Commit Graph

971 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tim Peters eb28ef209e New collision resolution scheme: no polynomials, simpler, faster, less
code, less memory.  Tests have uncovered no drawbacks.  Christian and
Vladimir are the other two people who have burned many brain cells on the
dict code in recent years, and they like the approach too, so I'm checking
it in without further ado.
2001-06-02 05:27:19 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 9cea41c195 fix bogus indentation 2001-05-29 17:13:15 +00:00
Thomas Wouters 0dcea5973d _PyTuple_Resize: guard against PyTuple_New() returning NULL, using Tim's
suggestion (modulo style).
2001-05-29 07:58:45 +00:00
Tim Peters 4324aa3572 Cruft cleanup: Removed the unused last_is_sticky argument from the internal
_PyTuple_Resize().
2001-05-28 22:30:08 +00:00
Thomas Wouters 6a922372ad _PyTuple_Resize: take into account the empty tuple. There can be only one.
Instead of raising a SystemError, just create a new tuple of the desired
size.

This fixes (at least) SF bug #420343.
2001-05-28 13:11:02 +00:00
Tim Peters 15d4929ae4 Implement an old idea of Christian Tismer's: use polynomial division
instead of multiplication to generate the probe sequence.  The idea is
recorded in Python-Dev for Dec 2000, but that version is prone to rare
infinite loops.

The value is in getting *all* the bits of the hash code to participate;
and, e.g., this speeds up querying every key in a dict with keys
 [i << 16 for i in range(20000)] by a factor of 500.  Should be equally
valuable in any bad case where the high-order hash bits were getting
ignored.

Also wrote up some of the motivations behind Python's ever-more-subtle
hash table strategy.
2001-05-27 07:39:22 +00:00
Tim Peters 1af03e98d9 Change list.extend() error msgs and NEWS to reflect that list.extend()
now takes any iterable argument, not only sequences.

NEEDS DOC CHANGES -- but I don't think we settled on a concise way to
say this stuff.
2001-05-26 19:37:54 +00:00
Tim Peters 442914d265 Cruft cleanup: removed the #ifdef'ery in support of compiling to allow
multi-argument list.append(1, 2, 3) (as opposed to .append((1,2,3))).
2001-05-26 05:50:03 +00:00
Tim Peters 65b8b84839 roundupsize() and friends: fiddle over-allocation strategy for list
resizing.

Accurate timings are impossible on my Win98SE box, but this is obviously
faster even on this box for reasonable list.append() cases.  I give
credit for this not to the resizing strategy but to getting rid of integer
multiplication and divsion (in favor of shifting) when computing the
rounded-up size.

For unreasonable list.append() cases, Win98SE now displays linear behavior
for one-at-time appends up to a list with about 35 million elements.  Then
it dies with a MemoryError, due to fatally fragmented *address space*
(there's plenty of VM available, but by this point Win9X has broken user
space into many distinct heaps none of which has enough contiguous space
left to resize the list, and for whatever reason Win9x isn't coalescing
the dead heaps).  Before the patch it got a MemoryError for the same
reason, but once the list reached about 2 million elements.

Haven't yet tried on Win2K but have high hopes extreme list.append()
will be much better behaved now (NT & Win2K didn't fragment address space,
but suffered obvious quadratic-time behavior before as lists got large).

For other systems I'm relying on common sense:  replacing integer * and /
by << and >> can't plausibly hurt, the number of function calls hasn't
changed, and the total operation count for reasonably small lists is about
the same (while the operations are cheaper now).
2001-05-26 05:28:40 +00:00
Martin v. Löwis cd35306a25 Patch #424335: Implement string_richcompare, remove string_compare.
Use new _PyString_Eq in lookdict_string.
2001-05-24 16:56:35 +00:00
Tim Peters f8a548c23c dictresize(): Rebuild small tables if there are any dummies, not just if
they're entirely full.  Not a question of correctness, but of temporarily
misplaced common sense.
2001-05-24 16:26:40 +00:00
Tim Peters 0c6010be75 Jack Jansen hit a bug in the new dict code, reported on python-dev.
dictresize() was too aggressive about never ever resizing small dicts.
If a small dict is entirely full, it needs to rebuild it despite that
it won't actually resize it, in order to purge old dummy entries thus
creating at least one virgin slot (lookdict assumes at least one such
exists).

