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Skip Montanaro54455942003-01-29 15:41:33 +00001'''"Executable documentation" for the pickle module.
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00002
3Extensive comments about the pickle protocols and pickle-machine opcodes
4can be found here. Some functions meant for external use:
5
6genops(pickle)
7 Generate all the opcodes in a pickle, as (opcode, arg, position) triples.
8
Andrew M. Kuchlingd0c53fe2004-08-07 16:51:30 +00009dis(pickle, out=None, memo=None, indentlevel=4)
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +000010 Print a symbolic disassembly of a pickle.
Skip Montanaro54455942003-01-29 15:41:33 +000011'''
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +000012
Walter Dörwald42748a82007-06-12 16:40:17 +000013import codecs
Guido van Rossum98297ee2007-11-06 21:34:58 +000014import pickle
15import re
Walter Dörwald42748a82007-06-12 16:40:17 +000016
Christian Heimes3feef612008-02-11 06:19:17 +000017__all__ = ['dis', 'genops', 'optimize']
Tim Peters90cf2122004-11-06 23:45:48 +000018
Guido van Rossum98297ee2007-11-06 21:34:58 +000019bytes_types = pickle.bytes_types
20
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +000021# Other ideas:
22#
23# - A pickle verifier: read a pickle and check it exhaustively for
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +000024# well-formedness. dis() does a lot of this already.
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +000025#
26# - A protocol identifier: examine a pickle and return its protocol number
27# (== the highest .proto attr value among all the opcodes in the pickle).
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +000028# dis() already prints this info at the end.
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +000029#
30# - A pickle optimizer: for example, tuple-building code is sometimes more
31# elaborate than necessary, catering for the possibility that the tuple
32# is recursive. Or lots of times a PUT is generated that's never accessed
33# by a later GET.
34
35
36"""
37"A pickle" is a program for a virtual pickle machine (PM, but more accurately
38called an unpickling machine). It's a sequence of opcodes, interpreted by the
39PM, building an arbitrarily complex Python object.
40
41For the most part, the PM is very simple: there are no looping, testing, or
42conditional instructions, no arithmetic and no function calls. Opcodes are
43executed once each, from first to last, until a STOP opcode is reached.
44
45The PM has two data areas, "the stack" and "the memo".
46
47Many opcodes push Python objects onto the stack; e.g., INT pushes a Python
48integer object on the stack, whose value is gotten from a decimal string
49literal immediately following the INT opcode in the pickle bytestream. Other
50opcodes take Python objects off the stack. The result of unpickling is
51whatever object is left on the stack when the final STOP opcode is executed.
52
53The memo is simply an array of objects, or it can be implemented as a dict
54mapping little integers to objects. The memo serves as the PM's "long term
55memory", and the little integers indexing the memo are akin to variable
56names. Some opcodes pop a stack object into the memo at a given index,
57and others push a memo object at a given index onto the stack again.
58
59At heart, that's all the PM has. Subtleties arise for these reasons:
60
61+ Object identity. Objects can be arbitrarily complex, and subobjects
62 may be shared (for example, the list [a, a] refers to the same object a
63 twice). It can be vital that unpickling recreate an isomorphic object
64 graph, faithfully reproducing sharing.
65
66+ Recursive objects. For example, after "L = []; L.append(L)", L is a
67 list, and L[0] is the same list. This is related to the object identity
68 point, and some sequences of pickle opcodes are subtle in order to
69 get the right result in all cases.
70
71+ Things pickle doesn't know everything about. Examples of things pickle
72 does know everything about are Python's builtin scalar and container
73 types, like ints and tuples. They generally have opcodes dedicated to
74 them. For things like module references and instances of user-defined
75 classes, pickle's knowledge is limited. Historically, many enhancements
76 have been made to the pickle protocol in order to do a better (faster,
77 and/or more compact) job on those.
78
79+ Backward compatibility and micro-optimization. As explained below,
80 pickle opcodes never go away, not even when better ways to do a thing
81 get invented. The repertoire of the PM just keeps growing over time.
Tim Petersfdc03462003-01-28 04:56:33 +000082 For example, protocol 0 had two opcodes for building Python integers (INT
83 and LONG), protocol 1 added three more for more-efficient pickling of short
84 integers, and protocol 2 added two more for more-efficient pickling of
85 long integers (before protocol 2, the only ways to pickle a Python long
86 took time quadratic in the number of digits, for both pickling and
87 unpickling). "Opcode bloat" isn't so much a subtlety as a source of
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +000088 wearying complication.
89
90
91Pickle protocols:
92
93For compatibility, the meaning of a pickle opcode never changes. Instead new
94pickle opcodes get added, and each version's unpickler can handle all the
95pickle opcodes in all protocol versions to date. So old pickles continue to
96be readable forever. The pickler can generally be told to restrict itself to
97the subset of opcodes available under previous protocol versions too, so that
98users can create pickles under the current version readable by older
99versions. However, a pickle does not contain its version number embedded
100within it. If an older unpickler tries to read a pickle using a later
101protocol, the result is most likely an exception due to seeing an unknown (in
102the older unpickler) opcode.
103
104The original pickle used what's now called "protocol 0", and what was called
105"text mode" before Python 2.3. The entire pickle bytestream is made up of
106printable 7-bit ASCII characters, plus the newline character, in protocol 0.
Tim Petersfdc03462003-01-28 04:56:33 +0000107That's why it was called text mode. Protocol 0 is small and elegant, but
108sometimes painfully inefficient.
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000109
110The second major set of additions is now called "protocol 1", and was called
111"binary mode" before Python 2.3. This added many opcodes with arguments
112consisting of arbitrary bytes, including NUL bytes and unprintable "high bit"
113bytes. Binary mode pickles can be substantially smaller than equivalent
114text mode pickles, and sometimes faster too; e.g., BININT represents a 4-byte
115int as 4 bytes following the opcode, which is cheaper to unpickle than the
Tim Petersfdc03462003-01-28 04:56:33 +0000116(perhaps) 11-character decimal string attached to INT. Protocol 1 also added
117a number of opcodes that operate on many stack elements at once (like APPENDS
Tim Peters81098ac2003-01-28 05:12:08 +0000118and SETITEMS), and "shortcut" opcodes (like EMPTY_DICT and EMPTY_TUPLE).
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000119
120The third major set of additions came in Python 2.3, and is called "protocol
Tim Petersfdc03462003-01-28 04:56:33 +00001212". This added:
122
123- A better way to pickle instances of new-style classes (NEWOBJ).
124
125- A way for a pickle to identify its protocol (PROTO).
126
127- Time- and space- efficient pickling of long ints (LONG{1,4}).
128
129- Shortcuts for small tuples (TUPLE{1,2,3}}.
130
131- Dedicated opcodes for bools (NEWTRUE, NEWFALSE).
132
133- The "extension registry", a vector of popular objects that can be pushed
134 efficiently by index (EXT{1,2,4}). This is akin to the memo and GET, but
135 the registry contents are predefined (there's nothing akin to the memo's
136 PUT).
Guido van Rossumecb11042003-01-29 06:24:30 +0000137
Skip Montanaro54455942003-01-29 15:41:33 +0000138Another independent change with Python 2.3 is the abandonment of any
139pretense that it might be safe to load pickles received from untrusted
Guido van Rossumecb11042003-01-29 06:24:30 +0000140parties -- no sufficient security analysis has been done to guarantee
Skip Montanaro54455942003-01-29 15:41:33 +0000141this and there isn't a use case that warrants the expense of such an
Guido van Rossumecb11042003-01-29 06:24:30 +0000142analysis.
143
144To this end, all tests for __safe_for_unpickling__ or for
Alexandre Vassalottif7fa63d2008-05-11 08:55:36 +0000145copyreg.safe_constructors are removed from the unpickling code.
Guido van Rossumecb11042003-01-29 06:24:30 +0000146References to these variables in the descriptions below are to be seen
147as describing unpickling in Python 2.2 and before.
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000148"""
149
150# Meta-rule: Descriptions are stored in instances of descriptor objects,
151# with plain constructors. No meta-language is defined from which
152# descriptors could be constructed. If you want, e.g., XML, write a little
153# program to generate XML from the objects.
154
155##############################################################################
156# Some pickle opcodes have an argument, following the opcode in the
157# bytestream. An argument is of a specific type, described by an instance
158# of ArgumentDescriptor. These are not to be confused with arguments taken
159# off the stack -- ArgumentDescriptor applies only to arguments embedded in
160# the opcode stream, immediately following an opcode.
161
162# Represents the number of bytes consumed by an argument delimited by the
163# next newline character.
164UP_TO_NEWLINE = -1
165
166# Represents the number of bytes consumed by a two-argument opcode where
167# the first argument gives the number of bytes in the second argument.
Tim Petersfdb8cfa2003-01-28 00:13:19 +0000168TAKEN_FROM_ARGUMENT1 = -2 # num bytes is 1-byte unsigned int
169TAKEN_FROM_ARGUMENT4 = -3 # num bytes is 4-byte signed little-endian int
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000170
171class ArgumentDescriptor(object):
172 __slots__ = (
173 # name of descriptor record, also a module global name; a string
174 'name',
175
176 # length of argument, in bytes; an int; UP_TO_NEWLINE and
Tim Petersfdb8cfa2003-01-28 00:13:19 +0000177 # TAKEN_FROM_ARGUMENT{1,4} are negative values for variable-length
178 # cases
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000179 'n',
180
181 # a function taking a file-like object, reading this kind of argument
182 # from the object at the current position, advancing the current
183 # position by n bytes, and returning the value of the argument
184 'reader',
185
186 # human-readable docs for this arg descriptor; a string
187 'doc',
188 )
189
190 def __init__(self, name, n, reader, doc):
191 assert isinstance(name, str)
192 self.name = name
193
194 assert isinstance(n, int) and (n >= 0 or
Tim Petersfdb8cfa2003-01-28 00:13:19 +0000195 n in (UP_TO_NEWLINE,
196 TAKEN_FROM_ARGUMENT1,
197 TAKEN_FROM_ARGUMENT4))
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000198 self.n = n
199
200 self.reader = reader
201
202 assert isinstance(doc, str)
203 self.doc = doc
204
205from struct import unpack as _unpack
206
207def read_uint1(f):
Tim Peters55762f52003-01-28 16:01:25 +0000208 r"""
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000209 >>> import io
210 >>> read_uint1(io.BytesIO(b'\xff'))
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000211 255
212 """
213
214 data = f.read(1)
215 if data:
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000216 return data[0]
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000217 raise ValueError("not enough data in stream to read uint1")
218
219uint1 = ArgumentDescriptor(
220 name='uint1',
221 n=1,
222 reader=read_uint1,
223 doc="One-byte unsigned integer.")
224
225
226def read_uint2(f):
Tim Peters55762f52003-01-28 16:01:25 +0000227 r"""
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000228 >>> import io
229 >>> read_uint2(io.BytesIO(b'\xff\x00'))
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000230 255
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000231 >>> read_uint2(io.BytesIO(b'\xff\xff'))
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000232 65535
233 """
234
235 data = f.read(2)
236 if len(data) == 2:
237 return _unpack("<H", data)[0]
238 raise ValueError("not enough data in stream to read uint2")
239
240uint2 = ArgumentDescriptor(
241 name='uint2',
242 n=2,
243 reader=read_uint2,
244 doc="Two-byte unsigned integer, little-endian.")
