Commit Graph

23129 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jeremy Hylton 4e54730ed5 Repair badly formatted code. 2002-07-02 18:25:00 +00:00
Tim Peters 6fc13d9595 Finished transitioning to using gc_refs to track gc objects' states.
This was mostly a matter of adding comments and light code rearrangement.
Upon untracking, gc_next is still set to NULL.  It's a cheap way to
provoke memory faults if calling code is insane.  It's also used in some
way by the trashcan mechanism.
2002-07-02 18:12:35 +00:00
Fred Drake 8e8dc419d0 Remove bogus assignment to self.length in NamedNodeMap.__delitem__(). 2002-07-02 17:27:06 +00:00
Fred Drake abe7c1a4af Minor markup adjustments, consistency changes, and shorten a long
line.
2002-07-02 16:17:58 +00:00
Fred Drake 7c1bb9c528 Add refcount info for PyErr_SetFromWindowsErr() and
PyErr_SetFromWindowsErrWithFilename().
2002-07-02 16:16:18 +00:00
Thomas Heller 4f2722ac9b Docs for PyErr_SetFromWindowsErrWithFilename() and
PyErr_SetFromWindowsErr().
Fixes SF# 576016, with additional markup.
2002-07-02 15:47:03 +00:00
Fred Drake b28467b713 Do not depend on pymemcompat.h (was only used for PyXML); Martin likes
it all inline.
2002-07-02 15:44:36 +00:00
Jack Jansen 84262fb1f3 Mac OS X Jaguar (developer preview) seems to have a working getaddrinfo(). 2002-07-02 14:40:42 +00:00
Tim Peters ea405639bf Reserved another gc_refs value for untracked objects. Every live gc
object should now have a well-defined gc_refs value, with clear transitions
among gc_refs states.  As a result, none of the visit_XYZ traversal
callbacks need to check IS_TRACKED() anymore, and those tests were removed.
(They were already looking for objects with specific gc_refs states, and
the gc_refs state of an untracked object can no longer match any other
gc_refs state by accident.)
Added more asserts.
I expect that the gc_next == NULL indicator for an untracked object is
now redundant and can also be removed, but I ran out of time for this.
2002-07-02 00:52:30 +00:00
Fred Drake 7c75bf2090 Bring this back into sync with PyXML revision 1.58. 2002-07-01 14:02:31 +00:00
Tim Peters 19b74c7868 OK, I couldn't stand it <0.5 wink>: removed all uncertainty about what's
in gc_refs, even at the cost of putting back a test+branch in
visit_decref.

The good news:  since gc_refs became utterly tame then, it became
clear that another special value could be useful.  The move_roots() and
move_root_reachable() passes have now been replaced by a single
move_unreachable() pass.  Besides saving a pass over the generation, this
has a better effect:  most of the time everything turns out to be
reachable, so we were breaking the generation list apart and moving it
into into the reachable list, one element at a time.  Now the reachable
stuff stays in the generation list, and the unreachable stuff is moved
instead.  This isn't quite as good as it sounds, since sometimes we
guess wrongly that a thing is unreachable, and have to move it back again.

Still, overall, it yields a significant (but not dramatic) boost in
collection speed.
2002-07-01 03:52:19 +00:00
Tim Peters 93cd83e4ae visit_decref(): Two optimizations.
1. You're not supposed to call this with a NULL argument, although the
   docs could be clearer about that.  The other visit_XYZ() functions
   don't bother to check.  This doesn't either now, although it does
   assert non-NULL-ness now.

2. It doesn't matter whether the object is currently tracked, so don't
   bother checking that either (if it isn't currently tracked, it may
   have some nonsense value in gc_refs, but it doesn't hurt to
   decrement gibberish, and it's cheaper to do so than to make everyone
   test for trackedness).

