summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorGeorg Brandl <georg@python.org>2011-02-25 10:03:34 (GMT)
committerGeorg Brandl <georg@python.org>2011-02-25 10:03:34 (GMT)
commitd98934c48381a1128fc5e2d0fa1d57f9ec584041 (patch)
treedcf8959f78f281ee9651eacaa1cf891dc33564c2
parentf6c8fd62b924cf3478a141fba7eb970cf23940bf (diff)
downloadcpython-d98934c48381a1128fc5e2d0fa1d57f9ec584041.zip
cpython-d98934c48381a1128fc5e2d0fa1d57f9ec584041.tar.gz
cpython-d98934c48381a1128fc5e2d0fa1d57f9ec584041.tar.bz2
Merged revisions 87101,87146,87156,87172,87175,87371,87378,87522-87524,87526-87528,87530-87536,87581 via svnmerge from
svn+ssh://svn.python.org/python/branches/py3k ........ r87101 | georg.brandl | 2010-12-06 23:02:48 +0100 (Mo, 06 Dez 2010) | 1 line Remove visible XXX comments. ........ r87146 | georg.brandl | 2010-12-09 19:08:43 +0100 (Do, 09 Dez 2010) | 1 line Fix "seperate". ........ r87156 | georg.brandl | 2010-12-10 11:01:44 +0100 (Fr, 10 Dez 2010) | 1 line #10668: fix wrong call of __init__. ........ r87172 | georg.brandl | 2010-12-11 20:10:30 +0100 (Sa, 11 Dez 2010) | 1 line Avoid AttributeError(_closed) when a TemporaryDirectory is deallocated whose mkdtemp call failed. ........ r87175 | georg.brandl | 2010-12-11 23:19:34 +0100 (Sa, 11 Dez 2010) | 1 line Fix markup. ........ r87371 | georg.brandl | 2010-12-18 17:21:58 +0100 (Sa, 18 Dez 2010) | 1 line Fix typo. ........ r87378 | georg.brandl | 2010-12-18 18:51:28 +0100 (Sa, 18 Dez 2010) | 1 line #10723: add missing builtin exceptions. ........ r87522 | georg.brandl | 2010-12-28 10:16:12 +0100 (Di, 28 Dez 2010) | 1 line Replace sys.maxint mention by sys.maxsize. ........ r87523 | georg.brandl | 2010-12-28 10:18:24 +0100 (Di, 28 Dez 2010) | 1 line Remove confusing paragraph -- this is relevant only to advanced users anyway and does not belong into the tutorial. ........ r87524 | georg.brandl | 2010-12-28 10:29:19 +0100 (Di, 28 Dez 2010) | 1 line Fix advice: call PyType_Ready to fill in ob_type of custom types. ........ r87526 | georg.brandl | 2010-12-28 11:38:33 +0100 (Di, 28 Dez 2010) | 1 line #10777: fix iteration over dict keys while mutating the dict. ........ r87527 | georg.brandl | 2010-12-28 11:56:20 +0100 (Di, 28 Dez 2010) | 1 line #10768: fix ScrolledText widget construction, and make the example work from the interactive shell. ........ r87528 | georg.brandl | 2010-12-28 12:02:12 +0100 (Di, 28 Dez 2010) | 1 line Add news entry and clarify another. ........ r87530 | georg.brandl | 2010-12-28 12:06:07 +0100 (Di, 28 Dez 2010) | 1 line #10767: update README in crashers; not all may have a bug entry and/or be fixed. ........ r87531 | georg.brandl | 2010-12-28 12:08:17 +0100 (Di, 28 Dez 2010) | 1 line #10742: document readonly attribute of memoryviews. ........ r87532 | georg.brandl | 2010-12-28 12:15:49 +0100 (Di, 28 Dez 2010) | 1 line #10781: clarify that *encoding* is not a parameter for Node objects in general. ........ r87533 | georg.brandl | 2010-12-28 12:38:12 +0100 (Di, 28 Dez 2010) | 1 line Remove history; adapt a bit more to reST, since this will once be part of the dev guide. ........ r87534 | georg.brandl | 2010-12-28 12:48:53 +0100 (Di, 28 Dez 2010) | 1 line Rewrap. ........ r87535 | georg.brandl | 2010-12-28 12:49:41 +0100 (Di, 28 Dez 2010) | 1 line #10739: document that on Windows, socket.makefile() does not make a file that has a true file descriptor usable where such a thing is expected. ........ r87536 | georg.brandl | 2010-12-28 12:53:25 +0100 (Di, 28 Dez 2010) | 1 line #10609: fix non-working dbm example. ........ r87581 | georg.brandl | 2010-12-30 18:36:17 +0100 (Do, 30 Dez 2010) | 1 line Fix NameErrors. ........
