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.)
* Rename _Py_UOpsAbstractInterpContext to _Py_UOpsContext and _Py_UOpsSymType to _Py_UopsSymbol.
* #define shortened form of _Py_uop_... names for improved readability.
Part of the work on PEP 738: Adding Android as a supported platform.
* Rename the LIBPYTHON variable to MODULE_LDFLAGS, to more accurately
reflect its purpose.
* Edit makesetup to use MODULE_LDFLAGS when linking extension modules.
* Edit the Makefile so that extension modules depend on libpython on
Android and Cygwin.
* Restore `-fPIC` on Android. It was removed several years ago with a
note that the toolchain used it automatically, but this is no longer
the case. Omitting it causes all linker commands to fail with an error
like `relocation R_AARCH64_ADR_PREL_PG_HI21 cannot be used against
symbol '_Py_FalseStruct'; recompile with -fPIC`.
PyTime_t no longer uses an arbitrary unit, it's always a number of
nanoseconds (64-bit signed integer).
* Rename _PyTime_FromNanosecondsObject() to _PyTime_FromLong().
* Rename _PyTime_AsNanosecondsObject() to _PyTime_AsLong().
* Remove pytime_from_nanoseconds().
* Remove pytime_as_nanoseconds().
* Remove _PyTime_FromNanoseconds().
Remove references to the old names _PyTime_MIN
and _PyTime_MAX, now that PyTime_MIN and
PyTime_MAX are public.
Replace also _PyTime_MIN with PyTime_MIN.
* Rename `_testinternalcapi.get_{uop,counter}_optimizer` to `new_*_optimizer`
* Use `_PyUOpName()` instead of` _PyOpcode_uop_name[]`
* Add `target` to executor iterator items -- `list(ex)` now returns `(opcode, oparg, target, operand)` quadruples
* Add executor methods `get_opcode()` and `get_oparg()` to get `vmdata.opcode`, `vmdata.oparg`
* Define a helper for printing uops, and unify various places where they are printed
* Add a hack to summarize_stats.py to fix legacy uop names (e.g. `POP_TOP` -> `_POP_TOP`)
* Define helpers in `test_opt.py` for accessing the set or list of opnames of an executor
<pycore_time.h> include is no longer needed to get the PyTime_t type
in internal header files. This type is now provided by <Python.h>
include. Add <pycore_time.h> includes to C files instead.
Restore support of such combination, disabled in gh-113796.
csv.writer() now quotes empty fields if delimiter is a space and
skipinitialspace is true and raises exception if quoting is not possible.
This change adds an `eval_breaker` field to `PyThreadState`. The primary
motivation is for performance in free-threaded builds: with thread-local eval
breakers, we can stop a specific thread (e.g., for an async exception) without
interrupting other threads.
The source of truth for the global instrumentation version is stored in the
`instrumentation_version` field in PyInterpreterState. Threads usually read the
version from their local `eval_breaker`, where it continues to be colocated
with the eval breaker bits.
lseek() always returns 0 for character pseudo-devices like
`/dev/urandom` (for other non-regular files, e.g. `/dev/stdin`, it
always returns -1, to which CPython reacts by raising appropriate
exceptions). They are thus technically seekable despite not having seek
semantics.
When calling read() on e.g. an instance of `io.BufferedReader` that
wraps such a file, `BufferedReader` reads ahead, filling its buffer,
creating a discrepancy between the number of bytes read and the internal
`tell()` always returning 0, which previously resulted in e.g.
`BufferedReader.tell()` or `BufferedReader.seek()` being able to return
positions < 0 even though these are supposed to be always >= 0.
Invariably keep the return value non-negative by returning
max(former_return_value, 0) instead, and add some corresponding tests.
This adds a safe memory reclamation scheme based on FreeBSD's "GUS" and
quiescent state based reclamation (QSBR). The API provides a mechanism
for callers to detect when it is safe to free memory that may be
concurrently accessed by readers.
The ID of the owning thread (`rlock_owner`) may be accessed by
multiple threads without holding the underlying lock; relaxed
atomics are used in place of the previous loads/stores.
The number of times that the lock has been acquired (`rlock_count`)
is only ever accessed by the thread that holds the lock; we do not
need to use atomics to access it.
