Commit Graph

1690 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tim Peters 3b01a1217f Trimmed trailing whitespace. 2002-07-19 02:35:45 +00:00
Tim Peters 8e2e7ca330 Cleanup: Define one internal utility for reversing a list slice, and
use that everywhere.
2002-07-19 02:33:08 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton d1fedb6ab5 Remove extraneous semicolon.
(Silences compiler warning for Compaq C++ 6.5 on Tru64.)
2002-07-18 18:49:52 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 938ace69a0 staticforward bites the dust.
The staticforward define was needed to support certain broken C
compilers (notably SCO ODT 3.0, perhaps early AIX as well) botched the
static keyword when it was used with a forward declaration of a static
initialized structure.  Standard C allows the forward declaration with
static, and we've decided to stop catering to broken C compilers.  (In
fact, we expect that the compilers are all fixed eight years later.)

I'm leaving staticforward and statichere defined in object.h as
static.  This is only for backwards compatibility with C extensions
that might still use it.

XXX I haven't updated the documentation.
2002-07-17 16:30:39 +00:00
Guido van Rossum ca5ed5b875 Remove the next() method -- one is supplied automatically by
PyType_Ready() because the tp_iternext slot is set (fortunately,
because using the tp_iternext implementation for the the next()
implementation is buggy).  Also changed the allocation order in
enum_next() so that the underlying iterator is only moved ahead when
we have successfully allocated the result tuple and index.
2002-07-16 21:02:42 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 86d593e110 Remove the next() method -- one is supplied automatically by
PyType_Ready() because the tp_iternext slot is set.  Also removed the
redundant (and expensive!) call to raise StopIteration from
rangeiter_next().
2002-07-16 20:47:50 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 2147df748f Make StopIteration a sink state. This is done by clearing out the
di_dict field when the end of the list is reached.  Also make the
error ("dictionary changed size during iteration") a sticky state.

Also remove the next() method -- one is supplied automatically by
PyType_Ready() because the tp_iternext slot is set.  That's a good
thing, because the implementation given here was buggy (it never
raised StopIteration).
2002-07-16 20:30:22 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 613bed3726 Make StopIteration a sink state. This is done by clearing out the
object references (it_seq for seqiterobject, it_callable and
it_sentinel for calliterobject) when the end of the list is reached.

Also remove the next() methods -- one is supplied automatically by
PyType_Ready() because the tp_iternext slot is set.  That's a good
thing, because the implementation given here was buggy (it never
raised StopIteration).
2002-07-16 20:24:46 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 6b6272c857 Whitespace normalization. 2002-07-16 20:10:23 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 86103ae531 Make StopIteration a sink state. This is done by clearing out the
it_seq field when the end of the list is reached.

Also remove the next() method -- one is supplied automatically by
PyType_Ready() because the tp_iternext slot is set.  That's a good
thing, because the implementation given here was buggy (it never
raised StopIteration).
2002-07-16 20:07:32 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 719841e2fb The object returned by tp_new() may not have a tp_init.
If the object is an ExtensionClass, for example, the slot is not even
defined.  So we must check that the type has the slot (implied by
HAVE_CLASS) before calling tp_init().
2002-07-16 19:39:38 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 5086e49a6e Make list_iter() really static. 2002-07-16 15:56:52 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 03013a0130 valid_identifier(): use an unsigned char* so that isalpha() will do
the right thing even if char is unsigned.
2002-07-16 14:30:28 +00:00
Tim Peters 58cf361e35 docompare(): Another reasonable optimization from Jonathan Hogg for the
explicit comparison function case:  use PyObject_Call instead of
PyEval_CallObject.  Same thing in context, but gives a 2.4% overall
speedup when sorting a list of ints via list.sort(__builtin__.cmp).
2002-07-15 05:16:13 +00:00
Tim Peters 7a1f91709b WINDOWS_LEAN_AND_MEAN: There is no such symbol, although a very few
MSDN sample programs use it, apparently in error.  The correct name
is WIN32_LEAN_AND_MEAN.  After switching to the correct name, in two
cases more was needed because the code actually relied on things that
disappear when WIN32_LEAN_AND_MEAN is defined.
2002-07-14 22:14:19 +00:00
Guido van Rossum b6d29b7856 Undef MIN and MAX before defining them, to avoid warnings on certain
platforms.
2002-07-13 14:31:51 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton a4b4c3bf05 Don't declare a function with staticforward.
Just declare it static so that lame (BAD_STATIC_FORWARD) compilers
don't see a mismatch between the prototype and the function.
2002-07-13 03:51:17 +00:00
Tim Peters f2a0473350 docompare(): Use PyTuple_New instead of Py_BuildValue to build compare's
arg tuple.  This was suggested on c.l.py but afraid I can't find the msg
again for proper attribution.  For

    list.sort(cmp)

where list is a list of random ints, and cmp is __builtin__.cmp, this
yields an overall 50-60% speedup on my Win2K box.  Of course this is a
best case, because the overhead of calling cmp relative to the cost of
actually comparing two ints is at an extreme.  Nevertheless it's huge
bang for the buck.  An additionak 20-30% can be bought by making the arg
tuple an immortal static (avoiding all but "the first" PyTuple_New), but
that's tricky to make correct since docompare needs to be reentrant.  So
this picks the cherry and leaves the pits for Fred <wink>.

