and replaces them with a new API verify(). As a result the regression
suite will also perform its tests in optimization mode.
Written by Marc-Andre Lemburg. Copyright assigned to Guido van Rossum.
except that it always returns Unicode objects.
A new C API PyObject_Unicode() is also provided.
This closes patch #101664.
Written by Marc-Andre Lemburg. Copyright assigned to Guido van Rossum.
sys.prefix + 'config/Makefile'. When building Python for the first
time, these files aren't there, so the files from the build tree have
to be used instead; this file adds an entry point for specifying that
the build tree files should be used. (Perhaps 'set_python_build' should
should be preceded with an underscore?)
__getattr__() method, which clearly (like the other methods) was
intended to pass the __getattr__() call on to the self.err object,
mistakenly returned getattr(self, self.err) rather than
getattr(self.err, attr). Since self.err is not a string, this always
raises a TypeError. Apparently that doesn't bother for the one
attribute for which __getattr__() is actually called ('__coerce__'),
but it broke the rich comparisons stuff that I'm trying to get into
shape, so I'm fixing this now. (I could also simply remove the
__getattr__() method, but fixing it seems more in the spirit of what
the ComparableException class is trying to do.)
for done[n] can be integers as well as strings, but the code
concatenates them with strings (fixed by adding a str()) and calls
string.strip() on them (fixed by rearranging the logic)
(Presumably this wasn't noticed previously because parse_makefile()
was only called on Modules/Makefile, which contains no integer-valued
variables.)
produce a list of unique filenames:
"While attempting to build an RPM using distutils on Python 2.0,
rpm complained about duplicate files. The following patch fixed
that problem.
in case the parameters are out of bounds and fixes error handling
for .count(), .startswith() and .endswith() for the case of
mixed string/Unicode objects.
This patch adds Python style index semantics to PyUnicode_Count()
indices (including the special handling of negative indices).
The patch is an extended version of patch #103249 submitted
by Michael Hudson (mwh) on SF. It also includes new test cases.
message, and tries to make the messages more consistent and helpful when
the wrong number of arguments or duplicate keyword arguments are supplied.
Comes with more tests for test_extcall.py and and an update to an error
message in test/output/test_pyexpat.
uppercase strings also when the IGNORECASE flag is set (bug #128899)
(also added test cases for recently fixed bugs to the regression suite
-- or in other words, check in re_tests.py too...)
This is slightly controversial, but after reading the argumentation in
the bug tracker for and against, I believe this is the right solution.
Let me know if it breaks for you, and how.
(bugs #115903, #115696)
This is based on a patch by Darrel Gallion. I'm not 100%
sure about this fix, but I haven't managed to come up with
any test case it cannot handle...
Ping apparently doesn't check in Accepted patches, so I'm doing this
for him.
According to Ping: The name of the controller class should be
"Konqueror", not "Konquerer". (See the website
http://www.konqueror.org/.)
Header
Dougfort's comments: httplib does not include ':port ' in the HTTP 1.1
'Host:' header. This causes problems if the server is not listening
on Port 80. The test case I use is the login to /manage under Zope,
with Zope listening on port 8080. Zope returns a <frameset> with the
<frame> source URLs lacking the :8080.
-- added some more docstrings
-- fixed typo in scanner class (#125531)
-- the multiline flag (?m) should't affect the \Z operator (#127259)
-- fixed non-greedy backtracking bug (#123769, #127259)
-- added sre.DEBUG flag (currently dumps the parsed pattern structure)
-- fixed a couple of glitches in groupdict (the #126587 memory leak
had already been fixed by AMK)
appends to list of filters instead of inserting at the front. This
is useful to add a filter with a lower priority than -W options.
- Cosmetic improvements to a docstring and an error message.
The ASCII-art diagram at the top of httplib contains a backslash at
the end of a line, which causes Python to remove the newline. This
one-character patch adds a space after the backslash so it will
appear at the end of the line in the docstring as intended.
pid across threads (but in that case, it's still the same process, and so
still sharing the "template" cache in tempfile.py). Repaired that, and
added a new std test.
On Linux, someone please run that standalone with more files and/or more
threads; e.g.,
python lib/test/test_threadedtempfile.py -f 1000 -t 10
to run with 10 threads each creating (and deleting) 1000 temp files.
