8 /* Object and type object interface */
11 Objects are structures allocated on the heap. Special rules apply to
12 the use of objects to ensure they are properly garbage-collected.
13 Objects are never allocated statically or on the stack; they must be
14 accessed through special macros and functions only. (Type objects are
15 exceptions to the first rule; the standard types are represented by
16 statically initialized type objects, although work on type/class unification
17 for Python 2.2 made it possible to have heap-allocated type objects too).
19 An object has a 'reference count' that is increased or decreased when a
20 pointer to the object is copied or deleted; when the reference count
21 reaches zero there are no references to the object left and it can be
22 removed from the heap.
24 An object has a 'type' that determines what it represents and what kind
25 of data it contains. An object's type is fixed when it is created.
26 Types themselves are represented as objects; an object contains a
27 pointer to the corresponding type object. The type itself has a type
28 pointer pointing to the object representing the type 'type', which
29 contains a pointer to itself!).
31 Objects do not float around in memory; once allocated an object keeps
32 the same size and address. Objects that must hold variable-size data
33 can contain pointers to variable-size parts of the object. Not all
34 objects of the same type have the same size; but the size cannot change
35 after allocation. (These restrictions are made so a reference to an
36 object can be simply a pointer -- moving an object would require
37 updating all the pointers, and changing an object's size would require
38 moving it if there was another object right next to it.)
40 Objects are always accessed through pointers of the type 'PyObject *'.
41 The type 'PyObject' is a structure that only contains the reference count
42 and the type pointer. The actual memory allocated for an object
43 contains other data that can only be accessed after casting the pointer
44 to a pointer to a longer structure type. This longer type must start
45 with the reference count and type fields; the macro PyObject_HEAD should be
46 used for this (to accommodate for future changes). The implementation
47 of a particular object type can cast the object pointer to the proper
50 A standard interface exists for objects that contain an array of items
51 whose size is determined when the object is allocated.
54 /* Py_DEBUG implies Py_TRACE_REFS. */
55 #if defined(Py_DEBUG) && !defined(Py_TRACE_REFS)
59 /* Py_TRACE_REFS implies Py_REF_DEBUG. */
60 #if defined(Py_TRACE_REFS) && !defined(Py_REF_DEBUG)
65 /* Define pointers to support a doubly-linked list of all live heap objects. */
66 #define _PyObject_HEAD_EXTRA \
67 struct _object *_ob_next; \
68 struct _object *_ob_prev;
70 #define _PyObject_EXTRA_INIT 0, 0,
73 #define _PyObject_HEAD_EXTRA
74 #define _PyObject_EXTRA_INIT
77 /* PyObject_HEAD defines the initial segment of every PyObject. */
78 #define PyObject_HEAD \
79 _PyObject_HEAD_EXTRA \
80 Py_ssize_t ob_refcnt; \
81 struct _typeobject *ob_type;
83 #define PyObject_HEAD_INIT(type) \
84 _PyObject_EXTRA_INIT \
87 #define PyVarObject_HEAD_INIT(type, size) \
88 PyObject_HEAD_INIT(type) size,
90 /* PyObject_VAR_HEAD defines the initial segment of all variable-size
91 * container objects. These end with a declaration of an array with 1
92 * element, but enough space is malloc'ed so that the array actually
93 * has room for ob_size elements. Note that ob_size is an element count,
94 * not necessarily a byte count.
96 #define PyObject_VAR_HEAD \
98 Py_ssize_t ob_size; /* Number of items in variable part */
99 #define Py_INVALID_SIZE (Py_ssize_t)-1
101 /* Nothing is actually declared to be a PyObject, but every pointer to
102 * a Python object can be cast to a PyObject*. This is inheritance built
103 * by hand. Similarly every pointer to a variable-size Python object can,
104 * in addition, be cast to PyVarObject*.
106 typedef struct _object
{
114 #define Py_REFCNT(ob) (((PyObject*)(ob))->ob_refcnt)
115 #define Py_TYPE(ob) (((PyObject*)(ob))->ob_type)
116 #define Py_SIZE(ob) (((PyVarObject*)(ob))->ob_size)
119 Type objects contain a string containing the type name (to help somewhat
120 in debugging), the allocation parameters (see PyObject_New() and
122 and methods for accessing objects of the type. Methods are optional, a
123 nil pointer meaning that particular kind of access is not available for
124 this type. The Py_DECREF() macro uses the tp_dealloc method without
125 checking for a nil pointer; it should always be implemented except if
126 the implementation can guarantee that the reference count will never
127 reach zero (e.g., for statically allocated type objects).
