Fixes incorrect Python version added for `venv` `--upgrade-deps` in #13100. This feature was added in Python 3.9 not 3.8.
Relates to:
-
- 1cba1c9aba
Automerge-Triggered-By: @vsajip
Currently, empty sequences in gather rules make the conditional for
gather rules fail as empty sequences evaluate as "False". We need to
explicitly check for "None" (the failure condition) to avoid false
negatives.
Simply closing the event loop isn't enough to avoid warnings. If we
don't also shut down the event loop's default executor, it sometimes
logs a "dangling thread" warning.
Follow-up to GH-22017
* bpo-41696: Fix handling of debug mode in asyncio.run
This allows PYTHONASYNCIODEBUG or -X dev to enable asyncio debug mode
when using asyncio.run
* 📜🤖 Added by blurb_it.
Co-authored-by: hauntsaninja <>
Co-authored-by: blurb-it[bot] <43283697+blurb-it[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
This program can segfault the parser by stack overflow:
```
import ast
code = "f(" + ",".join(['a' for _ in range(100000)]) + ")"
print("Ready!")
ast.parse(code)
```
the reason is that the rule for arguments has a simple recursion when collecting args:
args[expr_ty]:
[...]
| a=named_expression b=[',' c=args { c }] {
[...] }
siginterrupt is deprecated:
./Modules/signalmodule.c:667:5: warning: ‘siginterrupt’ is deprecated: Use sigaction with SA_RESTART instead [-Wdeprecated-declarations]
667 | if (siginterrupt(signalnum, flag)<0) {
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.
Stopping and restarting a proactor event loop on windows can lead to
spurious errors logged (ConnectionResetError while reading from the
self pipe). This fixes the issue by ensuring that we don't attempt
to start multiple copies of the self-pipe reading loop.
I added some information to the `Concurrency and Multithreading` section of the `Developing with asyncio` guide.
This is all information that would have helped me when I started using asyncio. I incorrectly assumed that `loop.call_soon_threadsafe()` and `run_coroutine_threadsafe()` could be called from a thread in a process separate from the one that the event loop is running in. Explicitly stating that this will not work will probably help some people starting out with asyncio in the future.
I also added references to some other functions that can be used for inter-process communication without blocking the event loop. The section already mentions running blocking code in a ThreadPoolExecutor, but I think listing these other options in this section will also be helpful.