We do not want to add locking in `tp_traverse` slot implementations.
Instead, stop the world when calling `gc.get_referents`. Note that the the
stop the world call is a no-op in the default build.
Co-authored-by: Pablo Galindo Salgado <Pablogsal@gmail.com>
The `PyDict_SetDefaultRef` function is similar to `PyDict_SetDefault`,
but returns a strong reference through the optional `**result` pointer
instead of a borrowed reference.
Co-authored-by: Petr Viktorin <encukou@gmail.com>
Add optional 'filter' parameter to iterdump() that allows a "LIKE"
pattern for filtering database objects to dump.
Co-authored-by: Erlend E. Aasland <erlend@python.org>
When expanding `**` wildcards, ensure we add a trailing slash to the
topmost directory path. This matches `glob.glob()` behaviour:
>>> glob.glob('dirA/**', recursive=True)
['dirA/', 'dirA/dirB', 'dirA/dirB/dirC']
This does not affect `pathlib.Path.glob()`, because trailing slashes aren't
supported in pathlib proper.
Fix race between `_PyParkingLot_Park` and `_PyParkingLot_UnparkAll` when handling interrupts
There is a potential race when `_PyParkingLot_UnparkAll` is executing in
one thread and another thread is unblocked because of an interrupt in
`_PyParkingLot_Park`. Consider the following scenario:
1. Thread T0 is blocked[^1] in `_PyParkingLot_Park` on address `A`.
2. Thread T1 executes `_PyParkingLot_UnparkAll` on address `A`. It
finds the `wait_entry` for `T0` and unlinks[^2] its list node.
3. Immediately after (2), T0 is woken up due to an interrupt. It
then segfaults trying to unlink[^3] the node that was previously
unlinked in (2).
To fix this we mark each waiter as unparking before releasing the bucket
lock. `_PyParkingLot_Park` will wait to handle the coming wakeup, and not
attempt to unlink the node, when this field is set. `_PyParkingLot_Unpark`
does this already, presumably to handle this case.
Change the somewhat vague "listed below" to "listed in this chapter" in Doc/library/exceptions.rst.
The exceptions are listed in multiple sections after two intermediate sections.
---------
Co-authored-by: Terry Jan Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu>
* When called with a single argument to get a value, it allow to omit
the minus prefix.
* It can be called with keyword arguments to set attributes.
* w.wm_attributes(return_python_dict=True) returns a dict instead of
a tuple (it will be the default in future).
* Setting wantobjects to 0 no longer affects the result.
When cvs.Error is raised when TypeError is caught,
the TypeError display and 'During handling' note is just noise
with duplicate information. Suppress with 'from None'.
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.
Test all integer member types with extreme values and values outside of
the valid range. Test support of integer-like objects. Test warnings for
wrapped out values.
Previously, "tag_unbind(tag, sequence, funcid)" methods of Text and
Canvas widgets destroyed the current binding for "sequence", leaving
"sequence" unbound, and deleted the "funcid" command.
Now they remove only "funcid" from the binding for "sequence", keeping
other commands, and delete the "funcid" command.
They leave "sequence" unbound only if "funcid" was the last bound command.
* Fix a RuntimeWarning emitted when assign an integer-like value that
is not an instance of int to an attribute that corresponds to a C
struct member of type T_UINT and T_ULONG.
* Fix a double RuntimeWarning emitted when assign a negative integer value
to an attribute that corresponds to a C struct member of type T_UINT.
Update documentation with `__new__` and `__init__` entries.
Support use of `auto()` in tuple subclasses on member assignment lines. Previously, auto() was only supported on the member definition line either solo or as part of a tuple:
RED = auto()
BLUE = auto(), 'azul'
However, since Python itself supports using tuple subclasses where tuples are expected, e.g.:
from collections import namedtuple
T = namedtuple('T', 'first second third')
def test(one, two, three):
print(one, two, three)
test(*T(4, 5, 6))
# 4 5 6
it made sense to also support tuple subclasses in enum definitions.