Adjust DeprecationWarning when testing element truth values in ElementTree, we're planning to go with the more natural True return rather than a disruptive harder to code around exception raise, and are deferring the behavior change for a few more releases.
This adds a `_PyRecursiveMutex` type based on `PyMutex` and uses that
for the import lock. This fixes some data races in the free-threaded
build and generally simplifies the import lock code.
Some time strings that contain fractional hours or minutes are permitted
by ISO 8601, but such strings are very unlikely to be intentional. The
current parser does not parse such strings correctly or raise an error.
This change raises a ValueError when hours or minutes contain a decimal mark.
Co-authored-by: blurb-it[bot] <43283697+blurb-it[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
* Add declaration of Tcl_AppInit(), missing in Tcl 9.0.
* Use Tcl_Size instead of int where needed.
Co-authored-by: Serhiy Storchaka <storchaka@gmail.com>
We make use of the same mechanism that we use for the static builtin types. This required a few tweaks.
The relevant code could use some cleanup but I opted to avoid the significant churn in this change. I'll tackle that separately.
This change is the final piece needed to make _datetime support multiple interpreters. I've updated the module slot accordingly.
I was able to make use of the existing datetime_state struct, but there was one tricky thing I had to sort out. We mostly aren't converting to heap types, so we can't use things like PyType_GetModuleByDef() to look up the module state. The solution I came up with is somewhat novel, but I consider it straightforward. Also, it shouldn't have much impact on performance.
In summary, this main changes here are:
* I've added some macros to help hide how various objects relate to module state
* as a solution to the module state lookup problem, I've stored the last loaded module on the current interpreter's internal dict (actually a weakref)
* if the static type method is used after the module has been deleted, it is reloaded
* to avoid extra work when loading the module, we directly copy the objects (new refs only) from the old module state into the new state if the old module hasn't been deleted yet
* during module init we set various objects on the static types' __dict__s; to simplify things, we only do that the first time; once those static types have a separate __dict__ per interpreter, we'll do it every time
* we now clear the module state when the module is destroyed (before, we were leaking everything in _datetime_global_state)
The free-threaded build currently immortalizes objects that use deferred
reference counting (see gh-117783). This typically happens once the
first non-main thread is created, but the behavior can be suppressed for
tests, in subinterpreters, or during a compile() call.
This fixes a race condition involving the tracking of whether the
behavior is suppressed.
Make sure that `gilstate_counter` is not zero in when calling
`PyThreadState_Clear()`. A destructor called from `PyThreadState_Clear()` may
call back into `PyGILState_Ensure()` and `PyGILState_Release()`. If
`gilstate_counter` is zero, it will try to create a new thread state before
the current active thread state is destroyed, leading to an assertion failure
or crash.
Some of standard Tcl types were renamed, removed, or no longer
registered in Tcl 8.7/9.0. This change fixes automatic conversion of Tcl
values to Python values to avoid returning a Tcl_Obj where the primary
Python types (int, bool, str, bytes) were returned in older Tcl.
Structure layout, and especially bitfields, sometimes resulted in clearly
wrong behaviour like overlapping fields. This fixes
Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith <gps@python.org>
Co-authored-by: Petr Viktorin <encukou@gmail.com>
When the _Py_SINGLETON() is used, Argument Clinic now adds an
explicit "pycore_runtime.h" include to get the macro. Previously, the
macro may or may not be included indirectly by another include.
This is minimal support. Subinterpreters are not supported yet. That will be addressed in a later change.
Co-authored-by: Eric Snow <ericsnowcurrently@gmail.com>
The fix in gh-119561 introduced an assertion that doesn't hold true if any of the three new test extension modules are loaded more than once. This is fine normally but breaks if the new test_check_state_first() is run more than once, which happens for refleak checking and with the regrtest --forever flag. We fix that here by clearing each of the three modules after loading them. We also tweak a check in _modules_by_index_check().
The assertion was added in gh-118532 but was based on the invalid assumption that PyState_FindModule() would only be called with an already-initialized module def. I've added a test to make sure we don't make that assumption again.
Add socket.VMADDR_CID_LOCAL constant.
