On 9 August 2017 at 03:59, Paul Moore wrote:
> On 8 August 2017 at 17:21, Steve Dower wrote:
>> For a while I've been uploading the official releases to nuget.org. These
>> packages can be installed with nuget.exe (latest version always available at
>> https://aka.ms/nugetclidl), which is quickly
On 8 August 2017 at 10:12, Gregory P. Smith wrote:
> I don't know whether it is beneficial or not - but having the capability to
> build LTO without PGO seems reasonable. I can review any pull requests
> altering configure.ac and Makefile.pre.in to make such a change.
Being able to separate them
On 08Aug2017 1512, Nathaniel Smith wrote:
On Tue, Aug 8, 2017 at 2:29 PM, Steve Dower wrote:
On 08Aug2017 1151, Nathaniel Smith wrote:
It looks like Thread.join ultimately ends up blocking in
Python/thread_nt.h:EnterNonRecursiveMutex, which has a maze of #ifdefs
behind it -- I think there are
I updated some websites and services for the 3.5.4 release:
* Status of Python branches in the devguide:
https://devguide.python.org/#status-of-python-branches
* Python security vulnerabilities:
http://python-security.readthedocs.io/vulnerabilities.html
* I removed all Python 3.5 buildbots:
On Tue, Aug 8, 2017 at 2:29 PM, Steve Dower wrote:
> On 08Aug2017 1151, Nathaniel Smith wrote:
>>
>> It looks like Thread.join ultimately ends up blocking in
>> Python/thread_nt.h:EnterNonRecursiveMutex, which has a maze of #ifdefs
>> behind it -- I think there are 3 different implementation you m
On 08Aug2017 1151, Nathaniel Smith wrote:
It looks like Thread.join ultimately ends up blocking in
Python/thread_nt.h:EnterNonRecursiveMutex, which has a maze of #ifdefs
behind it -- I think there are 3 different implementation you might
end up with, depending on how CPython was built? Two of the
Thank you Nathaniel for the response!
Really interesting and helpful.
2017-08-08 20:51 GMT+02:00 Nathaniel Smith :
> On Tue, Aug 8, 2017 at 2:54 AM, Jonathan Slenders
> wrote:
> > Hi all,
> >
> > Is it possible that thread.join() cannot be interrupted on Windows,
> while it
> > can be on Linu
On Tue, Aug 8, 2017 at 2:54 AM, Jonathan Slenders wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Is it possible that thread.join() cannot be interrupted on Windows, while it
> can be on Linux?
> Would this be a bug, or is it by design?
>
>
> import threading, time
> def wait():
> time.sleep(1000)
> t = threading.Thread
On 8 August 2017 at 17:21, Steve Dower wrote:
> For a while I've been uploading the official releases to nuget.org. These
> packages can be installed with nuget.exe (latest version always available at
> https://aka.ms/nugetclidl), which is quickly becoming a standard tool in
> Microsoft's build to
Thank you!
I recall that we discussed that, but I understood that you was too
busy to implement the idea. No, you didn't forget and you made it! ;-)
Victor
2017-08-08 18:21 GMT+02:00 Steve Dower :
> Hi all
>
> As part of a deal with Zach Ware at PyCon, I agreed that if he removed the
> Subversio
Hi all
As part of a deal with Zach Ware at PyCon, I agreed that if he removed
the Subversion dependency from our builds, I would set up daily Windows
builds of Python. Zach did an excellent job, and so I am now following
through on my half of the deal :)
For a while I've been uploading the o
On 07Aug2017 2231, Patrick Rutkowski wrote:
So, it seems to be the case that picking a mismatched python binary
causes the crash, __but only with python3, not with python36__. This
makes me wonder what the differences is between the two in the first
place. I was getting the crash to begin with be
Hi all,
Is it possible that thread.join() cannot be interrupted on Windows, while
it can be on Linux?
Would this be a bug, or is it by design?
import threading, time
def wait():
time.sleep(1000)
t = threading.Thread(target=wait)
t.start()
t.join() # Press Control-C now. It stops on Linux, w
The Python 3.5 branch has now entered "security fixes only" mode. No
more bugfixes will be accepted into the 3.5 branch.
In keeping with our modern workflow, I have changed the permissions on
the 3.5 branch on Github so that only release managers can accept PRs
into the branch. Please add
On behalf of the Python development community and the Python 3.5 release
team, I'm pleased to announce the availability of Python 3.5.4.
Python 3.5.4 is the final 3.5 release in "bug fix" mode. The Python
3.5 branch has now transitioned into "security fixes mode"; all future
improvements i
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