#ifndef Py_INTERNAL_CROSSINTERP_H #define Py_INTERNAL_CROSSINTERP_H #ifdef __cplusplus extern "C" { #endif #ifndef Py_BUILD_CORE # error "this header requires Py_BUILD_CORE define" #endif #include "pycore_pyerrors.h" /***************************/ /* cross-interpreter calls */ /***************************/ typedef int (*_Py_simple_func)(void *); extern int _Py_CallInInterpreter( PyInterpreterState *interp, _Py_simple_func func, void *arg); extern int _Py_CallInInterpreterAndRawFree( PyInterpreterState *interp, _Py_simple_func func, void *arg); /**************************/ /* cross-interpreter data */ /**************************/ typedef struct _xid _PyCrossInterpreterData; typedef PyObject *(*xid_newobjectfunc)(_PyCrossInterpreterData *); typedef void (*xid_freefunc)(void *); // _PyCrossInterpreterData is similar to Py_buffer as an effectively // opaque struct that holds data outside the object machinery. This // is necessary to pass safely between interpreters in the same process. struct _xid { // data is the cross-interpreter-safe derivation of a Python object // (see _PyObject_GetCrossInterpreterData). It will be NULL if the // new_object func (below) encodes the data. void *data; // obj is the Python object from which the data was derived. This // is non-NULL only if the data remains bound to the object in some // way, such that the object must be "released" (via a decref) when // the data is released. In that case the code that sets the field, // likely a registered "crossinterpdatafunc", is responsible for // ensuring it owns the reference (i.e. incref). PyObject *obj; // interp is the ID of the owning interpreter of the original // object. It corresponds to the active interpreter when // _PyObject_GetCrossInterpreterData() was called. This should only // be set by the cross-interpreter machinery. // // We use the ID rather than the PyInterpreterState to avoid issues // with deleted interpreters. Note that IDs are never re-used, so // each one will always correspond to a specific interpreter // (whether still alive or not). int64_t interpid; // new_object is a function that returns a new object in the current // interpreter given the data. The resulting object (a new // reference) will be equivalent to the original object. This field // is required. xid_newobjectfunc new_object; // free is called when the data is released. If it is NULL then // nothing will be done to free the data. For some types this is // okay (e.g. bytes) and for those types this field should be set // to NULL. However, for most the data was allocated just for // cross-interpreter use, so it must be freed when // _PyCrossInterpreterData_Release is called or the memory will // leak. In that case, at the very least this field should be set // to PyMem_RawFree (the default if not explicitly set to NULL). // The call will happen with the original interpreter activated. xid_freefunc free; }; PyAPI_FUNC(_PyCrossInterpreterData *) _PyCrossInterpreterData_New(void); PyAPI_FUNC(void) _PyCrossInterpreterData_Free(_PyCrossInterpreterData *data); /* defining cross-interpreter data */ PyAPI_FUNC(void) _PyCrossInterpreterData_Init( _PyCrossInterpreterData *data, PyInterpreterState *interp, void *shared, PyObject *obj, xid_newobjectfunc new_object); PyAPI_FUNC(int) _PyCrossInterpreterData_InitWithSize( _PyCrossInterpreterData *, PyInterpreterState *interp, const size_t, PyObject *, xid_newobjectfunc); PyAPI_FUNC(void) _PyCrossInterpreterData_Clear( PyInterpreterState *, _PyCrossInterpreterData *); /* using cross-interpreter data */ PyAPI_FUNC(int) _PyObject_CheckCrossInterpreterData(PyObject *); PyAPI_FUNC(int) _PyObject_GetCrossInterpreterData(PyObject *, _PyCrossInterpreterData *); PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject *) _PyCrossInterpreterData_NewObject(_PyCrossInterpreterData *); PyAPI_FUNC(int) _PyCrossInterpreterData_Release(_PyCrossInterpreterData *); PyAPI_FUNC(int) _PyCrossInterpreterData_ReleaseAndRawFree(_PyCrossInterpreterData *); /* cross-interpreter data registry */ // For now we use a global registry of shareable classes. An // alternative would be to add a tp_* slot for a class's // crossinterpdatafunc. It would be simpler and more efficient. typedef int (*crossinterpdatafunc)(PyThreadState *tstate, PyObject *, _PyCrossInterpreterData *); struct _xidregitem; struct _xidregitem { struct _xidregitem *prev; struct _xidregitem *next; /* This can be a dangling pointer, but only if weakref is set. */ PyTypeObject *cls; /* This is NULL for builtin types. */ PyObject *weakref; size_t refcount; crossinterpdatafunc getdata; }; struct _xidregistry { int