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Fix fpectl-induced ABI breakage #73323

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njsmith opened this issue Jan 3, 2017 · 18 comments
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Fix fpectl-induced ABI breakage #73323

njsmith opened this issue Jan 3, 2017 · 18 comments
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3.7 (EOL) end of life extension-modules C modules in the Modules dir

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@njsmith
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njsmith commented Jan 3, 2017

BPO 29137
Nosy @Yhg1s, @rhettinger, @doko42, @mdickinson, @ncoghlan, @vstinner, @benjaminp, @njsmith
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  • bpo-29137: Remove fpectl module #4789
  • Note: these values reflect the state of the issue at the time it was migrated and might not reflect the current state.

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    GitHub fields:

    assignee = None
    closed_at = <Date 2021-02-18.11:24:18.753>
    created_at = <Date 2017-01-03.00:15:10.391>
    labels = ['extension-modules', '3.7']
    title = 'Fix fpectl-induced ABI breakage'
    updated_at = <Date 2021-02-18.11:24:18.753>
    user = 'https://github.com/njsmith'

    bugs.python.org fields:

    activity = <Date 2021-02-18.11:24:18.753>
    actor = 'vstinner'
    assignee = 'none'
    closed = True
    closed_date = <Date 2021-02-18.11:24:18.753>
    closer = 'vstinner'
    components = ['Extension Modules']
    creation = <Date 2017-01-03.00:15:10.391>
    creator = 'njs'
    dependencies = []
    files = []
    hgrepos = []
    issue_num = 29137
    keywords = ['patch']
    message_count = 18.0
    messages = ['284511', '284529', '284532', '284540', '293803', '293806', '293816', '293819', '293820', '293870', '293872', '293901', '309533', '309539', '309769', '309780', '356875', '387217']
    nosy_count = 10.0
    nosy_names = ['twouters', 'rhettinger', 'doko', 'mark.dickinson', 'ncoghlan', 'vstinner', 'benjamin.peterson', 'stutzbach', 'njs', 'Dima Pasechnik']
    pr_nums = ['4789']
    priority = 'normal'
    resolution = 'fixed'
    stage = 'resolved'
    status = 'closed'
    superseder = None
    type = None
    url = 'https://bugs.python.org/issue29137'
    versions = ['Python 2.7', 'Python 3.5', 'Python 3.6', 'Python 3.7']

    @njsmith
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    njsmith commented Jan 3, 2017

    It turns out that CPython built with --with-fpectl has a different ABI than CPython built without --with-fpectl (which is the default). Specifically, if you have an extension module built against a --with-fpectl CPython, and it uses the PyFPE_{START,END}_PROTECT macros (as e.g. Cython modules do), then it ends up referring to some symbols that aren't provided by no-fpectl CPython builds.

    These macros are part of the stable ABI, so it's possible (though unlikely?) that there are existing modules using the stable ABI that refer to these symbols.

    Mailing list discussion:
    December: https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2016-December/147065.html
    January: https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2017-January/147092.html
    Guido's "let's get rid of it": https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2017-January/147094.html

    There are 3 parts to the fpectl machinery:

    • macros PyFPE_{START,END}_PROTECT in Include/pyfpe.h, which are part of the public C API. Depending on --with-fpectl, these are either no-ops, or else refer to:
    • global symbols PyFPE_{jbuf,counter,dummy}, defined in Python/pyfpe.c iff --with-fpectl is enabled.
    • the stdlib module 'fpectl' (Modules/fpectlmodule.c) which provides some Python APIs that make use of the information that the macros put into the global symbols. (If the user doesn't use fpectl, then the macros do nothing except update the global variables.)

    From the python-dev discussion, I think the resolution is:

    • for all supported CPython releases, we should modify Python/pyfpe.c so that the PyFPE_jbuf and PyFPE_counter are defined unconditionally. (I.e., remove the #ifdef WANT_SIGFPE_HANDLER that currently protects their definitions). After this change, all CPython builds will be able to import all CPython extension modules (though the actual fpectl functionality may or may not be available).

    • in the next 3.5 and maybe 3.4 releases, we should add a deprecation warning to the fpectl module.

    • in the next 2.7 release, we should add a Py3k warning to the fpectl module.