The GC keeps track of the number of allocations (less deallocations)
since the last GC. This buffers the count in thread-local state and uses
atomic operations to modify the per-interpreter count. The thread-local
buffering avoids contention on shared state.
A consequence is that the GC scheduling is not as precise, so
"test_sneaky_frame_object" is skipped because it requires that the GC be
run exactly after allocating a frame object.
* gh-114572: Fix locking in cert_store_stats and get_ca_certs
cert_store_stats and get_ca_certs query the SSLContext's X509_STORE with
X509_STORE_get0_objects, but reading the result requires a lock. See
https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/23224 for details.
Instead, use X509_STORE_get1_objects, newly added in that PR.
X509_STORE_get1_objects does not exist in current OpenSSLs, but we can
polyfill it with X509_STORE_lock and X509_STORE_unlock.
* Work around const-correctness problem
* Add missing X509_STORE_get1_objects failure check
* Add blurb
Makes _PyType_Lookup thread safe, including:
Thread safety of the underlying cache.
Make mutation of mro and type members thread safe
Also _PyType_GetMRO and _PyType_GetBases are currently returning borrowed references which aren't safe.
This adds `Py_XBEGIN_CRITICAL_SECTION` and
`Py_XEND_CRITICAL_SECTION`, which accept a possibly NULL object as an
argument. If the argument is NULL, then nothing is locked or unlocked.
Otherwise, they behave like `Py_BEGIN/END_CRITICAL_SECTION`.
Use critical sections to make deque methods that operate on mutable
state thread-safe when the GIL is disabled. This is mostly accomplished
by using the @critical_section Argument Clinic directive, though there
are a few places where this was not possible and critical sections had
to be manually acquired/released.
Add PythonFinalizationError exception. This exception derived from
RuntimeError is raised when an operation is blocked during the Python
finalization.
The following functions now raise PythonFinalizationError, instead of
RuntimeError:
* _thread.start_new_thread()
* subprocess.Popen
* os.fork()
* os.fork1()
* os.forkpty()
Morever, _winapi.Overlapped finalizer now logs an unraisable
PythonFinalizationError, instead of an unraisable RuntimeError.
For the most part, these changes make is substantially easier to backport subinterpreter-related code to 3.12, especially the related modules (e.g. _xxsubinterpreters). The main motivation is to support releasing a PyPI package with the 3.13 capabilities compiled for 3.12.
A lot of the changes here involve either hiding details behind macros/functions or splitting up some files.
We add _winapi.BatchedWaitForMultipleObjects to wait for larger numbers of handles.
This is an internal module, hence undocumented, and should be used with caution.
Check the docstring for info before using BatchedWaitForMultipleObjects.
When replace() method is called on a subclass of datetime, date or time,
properly call derived constructor. Previously, only the base class's
constructor was called.
Also, make sure to pass non-zero fold values when creating subclasses in
various methods. Previously, fold was silently ignored.
Immediate merits:
* eliminate complex workarounds for 'z' format support
(NOTE: mpdecimal recently added 'z' support, so this becomes
efficient in the long term.)
* fix 'z' format memory leak
* fix 'z' format applied to 'F'
* fix missing '#' format support
Suggested and prototyped by Stefan Krah.
Fixes gh-114563, gh-91060
Co-authored-by: Stefan Krah <skrah@bytereef.org>
Now the special comparison methods like `__eq__` and `__lt__` return
NotImplemented if one of comparands is date and other is datetime
instead of ignoring the time part and the time zone or forcefully
return "not equal" or raise TypeError.
It makes comparison of date and datetime subclasses more symmetric
and allows to change the default behavior by overriding
the special comparison methods in subclasses.
It is now the same as if date and datetime was independent classes.
On macOS the statvfs interface returns block counts as
32-bit integers, and that results in bad reporting for
larger disks.
Therefore reimplement statvfs in terms of statfs, which
does use 64-bit integers for block counts.
Tested using a sparse filesystem image of 100TB.
Biased reference counting maintains two refcount fields in each object:
`ob_ref_local` and `ob_ref_shared`. The true refcount is the sum of these two
fields. In some cases, when refcounting operations are split across threads,
the ob_ref_shared field can be negative (although the total refcount must be
at least zero). In this case, the thread that decremented the refcount
requests that the owning thread give up ownership and merge the refcount
fields.
