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#!/usr/bin/env python
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# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
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# Copyright (c) 2005-2010 ActiveState Software Inc.
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# Copyright (c) 2013 Eddy Petrișor
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"""Utilities for determining application-specific dirs.
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See <http://github.com/ActiveState/appdirs> for details and usage.
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"""
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# Dev Notes:
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# - MSDN on where to store app data files:
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# http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;310294#XSLTH3194121123120121120120
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# - Mac OS X: http://developer.apple.com/documentation/MacOSX/Conceptual/BPFileSystem/index.html
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# - XDG spec for Un*x: http://standards.freedesktop.org/basedir-spec/basedir-spec-latest.html
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__version_info__ = (1, 4, 3)
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__version__ = '.'.join(map(str, __version_info__))
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import sys
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import os
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PY3 = sys.version_info[0] == 3
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if PY3:
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unicode = str
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if sys.platform.startswith('java'):
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import platform
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os_name = platform.java_ver()[3][0]
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if os_name.startswith('Windows'): # "Windows XP", "Windows 7", etc.
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system = 'win32'
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elif os_name.startswith('Mac'): # "Mac OS X", etc.
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system = 'darwin'
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else: # "Linux", "SunOS", "FreeBSD", etc.
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# Setting this to "linux2" is not ideal, but only Windows or Mac
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# are actually checked for and the rest of the module expects
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# *sys.platform* style strings.
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system = 'linux2'
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else:
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system = sys.platform
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def user_data_dir(appname=None, appauthor=None, version=None, roaming=False):
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r"""Return full path to the user-specific data dir for this application.
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"appname" is the name of application.
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If None, just the system directory is returned.
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"appauthor" (only used on Windows) is the name of the
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appauthor or distributing body for this application. Typically
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it is the owning company name. This falls back to appname. You may
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pass False to disable it.
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"version" is an optional version path element to append to the
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path. You might want to use this if you want multiple versions
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of your app to be able to run independently. If used, this
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would typically be "<major>.<minor>".
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Only applied when appname is present.
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"roaming" (boolean, default False) can be set True to use the Windows
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roaming appdata directory. That means that for users on a Windows
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network setup for roaming profiles, this user data will be
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sync'd on login. See
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<http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc766489(WS.10).aspx>
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for a discussion of issues.
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Typical user data directories are:
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Mac OS X: ~/Library/Application Support/<AppName>
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Unix: ~/.local/share/<AppName> # or in $XDG_DATA_HOME, if defined
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Win XP (not roaming): C:\Documents and Settings\<username>\Application Data\<AppAuthor>\<AppName>
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Win XP (roaming): C:\Documents and Settings\<username>\Local Settings\Application Data\<AppAuthor>\<AppName>
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Win 7 (not roaming): C:\Users\<username>\AppData\Local\<AppAuthor>\<AppName>
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Win 7 (roaming): C:\Users\<username>\AppData\Roaming\<AppAuthor>\<AppName>
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For Unix, we follow the XDG spec and support $XDG_DATA_HOME.
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That means, by default "~/.local/share/<AppName>".
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"""
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if system == "win32":
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if appauthor is None:
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appauthor = appname
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const = roaming and "CSIDL_APPDATA" or "CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATA"
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path = os.path.normpath(_get_win_folder(const))
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if appname:
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if appauthor is not False:
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path = os.path.join(path, appauthor, appname)
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else:
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path = os.path.join(path, appname)
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elif system == 'darwin':
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path = os.path.expanduser('~/Library/Application Support/')
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if appname:
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path = os.path.join(path, appname)
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else:
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path = os.getenv('XDG_DATA_HOME', os.path.expanduser("~/.local/share"))
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if appname:
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path = os.path.join(path, appname)
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if appname and version:
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path = os.path.join(path, version)
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return path
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def site_data_dir(appname=None, appauthor=None, version=None, multipath=False):
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r"""Return full path to the user-shared data dir for this application.
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"appname" is the name of application.
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If None, just the system directory is returned.
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"appauthor" (only used on Windows) is the name of the
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appauthor or distributing body for this application. Typically
|
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it is the owning company name. This falls back to appname. You may
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pass False to disable it.
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"version" is an optional version path element to append to the
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path. You might want to use this if you want multiple versions
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of your app to be able to run independently. If used, this
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would typically be "<major>.<minor>".
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Only applied when appname is present.
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"multipath" is an optional parameter only applicable to *nix
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which indicates that the entire list of data dirs should be
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returned. By default, the first item from XDG_DATA_DIRS is
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returned, or '/usr/local/share/<AppName>',
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if XDG_DATA_DIRS is not set
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Typical site data directories are:
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Mac OS X: /Library/Application Support/<AppName>
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Unix: /usr/local/share/<AppName> or /usr/share/<AppName>
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Win XP: C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\<AppAuthor>\<AppName>
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Vista: (Fail! "C:\ProgramData" is a hidden *system* directory on Vista.)
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Win 7: C:\ProgramData\<AppAuthor>\<AppName> # Hidden, but writeable on Win 7.
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For Unix, this is using the $XDG_DATA_DIRS[0] default.
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WARNING: Do not use this on Windows. See the Vista-Fail note above for why.
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"""
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if system == "win32":
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if appauthor is None:
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appauthor = appname
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path = os.path.normpath(_get_win_folder("CSIDL_COMMON_APPDATA"))
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if appname:
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if appauthor is not False:
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path = os.path.join(path, appauthor, appname)
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else:
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path = os.path.join(path, appname)
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elif system == 'darwin':
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path = os.path.expanduser('/Library/Application Support')
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if appname:
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path = os.path.join(path, appname)
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else:
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# XDG default for $XDG_DATA_DIRS
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# only first, if multipath is False
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path = os.getenv('XDG_DATA_DIRS',
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os.pathsep.join(['/usr/local/share', '/usr/share']))
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pathlist = [os.path.expanduser(x.rstrip(os.sep)) for x in path.split(os.pathsep)]
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if appname:
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if version:
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appname = os.path.join(appname, version)
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pathlist = [os.sep.join([x, appname]) for x in pathlist]
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if multipath:
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path = os.pathsep.join(pathlist)
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else:
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path = pathlist[0]
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return path
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if appname and version:
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path = os.path.join(path, version)
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return path
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def user_config_dir(appname=None, appauthor=None, version=None, roaming=False):
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r"""Return full path to the user-specific config dir for this application.
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"appname" is the name of application.
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If None, just the system directory is returned.
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"appauthor" (only used on Windows) is the name of the
|
||||
appauthor or distributing body for this application. Typically
|
||||
it is the owning company name. This falls back to appname. You may
|
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pass False to disable it.
|
||||
"version" is an optional version path element to append to the
|
||||
path. You might want to use this if you want multiple versions
|
||||
of your app to be able to run independently. If used, this
|
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would typically be "<major>.<minor>".
|
||||
Only applied when appname is present.
|
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"roaming" (boolean, default False) can be set True to use the Windows
|
||||
roaming appdata directory. That means that for users on a Windows
|
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network setup for roaming profiles, this user data will be
|
||||
sync'd on login. See
|
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<http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc766489(WS.10).aspx>
|
||||
for a discussion of issues.
|
||||
|
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Typical user config directories are:
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Mac OS X: same as user_data_dir
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Unix: ~/.config/<AppName> # or in $XDG_CONFIG_HOME, if defined
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Win *: same as user_data_dir
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For Unix, we follow the XDG spec and support $XDG_CONFIG_HOME.
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That means, by default "~/.config/<AppName>".
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"""
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if system in ["win32", "darwin"]:
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path = user_data_dir(appname, appauthor, None, roaming)
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else:
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path = os.getenv('XDG_CONFIG_HOME', os.path.expanduser("~/.config"))
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if appname:
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path = os.path.join(path, appname)
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if appname and version:
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path = os.path.join(path, version)
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return path
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def site_config_dir(appname=None, appauthor=None, version=None, multipath=False):
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r"""Return full path to the user-shared data dir for this application.
|
||||
|
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"appname" is the name of application.
|
||||
If None, just the system directory is returned.
|
||||
"appauthor" (only used on Windows) is the name of the
|
||||
appauthor or distributing body for this application. Typically
|
||||
it is the owning company name. This falls back to appname. You may
|
||||
pass False to disable it.
|
||||
"version" is an optional version path element to append to the
|
||||
path. You might want to use this if you want multiple versions
|
||||
of your app to be able to run independently. If used, this
|
||||
would typically be "<major>.<minor>".
|
||||
Only applied when appname is present.
|
||||
"multipath" is an optional parameter only applicable to *nix
|
||||
which indicates that the entire list of config dirs should be
|
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returned. By default, the first item from XDG_CONFIG_DIRS is
|
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returned, or '/etc/xdg/<AppName>', if XDG_CONFIG_DIRS is not set
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|
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Typical site config directories are:
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Mac OS X: same as site_data_dir
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Unix: /etc/xdg/<AppName> or $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS[i]/<AppName> for each value in
|
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$XDG_CONFIG_DIRS
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Win *: same as site_data_dir
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Vista: (Fail! "C:\ProgramData" is a hidden *system* directory on Vista.)
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||||
|
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For Unix, this is using the $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS[0] default, if multipath=False
|
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|
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WARNING: Do not use this on Windows. See the Vista-Fail note above for why.
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"""
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if system in ["win32", "darwin"]:
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path = site_data_dir(appname, appauthor)
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if appname and version:
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path = os.path.join(path, version)
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else:
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# XDG default for $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS
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# only first, if multipath is False
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path = os.getenv('XDG_CONFIG_DIRS', '/etc/xdg')
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pathlist = [os.path.expanduser(x.rstrip(os.sep)) for x in path.split(os.pathsep)]
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if appname:
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if version:
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appname = os.path.join(appname, version)
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pathlist = [os.sep.join([x, appname]) for x in pathlist]
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if multipath:
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path = os.pathsep.join(pathlist)
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else:
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path = pathlist[0]
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return path
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def user_cache_dir(appname=None, appauthor=None, version=None, opinion=True):
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r"""Return full path to the user-specific cache dir for this application.
|
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|
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"appname" is the name of application.
|
||||
If None, just the system directory is returned.
|
||||
"appauthor" (only used on Windows) is the name of the
|
||||
appauthor or distributing body for this application. Typically
|
||||
it is the owning company name. This falls back to appname. You may
|
||||
pass False to disable it.
|
||||
"version" is an optional version path element to append to the
|
||||
path. You might want to use this if you want multiple versions
|
||||
of your app to be able to run independently. If used, this
|
||||
would typically be "<major>.<minor>".
|
||||
Only applied when appname is present.
|
||||
"opinion" (boolean) can be False to disable the appending of
|
||||
"Cache" to the base app data dir for Windows. See
|
||||
discussion below.
|
||||
|
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Typical user cache directories are:
|
||||
Mac OS X: ~/Library/Caches/<AppName>
|
||||
Unix: ~/.cache/<AppName> (XDG default)
|
||||
Win XP: C:\Documents and Settings\<username>\Local Settings\Application Data\<AppAuthor>\<AppName>\Cache
|
||||
Vista: C:\Users\<username>\AppData\Local\<AppAuthor>\<AppName>\Cache
|
||||
|
||||
On Windows the only suggestion in the MSDN docs is that local settings go in
|
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the `CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATA` directory. This is identical to the non-roaming
|
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app data dir (the default returned by `user_data_dir` above). Apps typically
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put cache data somewhere *under* the given dir here. Some examples:
|
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...\Mozilla\Firefox\Profiles\<ProfileName>\Cache
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...\Acme\SuperApp\Cache\1.0
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OPINION: This function appends "Cache" to the `CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATA` value.
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This can be disabled with the `opinion=False` option.
|
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"""
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if system == "win32":
|
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if appauthor is None:
|
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appauthor = appname
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path = os.path.normpath(_get_win_folder("CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATA"))
|
||||
if appname:
|
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if appauthor is not False:
|
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path = os.path.join(path, appauthor, appname)
|
||||
else:
|
||||
path = os.path.join(path, appname)
|
||||
if opinion:
|
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path = os.path.join(path, "Cache")
|
||||
elif system == 'darwin':
|
||||
path = os.path.expanduser('~/Library/Caches')
|
||||
if appname:
|
||||
path = os.path.join(path, appname)
|
||||
else:
|
||||
path = os.getenv('XDG_CACHE_HOME', os.path.expanduser('~/.cache'))
|
||||
if appname:
|
||||
path = os.path.join(path, appname)
|
||||
if appname and version:
|
||||
path = os.path.join(path, version)
|
||||
return path
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def user_state_dir(appname=None, appauthor=None, version=None, roaming=False):
|
||||
r"""Return full path to the user-specific state dir for this application.
|
||||
|
||||
"appname" is the name of application.
|
||||
If None, just the system directory is returned.
|
||||
"appauthor" (only used on Windows) is the name of the
|
||||
appauthor or distributing body for this application. Typically
|
||||
it is the owning company name. This falls back to appname. You may
|
||||
pass False to disable it.
|
||||
"version" is an optional version path element to append to the
|
||||
path. You might want to use this if you want multiple versions
|
||||
of your app to be able to run independently. If used, this
|
||||
would typically be "<major>.<minor>".
|
||||
Only applied when appname is present.
|
||||
"roaming" (boolean, default False) can be set True to use the Windows
|
||||
roaming appdata directory. That means that for users on a Windows
|
||||
network setup for roaming profiles, this user data will be
|
||||
sync'd on login. See
|
||||
<http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc766489(WS.10).aspx>
|
||||
for a discussion of issues.
|
||||
|
||||
Typical user state directories are:
|
||||
Mac OS X: same as user_data_dir
|
||||
Unix: ~/.local/state/<AppName> # or in $XDG_STATE_HOME, if defined
|
||||
Win *: same as user_data_dir
|
||||
|
||||
For Unix, we follow this Debian proposal <https://wiki.debian.org/XDGBaseDirectorySpecification#state>
|
||||
to extend the XDG spec and support $XDG_STATE_HOME.
|
||||
|
||||
That means, by default "~/.local/state/<AppName>".
|
||||
"""
|
||||
if system in ["win32", "darwin"]:
|
||||
path = user_data_dir(appname, appauthor, None, roaming)
|
||||
else:
|
||||
path = os.getenv('XDG_STATE_HOME', os.path.expanduser("~/.local/state"))
|
||||
if appname:
|
||||
path = os.path.join(path, appname)
|
||||
if appname and version:
|
||||
path = os.path.join(path, version)
|
||||
return path
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def user_log_dir(appname=None, appauthor=None, version=None, opinion=True):
|
||||
r"""Return full path to the user-specific log dir for this application.
|
||||
|
||||
"appname" is the name of application.
|
||||
If None, just the system directory is returned.
|
||||
"appauthor" (only used on Windows) is the name of the
|
||||
appauthor or distributing body for this application. Typically
|
||||
it is the owning company name. This falls back to appname. You may
|
||||
pass False to disable it.
|
||||
"version" is an optional version path element to append to the
|
||||
path. You might want to use this if you want multiple versions
|
||||
of your app to be able to run independently. If used, this
|
||||
would typically be "<major>.<minor>".
|
||||
Only applied when appname is present.
|
||||
"opinion" (boolean) can be False to disable the appending of
|
||||
"Logs" to the base app data dir for Windows, and "log" to the
|
||||
base cache dir for Unix. See discussion below.
|
||||
|
||||
Typical user log directories are:
|
||||
Mac OS X: ~/Library/Logs/<AppName>
|
||||
Unix: ~/.cache/<AppName>/log # or under $XDG_CACHE_HOME if defined
|
||||
Win XP: C:\Documents and Settings\<username>\Local Settings\Application Data\<AppAuthor>\<AppName>\Logs
|
||||
Vista: C:\Users\<username>\AppData\Local\<AppAuthor>\<AppName>\Logs
|
||||
|
||||
On Windows the only suggestion in the MSDN docs is that local settings
|
||||
go in the `CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATA` directory. (Note: I'm interested in
|
||||
examples of what some windows apps use for a logs dir.)
|
||||
|
||||
OPINION: This function appends "Logs" to the `CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATA`
|
||||
value for Windows and appends "log" to the user cache dir for Unix.
|
||||
This can be disabled with the `opinion=False` option.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
if system == "darwin":
|
||||
path = os.path.join(
|
||||
os.path.expanduser('~/Library/Logs'),
|
||||
appname)
|
||||
elif system == "win32":
|
||||
path = user_data_dir(appname, appauthor, version)
|
||||
version = False
|
||||
if opinion:
|
||||
path = os.path.join(path, "Logs")
|
||||
else:
|
||||
path = user_cache_dir(appname, appauthor, version)
|
||||
version = False
|
||||
if opinion:
|
||||
path = os.path.join(path, "log")
|
||||
if appname and version:
|
||||
path = os.path.join(path, version)
|
||||
return path
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class AppDirs(object):
|
||||
"""Convenience wrapper for getting application dirs."""
|
||||
def __init__(self, appname=None, appauthor=None, version=None,
|
||||
roaming=False, multipath=False):
|
||||
self.appname = appname
|
||||
self.appauthor = appauthor
|
||||
self.version = version
|
||||
self.roaming = roaming
|
||||
self.multipath = multipath
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def user_data_dir(self):
|
||||
return user_data_dir(self.appname, self.appauthor,
|
||||
version=self.version, roaming=self.roaming)
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def site_data_dir(self):
|
||||
return site_data_dir(self.appname, self.appauthor,
|
||||
version=self.version, multipath=self.multipath)
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def user_config_dir(self):
|
||||
return user_config_dir(self.appname, self.appauthor,
|
||||
version=self.version, roaming=self.roaming)
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def site_config_dir(self):
|
||||
return site_config_dir(self.appname, self.appauthor,
|
||||
version=self.version, multipath=self.multipath)
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def user_cache_dir(self):
|
||||
return user_cache_dir(self.appname, self.appauthor,
|
||||
version=self.version)
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def user_state_dir(self):
|
||||
return user_state_dir(self.appname, self.appauthor,
|
||||
version=self.version)
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def user_log_dir(self):
|
||||
return user_log_dir(self.appname, self.appauthor,
|
||||
version=self.version)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
#---- internal support stuff
|
||||
|
||||
def _get_win_folder_from_registry(csidl_name):
|
||||
"""This is a fallback technique at best. I'm not sure if using the
|
||||
registry for this guarantees us the correct answer for all CSIDL_*
|
||||
names.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
if PY3:
|
||||
import winreg as _winreg
|
||||
else:
|
||||
import _winreg
|
||||
|
||||
shell_folder_name = {
|
||||
"CSIDL_APPDATA": "AppData",
|
||||
"CSIDL_COMMON_APPDATA": "Common AppData",
|
||||
"CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATA": "Local AppData",
|
||||
}[csidl_name]
|
||||
|
||||
key = _winreg.OpenKey(
|
||||
_winreg.HKEY_CURRENT_USER,
|
||||
r"Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\Shell Folders"
|
||||
)
|
||||
dir, type = _winreg.QueryValueEx(key, shell_folder_name)
|
||||
return dir
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _get_win_folder_with_pywin32(csidl_name):
|
||||
from win32com.shell import shellcon, shell
|
||||
dir = shell.SHGetFolderPath(0, getattr(shellcon, csidl_name), 0, 0)
|
||||
# Try to make this a unicode path because SHGetFolderPath does
|
||||
# not return unicode strings when there is unicode data in the
|
||||
# path.
|
||||
try:
|
||||
dir = unicode(dir)
|
||||
|
||||
# Downgrade to short path name if have highbit chars. See
|
||||
# <http://bugs.activestate.com/show_bug.cgi?id=85099>.
|
||||
has_high_char = False
|
||||
for c in dir:
|
||||
if ord(c) > 255:
|
||||
has_high_char = True
|
||||
break
|
||||
if has_high_char:
|
||||
try:
|
||||
import win32api
|
||||
dir = win32api.GetShortPathName(dir)
|
||||
except ImportError:
|
||||
pass
|
||||
except UnicodeError:
|
||||
pass
|
||||
return dir
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _get_win_folder_with_ctypes(csidl_name):
|
||||
import ctypes
|
||||
|
||||
csidl_const = {
|
||||
"CSIDL_APPDATA": 26,
|
||||
"CSIDL_COMMON_APPDATA": 35,
|
||||
"CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATA": 28,
|
||||
}[csidl_name]
|
||||
|
||||
buf = ctypes.create_unicode_buffer(1024)
|
||||
ctypes.windll.shell32.SHGetFolderPathW(None, csidl_const, None, 0, buf)
|
||||
|
||||
# Downgrade to short path name if have highbit chars. See
|
||||
# <http://bugs.activestate.com/show_bug.cgi?id=85099>.
|
||||
has_high_char = False
|
||||
for c in buf:
|
||||
if ord(c) > 255:
|
||||
has_high_char = True
|
||||
break
|
||||
if has_high_char:
|
||||
buf2 = ctypes.create_unicode_buffer(1024)
|
||||
if ctypes.windll.kernel32.GetShortPathNameW(buf.value, buf2, 1024):
|
||||
buf = buf2
|
||||
|
||||
return buf.value
|
||||
|
||||
def _get_win_folder_with_jna(csidl_name):
|
||||
import array
|
||||
from com.sun import jna
|
||||
from com.sun.jna.platform import win32
|
||||
|
||||
buf_size = win32.WinDef.MAX_PATH * 2
|
||||
buf = array.zeros('c', buf_size)
|
||||
shell = win32.Shell32.INSTANCE
|
||||
shell.SHGetFolderPath(None, getattr(win32.ShlObj, csidl_name), None, win32.ShlObj.SHGFP_TYPE_CURRENT, buf)
|
||||
dir = jna.Native.toString(buf.tostring()).rstrip("\0")
|
||||
|
||||
# Downgrade to short path name if have highbit chars. See
|
||||
# <http://bugs.activestate.com/show_bug.cgi?id=85099>.
|
||||
has_high_char = False
|
||||
for c in dir:
|
||||
if ord(c) > 255:
|
||||
has_high_char = True
|
||||
break
|
||||
if has_high_char:
|
||||
buf = array.zeros('c', buf_size)
|
||||
kernel = win32.Kernel32.INSTANCE
|
||||
if kernel.GetShortPathName(dir, buf, buf_size):
|
||||
dir = jna.Native.toString(buf.tostring()).rstrip("\0")
|
||||
|
||||
return dir
|
||||
|
||||
if system == "win32":
|
||||
try:
|
||||
import win32com.shell
|
||||
_get_win_folder = _get_win_folder_with_pywin32
|
||||
except ImportError:
|
||||
try:
|
||||
from ctypes import windll
|
||||
_get_win_folder = _get_win_folder_with_ctypes
|
||||
except ImportError:
|
||||
try:
|
||||
import com.sun.jna
|
||||
_get_win_folder = _get_win_folder_with_jna
|
||||
except ImportError:
|
||||
_get_win_folder = _get_win_folder_from_registry
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
#---- self test code
|
||||
|
||||
if __name__ == "__main__":
|
||||
appname = "MyApp"
|
||||
appauthor = "MyCompany"
|
||||
|
||||
props = ("user_data_dir",
|
||||
"user_config_dir",
|
||||
"user_cache_dir",
|
||||
"user_state_dir",
|
||||
"user_log_dir",
|
||||
"site_data_dir",
|
||||
"site_config_dir")
|
||||
|
||||
print("-- app dirs %s --" % __version__)
|
||||
|
||||
print("-- app dirs (with optional 'version')")
|
||||
dirs = AppDirs(appname, appauthor, version="1.0")
|
||||
for prop in props:
|
||||
print("%s: %s" % (prop, getattr(dirs, prop)))
|
||||
|
||||
print("\n-- app dirs (without optional 'version')")
|
||||
dirs = AppDirs(appname, appauthor)
|
||||
for prop in props:
|
||||
print("%s: %s" % (prop, getattr(dirs, prop)))
|
||||
|
||||
print("\n-- app dirs (without optional 'appauthor')")
|
||||
dirs = AppDirs(appname)
|
||||
for prop in props:
|
||||
print("%s: %s" % (prop, getattr(dirs, prop)))
|
||||
|
||||
print("\n-- app dirs (with disabled 'appauthor')")
|
||||
dirs = AppDirs(appname, appauthor=False)
|
||||
for prop in props:
|
||||
print("%s: %s" % (prop, getattr(dirs, prop)))
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,36 @@
|
||||
"""Read resources contained within a package."""
|
||||
|
||||
from ._common import (
|
||||
as_file,
|
||||
files,
|
||||
Package,
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
from ._legacy import (
|
||||
contents,
|
||||
open_binary,
|
||||
read_binary,
|
||||
open_text,
|
||||
read_text,
|
||||
is_resource,
|
||||
path,
|
||||
Resource,
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
from .abc import ResourceReader
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
__all__ = [
|
||||
'Package',
|
||||
'Resource',
|
||||
'ResourceReader',
|
||||
'as_file',
|
||||
'contents',
|
||||
'files',
|
||||
'is_resource',
|
||||
'open_binary',
|
||||
'open_text',
|
||||
'path',
|
||||
'read_binary',
|
||||
'read_text',
|
||||
]
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,170 @@
|
||||
from contextlib import suppress
|
||||
from io import TextIOWrapper
|
||||
|
||||
from . import abc
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class SpecLoaderAdapter:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Adapt a package spec to adapt the underlying loader.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def __init__(self, spec, adapter=lambda spec: spec.loader):
|
||||
self.spec = spec
|
||||
self.loader = adapter(spec)
|
||||
|
||||
def __getattr__(self, name):
|
||||
return getattr(self.spec, name)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class TraversableResourcesLoader:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Adapt a loader to provide TraversableResources.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def __init__(self, spec):
|
||||
self.spec = spec
|
||||
|
||||
def get_resource_reader(self, name):
|
||||
return CompatibilityFiles(self.spec)._native()
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _io_wrapper(file, mode='r', *args, **kwargs):
|
||||
if mode == 'r':
|
||||
return TextIOWrapper(file, *args, **kwargs)
|
||||
elif mode == 'rb':
|
||||
return file
|
||||
raise ValueError(
|
||||
"Invalid mode value '{}', only 'r' and 'rb' are supported".format(mode)
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class CompatibilityFiles:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Adapter for an existing or non-existent resource reader
|
||||
to provide a compatibility .files().
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
class SpecPath(abc.Traversable):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Path tied to a module spec.
|
||||
Can be read and exposes the resource reader children.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def __init__(self, spec, reader):
|
||||
self._spec = spec
|
||||
self._reader = reader
|
||||
|
||||
def iterdir(self):
|
||||
if not self._reader:
|
||||
return iter(())
|
||||
return iter(
|
||||
CompatibilityFiles.ChildPath(self._reader, path)
|
||||
for path in self._reader.contents()
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
def is_file(self):
|
||||
return False
|
||||
|
||||
is_dir = is_file
|
||||
|
||||
def joinpath(self, other):
|
||||
if not self._reader:
|
||||
return CompatibilityFiles.OrphanPath(other)
|
||||
return CompatibilityFiles.ChildPath(self._reader, other)
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def name(self):
|
||||
return self._spec.name
|
||||
|
||||
def open(self, mode='r', *args, **kwargs):
|
||||
return _io_wrapper(self._reader.open_resource(None), mode, *args, **kwargs)
|
||||
|
||||
class ChildPath(abc.Traversable):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Path tied to a resource reader child.
|
||||
Can be read but doesn't expose any meaningful children.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def __init__(self, reader, name):
|
||||
self._reader = reader
|
||||
self._name = name
|
||||
|
||||
def iterdir(self):
|
||||
return iter(())
|
||||
|
||||
def is_file(self):
|
||||
return self._reader.is_resource(self.name)
|
||||
|
||||
def is_dir(self):
|
||||
return not self.is_file()
|
||||
|
||||
def joinpath(self, other):
|
||||
return CompatibilityFiles.OrphanPath(self.name, other)
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def name(self):
|
||||
return self._name
|
||||
|
||||
def open(self, mode='r', *args, **kwargs):
|
||||
return _io_wrapper(
|
||||
self._reader.open_resource(self.name), mode, *args, **kwargs
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
class OrphanPath(abc.Traversable):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Orphan path, not tied to a module spec or resource reader.
|
||||
Can't be read and doesn't expose any meaningful children.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def __init__(self, *path_parts):
|
||||
if len(path_parts) < 1:
|
||||
raise ValueError('Need at least one path part to construct a path')
|
||||
self._path = path_parts
|
||||
|
||||
def iterdir(self):
|
||||
return iter(())
|
||||
|
||||
def is_file(self):
|
||||
return False
|
||||
|
||||
is_dir = is_file
|
||||
|
||||
def joinpath(self, other):
|
||||
return CompatibilityFiles.OrphanPath(*self._path, other)
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def name(self):
|
||||
return self._path[-1]
|
||||
|
||||
def open(self, mode='r', *args, **kwargs):
|
||||
raise FileNotFoundError("Can't open orphan path")
|
||||
|
||||
def __init__(self, spec):
|
||||
self.spec = spec
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def _reader(self):
|
||||
with suppress(AttributeError):
|
||||
return self.spec.loader.get_resource_reader(self.spec.name)
|
||||
|
||||
def _native(self):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Return the native reader if it supports files().
|
||||
"""
|
||||
reader = self._reader
|
||||
return reader if hasattr(reader, 'files') else self
|
||||
|
||||
def __getattr__(self, attr):
|
||||
return getattr(self._reader, attr)
|
||||
|
||||
def files(self):
|
||||
return CompatibilityFiles.SpecPath(self.spec, self._reader)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def wrap_spec(package):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Construct a package spec with traversable compatibility
|
||||
on the spec/loader/reader.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return SpecLoaderAdapter(package.__spec__, TraversableResourcesLoader)
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,104 @@
|
||||
import os
|
||||
import pathlib
|
||||
import tempfile
|
||||
import functools
|
||||
import contextlib
|
||||
import types
|
||||
import importlib
|
||||
|
||||
from typing import Union, Optional
|
||||
from .abc import ResourceReader, Traversable
|
||||
|
||||
from ._compat import wrap_spec
|
||||
|
||||
Package = Union[types.ModuleType, str]
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def files(package):
|
||||
# type: (Package) -> Traversable
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Get a Traversable resource from a package
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return from_package(get_package(package))
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def get_resource_reader(package):
|
||||
# type: (types.ModuleType) -> Optional[ResourceReader]
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Return the package's loader if it's a ResourceReader.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
# We can't use
|
||||
# a issubclass() check here because apparently abc.'s __subclasscheck__()
|
||||
# hook wants to create a weak reference to the object, but
|
||||
# zipimport.zipimporter does not support weak references, resulting in a
|
||||
# TypeError. That seems terrible.
|
||||
spec = package.__spec__
|
||||
reader = getattr(spec.loader, 'get_resource_reader', None) # type: ignore
|
||||
if reader is None:
|
||||
return None
|
||||
return reader(spec.name) # type: ignore
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def resolve(cand):
|
||||
# type: (Package) -> types.ModuleType
|
||||
return cand if isinstance(cand, types.ModuleType) else importlib.import_module(cand)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def get_package(package):
|
||||
# type: (Package) -> types.ModuleType
|
||||
"""Take a package name or module object and return the module.
|
||||
|
||||
Raise an exception if the resolved module is not a package.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
resolved = resolve(package)
|
||||
if wrap_spec(resolved).submodule_search_locations is None:
|
||||
raise TypeError(f'{package!r} is not a package')
|
||||
return resolved
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def from_package(package):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Return a Traversable object for the given package.
