diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/archive_util.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/archive_util.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..4a7fb9c9e7a0c4a0ca2a3ab608ffab6acf10bb3e --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/archive_util.py @@ -0,0 +1,284 @@ +"""distutils.archive_util + +Utility functions for creating archive files (tarballs, zip files, +that sort of thing).""" + +from __future__ import annotations + +import os +from typing import Literal, overload + +try: + import zipfile +except ImportError: + zipfile = None + + +from ._log import log +from .dir_util import mkpath +from .errors import DistutilsExecError +from .spawn import spawn + +try: + from pwd import getpwnam +except ImportError: + getpwnam = None + +try: + from grp import getgrnam +except ImportError: + getgrnam = None + + +def _get_gid(name): + """Returns a gid, given a group name.""" + if getgrnam is None or name is None: + return None + try: + result = getgrnam(name) + except KeyError: + result = None + if result is not None: + return result[2] + return None + + +def _get_uid(name): + """Returns an uid, given a user name.""" + if getpwnam is None or name is None: + return None + try: + result = getpwnam(name) + except KeyError: + result = None + if result is not None: + return result[2] + return None + + +def make_tarball( + base_name: str, + base_dir: str | os.PathLike[str], + compress: Literal["gzip", "bzip2", "xz"] | None = "gzip", + verbose: bool = False, + owner: str | None = None, + group: str | None = None, +) -> str: + """Create a (possibly compressed) tar file from all the files under + 'base_dir'. + + 'compress' must be "gzip" (the default), "bzip2", "xz", or None. + + 'owner' and 'group' can be used to define an owner and a group for the + archive that is being built. If not provided, the current owner and group + will be used. + + The output tar file will be named 'base_dir' + ".tar", possibly plus + the appropriate compression extension (".gz", ".bz2", ".xz" or ".Z"). + + Returns the output filename. + """ + tar_compression = { + 'gzip': 'gz', + 'bzip2': 'bz2', + 'xz': 'xz', + None: '', + } + compress_ext = {'gzip': '.gz', 'bzip2': '.bz2', 'xz': '.xz'} + + # flags for compression program, each element of list will be an argument + if compress is not None and compress not in compress_ext.keys(): + raise ValueError( + "bad value for 'compress': must be None, 'gzip', 'bzip2', 'xz'" + ) + + archive_name = base_name + '.tar' + archive_name += compress_ext.get(compress, '') + + mkpath(os.path.dirname(archive_name)) + + # creating the tarball + import tarfile # late import so Python build itself doesn't break + + log.info('Creating tar archive') + + uid = _get_uid(owner) + gid = _get_gid(group) + + def _set_uid_gid(tarinfo): + if gid is not None: + tarinfo.gid = gid + tarinfo.gname = group + if uid is not None: + tarinfo.uid = uid + tarinfo.uname = owner + return tarinfo + + tar = tarfile.open(archive_name, f'w|{tar_compression[compress]}') + try: + tar.add(base_dir, filter=_set_uid_gid) + finally: + tar.close() + + return archive_name + + +def make_zipfile( + base_name: str, + base_dir: str | os.PathLike[str], + verbose: bool = False, +) -> str: + """Create a zip file from all the files under 'base_dir'. + + The output zip file will be named 'base_name' + ".zip". Uses either the + "zipfile" Python module (if available) or the InfoZIP "zip" utility + (if installed and found on the default search path). If neither tool is + available, raises DistutilsExecError. Returns the name of the output zip + file. + """ + zip_filename = base_name + ".zip" + mkpath(os.path.dirname(zip_filename)) + + # If zipfile module is not available, try spawning an external + # 'zip' command. + if zipfile is None: + if verbose: + zipoptions = "-r" + else: + zipoptions = "-rq" + + try: + spawn(["zip", zipoptions, zip_filename, base_dir]) + except DistutilsExecError: + # XXX really should distinguish between "couldn't find + # external 'zip' command" and "zip failed". + raise DistutilsExecError( + f"unable to create zip file '{zip_filename}': " + "could neither import the 'zipfile' module nor " + "find a standalone zip utility" + ) + + else: + log.info("creating '%s' and adding '%s' to it", zip_filename, base_dir) + + try: + zip = zipfile.ZipFile(zip_filename, "w", compression=zipfile.ZIP_DEFLATED) + except RuntimeError: + zip = zipfile.ZipFile(zip_filename, "w", compression=zipfile.ZIP_STORED) + + with zip: + if base_dir != os.curdir: + path = os.path.normpath(os.path.join(base_dir, '')) + zip.write(path, path) + log.info("adding '%s'", path) + for dirpath, dirnames, filenames in os.walk(base_dir): + for name in dirnames: + path = os.path.normpath(os.path.join(dirpath, name, '')) + zip.write(path, path) + log.info("adding '%s'", path) + for name in filenames: + path = os.path.normpath(os.path.join(dirpath, name)) + if os.path.isfile(path): + zip.write(path, path) + log.info("adding '%s'", path) + + return zip_filename + + +ARCHIVE_FORMATS = { + 'gztar': (make_tarball, [('compress', 'gzip')], "gzip'ed tar-file"), + 'bztar': (make_tarball, [('compress', 'bzip2')], "bzip2'ed tar-file"), + 'xztar': (make_tarball, [('compress', 'xz')], "xz'ed tar-file"), + 'ztar': (make_tarball, [('compress', 'compress')], "compressed tar file"), + 'tar': (make_tarball, [('compress', None)], "uncompressed tar file"), + 'zip': (make_zipfile, [], "ZIP file"), +} + + +def check_archive_formats(formats): + """Returns the first format from the 'format' list that is unknown. + + If all formats are known, returns None + """ + for format in formats: + if format not in ARCHIVE_FORMATS: + return format + return None + + +@overload +def make_archive( + base_name: str, + format: str, + root_dir: str | os.PathLike[str] | bytes | os.PathLike[bytes] | None = None, + base_dir: str | None = None, + verbose: bool = False, + owner: str | None = None, + group: str | None = None, +) -> str: ... +@overload +def make_archive( + base_name: str | os.PathLike[str], + format: str, + root_dir: str | os.PathLike[str] | bytes | os.PathLike[bytes], + base_dir: str | None = None, + verbose: bool = False, + owner: str | None = None, + group: str | None = None, +) -> str: ... +def make_archive( + base_name: str | os.PathLike[str], + format: str, + root_dir: str | os.PathLike[str] | bytes | os.PathLike[bytes] | None = None, + base_dir: str | None = None, + verbose: bool = False, + owner: str | None = None, + group: str | None = None, +) -> str: + """Create an archive file (eg. zip or tar). + + 'base_name' is the name of the file to create, minus any format-specific + extension; 'format' is the archive format: one of "zip", "tar", "gztar", + "bztar", "xztar", or "ztar". + + 'root_dir' is a directory that will be the root directory of the + archive; ie. we typically chdir into 'root_dir' before creating the + archive. 'base_dir' is the directory where we start archiving from; + ie. 'base_dir' will be the common prefix of all files and + directories in the archive. 'root_dir' and 'base_dir' both default + to the current directory. Returns the name of the archive file. + + 'owner' and 'group' are used when creating a tar archive. By default, + uses the current owner and group. + """ + save_cwd = os.getcwd() + if root_dir is not None: + log.debug("changing into '%s'", root_dir) + base_name = os.path.abspath(base_name) + os.chdir(root_dir) + + if base_dir is None: + base_dir = os.curdir + + kwargs: dict[str, bool | None] = {} + + try: + format_info = ARCHIVE_FORMATS[format] + except KeyError: + raise ValueError(f"unknown archive format '{format}'") + + func = format_info[0] + kwargs.update(format_info[1]) + + if format != 'zip': + kwargs['owner'] = owner + kwargs['group'] = group + + try: + filename = func(base_name, base_dir, **kwargs) + finally: + if root_dir is not None: + log.debug("changing back to '%s'", save_cwd) + os.chdir(save_cwd) + + return filename diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/ccompiler.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/ccompiler.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..58bc6a55e24fd2b0b170e4499c6095e934313827 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/ccompiler.py @@ -0,0 +1,26 @@ +from .compat.numpy import ( # noqa: F401 + _default_compilers, + compiler_class, +) +from .compilers.C import base +from .compilers.C.base import ( + gen_lib_options, + gen_preprocess_options, + get_default_compiler, + new_compiler, + show_compilers, +) +from .compilers.C.errors import CompileError, LinkError + +__all__ = [ + 'CompileError', + 'LinkError', + 'gen_lib_options', + 'gen_preprocess_options', + 'get_default_compiler', + 'new_compiler', + 'show_compilers', +] + + +CCompiler = base.Compiler diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/cmd.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/cmd.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..530cc108d4743ed26fdf0dd7a8eef204d309b5de --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/cmd.py @@ -0,0 +1,535 @@ +"""distutils.cmd + +Provides the Command class, the base class for the command classes +in the distutils.command package. +""" + +from __future__ import annotations + +import logging +import os +import re +import sys +from abc import abstractmethod +from collections.abc import Callable, MutableSequence +from typing import TYPE_CHECKING, Any, ClassVar, TypeVar, overload + +from . import _modified, archive_util, dir_util, file_util, util +from ._log import log +from .errors import DistutilsOptionError + +if TYPE_CHECKING: + # type-only import because of mutual dependence between these classes + from distutils.dist import Distribution + + from typing_extensions import TypeVarTuple, Unpack + + _Ts = TypeVarTuple("_Ts") + +_StrPathT = TypeVar("_StrPathT", bound="str | os.PathLike[str]") +_BytesPathT = TypeVar("_BytesPathT", bound="bytes | os.PathLike[bytes]") +_CommandT = TypeVar("_CommandT", bound="Command") + + +class Command: + """Abstract base class for defining command classes, the "worker bees" + of the Distutils. A useful analogy for command classes is to think of + them as subroutines with local variables called "options". The options + are "declared" in 'initialize_options()' and "defined" (given their + final values, aka "finalized") in 'finalize_options()', both of which + must be defined by every command class. The distinction between the + two is necessary because option values might come from the outside + world (command line, config file, ...), and any options dependent on + other options must be computed *after* these outside influences have + been processed -- hence 'finalize_options()'. The "body" of the + subroutine, where it does all its work based on the values of its + options, is the 'run()' method, which must also be implemented by every + command class. + """ + + # 'sub_commands' formalizes the notion of a "family" of commands, + # eg. "install" as the parent with sub-commands "install_lib", + # "install_headers", etc. The parent of a family of commands + # defines 'sub_commands' as a class attribute; it's a list of + # (command_name : string, predicate : unbound_method | string | None) + # tuples, where 'predicate' is a method of the parent command that + # determines whether the corresponding command is applicable in the + # current situation. (Eg. we "install_headers" is only applicable if + # we have any C header files to install.) If 'predicate' is None, + # that command is always applicable. + # + # 'sub_commands' is usually defined at the *end* of a class, because + # predicates can be unbound methods, so they must already have been + # defined. The canonical example is the "install" command. + sub_commands: ClassVar[ # Any to work around variance issues + list[tuple[str, Callable[[Any], bool] | None]] + ] = [] + + user_options: ClassVar[ + # Specifying both because list is invariant. Avoids mypy override assignment issues + list[tuple[str, str, str]] | list[tuple[str, str | None, str]] + ] = [] + + # -- Creation/initialization methods ------------------------------- + + def __init__(self, dist: Distribution) -> None: + """Create and initialize a new Command object. Most importantly, + invokes the 'initialize_options()' method, which is the real + initializer and depends on the actual command being + instantiated. + """ + # late import because of mutual dependence between these classes + from distutils.dist import Distribution + + if not isinstance(dist, Distribution): + raise TypeError("dist must be a Distribution instance") + if self.__class__ is Command: + raise RuntimeError("Command is an abstract class") + + self.distribution = dist + self.initialize_options() + + # Per-command versions of the global flags, so that the user can + # customize Distutils' behaviour command-by-command and let some + # commands fall back on the Distribution's behaviour. None means + # "not defined, check self.distribution's copy". + + # verbose is largely ignored, but needs to be set for + # backwards compatibility (I think)? + self.verbose = dist.verbose + + # Some commands define a 'self.force' option to ignore file + # timestamps, but methods defined *here* assume that + # 'self.force' exists for all commands. So define it here + # just to be safe. + self.force = None + + # The 'help' flag is just used for command-line parsing, so + # none of that complicated bureaucracy is needed. + self.help = False + + # 'finalized' records whether or not 'finalize_options()' has been + # called. 'finalize_options()' itself should not pay attention to + # this flag: it is the business of 'ensure_finalized()', which + # always calls 'finalize_options()', to respect/update it. + self.finalized = False + + def ensure_finalized(self) -> None: + if not self.finalized: + self.finalize_options() + self.finalized = True + + # Subclasses must define: + # initialize_options() + # provide default values for all options; may be customized by + # setup script, by options from config file(s), or by command-line + # options + # finalize_options() + # decide on the final values for all options; this is called + # after all possible intervention from the outside world + # (command-line, option file, etc.) has been processed + # run() + # run the command: do whatever it is we're here to do, + # controlled by the command's various option values + + @abstractmethod + def initialize_options(self) -> None: + """Set default values for all the options that this command + supports. Note that these defaults may be overridden by other + commands, by the setup script, by config files, or by the + command-line. Thus, this is not the place to code dependencies + between options; generally, 'initialize_options()' implementations + are just a bunch of "self.foo = None" assignments. + + This method must be implemented by all command classes. + """ + raise RuntimeError( + f"abstract method -- subclass {self.__class__} must override" + ) + + @abstractmethod + def finalize_options(self) -> None: + """Set final values for all the options that this command supports. + This is always called as late as possible, ie. after any option + assignments from the command-line or from other commands have been + done. Thus, this is the place to code option dependencies: if + 'foo' depends on 'bar', then it is safe to set 'foo' from 'bar' as + long as 'foo' still has the same value it was assigned in + 'initialize_options()'. + + This method must be implemented by all command classes. + """ + raise RuntimeError( + f"abstract method -- subclass {self.__class__} must override" + ) + + def dump_options(self, header=None, indent=""): + from distutils.fancy_getopt import longopt_xlate + + if header is None: + header = f"command options for '{self.get_command_name()}':" + self.announce(indent + header, level=logging.INFO) + indent = indent + " " + for option, _, _ in self.user_options: + option = option.translate(longopt_xlate) + if option[-1] == "=": + option = option[:-1] + value = getattr(self, option) + self.announce(indent + f"{option} = {value}", level=logging.INFO) + + @abstractmethod + def run(self) -> None: + """A command's raison d'etre: carry out the action it exists to + perform, controlled by the options initialized in + 'initialize_options()', customized by other commands, the setup + script, the command-line, and config files, and finalized in + 'finalize_options()'. All terminal output and filesystem + interaction should be done by 'run()'. + + This method must be implemented by all command classes. + """ + raise RuntimeError( + f"abstract method -- subclass {self.__class__} must override" + ) + + def announce(self, msg: object, level: int = logging.DEBUG) -> None: + log.log(level, msg) + + def debug_print(self, msg: object) -> None: + """Print 'msg' to stdout if the global DEBUG (taken from the + DISTUTILS_DEBUG environment variable) flag is true. + """ + from distutils.debug import DEBUG + + if DEBUG: + print(msg) + sys.stdout.flush() + + # -- Option validation methods ------------------------------------- + # (these are very handy in writing the 'finalize_options()' method) + # + # NB. the general philosophy here is to ensure that a particular option + # value meets certain type and value constraints. If not, we try to + # force it into conformance (eg. if we expect a list but have a string, + # split the string on comma and/or whitespace). If we can't force the + # option into conformance, raise DistutilsOptionError. Thus, command + # classes need do nothing more than (eg.) + # self.ensure_string_list('foo') + # and they can be guaranteed that thereafter, self.foo will be + # a list of strings. + + def _ensure_stringlike(self, option, what, default=None): + val = getattr(self, option) + if val is None: + setattr(self, option, default) + return default + elif not isinstance(val, str): + raise DistutilsOptionError(f"'{option}' must be a {what} (got `{val}`)") + return val + + def ensure_string(self, option: str, default: str | None = None) -> None: + """Ensure that 'option' is a string; if not defined, set it to + 'default'. + """ + self._ensure_stringlike(option, "string", default) + + def ensure_string_list(self, option: str) -> None: + r"""Ensure that 'option' is a list of strings. If 'option' is + currently a string, we split it either on /,\s*/ or /\s+/, so + "foo bar baz", "foo,bar,baz", and "foo, bar baz" all become + ["foo", "bar", "baz"]. + """ + val = getattr(self, option) + if val is None: + return + elif isinstance(val, str): + setattr(self, option, re.split(r',\s*|\s+', val)) + else: + if isinstance(val, list): + ok = all(isinstance(v, str) for v in val) + else: + ok = False + if not ok: + raise DistutilsOptionError( + f"'{option}' must be a list of strings (got {val!r})" + ) + + def _ensure_tested_string(self, option, tester, what, error_fmt, default=None): + val = self._ensure_stringlike(option, what, default) + if val is not None and not tester(val): + raise DistutilsOptionError( + ("error in '%s' option: " + error_fmt) % (option, val) + ) + + def ensure_filename(self, option: str) -> None: + """Ensure that 'option' is the name of an existing file.""" + self._ensure_tested_string( + option, os.path.isfile, "filename", "'%s' does not exist or is not a file" + ) + + def ensure_dirname(self, option: str) -> None: + self._ensure_tested_string( + option, + os.path.isdir, + "directory name", + "'%s' does not exist or is not a directory", + ) + + # -- Convenience methods for commands ------------------------------ + + def get_command_name(self) -> str: + if hasattr(self, 'command_name'): + return self.command_name + else: + return self.__class__.__name__ + + def set_undefined_options( + self, src_cmd: str, *option_pairs: tuple[str, str] + ) -> None: + """Set the values of any "undefined" options from corresponding + option values in some other command object. "Undefined" here means + "is None", which is the convention used to indicate that an option + has not been changed between 'initialize_options()' and + 'finalize_options()'. Usually called from 'finalize_options()' for + options that depend on some other command rather than another + option of the same command. 'src_cmd' is the other command from + which option values will be taken (a command object will be created + for it if necessary); the remaining arguments are + '(src_option,dst_option)' tuples which mean "take the value of + 'src_option' in the 'src_cmd' command object, and copy it to + 'dst_option' in the current command object". + """ + # Option_pairs: list of (src_option, dst_option) tuples + src_cmd_obj = self.distribution.get_command_obj(src_cmd) + src_cmd_obj.ensure_finalized() + for src_option, dst_option in option_pairs: + if getattr(self, dst_option) is None: + setattr(self, dst_option, getattr(src_cmd_obj, src_option)) + + # NOTE: Because distutils is private to Setuptools and not all commands are exposed here, + # not every possible command is enumerated in the signature. + def get_finalized_command(self, command: str, create: bool = True) -> Command: + """Wrapper around Distribution's 'get_command_obj()' method: find + (create if necessary and 'create' is true) the command object for + 'command', call its 'ensure_finalized()' method, and return the + finalized command object. + """ + cmd_obj = self.distribution.get_command_obj(command, create) + cmd_obj.ensure_finalized() + return cmd_obj + + # XXX rename to 'get_reinitialized_command()'? (should do the + # same in dist.py, if so) + @overload + def reinitialize_command( + self, command: str, reinit_subcommands: bool = False + ) -> Command: ... + @overload + def reinitialize_command( + self, command: _CommandT, reinit_subcommands: bool = False + ) -> _CommandT: ... + def reinitialize_command( + self, command: str | Command, reinit_subcommands=False + ) -> Command: + return self.distribution.reinitialize_command(command, reinit_subcommands) + + def run_command(self, command: str) -> None: + """Run some other command: uses the 'run_command()' method of + Distribution, which creates and finalizes the command object if + necessary and then invokes its 'run()' method. + """ + self.distribution.run_command(command) + + def get_sub_commands(self) -> list[str]: + """Determine the sub-commands that are relevant in the current + distribution (ie., that need to be run). This is based on the + 'sub_commands' class attribute: each tuple in that list may include + a method that we call to determine if the subcommand needs to be + run for the current distribution. Return a list of command names. + """ + commands = [] + for cmd_name, method in self.sub_commands: + if method is None or method(self): + commands.append(cmd_name) + return commands + + # -- External world manipulation ----------------------------------- + + def warn(self, msg: object) -> None: + log.warning("warning: %s: %s\n", self.get_command_name(), msg) + + def execute( + self, + func: Callable[[Unpack[_Ts]], object], + args: tuple[Unpack[_Ts]], + msg: object = None, + level: int = 1, + ) -> None: + util.execute(func, args, msg) + + def mkpath(self, name: str, mode: int = 0o777) -> None: + dir_util.mkpath(name, mode) + + @overload + def copy_file( + self, + infile: str | os.PathLike[str], + outfile: _StrPathT, + preserve_mode: bool = True, + preserve_times: bool = True, + link: str | None = None, + level: int = 1, + ) -> tuple[_StrPathT | str, bool]: ... + @overload + def copy_file( + self, + infile: bytes | os.PathLike[bytes], + outfile: _BytesPathT, + preserve_mode: bool = True, + preserve_times: bool = True, + link: str | None = None, + level: int = 1, + ) -> tuple[_BytesPathT | bytes, bool]: ... + def copy_file( + self, + infile: str | os.PathLike[str] | bytes | os.PathLike[bytes], + outfile: str | os.PathLike[str] | bytes | os.PathLike[bytes], + preserve_mode: bool = True, + preserve_times: bool = True, + link: str | None = None, + level: int = 1, + ) -> tuple[str | os.PathLike[str] | bytes | os.PathLike[bytes], bool]: + """Copy a file respecting verbose, dry-run and force flags. (The + former two default to whatever is in the Distribution object, and + the latter defaults to false for commands that don't define it.)""" + return file_util.copy_file( + infile, + outfile, + preserve_mode, + preserve_times, + not self.force, + link, + ) + + def copy_tree( + self, + infile: str | os.PathLike[str], + outfile: str, + preserve_mode: bool = True, + preserve_times: bool = True, + preserve_symlinks: bool = False, + level: int = 1, + ) -> list[str]: + """Copy an entire directory tree respecting verbose, dry-run, + and force flags. + """ + return dir_util.copy_tree( + infile, + outfile, + preserve_mode, + preserve_times, + preserve_symlinks, + not self.force, + ) + + @overload + def move_file( + self, src: str | os.PathLike[str], dst: _StrPathT, level: int = 1 + ) -> _StrPathT | str: ... + @overload + def move_file( + self, src: bytes | os.PathLike[bytes], dst: _BytesPathT, level: int = 1 + ) -> _BytesPathT | bytes: ... + def move_file( + self, + src: str | os.PathLike[str] | bytes | os.PathLike[bytes], + dst: str | os.PathLike[str] | bytes | os.PathLike[bytes], + level: int = 1, + ) -> str | os.PathLike[str] | bytes | os.PathLike[bytes]: + """Move a file respecting dry-run flag.""" + return file_util.move_file(src, dst) + + def spawn( + self, cmd: MutableSequence[str], search_path: bool = True, level: int = 1 + ) -> None: + """Spawn an external command respecting dry-run flag.""" + from distutils.spawn import spawn + + spawn(cmd, search_path) + + @overload + def make_archive( + self, + base_name: str, + format: str, + root_dir: str | os.PathLike[str] | bytes | os.PathLike[bytes] | None = None, + base_dir: str | None = None, + owner: str | None = None, + group: str | None = None, + ) -> str: ... + @overload + def make_archive( + self, + base_name: str | os.PathLike[str], + format: str, + root_dir: str | os.PathLike[str] | bytes | os.PathLike[bytes], + base_dir: str | None = None, + owner: str | None = None, + group: str | None = None, + ) -> str: ... + def make_archive( + self, + base_name: str | os.PathLike[str], + format: str, + root_dir: str | os.PathLike[str] | bytes | os.PathLike[bytes] | None = None, + base_dir: str | None = None, + owner: str | None = None, + group: str | None = None, + ) -> str: + return archive_util.make_archive( + base_name, + format, + root_dir, + base_dir, + owner=owner, + group=group, + ) + + def make_file( + self, + infiles: str | list[str] | tuple[str, ...], + outfile: str | os.PathLike[str] | bytes | os.PathLike[bytes], + func: Callable[[Unpack[_Ts]], object], + args: tuple[Unpack[_Ts]], + exec_msg: object = None, + skip_msg: object = None, + level: int = 1, + ) -> None: + """Special case of 'execute()' for operations that process one or + more input files and generate one output file. Works just like + 'execute()', except the operation is skipped and a different + message printed if 'outfile' already exists and is newer than all + files listed in 'infiles'. If the command defined 'self.force', + and it is true, then the command is unconditionally run -- does no + timestamp checks. + """ + if skip_msg is None: + skip_msg = f"skipping {outfile} (inputs unchanged)" + + # Allow 'infiles' to be a single string + if isinstance(infiles, str): + infiles = (infiles,) + elif not isinstance(infiles, (list, tuple)): + raise TypeError("'infiles' must be a string, or a list or tuple of strings") + + if exec_msg is None: + exec_msg = "generating {} from {}".format(outfile, ', '.join(infiles)) + + # If 'outfile' must be regenerated (either because it doesn't + # exist, is out-of-date, or the 'force' flag is true) then + # perform the action that presumably regenerates it + if self.force or _modified.newer_group(infiles, outfile): + self.execute(func, args, exec_msg, level) + # Otherwise, print the "skip" message + else: + log.debug(skip_msg) diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/core.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/core.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..bd62546bdd9d35dcc46e0b46a46b0c61a43fd0ba --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/core.py @@ -0,0 +1,289 @@ +"""distutils.core + +The only module that needs to be imported to use the Distutils; provides +the 'setup' function (which is to be called from the setup script). Also +indirectly provides the Distribution and Command classes, although they are +really defined in distutils.dist and distutils.cmd. +""" + +from __future__ import annotations + +import os +import sys +import tokenize +from collections.abc import Iterable + +from .cmd import Command +from .debug import DEBUG + +# Mainly import these so setup scripts can "from distutils.core import" them. +from .dist import Distribution +from .errors import ( + CCompilerError, + DistutilsArgError, + DistutilsError, + DistutilsSetupError, +) +from .extension import Extension + +__all__ = ['Distribution', 'Command', 'Extension', 'setup'] + +# This is a barebones help message generated displayed when the user +# runs the setup script with no arguments at all. More useful help +# is generated with various --help options: global help, list commands, +# and per-command help. +USAGE = """\ +usage: %(script)s [global_opts] cmd1 [cmd1_opts] [cmd2 [cmd2_opts] ...] + or: %(script)s --help [cmd1 cmd2 ...] + or: %(script)s --help-commands + or: %(script)s cmd --help +""" + + +def gen_usage(script_name): + script = os.path.basename(script_name) + return USAGE % locals() + + +# Some mild magic to control the behaviour of 'setup()' from 'run_setup()'. +_setup_stop_after = None +_setup_distribution = None + +# Legal keyword arguments for the setup() function +setup_keywords = ( + 'distclass', + 'script_name', + 'script_args', + 'options', + 'name', + 'version', + 'author', + 'author_email', + 'maintainer', + 'maintainer_email', + 'url', + 'license', + 'description', + 'long_description', + 'keywords', + 'platforms', + 'classifiers', + 'download_url', + 'requires', + 'provides', + 'obsoletes', +) + +# Legal keyword arguments for the Extension constructor +extension_keywords = ( + 'name', + 'sources', + 'include_dirs', + 'define_macros', + 'undef_macros', + 'library_dirs', + 'libraries', + 'runtime_library_dirs', + 'extra_objects', + 'extra_compile_args', + 'extra_link_args', + 'swig_opts', + 'export_symbols', + 'depends', + 'language', +) + + +def setup(**attrs): # noqa: C901 + """The gateway to the Distutils: do everything your setup script needs + to do, in a highly flexible and user-driven way. Briefly: create a + Distribution instance; find and parse config files; parse the command + line; run each Distutils command found there, customized by the options + supplied to 'setup()' (as keyword arguments), in config files, and on + the command line. + + The Distribution instance might be an instance of a class supplied via + the 'distclass' keyword argument to 'setup'; if no such class is + supplied, then the Distribution class (in dist.py) is instantiated. + All other arguments to 'setup' (except for 'cmdclass') are used to set + attributes of the Distribution instance. + + The 'cmdclass' argument, if supplied, is a dictionary mapping command + names to command classes. Each command encountered on the command line + will be turned into a command class, which is in turn instantiated; any + class found in 'cmdclass' is used in place of the default, which is + (for command 'foo_bar') class 'foo_bar' in module + 'distutils.command.foo_bar'. The command class must provide a + 'user_options' attribute which is a list of option specifiers for + 'distutils.fancy_getopt'. Any command-line options between the current + and the next command are used to set attributes of the current command + object. + + When the entire command-line has been successfully parsed, calls the + 'run()' method on each command object in turn. This method will be + driven entirely by the Distribution object (which each command object + has a reference to, thanks to its constructor), and the + command-specific options that became attributes of each command + object. + """ + + global _setup_stop_after, _setup_distribution + + # Determine the distribution class -- either caller-supplied or + # our Distribution (see below). + klass = attrs.get('distclass') + if klass: + attrs.pop('distclass') + else: + klass = Distribution + + if 'script_name' not in attrs: + attrs['script_name'] = os.path.basename(sys.argv[0]) + if 'script_args' not in attrs: + attrs['script_args'] = sys.argv[1:] + + # Create the Distribution instance, using the remaining arguments + # (ie. everything except distclass) to initialize it + try: + _setup_distribution = dist = klass(attrs) + except DistutilsSetupError as msg: + if 'name' not in attrs: + raise SystemExit(f"error in setup command: {msg}") + else: + raise SystemExit("error in {} setup command: {}".format(attrs['name'], msg)) + + if _setup_stop_after == "init": + return dist + + # Find and parse the config file(s): they will override options from + # the setup script, but be overridden by the command line. + dist.parse_config_files() + + if DEBUG: + print("options (after parsing config files):") + dist.dump_option_dicts() + + if _setup_stop_after == "config": + return dist + + # Parse the command line and override config files; any + # command-line errors are the end user's fault, so turn them into + # SystemExit to suppress tracebacks. + try: + ok = dist.parse_command_line() + except DistutilsArgError as msg: + raise SystemExit(gen_usage(dist.script_name) + f"\nerror: {msg}") + + if DEBUG: + print("options (after parsing command line):") + dist.dump_option_dicts() + + if _setup_stop_after == "commandline": + return dist + + # And finally, run all the commands found on the command line. + if ok: + return run_commands(dist) + + return dist + + +# setup () + + +def run_commands(dist): + """Given a Distribution object run all the commands, + raising ``SystemExit`` errors in the case of failure. + + This function assumes that either ``sys.argv`` or ``dist.script_args`` + is already set accordingly. + """ + try: + dist.run_commands() + except KeyboardInterrupt: + raise SystemExit("interrupted") + except OSError as exc: + if DEBUG: + sys.stderr.write(f"error: {exc}\n") + raise + else: + raise SystemExit(f"error: {exc}") + + except (DistutilsError, CCompilerError) as msg: + if DEBUG: + raise + else: + raise SystemExit("error: " + str(msg)) + + return dist + + +def run_setup(script_name, script_args: Iterable[str] | None = None, stop_after="run"): + """Run a setup script in a somewhat controlled environment, and + return the Distribution instance that drives things. This is useful + if you need to find out the distribution meta-data (passed as + keyword args from 'script' to 'setup()', or the contents of the + config files or command-line. + + 'script_name' is a file that will be read and run with 'exec()'; + 'sys.argv[0]' will be replaced with 'script' for the duration of the + call. 'script_args' is a list of strings; if supplied, + 'sys.argv[1:]' will be replaced by 'script_args' for the duration of + the call. + + 'stop_after' tells 'setup()' when to stop processing; possible + values: + init + stop after the Distribution instance has been created and + populated with the keyword arguments to 'setup()' + config + stop after config files have been parsed (and their data + stored in the Distribution instance) + commandline + stop after the command-line ('sys.argv[1:]' or 'script_args') + have been parsed (and the data stored in the Distribution) + run [default] + stop after all commands have been run (the same as if 'setup()' + had been called in the usual way + + Returns the Distribution instance, which provides all information + used to drive the Distutils. + """ + if stop_after not in ('init', 'config', 'commandline', 'run'): + raise ValueError(f"invalid value for 'stop_after': {stop_after!r}") + + global _setup_stop_after, _setup_distribution + _setup_stop_after = stop_after + + save_argv = sys.argv.copy() + g = {'__file__': script_name, '__name__': '__main__'} + try: + try: + sys.argv[0] = script_name + if script_args is not None: + sys.argv[1:] = script_args + # tokenize.open supports automatic encoding detection + with tokenize.open(script_name) as f: + code = f.read().replace(r'\r\n', r'\n') + exec(code, g) + finally: + sys.argv = save_argv + _setup_stop_after = None + except SystemExit: + # Hmm, should we do something if exiting with a non-zero code + # (ie. error)? + pass + + if _setup_distribution is None: + raise RuntimeError( + "'distutils.core.setup()' was never called -- " + f"perhaps '{script_name}' is not a Distutils setup script?" + ) + + # I wonder if the setup script's namespace -- g and l -- would be of + # any interest to callers? + # print "_setup_distribution:", _setup_distribution + return _setup_distribution + + +# run_setup () diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/cygwinccompiler.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/cygwinccompiler.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..de89e3cd8402c9b7048c9e456ff67601934f972b --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/cygwinccompiler.py @@ -0,0 +1,31 @@ +from .compilers.C import cygwin +from .compilers.C.cygwin import ( + CONFIG_H_NOTOK, + CONFIG_H_OK, + CONFIG_H_UNCERTAIN, + check_config_h, + get_msvcr, + is_cygwincc, +) + +__all__ = [ + 'CONFIG_H_NOTOK', + 'CONFIG_H_OK', + 'CONFIG_H_UNCERTAIN', + 'CygwinCCompiler', + 'Mingw32CCompiler', + 'check_config_h', + 'get_msvcr', + 'is_cygwincc', +] + + +CygwinCCompiler = cygwin.Compiler +Mingw32CCompiler = cygwin.MinGW32Compiler + + +get_versions = None +""" +A stand-in for the previous get_versions() function to prevent failures +when monkeypatched. See pypa/setuptools#2969. +""" diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/debug.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/debug.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..daf1660f0d821143e388d37532a39ddfd2ca0347 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/debug.py @@ -0,0 +1,5 @@ +import os + +# If DISTUTILS_DEBUG is anything other than the empty string, we run in +# debug mode. +DEBUG = os.environ.get('DISTUTILS_DEBUG') diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/dep_util.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/dep_util.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..09a8a2e126c8bb009dbbe61c5c4bd5e358744996 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/dep_util.py @@ -0,0 +1,14 @@ +import warnings + +from . import _modified + + +def __getattr__(name): + if name not in ['newer', 'newer_group', 'newer_pairwise']: + raise AttributeError(name) + warnings.warn( + "dep_util is Deprecated. Use functions from setuptools instead.", + DeprecationWarning, + stacklevel=2, + ) + return getattr(_modified, name) diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/dir_util.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/dir_util.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..61b4575aa0318029c103f40af179cab20ed179b2 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/dir_util.py @@ -0,0 +1,232 @@ +"""distutils.dir_util + +Utility functions for manipulating directories and directory trees.""" + +import functools +import itertools +import os +import pathlib + +from . import file_util +from ._log import log +from .errors import DistutilsFileError, DistutilsInternalError + + +class SkipRepeatAbsolutePaths(set): + """ + Cache for mkpath. + + In addition to cheapening redundant calls, eliminates redundant + "creating /foo/bar/baz" messages in dry-run mode. + """ + + def __init__(self): + SkipRepeatAbsolutePaths.instance = self + + @classmethod + def clear(cls): + super(cls, cls.instance).clear() + + def wrap(self, func): + @functools.wraps(func) + def wrapper(path, *args, **kwargs): + if path.absolute() in self: + return + result = func(path, *args, **kwargs) + self.add(path.absolute()) + return result + + return wrapper + + +# Python 3.8 compatibility +wrapper = SkipRepeatAbsolutePaths().wrap + + +@functools.singledispatch +@wrapper +def mkpath(name: pathlib.Path, mode=0o777, verbose=True) -> None: + """Create a directory and any missing ancestor directories. + + If the directory already exists (or if 'name' is the empty string, which + means the current directory, which of course exists), then do nothing. + Raise DistutilsFileError if unable to create some directory along the way + (eg. some sub-path exists, but is a file rather than a directory). + If 'verbose' is true, log the directory created. + """ + if verbose and not name.is_dir(): + log.info("creating %s", name) + + try: + name.mkdir(mode=mode, parents=True, exist_ok=True) + except OSError as exc: + raise DistutilsFileError(f"could not create '{name}': {exc.args[-1]}") + + +@mkpath.register +def _(name: str, *args, **kwargs): + return mkpath(pathlib.Path(name), *args, **kwargs) + + +@mkpath.register +def _(name: None, *args, **kwargs): + """ + Detect a common bug -- name is None. + """ + raise DistutilsInternalError(f"mkpath: 'name' must be a string (got {name!r})") + + +def create_tree(base_dir, files, mode=0o777, verbose=True): + """Create all the empty directories under 'base_dir' needed to put 'files' + there. + + 'base_dir' is just the name of a directory which doesn't necessarily + exist yet; 'files' is a list of filenames to be interpreted relative to + 'base_dir'. 'base_dir' + the directory portion of every file in 'files' + will be created if it doesn't already exist. 'mode' and 'verbose' + flags are as for 'mkpath()'. + """ + # First get the list of directories to create + need_dir = set(os.path.join(base_dir, os.path.dirname(file)) for file in files) + + # Now create them + for dir in sorted(need_dir): + mkpath(dir, mode, verbose=verbose) + + +def copy_tree( + src, + dst, + preserve_mode=True, + preserve_times=True, + preserve_symlinks=False, + update=False, + verbose=True, +): + """Copy an entire directory tree 'src' to a new location 'dst'. + + Both 'src' and 'dst' must be directory names. If 'src' is not a + directory, raise DistutilsFileError. If 'dst' does not exist, it is + created with 'mkpath()'. The end result of the copy is that every + file in 'src' is copied to 'dst', and directories under 'src' are + recursively copied to 'dst'. Return the list of files that were + copied or might have been copied, using their output name. The + return value is unaffected by 'update': it is simply + the list of all files under 'src', with the names changed to be + under 'dst'. + + 'preserve_mode' and 'preserve_times' are the same as for + 'copy_file'; note that they only apply to regular files, not to + directories. If 'preserve_symlinks' is true, symlinks will be + copied as symlinks (on platforms that support them!); otherwise + (the default), the destination of the symlink will be copied. + 'update' and 'verbose' are the same as for 'copy_file'. + """ + if not os.path.isdir(src): + raise DistutilsFileError(f"cannot copy tree '{src}': not a directory") + try: + names = os.listdir(src) + except OSError as e: + raise DistutilsFileError(f"error listing files in '{src}': {e.strerror}") + + mkpath(dst, verbose=verbose) + + copy_one = functools.partial( + _copy_one, + src=src, + dst=dst, + preserve_symlinks=preserve_symlinks, + verbose=verbose, + preserve_mode=preserve_mode, + preserve_times=preserve_times, + update=update, + ) + return list(itertools.chain.from_iterable(map(copy_one, names))) + + +def _copy_one( + name, + *, + src, + dst, + preserve_symlinks, + verbose, + preserve_mode, + preserve_times, + update, +): + src_name = os.path.join(src, name) + dst_name = os.path.join(dst, name) + + if name.startswith('.nfs'): + # skip NFS rename files + return + + if preserve_symlinks and os.path.islink(src_name): + link_dest = os.readlink(src_name) + if verbose >= 1: + log.info("linking %s -> %s", dst_name, link_dest) + os.symlink(link_dest, dst_name) + yield dst_name + + elif os.path.isdir(src_name): + yield from copy_tree( + src_name, + dst_name, + preserve_mode, + preserve_times, + preserve_symlinks, + update, + verbose=verbose, + ) + else: + file_util.copy_file( + src_name, + dst_name, + preserve_mode, + preserve_times, + update, + verbose=verbose, + ) + yield dst_name + + +def _build_cmdtuple(path, cmdtuples): + """Helper for remove_tree().""" + for f in os.listdir(path): + real_f = os.path.join(path, f) + if os.path.isdir(real_f) and not os.path.islink(real_f): + _build_cmdtuple(real_f, cmdtuples) + else: + cmdtuples.append((os.remove, real_f)) + cmdtuples.append((os.rmdir, path)) + + +def remove_tree(directory, verbose=True): + """Recursively remove an entire directory tree. + + Any errors are ignored (apart from being reported to stdout if 'verbose' + is true). + """ + if verbose >= 1: + log.info("removing '%s' (and everything under it)", directory) + cmdtuples = [] + _build_cmdtuple(directory, cmdtuples) + for cmd in cmdtuples: + try: + cmd[0](cmd[1]) + # Clear the cache + SkipRepeatAbsolutePaths.clear() + except OSError as exc: + log.warning("error removing %s: %s", directory, exc) + + +def ensure_relative(path): + """Take the full path 'path', and make it a relative path. + + This is useful to make 'path' the second argument to os.path.join(). + """ + drive, path = os.path.splitdrive(path) + if path[0:1] == os.sep: + path = drive + path[1:] + return path diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/dist.