This brings the code under test.support.interpreters, and the corresponding extension modules, in line with recent updates to PEP 734.
(Note: PEP 734 has not been accepted at this time. However, we are using an internal copy of the implementation in the test suite to exercise the existing subinterpreters feature.)
A few of our tests measure the time of CPU-bound operation, mainly
to avoid quadratic or worse behaviour.
Add a helper to ignore GC and time spent in other processes.
Add test annotations required to run the test suite on iOS (PEP 730).
The majority of the change involve annotating tests that use subprocess,
but are skipped on Emscripten/WASI for other reasons, and including
iOS/tvOS/watchOS under the same umbrella as macOS/darwin checks.
`is_apple` and `is_apple_mobile` test helpers have been added to
identify *any* Apple platform, and "any Apple platform except macOS",
respectively.
Some socket tests related to sending file descriptors cause a file descriptor leak on macOS, all of them tests that send one or more descriptors than cannot be received on the read end. This appears to be a platform bug.
This PR skips those tests when doing a refleak test run to avoid hiding other problems.
We need the TracebackException of uncaught exceptions for a single purpose: the error display. Thus we only need to pass the formatted error display between interpreters. Passing a pickled TracebackException is overkill.
When an exception is uncaught in Interpreter.exec_sync(), it helps to show that exception's error display if uncaught in the calling interpreter. We do so here by generating a TracebackException in the subinterpreter and passing it between interpreters using pickle.
Regression test that vfork is used when expected by subprocess.
This is written integration test style, it uses strace if it is present and appears to work to find out what system call actually gets used in different scenarios.
Test coverage is added for the default behavior and that of each of the specific arguments that must disable the use of vfork. obviously not an entire test matrix, but it covers the most important aspects.
If there are ever issues with this test being flaky or failing on new platforms, rather than try and adapt it for all possible platforms, feel free to narrow the range it gets tested on when appropriate. That is not likely to reduce coverage.
Use scanning "/dev/fd/" on macOS in support.fd_count(). That's both more efficient than scanning all possible file descriptors, and avoids crashing the interpreter when there are open "guarded" file descriptors.
"Guarded" file descriptors are a macOS feature where file descriptors used by system libraries are marked and cause hard crashes when used by "user" code.
Co-authored-by: Victor Stinner <vstinner@python.org>
Now all results from worker processes are aggregated and
displayed together as a summary at the end of a regrtest run.
The traditional trace is left in place for use with sequential
in-process test runs but now raises a warning that those
numbers are not precise.
`-T -j` requires `--with-pydebug` as it relies on `-Xpresite=`.
Copy the list of dangling threads to make sure that the list of
"Dangling thread" is complete. Previously, the list was incomplete if
threads completed just before the list was displayed.
Changes:
* Rewrite the warning to make it easier to understand.
* Use support.sleeping_retry().
* threading_cleanup() no longer copies threading._dangling,
but only counts the number of dangling thread.
* Remove support.gc_support() call.
This moves several general internal APIs out of _xxsubinterpretersmodule.c and into the new Python/crossinterp.c (and the corresponding internal headers).
Specifically:
* _Py_excinfo, etc.: the initial implementation for non-object exception snapshots (in pycore_pyerrors.h and Python/errors.c)
* _PyXI_exception_info, etc.: helpers for passing an exception beween interpreters (wraps _Py_excinfo)
* _PyXI_namespace, etc.: helpers for copying a dict of attrs between interpreters
* _PyXI_Enter(), _PyXI_Exit(): functions that abstract out the transitions between one interpreter and a second that will do some work temporarily
Again, these were all abstracted out of _xxsubinterpretersmodule.c as generalizations. I plan on proposing these as public API at some point.
- There is no longer a separate Python/executor.c file.
- Conventions in Python/bytecodes.c are slightly different -- don't use `goto error`,
you must use `GOTO_ERROR(error)` (same for others like `unused_local_error`).
- The `TIER_ONE` and `TIER_TWO` symbols are only valid in the generated (.c.h) files.
- In Lib/test/support/__init__.py, `Py_C_RECURSION_LIMIT` is imported from `_testcapi`.
