Commit Graph

1942 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tim Peters e1682a80fa Py_UniversalNewlineFread(): small speed boost on non-Windows boxes. 2002-04-21 18:15:20 +00:00
Tim Peters 0eca65c4c5 PyUnicode_EncodeUTF8(): tightened the memory asserts a bit, and at least
tried to catch some possible arithmetic overflows in the debug build.
2002-04-21 17:28:06 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 2a7ff35a07 Back out 2.140. 2002-04-21 09:59:45 +00:00
Tim Peters 058b141ef7 Py_UniversalNewlineFread(): Many changes.
+ Continued looping until n bytes in the buffer have been filled, not
  just when n bytes have been read from the file.  This repairs the
  bug that f.readlines() only sucked up the first 8192 bytes of the file
  on Windows when universal newlines was enabled and f was opened in
  U mode (see Python-Dev -- this was the ultimate cause of the
  test_inspect.py failure).

+ Changed prototye to take a char* buffer (void* doesn't make much sense).

+ Squashed size_t vs int mismatches (in particular, besides the unsigned
  vs signed distinction, size_t may be larger than int).

+ Gets out under all error conditions now (it's possible for fread() to
  suffer an error even if it returns a number larger than 0 -- any
  "short read" is an error or EOF condition).

+ Rearranged and simplified declarations.
2002-04-21 07:29:14 +00:00
Tim Peters 7e3d961fc1 PyUnicode_EncodeUTF8: squash compiler wng. The difference of two
pointers is a signed type.  Changing "allocated" to a signed int makes
undetected overflow more likely, but there was no overflow detection
before either.
2002-04-21 03:26:37 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis a4eb14b7a4 Patch #495401: Count number of required bytes for encoding UTF-8 before
allocating the target buffer.
2002-04-20 13:44:01 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 24ea8d3d9c Fix SF bug #505315: Make free and cell vars show up consistently in locals().
PyFrame_FastToLocals() and PyFrame_LocalsToFast() had a return if
f_nlocals was 0.  I think this was a holdover from the pre 2.1 days
when regular locals were the only kind of local variables.

The change makes it possible to use a free variable in eval or exec if
it the variable is also used elsewhere in the same block, which is
what the documentation says.
2002-04-20 04:46:55 +00:00
Tim Peters 08d821582f _PyObject_DebugMallocStats(): Added some potentially expensive internal
consistency checks, enabled only in a debug (Py_DEBUG) build.  Note that
this never gets called automatically unless PYMALLOC_DEBUG is #define'd
too, and the envar PYTHONMALLOCSTATS exists.
2002-04-18 22:25:03 +00:00
Tim Peters 64d80c9f40 PyObject_Malloc: make a tiny bit faster for platforms where malloc(0)
doesn't return NULL.

PyObject_Realloc:  better comment for why we don't call PyObject_Malloc(0).
2002-04-18 21:58:56 +00:00
Tim Peters 3e12071dbe Remove some long-disabled debugging boilerplate. 2002-04-18 21:37:03 +00:00
Tim Peters 2b85897189 type_get_doc(): Squash compiler wng about incompatible ptr types. 2002-04-18 04:12:28 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 6ca7d41c1f SF bug 542984.
Change type_get_doc (the get function for __doc__) to look in tp_dict
more often, and if it finds a descriptor in tp_dict, to call it (with
a NULL instance).  This means you can add a __doc__ descriptor to a
new-style class that returns instance docs when called on an instance,
and class docs when called on a class -- or the same docs in either
case, but lazily computed.

I'll also check this into the 2.2 maintenance branch.
2002-04-18 00:22:00 +00:00
Guido van Rossum e8fc640349 SF bug 544647.
PyNumber_InPlaceMultiply insisted on calling sq_inplace_repeat if it
existed, even if nb_inplace_multiply also existed and the arguments
weren't right for sq_inplace_repeat.  Change this to only use
sq_inplace_repeat if nb_inplace_multiply isn't defined.

Bugfix candidate.
2002-04-16 16:44:51 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 7766091e04 Whitespace normalization and fold some long lines. 2002-04-16 16:32:50 +00:00
Walter Dörwald 0fe940c862 Return the orginal string only if it's a real str or unicode
instance, otherwise make a copy.
2002-04-15 18:42:15 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 3aa3fc46c8 Remove 'const' from local variable declaration in string_zfill() -- it
isn't constant, so why bother.

Folded long lines.

Whitespace normalization.
2002-04-15 13:48:52 +00:00
Walter Dörwald 068325ef92 Apply the second version of SF patch http://www.python.org/sf/536241
Add a method zfill to str, unicode and UserString and change
Lib/string.py accordingly.

This activates the zfill version in unicodeobject.c that was
commented out and implements the same in stringobject.c. It also
adds the test for unicode support in Lib/string.py back in and
uses repr() instead() of str() (as it was before Lib/string.py 1.62)
2002-04-15 13:36:47 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 69cf3c7641 Deprecate % as well. The message for deprecation of //, % and divmod
is the same in all three cases (mostly because // calls divmod :-).
2002-04-15 12:39:12 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 9ec4c78a54 SF bug #543387.
Complex numbers implement divmod() and //, neither of which makes one
lick of sense.  Unfortunately this is documented, so I'm adding a
deprecation warning now, so we can delete this silliness, oh, around
2005 or so.

Bugfix candidate (At least for 2.2.2, I think.)
2002-04-15 01:41:56 +00:00
Guido van Rossum b6b8942f53 SF bug #541883 (Vincent Fiack).
A stupid bug in object_set_class(): didn't check for value==NULL
before checking its type.

Bugfix candidate.
2002-04-15 01:03:30 +00:00
Tim Peters 077f27141f SF bug 543840: complex(string) accepts strings with \0
complex_subtype_from_string():  this stopped parsing at the first 0
byte, as if that were the end of the input string.

Bugfix candidate.
2002-04-14 22:04:03 +00:00
Jack Jansen 7b8c7546eb Mass checkin of universal newline support.
Highlights: import and friends will understand any of \r, \n and \r\n
as end of line. Python file input will do the same if you use mode 'U'.
Everything can be disabled by configuring with --without-universal-newlines.

See PEP278 for details.
2002-04-14 20:12:41 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 5961042061 Fold long lines. (Walter, please take note! :-) 2002-04-13 14:06:36 +00:00
Tim Peters 0e871188e8 _PyObject_DebugDumpStats: renamed to _PyObject_DebugMallocStats.
Added code to call this when PYMALLOC_DEBUG is enabled, and envar
PYTHONMALLOCSTATS is set, whenever a new arena is obtained and once
late in the Python shutdown process.
2002-04-13 08:29:14 +00:00
Tim Peters b7ba743312 SF bug 543148: Memory leak with stackframes + inspect.
Put a bound on the number of frameobjects that can live in the
frameobject free_list.

Am also backporting to 2.2.  I don't intend to backport to 2.1 (too
much work -- lots of cyclic structures leak there, and the GC API).
2002-04-13 05:21:47 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 018b0eb0f5 Partially implement SF feature request 444708.
Add optional arg to string methods strip(), lstrip(), rstrip().
The optional arg specifies characters to delete.

Also for UserString.

Still to do:

- Misc/NEWS
- LaTeX docs (I did the docstrings though)
- Unicode methods, and Unicode support in the string methods.
2002-04-13 00:56:08 +00:00
Tim Peters 8a8cdfd0f5 Small anal correctness tweaks:
_PyObject_DebugMalloc:  explicitly cast PyObject_Malloc's result to the
target pointer type.

_PyObject_DebugDumpStats:  change decl of arena_alignment from unsigned
int to unsigned long.

This is for the 2.3 release only (it's new code).
2002-04-12 20:49:36 +00:00
Guido van Rossum e027d9818f Add Raymond Hettinger's d.pop(). See SF patch 539949. 2002-04-12 15:11:59 +00:00
Tim Peters 85cc1c4368 _PyObject_DebugRealloc(): rewritten to let the underlying realloc do
most of the work.  In particular, if the underlying realloc is able to
grow the memory block in place, great (this routine used to do a fresh
malloc + memcpy every time a block grew).  BTW, I'm not so keen here on
avoiding possible quadratic-time realloc patterns as I am on making
the debug pymalloc more invisible (the more it uses memory "just like"
the underlying allocator, the better the chance that a suspected memory
corruption bug won't vanish when the debug malloc is turned on).
2002-04-12 08:52:50 +00:00
Tim Peters f539c68ccd _PyObject_DebugDumpAddress(): clarify an output message. 2002-04-12 07:43:07 +00:00
Tim Peters f6fb501c57 PYMALLOC_{CLEAN, DEAD, FORBIDDEN}BYTE symbols: remove the PYMALLOC_
prefix.  These symbols are private to the file, and the PYMALLOC_ gets
in the way (overly long code lines, comments, and error messages).
2002-04-12 07:38:53 +00:00
Tim Peters af3e8de580 First stab at rationalizing the PyMem_ API. Mixing PyObject_xyz with
PyMem_{Del, DEL} doesn't work yet (compilation problems).

pyport.h:  _PyMem_EXTRA is gone.

pmem.h:  Repaired comments.  PyMem_{Malloc, MALLOC} and
PyMem_{Realloc, REALLOC} now make the same x-platform guarantees when
asking for 0 bytes, and when passing a NULL pointer to the latter.

object.c:  PyMem_{Malloc, Realloc} just call their macro versions
now, since the latter take care of the x-platform 0 and NULL stuff
by themselves now.

pypcre.c, grow_stack():  So sue me.  On two lines, this called
PyMem_RESIZE to grow a "const" area.  It's not legit to realloc a
const area, so the compiler warned given the new expansion of
PyMem_RESIZE.  It would have gotten the same warning before if it
had used PyMem_Resize() instead; the older macro version, but not the
function version, silently cast away the constness.  IMO that was a wrong
thing to do, and the docs say the macro versions of PyMem_xyz are
deprecated anyway.  If somebody else is resizing const areas with the
macro spelling, they'll get a warning when they recompile now too.
2002-04-12 07:22:56 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer d2560cd37c Move PyObject_Malloc and PyObject_Free here from object.c. Remove
PyMalloc_ prefix and use PyObject_ instead.  I'm not sure about the
debugging functions.  Perhaps they should stay as PyMalloc_.
2002-04-12 03:10:20 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer bdf0eedb68 Move PyObject_Malloc and PyObject_Free to obmalloc.c. 2002-04-12 03:08:42 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 58aa861fa2 Remove PyMalloc_*. 2002-04-12 03:07:20 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 09a2ae5882 Change signature of _PyObject_GC_Malloc to match PyObject_MALLOC.
PyObject_Del and PyObject_GC_Del can now be used as a function
designators.
2002-04-12 03:06:53 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 626d774df6 PyObject_GC_Del can now be used as a function designator. 2002-04-12 03:05:52 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 7465ad2fc9 Remove PyMalloc_New and PyMalloc_Del. 2002-04-12 03:05:37 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 510492e985 Remove PyMalloc_New, _PyMalloc_MALLOC, and PyMalloc_Del. 2002-04-12 03:05:19 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 9acae5a0a6 Remove PyMalloc_New and PyMalloc_Del. 2002-04-12 02:44:55 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 99b5d28467 PyObject_GC_Del can now be used as a function designator. 2002-04-12 02:44:22 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer aa769ae468 PyObject_Del can now be used as a function designator. 2002-04-12 02:44:10 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 6189b89cc5 PyObject_GC_Del and PyObject_Del can now be used as a function
designators.

Remove PyMalloc_New.
2002-04-12 02:43:00 +00:00
Tim Peters 52aefc8a7b SF bug 542181: Realloc behavior
The bug report pointed out a bogosity in the comment block explaining
thread safety for arena management.  Repaired that comment, repaired a
couple others while I was at it, and added an assert.

_PyMalloc_DebugRealloc:  If this needed to get more memory, but couldn't,
it erroneously freed the original memory.  Repaired that.

This is for 2.3 only (unless we decide to backport the new pymalloc).
2002-04-11 06:36:45 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg 68e69338ae Bug fix for UTF-8 encoding bug (buffer overrun) #541828. 2002-04-10 20:36:13 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg ce0b664af2 Added test case for UTF-8 encoding bug #541828. 2002-04-10 17:18:02 +00:00
Tim Peters 2ea9111cf1 SF bug 538827: Python open w/ MSVC6: bad error msgs.
open_the_file:  Some (not all) flavors of Windows set errno to EINVAL
when passed a syntactically invalid filename.  Python turned that into an
incomprehensible complaint about the mode string.  Fixed by special-casing
MSVC.
2002-04-08 04:13:12 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 0986d8250f - A type can now inherit its metatype from its base type. Previously,
when PyType_Ready() was called, if ob_type was found to be NULL, it
  was always set to &PyType_Type; now it is set to base->ob_type,
  where base is tp_base, defaulting to &PyObject_Type.

- PyType_Ready() accidentally did not inherit tp_is_gc; now it does.

Bugfix candidate.
2002-04-08 01:38:42 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 7f7666ff43 isatty() should return a bool. 2002-04-07 06:28:00 +00:00
Tim Peters 49f26817eb Minor improvements to the stats output dump, including adding commas to
the big numbers.
2002-04-06 01:45:35 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 8ace1ab53a - Changed new-style class instantiation so that when C's __new__
method returns something that's not a C instance, its __init__ is
  not called.  [SF bug #537450]
2002-04-06 01:05:01 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 6b8ab74c8a Don't inherit tp_new! This is a retraction of half of the previous
checkin.  And since that one was, this one is also a:

Bugfix candidate.
2002-04-05 22:04:18 +00:00
Guido van Rossum cc8fe0407a Inherit tp_new and tp_is_gc.
Bugfix candidate.
2002-04-05 17:10:16 +00:00
Tim Peters ffdd22f1af Repair an incomprehensible comment. 2002-04-05 06:24:54 +00:00
Tim Peters 16bcb6b1af _PyMalloc_DebugDumpStats(): vastly improved the output, and it now
accounts for every byte.
2002-04-05 05:45:31 +00:00
Tim Peters e70ddf3a99 Widespread, but mostly in _PyMalloc_Malloc: optimize away all expensive
runtime multiplications and divisions, via the scheme developed with
Vladimir Marangozov on Python-Dev.  The pool_header struct loses its
capacity member, but gains nextoffset and maxnextoffset members; this
still leaves it at 32 bytes on a 32-bit box (it has to be padded to a
multiple of 8 bytes).
2002-04-05 04:32:29 +00:00
Guido van Rossum c334df5727 A much revised version of SF patch 514662, by Naofumi Honda. This
speeds up __getitem__ and __setitem__ in subclasses of built-in
sequences.

It's much revised because I took the opportunity to refactor the code
somewhat (moving a large section of duplicated code to a helper
function) and added comments to a series of functions.
2002-04-04 23:44:47 +00:00
Guido van Rossum bfc2e5ee8e Clarifying code rearrangement and comments by David Abrahams. I've
got to admit that I haven't reviewed this carefully, but it looks okay
from 30,000 views, and doesn't break anything.  (SF patch 536407.)
2002-04-04 17:50:54 +00:00
Tim Peters b7265dbe3e _PyMalloc_Realloc(): removed a now-pointless cast. 2002-04-04 05:08:31 +00:00
Tim Peters 84c1b97467 _PyMalloc_{Malloc, Realloc}: Strive to meet the doc's promises about
what these do given a 0 size argument.  This is so that when pymalloc
is enabled, we don't need to wrap pymalloc calls in goofy little
routines special-casing 0.  Note that it's virtually impossible to meet
the doc's promise that malloc(0) will never return NULL; this makes a
best effort, but not an insane effort.  The code does promise that
realloc(not-NULL, 0) will never return NULL (malloc(0) is much harder).

_PyMalloc_Realloc:  Changed to take over all requests for 0 bytes, and
rearranged to be a little quicker in expected cases.

All over the place:  when resorting to the platform allocator, call
free/malloc/realloc directly, without indirecting thru macros.  This
should avoid needing a nightmarish pile of #ifdef-ery if PYMALLOC_DEBUG
is changed so that pymalloc takes over all Py(Mem, Object} memory
operations (which would add useful debugging info to PyMem_xyz
allocations too).
2002-04-04 04:44:32 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 645a22e007 As Neal pointed out, bool_print was an order of magnitude too complex. 2002-04-04 01:00:42 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 5f8203679d Oops. Here are the new files. My apologies. 2002-04-03 23:01:45 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 77f6a65eb0 Add the 'bool' type and its values 'False' and 'True', as described in
PEP 285.  Everything described in the PEP is here, and there is even
some documentation.  I had to fix 12 unit tests; all but one of these
were printing Boolean outcomes that changed from 0/1 to False/True.
(The exception is test_unicode.py, which did a type(x) == type(y)
style comparison.  I could've fixed that with a single line using
issubtype(x, type(y)), but instead chose to be explicit about those
places where a bool is expected.

Still to do: perhaps more documentation; change standard library
modules to return False/True from predicates.
2002-04-03 22:41:51 +00:00
Fred Drake cd874edaaa Fix the names of the classmethod and staticmethod constructors as passed to
PyArg_ParseTuple() as part of the format string.
2002-04-03 21:42:45 +00:00
Guido van Rossum d464107ecf Fold some long lines. Delete blank initial line. 2002-04-03 02:13:37 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 155db9aa22 SF patch 537536 by Phillip J. Eby, fix for SF bug 535444, super()
broken w/ classmethods.

Bugfix candidate.
2002-04-02 17:53:47 +00:00
Tim Peters 6169f09d64 Fixed errors in two comments. 2002-04-01 20:12:59 +00:00
Tim Peters 338e010b45 Restructured my pool-management overview in terms of the three
possible pool states.  I think it's much clearer now.

Added a new long overdue block-management overview comment block.

I believe the comments are in good shape now.

Added two comments about possible small optimizations (one getting rid
of runtime multiplications at the cost of a new pool_header member; the
other getting rid of runtime divisions and the pool_header capacity
member, at the cost of a static const vector of 32 uints).
2002-04-01 19:23:44 +00:00
Tim Peters 7ccfadf3a8 New PYMALLOC_DEBUG function void _PyMalloc_DebugDumpStats(void).
This displays stats about the # of arenas, pools, blocks and bytes, to
stderr, both used and reserved but unused.

CAUTION:  Because PYMALLOC_DEBUG is on, the debug malloc routine adds
16 bytes to each request.  This makes each block appear two size classes
higher than it would be if PYMALLOC_DEBUG weren't on.

