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>
As the comment in py/obj.h says:
> Implementing this as a call rather than inline saves 8 bytes per usage.
So in order to get this savings, we need to tell the compiler to never
inline the function.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
* Enable dcache for OCRAM where the VM heap lives.
* Add CIRCUITPY_SWO_TRACE for pushing program counters out over the
SWO pin via the ITM module in the CPU. Exempt some functions from
instrumentation to reduce traffic and allow inlining.
* Place more functions in ITCM to handle errors using code in RAM-only
and speed up CP.
* Use SET and CLEAR registers for digitalio. The SDK does read, mask
and write.
* Switch to 2MiB reserved for CircuitPython code. Up from 1MiB.
* Run USB interrupts during flash erase and write.
* Allow storage writes from CP if the USB drive is disabled.
* Get perf bench tests running on CircuitPython and increase timeouts
so it works when instrumentation is active.
Without this, building the unix port variants gives:
ports/unix/main.c:667: undefined reference to `mp_obj_is_package',
when MICROPY_ENABLE_EXTERNAL_IMPORT is 0.
Signed-off-by: Laurens Valk <laurens@pybricks.com>
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 := is used in a comprehension the target variable is bound to the
parent scope, so it's either a global or a nonlocal. Prior to this commit
that was handled by simply using the parent scope's id_info for the
target variable. That's completely wrong because it uses the slot number
for the parent's Python stack to store the variable, rather than the slot
number for the comprehension. This will in most cases lead to incorrect
behaviour or memory faults.
This commit fixes the scoping of the target variable by explicitly
declaring it a global or nonlocal, depending on whether the parent is the
global scope or not. Then the id_info of the comprehension can be used to
access the target variable. This fixes a lot of cases of using := in a
comprehension.
Code size change for this commit:
bare-arm: +0 +0.000%
minimal x86: +0 +0.000%
unix x64: +152 +0.019% standard
stm32: +96 +0.024% PYBV10
cc3200: +96 +0.052%
esp8266: +196 +0.028% GENERIC
esp32: +156 +0.010% GENERIC[incl +8(data)]
mimxrt: +96 +0.027% TEENSY40
renesas-ra: +88 +0.014% RA6M2_EK
nrf: +88 +0.048% pca10040
rp2: +104 +0.020% PICO
samd: +88 +0.033% ADAFRUIT_ITSYBITSY_M4_EXPRESS
Fixes issue #10895.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This is handy when you are doing builds outside of the Git repository but
still want to record that information.
Signed-off-by: David Grayson <davidegrayson@gmail.com>
Without this it's possible to get a compiler error about the comparison
always being true, because MP_BINARY_OP_LESS is 0. And it seems that gcc
optimises these 6 equality comparisons into the same size machine code as
before.
Prior to this fix, pow(1.5, inf) and pow(0.5, -inf) (among other things)
would incorrectly raise a ValueError, because the result is inf with the
first argument being finite. This commit fixes this by allowing the result
to be infinite if the first or second (or both) argument is infinite.
This fix doesn't affect the other three math functions that have two
arguments:
- atan2 never returns inf, so always fails isinf(ans)
- copysign returns inf only if the first argument x is inf, so will never
reach the isinf(y) check
- fmod never returns inf, so always fails isinf(ans)
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Only uppercase ASCII letters a-z. This saves ~900 bytes. Previously
written files with other unicode letters will only be accessible
from their upper cased path.
If an exception's chain or context can refer to a pointer from a different
VM, a crash would typically result.
This couldn't turn up on UNIX testing because the VM is never torn
down and rebuilt like it is on hardware.
Because in the 'static' case the GeneratorObject is now fully initialized
whenever it's raised, the initialization can be dropped, which reduces
the flash size slightly.
Closes: #7565
This ensures that all builds unconditionally run makeversionhdr.py and
makemanifest.py to generate mpversion.h and frozen_content.c respectively.
This now matches the Makefile behavior, and in particular this fixes the
issue on ESP32 builds that changes in code-to-be-frozen will cause the
build to update. Both these already tools know not to touch their output
if there is no change.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Unless MICROPY_OBJ_REPR == MICROPY_OBJ_REPR_D, these macros only work with
values and "->"/"." expressions as their sole argument. In other words,
the macros are broken with expressions which contain operations of lower
precedence than the cast operator.
Depending on situation, the old code either results in compiler error:
MP_OBJ_TO_PTR(flag ? o1 : o2) expands into "(void *)flag ? o1 : o2",
which some compiler configurations will reject (e.g. GCC -Wint-conversion
-Wint-to-pointer-cast -Werror)
Or in an incorrect address calculation:
For ptr declared as "uint8_t *" the MP_OBJ_FROM_PTR(ptr + off)
expands into ((mp_obj_t)ptr) + off, resulting in an obviously
wrong address.
Signed-off-by: Alex Riesen <alexander.riesen@cetitec.com>
This is important for literal tuples, e.g.
f"{a,b,}, {c}" --> "{}".format((a,b), (c),)
which would otherwise result in either a syntax error or the wrong result.
Fixes issue #9635.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
32-bit platforms only support a slice offset start of 24 bit max due to the
limited size of the mp_obj_array_t.free member. Similarly on 64-bit
platforms the limit is 56 bits.
This commit adds an OverflowError if the user attempts to slice a
memoryview beyond this limit.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Showing 8 digits instead of 5, supporting devices with more than 1 MByte of
RAM (which is common these days). The masking was never needed, and the
related commented-out line can go.
To adhere to the contract of mp_map_lookup, namely:
MP_MAP_LOOKUP_ADD_IF_NOT_FOUND behaviour:
- returns slot, with key non-null and value=MP_OBJ_NULL if it was added
cpython actually makes sure the newly chained exception doesn't create
a cycle (even indirectly); see _PyErr_SetObject use of "Floyd's cycle
detection algo". We'll go for the simpler solution of just checking
one level deep until it's clear we need to do more.
