See the latest version of getrandom() manual page:
http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/getrandom.2.html#NOTES
The behavior when a call to getrandom() that is blocked while reading from
/dev/urandom is interrupted by a signal handler depends on the
initialization state of the entropy buffer and on the request size, buflen.
If the entropy is not yet initialized, then the call will fail with the
EINTR error. If the entropy pool has been initialized and the request size
is large (buflen > 256), the call either succeeds, returning a partially
filled buffer, or fails with the error EINTR. If the entropy pool has been
initialized and the request size is small (buflen <= 256), then getrandom()
will not fail with EINTR. Instead, it will return all of the bytes that
have been requested.
Note: py_getrandom() calls getrandom() with flags=0.
The fix for Issue #21217 introduced a regression that caused
`inspect.getsource` to return incorrect results on nested
functions. The root cause of the regression was due to
switching the implementation to analyze the underlying
bytecode instead of the source code.
This commit switches things back to analyzing the source code
in a more complete way. The original bug and the regression
are both fixed by the new source code analysis.
This commit simplifies async/await tokenization in tokenizer.c,
tokenize.py & lib2to3/tokenize.py. Previous solution was to keep
a stack of async-def & def blocks, whereas the new approach is just
to remember position of the outermost async-def block.
This change won't bring any parsing performance improvements, but
it makes the code much easier to read and validate.
* Tests that index.html is served, rather than an automatic directory listing
* Tests that there is no extra data sent after the response
Patch by Martin Panter.
This commit fixes how one-line async-defs and defs are tracked
by tokenizer. It allows to correctly parse invalid code such
as:
>>> async def f():
... def g(): pass
... async = 10
and valid code such as:
>>> async def f():
... async def g(): pass
... await z
As a consequence, is is now possible to have one-line
'async def foo(): await ..' functions:
>>> async def foo(): return await bar()