So far, playing with this confirms the obvious:  there's a lot of activity
in the "small dict" size class, but nothing in the core makes any use of
the 8-byte or 16-byte classes.
2002-04-01 06:04:21 +00:00
Neal Norwitz 62f5a9d6c2 Convert file.readinto() to stop using METH_OLDARGS & PyArg_Parse.
Add test for file.readinto().
2002-04-01 00:09:00 +00:00
Neal Norwitz 93c1e23667 Use METH_VARARGS rather than METH_OLDARGS implicitly (args are ignored) 2002-03-31 16:06:11 +00:00
Tim Peters 57b17ad6ae Add one more assert that indirectly interlocking conditions are consistent
with each other.
2002-03-31 02:59:48 +00:00
Tim Peters 4c5be0ce09 Fixed an error in a new assert. 2002-03-31 02:52:29 +00:00
Tim Peters b1da050131 Fixed a typo in a new comment. 2002-03-31 02:51:40 +00:00
Tim Peters 2c95c99a64 _PyMalloc_Free(): As was already done for _PyMalloc_Malloc, rearranged
the code so that the most frequent cases come first.  Added comments.
Found a hidden assumption that a pool contains room for at least two
blocks, and added an assert to catch a violation if it ever happens in
a place where that matters.  Gave the normal "I allocated this block"
case a longer basic block to work with before it has to do its first
branch (via breaking apart an embedded assignment in an "if", and
hoisting common code out of both branches).
2002-03-31 02:18:01 +00:00
Tim Peters 1e16db6d3b Added a long-overdue comment block giving an overview of pool operations
and terminology, plus explanation of some extreme obscurities.
2002-03-31 01:05:22 +00:00
Tim Peters c2ce91af5f It's once again thought safe to call the pymalloc free/realloc with an
address obtained from system malloc/realloc without holding the GIL.

When the vector of arena base addresses has to grow, the old vector is
deliberately leaked.  This makes "stale" x-thread references safe.
arenas and narenas are also declared volatile, and changed in an order
that prevents a thread from picking up a value of narenas too large
for the value of arenas it sees.

Added more asserts.

Fixed an old inaccurate comment.

Added a comment explaining why it's safe to call pymalloc free/realloc
with an address obtained from system malloc/realloc even when arenas is
still NULL (this is obscure, since the ADDRESS_IN_RANGE macro
appears <wink> to index into arenas).
2002-03-30 21:36:04 +00:00
Tim Peters 7b85b4aa7f new_arena(): In error cases, reset the number of available pools to 0.
Else the pymalloc malloc will go insane the next time it's called.
2002-03-30 10:42:09 +00:00
Tim Peters 1d99af8d69 Changed the #-of-arenas counters to uints -- no need to be insane about
this.  But added an overflow check just in case there is.

Got rid of the ushort macro.  It wasn't used anymore (it was only used
in the no-longer-exists off_t macro), and there's no plausible use for it.
2002-03-30 10:35:09 +00:00
Tim Peters 8deda70b16 Eliminate DONT_SHARE_SHORT_STRINGS. 2002-03-30 10:06:07 +00:00
Tim Peters df4d1377ed Turns out the off_t macro isn't used anymore, so got rid of it. 2002-03-30 07:07:24 +00:00
Tim Peters 3c83df2047 Now that we're no longer linking arenas together, there's no need to
waste the first pool if malloc happens to return a pool-aligned address.

This means the number of pools per arena can now vary by 1.  Unfortunately,
the code counted up from 0 to a presumed constant number of pools.  So
changed the increasing "watermark" counter to a decreasing "nfreepools"
counter instead, and fiddled various stuff accordingly.  This also allowed
getting rid of two more macros.

Also changed the code to align the first address to a pool boundary
instead of a page boundary.  These are two parallel sets of macro #defines
that happen to be identical now, but the page macros are in theory more
restrictive (bigger), and there's simply no reason I can see that it
wasn't aligning to the less restrictive pool size all along (the code
only relies on pool alignment).

Hmm.  The "page size" macros aren't used for anything *except* defining
the pool size macros, and the comments claim the latter isn't necessary.
So this has the feel of a layer of indirection that doesn't serve a
purpose; should probably get rid of the page macros now.
2002-03-30 07:04:41 +00:00
Tim Peters 12300686ca Retract the claim that this is always safe if PyMem_{Del, DEL, Free, FREE}
are called without the GIL.  It's incredibly unlikely to fail, but I can't
make this bulletproof without either adding a lock for exclusion, or
giving up on growing the arena base-address vector (it would be safe if
this were a static array).
2002-03-30 06:20:23 +00:00
Tim Peters d97a1c008c Lots of changes:
+ A new scheme for determining whether an address belongs to a pymalloc
  arena.  This should be 100% reliable.  The poolp->pooladdr and
  poolp->magic members are gone.  A new poolp->arenaindex member takes
  their place.  Note that the pool header overhead doesn't actually
  shrink, though, since the header is padded to a multiple of 8 bytes.

+ _PyMalloc_Free and _PyMalloc_Realloc should now be safe to call for
  any legit address, whether obtained from a _PyMalloc function or from
  the system malloc/realloc.  It should even be safe to call
   _PyMalloc_Free when *not* holding the GIL, provided that the passed-in
  address was obtained from system malloc/realloc.  Since this is
  accomplished without any locks, you better believe the code is subtle.
  I hope it's sufficiently commented.

+ The above implies we don't need the new PyMalloc_{New, NewVar, Del}
  API anymore, and could switch back to PyObject_XXX without breaking
  existing code mixing PyObject_XXX with PyMem_{Del, DEL, Free, FREE}.
  Nothing is done here about that yet, and I'd like to see this new
  code exercised more first.

+ The small object threshhold is boosted to 256 (the max).  We should
  play with that some more, but the old 64 was way too small for 2.3.

+ Getting a new arena is now done via new function new_arena().

+ Removed some unused macros, and squashed out some macros that were
  used only once to define other macros.

+ Arenas are no longer linked together.  A new vector of arena base
  addresses had to be created anyway to make address classification
  bulletproof.

+ A lot of the patch size is an illusion:  given the way address
  classification works now, it was more convenient to switch the
  sense of the prime "if" tests in the realloc and free functions,
  so the "if" and "else" blocks got swapped.

+ Assorted minor code, comment and whitespace cleanup.

Back to the Windows installer <wink>.
2002-03-30 06:09:22 +00:00
Tim Peters 1f7df3595a Remove the CACHE_HASH and INTERN_STRINGS preprocessor symbols. 2002-03-29 03:29:08 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer f589c059f4 If the GC is enabled then don't use the ob_type pointer to create a list
of trash objects.  Use the gc_prev pointer instead.
2002-03-29 03:05:54 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer bd02b14255 Add missing "void" to function. 2002-03-28 21:05:38 +00:00
Guido van Rossum ff413af605 This is Neil's fix for SF bug 535905 (Evil Trashcan and GC interaction).
The fix makes it possible to call PyObject_GC_UnTrack() more than once
on the same object, and then move the PyObject_GC_UnTrack() call to
*before* the trashcan code is invoked.

BUGFIX CANDIDATE!
2002-03-28 20:34:59 +00:00
Tim Peters d1139e043c PYMALLOC_DEBUG routines: The "check API family" gimmick was going nowhere
fast, and just cluttered the code.  Get rid of it for now.  If a compelling
case can be made for it, easy to restore it later.
2002-03-28 07:32:11 +00:00
Fred Drake 7bf9715a8b Introduce two new flag bits that can be set in a PyMethodDef method
descriptor, as used for the tp_methods slot of a type.  These new flag
bits are both optional, and mutually exclusive.  Most methods will not
use either.  These flags are used to create special method types which
exist in the same namespace as normal methods without having to use
tedious construction code to insert the new special method objects in
the type's tp_dict after PyType_Ready() has been called.

If METH_CLASS is specified, the method will represent a class method
like that returned by the classmethod() built-in.

If METH_STATIC is specified, the method will represent a static method
like that returned by the staticmethod() built-in.

These flags may not be used in the PyMethodDef table for modules since
these special method types are not meaningful in that case; a
ValueError will be raised if these flags are found in that context.
2002-03-28 05:33:33 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 38a8916134 Remove weakref free list. This has the side effect of fixing a memory
management bug.  Also, move some duplicated code into the new_weakref
fucntion.
2002-03-27 15:18:21 +00:00
Walter Dörwald e990c79fa8 Add missing methods iterkeys, itervalues and iteritems to
dict-proxy objects.

Add real docstrings to all methods.
2002-03-25 17:43:22 +00:00
Walter Dörwald 8c077227f2 Fix whitespace. 2002-03-25 11:16:18 +00:00
Tim Peters e085017ab7 _PyMalloc_DebugRealloc(): simplify decl of "fresh".
Assorted:  bump the serial number via a trivial new bumpserialno()
function.  The point is to give a single place to set a breakpoint when
waiting for a specific serial number.
2002-03-24 00:34:21 +00:00
Tim Peters 62c06ba6a9 Minor code cleanup -- no semantic changes. 2002-03-23 22:28:18 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 3a204a7e48 Grow the string buffer at a mildly exponential rate for the getc version
of get_line.  This makes test_bufio finish in 1.7 seconds instead of 57
seconds on my machine (with Py_DEBUG defined).

Also, rename the local variables n1 and n2 to used_v_size and
total_v_size.
2002-03-23 19:41:34 +00:00
Tim Peters ddea208be9 Give Python a debug-mode pymalloc, much as sketched on Python-Dev.
When WITH_PYMALLOC is defined, define PYMALLOC_DEBUG to enable the debug
allocator.  This can be done independent of build type (release or debug).
A debug build automatically defines PYMALLOC_DEBUG when pymalloc is
enabled.  It's a detected error to define PYMALLOC_DEBUG when pymalloc
isn't enabled.

Two debugging entry points defined only under PYMALLOC_DEBUG:

+ _PyMalloc_DebugCheckAddress(const void *p) can be used (e.g., from gdb)
  to sanity-check a memory block obtained from pymalloc.  It sprays
  info to stderr (see next) and dies via Py_FatalError if the block is
  detectably damaged.

+ _PyMalloc_DebugDumpAddress(const void *p) can be used to spray info
  about a debug memory block to stderr.

A tiny start at implementing "API family" checks isn't good for
anything yet.

_PyMalloc_DebugRealloc() has been optimized to do little when the new
size is <= old size.  However, if the new size is larger, it really
can't call the underlying realloc() routine without either violating its
contract, or knowing something non-trivial about how the underlying
realloc() works.  A memcpy is always done in this case.

This was a disaster for (and only) one of the std tests:  test_bufio
creates single text file lines up to a million characters long.  On
Windows, fileobject.c's get_line() uses the horridly funky
getline_via_fgets(), which keeps growing and growing a string object
hoping to find a newline.  It grew the string object 1000 bytes each
time, so for a million-character string it took approximately forever
(I gave up after a few minutes).

So, also:

fileobject.c, getline_via_fgets():  When a single line is outrageously
long, grow the string object at a mildly exponential rate, instead of
just 1000 bytes at a time.

That's enough so that a debug-build test_bufio finishes in about 5 seconds
on my Win98SE box.  I'm curious to try this on Win2K, because it has very
different memory behavior than Win9X, and test_bufio always took a factor
of 10 longer to complete on Win2K.  It *could* be that the endless
reallocs were simply killing it on Win2K even in the release build.
2002-03-23 10:03:50 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer ed19b88f0b Check in (hopefully) corrected version of last change. 2002-03-23 02:06:50 +00:00
Tim Peters ce7fb9b515 Just whitespace fiddling. 2002-03-23 00:28:57 +00:00
Tim Peters 1221c0a435 Build obmalloc.c directly instead of #include'ing from object.c.
Also move all _PyMalloc_XXX entry points into obmalloc.c.

The Windows build works fine.
The Unix build is changed here (Makefile.pre.in), but not tested.
No other platform's build process has been fiddled.
2002-03-23 00:20:15 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 12a6d942d8 Undo last commit. It's causing the tests to file. 2002-03-22 23:50:30 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 558ba52f10 Remove malloc hooks. 2002-03-22 23:20:15 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 398b9f6d6d Disallow open()ing of directories. Closes SF bug 487277. 2002-03-22 20:38:57 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer dcc819a5c9 Use pymalloc if it's enabled. 2002-03-22 15:33:15 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer a1a9c51a3e Add pymalloc object memory management functions. These must be
available even if pymalloc is disabled since extension modules might use
them.
2002-03-22 15:28:30 +00:00
Tim Peters bab22beda8 SF bug 533198: Complex power underflow raises exception.
Konrad was too kind.  Not only did it raise an exception, the specific
exception it raised made no sense.  These are old bugs in complex_pow()
and friends:

1. Raising 0 to a negative power isn't a range error, it's a domain
   error, so changed c_pow() to set errno to EDOM in that case instead
   of ERANGE.

2. Changed complex_pow() to:

A. Used the Py_ADJUST_ERANGE2 macro to try to clear errno of a spurious
   ERANGE error due to underflow in the libm pow() called by c_pow().

B. Produced different exceptions depending on the errno value:
   i) For errno==EDOM, raise ZeroDivisionError instead of ValueError.
      This is for consistency with the non-complex cases 0.0**-2 and
      0**-2 and 0L**-2.
   ii) For errno==ERANGE, raise OverflowError.

Bugfix candidate.
2002-03-22 02:48:46 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 047c05ebc4 Do not insert characters for unicode-escape decoders if the error mode
is "ignore". Fixes #529104.
2002-03-21 08:55:28 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 25f3dc21b5 Drop the PyCore_* memory API. 2002-03-18 21:06:21 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer d91eec9df3 Re-enable GC of method objects. 2002-03-18 20:44:53 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer dbf409fbfc Re-enable GC of iter objects. 2002-03-18 20:43:51 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 11f5be8d88 Simpilify PyCore_* macros by assuming the function prototypes for
malloc() and free() don't change.
2002-03-18 18:13:41 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 7e30548285 Fix for SF bug 528132 (Armin Rigo): classmethod().__get__() segfault
The proper fix is not quite what was submitted; it's really better to
take the class of the object passed rather than calling PyMethod_New
with NULL pointer args, because that can then cause other core dumps
later.

I also added a testcase for the fix to classmethods() in test_descr.py.

I've already applied this to the 2.2 branch.
2002-03-18 03:09:06 +00:00
Tim Peters 2400831773 SF patch 530070: pydoc regression, from Martin and Guido.
Change the way __doc__ is handled, to avoid blowing up on non-string
__doc__ values.
2002-03-17 18:56:20 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis f6eebbb435 Patch #530105: Allow file object may to be subtyped 2002-03-15 17:42:16 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 0c160a08f2 Patch #517521: Consider byte strings before Unicode strings
in PyObject_Get/SetAttr.
2002-03-15 13:40:30 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 0628dcfe1f "Fix" for SF bug #520644: __slots__ are not pickled.
As promised in my response to the bug report, I'm not really fixing
it; in fact, one could argule over what the proper fix should do.
Instead, I'm adding a little magic that raises TypeError if you try to
pickle an instance of a class that has __slots__ but doesn't define or
override __getstate__.  This is done by adding a bozo __getstate__
that always raises TypeError.
2002-03-14 23:03:14 +00:00
Guido van Rossum cd637aae56 Fix for SF bug #529050 - ModuleType.__new__ crash.
There were several places that assumed the md_dict field was always
set, but it needn't be.  Fixed these to be more careful.

I changed PyModule_GetDict() to initialize md_dict to a new dictionary
if it's NULL.

Bugfix candidate.
2002-03-12 20:37:02 +00:00
Tim Peters 8f01b680c8 Change Windows file.truncate() to (a) restore the original file position,
and (b) stop trying to prevent file growth.

Beef up the file.truncate() docs.

Change test_largefile.py to stop assuming that f.truncate() moves the
file pointer to the truncation point, and to verify instead that it leaves
the file position alone.  Remove the test for what happens when a
specified size exceeds the original file size (it's ill-defined, according
to the Single Unix Spec).
2002-03-12 03:04:44 +00:00
Tim Peters fb05db2cae file_truncate(): provide full "large file" support on Windows, by
dropping MS's inadequate _chsize() function.  This was inspired by
SF patch 498109 ("fileobject truncate support for win32"), which I
rejected.

libstdtypes.tex:  Someone who knows should update the availability
blurb.  For example, if it's available on Linux, it would be good to
say so.

test_largefile:  Uncommented the file.truncate() tests, and reworked to
do more.  The old comment about "permission errors" in the truncation
tests under Windows was almost certainly due to that the file wasn't open
for *write* access at this point, so of course MS wouldn't let you
truncate it.  I'd be appalled if a Unixish system did.

CAUTION:  Someone should run this test on Linux (etc) too.  The
truncation part was commented out before.  Note that test_largefile isn't
run by default.
2002-03-11 00:24:00 +00:00
Guido van Rossum dfce3bf908 Bugfix candidate.
Adapter from SF patch 528038; fixes SF bug 527816.

The wrapper for __nonzero__ should be wrap_inquiry rather than
wrap_unaryfunc, since the slot returns an int, not a PyObject *.
2002-03-10 14:11:16 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis c8bb9eba31 Patch #494047: removes 64-bit ?: to cope on plan9. 2002-03-09 12:02:59 +00:00
Tim Peters dc5a508761 SF bug 525705: [2.2] underflow raise OverflowException.
Another year in the quest to out-guess random C behavior.

Added macros Py_ADJUST_ERANGE1(X) and Py_ADJUST_ERANGE2(X, Y).  The latter
is useful for functions with complex results.  Two corrections to errno-
after-libm-call are attempted:

1. If the platform set errno to ERANGE due to underflow, clear errno.
   Some unknown subset of libm versions and link options do this.  It's
   allowed by C89, but I never figured anyone would do it.

2. If the platform did not set errno but overflow occurred, force
   errno to ERANGE.  C89 required setting errno to ERANGE, but C99
   doesn't.  Some unknown subset of libm versions and link options do
   it the C99 way now.

Bugfix candidate, but hold off until some Linux people actually try it,
with and without -lieee.  I'll send a help plea to Python-Dev.
2002-03-09 04:58:24 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 0522d9891a Fix leak of NotImplemented in previous checkin to PyNumber_Add().
If result == Py_NotImplemented, always DECREF it before assigning a
new value to result.
2002-03-08 21:28:54 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 6ae6a43a77 Fix for SF bug 516727: MyInt(2) + "3" -> NotImplemented
PyNumber_Add() tries the nb_add slot first, then falls back to
sq_concat.  However, tt didn't check the return value of sq_concat.
If sq_concat returns NotImplemented, raise the standard TypeError.
2002-03-08 21:11:37 +00:00
Michael W. Hudson 70ffddf8af Guido pointed out that I was missing a couple decrefs. 2002-03-07 15:13:40 +00:00
Michael W. Hudson ce358e3015 Apply (my) patch:
[ 526072 ] pickling os.stat results round II

structseq's constructors can now take "invisible" fields in a dict.
Gave the constructors better error messages.
their __reduce__ method puts these fields in a dict.

(this is all in aid of getting os.stat_result's to pickle portably)

Also fixes

[ 526039 ] devious code can crash structseqs

Thought needed about how much of this counts as a bugfix.  Certainly
#526039 needs to be fixed.
2002-03-06 17:07:49 +00:00
Michael W. Hudson 7bb466a1a5 A fix & test for
[ 496873 ] structseqs unpicklable

by adding a __reduce__ method to structseqs.