global; /* builtin types or heap types */ int initialized; PyThread_type_lock mutex; struct _xidregitem *head; }; PyAPI_FUNC(int) _PyCrossInterpreterData_RegisterClass(PyTypeObject *, crossinterpdatafunc); PyAPI_FUNC(int) _PyCrossInterpreterData_UnregisterClass(PyTypeObject *); PyAPI_FUNC(crossinterpdatafunc) _PyCrossInterpreterData_Lookup(PyObject *); /*****************************/ /* runtime state & lifecycle */ /*****************************/ struct _xi_runtime_state { // builtin types // XXX Remove this field once we have a tp_* slot. struct _xidregistry registry; }; struct _xi_state { // heap types // XXX Remove this field once we have a tp_* slot. struct _xidregistry registry; // heap types PyObject *PyExc_NotShareableError; }; extern PyStatus _PyXI_Init(PyInterpreterState *interp); extern void _PyXI_Fini(PyInterpreterState *interp); /***************************/ /* short-term data sharing */ /***************************/ // Ultimately we'd like to preserve enough information about the // exception and traceback that we could re-constitute (or at least // simulate, a la traceback.TracebackException), and even chain, a copy // of the exception in the calling interpreter. typedef struct _excinfo { const char *type; const char *msg; } _Py_excinfo; typedef enum error_code { _PyXI_ERR_NO_ERROR = 0, _PyXI_ERR_UNCAUGHT_EXCEPTION = -1, _PyXI_ERR_OTHER = -2, _PyXI_ERR_NO_MEMORY = -3, _PyXI_ERR_ALREADY_RUNNING = -4, _PyXI_ERR_MAIN_NS_FAILURE = -5, _PyXI_ERR_APPLY_NS_FAILURE = -6, _PyXI_ERR_NOT_SHAREABLE = -7, } _PyXI_errcode; typedef struct _sharedexception { // The originating interpreter. PyInterpreterState *interp; // The kind of error to propagate. _PyXI_errcode code; // The exception information to propagate, if applicable. // This is populated only for _PyXI_ERR_UNCAUGHT_EXCEPTION. _Py_excinfo uncaught; } _PyXI_exception_info; PyAPI_FUNC(void) _PyXI_ApplyExceptionInfo( _PyXI_exception_info *info, PyObject *exctype); typedef struct xi_session _PyXI_session; typedef struct _sharedns _PyXI_namespace; PyAPI_FUNC(void) _PyXI_FreeNamespace(_PyXI_namespace *ns); PyAPI_FUNC(_PyXI_namespace *) _PyXI_NamespaceFromNames(PyObject *names); PyAPI_FUNC(int) _PyXI_FillNamespaceFromDict( _PyXI_namespace *ns, PyObject *nsobj, _PyXI_session *session); PyAPI_FUNC(int) _PyXI_ApplyNamespace( _PyXI_namespace *ns, PyObject *nsobj, PyObject *dflt); // A cross-interpreter session involves entering an interpreter // (_PyXI_Enter()), doing some work with it, and finally exiting // that interpreter (_PyXI_Exit()). // // At the boundaries of the session, both entering and exiting, // data may be exchanged between the previous interpreter and the // target one in a thread-safe way that does not violate the // isolation between interpreters. This includes setting objects // in the target's __main__ module on the way in, and capturing // uncaught exceptions on the way out. struct xi_session { // Once a session has been entered, this is the tstate that was // current before the session. If it is different from cur_tstate // then we must have switched interpreters. Either way, this will // be the current tstate once we exit the session. PyThreadState *prev_tstate; // Once a session has been entered, this is the current tstate. // It must be current when the session exits. PyThreadState *init_tstate; // This is true if init_tstate needs cleanup during exit. int own_init_tstate; // This is true if, while entering the session, init_thread took // "ownership" of the interpreter's __main__ module. This means // it is the only thread that is allowed to run code there. // (Caveat: for now, users may still run exec() against the // __main__ module's dict, though that isn't advisable.) int running; // This is a cached reference to the __dict__ of the entered // interpreter's __main__ module. It is looked up when at the // beginning of the session as a convenience. PyObject *main_ns; // This is set if the interpreter is entered and raised an exception // that needs to be handled in some special way during exit. _PyXI_errcode *exc_override; // This is set if exit captured an exception to propagate. _PyXI_exception_info *exc; // -- pre-allocated memory -- _PyXI_exception_info _exc; _PyXI_errcode _exc_override; }; PyAPI_FUNC(int) _PyXI_Enter( _PyXI_session *session, PyInterpreterState *interp, PyObject *nsupdates); PyAPI_FUNC(void) _PyXI_Exit(_PyXI_session *session); PyAPI_FUNC(void) _PyXI_ApplyCapturedException( _PyXI_session *session, PyObject *excwrapper); PyAPI_FUNC(int) _PyXI_HasCapturedException(_PyXI_session *session); #ifdef __cplusplus } #endif #endif /* !Py_INTERNAL_CROSSINTERP_H */