Commit Graph

384 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Fred Drake 4ec5d5699d Fix bug in profiler modifications detected only in debug builds.
The new profiler event stream includes a "return" event even when an
exception is being propogated, but the machinery that called the profile
hook did not save & restore the exception.  In debug mode, the exception
was detected during the execution of the profile callback, which did not
have the proper internal flags set for the exception.  Saving & restoring
the exception state solves the problem.
2001-10-04 19:26:43 +00:00
Fred Drake 8f51f54319 Rationalize the events passed to the profiler (no changes for the tracer).
The profiler does not need to know anything about the exception state,
so we no longer call it when an exception is raised.  We do, however,
make sure we *always* call the profiler when we exit a frame.  This
ensures that timing events are more easily isolated by a profiler and
finally clauses that do a lot of work don't have their time
mis-allocated.

When an exception is propogated out of the frame, the C callback for
the profiler now receives a PyTrace_RETURN event with an arg of NULL;
the Python-level profile hook function will see a 'return' event with
an arg of None.  This means that from Python it is impossible for the
profiler to determine if the frame exited with an exception or if it
returned None, but this doesn't matter for profiling.  A C-based
profiler could tell the difference, but this doesn't seem important.

ceval.c:eval_frame():  Simplify the code in two places so that the
                       profiler is called for every exit from a frame
                       and not for exceptions.

sysmodule.c:profile_trampoline():  Make sure we don't expose Python
                                   code to NULL; use None instead.
2001-10-04 14:48:42 +00:00
Tim Peters 8b13b3ede2 SF bug [#466173] unpack TypeError unclear
Replaced 3 instances of "iter() of non-sequence" with
"iteration over non-sequence".
Restored "unpack non-sequence" for stuff like "a, b = 1".
2001-09-30 05:58:42 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton c631489289 Prevent a NULL pointer from being pushed onto the stack.
It's possible for PyErr_NormalizeException() to set the traceback
pointer to NULL.  I'm not sure how to provoke this directly from
Python, although it may be possible.  The error occurs when an
exception is set using PyErr_SetObject() and another exception occurs
while PyErr_NormalizeException() is creating the exception instance.

XXX As a result of this change, it's possible for an exception to
occur but sys.last_traceback to be left undefined.  Not sure if this
is a problem.
2001-09-26 19:24:45 +00:00
Thomas Wouters 1ee6422111 Don't swap the arguments to PyFrame_BlockSetup when recreating the recently
popped frame-block. What an embarrassing bug! Especially for Jeremy, since
he accepted the patch :-)

This fixes SF bugs #463359 and #462937, and possibly other, *very* obscure
bugs with very deeply nested loops that continue the loop and then break out
of it or raise an exception.
2001-09-24 19:32:01 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 6f7993765a Add optional docstrings to member descriptors. For backwards
compatibility, this required all places where an array of "struct
memberlist" structures was declared that is referenced from a type's
tp_members slot to change the type of the structure to PyMemberDef;
"struct memberlist" is now only used by old code that still calls
PyMember_Get/Set.  The code in PyObject_GenericGetAttr/SetAttr now
calls the new APIs PyMember_GetOne/SetOne, which take a PyMemberDef
argument.

As examples, I added actual docstrings to the attributes of a few
types: file, complex, instance method, super, and xxsubtype.spamlist.

Also converted the symtable to new style getattr.
2001-09-20 20:46:19 +00:00
Fred Drake b9a96282f1 Admit that we'll never add the args for a "call" event to the profile
and trace functions; this now declares that None will be passed for the
"call" event.
This closes SF bug/suggestion #460315.
2001-09-13 16:56:43 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 7851eea5f2 build_class(): one more (hopefully the last) step on the way to
backwards compatibility.  When using the class of the first base as
the metaclass, use its __class__ attribute in preference over its
ob_type slot.  This ensures that we can still use classic classes as
metaclasse, as shown in the original "Metaclasses" essay.  This also
makes all the examples in Demo/metaclasses/ work again (maybe these
should be turned into a test suite?).
2001-09-12 19:19:18 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 6c0f20088f Move call_trace(..., PyTrace_CALL, ...) call to top of eval_frame. That
way it's called each time a generator is resumed.  The tracing of normal
functions should be unaffected by this change.
2001-09-04 19:03:35 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 46add98758 Do the int inlining only if the type is really an int, not whenever
PyInt_Check() succeeds.  That returns true for subtypes of int, which
may override __add__ or __sub__.
2001-08-30 16:06:23 +00:00
Sjoerd Mullender 2f38f81fec Removed some unreachable break statements to silence SGI compiler. 2001-08-30 14:05:20 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 87780dfa97 When an inlined operation on two small ints causes overflow, don't
raise the exception here -- call the generic function (which may
convert the arguments to long and try again).
2001-08-23 02:58:07 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 50d756e262 Fix SF bug #443600:
Change to get/set/del slice operations so that if the object doesn't
support slicing, *or* if either of the slice arguments is not an int
or long, we construct a slice object and call the get/set/del item
operation instead.  This makes it possible to design classes that
support slice arguments of non-integral types.
2001-08-18 17:43:36 +00:00
Tim Peters e2c18e90da ceval, PyEval_MergeCompilerFlags: wasn't merging in the
CO_FUTURE_DIVISION flag.  Redid this to use Jeremy's PyCF_MASK #define
instead, so we dont have to remember to fiddle individual feature names
here again.

pythonrun.h:  Also #define a PyCF_MASK_OBSOLETE mask.  This isn't used
yet, but will be as part of the PEP 264 implementation (compile() mustn't
raise an error just because old code uses a flag name that's become
obsolete; a warning may be appropriate, but not an error; so compile() has
to know about obsolete flags too, but nobody is going to remember to
update compile() with individual obsolete flag names across releases either
-- i.e., this is the flip side of PyEval_MergeCompilerFlags's oversight).
2001-08-17 20:47:47 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis e3eb1f2b23 Patch #427190: Implement and use METH_NOARGS and METH_O. 2001-08-16 13:15:00 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 910d7d46dc Remove much dead code from ceval.c
The descr changes moved the dispatch for calling objects from
call_object() in ceval.c to PyObject_Call() in abstract.c.
call_object() and the many functions it used in ceval.c were no longer
used, but were not removed.

Rename meth_call() as PyCFunction_Call() so that it can be called by
the CALL_FUNCTION opcode in ceval.c.