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
spec = wrap_spec(package)
|
||||
reader = spec.loader.get_resource_reader(spec.name)
|
||||
return reader.files()
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
@contextlib.contextmanager
|
||||
def _tempfile(reader, suffix=''):
|
||||
# Not using tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile as it leads to deeper 'try'
|
||||
# blocks due to the need to close the temporary file to work on Windows
|
||||
# properly.
|
||||
fd, raw_path = tempfile.mkstemp(suffix=suffix)
|
||||
try:
|
||||
try:
|
||||
os.write(fd, reader())
|
||||
finally:
|
||||
os.close(fd)
|
||||
del reader
|
||||
yield pathlib.Path(raw_path)
|
||||
finally:
|
||||
try:
|
||||
os.remove(raw_path)
|
||||
except FileNotFoundError:
|
||||
pass
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
@functools.singledispatch
|
||||
def as_file(path):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Given a Traversable object, return that object as a
|
||||
path on the local file system in a context manager.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return _tempfile(path.read_bytes, suffix=path.name)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
@as_file.register(pathlib.Path)
|
||||
@contextlib.contextmanager
|
||||
def _(path):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Degenerate behavior for pathlib.Path objects.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
yield path
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,98 @@
|
||||
# flake8: noqa
|
||||
|
||||
import abc
|
||||
import sys
|
||||
import pathlib
|
||||
from contextlib import suppress
|
||||
|
||||
if sys.version_info >= (3, 10):
|
||||
from zipfile import Path as ZipPath # type: ignore
|
||||
else:
|
||||
from ..zipp import Path as ZipPath # type: ignore
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
try:
|
||||
from typing import runtime_checkable # type: ignore
|
||||
except ImportError:
|
||||
|
||||
def runtime_checkable(cls): # type: ignore
|
||||
return cls
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
try:
|
||||
from typing import Protocol # type: ignore
|
||||
except ImportError:
|
||||
Protocol = abc.ABC # type: ignore
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class TraversableResourcesLoader:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Adapt loaders to provide TraversableResources and other
|
||||
compatibility.
|
||||
|
||||
Used primarily for Python 3.9 and earlier where the native
|
||||
loaders do not yet implement TraversableResources.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def __init__(self, spec):
|
||||
self.spec = spec
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def path(self):
|
||||
return self.spec.origin
|
||||
|
||||
def get_resource_reader(self, name):
|
||||
from . import readers, _adapters
|
||||
|
||||
def _zip_reader(spec):
|
||||
with suppress(AttributeError):
|
||||
return readers.ZipReader(spec.loader, spec.name)
|
||||
|
||||
def _namespace_reader(spec):
|
||||
with suppress(AttributeError, ValueError):
|
||||
return readers.NamespaceReader(spec.submodule_search_locations)
|
||||
|
||||
def _available_reader(spec):
|
||||
with suppress(AttributeError):
|
||||
return spec.loader.get_resource_reader(spec.name)
|
||||
|
||||
def _native_reader(spec):
|
||||
reader = _available_reader(spec)
|
||||
return reader if hasattr(reader, 'files') else None
|
||||
|
||||
def _file_reader(spec):
|
||||
try:
|
||||
path = pathlib.Path(self.path)
|
||||
except TypeError:
|
||||
return None
|
||||
if path.exists():
|
||||
return readers.FileReader(self)
|
||||
|
||||
return (
|
||||
# native reader if it supplies 'files'
|
||||
_native_reader(self.spec)
|
||||
or
|
||||
# local ZipReader if a zip module
|
||||
_zip_reader(self.spec)
|
||||
or
|
||||
# local NamespaceReader if a namespace module
|
||||
_namespace_reader(self.spec)
|
||||
or
|
||||
# local FileReader
|
||||
_file_reader(self.spec)
|
||||
# fallback - adapt the spec ResourceReader to TraversableReader
|
||||
or _adapters.CompatibilityFiles(self.spec)
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def wrap_spec(package):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Construct a package spec with traversable compatibility
|
||||
on the spec/loader/reader.
|
||||
|
||||
Supersedes _adapters.wrap_spec to use TraversableResourcesLoader
|
||||
from above for older Python compatibility (<3.10).
|
||||
"""
|
||||
from . import _adapters
|
||||
|
||||
return _adapters.SpecLoaderAdapter(package.__spec__, TraversableResourcesLoader)
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,35 @@
|
||||
from itertools import filterfalse
|
||||
|
||||
from typing import (
|
||||
Callable,
|
||||
Iterable,
|
||||
Iterator,
|
||||
Optional,
|
||||
Set,
|
||||
TypeVar,
|
||||
Union,
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
# Type and type variable definitions
|
||||
_T = TypeVar('_T')
|
||||
_U = TypeVar('_U')
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def unique_everseen(
|
||||
iterable: Iterable[_T], key: Optional[Callable[[_T], _U]] = None
|
||||
) -> Iterator[_T]:
|
||||
"List unique elements, preserving order. Remember all elements ever seen."
|
||||
# unique_everseen('AAAABBBCCDAABBB') --> A B C D
|
||||
# unique_everseen('ABBCcAD', str.lower) --> A B C D
|
||||
seen: Set[Union[_T, _U]] = set()
|
||||
seen_add = seen.add
|
||||
if key is None:
|
||||
for element in filterfalse(seen.__contains__, iterable):
|
||||
seen_add(element)
|
||||
yield element
|
||||
else:
|
||||
for element in iterable:
|
||||
k = key(element)
|
||||
if k not in seen:
|
||||
seen_add(k)
|
||||
yield element
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,121 @@
|
||||
import functools
|
||||
import os
|
||||
import pathlib
|
||||
import types
|
||||
import warnings
|
||||
|
||||
from typing import Union, Iterable, ContextManager, BinaryIO, TextIO, Any
|
||||
|
||||
from . import _common
|
||||
|
||||
Package = Union[types.ModuleType, str]
|
||||
Resource = str
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def deprecated(func):
|
||||
@functools.wraps(func)
|
||||
def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
|
||||
warnings.warn(
|
||||
f"{func.__name__} is deprecated. Use files() instead. "
|
||||
"Refer to https://importlib-resources.readthedocs.io"
|
||||
"/en/latest/using.html#migrating-from-legacy for migration advice.",
|
||||
DeprecationWarning,
|
||||
stacklevel=2,
|
||||
)
|
||||
return func(*args, **kwargs)
|
||||
|
||||
return wrapper
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def normalize_path(path):
|
||||
# type: (Any) -> str
|
||||
"""Normalize a path by ensuring it is a string.
|
||||
|
||||
If the resulting string contains path separators, an exception is raised.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
str_path = str(path)
|
||||
parent, file_name = os.path.split(str_path)
|
||||
if parent:
|
||||
raise ValueError(f'{path!r} must be only a file name')
|
||||
return file_name
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
@deprecated
|
||||
def open_binary(package: Package, resource: Resource) -> BinaryIO:
|
||||
"""Return a file-like object opened for binary reading of the resource."""
|
||||
return (_common.files(package) / normalize_path(resource)).open('rb')
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
@deprecated
|
||||
def read_binary(package: Package, resource: Resource) -> bytes:
|
||||
"""Return the binary contents of the resource."""
|
||||
return (_common.files(package) / normalize_path(resource)).read_bytes()
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
@deprecated
|
||||
def open_text(
|
||||
package: Package,
|
||||
resource: Resource,
|
||||
encoding: str = 'utf-8',
|
||||
errors: str = 'strict',
|
||||
) -> TextIO:
|
||||
"""Return a file-like object opened for text reading of the resource."""
|
||||
return (_common.files(package) / normalize_path(resource)).open(
|
||||
'r', encoding=encoding, errors=errors
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
@deprecated
|
||||
def read_text(
|
||||
package: Package,
|
||||
resource: Resource,
|
||||
encoding: str = 'utf-8',
|
||||
errors: str = 'strict',
|
||||
) -> str:
|
||||
"""Return the decoded string of the resource.
|
||||
|
||||
The decoding-related arguments have the same semantics as those of
|
||||
bytes.decode().
|
||||
"""
|
||||
with open_text(package, resource, encoding, errors) as fp:
|
||||
return fp.read()
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
@deprecated
|
||||
def contents(package: Package) -> Iterable[str]:
|
||||
"""Return an iterable of entries in `package`.
|
||||
|
||||
Note that not all entries are resources. Specifically, directories are
|
||||
not considered resources. Use `is_resource()` on each entry returned here
|
||||
to check if it is a resource or not.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return [path.name for path in _common.files(package).iterdir()]
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
@deprecated
|
||||
def is_resource(package: Package, name: str) -> bool:
|
||||
"""True if `name` is a resource inside `package`.
|
||||
|
||||
Directories are *not* resources.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
resource = normalize_path(name)
|
||||
return any(
|
||||
traversable.name == resource and traversable.is_file()
|
||||
for traversable in _common.files(package).iterdir()
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
@deprecated
|
||||
def path(
|
||||
package: Package,
|
||||
resource: Resource,
|
||||
) -> ContextManager[pathlib.Path]:
|
||||
"""A context manager providing a file path object to the resource.
|
||||
|
||||
If the resource does not already exist on its own on the file system,
|
||||
a temporary file will be created. If the file was created, the file
|
||||
will be deleted upon exiting the context manager (no exception is
|
||||
raised if the file was deleted prior to the context manager
|
||||
exiting).
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return _common.as_file(_common.files(package) / normalize_path(resource))
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,137 @@
|
||||
import abc
|
||||
from typing import BinaryIO, Iterable, Text
|
||||
|
||||
from ._compat import runtime_checkable, Protocol
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class ResourceReader(metaclass=abc.ABCMeta):
|
||||
"""Abstract base class for loaders to provide resource reading support."""
|
||||
|
||||
@abc.abstractmethod
|
||||
def open_resource(self, resource: Text) -> BinaryIO:
|
||||
"""Return an opened, file-like object for binary reading.
|
||||
|
||||
The 'resource' argument is expected to represent only a file name.
|
||||
If the resource cannot be found, FileNotFoundError is raised.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
# This deliberately raises FileNotFoundError instead of
|
||||
# NotImplementedError so that if this method is accidentally called,
|
||||
# it'll still do the right thing.
|
||||
raise FileNotFoundError
|
||||
|
||||
@abc.abstractmethod
|
||||
def resource_path(self, resource: Text) -> Text:
|
||||
"""Return the file system path to the specified resource.
|
||||
|
||||
The 'resource' argument is expected to represent only a file name.
|
||||
If the resource does not exist on the file system, raise
|
||||
FileNotFoundError.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
# This deliberately raises FileNotFoundError instead of
|
||||
# NotImplementedError so that if this method is accidentally called,
|
||||
# it'll still do the right thing.
|
||||
raise FileNotFoundError
|
||||
|
||||
@abc.abstractmethod
|
||||
def is_resource(self, path: Text) -> bool:
|
||||
"""Return True if the named 'path' is a resource.
|
||||
|
||||
Files are resources, directories are not.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
raise FileNotFoundError
|
||||
|
||||
@abc.abstractmethod
|
||||
def contents(self) -> Iterable[str]:
|
||||
"""Return an iterable of entries in `package`."""
|
||||
raise FileNotFoundError
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
@runtime_checkable
|
||||
class Traversable(Protocol):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
An object with a subset of pathlib.Path methods suitable for
|
||||
traversing directories and opening files.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
@abc.abstractmethod
|
||||
def iterdir(self):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Yield Traversable objects in self
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def read_bytes(self):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Read contents of self as bytes
|
||||
"""
|
||||
with self.open('rb') as strm:
|
||||
return strm.read()
|
||||
|
||||
def read_text(self, encoding=None):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Read contents of self as text
|
||||
"""
|
||||
with self.open(encoding=encoding) as strm:
|
||||
return strm.read()
|
||||
|
||||
@abc.abstractmethod
|
||||
def is_dir(self) -> bool:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Return True if self is a directory
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
@abc.abstractmethod
|
||||
def is_file(self) -> bool:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Return True if self is a file
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
@abc.abstractmethod
|
||||
def joinpath(self, child):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Return Traversable child in self
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def __truediv__(self, child):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Return Traversable child in self
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return self.joinpath(child)
|
||||
|
||||
@abc.abstractmethod
|
||||
def open(self, mode='r', *args, **kwargs):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
mode may be 'r' or 'rb' to open as text or binary. Return a handle
|
||||
suitable for reading (same as pathlib.Path.open).
|
||||
|
||||
When opening as text, accepts encoding parameters such as those
|
||||
accepted by io.TextIOWrapper.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
@abc.abstractproperty
|
||||
def name(self) -> str:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
The base name of this object without any parent references.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class TraversableResources(ResourceReader):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
The required interface for providing traversable
|
||||
resources.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
@abc.abstractmethod
|
||||
def files(self):
|
||||
"""Return a Traversable object for the loaded package."""
|
||||
|
||||
def open_resource(self, resource):
|
||||
return self.files().joinpath(resource).open('rb')
|
||||
|
||||
def resource_path(self, resource):
|
||||
raise FileNotFoundError(resource)
|
||||
|
||||
def is_resource(self, path):
|
||||
return self.files().joinpath(path).is_file()
|
||||
|
||||
def contents(self):
|
||||
return (item.name for item in self.files().iterdir())
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,122 @@
|
||||
import collections
|
||||
import pathlib
|
||||
import operator
|
||||
|
||||
from . import abc
|
||||
|
||||
from ._itertools import unique_everseen
|
||||
from ._compat import ZipPath
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def remove_duplicates(items):
|
||||
return iter(collections.OrderedDict.fromkeys(items))
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class FileReader(abc.TraversableResources):
|
||||
def __init__(self, loader):
|
||||
self.path = pathlib.Path(loader.path).parent
|
||||
|
||||
def resource_path(self, resource):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Return the file system path to prevent
|
||||
`resources.path()` from creating a temporary
|
||||
copy.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return str(self.path.joinpath(resource))
|
||||
|
||||
def files(self):
|
||||
return self.path
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class ZipReader(abc.TraversableResources):
|
||||
def __init__(self, loader, module):
|
||||
_, _, name = module.rpartition('.')
|
||||
self.prefix = loader.prefix.replace('\\', '/') + name + '/'
|
||||
self.archive = loader.archive
|
||||
|
||||
def open_resource(self, resource):
|
||||
try:
|
||||
return super().open_resource(resource)
|
||||
except KeyError as exc:
|
||||
raise FileNotFoundError(exc.args[0])
|
||||
|
||||
def is_resource(self, path):
|
||||
# workaround for `zipfile.Path.is_file` returning true
|
||||
# for non-existent paths.
|
||||
target = self.files().joinpath(path)
|
||||
return target.is_file() and target.exists()
|
||||
|
||||
def files(self):
|
||||
return ZipPath(self.archive, self.prefix)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class MultiplexedPath(abc.Traversable):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Given a series of Traversable objects, implement a merged
|
||||
version of the interface across all objects. Useful for
|
||||
namespace packages which may be multihomed at a single
|
||||
name.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def __init__(self, *paths):
|
||||
self._paths = list(map(pathlib.Path, remove_duplicates(paths)))
|
||||
if not self._paths:
|
||||
message = 'MultiplexedPath must contain at least one path'
|
||||
raise FileNotFoundError(message)
|
||||
if not all(path.is_dir() for path in self._paths):
|
||||
raise NotADirectoryError('MultiplexedPath only supports directories')
|
||||
|
||||
def iterdir(self):
|
||||
files = (file for path in self._paths for file in path.iterdir())
|
||||
return unique_everseen(files, key=operator.attrgetter('name'))
|
||||
|
||||
def read_bytes(self):
|
||||
raise FileNotFoundError(f'{self} is not a file')
|
||||
|
||||
def read_text(self, *args, **kwargs):
|
||||
raise FileNotFoundError(f'{self} is not a file')
|
||||
|
||||
def is_dir(self):
|
||||
return True
|
||||
|
||||
def is_file(self):
|
||||
return False
|
||||
|
||||
def joinpath(self, child):
|
||||
# first try to find child in current paths
|
||||
for file in self.iterdir():
|
||||
if file.name == child:
|
||||
return file
|
||||
# if it does not exist, construct it with the first path
|
||||
return self._paths[0] / child
|
||||
|
||||
__truediv__ = joinpath
|
||||
|
||||
def open(self, *args, **kwargs):
|
||||
raise FileNotFoundError(f'{self} is not a file')
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def name(self):
|
||||
return self._paths[0].name
|
||||
|
||||
def __repr__(self):
|
||||
paths = ', '.join(f"'{path}'" for path in self._paths)
|
||||
return f'MultiplexedPath({paths})'
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class NamespaceReader(abc.TraversableResources):
|
||||
def __init__(self, namespace_path):
|
||||
if 'NamespacePath' not in str(namespace_path):
|
||||
raise ValueError('Invalid path')
|
||||
self.path = MultiplexedPath(*list(namespace_path))
|
||||
|
||||
def resource_path(self, resource):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Return the file system path to prevent
|
||||
`resources.path()` from creating a temporary
|
||||
copy.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return str(self.path.joinpath(resource))
|
||||
|
||||
def files(self):
|
||||
return self.path
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,116 @@
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Interface adapters for low-level readers.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
import abc
|
||||
import io
|
||||
import itertools
|
||||
from typing import BinaryIO, List
|
||||
|
||||
from .abc import Traversable, TraversableResources
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class SimpleReader(abc.ABC):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
The minimum, low-level interface required from a resource
|
||||
provider.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
@abc.abstractproperty
|
||||
def package(self):
|
||||
# type: () -> str
|
||||
"""
|
||||
The name of the package for which this reader loads resources.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
@abc.abstractmethod
|
||||
def children(self):
|
||||
# type: () -> List['SimpleReader']
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Obtain an iterable of SimpleReader for available
|
||||
child containers (e.g. directories).
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
@abc.abstractmethod
|
||||
def resources(self):
|
||||
# type: () -> List[str]
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Obtain available named resources for this virtual package.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
@abc.abstractmethod
|
||||
def open_binary(self, resource):
|
||||
# type: (str) -> BinaryIO
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Obtain a File-like for a named resource.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def name(self):
|
||||
return self.package.split('.')[-1]
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class ResourceHandle(Traversable):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Handle to a named resource in a ResourceReader.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def __init__(self, parent, name):
|
||||
# type: (ResourceContainer, str) -> None
|
||||
self.parent = parent
|
||||
self.name = name # type: ignore
|
||||
|
||||
def is_file(self):
|
||||
return True
|
||||
|
||||
def is_dir(self):
|
||||
return False
|
||||
|
||||
def open(self, mode='r', *args, **kwargs):
|
||||
stream = self.parent.reader.open_binary(self.name)
|
||||
if 'b' not in mode:
|
||||
stream = io.TextIOWrapper(*args, **kwargs)
|
||||
return stream
|
||||
|
||||
def joinpath(self, name):
|
||||
raise RuntimeError("Cannot traverse into a resource")
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class ResourceContainer(Traversable):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Traversable container for a package's resources via its reader.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def __init__(self, reader):
|
||||
# type: (SimpleReader) -> None
|
||||
self.reader = reader
|
||||
|
||||
def is_dir(self):
|
||||
return True
|
||||
|
||||
def is_file(self):
|
||||
return False
|
||||
|
||||
def iterdir(self):
|
||||
files = (ResourceHandle(self, name) for name in self.reader.resources)
|
||||
dirs = map(ResourceContainer, self.reader.children())
|
||||
return itertools.chain(files, dirs)
|
||||
|
||||
def open(self, *args, **kwargs):
|
||||
raise IsADirectoryError()
|
||||
|
||||
def joinpath(self, name):
|
||||
return next(
|
||||
traversable for traversable in self.iterdir() if traversable.name == name
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class TraversableReader(TraversableResources, SimpleReader):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
A TraversableResources based on SimpleReader. Resource providers
|
||||
may derive from this class to provide the TraversableResources
|
||||
interface by supplying the SimpleReader interface.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def files(self):
|
||||
return ResourceContainer(self)
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,213 @@
|
||||
import os
|
||||
import subprocess
|
||||
import contextlib
|
||||
import functools
|
||||
import tempfile
|
||||
import shutil
|
||||
import operator
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
@contextlib.contextmanager
|
||||
def pushd(dir):
|
||||
orig = os.getcwd()
|
||||
os.chdir(dir)
|
||||
try:
|
||||
yield dir
|
||||
finally:
|
||||
os.chdir(orig)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
@contextlib.contextmanager
|
||||
def tarball_context(url, target_dir=None, runner=None, pushd=pushd):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Get a tarball, extract it, change to that directory, yield, then
|
||||
clean up.
|
||||
`runner` is the function to invoke commands.
|
||||
`pushd` is a context manager for changing the directory.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
if target_dir is None:
|
||||
target_dir = os.path.basename(url).replace('.tar.gz', '').replace('.tgz', '')
|
||||
if runner is None:
|
||||
runner = functools.partial(subprocess.check_call, shell=True)
|
||||
# In the tar command, use --strip-components=1 to strip the first path and
|
||||
# then
|
||||
# use -C to cause the files to be extracted to {target_dir}. This ensures
|
||||
# that we always know where the files were extracted.
|
||||
runner('mkdir {target_dir}'.format(**vars()))
|
||||
try:
|
||||
getter = 'wget {url} -O -'
|
||||
extract = 'tar x{compression} --strip-components=1 -C {target_dir}'
|
||||
cmd = ' | '.join((getter, extract))
|
||||
runner(cmd.format(compression=infer_compression(url), **vars()))
|
||||
with pushd(target_dir):
|
||||
yield target_dir
|
||||
finally:
|
||||
runner('rm -Rf {target_dir}'.format(**vars()))
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def infer_compression(url):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Given a URL or filename, infer the compression code for tar.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
# cheat and just assume it's the last two characters
|
||||
compression_indicator = url[-2:]
|
||||
mapping = dict(gz='z', bz='j', xz='J')
|
||||
# Assume 'z' (gzip) if no match
|
||||
return mapping.get(compression_indicator, 'z')
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
@contextlib.contextmanager
|
||||
def temp_dir(remover=shutil.rmtree):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Create a temporary directory context. Pass a custom remover
|
||||
to override the removal behavior.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
temp_dir = tempfile.mkdtemp()
|
||||
try:
|
||||
yield temp_dir
|
||||
finally:
|
||||
remover(temp_dir)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
@contextlib.contextmanager
|
||||
def repo_context(url, branch=None, quiet=True, dest_ctx=temp_dir):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Check out the repo indicated by url.
|
||||
|
||||
If dest_ctx is supplied, it should be a context manager
|
||||
to yield the target directory for the check out.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
exe = 'git' if 'git' in url else 'hg'
|
||||
with dest_ctx() as repo_dir:
|
||||
cmd = [exe, 'clone', url, repo_dir]
|
||||
if branch:
|
||||
cmd.extend(['--branch', branch])
|
||||
devnull = open(os.path.devnull, 'w')
|
||||
stdout = devnull if quiet else None
|
||||
subprocess.check_call(cmd, stdout=stdout)
|
||||
yield repo_dir
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
@contextlib.contextmanager
|
||||
def null():
|
||||
yield
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class ExceptionTrap:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
A context manager that will catch certain exceptions and provide an
|
||||
indication they occurred.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> with ExceptionTrap() as trap:
|
||||
... raise Exception()
|
||||
>>> bool(trap)
|
||||
True
|
||||
|
||||
>>> with ExceptionTrap() as trap:
|
||||
... pass
|
||||
>>> bool(trap)
|
||||
False
|
||||
|
||||
>>> with ExceptionTrap(ValueError) as trap:
|
||||
... raise ValueError("1 + 1 is not 3")
|
||||
>>> bool(trap)
|
||||
True
|
||||
|
||||
>>> with ExceptionTrap(ValueError) as trap:
|
||||
... raise Exception()
|
||||
Traceback (most recent call last):
|
||||
...
|
||||
Exception
|
||||
|
||||
>>> bool(trap)
|
||||
False
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
exc_info = None, None, None
|
||||
|
||||
def __init__(self, exceptions=(Exception,)):
|
||||
self.exceptions = exceptions
|
||||
|
||||
def __enter__(self):
|
||||
return self
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def type(self):
|
||||
return self.exc_info[0]
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def value(self):
|
||||
return self.exc_info[1]
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def tb(self):
|
||||
return self.exc_info[2]
|
||||
|
||||
def __exit__(self, *exc_info):
|
||||
type = exc_info[0]
|
||||
matches = type and issubclass(type, self.exceptions)
|
||||
if matches:
|
||||
self.exc_info = exc_info
|
||||
return matches
|
||||
|
||||
def __bool__(self):
|
||||
return bool(self.type)
|
||||
|
||||
def raises(self, func, *, _test=bool):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Wrap func and replace the result with the truth
|
||||
value of the trap (True if an exception occurred).
|
||||
|
||||
First, give the decorator an alias to support Python 3.8
|
||||
Syntax.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> raises = ExceptionTrap(ValueError).raises
|
||||
|
||||
Now decorate a function that always fails.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> @raises
|
||||
... def fail():
|
||||
... raise ValueError('failed')
|
||||
>>> fail()
|
||||
True
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
@functools.wraps(func)
|
||||
def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
|
||||
with ExceptionTrap(self.exceptions) as trap:
|
||||
func(*args, **kwargs)
|
||||
return _test(trap)
|
||||
|
||||
return wrapper
|
||||
|
||||
def passes(self, func):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Wrap func and replace the result with the truth
|
||||
value of the trap (True if no exception).
|
||||
|
||||
First, give the decorator an alias to support Python 3.8
|
||||
Syntax.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> passes = ExceptionTrap(ValueError).passes
|
||||
|
||||
Now decorate a function that always fails.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> @passes
|
||||
... def fail():
|
||||
... raise ValueError('failed')
|
||||
|
||||
>>> fail()
|
||||
False
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return self.raises(func, _test=operator.not_)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class suppress(contextlib.suppress, contextlib.ContextDecorator):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
A version of contextlib.suppress with decorator support.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> @suppress(KeyError)
|
||||
... def key_error():
|
||||
... {}['']
|
||||
>>> key_error()
|
||||
"""
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,525 @@
|
||||
import functools
|
||||
import time
|
||||
import inspect
|
||||
import collections
|
||||
import types
|
||||
import itertools
|
||||
|
||||
import pkg_resources.extern.more_itertools
|
||||
|
||||
from typing import Callable, TypeVar
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
CallableT = TypeVar("CallableT", bound=Callable[..., object])
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def compose(*funcs):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Compose any number of unary functions into a single unary function.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> import textwrap
|
||||
>>> expected = str.strip(textwrap.dedent(compose.__doc__))
|
||||
>>> strip_and_dedent = compose(str.strip, textwrap.dedent)
|
||||
>>> strip_and_dedent(compose.__doc__) == expected
|
||||
True
|
||||
|
||||
Compose also allows the innermost function to take arbitrary arguments.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> round_three = lambda x: round(x, ndigits=3)
|
||||
>>> f = compose(round_three, int.__truediv__)
|
||||
>>> [f(3*x, x+1) for x in range(1,10)]
|
||||
[1.5, 2.0, 2.25, 2.4, 2.5, 2.571, 2.625, 2.667, 2.7]
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def compose_two(f1, f2):
|
||||
return lambda *args, **kwargs: f1(f2(*args, **kwargs))
|
||||
|
||||
return functools.reduce(compose_two, funcs)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def method_caller(method_name, *args, **kwargs):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Return a function that will call a named method on the
|
||||
target object with optional positional and keyword
|
||||
arguments.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> lower = method_caller('lower')
|
||||
>>> lower('MyString')
|
||||
'mystring'
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def call_method(target):
|
||||
func = getattr(target, method_name)
|
||||
return func(*args, **kwargs)
|
||||
|
||||
return call_method
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def once(func):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Decorate func so it's only ever called the first time.
