Commit Graph

27024 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Guido van Rossum 2fb9fdc96a Make it possible to call instancemethod() with 2 arguments. 2003-04-09 19:35:08 +00:00
Guido van Rossum a7132189d2 Reformat a few docstrings that caused line wraps in help() output. 2003-04-09 19:32:45 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 69c2b88392 Fix two crashes on Windows:
- CHECK_VALID() was checking the wrong value for a closed fd
- fseek(&_iob[fileno], ...) doesn't work for fileno >= 20
2003-04-09 19:31:02 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 21123ab7e5 Various improvements to the way the table is formatted, to deal with
exceptionally large totals etc.
2003-04-09 19:10:46 +00:00
Guido van Rossum a12fe4e81f - New function sys.call_tracing() allows pdb to debug code
recursively.
- pdb has a new command, "debug", which lets you step through
  arbitrary code from the debugger's (pdb) prompt.
2003-04-09 19:06:21 +00:00
Fred Drake 12dd7b12c6 Minor markup adjustments. 2003-04-09 18:15:57 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 6db771871e Try to discourage use of PyObject_Type(). 2003-04-09 18:02:23 +00:00
Guido van Rossum fc29646a2e Don't use (PyObject *)PyObject_Type(x). It is a leaky and verbose way
of saying x->ob_type.
2003-04-09 17:53:22 +00:00
Andrew M. Kuchling a6b1c75b7a Re-indent example; fix typo 2003-04-09 17:26:38 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 00bf8280f5 property_traverse() should also traverse into prop_doc -- there's no
typecheck that guarantees it's a string, and BTW string subclasses
could hide references.
2003-04-09 17:05:33 +00:00
Jason Tishler 70367d3a6c Patch #709178: remove -static option from cygwinccompiler
Currently, the cygwinccompiler.py compiler handling in
distutils is invoking the cygwin and mingw compilers
with the -static option.

Logically, this means that the linker should choose to
link to static libraries instead of shared/dynamically
linked libraries.

Current win32 binutils expect import libraries to have
a .dll.a suffix and static libraries to have .a suffix.
If -static is passed, it will skip the .dll.a
libraries. This is pain if one has a tree with both
static and dynamic libraries using this naming
convention, and wish to use the dynamic libraries.

The -static option being passed in distutils is to get
around a bug in old versions of binutils where it would
get confused when it found the DLLs themselves.

The decision to use static or shared libraries is site
or package specific, and should be left to the setup
script or to command line options.
2003-04-09 16:03:57 +00:00
Jack Jansen d5e0a5a08e Created a minimal MacOSX section. 2003-04-09 15:12:38 +00:00
Jack Jansen 0ae3220736 Detabbed. 2003-04-09 13:25:43 +00:00
Andrew M. Kuchling 058a84f36a Remove the --verify option in favor of the standard -n/--dry-run option 2003-04-09 12:35:51 +00:00
Fred Drake fcd845a7ed Lots of small markup adjustments. 2003-04-09 04:06:37 +00:00
Fred Drake 61a0a73d76 Add dependency information for the hotshot package docs. 2003-04-09 03:25:07 +00:00
Anthony Baxter fda5e27ec9 extra punctuation removed 2003-04-09 03:03:46 +00:00
Fred Drake 567b0a6445 Add dependency information for the timeit module docs. 2003-04-09 02:41:36 +00:00
Skip Montanaro d6e9fe386a + libtimeit 2003-04-09 01:39:06 +00:00
Skip Montanaro ca652746ff doc for timeit module/script - mostly just a recast of Tim's docstring 2003-04-09 01:38:53 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 400d8ee6fa Make staticmethods and classmethods participate in GC.
If a class was defined inside a function, used a static or class
method, and used super() inside the method body, it would be caught in
an uncollectable cycle.  (Simplified version: The static/class method
object would point to a function object with a closure that referred
to the class.)