245
246
247def read_int4(f):
Tim Peters55762f52003-01-28 16:01:25 +0000248 r"""
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000249 >>> import io
250 >>> read_int4(io.BytesIO(b'\xff\x00\x00\x00'))
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000251 255
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000252 >>> read_int4(io.BytesIO(b'\x00\x00\x00\x80')) == -(2**31)
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000253 True
254 """
255
256 data = f.read(4)
257 if len(data) == 4:
258 return _unpack("<i", data)[0]
259 raise ValueError("not enough data in stream to read int4")
260
261int4 = ArgumentDescriptor(
262 name='int4',
263 n=4,
264 reader=read_int4,
265 doc="Four-byte signed integer, little-endian, 2's complement.")
266
267
268def read_stringnl(f, decode=True, stripquotes=True):
Tim Peters55762f52003-01-28 16:01:25 +0000269 r"""
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000270 >>> import io
271 >>> read_stringnl(io.BytesIO(b"'abcd'\nefg\n"))
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000272 'abcd'
273
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000274 >>> read_stringnl(io.BytesIO(b"\n"))
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000275 Traceback (most recent call last):
276 ...
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000277 ValueError: no string quotes around b''
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000278
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000279 >>> read_stringnl(io.BytesIO(b"\n"), stripquotes=False)
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000280 ''
281
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000282 >>> read_stringnl(io.BytesIO(b"''\n"))
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000283 ''
284
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000285 >>> read_stringnl(io.BytesIO(b'"abcd"'))
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000286 Traceback (most recent call last):
287 ...
288 ValueError: no newline found when trying to read stringnl
289
290 Embedded escapes are undone in the result.
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000291 >>> read_stringnl(io.BytesIO(br"'a\n\\b\x00c\td'" + b"\n'e'"))
Tim Peters55762f52003-01-28 16:01:25 +0000292 'a\n\\b\x00c\td'
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000293 """
294
Guido van Rossum26986312007-07-17 00:19:46 +0000295 data = f.readline()
Guido van Rossum26d95c32007-08-27 23:18:54 +0000296 if not data.endswith(b'\n'):
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000297 raise ValueError("no newline found when trying to read stringnl")
298 data = data[:-1] # lose the newline
299
300 if stripquotes:
Guido van Rossum26d95c32007-08-27 23:18:54 +0000301 for q in (b'"', b"'"):
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000302 if data.startswith(q):
303 if not data.endswith(q):
304 raise ValueError("strinq quote %r not found at both "
305 "ends of %r" % (q, data))
306 data = data[1:-1]
307 break
308 else:
309 raise ValueError("no string quotes around %r" % data)
310
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000311 if decode:
Guido van Rossum98297ee2007-11-06 21:34:58 +0000312 data = codecs.escape_decode(data)[0].decode("ascii")
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000313 return data
314
315stringnl = ArgumentDescriptor(
316 name='stringnl',
317 n=UP_TO_NEWLINE,
318 reader=read_stringnl,
319 doc="""A newline-terminated string.
320
321 This is a repr-style string, with embedded escapes, and
322 bracketing quotes.
323 """)
324
325def read_stringnl_noescape(f):
Guido van Rossum98297ee2007-11-06 21:34:58 +0000326 return read_stringnl(f, stripquotes=False)
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000327
328stringnl_noescape = ArgumentDescriptor(
329 name='stringnl_noescape',
330 n=UP_TO_NEWLINE,
331 reader=read_stringnl_noescape,
332 doc="""A newline-terminated string.
333
334 This is a str-style string, without embedded escapes,
335 or bracketing quotes. It should consist solely of
336 printable ASCII characters.
337 """)
338
339def read_stringnl_noescape_pair(f):
Tim Peters55762f52003-01-28 16:01:25 +0000340 r"""
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000341 >>> import io
342 >>> read_stringnl_noescape_pair(io.BytesIO(b"Queue\nEmpty\njunk"))
Tim Petersd916cf42003-01-27 19:01:47 +0000343 'Queue Empty'
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000344 """
345
Tim Petersd916cf42003-01-27 19:01:47 +0000346 return "%s %s" % (read_stringnl_noescape(f), read_stringnl_noescape(f))
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000347
348stringnl_noescape_pair = ArgumentDescriptor(
349 name='stringnl_noescape_pair',
350 n=UP_TO_NEWLINE,
351 reader=read_stringnl_noescape_pair,
352 doc="""A pair of newline-terminated strings.
353
354 These are str-style strings, without embedded
355 escapes, or bracketing quotes. They should
356 consist solely of printable ASCII characters.
357 The pair is returned as a single string, with
Tim Petersd916cf42003-01-27 19:01:47 +0000358 a single blank separating the two strings.
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000359 """)
360
361def read_string4(f):
Tim Peters55762f52003-01-28 16:01:25 +0000362 r"""
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000363 >>> import io
364 >>> read_string4(io.BytesIO(b"\x00\x00\x00\x00abc"))
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000365 ''
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000366 >>> read_string4(io.BytesIO(b"\x03\x00\x00\x00abcdef"))
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000367 'abc'
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000368 >>> read_string4(io.BytesIO(b"\x00\x00\x00\x03abcdef"))
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000369 Traceback (most recent call last):
370 ...
371 ValueError: expected 50331648 bytes in a string4, but only 6 remain
372 """
373
374 n = read_int4(f)
375 if n < 0:
376 raise ValueError("string4 byte count < 0: %d" % n)
377 data = f.read(n)
378 if len(data) == n:
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000379 return data.decode("latin-1")
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000380 raise ValueError("expected %d bytes in a string4, but only %d remain" %
381 (n, len(data)))
382
383string4 = ArgumentDescriptor(
384 name="string4",
Tim Petersfdb8cfa2003-01-28 00:13:19 +0000385 n=TAKEN_FROM_ARGUMENT4,
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000386 reader=read_string4,
387 doc="""A counted string.
388
389 The first argument is a 4-byte little-endian signed int giving
390 the number of bytes in the string, and the second argument is
391 that many bytes.
392 """)
393
394
395def read_string1(f):
Tim Peters55762f52003-01-28 16:01:25 +0000396 r"""
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000397 >>> import io
398 >>> read_string1(io.BytesIO(b"\x00"))
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000399 ''
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000400 >>> read_string1(io.BytesIO(b"\x03abcdef"))
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000401 'abc'
402 """
403
404 n = read_uint1(f)
405 assert n >= 0
406 data = f.read(n)
407 if len(data) == n:
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000408 return data.decode("latin-1")
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000409 raise ValueError("expected %d bytes in a string1, but only %d remain" %
410 (n, len(data)))
411
412string1 = ArgumentDescriptor(
413 name="string1",
Tim Petersfdb8cfa2003-01-28 00:13:19 +0000414 n=TAKEN_FROM_ARGUMENT1,
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000415 reader=read_string1,
416 doc="""A counted string.
417
418 The first argument is a 1-byte unsigned int giving the number
419 of bytes in the string, and the second argument is that many
420 bytes.
421 """)
422
423
424def read_unicodestringnl(f):
Tim Peters55762f52003-01-28 16:01:25 +0000425 r"""
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000426 >>> import io
427 >>> read_unicodestringnl(io.BytesIO(b"abc\\uabcd\njunk")) == 'abc\uabcd'
428 True
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000429 """
430
Guido van Rossum26986312007-07-17 00:19:46 +0000431 data = f.readline()
Guido van Rossum26d95c32007-08-27 23:18:54 +0000432 if not data.endswith(b'\n'):
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000433 raise ValueError("no newline found when trying to read "
434 "unicodestringnl")
435 data = data[:-1] # lose the newline
Guido van Rossumef87d6e2007-05-02 19:09:54 +0000436 return str(data, 'raw-unicode-escape')
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000437
438unicodestringnl = ArgumentDescriptor(
439 name='unicodestringnl',
440 n=UP_TO_NEWLINE,
441 reader=read_unicodestringnl,
442 doc="""A newline-terminated Unicode string.
443
444 This is raw-unicode-escape encoded, so consists of
445 printable ASCII characters, and may contain embedded
446 escape sequences.
447 """)
448
449def read_unicodestring4(f):
Tim Peters55762f52003-01-28 16:01:25 +0000450 r"""
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000451 >>> import io
452 >>> s = 'abcd\uabcd'
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000453 >>> enc = s.encode('utf-8')
454 >>> enc
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000455 b'abcd\xea\xaf\x8d'
456 >>> n = bytes([len(enc), 0, 0, 0]) # little-endian 4-byte length
457 >>> t = read_unicodestring4(io.BytesIO(n + enc + b'junk'))
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000458 >>> s == t
459 True
460
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000461 >>> read_unicodestring4(io.BytesIO(n + enc[:-1]))
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000462 Traceback (most recent call last):
463 ...
464 ValueError: expected 7 bytes in a unicodestring4, but only 6 remain
465 """
466
467 n = read_int4(f)
468 if n < 0:
469 raise ValueError("unicodestring4 byte count < 0: %d" % n)
470 data = f.read(n)
471 if len(data) == n:
Guido van Rossumef87d6e2007-05-02 19:09:54 +0000472 return str(data, 'utf-8')
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000473 raise ValueError("expected %d bytes in a unicodestring4, but only %d "
474 "remain" % (n, len(data)))
475
476unicodestring4 = ArgumentDescriptor(
477 name="unicodestring4",
Tim Petersfdb8cfa2003-01-28 00:13:19 +0000478 n=TAKEN_FROM_ARGUMENT4,
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000479 reader=read_unicodestring4,
480 doc="""A counted Unicode string.
481
482 The first argument is a 4-byte little-endian signed int
483 giving the number of bytes in the string, and the second
484 argument-- the UTF-8 encoding of the Unicode string --
485 contains that many bytes.
486 """)
487
488
489def read_decimalnl_short(f):
Tim Peters55762f52003-01-28 16:01:25 +0000490 r"""
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000491 >>> import io
492 >>> read_decimalnl_short(io.BytesIO(b"1234\n56"))
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000493 1234
494
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000495 >>> read_decimalnl_short(io.BytesIO(b"1234L\n56"))
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000496 Traceback (most recent call last):
497 ...
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000498 ValueError: trailing 'L' not allowed in b'1234L'
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000499 """
500
501 s = read_stringnl(f, decode=False, stripquotes=False)
Guido van Rossum26d95c32007-08-27 23:18:54 +0000502 if s.endswith(b"L"):
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000503 raise ValueError("trailing 'L' not allowed in %r" % s)
504
505 # It's not necessarily true that the result fits in a Python short int:
506 # the pickle may have been written on a 64-bit box. There's also a hack
507 # for True and False here.
Jeremy Hyltona5dc3db2007-08-29 19:07:40 +0000508 if s == b"00":
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000509 return False
Jeremy Hyltona5dc3db2007-08-29 19:07:40 +0000510 elif s == b"01":
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000511 return True
512
513 try:
514 return int(s)
515 except OverflowError:
Guido van Rossume2a383d2007-01-15 16:59:06 +0000516 return int(s)
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000517
518def read_decimalnl_long(f):
Tim Peters55762f52003-01-28 16:01:25 +0000519 r"""
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000520 >>> import io
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000521
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000522 >>> read_decimalnl_long(io.BytesIO(b"1234L\n56"))
Guido van Rossume2b70bc2006-08-18 22:13:04 +0000523 1234
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000524
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000525 >>> read_decimalnl_long(io.BytesIO(b"123456789012345678901234L\n6"))
Guido van Rossume2b70bc2006-08-18 22:13:04 +0000526 123456789012345678901234
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000527 """
528
529 s = read_stringnl(f, decode=False, stripquotes=False)
Mark Dickinson8dd05142009-01-20 20:43:58 +0000530 if s[-1:] == b'L':
531 s = s[:-1]
Guido van Rossume2a383d2007-01-15 16:59:06 +0000532 return int(s)
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000533
534
535decimalnl_short = ArgumentDescriptor(
536 name='decimalnl_short',
537 n=UP_TO_NEWLINE,
538 reader=read_decimalnl_short,
539 doc="""A newline-terminated decimal integer literal.
