Since we can use now the sha3 and shake algorithms from OpenSSL, we shouldn't
skip the tests in case the builtin algorithm was not compiled or removed.
- Introduce sslmodule_slots
- Introduce sslmodulestate
- Use sslmodulestate
- Get rid of PyState_FindModule
- Move new structs and helpers to header file
- Use macros to access state
- Keep a strong ref to socket type
- Remove HAVE_X509_VERIFY_PARAM_SET1_HOST check
- Update hashopenssl to require OpenSSL 1.1.1
- multissltests only OpenSSL > 1.1.0
- ALPN is always supported
- SNI is always supported
- Remove deprecated NPN code. Python wrappers are no-op.
- ECDH is always supported
- Remove OPENSSL_VERSION_1_1 macro
- Remove locking callbacks
- Drop PY_OPENSSL_1_1_API macro
- Drop HAVE_SSL_CTX_CLEAR_OPTIONS macro
- SSL_CTRL_GET_MAX_PROTO_VERSION is always defined now
- security level is always available now
- get_num_tickets is available with TLS 1.3
- X509_V_ERR MISMATCH is always available now
- Always set SSL_MODE_RELEASE_BUFFERS
- X509_V_FLAG_TRUSTED_FIRST is always available
- get_ciphers is always supported
- SSL_CTX_set_keylog_callback is always available
- Update Modules/Setup with static link example
- Mention PEP in whatsnew
- Drop 1.0.2 and 1.1.0 from GHA tests
Fix problem with ssl.SSLContext.hostname_checks_common_name. OpenSSL does not
copy hostflags from *struct SSL_CTX* to *struct SSL*.
Signed-off-by: Christian Heimes <christian@python.org>
Use a versionadded directive to generate the text "New in version
3.8." (to match with the documentation of other modules).
Automerge-Triggered-By: GH:jaraco
The multiprocessing Server class now explicitly catchs SystemExit and
closes the client connection in this case. It happens when the
Server.serve_client() method reachs the end of file (EOF).
test.libregrtest now marks a test as ENV_CHANGED (altered the
execution environment) if a thread raises an exception but does not
catch it. It sets a hook on threading.excepthook. Use
--fail-env-changed option to mark the test as failed.
libregrtest regrtest_unraisable_hook() explicitly flushs
sys.stdout, sys.stderr and sys.__stderr__.
Fix a race condition in the SMTP test of test_logging. Don't close a
file descriptor (socket) from a different thread while
asyncore.loop() is polling the file descriptor.
* Modify compiler to reduce stack consumption for large expressions.
* Add more tests for stack usage.
* Add NEWS item.
* Raise SystemError for truly excessive stack use.
With this patch, `distutils.command.install.INSTALL_SCHEMES` are loaded from
`sysconfig._INSTALL_SCHEMES`.
The distutils module is deprecated and will be removed in 3.12 (PEP 632).
This change makes the `sysconfig._INSTALL_SCHEMES` the single point of truth
for install schemes while keeping `distutils.command.install.INSTALL_SCHEMES`
exactly the same. If we, during the transition to the sysconfig, change
something, this makes sure that it also propagates to distutils until the
module gets removed.
Moreover, as discussed [on Discourse], Linux distros need to patch
distutils/sysconfig to make sure the packages will land in proper locations.
This patch makes it easier because it leaves only one location where install
schemes are defined which is much easier to patch/adjust.
[on Discourse]: https://discuss.python.org/t/pep-632-deprecate-distutils-module/5134
The implementation is slightly different than the plan but I think it's the
easiest way how to do it and it also makes the downstream patch simple,
flexible and easy to maintain.
It's also necessary to implement this before setuptools starts bundling
the distutils module so the default install schemes stay in the standard library.
The removed code from sysconfig does not seem to have any negative effect
because, honestly, it seems that nothing actually uses the install schemes
from sysconfig at all. There were many big changes in these modules where
they were trying to include packaging in stdlib and then reverted that.
Also, the test of distutils install command does not count with the different
locations which is good evidence that the reason to have this piece of code
is no longer valid.
https://bugs.python.org/issue41282
Each section is sorted to reduce diffs (review effort) when the file becomes generated.
Sort is done with key=str.lower to preserve most of the original order (underscored items first).
https://bugs.python.org/issue43795
When printing NameError raised by the interpreter, PyErr_Display
will offer suggestions of simmilar variable names in the function that the exception
was raised from:
>>> schwarzschild_black_hole = None
>>> schwarschild_black_hole
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
NameError: name 'schwarschild_black_hole' is not defined. Did you mean: schwarzschild_black_hole?
When printing AttributeError, PyErr_Display will offer suggestions of similar
attribute names in the object that the exception was raised from:
>>> collections.namedtoplo
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
AttributeError: module 'collections' has no attribute 'namedtoplo'. Did you mean: namedtuple?
Deprecate io.OpenWrapper and _pyio.OpenWrapper: use io.open and
_pyio.open instead. Until Python 3.9, _pyio.open was not a static
method and builtins.open was set to OpenWrapper to not become a bound
method when set to a class variable. _io.open is a built-in function
whereas _pyio.open is a Python function. In Python 3.10, _pyio.open()
is now a static method, and builtins.open() is now io.open().