301 lines
10 KiB
ReStructuredText
301 lines
10 KiB
ReStructuredText
:mod:`gc` --- Garbage Collector interface
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=========================================
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.. module:: gc
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:synopsis: Interface to the cycle-detecting garbage collector.
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.. moduleauthor:: Neil Schemenauer <nas@arctrix.com>
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.. sectionauthor:: Neil Schemenauer <nas@arctrix.com>
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--------------
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This module provides an interface to the optional garbage collector. It
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provides the ability to disable the collector, tune the collection frequency,
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and set debugging options. It also provides access to unreachable objects that
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the collector found but cannot free. Since the collector supplements the
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reference counting already used in Python, you can disable the collector if you
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are sure your program does not create reference cycles. Automatic collection
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can be disabled by calling ``gc.disable()``. To debug a leaking program call
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``gc.set_debug(gc.DEBUG_LEAK)``. Notice that this includes
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``gc.DEBUG_SAVEALL``, causing garbage-collected objects to be saved in
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gc.garbage for inspection.
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The :mod:`gc` module provides the following functions:
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.. function:: enable()
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Enable automatic garbage collection.
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.. function:: disable()
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Disable automatic garbage collection.
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.. function:: isenabled()
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Return ``True`` if automatic collection is enabled.
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.. function:: collect(generation=2)
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With no arguments, run a full collection. The optional argument *generation*
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may be an integer specifying which generation to collect (from 0 to 2). A
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:exc:`ValueError` is raised if the generation number is invalid. The number of
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unreachable objects found is returned.
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The free lists maintained for a number of built-in types are cleared
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whenever a full collection or collection of the highest generation (2)
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is run. Not all items in some free lists may be freed due to the
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particular implementation, in particular :class:`float`.
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.. function:: set_debug(flags)
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Set the garbage collection debugging flags. Debugging information will be
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written to ``sys.stderr``. See below for a list of debugging flags which can be
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combined using bit operations to control debugging.
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.. function:: get_debug()
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Return the debugging flags currently set.
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.. function:: get_objects(generation=None)
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Returns a list of all objects tracked by the collector, excluding the list
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returned. If *generation* is not None, return only the objects tracked by
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the collector that are in that generation.
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.. versionchanged:: 3.8
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New *generation* parameter.
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.. function:: get_stats()
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Return a list of three per-generation dictionaries containing collection
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statistics since interpreter start. The number of keys may change
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in the future, but currently each dictionary will contain the following
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items:
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* ``collections`` is the number of times this generation was collected;
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* ``collected`` is the total number of objects collected inside this
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generation;
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* ``uncollectable`` is the total number of objects which were found
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to be uncollectable (and were therefore moved to the :data:`garbage`
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list) inside this generation.
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.. versionadded:: 3.4
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.. function:: set_threshold(threshold0[, threshold1[, threshold2]])
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Set the garbage collection thresholds (the collection frequency). Setting
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*threshold0* to zero disables collection.
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The GC classifies objects into three generations depending on how many
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collection sweeps they have survived. New objects are placed in the youngest
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generation (generation ``0``). If an object survives a collection it is moved
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into the next older generation. Since generation ``2`` is the oldest
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generation, objects in that generation remain there after a collection. In
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order to decide when to run, the collector keeps track of the number object
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allocations and deallocations since the last collection. When the number of
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allocations minus the number of deallocations exceeds *threshold0*, collection
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starts. Initially only generation ``0`` is examined. If generation ``0`` has
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been examined more than *threshold1* times since generation ``1`` has been
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examined, then generation ``1`` is examined as well.
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With the third generation, things are a bit more complicated,
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see `Collecting the oldest generation <https://devguide.python.org/garbage_collector/#collecting-the-oldest-generation>`_ for more information.
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.. function:: get_count()
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Return the current collection counts as a tuple of ``(count0, count1,
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count2)``.
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.. function:: get_threshold()
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Return the current collection thresholds as a tuple of ``(threshold0,
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threshold1, threshold2)``.
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.. function:: get_referrers(*objs)
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Return the list of objects that directly refer to any of objs. This function
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will only locate those containers which support garbage collection; extension
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types which do refer to other objects but do not support garbage collection will
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not be found.
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Note that objects which have already been dereferenced, but which live in cycles
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and have not yet been collected by the garbage collector can be listed among the
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resulting referrers. To get only currently live objects, call :func:`collect`
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before calling :func:`get_referrers`.
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Care must be taken when using objects returned by :func:`get_referrers` because
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some of them could still be under construction and hence in a temporarily
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invalid state. Avoid using :func:`get_referrers` for any purpose other than
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debugging.
