gh-121571: Do not use `EnvironmentError` in tests, use `OSError` instead (GH-121572)
(cherry picked from commit e2822360da)
Co-authored-by: sobolevn <mail@sobolevn.me>
Starting in Python 3.12, we prevented calling fork() and starting new threads
during interpreter finalization (shutdown). This has led to a number of
regressions and flaky tests. We should not prevent starting new threads
(or `fork()`) until all non-daemon threads exit and finalization starts in
earnest.
This changes the checks to use `_PyInterpreterState_GetFinalizing(interp)`,
which is set immediately before terminating non-daemon threads.
(cherry picked from commit 60e105c1c1)
gh-90872: Fix subprocess.Popen.wait() for negative timeout (#116989)
On Windows, subprocess.Popen.wait() no longer calls
WaitForSingleObject() with a negative timeout: pass 0 ms if the
timeout is negative.
(cherry picked from commit 27cf3ed00c)
EPERM is raised when setreuid() fails.
EACCES is set in execve() when the test user has not access to sys.executable.
(cherry picked from commit 311d1e2701)
Co-authored-by: Serhiy Storchaka <storchaka@gmail.com>
gh-104522: Fix OSError raised when run a subprocess (GH-114195)
Only set filename to cwd if it was caused by failed chdir(cwd).
_fork_exec() now returns "noexec:chdir" for failed chdir(cwd).
(cherry picked from commit e2c097ebde)
Co-authored-by: Serhiy Storchaka <storchaka@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Robert O'Shea <PurityLake@users.noreply.github.com>
(cherry picked from commit c31be58da8)
Co-authored-by: AN Long <aisk@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Pieter Eendebak <pieter.eendebak@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Erlend E. Aasland <erlend.aasland@protonmail.com>
Restore `subprocess`'s intended use of `vfork()` by default for performance on Linux;
also fixes the behavior of `extra_groups=[]` which was unintentionally broken in 3.12.0:
Fixed a performance regression in 3.12's :mod:`subprocess` on Linux where it
would no longer use the fast-path ``vfork()`` system call when it could have
due to a logic bug, instead falling back to the safe but slower ``fork()``.
Also fixed a security bug introduced in 3.12.0. If a value of ``extra_groups=[]``
was passed to :mod:`subprocess.Popen` or related APIs, the underlying
``setgroups(0, NULL)`` system call to clear the groups list would not be made
in the child process prior to ``exec()``.
The security issue was identified via code inspection in the process of
fixing the first bug. Thanks to @vain for the detailed report and
analysis in the initial bug on Github.
(cherry picked from commit 9fe7655c6c)
+ Reword NEWS for the bugfix/security release. (mentions the assigned CVE number)
Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith [Google LLC] <greg@krypto.org>
Co-authored-by: Serhiy Storchaka <storchaka@gmail.com>
gh-110184: Fix subprocess test_pipesize_default() (GH-110465)
For proc.stdin, get the size of the read end of the test pipe.
Use subprocess context manager ("with proc:").
(cherry picked from commit d023d4166b)
Co-authored-by: Victor Stinner <vstinner@python.org>
* gh-108834: regrtest reruns failed tests in subprocesses (#108839)
When using --rerun option, regrtest now re-runs failed tests
in verbose mode in fresh worker processes to have more
deterministic behavior. So it can write its final report even
if a test killed a worker progress.
Add --fail-rerun option to regrtest: exit with non-zero exit code
if a test failed pass passed when re-run in verbose mode (in a
fresh process). That's now more useful since tests can pass
when re-run in a fresh worker progress, whereas they failed
when run after other tests when tests are run sequentially.
Rename --verbose2 option (-w) to --rerun. Keep --verbose2 as a
deprecated alias.
Changes:
* Fix and enhance statistics in regrtest summary. Add "(filtered)"
when --match and/or --ignore options are used.
* Add RunTests class.
* Add TestResult.get_rerun_match_tests() method
* Rewrite code to serialize/deserialize worker arguments as JSON
using a new WorkerJob class.
* Fix stats when a test is run with --forever --rerun.
* If failed test names cannot be parsed, log a warning and don't
filter tests.
* test_regrtest.test_rerun_success() now uses a marker file, since
the test is re-run in a separated process.
* Add tests on normalize_test_name() function.
* Add test_success() and test_skip() tests to test_regrtest.
(cherry picked from commit 31c2945f14)
* gh-108834: regrtest --fail-rerun exits with code 5 (#108896)
When the --fail-rerun option is used and a test fails and then pass,
regrtest now uses exit code 5 ("rerun) instead of 2 ("bad test").
(cherry picked from commit 1170d5a292)
* gh-108416: Mark slow but not CPU bound test methods with requires_resource('walltime') (GH-108480)
(cherry picked from commit 1e0d62793a)
* Manually sync Lib/test/libregrtest/ from main
---------
Co-authored-by: Serhiy Storchaka <storchaka@gmail.com>
gh-108416: Mark slow test methods with @requires_resource('cpu') (GH-108421)
Only mark tests which spend significant system or user time,
by itself or in subprocesses.