This changes a number of internal usages of `PyDict_SetDefault` to use `PyDict_SetDefaultRef`.
Co-authored-by: Erlend E. Aasland <erlend.aasland@protonmail.com>
Starts adding thread safety to dict objects.
Use @critical_section for APIs which are exposed via argument clinic and don't directly correlate with a public C API which needs to acquire the lock
Use a _lock_held suffix for keeping changes to complicated functions simple and just wrapping them with a critical section
Acquire and release the lock in an existing function where it won't be overly disruptive to the existing logic
This marks dead ThreadHandles as non-joinable earlier in
`PyOS_AfterFork_Child()` before we execute any Python code. The handles
are stored in a global linked list in `_PyRuntimeState` because `fork()`
affects the entire process.
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>
The new `PyList_GetItemRef` is similar to `PyList_GetItem`, but returns
a strong reference instead of a borrowed reference. Additionally, if the
passed "list" object is not a list, the function sets a `TypeError`
instead of calling `PyErr_BadInternalCall()`.
* gh-112529: Remove PyGC_Head from object pre-header in free-threaded build
This avoids allocating space for PyGC_Head in the free-threaded build.
The GC implementation for free-threaded CPython does not use the
PyGC_Head structure.
* The trashcan mechanism uses the `ob_tid` field instead of `_gc_prev`
in the free-threaded build.
* The GDB libpython.py file now determines the offset of the managed
dict field based on whether the running process is a free-threaded
build. Those are identified by the `ob_ref_local` field in PyObject.
* Fixes `_PySys_GetSizeOf()` which incorrectly incorrectly included the
size of `PyGC_Head` in the size of static `PyTypeObject`.
PyObject_GetBuffer() now raises a SystemError if called with
PyBUF_READ or PyBUF_WRITE as flags. These flags should
only be used with the PyMemoryView_* C API.
Signed-off-by: Soumendra Ganguly <soumendraganguly@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith <greg@krypto.org>
Co-authored-by: Petr Viktorin <encukou@gmail.com>
`threading.Lock` is now the underlying class and is constructable rather than the old
factory function. This allows for type annotations to refer to it which had no non-ugly
way to be expressed prior to this.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith <greg@krypto.org>
* use the ParkingLot API to manage waiting threads
* use Argument Clinic's critical section directive to protect queue methods
* remove unnecessary overflow check
Co-authored-by: Erlend E. Aasland <erlend.aasland@protonmail.com>
Use a ring buffer instead of a Python list in order to simplify the
process of making queue.SimpleQueue thread-safe in free-threaded
builds. The ring buffer implementation has no places where critical
sections may be released.
Only set filename to cwd if it was caused by failed chdir(cwd).
_fork_exec() now returns "noexec:chdir" for failed chdir(cwd).
Co-authored-by: Robert O'Shea <PurityLake@users.noreply.github.com>
This comment appears to have been mistakenly copied from what is now
called iobase_check_closed() in commit 4d9aec0220.
Also unite the iobase_check_closed() code with the relevant comment.
Co-authored-by: Serhiy Storchaka <storchaka@gmail.com>
If *trackfd* is False, the file descriptor specified by *fileno*
will not be duplicated.
Co-authored-by: Erlend E. Aasland <erlend@python.org>
Co-authored-by: Petr Viktorin <encukou@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Serhiy Storchaka <storchaka@gmail.com>
On Windows, set _O_NOINHERIT flag on file descriptors
created by os.pipe() and io.WindowsConsoleIO.
Add test_pipe_spawnl() to test_os.
Co-authored-by: Zackery Spytz <zspytz@gmail.com>
Previously the C implementation of pickle.Pickler and pickle.Unpickler
classes did not have such methods and they could only be used if
they were overloaded in subclasses or set as instance attributes.
Fixed calling super().persistent_id() and super().persistent_load() in
subclasses of the C implementation of pickle.Pickler and pickle.Unpickler
classes. It no longer causes an infinite recursion.
When an `StopIteration` raises into `asyncio.Future`, this will cause
a thread to hang. This commit address this by not raising an exception
and silently transforming the `StopIteration` with a `RuntimeError`,
which the caller can reconstruct from `fut.exception().__cause__`
Remove LibreSSL specific workaround ifdefs from `_ssl.c` and delete the non-version-specific `_ssl_data.h` file (relevant for OpenSSL < 1.1.1, which we no longer support per PEP 644).
