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/*
* This file is part of the MicroPython project, http://micropython.org/
*
* The MIT License (MIT)
*
* Copyright (c) 2016 Damien P. George on behalf of Pycom Ltd
*
* Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
* of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
* in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
* to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
* copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
* furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
*
* The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
* all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
*
* THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
* IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
* FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
* AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
* LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
* OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
* THE SOFTWARE.
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include "py/runtime.h"
#include "py/stackctrl.h"
#if MICROPY_PY_THREAD
#include "py/mpthread.h"
#if MICROPY_DEBUG_VERBOSE // print debugging info
#define DEBUG_PRINT (1)
#define DEBUG_printf DEBUG_printf
#else // don't print debugging info
#define DEBUG_PRINT (0)
#define DEBUG_printf(...) (void)0
#endif
/****************************************************************/
// Lock object
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static const mp_obj_type_t mp_type_thread_lock;
typedef struct _mp_obj_thread_lock_t {
mp_obj_base_t base;
mp_thread_mutex_t mutex;
volatile bool locked;
} mp_obj_thread_lock_t;
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static mp_obj_thread_lock_t *mp_obj_new_thread_lock(void) {
mp_obj_thread_lock_t *self = mp_obj_malloc(mp_obj_thread_lock_t, &mp_type_thread_lock);
mp_thread_mutex_init(&self->mutex);
self->locked = false;
return self;
}
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static mp_obj_t thread_lock_acquire(size_t n_args, const mp_obj_t *args) {
mp_obj_thread_lock_t *self = MP_OBJ_TO_PTR(args[0]);
bool wait = true;
if (n_args > 1) {
wait = mp_obj_get_int(args[1]);
// TODO support timeout arg
}
MP_THREAD_GIL_EXIT();
int ret = mp_thread_mutex_lock(&self->mutex, wait);
MP_THREAD_GIL_ENTER();
if (ret == 0) {
return mp_const_false;
} else if (ret == 1) {
self->locked = true;
return mp_const_true;
} else {
mp_raise_OSError(-ret);
}
}
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static MP_DEFINE_CONST_FUN_OBJ_VAR_BETWEEN(thread_lock_acquire_obj, 1, 3, thread_lock_acquire);
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static mp_obj_t thread_lock_release(mp_obj_t self_in) {
mp_obj_thread_lock_t *self = MP_OBJ_TO_PTR(self_in);
if (!self->locked) {
mp_raise_msg(&mp_type_RuntimeError, NULL);
}
self->locked = false;
MP_THREAD_GIL_EXIT();
mp_thread_mutex_unlock(&self->mutex);
MP_THREAD_GIL_ENTER();
return mp_const_none;
}
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static MP_DEFINE_CONST_FUN_OBJ_1(thread_lock_release_obj, thread_lock_release);
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static mp_obj_t thread_lock_locked(mp_obj_t self_in) {
mp_obj_thread_lock_t *self = MP_OBJ_TO_PTR(self_in);
return mp_obj_new_bool(self->locked);
}
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static MP_DEFINE_CONST_FUN_OBJ_1(thread_lock_locked_obj, thread_lock_locked);
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static mp_obj_t thread_lock___exit__(size_t n_args, const mp_obj_t *args) {
(void)n_args; // unused
return thread_lock_release(args[0]);
}
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static MP_DEFINE_CONST_FUN_OBJ_VAR_BETWEEN(thread_lock___exit___obj, 4, 4, thread_lock___exit__);
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static const mp_rom_map_elem_t thread_lock_locals_dict_table[] = {
{ MP_ROM_QSTR(MP_QSTR_acquire), MP_ROM_PTR(&thread_lock_acquire_obj) },
{ MP_ROM_QSTR(MP_QSTR_release), MP_ROM_PTR(&thread_lock_release_obj) },
{ MP_ROM_QSTR(MP_QSTR_locked), MP_ROM_PTR(&thread_lock_locked_obj) },
{ MP_ROM_QSTR(MP_QSTR___enter__), MP_ROM_PTR(&thread_lock_acquire_obj) },
{ MP_ROM_QSTR(MP_QSTR___exit__), MP_ROM_PTR(&thread_lock___exit___obj) },
};
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static MP_DEFINE_CONST_DICT(thread_lock_locals_dict, thread_lock_locals_dict_table);
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static MP_DEFINE_CONST_OBJ_TYPE(
mp_type_thread_lock,
MP_QSTR_lock,
MP_TYPE_FLAG_NONE,
locals_dict, &thread_lock_locals_dict
);
/****************************************************************/
// _thread module
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static size_t thread_stack_size = 0;
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static mp_obj_t mod_thread_get_ident(void) {
return mp_obj_new_int_from_uint(mp_thread_get_id());
}
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static MP_DEFINE_CONST_FUN_OBJ_0(mod_thread_get_ident_obj, mod_thread_get_ident);
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static mp_obj_t mod_thread_stack_size(size_t n_args, const mp_obj_t *args) {
mp_obj_t ret = mp_obj_new_int_from_uint(thread_stack_size);
if (n_args == 0) {
thread_stack_size = 0;
} else {
thread_stack_size = mp_obj_get_int(args[0]);
}
return ret;
}
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static MP_DEFINE_CONST_FUN_OBJ_VAR_BETWEEN(mod_thread_stack_size_obj, 0, 1, mod_thread_stack_size);
typedef struct _thread_entry_args_t {
mp_obj_dict_t *dict_locals;
mp_obj_dict_t *dict_globals;
size_t stack_size;
mp_obj_t fun;
size_t n_args;
size_t n_kw;
mp_obj_t args[];
} thread_entry_args_t;
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static void *thread_entry(void *args_in) {
// Execution begins here for a new thread. We do not have the GIL.