Closes: #7414
This may help address #7409 if the underlying cause is the deterministic
volume ID. However, not all boards have working urandom (samd21
at least does not) so a couple of fallbacks are attempted when it fails.
I verified that on a pico_w, each `storage.erase_filesystem()` gives
a distinct 32-bit volume ID (pico_w's urandom can never fail)
In @micropython.native code the types of variables and expressions are
always Python objects, so they can be initialised as such. This prevents
problems with compiling optimised code like while-loops where a local may
be referenced before it is assigned to.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This was previously used for the definition of NIC types, but they have
been updated to use a protocol instead.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
The assertion that is added here (to gc.c) fails when running this new test
if ALLOC_TABLE_GAP_BYTE is set to 0.
Signed-off-by: Jeff Epler <jepler@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Prior to this fix the follow crash occurred. With a GC layout of:
GC layout:
alloc table at 0x3fd80428, length 32001 bytes, 128004 blocks
finaliser table at 0x3fd88129, length 16001 bytes, 128008 blocks
pool at 0x3fd8bfc0, length 2048064 bytes, 128004 blocks
Block 128003 is an AT_HEAD and eventually is passed to gc_mark_subtree.
This causes gc_mark_subtree to call ATB_GET_KIND(128004). When block 1 is
created with a finaliser, the first byte of the finaliser table becomes
0x2, but ATB_GET_KIND(128004) reads these bits as AT_TAIL, and then
gc_mark_subtree references past the end of the heap, which happened to be
past the end of PSRAM on the esp32-s2.
The fix in this commit is to ensure there is a one-byte gap after the ATB
filled permanently with AT_FREE.
Fixes issue #7116.
See also https://github.com/adafruit/circuitpython/issues/5021
Signed-off-by: Jeff Epler <jepler@gmail.com>
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 change makes it so the compiler and persistent code loader take a
mp_compiled_module_t* as their last argument, instead of returning this
struct. This eliminates a duplicate context variable for all callers of
these functions (because the context is now stored in the
mp_compiled_module_t by the caller), and also eliminates any confusion
about which context to use after the mp_compile_to_raw_code or
mp_raw_code_load function returns (because there is now only one context,
that stored in mp_compiled_module_t.context).
Reduces code size by 16 bytes on ARM Cortex-based ports.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
These unimplemented features may never be implemented, and having the word
"yet" there takes up space.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
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>
The conversion of characters like _space_ in qstrs is a bit
ad-hoc. Because "_not_" stands for the logical negation character ¬
the recently added message was displayed incorrectly:
```
>>> socket.getaddrinfo('does.not.exist', 0)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
gaierror: (-2, 'Name or service_space¬space_known')
```
I had noticed this, but evidently failed to include the fix in
the problem in #7269.
MP_REGISTER_MODULE would use identifiers like
"MODULE_DEF_MP_QSTR___FUTURE__" which would in turn cause
a QSTR to be generated for it. This wasn't desirable, because the
qstr would never be used.
This clears out quite a bit of flash storage on the proxlight trinkey.
The code was already checking for duplicate kwargs for named parameters but
if `**kwargs` was given as a parameter, it did not check for multiples of
the same argument name.
This fixes the issue by adding an addition test to catch duplicates and
adds a test to exercise the code.
Fixes issue #10083.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
Implements dictionary union according to PEP 584's specifications, minus
the fact that dictionary entries are not guaranteed to be in insertion
order. This feature is enabled with MICROPY_CPYTHON_COMPAT.
Includes a new test.
With the assistance of Fangrui Qin <qinf@purdue.edu>
Signed-off-by: Rayane Chatrieux <rayane.chatrieux@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
If a CMake-build is run with `make BUILD=/outside/path` then
makeversionheader.py is run with the CWD set to the build directory, which
means the git version lookup will fail and silently fall back to the
mpconfig.h mode (giving the wrong result).
This commit:
- Uses the location of makeversionheader.py to find the repo path.
- Allows overriding this path via --repo-path.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
This can be tested using ports/minimal and qemu:
make CC=mips-linux-gnu-gcc-8
Then run with qemu-mips:
stty raw opost -echo;
QEMU_LD_PREFIX=/usr/mips-linux-gnu/ qemu-mips build/firmware.elf;
sleep 1; reset
Signed-off-by: Jan Willeke <willeke@smartmote.de>
This adds the __cause__, __context__ and __suppress_context__
members to exception objects and makes e.g., `raise exc from cause`
set them in the same way as standard Python.
.. a fast helper for animations. It is similar to and inspired by the
PixelMap helper in Adafruit LED Animation library, but with an extremely
fast 'paste' method for setting a series of pixels. This is a common
operation for many animations, and can give a substantial speed improvement.
It's named `adafruit_pixelmap` so that we can package a compatible version
in pure Python for systems that can't fit it in C in flash, or for
Blinka.
This is a proof of concept and can make a very fast comet animation:
```python
import time
import adafruit_pixelbuf
import adafruti_pixelmap
import board
import neopixel
from supervisor import ticks_ms
from adafruit_led_animation.animation.solid import Solid
from adafruit_led_animation import color
pixel_pin = board.GP0
pixel_num = 96
pixels = neopixel.NeoPixel(pixel_pin, pixel_num, brightness=1, auto_write=False, pixel_order="RGB")
evens = adafruit_pixelmap.PixelMap(pixels, tuple(range(0, pixel_num, 2)))
odd_indices = tuple((i, i+2) for i in range(1, pixel_num, 4))
print(odd_indices)
odds = adafruit_pixelbuf.PixelMap(pixels, odd_indices)
assert len(odds) == len(odd_indices)
comet_length = 16
comet1 = [color.calculate_intensity(color.GREEN, ((1+i) / comet_length) ** 2.4)
for i in range(comet_length)]
comet2 = [color.calculate_intensity(color.PURPLE, ((1+i) / comet_length) ** 2.4)
for i in range(comet_length)]
pos1 = 0
pos2 = 96//4
while True:
evens.paste(comet1, pos1, wrap=True, reverse=False, others=0)
pos1 = (pos1 + 1) % len(evens)
odds.paste(comet2, pos2, wrap=True, reverse=True, others=0)
pos2 = (pos2 - 1) % len(odds)
pixels.show()
m = ticks_ms()
if m % 2000 > 1000:
time.sleep(.02)
```
This prevents a very subtle bug caused by writing e.g. `bytearray('\xfd')`
which gives you `(0xc3, 0xbd)`.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
There are two calls to mp_builtin___import__():
1. ports/unix/main.c:main_() which provides a str in args[0]
2. py/runtime.c:mp_import_name() which provides a qstr in args[0]
The default implementation of mp_builtin___import__() is
mp_builtin___import___default() which has a different implementation based
on MICROPY_ENABLE_EXTERNAL_IMPORT.