It would be nice to get rid of the other tests on IS_TRACKED.  Perhaps
trackedness should not be a matter of not being in any gc list, but
should be a matter of being in a new "untracked" gc list.  This list
simply wouldn't be involved in the collection mechanism.  A newly
created object would be put in the untracked list.  Tracking would
simply unlink it and move it into the gen0 list.  Untracking would do
the reverse.  No test+branch needed then.  visit_move() may be vulnerable
then, though, and I don't know how this would work with the trashcan.
2002-06-30 21:31:03 +00:00
Tim Peters 8839617cc9 SF bug #574132: Major GC related performance regression
"The regression" is actually due to that 2.2.1 had a bug that prevented
the regression (which isn't a regression at all) from showing up.  "The
regression" is actually a glitch in cyclic gc that's been there forever.

As the generation being collected is analyzed, objects that can't be
collected (because, e.g., we find they're externally referenced, or
are in an unreachable cycle but have a __del__ method) are moved out
of the list of candidates.  A tricksy scheme uses negative values of
gc_refs to mark such objects as being moved.  However, the exact
negative value set at the start may become "more negative" over time
for objects not in the generation being collected, and the scheme was
checking for an exact match on the negative value originally assigned.
As a result, objects in generations older than the one being collected
could get scanned too, and yanked back into a younger generation.  Doing
so doesn't lead to an error, but doesn't do any good, and can burn an
unbounded amount of time doing useless work.

A test case is simple (thanks to Kevin Jacobs for finding it!):

x = []
for i in xrange(200000):
    x.append((1,))

Without the patch, this ends up scanning all of x on every gen0 collection,
scans all of x twice on every gen1 collection, and x gets yanked back into
gen1 on every gen0 collection.  With the patch, once x gets to gen2, it's
never scanned again until another gen2 collection, and stays in gen2.

Bugfix candidate, although the code has changed enough that I think I'll
need to port it by hand.  2.2.1 also has a different bug that causes
bound method objects not to get tracked at all (so the test case doesn't
burn absurd amounts of time in 2.2.1, but *should* <wink>).
2002-06-30 17:56:40 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 6238d2b024 Patch #569753: Remove support for WIN16.
Rename all occurrences of MS_WIN32 to MS_WINDOWS.
2002-06-30 15:26:10 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis adfa7409f8 Bump required PyXML version to 0.6.5. 2002-06-30 15:08:22 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 7d650ca83b Implement the encoding argument for toxml and toprettyxml.
Document toprettyxml.
2002-06-30 15:05:00 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 2ebfd09e58 Merge from PyXML:
[1.3] Added documentation of the namespace URI for elements with no namespace.
[1.4] New property http://www.python.org/sax/properties/encoding.
[1.5] Support optional string interning in pyexpat.
2002-06-30 07:38:50 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 0e2d881406 Add xml namespace initially (PyXML 1.19). 2002-06-30 07:32:56 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis d1b516c274 Fix spacing. 2002-06-30 07:27:30 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 18476a3740 Merge changes from PyXML:
[1.15]
Added understanding of the feature_validation, feature_external_pes,
and feature_string_interning features.
Added support for the feature_external_ges feature.
Added support for the property_xml_string property.
[1.16]
Made it recognize the namespace prefixes feature.
[1.17]
removed erroneous first line
[1.19]
Support optional string interning in pyexpat.
[1.21]
Restore compatibility with versions of Python that did not support weak
references.  These do not get the cyclic reference fix, but they will
continue to work as they did before.
[1.22]
Activate entity processing unless standalone.
2002-06-30 07:21:24 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis b4fcf4d102 Define PyDoc_STRVAR if it is not available (PyXML 1.54).
Remove support for Python 1.5 (PyXML 1.55).
2002-06-30 06:40:55 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 6b2cf0e5ea Undo usage of PyOS_snprintf (rev. 1.51 of PyXML). 2002-06-30 06:03:35 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger 550fd5d799 Fixed bug 574978 shutil example out of sync with source code 2002-06-30 04:43:20 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger 8a9e8b6d0e Fix bug 575221 referred to dictionary type instead of dict. 2002-06-30 04:32:38 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger 46ac8eb3c8 Code modernization. Replace v=s[i]; del s[i] with single lookup v=s.pop(i) 2002-06-30 03:39:14 +00:00
Fred Drake 78e057a32a Clarify the version information for the unicode() built-in.
Closes SF bug #575272.
2002-06-29 16:06:47 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 1969817486 Another test of long headers. 2002-06-29 15:23:39 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 9546e7972c Oleg Broytmann's support for RFC 2231 encoded parameters, SF patch #549133
New test cases.
2002-06-29 05:58:45 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 12566a8826 Oleg Broytmann's support for RFC 2231 encoded parameters, SF patch #549133
Specifically,

