requests/packages.py just imports urllib3 normally, then makes up new
names for it. pkgutil can't cope with that, and returns the loader
(builtin) for the requests package. The built-in loader obviously can't
find_module() for "requests/packages/urllib3/contrib/pyopenssl" because
it doesn't exist on disk.
On OS X with case-insensitive filenames, resolving
'ansible.module_utils.facts.base.Hardware' finds
'ansible.module_utils.facts.hardware/__init__.py', because
module_finder's procedure is completely wrong for resolving child
modules. Patch over it for now since it otherwise works for Ansible.
If thread A is about to wake as thread B is about to sleep, and A loses
the GIL at an inopportune moment, it was possible for two latches to
share the same socketpair, causing wakeups routed to the wrong latch.
The pair was returned to the 'idle sockets' list before .recv() had been
called. This manifested as TimeoutError() thrown rarely with many active
threads and the host is heavily loaded (such as Travis CI).
Add more documentation and stop writing single wake bytes. Instead the
recipient's identity is written instead, making it simpler to detect
future bugs.
On 2.7 it was "accidentally fine" because the buffer object the StringIO
was initialized from happened to look like ASCII, but in 2.6 either
UCS-2 or UCS-4 is used for that buffer, and so the result was junk.
Just use the io module everywhere if we can, falling back to pure-Python
StringIO for Python<2.6.