Will also commit this to the 2.2.1 branch momentarily.
2002-03-05 13:27:58 +00:00
Tim Peters a5d78cc208 Whether platform malloc(0) returns NULL has nothing to do with whether
platform realloc(p, 0) returns NULL, so MALLOC_ZERO_RETURNS_NULL can
be correctly undefined yet realloc(p, 0) can return NULL anyway.

Prevent realloc(p, 0) doing free(p) and returning NULL via a different
hack.  Would probably be better to get rid of MALLOC_ZERO_RETURNS_NULL
entirely.

Bugfix candidate.
2002-03-02 08:43:19 +00:00
Tim Peters 5329cdb3ce _PyLong_Copy(): was creating a copy of the absolute value, but should
copy the sign too.  Added a test to test_descr to ensure that it does.

Bugfix candidate.
2002-03-02 04:18:04 +00:00
Tim Peters db30ac41de Revert the last odd change to PyNumber_Long: the problem it was trying
to fix was almost certainly a bug in _PyLong_Copy (which I'll fix next).
2002-03-02 04:14:21 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 2eb0b87d14 SF patch 514641 (Naofumi Honda) - Negative ob_size of LongObjects
Due to the bizarre definition of _PyLong_Copy(), creating an instance
of a subclass of long with a negative value could cause core dumps
later on.  Unfortunately it looks like the behavior of _PyLong_Copy()
is quite intentional, so the fix is more work than feels comfortable.

This fix is almost, but not quite, the code that Naofumi Honda added;
in addition, I added a test case.
2002-03-01 22:24:49 +00:00
Andrew MacIntyre 5e9c80d906 %#x/%#X format conversion cleanup (see patch #450267):
Objects/
    stringobject.c
    unicodeobject.c
2002-02-28 11:38:24 +00:00
Andrew MacIntyre c487439aa7 OS/2 EMX port changes (Objects part of patch #450267):
Objects/
    fileobject.c
    stringobject.c
    unicodeobject.c

This commit doesn't include the cleanup patches for stringobject.c and
unicodeobject.c which are shown separately in the patch manager.  Those
patches will be regenerated and applied in a subsequent commit, so as
to preserve a fallback position (this commit to those files).
2002-02-26 11:36:35 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis f9bd6b09e1 Allow __doc__ to be of arbitrary type. Patch by James Henstridge,
fixes #504343. 2.2.1 candidate.
2002-02-18 17:46:48 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis a5854c24a2 Patch #508038: Do not use a type as a variable name. 2002-02-16 23:39:10 +00:00
Guido van Rossum fa2e4c27d2 Declare real and imag as read-only attributes.
This fixes SF bug #514858 (Gregory Smith): complex not entirely
immutable

2.2.1 Bugfix candidate!
2002-02-08 21:26:07 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg bd3be8f0ca Fix to the UTF-8 encoder: it failed on 0-length input strings.
Fix for the UTF-8 decoder: it will now accept isolated surrogates
(previously it raised an exception which causes round-trips to
fail).

Added new tests for UTF-8 round-trip safety (we rely on UTF-8 for
marshalling Unicode objects, so we better make sure it works for
all Unicode code points, including isolated surrogates).

Bumped the PYC magic in a non-standard way -- please review. This
was needed because the old PYC format used illegal UTF-8 sequences
for isolated high surrogates which now raise an exception.
2002-02-07 11:33:49 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg dc724d6e35 Cosmetics. 2002-02-06 18:20:19 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg e7c6ee4b8a Whitespace fixes. 2002-02-06 18:18:03 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg 3688a882d3 Fix for the UTF-8 memory allocation bug and the UTF-8 encoding
bug related to lone high surrogates.
2002-02-06 18:09:02 +00:00
Guido van Rossum e75bfde7e9 Bugfix candidate.
Fix SF bug #511603: Error calling str on subclass of int

Explicitly fill in tp_str with the same pointer as tp_repr.
2002-02-01 15:34:10 +00:00
Neal Norwitz 2a47c0fa23 Fix spelling mistakes. Bugfix candidates. 2002-01-29 00:53:41 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 1f803f782c Updated patch #487906: Revise inline docs. 2002-01-16 10:53:24 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis cdc4451222 Include <unistd.h> in Python.h. Fixes #500924. 2002-01-12 11:05:12 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis b0d71d0ec6 Implement PyObject_DelItemString. Fixes #498915. 2002-01-05 10:50:30 +00:00
Neal Norwitz 649b75954a SF Patch #494863, file.xreadlines() should raise ValueError if file is closed
This makes xreadlines behave like all other file methods
(other than close() which just returns).
2002-01-01 19:07:13 +00:00
Fred Drake 2a908f6b7b proxy_compare(): Make sure that we unwrap both objects being compared if
both are proxy objects.
2001-12-19 16:44:30 +00:00
Guido van Rossum f884b74910 - PyType_Ready(): Initialize the ob_type field to &PyType_Type if it's
NULL, so that you can call PyType_Ready() to initialize a type that
  is to be separately compiled with C on Windows.

inherit_special():  Add a long comment explaining that you have to set
tp_new if your base class is PyBaseObject_Type.
2001-12-17 17:14:22 +00:00
Sjoerd Mullender 564980bd86 Portability fix: Not every compiler implements the extension of
unescaped newlines in strings.
2001-12-17 11:39:56 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 33c1a8893d SF patch #493452: docstrings for staticmethod/classmethod (Skip
Montanaro)

(With minor adjustments.)
2001-12-17 02:53:53 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 2b8235e485 SF bug #493561: incorrect format string descrobject.c (Neal Norwitz)
%300s should be %.300s, twice.
2001-12-15 05:00:30 +00:00
Guido van Rossum e54616cb6f (Merge into trunk.)
Fix for SF bug #492345.  (I could've sworn I checked this in, but
apparently I didn't!)

This code:

    class Classic:
        pass

    class New(Classic):
        __metaclass__ = type

attempts to create a new-style class with only classic bases -- but it
doesn't work right.  Attempts to fix it so it works caused problems
elsewhere, so I'm now raising a TypeError in this case.
2001-12-14 04:19:56 +00:00
Fred Drake 526c7a0101 Ensure that complex() only accepts a string argument as the first arg,
and only if there is no second arg.
This closes SF patch #479551.
2001-12-13 19:52:22 +00:00
Tim Peters 77d8a4fc91 float_floor_div: An expression like 3.//1j crashed the interpreter, or
delivered bizarre results.  Check float_divmod for a Py_NotImplemented
return and pass it along (instead of treating Py_NotImplemented as a
2-tuple).
CONVERT_TO_DOUBLE:  Added comments; this macro is obscure.
2001-12-11 20:31:34 +00:00
Tim Peters 63a3571e17 float_int_div(): For clarity, move this closer to the other float
division functions, and rename to float_floor_div.
2001-12-11 19:57:24 +00:00
Tim Peters f582b82fe9 SF bug #491415 PyDict_UpdateFromSeq2() unused
PyDict_UpdateFromSeq2():  removed it.
PyDict_MergeFromSeq2():  made it public and documented it.
PyDict_Merge() docs:  updated to reveal <wink> that the second
argument can be any mapping object.
2001-12-11 18:51:08 +00:00
Fred Drake ef8ebd1e74 Make sure that when we invoke callback functions associated with weak
references, we do not allow any outstanding exceptions "leak" into the
callback's execution state.
This closes SF bug #478534.
2001-12-10 23:44:54 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 7171f1c8d8 Well what do you know. The Python implementation contained the same
bug as the C code. :-(
2001-12-10 18:06:21 +00:00
Guido van Rossum ba2485f947 Fix the Python property class in a comment right. 2001-12-10 18:03:34 +00:00
Guido van Rossum b75ba918d6 property_descr_get(): Fix a curious bug in the property() type: when
no get function was defined, the property's doc string was
inaccessible.  This was because the test for prop_get was made
*before* the test for a NULL/None object argument.

Also changed the property class defined in Python in a comment to test
for NULL to decide between get and delete; this makes it less Python
but then, assigning None to a property doesn't delete it!
2001-12-10 18:00:15 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 169192e818 SF patch #491049 (David Jacobs): Small PyString_FromString optimization
PyString_FromString():
  Since the length of the string is already being stored in size,
  changed the strcpy() to a memcpy() for a small speed improvement.
2001-12-10 15:45:54 +00:00
Guido van Rossum f70590f990 _PyTuple_Resize(): this dumped core on tuple(globals()) for me. Turns
out the for loop at the end intended to zero out new items wasn't
doing anything, because sv->ob_size was already equal to newsize.  The
fix slightly refactors the function, introducing a variable oldsize
and doing away with sizediff (which was used only once), and using
oldsize and newsize consistently.  I also added comments explaining
what the two for loops do.  (Looking at the CVS annotation of this
function, it's no miracle a bug crept in -- this has been patched by
many different folks! :-)
2001-12-07 20:00:04 +00:00
Tim Peters 62de65b25e PyString_FromString: this requires its argument be non-NULL, but doesn't
check it.  Added an assert() to that effect.
2001-12-06 20:29:32 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 604ddf80d8 Fix for #489669 (Neil Norwitz): memory leak in test_descr (unicode).
This is best reproduced by

  while 1:
      class U(unicode):
          pass
      U(u"xxxxxx")

The unicode_dealloc() code wasn't properly freeing the str and defenc
fields of the Unicode object when freeing a subtype instance.  Fixed
this by a subtle refactoring that actually reduces the amount of code
slightly.
2001-12-06 20:03:56 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 1a48ca8c53 Fix memory leak in dict_to_map(), SF bug [ #485152 ] memory leak in test_scope.
PyCell_Set() incremenets the reference count, so the earlier XINCREF
causes a leak.

Also make a number of small performance improvements to the code on
the assumption that most of the time variables are not rebound across
a FastToLocals() / LocalsToFast() pair.

Replace uses of PyCell_Set() and PyCell_Get() with PyCell_SET() and
PyCell_GET(), since the frame is guaranteed to contain cells.
2001-12-06 15:48:16 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 7802a53e38 Little stuff.
Add a missing DECREF in an obscure corner.  If the str() or repr() of
an object passed to a string interpolation -- e.g. "%s" % obj --
returns a non-string, the returned object was leaked.

Repair an indentation glitch.

Replace a bunch of PyString_AsString() calls (and their ilk) with
macros.
2001-12-06 15:18:48 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 14227b4dd4 The previous checkin to clear __slots__ variables did a little bit of
the work each time it found another base class.  All the work is
contiguous, so we might as well do it all at once at the end.
2001-12-06 02:35:58 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 33bab01da6 Fix SF bug #489581: __slots__ leak.
It was easier than I thought, assuming that no other things contribute
to the instance size besides slots -- a pretty good bet.  With a test
suite, no less!
2001-12-05 22:45:48 +00:00
Guido van Rossum d331cb5502 At the PythonLabs meeting someone mentioned it would make Jim really
happy if one could delete the __dict__ attribute of an instance.  I
love to make Jim happy, so here goes...

- New-style objects now support deleting their __dict__.  This is for
  all intents and purposes equivalent to assigning a brand new empty
  dictionary, but saves space if the object is not used further.
2001-12-05 19:46:42 +00:00
Tim Peters a3c01ce696 SF bug #488480: integer multiply to return -max_int-1.
int_mul():  new and vastly simpler overflow checking.  Whether it's
faster or slower will likely vary across platforms, favoring boxes
with fast floating point.  OTOH, we no longer have to worry about
people shipping broken LONG_BIT definitions <0.9 wink>.
2001-12-04 23:05:10 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 64b206c19e Fix SF bug #486144: Uninitialized __slot__ vrbl is None.
There's now a new structmember code, T_OBJECT_EX, which is used for
all __slot__ variables (except __weakref__, which has special behavior
anyway).  This new code raises AttributeError when the variable is
NULL rather than converting NULL to None.
2001-12-04 17:13:22 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 03b3f04542 long_mul(): The PyNumber_Multiply() call can return a long if the
result would overflow an int.  Check for this.  (SF bug #488482, Armin
Rigo.)
2001-12-04 16:36:39 +00:00
Guido van Rossum ebca9fc1ba PyObject_Generic{Get,Set}Attr(): ensure that the attribute name is a
string object (or a Unicode that's trivially converted to ASCII).

PyObject_GetAttr(): add an 'else' to the Unicode test like
PyObject_SetAttr() already has.
2001-12-04 15:54:53 +00:00
Guido van Rossum be5234610a function_call(): Remove a bogus (and I mean *really* bogus) call to
Py_DECREF(arg) after the PyErr_NoMemory() call.  (Armin Rigo, SF bug
#488477.)
2001-12-03 19:22:38 +00:00
Guido van Rossum dbb53d9918 Fix of SF bug #475877 (Mutable subtype instances are hashable).
Rather than tweaking the inheritance of type object slots (which turns
out to be too messy to try), this fix adds a __hash__ to the list and
dict types (the only mutable types I'm aware of) that explicitly
raises an error.  This has the advantage that list.__hash__([]) also
raises an error (previously, this would invoke object.__hash__([]),
returning the argument's address); ditto for dict.__hash__.

The disadvantage for this fix is that 3rd party mutable types aren't
automatically fixed.  This should be added to the rules for creating
subclassable extension types: if you don't want your object to be
hashable, add a tp_hash function that raises an exception.

Also, it's possible that I've forgotten about other mutable types for
which this should be done.
2001-12-03 16:32:18 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 5b443c6282 Address SF patch #480716 as well as related issues.
SF patch #480716 by Greg Chapman fixes the problem that super's
__get__ method always returns an instance of super, even when the
instance whose __get__ method is called is an instance of a subclass
of super.

Other issues fixed:

- super(C, C()).__class__ would return the __class__ attribute of C()
  rather than the __class__ attribute of the super object.  This is
  confusing.  To fix this, I decided to change the semantics of super
  so that it only applies to code attributes, not to data attributes.
  After all, overriding data attributes is not supported anyway.

- While super(C, x) carefully checked that x is an instance of C,
  super(C).__get__(x) made no such check, allowing for a loophole.
  This is now fixed.
2001-12-03 15:38:28 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 8f1ea71eab Add more inline documentation, as contributed in #487906. 2001-12-03 08:24:52 +00:00
Tim Peters 9161c8b0a1 PyString_FromFormatV, string_repr: document why these use sprintf
instead of PyOS_snprintf; add some relevant comments and asserts.
2001-12-03 01:55:38 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 1d5b3f29ff Fix for SF bug #485678.
slot_tp_descr_set(): When deleting an attribute described by a
descriptor implemented in Python, the descriptor's __del__ method is
called by the slot_tp_descr_set dispatch function.  This is bogus --
__del__ already has a different meaning. Renaming this use of __del__
is renamed to __delete__.
2001-12-03 00:08:33 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis d132750206 Patch 487906: update inline docs. 2001-12-02 18:09:41 +00:00
Tim Peters 422210426e SF bug #487743: test_builtin fails on 64 bit platform.
Bugfix candidate.
int_repr():  we've never had a buffer big enough to hold the largest
possible result on a 64-bit box.  Now that we're using snprintf instead
of sprintf, this can lead to nonsense results instead of random stack
corruption.
2001-12-01 02:52:56 +00:00
Jack Jansen b3be216b41 Merged changes made on r22b2-branch between r22b2 and r22b2-mac (the
changes from start of branch upto r22b2 were already merged, of course).
2001-11-30 14:16:36 +00:00
Tim Peters 97019e4110 PyFloat_AsStringEx(): This function takes an output char* but doesn't
pass the buffer length.  Stop using it.  It should be deprecated, but too
late in the release cycle to do that now.
New static format_float() does the same thing but requires passing the
buffer length too.  Use it instead.
2001-11-28 22:43:45 +00:00
Tim Peters c1bbcb87aa PyFile_WriteString(): change prototype so that the string arg is
const char* instead of char*.  The change is conceptually correct, and
indirectly fixes a compiler wng introduced when somebody else innocently
passed a const char* to this function.
2001-11-28 22:13:25 +00:00
Barry Warsaw d586756dc5 weakref_repr(), proxy_repr(): Conversion of sprintf() to
PyOS_snprintf() for buffer overrun avoidance.
2001-11-28 21:01:56 +00:00
Barry Warsaw e5c492d72a formatfloat(), formatint(): Conversion of sprintf() to PyOS_snprintf()
for buffer overrun avoidance.
2001-11-28 21:00:41 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 312af42b47 structseq_new(): Conversion of sprintf() to PyOS_snprintf() for buffer
overrun avoidance.
2001-11-28 20:56:44 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 6197509f24 PyInt_FromString(), int_repr(), int_oct(), int_hex(): Conversion of
sprintf() to PyOS_snprintf() for buffer overrun avoidance.
2001-11-28 20:55:34 +00:00
Barry Warsaw af8aef9ee2 PyFloat_FromString(): Conversion of sprintf() to PyOS_snprintf() for
buffer overrun avoidance.
2001-11-28 20:52:21 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 01d697a067 complex_to_buf(), complex_subtype_from_c_complex(): Conversion of
sprintf() to PyOS_snprintf() for buffer overrun avoidance.

complex_print(), complex_repr(), complex_str(): Call complex_to_buf()
passing in sizeof(buf).
2001-11-28 20:50:56 +00:00
Tim Peters 885d457709 sprintf -> PyOS_snprintf in some "obviously safe" cases.
Also changed <>-style #includes to ""-style in some places where the
former didn't make sense.
2001-11-28 20:27:42 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg 11326de657 Fix for bug #485951: repr diff between string and unicode. 2001-11-28 12:56:20 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg d4c0a9c59b Fixes for possible buffer overflows in sprintf() usages. 2001-11-28 11:47:00 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 64585f6afb PyObject_GetItem(), PyObject_SetItem(), PyObject_DelItem(): Fix a few
confusing error messages.  If a new-style class has no sequence or
mapping behavior, attempting to use the indexing notation with a
non-integer key would complain that the sequence index must be an
integer, rather than complaining that the operation is not supported.
2001-11-24 18:24:47 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg 72f8213ba4 Fix for bug #438164: %-formatting using Unicode objects.
This patch also does away with an incompatibility between Jython
and CPython.
2001-11-20 15:18:49 +00:00
Tim Peters a91e9646e0 Changing diapers reminded Guido that he wanted to allow for some measure
of multiple inheritance from a mix of new- and classic-style classes.
This is his patch, plus a start at some test cases from me.  Will check
in more, plus a NEWS blurb, later tonight.
2001-11-14 23:32:33 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 89c3a22a27 Add PyObject_CheckReadBuffer(), which returns true if its argument
supports the single-segment readable buffer interface.