540
541 This never has a trailing 'L', and the integer fit
542 in a short Python int on the box where the pickle
543 was written -- but there's no guarantee it will fit
544 in a short Python int on the box where the pickle
545 is read.
546 """)
547
548decimalnl_long = ArgumentDescriptor(
549 name='decimalnl_long',
550 n=UP_TO_NEWLINE,
551 reader=read_decimalnl_long,
552 doc="""A newline-terminated decimal integer literal.
553
554 This has a trailing 'L', and can represent integers
555 of any size.
556 """)
557
558
559def read_floatnl(f):
Tim Peters55762f52003-01-28 16:01:25 +0000560 r"""
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000561 >>> import io
562 >>> read_floatnl(io.BytesIO(b"-1.25\n6"))
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000563 -1.25
564 """
565 s = read_stringnl(f, decode=False, stripquotes=False)
566 return float(s)
567
568floatnl = ArgumentDescriptor(
569 name='floatnl',
570 n=UP_TO_NEWLINE,
571 reader=read_floatnl,
572 doc="""A newline-terminated decimal floating literal.
573
574 In general this requires 17 significant digits for roundtrip
575 identity, and pickling then unpickling infinities, NaNs, and
576 minus zero doesn't work across boxes, or on some boxes even
577 on itself (e.g., Windows can't read the strings it produces
578 for infinities or NaNs).
579 """)
580
581def read_float8(f):
Tim Peters55762f52003-01-28 16:01:25 +0000582 r"""
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000583 >>> import io, struct
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000584 >>> raw = struct.pack(">d", -1.25)
585 >>> raw
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000586 b'\xbf\xf4\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00'
587 >>> read_float8(io.BytesIO(raw + b"\n"))
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000588 -1.25
589 """
590
591 data = f.read(8)
592 if len(data) == 8:
593 return _unpack(">d", data)[0]
594 raise ValueError("not enough data in stream to read float8")
595
596
597float8 = ArgumentDescriptor(
598 name='float8',
599 n=8,
600 reader=read_float8,
601 doc="""An 8-byte binary representation of a float, big-endian.
602
603 The format is unique to Python, and shared with the struct
Guido van Rossum99603b02007-07-20 00:22:32 +0000604 module (format string '>d') "in theory" (the struct and pickle
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000605 implementations don't share the code -- they should). It's
606 strongly related to the IEEE-754 double format, and, in normal
607 cases, is in fact identical to the big-endian 754 double format.
608 On other boxes the dynamic range is limited to that of a 754
609 double, and "add a half and chop" rounding is used to reduce
610 the precision to 53 bits. However, even on a 754 box,
611 infinities, NaNs, and minus zero may not be handled correctly
612 (may not survive roundtrip pickling intact).
613 """)
614
Guido van Rossum5a2d8f52003-01-27 21:44:25 +0000615# Protocol 2 formats
616
Tim Petersc0c12b52003-01-29 00:56:17 +0000617from pickle import decode_long
Guido van Rossum5a2d8f52003-01-27 21:44:25 +0000618
619def read_long1(f):
620 r"""
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000621 >>> import io
622 >>> read_long1(io.BytesIO(b"\x00"))
Guido van Rossume2b70bc2006-08-18 22:13:04 +0000623 0
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000624 >>> read_long1(io.BytesIO(b"\x02\xff\x00"))
Guido van Rossume2b70bc2006-08-18 22:13:04 +0000625 255
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000626 >>> read_long1(io.BytesIO(b"\x02\xff\x7f"))
Guido van Rossume2b70bc2006-08-18 22:13:04 +0000627 32767
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000628 >>> read_long1(io.BytesIO(b"\x02\x00\xff"))
Guido van Rossume2b70bc2006-08-18 22:13:04 +0000629 -256
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000630 >>> read_long1(io.BytesIO(b"\x02\x00\x80"))
Guido van Rossume2b70bc2006-08-18 22:13:04 +0000631 -32768
Guido van Rossum5a2d8f52003-01-27 21:44:25 +0000632 """
633
634 n = read_uint1(f)
635 data = f.read(n)
636 if len(data) != n:
637 raise ValueError("not enough data in stream to read long1")
638 return decode_long(data)
639
640long1 = ArgumentDescriptor(
641 name="long1",
Tim Petersfdb8cfa2003-01-28 00:13:19 +0000642 n=TAKEN_FROM_ARGUMENT1,
Guido van Rossum5a2d8f52003-01-27 21:44:25 +0000643 reader=read_long1,
644 doc="""A binary long, little-endian, using 1-byte size.
645
646 This first reads one byte as an unsigned size, then reads that
Tim Petersbdbe7412003-01-27 23:54:04 +0000647 many bytes and interprets them as a little-endian 2's-complement long.
Tim Peters4b23f2b2003-01-31 16:43:39 +0000648 If the size is 0, that's taken as a shortcut for the long 0L.
Guido van Rossum5a2d8f52003-01-27 21:44:25 +0000649 """)
650
Guido van Rossum5a2d8f52003-01-27 21:44:25 +0000651def read_long4(f):
652 r"""
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000653 >>> import io
654 >>> read_long4(io.BytesIO(b"\x02\x00\x00\x00\xff\x00"))
Guido van Rossume2b70bc2006-08-18 22:13:04 +0000655 255
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000656 >>> read_long4(io.BytesIO(b"\x02\x00\x00\x00\xff\x7f"))
Guido van Rossume2b70bc2006-08-18 22:13:04 +0000657 32767
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000658 >>> read_long4(io.BytesIO(b"\x02\x00\x00\x00\x00\xff"))
Guido van Rossume2b70bc2006-08-18 22:13:04 +0000659 -256
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000660 >>> read_long4(io.BytesIO(b"\x02\x00\x00\x00\x00\x80"))
Guido van Rossume2b70bc2006-08-18 22:13:04 +0000661 -32768
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +0000662 >>> read_long1(io.BytesIO(b"\x00\x00\x00\x00"))
Guido van Rossume2b70bc2006-08-18 22:13:04 +0000663 0
Guido van Rossum5a2d8f52003-01-27 21:44:25 +0000664 """
665
666 n = read_int4(f)
667 if n < 0:
Neal Norwitz784a3f52003-01-28 00:20:41 +0000668 raise ValueError("long4 byte count < 0: %d" % n)
Guido van Rossum5a2d8f52003-01-27 21:44:25 +0000669 data = f.read(n)
670 if len(data) != n:
Neal Norwitz784a3f52003-01-28 00:20:41 +0000671 raise ValueError("not enough data in stream to read long4")
Guido van Rossum5a2d8f52003-01-27 21:44:25 +0000672 return decode_long(data)
673
674long4 = ArgumentDescriptor(
675 name="long4",
Tim Petersfdb8cfa2003-01-28 00:13:19 +0000676 n=TAKEN_FROM_ARGUMENT4,
Guido van Rossum5a2d8f52003-01-27 21:44:25 +0000677 reader=read_long4,
678 doc="""A binary representation of a long, little-endian.
679
680 This first reads four bytes as a signed size (but requires the
681 size to be >= 0), then reads that many bytes and interprets them
Tim Peters4b23f2b2003-01-31 16:43:39 +0000682 as a little-endian 2's-complement long. If the size is 0, that's taken
Guido van Rossume2a383d2007-01-15 16:59:06 +0000683 as a shortcut for the int 0, although LONG1 should really be used
Tim Peters4b23f2b2003-01-31 16:43:39 +0000684 then instead (and in any case where # of bytes < 256).
Guido van Rossum5a2d8f52003-01-27 21:44:25 +0000685 """)
686
687
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000688##############################################################################
689# Object descriptors. The stack used by the pickle machine holds objects,
690# and in the stack_before and stack_after attributes of OpcodeInfo
691# descriptors we need names to describe the various types of objects that can
692# appear on the stack.
693
694class StackObject(object):
695 __slots__ = (
696 # name of descriptor record, for info only
697 'name',
698
699 # type of object, or tuple of type objects (meaning the object can
700 # be of any type in the tuple)
701 'obtype',
702
703 # human-readable docs for this kind of stack object; a string
704 'doc',
705 )
706
707 def __init__(self, name, obtype, doc):
Guido van Rossum3172c5d2007-10-16 18:12:55 +0000708 assert isinstance(name, str)
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000709 self.name = name
710
711 assert isinstance(obtype, type) or isinstance(obtype, tuple)
712 if isinstance(obtype, tuple):
713 for contained in obtype:
714 assert isinstance(contained, type)
715 self.obtype = obtype
716
Guido van Rossum3172c5d2007-10-16 18:12:55 +0000717 assert isinstance(doc, str)
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000718 self.doc = doc
719
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +0000720 def __repr__(self):
721 return self.name
722
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000723
724pyint = StackObject(
725 name='int',
726 obtype=int,
727 doc="A short (as opposed to long) Python integer object.")
728
729pylong = StackObject(
730 name='long',
Guido van Rossume2a383d2007-01-15 16:59:06 +0000731 obtype=int,
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000732 doc="A long (as opposed to short) Python integer object.")
733
734pyinteger_or_bool = StackObject(
735 name='int_or_bool',
Guido van Rossume2a383d2007-01-15 16:59:06 +0000736 obtype=(int, int, bool),
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000737 doc="A Python integer object (short or long), or "
738 "a Python bool.")
739
Guido van Rossum5a2d8f52003-01-27 21:44:25 +0000740pybool = StackObject(
741 name='bool',
742 obtype=(bool,),
743 doc="A Python bool object.")
744
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000745pyfloat = StackObject(
746 name='float',
747 obtype=float,
748 doc="A Python float object.")
749
750pystring = StackObject(
Guido van Rossumf4169812008-03-17 22:56:06 +0000751 name='string',
752 obtype=bytes,
753 doc="A Python (8-bit) string object.")
754
755pybytes = StackObject(
Guido van Rossum98297ee2007-11-06 21:34:58 +0000756 name='bytes',
757 obtype=bytes,
758 doc="A Python bytes object.")
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000759
760pyunicode = StackObject(
Guido van Rossum98297ee2007-11-06 21:34:58 +0000761 name='str',
Guido van Rossumef87d6e2007-05-02 19:09:54 +0000762 obtype=str,
Guido van Rossumf4169812008-03-17 22:56:06 +0000763 doc="A Python (Unicode) string object.")
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000764
765pynone = StackObject(
766 name="None",
767 obtype=type(None),
768 doc="The Python None object.")
769
770pytuple = StackObject(
771 name="tuple",
772 obtype=tuple,
773 doc="A Python tuple object.")
774
775pylist = StackObject(
776 name="list",
777 obtype=list,
778 doc="A Python list object.")
779
780pydict = StackObject(
781 name="dict",
782 obtype=dict,
783 doc="A Python dict object.")
784
785anyobject = StackObject(
786 name='any',
787 obtype=object,
788 doc="Any kind of object whatsoever.")
789
790markobject = StackObject(
791 name="mark",
792 obtype=StackObject,
793 doc="""'The mark' is a unique object.