- On Windows, in debug mode, stack allocation grows from 8MiB to 12MiB.
- **Beware!** This changes the env vars to enable uops and their debugging
to `PYTHON_UOPS` and `PYTHON_LLTRACE`.
* Add mimalloc v2.12
Modified src/alloc.c to remove include of alloc-override.c and not
compile new handler.
Did not include the following files:
- include/mimalloc-new-delete.h
- include/mimalloc-override.h
- src/alloc-override-osx.c
- src/alloc-override.c
- src/static.c
- src/region.c
mimalloc is thread safe and shares a single heap across all runtimes,
therefore finalization and getting global allocated blocks across all
runtimes is different.
* mimalloc: minimal changes for use in Python:
- remove debug spam for freeing large allocations
- use same bytes (0xDD) for freed allocations in CPython and mimalloc
This is important for the test_capi debug memory tests
* Don't export mimalloc symbol in libpython.
* Enable mimalloc as Python allocator option.
* Add mimalloc MIT license.
* Log mimalloc in Lib/test/pythoninfo.py.
* Document new mimalloc support.
* Use macro defs for exports as done in:
https://github.com/python/cpython/pull/31164/
Co-authored-by: Sam Gross <colesbury@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Christian Heimes <christian@python.org>
Co-authored-by: Victor Stinner <vstinner@python.org>
Test case matching patterns specified by options --match, --ignore,
--matchfile and --ignorefile are now tested in the order of
specification, and the last match determines whether the test case be run
or ignored.
Increase support.LOOPBACK_TIMEOUT from 5 to 10 seconds. Also increase
the timeout depending on the --timeout option. For example, for a
test timeout of 40 minutes (ARM Raspbian 3.x), use LOOPBACK_TIMEOUT
of 20 seconds instead of 5 seconds before.
* Split test_pycfunction.py: add test_cfunction_full.py.
Split the function into the following 6 functions. In verbose
mode, these "pycfunction" tests now log each tested call.
* test_pycfunction_noargs()
* test_pycfunction_o()
* test_pycfunction_varargs()
* test_pycfunction_varargs_keywords()
* test_pycfunction_fastcall()
* test_pycfunction_fastcall_keywords()
* Move get_gdb_repr() to PrettyPrintTests.
* Replace DebuggerTests.get_sample_script() with SAMPLE_SCRIPT.
* Rename checkout_hook_path to CHECKOUT_HOOK_PATH.
* Rename gdb_version to GDB_VERSION_TEXT.
* Replace (gdb_major_version, gdb_minor_version) with GDB_VERSION.
* run_gdb() uses "backslashreplace" error handler instead of "replace".
* Add check_gdb() function to util.py.
* Enhance support.check_cflags_pgo(): check also for sysconfig
PGO_PROF_USE_FLAG (if available) in compiler flags.
* Move some SkipTest checks to test_gdb/__init__.py.
* Elaborate why gdb cannot be tested on Windows: gdb doesn't support
PDB debug symbol files.
Fix copy_source_tree() function of test_tools.test_freeze:
* Don't copy SRC_DIR/build/ anymore. This directory is modified by
other tests running in parallel.
* Add test.support.copy_python_src_ignore().
* Use sysconfig to get the source directory.
* Use sysconfig.get_config_var() to get CONFIG_ARGS variable.
Skip test_freeze_simple_script() of test_tools.test_freeze if Python
is built with "./configure --enable-optimizations", which means with
Profile Guided Optimization (PGO): it just makes the test too slow.
The freeze tool is tested by many other CIs with other (faster)
compiler flags.
test.pythoninfo now gets also get_build_info() of
test.libregrtests.utils.
This adds a 16-bit inline cache entry to the conditional branch instructions POP_JUMP_IF_{FALSE,TRUE,NONE,NOT_NONE} and their instrumented variants, which is used to keep track of the branch direction.
Each time we encounter these instructions we shift the cache entry left by one and set the bottom bit to whether we jumped.
Then when it's time to translate such a branch to Tier 2 uops, we use the bit count from the cache entry to decided whether to continue translating the "didn't jump" branch or the "jumped" branch.