Add documentation for this and other PyObject_XXXBuffer() calls.
2001-11-09 21:59:42 +00:00
Tim Peters a27a150ea5 open_the_file(): Explicitly set errno to 0 before calling fopen(). 2001-11-09 20:59:14 +00:00
Tim Peters 114486701a open_the_file(): this routine has a borrowed reference to the file
object, so the "Metroworks only" section should not decref it in case
of error (the caller is responsible for decref'ing in case of error --
and does).
2001-11-09 19:23:47 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 41c8321252 Fix SF buf #476953: Bad more for opening file gives bad msg.
If fopen() fails with EINVAL it means that the mode argument is
invalid.  Return the mode in the error message instead of the
filename.
2001-11-09 16:17:24 +00:00
Tim Peters 6f97e493e1 long_true_divide(): decref its converted arguments. test_long_future.py
run in an infinite loop no longer grows.  Thanks to Neal Norwitz for
determining that test leaked!
2001-11-04 23:09:40 +00:00
Tim Peters 67754e993e Rehabilitated the fast-path richcmp code, and sped it up. It wasn't
helping for types that defined tp_richcmp but not tp_compare, although
that's when it's most valuable, and strings moved into that category
since the fast path was first introduced.  Now it helps for same-type
non-Instance objects that define rich or 3-way compares.

For all the edits here, the rest just amounts to moving the fast path from
do_richcmp into PyObject_RichCompare, saving a layer of function call
(measurable on my box!).  This loses when NESTING_LIMIT is exceeded, but I
don't care about that (fast-paths are for normal cases, not pathologies).

Also added a tasteful <wink> label to get out of PyObject_RichCompare, as
the if/else nesting in this routine was getting incomprehensible.
2001-11-04 07:29:31 +00:00
Tim Peters c99213f993 No code change -- just trying to document the return conditions for all
the internal comparison routines.
2001-11-04 05:57:16 +00:00
Tim Peters 4e8ab5db38 float_divmod(): the code wasn't sick enough to stop the MS optimizer
from optimizing away mod's sign adjustment when mod == 0; so it got
the intended result only in the debug build.
2001-11-01 23:59:56 +00:00
Tim Peters d2e40d6691 SF bug #477221: abs and divmod act oddly with -0.0
Try to ensure that divmod(-0.0, 1.0) -> (-0.0, +0.0) across platforms.
It always did on Windows, and still does.  It didn't on Linux.  Alas,
there's no platform-independent way to write a test case for this.
Bugfix candidate.
2001-11-01 23:12:27 +00:00
Tim Peters faf0cd21ed float_abs() again: Guido pointed out that this could screw up in the
presence of NaNs.  So pass the issue on to the platform libm fabs();
after all, fabs() is a std C function because you can't implement it
correctly in portable C89.
2001-11-01 21:51:15 +00:00
Fred Drake 573395a7a8 PyFunction_Call() did not check the result of PyObject_Repr() for NULL, and
should just avoid calling it in the first place to avoid waiting for a repr
of a large object like a dict or list.  The result of PyObject_Repr() was
being leaked as well.
Bugfix candidate!
2001-11-01 20:26:12 +00:00
Tim Peters d2364e8e2d SF bug #477221: abs and divmod act oddly with -0.0.
Partial fix.
float_abs():  ensure abs(-0.0) returns +0.0.
Bugfix candidate.
2001-11-01 20:09:42 +00:00
Michael W. Hudson e2ec3ebcb8 fix for
[ #476557 ] Wrong error message for file.write(a, b)

Makes file.write a METH_VARARGS function.
2001-10-31 18:51:01 +00:00
Tim Peters c2fe618575 Fix bad bug in structseq slicing (NULL pointers in result). Reported by
Jack Jansen on python-dev.
Add simple test case.
Move vereq() from test_descr to test_support (it's handy!).
2001-10-30 23:20:46 +00:00
Guido van Rossum d82fb78b5c Add values to tp_getattro and tp_flags so that dir(Ellipsis) will
return the same as dir(None).
2001-10-30 02:40:52 +00:00
Tim Peters a427a2b8d0 Rename "dictionary" (type and constructor) to "dict". 2001-10-29 22:25:45 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 7ad2d1eb8e Add __del__ callbacks. They are too useful to leave out.
XXX Remaining problems:

- The GC module doesn't know about these; I think it has its reasons
  to disallow calling __del__, but for now, __del__ on new-style
  objects is called when the GC module discards an object, for better
  or for worse.

- The code to call a __del__ handler is really ridiculously
  complicated, due to all the different debug #ifdefs.  I've copied
  this from the similar code in classobject.c, so I'm pretty sure I
  did it right, but it's not pretty. :-(

- No tests yet.
2001-10-29 22:11:00 +00:00
Guido van Rossum afe7a94089 When overriding __str__ or __repr__, set the tp_print slot to NULL. 2001-10-29 14:33:44 +00:00
Fred Drake b0c079e3e5 PyObject_CallFunctionObArgs() ---> PyObject_CallFunctionObjArgs()
PyObject_CallMethodObArgs() ---> PyObject_CallMethodObjArgs()
2001-10-28 02:39:03 +00:00
Tim Peters 3abca127fe SF bug #475327: type() produces incorrect error msg
object.h:  Added PyType_CheckExact macro.

typeobject.c, type_new():

+ Use the new macro.
+ Assert that the arguments have the right types rather than do incomplete
  runtime checks "sometimes".
+ If this isn't the 1-argument flavor() of type, and there aren't 3 args
  total, produce a "types() takes 1 or 3 args" msg before
  PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords produces a "takes exactly 3" msg.
2001-10-27 19:37:48 +00:00
Tim Peters 4d85953fe6 dictionary() constructor:
+ Change keyword arg name from "x" to "items".  People passing a mapping
  object can stretch their imaginations <wink>.
+ Simplify the docstring text.
2001-10-27 18:27:48 +00:00
Fred Drake b92cf067c6 PyObject_CallFunction(), PyObject_CallMethod(): Make sure we do not touch
the va_list until we are sure we have a format string and need to use it;
this avoid premature initialization and having to finalize it several
different places because of error returns.
2001-10-27 06:16:31 +00:00
Fred Drake c916f5a390 Be smarter about clearing the weakref lists for instances, instance methods,
and functions: we only need to call PyObject_ClearWeakRefs() if the weakref
list is non-NULL.  Since these objects are common but weakrefs are still
unusual, saving the call at deallocation time makes a lot of sense.
2001-10-26 17:56:51 +00:00
Fred Drake b421b8c191 Added two new functions to conveniently call functions/methods from C.
PyObject_CallFunctionObArgs() and PyObject_CallMethodObArgs() have the
advantage that no format strings need to be parsed.  The CallMethod
variant also avoids creating a new string object in order to retrieve
a method from an object as well.
2001-10-26 16:21:32 +00:00
Tim Peters 1fc240e851 Generalize dictionary() to accept a sequence of 2-sequences. At the
outer level, the iterator protocol is used for memory-efficiency (the
outer sequence may be very large if fully materialized); at the inner
level, PySequence_Fast() is used for time-efficiency (these should
always be sequences of length 2).

dictobject.c, new functions PyDict_{Merge,Update}FromSeq2.  These are
wholly analogous to PyDict_{Merge,Update}, but process a sequence-of-2-
sequences argument instead of a mapping object.  For now, I left these
functions file static, so no corresponding doc changes.  It's tempting
to change dict.update() to allow a sequence-of-2-seqs argument too.

Also changed the name of dictionary's keyword argument from "mapping"
to "x".  Got a better name?  "mapping_or_sequence_of_pairs" isn't
attractive, although more so than "mosop" <wink>.

abstract.h, abstract.tex:  Added new PySequence_Fast_GET_SIZE function,
much faster than going thru the all-purpose PySequence_Size.

libfuncs.tex:
- Document dictionary().
- Fiddle tuple() and list() to admit that their argument is optional.
- The long-winded repetitions of "a sequence, a container that supports
  iteration, or an iterator object" is getting to be a PITA.  Many
  months ago I suggested factoring this out into "iterable object",
  where the definition of that could include being explicit about
  generators too (as is, I'm not sure a reader outside of PythonLabs
  could guess that "an iterator object" includes a generator call).
- Please check my curly braces -- I'm going blind <0.9 wink>.

abstract.c, PySequence_Tuple():  When PyObject_GetIter() fails, leave
its error msg alone now (the msg it produces has improved since
PySequence_Tuple was generalized to accept iterable objects, and
PySequence_Tuple was also stomping on the msg in cases it shouldn't
have even before PyObject_GetIter grew a better msg).
2001-10-26 05:06:50 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 6661be3bed Allow assignment to newinstance.__dict__. 2001-10-26 04:26:12 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 70e3688364 complex_subtype_from_string(): move the declaration of s_buffer[] out
of the if block where it was before.  The name is only used inside
that if block, but the storage is referenced outside it via the 's'
variable.

(This patch was part of SF patch #474590 -- RISC OS support.)
2001-10-25 18:07:22 +00:00
Guido van Rossum e2ae77b8b8 SF patch #474590 -- RISC OS support 2001-10-24 20:42:55 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 00ebd46dfc SF patch #474175 (Jay T Miller): file.readinto arg parsing bug
The C-code in fileobject.readinto(buffer) which parses
    the arguments assumes that size_t is interchangeable
    with int:

	    size_t ntodo, ndone, nnow;

	    if (f->f_fp == NULL)
		    return err_closed();
	    if (!PyArg_Parse(args, "w#", &ptr, &ntodo))
		    return NULL;

    This causes a problem on Alpha / Tru64 / OSF1 v5.1
    where size_t is a long and sizeof(long) != sizeof(int).

    The patch I'm proposing declares ntodo as an int.  An
    alternative might be to redefine w# to expect size_t.

[We can't change w# because there are probably third party modules
relying on it. GvR]
2001-10-23 21:25:24 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 996fad315c Referencable is not a word, so don't use it in an error message <wink>. 2001-10-22 16:31:40 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 39a362d9f4 cleanup indentation 2001-10-22 16:30:36 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 5c66a26dee Make the error message for unsupported operand types cleaner, in
response to a message by Laura Creighton on c.l.py.  E.g.

    >>> 0+''
    TypeError: unsupported operand types for +: 'int' and 'str'

(previously this did not mention the operand types)

    >>> ''+0
    TypeError: cannot concatenate 'str' and 'int' objects
2001-10-22 04:12:44 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 56ff387a7e Fix for SF bug #472940: can't getattr() attribute shown by dir()
There really isn't a good reason for instance method objects to have
their own __dict__, __doc__ and __name__ properties that just delegate
the request to the function (callable); the default attribute behavior
already does this.

The test suite had to be fixed because the error changes from
TypeError to AttributeError.
2001-10-22 02:00:09 +00:00
Guido van Rossum c8e5645f15 Methods of built-in types now properly check for keyword arguments
(formerly these were silently ignored).  The only built-in methods
that take keyword arguments are __call__, __init__ and __new__.
2001-10-22 00:43:43 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer f23473f008 Add missing "static" declarations (found by "make smelly"). 2001-10-21 22:28:58 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 2677512fc1 Adding missing "static" declarations (found by "make smelly"). 2001-10-21 22:26:43 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 6d204074cb Big internal change that should have no external effects: unify the
'slotdef' structure typedef and 'struct wrapperbase'.  By adding the
wrapper docstrings to the slotdef structure, the slotdefs array can
serve as the data structure that drives add_operators(); the wrapper
descriptor contains a pointer to slotdef structure.  This replaces
lots of custom code from add_operators() by a loop over the slotdefs
array, and does away with all the tab_xxx tables.
2001-10-21 00:44:31 +00:00
Thomas Heller fdc1bd305b Fix for Bug #216405:
use the correct base for a buffer object in _PyBuffer_FromObject.
2001-10-19 13:49:35 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg b5507ecd3c Additional test and documentation for the unicode() changes.
This patch should also be applied to the 2.2b1 trunk.
2001-10-19 12:02:29 +00:00
Guido van Rossum b8c65bc27f SF patch #470578: Fixes to synchronize unicode() and str()
This patch implements what we have discussed on python-dev late in
    September: str(obj) and unicode(obj) should behave similar, while
    the old behaviour is retained for unicode(obj, encoding, errors).

    The patch also adds a new feature with which objects can provide
    unicode(obj) with input data: the __unicode__ method. Currently no
    new tp_unicode slot is implemented; this is left as option for the
    future.

    Note that PyUnicode_FromEncodedObject() no longer accepts Unicode
    objects as input. The API name already suggests that Unicode
    objects do not belong in the list of acceptable objects and the
    functionality was only needed because
    PyUnicode_FromEncodedObject() was being used directly by
    unicode(). The latter was changed in the discussed way:

    * unicode(obj) calls PyObject_Unicode()
    * unicode(obj, encoding, errors) calls PyUnicode_FromEncodedObject()

    One thing left open to discussion is whether to leave the
    PyUnicode_FromObject() API as a thin API extension on top of
    PyUnicode_FromEncodedObject() or to turn it into a (macro) alias
    for PyObject_Unicode() and deprecate it. Doing so would have some
    surprising consequences though, e.g.  u"abc" + 123 would turn out
    as u"abc123"...

[Marc-Andre didn't have time to check this in before the deadline.  I
hope this is OK, Marc-Andre!  You can still make changes and commit
them on the trunk after the branch has been made, but then please mail
Barry a context diff if you want the change to be merged into the
2.2b1 release branch.  GvR]
2001-10-19 02:01:31 +00:00
Guido van Rossum e82f75aa20 Missing file structseq.c for SF patch #462296 2001-10-18 20:47:51 +00:00
Fred Drake 31f4d1fa4b Remove an unnecessary check for NULL. 2001-10-18 19:21:46 +00:00
Fred Drake 73006d0237 When weakref proxies are involved in binary & ternary slot operations,
the left-hand operand may not be the proxy in all cases.  If it isn't,
we end up doing two things: a) unwrapping something that isn't a
PyWeakReference (later resulting in a core dump) and b) passing a
proxy as the right-hand operand anyway, even though that can't be
handled by the actual handler (maybe eventually causing a core dump).

This is fixed by always unwrapping all the proxies involved before
passing anything to the actual handler.
2001-10-18 18:04:18 +00:00
Guido van Rossum f76de62f7d Fix SF bug #472234: type(obj) calls type->tp_init (Roeland Rengelink)
The fix is a band-aid: type_call() now makes the same exception for a
single-argument call to type() as type_new() was already making.
2001-10-18 15:49:21 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 6b47129424 Fix error checking done by abstract_issubclass and abstract_isinstance.
isinstance() now allows any object as the first argument and a class, a
type or something with a __bases__ tuple attribute for the second
argument.  This closes SF patch #464992.
2001-10-18 03:18:43 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 915f0eb212 Protect references to tp_descr_get and tp_dict with the appropriate test:
PyType_HasFeature(t, Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_CLASS).
2001-10-17 20:26:38 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 14a6f8378e Remove a bunch of stuff that's no longer needed now that update_slot()
and fixup_slot_dispatchers() always select the proper slot dispatcher.
This affects slot_sq_item(), slot_tp_getattro(), and
slot_tp_getattr_hook().
2001-10-17 13:59:09 +00:00
Guido van Rossum caf59043d1 slot_sq_item(): ensure that self is an instance of the wrapper's
d_type before calling the wrapped function.

fixup_slot_dispatchers(): fix indentation.
2001-10-17 07:15:43 +00:00
Tim Peters c993315b18 SF bug [#468061] __str__ ignored in str subclass.
object.c, PyObject_Str:  Don't try to optimize anything except exact
string objects here; in particular, let str subclasses go thru tp_str,
same as non-str objects.  This allows overrides of tp_str to take
effect.

stringobject.c:
+ string_print (str's tp_print):  If the argument isn't an exact string
  object, get one from PyObject_Str.

+ string_str (str's tp_str):  Make a genuine-string copy of the object if
  it's of a proper str subclass type.  str() applied to a str subclass
  that doesn't override __str__ ends up here.

test_descr.py:  New str_of_str_subclass() test.
2001-10-16 20:18:24 +00:00
Guido van Rossum b85a8b7bc7 Refactored the update_slot() code a bit to be hopefully slightly more
efficient:

- recurse down subclasses only once rather than for each affected
  slot;

- short-circuit recursing down subclasses when a subclass has its own
  definition of the name that caused the update_slot() calls in the
  first place;

- inline collect_ptrs().
2001-10-16 17:00:48 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 687ae00460 Get rid of __defined__ and tp_defined -- there's no need to
distinguish __dict__ and __defined__ any more.  In the C structure,
tp_cache takes its place -- but this hasn't been implemented yet.
2001-10-15 22:03:32 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 2f3ca6eeb6 Completely get rid of __dynamic__ and the corresponding
Py_TPFLAGS_DYNAMICTYPE bit.  There is no longer a performance benefit,
and I don't really see the use case any more.
2001-10-15 21:05:10 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 825d875371 Add (void *) casts to solve some problems on HP-UX 11.0, as discussed
on SF bug #467145.
2001-10-15 19:44:24 +00:00
Guido van Rossum d396b9c9c3 Redid the slot computation. The initial slot assignments are now done
using the same algorithm as the slot updates.  The slotdefs array is
now sorted by slot offset and has an interned string object corresponding
to the name added to each item.  More can be done but I need to commit
this first as a working intermediate stage.
2001-10-13 20:02:41 +00:00
Fred Drake 2bae4face2 Remove extra "]" in splitlines() docstring.
Reported by Neal Norwitz.
2001-10-13 15:57:55 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 79fd0fcae4 Band-aid solution to SF bug #470634: readlines() on linux requires 2 ^D's.
The problem is that if fread() returns a short count, we attempt
another fread() the next time through the loop, and apparently glibc
clears or ignores the eof condition so the second fread() requires
another ^D to make it see the eof condition.

According to the man page (and the C std, I hope) fread() can only
return a short count on error or eof.  I'm using that in the band-aid
solution to avoid calling fread() a second time after a short read.

Note that xreadlines() still has this problem: it calls
readlines(sizehint) until it gets a zero-length return.  Since
xreadlines() is mostly used for reading real files, I won't worry
about this until we get a bug report.
2001-10-12 20:01:53 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 5af588b7f0 Now that COPYBUF is a new local macro, add #undef COPYBUF. 2001-10-12 14:13:21 +00:00
Tim Peters fc57ccb982 SF bug [#470040] ParseTuple t# vs subclasses.
inherit_slots():  tp_as_buffer was getting inherited as if it were a
method pointer, rather than a pointer to a vector of method pointers.  As
a result, inheriting from a type that implemented buffer methods was
ineffective, leaving all the tp_as_buffer slots NULL in the subclass.
2001-10-12 02:38:24 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 875eeaa193 Another step in the right direction: when a new class's attribute
corresponding to a dispatch slot (e.g. __getitem__ or __add__) is set,
calculate the proper dispatch slot and propagate the change to all
subclasses.  Because of multiple inheritance, there's no easy way to
avoid always recursing down the tree of subclasses.  Who cares?

