* Fix the french used in the email documentation
The french used in one of the example was either machine translated a while ago or written by someone who does not speak french. Fixed it by using grammatically correct french.
Detect email address parsing errors and return empty tuple to indicate the parsing error (old API). This fixes or at least ameliorates CVE-2023-27043.
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Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith <greg@krypto.org>
The getopt module exists since the initial revision of the Python
source code (1990). The optparse module was added to Python 2.3. When
Python 2.7 added the 3rd argparse module, the optparse module was
soft deprecated. Soft deprecate the getopt module.
mock: Rename `wait_until_any_call` to `wait_until_any_call_with`
Rename the method to be more explicit that it expects the args and
kwargs to wait for.
mock: Add `ThreadingMock` class
Add a new class that allows to wait for a call to happen by using
`Event` objects. This mock class can be used to test and validate
expectations of multithreading code.
It uses two attributes for events to distinguish calls with any argument
and calls with specific arguments.
The calls with specific arguments need a lock to prevent two calls in
parallel from creating the same event twice.
The timeout is configured at class and constructor level to allow users
to set a timeout, we considered passing it as an argument to the
function but it could collide with a function parameter. Alternatively
we also considered passing it as positional only but from an API
caller perspective it was unclear what the first number meant on the
function call, think `mock.wait_until_called(1, "arg1", "arg2")`, where
1 is the timeout.
Lastly we also considered adding the new attributes to magic mock
directly rather than having a custom mock class for multi threading
scenarios, but we preferred to have specialised class that can be
composed if necessary. Additionally, having added it to `MagicMock`
directly would have resulted in `AsyncMock` having this logic, which
would not work as expected, since when if user "waits" on a
coroutine does not have the same meaning as waiting on a standard
call.
Co-authored-by: Karthikeyan Singaravelan <tir.karthi@gmail.com>
Command Prompt (CMD Shell) and older versions of PowerShell
require double quotes and single quotes inside the string.
This form also works on linux and macOS.
Brings `pathlib.Path.is_dir()` and `in line with `os.DirEntry.is_dir()`, which
will be important for implementing generic path walking and globbing.
Likewise `is_file()`.
This new exception type is raised instead of `NotImplementedError` when
a path operation is not supported. It can be raised from `Path.readlink()`,
`symlink_to()`, `hardlink_to()`, `owner()` and `group()`. In a future
version of pathlib, it will be raised by `AbstractPath` for these methods
and others, such as `AbstractPath.mkdir()` and `unlink()`.
* bpo-44530: Document the change in MAKE_FUNCTION behavior
Fixes dis module documentation for MAKE_FUNCTION due to 2f180ce2cb (bpo-44530, released as part of 3.11) removes the qualified name at TOS
Deprecate two methods of creating typing.TypedDict classes with 0 fields using the functional syntax: `TD = TypedDict("TD")` and `TD = TypedDict("TD", None)`. Both will be disallowed in Python 3.15. To create a TypedDict class with 0 fields, either use `class TD(TypedDict): pass` or `TD = TypedDict("TD", {})`.
Deprecate creating a typing.NamedTuple class using keyword arguments to denote the fields (`NT = NamedTuple("NT", x=int, y=str)`). This will be disallowed in Python 3.15. Use the class-based syntax or the functional syntax instead.
Two methods of creating `NamedTuple` classes with 0 fields using the functional syntax are also deprecated, and will be disallowed in Python 3.15: `NT = NamedTuple("NT")` and `NT = NamedTuple("NT", None)`. To create a `NamedTuple` class with 0 fields, either use `class NT(NamedTuple): pass` or `NT = NamedTuple("NT", [])`.
The syntax used in the current docs (a / before any args) is invalid.
I think the right approach is for the arguments to arbitrary
filter functions to be treated as positional-only, meaning that users
can supply filter functions with any names for the argument. tarfile.py
only calls the filter function with positional arguments.
* GH-104554: Add RTSPS support to `urllib/parse.py`
RTSPS is the permanent scheme defined in
https://www.iana.org/assignments/uri-schemes/uri-schemes.xhtml
alongside RTSP and RTSPU schemes.
* 📜🤖 Added by blurb_it.
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Co-authored-by: blurb-it[bot] <43283697+blurb-it[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Adds start_offset, cache_offset, end_offset, baseopcode,
baseopname, jump_target and oparg to dis.Instruction.
Also slightly improves the disassembly output by allowing
opnames to overflow into the space reserved for opargs.
