| // This implements the reference cycle garbage collector. |
| // The Python module inteface to the collector is in gcmodule.c. |
| // See https://devguide.python.org/internals/garbage-collector/ |
| |
| #include "Python.h" |
| #include "pycore_ceval.h" // _Py_set_eval_breaker_bit() |
| #include "pycore_context.h" |
| #include "pycore_dict.h" // _PyDict_MaybeUntrack() |
| #include "pycore_initconfig.h" |
| #include "pycore_interp.h" // PyInterpreterState.gc |
| #include "pycore_object.h" |
| #include "pycore_object_alloc.h" // _PyObject_MallocWithType() |
| #include "pycore_pyerrors.h" |
| #include "pycore_pystate.h" // _PyThreadState_GET() |
| #include "pycore_time.h" // _PyTime_PerfCounterUnchecked() |
| #include "pycore_weakref.h" // _PyWeakref_ClearRef() |
| #include "pydtrace.h" |
| |
| #ifndef Py_GIL_DISABLED |
| |
| typedef struct _gc_runtime_state GCState; |
| |
| #ifdef Py_DEBUG |
| # define GC_DEBUG |
| #endif |
| |
| #define GC_NEXT _PyGCHead_NEXT |
| #define GC_PREV _PyGCHead_PREV |
| |
| // update_refs() set this bit for all objects in current generation. |
| // subtract_refs() and move_unreachable() uses this to distinguish |
| // visited object is in GCing or not. |
| // |
| // move_unreachable() removes this flag from reachable objects. |
| // Only unreachable objects have this flag. |
| // |
| // No objects in interpreter have this flag after GC ends. |
| #define PREV_MASK_COLLECTING _PyGC_PREV_MASK_COLLECTING |
| |
| // Lowest bit of _gc_next is used for UNREACHABLE flag. |
| // |
| // This flag represents the object is in unreachable list in move_unreachable() |
| // |
| // Although this flag is used only in move_unreachable(), move_unreachable() |
| // doesn't clear this flag to skip unnecessary iteration. |
| // move_legacy_finalizers() removes this flag instead. |
| // Between them, unreachable list is not normal list and we can not use |
| // most gc_list_* functions for it. |
| #define NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE (1) |
| |
| #define AS_GC(op) _Py_AS_GC(op) |
| #define FROM_GC(gc) _Py_FROM_GC(gc) |
| |
| // Automatically choose the generation that needs collecting. |
| #define GENERATION_AUTO (-1) |
| |
| static inline int |
| gc_is_collecting(PyGC_Head *g) |
| { |
| return (g->_gc_prev & PREV_MASK_COLLECTING) != 0; |
| } |
| |
| static inline void |
| gc_clear_collecting(PyGC_Head *g) |
| { |
| g->_gc_prev &= ~PREV_MASK_COLLECTING; |
| } |
| |
| static inline Py_ssize_t |
| gc_get_refs(PyGC_Head *g) |
| { |
| return (Py_ssize_t)(g->_gc_prev >> _PyGC_PREV_SHIFT); |
| } |
| |
| static inline void |
| gc_set_refs(PyGC_Head *g, Py_ssize_t refs) |
| { |
| g->_gc_prev = (g->_gc_prev & ~_PyGC_PREV_MASK) |
| | ((uintptr_t)(refs) << _PyGC_PREV_SHIFT); |
| } |
| |
| static inline void |
| gc_reset_refs(PyGC_Head *g, Py_ssize_t refs) |
| { |
| g->_gc_prev = (g->_gc_prev & _PyGC_PREV_MASK_FINALIZED) |
| | PREV_MASK_COLLECTING |
| | ((uintptr_t)(refs) << _PyGC_PREV_SHIFT); |
| } |
| |
| static inline void |
| gc_decref(PyGC_Head *g) |
| { |
| _PyObject_ASSERT_WITH_MSG(FROM_GC(g), |
| gc_get_refs(g) > 0, |
| "refcount is too small"); |
| g->_gc_prev -= 1 << _PyGC_PREV_SHIFT; |
| } |
| |
| |
| #define GEN_HEAD(gcstate, n) (&(gcstate)->generations[n].head) |
| |
| |
| static GCState * |
| get_gc_state(void) |
| { |
| PyInterpreterState *interp = _PyInterpreterState_GET(); |
| return &interp->gc; |
| } |
| |
| |
| void |
| _PyGC_InitState(GCState *gcstate) |
| { |
| #define INIT_HEAD(GEN) \ |
| do { \ |
| GEN.head._gc_next = (uintptr_t)&GEN.head; \ |
| GEN.head._gc_prev = (uintptr_t)&GEN.head; \ |
| } while (0) |
| |
| for (int i = 0; i < NUM_GENERATIONS; i++) { |
| assert(gcstate->generations[i].count == 0); |
| INIT_HEAD(gcstate->generations[i]); |
| }; |
| gcstate->generation0 = GEN_HEAD(gcstate, 0); |
| INIT_HEAD(gcstate->permanent_generation); |
| |
| #undef INIT_HEAD |
| } |
| |
| |
| PyStatus |
| _PyGC_Init(PyInterpreterState *interp) |
| { |
| GCState *gcstate = &interp->gc; |
| |
| gcstate->garbage = PyList_New(0); |
| if (gcstate->garbage == NULL) { |
| return _PyStatus_NO_MEMORY(); |
| } |
| |
| gcstate->callbacks = PyList_New(0); |
| if (gcstate->callbacks == NULL) { |
| return _PyStatus_NO_MEMORY(); |
| } |
| |
| return _PyStatus_OK(); |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* |
| _gc_prev values |
| --------------- |
| |
| Between collections, _gc_prev is used for doubly linked list. |
| |
| Lowest two bits of _gc_prev are used for flags. |
| PREV_MASK_COLLECTING is used only while collecting and cleared before GC ends |
| or _PyObject_GC_UNTRACK() is called. |
| |
| During a collection, _gc_prev is temporary used for gc_refs, and the gc list |
| is singly linked until _gc_prev is restored. |
| |
| gc_refs |
| At the start of a collection, update_refs() copies the true refcount |
| to gc_refs, for each object in the generation being collected. |
| subtract_refs() then adjusts gc_refs so that it equals the number of |
| times an object is referenced directly from outside the generation |
| being collected. |
| |
| PREV_MASK_COLLECTING |
| Objects in generation being collected are marked PREV_MASK_COLLECTING in |
| update_refs(). |
| |
| |
| _gc_next values |
| --------------- |
| |
| _gc_next takes these values: |
| |
| 0 |
| The object is not tracked |
| |
| != 0 |
| Pointer to the next object in the GC list. |
| Additionally, lowest bit is used temporary for |
| NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE flag described below. |
| |
| NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE |
| move_unreachable() then moves objects not reachable (whether directly or |
| indirectly) from outside the generation into an "unreachable" set and |
| set this flag. |
| |
| Objects that are found to be reachable have gc_refs set to 1. |
| When this flag is set for the reachable object, the object must be in |
| "unreachable" set. |
| The flag is unset and the object is moved back to "reachable" set. |
| |
| move_legacy_finalizers() will remove this flag from "unreachable" set. |
| */ |
| |
| /*** list functions ***/ |
| |
| static inline void |
| gc_list_init(PyGC_Head *list) |
| { |
| // List header must not have flags. |
| // We can assign pointer by simple cast. |
| list->_gc_prev = (uintptr_t)list; |
| list->_gc_next = (uintptr_t)list; |
| } |
| |
| static inline int |
| gc_list_is_empty(PyGC_Head *list) |
| { |
| return (list->_gc_next == (uintptr_t)list); |
| } |
| |
| /* Append `node` to `list`. */ |
| static inline void |
| gc_list_append(PyGC_Head *node, PyGC_Head *list) |
| { |
| PyGC_Head *last = (PyGC_Head *)list->_gc_prev; |
| |
| // last <-> node |
| _PyGCHead_SET_PREV(node, last); |
| _PyGCHead_SET_NEXT(last, node); |
| |
| // node <-> list |
| _PyGCHead_SET_NEXT(node, list); |
| list->_gc_prev = (uintptr_t)node; |
| } |
| |
| /* Remove `node` from the gc list it's currently in. */ |
| static inline void |
| gc_list_remove(PyGC_Head *node) |
| { |
| PyGC_Head *prev = GC_PREV(node); |
| PyGC_Head *next = GC_NEXT(node); |
| |
| _PyGCHead_SET_NEXT(prev, next); |
| _PyGCHead_SET_PREV(next, prev); |
| |
| node->_gc_next = 0; /* object is not currently tracked */ |
| } |
| |
| /* Move `node` from the gc list it's currently in (which is not explicitly |
| * named here) to the end of `list`. This is semantically the same as |
| * gc_list_remove(node) followed by gc_list_append(node, list). |
| */ |
| static void |
| gc_list_move(PyGC_Head *node, PyGC_Head *list) |
| { |
| /* Unlink from current list. */ |
| PyGC_Head *from_prev = GC_PREV(node); |
| PyGC_Head *from_next = GC_NEXT(node); |
| _PyGCHead_SET_NEXT(from_prev, from_next); |
| _PyGCHead_SET_PREV(from_next, from_prev); |
| |
| /* Relink at end of new list. */ |
| // list must not have flags. So we can skip macros. |
| PyGC_Head *to_prev = (PyGC_Head*)list->_gc_prev; |
| _PyGCHead_SET_PREV(node, to_prev); |
| _PyGCHead_SET_NEXT(to_prev, node); |
| list->_gc_prev = (uintptr_t)node; |
| _PyGCHead_SET_NEXT(node, list); |
| } |
| |
| /* append list `from` onto list `to`; `from` becomes an empty list */ |
| static void |
| gc_list_merge(PyGC_Head *from, PyGC_Head *to) |
| { |
| assert(from != to); |
| if (!gc_list_is_empty(from)) { |
| PyGC_Head *to_tail = GC_PREV(to); |
| PyGC_Head *from_head = GC_NEXT(from); |
| PyGC_Head *from_tail = GC_PREV(from); |