(There's more to do, but this works.  There's also a test for this now.)
2001-10-11 18:33:53 +00:00
Jack Jansen 2771b5b52b Rather gross workaround for a bug in the mac GUSI I/O library:
lseek(fp, 0L, SEEK_CUR) can make a filedescriptor unusable.
This workaround is expected to last only a few weeks (until GUSI
is fixed), but without it test_email fails.
2001-10-10 22:03:27 +00:00
Guido van Rossum fd38f8e638 The slot definition table entry for mp_getitem had a bogus wrapper
function, which caused test_minidom to fail.  Fixed this.
2001-10-09 20:17:57 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 7b9144b2ee Halfway checkin. This is still messy, but it's beginning to address
the problem that slots weren't inherited properly.  override_slots()
no longer exists; in its place comes fixup_slot_dispatchers() which
does more and different work and is table-based.  (Eventually I want
this table also to replace all the little tab_foo tables.)

Also add a wrapper for __delslice__; this required a change in
test_descrtut.py.
2001-10-09 19:39:46 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 0eb2a6e974 It turned out not so difficult to support old-style numbers (those
without the Py_TPFLAGS_CHECKTYPES flag) in the wrappers.  This
required a few changes in test_descr.py to cope with the fact that the
complex type has __int__, __long__ and __float__ methods that always
raise an exception.
2001-10-09 11:07:24 +00:00
Tim Peters 44383384b3 type_subclasses(): debug build was broken due to typo in new assert(). 2001-10-08 16:49:26 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 1c45073aba Keep track of a type's subclasses (subtypes), in tp_subclasses, which
is a list of weak references to types (new-style classes).  Make this
accessible to Python as the function __subclasses__ which returns a
list of types -- we don't want Python programmers to be able to
manipulate the raw list.

In order to make this possible, I also had to add weak reference
support to type objects.

This will eventually be used together with a trap on attribute
assignment for dynamic classes for a major speed-up without losing the
dynamic properties of types: when a __foo__ method is added to a
class, the class and all its subclasses will get an appropriate tp_foo
slot function.
2001-10-08 15:18:27 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 03290ecbf1 Implement isinstance(x, (A, B, ...)). Note that we only allow tuples,
not other sequences (then we'd have to except strings, and we'd still
be susceptible to recursive attacks).
2001-10-07 20:54:12 +00:00
Tim Peters f2a67daca2 Guido suggests, and I agree, to insist that SIZEOF_VOID_P be a power of 2.
This simplifies the rounding in _PyObject_VAR_SIZE, allows to restore the
pre-rounding calling sequence, and allows some nice little simplifications
in its callers.  I'm still making it return a size_t, though.
2001-10-07 03:54:51 +00:00
Tim Peters 6d483d3477 _PyObject_VAR_SIZE: always round up to a multiple-of-pointer-size value.
As Guido suggested, this makes the new subclassing code substantially
simpler.  But the mechanics of doing it w/ C macro semantics are a mess,
and _PyObject_VAR_SIZE has a new calling sequence now.

Question:  The PyObject_NEW_VAR macro appears to be part of the public API.
Regardless of what it expands to, the notion that it has to round up the
memory it allocates is new, and extensions containing the old
PyObject_NEW_VAR macro expansion (which was embedded in the
PyObject_NEW_VAR expansion) won't do this rounding.  But the rounding
isn't actually *needed* except for new-style instances with dict pointers
after a variable-length blob of embedded data.  So my guess is that we do
not need to bump the API version for this (as the rounding isn't needed
for anything an extension can do unless it's recompiled anyway).  What's
your guess?
2001-10-06 21:27:34 +00:00
Tim Peters 406fe3b1c0 Repaired the debug Windows deaths in test_descr, by allocating enough
pad memory to properly align the __dict__ pointer in all cases.

gcmodule.c/objimpl.h, _PyObject_GC_Malloc:
+ Added a "padding" argument so that this flavor of malloc can allocate
  enough bytes for alignment padding (it can't know this is needed, but
  its callers do).

typeobject.c, PyType_GenericAlloc:
+ Allocated enough bytes to align the __dict__ pointer.
+ Sped and simplified the round-up-to-PTRSIZE logic.
+ Added blank lines so I could parse the if/else blocks <0.7 wink>.
2001-10-06 19:04:01 +00:00
Tim Peters 7254e5a3ed _PyObject_GetDictPtr():
+ Use the _PyObject_VAR_SIZE macro to compute object size.
+ Break the computation into lines convenient for debugger inspection.
+ Speed the round-up-to-pointer-size computation.
2001-10-06 17:45:17 +00:00
Fred Drake b3f0d349b6 PyObject_ClearWeakRefs() is now a real function instead of a function pointer;
the implementation is in Objects/weakrefobject.c.
2001-10-05 21:58:11 +00:00
Fred Drake 8844d5264f The weak reference implementation, separated from the weakref module. 2001-10-05 21:52:26 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 9475a2310d Enable GC for new-style instances. This touches lots of files, since
many types were subclassable but had a xxx_dealloc function that
called PyObject_DEL(self) directly instead of deferring to
self->ob_type->tp_free(self).  It is permissible to set tp_free in the
type object directly to _PyObject_Del, for non-GC types, or to
_PyObject_GC_Del, for GC types.  Still, PyObject_DEL was a tad faster,
so I'm fearing that our pystone rating is going down again.  I'm not
sure if doing something like

void xxx_dealloc(PyObject *self)
{
	if (PyXxxCheckExact(self))
		PyObject_DEL(self);
	else
		self->ob_type->tp_free(self);
}

is any faster than always calling the else branch, so I haven't
attempted that -- however those types whose own dealloc is fancier
(int, float, unicode) do use this pattern.
2001-10-05 20:51:39 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 50fda3ba26 Make new classes dynamic by default. 2001-10-04 19:46:06 +00:00
Tim Peters 59f809d3bc type_new(): cast PyObject_MALLOC's result to char*, for clarity. 2001-10-04 05:43:02 +00:00
Tim Peters 2f93e28a19 SF bug [#467331] ClassType.__doc__ always None.
For a dynamically constructed type object, fill in the tp_doc slot with
a copy of the argument dict's "__doc__" value, provided the latter exists
and is a string.
NOTE:  I don't know what to do if it's a Unicode string, so in that case
tp_doc is left NULL (which shows up as Py_None if you do Class.__doc__).
Note that tp_doc holds a char*, not a general PyObject*.
2001-10-04 05:27:00 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 1e1de1cf35 typeobject.c, slot_tp_gettattr_hook(): fix the speedup hack -- the
test for getattribute==NULL was bogus because it always found
object.__getattribute__.  Pick it apart using the trick we learned
from slot_sq_item, and if it's just a wrapper around
PyObject_GenericGetAttr, zap it.  Also added a long XXX comment
explaining the consequences.
2001-10-03 13:58:35 +00:00
Guido van Rossum f4593e0b65 *EXPERIMENTAL* speedup of slot_sq_item. This sped up the following
test dramatically:

    class T(tuple): __dynamic__ = 1
    t = T(range(1000))
    for i in range(1000): tt = tuple(t)

The speedup was about 5x compared to the previous state of CVS (1.7
vs. 8.8, in arbitrary time units).  But it's still more than twice as
slow as as the same test with __dynamic__ = 0 (0.8).

I'm not sure that I really want to go through the trouble of this kind
of speedup for every slot.  Even doing it just for the most popular
slots will be a major effort (the new slot_sq_item is 40+ lines, while
the old one was one line with a powerful macro -- unfortunately the
speedup comes from expanding the macro and doing things in a way
specific to the slot signature).

An alternative that I'm currently considering is sketched in PLAN.txt:
trap setattr on type objects.  But this will require keeping track of
all derived types using weak references.
2001-10-03 12:09:30 +00:00
Guido van Rossum da21c0110b call_method(), call_maybe(): fix a performance bug: the argument
pointing to a static variable to hold the object form of the string
was never used, causing endless calls to PyString_InternFromString().
One particular test (with lots of __getitem__ calls) became a third
faster with this!
2001-10-03 00:50:18 +00:00
Tim Peters c15c4f1f39 SF bug [#467265] Compile errors on SuSe Linux on IBM/s390.
Unknown whether this fixes it.
- stringobject.c, PyString_FromFormatV:  don't assume that va_list is of
  a type that can be copied via an initializer.
- errors.c, PyErr_Format:  add a va_end() to balance the va_start().
2001-10-02 21:32:07 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 048eb75c2d Add Garbage Collection support to new-style classes (not yet to their
instances).

Also added GC support to various auxiliary types: super, property,
descriptors, wrappers, dictproxy.  (Only type objects have a tp_clear
field; the other types are.)

One change was necessary to the GC infrastructure.  We have statically
allocated type objects that don't have a GC header (and can't easily
be given one) and heap-allocated type objects that do have a GC
header.  Giving these different metatypes would be really ugly: I
tried, and I had to modify pickle.py, cPickle.c, copy.py, add a new
invent a new name for the new metatype and make it a built-in, change
affected tests...  In short, a mess.  So instead, we add a new type
slot tp_is_gc, which is a simple Boolean function that determines
whether a particular instance has GC headers or not.  This slot is
only relevant for types that have the (new) GC flag bit set.  If the
tp_is_gc slot is NULL (by far the most common case), all instances of
the type are deemed to have GC headers.  This slot is called by the
PyObject_IS_GC() macro (which is only used twice, both times in
gcmodule.c).

I also changed the extern declarations for a bunch of GC-related
functions (_PyObject_GC_Del etc.): these always exist but objimpl.h
only declared them when WITH_CYCLE_GC was defined, but I needed to be
able to reference them without #ifdefs.  (When WITH_CYCLE_GC is not
defined, they do the same as their non-GC counterparts anyway.)
2001-10-02 21:24:57 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 55f2099b2f Miscellaneous code fiddling:
- SLOT1BINFULL() macro: changed this to check for __rop__ overriding
  __op__, like binary_op1() in abstract.c -- the latter only calls the
  slot function once if both types use the same slot function, so the
  slot function must make both calls -- which it already did for the
  __op__, __rop__ order, but not yet for the __rop__, __op__ order
  when B.__class__ is a subclass of A.__class__.

- slot_sq_contains(), slot_nb_nonzero(): use lookup_maybe() rather
  than lookup_method() which sets an exception which we then clear.

- slot_nb_coerce(): don't give up when left argument's __coerce__
returns NotImplemented, but give the right argument a chance.
2001-10-01 17:18:22 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 89c4264792 binary_op1(), ternary_op(): rearrange the code so that slotw is tested
(to see whether __rop__ should go before __op__) only when slotv is
set.  This saves a test+branch when only slotw is set.
2001-10-01 17:10:18 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 2611162345 slot_sq_length(): squash a leak. 2001-10-01 16:42:49 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 25d1807d23 slot_tp_new(): newargs was leaking. 2001-10-01 15:55:28 +00:00
Guido van Rossum d016e45fdb Fix typo found by doerwalter. 2001-10-01 13:17:24 +00:00
Tim Peters 8b13b3ede2 SF bug [#466173] unpack TypeError unclear
Replaced 3 instances of "iter() of non-sequence" with
"iteration over non-sequence".
Restored "unpack non-sequence" for stuff like "a, b = 1".
2001-09-30 05:58:42 +00:00
Tim Peters d38b1c74f3 SF [#466125] PyLong_AsLongLong works for any integer.
Generalize PyLong_AsLongLong to accept int arguments too.  The real point
is so that PyArg_ParseTuple's 'L' code does too.  That code was
undocumented (AFAICT), so documented it.
2001-09-30 05:09:37 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 84675acb49 The changes to ternary_op could cause a core dump. Fix this, and
rewrite the code a bit to avoid calling the same slot more than once.
2001-09-29 01:05:03 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 4bb1e36eec It's a fact: for binary operators, *under certain circumstances*,
__rop__ now takes precendence over __op__.  Those circumstances are:

  - Both arguments are new-style classes
  - Both arguments are new-style numbers
  - Their implementation slots for tp_op differ
  - Their types differ
  - The right argument's type is a subtype of the left argument's type

Also did this for the ternary operator (pow) -- only the binary case
is dealt with properly though, since __rpow__ is not supported anyway.
2001-09-28 23:49:48 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 9bea3abf0d Ouch. The wrapper for __rpow__ was the same as for __pow__, resulting
in bizarre outcomes.  Test forthcoming.
2001-09-28 22:58:52 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 2ed6bf87c9 Merge branch changes (coercion, rich comparisons) into trunk. 2001-09-27 20:30:07 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 874f15aa28 add_operators(): the __floordiv__ and __truediv__ descriptors (and
their 'i' and 'r' variants) were not being generated if the
corresponding nb_ slots were present in the type object.  I bet this
is because floor and true division were introduced after I last
looked at that part of the code.
2001-09-25 21:16:33 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 3926a63d05 - Provisional support for pickling new-style objects. (*)
- Made cls.__module__ writable.

- Ensure that obj.__dict__ is returned as {}, not None, even upon first
  reference; it simply springs into life when you ask for it.

(*) The pickling support is provisional for the following reasons:

- It doesn't support classes with __slots__.

- It relies on additional support in copy_reg.py: the C method
  __reduce__, defined in the object class, really calls calling
  copy_reg._reduce(obj).  Eventually the Python code in copy_reg.py
  needs to be migrated to C, but I'd like to experiment with the
  Python implementation first.  The _reduce() code also relies on an
  additional helper function, _reconstructor(), defined in
  copy_reg.py; this should also be reimplemented in C.
2001-09-25 16:25:58 +00:00
Guido van Rossum a4cb78874c Change repr() of a new-style class to say <class 'ClassName'> rather
than <type 'ClassName'>.  Exception: if it's a built-in type or an
extension type, continue to call it <type 'ClassName>.  Call me a
wimp, but I don't want to break more user code than necessary.
2001-09-25 03:56:29 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 5c294fb0e6 Make __class__ assignment possible, when the object structures are the
same.  I hope the test for structural equivalence is stringent enough.
It only allows the assignment if the old and new types:

- have the same basic size
- have the same item size
- have the same dict offset
- have the same weaklist offset
- have the same GC flag bit
- have a common base that is the same except for maybe the dict and
  weaklist (which may have been added separately at the same offsets
  in both types)
2001-09-25 03:43:42 +00:00
Tim Peters 66c1a525e0 Make properties discoverable from Python:
- property() now takes 4 keyword arguments:  fget, fset, fdel, doc.
  Note that the real purpose of the 'f' prefix is to make fdel fit in
  ('del' is a keyword, so can't used as a keyword argument name).

- These map to visible readonly attributes 'fget', 'fset', 'fdel',
  and '__doc__' in the property object.

- fget/fset/fdel weren't discoverable from Python before.

- __doc__ is new, and allows to associate a docstring with a property.
2001-09-24 21:17:50 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 3d45d8f12e Another comparison patch-up: comparing a type with a dynamic metatype
to one with a static metatype raised an obscure error.
2001-09-24 18:47:40 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 2205642fe0 Do the same thing to complex that I did to str: the rich comparison
function returns NotImplemented when comparing objects whose
tp_richcompare slot is not itself.
2001-09-24 17:52:04 +00:00
Guido van Rossum bb77e6801e Change string comparison so that it applies even when one (or both)
arguments are subclasses of str, as long as they don't override rich
comparison.
2001-09-24 16:51:54 +00:00
Guido van Rossum ff0e6d6ef5 Fix the baffler that Tim reported: sometimes the repr() of an object
looks like <X object at ...>, sometimes it says <X instance at ...>.
Make this uniformly say <X object at ...>.
2001-09-24 16:03:59 +00:00
Tim Peters 2c9aa5ea8d Generalize file.writelines() to allow iterable objects. 2001-09-23 04:06:05 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 19c1cd5b35 Add the __getattr__ hook back. The rules are now:
- if __getattribute__ exists, it is called first;
  if it doesn't exists, PyObject_GenericGetAttr is called first.
- if the above raises AttributeError, and __getattr__ exists,
  it is called.
2001-09-21 21:24:49 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 867a8d2e26 Change the name of the __getattr__ special method for new-style
classes to __getattribute__, to make it crystal-clear that it doesn't
have the same semantics as overriding __getattr__ on classic classes.

This is a halfway checkin -- I'll proceed to add a __getattr__ hook
that works the way it works in classic classes.
2001-09-21 19:29:08 +00:00
Guido van Rossum ad9744a67a Fix a bug in rendering of \\ by repr() -- it rendered as \\\ instead
of \\.
2001-09-21 15:38:17 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 32d34c809f Add optional docstrings to getset descriptors. Fortunately, there's
no backwards compatibility to worry about, so I just pushed the
'closure' struct member to the back -- it's never used in the current
code base (I may eliminate it, but that's more work because the getter
and setter signatures would have to change.)

As examples, I added actual docstrings to the getset attributes of a
few types: file.closed, xxsubtype.spamdict.state.
2001-09-20 21:45:26 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 6f7993765a Add optional docstrings to member descriptors. For backwards
compatibility, this required all places where an array of "struct
memberlist" structures was declared that is referenced from a type's
tp_members slot to change the type of the structure to PyMemberDef;
"struct memberlist" is now only used by old code that still calls
PyMember_Get/Set.  The code in PyObject_GenericGetAttr/SetAttr now
calls the new APIs PyMember_GetOne/SetOne, which take a PyMemberDef
argument.

As examples, I added actual docstrings to the attributes of a few
types: file, complex, instance method, super, and xxsubtype.spamlist.

Also converted the symtable to new style getattr.
2001-09-20 20:46:19 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg 3508e30861 Fix Unicode .join() method to raise a TypeError for sequence
elements which are not Unicode objects or strings. (This matches
the string.join() behaviour.)

Fix a memory leak in the .join() method which occurs in case
the Unicode resize fails.

Restore the test_unicode output.
2001-09-20 17:22:58 +00:00
Guido van Rossum dd4d1c4f5d _PyObject_GetDictPtr(): when the offset is negative, always align --
we can't trust that tp_basicsize is aligned.  Fixes SF bug #462848.
2001-09-20 13:38:22 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg 6871f6ac57 Implement the changes proposed in patch #413333. unicode(obj) now
works just like str(obj) in that it tries __str__/tp_str on the object
in case it finds that the object is not a string or buffer.
2001-09-20 12:53:16 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg c60e6f7771 Patch #435971: UTF-7 codec by Brian Quinlan. 2001-09-20 10:35:46 +00:00
Tim Peters efc3a3af3b SF bug [#463093] File methods need doc strings.
Now they don't.
2001-09-20 07:55:22 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 2777c021fc Patch #462849: Pass Unicode objects to file's .write method. 2001-09-19 13:47:32 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 1952e388ca Add additional coercion support for "self subtypes" to int, long,
float (compare the recent checkin to complex).  Added tests for these.
2001-09-19 01:25:16 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 638059603c complex_coerce(): add explicit PyComplex_Check() test. Previously,
complex_coerce() would never be called with a complex argument,
because PyNumber_Coerce[Ex] doesn't bother calling the type's coercion
method if the values already have the same type.  But now, of course,
it's possible to pass an instance of a complex *subtype*, and those
must be accepted.
2001-09-19 01:13:10 +00:00
Guido van Rossum ab3b0343b8 Hopefully fix 3-way comparisons. This unfortunately adds yet another
hack, and it's even more disgusting than a PyInstance_Check() call.
If the tp_compare slot is the slot used for overrides in Python,
it's always called.