Also, fix error message that referred to PyEval_EvalCodeEx() by its
old name eval_code2().  (I'll probably refer to it by its old name,
too.)
2001-08-12 21:52:24 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton b857ba261f Refactor future feature handling
Replace uses of PyCF_xxx with CO_xxx.

Replace individual feature slots in PyFutureFeatures with single
bitmask ff_features.

When flags must be transfered among the three parts of the interpreter
that care about them -- the pythonrun layer, the compiler, and the
future feature parser -- can simply or (|) the definitions.
2001-08-10 21:41:33 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 4668b000a1 Implement PEP 238 in its (almost) full glory.
This introduces:

- A new operator // that means floor division (the kind of division
  where 1/2 is 0).

- The "future division" statement ("from __future__ import division)
  which changes the meaning of the / operator to implement "true
  division" (where 1/2 is 0.5).

- New overloadable operators __truediv__ and __floordiv__.

- New slots in the PyNumberMethods struct for true and floor division,
  new abstract APIs for them, new opcodes, and so on.

I emphasize that without the future division statement, the semantics
of / will remain unchanged until Python 3.0.

Not yet implemented are warnings (default off) when / is used with int
or long arguments.

This has been on display since 7/31 as SF patch #443474.

Flames to /dev/null.
2001-08-08 05:00:18 +00:00
Tim Peters 6d6c1a35e0 Merge of descr-branch back into trunk. 2001-08-02 04:15:00 +00:00
Tim Peters 5ba5866281 Part way to allowing "from __future__ import generators" to communicate
that info to code dynamically compiled *by* code compiled with generators
enabled.  Doesn't yet work because there's still no way to tell the parser
that "yield" is OK (unlike nested_scopes, the parser has its fingers in
this too).
Replaced PyEval_GetNestedScopes by a more-general
PyEval_MergeCompilerFlags.  Perhaps I should not have?  I doubted it was
*intended* to be part of the public API, so just did.
2001-07-16 02:29:45 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer f8c7c20ba5 GC for generator objects. 2001-07-12 13:27:49 +00:00
Fred Drake 9e3ad78444 This change adjusts the profiling/tracing support so that the common
path (with no profile/trace function) through eval_code2() and
eval_frame() avoids several checks.

In the common cases of calls, returns, and exception propogation,
eval_code2() and eval_frame() used to test two values in the
thread-state: the profiling function and the tracing function.  With
this change, a flag is set in the thread-state if either of these is
active, allowing a single check to suffice when both are NULL.  This
also simplifies the code needed when either function is in use but is
already active (to avoid profiling/tracing the profiler/tracer); the
flag is set to 0 when the profile/trace code is entered, allowing the
same check to suffice for "already in the tracer" for call/return/
exception events.
2001-07-03 23:39:52 +00:00
Fred Drake 5755ce693d Revise the interface to the profiling and tracing support for the
Python interpreter.

This change adds two new C-level APIs:  PyEval_SetProfile() and
PyEval_SetTrace().  These can be used to install profile and trace
functions implemented in C, which can operate at much higher speeds
than Python-based functions.  The overhead for calling a C-based
profile function is a very small fraction of a percent of the overhead
involved in calling a Python-based function.

The machinery required to call a Python-based profile or trace
function been moved to sysmodule.c, where sys.setprofile() and
sys.setprofile() simply become users of the new interface.

As a side effect, SF bug #436058 is fixed; there is no longer a
_PyTrace_Init() function to declare.
2001-06-27 19:19:46 +00:00
Tim Peters e77f2e2798 gen_getattr: make the gi_running and gi_frame members discoverable (but
not writable -- too dangerous!) from Python code.
2001-06-26 22:24:51 +00:00
Tim Peters d8e1c9e177 Add "gi_" (generator-iterator) prefix to names of genobject members.
Makes it much easier to find references via dumb editor search (former
"frame" in particular was near-hopeless).
2001-06-26 20:58:58 +00:00
Tim Peters ad1a18b78e Change the semantics of "return" in generators, as discussed on the
Iterators list and Python-Dev; e.g., these all pass now:

def g1():
    try:
        return
    except:
        yield 1
assert list(g1()) == []

def g2():
    try:
        return
    finally:
        yield 1
assert list(g2()) == [1]

def g3():
    for i in range(3):
        yield None
    yield None
assert list(g3()) == [None] * 4

compile.c:  compile_funcdef and com_return_stmt:  Just van Rossum's patch
to compile the same code for "return" regardless of function type (this
goes back to the previous scheme of returning Py_None).

ceval.c:  gen_iternext:  take a return (but not a yield) of Py_None as
meaning the generator is exhausted.
2001-06-23 06:19:16 +00:00
Tim Peters 5eb4b87ae6 gen_iternext(): Don't assume that the current thread state's frame is
not NULL.  I don't think it can be NULL from Python code, but if using
generators via the C API I expect a NULL frame is possible.
2001-06-23 05:47:56 +00:00
Tim Peters 8c96369513 PyFrameObject: rename f_stackbottom to f_stacktop, since it points to
the next free valuestack slot, not to the base (in America, stacks push
and pop at the top -- they mutate at the bottom in Australia <winK>).
eval_frame():  assert that f_stacktop isn't NULL upon entry.
frame_delloc():  avoid ordered pointer comparisons involving f_stacktop
when f_stacktop is NULL.
2001-06-23 05:26:56 +00:00
Tim Peters d6d010b874 Teach the UNPACK_SEQUENCE opcode how to tease an iterable object into
giving up the goods.
NEEDS DOC CHANGES
2001-06-21 02:49:55 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 2b13ce8317 Try to avoid creating reference cycles involving generators. Only keep a
reference to f_back when its really needed.  Do a little whitespace
normalization as well.  This whole file is a big war between tabs and spaces
but now is probably not the time to reindent everything.
2001-06-21 02:41:10 +00:00
Tim Peters 6302ec63fc gen_iternext(): repair subtle refcount problem.
NeilS, please check!  This came from staring at your genbug.py, but I'm
not sure it plugs all possible holes.  Without this, I caught a
frameobject refcount going negative, and it was also the cause (in debug
build) of _Py_ForgetReference's attempt to forget an object with already-
NULL _ob_prev and _ob_next pointers -- although I'm still not entirely
sure how!  Part of the difficulty is that frameobjects are stored on a
free list that gets recycled very quickly, so if there's a stray pointer
to one of them it never looks like an insane frameobject (never goes
trough the free() mangling MS debug forces, etc).
2001-06-20 06:57:32 +00:00
Neil Schemenauer 43afb24c30 Remove unused code. 2001-06-20 00:39:28 +00:00
Tim Peters 5ca576ed0a Merging the gen-branch into the main line, at Guido's direction. Yay!
Bugfix candidate in inspect.py:  it was referencing "self" outside of
a method.
2001-06-18 22:08:13 +00:00
Fred Drake d083839fb4 Instead of initializing & interning the strings passed to the profile
and trace functions lazily, which incurs extra argument pushing and checks
in the C overhead for profiling/tracing, create the strings semi-lazily
when the Python code first registers a profile or trace function.  This
simplifies the trampoline into the profile/trace functions.
2001-06-16 21:02:31 +00:00
Tim Peters 239508cd10 SF bug 433228: repr(list) woes when len(list) big
call_object:  If the object isn't callable, display its type in the error
msg rather than its repr.
Bugfix candidate.
2001-06-16 00:09:28 +00:00
Fred Drake 904aa7bb00 call_trace(): Add an additional parameter -- pointer to a PyObject*
that should be used to cache an interned version of the event
    string passed to the profile/trace function.  call_trace() will
    create interned strings and cache them in using the storage
    specified by this additional parameter, avoiding a lot of string
    object creation at runtime when using the profiling or tracing
    functions.

