528 lines
17 KiB
C
Executable File
528 lines
17 KiB
C
Executable File
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/***** Support code for embedding *****/
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#ifdef __cplusplus
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extern "C" {
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#endif
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#if defined(_WIN32)
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# define CFFI_DLLEXPORT __declspec(dllexport)
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#elif defined(__GNUC__)
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# define CFFI_DLLEXPORT __attribute__((visibility("default")))
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#else
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# define CFFI_DLLEXPORT /* nothing */
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#endif
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/* There are two global variables of type _cffi_call_python_fnptr:
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* _cffi_call_python, which we declare just below, is the one called
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by ``extern "Python"`` implementations.
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* _cffi_call_python_org, which on CPython is actually part of the
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_cffi_exports[] array, is the function pointer copied from
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_cffi_backend.
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After initialization is complete, both are equal. However, the
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first one remains equal to &_cffi_start_and_call_python until the
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very end of initialization, when we are (or should be) sure that
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concurrent threads also see a completely initialized world, and
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only then is it changed.
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*/
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#undef _cffi_call_python
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typedef void (*_cffi_call_python_fnptr)(struct _cffi_externpy_s *, char *);
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static void _cffi_start_and_call_python(struct _cffi_externpy_s *, char *);
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static _cffi_call_python_fnptr _cffi_call_python = &_cffi_start_and_call_python;
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#ifndef _MSC_VER
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/* --- Assuming a GCC not infinitely old --- */
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# define cffi_compare_and_swap(l,o,n) __sync_bool_compare_and_swap(l,o,n)
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# define cffi_write_barrier() __sync_synchronize()
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# if !defined(__amd64__) && !defined(__x86_64__) && \
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!defined(__i386__) && !defined(__i386)
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# define cffi_read_barrier() __sync_synchronize()
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# else
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# define cffi_read_barrier() (void)0
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# endif
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#else
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/* --- Windows threads version --- */
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# include <Windows.h>
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# define cffi_compare_and_swap(l,o,n) \
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(InterlockedCompareExchangePointer(l,n,o) == (o))
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# define cffi_write_barrier() InterlockedCompareExchange(&_cffi_dummy,0,0)
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# define cffi_read_barrier() (void)0
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static volatile LONG _cffi_dummy;
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#endif
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#ifdef WITH_THREAD
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# ifndef _MSC_VER
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# include <pthread.h>
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static pthread_mutex_t _cffi_embed_startup_lock;
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# else
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static CRITICAL_SECTION _cffi_embed_startup_lock;
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# endif
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static char _cffi_embed_startup_lock_ready = 0;
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#endif
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static void _cffi_acquire_reentrant_mutex(void)
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{
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static void *volatile lock = NULL;
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while (!cffi_compare_and_swap(&lock, NULL, (void *)1)) {
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/* should ideally do a spin loop instruction here, but
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hard to do it portably and doesn't really matter I
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think: pthread_mutex_init() should be very fast, and
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this is only run at start-up anyway. */
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}
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#ifdef WITH_THREAD
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if (!_cffi_embed_startup_lock_ready) {
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# ifndef _MSC_VER
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pthread_mutexattr_t attr;
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pthread_mutexattr_init(&attr);
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pthread_mutexattr_settype(&attr, PTHREAD_MUTEX_RECURSIVE);
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pthread_mutex_init(&_cffi_embed_startup_lock, &attr);
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# else
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InitializeCriticalSection(&_cffi_embed_startup_lock);
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# endif
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_cffi_embed_startup_lock_ready = 1;
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}
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#endif
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while (!cffi_compare_and_swap(&lock, (void *)1, NULL))
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;
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#ifndef _MSC_VER
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pthread_mutex_lock(&_cffi_embed_startup_lock);
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#else
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EnterCriticalSection(&_cffi_embed_startup_lock);
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#endif
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}
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static void _cffi_release_reentrant_mutex(void)
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{
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#ifndef _MSC_VER
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pthread_mutex_unlock(&_cffi_embed_startup_lock);
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#else
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LeaveCriticalSection(&_cffi_embed_startup_lock);
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#endif
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}
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/********** CPython-specific section **********/
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#ifndef PYPY_VERSION
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#include "_cffi_errors.h"
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#define _cffi_call_python_org _cffi_exports[_CFFI_CPIDX]
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PyMODINIT_FUNC _CFFI_PYTHON_STARTUP_FUNC(void); /* forward */
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static void _cffi_py_initialize(void)
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{
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/* XXX use initsigs=0, which "skips initialization registration of
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signal handlers, which might be useful when Python is
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embedded" according to the Python docs. But review and think
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if it should be a user-controllable setting.