The counter is initialized to a pattern of alternating ones and zeros to avoid bias.
The .pyc file magic number is updated. There's a new test, some fixes for existing tests, and a few miscellaneous cleanups.
* Add attributes to Regrtest and RunTests:
* gc_threshold
* memory_limit
* python_cmd
* use_resources
* Remove WorkerJob class. Add as_json() and from_json() methods to
RunTests. A worker process now only uses RunTests for all
parameters.
* Add tests on support.set_memlimit() in test_support. Create
_parse_memlimit() and also adds tests on it.
* Remove 'ns' parameter from runtest.py.
Symbols of the C API should be prefixed by "Py_" to avoid conflict
with existing names in 3rd party C extensions on "#include <Python.h>".
test.pythoninfo now logs Py_C_RECURSION_LIMIT constant and other
_testcapi and _testinternalcapi constants.
Commit 13a00078b8 (#108663) made all
Python builds compatible with the Limited API, and removed the
LIMITED_API_AVAILABLE flag. However, some tests were still checking
for that flag, so they were now being incorrectly skipped. Remove
these checks to let these tests run again.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
* Add get_recursion_available() and get_recursion_depth() functions
to the test.support module.
* Change infinite_recursion() default max_depth from 75 to 100.
* Fix test_tomllib recursion tests for WASI buildbots: reduce the
recursion limit and compute the maximum nested array/dict depending
on the current available recursion limit.
* test.pythoninfo logs sys.getrecursionlimit().
* Enhance test_sys tests on sys.getrecursionlimit()
and sys.setrecursionlimit().
When using --rerun option, regrtest now re-runs failed tests
in verbose mode in fresh worker processes to have more
deterministic behavior. So it can write its final report even
if a test killed a worker progress.
Add --fail-rerun option to regrtest: exit with non-zero exit code
if a test failed pass passed when re-run in verbose mode (in a
fresh process). That's now more useful since tests can pass
when re-run in a fresh worker progress, whereas they failed
when run after other tests when tests are run sequentially.
Rename --verbose2 option (-w) to --rerun. Keep --verbose2 as a
deprecated alias.
Changes:
* Fix and enhance statistics in regrtest summary. Add "(filtered)"
when --match and/or --ignore options are used.
* Add RunTests class.
* Add TestResult.get_rerun_match_tests() method
* Rewrite code to serialize/deserialize worker arguments as JSON
using a new WorkerJob class.
* Fix stats when a test is run with --forever --rerun.
* If failed test names cannot be parsed, log a warning and don't
filter tests.
* test_regrtest.test_rerun_success() now uses a marker file, since
the test is re-run in a separated process.
* Add tests on normalize_test_name() function.
* Add test_success() and test_skip() tests to test_regrtest.
test_netrc, test_pep646_syntax and test_xml_etree now return results
in the test_main() function.
Changes:
* Rewrite TestResult as a dataclass with a new State class.
* Add test.support.TestStats class and Regrtest.stats_dict attribute.
* libregrtest.runtest functions now modify a TestResult instance
in-place.
* libregrtest summary lists the number of run tests and skipped
tests, and denied resources.
* Add TestResult.has_meaningful_duration() method.
* Compute TestResult duration in the upper function.
* Use time.perf_counter() instead of time.monotonic().
* Regrtest: rename 'resource_denieds' attribute to 'resource_denied'.
* Rename CHILD_ERROR to MULTIPROCESSING_ERROR.
* Use match/case syntadx to have different code depending on the
test state.
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
Python built with "configure --with-trace-refs" (tracing references)
is now ABI compatible with Python release build and debug build.
Moreover, it now also supports the Limited API.
Change Py_TRACE_REFS build:
* Remove _PyObject_EXTRA_INIT macro.
* The PyObject structure no longer has two extra members (_ob_prev
and _ob_next).
* Use a hash table (_Py_hashtable_t) to trace references (all
objects): PyInterpreterState.object_state.refchain.
* Py_TRACE_REFS build is now ABI compatible with release build and
debug build.
* Limited C API extensions can now be built with Py_TRACE_REFS:
xxlimited, xxlimited_35, _testclinic_limited.
