Issue #25274: sys.setrecursionlimit() now raises a RecursionError if the new
recursion limit is too low depending at the current recursion depth. Modify
also the "lower-water mark" formula to make it monotonic. This mark is used to
decide when the overflowed flag of the thread state is reset.
function instead of the getentropy() function. The getentropy() function is
blocking to generate very good quality entropy, os.urandom() doesn't need such
high-quality entropy.
On the x86 OpenBSD 5.8 buildbot, the integer overflow check is ignored. Copy
the tv_sec variable into a Py_time_t variable instead of "simply" casting it to
Py_time_t, to fix the integer overflow check.
function instead of the getentropy() function. The getentropy() function is
blocking to generate very good quality entropy, os.urandom() doesn't need such
high-quality entropy.
On Windows, the tv_sec field of the timeval structure has the type C long,
whereas it has the type C time_t on all other platforms. A C long has a size of
32 bits (signed inter, 1 bit for the sign, 31 bits for the value) which is not
enough to store an Epoch timestamp after the year 2038.
Add the _PyTime_AsTimevalTime_t() function written for datetime.datetime.now():
convert a _PyTime_t timestamp to a (secs, us) tuple where secs type is time_t.
It allows to support dates after the year 2038 on Windows.
Enhance also _PyTime_AsTimeval_impl() to detect overflow on the number of
seconds when rounding the number of microseconds.
On Windows, the tv_sec field of the timeval structure has the type C long,
whereas it has the type C time_t on all other platforms. A C long has a size of
32 bits (signed inter, 1 bit for the sign, 31 bits for the value) which is not
enough to store an Epoch timestamp after the year 2038.
Add the _PyTime_AsTimevalTime_t() function written for datetime.datetime.now():
convert a _PyTime_t timestamp to a (secs, us) tuple where secs type is time_t.
It allows to support dates after the year 2038 on Windows.
Enhance also _PyTime_AsTimeval_impl() to detect overflow on the number of
seconds when rounding the number of microseconds.
Overflow test in test_FromSecondsObject() fails on FreeBSD 10.0 buildbot which
uses clang. clang implements more aggressive optimization which gives
different result than GCC on undefined behaviours.
Check if a multiplication will overflow, instead of checking if a
multiplicatin had overflowed, to avoid undefined behaviour.
Add also debug information if the test on overflow fails.
* Filter values which would overflow on conversion to the C long type
(for timeval.tv_sec).
* Adjust also the message of OverflowError on PyTime conversions
* test_time: add debug information if a timestamp conversion fails
Drop all hardcoded tests. Instead, reimplement each function in Python, usually
using decimal.Decimal for the rounding mode.
Add much more values to the dataset. Test various timestamp units from
picroseconds to seconds, in integer and float.
Enhance also _PyTime_AsSecondsDouble().
datetime.datetime now round microseconds to nearest with ties going to nearest
even integer (ROUND_HALF_EVEN), as round(float), instead of rounding towards
-Infinity (ROUND_FLOOR).
pytime API: replace _PyTime_ROUND_HALF_UP with _PyTime_ROUND_HALF_EVEN. Fix
also _PyTime_Divide() for negative numbers.
_PyTime_AsTimeval_impl() now reuses _PyTime_Divide() instead of reimplementing
rounding modes.