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XXX we should also give a way to write errors to a buffer
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instead of to stderr.
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XXX if importing 'site' fails, CPython (any version) calls
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exit(). Should we try to work around this behavior here?
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*/
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Py_InitializeEx(0);
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}
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static int _cffi_initialize_python(void)
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{
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/* This initializes Python, imports _cffi_backend, and then the
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present .dll/.so is set up as a CPython C extension module.
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*/
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int result;
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PyGILState_STATE state;
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PyObject *pycode=NULL, *global_dict=NULL, *x;
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PyObject *builtins;
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state = PyGILState_Ensure();
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/* Call the initxxx() function from the present module. It will
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create and initialize us as a CPython extension module, instead
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of letting the startup Python code do it---it might reimport
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the same .dll/.so and get maybe confused on some platforms.
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It might also have troubles locating the .dll/.so again for all
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I know.
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*/
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(void)_CFFI_PYTHON_STARTUP_FUNC();
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if (PyErr_Occurred())
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goto error;
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/* Now run the Python code provided to ffi.embedding_init_code().
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*/
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pycode = Py_CompileString(_CFFI_PYTHON_STARTUP_CODE,
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"<init code for '" _CFFI_MODULE_NAME "'>",
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Py_file_input);
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if (pycode == NULL)
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goto error;
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global_dict = PyDict_New();
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if (global_dict == NULL)
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goto error;
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builtins = PyEval_GetBuiltins();
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if (builtins == NULL)
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goto error;
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if (PyDict_SetItemString(global_dict, "__builtins__", builtins) < 0)
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goto error;
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x = PyEval_EvalCode(
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#if PY_MAJOR_VERSION < 3
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(PyCodeObject *)
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#endif
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pycode, global_dict, global_dict);
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if (x == NULL)
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goto error;
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Py_DECREF(x);
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/* Done! Now if we've been called from
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_cffi_start_and_call_python() in an ``extern "Python"``, we can
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only hope that the Python code did correctly set up the
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corresponding @ffi.def_extern() function. Otherwise, the
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general logic of ``extern "Python"`` functions (inside the
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_cffi_backend module) will find that the reference is still
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missing and print an error.
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*/
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result = 0;
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done:
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Py_XDECREF(pycode);
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Py_XDECREF(global_dict);
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PyGILState_Release(state);
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return result;
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error:;
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{
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/* Print as much information as potentially useful.
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Debugging load-time failures with embedding is not fun
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*/
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PyObject *ecap;
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PyObject *exception, *v, *tb, *f, *modules, *mod;
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PyErr_Fetch(&exception, &v, &tb);
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ecap = _cffi_start_error_capture();
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f = PySys_GetObject((char *)"stderr");
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if (f != NULL && f != Py_None) {
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PyFile_WriteString(
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"Failed to initialize the Python-CFFI embedding logic:\n\n", f);
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}
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if (exception != NULL) {
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PyErr_NormalizeException(&exception, &v, &tb);
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PyErr_Display(exception, v, tb);
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}
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Py_XDECREF(exception);
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Py_XDECREF(v);
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Py_XDECREF(tb);
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if (f != NULL && f != Py_None) {
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PyFile_WriteString("\nFrom: " _CFFI_MODULE_NAME
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"\ncompiled with cffi version: 1.14.3"
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"\n_cffi_backend module: ", f);
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modules = PyImport_GetModuleDict();
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mod = PyDict_GetItemString(modules, "_cffi_backend");
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if (mod == NULL) {
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PyFile_WriteString("not loaded", f);
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}
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else {
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v = PyObject_GetAttrString(mod, "__file__");
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PyFile_WriteObject(v, f, 0);
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Py_XDECREF(v);
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}
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PyFile_WriteString("\nsys.path: ", f);
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PyFile_WriteObject(PySys_GetObject((char *)"path"), f, 0);
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PyFile_WriteString("\n\n", f);
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}
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_cffi_stop_error_capture(ecap);
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}
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result = -1;
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goto done;
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}
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#if PY_VERSION_HEX < 0x03080000
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PyAPI_DATA(char *) _PyParser_TokenNames[]; /* from CPython */
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#endif
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static int _cffi_carefully_make_gil(void)
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{
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/* This does the basic initialization of Python. It can be called
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completely concurrently from unrelated threads. It assumes
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that we don't hold the GIL before (if it exists), and we don't
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hold it afterwards.