Also took the opportunity to add some high-level comments to dictresize.
2001-05-23 23:33:57 +00:00
Fred Drake 0c23231f6e Remove unused variable. 2001-05-22 22:36:52 +00:00
Tim Peters dea48ec581 SF patch #425242: Patch which "inlines" small dictionaries.
The idea is Marc-Andre Lemburg's, the implementation is Tim's.
Add a new ma_smalltable member to dictobjects, an embedded vector of
MINSIZE (8) dictentry structs.  Short course is that this lets us avoid
additional malloc(s) for dicts with no more than 5 entries.

The changes are widespread but mostly small.

Long course:  WRT speed, all scalar operations (getitem, setitem, delitem)
on non-empty dicts benefit from no longer needing NULL-pointer checks
(ma_table is never NULL anymore).  Bulk operations (copy, update, resize,
clearing slots during dealloc) benefit in some cases from now looping
on the ma_fill count rather than on ma_size, but that was an unexpected
benefit:  the original reason to loop on ma_fill was to let bulk
operations on empty dicts end quickly (since the NULL-pointer checks
went away, empty dicts aren't special-cased any more).

Special considerations:

For dicts that remain empty, this change is a lose on two counts:
the dict object contains 8 new dictentry slots now that weren't
needed before, and dict object creation also spends time memset'ing
these doomed-to-be-unsused slots to NULLs.

For dicts with one or two entries that never get larger than 2, it's
a mix:  a malloc()/free() pair is no longer needed, and the 2-entry case
gets to use 8 slots (instead of 4) thus decreasing the chance of
collision.  Against that, dict object creation spends time memset'ing
4 slots that aren't strictly needed in this case.

For dicts with 3 through 5 entries that never get larger than 5, it's a
pure win:  the dict is created with all the space they need, and they
never need to resize.  Before they suffered two malloc()/free() calls,
plus 1 dict resize, to get enough space.  In addition, the 8-slot
table they ended with consumed more memory overall, because of the
hidden overhead due to the additional malloc.

For dicts with 6 or more entries, the ma_smalltable member is wasted
space, but then these are large(r) dicts so 8 slots more or less doesn't
make much difference.  They still benefit all the time from removing
ubiquitous dynamic null-pointer checks, and get a small benefit (but
relatively smaller the larger the dict) from not having to do two
mallocs, two frees, and a resize on the way *to* getting their sixth
entry.

All in all it appears a small but definite general win, with larger
benefits in specific cases.  It's especially nice that it allowed to
get rid of several branches, gotos and labels, and overall made the
code smaller.
2001-05-22 20:40:22 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 5b021848ac file_getiter(): make iter(file) be equivalent to file.xreadlines().
This should be faster.

This means:

(1) "for line in file:" won't work if the xreadlines module can't be
    imported.

(2) The body of "for line in file:" shouldn't use the file directly;
    the effects (e.g. of file.readline(), file.seek() or even
    file.tell()) would be undefined because of the buffering that goes
    on in the xreadlines module.
2001-05-22 16:48:37 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 0ba9e3ac27 init_name_op(): add (void) to the argument list to make it a valid
prototype, for gcc -Wstrict-prototypes.
2001-05-22 02:33:08 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg 489b56e044 This patch changes the behaviour of the UTF-16 codec family. Only the
UTF-16 codec will now interpret and remove a *leading* BOM mark. Sub-
sequent BOM characters are no longer interpreted and removed.
UTF-16-LE and -BE pass through all BOM mark characters.

These changes should get the UTF-16 codec more in line with what
the Unicode FAQ recommends w/r to BOM marks.
2001-05-21 20:30:15 +00:00
Tim Peters 91a364df17 Bugfix candidate.
Two exceedingly unlikely errors in dictresize():
1. The loop for finding the new size had an off-by-one error at the
   end (could over-index the polys[] vector).
2. The polys[] vector ended with a 0, apparently intended as a sentinel
   value but never used as such; i.e., it was never checked, so 0 could
   have been used *as* a polynomial.
Neither bug could trigger unless a dict grew to 2**30 slots; since that
would consume at least 12GB of memory just to hold the dict pointers,
I'm betting it's not the cause of the bug Fred's tracking down <wink>.
2001-05-19 07:04:38 +00:00
Tim Peters 1928314ef4 Speed dictresize by collapsing its two passes into one; the reason given
in the comments for using two passes was bogus, as the only object that
can get decref'ed due to the copy is the dummy key, and decref'ing dummy
can't have side effects (for one thing, dummy is immortal!  for another,
it's a string object, not a potentially dangerous user-defined object).
2001-05-17 22:25:34 +00:00
Tim Peters d7ed3bf552 Speed tuple comparisons in two ways:
1. Omit the early-out EQ/NE "lengths different?" test.  Was unable to find
   any real code where it triggered, but it always costs.  The same is not
   true of list richcmps, where different-size lists appeared to get
   compared about half the time.
2. Because tuples are immutable, there's no need to refetch the lengths of
   both tuples from memory again on each loop trip.

