Operating System Utilities¶
- PyObject*
PyOS_FSPath(PyObject *path)¶ - Return value: New reference.
Return the file system representation forpath. If the object is a
strorbytesobject, then its reference count isincremented. If the object implements theos.PathLikeinterface,then__fspath__()is returned as long as it is astrorbytesobject. OtherwiseTypeErroris raisedandNULLis returned.New in version 3.6.
- int
Py_FdIsInteractive(FILE *fp, const char *filename)¶ Return true (nonzero) if the standard I/O filefp with namefilename isdeemed interactive. This is the case for files for which
isatty(fileno(fp))is true. If the global flagPy_InteractiveFlagis true, this functionalso returns true if thefilename pointer isNULL or if the name is equal toone of the strings'<stdin>'or'???'.
- void
PyOS_AfterFork()¶ Function to update some internal state after a process fork; this should becalled in the new process if the Python interpreter will continue to be used.If a new executable is loaded into the new process, this function does not needto be called.
- int
PyOS_CheckStack()¶ Return true when the interpreter runs out of stack space. This is a reliablecheck, but is only available when
USE_STACKCHECKis defined (currentlyon Windows using the Microsoft Visual C++ compiler).USE_STACKCHECKwill be defined automatically; you should never change the definition in yourown code.
- PyOS_sighandler_t
PyOS_getsig(int i)¶ Return the current signal handler for signali. This is a thin wrapper aroundeither
sigaction()orsignal(). Do not call those functionsdirectly!PyOS_sighandler_tis a typedef alias forvoid(*)(int).
- PyOS_sighandler_t
PyOS_setsig(int i, PyOS_sighandler_t h)¶ Set the signal handler for signali to beh; return the old signal handler.This is a thin wrapper around either
sigaction()orsignal(). Donot call those functions directly!PyOS_sighandler_tis a typedefalias forvoid(*)(int).
- wchar_t*
Py_DecodeLocale(const char* arg, size_t *size)¶ Decode a byte string from the locale encoding with thesurrogateescapeerror handler: undecodable bytes are decoded ascharacters in range U+DC80..U+DCFF. If a byte sequence can be decoded as asurrogate character, escape the bytes using the surrogateescape errorhandler instead of decoding them.
Encoding, highest priority to lowest priority:
UTF-8on macOS and Android;ASCIIif theLC_CTYPElocale is"C",nl_langinfo(CODESET)returns theASCIIencoding (or an alias),andmbstowcs()andwcstombs()functions use theISO-8859-1encoding.the current locale encoding (
LC_CTYPElocale).
Return a pointer to a newly allocated wide character string, use
PyMem_RawFree()to free the memory. If size is notNULL, writethe number of wide characters excluding the null character into*size.Return
NULLon decoding error or memory allocation error. Ifsize isnotNULL,*sizeis set to(size_t)-1on memory error or set to(size_t)-2on decoding error.Decoding errors should never happen, unless there is a bug in the Clibrary.
Use the
Py_EncodeLocale()function to encode the character stringback to a byte string.See also
The
PyUnicode_DecodeFSDefaultAndSize()andPyUnicode_DecodeLocaleAndSize()functions.New in version 3.5.
- char*
Py_EncodeLocale(const wchar_t *text, size_t *error_pos)¶ Encode a wide character string to the locale encoding with thesurrogateescape error handler: surrogate charactersin the range U+DC80..U+DCFF are converted to bytes 0x80..0xFF.
Encoding, highest priority to lowest priority:
UTF-8on macOS and Android;ASCIIif theLC_CTYPElocale is"C",nl_langinfo(CODESET)returns theASCIIencoding (or an alias),andmbstowcs()andwcstombs()functions uses theISO-8859-1encoding.the current locale encoding.
Return a pointer to a newly allocated byte string, use
PyMem_Free()to free the memory. ReturnNULLon encoding error or memory allocationerrorIf error_pos is not
NULL,*error_posis set to the index of theinvalid character on encoding error, or set to(size_t)-1otherwise.Use the
Py_DecodeLocale()function to decode the bytes string backto a wide character string.See also
The
PyUnicode_EncodeFSDefault()andPyUnicode_EncodeLocale()functions.New in version 3.5.
