From 12cf076118570eebbff08c6b3090e0d4798447a1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: cyfraeviolae Date: Wed, 3 Apr 2024 03:17:55 -0400 Subject: no venv --- .../site-packages/greenlet/TPythonState.cpp | 375 --------------------- 1 file changed, 375 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 venv/lib/python3.11/site-packages/greenlet/TPythonState.cpp (limited to 'venv/lib/python3.11/site-packages/greenlet/TPythonState.cpp') diff --git a/venv/lib/python3.11/site-packages/greenlet/TPythonState.cpp b/venv/lib/python3.11/site-packages/greenlet/TPythonState.cpp deleted file mode 100644 index 465d417..0000000 --- a/venv/lib/python3.11/site-packages/greenlet/TPythonState.cpp +++ /dev/null @@ -1,375 +0,0 @@ -#ifndef GREENLET_PYTHON_STATE_CPP -#define GREENLET_PYTHON_STATE_CPP - -#include -#include "greenlet_greenlet.hpp" - -namespace greenlet { - -PythonState::PythonState() - : _top_frame() -#if GREENLET_USE_CFRAME - ,cframe(nullptr) - ,use_tracing(0) -#endif -#if GREENLET_PY312 - ,py_recursion_depth(0) - ,c_recursion_depth(0) -#else - ,recursion_depth(0) -#endif - ,trash_delete_nesting(0) -#if GREENLET_PY311 - ,current_frame(nullptr) - ,datastack_chunk(nullptr) - ,datastack_top(nullptr) - ,datastack_limit(nullptr) -#endif -{ -#if GREENLET_USE_CFRAME - /* - The PyThreadState->cframe pointer usually points to memory on - the stack, alloceted in a call into PyEval_EvalFrameDefault. - - Initially, before any evaluation begins, it points to the - initial PyThreadState object's ``root_cframe`` object, which is - statically allocated for the lifetime of the thread. - - A greenlet can last for longer than a call to - PyEval_EvalFrameDefault, so we can't set its ``cframe`` pointer - to be the current ``PyThreadState->cframe``; nor could we use - one from the greenlet parent for the same reason. Yet a further - no: we can't allocate one scoped to the greenlet and then - destroy it when the greenlet is deallocated, because inside the - interpreter the _PyCFrame objects form a linked list, and that too - can result in accessing memory beyond its dynamic lifetime (if - the greenlet doesn't actually finish before it dies, its entry - could still be in the list). - - Using the ``root_cframe`` is problematic, though, because its - members are never modified by the interpreter and are set to 0, - meaning that its ``use_tracing`` flag is never updated. We don't - want to modify that value in the ``root_cframe`` ourself: it - *shouldn't* matter much because we should probably never get - back to the point where that's the only cframe on the stack; - even if it did matter, the major consequence of an incorrect - value for ``use_tracing`` is that if its true the interpreter - does some extra work --- however, it's just good code hygiene. - - Our solution: before a greenlet runs, after its initial - creation, it uses the ``root_cframe`` just to have something to - put there. However, once the greenlet is actually switched to - for the first time, ``g_initialstub`` (which doesn't actually - "return" while the greenlet is running) stores a new _PyCFrame on - its local stack, and copies the appropriate values from the - currently running _PyCFrame; this is then made the _PyCFrame for the - newly-minted greenlet. ``g_initialstub`` then proceeds to call - ``glet.run()``, which results in ``PyEval_...`` adding the - _PyCFrame to the list. Switches continue as normal. Finally, when - the greenlet finishes, the call to ``glet.run()`` returns and - the _PyCFrame is taken out of the linked list and the stack value - is now unused and free to expire. - - XXX: I think we can do better. If we're deallocing in the same - thread, can't we traverse the list and unlink our frame? - Can we just keep a reference to the thread state in case we - dealloc in another thread? (Is that even possible if we're still - running and haven't returned from g_initialstub?) - */ - this->cframe = &PyThreadState_GET()->root_cframe; -#endif -} - - -inline void PythonState::may_switch_away() noexcept -{ -#if GREENLET_PY311 - // PyThreadState_GetFrame is probably going to have to allocate a - // new frame object. That may trigger garbage collection. Because - // we call this during the early phases of a switch (it doesn't - // matter to which greenlet, as this has a global effect), if a GC - // triggers a switch away, two things can happen, both bad: - // - We might not get switched back to, halting forward progress. - // this is pathological, but possible. - // - We might get switched back to with a different set of - // arguments or a throw instead of a switch. That would corrupt - // our state (specifically, PyErr_Occurred() and this->args() - // would no longer agree). - // - // Thus, when we call this API, we need to have GC disabled. - // This method serves as a bottleneck we call when maybe beginning - // a switch. In this way, it is always safe -- no risk of GC -- to - // use ``_GetFrame()`` whenever we need