All call sites are modified to pass the additional parameter, and four
static PyObject* variables are allocated to cache the interned string
objects.

This closes SF patch #431257.
2001-06-08 04:33:09 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 4c9dace392 Fix bug reported by Tim Peters on python-dev:
Keyword arguments passed to builtin functions that don't take them are
ignored.

>>> {}.clear(x=2)
>>>

instead of

>>> {}.clear(x=2)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
TypeError: clear() takes no keyword arguments
2001-05-29 16:23:26 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton da20fce9c3 Add a second special case to the inline function call code in eval_code2().
If we have a PyCFunction (builtin) and it is METH_VARARGS only, load
the args and dispatch to call_cfunction() directly.  This provides a
small speedup for perhaps the most common function calls -- builtins.
2001-05-18 20:53:14 +00:00
Tim Peters f4848dac41 Make PyIter_Next() a little smarter (wrt its knowledge of iterator
internals) so clients can be a lot dumber (wrt their knowledge).
2001-05-05 00:14:56 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 960d948e7c improved error message-- names the type of the unexpected object 2001-04-27 02:25:33 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 213c7a6aa5 Mondo changes to the iterator stuff, without changing how Python code
sees it (test_iter.py is unchanged).

- Added a tp_iternext slot, which calls the iterator's next() method;
  this is much faster for built-in iterators over built-in types
  such as lists and dicts, speeding up pybench's ForLoop with about
  25% compared to Python 2.1.  (Now there's a good argument for
  iterators. ;-)

- Renamed the built-in sequence iterator SeqIter, affecting the C API
  functions for it.  (This frees up the PyIter prefix for generic
  iterator operations.)

- Added PyIter_Check(obj), which checks that obj's type has a
  tp_iternext slot and that the proper feature flag is set.

- Added PyIter_Next(obj) which calls the tp_iternext slot.  It has a
  somewhat complex return condition due to the need for speed: when it
  returns NULL, it may not have set an exception condition, meaning
  the iterator is exhausted; when the exception StopIteration is set
  (or a derived exception class), it means the same thing; any other
  exception means some other error occurred.
2001-04-23 14:08:49 +00:00
Tim Peters cf96de052f SF but #417587: compiler warnings compiling 2.1.
Repaired *some* of the SGI compiler warnings Sjoerd Mullender reported.
2001-04-21 02:46:11 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 59d1d2b434 Iterators phase 1. This comprises:
new slot tp_iter in type object, plus new flag Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_ITER
new C API PyObject_GetIter(), calls tp_iter
new builtin iter(), with two forms: iter(obj), and iter(function, sentinel)
new internal object types iterobject and calliterobject
new exception StopIteration
new opcodes for "for" loops, GET_ITER and FOR_ITER (also supported by dis.py)
new magic number for .pyc files
new special method for instances: __iter__() returns an iterator
iteration over dictionaries: "for x in dict" iterates over the keys
iteration over files: "for x in file" iterates over lines

TODO:

documentation
test suite
decide whether to use a different way to spell iter(function, sentinal)
decide whether "for key in dict" is a good idea
use iterators in map/filter/reduce, min/max, and elsewhere (in/not in?)
speed tuning (make next() a slot tp_next???)
2001-04-20 19:13:02 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton c76770c68c Change error message raised when free variable is not yet bound. It
now raises NameError instead of UnboundLocalError, because the var in
question is definitely not local.  (This affects test_scope.py)

Also update the recent fix by Ping using get_func_name().  Replace
tests of get_func_name() return value with call to get_func_desc() to
match all the other uses.
2001-04-13 16:51:46 +00:00
Guido van Rossum d9994e0115 Patch by Ping (SF bug 415879, Exception.__init__() causes segfault):
Calling an unbound method on a C extension class without providing
   an instance can yield a segfault.  Try "Exception.__init__()" or
   "ValueError.__init__()".

   This is a simple fix. The error-reporting bits in call_method
   mistakenly treat the misleadingly-named variable "func" as a
   function, when in fact it is a method.

   If we let get_func_name take care of the work, all is fine.
2001-04-13 15:42:40 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 512a237725 Fix exception handling for non-PyFunction objects, SF bug 414743.
Fix based on patch #414750 by Michael Hudson.

New functions get_func_name() and get_func_desc() return reasonable
names and descriptions for all objects.  XXX Even objects that aren't
actually callable.
2001-04-11 13:52:29 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton bc32024769 Extend support for from __future__ import nested_scopes
If a module has a future statement enabling nested scopes, they are
also enable for the exec statement and the functions compile() and
execfile() if they occur in the module.

If Python is run with the -i option, which enters interactive mode
after executing a script, and the script it runs enables nested
scopes, they are also enabled in interactive mode.

XXX The use of -i with -c "from __future__ import nested_scopes" is
not supported.  What's the point?

To support these changes, many function variants have been added to
pythonrun.c.  All the variants names end with Flags and they take an
extra PyCompilerFlags * argument.  It is possible that this complexity
will be eliminated in a future version of the interpreter in which
nested scopes are not optional.
2001-03-22 02:47:58 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 061d106a0f If a code object is compiled with nested scopes, define the CO_NESTED flag.
Add PyEval_GetNestedScopes() which returns a non-zero value if the
code for the current interpreter frame has CO_NESTED defined.
2001-03-22 02:32:48 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 66b0e9c2a7 Use PyObject_IsInstance() to check whether the first argument to an
unbound method is of the right type.  Hopefully this solves SF patch
#409355 (Meta-class inheritance problem); I have no easy way to test.
2001-03-21 19:17:22 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 220ae7c0bf Fix PyFrame_FastToLocals() and counterpart to deal with cells and
frees.  Note there doesn't seem to be any way to test LocalsToFast(),
because the instructions that trigger it are illegal in nested scopes
with free variables.