| assert(from_head != from); |
| assert(from_tail != from); |
| |
| _PyGCHead_SET_NEXT(to_tail, from_head); |
| _PyGCHead_SET_PREV(from_head, to_tail); |
| |
| _PyGCHead_SET_NEXT(from_tail, to); |
| _PyGCHead_SET_PREV(to, from_tail); |
| } |
| gc_list_init(from); |
| } |
| |
| static Py_ssize_t |
| gc_list_size(PyGC_Head *list) |
| { |
| PyGC_Head *gc; |
| Py_ssize_t n = 0; |
| for (gc = GC_NEXT(list); gc != list; gc = GC_NEXT(gc)) { |
| n++; |
| } |
| return n; |
| } |
| |
| /* Walk the list and mark all objects as non-collecting */ |
| static inline void |
| gc_list_clear_collecting(PyGC_Head *collectable) |
| { |
| PyGC_Head *gc; |
| for (gc = GC_NEXT(collectable); gc != collectable; gc = GC_NEXT(gc)) { |
| gc_clear_collecting(gc); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Append objects in a GC list to a Python list. |
| * Return 0 if all OK, < 0 if error (out of memory for list) |
| */ |
| static int |
| append_objects(PyObject *py_list, PyGC_Head *gc_list) |
| { |
| PyGC_Head *gc; |
| for (gc = GC_NEXT(gc_list); gc != gc_list; gc = GC_NEXT(gc)) { |
| PyObject *op = FROM_GC(gc); |
| if (op != py_list) { |
| if (PyList_Append(py_list, op)) { |
| return -1; /* exception */ |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| // Constants for validate_list's flags argument. |
| enum flagstates {collecting_clear_unreachable_clear, |
| collecting_clear_unreachable_set, |
| collecting_set_unreachable_clear, |
| collecting_set_unreachable_set}; |
| |
| #ifdef GC_DEBUG |
| // validate_list checks list consistency. And it works as document |
| // describing when flags are expected to be set / unset. |
| // `head` must be a doubly-linked gc list, although it's fine (expected!) if |
| // the prev and next pointers are "polluted" with flags. |
| // What's checked: |
| // - The `head` pointers are not polluted. |
| // - The objects' PREV_MASK_COLLECTING and NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE flags are all |
| // `set or clear, as specified by the 'flags' argument. |
| // - The prev and next pointers are mutually consistent. |
| static void |
| validate_list(PyGC_Head *head, enum flagstates flags) |
| { |
| assert((head->_gc_prev & PREV_MASK_COLLECTING) == 0); |
| assert((head->_gc_next & NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE) == 0); |
| uintptr_t prev_value = 0, next_value = 0; |
| switch (flags) { |
| case collecting_clear_unreachable_clear: |
| break; |
| case collecting_set_unreachable_clear: |
| prev_value = PREV_MASK_COLLECTING; |
| break; |
| case collecting_clear_unreachable_set: |
| next_value = NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE; |
| break; |
| case collecting_set_unreachable_set: |
| prev_value = PREV_MASK_COLLECTING; |
| next_value = NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE; |
| break; |
| default: |
| assert(! "bad internal flags argument"); |
| } |
| PyGC_Head *prev = head; |
| PyGC_Head *gc = GC_NEXT(head); |
| while (gc != head) { |
| PyGC_Head *trueprev = GC_PREV(gc); |
| PyGC_Head *truenext = (PyGC_Head *)(gc->_gc_next & ~NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE); |
| assert(truenext != NULL); |
| assert(trueprev == prev); |
| assert((gc->_gc_prev & PREV_MASK_COLLECTING) == prev_value); |
| assert((gc->_gc_next & NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE) == next_value); |
| prev = gc; |
| gc = truenext; |
| } |
| assert(prev == GC_PREV(head)); |
| } |
| #else |
| #define validate_list(x, y) do{}while(0) |
| #endif |
| |
| /*** end of list stuff ***/ |
| |
| |
| /* Set all gc_refs = ob_refcnt. After this, gc_refs is > 0 and |
| * PREV_MASK_COLLECTING bit is set for all objects in containers. |
| */ |
| static void |
| update_refs(PyGC_Head *containers) |
| { |
| PyGC_Head *next; |
| PyGC_Head *gc = GC_NEXT(containers); |
| |
| while (gc != containers) { |
| next = GC_NEXT(gc); |
| PyObject *op = FROM_GC(gc); |
| /* Move any object that might have become immortal to the |
| * permanent generation as the reference count is not accurately |
| * reflecting the actual number of live references to this object |
| */ |
| if (_Py_IsImmortal(op)) { |
| gc_list_move(gc, &get_gc_state()->permanent_generation.head); |
| gc = next; |
| continue; |
| } |
| gc_reset_refs(gc, Py_REFCNT(op)); |
| /* Python's cyclic gc should never see an incoming refcount |
| * of 0: if something decref'ed to 0, it should have been |
| * deallocated immediately at that time. |
| * Possible cause (if the assert triggers): a tp_dealloc |
| * routine left a gc-aware object tracked during its teardown |
| * phase, and did something-- or allowed something to happen -- |
| * that called back into Python. gc can trigger then, and may |
| * see the still-tracked dying object. Before this assert |
| * was added, such mistakes went on to allow gc to try to |
| * delete the object again. In a debug build, that caused |
| * a mysterious segfault, when _Py_ForgetReference tried |
| * to remove the object from the doubly-linked list of all |
| * objects a second time. In a release build, an actual |
| * double deallocation occurred, which leads to corruption |
| * of the allocator's internal bookkeeping pointers. That's |
| * so serious that maybe this should be a release-build |
| * check instead of an assert? |
| */ |
| _PyObject_ASSERT(op, gc_get_refs(gc) != 0); |
| gc = next; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* A traversal callback for subtract_refs. */ |
| static int |
| visit_decref(PyObject *op, void *parent) |
| { |
| OBJECT_STAT_INC(object_visits); |
| _PyObject_ASSERT(_PyObject_CAST(parent), !_PyObject_IsFreed(op)); |
| |
| if (_PyObject_IS_GC(op)) { |
| PyGC_Head *gc = AS_GC(op); |
| /* We're only interested in gc_refs for objects in the |
| * generation being collected, which can be recognized |
| * because only they have positive gc_refs. |
| */ |
| if (gc_is_collecting(gc)) { |
| gc_decref(gc); |
| } |
| } |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| /* Subtract internal references from gc_refs. After this, gc_refs is >= 0 |
| * for all objects in containers, and is GC_REACHABLE for all tracked gc |
| * objects not in containers. The ones with gc_refs > 0 are directly |
| * reachable from outside containers, and so can't be collected. |
| */ |
| static void |
| subtract_refs(PyGC_Head *containers) |
| { |
| traverseproc traverse; |
| PyGC_Head *gc = GC_NEXT(containers); |
| for (; gc != containers; gc = GC_NEXT(gc)) { |
| PyObject *op = FROM_GC(gc); |
| traverse = Py_TYPE(op)->tp_traverse; |
| (void) traverse(op, |
| visit_decref, |
| op); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* A traversal callback for move_unreachable. */ |
| static int |
| visit_reachable(PyObject *op, void *arg) |
| { |
| PyGC_Head *reachable = arg; |
| OBJECT_STAT_INC(object_visits); |
| if (!_PyObject_IS_GC(op)) { |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| PyGC_Head *gc = AS_GC(op); |
| const Py_ssize_t gc_refs = gc_get_refs(gc); |
| |
| // Ignore objects in other generation. |
| // This also skips objects "to the left" of the current position in |
| // move_unreachable's scan of the 'young' list - they've already been |
| // traversed, and no longer have the PREV_MASK_COLLECTING flag. |
| if (! gc_is_collecting(gc)) { |
| return 0; |
| } |
| // It would be a logic error elsewhere if the collecting flag were set on |
| // an untracked object. |
| _PyObject_ASSERT(op, gc->_gc_next != 0); |
| |
| if (gc->_gc_next & NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE) { |
| /* This had gc_refs = 0 when move_unreachable got |
| * to it, but turns out it's reachable after all. |
| * Move it back to move_unreachable's 'young' list, |
| * and move_unreachable will eventually get to it |
| * again. |
| */ |
| // Manually unlink gc from unreachable list because the list functions |
| // don't work right in the presence of NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE flags. |
| PyGC_Head *prev = GC_PREV(gc); |
| PyGC_Head *next = (PyGC_Head*)(gc->_gc_next & ~NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE); |
| _PyObject_ASSERT(FROM_GC(prev), |
| prev->_gc_next & NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE); |
| _PyObject_ASSERT(FROM_GC(next), |
| next->_gc_next & NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE); |
