The GILState API (PEP 311) implementation from 2003 made the assumption that only one thread state would ever be used for any given OS thread, explicitly disregarding the case of subinterpreters. However, PyThreadState_Swap() still facilitated switching between subinterpreters, meaning the "current" thread state (holding the GIL), and the GILState thread state could end up out of sync, causing problems (including crashes).
This change addresses the issue by keeping the two in sync in PyThreadState_Swap(). I verified the fix against gh-99040.
Note that the other GILState-subinterpreter incompatibility (with autoInterpreterState) is not resolved here.
https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/59956
A PyThreadState can be in one of many states in its lifecycle, represented by some status value. Those statuses haven't been particularly clear, so we're addressing that here. Specifically:
* made the distinct lifecycle statuses clear on PyThreadState
* identified expectations of how various lifecycle-related functions relate to status
* noted the various places where those expectations don't match the actual behavior
At some point we'll need to address the mismatches.
(This change also includes some cleanup.)
https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/59956
`warnings.warn()` gains the ability to skip stack frames based on code
filename prefix rather than only a numeric `stacklevel=` via a new
`skip_file_prefixes=` keyword argument.
We've factored out a struct from the two PyThreadState fields. This accomplishes two things:
* make it clear that the trashcan-related code doesn't need any other parts of PyThreadState
* allows us to use the trashcan mechanism even when there isn't a "current" thread state
We still expect the caller to hold the GIL.
https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/59956
This is a follow-up to gh-101161. The objective is to make it easier to read Python/pystate.c by grouping the functions there in a consistent way. This exclusively involves moving code around and adding various kinds of comments.
https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/59956
The objective of this change is to help make the GILState-related code easier to understand. This mostly involves moving code around and some semantically equivalent refactors. However, there are a also a small number of slight changes in structure and behavior:
* tstate_current is moved out of _PyRuntimeState.gilstate
* autoTSSkey is moved out of _PyRuntimeState.gilstate
* autoTSSkey is initialized earlier
* autoTSSkey is re-initialized (after fork) earlier
https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/59956
You can now write things like this:
```
inst(BUILD_STRING, (pieces[oparg] -- str)) { ... }
inst(LIST_APPEND, (list, unused[oparg-1], v -- list, unused[oparg-1])) { ... }
```
Note that array output effects are only partially supported (they must be named `unused` or correspond to an input effect).
For these the instr_format field uses IX instead of IB.
Register instructions use IX, IB, IBBX, IBBB, etc.
Also: Include the closing '}' in Block.tokens, for completeness