Add support to the configure script for OBJC and OBJCXX command line options so that the macOS builds can use the clang compiler for the macOS-specific Objective C source files. This allows third-party compilers, like GNU gcc, to be used to build the rest of the project since some of the Objective C system header files are not compilable by GNU gcc.
Co-authored-by: Jeffrey Kintscher <websurfer@surf2c.net>
Co-authored-by: Terry Jan Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu>
_tkinter now builds and links with non-system Tcl and Tk frameworks if they
are installed in /Library/Frameworks as had been the case on older releases
of macOS. If a macOS SDK is explicitly configured, by using ./configure
--enable-universalsdk= or -isysroot, only a Library/Frameworks directory in
the SDK itself is searched. The default behavior can still be overridden with
configure --with-tcltk-includes and --with-tcltk-libs.
Ifdef is not necessary, as AF_INET6 is supported from Windows Vista, and other code in overlapped.c uses AF_INET6 and is not ifdef'd.
Change the raised exception so users are not fooled to think it comes from Windows API.
Automerge-Triggered-By: @njsmith
When an asyncio.Task is cancelled, the exception traceback now
starts with where the task was first interrupted. Previously,
the traceback only had "depth one."
This was not specified in the PEP, but it will likely be a frequently requested feature if it's not included.
This includes only the "canonical" zones, not a simple listing of every valid value of `key` that can be passed to `Zoneinfo`, because it seems likely that that's what people will want.
The internal module ``_hashlib`` wraps and exposes OpenSSL's HMAC API. The
new code will be used in Python 3.10 after the internal implementation
details of the pure Python HMAC module are no longer part of the public API.
The code is based on a patch by Petr Viktorin for RHEL and Python 3.6.
Co-Authored-By: Petr Viktorin <encukou@gmail.com>
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>
{date, datetime}.isocalendar() now return a private custom named tuple object
IsoCalendarDate rather than a simple tuple.
In order to leave IsocalendarDate as a private class and to improve what
backwards compatibility is offered for pickling the result of a
datetime.isocalendar() call, add a __reduce__ method to the named tuples that
reduces them to plain tuples. (This is the part of this PR most likely to cause
problems — if it causes major issues, switching to a strucseq or equivalent
would be prudent).
The pure python implementation of IsoCalendarDate uses positional-only
arguments, since it is private and only constructed by position anyway; the
equivalent change in the argument clinic on the C side would require us to move
the forward declaration of the type above the clinic import for whatever
reason, so it seems preferable to hold off on that for now.
bpo-24416: https://bugs.python.org/issue24416
Original PR by Dong-hee Na with only minor alterations by Paul Ganssle.
Co-authored-by: Dong-hee Na <donghee.na92@gmail.com>
On AIX, time.thread_time() is now implemented with thread_cputime()
which has nanosecond resolution, rather than
clock_gettime(CLOCK_THREAD_CPUTIME_ID) which has a resolution of 10 ms.
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
Clarify the zip built-in docstring.
This puts much simpler text up front along with an example.
As it was, the zip built-in docstring was technically correct. But too
technical for the reader who shouldn't _need_ to know about `__next__` and
`StopIteration` as most people do not need to understand the internal
implementation details of the iterator protocol in their daily life.
This is a documentation only change, intended to be backported to 3.8; it is
only tangentially related to PEP-618 which might offer new behavior options
in the future.
Wording based a bit more on enumerate per Brandt's suggestion.
This gets rid of the legacy wording paragraph which seems too tied to
implementation details of the iterator protocol which isn't relevant here.
Co-authored-by: Brandt Bucher <brandtbucher@gmail.com>
Currently, if asyncio.wait_for() timeout expires, it cancels
inner future and then always raises TimeoutError. In case
those future is task, it can handle cancelation mannually,
and those process can lead to some other exception. Current
implementation silently loses thoses exception.
To resolve this, wait_for will check was the cancelation
successfull or not. In case there was exception, wait_for
will reraise it.
Co-authored-by: Roman Skurikhin <roman.skurikhin@cruxlab.com>
The ``ssl`` and ``hashlib`` modules now actively check that OpenSSL is
build with thread support. Python 3.7.0 made thread support mandatory and no
longer works safely with a no-thread builds.
Signed-off-by: Christian Heimes <christian@python.org>
* 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