| prev->_gc_next = gc->_gc_next; // copy NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE |
| _PyGCHead_SET_PREV(next, prev); |
| |
| gc_list_append(gc, reachable); |
| gc_set_refs(gc, 1); |
| } |
| else if (gc_refs == 0) { |
| /* This is in move_unreachable's 'young' list, but |
| * the traversal hasn't yet gotten to it. All |
| * we need to do is tell move_unreachable that it's |
| * reachable. |
| */ |
| gc_set_refs(gc, 1); |
| } |
| /* Else there's nothing to do. |
| * If gc_refs > 0, it must be in move_unreachable's 'young' |
| * list, and move_unreachable will eventually get to it. |
| */ |
| else { |
| _PyObject_ASSERT_WITH_MSG(op, gc_refs > 0, "refcount is too small"); |
| } |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| /* Move the unreachable objects from young to unreachable. After this, |
| * all objects in young don't have PREV_MASK_COLLECTING flag and |
| * unreachable have the flag. |
| * All objects in young after this are directly or indirectly reachable |
| * from outside the original young; and all objects in unreachable are |
| * not. |
| * |
| * This function restores _gc_prev pointer. young and unreachable are |
| * doubly linked list after this function. |
| * But _gc_next in unreachable list has NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE flag. |
| * So we can not gc_list_* functions for unreachable until we remove the flag. |
| */ |
| static void |
| move_unreachable(PyGC_Head *young, PyGC_Head *unreachable) |
| { |
| // previous elem in the young list, used for restore gc_prev. |
| PyGC_Head *prev = young; |
| PyGC_Head *gc = GC_NEXT(young); |
| |
| /* Invariants: all objects "to the left" of us in young are reachable |
| * (directly or indirectly) from outside the young list as it was at entry. |
| * |
| * All other objects from the original young "to the left" of us are in |
| * unreachable now, and have NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE. All objects to the |
| * left of us in 'young' now have been scanned, and no objects here |
| * or to the right have been scanned yet. |
| */ |
| |
| while (gc != young) { |
| if (gc_get_refs(gc)) { |
| /* gc is definitely reachable from outside the |
| * original 'young'. Mark it as such, and traverse |
| * its pointers to find any other objects that may |
| * be directly reachable from it. Note that the |
| * call to tp_traverse may append objects to young, |
| * so we have to wait until it returns to determine |
| * the next object to visit. |
| */ |
| PyObject *op = FROM_GC(gc); |
| traverseproc traverse = Py_TYPE(op)->tp_traverse; |
| _PyObject_ASSERT_WITH_MSG(op, gc_get_refs(gc) > 0, |
| "refcount is too small"); |
| // NOTE: visit_reachable may change gc->_gc_next when |
| // young->_gc_prev == gc. Don't do gc = GC_NEXT(gc) before! |
| (void) traverse(op, |
| visit_reachable, |
| (void *)young); |
| // relink gc_prev to prev element. |
| _PyGCHead_SET_PREV(gc, prev); |
| // gc is not COLLECTING state after here. |
| gc_clear_collecting(gc); |
| prev = gc; |
| } |
| else { |
| /* This *may* be unreachable. To make progress, |
| * assume it is. gc isn't directly reachable from |
| * any object we've already traversed, but may be |
| * reachable from an object we haven't gotten to yet. |
| * visit_reachable will eventually move gc back into |
| * young if that's so, and we'll see it again. |
| */ |
| // Move gc to unreachable. |
| // No need to gc->next->prev = prev because it is single linked. |
| prev->_gc_next = gc->_gc_next; |
| |
| // We can't use gc_list_append() here because we use |
| // NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE here. |
| PyGC_Head *last = GC_PREV(unreachable); |
| // NOTE: Since all objects in unreachable set has |
| // NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE flag, we set it unconditionally. |
| // But this may pollute the unreachable list head's 'next' pointer |
| // too. That's semantically senseless but expedient here - the |
| // damage is repaired when this function ends. |
| last->_gc_next = (NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE | (uintptr_t)gc); |
| _PyGCHead_SET_PREV(gc, last); |
| gc->_gc_next = (NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE | (uintptr_t)unreachable); |
| unreachable->_gc_prev = (uintptr_t)gc; |
| } |
| gc = (PyGC_Head*)prev->_gc_next; |
| } |
| // young->_gc_prev must be last element remained in the list. |
| young->_gc_prev = (uintptr_t)prev; |
| // don't let the pollution of the list head's next pointer leak |
| unreachable->_gc_next &= ~NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE; |
| } |
| |
| static void |
| untrack_tuples(PyGC_Head *head) |
| { |
| PyGC_Head *next, *gc = GC_NEXT(head); |
| while (gc != head) { |
| PyObject *op = FROM_GC(gc); |
| next = GC_NEXT(gc); |
| if (PyTuple_CheckExact(op)) { |
| _PyTuple_MaybeUntrack(op); |
| } |
| gc = next; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Try to untrack all currently tracked dictionaries */ |
| static void |
| untrack_dicts(PyGC_Head *head) |
| { |
| PyGC_Head *next, *gc = GC_NEXT(head); |
| while (gc != head) { |
| PyObject *op = FROM_GC(gc); |
| next = GC_NEXT(gc); |
| if (PyDict_CheckExact(op)) { |
| _PyDict_MaybeUntrack(op); |
| } |
| gc = next; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Return true if object has a pre-PEP 442 finalization method. */ |
| static int |
| has_legacy_finalizer(PyObject *op) |
| { |
| return Py_TYPE(op)->tp_del != NULL; |
| } |
| |
| /* Move the objects in unreachable with tp_del slots into `finalizers`. |
| * |
| * This function also removes NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE flag |
| * from _gc_next in unreachable. |
| */ |
| static void |
| move_legacy_finalizers(PyGC_Head *unreachable, PyGC_Head *finalizers) |
| { |
| PyGC_Head *gc, *next; |
| _PyObject_ASSERT( |
| FROM_GC(unreachable), |
| (unreachable->_gc_next & NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE) == 0); |
| |
| /* March over unreachable. Move objects with finalizers into |
| * `finalizers`. |
| */ |
| for (gc = GC_NEXT(unreachable); gc != unreachable; gc = next) { |
| PyObject *op = FROM_GC(gc); |
| |
| _PyObject_ASSERT(op, gc->_gc_next & NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE); |
| gc->_gc_next &= ~NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE; |
| next = (PyGC_Head*)gc->_gc_next; |
| |
| if (has_legacy_finalizer(op)) { |
| gc_clear_collecting(gc); |
| gc_list_move(gc, finalizers); |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| static inline void |
| clear_unreachable_mask(PyGC_Head *unreachable) |
| { |
| /* Check that the list head does not have the unreachable bit set */ |
| _PyObject_ASSERT( |
| FROM_GC(unreachable), |
| ((uintptr_t)unreachable & NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE) == 0); |
| _PyObject_ASSERT( |
| FROM_GC(unreachable), |
| (unreachable->_gc_next & NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE) == 0); |
| |
| PyGC_Head *gc, *next; |
| for (gc = GC_NEXT(unreachable); gc != unreachable; gc = next) { |
| _PyObject_ASSERT((PyObject*)FROM_GC(gc), gc->_gc_next & NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE); |
| gc->_gc_next &= ~NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE; |
| next = (PyGC_Head*)gc->_gc_next; |
| } |
| validate_list(unreachable, collecting_set_unreachable_clear); |
| } |
| |
| /* A traversal callback for move_legacy_finalizer_reachable. */ |
| static int |
| visit_move(PyObject *op, void *arg) |
| { |
| PyGC_Head *tolist = arg; |
| OBJECT_STAT_INC(object_visits); |
| if (_PyObject_IS_GC(op)) { |
| PyGC_Head *gc = AS_GC(op); |
| if (gc_is_collecting(gc)) { |
| gc_list_move(gc, tolist); |
| gc_clear_collecting(gc); |
| } |
| } |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| /* Move objects that are reachable from finalizers, from the unreachable set |
| * into finalizers set. |
| */ |
| static void |
| move_legacy_finalizer_reachable(PyGC_Head *finalizers) |
| { |
| traverseproc traverse; |
| PyGC_Head *gc = GC_NEXT(finalizers); |
| for (; gc != finalizers; gc = GC_NEXT(gc)) { |
| /* Note that the finalizers list may grow during this. */ |
| traverse = Py_TYPE(FROM_GC(gc))->tp_traverse; |
| (void) traverse(FROM_GC(gc), |
| visit_move, |
