Commit Graph

2076 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jeremy Hylton 7083bb744a Oops. Return -1 to distinguish error from empty dict.
This change probably isn't work a bug fix.  It's unlikely that anyone
was calling this method without passing it a real dict.
2004-02-17 20:10:11 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger 9eb86b3c7c Double the speed of list.pop() which was spending most of its time parsing
arguments.
2004-02-17 11:36:16 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger 90a39bf12c Refactor list_extend() and list_fill() for gains in code size, memory
utilization, and speed:

* Moved the responsibility for emptying the previous list from list_fill
  to list_init.

* Replaced the code in list_extend with the superior code from list_fill.

* Eliminated list_fill.

Results:

* list.extend() no longer creates an intermediate tuple except to handle
  the special case of x.extend(x).  The saves memory and time.

* list.extend(x) runs
    5 to 10% faster when x is a list or tuple
    15% faster when x is an iterable not defining __len__
    twice as fast when x is an iterable defining __len__

* the code is about 15 lines shorter and no longer duplicates
  functionality.
2004-02-15 03:57:00 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger ab517d2eac Fine tune the speed/space trade-off for overallocating small lists.
The Py2.3 approach overallocated small lists by up to 8 elements.
The last checkin would limited this to one but slowed down (by 20 to 30%)
the creation of small lists between 3 to 8 elements.

This tune-up balances the two, limiting overallocation to 3 elements
(significantly reducing space consumption from Py2.3) and running faster
than the previous checkin.

The first part of the growth pattern (0, 4, 8, 16) neatly meshes with
allocators that trigger data movement only when crossing a power of two
boundary.  Also, then even numbers mesh well with common data alignments.
2004-02-14 18:34:46 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger 2731ae4d6d Fix missing return value. Spotted by Neal Norwitz 2004-02-14 03:07:21 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger cb3e580ebc Optimize list.pop() for the common special case of popping off the end.
More than doubles its speed.
2004-02-13 18:36:31 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger 4bb9540dd6 * Optimized list appends and pops by making fewer calls the underlying system
realloc().  This is achieved by tracking the overallocation size in a new
  field and using that information to skip calls to realloc() whenever
  possible.

* Simplified and tightened the amount of overallocation.  For larger lists,
  this overallocates by 1/8th (compared to the previous scheme which ranged
  between 1/4th to 1/32nd over-allocation).  For smaller lists (n<6), the
  maximum overallocation is one byte (formerly it could be upto eight bytes).
  This saves memory in applications with large numbers of small lists.

* Eliminated the NRESIZE macro in favor of a new, static list_resize function
  that encapsulates the resizing logic.  Coverting this back to macro would
  give a small (under 1%) speed-up.  This was too small to warrant the loss
  of readability, maintainability, and de-coupling.

* Some functions using NRESIZE had grown unnecessarily complex in their
  efforts to bend to the macro's calling pattern.  With the new list_resize
  function in place, those other functions could be simplified.  That is
  being saved for a separate patch.

* The ob_item==NULL check could be eliminated from the new list_resize
  function.  This would entail finding each piece of code that sets ob_item
  to NULL and adding a new line to invalidate the overallocation tracking
  field.  Rather than impose a new requirement on other pieces of list code,
  it was preferred to leave the NULL check in place and retain the benefits
  of decoupling, maintainability and information hiding (only PyList_New()
  and list_sort() need to know about the new field).  This approach also
  reduces the odds of breaking an extension module.

(Collaborative effort by Raymond Hettinger, Hye-Shik Chang, Tim Peters,
 and Armin Rigo.)
2004-02-13 11:36:39 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger 029dba5a40 Make reversed() transparent with respect to length. 2004-02-10 09:33:39 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger b32e640489 SF patch #875689: >100k alloc wasted on startup
(Contributed by Mike Pall.)

