18.10.1 Python Byte Code Instructions
The Python compiler currently generates the following byte code
instructions.
- STOP_CODE
-
Indicates end-of-code to the compiler, not used by the interpreter.
- NOP
-
Do nothing code. Used as a placeholder by the bytecode optimizer.
- POP_TOP
-
Removes the top-of-stack (TOS) item.
- ROT_TWO
-
Swaps the two top-most stack items.
- ROT_THREE
-
Lifts second and third stack item one position up, moves top down
to position three.
- ROT_FOUR
-
Lifts second, third and forth stack item one position up, moves top down to
position four.
- DUP_TOP
-
Duplicates the reference on top of the stack.
Unary Operations take the top of the stack, apply the operation, and
push the result back on the stack.
- UNARY_POSITIVE
-
Implements
TOS = +TOS
.
- UNARY_NEGATIVE
-
Implements
TOS = -TOS
.
- UNARY_NOT
-
Implements
TOS = not TOS
.
- UNARY_CONVERT
-
Implements
TOS = `TOS`
.
- UNARY_INVERT
-
Implements
TOS = ~TOS
.
- GET_ITER
-
Implements
TOS = iter(TOS)
.
Binary operations remove the top of the stack (TOS) and the second top-most
stack item (TOS1) from the stack. They perform the operation, and put the
result back on the stack.
- BINARY_POWER
-
Implements
TOS = TOS1 ** TOS
.
- BINARY_MULTIPLY
-
Implements
TOS = TOS1 * TOS
.
- BINARY_DIVIDE
-
Implements
TOS = TOS1 / TOS
when
from __future__ import division
is not in effect.
- BINARY_FLOOR_DIVIDE
-
Implements
TOS = TOS1 // TOS
.
- BINARY_TRUE_DIVIDE
-
Implements
TOS = TOS1 / TOS
when
from __future__ import division
is in effect.
- BINARY_MODULO
-
Implements
TOS = TOS1 % TOS
.
- BINARY_ADD
-
Implements
TOS = TOS1 + TOS
.
- BINARY_SUBTRACT
-
Implements
TOS = TOS1 - TOS
.
- BINARY_SUBSCR
-
Implements
TOS = TOS1[TOS]
.
- BINARY_LSHIFT
-
Implements
TOS = TOS1 <
< TOS
.
- BINARY_RSHIFT
-
Implements
TOS = TOS1 >
> TOS
.
- BINARY_AND
-
Implements
TOS = TOS1 & TOS
.
- BINARY_XOR
-
Implements
TOS = TOS1 ^ TOS
.
- BINARY_OR
-
Implements
TOS = TOS1 | TOS
.
In-place operations are like binary operations, in that they remove TOS and
TOS1, and push the result back on the stack, but the operation is done
in-place when TOS1 supports it, and the resulting TOS may be (but does not
have to be) the original TOS1.
- INPLACE_POWER
-
Implements in-place
TOS = TOS1 ** TOS
.
- INPLACE_MULTIPLY
-
Implements in-place
TOS = TOS1 * TOS
.
- INPLACE_DIVIDE
-
Implements in-place
TOS = TOS1 / TOS
when
from __future__ import division
is not in effect.
- INPLACE_FLOOR_DIVIDE
-
Implements in-place
TOS = TOS1 // TOS
.
- INPLACE_TRUE_DIVIDE
-
Implements in-place
TOS = TOS1 / TOS
when
from __future__ import division
is in effect.
- INPLACE_MODULO
-
Implements in-place
TOS = TOS1 % TOS
.
- INPLACE_ADD
-
Implements in-place
TOS = TOS1 + TOS
.
- INPLACE_SUBTRACT
-
Implements in-place
TOS = TOS1 - TOS
.
- INPLACE_LSHIFT
-
Implements in-place
TOS = TOS1 <
< TOS
.
- INPLACE_RSHIFT
-
Implements in-place
TOS = TOS1 >
> TOS
.
- INPLACE_AND
-
Implements in-place
TOS = TOS1 & TOS
.
- INPLACE_XOR
-
Implements in-place
TOS = TOS1 ^ TOS
.
- INPLACE_OR
-
Implements in-place
TOS = TOS1 | TOS
.
The slice opcodes take up to three parameters.
- SLICE+0
-
Implements
TOS = TOS[:]
.
- SLICE+1
-
Implements
TOS = TOS1[TOS:]
.
- SLICE+2
-
Implements
TOS = TOS1[:TOS]
.
- SLICE+3
-
Implements
TOS = TOS2[TOS1:TOS]
.
Slice assignment needs even an additional parameter. As any statement,
they put nothing on the stack.
- STORE_SLICE+0
-
Implements
TOS[:] = TOS1
.
- STORE_SLICE+1
-
Implements
TOS1[TOS:] = TOS2
.