Bugfix candidate.
2003-04-08 21:28:47 +00:00
Just van Rossum 547eb42d75 tentative fix for #712322: modification time stamp checking failed
when DST began.
2003-04-08 20:07:15 +00:00
Skip Montanaro f2f174f655 install timeit.py as a command line script 2003-04-08 19:50:02 +00:00
Skip Montanaro cfd55501bb add a #! line for unix weenies 2003-04-08 19:49:40 +00:00
Tim Peters 8805e66ec8 New tests identical to boom and boom2, except using new-style classes.
These never failed in 2.3, and the tests confirm it.  They still blow up
in the 2.2 branch, despite that all the gc-vs-__del__ fixes from 2.3
have been backported (and this is expected -- 2.2 needs more work than
2.3 needed).
2003-04-08 19:44:13 +00:00
Skip Montanaro fb2a6ccfc4 correct a couple docstring nits 2003-04-08 19:40:19 +00:00
Tim Peters f995cce4df Typo repair. 2003-04-08 18:47:21 +00:00
Fred Drake 2c2068c4d1 Added example of using positional and keyword args with atexit.register().
Based on a suggestion from a reader.
2003-04-08 17:46:53 +00:00
Fred Drake de7ad2caac Markup fix. 2003-04-08 17:37:47 +00:00
Tim Peters 730f5535ba s/referrents/referents/g. Gotta love that referrers remains rife with rs. 2003-04-08 17:17:17 +00:00
Tim Peters 0f81ab6d88 Finished implementing gc.get_referrents(): dealt with error and end
cases, wrote docs, added a test.
2003-04-08 16:39:48 +00:00
Tim Peters fb2ab4d5ae Comment repair; no semantic changes. 2003-04-07 22:41:24 +00:00
Tim Peters f6b8045ca5 Reworked has_finalizer() to use the new _PyObject_Lookup() instead
of PyObject_HasAttr(); the former promises never to execute
arbitrary Python code.  Undid many of the changes recently made to
worm around the worst consequences of that PyObject_HasAttr() could
execute arbitrary Python code.

Compatibility is hard to discuss, because the dangerous cases are
so perverse, and much of this appears to rely on implementation
accidents.

To start with, using hasattr() to check for __del__ wasn't only
dangerous, in some cases it was wrong:  if an instance of an old-
style class didn't have "__del__" in its instance dict or in any
base class dict, but a getattr hook said __del__ existed, then
hasattr() said "yes, this object has a __del__".  But
instance_dealloc() ignores the possibility of getattr hooks when
looking for a __del__, so while object.__del__ succeeds, no
__del__ method is called when the object is deleted.  gc was
therefore incorrect in believing that the object had a finalizer.

The new method doesn't suffer that problem (like instance_dealloc(),
_PyObject_Lookup() doesn't believe __del__ exists in that case), but
does suffer a somewhat opposite-- and even more obscure --oddity:
if an instance of an old-style class doesn't have "__del__" in its
instance dict, and a base class does have "__del__" in its dict,
and the first base class with a "__del__" associates it with a
descriptor (an object with a __get__ method), *and* if that
descriptor raises an exception when __get__ is called, then
(a) the current method believes the instance does have a __del__,
but (b) hasattr() does not believe the instance has a __del__.

While these disagree, I believe the new method is "more correct":
because the descriptor *will* be called when the object is
destructed, it can execute arbitrary Python code at the time the
object is destructed, and that's really what gc means by "has a
finalizer":  not specifically a __del__ method, but more generally
the possibility of executing arbitrary Python code at object
destruction time.  Code in a descriptor's __get__() executed at
destruction time can be just as problematic as code in a
__del__() executed then.

So I believe the new method is better on all counts.

