- cross-posted to:
- python@lemmy.ml
- hackernews@derp.foo
- cross-posted to:
- python@lemmy.ml
- hackernews@derp.foo
It’s clear that the overall sentiment is positive, both for the general idea and for PEP 703 specifically. The Steering Council is also largely positive on both. We intend to accept PEP 703, although we’re still working on the acceptance details.
Long-term (probably 5+ years), the no-GIL build should be the only build. We do not want to create a permanent split between with-GIL and no-GIL builds (and extension modules).
Short term, we add the no-GIL build as an experimental build mode, presumably in 3.13 (if it slips to 3.14, that is not a problem
So legacy threaded code will now get a performance boost for “free”?
It will depend on the nature of how the threaded code is structured (how much is sequential, how much is paralle, Amdahl’s law, etc), but it should at least be more effective at scaling up and taking advantage of multiple cores.
That said, the change would come at a cost to single threaded code. From the PEP 703:
imho its a cost we should pay. CPU’s are getting more cores not faster ones.