Tested on Windows. Should be tested on Linux. Should also be
tested on some platform without threads (I simulated that by
making the "import thread" fail, but that's not the same as
actually doing it!).
with spaces in filename.
I changed the module to use string methods instead of the string
module. Also, instead of stripping the last character of the filename
(assuming this is the linefeed), I strip trailing whitespace (assuming
creating files with trailing whitespace in their name cannot possibly
be a wise idea).
(Note that I believe that /F's "workaround for broken uuencoders" is
no longer needed since the recent fix to binascii.c, but I'll leave it
in since it appears pretty harmless.)
codec to test all charmap codec features.
As side-effect of moving the test codec into a new module, the encodings
package codec import mechanism is checked as well.
Wasn't built on Windows; not in config.c either.
Module init function missing DL_EXPORT magic.
test_xreadline output file obviously wrong (started w/ "test_xrl").
test program very unclear about what was expected.
variant that never needs to "search from the right".
Also fixed unlikely memory leak in get_line, if string size overflows INTMAX.
Also new std test test_bufio to make sure .readline() works.
the mapping dictionaries can now contain 1-n mappings, meaning
that character ordinals may be mapped to strings or Unicode object,
e.g. 0x0078 ('x') -> u"abc", causing the ordinal to be replaced by
the complete string or Unicode object instead of just one character.
Another feature introduced by the patch is that of mapping oridnals to
the emtpy string. This allows removing characters.
The patch is different from patch #103100 in that it does not cause a
performance hit for the normal use case of 1-1 mappings.
Written by Marc-Andre Lemburg, copyright assigned to Guido van Rossum.
the urljoin() function, which exercises the urlparse() and urlunparse()
functions as side effects.
(Moshe, why did we have perfectly empty tests checked in for this?)
urljoin(): Make this conform to RFC 1808 for all examples given in that
RFC (both "Normal" and "Abnormal"), so long as that RFC does
not conflict the older RFC 1630, which also specified
relative URL resolution.
This closes SF bug #110832 (Jitterbug PR#194).
an empty keywords dictionary (via apply() or the extended call syntax),
the keywords dict should be ignored. If the keywords dict is not empty,
TypeError should be raised. (Between the restructuring of the call
machinery and this patch, an empty dict in this situation would trigger
a SystemError via PyErr_BadInternalCall().)
Added regression tests to detect errors for this.
codec to not apply Latin-1 mappings for keys which are not found
in the mapping dictionaries, but instead treat them as undefined
mappings.
The patch was originally written by Martin v. Loewis with some
additional (cosmetic) changes and an updated test script
by Marc-Andre Lemburg.
The standard codecs were recreated from the most current files
available at the Unicode.org site using the Tools/scripts/gencodec.py
tool.
This patch closes the bugs #116285 and #119960.
1. When running in verbose mode, if any test happens to pass, print
a warning that the apparent success may be bogus (stdout isn't
compared in verbose mode). Been fooled by that too often.
2. When a test fails because the expected stdout doesn't match the
actual stdout, print as much of stdout as did match before the
first failing write. Else we get failures of the form "expected
'a', got 'b'" and a glance at the expected output file shows
500 instances of 'a' -- no idea where it failed, and, as in #1,
trying to run in verbose mode instead doesn't help because
stdout isn't compared then.
the logic. That resulted in a bug. My previous getopt checkin repaired
the bug but left the sorting. The solution is significantly simpler if
we don't bother sorting at all, so this checkin gets rid of the sort and
the code that relied on it.
Christmas present to myself: the bisect module didn't define what
happened if the new element was already in the list. It so happens
that it inserted the new element "to the right" of all equal elements.
Since it wasn't defined, among other bad implications it was a mystery
how to use bisect to determine whether an element was already in the
list (I've seen code that *assumed* "to the right" without justification).
Added new methods bisect_left and insort_left that insert "to the left"
instead; made the old names bisect and insort aliases for the new names
bisect_right and insort_right; beefed up docstrings to explain what
these actually do; and added a std test for the bisect module.
- implement hasAttribute and hasAttributeNS (1.7)
- Node.replaceChild(): Update the sibling nodes to point to newChild. Set
the .nextSibling attribute on oldChild instead of adding a .newChild
attribute (1.9).
information from the Expat library that is not part of its public API.
