Keep the old private _PyCFunctionFastWithKeywords name (Python 3.7)
as an alias to the new public name PyCFunctionFastWithKeywords
(Python 3.13a4).
_PyCFunctionWithKeywords doesn't exist in Python 3.13a3, whereas
_PyCFunctionFastWithKeywords was removed in Python 3.13a4.
The charset name "Windows-31J" is registered in the IANA Charset Registry[1]
and is implemented in Python as the cp932 codec.
[1] https://www.iana.org/assignments/charset-reg/windows-31J
Signed-off-by: Masayuki Moriyama <masayuki.moriyama@miraclelinux.com>
* test.bisect_cmd now exit with code 0 on success, and code 1 on
failure. Before, it was the opposite.
* test.bisect_cmd now runs the test worker process with
-X faulthandler.
* regrtest RunTests: Add create_python_cmd() and bisect_cmd()
methods.
Fix the exceptions raised by posixpath.commonpath
Raise ValueError, not IndexError when passed an empty iterable. Raise
TypeError, not ValueError when passed None.
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 change essentially replaces usage of `%1` with `%~1`, which removes
quotes, if any. Without this change, the if statements fail due to
the quotes mangling the syntax.
Additionally, this change works around comma being treated as a parameter
delimiter in test.bat by escaping commas at time of parsing. Tested
combinations of rt and regrtest arguments, all seems to work as before
but now you can specify commas in arguments like "-uall,extralargefile".
* 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
* bpo-38364: unwrap partialmethods just like we unwrap partials
The inspect.isgeneratorfunction, inspect.iscoroutinefunction and inspect.isasyncgenfunction already unwrap functools.partial objects, this patch adds support for partialmethod objects as well.
Also: Rename _partialmethod to __partialmethod__.
Since we're checking this attribute on arbitrary function-like objects,
we should use the namespace reserved for core Python.
---------
Co-authored-by: Petr Viktorin <encukou@gmail.com>
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.
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.
Part of the PEP 730 work to add iOS support.
This change lays the groundwork for introducing iOS/tvOS/watchOS
frameworks; it includes the structural refactoring needed so that iOS
branches can be added into in a subsequent PR.
Summary of changes:
* Updates config.sub to the 2024-01-01 release. This is the "as
released" version of config.sub.
* Adds a RESSRCDIR variable to allow sharing of macOS and iOS Makefile
steps.
* Adds an INSTALLTARGETS variable so platforms can customise which
targets are actually installed. This will be used to exclude certain
targets (e.g., binaries, manfiles) from iOS framework installs.
* Adds a PYTHONFRAMEWORKINSTALLNAMEPREFIX variable; this is used as
the install name for the library. This is needed to allow for iOS
frameworks to specify an @rpath-based install name.
* Evaluates MACHDEP earlier in the configure process so that
ac_sys_system is available.
* Modifies _PYTHON_HOST_PLATFORM evaluation for cross-platform builds
so that the CPU architecture is differentiated from the host
identifier. This will be used to generate a _PYTHON_HOST_PLATFORM
definition that includes ABI information, not just CPU architecture.
* Differentiates between SOABI_PLATFORM and PLATFORM_TRIPLET.
SOABI_PLATFORM is used in binary module names, and includes the ABI,
but not the OS or CPU architecture (e.g.,
math.cpython-313-iphonesimulator.dylib). PLATFORM_TRIPLET is used
as the sys._multiarch value, and on iOS will contains the ABI and
architecture (e.g., iphoneos-arm64). This differentiation hasn't
historically been needed because while macOS is a multiarch platform,
it uses a bare darwin as PLATFORM_TRIPLE.
* Removes the use of the deprecated -Wl,-single_module flag when
compiling macOS frameworks.
* Some whitespace normalisation where there was a mix of spaces and tabs
in a single block.