This converts functions, code, str, bytes, bytearray, and memoryview objects to PyCodeObject,
and ensure that the object looks like a script. That means no args, no return, and no closure.
_PyCode_GetPureScriptXIData() takes it a step further and ensures there are no globals.
We also add _PyObject_SupportedAsScript() to the internal C-API.
(cherry picked from commit c81fa2b9cd, AKA gh-133480)
Co-authored-by: Eric Snow <ericsnowcurrently@gmail.com>
This reverts commit 3c73cf5 (gh-133497), which itself reverted
the original commit d270bb5 (gh-133221).
We reverted the original change due to failing android tests.
The checks in _PyCode_CheckNoInternalState() were too strict,
so we've relaxed them.
"Stateless" code is a function or code object which does not rely on external state or internal state.
It may rely on arguments and builtins, but not globals or a closure. I've left a comment in
pycore_code.h that provides more detail.
We also add _PyFunction_VerifyStateless(). The new functions will be used in several later changes
that facilitate "sharing" functions and code objects between interpreters.
This reverts commit 811edcf (gh-133232), which itself reverted the original commit 811edcf (gh-133128).
We reverted the original change due to failing s390 builds (a big-endian architecture).
It ended up that I had not accommodated op caches.
For the free-threaded build, check the process resident set size (RSS)
increase before triggering a full automatic garbage collection. If the RSS
has not increased 10% since the last collection then it is deferred.
In certain cases it's possible for locals loaded by `LOAD_FAST` instructions
to be on the stack when the local is killed by `DEL_FAST`. These `LOAD_FAST`
instructions should not be optimized into `LOAD_FAST_BORROW` as the strong
reference in the frame is killed while there is still a reference on the stack.
The X/Open curses specification[0] and ncurses documentation[1]
both state that subwindows must be deleted before the main window.
Deleting the windows in the wrong order causes a double-free with
NetBSD's curses implementation.
To fix this, keep track of the original window object in the subwindow
object, and keep a reference to the original for the lifetime of
the subwindow.
[0] https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/7908799/xcurses/delwin.html
[1] https://invisible-island.net/ncurses/man/curs_window.3x.html
Co-authored-by: Serhiy Storchaka <storchaka@gmail.com>
* Track the current executor, not the previous one, on the thread-state.
* Batch executors for deallocation to avoid having to constantly incref executors; this is an ad-hoc form of deferred reference counting.
Add `_Py_ALIGN_AS` as per C API WG vote: https://github.com/capi-workgroup/decisions/issues/61
This patch only adds it to free-threaded builds; the `#ifdef Py_GIL_DISABLED`
can be removed in the future.
Use this to revert `PyASCIIObject` memory layout for non-free-threaded builds.
The long-term plan is to deprecate the entire struct; until that happens
it's better to keep it unchanged, as courtesy to people that rely on it despite
it not being stable ABI.
After gh-130704, the interpreter replaces some uses of `LOAD_FAST` with
`LOAD_FAST_BORROW` which avoid incref/decrefs by "borrowing" references
on the interpreter stack when the bytecode compiler can determine that
it's safe.
This change broke some checks in C API extensions that relied on
`Py_REFCNT()` of `1` to determine if it's safe to modify an object
in-place. Objects may have a reference count of one, but still be
referenced further up the interpreter stack due to borrowing of
references.
This provides a replacement function for those checks.
`PyUnstable_Object_IsUniqueReferencedTemporary` is more conservative:
it checks that the object has a reference count of one and that it exists as a
unique strong reference in the interpreter's stack of temporary
variables in the top most frame.
See also:
* https://github.com/numpy/numpy/issues/28681
Co-authored-by: Pieter Eendebak <pieter.eendebak@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: T. Wouters <thomas@python.org>
Co-authored-by: mpage <mpage@cs.stanford.edu>
Co-authored-by: Mark Shannon <mark@hotpy.org>
Co-authored-by: Victor Stinner <vstinner@python.org>
There's some extra complexity due to making sure we we get things right when handling functions and classes defined in the __main__ module. This is also reflected in the tests, including the addition of extra functions in test.support.import_helper.
This helper is useful in a variety of ways, including in demonstrating how the different counts relate to one another.
It will be used in a later change to help identify if a function is "stateless", meaning it doesn't have any free vars or globals.
Note that a majority of this change is tests.
Both were added in 3.13, are undocumented, and don't make sense in 3.14 due to
changes in the stack overflow detection machinery (gh-112282).
PEP 387 exception for skipping a deprecation period: https://github.com/python/steering-council/issues/288
The function indicates whether or not the function has a return statement.
This is used by a later change related treating some functions like scripts.
In the free-threaded build, avoid data races caused by updating type slots
or type flags after the type was initially created. For those (typically
rare) cases, use the stop-the-world mechanism. Remove the use of atomics
when reading or writing type flags. The use of atomics is not sufficient to
avoid races (since flags are sometimes read without a lock and without
atomics) and are no longer required.
We replace it with _Py_GetMainModule(), and add _Py_CheckMainModule(), but both in the internal-only C-API. We also add _PyImport_GetModulesRef(), which is the equivalent of _PyImport_GetModules(), but which increfs before the lock is released.
This is used by a later change related to pickle and handling __main__.
The following are added to the internal C-API:
* _PyErr_FormatV()
* _PyErr_SetModuleNotFoundError()
* _PyXIData_GetNotShareableErrorType()
* _PyXIData_FormatNotShareableError()
We also drop _PyXIData_lookup_context_t and _PyXIData_GetLookupContext().