If MICROPY_ENABLE_EXTERNAL_IMPORT is disabled then the handling of weak
links assumes that args[0] is a `const char *`, when it is either a str or
qstr object.
Use the existing qstr of the module name instead, and also use a vstr
instead of strcpy() to ensure no overflow occurs.
Commit 64af916c11 removed the version string
from docs/conf.py. py/mpconfig.h is a better place to get the version
from, so use that (when there is no git repository).
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
In order for v1.19.1 to load a .mpy, the formerly-feature-flags which are
now used for the sub-version must be zero.
The sub-version is only used to indicate a native version change, so it
should be zero when emitting bytecode-only .mpy files.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Prevents double-precision floats being enabled on 32-bit architectures
where they will not fit into the mp_obj_t encoding.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
We adopted the file "py/ioctl.h" and the ioctl names beginning
with MP_IOCTL_POLL while micropython went with "py/stream.h" and
MP_STREAM_POLL.
Align with upstream.
Closes#6711
Since there is only one flag, we don't need to use a bitfield in vstr_t.
Compilers emit extra instructions to access a bitfield, so this should
reduce the binary size a small amount.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
This makes it so that all a port needs to do is set the relevant variables
and "include extmod.mk" and doesn't need to worry about adding anything to
OBJ, CFLAGS, SRC_QSTR, etc.
Make all extmod variables (src, flags, etc) private to extmod.mk.
Also move common/shared, extmod-related fragments (e.g. wiznet, cyw43,
bluetooth) into extmod.mk.
Now that SRC_MOD, CFLAGS_MOD, CXXFLAGS_MOD are unused by both extmod.mk
(and user-C-modules in a previous commit), remove all uses of them from
port makefiles.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Removes the need for the port to add anything to OBJS or SRC_QSTR.
Also makes it possible for user-C-modules to differentiate between code
that should be processed for QSTR vs other files (e.g. helpers and
libraries).
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.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>
Note: at this time, the ssl module on pico_w never verifies the server
certificate. This means it does not actually provide a higher security
level than regular socket / http protocols.
My pings go out, and then they come back
```py
import os
import wifi
import ipaddress
wifi.radio.connect(os.getenv('WIFI_SSID'), os.getenv('WIFI_PASSWORD'))
ipv4 = ipaddress.ip_address("8.8.4.4")
print("Ping google.com: %f ms" % (wifi.radio.ping(ipv4)*1000))
```
`b'\xaa \xaa'.count(b'\xaa')` now (correctly) returns 2 instead of 1.
Fixes issue #9404.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Allows optimisation of cases like:
import micropython
_DEBUG = micropython.const(False)
if _DEBUG:
print('Debugging info')
Previously the 'if' statement was only optimised out if the type of the
const() argument was integer.
The change is implemented in a way that makes the compiler slightly smaller
(-16 bytes on PYBV11) but compilation will also be very slightly slower.
As a bonus, if const support is enabled then the compiler can now optimise
const truthy/falsey expressions of other types, like:
while "something":
pass
... unclear if that is useful, but perhaps it could be.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
This improves error messages in mpy-cross:
- When loading a .py file that doesn't exist (or can't be opened) it now
includes the filename in the OSError.
- When saving a .mpy file that can't be opened it now raises an exception
(prior, it would silently fail), and includes the filename in the
OSError.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This matches class `__dict__`, and is similarly gated on
MICROPY_CPYTHON_COMPAT. Unlike class though, because modules's globals are
actually dict instances, the result is a mutable dictionary.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
The intent is to allow us to make breaking changes to the native ABI (e.g.
changes to dynruntime.h) without needing the bytecode version to increment.
With this commit the two bits previously used for the feature flags (but
now unused as of .mpy version 6) encode a sub-version. A bytecode-only
.mpy file can be loaded as long as MPY_VERSION matches, but a native .mpy
(i.e. one with an arch set) must also match MPY_SUB_VERSION. This allows 3
additional updates to the native ABI per bytecode revision.
The sub-version is set to 1 because the previous commits that changed the
layout of mp_obj_type_t have changed the native ABI.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
The check for make_new (i.e. used to determine something's type) is now
more complicated due to the slot access. This commit changes the inlining
of a few frequently-used helpers to overall improve code size and
performance.
Instead of being an explicit field, it's now a slot like all the other
methods.
This is a marginal code size improvement because most types have a make_new
(100/138 on PYBV11), however it improves consistency in how types are
declared, removing the special case for make_new.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
The goal here is to remove a slot (making way to turn make_new into a slot)
as well as reduce code size by the ~40 references to mp_identity_getiter
and mp_stream_unbuffered_iter.
This introduces two new type flags:
- MP_TYPE_FLAG_ITER_IS_ITERNEXT: This means that the "iter" slot in the
type is "iternext", and should use the identity getiter.
- MP_TYPE_FLAG_ITER_IS_CUSTOM: This means that the "iter" slot is a pointer
to a mp_getiter_iternext_custom_t instance, which then defines both
getiter and iternext.
And a third flag that is the OR of both, MP_TYPE_FLAG_ITER_IS_STREAM: This
means that the type should use the identity getiter, and
mp_stream_unbuffered_iter as iternext.