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(What it really does used to be completely different in Python 2
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and Python 3, with the Python 2 solution avoiding the spin-lock
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around the Py_InitializeEx() call. However, after recent changes
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to CPython 2.7 (issue #358) it no longer works. So we use the
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Python 3 solution everywhere.)
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This initializes Python by calling Py_InitializeEx().
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Important: this must not be called concurrently at all.
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So we use a global variable as a simple spin lock. This global
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variable must be from 'libpythonX.Y.so', not from this
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cffi-based extension module, because it must be shared from
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different cffi-based extension modules.
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In Python < 3.8, we choose
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_PyParser_TokenNames[0] as a completely arbitrary pointer value
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that is never written to. The default is to point to the
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string "ENDMARKER". We change it temporarily to point to the
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next character in that string. (Yes, I know it's REALLY
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obscure.)
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In Python >= 3.8, this string array is no longer writable, so
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instead we pick PyCapsuleType.tp_version_tag. We can't change
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Python < 3.8 because someone might use a mixture of cffi
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embedded modules, some of which were compiled before this file
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changed.
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*/
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#ifdef WITH_THREAD
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# if PY_VERSION_HEX < 0x03080000
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char *volatile *lock = (char *volatile *)_PyParser_TokenNames;
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char *old_value, *locked_value;
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while (1) { /* spin loop */
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old_value = *lock;
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locked_value = old_value + 1;
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if (old_value[0] == 'E') {
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assert(old_value[1] == 'N');
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if (cffi_compare_and_swap(lock, old_value, locked_value))
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break;
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}
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else {
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assert(old_value[0] == 'N');
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/* should ideally do a spin loop instruction here, but
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hard to do it portably and doesn't really matter I
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think: PyEval_InitThreads() should be very fast, and
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this is only run at start-up anyway. */
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}
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}
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# else
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int volatile *lock = (int volatile *)&PyCapsule_Type.tp_version_tag;
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int old_value, locked_value;
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assert(!(PyCapsule_Type.tp_flags & Py_TPFLAGS_HAVE_VERSION_TAG));
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while (1) { /* spin loop */
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old_value = *lock;
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locked_value = -42;
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if (old_value == 0) {
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if (cffi_compare_and_swap(lock, old_value, locked_value))
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break;
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}
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else {
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assert(old_value == locked_value);
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/* should ideally do a spin loop instruction here, but
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hard to do it portably and doesn't really matter I
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think: PyEval_InitThreads() should be very fast, and
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this is only run at start-up anyway. */
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}
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}
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# endif
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#endif
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/* call Py_InitializeEx() */
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if (!Py_IsInitialized()) {
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_cffi_py_initialize();
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#if PY_VERSION_HEX < 0x03070000
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PyEval_InitThreads();
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#endif
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PyEval_SaveThread(); /* release the GIL */
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/* the returned tstate must be the one that has been stored into the
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autoTLSkey by _PyGILState_Init() called from Py_Initialize(). */
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}
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else {
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#if PY_VERSION_HEX < 0x03070000
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/* PyEval_InitThreads() is always a no-op from CPython 3.7 */
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PyGILState_STATE state = PyGILState_Ensure();
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PyEval_InitThreads();
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PyGILState_Release(state);
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#endif
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}
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#ifdef WITH_THREAD
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/* release the lock */
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while (!cffi_compare_and_swap(lock, locked_value, old_value))
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;
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#endif
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return 0;
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}
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/********** end CPython-specific section **********/
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#else
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/********** PyPy-specific section **********/
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PyMODINIT_FUNC _CFFI_PYTHON_STARTUP_FUNC(const void *[]); /* forward */
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static struct _cffi_pypy_init_s {
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const char *name;
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void *func; /* function pointer */
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const char *code;
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} _cffi_pypy_init = {
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_CFFI_MODULE_NAME,
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_CFFI_PYTHON_STARTUP_FUNC,
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_CFFI_PYTHON_STARTUP_CODE,
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};
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extern int pypy_carefully_make_gil(const char *);
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extern int pypy_init_embedded_cffi_module(int, struct _cffi_pypy_init_s *);
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static int _cffi_carefully_make_gil(void)
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{
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return pypy_carefully_make_gil(_CFFI_MODULE_NAME);
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}
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static int _cffi_initialize_python(void)
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{
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return pypy_init_embedded_cffi_module(0xB011, &_cffi_pypy_init);
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}
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/********** end PyPy-specific section **********/
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#endif
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#ifdef __GNUC__
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__attribute__((noinline))
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#endif
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static _cffi_call_python_fnptr _cffi_start_python(void)
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{
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/* Delicate logic to initialize Python. This function can be
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called multiple times concurrently, e.g. when the process calls
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its first ``extern "Python"`` functions in multiple threads at
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once. It can also be called recursively, in which case we must
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ignore it. We also have to consider what occurs if several
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different cffi-based extensions reach this code in parallel
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threads---it is a different copy of the code, then, and we
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can't have any shared global variable unless it comes from
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'libpythonX.Y.so'.