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/dist.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..e04e487b58bd75b5b50ccb005c2c3de4cf5038af --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/dist.py @@ -0,0 +1,1384 @@ +"""distutils.dist + +Provides the Distribution class, which represents the module distribution +being built/installed/distributed. +""" + +from __future__ import annotations + +import contextlib +import logging +import os +import pathlib +import re +import sys +import warnings +from collections.abc import Iterable, MutableMapping +from email import message_from_file +from typing import ( + IO, + TYPE_CHECKING, + Any, + ClassVar, + Literal, + TypeVar, + Union, + overload, +) + +from packaging.utils import canonicalize_name, canonicalize_version + +from ._log import log +from .debug import DEBUG +from .errors import ( + DistutilsArgError, + DistutilsClassError, + DistutilsModuleError, + DistutilsOptionError, +) +from .fancy_getopt import FancyGetopt, translate_longopt +from .util import check_environ, rfc822_escape, strtobool + +if TYPE_CHECKING: + from _typeshed import SupportsWrite + from typing_extensions import TypeAlias + + # type-only import because of mutual dependence between these modules + from .cmd import Command + +_CommandT = TypeVar("_CommandT", bound="Command") +_OptionsList: TypeAlias = list[ + Union[tuple[str, Union[str, None], str, int], tuple[str, Union[str, None], str]] +] + + +# Regex to define acceptable Distutils command names. This is not *quite* +# the same as a Python NAME -- I don't allow leading underscores. The fact +# that they're very similar is no coincidence; the default naming scheme is +# to look for a Python module named after the command. +command_re = re.compile(r'^[a-zA-Z]([a-zA-Z0-9_]*)$') + + +def _ensure_list(value: str | Iterable[str], fieldname) -> str | list[str]: + if isinstance(value, str): + # a string containing comma separated values is okay. It will + # be converted to a list by Distribution.finalize_options(). + pass + elif not isinstance(value, list): + # passing a tuple or an iterator perhaps, warn and convert + typename = type(value).__name__ + msg = "Warning: '{fieldname}' should be a list, got type '{typename}'" + msg = msg.format(**locals()) + log.warning(msg) + value = list(value) + return value + + +class Distribution: + """The core of the Distutils. Most of the work hiding behind 'setup' + is really done within a Distribution instance, which farms the work out + to the Distutils commands specified on the command line. + + Setup scripts will almost never instantiate Distribution directly, + unless the 'setup()' function is totally inadequate to their needs. + However, it is conceivable that a setup script might wish to subclass + Distribution for some specialized purpose, and then pass the subclass + to 'setup()' as the 'distclass' keyword argument. If so, it is + necessary to respect the expectations that 'setup' has of Distribution. + See the code for 'setup()', in core.py, for details. + """ + + # 'global_options' describes the command-line options that may be + # supplied to the setup script prior to any actual commands. + # Eg. "./setup.py -n" or "./setup.py --quiet" both take advantage of + # these global options. This list should be kept to a bare minimum, + # since every global option is also valid as a command option -- and we + # don't want to pollute the commands with too many options that they + # have minimal control over. + # The fourth entry for verbose means that it can be repeated. + global_options: ClassVar[_OptionsList] = [ + ('verbose', 'v', "run verbosely (default)", 1), + ('quiet', 'q', "run quietly (turns verbosity off)"), + ('help', 'h', "show detailed help message"), + ('no-user-cfg', None, 'ignore pydistutils.cfg in your home directory'), + ] + + # 'common_usage' is a short (2-3 line) string describing the common + # usage of the setup script. + common_usage: ClassVar[str] = """\ +Common commands: (see '--help-commands' for more) + + setup.py build will build the package underneath 'build/' + setup.py install will install the package +""" + + # options that are not propagated to the commands + display_options: ClassVar[_OptionsList] = [ + ('help-commands', None, "list all available commands"), + ('name', None, "print package name"), + ('version', 'V', "print package version"), + ('fullname', None, "print -"), + ('author', None, "print the author's name"), + ('author-email', None, "print the author's email address"), + ('maintainer', None, "print the maintainer's name"), + ('maintainer-email', None, "print the maintainer's email address"), + ('contact', None, "print the maintainer's name if known, else the author's"), + ( + 'contact-email', + None, + "print the maintainer's email address if known, else the author's", + ), + ('url', None, "print the URL for this package"), + ('license', None, "print the license of the package"), + ('licence', None, "alias for --license"), + ('description', None, "print the package description"), + ('long-description', None, "print the long package description"), + ('platforms', None, "print the list of platforms"), + ('classifiers', None, "print the list of classifiers"), + ('keywords', None, "print the list of keywords"), + ('provides', None, "print the list of packages/modules provided"), + ('requires', None, "print the list of packages/modules required"), + ('obsoletes', None, "print the list of packages/modules made obsolete"), + ] + display_option_names: ClassVar[list[str]] = [ + translate_longopt(x[0]) for x in display_options + ] + + # negative options are options that exclude other options + negative_opt: ClassVar[dict[str, str]] = {'quiet': 'verbose'} + + # -- Creation/initialization methods ------------------------------- + + # Can't Unpack a TypedDict with optional properties, so using Any instead + def __init__(self, attrs: MutableMapping[str, Any] | None = None) -> None: # noqa: C901 + """Construct a new Distribution instance: initialize all the + attributes of a Distribution, and then use 'attrs' (a dictionary + mapping attribute names to values) to assign some of those + attributes their "real" values. (Any attributes not mentioned in + 'attrs' will be assigned to some null value: 0, None, an empty list + or dictionary, etc.) Most importantly, initialize the + 'command_obj' attribute to the empty dictionary; this will be + filled in with real command objects by 'parse_command_line()'. + """ + + # Default values for our command-line options + self.verbose = True + self.help = False + for attr in self.display_option_names: + setattr(self, attr, False) + + # Store the distribution meta-data (name, version, author, and so + # forth) in a separate object -- we're getting to have enough + # information here (and enough command-line options) that it's + # worth it. Also delegate 'get_XXX()' methods to the 'metadata' + # object in a sneaky and underhanded (but efficient!) way. + self.metadata = DistributionMetadata() + for basename in self.metadata._METHOD_BASENAMES: + method_name = "get_" + basename + setattr(self, method_name, getattr(self.metadata, method_name)) + + # 'cmdclass' maps command names to class objects, so we + # can 1) quickly figure out which class to instantiate when + # we need to create a new command object, and 2) have a way + # for the setup script to override command classes + self.cmdclass: dict[str, type[Command]] = {} + + # 'command_packages' is a list of packages in which commands + # are searched for. The factory for command 'foo' is expected + # to be named 'foo' in the module 'foo' in one of the packages + # named here. This list is searched from the left; an error + # is raised if no named package provides the command being + # searched for. (Always access using get_command_packages().) + self.command_packages: str | list[str] | None = None + + # 'script_name' and 'script_args' are usually set to sys.argv[0] + # and sys.argv[1:], but they can be overridden when the caller is + # not necessarily a setup script run from the command-line. + self.script_name: str | os.PathLike[str] | None = None + self.script_args: list[str] | None = None + + # 'command_options' is where we store command options between + # parsing them (from config files, the command-line, etc.) and when + # they are actually needed -- ie. when the command in question is + # instantiated. It is a dictionary of dictionaries of 2-tuples: + # command_options = { command_name : { option : (source, value) } } + self.command_options: dict[str, dict[str, tuple[str, str]]] = {} + + # 'dist_files' is the list of (command, pyversion, file) that + # have been created by any dist commands run so far. This is + # filled regardless of whether the run is dry or not. pyversion + # gives sysconfig.get_python_version() if the dist file is + # specific to a Python version, 'any' if it is good for all + # Python versions on the target platform, and '' for a source + # file. pyversion should not be used to specify minimum or + # maximum required Python versions; use the metainfo for that + # instead. + self.dist_files: list[tuple[str, str, str]] = [] + + # These options are really the business of various commands, rather + # than of the Distribution itself. We provide aliases for them in + # Distribution as a convenience to the developer. + self.packages = None + self.package_data: dict[str, list[str]] = {} + self.package_dir = None + self.py_modules = None + self.libraries = None + self.headers = None + self.ext_modules = None + self.ext_package = None + self.include_dirs = None + self.extra_path = None + self.scripts = None + self.data_files = None + self.password = '' + + # And now initialize bookkeeping stuff that can't be supplied by + # the caller at all. 'command_obj' maps command names to + # Command instances -- that's how we enforce that every command + # class is a singleton. + self.command_obj: dict[str, Command] = {} + + # 'have_run' maps command names to boolean values; it keeps track + # of whether we have actually run a particular command, to make it + # cheap to "run" a command whenever we think we might need to -- if + # it's already been done, no need for expensive filesystem + # operations, we just check the 'have_run' dictionary and carry on. + # It's only safe to query 'have_run' for a command class that has + # been instantiated -- a false value will be inserted when the + # command object is created, and replaced with a true value when + # the command is successfully run. Thus it's probably best to use + # '.get()' rather than a straight lookup. + self.have_run: dict[str, bool] = {} + + # Now we'll use the attrs dictionary (ultimately, keyword args from + # the setup script) to possibly override any or all of these + # distribution options. + + if attrs: + # Pull out the set of command options and work on them + # specifically. Note that this order guarantees that aliased + # command options will override any supplied redundantly + # through the general options dictionary. + options = attrs.get('options') + if options is not None: + del attrs['options'] + for command, cmd_options in options.items(): + opt_dict = self.get_option_dict(command) + for opt, val in cmd_options.items(): + opt_dict[opt] = ("setup script", val) + + if 'licence' in attrs: + attrs['license'] = attrs['licence'] + del attrs['licence'] + msg = "'licence' distribution option is deprecated; use 'license'" + warnings.warn(msg) + + # Now work on the rest of the attributes. Any attribute that's + # not already defined is invalid! + for key, val in attrs.items(): + if hasattr(self.metadata, "set_" + key): + getattr(self.metadata, "set_" + key)(val) + elif hasattr(self.metadata, key): + setattr(self.metadata, key, val) + elif hasattr(self, key): + setattr(self, key, val) + else: + msg = f"Unknown distribution option: {key!r}" + warnings.warn(msg) + + # no-user-cfg is handled before other command line args + # because other args override the config files, and this + # one is needed before we can load the config files. + # If attrs['script_args'] wasn't passed, assume false. + # + # This also make sure we just look at the global options + self.want_user_cfg = True + + if self.script_args is not None: + # Coerce any possible iterable from attrs into a list + self.script_args = list(self.script_args) + for arg in self.script_args: + if not arg.startswith('-'): + break + if arg == '--no-user-cfg': + self.want_user_cfg = False + break + + self.finalize_options() + + def get_option_dict(self, command): + """Get the option dictionary for a given command. If that + command's option dictionary hasn't been created yet, then create it + and return the new dictionary; otherwise, return the existing + option dictionary. + """ + dict = self.command_options.get(command) + if dict is None: + dict = self.command_options[command] = {} + return dict + + def dump_option_dicts(self, header=None, commands=None, indent: str = "") -> None: + from pprint import pformat + + if commands is None: # dump all command option dicts + commands = sorted(self.command_options.keys()) + + if header is not None: + self.announce(indent + header) + indent = indent + " " + + if not commands: + self.announce(indent + "no commands known yet") + return + + for cmd_name in commands: + opt_dict = self.command_options.get(cmd_name) + if opt_dict is None: + self.announce(indent + f"no option dict for '{cmd_name}' command") + else: + self.announce(indent + f"option dict for '{cmd_name}' command:") + out = pformat(opt_dict) + for line in out.split('\n'): + self.announce(indent + " " + line) + + # -- Config file finding/parsing methods --------------------------- + + def find_config_files(self): + """Find as many configuration files as should be processed for this + platform, and return a list of filenames in the order in which they + should be parsed. The filenames returned are guaranteed to exist + (modulo nasty race conditions). + + There are multiple possible config files: + - distutils.cfg in the Distutils installation directory (i.e. + where the top-level Distutils __inst__.py file lives) + - a file in the user's home directory named .pydistutils.cfg + on Unix and pydistutils.cfg on Windows/Mac; may be disabled + with the ``--no-user-cfg`` option + - setup.cfg in the current directory + - a file named by an environment variable + """ + check_environ() + files = [str(path) for path in self._gen_paths() if os.path.isfile(path)] + + if DEBUG: + self.announce("using config files: {}".format(', '.join(files))) + + return files + + def _gen_paths(self): + # The system-wide Distutils config file + sys_dir = pathlib.Path(sys.modules['distutils'].__file__).parent + yield sys_dir / "distutils.cfg" + + # The per-user config file + prefix = '.' * (os.name == 'posix') + filename = prefix + 'pydistutils.cfg' + if self.want_user_cfg: + with contextlib.suppress(RuntimeError): + yield pathlib.Path('~').expanduser() / filename + + # All platforms support local setup.cfg + yield pathlib.Path('setup.cfg') + + # Additional config indicated in the environment + with contextlib.suppress(TypeError): + yield pathlib.Path(os.getenv("DIST_EXTRA_CONFIG")) + + def parse_config_files(self, filenames=None): # noqa: C901 + from configparser import ConfigParser + + # Ignore install directory options if we have a venv + if sys.prefix != sys.base_prefix: + ignore_options = [ + 'install-base', + 'install-platbase', + 'install-lib', + 'install-platlib', + 'install-purelib', + 'install-headers', + 'install-scripts', + 'install-data', + 'prefix', + 'exec-prefix', + 'home', + 'user', + 'root', + ] + else: + ignore_options = [] + + ignore_options = frozenset(ignore_options) + + if filenames is None: + filenames = self.find_config_files() + + if DEBUG: + self.announce("Distribution.parse_config_files():") + + parser = ConfigParser() + for filename in filenames: + if DEBUG: + self.announce(f" reading {filename}") + parser.read(filename, encoding='utf-8') + for section in parser.sections(): + options = parser.options(section) + opt_dict = self.get_option_dict(section) + + for opt in options: + if opt != '__name__' and opt not in ignore_options: + val = parser.get(section, opt) + opt = opt.replace('-', '_') + opt_dict[opt] = (filename, val) + + # Make the ConfigParser forget everything (so we retain + # the original filenames that options come from) + parser.__init__() + + # If there was a "global" section in the config file, use it + # to set Distribution options. + + if 'global' in self.command_options: + for opt, (_src, val) in self.command_options['global'].items(): + alias = self.negative_opt.get(opt) + try: + if alias: + setattr(self, alias, not strtobool(val)) + elif opt in ('verbose',): # ugh! + setattr(self, opt, strtobool(val)) + else: + setattr(self, opt, val) + except ValueError as msg: + raise DistutilsOptionError(msg) + + # -- Command-line parsing methods ---------------------------------- + + def parse_command_line(self): + """Parse the setup script's command line, taken from the + 'script_args' instance attribute (which defaults to 'sys.argv[1:]' + -- see 'setup()' in core.py). This list is first processed for + "global options" -- options that set attributes of the Distribution + instance. Then, it is alternately scanned for Distutils commands + and options for that command. Each new command terminates the + options for the previous command. The allowed options for a + command are determined by the 'user_options' attribute of the + command class -- thus, we have to be able to load command classes + in order to parse the command line. Any error in that 'options' + attribute raises DistutilsGetoptError; any error on the + command-line raises DistutilsArgError. If no Distutils commands + were found on the command line, raises DistutilsArgError. Return + true if command-line was successfully parsed and we should carry + on with executing commands; false if no errors but we shouldn't + execute commands (currently, this only happens if user asks for + help). + """ + # + # We now have enough information to show the Macintosh dialog + # that allows the user to interactively specify the "command line". + # + toplevel_options = self._get_toplevel_options() + + # We have to parse the command line a bit at a time -- global + # options, then the first command, then its options, and so on -- + # because each command will be handled by a different class, and + # the options that are valid for a particular class aren't known + # until we have loaded the command class, which doesn't happen + # until we know what the command is. + + self.commands = [] + parser = FancyGetopt(toplevel_options + self.display_options) + parser.set_negative_aliases(self.negative_opt) + parser.set_aliases({'licence': 'license'}) + args = parser.getopt(args=self.script_args, object=self) + option_order = parser.get_option_order() + logging.getLogger().setLevel(logging.WARN - 10 * self.verbose) + + # for display options we return immediately + if self.handle_display_options(option_order): + return + while args: + args = self._parse_command_opts(parser, args) + if args is None: # user asked for help (and got it) + return + + # Handle the cases of --help as a "global" option, ie. + # "setup.py --help" and "setup.py --help command ...". For the + # former, we show global options (--verbose, --dry-run, etc.) + # and display-only options (--name, --version, etc.); for the + # latter, we omit the display-only options and show help for + # each command listed on the command line. + if self.help: + self._show_help( + parser, display_options=len(self.commands) == 0, commands=self.commands + ) + return + + # Oops, no commands found -- an end-user error + if not self.commands: + raise DistutilsArgError("no commands supplied") + + # All is well: return true + return True + + def _get_toplevel_options(self): + """Return the non-display options recognized at the top level. + + This includes options that are recognized *only* at the top + level as well as options recognized for commands. + """ + return self.global_options + [ + ( + "command-packages=", + None, + "list of packages that provide distutils commands", + ), + ] + + def _parse_command_opts(self, parser, args): # noqa: C901 + """Parse the command-line options for a single command. + 'parser' must be a FancyGetopt instance; 'args' must be the list + of arguments, starting with the current command (whose options + we are about to parse). Returns a new version of 'args' with + the next command at the front of the list; will be the empty + list if there are no more commands on the command line. Returns + None if the user asked for help on this command. + """ + # late import because of mutual dependence between these modules + from distutils.cmd import Command + + # Pull the current command from the head of the command line + command = args[0] + if not command_re.match(command): + raise SystemExit(f"invalid command name '{command}'") + self.commands.append(command) + + # Dig up the command class that implements this command, so we + # 1) know that it's a valid command, and 2) know which options + # it takes. + try: + cmd_class = self.get_command_class(command) + except DistutilsModuleError as msg: + raise DistutilsArgError(msg) + + # Require that the command class be derived from Command -- want + # to be sure that the basic "command" interface is implemented. + if not issubclass(cmd_class, Command): + raise DistutilsClassError( + f"command class {cmd_class} must subclass Command" + ) + + # Also make sure that the command object provides a list of its + # known options. + if not ( + hasattr(cmd_class, 'user_options') + and isinstance(cmd_class.user_options, list) + ): + msg = ( + "command class %s must provide " + "'user_options' attribute (a list of tuples)" + ) + raise DistutilsClassError(msg % cmd_class) + + # If the command class has a list of negative alias options, + # merge it in with the global negative aliases. + negative_opt = self.negative_opt + if hasattr(cmd_class, 'negative_opt'): + negative_opt = negative_opt.copy() + negative_opt.update(cmd_class.negative_opt) + + # Check for help_options in command class. They have a different + # format (tuple of four) so we need to preprocess them here. + if hasattr(cmd_class, 'help_options') and isinstance( + cmd_class.help_options, list + ): + help_options = fix_help_options(cmd_class.help_options) + else: + help_options = [] + + # All commands support the global options too, just by adding + # in 'global_options'. + parser.set_option_table( + self.global_options + cmd_class.user_options + help_options + ) + parser.set_negative_aliases(negative_opt) + (args, opts) = parser.getopt(args[1:]) + if hasattr(opts, 'help') and opts.help: + self._show_help(parser, display_options=False, commands=[cmd_class]) + return + + if hasattr(cmd_class, 'help_options') and isinstance( + cmd_class.help_options, list + ): + help_option_found = 0 + for help_option, _short, _desc, func in cmd_class.help_options: + if hasattr(opts, parser.get_attr_name(help_option)): + help_option_found = 1 + if callable(func): + func() + else: + raise DistutilsClassError( + f"invalid help function {func!r} for help option '{help_option}': " + "must be a callable object (function, etc.)" + ) + + if help_option_found: + return + + # Put the options from the command-line into their official + # holding pen, the 'command_options' dictionary. + opt_dict = self.get_option_dict(command) + for name, value in vars(opts).items(): + opt_dict[name] = ("command line", value) + + return args + + def finalize_options(self) -> None: + """Set final values for all the options on the Distribution + instance, analogous to the .finalize_options() method of Command + objects. + """ + for attr in ('keywords', 'platforms'): + value = getattr(self.metadata, attr) + if value is None: + continue + if isinstance(value, str): + value = [elm.strip() for elm in value.split(',')] + setattr(self.metadata, attr, value) + + def _show_help( + self, parser, global_options=True, display_options=True, commands: Iterable = () + ): + """Show help for the setup script command-line in the form of + several lists of command-line options. 'parser' should be a + FancyGetopt instance; do not expect it to be returned in the + same state, as its option table will be reset to make it + generate the correct help text. + + If 'global_options' is true, lists the global options: + --verbose, --dry-run, etc. If 'display_options' is true, lists + the "display-only" options: --name, --version, etc. Finally, + lists per-command help for every command name or command class + in 'commands'. + """ + # late import because of mutual dependence between these modules + from distutils.cmd import Command + from distutils.core import gen_usage + + if global_options: + if display_options: + options = self._get_toplevel_options() + else: + options = self.global_options + parser.set_option_table(options) + parser.print_help(self.common_usage + "\nGlobal options:") + print() + + if display_options: + parser.set_option_table(self.display_options) + parser.print_help( + "Information display options (just display information, ignore any commands)" + ) + print() + + for command in commands: + if isinstance(command, type) and issubclass(command, Command): + klass = command + else: + klass = self.get_command_class(command) + if hasattr(klass, 'help_options') and isinstance(klass.help_options, list): + parser.set_option_table( + klass.user_options + fix_help_options(klass.help_options) + ) + else: + parser.set_option_table(klass.user_options) + parser.print_help(f"Options for '{klass.__name__}' command:") + print() + + print(gen_usage(self.script_name)) + + def handle_display_options(self, option_order): + """If there were any non-global "display-only" options + (--help-commands or the metadata display options) on the command + line, display the requested info and return true; else return + false. + """ + from distutils.core import gen_usage + + # User just wants a list of commands -- we'll print it out and stop + # processing now (ie. if they ran "setup --help-commands foo bar", + # we ignore "foo bar"). + if self.help_commands: + self.print_commands() + print() + print(gen_usage(self.script_name)) + return 1 + + # If user supplied any of the "display metadata" options, then + # display that metadata in the order in which the user supplied the + # metadata options. + any_display_options = 0 + is_display_option = set() + for option in self.display_options: + is_display_option.add(option[0]) + + for opt, val in option_order: + if val and opt in is_display_option: + opt = translate_longopt(opt) + value = getattr(self.metadata, "get_" + opt)() + if opt in ('keywords', 'platforms'): + print(','.join(value)) + elif opt in ('classifiers', 'provides', 'requires', 'obsoletes'): + print('\n'.join(value)) + else: + print(value) + any_display_options = 1 + + return any_display_options + + def print_command_list(self, commands, header, max_length) -> None: + """Print a subset of the list of all commands -- used by + 'print_commands()'. + """ + print(header + ":") + + for cmd in commands: + klass = self.cmdclass.get(cmd) + if not klass: + klass = self.get_command_class(cmd) + try: + description = klass.description + except AttributeError: + description = "(no description available)" + + print(f" {cmd:<{max_length}} {description}") + + def print_commands(self) -> None: + """Print out a help message listing all available commands with a + description of each. The list is divided into "standard commands" + (listed in distutils.command.__all__) and "extra commands" + (mentioned in self.cmdclass, but not a standard command). The + descriptions come from the command class attribute + 'description'. + """ + import distutils.command + + std_commands = distutils.command.__all__ + is_std = set(std_commands) + + extra_commands = [cmd for cmd in self.cmdclass.keys() if cmd not in is_std] + + max_length = 0 + for cmd in std_commands + extra_commands: + if len(cmd) > max_length: + max_length = len(cmd) + + self.print_command_list(std_commands, "Standard commands", max_length) + if extra_commands: + print() + self.print_command_list(extra_commands, "Extra commands", max_length) + + def get_command_list(self): + """Get a list of (command, description) tuples. + The list is divided into "standard commands" (listed in + distutils.command.__all__) and "extra commands" (mentioned in + self.cmdclass, but not a standard command). The descriptions come + from the command class attribute 'description'. + """ + # Currently this is only used on Mac OS, for the Mac-only GUI + # Distutils interface (by Jack Jansen) + import distutils.command + + std_commands = distutils.command.__all__ + is_std = set(std_commands) + + extra_commands = [cmd for cmd in self.cmdclass.keys() if cmd not in is_std] + + rv = [] + for cmd in std_commands + extra_commands: + klass = self.cmdclass.get(cmd) + if not klass: + klass = self.get_command_class(cmd) + try: + description = klass.description + except AttributeError: + description = "(no description available)" + rv.append((cmd, description)) + return rv + + # -- Command class/object methods ---------------------------------- + + def get_command_packages(self): + """Return a list of packages from which commands are loaded.""" + pkgs = self.command_packages + if not isinstance(pkgs, list): + if pkgs is None: + pkgs = '' + pkgs = [pkg.strip() for pkg in pkgs.split(',') if pkg != ''] + if "distutils.command" not in pkgs: + pkgs.insert(0, "distutils.command") + self.command_packages = pkgs + return pkgs + + def get_command_class(self, command: str) -> type[Command]: + """Return the class that implements the Distutils command named by + 'command'. First we check the 'cmdclass' dictionary; if the + command is mentioned there, we fetch the class object from the + dictionary and return it. Otherwise we load the command module + ("distutils.command." + command) and fetch the command class from + the module. The loaded class is also stored in 'cmdclass' + to speed future calls to 'get_command_class()'. + + Raises DistutilsModuleError if the expected module could not be + found, or if that module does not define the expected class. + """ + klass = self.cmdclass.get(command) + if klass: + return klass + + for pkgname in self.get_command_packages(): + module_name = f"{pkgname}.{command}" + klass_name = command + + try: + __import__(module_name) + module = sys.modules[module_name] + except ImportError: + continue + + try: + klass = getattr(module, klass_name) + except AttributeError: + raise DistutilsModuleError( + f"invalid command '{command}' (no class '{klass_name}' in module '{module_name}')" + ) + + self.cmdclass[command] = klass + return klass + + raise DistutilsModuleError(f"invalid command '{command}'") + + @overload + def get_command_obj( + self, command: str, create: Literal[True] = True + ) -> Command: ... + @overload + def get_command_obj( + self, command: str, create: Literal[False] + ) -> Command | None: ... + def get_command_obj(self, command: str, create: bool = True) -> Command | None: + """Return the command object for 'command'. Normally this object + is cached on a previous call to 'get_command_obj()'; if no command + object for 'command' is in the cache, then we either create and + return it (if 'create' is true) or return None. + """ + cmd_obj = self.command_obj.get(command) + if not cmd_obj and create: + if DEBUG: + self.announce( + "Distribution.get_command_obj(): " + f"creating '{command}' command object" + ) + + klass = self.get_command_class(command) + cmd_obj = self.command_obj[command] = klass(self) + self.have_run[command] = False + + # Set any options that were supplied in config files + # or on the command line. (NB. support for error + # reporting is lame here: any errors aren't reported + # until 'finalize_options()' is called, which means + # we won't report the source of the error.) + options = self.command_options.get(command) + if options: + self._set_command_options(cmd_obj, options) + + return cmd_obj + + def _set_command_options(self, command_obj, option_dict=None): # noqa: C901 + """Set the options for 'command_obj' from 'option_dict'. Basically + this means copying elements of a dictionary ('option_dict') to + attributes of an instance ('command'). + + 'command_obj' must be a Command instance. If 'option_dict' is not + supplied, uses the standard option dictionary for this command + (from 'self.command_options'). + """ + command_name = command_obj.get_command_name() + if option_dict is None: + option_dict = self.get_option_dict(command_name) + + if DEBUG: + self.announce(f" setting options for '{command_name}' command:") + for option, (source, value) in option_dict.items(): + if DEBUG: + self.announce(f" {option} = {value} (from {source})") + try: + bool_opts = [translate_longopt(o) for o in command_obj.boolean_options] + except AttributeError: + bool_opts = [] + try: + neg_opt = command_obj.negative_opt + except AttributeError: + neg_opt = {} + + try: + is_string = isinstance(value, str) + if option in neg_opt and is_string: + setattr(command_obj, neg_opt[option], not strtobool(value)) + elif option in bool_opts and is_string: + setattr(command_obj, option, strtobool(value)) + elif hasattr(command_obj, option): + setattr(command_obj, option, value) + else: + raise DistutilsOptionError( + f"error in {source}: command '{command_name}' has no such option '{option}'" + ) + except ValueError as msg: + raise DistutilsOptionError(msg) + + @overload + def reinitialize_command( + self, command: str, reinit_subcommands: bool = False + ) -> Command: ... + @overload + def reinitialize_command( + self, command: _CommandT, reinit_subcommands: bool = False + ) -> _CommandT: ... + def reinitialize_command( + self, command: str | Command, reinit_subcommands=False + ) -> Command: + """Reinitializes a command to the state it was in when first + returned by 'get_command_obj()': ie., initialized but not yet + finalized. This provides the opportunity to sneak option + values in programmatically, overriding or supplementing + user-supplied values from the config files and command line. + You'll have to re-finalize the command object (by calling + 'finalize_options()' or 'ensure_finalized()') before using it for + real. + + 'command' should be a command name (string) or command object. If + 'reinit_subcommands' is true, also reinitializes the command's + sub-commands, as declared by the 'sub_commands' class attribute (if + it has one). See the "install" command for an example. Only + reinitializes the sub-commands that actually matter, ie. those + whose test predicates return true. + + Returns the reinitialized command object. + """ + from distutils.cmd import Command + + if not isinstance(command, Command): + command_name = command + command = self.get_command_obj(command_name) + else: + command_name = command.get_command_name() + + if not command.finalized: + return command + command.initialize_options() + command.finalized = False + self.have_run[command_name] = False + self._set_command_options(command) + + if reinit_subcommands: + for sub in command.get_sub_commands(): + self.reinitialize_command(sub, reinit_subcommands) + + return command + + # -- Methods that operate on the Distribution ---------------------- + + def announce(self, msg, level: int = logging.INFO) -> None: + log.log(level, msg) + + def run_commands(self) -> None: + """Run each command that was seen on the setup script command line. + Uses the list of commands found and cache of command objects + created by 'get_command_obj()'. + """ + for cmd in self.commands: + self.run_command(cmd) + + # -- Methods that operate on its Commands -------------------------- + + def run_command(self, command: str) -> None: + """Do whatever it takes to run a command (including nothing at all, + if the command has already been run). Specifically: if we have + already created and run the command named by 'command', return + silently without doing anything. If the command named by 'command' + doesn't even have a command object yet, create one. Then invoke + 'run()' on that command object (or an existing one). + """ + # Already been here, done that? then return silently. + if self.have_run.get(command): + return + + log.info("running %s", command) + cmd_obj = self.get_command_obj(command) + cmd_obj.ensure_finalized() + cmd_obj.run() + self.have_run[command] = True + + # -- Distribution query methods ------------------------------------ + + def has_pure_modules(self) -> bool: + return len(self.packages or self.py_modules or []) > 0 + + def has_ext_modules(self) -> bool: + return self.ext_modules and len(self.ext_modules) > 0 + + def has_c_libraries(self) -> bool: + return self.libraries and len(self.libraries) > 0 + + def has_modules(self) -> bool: + return self.has_pure_modules() or self.has_ext_modules() + + def has_headers(self) -> bool: + return self.headers and len(self.headers) > 0 + + def has_scripts(self) -> bool: + return self.scripts and len(self.scripts) > 0 + + def has_data_files(self) -> bool: + return self.data_files and len(self.data_files) > 0 + + def is_pure(self) -> bool: + return ( + self.has_pure_modules() + and not self.has_ext_modules() + and not self.has_c_libraries() + ) + + # -- Metadata query methods ---------------------------------------- + + # If you're looking for 'get_name()', 'get_version()', and so forth, + # they are defined in a sneaky way: the constructor binds self.get_XXX + # to self.metadata.get_XXX. The actual code is in the + # DistributionMetadata class, below. + if TYPE_CHECKING: + # Unfortunately this means we need to specify them manually or not expose statically + def _(self) -> None: + self.get_name = self.metadata.get_name + self.get_version = self.metadata.get_version + self.get_fullname = self.metadata.get_fullname + self.get_author = self.metadata.get_author + self.get_author_email = self.metadata.get_author_email + self.get_maintainer = self.metadata.get_maintainer + self.get_maintainer_email = self.metadata.get_maintainer_email + self.get_contact = self.metadata.get_contact + self.get_contact_email = self.metadata.get_contact_email + self.get_url = self.metadata.get_url + self.get_license = self.metadata.get_license + self.get_licence = self.metadata.get_licence + self.get_description = self.metadata.get_description + self.get_long_description = self.metadata.get_long_description + self.get_keywords = self.metadata.get_keywords + self.get_platforms = self.metadata.get_platforms + self.get_classifiers = self.metadata.get_classifiers + self.get_download_url = self.metadata.get_download_url + self.get_requires = self.metadata.get_requires + self.get_provides = self.metadata.get_provides + self.get_obsoletes = self.metadata.get_obsoletes + + # Default attributes generated in __init__ from self.display_option_names + help_commands: bool + name: str | Literal[False] + version: str | Literal[False] + fullname: str | Literal[False] + author: str | Literal[False] + author_email: str | Literal[False] + maintainer: str | Literal[False] + maintainer_email: str | Literal[False] + contact: str | Literal[False] + contact_email: str | Literal[False] + url: str | Literal[False] + license: str | Literal[False] + licence: str | Literal[False] + description: str | Literal[False] + long_description: str | Literal[False] + platforms: str | list[str] | Literal[False] + classifiers: str | list[str] | Literal[False] + keywords: str | list[str] | Literal[False] + provides: list[str] | Literal[False] + requires: list[str] | Literal[False] + obsoletes: list[str] | Literal[False] + + +class DistributionMetadata: + """Dummy class to hold the distribution meta-data: name, version, + author, and so forth. + """ + + _METHOD_BASENAMES = ( + "name", + "version", + "author", + "author_email", + "maintainer", + "maintainer_email", + "url", + "license", + "description", + "long_description", + "keywords", + "platforms", + "fullname", + "contact", + "contact_email", + "classifiers", + "download_url", + # PEP 314 + "provides", + "requires", + "obsoletes", + ) + + def __init__( + self, path: str | bytes | os.PathLike[str] | os.PathLike[bytes] | None = None + ) -> None: + if path is not None: + self.read_pkg_file(open(path)) + else: + self.name: str | None = None + self.version: str | None = None + self.author: str | None = None + self.author_email: str | None = None + self.maintainer: str | None = None + self.maintainer_email: str | None = None + self.url: str | None = None + self.license: str | None = None + self.description: str | None = None + self.long_description: str | None = None + self.keywords: str | list[str] | None = None + self.platforms: str | list[str] | None = None + self.classifiers: str | list[str] | None = None + self.download_url: str | None = None + # PEP 314 + self.provides: str | list[str] | None = None + self.requires: str | list[str] | None = None + self.obsoletes: str | list[str] | None = None + + def read_pkg_file(self, file: IO[str]) -> None: + """Reads the metadata values from a file object.""" + msg = message_from_file(file) + + def _read_field(name: str) -> str | None: + value = msg[name] + if value and value != "UNKNOWN": + return value + return None + + def _read_list(name): + values = msg.get_all(name, None) + if values == []: + return None + return values + + metadata_version = msg['metadata-version'] + self.name = _read_field('name') + self.version = _read_field('version') + self.description = _read_field('summary') + # we are filling author only. + self.author = _read_field('author') + self.maintainer = None + self.author_email = _read_field('author-email') + self.maintainer_email = None + self.url = _read_field('home-page') + self.license = _read_field('license') + + if 'download-url' in msg: + self.download_url = _read_field('download-url') + else: + self.download_url = None + + self.long_description = _read_field('description') + self.description = _read_field('summary') + + if 'keywords' in msg: + self.keywords = _read_field('keywords').split(',') + + self.platforms = _read_list('platform') + self.classifiers = _read_list('classifier') + + # PEP 314 - these fields only exist in 1.1 + if metadata_version == '1.1': + self.requires = _read_list('requires') + self.provides = _read_list('provides') + self.obsoletes = _read_list('obsoletes') + else: + self.requires = None + self.provides = None + self.obsoletes = None + + def write_pkg_info(self, base_dir: str | os.PathLike[str]) -> None: + """Write the PKG-INFO file into the release tree.""" + with open( + os.path.join(base_dir, 'PKG-INFO'), 'w', encoding='UTF-8' + ) as pkg_info: + self.write_pkg_file(pkg_info) + + def write_pkg_file(self, file: SupportsWrite[str]) -> None: + """Write the PKG-INFO format data to a file object.""" + version = '1.0' + if ( + self.provides + or self.requires + or self.obsoletes + or self.classifiers + or self.download_url + ): + version = '1.1' + + # required fields + file.write(f'Metadata-Version: {version}\n') + file.write(f'Name: {self.get_name()}\n') + file.write(f'Version: {self.get_version()}\n') + + def maybe_write(header, val): + if val: + file.write(f"{header}: {val}\n") + + # optional fields + maybe_write("Summary", self.get_description()) + maybe_write("Home-page", self.get_url()) + maybe_write("Author", self.get_contact()) + maybe_write("Author-email", self.get_contact_email()) + maybe_write("License", self.get_license()) + maybe_write("Download-URL", self.download_url) + maybe_write("Description", rfc822_escape(self.get_long_description() or "")) + maybe_write("Keywords", ",".join(self.get_keywords())) + + self._write_list(file, 'Platform', self.get_platforms()) + self._write_list(file, 'Classifier', self.get_classifiers()) + + # PEP 314 + self._write_list(file, 'Requires', self.get_requires()) + self._write_list(file, 'Provides', self.get_provides()) + self._write_list(file, 'Obsoletes', self.get_obsoletes()) + + def _write_list(self, file, name, values): + values = values or [] + for value in values: + file.write(f'{name}: {value}\n') + + # -- Metadata query methods ---------------------------------------- + + def get_name(self) -> str: + return self.name or "UNKNOWN" + + def get_version(self) -> str: + return self.version or "0.0.0" + + def get_fullname(self) -> str: + return self._fullname(self.get_name(), self.get_version()) + + @staticmethod + def _fullname(name: str, version: str) -> str: + """ + >>> DistributionMetadata._fullname('setup.tools', '1.0-2') + 'setup_tools-1.0.post2' + >>> DistributionMetadata._fullname('setup-tools', '1.2post2') + 'setup_tools-1.2.post2' + >>> DistributionMetadata._fullname('setup-tools', '1.0-r2') + 'setup_tools-1.0.post2' + >>> DistributionMetadata._fullname('setup.tools', '1.0.post') + 'setup_tools-1.0.post0' + >>> DistributionMetadata._fullname('setup.tools', '1.0+ubuntu-1') + 'setup_tools-1.0+ubuntu.1' + """ + return "{}-{}".format( + canonicalize_name(name).replace('-', '_'), + canonicalize_version(version, strip_trailing_zero=False), + ) + + def get_author(self) -> str | None: + return self.author + + def get_author_email(self) -> str | None: + return self.author_email + + def get_maintainer(self) -> str | None: + return self.maintainer + + def get_maintainer_email(self) -> str | None: + return self.maintainer_email + + def get_contact(self) -> str | None: + return self.maintainer or self.author + + def get_contact_email(self) -> str | None: + return self.maintainer_email or self.author_email + + def get_url(self) -> str | None: + return self.url + + def get_license(self) -> str | None: + return self.license + + get_licence = get_license + + def get_description(self) -> str | None: + return self.description + + def get_long_description(self) -> str | None: + return self.long_description + + def get_keywords(self) -> str | list[str]: + return self.keywords or [] + + def set_keywords(self, value: str | Iterable[str]) -> None: + self.keywords = _ensure_list(value, 'keywords') + + def get_platforms(self) -> str | list[str] | None: + return self.platforms + + def set_platforms(self, value: str | Iterable[str]) -> None: + self.platforms = _ensure_list(value, 'platforms') + + def get_classifiers(self) -> str | list[str]: + return self.classifiers or [] + + def set_classifiers(self, value: str | Iterable[str]) -> None: + self.classifiers = _ensure_list(value, 'classifiers') + + def get_download_url(self) -> str | None: + return self.download_url + + # PEP 314 + def get_requires(self) -> str | list[str]: + return self.requires or [] + + def set_requires(self, value: Iterable[str]) -> None: + import distutils.versionpredicate + + for v in value: + distutils.versionpredicate.VersionPredicate(v) + self.requires = list(value) + + def get_provides(self) -> str | list[str]: + return self.provides or [] + + def set_provides(self, value: Iterable[str]) -> None: + value = [v.strip() for v in value] + for v in value: + import distutils.versionpredicate + + distutils.versionpredicate.split_provision(v) + self.provides = value + + def get_obsoletes(self) -> str | list[str]: + return self.obsoletes or [] + + def set_obsoletes(self, value: Iterable[str]) -> None: + import distutils.versionpredicate + + for v in value: + distutils.versionpredicate.VersionPredicate(v) + self.obsoletes = list(value) + + +def fix_help_options(options): + """Convert a 4-tuple 'help_options' list as found in various command + classes to the 3-tuple form required by FancyGetopt. + """ + return [opt[0:3] for opt in options] diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/errors.