Make sure fill_free_list() is called only once rather than 106 times
when pre-allocating small ints.
2004-02-08 18:54:37 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger 06353f76be Let reversed() work with itself. 2004-02-08 10:49:42 +00:00
Jim Fulton 8a1a594590 Fixed a bug in object.__reduce_ex__ (reduce_2) when using protocol
2.  Failure to clear the error when attempts to get the __getstate__
  attribute fail caused intermittent errors and odd behavior.
2004-02-08 04:21:26 +00:00
Skip Montanaro db6080507d Remove support for --without-universal-newlines (see PEP 11). 2004-02-07 13:53:46 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger c058fd14a9 * Fix ref counting in extend() and extendleft().
* Let deques support reversed().
2004-02-07 02:45:22 +00:00
Walter Dörwald cd736e71a3 Fix reallocation bug in unicode.translate(): The code was comparing
characters instead of character pointers to determine space requirements.
2004-02-05 17:36:00 +00:00
Fred Drake bc875f5a36 Allocating a new weakref object can cause existing weakref objects for
the same object to be collected by the cyclic GC support if they are
only referenced by a cycle.  If the weakref being collected was one of
the weakrefs without callbacks, some local variables for the
constructor became invalid and have to be re-computed.

The test caused a segfault under a debug build without the fix applied.
2004-02-04 23:14:14 +00:00
Fred Drake 6a2852cd48 Fix bug in interpretation of the "callback" argument in the constructors for
weakref ref and proxy objects; None was not being treated as identical to
NULL, though it was documented as equivalent.
2004-02-03 19:52:56 +00:00
Brett Cannon fb5a4e33fb Removed two unneeded lines from PyObject_Compare().
Closes bug #885293 (thanks, Josiah Carlson).
2004-01-27 20:17:54 +00:00
Armin Rigo 76beca957f Two forgotten Py_DECREF() for two out-of-memory conditions. 2004-01-27 16:08:07 +00:00
Tim Peters 7049d816fb Revert change accidentally checked in as part of a whitespace normalization
patch.
2004-01-18 20:31:02 +00:00
Tim Peters 58eb11cf62 Whitespace normalization. 2004-01-18 20:29:55 +00:00
Skip Montanaro ce59c04127 Remove support for SunOS 4.
Remove BAD_EXEC_PROTOYPE (leftover from IRIX 4 demolition).
2004-01-17 14:19:44 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger 2fb702966c SF Patch #871704: Py_SequenceFast can mask errors
(Contributed by Greg Chapman.)

Since this only changes the error message, I doubt that it should be
backported.
2004-01-11 23:26:51 +00:00
Hye-Shik Chang 75c00efcc7 [SF #866875] Add a specialized routine for one character
separaters on str.split() and str.rsplit().
2004-01-05 00:29:51 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger b86269db45 Apply pre-sizing optimization to a broader class of objects.
Formerly, the length was only fetched from sequence objects.
Now, any object that reports its length can benefit from pre-sizing.
2004-01-04 11:00:08 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger 7832cd6141 Apply tuple/list pre-sizing optimization to a broader class of objects.
Formerly, length data fetched from sequence objects.
Now, any object that reports its length can benefit from pre-sizing.

On one sample timing, it gave a threefold speedup for list(s) where s
was a set object.
2004-01-04 06:08:16 +00:00
Hye-Shik Chang 1bc09b7c2a Cosmetic fix for wrongly indented tabs with ts=4. 2004-01-03 19:35:43 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger a3b11e7fb3 * Simplify and speedup logic for tp_print.
* Speed-up intersection whenever PyDict_Next can be used.
2003-12-31 14:08:58 +00:00
Hye-Shik Chang 7db07e6972 Fix gcc 3.3 warnings related to Py_UNICODE_WIDE. 2003-12-29 01:36:01 +00:00
Andrew MacIntyre f1ca7f561c complete backout of listobject.c v2.171 2003-12-28 07:43:56 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 30973414c5 Revert previous two checkins to repair test failure.
The special-case code that was removed could return a value indicating
success but leave an exception set.  test_fileinput failed in a debug
build as a result.
2003-12-26 19:05:04 +00:00
Andrew MacIntyre 694e3a4a9d use the correct macro to access list size 2003-12-26 00:09:04 +00:00
Andrew MacIntyre d57caed52c Performance of list([]) in 2.3 came up in a thread on comp.lang.python,
which can be reviewed via
http://coding.derkeiler.com/Archive/Python/comp.lang.python/2003-12/1011.html

Duncan Booth investigated, and discovered that an "optimisation" was
in fact a pessimisation for small numbers of elements in a source list,
compared to not having the optimisation, although with large numbers
of elements in the source list the optimisation was quite beneficial.

He posted his change to comp.lang.python (but not to SF).

Further research has confirmed his assessment that the optimisation only
becomes a net win when the source list has more than 100 elements.

