- 17 Jun, 2002 5 commits
-
-
Tim Peters authored
an error return leaked references.
-
Tim Peters authored
-
Tim Peters authored
a BTree in an invalid state when called with an empty BTree. I still need to change callers to ensure that the BTree is never left in that invalid state (it can be now).
-
Tim Peters authored
between the Zope2 and Zope3 versions.
-
Tim Peters authored
deletion endcases uncovered by the new degenerate-BTree tests. The degenerate testDeletes() and testEmptyFirstBucketReportedByGuido() are enabled now.
-
- 14 Jun, 2002 6 commits
-
-
Jeremy Hylton authored
-
Tim Peters authored
disabled for now, because it dies in lots of ways. I hope, but don't know, that they're all related to "Guido's bug". Also backported the "Guido's bug" test case from the Zope3 project. This is also disabled for now.
-
Jeremy Hylton authored
-
Jeremy Hylton authored
changed() in cPersistence.c now calls the jar's register() method. Connection's register() method just calls get_transaction().register(). This redirection would allow specialized Connection's to change the default policy on how the transaction manager is selected without hacking the Transaction module. The cPersistence.c code is based on _PyPersist_RegisterDataManager() from the Zope3 code.
-
Jeremy Hylton authored
XXX Should start still do path munging?
-
Jeremy Hylton authored
-
- 13 Jun, 2002 11 commits
-
-
Tim Peters authored
search returned a seemingly random slice of the tree. A new test on the painfully constructed highly-degenerate BTree turned up lots of these. It turns out that BTree_rangeSearch had a much harder job than it thought it had <0.7 wink>.
-
Tim Peters authored
for lo > hi either, except if they happened to be in the same bucket. All sorts of strange results followed (the range should be empty if lo > hi, and is after this patch).
-
Tim Peters authored
passed in, it was quite possible for this to return *low > *high, and the caller could crash due to trying to create a list with "negative length". Changed the routine to consider a range empty if min>max on input, and added test cases that fail before this patch.
-
Tim Peters authored
-
Tim Peters authored
legitimate) BTree. New test testDegenerateBasicOps() does basic sanity checks on it. More tests against this tree will follow.
-
Tim Peters authored
classes entirely (like for IITreeSets), and to run other test classes twice.
-
Tim Peters authored
plus cleanup of a previous such fix.
-
Tim Peters authored
bucket reference. BTree_rangeSearch(): Fixed one place likewise.
-
Tim Peters authored
little on redundant activations.
-
Tim Peters authored
key S in a bucket in a BTree is deleted, doing a range search on the BTree with S on the high end may claim that the range is empty even when it's not. It proved difficult to fix this correctly and efficiently in all cases (our BTrees don't like "searching backwards"). The implementation here is a new and non-recursive one (in effect, to do this efficiently you have to remember the deepest point in the tree where it was *possible* to "go one left" of where binary search tells you to go; an iterative algorithm makes that part all but obvious). Alas, the number of uses of persistence macros is amazing, unfortunately making this still-hairy algorithm hard to follow. testPathologicalRangeSearch(): uncommented the lines that failed before this patch. They pass now. Insecurity: The test case only exercises the simplest possible form of the failure. Any failing case is hard to provoke, even the simplest. The hairier failing cases require generating degenerate trees, deep and with some interior nodes near the top having just one or two children (since the tree needs to be deep too, that isn't easy to provoke). I'll think about how to provoke this without needing to build up multi-million element trees first; maybe using __setstate__ directly is the answer.
-
Tim Peters authored
references, what must not be and what may be a ghost, and exactly what "last" means, it was surprisingly unclear). Also simplified the implementation (to my eyes -- it's arguable, but I'm the one working on it, so my eyes count <wink>). I believe this routine is key to fixing the range-search bug efficiently.
-
- 12 Jun, 2002 10 commits
-
-
Tim Peters authored
-
Tim Peters authored
commented out for now, because it fails. I'm working on a fix. The problem was found by eyeballing the range-test implementation. If you delete a key from a BTree that just happens to be the first key in a bucket, then a later high-end range search giving that specific key as the endpoint claims that no keys are in the range, and whether or not that's actually true.
-
Tim Peters authored
-
Shane Hathaway authored
so makes the full suite brittle. Cleaned out all the places where unit tests change sys.path. (Use the PYTHONPATH environment variable instead.) Also brought SearchIndex tests up to date, which I didn't really need to do since SearchIndex is deprecated, but I did it as part of figuring out the failed Interface tests, so I might as well check in my work. ;-) One of the test modules in SearchIndex forgets to define a global named "Dummy", actually, so all the tests were failing before this checkin anyway.
-
Tim Peters authored
-
Jeremy Hylton authored
-
Jeremy Hylton authored
Reindent MUCH_RING_CHECKING test.
-
Jeremy Hylton authored
-
Jeremy Hylton authored
Ignore invalidations on objects where _p_oid is None. In other places, assert the _p_oid is not None. Also, add whitespace in a bunch of places.
-
Tim Peters authored
on Mac OS Roman Numeral <wink>. The prototypes sorters.c needs here should be supplied by <stdlib.h> anyway, which is also being included.
-
- 11 Jun, 2002 8 commits
-
-
Tim Peters authored
caller was compensating for this, others weren't, easier to fix the routine than its callers (it's unexpected that an error return may require the caller to decref an output argument). Noted but did not yet fix what looks to be a subtle algorithmic problem that can result in a bad answer in an unlikely (but possible) case.
-
Jeremy Hylton authored
Do not encode the file position in the transaction id used for undo. An attacker could construct a pickle with a bogus transaction record in its binary data, deduce the position of the pickle in the file from the undo log, then submit an undo with a bogus file position that caused the pickle to get written as a regular data record. Bad stuff. The new implementation uses a straight linear search backwards from the most recent transaction header.
-
Jeremy Hylton authored
-
Tim Peters authored
directly without doing the unghostification dance. Repaired to cache the child length once in a local vrbl, bracketed by the right persistence stuff.
-
Jeremy Hylton authored
-
Jeremy Hylton authored
-
Jeremy Hylton authored
-
Tim Peters authored
an error return.
-