| (void *)finalizers); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Clear all weakrefs to unreachable objects, and if such a weakref has a |
| * callback, invoke it if necessary. Note that it's possible for such |
| * weakrefs to be outside the unreachable set -- indeed, those are precisely |
| * the weakrefs whose callbacks must be invoked. See gc_weakref.txt for |
| * overview & some details. Some weakrefs with callbacks may be reclaimed |
| * directly by this routine; the number reclaimed is the return value. Other |
| * weakrefs with callbacks may be moved into the `old` generation. Objects |
| * moved into `old` have gc_refs set to GC_REACHABLE; the objects remaining in |
| * unreachable are left at GC_TENTATIVELY_UNREACHABLE. When this returns, |
| * no object in `unreachable` is weakly referenced anymore. |
| */ |
| static int |
| handle_weakrefs(PyGC_Head *unreachable, PyGC_Head *old) |
| { |
| PyGC_Head *gc; |
| PyObject *op; /* generally FROM_GC(gc) */ |
| PyWeakReference *wr; /* generally a cast of op */ |
| PyGC_Head wrcb_to_call; /* weakrefs with callbacks to call */ |
| PyGC_Head *next; |
| int num_freed = 0; |
| |
| gc_list_init(&wrcb_to_call); |
| |
| /* Clear all weakrefs to the objects in unreachable. If such a weakref |
| * also has a callback, move it into `wrcb_to_call` if the callback |
| * needs to be invoked. Note that we cannot invoke any callbacks until |
| * all weakrefs to unreachable objects are cleared, lest the callback |
| * resurrect an unreachable object via a still-active weakref. We |
| * make another pass over wrcb_to_call, invoking callbacks, after this |
| * pass completes. |
| */ |
| for (gc = GC_NEXT(unreachable); gc != unreachable; gc = next) { |
| PyWeakReference **wrlist; |
| |
| op = FROM_GC(gc); |
| next = GC_NEXT(gc); |
| |
| if (PyWeakref_Check(op)) { |
| /* A weakref inside the unreachable set must be cleared. If we |
| * allow its callback to execute inside delete_garbage(), it |
| * could expose objects that have tp_clear already called on |
| * them. Or, it could resurrect unreachable objects. One way |
| * this can happen is if some container objects do not implement |
| * tp_traverse. Then, wr_object can be outside the unreachable |
| * set but can be deallocated as a result of breaking the |
| * reference cycle. If we don't clear the weakref, the callback |
| * will run and potentially cause a crash. See bpo-38006 for |
| * one example. |
| */ |
| _PyWeakref_ClearRef((PyWeakReference *)op); |
| } |
| |
| if (! _PyType_SUPPORTS_WEAKREFS(Py_TYPE(op))) { |
| continue; |
| } |
| |
| /* It supports weakrefs. Does it have any? |
| * |
| * This is never triggered for static types so we can avoid the |
| * (slightly) more costly _PyObject_GET_WEAKREFS_LISTPTR(). |
| */ |
| wrlist = _PyObject_GET_WEAKREFS_LISTPTR_FROM_OFFSET(op); |
| |
| /* `op` may have some weakrefs. March over the list, clear |
| * all the weakrefs, and move the weakrefs with callbacks |
| * that must be called into wrcb_to_call. |
| */ |
| for (wr = *wrlist; wr != NULL; wr = *wrlist) { |
| PyGC_Head *wrasgc; /* AS_GC(wr) */ |
| |
| /* _PyWeakref_ClearRef clears the weakref but leaves |
| * the callback pointer intact. Obscure: it also |
| * changes *wrlist. |
| */ |
| _PyObject_ASSERT((PyObject *)wr, wr->wr_object == op); |
| _PyWeakref_ClearRef(wr); |
| _PyObject_ASSERT((PyObject *)wr, wr->wr_object == Py_None); |
| if (wr->wr_callback == NULL) { |
| /* no callback */ |
| continue; |
| } |
| |
| /* Headache time. `op` is going away, and is weakly referenced by |
| * `wr`, which has a callback. Should the callback be invoked? If wr |
| * is also trash, no: |
| * |
| * 1. There's no need to call it. The object and the weakref are |
| * both going away, so it's legitimate to pretend the weakref is |
| * going away first. The user has to ensure a weakref outlives its |
| * referent if they want a guarantee that the wr callback will get |
| * invoked. |
| * |
| * 2. It may be catastrophic to call it. If the callback is also in |
| * cyclic trash (CT), then although the CT is unreachable from |
| * outside the current generation, CT may be reachable from the |
| * callback. Then the callback could resurrect insane objects. |
| * |
| * Since the callback is never needed and may be unsafe in this case, |
| * wr is simply left in the unreachable set. Note that because we |
| * already called _PyWeakref_ClearRef(wr), its callback will never |
| * trigger. |
| * |
| * OTOH, if wr isn't part of CT, we should invoke the callback: the |
| * weakref outlived the trash. Note that since wr isn't CT in this |
| * case, its callback can't be CT either -- wr acted as an external |
| * root to this generation, and therefore its callback did too. So |
| * nothing in CT is reachable from the callback either, so it's hard |
| * to imagine how calling it later could create a problem for us. wr |
| * is moved to wrcb_to_call in this case. |
| */ |
| if (gc_is_collecting(AS_GC((PyObject *)wr))) { |
| /* it should already have been cleared above */ |
| _PyObject_ASSERT((PyObject*)wr, wr->wr_object == Py_None); |
| continue; |
| } |
| |
| /* Create a new reference so that wr can't go away |
| * before we can process it again. |
| */ |
| Py_INCREF(wr); |
| |
| /* Move wr to wrcb_to_call, for the next pass. */ |
| wrasgc = AS_GC((PyObject *)wr); |
| // wrasgc is reachable, but next isn't, so they can't be the same |
| _PyObject_ASSERT((PyObject *)wr, wrasgc != next); |
| gc_list_move(wrasgc, &wrcb_to_call); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Invoke the callbacks we decided to honor. It's safe to invoke them |
| * because they can't reference unreachable objects. |
| */ |
| while (! gc_list_is_empty(&wrcb_to_call)) { |
| PyObject *temp; |
| PyObject *callback; |
| |
| gc = (PyGC_Head*)wrcb_to_call._gc_next; |
| op = FROM_GC(gc); |
| _PyObject_ASSERT(op, PyWeakref_Check(op)); |
| wr = (PyWeakReference *)op; |
| callback = wr->wr_callback; |
| _PyObject_ASSERT(op, callback != NULL); |
| |
| /* copy-paste of weakrefobject.c's handle_callback() */ |
| temp = PyObject_CallOneArg(callback, (PyObject *)wr); |
| if (temp == NULL) { |
| PyErr_WriteUnraisable(callback); |
| } |
| else { |
| Py_DECREF(temp); |
| } |
| |
| /* Give up the reference we created in the first pass. When |
| * op's refcount hits 0 (which it may or may not do right now), |
| * op's tp_dealloc will decref op->wr_callback too. Note |
| * that the refcount probably will hit 0 now, and because this |
| * weakref was reachable to begin with, gc didn't already |
| * add it to its count of freed objects. Example: a reachable |
| * weak value dict maps some key to this reachable weakref. |
| * The callback removes this key->weakref mapping from the |
| * dict, leaving no other references to the weakref (excepting |
| * ours). |
| */ |
| Py_DECREF(op); |
| if (wrcb_to_call._gc_next == (uintptr_t)gc) { |
| /* object is still alive -- move it */ |
| gc_list_move(gc, old); |
| } |
| else { |
| ++num_freed; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| return num_freed; |
| } |
| |
| static void |
| debug_cycle(const char *msg, PyObject *op) |
| { |
| PySys_FormatStderr("gc: %s <%s %p>\n", |
| msg, Py_TYPE(op)->tp_name, op); |
| } |
| |
| /* Handle uncollectable garbage (cycles with tp_del slots, and stuff reachable |
| * only from such cycles). |
| * If _PyGC_DEBUG_SAVEALL, all objects in finalizers are appended to the module |
| * garbage list (a Python list), else only the objects in finalizers with |
| * __del__ methods are appended to garbage. All objects in finalizers are |
| * merged into the old list regardless. |
| */ |
| static void |
| handle_legacy_finalizers(PyThreadState *tstate, |
| GCState *gcstate, |
| PyGC_Head *finalizers, PyGC_Head *old) |
| { |
| assert(!_PyErr_Occurred(tstate)); |
| assert(gcstate->garbage != NULL); |
| |
| PyGC_Head *gc = GC_NEXT(finalizers); |
| for (; gc != finalizers; gc = GC_NEXT(gc)) { |
| PyObject *op = FROM_GC(gc); |
| |
| if ((gcstate->debug & _PyGC_DEBUG_SAVEALL) || has_legacy_finalizer(op)) { |
| if (PyList_Append(gcstate->garbage, op) < 0) { |
| _PyErr_Clear(tstate); |
| break; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| gc_list_merge(finalizers, old); |
| } |
| |
| /* Run first-time finalizers (if any) on all the objects in collectable. |