Note that this makes no difference to the

    list.sort()

case; an arg tuple gets built only if the user specifies an explicit
sort function.
2002-07-11 21:46:16 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton df3f793516 Extend function() to support an optional closure argument.
Also, simplify some ref counting for other optional arguments.
2002-07-11 18:30:27 +00:00
Tim Peters 3459251d5a object.h special-build macro minefield: renamed all the new lexical
helper macros to something saner, and used them appropriately in other
files too, to reduce #ifdef blocks.

classobject.c, instance_dealloc():  One of my worst Python Memories is
trying to fix this routine a few years ago when COUNT_ALLOCS was defined
but Py_TRACE_REFS wasn't.  The special-build code here is way too
complicated.  Now it's much simpler.  Difference:  in a Py_TRACE_REFS
build, the instance is no longer in the doubly-linked list of live
objects while its __del__ method is executing, and that may be visible
via sys.getobjects() called from a __del__ method.  Tough -- the object
is presumed dead while its __del__ is executing anyway, and not calling
_Py_NewReference() at the start allows enormous code simplification.

typeobject.c, call_finalizer():  The special-build instance_dealloc()
pain apparently spread to here too via cut-'n-paste, and this is much
simpler now too.  In addition, I didn't understand why this routine
was calling _PyObject_GC_TRACK() after a resurrection, since there's no
plausible way _PyObject_GC_UNTRACK() could have been called on the
object by this point.  I suspect it was left over from pasting the
instance_delloc() code.  Instead asserted that the object is still
tracked.  Caution:  I suspect we don't have a test that actually
exercises the subtype_dealloc() __del__-resurrected-me code.
2002-07-11 06:23:50 +00:00
Tim Peters 889f61dcfb Documented PYMALLOC_DEBUG. This completes primary coverage of all the
"special builds" I ever use.  If you use others, document them here, or
don't be surprised if I rip out the code for them <0.5 wink>.
2002-07-10 19:29:49 +00:00
Tim Peters 7c321a80f9 The Py_REF_DEBUG/COUNT_ALLOCS/Py_TRACE_REFS macro minefield: added
more trivial lexical helper macros so that uses of these guys expand
to nothing at all when they're not enabled.  This should help sub-
standard compilers that can't do a good job of optimizing away the
previous "(void)0" expressions.

Py_DECREF:  There's only one definition of this now.  Yay!  That
was that last one in the family defined multiple times in an #ifdef
maze.

Py_FatalError():  Changed the char* signature to const char*.

_Py_NegativeRefcount():  New helper function for the Py_REF_DEBUG
expansion of Py_DECREF.  Calling an external function cuts down on
the volume of generated code.  The previous inline expansion of abort()
didn't work as intended on Windows (the program often kept going, and
the error msg scrolled off the screen unseen).  _Py_NegativeRefcount
calls Py_FatalError instead, which captures our best knowledge of
how to abort effectively across platforms.
2002-07-09 02:57:01 +00:00
Tim Peters c6a3ff634a SF bug 578752: COUNT_ALLOCS vs heap types
Repair segfaults and infinite loops in COUNT_ALLOCS builds in the
presence of new-style (heap-allocated) classes/types.

Bugfix candidate.  I'll backport this to 2.2.  It's irrelevant in 2.1.
2002-07-08 22:11:52 +00:00
Tim Peters 4be93d0e84 Rearranged and added comments to object.h, to clarify many things
that have taken me "too long" to reverse-engineer over the years.
Vastly reduced the nesting level and redundancy of #ifdef-ery.
Took a light stab at repairing comments that are no longer true.

sys_gettotalrefcount():  Changed to enable under Py_REF_DEBUG.
It was enabled under Py_TRACE_REFS, which was much heavier than
necessary.  sys.gettotalrefcount() is now available in a
Py_REF_DEBUG-only build.
2002-07-07 19:59:50 +00:00
Tim Peters a6269a8ec5 Removed 3 unlikely #includes that were only needed for the non-gc flavor
of the trashcan code.
2002-07-07 16:52:50 +00:00
Tim Peters 803526b9e2 Trashcan cleanup: Now that cyclic gc is always there, the trashcan
mechanism is no longer evil:  it no longer plays dangerous games with
the type pointer or refcounts, and objects in extension modules can play
along too without needing to edit the core first.

Rewrote all the comments to explain this, and (I hope) give clear
guidance to extension authors who do want to play along.  Documented
all the functions.  Added more asserts (it may no longer be evil, but
it's still dangerous <0.9 wink>).  Rearranged the generated code to
make it clearer, and to tolerate either the presence or absence of a
semicolon after the macros.  Rewrote _PyTrash_destroy_chain() to call
tp_dealloc directly; it was doing a Py_DECREF again, and that has all
sorts of obscure distorting effects in non-release builds (Py_DECREF
was already called on the object!).  Removed Christian's little "embedded
change log" comments -- that's what checkin messages are for, and since
it was impossible to correlate the comments with the code that changed,
I found them merely distracting.
2002-07-07 05:13:56 +00:00
Tim Peters 943382c8e5 Removed WITH_CYCLE_GC #ifdef-ery. Holes:
+ I'm not sure what to do about configure.in.  Left it alone.

+ Ditto pyexpat.c.  Fred or Martin will know what to do.
2002-07-07 03:59:34 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 6238d2b024 Patch #569753: Remove support for WIN16.
Rename all occurrences of MS_WIN32 to MS_WINDOWS.
2002-06-30 15:26:10 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger 5a04aec384 Fix SF bug 546434 -- buffer slice type inconsistent. 2002-06-25 00:25:30 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger ab5dae35ca Fix SF bug 572567: Memory leak in object comparison. 2002-06-24 13:08:16 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 8b47dffc93 Fix for SF bug 571885
When resizing a tuple, zero out the memory starting at the end of the
old tuple not at the beginning of the old tuple.
2002-06-20 23:13:17 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger 0ae0c07661 SF 569257 -- Name mangle double underscored variable names in __slots__. 2002-06-20 22:23:15 +00:00
Michael W. Hudson 9c14badc5f Fix the bug described in
http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2002-June/025461.html

with test cases.

