This commit changes the parsing of f-string expressions with the new parser. The parser gets pre-fed with the location of the expression itself (not the f-string, which was what we were doing before). This allows us to completely skip the shifting of the AST nodes after the parsing is completed..
(cherry picked from commit 1f0f4abb11)
Prefix the error message with `fstring: `, when parsing an f-string expression throws a `SyntaxError`.
(cherry picked from commit 2e0a920e9e)
Co-authored-by: Lysandros Nikolaou <lisandrosnik@gmail.com>
`GET_INVALID_TARGET` might unexpectedly return `NULL`, which if not
caught will cause a SEGFAULT. Therefore, this commit introduces a new
inline function `RAISE_SYNTAX_ERROR_INVALID_TARGET` that always
checks for `GET_INVALID_TARGET` returning NULL and can be used in
the grammar, replacing the long C ternary operation used till now.
(cherry picked from commit 6c4e0bd974)
Automerge-Triggered-By: @pablogsal
* bpo-40334: Produce better error messages on invalid targets (GH-20106)
The following error messages get produced:
- `cannot delete ...` for invalid `del` targets
- `... is an illegal 'for' target` for invalid targets in for
statements
- `... is an illegal 'with' target` for invalid targets in
with statements
Additionally, a few `cut`s were added in various places before the
invocation of the `invalid_*` rule, in order to speed things
up.
Co-authored-by: Pablo Galindo <Pablogsal@gmail.com>
(cherry picked from commit 01ece63d42)
On Windows, GH-include "pyerrors.h" no longer defines "snprintf" and
"vsnprintf" macros.
PyOS_snprintf() and PyOS_vsnprintf() should be used to get portable
behavior.
Replace snprintf() calls with PyOS_snprintf() and replace vsnprintf()
calls with PyOS_vsnprintf().
(cherry picked from commit e822e37946)
Co-authored-by: Victor Stinner <vstinner@python.org>
A line with only a line continuation character should be considered
a blank line at tokenizer level so that only a single NEWLINE token
gets emitted. The old parser was working around the issue, but the
new parser threw a `SyntaxError` for valid input. For example,
an empty line following a line continuation character was interpreted
as a `SyntaxError`.
Co-authored-by: Pablo Galindo <Pablogsal@gmail.com>
(cherry picked from commit 896f4cf63f)
Co-authored-by: Lysandros Nikolaou <lisandrosnik@gmail.com>
* bpo-40826: Fix GIL usage in PyOS_Readline() (GH-20579)
Fix GIL usage in PyOS_Readline(): lock the GIL to set an exception.
Pass tstate to my_fgets() and _PyOS_WindowsConsoleReadline(). Cleanup
these functions.
(cherry picked from commit c353764fd5)
* bpo-40826: Add _PyOS_InterruptOccurred(tstate) function (GH-20599)
my_fgets() now calls _PyOS_InterruptOccurred(tstate) to check for
pending signals, rather calling PyOS_InterruptOccurred().
my_fgets() is called with the GIL released, whereas
PyOS_InterruptOccurred() must be called with the GIL held.
test_repl: use text=True and avoid SuppressCrashReport in
test_multiline_string_parsing().
Fix my_fgets() on Windows: fgets(fp) does crash if fileno(fp) is closed.
(cherry picked from commit fa7ab6aa0f)
Heap types now always visit the type in tp_traverse. See added docs for details.
This reverts commit 0169d3003b.
Automerge-Triggered-By: @encukou
(cherry picked from commit 1cf15af9a6)
Co-authored-by: Pablo Galindo <Pablogsal@gmail.com>
When a `SyntaxError` in the expression part of a fstring is found,
the filename attribute of the `SyntaxError` is always `<fstring>`.
With this commit, it gets changed to always have the name of the file
the fstring resides in.
Co-authored-by: Pablo Galindo <Pablogsal@gmail.com>.
(cherry picked from commit f7b1e46156)
The error message, generated for a non-parenthesized generator expression
in function calls, was still the generic `invalid syntax`, when the generator expression wasn't appearing as the first argument in the call. With this patch, even on input like `f(a, b, c for c in d, e)`, the correct error message gets produced.
(cherry picked from commit ae14583302)
Co-authored-by: Lysandros Nikolaou <lisandrosnik@gmail.com>
- Switch from getopt to argparse.
- Removed the limitation of not being able to produce both C and H simultaneously.
This will make it run faster since it parses the asdl definition once and uses the generated tree to generate both the header and the C source.
The following improvements are implemented in this commit:
- `p->error_indicator` is set, in case malloc or realloc fail.
- Avoid memory leaks in the case that realloc fails.
- Call `PyErr_NoMemory()` instead of `PyErr_Format()`, because it requires no memory.
Co-authored-by: Pablo Galindo <Pablogsal@gmail.com>
This commit fixes the new parser to disallow invalid targets in the
following scenarios:
- Augmented assignments must only accept a single target (Name,
Attribute or Subscript), but no tuples or lists.
- `except` clauses should only accept a single `Name` as a target.
Co-authored-by: Pablo Galindo <Pablogsal@gmail.com>
This commit fixes SyntaxError locations when the caret is not displayed,
by doing the following:
- `col_number` always gets set to the location of the offending
node/expr. When no caret is to be displayed, this gets achieved
by setting the object holding the error line to None.
- Introduce a new function `_PyPegen_raise_error_known_location`,
which can be called, when an arbitrary `lineno`/`col_offset`
needs to be passed. This function then gets used in the grammar
(through some new macros and inline functions) so that SyntaxError
locations of the new parser match that of the old.
With the new parser, the error message contains always the trailing
newlines, causing the comparison of the repr of the error messages
in codeop to fail. This commit makes the new parser mirror the old parser's
behaviour regarding trailing newlines.
This is for the C generator:
- Disallow rule and variable names starting with `_`
- Rename most local variable names generated by the parser to start with `_`
Exceptions:
- Renaming `p` to `_p` will be a separate PR
- There are still some names that might clash, e.g.
- anything starting with `Py`
- C reserved words (`if` etc.)
- Macros like `EXTRA` and `CHECK`
When parsing something like `f(g()=2)`, where the name of a default arg
is not a NAME, but an arbitrary expression, a specialised error message
is emitted.
When parsing a string with an invalid escape, the old parser used to
point to the beginning of the invalid string. This commit changes the new
parser to match that behaviour, since it's currently pointing to the
end of the string (or to be more precise, to the beginning of the next
token).