|
||||
|
||||
This decorator can ensure that an expensive or non-idempotent function
|
||||
will not be expensive on subsequent calls and is idempotent.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> add_three = once(lambda a: a+3)
|
||||
>>> add_three(3)
|
||||
6
|
||||
>>> add_three(9)
|
||||
6
|
||||
>>> add_three('12')
|
||||
6
|
||||
|
||||
To reset the stored value, simply clear the property ``saved_result``.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> del add_three.saved_result
|
||||
>>> add_three(9)
|
||||
12
|
||||
>>> add_three(8)
|
||||
12
|
||||
|
||||
Or invoke 'reset()' on it.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> add_three.reset()
|
||||
>>> add_three(-3)
|
||||
0
|
||||
>>> add_three(0)
|
||||
0
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
@functools.wraps(func)
|
||||
def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
|
||||
if not hasattr(wrapper, 'saved_result'):
|
||||
wrapper.saved_result = func(*args, **kwargs)
|
||||
return wrapper.saved_result
|
||||
|
||||
wrapper.reset = lambda: vars(wrapper).__delitem__('saved_result')
|
||||
return wrapper
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def method_cache(
|
||||
method: CallableT,
|
||||
cache_wrapper: Callable[
|
||||
[CallableT], CallableT
|
||||
] = functools.lru_cache(), # type: ignore[assignment]
|
||||
) -> CallableT:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Wrap lru_cache to support storing the cache data in the object instances.
|
||||
|
||||
Abstracts the common paradigm where the method explicitly saves an
|
||||
underscore-prefixed protected property on first call and returns that
|
||||
subsequently.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> class MyClass:
|
||||
... calls = 0
|
||||
...
|
||||
... @method_cache
|
||||
... def method(self, value):
|
||||
... self.calls += 1
|
||||
... return value
|
||||
|
||||
>>> a = MyClass()
|
||||
>>> a.method(3)
|
||||
3
|
||||
>>> for x in range(75):
|
||||
... res = a.method(x)
|
||||
>>> a.calls
|
||||
75
|
||||
|
||||
Note that the apparent behavior will be exactly like that of lru_cache
|
||||
except that the cache is stored on each instance, so values in one
|
||||
instance will not flush values from another, and when an instance is
|
||||
deleted, so are the cached values for that instance.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> b = MyClass()
|
||||
>>> for x in range(35):
|
||||
... res = b.method(x)
|
||||
>>> b.calls
|
||||
35
|
||||
>>> a.method(0)
|
||||
0
|
||||
>>> a.calls
|
||||
75
|
||||
|
||||
Note that if method had been decorated with ``functools.lru_cache()``,
|
||||
a.calls would have been 76 (due to the cached value of 0 having been
|
||||
flushed by the 'b' instance).
|
||||
|
||||
Clear the cache with ``.cache_clear()``
|
||||
|
||||
>>> a.method.cache_clear()
|
||||
|
||||
Same for a method that hasn't yet been called.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> c = MyClass()
|
||||
>>> c.method.cache_clear()
|
||||
|
||||
Another cache wrapper may be supplied:
|
||||
|
||||
>>> cache = functools.lru_cache(maxsize=2)
|
||||
>>> MyClass.method2 = method_cache(lambda self: 3, cache_wrapper=cache)
|
||||
>>> a = MyClass()
|
||||
>>> a.method2()
|
||||
3
|
||||
|
||||
Caution - do not subsequently wrap the method with another decorator, such
|
||||
as ``@property``, which changes the semantics of the function.
|
||||
|
||||
See also
|
||||
http://code.activestate.com/recipes/577452-a-memoize-decorator-for-instance-methods/
|
||||
for another implementation and additional justification.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def wrapper(self: object, *args: object, **kwargs: object) -> object:
|
||||
# it's the first call, replace the method with a cached, bound method
|
||||
bound_method: CallableT = types.MethodType( # type: ignore[assignment]
|
||||
method, self
|
||||
)
|
||||
cached_method = cache_wrapper(bound_method)
|
||||
setattr(self, method.__name__, cached_method)
|
||||
return cached_method(*args, **kwargs)
|
||||
|
||||
# Support cache clear even before cache has been created.
|
||||
wrapper.cache_clear = lambda: None # type: ignore[attr-defined]
|
||||
|
||||
return ( # type: ignore[return-value]
|
||||
_special_method_cache(method, cache_wrapper) or wrapper
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _special_method_cache(method, cache_wrapper):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Because Python treats special methods differently, it's not
|
||||
possible to use instance attributes to implement the cached
|
||||
methods.
|
||||
|
||||
Instead, install the wrapper method under a different name
|
||||
and return a simple proxy to that wrapper.
|
||||
|
||||
https://github.com/jaraco/jaraco.functools/issues/5
|
||||
"""
|
||||
name = method.__name__
|
||||
special_names = '__getattr__', '__getitem__'
|
||||
if name not in special_names:
|
||||
return
|
||||
|
||||
wrapper_name = '__cached' + name
|
||||
|
||||
def proxy(self, *args, **kwargs):
|
||||
if wrapper_name not in vars(self):
|
||||
bound = types.MethodType(method, self)
|
||||
cache = cache_wrapper(bound)
|
||||
setattr(self, wrapper_name, cache)
|
||||
else:
|
||||
cache = getattr(self, wrapper_name)
|
||||
return cache(*args, **kwargs)
|
||||
|
||||
return proxy
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def apply(transform):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Decorate a function with a transform function that is
|
||||
invoked on results returned from the decorated function.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> @apply(reversed)
|
||||
... def get_numbers(start):
|
||||
... "doc for get_numbers"
|
||||
... return range(start, start+3)
|
||||
>>> list(get_numbers(4))
|
||||
[6, 5, 4]
|
||||
>>> get_numbers.__doc__
|
||||
'doc for get_numbers'
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def wrap(func):
|
||||
return functools.wraps(func)(compose(transform, func))
|
||||
|
||||
return wrap
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def result_invoke(action):
|
||||
r"""
|
||||
Decorate a function with an action function that is
|
||||
invoked on the results returned from the decorated
|
||||
function (for its side-effect), then return the original
|
||||
result.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> @result_invoke(print)
|
||||
... def add_two(a, b):
|
||||
... return a + b
|
||||
>>> x = add_two(2, 3)
|
||||
5
|
||||
>>> x
|
||||
5
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def wrap(func):
|
||||
@functools.wraps(func)
|
||||
def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
|
||||
result = func(*args, **kwargs)
|
||||
action(result)
|
||||
return result
|
||||
|
||||
return wrapper
|
||||
|
||||
return wrap
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def call_aside(f, *args, **kwargs):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Call a function for its side effect after initialization.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> @call_aside
|
||||
... def func(): print("called")
|
||||
called
|
||||
>>> func()
|
||||
called
|
||||
|
||||
Use functools.partial to pass parameters to the initial call
|
||||
|
||||
>>> @functools.partial(call_aside, name='bingo')
|
||||
... def func(name): print("called with", name)
|
||||
called with bingo
|
||||
"""
|
||||
f(*args, **kwargs)
|
||||
return f
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class Throttler:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Rate-limit a function (or other callable)
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def __init__(self, func, max_rate=float('Inf')):
|
||||
if isinstance(func, Throttler):
|
||||
func = func.func
|
||||
self.func = func
|
||||
self.max_rate = max_rate
|
||||
self.reset()
|
||||
|
||||
def reset(self):
|
||||
self.last_called = 0
|
||||
|
||||
def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs):
|
||||
self._wait()
|
||||
return self.func(*args, **kwargs)
|
||||
|
||||
def _wait(self):
|
||||
"ensure at least 1/max_rate seconds from last call"
|
||||
elapsed = time.time() - self.last_called
|
||||
must_wait = 1 / self.max_rate - elapsed
|
||||
time.sleep(max(0, must_wait))
|
||||
self.last_called = time.time()
|
||||
|
||||
def __get__(self, obj, type=None):
|
||||
return first_invoke(self._wait, functools.partial(self.func, obj))
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def first_invoke(func1, func2):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Return a function that when invoked will invoke func1 without
|
||||
any parameters (for its side-effect) and then invoke func2
|
||||
with whatever parameters were passed, returning its result.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
|
||||
func1()
|
||||
return func2(*args, **kwargs)
|
||||
|
||||
return wrapper
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def retry_call(func, cleanup=lambda: None, retries=0, trap=()):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Given a callable func, trap the indicated exceptions
|
||||
for up to 'retries' times, invoking cleanup on the
|
||||
exception. On the final attempt, allow any exceptions
|
||||
to propagate.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
attempts = itertools.count() if retries == float('inf') else range(retries)
|
||||
for attempt in attempts:
|
||||
try:
|
||||
return func()
|
||||
except trap:
|
||||
cleanup()
|
||||
|
||||
return func()
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def retry(*r_args, **r_kwargs):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Decorator wrapper for retry_call. Accepts arguments to retry_call
|
||||
except func and then returns a decorator for the decorated function.
|
||||
|
||||
Ex:
|
||||
|
||||
>>> @retry(retries=3)
|
||||
... def my_func(a, b):
|
||||
... "this is my funk"
|
||||
... print(a, b)
|
||||
>>> my_func.__doc__
|
||||
'this is my funk'
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def decorate(func):
|
||||
@functools.wraps(func)
|
||||
def wrapper(*f_args, **f_kwargs):
|
||||
bound = functools.partial(func, *f_args, **f_kwargs)
|
||||
return retry_call(bound, *r_args, **r_kwargs)
|
||||
|
||||
return wrapper
|
||||
|
||||
return decorate
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def print_yielded(func):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Convert a generator into a function that prints all yielded elements
|
||||
|
||||
>>> @print_yielded
|
||||
... def x():
|
||||
... yield 3; yield None
|
||||
>>> x()
|
||||
3
|
||||
None
|
||||
"""
|
||||
print_all = functools.partial(map, print)
|
||||
print_results = compose(more_itertools.consume, print_all, func)
|
||||
return functools.wraps(func)(print_results)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def pass_none(func):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Wrap func so it's not called if its first param is None
|
||||
|
||||
>>> print_text = pass_none(print)
|
||||
>>> print_text('text')
|
||||
text
|
||||
>>> print_text(None)
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
@functools.wraps(func)
|
||||
def wrapper(param, *args, **kwargs):
|
||||
if param is not None:
|
||||
return func(param, *args, **kwargs)
|
||||
|
||||
return wrapper
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def assign_params(func, namespace):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Assign parameters from namespace where func solicits.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> def func(x, y=3):
|
||||
... print(x, y)
|
||||
>>> assigned = assign_params(func, dict(x=2, z=4))
|
||||
>>> assigned()
|
||||
2 3
|
||||
|
||||
The usual errors are raised if a function doesn't receive
|
||||
its required parameters:
|
||||
|
||||
>>> assigned = assign_params(func, dict(y=3, z=4))
|
||||
>>> assigned()
|
||||
Traceback (most recent call last):
|
||||
TypeError: func() ...argument...
|
||||
|
||||
It even works on methods:
|
||||
|
||||
>>> class Handler:
|
||||
... def meth(self, arg):
|
||||
... print(arg)
|
||||
>>> assign_params(Handler().meth, dict(arg='crystal', foo='clear'))()
|
||||
crystal
|
||||
"""
|
||||
sig = inspect.signature(func)
|
||||
params = sig.parameters.keys()
|
||||
call_ns = {k: namespace[k] for k in params if k in namespace}
|
||||
return functools.partial(func, **call_ns)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def save_method_args(method):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Wrap a method such that when it is called, the args and kwargs are
|
||||
saved on the method.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> class MyClass:
|
||||
... @save_method_args
|
||||
... def method(self, a, b):
|
||||
... print(a, b)
|
||||
>>> my_ob = MyClass()
|
||||
>>> my_ob.method(1, 2)
|
||||
1 2
|
||||
>>> my_ob._saved_method.args
|
||||
(1, 2)
|
||||
>>> my_ob._saved_method.kwargs
|
||||
{}
|
||||
>>> my_ob.method(a=3, b='foo')
|
||||
3 foo
|
||||
>>> my_ob._saved_method.args
|
||||
()
|
||||
>>> my_ob._saved_method.kwargs == dict(a=3, b='foo')
|
||||
True
|
||||
|
||||
The arguments are stored on the instance, allowing for
|
||||
different instance to save different args.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> your_ob = MyClass()
|
||||
>>> your_ob.method({str('x'): 3}, b=[4])
|
||||
{'x': 3} [4]
|
||||
>>> your_ob._saved_method.args
|
||||
({'x': 3},)
|
||||
>>> my_ob._saved_method.args
|
||||
()
|
||||
"""
|
||||
args_and_kwargs = collections.namedtuple('args_and_kwargs', 'args kwargs')
|
||||
|
||||
@functools.wraps(method)
|
||||
def wrapper(self, *args, **kwargs):
|
||||
attr_name = '_saved_' + method.__name__
|
||||
attr = args_and_kwargs(args, kwargs)
|
||||
setattr(self, attr_name, attr)
|
||||
return method(self, *args, **kwargs)
|
||||
|
||||
return wrapper
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def except_(*exceptions, replace=None, use=None):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Replace the indicated exceptions, if raised, with the indicated
|
||||
literal replacement or evaluated expression (if present).
|
||||
|
||||
>>> safe_int = except_(ValueError)(int)
|
||||
>>> safe_int('five')
|
||||
>>> safe_int('5')
|
||||
5
|
||||
|
||||
Specify a literal replacement with ``replace``.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> safe_int_r = except_(ValueError, replace=0)(int)
|
||||
>>> safe_int_r('five')
|
||||
0
|
||||
|
||||
Provide an expression to ``use`` to pass through particular parameters.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> safe_int_pt = except_(ValueError, use='args[0]')(int)
|
||||
>>> safe_int_pt('five')
|
||||
'five'
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def decorate(func):
|
||||
@functools.wraps(func)
|
||||
def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
|
||||
try:
|
||||
return func(*args, **kwargs)
|
||||
except exceptions:
|
||||
try:
|
||||
return eval(use)
|
||||
except TypeError:
|
||||
return replace
|
||||
|
||||
return wrapper
|
||||
|
||||
return decorate
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,599 @@
|
||||
import re
|
||||
import itertools
|
||||
import textwrap
|
||||
import functools
|
||||
|
||||
try:
|
||||
from importlib.resources import files # type: ignore
|
||||
except ImportError: # pragma: nocover
|
||||
from pkg_resources.extern.importlib_resources import files # type: ignore
|
||||
|
||||
from pkg_resources.extern.jaraco.functools import compose, method_cache
|
||||
from pkg_resources.extern.jaraco.context import ExceptionTrap
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def substitution(old, new):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Return a function that will perform a substitution on a string
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return lambda s: s.replace(old, new)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def multi_substitution(*substitutions):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Take a sequence of pairs specifying substitutions, and create
|
||||
a function that performs those substitutions.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> multi_substitution(('foo', 'bar'), ('bar', 'baz'))('foo')
|
||||
'baz'
|
||||
"""
|
||||
substitutions = itertools.starmap(substitution, substitutions)
|
||||
# compose function applies last function first, so reverse the
|
||||
# substitutions to get the expected order.
|
||||
substitutions = reversed(tuple(substitutions))
|
||||
return compose(*substitutions)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class FoldedCase(str):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
A case insensitive string class; behaves just like str
|
||||
except compares equal when the only variation is case.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> s = FoldedCase('hello world')
|
||||
|
||||
>>> s == 'Hello World'
|
||||
True
|
||||
|
||||
>>> 'Hello World' == s
|
||||
True
|
||||
|
||||
>>> s != 'Hello World'
|
||||
False
|
||||
|
||||
>>> s.index('O')
|
||||
4
|
||||
|
||||
>>> s.split('O')
|
||||
['hell', ' w', 'rld']
|
||||
|
||||
>>> sorted(map(FoldedCase, ['GAMMA', 'alpha', 'Beta']))
|
||||
['alpha', 'Beta', 'GAMMA']
|
||||
|
||||
Sequence membership is straightforward.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> "Hello World" in [s]
|
||||
True
|
||||
>>> s in ["Hello World"]
|
||||
True
|
||||
|
||||
You may test for set inclusion, but candidate and elements
|
||||
must both be folded.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> FoldedCase("Hello World") in {s}
|
||||
True
|
||||
>>> s in {FoldedCase("Hello World")}
|
||||
True
|
||||
|
||||
String inclusion works as long as the FoldedCase object
|
||||
is on the right.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> "hello" in FoldedCase("Hello World")
|
||||
True
|
||||
|
||||
But not if the FoldedCase object is on the left:
|
||||
|
||||
>>> FoldedCase('hello') in 'Hello World'
|
||||
False
|
||||
|
||||
In that case, use ``in_``:
|
||||
|
||||
>>> FoldedCase('hello').in_('Hello World')
|
||||
True
|
||||
|
||||
>>> FoldedCase('hello') > FoldedCase('Hello')
|
||||
False
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def __lt__(self, other):
|
||||
return self.lower() < other.lower()
|
||||
|
||||
def __gt__(self, other):
|
||||
return self.lower() > other.lower()
|
||||
|
||||
def __eq__(self, other):
|
||||
return self.lower() == other.lower()
|
||||
|
||||
def __ne__(self, other):
|
||||
return self.lower() != other.lower()
|
||||
|
||||
def __hash__(self):
|
||||
return hash(self.lower())
|
||||
|
||||
def __contains__(self, other):
|
||||
return super().lower().__contains__(other.lower())
|
||||
|
||||
def in_(self, other):
|
||||
"Does self appear in other?"
|
||||
return self in FoldedCase(other)
|
||||
|
||||
# cache lower since it's likely to be called frequently.
|
||||
@method_cache
|
||||
def lower(self):
|
||||
return super().lower()
|
||||
|
||||
def index(self, sub):
|
||||
return self.lower().index(sub.lower())
|
||||
|
||||
def split(self, splitter=' ', maxsplit=0):
|
||||
pattern = re.compile(re.escape(splitter), re.I)
|
||||
return pattern.split(self, maxsplit)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
# Python 3.8 compatibility
|
||||
_unicode_trap = ExceptionTrap(UnicodeDecodeError)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
@_unicode_trap.passes
|
||||
def is_decodable(value):
|
||||
r"""
|
||||
Return True if the supplied value is decodable (using the default
|
||||
encoding).
|
||||
|
||||
>>> is_decodable(b'\xff')
|
||||
False
|
||||
>>> is_decodable(b'\x32')
|
||||
True
|
||||
"""
|
||||
value.decode()
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def is_binary(value):
|
||||
r"""
|
||||
Return True if the value appears to be binary (that is, it's a byte
|
||||
string and isn't decodable).
|
||||
|
||||
>>> is_binary(b'\xff')
|
||||
True
|
||||
>>> is_binary('\xff')
|
||||
False
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return isinstance(value, bytes) and not is_decodable(value)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def trim(s):
|
||||
r"""
|
||||
Trim something like a docstring to remove the whitespace that
|
||||
is common due to indentation and formatting.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> trim("\n\tfoo = bar\n\t\tbar = baz\n")
|
||||
'foo = bar\n\tbar = baz'
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return textwrap.dedent(s).strip()
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def wrap(s):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Wrap lines of text, retaining existing newlines as
|
||||
paragraph markers.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> print(wrap(lorem_ipsum))
|
||||
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do
|
||||
eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad
|
||||
minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut
|
||||
aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in
|
||||
reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla
|
||||
pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in
|
||||
culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.
|
||||
<BLANKLINE>
|
||||
Curabitur pretium tincidunt lacus. Nulla gravida orci a odio. Nullam
|
||||
varius, turpis et commodo pharetra, est eros bibendum elit, nec luctus
|
||||
magna felis sollicitudin mauris. Integer in mauris eu nibh euismod
|
||||
gravida. Duis ac tellus et risus vulputate vehicula. Donec lobortis
|
||||
risus a elit. Etiam tempor. Ut ullamcorper, ligula eu tempor congue,
|
||||
eros est euismod turpis, id tincidunt sapien risus a quam. Maecenas
|
||||
fermentum consequat mi. Donec fermentum. Pellentesque malesuada nulla
|
||||
a mi. Duis sapien sem, aliquet nec, commodo eget, consequat quis,
|
||||
neque. Aliquam faucibus, elit ut dictum aliquet, felis nisl adipiscing
|
||||
sapien, sed malesuada diam lacus eget erat. Cras mollis scelerisque
|
||||
nunc. Nullam arcu. Aliquam consequat. Curabitur augue lorem, dapibus
|
||||
quis, laoreet et, pretium ac, nisi. Aenean magna nisl, mollis quis,
|
||||
molestie eu, feugiat in, orci. In hac habitasse platea dictumst.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
paragraphs = s.splitlines()
|
||||
wrapped = ('\n'.join(textwrap.wrap(para)) for para in paragraphs)
|
||||
return '\n\n'.join(wrapped)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def unwrap(s):
|
||||
r"""
|
||||
Given a multi-line string, return an unwrapped version.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> wrapped = wrap(lorem_ipsum)
|
||||
>>> wrapped.count('\n')
|
||||
20
|
||||
>>> unwrapped = unwrap(wrapped)
|
||||
>>> unwrapped.count('\n')
|
||||
1
|
||||
>>> print(unwrapped)
|
||||
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing ...
|
||||
Curabitur pretium tincidunt lacus. Nulla gravida orci ...
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
paragraphs = re.split(r'\n\n+', s)
|
||||
cleaned = (para.replace('\n', ' ') for para in paragraphs)
|
||||
return '\n'.join(cleaned)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class Splitter(object):
|
||||
"""object that will split a string with the given arguments for each call
|
||||
|
||||
>>> s = Splitter(',')
|
||||
>>> s('hello, world, this is your, master calling')
|
||||
['hello', ' world', ' this is your', ' master calling']
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def __init__(self, *args):
|
||||
self.args = args
|
||||
|
||||
def __call__(self, s):
|
||||
return s.split(*self.args)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def indent(string, prefix=' ' * 4):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
>>> indent('foo')
|
||||
' foo'
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return prefix + string
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class WordSet(tuple):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Given an identifier, return the words that identifier represents,
|
||||
whether in camel case, underscore-separated, etc.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> WordSet.parse("camelCase")
|
||||
('camel', 'Case')
|
||||
|
||||
>>> WordSet.parse("under_sep")
|
||||
('under', 'sep')
|
||||
|
||||
Acronyms should be retained
|
||||
|
||||
>>> WordSet.parse("firstSNL")
|
||||
('first', 'SNL')
|
||||
|
||||
>>> WordSet.parse("you_and_I")
|
||||
('you', 'and', 'I')
|
||||
|
||||
>>> WordSet.parse("A simple test")
|
||||
('A', 'simple', 'test')
|
||||
|
||||
Multiple caps should not interfere with the first cap of another word.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> WordSet.parse("myABCClass")
|
||||
('my', 'ABC', 'Class')
|
||||
|
||||
The result is a WordSet, so you can get the form you need.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> WordSet.parse("myABCClass").underscore_separated()
|
||||
'my_ABC_Class'
|
||||
|
||||
>>> WordSet.parse('a-command').camel_case()
|
||||
'ACommand'
|
||||
|
||||
>>> WordSet.parse('someIdentifier').lowered().space_separated()
|
||||
'some identifier'
|
||||
|
||||
Slices of the result should return another WordSet.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> WordSet.parse('taken-out-of-context')[1:].underscore_separated()
|
||||
'out_of_context'
|
||||
|
||||
>>> WordSet.from_class_name(WordSet()).lowered().space_separated()
|
||||
'word set'
|
||||
|
||||
>>> example = WordSet.parse('figured it out')
|
||||
>>> example.headless_camel_case()
|
||||
'figuredItOut'
|
||||
>>> example.dash_separated()
|
||||
'figured-it-out'
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
_pattern = re.compile('([A-Z]?[a-z]+)|([A-Z]+(?![a-z]))')
|
||||
|
||||
def capitalized(self):
|
||||
return WordSet(word.capitalize() for word in self)
|
||||
|
||||
def lowered(self):
|
||||
return WordSet(word.lower() for word in self)
|
||||
|
||||
def camel_case(self):
|
||||
return ''.join(self.capitalized())
|
||||
|
||||
def headless_camel_case(self):
|
||||
words = iter(self)
|
||||
first = next(words).lower()
|
||||
new_words = itertools.chain((first,), WordSet(words).camel_case())
|
||||
return ''.join(new_words)
|
||||
|
||||
def underscore_separated(self):
|
||||
return '_'.join(self)
|
||||
|
||||
def dash_separated(self):
|
||||
return '-'.join(self)
|
||||
|
||||
def space_separated(self):
|
||||
return ' '.join(self)
|
||||
|
||||
def trim_right(self, item):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Remove the item from the end of the set.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> WordSet.parse('foo bar').trim_right('foo')
|
||||
('foo', 'bar')
|
||||
>>> WordSet.parse('foo bar').trim_right('bar')
|
||||
('foo',)
|
||||
>>> WordSet.parse('').trim_right('bar')
|
||||
()
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return self[:-1] if self and self[-1] == item else self
|
||||
|
||||
def trim_left(self, item):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Remove the item from the beginning of the set.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> WordSet.parse('foo bar').trim_left('foo')
|
||||
('bar',)
|
||||
>>> WordSet.parse('foo bar').trim_left('bar')
|
||||
('foo', 'bar')
|
||||
>>> WordSet.parse('').trim_left('bar')
|
||||
()
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return self[1:] if self and self[0] == item else self
|
||||
|
||||
def trim(self, item):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
>>> WordSet.parse('foo bar').trim('foo')
|
||||
('bar',)
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return self.trim_left(item).trim_right(item)
|
||||
|
||||
def __getitem__(self, item):
|
||||
result = super(WordSet, self).__getitem__(item)
|
||||
if isinstance(item, slice):
|
||||
result = WordSet(result)
|
||||
return result
|
||||
|
||||
@classmethod
|
||||
def parse(cls, identifier):
|
||||
matches = cls._pattern.finditer(identifier)
|
||||
return WordSet(match.group(0) for match in matches)
|
||||
|
||||
@classmethod
|
||||
def from_class_name(cls, subject):
|
||||
return cls.parse(subject.__class__.__name__)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
# for backward compatibility
|
||||
words = WordSet.parse
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def simple_html_strip(s):
|
||||
r"""
|
||||
Remove HTML from the string `s`.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> str(simple_html_strip(''))
|
||||
''
|
||||
|
||||
>>> print(simple_html_strip('A <bold>stormy</bold> day in paradise'))
|
||||
A stormy day in paradise
|
||||
|
||||
>>> print(simple_html_strip('Somebody <!-- do not --> tell the truth.'))
|
||||
Somebody tell the truth.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> print(simple_html_strip('What about<br/>\nmultiple lines?'))
|
||||
What about
|
||||
multiple lines?