| * Note that this may remove some (or even all) of the objects from the |
| * list, due to refcounts falling to 0. |
| */ |
| static void |
| finalize_garbage(PyThreadState *tstate, PyGC_Head *collectable) |
| { |
| destructor finalize; |
| PyGC_Head seen; |
| |
| /* While we're going through the loop, `finalize(op)` may cause op, or |
| * other objects, to be reclaimed via refcounts falling to zero. So |
| * there's little we can rely on about the structure of the input |
| * `collectable` list across iterations. For safety, we always take the |
| * first object in that list and move it to a temporary `seen` list. |
| * If objects vanish from the `collectable` and `seen` lists we don't |
| * care. |
| */ |
| gc_list_init(&seen); |
| |
| while (!gc_list_is_empty(collectable)) { |
| PyGC_Head *gc = GC_NEXT(collectable); |
| PyObject *op = FROM_GC(gc); |
| gc_list_move(gc, &seen); |
| if (!_PyGC_FINALIZED(op) && |
| (finalize = Py_TYPE(op)->tp_finalize) != NULL) |
| { |
| _PyGC_SET_FINALIZED(op); |
| Py_INCREF(op); |
| finalize(op); |
| assert(!_PyErr_Occurred(tstate)); |
| Py_DECREF(op); |
| } |
| } |
| gc_list_merge(&seen, collectable); |
| } |
| |
| /* Break reference cycles by clearing the containers involved. This is |
| * tricky business as the lists can be changing and we don't know which |
| * objects may be freed. It is possible I screwed something up here. |
| */ |
| static void |
| delete_garbage(PyThreadState *tstate, GCState *gcstate, |
| PyGC_Head *collectable, PyGC_Head *old) |
| { |
| assert(!_PyErr_Occurred(tstate)); |
| |
| while (!gc_list_is_empty(collectable)) { |
| PyGC_Head *gc = GC_NEXT(collectable); |
| PyObject *op = FROM_GC(gc); |
| |
| _PyObject_ASSERT_WITH_MSG(op, Py_REFCNT(op) > 0, |
| "refcount is too small"); |
| |
| if (gcstate->debug & _PyGC_DEBUG_SAVEALL) { |
| assert(gcstate->garbage != NULL); |
| if (PyList_Append(gcstate->garbage, op) < 0) { |
| _PyErr_Clear(tstate); |
| } |
| } |
| else { |
| inquiry clear; |
| if ((clear = Py_TYPE(op)->tp_clear) != NULL) { |
| Py_INCREF(op); |
| (void) clear(op); |
| if (_PyErr_Occurred(tstate)) { |
| PyErr_FormatUnraisable("Exception ignored in tp_clear of %s", |
| Py_TYPE(op)->tp_name); |
| } |
| Py_DECREF(op); |
| } |
| } |
| if (GC_NEXT(collectable) == gc) { |
| /* object is still alive, move it, it may die later */ |
| gc_clear_collecting(gc); |
| gc_list_move(gc, old); |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| |
| // Show stats for objects in each generations |
| static void |
| show_stats_each_generations(GCState *gcstate) |
| { |
| char buf[100]; |
| size_t pos = 0; |
| |
| for (int i = 0; i < NUM_GENERATIONS && pos < sizeof(buf); i++) { |
| pos += PyOS_snprintf(buf+pos, sizeof(buf)-pos, |
| " %zd", |
| gc_list_size(GEN_HEAD(gcstate, i))); |
| } |
| |
| PySys_FormatStderr( |
| "gc: objects in each generation:%s\n" |
| "gc: objects in permanent generation: %zd\n", |
| buf, gc_list_size(&gcstate->permanent_generation.head)); |
| } |
| |
| /* Deduce which objects among "base" are unreachable from outside the list |
| and move them to 'unreachable'. The process consist in the following steps: |
| |
| 1. Copy all reference counts to a different field (gc_prev is used to hold |
| this copy to save memory). |
| 2. Traverse all objects in "base" and visit all referred objects using |
| "tp_traverse" and for every visited object, subtract 1 to the reference |
| count (the one that we copied in the previous step). After this step, all |
| objects that can be reached directly from outside must have strictly positive |
| reference count, while all unreachable objects must have a count of exactly 0. |
| 3. Identify all unreachable objects (the ones with 0 reference count) and move |
| them to the "unreachable" list. This step also needs to move back to "base" all |
| objects that were initially marked as unreachable but are referred transitively |
| by the reachable objects (the ones with strictly positive reference count). |
| |
| Contracts: |
| |
| * The "base" has to be a valid list with no mask set. |
| |
| * The "unreachable" list must be uninitialized (this function calls |
| gc_list_init over 'unreachable'). |
| |
| IMPORTANT: This function leaves 'unreachable' with the NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE |
| flag set but it does not clear it to skip unnecessary iteration. Before the |
| flag is cleared (for example, by using 'clear_unreachable_mask' function or |
| by a call to 'move_legacy_finalizers'), the 'unreachable' list is not a normal |
| list and we can not use most gc_list_* functions for it. */ |
| static inline void |
| deduce_unreachable(PyGC_Head *base, PyGC_Head *unreachable) { |
| validate_list(base, collecting_clear_unreachable_clear); |
| /* Using ob_refcnt and gc_refs, calculate which objects in the |
| * container set are reachable from outside the set (i.e., have a |
| * refcount greater than 0 when all the references within the |
| * set are taken into account). |
| */ |
| update_refs(base); // gc_prev is used for gc_refs |
| subtract_refs(base); |
| |
| /* Leave everything reachable from outside base in base, and move |
| * everything else (in base) to unreachable. |
| * |
| * NOTE: This used to move the reachable objects into a reachable |
| * set instead. But most things usually turn out to be reachable, |
| * so it's more efficient to move the unreachable things. It "sounds slick" |
| * to move the unreachable objects, until you think about it - the reason it |
| * pays isn't actually obvious. |
| * |
| * Suppose we create objects A, B, C in that order. They appear in the young |
| * generation in the same order. If B points to A, and C to B, and C is |
| * reachable from outside, then the adjusted refcounts will be 0, 0, and 1 |
| * respectively. |
| * |
| * When move_unreachable finds A, A is moved to the unreachable list. The |
| * same for B when it's first encountered. Then C is traversed, B is moved |
| * _back_ to the reachable list. B is eventually traversed, and then A is |
| * moved back to the reachable list. |
| * |
| * So instead of not moving at all, the reachable objects B and A are moved |
| * twice each. Why is this a win? A straightforward algorithm to move the |
| * reachable objects instead would move A, B, and C once each. |
| * |
| * The key is that this dance leaves the objects in order C, B, A - it's |
| * reversed from the original order. On all _subsequent_ scans, none of |
| * them will move. Since most objects aren't in cycles, this can save an |
| * unbounded number of moves across an unbounded number of later collections. |
| * It can cost more only the first time the chain is scanned. |
| * |
| * Drawback: move_unreachable is also used to find out what's still trash |
| * after finalizers may resurrect objects. In _that_ case most unreachable |
| * objects will remain unreachable, so it would be more efficient to move |
| * the reachable objects instead. But this is a one-time cost, probably not |
| * worth complicating the code to speed just a little. |
| */ |
| gc_list_init(unreachable); |
| move_unreachable(base, unreachable); // gc_prev is pointer again |
| validate_list(base, collecting_clear_unreachable_clear); |
| validate_list(unreachable, collecting_set_unreachable_set); |
| } |
| |
| /* Handle objects that may have resurrected after a call to 'finalize_garbage', moving |
| them to 'old_generation' and placing the rest on 'still_unreachable'. |
| |
| Contracts: |
| * After this function 'unreachable' must not be used anymore and 'still_unreachable' |
| will contain the objects that did not resurrect. |
| |
| * The "still_unreachable" list must be uninitialized (this function calls |
| gc_list_init over 'still_unreachable'). |
| |
| IMPORTANT: After a call to this function, the 'still_unreachable' set will have the |
| PREV_MARK_COLLECTING set, but the objects in this set are going to be removed so |
| we can skip the expense of clearing the flag to avoid extra iteration. */ |
| static inline void |
| handle_resurrected_objects(PyGC_Head *unreachable, PyGC_Head* still_unreachable, |
| PyGC_Head *old_generation) |
| { |
| // Remove the PREV_MASK_COLLECTING from unreachable |
| // to prepare it for a new call to 'deduce_unreachable' |
| gc_list_clear_collecting(unreachable); |
| |