Mostly, these are changes so that we use shorter sentences and shorter paragraphs. In particular, I've tried to make the first sentence introducing each object in the typing API short and declarative.
This commit introduces a 'walk-and-match' strategy for handling glob patterns that include a non-terminal `**` wildcard, such as `**/*.py`. For this example, the previous implementation recursively walked directories using `os.scandir()` when it expanded the `**` component, and then **scanned those same directories again** when expanded the `*.py` component. This is wasteful.
In the new implementation, any components following a `**` wildcard are used to build a `re.Pattern` object, which is used to filter the results of the recursive walk. A pattern like `**/*.py` uses half the number of `os.scandir()` calls; a pattern like `**/*/*.py` a third, etc.
This new algorithm does not apply if either:
1. The *follow_symlinks* argument is set to `None` (its default), or
2. The pattern contains `..` components.
In these cases we fall back to the old implementation.
This commit also replaces selector classes with selector functions. These generators directly yield results rather calling through to their successors. A new internal `Path._glob()` method takes care to chain these generators together, which simplifies the lazy algorithm and slightly improves performance. It should also be easier to understand and maintain.
Disallow thread creation and fork at interpreter finalization.
in the following functions, check if interpreter is finalizing and raise `RuntimeError` with appropriate message:
* `_thread.start_new_thread` and thus `threading`
* `posix.fork`
* `posix.fork1`
* `posix.forkpty`
* `_posixsubprocess.fork_exec` when a `preexec_fn=` is supplied.
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Co-authored-by: blurb-it[bot] <43283697+blurb-it[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith <greg@krypto.org>
Remove the following old functions to configure the Python
initialization, deprecated in Python 3.11:
* PySys_AddWarnOptionUnicode()
* PySys_AddWarnOption()
* PySys_AddXOption()
* PySys_HasWarnOptions()
* PySys_SetArgvEx()
* PySys_SetArgv()
* PySys_SetPath()
* Py_SetPath()
* Py_SetProgramName()
* Py_SetPythonHome()
* Py_SetStandardStreamEncoding()
* _Py_SetProgramFullPath()
Most of these functions are kept in the stable ABI, except:
* Py_SetStandardStreamEncoding()
* _Py_SetProgramFullPath()
Update Doc/extending/embedding.rst and Doc/extending/extending.rst to
use the new PyConfig API.
_testembed.c:
* check_stdio_details() now sets stdio_encoding and stdio_errors
of PyConfig.
* Add definitions of functions removed from the API but kept in the
stable ABI.
* test_init_from_config() and test_init_read_set() now use
PyConfig_SetString() instead of PyConfig_SetBytesString().
Remove _Py_ClearStandardStreamEncoding() internal function.
Add ".. class::" markups in the wave documentation.
* Reformat also wave.py (minor PEP 8 changes).
* Remove redundant "import struct": it's already imported at top
level.
* Remove wave.rst from .nitignore
`PurePath.match()` now handles the `**` wildcard as in `Path.glob()`, i.e. it matches any number of path segments.
We now compile a `re.Pattern` object for the entire pattern. This is made more difficult by `fnmatch` not treating directory separators as special when evaluating wildcards (`*`, `?`, etc), and so we arrange the path parts onto separate *lines* in a string, and ensure we don't set `re.DOTALL`.
Co-authored-by: Hugo van Kemenade <hugovk@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
Add a keyword-only *follow_symlinks* parameter to `pathlib.Path.glob()` and`rglob()`.
When *follow_symlinks* is `None` (the default), these methods follow symlinks except when evaluating "`**`" wildcards. When set to true or false, symlinks are always or never followed, respectively.
* Remove the Lib/test/imghdrdata/ directory.
* Copy 5 pictures (gif, png, ppm, pgm, xbm) from removed
Lib/test/imghdrdata/ to a new Lib/test/tkinterdata/ directory.
* Update Sphinx from 4.5 to 6.2 in Doc/requirements.txt.
On Linux where the `subprocess` module can use the `vfork` syscall for
faster spawning, prevent the parent process from blocking other threads
by dropping the GIL while it waits for the vfork'ed child process `exec`
outcome. This prevents spawning a binary from a slow filesystem from
blocking the rest of the application.
Fixes#104372.
* socket_helper.transient_internet() no longer imports nntplib to
catch nntplib.NNTPTemporaryError.
* ssltests.py no longer runs test_nntplib.
* "make quicktest" no longer runs test_nntplib.
* WASM: remove nntplib from OMIT_NETWORKING_FILES.
* Remove mentions to nntplib in the email documentation.