-rw-r--r--Doc/ACKS.txt1
-rw-r--r--Doc/c-api/slice.rst1
-rw-r--r--Doc/c-api/typeobj.rst8
-rw-r--r--Doc/extending/windows.rst6
-rw-r--r--Doc/glossary.rst26
-rw-r--r--Doc/library/collections.rst2
-rw-r--r--Doc/library/dbm.rst6
-rw-r--r--Doc/library/exceptions.rst18
-rw-r--r--Doc/library/socket.rst13
-rw-r--r--Doc/library/stdtypes.rst4
-rw-r--r--Doc/library/xml.dom.minidom.rst6
-rw-r--r--Doc/tutorial/interpreter.rst8
-rw-r--r--Lib/test/crashers/README24
-rwxr-xr-xLib/test/test_array.py2
-rw-r--r--Lib/tkinter/scrolledtext.py3
-rw-r--r--Misc/SpecialBuilds.txt314
16 files changed, 227 insertions, 215 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/ACKS.txt b/Doc/ACKS.txt
index 6154fb9..a2a10a0 100644
--- a/Doc/ACKS.txt
+++ b/Doc/ACKS.txt
@@ -112,6 +112,7 @@ docs@python.org), and we'll be glad to correct the problem.
* Andrew M. Kuchling
* Dave Kuhlman
* Erno Kuusela
+ * Ross Lagerwall
* Thomas Lamb
* Detlef Lannert
* Piers Lauder
diff --git a/Doc/c-api/slice.rst b/Doc/c-api/slice.rst
index f17915f..f33cd53 100644
--- a/Doc/c-api/slice.rst
+++ b/Doc/c-api/slice.rst
@@ -48,4 +48,3 @@ Slice Objects
normal slices.
Returns 0 on success and -1 on error with exception set.
-
diff --git a/Doc/c-api/typeobj.rst b/Doc/c-api/typeobj.rst
index ab55292..7aa827a 100644
--- a/Doc/c-api/typeobj.rst
+++ b/Doc/c-api/typeobj.rst
@@ -705,7 +705,9 @@ type objects) *must* have the :attr:`ob_size` field.
This field is not inherited by subtypes (computed attributes are inherited
through a different mechanism).
- Docs for PyGetSetDef (XXX belong elsewhere)::
+ .. XXX belongs elsewhere
+
+ Docs for PyGetSetDef::
typedef PyObject *(*getter)(PyObject *, void *);
typedef int (*setter)(PyObject *, PyObject *, void *);
@@ -752,7 +754,7 @@ type objects) *must* have the :attr:`ob_size` field.
PyObject * tp_descr_get(PyObject *self, PyObject *obj, PyObject *type);
- XXX explain.
+ .. XXX explain.
This field is inherited by subtypes.
@@ -767,7 +769,7 @@ type objects) *must* have the :attr:`ob_size` field.
This field is inherited by subtypes.
- XXX explain.
+ .. XXX explain.
.. cmember:: long PyTypeObject.tp_dictoffset
diff --git a/Doc/extending/windows.rst b/Doc/extending/windows.rst
index 6733666..d1d0cf7 100644
--- a/Doc/extending/windows.rst
+++ b/Doc/extending/windows.rst
@@ -110,7 +110,7 @@ described here are distributed with the Python sources in the
Now your options are:
#. Copy :file:`example.sln` and :file:`example.vcproj`, rename them to
- :file:`spam.\*`, and edit them by hand, or
+ :file:`spam.\*`, and edit them by hand, or
#. Create a brand new project; instructions are below.
@@ -179,8 +179,8 @@ constant". This shows up when building DLL under MSVC. Change it to::
and add the following to the module initialization function::
- MyObject_Type.ob_type = &PyType_Type;
-
+ if (PyType_Ready(&MyObject_Type) < 0)
+ return NULL;
.. _dynamic-linking:
diff --git a/Doc/glossary.rst b/Doc/glossary.rst
index d7f2749..7431545 100644
--- a/Doc/glossary.rst
+++ b/Doc/glossary.rst
@@ -179,22 +179,22 @@ Glossary
not expressions.
extension module
- A module written in C or C++, using Python's C API to interact with the core and
- with user code.
+ A module written in C or C++, using Python's C API to interact with the
+ core and with user code.
file object
An object exposing a file-oriented API (with methods such as
- :meth:`read()` or :meth:`write()`) to an underlying resource.
- Depending on the way it was created, a file object can mediate access
- to a real on-disk file or to another other type of storage or
- communication device (for example standard input/output, in-memory
- buffers, sockets, pipes, etc.). File objects are also called
- :dfn:`file-like objects` or :dfn:`streams`.