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/errors.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..409d21faa2caeb8a53fed10e4266f7cccc764d23 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/errors.py @@ -0,0 +1,108 @@ +""" +Exceptions used by the Distutils modules. + +Distutils modules may raise these or standard exceptions, +including :exc:`SystemExit`. +""" + +# compiler exceptions aliased for compatibility +from .compilers.C.errors import CompileError as CompileError +from .compilers.C.errors import Error as _Error +from .compilers.C.errors import LibError as LibError +from .compilers.C.errors import LinkError as LinkError +from .compilers.C.errors import PreprocessError as PreprocessError +from .compilers.C.errors import UnknownFileType as _UnknownFileType + +CCompilerError = _Error +UnknownFileError = _UnknownFileType + + +class DistutilsError(Exception): + """The root of all Distutils evil.""" + + pass + + +class DistutilsModuleError(DistutilsError): + """Unable to load an expected module, or to find an expected class + within some module (in particular, command modules and classes).""" + + pass + + +class DistutilsClassError(DistutilsError): + """Some command class (or possibly distribution class, if anyone + feels a need to subclass Distribution) is found not to be holding + up its end of the bargain, ie. implementing some part of the + "command "interface.""" + + pass + + +class DistutilsGetoptError(DistutilsError): + """The option table provided to 'fancy_getopt()' is bogus.""" + + pass + + +class DistutilsArgError(DistutilsError): + """Raised by fancy_getopt in response to getopt.error -- ie. an + error in the command line usage.""" + + pass + + +class DistutilsFileError(DistutilsError): + """Any problems in the filesystem: expected file not found, etc. + Typically this is for problems that we detect before OSError + could be raised.""" + + pass + + +class DistutilsOptionError(DistutilsError): + """Syntactic/semantic errors in command options, such as use of + mutually conflicting options, or inconsistent options, + badly-spelled values, etc. No distinction is made between option + values originating in the setup script, the command line, config + files, or what-have-you -- but if we *know* something originated in + the setup script, we'll raise DistutilsSetupError instead.""" + + pass + + +class DistutilsSetupError(DistutilsError): + """For errors that can be definitely blamed on the setup script, + such as invalid keyword arguments to 'setup()'.""" + + pass + + +class DistutilsPlatformError(DistutilsError): + """We don't know how to do something on the current platform (but + we do know how to do it on some platform) -- eg. trying to compile + C files on a platform not supported by a CCompiler subclass.""" + + pass + + +class DistutilsExecError(DistutilsError): + """Any problems executing an external program (such as the C + compiler, when compiling C files).""" + + pass + + +class DistutilsInternalError(DistutilsError): + """Internal inconsistencies or impossibilities (obviously, this + should never be seen if the code is working!).""" + + pass + + +class DistutilsTemplateError(DistutilsError): + """Syntax error in a file list template.""" + + +class DistutilsByteCompileError(DistutilsError): + """Byte compile error.""" diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/extension.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/extension.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..f51411266e4047275280d883b75e7103af21faef --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/extension.py @@ -0,0 +1,258 @@ +"""distutils.extension + +Provides the Extension class, used to describe C/C++ extension +modules in setup scripts.""" + +from __future__ import annotations + +import os +import warnings +from collections.abc import Iterable + +# This class is really only used by the "build_ext" command, so it might +# make sense to put it in distutils.command.build_ext. However, that +# module is already big enough, and I want to make this class a bit more +# complex to simplify some common cases ("foo" module in "foo.c") and do +# better error-checking ("foo.c" actually exists). +# +# Also, putting this in build_ext.py means every setup script would have to +# import that large-ish module (indirectly, through distutils.core) in +# order to do anything. + + +class Extension: + """Just a collection of attributes that describes an extension + module and everything needed to build it (hopefully in a portable + way, but there are hooks that let you be as unportable as you need). + + Instance attributes: + name : string + the full name of the extension, including any packages -- ie. + *not* a filename or pathname, but Python dotted name + sources : Iterable[string | os.PathLike] + iterable of source filenames (except strings, which could be misinterpreted + as a single filename), relative to the distribution root (where the setup + script lives), in Unix form (slash-separated) for portability. Can be any + non-string iterable (list, tuple, set, etc.) containing strings or + PathLike objects. Source files may be C, C++, SWIG (.i), platform-specific + resource files, or whatever else is recognized by the "build_ext" command + as source for a Python extension. + include_dirs : [string] + list of directories to search for C/C++ header files (in Unix + form for portability) + define_macros : [(name : string, value : string|None)] + list of macros to define; each macro is defined using a 2-tuple, + where 'value' is either the string to define it to or None to + define it without a particular value (equivalent of "#define + FOO" in source or -DFOO on Unix C compiler command line) + undef_macros : [string] + list of macros to undefine explicitly + library_dirs : [string] + list of directories to search for C/C++ libraries at link time + libraries : [string] + list of library names (not filenames or paths) to link against + runtime_library_dirs : [string] + list of directories to search for C/C++ libraries at run time + (for shared extensions, this is when the extension is loaded) + extra_objects : [string] + list of extra files to link with (eg. object files not implied + by 'sources', static library that must be explicitly specified, + binary resource files, etc.) + extra_compile_args : [string] + any extra platform- and compiler-specific information to use + when compiling the source files in 'sources'. For platforms and + compilers where "command line" makes sense, this is typically a + list of command-line arguments, but for other platforms it could + be anything. + extra_link_args : [string] + any extra platform- and compiler-specific information to use + when linking object files together to create the extension (or + to create a new static Python interpreter). Similar + interpretation as for 'extra_compile_args'. + export_symbols : [string] + list of symbols to be exported from a shared extension. Not + used on all platforms, and not generally necessary for Python + extensions, which typically export exactly one symbol: "init" + + extension_name. + swig_opts : [string] + any extra options to pass to SWIG if a source file has the .i + extension. + depends : [string] + list of files that the extension depends on + language : string + extension language (i.e. "c", "c++", "objc"). Will be detected + from the source extensions if not provided. + optional : boolean + specifies that a build failure in the extension should not abort the + build process, but simply not install the failing extension. + """ + + # When adding arguments to this constructor, be sure to update + # setup_keywords in core.py. + def __init__( + self, + name: str, + sources: Iterable[str | os.PathLike[str]], + include_dirs: list[str] | None = None, + define_macros: list[tuple[str, str | None]] | None = None, + undef_macros: list[str] | None = None, + library_dirs: list[str] | None = None, + libraries: list[str] | None = None, + runtime_library_dirs: list[str] | None = None, + extra_objects: list[str] | None = None, + extra_compile_args: list[str] | None = None, + extra_link_args: list[str] | None = None, + export_symbols: list[str] | None = None, + swig_opts: list[str] | None = None, + depends: list[str] | None = None, + language: str | None = None, + optional: bool | None = None, + **kw, # To catch unknown keywords + ): + if not isinstance(name, str): + raise TypeError("'name' must be a string") + + # handle the string case first; since strings are iterable, disallow them + if isinstance(sources, str): + raise TypeError( + "'sources' must be an iterable of strings or PathLike objects, not a string" + ) + + # now we check if it's iterable and contains valid types + try: + self.sources = list(map(os.fspath, sources)) + except TypeError: + raise TypeError( + "'sources' must be an iterable of strings or PathLike objects" + ) + + self.name = name + self.include_dirs = include_dirs or [] + self.define_macros = define_macros or [] + self.undef_macros = undef_macros or [] + self.library_dirs = library_dirs or [] + self.libraries = libraries or [] + self.runtime_library_dirs = runtime_library_dirs or [] + self.extra_objects = extra_objects or [] + self.extra_compile_args = extra_compile_args or [] + self.extra_link_args = extra_link_args or [] + self.export_symbols = export_symbols or [] + self.swig_opts = swig_opts or [] + self.depends = depends or [] + self.language = language + self.optional = optional + + # If there are unknown keyword options, warn about them + if len(kw) > 0: + options = [repr(option) for option in kw] + options = ', '.join(sorted(options)) + msg = f"Unknown Extension options: {options}" + warnings.warn(msg) + + def __repr__(self): + return f'<{self.__class__.__module__}.{self.__class__.__qualname__}({self.name!r}) at {id(self):#x}>' + + +def read_setup_file(filename): # noqa: C901 + """Reads a Setup file and returns Extension instances.""" + from distutils.sysconfig import _variable_rx, expand_makefile_vars, parse_makefile + from distutils.text_file import TextFile + from distutils.util import split_quoted + + # First pass over the file to gather "VAR = VALUE" assignments. + vars = parse_makefile(filename) + + # Second pass to gobble up the real content: lines of the form + # ... [ ...] [ ...] [ ...] + file = TextFile( + filename, + strip_comments=True, + skip_blanks=True, + join_lines=True, + lstrip_ws=True, + rstrip_ws=True, + ) + try: + extensions = [] + + while True: + line = file.readline() + if line is None: # eof + break + if _variable_rx.match(line): # VAR=VALUE, handled in first pass + continue + + if line[0] == line[-1] == "*": + file.warn(f"'{line}' lines not handled yet") + continue + + line = expand_makefile_vars(line, vars) + words = split_quoted(line) + + # NB. this parses a slightly different syntax than the old + # makesetup script: here, there must be exactly one extension per + # line, and it must be the first word of the line. I have no idea + # why the old syntax supported multiple extensions per line, as + # they all wind up being the same. + + module = words[0] + ext = Extension(module, []) + append_next_word = None + + for word in words[1:]: + if append_next_word is not None: + append_next_word.append(word) + append_next_word = None + continue + + suffix = os.path.splitext(word)[1] + switch = word[0:2] + value = word[2:] + + if suffix in (".c", ".cc", ".cpp", ".cxx", ".c++", ".m", ".mm"): + # hmm, should we do something about C vs. C++ sources? + # or leave it up to the CCompiler implementation to + # worry about? + ext.sources.append(word) + elif switch == "-I": + ext.include_dirs.append(value) + elif switch == "-D": + equals = value.find("=") + if equals == -1: # bare "-DFOO" -- no value + ext.define_macros.append((value, None)) + else: # "-DFOO=blah" + ext.define_macros.append((value[0:equals], value[equals + 2 :])) + elif switch == "-U": + ext.undef_macros.append(value) + elif switch == "-C": # only here 'cause makesetup has it! + ext.extra_compile_args.append(word) + elif switch == "-l": + ext.libraries.append(value) + elif switch == "-L": + ext.library_dirs.append(value) + elif switch == "-R": + ext.runtime_library_dirs.append(value) + elif word == "-rpath": + append_next_word = ext.runtime_library_dirs + elif word == "-Xlinker": + append_next_word = ext.extra_link_args + elif word == "-Xcompiler": + append_next_word = ext.extra_compile_args + elif switch == "-u": + ext.extra_link_args.append(word) + if not value: + append_next_word = ext.extra_link_args + elif suffix in (".a", ".so", ".sl", ".o", ".dylib"): + # NB. a really faithful emulation of makesetup would + # append a .o file to extra_objects only if it + # had a slash in it; otherwise, it would s/.o/.c/ + # and append it to sources. Hmmmm. + ext.extra_objects.append(word) + else: + file.warn(f"unrecognized argument '{word}'") + + extensions.append(ext) + finally: + file.close() + + return extensions diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/fancy_getopt.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/fancy_getopt.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..1a1d3a05da544b98ff84d03ecbee1185b2eb45f7 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/fancy_getopt.py @@ -0,0 +1,471 @@ +"""distutils.fancy_getopt + +Wrapper around the standard getopt module that provides the following +additional features: + * short and long options are tied together + * options have help strings, so fancy_getopt could potentially + create a complete usage summary + * options set attributes of a passed-in object +""" + +from __future__ import annotations + +import getopt +import re +import string +import sys +from collections.abc import Sequence +from typing import Any + +from .errors import DistutilsArgError, DistutilsGetoptError + +# Much like command_re in distutils.core, this is close to but not quite +# the same as a Python NAME -- except, in the spirit of most GNU +# utilities, we use '-' in place of '_'. (The spirit of LISP lives on!) +# The similarities to NAME are again not a coincidence... +longopt_pat = r'[a-zA-Z](?:[a-zA-Z0-9-]*)' +longopt_re = re.compile(rf'^{longopt_pat}$') + +# For recognizing "negative alias" options, eg. "quiet=!verbose" +neg_alias_re = re.compile(f"^({longopt_pat})=!({longopt_pat})$") + +# This is used to translate long options to legitimate Python identifiers +# (for use as attributes of some object). +longopt_xlate = str.maketrans('-', '_') + + +class FancyGetopt: + """Wrapper around the standard 'getopt()' module that provides some + handy extra functionality: + * short and long options are tied together + * options have help strings, and help text can be assembled + from them + * options set attributes of a passed-in object + * boolean options can have "negative aliases" -- eg. if + --quiet is the "negative alias" of --verbose, then "--quiet" + on the command line sets 'verbose' to false + """ + + def __init__(self, option_table=None): + # The option table is (currently) a list of tuples. The + # tuples may have 3 or four values: + # (long_option, short_option, help_string [, repeatable]) + # if an option takes an argument, its long_option should have '=' + # appended; short_option should just be a single character, no ':' + # in any case. If a long_option doesn't have a corresponding + # short_option, short_option should be None. All option tuples + # must have long options. + self.option_table = option_table + + # 'option_index' maps long option names to entries in the option + # table (ie. those 3-tuples). + self.option_index = {} + if self.option_table: + self._build_index() + + # 'alias' records (duh) alias options; {'foo': 'bar'} means + # --foo is an alias for --bar + self.alias = {} + + # 'negative_alias' keeps track of options that are the boolean + # opposite of some other option + self.negative_alias = {} + + # These keep track of the information in the option table. We + # don't actually populate these structures until we're ready to + # parse the command-line, since the 'option_table' passed in here + # isn't necessarily the final word. + self.short_opts = [] + self.long_opts = [] + self.short2long = {} + self.attr_name = {} + self.takes_arg = {} + + # And 'option_order' is filled up in 'getopt()'; it records the + # original order of options (and their values) on the command-line, + # but expands short options, converts aliases, etc. + self.option_order = [] + + def _build_index(self): + self.option_index.clear() + for option in self.option_table: + self.option_index[option[0]] = option + + def set_option_table(self, option_table): + self.option_table = option_table + self._build_index() + + def add_option(self, long_option, short_option=None, help_string=None): + if long_option in self.option_index: + raise DistutilsGetoptError( + f"option conflict: already an option '{long_option}'" + ) + else: + option = (long_option, short_option, help_string) + self.option_table.append(option) + self.option_index[long_option] = option + + def has_option(self, long_option): + """Return true if the option table for this parser has an + option with long name 'long_option'.""" + return long_option in self.option_index + + def get_attr_name(self, long_option): + """Translate long option name 'long_option' to the form it + has as an attribute of some object: ie., translate hyphens + to underscores.""" + return long_option.translate(longopt_xlate) + + def _check_alias_dict(self, aliases, what): + assert isinstance(aliases, dict) + for alias, opt in aliases.items(): + if alias not in self.option_index: + raise DistutilsGetoptError( + f"invalid {what} '{alias}': option '{alias}' not defined" + ) + if opt not in self.option_index: + raise DistutilsGetoptError( + f"invalid {what} '{alias}': aliased option '{opt}' not defined" + ) + + def set_aliases(self, alias): + """Set the aliases for this option parser.""" + self._check_alias_dict(alias, "alias") + self.alias = alias + + def set_negative_aliases(self, negative_alias): + """Set the negative aliases for this option parser. + 'negative_alias' should be a dictionary mapping option names to + option names, both the key and value must already be defined + in the option table.""" + self._check_alias_dict(negative_alias, "negative alias") + self.negative_alias = negative_alias + + def _grok_option_table(self): # noqa: C901 + """Populate the various data structures that keep tabs on the + option table. Called by 'getopt()' before it can do anything + worthwhile. + """ + self.long_opts = [] + self.short_opts = [] + self.short2long.clear() + self.repeat = {} + + for option in self.option_table: + if len(option) == 3: + long, short, help = option + repeat = 0 + elif len(option) == 4: + long, short, help, repeat = option + else: + # the option table is part of the code, so simply + # assert that it is correct + raise ValueError(f"invalid option tuple: {option!r}") + + # Type- and value-check the option names + if not isinstance(long, str) or len(long) < 2: + raise DistutilsGetoptError( + f"invalid long option '{long}': must be a string of length >= 2" + ) + + if not ((short is None) or (isinstance(short, str) and len(short) == 1)): + raise DistutilsGetoptError( + f"invalid short option '{short}': must a single character or None" + ) + + self.repeat[long] = repeat + self.long_opts.append(long) + + if long[-1] == '=': # option takes an argument? + if short: + short = short + ':' + long = long[0:-1] + self.takes_arg[long] = True + else: + # Is option is a "negative alias" for some other option (eg. + # "quiet" == "!verbose")? + alias_to = self.negative_alias.get(long) + if alias_to is not None: + if self.takes_arg[alias_to]: + raise DistutilsGetoptError( + f"invalid negative alias '{long}': " + f"aliased option '{alias_to}' takes a value" + ) + + self.long_opts[-1] = long # XXX redundant?! + self.takes_arg[long] = False + + # If this is an alias option, make sure its "takes arg" flag is + # the same as the option it's aliased to. + alias_to = self.alias.get(long) + if alias_to is not None: + if self.takes_arg[long] != self.takes_arg[alias_to]: + raise DistutilsGetoptError( + f"invalid alias '{long}': inconsistent with " + f"aliased option '{alias_to}' (one of them takes a value, " + "the other doesn't" + ) + + # Now enforce some bondage on the long option name, so we can + # later translate it to an attribute name on some object. Have + # to do this a bit late to make sure we've removed any trailing + # '='. + if not longopt_re.match(long): + raise DistutilsGetoptError( + f"invalid long option name '{long}' " + "(must be letters, numbers, hyphens only" + ) + + self.attr_name[long] = self.get_attr_name(long) + if short: + self.short_opts.append(short) + self.short2long[short[0]] = long + + def getopt(self, args: Sequence[str] | None = None, object=None): # noqa: C901 + """Parse command-line options in args. Store as attributes on object. + + If 'args' is None or not supplied, uses 'sys.argv[1:]'. If + 'object' is None or not supplied, creates a new OptionDummy + object, stores option values there, and returns a tuple (args, + object). If 'object' is supplied, it is modified in place and + 'getopt()' just returns 'args'; in both cases, the returned + 'args' is a modified copy of the passed-in 'args' list, which + is left untouched. + """ + if args is None: + args = sys.argv[1:] + if object is None: + object = OptionDummy() + created_object = True + else: + created_object = False + + self._grok_option_table() + + short_opts = ' '.join(self.short_opts) + try: + opts, args = getopt.getopt(args, short_opts, self.long_opts) + except getopt.error as msg: + raise DistutilsArgError(msg) + + for opt, val in opts: + if len(opt) == 2 and opt[0] == '-': # it's a short option + opt = self.short2long[opt[1]] + else: + assert len(opt) > 2 and opt[:2] == '--' + opt = opt[2:] + + alias = self.alias.get(opt) + if alias: + opt = alias + + if not self.takes_arg[opt]: # boolean option? + assert val == '', "boolean option can't have value" + alias = self.negative_alias.get(opt) + if alias: + opt = alias + val = 0 + else: + val = 1 + + attr = self.attr_name[opt] + # The only repeating option at the moment is 'verbose'. + # It has a negative option -q quiet, which should set verbose = False. + if val and self.repeat.get(attr) is not None: + val = getattr(object, attr, 0) + 1 + setattr(object, attr, val) + self.option_order.append((opt, val)) + + # for opts + if created_object: + return args, object + else: + return args + + def get_option_order(self): + """Returns the list of (option, value) tuples processed by the + previous run of 'getopt()'. Raises RuntimeError if + 'getopt()' hasn't been called yet. + """ + if self.option_order is None: + raise RuntimeError("'getopt()' hasn't been called yet") + else: + return self.option_order + + def generate_help(self, header=None): # noqa: C901 + """Generate help text (a list of strings, one per suggested line of + output) from the option table for this FancyGetopt object. + """ + # Blithely assume the option table is good: probably wouldn't call + # 'generate_help()' unless you've already called 'getopt()'. + + # First pass: determine maximum length of long option names + max_opt = 0 + for option in self.option_table: + long = option[0] + short = option[1] + ell = len(long) + if long[-1] == '=': + ell = ell - 1 + if short is not None: + ell = ell + 5 # " (-x)" where short == 'x' + if ell > max_opt: + max_opt = ell + + opt_width = max_opt + 2 + 2 + 2 # room for indent + dashes + gutter + + # Typical help block looks like this: + # --foo controls foonabulation + # Help block for longest option looks like this: + # --flimflam set the flim-flam level + # and with wrapped text: + # --flimflam set the flim-flam level (must be between + # 0 and 100, except on Tuesdays) + # Options with short names will have the short name shown (but + # it doesn't contribute to max_opt): + # --foo (-f) controls foonabulation + # If adding the short option would make the left column too wide, + # we push the explanation off to the next line + # --flimflam (-l) + # set the flim-flam level + # Important parameters: + # - 2 spaces before option block start lines + # - 2 dashes for each long option name + # - min. 2 spaces between option and explanation (gutter) + # - 5 characters (incl. space) for short option name + + # Now generate lines of help text. (If 80 columns were good enough + # for Jesus, then 78 columns are good enough for me!) + line_width = 78 + text_width = line_width - opt_width + big_indent = ' ' * opt_width + if header: + lines = [header] + else: + lines = ['Option summary:'] + + for option in self.option_table: + long, short, help = option[:3] + text = wrap_text(help, text_width) + if long[-1] == '=': + long = long[0:-1] + + # Case 1: no short option at all (makes life easy) + if short is None: + if text: + lines.append(f" --{long:<{max_opt}} {text[0]}") + else: + lines.append(f" --{long:<{max_opt}}") + + # Case 2: we have a short option, so we have to include it + # just after the long option + else: + opt_names = f"{long} (-{short})" + if text: + lines.append(f" --{opt_names:<{max_opt}} {text[0]}") + else: + lines.append(f" --{opt_names:<{max_opt}}") + + for ell in text[1:]: + lines.append(big_indent + ell) + return lines + + def print_help(self, header=None, file=None): + if file is None: + file = sys.stdout + for line in self.generate_help(header): + file.write(line + "\n") + + +def fancy_getopt(options, negative_opt, object, args: Sequence[str] | None): + parser = FancyGetopt(options) + parser.set_negative_aliases(negative_opt) + return parser.getopt(args, object) + + +WS_TRANS = {ord(_wschar): ' ' for _wschar in string.whitespace} + + +def wrap_text(text, width): + """wrap_text(text : string, width : int) -> [string] + + Split 'text' into multiple lines of no more than 'width' characters + each, and return the list of strings that results. + """ + if text is None: + return [] + if len(text) <= width: + return [text] + + text = text.expandtabs() + text = text.translate(WS_TRANS) + chunks = re.split(r'( +|-+)', text) + chunks = [ch for ch in chunks if ch] # ' - ' results in empty strings + lines = [] + + while chunks: + cur_line = [] # list of chunks (to-be-joined) + cur_len = 0 # length of current line + + while chunks: + ell = len(chunks[0]) + if cur_len + ell <= width: # can squeeze (at least) this chunk in + cur_line.append(chunks[0]) + del chunks[0] + cur_len = cur_len + ell + else: # this line is full + # drop last chunk if all space + if cur_line and cur_line[-1][0] == ' ': + del cur_line[-1] + break + + if chunks: # any chunks left to process? + # if the current line is still empty, then we had a single + # chunk that's too big too fit on a line -- so we break + # down and break it up at the line width + if cur_len == 0: + cur_line.append(chunks[0][0:width]) + chunks[0] = chunks[0][width:] + + # all-whitespace chunks at the end of a line can be discarded + # (and we know from the re.split above that if a chunk has + # *any* whitespace, it is *all* whitespace) + if chunks[0][0] == ' ': + del chunks[0] + + # and store this line in the list-of-all-lines -- as a single + # string, of course! + lines.append(''.join(cur_line)) + + return lines + + +def translate_longopt(opt): + """Convert a long option name to a valid Python identifier by + changing "-" to "_". + """ + return opt.translate(longopt_xlate) + + +class OptionDummy: + """Dummy class just used as a place to hold command-line option + values as instance attributes.""" + + def __init__(self, options: Sequence[Any] = []): + """Create a new OptionDummy instance. The attributes listed in + 'options' will be initialized to None.""" + for opt in options: + setattr(self, opt, None) + + +if __name__ == "__main__": + text = """\ +Tra-la-la, supercalifragilisticexpialidocious. +How *do* you spell that odd word, anyways? +(Someone ask Mary -- she'll know [or she'll +say, "How should I know?"].)""" + + for w in (10, 20, 30, 40): + print(f"width: {w}") + print("\n".join(wrap_text(text, w))) + print() diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/file_util.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/file_util.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..a9724b1779703543aaacc7b4a5872b68911d2144 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/file_util.py @@ -0,0 +1,228 @@ +"""distutils.file_util + +Utility functions for operating on single files. +""" + +import os + +from ._log import log +from .errors import DistutilsFileError + +# for generating verbose output in 'copy_file()' +_copy_action = {None: 'copying', 'hard': 'hard linking', 'sym': 'symbolically linking'} + + +def _copy_file_contents(src, dst, buffer_size=16 * 1024): # noqa: C901 + """Copy the file 'src' to 'dst'; both must be filenames. Any error + opening either file, reading from 'src', or writing to 'dst', raises + DistutilsFileError. Data is read/written in chunks of 'buffer_size' + bytes (default 16k). No attempt is made to handle anything apart from + regular files. + """ + # Stolen from shutil module in the standard library, but with + # custom error-handling added. + fsrc = None + fdst = None + try: + try: + fsrc = open(src, 'rb') + except OSError as e: + raise DistutilsFileError(f"could not open '{src}': {e.strerror}") + + if os.path.exists(dst): + try: + os.unlink(dst) + except OSError as e: + raise DistutilsFileError(f"could not delete '{dst}': {e.strerror}") + + try: + fdst = open(dst, 'wb') + except OSError as e: + raise DistutilsFileError(f"could not create '{dst}': {e.strerror}") + + while True: + try: + buf = fsrc.read(buffer_size) + except OSError as e: + raise DistutilsFileError(f"could not read from '{src}': {e.strerror}") + + if not buf: + break + + try: + fdst.write(buf) + except OSError as e: + raise DistutilsFileError(f"could not write to '{dst}': {e.strerror}") + finally: + if fdst: + fdst.close() + if fsrc: + fsrc.close() + + +def copy_file( # noqa: C901 + src, + dst, + preserve_mode=True, + preserve_times=True, + update=False, + link=None, + verbose=True, +): + """Copy a file 'src' to 'dst'. If 'dst' is a directory, then 'src' is + copied there with the same name; otherwise, it must be a filename. (If + the file exists, it will be ruthlessly clobbered.) If 'preserve_mode' + is true (the default), the file's mode (type and permission bits, or + whatever is analogous on the current platform) is copied. If + 'preserve_times' is true (the default), the last-modified and + last-access times are copied as well. If 'update' is true, 'src' will + only be copied if 'dst' does not exist, or if 'dst' does exist but is + older than 'src'. + + 'link' allows you to make hard links (os.link) or symbolic links + (os.symlink) instead of copying: set it to "hard" or "sym"; if it is + None (the default), files are copied. Don't set 'link' on systems that + don't support it: 'copy_file()' doesn't check if hard or symbolic + linking is available. If hardlink fails, falls back to + _copy_file_contents(). + + Under Mac OS, uses the native file copy function in macostools; on + other systems, uses '_copy_file_contents()' to copy file contents. + + Return a tuple (dest_name, copied): 'dest_name' is the actual name of + the output file, and 'copied' is true if the file was copied. + """ + # XXX if the destination file already exists, we clobber it if + # copying, but blow up if linking. Hmmm. And I don't know what + # macostools.copyfile() does. Should definitely be consistent, and + # should probably blow up if destination exists and we would be + # changing it (ie. it's not already a hard/soft link to src OR + # (not update) and (src newer than dst). + + from distutils._modified import newer + from stat import S_IMODE, ST_ATIME, ST_MODE, ST_MTIME + + if not os.path.isfile(src): + raise DistutilsFileError( + f"can't copy '{src}': doesn't exist or not a regular file" + ) + + if os.path.isdir(dst): + dir = dst + dst = os.path.join(dst, os.path.basename(src)) + else: + dir = os.path.dirname(dst) + + if update and not newer(src, dst): + if verbose >= 1: + log.debug("not copying %s (output up-to-date)", src) + return (dst, False) + + try: + action = _copy_action[link] + except KeyError: + raise ValueError(f"invalid value '{link}' for 'link' argument") + + if verbose >= 1: + if os.path.basename(dst) == os.path.basename(src): + log.info("%s %s -> %s", action, src, dir) + else: + log.info("%s %s -> %s", action, src, dst) + + # If linking (hard or symbolic), use the appropriate system call + # (Unix only, of course, but that's the caller's responsibility) + if link == 'hard': + if not (os.path.exists(dst) and os.path.samefile(src, dst)): + try: + os.link(src, dst) + except OSError: + # If hard linking fails, fall back on copying file + # (some special filesystems don't support hard linking + # even under Unix, see issue #8876). + pass + else: + return (dst, True) + elif link == 'sym': + if not (os.path.exists(dst) and os.path.samefile(src, dst)): + os.symlink(src, dst) + return (dst, True) + + # Otherwise (non-Mac, not linking), copy the file contents and + # (optionally) copy the times and mode. + _copy_file_contents(src, dst) + if preserve_mode or preserve_times: + st = os.stat(src) + + # According to David Ascher , utime() should be done + # before chmod() (at least under NT). + if preserve_times: + os.utime(dst, (st[ST_ATIME], st[ST_MTIME])) + if preserve_mode: + os.chmod(dst, S_IMODE(st[ST_MODE])) + + return (dst, True) + + +# XXX I suspect this is Unix-specific -- need porting help! +def move_file(src, dst, verbose=True): # noqa: C901 + """Move a file 'src' to 'dst'. If 'dst' is a directory, the file will + be moved into it with the same name; otherwise, 'src' is just renamed + to 'dst'. Return the new full name of the file. + + Handles cross-device moves on Unix using 'copy_file()'. What about + other systems??? + """ + import errno + from os.path import basename, dirname, exists, isdir, isfile + + if verbose >= 1: + log.info("moving %s -> %s", src, dst) + + if not isfile(src): + raise DistutilsFileError(f"can't move '{src}': not a regular file") + + if isdir(dst): + dst = os.path.join(dst, basename(src)) + elif exists(dst): + raise DistutilsFileError( + f"can't move '{src}': destination '{dst}' already exists" + ) + + if not isdir(dirname(dst)): + raise DistutilsFileError( + f"can't move '{src}': destination '{dst}' not a valid path" + ) + + copy_it = False + try: + os.rename(src, dst) + except OSError as e: + (num, msg) = e.args + if num == errno.EXDEV: + copy_it = True + else: + raise DistutilsFileError(f"couldn't move '{src}' to '{dst}': {msg}") + + if copy_it: + copy_file(src, dst, verbose=verbose) + try: + os.unlink(src) + except OSError as e: + (num, msg) = e.args + try: + os.unlink(dst) + except OSError: + pass + raise DistutilsFileError( + f"couldn't move '{src}' to '{dst}' by copy/delete: " + f"delete '{src}' failed: {msg}" + ) + return dst + + +def write_file(filename, contents): + """Create a file with the specified name and write 'contents' (a + sequence of strings without line terminators) to it. + """ + with open(filename, 'w', encoding='utf-8') as f: + f.writelines(line + '\n' for line in contents) diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/filelist.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/filelist.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..70dc0fdebc3f4200245aa1c6280ab39861dcf8b0 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/filelist.py @@ -0,0 +1,431 @@ +"""distutils.filelist + +Provides the FileList class, used for poking about the filesystem +and building lists of files. +""" + +from __future__ import annotations + +import fnmatch +import functools +import os +import re +from collections.abc import Iterable +from typing import Literal, overload + +from ._log import log +from .errors import DistutilsInternalError, DistutilsTemplateError +from .util import convert_path + + +class FileList: + """A list of files built by on exploring the filesystem and filtered by + applying various patterns to what we find there. + + Instance attributes: + dir + directory from which files will be taken -- only used if + 'allfiles' not supplied to constructor + files + list of filenames currently being built/filtered/manipulated + allfiles + complete list of files under consideration (ie. without any + filtering applied) + """ + + def __init__(self, warn: object = None, debug_print: object = None) -> None: + # ignore argument to FileList, but keep them for backwards + # compatibility + self.allfiles: Iterable[str] | None = None + self.files: list[str] = [] + + def set_allfiles(self, allfiles: Iterable[str]) -> None: + self.allfiles = allfiles + + def findall(self, dir: str | os.PathLike[str] = os.curdir) -> None: + self.allfiles = findall(dir) + + def debug_print(self, msg: object) -> None: + """Print 'msg' to stdout if the global DEBUG (taken from the + DISTUTILS_DEBUG environment variable) flag is true. + """ + from distutils.debug import DEBUG + + if DEBUG: + print(msg) + + # Collection methods + + def append(self, item: str) -> None: + self.files.append(item) + + def extend(self, items: Iterable[str]) -> None: + self.files.extend(items) + + def sort(self) -> None: + # Not a strict lexical sort! + sortable_files = sorted(map(os.path.split, self.files)) + self.files = [] + for sort_tuple in sortable_files: + self.files.append(os.path.join(*sort_tuple)) + + # Other miscellaneous utility methods + + def remove_duplicates(self) -> None: + # Assumes list has been sorted! + for i in range(len(self.files) - 1, 0, -1): + if self.files[i] == self.files[i - 1]: + del self.files[i] + + # "File template" methods + + def _parse_template_line(self, line): + words = line.split() + action = words[0] + + patterns = dir = dir_pattern = None + + if action in ('include', 'exclude', 'global-include', 'global-exclude'): + if len(words) < 2: + raise DistutilsTemplateError( + f"'{action}' expects ..." + ) + patterns = [convert_path(w) for w in words[1:]] + elif action in ('recursive-include', 'recursive-exclude'): + if len(words) < 3: + raise DistutilsTemplateError( + f"'{action}' expects ..." + ) + dir = convert_path(words[1]) + patterns = [convert_path(w) for w in words[2:]] + elif action in ('graft', 'prune'): + if len(words) != 2: + raise DistutilsTemplateError( + f"'{action}' expects a single " + ) + dir_pattern = convert_path(words[1]) + else: + raise DistutilsTemplateError(f"unknown action '{action}'") + + return (action, patterns, dir, dir_pattern) + + def process_template_line(self, line: str) -> None: # noqa: C901 + # Parse the line: split it up, make sure the right number of words + # is there, and return the relevant words. 