Fix allocation strategy for cells that are also formal parameters.
Instead of emitting LOAD_FAST / STORE_DEREF pairs for each parameter,
have the argument handling code in eval_code2() do the right thing.

A side-effect of this change is that cell variables that are also
arguments are listed at the front of co_cellvars in the order they
appear in the argument list.
2001-03-21 16:43:47 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 30c9f3991c Variety of small INC/DECREF patches that fix reported memory leaks
with free variables.  Thanks to Martin v. Loewis for finding two of
the problems.  This fixes SF buf 405583.

There is also a C API change: PyFrame_New() is reverting to its
pre-2.1 signature.  The change introduced by nested scopes was a
mistake.  XXX Is this okay between beta releases?

cell_clear(), the GC helper, must decref its reference to break
cycles.

frame_dealloc() must dealloc all cell vars and free vars in addition
to locals.

eval_code2() setup code must INCREF cells it copies out of the
closure.

The STORE_DEREF opcode implementation must DECREF the object it passes
to PyCell_Set().
2001-03-13 01:58:22 +00:00
Thomas Wouters fc93b0a81a Remove trailing comma from 'why_code' enum, which was introduced by the
continue-inside-try patch. Partly fixes SF bug #132597.
2001-02-16 11:52:31 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 8af6b83e61 When calling a PyCFunction that has METH_KEYWORDS defined, don't
create an empty dictionary if it is called without keyword args.  Just
pass NULL.

XXX I had believed that this caused weird errors, but the test suite
runs cleanly.
2001-02-09 23:23:20 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 2524d699f5 SF patch 103596 by Nick Mathewson: rause UnboundLocalError for
uninitialized free variables
2001-02-05 17:23:16 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 3faa52ecc4 Allow 'continue' inside 'try' clause
SF patch 102989 by Thomas Wouters
2001-02-01 22:48:12 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 483638c9a8 Undo recent change that banned using import to bind a global, as per
discussion on python-dev.  'from mod import *' is still banned except
at the module level.

Fix value for special NOOPT entry in symtable.  Initialze to 0 instead
of None, so that later uses of PyInt_AS_LONG() are valid.  (Bug
reported by Donn Cave.)

replace local REPR macros with PyObject_REPR in object.h
2001-02-01 20:20:45 +00:00
Tim Peters 1ff31f9534 SF bug #130532: newest CVS won't build on AIX.
Removed illegal redefinition of REPR macro; kept the one with the
argument name that isn't too easy to confuse with zero <wink>.
2001-01-31 01:16:47 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 2b724da8d9 Remove f_closure slot of frameobject and use f_localsplus instead.
This change eliminates an extra malloc/free when a frame with free
variables is created.  Any cell vars or free vars are stored in
f_localsplus after the locals and before the stack.

eval_code2() fills in the appropriate values after handling
initialization of locals.

To track the size the frame has an f_size member that tracks the total
size of f_localsplus. It used to be implicitly f_nlocals + f_stacksize.
2001-01-29 22:51:52 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 64949cb753 PEP 227 implementation
The majority of the changes are in the compiler.  The mainloop changes
primarily to implement the new opcodes and to pass a function's
closure to eval_code2().  Frames and functions got new slots to hold
the closure.

Include/compile.h
    Add co_freevars and co_cellvars slots to code objects.
    Update PyCode_New() to take freevars and cellvars as arguments
Include/funcobject.h
    Add func_closure slot to function objects.
    Add GetClosure()/SetClosure() functions (and corresponding
    macros) for getting at the closure.
Include/frameobject.h
    PyFrame_New() now takes a closure.
Include/opcode.h
    Add four new opcodes: MAKE_CLOSURE, LOAD_CLOSURE, LOAD_DEREF,
    STORE_DEREF.
    Remove comment about old requirement for opcodes to fit in 7
    bits.
compile.c
    Implement changes to code objects for co_freevars and co_cellvars.

    Modify symbol table to use st_cur_name (string object for the name
    of the current scope) and st_cur_children (list of nested blocks).
    Also define st_nested, which might more properly be called
    st_cur_nested.  Add several DEF_XXX flags to track def-use
    information for free variables.

    New or modified functions of note:
    com_make_closure(struct compiling *, PyCodeObject *)
        Emit LOAD_CLOSURE opcodes as needed to pass cells for free
        variables into nested scope.
    com_addop_varname(struct compiling *, int, char *)
        Emits opcodes for LOAD_DEREF and STORE_DEREF.
    get_ref_type(struct compiling *, char *name)
        Return NAME_CLOSURE if ref type is FREE or CELL
    symtable_load_symbols(struct compiling *)
        Decides what variables are cell or free based on def-use info.
        Can now raise SyntaxError if nested scopes are mixed with
        exec or from blah import *.
    make_scope_info(PyObject *, PyObject *, int, int)
        Helper functions for symtable scope stack.
    symtable_update_free_vars(struct symtable *)
        After a code block has been analyzed, it must check each of
        its children for free variables that are not defined in the
        block.  If a variable is free in a child and not defined in
        the parent, then it is defined by block the enclosing the
        current one or it is a global.  This does the right logic.
    symtable_add_use() is now a macro for symtable_add_def()
    symtable_assign(struct symtable *, node *)
        Use goto instead of for (;;)

    Fixed bug in symtable where name of keyword argument in function
    call was treated as assignment in the scope of the call site. Ex:
        def f():
            g(a=2) # a was considered a local of f

ceval.c
    eval_code2() now take one more argument, a closure.
    Implement LOAD_CLOSURE, LOAD_DEREF, STORE_DEREF, MAKE_CLOSURE>

    Also: When name error occurs for global variable, report that the
    name was global in the error mesage.

Objects/frameobject.c
    Initialize f_closure to be a tuple containing space for cellvars
    and freevars.  f_closure is NULL if neither are present.
Objects/funcobject.c
    Add support for func_closure.
Python/import.c
    Change the magic number.
Python/marshal.c
    Track changes to code objects.
2001-01-25 20:06:59 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton c862cf400f clearer error messages for apply() and "no locals" 2001-01-19 03:25:05 +00:00
Guido van Rossum ac7be6888b Rich comparisons fall-out:
- Use PyObject_RichCompare*() where possible: when comparing
  keyword arguments, in _PyEval_SliceIndex(), and of course in
  cmp_outcome().