Co-authored-by: Christian Heimes <christian@python.org>
Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith <greg@krypto.org>
gh-113750: Fix object resurrection on free-threaded builds
This avoids the undesired re-initializing of fields like `ob_gc_bits`,
`ob_mutex`, and `ob_tid` when an object is resurrected due to its
finalizer being called.
This change has no effect on the default (with GIL) build.
This splits part of Modules/gcmodule.c of into Python/gc.c, which
now contains the core garbage collection implementation. The Python
module remain in the Modules/gcmodule.c file.
* gh-113536: Expose `os.waitid` on macOS
This API has been available on macOS for a long time, but was
explicitly excluded due to unspecified problems with the API
in ancient versions of macOS.
* Document that the API is available on macOS starting in Python 3.13
The length field of StgDictObject for Structure class contains now
the total number of items in ffi_type_pointer.elements (excluding
the trailing null).
The old behavior of using the number of elements in the parent class can
cause the array to be truncated when it is copied, especially when there
are multiple layers of subclassing.
Co-authored-by: Serhiy Storchaka <storchaka@gmail.com>
First fix resolve situation when pyexpat module (which contains expat_CAPI
capsule) deallocates before _elementtree, so we need to hold a strong
reference to pyexpat module to.
Second fix resolve situation when module state is deallocated before
deallocation of XMLParser instances, which uses module state to clear
some stuff.
Add support for `os.POSIX_SPAWN_CLOSEFROM` and
`posix_spawn_file_actions_addclosefrom_np` and have the `subprocess` module use
them when available. This means `posix_spawn` can now be used in the default
`close_fds=True` situation on many platforms.
Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith [Google LLC] <greg@krypto.org>
* Allow posix_spawn to inherit environment form parent environ variable.
With this change, posix_spawn call can behave similarly to execv with regards to environments when used in subprocess functions.
The `PyThreadState_Clear()` function must only be called with the GIL
held and must be called from the same interpreter as the passed in
thread state. Otherwise, any Python objects on the thread state may be
destroyed using the wrong interpreter, leading to memory corruption.
This is also important for `Py_GIL_DISABLED` builds because free lists
will be associated with PyThreadStates and cleared in
`PyThreadState_Clear()`.
This fixes two places that called `PyThreadState_Clear()` from the wrong
interpreter and adds an assertion to `PyThreadState_Clear()`.
* bpo-43120: Add a number of LOG_* constants to syslog
This adds a number of syslog facilities to the syslogmodule.c.
These values are available on macOS.
* Switch contant documentation to the data directive
This fixes a CI warning and matches the pattern
used in the documentation for ``os``.
* Update Doc/library/syslog.rst
Co-authored-by: Hugo van Kemenade <hugovk@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
* gh-112529: Use atomic operations for `gcstate->collecting`
The `collecting` field in `GCState` is used to prevent overlapping garbage
collections within the same interpreter. This is updated to use atomic
operations in order to be thread-safe in `--disable-gil` builds.
The GC code is refactored a bit to support this. More of the logic is pushed
down to `gc_collect_main()` so that we can safely order the logic setting
`collecting`, the selection of the generation, and the invocation of callbacks
with respect to the atomic operations and the (future) stop-the-world pauses.
The change uses atomic operations for both `--disable-gil` and the default
build (with the GIL) to avoid extra `#ifdef` guards and ease the maintenance
burden.
* gh-51944: Add some macOS constants to termios
This changeset adds all public constants in <termio.h>
and <sys/termios.h> on macOS that weren't present
already.
Based on the macOS 14.2 SDK
Co-authored-by: Serhiy Storchaka <storchaka@gmail.com>
* Implement _Py_HashPointerRaw() as a static inline function.
* Add Py_HashPointer() tests to test_capi.test_hash.
* Keep _Py_HashPointer() function as an alias to Py_HashPointer().
Set MAX_STRUCT_SIZE to 32 in stgdict.c when on Arm platforms.
This because on Arm platforms structs with at most 4 elements of any
floating point type values can be passed through registers. If the type
is double the maximum size of the struct is 32 bytes.