'action' is always + # defined: it's the first word of the line. Which of the other + # three are defined depends on the action; it'll be either + # patterns, (dir and patterns), or (dir_pattern). + (action, patterns, dir, dir_pattern) = self._parse_template_line(line) + + # OK, now we know that the action is valid and we have the + # right number of words on the line for that action -- so we + # can proceed with minimal error-checking. + if action == 'include': + self.debug_print("include " + ' '.join(patterns)) + for pattern in patterns: + if not self.include_pattern(pattern, anchor=True): + log.warning("warning: no files found matching '%s'", pattern) + + elif action == 'exclude': + self.debug_print("exclude " + ' '.join(patterns)) + for pattern in patterns: + if not self.exclude_pattern(pattern, anchor=True): + log.warning( + "warning: no previously-included files found matching '%s'", + pattern, + ) + + elif action == 'global-include': + self.debug_print("global-include " + ' '.join(patterns)) + for pattern in patterns: + if not self.include_pattern(pattern, anchor=False): + log.warning( + ( + "warning: no files found matching '%s' " + "anywhere in distribution" + ), + pattern, + ) + + elif action == 'global-exclude': + self.debug_print("global-exclude " + ' '.join(patterns)) + for pattern in patterns: + if not self.exclude_pattern(pattern, anchor=False): + log.warning( + ( + "warning: no previously-included files matching " + "'%s' found anywhere in distribution" + ), + pattern, + ) + + elif action == 'recursive-include': + self.debug_print("recursive-include {} {}".format(dir, ' '.join(patterns))) + for pattern in patterns: + if not self.include_pattern(pattern, prefix=dir): + msg = "warning: no files found matching '%s' under directory '%s'" + log.warning(msg, pattern, dir) + + elif action == 'recursive-exclude': + self.debug_print("recursive-exclude {} {}".format(dir, ' '.join(patterns))) + for pattern in patterns: + if not self.exclude_pattern(pattern, prefix=dir): + log.warning( + ( + "warning: no previously-included files matching " + "'%s' found under directory '%s'" + ), + pattern, + dir, + ) + + elif action == 'graft': + self.debug_print("graft " + dir_pattern) + if not self.include_pattern(None, prefix=dir_pattern): + log.warning("warning: no directories found matching '%s'", dir_pattern) + + elif action == 'prune': + self.debug_print("prune " + dir_pattern) + if not self.exclude_pattern(None, prefix=dir_pattern): + log.warning( + ("no previously-included directories found matching '%s'"), + dir_pattern, + ) + else: + raise DistutilsInternalError( + f"this cannot happen: invalid action '{action}'" + ) + + # Filtering/selection methods + @overload + def include_pattern( + self, + pattern: str, + anchor: bool = True, + prefix: str | None = None, + is_regex: Literal[False] = False, + ) -> bool: ... + @overload + def include_pattern( + self, + pattern: str | re.Pattern[str], + anchor: bool = True, + prefix: str | None = None, + *, + is_regex: Literal[True], + ) -> bool: ... + @overload + def include_pattern( + self, + pattern: str | re.Pattern[str], + anchor: bool, + prefix: str | None, + is_regex: Literal[True], + ) -> bool: ... + def include_pattern( + self, + pattern: str | re.Pattern, + anchor: bool = True, + prefix: str | None = None, + is_regex: bool = False, + ) -> bool: + """Select strings (presumably filenames) from 'self.files' that + match 'pattern', a Unix-style wildcard (glob) pattern. Patterns + are not quite the same as implemented by the 'fnmatch' module: '*' + and '?' match non-special characters, where "special" is platform- + dependent: slash on Unix; colon, slash, and backslash on + DOS/Windows; and colon on Mac OS. + + If 'anchor' is true (the default), then the pattern match is more + stringent: "*.py" will match "foo.py" but not "foo/bar.py". If + 'anchor' is false, both of these will match. + + If 'prefix' is supplied, then only filenames starting with 'prefix' + (itself a pattern) and ending with 'pattern', with anything in between + them, will match. 'anchor' is ignored in this case. + + If 'is_regex' is true, 'anchor' and 'prefix' are ignored, and + 'pattern' is assumed to be either a string containing a regex or a + regex object -- no translation is done, the regex is just compiled + and used as-is. + + Selected strings will be added to self.files. + + Return True if files are found, False otherwise. + """ + # XXX docstring lying about what the special chars are? + files_found = False + pattern_re = translate_pattern(pattern, anchor, prefix, is_regex) + self.debug_print(f"include_pattern: applying regex r'{pattern_re.pattern}'") + + # delayed loading of allfiles list + if self.allfiles is None: + self.findall() + + for name in self.allfiles: + if pattern_re.search(name): + self.debug_print(" adding " + name) + self.files.append(name) + files_found = True + return files_found + + @overload + def exclude_pattern( + self, + pattern: str, + anchor: bool = True, + prefix: str | None = None, + is_regex: Literal[False] = False, + ) -> bool: ... + @overload + def exclude_pattern( + self, + pattern: str | re.Pattern[str], + anchor: bool = True, + prefix: str | None = None, + *, + is_regex: Literal[True], + ) -> bool: ... + @overload + def exclude_pattern( + self, + pattern: str | re.Pattern[str], + anchor: bool, + prefix: str | None, + is_regex: Literal[True], + ) -> bool: ... + def exclude_pattern( + self, + pattern: str | re.Pattern, + anchor: bool = True, + prefix: str | None = None, + is_regex: bool = False, + ) -> bool: + """Remove strings (presumably filenames) from 'files' that match + 'pattern'. Other parameters are the same as for + 'include_pattern()', above. + The list 'self.files' is modified in place. + Return True if files are found, False otherwise. + """ + files_found = False + pattern_re = translate_pattern(pattern, anchor, prefix, is_regex) + self.debug_print(f"exclude_pattern: applying regex r'{pattern_re.pattern}'") + for i in range(len(self.files) - 1, -1, -1): + if pattern_re.search(self.files[i]): + self.debug_print(" removing " + self.files[i]) + del self.files[i] + files_found = True + return files_found + + +# Utility functions + + +def _find_all_simple(path): + """ + Find all files under 'path' + """ + all_unique = _UniqueDirs.filter(os.walk(path, followlinks=True)) + results = ( + os.path.join(base, file) for base, dirs, files in all_unique for file in files + ) + return filter(os.path.isfile, results) + + +class _UniqueDirs(set): + """ + Exclude previously-seen dirs from walk results, + avoiding infinite recursion. + Ref https://bugs.python.org/issue44497. + """ + + def __call__(self, walk_item): + """ + Given an item from an os.walk result, determine + if the item represents a unique dir for this instance + and if not, prevent further traversal. + """ + base, dirs, files = walk_item + stat = os.stat(base) + candidate = stat.st_dev, stat.st_ino + found = candidate in self + if found: + del dirs[:] + self.add(candidate) + return not found + + @classmethod + def filter(cls, items): + return filter(cls(), items) + + +def findall(dir: str | os.PathLike[str] = os.curdir): + """ + Find all files under 'dir' and return the list of full filenames. + Unless dir is '.', return full filenames with dir prepended. + """ + files = _find_all_simple(dir) + if dir == os.curdir: + make_rel = functools.partial(os.path.relpath, start=dir) + files = map(make_rel, files) + return list(files) + + +def glob_to_re(pattern): + """Translate a shell-like glob pattern to a regular expression; return + a string containing the regex. Differs from 'fnmatch.translate()' in + that '*' does not match "special characters" (which are + platform-specific). + """ + pattern_re = fnmatch.translate(pattern) + + # '?' and '*' in the glob pattern become '.' and '.*' in the RE, which + # IMHO is wrong -- '?' and '*' aren't supposed to match slash in Unix, + # and by extension they shouldn't match such "special characters" under + # any OS. So change all non-escaped dots in the RE to match any + # character except the special characters (currently: just os.sep). + sep = os.sep + if os.sep == '\\': + # we're using a regex to manipulate a regex, so we need + # to escape the backslash twice + sep = r'\\\\' + escaped = rf'\1[^{sep}]' + pattern_re = re.sub(r'((?= 2: + set_threshold(logging.DEBUG) + + +class Log(logging.Logger): + """distutils.log.Log is deprecated, please use an alternative from `logging`.""" + + def __init__(self, threshold=WARN): + warnings.warn(Log.__doc__) # avoid DeprecationWarning to ensure warn is shown + super().__init__(__name__, level=threshold) + + @property + def threshold(self): + return self.level + + @threshold.setter + def threshold(self, level): + self.setLevel(level) + + warn = logging.Logger.warning diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/spawn.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/spawn.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..e47f1d19272cdd5fb8daa67eff3e52c8c435cfde --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/spawn.py @@ -0,0 +1,130 @@ +"""distutils.spawn + +Provides the 'spawn()' function, a front-end to various platform- +specific functions for launching another program in a sub-process. +""" + +from __future__ import annotations + +import os +import platform +import shutil +import subprocess +import sys +import warnings +from collections.abc import Mapping, MutableSequence +from typing import TYPE_CHECKING, TypeVar, overload + +from ._log import log +from .debug import DEBUG +from .errors import DistutilsExecError + +if TYPE_CHECKING: + from subprocess import _ENV + + +_MappingT = TypeVar("_MappingT", bound=Mapping) + + +def _debug(cmd): + """ + Render a subprocess command differently depending on DEBUG. + """ + return cmd if DEBUG else cmd[0] + + +def _inject_macos_ver(env: _MappingT | None) -> _MappingT | dict[str, str | int] | None: + if platform.system() != 'Darwin': + return env + + from .util import MACOSX_VERSION_VAR, get_macosx_target_ver + + target_ver = get_macosx_target_ver() + update = {MACOSX_VERSION_VAR: target_ver} if target_ver else {} + return {**_resolve(env), **update} + + +@overload +def _resolve(env: None) -> os._Environ[str]: ... +@overload +def _resolve(env: _MappingT) -> _MappingT: ... +def _resolve(env: _MappingT | None) -> _MappingT | os._Environ[str]: + return os.environ if env is None else env + + +def spawn( + cmd: MutableSequence[bytes | str | os.PathLike[str]], + search_path: bool = True, + verbose: bool = False, + env: _ENV | None = None, +) -> None: + """Run another program, specified as a command list 'cmd', in a new process. + + 'cmd' is just the argument list for the new process, ie. + cmd[0] is the program to run and cmd[1:] are the rest of its arguments. + There is no way to run a program with a name different from that of its + executable. + + If 'search_path' is true (the default), the system's executable + search path will be used to find the program; otherwise, cmd[0] + must be the exact path to the executable. + + Raise DistutilsExecError if running the program fails in any way; just + return on success. + """ + log.info(subprocess.list2cmdline(cmd)) + + if search_path: + executable = shutil.which(cmd[0]) + if executable is not None: + cmd[0] = executable + + try: + subprocess.check_call(cmd, env=_inject_macos_ver(env)) + except OSError as exc: + raise DistutilsExecError( + f"command {_debug(cmd)!r} failed: {exc.args[-1]}" + ) from exc + except subprocess.CalledProcessError as err: + raise DistutilsExecError( + f"command {_debug(cmd)!r} failed with exit code {err.returncode}" + ) from err + + +def find_executable(executable: str, path: str | None = None) -> str | None: + """Tries to find 'executable' in the directories listed in 'path'. + + A string listing directories separated by 'os.pathsep'; defaults to + os.environ['PATH']. Returns the complete filename or None if not found. + """ + warnings.warn( + 'Use shutil.which instead of find_executable', DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2 + ) + _, ext = os.path.splitext(executable) + if (sys.platform == 'win32') and (ext != '.exe'): + executable = executable + '.exe' + + if os.path.isfile(executable): + return executable + + if path is None: + path = os.environ.get('PATH', None) + # bpo-35755: Don't fall through if PATH is the empty string + if path is None: + try: + path = os.confstr("CS_PATH") + except (AttributeError, ValueError): + # os.confstr() or CS_PATH is not available + path = os.defpath + + # PATH='' doesn't match, whereas PATH=':' looks in the current directory + if not path: + return None + + paths = path.split(os.pathsep) + for p in paths: + f = os.path.join(p, executable) + if os.path.isfile(f): + # the file exists, we have a shot at spawn working + return f + return None diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/sysconfig.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/sysconfig.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..7ddc869ab5603d691a8863988da89ec84689de84 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/sysconfig.py @@ -0,0 +1,598 @@ +"""Provide access to Python's configuration information. The specific +configuration variables available depend heavily on the platform and +configuration. The values may be retrieved using +get_config_var(name), and the list of variables is available via +get_config_vars().keys(). Additional convenience functions are also +available. + +Written by: Fred L. Drake, Jr. +Email: +""" + +from __future__ import annotations + +import functools +import os +import pathlib +import re +import sys +import sysconfig +from typing import TYPE_CHECKING, Literal, overload + +from jaraco.functools import pass_none + +from .ccompiler import CCompiler +from .compat import py39 +from .errors import DistutilsPlatformError +from .util import is_mingw + +if TYPE_CHECKING: + from typing_extensions import deprecated +else: + + def deprecated(message): + return lambda fn: fn + + +IS_PYPY = '__pypy__' in sys.builtin_module_names + +# These are needed in a couple of spots, so just compute them once. +PREFIX = os.path.normpath(sys.prefix) +EXEC_PREFIX = os.path.normpath(sys.exec_prefix) +BASE_PREFIX = os.path.normpath(sys.base_prefix) +BASE_EXEC_PREFIX = os.path.normpath(sys.base_exec_prefix) + +# Path to the base directory of the project. On Windows the binary may +# live in project/PCbuild/win32 or project/PCbuild/amd64. +# set for cross builds +if "_PYTHON_PROJECT_BASE" in os.environ: + project_base = os.path.abspath(os.environ["_PYTHON_PROJECT_BASE"]) +else: + if sys.executable: + project_base = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(sys.executable)) + else: + # sys.executable can be empty if argv[0] has been changed and Python is + # unable to retrieve the real program name + project_base = os.getcwd() + + +def _is_python_source_dir(d): + """ + Return True if the target directory appears to point to an + un-installed Python. + """ + modules = pathlib.Path(d).joinpath('Modules') + return any(modules.joinpath(fn).is_file() for fn in ('Setup', 'Setup.local')) + + +_sys_home = getattr(sys, '_home', None) + + +def _is_parent(dir_a, dir_b): + """ + Return True if a is a parent of b. + """ + return os.path.normcase(dir_a).startswith(os.path.normcase(dir_b)) + + +if os.name == 'nt': + + @pass_none + def _fix_pcbuild(d): + # In a venv, sys._home will be inside BASE_PREFIX rather than PREFIX. + prefixes = PREFIX, BASE_PREFIX + matched = ( + prefix + for prefix in prefixes + if _is_parent(d, os.path.join(prefix, "PCbuild")) + ) + return next(matched, d) + + project_base = _fix_pcbuild(project_base) + _sys_home = _fix_pcbuild(_sys_home) + + +def _python_build(): + if _sys_home: + return _is_python_source_dir(_sys_home) + return _is_python_source_dir(project_base) + + +python_build = _python_build() + + +# Calculate the build qualifier flags if they are defined. Adding the flags +# to the include and lib directories only makes sense for an installation, not +# an in-source build. +build_flags = '' +try: + if not python_build: + build_flags = sys.abiflags +except AttributeError: + # It's not a configure-based build, so the sys module doesn't have + # this attribute, which is fine. + pass + + +def get_python_version(): + """Return a string containing the major and minor Python version, + leaving off the patchlevel. Sample return values could be '1.5' + or '2.2'. + """ + return f'{sys.version_info.major}.{sys.version_info.minor}' + + +def get_python_inc(plat_specific: bool = False, prefix: str | None = None) -> str: + """Return the directory containing installed Python header files. + + If 'plat_specific' is false (the default), this is the path to the + non-platform-specific header files, i.e. Python.h and so on; + otherwise, this is the path to platform-specific header files + (namely pyconfig.h). + + If 'prefix' is supplied, use it instead of sys.base_prefix or + sys.base_exec_prefix -- i.e., ignore 'plat_specific'. + """ + default_prefix = BASE_EXEC_PREFIX if plat_specific else BASE_PREFIX + resolved_prefix = prefix if prefix is not None else default_prefix + # MinGW imitates posix like layout, but os.name != posix + os_name = "posix" if is_mingw() else os.name + try: + getter = globals()[f'_get_python_inc_{os_name}'] + except KeyError: + raise DistutilsPlatformError( + "I don't know where Python installs its C header files " + f"on platform '{os.name}'" + ) + return getter(resolved_prefix, prefix, plat_specific) + + +@pass_none +def _extant(path): + """ + Replace path with None if it doesn't exist. + """ + return path if os.path.exists(path) else None + + +def _get_python_inc_posix(prefix, spec_prefix, plat_specific): + return ( + _get_python_inc_posix_python(plat_specific) + or _extant(_get_python_inc_from_config(plat_specific, spec_prefix)) + or _get_python_inc_posix_prefix(prefix) + ) + + +def _get_python_inc_posix_python(plat_specific): + """ + Assume the executable is in the build directory. The + pyconfig.h file should be in the same directory. Since + the build directory may not be the source directory, + use "srcdir" from the makefile to find the "Include" + directory. + """ + if not python_build: + return + if plat_specific: + return _sys_home or project_base + incdir = os.path.join(get_config_var('srcdir'), 'Include') + return os.path.normpath(incdir) + + +def _get_python_inc_from_config(plat_specific, spec_prefix): + """ + If no prefix was explicitly specified, provide the include + directory from the config vars. Useful when + cross-compiling, since the config vars may come from + the host + platform Python installation, while the current Python + executable is from the build platform installation. + + >>> monkeypatch = getfixture('monkeypatch') + >>> gpifc = _get_python_inc_from_config + >>> monkeypatch.setitem(gpifc.__globals__, 'get_config_var', str.lower) + >>> gpifc(False, '/usr/bin/') + >>> gpifc(False, '') + >>> gpifc(False, None) + 'includepy' + >>> gpifc(True, None) + 'confincludepy' + """ + if spec_prefix is None: + return get_config_var('CONF' * plat_specific + 'INCLUDEPY') + + +def _get_python_inc_posix_prefix(prefix): + implementation = 'pypy' if IS_PYPY else 'python' + python_dir = implementation + get_python_version() + build_flags + return os.path.join(prefix, "include", python_dir) + + +def _get_python_inc_nt(prefix, spec_prefix, plat_specific): + if python_build: + # Include both include dirs to ensure we can find pyconfig.h + return ( + os.path.join(prefix, "include") + + os.path.pathsep + + os.path.dirname(sysconfig.get_config_h_filename()) + ) + return os.path.join(prefix, "include") + + +# allow this behavior to be monkey-patched. Ref pypa/distutils#2. +def _posix_lib(standard_lib, libpython, early_prefix, prefix): + if standard_lib: + return libpython + else: + return os.path.join(libpython, "site-packages") + + +def get_python_lib( + plat_specific: bool = False, standard_lib: bool = False, prefix: str | None = None +) -> str: + """Return the directory containing the Python library (standard or + site additions). + + If 'plat_specific' is true, return the directory containing + platform-specific modules, i.e. any module from a non-pure-Python + module distribution; otherwise, return the platform-shared library + directory. If 'standard_lib' is true, return the directory + containing standard Python library modules; otherwise, return the + directory for site-specific modules. + + If 'prefix' is supplied, use it instead of sys.base_prefix or + sys.base_exec_prefix -- i.e., ignore 'plat_specific'. + """ + + early_prefix = prefix + + if prefix is None: + if standard_lib: + prefix = plat_specific and BASE_EXEC_PREFIX or BASE_PREFIX + else: + prefix = plat_specific and EXEC_PREFIX or PREFIX + + if os.name == "posix" or is_mingw(): + if plat_specific or standard_lib: + # Platform-specific modules (any module from a non-pure-Python + # module distribution) or standard Python library modules. + libdir = getattr(sys, "platlibdir", "lib") + else: + # Pure Python + libdir = "lib" + implementation = 'pypy' if IS_PYPY else 'python' + libpython = os.path.join(prefix, libdir, implementation + get_python_version()) + return _posix_lib(standard_lib, libpython, early_prefix, prefix) + elif os.name == "nt": + if standard_lib: + return os.path.join(prefix, "Lib") + else: + return os.path.join(prefix, "Lib", "site-packages") + else: + raise DistutilsPlatformError( + f"I don't know where Python installs its library on platform '{os.name}'" + ) + + +@functools.lru_cache +def _customize_macos(): + """ + Perform first-time customization of compiler-related + config vars on macOS. Use after a compiler is known + to be needed. This customization exists primarily to support Pythons + from binary installers. The kind and paths to build tools on + the user system may vary significantly from the system + that Python itself was built on. Also the user OS + version and build tools may not support the same set + of CPU architectures for universal builds. + """ + + sys.platform == "darwin" and __import__('_osx_support').customize_compiler( + get_config_vars() + ) + + +def customize_compiler(compiler: CCompiler) -> None: + """Do any platform-specific customization of a CCompiler instance. + + Mainly needed on Unix, so we can plug in the information that + varies across Unices and is stored in Python's Makefile. + """ + if compiler.compiler_type in ["unix", "cygwin"] or ( + compiler.compiler_type == "mingw32" and is_mingw() + ): + _customize_macos() + + ( + cc, + cxx, + cflags, + ccshared, + ldshared, + ldcxxshared, + shlib_suffix, + ar, + ar_flags, + ) = get_config_vars( + 'CC', + 'CXX', + 'CFLAGS', + 'CCSHARED', + 'LDSHARED', + 'LDCXXSHARED', + 'SHLIB_SUFFIX', + 'AR', + 'ARFLAGS', + ) + + cxxflags = cflags + + if 'CC' in os.environ: + newcc = os.environ['CC'] + if 'LDSHARED' not in os.environ and ldshared.startswith(cc): + # If CC is overridden, use that as the default + # command for LDSHARED as well + ldshared = newcc + ldshared[len(cc) :] + cc = newcc + cxx = os.environ.get('CXX', cxx) + ldshared = os.environ.get('LDSHARED', ldshared) + ldcxxshared = os.environ.get('LDCXXSHARED', ldcxxshared) + cpp = os.environ.get( + 'CPP', + cc + " -E", # not always + ) + + ldshared = _add_flags(ldshared, 'LD') + ldcxxshared = _add_flags(ldcxxshared, 'LD') + cflags = os.environ.get('CFLAGS', cflags) + ldshared = _add_flags(ldshared, 'C') + cxxflags = os.environ.get('CXXFLAGS', cxxflags) + ldcxxshared = _add_flags(ldcxxshared, 'CXX') + cpp = _add_flags(cpp, 'CPP') + cflags = _add_flags(cflags, 'CPP') + cxxflags = _add_flags(cxxflags, 'CPP') + ldshared = _add_flags(ldshared, 'CPP') + ldcxxshared = _add_flags(ldcxxshared, 'CPP') + + ar = os.environ.get('AR', ar) + + archiver = ar + ' ' + os.environ.get('ARFLAGS', ar_flags) + cc_cmd = cc + ' ' + cflags + cxx_cmd = cxx + ' ' + cxxflags + + compiler.set_executables( + preprocessor=cpp, + compiler=cc_cmd, + compiler_so=cc_cmd + ' ' + ccshared, + compiler_cxx=cxx_cmd, + compiler_so_cxx=cxx_cmd + ' ' + ccshared, + linker_so=ldshared, + linker_so_cxx=ldcxxshared, + linker_exe=cc, + linker_exe_cxx=cxx, + archiver=archiver, + ) + + if 'RANLIB' in os.environ and compiler.executables.get('ranlib', None): + compiler.set_executables(ranlib=os.environ['RANLIB']) + + compiler.shared_lib_extension = shlib_suffix + + +def get_config_h_filename() -> str: + """Return full pathname of installed pyconfig.h file.""" + return sysconfig.get_config_h_filename() + + +def get_makefile_filename() -> str: + """Return full pathname of installed Makefile from the Python build.""" + return sysconfig.get_makefile_filename() + + +def parse_config_h(fp, g=None): + """Parse a config.h-style file. + + A dictionary containing name/value pairs is returned. If an + optional dictionary is passed in as the second argument, it is + used instead of a new dictionary. + """ + return sysconfig.parse_config_h(fp, vars=g) + + +# Regexes needed for parsing Makefile (and similar syntaxes, +# like old-style Setup files). +_variable_rx = re.compile(r"([a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z0-9_]+)\s*=\s*(.*)") +_findvar1_rx = re.compile(r"\$\(([A-Za-z][A-Za-z0-9_]*)\)") +_findvar2_rx = re.compile(r"\${([A-Za-z][A-Za-z0-9_]*)}") + + +def parse_makefile(fn, g=None): # noqa: C901 + """Parse a Makefile-style file. + + A dictionary containing name/value pairs is returned. If an + optional dictionary is passed in as the second argument, it is + used instead of a new dictionary. + """ + from distutils.text_file import TextFile + + fp = TextFile( + fn, + strip_comments=True, + skip_blanks=True, + join_lines=True, + errors="surrogateescape", + ) + + if g is None: + g = {} + done = {} + notdone = {} + + while True: + line = fp.readline() + if line is None: # eof + break + m = _variable_rx.match(line) + if m: + n, v = m.group(1, 2) + v = v.strip() + # `$$' is a literal `$' in make + tmpv = v.replace('$$', '') + + if "$" in tmpv: + notdone[n] = v + else: + try: + v = int(v) + except ValueError: + # insert literal `$' + done[n] = v.replace('$$', '$') + else: + done[n] = v + + # Variables with a 'PY_' prefix in the makefile. These need to + # be made available without that prefix through sysconfig. + # Special care is needed to ensure that variable expansion works, even + # if the expansion uses the name without a prefix. + renamed_variables = ('CFLAGS', 'LDFLAGS', 'CPPFLAGS') + + # do variable interpolation here + while notdone: + for name in list(notdone): + value = notdone[name] + m = _findvar1_rx.search(value) or _findvar2_rx.search(value) + if m: + n = m.group(1) + found = True + if n in done: + item = str(done[n]) + elif n in notdone: + # get it on a subsequent round + found = False + elif n in os.environ: + # do it like make: fall back to environment + item = os.environ[n] + + elif n in renamed_variables: + if name.startswith('PY_') and name[3:] in renamed_variables: + item = "" + + elif 'PY_' + n in notdone: + found = False + + else: + item = str(done['PY_' + n]) + else: + done[n] = item = "" + if found: + after = value[m.end() :] + value = value[: m.start()] + item + after + if "$" in after: + notdone[name] = value + else: + try: + value = int(value) + except ValueError: + done[name] = value.strip() + else: + done[name] = value + del notdone[name] + + if name.startswith('PY_') and name[3:] in renamed_variables: + name = name[3:] + if name not in done: + done[name] = value + else: + # bogus variable reference; just drop it since we can't deal + del notdone[name] + + fp.close() + + # strip spurious spaces + for k, v in done.items(): + if isinstance(v, str): + done[k] = v.strip() + + # save the results in the global dictionary + g.update(done) + return g + + +def expand_makefile_vars(s, vars): + """Expand Makefile-style variables -- "${foo}" or "$(foo)" -- in + 'string' according to 'vars' (a dictionary mapping variable names to + values). Variables not present in 'vars' are silently expanded to the + empty string. The variable values in 'vars' should not contain further + variable expansions; if 'vars' is the output of 'parse_makefile()', + you're fine. Returns a variable-expanded version of 's'. + """ + + # This algorithm does multiple expansion, so if vars['foo'] contains + # "${bar}", it will expand ${foo} to ${bar}, and then expand + # ${bar}... and so forth. This is fine as long as 'vars' comes from + # 'parse_makefile()', which takes care of such expansions eagerly, + # according to make's variable expansion semantics. + + while True: + m = _findvar1_rx.search(s) or _findvar2_rx.search(s) + if m: + (beg, end) = m.span() + s = s[0:beg] + vars.get(m.group(1)) + s[end:] + else: + break + return s + + +_config_vars = None + + +@overload +def get_config_vars() -> dict[str, str | int]: ... +@overload +def get_config_vars(arg: str, /, *args: str) -> list[str | int]: ... +def get_config_vars(*args: str) -> list[str | int] | dict[str, str | int]: + """With no arguments, return a dictionary of all configuration + variables relevant for the current platform. Generally this includes + everything needed to build extensions and install both pure modules and + extensions. On Unix, this means every variable defined in Python's + installed Makefile; on Windows it's a much smaller set. + + With arguments, return a list of values that result from looking up + each argument in the configuration variable dictionary. + """ + global _config_vars + if _config_vars is None: + _config_vars = sysconfig.get_config_vars().copy() + py39.add_ext_suffix(_config_vars) + + return [_config_vars.get(name) for name in args] if args else _config_vars + + +@overload +@deprecated( + "SO is deprecated, use EXT_SUFFIX. Support will be removed when this module is synchronized with stdlib Python 3.11" +) +def get_config_var(name: Literal["SO"]) -> int | str | None: ... +@overload +def get_config_var(name: str) -> int | str | None: ... +def get_config_var(name: str) -> int | str | None: + """Return the value of a single variable using the dictionary + returned by 'get_config_vars()'. Equivalent to + get_config_vars().get(name) + """ + if name == 'SO': + import warnings + + warnings.warn('SO is deprecated, use EXT_SUFFIX', DeprecationWarning, 2) + return get_config_vars().get(name) + + +@pass_none +def _add_flags(value: str, type: str) -> str: + """ + Add any flags from the environment for the given type. + + type is the prefix to FLAGS in the environment key (e.g. "C" for "CFLAGS"). + """ + flags = os.environ.get(f'{type}FLAGS') + return f'{value} {flags}' if flags else value diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/text_file.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/text_file.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..89d9048d5902950516c3541ad212bff7b6cb2045 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/text_file.py @@ -0,0 +1,286 @@ +"""text_file + +provides the TextFile class, which gives an interface to text files +that (optionally) takes care of stripping comments, ignoring blank +lines, and joining lines with backslashes.""" + +import sys + + +class TextFile: + """Provides a file-like object that takes care of all the things you + commonly want to do when processing a text file that has some + line-by-line syntax: strip comments (as long as "#" is your + comment character), skip blank lines, join adjacent lines by + escaping the newline (ie. backslash at end of line), strip + leading and/or trailing whitespace. All of these are optional + and independently controllable. + + Provides a 'warn()' method so you can generate warning messages that + report physical line number, even if the logical line in question + spans multiple physical lines. Also provides 'unreadline()' for + implementing line-at-a-time lookahead. + + Constructor is called as: + + TextFile (filename=None, file=None, **options) + + It bombs (RuntimeError) if both 'filename' and 'file' are None; + 'filename' should be a string, and 'file' a file object (or + something that provides 'readline()' and 'close()' methods). It is + recommended that you supply at least 'filename', so that TextFile + can include it in warning messages. If 'file' is not supplied, + TextFile creates its own using 'io.open()'. + + The options are all boolean, and affect the value returned by + 'readline()': + strip_comments [default: true] + strip from "#" to end-of-line, as well as any whitespace + leading up to the "#" -- unless it is escaped by a backslash + lstrip_ws [default: false] + strip leading whitespace from each line before returning it + rstrip_ws [default: true] + strip trailing whitespace (including line terminator!) from + each line before returning it + skip_blanks [default: true} + skip lines that are empty *after* stripping comments and + whitespace. (If both lstrip_ws and rstrip_ws are false, + then some lines may consist of solely whitespace: these will + *not* be skipped, even if 'skip_blanks' is true.) + join_lines [default: false] + if a backslash is the last non-newline character on a line + after stripping comments and whitespace, join the following line + to it to form one "logical line"; if N consecutive lines end + with a backslash, then N+1 physical lines will be joined to + form one logical line. + collapse_join [default: false] + strip leading whitespace from lines that are joined to their + predecessor; only matters if (join_lines and not lstrip_ws) + errors [default: 'strict'] + error handler used to decode the file content + + Note that since 'rstrip_ws' can strip the trailing newline, the + semantics of 'readline()' must differ from those of the builtin file + object's 'readline()' method! In particular, 'readline()' returns + None for end-of-file: an empty string might just be a blank line (or + an all-whitespace line), if 'rstrip_ws' is true but 'skip_blanks' is + not.""" + + default_options = { + 'strip_comments': 1, + 'skip_blanks': 1, + 'lstrip_ws': 0, + 'rstrip_ws': 1, + 'join_lines': 0, + 'collapse_join': 0, + 'errors': 'strict', + } + + def __init__(self, filename=None, file=None, **options): + """Construct a new TextFile object. At least one of 'filename' + (a string) and 'file' (a file-like object) must be supplied. + They keyword argument options are described above and affect + the values returned by 'readline()'.""" + if filename is None and file is None: + raise RuntimeError( + "you must supply either or both of 'filename' and 'file'" + ) + + # set values for all options -- either from client option hash + # or fallback to default_options + for opt in self.default_options.keys(): + if opt in options: + setattr(self, opt, options[opt]) + else: + setattr(self, opt, self.default_options[opt]) + + # sanity check client option hash + for opt in options.keys(): + if opt not in self.default_options: + raise KeyError(f"invalid TextFile option '{opt}'") + + if file is None: + self.open(filename) + else: + self.filename = filename + self.file = file + self.current_line = 0 # assuming that file is at BOF! + + # 'linebuf' is a stack of lines that will be emptied before we + # actually read from the file; it's only populated by an + # 'unreadline()' operation + self.linebuf = [] + + def open(self, filename): + """Open a new file named 'filename'. This overrides both the + 'filename' and 'file' arguments to the constructor.""" + self.filename = filename + self.file = open(self.filename, errors=self.errors, encoding='utf-8') + self.current_line = 0 + + def close(self): + """Close the current file and forget everything we know about it + (filename, current line number).""" + file = self.file + self.file = None + self.filename = None + self.current_line = None + file.close() + + def gen_error(self, msg, line=None): + outmsg = [] + if line is None: + line = self.current_line + outmsg.append(self.filename + ", ") + if isinstance(line, (list, tuple)): + outmsg.append("lines {}-{}: ".format(*line)) + else: + outmsg.append(f"line {int(line)}: ") + outmsg.append(str(msg)) + return "".join(outmsg) + + def error(self, msg, line=None): + raise ValueError("error: " + self.gen_error(msg, line)) + + def warn(self, msg, line=None): + """Print (to stderr) a warning message tied to the current logical + line in the current file. If the current logical line in the + file spans multiple physical lines, the warning refers to the + whole range, eg. "lines 3-5". If 'line' supplied, it overrides + the current line number; it may be a list or tuple to indicate a + range of physical lines, or an integer for a single physical + line.""" + sys.stderr.write("warning: " + self.gen_error(msg, line) + "\n") + + def readline(self): # noqa: C901 + """Read and return a single logical line from the current file (or + from an internal buffer if lines have previously been "unread" + with 'unreadline()'). If the 'join_lines' option is true, this + may involve reading multiple physical lines concatenated into a + single string. Updates the current line number, so calling + 'warn()' after 'readline()' emits a warning about the physical + line(s) just read. Returns None on end-of-file, since the empty + string can occur if 'rstrip_ws' is true but 'strip_blanks' is + not.""" + # If any "unread" lines waiting in 'linebuf', return the top + # one. (We don't actually buffer read-ahead data -- lines only + # get put in 'linebuf' if the client explicitly does an + # 'unreadline()'. + if self.linebuf: + line = self.linebuf[-1] + del self.linebuf[-1] + return line + + buildup_line = '' + + while True: + # read the line, make it None if EOF + line = self.file.readline() + if line == '': + line = None + + if self.strip_comments and line: + # Look for the first "#" in the line. If none, never + # mind. If we find one and it's the first character, or + # is not preceded by "\", then it starts a comment -- + # strip the comment, strip whitespace before it, and + # carry on. Otherwise, it's just an escaped "#", so + # unescape it (and any other escaped "#"'s that might be + # lurking in there) and otherwise leave the line alone. + + pos = line.find("#") + if pos == -1: # no "#" -- no comments + pass + + # It's definitely a comment -- either "#" is the first + # character, or it's elsewhere and unescaped. + elif pos == 0 or line[pos - 1] != "\\": + # Have to preserve the trailing newline, because it's + # the job of a later step (rstrip_ws) to remove it -- + # and if rstrip_ws is false, we'd better preserve it! + # (NB. this means that if the final line is all comment + # and has no trailing newline, we will think that it's + # EOF; I think that's OK.) + eol = (line[-1] == '\n') and '\n' or '' + line = line[0:pos] + eol + + # If all that's left is whitespace, then skip line + # *now*, before we try to join it to 'buildup_line' -- + # that way constructs like + # hello \\ + # # comment that should be ignored + # there + # result in "hello there". + if line.strip() == "": + continue + else: # it's an escaped "#" + line = line.replace("\\#", "#") + + # did previous line end with a backslash? then accumulate + if self.join_lines and buildup_line: + # oops: end of file + if line is None: + self.warn("continuation line immediately precedes end-of-file") + return buildup_line + + if self.collapse_join: + line = line.lstrip() + line = buildup_line + line + + # careful: pay attention to line number when incrementing it + if isinstance(self.current_line, list): + self.current_line[1] = self.current_line[1] + 1 + else: + self.current_line = [self.current_line, self.current_line + 1] + # just an ordinary line, read it as usual + else: + if line is None: # eof + return None + + # still have to be careful about incrementing the line number! + if isinstance(self.current_line, list): + self.current_line = self.current_line[1] + 1 + else: + self.current_line = self.current_line + 1 + + # strip whitespace however the client wants (leading and + # trailing, or one or the other, or neither) + if self.lstrip_ws and self.rstrip_ws: + line = line.strip() + elif self.lstrip_ws: + line = line.lstrip() + elif self.rstrip_ws: + line = line.rstrip() + + # blank line (whether we rstrip'ed or not)? skip to next line + # if appropriate + if line in ('', '\n') and self.skip_blanks: + continue + + if self.join_lines: + if line[-1] == '\\': + buildup_line = line[:-1] + continue + + if line[-2:] == '\\\n': + buildup_line = line[0:-2] + '\n' + continue + + # well, I guess there's some actual content there: return it + return line + + def readlines(self): + """Read and return the list of all logical lines remaining in the + current file.""" + lines = [] + while True: + line = self.readline() + if line is None: + return lines + lines.append(line) + + def unreadline(self, line): + """Push 'line' (a string) onto an internal buffer that will be + checked by future 'readline()' calls. Handy for implementing + a parser with line-at-a-time lookahead.""" + self.linebuf.append(line) diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/unixccompiler.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/unixccompiler.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..20b8ce6b9bba21bd709b77249bdcae5b4119e9ca --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/unixccompiler.py @@ -0,0 +1,9 @@ +import importlib + +from .compilers.C import unix + +UnixCCompiler = unix.Compiler + +# ensure import of unixccompiler implies ccompiler imported +# (pypa/setuptools#4871) +importlib.import_module('distutils.ccompiler') diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/util.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/util.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..47bb5af5e4b9c78c8b7e3657594562115750db8a --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/util.py @@ -0,0 +1,506 @@ +"""distutils.util + +Miscellaneous utility functions -- anything that doesn't fit into +one of the other *util.py modules. +""" + +from __future__ import annotations + +import functools +import importlib.util +import os +import pathlib +import re +import string +import subprocess +import sys +import sysconfig +import tempfile +from collections.abc import Callable, Iterable, Mapping +from typing import TYPE_CHECKING, AnyStr + +from jaraco.functools import pass_none + +from ._log import log +from ._modified import newer +from .errors import DistutilsByteCompileError, DistutilsPlatformError +from .spawn import spawn + +if TYPE_CHECKING: + from typing_extensions import TypeVarTuple, Unpack + + _Ts = TypeVarTuple("_Ts") + + +def get_host_platform() -> str: + """ + Return a string that identifies the current platform. Use this + function to distinguish platform-specific build directories and + platform-specific built distributions. + """ + + # This function initially exposed platforms as defined in Python 3.9 + # even with older Python versions when distutils was split out. + # Now it delegates to stdlib sysconfig. + + return sysconfig.get_platform() + + +def get_platform() -> str: + if os.name == 'nt': + TARGET_TO_PLAT = { + 'x86': 'win32', + 'x64': 'win-amd64', + 'arm': 'win-arm32', + 'arm64': 'win-arm64', + } + target = os.environ.get('VSCMD_ARG_TGT_ARCH') + return TARGET_TO_PLAT.get(target) or get_host_platform() + return get_host_platform() + + +if sys.platform == 'darwin': + _syscfg_macosx_ver = None # cache the version pulled from sysconfig +MACOSX_VERSION_VAR = 'MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET' + + +def _clear_cached_macosx_ver(): + """For testing only. Do not call.""" + global _syscfg_macosx_ver + _syscfg_macosx_ver = None + + +def get_macosx_target_ver_from_syscfg(): + """Get the version of macOS latched in the Python interpreter configuration. + Returns the version as a string or None if can't obtain one. Cached.""" + global _syscfg_macosx_ver + if _syscfg_macosx_ver is None: + from distutils import sysconfig + + ver = sysconfig.get_config_var(MACOSX_VERSION_VAR) or '' + if ver: + _syscfg_macosx_ver = ver + return _syscfg_macosx_ver + + +def get_macosx_target_ver(): + """Return the version of macOS for which we are building. + + The target version defaults to the version in sysconfig latched at time + the Python interpreter was built, unless overridden by an environment + variable. If neither source has a value, then None is returned""" + + syscfg_ver = get_macosx_target_ver_from_syscfg() + env_ver = os.environ.get(MACOSX_VERSION_VAR) + + if env_ver: + # Validate overridden version against sysconfig version, if have both. + # Ensure that the deployment target of the build process is not less + # than 10.3 if the interpreter was built for 10.3 or later. This + # ensures extension modules are built with correct compatibility + # values, specifically LDSHARED which can use + # '-undefined dynamic_lookup' which only works on >= 10.3. + if ( + syscfg_ver + and split_version(syscfg_ver) >= [10, 3] + and split_version(env_ver) < [10, 3] + ): + my_msg = ( + '$' + MACOSX_VERSION_VAR + ' mismatch: ' + f'now "{env_ver}" but "{syscfg_ver}" during configure; ' + 'must use 10.3 or later' + ) + raise DistutilsPlatformError(my_msg) + return env_ver + return syscfg_ver + + +def split_version(s: str) -> list[int]: + """Convert a dot-separated string into a list of numbers for comparisons""" + return [int(n) for n in s.split('.')] + + +@pass_none +def convert_path(pathname: str | os.PathLike[str]) -> str: + r""" + Allow for pathlib.Path inputs, coax to a native path string. + + If None is passed, will just pass it through as + Setuptools relies on this behavior. + + >>> convert_path(None) is None + True + + Removes empty paths. + + >>> convert_path('foo/./bar').replace('\\', '/') + 'foo/bar' + """ + return os.fspath(pathlib.PurePath(pathname)) + + +def change_root( + new_root: AnyStr | os.PathLike[AnyStr], pathname: AnyStr | os.PathLike[AnyStr] +) -> AnyStr: + """Return 'pathname' with 'new_root' prepended. If 'pathname' is + relative, this is equivalent to "os.path.join(new_root,pathname)". + Otherwise, it requires making 'pathname' relative and then joining the + two, which is tricky on DOS/Windows and Mac OS. + """ + if os.name == 'posix': + if not os.path.isabs(pathname): + return os.path.join(new_root, pathname) + else: + return os.path.join(new_root, pathname[1:]) + + elif os.name == 'nt': + (drive, path) = os.path.splitdrive(pathname) + if path[0] == os.sep: + path = path[1:] + return os.path.join(new_root, path) + + raise DistutilsPlatformError(f"nothing known about platform '{os.name}'") + + +@functools.lru_cache +def check_environ() -> None: + """Ensure that 'os.environ' has all the environment variables we + guarantee that users can use in config files, command-line options, + etc. Currently this includes: + HOME - user's home directory (Unix only) + PLAT - description of the current platform, including hardware + and OS (see 'get_platform()') + """ + if os.name == 'posix' and 'HOME' not in os.environ: + try: + import pwd + + os.environ['HOME'] = pwd.getpwuid(os.getuid())[5] + except (ImportError, KeyError): + # bpo-10496: if the current user identifier doesn't exist in the + # password database, do nothing + pass + + if 'PLAT' not in os.environ: + os.environ['PLAT'] = get_platform() + + +def subst_vars(s, local_vars: Mapping[str, object]) -> str: + """ + Perform variable substitution on 'string'. + Variables are indicated by format-style braces ("{var}"). + Variable is substituted by the value found in the 'local_vars' + dictionary or in 'os.environ' if it's not in 'local_vars'. + 'os.environ' is first checked/augmented to guarantee that it contains + certain values: see 'check_environ()'. Raise ValueError for any + variables not found in either 'local_vars' or 'os.environ'. + """ + check_environ() + lookup = dict(os.environ) + lookup.update((name, str(value)) for name, value in local_vars.items()) + try: + return _subst_compat(s).format_map(lookup) + except KeyError as var: + raise ValueError(f"invalid variable {var}") + + +def _subst_compat(s): + """ + Replace shell/Perl-style variable substitution with + format-style. For compatibility. + """ + + def _subst(match): + return f'{{{match.group(1)}}}' + + repl = re.sub(r'\$([a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z_0-9]*)', _subst, s) + if repl != s: + import warnings + + warnings.warn( + "shell/Perl-style substitutions are deprecated", + DeprecationWarning, + ) + return repl + + +def grok_environment_error(exc: object, prefix: str = "error: ") -> str: + # Function kept for backward compatibility. + # Used to try clever things with EnvironmentErrors, + # but nowadays str(exception) produces good messages. + return prefix + str(exc) + + +# Needed by 'split_quoted()' +_wordchars_re = _squote_re = _dquote_re = None + + +def _init_regex(): + global _wordchars_re, _squote_re, _dquote_re + _wordchars_re = re.compile(rf'[^\\\'\"{string.whitespace} ]*') + _squote_re = re.compile(r"'(?:[^'\\]|\\.)