-
- There are actually three categories of file objects: raw binary
- files, buffered binary files and text files. Their interfaces are
- defined in the :mod:`io` module. The canonical way to create a
- file object is by using the :func:`open` function.
+ :meth:`read()` or :meth:`write()`) to an underlying resource. Depending
+ on the way it was created, a file object can mediate access to a real
+ on-disk file or to another other type of storage or communication device
+ (for example standard input/output, in-memory buffers, sockets, pipes,
+ etc.). File objects are also called :dfn:`file-like objects` or
+ :dfn:`streams`.
+
+ There are actually three categories of file objects: raw binary files,
+ buffered binary files and text files. Their interfaces are defined in the
+ :mod:`io` module. The canonical way to create a file object is by using
+ the :func:`open` function.
file-like object
A synonym for :term:`file object`.
diff --git a/Doc/library/collections.rst b/Doc/library/collections.rst
index e79f723..1ed96b9 100644
--- a/Doc/library/collections.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/collections.rst
@@ -810,7 +810,7 @@ If a new entry overwrites an existing entry, the
original insertion position is changed and moved to the end::
class LastUpdatedOrderedDict(OrderedDict):
- 'Store items is the order the keys were last added'
+ 'Store items in the order the keys were last added'
def __setitem__(self, key, value):
if key in self:
del self[key]
diff --git a/Doc/library/dbm.rst b/Doc/library/dbm.rst
index 6926ca6..c7c7347 100644
--- a/Doc/library/dbm.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/dbm.rst
@@ -86,10 +86,8 @@ then prints out the contents of the database::
# Notice how the value is now in bytes.
assert db['www.cnn.com'] == b'Cable News Network'
- # Loop through contents. Other dictionary methods
- # such as .keys(), .values() also work.
- for k, v in db.iteritems():
- print(k, '\t', v)
+ # Often-used methods of the dict interface work too.
+ print(db.get('python.org', b'not present'))
# Storing a non-string key or value will raise an exception (most
# likely a TypeError).
diff --git a/Doc/library/exceptions.rst b/Doc/library/exceptions.rst
index 7ecfbca..4159287 100644
--- a/Doc/library/exceptions.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/exceptions.rst
@@ -77,6 +77,12 @@ The following exceptions are used mostly as base classes for other exceptions.
:exc:`FloatingPointError`.
+.. exception:: BufferError
+
+ Raised when a :ref:`buffer <bufferobjects>` related operation cannot be
+ performed.
+
+
.. exception:: LookupError
The base class for the exceptions that are raised when a key or index used on
@@ -271,6 +277,18 @@ The following exceptions are the exceptions that are usually raised.
of the exception instance returns only the message.
+.. exception:: IndentationError
+
+ Base class for syntax errors related to incorrect indentation. This is a
+ subclass of :exc:`SyntaxError`.
+
+
+.. exception:: TabError
+
+ Raised when indentation contains an inconsistent use of tabs and spaces.
+ This is a subclass of :exc:`IndentationError`.
+
+
.. exception:: SystemError
Raised when the interpreter finds an internal error, but the situation does not
diff --git a/Doc/library/socket.rst b/Doc/library/socket.rst
index 1b7b1f7..d61398c 100644
--- a/Doc/library/socket.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/socket.rst
@@ -616,16 +616,21 @@ correspond to Unix system calls applicable to sockets.
.. index:: single: I/O control; buffering
- Return a :term:`file object` associated with the socket. The exact
- returned type depends on the arguments given to :meth:`makefile`. These
- arguments are interpreted the same way as by the built-in :func:`open`
- function.
+ Return a :term:`file object` associated with the socket. The exact returned
+ type depends on the arguments given to :meth:`makefile`. These arguments are
+ interpreted the same way as by the built-in :func:`open` function.
Closing the file object won't close the socket unless there are no remaining
references to the socket. The socket must be in blocking mode; it can have
a timeout, but the file object's internal buffer may end up in a inconsistent
state if a timeout occurs.
+ .. note::
+
+ On Windows, the file-like object created by :meth:`makefile` cannot be
+ used where a file object with a file descriptor is expected, such as the
+ stream arguments of :meth:`subprocess.Popen`.
+
.. method:: socket.recv(bufsize[, flags])
diff --git a/Doc/library/stdtypes.rst b/Doc/library/stdtypes.rst
index 1fb736b..2e8b772 100644
--- a/Doc/library/stdtypes.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/stdtypes.rst
@@ -2203,6 +2203,10 @@ copying. Memory is generally interpreted as simple bytes.
A tuple of integers the length of :attr:`ndim` giving the size in bytes to
access each element for each dimension of the array.