|
||||
"""
|
||||
html_stripper = re.compile('(<!--.*?-->)|(<[^>]*>)|([^<]+)', re.DOTALL)
|
||||
texts = (match.group(3) or '' for match in html_stripper.finditer(s))
|
||||
return ''.join(texts)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class SeparatedValues(str):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
A string separated by a separator. Overrides __iter__ for getting
|
||||
the values.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> list(SeparatedValues('a,b,c'))
|
||||
['a', 'b', 'c']
|
||||
|
||||
Whitespace is stripped and empty values are discarded.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> list(SeparatedValues(' a, b , c, '))
|
||||
['a', 'b', 'c']
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
separator = ','
|
||||
|
||||
def __iter__(self):
|
||||
parts = self.split(self.separator)
|
||||
return filter(None, (part.strip() for part in parts))
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class Stripper:
|
||||
r"""
|
||||
Given a series of lines, find the common prefix and strip it from them.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> lines = [
|
||||
... 'abcdefg\n',
|
||||
... 'abc\n',
|
||||
... 'abcde\n',
|
||||
... ]
|
||||
>>> res = Stripper.strip_prefix(lines)
|
||||
>>> res.prefix
|
||||
'abc'
|
||||
>>> list(res.lines)
|
||||
['defg\n', '\n', 'de\n']
|
||||
|
||||
If no prefix is common, nothing should be stripped.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> lines = [
|
||||
... 'abcd\n',
|
||||
... '1234\n',
|
||||
... ]
|
||||
>>> res = Stripper.strip_prefix(lines)
|
||||
>>> res.prefix = ''
|
||||
>>> list(res.lines)
|
||||
['abcd\n', '1234\n']
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def __init__(self, prefix, lines):
|
||||
self.prefix = prefix
|
||||
self.lines = map(self, lines)
|
||||
|
||||
@classmethod
|
||||
def strip_prefix(cls, lines):
|
||||
prefix_lines, lines = itertools.tee(lines)
|
||||
prefix = functools.reduce(cls.common_prefix, prefix_lines)
|
||||
return cls(prefix, lines)
|
||||
|
||||
def __call__(self, line):
|
||||
if not self.prefix:
|
||||
return line
|
||||
null, prefix, rest = line.partition(self.prefix)
|
||||
return rest
|
||||
|
||||
@staticmethod
|
||||
def common_prefix(s1, s2):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Return the common prefix of two lines.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
index = min(len(s1), len(s2))
|
||||
while s1[:index] != s2[:index]:
|
||||
index -= 1
|
||||
return s1[:index]
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def remove_prefix(text, prefix):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Remove the prefix from the text if it exists.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> remove_prefix('underwhelming performance', 'underwhelming ')
|
||||
'performance'
|
||||
|
||||
>>> remove_prefix('something special', 'sample')
|
||||
'something special'
|
||||
"""
|
||||
null, prefix, rest = text.rpartition(prefix)
|
||||
return rest
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def remove_suffix(text, suffix):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Remove the suffix from the text if it exists.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> remove_suffix('name.git', '.git')
|
||||
'name'
|
||||
|
||||
>>> remove_suffix('something special', 'sample')
|
||||
'something special'
|
||||
"""
|
||||
rest, suffix, null = text.partition(suffix)
|
||||
return rest
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def normalize_newlines(text):
|
||||
r"""
|
||||
Replace alternate newlines with the canonical newline.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> normalize_newlines('Lorem Ipsum\u2029')
|
||||
'Lorem Ipsum\n'
|
||||
>>> normalize_newlines('Lorem Ipsum\r\n')
|
||||
'Lorem Ipsum\n'
|
||||
>>> normalize_newlines('Lorem Ipsum\x85')
|
||||
'Lorem Ipsum\n'
|
||||
"""
|
||||
newlines = ['\r\n', '\r', '\n', '\u0085', '\u2028', '\u2029']
|
||||
pattern = '|'.join(newlines)
|
||||
return re.sub(pattern, '\n', text)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _nonblank(str):
|
||||
return str and not str.startswith('#')
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
@functools.singledispatch
|
||||
def yield_lines(iterable):
|
||||
r"""
|
||||
Yield valid lines of a string or iterable.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> list(yield_lines(''))
|
||||
[]
|
||||
>>> list(yield_lines(['foo', 'bar']))
|
||||
['foo', 'bar']
|
||||
>>> list(yield_lines('foo\nbar'))
|
||||
['foo', 'bar']
|
||||
>>> list(yield_lines('\nfoo\n#bar\nbaz #comment'))
|
||||
['foo', 'baz #comment']
|
||||
>>> list(yield_lines(['foo\nbar', 'baz', 'bing\n\n\n']))
|
||||
['foo', 'bar', 'baz', 'bing']
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return itertools.chain.from_iterable(map(yield_lines, iterable))
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
@yield_lines.register(str)
|
||||
def _(text):
|
||||
return filter(_nonblank, map(str.strip, text.splitlines()))
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def drop_comment(line):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Drop comments.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> drop_comment('foo # bar')
|
||||
'foo'
|
||||
|
||||
A hash without a space may be in a URL.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> drop_comment('http://example.com/foo#bar')
|
||||
'http://example.com/foo#bar'
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return line.partition(' #')[0]
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def join_continuation(lines):
|
||||
r"""
|
||||
Join lines continued by a trailing backslash.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> list(join_continuation(['foo \\', 'bar', 'baz']))
|
||||
['foobar', 'baz']
|
||||
>>> list(join_continuation(['foo \\', 'bar', 'baz']))
|
||||
['foobar', 'baz']
|
||||
>>> list(join_continuation(['foo \\', 'bar \\', 'baz']))
|
||||
['foobarbaz']
|
||||
|
||||
Not sure why, but...
|
||||
The character preceeding the backslash is also elided.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> list(join_continuation(['goo\\', 'dly']))
|
||||
['godly']
|
||||
|
||||
A terrible idea, but...
|
||||
If no line is available to continue, suppress the lines.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> list(join_continuation(['foo', 'bar\\', 'baz\\']))
|
||||
['foo']
|
||||
"""
|
||||
lines = iter(lines)
|
||||
for item in lines:
|
||||
while item.endswith('\\'):
|
||||
try:
|
||||
item = item[:-2].strip() + next(lines)
|
||||
except StopIteration:
|
||||
return
|
||||
yield item
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
|
||||
from .more import * # noqa
|
||||
from .recipes import * # noqa
|
||||
|
||||
__version__ = '8.12.0'
|
||||
File diff suppressed because it is too large
Load Diff
@@ -0,0 +1,698 @@
|
||||
"""Imported from the recipes section of the itertools documentation.
|
||||
|
||||
All functions taken from the recipes section of the itertools library docs
|
||||
[1]_.
|
||||
Some backward-compatible usability improvements have been made.
|
||||
|
||||
.. [1] http://docs.python.org/library/itertools.html#recipes
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
import warnings
|
||||
from collections import deque
|
||||
from itertools import (
|
||||
chain,
|
||||
combinations,
|
||||
count,
|
||||
cycle,
|
||||
groupby,
|
||||
islice,
|
||||
repeat,
|
||||
starmap,
|
||||
tee,
|
||||
zip_longest,
|
||||
)
|
||||
import operator
|
||||
from random import randrange, sample, choice
|
||||
|
||||
__all__ = [
|
||||
'all_equal',
|
||||
'before_and_after',
|
||||
'consume',
|
||||
'convolve',
|
||||
'dotproduct',
|
||||
'first_true',
|
||||
'flatten',
|
||||
'grouper',
|
||||
'iter_except',
|
||||
'ncycles',
|
||||
'nth',
|
||||
'nth_combination',
|
||||
'padnone',
|
||||
'pad_none',
|
||||
'pairwise',
|
||||
'partition',
|
||||
'powerset',
|
||||
'prepend',
|
||||
'quantify',
|
||||
'random_combination_with_replacement',
|
||||
'random_combination',
|
||||
'random_permutation',
|
||||
'random_product',
|
||||
'repeatfunc',
|
||||
'roundrobin',
|
||||
'sliding_window',
|
||||
'tabulate',
|
||||
'tail',
|
||||
'take',
|
||||
'triplewise',
|
||||
'unique_everseen',
|
||||
'unique_justseen',
|
||||
]
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def take(n, iterable):
|
||||
"""Return first *n* items of the iterable as a list.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> take(3, range(10))
|
||||
[0, 1, 2]
|
||||
|
||||
If there are fewer than *n* items in the iterable, all of them are
|
||||
returned.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> take(10, range(3))
|
||||
[0, 1, 2]
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return list(islice(iterable, n))
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def tabulate(function, start=0):
|
||||
"""Return an iterator over the results of ``func(start)``,
|
||||
``func(start + 1)``, ``func(start + 2)``...
|
||||
|
||||
*func* should be a function that accepts one integer argument.
|
||||
|
||||
If *start* is not specified it defaults to 0. It will be incremented each
|
||||
time the iterator is advanced.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> square = lambda x: x ** 2
|
||||
>>> iterator = tabulate(square, -3)
|
||||
>>> take(4, iterator)
|
||||
[9, 4, 1, 0]
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return map(function, count(start))
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def tail(n, iterable):
|
||||
"""Return an iterator over the last *n* items of *iterable*.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> t = tail(3, 'ABCDEFG')
|
||||
>>> list(t)
|
||||
['E', 'F', 'G']
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return iter(deque(iterable, maxlen=n))
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def consume(iterator, n=None):
|
||||
"""Advance *iterable* by *n* steps. If *n* is ``None``, consume it
|
||||
entirely.
|
||||
|
||||
Efficiently exhausts an iterator without returning values. Defaults to
|
||||
consuming the whole iterator, but an optional second argument may be
|
||||
provided to limit consumption.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> i = (x for x in range(10))
|
||||
>>> next(i)
|
||||
0
|
||||
>>> consume(i, 3)
|
||||
>>> next(i)
|
||||
4
|
||||
>>> consume(i)
|
||||
>>> next(i)
|
||||
Traceback (most recent call last):
|
||||
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
|
||||
StopIteration
|
||||
|
||||
If the iterator has fewer items remaining than the provided limit, the
|
||||
whole iterator will be consumed.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> i = (x for x in range(3))
|
||||
>>> consume(i, 5)
|
||||
>>> next(i)
|
||||
Traceback (most recent call last):
|
||||
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
|
||||
StopIteration
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
# Use functions that consume iterators at C speed.
|
||||
if n is None:
|
||||
# feed the entire iterator into a zero-length deque
|
||||
deque(iterator, maxlen=0)
|
||||
else:
|
||||
# advance to the empty slice starting at position n
|
||||
next(islice(iterator, n, n), None)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def nth(iterable, n, default=None):
|
||||
"""Returns the nth item or a default value.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> l = range(10)
|
||||
>>> nth(l, 3)
|
||||
3
|
||||
>>> nth(l, 20, "zebra")
|
||||
'zebra'
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return next(islice(iterable, n, None), default)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def all_equal(iterable):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Returns ``True`` if all the elements are equal to each other.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> all_equal('aaaa')
|
||||
True
|
||||
>>> all_equal('aaab')
|
||||
False
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
g = groupby(iterable)
|
||||
return next(g, True) and not next(g, False)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def quantify(iterable, pred=bool):
|
||||
"""Return the how many times the predicate is true.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> quantify([True, False, True])
|
||||
2
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return sum(map(pred, iterable))
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def pad_none(iterable):
|
||||
"""Returns the sequence of elements and then returns ``None`` indefinitely.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> take(5, pad_none(range(3)))
|
||||
[0, 1, 2, None, None]
|
||||
|
||||
Useful for emulating the behavior of the built-in :func:`map` function.
|
||||
|
||||
See also :func:`padded`.
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return chain(iterable, repeat(None))
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
padnone = pad_none
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def ncycles(iterable, n):
|
||||
"""Returns the sequence elements *n* times
|
||||
|
||||
>>> list(ncycles(["a", "b"], 3))
|
||||
['a', 'b', 'a', 'b', 'a', 'b']
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return chain.from_iterable(repeat(tuple(iterable), n))
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def dotproduct(vec1, vec2):
|
||||
"""Returns the dot product of the two iterables.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> dotproduct([10, 10], [20, 20])
|
||||
400
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return sum(map(operator.mul, vec1, vec2))
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def flatten(listOfLists):
|
||||
"""Return an iterator flattening one level of nesting in a list of lists.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> list(flatten([[0, 1], [2, 3]]))
|
||||
[0, 1, 2, 3]
|
||||
|
||||
See also :func:`collapse`, which can flatten multiple levels of nesting.
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return chain.from_iterable(listOfLists)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def repeatfunc(func, times=None, *args):
|
||||
"""Call *func* with *args* repeatedly, returning an iterable over the
|
||||
results.
|
||||
|
||||
If *times* is specified, the iterable will terminate after that many
|
||||
repetitions:
|
||||
|
||||
>>> from operator import add
|
||||
>>> times = 4
|
||||
>>> args = 3, 5
|
||||
>>> list(repeatfunc(add, times, *args))
|
||||
[8, 8, 8, 8]
|
||||
|
||||
If *times* is ``None`` the iterable will not terminate:
|
||||
|
||||
>>> from random import randrange
|
||||
>>> times = None
|
||||
>>> args = 1, 11
|
||||
>>> take(6, repeatfunc(randrange, times, *args)) # doctest:+SKIP
|
||||
[2, 4, 8, 1, 8, 4]
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
if times is None:
|
||||
return starmap(func, repeat(args))
|
||||
return starmap(func, repeat(args, times))
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _pairwise(iterable):
|
||||
"""Returns an iterator of paired items, overlapping, from the original
|
||||
|
||||
>>> take(4, pairwise(count()))
|
||||
[(0, 1), (1, 2), (2, 3), (3, 4)]
|
||||
|
||||
On Python 3.10 and above, this is an alias for :func:`itertools.pairwise`.
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
a, b = tee(iterable)
|
||||
next(b, None)
|
||||
yield from zip(a, b)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
try:
|
||||
from itertools import pairwise as itertools_pairwise
|
||||
except ImportError:
|
||||
pairwise = _pairwise
|
||||
else:
|
||||
|
||||
def pairwise(iterable):
|
||||
yield from itertools_pairwise(iterable)
|
||||
|
||||
pairwise.__doc__ = _pairwise.__doc__
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def grouper(iterable, n, fillvalue=None):
|
||||
"""Collect data into fixed-length chunks or blocks.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> list(grouper('ABCDEFG', 3, 'x'))
|
||||
[('A', 'B', 'C'), ('D', 'E', 'F'), ('G', 'x', 'x')]
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
if isinstance(iterable, int):
|
||||
warnings.warn(
|
||||
"grouper expects iterable as first parameter", DeprecationWarning
|
||||
)
|
||||
n, iterable = iterable, n
|
||||
args = [iter(iterable)] * n
|
||||
return zip_longest(fillvalue=fillvalue, *args)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def roundrobin(*iterables):
|
||||
"""Yields an item from each iterable, alternating between them.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> list(roundrobin('ABC', 'D', 'EF'))
|
||||
['A', 'D', 'E', 'B', 'F', 'C']
|
||||
|
||||
This function produces the same output as :func:`interleave_longest`, but
|
||||
may perform better for some inputs (in particular when the number of
|
||||
iterables is small).
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
# Recipe credited to George Sakkis
|
||||
pending = len(iterables)
|
||||
nexts = cycle(iter(it).__next__ for it in iterables)
|
||||
while pending:
|
||||
try:
|
||||
for next in nexts:
|
||||
yield next()
|
||||
except StopIteration:
|
||||
pending -= 1
|
||||
nexts = cycle(islice(nexts, pending))
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def partition(pred, iterable):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Returns a 2-tuple of iterables derived from the input iterable.
|
||||
The first yields the items that have ``pred(item) == False``.
|
||||
The second yields the items that have ``pred(item) == True``.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> is_odd = lambda x: x % 2 != 0
|
||||
>>> iterable = range(10)
|
||||
>>> even_items, odd_items = partition(is_odd, iterable)
|
||||
>>> list(even_items), list(odd_items)
|
||||
([0, 2, 4, 6, 8], [1, 3, 5, 7, 9])
|
||||
|
||||
If *pred* is None, :func:`bool` is used.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> iterable = [0, 1, False, True, '', ' ']
|
||||
>>> false_items, true_items = partition(None, iterable)
|
||||
>>> list(false_items), list(true_items)
|
||||
([0, False, ''], [1, True, ' '])
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
if pred is None:
|
||||
pred = bool
|
||||
|
||||
evaluations = ((pred(x), x) for x in iterable)
|
||||
t1, t2 = tee(evaluations)
|
||||
return (
|
||||
(x for (cond, x) in t1 if not cond),
|
||||
(x for (cond, x) in t2 if cond),
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def powerset(iterable):
|
||||
"""Yields all possible subsets of the iterable.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> list(powerset([1, 2, 3]))
|
||||
[(), (1,), (2,), (3,), (1, 2), (1, 3), (2, 3), (1, 2, 3)]
|
||||
|
||||
:func:`powerset` will operate on iterables that aren't :class:`set`
|
||||
instances, so repeated elements in the input will produce repeated elements
|
||||
in the output. Use :func:`unique_everseen` on the input to avoid generating
|
||||
duplicates:
|
||||
|
||||
>>> seq = [1, 1, 0]
|
||||
>>> list(powerset(seq))
|
||||
[(), (1,), (1,), (0,), (1, 1), (1, 0), (1, 0), (1, 1, 0)]
|
||||
>>> from more_itertools import unique_everseen
|
||||
>>> list(powerset(unique_everseen(seq)))
|
||||
[(), (1,), (0,), (1, 0)]
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
s = list(iterable)
|
||||
return chain.from_iterable(combinations(s, r) for r in range(len(s) + 1))
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def unique_everseen(iterable, key=None):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Yield unique elements, preserving order.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> list(unique_everseen('AAAABBBCCDAABBB'))
|
||||
['A', 'B', 'C', 'D']
|
||||
>>> list(unique_everseen('ABBCcAD', str.lower))
|
||||
['A', 'B', 'C', 'D']
|
||||
|
||||
Sequences with a mix of hashable and unhashable items can be used.
|
||||
The function will be slower (i.e., `O(n^2)`) for unhashable items.
|
||||
|
||||
Remember that ``list`` objects are unhashable - you can use the *key*
|
||||
parameter to transform the list to a tuple (which is hashable) to
|
||||
avoid a slowdown.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> iterable = ([1, 2], [2, 3], [1, 2])
|
||||
>>> list(unique_everseen(iterable)) # Slow
|
||||
[[1, 2], [2, 3]]
|
||||
>>> list(unique_everseen(iterable, key=tuple)) # Faster
|
||||
[[1, 2], [2, 3]]
|
||||
|
||||
Similary, you may want to convert unhashable ``set`` objects with
|
||||
``key=frozenset``. For ``dict`` objects,
|
||||
``key=lambda x: frozenset(x.items())`` can be used.
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
seenset = set()
|
||||
seenset_add = seenset.add
|
||||
seenlist = []
|
||||
seenlist_add = seenlist.append
|
||||
use_key = key is not None
|
||||
|
||||
for element in iterable:
|
||||
k = key(element) if use_key else element
|
||||
try:
|
||||
if k not in seenset:
|
||||
seenset_add(k)
|
||||
yield element
|
||||
except TypeError:
|
||||
if k not in seenlist:
|
||||
seenlist_add(k)
|
||||
yield element
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def unique_justseen(iterable, key=None):
|
||||
"""Yields elements in order, ignoring serial duplicates
|
||||
|
||||
>>> list(unique_justseen('AAAABBBCCDAABBB'))
|
||||
['A', 'B', 'C', 'D', 'A', 'B']
|
||||
>>> list(unique_justseen('ABBCcAD', str.lower))
|
||||
['A', 'B', 'C', 'A', 'D']
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return map(next, map(operator.itemgetter(1), groupby(iterable, key)))
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def iter_except(func, exception, first=None):
|
||||
"""Yields results from a function repeatedly until an exception is raised.
|
||||
|
||||
Converts a call-until-exception interface to an iterator interface.
|
||||
Like ``iter(func, sentinel)``, but uses an exception instead of a sentinel
|
||||
to end the loop.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> l = [0, 1, 2]
|
||||
>>> list(iter_except(l.pop, IndexError))
|
||||
[2, 1, 0]
|
||||
|
||||
Multiple exceptions can be specified as a stopping condition:
|
||||
|
||||
>>> l = [1, 2, 3, '...', 4, 5, 6]
|
||||
>>> list(iter_except(lambda: 1 + l.pop(), (IndexError, TypeError)))
|
||||
[7, 6, 5]
|
||||
>>> list(iter_except(lambda: 1 + l.pop(), (IndexError, TypeError)))
|
||||
[4, 3, 2]
|
||||
>>> list(iter_except(lambda: 1 + l.pop(), (IndexError, TypeError)))
|
||||
[]
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
try:
|
||||
if first is not None:
|
||||
yield first()
|
||||
while 1:
|
||||
yield func()
|
||||
except exception:
|
||||
pass
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def first_true(iterable, default=None, pred=None):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Returns the first true value in the iterable.
|
||||
|
||||
If no true value is found, returns *default*
|
||||
|
||||
If *pred* is not None, returns the first item for which
|
||||
``pred(item) == True`` .
|
||||
|
||||
>>> first_true(range(10))
|
||||
1
|
||||
>>> first_true(range(10), pred=lambda x: x > 5)
|
||||
6
|
||||
>>> first_true(range(10), default='missing', pred=lambda x: x > 9)
|
||||
'missing'
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return next(filter(pred, iterable), default)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def random_product(*args, repeat=1):
|
||||
"""Draw an item at random from each of the input iterables.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> random_product('abc', range(4), 'XYZ') # doctest:+SKIP
|
||||
('c', 3, 'Z')
|
||||
|
||||
If *repeat* is provided as a keyword argument, that many items will be
|
||||
drawn from each iterable.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> random_product('abcd', range(4), repeat=2) # doctest:+SKIP
|
||||
('a', 2, 'd', 3)
|
||||
|
||||
This equivalent to taking a random selection from
|
||||
``itertools.product(*args, **kwarg)``.
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
pools = [tuple(pool) for pool in args] * repeat
|
||||
return tuple(choice(pool) for pool in pools)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def random_permutation(iterable, r=None):
|
||||
"""Return a random *r* length permutation of the elements in *iterable*.
|
||||
|
||||
If *r* is not specified or is ``None``, then *r* defaults to the length of
|
||||
*iterable*.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> random_permutation(range(5)) # doctest:+SKIP
|
||||
(3, 4, 0, 1, 2)
|
||||
|
||||
This equivalent to taking a random selection from
|
||||
``itertools.permutations(iterable, r)``.
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
pool = tuple(iterable)
|
||||
r = len(pool) if r is None else r
|
||||
return tuple(sample(pool, r))
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def random_combination(iterable, r):
|
||||
"""Return a random *r* length subsequence of the elements in *iterable*.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> random_combination(range(5), 3) # doctest:+SKIP
|
||||
(2, 3, 4)
|
||||
|
||||
This equivalent to taking a random selection from
|
||||
``itertools.combinations(iterable, r)``.
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
pool = tuple(iterable)
|
||||
n = len(pool)
|
||||
indices = sorted(sample(range(n), r))
|
||||
return tuple(pool[i] for i in indices)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def random_combination_with_replacement(iterable, r):
|
||||
"""Return a random *r* length subsequence of elements in *iterable*,
|
||||
allowing individual elements to be repeated.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> random_combination_with_replacement(range(3), 5) # doctest:+SKIP
|
||||
(0, 0, 1, 2, 2)
|
||||
|
||||
This equivalent to taking a random selection from
|
||||
``itertools.combinations_with_replacement(iterable, r)``.
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
pool = tuple(iterable)
|
||||
n = len(pool)
|
||||
indices = sorted(randrange(n) for i in range(r))
|
||||
return tuple(pool[i] for i in indices)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def nth_combination(iterable, r, index):
|
||||
"""Equivalent to ``list(combinations(iterable, r))[index]``.
|
||||
|
||||
The subsequences of *iterable* that are of length *r* can be ordered
|
||||
lexicographically. :func:`nth_combination` computes the subsequence at
|
||||
sort position *index* directly, without computing the previous
|
||||
subsequences.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> nth_combination(range(5), 3, 5)
|
||||
(0, 3, 4)
|
||||
|
||||
``ValueError`` will be raised If *r* is negative or greater than the length
|
||||
of *iterable*.
|
||||
``IndexError`` will be raised if the given *index* is invalid.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
pool = tuple(iterable)
|
||||
n = len(pool)
|
||||
if (r < 0) or (r > n):
|
||||
raise ValueError
|
||||
|
||||
c = 1
|
||||
k = min(r, n - r)
|
||||
for i in range(1, k + 1):
|
||||
c = c * (n - k + i) // i
|
||||
|
||||
if index < 0:
|
||||
index += c
|
||||
|
||||
if (index < 0) or (index >= c):
|
||||
raise IndexError
|
||||
|
||||
result = []
|
||||
while r:
|
||||
c, n, r = c * r // n, n - 1, r - 1
|
||||
while index >= c:
|
||||
index -= c
|
||||
c, n = c * (n - r) // n, n - 1
|
||||
result.append(pool[-1 - n])
|
||||
|
||||
return tuple(result)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def prepend(value, iterator):
|
||||
"""Yield *value*, followed by the elements in *iterator*.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> value = '0'
|
||||
>>> iterator = ['1', '2', '3']
|
||||
>>> list(prepend(value, iterator))
|
||||
['0', '1', '2', '3']
|
||||
|
||||
To prepend multiple values, see :func:`itertools.chain`
|
||||
or :func:`value_chain`.
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return chain([value], iterator)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def convolve(signal, kernel):
|
||||
"""Convolve the iterable *signal* with the iterable *kernel*.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> signal = (1, 2, 3, 4, 5)
|
||||
>>> kernel = [3, 2, 1]
|
||||
>>> list(convolve(signal, kernel))
|
||||
[3, 8, 14, 20, 26, 14, 5]
|
||||
|
||||
Note: the input arguments are not interchangeable, as the *kernel*
|
||||
is immediately consumed and stored.
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
kernel = tuple(kernel)[::-1]
|
||||
n = len(kernel)
|
||||
window = deque([0], maxlen=n) * n
|
||||
for x in chain(signal, repeat(0, n - 1)):
|
||||
window.append(x)
|
||||
yield sum(map(operator.mul, kernel, window))
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def before_and_after(predicate, it):
|
||||
"""A variant of :func:`takewhile` that allows complete access to the
|
||||
remainder of the iterator.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> it = iter('ABCdEfGhI')
|
||||
>>> all_upper, remainder = before_and_after(str.isupper, it)
|
||||
>>> ''.join(all_upper)
|
||||
'ABC'
|
||||
>>> ''.join(remainder) # takewhile() would lose the 'd'
|
||||
'dEfGhI'
|
||||
|
||||
Note that the first iterator must be fully consumed before the second
|
||||
iterator can generate valid results.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
it = iter(it)
|
||||
transition = []
|
||||
|
||||
def true_iterator():
|
||||
for elem in it:
|
||||
if predicate(elem):
|
||||
yield elem
|
||||
else:
|
||||
transition.append(elem)
|
||||
return
|
||||
|
||||
def remainder_iterator():
|
||||
yield from transition
|
||||
yield from it
|
||||
|
||||
return true_iterator(), remainder_iterator()
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def triplewise(iterable):
|
||||
"""Return overlapping triplets from *iterable*.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> list(triplewise('ABCDE'))
|
||||
[('A', 'B', 'C'), ('B', 'C', 'D'), ('C', 'D', 'E')]
|
||||
|
||||
"""
|
||||
for (a, _), (b, c) in pairwise(pairwise(iterable)):
|
||||
yield a, b, c
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def sliding_window(iterable, n):
|
||||
"""Return a sliding window of width *n* over *iterable*.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> list(sliding_window(range(6), 4))
|
||||
[(0, 1, 2, 3), (1, 2, 3, 4), (2, 3, 4, 5)]
|
||||
|
||||
If *iterable* has fewer than *n* items, then nothing is yielded:
|
||||
|
||||
>>> list(sliding_window(range(3), 4))
|
||||
[]
|
||||
|
||||
For a variant with more features, see :func:`windowed`.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
it = iter(iterable)
|
||||
window = deque(islice(it, n), maxlen=n)
|
||||
if len(window) == n:
|
||||
yield tuple(window)
|
||||
for x in it:
|
||||
window.append(x)
|
||||
yield tuple(window)
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,26 @@
|
||||
# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
|
||||
# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
|
||||
# for complete details.
|
||||
|
||||
__all__ = [
|
||||
"__title__",
|
||||
"__summary__",
|
||||
"__uri__",
|
||||
"__version__",
|
||||
"__author__",
|
||||
"__email__",
|
||||
"__license__",
|
||||
"__copyright__",
|
||||
]
|
||||
|
||||
__title__ = "packaging"
|
||||
__summary__ = "Core utilities for Python packages"
|
||||
__uri__ = "https://github.com/pypa/packaging"
|
||||
|
||||
__version__ = "21.3"
|
||||
|
||||
__author__ = "Donald Stufft and individual contributors"
|
||||
__email__ = "donald@stufft.io"
|
||||
|
||||
__license__ = "BSD-2-Clause or Apache-2.0"
|
||||
__copyright__ = "2014-2019 %s" % __author__
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,25 @@
|
||||
# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
|
||||
# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
|
||||
# for complete details.
|
||||
|
||||
from .__about__ import (
|
||||
__author__,
|
||||
__copyright__,
|
||||
__email__,
|
||||
__license__,
|
||||
__summary__,
|
||||
__title__,
|
||||
__uri__,
|
||||
__version__,
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
__all__ = [
|
||||
"__title__",
|
||||
"__summary__",
|
||||
"__uri__",
|
||||
"__version__",
|
||||
"__author__",
|
||||
"__email__",
|
||||
"__license__",
|
||||
"__copyright__",
|
||||
]