On x86-64 Linux, it's maximum 16 bytes hence we need to differentiate.
Restore `subprocess`'s intended use of `vfork()` by default for performance on Linux;
also fixes the behavior of `extra_groups=[]` which was unintentionally broken in 3.12.0:
Fixed a performance regression in 3.12's :mod:`subprocess` on Linux where it
would no longer use the fast-path ``vfork()`` system call when it could have
due to a logic bug, instead falling back to the safe but slower ``fork()``.
Also fixed a security bug introduced in 3.12.0. If a value of ``extra_groups=[]``
was passed to :mod:`subprocess.Popen` or related APIs, the underlying
``setgroups(0, NULL)`` system call to clear the groups list would not be made
in the child process prior to ``exec()``.
The security issue was identified via code inspection in the process of
fixing the first bug. Thanks to @vain for the detailed report and
analysis in the initial bug on Github.
Co-authored-by: Serhiy Storchaka <storchaka@gmail.com>
Work around a macOS bug, limit zlib crc32 calls to 1GiB.
Without this, `zlib.crc32` and `binascii.crc32` could produce incorrect
results on multi-gigabyte inputs depending on the macOS version's Apple
supplied zlib implementation.
Use a fraction internally in the _PyTime API to reduce the risk of
integer overflow: simplify the fraction using Greatest Common
Divisor (GCD). The fraction API is used by time functions:
perf_counter(), monotonic() and process_time().
For example, QueryPerformanceFrequency() usually returns 10 MHz on
Windows 10 and newer. The fraction SEC_TO_NS / frequency =
1_000_000_000 / 10_000_000 can be simplified to 100 / 1.
* Add _PyTimeFraction type.
* Add functions:
* _PyTimeFraction_Set()
* _PyTimeFraction_Mul()
* _PyTimeFraction_Resolution()
* No longer check "numer * denom <= _PyTime_MAX" in
_PyTimeFraction_Set(). _PyTimeFraction_Mul() uses _PyTime_Mul()
which handles integer overflow.
* Move _PyRuntimeState.time to _posixstate.ticks_per_second and
time_module_state.ticks_per_second.
* Add time_module_state.clocks_per_second.
* Rename _PyTime_GetClockWithInfo() to py_clock().
* Rename _PyTime_GetProcessTimeWithInfo() to py_process_time().
* Add process_time_times() helper function, called by
py_process_time().
* os.times() is now always built: no longer rely on HAVE_TIMES.
If OpenSSL was built without PSK support, the python TLS-PSK
methods will raise "NotImplementedError" if called.
Add a constant "ssl.HAS_PSK" to check if TLS-PSK is supported
Prevents a segmentation fault in registered hooks for the readline library, but only when the readline module is loaded inside an isolated sub interpreter. The module is single-phase init so loading it fails, but not until the module init function has already run, where the readline hooks get registered.
The readlinestate_global macro was error-prone to PyImport_FindModule returning NULL and crashing in about 18 places. I could reproduce 1 easily, but this PR replaces the macro with a function and adds error conditions to the other functions.
Add support for TLS-PSK (pre-shared key) to the ssl module.
---------
Co-authored-by: Oleg Iarygin <oleg@arhadthedev.net>
Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith <greg@krypto.org>
Revert commit c8c0afc713 (PR #94532),
which moved `struct.Struct` initialisation from `Struct.__init__` to `Struct.__new__`.
This caused issues with code in the wild that subclasses `struct.Struct`.
* Run again test_ast_recursion_limit() on WASI platform.
* Add _testinternalcapi.get_c_recursion_remaining().
* Fix test_ast and test_sys_settrace: test_ast_recursion_limit() and
test_trace_unpack_long_sequence() now adjust the maximum recursion
depth depending on the the remaining C recursion.
This avoids:
python3.13 Tools/unicode/makeunicodedata.py
python3.13: can't open file '.../build/debug/Tools/unicode/makeunicodedata.py': [Errno 2] No such file or directory
make: *** [Makefile:1498: regen-unicodedata] Error 2
Re-run `make regen-unicodedata` to update the script path in generated files.
In non-debug more the check for the "errors" argument is skipped,
and then PyUnicode_AsUTF8() can fail, but its result was not checked.
Co-authored-by: Victor Stinner <vstinner@python.org>
* Fix crash when encoding is not string or None.