| // After the call to deduce_unreachable, the 'still_unreachable' set will |
| // have the PREV_MARK_COLLECTING set, but the objects are going to be |
| // removed so we can skip the expense of clearing the flag. |
| PyGC_Head* resurrected = unreachable; |
| deduce_unreachable(resurrected, still_unreachable); |
| clear_unreachable_mask(still_unreachable); |
| |
| // Move the resurrected objects to the old generation for future collection. |
| gc_list_merge(resurrected, old_generation); |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Invoke progress callbacks to notify clients that garbage collection |
| * is starting or stopping |
| */ |
| static void |
| invoke_gc_callback(PyThreadState *tstate, const char *phase, |
| int generation, Py_ssize_t collected, |
| Py_ssize_t uncollectable) |
| { |
| assert(!_PyErr_Occurred(tstate)); |
| |
| /* we may get called very early */ |
| GCState *gcstate = &tstate->interp->gc; |
| if (gcstate->callbacks == NULL) { |
| return; |
| } |
| |
| /* The local variable cannot be rebound, check it for sanity */ |
| assert(PyList_CheckExact(gcstate->callbacks)); |
| PyObject *info = NULL; |
| if (PyList_GET_SIZE(gcstate->callbacks) != 0) { |
| info = Py_BuildValue("{sisnsn}", |
| "generation", generation, |
| "collected", collected, |
| "uncollectable", uncollectable); |
| if (info == NULL) { |
| PyErr_FormatUnraisable("Exception ignored on invoking gc callbacks"); |
| return; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| PyObject *phase_obj = PyUnicode_FromString(phase); |
| if (phase_obj == NULL) { |
| Py_XDECREF(info); |
| PyErr_FormatUnraisable("Exception ignored on invoking gc callbacks"); |
| return; |
| } |
| |
| PyObject *stack[] = {phase_obj, info}; |
| for (Py_ssize_t i=0; i<PyList_GET_SIZE(gcstate->callbacks); i++) { |
| PyObject *r, *cb = PyList_GET_ITEM(gcstate->callbacks, i); |
| Py_INCREF(cb); /* make sure cb doesn't go away */ |
| r = PyObject_Vectorcall(cb, stack, 2, NULL); |
| if (r == NULL) { |
| PyErr_WriteUnraisable(cb); |
| } |
| else { |
| Py_DECREF(r); |
| } |
| Py_DECREF(cb); |
| } |
| Py_DECREF(phase_obj); |
| Py_XDECREF(info); |
| assert(!_PyErr_Occurred(tstate)); |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* Find the oldest generation (highest numbered) where the count |
| * exceeds the threshold. Objects in the that generation and |
| * generations younger than it will be collected. */ |
| static int |
| gc_select_generation(GCState *gcstate) |
| { |
| for (int i = NUM_GENERATIONS-1; i >= 0; i--) { |
| if (gcstate->generations[i].count > gcstate->generations[i].threshold) { |
| /* Avoid quadratic performance degradation in number |
| of tracked objects (see also issue #4074): |
| |
| To limit the cost of garbage collection, there are two strategies; |
| - make each collection faster, e.g. by scanning fewer objects |
| - do less collections |
| This heuristic is about the latter strategy. |
| |
| In addition to the various configurable thresholds, we only trigger a |
| full collection if the ratio |
| |
| long_lived_pending / long_lived_total |
| |
| is above a given value (hardwired to 25%). |
| |
| The reason is that, while "non-full" collections (i.e., collections of |
| the young and middle generations) will always examine roughly the same |
| number of objects -- determined by the aforementioned thresholds --, |
| the cost of a full collection is proportional to the total number of |
| long-lived objects, which is virtually unbounded. |
| |
| Indeed, it has been remarked that doing a full collection every |
| <constant number> of object creations entails a dramatic performance |
| degradation in workloads which consist in creating and storing lots of |
| long-lived objects (e.g. building a large list of GC-tracked objects would |
| show quadratic performance, instead of linear as expected: see issue #4074). |
| |
| Using the above ratio, instead, yields amortized linear performance in |
| the total number of objects (the effect of which can be summarized |
| thusly: "each full garbage collection is more and more costly as the |
| number of objects grows, but we do fewer and fewer of them"). |
| |
| This heuristic was suggested by Martin von Löwis on python-dev in |
| June 2008. His original analysis and proposal can be found at: |
| http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2008-June/080579.html |
| */ |
| if (i == NUM_GENERATIONS - 1 |
| && gcstate->long_lived_pending < gcstate->long_lived_total / 4) |
| { |
| continue; |
| } |
| return i; |
| } |
| } |
| return -1; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* This is the main function. Read this to understand how the |
| * collection process works. */ |
| static Py_ssize_t |
| gc_collect_main(PyThreadState *tstate, int generation, _PyGC_Reason reason) |
| { |
| int i; |
| Py_ssize_t m = 0; /* # objects collected */ |
| Py_ssize_t n = 0; /* # unreachable objects that couldn't be collected */ |
| PyGC_Head *young; /* the generation we are examining */ |
| PyGC_Head *old; /* next older generation */ |
| PyGC_Head unreachable; /* non-problematic unreachable trash */ |
| PyGC_Head finalizers; /* objects with, & reachable from, __del__ */ |
| PyGC_Head *gc; |
| PyTime_t t1 = 0; /* initialize to prevent a compiler warning */ |
| GCState *gcstate = &tstate->interp->gc; |
| |
| // gc_collect_main() must not be called before _PyGC_Init |
| // or after _PyGC_Fini() |
| assert(gcstate->garbage != NULL); |
| assert(!_PyErr_Occurred(tstate)); |
| |
| int expected = 0; |
| if (!_Py_atomic_compare_exchange_int(&gcstate->collecting, &expected, 1)) { |
| // Don't start a garbage collection if one is already in progress. |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| if (generation == GENERATION_AUTO) { |
| // Select the oldest generation that needs collecting. We will collect |
| // objects from that generation and all generations younger than it. |
| generation = gc_select_generation(gcstate); |
| if (generation < 0) { |
| // No generation needs to be collected. |
| _Py_atomic_store_int(&gcstate->collecting, 0); |
| return 0; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| assert(generation >= 0 && generation < NUM_GENERATIONS); |
| |
| #ifdef Py_STATS |
| if (_Py_stats) { |
| _Py_stats->object_stats.object_visits = 0; |
| } |
| #endif |
| GC_STAT_ADD(generation, collections, 1); |
| |
| if (reason != _Py_GC_REASON_SHUTDOWN) { |
| invoke_gc_callback(tstate, "start", generation, 0, 0); |
| } |
| |
| if (gcstate->debug & _PyGC_DEBUG_STATS) { |
| PySys_WriteStderr("gc: collecting generation %d...\n", generation); |
| show_stats_each_generations(gcstate); |
| t1 = _PyTime_PerfCounterUnchecked(); |
| } |
| |
| if (PyDTrace_GC_START_ENABLED()) { |
| PyDTrace_GC_START(generation); |
| } |
| |
| /* update collection and allocation counters */ |
| if (generation+1 < NUM_GENERATIONS) { |
| gcstate->generations[generation+1].count += 1; |
| } |
| for (i = 0; i <= generation; i++) { |
| gcstate->generations[i].count = 0; |
| } |
| |
| /* merge younger generations with one we are currently collecting */ |
| for (i = 0; i < generation; i++) { |
| gc_list_merge(GEN_HEAD(gcstate, i), GEN_HEAD(gcstate, generation)); |
| } |
| |
| /* handy references */ |
| young = GEN_HEAD(gcstate, generation); |
| if (generation < NUM_GENERATIONS-1) { |
| old = GEN_HEAD(gcstate, generation+1); |
| } |
| else { |
| old = young; |
| } |
| validate_list(old, collecting_clear_unreachable_clear); |
| |
| deduce_unreachable(young, &unreachable); |
| |
| untrack_tuples(young); |
| /* Move reachable objects to next generation. */ |
| if (young != old) { |
| if (generation == NUM_GENERATIONS - 2) { |
| gcstate->long_lived_pending += gc_list_size(young); |
| } |
| gc_list_merge(young, old); |
| } |
| else { |
| /* We only un-track dicts in full collections, to avoid quadratic |
| dict build-up. See issue #14775. */ |
| untrack_dicts(young); |
| gcstate->long_lived_pending = 0; |
| gcstate->long_lived_total = gc_list_size(young); |
| } |
| |
| /* All objects in unreachable are trash, but objects reachable from |
| * legacy finalizers (e.g. tp_del) can't safely be deleted. |
| */ |
| gc_list_init(&finalizers); |
| // NEXT_MASK_UNREACHABLE is cleared here. |
| // After move_legacy_finalizers(), unreachable is normal list. |
| move_legacy_finalizers(&unreachable, &finalizers); |
