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| author | Jeffrey Yasskin <jyasskin@gmail.com> | 2009-05-23 23:23:01 (GMT) | 
|---|---|---|
| committer | Jeffrey Yasskin <jyasskin@gmail.com> | 2009-05-23 23:23:01 (GMT) | 
| commit | 655d835415800085cddbacecfc8a22111d70a5ef (patch) | |
| tree | 313b44ddc5a8af0d3c1ec29cc2b1fb35b4b118c3 /Objects/codeobject.c | |
| parent | 3724d6c3923f45f4c284e1b3d44a60c3090017d1 (diff) | |
| download | cpython-655d835415800085cddbacecfc8a22111d70a5ef.zip cpython-655d835415800085cddbacecfc8a22111d70a5ef.tar.gz cpython-655d835415800085cddbacecfc8a22111d70a5ef.tar.bz2  | |
Issue #6042:
lnotab-based tracing is very complicated and isn't documented very well.  There
were at least 3 comment blocks purporting to document co_lnotab, and none did a
very good job. This patch unifies them into Objects/lnotab_notes.txt which
tries to completely capture the current state of affairs.
I also discovered that we've attached 2 layers of patches to the basic tracing
scheme. The first layer avoids jumping to instructions that don't start a line,
to avoid problems in if statements and while loops.  The second layer
discovered that jumps backward do need to trace at instructions that don't
start a line, so it added extra lnotab entries for 'while' and 'for' loops, and
added a special case for backward jumps within the same line. I replaced these
patches by just treating forward and backward jumps differently.
Diffstat (limited to 'Objects/codeobject.c')
| -rw-r--r-- | Objects/codeobject.c | 140 | 
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 132 deletions
diff --git a/Objects/codeobject.c b/Objects/codeobject.c index 55f3fb8..6d6775a 100644 --- a/Objects/codeobject.c +++ b/Objects/codeobject.c @@ -507,48 +507,8 @@ PyTypeObject PyCode_Type = {  	code_new,			/* tp_new */  }; -/* All about c_lnotab. - -c_lnotab is an array of unsigned bytes disguised as a Python string.  In -O -mode, SET_LINENO opcodes aren't generated, and bytecode offsets are mapped -to source code line #s (when needed for tracebacks) via c_lnotab instead. -The array is conceptually a list of -    (bytecode offset increment, line number increment) -pairs.  The details are important and delicate, best illustrated by example: - -    byte code offset    source code line number -        0		    1 -        6		    2 -       50		    7 -      350                 307 -      361                 308 - -The first trick is that these numbers aren't stored, only the increments -from one row to the next (this doesn't really work, but it's a start): - -    0, 1,  6, 1,  44, 5,  300, 300,  11, 1 - -The second trick is that an unsigned byte can't hold negative values, or -values larger than 255, so (a) there's a deep assumption that byte code -offsets and their corresponding line #s both increase monotonically, and (b) -if at least one column jumps by more than 255 from one row to the next, more -than one pair is written to the table. In case #b, there's no way to know -from looking at the table later how many were written.  That's the delicate -part.  A user of c_lnotab desiring to find the source line number -corresponding to a bytecode address A should do something like this - -    lineno = addr = 0 -    for addr_incr, line_incr in c_lnotab: -        addr += addr_incr -        if addr > A: -            return lineno -        lineno += line_incr - -In order for this to work, when the addr field increments by more than 255, -the line # increment in each pair generated must be 0 until the remaining addr -increment is < 256.  So, in the example above, com_set_lineno should not (as -was actually done until 2.2) expand 300, 300 to 255, 255,  45, 45, but to -255, 0,  45, 255,  0, 45. +/* Use co_lnotab to compute the line number from a bytecode index, addrq.  See +   lnotab_notes.txt for the details of the lnotab representation.  */  int @@ -567,85 +527,10 @@ PyCode_Addr2Line(PyCodeObject *co, int addrq)  	return line;  } -/*  -   Check whether the current instruction is at the start of a line. - - */ - -	/* The theory of SET_LINENO-less tracing. - -	   In a nutshell, we use the co_lnotab field of the code object -	   to tell when execution has moved onto a different line. - -	   As mentioned above, the basic idea is so set things up so -	   that - -	         *instr_lb <= frame->f_lasti < *instr_ub - -	   is true so long as execution does not change lines. - -	   This is all fairly simple.  Digging the information out of -	   co_lnotab takes some work, but is conceptually clear. - -	   Somewhat harder to explain is why we don't *always* call the -	   line trace function when the above test fails. - -	   Consider this code: - -	   1: def f(a): -	   2:     if a: -	   3:        print 1 -	   4:     else: -	   5:        print 2 - -	   which compiles to this: - -	   2           0 LOAD_FAST                0 (a) -		       3 JUMP_IF_FALSE            9 (to 15) -		       6 POP_TOP - -	   3           7 LOAD_CONST               1 (1) -		      10 PRINT_ITEM -		      11 PRINT_NEWLINE -		      12 JUMP_FORWARD             6 (to 21) -		 >>   15 POP_TOP - -	   5          16 LOAD_CONST               2 (2) -		      19 PRINT_ITEM -		      20 PRINT_NEWLINE -		 >>   21 LOAD_CONST               0 (None) -		      24 RETURN_VALUE - -	   If 'a' is false, execution will jump to instruction at offset -	   15 and the co_lnotab will claim that execution has moved to -	   line 3.  This is at best misleading.  In this case we could -	   associate the POP_TOP with line 4, but that doesn't make -	   sense in all cases (I think). - -	   What we do is only call the line trace function if the co_lnotab -	   indicates we have jumped to the *start* of a line, i.e. if the -	   current instruction offset matches the offset given for the -	   start of a line by the co_lnotab. - -	   This also takes care of the situation where 'a' is true. -	   Execution will jump from instruction offset 12 to offset 21. -	   Then the co_lnotab would imply that execution has moved to line -	   5, which is again misleading. - -	   Why do we set f_lineno when tracing?  Well, consider the code -	   above when 'a' is true.  If stepping through this with 'n' in -	   pdb, you would stop at line 1 with a "call" type event, then -	   line events on lines 2 and 3, then a "return" type event -- but -	   you would be shown line 5 during this event.  This is a change -	   from the behaviour in 2.2 and before, and I've found it -	   confusing in practice.  By setting and using f_lineno when -	   tracing, one can report a line number different from that -	   suggested by f_lasti on this one occasion where it's desirable. -	*/ - - -int  -PyCode_CheckLineNumber(PyCodeObject* co, int lasti, PyAddrPair *bounds) +/* Update *bounds to describe the first and one-past-the-last instructions in +   the same line as lasti.  Return the number of that line. */ +int +_PyCode_CheckLineNumber(PyCodeObject* co, int lasti, PyAddrPair *bounds)  {          int size, addr, line;          unsigned char* p; @@ -662,11 +547,9 @@ PyCode_CheckLineNumber(PyCodeObject* co, int lasti, PyAddrPair *bounds)             instr_lb -- if we stored the matching value of p             somwhere we could skip the first while loop. */ -        /* see comments in compile.c for the description of +        /* See lnotab_notes.txt for the description of             co_lnotab.  A point to remember: increments to p -           should come in pairs -- although we don't care about -           the line increments here, treating them as byte -           increments gets confusing, to say the least. */ +           come in (addr, line) pairs. */          bounds->ap_lower = 0;          while (size > 0) { @@ -679,13 +562,6 @@ PyCode_CheckLineNumber(PyCodeObject* co, int lasti, PyAddrPair *bounds)                  --size;          } -        /* If lasti and addr don't match exactly, we don't want to -           change the lineno slot on the frame or execute a trace -           function.  Return -1 instead. -        */ -        if (addr != lasti) -                line = -1; -                  if (size > 0) {                  while (--size >= 0) {                          addr += *p++;  | 
