Commit Graph

1549 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tim Peters 8c5e41559c Part of SF bug #478003 possible memory leaks in err handling.
PyNode_CompileSymtable:  if symtable_init() fails, free the memory
allocated for the PyFutureFeatures struct.
2001-11-04 19:26:58 +00:00
Jack Jansen 666b1e7e2f Link the core with CoreServices, not with Carbon, and don't use any Carbon
routines. As of 10.1 using Carbon will crash Python if no window server is
available (ssh connection, console mode, MacOSX Server). This fixes bug
#466907.

A result of this mod is that the default 8bit encoding on OSX is now ASCII,
for the time being. Also, the extension modules that need the Carbon
framework now explicitly include it in setup.py.
2001-10-31 12:11:48 +00:00
Tim Peters a6ca4f40d0 SF patch #474500: Make OS/2 locks work like posix locks, from Michael
Muller.
2001-10-31 03:50:45 +00:00
Jack Jansen 550fdae2f5 On the macintosh don't take a quick exit in find_module() for frozen submodule imports: the frozen import goes through a different mechanism. 2001-10-30 13:08:39 +00:00
Tim Peters a427a2b8d0 Rename "dictionary" (type and constructor) to "dict". 2001-10-29 22:25:45 +00:00
Tim Peters c2f011201a vgetargskeywords()
+ Squash another potential buffer overrun.
+ Simplify the keyword-arg loop by decrementing the count of keywords
  remaining instead of incrementing Yet Another Variable; also break
  out early if the number of keyword args remaining hits 0.

Since I hit the function's closing curly brace with this patch, that's
enough of this for now <wink>.
2001-10-27 07:25:06 +00:00
Tim Peters b639d49798 vgetargskeywords: Now that it's clear that nkwlist must equal max, and
we're ensuring that's true during the format parse, get rid of nkwlist.
2001-10-27 07:00:56 +00:00
Tim Peters dc5eff9170 vgetargskeywords: Prevent another potential sprintf buffer overrun. 2001-10-27 06:53:00 +00:00
Tim Peters 62d48e1735 vgetargskeywords: Verify kwlist has the required length while parsing
the format, instead of waiting until after we can overindex it by
mistake.
2001-10-27 06:42:16 +00:00
Tim Peters 0af4916ad4 vgetargskeywords: Removed all PyErr_Clear() calls. It's possible that
this routine will report an error now when it didn't before, but, if so,
it's a legitimate error that should never have been suppressed.
2001-10-27 06:14:32 +00:00
Tim Peters 077f574db1 vgetargskeywords: The keywords arg is a dict (if non-NULL), so use the
dict API everywhere on it instead of sometimes using the slower mapping
API.
2001-10-27 05:50:39 +00:00
Tim Peters 61dde63e3b vgetargskeywords: Removed one of the mysterious PyErr_Clear() calls.
The "need" for this was probably removed by an earlier patch that stopped
the loop right before it from passing NULL to a dict lookup routine.
I still haven't convinced myself that the next loop is correct, so am
leaving the next mysterious PyErr_Clear() call in for now.
2001-10-27 05:30:17 +00:00
Tim Peters b054be41c0 vgetargskeywords:
+ Generally test nkeywords against 0 instead of keywords against NULL
  (saves a little work if an empty keywords dict is passed, and is
  conceptually more on-target regardless).
+ When a call erroneously specifies a keyword argument both by position
  and by keyword name:
    - It was easy to provoke this routine into an internal buffer overrun
      by using a long argument name.  Now uses PyErr_format instead (which
      computes a safe buffer size).
    - Improved the error msg.
2001-10-27 05:07:41 +00:00
Tim Peters b0872fc8a6 vgetargskeywords:
+ Got rid of now-redundant dict typecheck.
+ Renamed nkwds to nkwlist.  Now all the "counting" vrbls have names
  related to the things they're counting in an obvious way.
2001-10-27 04:45:34 +00:00
Tim Peters 6fb2635f25 vgetargskeywords:
+ Renamed argslen to nargs.
+ Renamed kwlen to nkeywords.  This one was especially confusing because
  kwlen wasn't the length of the kwlist argument, but of the keywords
  argument.
2001-10-27 04:38:11 +00:00
Tim Peters 28bf7a9770 vgetargskeywords:
+ Removed now-redundant tuple typecheck.
+ Renamed "tplen" local to "argslen" (it's the length of the "args"
  argument; I suppose "tp" was for "Tim Peters should rename me
  someday <wink>).
2001-10-27 04:33:41 +00:00
Tim Peters f8cd3e8621 PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords: return false on internal error, not -1 (I
introduced this bug just a little while ago, when *adding* internal error
checks).