Fix ThreadedVSOCKSocketStreamTest: if get_cid() returns the host
address or the "any" address, use the local communication address
(loopback): VMADDR_CID_LOCAL.
On Linux 6.9, apparently, the /dev/vsock device is now available but
get_cid() returns VMADDR_CID_ANY (-1).
Add a funciton that inlines PyObject_GetTypeData and skips
type-checking, so it doesn't need access to the CType_Type object.
This will break if the memory layout changes, but should
be an acceptable solution to enable ctypes in subinterpreters in
Python 3.13.
Mark _ctypes as safe for multiple interpreters
Co-authored-by: neonene <53406459+neonene@users.noreply.github.com>
As reported in #117847 and #115366, an unpaired backtick in a docstring
tends to confuse e.g. Sphinx running on subclasses of standard library
objects, and the typographic style of using a backtick as an opening
quote is no longer in favor. Convert almost all uses of the form
The variable `foo' should do xyz
to
The variable 'foo' should do xyz
and also fix up miscellaneous other unpaired backticks (extraneous /
missing characters).
No functional change is intended here other than in human-readable
docstrings.
_PyArg_Parser holds static global data generated for modules by Argument Clinic. The _PyArg_Parser.kwtuple field is a tuple object, even though it's stored within a static global. In some cases the tuple is statically allocated and thus it's okay that it gets shared by multiple interpreters. However, in other cases the tuple is set lazily, allocated from the heap using the active interprepreter at the point the tuple is needed.
This is a problem once that interpreter is destroyed since _PyArg_Parser.kwtuple becomes at dangling pointer, leading to crashes. It isn't a problem if the tuple is allocated under the main interpreter, since its lifetime is bound to the lifetime of the runtime. The solution here is to temporarily switch to the main interpreter. The alternative would be to always statically allocate the tuple.
This change also fixes a bug where only the most recent parser was added to the global linked list.
Follow-up of gh-101693. The previous DeprecationWarning is replaced with
raising sqlite3.ProgrammingError.
Co-authored-by: Hugo van Kemenade <1324225+hugovk@users.noreply.github.com>
* shm_unlink() parameter becomes positional-only.
* shm_open() first parameter (path) becomes positional-only,
the two following parameters remain positional-or-keyword.
Callbacks registered in the tkinter module now take arguments as
various Python objects (int, float, bytes, tuple), not just str.
To restore the previous behavior set tkinter module global wantobject to 1
before creating the Tk object or call the wantobject() method of the Tk object
with argument 1.
Calling it with argument 2 restores the current default behavior.
Fix an edge case in `binascii.a2b_base64` strict mode, where
excessive padding was not detected when no padding is necessary.
Co-authored-by: Terry Jan Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu>
Co-authored-by: Pieter Eendebak <pieter.eendebak@gmail.com>
We already intern and immortalize most string constants. In the
free-threaded build, other constants can be a source of reference count
contention because they are shared by all threads running the same code
objects.
Add _PyType_LookupRef and use incref before setting attribute on type
Makes setting an attribute on a class and signaling type modified atomic
Avoid adding re-entrancy exposing the type cache in an inconsistent state by decrefing after type is updated
This is an experimental feature, for internal use.
Setting tkinter._debug = True before creating the root window enables
printing every executed Tcl command (or a Tcl command equivalent to the
used Tcl C API).
This will help to convert a Tkinter example into Tcl script to check
whether the issue is caused by Tkinter or exists in the underlying Tcl/Tk
library.
Use the new public Raw functions:
* _PyTime_PerfCounterUnchecked() with PyTime_PerfCounterRaw()
* _PyTime_TimeUnchecked() with PyTime_TimeRaw()
* _PyTime_MonotonicUnchecked() with PyTime_MonotonicRaw()
Remove internal functions:
* _PyTime_PerfCounterUnchecked()
* _PyTime_TimeUnchecked()
* _PyTime_MonotonicUnchecked()
This PR adds the ability to enable the GIL if it was disabled at
interpreter startup, and modifies the multi-phase module initialization
path to enable the GIL when loading a module, unless that module's spec
includes a slot indicating it can run safely without the GIL.