* Fix crash when both line_buffering and write_through raise exception
when converted ti int.
* Add a number of tests for constructor and reconfigure() method
with invalid arguments.
_PyDict_Pop_KnownHash(): remove the default value and the return type
becomes an int.
Co-authored-by: Stefan Behnel <stefan_ml@behnel.de>
Co-authored-by: Antoine Pitrou <pitrou@free.fr>
The `@critical_section` directive instructs Argument Clinic to generate calls
to `Py_BEGIN_CRITICAL_SECTION()` and `Py_END_CRITICAL_SECTION()` around the
bound function. In `--disable-gil` builds, these calls will lock and unlock
the `self` object. They are no-ops in the default build.
This is used in one place (`_io._Buffered.close`) as a demonstration.
Subsequent PRs will use it more widely in the `_io.Buffered` bindings.
* Split list_extend() into two sub-functions: list_extend_fast() and
list_extend_iter().
* list_inplace_concat() no longer has to call Py_DECREF() on the
list_extend() result, since list_extend() now returns an int.
In PyObject_GC_Del, in Py_DEBUG mode, when warning about GC objects that
were not properly untracked before starting destruction, take care to
untrack the object _before_ warning, to avoid triggering a GC run and
causing the problem the code tries to warn about. Also make sure to save and
restore any pending exceptions, which the warning would otherwise clobber or
trigger an assertion error on.
Fix undefined behaviour in datetime.time.fromisoformat() when parsing a string without a timezone. 'tzoffset' is not assigned to by parse_isoformat_time if it returns 0, but time_fromisoformat then passes tzoffset to another function, which is undefined behaviour (even if the function in question does not use the value).
This adds a macro `Py_CAN_START_THREADS` that corresponds to the Python
function `test.support.threading_helper.can_start_thread()`. WASI and
some Emscripten builds do not have a working pthread implementation.
This macro is used to guard the critical sections C API tests that
require a working threads implementation.
Drop posix.fallocate() under WASI.
The underlying POSIX function, posix_fallocate(), was found to vary too
much between implementations to remain in WASI. As such, while it was
available in WASI preview1, it's been dropped in preview2.
Critical sections are helpers to replace the global interpreter lock
with finer grained locking. They provide similar guarantees to the GIL
and avoid the deadlock risk that plain locking involves. Critical
sections are implicitly ended whenever the GIL would be released. They
are resumed when the GIL would be acquired. Nested critical sections
behave as if the sections were interleaved.
* Revert "gh-111089: Use PyUnicode_AsUTF8() in Argument Clinic (#111585)"
This reverts commit d9b606b3d0.
* Revert "gh-111089: Use PyUnicode_AsUTF8() in getargs.c (#111620)"
This reverts commit cde1071b2a.
* Revert "gh-111089: PyUnicode_AsUTF8() now raises on embedded NUL (#111091)"
This reverts commit d731579bfb.
* Revert "gh-111089: Add PyUnicode_AsUTF8() to the limited C API (#111121)"
This reverts commit d8f32be5b6.
* Revert "gh-111089: Use PyUnicode_AsUTF8() in sqlite3 (#111122)"
This reverts commit 37e4e20eaa.
Joining a thread now ensures the underlying OS thread has exited. This is required for safer fork() in multi-threaded processes.
---------
Co-authored-by: blurb-it[bot] <43283697+blurb-it[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Use Argument Clinic for time.clock_gettime() and
time.clock_gettime_ns() functions.
Benchmark on time.clock_gettime_ns():
import time
import pyperf
runner = pyperf.Runner()
runner.timeit(
'clock_gettime_ns(CLOCK_MONOTONIC_COARSE)',
setup='import time; clock_gettime_ns=time.clock_gettime_ns; CLOCK_MONOTONIC_COARSE=6',
stmt='clock_gettime_ns(CLOCK_MONOTONIC_COARSE)')
Result on Linux with CPU isolation:
Mean +- std dev: [ref] 134 ns +- 1 ns -> [change] 55.7 ns +- 1.4 ns: 2.41x faster
Replace most of calls of _PyErr_WriteUnraisableMsg() and some
calls of PyErr_WriteUnraisable(NULL) with PyErr_FormatUnraisable().