Unrelated stuff:

- Removed all trailing whitespace.

- Folded some long lines.
2001-01-17 15:42:30 +00:00
Ka-Ping Yee 2057970601 This patch makes sure that the function name always appears in the error
message, and tries to make the messages more consistent and helpful when
the wrong number of arguments or duplicate keyword arguments are supplied.
Comes with more tests for test_extcall.py and and an update to an error
message in test/output/test_pyexpat.
2001-01-15 22:14:16 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 18d4d8f71d Two changes to from...import:
1) "from M import X" now works even if M is not a real module; it's
   basically a getattr() operation with AttributeError exceptions
   changed into ImportError.

2) "from M import *" now looks for M.__all__ to decide which names to
   import; if M.__all__ doesn't exist, it uses M.__dict__.keys() but
   filters out names starting with '_' as before.  Whether or not
   __all__ exists, there's no restriction on the type of M.
2001-01-12 16:24:03 +00:00
Moshe Zadka f5df3834eb Fixed bugs noted by Greg Stein
* x wasn't initialized to NULL
* Did not DECREF result from displayhook function
2001-01-11 11:55:37 +00:00
Moshe Zadka f68f2fec7d Implementation of PEP-0217.
This closes the PEP, and patch 103170
2001-01-11 05:41:27 +00:00
Charles G. Waldman eec72a7fd9 Add missing Py_DECREF in fast_cfunction. Partial fix for SF bug
#127699.
2001-01-10 22:11:59 +00:00
Fred Drake 1a7aab70d1 When a PyCFunction that takes only positional parameters is called with
an empty keywords dictionary (via apply() or the extended call syntax),
the keywords dict should be ignored.  If the keywords dict is not empty,
TypeError should be raised.  (Between the restructuring of the call
machinery and this patch, an empty dict in this situation would trigger
a SystemError via PyErr_BadInternalCall().)

Added regression tests to detect errors for this.
2001-01-04 22:33:02 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 5282044be7 Revised implementation of CALL_FUNCTION and friends.
More revision still needed.

Much of the code that was in the mainloop was moved to a series of
helper functions.  PyEval_CallObjectWithKeywords was split into two
parts.  The first part now only does argument handling.  The second
part is now named call_object and delegates the call to a
call_(function,method,etc.) helper.

XXX The call_XXX helper functions should be replaced with tp_call
functions for the respective types.

The CALL_FUNCTION implementation contains three kinds of optimization:
1. fast_cfunction and fast_function are called when the arguments on
   the stack can be passed directly to eval_code2() without copying
   them into a tuple.
2. PyCFunction objects are dispatched immediately, because they are
   presumed to occur more often than anything else.
3. Bound methods are dispatched inline.  The method object contains a
   pointer to the function object that will be called.  The function
   is called from within the mainloop, which may allow optimization #1
   to be used, too.

The extened call implementation -- f(*args) and f(**kw) -- are
implemented as a separate case in the mainloop.  This allows the
common case of normal function calls to execute without wasting time
on checks for extended calls, although it does introduce a small
amount of code duplication.

Also, the unused final argument of eval_code2() was removed.  This is
probably the last trace of the access statement :-).
2001-01-03 23:52:36 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 6b4ec5135b Fix for SF bug #117241
When a method is called with no regular arguments and * args, defer
the first arg is subclass check until after the * args have been
expanded.

N.B. The CALL_FUNCTION implementation is getting really hairy; should
review it to see if it can be simplified.
2000-10-30 17:15:20 +00:00
Fred Drake 661ea26b3d Ka-Ping Yee <ping@lfw.org>:
Changes to error messages to increase consistency & clarity.

This (mostly) closes SourceForge patch #101839.
2000-10-24 19:57:45 +00:00
Thomas Wouters 0be483fd4d Do a better job at staying on-screen :P (Sorry, it's late here.) I'm
assuming here that the ANSI-C adjacent-string-concatenation technique is
allowable, now that Python requires an ANSI C compiler.
2000-10-11 23:26:11 +00:00
Thomas Wouters 8fb62a2e9a Adjust debugging code in the implementation of the DUP_TOPX bytecode, use
Py_FatalError() instead, and clarify the message somewhat. As discussed on
python-dev.
2000-10-11 23:20:09 +00:00
Fred Drake 48fba733b9 Remove the last gcc -Wall warning about possible use of an uninitialized
variable.  w should be initialized before entering the bytecode
interpretation loop since we only need one initialization to satisfy the
compiler.
2000-10-11 13:54:07 +00:00
Tim Peters 35ba689cab Attempt to fix bogus gcc -Wall warnings reported by Marc-Andre Lemburg,
by making the DUP_TOPX code utterly straightforward.  This also gets rid
of all normal-case internal DUP_TOPX if/branches, and allows replacing one
POP() with TOP() in each case, so is a good idea regardless.
2000-10-11 07:04:49 +00:00
Fred Drake d5fadf75e4 Rationalize use of limits.h, moving the inclusion to Python.h.
Add definitions of INT_MAX and LONG_MAX to pyport.h.
Remove includes of limits.h and conditional definitions of INT_MAX
and LONG_MAX elsewhere.

This closes SourceForge patch #101659 and bug #115323.
2000-09-26 05:46:01 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg d1ba443206 This patch adds a new Python C API called PyString_AsStringAndSize()
which implements the automatic conversion from Unicode to a string
object using the default encoding.

The new API is then put to use to have eval() and exec accept
Unicode objects as code parameter. This closes bugs #110924
and #113890.

