The documentation for CERT_NONE, CERT_OPTIONAL, and CERT_REQUIRED were
misleading and partly wrong. It fails to explain that OpenSSL behaves
differently in client and server mode. Also OpenSSL does validate the
cert chain everytime. With SSL_VERIFY_NONE a validation error is not
fatal in client mode and does not request a client cert in server mode.
Also discourage people from using CERT_OPTIONAL in client mode.
(cherry picked from commit ef24b6c54d)
Co-authored-by: Christian Heimes <christian@python.org>
On Windows 8.1+ or 10, with DPI compatibility properties of the Python binary
unchanged, and a monitor resolution greater than 96 DPI, this should
make text and lines sharper. It should otherwise have no effect.
Using a magnifier, I determined that the improvement comes from horizontal and
lines being better lined up with the monitor pixels. I checked that this call causes
no problem on any Windows buildbot, including the Win7 buildbots. Unlike most
IDLE patches, this one can be easily reverted by users by removing a few lines,
at the top of idlelib/pyshell.py.
(cherry picked from commit 800415e3df)
Co-authored-by: Terry Jan Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu>
The docs claimed that a list of EmailMessage objects could be
passed to set_content(), but this was never implemented.
(cherry picked from commit 2c071cebe6)
Co-authored-by: Zackery Spytz <zspytz@gmail.com>
A datetime object d is aware if d.tzinfo is not None and
d.tzinfo.utcoffset(d) does not return None. If d.tzinfo is None,
or if d.tzinfo is not None but d.tzinfo.utcoffset(d) returns None,
d is naive.
This commit ensures that instances with non-None d.tzinfo, but
d.tzinfo.utcoffset(d) returning None are treated as naive.
In addition, C acceleration code will raise TypeError if
d.tzinfo.utcoffset(d) returns an object with the type other than
timedelta.
* Updated the documentation.
Assume that the term "naive" is defined elsewhere and remove the
not entirely correct clarification. Thanks, Tim.
(cherry picked from commit 877b23202b)
Co-authored-by: Alexander Belopolsky <abalkin@users.noreply.github.com>
While locale coercion and UTF-8 mode turned out to
be complementary ideas rather than competing ones,
it isn't immediately obvious why it's useful to
have both, or how they interact at runtime.
This updates both the Python 3.7 What's New doc
and the PYTHONCOERCECLOCALE and PYTHONUTF8
documentation in an attempt to clarify that
relationship:
- in the respective What's New sections, add a closing paragraph
explaining which problem each one solves, and pointing to the
other PEP's section for the specific aspects it relies on the other
PEP to solve
- use "locale-aware mode" as a more descriptive term for the
default non-UTF-8 mode
- improve wording conistenccy between the PYTHONCOERCECLOCALE
and PYTHONUTF8 docs when they cover the same thing (mostly
related to legacy locale detection and setting the standard
stream error handler)
- improve the description of the locale coercion trigger conditions
(including pointing out that setting LC_ALL turns off locale coercion)
- port the full description of the UTF-8 mode behaviour changes
from PEP 540 into the PYTHONUTF8 documentation
- be explicit that PYTHONIOENCODING still overrides the settings
for the standard streams
- mention concrete examples of things that do and don't get their
text encoding assumptions adjusted by the two text encoding
assumption override techniques
(cherry picked from commit 1bcb8a6368)
Co-authored-by: Nick Coghlan <ncoghlan@gmail.com>
A few wording improvements to dict ordering documentation.
(cherry picked from commit d3ed67d14e)
Co-authored-by: Neil Schemenauer <nas-github@arctrix.com>
Document that the default value of repeat changed from 3 to 5 in
Python 3.7.
(cherry picked from commit 3ef769fcd3)
Co-authored-by: Victor Stinner <vstinner@redhat.com>
* Fix AttributeError (not all SSL exceptions have 'errno' attribute)
* Increase default handshake timeout from 10 to 60 seconds
* Make sure start_tls can be cancelled correctly
* Make sure any error in SSLProtocol gets propagated (instead of just being logged)
(cherry picked from commit 9602643120)
Co-authored-by: Yury Selivanov <yury@magic.io>
This is a simple grammatical fix correcting "...object whose `__self__` attributes is ..." to "...object whose `__self__` attribute is ...".
(cherry picked from commit 00818c8ffd)
Co-authored-by: Zach Mitchell <zmitchell@users.noreply.github.com>
* bpo-23859: Document that asyncio.wait() does not cancel its futures (GH-7217)
Unlike `asyncio.wait_for()`, `asyncio.wait()` does not cancel the passed
futures when a timeout accurs.
(cherry picked from commit f9aeca2085)
Co-authored-by: Elvis Pranskevichus <elvis@magic.io>
* Update asyncio-task.rst
* [3.7] bpo-31639: Change ThreadedHTTPServer to ThreadingHTTPServer class name (GH-7195).
(cherry picked from commit 1cee216cf3)
* Fix whatsnew entry about ThreadedHTTPServer. (GH-7220)
(cherry picked from commit a34e424bdb)
Currently, asyncio.wait_for(fut), upon reaching the timeout deadline,
cancels the future and returns immediately. This is problematic for
when *fut* is a Task, because it will be left running for an arbitrary
amount of time. This behavior is iself surprising and may lead to
related bugs such as the one described in bpo-33638:
condition = asyncio.Condition()
async with condition:
await asyncio.wait_for(condition.wait(), timeout=0.5)
Currently, instead of raising a TimeoutError, the above code will fail
with `RuntimeError: cannot wait on un-acquired lock`, because
`__aexit__` is reached _before_ `condition.wait()` finishes its
cancellation and re-acquires the condition lock.
To resolve this, make `wait_for` await for the task cancellation.
The tradeoff here is that the `timeout` promise may be broken if the
task decides to handle its cancellation in a slow way. This represents
a behavior change and should probably not be back-patched to 3.6 and
earlier.
(cherry picked from commit e2b340ab41)
Co-authored-by: Elvis Pranskevichus <elvis@magic.io>