The previous `_parse_args()` method pulled the `_parts` out of any supplied `PurePath` objects; these were subsequently joined in `_from_parts()` using `os.path.join()`. This is actually a slower form of joining than calling `fspath()` on the path object, because it doesn't take advantage of the fact that the contents of `_parts` is normalized!
This reduces the time taken to run `PurePath("foo", "bar")` by ~20%, and the time taken to run `PurePath(p, "cheese")`, where `p = PurePath("/foo", "bar", "baz")`, by ~40%.
Automerge-Triggered-By: GH:AlexWaygood
As part of investigation issue https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/102433, I discovered what I believe to be an error where two classes `CI` and `DI` are not being used. The assertions beneath them act on `C` and `D`, duplicating existing assertions in this test.
Automerge-Triggered-By: GH:AlexWaygood
Found some duplicate `to`s in the documentation and some code comments and fixed them.
[Misc/NEWS.d/3.12.0a1.rst](ed55c69ebd/Misc/NEWS.d/3.12.0a1.rst) also contains two duplicate `to`s, but I wasn't sure if it's ok to touch that file. Looks auto generated. I'm happy to amend the PR if requested. :)
Automerge-Triggered-By: GH:AlexWaygood
Refactor DynOptionMenu's initializer to not copy kwargs dict and use subscripting;
improve its htest.
Co-authored-by: Terry Jan Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu>
Make docstrings for `as_integer_ratio` consistent across types, and document that
the returned pair is always normalized (coprime integers, with positive denominator).
---------
Co-authored-by: Owain Davies <116417456+OTheDev@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Mark Dickinson <dickinsm@gmail.com>
This PR adds a private `Fraction._from_coprime_ints` classmethod for internal creations of `Fraction` objects, replacing the use of `_normalize=False` in the existing constructor. This speeds up creation of `Fraction` objects arising from calculations. The `_normalize` argument to the `Fraction` constructor has been removed.
Co-authored-by: Pieter Eendebak <pieter.eendebak@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Mark Dickinson <dickinsm@gmail.com>
This is related to fixing the refleaks introduced by commit 096d009. I haven't been able to find the leak yet, but these changes are a consequence of that effort. This includes some cleanup, some tweaks to the existing tests, and a bunch of new test cases. The only change here that might have impact outside the tests in question is in imp.py, where I update imp.load_dynamic() to use spec_from_file_location() instead of creating a ModuleSpec directly.
Also note that I've updated the tests to only skip if we're checking for refleaks (regrtest's --huntrleaks), whereas in gh-101969 I had skipped the tests entirely. The tests will be useful for some upcoming work and I'd rather the refleaks not hold that up. (It isn't clear how quickly we'll be able to fix the leaking code, though it will certainly be done in the short term.)
https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/102251
The argument is used as a switch and corresponds to a boolean logic. Therefore it is more intuitive to use the corresponding constant `False` as default value instead of the integer `0`.
Co-authored-by: Shantanu <12621235+hauntsaninja@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Oleg Iarygin <oleg@arhadthedev.net>
* Don't deadlock on shutdown if test_current_{exception,frames} fails
These tests spawn a thread that waits on a threading.Event. If the test fails any of its assertions, the Event won't be signaled and the thread will wait indefinitely, causing a deadlock when threading._shutdown() tries to join all outstanding threads.
Co-authored-by: Brett Simmers <bsimmers@meta.com>
* Add a news entry
* Fix whitespace
---------
Co-authored-by: Brett Simmers <bsimmers@meta.com>
Co-authored-by: Oleg Iarygin <oleg@arhadthedev.net>
lzma.LZMADecompressor and bz2.BZ2Decompressor objects caused
segfaults when their `__init__()` methods were not called.
lzma.LZMADecompressor, lzma.LZMACompressor, bz2.BZ2Compressor,
and bz2.BZ2Decompressor objects would leak locks and internal buffers
when their `__init__()` methods were called multiple times.
https://bugs.python.org/issue23224
- partial tests for cosh/sinh overflows (L535 and L771). I doubt
both ||-ed conditions could be tested.
- removed inaccessible case in sqrt (L832): ax=ay=0 is handled
above (L823) because fabs() is exact. Also added test (checked
with mpmath and gmpy2) for second condition on that line.
- some trivial tests for isclose (cover all conditions on L1217-1218)
- add comment for uncovered L1018
Co-authored-by: Mark Dickinson <dickinsm@gmail.com>
gh-101891 is causing failures under `$> ./python -m test test_imp -R 3:3`. Furthermore, with that fixed, "test_singlephase_variants" is leaking references. This change addresses the first part, but skips the leaking tests until we can follow up with a fix.
https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/101758
We're adding the function back, only for the stable ABI symbol and not as any form of API. I had removed it yesterday.