decode_rfc2231(), encode_rfc2231(): Functions to encode and decode RFC
2231 style parameters.

decode_params(): Function to decode a list of parameters.
2002-06-29 05:58:04 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 908dc4bea8 Oleg Broytmann's support for RFC 2231 encoded parameters, SF patch #549133
Specifically,

_formatparam(): Teach this about encoded `param' arguments, which are
a 3-tuple of items (charset, language, value).  language is ignored.

_unquotevalue(): Handle both 3-tuple RFC 2231 values and unencoded
values.

_get_params_preserve(): Decode the parameters before returning them.

get_params(), get_param(): Use _unquotevalue().

get_filename(), get_boundary(): Teach these about encoded (3-tuple)
parameters.
2002-06-29 05:56:15 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 3fdc889e76 test_multilingual(): Test for Header.__unicode__(). 2002-06-29 03:27:27 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 8e69bdac33 __unicode__(): Patch # 541263 by Mikhail Zabaluev, implementation
modified by Barry.
2002-06-29 03:26:58 +00:00
Greg Ward ae64f3adcd Add documentation for new textwrap module. 2002-06-29 02:38:50 +00:00
Greg Ward 8b46c71d5b Typo fix. 2002-06-29 01:23:45 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 566fe9ef66 Track change of begin() to _begin(). 2002-06-28 23:54:30 +00:00
Barry Warsaw b6a9213930 Lots of new and updated tests to check for proper ascii header
folding.  Note that some of the Japanese tests have changed, but I
don't really know if they are correct or not. :(

Someone with Japanese and RFC 2047 expertise, please take a look!
2002-06-28 23:49:33 +00:00
Barry Warsaw ba2577b7f1 _max_append(): When adding the string `s' to its own line, it should
be lstrip'd so that old continuation whitespace is replaced by that
specified in Header's continuation_ws parameter.
2002-06-28 23:48:23 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 766125080f Teach this class about "highest-level syntactic breaks" but only for
headers with no charset or 'us-ascii' charsets.  Actually this is only
partially true: we know about semicolons (but not true parameters) and
we know about whitespace (but not technically folding whitespace).
Still it should be good enough for all practical purposes.

Other changes include:

__init__(): Add a continuation_ws argument, which defaults to a single
space.  Set this to change the whitespace used for continuation lines
when a header must be split.  Also, changed the way header line
lengths are calculated, so that they take into account continuation_ws
(when tabs-expanded) and any provided header_name parameter.  This
should do much better on returning split headers for which the first
and subsequent lines must fit into a specified width.

guess_maxlinelen(): Removed.  I don't think we need this method as
part of the public API.

encode_chunks() -> _encode_chunks(): I don't think we need this one as
part of the public API either.
2002-06-28 23:46:53 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 062749ac57 _split_header(): The code here was terminally broken because it didn't
know anything about RFC 2047 encoded headers.  Fortunately we have a
perfectly good header splitter in Header.encode().  So we just call
that to give us a properly formatted and split header.
Header.encode() didn't know about "highest-level syntactic breaks" but
that's been fixed now too.
2002-06-28 23:41:42 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 7c75c99a10 Simplify HTTPSConnection constructor.
See discussion in SF bug 458463.
2002-06-28 23:38:14 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 13f99d7097 Close SF patch 523944: importing modules with foreign newlines.
Didn't use the patch, because universal newlines support made it easy.
It might be worth fixing the actual problem in the 2.2 maintenance
branch, in which case the patch is still needed.
2002-06-28 23:32:51 +00:00
Fred Drake 2a3d7db93e Added character data buffering to pyexpat parser objects.
Setting the buffer_text attribute to true causes the parser to collect
character data, waiting as long as possible to report it to the Python
callback.  This can save an enormous number of callbacks from C to
Python, which can be a substantial performance improvement.