    • in trunk / 3.7, we should remove --with-fpectl and the fpectl stdlib module entirely. For stable API compatibility we might want to leave the PyFPE_* macros (defined as no-ops) and/or the PyFPE_{jbuf,counter,dummy} symbols, but nothing will actually use them.

    @njsmith njsmith added 3.7 (EOL) end of life extension-modules C modules in the Modules dir labels Jan 3, 2017
    @ncoghlan
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    ncoghlan commented Jan 3, 2017

    • 3.4 is already in security-fix only mode so we can safely ignore it for this purpose

    • 3.5.3 is likely to be the last general bugfix release of 3.5, so we can probably skip that as well

    • that would mean the ABI compability shims would only go in 3.6.1 and the next 2.7 release

    At that point, does it actually make sense to provide the shims? Or should we instead just add the deprecation warnings and say "Don't use the --with-fpectl option, as it doesn't work properly, and breaks ABI compatibility for extension modules built with that Python"?

    And then add a build time "#pragma message '--with-fpectl' is deprecated as it breaks extension module ABI compatibility" to the WANT_SIGFPE_HANDLER branch in Include/fpectl.h

    @njsmith
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    njsmith commented Jan 3, 2017

    At that point, does it actually make sense to provide the shims? Or should we instead just add the deprecation warnings and say "Don't use the --with-fpectl option, as it doesn't work properly, and breaks ABI compatibility for extension modules built with that Python"?

    "Providing the shims" consists of deleting two lines of code, so eh, why not? And in theory there could be "stable ABI" extensions that depend on the shims. But I agree that it doesn't make much difference either way.

    And then add a build time "#pragma message '--with-fpectl' is deprecated as it breaks extension module ABI compatibility" to the WANT_SIGFPE_HANDLER branch in Include/fpectl.h

    This would hassle every end user who builds extension modules on Debian/Ubuntu (b/c their default Python build uses --with-fpectl). But end users can't do anything about how Debian/Ubuntu build CPython. And in fact Debian/Ubuntu can't do anything about how Debian/Ubuntu build CPython either until 3.7 comes out and breaks ABI, because switching now would break installed systems...

    So long as we keep the PyFPE_* macros as no-ops (which technically we have to to preserve the stable ABI), then there's no need to break compatibility at the C API level. The place we want to break compatibility is by dropping the Python-level fpectl package, so I think that's where we should warn.

    @ncoghlan
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    ncoghlan commented Jan 3, 2017

    Ah, cool - I didn't know that Debian built with fpectl enabled by default. In that case, +1 for:

    • low maintenance ABI and API compatibility shims that are kept around indefinitely (since they leaked into the limited API/stable ABI) but don't actually do anything
    • deprecating and removing the fpectl module
    • adding the ABI compatibility shims in the maintenance releases where the retroactive deprecation warnings are introduced

    @DimaPasechnik
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    DimaPasechnik mannequin commented May 16, 2017

    While fpectl might be a bit rusty, this is a priceless tool in debugging situations, where one needs to identify components that do something wrong to FPU, see e.g.
    numpy/numpy#9007
    and the related
    https://trac.sagemath.org/ticket/22799

    As long as there is no equivalent, it's too early to discuss getting rid of it, IMHO.

    @njsmith
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    njsmith commented May 16, 2017

    @dima: are you volunteering to fix and maintain it? I can see why it's useful to have some way to get at the fpu flags, but I don't see how fpectl specifically helps with that issue, and fpectl has always been broken on x86-64.

    @DimaPasechnik
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    DimaPasechnik mannequin commented May 16, 2017

    @njs: Fixing this entails switching over from ieeefp to fenv, right? Looks doable, although not trivial.
    It might potentially be useful for various numerics, IMHO.

    @njsmith
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    njsmith commented May 16, 2017

    Also fixing the abi issues that started this, and probably making an argument for why it makes sense for all of cpython's built-in float operations to check the fpu flags, and to do so using a weird longjmp-based mechanism that only some platforms support. The fact that it's disabled by default and has been broken for a decade+ without anyone noticing might be working against you here...

