On Fri, Feb 4, 2022 at 10:37 AM Laszlo Ersek <lersek(a)redhat.com> wrote:
On 02/03/22 23:49, Nir Soffer wrote:
> On Thu, Feb 3, 2022 at 10:26 PM Eric Blake <eblake(a)redhat.com> wrote:
>>
>> Like a lot of the C examples, the aio copy test ignores read and write
>> errors in the completion callback, which can cause silent data
>> corruption. The failure in the test is not critical, but this is a bad
>> example that may be copied by developers to a real application.
>>
>> The test dies with an assertion failure now if completion callback
>> fails. Tested with the temporary patch of:
>>
>> | diff --git i/python/t/590-aio-copy.py w/python/t/590-aio-copy.py
>> | index 861fa6c8..4cd64d83 100644
>> | --- i/python/t/590-aio-copy.py
>> | +++ w/python/t/590-aio-copy.py
>> | @@ -117,7 +117,8 @@ src.set_handle_name("src")
>> | dst = nbd.NBD()
>> | dst.set_handle_name("dst")
>> | src.connect_command(["nbdkit", "-s",
"--exit-with-parent", "-r",
>> | - "pattern", "size=%d" % disk_size])
>> | + "--filter=error", "pattern",
"error-pread-rate=1",
>> | + "size=%d" % disk_size])
>> | dst.connect_command(["nbdkit", "-s",
"--exit-with-parent",
>> | "memory", "size=%d" % disk_size])
>> | asynch_copy(src, dst)
>> ---
>> python/t/590-aio-copy.py | 4 +++-
>> 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
>>
>> diff --git a/python/t/590-aio-copy.py b/python/t/590-aio-copy.py
>> index 6cde5934..861fa6c8 100644
>> --- a/python/t/590-aio-copy.py
>> +++ b/python/t/590-aio-copy.py
>> @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
>> # libnbd Python bindings
>> -# Copyright (C) 2010-2019 Red Hat Inc.
>> +# Copyright (C) 2010-2022 Red Hat Inc.
>> #
>> # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
>> # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
>> @@ -36,6 +36,7 @@ def asynch_copy(src, dst):
>> # This callback is called when any pread from the source
>> # has completed.
>> def read_completed(buf, offset, error):
>> + assert not error
>
> This works for the test, since the test is not compiled
> to pyc file, which removes the asserts (like C -DNODBUG)
> by default when building rpms.
>
> If someone will copy this to a real application they will have no
> error checking.
I consider this a catastrophic bug in python, to be honest. Eliminating
assertions should never be done without an explicit request from whoever
builds the package.
I checked this and asserts are not removed automatically.
They are removed only when using the -O or -OO options:
$ python -O -c 'assert 0; print("assert was removed")'
assert was removed
Or:
$ PYTHONOPTIMIZE=1 python -c 'assert 0; print("assert was
removed")'
assert was removed
Or when compiling modules, if you use the -o1 argument:
$ cat test.py
assert 0
print("assert was removed")
$ python -m compileall -o1 test.py
Compiling 'test.py'...
$ python __pycache__/test.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
assert was removed
So this is similar to -DNODEBUG, but unlike a compiled program, asserts
can be removed at runtime without your control.
Nir