Also includes extended slice support for arrays, which I thought I'd
already checked in but obviously not.
2002-06-19 15:44:15 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 63517577fd Patch from SF bug 570483 (Tim Northover).
In a fresh interpreter, type.mro(tuple) would segfault, because
PyType_Ready() isn't called for tuple yet.  To fix, call
PyType_Ready(type) if type->tp_dict is NULL.
2002-06-18 16:44:57 +00:00
Michael W. Hudson b1e8154013 About the new but unreferenced new_class, Guido sez:
> Looks like an experiment by Oren Tirosh that didn't get nuked.  I
> think you can safely lose it.

It's gone.
2002-06-18 12:38:06 +00:00
Guido van Rossum bea18ccde6 SF patch 568629 by Oren Tirosh: types made callable.
These built-in functions are replaced by their (now callable) type:

    slice()
    buffer()

and these types can also be called (but have no built-in named
function named after them)

    classobj (type name used to be "class")
    code
    function
    instance
    instancemethod (type name used to be "instance method")

The module "new" has been replaced with a small backward compatibility
placeholder in Python.

A large portion of the patch simply removes the new module from
various platform-specific build recipes.  The following binary Mac
project files still have references to it:

    Mac/Build/PythonCore.mcp
    Mac/Build/PythonStandSmall.mcp
    Mac/Build/PythonStandalone.mcp

[I've tweaked the code layout and the doc strings here and there, and
added a comment to types.py about StringTypes vs. basestring.  --Guido]
2002-06-14 20:41:17 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 59e6c53920 Inexplicably, recurse_down_subclasses() was comparing the object
gotten from a weak reference to NULL instead of to None.  This caused
the following assert() to fail (but only in 2.2 in the debug build --
I have to find a better test case).  Will backport.
2002-06-14 02:27:07 +00:00
Neal Norwitz 2c2e827029 Missed one use of new PyDoc_STRVAR macro 2002-06-14 02:04:18 +00:00
Neal Norwitz 1f68fc7fa5 SF bug # 493951 string.{starts,ends}with vs slices
Handle negative indices similar to slices.
2002-06-14 00:50:42 +00:00
Neal Norwitz 4178515035 SF # 533070 Silence AIX C Compiler Warnings
Warning caused by using &func.  & is not necessary.
2002-06-13 21:42:51 +00:00
Guido van Rossum e7b8ecf196 Major cleanup operation: whenever there's a call that looks for an
optional attribute, only clear the exception when the internal getattr
operation raised AttributeError.  Many places in this file already had
that policy; but just as many didn't, and there didn't seem to be any
rhyme or reason to it.  Be consistently cautious.

Question: should I backport this?  On the one hand it's a bugfix.  On
the other hand it's a change in behavior.  Certain forms of buggy or
just weird code would work in the past but raise an exception under
the new rules; e.g. if you define a __getattr__ method that raises a
non-AttributeError exception.
2002-06-13 21:42:04 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 16b93b3d0e Fix for SF bug 532646. This is a little simpler than what Neal
suggested there, based upon a better analysis (__getattr__ is a red
herring).  Will backport to 2.2.
2002-06-13 21:32:51 +00:00
Neal Norwitz 51290d369d SF # 561244 Micro optimizations
Cleanup code a bit and return as early as possible.
2002-06-13 21:32:44 +00:00
Neal Norwitz 20e72130c4 Fix typo in exception message 2002-06-13 21:25:17 +00:00
Neal Norwitz 35fc7606f0 SF #561244 Micro optimizations
Convert loops to memset()s.
2002-06-13 21:11:11 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 14f8b4cfcb Patch #568124: Add doc string macros. 2002-06-13 20:33:02 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 09638c16d8 Hopefully this addresses the remaining issues of SF bugs 459235 and
473985.  Through a subtle rearrangement of some members in the etype
struct (!), mapping methods are now preferred over sequence methods,
which is necessary to support str.__getitem__("hello", slice(4)) etc.
2002-06-13 19:17:46 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 65ce6de35c Rearrange the #ifndef WITHOUT_COMPLEX so it can be picked up from
pyconfig.h.
2002-06-13 17:07:07 +00:00
Michael W. Hudson 589dc93620 Fix for problem reported by Neal Norwitz. Tighten up calculation of
slicelength.  Include his test case.
2002-06-11 13:38:42 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 75a20b19ef Fold remaining long lines. 2002-06-11 12:22:28 +00:00
Michael W. Hudson 5efaf7eac8 This is my nearly two year old patch
[ 400998 ] experimental support for extended slicing on lists

somewhat spruced up and better tested than it was when I wrote it.

Includes docs & tests.  The whatsnew section needs expanding, and arrays
should support extended slices -- later.
2002-06-11 10:55:12 +00:00
Guido van Rossum cab05807fc Undo the last chunk of the previous patch, putting back a useful
assert into PyType_Ready(): now that we're not clearing tp_dict, we
can assert that it's non-NULL again.
2002-06-10 15:29:03 +00:00
Guido van Rossum a386209754 In the recent python-dev thread "Bizarre new test failure", we
discovered that subtype_traverse must traverse the type if it is a
heap type, because otherwise some cycles involving a type and its
instance would not be collected.  Simplest example:
    while 1:
        class C(object): pass
        C.ref = C()
This program grows without bounds before this fix.  (It grows ever
slower since it spends ever more time in the collector.)