As side-effect, the traditional C APIs PyString_Size() and
PyString_AsString() will also accept Unicode objects as
parameters.
2000-09-19 21:04:18 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 8586991099 REMOVED all CWI, CNRI and BeOpen copyright markings.
This should match the situation in the 1.6b1 tree.
2000-09-01 23:29:29 +00:00
Vladimir Marangozov 7bd25be508 Cosmetics on Py_Get/SetRecursionLimit (for the style guide) 2000-09-01 11:07:19 +00:00
Tim Peters d320c348f8 Revert removal of void from function definition. Guido sez I can take it
out again after we complete switching to C++ <wink>.  Thanks to Greg Stein
for hitting me.
2000-09-01 03:34:26 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 349ff6f7e2 Set the recursion limit to 1000 -- 2500 was not enough, let's be
conservative.
2000-09-01 01:52:08 +00:00
Tim Peters 51de6906be Supply missing prototypes for new Py_{Get,Set}RecursionLimit; fixes compiler wngs;
un-analize Get's definition ("void" is needed only in declarations, not defns, &
is generally considered bad style in the latter).
2000-09-01 00:01:58 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton ee5adfbae6 add user-modifiable recursion_limit
ceval.c:
    define recurion_limit (static), default value is 2500
    define Py_GetRecursionLimit and Py_SetRecursionLimit
    raise RuntimeError if limit is exceeded
PC/config.h:
    remove plat-specific definition
sysmodule.c:
    add sys.(get|set)recursionlimit
2000-08-31 19:23:01 +00:00
Paul Prescod e68140dd3c Better error message with UnboundLocalError 2000-08-30 20:25:01 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 093abe005d eval_code2(): Guido provides this patch for his suggested elaboration
of extended print.  If the file object being printed to is None, then
sys.stdout is used.
2000-08-29 04:56:13 +00:00
Thomas Wouters dd13e4f91f Replace the run-time 'future-bytecode-stream-inspection' hack to find out
how 'import' was called with a compiletime mechanism: create either a tuple
of the import arguments, or None (in the case of a normal import), add it to
the code-block constants, and load it onto the stack before calling
IMPORT_NAME.
2000-08-27 20:31:27 +00:00
Guido van Rossum fee3a2dd8c Charles Waldman's patch to reinitialize the interpreter lock after a
fork.  This solves the test_fork1 problem.  (ceval.c, signalmodule.c,
intrcheck.c)

SourceForge: [ Patch #101226 ] make threading fork-safe
2000-08-27 17:34:07 +00:00
Thomas Wouters 434d0828d8 Support for three-token characters (**=, >>=, <<=) which was written by
Michael Hudson, and support in general for the augmented assignment syntax.
The graminit.c patch is large!
2000-08-24 20:11:32 +00:00
Fred Drake ef8ace3a6f Charles G. Waldman <cgw@fnal.gov>:
Add the EXTENDED_ARG opcode to the virtual machine, allowing 32-bit
arguments to opcodes instead of being forced to stick to the 16-bit
limit.  This is especially useful for machine-generated code, which
can be too long for the SET_LINENO parameter to fit into 16 bits.

This closes the implementation portion of SourceForge patch #100893.
2000-08-24 00:32:09 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 23c9ec87cf PEP 214, Extended print Statement, has been accepted by the BDFL.
eval_code2(): Implement new bytecodes PRINT_ITEM_TO and
PRINT_NEWLINE_TO, as per accepted SF patch #100970.

Also update graminit.c based on related Grammar/Grammar changes.
2000-08-21 15:44:01 +00:00
Thomas Wouters 0400515ff0 Fix the bug Sjoerd Mullender discovered, where find_from_args() wasn't
trying hard enough to find out what the arguments to an import were. There
is no test-case for this bug, yet, but this is what it looked like:

from encodings import cp1006, cp1026
ImportError: cannot import name cp1026

'__import__' was called with only the first name in the 'arguments' list.
2000-08-20 14:01:53 +00:00
Fred Drake 04e654a63c Remove a couple of warnings turned up by "gcc -Wall". 2000-08-18 19:53:25 +00:00
Thomas Wouters 5215225ea1 Apply SF patch #101135, adding 'import module as m' and 'from module import
name as n'. By doing some twists and turns, "as" is not a reserved word.

There is a slight change in semantics for 'from module import name' (it will
now honour the 'global' keyword) but only in cases that are explicitly
undocumented.
2000-08-17 22:55:00 +00:00
Thomas Wouters 0be5aab04d Merge UNPACK_LIST and UNPACK_TUPLE into a single UNPACK_SEQUENCE, since they
did the same anyway.

I'm not sure what to do with Tools/compiler/compiler/* -- that isn't part of
distutils, is it ? Should it try to be compatible with old bytecode version ?
2000-08-11 22:15:52 +00:00
Moshe Zadka aa39a7edf7 Initialized opcode and oparg to silence a gcc -Wall warning. 2000-08-07 06:34:45 +00:00
Thomas Wouters 334fb8985b Use 'void' directly instead of the ANY #define, now that all code is ANSI C.
Leave the actual #define in for API compatibility.
2000-07-25 12:56:38 +00:00
Thomas Wouters f70ef4f860 Mass ANSIfication of function definitions. Doesn't cover all 'extern'
declarations yet, those come later.
2000-07-22 18:47:25 +00:00
Thomas Wouters 7e47402264 Spelling fixes supplied by Rob W. W. Hooft. All these are fixes in either
comments, docstrings or error messages. I fixed two minor things in
test_winreg.py ("didn't" -> "Didn't" and "Didnt" -> "Didn't").

There is a minor style issue involved: Guido seems to have preferred English
grammar (behaviour, honour) in a couple places. This patch changes that to
American, which is the more prominent style in the source. I prefer English
myself, so if English is preferred, I'd be happy to supply a patch myself ;)
2000-07-16 12:04:32 +00:00
Jack Jansen cbf630f0a9 Include macglue.h for some function prototypes, and renamed a few
mac-specific functions to have a PyMac_ name.
2000-07-11 21:59:16 +00:00
Tim Peters dbd9ba6a6c Nuke all remaining occurrences of Py_PROTO and Py_FPROTO. 2000-07-09 03:09:57 +00:00
Guido van Rossum ffcc3813d8 Change copyright notice - 2nd try. 2000-06-30 23:58:06 +00:00
Guido van Rossum fd71b9e9d4 Change copyright notice. 2000-06-30 23:50:40 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 582acece2e Trent Mick's Win64 changes: size_t vs. int or long; also some overflow
tests.
2000-06-28 22:07:35 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 20c6add7ff Trent Mick:
Change static slice_index() to extern _PyEval_SliceIndex() (with
different return value interpretation: 0 for failure, 1 for success).
2000-05-08 14:06:50 +00:00
Guido van Rossum cc229ea76f Add useless 'return 1' to prtrace() to shut up VC++. 2000-05-04 00:55:17 +00:00
Guido van Rossum b18618dab7 Vladimir Marangozov's long-awaited malloc restructuring.
For more comments, read the patches@python.org archives.
For documentation read the comments in mymalloc.h and objimpl.h.