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.. function:: get_referents(*objs)
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Return a list of objects directly referred to by any of the arguments. The
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referents returned are those objects visited by the arguments' C-level
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:c:member:`~PyTypeObject.tp_traverse` methods (if any), and may not be all objects actually
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directly reachable. :c:member:`~PyTypeObject.tp_traverse` methods are supported only by objects
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that support garbage collection, and are only required to visit objects that may
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be involved in a cycle. So, for example, if an integer is directly reachable
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from an argument, that integer object may or may not appear in the result list.
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.. function:: is_tracked(obj)
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Returns ``True`` if the object is currently tracked by the garbage collector,
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``False`` otherwise. As a general rule, instances of atomic types aren't
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tracked and instances of non-atomic types (containers, user-defined
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objects...) are. However, some type-specific optimizations can be present
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in order to suppress the garbage collector footprint of simple instances
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(e.g. dicts containing only atomic keys and values)::
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>>> gc.is_tracked(0)
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False
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>>> gc.is_tracked("a")
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False
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>>> gc.is_tracked([])
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True
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>>> gc.is_tracked({})
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False
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>>> gc.is_tracked({"a": 1})
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False
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>>> gc.is_tracked({"a": []})
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True
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.. versionadded:: 3.1
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.. function:: freeze()
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Freeze all the objects tracked by gc - move them to a permanent generation
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and ignore all the future collections. This can be used before a POSIX
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fork() call to make the gc copy-on-write friendly or to speed up collection.
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Also collection before a POSIX fork() call may free pages for future
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allocation which can cause copy-on-write too so it's advised to disable gc
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in parent process and freeze before fork and enable gc in child process.
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.. versionadded:: 3.7
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.. function:: unfreeze()
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Unfreeze the objects in the permanent generation, put them back into the
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oldest generation.
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.. versionadded:: 3.7
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.. function:: get_freeze_count()
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Return the number of objects in the permanent generation.
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.. versionadded:: 3.7
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The following variables are provided for read-only access (you can mutate the
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values but should not rebind them):
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.. data:: garbage
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A list of objects which the collector found to be unreachable but could
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not be freed (uncollectable objects). Starting with Python 3.4, this
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list should be empty most of the time, except when using instances of
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C extension types with a non-``NULL`` ``tp_del`` slot.
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If :const:`DEBUG_SAVEALL` is set, then all unreachable objects will be
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added to this list rather than freed.
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.. versionchanged:: 3.2
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If this list is non-empty at :term:`interpreter shutdown`, a
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:exc:`ResourceWarning` is emitted, which is silent by default. If
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:const:`DEBUG_UNCOLLECTABLE` is set, in addition all uncollectable objects
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are printed.
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.. versionchanged:: 3.4
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Following :pep:`442`, objects with a :meth:`__del__` method don't end
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up in :attr:`gc.garbage` anymore.
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.. data:: callbacks
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A list of callbacks that will be invoked by the garbage collector before and
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after collection. The callbacks will be called with two arguments,
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*phase* and *info*.
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*phase* can be one of two values:
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"start": The garbage collection is about to start.
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"stop": The garbage collection has finished.
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*info* is a dict providing more information for the callback. The following
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keys are currently defined:
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"generation": The oldest generation being collected.
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"collected": When *phase* is "stop", the number of objects
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successfully collected.
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"uncollectable": When *phase* is "stop", the number of objects
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that could not be collected and were put in :data:`garbage`.
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Applications can add their own callbacks to this list. The primary
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use cases are:
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Gathering statistics about garbage collection, such as how often
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various generations are collected, and how long the collection
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takes.
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Allowing applications to identify and clear their own uncollectable
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types when they appear in :data:`garbage`.
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.. versionadded:: 3.3
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The following constants are provided for use with :func:`set_debug`:
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.. data:: DEBUG_STATS
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Print statistics during collection. This information can be useful when tuning
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the collection frequency.
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.. data:: DEBUG_COLLECTABLE
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Print information on collectable objects found.
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.. data:: DEBUG_UNCOLLECTABLE
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Print information of uncollectable objects found (objects which are not
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reachable but cannot be freed by the collector). These objects will be added
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to the ``garbage`` list.
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.. versionchanged:: 3.2
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Also print the contents of the :data:`garbage` list at
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:term:`interpreter shutdown`, if it isn't empty.
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.. data:: DEBUG_SAVEALL
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When set, all unreachable objects found will be appended to *garbage* rather
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than being freed. This can be useful for debugging a leaking program.
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.. data:: DEBUG_LEAK
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The debugging flags necessary for the collector to print information about a
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leaking program (equal to ``DEBUG_COLLECTABLE | DEBUG_UNCOLLECTABLE |
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DEBUG_SAVEALL``).
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