129 NB: the methods for certain type groups are now contained in separate
133 typedef PyObject
* (*unaryfunc
)(PyObject
*);
134 typedef PyObject
* (*binaryfunc
)(PyObject
*, PyObject
*);
135 typedef PyObject
* (*ternaryfunc
)(PyObject
*, PyObject
*, PyObject
*);
136 typedef int (*inquiry
)(PyObject
*);
137 typedef Py_ssize_t (*lenfunc
)(PyObject
*);
138 typedef int (*coercion
)(PyObject
**, PyObject
**);
139 typedef PyObject
*(*intargfunc
)(PyObject
*, int) Py_DEPRECATED(2.5);
140 typedef PyObject
*(*intintargfunc
)(PyObject
*, int, int) Py_DEPRECATED(2.5);
141 typedef PyObject
*(*ssizeargfunc
)(PyObject
*, Py_ssize_t
);
142 typedef PyObject
*(*ssizessizeargfunc
)(PyObject
*, Py_ssize_t
, Py_ssize_t
);
143 typedef int(*intobjargproc
)(PyObject
*, int, PyObject
*);
144 typedef int(*intintobjargproc
)(PyObject
*, int, int, PyObject
*);
145 typedef int(*ssizeobjargproc
)(PyObject
*, Py_ssize_t
, PyObject
*);
146 typedef int(*ssizessizeobjargproc
)(PyObject
*, Py_ssize_t
, Py_ssize_t
, PyObject
*);
147 typedef int(*objobjargproc
)(PyObject
*, PyObject
*, PyObject
*);
151 /* int-based buffer interface */
152 typedef int (*getreadbufferproc
)(PyObject
*, int, void **);
153 typedef int (*getwritebufferproc
)(PyObject
*, int, void **);
154 typedef int (*getsegcountproc
)(PyObject
*, int *);
155 typedef int (*getcharbufferproc
)(PyObject
*, int, char **);
156 /* ssize_t-based buffer interface */
157 typedef Py_ssize_t (*readbufferproc
)(PyObject
*, Py_ssize_t
, void **);
158 typedef Py_ssize_t (*writebufferproc
)(PyObject
*, Py_ssize_t
, void **);
159 typedef Py_ssize_t (*segcountproc
)(PyObject
*, Py_ssize_t
*);
160 typedef Py_ssize_t (*charbufferproc
)(PyObject
*, Py_ssize_t
, char **);
162 /* Py3k buffer interface */
164 typedef struct bufferinfo
{
167 Py_ssize_t itemsize
; /* This is Py_ssize_t so it can be
168 pointed to by strides in simple case.*/
174 Py_ssize_t
*suboffsets
;
178 typedef int (*getbufferproc
)(PyObject
*, Py_buffer
*, int);
179 typedef void (*releasebufferproc
)(PyObject
*, Py_buffer
*);
181 /* Flags for getting buffers */
182 #define PyBUF_SIMPLE 0
183 #define PyBUF_WRITABLE 0x0001
184 /* we used to include an E, backwards compatible alias */
185 #define PyBUF_WRITEABLE PyBUF_WRITABLE
186 #define PyBUF_LOCK 0x0002
187 #define PyBUF_FORMAT 0x0004
188 #define PyBUF_ND 0x0008
189 #define PyBUF_STRIDES (0x0010 | PyBUF_ND)
190 #define PyBUF_C_CONTIGUOUS (0x0020 | PyBUF_STRIDES)
191 #define PyBUF_F_CONTIGUOUS (0x0040 | PyBUF_STRIDES)
192 #define PyBUF_ANY_CONTIGUOUS (0x0080 | PyBUF_STRIDES)
193 #define PyBUF_INDIRECT (0x0100 | PyBUF_STRIDES)
195 #define PyBUF_CONTIG (PyBUF_ND | PyBUF_WRITABLE)
196 #define PyBUF_CONTIG_RO (PyBUF_ND)
197 #define PyBUF_CONTIG_LCK (PyBUF_ND | PyBUF_LOCK)
198 #define PyBUF_CONTIG_XLCK (PyBUF_ND | PyBUF_LOCK | PyBUF_WRITABLE)
200 #define PyBUF_STRIDED (PyBUF_STRIDES | PyBUF_WRITABLE)
201 #define PyBUF_STRIDED_RO (PyBUF_STRIDES)
202 #define PyBUF_STRIDED_LCK (PyBUF_STRIDES | PyBUF_LOCK)
203 #define PyBUF_STRIDED_XLCK (PyBUF_STRIDES | PyBUF_LOCK | PyBUF_WRITABLE)
205 #define PyBUF_RECORDS (PyBUF_STRIDES | PyBUF_WRITABLE | PyBUF_FORMAT)
206 #define PyBUF_RECORDS_RO (PyBUF_STRIDES | PyBUF_FORMAT)
207 #define PyBUF_RECORDS_LCK (PyBUF_STRIDES | PyBUF_LOCK | PyBUF_FORMAT)
208 #define PyBUF_RECORDS_XLCK (PyBUF_STRIDES | PyBUF_LOCK | PyBUF_WRITABLE \
211 #define PyBUF_FULL (PyBUF_INDIRECT | PyBUF_WRITABLE | PyBUF_FORMAT)
212 #define PyBUF_FULL_RO (PyBUF_INDIRECT | PyBUF_FORMAT)
213 #define PyBUF_FULL_LCK (PyBUF_INDIRECT | PyBUF_LOCK | PyBUF_FORMAT)
214 #define PyBUF_FULL_XLCK (PyBUF_INDIRECT | PyBUF_LOCK | PyBUF_WRITABLE \
218 #define PyBUF_READ 0x100
219 #define PyBUF_WRITE 0x200
220 #define PyBUF_SHADOW 0x400
221 /* end Py3k buffer interface */
223 typedef int (*objobjproc
)(PyObject
*, PyObject
*);
224 typedef int (*visitproc
)(PyObject
*, void *);
225 typedef int (*traverseproc
)(PyObject
*, visitproc
, void *);
228 /* For numbers without flag bit Py_TPFLAGS_CHECKTYPES set, all
229 arguments are guaranteed to be of the object's type (modulo
230 coercion hacks -- i.e. if the type's coercion function
231 returns other types, then these are allowed as well). Numbers that
232 have the Py_TPFLAGS_CHECKTYPES flag bit set should check *both*
