The warning emitted by the Python parser for a numeric literal
immediately followed by keyword has been changed from deprecation
warning to syntax warning.
Fix parsing a numeric literal immediately (without spaces) followed by
"not in" keywords, like in "1not in x". Now the parser only emits
a warning, not a syntax error.
We're no longer using _Py_IDENTIFIER() (or _Py_static_string()) in any core CPython code. It is still used in a number of non-builtin stdlib modules.
The replacement is: PyUnicodeObject (not pointer) fields under _PyRuntimeState, statically initialized as part of _PyRuntime. A new _Py_GET_GLOBAL_IDENTIFIER() macro facilitates lookup of the fields (along with _Py_GET_GLOBAL_STRING() for non-identifier strings).
https://bugs.python.org/issue46541#msg411799 explains the rationale for this change.
The core of the change is in:
* (new) Include/internal/pycore_global_strings.h - the declarations for the global strings, along with the macros
* Include/internal/pycore_runtime_init.h - added the static initializers for the global strings
* Include/internal/pycore_global_objects.h - where the struct in pycore_global_strings.h is hooked into _PyRuntimeState
* Tools/scripts/generate_global_objects.py - added generation of the global string declarations and static initializers
I've also added a --check flag to generate_global_objects.py (along with make check-global-objects) to check for unused global strings. That check is added to the PR CI config.
The remainder of this change updates the core code to use _Py_GET_GLOBAL_IDENTIFIER() instead of _Py_IDENTIFIER() and the related _Py*Id functions (likewise for _Py_GET_GLOBAL_STRING() instead of _Py_static_string()). This includes adding a few functions where there wasn't already an alternative to _Py*Id(), replacing the _Py_Identifier * parameter with PyObject *.
The following are not changed (yet):
* stop using _Py_IDENTIFIER() in the stdlib modules
* (maybe) get rid of _Py_IDENTIFIER(), etc. entirely -- this may not be doable as at least one package on PyPI using this (private) API
* (maybe) intern the strings during runtime init
https://bugs.python.org/issue46541
@pablogsal, sorry i failed to rebase to main, so i recreated https://github.com/python/cpython/pull/22190#issuecomment-1024633392
> PyRun_InteractiveOne\*() functions allow to explicitily set fd instead of stdin.
but stdin was hardcoded in readline call.
> This patch does not fix target file for prompt unlike original bpo one : prompt fd is unrelated to tokenizer source which could be read only. It is more of a bugfix regarding the docs : actual documentation say "prompt the user" so one would expect prompt to go on stdout not a file for both PyRun_InteractiveOne\*() and PyRun_InteractiveLoop\*().
Automerge-Triggered-By: GH:pablogsal