Add some tests that show what should work too.
2001-09-18 20:38:53 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis cf95f9cacb Properly repr classes without module names. 2001-09-18 20:23:28 +00:00
Guido van Rossum ceccae5365 wrap_cmpfunc(): added a safety check for the __cmp__ wrapper. We can
only safely call a type's tp_compare slot if the second argument is
also an instance of the same type.  I hate to think what
e.g. int_compare() would do with a second argument that's a float!
2001-09-18 20:03:57 +00:00
Guido van Rossum f0b35e1501 Redo the PyMethod attributes using a dir()-friendly approach, creating
descriptors for each attribute.  The getattr() implementation is
similar to PyObject_GenericGetAttr(), but delegates to im_self instead
of looking in __dict__; I couldn't do this as a wrapper around
PyObject_GenericGetAttr().

XXX A problem here is that this is a case of *delegation*.  dir()
doesn't see exactly the same attributes that are actually defined;
e.g. if the delegate is a Python function object, it supports
attributes like func_code etc., but these are not visible to dir(); on
the other hand, dynamic function attributes (stored in the function's
__dict__) *are* visible to dir().  Maybe we need a mechanism to tell
dir() about the delegation mechanism?  I vaguely recall seeing a
request in the newsgroup for a more formal definition of attribute
delegation too.  Sigh, time for a new PEP.
2001-09-18 03:53:24 +00:00
Tim Peters 26f68f5957 type_new(): Didn't compile anymore, due to change in struct memberlist
definition.  Guido, what else did you forget to check in <wink>?
2001-09-18 00:23:33 +00:00
Guido van Rossum d9d1d4ac6f Rewrite function attributes to use the generic routines properly.
This uses the new "restricted" feature of structmember, and getset
descriptors for some of the type checks.
2001-09-17 23:46:56 +00:00
Tim Peters 305b5857f6 PyObject_Dir(): Merge in __members__ and __methods__ too (if they exist,
and are lists, and then just the string elements (if any)).

There are good and bad reasons for this.  The good reason is to support
dir() "like before" on objects of extension types that haven't migrated
to the class introspection API yet.  The bad reason is that Python's own
method objects are such a type, and this is the quickest way to get their
im_self etc attrs to "show up" via dir().  It looks much messier to move
them to the new scheme, as their current getattr implementation presents
a view of their attrs that's a untion of their own attrs plus their
im_func's attrs.  In particular, methodobject.__dict__ actually returns
methodobject.im_func.__dict__, and if that's important to preserve it
doesn't seem to fit the class introspection model at all.
2001-09-17 02:38:46 +00:00
Tim Peters bc7e863ce2 merge_class_dict(): Clear the error if __bases__ doesn't exist. 2001-09-16 20:33:22 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 7e35d57c0c A fix for SF bug #461546 (bug in long_mul).
Both int and long multiplication are changed to be more careful in
their assumptions about when one of the arguments is a sequence: the
assumption that at least one of the arguments must be an int (or long,
respectively) is still held, but the assumption that these don't smell
like sequences is no longer true: a subtype of int or long may well
have a sequence-repeat thingie!
2001-09-15 03:14:32 +00:00
Guido van Rossum a8c60f478c tp_new_wrapper(): A subtle change in the check for safe use.
Allow staticbase != type, as long as their tp_new slots are the same.
2001-09-14 19:43:36 +00:00
Guido van Rossum f21c6be7bd Add call_maybe(): a variant of call_method() that returns
NotImplemented when the lookup fails, and use this for binary
operators.  Also lookup_maybe() which doesn't raise an exception when
the lookup fails (still returning NULL).
2001-09-14 17:51:50 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 717ce00c7c call_method():
- Don't turn a non-tuple argument into a one-tuple.  Rather, the
  caller must pass a format that causes Py_VaBuildValue() to return a
  tuple.

- Speed things up by calling PyObject_Call (which is fairly low-level
  and straightforward) rather than PyObject_CallObject (which calls
  PyEval_CallObjectWithKeywords which calls PyObject_Call, and nothing
  is really done in the mean time except some tests for NULL args and
  valid types, which are already guaranteed).

- Cosmetics.

Other places:

- Make sure that the format argument to call_method() is surrounded by
  parentheses, so it will cause a tuple to be created.

- Replace a few calls to PyEval_CallObject() with a surefire tuple for
  args to calls to PyObject_Call().  (A few calls to
  PyEval_CallObject() remain that have NULL for args.)
2001-09-14 16:58:08 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 5560b7492c PyObject_CallObject(): this may as well call PyEval_CallObject()
directly, as the only thing done here (replace NULL args with an empty
tuple) is also done there.

XXX Maybe we should take one step further and equate the two at the
macro level?  That's harder though because PyEval_Call* is declared in
a header that's not included standard.  But it is silly that
PyObject_CallObject calls PyEval_CallObject which calls back to
PyObject_Call.  Maybe PyEval_CallObject should be moved into this file
instead?  All I know is that there are too many call APIs!  The
differences between PyObject_Call and PyEval_CallObjectWithKeywords is
that the latter allows args to be NULL, and does explicit type checks
for args and kwds.
2001-09-14 16:47:50 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 5f5512d246 _PyObject_Dump(): print the type of the object. This is by far the
most frequently interesting information IMO.  Also tidy up the output.
2001-09-14 15:50:08 +00:00
Tim Peters 4441001b56 The end of [#460467] file objects should be subclassable.
A surprising number of changes to split tp_new into tp_new and tp_init.
Turned out the older PyFile_FromFile() didn't initialize the memory it
allocated in all (error) cases, which caused new sanity asserts
elsewhere to fail left & right (and could have, e.g., caused file_dealloc
to try decrefing random addresses).
2001-09-14 03:26:08 +00:00
Tim Peters 0ab085c4cb Changed the dict implementation to take "string shortcuts" only when
keys are true strings -- no subclasses need apply.  This may be debatable.

The problem is that a str subclass may very well want to override __eq__
and/or __hash__ (see the new example of case-insensitive strings in
test_descr), but go-fast shortcuts for strings are ubiquitous in our dicts
(and subclass overrides aren't even looked for then).  Another go-fast
reason for the change is that PyCheck_StringExact() is a quicker test
than PyCheck_String(), and we make such a test on virtually every access
to every dict.

OTOH, a str subclass may also be perfectly happy using the base str eq
and hash, and this change slows them a lot.  But those cases are still
hypothetical, while Python's own reliance on true-string dicts is not.
2001-09-14 00:25:33 +00:00
Tim Peters 742dfd6f17 Get rid of builtin_open() entirely (the C code and docstring, not the
builtin function); Guido pointed out that it could be just another
name in the __builtin__ dict for the file constructor now.
2001-09-13 21:49:44 +00:00
Tim Peters 8fa45677c1 Now that file objects are subclassable, you can get at the file constructor
just by doing type(f) where f is any file object.  This left a hole in
restricted execution mode that rexec.py can't plug by itself (although it
can plug part of it; the rest is plugged in fileobject.c now).
2001-09-13 21:01:29 +00:00
Tim Peters 3f996e7266 type_call(): Change in policy. The keyword args (if any) are now passed
on to the tp_new slot (if non-NULL), as well as to the tp_init slot (if
any).  A sane type implementing both tp_new and tp_init should probably
pay attention to the arguments in only one of them.
2001-09-13 19:18:27 +00:00
Skip Montanaro bafedecc06 based upon a suggestion in c.l.py, this slight expansion of the
OverflowError message seems reasonable.
2001-09-13 19:05:30 +00:00
Tim Peters 59c9a645e2 SF bug [#460467] file objects should be subclassable.
Preliminary support.  What's here works, but needs fine-tuning.
2001-09-13 05:38:56 +00:00
Tim Peters 2400fa4ad1 Again perhaps the end of [#460020] bug or feature: unicode() and subclasses.
Inhibited complex unary plus optimization when applied to a complex subtype.
Added PyComplex_CheckExact macro.  Some comments and minor code fiddling.
2001-09-12 19:12:49 +00:00
Tim Peters 111f60964e If interning an instance of a string subclass, intern a real string object
with the same value instead.  This ensures that a string (or string
subclass) object's ob_sinterned pointer is always a str (or NULL), and
that the dict of interned strings only has strs as keys.
2001-09-12 07:54:51 +00:00
Tim Peters af90b3e610 str_subtype_new, unicode_subtype_new:
+ These were leaving the hash fields at 0, which all string and unicode
  routines believe is a legitimate hash code.  As a result, hash() applied
  to str and unicode subclass instances always returned 0, which in turn
  confused dict operations, etc.
+ Changed local names "new"; no point to antagonizing C++ compilers.
2001-09-12 05:18:58 +00:00
Tim Peters 7a29bd5861 More on bug 460020: disable many optimizations of unicode subclasses. 2001-09-12 03:03:31 +00:00
Tim Peters 8fa5dd0601 More bug 460020: lots of string optimizations inhibited for string
subclasses, all "the usual" ones (slicing etc), plus replace, translate,
ljust, rjust, center and strip.  I don't know how to be sure they've all
been caught.

Question:  Should we complain if someone tries to intern an instance of
a string subclass?  I hate to slow any code on those paths.
2001-09-12 02:18:30 +00:00
Tim Peters 40c397dd56 long_invert(): tiny speed and space optimization. 2001-09-11 23:24:22 +00:00
Tim Peters 69c2de3ad6 More bug 460020. Disable a number of long optimizations for long subclasses. 2001-09-11 22:31:33 +00:00
Tim Peters 0280cf79a7 More bug 460020: when F is a subclass of float, disable the unary plus
optimization (+F(whatever)).
2001-09-11 21:53:35 +00:00
Tim Peters 73a1dfe367 More bug 460020. When I is a subclass of int, disable the +I(whatever),
I(0) << whatever, I(0) >> whatever, I(whatever) << 0 and I(whatever) >> 0
optimizations.
2001-09-11 21:44:14 +00:00
Tim Peters 7b07a41e9f The endless 460020 bug.
Disable t[:], t*0, t*1 optimizations when t is of a tuple subclass type.
2001-09-11 19:48:03 +00:00
Guido van Rossum dea6ef9bfd Replace a few places where X->ob_type was compared to &PyXXX_Type with
calls to PyXXX_CheckExact(X).
2001-09-11 16:13:52 +00:00
Tim Peters 78e0fc74bc Possibly the end of SF [#460020] bug or feature: unicode() and subclasses.
Changed unicode(i) to return a true Unicode object when i is an instance of
a unicode subclass.  Added PyUnicode_CheckExact macro.
2001-09-11 03:07:38 +00:00
Tim Peters 0ebeb584a4 PyUnicode_FromEncodedObject(): Repair memory leak in an error case. 2001-09-11 02:00:50 +00:00
Tim Peters 5a49ade70e More on SF bug [#460020] bug or feature: unicode() and subclasses.
Repaired str(i) to return a genuine string when i is an instance of a str
subclass.  New PyString_CheckExact() macro.
2001-09-11 01:41:59 +00:00
Tim Peters 8ff70a9606 Fix tortured comment -- I must be on drugs today. 2001-09-10 23:53:53 +00:00
Tim Peters 4c3a0a35cd More on SF bug [#460020] bug or feature: unicode() and subclasses.
tuple(i) repaired to return a true tuple when i is an instance of a
tuple subclass.
Added PyTuple_CheckExact macro.
PySequence_Tuple():  if a tuple-like object isn't exactly a tuple, it's
not safe to return the object as-is -- make a new tuple of it instead.
2001-09-10 23:37:46 +00:00
Tim Peters 7a50f2536e More for SF bug [#460020] bug or feature: unicode() and subclasses
Repair float constructor to return a true float when passed a subclass
instance.  New PyFloat_CheckExact macro.
2001-09-10 21:28:20 +00:00
Tim Peters 64b5ce3a69 SF bug #460020: bug or feature: unicode() and subclasses.
Given an immutable type M, and an instance I of a subclass of M, the
constructor call M(I) was just returning I as-is; but it should return a
new instance of M.  This fixes it for M in {int, long}.  Strings, floats
and tuples remain to be done.
Added new macros PyInt_CheckExact and PyLong_CheckExact, to more easily
distinguish between "is" and "is a" (i.e., only an int passes
PyInt_CheckExact, while any sublass of int passes PyInt_Check).
Added private API function _PyLong_Copy.
2001-09-10 20:52:51 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 8b4e43e768 _portable_fseek():
Subtlety on Windows: if we change test_largefile.py to use a file
> 4GB, it still fails.  A debug session suggests this is because
fseek(fp, 0, 2) refuses to seek to the end of the file when the file
is > 4GB, because it uses the SetFilePointer() in 32-bit mode.

But it only fails when we seek relative to the end of the file,
because in the other seek modes only calls to fgetpos() and fsetpos()
are made, which use Get/SetFilePointer() in 64-bit mode.  Solution:
#ifdef MS_WInDOWS, replace the call to fseek(fp, ...) with a call to
_lseeki64(fileno(fp), ...).  Make sure to call fflush(fp) first.

(XXX Could also replace the entire branch with a call to _lseeki64().
Would that be more efficient?  Certainly less generated code.)

(XXX This needs more testing.  I can't actually test that it works for
files >4GB on my Win98 machine, because the filesystem here won't let
me create files >=4GB at all.  Tim should test this on his Win2K
machine.)
2001-09-10 20:43:35 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 8dbd3d8c50 PyObject_Dir():
- use PyModule_Check() instead of PyObject_TypeCheck(), now we can.
  - don't assert that the __dict__ gotten out of a module is always
    a dictionary; check its type, and raise an exception if it's not.
2001-09-10 18:27:43 +00:00
Tim Peters 16a77adfbd Generalize operator.indexOf (PySequence_Index) to work with any
iterable object.  I'm not sure how that got overlooked before!

Got rid of the internal _PySequence_IterContains, introduced a new
internal _PySequence_IterSearch, and rewrote all the iteration-based
"count of", "index of", and "is the object in it or not?" routines to
just call the new function.  I suppose it's slower this way, but the
code duplication was getting depressing.
2001-09-08 04:00:12 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 28d80b1058 PyClass_New(): put the extended Don Beaudry hook back in. When one of
the base classes is not a classic class, and its class (the metaclass)
is callable, call the metaclass to do the deed.

One effect of this is that, when mixing classic and new-style classes
amongst the bases of a class, it doesn't matter whether the first base
class is a classic class or not: you will always get the error
"TypeError: metatype conflict among bases".  (Formerly, with a classic
class first, you'd get "TypeError: PyClass_New: base must be a class".)

Another effect is that multiple inheritance from ExtensionClass.Base,
with a classic class as the first class, transfers control to the
ExtensionClass.Base class.  This is what we need for SF #443239 (and
also for running Zope under 2.2a4, before ExtensionClass is replaced).
2001-09-07 21:08:32 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 8700b4281a PySequence_Check(), PyMapping_Check(): only return true if the
corresponding "getitem" operation (sq_item or mp_subscript) is
implemented.  I realize that "sequence-ness" and "mapping-ness" are
poorly defined (and the tests may still be wrong for user-defined
instances, which always have both slots filled), but I believe that a
sequence that doesn't support its getitem operation should not be
considered a sequence.  All other operations are optional though.

For example, the ZODB BTree tests crashed because PySequence_Check()
returned true for a dictionary!  (In 2.2, the dictionary type has a
tp_as_sequence pointer, but the only field filled is sq_contains, so
you can write "if key in dict".)  With this fix, all standalone ZODB
tests succeed.
2001-09-07 20:20:11 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 9478d07ee7 PyType_IsSubtype(): test tp_flags for HAVE_CLASS bit before accessing
a->tp_mro.  If a doesn't have class, it's considered a subclass only
of itself or of 'object'.

This one fix is enough to prevent the ExtensionClass test suite from
dumping core, but that doesn't say much (it's a rather small test
suite).  Also note that for ExtensionClass-defined types, a different
subclass test may be needed.  But I haven't checked whether
PyType_IsSubtype() is actually used in situations where this matters
-- probably it doesn't, since we also don't check for classic classes.
2001-09-07 18:52:13 +00:00
Tim Peters e56ed9ba15 long_true_divide: reliably force underflow to 0 when the denominator
has more bits than the numerator than can be counted in a C int (yes,
that's unlikely, and no, I'm not adding a test case with a 2 gigabit
long).
2001-09-06 21:59:14 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 8bce4acb17 Rename 'getset' to 'property'. 2001-09-06 21:56:42 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 387c547fd3 Revert parts of patch #453627, documenting the resulting test failures
instead.
2001-09-06 08:16:17 +00:00
Tim Peters 6e13a562ae Enable large file support on Win32 systems.
Curious:  the MS docs say stati64 etc are supported even on Win95, but
Win95 doesn't support a filesystem that allows partitions > 2 Gb.

test_largefile:  This was opening its test file in text mode.  I have no
idea how that worked under Win64, but it sure needs binary mode on Win98.
BTW, on Win98 test_largefile runs quickly (under a second).
2001-09-06 00:32:15 +00:00
Tim Peters 97f4a33e12 Better error msg for 3-arg pow with a float argument. 2001-09-05 23:49:24 +00:00
Guido van Rossum b479dc561c Add PyMethod_Function(), PyMethod_Self(), PyMethod_Class() back.
While not even documented, they were clearly part of the C API,
there's no great difficulty to support them, and it has the cool
effect of not requiring any changes to ExtensionClass.c.
2001-09-05 22:52:50 +00:00
Tim Peters a40c793d06 Rework the way we try to check for libm overflow, given that C99 no longer
requires that errno ever get set, and it looks like glibc is already
playing that game.  New rules:

+ Never use HUGE_VAL.  Use the new Py_HUGE_VAL instead.

+ Never believe errno.  If overflow is the only thing you're interested in,
  use the new Py_OVERFLOWED(x) macro.  If you're interested in any libm
  errors, use the new Py_SET_ERANGE_IF_OVERFLOW(x) macro, which attempts
  to set errno the way C89 said it worked.

Unfortunately, none of these are reliable, but they work on Windows and I
*expect* under glibc too.
2001-09-05 22:36:56 +00:00
Guido van Rossum b855216099 Changes to automatically enable large file support on some systems.
I believe this works on Linux (tested both on a system with large file
support and one without it), and it may work on Solaris 2.7.

The changes are twofold:

(1) The configure script now boldly tries to set the two symbols that
    are recommended (for Solaris and Linux), and then tries a test
    script that does some simple seeking without writing.

(2) The _portable_{fseek,ftell} functions are a little more systematic
    in how they try the different large file support options: first
    try fseeko/ftello, but only if off_t is large; then try
    fseek64/ftell64; then try hacking with fgetpos/fsetpos.

I'm keeping my fingers crossed.  The meaning of the
HAVE_LARGEFILE_SUPPORT macro is not at all clear.

