bpo-30039: Don't run signal handlers while resuming a yield from stack (#1081)

If we have a chain of generators/coroutines that are 'yield from'ing
each other, then resuming the stack works like:

- call send() on the outermost generator
- this enters _PyEval_EvalFrameDefault, which re-executes the
  YIELD_FROM opcode
- which calls send() on the next generator
- which enters _PyEval_EvalFrameDefault, which re-executes the
  YIELD_FROM opcode
- ...etc.

However, every time we enter _PyEval_EvalFrameDefault, the first thing
we do is to check for pending signals, and if there are any then we
run the signal handler. And if it raises an exception, then we
immediately propagate that exception *instead* of starting to execute
bytecode. This means that e.g. a SIGINT at the wrong moment can "break
the chain" – it can be raised in the middle of our yield from chain,
with the bottom part of the stack abandoned for the garbage collector.

The fix is pretty simple: there's already a special case in
_PyEval_EvalFrameEx where it skips running signal handlers if the next
opcode is SETUP_FINALLY. (I don't see how this accomplishes anything
useful, but that's another story.) If we extend this check to also
skip running signal handlers when the next opcode is YIELD_FROM, then
that closes the hole – now the exception can only be raised at the
innermost stack frame.

This shouldn't have any performance implications, because the opcode
check happens inside the "slow path" after we've already determined
that there's a pending signal or something similar for us to process;
the vast majority of the time this isn't true and the new check
doesn't run at all.
This commit is contained in:
Nathaniel J. Smith 2017-05-17 13:33:23 -07:00 committed by Yury Selivanov
parent 4486a09346
commit ab4413a7e9
4 changed files with 71 additions and 3 deletions

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@ -9,6 +9,35 @@ import inspect
from test import support
_testcapi = support.import_module('_testcapi')
# This tests to make sure that if a SIGINT arrives just before we send into a
# yield from chain, the KeyboardInterrupt is raised in the innermost
# generator (see bpo-30039).
class SignalAndYieldFromTest(unittest.TestCase):
def generator1(self):
return (yield from self.generator2())
def generator2(self):
try:
yield
except KeyboardInterrupt:
return "PASSED"
else:
return "FAILED"
def test_raise_and_yield_from(self):
gen = self.generator1()
gen.send(None)
try:
_testcapi.raise_SIGINT_then_send_None(gen)
except BaseException as _exc:
exc = _exc
self.assertIs(type(exc), StopIteration)
self.assertEqual(exc.value, "PASSED")
class FinalizationTest(unittest.TestCase):

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@ -10,6 +10,10 @@ What's New in Python 3.7.0 alpha 1?
Core and Builtins
-----------------
- bpo-30039: If a KeyboardInterrupt happens when the interpreter is in
the middle of resuming a chain of nested 'yield from' or 'await'
calls, it's now correctly delivered to the innermost frame.
- bpo-28974: ``object.__format__(x, '')`` is now equivalent to ``str(x)``
rather than ``format(str(self), '')``.

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@ -4028,6 +4028,29 @@ dict_get_version(PyObject *self, PyObject *args)
}
static PyObject *
raise_SIGINT_then_send_None(PyObject *self, PyObject *args)
{
PyGenObject *gen;
if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "O!", &PyGen_Type, &gen))
return NULL;
/* This is used in a test to check what happens if a signal arrives just
as we're in the process of entering a yield from chain (see
bpo-30039).
Needs to be done in C, because:
- we don't have a Python wrapper for raise()
- we need to make sure that the Python-level signal handler doesn't run
*before* we enter the generator frame, which is impossible in Python
because we check for signals before every bytecode operation.
*/
raise(SIGINT);
return _PyGen_Send(gen, Py_None);
}
static PyMethodDef TestMethods[] = {
{"raise_exception", raise_exception, METH_VARARGS},
{"raise_memoryerror", (PyCFunction)raise_memoryerror, METH_NOARGS},
@ -4232,6 +4255,7 @@ static PyMethodDef TestMethods[] = {
{"tracemalloc_untrack", tracemalloc_untrack, METH_VARARGS},
{"tracemalloc_get_traceback", tracemalloc_get_traceback, METH_VARARGS},
{"dict_get_version", dict_get_version, METH_VARARGS},
{"raise_SIGINT_then_send_None", raise_SIGINT_then_send_None, METH_VARARGS},
{NULL, NULL} /* sentinel */
};

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@ -1064,9 +1064,20 @@ _PyEval_EvalFrameDefault(PyFrameObject *f, int throwflag)
Py_MakePendingCalls() above. */
if (_Py_atomic_load_relaxed(&eval_breaker)) {
if (_Py_OPCODE(*next_instr) == SETUP_FINALLY) {
/* Make the last opcode before
a try: finally: block uninterruptible. */
if (_Py_OPCODE(*next_instr) == SETUP_FINALLY ||
_Py_OPCODE(*next_instr) == YIELD_FROM) {
/* Two cases where we skip running signal handlers and other
pending calls:
- If we're about to enter the try: of a try/finally (not
*very* useful, but might help in some cases and it's
traditional)
- If we're resuming a chain of nested 'yield from' or
'await' calls, then each frame is parked with YIELD_FROM
as its next opcode. If the user hit control-C we want to
wait until we've reached the innermost frame before
running the signal handler and raising KeyboardInterrupt
(see bpo-30039).
*/
goto fast_next_opcode;
}
if (_Py_atomic_load_relaxed(&pendingcalls_to_do)) {