On Tue, Jan 10, 2006 at 01:14:13PM -0800, Guido van Rossum wrote: > On the other hand it breaks one of the most fundamental Python > guidelines: if you get a core dump (segfault etc.) it's a bug in > Python or in a 3rd party extension, not in *your* Python code. An > exception would have to be made for any code that uses ctypes, as it > is usually trivial to cause core dumps with ctypes (I'd venture it's > hard to avoid them ;-). Aside from 'dl', what was also pointed out in c.l.py was the crashability of Python in general, even from pure Python code: centurion:~ > python < . Segmentation fault [...] >>> sys.setrecursionlimit(1<<30) >>> f = lambda f:f(f) >>> f(f) Segmentation fault There's more, all from Python itself. And sure, "well, don't do that then" is a perfectly valid response to most of these harebrained tricks, but it does put a lie to the 'uncrashable python' idea :) Not-for-or-against-including-ctypes-anyway'ly y'rs, -- Thomas Wouters <thomas at xs4all.net> Hi! I'm a .signature virus! copy me into your .signature file to help me spread!
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