See https://github.com/micropython/micropython/issues/12127 for details.
Previously at the point when a release is made, we update mpconfig.h
and set a git tag. i.e. the version increments at the release.
Now the version increments immediately after the release. The workflow is:
1. Final commit in the cycle updates mpconfig.h to set (X, Y, 0, 0) (i.e.
clear the pre-release state).
2. This commit is tagged "vX.Y.0".
3. First commit for the new cycle updates mpconfig.h to set (X, Y+1, 0, 1)
(i.e. increment the minor version, set the pre-release state).
4. This commit is tagged "vX.Y+1.0-preview".
The idea is that a nightly build is actually a "preview" of the _next_
release. i.e. any documentation describing the current release may not
actually match the nightly build. So we use "preview" as our semver
pre-release identifier.
Changes in this commit:
- Add MICROPY_VERSION_PRERELEASE to mpconfig.h to allow indicating that
this is not a release version.
- Remove unused MICROPY_VERSION integer.
- Append "-preview" to MICROPY_VERSION_STRING when the pre-release state
is set.
- Update py/makeversionhdr.py to no longer generate MICROPY_GIT_HASH.
- Remove the one place MICROPY_GIT_HASH was used (it can use
MICROPY_GIT_TAG instead).
- Update py/makeversionhdr.py to also understand
MICROPY_VERSION_PRERELEASE in mpconfig.h.
- Update py/makeversionhdr.py to convert the git-describe output into
semver-compatible "X.Y.Z-preview.N.gHASH".
- Update autobuild.sh to generate filenames using the new scheme.
- Update remove_old_firmware.py to match new scheme.
- Update mpremote's pyproject.toml to handle the "-preview" suffix in the
tag. setuptools_scm maps to this "rc0" to match PEP440.
- Fix docs heading where it incorrectly said "vvX.Y.Z" for release docs.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
The rp2 port was enabling SSL and had finalizers enabled via the "extra
features" level, but missed explicitly enabling `MICROPY_PY_SSL_FINALISER`
(like esp32, stm32, and mimxrt did).
This commit makes `MICROPY_PY_SSL_FINALISER` default to enabled if
finalizers are enabled, and removes the explicit setting of this for
esp32, stm32, mimxrt (because they all use the "extra features" level).
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
The only reason that const had to be disabled was to make the test output
match CPython when const was involved. Instead, this commit fixes the test
to handle the lines where const is used.
Also:
- remove the special handling for MICROPY_PERSISTENT_CODE_SAVE in
unix/mpconfigport.h, and make this automatic.
- move the check for MICROPY_PERSISTENT_CODE_SAVE to where it's used (like
we do for other similar checks) and add a comment explaining it.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
When set, the split heap is automatically extended with new areas on
demand, and shrunk if a heap area becomes empty during a GC pass or soft
reset.
To save code size the size allocation for a new heap block (including
metadata) is estimated at 103% of the failed allocation, rather than
working from the more complex algorithm in gc_try_add_heap(). This appears
to work well except in the extreme limit case when almost all RAM is
exhausted (~last few hundred bytes). However in this case some allocation
is likely to fail soon anyhow.
Currently there is no API to manually add a block of a given size to the
heap, although that could easily be added if necessary.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
A previous commit removed the unix-specific select module implementation
and made unix use the common one.
This commit adds an optimisation so that the system poll function is used
when polling objects that have a file descriptor. With this optimisation
enabled, if code registers both file-descriptor-based objects, and non-
file-descriptor-based objects with select.poll() then the following occurs:
- the system poll is called for all file-descriptor-based objects with a
timeout of 1ms
- then the bare-metal polling implementation is used for remaining objects,
which calls into their ioctl method (which can be in C or Python)
In the case where all objects have file descriptors, the system poll is
called with the full timeout requested by the caller. That makes it as
efficient as possible in the case everything has a file descriptor.
Benefits of this approach:
- all ports use the same select module implementation
- the unix port now supports polling of all objects and matches bare metal
implementations
- it's still efficient for existing cases where only files and sockets are
polled (on unix)
- the bare metal implementation does not change
- polling of SSL objects will now work on unix by calling in to the ioctl
method on SSL objects (this is required for asyncio ssl support)
Note that extmod/vfs_posix_file.c has poll disable when the optimisation is
enabled, because the code is not reachable when the optimisation is used.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Previously this was explicitly enabled on esp32/stm32/renesas/mimxrt/samd,
but didn't get a default feature level because it wasn't in py/mpconfig.h.
