This document tracks the incremental improvements being made to
CPython's build system. It includes:
- Summary of completed work (3 documentation commits)
- Submission strategy and review checklists
- Analysis of build system complexity
- Remaining improvement opportunities
- Testing procedures
This is a working document to coordinate build system simplification
efforts and is not intended for inclusion in CPython upstream
(should be in .gitignore or kept in a fork).
The configure.ac file has grown to 8,200+ lines, making it difficult
to navigate and understand its organization. This adds 5 major section
headers to divide the file into logical groups:
Section 1 (line 137): Platform and Build Configuration Detection
- Platform triplet detection, cross-compilation setup
Section 2 (line 1070): Compiler Detection and Configuration
- C/C++ compiler detection and characteristics
Section 3 (line 1731): Python Build Feature Flags
- --disable-gil, --with-pydebug, --enable-optimizations, etc.
Section 4 (line 7840): Standard Library Extension Module Configuration
- PY_STDLIB_MOD macro and module dependency detection
Section 5 (line 4054): External Library Dependencies
- System and third-party library detection
These are comment-only changes that do not affect the generated
configure script. They make the file more maintainable and help
developers quickly locate relevant sections.
Adding a new C extension module to CPython's standard library
requires updating multiple files across different build systems,
which is not well documented. This adds a comprehensive guide that
covers:
- Prerequisites and design decisions (built-in vs shared)
- Step-by-step process for all platforms
- Unix/Linux: configure.ac and Setup file changes
- Windows: MSBuild .vcxproj file creation
- Testing, documentation, and cross-platform considerations
- Troubleshooting common issues with solutions
- Complete pre-submission checklist
The guide is created in a new Doc/build_system/ directory for
build-system-specific documentation that doesn't fit in the
existing extending/ or c-api/ sections.
This significantly reduces the barrier to adding new stdlib modules
and provides a template for contributors to follow.
The CPython build system is complex, but lacks comprehensive
documentation explaining how the pieces fit together. This expands
the existing "Python Build System" section in Doc/using/configure.rst
with detailed explanations of:
- Build system overview and key phases
- Platform-specific build system components (autotools, MSBuild, etc.)
- The 4-stage bootstrap process explained step-by-step
- Module configuration system (3-layer architecture)
- Detailed build flow with phase-by-phase breakdown
- Visual build flow diagram
This helps new contributors understand the build system architecture
and reduces questions about "how does CPython build?"
The documentation focuses on conceptual understanding rather than
step-by-step instructions, which are better suited for the devguide.
In the linecache module and in the Python implementation of the
warnings module, a DeprecationWarning is issued when
m.__loader__ differs from m.__spec__.loader (like in the C
implementation of the warnings module).
Replace code that directly accesses PyASCIIObject.hash with
PyUnstable_Unicode_GET_CACHED_HASH().
Remove redundant "assert(PyUnicode_Check(op))" from
PyUnstable_Unicode_GET_CACHED_HASH(), _PyASCIIObject_CAST() already
implements the check.
This needs a single bit, but was stored as a void* in the module
struct. This didn't matter due to packing, but now that there's
another bool in the struct, we can save a bit of memory by
making md_gil a bool.
Variables that changed type are renamed, to detect conflicts.
When iterparse() opens a file by filename and is not explicitly closed,
emit a ResourceWarning to alert developers of the resource leak.
Signed-off-by: Osama Abdelkader <osama.abdelkader@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Serhiy Storchaka <storchaka@gmail.com>
This PR changes the current JIT model from trace projection to trace recording. Benchmarking: better pyperformance (about 1.7% overall) geomean versus current https://raw.githubusercontent.com/facebookexperimental/free-threading-benchmarking/refs/heads/main/results/bm-20251108-3.15.0a1%2B-7e2bc1d-JIT/bm-20251108-vultr-x86_64-Fidget%252dSpinner-tracing_jit-3.15.0a1%2B-7e2bc1d-vs-base.svg, 100% faster Richards on the most improved benchmark versus the current JIT. Slowdown of about 10-15% on the worst benchmark versus the current JIT. **Note: the fastest version isn't the one merged, as it relies on fixing bugs in the specializing interpreter, which is left to another PR**. The speedup in the merged version is about 1.1%. https://raw.githubusercontent.com/facebookexperimental/free-threading-benchmarking/refs/heads/main/results/bm-20251112-3.15.0a1%2B-f8a764a-JIT/bm-20251112-vultr-x86_64-Fidget%252dSpinner-tracing_jit-3.15.0a1%2B-f8a764a-vs-base.svg
Stats: 50% more uops executed, 30% more traces entered the last time we ran them. It also suggests our trace lengths for a real trace recording JIT are too short, as a lot of trace too long aborts https://github.com/facebookexperimental/free-threading-benchmarking/blob/main/results/bm-20251023-3.15.0a1%2B-eb73378-CLANG%2CJIT/bm-20251023-vultr-x86_64-Fidget%252dSpinner-tracing_jit-3.15.0a1%2B-eb73378-pystats-vs-base.md .
