Previously, unexpected results occurred when email was passed, for example,
'utf8' as a charset name, since email would accept it but would *not* use
the 'utf-8' codec for it, even though Python itself recognises that as
an alias for utf-8. Now Charset checks with codecs for aliases as well
as its own internal table. Issue 8898 has been opened to change this
further in py3k so that all aliasing is routed through the codecs module.
FreeBSD doesn't have socket.EAI_NODATA. I rewrote the routine because
there's no easy way to conditionally include a context manager in a
with statement. As a side benefit, instead of a stack of context
managers there's now only one.
If a body part ended with \r\n, feedparser, using '$' to terminate its
search for the newline, would match on the \r\n, and think that it needed
to strip two characters in order to account for the line end before the
boundary. That made it chop one too many characters off the end of
the body part. Using \Z makes the match correct.
Patch and test by Tony Nelson.
the curses module must be linked against ncurses as well. Otherwise it
is not safe to load both the readline and curses modules in an application.
Thanks Thomas Dickey for answering questions about ncurses/ncursesw
and readline!
Fixes (mysterious, to the end user) UnicodeErrors when using utf-8 as
the charset and unicode as the _text argument. Also makes the way in
which unicode gets encoded to quoted printable for other charsets more
sane (it only worked by accident previously). The _payload now is encoded
to the charset.output_charset if it is unicode.
* Fix seek() method of codecs.open(), don't write the BOM twice after seek(0)
* Fix reset() method of codecs, UTF-16, UTF-32 and StreamWriter classes
* test_codecs: use "w+" mode instead of "wt+". "t" mode is not supported by
Solaris or Windows, but does it really exist? I found it the in the issue.
(e.g. from .os import sep) and it failed, import would still try the implicit
relative import semantics of an absolute import (from os import sep). That's
not right, so when level is negative, only do explicit relative import
semantics.
Fixes issue #7902. Thanks to Meador Inge for the patch.
interpreter shutdown semantics. Same issue goes for the methods that __del__
called. Now all the methods capture the global objects it needs as default
values to private parameters (could have stuck them on the class object itself,
but since the objects have nothing directly to do with the class that seemed
wrong).
There is no test as making one that works is hard. This patch was
verified against a consistently failing test in Mercurial's test suite, though,
so it has been tested in some regard.
Closes issue #5099. Thanks to Mary Stern for the bug report and Gabriel
Genellina for writing another patch for the same issue and attempting to write
a test.
to "sys.platform == 'mac'" and that is
dead code because it refers to a platform
that is no longer supported (and hasn't been
supported for several releases).
Fixes issue #7908 for the trunk.
OSX 10.6 in that after os.fork() the parent and
child generate the same sequence of UUIDs.
This patch falls back to the the Python implementation
on OSX 10.6 or later.
Fixes issue #8621.
calling a foreign function. This allows to use the unmodified libffi
library.
Remove most files from _ctypes/libffi_msvc, only two include files
stay (updated from _ctypes/libffi/...). Other files are used in the
cross-platform _ctypes/libffi directory.
any non-float non-integer argument is now converted to an integer (if
possible) using its __int__ method. Previously, only small arguments
were treated this way; larger arguments (those whose __int__ was
outside the range of a C long) would produce a TypeError.
Patch by Alexander Belopolsky (with minor modifications).
When a Decimal operation raises multiple signals and more than one of
those signals is trapped, the specification determines the order in
which the signals should be handled. In many cases this order wasn't
being followed, leading to the wrong Python exception being raised.
This commit fixes those cases, and adds extra tests. The tests are
only enabled when EXTENDEDERRORTESTS is True, since they involve
rerunning each Decimal testcase several times.
framework install of Python in your home directory (on OSX):
$ configure --enable-framework=${HOME}/Library/Frameworks
$ make && make install
Without this patch the framework would get installed just fine,
but 'make install' would try to install the application bundles
and command-line tools outside the user's home, which doesn't work
for non-admin users (and is bad form anyway).
* Use try/except ImportError or test_support.import_module() to import thread
and threading modules
* Add @unittest.skipUnless(threading, ...) to testcases using threads
Refactors format_string. Includes tests for the two problems noted in
the issue, but as far as I can see there are no other tests that confirm
that format_string conforms to normal % formatting rules.
by default as well. This change fixes that by treating -Q like -3 when it comes
to DeprecationWarning; using it causes the silencing to not occur.
Fixes issue #7319.
where the method could block indefinitely if called just before the
event loop started running. This also fixes the occasional freezes
witnessed in test_httpservers.
a non-infinite timeout. Also make that method friendlier with applications
wanting to continue using the socket in clear-text mode, by disabling
OpenSSL's internal readahead. Thanks to Darryl Miles for guidance.
Issue #8108: test_ftplib's non-blocking SSL server now has proper handling
of SSL shutdowns.
PyMarshal_ReadLastObjectFromFile, which doesn't bring any noticeable
benefit compared to the dynamic memory allocation fallback. Patch by
Charles-François Natali.
Two itimer tests and an interprocess signal test fail on FreeBSD 6 if
any test that starts a thread runs before test_signal. Since FreeBSD7
does not show this behavior, the bug is most likely a platform bug,
so this patch just skips the failing tests on freebsd6.
Instead of spaces between the filename and date (or whatever the string
is that follows the filename, if any) use tabs. This is what the unix
'diff' command does, for example, and difflib was intended to follow
the 'standard' way of doing diffs. This improves compatibility with
patch tools. The docs and examples are also changed to recommended that
the date format used be the ISO 8601 format, which is what modern diff
tools emit by default.
Patch by Anatoly Techtonik.
Fixed a typo in the email.encoders module so that messages output using
an ISO-2022 character set will use a content-transfer-encoding of
7bit consistently. Previously if the input data had any eight bit
characters the output data would get marked as 8bit even though it
was actually 7bit.