233 arguments for proper type and implement the necessary conversions
234 in the slot functions themselves. */
237 binaryfunc nb_subtract
;
238 binaryfunc nb_multiply
;
239 binaryfunc nb_divide
;
240 binaryfunc nb_remainder
;
241 binaryfunc nb_divmod
;
242 ternaryfunc nb_power
;
243 unaryfunc nb_negative
;
244 unaryfunc nb_positive
;
245 unaryfunc nb_absolute
;
248 binaryfunc nb_lshift
;
249 binaryfunc nb_rshift
;
259 /* Added in release 2.0 */
260 binaryfunc nb_inplace_add
;
261 binaryfunc nb_inplace_subtract
;
262 binaryfunc nb_inplace_multiply
;
263 binaryfunc nb_inplace_divide
;
264 binaryfunc nb_inplace_remainder
;
265 ternaryfunc nb_inplace_power
;
266 binaryfunc nb_inplace_lshift
;
267 binaryfunc nb_inplace_rshift
;
268 binaryfunc nb_inplace_and
;
269 binaryfunc nb_inplace_xor
;
270 binaryfunc nb_inplace_or
;
272 /* Added in release 2.2 */
273 /* The following require the Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_CLASS flag */
274 binaryfunc nb_floor_divide
;
275 binaryfunc nb_true_divide
;
276 binaryfunc nb_inplace_floor_divide
;
277 binaryfunc nb_inplace_true_divide
;
279 /* Added in release 2.5 */
285 binaryfunc sq_concat
;
286 ssizeargfunc sq_repeat
;
287 ssizeargfunc sq_item
;
288 ssizessizeargfunc sq_slice
;
289 ssizeobjargproc sq_ass_item
;
290 ssizessizeobjargproc sq_ass_slice
;
291 objobjproc sq_contains
;
292 /* Added in release 2.0 */
293 binaryfunc sq_inplace_concat
;
294 ssizeargfunc sq_inplace_repeat
;
299 binaryfunc mp_subscript
;
300 objobjargproc mp_ass_subscript
;
304 readbufferproc bf_getreadbuffer
;
305 writebufferproc bf_getwritebuffer
;
306 segcountproc bf_getsegcount
;
307 charbufferproc bf_getcharbuffer
;
308 getbufferproc bf_getbuffer
;
309 releasebufferproc bf_releasebuffer
;
313 typedef void (*freefunc
)(void *);
314 typedef void (*destructor
)(PyObject
*);
315 typedef int (*printfunc
)(PyObject
*, FILE *, int);
316 typedef PyObject
*(*getattrfunc
)(PyObject
*, char *);
317 typedef PyObject
*(*getattrofunc
)(PyObject
*, PyObject
*);
318 typedef int (*setattrfunc
)(PyObject
*, char *, PyObject
*);
319 typedef int (*setattrofunc
)(PyObject
*, PyObject
*, PyObject
*);
320 typedef int (*cmpfunc
)(PyObject
*, PyObject
*);
321 typedef PyObject
*(*reprfunc
)(PyObject
*);
322 typedef long (*hashfunc
)(PyObject
*);
323 typedef PyObject
*(*richcmpfunc
) (PyObject
*, PyObject
*, int);
324 typedef PyObject
*(*getiterfunc
) (PyObject
*);
325 typedef PyObject
*(*iternextfunc
) (PyObject
*);
326 typedef PyObject
*(*descrgetfunc
) (PyObject
*, PyObject
*, PyObject
*);
327 typedef int (*descrsetfunc
) (PyObject
*, PyObject
*, PyObject
*);
328 typedef int (*initproc
)(PyObject
*, PyObject
*, PyObject
*);
329 typedef PyObject
*(*newfunc
)(struct _typeobject
*, PyObject
*, PyObject
*);
330 typedef PyObject
*(*allocfunc
)(struct _typeobject
*, Py_ssize_t
);
332 typedef struct _typeobject
{
334 const char *tp_name
; /* For printing, in format "<module>.<name>" */
335 Py_ssize_t tp_basicsize
, tp_itemsize
; /* For allocation */
337 /* Methods to implement standard operations */
339 destructor tp_dealloc
;
341 getattrfunc tp_getattr
;
342 setattrfunc tp_setattr
;
346 /* Method suites for standard classes */
348 PyNumberMethods
*tp_as_number
;
349 PySequenceMethods
*tp_as_sequence
;
350 PyMappingMethods
*tp_as_mapping
;
352 /* More standard operations (here for binary compatibility) */
357 getattrofunc tp_getattro
;
358 setattrofunc tp_setattro
;
360 /* Functions to access object as input/output buffer */
361 PyBufferProcs
*tp_as_buffer
;
363 /* Flags to define presence of optional/expanded features */
366 const char *tp_doc
; /* Documentation string */
368 /* Assigned meaning in release 2.0 */
369 /* call function for all accessible objects */
370 traverseproc tp_traverse
;
372 /* delete references to contained objects */
375 /* Assigned meaning in release 2.1 */
376 /* rich comparisons */
377 richcmpfunc tp_richcompare
;
379 /* weak reference enabler */
380 Py_ssize_t tp_weaklistoffset
;
382 /* Added in release 2.2 */
385 iternextfunc tp_iternext
;
387 /* Attribute descriptor and subclassing stuff */
388 struct PyMethodDef
*tp_methods
;
389 struct PyMemberDef
*tp_members
;
390 struct PyGetSetDef
*tp_getset
;
391 struct _typeobject
*tp_base
;
393 descrgetfunc tp_descr_get
;
394 descrsetfunc tp_descr_set