System Functions¶
These are utility functions that make functionality from thesys moduleaccessible to C code. They all work with the current interpreter thread’ssys module’s dict, which is contained in the internal thread state structure.
- PyObject *
PySys_GetObject(const char *name)¶ - Return value: Borrowed reference.
Return the objectname from the
sysmodule orNULL if it doesnot exist, without setting an exception.
- int
PySys_SetObject(const char *name,PyObject *v)¶ Setname in the
sysmodule tov unlessv isNULL, in whichcasename is deleted from the sys module. Returns0on success,-1on error.
- void
PySys_ResetWarnOptions()¶ Reset
sys.warnoptionsto an empty list.
- void
PySys_AddWarnOption(wchar_t *s)¶ Appends to
sys.warnoptions.
- void
PySys_AddWarnOptionUnicode(PyObject *unicode)¶ Appendunicode to
sys.warnoptions.
- void
PySys_SetPath(wchar_t *path)¶ Set
sys.pathto a list object of paths found inpath which shouldbe a list of paths separated with the platform’s search path delimiter(:on Unix,;on Windows).
- void
PySys_WriteStdout(const char *format, ...)¶ Write the output string described byformat to
sys.stdout. Noexceptions are raised, even if truncation occurs (see below).format should limit the total size of the formatted output string to1000 bytes or less – after 1000 bytes, the output string is truncated.In particular, this means that no unrestricted “%s” formats should occur;these should be limited using “%.<N>s” where <N> is a decimal numbercalculated so that <N> plus the maximum size of other formatted text does notexceed 1000 bytes. Also watch out for “%f”, which can print hundreds ofdigits for very large numbers.
If a problem occurs, or
sys.stdoutis unset, the formatted messageis written to the real (C level)stdout.
- void
PySys_WriteStderr(const char *format, ...)¶ As
PySys_WriteStdout(), but write tosys.stderrorstderrinstead.
- void
PySys_FormatStdout(const char *format, ...)¶ Function similar to PySys_WriteStdout() but format the message using
PyUnicode_FromFormatV()and don’t truncate the message to anarbitrary length.New in version 3.2.
- void
PySys_FormatStderr(const char *format, ...)¶ As
PySys_FormatStdout(), but write tosys.stderrorstderrinstead.New in version 3.2.
- void
PySys_AddXOption(const wchar_t *s)¶ Parses as a set of
-Xoptions and add them to the currentoptions mapping as returned byPySys_GetXOptions().New in version 3.2.
- PyObject *
PySys_GetXOptions()¶ - Return value: Borrowed reference.
Return the current dictionary of
-Xoptions, similarly tosys._xoptions. On error,NULL is returned and an exception isset.New in version 3.2.
Process Control¶
- void
Py_FatalError(const char *message)¶ Print a fatal error message and kill the process. No cleanup is performed.This function should only be invoked when a condition is detected that wouldmake it dangerous to continue using the Python interpreter; e.g., when theobject administration appears to be corrupted. On Unix, the standard C libraryfunction
abort()is called which will attempt to produce acorefile.
- void
Py_Exit(int status)¶ Exit the current process. This calls
Py_FinalizeEx()and then calls thestandard C library functionexit(status). IfPy_FinalizeEx()indicates an error, the exit status is set to 120.Changed in version 3.6:Errors from finalization no longer ignored.
- int
Py_AtExit(void (*func)())¶ Register a cleanup function to be called by
Py_FinalizeEx(). The cleanupfunction will be called with no arguments and should return no value. At most32 cleanup functions can be registered. When the registration is successful,Py_AtExit()returns0; on failure, it returns-1. The cleanupfunction registered last is called first. Each cleanup function will be calledat most once. Since Python’s internal finalization will have completed beforethe cleanup function, no Python APIs should be called byfunc.