(cherry picked from commit f3ba0a74cd)
Co-authored-by: Serhiy Storchaka <storchaka@gmail.com>
gh-105436: The environment block should end with two null wchar_t values (GH-105495)
(cherry picked from commit 4f7d3b602d)
Co-authored-by: Dora203 <66343334+sku2000@users.noreply.github.com>
gh-104690 Disallow thread creation and fork at interpreter finalization (GH-104826)
Disallow thread creation and fork at interpreter finalization.
in the following functions, check if interpreter is finalizing and raise `RuntimeError` with appropriate message:
* `_thread.start_new_thread` and thus `threading`
* `posix.fork`
* `posix.fork1`
* `posix.forkpty`
* `_posixsubprocess.fork_exec` when a `preexec_fn=` is supplied.
---------
(cherry picked from commit ce558e69d4)
Co-authored-by: chgnrdv <52372310+chgnrdv@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith <greg@krypto.org>
One more thing that can help prevent people from using `preexec_fn`.
Also adds conditional skips to two tests exposing ASAN flakiness on the Ubuntu 20.04 Address Sanitizer Github CI system. When that build is run on more modern systems the "problem" does not show up. It seems ASAN implementation related.
Co-authored-by: Zackery Spytz <zspytz@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Serhiy Storchaka <storchaka@gmail.com>
Just in case there is ever an issue with _posixsubprocess's use of
vfork() due to the complexity of using it properly and potential
directions that Linux platforms where it defaults to on could take, this
adds a failsafe so that users can disable its use entirely by setting
a global flag.
No known reason to disable it exists. But it'd be a shame to encounter
one and not be able to use CPython without patching and rebuilding it.
See the linked issue for some discussion on reasoning.
Also documents the existing way to disable posix_spawn.
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
When the modern text= spelling of the universal_newlines= parameter was added
for Python 3.7, check_output's special case around input=None was overlooked.
So it behaved differently with universal_newlines=True vs text=True. This
reconciles the behavior to be consistent and adds a test to guarantee it.
Also clarifies the existing check_output documentation.
Co-authored-by: Alexey Izbyshev <izbyshev@ispras.ru>
send_signal() now swallows the exception if the process it thought was still alive winds up not to exist anymore (always a plausible race condition despite the checks).
Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith <greg@krypto.org>
Fix memory leak in subprocess.Popen() in case of uid/gid overflow
Also add a test that would catch this leak with `--huntrleaks`.
Alas, the test for `extra_groups` also exposes an inconsistency
in our error reporting: we use a custom ValueError for `extra_groups`,
but propagate OverflowError for `user` and `group`.
* Add F_SETPIPE_SZ and F_GETPIPE_SZ to fcntl module
* Add pipesize parameter for subprocess.Popen class
This will allow the user to control the size of the pipes.
On linux the default is 64K. When a pipe is full it blocks for writing.
When a pipe is empty it blocks for reading. On processes that are
very fast this can lead to a lot of wasted CPU cycles. On a typical
Linux system the max pipe size is 1024K which is much better.
For high performance-oriented libraries such as xopen it is nice to
be able to set the pipe size.
The workaround without this feature is to use my_popen_process.stdout.fileno() in
conjuction with fcntl and 1031 (value of F_SETPIPE_SZ) to acquire this behavior.
This implements things like `list[int]`,
which returns an object of type `types.GenericAlias`.
This object mostly acts as a proxy for `list`,
but has attributes `__origin__` and `__args__`
that allow recovering the parts (with values `list` and `(int,)`.
There is also an approximate notion of type variables;
e.g. `list[T]` has a `__parameters__` attribute equal to `(T,)`.
Type variables are objects of type `typing.TypeVar`.
Moreover, the following tests now check the child process exit code:
* test_os.PtyTests
* test_mailbox.test_lock_conflict()
* test_tempfile.test_process_awareness()
* test_uuid.testIssue8621()
* multiprocessing resource tracker tests
* bpo-22490: Remove "__PYVENV_LAUNCHER__" from the shell environment on macOS
This changeset removes the environment varialbe "__PYVENV_LAUNCHER__"
during interpreter launch as it is only needed to communicate between
the stub executable in framework installs and the actual interpreter.
Leaving the environment variable present may lead to misbehaviour when
launching other scripts.
* Actually commit the changes for issue 22490...
* Correct typo
Co-Authored-By: Nicola Soranzo <nicola.soranzo@gmail.com>
* Run make patchcheck
Co-authored-by: Jason R. Coombs <jaraco@jaraco.com>
Co-authored-by: Nicola Soranzo <nicola.soranzo@gmail.com>
test_subprocess.test_user() now skips the test on an user name if the
user name doesn't exist. For example, skip the test if the user
"nobody" doesn't exist on Linux.
When communicate() is called in a loop, it crashes when the child process
has already closed any piped standard stream, but still continues to be running
Co-authored-by: Andriy Maletsky <andriy.maletsky@gmail.com>
On Unix, subprocess.Popen.send_signal() now polls the process status.
Polling reduces the risk of sending a signal to the wrong process if
the process completed, the Popen.returncode attribute is still None,
and the pid has been reassigned (recycled) to a new different
process.
Replace hardcoded timeout constants in tests with SHORT_TIMEOUT of
test.support, so it's easier to ajdust this timeout for all tests at
once.
SHORT_TIMEOUT is 30 seconds by default, but it can be longer
depending on --timeout command line option.
The change makes almost all timeouts longer, except
test_reap_children() of test_support which is made 2x shorter:
SHORT_TIMEOUT should be enough. If this test starts to fail,
LONG_TIMEOUT should be used instead.
Uniformize also "from test import support" import in some test files.