vgetargskeywords:  Rewrote the section that crawls over the format string.
+ Added block comment so it won't take the next person 15 minutes to
  reverse-engineer what it's doing.
+ Lined up the "else" clauses.
+ Rearranged the ifs in decreasing order of likelihood (for speed).
2001-10-27 04:26:57 +00:00
Tim Peters 45772cde7e PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords: do basic sanity checks on the arguments,
and raise an error if they're insane.
vgetargskeywords:  the same, except that since this is an internal routine,
just assert that the arguments are sane.
2001-10-27 03:58:40 +00:00
Tim Peters a9f4739a1b tuple(3,4,5,x=2) dumped core on my box. vgetargskeywords() overindexed
the kwlist vector whenever there was a mix of positional and keyword
arguments, and the number of positional arguments exceeded the length
of the kwlist vector.  If there was just one more positional arg than
keyword, the kwlist-terminating NULL got passed to PyMapping_HasKeyString,
which set an internal error that vgetargskeywords() then squashed (but
it's impossible to say whether it knew it was masking an error).  If
more than one more positional argument, it went on to pass random trash
to PyMapping_HasKeyString, which is why the example at the start
happened to kill the process.

Pure bugfix candidate.
2001-10-27 00:46:09 +00:00
Tim Peters f4331c1c38 vgetargskeywords(): remove test that can't succeed. Not a bugfix, just
removing useless obfuscation.
2001-10-27 00:17:34 +00:00
Fred Drake 9cd0efcee9 Use PyDict_Copy() and PyDict_Update() instead of using PyObject_CallMethod()
to call the corresponding methods.  This is not a performance improvement
since the times are still swamped by disk I/O, but cleans up the code just
a little.
2001-10-25 21:38:59 +00:00
Fred Drake a768882b00 Convert getrefcount() to METH_O, and sys_excepthook() to use
PyArg_UnpackTuple().
2001-10-24 20:47:48 +00:00
Guido van Rossum e2ae77b8b8 SF patch #474590 -- RISC OS support 2001-10-24 20:42:55 +00:00
Fred Drake e4616e6752 PyArg_UnpackTuple(): New argument unpacking function suggested by Jim
Fulton, based on code Jim supplied.
2001-10-23 21:09:29 +00:00
Fred Drake 563dfc2f73 Style conformance: function name begins a new line *consistently*.
Make convertbuffer() static like the prototype says.  Not used elsewhere.
2001-10-23 14:41:08 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton fd14d8e187 Make traceback objects collectable.
This should eliminate the traceback returned by sys.exc_info() as a
common source of memory leaks.
2001-10-22 22:17:41 +00:00
Tim Peters d7c3652aa7 Removed two pointless and obfuscating macros. 2001-10-22 19:34:09 +00:00
Guido van Rossum b8cf3e64be SF patch #470393 (Jim Ahlstrom): Add missing marshal function
In Include/, marshal.h declares both
    PyMarshal_ReadLongFromFile()
    and PyMarshal_ReadShortFromFile(),
    but the second is missing from marshal.c.

