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.