When allocating MemoryError classes, there is some logic to use
pre-allocated instances in a freelist only if the type that is being
allocated is not a subclass of MemoryError. Unfortunately in the
destructor this logic is not present so the freelist is altered even
with subclasses of MemoryError..
(cherry picked from commit 9b648a95cc)
Co-authored-by: Pablo Galindo <Pablogsal@gmail.com>
* bpo-40334: Produce better error messages on invalid targets (GH-20106)
The following error messages get produced:
- `cannot delete ...` for invalid `del` targets
- `... is an illegal 'for' target` for invalid targets in for
statements
- `... is an illegal 'with' target` for invalid targets in
with statements
Additionally, a few `cut`s were added in various places before the
invocation of the `invalid_*` rule, in order to speed things
up.
Co-authored-by: Pablo Galindo <Pablogsal@gmail.com>
(cherry picked from commit 01ece63d42)
This commit fixes SyntaxError locations when the caret is not displayed,
by doing the following:
- `col_number` always gets set to the location of the offending
node/expr. When no caret is to be displayed, this gets achieved
by setting the object holding the error line to None.
- Introduce a new function `_PyPegen_raise_error_known_location`,
which can be called, when an arbitrary `lineno`/`col_offset`
needs to be passed. This function then gets used in the grammar
(through some new macros and inline functions) so that SyntaxError
locations of the new parser match that of the old.
When parsing something like `f(g()=2)`, where the name of a default arg
is not a NAME, but an arbitrary expression, a specialised error message
is emitted.
When parsing things like `def f(*): pass` the old parser used to output `SyntaxError: named arguments must follow bare *`, which the new parser wasn't able to do.
* Rename PyConfig.use_peg to _use_peg_parser
* Document PyConfig._use_peg_parser and mark it a deprecated
* Mark -X oldparser option and PYTHONOLDPARSER env var as deprecated
in the documentation.
* Add use_old_parser() and skip_if_new_parser() to test.support
* Remove sys.flags.use_peg: use_old_parser() uses
_testinternalcapi.get_configs() instead.
* Enhance test_embed tests
* subprocess._args_from_interpreter_flags() copies -X oldparser
The Py_FatalError() function is replaced with a macro which logs
automatically the name of the current function, unless the
Py_LIMITED_API macro is defined.
Changes:
* Add _Py_FatalErrorFunc() function.
* Remove the function name from the message of Py_FatalError() calls
which included the function name.
* Update tests.
* Copy test_exceptions.test_unraisable() to
test_sys.UnraisableHookTest().
* Use catch_unraisable_exception() in test_coroutines,
test_exceptions, test_generators.
The lineno and col_offset attributes of AST nodes for list comprehensions,
generator expressions and tuples are now point to the opening parenthesis or
square brace. For tuples without parenthesis they point to the position
of the first item.
test_unraisable() of test_exceptions expects that PyErr_WriteUnraisable(method)
fails on repr(method).
Before the previous change (7b8df4a5d81d), slot_tp_finalize() called
PyErr_WriteUnraisable() with a PyMethodObject. In this case, repr(method) calls
repr(self) which is BrokenRepr.__repr__() and the calls raises a new exception.
After the previous change, slot_tp_finalize() uses an unbound method: repr() is
called on a regular __del__() method which doesn't call repr(self). repr()
doesn't fail anymore.
PyErr_WriteUnraisable() doesn't call __repr__() anymore, so remove BrokenRepr
unit test.
This restores details lost in revision 097f4fda61a4 (since Python 3.3,
related to the new OSError subclasses). Further additions:
* Markup for attributes and constructor signature
* Explain "winerror" and "filename2"
* Extend test to check for filename2 defaulting to None
* Clarify that the constructor can return a subclass
I have intentionally left out any details of allowing more than five
arguments, or how the "args" attribute is set for four or more arguments.
These details seem to be dependent on the Python version and platform.
now register both filenames in the exception on failure.
This required adding new C API functions allowing OSError exceptions
to reference two filenames instead of one.