`convertitem()` raises `SystemError` when 'GH-' is used without `PY_SSIZE_T_CLEAN`.
This commit makes `skipitem()` raise it too.
(cherry picked from commit 4ebf4a6bfa)
Co-authored-by: Inada Naoki <songofacandy@gmail.com>
* Set content-length for simple http server 301s
When http.server.SimpleHTTPRequestHandler sends a 301 (Moved
Permanently) due to a missing file, it does not set a Content-Length
of 0. Unfortunately, certain clients can be left waiting for the
connection to be closed in this circumstance, even though no body
will be sent. At time of writing, both curl and Firefox demonstrate
this behavior.
* Test Content-Length on simple http server redirect
When serving a redirect, the SimpleHTTPRequestHandler will now send
`Content-Length: 0`. Several tests for http.server already cover
various behaviors and checks including redirection. This change only
adds one check for the expected Content-Length on the simplest case
for a redirect.
* Add news entry for SimpleHTTPRequestHandler fix
* Clarify the specific kind of 301
Co-authored-by: Senthil Kumaran <skumaran@gatech.edu>
(cherry picked from commit fb42725561)
Co-authored-by: Stephen Rosen <sirosen@globus.org>
Fixes http.client potential denial of service where it could get stuck reading lines from a malicious server after a 100 Continue response.
Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith <greg@krypto.org>
(cherry picked from commit 47895e31b6)
Co-authored-by: Gen Xu <xgbarry@gmail.com>
Ignore objects that inspect.unwrap throws due to
too many wrappers. This is a very rare case, however
it can easily be surfaced when a module under doctest
imports unitest.mock.call into its namespace.
We simply skip any object that throws this exception.
This should handle the majority of cases.
(cherry picked from commit 565a31804c)
Co-authored-by: Alfred Perlstein <alfred@fb.com>
The address tuple for CAN_RAW no longer returns the address family
after the introduction of CAN ISO-TP support in a30f6d45ac. However,
updating test_socket.CANTest.testSendFrame was missed as part of the
change, so the test incorrectly attempts to index past the last tuple
item to retrieve the address family.
This removes the now-redundant check for equality against socket.AF_CAN,
as the tuple will not contain the address family.
(cherry picked from commit 355bae8882)
Co-authored-by: karl ding <karlding@users.noreply.github.com>
This adds IO, TextIO, BinaryIO, Match, and Pattern.
Co-authored-by: Łukasz Langa <lukasz@langa.pl>
Co-authored-by: Ken Jin <28750310+Fidget-Spinner@users.noreply.github.com>
(cherry picked from commit b115579734)
Co-authored-by: Jelle Zijlstra <jelle.zijlstra@gmail.com>
The code was updated in
0ec88b33d0
but the docstring was left untouched.
=> updated the docstring to reflect the code changes
(cherry picked from commit d4222ea6b0)
Co-authored-by: Jürgen Gmach <juergen.gmach@googlemail.com>
Left click and drag to select lines. With selection, right click for context menu with copy and copy-with-prompts.
Also add copy-with-prompts to the text-box context menu.
Co-authored-by: Terry Jan Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu>
Only complain if the config target is >= 10.3 and the current target is
< 10.3. The check was originally added to ensure that incompatible
LDSHARED flags are not used, because -undefined dynamic_lookup is
used when building for 10.3 and later, and is not supported on older OS
versions. Apart from that, there should be no problem in general
with using an older target.
Authored-by: Joshua Root <jmr@macports.org>
* bpo-43926: Cleaner metadata with PEP 566 JSON support.
* Add blurb
* Add versionchanged and versionadded declarations for changes to metadata.
* Use descriptor for PEP 566
Reverts commit e653d4d8e8 and makes
parsing even more strict. Like socket.inet_pton() any leading zero
is now treated as invalid input.
Signed-off-by: Christian Heimes <christian@python.org>
Co-authored-by: Łukasz Langa <lukasz@langa.pl>
check_set_special_type_attr() and type_set_annotations()
now check for immutable flag (Py_TPFLAGS_IMMUTABLETYPE).
Co-authored-by: Victor Stinner <vstinner@python.org>
The PyStdPrinter_Type type now uses the
Py_TPFLAGS_DISALLOW_INSTANTIATION flag to disallow instantiation,
rather than seting a tp_init method which always fail.
Write also unit tests for PyStdPrinter_Type.
Add a new Py_TPFLAGS_DISALLOW_INSTANTIATION type flag to disallow
creating type instances: set tp_new to NULL and don't create the
"__new__" key in the type dictionary.
The flag is set automatically on static types if tp_base is NULL or
&PyBaseObject_Type and tp_new is NULL.
Use the flag on the following types:
* _curses.ncurses_version type
* _curses_panel.panel
* _tkinter.Tcl_Obj
* _tkinter.tkapp
* _tkinter.tktimertoken
* _xxsubinterpretersmodule.ChannelID
* sys.flags type
* sys.getwindowsversion() type
* sys.version_info type
Update MyStr example in the C API documentation to use
Py_TPFLAGS_DISALLOW_INSTANTIATION.