This undocumented "private" function was added with the implementation for PEP 3121 (3.0, 2007) for internal use and later moved out of the limited API (3.6, 2016) and then into the internal API (3.9, 2019). I removed it completely yesterday, including from the stable ABI manifest (where it was added because the symbol happened to be exported). It's unlikely that anyone is using _PyState_AddModule(), especially any stable ABI extensions built against 3.2-3.5, but we're playing it safe.
https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/101758
* fileutils: handle non-blocking pipe IO on Windows
Handle erroring operations on non-blocking pipes by reading the _doserrno code.
Limit writes on non-blocking pipes that are too large.
* Support blocking functions on Windows
Use the GetNamedPipeHandleState and SetNamedPipeHandleState Win32 API functions to add support for os.get_blocking and os.set_blocking.
This merges their code. They're backed by the same single HACL* static library, having them be a single module simplifies maintenance.
This should unbreak the wasm enscripten builds that currently fail due to linking in --whole-archive mode and the HACL* library appearing twice.
Long unnoticed error fixed: _sha512.SHA384Type was doubly assigned and was actually SHA512Type. Nobody depends on those internal names.
Also rename LIBHACL_ make vars to LIBHACL_SHA2_ in preperation for other future HACL things.
Enforcing (optionally) the restriction set by PEP 489 makes sense. Furthermore, this sets the stage for a potential restriction related to a per-interpreter GIL.
This change includes the following:
* add tests for extension module subinterpreter compatibility
* add _PyInterpreterConfig.check_multi_interp_extensions
* add Py_RTFLAGS_MULTI_INTERP_EXTENSIONS
* add _PyImport_CheckSubinterpIncompatibleExtensionAllowed()
* fail iff the module does not implement multi-phase init and the current interpreter is configured to check
https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/98627
This change is almost entirely moving code around and hiding import state behind internal API. We introduce no changes to behavior, nor to non-internal API. (Since there was already going to be a lot of churn, I took this as an opportunity to re-organize import.c into topically-grouped sections of code.) The motivation is to simplify a number of upcoming changes.
Specific changes:
* move existing import-related code to import.c, wherever possible
* add internal API for interacting with import state (both global and per-interpreter)
* use only API outside of import.c (to limit churn there when changing the location, etc.)
* consolidate the import-related state of PyInterpreterState into a single struct field (this changes layout slightly)
* add macros for import state in import.c (to simplify changing the location)
* group code in import.c into sections
*remove _PyState_AddModule()
https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/101758
The new test exercises the most important variants for single-phase init extension modules. We also add some explanation about those variants to import.c.
https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/101758
`socket.getaddrinfo()` no longer raises `OverflowError` based on the **port** argument. Error reporting (or not) for its value is left up to the underlying C library `getaddrinfo()` implementation.
Utilize new functions termios.tcgetwinsize() and termios.tcsetwinsize in test_pty.py.
Signed-off-by: Soumendra Ganguly <soumendraganguly@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith <greg@krypto.org>
Refactored the implementation of pty.fork to use os.login_tty.
A DeprecationWarning is now raised by pty.master_open() and pty.slave_open(). They were
undocumented and deprecated long long ago in the docstring in favor of pty.openpty.
Signed-off-by: Soumendra Ganguly <soumendraganguly@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: blurb-it[bot] <43283697+blurb-it[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith <greg@krypto.org>
* Make sure that the current exception is always normalized.
* Remove redundant type and traceback fields for the current exception.
* Add new API functions: PyErr_GetRaisedException, PyErr_SetRaisedException
* Add new API functions: PyException_GetArgs, PyException_SetArgs
replacing hashlib primitives (for the non-OpenSSL case) with verified implementations from HACL*. This is the first PR in the series, and focuses specifically on SHA2-256 and SHA2-224.
This PR imports Hacl_Streaming_SHA2 into the Python tree. This is the HACL* implementation of SHA2, which combines a core implementation of SHA2 along with a layer of buffer management that allows updating the digest with any number of bytes. This supersedes the previous implementation in the tree.
@franziskuskiefer was kind enough to benchmark the changes: in addition to being verified (thus providing significant safety and security improvements), this implementation also provides a sizeable performance boost!
```
---------------------------------------------------------------
Benchmark Time CPU Iterations
---------------------------------------------------------------
Sha2_256_Streaming 3163 ns 3160 ns 219353 // this PR
LibTomCrypt_Sha2_256 5057 ns 5056 ns 136234 // library used by Python currently
```
The changes in this PR are as follows:
- import the subset of HACL* that covers SHA2-256/224 into `Modules/_hacl`
- rewire sha256module.c to use the HACL* implementation
Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith [Google LLC] <greg@krypto.org>
Co-authored-by: Erlend E. Aasland <erlend.aasland@protonmail.com>
This PR fixes the buildbot failures introduced by the merge of #5561, by restricting the relevant tests to something that should work on both 32-bit and 64-bit platforms. It also silences some compiler warnings introduced in that PR.
That causes the test to fail when run using a high UID as that ancient format
cannot represent it. The current default (PAX) and the old default (GNU) both
support high UIDs.