- STORE_SLICE+2
-
Implements
TOS1[:TOS] = TOS2
.
- STORE_SLICE+3
-
Implements
TOS2[TOS1:TOS] = TOS3
.
- DELETE_SLICE+0
-
Implements
del TOS[:]
.
- DELETE_SLICE+1
-
Implements
del TOS1[TOS:]
.
- DELETE_SLICE+2
-
Implements
del TOS1[:TOS]
.
- DELETE_SLICE+3
-
Implements
del TOS2[TOS1:TOS]
.
- STORE_SUBSCR
-
Implements
TOS1[TOS] = TOS2
.
- DELETE_SUBSCR
-
Implements
del TOS1[TOS]
.
Miscellaneous opcodes.
- PRINT_EXPR
-
Implements the expression statement for the interactive mode. TOS is
removed from the stack and printed. In non-interactive mode, an
expression statement is terminated with
POP_STACK
.
- PRINT_ITEM
-
Prints TOS to the file-like object bound to
sys.stdout
. There
is one such instruction for each item in the print statement.
- PRINT_ITEM_TO
-
Like
PRINT_ITEM
, but prints the item second from TOS to the
file-like object at TOS. This is used by the extended print statement.
- PRINT_NEWLINE
-
Prints a new line on
sys.stdout
. This is generated as the
last operation of a print statement, unless the statement
ends with a comma.
- PRINT_NEWLINE_TO
-
Like
PRINT_NEWLINE
, but prints the new line on the file-like
object on the TOS. This is used by the extended print statement.
- BREAK_LOOP
-
Terminates a loop due to a break statement.
- CONTINUE_LOOP target
-
Continues a loop due to a continue statement. target
is the address to jump to (which should be a
FOR_ITER
instruction).
- LIST_APPEND
-
Calls
list.append(TOS1, TOS)
. Used to implement list comprehensions.
- LOAD_LOCALS
-
Pushes a reference to the locals of the current scope on the stack.
This is used in the code for a class definition: After the class body
is evaluated, the locals are passed to the class definition.
- RETURN_VALUE
-
Returns with TOS to the caller of the function.
- YIELD_VALUE
-
Pops
TOS
and yields it from a generator.
- IMPORT_STAR
-
Loads all symbols not starting with "_" directly from the module TOS
to the local namespace. The module is popped after loading all names.
This opcode implements
from module import *
.
- EXEC_STMT
-
Implements
exec TOS2,TOS1,TOS
. The compiler fills
missing optional parameters with None
.
- POP_BLOCK
-
Removes one block from the block stack. Per frame, there is a
stack of blocks, denoting nested loops, try statements, and such.
- END_FINALLY
-
Terminates a finally clause. The interpreter recalls
whether the exception has to be re-raised, or whether the function
returns, and continues with the outer-next block.
- BUILD_CLASS
-
Creates a new class object. TOS is the methods dictionary, TOS1
the tuple of the names of the base classes, and TOS2 the class name.
All of the following opcodes expect arguments. An argument is two
bytes, with the more significant byte last.
- STORE_NAME namei
-
Implements
name = TOS
. namei is the index of name
in the attribute co_names of the code object.
The compiler tries to use STORE_LOCAL
or STORE_GLOBAL
if possible.
- DELETE_NAME namei
-
Implements
del name
, where namei is the index into
co_names attribute of the code object.
- UNPACK_SEQUENCE count
-
Unpacks TOS into count individual values, which are put onto
the stack right-to-left.
- DUP_TOPX count
-
Duplicate count items, keeping them in the same order. Due to
implementation limits, count should be between 1 and 5 inclusive.
- STORE_ATTR namei
-
Implements
TOS.name = TOS1
, where namei is the index
of name in co_names.
- DELETE_ATTR namei
-
Implements
del TOS.name
, using namei as index into
co_names.
- STORE_GLOBAL namei
-
Works as
STORE_NAME
, but stores the name as a global.
- DELETE_GLOBAL namei
-
Works as
DELETE_NAME
, but deletes a global name.
- LOAD_CONST consti
-
Pushes "co_consts[consti]" onto the stack.
- LOAD_NAME namei
-
Pushes the value associated with "co_names[namei]" onto the stack.
- BUILD_TUPLE count
-
Creates a tuple consuming count items from the stack, and pushes
the resulting tuple onto the stack.
- BUILD_LIST count
-
Works as
BUILD_TUPLE
, but creates a list.
- BUILD_MAP zero
-
Pushes a new empty dictionary object onto the stack. The argument is
ignored and set to zero by the compiler.
- LOAD_ATTR namei
-
Replaces TOS with
getattr(TOS, co_names[namei])
.
- COMPARE_OP opname
-
Performs a Boolean operation. The operation name can be found
in
cmp_op[opname]
.
