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Bump the magic number to avoid sharing bytecode between 2.3 and 2.4.
Revise the long comment that explained details of the magic number in gory detail.
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@ -19,39 +19,20 @@
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extern time_t PyOS_GetLastModificationTime(char *, FILE *);
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/* In getmtime.c */
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/* Magic word to reject .pyc files generated by other Python versions */
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/* Change for each incompatible change */
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/* The value of CR and LF is incorporated so if you ever read or write
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/* Magic word to reject .pyc files generated by other Python versions.
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It should change for each incompatible change to the bytecode.
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The value of CR and LF is incorporated so if you ever read or write
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a .pyc file in text mode the magic number will be wrong; also, the
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Apple MPW compiler swaps their values, botching string constants.
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XXX That probably isn't important anymore.
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*/
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/* XXX Perhaps the magic number should be frozen and a version field
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added to the .pyc file header? */
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/* New way to come up with the low 16 bits of the magic number:
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(YEAR-1995) * 10000 + MONTH * 100 + DAY
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where MONTH and DAY are 1-based.
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XXX Whatever the "old way" may have been isn't documented.
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XXX This scheme breaks in 2002, as (2002-1995)*10000 = 70000 doesn't
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fit in 16 bits.
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XXX Later, sometimes 1 gets added to MAGIC in order to record that
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the Unicode -U option is in use. IMO (Tim's), that's a Bad Idea
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(quite apart from that the -U option doesn't work so isn't used
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anyway).
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XXX MAL, 2002-02-07: I had to modify the MAGIC due to a fix of the
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UTF-8 encoder (it previously produced invalid UTF-8 for unpaired
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high surrogates), so I simply bumped the month value to 20 (invalid
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month) and set the day to 1. This should be recognizable by any
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algorithm relying on the above scheme. Perhaps we should simply
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start counting in increments of 10 from now on ?!
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Apparently, there was a distinction made between even and odd
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bytecodes that is related to Unicode. The details aren't clear,
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but the magic number has been odd for a long time.
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MWH, 2002-08-03: Removed SET_LINENO. Couldn't be bothered figuring
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out the MAGIC schemes, so just incremented it by 10.
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GvR, 2002-08-31: Because MWH changed the bytecode again, moved the
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magic number *back* to 62011. This should get the snake-farm to
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throw away its old .pyc files, amongst others.
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There were a variety of old schemes for setting the magic number.
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The current working scheme is to increment the previous value by
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10.
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Known values:
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Python 1.5: 20121
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@ -66,8 +47,9 @@ extern time_t PyOS_GetLastModificationTime(char *, FILE *);
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Python 2.3a0: 62011
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Python 2.3a0: 62021
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Python 2.3a0: 62011 (!)
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Python 2.4a0: 62031
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*/
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#define MAGIC (62011 | ((long)'\r'<<16) | ((long)'\n'<<24))
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#define MAGIC (62031 | ((long)'\r'<<16) | ((long)'\n'<<24))
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/* Magic word as global; note that _PyImport_Init() can change the
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value of this global to accommodate for alterations of how the
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