BUG ALERT:  The tuple (and list) richcmp algorithm is arguably wrong,
because it won't believe there's any difference unless Py_EQ returns false
for some corresponding elements:

>>> class C:
...     def __lt__(x, y): return 1
...     __eq__ = __lt__
...
>>> C() < C()
1
>>> (C(),) < (C(),)
0
>>>

That doesn't make sense -- provided you believe the defn. of C makes sense.
2001-05-15 20:12:59 +00:00
Marc-André Lemburg 2d9204199f This patch changes the way the string .encode() method works slightly
and introduces a new method .decode().

The major change is that strg.encode() will no longer try to convert
Unicode returns from the codec into a string, but instead pass along
the Unicode object as-is. The same is now true for all other codec
return types. The underlying C APIs were changed accordingly.

Note that even though this does have the potential of breaking
existing code, the chances are low since conversion from Unicode
previously took place using the default encoding which is normally
set to ASCII rendering this auto-conversion mechanism useless for
most Unicode encodings.

The good news is that you can now use .encode() and .decode() with
much greater ease and that the door was opened for better accessibility
of the builtin codecs.

As demonstration of the new feature, the patch includes a few new
codecs which allow string to string encoding and decoding (rot13,
hex, zip, uu, base64).

Written by Marc-Andre Lemburg. Copyright assigned to the PSF.
2001-05-15 12:00:02 +00:00
Tim Peters 342c65e19a Aggressive reordering of dict comparisons. In case of collision, it stands
to reason that me_key is much more likely to match the key we're looking
for than to match dummy, and if the key is absent me_key is much more
likely to be NULL than dummy:  most dicts don't even have a dummy entry.
Running instrumented dict code over the test suite and some apps confirmed
that matching dummy was 200-300x less frequent than matching key in
practice.  So this reorders the tests to try the common case first.
It can lose if a large dict with many collisions is mostly deleted, not
resized, and then frequently searched, but that's hardly a case we
should be favoring.
2001-05-13 06:43:53 +00:00
Tim Peters 2f228e75e4 Get rid of the superstitious "~" in dict hashing's "i = (~hash) & mask".
The comment following used to say:
	/* We use ~hash instead of hash, as degenerate hash functions, such
	   as for ints <sigh>, can have lots of leading zeros. It's not
	   really a performance risk, but better safe than sorry.
	   12-Dec-00 tim:  so ~hash produces lots of leading ones instead --
	   what's the gain? */
That is, there was never a good reason for doing it.  And to the contrary,
as explained on Python-Dev last December, it tended to make the *sum*
(i + incr) & mask (which is the first table index examined in case of
collison) the same "too often" across distinct hashes.

Changing to the simpler "i = hash & mask" reduced the number of string-dict
collisions (== # number of times we go around the lookup for-loop) from about
6 million to 5 million during a full run of the test suite (these are
approximate because the test suite does some random stuff from run to run).
The number of collisions in non-string dicts also decreased, but not as
dramatically.

Note that this may, for a given dict, change the order (wrt previous
releases) of entries exposed by .keys(), .values() and .items().  A number
of std tests suffered bogus failures as a result.  For dicts keyed by
small ints, or (less so) by characters, the order is much more likely to be
in increasing order of key now; e.g.,

>>> d = {}
>>> for i in range(10):
...    d[i] = i
...
>>> d
{0: 0, 1: 1, 2: 2, 3: 3, 4: 4, 5: 5, 6: 6, 7: 7, 8: 8, 9: 9}
>>>

Unfortunately. people may latch on to that in small examples and draw a
bogus conclusion.