* No longer rename PyModule_Create2() and PyModule_FromDefAndSpec2()
functions to PyModule_Create2TraceRefs() and
PyModule_FromDefAndSpec2TraceRefs().
* _Py_PrintReferenceAddresses() is now called before
finalize_interp_delete() which deletes the refchain hash table.
* test_tracemalloc find_trace() now also filters by size to ignore
the memory allocated by _PyRefchain_Trace().
Test changes for Py_TRACE_REFS:
* Add test.support.Py_TRACE_REFS constant.
* Add test_sys.test_getobjects() to test sys.getobjects() function.
* test_exceptions skips test_recursion_normalizing_with_no_memory()
and test_memory_error_in_PyErr_PrintEx() if Python is built with
Py_TRACE_REFS.
* test_repl skips test_no_memory().
* test_capi skisp test_set_nomemory().
Remove _PyErr_ChainExceptions(), _PyErr_ChainExceptions1() and
_PyErr_SetFromPyStatus() functions from the public C API.
* Move the private _PyErr_ChainExceptions() and
_PyErr_ChainExceptions1() function to the internal C API
(pycore_pyerrors.h).
* Move the private _PyErr_SetFromPyStatus() to the internal C API
(pycore_initconfig.h).
* No longer export the _PyErr_ChainExceptions() function.
* Move run_in_subinterp_with_config() from _testcapi to
_testinternalcapi.
The decorator now requires to be called with parenthesis:
@support.requires_legacy_unicode_capi()
instead of:
@support.requires_legacy_unicode_capi
The implementation now only imports _testcapi when the decorator is
called, so "import test.support" no longer imports the _testcapi
extension.
For a while now, pending calls only run in the main thread (in the main interpreter). This PR changes things to allow any thread run a pending call, unless the pending call was explicitly added for the main thread to run.
Display the sanitizers present in libregrtest.
Having this in the CI output for tests with the relevant environment
variable displayed will help make it easier to do what we need to
create an equivalent local test run.
* socket_helper.transient_internet() no longer imports nntplib to
catch nntplib.NNTPTemporaryError.
* ssltests.py no longer runs test_nntplib.
* "make quicktest" no longer runs test_nntplib.
* WASM: remove nntplib from OMIT_NETWORKING_FILES.
* Remove mentions to nntplib in the email documentation.
This implements PEP 695, Type Parameter Syntax. It adds support for:
- Generic functions (def func[T](): ...)
- Generic classes (class X[T](): ...)
- Type aliases (type X = ...)
- New scoping when the new syntax is used within a class body
- Compiler and interpreter changes to support the new syntax and scoping rules
Co-authored-by: Marc Mueller <30130371+cdce8p@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Eric Traut <eric@traut.com>
Co-authored-by: Larry Hastings <larry@hastings.org>
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
These are stubs to be used for adding hypothesis (https://hypothesis.readthedocs.io/en/latest/) tests to the standard library.
When the tests are run in an environment where `hypothesis` and its various dependencies are not installed, the stubs will turn any tests with examples into simple parameterized tests and any tests without examples are skipped.
It also adds hypothesis tests for the `zoneinfo` module, and a Github Actions workflow to run the hypothesis tests as a non-required CI job.
The full hypothesis interface is not stubbed out — missing stubs can be added as necessary.
Co-authored-by: Zac Hatfield-Dodds <zac.hatfield.dodds@gmail.com>
Using `datetime.datetime.utcnow()` and `datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp()` will now raise a `DeprecationWarning`.
We also have removed our internal uses of these functions and documented the change.
Enforcing (optionally) the restriction set by PEP 489 makes sense. Furthermore, this sets the stage for a potential restriction related to a per-interpreter GIL.
This change includes the following:
* add tests for extension module subinterpreter compatibility
* add _PyInterpreterConfig.check_multi_interp_extensions
* add Py_RTFLAGS_MULTI_INTERP_EXTENSIONS
* add _PyImport_CheckSubinterpIncompatibleExtensionAllowed()
* fail iff the module does not implement multi-phase init and the current interpreter is configured to check
https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/98627