+ .. attribute:: readonly
+
+ A bool indicating whether the memory is read only.
+
.. memoryview.suboffsets isn't documented because it only seems useful for C
diff --git a/Doc/library/xml.dom.minidom.rst b/Doc/library/xml.dom.minidom.rst
index 98e7586..8364f35 100644
--- a/Doc/library/xml.dom.minidom.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/xml.dom.minidom.rst
@@ -125,7 +125,7 @@ module documentation. This section lists the differences between the API and
to discard children of that node.
-.. method:: Node.writexml(writer, indent="", addindent="", newl="", encoding="")
+.. method:: Node.writexml(writer, indent="", addindent="", newl="")
Write XML to the writer object. The writer should have a :meth:`write` method
which matches that of the file object interface. The *indent* parameter is the
@@ -133,8 +133,8 @@ module documentation. This section lists the differences between the API and
indentation to use for subnodes of the current one. The *newl* parameter
specifies the string to use to terminate newlines.
- For the :class:`Document` node, an additional keyword argument *encoding* can be
- used to specify the encoding field of the XML header.
+ For the :class:`Document` node, an additional keyword argument *encoding* can
+ be used to specify the encoding field of the XML header.
.. method:: Node.toxml(encoding=None)
diff --git a/Doc/tutorial/interpreter.rst b/Doc/tutorial/interpreter.rst
index 9d376e6..94d7562 100644
--- a/Doc/tutorial/interpreter.rst
+++ b/Doc/tutorial/interpreter.rst
@@ -58,14 +58,6 @@ Some Python modules are also useful as scripts. These can be invoked using
``python -m module [arg] ...``, which executes the source file for *module* as
if you had spelled out its full name on the command line.
-Note that there is a difference between ``python file`` and ``python
-<file``. In the latter case, input requests from the program, such as calling
-``sys.stdin.read()``, are satisfied from *file*. Since this file has already
-been read until the end by the parser before the program starts executing, the
-program will encounter end-of-file immediately. In the former case (which is
-usually what you want) they are satisfied from whatever file or device is
-connected to standard input of the Python interpreter.
-
When a script file is used, it is sometimes useful to be able to run the script
and enter interactive mode afterwards. This can be done by passing :option:`-i`
before the script. (This does not work if the script is read from standard
diff --git a/Lib/test/crashers/README b/Lib/test/crashers/README
index 070c3f1..2a73e1b 100644
--- a/Lib/test/crashers/README
+++ b/Lib/test/crashers/README
@@ -1,20 +1,16 @@
-This directory only contains tests for outstanding bugs that cause
-the interpreter to segfault. Ideally this directory should always
-be empty. Sometimes it may not be easy to fix the underlying cause.
+This directory only contains tests for outstanding bugs that cause the
+interpreter to segfault. Ideally this directory should always be empty, but
+sometimes it may not be easy to fix the underlying cause and the bug is deemed
+too obscure to invest the effort.
Each test should fail when run from the command line:
./python Lib/test/crashers/weakref_in_del.py
-Each test should have a link to the bug report:
+Put as much info into a docstring or comments to help determine the cause of the
+failure, as well as a bugs.python.org issue number if it exists. Particularly
+note if the cause is system or environment dependent and what the variables are.
- # http://python.org/sf/BUG#
-
-Put as much info into a docstring or comments to help determine
-the cause of the failure. Particularly note if the cause is
-system or environment dependent and what the variables are.
-
-Once the crash is fixed, the test case should be moved into an appropriate
-test (even if it was originally from the test suite). This ensures the
-regression doesn't happen again. And if it does, it should be easier
-to track down.
+Once the crash is fixed, the test case should be moved into an appropriate test
+(even if it was originally from the test suite). This ensures the regression
+doesn't happen again. And if it does, it should be easier to track down.
diff --git a/Lib/test/test_array.py b/Lib/test/test_array.py
index 97cec11..62997d7 100755
--- a/Lib/test/test_array.py
+++ b/Lib/test/test_array.py
@@ -15,7 +15,7 @@ class ArraySubclass(array.array):
class ArraySubclassWithKwargs(array.array):
def __init__(self, typecode, newarg=None):
- array.array.__init__(typecode)
+ array.array.__init__(self, typecode)
tests = [] # list to accumulate all tests
typecodes = "ubBhHiIlLfd"
diff --git a/Lib/tkinter/scrolledtext.py b/Lib/tkinter/scrolledtext.py
index d2a9987..d9af67c 100644
--- a/Lib/tkinter/scrolledtext.py
+++ b/Lib/tkinter/scrolledtext.py
@@ -39,11 +39,10 @@ class ScrolledText(Text):
def example():
- import __main__
from tkinter.constants import END
stext = ScrolledText(bg='white', height=10)
- stext.insert(END, __main__.__doc__)
+ stext.insert(END, __doc__)
stext.pack(fill=BOTH, side=LEFT, expand=True)
stext.focus_set()
stext.mainloop()
diff --git a/Misc/SpecialBuilds.txt b/Misc/SpecialBuilds.txt
index 25bb6d1..f869e7c 100644
--- a/Misc/SpecialBuilds.txt
+++ b/Misc/SpecialBuilds.txt
@@ -1,17 +1,20 @@
-This file describes some special Python build types enabled via
-compile-time preprocessor defines.