test_support.py
    Moved test_extcall's sortdict() into test_support, made it stronger,
    and imported sortdict into other std tests that needed it.
test_unicode.py
    Excluced cp875 from the "roundtrip over range(128)" test, because
    cp875 doesn't have a well-defined inverse for unicode("?", "cp875").
    See Python-Dev for excruciating details.
Cookie.py
    Chaged various output functions to sort dicts before building
    strings from them.
test_extcall
    Fiddled the expected-result file.  This remains sensitive to native
    dict ordering, because, e.g., if there are multiple errors in a
    keyword-arg dict (and test_extcall sets up many cases like that), the
    specific error Python complains about first depends on native dict
    ordering.
2001-05-13 00:19:31 +00:00
Tim Peters 16cabc0a3d Repair "module has no attribute xxx" error msg; bug introduced when
switching from tp_getattr to tp_getattro.
2001-05-12 20:24:22 +00:00
Tim Peters d85e102337 Variant of patch #423262: Change module attribute get & set
Allow module getattr and setattr to exploit string interning, via the
previously null module object tp_getattro and tp_setattro slots.   Yields
a very nice speedup for things like random.random and os.path etc.
2001-05-11 21:51:48 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 1b0feb4ada Variant of SF patch 423181
For rich comparisons, use instance_getattr2() when possible to avoid
the expense of setting an AttributeError.  Also intern the name_op[]
table and use the interned strings rather than creating a new string
and interning it each time through.
2001-05-11 14:48:41 +00:00
Tim Peters 5acbfcc164 Cosmetic: code under "else" clause was missing indent. 2001-05-11 03:36:45 +00:00
Tim Peters 4fa58bfac2 Restore dicts' tp_compare slot, and change dict_richcompare to say it
doesn't know how to do LE, LT, GE, GT.  dict_richcompare can't do the
latter any faster than dict_compare can.  More importantly, for
cmp(dict1, dict2), Python *first* tries rich compares with EQ, LT, and
GT one at a time, even if the tp_compare slot is defined, and
dict_richcompare called dict_compare for the latter two because
it couldn't do them itself.  The result was a lot of wasted calls to
dict_compare.  Now dict_richcompare gives up at once the times Python
calls it with LT and GT from try_rich_to_3way_compare(), and dict_compare
is called only once (when Python gets around to trying the tp_compare
slot).
Continued mystery:  despite that this cut the number of calls to
dict_compare approximately in half in test_mutants.py, the latter still
runs amazingly slowly.  Running under the debugger doesn't show excessive
activity in the dict comparison code anymore, so I'm guessing the culprit
is somewhere else -- but where?  Perhaps in the element (key/value)
comparison code?  We clearly spend a lot of time figuring out how to
compare things.
2001-05-10 21:45:19 +00:00
Tim Peters 3918fb2549 Repair typo in comment. 2001-05-10 18:58:31 +00:00
Tim Peters 95bf9390a4 SF bug #422121 Insecurities in dict comparison.
Fixed a half dozen ways in which general dict comparison could crash
Python (even cause Win98SE to reboot) in the presence of kay and/or
value comparison routines that mutate the dict during dict comparison.
Bugfix candidate.
2001-05-10 08:32:44 +00:00
Tim Peters 9c012af3c3 Heh. I need a break. After this: stropmodule & stringobject were more
out of synch than I realized, and I managed to break replace's "count"
argument when it was 0.  All is well again.  Maybe.
Bugfix candidate.
2001-05-10 00:32:57 +00:00
Tim Peters 4cd44ef4bf Fudge. stropmodule and stringobject both had copies of the buggy
mymemXXX stuff, and they were already out of synch.  Fix the remaining
bugs in both and get them back in synch.
Bugfix release candidate.
2001-05-10 00:05:33 +00:00
Tim Peters 1a97d5f098 SF patch #416247 2.1c1 stringobject: unused vrbl cleanup.
Thanks to Mark Favas.
2001-05-09 20:06:00 +00:00
Tim Peters 4862ab7bf4 Sheesh -- repair the dodge around "cast isn't an lvalue" complaints to
restore correct semantics.
2001-05-09 08:43:21 +00:00
Tim Peters 9e897f41db Mark Favas reported that gcc caught me using casts as lvalues. Dodge it. 2001-05-09 07:37:07 +00:00
Tim Peters b4bbcd76ea Ack! Restore the COUNT_ALLOCS one_strings code. 2001-05-09 00:31:40 +00:00
Tim Peters cf5ad5d6f6 My change to string_item() left an extra reference to each 1-character
interned string created by "string"[i].  Since they're immortal anyway,
this was hard to notice, but it was still wrong <wink>.
2001-05-09 00:24:55 +00:00
Tim Peters 5b4d477568 Intern 1-character strings as soon as they're created. As-is, they aren't
interned when created, so the cached versions generally aren't ever
interned.  With the patch, the
		Py_INCREF(t);
		*p = t;
		Py_DECREF(s);
		return;
indirection block in PyString_InternInPlace() is never executed during a
full run of the test suite, but was executed very many times before.  So