I'll see if I can get it to work on Windows as well.
2001-09-05 14:58:11 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 655c9557f6 Patch #453627: Define the following macros when compiling on a UnixWare 7.x system:
SCO_ATAN2_BUG, SCO_ACCEPT_BUG, and STRICT_SYSV_CURSES.
Work aroudn a bug in the SCO UnixWare atan2() implementation.
2001-09-05 14:45:54 +00:00
Tim Peters 4c483c4d8e Make the error msgs in our pow() implementations consistent. 2001-09-05 06:24:58 +00:00
Tim Peters 57f282a2a0 Try to recover from that glibc's ldexp apparently doesn't set errno on
overflow.  Needs testing on Linux (test_long.py and test_long_future.py
especially).
2001-09-05 05:38:10 +00:00
Tim Peters 7eea37e831 At Guido's suggestion, here's a new C API function, PyObject_Dir(), like
__builtin__.dir().  Moved the guts from bltinmodule.c to object.c.
2001-09-04 22:08:56 +00:00
Tim Peters e2a600099d Change long/long true division to return as many good bits as it can;
e.g., (1L << 40000)/(1L << 40001) returns 0.5, not Inf or NaN or whatever.
2001-09-04 06:17:36 +00:00
Tim Peters 9c1d7fd5f2 Move int_true_divide next to the other division routines. 2001-09-04 05:52:47 +00:00
Tim Peters 20dab9f168 Move long_true_divide next to the other division routines (for clarity!). 2001-09-04 05:31:47 +00:00
Tim Peters 9fffa3eea3 Raise OverflowError when appropriate on long->float conversion. Most of
the fiddling is simply due to that no caller of PyLong_AsDouble ever
checked for failure (so that's fixing old bugs).  PyLong_AsDouble is much
faster for big inputs now too, but that's more of a happy consequence
than a design goal.
2001-09-04 05:14:19 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 1832de4bc0 PEP 238 documented -Qwarn as warning only for classic int or long
division, and this makes sense.  Add -Qwarnall to warn for all
classic divisions, as required by the fixdiv.py tool.
2001-09-04 03:51:09 +00:00
Tim Peters a1c1b0f468 Introduce new private API function _PyLong_AsScaledDouble. Not used yet,
but will be the foundation for Good Things:
+ Speed PyLong_AsDouble.
+ Give PyLong_AsDouble the ability to detect overflow.
+ Make true division of long/long nearly as accurate as possible (no
  spurious infinities or NaNs).
+ Return non-insane results from math.log and math.log10 when passing a
  long that can't be approximated by a double better than HUGE_VAL.
2001-09-04 02:50:49 +00:00
Tim Peters 32f453eaa4 New restriction on pow(x, y, z): If z is not None, x and y must be of
integer types, and y must be >= 0.  See discussion at
http://sf.net/tracker/index.php?func=detail&aid=457066&group_id=5470&atid=105470
2001-09-03 08:35:41 +00:00
Tim Peters b95ec09a44 Repair typo in comment. 2001-09-02 18:35:54 +00:00
Tim Peters 25786c0851 Make dictionary() a real constructor. Accepts at most one argument, "a
mapping object", in the same sense dict.update(x) requires of x (that x
has a keys() method and a getitem).
Questionable:  The other type constructors accept a keyword argument, so I
did that here too (e.g., dictionary(mapping={1:2}) works).  But type_call
doesn't pass the keyword args to the tp_new slot (it passes NULL), it only
passes them to the tp_init slot, so getting at them required adding a
tp_init slot to dicts.  Looks like that makes the normal case (i.e., no
args at all) a little slower (the time it takes to call dict.tp_init and
have it figure out there's nothing to do).
2001-09-02 08:22:48 +00:00
Tim Peters 1b8ca0d87a Rewrite the tuple() docstring to parallel the list() docstring. 2001-09-02 06:42:25 +00:00
Tim Peters 9577761337 Repair apparent cut'n'pasteo in tuple() docstring. 2001-09-02 06:29:48 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 393661d15f Add warning mode for classic division, almost exactly as specified in
PEP 238.  Changes:

- add a new flag variable Py_DivisionWarningFlag, declared in
  pydebug.h, defined in object.c, set in main.c, and used in
  {int,long,float,complex}object.c.  When this flag is set, the
  classic division operator issues a DeprecationWarning message.

- add a new API PyRun_SimpleStringFlags() to match
  PyRun_SimpleString().  The main() function calls this so that
  commands run with -c can also benefit from -Dnew.

- While I was at it, I changed the usage message in main() somewhat:
  alphabetized the options, split it in *four* parts to fit in under
  512 bytes (not that I still believe this is necessary -- doc strings
  elsewhere are much longer), and perhaps most visibly, don't display
  the full list of options on each command line error.  Instead, the
  full list is only displayed when -h is used, and otherwise a brief
  reminder of -h is displayed.  When -h is used, write to stdout so
  that you can do `python -h | more'.

Notes:

- I don't want to use the -W option to control whether the classic
  division warning is issued or not, because the machinery to decide
  whether to display the warning or not is very expensive (it involves
  calling into the warnings.py module).  You can use -Werror to turn
  the warnings into exceptions though.

- The -Dnew option doesn't select future division for all of the
  program -- only for the __main__ module.  I don't know if I'll ever
  change this -- it would require changes to the .pyc file magic
  number to do it right, and a more global notion of compiler flags.

- You can usefully combine -Dwarn and -Dnew: this gives the __main__
  module new division, and warns about classic division everywhere
  else.
2001-08-31 17:40:15 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 29d55a38ce Fix a memory leak in str_subtype_new(). (All the other
xxx_subtype_new() functions are OK, but I goofed up in this one. :-( )
2001-08-31 16:11:15 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 41eb14dffa Give 'super' a decent repr(), and readonly attributes to access the
type and obj properties.  The "bogus super object" message is gone --
this will now just raise an AttributeError.
2001-08-30 23:13:11 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 21922aa939 PyObject_Repr(): add missing ">" back at end of format string: "<%s
object at %p>".
2001-08-30 20:26:05 +00:00
Tim Peters 017cb2c7d8 Squash new compiler wng. 2001-08-30 20:07:55 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 6fb3fdec7c Pytype_GenericAlloc(): round up size so we zap all four bytes of the
__dict__ slot for string subtypes.

subtype_dealloc(): properly use _PyObject_GetDictPtr() to get the
(potentially negative) dict offset.  Don't copy things into local
variables that are used only once.

type_new(): properly calculate a negative dict offset when tp_itemsize
is nonzero.  The __dict__ attribute, if present, is now a calculated
attribute rather than a structure member.
2001-08-30 20:00:07 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 4b8c0f6d7d More stuff discovered while writing the simplest of testcases:
tupledealloc(): only feed the free list when the type is really a
tuple, not a subtype.  Otherwise, use PyObject_GC_Del().

_PyTuple_Resize(): disallow using this for tuple subtypes.
2001-08-30 18:31:30 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 13228a6f09 Ah, the joy of writing test cases...
long_subtype_new(): fix a typo (type->ob_size instead of
tmp->ob_size).
2001-08-30 15:54:44 +00:00
Sjoerd Mullender 38b88c233a Removed some unreachable break statements to silence SGI compiler. 2001-08-30 13:58:58 +00:00
Tim Peters 52e0717215 Give the internal immutable list type .extend and .pop methods (they
"should have" been added here when they were added to lists).
2001-08-30 06:15:32 +00:00
Guido van Rossum c41418751f Safety measures now that str and tuple are subclassable:
If tp_itemsize of the basetype is nonzero, only allow empty __slots__
(declaring that no __dict__ should be added), and don't add a weakref
offset.
2001-08-30 04:43:35 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 31bcff8815 Make 'super' subclassable. (Not sure how useful this is yet. :-) 2001-08-30 04:37:15 +00:00
Guido van Rossum e023fe0eef Make unicode subclassable. 2001-08-30 03:12:59 +00:00
Guido van Rossum ae960afb5e Make str and tuple types subclassable. 2001-08-30 03:11:59 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 147b13c069 Make getset subclassable. 2001-08-30 03:10:36 +00:00
Guido van Rossum d93dce1699 Fix typo: double semicolons. 2001-08-30 03:09:31 +00:00
Tim Peters deb77e8394 Squash new compiler wng in debug build. 2001-08-30 00:32:51 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer c806c8858d Use new GC API. Remove usage of BASICSIZE macros. 2001-08-29 23:54:54 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer e83c00efd0 Use new GC API. 2001-08-29 23:54:21 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer fd34369ecb Remove GC related code. It lives in gcmodule now. 2001-08-29 23:54:03 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 4f4817fee8 Make frames a PyVarObject. Use new GC API. 2001-08-29 23:52:17 +00:00
Guido van Rossum bef1417f9f Make int, long and float subclassable.
This uses a slightly wimpy and wasteful approach, but it works. :-)
2001-08-29 15:47:46 +00:00
Guido van Rossum e705ef1bce Fix super() so that it is usable for static methods (like __new__) as well.
In particular, the second argument can now be a subclass of the first
as well (normally it must be an instance though).
2001-08-29 15:47:06 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 5592e4d7d5 Fix a typo in SLOT0 macro for the declaration of cache_str.
Dunno why I didn't catch this before.
2001-08-28 18:28:21 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 2730b13202 Finish the previous checkin: also avoid getattr when calling the method
directly.
2001-08-28 18:22:14 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 607187325f Change in policy: when a slot_tp_xxx function looks for the __xxx__ method,
don't use getattr, but only look in the dict of the type and base types.
This prevents picking up all sorts of weird stuff, including things defined
by the metaclass when the object is a class (type).

For this purpose, a helper function lookup_method() was added.  One or two
other places also use this.
2001-08-28 17:47:51 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 7c47beb860 Two improvements suggested by Greg Stein:
PyString_FromFormatV(): In the final resize at the end, we can use
    PyString_AS_STRING() since we know the object is a string and can
    avoid the typechecking.

PyString_FromFormat(): GS sez: "For safety/propriety, you should call
    va_end() on the vargs variable."
2001-08-27 03:11:09 +00:00
Tim Peters 6af5bbb565 PyString_FromFormatV: Massage platform %p output to match what gcc does,
at least in the first two characters.  %p is ill-defined, and people will
forever commit bad tests otherwise ("bad" in the sense that they fall
over (at least on Windows) for lack of a leading '0x'; 5 of the 7 tests
in test_repr.py failed on Windows for that reason this time around).
2001-08-25 03:02:28 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 239abf7e23 getset_init(): the function name in the PyArg_ParseTuple() format
should just be "getset", not "getset.__init__".
2001-08-24 18:49:10 +00:00
Guido van Rossum a15dece519 Improve the error message issued when an unbound method is called with
an inappropriate first argument.  Now that there are more ways for
this to fail, make sure to report the name of the class of the
expected instance and of the actual instance.
2001-08-24 18:48:27 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 7ce3694a52 repr's converted to using PyString_FromFormat() instead of sprintf'ing
into a hardcoded char* buffer.

Closes patch #454743.
2001-08-24 18:34:26 +00:00
Barry Warsaw dadace004b PyString_FromFormat() and PyString_FromFormatV(): Largely ripped from
PyErr_Format() these new C API methods can be used instead of
    sprintf()'s into hardcoded char* buffers.  This allows us to fix
    many situation where long package, module, or class names get
    truncated in reprs.

    PyString_FromFormat() is the varargs variety.
    PyString_FromFormatV() is the va_list variety

    Original PyErr_Format() code was modified to allow %p and %ld
    expansions.

    Many reprs were converted to this, checkins coming soo.  Not
    changed: complex_repr(), float_repr(), float_print(), float_str(),
    int_repr().  There may be other candidates not yet converted.

    Closes patch #454743.
2001-08-24 18:32:06 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 705f0f5a91 Add 'super', another new object type with magical properties.
super(type) -> unbound super object
super(type, obj) -> bound super object; requires isinstance(obj, type)

Typical use to call a cooperative superclass method:

class C(B):
    def meth(self, arg):
        super(C, self).meth(arg);
2001-08-24 16:47:00 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 271410ad18 Change the getset type to take an optional third function argument:
the delete function.  (Question: should the attribute name also be
recorded in the getset object?  That makes the protocol more work, but
may give us better error messages.)
2001-08-24 15:23:20 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 845fc48bf7 getset_descr_set(): guard against deletion (indicated by a set call
with a NULL value), in a somewhat lame way: call the set() function
with one argument.  Should I add a 3rd function, 'del', instead?
2001-08-24 10:17:36 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 2c25239215 slot_tp_descr_get(): guard against NULL obj or type (bug reported by
Thomas Hellor on python-dev).

slot_tp_descr_set(): if value is NULL, call __del__ instead of
__set__.
2001-08-24 10:13:31 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 91c0d8a922 getset_init(): make the arguments optional.
getset_doc: add docstring.
2001-08-24 09:55:51 +00:00
Tim Peters 96685bfbf0 float_pow: Put *all* of the burden on the libm pow in normal
cases.
powu:  Deleted.

This started with a nonsensical error msg:

>>> x = -1.
>>> import sys
>>> x**(-sys.maxint-1L)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
ValueError: negative number cannot be raised to a fractional power
>>>

The special-casing in float_pow was simply wrong in this case (there's
not even anything peculiar about these inputs), and I don't see any point
to it in *any* case:  a decent libm pow should have worst-case error under
1 ULP, so in particular should deliver the exact result whenever the exact
result is representable (else its error is at least 1 ULP).  Thus our
special fiddling for integral values "shouldn't" buy anything in accuracy,
and, to the contrary, repeated multiplication is less accurate than a
decent pow when the true result isn't exactly representable.  So just
letting pow() do its job here (we may not be able to trust libm x-platform
in exceptional cases, but these are normal cases).
2001-08-23 22:31:37 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 29a62dd6eb Add new built-in type 'getset' (PyGetSet_Type).
This implements the 'getset' class from test_binop.py.
2001-08-23 21:40:38 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 0b13116a62 err_ovf(): only raise OverflowError when OverflowWarning was raised. 2001-08-23 21:32:40 +00:00
Tim Peters 31960db5a5 int_pow(): Repair typo when passing on to float pow (the 2nd argument was
being passed as both the 2nd and 3rd args).  Regression test will follow.
2001-08-23 21:28:33 +00:00
Guido van Rossum e27f795b72 Change all case where we used to raise OverflowError to issue a
warning and then redo the operation using long ints.
2001-08-23 02:59:04 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 60f018846d Merge changes from r22a2-branch back into trunk. Also, change patch
level to 2.2a2+
2001-08-22 19:24:42 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 5d815f323b Address SF bug #442813. The sequence getitem wrappers should do
interpretation of negative indices, since neither the sq_*item slots
nor the slot_ wrappers do this.  (Slices are a different story, there
the size wrapping is done too early.)
2001-08-17 21:57:47 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 9676b22cd7 Weak reference support, closing SF bug #451773.
Classes that don't use __slots__ have a __weakref__ member added in
the same way as __dict__ is added (i.e. only if the base didn't
already have one).  Classes using __slots__ can enable weak
referenceability by adding '__weakref__' to the __slots__ list.

Renamed the __weaklistoffset__ class member to __weakrefoffset__ --
it's not always a list, it seems.  (Is tp_weaklistoffset a historical
misnomer, or do I misunderstand this?)
2001-08-17 20:32:36 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 339d0f720e Patch #445762: Support --disable-unicode
- Do not compile unicodeobject, unicodectype, and unicodedata if Unicode is disabled
- check for Py_USING_UNICODE in all places that use Unicode functions
- disables unicode literals, and the builtin functions
- add the types.StringTypes list
- remove Unicode literals from most tests.
2001-08-17 18:39:25 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 1a49350e8d type_new(): look for __dynamic__ at the module level (after looking in
the class dict).  Anything but a nonnegative int in either place is
*ignored* (before, a non-Boolean was an error).  The default is still
static -- in a comparative test, Jeremy's Tools/compiler package ran
twice as slow (compiling itself) using dynamic as the default.  (The
static version, which requires a few tweaks to avoid modifying class
variables, runs at about the same speed as the classic version.)

slot_tp_descr_get(): this also needed fallback behavior.

slot_tp_getattro(): remove a debug fprintf() call.
2001-08-17 16:47:50 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 4066769b91 Fix core dump in repr() of instancemethod whose class==NULL. 2001-08-17 13:59:27 +00:00
Guido van Rossum f23c41d56a instance_getattr2(): rewritten to remove unnecessary stuff and
streamlined a bit.

instancemethod_descr_get(): don't bind an unbound method of a class
that's not a base class of the argument class.
2001-08-17 13:43:27 +00:00
Guido van Rossum cdf0d75897 Instance methods: allow a NULL value for im_class. 2001-08-17 12:07:34 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 8d32c8b59f type_new(): only defer to the winning metatype if it's different from
the metatype passed in as an argument.  This prevents infinite
recursion when a metatype written in Python calls type.__new__() as a
"super" call.

Also tweaked some comments.
2001-08-17 11:18:38 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 501c7c7d0e classobject.c:instancemethod_descr_get(): when a bound method is
assigned to a class variable and then accessed via an instance, it
should not be rebound.

test_descr.py:methods(): test for the condition above.
2001-08-16 20:41:56 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 2907fe6ce7 module_repr(): Instead of fixing the maximum buf size to 400,
calculate it on the fly.  This way even modules with long package
    names get an accurate repr instead of a truncated one.  The extra
    malloc/free cost shouldn't be a problem in a repr function.

    Closes SF bug #437984
2001-08-16 20:39:24 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 76e6963fc1 Fix object_repr() to include the module (using the same rules as
type_repr() for when to show or not to show it).
2001-08-16 18:52:43 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis e3eb1f2b23 Patch #427190: Implement and use METH_NOARGS and METH_O. 2001-08-16 13:15:00 +00:00
Guido van Rossum c35422109b Fix SF bug #442501: calculate __module__ properly.
- type_module(), type_name(): if tp_name contains one or more period,
  the part before the last period is __module__, the part after that
  is __name__.  Otherwise, for non-heap types, __module__ is
  "__builtin__".  For heap types, __module__ is looked up in
  tp_defined.

- type_new(): heap types have their __module__ set from
  globals().__name__; a pre-existing __module__ in their dict is not
  overridden.  This is not inherited.

- type_repr(): if __module__ exists and is not "__builtin__", it is
  included in the string representation (just as it already is for
  classes).  For example <type '__main__.C'>.
2001-08-16 09:18:56 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 8098ddbe81 Subtle change to make None.__class__ work:
- descrobject.c:descr_check(): only believe None means the same as
  NULL if the type given is None's type.

- typeobject.c:wrap_descr_get(): don't "conventiently" default an
  absent type to the type of the object argument.  Let the called
  function figure it out.
2001-08-16 08:27:33 +00:00
Guido van Rossum ba21a49f9d Add a function _Py_ReadyTypes() which initializes various and sundry
types -- currently Type, List, None and NotImplemented.  To be called
from Py_Initialize() instead of accumulating calls there.