794
795 Opcodes that operate on a variable number of objects
796 generally don't embed the count of objects in the opcode,
797 or pull it off the stack. Instead the MARK opcode is used
798 to push a special marker object on the stack, and then
799 some other opcodes grab all the objects from the top of
800 the stack down to (but not including) the topmost marker
801 object.
802 """)
803
804stackslice = StackObject(
805 name="stackslice",
806 obtype=StackObject,
807 doc="""An object representing a contiguous slice of the stack.
808
809 This is used in conjuction with markobject, to represent all
810 of the stack following the topmost markobject. For example,
811 the POP_MARK opcode changes the stack from
812
813 [..., markobject, stackslice]
814 to
815 [...]
816
817 No matter how many object are on the stack after the topmost
818 markobject, POP_MARK gets rid of all of them (including the
819 topmost markobject too).
820 """)
821
822##############################################################################
823# Descriptors for pickle opcodes.
824
825class OpcodeInfo(object):
826
827 __slots__ = (
828 # symbolic name of opcode; a string
829 'name',
830
831 # the code used in a bytestream to represent the opcode; a
832 # one-character string
833 'code',
834
835 # If the opcode has an argument embedded in the byte string, an
836 # instance of ArgumentDescriptor specifying its type. Note that
837 # arg.reader(s) can be used to read and decode the argument from
838 # the bytestream s, and arg.doc documents the format of the raw
839 # argument bytes. If the opcode doesn't have an argument embedded
840 # in the bytestream, arg should be None.
841 'arg',
842
843 # what the stack looks like before this opcode runs; a list
844 'stack_before',
845
846 # what the stack looks like after this opcode runs; a list
847 'stack_after',
848
849 # the protocol number in which this opcode was introduced; an int
850 'proto',
851
852 # human-readable docs for this opcode; a string
853 'doc',
854 )
855
856 def __init__(self, name, code, arg,
857 stack_before, stack_after, proto, doc):
Guido van Rossum3172c5d2007-10-16 18:12:55 +0000858 assert isinstance(name, str)
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000859 self.name = name
860
Guido van Rossum3172c5d2007-10-16 18:12:55 +0000861 assert isinstance(code, str)
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000862 assert len(code) == 1
863 self.code = code
864
865 assert arg is None or isinstance(arg, ArgumentDescriptor)
866 self.arg = arg
867
868 assert isinstance(stack_before, list)
869 for x in stack_before:
870 assert isinstance(x, StackObject)
871 self.stack_before = stack_before
872
873 assert isinstance(stack_after, list)
874 for x in stack_after:
875 assert isinstance(x, StackObject)
876 self.stack_after = stack_after
877
Guido van Rossumf4169812008-03-17 22:56:06 +0000878 assert isinstance(proto, int) and 0 <= proto <= 3
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000879 self.proto = proto
880
Guido van Rossum3172c5d2007-10-16 18:12:55 +0000881 assert isinstance(doc, str)
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000882 self.doc = doc
883
884I = OpcodeInfo
885opcodes = [
886
887 # Ways to spell integers.
888
889 I(name='INT',
890 code='I',
891 arg=decimalnl_short,
892 stack_before=[],
893 stack_after=[pyinteger_or_bool],
894 proto=0,
895 doc="""Push an integer or bool.
896
897 The argument is a newline-terminated decimal literal string.
898
899 The intent may have been that this always fit in a short Python int,
900 but INT can be generated in pickles written on a 64-bit box that
901 require a Python long on a 32-bit box. The difference between this
902 and LONG then is that INT skips a trailing 'L', and produces a short
903 int whenever possible.
904
905 Another difference is due to that, when bool was introduced as a
906 distinct type in 2.3, builtin names True and False were also added to
907 2.2.2, mapping to ints 1 and 0. For compatibility in both directions,
908 True gets pickled as INT + "I01\\n", and False as INT + "I00\\n".
909 Leading zeroes are never produced for a genuine integer. The 2.3
910 (and later) unpicklers special-case these and return bool instead;
911 earlier unpicklers ignore the leading "0" and return the int.
912 """),
913
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000914 I(name='BININT',
915 code='J',
916 arg=int4,
917 stack_before=[],
918 stack_after=[pyint],
919 proto=1,
920 doc="""Push a four-byte signed integer.
921
922 This handles the full range of Python (short) integers on a 32-bit
923 box, directly as binary bytes (1 for the opcode and 4 for the integer).
924 If the integer is non-negative and fits in 1 or 2 bytes, pickling via
925 BININT1 or BININT2 saves space.
926 """),
927
928 I(name='BININT1',
929 code='K',
930 arg=uint1,
931 stack_before=[],
932 stack_after=[pyint],
933 proto=1,
934 doc="""Push a one-byte unsigned integer.
935
936 This is a space optimization for pickling very small non-negative ints,
937 in range(256).
938 """),
939
940 I(name='BININT2',
941 code='M',
942 arg=uint2,
943 stack_before=[],
944 stack_after=[pyint],
945 proto=1,
946 doc="""Push a two-byte unsigned integer.
947
948 This is a space optimization for pickling small positive ints, in
949 range(256, 2**16). Integers in range(256) can also be pickled via
950 BININT2, but BININT1 instead saves a byte.
951 """),
952
Tim Petersfdc03462003-01-28 04:56:33 +0000953 I(name='LONG',
954 code='L',
955 arg=decimalnl_long,
956 stack_before=[],
957 stack_after=[pylong],
958 proto=0,
959 doc="""Push a long integer.
960
961 The same as INT, except that the literal ends with 'L', and always
962 unpickles to a Python long. There doesn't seem a real purpose to the
963 trailing 'L'.
964
965 Note that LONG takes time quadratic in the number of digits when
966 unpickling (this is simply due to the nature of decimal->binary
967 conversion). Proto 2 added linear-time (in C; still quadratic-time
968 in Python) LONG1 and LONG4 opcodes.
969 """),
970
971 I(name="LONG1",
972 code='\x8a',
973 arg=long1,
974 stack_before=[],
975 stack_after=[pylong],
976 proto=2,
977 doc="""Long integer using one-byte length.
978
979 A more efficient encoding of a Python long; the long1 encoding
980 says it all."""),
981
982 I(name="LONG4",
983 code='\x8b',
984 arg=long4,
985 stack_before=[],
986 stack_after=[pylong],
987 proto=2,
988 doc="""Long integer using found-byte length.
989
990 A more efficient encoding of a Python long; the long4 encoding
991 says it all."""),
992
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +0000993 # Ways to spell strings (8-bit, not Unicode).
994
995 I(name='STRING',
996 code='S',
997 arg=stringnl,
998 stack_before=[],
999 stack_after=[pystring],
1000 proto=0,
1001 doc="""Push a Python string object.
1002
1003 The argument is a repr-style string, with bracketing quote characters,
1004 and perhaps embedded escapes. The argument extends until the next
Guido van Rossumf4169812008-03-17 22:56:06 +00001005 newline character. (Actually, they are decoded into a str instance
1006 using the encoding given to the Unpickler constructor. or the default,
1007 'ASCII'.)
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001008 """),
1009
1010 I(name='BINSTRING',
1011 code='T',
1012 arg=string4,
1013 stack_before=[],
1014 stack_after=[pystring],
1015 proto=1,
1016 doc="""Push a Python string object.
1017
1018 There are two arguments: the first is a 4-byte little-endian signed int
1019 giving the number of bytes in the string, and the second is that many
Guido van Rossumf4169812008-03-17 22:56:06 +00001020 bytes, which are taken literally as the string content. (Actually,
1021 they are decoded into a str instance using the encoding given to the
1022 Unpickler constructor. or the default, 'ASCII'.)
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001023 """),
1024
1025 I(name='SHORT_BINSTRING',
1026 code='U',
1027 arg=string1,
1028 stack_before=[],
1029 stack_after=[pystring],
1030 proto=1,
1031 doc="""Push a Python string object.
1032
1033 There are two arguments: the first is a 1-byte unsigned int giving
1034 the number of bytes in the string, and the second is that many bytes,
Guido van Rossumf4169812008-03-17 22:56:06 +00001035 which are taken literally as the string content. (Actually, they
1036 are decoded into a str instance using the encoding given to the
1037 Unpickler constructor. or the default, 'ASCII'.)
1038 """),
1039
1040 # Bytes (protocol 3 only; older protocols don't support bytes at all)
1041
1042 I(name='BINBYTES',
1043 code='B',
1044 arg=string4,
1045 stack_before=[],
1046 stack_after=[pybytes],
1047 proto=3,
1048 doc="""Push a Python bytes object.
1049
1050 There are two arguments: the first is a 4-byte little-endian signed int
1051 giving the number of bytes in the string, and the second is that many
1052 bytes, which are taken literally as the bytes content.
1053 """),
1054
1055 I(name='SHORT_BINBYTES',
1056 code='C',
1057 arg=string1,
1058 stack_before=[],
1059 stack_after=[pybytes],
Collin Wintere61d4372009-05-20 17:46:47 +00001060 proto=3,
Guido van Rossumf4169812008-03-17 22:56:06 +00001061 doc="""Push a Python string object.
1062
1063 There are two arguments: the first is a 1-byte unsigned int giving
1064 the number of bytes in the string, and the second is that many bytes,
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001065 which are taken literally as the string content.
1066 """),
1067
1068 # Ways to spell None.
1069
1070 I(name='NONE',
1071 code='N',
1072 arg=None,
1073 stack_before=[],
1074 stack_after=[pynone],
1075 proto=0,
1076 doc="Push None on the stack."),
1077
Tim Petersfdc03462003-01-28 04:56:33 +00001078 # Ways to spell bools, starting with proto 2. See INT for how this was
1079 # done before proto 2.
1080
1081 I(name='NEWTRUE',
1082 code='\x88',
1083 arg=None,
1084 stack_before=[],
1085 stack_after=[pybool],
1086 proto=2,
1087 doc="""True.
1088
1089 Push True onto the stack."""),
1090
1091 I(name='NEWFALSE',
1092 code='\x89',
1093 arg=None,
1094 stack_before=[],
1095 stack_after=[pybool],
1096 proto=2,
1097 doc="""True.
1098
1099 Push False onto the stack."""),
1100
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001101 # Ways to spell Unicode strings.
1102
1103 I(name='UNICODE',
1104 code='V',
1105 arg=unicodestringnl,
1106 stack_before=[],
1107 stack_after=[pyunicode],
1108 proto=0, # this may be pure-text, but it's a later addition
1109 doc="""Push a Python Unicode string object.
1110
1111 The argument is a raw-unicode-escape encoding of a Unicode string,
1112 and so may contain embedded escape sequences. The argument extends
1113 until the next newline character.
1114 """),
1115
1116 I(name='BINUNICODE',
1117 code='X',
1118 arg=unicodestring4,
1119 stack_before=[],
1120 stack_after=[pyunicode],
1121 proto=1,
1122 doc="""Push a Python Unicode string object.
1123
1124 There are two arguments: the first is a 4-byte little-endian signed int
1125 giving the number of bytes in the string. The second is that many
1126 bytes, and is the UTF-8 encoding of the Unicode string.
1127 """),
1128
1129 # Ways to spell floats.
1130
1131 I(name='FLOAT',
1132 code='F',
1133 arg=floatnl,
1134 stack_before=[],
1135 stack_after=[pyfloat],
1136 proto=0,
1137 doc="""Newline-terminated decimal float literal.
1138
1139 The argument is repr(a_float), and in general requires 17 significant
1140 digits for roundtrip conversion to be an identity (this is so for
1141 IEEE-754 double precision values, which is what Python float maps to
1142 on most boxes).