PEP 703 called the constant for the slot `Py_mod_gil_not_used`; I went
with `Py_MOD_GIL_NOT_USED` for consistency with gh-104148.
A warning will be issued up to once per interpreter for the first
GIL-using module that is loaded. If `-v` is given, a shorter message
will be printed to stderr every time a GIL-using module is loaded
(including the first one that issues a warning).
Now inspect.signature() supports references to the module globals in
parameter defaults on methods in extension modules. Previously it was
only supported in functions. The workaround was to specify the fully
qualified name, including the module name.
Add "Raw" variant of PyTime functions:
* PyTime_MonotonicRaw()
* PyTime_PerfCounterRaw()
* PyTime_TimeRaw()
Changes:
* Add documentation and tests. Tests release the GIL while calling
raw clock functions.
* py_get_system_clock() and py_get_monotonic_clock() now check that
the GIL is hold by the caller if raise_exc is non-zero.
* Reimplement "Unchecked" functions with raw clock functions.
Co-authored-by: Petr Viktorin <encukou@gmail.com>
The code for Tier 2 is now only compiled when configured
with `--enable-experimental-jit[=yes|interpreter]`.
We drop support for `PYTHON_UOPS` and -`Xuops`,
but you can disable the interpreter or JIT
at runtime by setting `PYTHON_JIT=0`.
You can also build it without enabling it by default
using `--enable-experimental-jit=yes-off`;
enable with `PYTHON_JIT=1`.
On Windows, the `build.bat` script supports
`--experimental-jit`, `--experimental-jit-off`,
`--experimental-interpreter`.
In the C code, `_Py_JIT` is defined as before
when the JIT is enabled; the new variable
`_Py_TIER2` is defined when the JIT *or* the
interpreter is enabled. It is actually a bitmask:
1: JIT; 2: default-off; 4: interpreter.
Avoid detaching thread state when stopping the world. When re-attaching
the thread state, the thread would attempt to resume the top-most
critical section, which might now be held by a thread paused for our
stop-the-world request.
Deferred reference counting is not fully implemented yet. As a temporary
measure, we immortalize objects that would use deferred reference
counting to avoid multi-threaded scaling bottlenecks.
This is only performed in the free-threaded build once the first
non-main thread is started. Additionally, some tests, including refleak
tests, suppress this behavior.
* Allow to specify the signature of custom callable instances of extension
type by the __text_signature__ attribute.
* Specify signatures of operator.attrgetter, operator.itemgetter, and
operator.methodcaller instances.
The behavior of fileno() after fclose() is undefined, but it is the only
practical way to check whether the file was closed.
Only test this on the known platforms (Linux, Windows, macOS), where we
already tested that it works.
BufferedWriter() was buffering calls that are the exact same size as the buffer. it's a very common case to read/write in blocks of the exact buffer size.
it's pointless to copy a full buffer, it's costing extra memory copy and the full buffer will have to be written in the next call anyway.
Co-authored-by: rmorotti <romain.morotti@man.com>
Older libedit versions (like Apple's) use a different type signature
for rl_startup_hook and rl_pre_input_hook. Add a configure check to
determine which signature is accepted by introducing the
Py_RL_STARTUP_HOOK_TAKES_ARGS macro in pyconfig.h.
This is similar to the situation with threading._DummyThread. The methods (incl. __del__()) of interpreters.Interpreter objects must be careful with interpreters not created by interpreters.create(). The simplest thing to start with is to disable any method that modifies or runs in the interpreter. As part of this, the runtime keeps track of where an interpreter was created. We also handle interpreter "refcounts" properly.
Detect libcrypto BLAKE2, Shake, SHA3, and Truncated-SHA512 support at hashlib build time
## BLAKE2
While OpenSSL supports both "b" and "s" variants of the BLAKE2 hash
function, other cryptographic libraries may lack support for one or both
of the variants. This commit modifies `hashlib`'s C code to detect
whether or not the linked libcrypto supports each BLAKE2 variant, and
elides references to each variant's NID accordingly. In cases where the
underlying libcrypto doesn't fully support BLAKE2, CPython's
`./configure` script can be given the following flag to use CPython's
interned BLAKE2 implementation: `--with-builtin-hashlib-hashes=blake2`.