Also rename type(None) to NoneType and type(NotImplemented) to
NotImplementedType -- naming the type identical to the object was
confusing.
2001-08-16 08:17:26 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 82fc51c19c Update to MvL's patch #424475 to avoid returning 2 when tp_compare
returns that.  (This fix is also by MvL; checkin it in because I want
to make more changes here.  I'm still not 100% satisfied -- see
comments attached to the patch.)
2001-08-16 08:02:45 +00:00
Guido van Rossum b8f636641f - Another big step in the right direction. All the overridable
operators for which a default implementation exist now work, both in
  dynamic classes and in static classes, overridden or not.  This
  affects __repr__, __str__, __hash__, __contains__, __nonzero__,
  __cmp__, and the rich comparisons (__lt__ etc.).  For dynamic
  classes, this meant copying a lot of code from classobject!  (XXX
  There are still some holes, because the comparison code in object.c
  uses PyInstance_Check(), meaning new-style classes don't get the
  same dispensation.  This needs more thinking.)

- Add object.__hash__, object.__repr__, object.__str__.  The __str__
  dispatcher now calls the __repr__ dispatcher, as it should.

- For static classes, the tp_compare, tp_richcompare and tp_hash slots
  are now inherited together, or not at all.  (XXX I fear there are
  still some situations where you can inherit __hash__ when you
  shouldn't, but mostly it's OK now, and I think there's no way we can
  get that 100% right.)
2001-08-15 23:57:02 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 23cc2b4991 PyMethod_Type: add a tp_descr_get slot function to ensure proper
binding of unbound methods.
2001-08-15 17:52:31 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 4dd64ab5ea Non-function fields, like tp_dictoffset and tp_weaklistoffset, should
be inherited in inherit_special(), otherwise dynamic types don't
inherit these.

Also added some XXX comments about open ends.
2001-08-14 20:04:48 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 142865cae1 func_getattro(), func_setattro(): Implement the new semantics for
setting and deleting a function's __dict__ attribute.  Deleting
    it, or setting it to a non-dictionary result in a TypeError.  Note
    that getting it the first time magically initializes it to an
    empty dict so that func.__dict__ will always appear to be a
    dictionary (never None).

    Closes SF bug #446645.
2001-08-14 18:23:58 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 910d7d46dc Remove much dead code from ceval.c
The descr changes moved the dispatch for calling objects from
call_object() in ceval.c to PyObject_Call() in abstract.c.
call_object() and the many functions it used in ceval.c were no longer
used, but were not removed.

Rename meth_call() as PyCFunction_Call() so that it can be called by
the CALL_FUNCTION opcode in ceval.c.

Also, fix error message that referred to PyEval_EvalCodeEx() by its
old name eval_code2().  (I'll probably refer to it by its old name,
too.)
2001-08-12 21:52:24 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 8e24818cf4 Make dynamic types work as intended. Or at least more so.
XXX There are still some loose ends: repr(), str(), hash() and
comparisons don't inherit a default implementation from object.  This
must be resolved similarly to the way it's resolved for classic
instances.
2001-08-12 05:17:56 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 8de8680d07 Temporary stop-gap fix for dynamic classes, so they pass the test.
XXX This is not sufficient: if a dynamic class has no __repr__ method
(for instance), but later one is added, that doesn't add a tp_repr
slot, so repr() doesn't call the __repr__ method.  To make this work,
I'll have to add default implementations of several slots to 'object'.

XXX Also, dynamic types currently only inherit slots from their
dominant base.
2001-08-12 03:43:35 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 13d52f0b32 - Big changes to fix SF bug #442833 (a nasty multiple inheritance
problem).  inherit_slots() is split in two parts: inherit_special()
  which inherits the flags and a few very special members from the
  dominant base; inherit_slots() which inherits only regular slots,
  and is now called for each base in the MRO in turn.  These are now
  both void functions since they don't have error returns.

- Added object.__setitem__() back -- for the same reason as
  object.__new__(): a subclass of object should be able to call
  object.__new__().

- add_wrappers() was moved around to be closer to where it is used (it
  was defined together with add_methods() etc., but has nothing to do
  with these).
2001-08-10 21:24:08 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 05ac6de2d5 Add PyDict_Merge(a, b, override):
PyDict_Merge(a, b, 1) is the same as PyDict_Update(a, b).
PyDict_Merge(a, b, 0) does something similar but leaves existing items
unchanged.
2001-08-10 20:28:28 +00:00
Guido van Rossum d614f97733 Change PyType_Ready() to use the READY and READYING flags. This makes
it possible to detect recursive calls early (as opposed to when the
stack overflows :-).
2001-08-10 17:39:49 +00:00
Tim Peters 772747b3f1 SF patch #438013 Remove 2-byte Py_UCS2 assumptions
Removed all instances of Py_UCS2 from the codebase, and so also (I hope)
the last remaining reliance on the platform having an integral type
with exactly 16 bits.
PyUnicode_DecodeUTF16() and PyUnicode_EncodeUTF16() now read and write
one byte at a time.
2001-08-09 22:21:55 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 29687cd211 Sigh. Strengthen the resriction of the previous checkin: tp_new is
inherited unless *both*: (a) the base type is 'object', and (b) the
subtype is not a "heap" type.
2001-08-09 19:43:37 +00:00
Guido van Rossum c11e192d41 Thinking back to the 2.22 revision, I didn't like what I did there one
bit.  For one, this class:

    class C(object):
        def __new__(myclass, ...): ...

would have no way to call the __new__ method of its base class, and
the workaround (to create an intermediate base class whose __new__ you
can call) is ugly.

So, I've come up with a better solution that restores object.__new__,
but still solves the original problem, which is that built-in and
extension types shouldn't inherit object.__new__.  The solution is
simple: only "heap types" inherit tp_new.  Simpler, less code,
perfect!
2001-08-09 19:38:15 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 29206bc8a3 Apply anonymous SF patch #441229.
Previously, f.read() and f.readlines() checked for
  errors on their file object and possibly raised an
  IOError, but f.readline() didn't. This patch makes
  f.readline() behave like the others.

Note that I've added a call to clearerr() since the other calls to
ferror() include that too.

I have no way to test this code. :-)
2001-08-09 18:14:59 +00:00
Guido van Rossum dc91b99f23 Proper support for binary operators, including true division and floor
division.  The basic binary operators now all correctly call the
__rxxx__ variant when they should.

In type_new(), I now make the new type a new-style number unless it
inherits from an old-style number that has numeric methods.

By way of cosmetics, I've changed the signatures of the SLOT<i> macros
to take actual function names and operator names as strings, rather
than rely on C preprocessor symbol manipulations.  This makes the
calls slightly more verbose, but greatly helps simple searches through
the file: you can now find out where "__radd__" is used or where the
function slot_nb_power() is defined and where it is used.
2001-08-08 22:26:22 +00:00
Jack Jansen 8e938b4257 Removed extraneous semicolons that caused a gazzilion "empty declaration" warnings in the MetroWerks compiler. 2001-08-08 15:29:49 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 4668b000a1 Implement PEP 238 in its (almost) full glory.
This introduces:

- A new operator // that means floor division (the kind of division
  where 1/2 is 0).

- The "future division" statement ("from __future__ import division)
  which changes the meaning of the / operator to implement "true
  division" (where 1/2 is 0.5).

- New overloadable operators __truediv__ and __floordiv__.

- New slots in the PyNumberMethods struct for true and floor division,
  new abstract APIs for them, new opcodes, and so on.

I emphasize that without the future division statement, the semantics
of / will remain unchanged until Python 3.0.

Not yet implemented are warnings (default off) when / is used with int
or long arguments.

This has been on display since 7/31 as SF patch #443474.

Flames to /dev/null.
2001-08-08 05:00:18 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 528b7eb0b0 - Rename PyType_InitDict() to PyType_Ready().
- Add an explicit call to PyType_Ready(&PyList_Type) to pythonrun.c
  (just for the heck of it, really -- we should either explicitly
  ready all types, or none).
2001-08-07 17:24:28 +00:00
Guido van Rossum f040ede6e8 Cosmetics:
- Add comment blocks explaining add_operators() and override_slots().
  (This file could use some more explaining, but this is all I had
  breath for today. :)

- Renamed the argument 'base' of add_wrappers() to 'wraps' because
  it's not a base class (which is what the 'base' identifier is used
  for elsewhere).

Small nits:

- Fix add_tp_new_wrapper() to avoid overwriting an existing __new__
  descriptor in tp_defined.

- In add_operators(), check the return value of add_tp_new_wrapper().

Functional change:

- Remove the tp_new functionality from PyBaseObject_Type; this means
  you can no longer instantiate the 'object' type.  It's only useful
  as a base class.

- To make up for the above loss, add tp_new to dynamic types.  This
  has to be done in a hackish way (after override_slots() has been
  called, with an explicit call to add_tp_new_wrapper() at the very
  end) because otherwise I ran into recursive calls of slot_tp_new().
  Sigh.
2001-08-07 16:40:56 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 63e0a64562 Remove spurious "closed" attribute definition from the memberlist
table.  (reported as an aside in SF #446049).
2001-08-06 18:51:38 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 0d231eda52 A totally new way to do the __new__ wrapper. This should address the
problem brought up in SF bug #444229.
2001-08-06 16:50:37 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 2b8d7bdd77 Fix SF #442791 (revisited): No __delitem__ wrapper was defined. 2001-08-02 15:31:58 +00:00
Tim Peters 5962cbf5ba Fix the test_weakref.py failure. Introduced by resolving "a conflict"
(which didn't actually exist!) incorrectly.
2001-08-02 04:45:20 +00:00
Tim Peters 6d6c1a35e0 Merge of descr-branch back into trunk. 2001-08-02 04:15:00 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 3ce45389bd Add _PyUnicode_AsDefaultEncodedString to unicodeobject.h.
And remove all the extern decls in the middle of .c files.
Apparently, it was excluded from the header file because it is
intended for internal use by the interpreter.  It's still intended for
internal use and documented as such in the header file.
2001-07-30 22:34:24 +00:00
Tim Peters 7321ec437b SF bug #444510: int() should guarantee truncation.
It's guaranteed now, assuming the platform modf() works correctly.
2001-07-26 20:02:17 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg 80d1dd5f3b Fix for bug #444493: u'\U00010001' segfaults with current CVS on
wide builds.
2001-07-25 16:05:59 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg 6c6bfb7c70 Make the unicode-escape and the UTF-16 codecs handle surrogates
correctly and thus roundtrip-safe.

Some minor cleanups of the code.

Added tests for the roundtrip-safety.
2001-07-20 17:39:11 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 0d42e0c54a #ifdef out generation of \U escapes unless Py_UNICODE_WIDE. This
#caused warnings with the VMS C compiler.  (SF bug #442998, in part.)
On a narrow system the current code should never be executed since ch
will always be < 0x10000.

Marc-Andre: you may end up fixing this a different way, since I
believe you have plans to generate \U for surrogate pairs.  I'll leave
that to you.
2001-07-20 16:36:21 +00:00
Fred Drake 1bc8fab0e7 Kill more warnings from the SGI compiler.
Part of SF patch #434992.
2001-07-19 21:49:38 +00:00
Tim Peters 0d5dd68692 Python.h: Don't attempt to redefine NDEBUG if it's already defined.
Others:  Remove redundant includes of assert.h.
2001-07-15 18:38:47 +00:00
Tim Peters 586b2e3f3d long_format: Simplify the overly elaborate base-is-a-power-of-2 code. 2001-07-15 09:11:14 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 3c29602d74 _Py_GetObjects(): GCC suggests to add () around && within || for some
code only compiled in debug mode, and I dutifully comply.
2001-07-14 17:58:00 +00:00
Tim Peters 212e614f60 divrem1 & long_format: found a clean way to factor divrem1 so that
long_format can reuse a scratch area for its repeated divisions (instead
of malloc/free for every digit produced); speeds str(long)/repr(long).
2001-07-14 12:23:19 +00:00
Tim Peters c8a6b9b6d6 long_format(): Simplify new code a bit. 2001-07-14 11:01:28 +00:00
Tim Peters fad225f1ba long_format(): Easy speedup for output bases that aren't a power of 2 (in
particular, str(long) and repr(long) use base 10, and that gets a factor
of 4 speedup).  Another factor of 2 can be gotten by refactoring divrem1 to
support in-place division, but that started getting messy so I'm leaving
that out.
2001-07-13 02:59:26 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 10c6692774 GC for method objects. 2001-07-12 13:27:35 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 7eac9b72d4 GC for iterator objects. 2001-07-12 13:27:25 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 19cd292bbc GC for frame objects. 2001-07-12 13:27:11 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 0ec9abaa2b On long to the negative long power, let float handle it instead of
raising an error.  This was one of the two issues that the VPython
folks were particularly problematic for their students.  (The other
one was integer division...)  This implements (my) SF patch #440487.
2001-07-12 11:21:17 +00:00
Guido van Rossum b82fedc7d8 On int to the negative integral power, let float handle it instead of
raising an error.  This was one of the two issues that the VPython
folks were particularly problematic for their students.  (The other
one was integer division...)  This implements (my) SF patch #440487.
2001-07-12 11:19:45 +00:00
Thomas Wouters efafcea280 Re-add 'advanced' xrange features, adding DeprecationWarnings as discussed
on python-dev. The features will still vanish, however, just one release
later.
2001-07-09 12:30:54 +00:00
Tim Peters 6ee4234802 SF bug #439104: Tuple richcompares has code-typo.
Symptom:  (1, 2, 3) <= (1, 2) returned 1.
This was already fixed in CVS for tuples, but an isomorphic error was in
the list richcompare code.
2001-07-06 17:45:43 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 3f56166b1a Rip out the fancy behaviors of xrange that nobody uses: repeat, slice,
contains, tolist(), and the start/stop/step attributes.  This includes
removing the 4th ('repeat') argument to PyRange_New().
2001-07-05 13:27:48 +00:00
Fredrik Lundh 72b068566a removed "register const" from scalar arguments to the unicode
predicates
2001-06-27 22:08:26 +00:00
Fredrik Lundh 8f4558583f use Py_UNICODE_WIDE instead of USE_UCS4_STORAGE and Py_UNICODE_SIZE
tests.
2001-06-27 18:59:43 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis ce9b5a55e1 Encode surrogates in UTF-8 even for a wide Py_UNICODE.
Implement sys.maxunicode.
Explicitly wrap around upper/lower computations for wide Py_UNICODE.
When decoding large characters with UTF-8, represent expected test
results using the \U notation.
2001-06-27 06:28:56 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis ac93bc2501 When decoding UTF-16, don't assume that the buffer is in native endianness
when checking surrogates.
2001-06-26 22:43:40 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 0ba70cc3c8 Support using UCS-4 as the Py_UNICODE type:
Add configure option --enable-unicode.
Add config.h macros Py_USING_UNICODE, PY_UNICODE_TYPE, Py_UNICODE_SIZE,
                    SIZEOF_WCHAR_T.
Define Py_UCS2.
Encode and decode large UTF-8 characters into single Py_UNICODE values
for wide Unicode types; likewise for UTF-16.
Remove test whether sizeof Py_UNICODE is two.
2001-06-26 22:22:37 +00:00
Fredrik Lundh ee13dba1aa more unicode tweaks: fix unicodectype for sizeof(Py_UNICODE) >
sizeof(int)
2001-06-26 20:36:12 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 66a0d1d9b9 dict_update(): Generalize this method so {}.update() accepts any
"mapping" object, specifically one that supports PyMapping_Keys() and
PyObject_GetItem().  This allows you to say e.g. {}.update(UserDict())

We keep the special case for concrete dict objects, although that
seems moderately questionable.  OTOH, the code exists and works, so
why change that?

.update()'s docstring already claims that D.update(E) implies calling
E.keys() so it's appropriate not to transform AttributeErrors in
PyMapping_Keys() to TypeErrors.

Patch eyeballed by Tim.
2001-06-26 20:08:32 +00:00
Fredrik Lundh 1294ad0c59 experimental UCS-4 support: added USE_UCS4_STORAGE define to
unicodeobject.h, which forces sizeof(Py_UNICODE) == sizeof(Py_UCS4).
(this may be good enough for platforms that doesn't have a 16-bit
type.  the UTF-16 codecs don't work, though)
2001-06-26 17:17:07 +00:00
Fredrik Lundh 45714e9ecb experimental UCS-4 support: made compare a bit more robust, in case
sizeof(Py_UNICODE) >= sizeof(long).  also changed surrogate expansion
to work if sizeof(Py_UNICODE) > 2.
2001-06-26 16:39:36 +00:00
Fredrik Lundh 3083163dc1 experimental UCS-4 support: don't assume that MS_WIN32 implies
HAVE_USABLE_WCHAR_T
2001-06-26 15:11:00 +00:00
Tim Peters 8c96369513 PyFrameObject: rename f_stackbottom to f_stacktop, since it points to
the next free valuestack slot, not to the base (in America, stacks push
and pop at the top -- they mutate at the bottom in Australia <winK>).
eval_frame():  assert that f_stacktop isn't NULL upon entry.
frame_delloc():  avoid ordered pointer comparisons involving f_stacktop
when f_stacktop is NULL.
2001-06-23 05:26:56 +00:00
Tim Peters 5ca576ed0a Merging the gen-branch into the main line, at Guido's direction. Yay!
Bugfix candidate in inspect.py:  it was referencing "self" outside of
a method.
2001-06-18 22:08:13 +00:00
Tim Peters 1dad6a86de SF bug 434186: 0x80000000/2 != 0x80000000>>1
i_divmod:  New and simpler algorithm.  Old one returned gibberish on most
boxes when the numerator was -sys.maxint-1.  Oddly enough, it worked in the
release (not debug) build on Windows, because the compiler optimized away
some tricky sign manipulations that were incorrect in this case.
Makes you wonder <wink> ...
Bugfix candidate.
2001-06-18 19:21:11 +00:00
Tim Peters 70128a1ba6 PyLong_{As, From}VoidPtr: cleanup, replacing assumptions in comments with
#if/#error constructs.
2001-06-16 08:48:40 +00:00
Tim Peters c605784174 dict_repr: Reuse one of the int vars (minor code simplification). 2001-06-16 07:52:53 +00:00
Tim Peters 52e155e31b Reformat decl of new _PyString_Join. Add NEWS blurb about repr() speedup. 2001-06-16 05:42:57 +00:00
Tim Peters a7259597f1 SF bug 433228: repr(list) woes when len(list) big.
Gave Python linear-time repr() implementations for dicts, lists, strings.
This means, e.g., that repr(range(50000)) is no longer 50x slower than
pprint.pprint() in 2.2 <wink>.

I don't consider this a bugfix candidate, as it's a performance boost.

Added _PyString_Join() to the internal string API.  If we want that in the
public API, fine, but then it requires runtime error checks instead of
asserts.
2001-06-16 05:11:17 +00:00
Tim Peters cf37dfc3db Change IS_LITTLE_ENDIAN macro -- a little faster now. 2001-06-14 18:42:50 +00:00