1143
1144 In general, FLOAT cannot be used to transport infinities, NaNs, or
1145 minus zero across boxes (or even on a single box, if the platform C
1146 library can't read the strings it produces for such things -- Windows
1147 is like that), but may do less damage than BINFLOAT on boxes with
1148 greater precision or dynamic range than IEEE-754 double.
1149 """),
1150
1151 I(name='BINFLOAT',
1152 code='G',
1153 arg=float8,
1154 stack_before=[],
1155 stack_after=[pyfloat],
1156 proto=1,
1157 doc="""Float stored in binary form, with 8 bytes of data.
1158
1159 This generally requires less than half the space of FLOAT encoding.
1160 In general, BINFLOAT cannot be used to transport infinities, NaNs, or
1161 minus zero, raises an exception if the exponent exceeds the range of
1162 an IEEE-754 double, and retains no more than 53 bits of precision (if
1163 there are more than that, "add a half and chop" rounding is used to
1164 cut it back to 53 significant bits).
1165 """),
1166
1167 # Ways to build lists.
1168
1169 I(name='EMPTY_LIST',
1170 code=']',
1171 arg=None,
1172 stack_before=[],
1173 stack_after=[pylist],
1174 proto=1,
1175 doc="Push an empty list."),
1176
1177 I(name='APPEND',
1178 code='a',
1179 arg=None,
1180 stack_before=[pylist, anyobject],
1181 stack_after=[pylist],
1182 proto=0,
1183 doc="""Append an object to a list.
1184
1185 Stack before: ... pylist anyobject
1186 Stack after: ... pylist+[anyobject]
Tim Peters81098ac2003-01-28 05:12:08 +00001187
1188 although pylist is really extended in-place.
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001189 """),
1190
1191 I(name='APPENDS',
1192 code='e',
1193 arg=None,
1194 stack_before=[pylist, markobject, stackslice],
1195 stack_after=[pylist],
1196 proto=1,
1197 doc="""Extend a list by a slice of stack objects.
1198
1199 Stack before: ... pylist markobject stackslice
1200 Stack after: ... pylist+stackslice
Tim Peters81098ac2003-01-28 05:12:08 +00001201
1202 although pylist is really extended in-place.
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001203 """),
1204
1205 I(name='LIST',
1206 code='l',
1207 arg=None,
1208 stack_before=[markobject, stackslice],
1209 stack_after=[pylist],
1210 proto=0,
1211 doc="""Build a list out of the topmost stack slice, after markobject.
1212
1213 All the stack entries following the topmost markobject are placed into
1214 a single Python list, which single list object replaces all of the
1215 stack from the topmost markobject onward. For example,
1216
1217 Stack before: ... markobject 1 2 3 'abc'
1218 Stack after: ... [1, 2, 3, 'abc']
1219 """),
1220
1221 # Ways to build tuples.
1222
1223 I(name='EMPTY_TUPLE',
1224 code=')',
1225 arg=None,
1226 stack_before=[],
1227 stack_after=[pytuple],
1228 proto=1,
1229 doc="Push an empty tuple."),
1230
1231 I(name='TUPLE',
1232 code='t',
1233 arg=None,
1234 stack_before=[markobject, stackslice],
1235 stack_after=[pytuple],
1236 proto=0,
1237 doc="""Build a tuple out of the topmost stack slice, after markobject.
1238
1239 All the stack entries following the topmost markobject are placed into
1240 a single Python tuple, which single tuple object replaces all of the
1241 stack from the topmost markobject onward. For example,
1242
1243 Stack before: ... markobject 1 2 3 'abc'
1244 Stack after: ... (1, 2, 3, 'abc')
1245 """),
1246
Tim Petersfdc03462003-01-28 04:56:33 +00001247 I(name='TUPLE1',
1248 code='\x85',
1249 arg=None,
1250 stack_before=[anyobject],
1251 stack_after=[pytuple],
1252 proto=2,
1253 doc="""One-tuple.
1254
1255 This code pops one value off the stack and pushes a tuple of
1256 length 1 whose one item is that value back onto it. IOW:
1257
1258 stack[-1] = tuple(stack[-1:])
1259 """),
1260
1261 I(name='TUPLE2',
1262 code='\x86',
1263 arg=None,
1264 stack_before=[anyobject, anyobject],
1265 stack_after=[pytuple],
1266 proto=2,
1267 doc="""One-tuple.
1268
1269 This code pops two values off the stack and pushes a tuple
1270 of length 2 whose items are those values back onto it. IOW:
1271
1272 stack[-2:] = [tuple(stack[-2:])]
1273 """),
1274
1275 I(name='TUPLE3',
1276 code='\x87',
1277 arg=None,
1278 stack_before=[anyobject, anyobject, anyobject],
1279 stack_after=[pytuple],
1280 proto=2,
1281 doc="""One-tuple.
1282
1283 This code pops three values off the stack and pushes a tuple
1284 of length 3 whose items are those values back onto it. IOW:
1285
1286 stack[-3:] = [tuple(stack[-3:])]
1287 """),
1288
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001289 # Ways to build dicts.
1290
1291 I(name='EMPTY_DICT',
1292 code='}',
1293 arg=None,
1294 stack_before=[],
1295 stack_after=[pydict],
1296 proto=1,
1297 doc="Push an empty dict."),
1298
1299 I(name='DICT',
1300 code='d',
1301 arg=None,
1302 stack_before=[markobject, stackslice],
1303 stack_after=[pydict],
1304 proto=0,
1305 doc="""Build a dict out of the topmost stack slice, after markobject.
1306
1307 All the stack entries following the topmost markobject are placed into
1308 a single Python dict, which single dict object replaces all of the
1309 stack from the topmost markobject onward. The stack slice alternates
1310 key, value, key, value, .... For example,
1311
1312 Stack before: ... markobject 1 2 3 'abc'
1313 Stack after: ... {1: 2, 3: 'abc'}
1314 """),
1315
1316 I(name='SETITEM',
1317 code='s',
1318 arg=None,
1319 stack_before=[pydict, anyobject, anyobject],
1320 stack_after=[pydict],
1321 proto=0,
1322 doc="""Add a key+value pair to an existing dict.
1323
1324 Stack before: ... pydict key value
1325 Stack after: ... pydict
1326
1327 where pydict has been modified via pydict[key] = value.
1328 """),
1329
1330 I(name='SETITEMS',
1331 code='u',
1332 arg=None,
1333 stack_before=[pydict, markobject, stackslice],
1334 stack_after=[pydict],
1335 proto=1,
1336 doc="""Add an arbitrary number of key+value pairs to an existing dict.
1337
1338 The slice of the stack following the topmost markobject is taken as
1339 an alternating sequence of keys and values, added to the dict
1340 immediately under the topmost markobject. Everything at and after the
1341 topmost markobject is popped, leaving the mutated dict at the top
1342 of the stack.
1343
1344 Stack before: ... pydict markobject key_1 value_1 ... key_n value_n
1345 Stack after: ... pydict
1346
1347 where pydict has been modified via pydict[key_i] = value_i for i in
1348 1, 2, ..., n, and in that order.
1349 """),
1350
1351 # Stack manipulation.
1352
1353 I(name='POP',
1354 code='0',
1355 arg=None,
1356 stack_before=[anyobject],
1357 stack_after=[],
1358 proto=0,
1359 doc="Discard the top stack item, shrinking the stack by one item."),
1360
1361 I(name='DUP',
1362 code='2',
1363 arg=None,
1364 stack_before=[anyobject],
1365 stack_after=[anyobject, anyobject],
1366 proto=0,
1367 doc="Push the top stack item onto the stack again, duplicating it."),
1368
1369 I(name='MARK',
1370 code='(',
1371 arg=None,
1372 stack_before=[],
1373 stack_after=[markobject],
1374 proto=0,
1375 doc="""Push markobject onto the stack.
1376
1377 markobject is a unique object, used by other opcodes to identify a
1378 region of the stack containing a variable number of objects for them
1379 to work on. See markobject.doc for more detail.
1380 """),
1381
1382 I(name='POP_MARK',
1383 code='1',
1384 arg=None,
1385 stack_before=[markobject, stackslice],
1386 stack_after=[],
Collin Wintere61d4372009-05-20 17:46:47 +00001387 proto=1,
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001388 doc="""Pop all the stack objects at and above the topmost markobject.
1389
1390 When an opcode using a variable number of stack objects is done,
1391 POP_MARK is used to remove those objects, and to remove the markobject
1392 that delimited their starting position on the stack.
1393 """),
1394
1395 # Memo manipulation. There are really only two operations (get and put),
1396 # each in all-text, "short binary", and "long binary" flavors.
1397
1398 I(name='GET',
1399 code='g',
1400 arg=decimalnl_short,
1401 stack_before=[],
1402 stack_after=[anyobject],
1403 proto=0,
1404 doc="""Read an object from the memo and push it on the stack.
1405
1406 The index of the memo object to push is given by the newline-teriminated
1407 decimal string following. BINGET and LONG_BINGET are space-optimized
1408 versions.
1409 """),
1410
1411 I(name='BINGET',
1412 code='h',
1413 arg=uint1,
1414 stack_before=[],
1415 stack_after=[anyobject],
1416 proto=1,
1417 doc="""Read an object from the memo and push it on the stack.
1418
1419 The index of the memo object to push is given by the 1-byte unsigned
1420 integer following.
1421 """),
1422
1423 I(name='LONG_BINGET',
1424 code='j',
1425 arg=int4,
1426 stack_before=[],
1427 stack_after=[anyobject],
1428 proto=1,
1429 doc="""Read an object from the memo and push it on the stack.
1430
1431 The index of the memo object to push is given by the 4-byte signed
1432 little-endian integer following.
1433 """),
1434
1435 I(name='PUT',
1436 code='p',
1437 arg=decimalnl_short,
1438 stack_before=[],
1439 stack_after=[],
1440 proto=0,
1441 doc="""Store the stack top into the memo. The stack is not popped.
1442
1443 The index of the memo location to write into is given by the newline-
1444 terminated decimal string following. BINPUT and LONG_BINPUT are
1445 space-optimized versions.
1446 """),
1447
1448 I(name='BINPUT',
1449 code='q',
1450 arg=uint1,
1451 stack_before=[],
1452 stack_after=[],
1453 proto=1,
1454 doc="""Store the stack top into the memo. The stack is not popped.
1455
1456 The index of the memo location to write into is given by the 1-byte
1457 unsigned integer following.
1458 """),
1459
1460 I(name='LONG_BINPUT',
1461 code='r',
1462 arg=int4,
1463 stack_before=[],
1464 stack_after=[],
1465 proto=1,
1466 doc="""Store the stack top into the memo. The stack is not popped.
1467
1468 The index of the memo location to write into is given by the 4-byte
1469 signed little-endian integer following.
1470 """),
1471
Tim Petersfdc03462003-01-28 04:56:33 +00001472 # Access the extension registry (predefined objects). Akin to the GET
1473 # family.
1474
1475 I(name='EXT1',
1476 code='\x82',
1477 arg=uint1,
1478 stack_before=[],
1479 stack_after=[anyobject],
1480 proto=2,
1481 doc="""Extension code.
1482
1483 This code and the similar EXT2 and EXT4 allow using a registry
1484 of popular objects that are pickled by name, typically classes.
1485 It is envisioned that through a global negotiation and
1486 registration process, third parties can set up a mapping between
1487 ints and object names.
1488
1489 In order to guarantee pickle interchangeability, the extension
1490 code registry ought to be global, although a range of codes may
1491 be reserved for private use.
