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== Summary == | == Summary == | ||
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The standalone Python 3.6 binary will automatically attempt to coerce the C locale to C.utf8, unless the new | The standalone Python 3.6 binary will automatically attempt to coerce the C locale to C.utf8, unless the new PYTHONALLOWLOCALE environment variable is set to 0. | ||
== Owner == | == Owner == |
Revision as of 16:00, 14 February 2017
Change Proposal Name
Force C.UTF-8 when Python 3 is run under the C locale
Summary
The standalone Python 3.6 binary will automatically attempt to coerce the C locale to C.utf8, unless the new PYTHONALLOWLOCALE environment variable is set to 0.
Owner
- Name: Charalampos Stratakis
- Name: Nick Coghlan
- Email: cstratak AT redhat.com
- Email: ncoghlan AT redhat.com
- Release notes owner:
Current status
- Targeted release: Fedora 26
- Last updated: 2017-02-14
- Tracker bug: <will be assigned by the Wrangler>
Detailed Description
When run under the C locale, Python 3 doesn't work properly on systems where UTF-8 is the correct encoding for interacting with the rest of the system.
This is described in detail by Armin Ronacher in the click documentation: http://click.pocoo.org/5/python3/#python-3-surrogate-handling
This proposed change for the system Python 3, assumes the current process is misconfigured when it detects that "LC_CTYPE" refers to the "C" locale, and in that case, prints a warnings to stderr and forces the use of the C.UTF-8 locale instead.
To avoid unintended side effects, it *solely* changes the actual python3.6 command line utility - nothing changes for cases where CPython is used as a dynamically linked library.
Behaviour with the patch:
$ LANG=C /usr/bin/python3 -c 'import click; cli = click.command()(lambda:None); cli()'
Python detected LC_CTYPE=C. Setting LC_ALL & LANG to C.UTF-8 (set PYTHONALLOWLOCALE to disable this locale coercion behaviour).
Behaviour without the patch:
$ LANG=C /usr/bin/python3 -c 'import click; cli = click.command()(lambda:None); cli()'
Traceback (most recent call last): File "<string>", line 1, in <module> File "/home/ncoghlan/.local/lib/python3.5/site-packages/click/core.py", line 716, in __call__ return self.main(*args, **kwargs) File "/home/ncoghlan/.local/lib/python3.5/site-packages/click/core.py", line 675, in main _verify_python3_env() File "/home/ncoghlan/.local/lib/python3.5/site-packages/click/_unicodefun.py", line 119, in _verify_python3_env 'mitigation steps.' + extra) RuntimeError: Click will abort further execution because Python 3 was configured to use ASCII as encoding for the environment. Either run this under Python 2 or consult http://click.pocoo.org/python3/ for mitigation steps. This system supports the C.UTF-8 locale which is recommended. You might be able to resolve your issue by exporting the following environment variables: export LC_ALL=C.UTF-8 export LANG=C.UTF-8
Benefit to Fedora
Scope
- Proposal owners:
A patch will be backported to Fedora's Python 3.6 from the upstream PEP 538 which targets Python 3.7. The patch that will be backported is explicitly targeting Fedora, as the upstream equivalent one will have to be compatible with Windows, macOS, Solaris etc. The Fedora specific patch is provided by Python's core developer Nick Coghlan.
- Release engineering: No impact with release engineering
Upgrade/compatibility impact
N/A (not a System Wide Change)
How To Test
N/A (not a System Wide Change)
User Experience
N/A (not a System Wide Change)
Dependencies
No new dependencies will be added.
Contingency Plan
- Contingency mechanism: Remove the patch from Python 3.6
- Contingency deadline: If users experience any issues this change can be reverted at any time
- Blocks release? No
- Blocks product? No
Documentation
N/A (not a System Wide Change)