(This is not exactly what Vladimir posted to the patches list; I've
made a few changes, and Vladimir sent me a fix in private email for a
problem that only occurs in debug mode.  I'm also holding back on his
change to main.c, which seems unnecessary to me.)
2000-05-03 23:44:39 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 25826c93c4 Charles Waldman writes:
"""
Running "test_extcall" repeatedly results in memory leaks.

One of these can't be fixed (at least not easily!), it happens since
this code:

def saboteur(**kw):
    kw['x'] = locals()
d = {}
saboteur(a=1, **d)

creates a circular reference - d['x']['d']==d

The others are due to some missing decrefs in ceval.c, fixed by the
patch attached below.

Note:  I originally wrote this without the "goto", just adding the
missing decref's where needed.  But I think the goto is justified in
keeping the executable code size of ceval as small as possible.
"""

[I think the circular reference is more like kw['x']['kw'] == kw. --GvR]
2000-04-21 21:17:39 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 5db862dd0c Skip Montanaro: add string precisions to calls to PyErr_Format
to prevent possible buffer overruns.
2000-04-10 12:46:51 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 7a5b796322 Thomas Heller fixes a typo in an error message. 2000-03-31 13:52:29 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 387b1011a1 rename args variable in CALL_FUNCTION to callargs (avoids name
override)

add missing DECREFs in error handling code of CALL_FUNCTION
2000-03-31 01:22:54 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 074c3e62d1 Two fixes for extended call syntax:
If a non-tuple sequence is passed as the *arg, convert it to a tuple
before checking its length.
If named keyword arguments are used in combination with **kwargs, make
a copy of kwargs before inserting the new keys.
2000-03-30 23:55:31 +00:00
Barry Warsaw b2ba9d8963 eval_code2(): Oops, in the last checkin, we shouldn't check for
PyErr_Occurred(), just set x=NULL and break.  Oh, and make Jeremy stop
nagging me about the "special" indentation for this block.
2000-03-29 18:36:49 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 4961ef7086 eval_code2(): In the extended calling syntax opcodes, you must check
the return value of PySequence_Length().  If an exception occurred,
the returned length will be -1.  Make sure this doesn't get obscurred,
and that the bogus length isn't used.
2000-03-29 18:30:03 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 7690151c7e slightly modified version of Greg Ewing's extended call syntax patch
executive summary:
Instead of typing 'apply(f, args, kwargs)' you can type 'f(*arg, **kwargs)'.
Some file-by-file details follow.

Grammar/Grammar:
    simplify varargslist, replacing '*' '*' with '**'
    add * & ** options to arglist

Include/opcode.h & Lib/dis.py:
    define three new opcodes
        CALL_FUNCTION_VAR
        CALL_FUNCTION_KW
        CALL_FUNCTION_VAR_KW

Python/ceval.c:
    extend TypeError "keyword parameter redefined" message to include
        the name of the offending keyword
    reindent CALL_FUNCTION using four spaces
    add handling of sequences and dictionaries using extend calls
    fix function import_from to use PyErr_Format
2000-03-28 23:49:17 +00:00
Andrew M. Kuchling 2194b165db Allow using long integers as slice indexes 2000-02-23 22:18:48 +00:00
Fred Drake 145c26e3d3 Remove comment that Guido agree's doesn't make sense:
PyEval_EvalCode() is *not* a "backward compatible interface", it's the
one to use!
2000-02-21 17:59:48 +00:00
Guido van Rossum a400d8a96d Fix a bug in exec_statement() noted incidentally by Tim Peters in
PR#175 -- when exec is passed a code object, it didn't sync the locals
from the dictionary back into their fast representation.

Also took the time to remove some repetitive code there and to do the
syncing even when an exception is raised (since a partial effect
should still be synced).
2000-01-12 22:45:54 +00:00
Guido van Rossum ba98a42a0f Change the last PyErr_Format %s format to %.400s. 1999-11-15 19:29:33 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 25da5bebd8 Fix PR117. The error message is "keywords must be strings". Perhaps
not as descriptive as what Barry suggests, but this also catches the
(in my opinion important) case where some other C code besides apply()
constructs a kwdict that doesn't have the right format.  All the other
possibilities of getting it wrong (non-dict, wrong keywords etc) are
already caught so this makes sense to check here.
1999-10-26 00:12:20 +00:00
Barry Warsaw f6202635f9 call_trace(): A fix for PR#73, if an exception occurred in the
tracefunc (or profilefunc -- we're not sure which), zap the global
trace and profile funcs so that we can't get into recursive loop when
instantiating the resulting class based exception.
1999-09-08 16:26:33 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 8746082175 Patch by Tim Peters:
Introduce a new builtin exception, UnboundLocalError, raised when ceval.c
tries to retrieve or delete a local name that isn't bound to a value.
Currently raises NameError, which makes this behavior a FAQ since the same
error is raised for "missing" global names too:  when the user has a global
of the same name as the unbound local, NameError makes no sense to them.
Even in the absence of shadowing, knowing whether a bogus name is local or
global is a real aid to quick understanding.

Example:

D:\src\PCbuild>type local.py
x = 42

def f():
    print x
    x = 13
    return x

f()

D:\src\PCbuild>python local.py
Traceback (innermost last):
  File "local.py", line 8, in ?
    f()
  File "local.py", line 4, in f
    print x
UnboundLocalError: x

D:\src\PCbuild>

Note that UnboundLocalError is a subclass of NameError, for compatibility
with existing class-exception code that may be trying to catch this as a
NameError.  Unfortunately, I see no way to make this wholly compatible
with -X (see comments in bltinmodule.c):  under -X, [UnboundLocalError
is an alias for NameError --GvR].