Simply adding the right visit() call to subtype_traverse() revealed
other problems.  With MvL's help we re-learned that type_clear()
doesn't have to clear *all* references, only the ones that may not be
cleared by other means.  Careful analysis (see comments in the code)
revealed that only tp_mro needs to be cleared.  (The previous checkin
to this file adds a test for tp_mro==NULL to _PyType_Lookup() that's
essential to prevent crashes due to tp_mro being NULL when
subtype_dealloc() tries to look for a __del__ method.)  The same kind
of analysis also revealed that subtype_clear() doesn't need to clear
the instance dict.

With this fix, a useful property of the collector is once again
guaranteed: a single gc.collect() call will clear out all garbage.
(It didn't always before, which put us on the track of this bug.)

Will backport to 2.2.
2002-06-10 15:24:42 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 2309498595 Three's a charm: yet another fix for SF bug 551412. Thinking again
about the test case, slot_nb_power gets called on behalf of its second
argument, but with a non-None modulus it wouldn't check this, and
believes it is called on behalf of its first argument.  Fix this
properly, and get rid of the code in _PyType_Lookup() that tries to
call _PyType_Ready().  But do leave a check for a NULL tp_mro there,
because this can still legitimately occur.

I'll fix this in 2.2.x too.
2002-06-10 14:30:43 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger 478d47a168 Close SF bug 563740. complex() now finds __complex__() in new style classes.
Made conversion failure error messages consistent between types.
Added related unittests.
2002-06-06 15:45:38 +00:00
Neal Norwitz 56f46f8d8c Pyrangeiter_Type && range_iter should be static 2002-06-06 14:58:21 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger c4c453f5ae Skip Montanaro's patch, SF 559833, exposing xrange type in builtins.
Also, added more regression tests to cover the new type and test its
conformity with range().
2002-06-05 23:12:45 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger 48165d40cb SF 564601 adding rangeiterobject to make xrange() iterate like range(). 2002-06-05 20:08:48 +00:00
Thomas Heller aee2d5f975 Better isinstance error message.
Closes SF patch # 560250.

Bugfix candidate IMO.
2002-06-05 12:55:19 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 9923ffe2c0 Address SF bug 519621: slots weren't traversed by GC.
While I was at it, I added a tp_clear handler and changed the
tp_dealloc handler to use the clear_slots helper for the tp_clear
handler.

Also tightened the rules for slot names: they must now be proper
identifiers (ignoring the dirty little fact that <ctype.h> is locale
sensitive).

Also set mp->flags = READONLY for the __weakref__ pseudo-slot.

Most of this is a 2.2 bugfix candidate; I'll apply it there myself.
2002-06-04 19:52:53 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger e53e7a2c7d Inverted test for small speedup 2002-06-04 18:45:50 +00:00
Guido van Rossum ed3e09f289 Add a docstring to the module type. 2002-06-04 06:02:35 +00:00
Guido van Rossum c3a787e090 Surprising fix for SF bug 563060: module can be used as base class.
Change the module constructor (module_init) to have the signature
__init__(name:str, doc=None); this prevents the call from type_new()
to succeed.  While we're at it, prevent repeated calling of
module_init for the same module from leaking the dict, changing the
semantics so that __dict__ is only initialized if NULL.

Also adding a unittest, test_module.py.

This is an incompatibility with 2.2, if anybody was instantiating the
module class before, their argument list was probably empty; so this
can't be backported to 2.2.x.
2002-06-04 05:52:47 +00:00
Guido van Rossum b65c65b301 Address the residual issue with the fix for SF 551412 in
_PyType_Lookup().  Decided to clear the error condition in the
unfortunate but unlikely case that PyType_Ready() fails.

Will fix in 2.2.x too.
2002-06-03 19:52:41 +00:00
Tim Peters 93b2cc4e97 A bogus assert in the new listiter code prevented starting Python in a
debug build.  Repaired that, and rewrote other parts to reduce
long-winded casting.
2002-06-01 05:22:55 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger 14bd6de0ec SF 560736. Optimize list iteration by filling the tp_iter slot. 2002-05-31 21:40:38 +00:00
Neal Norwitz 3f8dae73c7 Fix typo 2002-05-31 20:23:33 +00:00
Guido van Rossum a407300cd7 Implement the intention of SF patch 472523 (but coded differently).
In the past, an object's tp_compare could return any value.  In 2.2
the docs were tightened to require it to return -1, 0 or 1; and -1 for
an error.

We now issue a warning if the value is not in this range.  When an
exception is raised, we allow -1 or -2 as return value, since -2 will
the recommended return value for errors in the future.  (Eventually
tp_compare will also be allowed to return +2, to indicate
NotImplemented; but that can only be implemented once we know all
extensions return a value in [-2...1].  Or perhaps it will require the
type to set a flag bit.)

