A TypeError is now raised instead of an AttributeError in
ExitStack.enter_context() and AsyncExitStack.enter_async_context()
for objects which do not support the context manager or
asynchronous context manager protocols correspondingly.
A TypeError is now raised instead of an AttributeError in
"with" and "async with" statements for objects which do not
support the context manager or asynchronous context manager
protocols correspondingly.
I tried to be relatively thorough and give lots of links.
One reason is that this wasn't deprecated very long; also it seems people running into this tend to not be familiar with similar APIs.
Co-authored-by: Ken Jin <28750310+Fidget-Spinner@users.noreply.github.com>
Remove 4 C API private trashcan functions which were only kept for
the backward compatibility of the stable ABI with Python 3.8 and
older, since the trashcan API was not usable with the limited C API
on Python 3.8 and older. The trashcan API was excluded from the
limited C API in Python 3.9.
Removed functions:
* _PyTrash_deposit_object()
* _PyTrash_destroy_chain()
* _PyTrash_thread_deposit_object()
* _PyTrash_thread_destroy_chain()
The trashcan C API was never usable with the limited C API, since old
trashcan macros accessed directly PyThreadState members like
"_tstate->trash_delete_nesting", whereas the PyThreadState structure
is opaque in the limited C API.
Exclude also the PyTrash_UNWIND_LEVEL constant from the C API.
The trashcan C API was modified in Python 3.9 by commit
38965ec541 and in Python 3.10 by commit
ed1a5a5bac to hide implementation
details.
Py_RunMain() now resets PyImport_Inittab to its initial value at
exit. It must be possible to call PyImport_AppendInittab() or
PyImport_ExtendInittab() at each Python initialization.
Fix asyncio test_popen() of test_windows_utils by using a longer
timeout. Use military grade battle-tested test.support.SHORT_TIMEOUT
timeout rather than a hardcoded timeout of 10 seconds: it's 30
seconds by default, but it is made longer on slow buildbots.
WaitForMultipleObjects() timeout argument is in milliseconds.
_thread.start_new_thread() no longer calls PyThread_exit_thread()
explicitly at the thread exit, the call was redundant.
On Linux with the glibc, pthread_cancel() loads dynamically the
libgcc_s.so.1 library. dlopen() can fail if there is no more
available file descriptor to open the file. In this case, the process
aborts with the error message:
"libgcc_s.so.1 must be installed for pthread_cancel to work"
pthread_cancel() unwinds back to the thread's wrapping function that
calls the thread entry point.
The unwind function is dynamically loaded from the libgcc_s library
since it is tightly coupled to the C compiler (GCC). The unwinder
depends on DWARF, the compiler generates DWARF, so the unwinder
belongs to the compiler.
Thanks Florian Weimer and Carlos O'Donell for their help on
investigating this issue.
This avoids the following error if DeprecationWarnings are ignored.
======================================================================
ERROR: test_entry_points_by_index (test.test_importlib.test_metadata_api.APITests)
Prior versions of Distribution.entry_points would return a
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/builddir/build/BUILD/Python-3.10.0b3/Lib/test/test_importlib/test_metadata_api.py", line 145, in test_entry_points_by_index
expected = next(iter(caught))
StopIteration
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ran 1402 tests in 2.125s
FAILED (errors=1, skipped=18, expected failures=1)
* Remove struct _node from the stable ABI list
This struct was removed along with the old parser in Python 3.9 (PEP 617)
* Stable ABI list: Use the public name "PyFrameObject" rather than "_frame"
* Ensure limited API doesn't contain private names
Names prefixed by an underscore are private by definition.
* Add a blurb
Currently, if an arg value escapes (into the closure for an inner function) we end up allocating two indices in the fast locals even though only one gets used. Additionally, using the lower index would be better in some cases, such as with no-arg `super()`. To address this, we update the compiler to fix the offsets so each variable only gets one "fast local". As a consequence, now some cell offsets are interspersed with the locals (only when an arg escapes to an inner function).
https://bugs.python.org/issue43693