Most typos are in comments, but two typos are in docstring.
2.6 KiB
Object layout
Common header
Each Python object starts with two fields:
- ob_refcnt
- ob_type
which the form the header common to all Python objects, for all versions, and hold the reference count and class of the object, respectively.
Pre-header
Since the introduction of the cycle GC, there has also been a pre-header. Before 3.11, this pre-header was two words in size. It should be considered opaque to all code except the cycle GC.
3.11 pre-header
In 3.11 the pre-header was extended to include pointers to the VM managed __dict__
.
The reason for moving the __dict__
to the pre-header is that it allows
faster access, as it is at a fixed offset, and it also allows object's
dictionaries to be lazily created when the __dict__
attribute is
specifically asked for.
In the 3.11 the non-GC part of the pre-header consists of two pointers:
- dict
- values
The values pointer refers to the PyDictValues
array which holds the
values of the objects's attributes.
Should the dictionary be needed, then values
is set to NULL
and the dict
field points to the dictionary.
3.12 pre-header
In 3.12 the the pointer to the list of weak references is added to the
pre-header. In order to make space for it, the dict
and values
pointers are combined into a single tagged pointer:
- weakreflist
- dict_or_values
If the object has no physical dictionary, then the dict_or_values
has its low bit set to one, and points to the values array.
If the object has a physical dictionary, then the dict_or_values
has its low bit set to zero, and points to the dictionary.
The untagged form is chosen for the dictionary pointer, rather than
the values pointer, to enable the (legacy) C-API function
_PyObject_GetDictPtr(PyObject *obj)
to work.
Layout of a "normal" Python object in 3.12:
- weakreflist
- dict_or_values
- GC 1
- GC 2
- ob_refcnt
- ob_type
For a "normal" Python object, that is one that doesn't inherit from a builtin class or have slots, the header and pre-header form the entire object.
There are several advantages to this layout:
- It allows lazy
__dict__
s, as described above. - The regular layout allows us to create tailored traversal and deallocation functions based on layout, rather than inheritance.
- Multiple inheritance works properly, as the weakrefs and dict are always at the same offset.
The full layout object, with an opaque part defined by a C extension,
and __slots__
looks like this: