bpo-26185: Fix repr() on empty ZipInfo object (#13441)
* bpo-26185: Fix repr() on empty ZipInfo object
It was failing on AttributeError due to inexistant
but required attributes file_size and compress_size.
They are now initialized to 0 in ZipInfo.__init__().
* Remove useless hasattr() in ZipInfo._open_to_write()
* Completely remove file_size setting in _open_to_write().
bpo-37702: Fix SSL's certificate-store leak on Windows (GH-15632)
ssl_collect_certificates function in _ssl.c has a memory leak.
Calling CertOpenStore() and CertAddStoreToCollection(), a store's refcnt gets incremented by 2.
But CertCloseStore() is called only once and the refcnt leaves 1.
bpo-37705: Improve the implementation of winerror_to_errno() (GH-15623)
winerror_to_errno() is no longer automatically generated.
Do not rely on the old _dosmapperr() function.
Add ERROR_NO_UNICODE_TRANSLATION (1113) -> EILSEQ.
bpo-37936: Avoid ignoring files that we actually do track. (GH-15451)
There were about 14 files that are actually in the repo but that are
covered by the rules in .gitignore.
Git itself takes no notice of what .gitignore says about files that
it's already tracking... but the discrepancy can be confusing to a
human that adds a new file unexpectedly covered by these rules, as
well as to non-Git software that looks at .gitignore but doesn't
implement this wrinkle in its semantics. (E.g., `rg`.)
Several of these are from rules that apply more broadly than
intended: for example, `Makefile` applies to `Doc/Makefile` and
`Tools/freeze/test/Makefile`, whereas `/Makefile` means only the
`Makefile` at the repo's root.
And the `Modules/Setup` rule simply wasn't updated after 961d54c5c.
bpo-37445: Include FORMAT_MESSAGE_IGNORE_INSERTS in FormatMessageW() calls (GH-14462)
If FormatMessageW() is passed the FORMAT_MESSAGE_FROM_SYSTEM flag without FORMAT_MESSAGE_IGNORE_INSERTS, it will fail if there are insert sequences in the message definition.
Restart lines now always start with '=' and never end with ' ' and fill the width of the window unless that would require ending with ' ', which could be wrapped by itself and possible confusing the user.
closes bpo-37966: Fully implement the UAX #15 quick-check algorithm. (GH-15558)
The purpose of the `unicodedata.is_normalized` function is to answer
the question `str == unicodedata.normalized(form, str)` more
efficiently than writing just that, by using the "quick check"
optimization described in the Unicode standard in UAX #15.
However, it turns out the code doesn't implement the full algorithm
from the standard, and as a result we often miss the optimization and
end up having to compute the whole normalized string after all.
Implement the standard's algorithm. This greatly speeds up
`unicodedata.is_normalized` in many cases where our partial variant
of quick-check had been returning MAYBE and the standard algorithm
returns NO.
At a quick test on my desktop, the existing code takes about 4.4 ms/MB
(so 4.4 ns per byte) when the partial quick-check returns MAYBE and it
has to do the slow normalize-and-compare:
$ build.base/python -m timeit -s 'import unicodedata; s = "\uf900"*500000' \
-- 'unicodedata.is_normalized("NFD", s)'
50 loops, best of 5: 4.39 msec per loop
With this patch, it gets the answer instantly (58 ns) on the same 1 MB
string:
$ build.dev/python -m timeit -s 'import unicodedata; s = "\uf900"*500000' \
-- 'unicodedata.is_normalized("NFD", s)' 5000000 loops, best of 5: 58.2 nsec per loop
This restores a small optimization that the original version of this
code had for the `unicodedata.normalize` use case.
With this, that case is actually faster than in master!
$ build.base/python -m timeit -s 'import unicodedata; s = "\u0338"*500000' \
-- 'unicodedata.normalize("NFD", s)'
500 loops, best of 5: 561 usec per loop
$ build.dev/python -m timeit -s 'import unicodedata; s = "\u0338"*500000' \
-- 'unicodedata.normalize("NFD", s)'
500 loops, best of 5: 512 usec per loop
Tal Einat [Tue, 3 Sep 2019 20:52:58 +0000 (23:52 +0300)]
bpo-38022: IDLE: upgrade help.html to sphinx 2.x HTML5 output (GH-15664)
The HTML5 output from Sphinx 2.x adds '<p>' tags within list elements. Using a new prevtag attribute, ignore these instead of emitting unwanted '\n\n'.
Also stop looking for 'first' classes on tags (no longer present) and fix the bug of double-spacing instead of single spacing after <pre> blocks.
Extending the hover delay in test_tooltip should avoid spurious test_idle failures.
One longer delay instead of two shorter delays results in a net speedup.
bpo-15999: Clean up of handling boolean arguments. (GH-15610)
* Use the 'p' format unit instead of manually called PyObject_IsTrue().
* Pass boolean value instead 0/1 integers to functions that needs boolean.
* Convert some arguments to boolean only once.
Ashwin Ramaswami [Sat, 31 Aug 2019 15:25:35 +0000 (10:25 -0500)]
bpo-37764: Fix infinite loop when parsing unstructured email headers. (GH-15239)
Fixes a case in which email._header_value_parser.get_unstructured hangs the system for some invalid headers. This covers the cases in which the header contains either:
- a case without trailing whitespace
- an invalid encoded word
Fix a ctypes regression of Python 3.8. When a ctypes.Structure is
passed by copy to a function, ctypes internals created a temporary
object which had the side effect of calling the structure finalizer
(__del__) twice. The Python semantics requires a finalizer to be
called exactly once. Fix ctypes internals to no longer call the
finalizer twice.
Create a new internal StructParam_Type which is only used by
_ctypes_callproc() to call PyMem_Free(ptr) on Py_DECREF(argument).
StructUnionType_paramfunc() creates such object.
Nick Coghlan [Thu, 29 Aug 2019 13:26:53 +0000 (23:26 +1000)]
bpo-37947: Avoid double-decrement in symtable recursion counting (GH-15593)
With `symtable_visit_expr` now correctly adjusting the recursion depth for named
expressions, `symtable_handle_namedexpr` should be leaving it alone.
Also adds a new check to `PySymtable_BuildObject` that raises `SystemError`
if a successful first symbol analysis pass fails to keep the stack depth
accounting clean.
Greg Price [Tue, 27 Aug 2019 18:16:31 +0000 (11:16 -0700)]
bpo-37936: Remove some .gitignore rules that were intended locally. (GH-15542)
These appeared in commit c5ae169e1. The comment on them, as well as
the presence among them of a rule for the .gitignore file itself,
indicate that the author intended these lines to remain only in their
own local working tree -- not to get committed even to their own repo,
let alone merged upstream.
They did nevertheless get committed, because it turns out that Git
takes no notice of what .gitignore says about files that it's already
tracking... for example, this .gitignore file itself.
Give effect to these lines' original intention, by deleting them. :-)
Git tip, for reference: the `.git/info/exclude` file is a handy way
to do exactly what these lines were originally intended to do. A
related handy file is `~/.config/git/ignore`. See gitignore(5),
aka `git help ignore`, for details.