Merged revisions 81881-81882 via svnmerge from

svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk

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  r81881 | andrew.kuchling | 2010-06-10 19:16:08 -0500 (Thu, 10 Jun 2010) | 1 line

  #5753: update demo.c to use PySys_SetArgvEx(), and add a comment
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  r81882 | andrew.kuchling | 2010-06-10 19:23:01 -0500 (Thu, 10 Jun 2010) | 1 line

  #5753: Suggest PySys_SetArgvEx() instead of PySys_SetArgv()
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This commit is contained in:
Benjamin Peterson 2010-06-27 21:48:35 +00:00
parent 3e5cd1d04e
commit 2ebf8ce488
2 changed files with 16 additions and 7 deletions

View File

@ -20,10 +20,19 @@ main(int argc, char **argv)
Py_Initialize();
/* Define sys.argv. It is up to the application if you
want this; you can also let it undefined (since the Python
want this; you can also leave it undefined (since the Python
code is generally not a main program it has no business
touching sys.argv...) */
PySys_SetArgv(2, args);
touching sys.argv...)
If the third argument is true, sys.path is modified to include
either the directory containing the script named by argv[0], or
the current working directory. This can be risky; if you run
an application embedding Python in a directory controlled by
someone else, attackers could put a Trojan-horse module in the
directory (say, a file named os.py) that your application would
then import and run.
*/
PySys_SetArgvEx(argc, argv, 0);
/* Do some application specific code */
printf("Hello, brave new world\n\n");

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@ -519,12 +519,12 @@ the table of loaded modules, and creates the fundamental modules
:mod:`builtins`, :mod:`__main__`, :mod:`sys`, and :mod:`exceptions`. It also
initializes the module search path (``sys.path``).
.. index:: single: PySys_SetArgv()
.. index:: single: PySys_SetArgvEx()
:cfunc:`Py_Initialize` does not set the "script argument list" (``sys.argv``).
If this variable is needed by Python code that will be executed later, it must
be set explicitly with a call to ``PySys_SetArgv(argc, argv)`` subsequent to
the call to :cfunc:`Py_Initialize`.
be set explicitly with a call to ``PySys_SetArgvEx(argc, argv, updatepath)``
after the call to :cfunc:`Py_Initialize`.
On most systems (in particular, on Unix and Windows, although the details are
slightly different), :cfunc:`Py_Initialize` calculates the module search path