[The ceval.c patch differs slightly from the second version that Tim
submitted; I decided not to raise UnboundLocalError for DELETE_NAME,
only for DELETE_LOCAL.  DELETE_NAME is only generated at the module
level, and since at that level a NameError is raised for referencing
an undefined name, it should also be raised for deleting one.]
1999-06-22 14:47:32 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 2571cc8bf5 Changes by Mark Hammond for Windows CE. Mostly of the form
#ifdef DONT_HAVE_header_H ... #endif around #include <header.h>.
1999-04-07 16:07:23 +00:00
Guido van Rossum eb894ebd0a Always test for an error return (usually NULL or -1) without setting
an exception.
1999-03-09 16:16:45 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 65d5b5763c Thanks to Chris Herborth, the thread primitives now have proper Py*
names in the source code (they already had those for the linker,
through some smart macros; but the source still had the old, un-Py names).
1998-12-21 19:32:43 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 885553e8d3 Use PyThreadState_GET() macro. 1998-12-21 18:33:30 +00:00
Guido van Rossum cf183acf15 Use PyInt_AS_LONG macro instead of explicit inlining. 1998-12-04 18:51:36 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 014518f66c Whoops! One the "redundant" initializations removed by Vladimir in
the previous patch wasn't -- there was a path through the code that
bypassed all initializations.  Thanks to Just for reporting the bug!
1998-11-23 21:09:51 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 50cd34888b Remove some redundant initializations -- patch by Vladimir Marangozov. 1998-11-17 17:02:51 +00:00
Guido van Rossum d076c73cc8 Changes to support other object types besides strings
as the code string of code objects, as long as they support
the (readonly) buffer interface.  By Greg Stein.
1998-10-07 19:42:25 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 49b560698b Renamed thread.h to pythread.h. 1998-10-01 20:42:43 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 2d1ad39b81 Add the type of the object to the error message about calling a non-function. 1998-08-25 18:16:54 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 5053efc2c4 In BUILD_LIST, use PyList_SET_ITEM() instead of PyList_SetItem(); and
get rid of redundant error check.
1998-08-04 15:27:50 +00:00
Guido van Rossum fa00e958fd # In case BINARY_SUBSCR, use proper PyList_GET* macros instead of inlining. 1998-07-08 15:02:37 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 7859f87fdb Marc-Andre Lemburg's patch to support instance methods with other
callable objects than regular Pythonm functions as their im_func.
1998-07-08 14:58:16 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 7e33c6e896 Moved cmp_member() to abstract.c, as PySequence_Contains() [with
swapped arguments].

Also make sure that no use of a function pointer gotten from a
tp_as_sequence or tp_as_mapping structure is made without checking it
for NULL first.
1998-05-22 00:52:29 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 234e260d5e Since PyDict_GetItem() can't raise an exception any more, there's no
need to call PyErr_Clear() when it returns NULL.
1998-05-14 02:16:20 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 2e4c899e2d DELETE_FAST should issue an exception when the local variable is undefined. 1998-05-12 20:27:36 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 730806d3d9 Make new gcc -Wall happy 1998-04-10 22:27:42 +00:00
Guido van Rossum d295f120ae Make first raise argument optional 1998-04-09 21:39:57 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 8f18320270 Last-minute fix for Jim H: don't die after del sys.stdout 1997-12-31 05:53:15 +00:00
Guido van Rossum aa06b0ede5 Plug the most annoying recursive printing problem -- reset '_' to None
before printing and set it to the printed variable *after* printing
(and only when printing is successful).
1997-12-26 22:15:57 +00:00
Guido van Rossum df9db1ea18 Give more detailed error message when the argument count isn't right. 1997-11-19 16:05:40 +00:00
Guido van Rossum dfed725e2c Fix memory leak in exec statement with code object -- the None returned
by PyEval_EvalCode() on success was never DECREF'ed.

Fix by Bernhard Herzog.
1997-11-11 16:29:38 +00:00
Guido van Rossum b74eca9349 Change PyEval_SaveThread() and PyEval_RestoreThread() to always do the
tstate swapping.  Only the acquiring and releasing of the lock is
conditional (twice, under ``#ifdef WITH_THREAD'' and inside ``if
(interpreter_lock)'').
1997-09-30 22:03:16 +00:00
Guido van Rossum aee0bad0a5 First part of package support.
This doesn't yet support "import a.b.c" or "from a.b.c import x", but
it does recognize directories.  When importing a directory, it
initializes __path__ to a list containing the directory name, and
loads the __init__ module if found.

The (internal) find_module() and load_module() functions are
restructured so that they both also handle built-in and frozen modules
and Mac resources (and directories of course).  The imp module's
find_module() and (new) load_module() also have this functionality.
Moreover, imp unconditionally defines constants for all module types,
and has two more new functions: find_module_in_package() and
find_module_in_directory().

There's also a new API function, PyImport_ImportModuleEx(), which
takes all four __import__ arguments (name, globals, locals, fromlist).
The last three may be NULL.  This is currently the same as
PyImport_ImportModule() but in the future it will be able to do
relative dotted-path imports.

Other changes:

- bltinmodule.c: in __import__, call PyImport_ImportModuleEx().

- ceval.c: always pass the fromlist to __import__, even if it is a C
function, so PyImport_ImportModuleEx() is useful.

- getmtime.c: the function has a second argument, the FILE*, on which
it applies fstat().  According to Sjoerd this is much faster.  The
first (pathname) argument is ignored, but remains for backward
compatibility (so the Mac version still works without changes).

By cleverly combining the new imp functionality, the full support for
dotted names in Python (mini.py, not checked in) is now about 7K,
lavishly commented (vs. 14K for ni plus 11K for ihooks, also lavishly
commented).

Good night!
1997-09-05 07:33:22 +00:00
Guido van Rossum d7ed683a7e Inline PyObject_CallObject (Marc-Andre Lemburg). 1997-08-30 15:02:50 +00:00
Barry Warsaw eaedc7ce32 eval_code2(), set_exc_info(): Call PyErr_NormalizeException() the
former rather than the latter, since PyErr_NormalizeException takes
PyObject** and I didn't want to change the interface for set_exc_info
(but I did want the changes propagated to eval_code2!).
1997-08-28 22:36:40 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 910105515e unpack_sequence(): In finally clause, watch out for Py_DECREF
evaluating its arguments twice.
1997-08-25 22:30:51 +00:00
Barry Warsaw e42b18f9d1 eval_code2(): collapsed the implementations of UNPACK_TUPLE and
UNPACK_LIST byte codes and added a third code path that allows
generalized sequence unpacking.  Now both syntaxes:

    a, b, c = seq
    [a, b, c] = seq

can be used to unpack any sequence with the exact right number of
items.

unpack_sequence(): out-lined implementation of generalized sequence
unpacking.  tuple and list unpacking are still inlined.
1997-08-25 22:13:04 +00:00
Barry Warsaw 4249f54b28 cmp_exception gets promoted (essentially) to the C API function
PyErr_GivenExceptionMatches().

set_exc_info(): make sure to normalize exceptions.

do_raise(): Use PyErr_NormalizeException() if type is a class.

loop_subscript(): Use PyErr_ExceptionMatches() instead of raw pointer
compare for PyExc_IndexError.
1997-08-22 21:26:19 +00:00
Guido van Rossum cd649654d7 Reverse the search order for the Don Beaudry hook so that the first
class wins.  Makes more sense.
1997-08-22 16:56:16 +00:00