Add _PyStructSequence_InitType() function to create a structseq type
with the Py_TPFLAGS_DISALLOW_INSTANTIATION flag set.
type_new() calls _PyType_CheckConsistency() at exit.
* Add Py_TPFLAGS_SEQUENCE and Py_TPFLAGS_MAPPING, add to all relevant standard builtin classes.
* Set relevant flags on collections.abc.Sequence and Mapping.
* Use flags in MATCH_SEQUENCE and MATCH_MAPPING opcodes.
* Inherit Py_TPFLAGS_SEQUENCE and Py_TPFLAGS_MAPPING.
* Add NEWS
* Remove interpreter-state map_abc and seq_abc fields.
Add inspect.get_annotations, which safely computes the annotations defined on an object. It works around the quirks of accessing the annotations from various types of objects, and makes very few assumptions about the object passed in. inspect.get_annotations can also correctly un-stringize stringized annotations.
inspect.signature, inspect.from_callable, and inspect.from_function now call inspect.get_annotations to retrieve annotations. This means inspect.signature and inspect.from_callable can now un-stringize stringized annotations, too.
Remove call to macosx.setupApp, which calls macosc.overrideRootMenu, which modifies
the menus, which results in two failures in the second round of the leak test.
While working on another issue, I noticed two minor nits in the C implementation of the module object. Both are related to getting a module's name.
First, the C function module_dir() (module.__dir__) starts by ensuring the module dict is valid. If the module dict is invalid, it wants to format an exception using the name of the module, which it gets from PyModule_GetName(). However, PyModule_GetName() gets the name of the module from the dict. So getting the name in this circumstance will never succeed.
When module_dir() wants to format the error but can't get the name, it knows that PyModule_GetName() must have already raised an exception. So it leaves that exception alone and returns an error. The end result is that the exception raised here is kind of useless and misleading: dir(module) on a module with no __dict__ raises SystemError("nameless module"). I changed the code to actually raise the exception it wanted to raise, just without a real module name: TypeError("<module>.__dict__ is not a dictionary"). This seems more useful, and would do a better job putting the programmer who encountered this on the right track of figuring out what was going on.
Second, the C API function PyModule_GetNameObject() checks to see if the module has a dict. If m->md_dict is not NULL, it calls _PyDict_GetItemIdWithError(). However, it's possible for m->md_dict to be None. And if you call _PyDict_GetItemIdWithError(Py_None, ...) it will *crash*.
Unfortunately, this crash was due to my own bug in the other branch. Fixing my code made the crash go away. I assert that this is still possible at the API level.
The fix is easy: add a PyDict_Check() to PyModule_GetNameObject().
Unfortunately, I don't know how to add a unit test for this. Having changed module_dir() above, I can't find any other interfaces callable from Python that eventually call PyModule_GetNameObject(). So I don't know how to trick the runtime into reproducing this error.
Since both these changes are minor--each entails only a small edit to only one line--I didn't bother with a news item.
Change class and module objects to lazy-create empty annotations dicts on demand. The annotations dicts are stored in the object's `__dict__` for backwards compatibility.
* Add length parameter to PyLineTable_InitAddressRange and doen't use sentinel values at end of table. Makes the line number table more robust.
* Update PyCodeAddressRange to match PEP 626.
Removes the `list` call in the Popen `repr`.
Current implementation:
For cmd = `python --version`, with `shell=True`.
```bash
<Popen: returncode: None args: ['p', 'y', 't', 'h', 'o', 'n', ' ', '-', '-',...>
```
For `shell=False` and args=`['python', '--version']`, the output is correct:
```bash
<Popen: returncode: None args: ['python', '--version']>
```
With the new changes the `repr` yields:
For cmd = `python --version`, with `shell=True`:
```bash
<Popen: returncode: None args: 'python --version'>
```
For `shell=False` and args=`['python', '--version']`, the output:
```bash
<Popen: returncode: None args: ['python', '--version']>
```
Automerge-Triggered-By: GH:gpshead
Faster bz2/lzma/zlib via new output buffering.
Also adds .readall() function to _compression.DecompressReader class
to take best advantage of this in the consume-all-output at once scenario.
Often a 5-20% speedup in common scenarios due to less data copying.
Contributed by Ma Lin.
In 3.12 ``True`` or ``False`` will be returned for all containment checks,
with ``True`` being returned if the value is either a member of that enum
or one of its members' value.
In 3.12 the enum member, not the member's value, will be used for
format() calls. Format specifiers can be used to retain the current
display of enum members:
Example enumeration:
class Color(IntEnum):
RED = 1
GREEN = 2
BLUE = 3
Current behavior:
f'{Color.RED}' --> '1'
Future behavior:
f'{Color.RED}' --> 'RED'
Using d specifier:
f'{Color.RED:d}' --> '1'
Using specifiers can be done now and is future-compatible.
