summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/PLAN.txt
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorTim Peters <tim.peters@gmail.com>2001-08-02 04:15:00 (GMT)
committerTim Peters <tim.peters@gmail.com>2001-08-02 04:15:00 (GMT)
commit6d6c1a35e08b95a83dbe47dbd9e6474daff00354 (patch)
tree542089077b9c2650dcf5c52d6bfcef1baf12d176 /PLAN.txt
parent52d55a392600011d3edfe85c694744ec550ad1fe (diff)
downloadcpython-6d6c1a35e08b95a83dbe47dbd9e6474daff00354.zip
cpython-6d6c1a35e08b95a83dbe47dbd9e6474daff00354.tar.gz
cpython-6d6c1a35e08b95a83dbe47dbd9e6474daff00354.tar.bz2
Merge of descr-branch back into trunk.
Diffstat (limited to 'PLAN.txt')
-rw-r--r--PLAN.txt431
1 files changed, 431 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/PLAN.txt b/PLAN.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1ab384c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/PLAN.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,431 @@
+Project: core implementation
+****************************
+
+Tasks:
+
+Do binary operators properly. nb_add should try to call self.__add__
+and other.__radd__. I think I'll exclude base types that define any
+binary operator without setting the CHECKTYPES flag.
+
+Fix comparisons. There's some nasty stuff here: when two types are
+not the same, and they're not instances, the fallback code doesn't
+account for the possibility that they might be subtypes of a common
+base type that defines a comparison.
+
+Fix subtype_dealloc(). This currently searches through the list of
+base types until it finds a type whose tp_dealloc is not
+subtype_dealloc. I think this is not safe. I think the alloc/dealloc
+policy needs to be rethought. *** There's an idea here that I haven't
+worked out yet: just as object creation now has separate API's tp_new,
+tp_alloc, and tp_init, destruction has tp_dealloc and tp_free. (Maybe
+tp_fini should be added to correspond to tp_init?) Something
+could/should be done with this. ***
+
+Clean up isinstance(), issubclass() and their C equivalents. There
+are a bunch of different APIs here and not all of them do the right
+thing yet. There should be fewer APIs and their implementation should
+be simpler. The old "abstract subclass" test should probably
+disappear (if we want to root out ExtensionClass). *** I think I've
+done 90% of this by creating PyType_IsSubtype() and using it
+appropriately. For now, the old "abstract subclass" test is still
+there, and there may be some places where PyObject_IsSubclass() is
+called where PyType_IsSubtype() would be more appropriate. ***
+
+Check for conflicts between base classes. I fear that the rules used
+to decide whether multiple bases have conflicting instance variables
+aren't strict enough. I think that sometimes two different classes
+adding __dict__ may be incompatible after all.
+
+Check for order conflicts. Suppose there are two base classes X and
+Y. Suppose class B derives from X and Y, and class C from Y and X (in
+that order). Now suppose class D derives from B and C. In which
+order should the base classes X and Y be searched? This is an order
+conflict, and should be disallowed; currently the test for this is not
+implemented.
+
+Clean up the GC interface. Currently, tp_basicsize includes the GC
+head size iff tp_flags includes the GC flag bit. This makes object
+size math a pain (e.g. to see if two object types have the same
+instance size, you can't just compare the tp_basicsize fields -- you
+have to conditionally subtract the GC head size). Neil has a patch
+that improves the API in this area, but it's backwards incompatible.
+(http://sf.net/tracker/?func=detail&aid=421893&group_id=5470&atid=305470)
+I think I know of a way to fix the incompatibility (by switching to a
+different flag bit). *** Tim proposed a better idea: macros to access
+tp_basicsize while hiding the nastiness. This is done now, so I think
+the rest of this task needn't be done. ***
+
+Make the __dict__ of types declared with Python class statements
+writable -- only statically declared types must have an immutable
+dict, because they're shared between interpreter instances. Possibly
+trap writes to the __dict__ to update the corresponding tp_<slot> if
+an __<slot>__ name is affected. *** Done as part of the next task. ***
+
+It should be an option (maybe a different metaclass, maybe a flag) to
+*not* merge __dict__ with all the bases, but instead search the
+__dict__ (or __introduced__?) of all bases in __mro__ order. (This is
+needed anyway to unify classes completely.) *** Partly done.