I'm trading more work when creating one-character strings for doing less
work later.  Note that the "more work" here can happen at most 256 times
per program run, so it's trivial.  The same reasoning accounts for the
patch's simplification of string_item (the new version can call
PyString_FromStringAndSize() no more than 256 times per run, so there's
no point to inlining that stuff -- if we were serious about saving time
here, we'd pre-initialize the characters vector so that no runtime testing
at all was needed!).
2001-05-08 22:33:50 +00:00
Tim Peters 72f98e9b83 SF bug #422177: Results from .pyc differs from .py
Store floats and doubles to full precision in marshal.
Test that floats read from .pyc/.pyo closely match those read from .py.
Declare PyFloat_AsString() in floatobject header file.
Add new PyFloat_AsReprString() API function.
Document the functions declared in floatobject.h.
2001-05-08 15:19:57 +00:00
Tim Peters e63415ead8 SF patch #421922: Implement rich comparison for dicts.
d1 == d2 and d1 != d2 now work even if the keys and values in d1 and d2
don't support comparisons other than ==, and testing dicts for equality
is faster now (especially when inequality obtains).
2001-05-08 04:38:29 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton 4c889011db SF patch 419176 from MvL; fixed bug 418977
Two errors in dict_to_map() helper used by PyFrame_LocalsToFast().
2001-05-08 04:08:59 +00:00
Jeremy Hylton d37292bb8d Remove unused variable 2001-05-08 04:00:45 +00:00
Tim Peters 6d60b2e762 SF bug #422108 - Error in rich comparisons.
2.1.1 bugfix candidate too.
Fix a bad (albeit unlikely) return value in try_rich_to_3way_compare().
Also document do_cmp()'s return values.
2001-05-07 20:53:51 +00:00
Tim Peters cb8d368b82 Reimplement PySequence_Contains() and instance_contains(), so they work
safely together and don't duplicate logic (the common logic was factored
out into new private API function _PySequence_IterContains()).
Visible change:
    some_complex_number  in  some_instance
no longer blows up if some_instance has __getitem__ but neither
__contains__ nor __iter__.  test_iter changed to ensure that remains true.
2001-05-05 21:05:01 +00:00
Tim Peters 75f8e35ef4 Generalize PySequence_Count() (operator.countOf) to work with iterators. 2001-05-05 11:33:43 +00:00
Tim Peters de9725f135 Make 'x in y' and 'x not in y' (PySequence_Contains) play nice w/ iterators.
NEEDS DOC CHANGES
A few more AttributeErrors turned into TypeErrors, but in test_contains
this time.
The full story for instance objects is pretty much unexplainable, because
instance_contains() tries its own flavor of iteration-based containment
testing first, and PySequence_Contains doesn't get a chance at it unless
instance_contains() blows up.  A consequence is that
    some_complex_number in some_instance
dies with a TypeError unless some_instance.__class__ defines __iter__ but
does not define __getitem__.
2001-05-05 10:06:17 +00:00
Tim Peters 2cfe368283 Make unicode.join() work nice with iterators. This also required a change
to string.join(), so that when the latter figures out in midstream that
it really needs unicode.join() instead, unicode.join() can actually get
all the sequence elements (i.e., there's no guarantee that the sequence
passed to string.join() can be iterated over *again* by unicode.join(),
so string.join() must not pass on the original sequence object anymore).
2001-05-05 05:36:48 +00:00
Tim Peters 12d0a6c78a Fix a tiny and unlikely memory leak. Was there before too, and actually
several of these turned up and got fixed during the iteration crusade.
2001-05-05 04:10:25 +00:00
Tim Peters 6912d4ddf0 Generalize tuple() to work nicely with iterators.
NEEDS DOC CHANGES.
This one surprised me!  While I expected tuple() to be a no-brainer, turns
out it's actually dripping with consequences:
1. It will *allow* the popular PySequence_Fast() to work with any iterable
   object (code for that not yet checked in, but should be trivial).
2. It caused two std tests to fail.  This because some places used
   PyTuple_Sequence() (the C spelling of tuple()) as an indirect way to test
   whether something *is* a sequence.  But tuple() code only looked for the
   existence of sq->item to determine that, and e.g. an instance passed
   that test whether or not it supported the other operations tuple()
   needed (e.g., __len__).  So some things the tests *expected* to fail
   with an AttributeError now fail with a TypeError instead.  This looks
   like an improvement to me; e.g., test_coercion used to produce 559
   TypeErrors and 2 AttributeErrors, and now they're all TypeErrors.  The
   error details are more informative too, because the places calling this
   were *looking* for TypeErrors in order to replace the generic tuple()
   "not a sequence" msg with their own more specific text, and
   AttributeErrors snuck by that.
2001-05-05 03:56:37 +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