*'") + _dquote_re = re.compile(r'"(?:[^"\\]|\\.)*"') + + +def split_quoted(s: str) -> list[str]: + """Split a string up according to Unix shell-like rules for quotes and + backslashes. In short: words are delimited by spaces, as long as those + spaces are not escaped by a backslash, or inside a quoted string. + Single and double quotes are equivalent, and the quote characters can + be backslash-escaped. The backslash is stripped from any two-character + escape sequence, leaving only the escaped character. The quote + characters are stripped from any quoted string. Returns a list of + words. + """ + + # This is a nice algorithm for splitting up a single string, since it + # doesn't require character-by-character examination. It was a little + # bit of a brain-bender to get it working right, though... + if _wordchars_re is None: + _init_regex() + + s = s.strip() + words = [] + pos = 0 + + while s: + m = _wordchars_re.match(s, pos) + end = m.end() + if end == len(s): + words.append(s[:end]) + break + + if s[end] in string.whitespace: + # unescaped, unquoted whitespace: now + # we definitely have a word delimiter + words.append(s[:end]) + s = s[end:].lstrip() + pos = 0 + + elif s[end] == '\\': + # preserve whatever is being escaped; + # will become part of the current word + s = s[:end] + s[end + 1 :] + pos = end + 1 + + else: + if s[end] == "'": # slurp singly-quoted string + m = _squote_re.match(s, end) + elif s[end] == '"': # slurp doubly-quoted string + m = _dquote_re.match(s, end) + else: + raise RuntimeError(f"this can't happen (bad char '{s[end]}')") + + if m is None: + raise ValueError(f"bad string (mismatched {s[end]} quotes?)") + + (beg, end) = m.span() + s = s[:beg] + s[beg + 1 : end - 1] + s[end:] + pos = m.end() - 2 + + if pos >= len(s): + words.append(s) + break + + return words + + +# split_quoted () + + +def execute( + func: Callable[[Unpack[_Ts]], object], + args: tuple[Unpack[_Ts]], + msg: object = None, + verbose: bool = False, +) -> None: + """ + Perform some action that affects the outside world (e.g. by + writing to the filesystem). Was previously used to deal with + "dry run" operations, but now runs unconditionally. + """ + if msg is None: + msg = f"{func.__name__}{args!r}" + if msg[-2:] == ',)': # correct for singleton tuple + msg = msg[0:-2] + ')' + + log.info(msg) + func(*args) + + +def strtobool(val: str) -> bool: + """Convert a string representation of truth to true (1) or false (0). + + True values are 'y', 'yes', 't', 'true', 'on', and '1'; false values + are 'n', 'no', 'f', 'false', 'off', and '0'. Raises ValueError if + 'val' is anything else. + """ + val = val.lower() + if val in ('y', 'yes', 't', 'true', 'on', '1'): + return True + elif val in ('n', 'no', 'f', 'false', 'off', '0'): + return False + else: + raise ValueError(f"invalid truth value {val!r}") + + +def byte_compile( # noqa: C901 + py_files: Iterable[str], + optimize: int = 0, + force: bool = False, + prefix: str | None = None, + base_dir: str | None = None, + verbose: bool = True, + direct: bool | None = None, +) -> None: + """Byte-compile a collection of Python source files to .pyc + files in a __pycache__ subdirectory. 'py_files' is a list + of files to compile; any files that don't end in ".py" are silently + skipped. 'optimize' must be one of the following: + 0 - don't optimize + 1 - normal optimization (like "python -O") + 2 - extra optimization (like "python -OO") + If 'force' is true, all files are recompiled regardless of + timestamps. + + The source filename encoded in each bytecode file defaults to the + filenames listed in 'py_files'; you can modify these with 'prefix' and + 'basedir'. 'prefix' is a string that will be stripped off of each + source filename, and 'base_dir' is a directory name that will be + prepended (after 'prefix' is stripped). You can supply either or both + (or neither) of 'prefix' and 'base_dir', as you wish. + + Byte-compilation is either done directly in this interpreter process + with the standard py_compile module, or indirectly by writing a + temporary script and executing it. Normally, you should let + 'byte_compile()' figure out to use direct compilation or not (see + the source for details). The 'direct' flag is used by the script + generated in indirect mode; unless you know what you're doing, leave + it set to None. + """ + + # nothing is done if sys.dont_write_bytecode is True + if sys.dont_write_bytecode: + raise DistutilsByteCompileError('byte-compiling is disabled.') + + # First, if the caller didn't force us into direct or indirect mode, + # figure out which mode we should be in. We take a conservative + # approach: choose direct mode *only* if the current interpreter is + # in debug mode and optimize is 0. If we're not in debug mode (-O + # or -OO), we don't know which level of optimization this + # interpreter is running with, so we can't do direct + # byte-compilation and be certain that it's the right thing. Thus, + # always compile indirectly if the current interpreter is in either + # optimize mode, or if either optimization level was requested by + # the caller. + if direct is None: + direct = __debug__ and optimize == 0 + + # "Indirect" byte-compilation: write a temporary script and then + # run it with the appropriate flags. + if not direct: + (script_fd, script_name) = tempfile.mkstemp(".py") + log.info("writing byte-compilation script '%s'", script_name) + script = os.fdopen(script_fd, "w", encoding='utf-8') + + with script: + script.write( + """\ +from distutils.util import byte_compile +files = [ +""" + ) + + # XXX would be nice to write absolute filenames, just for + # safety's sake (script should be more robust in the face of + # chdir'ing before running it). But this requires abspath'ing + # 'prefix' as well, and that breaks the hack in build_lib's + # 'byte_compile()' method that carefully tacks on a trailing + # slash (os.sep really) to make sure the prefix here is "just + # right". This whole prefix business is rather delicate -- the + # problem is that it's really a directory, but I'm treating it + # as a dumb string, so trailing slashes and so forth matter. + + script.write(",\n".join(map(repr, py_files)) + "]\n") + script.write( + f""" +byte_compile(files, optimize={optimize!r}, force={force!r}, + prefix={prefix!r}, base_dir={base_dir!r}, + verbose={verbose!r}, + direct=True) +""" + ) + + cmd = [sys.executable] + cmd.extend(subprocess._optim_args_from_interpreter_flags()) + cmd.append(script_name) + spawn(cmd) + execute(os.remove, (script_name,), f"removing {script_name}") + + # "Direct" byte-compilation: use the py_compile module to compile + # right here, right now. Note that the script generated in indirect + # mode simply calls 'byte_compile()' in direct mode, a weird sort of + # cross-process recursion. Hey, it works! + else: + from py_compile import compile + + for file in py_files: + if file[-3:] != ".py": + # This lets us be lazy and not filter filenames in + # the "install_lib" command. + continue + + # Terminology from the py_compile module: + # cfile - byte-compiled file + # dfile - purported source filename (same as 'file' by default) + if optimize >= 0: + opt = '' if optimize == 0 else optimize + cfile = importlib.util.cache_from_source(file, optimization=opt) + else: + cfile = importlib.util.cache_from_source(file) + dfile = file + if prefix: + if file[: len(prefix)] != prefix: + raise ValueError( + f"invalid prefix: filename {file!r} doesn't start with {prefix!r}" + ) + dfile = dfile[len(prefix) :] + if base_dir: + dfile = os.path.join(base_dir, dfile) + + cfile_base = os.path.basename(cfile) + if direct: + if force or newer(file, cfile): + log.info("byte-compiling %s to %s", file, cfile_base) + compile(file, cfile, dfile) + else: + log.debug("skipping byte-compilation of %s to %s", file, cfile_base) + + +def rfc822_escape(header: str) -> str: + """Return a version of the string escaped for inclusion in an + RFC-822 header, by ensuring there are 8 spaces space after each newline. + """ + indent = 8 * " " + lines = header.splitlines(keepends=True) + + # Emulate the behaviour of `str.split` + # (the terminal line break in `splitlines` does not result in an extra line): + ends_in_newline = lines and lines[-1].splitlines()[0] != lines[-1] + suffix = indent if ends_in_newline else "" + + return indent.join(lines) + suffix + + +def is_mingw() -> bool: + """Returns True if the current platform is mingw. + + Python compiled with Mingw-w64 has sys.platform == 'win32' and + get_platform() starts with 'mingw'. + """ + return sys.platform == 'win32' and get_platform().startswith('mingw') + + +def is_freethreaded(): + """Return True if the Python interpreter is built with free threading support.""" + return bool(sysconfig.get_config_var('Py_GIL_DISABLED')) diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/version.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/version.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..2223ee9c8cab2495034a57d4585625feb81a8330 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/version.py @@ -0,0 +1,348 @@ +# +# distutils/version.py +# +# Implements multiple version numbering conventions for the +# Python Module Distribution Utilities. +# +# $Id$ +# + +"""Provides classes to represent module version numbers (one class for +each style of version numbering). There are currently two such classes +implemented: StrictVersion and LooseVersion. + +Every version number class implements the following interface: + * the 'parse' method takes a string and parses it to some internal + representation; if the string is an invalid version number, + 'parse' raises a ValueError exception + * the class constructor takes an optional string argument which, + if supplied, is passed to 'parse' + * __str__ reconstructs the string that was passed to 'parse' (or + an equivalent string -- ie. one that will generate an equivalent + version number instance) + * __repr__ generates Python code to recreate the version number instance + * _cmp compares the current instance with either another instance + of the same class or a string (which will be parsed to an instance + of the same class, thus must follow the same rules) +""" + +import contextlib +import re +import warnings + + +@contextlib.contextmanager +def suppress_known_deprecation(): + with warnings.catch_warnings(record=True) as ctx: + warnings.filterwarnings( + action='default', + category=DeprecationWarning, + message="distutils Version classes are deprecated.", + ) + yield ctx + + +class Version: + """Abstract base class for version numbering classes. Just provides + constructor (__init__) and reproducer (__repr__), because those + seem to be the same for all version numbering classes; and route + rich comparisons to _cmp. + """ + + def __init__(self, vstring=None): + if vstring: + self.parse(vstring) + warnings.warn( + "distutils Version classes are deprecated. Use packaging.version instead.", + DeprecationWarning, + stacklevel=2, + ) + + def __repr__(self): + return f"{self.__class__.__name__} ('{self}')" + + def __eq__(self, other): + c = self._cmp(other) + if c is NotImplemented: + return c + return c == 0 + + def __lt__(self, other): + c = self._cmp(other) + if c is NotImplemented: + return c + return c < 0 + + def __le__(self, other): + c = self._cmp(other) + if c is NotImplemented: + return c + return c <= 0 + + def __gt__(self, other): + c = self._cmp(other) + if c is NotImplemented: + return c + return c > 0 + + def __ge__(self, other): + c = self._cmp(other) + if c is NotImplemented: + return c + return c >= 0 + + +# Interface for version-number classes -- must be implemented +# by the following classes (the concrete ones -- Version should +# be treated as an abstract class). +# __init__ (string) - create and take same action as 'parse' +# (string parameter is optional) +# parse (string) - convert a string representation to whatever +# internal representation is appropriate for +# this style of version numbering +# __str__ (self) - convert back to a string; should be very similar +# (if not identical to) the string supplied to parse +# __repr__ (self) - generate Python code to recreate +# the instance +# _cmp (self, other) - compare two version numbers ('other' may +# be an unparsed version string, or another +# instance of your version class) + + +class StrictVersion(Version): + """Version numbering for anal retentives and software idealists. + Implements the standard interface for version number classes as + described above. A version number consists of two or three + dot-separated numeric components, with an optional "pre-release" tag + on the end. The pre-release tag consists of the letter 'a' or 'b' + followed by a number. If the numeric components of two version + numbers are equal, then one with a pre-release tag will always + be deemed earlier (lesser) than one without. + + The following are valid version numbers (shown in the order that + would be obtained by sorting according to the supplied cmp function): + + 0.4 0.4.0 (these two are equivalent) + 0.4.1 + 0.5a1 + 0.5b3 + 0.5 + 0.9.6 + 1.0 + 1.0.4a3 + 1.0.4b1 + 1.0.4 + + The following are examples of invalid version numbers: + + 1 + 2.7.2.2 + 1.3.a4 + 1.3pl1 + 1.3c4 + + The rationale for this version numbering system will be explained + in the distutils documentation. + """ + + version_re = re.compile( + r'^(\d+) \. (\d+) (\. (\d+))? ([ab](\d+))?$', re.VERBOSE | re.ASCII + ) + + def parse(self, vstring): + match = self.version_re.match(vstring) + if not match: + raise ValueError(f"invalid version number '{vstring}'") + + (major, minor, patch, prerelease, prerelease_num) = match.group(1, 2, 4, 5, 6) + + if patch: + self.version = tuple(map(int, [major, minor, patch])) + else: + self.version = tuple(map(int, [major, minor])) + (0,) + + if prerelease: + self.prerelease = (prerelease[0], int(prerelease_num)) + else: + self.prerelease = None + + def __str__(self): + if self.version[2] == 0: + vstring = '.'.join(map(str, self.version[0:2])) + else: + vstring = '.'.join(map(str, self.version)) + + if self.prerelease: + vstring = vstring + self.prerelease[0] + str(self.prerelease[1]) + + return vstring + + def _cmp(self, other): + if isinstance(other, str): + with suppress_known_deprecation(): + other = StrictVersion(other) + elif not isinstance(other, StrictVersion): + return NotImplemented + + if self.version == other.version: + # versions match; pre-release drives the comparison + return self._cmp_prerelease(other) + + return -1 if self.version < other.version else 1 + + def _cmp_prerelease(self, other): + """ + case 1: self has prerelease, other doesn't; other is greater + case 2: self doesn't have prerelease, other does: self is greater + case 3: both or neither have prerelease: compare them! + """ + if self.prerelease and not other.prerelease: + return -1 + elif not self.prerelease and other.prerelease: + return 1 + + if self.prerelease == other.prerelease: + return 0 + elif self.prerelease < other.prerelease: + return -1 + else: + return 1 + + +# end class StrictVersion + + +# The rules according to Greg Stein: +# 1) a version number has 1 or more numbers separated by a period or by +# sequences of letters. If only periods, then these are compared +# left-to-right to determine an ordering. +# 2) sequences of letters are part of the tuple for comparison and are +# compared lexicographically +# 3) recognize the numeric components may have leading zeroes +# +# The LooseVersion class below implements these rules: a version number +# string is split up into a tuple of integer and string components, and +# comparison is a simple tuple comparison. This means that version +# numbers behave in a predictable and obvious way, but a way that might +# not necessarily be how people *want* version numbers to behave. There +# wouldn't be a problem if people could stick to purely numeric version +# numbers: just split on period and compare the numbers as tuples. +# However, people insist on putting letters into their version numbers; +# the most common purpose seems to be: +# - indicating a "pre-release" version +# ('alpha', 'beta', 'a', 'b', 'pre', 'p') +# - indicating a post-release patch ('p', 'pl', 'patch') +# but of course this can't cover all version number schemes, and there's +# no way to know what a programmer means without asking him. +# +# The problem is what to do with letters (and other non-numeric +# characters) in a version number. The current implementation does the +# obvious and predictable thing: keep them as strings and compare +# lexically within a tuple comparison. This has the desired effect if +# an appended letter sequence implies something "post-release": +# eg. "0.99" < "0.99pl14" < "1.0", and "5.001" < "5.001m" < "5.002". +# +# However, if letters in a version number imply a pre-release version, +# the "obvious" thing isn't correct. Eg. you would expect that +# "1.5.1" < "1.5.2a2" < "1.5.2", but under the tuple/lexical comparison +# implemented here, this just isn't so. +# +# Two possible solutions come to mind. The first is to tie the +# comparison algorithm to a particular set of semantic rules, as has +# been done in the StrictVersion class above. This works great as long +# as everyone can go along with bondage and discipline. Hopefully a +# (large) subset of Python module programmers will agree that the +# particular flavour of bondage and discipline provided by StrictVersion +# provides enough benefit to be worth using, and will submit their +# version numbering scheme to its domination. The free-thinking +# anarchists in the lot will never give in, though, and something needs +# to be done to accommodate them. +# +# Perhaps a "moderately strict" version class could be implemented that +# lets almost anything slide (syntactically), and makes some heuristic +# assumptions about non-digits in version number strings. This could +# sink into special-case-hell, though; if I was as talented and +# idiosyncratic as Larry Wall, I'd go ahead and implement a class that +# somehow knows that "1.2.1" < "1.2.2a2" < "1.2.2" < "1.2.2pl3", and is +# just as happy dealing with things like "2g6" and "1.13++". I don't +# think I'm smart enough to do it right though. +# +# In any case, I've coded the test suite for this module (see +# ../test/test_version.py) specifically to fail on things like comparing +# "1.2a2" and "1.2". That's not because the *code* is doing anything +# wrong, it's because the simple, obvious design doesn't match my +# complicated, hairy expectations for real-world version numbers. It +# would be a snap to fix the test suite to say, "Yep, LooseVersion does +# the Right Thing" (ie. the code matches the conception). But I'd rather +# have a conception that matches common notions about version numbers. + + +class LooseVersion(Version): + """Version numbering for anarchists and software realists. + Implements the standard interface for version number classes as + described above. A version number consists of a series of numbers, + separated by either periods or strings of letters. When comparing + version numbers, the numeric components will be compared + numerically, and the alphabetic components lexically. The following + are all valid version numbers, in no particular order: + + 1.5.1 + 1.5.2b2 + 161 + 3.10a + 8.02 + 3.4j + 1996.07.12 + 3.2.pl0 + 3.1.1.6 + 2g6 + 11g + 0.960923 + 2.2beta29 + 1.13++ + 5.5.kw + 2.0b1pl0 + + In fact, there is no such thing as an invalid version number under + this scheme; the rules for comparison are simple and predictable, + but may not always give the results you want (for some definition + of "want"). + """ + + component_re = re.compile(r'(\d+ | [a-z]+ | \.)', re.VERBOSE) + + def parse(self, vstring): + # I've given up on thinking I can reconstruct the version string + # from the parsed tuple -- so I just store the string here for + # use by __str__ + self.vstring = vstring + components = [x for x in self.component_re.split(vstring) if x and x != '.'] + for i, obj in enumerate(components): + try: + components[i] = int(obj) + except ValueError: + pass + + self.version = components + + def __str__(self): + return self.vstring + + def __repr__(self): + return f"LooseVersion ('{self}')" + + def _cmp(self, other): + if isinstance(other, str): + other = LooseVersion(other) + elif not isinstance(other, LooseVersion): + return NotImplemented + + if self.version == other.version: + return 0 + if self.version < other.version: + return -1 + if self.version > other.version: + return 1 + + +# end class LooseVersion diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools-10.8.0.dist-info/INSTALLER b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools-10.8.0.dist-info/INSTALLER new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..5c69047b2eb8235994febeeae1da4a82365a240a --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools-10.8.0.dist-info/INSTALLER @@ -0,0 +1 @@ +uv \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools-10.8.0.dist-info/METADATA b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools-10.8.0.dist-info/METADATA new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..bb7a3db109905db8cc7f1f2f5047e0b609aaf4ce --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools-10.8.0.dist-info/METADATA @@ -0,0 +1,283 @@ +Metadata-Version: 2.4 +Name: more-itertools +Version: 10.8.0 +Summary: More routines for operating on iterables, beyond itertools +Keywords: itertools,iterator,iteration,filter,peek,peekable,chunk,chunked +Author-email: Erik Rose +Requires-Python: >=3.9 +Description-Content-Type: text/x-rst +License-Expression: MIT +Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable +Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers +Classifier: Natural Language :: English +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3 +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9 +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.10 +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.11 +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.12 +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.13 +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3 :: Only +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: CPython +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: PyPy +Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries +License-File: LICENSE +Project-URL: Documentation, https://more-itertools.readthedocs.io/en/stable/ +Project-URL: Homepage, https://github.com/more-itertools/more-itertools + +============== +More Itertools +============== + +.. image:: https://readthedocs.org/projects/more-itertools/badge/?version=latest + :target: https://more-itertools.readthedocs.io/en/stable/ + +Python's ``itertools`` library is a gem - you can compose elegant solutions +for a variety of problems with the functions it provides. In ``more-itertools`` +we collect additional building blocks, recipes, and routines for working with +Python iterables. + ++------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| Grouping | `chunked `_, | +| | `ichunked `_, | +| | `chunked_even `_, | +| | `sliced `_, | +| | `constrained_batches `_, | +| | `distribute `_, | +| | `divide `_, | +| | `split_at `_, | +| | `split_before `_, | +| | `split_after `_, | +| | `split_into `_, | +| | `split_when `_, | +| | `bucket `_, | +| | `unzip `_, | +| | `batched `_, | +| | `grouper `_, | +| | `partition `_, | +| | `transpose `_ | ++------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| Lookahead and lookback | `spy `_, | +| | `peekable `_, | +| | `seekable `_ | ++------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| Windowing | `windowed `_, | +| | `substrings `_, | +| | `substrings_indexes `_, | +| | `stagger `_, | +| | `windowed_complete `_, | +| | `pairwise `_, | +| | `triplewise `_, | +| | `sliding_window `_, | +| | `subslices `_ | ++------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| Augmenting | `count_cycle `_, | +| | `intersperse `_, | +| | `padded `_, | +| | `repeat_each `_, | +| | `mark_ends `_, | +| | `repeat_last `_, | +| | `adjacent `_, | +| | `groupby_transform `_, | +| | `pad_none `_, | +| | `ncycles `_ | ++------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| Combining | `collapse `_, | +| | `sort_together `_, | +| | `interleave `_, | +| | `interleave_longest `_, | +| | `interleave_evenly `_, | +| | `interleave_randomly `_, | +| | `zip_offset `_, | +| | `zip_equal `_, | +| | `zip_broadcast `_, | +| | `flatten `_, | +| | `roundrobin `_, | +| | `prepend `_, | +| | `value_chain `_, | +| | `partial_product `_ | ++------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| Summarizing | `ilen `_, | +| | `unique_to_each `_, | +| | `sample `_, | +| | `consecutive_groups `_, | +| | `run_length `_, | +| | `map_reduce `_, | +| | `join_mappings `_, | +| | `exactly_n `_, | +| | `is_sorted `_, | +| | `all_equal `_, | +| | `all_unique `_, | +| | `argmin `_, | +| | `argmax `_, | +| | `minmax `_, | +| | `first_true `_, | +| | `quantify `_, | +| | `iequals `_ | ++------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| Selecting | `islice_extended `_, | +| | `first `_, | +| | `last `_, | +| | `one `_, | +| | `only `_, | +| | `strictly_n `_, | +| | `strip `_, | +| | `lstrip `_, | +| | `rstrip `_, | +| | `filter_except `_, | +| | `map_except `_, | +| | `filter_map `_, | +| | `iter_suppress `_, | +| | `nth_or_last `_, | +| | `extract `_, | +| | `unique_in_window `_, | +| | `before_and_after `_, | +| | `nth `_, | +| | `take `_, | +| | `tail `_, | +| | `unique_everseen `_, | +| | `unique_justseen `_, | +| | `unique `_, | +| | `duplicates_everseen `_, | +| | `duplicates_justseen `_, | +| | `classify_unique `_, | +| | `longest_common_prefix `_, | +| | `takewhile_inclusive `_ | ++------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| Math | `dft `_, | +| | `idft `_, | +| | `convolve `_, | +| | `dotproduct `_, | +| | `matmul `_, | +| | `polynomial_from_roots `_, | +| | `polynomial_derivative `_, | +| | `polynomial_eval `_, | +| | `sum_of_squares `_, | +| | `running_median `_, | +| | `totient `_ | ++------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| Integer math | `factor `_, | +| | `is_prime `_, | +| | `multinomial `_, | +| | `nth_prime `_, | +| | `sieve `_ | ++------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| Combinatorics | `circular_shifts `_, | +| | `derangements `_, | +| | `gray_product `_, | +| | `outer_product `_, | +| | `partitions `_, | +| | `set_partitions `_, | +| | `powerset `_, | +| | `powerset_of_sets `_ | +| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| | `distinct_combinations `_, | +| | `distinct_permutations `_ | +| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| | `combination_index `_, | +| | `combination_with_replacement_index `_, | +| | `permutation_index `_, | +| | `product_index `_ | +| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| | `nth_combination `_, | +| | `nth_combination_with_replacement `_, | +| | `nth_permutation `_, | +| | `nth_product `_ | +| +-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| | `random_combination `_, | +| | `random_combination_with_replacement `_, | +| | `random_permutation `_, | +| | `random_product `_ | ++------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| Wrapping | `always_iterable `_, | +| | `always_reversible `_, | +| | `countable `_, | +| | `consumer `_, | +| | `with_iter `_, | +| | `iter_except `_ | ++------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ +| Others | `locate `_, | +| | `rlocate `_, | +| | `replace `_, | +| | `numeric_range `_, | +| | `side_effect `_, | +| | `iterate `_, | +| | `loops `_, | +| | `difference `_, | +| | `make_decorator `_, | +| | `SequenceView `_, | +| | `time_limited `_, | +| | `map_if `_, | +| | `iter_index `_, | +| | `consume `_, | +| | `tabulate `_, | +| | `repeatfunc `_, | +| | `reshape `_, | +| | `doublestarmap `_ | ++------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ + + +Getting started +=============== + +To get started, install the library with `pip `_: + +.. code-block:: shell + + pip install more-itertools + +The recipes from the `itertools docs `_ +are included in the top-level package: + +.. code-block:: python + + >>> from more_itertools import flatten + >>> iterable = [(0, 1), (2, 3)] + >>> list(flatten(iterable)) + [0, 1, 2, 3] + +Several new recipes are available as well: + +.. code-block:: python + + >>> from more_itertools import chunked + >>> iterable = [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8] + >>> list(chunked(iterable, 3)) + [[0, 1, 2], [3, 4, 5], [6, 7, 8]] + + >>> from more_itertools import spy + >>> iterable = (x * x for x in range(1, 6)) + >>> head, iterable = spy(iterable, n=3) + >>> list(head) + [1, 4, 9] + >>> list(iterable) + [1, 4, 9, 16, 25] + + + +For the full listing of functions, see the `API documentation `_. + + +Links elsewhere +=============== + +Blog posts about ``more-itertools``: + +* `Yo, I heard you like decorators `__ +* `Tour of Python Itertools `__ (`Alternate `__) +* `Real-World Python More Itertools `_ + + +Development +=========== + +``more-itertools`` is maintained by `@erikrose `_ +and `@bbayles `_, with help from `many others `_. +If you have a problem or suggestion, please file a bug or pull request in this +repository. Thanks for contributing! + + +Version History +=============== + +The version history can be found in `documentation `_. + diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools-10.8.0.dist-info/RECORD b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools-10.8.0.dist-info/RECORD new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..61ef7d6dd02d0a26d3373299cd2efa792fb23165 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools-10.8.0.dist-info/RECORD @@ -0,0 +1,13 @@ +more_itertools-10.8.0.dist-info/INSTALLER,sha256=5hhM4Q4mYTT9z6QB6PGpUAW81PGNFrYrdXMj4oM_6ak,2 +more_itertools-10.8.0.dist-info/METADATA,sha256=arNRUUWr5YsGfwh8hnYxz0z11lP-2BuWQu4SCGw5BLg,39413 +more_itertools-10.8.0.dist-info/RECORD,, +more_itertools-10.8.0.dist-info/REQUESTED,sha256=47DEQpj8HBSa-_TImW-5JCeuQeRkm5NMpJWZG3hSuFU,0 +more_itertools-10.8.0.dist-info/WHEEL,sha256=G2gURzTEtmeR8nrdXUJfNiB3VYVxigPQ-bEQujpNiNs,82 +more_itertools-10.8.0.dist-info/licenses/LICENSE,sha256=CfHIyelBrz5YTVlkHqm4fYPAyw_QB-te85Gn4mQ8GkY,1053 +more_itertools/__init__.py,sha256=5F7E_zpoGcEBW_T_3WE0WYYt8j-gJodIuiBcOJxrOv8,149 +more_itertools/__init__.pyi,sha256=5B3eTzON1BBuOLob1vCflyEb2lSd6usXQQ-Cv-hXkeA,43 +more_itertools/more.py,sha256=mNPKKu5UI7lRL460vgm0QTCWFiGMVCMosSPxVSdibos,163690 +more_itertools/more.pyi,sha256=fpEgNX3O66wY5cnT-s5VYDKNUpAcaCyU3iP84It3OOM,27119 +more_itertools/py.typed,sha256=47DEQpj8HBSa-_TImW-5JCeuQeRkm5NMpJWZG3hSuFU,0 +more_itertools/recipes.py,sha256=Ma-kuBNZDFhaQDbIJgRmnrG86WzaupbOyUV3v8je3xw,41811 +more_itertools/recipes.pyi,sha256=LNRwN-OL3nkMfQAqx-PPc1fBaetUObb_Z6mdePyzh1c,6226 diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools-10.8.0.dist-info/REQUESTED b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools-10.8.0.dist-info/REQUESTED new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..e69de29bb2d1d6434b8b29ae775ad8c2e48c5391 diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools-10.8.0.dist-info/WHEEL b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools-10.8.0.dist-info/WHEEL new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..d8b9936dad9ab2513fa6979f411560d3b6b57e37 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools-10.8.0.dist-info/WHEEL @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ +Wheel-Version: 1.0 +Generator: flit 3.12.0 +Root-Is-Purelib: true +Tag: py3-none-any diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools/__init__.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools/__init__.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..24216c5c1feb8b6017f71d096124e5db0aac5bd2 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools/__init__.py @@ -0,0 +1,6 @@ +"""More routines for operating on iterables, beyond itertools""" + +from .more import * # noqa +from .recipes import * # noqa + +__version__ = '10.8.0' diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools/__init__.pyi b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools/__init__.pyi new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..96f6e36c7f4ac9ea0aebdcd9e11b8d1ff092d2ef --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools/__init__.pyi @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +from .more import * +from .recipes import * diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools/py.typed b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools/py.typed new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..e69de29bb2d1d6434b8b29ae775ad8c2e48c5391 diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools/recipes.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools/recipes.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..dacf61407d454907d661edde2d774bee11cec92a --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools/recipes.py @@ -0,0 +1,1471 @@ +"""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 random + +from bisect import bisect_left, insort +from collections import deque +from contextlib import suppress +from functools import lru_cache, partial, reduce +from heapq import heappush, heappushpop +from itertools import ( + accumulate, + chain, + combinations, + compress, + count, + cycle, + groupby, + islice, + product, + repeat, + starmap, + takewhile, + tee, + zip_longest, +) +from math import prod, comb, isqrt, gcd +from operator import mul, not_, itemgetter, getitem, index +from random import randrange, sample, choice +from sys import hexversion + +__all__ = [ + 'all_equal', + 'batched', + 'before_and_after', + 'consume', + 'convolve', + 'dotproduct', + 'first_true', + 'factor', + 'flatten', + 'grouper', + 'is_prime', + 'iter_except', + 'iter_index', + 'loops', + 'matmul', + 'multinomial', + 'ncycles', + 'nth', + 'nth_combination', + 'padnone', + 'pad_none', + 'pairwise', + 'partition', + 'polynomial_eval', + 'polynomial_from_roots', + 'polynomial_derivative', + 'powerset', + 'prepend', + 'quantify', + 'reshape', + 'random_combination_with_replacement', + 'random_combination', + 'random_permutation', + 'random_product', + 'repeatfunc', + 'roundrobin', + 'running_median', + 'sieve', + 'sliding_window', + 'subslices', + 'sum_of_squares', + 'tabulate', + 'tail', + 'take', + 'totient', + 'transpose', + 'triplewise', + 'unique', + 'unique_everseen', + 'unique_justseen', +] + +_marker = object() + + +# zip with strict is available for Python 3.10+ +try: + zip(strict=True) +except TypeError: # pragma: no cover + _zip_strict = zip +else: # pragma: no cover + _zip_strict = partial(zip, strict=True) + + +# math.sumprod is available for Python 3.12+ +try: + from math import sumprod as _sumprod +except ImportError: # pragma: no cover + _sumprod = lambda x, y: dotproduct(x, y) + + +# heapq max-heap functions are available for Python 3.14+ +try: + from heapq import heappush_max, heappushpop_max +except ImportError: # pragma: no cover + _max_heap_available = False +else: # pragma: no cover + _max_heap_available = True + + +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'] + + """ + try: + size = len(iterable) + except TypeError: + return iter(deque(iterable, maxlen=n)) + else: + return islice(iterable, max(0, size - n), None) + + +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 "", line 1, in + 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 "", line 1, in + 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, key=None): + """ + Returns ``True`` if all the elements are equal to each other. + + >>> all_equal('aaaa') + True + >>> all_equal('aaab') + False + + A function that accepts a single argument and returns a transformed version + of each input item can be specified with *key*: + + >>> all_equal('AaaA', key=str.casefold) + True + >>> all_equal([1, 2, 3], key=lambda x: x < 10) + True + + """ + iterator = groupby(iterable, key) + for first in iterator: + for second in iterator: + return False + return True + return True + + +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, 15, 12], [0.65, 0.80, 1.25]) + 33.5 + >>> 10 * 0.65 + 15 * 0.80 + 12 * 1.25 + 33.5 + + In Python 3.12 and later, use ``math.sumprod()`` instead. + """ + return sum(map(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) + return zip(a, b) + + +try: + from itertools import pairwise as itertools_pairwise +except ImportError: # pragma: no cover + pairwise = _pairwise +else: # pragma: no cover + + def pairwise(iterable): + return itertools_pairwise(iterable) + + pairwise.__doc__ = _pairwise.__doc__ + + +class UnequalIterablesError(ValueError): + def __init__(self, details=None): + msg = 'Iterables have different lengths' + if details is not None: + msg += (': index 0 has length {}; index {} has length {}').format( + *details + ) + + super().__init__(msg) + + +def _zip_equal_generator(iterables): + for combo in zip_longest(*iterables, fillvalue=_marker): + for val in combo: + if val is _marker: + raise UnequalIterablesError() + yield combo + + +def _zip_equal(*iterables): + # Check whether the iterables are all the same size. + try: + first_size = len(iterables[0]) + for i, it in enumerate(iterables[1:], 1): + size = len(it) + if size != first_size: + raise UnequalIterablesError(details=(first_size, i, size)) + # All sizes are equal, we can use the built-in zip. + return zip(*iterables) + # If any one of the iterables didn't have a length, start reading + # them until one runs out. + except TypeError: + return _zip_equal_generator(iterables) + + +def grouper(iterable, n, incomplete='fill', fillvalue=None): + """Group elements from *iterable* into fixed-length groups of length *n*. + + >>> list(grouper('ABCDEF', 3)) + [('A', 'B', 'C'), ('D', 'E', 'F')] + + The keyword arguments *incomplete* and *fillvalue* control what happens for + iterables whose length is not a multiple of *n*. + + When *incomplete* is `'fill'`, the last group will contain instances of + *fillvalue*. + + >>> list(grouper('ABCDEFG', 3, incomplete='fill', fillvalue='x')) + [('A', 'B', 'C'), ('D', 'E', 'F'), ('G', 'x', 'x')] + + When *incomplete* is `'ignore'`, the last group will not be emitted. + + >>> list(grouper('ABCDEFG', 3, incomplete='ignore', fillvalue='x')) + [('A', 'B', 'C'), ('D', 'E', 'F')] + + When *incomplete* is `'strict'`, a subclass of `ValueError` will be raised. + + >>> iterator = grouper('ABCDEFG', 3, incomplete='strict') + >>> list(iterator) # doctest: +IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL + Traceback (most recent call last): + ... + UnequalIterablesError + + """ + iterators = [iter(iterable)] * n + if incomplete == 'fill': + return zip_longest(*iterators, fillvalue=fillvalue) + if incomplete == 'strict': + return _zip_equal(*iterators) + if incomplete == 'ignore': + return zip(*iterators) + else: + raise ValueError('Expected fill, strict, or ignore') + + +def roundrobin(*iterables): + """Visit input iterables in a cycle until each is exhausted. + + >>> 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). + + """ + # Algorithm credited to George Sakkis + iterators = map(iter, iterables) + for num_active in range(len(iterables), 0, -1): + iterators = cycle(islice(iterators, num_active)) + yield from map(next, iterators) + + +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 + + t1, t2, p = tee(iterable, 3) + p1, p2 = tee(map(pred, p)) + return (compress(t1, map(not_, p1)), compress(t2, p2)) + + +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. + + >>> seq = [1, 1, 0] + >>> list(powerset(seq)) + [(), (1,), (1,), (0,), (1, 1), (1, 0), (1, 0), (1, 1, 0)] + + For a variant that efficiently yields actual :class:`set` instances, see + :func:`powerset_of_sets`. + """ + 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]] + + Similarly, 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'] + + """ + if key is None: + return map(itemgetter(0), groupby(iterable)) + + return map(next, map(itemgetter(1), groupby(iterable, key))) + + +def unique(iterable, key=None, reverse=False): + """Yields unique elements in sorted order. + + >>> list(unique([[1, 2], [3, 4], [1, 2]])) + [[1, 2], [3, 4]] + + *key* and *reverse* are passed to :func:`sorted`. + + >>> list(unique('ABBcCAD', str.casefold)) + ['A', 'B', 'c', 'D'] + >>> list(unique('ABBcCAD', str.casefold, reverse=True)) + ['D', 'c', 'B', 'A'] + + The elements in *iterable* need not be hashable, but they must be + comparable for sorting to work. + """ + sequenced = sorted(iterable, key=key, reverse=reverse) + return unique_justseen(sequenced, key=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))) + [] + + """ + with suppress(exception): + if first is not None: + yield first() + while True: + yield func() + + +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, repeat=repeat)``. + + """ + 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): + """Discrete linear convolution of two iterables. + Equivalent to polynomial multiplication. + + For example, multiplying ``(x² -x - 20)`` by ``(x - 3)`` + gives ``(x³ -4x² -17x + 60)``. + + >>> list(convolve([1, -1, -20], [1, -3])) + [1, -4, -17, 60] + + Examples of popular kinds of kernels: + + * The kernel ``[0.25, 0.25, 0.25, 0.25]`` computes a moving average. + For image data, this blurs the image and reduces noise. + * The kernel ``[1/2, 0, -1/2]`` estimates the first derivative of + a function evaluated at evenly spaced inputs. + * The kernel ``[1, -2, 1]`` estimates the second derivative of a + function evaluated at evenly spaced inputs. + + Convolutions are mathematically commutative; however, the inputs are + evaluated differently. The signal is consumed lazily and can be + infinite. The kernel is fully consumed before the calculations begin. + + Supports all numeric types: int, float, complex, Decimal, Fraction. + + References: + + * Article: https://betterexplained.com/articles/intuitive-convolution/ + * Video by 3Blue1Brown: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KuXjwB4LzSA + + """ + # This implementation comes from an older version of the itertools + # documentation. While the newer implementation is a bit clearer, + # this one was kept because the inlined window logic is faster + # and it avoids an unnecessary deque-to-tuple conversion. + 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 _sumprod(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. + """ + trues, after = tee(it) + trues = compress(takewhile(predicate, trues), zip(after)) + return trues, after + + +def triplewise(iterable): + """Return overlapping triplets from *iterable*. + + >>> list(triplewise('ABCDE')) + [('A', 'B', 'C'), ('B', 'C', 'D'), ('C', 'D', 'E')] + + """ + # This deviates from the itertools documentation recipe - see + # https://github.com/more-itertools/more-itertools/issues/889 + t1, t2, t3 = tee(iterable, 3) + next(t3, None) + next(t3, None) + next(t2, None) + return zip(t1, t2, t3) + + +def _sliding_window_islice(iterable, n): + # Fast path for small, non-zero values of n. + iterators = tee(iterable, n) + for i, iterator in enumerate(iterators): + next(islice(iterator, i, i), None) + return zip(*iterators) + + +def _sliding_window_deque(iterable, n): + # Normal path for other values of n. + iterator = iter(iterable) + window = deque(islice(iterator, n - 1), maxlen=n) + for x in iterator: + window.append(x) + yield tuple(window) + + +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`. + """ + if n > 20: + return _sliding_window_deque(iterable, n) + elif n > 2: + return _sliding_window_islice(iterable, n) + elif n == 2: + return pairwise(iterable) + elif n == 1: + return zip(iterable) + else: + raise ValueError(f'n should be at least one, not {n}') + + +def subslices(iterable): + """Return all contiguous non-empty subslices of *iterable*. + + >>> list(subslices('ABC')) + [['A'], ['A', 'B'], ['A', 'B', 'C'], ['B'], ['B', 'C'], ['C']] + + This is similar to :func:`substrings`, but emits items in a different + order. + """ + seq = list(iterable) + slices = starmap(slice, combinations(range(len(seq) + 1), 2)) + return map(getitem, repeat(seq), slices) + + +def polynomial_from_roots(roots): + """Compute a polynomial's coefficients from its roots. + + >>> roots = [5, -4, 3] # (x - 5) * (x + 4) * (x - 3) + >>> polynomial_from_roots(roots) # x³ - 4 x² - 17 x + 60 + [1, -4, -17, 60] + + Note that polynomial coefficients are specified in descending power order. + + Supports all numeric types: int, float, complex, Decimal, Fraction. + """ + + # This recipe differs from the one in itertools docs in that it + # applies list() after each call to convolve(). This avoids + # hitting stack limits with nested generators. + + poly = [1] + for root in roots: + poly = list(convolve(poly, (1, -root))) + return poly + + +def iter_index(iterable, value, start=0, stop=None): + """Yield the index of each place in *iterable* that *value* occurs, + beginning with index *start* and ending before index *stop*. + + + >>> list(iter_index('AABCADEAF', 'A')) + [0, 1, 4, 7] + >>> list(iter_index('AABCADEAF', 'A', 1)) # start index is inclusive + [1, 4, 7] + >>> list(iter_index('AABCADEAF', 'A', 1, 7)) # stop index is not inclusive + [1, 4] + + The behavior for non-scalar *values* matches the built-in Python types. + + >>> list(iter_index('ABCDABCD', 'AB')) + [0, 4] + >>> list(iter_index([0, 1, 2, 3, 0, 1, 2, 3], [0, 1])) + [] + >>> list(iter_index([[0, 1], [2, 3], [0, 1], [2, 3]], [0, 1])) + [0, 2] + + See :func:`locate` for a more general means of finding the indexes + associated with particular values. + + """ + seq_index = getattr(iterable, 'index', None) + if seq_index is None: + # Slow path for general iterables + iterator = islice(iterable, start, stop) + for i, element in enumerate(iterator, start): + if element is value or element == value: + yield i + else: + # Fast path for sequences + stop = len(iterable) if stop is None else stop + i = start - 1 + with suppress(ValueError): + while True: + yield (i := seq_index(value, i + 1, stop)) + + +def sieve(n): + """Yield the primes less than n. + + >>> list(sieve(30)) + [2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29] + + """ + # This implementation comes from an older version of the itertools + # documentation. The newer implementation is easier to read but is + # less lazy. + if n > 2: + yield 2 + start = 3 + data = bytearray((0, 1)) * (n // 2) + for p in iter_index(data, 1, start, stop=isqrt(n) + 1): + yield from iter_index(data, 1, start, p * p) + data[p * p : n : p + p] = bytes(len(range(p * p, n, p + p))) + start = p * p + yield from iter_index(data, 1, start) + + +def _batched(iterable, n, *, strict=False): # pragma: no cover + """Batch data into tuples of length *n*. If the number of items in + *iterable* is not divisible by *n*: + * The last batch will be shorter if *strict* is ``False``. + * :exc:`ValueError` will be raised if *strict* is ``True``. + + >>> list(batched('ABCDEFG', 3)) + [('A', 'B', 'C'), ('D', 'E', 'F'), ('G',)] + + On Python 3.13 and above, this is an alias for :func:`itertools.batched`. + """ + if n < 1: + raise ValueError('n must be at least one') + iterator = iter(iterable) + while batch := tuple(islice(iterator, n)): + if strict and len(batch) != n: + raise ValueError('batched(): incomplete batch') + yield batch + + +if hexversion >= 0x30D00A2: # pragma: no cover + from itertools import batched as itertools_batched + + def batched(iterable, n, *, strict=False): + return itertools_batched(iterable, n, strict=strict) + + batched.