+Inheritance of slots from bases is still icky: (1) MRO is not always
+respected when inheriting slots; (2) dynamic classes can't add slot
+implementations in Python after creation (e.g., setting C.__hash__
+doesn't set the tp_hash slot). ***
+
+Universal base class (object). How can we make the object class
+subclassable and define simple default methods for everything without
+having these inherited by built-in types that don't want these
+defaults? *** Done, really. ***
+
+Add error checking to the MRO calculation. *** Done. ***
+
+Make __new__ overridable through a Python class method (!). Make more
+of the sub-algorithms of type construction available as methods. ***
+After I implemented class methods, I found that in order to be able
+to make an upcall to Base.__new__() and have it create an instance of
+your class (rather than a Base instance), you can't use class methods
+-- you must use static methods. So I've implemented those too. I've
+hooked up __new__ in the right places, so the first part of this is
+now done. I've also exported the MRO calculation and made it
+overridable, as metamethod mro(). I believe that closes this topic
+for now. I expect that some warts will only be really debugged when
+we try to use this for some, eh, interesting types such as tuples. ***
+
+More -- I'm sure new issues will crop up as we go.
+
+
+Project: loose ends and follow-through
+**************************************
+
+Tasks:
+
+Make more (most?) built-in types act as their own factory functions.
+
+Make more (most?) built-in types subtypable -- with or without
+overridable allocation. *** This includes descriptors! It should be
+possible to write descriptors in Python, so metaclasses can do clever
+things with them. ***
+
+Exceptions should be types. This changes the rules, since now almost
+anything can be raised (as maybe it should). Or should we strive for
+enforcement of the convention that all exceptions should be derived
+from Exception? String exceptions will be another hassle, to be
+deprecated and eventually ruled out.
+
+Standardize a module containing names for all built-in types, and
+standardize on names. E.g. should the official name of the string
+type be 'str', 'string', or 'StringType'?
+
+Create a hierarchy of types, so that e.g. int and long are both
+subtypes of an abstract base type integer, which is itself a subtype
+of number, etc. A lot of thinking can go into this!
+
+*** NEW TASK??? ***
+Implement "signature" objects. These are alluded to in PEP 252 but
+not yet specified. Supposedly they provide an easily usable API to
+find out about function/method arguments. Building these for Python
+functions is simple. Building these for built-in functions will
+require a change to the PyMethodDef structure, so that a type can
+provide signature information for its C methods. (This would also
+help in supporting keyword arguments for C methods with less work than
+PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords() currently requires.) But should we do
+this? It's additional work and not required for any of the other
+parts.
+
+
+Project: making classes use the new machinery
+*********************************************
+
+Tasks:
+
+Try to get rid of all code in classobject.c by deferring to the new
+mechanisms. How far can we get without breaking backwards
+compatibility? This is underspecified because I haven't thought much
+about it yet. Can we lose the use of PyInstance_Check() everywhere?
+I would hope so!
+
+
+Project: backwards compatibility
+********************************
+
+Tasks:
+
+Make sure all code checks the proper tp_flags bit before accessing
+type object fields.
+
+Identify areas of incompatibility with Python 2.1. Design solutions.
+Implement and test.
+
+Some specific areas: a fair amount of code probably depends on
+specific types having __members__ and/or __methods__ attributes.
+These are currently not present (conformant to PEP 252, which proposes
+to drop them) but we may have to add them back. This can be done in a
+generic way with not too much effort. Tim adds: Perhaps that dir(object)
+rarely returns anything but [] now is a consequence of this. I'm very
+used to doing, e.g., dir([]) or dir("") in an interactive shell to jog my
+memory; also one of the reasons test_generators failed.
+
+Another area: going all the way with classes and instances means that
+type(x) == types.InstanceType won't work any more to detect instances.
+Should there be a mode where this still works? Maybe this should be
+the default mode, with a warning, and an explicit way to get the new
+way to work? (Instead of a __future__ statement, I'm thinking of a
+module global __metaclass__ which would provide the default metaclass
+for baseless class statements.)
+
+
+Project: testing
+****************
+
+Tasks:
+
+Identify new functionality that needs testing. Conceive unit tests
+for all new functionality. Conceive stress tests for critical
+features. Run the tests. Fix bugs. Repeat until satisfied.
