With inplace methods now disabled by default, it makes sense to enable
reverse methods, as they allow for more useful features, e.g. allow
for datetime module to implement both 2 * HOUR and HOUR * 2 (where
HOUR is e.g. timedelta object).
* Revert "Read serial input as a background task so we can check for the interrupt character."
This reverts commit 046092e8a2.
* Revert "Check INTERNAL_LIBM make flag in a safer way."
This reverts commit 2b80add22f.
* Revert "Read serial input as a background task so we can check for the interrupt character."
This reverts commit 046092e8a2.
* Revert "Check INTERNAL_LIBM make flag in a safer way."
This reverts commit 2b80add22f.
This allows to configure support for inplace special methods separately,
similar to "normal" and reverse special methods. This is useful, because
inplace methods are "the most optional" ones, for example, if inplace
methods aren't defined, the operation will be executed using normal
methods instead.
As a caveat, __iadd__ and __isub__ are implemented even if
MICROPY_PY_ALL_INPLACE_SPECIAL_METHODS isn't defined. This is similar
to the state of affairs before binary operations refactor, and allows
to run existing tests even if MICROPY_PY_ALL_INPLACE_SPECIAL_METHODS
isn't defined.
If MICROPY_PY_ALL_SPECIAL_METHODS is defined, actually define all special
methods (still subject to gating by e.g. MICROPY_PY_REVERSE_SPECIAL_METHODS).
This adds quite a number of qstr's, so should be used sparingly.
VLAs can be expensive on stack usage due to stack alignment requirements,
and also the fact that extra local variables are needed to track the
dynamic size of the stack. So using fixed-size arrays when possible can
help to reduce code size and stack usage.
In this particular case, the maximum value of n_args in the VLA is 2 and so
it's more efficient to just allocate this array with a fixed size. This
reduces code size by around 30 bytes on Thumb2 and Xtensa archs. It also
reduces total stack usage of the function: on Thumb2 the usage with VLA is
between 40 and 48 bytes, which is reduced to 32; on Xtensa, VLA usage is
between 64 and 80 bytes, reduced to 32; on x86-64 it's at least 88 bytes
reduced to 80.
CPython only supports the server_hostname keyword arg via the SSLContext
object, so use that instead of the top-level ssl.wrap_socket. This allows
the test to run on CPython the same as uPy.
Also add the "Host:" header to correctly make a GET request (for URLs that
are hosted on other servers). This is not strictly needed to test the SSL
connection but helps to debug things when printing the response.
atmel-samd: Use our own CDC output cache because the internal
cache is only used when the memory isn't aligned even if we're
going to change the memory immediately after.
Unix naming is historical, before current conventions were established.
All other ports however have it as "modusocket.c", so rename for
consistency and to avoid confusion.
If a soft reset happens while the gamepad module is scanning for button
presses, there is a moment when the pins get de-initialized, but the
gamepad module is still trying to read them, which ends in a crash.
We can avoid it by disabling scanning on reset.
(cherry picked from commit 470a23d4c9)
Conflicts:
atmel-samd/main.c
If a soft reset happens while the gamepad module is scanning for button
presses, there is a moment when the pins get de-initialized, but the
gamepad module is still trying to read them, which ends in a crash.
We can avoid it by disabling scanning on reset.
Update makeqstrdata.py to sort strings starting with "__" to the beginning
of qstr list, so they get low qstr id's, guaranteedly fitting in 8 bits.
Then use this property to further compact op_id => qstr mapping arrays.