The scripts in `Tools/peg_generator/scripts` mostly assume that
`ast.parse` and `compile` use the old parser, since this was the
state of things, while we were developing them. They need to be
updated to always use the correct parser. `_peg_parser` is being
extended to support both parsing and compiling with both parsers.
(cherry picked from commit 9645930b5b)
Co-authored-by: Lysandros Nikolaou <lisandrosnik@gmail.com>
Use text/x-python instead of text/plain to avoid issues with tools assuming that "ShellExecute(script)" is a non-executable operation.
(cherry picked from commit 8c862e5124)
Co-authored-by: Zackery Spytz <zspytz@gmail.com>
Create a `make venv` target, that creates a virtual environment
and installs the dependency in that venv. `make time` and all
the related targets are changed to use the virtual environment
python.
Automerge-Triggered-By: @pablogsal
The following improvements are implemented in this commit:
- `p->error_indicator` is set, in case malloc or realloc fail.
- Avoid memory leaks in the case that realloc fails.
- Call `PyErr_NoMemory()` instead of `PyErr_Format()`, because it requires no memory.
Co-authored-by: Pablo Galindo <Pablogsal@gmail.com>
This is the initial implementation of PEP 615, the zoneinfo module,
ported from the standalone reference implementation (see
https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0615/#reference-implementation for a
link, which has a more detailed commit history).
This includes (hopefully) all functional elements described in the PEP,
but documentation is found in a separate PR. This includes:
1. A pure python implementation of the ZoneInfo class
2. A C accelerated implementation of the ZoneInfo class
3. Tests with 100% branch coverage for the Python code (though C code
coverage is less than 100%).
4. A compile-time configuration option on Linux (though not on Windows)
Differences from the reference implementation:
- The module is arranged slightly differently: the accelerated module is
`_zoneinfo` rather than `zoneinfo._czoneinfo`, which also necessitates
some changes in the test support function. (Suggested by Victor
Stinner and Steve Dower.)
- The tests are arranged slightly differently and do not include the
property tests. The tests live at test/test_zoneinfo/test_zoneinfo.py
rather than test/test_zoneinfo.py or test/test_zoneinfo/__init__.py
because we may do some refactoring in the future that would likely
require this separation anyway; we may:
- include the property tests
- automatically run all the tests against both pure Python and C,
rather than manually constructing C and Python test classes (similar
to the way this works with test_datetime.py, which generates C
and Python test cases from datetimetester.py).
- This includes a compile-time configuration option on Linux (though not
on Windows); added with much help from Thomas Wouters.
- Integration into the CPython build system is obviously different from
building a standalone zoneinfo module wheel.
- This includes configuration to install the tzdata package as part of
CI, though only on the coverage jobs. Introducing a PyPI dependency as
part of the CI build was controversial, and this is seen as less of a
major change, since the coverage jobs already depend on pip and PyPI.
Additional changes that were introduced as part of this PR, most / all of
which were backported to the reference implementation:
- Fixed reference and memory leaks
With much debugging help from Pablo Galindo
- Added smoke tests ensuring that the C and Python modules are built
The import machinery can be somewhat fragile, and the "seamlessly falls
back to pure Python" nature of this module makes it so that a problem
building the C extension or a failure to import the pure Python version
might easily go unnoticed.
- Adjustments to zoneinfo.__dir__
Suggested by Petr Viktorin.
- Slight refactorings as suggested by Steve Dower.
- Removed unnecessary if check on std_abbr
Discovered this because of a missing line in branch coverage.
OpenSSL can be build without support for TLS 1.0 and 1.1. The ssl module
now correctly adheres to OPENSSL_NO_TLS1 and OPENSSL_NO_TLS1_1 flags.
Also update multissltest to test with latest OpenSSL and LibreSSL
releases.
Signed-off-by: Christian Heimes <christian@python.org>
Automerge-Triggered-By: @tiran
* 1.0.2u (EOL)
* 1.1.0l (EOL)
* 1.1.1g
* 3.0.0-alpha2 (disabled for now)
Build the FIPS provider and create a FIPS configuration file for OpenSSL
3.0.0.
Signed-off-by: Christian Heimes <christian@python.org>
Automerge-Triggered-By: @tiran
Don't hardcode defining_class parameter name to "cls":
* Define CConverter.set_template_dict(): do nothing by default
* CLanguage.render_function() now calls set_template_dict() on all
converters.
This is for the C generator:
- Disallow rule and variable names starting with `_`
- Rename most local variable names generated by the parser to start with `_`
Exceptions:
- Renaming `p` to `_p` will be a separate PR
- There are still some names that might clash, e.g.
- anything starting with `Py`
- C reserved words (`if` etc.)
- Macros like `EXTRA` and `CHECK`
Module C state is now accessible from C-defined heap type methods (PEP 573).
Patch by Marcel Plch and Petr Viktorin.
Co-authored-by: Marcel Plch <mplch@redhat.com>
Co-authored-by: Victor Stinner <vstinner@python.org>
This commit also allows to pass flags to the new parser in all interfaces and fixes a bug in the parser generator that was causing to inline rules with actions, making them disappear.
This is one of the few files that has intimate knowledge of the pyc file
format. Since it lacks tests it tends to become outdated fairly quickly.
At present it has been broken since the introduction of PEP 552.
Previously every test was building an extension module and
loading it into sys.modules. The tearDown function was thus
not able to clean up correctly, resulting in memory leaks.
With this commit, every test function now builds the extension
module and runs the actual test code in a new process
(using assert_python_ok), so that sys.modules stays intact
and no memory gets leaked.
When there is a SyntaxError after reading the last input character from
the tokenizer and if no newline follows it, the error message used to be
`unexpected EOF while parsing`, which is wrong.
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.