Co-authored-by: Victor Stinner <vstinner@python.org>
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.
Replace PyUnicode_AsUTF8AndSize() with PyUnicode_AsUTF8() to remove
the explicit check for embedded null characters.
The change avoids to have to include explicitly <string.h> to get the
strlen() function when using a recent version of the limited C API.
This is partly to clear this stuff out of pystate.c, but also in preparation for moving some code out of _xxsubinterpretersmodule.c. This change also moves this stuff to the internal API (new: Include/internal/pycore_crossinterp.h). @vstinner did this previously and I undid it. Now I'm re-doing it. :/
* 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>
* gh-106320: Re-add _PyLong_FromByteArray(), _PyLong_AsByteArray() and _PyLong_GCD() to the public header files since they are used by third-party packages and there is no efficient replacement.
See https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/111140
See https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/111139
* gh-111262: Re-add _PyDict_Pop() to have a C-API until a new public one is designed.
* Move existing tests for PySys_GetObject() and PySys_SetObject() into
specialized files.
* Add test for PySys_GetXOptions() using _testcapi.
* Add tests for PySys_FormatStdout(), PySys_FormatStderr(),
PySys_WriteStdout() and PySys_WriteStderr() using ctypes.
Add PyUnicode_AsUTF8() function to the limited C API.
multiprocessing posixshmem now uses PyUnicode_AsUTF8() instead of
PyUnicode_AsUTF8AndSize(): the extension is built with the limited C
API. The function now raises an exception if the filename contains an
embedded null character instead of truncating silently the filename.
Build the _multiprocessing.posixshmem extension with the Limited C
API.
* Add <errno.h> include.
* Replace PyUnicode_AsUTF8() with PyUnicode_AsUTF8AndSize().
There were a few things I did in gh-110565 that need to be fixed. I also forgot to add tests in that PR.
(Note that this PR exposes a refleak introduced by gh-110246. I'll take care of that separately.)
* Replace PyStructSequence_SET_ITEM() with
PyStructSequence_SetItem().
* Replace PyTuple_GET_SIZE() with PyTuple_Size().
* Replace PyTuple_GET_ITEM() with PyTuple_GetItem().
Move the following private functions and structures to
pycore_modsupport.h internal C API:
* _PyArg_BadArgument()
* _PyArg_CheckPositional()
* _PyArg_NoKeywords()
* _PyArg_NoPositional()
* _PyArg_ParseStack()
* _PyArg_ParseStackAndKeywords()
* _PyArg_Parser structure
* _PyArg_UnpackKeywords()
* _PyArg_UnpackKeywordsWithVararg()
* _PyArg_UnpackStack()
* _Py_ANY_VARARGS()
Changes:
* Python/getargs.h now includes pycore_modsupport.h to export
functions.
* clinic.py now adds pycore_modsupport.h when one of these functions
is used.
* Add pycore_modsupport.h includes when a C extension uses one of
these functions.
* Define Py_BUILD_CORE_MODULE in C extensions which now include
directly or indirectly (via code generated by Argument Clinic)
pycore_modsupport.h:
* _csv
* _curses_panel
* _dbm
* _gdbm
* _multiprocessing.posixshmem
* _sqlite.row
* _statistics
* grp
* resource
* syslog
* _testcapi: bad_get() no longer uses METH_FASTCALL calling
convention but METH_VARARGS. Replace _PyArg_UnpackStack() with
PyArg_ParseTuple().
* _testcapi: add PYTESTCAPI_NEED_INTERNAL_API macro which is defined
by _testcapi sub-modules which need the internal C API
(pycore_modsupport.h): exceptions.c, float.c, vectorcall.c,
watchers.c.
* Remove Include/cpython/modsupport.h header file.
Include/modsupport.h no longer includes the removed header file.
* Fix mypy clinic.py
* Only add Py_MOD_PER_INTERPRETER_GIL_SUPPORTED to limited C API
version 3.13.
* errno, xxlimited and _ctypes_test extensions now need the limited C
API version 3.13 to get Py_MOD_PER_INTERPRETER_GIL_SUPPORTED. They
now include standard header files explicitly: <errno.h>, <string.h>
and <stdio.h>.
* xxlimited_35: Remove Py_mod_multiple_interpreters slot,
incompatible with limited C API version 3.5.