* Inline _PyInterpreterState_SetConfig(): replace it with
_PyConfig_Copy().
* Add _PyErr_SetFromPyStatus()
* Add _PyInterpreterState_GetConfigCopy()
* Add a new _PyInterpreterState_SetConfig() function.
* Add an unit which gets, modifies, and sets the config.
Otherwise, when running the testsuite, test_peg_generator tries to compile C
code using the optimized flags and fails because it cannot find the profile
data.
When Py_Initialize() is called twice, the second call now updates
more sys attributes for the configuration, rather than only sys.argv.
* Rename _PySys_InitMain() to _PySys_UpdateConfig().
* _PySys_UpdateConfig() now modifies sys.flags in-place, instead of
creating a new flags object.
* Remove old commented sys.flags flags (unbuffered and skip_first).
* Add private _PySys_GetObject() function.
* When Py_Initialize(), Py_InitializeFromConfig() and
Replace PyModule_AddObject() with PyModule_AddObjectRef() in the
_warnings module to fix a reference leak on error.
Use also PyModule_AddObjectRef() in importdl.c.
* Move orig_argv before argv
* Move program_name and platlibdir with other path configuration
inputs
Give a name to the PyPreConfig and PyConfig structures and separate
the type definitions.
Call _PyAST_Fini() on all interpreters, not only on the main
interpreter. Also, call it ealier to fix a reference leak.
Python types contain a reference to themselves in in their
PyTypeObject.tp_mro member. _PyAST_Fini() must called before the last
GC collection to destroy AST types.
_PyInterpreterState_Clear() now calls _PyAST_Fini(). It now also
calls _PyWarnings_Fini() on subinterpeters, not only on the main
interpreter.
Add an assertion in AST init_types() to ensure that the _ast module
is no longer used after _PyAST_Fini() has been called.
The logging.FileHandler class now keeps a reference to the builtin
open() function to be able to open or reopen the file during Python
finalization.
Fix errors like:
Exception ignored in: (...)
Traceback (most recent call last):
(...)
File ".../logging/__init__.py", line 1463, in error
File ".../logging/__init__.py", line 1577, in _log
File ".../logging/__init__.py", line 1587, in handle
File ".../logging/__init__.py", line 1649, in callHandlers
File ".../logging/__init__.py", line 948, in handle
File ".../logging/__init__.py", line 1182, in emit
File ".../logging/__init__.py", line 1171, in _open
NameError: name 'open' is not defined
The ast module internal state is now per interpreter.
* Rename "astmodulestate" to "struct ast_state"
* Add pycore_ast.h internal header: the ast_state structure is now
declared in pycore_ast.h.
* Add PyInterpreterState.ast (struct ast_state)
* Remove get_ast_state()
* Rename get_global_ast_state() to get_ast_state()
* PyAST_obj2mod() now handles get_ast_state() failures
* Prevent some possible DoS attacks via providing invalid Plist files
with extremely large number of objects or collection sizes.
* Raise InvalidFileException for too large bytes and string size instead of returning garbage.
* Raise InvalidFileException instead of ValueError for specific invalid datetime (NaN).
* Raise InvalidFileException instead of TypeError for non-hashable dict keys.
* Add more tests for invalid Plist files.
Enhance the documentation of the Python startup, filesystem encoding
and error handling, locale encoding. Add a new "Python UTF-8 Mode"
section.
* Add "locale encoding" and "filesystem encoding and error handler"
to the glossary
* Remove documentation from Include/cpython/initconfig.h: move it to
Doc/c-api/init_config.rst.
* Doc/c-api/init_config.rst:
* Document command line options and environment variables
* Document default values.
* Add a new "Python UTF-8 Mode" section in Doc/library/os.rst.
* Add warnings to Py_DecodeLocale() and Py_EncodeLocale() docs.
* Document how Python selects the filesystem encoding and error
handler at a single place: PyConfig.filesystem_encoding and
PyConfig.filesystem_errors.
* PyConfig: move orig_argv member at the right place.
This adds a new function named sys._current_exceptions() which is equivalent ot
sys._current_frames() except that it returns the exceptions currently handled
by other threads. It is equivalent to calling sys.exc_info() for each running
thread.
They were occurring with both repeated 'force-calltip' invocations and by typing parentheses
in expressions, strings, and comments in the argument code.
Co-authored-by: Terry Jan Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu>
* bpo-37193: remove the thread which finished process request from threads list
* rename variable t to thread.
* don't remove thread from list if it is daemon.
* use lock to protect self._threads.
* use finally block in case of exception from shutdown_request().
* check "not thread.daemon" before lock to avoid holding the lock if it's unnecessary.
* fix the place of _threads_lock.
* separate code to remove a current thread into a function.
* check ValueError when removing thread.
* fix wrong code which all instance shared same lock.
* Extract thread management into a _Threads class to encapsulate atomic operations and separate concerns.
* Replace multiple references of 'block_on_close' with one, avoiding the possibility that 'block_on_close' could change during the course of processing requests. Now, there's exactly one _threads object with behavior fixed for the duration.
* Add docstrings to private classes.
* Add test to ensure that a ThreadingTCPServer can be closed without serving any requests.
* Use _NoThreads as the default value. Fixes AttributeError when server is closed without serving any requests.
* Add blurb
* Add test capturing failure.
Co-authored-by: Jason R. Coombs <jaraco@jaraco.com>
If the nl_langinfo(CODESET) function returns an empty string, Python
now uses UTF-8 as the filesystem encoding.
In May 2010 (commit b744ba1d14), I
modified Python to log a warning and use UTF-8 as the filesystem
encoding (instead of None) if nl_langinfo(CODESET) returns an empty
string.
In August 2020 (commit 94908bbc15), I
modified Python startup to fail with a fatal error and a specific
error message if nl_langinfo(CODESET) returns an empty string. The
intent was to prevent guessing the encoding and also investigate user
configuration where this case happens.
In 10 years (2010 to 2020), I saw zero user report about the error
message related to nl_langinfo(CODESET) returning an empty string.
Today, UTF-8 became the defacto standard and it's safe to make the
assumption that the user expects UTF-8. For example,
nl_langinfo(CODESET) can return an empty string on macOS if the
LC_CTYPE locale is not supported, and UTF-8 is the default encoding
on macOS.
While this change is likely to not affect anyone in practice, it
should make UTF-8 lover happy ;-)
Rewrite also the documentation explaining how Python selects the
filesystem encoding and error handler.
* Rename _Py_GetLocaleEncoding() to _Py_GetLocaleEncodingObject()
* Add _Py_GetLocaleEncoding() which returns a wchar_t* string to
share code between _Py_GetLocaleEncodingObject()
and config_get_locale_encoding().
* _Py_GetLocaleEncodingObject() now decodes nl_langinfo(CODESET)
from the current locale encoding with surrogateescape,
rather than using UTF-8.
[bpo-29566]() notes that binhex.binhex uses inconsistent line endings (both Unix and MacOS9 line endings are used). This PR changes this to use the MacOS9 line endings everywhere.
* bpo-42146: Unify cleanup in subprocess_fork_exec()
Also ignore errors from _enable_gc():
* They are always suppressed by the current code due to a bug.
* _enable_gc() is only used if `preexec_fn != None`, which is unsafe.
* We don't have a good way to handle errors in case we successfully
created a child process.
Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith <greg@krypto.org>
Left-recursive rules need to check for errors explicitly, since
even if the rule returns NULL, the parsing might continue and lead
to long-distance failures.
Co-authored-by: Pablo Galindo <Pablogsal@gmail.com>