This is a bit of a hack: when the shared library is loaded, the module
name is "package.module", but the module calls Py_InitModule*() with just
"module" for the name. The shared library loader squirrels away the true
name of the module in _Py_PackageContext, and Py_InitModule*() will
substitute this (if the name actually matches).
1) The __builtins__ variable in the __main__ module is set to the
__builtin__ module instead of its __dict__.
2) Get rid of the SIGHUP and SIGTERM handlers. They can't be made to
work reliably when threads may be in use, they are Unix specific, and
Python programmers can now program this functionality is a safer way
using the signal module.
Setting interp->builtins to the __builtin__ module instead of to its
dictionary had the unfortunate side effect of always running in
restricted execution mode :-(
I will check in a different way of setting __main__.__builtins__ to
the __builtin__ module later.
Also, there was a typo -- a comment was unfinished, and as a result
some finalizations were not being executed.
In Bart Simpson style,
I Will Not Check In Untested Changes.
I Will Not Check In Untested Changes.
I Will Not Check In Untested Changes.
I Will Not Check In Untested Changes.
I Will Not Check In Untested Changes.
I Will Not Check In Untested Changes.
I Will Not Check In Untested Changes.
I Will Not Check In Untested Changes.
I Will Not Check In Untested Changes.
I Will Not Check In Untested Changes.
- The interp->builtins variable (and hence, __main__.__builtins__) is
once again initialized to the built-in *module* instead of its
dictionary.
- The finalization order is once again changed. Signals are finalized
relatively early, because (1) it DECREF's the signal handlers, and if
a signal handler happens to be a bound method, deleting it could cause
problems when there's no current thread around, and (2) we don't want
to risk executing signal handlers during finalization.
__init__.py (or __init__.pyc/.pyo, whichever applies) is considered a
package. All other subdirectories are left alone. Should make Konrad
Hinsen happy!
tstate swapping. Only the acquiring and releasing of the lock is
conditional (twice, under ``#ifdef WITH_THREAD'' and inside ``if
(interpreter_lock)'').
but annoying memory leak. This was introduced when PyExc_Exception
was added; the loop above populating the PyExc_StandardError exception
tuple started at index 1 in bltin_exc, but PyExc_Exception was added
at index 0, so PyExc_StandardError was getting inserted in itself!
How else can a tuple include itself?!
Change the loop to start at index 2.
This was a *fun* one! :-)
dummy entry to sys.modules, marking the absence of a submodule by the
same name.
Thus, if module foo.bar executes the statement "import time",
sys.modules['foo.time'] will be set to None, once the absence of a
module foo.time is confirmed (by looking for it in foo's path).
The next time when foo.bar (or any other submodule of foo) executes
"import time", no I/O is necessary to determine that there is no
module foo.time.
(Justification: It may seem strange to pollute sys.modules. However,
since we're doing the lookup anyway it's definitely the fastest
solution. This is the same convention that 'ni' uses and I haven't
heard any complaints.)