| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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- recognize "SyntaxError"s by the print_file_and_line attribute.
- add the syntaxerror attributes to all exceptions in compile.c.
Fixes #221791
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Unknown whether this fixes it.
- stringobject.c, PyString_FromFormatV: don't assume that va_list is of
a type that can be copied via an initializer.
- errors.c, PyErr_Format: add a va_end() to balance the va_start().
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If a new exception occurs while an exception instance is being
created, try harder to make sure there is a traceback. If the
original exception had a traceback associated with it and the new
exception does not, keep the old exception.
Of course, callers to PyErr_NormalizeException() must still be
prepared to have tb set to NULL.
XXX This isn't an ideal solution, but it's better than no traceback at
all. It occurs if, for example, the exception occurs when the call to
the constructor fails before any Python code is executed. Guido
suggests that it there is Python code that was about to be executed
-- but wasn't, say, because it was called with the wrong number of
arguments -- then we should point at the first line of the code object
anyway.
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PyString_FromFormat() since it's much more generally useful than
just for exceptions.
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in release builds. Suggested by Martin v. Loewis.
I'm half tempted to macroize PyErr_Occurred too, as the whole thing could
collapse to just
_PyThreadState_Current->curexc_type
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explicit filename, lineno etc. arguments.
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for errors raised in future.c.
Move some helper functions from compile.c to errors.c and make them
API functions: PyErr_SyntaxLocation() and PyErr_ProgramText().
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Changes to error messages to increase consistency & clarity.
This (mostly) closes SourceForge patch #101839.
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these computations are required for their side effects in traversing the
variable arguments list.
Reported by Marc-Andre Lemburg <mal@lemburg.com>.
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This should match the situation in the 1.6b1 tree.
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PyErr_Format computes size of buffer needed rather than relying on
static buffer.
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add sanity check to gc: if an exception occurs during GC, call
PyErr_WriteUnraisable and then call Py_FatalEror.
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filename and line number of the call site to allow esier debugging.
This closes SourceForge patch #101214.
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thus preserving the first one that has been raised.
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an exception set. This shouldn't happen, but we see it at times...
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declarations yet, those come later.
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return 0 (exceptions don't match). This means that if an ImportError
is raised because exceptions.py can't be imported, the interpreter
will exit "cleanly" with an error message instead of just core
dumping.
PyErr_SetFromErrnoWithFilename(), PyErr_SetFromWindowsErrWithFilename():
Don't test on Py_UseClassExceptionsFlag.
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in PyErr_SetFromWindowsErrWithFilename() like he intended to... :-)
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enough, it could be negative. Add i > 0 test. (Not i >= 0; zero isn't
a valid error number.)
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* Changes to a recent patch by Chris Tismer to errors.c. Chris' patch
always used FormatMessage() to get the error message passing the error code
from errno - but errno and FormatMessage use a different numbering scheme.
The main reason the patch looked OK was that ENOFILE==ERROR_FILE_NOT_FOUND -
but that is about the only shared error code :-). The MS CRT docs tell you
to use _sys_errlist()/_sys_nerr. My patch does also this, and adds a very
similar function specifically for win32 error codes.
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strerror(). This improves the quality of the error messages.
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message.
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an exception from errno, with a supplied filename (primarily used by
IOError and OSError). If class exceptions are used then the exception
is instantiated with a 3-tuple: (errno, strerror, filename). For
backwards compatibility reasons, if string exceptions are used,
filename is ignored.
PyErr_SetFromErrno(): Implement in terms of
PyErr_SetFromErrnoWithFilename().
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by Marc Lemburg. There's a path through the code where *val is NULL,
but value isn't, and value should be DECREF'ed.
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instance's class is a subclass of this, then use the instance's class
as the exception type.
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(PyExc_MemoryErrorInst) raise this instead of PyExc_MemoryError. This
only happens when exception classes are enabled (e.g. when Python is
started with -X).
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- int PyErr_GivenExceptionMatches(obj1, obj2)
Returns 1 if obj1 and obj2 are the same object, or if obj1 is an
instance of type obj2, or of a class derived from obj2
- int PyErr_ExceptionMatches(obj)
Higher level wrapper around PyErr_GivenExceptionMatches() which uses
PyErr_Occurred() as obj1. This will be the more commonly called
function.
- void PyErr_NormalizeException(typeptr, valptr, tbptr)
Normalizes exceptions, and places the normalized values in the
arguments. If type is not a class, this does nothing. If type is a
class, then it makes sure that value is an instance of the class by:
1. if instance is of the type, or a class derived from type, it does
nothing.
2. otherwise it instantiates the class, using the value as an
argument. If value is None, it uses an empty arg tuple, and if
the value is a tuple, it uses just that.
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All per-thread globals are moved into a struct which is manipulated
separately.
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better than the old error API.
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