Commit Graph

88 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Guido van Rossum
11801859e0 Include myselect.h -- needed on some platforms. 1999-01-25 21:39:03 +00:00
Guido van Rossum
65d5b5763c Thanks to Chris Herborth, the thread primitives now have proper Py*
names in the source code (they already had those for the linker,
through some smart macros; but the source still had the old, un-Py names).
1998-12-21 19:32:43 +00:00
Guido van Rossum
3886bb6997 Add DL_EXPORT() to all modules that could possibly be used
on BeOS or Windows.
1998-12-04 18:50:17 +00:00
Guido van Rossum
e9bc62d993 RajGopal Srinivasan noted that the latest code doesn't work when
running in a non-threaded environment.  He added some #ifdefs that fix
this.
1998-11-17 03:45:24 +00:00
Guido van Rossum
41f0a98f8f Looks like I didn't test this interactively. The EventHook() code was
broken; it asked for the current thread state when there was none.
Fixed by using the saved event_tstate.
1998-10-12 16:26:22 +00:00
Guido van Rossum
dc1adabcb8 Patch by Jonathan Giddy (with some cleanup by me) to always use the
thread state of the thread calling mainloop() (or another event
handling function) rather than the thread state of the function that
created the client data structure.
1998-10-09 20:51:18 +00:00
Guido van Rossum
215193bd93 There's no need to declare Tk_GetNumMainWindows() (and it breaks
something in the latest win342 build).
1998-10-08 02:27:41 +00:00
Guido van Rossum
49b560698b Renamed thread.h to pythread.h. 1998-10-01 20:42:43 +00:00
Guido van Rossum
469067800b Get rid of the test for non-NULL thread state in EventHook; it can be
triggered in situations that are not an error.
1998-09-21 14:47:16 +00:00
Guido van Rossum
541f241132 Need mytime.h for Sleep(). 1998-08-13 13:29:22 +00:00
Guido van Rossum
227cf764b2 Undo a silly effect of a global substitution: the macintosh panic()
function had a reference to vPySys_WriteStderr(...) -- turn it back
into fprintf(stder, ...).
1998-08-05 13:53:32 +00:00
Guido van Rossum
43ff8683fe Temporarily get rid of the registration of Tcl_Finalize() as a
low-level Python exit handler.  This can attempt to call Python code
at a point that the interpreter and thread state have already been
destroyed, causing a Bus Error.  Given the intended use of
Py_AtExit(), I'm not convinced that it's a good idea to call it
earlier during Python's finalization sequence...  (Although this is
the only use for it in the entire distribution.)
1998-07-14 18:02:13 +00:00
Guido van Rossum
c821d1ecc0 Add a cast that a picky SGI compiler found was necessary. 1998-07-07 22:25:47 +00:00
Guido van Rossum
f766e23f63 There was an error check in a loop in PythonCmd which called
PythonCmd_Error() but failed to return.  The error wasn't very likely
(only when we run out of memory) but since the check is there we might
as well return the error.  (I think that Barry introduced this buglet
when he added error checks everywhere.)
1998-06-19 04:28:10 +00:00
Guido van Rossum
5e97783c8f # Note: a previous checkin message was lost because I can now use CVS
# from my PC at home, but it can't send email :-(

Add a clarifying comment about the new ENTER_OVERLAP and
LEAVE_OVERLAP_TCL macros; get rid of all the bogus tests for deleted
interpreters (Tcl already tests for this; they were left over from an
earlier misguided attempt to fix the threading).
1998-06-15 14:03:52 +00:00
Guido van Rossum
62320c9b9b # (My first checkin from Windows NT using remote CVS!)
There were some serious problem with the thread-safety code.
The basic problem was that often the result was gotten out of
the Tcl interpreter object after releasing the Tcl lock.
Of course, another thread might have changed the return value
already, and this was indeed happening.  (Amazing what trying
it on a different thread implementation does!)

The solution is to grab the Python lock without releasing the
Tcl lock, so it's safe to create a string object or set the
exceptions from the Tcl interpreter.  Once that's done, the
Tcl lock is released.

Note that it's now legal to acquire the Python lock while the
the Tcl lock is held; but the reverse is not true: the Python
lock must be released before the Tcl lock is acquired.  This
in order to avoid deadlines.  Fortunately, there don't seem to
be any problems with this.
1998-06-15 04:36:09 +00:00
Guido van Rossum
ad4db17552 Fixed the EventHook() code so that it also works on Windows, sort of.
(The "sort of" is because it uses kbhit() to detect that the user
starts typing, and then no events are processed until they hit
return.)

Also fixed a nasty locking bug: EventHook() is called without the Tcl
lock set, so it can't use the ENTER_PYTHON and LEAVE_PYTHON macros,
which manipulate both the Python and the Tcl lock.  I now only acquire
and release the Python lock.

(Haven't tested this on Unix yet...)
1998-06-13 13:56:28 +00:00
Guido van Rossum
2a5119b680 On Windows, need #include <windows.h>; and it's MS_WINDOWS, not MS_WIN32. 1998-05-29 01:28:40 +00:00
Guido van Rossum
00d93066b0 Changes to make it possible to write multi-threaded programs using
Tkinter.  This adds a separate lock -- read the comments.  (This was
also needed for Mark Hammond's attempts to make PythonWin
Tkinter-friendly.)

The changes have affected the EventHook slightly, too; and I've done
some more cleanup of the code that deals with the different versions
of Tcl_CreateFileHandler().
1998-05-28 23:06:38 +00:00
Guido van Rossum
7bf15648a4 Use a different implementation of EventHook(). The new version
registers an input file handler for stdin with Tcl and handles Tcl
events until something is available on stdin; it then deletes the
handler and returns from EventHook().

This works with or without GNU readline, and doesn't busy-wait.

It still doesn't work for Mac or Windows :-(
1998-05-22 18:28:17 +00:00
Guido van Rossum
b41addf6a6 Replace all calls to fprintf(stderr, ...) with calls to PySys_WriteStderr(...). 1998-05-12 15:02:41 +00:00
Guido van Rossum
597ac20708 Trivial little change: timer tokens shouldn't have a Print() function,
they should have a Repr() function.
1998-05-12 14:36:19 +00:00
Guido van Rossum
212643f199 Still somewhat experimental speedup. This appears to speed up the
most common interface to Tcl, the call() method, by maybe 20-25%.

The speedup code avoids the construction of a Tcl command string from
the argument list -- the Tcl argument list is immediately parsed back
by Tcl_Eval() into a list that is *guaranteed* (by Tcl_Merge()) to be
exactly the same list, so instead we look up the command info and call
the command function directly.  If the lookup fails, we fall back to
the old method (Tcl_Merge() + Tcl_Eval()) so we don't need to worry
about special cases like undefined commands or the occasional command
("after") that sets the info.proc pointer to NULL -- let TclEval()
deal with these.
1998-04-29 16:22:14 +00:00
Guido van Rossum
9d1b7ae65b Add a new method of interpreter objects, interpaddr(). This returns
the address of the Tcl interpreter object, as an integer.  Not very
useful for the Python programmer, but this can be called by another C
extension that needs to make calls into the Tcl/Tk C API and needs to
get the address of the Tcl interpreter object.  A simple cast of the
return value to (Tcl_Interp *) will do the trick now.
1998-04-29 16:17:01 +00:00
Guido van Rossum
2ea1c94b9a On the Mac a call to TkMacInitMenus is needed. Also, we pass
appropriate events to Sioux so the console window remains functional.
(Jack)
1998-04-28 16:12:43 +00:00