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,301 @@
|
||||
import collections
|
||||
import functools
|
||||
import os
|
||||
import re
|
||||
import struct
|
||||
import sys
|
||||
import warnings
|
||||
from typing import IO, Dict, Iterator, NamedTuple, Optional, Tuple
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
# Python does not provide platform information at sufficient granularity to
|
||||
# identify the architecture of the running executable in some cases, so we
|
||||
# determine it dynamically by reading the information from the running
|
||||
# process. This only applies on Linux, which uses the ELF format.
|
||||
class _ELFFileHeader:
|
||||
# https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Executable_and_Linkable_Format#File_header
|
||||
class _InvalidELFFileHeader(ValueError):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
An invalid ELF file header was found.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
ELF_MAGIC_NUMBER = 0x7F454C46
|
||||
ELFCLASS32 = 1
|
||||
ELFCLASS64 = 2
|
||||
ELFDATA2LSB = 1
|
||||
ELFDATA2MSB = 2
|
||||
EM_386 = 3
|
||||
EM_S390 = 22
|
||||
EM_ARM = 40
|
||||
EM_X86_64 = 62
|
||||
EF_ARM_ABIMASK = 0xFF000000
|
||||
EF_ARM_ABI_VER5 = 0x05000000
|
||||
EF_ARM_ABI_FLOAT_HARD = 0x00000400
|
||||
|
||||
def __init__(self, file: IO[bytes]) -> None:
|
||||
def unpack(fmt: str) -> int:
|
||||
try:
|
||||
data = file.read(struct.calcsize(fmt))
|
||||
result: Tuple[int, ...] = struct.unpack(fmt, data)
|
||||
except struct.error:
|
||||
raise _ELFFileHeader._InvalidELFFileHeader()
|
||||
return result[0]
|
||||
|
||||
self.e_ident_magic = unpack(">I")
|
||||
if self.e_ident_magic != self.ELF_MAGIC_NUMBER:
|
||||
raise _ELFFileHeader._InvalidELFFileHeader()
|
||||
self.e_ident_class = unpack("B")
|
||||
if self.e_ident_class not in {self.ELFCLASS32, self.ELFCLASS64}:
|
||||
raise _ELFFileHeader._InvalidELFFileHeader()
|
||||
self.e_ident_data = unpack("B")
|
||||
if self.e_ident_data not in {self.ELFDATA2LSB, self.ELFDATA2MSB}:
|
||||
raise _ELFFileHeader._InvalidELFFileHeader()
|
||||
self.e_ident_version = unpack("B")
|
||||
self.e_ident_osabi = unpack("B")
|
||||
self.e_ident_abiversion = unpack("B")
|
||||
self.e_ident_pad = file.read(7)
|
||||
format_h = "<H" if self.e_ident_data == self.ELFDATA2LSB else ">H"
|
||||
format_i = "<I" if self.e_ident_data == self.ELFDATA2LSB else ">I"
|
||||
format_q = "<Q" if self.e_ident_data == self.ELFDATA2LSB else ">Q"
|
||||
format_p = format_i if self.e_ident_class == self.ELFCLASS32 else format_q
|
||||
self.e_type = unpack(format_h)
|
||||
self.e_machine = unpack(format_h)
|
||||
self.e_version = unpack(format_i)
|
||||
self.e_entry = unpack(format_p)
|
||||
self.e_phoff = unpack(format_p)
|
||||
self.e_shoff = unpack(format_p)
|
||||
self.e_flags = unpack(format_i)
|
||||
self.e_ehsize = unpack(format_h)
|
||||
self.e_phentsize = unpack(format_h)
|
||||
self.e_phnum = unpack(format_h)
|
||||
self.e_shentsize = unpack(format_h)
|
||||
self.e_shnum = unpack(format_h)
|
||||
self.e_shstrndx = unpack(format_h)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _get_elf_header() -> Optional[_ELFFileHeader]:
|
||||
try:
|
||||
with open(sys.executable, "rb") as f:
|
||||
elf_header = _ELFFileHeader(f)
|
||||
except (OSError, TypeError, _ELFFileHeader._InvalidELFFileHeader):
|
||||
return None
|
||||
return elf_header
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _is_linux_armhf() -> bool:
|
||||
# hard-float ABI can be detected from the ELF header of the running
|
||||
# process
|
||||
# https://static.docs.arm.com/ihi0044/g/aaelf32.pdf
|
||||
elf_header = _get_elf_header()
|
||||
if elf_header is None:
|
||||
return False
|
||||
result = elf_header.e_ident_class == elf_header.ELFCLASS32
|
||||
result &= elf_header.e_ident_data == elf_header.ELFDATA2LSB
|
||||
result &= elf_header.e_machine == elf_header.EM_ARM
|
||||
result &= (
|
||||
elf_header.e_flags & elf_header.EF_ARM_ABIMASK
|
||||
) == elf_header.EF_ARM_ABI_VER5
|
||||
result &= (
|
||||
elf_header.e_flags & elf_header.EF_ARM_ABI_FLOAT_HARD
|
||||
) == elf_header.EF_ARM_ABI_FLOAT_HARD
|
||||
return result
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _is_linux_i686() -> bool:
|
||||
elf_header = _get_elf_header()
|
||||
if elf_header is None:
|
||||
return False
|
||||
result = elf_header.e_ident_class == elf_header.ELFCLASS32
|
||||
result &= elf_header.e_ident_data == elf_header.ELFDATA2LSB
|
||||
result &= elf_header.e_machine == elf_header.EM_386
|
||||
return result
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _have_compatible_abi(arch: str) -> bool:
|
||||
if arch == "armv7l":
|
||||
return _is_linux_armhf()
|
||||
if arch == "i686":
|
||||
return _is_linux_i686()
|
||||
return arch in {"x86_64", "aarch64", "ppc64", "ppc64le", "s390x"}
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
# If glibc ever changes its major version, we need to know what the last
|
||||
# minor version was, so we can build the complete list of all versions.
|
||||
# For now, guess what the highest minor version might be, assume it will
|
||||
# be 50 for testing. Once this actually happens, update the dictionary
|
||||
# with the actual value.
|
||||
_LAST_GLIBC_MINOR: Dict[int, int] = collections.defaultdict(lambda: 50)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class _GLibCVersion(NamedTuple):
|
||||
major: int
|
||||
minor: int
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _glibc_version_string_confstr() -> Optional[str]:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Primary implementation of glibc_version_string using os.confstr.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
# os.confstr is quite a bit faster than ctypes.DLL. It's also less likely
|
||||
# to be broken or missing. This strategy is used in the standard library
|
||||
# platform module.
|
||||
# https://github.com/python/cpython/blob/fcf1d003bf4f0100c/Lib/platform.py#L175-L183
|
||||
try:
|
||||
# os.confstr("CS_GNU_LIBC_VERSION") returns a string like "glibc 2.17".
|
||||
version_string = os.confstr("CS_GNU_LIBC_VERSION")
|
||||
assert version_string is not None
|
||||
_, version = version_string.split()
|
||||
except (AssertionError, AttributeError, OSError, ValueError):
|
||||
# os.confstr() or CS_GNU_LIBC_VERSION not available (or a bad value)...
|
||||
return None
|
||||
return version
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _glibc_version_string_ctypes() -> Optional[str]:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Fallback implementation of glibc_version_string using ctypes.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
try:
|
||||
import ctypes
|
||||
except ImportError:
|
||||
return None
|
||||
|
||||
# ctypes.CDLL(None) internally calls dlopen(NULL), and as the dlopen
|
||||
# manpage says, "If filename is NULL, then the returned handle is for the
|
||||
# main program". This way we can let the linker do the work to figure out
|
||||
# which libc our process is actually using.
|
||||
#
|
||||
# We must also handle the special case where the executable is not a
|
||||
# dynamically linked executable. This can occur when using musl libc,
|
||||
# for example. In this situation, dlopen() will error, leading to an
|
||||
# OSError. Interestingly, at least in the case of musl, there is no
|
||||
# errno set on the OSError. The single string argument used to construct
|
||||
# OSError comes from libc itself and is therefore not portable to
|
||||
# hard code here. In any case, failure to call dlopen() means we
|
||||
# can proceed, so we bail on our attempt.
|
||||
try:
|
||||
process_namespace = ctypes.CDLL(None)
|
||||
except OSError:
|
||||
return None
|
||||
|
||||
try:
|
||||
gnu_get_libc_version = process_namespace.gnu_get_libc_version
|
||||
except AttributeError:
|
||||
# Symbol doesn't exist -> therefore, we are not linked to
|
||||
# glibc.
|
||||
return None
|
||||
|
||||
# Call gnu_get_libc_version, which returns a string like "2.5"
|
||||
gnu_get_libc_version.restype = ctypes.c_char_p
|
||||
version_str: str = gnu_get_libc_version()
|
||||
# py2 / py3 compatibility:
|
||||
if not isinstance(version_str, str):
|
||||
version_str = version_str.decode("ascii")
|
||||
|
||||
return version_str
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _glibc_version_string() -> Optional[str]:
|
||||
"""Returns glibc version string, or None if not using glibc."""
|
||||
return _glibc_version_string_confstr() or _glibc_version_string_ctypes()
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _parse_glibc_version(version_str: str) -> Tuple[int, int]:
|
||||
"""Parse glibc version.
|
||||
|
||||
We use a regexp instead of str.split because we want to discard any
|
||||
random junk that might come after the minor version -- this might happen
|
||||
in patched/forked versions of glibc (e.g. Linaro's version of glibc
|
||||
uses version strings like "2.20-2014.11"). See gh-3588.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
m = re.match(r"(?P<major>[0-9]+)\.(?P<minor>[0-9]+)", version_str)
|
||||
if not m:
|
||||
warnings.warn(
|
||||
"Expected glibc version with 2 components major.minor,"
|
||||
" got: %s" % version_str,
|
||||
RuntimeWarning,
|
||||
)
|
||||
return -1, -1
|
||||
return int(m.group("major")), int(m.group("minor"))
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
@functools.lru_cache()
|
||||
def _get_glibc_version() -> Tuple[int, int]:
|
||||
version_str = _glibc_version_string()
|
||||
if version_str is None:
|
||||
return (-1, -1)
|
||||
return _parse_glibc_version(version_str)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
# From PEP 513, PEP 600
|
||||
def _is_compatible(name: str, arch: str, version: _GLibCVersion) -> bool:
|
||||
sys_glibc = _get_glibc_version()
|
||||
if sys_glibc < version:
|
||||
return False
|
||||
# Check for presence of _manylinux module.
|
||||
try:
|
||||
import _manylinux # noqa
|
||||
except ImportError:
|
||||
return True
|
||||
if hasattr(_manylinux, "manylinux_compatible"):
|
||||
result = _manylinux.manylinux_compatible(version[0], version[1], arch)
|
||||
if result is not None:
|
||||
return bool(result)
|
||||
return True
|
||||
if version == _GLibCVersion(2, 5):
|
||||
if hasattr(_manylinux, "manylinux1_compatible"):
|
||||
return bool(_manylinux.manylinux1_compatible)
|
||||
if version == _GLibCVersion(2, 12):
|
||||
if hasattr(_manylinux, "manylinux2010_compatible"):
|
||||
return bool(_manylinux.manylinux2010_compatible)
|
||||
if version == _GLibCVersion(2, 17):
|
||||
if hasattr(_manylinux, "manylinux2014_compatible"):
|
||||
return bool(_manylinux.manylinux2014_compatible)
|
||||
return True
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
_LEGACY_MANYLINUX_MAP = {
|
||||
# CentOS 7 w/ glibc 2.17 (PEP 599)
|
||||
(2, 17): "manylinux2014",
|
||||
# CentOS 6 w/ glibc 2.12 (PEP 571)
|
||||
(2, 12): "manylinux2010",
|
||||
# CentOS 5 w/ glibc 2.5 (PEP 513)
|
||||
(2, 5): "manylinux1",
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def platform_tags(linux: str, arch: str) -> Iterator[str]:
|
||||
if not _have_compatible_abi(arch):
|
||||
return
|
||||
# Oldest glibc to be supported regardless of architecture is (2, 17).
|
||||
too_old_glibc2 = _GLibCVersion(2, 16)
|
||||
if arch in {"x86_64", "i686"}:
|
||||
# On x86/i686 also oldest glibc to be supported is (2, 5).
|
||||
too_old_glibc2 = _GLibCVersion(2, 4)
|
||||
current_glibc = _GLibCVersion(*_get_glibc_version())
|
||||
glibc_max_list = [current_glibc]
|
||||
# We can assume compatibility across glibc major versions.
|
||||
# https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=24636
|
||||
#
|
||||
# Build a list of maximum glibc versions so that we can
|
||||
# output the canonical list of all glibc from current_glibc
|
||||
# down to too_old_glibc2, including all intermediary versions.
|
||||
for glibc_major in range(current_glibc.major - 1, 1, -1):
|
||||
glibc_minor = _LAST_GLIBC_MINOR[glibc_major]
|
||||
glibc_max_list.append(_GLibCVersion(glibc_major, glibc_minor))
|
||||
for glibc_max in glibc_max_list:
|
||||
if glibc_max.major == too_old_glibc2.major:
|
||||
min_minor = too_old_glibc2.minor
|
||||
else:
|
||||
# For other glibc major versions oldest supported is (x, 0).
|
||||
min_minor = -1
|
||||
for glibc_minor in range(glibc_max.minor, min_minor, -1):
|
||||
glibc_version = _GLibCVersion(glibc_max.major, glibc_minor)
|
||||
tag = "manylinux_{}_{}".format(*glibc_version)
|
||||
if _is_compatible(tag, arch, glibc_version):
|
||||
yield linux.replace("linux", tag)
|
||||
# Handle the legacy manylinux1, manylinux2010, manylinux2014 tags.
|
||||
if glibc_version in _LEGACY_MANYLINUX_MAP:
|
||||
legacy_tag = _LEGACY_MANYLINUX_MAP[glibc_version]
|
||||
if _is_compatible(legacy_tag, arch, glibc_version):
|
||||
yield linux.replace("linux", legacy_tag)
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,136 @@
|
||||
"""PEP 656 support.
|
||||
|
||||
This module implements logic to detect if the currently running Python is
|
||||
linked against musl, and what musl version is used.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
import contextlib
|
||||
import functools
|
||||
import operator
|
||||
import os
|
||||
import re
|
||||
import struct
|
||||
import subprocess
|
||||
import sys
|
||||
from typing import IO, Iterator, NamedTuple, Optional, Tuple
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _read_unpacked(f: IO[bytes], fmt: str) -> Tuple[int, ...]:
|
||||
return struct.unpack(fmt, f.read(struct.calcsize(fmt)))
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _parse_ld_musl_from_elf(f: IO[bytes]) -> Optional[str]:
|
||||
"""Detect musl libc location by parsing the Python executable.
|
||||
|
||||
Based on: https://gist.github.com/lyssdod/f51579ae8d93c8657a5564aefc2ffbca
|
||||
ELF header: https://refspecs.linuxfoundation.org/elf/gabi4+/ch4.eheader.html
|
||||
"""
|
||||
f.seek(0)
|
||||
try:
|
||||
ident = _read_unpacked(f, "16B")
|
||||
except struct.error:
|
||||
return None
|
||||
if ident[:4] != tuple(b"\x7fELF"): # Invalid magic, not ELF.
|
||||
return None
|
||||
f.seek(struct.calcsize("HHI"), 1) # Skip file type, machine, and version.
|
||||
|
||||
try:
|
||||
# e_fmt: Format for program header.
|
||||
# p_fmt: Format for section header.
|
||||
# p_idx: Indexes to find p_type, p_offset, and p_filesz.
|
||||
e_fmt, p_fmt, p_idx = {
|
||||
1: ("IIIIHHH", "IIIIIIII", (0, 1, 4)), # 32-bit.
|
||||
2: ("QQQIHHH", "IIQQQQQQ", (0, 2, 5)), # 64-bit.
|
||||
}[ident[4]]
|
||||
except KeyError:
|
||||
return None
|
||||
else:
|
||||
p_get = operator.itemgetter(*p_idx)
|
||||
|
||||
# Find the interpreter section and return its content.
|
||||
try:
|
||||
_, e_phoff, _, _, _, e_phentsize, e_phnum = _read_unpacked(f, e_fmt)
|
||||
except struct.error:
|
||||
return None
|
||||
for i in range(e_phnum + 1):
|
||||
f.seek(e_phoff + e_phentsize * i)
|
||||
try:
|
||||
p_type, p_offset, p_filesz = p_get(_read_unpacked(f, p_fmt))
|
||||
except struct.error:
|
||||
return None
|
||||
if p_type != 3: # Not PT_INTERP.
|
||||
continue
|
||||
f.seek(p_offset)
|
||||
interpreter = os.fsdecode(f.read(p_filesz)).strip("\0")
|
||||
if "musl" not in interpreter:
|
||||
return None
|
||||
return interpreter
|
||||
return None
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class _MuslVersion(NamedTuple):
|
||||
major: int
|
||||
minor: int
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _parse_musl_version(output: str) -> Optional[_MuslVersion]:
|
||||
lines = [n for n in (n.strip() for n in output.splitlines()) if n]
|
||||
if len(lines) < 2 or lines[0][:4] != "musl":
|
||||
return None
|
||||
m = re.match(r"Version (\d+)\.(\d+)", lines[1])
|
||||
if not m:
|
||||
return None
|
||||
return _MuslVersion(major=int(m.group(1)), minor=int(m.group(2)))
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
@functools.lru_cache()
|
||||
def _get_musl_version(executable: str) -> Optional[_MuslVersion]:
|
||||
"""Detect currently-running musl runtime version.
|
||||
|
||||
This is done by checking the specified executable's dynamic linking
|
||||
information, and invoking the loader to parse its output for a version
|
||||
string. If the loader is musl, the output would be something like::
|
||||
|
||||
musl libc (x86_64)
|
||||
Version 1.2.2
|
||||
Dynamic Program Loader
|
||||
"""
|
||||
with contextlib.ExitStack() as stack:
|
||||
try:
|
||||
f = stack.enter_context(open(executable, "rb"))
|
||||
except OSError:
|
||||
return None
|
||||
ld = _parse_ld_musl_from_elf(f)
|
||||
if not ld:
|
||||
return None
|
||||
proc = subprocess.run([ld], stderr=subprocess.PIPE, universal_newlines=True)
|
||||
return _parse_musl_version(proc.stderr)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def platform_tags(arch: str) -> Iterator[str]:
|
||||
"""Generate musllinux tags compatible to the current platform.
|
||||
|
||||
:param arch: Should be the part of platform tag after the ``linux_``
|
||||
prefix, e.g. ``x86_64``. The ``linux_`` prefix is assumed as a
|
||||
prerequisite for the current platform to be musllinux-compatible.
|
||||
|
||||
:returns: An iterator of compatible musllinux tags.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
sys_musl = _get_musl_version(sys.executable)
|
||||
if sys_musl is None: # Python not dynamically linked against musl.
|
||||
return
|
||||
for minor in range(sys_musl.minor, -1, -1):
|
||||
yield f"musllinux_{sys_musl.major}_{minor}_{arch}"
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
if __name__ == "__main__": # pragma: no cover
|
||||
import sysconfig
|
||||
|
||||
plat = sysconfig.get_platform()
|
||||
assert plat.startswith("linux-"), "not linux"
|
||||
|
||||
print("plat:", plat)
|
||||
print("musl:", _get_musl_version(sys.executable))
|
||||
print("tags:", end=" ")
|
||||
for t in platform_tags(re.sub(r"[.-]", "_", plat.split("-", 1)[-1])):
|
||||
print(t, end="\n ")
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,61 @@
|
||||
# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
|
||||
# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
|
||||
# for complete details.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class InfinityType:
|
||||
def __repr__(self) -> str:
|
||||
return "Infinity"
|
||||
|
||||
def __hash__(self) -> int:
|
||||
return hash(repr(self))
|
||||
|
||||
def __lt__(self, other: object) -> bool:
|
||||
return False
|
||||
|
||||
def __le__(self, other: object) -> bool:
|
||||
return False
|
||||
|
||||
def __eq__(self, other: object) -> bool:
|
||||
return isinstance(other, self.__class__)
|
||||
|
||||
def __gt__(self, other: object) -> bool:
|
||||
return True
|
||||
|
||||
def __ge__(self, other: object) -> bool:
|
||||
return True
|
||||
|
||||
def __neg__(self: object) -> "NegativeInfinityType":
|
||||
return NegativeInfinity
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Infinity = InfinityType()
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class NegativeInfinityType:
|
||||
def __repr__(self) -> str:
|
||||
return "-Infinity"
|
||||
|
||||
def __hash__(self) -> int:
|
||||
return hash(repr(self))
|
||||
|
||||
def __lt__(self, other: object) -> bool:
|
||||
return True
|
||||
|
||||
def __le__(self, other: object) -> bool:
|
||||
return True
|
||||
|
||||
def __eq__(self, other: object) -> bool:
|
||||
return isinstance(other, self.__class__)
|
||||
|
||||
def __gt__(self, other: object) -> bool:
|
||||
return False
|
||||
|
||||
def __ge__(self, other: object) -> bool:
|
||||
return False
|
||||
|
||||
def __neg__(self: object) -> InfinityType:
|
||||
return Infinity
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
NegativeInfinity = NegativeInfinityType()
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,304 @@
|
||||
# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
|
||||
# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
|
||||
# for complete details.
|
||||
|
||||
import operator
|
||||
import os
|
||||
import platform
|
||||
import sys
|
||||
from typing import Any, Callable, Dict, List, Optional, Tuple, Union
|
||||
|
||||
from pkg_resources.extern.pyparsing import ( # noqa: N817
|
||||
Forward,
|
||||
Group,
|
||||
Literal as L,
|
||||
ParseException,
|
||||
ParseResults,
|
||||
QuotedString,
|
||||
ZeroOrMore,
|
||||
stringEnd,
|
||||
stringStart,
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
from .specifiers import InvalidSpecifier, Specifier
|
||||
|
||||
__all__ = [
|
||||
"InvalidMarker",
|
||||
"UndefinedComparison",
|
||||
"UndefinedEnvironmentName",
|
||||
"Marker",
|
||||
"default_environment",
|
||||
]
|
||||
|
||||
Operator = Callable[[str, str], bool]
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class InvalidMarker(ValueError):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
An invalid marker was found, users should refer to PEP 508.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class UndefinedComparison(ValueError):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
An invalid operation was attempted on a value that doesn't support it.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class UndefinedEnvironmentName(ValueError):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
A name was attempted to be used that does not exist inside of the
|
||||
environment.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class Node:
|
||||
def __init__(self, value: Any) -> None:
|
||||
self.value = value
|
||||
|
||||
def __str__(self) -> str:
|
||||
return str(self.value)
|
||||
|
||||
def __repr__(self) -> str:
|
||||
return f"<{self.__class__.__name__}('{self}')>"
|
||||
|
||||
def serialize(self) -> str:
|
||||
raise NotImplementedError
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class Variable(Node):
|
||||
def serialize(self) -> str:
|
||||
return str(self)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class Value(Node):
|
||||
def serialize(self) -> str:
|
||||
return f'"{self}"'
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class Op(Node):
|
||||
def serialize(self) -> str:
|
||||
return str(self)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
VARIABLE = (
|
||||
L("implementation_version")
|
||||
| L("platform_python_implementation")
|
||||
| L("implementation_name")
|
||||
| L("python_full_version")
|
||||
| L("platform_release")
|
||||
| L("platform_version")
|
||||
| L("platform_machine")
|
||||
| L("platform_system")
|
||||
| L("python_version")
|
||||
| L("sys_platform")
|
||||
| L("os_name")
|
||||
| L("os.name") # PEP-345
|
||||
| L("sys.platform") # PEP-345
|
||||
| L("platform.version") # PEP-345
|
||||
| L("platform.machine") # PEP-345
|
||||
| L("platform.python_implementation") # PEP-345
|
||||
| L("python_implementation") # undocumented setuptools legacy
|
||||
| L("extra") # PEP-508
|
||||
)
|
||||
ALIASES = {
|
||||
"os.name": "os_name",
|
||||
"sys.platform": "sys_platform",
|
||||
"platform.version": "platform_version",
|
||||
"platform.machine": "platform_machine",
|
||||
"platform.python_implementation": "platform_python_implementation",
|
||||
"python_implementation": "platform_python_implementation",
|
||||
}
|
||||
VARIABLE.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: Variable(ALIASES.get(t[0], t[0])))
|
||||
|
||||
VERSION_CMP = (
|
||||
L("===") | L("==") | L(">=") | L("<=") | L("!=") | L("~=") | L(">") | L("<")
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
MARKER_OP = VERSION_CMP | L("not in") | L("in")
|
||||
MARKER_OP.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: Op(t[0]))
|
||||
|
||||
MARKER_VALUE = QuotedString("'") | QuotedString('"')
|
||||
MARKER_VALUE.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: Value(t[0]))
|
||||
|
||||
BOOLOP = L("and") | L("or")
|
||||
|
||||
MARKER_VAR = VARIABLE | MARKER_VALUE
|
||||
|
||||
MARKER_ITEM = Group(MARKER_VAR + MARKER_OP + MARKER_VAR)
|
||||
MARKER_ITEM.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: tuple(t[0]))
|
||||
|
||||
LPAREN = L("(").suppress()
|
||||
RPAREN = L(")").suppress()
|
||||
|
||||
MARKER_EXPR = Forward()
|
||||
MARKER_ATOM = MARKER_ITEM | Group(LPAREN + MARKER_EXPR + RPAREN)
|
||||
MARKER_EXPR << MARKER_ATOM + ZeroOrMore(BOOLOP + MARKER_EXPR)
|
||||
|
||||
MARKER = stringStart + MARKER_EXPR + stringEnd
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _coerce_parse_result(results: Union[ParseResults, List[Any]]) -> List[Any]:
|
||||
if isinstance(results, ParseResults):
|
||||
return [_coerce_parse_result(i) for i in results]
|
||||
else:
|
||||
return results
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _format_marker(
|
||||
marker: Union[List[str], Tuple[Node, ...], str], first: Optional[bool] = True
|
||||
) -> str:
|
||||
|
||||
assert isinstance(marker, (list, tuple, str))
|
||||
|
||||
# Sometimes we have a structure like [[...]] which is a single item list
|
||||
# where the single item is itself it's own list. In that case we want skip
|
||||
# the rest of this function so that we don't get extraneous () on the
|
||||
# outside.
|
||||
if (
|
||||
isinstance(marker, list)
|
||||
and len(marker) == 1
|
||||
and isinstance(marker[0], (list, tuple))
|
||||
):
|
||||
return _format_marker(marker[0])
|
||||
|
||||
if isinstance(marker, list):
|
||||
inner = (_format_marker(m, first=False) for m in marker)
|
||||
if first:
|
||||
return " ".join(inner)
|
||||
else:
|
||||
return "(" + " ".join(inner) + ")"
|
||||
elif isinstance(marker, tuple):
|
||||
return " ".join([m.serialize() for m in marker])
|
||||
else:
|
||||
return marker
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
_operators: Dict[str, Operator] = {
|
||||
"in": lambda lhs, rhs: lhs in rhs,
|
||||
"not in": lambda lhs, rhs: lhs not in rhs,
|
||||
"<": operator.lt,
|
||||
"<=": operator.le,
|
||||
"==": operator.eq,
|
||||
"!=": operator.ne,
|
||||
">=": operator.ge,
|
||||
">": operator.gt,
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _eval_op(lhs: str, op: Op, rhs: str) -> bool:
|
||||
try:
|
||||
spec = Specifier("".join([op.serialize(), rhs]))
|
||||
except InvalidSpecifier:
|
||||
pass
|
||||
else:
|
||||
return spec.contains(lhs)
|
||||
|
||||
oper: Optional[Operator] = _operators.get(op.serialize())
|
||||
if oper is None:
|
||||
raise UndefinedComparison(f"Undefined {op!r} on {lhs!r} and {rhs!r}.")
|
||||
|
||||
return oper(lhs, rhs)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class Undefined:
|
||||
pass
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
_undefined = Undefined()
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _get_env(environment: Dict[str, str], name: str) -> str:
|
||||
value: Union[str, Undefined] = environment.get(name, _undefined)
|
||||
|
||||
if isinstance(value, Undefined):
|
||||
raise UndefinedEnvironmentName(
|
||||
f"{name!r} does not exist in evaluation environment."