Finally, MP_TYPE_FLAG_ITER_IS_GETITER is defined as a no-op flag to give
the default case where "iter" is "getiter".
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Rather than reserving a full 12-slot mp_obj_type_t, reserve enough room for
seven and cast as necessary.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
In all cases other than where you have a native base with a protocol, it
now fits into 4 GC blocks (like it did before the slots representation).
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
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>
This will always have the maximum/minimum size of a mp_obj_type_t
representation and can be used as a member in other structs.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
This will allow the structure of mp_obj_type_t to change while keeping the
definition code the same.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
The buffer protocol type only has a single member, and this existing layout
creates problems for the upcoming split/slot-index mp_obj_type_t layout
optimisations.
If we need to make the buffer protocol more sophisticated in the future
either we can rely on the mp_obj_type_t optimisations to just add
additional slots to mp_obj_type_t or re-visit the buffer protocol then.
This change is a no-op in terms of generated code.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Recently(?) github started making it the default to only copy a single
branch (e.g., main) and NO TAGS into new forks.
This makes the step of the build process that determines the CircuitPython
version not work, because tags are expected to be present. When tags are
not present, the version number is only a git hash. The version number
ends up being 0.0.0.
This causes problems with libraries that check for CircuitPython version
to determine compatibility, among other things.
We'll do other things to improve the situation, such as document it.
But it'd also be good if the build stopped when this detectable condition
occurs.
.. the default is intended to be the equivalent of the original,
implementing `DISPLAYIO && TERMINALIO`.
This is a possible alternative to #6889, if I understand the intent.
All uses of this are either tiny strings or not-known-to-be-safe.
Update comments for mp_obj_new_str_copy and mp_obj_new_str_of_type.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
The new `mp_obj_new_str_from_utf8_vstr` can be used when you know you
already have a unicode-safe string.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Now that we have `mp_obj_new_str_type_from_vstr` (private helper used by
objstr.c) split from the public API (`mp_obj_new_str_from_vstr`), we can
enforce a unicode check at the public API without incurring a performance
cost on the various objstr.c methods (which are already working on known
unicode-safe strings).
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Previously the desired output type was specified. Now make the type part
of the function name. Because this function is used in a few places this
saves code size due to smaller call-site.
This makes `mp_obj_new_str_type_from_vstr` a private function of objstr.c
(which is almost the only place where the output type isn't a compile-time
constant).
This saves ~140 bytes on PYBV11.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
This allows ports to override mp_builtin___import__.
This can be useful in MicroPython applications where
MICROPY_ENABLE_EXTERNAL_IMPORT has to be disabled due to its impact on
build size (2% to 2.5% of the minimal port). By overriding the otherwise
very minimal mp_builtin___import__, ports can still allow limited forms
of application-specific imports.
Signed-off-by: Laurens Valk <laurens@pybricks.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>
Rework the conversion of floats to decimal strings so it aligns precisely
with the conversion of strings to floats in parsenum.c. This is to avoid
rendering 1eX as 9.99999eX-1 etc. This is achieved by removing the power-
of-10 tables and using pow() to compute the exponent directly, and that's
done efficiently by first estimating the power-of-10 exponent from the
power-of-2 exponent in the floating-point representation.
Code size is reduced by roughly 100 to 200 bytes by this commit.
Signed-off-by: Dan Ellis <dan.ellis@gmail.com>
Prior to this commit, parsenum would calculate "1e-20" as 1.0*pow(10, -20),
and "1.000e-20" as 1000.0*pow(10, -23); in certain cases, this could make
seemingly-identical values compare as not equal. This commit watches for
trailing zeros as a special case, and ignores them when appropriate, so
"1.000e-20" is also calculated as 1.0*pow(10, -20).
Fixes issue #5831.
Otherwise if the `mpy-cross/build/` directory doesn't exist then
`mpy-cross/build/..` won't work.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Since f7f56d4285 consolidated all uses of
these to a single locals dict, they no longer need to be made public.
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 the bytes methods to bytearray, matching CPython. The
existing implementations of these methods for str/bytes are reused for
bytearray with minor updates to match CPython return types.
For details on the CPython behaviour see
https://docs.python.org/3/library/stdtypes.html#bytes-and-bytearray-operations
The work to merge locals tables for str/bytes/bytearray/array was done by
@jimmo. Because of this merging of locals the change in code size for this
commit is mostly negative:
bare-arm: +0 +0.000%
minimal x86: +29 +0.018%
unix x64: -792 -0.128% standard[incl -448(data)]
unix nanbox: -436 -0.078% nanbox[incl -448(data)]
stm32: -40 -0.010% PYBV10
cc3200: -32 -0.017%
esp8266: -28 -0.004% GENERIC
esp32: -72 -0.005% GENERIC[incl -200(data)]
mimxrt: -40 -0.011% TEENSY40
renesas-ra: -40 -0.006% RA6M2_EK
nrf: -16 -0.009% pca10040
rp2: -64 -0.013% PICO
samd: +148 +0.105% ADAFRUIT_ITSYBITSY_M4_EXPRESS
The hash is either 8 or 16 bits (depending on MICROPY_QSTR_BYTES_IN_HASH)
so will fit in a size_t.
This saves 268 bytes on the unix nanbox build. Non-nanbox configurations
are unchanged because mp_uint_t is the same size as size_t.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Due to inline assembly, wrong instructions were generated. Use
corresponding 32 bit instructions and fix the offsets used.
Signed-off-by: Efi Weiss <efiwiss@gmail.com>
Binaries built using the Make build system now no longer appear in the
working directory of the build, but rather in the build directory. Thus
some paths had to be adjusted.
The rules for lib (static library with name $(LIBMICROPYTHON)) and the
default rule to build a binary (name $(PROG)) produced outputs in the
current working directory. Change this to build these files in the build
directory.
Note: An empty BUILD variable can cause issues (references to the root
directory); this is not addressed by this commit due to multiple other
places having the same issue.
