Issue #9707: Rewritten reference implementation of threading.local which
is friendlier towards reference cycles. This change is not normally visible since an optimized C implementation (_thread._local) is used instead.
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@ -132,6 +132,9 @@ affects what we see:
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>>> del mydata
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"""
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from weakref import ref
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from contextlib import contextmanager
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__all__ = ["local"]
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# We need to use objects from the threading module, but the threading
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@ -139,112 +142,105 @@ __all__ = ["local"]
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# isn't compiled in to the `thread` module. This creates potential problems
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# with circular imports. For that reason, we don't import `threading`
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# until the bottom of this file (a hack sufficient to worm around the
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# potential problems). Note that almost all platforms do have support for
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# locals in the `thread` module, and there is no circular import problem
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# potential problems). Note that all platforms on CPython do have support
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# for locals in the `thread` module, and there is no circular import problem
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# then, so problems introduced by fiddling the order of imports here won't
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# manifest on most boxes.
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# manifest.
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class _localbase(object):
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__slots__ = '_local__key', '_local__args', '_local__lock'
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class _localimpl:
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"""A class managing thread-local dicts"""
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__slots__ = 'key', 'dicts', 'localargs', 'locallock', '__weakref__'
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def __init__(self):
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# The key used in the Thread objects' attribute dicts.
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# We keep it a string for speed but make it unlikely to clash with
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# a "real" attribute.
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self.key = '_threading_local._localimpl.' + str(id(self))
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# { id(Thread) -> (ref(Thread), thread-local dict) }
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self.dicts = {}
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def get_dict(self):
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"""Return the dict for the current thread. Raises KeyError if none
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defined."""
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thread = current_thread()
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return self.dicts[id(thread)][1]
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def create_dict(self):
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"""Create a new dict for the current thread, and return it."""
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localdict = {}
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key = self.key
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thread = current_thread()
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idt = id(thread)
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def local_deleted(_, key=key):
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# When the localimpl is deleted, remove the thread attribute.
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thread = wrthread()
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if thread is not None:
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del thread.__dict__[key]
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def thread_deleted(_, idt=idt):
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# When the thread is deleted, remove the local dict.
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# Note that this is suboptimal if the thread object gets
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# caught in a reference loop. We would like to be called
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# as soon as the OS-level thread ends instead.
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local = wrlocal()
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if local is not None:
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dct = local.dicts.pop(idt)
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wrlocal = ref(self, local_deleted)
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wrthread = ref(thread, thread_deleted)
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thread.__dict__[key] = wrlocal
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self.dicts[idt] = wrthread, localdict
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return localdict
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@contextmanager
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def _patch(self):
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impl = object.__getattribute__(self, '_local__impl')
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try:
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dct = impl.get_dict()
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except KeyError:
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dct = impl.create_dict()
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args, kw = impl.localargs
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self.__init__(*args, **kw)
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with impl.locallock:
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object.__setattr__(self, '__dict__', dct)
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yield
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class local:
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__slots__ = '_local__impl', '__dict__'
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def __new__(cls, *args, **kw):
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self = object.__new__(cls)
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key = '_local__key', 'thread.local.' + str(id(self))
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object.__setattr__(self, '_local__key', key)
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object.__setattr__(self, '_local__args', (args, kw))
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object.__setattr__(self, '_local__lock', RLock())
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if (args or kw) and (cls.__init__ is object.__init__):
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raise TypeError("Initialization arguments are not supported")
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self = object.__new__(cls)
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impl = _localimpl()
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impl.localargs = (args, kw)
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impl.locallock = RLock()
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object.__setattr__(self, '_local__impl', impl)
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# We need to create the thread dict in anticipation of
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# __init__ being called, to make sure we don't call it
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# again ourselves.
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dict = object.__getattribute__(self, '__dict__')
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current_thread().__dict__[key] = dict
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impl.create_dict()
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return self
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def _patch(self):
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key = object.__getattribute__(self, '_local__key')
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d = current_thread().__dict__.get(key)
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if d is None:
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d = {}
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current_thread().__dict__[key] = d
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object.__setattr__(self, '__dict__', d)
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# we have a new instance dict, so call out __init__ if we have
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# one
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cls = type(self)
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if cls.__init__ is not object.__init__:
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args, kw = object.__getattribute__(self, '_local__args')
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cls.__init__(self, *args, **kw)
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else:
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object.__setattr__(self, '__dict__', d)
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class local(_localbase):
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def __getattribute__(self, name):
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lock = object.__getattribute__(self, '_local__lock')
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lock.acquire()
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try:
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_patch(self)
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with _patch(self):
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return object.__getattribute__(self, name)
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finally:
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lock.release()
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def __setattr__(self, name, value):
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if name == '__dict__':
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raise AttributeError(
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"%r object attribute '__dict__' is read-only"
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% self.__class__.__name__)
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lock = object.__getattribute__(self, '_local__lock')
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lock.acquire()
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try:
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_patch(self)
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with _patch(self):
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return object.__setattr__(self, name, value)
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finally:
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lock.release()
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def __delattr__(self, name):
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if name == '__dict__':
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raise AttributeError(
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"%r object attribute '__dict__' is read-only"
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% self.__class__.__name__)
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lock = object.__getattribute__(self, '_local__lock')
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lock.acquire()
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try:
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_patch(self)
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with _patch(self):
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return object.__delattr__(self, name)
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finally:
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lock.release()
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def __del__(self):
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import threading
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key = object.__getattribute__(self, '_local__key')
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try:
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# We use the non-locking API since we might already hold the lock
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# (__del__ can be called at any point by the cyclic GC).
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threads = threading._enumerate()
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except:
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# If enumerating the current threads fails, as it seems to do
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# during shutdown, we'll skip cleanup under the assumption
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# that there is nothing to clean up.
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return
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for thread in threads:
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try:
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__dict__ = thread.__dict__
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except AttributeError:
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# Thread is dying, rest in peace.
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continue
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if key in __dict__:
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try:
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del __dict__[key]
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except KeyError:
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pass # didn't have anything in this thread
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from threading import current_thread, RLock
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@ -184,11 +184,6 @@ class BaseLocalTest:
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"""To test that subclasses behave properly."""
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self._test_dict_attribute(LocalSubclass)
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class ThreadLocalTest(unittest.TestCase, BaseLocalTest):
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_local = _thread._local
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# Fails for the pure Python implementation
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def test_cycle_collection(self):
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class X:
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pass
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@ -201,6 +196,10 @@ class ThreadLocalTest(unittest.TestCase, BaseLocalTest):
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gc.collect()
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self.assertIs(wr(), None)
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class ThreadLocalTest(unittest.TestCase, BaseLocalTest):
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_local = _thread._local
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class PyThreadingLocalTest(unittest.TestCase, BaseLocalTest):
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_local = _threading_local.local
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@ -13,6 +13,11 @@ Core and Builtins
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Library
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-------
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- Issue #9707: Rewritten reference implementation of threading.local which
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is friendlier towards reference cycles. This change is not normally
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visible since an optimized C implementation (_thread._local) is used
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instead.
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- Issue #6394: os.getppid() is now supported on Windows. Note that it will
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still return the id of the parent process after it has exited. This process
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id may even have been reused by another unrelated process.
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