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Idea:
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* _cffi_carefully_make_gil(): "carefully" call
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PyEval_InitThreads() (possibly with Py_InitializeEx() first).
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* then we use a (local) custom lock to make sure that a call to this
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cffi-based extension will wait if another call to the *same*
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extension is running the initialization in another thread.
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It is reentrant, so that a recursive call will not block, but
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only one from a different thread.
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* then we grab the GIL and (Python 2) we call Py_InitializeEx().
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At this point, concurrent calls to Py_InitializeEx() are not
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possible: we have the GIL.
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* do the rest of the specific initialization, which may
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temporarily release the GIL but not the custom lock.
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Only release the custom lock when we are done.
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*/
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static char called = 0;
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if (_cffi_carefully_make_gil() != 0)
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return NULL;
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_cffi_acquire_reentrant_mutex();
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/* Here the GIL exists, but we don't have it. We're only protected
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from concurrency by the reentrant mutex. */
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/* This file only initializes the embedded module once, the first
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time this is called, even if there are subinterpreters. */
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if (!called) {
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called = 1; /* invoke _cffi_initialize_python() only once,
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but don't set '_cffi_call_python' right now,
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otherwise concurrent threads won't call
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this function at all (we need them to wait) */
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if (_cffi_initialize_python() == 0) {
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/* now initialization is finished. Switch to the fast-path. */
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/* We would like nobody to see the new value of
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'_cffi_call_python' without also seeing the rest of the
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data initialized. However, this is not possible. But
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the new value of '_cffi_call_python' is the function
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'cffi_call_python()' from _cffi_backend. So: */
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cffi_write_barrier();
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/* ^^^ we put a write barrier here, and a corresponding
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read barrier at the start of cffi_call_python(). This
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ensures that after that read barrier, we see everything
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done here before the write barrier.
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*/
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assert(_cffi_call_python_org != NULL);
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_cffi_call_python = (_cffi_call_python_fnptr)_cffi_call_python_org;
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}
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else {
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/* initialization failed. Reset this to NULL, even if it was
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already set to some other value. Future calls to
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_cffi_start_python() are still forced to occur, and will
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always return NULL from now on. */
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_cffi_call_python_org = NULL;
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}
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}
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_cffi_release_reentrant_mutex();
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return (_cffi_call_python_fnptr)_cffi_call_python_org;
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}
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static
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void _cffi_start_and_call_python(struct _cffi_externpy_s *externpy, char *args)
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{
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_cffi_call_python_fnptr fnptr;
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int current_err = errno;
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#ifdef _MSC_VER
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int current_lasterr = GetLastError();
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#endif
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fnptr = _cffi_start_python();
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if (fnptr == NULL) {
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fprintf(stderr, "function %s() called, but initialization code "
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"failed. Returning 0.\n", externpy->name);
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memset(args, 0, externpy->size_of_result);
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}
|
|
#ifdef _MSC_VER
|
|
SetLastError(current_lasterr);
|
|
#endif
|
|
errno = current_err;
|
|
|
|
if (fnptr != NULL)
|
|
fnptr(externpy, args);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* The cffi_start_python() function makes sure Python is initialized
|
|
and our cffi module is set up. It can be called manually from the
|
|
user C code. The same effect is obtained automatically from any
|
|
dll-exported ``extern "Python"`` function. This function returns
|
|
-1 if initialization failed, 0 if all is OK. */
|
|
_CFFI_UNUSED_FN
|
|
static int cffi_start_python(void)
|
|
{
|
|
if (_cffi_call_python == &_cffi_start_and_call_python) {
|
|
if (_cffi_start_python() == NULL)
|
|
return -1;
|
|
}
|
|
cffi_read_barrier();
|
|
return 0;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
#undef cffi_compare_and_swap
|
|
#undef cffi_write_barrier
|
|
#undef cffi_read_barrier
|
|
|
|
#ifdef __cplusplus
|
|
}
|
|
#endif
|