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
return value
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _evaluate_markers(markers: List[Any], environment: Dict[str, str]) -> bool:
|
||||
groups: List[List[bool]] = [[]]
|
||||
|
||||
for marker in markers:
|
||||
assert isinstance(marker, (list, tuple, str))
|
||||
|
||||
if isinstance(marker, list):
|
||||
groups[-1].append(_evaluate_markers(marker, environment))
|
||||
elif isinstance(marker, tuple):
|
||||
lhs, op, rhs = marker
|
||||
|
||||
if isinstance(lhs, Variable):
|
||||
lhs_value = _get_env(environment, lhs.value)
|
||||
rhs_value = rhs.value
|
||||
else:
|
||||
lhs_value = lhs.value
|
||||
rhs_value = _get_env(environment, rhs.value)
|
||||
|
||||
groups[-1].append(_eval_op(lhs_value, op, rhs_value))
|
||||
else:
|
||||
assert marker in ["and", "or"]
|
||||
if marker == "or":
|
||||
groups.append([])
|
||||
|
||||
return any(all(item) for item in groups)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def format_full_version(info: "sys._version_info") -> str:
|
||||
version = "{0.major}.{0.minor}.{0.micro}".format(info)
|
||||
kind = info.releaselevel
|
||||
if kind != "final":
|
||||
version += kind[0] + str(info.serial)
|
||||
return version
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def default_environment() -> Dict[str, str]:
|
||||
iver = format_full_version(sys.implementation.version)
|
||||
implementation_name = sys.implementation.name
|
||||
return {
|
||||
"implementation_name": implementation_name,
|
||||
"implementation_version": iver,
|
||||
"os_name": os.name,
|
||||
"platform_machine": platform.machine(),
|
||||
"platform_release": platform.release(),
|
||||
"platform_system": platform.system(),
|
||||
"platform_version": platform.version(),
|
||||
"python_full_version": platform.python_version(),
|
||||
"platform_python_implementation": platform.python_implementation(),
|
||||
"python_version": ".".join(platform.python_version_tuple()[:2]),
|
||||
"sys_platform": sys.platform,
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class Marker:
|
||||
def __init__(self, marker: str) -> None:
|
||||
try:
|
||||
self._markers = _coerce_parse_result(MARKER.parseString(marker))
|
||||
except ParseException as e:
|
||||
raise InvalidMarker(
|
||||
f"Invalid marker: {marker!r}, parse error at "
|
||||
f"{marker[e.loc : e.loc + 8]!r}"
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
def __str__(self) -> str:
|
||||
return _format_marker(self._markers)
|
||||
|
||||
def __repr__(self) -> str:
|
||||
return f"<Marker('{self}')>"
|
||||
|
||||
def evaluate(self, environment: Optional[Dict[str, str]] = None) -> bool:
|
||||
"""Evaluate a marker.
|
||||
|
||||
Return the boolean from evaluating the given marker against the
|
||||
environment. environment is an optional argument to override all or
|
||||
part of the determined environment.
|
||||
|
||||
The environment is determined from the current Python process.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
current_environment = default_environment()
|
||||
if environment is not None:
|
||||
current_environment.update(environment)
|
||||
|
||||
return _evaluate_markers(self._markers, current_environment)
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,146 @@
|
||||
# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
|
||||
# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
|
||||
# for complete details.
|
||||
|
||||
import re
|
||||
import string
|
||||
import urllib.parse
|
||||
from typing import List, Optional as TOptional, Set
|
||||
|
||||
from pkg_resources.extern.pyparsing import ( # noqa
|
||||
Combine,
|
||||
Literal as L,
|
||||
Optional,
|
||||
ParseException,
|
||||
Regex,
|
||||
Word,
|
||||
ZeroOrMore,
|
||||
originalTextFor,
|
||||
stringEnd,
|
||||
stringStart,
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
from .markers import MARKER_EXPR, Marker
|
||||
from .specifiers import LegacySpecifier, Specifier, SpecifierSet
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class InvalidRequirement(ValueError):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
An invalid requirement was found, users should refer to PEP 508.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
ALPHANUM = Word(string.ascii_letters + string.digits)
|
||||
|
||||
LBRACKET = L("[").suppress()
|
||||
RBRACKET = L("]").suppress()
|
||||
LPAREN = L("(").suppress()
|
||||
RPAREN = L(")").suppress()
|
||||
COMMA = L(",").suppress()
|
||||
SEMICOLON = L(";").suppress()
|
||||
AT = L("@").suppress()
|
||||
|
||||
PUNCTUATION = Word("-_.")
|
||||
IDENTIFIER_END = ALPHANUM | (ZeroOrMore(PUNCTUATION) + ALPHANUM)
|
||||
IDENTIFIER = Combine(ALPHANUM + ZeroOrMore(IDENTIFIER_END))
|
||||
|
||||
NAME = IDENTIFIER("name")
|
||||
EXTRA = IDENTIFIER
|
||||
|
||||
URI = Regex(r"[^ ]+")("url")
|
||||
URL = AT + URI
|
||||
|
||||
EXTRAS_LIST = EXTRA + ZeroOrMore(COMMA + EXTRA)
|
||||
EXTRAS = (LBRACKET + Optional(EXTRAS_LIST) + RBRACKET)("extras")
|
||||
|
||||
VERSION_PEP440 = Regex(Specifier._regex_str, re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE)
|
||||
VERSION_LEGACY = Regex(LegacySpecifier._regex_str, re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE)
|
||||
|
||||
VERSION_ONE = VERSION_PEP440 ^ VERSION_LEGACY
|
||||
VERSION_MANY = Combine(
|
||||
VERSION_ONE + ZeroOrMore(COMMA + VERSION_ONE), joinString=",", adjacent=False
|
||||
)("_raw_spec")
|
||||
_VERSION_SPEC = Optional((LPAREN + VERSION_MANY + RPAREN) | VERSION_MANY)
|
||||
_VERSION_SPEC.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: t._raw_spec or "")
|
||||
|
||||
VERSION_SPEC = originalTextFor(_VERSION_SPEC)("specifier")
|
||||
VERSION_SPEC.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: t[1])
|
||||
|
||||
MARKER_EXPR = originalTextFor(MARKER_EXPR())("marker")
|
||||
MARKER_EXPR.setParseAction(
|
||||
lambda s, l, t: Marker(s[t._original_start : t._original_end])
|
||||
)
|
||||
MARKER_SEPARATOR = SEMICOLON
|
||||
MARKER = MARKER_SEPARATOR + MARKER_EXPR
|
||||
|
||||
VERSION_AND_MARKER = VERSION_SPEC + Optional(MARKER)
|
||||
URL_AND_MARKER = URL + Optional(MARKER)
|
||||
|
||||
NAMED_REQUIREMENT = NAME + Optional(EXTRAS) + (URL_AND_MARKER | VERSION_AND_MARKER)
|
||||
|
||||
REQUIREMENT = stringStart + NAMED_REQUIREMENT + stringEnd
|
||||
# pkg_resources.extern.pyparsing isn't thread safe during initialization, so we do it eagerly, see
|
||||
# issue #104
|
||||
REQUIREMENT.parseString("x[]")
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class Requirement:
|
||||
"""Parse a requirement.
|
||||
|
||||
Parse a given requirement string into its parts, such as name, specifier,
|
||||
URL, and extras. Raises InvalidRequirement on a badly-formed requirement
|
||||
string.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
# TODO: Can we test whether something is contained within a requirement?
|
||||
# If so how do we do that? Do we need to test against the _name_ of
|
||||
# the thing as well as the version? What about the markers?
|
||||
# TODO: Can we normalize the name and extra name?
|
||||
|
||||
def __init__(self, requirement_string: str) -> None:
|
||||
try:
|
||||
req = REQUIREMENT.parseString(requirement_string)
|
||||
except ParseException as e:
|
||||
raise InvalidRequirement(
|
||||
f'Parse error at "{ requirement_string[e.loc : e.loc + 8]!r}": {e.msg}'
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
self.name: str = req.name
|
||||
if req.url:
|
||||
parsed_url = urllib.parse.urlparse(req.url)
|
||||
if parsed_url.scheme == "file":
|
||||
if urllib.parse.urlunparse(parsed_url) != req.url:
|
||||
raise InvalidRequirement("Invalid URL given")
|
||||
elif not (parsed_url.scheme and parsed_url.netloc) or (
|
||||
not parsed_url.scheme and not parsed_url.netloc
|
||||
):
|
||||
raise InvalidRequirement(f"Invalid URL: {req.url}")
|
||||
self.url: TOptional[str] = req.url
|
||||
else:
|
||||
self.url = None
|
||||
self.extras: Set[str] = set(req.extras.asList() if req.extras else [])
|
||||
self.specifier: SpecifierSet = SpecifierSet(req.specifier)
|
||||
self.marker: TOptional[Marker] = req.marker if req.marker else None
|
||||
|
||||
def __str__(self) -> str:
|
||||
parts: List[str] = [self.name]
|
||||
|
||||
if self.extras:
|
||||
formatted_extras = ",".join(sorted(self.extras))
|
||||
parts.append(f"[{formatted_extras}]")
|
||||
|
||||
if self.specifier:
|
||||
parts.append(str(self.specifier))
|
||||
|
||||
if self.url:
|
||||
parts.append(f"@ {self.url}")
|
||||
if self.marker:
|
||||
parts.append(" ")
|
||||
|
||||
if self.marker:
|
||||
parts.append(f"; {self.marker}")
|
||||
|
||||
return "".join(parts)
|
||||
|
||||
def __repr__(self) -> str:
|
||||
return f"<Requirement('{self}')>"
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,802 @@
|
||||
# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
|
||||
# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
|
||||
# for complete details.
|
||||
|
||||
import abc
|
||||
import functools
|
||||
import itertools
|
||||
import re
|
||||
import warnings
|
||||
from typing import (
|
||||
Callable,
|
||||
Dict,
|
||||
Iterable,
|
||||
Iterator,
|
||||
List,
|
||||
Optional,
|
||||
Pattern,
|
||||
Set,
|
||||
Tuple,
|
||||
TypeVar,
|
||||
Union,
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
from .utils import canonicalize_version
|
||||
from .version import LegacyVersion, Version, parse
|
||||
|
||||
ParsedVersion = Union[Version, LegacyVersion]
|
||||
UnparsedVersion = Union[Version, LegacyVersion, str]
|
||||
VersionTypeVar = TypeVar("VersionTypeVar", bound=UnparsedVersion)
|
||||
CallableOperator = Callable[[ParsedVersion, str], bool]
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class InvalidSpecifier(ValueError):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
An invalid specifier was found, users should refer to PEP 440.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class BaseSpecifier(metaclass=abc.ABCMeta):
|
||||
@abc.abstractmethod
|
||||
def __str__(self) -> str:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Returns the str representation of this Specifier like object. This
|
||||
should be representative of the Specifier itself.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
@abc.abstractmethod
|
||||
def __hash__(self) -> int:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Returns a hash value for this Specifier like object.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
@abc.abstractmethod
|
||||
def __eq__(self, other: object) -> bool:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Returns a boolean representing whether or not the two Specifier like
|
||||
objects are equal.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
@abc.abstractproperty
|
||||
def prereleases(self) -> Optional[bool]:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Returns whether or not pre-releases as a whole are allowed by this
|
||||
specifier.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
@prereleases.setter
|
||||
def prereleases(self, value: bool) -> None:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Sets whether or not pre-releases as a whole are allowed by this
|
||||
specifier.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
@abc.abstractmethod
|
||||
def contains(self, item: str, prereleases: Optional[bool] = None) -> bool:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Determines if the given item is contained within this specifier.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
@abc.abstractmethod
|
||||
def filter(
|
||||
self, iterable: Iterable[VersionTypeVar], prereleases: Optional[bool] = None
|
||||
) -> Iterable[VersionTypeVar]:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Takes an iterable of items and filters them so that only items which
|
||||
are contained within this specifier are allowed in it.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class _IndividualSpecifier(BaseSpecifier):
|
||||
|
||||
_operators: Dict[str, str] = {}
|
||||
_regex: Pattern[str]
|
||||
|
||||
def __init__(self, spec: str = "", prereleases: Optional[bool] = None) -> None:
|
||||
match = self._regex.search(spec)
|
||||
if not match:
|
||||
raise InvalidSpecifier(f"Invalid specifier: '{spec}'")
|
||||
|
||||
self._spec: Tuple[str, str] = (
|
||||
match.group("operator").strip(),
|
||||
match.group("version").strip(),
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
# Store whether or not this Specifier should accept prereleases
|
||||
self._prereleases = prereleases
|
||||
|
||||
def __repr__(self) -> str:
|
||||
pre = (
|
||||
f", prereleases={self.prereleases!r}"
|
||||
if self._prereleases is not None
|
||||
else ""
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
return f"<{self.__class__.__name__}({str(self)!r}{pre})>"
|
||||
|
||||
def __str__(self) -> str:
|
||||
return "{}{}".format(*self._spec)
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def _canonical_spec(self) -> Tuple[str, str]:
|
||||
return self._spec[0], canonicalize_version(self._spec[1])
|
||||
|
||||
def __hash__(self) -> int:
|
||||
return hash(self._canonical_spec)
|
||||
|
||||
def __eq__(self, other: object) -> bool:
|
||||
if isinstance(other, str):
|
||||
try:
|
||||
other = self.__class__(str(other))
|
||||
except InvalidSpecifier:
|
||||
return NotImplemented
|
||||
elif not isinstance(other, self.__class__):
|
||||
return NotImplemented
|
||||
|
||||
return self._canonical_spec == other._canonical_spec
|
||||
|
||||
def _get_operator(self, op: str) -> CallableOperator:
|
||||
operator_callable: CallableOperator = getattr(
|
||||
self, f"_compare_{self._operators[op]}"
|
||||
)
|
||||
return operator_callable
|
||||
|
||||
def _coerce_version(self, version: UnparsedVersion) -> ParsedVersion:
|
||||
if not isinstance(version, (LegacyVersion, Version)):
|
||||
version = parse(version)
|
||||
return version
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def operator(self) -> str:
|
||||
return self._spec[0]
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def version(self) -> str:
|
||||
return self._spec[1]
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def prereleases(self) -> Optional[bool]:
|
||||
return self._prereleases
|
||||
|
||||
@prereleases.setter
|
||||
def prereleases(self, value: bool) -> None:
|
||||
self._prereleases = value
|
||||
|
||||
def __contains__(self, item: str) -> bool:
|
||||
return self.contains(item)
|
||||
|
||||
def contains(
|
||||
self, item: UnparsedVersion, prereleases: Optional[bool] = None
|
||||
) -> bool:
|
||||
|
||||
# Determine if prereleases are to be allowed or not.
|
||||
if prereleases is None:
|
||||
prereleases = self.prereleases
|
||||
|
||||
# Normalize item to a Version or LegacyVersion, this allows us to have
|
||||
# a shortcut for ``"2.0" in Specifier(">=2")
|
||||
normalized_item = self._coerce_version(item)
|
||||
|
||||
# Determine if we should be supporting prereleases in this specifier
|
||||
# or not, if we do not support prereleases than we can short circuit
|
||||
# logic if this version is a prereleases.
|
||||
if normalized_item.is_prerelease and not prereleases:
|
||||
return False
|
||||
|
||||
# Actually do the comparison to determine if this item is contained
|
||||
# within this Specifier or not.
|
||||
operator_callable: CallableOperator = self._get_operator(self.operator)
|
||||
return operator_callable(normalized_item, self.version)
|
||||
|
||||
def filter(
|
||||
self, iterable: Iterable[VersionTypeVar], prereleases: Optional[bool] = None
|
||||
) -> Iterable[VersionTypeVar]:
|
||||
|
||||
yielded = False
|
||||
found_prereleases = []
|
||||
|
||||
kw = {"prereleases": prereleases if prereleases is not None else True}
|
||||
|
||||
# Attempt to iterate over all the values in the iterable and if any of
|
||||
# them match, yield them.
|
||||
for version in iterable:
|
||||
parsed_version = self._coerce_version(version)
|
||||
|
||||
if self.contains(parsed_version, **kw):
|
||||
# If our version is a prerelease, and we were not set to allow
|
||||
# prereleases, then we'll store it for later in case nothing
|
||||
# else matches this specifier.
|
||||
if parsed_version.is_prerelease and not (
|
||||
prereleases or self.prereleases
|
||||
):
|
||||
found_prereleases.append(version)
|
||||
# Either this is not a prerelease, or we should have been
|
||||
# accepting prereleases from the beginning.
|
||||
else:
|
||||
yielded = True
|
||||
yield version
|
||||
|
||||
# Now that we've iterated over everything, determine if we've yielded
|
||||
# any values, and if we have not and we have any prereleases stored up
|
||||
# then we will go ahead and yield the prereleases.
|
||||
if not yielded and found_prereleases:
|
||||
for version in found_prereleases:
|
||||
yield version
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class LegacySpecifier(_IndividualSpecifier):
|
||||
|
||||
_regex_str = r"""
|
||||
(?P<operator>(==|!=|<=|>=|<|>))
|
||||
\s*
|
||||
(?P<version>
|
||||
[^,;\s)]* # Since this is a "legacy" specifier, and the version
|
||||
# string can be just about anything, we match everything
|
||||
# except for whitespace, a semi-colon for marker support,
|
||||
# a closing paren since versions can be enclosed in
|
||||
# them, and a comma since it's a version separator.
|
||||
)
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
_regex = re.compile(r"^\s*" + _regex_str + r"\s*$", re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE)
|
||||
|
||||
_operators = {
|
||||
"==": "equal",
|
||||
"!=": "not_equal",
|
||||
"<=": "less_than_equal",
|
||||
">=": "greater_than_equal",
|
||||
"<": "less_than",
|
||||
">": "greater_than",
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
def __init__(self, spec: str = "", prereleases: Optional[bool] = None) -> None:
|
||||
super().__init__(spec, prereleases)
|
||||
|
||||
warnings.warn(
|
||||
"Creating a LegacyVersion has been deprecated and will be "
|
||||
"removed in the next major release",
|
||||
DeprecationWarning,
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
def _coerce_version(self, version: UnparsedVersion) -> LegacyVersion:
|
||||
if not isinstance(version, LegacyVersion):
|
||||
version = LegacyVersion(str(version))
|
||||
return version
|
||||
|
||||
def _compare_equal(self, prospective: LegacyVersion, spec: str) -> bool:
|
||||
return prospective == self._coerce_version(spec)
|
||||
|
||||
def _compare_not_equal(self, prospective: LegacyVersion, spec: str) -> bool:
|
||||
return prospective != self._coerce_version(spec)
|
||||
|
||||
def _compare_less_than_equal(self, prospective: LegacyVersion, spec: str) -> bool:
|
||||
return prospective <= self._coerce_version(spec)
|
||||
|
||||
def _compare_greater_than_equal(
|
||||
self, prospective: LegacyVersion, spec: str
|
||||
) -> bool:
|
||||
return prospective >= self._coerce_version(spec)
|
||||
|
||||
def _compare_less_than(self, prospective: LegacyVersion, spec: str) -> bool:
|
||||
return prospective < self._coerce_version(spec)
|
||||
|
||||
def _compare_greater_than(self, prospective: LegacyVersion, spec: str) -> bool:
|
||||
return prospective > self._coerce_version(spec)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _require_version_compare(
|
||||
fn: Callable[["Specifier", ParsedVersion, str], bool]
|
||||
) -> Callable[["Specifier", ParsedVersion, str], bool]:
|
||||
@functools.wraps(fn)
|
||||
def wrapped(self: "Specifier", prospective: ParsedVersion, spec: str) -> bool:
|
||||
if not isinstance(prospective, Version):
|
||||
return False
|
||||
return fn(self, prospective, spec)
|
||||
|
||||
return wrapped
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class Specifier(_IndividualSpecifier):
|
||||
|
||||
_regex_str = r"""
|
||||
(?P<operator>(~=|==|!=|<=|>=|<|>|===))
|
||||
(?P<version>
|
||||
(?:
|
||||
# The identity operators allow for an escape hatch that will
|
||||
# do an exact string match of the version you wish to install.
|
||||
# This will not be parsed by PEP 440 and we cannot determine
|
||||
# any semantic meaning from it. This operator is discouraged
|
||||
# but included entirely as an escape hatch.
|
||||
(?<====) # Only match for the identity operator
|
||||
\s*
|
||||
[^\s]* # We just match everything, except for whitespace
|
||||
# since we are only testing for strict identity.
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
|
||||
(?:
|
||||
# The (non)equality operators allow for wild card and local
|
||||
# versions to be specified so we have to define these two
|
||||
# operators separately to enable that.
|
||||
(?<===|!=) # Only match for equals and not equals
|
||||
|
||||
\s*
|
||||
v?
|
||||
(?:[0-9]+!)? # epoch
|
||||
[0-9]+(?:\.[0-9]+)* # release
|
||||
(?: # pre release
|
||||
[-_\.]?
|
||||
(a|b|c|rc|alpha|beta|pre|preview)
|
||||
[-_\.]?
|
||||
[0-9]*
|
||||
)?
|
||||
(?: # post release
|
||||
(?:-[0-9]+)|(?:[-_\.]?(post|rev|r)[-_\.]?[0-9]*)
|
||||
)?
|
||||
|
||||
# You cannot use a wild card and a dev or local version
|
||||
# together so group them with a | and make them optional.
|
||||
(?:
|
||||
(?:[-_\.]?dev[-_\.]?[0-9]*)? # dev release
|
||||
(?:\+[a-z0-9]+(?:[-_\.][a-z0-9]+)*)? # local
|
||||
|
|
||||
\.\* # Wild card syntax of .*
|
||||
)?
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
|
||||
(?:
|
||||
# The compatible operator requires at least two digits in the
|
||||
# release segment.
|
||||
(?<=~=) # Only match for the compatible operator
|
||||
|
||||
\s*
|
||||
v?
|
||||
(?:[0-9]+!)? # epoch
|
||||
[0-9]+(?:\.[0-9]+)+ # release (We have a + instead of a *)
|
||||
(?: # pre release
|
||||
[-_\.]?
|
||||
(a|b|c|rc|alpha|beta|pre|preview)
|
||||
[-_\.]?
|
||||
[0-9]*
|
||||
)?
|
||||
(?: # post release
|
||||
(?:-[0-9]+)|(?:[-_\.]?(post|rev|r)[-_\.]?[0-9]*)
|
||||
)?
|
||||
(?:[-_\.]?dev[-_\.]?[0-9]*)? # dev release
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
|
||||
(?:
|
||||
# All other operators only allow a sub set of what the
|
||||
# (non)equality operators do. Specifically they do not allow
|
||||
# local versions to be specified nor do they allow the prefix
|
||||
# matching wild cards.
|
||||
(?<!==|!=|~=) # We have special cases for these
|
||||
# operators so we want to make sure they
|
||||
# don't match here.
|
||||
|
||||
\s*
|
||||
v?
|
||||
(?:[0-9]+!)? # epoch
|
||||
[0-9]+(?:\.[0-9]+)* # release
|
||||
(?: # pre release
|
||||
[-_\.]?
|
||||
(a|b|c|rc|alpha|beta|pre|preview)
|
||||
[-_\.]?
|
||||
[0-9]*
|
||||
)?
|
||||
(?: # post release
|
||||
(?:-[0-9]+)|(?:[-_\.]?(post|rev|r)[-_\.]?[0-9]*)
|
||||
)?
|
||||
(?:[-_\.]?dev[-_\.]?[0-9]*)? # dev release
|
||||
)
|
||||
)
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
_regex = re.compile(r"^\s*" + _regex_str + r"\s*$", re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE)
|
||||
|
||||
_operators = {
|
||||
"~=": "compatible",
|
||||
"==": "equal",
|
||||
"!=": "not_equal",
|
||||
"<=": "less_than_equal",
|
||||
">=": "greater_than_equal",
|
||||
"<": "less_than",
|
||||
">": "greater_than",
|
||||
"===": "arbitrary",
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
@_require_version_compare
|
||||
def _compare_compatible(self, prospective: ParsedVersion, spec: str) -> bool:
|
||||
|
||||
# Compatible releases have an equivalent combination of >= and ==. That
|
||||
# is that ~=2.2 is equivalent to >=2.2,==2.*. This allows us to
|
||||
# implement this in terms of the other specifiers instead of
|
||||
# implementing it ourselves. The only thing we need to do is construct
|
||||
# the other specifiers.
|
||||
|
||||
# We want everything but the last item in the version, but we want to
|
||||
# ignore suffix segments.
|
||||
prefix = ".".join(
|
||||
list(itertools.takewhile(_is_not_suffix, _version_split(spec)))[:-1]
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
# Add the prefix notation to the end of our string
|
||||
prefix += ".*"
|
||||
|
||||
return self._get_operator(">=")(prospective, spec) and self._get_operator("==")(
|
||||
prospective, prefix
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
@_require_version_compare
|
||||
def _compare_equal(self, prospective: ParsedVersion, spec: str) -> bool:
|
||||
|
||||
# We need special logic to handle prefix matching
|
||||
if spec.endswith(".*"):
|
||||
# In the case of prefix matching we want to ignore local segment.
|
||||
prospective = Version(prospective.public)
|
||||
# Split the spec out by dots, and pretend that there is an implicit
|
||||
# dot in between a release segment and a pre-release segment.
|
||||
split_spec = _version_split(spec[:-2]) # Remove the trailing .*
|
||||
|
||||
# Split the prospective version out by dots, and pretend that there
|
||||
# is an implicit dot in between a release segment and a pre-release
|
||||
# segment.
|
||||
split_prospective = _version_split(str(prospective))
|
||||
|
||||
# Shorten the prospective version to be the same length as the spec
|
||||
# so that we can determine if the specifier is a prefix of the
|
||||
# prospective version or not.
|
||||
shortened_prospective = split_prospective[: len(split_spec)]
|
||||
|
||||
# Pad out our two sides with zeros so that they both equal the same
|
||||
# length.
|
||||
padded_spec, padded_prospective = _pad_version(
|
||||
split_spec, shortened_prospective
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
return padded_prospective == padded_spec
|
||||
else:
|
||||
# Convert our spec string into a Version
|
||||
spec_version = Version(spec)
|
||||
|
||||
# If the specifier does not have a local segment, then we want to
|
||||
# act as if the prospective version also does not have a local
|
||||
# segment.
|
||||
if not spec_version.local:
|
||||
prospective = Version(prospective.public)
|
||||
|
||||
return prospective == spec_version
|
||||
|
||||
@_require_version_compare
|
||||
def _compare_not_equal(self, prospective: ParsedVersion, spec: str) -> bool:
|
||||
return not self._compare_equal(prospective, spec)
|
||||
|
||||
@_require_version_compare
|
||||
def _compare_less_than_equal(self, prospective: ParsedVersion, spec: str) -> bool:
|
||||
|
||||
# NB: Local version identifiers are NOT permitted in the version
|
||||
# specifier, so local version labels can be universally removed from
|
||||
# the prospective version.
|
||||
return Version(prospective.public) <= Version(spec)
|
||||
|
||||
@_require_version_compare
|
||||
def _compare_greater_than_equal(
|
||||
self, prospective: ParsedVersion, spec: str
|
||||
) -> bool:
|
||||
|
||||
# NB: Local version identifiers are NOT permitted in the version
|
||||
# specifier, so local version labels can be universally removed from
|
||||
# the prospective version.
|
||||
return Version(prospective.public) >= Version(spec)
|
||||
|
||||
@_require_version_compare
|
||||
def _compare_less_than(self, prospective: ParsedVersion, spec_str: str) -> bool:
|
||||
|
||||
# Convert our spec to a Version instance, since we'll want to work with
|
||||
# it as a version.
|
||||
spec = Version(spec_str)
|
||||
|
||||
# Check to see if the prospective version is less than the spec
|
||||
# version. If it's not we can short circuit and just return False now
|
||||
# instead of doing extra unneeded work.
|
||||
if not prospective < spec:
|
||||
return False
|
||||
|
||||
# This special case is here so that, unless the specifier itself
|
||||
# includes is a pre-release version, that we do not accept pre-release
|
||||
# versions for the version mentioned in the specifier (e.g. <3.1 should
|
||||
# not match 3.1.dev0, but should match 3.0.dev0).
|
||||
if not spec.is_prerelease and prospective.is_prerelease:
|
||||
if Version(prospective.base_version) == Version(spec.base_version):
|
||||
return False
|
||||
|
||||
# If we've gotten to here, it means that prospective version is both
|
||||
# less than the spec version *and* it's not a pre-release of the same
|
||||
# version in the spec.
|
||||
return True
|
||||
|
||||
@_require_version_compare
|
||||
def _compare_greater_than(self, prospective: ParsedVersion, spec_str: str) -> bool:
|
||||
|
||||
# Convert our spec to a Version instance, since we'll want to work with
|
||||
# it as a version.
|
||||
spec = Version(spec_str)
|
||||
|
||||
# Check to see if the prospective version is greater than the spec
|
||||
# version. If it's not we can short circuit and just return False now
|
||||
# instead of doing extra unneeded work.
|
||||
if not prospective > spec:
|
||||
return False
|
||||
|
||||
# This special case is here so that, unless the specifier itself
|
||||
# includes is a post-release version, that we do not accept
|
||||
# post-release versions for the version mentioned in the specifier
|
||||
# (e.g. >3.1 should not match 3.0.post0, but should match 3.2.post0).
|
||||
if not spec.is_postrelease and prospective.is_postrelease:
|
||||
if Version(prospective.base_version) == Version(spec.base_version):
|
||||
return False
|
||||
|
||||
# Ensure that we do not allow a local version of the version mentioned
|
||||
# in the specifier, which is technically greater than, to match.
|
||||
if prospective.local is not None:
|
||||
if Version(prospective.base_version) == Version(spec.base_version):
|
||||
return False
|
||||
|
||||
# If we've gotten to here, it means that prospective version is both
|
||||
# greater than the spec version *and* it's not a pre-release of the
|
||||
# same version in the spec.
|
||||
return True
|
||||
|
||||
def _compare_arbitrary(self, prospective: Version, spec: str) -> bool:
|
||||
return str(prospective).lower() == str(spec).lower()
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def prereleases(self) -> bool:
|
||||
|
||||
# If there is an explicit prereleases set for this, then we'll just
|
||||
# blindly use that.
|
||||
if self._prereleases is not None:
|
||||
return self._prereleases
|
||||
|
||||
# Look at all of our specifiers and determine if they are inclusive
|
||||
# operators, and if they are if they are including an explicit
|
||||
# prerelease.
|
||||
operator, version = self._spec
|
||||
if operator in ["==", ">=", "<=", "~=", "==="]:
|
||||
# The == specifier can include a trailing .*, if it does we
|
||||
# want to remove before parsing.
|
||||
if operator == "==" and version.endswith(".*"):
|
||||
version = version[:-2]
|
||||
|
||||
# Parse the version, and if it is a pre-release than this
|
||||
# specifier allows pre-releases.
|
||||
if parse(version).is_prerelease:
|
||||
return True
|
||||
|
||||
return False
|
||||
|
||||
@prereleases.setter
|
||||
def prereleases(self, value: bool) -> None:
|
||||
self._prereleases = value
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
_prefix_regex = re.compile(r"^([0-9]+)((?:a|b|c|rc)[0-9]+)$")
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _version_split(version: str) -> List[str]:
|
||||
result: List[str] = []
|
||||
for item in version.split("."):
|
||||
match = _prefix_regex.search(item)
|
||||
if match:
|
||||
result.extend(match.groups())
|
||||
else:
|
||||
result.append(item)
|
||||
return result
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _is_not_suffix(segment: str) -> bool:
|
||||
return not any(
|
||||
segment.startswith(prefix) for prefix in ("dev", "a", "b", "rc", "post")
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _pad_version(left: List[str], right: List[str]) -> Tuple[List[str], List[str]]:
|
||||
left_split, right_split = [], []
|
||||
|
||||
# Get the release segment of our versions
|
||||
left_split.append(list(itertools.takewhile(lambda x: x.isdigit(), left)))
|
||||
right_split.append(list(itertools.takewhile(lambda x: x.isdigit(), right)))
|
||||
|
||||
# Get the rest of our versions
|
||||
left_split.append(left[len(left_split[0]) :])
|
||||
right_split.append(right[len(right_split[0]) :])
|
||||
|
||||
# Insert our padding
|
||||
left_split.insert(1, ["0"] * max(0, len(right_split[0]) - len(left_split[0])))
|
||||
right_split.insert(1, ["0"] * max(0, len(left_split[0]) - len(right_split[0])))
|
||||
|
||||
return (list(itertools.chain(*left_split)), list(itertools.chain(*right_split)))
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class SpecifierSet(BaseSpecifier):
|
||||
def __init__(
|
||||
self, specifiers: str = "", prereleases: Optional[bool] = None
|
||||
) -> None:
|
||||
|
||||
# Split on , to break each individual specifier into it's own item, and
|
||||
# strip each item to remove leading/trailing whitespace.
|
||||
split_specifiers = [s.strip() for s in specifiers.split(",") if s.strip()]
|
||||
|
||||
# Parsed each individual specifier, attempting first to make it a
|
||||
# Specifier and falling back to a LegacySpecifier.
|
||||
parsed: Set[_IndividualSpecifier] = set()
|
||||
for specifier in split_specifiers:
|
||||
try:
|
||||
parsed.add(Specifier(specifier))
|
||||
except InvalidSpecifier:
|
||||
parsed.add(LegacySpecifier(specifier))
|
||||
|
||||
# Turn our parsed specifiers into a frozen set and save them for later.
|
||||
self._specs = frozenset(parsed)
|
||||
|
||||
# Store our prereleases value so we can use it later to determine if
|
||||
# we accept prereleases or not.
|
||||
self._prereleases = prereleases
|
||||
|
||||
def __repr__(self) -> str:
|
||||
pre = (
|
||||
f", prereleases={self.prereleases!r}"
|
||||
if self._prereleases is not None
|
||||
else ""
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
return f"<SpecifierSet({str(self)!r}{pre})>"
|
||||
|
||||
def __str__(self) -> str:
|
||||
return ",".join(sorted(str(s) for s in self._specs))
|
||||
|
||||
def __hash__(self) -> int:
|
||||
return hash(self._specs)
|
||||
|
||||
def __and__(self, other: Union["SpecifierSet", str]) -> "SpecifierSet":
|
||||
if isinstance(other, str):
|
||||
other = SpecifierSet(other)
|
||||
elif not isinstance(other, SpecifierSet):
|
||||
return NotImplemented
|
||||
|
||||
specifier = SpecifierSet()
|
||||
specifier._specs = frozenset(self._specs | other._specs)
|
||||
|
||||
if self._prereleases is None and other._prereleases is not None:
|
||||
specifier._prereleases = other._prereleases
|
||||
elif self._prereleases is not None and other._prereleases is None:
|
||||
specifier._prereleases = self._prereleases
|
||||
elif self._prereleases == other._prereleases:
|
||||
specifier._prereleases = self._prereleases
|
||||
else:
|
||||
raise ValueError(
|
||||
"Cannot combine SpecifierSets with True and False prerelease "
|
||||
"overrides."
