* move _PyRuntime.global_objects.interned to _PyRuntime.cached_objects.interned_strings (and use _Py_CACHED_OBJECT())
* rename _PyRuntime.global_objects to _PyRuntime.static_objects
(This also relates to gh-96075.)
https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/90111
gh-100176: Remove redundant compat code for Python 3.2 and older
Python 3.2 has been EOL since 2016-02-20 and 2.7 since 2020-01-01, so we
can remove this old compatibility check and unindent the old else-block.
Also, in the unindented block, replace a .format() call with an f-string.
Plus similar changes in the documentation.
We can't move it to _PyRuntimeState because the symbol is exposed in the stable ABI. We'll have to sort that out before a per-interpreter GIL, but it shouldn't be too hard.
https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/81057
Example needed to be indented. Was trying to call a context manger `pr` (from ` with cProfile.Profile() as pr:`) wot perform ` pr.print_stats()` once it had already exited.
Automerge-Triggered-By: GH:AlexWaygood
`urllib.unquote_to_bytes` and `urllib.unquote` could both potentially generate `O(len(string))` intermediate `bytes` or `str` objects while computing the unquoted final result depending on the input provided. As Python objects are relatively large, this could consume a lot of ram.
This switches the implementation to using an expanding `bytearray` and a generator internally instead of precomputed `split()` style operations.
Microbenchmarks with some antagonistic inputs like `mess = "\u0141%%%20a%fe"*1000` show this is 10-20% slower for unquote and unquote_to_bytes and no different for typical inputs that are short or lack much unicode or % escaping. But the functions are already quite fast anyways so not a big deal. The slowdown scales consistently linear with input size as expected.
Memory usage observed manually using `/usr/bin/time -v` on `python -m timeit` runs of larger inputs. Unittesting memory consumption is difficult and does not seem worthwhile.
Observed memory usage is ~1/2 for `unquote()` and <1/3 for `unquote_to_bytes()` using `python -m timeit -s 'from urllib.parse import unquote, unquote_to_bytes; v="\u0141%01\u0161%20"*500_000' 'unquote_to_bytes(v)'` as a test.
An earlier commit only defined check_ticks_per_second() when HAVE_TIMES is defined. However, we also need it when HAVE_CLOCK is defined. This primarily affects Windows.
https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/81057
Stack effects can now have a type, e.g. `inst(X, (left, right -- jump/uint64_t)) { ... }`.
Instructions converted to the non-legacy format:
* COMPARE_OP
* COMPARE_OP_FLOAT_JUMP
* COMPARE_OP_INT_JUMP
* COMPARE_OP_STR_JUMP
* STORE_ATTR
* DELETE_ATTR
* STORE_GLOBAL
* STORE_ATTR_INSTANCE_VALUE
* STORE_ATTR_WITH_HINT
* STORE_ATTR_SLOT, and complete the store_attr family
* Complete the store_subscr family: STORE_SUBSCR{,DICT,LIST_INT}
(STORE_SUBSCR was alread half converted,
but wasn't using cache effects yet.)
* DELETE_SUBSCR
* PRINT_EXPR
* INTERPRETER_EXIT (a bit weird, ends in return)
* RETURN_VALUE
* GET_AITER (had to restructure it some)
The original had mysterious `SET_TOP(NULL)` before `goto error`.
I assume those just account for `obj` having been decref'ed,
so I got rid of them in favor of the cleanup implied by `ERROR_IF()`.
* LIST_APPEND (a bit unhappy with it)
* SET_ADD (also a bit unhappy with it)
Various other improvements/refactorings as well.