+This file describes some special Python build types enabled via compile-time
+preprocessor defines.
-It is best to define these options in the EXTRA_CFLAGS make variable;
+IMPORTANT: if you want to build a debug-enabled Python, it is recommended that
+you use ``./configure --with-pydebug``, rather than the options listed here.
+
+However, if you wish to define some of these options individually, it is best
+to define them in the EXTRA_CFLAGS make variable;
``make EXTRA_CFLAGS="-DPy_REF_DEBUG"``.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-Py_REF_DEBUG introduced in 1.4
- named REF_DEBUG before 1.4
-Turn on aggregate reference counting. This arranges that extern
-_Py_RefTotal hold a count of all references, the sum of ob_refcnt across
-all objects. In a debug-mode build, this is where the "8288" comes from
-in
+Py_REF_DEBUG
+------------
+
+Turn on aggregate reference counting. This arranges that extern _Py_RefTotal
+hold a count of all references, the sum of ob_refcnt across all objects. In a
+debug-mode build, this is where the "8288" comes from in
>>> 23
23
@@ -19,75 +22,72 @@ in
>>>
Note that if this count increases when you're not storing away new objects,
-there's probably a leak. Remember, though, that in interactive mode the
-special name "_" holds a reference to the last result displayed!
+there's probably a leak. Remember, though, that in interactive mode the special
+name "_" holds a reference to the last result displayed!
-Py_REF_DEBUG also checks after every decref to verify that the refcount
-hasn't gone negative, and causes an immediate fatal error if it has.
+Py_REF_DEBUG also checks after every decref to verify that the refcount hasn't
+gone negative, and causes an immediate fatal error if it has.
Special gimmicks:
sys.gettotalrefcount()
Return current total of all refcounts.
- Available under Py_REF_DEBUG in Python 2.3.
- Before 2.3, Py_TRACE_REFS was required to enable this function.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-Py_TRACE_REFS introduced in 1.4
- named TRACE_REFS before 1.4
-
-Turn on heavy reference debugging. This is major surgery. Every PyObject
-grows two more pointers, to maintain a doubly-linked list of all live
-heap-allocated objects. Most built-in type objects are not in this list,
-as they're statically allocated. Starting in Python 2.3, if COUNT_ALLOCS
-(see below) is also defined, a static type object T does appear in this
-list if at least one object of type T has been created.
+
+
+Py_TRACE_REFS
+-------------
+
+Turn on heavy reference debugging. This is major surgery. Every PyObject grows
+two more pointers, to maintain a doubly-linked list of all live heap-allocated
+objects. Most built-in type objects are not in this list, as they're statically
+allocated. Starting in Python 2.3, if COUNT_ALLOCS (see below) is also defined,
+a static type object T does appear in this list if at least one object of type T
+has been created.
Note that because the fundamental PyObject layout changes, Python modules
-compiled with Py_TRACE_REFS are incompatible with modules compiled without
-it.
+compiled with Py_TRACE_REFS are incompatible with modules compiled without it.
Py_TRACE_REFS implies Py_REF_DEBUG.
Special gimmicks:
sys.getobjects(max[, type])
- Return list of the (no more than) max most-recently allocated objects,
- most recently allocated first in the list, least-recently allocated
- last in the list. max=0 means no limit on list length.
- If an optional type object is passed, the list is also restricted to
- objects of that type.
- The return list itself, and some temp objects created just to call
- sys.getobjects(), are excluded from the return list. Note that the
- list returned is just another object, though, so may appear in the
- return list the next time you call getobjects(); note that every
- object in the list is kept alive too, simply by virtue of being in
- the list.