I also found that the optimisation could apply to tuples as well,
but the gains only arrive with source tuples larger than about 320
elements and are nowhere near as significant as the gains with lists,
(~95% gain @ 10000 elements for lists, ~20% gain @ 10000 elements for
tuples) so I haven't proceeded with this.

The code as it was applied the optimisation to list subclasses as
well, and this also appears to be a net loss for all reasonable sized
sources (~80-100% for up to 100 elements, ~20% for more than 500
elements; I tested up to 10000 elements).

Duncan also suggested special casing empty lists, which I've extended
to all empty sequences.

On the basis that list_fill() is only ever called with a list for the
result argument, testing for the source being the destination has
now happens before testing source types.
2003-12-25 13:28:48 +00:00
Hye-Shik Chang 7fc4cf57b8 Fix unicode.rsplit()'s bug that ignores separater on the end of string when
using specialized splitter for 1 char sep.
2003-12-23 09:10:16 +00:00
Skip Montanaro ac4ea13a3a There are places in Python which assume bytes have 8-bits. Formalize that a
bit by checking the value of UCHAR_MAX in Include/Python.h.  There was a
check in Objects/stringobject.c.  Remove that.  (Note that we don't define
UCHAR_MAX if it's not defined as the old test did.)
2003-12-22 16:31:41 +00:00
Hye-Shik Chang 40e9509dc7 Fix broken xmlcharrefreplace by rev 2.204.
(Pointy hat goes to perky)
2003-12-22 01:31:13 +00:00
Hye-Shik Chang 4a264fb054 SF #859573: Reduce compiler warnings on gcc 3.2 and above. 2003-12-19 01:59:56 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger 64958a15d7 Guido grants a Christmas wish:
sorted() becomes a regular function instead of a classmethod.
2003-12-17 20:43:33 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger 81ad32e435 Speedup set.update by using the override mode for PyDict_Merge(). 2003-12-15 21:16:06 +00:00
Hye-Shik Chang 3ae811b57d Add rsplit method for str and unicode builtin types.
SF feature request #801847.
Original patch is written by Sean Reifschneider.
2003-12-15 18:49:53 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger fb4e33a8e2 Improve algorithm for set.difference when the input is not a set. 2003-12-15 13:23:55 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger 438e02dfc8 * Refactor set.__contains__()
* Use Py_RETURN_NONE everywhere.
* Fix-up the firstpass check for the tp_print slot.
2003-12-13 19:38:47 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger 0deab62704 Refactor set.discard() and set.remove(). 2003-12-13 18:53:18 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger 6a8bbdbe7b Improve argument checking speed. 2003-12-13 15:21:55 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger dc5ae11abf Use dictionary specific looping idiom where possible.
Simplifies and speeds-up the code.
2003-12-13 14:46:46 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger 0c66967e3d Simplify previous checkin -- a new function was not needed. 2003-12-13 13:31:55 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger d3ae6729e7 Use PyDict_Contains() instead of PySequence_Contains(). 2003-12-13 11:58:56 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger 8f5cdaa784 * Added a new method flag, METH_COEXIST.
* Used the flag to optimize set.__contains__(), dict.__contains__(),
  dict.__getitem__(), and list.__getitem__().
2003-12-13 11:26:12 +00:00
Hye-Shik Chang 19cb193244 Fix memory error treatment correctly. Going to dsu_fail causes
deallocating garbage pointers; saved_ob_item and empty_ob_item.
(Reviewed by Raymond Hettinger)
2003-12-10 07:31:08 +00:00
Michael W. Hudson 1df0f654e8 Fixes and tests for various "holding pointers when arbitrary Python code
can run" bugs as discussed in

[ 848856 ] couple of new list.sort bugs
2003-12-04 11:25:46 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 6c9e130524 - Removed FutureWarnings related to hex/oct literals and conversions
and left shifts.  (Thanks to Kalle Svensson for SF patch 849227.)
  This addresses most of the remaining semantic changes promised by
  PEP 237, except for repr() of a long, which still shows the trailing
  'L'.  The PEP appears to promise warnings for operations that
  changed semantics compared to Python 2.3, but this is not
  implemented; we've suffered through enough warnings related to
  hex/oct literals and I think it's best to be silent now.
2003-11-29 23:52:13 +00:00