python-gdb.py now checks for "take_gil" function name to check if a
frame tries to acquire the GIL, instead of checking for
"pthread_cond_timedwait" which is specific to Linux and can be a
different condition than the GIL.
Break up COMPARE_OP into four logically distinct opcodes:
* COMPARE_OP for rich comparisons
* IS_OP for 'is' and 'is not' tests
* CONTAINS_OP for 'in' and 'is not' tests
* JUMP_IF_NOT_EXC_MATCH for checking exceptions in 'try-except' statements.
Add ast.unparse() as a function in the ast module that can be used to unparse an
ast.AST object and produce a string with code that would produce an equivalent ast.AST
object when parsed.
test_urllib commented since 2007:
commit d9880d07fc
Author: Facundo Batista <facundobatista@gmail.com>
Date: Fri May 25 04:20:22 2007 +0000
Commenting out the tests until find out who can test them in
one of the problematic enviroments.
pynche code commented since 1998 and 2001:
commit ef30092207
Author: Barry Warsaw <barry@python.org>
Date: Tue Dec 15 01:04:38 1998 +0000
Added most of the mechanism to change the strips from color variations
to color constants (i.e. red constant, green constant, blue
constant). But I haven't hooked this up yet because the UI gets more
crowded and the arrows don't reflect the correct values.
Added "Go to Black" and "Go to White" buttons.
commit 741eae0b31
Author: Barry Warsaw <barry@python.org>
Date: Wed Apr 18 03:51:55 2001 +0000
StripWidget.__init__(), update_yourself(): Removed some unused local
variables reported by PyChecker.
__togglegentype(): PyChecker accurately reported that the variable
__gentypevar was unused -- actually this whole method is currently
unused so comment it out.
This is partly a cleanup of the code. It also is preparation for getting the variables from the source (cross-platform) rather than from the symbols.
The change only touches the tool (and its tests).
The "Slot" helper (descriptor) is leaking references due to its caching mechanism. The change includes a partial fix to Slot, but also adds Variable.storage to replace the problematic use of Slot.
https://bugs.python.org/issue38187
This fixes the exception '`ValueError: invalid literal for int() with base 10`
if `str(gdbval)` returns a hexadecimal value (e.g. '0xa0'). This is the case if
the output-radix is set to 16 in gdb. See
https://sourceware.org/gdb/onlinedocs/gdb/Numbers.html for more information.
In ArgumentClinic, value "NULL" should now be used only for unrepresentable default values
(like in the optional third parameter of getattr). "None" should be used if None is accepted
as argument and passing None has the same effect as not passing the argument at all.
Now the fields have names! Much easier to keep straight as a
reader than the elements of an 18-tuple.
Runs about 10-15% slower: from 10.8s to 12.3s, on my laptop.
Fortunately that's perfectly fine for this maintenance script.
bpo-37151: remove special case for PyCFunction from PyObject_Call
Alse, make the undocumented function PyCFunction_Call an alias
of PyObject_Call and deprecate it.
Since PEP 393 in Python 3.3, this value is always 0x10ffff, the
maximum codepoint in Unicode; there's no longer such a thing as a
UCS-2 build of Python, which couldn't properly represent some
characters.
There are a couple of spots left where we still condition on the value
of this constant. Take them out.
This is the converse of GH-15353 -- in addition to plenty of
scripts in the tree that are marked with the executable bit
(and so can be directly executed), there are a few that have
a leading `#!` which could let them be executed, but it doesn't
do anything because they don't have the executable bit set.
Here's a command which finds such files and marks them. The
first line finds files in the tree with a `#!` line *anywhere*;
the next-to-last step checks that the *first* line is actually of
that form. In between we filter out files that already have the
bit set, and some files that are meant as fragments to be
consumed by one or another kind of preprocessor.
$ git grep -l '^#!' \
| grep -vxFf <( \
git ls-files --stage \
| perl -lane 'print $F[3] if (!/^100644/)' \
) \
| grep -ve '\.in$' -e '^Doc/includes/' \
| while read f; do
head -c2 "$f" | grep -qxF '#!' \
&& chmod a+x "$f"; \
done
Much like the lower-level logic in commit ef2af1ad4, we had
4 copies of this logic, written in a couple of different ways.
They're all implementing the same standard, so write it just once.
The `expand` option was introduced in 2000 in commit fad27aee1.
It appears to have been always set since it was committed, and
what it does is tell the code to do something essential. So,
just always do that, and cut the option.
Also cut the `linebreakprops` option, which isn't consulted anymore.
There were 10 copies of this, and almost as many distinct versions of
exactly how it was written. They're all implementing the same
standard. Pull them out to the top, so the more interesting logic
that remains becomes easier to read.