- IMPORT_NAME namei
-
Imports the module
co_names[namei]
. The module object is
pushed onto the stack. The current namespace is not affected: for a
proper import statement, a subsequent STORE_FAST
instruction
modifies the namespace.
- IMPORT_FROM namei
-
Loads the attribute
co_names[namei]
from the module found in
TOS. The resulting object is pushed onto the stack, to be subsequently
stored by a STORE_FAST
instruction.
- JUMP_FORWARD delta
-
Increments byte code counter by delta.
- JUMP_IF_TRUE delta
-
If TOS is true, increment the byte code counter by delta. TOS is
left on the stack.
- JUMP_IF_FALSE delta
-
If TOS is false, increment the byte code counter by delta. TOS
is not changed.
- JUMP_ABSOLUTE target
-
Set byte code counter to target.
- FOR_ITER delta
-
TOS
is an iterator. Call its next() method. If this
yields a new value, push it on the stack (leaving the iterator below
it). If the iterator indicates it is exhausted TOS
is
popped, and the byte code counter is incremented by delta.
- LOAD_GLOBAL namei
-
Loads the global named
co_names[namei]
onto the stack.
- SETUP_LOOP delta
-
Pushes a block for a loop onto the block stack. The block spans
from the current instruction with a size of delta bytes.
- SETUP_EXCEPT delta
-
Pushes a try block from a try-except clause onto the block stack.
delta points to the first except block.
- SETUP_FINALLY delta
-
Pushes a try block from a try-except clause onto the block stack.
delta points to the finally block.
- LOAD_FAST var_num
-
Pushes a reference to the local
co_varnames[var_num]
onto
the stack.
- STORE_FAST var_num
-
Stores TOS into the local
co_varnames[var_num]
.
- DELETE_FAST var_num
-
Deletes local
co_varnames[var_num]
.
- LOAD_CLOSURE i
-
Pushes a reference to the cell contained in slot i of the
cell and free variable storage. The name of the variable is
co_cellvars[i]
if i is less than the length of
co_cellvars. Otherwise it is
co_freevars[i - len(co_cellvars)]
.
- LOAD_DEREF i
-
Loads the cell contained in slot i of the cell and free variable
storage. Pushes a reference to the object the cell contains on the
stack.
- STORE_DEREF i
-
Stores TOS into the cell contained in slot i of the cell and
free variable storage.
- SET_LINENO lineno
-
This opcode is obsolete.
- RAISE_VARARGS argc
-
Raises an exception. argc indicates the number of parameters
to the raise statement, ranging from 0 to 3. The handler will find
the traceback as TOS2, the parameter as TOS1, and the exception
as TOS.
- CALL_FUNCTION argc
-
Calls a function. The low byte of argc indicates the number of
positional parameters, the high byte the number of keyword parameters.
On the stack, the opcode finds the keyword parameters first. For each
keyword argument, the value is on top of the key. Below the keyword
parameters, the positional parameters are on the stack, with the
right-most parameter on top. Below the parameters, the function object
to call is on the stack.
- MAKE_FUNCTION argc
-
Pushes a new function object on the stack. TOS is the code associated
with the function. The function object is defined to have argc
default parameters, which are found below TOS.
- MAKE_CLOSURE argc
-
Creates a new function object, sets its func_closure slot, and
pushes it on the stack. TOS is the code associated with the function.
If the code object has N free variables, the next N items on the stack
are the cells for these variables. The function also has argc
default parameters, where are found before the cells.
- BUILD_SLICE argc
-
Pushes a slice object on the stack. argc must be 2 or 3. If it
is 2,
slice(TOS1, TOS)
is pushed; if it is 3,
slice(TOS2, TOS1, TOS)
is pushed.
See the slice()
built-in function for more
information.
- EXTENDED_ARG ext
-
Prefixes any opcode which has an argument too big to fit into the
default two bytes. ext holds two additional bytes which, taken
together with the subsequent opcode's argument, comprise a four-byte
argument, ext being the two most-significant bytes.
- CALL_FUNCTION_VAR argc
-
Calls a function. argc is interpreted as in
CALL_FUNCTION
.
The top element on the stack contains the variable argument list, followed
by keyword and positional arguments.
- CALL_FUNCTION_KW argc
-
Calls a function. argc is interpreted as in
CALL_FUNCTION
.
The top element on the stack contains the keyword arguments dictionary,
followed by explicit keyword and positional arguments.
- CALL_FUNCTION_VAR_KW argc
-
Calls a function. argc is interpreted as in
CALL_FUNCTION
. The top element on the stack contains the
keyword arguments dictionary, followed by the variable-arguments
tuple, followed by explicit keyword and positional arguments.
Release 2.4.4, documentation updated on 18 October 2006.
See About this document... for information on suggesting changes.