I haven't decided yet whether to backport this to 2.2.x.  The patch
applies fine.  But is it fair to start warning in 2.2.2 about code
that worked flawlessly in 2.2.1?
2002-05-31 20:03:54 +00:00
Neal Norwitz 32a7e7f6b6 Change name from string to basestring 2002-05-31 19:58:02 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg 4164439240 Fix a possible segfault. Found be Neal Norvitz. 2002-05-29 13:46:29 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg 4da6fd63bc Fix for bug [ 561796 ] string.find causes lazy error 2002-05-29 11:33:13 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 9fc8a29663 Fix for SF bug 551412. When _PyType_Lookup() is called on a type
whose tp_mro hasn't been initialized, it would dump core.  Fix this by
checking for NULL and calling PyType_Ready().  Will fix this in 2.2.1
too.
2002-05-24 21:40:08 +00:00
Guido van Rossum cacfc07d08 - A new type object, 'string', is added. This is a common base type
for 'str' and 'unicode', and can be used instead of
  types.StringTypes, e.g. to test whether something is "a string":
  isinstance(x, string) is True for Unicode and 8-bit strings.  This
  is an abstract base class and cannot be instantiated directly.
2002-05-24 19:01:59 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 9ee4b94f51 Add a safeguard against setting the class to something with a
different free or alloc slot.
2002-05-24 18:47:47 +00:00
Tim Peters bf9cb3ff1a Use function instead of macro spellings for PyObject_memorystuff. 2002-05-23 15:51:20 +00:00
Neal Norwitz d4e5be5340 Closes: #556025 seg fault when doing list(xrange(1e9))
A MemoryError is now raised when the list cannot be created.
There is a test, but as the comment says, it really only
works for 32 bit systems.  I don't know how to improve
the test for other systems (ie, 64 bit or systems
where the data size != addressable size,
e.g. 64 bit data, but 48 bit addressable memory)
2002-05-22 23:19:17 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 4be55b5cef file_doc: Add some description of the U mode character, but only when
WITH_UNIVERSAL_NEWLINES is enabled.
2002-05-22 20:37:53 +00:00
Raymond Hettinger 0ebac97058 Patch 549187. Improve string formatting error message. 2002-05-21 15:14:57 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 4402241450 Jim Fulton reported a segfault in dir(). A heavily proxied object
returned a proxy for __class__ whose __bases__ was also a proxy.  The
merge_class_dict() helper for dir() assumed incorrectly that __bases__
would always be a tuple and used the in-line tuple API on the proxy.

I will backport this to 2.2 as well.
2002-05-13 18:29:46 +00:00
Walter Dörwald 775c11f07a Add #ifdef PY_USING_UNICODE sections, so that
stringobject.c compiles again with --disable-unicode.

Fixes SF bug http://www.python.org/sf/554912
2002-05-13 09:00:41 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis e452659237 Patch #551410: Implement tp_getiter. 2002-05-08 08:49:27 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 01f94bda38 Patch #552433: Special-case tuples. Avoid sub-type checking for lists.
Avoid checks for negative indices and duplicate checks for support of
the sequence protocol.
2002-05-08 08:44:21 +00:00
Tim Peters 4ce71f77c3 PyObject_Realloc(): If a small block is shrinking, bite the expense of
copying it if at least 25% of the input block can be reclaimed.
2002-05-02 20:19:34 +00:00
Fred Drake d9018323c0 Remove old deprecated features from the xrange object. 2002-05-02 19:56:55 +00:00
Fred Drake edb51bb7e8 Fix attribute access for the xrange objects. The tp_getattr and tp_getattro
handlers were both set, but were not compatible.  This change uses only the
tp_getattro handler with a more "modern" approach.
This fixes SF bug #551285.
2002-05-02 16:05:27 +00:00
Skip Montanaro 71390a9a94 clarify message when raising TypeError to indicate that float() accepts
strings or numbers
2002-05-02 13:03:22 +00:00
Tim Peters 29c0afcfec Just added comments, and cleared some XXX questions, related to int
memory management.
2002-04-28 16:57:34 +00:00
Tim Peters 449b5a8da1 _PyObject_DebugCheckAddress(): If the leading pad bytes are corrupt,
display a msg warning that the count of bytes requested may be bogus,
and that a segfault may happen next.
2002-04-28 06:14:45 +00:00
Tim Peters 5de9842b34 Repair widespread misuse of _PyString_Resize. Since it's clear people
don't understand how this function works, also beefed up the docs.  The
most common usage error is of this form (often spread out across gotos):

	if (_PyString_Resize(&s, n) < 0) {
		Py_DECREF(s);
		s = NULL;
		goto outtahere;
	}

The error is that if _PyString_Resize runs out of memory, it automatically
decrefs the input string object s (which also deallocates it, since its
refcount must be 1 upon entry), and sets s to NULL.  So if the "if"
branch ever triggers, it's an error to call Py_DECREF(s):  s is already
NULL!  A correct way to write the above is the simpler (and intended)

	if (_PyString_Resize(&s, n) < 0)
		goto outtahere;

Bugfix candidate.
2002-04-27 18:44:32 +00:00
Tim Peters 602f740bc2 SF patch 549375: Compromise PyUnicode_EncodeUTF8
This implements ideas from Marc-Andre, Martin, Guido and me on Python-Dev.

"Short" Unicode strings are encoded into a "big enough" stack buffer,
then exactly as much string space as they turn out to need is allocated
at the end.  This should have speed benefits akin to Martin's "measure
once, allocate once" strategy, but without needing a distinct measuring
pass.

"Long" Unicode strings allocate as much heap space as they could possibly
need (4 x # Unicode chars), and do a realloc at the end to return the
untouched excess.  Since the overallocation is likely to be substantial,
this shouldn't burden the platform realloc with unusably small excess
blocks.

Also simplified uses of the PyString_xyz functions.  Also added a release-
build check that 4*size doesn't overflow a C int.  Sooner or later, that's
going to happen.
2002-04-27 18:03:26 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 7dab2426ca - New builtin function enumerate(x), from PEP 279. Example:
enumerate("abc") is an iterator returning (0,"a"), (1,"b"), (2,"c").
  The argument can be an arbitrary iterable object.
2002-04-26 19:40:56 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 517c7d4fd3 PyNumber_CoerceEx: this took a shortcut (not doing anything) when the
left and right type were of the same type and not classic instances.

This shortcut is dangerous for proxy types, because it means that
coerce(Proxy(1), Proxy(2.1)) leaves Proxy(1) unchanged rather than
turning it into Proxy(1.0).