[Shouldn't the return type be declared as 'short' instead of 'int'?
But 'int' is what was in marshal.h all those years...  --Guido]
2001-10-19 01:46:21 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 8a57f00081 Move dlfcn.h block out of NetBSD block, assuming that NetBSD before
199712 didn't have dlfcn.h, or that it wouldn't conflict with the other
stuff defined.
2001-10-18 21:24:04 +00:00
Tim Peters 6e6a63f01c SF Patch (but with no patch) 472555 Remove trailing common in enumeration.
Some AIX compiler didn't like the trailing comma at the end of the
why_code enum decl.
2001-10-18 20:49:35 +00:00
Tim Peters 84a0657ee9 Squash compiler wng about signed/unsigned mismatch. 2001-10-18 18:57:31 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 8f4d3316de First part of SF patch #416704: More robust freeze, by Toby Dickenson.
This fixes the behavior reported by SF bug #404545, where a file
x.y.py could be imported by the statement "import x.y" when there's a
frozen package x (I believe even if x.y also exists as a frozen
module).
2001-10-18 18:54:11 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 4114a4afec Fix the frozen bytecode for __hello__ (betcha didn't know that existed
:-).

Add a test that prevents the __hello__ bytecode from going stale
unnoticed again.

The test also tests the loophole noted in SF bug #404545.  This test
will fail right now; I'll check in the fix in a minute.
2001-10-18 18:49:37 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 961dfe0d85 Fix for SF bug [ #471928 ] global made w/nested list comprehensions
The symbol table pass didn't have an explicit case for the list_iter
node which is used only for a nested list comprehension.  As a result,
the target of the list comprehension was treated as a use instead of
an assignment.  Fix is to add a case to symtable_node() to handle
list_iter.

Also, rework and document a couple of the subtler implementation
issues in the symbol table pass.  The symtable_node() switch statement
depends on falling through the last several cases, in order to handle
some of the more complicated nodes like atom.  Add a comment
explaining the behavior before the first fall through case.  Add a
comment /* fall through */ at the end of case so that it is explicitly
marked as such.

Move the for_stmt case out of the fall through logic, which simplifies
both for_stmt and default.  (The default used the local variable start
to skip the first three nodes of a for_stmt when it fell through.)

Rename the flag argument to symtable_assign() to def_flag and add a
comment explaining its use:

   The third argument to symatble_assign() is a flag to be passed to
   symtable_add_def() if it is eventually called.  The flag is useful
   to specify the particular type of assignment that should be
   recorded, e.g. an assignment caused by import.
2001-10-18 16:15:10 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 0eb1ed556b Patch to bug #472202: Correctly recognize NetBSD before 199712. 2001-10-18 11:45:19 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 14368158c2 For debug build, check that the stack pointer never exceeds the stack size. 2001-10-17 13:29:30 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 93a569d634 Fix computation of stack depth for classdef and closures.
Also minor tweaks to internal routines.
Use PyCF_MASK instead of explicit list of flags.

For the MAKE_CLOSURE opcode, the number of items popped off the stack
depends on both the oparg and the number of free variables for the
code object.  Fix the code so it accounts for the free variables.

In com_classdef(), record an extra pop to account for the STORE call
after the BUILD_CLASS.

Get rid of some commented out debugging code in com_push() and
com_pop().

Factor string resize logic into helper routine com_check_size().

In com_addbyte(), remove redudant if statement after assert.  (They
test the same condition.)

In several routines, use string macros instead of string functions.
2001-10-17 13:22:22 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 2c40adb1e4 Fix a bug in the previous checkin. The wrong bootstrap function was
passed to _beginthread().
2001-10-16 21:50:04 +00:00
Guido van Rossum d892357bf7 SF patch #471852 (anonymous) notes that getattr(obj, name, default)
masks any exception, not just AttributeError.  Fix this.
2001-10-16 21:31:32 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 3c28863e08 Partial patch from SF #452266, by Jason Petrone.
This changes Pythread_start_thread() to return the thread ID, or -1
for an error.  (It's technically an incompatible API change, but I
doubt anyone calls it.)
2001-10-16 21:13:49 +00:00
Guido van Rossum ae9e7960d3 SF patch #471839: Bug when extensions import extensions (Shane Hathaway)
When an extension imports another extension in its
    initXXX() function, the variable _Py_PackageContext is
    prematurely reset to NULL. If the outer extension then
    calls Py_InitModule(), the extension is installed in
    sys.modules without its package name. The
    manifestation of this bug is a "SystemError:
    _PyImport_FixupExtension: module <package>.<extension>
    not loaded".

