Eryk Sun <[email protected]> added the comment:
The sys.stdout TextIOWrapper is stuck in a bad state. When the write() method
is called with an ASCII string, it implements an optimization that stores a
reference to the str() object in the internal pending_bytes instead of
immediately encoding the string. Subsequently _textiowrapper_writeflush()
attempts to create a bytes object for this ASCII string, but
PyBytes_FromStringAndSize fails with a memory error. It's stuck in this state
because it will never be able to flush the string.
The first workaround I thought of was to call to detach() to rewrap
sys.stdout.buffer with a new TextIOWrapper instance, but detach() attempts to
flush and fails. A hacky but simple and effective workaround is to just
re-initialize the wrapper. For example:
sys.stdout.__init__(sys.stdout.buffer, sys.stdout.encoding,
sys.stdout.errors, None, True)
This clears the internal pending_bytes.
----------
components: +IO
nosy: +eryksun
priority: normal -> high
versions: +Python 3.10, Python 3.9
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<https://bugs.python.org/issue43260>
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