This commit is contained in:
Larry Hastings 2013-09-09 21:12:21 +09:00
commit 8568f66daf
31 changed files with 529 additions and 364 deletions

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@ -118,6 +118,32 @@ typedef struct _ts {
int trash_delete_nesting;
PyObject *trash_delete_later;
/* Called when a thread state is deleted normally, but not when it
* is destroyed after fork().
* Pain: to prevent rare but fatal shutdown errors (issue 18808),
* Thread.join() must wait for the join'ed thread's tstate to be unlinked
* from the tstate chain. That happens at the end of a thread's life,
* in pystate.c.
* The obvious way doesn't quite work: create a lock which the tstate
* unlinking code releases, and have Thread.join() wait to acquire that
* lock. The problem is that we _are_ at the end of the thread's life:
* if the thread holds the last reference to the lock, decref'ing the
* lock will delete the lock, and that may trigger arbitrary Python code
* if there's a weakref, with a callback, to the lock. But by this time
* _PyThreadState_Current is already NULL, so only the simplest of C code
* can be allowed to run (in particular it must not be possible to
* release the GIL).
* So instead of holding the lock directly, the tstate holds a weakref to
* the lock: that's the value of on_delete_data below. Decref'ing a
* weakref is harmless.
* on_delete points to _threadmodule.c's static release_sentinel() function.
* After the tstate is unlinked, release_sentinel is called with the
* weakref-to-lock (on_delete_data) argument, and release_sentinel releases
* the indirectly held lock.
*/
void (*on_delete)(void *);
void *on_delete_data;
/* XXX signal handlers should also be here */
} PyThreadState;

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@ -105,7 +105,6 @@ PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject *) PySet_Pop(PyObject *set);
PyAPI_FUNC(int) _PySet_Update(PyObject *set, PyObject *iterable);
PyAPI_FUNC(int) PySet_ClearFreeList(void);
PyAPI_FUNC(void) _PySet_DebugMallocStats(FILE *out);
#endif
#ifdef __cplusplus