;
395 Py_ssize_t tp_dictoffset
;
399 freefunc tp_free
; /* Low-level free-memory routine */
400 inquiry tp_is_gc
; /* For PyObject_IS_GC */
402 PyObject
*tp_mro
; /* method resolution order */
404 PyObject
*tp_subclasses
;
405 PyObject
*tp_weaklist
;
408 /* Type attribute cache version tag. Added in version 2.6 */
409 unsigned int tp_version_tag
;
412 /* these must be last and never explicitly initialized */
413 Py_ssize_t tp_allocs
;
415 Py_ssize_t tp_maxalloc
;
416 struct _typeobject
*tp_prev
;
417 struct _typeobject
*tp_next
;
422 /* The *real* layout of a type object when allocated on the heap */
423 typedef struct _heaptypeobject
{
424 /* Note: there's a dependency on the order of these members
425 in slotptr() in typeobject.c . */
426 PyTypeObject ht_type
;
427 PyNumberMethods as_number
;
428 PyMappingMethods as_mapping
;
429 PySequenceMethods as_sequence
; /* as_sequence comes after as_mapping,
430 so that the mapping wins when both
431 the mapping and the sequence define
432 a given operator (e.g. __getitem__).
433 see add_operators() in typeobject.c . */
434 PyBufferProcs as_buffer
;
435 PyObject
*ht_name
, *ht_slots
;
436 /* here are optional user slots, followed by the members. */
439 /* access macro to the members which are floating "behind" the object */
440 #define PyHeapType_GET_MEMBERS(etype) \
441 ((PyMemberDef *)(((char *)etype) + Py_TYPE(etype)->tp_basicsize))
444 /* Generic type check */
445 PyAPI_FUNC(int) PyType_IsSubtype(PyTypeObject
*, PyTypeObject
*);
446 #define PyObject_TypeCheck(ob, tp) \
447 (Py_TYPE(ob) == (tp) || PyType_IsSubtype(Py_TYPE(ob), (tp)))
449 PyAPI_DATA(PyTypeObject
) PyType_Type
; /* built-in 'type' */
450 PyAPI_DATA(PyTypeObject
) PyBaseObject_Type
; /* built-in 'object' */
451 PyAPI_DATA(PyTypeObject
) PySuper_Type
; /* built-in 'super' */
453 #define PyType_Check(op) \
454 PyType_FastSubclass(Py_TYPE(op), Py_TPFLAGS_TYPE_SUBCLASS)
455 #define PyType_CheckExact(op) (Py_TYPE(op) == &PyType_Type)
457 PyAPI_FUNC(int) PyType_Ready(PyTypeObject
*);
458 PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject
*) PyType_GenericAlloc(PyTypeObject
*, Py_ssize_t
);
459 PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject
*) PyType_GenericNew(PyTypeObject
*,
460 PyObject
*, PyObject
*);
461 PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject
*) _PyType_Lookup(PyTypeObject
*, PyObject
*);
462 PyAPI_FUNC(unsigned int) PyType_ClearCache(void);
464 /* Generic operations on objects */
465 PyAPI_FUNC(int) PyObject_Print(PyObject
*, FILE *, int);
466 PyAPI_FUNC(void) _PyObject_Dump(PyObject
*);
467 PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject
*) PyObject_Repr(PyObject
*);
468 PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject
*) _PyObject_Str(PyObject
*);
469 PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject
*) PyObject_Str(PyObject
*);
470 #ifdef Py_USING_UNICODE
471 PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject
*) PyObject_Unicode(PyObject
*);
473 PyAPI_FUNC(int) PyObject_Compare(PyObject
*, PyObject
*);
474 PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject
*) PyObject_RichCompare(PyObject
*, PyObject
*, int);
475 PyAPI_FUNC(int) PyObject_RichCompareBool(PyObject
*, PyObject
*, int);
476 PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject
*) PyObject_GetAttrString(PyObject
*, const char *);
477 PyAPI_FUNC(int) PyObject_SetAttrString(PyObject
*, const char *, PyObject
*);
478 PyAPI_FUNC(int) PyObject_HasAttrString(PyObject
*, const char *);
479 PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject
*) PyObject_GetAttr(PyObject
*, PyObject
*);
480 PyAPI_FUNC(int) PyObject_SetAttr(PyObject
*, PyObject
*, PyObject
*);
481 PyAPI_FUNC(int) PyObject_HasAttr(PyObject
*, PyObject
*);
482 PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject
**) _PyObject_GetDictPtr(PyObject
*);
483 PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject
*) PyObject_SelfIter(PyObject
*);
484 PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject
*) PyObject_GenericGetAttr(PyObject
*, PyObject
*);
485 PyAPI_FUNC(int) PyObject_GenericSetAttr(PyObject
*,
486 PyObject
*, PyObject
*);
487 PyAPI_FUNC(long) PyObject_Hash(PyObject
*);
488 PyAPI_FUNC(int) PyObject_IsTrue(PyObject
*);
489 PyAPI_FUNC(int) PyObject_Not(PyObject