This new JIT frontend is already able to record/execute significantly more instructions than the previous JIT frontend. In this PR, we are now able to record through custom dunders, simple object creation, generators, etc. None of these were done by the old JIT frontend. Some custom dunders uops were discovered to be broken as part of this work gh-140277
The optimizer stack space check is disabled, as it's no longer valid to deal with underflow.
Pros:
* Ignoring the generated tracer code as it's automatically created, this is only additional 1k lines of code. The maintenance burden is handled by the DSL and code generator.
* `optimizer.c` is now significantly simpler, as we don't have to do strange things to recover the bytecode from a trace.
* The new JIT frontend is able to handle a lot more control-flow than the old one.
* Tracing is very low overhead. We use the tail calling interpreter/computed goto interpreter to switch between tracing mode and non-tracing mode. I call this mechanism dual dispatch, as we have two dispatch tables dispatching to each other. Specialization is still enabled while tracing.
* Better handling of polymorphism. We leverage the specializing interpreter for this.
Cons:
* (For now) requires tail calling interpreter or computed gotos. This means no Windows JIT for now :(. Not to fret, tail calling is coming soon to Windows though https://github.com/python/cpython/pull/139962
Design:
* After each instruction, the `record_previous_inst` function/label is executed. This does as the name suggests.
* The tracing interpreter lowers bytecode to uops directly so that it can obtain "fresh" values at the point of lowering.
* The tracing version behaves nearly identical to the normal interpreter, in fact it even has specialization! This allows it to run without much of a slowdown when tracing. The actual cost of tracing is only a function call and writes to memory.
* The tracing interpreter uses the specializing interpreter's deopt to naturally form the side exit chains. This allows it to side exit chain effectively, without repeating much code. We force a re-specializing when tracing a deopt.
* The tracing interpreter can even handle goto errors/exceptions, but I chose to disable them for now as it's not tested.
* Because we do not share interpreter dispatch, there is should be no significant slowdown to the original specializing interpreter on tailcall and computed got with JIT disabled. With JIT enabled, there might be a slowdown in the form of the JIT trying to trace.
* Things that could have dynamic instruction pointer effects are guarded on. The guard deopts to a new instruction --- `_DYNAMIC_EXIT`.
Add PyUnstable_ThreadState_SetStackProtection() and
PyUnstable_ThreadState_ResetStackProtection() functions
to set the stack base address and stack size of a Python
thread state.
Co-authored-by: Petr Viktorin <encukou@gmail.com>
Update `bytearray` to contain a `bytes` and provide a zero-copy path to
"extract" the `bytes`. This allows making several code paths more efficient.
This does not move any codepaths to make use of this new API. The documentation
changes include common code patterns which can be made more efficient with
this API.
---
When just changing `bytearray` to contain `bytes` I ran pyperformance on a
`--with-lto --enable-optimizations --with-static-libpython` build and don't see
any major speedups or slowdowns with this; all seems to be in the noise of
my machine (Generally changes under 5% or benchmarks that don't touch
bytes/bytearray).
Co-authored-by: Victor Stinner <vstinner@python.org>
Co-authored-by: Maurycy Pawłowski-Wieroński <5383+maurycy@users.noreply.github.com>
Split existing tests on smaller methods and move them to separate class.
Rename variable "content" to "it".
Use BytesIO instead of StringIO.
Add few more tests.
Many functions related to compiling or parsing Python code, such as
compile(), ast.parse(), symtable.symtable(),
and importlib.abc.InspectLoader.source_to_code() now allow to pass
the module name used when filtering syntax warnings.
* gh-137109: refactor warning about threads when forking
This splits the OS API specific functionality to get the number of threads out
from the fallback Python method and warning raising code itself. This way the
OS APIs can be queried before we've run
`os.register_at_fork(after_in_parent=...)` registered functions which
themselves may (re)start threads that would otherwise be detected.
This is best effort. If the OS APIs are either unavailable or fail, the
warning generating code still falls back to looking at the Python threading
state after the CPython interpreter world has been restarted and the
after_in_parent calls have been made. The common case for most Linux and macOS
environments should work today.
This also lines up with the existing TODO refactoring, we may choose to expose
this API to get the number of OS threads in the `os` module in the future.
* NEWS entry
* avoid "function-prototype" compiler warning?