With this commit it's now enabled at the "extra features" level, which adds
rp2, unix-standard, windows, esp8266, webassembly, and some nrf boards.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
This provides similar functionality to the former zlib.DecompIO and
especially CPython's gzip.GzipFile for both compression and decompression.
This class can be used directly, and also can be used from Python to
implement (via io.BytesIO) zlib.decompress and zlib.compress, as well as
gzip.GzipFile.
Enable/disable this on all ports/boards that zlib was previously configured
for.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
This will be replaced with a new deflate module providing the same
functionality, with an optional frozen Python wrapper providing a
replacement zlib module.
binascii.crc32 is temporarily disabled.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
The asyncio module now has much better CPython compatibility and
deserves to be just called "asyncio".
This will avoid people having to write `from uasyncio import asyncio`.
Renames all files, and updates port manifests to use the new path. Also
renames the built-in _uasyncio to _asyncio.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
This is a MicroPython-specific module that existed to support the old
version of uasyncio. It's undocumented and not enabled on all ports and
takes up code size unnecessarily.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Previously sys.path could be modified by append/pop or slice assignment.
This allows `sys.path = [...]`, which can be simpler in many cases, but
also improves CPython compatibility.
It also allows sys.path to be set to a tuple which means that you can
clear sys.path (e.g. temporarily) with no allocations.
This also makes sys.path (and sys.argv for consistency) able to be disabled
via mpconfig. The unix port (and upytesthelper) require them, so they
explicitly verify that they're enabled.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Otherwise you can get into the confusing state where e.g. sys.ps1 is
enabled in config (via `MICROPY_PY_SYS_PS1_PS2`) but still doesn't actually
get enabled.
Also verify that the required delegation options are enabled in modsys.c.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
This replaces the previous QSTR_null entry in the globals dict which could
leak out to Python (e.g. via iteration of mod.__dict__) and could lead to
crashes.
It results in smaller code size at the expense of turning a lookup into a
loop, but the list it is looping over likely only contains one or two
elements.
To allow a module to register its custom attr function it can use the new
`MP_REGISTER_MODULE_DELEGATION` macro.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
In order to keep "import umodule" working, the existing mechanism is
replaced with a simple fallback to drop the "u".
This makes importing of built-ins no longer touch the filesystem, which
makes a typical built-in import take ~0.15ms rather than 3-5ms.
(Weak links were added in c14a81662c)
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
This can lead to duplicate initialisations if a module can be imported
via multiple names, so the module must track this itself anyway.
This reduces code size (diff is -40 bytes), and avoids special treatment of
builtin-modules-with-init with respect to sys.modules. No other builtin
modules get put into sys.modules.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
To use this:
- Create a built-in module, and add the module object as a member of the
parent module's globals dict.
- The submodule can set its `__name__` to either `QSTR_foo_dot_bar` or
`QSTR_bar`. The former requires using qstrdefs(port).h to make the qstr.
Because `bar` is a member of `foo`'s globals, it is possible to write
`import foo` and then immediately use `foo.bar` without importing it
explicitly. This means that if `bar` has an `__init__`, it will not be
called in this situation, and for that reason, sub-modules should not have
`__init__` methods. If this is required, then all initalisation for
sub-modules should be done by the top-level module's (i.e. `foo`'s)
`__init__` method.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Changes in this commit:
- Add MICROPY_GC_HOOK_LOOP to gc_info() and gc_alloc(). Both of these can
be long running (many milliseconds) which is too long to be blocking in
some applications.
- Pass loop variable to MICROPY_GC_HOOK_LOOP(i) macro so that implementers
can use it, e.g. to improve performance by only calling a function every
X number of iterations.
- Drop outer call to MICROPY_GC_HOOK_LOOP in gc_mark_subtree().
Based on extmod/utime_mphal.c, with:
- a globals dict added
- time.localtime wrapper added
- time.time wrapper added
- time.time_ns function added
New configuration options are added for this module:
- MICROPY_PY_UTIME (enabled at basic features level)
- MICROPY_PY_UTIME_GMTIME_LOCALTIME_MKTIME
- MICROPY_PY_UTIME_TIME_TIME_NS
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This is intended to be used by the very outer caller of the VM/runtime. It
allows setting a top-level NLR handler that can be jumped to directly, in
order to forcefully abort the VM/runtime.
