##// END OF EJS Templates
make: switch the PYTHON default to `py.exe -3` on Windows...
make: switch the PYTHON default to `py.exe -3` on Windows Python3 _is_ named `python.exe` on Windows, but that isn't necessarily on PATH when installing from python.org. I do happen to have a python.exe on PATH in `$LOCALAPPDATA/Microsoft/WindowsApps`, but it appears to be 0 bytes (likely because of permission issues), and doesn't run: $ python -V - Cannot open Pulkit hit the same error as I did though, so it isn't just my system: $ make -C . local make: Entering directory `/home/Dell/repos/hg-committed` python setup.py \ build_py -c -d . \ build_ext -i \ build_hgexe -i \ build_mo - Cannot openmake: *** [local] Error 1 The `py.exe` dispatcher lives in the Windows directory (so it is on PATH), looks up the python.org installation, and invokes that interpreter directly. I get a warning with py39, but if it's our issue, it was an existing one: $ make -C .. local make: Entering directory `/c/Users/Matt/hg' py -3 setup.py \ build_py -c -d . \ build_ext -i \ build_hgexe -i \ build_mo C:\Users\Matt\AppData\Local\Programs\Python\Python39\lib\site-packages\setuptools\distutils_patch.py:25: UserWarning: Distutils was imported before Setuptools. This usage is discouraged and may exhibit undesirable behaviors or errors. Please use Setuptools' objects directly or at least import Setuptools first. warnings.warn( The end result is a py3 based hg.exe that annoyingly won't run because it can't find python39.dll. It will run tests (the ones without the `python3` shbang line anyway), because the test runner adjusts PATH to include the python running it. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D9361

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fm1readmarkers.cc
59 lines | 1.4 KiB | text/x-c | CppLexer
#include <Python.h>
#include <assert.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <string>
#include "pyutil.h"
extern "C" {
static PYCODETYPE *code;
extern "C" int LLVMFuzzerInitialize(int *argc, char ***argv)
{
contrib::initpy(*argv[0]);
code = (PYCODETYPE *)Py_CompileString(R"py(
def maybeint(s, default):
try:
return int(s)
except ValueError:
return default
try:
parts = data.split('\0', 2)
if len(parts) == 3:
offset, stop, data = parts
elif len(parts) == 2:
stop, data = parts
offset = 0
else:
offset = stop = 0
offset, stop = maybeint(offset, 0), maybeint(stop, len(data))
parsers.fm1readmarkers(data, offset, stop)
except Exception as e:
pass
# uncomment this print if you're editing this Python code
# to debug failures.
# print e
)py",
"fuzzer", Py_file_input);
return 0;
}
int LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput(const uint8_t *Data, size_t Size)
{
PyObject *text =
PyBytes_FromStringAndSize((const char *)Data, (Py_ssize_t)Size);
PyObject *locals = PyDict_New();
PyDict_SetItemString(locals, "data", text);
PyObject *res = PyEval_EvalCode(code, contrib::pyglobals(), locals);
if (!res) {
PyErr_Print();
}
Py_XDECREF(res);
Py_DECREF(locals);
Py_DECREF(text);
return 0; // Non-zero return values are reserved for future use.
}
}