thread_entry_args_t *args = (thread_entry_args_t *)args_in;
mp_state_thread_t ts;
mp_thread_init_state(&ts, args->stack_size, args->dict_locals, args->dict_globals);
py: Introduce a Python stack for scoped allocation. This patch introduces the MICROPY_ENABLE_PYSTACK option (disabled by default) which enables a &#34;Python stack&#34; that allows to allocate and free memory in a scoped, or Last-In-First-Out (LIFO) way, similar to alloca(). A new memory allocation API is introduced along with this Py-stack. It includes both &#34;local&#34; and &#34;nonlocal&#34; LIFO allocation. Local allocation is intended to be equivalent to using alloca(), whereby the same function must free the memory. Nonlocal allocation is where another function may free the memory, so long as it&#39;s still LIFO. Follow-up patches will convert all uses of alloca() and VLA to the new scoped allocation API. The old behaviour (using alloca()) will still be available, but when MICROPY_ENABLE_PYSTACK is enabled then alloca() is no longer required or used. The benefits of enabling this option are (or will be once subsequent patches are made to convert alloca()/VLA): - Toolchains without alloca() can use this feature to obtain correct and efficient scoped memory allocation (compared to using the heap instead of alloca(), which is slower). - Even if alloca() is available, enabling the Py-stack gives slightly more efficient use of stack space when calling nested Python functions, due to the way that compilers implement alloca(). - Enabling the Py-stack with the stackless mode allows for even more efficient stack usage, as well as retaining high performance (because the heap is no longer used to build and destroy stackless code states). - With Py-stack and stackless enabled, Python-calling-Python is no longer recursive in the C mp_execute_bytecode function. The micropython.pystack_use() function is included to measure usage of the Python stack.
7 years ago
#if MICROPY_ENABLE_PYSTACK
// TODO threading and pystack is not fully supported, for now just make a small stack
mp_obj_t mini_pystack[128];
mp_pystack_init(mini_pystack, &mini_pystack[128]);
#endif
MP_THREAD_GIL_ENTER();
// signal that we are set up and running
mp_thread_start();
// TODO set more thread-specific state here:
// cur_exception (root pointer)
DEBUG_printf("[thread] start ts=%p args=%p stack=%p\n", &ts, &args, MP_STATE_THREAD(stack_top));
nlr_buf_t nlr;
if (nlr_push(&nlr) == 0) {
mp_call_function_n_kw(args->fun, args->n_args, args->n_kw, args->args);
nlr_pop();
} else {
// uncaught exception
// check for SystemExit
mp_obj_base_t *exc = (mp_obj_base_t *)nlr.ret_val;
if (mp_obj_is_subclass_fast(MP_OBJ_FROM_PTR(exc->type), MP_OBJ_FROM_PTR(&mp_type_SystemExit))) {
// swallow exception silently
} else {
// print exception out
mp_printf(MICROPY_ERROR_PRINTER, "Unhandled exception in thread started by ");
mp_obj_print_helper(MICROPY_ERROR_PRINTER, args->fun, PRINT_REPR);
mp_printf(MICROPY_ERROR_PRINTER, "\n");
mp_obj_print_exception(MICROPY_ERROR_PRINTER, MP_OBJ_FROM_PTR(exc));
}
}
DEBUG_printf("[thread] finish ts=%p\n", &ts);
// signal that we are finished
mp_thread_finish();
MP_THREAD_GIL_EXIT();
return NULL;
}
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static mp_obj_t mod_thread_start_new_thread(size_t n_args, const mp_obj_t *args) {
// This structure holds the Python function and arguments for thread entry.
// We copy all arguments into this structure to keep ownership of them.