__doc__ = _batched.__doc__ +else: # pragma: no cover + batched = _batched + + +def transpose(it): + """Swap the rows and columns of the input matrix. + + >>> list(transpose([(1, 2, 3), (11, 22, 33)])) + [(1, 11), (2, 22), (3, 33)] + + The caller should ensure that the dimensions of the input are compatible. + If the input is empty, no output will be produced. + """ + return _zip_strict(*it) + + +def _is_scalar(value, stringlike=(str, bytes)): + "Scalars are bytes, strings, and non-iterables." + try: + iter(value) + except TypeError: + return True + return isinstance(value, stringlike) + + +def _flatten_tensor(tensor): + "Depth-first iterator over scalars in a tensor." + iterator = iter(tensor) + while True: + try: + value = next(iterator) + except StopIteration: + return iterator + iterator = chain((value,), iterator) + if _is_scalar(value): + return iterator + iterator = chain.from_iterable(iterator) + + +def reshape(matrix, shape): + """Change the shape of a *matrix*. + + If *shape* is an integer, the matrix must be two dimensional + and the shape is interpreted as the desired number of columns: + + >>> matrix = [(0, 1), (2, 3), (4, 5)] + >>> cols = 3 + >>> list(reshape(matrix, cols)) + [(0, 1, 2), (3, 4, 5)] + + If *shape* is a tuple (or other iterable), the input matrix can have + any number of dimensions. It will first be flattened and then rebuilt + to the desired shape which can also be multidimensional: + + >>> matrix = [(0, 1), (2, 3), (4, 5)] # Start with a 3 x 2 matrix + + >>> list(reshape(matrix, (2, 3))) # Make a 2 x 3 matrix + [(0, 1, 2), (3, 4, 5)] + + >>> list(reshape(matrix, (6,))) # Make a vector of length six + [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5] + + >>> list(reshape(matrix, (2, 1, 3, 1))) # Make 2 x 1 x 3 x 1 tensor + [(((0,), (1,), (2,)),), (((3,), (4,), (5,)),)] + + Each dimension is assumed to be uniform, either all arrays or all scalars. + Flattening stops when the first value in a dimension is a scalar. + Scalars are bytes, strings, and non-iterables. + The reshape iterator stops when the requested shape is complete + or when the input is exhausted, whichever comes first. + + """ + if isinstance(shape, int): + return batched(chain.from_iterable(matrix), shape) + first_dim, *dims = shape + scalar_stream = _flatten_tensor(matrix) + reshaped = reduce(batched, reversed(dims), scalar_stream) + return islice(reshaped, first_dim) + + +def matmul(m1, m2): + """Multiply two matrices. + + >>> list(matmul([(7, 5), (3, 5)], [(2, 5), (7, 9)])) + [(49, 80), (41, 60)] + + The caller should ensure that the dimensions of the input matrices are + compatible with each other. + + Supports all numeric types: int, float, complex, Decimal, Fraction. + """ + n = len(m2[0]) + return batched(starmap(_sumprod, product(m1, transpose(m2))), n) + + +def _factor_pollard(n): + # Return a factor of n using Pollard's rho algorithm. + # Efficient when n is odd and composite. + for b in range(1, n): + x = y = 2 + d = 1 + while d == 1: + x = (x * x + b) % n + y = (y * y + b) % n + y = (y * y + b) % n + d = gcd(x - y, n) + if d != n: + return d + raise ValueError('prime or under 5') # pragma: no cover + + +_primes_below_211 = tuple(sieve(211)) + + +def factor(n): + """Yield the prime factors of n. + + >>> list(factor(360)) + [2, 2, 2, 3, 3, 5] + + Finds small factors with trial division. Larger factors are + either verified as prime with ``is_prime`` or split into + smaller factors with Pollard's rho algorithm. + """ + + # Corner case reduction + if n < 2: + return + + # Trial division reduction + for prime in _primes_below_211: + while not n % prime: + yield prime + n //= prime + + # Pollard's rho reduction + primes = [] + todo = [n] if n > 1 else [] + for n in todo: + if n < 211**2 or is_prime(n): + primes.append(n) + else: + fact = _factor_pollard(n) + todo += (fact, n // fact) + yield from sorted(primes) + + +def polynomial_eval(coefficients, x): + """Evaluate a polynomial at a specific value. + + Computes with better numeric stability than Horner's method. + + Evaluate ``x^3 - 4 * x^2 - 17 * x + 60`` at ``x = 2.5``: + + >>> coefficients = [1, -4, -17, 60] + >>> x = 2.5 + >>> polynomial_eval(coefficients, x) + 8.125 + + Note that polynomial coefficients are specified in descending power order. + + Supports all numeric types: int, float, complex, Decimal, Fraction. + """ + n = len(coefficients) + if n == 0: + return type(x)(0) + powers = map(pow, repeat(x), reversed(range(n))) + return _sumprod(coefficients, powers) + + +def sum_of_squares(it): + """Return the sum of the squares of the input values. + + >>> sum_of_squares([10, 20, 30]) + 1400 + + Supports all numeric types: int, float, complex, Decimal, Fraction. + """ + return _sumprod(*tee(it)) + + +def polynomial_derivative(coefficients): + """Compute the first derivative of a polynomial. + + Evaluate the derivative of ``x³ - 4 x² - 17 x + 60``: + + >>> coefficients = [1, -4, -17, 60] + >>> derivative_coefficients = polynomial_derivative(coefficients) + >>> derivative_coefficients + [3, -8, -17] + + Note that polynomial coefficients are specified in descending power order. + + Supports all numeric types: int, float, complex, Decimal, Fraction. + """ + n = len(coefficients) + powers = reversed(range(1, n)) + return list(map(mul, coefficients, powers)) + + +def totient(n): + """Return the count of natural numbers up to *n* that are coprime with *n*. + + Euler's totient function φ(n) gives the number of totatives. + Totative are integers k in the range 1 ≤ k ≤ n such that gcd(n, k) = 1. + + >>> n = 9 + >>> totient(n) + 6 + + >>> totatives = [x for x in range(1, n) if gcd(n, x) == 1] + >>> totatives + [1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 8] + >>> len(totatives) + 6 + + Reference: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euler%27s_totient_function + + """ + for prime in set(factor(n)): + n -= n // prime + return n + + +# Miller–Rabin primality test: https://oeis.org/A014233 +_perfect_tests = [ + (2047, (2,)), + (9080191, (31, 73)), + (4759123141, (2, 7, 61)), + (1122004669633, (2, 13, 23, 1662803)), + (2152302898747, (2, 3, 5, 7, 11)), + (3474749660383, (2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13)), + (18446744073709551616, (2, 325, 9375, 28178, 450775, 9780504, 1795265022)), + ( + 3317044064679887385961981, + (2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41), + ), +] + + +@lru_cache +def _shift_to_odd(n): + 'Return s, d such that 2**s * d == n' + s = ((n - 1) ^ n).bit_length() - 1 + d = n >> s + assert (1 << s) * d == n and d & 1 and s >= 0 + return s, d + + +def _strong_probable_prime(n, base): + assert (n > 2) and (n & 1) and (2 <= base < n) + + s, d = _shift_to_odd(n - 1) + + x = pow(base, d, n) + if x == 1 or x == n - 1: + return True + + for _ in range(s - 1): + x = x * x % n + if x == n - 1: + return True + + return False + + +# Separate instance of Random() that doesn't share state +# with the default user instance of Random(). +_private_randrange = random.Random().randrange + + +def is_prime(n): + """Return ``True`` if *n* is prime and ``False`` otherwise. + + Basic examples: + + >>> is_prime(37) + True + >>> is_prime(3 * 13) + False + >>> is_prime(18_446_744_073_709_551_557) + True + + Find the next prime over one billion: + + >>> next(filter(is_prime, count(10**9))) + 1000000007 + + Generate random primes up to 200 bits and up to 60 decimal digits: + + >>> from random import seed, randrange, getrandbits + >>> seed(18675309) + + >>> next(filter(is_prime, map(getrandbits, repeat(200)))) + 893303929355758292373272075469392561129886005037663238028407 + + >>> next(filter(is_prime, map(randrange, repeat(10**60)))) + 269638077304026462407872868003560484232362454342414618963649 + + This function is exact for values of *n* below 10**24. For larger inputs, + the probabilistic Miller-Rabin primality test has a less than 1 in 2**128 + chance of a false positive. + """ + + if n < 17: + return n in {2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13} + + if not (n & 1 and n % 3 and n % 5 and n % 7 and n % 11 and n % 13): + return False + + for limit, bases in _perfect_tests: + if n < limit: + break + else: + bases = (_private_randrange(2, n - 1) for i in range(64)) + + return all(_strong_probable_prime(n, base) for base in bases) + + +def loops(n): + """Returns an iterable with *n* elements for efficient looping. + Like ``range(n)`` but doesn't create integers. + + >>> i = 0 + >>> for _ in loops(5): + ... i += 1 + >>> i + 5 + + """ + return repeat(None, n) + + +def multinomial(*counts): + """Number of distinct arrangements of a multiset. + + The expression ``multinomial(3, 4, 2)`` has several equivalent + interpretations: + + * In the expansion of ``(a + b + c)⁹``, the coefficient of the + ``a³b⁴c²`` term is 1260. + + * There are 1260 distinct ways to arrange 9 balls consisting of 3 reds, 4 + greens, and 2 blues. + + * There are 1260 unique ways to place 9 distinct objects into three bins + with sizes 3, 4, and 2. + + The :func:`multinomial` function computes the length of + :func:`distinct_permutations`. For example, there are 83,160 distinct + anagrams of the word "abracadabra": + + >>> from more_itertools import distinct_permutations, ilen + >>> ilen(distinct_permutations('abracadabra')) + 83160 + + This can be computed directly from the letter counts, 5a 2b 2r 1c 1d: + + >>> from collections import Counter + >>> list(Counter('abracadabra').values()) + [5, 2, 2, 1, 1] + >>> multinomial(5, 2, 2, 1, 1) + 83160 + + A binomial coefficient is a special case of multinomial where there are + only two categories. For example, the number of ways to arrange 12 balls + with 5 reds and 7 blues is ``multinomial(5, 7)`` or ``math.comb(12, 5)``. + + Likewise, factorial is a special case of multinomial where + the multiplicities are all just 1 so that + ``multinomial(1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1) == math.factorial(7)``. + + Reference: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multinomial_theorem + + """ + return prod(map(comb, accumulate(counts), counts)) + + +def _running_median_minheap_and_maxheap(iterator): # pragma: no cover + "Non-windowed running_median() for Python 3.14+" + + read = iterator.__next__ + lo = [] # max-heap + hi = [] # min-heap (same size as or one smaller than lo) + + with suppress(StopIteration): + while True: + heappush_max(lo, heappushpop(hi, read())) + yield lo[0] + + heappush(hi, heappushpop_max(lo, read())) + yield (lo[0] + hi[0]) / 2 + + +def _running_median_minheap_only(iterator): # pragma: no cover + "Backport of non-windowed running_median() for Python 3.13 and prior." + + read = iterator.__next__ + lo = [] # max-heap (actually a minheap with negated values) + hi = [] # min-heap (same size as or one smaller than lo) + + with suppress(StopIteration): + while True: + heappush(lo, -heappushpop(hi, read())) + yield -lo[0] + + heappush(hi, -heappushpop(lo, -read())) + yield (hi[0] - lo[0]) / 2 + + +def _running_median_windowed(iterator, maxlen): + "Yield median of values in a sliding window." + + window = deque() + ordered = [] + + for x in iterator: + window.append(x) + insort(ordered, x) + + if len(ordered) > maxlen: + i = bisect_left(ordered, window.popleft()) + del ordered[i] + + n = len(ordered) + m = n // 2 + yield ordered[m] if n & 1 else (ordered[m - 1] + ordered[m]) / 2 + + +def running_median(iterable, *, maxlen=None): + """Cumulative median of values seen so far or values in a sliding window. + + Set *maxlen* to a positive integer to specify the maximum size + of the sliding window. The default of *None* is equivalent to + an unbounded window. + + For example: + + >>> list(running_median([5.0, 9.0, 4.0, 12.0, 8.0, 9.0])) + [5.0, 7.0, 5.0, 7.0, 8.0, 8.5] + >>> list(running_median([5.0, 9.0, 4.0, 12.0, 8.0, 9.0], maxlen=3)) + [5.0, 7.0, 5.0, 9.0, 8.0, 9.0] + + Supports numeric types such as int, float, Decimal, and Fraction, + but not complex numbers which are unorderable. + + On version Python 3.13 and prior, max-heaps are simulated with + negative values. The negation causes Decimal inputs to apply context + rounding, making the results slightly different than that obtained + by statistics.median(). + """ + + iterator = iter(iterable) + + if maxlen is not None: + maxlen = index(maxlen) + if maxlen <= 0: + raise ValueError('Window size should be positive') + return _running_median_windowed(iterator, maxlen) + + if not _max_heap_available: + return _running_median_minheap_only(iterator) # pragma: no cover + + return _running_median_minheap_and_maxheap(iterator) # pragma: no cover diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools/recipes.pyi b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools/recipes.pyi new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..de3d0a1777a547e986cba595de72f92b8e3cedbd --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/more_itertools/recipes.pyi @@ -0,0 +1,205 @@ +"""Stubs for more_itertools.recipes""" + +from __future__ import annotations + +from collections.abc import Iterable, Iterator, Sequence +from decimal import Decimal +from fractions import Fraction +from typing import ( + Any, + Callable, + TypeVar, + overload, +) + +__all__ = [ + 'all_equal', + 'batched', + 'before_and_after', + 'consume', + 'convolve', + 'dotproduct', + 'first_true', + 'factor', + 'flatten', + 'grouper', + 'is_prime', + 'iter_except', + 'iter_index', + 'loops', + 'matmul', + 'multinomial', + 'ncycles', + 'nth', + 'nth_combination', + 'padnone', + 'pad_none', + 'pairwise', + 'partition', + 'polynomial_eval', + 'polynomial_from_roots', + 'polynomial_derivative', + 'powerset', + 'prepend', + 'quantify', + 'reshape', + 'random_combination_with_replacement', + 'random_combination', + 'random_permutation', + 'random_product', + 'repeatfunc', + 'roundrobin', + 'running_median', + 'sieve', + 'sliding_window', + 'subslices', + 'sum_of_squares', + 'tabulate', + 'tail', + 'take', + 'totient', + 'transpose', + 'triplewise', + 'unique', + 'unique_everseen', + 'unique_justseen', +] + +# Type and type variable definitions +_T = TypeVar('_T') +_T1 = TypeVar('_T1') +_T2 = TypeVar('_T2') +_U = TypeVar('_U') +_NumberT = TypeVar("_NumberT", float, Decimal, Fraction) + +def take(n: int, iterable: Iterable[_T]) -> list[_T]: ... +def tabulate( + function: Callable[[int], _T], start: int = ... +) -> Iterator[_T]: ... +def tail(n: int, iterable: Iterable[_T]) -> Iterator[_T]: ... +def consume(iterator: Iterable[_T], n: int | None = ...) -> None: ... +@overload +def nth(iterable: Iterable[_T], n: int) -> _T | None: ... +@overload +def nth(iterable: Iterable[_T], n: int, default: _U) -> _T | _U: ... +def all_equal( + iterable: Iterable[_T], key: Callable[[_T], _U] | None = ... +) -> bool: ... +def quantify( + iterable: Iterable[_T], pred: Callable[[_T], bool] = ... +) -> int: ... +def pad_none(iterable: Iterable[_T]) -> Iterator[_T | None]: ... +def padnone(iterable: Iterable[_T]) -> Iterator[_T | None]: ... +def ncycles(iterable: Iterable[_T], n: int) -> Iterator[_T]: ... +def dotproduct(vec1: Iterable[_T1], vec2: Iterable[_T2]) -> Any: ... +def flatten(listOfLists: Iterable[Iterable[_T]]) -> Iterator[_T]: ... +def repeatfunc( + func: Callable[..., _U], times: int | None = ..., *args: Any +) -> Iterator[_U]: ... +def pairwise(iterable: Iterable[_T]) -> Iterator[tuple[_T, _T]]: ... +def grouper( + iterable: Iterable[_T], + n: int, + incomplete: str = ..., + fillvalue: _U = ..., +) -> Iterator[tuple[_T | _U, ...]]: ... +def roundrobin(*iterables: Iterable[_T]) -> Iterator[_T]: ... +def partition( + pred: Callable[[_T], object] | None, iterable: Iterable[_T] +) -> tuple[Iterator[_T], Iterator[_T]]: ... +def powerset(iterable: Iterable[_T]) -> Iterator[tuple[_T, ...]]: ... +def unique_everseen( + iterable: Iterable[_T], key: Callable[[_T], _U] | None = ... +) -> Iterator[_T]: ... +def unique_justseen( + iterable: Iterable[_T], key: Callable[[_T], object] | None = ... +) -> Iterator[_T]: ... +def unique( + iterable: Iterable[_T], + key: Callable[[_T], object] | None = ..., + reverse: bool = False, +) -> Iterator[_T]: ... +@overload +def iter_except( + func: Callable[[], _T], + exception: type[BaseException] | tuple[type[BaseException], ...], + first: None = ..., +) -> Iterator[_T]: ... +@overload +def iter_except( + func: Callable[[], _T], + exception: type[BaseException] | tuple[type[BaseException], ...], + first: Callable[[], _U], +) -> Iterator[_T | _U]: ... +@overload +def first_true( + iterable: Iterable[_T], *, pred: Callable[[_T], object] | None = ... +) -> _T | None: ... +@overload +def first_true( + iterable: Iterable[_T], + default: _U, + pred: Callable[[_T], object] | None = ..., +) -> _T | _U: ... +def random_product( + *args: Iterable[_T], repeat: int = ... +) -> tuple[_T, ...]: ... +def random_permutation( + iterable: Iterable[_T], r: int | None = ... +) -> tuple[_T, ...]: ... +def random_combination(iterable: Iterable[_T], r: int) -> tuple[_T, ...]: ... +def random_combination_with_replacement( + iterable: Iterable[_T], r: int +) -> tuple[_T, ...]: ... +def nth_combination( + iterable: Iterable[_T], r: int, index: int +) -> tuple[_T, ...]: ... +def prepend(value: _T, iterator: Iterable[_U]) -> Iterator[_T | _U]: ... +def convolve(signal: Iterable[_T], kernel: Iterable[_T]) -> Iterator[_T]: ... +def before_and_after( + predicate: Callable[[_T], bool], it: Iterable[_T] +) -> tuple[Iterator[_T], Iterator[_T]]: ... +def triplewise(iterable: Iterable[_T]) -> Iterator[tuple[_T, _T, _T]]: ... +def sliding_window( + iterable: Iterable[_T], n: int +) -> Iterator[tuple[_T, ...]]: ... +def subslices(iterable: Iterable[_T]) -> Iterator[list[_T]]: ... +def polynomial_from_roots(roots: Sequence[_T]) -> list[_T]: ... +def iter_index( + iterable: Iterable[_T], + value: Any, + start: int | None = ..., + stop: int | None = ..., +) -> Iterator[int]: ... +def sieve(n: int) -> Iterator[int]: ... +def _batched( + iterable: Iterable[_T], n: int, *, strict: bool = False +) -> Iterator[tuple[_T, ...]]: ... + +batched = _batched + +def transpose( + it: Iterable[Iterable[_T]], +) -> Iterator[tuple[_T, ...]]: ... +@overload +def reshape( + matrix: Iterable[Iterable[_T]], shape: int +) -> Iterator[tuple[_T, ...]]: ... +@overload +def reshape(matrix: Iterable[Any], shape: Iterable[int]) -> Iterator[Any]: ... +def matmul(m1: Sequence[_T], m2: Sequence[_T]) -> Iterator[tuple[_T]]: ... +def _factor_trial(n: int) -> Iterator[int]: ... +def _factor_pollard(n: int) -> int: ... +def factor(n: int) -> Iterator[int]: ... +def polynomial_eval(coefficients: Sequence[_T], x: _U) -> _U: ... +def sum_of_squares(it: Iterable[_T]) -> _T: ... +def polynomial_derivative(coefficients: Sequence[_T]) -> list[_T]: ... +def totient(n: int) -> int: ... +def _shift_to_odd(n: int) -> tuple[int, int]: ... +def _strong_probable_prime(n: int, base: int) -> bool: ... +def is_prime(n: int) -> bool: ... +def loops(n: int) -> Iterator[None]: ... +def multinomial(*counts: int) -> int: ... +def running_median( + iterable: Iterable[_NumberT], *, maxlen: int | None = ... +) -> Iterator[_NumberT]: ... diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging-26.0.dist-info/INSTALLER b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging-26.0.dist-info/INSTALLER new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..5c69047b2eb8235994febeeae1da4a82365a240a --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging-26.0.dist-info/INSTALLER @@ -0,0 +1 @@ +uv \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging-26.0.dist-info/METADATA b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging-26.0.dist-info/METADATA new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..3200e601f970271fdde3fcc74f9af4423655a79d --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging-26.0.dist-info/METADATA @@ -0,0 +1,107 @@ +Metadata-Version: 2.4 +Name: packaging +Version: 26.0 +Summary: Core utilities for Python packages +Author-email: Donald Stufft +Requires-Python: >=3.8 +Description-Content-Type: text/x-rst +License-Expression: Apache-2.0 OR BSD-2-Clause +Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable +Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3 +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3 :: Only +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.8 +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9 +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.10 +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.11 +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.12 +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.13 +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.14 +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: CPython +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: PyPy +Classifier: Typing :: Typed +License-File: LICENSE +License-File: LICENSE.APACHE +License-File: LICENSE.BSD +Project-URL: Documentation, https://packaging.pypa.io/ +Project-URL: Source, https://github.com/pypa/packaging + +packaging +========= + +.. start-intro + +Reusable core utilities for various Python Packaging +`interoperability specifications `_. + +This library provides utilities that implement the interoperability +specifications which have clearly one correct behaviour (eg: :pep:`440`) +or benefit greatly from having a single shared implementation (eg: :pep:`425`). + +.. end-intro + +The ``packaging`` project includes the following: version handling, specifiers, +markers, requirements, tags, metadata, lockfiles, utilities. + +Documentation +------------- + +The `documentation`_ provides information and the API for the following: + +- Version Handling +- Specifiers +- Markers +- Requirements +- Tags +- Metadata +- Lockfiles +- Utilities + +Installation +------------ + +Use ``pip`` to install these utilities:: + + pip install packaging + +The ``packaging`` library uses calendar-based versioning (``YY.N``). + +Discussion +---------- + +If you run into bugs, you can file them in our `issue tracker`_. + +You can also join ``#pypa`` on Freenode to ask questions or get involved. + + +.. _`documentation`: https://packaging.pypa.io/ +.. _`issue tracker`: https://github.com/pypa/packaging/issues + + +Code of Conduct +--------------- + +Everyone interacting in the packaging project's codebases, issue trackers, chat +rooms, and mailing lists is expected to follow the `PSF Code of Conduct`_. + +.. _PSF Code of Conduct: https://github.com/pypa/.github/blob/main/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md + +Contributing +------------ + +The ``CONTRIBUTING.rst`` file outlines how to contribute to this project as +well as how to report a potential security issue. The documentation for this +project also covers information about `project development`_ and `security`_. + +.. _`project development`: https://packaging.pypa.io/en/latest/development/ +.. _`security`: https://packaging.pypa.io/en/latest/security/ + +Project History +--------------- + +Please review the ``CHANGELOG.rst`` file or the `Changelog documentation`_ for +recent changes and project history. + +.. _`Changelog documentation`: https://packaging.pypa.io/en/latest/changelog/ + diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging-26.0.dist-info/RECORD b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging-26.0.dist-info/RECORD new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..38cdeafd21f1eab74d3f49f069bac093d7694f84 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging-26.0.dist-info/RECORD @@ -0,0 +1,26 @@ +packaging-26.0.dist-info/INSTALLER,sha256=5hhM4Q4mYTT9z6QB6PGpUAW81PGNFrYrdXMj4oM_6ak,2 +packaging-26.0.dist-info/METADATA,sha256=M2K7fWom2iliuo2qpHhc0LrKwhq6kIoRlcyPWVgKJlo,3309 +packaging-26.0.dist-info/RECORD,, +packaging-26.0.dist-info/REQUESTED,sha256=47DEQpj8HBSa-_TImW-5JCeuQeRkm5NMpJWZG3hSuFU,0 +packaging-26.0.dist-info/WHEEL,sha256=G2gURzTEtmeR8nrdXUJfNiB3VYVxigPQ-bEQujpNiNs,82 +packaging-26.0.dist-info/licenses/LICENSE,sha256=ytHvW9NA1z4HS6YU0m996spceUDD2MNIUuZcSQlobEg,197 +packaging-26.0.dist-info/licenses/LICENSE.APACHE,sha256=DVQuDIgE45qn836wDaWnYhSdxoLXgpRRKH4RuTjpRZQ,10174 +packaging-26.0.dist-info/licenses/LICENSE.BSD,sha256=tw5-m3QvHMb5SLNMFqo5_-zpQZY2S8iP8NIYDwAo-sU,1344 +packaging/__init__.py,sha256=y4lVbpeBzCGk-IPDw5BGBZ_b0P3ukEEJZAbGYc6Ey8c,494 +packaging/_elffile.py,sha256=-sKkptYqzYw2-x3QByJa5mB4rfPWu1pxkZHRx1WAFCY,3211 +packaging/_manylinux.py,sha256=Hf6nB0cOrayEs96-p3oIXAgGnFquv20DO5l-o2_Xnv0,9559 +packaging/_musllinux.py,sha256=Z6swjH3MA7XS3qXnmMN7QPhqP3fnoYI0eQ18e9-HgAE,2707 +packaging/_parser.py,sha256=U_DajsEx2VoC_F46fSVV3hDKNCWoQYkPkasO3dld0ig,10518 +packaging/_structures.py,sha256=Hn49Ta8zV9Wo8GiCL8Nl2ARZY983Un3pruZGVNldPwE,1514 +packaging/_tokenizer.py,sha256=M8EwNIdXeL9NMFuFrQtiOKwjka_xFx8KjRQnfE8O_z8,5421 +packaging/licenses/__init__.py,sha256=TwXLHZCXwSgdFwRLPxW602T6mSieunSFHM6fp8pgW78,5819 +packaging/licenses/_spdx.py,sha256=WW7DXiyg68up_YND_wpRYlr1SHhiV4FfJLQffghhMxQ,51122 +packaging/markers.py,sha256=ZX-cLvW1S3cZcEc0fHI4z7zSx5U2T19yMpDP_mE-CYw,12771 +packaging/metadata.py,sha256=CWVZpN_HfoYMSSDuCP7igOvGgqA9AOmpW8f3qTisfnc,39360 +packaging/py.typed,sha256=47DEQpj8HBSa-_TImW-5JCeuQeRkm5NMpJWZG3hSuFU,0 +packaging/pylock.py,sha256=-R1uNfJ4PaLto7Mg62YsGOHgvskuiIEqPwxOywl42Jk,22537 +packaging/requirements.py,sha256=PMCAWD8aNMnVD-6uZMedhBuAVX2573eZ4yPBLXmz04I,2870 +packaging/specifiers.py,sha256=EPNPimY_zFivthv1vdjZYz5IqkKGsnKR2yKh-EVyvZw,40797 +packaging/tags.py,sha256=cXLV1pJD3UtJlDg7Wz3zrfdQhRZqr8jumSAKKAAd2xE,22856 +packaging/utils.py,sha256=N4c6oZzFJy6klTZ3AnkNz7sSkJesuFWPp68LA3B5dAo,5040 +packaging/version.py,sha256=7XWlL2IDYLwDYC0ht6cFEhapLwLWbmyo4rb7sEFj0x8,23272 diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging-26.0.dist-info/REQUESTED b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging-26.0.dist-info/REQUESTED new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..e69de29bb2d1d6434b8b29ae775ad8c2e48c5391 diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging-26.0.dist-info/WHEEL b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging-26.0.dist-info/WHEEL new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..d8b9936dad9ab2513fa6979f411560d3b6b57e37 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging-26.0.dist-info/WHEEL @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ +Wheel-Version: 1.0 +Generator: flit 3.12.0 +Root-Is-Purelib: true +Tag: py3-none-any diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/__init__.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/__init__.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..21695a74b5107c96ba4bb2cbca6b7f259dacd330 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/__init__.py @@ -0,0 +1,15 @@ +# 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. + +__title__ = "packaging" +__summary__ = "Core utilities for Python packages" +__uri__ = "https://github.com/pypa/packaging" + +__version__ = "26.0" + +__author__ = "Donald Stufft and individual contributors" +__email__ = "donald@stufft.io" + +__license__ = "BSD-2-Clause or Apache-2.0" +__copyright__ = f"2014 {__author__}" diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_elffile.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_elffile.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..497b0645217512ae2ba8ff61341fd2bbfa3648cd --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_elffile.py @@ -0,0 +1,108 @@ +""" +ELF file parser. + +This provides a class ``ELFFile`` that parses an ELF executable in a similar +interface to ``ZipFile``. Only the read interface is implemented. + +ELF header: https://refspecs.linuxfoundation.org/elf/gabi4+/ch4.eheader.html +""" + +from __future__ import annotations + +import enum +import os +import struct +from typing import IO + + +class ELFInvalid(ValueError): + pass + + +class EIClass(enum.IntEnum): + C32 = 1 + C64 = 2 + + +class EIData(enum.IntEnum): + Lsb = 1 + Msb = 2 + + +class EMachine(enum.IntEnum): + I386 = 3 + S390 = 22 + Arm = 40 + X8664 = 62 + AArc64 = 183 + + +class ELFFile: + """ + Representation of an ELF executable. + """ + + def __init__(self, f: IO[bytes]) -> None: + self._f = f + + try: + ident = self._read("16B") + except struct.error as e: + raise ELFInvalid("unable to parse identification") from e + magic = bytes(ident[:4]) + if magic != b"\x7fELF": + raise ELFInvalid(f"invalid magic: {magic!r}") + + self.capacity = ident[4] # Format for program header (bitness). + self.encoding = ident[5] # Data structure encoding (endianness). + + 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, self._p_fmt, self._p_idx = { + (1, 1): ("HHIIIIIHHH", ">IIIIIIII", (0, 1, 4)), # 32-bit MSB. + (2, 1): ("HHIQQQIHHH", ">IIQQQQQQ", (0, 2, 5)), # 64-bit MSB. + }[(self.capacity, self.encoding)] + except KeyError as e: + raise ELFInvalid( + f"unrecognized capacity ({self.capacity}) or encoding ({self.encoding})" + ) from e + + try: + ( + _, + self.machine, # Architecture type. + _, + _, + self._e_phoff, # Offset of program header. + _, + self.flags, # Processor-specific flags. + _, + self._e_phentsize, # Size of section. + self._e_phnum, # Number of sections. + ) = self._read(e_fmt) + except struct.error as e: + raise ELFInvalid("unable to parse machine and section information") from e + + def _read(self, fmt: str) -> tuple[int, ...]: + return struct.unpack(fmt, self._f.read(struct.calcsize(fmt))) + + @property + def interpreter(self) -> str | None: + """ + The path recorded in the ``PT_INTERP`` section header. + """ + for index in range(self._e_phnum): + self._f.seek(self._e_phoff + self._e_phentsize * index) + try: + data = self._read(self._p_fmt) + except struct.error: + continue + if data[self._p_idx[0]] != 3: # Not PT_INTERP. + continue + self._f.seek(data[self._p_idx[1]]) + return os.fsdecode(self._f.read(data[self._p_idx[2]])).strip("\0") + return None diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_manylinux.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_manylinux.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..0e79e8a882be74fe76c80ccf49a9cd68fb636fd4 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_manylinux.py @@ -0,0 +1,262 @@ +from __future__ import annotations + +import collections +import contextlib +import functools +import os +import re +import sys +import warnings +from typing import Generator, Iterator, NamedTuple, Sequence + +from ._elffile import EIClass, EIData, ELFFile, EMachine + +EF_ARM_ABIMASK = 0xFF000000 +EF_ARM_ABI_VER5 = 0x05000000 +EF_ARM_ABI_FLOAT_HARD = 0x00000400 + +_ALLOWED_ARCHS = { + "x86_64", + "aarch64", + "ppc64", + "ppc64le", + "s390x", + "loongarch64", + "riscv64", +} + + +# `os.PathLike` not a generic type until Python 3.9, so sticking with `str` +# as the type for `path` until then. +@contextlib.contextmanager +def _parse_elf(path: str) -> Generator[ELFFile | None, None, None]: + try: + with open(path, "rb") as f: + yield ELFFile(f) + except (OSError, TypeError, ValueError): + yield None + + +def _is_linux_armhf(executable: str) -> bool: + # hard-float ABI can be detected from the ELF header of the running + # process + # https://static.docs.arm.com/ihi0044/g/aaelf32.pdf + with _parse_elf(executable) as f: + return ( + f is not None + and f.capacity == EIClass.C32 + and f.encoding == EIData.Lsb + and f.machine == EMachine.Arm + and f.flags & EF_ARM_ABIMASK == EF_ARM_ABI_VER5 + and f.flags & EF_ARM_ABI_FLOAT_HARD == EF_ARM_ABI_FLOAT_HARD + ) + + +def _is_linux_i686(executable: str) -> bool: + with _parse_elf(executable) as f: + return ( + f is not None + and f.capacity == EIClass.C32 + and f.encoding == EIData.Lsb + and f.machine == EMachine.I386 + ) + + +def _have_compatible_abi(executable: str, archs: Sequence[str]) -> bool: + if "armv7l" in archs: + return _is_linux_armhf(executable) + if "i686" in archs: + return _is_linux_i686(executable) + return any(arch in _ALLOWED_ARCHS for arch in archs) + + +# 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() -> str | None: + """ + 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: + # Should be a string like "glibc 2.17". + version_string: str | None = os.confstr("CS_GNU_LIBC_VERSION") + assert version_string is not None + _, version = version_string.rsplit() + 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() -> str | None: + """ + Fallback implementation of glibc_version_string using ctypes. + """ + try: + import ctypes # noqa: PLC0415 + 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() -> str | None: + """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) -> _GLibCVersion: + """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[0-9]+)\.(?P[0-9]+)", version_str) + if not m: + warnings.warn( + f"Expected glibc version with 2 components major.minor, got: {version_str}", + RuntimeWarning, + stacklevel=2, + ) + return _GLibCVersion(-1, -1) + return _GLibCVersion(int(m.group("major")), int(m.group("minor"))) + + +@functools.lru_cache +def _get_glibc_version() -> _GLibCVersion: + version_str = _glibc_version_string() + if version_str is None: + return _GLibCVersion(-1, -1) + return _parse_glibc_version(version_str) + + +# From PEP 513, PEP 600 +def _is_compatible(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: PLC0415 + 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) and hasattr(_manylinux, "manylinux1_compatible"): + return bool(_manylinux.manylinux1_compatible) + if version == _GLibCVersion(2, 12) and hasattr( + _manylinux, "manylinux2010_compatible" + ): + return bool(_manylinux.manylinux2010_compatible) + if version == _GLibCVersion(2, 17) and hasattr( + _manylinux, "manylinux2014_compatible" + ): + return bool(_manylinux.manylinux2014_compatible) + return True + + +_LEGACY_MANYLINUX_MAP: dict[_GLibCVersion, str] = { + # CentOS 7 w/ glibc 2.17 (PEP 599) + _GLibCVersion(2, 17): "manylinux2014", + # CentOS 6 w/ glibc 2.12 (PEP 571) + _GLibCVersion(2, 12): "manylinux2010", + # CentOS 5 w/ glibc 2.5 (PEP 513) + _GLibCVersion(2, 5): "manylinux1", +} + + +def platform_tags(archs: Sequence[str]) -> Iterator[str]: + """Generate manylinux tags compatible to the current platform. + + :param archs: Sequence of compatible architectures. + The first one shall be the closest to the actual architecture and 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 manylinux-compatible. + + :returns: An iterator of compatible manylinux tags. + """ + if not _have_compatible_abi(sys.executable, archs): + return + # Oldest glibc to be supported regardless of architecture is (2, 17). + too_old_glibc2 = _GLibCVersion(2, 16) + if set(archs) & {"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 arch in archs: + 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) + if _is_compatible(arch, glibc_version): + yield "manylinux_{}_{}_{}".format(*glibc_version, arch) + + # Handle the legacy manylinux1, manylinux2010, manylinux2014 tags. + if legacy_tag := _LEGACY_MANYLINUX_MAP.get(glibc_version): + yield f"{legacy_tag}_{arch}" diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_musllinux.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_musllinux.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..4e8116a79ca80d60657542a23b4bbcbc3c518eaf --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_musllinux.py @@ -0,0 +1,85 @@ +"""PEP 656 support. + +This module implements logic to detect if the currently running Python is +linked against musl, and what musl version is used. +""" + +from __future__ import annotations + +import functools +import re +import subprocess +import sys +from typing import Iterator, NamedTuple, Sequence + +from ._elffile import ELFFile + + +class _MuslVersion(NamedTuple): + major: int + minor: int + + +def _parse_musl_version(output: str) -> _MuslVersion | None: + 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) -> _MuslVersion | None: + """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 + """ + try: + with open(executable, "rb") as f: + ld = ELFFile(f).interpreter + except (OSError, TypeError, ValueError): + return None + if ld is None or "musl" not in ld: + return None + proc = subprocess.run([ld], check=False, stderr=subprocess.PIPE, text=True) + return _parse_musl_version(proc.stderr) + + +def platform_tags(archs: Sequence[str]) -> Iterator[str]: + """Generate musllinux tags compatible to the current platform. + + :param archs: Sequence of compatible architectures. + The first one shall be the closest to the actual architecture and 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 arch in archs: + 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 ") diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_parser.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_parser.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..f6c1f5cd226b926f96a3bb1e9fb0f18d1bd021c9 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_parser.py @@ -0,0 +1,365 @@ +"""Handwritten parser of dependency specifiers. + +The docstring for each __parse_* function contains EBNF-inspired grammar representing +the implementation. +""" + +from __future__ import annotations + +import ast +from typing import List, Literal, NamedTuple, Sequence, Tuple, Union + +from ._tokenizer import DEFAULT_RULES, Tokenizer + + +class Node: + __slots__ = ("value",) + + def __init__(self, value: str) -> None: + self.value = value + + def __str__(self) -> str: + return self.value + + def __repr__(self) -> str: + return f"<{self.__class__.__name__}({self.value!r})>" + + def serialize(self) -> str: + raise NotImplementedError + + +class Variable(Node): + __slots__ = () + + def serialize(self) -> str: + return str(self) + + +class Value(Node): + __slots__ = () + + def serialize(self) -> str: + return f'"{self}"' + + +class Op(Node): + __slots__ = () + + def serialize(self) -> str: + return str(self) + + +MarkerLogical = Literal["and", "or"] +MarkerVar = Union[Variable, Value] +MarkerItem = Tuple[MarkerVar, Op, MarkerVar] +MarkerAtom = Union[MarkerItem, Sequence["MarkerAtom"]] +MarkerList = List[Union["MarkerList", MarkerAtom, MarkerLogical]] + + +class ParsedRequirement(NamedTuple): + name: str + url: str + extras: list[str] + specifier: str + marker: MarkerList | None + + +# -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +# Recursive descent parser for dependency specifier +# -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +def parse_requirement(source: str) -> ParsedRequirement: + return _parse_requirement(Tokenizer(source, rules=DEFAULT_RULES)) + + +def _parse_requirement(tokenizer: Tokenizer) -> ParsedRequirement: + """ + requirement = WS? IDENTIFIER WS? extras WS? requirement_details + """ + tokenizer.consume("WS") + + name_token = tokenizer.expect( + "IDENTIFIER", expected="package name at the start of dependency specifier" + ) + name = name_token.text + tokenizer.consume("WS") + + extras = _parse_extras(tokenizer) + tokenizer.consume("WS") + + url, specifier, marker = _parse_requirement_details(tokenizer) + tokenizer.expect("END", expected="end of dependency specifier") + + return ParsedRequirement(name, url, extras, specifier, marker) + + +def _parse_requirement_details( + tokenizer: Tokenizer, +) -> tuple[str, str, MarkerList | None]: + """ + requirement_details = AT URL (WS requirement_marker?)