but annoying memory leak. This was introduced when PyExc_Exception
was added; the loop above populating the PyExc_StandardError exception
tuple started at index 1 in bltin_exc, but PyExc_Exception was added
at index 0, so PyExc_StandardError was getting inserted in itself!
How else can a tuple include itself?!
Change the loop to start at index 2.
This was a *fun* one! :-)
This doesn't yet support "import a.b.c" or "from a.b.c import x", but
it does recognize directories. When importing a directory, it
initializes __path__ to a list containing the directory name, and
loads the __init__ module if found.
The (internal) find_module() and load_module() functions are
restructured so that they both also handle built-in and frozen modules
and Mac resources (and directories of course). The imp module's
find_module() and (new) load_module() also have this functionality.
Moreover, imp unconditionally defines constants for all module types,
and has two more new functions: find_module_in_package() and
find_module_in_directory().
There's also a new API function, PyImport_ImportModuleEx(), which
takes all four __import__ arguments (name, globals, locals, fromlist).
The last three may be NULL. This is currently the same as
PyImport_ImportModule() but in the future it will be able to do
relative dotted-path imports.
Other changes:
- bltinmodule.c: in __import__, call PyImport_ImportModuleEx().
- ceval.c: always pass the fromlist to __import__, even if it is a C
function, so PyImport_ImportModuleEx() is useful.
- getmtime.c: the function has a second argument, the FILE*, on which
it applies fstat(). According to Sjoerd this is much faster. The
first (pathname) argument is ignored, but remains for backward
compatibility (so the Mac version still works without changes).
By cleverly combining the new imp functionality, the full support for
dotted names in Python (mini.py, not checked in) is now about 7K,
lavishly commented (vs. 14K for ni plus 11K for ihooks, also lavishly
commented).
Good night!
Added PyErr_MemoryErrorInst to hold the pre-instantiated instance when
using class based exceptions.
Simplified the creation of all built-in exceptions, both class based
and string based. Actually, for class based exceptions, the string
ones are still created just in case there's a problem creating the
class based ones (so you still get *some* exception handling!). Now
the init and fini functions run through a list of structure elements,
creating the strings (and optionally classes) for every entry.
initerrors(): the new base class exceptions StandardError,
LookupError, and NumberError are initialized when using string
exceptions, to tuples containing the list of derived string
exceptions. This GvR trick enables forward compatibility! One bit of
nastiness is that the C code has to know the inheritance tree embodied
in exceptions.py.
Added the two phase init and fini functions.
classes as their second arguments. The former takes a class as the
first argument and returns true iff first is second, or is a subclass
of second.
The latter takes any object as the first argument and returns true iff
first is an instance of the second, or any subclass of second.
Also, change all occurances of pointer compares against
PyExc_IndexError with PyErr_ExceptionMatches() calls.
2. Fix two bugs in complex():
- Memory leak when using complex(classinstance) -- r was never
DECREF'ed.
- Conversion of the second argument, if not complex, was done using
the type vector of the 1st.
be Ellipsis!).
Bumped the API version because a linker-visible symbol is affected.
Old C code will still compile -- there's a b/w compat macro.
Similarly, old Python code will still run, builtin exports both
Ellipses and Ellipsis.