*);
490 PyAPI_FUNC(int) PyCallable_Check(PyObject
*);
491 PyAPI_FUNC(int) PyNumber_Coerce(PyObject
**, PyObject
**);
492 PyAPI_FUNC(int) PyNumber_CoerceEx(PyObject
**, PyObject
**);
494 PyAPI_FUNC(void) PyObject_ClearWeakRefs(PyObject
*);
496 /* A slot function whose address we need to compare */
497 extern int _PyObject_SlotCompare(PyObject
*, PyObject
*);
500 /* PyObject_Dir(obj) acts like Python __builtin__.dir(obj), returning a
501 list of strings. PyObject_Dir(NULL) is like __builtin__.dir(),
502 returning the names of the current locals. In this case, if there are
503 no current locals, NULL is returned, and PyErr_Occurred() is false.
505 PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject
*) PyObject_Dir(PyObject
*);
508 /* Helpers for printing recursive container types */
509 PyAPI_FUNC(int) Py_ReprEnter(PyObject
*);
510 PyAPI_FUNC(void) Py_ReprLeave(PyObject
*);
512 /* Helpers for hash functions */
513 PyAPI_FUNC(long) _Py_HashDouble(double);
514 PyAPI_FUNC(long) _Py_HashPointer(void*);
516 /* Helper for passing objects to printf and the like */
517 #define PyObject_REPR(obj) PyString_AS_STRING(PyObject_Repr(obj))
519 /* Flag bits for printing: */
520 #define Py_PRINT_RAW 1 /* No string quotes etc. */
523 `Type flags (tp_flags)
525 These flags are used to extend the type structure in a backwards-compatible
526 fashion. Extensions can use the flags to indicate (and test) when a given
527 type structure contains a new feature. The Python core will use these when
528 introducing new functionality between major revisions (to avoid mid-version
529 changes in the PYTHON_API_VERSION).
531 Arbitration of the flag bit positions will need to be coordinated among
532 all extension writers who publically release their extensions (this will
533 be fewer than you might expect!)..
535 Python 1.5.2 introduced the bf_getcharbuffer slot into PyBufferProcs.
537 Type definitions should use Py_TPFLAGS_DEFAULT for their tp_flags value.
539 Code can use PyType_HasFeature(type_ob, flag_value) to test whether the
540 given type object has a specified feature.
543 /* PyBufferProcs contains bf_getcharbuffer */
544 #define Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_GETCHARBUFFER (1L<<0)
546 /* PySequenceMethods contains sq_contains */
547 #define Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_SEQUENCE_IN (1L<<1)
549 /* This is here for backwards compatibility. Extensions that use the old GC
550 * API will still compile but the objects will not be tracked by the GC. */
551 #define Py_TPFLAGS_GC 0 /* used to be (1L<<2) */
553 /* PySequenceMethods and PyNumberMethods contain in-place operators */
554 #define Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_INPLACEOPS (1L<<3)
556 /* PyNumberMethods do their own coercion */
557 #define Py_TPFLAGS_CHECKTYPES (1L<<4)
559 /* tp_richcompare is defined */
560 #define Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_RICHCOMPARE (1L<<5)
562 /* Objects which are weakly referencable if their tp_weaklistoffset is >0 */
563 #define Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_WEAKREFS (1L<<6)
565 /* tp_iter is defined */
566 #define Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_ITER (1L<<7)
568 /* New members introduced by Python 2.2 exist */
569 #define Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_CLASS (1L<<8)
571 /* Set if the type object is dynamically allocated */
572 #define Py_TPFLAGS_HEAPTYPE (1L<<9)
574 /* Set if the type allows subclassing */
575 #define Py_TPFLAGS_BASETYPE (1L<<10)
577 /* Set if the type is 'ready' -- fully initialized */
578 #define Py_TPFLAGS_READY (1L<<12)
580 /* Set while the type is being 'readied', to prevent recursive ready calls */
581 #define Py_TPFLAGS_READYING (1L<<13)
583 /* Objects support garbage collection (see objimp.h) */
584 #define Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_GC (1L<<14)
586 /* These two bits are preserved for Stackless Python, next after this is 17 */
588 #define Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_STACKLESS_EXTENSION (3L<<15)
590 #define Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_STACKLESS_EXTENSION 0
593 /* Objects support nb_index in PyNumberMethods */
594 #define Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_INDEX (1L<<17)