buffer_text defaults to false.
2002-06-28 22:56:48 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 3e76d7f3b3 Add Bob Kline of HTTP 100 fame. 2002-06-28 22:39:56 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton be4fcf1875 Fixes for two separate HTTP/1.1 bugs: 100 responses and HTTPS connections.
The HTTPResponse class now handles 100 continue responses, instead of
choking on them.  It detects them internally in the _begin() method
and ignores them.  Based on a patch by Bob Kline.

This closes SF bugs 498149 and 551273.

The FakeSocket class (for SSL) is now usable with HTTP/1.1
connections.  The old version of the code could not work with
persistent connections, because the makefile() implementation read
until EOF before returning.  If the connection is persistent, the
server sends a response and leaves the connection open.  A client that
reads until EOF will block until the server gives up on the connection
-- more than a minute in my test case.

The problem was fixed by implementing a reasonable makefile().  It
reads data only when it is needed by the layers above it.  It's
implementation uses an internal buffer with a default size of 8192.

Also, rename begin() method of HTTPResponse to _begin() because it
should only be called by the HTTPConnection.
2002-06-28 22:38:01 +00:00
Fred Drake 71b63ff342 pyexpat code cleanup and minor refactorings:
The handlers array on each parser now has the invariant that None will
never be set as a handler; it will always be NULL or a Python-level
value passed in for the specific handler.

have_handler():  Return true if there is a Python handler for a
    particular event.

get_handler_name():  Return a string object giving the name of a
    particular handler.  This caches the string object so it doesn't
    need to be created more than once.

get_parse_result():  Helper to allow the Parse() and ParseFile()
    methods to share the same logic for determining the return value
    or exception state.

PyUnknownEncodingHandler(), PyModule_AddIntConstant():
    Made these helpers static.  (The later is only defined for older
    versions of Python.)

pyxml_UpdatePairedHandlers(), pyxml_SetStartElementHandler(),
pyxml_SetEndElementHandler(), pyxml_SetStartNamespaceDeclHandler(),
pyxml_SetEndNamespaceDeclHandler(), pyxml_SetStartCdataSection(),
pyxml_SetEndCdataSection(), pyxml_SetStartDoctypeDeclHandler(),
pyxml_SetEndDoctypeDeclHandler():
    Removed.  These are no longer needed with Expat 1.95.x.

handler_info:
    Use the setter functions provided by Expat 1.95.x instead of the
    pyxml_Set*Handler() functions which have been removed.

Minor code formatting changes for consistency.
Trailing whitespace removed.
2002-06-28 22:29:01 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer c9051640f8 Fix small bug. The count of objects in all generations younger then the
collected one should be zeroed.
2002-06-28 19:16:04 +00:00
Mark Hammond 0d3b2fe094 Patch 574531/Bug 574570 - allow freeze on windows to use the _winreg
extension.
2002-06-28 01:13:02 +00:00
Jack Jansen 2bb598067a The standard definition file is now called mwerks_shcarbon_plugin.h. 2002-06-27 22:10:19 +00:00
Jack Jansen 1892cf0312 Started on support for using standard setup.py to build at least
the "standard" modules. Unfinished, but shouldn't harm anything.
2002-06-27 22:09:19 +00:00
Jack Jansen 73aa1fff85 More fixes for building MacPython extension modules. It now actually succeeds
in building various modules.
2002-06-27 22:06:49 +00:00