By turning `assert(kwnames == NULL)` into a macro that is not in the "forbidden" list, many instructions that formerly were skipped because they contained such an assert (but no other mention of `kwnames`) are now supported in Tier 2. This covers 10 instructions in total (all specializations of `CALL` that invoke some C code):
- `CALL_NO_KW_TYPE_1`
- `CALL_NO_KW_STR_1`
- `CALL_NO_KW_TUPLE_1`
- `CALL_NO_KW_BUILTIN_O`
- `CALL_NO_KW_BUILTIN_FAST`
- `CALL_NO_KW_LEN`
- `CALL_NO_KW_ISINSTANCE`
- `CALL_NO_KW_METHOD_DESCRIPTOR_O`
- `CALL_NO_KW_METHOD_DESCRIPTOR_NOARGS`
- `CALL_NO_KW_METHOD_DESCRIPTOR_FAST`
Add various missing annotations in the following classes:
- BlockPrinter
- CConverter
- CLanguage
- FormatCounterFormatter
- Language
- _TextAccumulator
Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
This moves EXIT_TRACE, SAVE_IP, JUMP_TO_TOP, and
_POP_JUMP_IF_{FALSE,TRUE} from ceval.c to bytecodes.c.
They are no less special than before, but this way
they are discoverable o the copy-and-patch tooling.
Fetch CONFIG_ARGS from the original source directory, instead of from
the copied source tree. When "make clean" is executed in the copied
source tree, the build directory is cleared and the configure argument
lookup fails. However, the original source directory still contains this
information.
During superblock generation, a JUMP_BACKWARD instruction is translated to either a JUMP_TO_TOP micro-op (when the target of the jump is exactly the beginning of the superblock, closing the loop), or a SAVE_IP + EXIT_TRACE pair, when the jump goes elsewhere.
The new JUMP_TO_TOP instruction includes a CHECK_EVAL_BREAKER() call, so a closed loop can still be interrupted.
- Hand-written uops JUMP_IF_{TRUE,FALSE}.
These peek at the top of the stack.
The jump target (in superblock space) is absolute.
- Hand-written translation for POP_JUMP_IF_{TRUE,FALSE},
assuming the jump is unlikely.
Once we implement jump-likelihood profiling,
we can implement the jump-unlikely case (in another PR).
- Tests (including some test cleanup).
- Improvements to len(ex) and ex[i] to expose the whole trace.
This adds several of unspecialized opcodes to superblocks:
TO_BOOL, BINARY_SUBSCR, STORE_SUBSCR,
UNPACK_SEQUENCE, LOAD_GLOBAL, LOAD_ATTR,
COMPARE_OP, BINARY_OP.
While we may not want that eventually, for now this helps finding bugs.
There is a rudimentary test checking for UNPACK_SEQUENCE.
Once we're ready to undo this, that would be simple:
just replace the call to variable_used_unspecialized
with a call to variable_used (as shown in a comment).
Or add individual opcdes to FORBIDDEN_NAMES_IN_UOPS.
Instead of special-casing specific instructions,
we add a few more special values to the 'size' field of expansions,
so in the future we can automatically handle
additional super-instructions in the generator.
- Tweak uops debugging output
- Fix the bug from gh-106290
- Rename `SET_IP` to `SAVE_IP` (per https://github.com/faster-cpython/ideas/issues/558)
- Add a `SAVE_IP` uop at the start of the trace (ditto)
- Allow `unbound_local_error`; this gives us uops for `LOAD_FAST_CHECK`, `LOAD_CLOSURE`, and `DELETE_FAST`
- Longer traces
- Support `STORE_FAST_LOAD_FAST`, `STORE_FAST_STORE_FAST`
- Add deps on pycore_uops.h to Makefile(.pre.in)
Annotate the following method signatures:
- state_dsl_start()
- state_parameter_docstring_start()
- state_parameters_start()
Inverting ignore_line() logic, add type hints (including type guard) to
it, and rename to valid_line().
Remove the "cpython/pytime.h" header file: it only contained private
functions. Move functions to the internal pycore_time.h header file.
Move tests from _testcapi to _testinternalcapi. Rename also test
methods to have the same name than tested C functions.
No longer export these functions:
* _PyTime_Add()
* _PyTime_As100Nanoseconds()
* _PyTime_FromMicrosecondsClamp()
* _PyTime_FromTimespec()
* _PyTime_FromTimeval()
* _PyTime_GetPerfCounterWithInfo()
* _PyTime_MulDiv()