-
-envar PYTHONDUMPREFS
- If this envar exists, Py_Finalize() arranges to print a list of
- all still-live heap objects. This is printed twice, in different
- formats, before and after Py_Finalize has cleaned up everything it
- can clean up. The first output block produces the repr() of each
- object so is more informative; however, a lot of stuff destined to
- die is still alive then. The second output block is much harder
- to work with (repr() can't be invoked anymore -- the interpreter
- has been torn down too far), but doesn't list any objects that will
- die. The tool script combinerefs.py can be run over this to combine
- the info from both output blocks. The second output block, and
+ Return list of the (no more than) max most-recently allocated objects, most
+ recently allocated first in the list, least-recently allocated last in the
+ list. max=0 means no limit on list length. If an optional type object is
+ passed, the list is also restricted to objects of that type. The return
+ list itself, and some temp objects created just to call sys.getobjects(),
+ are excluded from the return list. Note that the list returned is just
+ another object, though, so may appear in the return list the next time you
+ call getobjects(); note that every object in the list is kept alive too,
+ simply by virtue of being in the list.
+
+envvar PYTHONDUMPREFS
+ If this envvar exists, Py_Finalize() arranges to print a list of all
+ still-live heap objects. This is printed twice, in different formats,
+ before and after Py_Finalize has cleaned up everything it can clean up. The
+ first output block produces the repr() of each object so is more
+ informative; however, a lot of stuff destined to die is still alive then.
+ The second output block is much harder to work with (repr() can't be invoked
+ anymore -- the interpreter has been torn down too far), but doesn't list any
+ objects that will die. The tool script combinerefs.py can be run over this
+ to combine the info from both output blocks. The second output block, and
combinerefs.py, were new in Python 2.3b1.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-PYMALLOC_DEBUG introduced in 2.3
+
+
+PYMALLOC_DEBUG
+--------------
When pymalloc is enabled (WITH_PYMALLOC is defined), calls to the PyObject_
-memory routines are handled by Python's own small-object allocator, while
-calls to the PyMem_ memory routines are directed to the system malloc/
-realloc/free. If PYMALLOC_DEBUG is also defined, calls to both PyObject_
-and PyMem_ memory routines are directed to a special debugging mode of
-Python's small-object allocator.
+memory routines are handled by Python's own small-object allocator, while calls
+to the PyMem_ memory routines are directed to the system malloc/ realloc/free.
+If PYMALLOC_DEBUG is also defined, calls to both PyObject_ and PyMem_ memory
+routines are directed to a special debugging mode of Python's small-object
+allocator.
-This mode fills dynamically allocated memory blocks with special,
-recognizable bit patterns, and adds debugging info on each end of
-dynamically allocated memory blocks. The special bit patterns are:
+This mode fills dynamically allocated memory blocks with special, recognizable
+bit patterns, and adds debugging info on each end of dynamically allocated
+memory blocks. The special bit patterns are:
#define CLEANBYTE 0xCB /* clean (newly allocated) memory */
#define DEADBYTE 0xDB /* dead (newly freed) memory */
@@ -96,73 +96,70 @@ dynamically allocated memory blocks. The special bit patterns are:
Strings of these bytes are unlikely to be valid addresses, floats, or 7-bit
ASCII strings.
-Let S = sizeof(size_t). 2*S bytes are added at each end of each block of N
-bytes requested. The memory layout is like so, where p represents the
-address returned by a malloc-like or realloc-like function (p[i:j] means
-the slice of bytes from *(p+i) inclusive up to *(p+j) exclusive; note that
-the treatment of negative indices differs from a Python slice):
+Let S = sizeof(size_t). 2*S bytes are added at each end of each block of N bytes
+requested. The memory layout is like so, where p represents the address
+returned by a malloc-like or realloc-like function (p[i:j] means the slice of
+bytes from *(p+i) inclusive up to *(p+j) exclusive; note that the treatment of
+negative indices differs from a Python slice):
p[-2*S:-S]
- Number of bytes originally asked for. This is a size_t, big-endian
- (easier to read in a memory dump).
+ Number of bytes originally asked for. This is a size_t, big-endian (easier
+ to read in a memory dump).
p[-S:0]
Copies of FORBIDDENBYTE. Used to catch under- writes and reads.
p[0:N]
The requested memory, filled with copies of CLEANBYTE, used to catch
- reference to uninitialized memory.
- When a realloc-like function is called requesting a larger memory
- block, the new excess bytes are also filled with CLEANBYTE.
- When a free-like function is called, these are overwritten with
- DEADBYTE, to catch reference to freed memory. When a realloc-
- like function is called requesting a smaller memory block, the excess
- old bytes are also filled with DEADBYTE.
+ reference to uninitialized memory. When a realloc-like function is called
+ requesting a larger memory block, the new excess bytes are also filled with
+ CLEANBYTE. When a free-like function is called, these are overwritten with
+ DEADBYTE, to catch reference to freed memory. When a realloc- like function
+ is called requesting a smaller memory block, the excess old bytes are also
+ filled with DEADBYTE.
p[N:N+S]
Copies of FORBIDDENBYTE. Used to catch over- writes and reads.
p[N+S:N+2*S]
A serial number, incremented by 1 on each call to a malloc-like or
- realloc-like function.