In an ever-so-slight change of semantics, I now only take the shortcut
when the left and right types are of the same type and don't have the
CHECKTYPES feature.  It so happens that classic instances have this
flag, so the shortcut is still skipped in this case (i.e. nothing
changes for classic instances).  Proxies also have this flag set
(otherwise implementing numeric operations on proxies would become
nightmarish) and this means that the shortcut is also skipped there,
as desired.  It so happens that int, long and float also have this
flag set; that means that e.g. coerce(1, 1) will now invoke
int_coerce().  This is fine: int_coerce() can deal with this, and I'm
not worried about the performance; int_coerce() is only invoked when
the user explicitly calls coerce(), which should be rarer than rare.
2002-04-26 02:49:14 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 9364698101 Make sure that tp_free frees the int the same way as tp_dealloc would.
This fixes the problem that Barry reported on python-dev:
   >>> 23000 .__class__ = bool
crashes in the deallocator.  This was because int inherited tp_free
from object, which uses the default allocator.

2.2. Bugfix candidate.
2002-04-26 00:53:34 +00:00
Guido van Rossum c95cc87447 Clean up the layout of the bool_as_number struct initializer. 2002-04-25 20:01:10 +00:00
Barry Warsaw f16951cffe abstract_get_bases(): Clarify exactly what the return values and
states can be for this function, and ensure that only AttributeErrors
are masked.  Any other exception raised via the equivalent of
getattr(cls, '__bases__') should be propagated up.

abstract_issubclass(): If abstract_get_bases() returns NULL, we must
call PyErr_Occurred() to see if an exception is being propagated, and
return -1 or 0 as appropriate.  This is the specific fix for a problem
whereby if getattr(derived, '__bases__') raised an exception, an
"undetected error" would occur (under a debug build).  This nasty
situation was uncovered when writing a security proxy extension type
for the Zope3 project, where the security proxy raised a Forbidden
exception on getattr of __bases__.

PyObject_IsInstance(), PyObject_IsSubclass(): After both calls to
abstract_get_bases(), where we're setting the TypeError if the return
value is NULL, we must first check to see if an exception occurred,
and /not/ mask an existing exception.

Neil Schemenauer should double check that these changes don't break
his ExtensionClass examples (there aren't any test cases for those
examples and abstract_get_bases() was added by him in response to
problems with ExtensionClass).  Neil, please add test cases if
possible!

I belive this is a bug fix candidate for Python 2.2.2.
2002-04-23 22:45:44 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton c4ad0bcbe5 Clarify return value of PyLong_AsLongLong().
The function is documented to return -1 on error.  If res was < 0, it
returned res.  It wasn't clear that the invariant was res < 0 iff res
== -1.
2002-04-23 20:01:20 +00:00
Tim Peters 030a5cebf4 unicode_memchr(): Squashed gratuitous int-vs-size_t mismatch (which
gives a compiler wng under MSVC because of the resulting signed-vs-
unsigned comparison).
2002-04-22 19:00:10 +00:00
Walter Dörwald de02bcb265 Apply patch diff.txt from SF feature request
http://www.python.org/sf/444708

This adds the optional argument for str.strip
to unicode.strip too and makes it possible
to call str.strip with a unicode argument
and unicode.strip with a str argument.
2002-04-22 17:42:37 +00:00
Tim Peters e1682a80fa Py_UniversalNewlineFread(): small speed boost on non-Windows boxes. 2002-04-21 18:15:20 +00:00
Tim Peters 0eca65c4c5 PyUnicode_EncodeUTF8(): tightened the memory asserts a bit, and at least
tried to catch some possible arithmetic overflows in the debug build.
2002-04-21 17:28:06 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis 2a7ff35a07 Back out 2.140. 2002-04-21 09:59:45 +00:00
Tim Peters 058b141ef7 Py_UniversalNewlineFread(): Many changes.
+ Continued looping until n bytes in the buffer have been filled, not
  just when n bytes have been read from the file.  This repairs the
  bug that f.readlines() only sucked up the first 8192 bytes of the file
  on Windows when universal newlines was enabled and f was opened in
  U mode (see Python-Dev -- this was the ultimate cause of the
  test_inspect.py failure).

+ Changed prototye to take a char* buffer (void* doesn't make much sense).

+ Squashed size_t vs int mismatches (in particular, besides the unsigned
  vs signed distinction, size_t may be larger than int).

+ Gets out under all error conditions now (it's possible for fread() to
  suffer an error even if it returns a number larger than 0 -- any
  "short read" is an error or EOF condition).

+ Rearranged and simplified declarations.
2002-04-21 07:29:14 +00:00
Tim Peters 7e3d961fc1 PyUnicode_EncodeUTF8: squash compiler wng. The difference of two
pointers is a signed type.  Changing "allocated" to a signed int makes
undetected overflow more likely, but there was no overflow detection
before either.
2002-04-21 03:26:37 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis a4eb14b7a4 Patch #495401: Count number of required bytes for encoding UTF-8 before
allocating the target buffer.
2002-04-20 13:44:01 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 24ea8d3d9c Fix SF bug #505315: Make free and cell vars show up consistently in locals().
PyFrame_FastToLocals() and PyFrame_LocalsToFast() had a return if
f_nlocals was 0.  I think this was a holdover from the pre 2.1 days
when regular locals were the only kind of local variables.

The change makes it possible to use a free variable in eval or exec if
it the variable is also used elsewhere in the same block, which is
what the documentation says.
2002-04-20 04:46:55 +00:00
Tim Peters 08d821582f _PyObject_DebugMallocStats(): Added some potentially expensive internal
consistency checks, enabled only in a debug (Py_DEBUG) build.  Note that
this never gets called automatically unless PYMALLOC_DEBUG is #define'd
too, and the envar PYTHONMALLOCSTATS exists.
2002-04-18 22:25:03 +00:00
Tim Peters 64d80c9f40 PyObject_Malloc: make a tiny bit faster for platforms where malloc(0)
doesn't return NULL.