Formerly, py/formatfloat would print whole numbers inaccurately with
nonzero digits beyond the decimal place. This resulted from its strategy
of successive scaling of the argument by 0.1 which cannot be exactly
represented in floating point. The change in this commit avoids scaling
until the value is smaller than 1, so all whole numbers print with zero
fractional part.
Fixes issue #4212.
Signed-off-by: Dan Ellis dan.ellis@gmail.com
The reallocation trigger for unpacking star args with unknown length
did not take into account the number of fixed args remaining. So it was
possible that the unpacked iterators could take up exactly the memory
allocated then nothing would be left for fixed args after the star args.
This causes a segfault crash.
This is fixed by taking into account the remaining number of fixed args
in the check to decide whether to realloc yet or not.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
* Tweak scroll area position so last line is complete and top is
under the title bar.
* Pick Blinka size based on the font to minimize unused space in
title bar. Related to #2791
* Update the title bar after terminal is started. Fixes#6078Fixes#6668
This uses the esp32-camera code instead of our own homebrewed camera code.
In theory it supports esp32, esp32-s2 and esp32-s3, as long as they have
PSRAM.
This is very basic and doesn't support changing any camera parameters,
including switching resolution or pixelformat.
This is tested on the Kaluga (ESP32-S2) and ESP32-S3-Eye boards.
First, reserve some PSRAM by putting this line in `CIRCUITPY/_env`:
```
CIRCUITPY_RESERVED_PSRAM=524288
```
and hard-reset the board for it to take effect.
Now, the following script will take a very low-resolution jpeg file and print
it in the REPL in escape coded form:
```python
import board
import esp32_camera
c = esp32_camera.Camera(
data_pins=board.CAMERA_DATA,
external_clock_pin=board.CAMERA_XCLK,
pixel_clock_pin=board.CAMERA_PCLK,
vsync_pin=board.CAMERA_VSYNC,
href_pin=board.CAMERA_HREF,
pixel_format=esp32_camera.PixelFormat.JPEG,
i2c=board.I2C(),
external_clock_frequency=20_000_000)
m = c.take()
if m is not None:
print(bytes(m))
```
Then on desktop open a python repl and run something like
```python
>>> with open("my.jpg", "wb") as f: f.write(<BIG PASTE FROM REPL>)
```
and open my.jpg in a viewer.
.. the primary user of which will be the camera, since the framebuffers
must be allocated via esp-idf allocation function and never from the
gc heap.
A board can have a default value, and the value can also be set in the
/.env file using the key CIRCUITPY_RESERVED_PSRAM with the value being
the reserved size in bytes.
Co-authored-by: Dan Halbert <halbert@adafruit.com>
Formerly, py/formatfloat would print whole numbers inaccurately with
nonzero digits beyond the decimal place. This resulted from its strategy
of successive scaling of the argument by 0.1 which cannot be exactly
represented in floating point. The change in this commit avoids scaling
until the value is smaller than 1, so all whole numbers print with zero
fractional part.
Fixes issue #4212.
Signed-off-by: Dan Ellis dan.ellis@gmail.com
On ports with more than one filesystem, the type will be wrong, for example
if using LFS but FAT enabled, then the type will be FAT. So it's not
possible to use these classes to identify a file object type.
Furthermore, constructing an io.FileIO currently crashes on FAT, and
make_new isn't supported on LFS.
And the io.TextIOWrapper class does not match CPython at all.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
This commit simplifies mp_obj_get_complex_maybe() by first calling
mp_obj_get_float_maybe() to handle the cases corresponding to floats.
Only if that fails does it attempt to extra a full complex number.
This reduces code size and also means that mp_obj_get_complex_maybe() now
supports user-defined classes defining __float__; in particular this allows
user-defined classes to be used as arguments to cmath-module function.
Furthermore, complex_make_new() can now be simplified to directly call
mp_obj_get_complex(), instead of mp_obj_get_complex_maybe() followed by
mp_obj_get_float(). This also improves error messages from complex with
an invalid argument, it now raises "can't convert <type> to complex" rather
than "can't convert <type> to float".
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Use C macros to reduce the size of firmware images when the GC split-heap
feature is disabled.
The code size difference of this commit versus HEAD~2 (ie the commit prior
to MICROPY_GC_SPLIT_HEAP being introduced) when split-heap is disabled is:
bare-arm: +0 +0.000%
minimal x86: +0 +0.000%
unix x64: -16 -0.003%
unix nanbox: -20 -0.004%
stm32: -8 -0.002% PYBV10
cc3200: +0 +0.000%
esp8266: +8 +0.001% GENERIC
esp32: +0 +0.000% GENERIC
nrf: -20 -0.011% pca10040
rp2: +0 +0.000% PICO
samd: -4 -0.003% ADAFRUIT_ITSYBITSY_M4_EXPRESS
The code size difference of this commit versus HEAD~2 split-heap is enabled
with MICROPY_GC_MULTIHEAP=1 (but no extra code to add more heaps):
unix x64: +1032 +0.197% [incl +544(bss)]
esp32: +592 +0.039% GENERIC[incl +16(data) +264(bss)]
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.
This uses MP_REGISTER_ROOT_POINTER() to register sched_queue
instead of using a conditional inside of mp_state_vm_t.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
This uses MP_REGISTER_ROOT_POINTER() to register cur_exception,
sys_exitfunc, mp_sys_path_obj, mp_sys_argv_obj and sys_mutable
instead of using a conditional inside of mp_state_vm_t.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
This uses MP_REGISTER_ROOT_POINTER() to register track_reloc_code_list
instead of using a conditional inside of mp_state_vm_t.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
This uses MP_REGISTER_ROOT_POINTER() to register `bluetooth`
instead of using a conditional inside of mp_state_vm_t.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
This uses MP_REGISTER_ROOT_POINTER() to register vfs_cur and
vfs_mount_table instead of using a conditional inside of mp_state_vm_t.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
This uses MP_REGISTER_ROOT_POINTER() to register lwip_slip_stream
instead of using a conditional inside of mp_state_vm_t.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
This uses MP_REGISTER_ROOT_POINTER() to register dupterm_objs
instead of using a conditional inside of mp_state_vm_t.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
This uses MP_REGISTER_ROOT_POINTER() to register repl_line
instead of using a conditional inside of mp_state_vm_t.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
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 adds new compile-time infrastructure to parse source code files for
`MP_REGISTER_ROOT_POINTER()` and generates a new `root_pointers.h` header
file containing the collected declarations. This works the same as the
existing `MP_REGISTER_MODULE()` feature.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
Zero effect on non debug builds, and also usually optimized out even in
debug builds as mp_obj_is_type() is called with a compile-time known type.