1492
1493 EXT1 has a 1-byte integer argument. This is used to index into the
1494 extension registry, and the object at that index is pushed on the stack.
1495 """),
1496
1497 I(name='EXT2',
1498 code='\x83',
1499 arg=uint2,
1500 stack_before=[],
1501 stack_after=[anyobject],
1502 proto=2,
1503 doc="""Extension code.
1504
1505 See EXT1. EXT2 has a two-byte integer argument.
1506 """),
1507
1508 I(name='EXT4',
1509 code='\x84',
1510 arg=int4,
1511 stack_before=[],
1512 stack_after=[anyobject],
1513 proto=2,
1514 doc="""Extension code.
1515
1516 See EXT1. EXT4 has a four-byte integer argument.
1517 """),
1518
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001519 # Push a class object, or module function, on the stack, via its module
1520 # and name.
1521
1522 I(name='GLOBAL',
1523 code='c',
1524 arg=stringnl_noescape_pair,
1525 stack_before=[],
1526 stack_after=[anyobject],
1527 proto=0,
1528 doc="""Push a global object (module.attr) on the stack.
1529
1530 Two newline-terminated strings follow the GLOBAL opcode. The first is
1531 taken as a module name, and the second as a class name. The class
1532 object module.class is pushed on the stack. More accurately, the
1533 object returned by self.find_class(module, class) is pushed on the
1534 stack, so unpickling subclasses can override this form of lookup.
1535 """),
1536
1537 # Ways to build objects of classes pickle doesn't know about directly
1538 # (user-defined classes). I despair of documenting this accurately
1539 # and comprehensibly -- you really have to read the pickle code to
1540 # find all the special cases.
1541
1542 I(name='REDUCE',
1543 code='R',
1544 arg=None,
1545 stack_before=[anyobject, anyobject],
1546 stack_after=[anyobject],
1547 proto=0,
1548 doc="""Push an object built from a callable and an argument tuple.
1549
1550 The opcode is named to remind of the __reduce__() method.
1551
1552 Stack before: ... callable pytuple
1553 Stack after: ... callable(*pytuple)
1554
1555 The callable and the argument tuple are the first two items returned
1556 by a __reduce__ method. Applying the callable to the argtuple is
1557 supposed to reproduce the original object, or at least get it started.
1558 If the __reduce__ method returns a 3-tuple, the last component is an
1559 argument to be passed to the object's __setstate__, and then the REDUCE
1560 opcode is followed by code to create setstate's argument, and then a
1561 BUILD opcode to apply __setstate__ to that argument.
1562
Guido van Rossum13257902007-06-07 23:15:56 +00001563 If not isinstance(callable, type), REDUCE complains unless the
Alexandre Vassalottif7fa63d2008-05-11 08:55:36 +00001564 callable has been registered with the copyreg module's
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001565 safe_constructors dict, or the callable has a magic
1566 '__safe_for_unpickling__' attribute with a true value. I'm not sure
1567 why it does this, but I've sure seen this complaint often enough when
1568 I didn't want to <wink>.
1569 """),
1570
1571 I(name='BUILD',
1572 code='b',
1573 arg=None,
1574 stack_before=[anyobject, anyobject],
1575 stack_after=[anyobject],
1576 proto=0,
1577 doc="""Finish building an object, via __setstate__ or dict update.
1578
1579 Stack before: ... anyobject argument
1580 Stack after: ... anyobject
1581
1582 where anyobject may have been mutated, as follows:
1583
1584 If the object has a __setstate__ method,
1585
1586 anyobject.__setstate__(argument)
1587
1588 is called.
1589
1590 Else the argument must be a dict, the object must have a __dict__, and
1591 the object is updated via
1592
1593 anyobject.__dict__.update(argument)
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001594 """),
1595
1596 I(name='INST',
1597 code='i',
1598 arg=stringnl_noescape_pair,
1599 stack_before=[markobject, stackslice],
1600 stack_after=[anyobject],
1601 proto=0,
1602 doc="""Build a class instance.
1603
1604 This is the protocol 0 version of protocol 1's OBJ opcode.
1605 INST is followed by two newline-terminated strings, giving a
1606 module and class name, just as for the GLOBAL opcode (and see
1607 GLOBAL for more details about that). self.find_class(module, name)
1608 is used to get a class object.
1609
1610 In addition, all the objects on the stack following the topmost
1611 markobject are gathered into a tuple and popped (along with the
1612 topmost markobject), just as for the TUPLE opcode.
1613
1614 Now it gets complicated. If all of these are true:
1615
1616 + The argtuple is empty (markobject was at the top of the stack
1617 at the start).
1618
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001619 + The class object does not have a __getinitargs__ attribute.
1620
1621 then we want to create an old-style class instance without invoking
1622 its __init__() method (pickle has waffled on this over the years; not
1623 calling __init__() is current wisdom). In this case, an instance of
1624 an old-style dummy class is created, and then we try to rebind its
1625 __class__ attribute to the desired class object. If this succeeds,
Guido van Rossuma8add0e2007-05-14 22:03:55 +00001626 the new instance object is pushed on the stack, and we're done.
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001627
1628 Else (the argtuple is not empty, it's not an old-style class object,
1629 or the class object does have a __getinitargs__ attribute), the code
1630 first insists that the class object have a __safe_for_unpickling__
1631 attribute. Unlike as for the __safe_for_unpickling__ check in REDUCE,
1632 it doesn't matter whether this attribute has a true or false value, it
Guido van Rossum99603b02007-07-20 00:22:32 +00001633 only matters whether it exists (XXX this is a bug). If
1634 __safe_for_unpickling__ doesn't exist, UnpicklingError is raised.
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001635
1636 Else (the class object does have a __safe_for_unpickling__ attr),
1637 the class object obtained from INST's arguments is applied to the
1638 argtuple obtained from the stack, and the resulting instance object
1639 is pushed on the stack.
Tim Peters2b93c4c2003-01-30 16:35:08 +00001640
1641 NOTE: checks for __safe_for_unpickling__ went away in Python 2.3.
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001642 """),
1643
1644 I(name='OBJ',
1645 code='o',
1646 arg=None,
1647 stack_before=[markobject, anyobject, stackslice],
1648 stack_after=[anyobject],
1649 proto=1,
1650 doc="""Build a class instance.
1651
1652 This is the protocol 1 version of protocol 0's INST opcode, and is
1653 very much like it. The major difference is that the class object
1654 is taken off the stack, allowing it to be retrieved from the memo
1655 repeatedly if several instances of the same class are created. This
1656 can be much more efficient (in both time and space) than repeatedly
1657 embedding the module and class names in INST opcodes.
1658
1659 Unlike INST, OBJ takes no arguments from the opcode stream. Instead
1660 the class object is taken off the stack, immediately above the
1661 topmost markobject:
1662
1663 Stack before: ... markobject classobject stackslice
1664 Stack after: ... new_instance_object
1665
1666 As for INST, the remainder of the stack above the markobject is
1667 gathered into an argument tuple, and then the logic seems identical,
Guido van Rossumecb11042003-01-29 06:24:30 +00001668 except that no __safe_for_unpickling__ check is done (XXX this is
Guido van Rossum99603b02007-07-20 00:22:32 +00001669 a bug). See INST for the gory details.
Tim Peters2b93c4c2003-01-30 16:35:08 +00001670
1671 NOTE: In Python 2.3, INST and OBJ are identical except for how they
1672 get the class object. That was always the intent; the implementations
1673 had diverged for accidental reasons.
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001674 """),
1675
Tim Petersfdc03462003-01-28 04:56:33 +00001676 I(name='NEWOBJ',
1677 code='\x81',
1678 arg=None,
1679 stack_before=[anyobject, anyobject],
1680 stack_after=[anyobject],
1681 proto=2,
1682 doc="""Build an object instance.
1683
1684 The stack before should be thought of as containing a class
1685 object followed by an argument tuple (the tuple being the stack
1686 top). Call these cls and args. They are popped off the stack,
1687 and the value returned by cls.__new__(cls, *args) is pushed back
1688 onto the stack.
1689 """),
1690
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001691 # Machine control.
1692
Tim Petersfdc03462003-01-28 04:56:33 +00001693 I(name='PROTO',
1694 code='\x80',
1695 arg=uint1,
1696 stack_before=[],
1697 stack_after=[],
1698 proto=2,
1699 doc="""Protocol version indicator.
1700
1701 For protocol 2 and above, a pickle must start with this opcode.
1702 The argument is the protocol version, an int in range(2, 256).
1703 """),
1704
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001705 I(name='STOP',
1706 code='.',
1707 arg=None,
1708 stack_before=[anyobject],
1709 stack_after=[],
1710 proto=0,
1711 doc="""Stop the unpickling machine.
1712
1713 Every pickle ends with this opcode. The object at the top of the stack
1714 is popped, and that's the result of unpickling. The stack should be
1715 empty then.
1716 """),
1717
1718 # Ways to deal with persistent IDs.
1719
1720 I(name='PERSID',
1721 code='P',
1722 arg=stringnl_noescape,
1723 stack_before=[],
1724 stack_after=[anyobject],
1725 proto=0,
1726 doc="""Push an object identified by a persistent ID.
1727
1728 The pickle module doesn't define what a persistent ID means. PERSID's
1729 argument is a newline-terminated str-style (no embedded escapes, no
1730 bracketing quote characters) string, which *is* "the persistent ID".
1731 The unpickler passes this string to self.persistent_load(). Whatever
1732 object that returns is pushed on the stack. There is no implementation
1733 of persistent_load() in Python's unpickler: it must be supplied by an
1734 unpickler subclass.
1735 """),
1736
1737 I(name='BINPERSID',
1738 code='Q',
1739 arg=None,
1740 stack_before=[anyobject],
1741 stack_after=[anyobject],
1742 proto=1,
1743 doc="""Push an object identified by a persistent ID.
1744
1745 Like PERSID, except the persistent ID is popped off the stack (instead
1746 of being a string embedded in the opcode bytestream). The persistent
1747 ID is passed to self.persistent_load(), and whatever object that
1748 returns is pushed on the stack. See PERSID for more detail.
1749 """),
1750]
1751del I
1752
1753# Verify uniqueness of .name and .code members.
1754name2i = {}
1755code2i = {}
1756
1757for i, d in enumerate(opcodes):
1758 if d.name in name2i:
1759 raise ValueError("repeated name %r at indices %d and %d" %
1760 (d.name, name2i[d.name], i))
1761 if d.code in code2i:
1762 raise ValueError("repeated code %r at indices %d and %d" %
1763 (d.code, code2i[d.code], i))
1764
1765 name2i[d.name] = i
1766 code2i[d.code] = i
1767
1768del name2i, code2i, i, d
1769
1770##############################################################################
1771# Build a code2op dict, mapping opcode characters to OpcodeInfo records.
1772# Also ensure we've got the same stuff as pickle.py, although the
1773# introspection here is dicey.