596 /* Objects support type attribute cache */
597 #define Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_VERSION_TAG (1L<<18)
598 #define Py_TPFLAGS_VALID_VERSION_TAG (1L<<19)
600 /* Type is abstract and cannot be instantiated */
601 #define Py_TPFLAGS_IS_ABSTRACT (1L<<20)
603 /* Has the new buffer protocol */
604 #define Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_NEWBUFFER (1L<<21)
606 /* These flags are used to determine if a type is a subclass. */
607 #define Py_TPFLAGS_INT_SUBCLASS (1L<<23)
608 #define Py_TPFLAGS_LONG_SUBCLASS (1L<<24)
609 #define Py_TPFLAGS_LIST_SUBCLASS (1L<<25)
610 #define Py_TPFLAGS_TUPLE_SUBCLASS (1L<<26)
611 #define Py_TPFLAGS_STRING_SUBCLASS (1L<<27)
612 #define Py_TPFLAGS_UNICODE_SUBCLASS (1L<<28)
613 #define Py_TPFLAGS_DICT_SUBCLASS (1L<<29)
614 #define Py_TPFLAGS_BASE_EXC_SUBCLASS (1L<<30)
615 #define Py_TPFLAGS_TYPE_SUBCLASS (1L<<31)
617 #define Py_TPFLAGS_DEFAULT ( \
618 Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_GETCHARBUFFER | \
619 Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_SEQUENCE_IN | \
620 Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_INPLACEOPS | \
621 Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_RICHCOMPARE | \
622 Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_WEAKREFS | \
623 Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_ITER | \
624 Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_CLASS | \
625 Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_STACKLESS_EXTENSION | \
626 Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_INDEX | \
627 Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_VERSION_TAG | \
630 #define PyType_HasFeature(t,f) (((t)->tp_flags & (f)) != 0)
631 #define PyType_FastSubclass(t,f) PyType_HasFeature(t,f)
635 The macros Py_INCREF(op) and Py_DECREF(op) are used to increment or decrement
636 reference counts. Py_DECREF calls the object's deallocator function when
637 the refcount falls to 0; for
638 objects that don't contain references to other objects or heap memory
639 this can be the standard function free(). Both macros can be used
640 wherever a void expression is allowed. The argument must not be a
641 NULL pointer. If it may be NULL, use Py_XINCREF/Py_XDECREF instead.
642 The macro _Py_NewReference(op) initialize reference counts to 1, and
643 in special builds (Py_REF_DEBUG, Py_TRACE_REFS) performs additional
644 bookkeeping appropriate to the special build.
646 We assume that the reference count field can never overflow; this can
647 be proven when the size of the field is the same as the pointer size, so
648 we ignore the possibility. Provided a C int is at least 32 bits (which
649 is implicitly assumed in many parts of this code), that's enough for
650 about 2**31 references to an object.
652 XXX The following became out of date in Python 2.2, but I'm not sure
653 XXX what the full truth is now. Certainly, heap-allocated type objects
654 XXX can and should be deallocated.
655 Type objects should never be deallocated; the type pointer in an object
656 is not considered to be a reference to the type object, to save
657 complications in the deallocation function. (This is actually a
658 decision that's up to the implementer of each new type so if you want,
659 you can count such references to the type object.)
661 *** WARNING*** The Py_DECREF macro must have a side-effect-free argument
662 since it may evaluate its argument multiple times. (The alternative
663 would be to mace it a proper function or assign it to a global temporary
664 variable first, both of which are slower; and in a multi-threaded
665 environment the global variable trick is not safe.)
668 /* First define a pile of simple helper macros, one set per special
669 * build symbol. These either expand to the obvious things, or to
670 * nothing at all when the special mode isn't in effect. The main
671 * macros can later be defined just once then, yet expand to different
672 * things depending on which special build options are and aren't in effect.
673 * Trust me <wink>: while painful, this is 20x easier to understand than,
674 * e.g, defining _Py_NewReference five different times in a maze of nested
675 * #ifdefs (we used to do that -- it was impenetrable).
