On Arm v5 it is not possible to get the thread ID via c13 register
hence the illegal instruction. The c13 register started to provide
thread ID since Arm v6K architecture variant. Other variants of
Arm v6 (T2, Z and base) don’t provide the thread ID via c13.
For the sake of simplicity we group v5 and v6 together and
consider that instructions for Arm v7 only.
Users want to know when the current context switches to a different
context object. Right now this happens when and only when a context
is entered or exited, so the enter and exit events are synonymous with
"switched". However, if the changes proposed for gh-99633 are
implemented, the current context will also switch for reasons other
than context enter or exit. Since users actually care about context
switches and not enter or exit, replace the enter and exit events with
a single switched event.
The former exit event was emitted just before exiting the context.
The new switched event is emitted after the context is exited to match
the semantics users expect of an event with a past-tense name. If
users need the ability to clean up before the switch takes effect,
another event type can be added in the future. It is not added here
because YAGNI.
I skipped 0 in the enum as a matter of practice. Skipping 0 makes it
easier to troubleshoot when code forgets to set zeroed memory, and it
aligns with best practices for other tools (e.g.,
https://protobuf.dev/programming-guides/dos-donts/#unspecified-enum).
Co-authored-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@rhansen.org>
Co-authored-by: Victor Stinner <vstinner@python.org>
Use per-thread refcounting for the reference from function objects to
their corresponding code object. This can be a source of contention when
frequently creating nested functions. Deferred refcounting alone isn't a
great fit here because these references are on the heap and may be
modified by other libraries.
Workaround for old libffi versions is added.
Module ctypes now supports C11 double complex only with libffi >= 3.3.0.
Co-authored-by: Sergey B Kirpichev <skirpichev@gmail.com>
This fixes a crash when running the PyO3 test suite on the free-threaded
build. The `qsbr` field is initialized after the `PyThreadState` is
added to the interpreter's linked list -- it might still be NULL.
Instead, we "steal" the queue of to-be-freed memory blocks. This is
always initialized (possibly empty) and protected by the stop the world
pause.
We previously used `AC_RUN_IF_ELSE` with a short test program to detect
if `-latomic` is needed, but that requires choosing a specific default
value when cross-compiling because the test program is not run.
Some cross compilation targets like `wasm32-emscripten` do not support
`-latomic`, while other cross compilation targets, like
`arm-linux-gnueabi` require it.
Propagate fixes in Doc/library/idle.rst to help.html.
Change 'interruptable' to 'interruptible' in run.py.
The latter was reported by ember91 in PR 125473.
Users want to know when the current context switches to a different
context object. Right now this happens when and only when a context
is entered or exited, so the enter and exit events are synonymous with
"switched". However, if the changes proposed for gh-99633 are
implemented, the current context will also switch for reasons other
than context enter or exit. Since users actually care about context
switches and not enter or exit, replace the enter and exit events with
a single switched event.
The former exit event was emitted just before exiting the context.
The new switched event is emitted after the context is exited to match
the semantics users expect of an event with a past-tense name. If
users need the ability to clean up before the switch takes effect,
another event type can be added in the future. It is not added here
because YAGNI.
I skipped 0 in the enum as a matter of practice. Skipping 0 makes it
easier to troubleshoot when code forgets to set zeroed memory, and it
aligns with best practices for other tools (e.g.,
https://protobuf.dev/programming-guides/dos-donts/#unspecified-enum).
It is an alternate constructor which only accepts a single numeric argument.
Unlike to Decimal.from_float() it accepts also Decimal.
Unlike to the standard constructor, it does not accept strings and tuples.