PyObject_Realloc:  better comment for why we don't call PyObject_Malloc(0).
2002-04-18 21:58:56 +00:00
Tim Peters 3e12071dbe Remove some long-disabled debugging boilerplate. 2002-04-18 21:37:03 +00:00
Tim Peters 2b85897189 type_get_doc(): Squash compiler wng about incompatible ptr types. 2002-04-18 04:12:28 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 6ca7d41c1f SF bug 542984.
Change type_get_doc (the get function for __doc__) to look in tp_dict
more often, and if it finds a descriptor in tp_dict, to call it (with
a NULL instance).  This means you can add a __doc__ descriptor to a
new-style class that returns instance docs when called on an instance,
and class docs when called on a class -- or the same docs in either
case, but lazily computed.

I'll also check this into the 2.2 maintenance branch.
2002-04-18 00:22:00 +00:00
Guido van Rossum e8fc640349 SF bug 544647.
PyNumber_InPlaceMultiply insisted on calling sq_inplace_repeat if it
existed, even if nb_inplace_multiply also existed and the arguments
weren't right for sq_inplace_repeat.  Change this to only use
sq_inplace_repeat if nb_inplace_multiply isn't defined.

Bugfix candidate.
2002-04-16 16:44:51 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 7766091e04 Whitespace normalization and fold some long lines. 2002-04-16 16:32:50 +00:00
Walter Dörwald 0fe940c862 Return the orginal string only if it's a real str or unicode
instance, otherwise make a copy.
2002-04-15 18:42:15 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 3aa3fc46c8 Remove 'const' from local variable declaration in string_zfill() -- it
isn't constant, so why bother.

Folded long lines.

Whitespace normalization.
2002-04-15 13:48:52 +00:00
Walter Dörwald 068325ef92 Apply the second version of SF patch http://www.python.org/sf/536241
Add a method zfill to str, unicode and UserString and change
Lib/string.py accordingly.

This activates the zfill version in unicodeobject.c that was
commented out and implements the same in stringobject.c. It also
adds the test for unicode support in Lib/string.py back in and
uses repr() instead() of str() (as it was before Lib/string.py 1.62)
2002-04-15 13:36:47 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 69cf3c7641 Deprecate % as well. The message for deprecation of //, % and divmod
is the same in all three cases (mostly because // calls divmod :-).
2002-04-15 12:39:12 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 9ec4c78a54 SF bug #543387.
Complex numbers implement divmod() and //, neither of which makes one
lick of sense.  Unfortunately this is documented, so I'm adding a
deprecation warning now, so we can delete this silliness, oh, around
2005 or so.

Bugfix candidate (At least for 2.2.2, I think.)
2002-04-15 01:41:56 +00:00
Guido van Rossum b6b8942f53 SF bug #541883 (Vincent Fiack).
A stupid bug in object_set_class(): didn't check for value==NULL
before checking its type.

Bugfix candidate.
2002-04-15 01:03:30 +00:00
Tim Peters 077f27141f SF bug 543840: complex(string) accepts strings with \0
complex_subtype_from_string():  this stopped parsing at the first 0
byte, as if that were the end of the input string.

Bugfix candidate.
2002-04-14 22:04:03 +00:00
Jack Jansen 7b8c7546eb Mass checkin of universal newline support.
Highlights: import and friends will understand any of \r, \n and \r\n
as end of line. Python file input will do the same if you use mode 'U'.
Everything can be disabled by configuring with --without-universal-newlines.

See PEP278 for details.
2002-04-14 20:12:41 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 5961042061 Fold long lines. (Walter, please take note! :-) 2002-04-13 14:06:36 +00:00
Tim Peters 0e871188e8 _PyObject_DebugDumpStats: renamed to _PyObject_DebugMallocStats.
Added code to call this when PYMALLOC_DEBUG is enabled, and envar
PYTHONMALLOCSTATS is set, whenever a new arena is obtained and once
late in the Python shutdown process.
2002-04-13 08:29:14 +00:00
Tim Peters b7ba743312 SF bug 543148: Memory leak with stackframes + inspect.
Put a bound on the number of frameobjects that can live in the
frameobject free_list.

Am also backporting to 2.2.  I don't intend to backport to 2.1 (too
much work -- lots of cyclic structures leak there, and the GC API).
2002-04-13 05:21:47 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 018b0eb0f5 Partially implement SF feature request 444708.
Add optional arg to string methods strip(), lstrip(), rstrip().
The optional arg specifies characters to delete.

Also for UserString.

Still to do:

- Misc/NEWS
- LaTeX docs (I did the docstrings though)
- Unicode methods, and Unicode support in the string methods.
2002-04-13 00:56:08 +00:00
Tim Peters 8a8cdfd0f5 Small anal correctness tweaks:
_PyObject_DebugMalloc:  explicitly cast PyObject_Malloc's result to the
target pointer type.

_PyObject_DebugDumpStats:  change decl of arena_alignment from unsigned
int to unsigned long.