- Big-endian size_t.
- If "bad memory" is detected later, the serial number gives an
- excellent way to set a breakpoint on the next run, to capture the
- instant at which this block was passed out. The static function
- bumpserialno() in obmalloc.c is the only place the serial number
- is incremented, and exists so you can set such a breakpoint easily.
-
-A realloc-like or free-like function first checks that the FORBIDDENBYTEs
-at each end are intact. If they've been altered, diagnostic output is
-written to stderr, and the program is aborted via Py_FatalError(). The
-other main failure mode is provoking a memory error when a program
-reads up one of the special bit patterns and tries to use it as an address.
-If you get in a debugger then and look at the object, you're likely
-to see that it's entirely filled with 0xDB (meaning freed memory is
-getting used) or 0xCB (meaning uninitialized memory is getting used).
+ realloc-like function. Big-endian size_t. If "bad memory" is detected
+ later, the serial number gives an excellent way to set a breakpoint on the
+ next run, to capture the instant at which this block was passed out. The
+ static function bumpserialno() in obmalloc.c is the only place the serial
+ number is incremented, and exists so you can set such a breakpoint easily.
+
+A realloc-like or free-like function first checks that the FORBIDDENBYTEs at
+each end are intact. If they've been altered, diagnostic output is written to
+stderr, and the program is aborted via Py_FatalError(). The other main failure
+mode is provoking a memory error when a program reads up one of the special bit
+patterns and tries to use it as an address. If you get in a debugger then and
+look at the object, you're likely to see that it's entirely filled with 0xDB
+(meaning freed memory is getting used) or 0xCB (meaning uninitialized memory is
+getting used).
Note that PYMALLOC_DEBUG requires WITH_PYMALLOC.
Special gimmicks:
-envar PYTHONMALLOCSTATS
- If this envar exists, a report of pymalloc summary statistics is
- printed to stderr whenever a new arena is allocated, and also
- by Py_Finalize().
+envvar PYTHONMALLOCSTATS
+ If this envvar exists, a report of pymalloc summary statistics is printed to
+ stderr whenever a new arena is allocated, and also by Py_Finalize().
Changed in 2.5: The number of extra bytes allocated is 4*sizeof(size_t).
Before it was 16 on all boxes, reflecting that Python couldn't make use of
allocations >= 2**32 bytes even on 64-bit boxes before 2.5.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-Py_DEBUG introduced in 1.5
- named DEBUG before 1.5
+
+
+Py_DEBUG
+--------
This is what is generally meant by "a debug build" of Python.
-Py_DEBUG implies LLTRACE, Py_REF_DEBUG, Py_TRACE_REFS, and
-PYMALLOC_DEBUG (if WITH_PYMALLOC is enabled). In addition, C
-assert()s are enabled (via the C way: by not defining NDEBUG), and
-some routines do additional sanity checks inside "#ifdef Py_DEBUG"
-blocks.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-COUNT_ALLOCS introduced in 0.9.9
- partly broken in 2.2 and 2.2.1
+Py_DEBUG implies LLTRACE, Py_REF_DEBUG, Py_TRACE_REFS, and PYMALLOC_DEBUG (if
+WITH_PYMALLOC is enabled). In addition, C assert()s are enabled (via the C way:
+by not defining NDEBUG), and some routines do additional sanity checks inside
+"#ifdef Py_DEBUG" blocks.
+
+
+COUNT_ALLOCS
+------------
Each type object grows three new members:
@@ -178,84 +175,85 @@ Each type object grows three new members:
*/
int tp_maxalloc;
-Allocation and deallocation code keeps these counts up to date.
-Py_Finalize() displays a summary of the info returned by sys.getcounts()
-(see below), along with assorted other special allocation counts (like
-the number of tuple allocations satisfied by a tuple free-list, the number
-of 1-character strings allocated, etc).
+Allocation and deallocation code keeps these counts up to date. Py_Finalize()
+displays a summary of the info returned by sys.getcounts() (see below), along
+with assorted other special allocation counts (like the number of tuple
+allocations satisfied by a tuple free-list, the number of 1-character strings
+allocated, etc).
Before Python 2.2, type objects were immortal, and the COUNT_ALLOCS
-implementation relies on that. As of Python 2.2, heap-allocated type/
-class objects can go away. COUNT_ALLOCS can blow up in 2.2 and 2.2.1
-because of this; this was fixed in 2.2.2. Use of COUNT_ALLOCS makes
-all heap-allocated type objects immortal, except for those for which no
-object of that type is ever allocated.