    You might get the impression that I think this is a bad idea. I do :-). But I am genuinely trying to helpful; I'm sure people would be willing to listen to an argument, and if you want to make one then those are the sorts of issues you're likely to need some answer for.

    @njsmith
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    njsmith commented May 16, 2017

    Another option you might want to consider is proposing to add a proper fpu control flag setting/checking API to the math module.

    @DimaPasechnik
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    DimaPasechnik mannequin commented May 17, 2017

    @njs: to point out that usefulness of this module is not just wishful thinking. I just used it to locate, up to the line in a Python extension module written in C, a bug in Sagemath (that has perhaps 20 FPU-using extensions, some of them as large as numpy). (Without using it we were pulling out our hair for weeks over this)

    https://trac.sagemath.org/ticket/22799#comment:103

    Thanks goodness that fpectl@FreeBSD is easy to fix by commenting out a couple of "fpresetsticky(fpgetsticky());" lines---fpresetsticky() is not available on 64-bit platforms.
    (our primary concern is OSX, where fpectl never worked---fortunately FreeBSD is close enough relative...)

    @DimaPasechnik
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    DimaPasechnik mannequin commented May 17, 2017

    PS. I would volunteer to fix it and maintain it, assuming I have some modest funding to support such an activity. (What precisely "it" should be, is another question).

    @njsmith
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    njsmith commented May 17, 2017

    @dima:

    @njs: to point out that usefulness of this module is not just wishful thinking. I just used it to locate, up to the line in a Python extension module written in C, a bug in Sagemath (that has perhaps 20 FPU-using extensions, some of them as large as numpy). (Without using it we were pulling out our hair for weeks over this)

    That's pretty cool :-). But from skimming your link, it sounds like it would have been sufficient in your case to add a call to "fesetmask(FP_X_INV)" using C or Cython or ctypes (or directly in gdb), and then running the program under gdb to get a backtrace where the SIGFPE was delivered? Is that correct? Or did your debugging depend on the specific fpectl machinery for responding to that signal?

    PS. I would volunteer to fix it and maintain it, assuming I have some modest funding to support such an activity.

    I'm not personally aware of any funding sources for this, if that's the question.

    @njsmith
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    njsmith commented Jan 6, 2018

    Ping -- anyone up for reviewing PR 4789?

    #4789

    It's pretty straightforward, and I figure better to ping now and beat the end-of-month rush :-). Also, it has an autoconf refresh in it, so it's likely to develop spurious conflicts at some point.

    @benjaminp
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    New changeset 735ae8d by Benjamin Peterson (Nathaniel J. Smith) in branch 'master':
    bpo-29137: Remove fpectl module (bpo-4789)
    735ae8d

    @doko42
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    doko42 commented Jan 10, 2018

    reopening. this patch introduces two new symbols unconditionally, which were not defined for non-pyfpe builds before (PyFPE_counter and PyFPE_jbuf).

    @doko42 doko42 reopened this Jan 10, 2018
    @njsmith
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    njsmith commented Jan 10, 2018

    Yes, they're intentionally retained as no-ops, so that it remains possible to load old extensions that were compiled against an fpe build and refer to those symbols. Is there a problem?

    @vstinner
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    I propose PR 17231: "PyFPE_START_PROTECT() and PyFPE_END_PROTECT() macros are empty: they do nothing for one year (since commit 735ae8d), stop using them."

    @vstinner
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    I created bpo-43250: "[C API] Depreate or remove PyFPE_START_PROTECT() and PyFPE_END_PROTECT()".

    By the way, I close this issue: there is no activity since 2019.

    @ezio-melotti ezio-melotti transferred this issue from another repository Apr 10, 2022
    da-woods added a commit to da-woods/cython that referenced this issue Nov 18, 2023
    These macros stopped doing anything in Python 3.7 (and may have
    been broken before): python/cpython#73323.
    
    This has the side-effect of fixing basic arthmetic in the limited
    API.
    da-woods added a commit to cython/cython that referenced this issue Nov 20, 2023
    * Drop PyFPE macros
    
    These macros stopped doing anything in Python 3.7 (and may have
    been broken before): python/cpython#73323.
    
    This has the side-effect of fixing basic arthmetic in the limited
    API.
    
    * Catch a couple more uses
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