| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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and .keys(), .items(), .values() return dict views.
The dict views aren't fully functional yet; in particular, they can't
be compared to sets yet. but they are useful as "iterator wells".
There are still 27 failing unit tests; I expect that many of these
have fairly trivial fixes, but there are so many, I could use help.
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There's one major and one minor category still unfixed:
doctests are the major category (and I hope to be able to augment the
refactoring tool to refactor bona fide doctests soon);
other code generating print statements in strings is the minor category.
(Oh, and I don't know if the compiler package works.)
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Not all code has been fixed yet; this is just a checkpoint...
The C API still has PyDict_HasKey() and _HasKeyString(); not sure
if I want to change those just yet.
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causing the profiler to crash on an AssertionError if the same Python
function catches multiple exceptions from C functions.
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profile.py if available.
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profile.help() point at the library reference instead of profile.doc.
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there's no need to subclass OptionParser.
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collate, so setting it back to the function name
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and one for sort order when using stdout. Uses optparse.
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From SF patch #852334.
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call, or via setting an instance or class vrbl.
Rewrote the calibration docs.
Modern boxes are so friggin' fast, and a profiler event does so much work
anyway, that the cost of looking up an instance vrbl (the bias constant)
per profile event just isn't a big deal.
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actual run of the profiler, instead of timing a simplified simulation of
part of what the profiler does. It computes a constant about 60% higher
on my Win98SE box than the old method, and the new constant appears much
more realistic. Deleted the undocumented simple(), instrumented(), and
profiler_simulation() methods (which existed only to support the previous
calibration method).
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seriously wrong. This started out by just fixing the docs, but then it
occurred to me that the doc confusion propagated into misleading vrbl names
too, so I also renamed those to match reality. As a result, INO the time
computations are much easier to understand now (within the limitations of
vast quantities of 3-character names <wink>).
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to use assert stmts (was raising unexpected kinds of exceptions).
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+ The last index in the timing tuple is 4, not 5 (noted by Guido).
+ The poorly named trace_dispatch_i works with float return values too.
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hasn't worked in years, docs were wrong, and they aren't interesting
anymore regardless.
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derive Profile subclasses. This patch repairs that, restoring
negative tuple indices. Yuck? You bet.
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it deals correctly with some anomalous cases; according to this test
suite I've fixed it right.
The anomalous cases had to do with 'exception' events: these aren't
generated when they would be most helpful, and the profiler has to
work hard to recover the right information. The problems occur when C
code (such as hasattr(), which is used as the example here) calls back
into Python code and clears an exception raised by that Python code.
Consider this example:
def foo():
hasattr(obj, "bar")
Where obj is an instance from a class like this:
class C:
def __getattr__(self, name):
raise AttributeError
The profiler sees the following sequence of events:
call (foo)
call (__getattr__)
exception (in __getattr__)
return (from foo)
Previously, the profiler would assume the return event returned from
__getattr__. An if statement checking for this condition and raising
an exception was commented out... This version does the right thing.
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This should fix a bug in how time is allocated during exception propogation
(esp. in the presence of finally clauses).
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"import MacOS", and there *is* a need for "import operator".
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Ensure that all the default timers are called as functions, not an
expensive method wrapper around a variety of different functions.
Agressively avoid dictionary lookups.
Modify the dispatch scheme (Profile.trace_dispatch_*(), where * is not
'call', 'exception' or 'return') so that the callables dispatched to
are simple functions and not bound methods -- this reduces the number
of layers of Python call machinery that gets touched.
Remove a couple of duplicate imports from the "if __name__ == ..."
section.
This closes SF patch #430948.
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good doc strings.)
Fix silly argument handling; was using *args but really wanted 1
optional arg.
XXX Should profile.doc be merged into the documentation and removed
from the Lib directory?
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(and yes, "Currintly" also counts <0.5 wink>)
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comments, docstrings or error messages. I fixed two minor things in
test_winreg.py ("didn't" -> "Didn't" and "Didnt" -> "Didn't").
There is a minor style issue involved: Guido seems to have preferred English
grammar (behaviour, honour) in a couple places. This patch changes that to
American, which is the more prominent style in the source. I prefer English
myself, so if English is preferred, I'd be happy to supply a patch myself ;)
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who writes:
Here is batch 2, as a big collection of CVS context diffs.
Along with moving comments into docstrings, i've added a
couple of missing docstrings and attempted to make sure more
module docstrings begin with a one-line summary.
I did not add docstrings to the methods in profile.py for
fear of upsetting any careful optimizations there, though
i did move class documentation into class docstrings.
The convention i'm using is to leave credits/version/copyright
type of stuff in # comments, and move the rest of the descriptive
stuff about module usage into module docstrings. Hope this is
okay.
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This simplified some other places in the code.
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