1774
1775code2op = {}
1776for d in opcodes:
1777 code2op[d.code] = d
1778del d
1779
1780def assure_pickle_consistency(verbose=False):
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001781
1782 copy = code2op.copy()
1783 for name in pickle.__all__:
1784 if not re.match("[A-Z][A-Z0-9_]+$", name):
1785 if verbose:
Guido van Rossumbe19ed72007-02-09 05:37:30 +00001786 print("skipping %r: it doesn't look like an opcode name" % name)
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001787 continue
1788 picklecode = getattr(pickle, name)
Guido van Rossum617dbc42007-05-07 23:57:08 +00001789 if not isinstance(picklecode, bytes) or len(picklecode) != 1:
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001790 if verbose:
Guido van Rossumbe19ed72007-02-09 05:37:30 +00001791 print(("skipping %r: value %r doesn't look like a pickle "
1792 "code" % (name, picklecode)))
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001793 continue
Guido van Rossum617dbc42007-05-07 23:57:08 +00001794 picklecode = picklecode.decode("latin-1")
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001795 if picklecode in copy:
1796 if verbose:
Guido van Rossumbe19ed72007-02-09 05:37:30 +00001797 print("checking name %r w/ code %r for consistency" % (
1798 name, picklecode))
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001799 d = copy[picklecode]
1800 if d.name != name:
1801 raise ValueError("for pickle code %r, pickle.py uses name %r "
1802 "but we're using name %r" % (picklecode,
1803 name,
1804 d.name))
1805 # Forget this one. Any left over in copy at the end are a problem
1806 # of a different kind.
1807 del copy[picklecode]
1808 else:
1809 raise ValueError("pickle.py appears to have a pickle opcode with "
1810 "name %r and code %r, but we don't" %
1811 (name, picklecode))
1812 if copy:
1813 msg = ["we appear to have pickle opcodes that pickle.py doesn't have:"]
1814 for code, d in copy.items():
1815 msg.append(" name %r with code %r" % (d.name, code))
1816 raise ValueError("\n".join(msg))
1817
1818assure_pickle_consistency()
Tim Petersc0c12b52003-01-29 00:56:17 +00001819del assure_pickle_consistency
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001820
1821##############################################################################
1822# A pickle opcode generator.
1823
1824def genops(pickle):
Guido van Rossuma72ded92003-01-27 19:40:47 +00001825 """Generate all the opcodes in a pickle.
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001826
1827 'pickle' is a file-like object, or string, containing the pickle.
1828
1829 Each opcode in the pickle is generated, from the current pickle position,
1830 stopping after a STOP opcode is delivered. A triple is generated for
1831 each opcode:
1832
1833 opcode, arg, pos
1834
1835 opcode is an OpcodeInfo record, describing the current opcode.
1836
1837 If the opcode has an argument embedded in the pickle, arg is its decoded
1838 value, as a Python object. If the opcode doesn't have an argument, arg
1839 is None.
1840
1841 If the pickle has a tell() method, pos was the value of pickle.tell()
Guido van Rossum34d19282007-08-09 01:03:29 +00001842 before reading the current opcode. If the pickle is a bytes object,
1843 it's wrapped in a BytesIO object, and the latter's tell() result is
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001844 used. Else (the pickle doesn't have a tell(), and it's not obvious how
1845 to query its current position) pos is None.
1846 """
1847
Guido van Rossum98297ee2007-11-06 21:34:58 +00001848 if isinstance(pickle, bytes_types):
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +00001849 import io
1850 pickle = io.BytesIO(pickle)
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001851
1852 if hasattr(pickle, "tell"):
1853 getpos = pickle.tell
1854 else:
1855 getpos = lambda: None
1856
1857 while True:
1858 pos = getpos()
1859 code = pickle.read(1)
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +00001860 opcode = code2op.get(code.decode("latin-1"))
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001861 if opcode is None:
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +00001862 if code == b"":
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001863 raise ValueError("pickle exhausted before seeing STOP")
1864 else:
1865 raise ValueError("at position %s, opcode %r unknown" % (
1866 pos is None and "<unknown>" or pos,
1867 code))
1868 if opcode.arg is None:
1869 arg = None
1870 else:
1871 arg = opcode.arg.reader(pickle)
1872 yield opcode, arg, pos
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +00001873 if code == b'.':
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001874 assert opcode.name == 'STOP'
1875 break
1876
1877##############################################################################
Christian Heimes3feef612008-02-11 06:19:17 +00001878# A pickle optimizer.
1879
1880def optimize(p):
1881 'Optimize a pickle string by removing unused PUT opcodes'
1882 gets = set() # set of args used by a GET opcode
1883 puts = [] # (arg, startpos, stoppos) for the PUT opcodes
1884 prevpos = None # set to pos if previous opcode was a PUT
1885 for opcode, arg, pos in genops(p):
1886 if prevpos is not None:
1887 puts.append((prevarg, prevpos, pos))
1888 prevpos = None
1889 if 'PUT' in opcode.name:
1890 prevarg, prevpos = arg, pos
1891 elif 'GET' in opcode.name:
1892 gets.add(arg)
1893
1894 # Copy the pickle string except for PUTS without a corresponding GET
1895 s = []
1896 i = 0
1897 for arg, start, stop in puts:
1898 j = stop if (arg in gets) else start
1899 s.append(p[i:j])
1900 i = stop
1901 s.append(p[i:])
Christian Heimes126d29a2008-02-11 22:57:17 +00001902 return b''.join(s)
Christian Heimes3feef612008-02-11 06:19:17 +00001903
1904##############################################################################
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001905# A symbolic pickle disassembler.
1906
Tim Peters62235e72003-02-05 19:55:53 +00001907def dis(pickle, out=None, memo=None, indentlevel=4):
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001908 """Produce a symbolic disassembly of a pickle.
1909
1910 'pickle' is a file-like object, or string, containing a (at least one)
1911 pickle. The pickle is disassembled from the current position, through
1912 the first STOP opcode encountered.
1913
1914 Optional arg 'out' is a file-like object to which the disassembly is
1915 printed. It defaults to sys.stdout.
1916
Tim Peters62235e72003-02-05 19:55:53 +00001917 Optional arg 'memo' is a Python dict, used as the pickle's memo. It
1918 may be mutated by dis(), if the pickle contains PUT or BINPUT opcodes.
1919 Passing the same memo object to another dis() call then allows disassembly
1920 to proceed across multiple pickles that were all created by the same
1921 pickler with the same memo. Ordinarily you don't need to worry about this.
1922
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001923 Optional arg indentlevel is the number of blanks by which to indent
1924 a new MARK level. It defaults to 4.
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00001925
1926 In addition to printing the disassembly, some sanity checks are made:
1927
1928 + All embedded opcode arguments "make sense".
1929
1930 + Explicit and implicit pop operations have enough items on the stack.
1931
1932 + When an opcode implicitly refers to a markobject, a markobject is
1933 actually on the stack.
1934
1935 + A memo entry isn't referenced before it's defined.
1936
1937 + The markobject isn't stored in the memo.
1938
1939 + A memo entry isn't redefined.
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001940 """
1941
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00001942 # Most of the hair here is for sanity checks, but most of it is needed
1943 # anyway to detect when a protocol 0 POP takes a MARK off the stack
1944 # (which in turn is needed to indent MARK blocks correctly).
1945
1946 stack = [] # crude emulation of unpickler stack
Tim Peters62235e72003-02-05 19:55:53 +00001947 if memo is None:
1948 memo = {} # crude emulation of unpicker memo
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00001949 maxproto = -1 # max protocol number seen
1950 markstack = [] # bytecode positions of MARK opcodes
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001951 indentchunk = ' ' * indentlevel
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00001952 errormsg = None
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001953 for opcode, arg, pos in genops(pickle):
1954 if pos is not None:
Guido van Rossumbe19ed72007-02-09 05:37:30 +00001955 print("%5d:" % pos, end=' ', file=out)
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001956
Tim Petersd0f7c862003-01-28 15:27:57 +00001957 line = "%-4s %s%s" % (repr(opcode.code)[1:-1],
1958 indentchunk * len(markstack),
1959 opcode.name)
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001960
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00001961 maxproto = max(maxproto, opcode.proto)
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00001962 before = opcode.stack_before # don't mutate
1963 after = opcode.stack_after # don't mutate
Tim Peters43277d62003-01-30 15:02:12 +00001964 numtopop = len(before)
1965
1966 # See whether a MARK should be popped.
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00001967 markmsg = None
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00001968 if markobject in before or (opcode.name == "POP" and
1969 stack and
1970 stack[-1] is markobject):
1971 assert markobject not in after
Tim Peters43277d62003-01-30 15:02:12 +00001972 if __debug__:
1973 if markobject in before:
1974 assert before[-1] is stackslice
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00001975 if markstack:
1976 markpos = markstack.pop()
1977 if markpos is None:
1978 markmsg = "(MARK at unknown opcode offset)"
1979 else:
1980 markmsg = "(MARK at %d)" % markpos
1981 # Pop everything at and after the topmost markobject.
1982 while stack[-1] is not markobject:
1983 stack.pop()
1984 stack.pop()
Tim Peters43277d62003-01-30 15:02:12 +00001985 # Stop later code from popping too much.
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00001986 try:
Tim Peters43277d62003-01-30 15:02:12 +00001987 numtopop = before.index(markobject)
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00001988 except ValueError:
1989 assert opcode.name == "POP"
Tim Peters43277d62003-01-30 15:02:12 +00001990 numtopop = 0
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00001991 else:
1992 errormsg = markmsg = "no MARK exists on stack"
1993
1994 # Check for correct memo usage.
1995 if opcode.name in ("PUT", "BINPUT", "LONG_BINPUT"):
Tim Peters43277d62003-01-30 15:02:12 +00001996 assert arg is not None
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00001997 if arg in memo:
1998 errormsg = "memo key %r already defined" % arg
1999 elif not stack:
2000 errormsg = "stack is empty -- can't store into memo"
2001 elif stack[-1] is markobject:
2002 errormsg = "can't store markobject in the memo"
2003 else:
2004 memo[arg] = stack[-1]
2005
2006 elif opcode.name in ("GET", "BINGET", "LONG_BINGET"):
2007 if arg in memo:
2008 assert len(after) == 1
2009 after = [memo[arg]] # for better stack emulation
2010 else:
2011 errormsg = "memo key %r has never been stored into" % arg
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00002012
2013 if arg is not None or markmsg:
2014 # make a mild effort to align arguments
2015 line += ' ' * (10 - len(opcode.name))
2016 if arg is not None:
2017 line += ' ' + repr(arg)
2018 if markmsg:
2019 line += ' ' + markmsg
Guido van Rossumbe19ed72007-02-09 05:37:30 +00002020 print(line, file=out)
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00002021
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00002022 if errormsg:
2023 # Note that we delayed complaining until the offending opcode
2024 # was printed.
2025 raise ValueError(errormsg)
2026
2027 # Emulate the stack effects.
Tim Peters43277d62003-01-30 15:02:12 +00002028 if len(stack) < numtopop:
2029 raise ValueError("tries to pop %d items from stack with "
2030 "only %d items" % (numtopop, len(stack)))
2031 if numtopop:
2032 del stack[-numtopop:]
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00002033 if markobject in after:
Tim Peters43277d62003-01-30 15:02:12 +00002034 assert markobject not in before
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00002035 markstack.append(pos)
2036
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00002037 stack.extend(after)
2038
Guido van Rossumbe19ed72007-02-09 05:37:30 +00002039 print("highest protocol among opcodes =", maxproto, file=out)
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00002040 if stack:
2041 raise ValueError("stack not empty after STOP: %r" % stack)
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00002042
Tim Peters90718a42005-02-15 16:22:34 +00002043# For use in the doctest, simply as an example of a class to pickle.