+
+Note: this may interact with the branch integration task.
+
+
+Project: integration with main branch
+*************************************
+
+Tasks:
+
+Merge changes in the HEAD branch into the descr-branch. Then merge
+the descr-branch back into the HEAD branch.
+
+The longer we wait, the more effort this will be -- the descr-branch
+forked off quite a long time ago, and there are changes everywhere in
+the HEAD branch (e.g. the dict object has been radically rewritten).
+
+On the other hand, if we do this too early, we'll have to do it again
+later.
+
+Note from Tim: We should never again wait until literally 100s of files
+are out of synch. I don't care how often I need to do this, provided only
+that it's a tractable task each time. Once per week sounds like a good
+idea. As is, even the trunk change to rangeobject.c created more than its
+proper share of merge headaches, because it confused all the other reasons
+include file merges were getting conflicts (the more changes there are, the
+worse diff does; indeed, I came up with the ndiff algorithm in the 80s
+precisely because the source-control diff program Cray used at the time
+produced minimal but *senseless* diffs, thus creating artificial conflicts;
+paying unbounded attention to context does a much better job of putting
+changes where they make semantic sense too; but we're stuck with Unix diff
+here, and it isn't robust in this sense; if we don't keep its job simple,
+it will make my job hell).
+
+Done:
+To undo or rename before final merge: Modules/spam.c has worked its
+way into the branch Unix and Windows builds (pythoncore.dsp and
+PC/config.c); also imported by test_descr.py. How about renaming to
+xxsubtype.c (whatever) now?
+
+
+Project: performance tuning
+***************************
+
+Tasks:
+
+Pick or create a general performance benchmark for Python. Benchmark
+the new system vs. the old system. Profile the new system. Improve
+hotspots. Repeat until satisfied.
+
+Note: this may interact with the branch integration task.
+
+
+Project: documentation
+**********************
+
+Tasks:
+
+Update PEP 252 (descriptors). Describe more of the prototype
+implementation
+
+Update PEP 253 (subtyping). Complicated architectural wrangling with
+metaclasses. There is an interaction between implementation and
+description.
+
+Write PEP 254 (unification of classes). This should discuss what
+changes for ordinary classes, and how we can make it more b/w
+compatible.
+
+Other documentation. There needs to be user documentation,
+eventually.
+
+
+Project: community interaction
+******************************
+
+Tasks:
+
+Once the PEPs are written, solicit community feedback, and formulate
+responses to the feedback. Give the community enough time to think
+over this complicated proposal. Provide the community with a
+prototype implementation to test. Try to do this *before* casting
+everything in stone!
+
+MERGE BEGIN ****************************************************************
+Merge details (this section is Tim's scratchpad, but should help a lot if
+he dies of frustration while wrestling with CVS <0.9 wink>).
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------
+2001-08-01 Merging descr-branch back into trunk.
+
+Tagged trunk about 22:05:
+ cvs tag date2001-08-01 python
+
+Merged trunk delta into branch:
+ cvs -q -z3 up -j date2001-07-30 -j date2001-08-01 descr
+
+No conflicts (! first time ever!) ... but problems with pythoncore.dsp.
+Resolved.
+
+Rebuilt from scratch; ran all tests; checked into branch about 22:40.
+
+Merged descr-branch back into trunk:
+ cvs -q -z3 up -j descr-branch python
+
+34 conflicts. Hmm! OK, looks like every file in the project with an
+embedded RCS Id is "a conflict". Others make no sense, e.g., a dozen
+conflicts in dictobject.c, sometimes enclosing identical(!) blobs of
+source code. And CVS remains utterly baffled by Python type object decls.
+Every line of ceval.c's generator code si in conflict blocks ... OK,
+there's no pattern or sense here, I'll just deal with it.
+
+Conflicts resolved; rebuilt from scratch; test_weakref fails.
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------
+2001-07-30
+
+Doing this again while the expat and Windows installer changes are still
+fresh on my mind.
+
+Tagged trunk about 23:50 EDT on the 29th:
+ cvs tag date2001-07-30 python
+
+Merged trunk delta into branch:
+
+ cvs -q -z3 up -j date2001-07-28 -j date2001-07-30 descr
+
+2 conflicts, resolved.