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
return specifier
|
||||
|
||||
def __eq__(self, other: object) -> bool:
|
||||
if isinstance(other, (str, _IndividualSpecifier)):
|
||||
other = SpecifierSet(str(other))
|
||||
elif not isinstance(other, SpecifierSet):
|
||||
return NotImplemented
|
||||
|
||||
return self._specs == other._specs
|
||||
|
||||
def __len__(self) -> int:
|
||||
return len(self._specs)
|
||||
|
||||
def __iter__(self) -> Iterator[_IndividualSpecifier]:
|
||||
return iter(self._specs)
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def prereleases(self) -> Optional[bool]:
|
||||
|
||||
# If we have been given an explicit prerelease modifier, then we'll
|
||||
# pass that through here.
|
||||
if self._prereleases is not None:
|
||||
return self._prereleases
|
||||
|
||||
# If we don't have any specifiers, and we don't have a forced value,
|
||||
# then we'll just return None since we don't know if this should have
|
||||
# pre-releases or not.
|
||||
if not self._specs:
|
||||
return None
|
||||
|
||||
# Otherwise we'll see if any of the given specifiers accept
|
||||
# prereleases, if any of them do we'll return True, otherwise False.
|
||||
return any(s.prereleases for s in self._specs)
|
||||
|
||||
@prereleases.setter
|
||||
def prereleases(self, value: bool) -> None:
|
||||
self._prereleases = value
|
||||
|
||||
def __contains__(self, item: UnparsedVersion) -> bool:
|
||||
return self.contains(item)
|
||||
|
||||
def contains(
|
||||
self, item: UnparsedVersion, prereleases: Optional[bool] = None
|
||||
) -> bool:
|
||||
|
||||
# Ensure that our item is a Version or LegacyVersion instance.
|
||||
if not isinstance(item, (LegacyVersion, Version)):
|
||||
item = parse(item)
|
||||
|
||||
# Determine if we're forcing a prerelease or not, if we're not forcing
|
||||
# one for this particular filter call, then we'll use whatever the
|
||||
# SpecifierSet thinks for whether or not we should support prereleases.
|
||||
if prereleases is None:
|
||||
prereleases = self.prereleases
|
||||
|
||||
# We can determine if we're going to allow pre-releases by looking to
|
||||
# see if any of the underlying items supports them. If none of them do
|
||||
# and this item is a pre-release then we do not allow it and we can
|
||||
# short circuit that here.
|
||||
# Note: This means that 1.0.dev1 would not be contained in something
|
||||
# like >=1.0.devabc however it would be in >=1.0.debabc,>0.0.dev0
|
||||
if not prereleases and item.is_prerelease:
|
||||
return False
|
||||
|
||||
# We simply dispatch to the underlying specs here to make sure that the
|
||||
# given version is contained within all of them.
|
||||
# Note: This use of all() here means that an empty set of specifiers
|
||||
# will always return True, this is an explicit design decision.
|
||||
return all(s.contains(item, prereleases=prereleases) for s in self._specs)
|
||||
|
||||
def filter(
|
||||
self, iterable: Iterable[VersionTypeVar], prereleases: Optional[bool] = None
|
||||
) -> Iterable[VersionTypeVar]:
|
||||
|
||||
# Determine if we're forcing a prerelease or not, if we're not forcing
|
||||
# one for this particular filter call, then we'll use whatever the
|
||||
# SpecifierSet thinks for whether or not we should support prereleases.
|
||||
if prereleases is None:
|
||||
prereleases = self.prereleases
|
||||
|
||||
# If we have any specifiers, then we want to wrap our iterable in the
|
||||
# filter method for each one, this will act as a logical AND amongst
|
||||
# each specifier.
|
||||
if self._specs:
|
||||
for spec in self._specs:
|
||||
iterable = spec.filter(iterable, prereleases=bool(prereleases))
|
||||
return iterable
|
||||
# If we do not have any specifiers, then we need to have a rough filter
|
||||
# which will filter out any pre-releases, unless there are no final
|
||||
# releases, and which will filter out LegacyVersion in general.
|
||||
else:
|
||||
filtered: List[VersionTypeVar] = []
|
||||
found_prereleases: List[VersionTypeVar] = []
|
||||
|
||||
item: UnparsedVersion
|
||||
parsed_version: Union[Version, LegacyVersion]
|
||||
|
||||
for item in iterable:
|
||||
# Ensure that we some kind of Version class for this item.
|
||||
if not isinstance(item, (LegacyVersion, Version)):
|
||||
parsed_version = parse(item)
|
||||
else:
|
||||
parsed_version = item
|
||||
|
||||
# Filter out any item which is parsed as a LegacyVersion
|
||||
if isinstance(parsed_version, LegacyVersion):
|
||||
continue
|
||||
|
||||
# Store any item which is a pre-release for later unless we've
|
||||
# already found a final version or we are accepting prereleases
|
||||
if parsed_version.is_prerelease and not prereleases:
|
||||
if not filtered:
|
||||
found_prereleases.append(item)
|
||||
else:
|
||||
filtered.append(item)
|
||||
|
||||
# If we've found no items except for pre-releases, then we'll go
|
||||
# ahead and use the pre-releases
|
||||
if not filtered and found_prereleases and prereleases is None:
|
||||
return found_prereleases
|
||||
|
||||
return filtered
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,487 @@
|
||||
# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
|
||||
# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
|
||||
# for complete details.
|
||||
|
||||
import logging
|
||||
import platform
|
||||
import sys
|
||||
import sysconfig
|
||||
from importlib.machinery import EXTENSION_SUFFIXES
|
||||
from typing import (
|
||||
Dict,
|
||||
FrozenSet,
|
||||
Iterable,
|
||||
Iterator,
|
||||
List,
|
||||
Optional,
|
||||
Sequence,
|
||||
Tuple,
|
||||
Union,
|
||||
cast,
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
from . import _manylinux, _musllinux
|
||||
|
||||
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
|
||||
|
||||
PythonVersion = Sequence[int]
|
||||
MacVersion = Tuple[int, int]
|
||||
|
||||
INTERPRETER_SHORT_NAMES: Dict[str, str] = {
|
||||
"python": "py", # Generic.
|
||||
"cpython": "cp",
|
||||
"pypy": "pp",
|
||||
"ironpython": "ip",
|
||||
"jython": "jy",
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
_32_BIT_INTERPRETER = sys.maxsize <= 2 ** 32
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class Tag:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
A representation of the tag triple for a wheel.
|
||||
|
||||
Instances are considered immutable and thus are hashable. Equality checking
|
||||
is also supported.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
__slots__ = ["_interpreter", "_abi", "_platform", "_hash"]
|
||||
|
||||
def __init__(self, interpreter: str, abi: str, platform: str) -> None:
|
||||
self._interpreter = interpreter.lower()
|
||||
self._abi = abi.lower()
|
||||
self._platform = platform.lower()
|
||||
# The __hash__ of every single element in a Set[Tag] will be evaluated each time
|
||||
# that a set calls its `.disjoint()` method, which may be called hundreds of
|
||||
# times when scanning a page of links for packages with tags matching that
|
||||
# Set[Tag]. Pre-computing the value here produces significant speedups for
|
||||
# downstream consumers.
|
||||
self._hash = hash((self._interpreter, self._abi, self._platform))
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def interpreter(self) -> str:
|
||||
return self._interpreter
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def abi(self) -> str:
|
||||
return self._abi
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def platform(self) -> str:
|
||||
return self._platform
|
||||
|
||||
def __eq__(self, other: object) -> bool:
|
||||
if not isinstance(other, Tag):
|
||||
return NotImplemented
|
||||
|
||||
return (
|
||||
(self._hash == other._hash) # Short-circuit ASAP for perf reasons.
|
||||
and (self._platform == other._platform)
|
||||
and (self._abi == other._abi)
|
||||
and (self._interpreter == other._interpreter)
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
def __hash__(self) -> int:
|
||||
return self._hash
|
||||
|
||||
def __str__(self) -> str:
|
||||
return f"{self._interpreter}-{self._abi}-{self._platform}"
|
||||
|
||||
def __repr__(self) -> str:
|
||||
return f"<{self} @ {id(self)}>"
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def parse_tag(tag: str) -> FrozenSet[Tag]:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Parses the provided tag (e.g. `py3-none-any`) into a frozenset of Tag instances.
|
||||
|
||||
Returning a set is required due to the possibility that the tag is a
|
||||
compressed tag set.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
tags = set()
|
||||
interpreters, abis, platforms = tag.split("-")
|
||||
for interpreter in interpreters.split("."):
|
||||
for abi in abis.split("."):
|
||||
for platform_ in platforms.split("."):
|
||||
tags.add(Tag(interpreter, abi, platform_))
|
||||
return frozenset(tags)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _get_config_var(name: str, warn: bool = False) -> Union[int, str, None]:
|
||||
value = sysconfig.get_config_var(name)
|
||||
if value is None and warn:
|
||||
logger.debug(
|
||||
"Config variable '%s' is unset, Python ABI tag may be incorrect", name
|
||||
)
|
||||
return value
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _normalize_string(string: str) -> str:
|
||||
return string.replace(".", "_").replace("-", "_")
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _abi3_applies(python_version: PythonVersion) -> bool:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Determine if the Python version supports abi3.
|
||||
|
||||
PEP 384 was first implemented in Python 3.2.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return len(python_version) > 1 and tuple(python_version) >= (3, 2)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _cpython_abis(py_version: PythonVersion, warn: bool = False) -> List[str]:
|
||||
py_version = tuple(py_version) # To allow for version comparison.
|
||||
abis = []
|
||||
version = _version_nodot(py_version[:2])
|
||||
debug = pymalloc = ucs4 = ""
|
||||
with_debug = _get_config_var("Py_DEBUG", warn)
|
||||
has_refcount = hasattr(sys, "gettotalrefcount")
|
||||
# Windows doesn't set Py_DEBUG, so checking for support of debug-compiled
|
||||
# extension modules is the best option.
|
||||
# https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues/3383#issuecomment-173267692
|
||||
has_ext = "_d.pyd" in EXTENSION_SUFFIXES
|
||||
if with_debug or (with_debug is None and (has_refcount or has_ext)):
|
||||
debug = "d"
|
||||
if py_version < (3, 8):
|
||||
with_pymalloc = _get_config_var("WITH_PYMALLOC", warn)
|
||||
if with_pymalloc or with_pymalloc is None:
|
||||
pymalloc = "m"
|
||||
if py_version < (3, 3):
|
||||
unicode_size = _get_config_var("Py_UNICODE_SIZE", warn)
|
||||
if unicode_size == 4 or (
|
||||
unicode_size is None and sys.maxunicode == 0x10FFFF
|
||||
):
|
||||
ucs4 = "u"
|
||||
elif debug:
|
||||
# Debug builds can also load "normal" extension modules.
|
||||
# We can also assume no UCS-4 or pymalloc requirement.
|
||||
abis.append(f"cp{version}")
|
||||
abis.insert(
|
||||
0,
|
||||
"cp{version}{debug}{pymalloc}{ucs4}".format(
|
||||
version=version, debug=debug, pymalloc=pymalloc, ucs4=ucs4
|
||||
),
|
||||
)
|
||||
return abis
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def cpython_tags(
|
||||
python_version: Optional[PythonVersion] = None,
|
||||
abis: Optional[Iterable[str]] = None,
|
||||
platforms: Optional[Iterable[str]] = None,
|
||||
*,
|
||||
warn: bool = False,
|
||||
) -> Iterator[Tag]:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Yields the tags for a CPython interpreter.
|
||||
|
||||
The tags consist of:
|
||||
- cp<python_version>-<abi>-<platform>
|
||||
- cp<python_version>-abi3-<platform>
|
||||
- cp<python_version>-none-<platform>
|
||||
- cp<less than python_version>-abi3-<platform> # Older Python versions down to 3.2.
|
||||
|
||||
If python_version only specifies a major version then user-provided ABIs and
|
||||
the 'none' ABItag will be used.
|
||||
|
||||
If 'abi3' or 'none' are specified in 'abis' then they will be yielded at
|
||||
their normal position and not at the beginning.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
if not python_version:
|
||||
python_version = sys.version_info[:2]
|
||||
|
||||
interpreter = f"cp{_version_nodot(python_version[:2])}"
|
||||
|
||||
if abis is None:
|
||||
if len(python_version) > 1:
|
||||
abis = _cpython_abis(python_version, warn)
|
||||
else:
|
||||
abis = []
|
||||
abis = list(abis)
|
||||
# 'abi3' and 'none' are explicitly handled later.
|
||||
for explicit_abi in ("abi3", "none"):
|
||||
try:
|
||||
abis.remove(explicit_abi)
|
||||
except ValueError:
|
||||
pass
|
||||
|
||||
platforms = list(platforms or platform_tags())
|
||||
for abi in abis:
|
||||
for platform_ in platforms:
|
||||
yield Tag(interpreter, abi, platform_)
|
||||
if _abi3_applies(python_version):
|
||||
yield from (Tag(interpreter, "abi3", platform_) for platform_ in platforms)
|
||||
yield from (Tag(interpreter, "none", platform_) for platform_ in platforms)
|
||||
|
||||
if _abi3_applies(python_version):
|
||||
for minor_version in range(python_version[1] - 1, 1, -1):
|
||||
for platform_ in platforms:
|
||||
interpreter = "cp{version}".format(
|
||||
version=_version_nodot((python_version[0], minor_version))
|
||||
)
|
||||
yield Tag(interpreter, "abi3", platform_)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _generic_abi() -> Iterator[str]:
|
||||
abi = sysconfig.get_config_var("SOABI")
|
||||
if abi:
|
||||
yield _normalize_string(abi)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def generic_tags(
|
||||
interpreter: Optional[str] = None,
|
||||
abis: Optional[Iterable[str]] = None,
|
||||
platforms: Optional[Iterable[str]] = None,
|
||||
*,
|
||||
warn: bool = False,
|
||||
) -> Iterator[Tag]:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Yields the tags for a generic interpreter.
|
||||
|
||||
The tags consist of:
|
||||
- <interpreter>-<abi>-<platform>
|
||||
|
||||
The "none" ABI will be added if it was not explicitly provided.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
if not interpreter:
|
||||
interp_name = interpreter_name()
|
||||
interp_version = interpreter_version(warn=warn)
|
||||
interpreter = "".join([interp_name, interp_version])
|
||||
if abis is None:
|
||||
abis = _generic_abi()
|
||||
platforms = list(platforms or platform_tags())
|
||||
abis = list(abis)
|
||||
if "none" not in abis:
|
||||
abis.append("none")
|
||||
for abi in abis:
|
||||
for platform_ in platforms:
|
||||
yield Tag(interpreter, abi, platform_)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _py_interpreter_range(py_version: PythonVersion) -> Iterator[str]:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Yields Python versions in descending order.
|
||||
|
||||
After the latest version, the major-only version will be yielded, and then
|
||||
all previous versions of that major version.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
if len(py_version) > 1:
|
||||
yield f"py{_version_nodot(py_version[:2])}"
|
||||
yield f"py{py_version[0]}"
|
||||
if len(py_version) > 1:
|
||||
for minor in range(py_version[1] - 1, -1, -1):
|
||||
yield f"py{_version_nodot((py_version[0], minor))}"
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def compatible_tags(
|
||||
python_version: Optional[PythonVersion] = None,
|
||||
interpreter: Optional[str] = None,
|
||||
platforms: Optional[Iterable[str]] = None,
|
||||
) -> Iterator[Tag]:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Yields the sequence of tags that are compatible with a specific version of Python.
|
||||
|
||||
The tags consist of:
|
||||
- py*-none-<platform>
|
||||
- <interpreter>-none-any # ... if `interpreter` is provided.
|
||||
- py*-none-any
|
||||
"""
|
||||
if not python_version:
|
||||
python_version = sys.version_info[:2]
|
||||
platforms = list(platforms or platform_tags())
|
||||
for version in _py_interpreter_range(python_version):
|
||||
for platform_ in platforms:
|
||||
yield Tag(version, "none", platform_)
|
||||
if interpreter:
|
||||
yield Tag(interpreter, "none", "any")
|
||||
for version in _py_interpreter_range(python_version):
|
||||
yield Tag(version, "none", "any")
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _mac_arch(arch: str, is_32bit: bool = _32_BIT_INTERPRETER) -> str:
|
||||
if not is_32bit:
|
||||
return arch
|
||||
|
||||
if arch.startswith("ppc"):
|
||||
return "ppc"
|
||||
|
||||
return "i386"
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _mac_binary_formats(version: MacVersion, cpu_arch: str) -> List[str]:
|
||||
formats = [cpu_arch]
|
||||
if cpu_arch == "x86_64":
|
||||
if version < (10, 4):
|
||||
return []
|
||||
formats.extend(["intel", "fat64", "fat32"])
|
||||
|
||||
elif cpu_arch == "i386":
|
||||
if version < (10, 4):
|
||||
return []
|
||||
formats.extend(["intel", "fat32", "fat"])
|
||||
|
||||
elif cpu_arch == "ppc64":
|
||||
# TODO: Need to care about 32-bit PPC for ppc64 through 10.2?
|
||||
if version > (10, 5) or version < (10, 4):
|
||||
return []
|
||||
formats.append("fat64")
|
||||
|
||||
elif cpu_arch == "ppc":
|
||||
if version > (10, 6):
|
||||
return []
|
||||
formats.extend(["fat32", "fat"])
|
||||
|
||||
if cpu_arch in {"arm64", "x86_64"}:
|
||||
formats.append("universal2")
|
||||
|
||||
if cpu_arch in {"x86_64", "i386", "ppc64", "ppc", "intel"}:
|
||||
formats.append("universal")
|
||||
|
||||
return formats
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def mac_platforms(
|
||||
version: Optional[MacVersion] = None, arch: Optional[str] = None
|
||||
) -> Iterator[str]:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Yields the platform tags for a macOS system.
|
||||
|
||||
The `version` parameter is a two-item tuple specifying the macOS version to
|
||||
generate platform tags for. The `arch` parameter is the CPU architecture to
|
||||
generate platform tags for. Both parameters default to the appropriate value
|
||||
for the current system.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
version_str, _, cpu_arch = platform.mac_ver()
|
||||
if version is None:
|
||||
version = cast("MacVersion", tuple(map(int, version_str.split(".")[:2])))
|
||||
else:
|
||||
version = version
|
||||
if arch is None:
|
||||
arch = _mac_arch(cpu_arch)
|
||||
else:
|
||||
arch = arch
|
||||
|
||||
if (10, 0) <= version and version < (11, 0):
|
||||
# Prior to Mac OS 11, each yearly release of Mac OS bumped the
|
||||
# "minor" version number. The major version was always 10.
|
||||
for minor_version in range(version[1], -1, -1):
|
||||
compat_version = 10, minor_version
|
||||
binary_formats = _mac_binary_formats(compat_version, arch)
|
||||
for binary_format in binary_formats:
|
||||
yield "macosx_{major}_{minor}_{binary_format}".format(
|
||||
major=10, minor=minor_version, binary_format=binary_format
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
if version >= (11, 0):
|
||||
# Starting with Mac OS 11, each yearly release bumps the major version
|
||||
# number. The minor versions are now the midyear updates.
|
||||
for major_version in range(version[0], 10, -1):
|
||||
compat_version = major_version, 0
|
||||
binary_formats = _mac_binary_formats(compat_version, arch)
|
||||
for binary_format in binary_formats:
|
||||
yield "macosx_{major}_{minor}_{binary_format}".format(
|
||||
major=major_version, minor=0, binary_format=binary_format
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
if version >= (11, 0):
|
||||
# Mac OS 11 on x86_64 is compatible with binaries from previous releases.
|
||||
# Arm64 support was introduced in 11.0, so no Arm binaries from previous
|
||||
# releases exist.
|
||||
#
|
||||
# However, the "universal2" binary format can have a
|
||||
# macOS version earlier than 11.0 when the x86_64 part of the binary supports
|
||||
# that version of macOS.
|
||||
if arch == "x86_64":
|
||||
for minor_version in range(16, 3, -1):
|
||||
compat_version = 10, minor_version
|
||||
binary_formats = _mac_binary_formats(compat_version, arch)
|
||||
for binary_format in binary_formats:
|
||||
yield "macosx_{major}_{minor}_{binary_format}".format(
|
||||
major=compat_version[0],
|
||||
minor=compat_version[1],
|
||||
binary_format=binary_format,
|
||||
)
|
||||
else:
|
||||
for minor_version in range(16, 3, -1):
|
||||
compat_version = 10, minor_version
|
||||
binary_format = "universal2"
|
||||
yield "macosx_{major}_{minor}_{binary_format}".format(
|
||||
major=compat_version[0],
|
||||
minor=compat_version[1],
|
||||
binary_format=binary_format,
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _linux_platforms(is_32bit: bool = _32_BIT_INTERPRETER) -> Iterator[str]:
|
||||
linux = _normalize_string(sysconfig.get_platform())
|
||||
if is_32bit:
|
||||
if linux == "linux_x86_64":
|
||||
linux = "linux_i686"
|
||||
elif linux == "linux_aarch64":
|
||||
linux = "linux_armv7l"
|
||||
_, arch = linux.split("_", 1)
|
||||
yield from _manylinux.platform_tags(linux, arch)
|
||||
yield from _musllinux.platform_tags(arch)
|
||||
yield linux
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _generic_platforms() -> Iterator[str]:
|
||||
yield _normalize_string(sysconfig.get_platform())
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def platform_tags() -> Iterator[str]:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Provides the platform tags for this installation.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
if platform.system() == "Darwin":
|
||||
return mac_platforms()
|
||||
elif platform.system() == "Linux":
|
||||
return _linux_platforms()
|
||||
else:
|
||||
return _generic_platforms()
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def interpreter_name() -> str:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Returns the name of the running interpreter.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
name = sys.implementation.name
|
||||
return INTERPRETER_SHORT_NAMES.get(name) or name
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def interpreter_version(*, warn: bool = False) -> str:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Returns the version of the running interpreter.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
version = _get_config_var("py_version_nodot", warn=warn)
|
||||
if version:
|
||||
version = str(version)
|
||||
else:
|
||||
version = _version_nodot(sys.version_info[:2])
|
||||
return version
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _version_nodot(version: PythonVersion) -> str:
|
||||
return "".join(map(str, version))
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def sys_tags(*, warn: bool = False) -> Iterator[Tag]:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Returns the sequence of tag triples for the running interpreter.
|
||||
|
||||
The order of the sequence corresponds to priority order for the
|
||||
interpreter, from most to least important.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
interp_name = interpreter_name()
|
||||
if interp_name == "cp":
|
||||
yield from cpython_tags(warn=warn)
|
||||
else:
|
||||
yield from generic_tags()
|
||||
|
||||
if interp_name == "pp":
|
||||
yield from compatible_tags(interpreter="pp3")
|
||||
else:
|
||||
yield from compatible_tags()
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,136 @@
|
||||
# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
|
||||
# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
|
||||
# for complete details.
|
||||
|
||||
import re
|
||||
from typing import FrozenSet, NewType, Tuple, Union, cast
|
||||
|
||||
from .tags import Tag, parse_tag
|
||||
from .version import InvalidVersion, Version
|
||||
|
||||
BuildTag = Union[Tuple[()], Tuple[int, str]]
|
||||
NormalizedName = NewType("NormalizedName", str)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class InvalidWheelFilename(ValueError):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
An invalid wheel filename was found, users should refer to PEP 427.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class InvalidSdistFilename(ValueError):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
An invalid sdist filename was found, users should refer to the packaging user guide.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
_canonicalize_regex = re.compile(r"[-_.]+")
|
||||
# PEP 427: The build number must start with a digit.
|
||||
_build_tag_regex = re.compile(r"(\d+)(.*)")
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def canonicalize_name(name: str) -> NormalizedName:
|
||||
# This is taken from PEP 503.
|
||||
value = _canonicalize_regex.sub("-", name).lower()
|
||||
return cast(NormalizedName, value)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def canonicalize_version(version: Union[Version, str]) -> str:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
This is very similar to Version.__str__, but has one subtle difference
|
||||
with the way it handles the release segment.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
if isinstance(version, str):
|
||||
try:
|
||||
parsed = Version(version)
|
||||
except InvalidVersion:
|
||||
# Legacy versions cannot be normalized
|
||||
return version
|
||||
else:
|
||||
parsed = version
|
||||
|
||||
parts = []
|
||||
|
||||
# Epoch
|
||||
if parsed.epoch != 0:
|
||||
parts.append(f"{parsed.epoch}!")
|
||||
|
||||
# Release segment
|
||||
# NB: This strips trailing '.0's to normalize
|
||||
parts.append(re.sub(r"(\.0)+$", "", ".".join(str(x) for x in parsed.release)))
|
||||
|
||||
# Pre-release
|
||||
if parsed.pre is not None:
|
||||
parts.append("".join(str(x) for x in parsed.pre))
|
||||
|
||||
# Post-release
|
||||
if parsed.post is not None:
|
||||
parts.append(f".post{parsed.post}")
|
||||
|
||||
# Development release
|
||||
if parsed.dev is not None:
|
||||
parts.append(f".dev{parsed.dev}")
|
||||
|
||||
# Local version segment
|
||||
if parsed.local is not None:
|
||||
parts.append(f"+{parsed.local}")
|
||||
|
||||
return "".join(parts)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def parse_wheel_filename(
|
||||
filename: str,
|
||||
) -> Tuple[NormalizedName, Version, BuildTag, FrozenSet[Tag]]:
|
||||
if not filename.endswith(".whl"):
|
||||
raise InvalidWheelFilename(
|
||||
f"Invalid wheel filename (extension must be '.whl'): {filename}"
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
filename = filename[:-4]
|
||||
dashes = filename.count("-")
|
||||
if dashes not in (4, 5):
|
||||
raise InvalidWheelFilename(
|
||||
f"Invalid wheel filename (wrong number of parts): {filename}"
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
parts = filename.split("-", dashes - 2)
|
||||
name_part = parts[0]
|
||||
# See PEP 427 for the rules on escaping the project name
|
||||
if "__" in name_part or re.match(r"^[\w\d._]*$", name_part, re.UNICODE) is None:
|
||||
raise InvalidWheelFilename(f"Invalid project name: {filename}")
|
||||
name = canonicalize_name(name_part)
|
||||
version = Version(parts[1])
|
||||
if dashes == 5:
|
||||
build_part = parts[2]
|
||||
build_match = _build_tag_regex.match(build_part)
|
||||
if build_match is None:
|
||||
raise InvalidWheelFilename(
|
||||
f"Invalid build number: {build_part} in '{filename}'"
|
||||
)
|
||||
build = cast(BuildTag, (int(build_match.group(1)), build_match.group(2)))
|
||||
else:
|
||||
build = ()
|
||||
tags = parse_tag(parts[-1])
|
||||
return (name, version, build, tags)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def parse_sdist_filename(filename: str) -> Tuple[NormalizedName, Version]:
|
||||
if filename.endswith(".tar.gz"):
|
||||
file_stem = filename[: -len(".tar.gz")]
|
||||
elif filename.endswith(".zip"):
|
||||
file_stem = filename[: -len(".zip")]
|
||||
else:
|
||||
raise InvalidSdistFilename(
|
||||
f"Invalid sdist filename (extension must be '.tar.gz' or '.zip'):"
|
||||
f" {filename}"
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
# We are requiring a PEP 440 version, which cannot contain dashes,
|
||||
# so we split on the last dash.
|
||||
name_part, sep, version_part = file_stem.rpartition("-")
|
||||
if not sep:
|
||||
raise InvalidSdistFilename(f"Invalid sdist filename: {filename}")
|
||||
|
||||
name = canonicalize_name(name_part)
|
||||
version = Version(version_part)
|
||||
return (name, version)
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,504 @@
|
||||
# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
|
||||
# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
|
||||
# for complete details.
|
||||
|
||||
import collections
|
||||
import itertools
|
||||
import re
|
||||
import warnings
|
||||
from typing import Callable, Iterator, List, Optional, SupportsInt, Tuple, Union
|
||||
|
||||
from ._structures import Infinity, InfinityType, NegativeInfinity, NegativeInfinityType
|
||||
|
||||
__all__ = ["parse", "Version", "LegacyVersion", "InvalidVersion", "VERSION_PATTERN"]
|
||||
|
||||
InfiniteTypes = Union[InfinityType, NegativeInfinityType]
|
||||
PrePostDevType = Union[InfiniteTypes, Tuple[str, int]]
|
||||
SubLocalType = Union[InfiniteTypes, int, str]
|
||||
LocalType = Union[
|
||||
NegativeInfinityType,
|
||||
Tuple[
|
||||
Union[
|
||||
SubLocalType,
|
||||
Tuple[SubLocalType, str],
|
||||
Tuple[NegativeInfinityType, SubLocalType],
|
||||
],
|
||||
...,
|
||||
],
|
||||
]
|
||||
CmpKey = Tuple[
|
||||
int, Tuple[int, ...], PrePostDevType, PrePostDevType, PrePostDevType, LocalType
|
||||
]
|
||||
LegacyCmpKey = Tuple[int, Tuple[str, ...]]