## SHA3, Shake, & truncated SHA512.
Detect BLAKE2, SHA3, Shake, & truncated SHA512 support in the
OpenSSL-ish libcrypto library at build time. This helps allow hashlib's
`_hashopenssl` to be used with libraries that do not to support every
algorithm that upstream OpenSSL does. Such as AWS-LC & BoringSSL.
Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith [Google LLC] <greg@krypto.org>
Moves the validation for invalid years in the C implementation of the `datetime` module into a common location between `fromisoformat` and `fromisocalendar`, which improves the error message and fixes a failed assertion when parsing invalid ISO 8601 years using one of the "ISO weeks" formats.
---------
Co-authored-by: blurb-it[bot] <43283697+blurb-it[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
This prevents external cancellations of a task group's parent task to
be dropped when an internal cancellation happens at the same time.
Also strengthen the semantics of uncancel() to clear self._must_cancel
when the cancellation count reaches zero.
Co-Authored-By: Tin Tvrtković <tinchester@gmail.com>
Co-Authored-By: Arthur Tacca
Most mutable data is protected by a striped lock that is keyed on the
referenced object's address. The weakref's hash is protected using the
weakref's per-object lock.
Note that this only affects free-threaded builds. Apart from some minor
refactoring, the added code is all either gated by `ifdef`s or is a no-op
(e.g. `Py_BEGIN_CRITICAL_SECTION`).
Introduce a unified 16-bit backoff counter type (``_Py_BackoffCounter``),
shared between the Tier 1 adaptive specializer and the Tier 2 optimizer. The
API used for adaptive specialization counters is changed but the behavior is
(supposed to be) identical.
The behavior of the Tier 2 counters is changed:
- There are no longer dynamic thresholds (we never varied these).
- All counters now use the same exponential backoff.
- The counter for ``JUMP_BACKWARD`` starts counting down from 16.
- The ``temperature`` in side exits starts counting down from 64.
This merges all `_CHECK_STACK_SPACE` uops in a trace into a single `_CHECK_STACK_SPACE_OPERAND` uop that checks whether there is enough stack space for all calls included in the entire trace.
I had meant to switch everything to InterpreterError when I added it a while back. At the time I missed a few key spots.
As part of this, I've added print-the-exception to _PyXI_InitTypes() and fixed an error case in `_PyStaticType_InitBuiltin().
On Linux >= 2.6.36 with glibc < 2.27, `getcwd()` can return a relative
pathname starting with '(unreachable)'. We detect this and fail with
ENOENT, matching new glibc behaviour.
Co-authored-by: Petr Viktorin <encukou@gmail.com>
These helpers make it easier to customize and inspect the config used to initialize interpreters. This is especially valuable in our tests. I found inspiration from the PyConfig API for the PyInterpreterConfig dict conversion stuff. As part of this PR I've also added a bunch of tests.
Integrates the following ctypes meta tp slot functions:
* `CDataType_traverse()` into `CType_Type_traverse()`.
* `CDataType_clear()` into `CType_Type_clear()`.
* `CDataType_dealloc()` into `CType_Type_dealloc()`.
* `CDataType_repeat()` into `CType_Type_repeat()`.
Remove extra self DECREF on ssl "no ciphers" error path.
This doesn't come up in practice because nobody links against a broken
OpenSSL library that provides nothing.
Python 3.10 changed from using SSL_write() and SSL_read() to SSL_write_ex() and
SSL_read_ex(), but did not update handling of the return value.
Change error handling so that the return value is not examined.
OSError (not EOF) is now returned when retval is 0.
According to *recent* man pages of all functions for which we call
PySSL_SetError, (in OpenSSL 3.0 and 1.1.1), their return value should
be used to determine whether an error happened (i.e. if PySSL_SetError
should be called), but not what kind of error happened (so,
PySSL_SetError shouldn't need retval). To get the error,
we need to use SSL_get_error.
Co-authored-by: Serhiy Storchaka <storchaka@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Petr Viktorin <encukou@gmail.com>