    To fix this, importdl.c just needs to retain the old
    value of _Py_PackageContext and restore it after the
    initXXX() method is called. The attached patch does this.

    This patch applies to Python 2.1.1 and the current CVS.
2001-10-16 20:07:34 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 26633f4c00 Put descr name in "bad memberdescr type" error message. 2001-10-16 16:51:56 +00:00
Skip Montanaro f118cb1d6f make getarray static - it's only called from ceval.c and is not an
extern-able name.
2001-10-15 20:51:38 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 1c917072ca Very subtle syntax change: in a list comprehension, the testlist in
"for <var> in <testlist> may no longer be a single test followed by
a comma.  This solves SF bug #431886.  Note that if the testlist
contains more than one test, a trailing comma is still allowed, for
maximum backward compatibility; but this example is not:

    [(x, y) for x in range(10), for y in range(10)]
                              ^

The fix involved creating a new nonterminal 'testlist_safe' whose
definition doesn't allow the trailing comma if there's only one test:

    testlist_safe: test [(',' test)+ [',']]
2001-10-15 15:44:05 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 69c0ff3836 Do not define _POSIX_THREADS if unistd.h defines it.
Check for pthread_sigmask before using it. Fixes remaining problem in #470781.
2001-10-15 14:34:42 +00:00
Fred Drake de26cfc1e1 Suppress a bunch of "value computed is not used" warnings when building in
debug mode (--with-pydebug).
2001-10-13 06:11:28 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 9abaf4d3b7 SF patch #467455 : Enhanced environment variables, by Toby Dickenson.
This patch changes to logic to:

   if env.var. set and non-empty:
       if env.var. is an integer:
           set flag to that integer
   if flag is zero: # [actually, <= 0 --GvR]
       set flag to 1

   Under this patch, anyone currently using
   PYTHONVERBOSE=yes will get the same output as before.

   PYTHONVERBNOSE=2 will generate more verbosity than
   before.

   The only unusual case that the following three are
   still all equivalent:
   PYTHONVERBOSE=yespleas
   PYTHONVERBOSE=1
   PYTHONVERBOSE=0
2001-10-12 22:17:56 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 80230998b9 Add SF patch #468347 -- mask signals for non-main pthreads, by Jason Lowe:
This patch updates Python/thread_pthread.h to mask all
   signals for any thread created. This will keep all
   signals masked for any thread that isn't the initial
   thread. For Solaris and Linux, the two platforms I was
   able to test it on, it solves bug #465673 (pthreads
   need signal protection) and probably will solve bug
   #219772 (Interactive InterPreter+ Thread -> core dump
   at exit).

   I'd be great if this could get some testing on other
   platforms, especially HP-UX pre 11.00 and post 11.00,
   as I had to make some guesses for the DCE thread case.
   AIX is also a concern as I saw some mention of using
   sigthreadmask() as a pthread_sigmask() equivalent, but
   this patch doesn't use sigthreadmask(). I don't have
   access to AIX.
2001-10-12 21:49:17 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 4819e97a48 Undo part of 2.59: 't' case of convertsimple() should not use convertbuffer().
convertbuffer() uses the buffer interface's getreadbuffer(), but 't'
should use getcharbuffer().
2001-10-11 14:40:37 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 0407aeae01 One more place where PyString_AsString() was used after a
PyString_Check() had already succeeded.
2001-10-10 02:51:57 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton a4c8cd7b2c Use AS_STRING() following the check and avoid an extra call. 2001-10-10 02:51:08 +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
Fred Drake bb9fa21cfe weakref.ReferenceError becomes a built-in exception now that weak ref objects
are moving into the core; with these changes, it will be possible for the
exception to be raised without the weakref module ever being imported.
2001-10-05 21:50:08 +00:00
Tim Peters b1c469843f Introduced the oddly-missing PyList_CheckExact(), and used it to replace
a hard-coded type check.
2001-10-05 20:41:38 +00:00
Tim Peters c1e6d969ba Get rid of unique local ISSTRICTINT macro in favor of std PyInt_CheckExact. 2001-10-05 20:21:03 +00:00
Fred Drake 4ec5d5699d Fix bug in profiler modifications detected only in debug builds.
The new profiler event stream includes a "return" event even when an
exception is being propogated, but the machinery that called the profile
hook did not save & restore the exception.  In debug mode, the exception
was detected during the execution of the profile callback, which did not
have the proper internal flags set for the exception.  Saving & restoring
the exception state solves the problem.
2001-10-04 19:26:43 +00:00
Greg Ward 201baee7ea Remove a couple of unused local variables (bug #445960, compiler warnings
on IRIX 6.5).
2001-10-04 14:52:06 +00:00
Fred Drake 8f51f54319 Rationalize the events passed to the profiler (no changes for the tracer).
The profiler does not need to know anything about the exception state,
so we no longer call it when an exception is raised.  We do, however,
make sure we *always* call the profiler when we exit a frame.  This
ensures that timing events are more easily isolated by a profiler and
finally clauses that do a lot of work don't have their time
mis-allocated.