678 PyAPI_DATA(Py_ssize_t
) _Py_RefTotal
;
679 PyAPI_FUNC(void) _Py_NegativeRefcount(const char *fname
,
680 int lineno
, PyObject
*op
);
681 PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject
*) _PyDict_Dummy(void);
682 PyAPI_FUNC(PyObject
*) _PySet_Dummy(void);
683 PyAPI_FUNC(Py_ssize_t
) _Py_GetRefTotal(void);
684 #define _Py_INC_REFTOTAL _Py_RefTotal++
685 #define _Py_DEC_REFTOTAL _Py_RefTotal--
686 #define _Py_REF_DEBUG_COMMA ,
687 #define _Py_CHECK_REFCNT(OP) \
688 { if (((PyObject*)OP)->ob_refcnt < 0) \
689 _Py_NegativeRefcount(__FILE__, __LINE__, \
693 #define _Py_INC_REFTOTAL
694 #define _Py_DEC_REFTOTAL
695 #define _Py_REF_DEBUG_COMMA
696 #define _Py_CHECK_REFCNT(OP) /* a semicolon */;
697 #endif /* Py_REF_DEBUG */
700 PyAPI_FUNC(void) inc_count(PyTypeObject
*);
701 PyAPI_FUNC(void) dec_count(PyTypeObject
*);
702 #define _Py_INC_TPALLOCS(OP) inc_count(Py_TYPE(OP))
703 #define _Py_INC_TPFREES(OP) dec_count(Py_TYPE(OP))
704 #define _Py_DEC_TPFREES(OP) Py_TYPE(OP)->tp_frees--
705 #define _Py_COUNT_ALLOCS_COMMA ,
707 #define _Py_INC_TPALLOCS(OP)
708 #define _Py_INC_TPFREES(OP)
709 #define _Py_DEC_TPFREES(OP)
710 #define _Py_COUNT_ALLOCS_COMMA
711 #endif /* COUNT_ALLOCS */
714 /* Py_TRACE_REFS is such major surgery that we call external routines. */
715 PyAPI_FUNC(void) _Py_NewReference(PyObject
*);
716 PyAPI_FUNC(void) _Py_ForgetReference(PyObject
*);
717 PyAPI_FUNC(void) _Py_Dealloc(PyObject
*);
718 PyAPI_FUNC(void) _Py_PrintReferences(FILE *);
719 PyAPI_FUNC(void) _Py_PrintReferenceAddresses(FILE *);
720 PyAPI_FUNC(void) _Py_AddToAllObjects(PyObject
*, int force
);
723 /* Without Py_TRACE_REFS, there's little enough to do that we expand code
726 #define _Py_NewReference(op) ( \
727 _Py_INC_TPALLOCS(op) _Py_COUNT_ALLOCS_COMMA \
728 _Py_INC_REFTOTAL _Py_REF_DEBUG_COMMA \
731 #define _Py_ForgetReference(op) _Py_INC_TPFREES(op)
733 #define _Py_Dealloc(op) ( \
734 _Py_INC_TPFREES(op) _Py_COUNT_ALLOCS_COMMA \
735 (*Py_TYPE(op)->tp_dealloc)((PyObject *)(op)))
736 #endif /* !Py_TRACE_REFS */
738 #define Py_INCREF(op) ( \
739 _Py_INC_REFTOTAL _Py_REF_DEBUG_COMMA \
740 ((PyObject*)(op))->ob_refcnt++)
742 #define Py_DECREF(op) \
743 if (_Py_DEC_REFTOTAL _Py_REF_DEBUG_COMMA \
744 --((PyObject*)(op))->ob_refcnt != 0) \
745 _Py_CHECK_REFCNT(op) \
747 _Py_Dealloc((PyObject *)(op))
749 /* Safely decref `op` and set `op` to NULL, especially useful in tp_clear
750 * and tp_dealloc implementatons.
752 * Note that "the obvious" code can be deadly:
757 * Typically, `op` is something like self->containee, and `self` is done
758 * using its `containee` member. In the code sequence above, suppose
759 * `containee` is non-NULL with a refcount of 1. Its refcount falls to
760 * 0 on the first line, which can trigger an arbitrary amount of code,
761 * possibly including finalizers (like __del__ methods or weakref callbacks)
762 * coded in Python, which in turn can release the GIL and allow other threads
763 * to run, etc. Such code may even invoke methods of `self` again, or cause
764 * cyclic gc to trigger, but-- oops! --self->containee still points to the
765 * object being torn down, and it may be in an insane state while being torn
766 * down. This has in fact been a rich historic source of miserable (rare &
767 * hard-to-diagnose) segfaulting (and other) bugs.
773 * That arranges to set `op` to NULL _before_ decref'ing, so that any code
774 * triggered as a side-effect of `op` getting torn down no longer believes
775 * `op` points to a valid object.
777 * There are cases where it's safe to use the naive code, but they're brittle.
778 * For example, if `op` points to a Python integer, you know that destroying
779 * one of those can't cause problems -- but in part that relies on that
780 * Python integers aren't currently weakly referencable. Best practice is
781 * to use Py_CLEAR() even if you can't think of a reason for why you need to.
783 #define Py_CLEAR(op) \
786 PyObject *tmp = (PyObject *)(op); \
792 /* Macros to use in case the object pointer may be NULL: */
793 #define Py_XINCREF(op) if ((op) == NULL) ; else Py_INCREF(op)
794 #define Py_XDECREF(op) if ((op) == NULL) ; else Py_DECREF(op)
797 These are provided as conveniences to Python runtime embedders, so that
798 they can have object code that is not dependent on Python compilation flags.
800 PyAPI_FUNC(void) Py_IncRef(PyObject
*);
801 PyAPI_FUNC(void) Py_DecRef(PyObject
*);
804 _Py_NoneStruct is an object of undefined type which can be used in contexts
805 where NULL (nil) is not suitable (since NULL often means 'error').
807 Don't forget to apply Py_INCREF() when returning this value!!!
809 PyAPI_DATA(PyObject
) _Py_NoneStruct
; /* Don't use this directly */
810 #define Py_None (&_Py_NoneStruct)
812 /* Macro for returning Py_None from a function */
813 #define Py_RETURN_NONE return Py_INCREF(Py_None), Py_None
816 Py_NotImplemented is a singleton used to signal that an operation is
817 not implemented for a given type combination.
819 PyAPI_DATA(PyObject
) _Py_NotImplementedStruct
; /* Don't use this directly */
820 #define Py_NotImplemented (&_Py_NotImplementedStruct)
822 /* Rich comparison opcodes */
830 /* Maps Py_LT to Py_GT, ..., Py_GE to Py_LE.