I'm not sure we even have dynamic uses of mp_obj_is_type() at the moment,
but if we ever will they will be protected from now on.
Signed-off-by: Yonatan Goldschmidt <yon.goldschmidt@gmail.com>
Commit d96cfd13e3 introduced a regression by breaking existing
users of mp_obj_is_type(.., &mp_obj_bool). This function (and associated
helpers like mp_obj_is_int()) have some specific nuances, and mistakes like
this one can happen again.
This commit adds mp_obj_is_exact_type() which behaves like the the old
mp_obj_is_type(). The new mp_obj_is_type() has the same prototype but it
attempts to statically assert that it's not called with types which should
be checked using mp_obj_is_type(). If called with any of these types: int,
str, bool, NoneType - it will cause a compilation error. Additional
checked types (e.g function types) can be added in the future.
Existing users of mp_obj_is_type() with the now "invalid" types, were
translated to use mp_obj_is_exact_type().
The use of MP_STATIC_ASSERT() is not bulletproof - usually GCC (and other
compilers) can't statically check conditions that are only known during
link-time (like variables' addresses comparison). However, in this case,
GCC is able to statically detect these conditions, probably because it's
the exact same object - `&mp_type_int == &mp_type_int` is detected.
Misuses of this function with runtime-chosen types (e.g:
`mp_obj_type_t *x = ...; mp_obj_is_type(..., x);` won't be detected. MSC
is unable to detect this, so we use MP_STATIC_ASSERT_NOT_MSC().
Compiling with this commit and without the fix for d96cfd13e3 shows
that it detects the problem.
Signed-off-by: Yonatan Goldschmidt <yon.goldschmidt@gmail.com>
The empty tuple is usually a constant object, but named tuples must be
allocated to allow modification. Added explicit allocation to fix this.
Also added a regression test to verify creating an empty named tuple works.
Fixes issue #7870.
Signed-off-by: Lars Haulin <lars.haulin@gmail.com>
The GENERATOR_EXIT_IF_NEEDED macro is only used once and it's easier to
read and understand the code if this macro body is written in the code.
Then the comment just before it makes more sense.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This check for code_state->ip being NULL was added in
a7c02c4538 with a commit message that "When
generator raises exception, it is automatically terminated (by setting its
code_state.ip to 0)". It was also added without any tests to test for this
particular case. (The commit did mention that CPython's test_pep380.py
triggered a bug, but upon re-running this test it did not show any need for
this NULL check of code_state->ip.)
It is true that generators that have completed (either by running to their
end or raising an exception) set "code_state.ip = 0". But there is an
explicit check at the start of mp_obj_gen_resume() to return immediately
for any attempt to resume an already-stopped generator. So the VM can
never execute a generator with NULL ip (and this was true at the time of
the above-referenced commit).
Furthermore, the other parts of the VM just before and after this piece
of code do require (or at least assume) code_state->ip is non-NULL.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
The optimisation that allows a single check in the VM for either a pending
exception or non-empty scheduler queue doesn't work when threading is
enabled, as one thread can clear the sched_state if it has no pending
exception, meaning the thread with the pending exception will never see it.
This removes that optimisation for threaded builds.
Also fixes a race in non-scheduler builds where get-and-clear of the
pending exception is not protected by the atomic section.
Also removes the bulk of the inlining of pending exceptions and scheduler
handling from the VM. This just costs code size and complexity at no
performance benefit.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
This helps with Python-compatibility (see issue #4171) but doesn't
completely resolve it.
Now, `dir()` still computes any properties of the underlying object,
HOWEVER, if the property raises an exception this expression is
captured.
This ability to capture exceptions always existed in
`mp_load_method_protected`, we just need to turn it on via the
`catch_all_exc` boolean parameter.
Add .attr attribute which forwards to self->fun.
A closure is intended to wrap around a function object, so forward any
requested attributes to the wrapped function object.
Signed-off-by: Michael Bentley <mikebentley15@gmail.com>
Prior to this commit, complex("j") would return 0j, and complex("nanj")
would return nan+0j. This commit makes sure "j" is tested for after
parsing the number (nan, inf or a decimal), and also supports the case of
"j" on its own.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This separates extmod source files from `py.mk`. Previously, `py.mk`
assumed that every consumer of the py/ directory also wanted to include
extmod/. However, this is not the case. For example, building mpy-cross
uses py/ but doesn't need extmod/.
This commit moves all extmod-specific items from `py.mk` to `extmod.mk` and
explicitly includes `extmod.mk` in ports that use it.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
The following changes are made:
- Guard entire file with MICROPY_PY_LWIP, so it can be included in the
build while still being disabled (for consistency with other extmod
modules).
- Add modlwip.c to list of all extmod source in py/py.mk and
extmod/extmod.cmake so all ports can easily use it.
- Move generic modlwip GIT_SUBMODULES build configuration code from
ports/rp2/CMakeLists.txt to extmod/extmod.cmake, so it can be reused by
other ports.
- Remove now unnecessary inclusion of modlwip.c in EXTMOD_SRC_C in esp8266
port, and in SRC_QSTR in mimxrt port.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This new logic tracks when an unconditional jump/raise occurs in the
emitted code stream (bytecode or native machine code) and suppresses all
subsequent code, until a label is assigned. This eliminates a lot of
cases of dead code, with relatively simple logic.
