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Tip revision: 8623e68ea856830e084839e1d726c1f5be727203 authored by Ɓukasz Langa on 10 February 2020, 19:08:24 UTC
Python 3.8.2rc1
Tip revision: 8623e68
bogus_code_obj.py
"""
Broken bytecode objects can easily crash the interpreter.

This is not going to be fixed.  It is generally agreed that there is no
point in writing a bytecode verifier and putting it in CPython just for
this.  Moreover, a verifier is bound to accept only a subset of all safe
bytecodes, so it could lead to unnecessary breakage.

For security purposes, "restricted" interpreters are not going to let
the user build or load random bytecodes anyway.  Otherwise, this is a
"won't fix" case.

"""

import types

co = types.CodeType(0, 0, 0, 0, 0, b'\x04\x71\x00\x00',
                    (), (), (), '', '', 1, b'')
exec(co)
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