831 * Defined in object.c.
833 PyAPI_DATA(int) _Py_SwappedOp
[];
836 Define staticforward and statichere for source compatibility with old
839 The staticforward define was needed to support certain broken C
840 compilers (notably SCO ODT 3.0, perhaps early AIX as well) botched the
841 static keyword when it was used with a forward declaration of a static
842 initialized structure. Standard C allows the forward declaration with
843 static, and we've decided to stop catering to broken C compilers.
844 (In fact, we expect that the compilers are all fixed eight years later.)
847 #define staticforward static
848 #define statichere static
858 Functions that take objects as arguments normally don't check for nil
859 arguments, but they do check the type of the argument, and return an
860 error if the function doesn't apply to the type.
865 Functions may fail for a variety of reasons, including running out of
866 memory. This is communicated to the caller in two ways: an error string
867 is set (see errors.h), and the function result differs: functions that
868 normally return a pointer return NULL for failure, functions returning
869 an integer return -1 (which could be a legal return value too!), and
870 other functions return 0 for success and -1 for failure.
871 Callers should always check for errors before using the result. If
872 an error was set, the caller must either explicitly clear it, or pass
873 the error on to its caller.
878 It takes a while to get used to the proper usage of reference counts.
880 Functions that create an object set the reference count to 1; such new
881 objects must be stored somewhere or destroyed again with Py_DECREF().
882 Some functions that 'store' objects, such as PyTuple_SetItem() and
884 don't increment the reference count of the object, since the most
885 frequent use is to store a fresh object. Functions that 'retrieve'
886 objects, such as PyTuple_GetItem() and PyDict_GetItemString(), also
888 the reference count, since most frequently the object is only looked at
889 quickly. Thus, to retrieve an object and store it again, the caller
890 must call Py_INCREF() explicitly.
892 NOTE: functions that 'consume' a reference count, like
893 PyList_SetItem(), consume the reference even if the object wasn't
894 successfully stored, to simplify error handling.
896 It seems attractive to make other functions that take an object as
897 argument consume a reference count; however, this may quickly get
898 confusing (even the current practice is already confusing). Consider
899 it carefully, it may save lots of calls to Py_INCREF() and Py_DECREF() at
904 /* Trashcan mechanism, thanks to Christian Tismer.
906 When deallocating a container object, it's possible to trigger an unbounded
907 chain of deallocations, as each Py_DECREF in turn drops the refcount on "the
908 next" object in the chain to 0. This can easily lead to stack faults, and
909 especially in threads (which typically have less stack space to work with).
911 A container object that participates in cyclic gc can avoid this by
912 bracketing the body of its tp_dealloc function with a pair of macros:
915 mytype_dealloc(mytype *p)
917 ... declarations go here ...
919 PyObject_GC_UnTrack(p); // must untrack first
920 Py_TRASHCAN_SAFE_BEGIN(p)
921 ... The body of the deallocator goes here, including all calls ...
922 ... to Py_DECREF on contained objects. ...
923 Py_TRASHCAN_SAFE_END(p)
926 CAUTION: Never return from the middle of the body! If the body needs to
927 "get out early", put a label immediately before the Py_TRASHCAN_SAFE_END
928 call, and goto it. Else the call-depth counter (see below) will stay
929 above 0 forever, and the trashcan will never get emptied.
931 How it works: The BEGIN macro increments a call-depth counter. So long
932 as this counter is small, the body of the deallocator is run directly without
933 further ado. But if the counter gets large, it instead adds p to a list of
934 objects to be deallocated later, skips the body of the deallocator, and
935 resumes execution after the END macro. The tp_dealloc routine then returns
936 without deallocating anything (and so unbounded call-stack depth is avoided).
938 When the call stack finishes unwinding again, code generated by the END macro
939 notices this, and calls another routine to deallocate all the objects that
940 may have been added to the list of deferred deallocations. In effect, a
941 chain of N deallocations is broken into N / PyTrash_UNWIND_LEVEL pieces,
942 with the call stack never exceeding a depth of PyTrash_UNWIND_LEVEL.
945 PyAPI_FUNC(void) _PyTrash_deposit_object(PyObject
*);
946 PyAPI_FUNC(void) _PyTrash_destroy_chain(void);
947 PyAPI_DATA(int) _PyTrash_delete_nesting
;
948 PyAPI_DATA(PyObject
*) _PyTrash_delete_later
;
950 #define PyTrash_UNWIND_LEVEL 50
952 #define Py_TRASHCAN_SAFE_BEGIN(op) \
953 if (_PyTrash_delete_nesting < PyTrash_UNWIND_LEVEL) { \
954 ++_PyTrash_delete_nesting;
955 /* The body of the deallocator is here. */
956 #define Py_TRASHCAN_SAFE_END(op) \
957 --_PyTrash_delete_nesting; \
958 if (_PyTrash_delete_later && _PyTrash_delete_nesting <= 0) \
959 _PyTrash_destroy_chain(); \
962 _PyTrash_deposit_object((PyObject*)op);
967 #endif /* !Py_OBJECT_H */