atexit._run_exitfuncs() now logs callback exceptions using
sys.unraisablehook, rather than logging them directly into
sys.stderr and raising the last exception.
Run GeneralTest of test_atexit in a subprocess since it calls
atexit._clear() which clears all atexit callbacks.
_PyAtExit_Fini() sets state->callbacks to NULL.
If config->run_filename doesn't exist, log the error into sys.stderr
using "%R" format, to escape properly unencodable characters (usually
with backslashreplace).
* Add _PyAtExit_Call() function and remove pyexitfunc and
pyexitmodule members of PyInterpreterState. The function
logs atexit callback errors using _PyErr_WriteUnraisableMsg().
* Add _PyAtExit_Init() and _PyAtExit_Fini() functions.
* Remove traverse, clear and free functions of the atexit module.
Co-authored-by: Dong-hee Na <donghee.na@python.org>
At Python exit, if a callback registered with atexit.register()
fails, its exception is now logged. Previously, only some exceptions
were logged, and the last exception was always silently ignored.
Add _PyAtExit_Call() function and remove
PyInterpreterState.atexit_func member. call_py_exitfuncs() now calls
directly _PyAtExit_Call().
The atexit module must now always be built as a built-in module.
pymain_run_file() no longer encodes the filename: pass the filename
as an object to the new _PyRun_AnyFileObject() function.
Add new private functions:
* _PyRun_AnyFileObject()
* _PyRun_InteractiveLoopObject()
* _Py_FdIsInteractive()
- Copy existing xxlimited to xxlimited53 (named for the limited API version it uses)
- Build both modules, both in debug and release
- Test both modules
Several built-in and standard library types now ensure that their internal result tuples are always tracked by the garbage collector:
- collections.OrderedDict.items
- dict.items
- enumerate
- functools.reduce
- itertools.combinations
- itertools.combinations_with_replacement
- itertools.permutations
- itertools.product
- itertools.zip_longest
- zip
Previously, they could have become untracked by a prior garbage collection.
No longer use deprecated aliases to functions:
* Replace PyObject_MALLOC() with PyObject_Malloc()
* Replace PyObject_REALLOC() with PyObject_Realloc()
* Replace PyObject_FREE() with PyObject_Free()
* Replace PyObject_Del() with PyObject_Free()
* Replace PyObject_DEL() with PyObject_Free()
No longer use deprecated aliases to functions:
* Replace PyMem_MALLOC() with PyMem_Malloc()
* Replace PyMem_REALLOC() with PyMem_Realloc()
* Replace PyMem_FREE() with PyMem_Free()
* Replace PyMem_Del() with PyMem_Free()
* Replace PyMem_DEL() with PyMem_Free()
Modify also the PyMem_DEL() macro to use directly PyMem_Free().
* bpo-40791: Make compare_digest more constant-time.
The existing volatile `left`/`right` pointers guarantee that the reads will all occur, but does not guarantee that they will be _used_. So a compiler can still short-circuit the loop, saving e.g. the overhead of doing the xors and especially the overhead of the data dependency between `result` and the reads. That would change performance depending on where the first unequal byte occurs. This change removes that optimization.
(This is change #1 from https://bugs.python.org/issue40791 .)
Convert the _imp extension module to the multi-phase initialization
API (PEP 489).
* Add _PyImport_BootstrapImp() which fix a bootstrap issue: import
the _imp module before importlib is initialized.
* Add create_builtin() sub-function, used by _imp_create_builtin().
* Initialize PyInterpreterState.import_func earlier, in
pycore_init_builtins().
* Remove references to _PyImport_Cleanup(). This function has been
renamed to finalize_modules() and moved to pylifecycle.c.
This change partically reverts
commit ad3252bad9
and the commit fe2978b3b9.
Many third party C extension modules rely on the ability of using
Py_TYPE() to set an object type: "Py_TYPE(obj) = type;" or to set an
object type using: "Py_SIZE(obj) = size;".
* Add signal_add_constants() function and add ADD_INT_MACRO macro.
* The Python SIGINT handler is now installed at the end of
signal_exec().
* Use Py_NewRef().
bpo-41686, bpo-41713: On Windows, the SIGINT event,
_PyOS_SigintEvent(), is now created even if Python is configured to
not install signal handlers (PyConfig.install_signal_handlers=0 or
Py_InitializeEx(0)).
Changes:
* Move global variables initialization from signal_exec() to
_PySignal_Init() to clarify that they are global variables cleared
by _PySignal_Fini().
* _PySignal_Fini() now closes sigint_event.
* IntHandler is no longer a global variable.
Remove the undocumented PyOS_InitInterrupts() C function.
* Rename PyOS_InitInterrupts() to _PySignal_Init(). It now installs
other signal handlers, not only SIGINT.
* Rename PyOS_FiniInterrupts() to _PySignal_Fini()
As AIX 5.3 and below do not support thread_cputime, it was decided in
https://bugs.python.org/issue40680 to require AIX 6.1 and above. This
commit removes workarounds for — and references to — older, unsupported
AIX versions.