When an exception is propogated out of the frame, the C callback for
the profiler now receives a PyTrace_RETURN event with an arg of NULL;
the Python-level profile hook function will see a 'return' event with
an arg of None.  This means that from Python it is impossible for the
profiler to determine if the frame exited with an exception or if it
returned None, but this doesn't matter for profiling.  A C-based
profiler could tell the difference, but this doesn't seem important.

ceval.c:eval_frame():  Simplify the code in two places so that the
                       profiler is called for every exit from a frame
                       and not for exceptions.

sysmodule.c:profile_trampoline():  Make sure we don't expose Python
                                   code to NULL; use None instead.
2001-10-04 14:48:42 +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
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
Jeremy Hylton e2e2c9f41e PyErr_NormalizeException()
If a new exception occurs while an exception instance is being
created, try harder to make sure there is a traceback.  If the
original exception had a traceback associated with it and the new
exception does not, keep the old exception.

Of course, callers to PyErr_NormalizeException() must still be
prepared to have tb set to NULL.

XXX This isn't an ideal solution, but it's better than no traceback at
all.  It occurs if, for example, the exception occurs when the call to
the constructor fails before any Python code is executed.  Guido
suggests that it there is Python code that was about to be executed
-- but wasn't, say, because it was called with the wrong number of
arguments -- then we should point at the first line of the code object
anyway.
2001-09-26 19:58:38 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton c631489289 Prevent a NULL pointer from being pushed onto the stack.
It's possible for PyErr_NormalizeException() to set the traceback
pointer to NULL.  I'm not sure how to provoke this directly from
Python, although it may be possible.  The error occurs when an
exception is set using PyErr_SetObject() and another exception occurs
while PyErr_NormalizeException() is creating the exception instance.

XXX As a result of this change, it's possible for an exception to
occur but sys.last_traceback to be left undefined.  Not sure if this
is a problem.
2001-09-26 19:24:45 +00:00
Thomas Wouters 1ee6422111 Don't swap the arguments to PyFrame_BlockSetup when recreating the recently
popped frame-block. What an embarrassing bug! Especially for Jeremy, since
he accepted the patch :-)