| /* finalizers contains the unreachable objects with a legacy finalizer; |
| * unreachable objects reachable *from* those are also uncollectable, |
| * and we move those into the finalizers list too. |
| */ |
| move_legacy_finalizer_reachable(&finalizers); |
| |
| validate_list(&finalizers, collecting_clear_unreachable_clear); |
| validate_list(&unreachable, collecting_set_unreachable_clear); |
| |
| /* Print debugging information. */ |
| if (gcstate->debug & _PyGC_DEBUG_COLLECTABLE) { |
| for (gc = GC_NEXT(&unreachable); gc != &unreachable; gc = GC_NEXT(gc)) { |
| debug_cycle("collectable", FROM_GC(gc)); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Clear weakrefs and invoke callbacks as necessary. */ |
| m += handle_weakrefs(&unreachable, old); |
| |
| validate_list(old, collecting_clear_unreachable_clear); |
| validate_list(&unreachable, collecting_set_unreachable_clear); |
| |
| /* Call tp_finalize on objects which have one. */ |
| finalize_garbage(tstate, &unreachable); |
| |
| /* Handle any objects that may have resurrected after the call |
| * to 'finalize_garbage' and continue the collection with the |
| * objects that are still unreachable */ |
| PyGC_Head final_unreachable; |
| handle_resurrected_objects(&unreachable, &final_unreachable, old); |
| |
| /* Call tp_clear on objects in the final_unreachable set. This will cause |
| * the reference cycles to be broken. It may also cause some objects |
| * in finalizers to be freed. |
| */ |
| m += gc_list_size(&final_unreachable); |
| delete_garbage(tstate, gcstate, &final_unreachable, old); |
| |
| /* Collect statistics on uncollectable objects found and print |
| * debugging information. */ |
| for (gc = GC_NEXT(&finalizers); gc != &finalizers; gc = GC_NEXT(gc)) { |
| n++; |
| if (gcstate->debug & _PyGC_DEBUG_UNCOLLECTABLE) |
| debug_cycle("uncollectable", FROM_GC(gc)); |
| } |
| if (gcstate->debug & _PyGC_DEBUG_STATS) { |
| double d = PyTime_AsSecondsDouble(_PyTime_PerfCounterUnchecked() - t1); |
| PySys_WriteStderr( |
| "gc: done, %zd unreachable, %zd uncollectable, %.4fs elapsed\n", |
| n+m, n, d); |
| } |
| |
| /* Append instances in the uncollectable set to a Python |
| * reachable list of garbage. The programmer has to deal with |
| * this if they insist on creating this type of structure. |
| */ |
| handle_legacy_finalizers(tstate, gcstate, &finalizers, old); |
| validate_list(old, collecting_clear_unreachable_clear); |
| |
| /* Clear free list only during the collection of the highest |
| * generation */ |
| if (generation == NUM_GENERATIONS-1) { |
| _PyGC_ClearAllFreeLists(tstate->interp); |
| } |
| |
| if (_PyErr_Occurred(tstate)) { |
| if (reason == _Py_GC_REASON_SHUTDOWN) { |
| _PyErr_Clear(tstate); |
| } |
| else { |
| PyErr_FormatUnraisable("Exception ignored in garbage collection"); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Update stats */ |
| struct gc_generation_stats *stats = &gcstate->generation_stats[generation]; |
| stats->collections++; |
| stats->collected += m; |
| stats->uncollectable += n; |
| |
| GC_STAT_ADD(generation, objects_collected, m); |
| #ifdef Py_STATS |
| if (_Py_stats) { |
| GC_STAT_ADD(generation, object_visits, |
| _Py_stats->object_stats.object_visits); |
| _Py_stats->object_stats.object_visits = 0; |
| } |
| #endif |
| |
| if (PyDTrace_GC_DONE_ENABLED()) { |
| PyDTrace_GC_DONE(n + m); |
| } |
| |
| if (reason != _Py_GC_REASON_SHUTDOWN) { |
| invoke_gc_callback(tstate, "stop", generation, m, n); |
| } |
| |
| assert(!_PyErr_Occurred(tstate)); |
| _Py_atomic_store_int(&gcstate->collecting, 0); |
| return n + m; |
| } |
| |
| static int |
| referrersvisit(PyObject* obj, void *arg) |
| { |
| PyObject *objs = arg; |
| Py_ssize_t i; |
| for (i = 0; i < PyTuple_GET_SIZE(objs); i++) { |
| if (PyTuple_GET_ITEM(objs, i) == obj) { |
| return 1; |
| } |
| } |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| static int |
| gc_referrers_for(PyObject *objs, PyGC_Head *list, PyObject *resultlist) |
| { |
| PyGC_Head *gc; |
| PyObject *obj; |
| traverseproc traverse; |
| for (gc = GC_NEXT(list); gc != list; gc = GC_NEXT(gc)) { |
| obj = FROM_GC(gc); |
| traverse = Py_TYPE(obj)->tp_traverse; |
| if (obj == objs || obj == resultlist) { |
| continue; |
| } |
| if (traverse(obj, referrersvisit, objs)) { |
| if (PyList_Append(resultlist, obj) < 0) { |
| return 0; /* error */ |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| return 1; /* no error */ |
| } |
| |
| PyObject * |
| _PyGC_GetReferrers(PyInterpreterState *interp, PyObject *objs) |
| { |
| PyObject *result = PyList_New(0); |
| if (!result) { |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| |
| GCState *gcstate = &interp->gc; |
| for (int i = 0; i < NUM_GENERATIONS; i++) { |
| if (!(gc_referrers_for(objs, GEN_HEAD(gcstate, i), result))) { |
| Py_DECREF(result); |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| } |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| PyObject * |
| _PyGC_GetObjects(PyInterpreterState *interp, Py_ssize_t generation) |
| { |
| assert(generation >= -1 && generation < NUM_GENERATIONS); |
| GCState *gcstate = &interp->gc; |
| |
| PyObject *result = PyList_New(0); |
| if (result == NULL) { |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| |
| if (generation == -1) { |
| /* If generation is -1, get all objects from all generations */ |
| for (int i = 0; i < NUM_GENERATIONS; i++) { |
| if (append_objects(result, GEN_HEAD(gcstate, i))) { |
| goto error; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| else { |
| if (append_objects(result, GEN_HEAD(gcstate, generation))) { |
| goto error; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| return result; |
| error: |
| Py_DECREF(result); |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| |
| void |
| _PyGC_Freeze(PyInterpreterState *interp) |
| { |
| GCState *gcstate = &interp->gc; |
| for (int i = 0; i < NUM_GENERATIONS; ++i) { |
| gc_list_merge(GEN_HEAD(gcstate, i), &gcstate->permanent_generation.head); |
| gcstate->generations[i].count = 0; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| void |
| _PyGC_Unfreeze(PyInterpreterState *interp) |
| { |
| GCState *gcstate = &interp->gc; |
| gc_list_merge(&gcstate->permanent_generation.head, |
| GEN_HEAD(gcstate, NUM_GENERATIONS-1)); |
| } |
| |
| Py_ssize_t |
| _PyGC_GetFreezeCount(PyInterpreterState *interp) |
| { |
| GCState *gcstate = &interp->gc; |
| return gc_list_size(&gcstate->permanent_generation.head); |
| } |
| |
| /* C API for controlling the state of the garbage collector */ |
| int |
| PyGC_Enable(void) |
| { |
| GCState *gcstate = get_gc_state(); |
| int old_state = gcstate->enabled; |
| gcstate->enabled = 1; |
| return old_state; |
| } |
| |
| int |
| PyGC_Disable(void) |
| { |
| GCState *gcstate = get_gc_state(); |
| int old_state = gcstate->enabled; |
| gcstate->enabled = 0; |
| return old_state; |
| } |
| |
| int |
| PyGC_IsEnabled(void) |
| { |
| GCState *gcstate = get_gc_state(); |
| return gcstate->enabled; |
| } |
| |
| /* Public API to invoke gc.collect() from C */ |
| Py_ssize_t |
| PyGC_Collect(void) |
| { |
| PyThreadState *tstate = _PyThreadState_GET(); |
| GCState *gcstate = &tstate->interp->gc; |
| |
| if (!gcstate->enabled) { |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| Py_ssize_t n; |
| PyObject *exc = _PyErr_GetRaisedException(tstate); |
| n = gc_collect_main(tstate, NUM_GENERATIONS - 1, _Py_GC_REASON_MANUAL); |
| _PyErr_SetRaisedException(tstate, exc); |
| |
| return n; |
| } |
| |
| Py_ssize_t |
| _PyGC_Collect(PyThreadState *tstate, int generation, _PyGC_Reason reason) |
| { |
| return gc_collect_main(tstate, generation, reason); |
| } |
| |
| Py_ssize_t |
| _PyGC_CollectNoFail(PyThreadState *tstate) |
| { |
| /* Ideally, this function is only called on interpreter shutdown, |
| and therefore not recursively. Unfortunately, when there are daemon |
| threads, a daemon thread can start a cyclic garbage collection |
| during interpreter shutdown (and then never finish it). |
| See http://bugs.python.org/issue8713#msg195178 for an example. |
| */ |
| return gc_collect_main(tstate, NUM_GENERATIONS - 1, _Py_GC_REASON_SHUTDOWN); |
| } |
| |
| void |
| _PyGC_DumpShutdownStats(PyInterpreterState *interp) |
| { |
| GCState *gcstate = &interp->gc; |
| if (!(gcstate->debug & _PyGC_DEBUG_SAVEALL) |