+implementation relies on that. As of Python 2.2, heap-allocated type/ class
+objects can go away. COUNT_ALLOCS can blow up in 2.2 and 2.2.1 because of this;
+this was fixed in 2.2.2. Use of COUNT_ALLOCS makes all heap-allocated type
+objects immortal, except for those for which no object of that type is ever
+allocated.
Starting with Python 2.3, If Py_TRACE_REFS is also defined, COUNT_ALLOCS
-arranges to ensure that the type object for each allocated object
-appears in the doubly-linked list of all objects maintained by
-Py_TRACE_REFS.
+arranges to ensure that the type object for each allocated object appears in the
+doubly-linked list of all objects maintained by Py_TRACE_REFS.
Special gimmicks:
sys.getcounts()
- Return a list of 4-tuples, one entry for each type object for which
- at least one object of that type was allocated. Each tuple is of
- the form:
+ Return a list of 4-tuples, one entry for each type object for which at least
+ one object of that type was allocated. Each tuple is of the form:
(tp_name, tp_allocs, tp_frees, tp_maxalloc)
- Each distinct type object gets a distinct entry in this list, even
- if two or more type objects have the same tp_name (in which case
- there's no way to distinguish them by looking at this list). The
- list is ordered by time of first object allocation: the type object
- for which the first allocation of an object of that type occurred
- most recently is at the front of the list.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-LLTRACE introduced well before 1.0
+ Each distinct type object gets a distinct entry in this list, even if two or
+ more type objects have the same tp_name (in which case there's no way to
+ distinguish them by looking at this list). The list is ordered by time of
+ first object allocation: the type object for which the first allocation of
+ an object of that type occurred most recently is at the front of the list.
+
+
+LLTRACE
+-------
Compile in support for Low Level TRACE-ing of the main interpreter loop.
-When this preprocessor symbol is defined, before PyEval_EvalFrame
-(eval_frame in 2.3 and 2.2, eval_code2 before that) executes a frame's code
-it checks the frame's global namespace for a variable "__lltrace__". If
-such a variable is found, mounds of information about what the interpreter
-is doing are sprayed to stdout, such as every opcode and opcode argument
-and values pushed onto and popped off the value stack.
+When this preprocessor symbol is defined, before PyEval_EvalFrame (eval_frame in
+2.3 and 2.2, eval_code2 before that) executes a frame's code it checks the
+frame's global namespace for a variable "__lltrace__". If such a variable is
+found, mounds of information about what the interpreter is doing are sprayed to
+stdout, such as every opcode and opcode argument and values pushed onto and
+popped off the value stack.
Not useful very often, but very useful when needed.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-CALL_PROFILE introduced for Python 2.3
+
+CALL_PROFILE
+------------
Count the number of function calls executed.
-When this symbol is defined, the ceval mainloop and helper functions
-count the number of function calls made. It keeps detailed statistics
-about what kind of object was called and whether the call hit any of
-the special fast paths in the code.
+When this symbol is defined, the ceval mainloop and helper functions count the
+number of function calls made. It keeps detailed statistics about what kind of
+object was called and whether the call hit any of the special fast paths in the
+code.
+
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-WITH_TSC introduced for Python 2.4
+WITH_TSC
+--------
-Super-lowlevel profiling of the interpreter. When enabled, the sys
-module grows a new function:
+Super-lowlevel profiling of the interpreter. When enabled, the sys module grows
+a new function:
settscdump(bool)
- If true, tell the Python interpreter to dump VM measurements to
- stderr. If false, turn off dump. The measurements are based on the
- processor's time-stamp counter.
+ If true, tell the Python interpreter to dump VM measurements to stderr. If
+ false, turn off dump. The measurements are based on the processor's
+ time-stamp counter.
-This build option requires a small amount of platform specific code.
-Currently this code is present for linux/x86 and any PowerPC platform
-that uses GCC (i.e. OS X and linux/ppc).
+This build option requires a small amount of platform specific code. Currently
+this code is present for linux/x86 and any PowerPC platform that uses GCC
+(i.e. OS X and linux/ppc).
-On the PowerPC the rate at which the time base register is incremented
-is not defined by the architecture specification, so you'll need to
-find the manual for your specific processor. For the 750CX, 750CXe
-and 750FX (all sold as the G3) we find:
+On the PowerPC the rate at which the time base register is incremented is not
+defined by the architecture specification, so you'll need to find the manual for
+your specific processor. For the 750CX, 750CXe and 750FX (all sold as the G3)
+we find:
- The time base counter is clocked at a frequency that is
- one-fourth that of the bus clock.
+ The time base counter is clocked at a frequency that is one-fourth that of
+ the bus clock.
This build is enabled by the --with-tsc flag to configure.