This fixes SF bugs #463359 and #462937, and possibly other, *very* obscure
bugs with very deeply nested loops that continue the loop and then break out
of it or raise an exception.
2001-09-24 19:32:01 +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
Guido van Rossum c299fc16f2 Add support for restricting access based on restricted execution mode.
Renamed the 'readonly' field to 'flags' and defined some new flag
bits: READ_RESTRICTED and WRITE_RESTRICTED, as well as a shortcut
RESTRICTED that means both.
2001-09-17 19:28:08 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton c785f4841c Supply code objects a new-style tp_members slot and tp_getattr impl.
The chief effects are to make dir() do something useful and supply
them with an __class__.
2001-09-14 20:08:07 +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 4b7625ee83 _PyBuiltin_Init(): For clarity, macroize this purely repetitive code. 2001-09-13 21:37:17 +00:00
Fred Drake b9a96282f1 Admit that we'll never add the args for a "call" event to the profile
and trace functions; this now declares that None will be passed for the
"call" event.
This closes SF bug/suggestion #460315.
2001-09-13 16:56:43 +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
Guido van Rossum 7851eea5f2 build_class(): one more (hopefully the last) step on the way to
backwards compatibility.  When using the class of the first base as
the metaclass, use its __class__ attribute in preference over its
ob_type slot.  This ensures that we can still use classic classes as
metaclasse, as shown in the original "Metaclasses" essay.  This also
makes all the examples in Demo/metaclasses/ work again (maybe these
should be turned into a test suite?).
2001-09-12 19:19:18 +00:00
Jack Jansen 697842f58c Replaced PyMac_FullPath by PyMac_FullPathname, which has an extra 'length'
parameter for the return string (as unix pathnames are not limited
by the 255 char pstring limit).
Implemented the function for MachO-Python, where it returns unix pathnames.
2001-09-10 22:00:39 +00:00
Guido van Rossum d0b69eceb4 Improve threading on Solaris, according to SF patch #460269, submitted
by bbrox@bbrox.org / lionel.ulmer@free.fr.

This adds a configure check and if all goes well turns on the
PTHREAD_SCOPE_SYSTEM thread attribute for new threads.

This should remove the need to add tiny sleeps at the start of threads
to allow other threads to be scheduled.
2001-09-10 14:10:54 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 77b8b67919 Fix core dump in PyArg_ParseTuple() with Unicode arguments.
Reported by Fredrik Lundh on python-dev.

The conversimple() code that handles Unicode arguments and converts
them to the default encoding now calls converterr() with the original
Unicode argument instead of the NULL returned by the failed encoding
attempt.
2001-09-10 01:54:43 +00:00
Tim Peters 51e2651b29 SF bug [#458941] Looks like a unary minus bug.
com_factor():  when a unary minus is attached to a float or imaginary zero,
don't optimize the UNARY_MINUS opcode away:  the const dict can't
distinguish between +0.0 and -0.0, so ended up treating both like the
first one added to it.  Optimizing UNARY_PLUS away isn't a problem.

(BTW, I already uploaded the 2.2a3 Windows installer, and this isn't
important enough to delay the release.)
2001-09-07 08:45:55 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 8bce4acb17 Rename 'getset' to 'property'. 2001-09-06 21:56:42 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 36546db750 Patch #455231: Support ELF properly on OpenBSD. 2001-09-05 14:24:43 +00:00
Guido van Rossum b3a639ed7d builtin_execfile(): initialize another local that the GCC on leroy
found it necessary to warn about.
2001-09-05 13:37:47 +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
Neil Schemenauer 6c0f20088f Move call_trace(..., PyTrace_CALL, ...) call to top of eval_frame. That
way it's called each time a generator is resumed.  The tracing of normal
functions should be unaffected by this change.
2001-09-04 19:03:35 +00:00
Tim Peters 37a309db70 builtin_dir(): Treat classic classes like types. Use PyDict_Keys instead
of PyMapping_Keys because we know we have a real dict.  Tolerate that
objects may have an attr named "__dict__" that's not a dict (Py_None
popped up during testing).

test_descr.py, test_dir():  Test the new classic-class behavior; beef up
the new-style class test similarly.

test_pyclbr.py, checkModule():  dir(C) is no longer a synonym for
C.__dict__.keys() when C is a classic class (looks like the same thing
that burned distutils! -- should it be *made* a synoym again?  Then it
would be inconsistent with new-style class behavior.).
2001-09-04 01:20:04 +00:00
Tim Peters 5d2b77cf31 Make dir() wordier (see the new docstring). The new behavior is a mixed
bag.  It's clearly wrong for classic classes, at heart because a classic
class doesn't have a __class__ attribute, and I'm unclear on whether
that's feature or bug.  I'll repair this once I find out (in the
meantime, dir() applied to classic classes won't find the base classes,
while dir() applied to a classic-class instance *will* find the base
classes but not *their* base classes).