Do not print this information as the format of the string may (and will)
change as Expat evolves.
Add additional tests to make sure the ParserCreate() function raises the
right exceptions on illegal parameters.
give minidom.py behaviour that complies with the DOM Level 1 REC,
which says that when a node newChild is added to the tree, "if the
newChild is already in the tree, it is first removed."
pulldom.py is patched to use the public minidom interface instead
of setting .parentNode itself. Possibly this reduces pulldom's
efficiency; someone else will have to pronounce on that.
so we can't use it.
While I'm at it, got rid of string module use. (Found several new
hard special cases for a hypothetical conversion tool: from string
import join, find, rfind; and a local assignment "find=string.find".)
required to work around restrictions on the arguments of
u.translate():
1) don't pass the deletions argument if it's empty;
2) convert table to Unicode if s is Unicode.
This fixes SF bug #124060.
bugs #126161 and 123634).
The solution doesn't use the unicode-escape encoding; that has other
problems (it seems not 100% reversible). Rather, it transforms the
input Unicode object slightly before encoding it using
raw-unicode-escape, so that the decoding will reconstruct the original
string: backslash and newline characters are translated into their
\uXXXX counterparts.
This is backwards incompatible for strings containing backslashes, but
for some of those strings, the pickling was already broken.
obsolete!).
Fix a bug in ftpwrapper.retrfile() where somehow ftplib.error_perm was
assumed to be a string. (The fix applies str().)
Also break some long lines and change the output from test() slightly.
Make Node inherit from xml.dom.Node to pick up the NodeType values
defined by the W3C recommendation.
When raising AttributeError, be sure to provide the name of the attribute
that does not exist.
Node.normalize(): Make sure we do not allow an empty text node to survive
as the first child; update the sibling links properly.
_getElementsByTagNameNSHelper(): Make recursive calls using the right
number of parameters.
Attr.__setattr__(): Be sure to update name and nodeName at the same time
since they are synonyms for this node type.
AttributeList: Renamed to NamedNodeMap (AttributeList maintained as an
alias). Compute the length attribute dynamically to allow
the underlying structures to mutate.
AttributeList.item(): Call .keys() on the dictionary rather than using
self.keys() for performance.
AttributeList.setNamedItem(), .setNamedItemNS():
Added methods.
Text.splitText():
Added method.
DocumentType:
Added implementation class.
DOMImplementation:
Added implementation class.
Document.appendChild(): Do not allow a second document element to be added.
Document.documentElement: Find this dynamically, so that one can be
removed and another added.
Document.unlink(): Clear the doctype attribute.
_get_StringIO(): Only use the StringIO module; cStringIO does not support
Unicode.
objects; uses minidom if one is not provided to the constructor.
parse(): Pick up the default_bufsize default value dynamically so that
the value in the module may be (meaningfully) changed at runtime.
This (partially) closes patch #102477.
can't be imported. This makes StringIO.py work with Jython.
Also, get rid of the string module by converting to string methods.
Shorten some lines by using augmented assignment where appropriate.
encodings package aliases mapping dictionary rather than in the
internal cache used by the search function.
This enables aliases to take advantage of the full normalization
process applied to encoding names which was previously not available.
The patch restricts alias registration to new aliases. Existing
aliases cannot be overridden anymore.
roundtrip(): Show the offending syntax tree when things break; this makes
it a little easier to debug the module by adding test cases.
(Still need better tests for this module, but there's not enough time
today.)
socket in httplib.py.
The bug reports that on Windows, you must pass sock._sock to the
socket.ssl() call. But on Unix, you must pass sock itself. (sock is
a wrapper on Windows but not on Unix; the ssl() call wants the real
socket object, not the wrapper.)
So we see if sock has an _sock attribute and if so, extract it.
Unfortunately, the submitter of the bug didn't confirm that this patch
works, so I'll just have to believe it (can't test it myself since I
don't have OpenSSL on Windows set up, and that's a nontrivial thing I
believe).
- Use new Error class (subclass of RuntimeError so is backward
compatible) which is raised when RuntimeError used to be raised.
- Report original attribute name in error messages instead of name
mangled with namespace URL.
also test join method of 8-bit strings.