This is for the 2.3 release only (it's new code).
2002-04-12 20:49:36 +00:00
Guido van Rossum e027d9818f Add Raymond Hettinger's d.pop(). See SF patch 539949. 2002-04-12 15:11:59 +00:00
Tim Peters 85cc1c4368 _PyObject_DebugRealloc(): rewritten to let the underlying realloc do
most of the work.  In particular, if the underlying realloc is able to
grow the memory block in place, great (this routine used to do a fresh
malloc + memcpy every time a block grew).  BTW, I'm not so keen here on
avoiding possible quadratic-time realloc patterns as I am on making
the debug pymalloc more invisible (the more it uses memory "just like"
the underlying allocator, the better the chance that a suspected memory
corruption bug won't vanish when the debug malloc is turned on).
2002-04-12 08:52:50 +00:00
Tim Peters f539c68ccd _PyObject_DebugDumpAddress(): clarify an output message. 2002-04-12 07:43:07 +00:00
Tim Peters f6fb501c57 PYMALLOC_{CLEAN, DEAD, FORBIDDEN}BYTE symbols: remove the PYMALLOC_
prefix.  These symbols are private to the file, and the PYMALLOC_ gets
in the way (overly long code lines, comments, and error messages).
2002-04-12 07:38:53 +00:00
Tim Peters af3e8de580 First stab at rationalizing the PyMem_ API. Mixing PyObject_xyz with
PyMem_{Del, DEL} doesn't work yet (compilation problems).

pyport.h:  _PyMem_EXTRA is gone.

pmem.h:  Repaired comments.  PyMem_{Malloc, MALLOC} and
PyMem_{Realloc, REALLOC} now make the same x-platform guarantees when
asking for 0 bytes, and when passing a NULL pointer to the latter.

object.c:  PyMem_{Malloc, Realloc} just call their macro versions
now, since the latter take care of the x-platform 0 and NULL stuff
by themselves now.

pypcre.c, grow_stack():  So sue me.  On two lines, this called
PyMem_RESIZE to grow a "const" area.  It's not legit to realloc a
const area, so the compiler warned given the new expansion of
PyMem_RESIZE.  It would have gotten the same warning before if it
had used PyMem_Resize() instead; the older macro version, but not the
function version, silently cast away the constness.  IMO that was a wrong
thing to do, and the docs say the macro versions of PyMem_xyz are
deprecated anyway.  If somebody else is resizing const areas with the
macro spelling, they'll get a warning when they recompile now too.
2002-04-12 07:22:56 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer d2560cd37c Move PyObject_Malloc and PyObject_Free here from object.c. Remove
PyMalloc_ prefix and use PyObject_ instead.  I'm not sure about the
debugging functions.  Perhaps they should stay as PyMalloc_.
2002-04-12 03:10:20 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer bdf0eedb68 Move PyObject_Malloc and PyObject_Free to obmalloc.c. 2002-04-12 03:08:42 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 58aa861fa2 Remove PyMalloc_*. 2002-04-12 03:07:20 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 09a2ae5882 Change signature of _PyObject_GC_Malloc to match PyObject_MALLOC.
PyObject_Del and PyObject_GC_Del can now be used as a function
designators.
2002-04-12 03:06:53 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 626d774df6 PyObject_GC_Del can now be used as a function designator. 2002-04-12 03:05:52 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 7465ad2fc9 Remove PyMalloc_New and PyMalloc_Del. 2002-04-12 03:05:37 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 510492e985 Remove PyMalloc_New, _PyMalloc_MALLOC, and PyMalloc_Del. 2002-04-12 03:05:19 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 9acae5a0a6 Remove PyMalloc_New and PyMalloc_Del. 2002-04-12 02:44:55 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 99b5d28467 PyObject_GC_Del can now be used as a function designator. 2002-04-12 02:44:22 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer aa769ae468 PyObject_Del can now be used as a function designator. 2002-04-12 02:44:10 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 6189b89cc5 PyObject_GC_Del and PyObject_Del can now be used as a function
designators.

Remove PyMalloc_New.
2002-04-12 02:43:00 +00:00
Tim Peters 52aefc8a7b SF bug 542181: Realloc behavior
The bug report pointed out a bogosity in the comment block explaining
thread safety for arena management.  Repaired that comment, repaired a
couple others while I was at it, and added an assert.

_PyMalloc_DebugRealloc:  If this needed to get more memory, but couldn't,
it erroneously freed the original memory.  Repaired that.

This is for 2.3 only (unless we decide to backport the new pymalloc).
2002-04-11 06:36:45 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg 68e69338ae Bug fix for UTF-8 encoding bug (buffer overrun) #541828. 2002-04-10 20:36:13 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg ce0b664af2 Added test case for UTF-8 encoding bug #541828. 2002-04-10 17:18:02 +00:00
Tim Peters 2ea9111cf1 SF bug 538827: Python open w/ MSVC6: bad error msgs.
open_the_file:  Some (not all) flavors of Windows set errno to EINVAL
when passed a syntactically invalid filename.  Python turned that into an
incomprehensible complaint about the mode string.  Fixed by special-casing
MSVC.
2002-04-08 04:13:12 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 0986d8250f - A type can now inherit its metatype from its base type. Previously,
when PyType_Ready() was called, if ob_type was found to be NULL, it
  was always set to &PyType_Type; now it is set to base->ob_type,
  where base is tp_base, defaulting to &PyObject_Type.

- PyType_Ready() accidentally did not inherit tp_is_gc; now it does.

Bugfix candidate.
2002-04-08 01:38:42 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 7f7666ff43 isatty() should return a bool. 2002-04-07 06:28:00 +00:00
Tim Peters 49f26817eb Minor improvements to the stats output dump, including adding commas to
the big numbers.
2002-04-06 01:45:35 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 8ace1ab53a - Changed new-style class instantiation so that when C's __new__
method returns something that's not a C instance, its __init__ is
  not called.  [SF bug #537450]
2002-04-06 01:05:01 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 6b8ab74c8a Don't inherit tp_new! This is a retraction of half of the previous
checkin.  And since that one was, this one is also a:

Bugfix candidate.
2002-04-05 22:04:18 +00:00