Enable using:
#define MICROPY_ENABLE_VM_ABORT (1)
Set up the handler at the top level using:
nlr_buf_t nlr;
nlr.ret_val = NULL;
if (nlr_push(&nlr) == 0) {
nlr_set_abort(&nlr);
// call into the VM/runtime
...
nlr_pop();
} else {
if (nlr.ret_val == NULL) {
// handle abort
...
} else {
// handle other exception that propagated to the top level
...
}
}
nlr_set_abort(NULL);
Schedule an abort, eg from an interrupt handler, using:
mp_sched_vm_abort();
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
The C-level printf is usually used for internal debugging prints, and a
port/board may want to redirect this somewhere other than stdout.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
When you want to use the valgrind memory analysis tool on MicroPython, you
can arrange to define MICROPY_DEBUG_VALGRIND to enable use of special
valgrind macros. For now, this only fixes `gc_get_ptr` so that it never
emits the diagnostic "Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised
value(s)".
Signed-off-by: Jeff Epler <jepler@gmail.com>
This module is useful, but it is not always needed. Disabling it saves
several kilobytes of build size, depending on other config options.
Signed-off-by: Laurens Valk <laurens@pybricks.com>
Only intended to be used on Unix and other "OS" ports. Matches CPython.
This should give the absolute path to the executing binary.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
The existings mp_obj_type_t uses a sparse representation for slots for the
capability methods of the type (eg print, make_new). This commit adds a
compact slot-index representation. The basic idea is that where the
mp_obj_type_t struct used to have 12 pointer fields, it now has 12 uint8_t
indices, and a variable-length array of pointers. So in the best case (no
fields used) it saves 12x4-12=36 bytes (on a 32-bit machine) and in the
common case (three fields used) it saves 9x4-12=24 bytes.
Overall with all associated changes, this slot-index representation reduces
code size by 1000 to 3000 bytes on bare-metal ports. Performance is
marginally better on a few tests (eg about 1% better on misc_pystone.py and
misc_raytrace.py on PYBv1.1), but overall marginally worse by a percent or
so.
See issue #7542 for further analysis and discussion.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Since commit e65d1e69e8 there is no longer an
io.FileIO class, so this option is no longer needed.
This option also controlled whether or not files supported being opened in
binary mode (eg 'rb'), and could, if disabled, lead to confusion as to why
opening a file in binary mode silently did the wrong thing (it would just
open in text mode if MICROPY_PY_IO_FILEIO was disabled).
The various VFS implementations (POSIX, FAT, LFS) were the only places
where enabling this option made a difference, and in almost all cases where
one of these filesystems were enabled, MICROPY_PY_IO_FILEIO was also
enabled. So it makes sense to just unconditionally enable this feature
(ability to open a file in binary mode) in all cases, and so just remove
this config option altogether. That makes configuration simpler and means
binary file support always exists (and opening a file in binary mode is
arguably more fundamental than opening in text mode, so if anything should
be configurable then it should be the ability to open in text mode).
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
These were added in Python 3.5.
Enabled via MICROPY_PY_BUILTINS_BYTES_HEX, and enabled by default for all
ports that currently have ubinascii.
Rework ubinascii to use the implementation of these methods.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
This commit adds a new option MICROPY_GC_SPLIT_HEAP (disabled by default)
which, when enabled, allows the GC heap to be split over multiple memory
areas/regions. The first area is added with gc_init() and subsequent areas
can be added with gc_add(). New areas can be added at runtime. Areas are
stored internally as a linked list, and calls to gc_alloc() can be
satisfied from any area.
This feature has the following use-cases (among others):
- The ESP32 has a fragmented OS heap, so to use all (or more) of it the
GC heap must be split.
- Other MCUs may have disjoint RAM regions and are now able to use them
all for the GC heap.
- The user could explicitly increase the size of the GC heap.
- Support a dynamic heap while running on an OS, adding more heap when
necessary.
All in-tree uses of MICROPY_PORT_ROOT_POINTERS have been replaced with
MP_REGISTER_ROOT_POINTER(), so now we can remove both
MICROPY_PORT_ROOT_POINTERS and MICROPY_BOARD_ROOT_POINTERS from the code
and remaining config files.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
This uses MP_REGISTER_ROOT_POINTER() to register the readline_history root
pointer array used by shared/readline.c and removes the registration from
all mpconfigport.h files.