Also changed the test() function to (1) compare the types of the
expected and actual result, and (2) in verbose mode, print the repr()
of the output.
testAAA(),
testAAB(): Added checks that the results are right.
testTooManyDocumentElements(): Added code to actually test this.
testCloneElementDeep()
testCloneElementShallow(): Filled these in with test code.
_testCloneElementCopiesAttributes(),
_setupCloneElement(): Helper functions used with the other
testCloneElement*() functions.
testCloneElementShallowCopiesAttributes(): No longer a separate test;
_setupCloneElement() uses _testCloneElementCopiesAttributes() to
test that this is always done.
testNormalize(): Added to check Node.normalize().
behavior.
Added support for the Attr.ownerElement attribute.
Everywhere: Define constant object attributes in the classes rather than
on the instances during object construction. This reduces the amount of
work needed for object construction and destruction; these need to be
lightweight operations on a DOM.
Node._get_firstChild(),
Node._get_lastChild(): Return None if there are no children (required for
compliance with DOM level 1).
Node.insertBefore(): If refChild is None, append the new node instead of
failing (required for compliance). Also, update the sibling
relationships. Return the inserted node (required for compliance).
Node.appendChild(): Update the parent of the appended node.
Node.replaceChild(): Actually replace the old child! Update the parent
and sibling relationships of both the old and new children. Return
the replaced child (required for compliance).
Node.normalize(): Implemented the normalize() method. Required for
compliance, but missing from the release. Useful for joining
adjacent Text nodes into a single node for easier processing.
Node.cloneNode(): Actually make this work. Don't let the new node share
the instance __dict__ with the original. Do proper recursion if
doing a "deep" clone. Move the attribute cloning out of the base
class, since only Element is supposed to have attributes.
Node.unlink(): Simplify handling of child nodes for efficiency, and
remove the attribute handling since only Element nodes support
attributes.
Attr.cloneNode(): Extend this to clear the ownerElement attribute in
the clone.
AttributeList.items(),
AttributeList.itemsNS(): Slight performance improvement (avoid lambda).
Element.cloneNode(): Extend Node.cloneNode() with support for the
attributes. Clone the Attr objects after creating the underlying
clone.
Element.unlink(): Clean out the attributes here instead of in the base
class, since this is the only class that will have them.
Element.toxml(): Adjust to create only one AttributeList instance; minor
efficiency improvement.
_nssplit(): No need to re-import string.
Document.__init__(): No longer needed once constant attributes are
initialized in the class itself.
Document.createElementNS(),
Document.createAttributeNS(): Use the defined constructors rather than
directly access the classes.
_get_StringIO(): New function. Create an output StringIO using the most
efficient available flavor.
parse(),
parseString(): Import pulldom here instead of in the public namespace of
the module.
file uploads.
In response to SF bugs 110674 and 119806, and discussions on
python-dev, we are removing the self.lines attribute from the
FieldStorage class. Specifically touched where methods __init__(),
read_lines_to_eof(), and skip_lines().
No one can remember why self.lines was added. Technically, it's part
of the public interface for the class, but it was never documented.
It's possible clever or nosy code will break because of this, but it
was decided to remove it and see who complains.
This resolution also closes the second half of the cgi.py entry in PEP
42. The first half of that PEP concerns specifically binary file
uploads, where there may be no end-of-line marker for a very long
time. This patch does not address that issue.
embedded code objects (e.g. functions) rather than the generated code
object. This change means that the compiler generates code for
everything at the end, rather then generating code for each function
as it finds it. Implementation note: _convert_LOAD_CONST in
pyassem.py must be change to call getCode().
Other changes follow. Several changes creates extra edges between
basic blocks to reflect control flow for loops and exceptions. These
missing edges had gone unnoticed because they do not affect the
current compilation process.
pyassem.py:
Add _enable_debug() and _disable_debug() methods that print
instructions and blocks to stdout as they are generated.
Add edges between blocks for instructions like SETUP_LOOP,
FOR_LOOP, etc.
Add pruneNext to get rid of bogus edges remaining after
unconditional transfer ops (e.g. JUMP_FORWARD)
Change repr of Block to omit block length.
pycodegen.py:
Make sure a new block is started after FOR_LOOP, etc.
Change assert implementation to use RAISE_VARARGS 1 when there is
no user-specified failure output.
misc.py:
Implement __contains__ and copy for Set.