This commit combined with the previous one (that removed the existing
dead-code finding logic) has the following code size change:
bare-arm: -16 -0.028%
minimal x86: -60 -0.036%
unix x64: -368 -0.070%
unix nanbox: -80 -0.017%
stm32: -204 -0.052% PYBV10
cc3200: +0 +0.000%
esp8266: -232 -0.033% GENERIC
esp32: -224 -0.015% GENERIC[incl -40(data)]
mimxrt: -192 -0.054% TEENSY40
renesas-ra: -200 -0.032% RA6M2_EK
nrf: +28 +0.015% pca10040
rp2: -256 -0.050% PICO
samd: -12 -0.009% ADAFRUIT_ITSYBITSY_M4_EXPRESS
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
The search in these cases should include all finally handlers that are
after the current ip. If a handler starts at exactly ip then it is
considered "after" the ip. This can happen when END_FINALLY is followed
immediately by a finally handler (from a different finally).
Consider the function:
def f():
try:
return 0
finally:
print(1)
The current bytecode emitter generates the following code:
00 SETUP_FINALLY 5
02 LOAD_CONST_SMALL_INT 0
03 RETURN_VALUE
04 LOAD_CONST_NONE ****
05 LOAD_GLOBAL print
07 LOAD_CONST_SMALL_INT 1
08 CALL_FUNCTION n=1 nkw=0
10 POP_TOP
11 END_FINALLY
12 LOAD_CONST_NONE
13 RETURN_VALUE
The LOAD_CONST_NONE marked with **** is dead code because it follows a
RETURN_VALUE, and nothing jumps to this LOAD_CONST_NONE. If the emitter
could remove this this dead code it would produce:
00 SETUP_FINALLY 4
02 LOAD_CONST_SMALL_INT 0
03 RETURN_VALUE
04 LOAD_GLOBAL print
06 LOAD_CONST_SMALL_INT 1
07 CALL_FUNCTION n=1 nkw=0
09 POP_TOP
10 END_FINALLY
11 LOAD_CONST_NONE
12 RETURN_VALUE
In this case the finally block (which starts at offset 4) immediately
follows the RETURN_VALUE. When RETURN_VALUE executes ip will point to
offset 4 in the bytecode (because the dispatch of the opcode does *ip++)
and so the finally handler will only be found if a >= comparison is used.
It's a similar story for break/continue:
while True:
try:
break
finally:
print(1)
Although technically in this case the > comparison still works because the
extra byte from the UNWIND_JUMP (encoding the number of exception handlers
to unwind) doesn't have a *ip++ (just a *ip) so ip remains pointing within
the UNWIND_JUMP opcode, and not at the start of the following finally
handler. Nevertheless, the change is made to use >= for consistency with
the RETURN_VALUE change.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Catch calls to legacy:
MP_REGISTER_MODULE(name, module, enable)
Emit a friendly error suggesting they be rewritten to:
MP_REGISTER_MODULE(name, module).
Signed-off-by: Phil Howard <phil@pimoroni.com>
Make them CIRCUITPY_FULL_BUILD = 0 and rework the boards to have
the same modules enabled (ish.)
Also make ZLIB require FULL_BUILD and disable advanced `micropython`
module APIs by default on all builds.
This adds support for CIRCUITPY_WIFI_SSID and CIRCUITPY_WIFI_PASSWORD
in `/.env`. When both are defined, CircuitPython will attempt to
connect to the network even when user code isn't running. If the
user code attempts to a network with the same SSID, it will return
immediately. Connecting to another SSID will disconnect from the
auto-connected network. If the user code initiates the connection,
then it will be shutdown after user code exits. (Should match <8
behavior.)
This PR also reworks the default displayio terminal. It now supports
a title bar TileGrid in addition to the (newly renamed) scroll area.
The default title bar is the top row of the display and is positioned
to the right of the Blinka logo when it is enabled. The scroll area
is now below the Blinka logo.
The Wi-Fi auto-connect code now uses the title bar to show its
state including the IP address when connected. It does this through
the "standard" OSC control sequence `ESC ] 0 ; <s> ESC \` where <s>
is the title bar string. This is commonly supported by terminals
so it should work over USB and UART as well.
Related to #6174
This file is not executable so shouldn't have the shebang line. This line
can cause issues when building on Windows msvc when the PyPython variable
is set to something other than "python", because it reverts back to using
the shebang line.
The top comment is also changed to """ style which matches all other
preprocessing scripts in the py/ directory.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Without this, newer versions of gcc (eg 11.2.0) used with -O2 can warn
about `q_ptr` being maybe uninitialized, because it doesn't know that there
is at least one qstr being written in to this (alloca'd) memory.
As part of this, change the type of `n` to `size_t` so the compiler knows
it's unsigned and can generate better code.
Code size change for this commit:
bare-arm: -28 -0.049%
minimal x86: -4 -0.002%
unix x64: +0 +0.000%
unix nanbox: -16 -0.003%
stm32: -24 -0.006% PYBV10
cc3200: -32 -0.017%
esp8266: +8 +0.001% GENERIC
esp32: -52 -0.003% GENERIC
nrf: -24 -0.013% pca10040
rp2: -32 -0.006% PICO
samd: -28 -0.020% ADAFRUIT_ITSYBITSY_M4_EXPRESS
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This was made redundant by f2040bfc7e, which
also did not update this function for the change to qstr-opcode encoding,
so it does not work correctly anyway.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Support for architecture-specific qstr linking was removed in
d4d53e9e11, where native code was changed to
access qstr values via qstr_table. The only remaining use for the special
qstr link table in persistentcode.c is to support native module written in
C, linked via mpy_ld.py. But native modules can also use the standard
module-level qstr_table (and obj_table) which was introduced in the .mpy
file reworking in f2040bfc7e.
