The designated initializer syntax in static inline functions in pycore_backoff.h
causes problems for C++ or MSVC users who aren't yet using C++20.
While internal, pycore_backoff.h is included (indirectly, via pycore_code.h)
by some key 3rd party software that does so for speed.
This is *not* sufficient for the final 3.13 release, but it will do for beta 1:
- What's new entry
- Updated changelog entry (news blurb)
- Mention the proxy for f_globals in the datamodel and Python frame object docs
This doesn't have any C API details (what's new refers to the PEP).
For converting large ints to strings, CPython invokes a function in _pylong.py,
which uses the decimal module to implement an asymptotically waaaaay
sub-quadratic algorithm. But if the C decimal module isn't available, CPython
uses _pydecimal.py instead. Which in turn frequently does str(int). If the int
is very large, _pylong ends up doing the work, which in turn asks decimal to do
"big" arithmetic, which in turn calls str(big_int), which in turn ... it can
become infinite mutual recursion.
This change introduces a different int->str function that doesn't use decimal.
It's asymptotically worse, "Karatsuba time" instead of quadratic time, so
still a huge improvement. _pylong switches to that when the C decimal isn't
available. It is also used for not too large integers (less than 450_000 bits),
where it is faster (up to 2 times for 30_000 bits) than the asymptotically
better implementation that uses the C decimal.
Co-authored-by: Tim Peters <tim.peters@gmail.com>
* Initial stab.
* Test the tentative fix. Hangs "forever" without this change.
* Move the new test to a better spot.
* New comment to explain why _convert_to_str allows any poewr of 10.
* Fixed a comment, and fleshed out an existing test that appeared unfinished.
* Added temporary asserts. Or maybe permanent ;-)
* Update Lib/_pydecimal.py
Co-authored-by: Serhiy Storchaka <storchaka@gmail.com>
* Remove the new _convert_to_str().
Serhiy and I independently concluded that exact powers of 10
aren't possible in these contexts, so just checking the
string length is sufficient.
* At least for now, add the asserts to the other block too.
* 📜🤖 Added by blurb_it.
---------
Co-authored-by: Serhiy Storchaka <storchaka@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: blurb-it[bot] <43283697+blurb-it[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
This PR adds the ability to enable the GIL if it was disabled at
interpreter startup, and modifies the multi-phase module initialization
path to enable the GIL when loading a module, unless that module's spec
includes a slot indicating it can run safely without the GIL.
PEP 703 called the constant for the slot `Py_mod_gil_not_used`; I went
with `Py_MOD_GIL_NOT_USED` for consistency with gh-104148.
A warning will be issued up to once per interpreter for the first
GIL-using module that is loaded. If `-v` is given, a shorter message
will be printed to stderr every time a GIL-using module is loaded
(including the first one that issues a warning).
The function returns `True` or `False` depending on whether the GIL is
currently enabled. In the default build, it always returns `True`
because the GIL is always enabled.
Now inspect.signature() supports references to the module globals in
parameter defaults on methods in extension modules. Previously it was
only supported in functions. The workaround was to specify the fully
qualified name, including the module name.
Add "Raw" variant of PyTime functions:
* PyTime_MonotonicRaw()
* PyTime_PerfCounterRaw()
* PyTime_TimeRaw()
Changes:
* Add documentation and tests. Tests release the GIL while calling
raw clock functions.
* py_get_system_clock() and py_get_monotonic_clock() now check that
the GIL is hold by the caller if raise_exc is non-zero.
* Reimplement "Unchecked" functions with raw clock functions.
Co-authored-by: Petr Viktorin <encukou@gmail.com>
Account for `add_stopiteration_handler` pushing a block for `async with`.
To allow generator functions that previously almost hit the `CO_MAXBLOCKS`
limit by nesting non-async blocks, the limit is increased by 1.
This increase allows one more block in non-generator functions.
Add code and config for a minimal Android app, and instructions to build and run it.
Improve Android build instructions in general.
Add a tool subcommand to download the Gradle wrapper (with its binary blob). Android
studio must be downloaded manually (due to the license).
The code for Tier 2 is now only compiled when configured
with `--enable-experimental-jit[=yes|interpreter]`.
We drop support for `PYTHON_UOPS` and -`Xuops`,
but you can disable the interpreter or JIT
at runtime by setting `PYTHON_JIT=0`.
You can also build it without enabling it by default
using `--enable-experimental-jit=yes-off`;
enable with `PYTHON_JIT=1`.
On Windows, the `build.bat` script supports
`--experimental-jit`, `--experimental-jit-off`,
`--experimental-interpreter`.
In the C code, `_Py_JIT` is defined as before
when the JIT is enabled; the new variable
`_Py_TIER2` is defined when the JIT *or* the
interpreter is enabled. It is actually a bitmask:
1: JIT; 2: default-off; 4: interpreter.