test_tools.test_sundry() now uses an unittest mock to prevent the
logging module to register a real "atfork" function which kept the
logging module dictionary alive. So the logging module can be
properly unloaded. Previously, the logging module was loaded before
test_sundry(), but it's no longer the case since recent test_tools
sub-tests removals.
Remove outdated example scripts of the Tools/scripts/ directory:
* gprof2html.py
* md5sum.py
* nm2def.py
* pathfix.py
* win_add2path.py
Remove test_gprof2html, test_md5sum and test_pathfix of test_tools.
There is no reason for this watcher to be attached to any particular loop.
This should make it safe to use regardless of the lifetime of the event loop running in the main thread
(relative to other loops).
Co-authored-by: Yury Selivanov <yury@edgedb.com>
Co-authored-by: Jelle Zijlstra <jelle.zijlstra@gmail.com>
The test failed on a buildbot because the pointer was only 7 hex characters. To be safe,
I bumped it down to 3: 4 in case we have 32-bit platforms, and 3 in case the pointer is very small.
This PR reverts gh-93369 and gh-97896 because they've made asyncio tests unstable. After these PRs were merged, random GitHub action jobs of random commits started to fail unrelated tests and test framework methods.
The reverting is necessary because such shrapnel failures are a symptom of some underlying bug that must be found and fixed first.
I had a hope that it's a server overload because we already have extremely rare disc access errors. However, one and a half day passed, and the failures continue to emerge both in PRs and commits.
Affected issue: gh-93357.
First reported in https://github.com/python/cpython/pull/97940#issuecomment-1270004134.
* Revert "gh-93357: Port test cases to IsolatedAsyncioTestCase, part 2 (#97896)"
This reverts commit 09aea94d29.
* Revert "gh-93357: Start porting asyncio server test cases to IsolatedAsyncioTestCase (#93369)"
This reverts commit ce8fc186ac.
In `_warnings.c`, in the C equivalent of `warnings.warn_explicit()`, if the module globals are given (and not None), the warning will attempt to get the source line for the issued warning. To do this, it needs the module's loader.
Previously, it would only look up `__loader__` in the module globals. In https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/86298 we want to defer to the `__spec__.loader` if available.
The first step on this journey is to check that `loader == __spec__.loader` and issue another warning if it is not. This commit does that.
Since this is a PoC, only manual testing for now.
```python
# /tmp/foo.py
import warnings
import bar
warnings.warn_explicit(
'warning!',
RuntimeWarning,
'bar.py', 2,
module='bar knee',
module_globals=bar.__dict__,
)
```
```python
# /tmp/bar.py
import sys
import os
import pathlib
# __loader__ = pathlib.Path()
```
Then running this: `./python.exe -Wdefault /tmp/foo.py`
Produces:
```
bar.py:2: RuntimeWarning: warning!
import os
```
Uncomment the `__loader__ = ` line in `bar.py` and try it again:
```
sys:1: ImportWarning: Module bar; __loader__ != __spec__.loader (<_frozen_importlib_external.SourceFileLoader object at 0x109f7dfa0> != PosixPath('.'))
bar.py:2: RuntimeWarning: warning!
import os
```
Automerge-Triggered-By: GH:warsaw
The macOS 13 SDK includes support for the `mkfifoat` and `mknodat` system calls.
Using the `dir_fd` option with either `os.mkfifo` or `os.mknod` could result in a
segfault if cpython is built with the macOS 13 SDK but run on an earlier
version of macOS. Prevent this by adding runtime support for detection of
these system calls ("weaklinking") as is done for other newer syscalls on
macOS.