// We must be very careful about root pointers because this pointer may
// disappear from our address space before the thread is created.
thread_entry_args_t *th_args;
// get positional arguments
size_t pos_args_len;
mp_obj_t *pos_args_items;
mp_obj_get_array(args[1], &pos_args_len, &pos_args_items);
// check for keyword arguments
if (n_args == 2) {
// just position arguments
th_args = m_new_obj_var(thread_entry_args_t, args, mp_obj_t, pos_args_len);
th_args->n_kw = 0;
} else {
// positional and keyword arguments
if (mp_obj_get_type(args[2]) != &mp_type_dict) {
mp_raise_TypeError(MP_ERROR_TEXT("expecting a dict for keyword args"));
}
mp_map_t *map = &((mp_obj_dict_t *)MP_OBJ_TO_PTR(args[2]))->map;
th_args = m_new_obj_var(thread_entry_args_t, args, mp_obj_t, pos_args_len + 2 * map->used);
th_args->n_kw = map->used;
// copy across the keyword arguments
for (size_t i = 0, n = pos_args_len; i < map->alloc; ++i) {
if (mp_map_slot_is_filled(map, i)) {
th_args->args[n++] = map->table[i].key;
th_args->args[n++] = map->table[i].value;
}
}
}
// copy across the positional arguments
th_args->n_args = pos_args_len;
memcpy(th_args->args, pos_args_items, pos_args_len * sizeof(mp_obj_t));
// pass our locals and globals into the new thread
th_args->dict_locals = mp_locals_get();
th_args->dict_globals = mp_globals_get();
// set the stack size to use
th_args->stack_size = thread_stack_size;
// set the function for thread entry
th_args->fun = args[0];
// spawn the thread!
return mp_obj_new_int_from_uint(mp_thread_create(thread_entry, th_args, &th_args->stack_size));
}
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static MP_DEFINE_CONST_FUN_OBJ_VAR_BETWEEN(mod_thread_start_new_thread_obj, 2, 3, mod_thread_start_new_thread);
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static mp_obj_t mod_thread_exit(void) {
mp_raise_type(&mp_type_SystemExit);
}
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static MP_DEFINE_CONST_FUN_OBJ_0(mod_thread_exit_obj, mod_thread_exit);
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static mp_obj_t mod_thread_allocate_lock(void) {
return MP_OBJ_FROM_PTR(mp_obj_new_thread_lock());
}
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static MP_DEFINE_CONST_FUN_OBJ_0(mod_thread_allocate_lock_obj, mod_thread_allocate_lock);
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static const mp_rom_map_elem_t mp_module_thread_globals_table[] = {
{ MP_ROM_QSTR(MP_QSTR___name__), MP_ROM_QSTR(MP_QSTR__thread) },
{ MP_ROM_QSTR(MP_QSTR_LockType), MP_ROM_PTR(&mp_type_thread_lock) },
{ MP_ROM_QSTR(MP_QSTR_get_ident), MP_ROM_PTR(&mod_thread_get_ident_obj) },
{ MP_ROM_QSTR(MP_QSTR_stack_size), MP_ROM_PTR(&mod_thread_stack_size_obj) },
{ MP_ROM_QSTR(MP_QSTR_start_new_thread), MP_ROM_PTR(&mod_thread_start_new_thread_obj) },
{ MP_ROM_QSTR(MP_QSTR_exit), MP_ROM_PTR(&mod_thread_exit_obj) },
{ MP_ROM_QSTR(MP_QSTR_allocate_lock), MP_ROM_PTR(&mod_thread_allocate_lock_obj) },
};
all: Remove the &#34;STATIC&#34; macro and just use &#34;static&#34; instead. The STATIC macro was introduced a very long time ago in commit d5df6cd44a433d6253a61cb0f987835fbc06b2de. The original reason for this was to have the option to define it to nothing so that all static functions become global functions and therefore visible to certain debug tools, so one could do function size comparison and other things. This STATIC feature is rarely (if ever) used. And with the use of LTO and heavy inline optimisation, analysing the size of individual functions when they are not static is not a good representation of the size of code when fully optimised. So the macro does not have much use and it&#39;s simpler to just remove it. Then you know exactly what it&#39;s doing. For example, newcomers don&#39;t have to learn what the STATIC macro is and why it exists. Reading the code is also less &#34;loud&#34; with a lowercase static. One other minor point in favour of removing it, is that it stops bugs with `STATIC inline`, which should always be `static inline`. Methodology for this commit was: 1) git ls-files | egrep &#39;\.[ch]$&#39; | \ xargs sed -Ei &#34;s/(^| )STATIC($| )/\1static\2/&#34; 2) Do some manual cleanup in the diff by searching for the word STATIC in comments and changing those back. 3) &#34;git-grep STATIC docs/&#34;, manually fixed those cases. 4) &#34;rg -t python STATIC&#34;, manually fixed codegen lines that used STATIC. This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors. Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton &lt;angus@redyak.com.au&gt;
8 months ago
static MP_DEFINE_CONST_DICT(mp_module_thread_globals, mp_module_thread_globals_table);
const mp_obj_module_t mp_module_thread = {
.base = { &mp_type_module },
.globals = (mp_obj_dict_t *)&mp_module_thread_globals,
};
MP_REGISTER_MODULE(MP_QSTR__thread, mp_module_thread);
#endif // MICROPY_PY_THREAD