Python Development Mode (original) (raw)
Added in version 3.7.
The Python Development Mode introduces additional runtime checks that are too expensive to be enabled by default. It should not be more verbose than the default if the code is correct; new warnings are only emitted when an issue is detected.
It can be enabled using the -X dev command line option or by setting the PYTHONDEVMODE environment variable to 1
.
See also Python debug build.
Effects of the Python Development Mode¶
Enabling the Python Development Mode is similar to the following command, but with additional effects described below:
PYTHONMALLOC=debug PYTHONASYNCIODEBUG=1 python -W default -X faulthandler
Effects of the Python Development Mode:
- Add
default
warning filter. The following warnings are shown:- DeprecationWarning
- ImportWarning
- PendingDeprecationWarning
- ResourceWarning
Normally, the above warnings are filtered by the default warning filters.
It behaves as if the -W default command line option is used.
Use the -W error command line option or set thePYTHONWARNINGS environment variable toerror
to treat warnings as errors.
- Install debug hooks on memory allocators to check for:
- Buffer underflow
- Buffer overflow
- Memory allocator API violation
- Unsafe usage of the GIL
See the PyMem_SetupDebugHooks() C function.
It behaves as if the PYTHONMALLOC environment variable is set todebug
.
To enable the Python Development Mode without installing debug hooks on memory allocators, set the PYTHONMALLOC environment variable todefault
.
- Call faulthandler.enable() at Python startup to install handlers for the SIGSEGV, SIGFPE,SIGABRT, SIGBUS andSIGILL signals to dump the Python traceback on a crash.
It behaves as if the -X faulthandler command line option is used or if the PYTHONFAULTHANDLER environment variable is set to1
. - Enable asyncio debug mode. For example,asyncio checks for coroutines that were not awaited and logs them.
It behaves as if the PYTHONASYNCIODEBUG environment variable is set to1
. - Check the encoding and errors arguments for string encoding and decoding operations. Examples: open(), str.encode() andbytes.decode().
By default, for best performance, the errors argument is only checked at the first encoding/decoding error and the encoding argument is sometimes ignored for empty strings. - The io.IOBase destructor logs
close()
exceptions. - Set the dev_mode attribute of sys.flags to
True
.
The Python Development Mode does not enable the tracemalloc module by default, because the overhead cost (to performance and memory) would be too large. Enabling the tracemalloc module provides additional information on the origin of some errors. For example, ResourceWarning logs the traceback where the resource was allocated, and a buffer overflow error logs the traceback where the memory block was allocated.
The Python Development Mode does not prevent the -O command line option from removing assert statements nor from setting__debug__ to False
.
The Python Development Mode can only be enabled at the Python startup. Its value can be read from sys.flags.dev_mode.
Changed in version 3.8: The io.IOBase destructor now logs close()
exceptions.
Changed in version 3.9: The encoding and errors arguments are now checked for string encoding and decoding operations.
ResourceWarning Example¶
Example of a script counting the number of lines of the text file specified in the command line:
import sys
def main(): fp = open(sys.argv[1]) nlines = len(fp.readlines()) print(nlines) # The file is closed implicitly
if name == "main": main()
The script does not close the file explicitly. By default, Python does not emit any warning. Example using README.txt, which has 269 lines:
$ python script.py README.txt 269
Enabling the Python Development Mode displays a ResourceWarning warning:
$ python -X dev script.py README.txt 269 script.py:10: ResourceWarning: unclosed file <_io.TextIOWrapper name='README.rst' mode='r' encoding='UTF-8'> main() ResourceWarning: Enable tracemalloc to get the object allocation traceback
In addition, enabling tracemalloc shows the line where the file was opened:
$ python -X dev -X tracemalloc=5 script.py README.rst 269 script.py:10: ResourceWarning: unclosed file <_io.TextIOWrapper name='README.rst' mode='r' encoding='UTF-8'> main() Object allocated at (most recent call last): File "script.py", lineno 10 main() File "script.py", lineno 4 fp = open(sys.argv[1])
The fix is to close explicitly the file. Example using a context manager:
def main(): # Close the file explicitly when exiting the with block with open(sys.argv[1]) as fp: nlines = len(fp.readlines()) print(nlines)
Not closing a resource explicitly can leave a resource open for way longer than expected; it can cause severe issues upon exiting Python. It is bad in CPython, but it is even worse in PyPy. Closing resources explicitly makes an application more deterministic and more reliable.
Bad file descriptor error example¶
Script displaying the first line of itself:
import os
def main(): fp = open(file) firstline = fp.readline() print(firstline.rstrip()) os.close(fp.fileno()) # The file is closed implicitly
main()
By default, Python does not emit any warning:
$ python script.py import os
The Python Development Mode shows a ResourceWarning and logs a “Bad file descriptor” error when finalizing the file object:
$ python -X dev script.py import os script.py:10: ResourceWarning: unclosed file <_io.TextIOWrapper name='script.py' mode='r' encoding='UTF-8'> main() ResourceWarning: Enable tracemalloc to get the object allocation traceback Exception ignored in: <_io.TextIOWrapper name='script.py' mode='r' encoding='UTF-8'> Traceback (most recent call last): File "script.py", line 10, in main() OSError: [Errno 9] Bad file descriptor
os.close(fp.fileno())
closes the file descriptor. When the file object finalizer tries to close the file descriptor again, it fails with the Bad file descriptor
error. A file descriptor must be closed only once. In the worst case scenario, closing it twice can lead to a crash (see bpo-18748for an example).
The fix is to remove the os.close(fp.fileno())
line, or open the file withclosefd=False
.