STINNER Victor <vstin...@python.org> added the comment:
When the crash occurs, the _sre.compile function is not destroyed in the interpreter which created the function. The crash is related to _sre.compile method. This method is created in PyInit__sre() called by "import _sre". On Windows, the _sre module is not imported at startup. So it's imported first in a subinterpreter. In Python 3.9, the _sre module doesn't use the multiphase initialization API and PyModuleDef.m_size = -1. When the module is imported, _PyImport_FixupExtensionObject() copies the module dictionary into PyModuleDef.m_copy. In Py_Finalize() and Py_EndInterpreter(), _PyImport_Cleanup() does two things: * (1) set _sre.__dict__['compile'] to None -> kill the first reference to the function * (2) call _PyInterpreterState_ClearModules() which does Py_CLEAR(def->m_base.m_copy), clear the cached copy of the _sre module dict -> kill the second reference I modified Python to add an "ob_interp" member to PyObject to log in which interpreter an object is created. I also modified meth_dealloc() to log when _sre.compile function is deleted. Extract of the reformatted output to see what's going on: --- (...) (1) fixup: COPY _sre ModuleDef copy: def=00007FFF19209810 interp=000001EC1846F2A0 (2) import: UPDATE(_sre ModuleDef copy): interp=000001EC184AB790 (3) _PyImport_Cleanup: interp=000001EC1846F2A0 _PyInterpreterState_ClearModules: PY_CLEAR _sre ModuleDef m_copy: def=00007FFF19209810 interp=000001EC1846F2A0 (4) _PyImport_Cleanup: interp=000001EC184AB790 meth_dealloc(compile): m->ob_interp=000001EC1846F2A0, interp=000001EC184AB790 Windows fatal exception: access violation (...) --- Steps: * (1) * interpreter #1 (000001EC1846F2A0) creates the _sre.compile function * interpreter #1 (000001EC1846F2A0) copies _sre module dict into PyModuleDef.m_copy * at this point, _sre.compile should have 2 references * (2) * interpreter #2 (000001EC184AB790) imports _sre: it creates a new module object and copies the function from PyModuleDef.m_copy * at this point, _sre.compile should have 3 references * (3) * interpreter #1 exit: Py_EndInterpreter() calls _PyImport_Cleanup() * at this point, _sre.compile should have 1 reference * (4) * interpreter #2 exit: Py_EndInterpreter() calls _PyImport_Cleanup() * the last reference to _sre.compile is deleted: 0 reference * meth_dealloc() is called The first problem is that the function was created in the interpreter #1 but deleted in the interpreter #2. The second problem is that the function is tracked by the GC and it is part of the GC list of the interpreter #1. When the interpreter #2 destroys the function, the GC list of interpreter #1 is already freed: PyGC_Head contains dangling pointers. ---------- _______________________________________ Python tracker <rep...@bugs.python.org> <https://bugs.python.org/issue46070> _______________________________________ _______________________________________________ Python-bugs-list mailing list Unsubscribe: https://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-bugs-list/archive%40mail-archive.com