* bpo-40630: Add tracemalloc.reset_peak (GH-20102, cherrypick 8b62644)
The reset_peak function sets the peak memory size to the current size,
representing a resetting of that metric. This allows for recording the
peak of specific sections of code, ignoring other code that may have
had a higher peak (since the most recent `tracemalloc.start()` or
tracemalloc.clear_traces()` call).
* Adjust docs to point to 3.9
Moreover, the following tests now check the child process exit code:
* test_os.PtyTests
* test_mailbox.test_lock_conflict()
* test_tempfile.test_process_awareness()
* test_uuid.testIssue8621()
* multiprocessing resource tracker tests
Add a total_nframe field to the traces collected by the tracemalloc module.
This field indicates the original number of frames before it was truncated.
tracemalloc now tries to update the traceback when an object is
reused from a "free list" (optimization for faster object creation,
used by the builtin list type for example).
Changes:
* Add _PyTraceMalloc_NewReference() function which tries to update
the Python traceback of a Python object.
* _Py_NewReference() now calls _PyTraceMalloc_NewReference().
* Add an unit test.
* Add most_recent_first parameter to tracemalloc.Traceback.format to allow
reversing the order of the frames in the output
* Reversed default sorting of tracemalloc.Traceback frames
* Allowed negative limit, truncating from the other side.
Parse more env vars in Py_Main():
* Add more options to _PyCoreConfig:
* faulthandler
* tracemalloc
* importtime
* Move code to parse environment variables from _Py_InitializeCore()
to Py_Main(). This change fixes a regression from Python 3.6:
PYTHONUNBUFFERED is now read before calling pymain_init_stdio().
* _PyFaulthandler_Init() and _PyTraceMalloc_Init() now take an
argument to decide if the module has to be enabled at startup.
* tracemalloc_start() is now responsible to check the maximum number
of frames.
Other changes:
* Cleanup Py_Main():
* Rename some pymain_xxx() subfunctions
* Add pymain_run_python() subfunction
* Cleanup Py_NewInterpreter()
* _PyInterpreterState_Enable() now reports failure
* init_hash_secret() now considers pyurandom() failure as an "user
error": don't fail with abort().
* pymain_optlist_append() and pymain_strdup() now sets err on memory
allocation failure.
Issue #26530:
* Add C functions _PyTraceMalloc_Track() and _PyTraceMalloc_Untrack() to track
memory blocks using the tracemalloc module.
* Add _PyTraceMalloc_GetTraceback() to get the traceback of an object.
Issue #26588:
* The _tracemalloc now supports tracing memory allocations of multiple address
spaces (domains).
* Add domain parameter to tracemalloc_add_trace() and
tracemalloc_remove_trace().
* tracemalloc_add_trace() now starts by removing the previous trace, if any.
* _tracemalloc._get_traces() now returns a list of (domain, size,
traceback_frames): the domain is new.
* Add tracemalloc.DomainFilter
* tracemalloc.Filter: add an optional domain parameter to the constructor and a
domain attribute
* Sublte change: use Py_uintptr_t rather than void* in the traces key.
* Add tracemalloc_config.use_domain, currently hardcoded to 1
The concept of .pyo files no longer exists. Now .pyc files have an
optional `opt-` tag which specifies if any extra optimizations beyond
the peepholer were applied.
interpreter under test is being run in an environment that requires the use of
environment variables such as PYTHONHOME in order to function at all.
Adds a test.script_helper.interpreter_requires_environment() function
to be used with @unittest.skipIf on stdlib test methods requiring this.
interpreter under test is being run in an environment that requires the use of
environment variables such as PYTHONHOME in order to function at all.
Adds a private test.script_helper._interpreter_requires_environment() function
to be used with @unittest.skipIf on stdlib test methods requiring this.
The limit is now 178,956,969 on 64 bit (it is greater on 32 bit because
structures are smaller).
Use int instead of Py_ssize_t to store the number of frames to have smaller
traceback_t objects.