? + | specifier WS? (requirement_marker)? + """ + + specifier = "" + url = "" + marker = None + + if tokenizer.check("AT"): + tokenizer.read() + tokenizer.consume("WS") + + url_start = tokenizer.position + url = tokenizer.expect("URL", expected="URL after @").text + if tokenizer.check("END", peek=True): + return (url, specifier, marker) + + tokenizer.expect("WS", expected="whitespace after URL") + + # The input might end after whitespace. + if tokenizer.check("END", peek=True): + return (url, specifier, marker) + + marker = _parse_requirement_marker( + tokenizer, + span_start=url_start, + expected="semicolon (after URL and whitespace)", + ) + else: + specifier_start = tokenizer.position + specifier = _parse_specifier(tokenizer) + tokenizer.consume("WS") + + if tokenizer.check("END", peek=True): + return (url, specifier, marker) + + marker = _parse_requirement_marker( + tokenizer, + span_start=specifier_start, + expected=( + "comma (within version specifier), semicolon (after version specifier)" + if specifier + else "semicolon (after name with no version specifier)" + ), + ) + + return (url, specifier, marker) + + +def _parse_requirement_marker( + tokenizer: Tokenizer, *, span_start: int, expected: str +) -> MarkerList: + """ + requirement_marker = SEMICOLON marker WS? + """ + + if not tokenizer.check("SEMICOLON"): + tokenizer.raise_syntax_error( + f"Expected {expected} or end", + span_start=span_start, + span_end=None, + ) + tokenizer.read() + + marker = _parse_marker(tokenizer) + tokenizer.consume("WS") + + return marker + + +def _parse_extras(tokenizer: Tokenizer) -> list[str]: + """ + extras = (LEFT_BRACKET wsp* extras_list? wsp* RIGHT_BRACKET)? + """ + if not tokenizer.check("LEFT_BRACKET", peek=True): + return [] + + with tokenizer.enclosing_tokens( + "LEFT_BRACKET", + "RIGHT_BRACKET", + around="extras", + ): + tokenizer.consume("WS") + extras = _parse_extras_list(tokenizer) + tokenizer.consume("WS") + + return extras + + +def _parse_extras_list(tokenizer: Tokenizer) -> list[str]: + """ + extras_list = identifier (wsp* ',' wsp* identifier)* + """ + extras: list[str] = [] + + if not tokenizer.check("IDENTIFIER"): + return extras + + extras.append(tokenizer.read().text) + + while True: + tokenizer.consume("WS") + if tokenizer.check("IDENTIFIER", peek=True): + tokenizer.raise_syntax_error("Expected comma between extra names") + elif not tokenizer.check("COMMA"): + break + + tokenizer.read() + tokenizer.consume("WS") + + extra_token = tokenizer.expect("IDENTIFIER", expected="extra name after comma") + extras.append(extra_token.text) + + return extras + + +def _parse_specifier(tokenizer: Tokenizer) -> str: + """ + specifier = LEFT_PARENTHESIS WS? version_many WS? RIGHT_PARENTHESIS + | WS? version_many WS? + """ + with tokenizer.enclosing_tokens( + "LEFT_PARENTHESIS", + "RIGHT_PARENTHESIS", + around="version specifier", + ): + tokenizer.consume("WS") + parsed_specifiers = _parse_version_many(tokenizer) + tokenizer.consume("WS") + + return parsed_specifiers + + +def _parse_version_many(tokenizer: Tokenizer) -> str: + """ + version_many = (SPECIFIER (WS? COMMA WS? SPECIFIER)*)? + """ + parsed_specifiers = "" + while tokenizer.check("SPECIFIER"): + span_start = tokenizer.position + parsed_specifiers += tokenizer.read().text + if tokenizer.check("VERSION_PREFIX_TRAIL", peek=True): + tokenizer.raise_syntax_error( + ".* suffix can only be used with `==` or `!=` operators", + span_start=span_start, + span_end=tokenizer.position + 1, + ) + if tokenizer.check("VERSION_LOCAL_LABEL_TRAIL", peek=True): + tokenizer.raise_syntax_error( + "Local version label can only be used with `==` or `!=` operators", + span_start=span_start, + span_end=tokenizer.position, + ) + tokenizer.consume("WS") + if not tokenizer.check("COMMA"): + break + parsed_specifiers += tokenizer.read().text + tokenizer.consume("WS") + + return parsed_specifiers + + +# -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +# Recursive descent parser for marker expression +# -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +def parse_marker(source: str) -> MarkerList: + return _parse_full_marker(Tokenizer(source, rules=DEFAULT_RULES)) + + +def _parse_full_marker(tokenizer: Tokenizer) -> MarkerList: + retval = _parse_marker(tokenizer) + tokenizer.expect("END", expected="end of marker expression") + return retval + + +def _parse_marker(tokenizer: Tokenizer) -> MarkerList: + """ + marker = marker_atom (BOOLOP marker_atom)+ + """ + expression = [_parse_marker_atom(tokenizer)] + while tokenizer.check("BOOLOP"): + token = tokenizer.read() + expr_right = _parse_marker_atom(tokenizer) + expression.extend((token.text, expr_right)) + return expression + + +def _parse_marker_atom(tokenizer: Tokenizer) -> MarkerAtom: + """ + marker_atom = WS? LEFT_PARENTHESIS WS? marker WS? RIGHT_PARENTHESIS WS? + | WS? marker_item WS? + """ + + tokenizer.consume("WS") + if tokenizer.check("LEFT_PARENTHESIS", peek=True): + with tokenizer.enclosing_tokens( + "LEFT_PARENTHESIS", + "RIGHT_PARENTHESIS", + around="marker expression", + ): + tokenizer.consume("WS") + marker: MarkerAtom = _parse_marker(tokenizer) + tokenizer.consume("WS") + else: + marker = _parse_marker_item(tokenizer) + tokenizer.consume("WS") + return marker + + +def _parse_marker_item(tokenizer: Tokenizer) -> MarkerItem: + """ + marker_item = WS? marker_var WS? marker_op WS? marker_var WS? + """ + tokenizer.consume("WS") + marker_var_left = _parse_marker_var(tokenizer) + tokenizer.consume("WS") + marker_op = _parse_marker_op(tokenizer) + tokenizer.consume("WS") + marker_var_right = _parse_marker_var(tokenizer) + tokenizer.consume("WS") + return (marker_var_left, marker_op, marker_var_right) + + +def _parse_marker_var(tokenizer: Tokenizer) -> MarkerVar: # noqa: RET503 + """ + marker_var = VARIABLE | QUOTED_STRING + """ + if tokenizer.check("VARIABLE"): + return process_env_var(tokenizer.read().text.replace(".", "_")) + elif tokenizer.check("QUOTED_STRING"): + return process_python_str(tokenizer.read().text) + else: + tokenizer.raise_syntax_error( + message="Expected a marker variable or quoted string" + ) + + +def process_env_var(env_var: str) -> Variable: + if env_var in ("platform_python_implementation", "python_implementation"): + return Variable("platform_python_implementation") + else: + return Variable(env_var) + + +def process_python_str(python_str: str) -> Value: + value = ast.literal_eval(python_str) + return Value(str(value)) + + +def _parse_marker_op(tokenizer: Tokenizer) -> Op: + """ + marker_op = IN | NOT IN | OP + """ + if tokenizer.check("IN"): + tokenizer.read() + return Op("in") + elif tokenizer.check("NOT"): + tokenizer.read() + tokenizer.expect("WS", expected="whitespace after 'not'") + tokenizer.expect("IN", expected="'in' after 'not'") + return Op("not in") + elif tokenizer.check("OP"): + return Op(tokenizer.read().text) + else: + return tokenizer.raise_syntax_error( + "Expected marker operator, one of <=, <, !=, ==, >=, >, ~=, ===, in, not in" + ) diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_structures.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_structures.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..225e2eee01238571c50595eb104e0b70d5f503c4 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_structures.py @@ -0,0 +1,69 @@ +# 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 typing + + +@typing.final +class InfinityType: + __slots__ = () + + 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() + + +@typing.final +class NegativeInfinityType: + __slots__ = () + + 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() diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_tokenizer.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_tokenizer.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..e6d20dd3f56f880a92db7409a3e1335cb282a8f2 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_tokenizer.py @@ -0,0 +1,193 @@ +from __future__ import annotations + +import contextlib +import re +from dataclasses import dataclass +from typing import Generator, Mapping, NoReturn + +from .specifiers import Specifier + + +@dataclass +class Token: + name: str + text: str + position: int + + +class ParserSyntaxError(Exception): + """The provided source text could not be parsed correctly.""" + + def __init__( + self, + message: str, + *, + source: str, + span: tuple[int, int], + ) -> None: + self.span = span + self.message = message + self.source = source + + super().__init__() + + def __str__(self) -> str: + marker = " " * self.span[0] + "~" * (self.span[1] - self.span[0]) + "^" + return f"{self.message}\n {self.source}\n {marker}" + + +DEFAULT_RULES: dict[str, re.Pattern[str]] = { + "LEFT_PARENTHESIS": re.compile(r"\("), + "RIGHT_PARENTHESIS": re.compile(r"\)"), + "LEFT_BRACKET": re.compile(r"\["), + "RIGHT_BRACKET": re.compile(r"\]"), + "SEMICOLON": re.compile(r";"), + "COMMA": re.compile(r","), + "QUOTED_STRING": re.compile( + r""" + ( + ('[^']*') + | + ("[^"]*") + ) + """, + re.VERBOSE, + ), + "OP": re.compile(r"(===|==|~=|!=|<=|>=|<|>)"), + "BOOLOP": re.compile(r"\b(or|and)\b"), + "IN": re.compile(r"\bin\b"), + "NOT": re.compile(r"\bnot\b"), + "VARIABLE": re.compile( + r""" + \b( + python_version + |python_full_version + |os[._]name + |sys[._]platform + |platform_(release|system) + |platform[._](version|machine|python_implementation) + |python_implementation + |implementation_(name|version) + |extras? + |dependency_groups + )\b + """, + re.VERBOSE, + ), + "SPECIFIER": re.compile( + Specifier._operator_regex_str + Specifier._version_regex_str, + re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE, + ), + "AT": re.compile(r"\@"), + "URL": re.compile(r"[^ \t]+"), + "IDENTIFIER": re.compile(r"\b[a-zA-Z0-9][a-zA-Z0-9._-]*\b"), + "VERSION_PREFIX_TRAIL": re.compile(r"\.\*"), + "VERSION_LOCAL_LABEL_TRAIL": re.compile(r"\+[a-z0-9]+(?:[-_\.][a-z0-9]+)*"), + "WS": re.compile(r"[ \t]+"), + "END": re.compile(r"$"), +} + + +class Tokenizer: + """Context-sensitive token parsing. + + Provides methods to examine the input stream to check whether the next token + matches. + """ + + def __init__( + self, + source: str, + *, + rules: Mapping[str, re.Pattern[str]], + ) -> None: + self.source = source + self.rules = rules + self.next_token: Token | None = None + self.position = 0 + + def consume(self, name: str) -> None: + """Move beyond provided token name, if at current position.""" + if self.check(name): + self.read() + + def check(self, name: str, *, peek: bool = False) -> bool: + """Check whether the next token has the provided name. + + By default, if the check succeeds, the token *must* be read before + another check. If `peek` is set to `True`, the token is not loaded and + would need to be checked again. + """ + assert self.next_token is None, ( + f"Cannot check for {name!r}, already have {self.next_token!r}" + ) + assert name in self.rules, f"Unknown token name: {name!r}" + + expression = self.rules[name] + + match = expression.match(self.source, self.position) + if match is None: + return False + if not peek: + self.next_token = Token(name, match[0], self.position) + return True + + def expect(self, name: str, *, expected: str) -> Token: + """Expect a certain token name next, failing with a syntax error otherwise. + + The token is *not* read. + """ + if not self.check(name): + raise self.raise_syntax_error(f"Expected {expected}") + return self.read() + + def read(self) -> Token: + """Consume the next token and return it.""" + token = self.next_token + assert token is not None + + self.position += len(token.text) + self.next_token = None + + return token + + def raise_syntax_error( + self, + message: str, + *, + span_start: int | None = None, + span_end: int | None = None, + ) -> NoReturn: + """Raise ParserSyntaxError at the given position.""" + span = ( + self.position if span_start is None else span_start, + self.position if span_end is None else span_end, + ) + raise ParserSyntaxError( + message, + source=self.source, + span=span, + ) + + @contextlib.contextmanager + def enclosing_tokens( + self, open_token: str, close_token: str, *, around: str + ) -> Generator[None, None, None]: + if self.check(open_token): + open_position = self.position + self.read() + else: + open_position = None + + yield + + if open_position is None: + return + + if not self.check(close_token): + self.raise_syntax_error( + f"Expected matching {close_token} for {open_token}, after {around}", + span_start=open_position, + ) + + self.read() diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/markers.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/markers.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..ca3706fe492f4cf0762f7734d84c2d269f88bbc5 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/markers.py @@ -0,0 +1,388 @@ +# 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 __future__ import annotations + +import operator +import os +import platform +import sys +from typing import AbstractSet, Callable, Literal, Mapping, TypedDict, Union, cast + +from ._parser import MarkerAtom, MarkerList, Op, Value, Variable +from ._parser import parse_marker as _parse_marker +from ._tokenizer import ParserSyntaxError +from .specifiers import InvalidSpecifier, Specifier +from .utils import canonicalize_name + +__all__ = [ + "Environment", + "EvaluateContext", + "InvalidMarker", + "Marker", + "UndefinedComparison", + "UndefinedEnvironmentName", + "default_environment", +] + +Operator = Callable[[str, Union[str, AbstractSet[str]]], bool] +EvaluateContext = Literal["metadata", "lock_file", "requirement"] +MARKERS_ALLOWING_SET = {"extras", "dependency_groups"} +MARKERS_REQUIRING_VERSION = { + "implementation_version", + "platform_release", + "python_full_version", + "python_version", +} + + +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 Environment(TypedDict): + implementation_name: str + """The implementation's identifier, e.g. ``'cpython'``.""" + + implementation_version: str + """ + The implementation's version, e.g. ``'3.13.0a2'`` for CPython 3.13.0a2, or + ``'7.3.13'`` for PyPy3.10 v7.3.13. + """ + + os_name: str + """ + The value of :py:data:`os.name`. The name of the operating system dependent module + imported, e.g. ``'posix'``. + """ + + platform_machine: str + """ + Returns the machine type, e.g. ``'i386'``. + + An empty string if the value cannot be determined. + """ + + platform_release: str + """ + The system's release, e.g. ``'2.2.0'`` or ``'NT'``. + + An empty string if the value cannot be determined. + """ + + platform_system: str + """ + The system/OS name, e.g. ``'Linux'``, ``'Windows'`` or ``'Java'``. + + An empty string if the value cannot be determined. + """ + + platform_version: str + """ + The system's release version, e.g. ``'#3 on degas'``. + + An empty string if the value cannot be determined. + """ + + python_full_version: str + """ + The Python version as string ``'major.minor.patchlevel'``. + + Note that unlike the Python :py:data:`sys.version`, this value will always include + the patchlevel (it defaults to 0). + """ + + platform_python_implementation: str + """ + A string identifying the Python implementation, e.g. ``'CPython'``. + """ + + python_version: str + """The Python version as string ``'major.minor'``.""" + + sys_platform: str + """ + This string contains a platform identifier that can be used to append + platform-specific components to :py:data:`sys.path`, for instance. + + For Unix systems, except on Linux and AIX, this is the lowercased OS name as + returned by ``uname -s`` with the first part of the version as returned by + ``uname -r`` appended, e.g. ``'sunos5'`` or ``'freebsd8'``, at the time when Python + was built. + """ + + +def _normalize_extras( + result: MarkerList | MarkerAtom | str, +) -> MarkerList | MarkerAtom | str: + if not isinstance(result, tuple): + return result + + lhs, op, rhs = result + if isinstance(lhs, Variable) and lhs.value == "extra": + normalized_extra = canonicalize_name(rhs.value) + rhs = Value(normalized_extra) + elif isinstance(rhs, Variable) and rhs.value == "extra": + normalized_extra = canonicalize_name(lhs.value) + lhs = Value(normalized_extra) + return lhs, op, rhs + + +def _normalize_extra_values(results: MarkerList) -> MarkerList: + """ + Normalize extra values. + """ + + return [_normalize_extras(r) for r in results] + + +def _format_marker( + marker: list[str] | MarkerAtom | str, first: bool | None = 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, + "<": lambda _lhs, _rhs: False, + "<=": operator.eq, + "==": operator.eq, + "!=": operator.ne, + ">=": operator.eq, + ">": lambda _lhs, _rhs: False, +} + + +def _eval_op(lhs: str, op: Op, rhs: str | AbstractSet[str], *, key: str) -> bool: + op_str = op.serialize() + if key in MARKERS_REQUIRING_VERSION: + try: + spec = Specifier(f"{op_str}{rhs}") + except InvalidSpecifier: + pass + else: + return spec.contains(lhs, prereleases=True) + + oper: Operator | None = _operators.get(op_str) + if oper is None: + raise UndefinedComparison(f"Undefined {op!r} on {lhs!r} and {rhs!r}.") + + return oper(lhs, rhs) + + +def _normalize( + lhs: str, rhs: str | AbstractSet[str], key: str +) -> tuple[str, str | AbstractSet[str]]: + # PEP 685 - Comparison of extra names for optional distribution dependencies + # https://peps.python.org/pep-0685/ + # > When comparing extra names, tools MUST normalize the names being + # > compared using the semantics outlined in PEP 503 for names + if key == "extra": + assert isinstance(rhs, str), "extra value must be a string" + # Both sides are normalized at this point already + return (lhs, rhs) + if key in MARKERS_ALLOWING_SET: + if isinstance(rhs, str): # pragma: no cover + return (canonicalize_name(lhs), canonicalize_name(rhs)) + else: + return (canonicalize_name(lhs), {canonicalize_name(v) for v in rhs}) + + # other environment markers don't have such standards + return lhs, rhs + + +def _evaluate_markers( + markers: MarkerList, environment: dict[str, str | AbstractSet[str]] +) -> bool: + groups: list[list[bool]] = [[]] + + for marker in markers: + if isinstance(marker, list): + groups[-1].append(_evaluate_markers(marker, environment)) + elif isinstance(marker, tuple): + lhs, op, rhs = marker + + if isinstance(lhs, Variable): + environment_key = lhs.value + lhs_value = environment[environment_key] + rhs_value = rhs.value + else: + lhs_value = lhs.value + environment_key = rhs.value + rhs_value = environment[environment_key] + + assert isinstance(lhs_value, str), "lhs must be a string" + lhs_value, rhs_value = _normalize(lhs_value, rhs_value, key=environment_key) + groups[-1].append(_eval_op(lhs_value, op, rhs_value, key=environment_key)) + elif marker == "or": + groups.append([]) + elif marker == "and": + pass + else: # pragma: nocover + raise TypeError(f"Unexpected marker {marker!r}") + + return any(all(item) for item in groups) + + +def format_full_version(info: sys._version_info) -> str: + version = f"{info.major}.{info.minor}.{info.micro}" + kind = info.releaselevel + if kind != "final": + version += kind[0] + str(info.serial) + return version + + +def default_environment() -> Environment: + 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: + # Note: We create a Marker object without calling this constructor in + # packaging.requirements.Requirement. If any additional logic is + # added here, make sure to mirror/adapt Requirement. + + # If this fails and throws an error, the repr still expects _markers to + # be defined. + self._markers: MarkerList = [] + + try: + self._markers = _normalize_extra_values(_parse_marker(marker)) + # The attribute `_markers` can be described in terms of a recursive type: + # MarkerList = List[Union[Tuple[Node, ...], str, MarkerList]] + # + # For example, the following expression: + # python_version > "3.6" or (python_version == "3.6" and os_name == "unix") + # + # is parsed into: + # [ + # (, ')>, ), + # 'and', + # [ + # (, , ), + # 'or', + # (, , ) + # ] + # ] + except ParserSyntaxError as e: + raise InvalidMarker(str(e)) from e + + def __str__(self) -> str: + return _format_marker(self._markers) + + def __repr__(self) -> str: + return f"<{self.__class__.__name__}('{self}')>" + + def __hash__(self) -> int: + return hash(str(self)) + + def __eq__(self, other: object) -> bool: + if not isinstance(other, Marker): + return NotImplemented + + return str(self) == str(other) + + def evaluate( + self, + environment: Mapping[str, str | AbstractSet[str]] | None = None, + context: EvaluateContext = "metadata", + ) -> 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 *context* parameter specifies what + context the markers are being evaluated for, which influences what markers + are considered valid. Acceptable values are "metadata" (for core metadata; + default), "lock_file", and "requirement" (i.e. all other situations). + + The environment is determined from the current Python process. + """ + current_environment = cast( + "dict[str, str | AbstractSet[str]]", default_environment() + ) + if context == "lock_file": + current_environment.update( + extras=frozenset(), dependency_groups=frozenset() + ) + elif context == "metadata": + current_environment["extra"] = "" + + if environment is not None: + current_environment.update(environment) + if "extra" in current_environment: + # The API used to allow setting extra to None. We need to handle + # this case for backwards compatibility. Also skip running + # normalize name if extra is empty. + extra = cast("str | None", current_environment["extra"]) + current_environment["extra"] = canonicalize_name(extra) if extra else "" + + return _evaluate_markers( + self._markers, _repair_python_full_version(current_environment) + ) + + +def _repair_python_full_version( + env: dict[str, str | AbstractSet[str]], +) -> dict[str, str | AbstractSet[str]]: + """ + Work around platform.python_version() returning something that is not PEP 440 + compliant for non-tagged Python builds. + """ + python_full_version = cast("str", env["python_full_version"]) + if python_full_version.endswith("+"): + env["python_full_version"] = f"{python_full_version}local" + return env diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/metadata.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/metadata.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..253f6b1b7ebd711fdc6bbbab3b56897061bab515 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/metadata.py @@ -0,0 +1,978 @@ +from __future__ import annotations + +import email.feedparser +import email.header +import email.message +import email.parser +import email.policy +import keyword +import pathlib +import sys +import typing +from typing import ( + Any, + Callable, + Generic, + Literal, + TypedDict, + cast, +) + +from . import licenses, requirements, specifiers, utils +from . import version as version_module + +if typing.TYPE_CHECKING: + from .licenses import NormalizedLicenseExpression + +T = typing.TypeVar("T") + + +if sys.version_info >= (3, 11): # pragma: no cover + ExceptionGroup = ExceptionGroup # noqa: F821 +else: # pragma: no cover + + class ExceptionGroup(Exception): + """A minimal implementation of :external:exc:`ExceptionGroup` from Python 3.11. + + If :external:exc:`ExceptionGroup` is already defined by Python itself, + that version is used instead. + """ + + message: str + exceptions: list[Exception] + + def __init__(self, message: str, exceptions: list[Exception]) -> None: + self.message = message + self.exceptions = exceptions + + def __repr__(self) -> str: + return f"{self.__class__.__name__}({self.message!r}, {self.exceptions!r})" + + +class InvalidMetadata(ValueError): + """A metadata field contains invalid data.""" + + field: str + """The name of the field that contains invalid data.""" + + def __init__(self, field: str, message: str) -> None: + self.field = field + super().__init__(message) + + +# The RawMetadata class attempts to make as few assumptions about the underlying +# serialization formats as possible. The idea is that as long as a serialization +# formats offer some very basic primitives in *some* way then we can support +# serializing to and from that format. +class RawMetadata(TypedDict, total=False): + """A dictionary of raw core metadata. + + Each field in core metadata maps to a key of this dictionary (when data is + provided). The key is lower-case and underscores are used instead of dashes + compared to the equivalent core metadata field. Any core metadata field that + can be specified multiple times or can hold multiple values in a single + field have a key with a plural name. See :class:`Metadata` whose attributes + match the keys of this dictionary. + + Core metadata fields that can be specified multiple times are stored as a + list or dict depending on which is appropriate for the field. Any fields + which hold multiple values in a single field are stored as a list. + + """ + + # Metadata 1.0 - PEP 241 + metadata_version: str + name: str + version: str + platforms: list[str] + summary: str + description: str + keywords: list[str] + home_page: str + author: str + author_email: str + license: str + + # Metadata 1.1 - PEP 314 + supported_platforms: list[str] + download_url: str + classifiers: list[str] + requires: list[str] + provides: list[str] + obsoletes: list[str] + + # Metadata 1.2 - PEP 345 + maintainer: str + maintainer_email: str + requires_dist: list[str] + provides_dist: list[str] + obsoletes_dist: list[str] + requires_python: str + requires_external: list[str] + project_urls: dict[str, str] + + # Metadata 2.0 + # PEP 426 attempted to completely revamp the metadata format + # but got stuck without ever being able to build consensus on + # it and ultimately ended up withdrawn. + # + # However, a number of tools had started emitting METADATA with + # `2.0` Metadata-Version, so for historical reasons, this version + # was skipped. + + # Metadata 2.1 - PEP 566 + description_content_type: str + provides_extra: list[str] + + # Metadata 2.2 - PEP 643 + dynamic: list[str] + + # Metadata 2.3 - PEP 685 + # No new fields were added in PEP 685, just some edge case were + # tightened up to provide better interoperability. + + # Metadata 2.4 - PEP 639 + license_expression: str + license_files: list[str] + + # Metadata 2.5 - PEP 794 + import_names: list[str] + import_namespaces: list[str] + + +# 'keywords' is special as it's a string in the core metadata spec, but we +# represent it as a list. +_STRING_FIELDS = { + "author", + "author_email", + "description", + "description_content_type", + "download_url", + "home_page", + "license", + "license_expression", + "maintainer", + "maintainer_email", + "metadata_version", + "name", + "requires_python", + "summary", + "version", +} + +_LIST_FIELDS = { + "classifiers", + "dynamic", + "license_files", + "obsoletes", + "obsoletes_dist", + "platforms", + "provides", + "provides_dist", + "provides_extra", + "requires", + "requires_dist", + "requires_external", + "supported_platforms", + "import_names", + "import_namespaces", +} + +_DICT_FIELDS = { + "project_urls", +} + + +def _parse_keywords(data: str) -> list[str]: + """Split a string of comma-separated keywords into a list of keywords.""" + return [k.strip() for k in data.split(",")] + + +def _parse_project_urls(data: list[str]) -> dict[str, str]: + """Parse a list of label/URL string pairings separated by a comma.""" + urls = {} + for pair in data: + # Our logic is slightly tricky here as we want to try and do + # *something* reasonable with malformed data. + # + # The main thing that we have to worry about, is data that does + # not have a ',' at all to split the label from the Value. There + # isn't a singular right answer here, and we will fail validation + # later on (if the caller is validating) so it doesn't *really* + # matter, but since the missing value has to be an empty str + # and our return value is dict[str, str], if we let the key + # be the missing value, then they'd have multiple '' values that + # overwrite each other in a accumulating dict. + # + # The other potential issue is that it's possible to have the + # same label multiple times in the metadata, with no solid "right" + # answer with what to do in that case. As such, we'll do the only + # thing we can, which is treat the field as unparsable and add it + # to our list of unparsed fields. + # + # TODO: The spec doesn't say anything about if the keys should be + # considered case sensitive or not... logically they should + # be case-preserving and case-insensitive, but doing that + # would open up more cases where we might have duplicate + # entries. + label, _, url = (s.strip() for s in pair.partition(",")) + + if label in urls: + # The label already exists in our set of urls, so this field + # is unparsable, and we can just add the whole thing to our + # unparsable data and stop processing it. + raise KeyError("duplicate labels in project urls") + urls[label] = url + + return urls + + +def _get_payload(msg: email.message.Message, source: bytes | str) -> str: + """Get the body of the message.""" + # If our source is a str, then our caller has managed encodings for us, + # and we don't need to deal with it. + if isinstance(source, str): + payload = msg.get_payload() + assert isinstance(payload, str) + return payload + # If our source is a bytes, then we're managing the encoding and we need + # to deal with it. + else: + bpayload = msg.get_payload(decode=True) + assert isinstance(bpayload, bytes) + try: + return bpayload.decode("utf8", "strict") + except UnicodeDecodeError as exc: + raise ValueError("payload in an invalid encoding") from exc + + +# The various parse_FORMAT functions here are intended to be as lenient as +# possible in their parsing, while still returning a correctly typed +# RawMetadata. +# +# To aid in this, we also generally want to do as little touching of the +# data as possible, except where there are possibly some historic holdovers +# that make valid data awkward to work with. +# +# While this is a lower level, intermediate format than our ``Metadata`` +# class, some light touch ups can make a massive difference in usability. + +# Map METADATA fields to RawMetadata. +_EMAIL_TO_RAW_MAPPING = { + "author": "author", + "author-email": "author_email", + "classifier": "classifiers", + "description": "description", + "description-content-type": "description_content_type", + "download-url": "download_url", + "dynamic": "dynamic", + "home-page": "home_page", + "import-name": "import_names", + "import-namespace": "import_namespaces", + "keywords": "keywords", + "license": "license", + "license-expression": "license_expression", + "license-file": "license_files", + "maintainer": "maintainer", + "maintainer-email": "maintainer_email", + "metadata-version": "metadata_version", + "name": "name", + "obsoletes": "obsoletes", + "obsoletes-dist": "obsoletes_dist", + "platform": "platforms", + "project-url": "project_urls", + "provides": "provides", + "provides-dist": "provides_dist", + "provides-extra": "provides_extra", + "requires": "requires", + "requires-dist": "requires_dist", + "requires-external": "requires_external", + "requires-python": "requires_python", + "summary": "summary", + "supported-platform": "supported_platforms", + "version": "version", +} +_RAW_TO_EMAIL_MAPPING = {raw: email for email, raw in _EMAIL_TO_RAW_MAPPING.items()} + + +# This class is for writing RFC822 messages +class RFC822Policy(email.policy.EmailPolicy): + """ + This is :class:`email.policy.EmailPolicy`, but with a simple ``header_store_parse`` + implementation that handles multi-line values, and some nice defaults. + """ + + utf8 = True + mangle_from_ = False + max_line_length = 0 + + def header_store_parse(self, name: str, value: str) -> tuple[str, str]: + size = len(name) + 2 + value = value.replace("\n", "\n" + " " * size) + return (name, value) + + +# This class is for writing RFC822 messages +class RFC822Message(email.message.EmailMessage): + """ + This is :class:`email.message.EmailMessage` with two small changes: it defaults to + our `RFC822Policy`, and it correctly writes unicode when being called + with `bytes()`. + """ + + def __init__(self) -> None: + super().__init__(policy=RFC822Policy()) + + def as_bytes( + self, unixfrom: bool = False, policy: email.policy.Policy | None = None + ) -> bytes: + """ + Return the bytes representation of the message. + + This handles unicode encoding. + """ + return self.as_string(unixfrom, policy=policy).encode("utf-8") + + +def parse_email(data: bytes | str) -> tuple[RawMetadata, dict[str, list[str]]]: + """Parse a distribution's metadata stored as email headers (e.g. from ``METADATA``). + + This function returns a two-item tuple of dicts. The first dict is of + recognized fields from the core metadata specification. Fields that can be + parsed and translated into Python's built-in types are converted + appropriately. All other fields are left as-is. Fields that are allowed to + appear multiple times are stored as lists. + + The second dict contains all other fields from the metadata. This includes + any unrecognized fields. It also includes any fields which are expected to + be parsed into a built-in type but were not formatted appropriately. Finally, + any fields that are expected to appear only once but are repeated are + included in this dict. + + """ + raw: dict[str, str | list[str] | dict[str, str]] = {} + unparsed: dict[str, list[str]] = {} + + if isinstance(data, str): + parsed = email.parser.Parser(policy=email.policy.compat32).parsestr(data) + else: + parsed = email.parser.BytesParser(policy=email.policy.compat32).parsebytes(data) + + # We have to wrap parsed.keys() in a set, because in the case of multiple + # values for a key (a list), the key will appear multiple times in the + # list of keys, but we're avoiding that by using get_all(). + for name_with_case in frozenset(parsed.keys()): + # Header names in RFC are case insensitive, so we'll normalize to all + # lower case to make comparisons easier. + name = name_with_case.lower() + + # We use get_all() here, even for fields that aren't multiple use, + # because otherwise someone could have e.g. two Name fields, and we + # would just silently ignore it rather than doing something about it. + headers = parsed.get_all(name) or [] + + # The way the email module works when parsing bytes is that it + # unconditionally decodes the bytes as ascii using the surrogateescape + # handler. When you pull that data back out (such as with get_all() ), + # it looks to see if the str has any surrogate escapes, and if it does + # it wraps it in a Header object instead of returning the string. + # + # As such, we'll look for those Header objects, and fix up the encoding. + value = [] + # Flag if we have run into any issues processing the headers, thus + # signalling that the data belongs in 'unparsed'. + valid_encoding = True + for h in headers: + # It's unclear if this can return more types than just a Header or + # a str, so we'll just assert here to make sure. + assert isinstance(h, (email.header.Header, str)) + + # If it's a header object, we need to do our little dance to get + # the real data out of it. In cases where there is invalid data + # we're going to end up with mojibake, but there's no obvious, good + # way around that without reimplementing parts of the Header object + # ourselves. + # + # That should be fine since, if mojibacked happens, this key is + # going into the unparsed dict anyways. + if isinstance(h, email.header.Header): + # The Header object stores it's data as chunks, and each chunk + # can be independently encoded, so we'll need to check each + # of them. + chunks: list[tuple[bytes, str | None]] = [] + for binary, _encoding in email.header.decode_header(h): + try: + binary.decode("utf8", "strict") + except UnicodeDecodeError: + # Enable mojibake. + encoding = "latin1" + valid_encoding = False + else: + encoding = "utf8" + chunks.append((binary, encoding)) + + # Turn our chunks back into a Header object, then let that + # Header object do the right thing to turn them into a + # string for us. + value.append(str(email.header.make_header(chunks))) + # This is already a string, so just add it. + else: + value.append(h) + + # We've processed all of our values to get them into a list of str, + # but we may have mojibake data, in which case this is an unparsed + # field. + if not valid_encoding: + unparsed[name] = value + continue + + raw_name = _EMAIL_TO_RAW_MAPPING.get(name) + if raw_name is None: + # This is a bit of a weird situation, we've encountered a key that + # we don't know what it means, so we don't know whether it's meant + # to be a list or not. + # + # Since we can't really tell one way or another, we'll just leave it + # as a list, even though it may be a single item list, because that's + # what makes the most sense for email headers. + unparsed[name] = value + continue + + # If this is one of our string fields, then we'll check to see if our + # value is a list of a single item. If it is then we'll assume that + # it was emitted as a single string, and unwrap the str from inside + # the list. + # + # If it's any other kind of data, then we haven't the faintest clue + # what we should parse it as, and we have to just add it to our list + # of unparsed stuff. + if raw_name in _STRING_FIELDS and len(value) == 1: + raw[raw_name] = value[0] + # If this is import_names, we need to special case the empty field + # case, which converts to an empty list instead of None. We can't let + # the empty case slip through, as it will fail validation. + elif raw_name == "import_names" and value == [""]: + raw[raw_name] = [] + # If this is one of our list of string fields, then we can just assign + # the value, since email *only* has strings, and our get_all() call + # above ensures that this is a list. + elif raw_name in _LIST_FIELDS: + raw[raw_name] = value + # Special Case: Keywords + # The keywords field is implemented in the metadata spec as a str, + # but it conceptually is a list of strings, and is serialized using + # ", ".join(keywords), so we'll do some light data massaging to turn + # this into what it logically is. + elif raw_name == "keywords" and len(value) == 1: + raw[raw_name] = _parse_keywords(value[0]) + # Special Case: Project-URL + # The project urls is implemented in the metadata spec as a list of + # specially-formatted strings that represent a key and a value, which + # is fundamentally a mapping, however the email format doesn't support + # mappings in a sane way, so it was crammed into a list of strings + # instead. + # + # We will do a little light data massaging to turn this into a map as + # it logically should be. + elif raw_name == "project_urls": + try: + raw[raw_name] = _parse_project_urls(value) + except KeyError: + unparsed[name] = value + # Nothing that we've done has managed to parse this, so it'll just + # throw it in our unparsable data and move on. + else: + unparsed[name] = value + + # We need to support getting the Description from the message payload in + # addition to getting it from the the headers. This does mean, though, there + # is the possibility of it being set both ways, in which case we put both + # in 'unparsed' since we don't know which is right. + try: + payload = _get_payload(parsed, data) + except ValueError: + unparsed.setdefault("description", []).append( + parsed.get_payload(decode=isinstance(data, bytes)) # type: ignore[call-overload] + ) + else: + if payload: + # Check to see if we've already got a description, if so then both + # it, and this body move to unparsable. + if "description" in raw: + description_header = cast("str", raw.pop("description")) + unparsed.setdefault("description", []).extend( + [description_header, payload] + ) + elif "description" in unparsed: + unparsed["description"].append(payload) + else: + raw["description"] = payload + + # We need to cast our `raw` to a metadata, because a TypedDict only support + # literal key names, but we're computing our key names on purpose, but the + # way this function is implemented, our `TypedDict` can only have valid key + # names. + return cast("RawMetadata", raw), unparsed + + +_NOT_FOUND = object() + + +# Keep the two values in sync. +_VALID_METADATA_VERSIONS = ["1.0", "1.1", "1.2", "2.1", "2.2", "2.3", "2.4", "2.5"] +_MetadataVersion = Literal["1.0", "1.1", "1.2", "2.1", "2.2", "2.3", "2.4", "2.5"] + +_REQUIRED_ATTRS = frozenset(["metadata_version", "name", "version"]) + + +class _Validator(Generic[T]): + """Validate a metadata field. + + All _process_*() methods correspond to a core metadata field. The method is + called with the field's raw value. If the raw value is valid it is returned + in its "enriched" form (e.g. ``version.Version`` for the ``Version`` field). + If the raw value is invalid, :exc:`InvalidMetadata` is raised (with a cause + as appropriate). + """ + + name: str + raw_name: str + added: _MetadataVersion + + def __init__( + self, + *, + added: _MetadataVersion = "1.0", + ) -> None: + self.added = added + + def __set_name__(self, _owner: Metadata, name: str) -> None: + self.name = name + self.raw_name = _RAW_TO_EMAIL_MAPPING[name] + + def __get__(self, instance: Metadata, _owner: type[Metadata]) -> T: + # With Python 3.8, the caching can be replaced with functools.cached_property(). + # No need to check the cache as attribute lookup will resolve into the + # instance's __dict__ before __get__ is called. + cache = instance.__dict__ + value = instance._raw.get(self.name) + + # To make the _process_* methods easier, we'll check if the value is None + # and if this field is NOT a required attribute, and if both of those + # things are true, we'll skip the the converter. This will mean that the + # converters never have to deal with the None union. + if self.name in _REQUIRED_ATTRS or value is not None: + try: + converter: Callable[[Any], T] = getattr(self, f"_process_{self.name}") + except AttributeError: + pass + else: + value = converter(value) + + cache[self.name] = value + try: + del instance._raw[self.name] # type: ignore[misc] + except KeyError: + pass + + return cast("T", value) + + def _invalid_metadata( + self, msg: str, cause: Exception | None = None + ) -> InvalidMetadata: + exc = InvalidMetadata( + self.raw_name, msg.format_map({"field": repr(self.raw_name)}) + ) + exc.