When a method is called with no regular arguments and * args, defer
the first arg is subclass check until after the * args have been
expanded.
N.B. The CALL_FUNCTION implementation is getting really hairy; should
review it to see if it can be simplified.
-- fixed negative lookbehind to work correctly at the beginning
of the target string (bug #117242)
-- improved syntax check; you can no longer refer to a group
inside itself (bug #110866)
Reformatting -- long lines, "[ ]" -> "[]", a few indentation nits.
Replace calls to Node function (which constructed ast nodes) with
calls to actual constructors imported from ast module.
Optimize com_node (most frequently used method) for the common case --
the appropriate method is found in _dispatch.
Fix com_augassign to use class object's rather than node names
(rendered invalid by recent changes to ast)
Remove expensive tests for sequence-ness in com_stmt and
com_append_stmt. These tests should never fail; if they do, something
is really broken and exception will be raised elsewhere.
Fix com_stmt and com_append_stmt to use isinstance rather than
testing's type slot of ast node (this slot disappeared with recent
changes to ast).
Betlehem, verified by Peter Funk. Fixes preservation of language
search order lost due to use of dictionary keys instead of a list.
Closes SF bug #116964.
1.5.2. The compiler generates code for the version of the interpreter
it is run under.
ast.py:
Print and Printnl add dest attr for extended print
new node AugAssign for augmented assignments
new nodes ListComp, ListCompFor, and ListCompIf for list
comprehensions
pyassem.py:
add work around for string-Unicode comparison raising UnicodeError
on comparison of two objects in code object's const table
pycodegen.py:
define VERSION, the Python major version number
get magic number using imp.get_magic() instead of hard coding
implement list comprehensions, extended print, and augmented
assignment; augmented assignment uses Delegator classes (see
doc string)
fix import and tuple unpacking for 1.5.2
transformer.py:
various changes to support new 2.0 grammar and old 1.5 grammar
add debug_tree helper than converts and symbol and token numbers
to their names
First, only report garbage that the GC cannot free. Second, only report
the number of objects found, not their repr(). People can dig deeper on
their own if they find a leak.
- don't close the fp, since that appears to also close the socket
- join the original url with the redirect reponse to deal with
relative redirect URL
wrap two socket ops in try/except to turn them into URLErrors, so that
client code need only catch one exception.
in HTTPError.__del__ only close fp if fp is not None
style changes:
- use f(*args) instead of apply(f, args)
- use __super_init instead of super.__init__(self, ...)
Let's hope this is correct (I'm not sure why the sys.platform would be
'Darwin1.2' rather than 'darwin1', which seems to be the convention).
Someone with Darwin please test this!
libm result is 0). Cautiously add a few libm exception test cases:
1. That exp(-huge) returns 0 without exception.
2. That exp(+huge) triggers OverflowError.
3. That sqrt(-1) raises ValueError specifically (apparently under glibc linked
with -lieee, it was raising OverflowError due to an accident of the way
mathmodule.c's CHECK() macro happened to deal with Infs and NaNs under gcc).
support for extension types, not classes.
pickle(): If the type is a class or if the reduction function is not
callable, raise a TypeError.
constructor(): If the constructor is not callable, raise TypeError.
This (partially) closes SourceForge patch #101859.
didn't bother to close the files. This caused the new test_wave test to fail
under Windows, as Windows won't let you delete a file that's open. Fixed
that by ensuring the wave read & write classes' .close() and __del__ methods
close files that were opened by their constructors.
driver code, so that each test gets this; it had been done inconsistently.
Remove the lines that set the variables holding dom objects to None; not
needed since the interpreter cleans up locals on function return.
Lownds. (#101816)
[Note: I'm not sure that this is really the right fix. Surely Darwin
doesn't require you to say "python.exe" everywhere??? Even Windows
doesn't! Or am I misunderstanding the point?]
tokenize.py has always used naive regexps for matching string literals,
and that appears to trigger the sre recursion limit on Skip's platform (he
has very long single-line string literals). Replaced all of tokenize.py's
string regexps with the "unrolled" forms used in IDLE, where they're known to
handle even absurd (multi-megabyte!) string literals without trouble. See
Friedl's book for explanation (at heart, the naive regexps create a backtracking
choice point for each character in the literal, while the unrolled forms create
none).
correct order of constructor args in createAttributeNS
pulldom: use symbolic names for uri and localnames
correct usage of createAttribute and setAttributeNode signatures.
callers of feed will get a SAXException.
