Previously when executing ``test_functattrs.test___builtins__`` directly, it failed because the fact, that ``__builtins__`` is refers to the built-in module ``builtins`` while it's expects a ``__builtins__.__dict__``. But when this test is being run from another module, then ``__builtins__`` is refers to ``builtins.__dict__``. Now this part of the behaviour is covered.
---------
Co-authored-by: Victor Stinner <vstinner@python.org>
Previously, formatting help output or error message for positional argument
with a tuple metavar raised exception.
Co-authored-by: Cyker Way <cykerway@gmail.com>
It can now have one of three forms:
* basename(argv0) -- for simple scripts
* python arv0 -- for directories, ZIP files, etc
* python -m module -- for imported modules
Co-authored-by: Alyssa Coghlan <ncoghlan@gmail.com>
Currently, we only use per-thread reference counting for heap type objects and
the naming reflects that. We will extend it to a few additional types in an
upcoming change to avoid scaling bottlenecks when creating nested functions.
Rename some of the files and functions in preparation for this change.
This is to allow the `dataclasses.make_dataclass` infrastructure to be used with another decorator that's compliant with `typing.dataclass_transform`. The new `decorator` argument to `dataclasses.make_dataclass` is `dataclasses.dataclass`, which used to be hard coded.
* Revert "GH-124639: add back loop param to staggered_race (#124700)"
This reverts commit e0a41a5dd1.
* Revert "gh-124309: Modernize the `staggered_race` implementation to support eager task factories (#124390)"
This reverts commit de929f353c.
Resolve a memory leak introduced in CPython 3.10's :mod:`ssl` when the :attr:`ssl.SSLSocket.session` property was accessed. Speeds up read and write access to said property by no longer unnecessarily cloning session objects via serialization.
Co-authored-by: blurb-it[bot] <43283697+blurb-it[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Peter Bierma <zintensitydev@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith <greg@krypto.org>
Co-authored-by: Antoine Pitrou <antoine@python.org>
* gh-124613: Don't run perf tests in JIT builds
Signed-off-by: Pablo Galindo <pablogsal@gmail.com>
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Victor Stinner <vstinner@python.org>
---------
Signed-off-by: Pablo Galindo <pablogsal@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Victor Stinner <vstinner@python.org>
PR #121089 added an eager import for types.MethodType, but
still left the existing hacks for lazily importing from types.
We could also create MethodType internally in functools.py (e.g.,
by using `type(Placeholder.__repr__)`, but it feels not worth it at
this point, so instead I unlazified all the usages of types in the
module.
Positional arguments with nargs equal to '?' or '*' no longer check
default against choices.
Optional arguments with nargs equal to '?' no longer check const
against choices.
Instead of be limited just by the size of addressable memory (2**63
bytes), Python integers are now also limited by the number of bits, so
the number of bit now always fit in a 64-bit integer.
Both limits are much larger than what might be available in practice,
so it doesn't affect users.
_PyLong_NumBits() and _PyLong_Frexp() are now always successful.