The internal `_ssl._SSLSocket` object now provides methods to retrieve
the peer cert chain and verified cert chain as a list of Certificate
objects. Certificate objects have methods to convert the cert to a dict,
PEM, or DER (ASN.1).
These are private APIs for now. There is a slim chance to stabilize the
approach and provide a public API for 3.10. Otherwise I'll provide a
stable API in 3.11.
Signed-off-by: Christian Heimes <christian@python.org>
* Add space after period to warning in _tzpath.py
Currently:
InvalidTZPathWarning: Invalid paths specified in PYTHONTZPATH environment variable.Paths should be absolute but found the following relative paths: ...
* Update _tzpath.py
asyncio.get_event_loop() emits now a deprecation warning when it creates a new event loop.
In future releases it will became an alias of asyncio.get_running_loop().
Revert 73ea546, increase logging, and improve stability of test.
Handle all OSErrors in a single block. OSError also takes care of
SSLError and socket's connection errors.
Partly reverts commit fb7e750. The
threaded connection handler must not raise an unhandled exception.
Depending on usage, it's possible for Flag members to have the _inverted_ attribute when they are testing, while the Flag being testing against will not have that attribute on its members -- so skip that comparison.
The argument order of `link_to()` is reversed compared to what one may expect, so:
a.link_to(b)
Might be expected to create *a* as a link to *b*, in fact it creates *b* as a link to *a*, making it function more like a "link from". This doesn't match `symlink_to()` nor the documentation and doesn't seem to be the original author's intent.
This PR deprecates `link_to()` and introduces `hardlink_to()`, which has the same argument order as `symlink_to()`.
test_wrong_cert_tls13 sometimes fails on some Windows buildbots. Turn
failing test case into skipped test case until we have more time to
investigate.
Signed-off-by: Christian Heimes <christian@python.org>
To improve the user experience understanding what part of the error messages associated with SyntaxErrors is wrong, we can highlight the whole error range and not only place the caret at the first character. In this way:
>>> foo(x, z for z in range(10), t, w)
File "<stdin>", line 1
foo(x, z for z in range(10), t, w)
^
SyntaxError: Generator expression must be parenthesized
becomes
>>> foo(x, z for z in range(10), t, w)
File "<stdin>", line 1
foo(x, z for z in range(10), t, w)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
SyntaxError: Generator expression must be parenthesized
This change:
* merges `distutils.sysconfig` into `sysconfig` while keeping the original functionality and
* marks `distutils.sysconfig` as deprecated
https://bugs.python.org/issue41282
The sys module uses the kernel32.dll version number, which can vary from the "actual" Windows version.
Since the best option for getting the version is WMI (which is expensive), we switch back to launching cmd.exe (which is also expensive, but a lot less code on our part).
sys.getwindowsversion() is not updated to avoid launching executables from that module.
Previously TestIntEnumConvert and TestStrEnumConvert would end up
converting the module level variables from their regular int form
to a `test.test_enum.X` instance after _convert would run. This
meant that after a single test ran, the next set of _convert
functions would be operating on the enum instances rather than
ints. This would cause some tests such as the one involving format
to fail when running under a mode that repeatedly runs test such
as the refleak finder.
add:
* `_simple_enum` decorator to transform a normal class into an enum
* `_test_simple_enum` function to compare
* `_old_convert_` to enable checking `_convert_` generated enums
`_simple_enum` takes a normal class and converts it into an enum:
@simple_enum(Enum)
class Color:
RED = 1
GREEN = 2
BLUE = 3
`_old_convert_` works much like` _convert_` does, using the original logic:
# in a test file
import socket, enum
CheckedAddressFamily = enum._old_convert_(
enum.IntEnum, 'AddressFamily', 'socket',
lambda C: C.isupper() and C.startswith('AF_'),
source=_socket,
)
`_test_simple_enum` takes a traditional enum and a simple enum and
compares the two:
# in the REPL or the same module as Color
class CheckedColor(Enum):
RED = 1
GREEN = 2
BLUE = 3
_test_simple_enum(CheckedColor, Color)
_test_simple_enum(CheckedAddressFamily, socket.AddressFamily)
Any important differences will raise a TypeError
add:
_simple_enum decorator to transform a normal class into an enum
_test_simple_enum function to compare
_old_convert_ to enable checking _convert_ generated enums
_simple_enum takes a normal class and converts it into an enum:
@simple_enum(Enum)
class Color:
RED = 1
GREEN = 2
BLUE = 3
_old_convert_ works much like _convert_ does, using the original logic:
# in a test file
import socket, enum
CheckedAddressFamily = enum._old_convert_(
enum.IntEnum, 'AddressFamily', 'socket',
lambda C: C.isupper() and C.startswith('AF_'),
source=_socket,
)
test_simple_enum takes a traditional enum and a simple enum and
compares the two:
# in the REPL or the same module as Color
class CheckedColor(Enum):
RED = 1
GREEN = 2
BLUE = 3
_test_simple_enum(CheckedColor, Color)
_test_simple_enum(CheckedAddressFamily, socket.AddressFamily)
Any important differences will raise a TypeError