On 24-11-2021 01:46, MRAB wrote:
On 2021-11-23 20:25, Arnaud Loonstra wrote:
On 23-11-2021 18:31, MRAB wrote:
On 2021-11-23 16:04, Arnaud Loonstra wrote:
On 23-11-2021 16:37, MRAB wrote:
On 2021-11-23 15:17, MRAB wrote:
On 2021-11-23 14:44, Arnaud Loonstra wrote:
On 23-11-2021 15:34, MRAB wrote:
On 2021-11-23 12:07, Arnaud Loonstra wrote:
Hi,
I've got Python embedded successfully in a program up until now
as I'm
now running into weird GC related segfaults. I'm currently
trying to
debug this but my understanding of CPython limits me here.
I'm creating a Tuple in C but it crashes on creating it after a
while.
It doesn't make sense which makes me wonder something else must be
happening? Could be it just crashes here because the GC is
cleaning up
stuff completely unrelated to the allocation of the new tuple?
How can I
troubleshoot this?
I've got CPython compiled with --with-valgrind --without-pymalloc
--with-pydebug
In C I'm creating a tuple with the following method:
static PyObject *
s_py_zosc_tuple(pythonactor_t *self, zosc_t *oscmsg)
{
assert(self);
assert(oscmsg);
char *format = zosc_format(oscmsg);
PyObject *rettuple = PyTuple_New((Py_ssize_t)
strlen(format) );
It segfaults here (frame 16) after 320 times (consistently)
1 __GI_raise raise.c 49 0x7ffff72c4e71
2 __GI_abort abort.c 79 0x7ffff72ae536
3 fatal_error pylifecycle.c 2183 0x7ffff7d84b4f
4 Py_FatalError pylifecycle.c 2193 0x7ffff7d878b2
5 _PyObject_AssertFailed object.c 2200 0x7ffff7c93cf2
6 visit_decref gcmodule.c 378 0x7ffff7dadfd5
7 tupletraverse tupleobject.c 623 0x7ffff7ca3e81
8 subtract_refs gcmodule.c 406 0x7ffff7dad340
9 collect gcmodule.c 1054 0x7ffff7dae838
10 collect_with_callback gcmodule.c 1240 0x7ffff7daf17b
11 collect_generations gcmodule.c 1262 0x7ffff7daf3f6
12 _PyObject_GC_Alloc gcmodule.c 1977 0x7ffff7daf4f2
13 _PyObject_GC_Malloc gcmodule.c 1987 0x7ffff7dafebc
14 _PyObject_GC_NewVar gcmodule.c 2016 0x7ffff7daffa5
15 PyTuple_New tupleobject.c 118 0x7ffff7ca4da7
16 s_py_zosc_tuple pythonactor.c 366 0x55555568cc82
17 pythonactor_socket pythonactor.c 664 0x55555568dac7
18 pythonactor_handle_msg pythonactor.c 862 0x55555568e472
19 pythonactor_handler pythonactor.c 828 0x55555568e2e2
20 sphactor_actor_run sphactor_actor.c 855 0x5555558cb268
... <More>
Any pointer really appreciated.
[snip]
Basically, yes, but I won't be surprised if it was due to too few
INCREFs or too many DECREFs somewhere.
https://github.com/hku-ect/gazebosc/blob/505b30c46bf3f78d188c3f575c80e294d3db7e5d/Actors/pythonactor.c#L286
Incidentally, in s_py_zosc_tuple, you're not doing "assert(rc == 0);"
after "after zosc_pop_float" or "zosc_pop_double".
Thanks for those pointers! I think your intuition is right. I might have
found the bugger. In s_py_zosc I call Py_DECREF on pAddress and pData.
However they are acquired by PyTuple_GetItem which returns a borrowed
reference. I think pAddress and pData are then also 'decrefed' when the
pReturn tuple which contains pAddress and pData is 'decrefed'?
Yes, members of a container are DECREFed when the container is destroyed.
It's bad practice for a function to DECREF its arguments unless the
function's sole purpose is cleanup because the function won't know where
the arguments came from.
I'm finding it out now. What strikes me was how hard it was to debug
this. I think it was caused because I INCREFed the return object. I
guess I did that to workaround the wrong DECREF data in the return
object. However that caused a hell to debug. I'm really curious what the
best practices are for debugging embedded CPython.
Thanks big time for your feedback!
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