This PR removes `_Py_dg_stdnan` and `_Py_dg_infinity` in favour of
using the standard `NAN` and `INFINITY` macros provided by C99.
This change has the side-effect of fixing a bug on MIPS where the
hard-coded value used by `_Py_dg_stdnan` gave a signalling NaN
rather than a quiet NaN.
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Co-authored-by: Mark Dickinson <dickinsm@gmail.com>
- Replace query with parameter in bufferediobase_unsupported()
- Replace query with parameter in iobase_unsupported()
- Hide delegate: Add method wrapper for _PyIOBase_check_seekable
- Hide delegate: Add method wraper for _PyIOBase_check_readable
- Hide delegate: Add method wraper for _PyIOBase_check_writable
- Replace query with parameter in _PyIOBase_check_seekable()
- Replace query with parameter in _PyIOBase_check_readable()
- Replace query with parameter in _PyIOBase_check_writable()
* socket.getnameinfo should release the GIL
* 📜🤖 Added by blurb_it.
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Co-authored-by: blurb-it[bot] <43283697+blurb-it[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Replaces our built-in SHA3 implementation with a verified one from the HACL* project.
This implementation is used when OpenSSL does not provide SHA3 or is not present.
3.11 shiped with a very slow tiny sha3 implementation to get off of the <=3.10 reference implementation that wound up having serious bugs. This brings us back to a reasonably performing built-in implementation consistent with what we've just replaced our other guaranteed available standard hash algorithms with: code from the HACL* project.
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Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith <greg@krypto.org>
We also add PyInterpreterState.ceval.own_gil to record if the interpreter actually has its own GIL.
Note that for now we don't actually respect own_gil; all interpreters still share the one GIL. However, PyInterpreterState.ceval.own_gil does reflect PyInterpreterConfig.own_gil. That lie is a temporary one that we will fix when the GIL really becomes per-interpreter.
Here we are doing no more than adding the value for Py_mod_multiple_interpreters and using it for stdlib modules. We will start checking for it in gh-104206 (once PyInterpreterState.ceval.own_gil is added in gh-104204).
In preparation for a per-interpreter GIL, we add PyInterpreterState.ceval.gil, set it to the shared GIL for each interpreter, and use that rather than using _PyRuntime.ceval.gil directly. Note that _PyRuntime.ceval.gil is still the actual GIL.
We also expose PyInterpreterConfig. This is part of the PEP 684 (per-interpreter GIL) implementation. We will add docs as soon as we can.
FYI, I'm adding the new config field for per-interpreter GIL in gh-99114.
his involves moving tp_dict, tp_bases, and tp_mro to PyInterpreterState, in the same way we did for tp_subclasses. Those three fields are effectively const for builtin static types (unlike tp_subclasses). In theory we only need to make their values immortal, along with their contents. However, that isn't such a simple proposition. (See gh-103823.) In the meantime the simplest solution is to move the fields into the interpreter.
One alternative is to statically allocate the values, but that's its own can of worms.