|
||||
VersionComparisonMethod = Callable[
|
||||
[Union[CmpKey, LegacyCmpKey], Union[CmpKey, LegacyCmpKey]], bool
|
||||
]
|
||||
|
||||
_Version = collections.namedtuple(
|
||||
"_Version", ["epoch", "release", "dev", "pre", "post", "local"]
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def parse(version: str) -> Union["LegacyVersion", "Version"]:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Parse the given version string and return either a :class:`Version` object
|
||||
or a :class:`LegacyVersion` object depending on if the given version is
|
||||
a valid PEP 440 version or a legacy version.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
try:
|
||||
return Version(version)
|
||||
except InvalidVersion:
|
||||
return LegacyVersion(version)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class InvalidVersion(ValueError):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
An invalid version was found, users should refer to PEP 440.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class _BaseVersion:
|
||||
_key: Union[CmpKey, LegacyCmpKey]
|
||||
|
||||
def __hash__(self) -> int:
|
||||
return hash(self._key)
|
||||
|
||||
# Please keep the duplicated `isinstance` check
|
||||
# in the six comparisons hereunder
|
||||
# unless you find a way to avoid adding overhead function calls.
|
||||
def __lt__(self, other: "_BaseVersion") -> bool:
|
||||
if not isinstance(other, _BaseVersion):
|
||||
return NotImplemented
|
||||
|
||||
return self._key < other._key
|
||||
|
||||
def __le__(self, other: "_BaseVersion") -> bool:
|
||||
if not isinstance(other, _BaseVersion):
|
||||
return NotImplemented
|
||||
|
||||
return self._key <= other._key
|
||||
|
||||
def __eq__(self, other: object) -> bool:
|
||||
if not isinstance(other, _BaseVersion):
|
||||
return NotImplemented
|
||||
|
||||
return self._key == other._key
|
||||
|
||||
def __ge__(self, other: "_BaseVersion") -> bool:
|
||||
if not isinstance(other, _BaseVersion):
|
||||
return NotImplemented
|
||||
|
||||
return self._key >= other._key
|
||||
|
||||
def __gt__(self, other: "_BaseVersion") -> bool:
|
||||
if not isinstance(other, _BaseVersion):
|
||||
return NotImplemented
|
||||
|
||||
return self._key > other._key
|
||||
|
||||
def __ne__(self, other: object) -> bool:
|
||||
if not isinstance(other, _BaseVersion):
|
||||
return NotImplemented
|
||||
|
||||
return self._key != other._key
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class LegacyVersion(_BaseVersion):
|
||||
def __init__(self, version: str) -> None:
|
||||
self._version = str(version)
|
||||
self._key = _legacy_cmpkey(self._version)
|
||||
|
||||
warnings.warn(
|
||||
"Creating a LegacyVersion has been deprecated and will be "
|
||||
"removed in the next major release",
|
||||
DeprecationWarning,
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
def __str__(self) -> str:
|
||||
return self._version
|
||||
|
||||
def __repr__(self) -> str:
|
||||
return f"<LegacyVersion('{self}')>"
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def public(self) -> str:
|
||||
return self._version
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def base_version(self) -> str:
|
||||
return self._version
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def epoch(self) -> int:
|
||||
return -1
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def release(self) -> None:
|
||||
return None
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def pre(self) -> None:
|
||||
return None
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def post(self) -> None:
|
||||
return None
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def dev(self) -> None:
|
||||
return None
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def local(self) -> None:
|
||||
return None
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def is_prerelease(self) -> bool:
|
||||
return False
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def is_postrelease(self) -> bool:
|
||||
return False
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def is_devrelease(self) -> bool:
|
||||
return False
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
_legacy_version_component_re = re.compile(r"(\d+ | [a-z]+ | \.| -)", re.VERBOSE)
|
||||
|
||||
_legacy_version_replacement_map = {
|
||||
"pre": "c",
|
||||
"preview": "c",
|
||||
"-": "final-",
|
||||
"rc": "c",
|
||||
"dev": "@",
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _parse_version_parts(s: str) -> Iterator[str]:
|
||||
for part in _legacy_version_component_re.split(s):
|
||||
part = _legacy_version_replacement_map.get(part, part)
|
||||
|
||||
if not part or part == ".":
|
||||
continue
|
||||
|
||||
if part[:1] in "0123456789":
|
||||
# pad for numeric comparison
|
||||
yield part.zfill(8)
|
||||
else:
|
||||
yield "*" + part
|
||||
|
||||
# ensure that alpha/beta/candidate are before final
|
||||
yield "*final"
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _legacy_cmpkey(version: str) -> LegacyCmpKey:
|
||||
|
||||
# We hardcode an epoch of -1 here. A PEP 440 version can only have a epoch
|
||||
# greater than or equal to 0. This will effectively put the LegacyVersion,
|
||||
# which uses the defacto standard originally implemented by setuptools,
|
||||
# as before all PEP 440 versions.
|
||||
epoch = -1
|
||||
|
||||
# This scheme is taken from pkg_resources.parse_version setuptools prior to
|
||||
# it's adoption of the packaging library.
|
||||
parts: List[str] = []
|
||||
for part in _parse_version_parts(version.lower()):
|
||||
if part.startswith("*"):
|
||||
# remove "-" before a prerelease tag
|
||||
if part < "*final":
|
||||
while parts and parts[-1] == "*final-":
|
||||
parts.pop()
|
||||
|
||||
# remove trailing zeros from each series of numeric parts
|
||||
while parts and parts[-1] == "00000000":
|
||||
parts.pop()
|
||||
|
||||
parts.append(part)
|
||||
|
||||
return epoch, tuple(parts)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
# Deliberately not anchored to the start and end of the string, to make it
|
||||
# easier for 3rd party code to reuse
|
||||
VERSION_PATTERN = r"""
|
||||
v?
|
||||
(?:
|
||||
(?:(?P<epoch>[0-9]+)!)? # epoch
|
||||
(?P<release>[0-9]+(?:\.[0-9]+)*) # release segment
|
||||
(?P<pre> # pre-release
|
||||
[-_\.]?
|
||||
(?P<pre_l>(a|b|c|rc|alpha|beta|pre|preview))
|
||||
[-_\.]?
|
||||
(?P<pre_n>[0-9]+)?
|
||||
)?
|
||||
(?P<post> # post release
|
||||
(?:-(?P<post_n1>[0-9]+))
|
||||
|
|
||||
(?:
|
||||
[-_\.]?
|
||||
(?P<post_l>post|rev|r)
|
||||
[-_\.]?
|
||||
(?P<post_n2>[0-9]+)?
|
||||
)
|
||||
)?
|
||||
(?P<dev> # dev release
|
||||
[-_\.]?
|
||||
(?P<dev_l>dev)
|
||||
[-_\.]?
|
||||
(?P<dev_n>[0-9]+)?
|
||||
)?
|
||||
)
|
||||
(?:\+(?P<local>[a-z0-9]+(?:[-_\.][a-z0-9]+)*))? # local version
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class Version(_BaseVersion):
|
||||
|
||||
_regex = re.compile(r"^\s*" + VERSION_PATTERN + r"\s*$", re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE)
|
||||
|
||||
def __init__(self, version: str) -> None:
|
||||
|
||||
# Validate the version and parse it into pieces
|
||||
match = self._regex.search(version)
|
||||
if not match:
|
||||
raise InvalidVersion(f"Invalid version: '{version}'")
|
||||
|
||||
# Store the parsed out pieces of the version
|
||||
self._version = _Version(
|
||||
epoch=int(match.group("epoch")) if match.group("epoch") else 0,
|
||||
release=tuple(int(i) for i in match.group("release").split(".")),
|
||||
pre=_parse_letter_version(match.group("pre_l"), match.group("pre_n")),
|
||||
post=_parse_letter_version(
|
||||
match.group("post_l"), match.group("post_n1") or match.group("post_n2")
|
||||
),
|
||||
dev=_parse_letter_version(match.group("dev_l"), match.group("dev_n")),
|
||||
local=_parse_local_version(match.group("local")),
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
# Generate a key which will be used for sorting
|
||||
self._key = _cmpkey(
|
||||
self._version.epoch,
|
||||
self._version.release,
|
||||
self._version.pre,
|
||||
self._version.post,
|
||||
self._version.dev,
|
||||
self._version.local,
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
def __repr__(self) -> str:
|
||||
return f"<Version('{self}')>"
|
||||
|
||||
def __str__(self) -> str:
|
||||
parts = []
|
||||
|
||||
# Epoch
|
||||
if self.epoch != 0:
|
||||
parts.append(f"{self.epoch}!")
|
||||
|
||||
# Release segment
|
||||
parts.append(".".join(str(x) for x in self.release))
|
||||
|
||||
# Pre-release
|
||||
if self.pre is not None:
|
||||
parts.append("".join(str(x) for x in self.pre))
|
||||
|
||||
# Post-release
|
||||
if self.post is not None:
|
||||
parts.append(f".post{self.post}")
|
||||
|
||||
# Development release
|
||||
if self.dev is not None:
|
||||
parts.append(f".dev{self.dev}")
|
||||
|
||||
# Local version segment
|
||||
if self.local is not None:
|
||||
parts.append(f"+{self.local}")
|
||||
|
||||
return "".join(parts)
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def epoch(self) -> int:
|
||||
_epoch: int = self._version.epoch
|
||||
return _epoch
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def release(self) -> Tuple[int, ...]:
|
||||
_release: Tuple[int, ...] = self._version.release
|
||||
return _release
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def pre(self) -> Optional[Tuple[str, int]]:
|
||||
_pre: Optional[Tuple[str, int]] = self._version.pre
|
||||
return _pre
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def post(self) -> Optional[int]:
|
||||
return self._version.post[1] if self._version.post else None
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def dev(self) -> Optional[int]:
|
||||
return self._version.dev[1] if self._version.dev else None
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def local(self) -> Optional[str]:
|
||||
if self._version.local:
|
||||
return ".".join(str(x) for x in self._version.local)
|
||||
else:
|
||||
return None
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def public(self) -> str:
|
||||
return str(self).split("+", 1)[0]
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def base_version(self) -> str:
|
||||
parts = []
|
||||
|
||||
# Epoch
|
||||
if self.epoch != 0:
|
||||
parts.append(f"{self.epoch}!")
|
||||
|
||||
# Release segment
|
||||
parts.append(".".join(str(x) for x in self.release))
|
||||
|
||||
return "".join(parts)
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def is_prerelease(self) -> bool:
|
||||
return self.dev is not None or self.pre is not None
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def is_postrelease(self) -> bool:
|
||||
return self.post is not None
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def is_devrelease(self) -> bool:
|
||||
return self.dev is not None
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def major(self) -> int:
|
||||
return self.release[0] if len(self.release) >= 1 else 0
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def minor(self) -> int:
|
||||
return self.release[1] if len(self.release) >= 2 else 0
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def micro(self) -> int:
|
||||
return self.release[2] if len(self.release) >= 3 else 0
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _parse_letter_version(
|
||||
letter: str, number: Union[str, bytes, SupportsInt]
|
||||
) -> Optional[Tuple[str, int]]:
|
||||
|
||||
if letter:
|
||||
# We consider there to be an implicit 0 in a pre-release if there is
|
||||
# not a numeral associated with it.
|
||||
if number is None:
|
||||
number = 0
|
||||
|
||||
# We normalize any letters to their lower case form
|
||||
letter = letter.lower()
|
||||
|
||||
# We consider some words to be alternate spellings of other words and
|
||||
# in those cases we want to normalize the spellings to our preferred
|
||||
# spelling.
|
||||
if letter == "alpha":
|
||||
letter = "a"
|
||||
elif letter == "beta":
|
||||
letter = "b"
|
||||
elif letter in ["c", "pre", "preview"]:
|
||||
letter = "rc"
|
||||
elif letter in ["rev", "r"]:
|
||||
letter = "post"
|
||||
|
||||
return letter, int(number)
|
||||
if not letter and number:
|
||||
# We assume if we are given a number, but we are not given a letter
|
||||
# then this is using the implicit post release syntax (e.g. 1.0-1)
|
||||
letter = "post"
|
||||
|
||||
return letter, int(number)
|
||||
|
||||
return None
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
_local_version_separators = re.compile(r"[\._-]")
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _parse_local_version(local: str) -> Optional[LocalType]:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Takes a string like abc.1.twelve and turns it into ("abc", 1, "twelve").
|
||||
"""
|
||||
if local is not None:
|
||||
return tuple(
|
||||
part.lower() if not part.isdigit() else int(part)
|
||||
for part in _local_version_separators.split(local)
|
||||
)
|
||||
return None
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _cmpkey(
|
||||
epoch: int,
|
||||
release: Tuple[int, ...],
|
||||
pre: Optional[Tuple[str, int]],
|
||||
post: Optional[Tuple[str, int]],
|
||||
dev: Optional[Tuple[str, int]],
|
||||
local: Optional[Tuple[SubLocalType]],
|
||||
) -> CmpKey:
|
||||
|
||||
# When we compare a release version, we want to compare it with all of the
|
||||
# trailing zeros removed. So we'll use a reverse the list, drop all the now
|
||||
# leading zeros until we come to something non zero, then take the rest
|
||||
# re-reverse it back into the correct order and make it a tuple and use
|
||||
# that for our sorting key.
|
||||
_release = tuple(
|
||||
reversed(list(itertools.dropwhile(lambda x: x == 0, reversed(release))))
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
# We need to "trick" the sorting algorithm to put 1.0.dev0 before 1.0a0.
|
||||
# We'll do this by abusing the pre segment, but we _only_ want to do this
|
||||
# if there is not a pre or a post segment. If we have one of those then
|
||||
# the normal sorting rules will handle this case correctly.
|
||||
if pre is None and post is None and dev is not None:
|
||||
_pre: PrePostDevType = NegativeInfinity
|
||||
# Versions without a pre-release (except as noted above) should sort after
|
||||
# those with one.
|
||||
elif pre is None:
|
||||
_pre = Infinity
|
||||
else:
|
||||
_pre = pre
|
||||
|
||||
# Versions without a post segment should sort before those with one.
|
||||
if post is None:
|
||||
_post: PrePostDevType = NegativeInfinity
|
||||
|
||||
else:
|
||||
_post = post
|
||||
|
||||
# Versions without a development segment should sort after those with one.
|
||||
if dev is None:
|
||||
_dev: PrePostDevType = Infinity
|
||||
|
||||
else:
|
||||
_dev = dev
|
||||
|
||||
if local is None:
|
||||
# Versions without a local segment should sort before those with one.
|
||||
_local: LocalType = NegativeInfinity
|
||||
else:
|
||||
# Versions with a local segment need that segment parsed to implement
|
||||
# the sorting rules in PEP440.
|
||||
# - Alpha numeric segments sort before numeric segments
|
||||
# - Alpha numeric segments sort lexicographically
|
||||
# - Numeric segments sort numerically
|
||||
# - Shorter versions sort before longer versions when the prefixes
|
||||
# match exactly
|
||||
_local = tuple(
|
||||
(i, "") if isinstance(i, int) else (NegativeInfinity, i) for i in local
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
return epoch, _release, _pre, _post, _dev, _local
|
||||
File diff suppressed because it is too large
Load Diff
@@ -0,0 +1,329 @@
|
||||
import io
|
||||
import posixpath
|
||||
import zipfile
|
||||
import itertools
|
||||
import contextlib
|
||||
import sys
|
||||
import pathlib
|
||||
|
||||
if sys.version_info < (3, 7):
|
||||
from collections import OrderedDict
|
||||
else:
|
||||
OrderedDict = dict
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
__all__ = ['Path']
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _parents(path):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Given a path with elements separated by
|
||||
posixpath.sep, generate all parents of that path.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> list(_parents('b/d'))
|
||||
['b']
|
||||
>>> list(_parents('/b/d/'))
|
||||
['/b']
|
||||
>>> list(_parents('b/d/f/'))
|
||||
['b/d', 'b']
|
||||
>>> list(_parents('b'))
|
||||
[]
|
||||
>>> list(_parents(''))
|
||||
[]
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return itertools.islice(_ancestry(path), 1, None)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _ancestry(path):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Given a path with elements separated by
|
||||
posixpath.sep, generate all elements of that path
|
||||
|
||||
>>> list(_ancestry('b/d'))
|
||||
['b/d', 'b']
|
||||
>>> list(_ancestry('/b/d/'))
|
||||
['/b/d', '/b']
|
||||
>>> list(_ancestry('b/d/f/'))
|
||||
['b/d/f', 'b/d', 'b']
|
||||
>>> list(_ancestry('b'))
|
||||
['b']
|
||||
>>> list(_ancestry(''))
|
||||
[]
|
||||
"""
|
||||
path = path.rstrip(posixpath.sep)
|
||||
while path and path != posixpath.sep:
|
||||
yield path
|
||||
path, tail = posixpath.split(path)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
_dedupe = OrderedDict.fromkeys
|
||||
"""Deduplicate an iterable in original order"""
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _difference(minuend, subtrahend):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Return items in minuend not in subtrahend, retaining order
|
||||
with O(1) lookup.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
return itertools.filterfalse(set(subtrahend).__contains__, minuend)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class CompleteDirs(zipfile.ZipFile):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
A ZipFile subclass that ensures that implied directories
|
||||
are always included in the namelist.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
@staticmethod
|
||||
def _implied_dirs(names):
|
||||
parents = itertools.chain.from_iterable(map(_parents, names))
|
||||
as_dirs = (p + posixpath.sep for p in parents)
|
||||
return _dedupe(_difference(as_dirs, names))
|
||||
|
||||
def namelist(self):
|
||||
names = super(CompleteDirs, self).namelist()
|
||||
return names + list(self._implied_dirs(names))
|
||||
|
||||
def _name_set(self):
|
||||
return set(self.namelist())
|
||||
|
||||
def resolve_dir(self, name):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
If the name represents a directory, return that name
|
||||
as a directory (with the trailing slash).
|
||||
"""
|
||||
names = self._name_set()
|
||||
dirname = name + '/'
|
||||
dir_match = name not in names and dirname in names
|
||||
return dirname if dir_match else name
|
||||
|
||||
@classmethod
|
||||
def make(cls, source):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Given a source (filename or zipfile), return an
|
||||
appropriate CompleteDirs subclass.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
if isinstance(source, CompleteDirs):
|
||||
return source
|
||||
|
||||
if not isinstance(source, zipfile.ZipFile):
|
||||
return cls(_pathlib_compat(source))
|
||||
|
||||
# Only allow for FastLookup when supplied zipfile is read-only
|
||||
if 'r' not in source.mode:
|
||||
cls = CompleteDirs
|
||||
|
||||
source.__class__ = cls
|
||||
return source
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class FastLookup(CompleteDirs):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
ZipFile subclass to ensure implicit
|
||||
dirs exist and are resolved rapidly.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def namelist(self):
|
||||
with contextlib.suppress(AttributeError):
|
||||
return self.__names
|
||||
self.__names = super(FastLookup, self).namelist()
|
||||
return self.__names
|
||||
|
||||
def _name_set(self):
|
||||
with contextlib.suppress(AttributeError):
|
||||
return self.__lookup
|
||||
self.__lookup = super(FastLookup, self)._name_set()
|
||||
return self.__lookup
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
def _pathlib_compat(path):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
For path-like objects, convert to a filename for compatibility
|
||||
on Python 3.6.1 and earlier.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
try:
|
||||
return path.__fspath__()
|
||||
except AttributeError:
|
||||
return str(path)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class Path:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
A pathlib-compatible interface for zip files.
|
||||
|
||||
Consider a zip file with this structure::
|
||||
|
||||
.
|
||||
├── a.txt
|
||||
└── b
|
||||
├── c.txt
|
||||
└── d
|
||||
└── e.txt
|
||||
|
||||
>>> data = io.BytesIO()
|
||||
>>> zf = zipfile.ZipFile(data, 'w')
|
||||
>>> zf.writestr('a.txt', 'content of a')
|
||||
>>> zf.writestr('b/c.txt', 'content of c')
|
||||
>>> zf.writestr('b/d/e.txt', 'content of e')
|
||||
>>> zf.filename = 'mem/abcde.zip'
|
||||
|
||||
Path accepts the zipfile object itself or a filename
|
||||
|
||||
>>> root = Path(zf)
|
||||
|
||||
From there, several path operations are available.
|
||||
|
||||
Directory iteration (including the zip file itself):
|
||||
|
||||
>>> a, b = root.iterdir()
|
||||
>>> a
|
||||
Path('mem/abcde.zip', 'a.txt')
|
||||
>>> b
|
||||
Path('mem/abcde.zip', 'b/')
|
||||
|
||||
name property:
|
||||
|
||||
>>> b.name
|
||||
'b'
|
||||
|
||||
join with divide operator:
|
||||
|
||||
>>> c = b / 'c.txt'
|
||||
>>> c
|
||||
Path('mem/abcde.zip', 'b/c.txt')
|
||||
>>> c.name
|
||||
'c.txt'
|
||||
|
||||
Read text:
|
||||
|
||||
>>> c.read_text()
|
||||
'content of c'
|
||||
|
||||
existence:
|
||||
|
||||
>>> c.exists()
|
||||
True
|
||||
>>> (b / 'missing.txt').exists()
|
||||
False
|
||||
|
||||
Coercion to string:
|
||||
|
||||
>>> import os
|
||||
>>> str(c).replace(os.sep, posixpath.sep)
|
||||
'mem/abcde.zip/b/c.txt'
|
||||
|
||||
At the root, ``name``, ``filename``, and ``parent``
|
||||
resolve to the zipfile. Note these attributes are not
|
||||
valid and will raise a ``ValueError`` if the zipfile
|
||||
has no filename.
|
||||
|
||||
>>> root.name
|
||||
'abcde.zip'
|
||||
>>> str(root.filename).replace(os.sep, posixpath.sep)
|
||||
'mem/abcde.zip'
|
||||
>>> str(root.parent)
|
||||
'mem'
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
__repr = "{self.__class__.__name__}({self.root.filename!r}, {self.at!r})"
|
||||
|
||||
def __init__(self, root, at=""):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Construct a Path from a ZipFile or filename.
|
||||
|
||||
Note: When the source is an existing ZipFile object,
|
||||
its type (__class__) will be mutated to a
|
||||
specialized type. If the caller wishes to retain the
|
||||
original type, the caller should either create a
|
||||
separate ZipFile object or pass a filename.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
self.root = FastLookup.make(root)
|
||||
self.at = at
|
||||
|
||||
def open(self, mode='r', *args, pwd=None, **kwargs):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Open this entry as text or binary following the semantics
|
||||
of ``pathlib.Path.open()`` by passing arguments through
|
||||
to io.TextIOWrapper().
|
||||
"""
|
||||
if self.is_dir():
|
||||
raise IsADirectoryError(self)
|
||||
zip_mode = mode[0]
|
||||
if not self.exists() and zip_mode == 'r':
|
||||
raise FileNotFoundError(self)
|
||||
stream = self.root.open(self.at, zip_mode, pwd=pwd)
|
||||
if 'b' in mode:
|
||||
if args or kwargs:
|
||||
raise ValueError("encoding args invalid for binary operation")
|
||||
return stream
|
||||
return io.TextIOWrapper(stream, *args, **kwargs)
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def name(self):
|
||||
return pathlib.Path(self.at).name or self.filename.name
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def suffix(self):
|
||||
return pathlib.Path(self.at).suffix or self.filename.suffix
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def suffixes(self):
|
||||
return pathlib.Path(self.at).suffixes or self.filename.suffixes
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def stem(self):
|
||||
return pathlib.Path(self.at).stem or self.filename.stem
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def filename(self):
|
||||
return pathlib.Path(self.root.filename).joinpath(self.at)
|
||||
|
||||
def read_text(self, *args, **kwargs):
|
||||
with self.open('r', *args, **kwargs) as strm:
|
||||
return strm.read()
|
||||
|
||||
def read_bytes(self):
|
||||
with self.open('rb') as strm:
|
||||
return strm.read()
|
||||
|
||||
def _is_child(self, path):
|
||||
return posixpath.dirname(path.at.rstrip("/")) == self.at.rstrip("/")
|
||||
|
||||
def _next(self, at):
|
||||
return self.__class__(self.root, at)
|
||||
|
||||
def is_dir(self):
|
||||
return not self.at or self.at.endswith("/")
|
||||
|
||||
def is_file(self):
|
||||
return self.exists() and not self.is_dir()
|
||||
|
||||
def exists(self):
|
||||
return self.at in self.root._name_set()
|
||||
|
||||
def iterdir(self):
|
||||
if not self.is_dir():
|
||||
raise ValueError("Can't listdir a file")
|
||||
subs = map(self._next, self.root.namelist())
|
||||
return filter(self._is_child, subs)
|
||||
|
||||
def __str__(self):
|
||||
return posixpath.join(self.root.filename, self.at)
|
||||
|
||||
def __repr__(self):
|
||||
return self.__repr.format(self=self)
|
||||
|
||||
def joinpath(self, *other):
|
||||
next = posixpath.join(self.at, *map(_pathlib_compat, other))
|
||||
return self._next(self.root.resolve_dir(next))
|
||||
|
||||
__truediv__ = joinpath
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def parent(self):
|
||||
if not self.at:
|
||||
return self.filename.parent
|
||||
parent_at = posixpath.dirname(self.at.rstrip('/'))
|
||||
if parent_at:
|
||||
parent_at += '/'
|
||||
return self._next(parent_at)
|
||||
@@ -0,0 +1,76 @@
|
||||
import importlib.util
|
||||
import sys
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
class VendorImporter:
|
||||
"""
|
||||
A PEP 302 meta path importer for finding optionally-vendored
|
||||
or otherwise naturally-installed packages from root_name.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
def __init__(self, root_name, vendored_names=(), vendor_pkg=None):
|
||||
self.root_name = root_name
|
||||
self.vendored_names = set(vendored_names)
|
||||
self.vendor_pkg = vendor_pkg or root_name.replace('extern', '_vendor')
|
||||
|
||||
@property
|
||||
def search_path(self):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Search first the vendor package then as a natural package.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
yield self.vendor_pkg + '.'
|
||||
yield ''
|
||||
|
||||
def _module_matches_namespace(self, fullname):
|
||||
"""Figure out if the target module is vendored."""
|
||||
root, base, target = fullname.partition(self.root_name + '.')
|
||||
return not root and any(map(target.startswith, self.vendored_names))
|
||||
|
||||
def load_module(self, fullname):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Iterate over the search path to locate and load fullname.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
root, base, target = fullname.partition(self.root_name + '.')
|
||||
for prefix in self.search_path:
|
||||
try:
|
||||
extant = prefix + target
|
||||
__import__(extant)
|
||||
mod = sys.modules[extant]
|
||||
sys.modules[fullname] = mod
|
||||
return mod
|
||||
except ImportError:
|
||||
pass
|
||||
else:
|
||||
raise ImportError(
|
||||
"The '{target}' package is required; "
|
||||
"normally this is bundled with this package so if you get "
|
||||
"this warning, consult the packager of your "
|
||||
"distribution.".format(**locals())
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
def create_module(self, spec):
|
||||
return self.load_module(spec.name)
|
||||
|
||||
def exec_module(self, module):
|
||||
pass
|
||||
|
||||
def find_spec(self, fullname, path=None, target=None):
|
||||
"""Return a module spec for vendored names."""
|
||||
return (
|
||||
importlib.util.spec_from_loader(fullname, self)
|
||||
if self._module_matches_namespace(fullname) else None
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
def install(self):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
Install this importer into sys.meta_path if not already present.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
if self not in sys.meta_path:
|
||||
sys.meta_path.append(self)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
names = (
|
||||
'packaging', 'pyparsing', 'appdirs', 'jaraco', 'importlib_resources',
|
||||
'more_itertools',
|
||||
)
|
||||
VendorImporter(__name__, names).install()
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user