2044class _Example:
2045 def __init__(self, value):
2046 self.value = value
2047
Guido van Rossum03e35322003-01-28 15:37:13 +00002048_dis_test = r"""
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00002049>>> import pickle
Guido van Rossumf4169812008-03-17 22:56:06 +00002050>>> x = [1, 2, (3, 4), {b'abc': "def"}]
2051>>> pkl0 = pickle.dumps(x, 0)
2052>>> dis(pkl0)
Tim Petersd0f7c862003-01-28 15:27:57 +00002053 0: ( MARK
2054 1: l LIST (MARK at 0)
2055 2: p PUT 0
Guido van Rossumf4100002007-01-15 00:21:46 +00002056 5: L LONG 1
Mark Dickinson8dd05142009-01-20 20:43:58 +00002057 9: a APPEND
2058 10: L LONG 2
2059 14: a APPEND
2060 15: ( MARK
2061 16: L LONG 3
2062 20: L LONG 4
2063 24: t TUPLE (MARK at 15)
2064 25: p PUT 1
2065 28: a APPEND
2066 29: ( MARK
2067 30: d DICT (MARK at 29)
2068 31: p PUT 2
2069 34: c GLOBAL 'builtins bytes'
2070 50: p PUT 3
2071 53: ( MARK
2072 54: ( MARK
2073 55: l LIST (MARK at 54)
2074 56: p PUT 4
2075 59: L LONG 97
Guido van Rossumf4169812008-03-17 22:56:06 +00002076 64: a APPEND
Mark Dickinson8dd05142009-01-20 20:43:58 +00002077 65: L LONG 98
2078 70: a APPEND
2079 71: L LONG 99
2080 76: a APPEND
2081 77: t TUPLE (MARK at 53)
2082 78: p PUT 5
2083 81: R REDUCE
2084 82: p PUT 6
2085 85: V UNICODE 'def'
2086 90: p PUT 7
2087 93: s SETITEM
2088 94: a APPEND
2089 95: . STOP
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00002090highest protocol among opcodes = 0
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00002091
2092Try again with a "binary" pickle.
2093
Guido van Rossumf4169812008-03-17 22:56:06 +00002094>>> pkl1 = pickle.dumps(x, 1)
2095>>> dis(pkl1)
Tim Petersd0f7c862003-01-28 15:27:57 +00002096 0: ] EMPTY_LIST
2097 1: q BINPUT 0
2098 3: ( MARK
2099 4: K BININT1 1
2100 6: K BININT1 2
2101 8: ( MARK
2102 9: K BININT1 3
2103 11: K BININT1 4
2104 13: t TUPLE (MARK at 8)
2105 14: q BINPUT 1
2106 16: } EMPTY_DICT
2107 17: q BINPUT 2
Guido van Rossumf4169812008-03-17 22:56:06 +00002108 19: c GLOBAL 'builtins bytes'
2109 35: q BINPUT 3
2110 37: ( MARK
2111 38: ] EMPTY_LIST
2112 39: q BINPUT 4
2113 41: ( MARK
2114 42: K BININT1 97
2115 44: K BININT1 98
2116 46: K BININT1 99
2117 48: e APPENDS (MARK at 41)
2118 49: t TUPLE (MARK at 37)
2119 50: q BINPUT 5
2120 52: R REDUCE
Alexandre Vassalottica2d6102008-06-12 18:26:05 +00002121 53: q BINPUT 6
2122 55: X BINUNICODE 'def'
2123 63: q BINPUT 7
2124 65: s SETITEM
2125 66: e APPENDS (MARK at 3)
2126 67: . STOP
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00002127highest protocol among opcodes = 1
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00002128
2129Exercise the INST/OBJ/BUILD family.
2130
Mark Dickinsoncddcf442009-01-24 21:46:33 +00002131>>> import pickletools
2132>>> dis(pickle.dumps(pickletools.dis, 0))
2133 0: c GLOBAL 'pickletools dis'
2134 17: p PUT 0
2135 20: . STOP
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00002136highest protocol among opcodes = 0
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00002137
Tim Peters90718a42005-02-15 16:22:34 +00002138>>> from pickletools import _Example
2139>>> x = [_Example(42)] * 2
Guido van Rossumf29d3d62003-01-27 22:47:53 +00002140>>> dis(pickle.dumps(x, 0))
Tim Petersd0f7c862003-01-28 15:27:57 +00002141 0: ( MARK
2142 1: l LIST (MARK at 0)
2143 2: p PUT 0
Alexandre Vassalottif7fa63d2008-05-11 08:55:36 +00002144 5: c GLOBAL 'copyreg _reconstructor'
2145 29: p PUT 1
2146 32: ( MARK
2147 33: c GLOBAL 'pickletools _Example'
2148 55: p PUT 2
2149 58: c GLOBAL 'builtins object'
2150 75: p PUT 3
2151 78: N NONE
2152 79: t TUPLE (MARK at 32)
2153 80: p PUT 4
2154 83: R REDUCE
2155 84: p PUT 5
2156 87: ( MARK
2157 88: d DICT (MARK at 87)
2158 89: p PUT 6
2159 92: V UNICODE 'value'
2160 99: p PUT 7
2161 102: L LONG 42
Mark Dickinson8dd05142009-01-20 20:43:58 +00002162 107: s SETITEM
2163 108: b BUILD
2164 109: a APPEND
2165 110: g GET 5
2166 113: a APPEND
2167 114: . STOP
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00002168highest protocol among opcodes = 0
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00002169
2170>>> dis(pickle.dumps(x, 1))
Tim Petersd0f7c862003-01-28 15:27:57 +00002171 0: ] EMPTY_LIST
2172 1: q BINPUT 0
2173 3: ( MARK
Alexandre Vassalottif7fa63d2008-05-11 08:55:36 +00002174 4: c GLOBAL 'copyreg _reconstructor'
2175 28: q BINPUT 1
2176 30: ( MARK
2177 31: c GLOBAL 'pickletools _Example'
2178 53: q BINPUT 2
2179 55: c GLOBAL 'builtins object'
2180 72: q BINPUT 3
2181 74: N NONE
2182 75: t TUPLE (MARK at 30)
2183 76: q BINPUT 4
2184 78: R REDUCE
2185 79: q BINPUT 5
2186 81: } EMPTY_DICT
2187 82: q BINPUT 6
2188 84: X BINUNICODE 'value'
2189 94: q BINPUT 7
2190 96: K BININT1 42
2191 98: s SETITEM
2192 99: b BUILD
2193 100: h BINGET 5
2194 102: e APPENDS (MARK at 3)
2195 103: . STOP
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00002196highest protocol among opcodes = 1
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00002197
2198Try "the canonical" recursive-object test.
2199
2200>>> L = []
2201>>> T = L,
2202>>> L.append(T)
2203>>> L[0] is T
2204True
2205>>> T[0] is L
2206True
2207>>> L[0][0] is L
2208True
2209>>> T[0][0] is T
2210True
Guido van Rossumf29d3d62003-01-27 22:47:53 +00002211>>> dis(pickle.dumps(L, 0))
Tim Petersd0f7c862003-01-28 15:27:57 +00002212 0: ( MARK
2213 1: l LIST (MARK at 0)
2214 2: p PUT 0
2215 5: ( MARK
2216 6: g GET 0
2217 9: t TUPLE (MARK at 5)
2218 10: p PUT 1
2219 13: a APPEND
2220 14: . STOP
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00002221highest protocol among opcodes = 0
2222
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00002223>>> dis(pickle.dumps(L, 1))
Tim Petersd0f7c862003-01-28 15:27:57 +00002224 0: ] EMPTY_LIST
2225 1: q BINPUT 0
2226 3: ( MARK
2227 4: h BINGET 0
2228 6: t TUPLE (MARK at 3)
2229 7: q BINPUT 1
2230 9: a APPEND
2231 10: . STOP
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00002232highest protocol among opcodes = 1
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00002233
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00002234Note that, in the protocol 0 pickle of the recursive tuple, the disassembler
2235has to emulate the stack in order to realize that the POP opcode at 16 gets
2236rid of the MARK at 0.
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00002237
Guido van Rossumf29d3d62003-01-27 22:47:53 +00002238>>> dis(pickle.dumps(T, 0))
Tim Petersd0f7c862003-01-28 15:27:57 +00002239 0: ( MARK
2240 1: ( MARK
2241 2: l LIST (MARK at 1)
2242 3: p PUT 0
2243 6: ( MARK
2244 7: g GET 0
2245 10: t TUPLE (MARK at 6)
2246 11: p PUT 1
2247 14: a APPEND
2248 15: 0 POP
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00002249 16: 0 POP (MARK at 0)
2250 17: g GET 1
2251 20: . STOP
2252highest protocol among opcodes = 0
2253
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00002254>>> dis(pickle.dumps(T, 1))
Tim Petersd0f7c862003-01-28 15:27:57 +00002255 0: ( MARK
2256 1: ] EMPTY_LIST
2257 2: q BINPUT 0
2258 4: ( MARK
2259 5: h BINGET 0
2260 7: t TUPLE (MARK at 4)
2261 8: q BINPUT 1
2262 10: a APPEND
2263 11: 1 POP_MARK (MARK at 0)
2264 12: h BINGET 1
2265 14: . STOP
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00002266highest protocol among opcodes = 1
Tim Petersd0f7c862003-01-28 15:27:57 +00002267
2268Try protocol 2.
2269
2270>>> dis(pickle.dumps(L, 2))
2271 0: \x80 PROTO 2
2272 2: ] EMPTY_LIST
2273 3: q BINPUT 0
2274 5: h BINGET 0
2275 7: \x85 TUPLE1
2276 8: q BINPUT 1
2277 10: a APPEND
2278 11: . STOP
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00002279highest protocol among opcodes = 2
Tim Petersd0f7c862003-01-28 15:27:57 +00002280
2281>>> dis(pickle.dumps(T, 2))
2282 0: \x80 PROTO 2
2283 2: ] EMPTY_LIST
2284 3: q BINPUT 0
2285 5: h BINGET 0
2286 7: \x85 TUPLE1
2287 8: q BINPUT 1
2288 10: a APPEND
2289 11: 0 POP
2290 12: h BINGET 1
2291 14: . STOP
Tim Petersc1c2b3e2003-01-29 20:12:21 +00002292highest protocol among opcodes = 2
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00002293"""
2294
Tim Peters62235e72003-02-05 19:55:53 +00002295_memo_test = r"""
2296>>> import pickle
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +00002297>>> import io
2298>>> f = io.BytesIO()
Tim Peters62235e72003-02-05 19:55:53 +00002299>>> p = pickle.Pickler(f, 2)
2300>>> x = [1, 2, 3]
2301>>> p.dump(x)
2302>>> p.dump(x)
2303>>> f.seek(0)
Guido van Rossumcfe5f202007-05-08 21:26:54 +000023040
Tim Peters62235e72003-02-05 19:55:53 +00002305>>> memo = {}
2306>>> dis(f, memo=memo)
2307 0: \x80 PROTO 2
2308 2: ] EMPTY_LIST
2309 3: q BINPUT 0
2310 5: ( MARK
2311 6: K BININT1 1
2312 8: K BININT1 2
2313 10: K BININT1 3
2314 12: e APPENDS (MARK at 5)
2315 13: . STOP
2316highest protocol among opcodes = 2
2317>>> dis(f, memo=memo)
2318 14: \x80 PROTO 2
2319 16: h BINGET 0
2320 18: . STOP
2321highest protocol among opcodes = 2
2322"""
2323
Guido van Rossum57028352003-01-28 15:09:10 +00002324__test__ = {'disassembler_test': _dis_test,
Tim Peters62235e72003-02-05 19:55:53 +00002325 'disassembler_memo_test': _memo_test,
Tim Peters8ecfc8e2003-01-27 18:51:48 +00002326 }
2327
2328def _test():
2329 import doctest
2330 return doctest.testmod()
2331
2332if __name__ == "__main__":
2333 _test()