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			229 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			8.8 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Text
		
	
	
	
	
	
| Description of the internal format of the line number table
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| 
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| Conceptually, the line number table consists of a sequence of triples:
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|     start-offset (inclusive), end-offset (exclusive), line-number.
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| 
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| Note that note all byte codes have a line number so we need handle `None` for the line-number.
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| 
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| However, storing the above sequence directly would be very inefficient as we would need 12 bytes per entry.
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| 
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| First of all, we can note that the end of one entry is the same as the start of the next, so we can overlap entries.
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| Secondly we also note that we don't really need arbitrary access to the sequence, so we can store deltas.
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| 
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| We just need to store (end - start, line delta) pairs. The start offset of the first entry is always zero.
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| 
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| Thirdly, most deltas are small, so we can use a single byte for each value, as long we allow several entries for the same line.
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| 
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| Consider the following table
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|      Start    End     Line
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|       0       6       1
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|       6       50      2
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|       50      350     7
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|       350     360     No line number
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|       360     376     8
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|       376     380     208
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| 
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| Stripping the redundant ends gives:
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| 
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|    End-Start  Line-delta
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|       6         +1
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|       44        +1
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|       300       +5
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|       10        No line number
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|       16        +1
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|       4         +200
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| 
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| 
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| Note that the end - start value is always positive.
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| 
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| Finally in order, to fit into a single byte we need to convert start deltas to the range 0 <= delta <= 254,
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| and line deltas to the range -127  <= delta <= 127.
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| A line delta of -128 is used to indicate no line number.
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| A start delta of 255 is used as a sentinel to mark the end of the table.
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| Also note that a delta of zero indicates that there are no bytecodes in the given range,
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| which means can use an invalidate line number for that range.
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| 
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| Final form:
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| 
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|    Start delta   Line delta
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|     6               +1
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|     44              +1
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|     254             +5
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|     46              0
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|     10              -128 (No line number, treated as a delta of zero)
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|     16              +1
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|     0               +127 (line 135, but the range is empty as no bytecodes are at line 135)
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|     4               +73
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|     255 (end mark)  ---
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| 
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| Iterating over the table.
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| -------------------------
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| 
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| For the `co_lines` attribute we want to emit the full form, omitting the (350, 360, No line number) and empty entries.
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| 
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| The code is as follows:
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| 
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| def co_lines(code):
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|     line = code.co_firstlineno
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|     end = 0
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|     table_iter = iter(code.internal_line_table):
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|     for sdelta, ldelta in table_iter:
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|         if sdelta == 255:
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|             break
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|         if ldelta == 0: # No change to line number, just accumulate changes to end
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|             end += odelta
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|             continue
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|         start = end
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|         end = start + sdelta
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|         if ldelta == -128: # No valid line number -- skip entry
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|             continue
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|         line += ldelta
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|         if end == start: # Empty range, omit.
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|             continue
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|         yield start, end, line
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| 
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| 
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| 
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| 
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| The historical co_lnotab format
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| -------------------------------
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| 
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| prior to 3.10 code objects stored a field named co_lnotab.
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| This was an array of unsigned bytes disguised as a Python bytes object.
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| 
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| The old co_lnotab did not account for the presence of bytecodes without a line number,
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| nor was it well suited to tracing as a number of workarounds were required.
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| 
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| The old format can still be accessed via `code.co_lnotab`, which is lazily computed from the new format.
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| 
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| Below is the description of the old co_lnotab format:
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| 
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| 
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| The array is conceptually a compressed list of
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|     (bytecode offset increment, line number increment)
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| pairs.  The details are important and delicate, best illustrated by example:
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| 
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|     byte code offset    source code line number
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|         0                   1
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|         6                   2
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|        50                   7
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|       350                 207
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|       361                 208
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| 
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| Instead of storing these numbers literally, we compress the list by storing only
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| the difference from one row to the next.  Conceptually, the stored list might
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| look like:
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| 
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|     0, 1,  6, 1,  44, 5,  300, 200,  11, 1
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| 
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| The above doesn't really work, but it's a start. An unsigned byte (byte code
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| offset) can't hold negative values, or values larger than 255, a signed byte