This commit removes the remaining native qstr liking support in
persistentcode.c's load_raw_code function, and adds two new relocation
options for constants.qstr_table and constants.obj_table. mpy_ld.py is
updated to use these relocations options instead of the native qstr link
table.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Profiling shows that `est_net_savings` is one of the highest costs of
the whole process. Approximately, you can save storage only if a word
appears more than once, and doing this greatly reduces the number
of `est_net_savings` calls. Locally, it reduces the time for this
specific build step by 50% on ports/unix coverage build, without
affecting the size of the generated binary.
This breaks the translation dependency to all of the other objects
and therefore speeds up subsequent builds. Now, even when the big
translate() function is inlined in the header, it only needs to be
optimized once.
It's no longer needed because this macro is now processed after
preprocessing the source code via cpp (in the qstr extraction stage), which
means unused MP_REGISTER_MODULE's are filtered out by the preprocessor.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This cleans up the parsing of MP_REGISTER_MODULE() and generation of
genhdr/moduledefs.h so that it uses the same process as compressed error
string messages, using the output of qstr extraction.
This makes sure all MP_REGISTER_MODULE()'s that are part of the build are
correctly picked up. Previously the extraction would miss some (eg if you
had a mod.c file in the board directory for an stm32 board).
Build speed is more or less unchanged.
Thanks to @stinos for the ports/windows/msvc/genhdr.targets changes.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This allows the compile stage to optimize most of the translate()
function away and saves a ton of space (~40k on ESP). *However*, it
requires us to wait for the qstr output before we compile the rest
of our .o files. (Only qstr.o used to wait.)
This isn't as good as the current setup with LTO though. Trinket M0
loses <1k with this setup.
So, we should probably conditionalize this along with LTO.
This allows mpy-cross to dynamically select whether ARMv7-M float
instructions are supported in @micropython.asm_thumb functions.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
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>
The following changes are made:
- If MICROPY_VFS is enabled then mp_vfs_import_stat and mp_vfs_open are
automatically used for mp_import_stat and mp_builtin_open respectively.
- If MICROPY_PY_IO is enabled then "open" is automatically included in the
set of builtins, and points to mp_builtin_open_obj.
This helps to clean up and simplify the most common port configuration.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Everything should be using the keypad module instead.
Note: there are several boards that still had gamepadshift enabled. I
did not contact their authors to make sure they already switched to
keypad in their code and documentation. We should probably wait with
merging this for their go ahead.
The examples/natmod features0 and features1 examples now build and run on
ARMv6-M platforms. More complicated examples are not yet supported because
the compiler emits references to built-in functions like __aeabi_uidiv.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
If __thumb2__ is defined by the compiler then .mpy files marked as ARMV6M
and above (up to ARMV7EMDP) are supported. If it's not defined then only
ARMV6M .mpy files are supported. This makes sure that on CPUs like
Cortex-M0+ (where __thumb2__ is not defined) only .mpy files marked as
ARMV6M can be imported.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This commit adjusts the asm_thumb_xxx functions so they can be dynamically
configured to use ARMv7-M instructions or not. This is available when
MICROPY_DYNAMIC_COMPILER is enabled, and then controlled by the value of
mp_dynamic_compiler.native_arch.
If MICROPY_DYNAMIC_COMPILER is disabled the previous behaviour is retained:
the functions emit ARMv7-M instructions only if MICROPY_EMIT_THUMB_ARMV7M
is enabled.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This eliminates the need to save and restore the exception unwind handler
pointer when calling nlr_push.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
os.getenv() will use it (when available) to load variables from
/.env
This will also be useful when we need secrets or config for
CircuitPython outside of the VM (like WiFi credentials.)
Fixes#4212
For example, ussl can come from axtls or mbedtls. If neither are enabled
then don't try and set an empty definition twice, and only include it
once in MICROPY_REGISTERED_MODULES.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
Now that constant tuples are supported in the parser, eg (1, True, "str"),
it's a small step to allow anything that is a constant to be used with the
pattern:
from micropython import const
X = const(obj)
This commit makes the required changes to allow the following types of
constants:
from micropython import const
_INT = const(123)
_FLOAT = const(1.2)
_COMPLEX = const(3.4j)
_STR = const("str")
_BYTES = const(b"bytes")
_TUPLE = const((_INT, _STR, _BYTES))
_TUPLE2 = const((None, False, True, ..., (), _TUPLE))
Prior to this, only integers could be used in const(...).
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
The recent rework of bytecode made all constants global with respect to the
module (previously, each function had its own constant table). That means
the constant table for a module is shared among all functions/methods/etc
within the module.
This commit add support to the compiler to de-duplicate constants in this
module constant table. So if a constant is used more than once -- eg 1.0
or (None, None) -- then the same object is reused for all instances.
For example, if there is code like `print(1.0, 1.0)` then the parser will
create two independent constants 1.0 and 1.0. The compiler will then (with
this commit) notice they are the same and only put one of them in the
constant table. The bytecode will then reuse that constant twice in the
print expression. That allows the second 1.0 to be reclaimed by the GC,
also means the constant table has one less entry so saves a word.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Prior to this commit, all qstrs were required to be allocated (by calling
mp_emit_common_use_qstr) in the MP_PASS_SCOPE pass (the first one). But
this is an unnecessary restriction, which is lifted by this commit.
Lifting the restriction simplifies the compiler because it can allocate
qstrs in later passes.
This also generates better code, because in some cases (eg when a variable
is closed over) the scope of an identifier is not known until a bit later
and then the identifier no longer needs its qstr allocated in the global
table.
Code size is reduced for all ports with this commit.
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>
mpy-cross will now generate native code based on the size of
mp_code_state_native_t, and the runtime will use this struct to calculate
the offset of the .state field. This makes native code generation and
execution (which rely on this struct) independent to the settings
MICROPY_STACKLESS and MICROPY_PY_SYS_SETTRACE, both of which change the
size of the mp_code_state_t struct.
Fixes issue #5059.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>