This commit prefixes `__dataclass` to several things in the locals dict:
- Names like `_dflt_` (which cause trouble, see first test)
- Names like `_type_` (not known to be able to cause trouble)
- `_return_type` (not known to able to cause trouble)
- `_HAS_DEFAULT_FACTORY` (which causes trouble, see second test)
In addition, this removes `MISSING` from the locals dict. As far as I can tell, this wasn't needed even in the initial implementation of dataclasses.py (and tests on that version passed with it removed). This makes me wary :-)
This is basically a continuation of #96151, where fixing this was welcomed in https://github.com/python/cpython/pull/98143#issuecomment-1280306360
In PEM, we need to parse until error and then suppress `PEM_R_NO_START_LINE`, because PEM allows arbitrary leading and trailing data. DER, however, does not. Parsing until error and suppressing `ASN1_R_HEADER_TOO_LONG` doesn't quite work because that error also covers some cases that should be rejected.
Instead, check `BIO_eof` early and stop the loop that way.
Automerge-Triggered-By: GH:Yhg1s
Previously, this used to fail:
```py
from typing import *
T = TypeVar("T")
P = ParamSpec("P")
class X(Generic[P]):
f: Callable[P, int]
Y = X[[int, T]]
Z = Y[str]
```
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
Also use `raise TimeOut from <CancelledError instance>` so that the CancelledError is set
in the `__cause__` field rather than in the `__context__` field.
Co-authored-by: Guido van Rossum <gvanrossum@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
* Eliminate all remaining uses of Py_SIZE and Py_SET_SIZE on PyLongObject, adding asserts.
* Change layout of size/sign bits in longobject to support future addition of immortal ints and tagged medium ints.
* Add functions to hide some internals of long object, and for setting sign and digit count.
* Replace uses of IS_MEDIUM_VALUE macro with _PyLong_IsCompact().
Use a stack to implement `pathlib.Path.walk()` iteratively instead of recursively to avoid hitting recursion limits on deeply nested trees.
Co-authored-by: Barney Gale <barney.gale@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Brett Cannon <brett@python.org>
GH-25309 enabled SSL_OP_IGNORE_UNEXPECTED_EOF by default, with a comment
that it restores OpenSSL 1.1.1 behavior, but this wasn't quite right.
That option causes OpenSSL to treat transport EOF as the same as
close_notify (i.e. SSL_ERROR_ZERO_RETURN), whereas Python actually has
distinct SSLEOFError and SSLZeroReturnError exceptions. (The latter is
usually mapped to a zero return from read.) In OpenSSL 1.1.1, the ssl
module would raise them for transport EOF and close_notify,
respectively. In OpenSSL 3.0, both act like close_notify.
Fix this by, instead, just detecting SSL_R_UNEXPECTED_EOF_WHILE_READING
and mapping that to the other exception type.
There doesn't seem to have been any unit test of this error, so fill in
the missing one. This had to be done with the BIO path because it's
actually slightly tricky to simulate a transport EOF with Python's fd
based APIs. (If you instruct the server to close the socket, it gets
confused, probably because the server's SSL object is still referencing
the now dead fd?)
This deprecates `st_ctime` fields on Windows, with the intent to change them to contain the correct value in 3.14. For now, they should keep returning the creation time as they always have.
When __getattr__ is defined, python with try to find an attribute using _PyObject_GenericGetAttrWithDict
find nothing is reasonable so we don't need an exception, it will hurt performance.