On Tue, 11 Dec 2012 08:16:27 +0100 Antoine Pitrou <solip...@pitrou.net> wrote:
> On Tue, 11 Dec 2012 03:05:19 +0100 (CET) > gregory.p.smith <python-check...@python.org> wrote: > > Using 'long double' to force this structure to be worst case aligned is no > > longer required as of Python 2.5+ when the gc_refs changed from an int (4 > > bytes) to a Py_ssize_t (8 bytes) as the minimum size is 16 bytes. > > > > The use of a 'long double' triggered a warning by Clang trunk's > > Undefined-Behavior Sanitizer as on many platforms a long double requires > > 16-byte alignment but the Python memory allocator only guarantees 8 byte > > alignment. > > > > So our code would allocate and use these structures with technically > > improper > > alignment. Though it didn't matter since the 'dummy' field is never used. > > This silences that warning. > > > > Spelunking into code history, the double was added in 2001 to force better > > alignment on some platforms and changed to a long double in 2002 to appease > > Tru64. That issue should no loner be present since the upgrade from int to > > Py_ssize_t where the minimum structure size increased to 16 (unless anyone > > knows of a platform where ssize_t is 4 bytes?) > > What?? Every 32-bit platform has a 4 bytes ssize_t (and size_t). > > > We can probably get rid of the double and this union hack all together > > today. > > That is a slightly more invasive change that can be left for later. > > How do you suggest to get rid of it? Some platforms still have strict > alignment rules and we must enforce that PyObjects (*) are always > aligned to the largest possible alignment, since a PyObject-derived > struct can hold arbitrary C types. Ok, I hadn't seen your proposal. I find it reasonable: “A more correct non-hacky alternative if any alignment issues are still found would be to use a compiler specific alignment declaration on the structure and determine which value to use at configure time.” However, the commit is still problematic, and I think it should be reverted. We can't remove the alignment hack just because it seems to be useless on x86(-64). Regards Antoine. _______________________________________________ Python-Dev mailing list Python-Dev@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-dev Unsubscribe: http://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-dev/archive%40mail-archive.com