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------
+2001-07-28
+
+Tagged trunk about 00:31 EDT:
+ cvs tag date2001-07-28 python
+
+Merged trunk delta into branch:
+ cvs -q -z3 up -j date2001-07-21 -j date2001-07-28 descr
+
+4 conflicts, all RCS Ids. Resolved.
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------
+2001-07-21
+
+Tagged trunk about 01:00 EDT:
+ cvs tag date2001-07-21 python
+
+Merged trunk delta into branch:
+ cvs -q -z3 up -j date2001-07-17b -j date2001-07-21 descr
+
+4 conflicts, mostly RCS Id thingies. Resolved.
+
+Legit failure in new test_repr, because repr.py dispatches on the exact
+string returned by type(x). type(1L) and type('s') differ in descr-branch
+now, and repr.py didn't realize that, falling back to the "unknown type"
+case for longs and strings. Repaired descr-branch repr.py.
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------
+2001-07-19
+
+Removed the r22a1-branch tag (see next entry). Turns out Guido did add a
+r22a1 tag, so the r22a1-branch tag served no point anymore.
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------
+2001-07-18 2.2a1 releaase
+
+Immediately after the merge just below, I tagged descr-branch via
+
+ cvs tag r22a1-branch descr
+
+Guido may or may not want to add another tag here (? maybe he wants to do
+some more Unix fiddling first).
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------
+2001-07-17 building 2.2a1 release, from descr-branch
+
+Tagged trunk about 22:00 EDT, like so:
+ cvs tag date2001-07-17b python
+
+Merged trunk delta into branch via:
+ cvs -q -z3 up -j date2001-07-17a -j date2001-07-17b descr
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------
+2001-07-17
+
+Tagged trunk about 00:05 EDT, like so:
+ cvs tag date2001-07-17a python
+
+Merged trunk delta into branch via:
+ cvs -q -z3 up -j date2001-07-16 -j date2001-07-17a descr
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------
+2001-07-16
+
+Tagged trunk about 15:20 EDT, like so:
+ cvs tag date2001-07-16 python
+
+Guido then added all the other dist/ directories to descr-branch from that
+trunk tag.
+
+Tim then merged trunk delta into the branch via:
+ cvs -q -z3 up -j date2001-07-15 -j date2001-07-16 descr
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------
+2001-07-15
+
+Tagged trunk about 15:44 EDT, like so:
+ cvs tag date2001-07-15 python
+
+Merged trunk delta into branch via:
+ cvs -q -z3 up -j date2001-07-13 -j date2001-07-15 descr
+
+Four files with conflicts, all artificial RCS Id & Revision thingies.
+Resolved and committed.
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------
+2001-07-13
+
+Tagged trunk about 22:13 EDT, like so:
+ cvs tag date2001-07-13 python
+
+Merged trunk delta into branch via:
+ cvs -q -z3 up -j date2001-07-06 -j date2001-07-13 descr
+
+Six(!) files with conflicts, mostly related to NeilS's generator gc patches.
+Unsure why, but CVS seems always to think there are conflicts whenever a
+line in a type object decl gets changed, and the conflict marking seems
+maximally confused in these cases. Anyway, since I reviewed those patches
+on the trunk, good thing I'm merging them, and darned glad it's still fresh
+on my mind.
+
+Resolved the conflicts, and committed the changes in a few hours total.
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------
+2001-07-07
+
+Merge of trunk tag date2001-07-06 into descr-branch, via
+ cvs -q -z3 up -j date2001-07-06 mergedescr
+was committed on 2001-07-07.
+
+Merge issues:
+
+(all resolved -- GvR)
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------
+2001-07-06
+
+Tagged trunk a bit after midnight, like so:
+
+C:\Code>cvs tag date2001-07-06 python
+cvs server: Tagging python
+cvs server: Tagging python/dist
+cvs server: Tagging python/dist/src
+T python/dist/src/.cvsignore
+T python/dist/src/LICENSE
+T python/dist/src/Makefile.pre.in
+T python/dist/src/README
+... [& about 3000 lines more] ...
+
+This is the first trunk snapshot to be merged into the descr-branch.
+Gave it a date instead of a goofy name because there's going to be more
+than one of these, and at least it's obvious which of two ISO dates comes
+earlier. These tags should go away after all merging is complete.
+MERGE END ******************************************************************