| && gcstate->garbage != NULL && PyList_GET_SIZE(gcstate->garbage) > 0) { |
| const char *message; |
| if (gcstate->debug & _PyGC_DEBUG_UNCOLLECTABLE) { |
| message = "gc: %zd uncollectable objects at shutdown"; |
| } |
| else { |
| message = "gc: %zd uncollectable objects at shutdown; " \ |
| "use gc.set_debug(gc.DEBUG_UNCOLLECTABLE) to list them"; |
| } |
| /* PyErr_WarnFormat does too many things and we are at shutdown, |
| the warnings module's dependencies (e.g. linecache) may be gone |
| already. */ |
| if (PyErr_WarnExplicitFormat(PyExc_ResourceWarning, "gc", 0, |
| "gc", NULL, message, |
| PyList_GET_SIZE(gcstate->garbage))) |
| { |
| PyErr_WriteUnraisable(NULL); |
| } |
| if (gcstate->debug & _PyGC_DEBUG_UNCOLLECTABLE) { |
| PyObject *repr = NULL, *bytes = NULL; |
| repr = PyObject_Repr(gcstate->garbage); |
| if (!repr || !(bytes = PyUnicode_EncodeFSDefault(repr))) { |
| PyErr_WriteUnraisable(gcstate->garbage); |
| } |
| else { |
| PySys_WriteStderr( |
| " %s\n", |
| PyBytes_AS_STRING(bytes) |
| ); |
| } |
| Py_XDECREF(repr); |
| Py_XDECREF(bytes); |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| |
| void |
| _PyGC_Fini(PyInterpreterState *interp) |
| { |
| GCState *gcstate = &interp->gc; |
| Py_CLEAR(gcstate->garbage); |
| Py_CLEAR(gcstate->callbacks); |
| |
| /* We expect that none of this interpreters objects are shared |
| with other interpreters. |
| See https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/90228. */ |
| } |
| |
| /* for debugging */ |
| void |
| _PyGC_Dump(PyGC_Head *g) |
| { |
| _PyObject_Dump(FROM_GC(g)); |
| } |
| |
| |
| #ifdef Py_DEBUG |
| static int |
| visit_validate(PyObject *op, void *parent_raw) |
| { |
| PyObject *parent = _PyObject_CAST(parent_raw); |
| if (_PyObject_IsFreed(op)) { |
| _PyObject_ASSERT_FAILED_MSG(parent, |
| "PyObject_GC_Track() object is not valid"); |
| } |
| return 0; |
| } |
| #endif |
| |
| |
| /* extension modules might be compiled with GC support so these |
| functions must always be available */ |
| |
| void |
| PyObject_GC_Track(void *op_raw) |
| { |
| PyObject *op = _PyObject_CAST(op_raw); |
| if (_PyObject_GC_IS_TRACKED(op)) { |
| _PyObject_ASSERT_FAILED_MSG(op, |
| "object already tracked " |
| "by the garbage collector"); |
| } |
| _PyObject_GC_TRACK(op); |
| |
| #ifdef Py_DEBUG |
| /* Check that the object is valid: validate objects traversed |
| by tp_traverse() */ |
| traverseproc traverse = Py_TYPE(op)->tp_traverse; |
| (void)traverse(op, visit_validate, op); |
| #endif |
| } |
| |
| void |
| PyObject_GC_UnTrack(void *op_raw) |
| { |
| PyObject *op = _PyObject_CAST(op_raw); |
| /* Obscure: the Py_TRASHCAN mechanism requires that we be able to |
| * call PyObject_GC_UnTrack twice on an object. |
| */ |
| if (_PyObject_GC_IS_TRACKED(op)) { |
| _PyObject_GC_UNTRACK(op); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| int |
| PyObject_IS_GC(PyObject *obj) |
| { |
| return _PyObject_IS_GC(obj); |
| } |
| |
| void |
| _Py_ScheduleGC(PyThreadState *tstate) |
| { |
| if (!_Py_eval_breaker_bit_is_set(tstate, _PY_GC_SCHEDULED_BIT)) |
| { |
| _Py_set_eval_breaker_bit(tstate, _PY_GC_SCHEDULED_BIT); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| void |
| _PyObject_GC_Link(PyObject *op) |
| { |
| PyGC_Head *gc = AS_GC(op); |
| // gc must be correctly aligned |
| _PyObject_ASSERT(op, ((uintptr_t)gc & (sizeof(uintptr_t)-1)) == 0); |
| |
| PyThreadState *tstate = _PyThreadState_GET(); |
| GCState *gcstate = &tstate->interp->gc; |
| gc->_gc_next = 0; |
| gc->_gc_prev = 0; |
| gcstate->generations[0].count++; /* number of allocated GC objects */ |
| if (gcstate->generations[0].count > gcstate->generations[0].threshold && |
| gcstate->enabled && |
| gcstate->generations[0].threshold && |
| !_Py_atomic_load_int_relaxed(&gcstate->collecting) && |
| !_PyErr_Occurred(tstate)) |
| { |
| _Py_ScheduleGC(tstate); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| void |
| _Py_RunGC(PyThreadState *tstate) |
| { |
| GCState *gcstate = get_gc_state(); |
| if (!gcstate->enabled) { |
| return; |
| } |
| gc_collect_main(tstate, GENERATION_AUTO, _Py_GC_REASON_HEAP); |
| } |
| |
| static PyObject * |
| gc_alloc(PyTypeObject *tp, size_t basicsize, size_t presize) |
| { |
| PyThreadState *tstate = _PyThreadState_GET(); |
| if (basicsize > PY_SSIZE_T_MAX - presize) { |
| return _PyErr_NoMemory(tstate); |
| } |
| size_t size = presize + basicsize; |
| char *mem = _PyObject_MallocWithType(tp, size); |
| if (mem == NULL) { |
| return _PyErr_NoMemory(tstate); |
| } |
| ((PyObject **)mem)[0] = NULL; |
| ((PyObject **)mem)[1] = NULL; |
| PyObject *op = (PyObject *)(mem + presize); |
| _PyObject_GC_Link(op); |
| return op; |
| } |
| |
| PyObject * |
| _PyObject_GC_New(PyTypeObject *tp) |
| { |
| size_t presize = _PyType_PreHeaderSize(tp); |
| PyObject *op = gc_alloc(tp, _PyObject_SIZE(tp), presize); |
| if (op == NULL) { |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| _PyObject_Init(op, tp); |
| return op; |
| } |
| |
| PyVarObject * |
| _PyObject_GC_NewVar(PyTypeObject *tp, Py_ssize_t nitems) |
| { |
| PyVarObject *op; |
| |
| if (nitems < 0) { |
| PyErr_BadInternalCall(); |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| size_t presize = _PyType_PreHeaderSize(tp); |
| size_t size = _PyObject_VAR_SIZE(tp, nitems); |
| op = (PyVarObject *)gc_alloc(tp, size, presize); |
| if (op == NULL) { |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| _PyObject_InitVar(op, tp, nitems); |
| return op; |
| } |
| |
| PyObject * |
| PyUnstable_Object_GC_NewWithExtraData(PyTypeObject *tp, size_t extra_size) |
| { |
| size_t presize = _PyType_PreHeaderSize(tp); |
| PyObject *op = gc_alloc(tp, _PyObject_SIZE(tp) + extra_size, presize); |
| if (op == NULL) { |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| memset(op, 0, _PyObject_SIZE(tp) + extra_size); |
| _PyObject_Init(op, tp); |
| return op; |
| } |
| |
| PyVarObject * |
| _PyObject_GC_Resize(PyVarObject *op, Py_ssize_t nitems) |
| { |
| const size_t basicsize = _PyObject_VAR_SIZE(Py_TYPE(op), nitems); |
| const size_t presize = _PyType_PreHeaderSize(((PyObject *)op)->ob_type); |
| _PyObject_ASSERT((PyObject *)op, !_PyObject_GC_IS_TRACKED(op)); |
| if (basicsize > (size_t)PY_SSIZE_T_MAX - presize) { |
| return (PyVarObject *)PyErr_NoMemory(); |
| } |
| char *mem = (char *)op - presize; |
| mem = (char *)_PyObject_ReallocWithType(Py_TYPE(op), mem, presize + basicsize); |
| if (mem == NULL) { |
| return (PyVarObject *)PyErr_NoMemory(); |
| } |
| op = (PyVarObject *) (mem + presize); |
| Py_SET_SIZE(op, nitems); |
| return op; |
| } |
| |
| void |
| PyObject_GC_Del(void *op) |
| { |
| size_t presize = _PyType_PreHeaderSize(((PyObject *)op)->ob_type); |
| PyGC_Head *g = AS_GC(op); |
| if (_PyObject_GC_IS_TRACKED(op)) { |
| gc_list_remove(g); |
| #ifdef Py_DEBUG |
| PyObject *exc = PyErr_GetRaisedException(); |
| if (PyErr_WarnExplicitFormat(PyExc_ResourceWarning, "gc", 0, |
| "gc", NULL, "Object of type %s is not untracked before destruction", |
| ((PyObject*)op)->ob_type->tp_name)) { |
| PyErr_WriteUnraisable(NULL); |
| } |
| PyErr_SetRaisedException(exc); |
| #endif |
| } |
| GCState *gcstate = get_gc_state(); |
| if (gcstate->generations[0].count > 0) { |
| gcstate->generations[0].count--; |
| } |
| PyObject_Free(((char *)op)-presize); |
| } |
| |
| int |
| PyObject_GC_IsTracked(PyObject* obj) |
| { |
| if (_PyObject_IS_GC(obj) && _PyObject_GC_IS_TRACKED(obj)) { |
| return 1; |
| } |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| int |
| PyObject_GC_IsFinalized(PyObject *obj) |
| { |
| if (_PyObject_IS_GC(obj) && _PyGC_FINALIZED(obj)) { |
| return 1; |
| } |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| void |
| PyUnstable_GC_VisitObjects(gcvisitobjects_t callback, void *arg) |
| { |
| size_t i; |
| GCState *gcstate = get_gc_state(); |
| int origenstate = gcstate->enabled; |
| gcstate->enabled = 0; |
| for (i = 0; i < NUM_GENERATIONS; i++) { |
| PyGC_Head *gc_list, *gc; |
| gc_list = GEN_HEAD(gcstate, i); |
| for (gc = GC_NEXT(gc_list); gc != gc_list; gc = GC_NEXT(gc)) { |
| PyObject *op = FROM_GC(gc); |
| Py_INCREF(op); |
| int res = callback(op, arg); |
| Py_DECREF(op); |
| if (!res) { |
| goto done; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| done: |
| gcstate->enabled = origenstate; |
| } |
| |
| #endif // Py_GIL_DISABLED |