Please give the new dir() a try and see whether you love it or hate it.
The new dir([]) behavior is something I could come to love.  Here's
something to hate:

>>> class C:
...     pass
...
>>> c = C()
>>> dir(c)
['__doc__', '__module__']
>>>

The idea that an instance has a __doc__ attribute is jarring (of course
it's really c.__class__.__doc__ == C.__doc__; likewise for __module__).

OTOH, the code already has too many special cases, and dir(x) doesn't
have a compelling or clear purpose when x isn't a module.
2001-09-03 05:47:38 +00:00
Jack Jansen fabd00fa91 Added glue routine for PyMac_BuildFSSpec, PyMac_GetFSRef and PyMac_BuildFSRef.
Moved the declarations to pymactoolbox.h.
2001-09-01 23:39:58 +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
Fred Drake 14ef244dfe When re-writing a factor containing a unary negation of a literal, only
affect nodes without another operator.  This was causing negated
exponentiations to drop the exponentiation.  This closes SF bug #456756.
2001-08-30 18:53:25 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 46add98758 Do the int inlining only if the type is really an int, not whenever
PyInt_Check() succeeds.  That returns true for subtypes of int, which
may override __add__ or __sub__.
2001-08-30 16:06:23 +00:00
Michael W. Hudson 8019913e4a fix for part of bug #453523: disable unmarshalling of code objects in
restricted execution mode.
2001-08-30 14:50:20 +00:00
Sjoerd Mullender a2c2ae62df Removed unreachable goto statement to silence SGI compiler. 2001-08-30 14:06:45 +00:00
Sjoerd Mullender 2f38f81fec Removed some unreachable break statements to silence SGI compiler. 2001-08-30 14:05:20 +00:00
Tim Peters 692323488b Add a new function imp.lock_held(), and use it to skip test_threaded_import
when that test is doomed to deadlock.
2001-08-30 05:16:13 +00:00
Tim Peters 79248aa1e4 SF bug [#456252] Python should never stomp on [u]intptr_t.
pyport.h:  typedef a new Py_intptr_t type.
    DELICATE ASSUMPTION:  That HAVE_UINTPTR_T implies intptr_t is
    available as well as uintptr_t.  If that turns out not to be
    true, things must get uglier (C99 wants both, so I think it's
    an assumption we're *likely* to get away with).
thread_nt.h, PyThread_start_new_thread:  MS _beginthread is documented
    as returning unsigned long; no idea why uintptr_t was being used.
Others:  Always use Py_[u]intptr_t, never [u]intptr_t directly.
2001-08-29 21:37:10 +00:00
Jack Jansen c51395d797 GUSI on the Mac creates threads with a default stack size of 20KB, which is
not enough for Python. Increased the stacksize to a (somewhat arbitrary)
64KB.
2001-08-29 15:24:53 +00:00
Tim Peters 8211237db8 marshal.c r_long64: When reading a TYPE_INT64 value on a box with 32-bit
ints, convert to PyLong (rather than throwing away the high-order 32 bits).
2001-08-29 02:28:42 +00:00
Guido van Rossum cbfc855f57 The "O!" format code should implement an isinstance() test
rather than a type equality test.
2001-08-28 16:37:51 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 71b6af91d3 If an integer constant can't be generated from an integer literal
because of overflow, generate a long instead.
2001-08-27 19:45:25 +00:00
Jack Jansen 06bd3234cb Refer to the toolbox modules by their official name (Carbon.AE), not the internal name (_AE). This can slow things down (once) but it's the only way I can get things to work on OSX, OS9 dynamically loaded and OS9 frozen. 2001-08-27 14:01:05 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 876c8cb597 PyErr_Format(): Factor out most of this code into
PyString_FromFormat() since it's much more generally useful than
    just for exceptions.
2001-08-24 18:35:23 +00:00
Guido van Rossum f5cb357468 Add 'super' builtin type. 2001-08-24 16:52:18 +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
Jack Jansen 3cbf6d9d6e Mac toolbox modules have gotten an _ prepended to their name. 2001-08-23 13:53:34 +00:00