This also required adding a new MICROPY_READLINE_HISTORY_SIZE config option
since not all ports used the same sized array.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
This follows on from a5324a1074 and allows
mpy-cross to dynamically select whether ARMv7-M instructions are supported
in @micropython.asm_thumb functions.
The config option MICROPY_EMIT_INLINE_THUMB_ARMV7M is no longer needed, it
is now controlled by MICROPY_EMIT_THUMB_ARMV7M.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Some architectures (like esp32 xtensa) cannot read byte-wise from
executable memory. This means the prelude for native functions -- which is
usually located after the machine code for the native function -- must be
placed in separate memory that can be read byte-wise. Prior to this commit
this was achieved by enabling N_PRELUDE_AS_BYTES_OBJ for the emitter and
MICROPY_EMIT_NATIVE_PRELUDE_AS_BYTES_OBJ for the runtime. The prelude was
then placed in a bytes object, pointed to by the module's constant table.
This behaviour is changed by this commit so that a pointer to the prelude
is stored either in mp_obj_fun_bc_t.child_table, or in
mp_obj_fun_bc_t.child_table[num_children] if num_children > 0. The reasons
for doing this are:
1. It decouples the native emitter from runtime requirements, the emitted
code no longer needs to know if the system it runs on can/can't read
byte-wise from executable memory.
2. It makes all ports have the same emitter behaviour, there is no longer
the N_PRELUDE_AS_BYTES_OBJ option.
3. The module's constant table is now used only for actual constants in the
Python code. This allows further optimisations to be done with the
constants (eg constant deduplication).
Code size change for those ports that enable the native emitter:
unix x64: +80 +0.015%
stm32: +24 +0.004% PYBV10
esp8266: +88 +0.013% GENERIC
esp32: -20 -0.002% GENERIC[incl -112(data)]
rp2: +32 +0.005% PICO
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Prior to this commit, even with unicode disabled .py and .mpy files could
contain unicode characters, eg by entering them directly in a string as
utf-8 encoded.
The only thing the compiler disallowed (with unicode disabled) was using
\uxxxx and \Uxxxxxxxx notation to specify a character within a string with
value >= 0x100; that would give a SyntaxError.
With this change mpy-cross will now accept \u and \U notation to insert a
character with value >= 0x100 into a string (because the -mno-unicode
option is now gone, there's no way to forbid this). The runtime will
happily work with strings with such characters, just like it already works
with strings with characters that were utf-8 encoded directly.
This change simplifies things because there are no longer any feature
flags in .mpy files, and any bytecode .mpy will now run on any target.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This contains a string useful for identifying the underlying machine. This
string is kept consistent with the second part of the REPL banner via the
new config option MICROPY_BANNER_MACHINE.
This makes os.uname() more or less redundant, as all the information in
os.uname() is now available in the sys module.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This commit adds the git hash and build date to sys.version. This is
allowed according to CPython docs, and is what PyPy does. The docs state:
A string containing the version number of the Python interpreter plus
additional information on the build number and compiler used.
Eg on CPython:
Python 3.10.4 (main, Mar 23 2022, 23:05:40) [GCC 11.2.0] on linux
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> import sys
>>> sys.version
'3.10.4 (main, Mar 23 2022, 23:05:40) [GCC 11.2.0]'
and PyPy:
Python 2.7.12 (5.6.0+dfsg-4, Nov 20 2016, 10:43:30)
[PyPy 5.6.0 with GCC 6.2.0 20161109] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>>> import sys
>>>> sys.version
'2.7.12 (5.6.0+dfsg-4, Nov 20 2016, 10:43:30)\n[PyPy 5.6.0 with GCC ...
With this commit on MicroPython we now have:
MicroPython v1.18-371-g9d08eb024 on 2022-04-28; linux [GCC 11.2.0] v...
Use Ctrl-D to exit, Ctrl-E for paste mode
>>> import sys
>>> sys.version
'3.4.0; MicroPython v1.18-371-g9d08eb024 on 2022-04-28'
Note that the start of the banner is the same as the end of sys.version.
This helps to keep code size under control because the string can be reused
by the compiler.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>