In close, feed the last chunk first before calling endDocument, so that
the parser may report errors before the end of the document. Don't do
anything in a nested parser.
Don't call endDocument in parse; that will be called in close.
Use self._source for finding the SystemID; XML_GetBase will be cleared in
case of an error.
read the header from the .au file and do a sanity check
pass only the data to the audio device
call flush() so that program does not exit until playback is complete
call all the other methods to verify that they work minimally
call setparameters with a bunch of bugs arguments
linuxaudiodev.c:
use explicit O_WRONLY and O_RDONLY instead of 1 and 0
add a string name to each of the entries in audio_types[]
add AFMT_A_LAW to the list of known formats
add x_mode attribute to lad object, stores imode from open call
test ioctl return value as == -1, not < 0
in read() method, resize string before return
add getptr() method, that calls does ioctl on GETIPTR or GETOPTR
depending on x_mode
in setparameters() method, do better error checking and raise
ValueErrors; also use ioctl calls recommended by Open Sound
System Programmer's Guido (www.opensound.com)
use PyModule_AddXXX to define names in module
as a parameter; this was the only use of the base
constructor or surgical alteration of another object's
data attribute.
This change simplifies the constructor requirements for subclasses.
This relates to SourceForge bug #115928.
Script to regenerate platform-specific modules of constants.
[I moved common paths to variables for easier reading by humans. -- FLD]
This closes SourceForge patch #101781.
raise ValueError. Checked in the patch as far as it went, but also changed
all of ints, longs and floats to raise ZeroDivisionError instead when raising
0 to a negative number. This is what 754-inspired stds require, as the "true
result" is an infinity obtained from finite operands, i.e. it's a singularity.
Also changed float pow to not be so timid about using its square-and-multiply
algorithm. Note that what math.pow does is unrelated to what builtin pow
does, and will still vary by platform.
1. repr(license) will no longer print to stdout and read from stdin;
you have to use license(). `license` is a short message explaining
this.
2. Use lazy initialization so that startup isn't slowed down by the
search for the LICENSE file.
3. repr(license) actually returns the desired string, rather than
printing to stdout and returning ''. (Why didn't we think of this
before?)
4. Use the pythonlabs license URL as the license fallback instead of
the CNRI license handle.
apparently not considered a terminal, and so isatty(3) returns false. So we
skip the test for ttyness of the master side and just check the slave side,
which should really be a terminal.
CGI scripts should *not* use /usr/bin/env, since on systems that don't
come standard with Python installed, Python isn't on the default $PATH.
Too bad that this breaks on Linux, where Python is in /usr/bin which
is on the default path -- the point is that you must manually edit
your CGI scripts when you install them.
about how it would be nice to write absolute paths to the temporary
byte-compilation script, but this doesn't work because it screws up the
trailing-slash trickery done to 'prefix' in build_py's 'byte_compile()'
method.
Fixed to use 'execute()' instead of 'os.remove()' to remove the temporary
script: now it doesn't blow up in dry-run mode!
invalid proxy setting.
Minor change to call of unknown_url; always pass data argument
explicitly since data defaults to None.
PEP 42: Add as a feature that urllib handle proxy setting that contain
only the host and port of the proxy.
Linux distributions which provide both KDE and Gnome set this environment
variable even if the user is not using KDE. We do *not* want to start
Konquerer if KDE is not running unless the user actually tells us to!
by default (since compiling at install time works just fine). Details:
- added 'compile' and 'optimize' options
- added 'byte_compile()' method
- changed 'get_outputs()' so it includes bytecode files
A lot of the code added is very similar to code in install_lib.py;
would be nice to factor it out further.
choice between (compile, no-compile) * (optimize=0, optimize=1,
optimize=2). Details:
- added --no-compile option to complement --compile, which has
been there for ages
- changed --optimize (which never worked) to a value option, which
expects 0, 1, or 2
- renamed 'bytecompile()' method to 'byte_compile()', and beefed
it up to handle both 'compile' and 'optimize' options
- fix '_bytecode_filenames()' to respect the new options