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| (line number) can't hold values larger than 127 or less than -128, and the
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| above example contains two such values.  (Note that before 3.6, line number
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| was also encoded by an unsigned byte.)  So we make two tweaks:
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| 
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|  (a) there's a deep assumption that byte code offsets increase monotonically,
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|  and
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|  (b) if byte code offset jumps by more than 255 from one row to the next, or if
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|  source code line number jumps by more than 127 or less than -128 from one row
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|  to the next, more than one pair is written to the table. In case #b,
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|  there's no way to know from looking at the table later how many were written.
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|  That's the delicate part.  A user of co_lnotab desiring to find the source
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|  line number corresponding to a bytecode address A should do something like
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|  this:
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| 
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|     lineno = addr = 0
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|     for addr_incr, line_incr in co_lnotab:
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|         addr += addr_incr
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|         if addr > A:
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|             return lineno
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|         if line_incr >= 0x80:
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|             line_incr -= 0x100
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|         lineno += line_incr
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| 
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| (In C, this is implemented by PyCode_Addr2Line().)  In order for this to work,
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| when the addr field increments by more than 255, the line # increment in each
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| pair generated must be 0 until the remaining addr increment is < 256.  So, in
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| the example above, assemble_lnotab in compile.c should not (as was actually done
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| until 2.2) expand 300, 200 to
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|     255, 255, 45, 45,
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| but to
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|     255, 0, 45, 127, 0, 73.
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| 
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| The above is sufficient to reconstruct line numbers for tracebacks, but not for
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| line tracing.  Tracing is handled by PyCode_CheckLineNumber() in codeobject.c
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| and maybe_call_line_trace() in ceval.c.
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| 
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| *** Tracing ***
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| 
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| To a first approximation, we want to call the tracing function when the line
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| number of the current instruction changes.  Re-computing the current line for
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| every instruction is a little slow, though, so each time we compute the line
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| number we save the bytecode indices where it's valid:
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| 
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|      *instr_lb <= frame->f_lasti < *instr_ub
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| 
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| is true so long as execution does not change lines.  That is, *instr_lb holds
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| the first bytecode index of the current line, and *instr_ub holds the first
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| bytecode index of the next line.  As long as the above expression is true,
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| maybe_call_line_trace() does not need to call PyCode_CheckLineNumber().  Note
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| that the same line may appear multiple times in the lnotab, either because the
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| bytecode jumped more than 255 indices between line number changes or because
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| the compiler inserted the same line twice.  Even in that case, *instr_ub holds
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| the first index of the next line.
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| 
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| However, we don't *always* want to call the line trace function when the above
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| test fails.
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| 
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| Consider this code:
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| 
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| 1: def f(a):
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| 2:    while a:
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| 3:       print(1)
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| 4:       break
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| 5:    else:
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| 6:       print(2)
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| 
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| which compiles to this:
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| 
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|   2           0 SETUP_LOOP              26 (to 28)
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|         >>    2 LOAD_FAST                0 (a)
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|               4 POP_JUMP_IF_FALSE       18
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| 
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|   3           6 LOAD_GLOBAL              0 (print)
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|               8 LOAD_CONST               1 (1)
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|              10 CALL_FUNCTION            1
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|              12 POP_TOP
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| 
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|   4          14 BREAK_LOOP
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|              16 JUMP_ABSOLUTE            2
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|         >>   18 POP_BLOCK
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| 
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|   6          20 LOAD_GLOBAL              0 (print)
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|              22 LOAD_CONST               2 (2)
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|              24 CALL_FUNCTION            1
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|              26 POP_TOP
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|         >>   28 LOAD_CONST               0 (None)
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|              30 RETURN_VALUE
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| 
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| If 'a' is false, execution will jump to the POP_BLOCK instruction at offset 18
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| and the co_lnotab will claim that execution has moved to line 4, which is wrong.
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| In this case, we could instead associate the POP_BLOCK with line 5, but that
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| would break jumps around loops without else clauses.
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| 
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| We fix this by only calling the line trace function for a forward jump if the
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| co_lnotab indicates we have jumped to the *start* of a line, i.e. if the current
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| instruction offset matches the offset given for the start of a line by the
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| co_lnotab.  For backward jumps, however, we always call the line trace function,
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| which lets a debugger stop on every evaluation of a loop guard (which usually
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| won't be the first opcode in a line).
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| 
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| Why do we set f_lineno when tracing, and only just before calling the trace
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| function?  Well, consider the code above when 'a' is true.  If stepping through
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| this with 'n' in pdb, you would stop at line 1 with a "call" type event, then
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| line events on lines 2, 3, and 4, then a "return" type event -- but because the
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| code for the return actually falls in the range of the "line 6" opcodes, you
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| would be shown line 6 during this event.  This is a change from the behaviour in
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| 2.2 and before, and I've found it confusing in practice.  By setting and using
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| f_lineno when tracing, one can report a line number different from that
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| suggested by f_lasti on this one occasion where it's desirable.
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