to, just as it was in - // <=3.10 (because subsequent calls will be cached and not - // allocate memory). - - GCDisabledGuard no_gc; - Py_XDECREF(PyThreadState_GetFrame(PyThreadState_GET())); -#endif -} - -void PythonState::operator<<(const PyThreadState *const tstate) noexcept -{ - this->_context.steal(tstate->context); -#if GREENLET_USE_CFRAME - /* - IMPORTANT: ``cframe`` is a pointer into the STACK. Thus, because - the call to ``slp_switch()`` changes the contents of the stack, - you cannot read from ``ts_current->cframe`` after that call and - necessarily get the same values you get from reading it here. - Anything you need to restore from now to then must be saved in a - global/threadlocal variable (because we can't use stack - variables here either). For things that need to persist across - the switch, use `will_switch_from`. - */ - this->cframe = tstate->cframe; - #if !GREENLET_PY312 - this->use_tracing = tstate->cframe->use_tracing; - #endif -#endif // GREENLET_USE_CFRAME -#if GREENLET_PY311 - #if GREENLET_PY312 - this->py_recursion_depth = tstate->py_recursion_limit - tstate->py_recursion_remaining; - this->c_recursion_depth = C_RECURSION_LIMIT - tstate->c_recursion_remaining; - #else // not 312 - this->recursion_depth = tstate->recursion_limit - tstate->recursion_remaining; - #endif // GREENLET_PY312 - this->current_frame = tstate->cframe->current_frame; - this->datastack_chunk = tstate->datastack_chunk; - this->datastack_top = tstate->datastack_top; - this->datastack_limit = tstate->datastack_limit; - - PyFrameObject *frame = PyThreadState_GetFrame((PyThreadState *)tstate); - Py_XDECREF(frame); // PyThreadState_GetFrame gives us a new - // reference. - this->_top_frame.steal(frame); - #if GREENLET_PY312 - this->trash_delete_nesting = tstate->trash.delete_nesting; - #else // not 312 - this->trash_delete_nesting = tstate->trash_delete_nesting; - #endif // GREENLET_PY312 -#else // Not 311 - this->recursion_depth = tstate->recursion_depth; - this->_top_frame.steal(tstate->frame); - this->trash_delete_nesting = tstate->trash_delete_nesting; -#endif // GREENLET_PY311 -} - -#if GREENLET_PY312 -void GREENLET_NOINLINE(PythonState::unexpose_frames)() -{ - if (!this->top_frame()) { - return; - } - - // See GreenletState::expose_frames() and the comment on frames_were_exposed - // for more information about this logic. - _PyInterpreterFrame *iframe = this->_top_frame->f_frame; - while (iframe != nullptr) { - _PyInterpreterFrame *prev_exposed = iframe->previous; - assert(iframe->frame_obj); - memcpy(&iframe->previous, &iframe->frame_obj->_f_frame_data[0], - sizeof(void *)); - iframe = prev_exposed; - } -} -#else -void PythonState::unexpose_frames() -{} -#endif - -void PythonState::operator>>(PyThreadState *const tstate) noexcept -{ - tstate->context = this->_context.relinquish_ownership(); - /* Incrementing this value invalidates the contextvars cache, - which would otherwise remain valid across switches */ - tstate->context_ver++; -#if GREENLET_USE_CFRAME - tstate->cframe = this->cframe; - /* - If we were tracing, we need to keep tracing. - There should never be the possibility of hitting the - root_cframe here. See note above about why we can't - just copy this from ``origin->cframe->use_tracing``. - */ - #if !GREENLET_PY312 - tstate->cframe->use_tracing = this->use_tracing; - #endif -#endif // GREENLET_USE_CFRAME -#if GREENLET_PY311 - #if GREENLET_PY312 - tstate->py_recursion_remaining = tstate->py_recursion_limit - this->py_recursion_depth; - tstate->c_recursion_remaining = C_RECURSION_LIMIT - this->c_recursion_depth; - this->unexpose_frames(); - #else // \/ 3.11 - tstate->recursion_remaining = tstate->recursion_limit - this->recursion_depth; - #endif // GREENLET_PY312 - tstate->cframe->current_frame = this->current_frame; - tstate->datastack_chunk = this->datastack_chunk; - tstate->datastack_top = this->datastack_top; - tstate->datastack_limit = this->datastack_limit; - this->_top_frame.relinquish_ownership(); - #if GREENLET_PY312 - tstate->trash.delete_nesting = this->trash_delete_nesting; - #else // not 3.12 - tstate->trash_delete_nesting = this->trash_delete_nesting; - #endif // GREENLET_PY312 -#else // not 3.11 - tstate->frame = this->_top_frame.relinquish_ownership(); - tstate->recursion_depth = this->recursion_depth; - tstate->trash_delete_nesting = this->trash_delete_nesting; -#endif // GREENLET_PY311 -} - -inline void PythonState::will_switch_from(PyThreadState *const origin_tstate) noexcept -{ -#if GREENLET_USE_CFRAME && !GREENLET_PY312 - // The weird thing is, we don't actually save this for an - // effect on the current greenlet, it's saved for an - // effect on the target greenlet. That is, we want - // continuity of this setting across the greenlet switch. - this->use_tracing = origin_tstate->cframe->use_tracing; -#endif -} - -void PythonState::set_initial_state(const PyThreadState* const tstate) noexcept -{ - this->_top_frame = nullptr; -#if GREENLET_PY312 - this->py_recursion_depth = tstate->py_recursion_limit - tstate->py_recursion_remaining; - // XXX: TODO: Comment from a reviewer: - // Should this be ``C_RECURSION_LIMIT - tstate->c_recursion_remaining``? - // But to me it looks more like that might not be the right - // initialization either? - this->c_recursion_depth = tstate->py_recursion_limit - tstate->py_recursion_remaining; -#elif GREENLET_PY311 - this->recursion_depth = tstate->recursion_limit - tstate->recursion_remaining; -#else - this->recursion_depth = tstate->recursion_depth; -#endif -} -// TODO: Better state management about when we own the top frame. -int PythonState::tp_traverse(visitproc visit, void* arg, bool own_top_frame) noexcept -{ - Py_VISIT(this->_context.borrow()); - if (own_top_frame) { - Py_VISIT(this->_top_frame.borrow()); - } - return 0; -} - -void PythonState::tp_clear(bool own_top_frame) noexcept -{ - PythonStateContext::tp_clear(); - // If we get here owning a frame, - // we got dealloc'd without being finished. We may or may not be - // in the same thread. - if (own_top_frame) { - this->_top_frame.CLEAR(); - } -} - -#if GREENLET_USE_CFRAME -void PythonState::set_new_cframe(_PyCFrame& frame) noexcept -{ - frame = *PyThreadState_GET()->cframe; - /* Make the target greenlet refer to the stack value. */ - this->cframe = &frame; - /* - And restore the link to the previous frame so this one gets - unliked appropriately. - */ - this->cframe->previous = &PyThreadState_GET()->root_cframe; -} -#endif - -const PythonState::OwnedFrame& PythonState::top_frame() const noexcept -{ - return this->_top_frame; -} - -void PythonState::did_finish(PyThreadState* tstate) noexcept -{ -#if GREENLET_PY311 - // See https://github.com/gevent/gevent/issues/1924 and - // https://github.com/python-greenlet/greenlet/issues/328. In - // short, Python 3.11 allocates memory for frames as a sort of - // linked list that's kept as part of PyThreadState in the - // ``datastack_chunk`` member and friends. These are saved and - // restored as part of switching greenlets. - // - // When we initially switch to a greenlet, we set those to NULL. - // That causes the frame management code to treat this like a - // brand new thread and start a fresh list of chunks, beginning - // with a new "root" chunk. As we make calls in this greenlet, - // those chunks get added, and as calls return, they get popped. - // But the frame code (pystate.c) is careful to make sure that the - // root chunk never gets popped. - // - // Thus, when a greenlet exits for the last time, there will be at - // least a single root chunk that we must be responsible for - // deallocating. - // - // The complex part is that these chunks are allocated and freed - // using ``_PyObject_VirtualAlloc``/``Free``. Those aren't public - // functions, and they aren't exported for linking. It so happens - // that we know they are just thin wrappers around the Arena - // allocator, so we can use that directly to deallocate in a - // compatible way. - // - // CAUTION: Check this implementation detail on every major version. - // - // It might be nice to be able to do this in our destructor, but - // can we be sure that no one else is using that memory? Plus, as - // described below, our pointers may not even be valid anymore. As - // a special case, there is one time that we know we can do this, - // and that's from the destructor of the associated UserGreenlet - // (NOT main greenlet) - PyObjectArenaAllocator alloc; - _PyStackChunk* chunk = nullptr; - if (tstate) { - // We really did finish, we can never be switched to again. - chunk = tstate->datastack_chunk; - // Unfortunately, we can't do much sanity checking. Our - // this->datastack_chunk pointer is out of date (evaluation may - // have popped down through it already) so we can't verify that - // we deallocate it. I don't think we can even check datastack_top - // for the same reason. - - PyObject_GetArenaAllocator(&alloc); - tstate->datastack_chunk = nullptr; - tstate->datastack_limit = nullptr; - tstate->datastack_top = nullptr; - - } - else if (this->datastack_chunk) { - // The UserGreenlet (NOT the main greenlet!) is being deallocated. If we're - // still holding a stack chunk, it's garbage because we know - // we can never switch back to let cPython clean it up. - // Because the last time we got switched away from, and we - // haven't run since then, we know our chain is valid and can - // be dealloced. - chunk = this->datastack_chunk; - PyObject_GetArenaAllocator(&alloc); - } - - if (alloc.free && chunk) { - // In case the arena mechanism has been torn down already. - while (chunk) { - _PyStackChunk *prev = chunk->previous; - chunk->previous = nullptr; - alloc.free(alloc.ctx, chunk, chunk->size); - chunk = prev; - } - } - - this->datastack_chunk = nullptr; - this->datastack_limit = nullptr; - this->datastack_top = nullptr; -#endif -} - - -}; // namespace greenlet - -#endif // GREENLET_PYTHON_STATE_CPP -- cgit v1.2.3