Bugfix candidate, but it's unclear to me how all this differs in
the 2.2 branch (e.g., new-style and old-style classes already
took different gc paths in 2.3 before this last round of patches,
but don't in the 2.2 branch).
2003-04-07 19:21:15 +00:00
Tim Peters df875b99fc New private API function _PyInstance_Lookup. gc will use this to figure
out whether __del__ exists, without executing any Python-level code.
2003-04-07 17:51:59 +00:00
Anthony Baxter cb8ed53014 add note suggested by rhettinger about example. 2003-04-07 12:21:56 +00:00
Anthony Baxter b3303efec6 patch [ 698505 ] docs for hotshot module 2003-04-07 12:19:15 +00:00
Tim Peters 1155887a74 initgc(): Rewrote to use the PyModule_AddXYZ API; cuts code size. 2003-04-06 23:30:52 +00:00
Tim Peters 259272b7a0 handle_finalizers(): Rewrote to call append_objects() and gc_list_merge()
instead of looping.  Smaller and clearer.  Faster, too, when we're not
appending to gc.garbage:  gc_list_merge() takes constant time, regardless
of the lists' sizes.

append_objects():  Moved up to live with the other list manipulation
utilities.
2003-04-06 19:41:39 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger f394df47fd SF bug #699934: Obscure error message
mwh pointed out that the error message did not
make sense if obtained by rearranging the bases.
2003-04-06 19:13:41 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger ff41c48a77 SF patch #701494: more apply removals 2003-04-06 09:01:11 +00:00
Tim Peters 50c61d5a6c Switched from METH_VARARGS to METH_NOARGS for the 7 module functions that
take no arguments; cuts generated code size.
2003-04-06 01:50:50 +00:00
Tim Peters bf384c256e Reworked move_finalizer_reachable() to create two distinct lists:
externally unreachable objects with finalizers, and externally unreachable
objects without finalizers reachable from such objects.  This allows us
to call has_finalizer() at most once per object, and so limit the pain of
nasty getattr hooks.  This fixes the failing "boom 2" example Jeremy
posted (a non-printing variant of which is now part of test_gc), via never
triggering the nasty part of its __getattr__ method.
2003-04-06 00:11:39 +00:00
Tim Peters f6ae7a43eb move_finalizers(): Rewrote. It's not necessary for this routine
to special-case classic classes, or to worry about refcounts;
has_finalizer() deleted the current object iff the first entry in
the unreachable list has changed.  I don't believe it was correct
to check for ob_refcnt == 1, either:  the dealloc routine would get
called by Py_DECREF then, but there's nothing to stop the dealloc
routine from ressurecting the object, and then gc would remain at
the head of the unreachable list despite that its refcount temporarily
fell to 0 (and that would lead to an infinite loop in move_finalizers()).

I'm still worried about has_finalizer() resurrecting other objects
in the unreachable list:  what's to stop them from getting collected?
2003-04-05 18:40:50 +00:00
Tim Peters 2f74fddfc1 test_boom: More comments. Also check that len(gc.garbage) doesn't
change (it would be another kind of bug if the trash cycle weren't
reclaimed).
2003-04-05 17:46:04 +00:00
Tim Peters 86b993b6cf New comments. Rewrote has_finalizer() as a sequence of ifs instead of
squashed-together conditional operators; makes it much easier to step
thru in the debugger, and to set a breakpoint on the only dangerous
path.
2003-04-05 17:35:54 +00:00
Tim Peters 93ad66dea9 Fixed new seemingly random segfaults, by moving the initialization of
delstr from initgc() into collect().  initgc() isn't called unless the
user explicitly imports gc, so can be used only for initialization of
user-visible module features; delstr needs to be initialized for proper
internal operation, whether or not gc is explicitly imported.

Bugfix candidate?  I don't know whether the new bug was backported to
2.2 already.
2003-04-05 17:15:44 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger c377cbfdaf SF bug #715145: unittest.py still uses != in failUnlessEqual 2003-04-04 22:56:42 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton dee38ac7dd Add Tim's gc boom test to the test suite. 2003-04-04 20:00:04 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton ce136e985a Fix Tim's boom example.
move_finalizers() moves every object from unreachable to collectable
or finalizers, unless the object is deallocated first.
2003-04-04 19:59:06 +00:00
Greg Ward 76ffb1918d Use fcntl() to put the audio device *back* into blocking mode after
opening it in non-blocking mode.  Both Guido and David Hammerton have
reported that this fixes their problems with ossaudiodev -- hooray!
2003-04-04 01:47:42 +00:00