__cause__ = cause + return exc + + def _process_metadata_version(self, value: str) -> _MetadataVersion: + # Implicitly makes Metadata-Version required. + if value not in _VALID_METADATA_VERSIONS: + raise self._invalid_metadata(f"{value!r} is not a valid metadata version") + return cast("_MetadataVersion", value) + + def _process_name(self, value: str) -> str: + if not value: + raise self._invalid_metadata("{field} is a required field") + # Validate the name as a side-effect. + try: + utils.canonicalize_name(value, validate=True) + except utils.InvalidName as exc: + raise self._invalid_metadata( + f"{value!r} is invalid for {{field}}", cause=exc + ) from exc + else: + return value + + def _process_version(self, value: str) -> version_module.Version: + if not value: + raise self._invalid_metadata("{field} is a required field") + try: + return version_module.parse(value) + except version_module.InvalidVersion as exc: + raise self._invalid_metadata( + f"{value!r} is invalid for {{field}}", cause=exc + ) from exc + + def _process_summary(self, value: str) -> str: + """Check the field contains no newlines.""" + if "\n" in value: + raise self._invalid_metadata("{field} must be a single line") + return value + + def _process_description_content_type(self, value: str) -> str: + content_types = {"text/plain", "text/x-rst", "text/markdown"} + message = email.message.EmailMessage() + message["content-type"] = value + + content_type, parameters = ( + # Defaults to `text/plain` if parsing failed. + message.get_content_type().lower(), + message["content-type"].params, + ) + # Check if content-type is valid or defaulted to `text/plain` and thus was + # not parseable. + if content_type not in content_types or content_type not in value.lower(): + raise self._invalid_metadata( + f"{{field}} must be one of {list(content_types)}, not {value!r}" + ) + + charset = parameters.get("charset", "UTF-8") + if charset != "UTF-8": + raise self._invalid_metadata( + f"{{field}} can only specify the UTF-8 charset, not {list(charset)}" + ) + + markdown_variants = {"GFM", "CommonMark"} + variant = parameters.get("variant", "GFM") # Use an acceptable default. + if content_type == "text/markdown" and variant not in markdown_variants: + raise self._invalid_metadata( + f"valid Markdown variants for {{field}} are {list(markdown_variants)}, " + f"not {variant!r}", + ) + return value + + def _process_dynamic(self, value: list[str]) -> list[str]: + for dynamic_field in map(str.lower, value): + if dynamic_field in {"name", "version", "metadata-version"}: + raise self._invalid_metadata( + f"{dynamic_field!r} is not allowed as a dynamic field" + ) + elif dynamic_field not in _EMAIL_TO_RAW_MAPPING: + raise self._invalid_metadata( + f"{dynamic_field!r} is not a valid dynamic field" + ) + return list(map(str.lower, value)) + + def _process_provides_extra( + self, + value: list[str], + ) -> list[utils.NormalizedName]: + normalized_names = [] + try: + for name in value: + normalized_names.append(utils.canonicalize_name(name, validate=True)) + except utils.InvalidName as exc: + raise self._invalid_metadata( + f"{name!r} is invalid for {{field}}", cause=exc + ) from exc + else: + return normalized_names + + def _process_requires_python(self, value: str) -> specifiers.SpecifierSet: + try: + return specifiers.SpecifierSet(value) + except specifiers.InvalidSpecifier as exc: + raise self._invalid_metadata( + f"{value!r} is invalid for {{field}}", cause=exc + ) from exc + + def _process_requires_dist( + self, + value: list[str], + ) -> list[requirements.Requirement]: + reqs = [] + try: + for req in value: + reqs.append(requirements.Requirement(req)) + except requirements.InvalidRequirement as exc: + raise self._invalid_metadata( + f"{req!r} is invalid for {{field}}", cause=exc + ) from exc + else: + return reqs + + def _process_license_expression(self, value: str) -> NormalizedLicenseExpression: + try: + return licenses.canonicalize_license_expression(value) + except ValueError as exc: + raise self._invalid_metadata( + f"{value!r} is invalid for {{field}}", cause=exc + ) from exc + + def _process_license_files(self, value: list[str]) -> list[str]: + paths = [] + for path in value: + if ".." in path: + raise self._invalid_metadata( + f"{path!r} is invalid for {{field}}, " + "parent directory indicators are not allowed" + ) + if "*" in path: + raise self._invalid_metadata( + f"{path!r} is invalid for {{field}}, paths must be resolved" + ) + if ( + pathlib.PurePosixPath(path).is_absolute() + or pathlib.PureWindowsPath(path).is_absolute() + ): + raise self._invalid_metadata( + f"{path!r} is invalid for {{field}}, paths must be relative" + ) + if pathlib.PureWindowsPath(path).as_posix() != path: + raise self._invalid_metadata( + f"{path!r} is invalid for {{field}}, paths must use '/' delimiter" + ) + paths.append(path) + return paths + + def _process_import_names(self, value: list[str]) -> list[str]: + for import_name in value: + name, semicolon, private = import_name.partition(";") + name = name.rstrip() + for identifier in name.split("."): + if not identifier.isidentifier(): + raise self._invalid_metadata( + f"{name!r} is invalid for {{field}}; " + f"{identifier!r} is not a valid identifier" + ) + elif keyword.iskeyword(identifier): + raise self._invalid_metadata( + f"{name!r} is invalid for {{field}}; " + f"{identifier!r} is a keyword" + ) + if semicolon and private.lstrip() != "private": + raise self._invalid_metadata( + f"{import_name!r} is invalid for {{field}}; " + "the only valid option is 'private'" + ) + return value + + _process_import_namespaces = _process_import_names + + +class Metadata: + """Representation of distribution metadata. + + Compared to :class:`RawMetadata`, this class provides objects representing + metadata fields instead of only using built-in types. Any invalid metadata + will cause :exc:`InvalidMetadata` to be raised (with a + :py:attr:`~BaseException.__cause__` attribute as appropriate). + """ + + _raw: RawMetadata + + @classmethod + def from_raw(cls, data: RawMetadata, *, validate: bool = True) -> Metadata: + """Create an instance from :class:`RawMetadata`. + + If *validate* is true, all metadata will be validated. All exceptions + related to validation will be gathered and raised as an :class:`ExceptionGroup`. + """ + ins = cls() + ins._raw = data.copy() # Mutations occur due to caching enriched values. + + if validate: + exceptions: list[Exception] = [] + try: + metadata_version = ins.metadata_version + metadata_age = _VALID_METADATA_VERSIONS.index(metadata_version) + except InvalidMetadata as metadata_version_exc: + exceptions.append(metadata_version_exc) + metadata_version = None + + # Make sure to check for the fields that are present, the required + # fields (so their absence can be reported). + fields_to_check = frozenset(ins._raw) | _REQUIRED_ATTRS + # Remove fields that have already been checked. + fields_to_check -= {"metadata_version"} + + for key in fields_to_check: + try: + if metadata_version: + # Can't use getattr() as that triggers descriptor protocol which + # will fail due to no value for the instance argument. + try: + field_metadata_version = cls.__dict__[key].added + except KeyError: + exc = InvalidMetadata(key, f"unrecognized field: {key!r}") + exceptions.append(exc) + continue + field_age = _VALID_METADATA_VERSIONS.index( + field_metadata_version + ) + if field_age > metadata_age: + field = _RAW_TO_EMAIL_MAPPING[key] + exc = InvalidMetadata( + field, + f"{field} introduced in metadata version " + f"{field_metadata_version}, not {metadata_version}", + ) + exceptions.append(exc) + continue + getattr(ins, key) + except InvalidMetadata as exc: + exceptions.append(exc) + + if exceptions: + raise ExceptionGroup("invalid metadata", exceptions) + + return ins + + @classmethod + def from_email(cls, data: bytes | str, *, validate: bool = True) -> Metadata: + """Parse metadata from email headers. + + If *validate* is true, the metadata will be validated. All exceptions + related to validation will be gathered and raised as an :class:`ExceptionGroup`. + """ + raw, unparsed = parse_email(data) + + if validate: + exceptions: list[Exception] = [] + for unparsed_key in unparsed: + if unparsed_key in _EMAIL_TO_RAW_MAPPING: + message = f"{unparsed_key!r} has invalid data" + else: + message = f"unrecognized field: {unparsed_key!r}" + exceptions.append(InvalidMetadata(unparsed_key, message)) + + if exceptions: + raise ExceptionGroup("unparsed", exceptions) + + try: + return cls.from_raw(raw, validate=validate) + except ExceptionGroup as exc_group: + raise ExceptionGroup( + "invalid or unparsed metadata", exc_group.exceptions + ) from None + + metadata_version: _Validator[_MetadataVersion] = _Validator() + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-metadata-version` + (required; validated to be a valid metadata version)""" + # `name` is not normalized/typed to NormalizedName so as to provide access to + # the original/raw name. + name: _Validator[str] = _Validator() + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-name` + (required; validated using :func:`~packaging.utils.canonicalize_name` and its + *validate* parameter)""" + version: _Validator[version_module.Version] = _Validator() + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-version` (required)""" + dynamic: _Validator[list[str] | None] = _Validator( + added="2.2", + ) + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-dynamic` + (validated against core metadata field names and lowercased)""" + platforms: _Validator[list[str] | None] = _Validator() + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-platform`""" + supported_platforms: _Validator[list[str] | None] = _Validator(added="1.1") + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-supported-platform`""" + summary: _Validator[str | None] = _Validator() + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-summary` (validated to contain no newlines)""" + description: _Validator[str | None] = _Validator() # TODO 2.1: can be in body + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-description`""" + description_content_type: _Validator[str | None] = _Validator(added="2.1") + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-description-content-type` (validated)""" + keywords: _Validator[list[str] | None] = _Validator() + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-keywords`""" + home_page: _Validator[str | None] = _Validator() + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-home-page`""" + download_url: _Validator[str | None] = _Validator(added="1.1") + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-download-url`""" + author: _Validator[str | None] = _Validator() + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-author`""" + author_email: _Validator[str | None] = _Validator() + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-author-email`""" + maintainer: _Validator[str | None] = _Validator(added="1.2") + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-maintainer`""" + maintainer_email: _Validator[str | None] = _Validator(added="1.2") + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-maintainer-email`""" + license: _Validator[str | None] = _Validator() + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-license`""" + license_expression: _Validator[NormalizedLicenseExpression | None] = _Validator( + added="2.4" + ) + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-license-expression`""" + license_files: _Validator[list[str] | None] = _Validator(added="2.4") + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-license-file`""" + classifiers: _Validator[list[str] | None] = _Validator(added="1.1") + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-classifier`""" + requires_dist: _Validator[list[requirements.Requirement] | None] = _Validator( + added="1.2" + ) + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-requires-dist`""" + requires_python: _Validator[specifiers.SpecifierSet | None] = _Validator( + added="1.2" + ) + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-requires-python`""" + # Because `Requires-External` allows for non-PEP 440 version specifiers, we + # don't do any processing on the values. + requires_external: _Validator[list[str] | None] = _Validator(added="1.2") + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-requires-external`""" + project_urls: _Validator[dict[str, str] | None] = _Validator(added="1.2") + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-project-url`""" + # PEP 685 lets us raise an error if an extra doesn't pass `Name` validation + # regardless of metadata version. + provides_extra: _Validator[list[utils.NormalizedName] | None] = _Validator( + added="2.1", + ) + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-provides-extra`""" + provides_dist: _Validator[list[str] | None] = _Validator(added="1.2") + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-provides-dist`""" + obsoletes_dist: _Validator[list[str] | None] = _Validator(added="1.2") + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-obsoletes-dist`""" + import_names: _Validator[list[str] | None] = _Validator(added="2.5") + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-import-name`""" + import_namespaces: _Validator[list[str] | None] = _Validator(added="2.5") + """:external:ref:`core-metadata-import-namespace`""" + requires: _Validator[list[str] | None] = _Validator(added="1.1") + """``Requires`` (deprecated)""" + provides: _Validator[list[str] | None] = _Validator(added="1.1") + """``Provides`` (deprecated)""" + obsoletes: _Validator[list[str] | None] = _Validator(added="1.1") + """``Obsoletes`` (deprecated)""" + + def as_rfc822(self) -> RFC822Message: + """ + Return an RFC822 message with the metadata. + """ + message = RFC822Message() + self._write_metadata(message) + return message + + def _write_metadata(self, message: RFC822Message) -> None: + """ + Return an RFC822 message with the metadata. + """ + for name, validator in self.__class__.__dict__.items(): + if isinstance(validator, _Validator) and name != "description": + value = getattr(self, name) + email_name = _RAW_TO_EMAIL_MAPPING[name] + if value is not None: + if email_name == "project-url": + for label, url in value.items(): + message[email_name] = f"{label}, {url}" + elif email_name == "keywords": + message[email_name] = ",".join(value) + elif email_name == "import-name" and value == []: + message[email_name] = "" + elif isinstance(value, list): + for item in value: + message[email_name] = str(item) + else: + message[email_name] = str(value) + + # The description is a special case because it is in the body of the message. + if self.description is not None: + message.set_payload(self.description) diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/py.typed b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/py.typed new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..e69de29bb2d1d6434b8b29ae775ad8c2e48c5391 diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/pylock.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/pylock.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..a564f15246ad65038029f8fefb48621fa64a3abd --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/pylock.py @@ -0,0 +1,635 @@ +from __future__ import annotations + +import dataclasses +import logging +import re +from collections.abc import Mapping, Sequence +from dataclasses import dataclass +from datetime import datetime +from typing import ( + TYPE_CHECKING, + Any, + Callable, + Protocol, + TypeVar, +) + +from .markers import Marker +from .specifiers import SpecifierSet +from .utils import NormalizedName, is_normalized_name +from .version import Version + +if TYPE_CHECKING: # pragma: no cover + from pathlib import Path + + from typing_extensions import Self + +_logger = logging.getLogger(__name__) + +__all__ = [ + "Package", + "PackageArchive", + "PackageDirectory", + "PackageSdist", + "PackageVcs", + "PackageWheel", + "Pylock", + "PylockUnsupportedVersionError", + "PylockValidationError", + "is_valid_pylock_path", +] + +_T = TypeVar("_T") +_T2 = TypeVar("_T2") + + +class _FromMappingProtocol(Protocol): # pragma: no cover + @classmethod + def _from_dict(cls, d: Mapping[str, Any]) -> Self: ... + + +_FromMappingProtocolT = TypeVar("_FromMappingProtocolT", bound=_FromMappingProtocol) + + +_PYLOCK_FILE_NAME_RE = re.compile(r"^pylock\.([^.]+)\.toml$") + + +def is_valid_pylock_path(path: Path) -> bool: + """Check if the given path is a valid pylock file path.""" + return path.name == "pylock.toml" or bool(_PYLOCK_FILE_NAME_RE.match(path.name)) + + +def _toml_key(key: str) -> str: + return key.replace("_", "-") + + +def _toml_value(key: str, value: Any) -> Any: # noqa: ANN401 + if isinstance(value, (Version, Marker, SpecifierSet)): + return str(value) + if isinstance(value, Sequence) and key == "environments": + return [str(v) for v in value] + return value + + +def _toml_dict_factory(data: list[tuple[str, Any]]) -> dict[str, Any]: + return { + _toml_key(key): _toml_value(key, value) + for key, value in data + if value is not None + } + + +def _get(d: Mapping[str, Any], expected_type: type[_T], key: str) -> _T | None: + """Get a value from the dictionary and verify it's the expected type.""" + if (value := d.get(key)) is None: + return None + if not isinstance(value, expected_type): + raise PylockValidationError( + f"Unexpected type {type(value).__name__} " + f"(expected {expected_type.__name__})", + context=key, + ) + return value + + +def _get_required(d: Mapping[str, Any], expected_type: type[_T], key: str) -> _T: + """Get a required value from the dictionary and verify it's the expected type.""" + if (value := _get(d, expected_type, key)) is None: + raise _PylockRequiredKeyError(key) + return value + + +def _get_sequence( + d: Mapping[str, Any], expected_item_type: type[_T], key: str +) -> Sequence[_T] | None: + """Get a list value from the dictionary and verify it's the expected items type.""" + if (value := _get(d, Sequence, key)) is None: # type: ignore[type-abstract] + return None + if isinstance(value, (str, bytes)): + # special case: str and bytes are Sequences, but we want to reject it + raise PylockValidationError( + f"Unexpected type {type(value).__name__} (expected Sequence)", + context=key, + ) + for i, item in enumerate(value): + if not isinstance(item, expected_item_type): + raise PylockValidationError( + f"Unexpected type {type(item).__name__} " + f"(expected {expected_item_type.__name__})", + context=f"{key}[{i}]", + ) + return value + + +def _get_as( + d: Mapping[str, Any], + expected_type: type[_T], + target_type: Callable[[_T], _T2], + key: str, +) -> _T2 | None: + """Get a value from the dictionary, verify it's the expected type, + and convert to the target type. + + This assumes the target_type constructor accepts the value. + """ + if (value := _get(d, expected_type, key)) is None: + return None + try: + return target_type(value) + except Exception as e: + raise PylockValidationError(e, context=key) from e + + +def _get_required_as( + d: Mapping[str, Any], + expected_type: type[_T], + target_type: Callable[[_T], _T2], + key: str, +) -> _T2: + """Get a required value from the dict, verify it's the expected type, + and convert to the target type.""" + if (value := _get_as(d, expected_type, target_type, key)) is None: + raise _PylockRequiredKeyError(key) + return value + + +def _get_sequence_as( + d: Mapping[str, Any], + expected_item_type: type[_T], + target_item_type: Callable[[_T], _T2], + key: str, +) -> list[_T2] | None: + """Get list value from dictionary and verify expected items type.""" + if (value := _get_sequence(d, expected_item_type, key)) is None: + return None + result = [] + try: + for item in value: + typed_item = target_item_type(item) + result.append(typed_item) + except Exception as e: + raise PylockValidationError(e, context=f"{key}[{len(result)}]") from e + return result + + +def _get_object( + d: Mapping[str, Any], target_type: type[_FromMappingProtocolT], key: str +) -> _FromMappingProtocolT | None: + """Get a dictionary value from the dictionary and convert it to a dataclass.""" + if (value := _get(d, Mapping, key)) is None: # type: ignore[type-abstract] + return None + try: + return target_type._from_dict(value) + except Exception as e: + raise PylockValidationError(e, context=key) from e + + +def _get_sequence_of_objects( + d: Mapping[str, Any], target_item_type: type[_FromMappingProtocolT], key: str +) -> list[_FromMappingProtocolT] | None: + """Get a list value from the dictionary and convert its items to a dataclass.""" + if (value := _get_sequence(d, Mapping, key)) is None: # type: ignore[type-abstract] + return None + result: list[_FromMappingProtocolT] = [] + try: + for item in value: + typed_item = target_item_type._from_dict(item) + result.append(typed_item) + except Exception as e: + raise PylockValidationError(e, context=f"{key}[{len(result)}]") from e + return result + + +def _get_required_sequence_of_objects( + d: Mapping[str, Any], target_item_type: type[_FromMappingProtocolT], key: str +) -> Sequence[_FromMappingProtocolT]: + """Get a required list value from the dictionary and convert its items to a + dataclass.""" + if (result := _get_sequence_of_objects(d, target_item_type, key)) is None: + raise _PylockRequiredKeyError(key) + return result + + +def _validate_normalized_name(name: str) -> NormalizedName: + """Validate that a string is a NormalizedName.""" + if not is_normalized_name(name): + raise PylockValidationError(f"Name {name!r} is not normalized") + return NormalizedName(name) + + +def _validate_path_url(path: str | None, url: str | None) -> None: + if not path and not url: + raise PylockValidationError("path or url must be provided") + + +def _validate_hashes(hashes: Mapping[str, Any]) -> Mapping[str, Any]: + if not hashes: + raise PylockValidationError("At least one hash must be provided") + if not all(isinstance(hash_val, str) for hash_val in hashes.values()): + raise PylockValidationError("Hash values must be strings") + return hashes + + +class PylockValidationError(Exception): + """Raised when when input data is not spec-compliant.""" + + context: str | None = None + message: str + + def __init__( + self, + cause: str | Exception, + *, + context: str | None = None, + ) -> None: + if isinstance(cause, PylockValidationError): + if cause.context: + self.context = ( + f"{context}.{cause.context}" if context else cause.context + ) + else: + self.context = context + self.message = cause.message + else: + self.context = context + self.message = str(cause) + + def __str__(self) -> str: + if self.context: + return f"{self.message} in {self.context!r}" + return self.message + + +class _PylockRequiredKeyError(PylockValidationError): + def __init__(self, key: str) -> None: + super().__init__("Missing required value", context=key) + + +class PylockUnsupportedVersionError(PylockValidationError): + """Raised when encountering an unsupported `lock_version`.""" + + +@dataclass(frozen=True, init=False) +class PackageVcs: + type: str + url: str | None = None + path: str | None = None + requested_revision: str | None = None + commit_id: str # type: ignore[misc] + subdirectory: str | None = None + + def __init__( + self, + *, + type: str, + url: str | None = None, + path: str | None = None, + requested_revision: str | None = None, + commit_id: str, + subdirectory: str | None = None, + ) -> None: + # In Python 3.10+ make dataclass kw_only=True and remove __init__ + object.__setattr__(self, "type", type) + object.__setattr__(self, "url", url) + object.__setattr__(self, "path", path) + object.__setattr__(self, "requested_revision", requested_revision) + object.__setattr__(self, "commit_id", commit_id) + object.__setattr__(self, "subdirectory", subdirectory) + + @classmethod + def _from_dict(cls, d: Mapping[str, Any]) -> Self: + package_vcs = cls( + type=_get_required(d, str, "type"), + url=_get(d, str, "url"), + path=_get(d, str, "path"), + requested_revision=_get(d, str, "requested-revision"), + commit_id=_get_required(d, str, "commit-id"), + subdirectory=_get(d, str, "subdirectory"), + ) + _validate_path_url(package_vcs.path, package_vcs.url) + return package_vcs + + +@dataclass(frozen=True, init=False) +class PackageDirectory: + path: str + editable: bool | None = None + subdirectory: str | None = None + + def __init__( + self, + *, + path: str, + editable: bool | None = None, + subdirectory: str | None = None, + ) -> None: + # In Python 3.10+ make dataclass kw_only=True and remove __init__ + object.__setattr__(self, "path", path) + object.__setattr__(self, "editable", editable) + object.__setattr__(self, "subdirectory", subdirectory) + + @classmethod + def _from_dict(cls, d: Mapping[str, Any]) -> Self: + return cls( + path=_get_required(d, str, "path"), + editable=_get(d, bool, "editable"), + subdirectory=_get(d, str, "subdirectory"), + ) + + +@dataclass(frozen=True, init=False) +class PackageArchive: + url: str | None = None + path: str | None = None + size: int | None = None + upload_time: datetime | None = None + hashes: Mapping[str, str] # type: ignore[misc] + subdirectory: str | None = None + + def __init__( + self, + *, + url: str | None = None, + path: str | None = None, + size: int | None = None, + upload_time: datetime | None = None, + hashes: Mapping[str, str], + subdirectory: str | None = None, + ) -> None: + # In Python 3.10+ make dataclass kw_only=True and remove __init__ + object.__setattr__(self, "url", url) + object.__setattr__(self, "path", path) + object.__setattr__(self, "size", size) + object.__setattr__(self, "upload_time", upload_time) + object.__setattr__(self, "hashes", hashes) + object.__setattr__(self, "subdirectory", subdirectory) + + @classmethod + def _from_dict(cls, d: Mapping[str, Any]) -> Self: + package_archive = cls( + url=_get(d, str, "url"), + path=_get(d, str, "path"), + size=_get(d, int, "size"), + upload_time=_get(d, datetime, "upload-time"), + hashes=_get_required_as(d, Mapping, _validate_hashes, "hashes"), # type: ignore[type-abstract] + subdirectory=_get(d, str, "subdirectory"), + ) + _validate_path_url(package_archive.path, package_archive.url) + return package_archive + + +@dataclass(frozen=True, init=False) +class PackageSdist: + name: str | None = None + upload_time: datetime | None = None + url: str | None = None + path: str | None = None + size: int | None = None + hashes: Mapping[str, str] # type: ignore[misc] + + def __init__( + self, + *, + name: str | None = None, + upload_time: datetime | None = None, + url: str | None = None, + path: str | None = None, + size: int | None = None, + hashes: Mapping[str, str], + ) -> None: + # In Python 3.10+ make dataclass kw_only=True and remove __init__ + object.__setattr__(self, "name", name) + object.__setattr__(self, "upload_time", upload_time) + object.__setattr__(self, "url", url) + object.__setattr__(self, "path", path) + object.__setattr__(self, "size", size) + object.__setattr__(self, "hashes", hashes) + + @classmethod + def _from_dict(cls, d: Mapping[str, Any]) -> Self: + package_sdist = cls( + name=_get(d, str, "name"), + upload_time=_get(d, datetime, "upload-time"), + url=_get(d, str, "url"), + path=_get(d, str, "path"), + size=_get(d, int, "size"), + hashes=_get_required_as(d, Mapping, _validate_hashes, "hashes"), # type: ignore[type-abstract] + ) + _validate_path_url(package_sdist.path, package_sdist.url) + return package_sdist + + +@dataclass(frozen=True, init=False) +class PackageWheel: + name: str | None = None + upload_time: datetime | None = None + url: str | None = None + path: str | None = None + size: int | None = None + hashes: Mapping[str, str] # type: ignore[misc] + + def __init__( + self, + *, + name: str | None = None, + upload_time: datetime | None = None, + url: str | None = None, + path: str | None = None, + size: int | None = None, + hashes: Mapping[str, str], + ) -> None: + # In Python 3.10+ make dataclass kw_only=True and remove __init__ + object.__setattr__(self, "name", name) + object.__setattr__(self, "upload_time", upload_time) + object.__setattr__(self, "url", url) + object.__setattr__(self, "path", path) + object.__setattr__(self, "size", size) + object.__setattr__(self, "hashes", hashes) + + @classmethod + def _from_dict(cls, d: Mapping[str, Any]) -> Self: + package_wheel = cls( + name=_get(d, str, "name"), + upload_time=_get(d, datetime, "upload-time"), + url=_get(d, str, "url"), + path=_get(d, str, "path"), + size=_get(d, int, "size"), + hashes=_get_required_as(d, Mapping, _validate_hashes, "hashes"), # type: ignore[type-abstract] + ) + _validate_path_url(package_wheel.path, package_wheel.url) + return package_wheel + + +@dataclass(frozen=True, init=False) +class Package: + name: NormalizedName + version: Version | None = None + marker: Marker | None = None + requires_python: SpecifierSet | None = None + dependencies: Sequence[Mapping[str, Any]] | None = None + vcs: PackageVcs | None = None + directory: PackageDirectory | None = None + archive: PackageArchive | None = None + index: str | None = None + sdist: PackageSdist | None = None + wheels: Sequence[PackageWheel] | None = None + attestation_identities: Sequence[Mapping[str, Any]] | None = None + tool: Mapping[str, Any] | None = None + + def __init__( + self, + *, + name: NormalizedName, + version: Version | None = None, + marker: Marker | None = None, + requires_python: SpecifierSet | None = None, + dependencies: Sequence[Mapping[str, Any]] | None = None, + vcs: PackageVcs | None = None, + directory: PackageDirectory | None = None, + archive: PackageArchive | None = None, + index: str | None = None, + sdist: PackageSdist | None = None, + wheels: Sequence[PackageWheel] | None = None, + attestation_identities: Sequence[Mapping[str, Any]] | None = None, + tool: Mapping[str, Any] | None = None, + ) -> None: + # In Python 3.10+ make dataclass kw_only=True and remove __init__ + object.__setattr__(self, "name", name) + object.__setattr__(self, "version", version) + object.__setattr__(self, "marker", marker) + object.__setattr__(self, "requires_python", requires_python) + object.__setattr__(self, "dependencies", dependencies) + object.__setattr__(self, "vcs", vcs) + object.__setattr__(self, "directory", directory) + object.__setattr__(self, "archive", archive) + object.__setattr__(self, "index", index) + object.__setattr__(self, "sdist", sdist) + object.__setattr__(self, "wheels", wheels) + object.__setattr__(self, "attestation_identities", attestation_identities) + object.__setattr__(self, "tool", tool) + + @classmethod + def _from_dict(cls, d: Mapping[str, Any]) -> Self: + package = cls( + name=_get_required_as(d, str, _validate_normalized_name, "name"), + version=_get_as(d, str, Version, "version"), + requires_python=_get_as(d, str, SpecifierSet, "requires-python"), + dependencies=_get_sequence(d, Mapping, "dependencies"), # type: ignore[type-abstract] + marker=_get_as(d, str, Marker, "marker"), + vcs=_get_object(d, PackageVcs, "vcs"), + directory=_get_object(d, PackageDirectory, "directory"), + archive=_get_object(d, PackageArchive, "archive"), + index=_get(d, str, "index"), + sdist=_get_object(d, PackageSdist, "sdist"), + wheels=_get_sequence_of_objects(d, PackageWheel, "wheels"), + attestation_identities=_get_sequence(d, Mapping, "attestation-identities"), # type: ignore[type-abstract] + tool=_get(d, Mapping, "tool"), # type: ignore[type-abstract] + ) + distributions = bool(package.sdist) + len(package.wheels or []) + direct_urls = ( + bool(package.vcs) + bool(package.directory) + bool(package.archive) + ) + if distributions > 0 and direct_urls > 0: + raise PylockValidationError( + "None of vcs, directory, archive must be set if sdist or wheels are set" + ) + if distributions == 0 and direct_urls != 1: + raise PylockValidationError( + "Exactly one of vcs, directory, archive must be set " + "if sdist and wheels are not set" + ) + try: + for i, attestation_identity in enumerate( # noqa: B007 + package.attestation_identities or [] + ): + _get_required(attestation_identity, str, "kind") + except Exception as e: + raise PylockValidationError( + e, context=f"attestation-identities[{i}]" + ) from e + return package + + @property + def is_direct(self) -> bool: + return not (self.sdist or self.wheels) + + +@dataclass(frozen=True, init=False) +class Pylock: + """A class representing a pylock file.""" + + lock_version: Version + environments: Sequence[Marker] | None = None + requires_python: SpecifierSet | None = None + extras: Sequence[NormalizedName] | None = None + dependency_groups: Sequence[str] | None = None + default_groups: Sequence[str] | None = None + created_by: str # type: ignore[misc] + packages: Sequence[Package] # type: ignore[misc] + tool: Mapping[str, Any] | None = None + + def __init__( + self, + *, + lock_version: Version, + environments: Sequence[Marker] | None = None, + requires_python: SpecifierSet | None = None, + extras: Sequence[NormalizedName] | None = None, + dependency_groups: Sequence[str] | None = None, + default_groups: Sequence[str] | None = None, + created_by: str, + packages: Sequence[Package], + tool: Mapping[str, Any] | None = None, + ) -> None: + # In Python 3.10+ make dataclass kw_only=True and remove __init__ + object.__setattr__(self, "lock_version", lock_version) + object.__setattr__(self, "environments", environments) + object.__setattr__(self, "requires_python", requires_python) + object.__setattr__(self, "extras", extras) + object.__setattr__(self, "dependency_groups", dependency_groups) + object.__setattr__(self, "default_groups", default_groups) + object.__setattr__(self, "created_by", created_by) + object.__setattr__(self, "packages", packages) + object.__setattr__(self, "tool", tool) + + @classmethod + def _from_dict(cls, d: Mapping[str, Any]) -> Self: + pylock = cls( + lock_version=_get_required_as(d, str, Version, "lock-version"), + environments=_get_sequence_as(d, str, Marker, "environments"), + extras=_get_sequence_as(d, str, _validate_normalized_name, "extras"), + dependency_groups=_get_sequence(d, str, "dependency-groups"), + default_groups=_get_sequence(d, str, "default-groups"), + created_by=_get_required(d, str, "created-by"), + requires_python=_get_as(d, str, SpecifierSet, "requires-python"), + packages=_get_required_sequence_of_objects(d, Package, "packages"), + tool=_get(d, Mapping, "tool"), # type: ignore[type-abstract] + ) + if not Version("1") <= pylock.lock_version < Version("2"): + raise PylockUnsupportedVersionError( + f"pylock version {pylock.lock_version} is not supported" + ) + if pylock.lock_version > Version("1.0"): + _logger.warning( + "pylock minor version %s is not supported", pylock.lock_version + ) + return pylock + + @classmethod + def from_dict(cls, d: Mapping[str, Any], /) -> Self: + """Create and validate a Pylock instance from a TOML dictionary. + + Raises :class:`PylockValidationError` if the input data is not + spec-compliant. + """ + return cls._from_dict(d) + + def to_dict(self) -> Mapping[str, Any]: + """Convert the Pylock instance to a TOML dictionary.""" + return dataclasses.asdict(self, dict_factory=_toml_dict_factory) + + def validate(self) -> None: + """Validate the Pylock instance against the specification. + + Raises :class:`PylockValidationError` otherwise.""" + self.from_dict(self.to_dict()) diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/requirements.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/requirements.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..3079be69bf880f47e64dbf62993f0e54754b7315 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/requirements.py @@ -0,0 +1,86 @@ +# 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 __future__ import annotations + +from typing import Iterator + +from ._parser import parse_requirement as _parse_requirement +from ._tokenizer import ParserSyntaxError +from .markers import Marker, _normalize_extra_values +from .specifiers import SpecifierSet +from .utils import canonicalize_name + + +class InvalidRequirement(ValueError): + """ + An invalid requirement was found, users should refer to PEP 508. + """ + + +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: + parsed = _parse_requirement(requirement_string) + except ParserSyntaxError as e: + raise InvalidRequirement(str(e)) from e + + self.name: str = parsed.name + self.url: str | None = parsed.url or None + self.extras: set[str] = set(parsed.extras or []) + self.specifier: SpecifierSet = SpecifierSet(parsed.specifier) + self.marker: Marker | None = None + if parsed.marker is not None: + self.marker = Marker.__new__(Marker) + self.marker._markers = _normalize_extra_values(parsed.marker) + + def _iter_parts(self, name: str) -> Iterator[str]: + yield name + + if self.extras: + formatted_extras = ",".join(sorted(self.extras)) + yield f"[{formatted_extras}]" + + if self.specifier: + yield str(self.specifier) + + if self.url: + yield f" @ {self.url}" + if self.marker: + yield " " + + if self.marker: + yield f"; {self.marker}" + + def __str__(self) -> str: + return "".join(self._iter_parts(self.name)) + + def __repr__(self) -> str: + return f"<{self.__class__.__name__}('{self}')>" + + def __hash__(self) -> int: + return hash(tuple(self._iter_parts(canonicalize_name(self.name)))) + + def __eq__(self, other: object) -> bool: + if not isinstance(other, Requirement): + return NotImplemented + + return ( + canonicalize_name(self.name) == canonicalize_name(other.name) + and self.extras == other.extras + and self.specifier == other.specifier + and self.url == other.url + and self.marker == other.marker + ) diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/specifiers.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/specifiers.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..5d26b0d1ae2d21b77e24b692d5a7e1fd01296edc --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/specifiers.py @@ -0,0 +1,1068 @@ +# 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. +""" +.. testsetup:: + + from packaging.specifiers import Specifier, SpecifierSet, InvalidSpecifier + from packaging.version import Version +""" + +from __future__ import annotations + +import abc +import itertools +import re +from typing import Callable, Final, Iterable, Iterator, TypeVar, Union + +from .utils import canonicalize_version +from .version import InvalidVersion, Version + +UnparsedVersion = Union[Version, str] +UnparsedVersionVar = TypeVar("UnparsedVersionVar", bound=UnparsedVersion) +CallableOperator = Callable[[Version, str], bool] + + +def _coerce_version(version: UnparsedVersion) -> Version | None: + if not isinstance(version, Version): + try: + version = Version(version) + except InvalidVersion: + return None + return version + + +def _public_version(version: Version) -> Version: + return version.__replace__(local=None) + + +def _base_version(version: Version) -> Version: + return version.__replace__(pre=None, post=None, dev=None, local=None) + + +class InvalidSpecifier(ValueError): + """ + Raised when attempting to create a :class:`Specifier` with a specifier + string that is invalid. + + >>> Specifier("lolwat") + Traceback (most recent call last): + ... + packaging.specifiers.InvalidSpecifier: Invalid specifier: 'lolwat' + """ + + +class BaseSpecifier(metaclass=abc.ABCMeta): + __slots__ = () + __match_args__ = ("_str",) + + @property + def _str(self) -> str: + """Internal property for match_args""" + return str(self) + + @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. + + :param other: The other object to check against. + """ + + @property + @abc.abstractmethod + def prereleases(self) -> bool | None: + """Whether or not pre-releases as a whole are allowed. + + This can be set to either ``True`` or ``False`` to explicitly enable or disable + prereleases or it can be set to ``None`` (the default) to use default semantics. + """ + + @prereleases.setter # noqa: B027 + def prereleases(self, value: bool) -> None: + """Setter for :attr:`prereleases`. + + :param value: The value to set. + """ + + @abc.abstractmethod + def contains(self, item: str, prereleases: bool | None = None) -> bool: + """ + Determines if the given item is contained within this specifier. + """ + + @abc.abstractmethod + def filter( + self, iterable: Iterable[UnparsedVersionVar], prereleases: bool | None = None + ) -> Iterator[UnparsedVersionVar]: + """ + Takes an iterable of items and filters them so that only items which + are contained within this specifier are allowed in it. + """ + + +class Specifier(BaseSpecifier): + """This class abstracts handling of version specifiers. + + .. tip:: + + It is generally not required to instantiate this manually. You should instead + prefer to work with :class:`SpecifierSet` instead, which can parse + comma-separated version specifiers (which is what package metadata contains). + """ + + __slots__ = ("_prereleases", "_spec", "_spec_version") + + _operator_regex_str = r""" + (?P(~=|==|!=|<=|>=|<|>|===)) + """ + _version_regex_str = r""" + (?P + (?: + # 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;)]* # The arbitrary version can be just about anything, + # we match everything except for whitespace, a + # semi-colon for marker support, and a closing paren + # since versions can be enclosed in them. + ) + | + (?: + # 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 + + # You cannot use a wild card and a pre-release, post-release, a dev or + # local version together so group them with a | and make them optional. + (?: + \.\* # Wild card syntax of .* + | + (?: # pre release + [-_\.]? + (alpha|beta|preview|pre|a|b|c|rc) + [-_\.]? + [0-9]* + )? + (?: # post release + (?:-[0-9]+)|(?:[-_\.]?(post|rev|r)[-_\.]?[0-9]*) + )? + (?:[-_\.]?dev[-_\.]?[0-9]*)? # dev release + (?:\+[a-z0-9]+(?:[-_\.][a-z0-9]+)*)? # local + )? + ) + | + (?: + # 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 + [-_\.]? + (alpha|beta|preview|pre|a|b|c|rc) + [-_\.]? + [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. + (?=": "greater_than_equal", + "<": "less_than", + ">": "greater_than", + "===": "arbitrary", + } + + def __init__(self, spec: str = "", prereleases: bool | None = None) -> None: + """Initialize a Specifier instance. + + :param spec: + The string representation of a specifier which will be parsed and + normalized before use. + :param prereleases: + This tells the specifier if it should accept prerelease versions if + applicable or not. The default of ``None`` will autodetect it from the + given specifiers. + :raises InvalidSpecifier: + If the given specifier is invalid (i.e. bad syntax). + """ + match = self._regex.fullmatch(spec) + if not match: + raise InvalidSpecifier(f"Invalid specifier: {spec!r}") + + 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 + + # Specifier version cache + self._spec_version: tuple[str, Version] | None = None + + def _get_spec_version(self, version: str) -> Version | None: + """One element cache, as only one spec Version is needed per Specifier.""" + if self._spec_version is not None and self._spec_version[0] == version: + return self._spec_version[1] + + version_specifier = _coerce_version(version) + if version_specifier is None: + return None + + self._spec_version = (version, version_specifier) + return version_specifier + + def _require_spec_version(self, version: str) -> Version: + """Get spec version, asserting it's valid (not for === operator). + + This method should only be called for operators where version + strings are guaranteed to be valid PEP 440 versions (not ===). + """ + spec_version = self._get_spec_version(version) + assert spec_version is not None + return spec_version + + @property + def prereleases(self) -> bool | None: + # 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 + + # Only the "!=" operator does not imply prereleases when + # the version in the specifier is a prerelease. + operator, version_str = self._spec + if operator != "!=": + # The == specifier with trailing .* cannot include prereleases + # e.g. "==1.0a1.*" is not valid. + if operator == "==" and version_str.endswith(".*"): + return False + + # "===" can have arbitrary string versions, so we cannot parse + # those, we take prereleases as unknown (None) for those. + version = self._get_spec_version(version_str) + if version is None: + return None + + # For all other operators, use the check if spec Version + # object implies pre-releases. + if version.is_prerelease: + return True + + return False + + @prereleases.setter + def prereleases(self, value: bool | None) -> None: + self._prereleases = value + + @property + def operator(self) -> str: + """The operator of this specifier. + + >>> Specifier("==1.2.3").operator + '==' + """ + return self._spec[0] + + @property + def version(self) -> str: + """The version of this specifier. + + >>> Specifier("==1.2.3").version + '1.2.3' + """ + return self._spec[1] + + def __repr__(self) -> str: + """A representation of the Specifier that shows all internal state. + + >>> Specifier('>=1.0.0') + =1.0.0')> + >>> Specifier('>=1.0.0', prereleases=False) + =1.0.0', prereleases=False)> + >>> Specifier('>=1.0.0', prereleases=True) + =1.0.0', prereleases=True)> + """ + 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: + """A string representation of the Specifier that can be round-tripped. + + >>> str(Specifier('>=1.0.0')) + '>=1.0.0' + >>> str(Specifier('>=1.0.0', prereleases=False)) + '>=1.0.0' + """ + return "{}{}".format(*self._spec) + + @property + def _canonical_spec(self) -> tuple[str, str]: + operator, version = self._spec + if operator == "===" or version.endswith(".*"): + return operator, version + + spec_version = self._require_spec_version(version) + + canonical_version = canonicalize_version( + spec_version, strip_trailing_zero=(operator != "~=") + ) + + return operator, canonical_version + + def __hash__(self) -> int: + return hash(self._canonical_spec) + + def __eq__(self, other: object) -> bool: + """Whether or not the two Specifier-like objects are equal. + + :param other: The other object to check against. + + The value of :attr:`prereleases` is ignored. + + >>> Specifier("==1.2.3") == Specifier("== 1.2.3.0") + True + >>> (Specifier("==1.2.3", prereleases=False) == + ... Specifier("==1.2.3", prereleases=True)) + True + >>> Specifier("==1.2.3") == "==1.2.3" + True + >>> Specifier("==1.2.3") == Specifier("==1.2.4") + False + >>> Specifier("==1.2.3") == Specifier("~=1.2.3") + False + """ + 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 _compare_compatible(self, prospective: Version, 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 = _version_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 + ) + + def _compare_equal(self, prospective: Version, 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. + normalized_prospective = canonicalize_version( + _public_version(prospective), strip_trailing_zero=False + ) + # Get the normalized version string ignoring the trailing .* + normalized_spec = canonicalize_version(spec[:-2], strip_trailing_zero=False) + # Split the spec out by bangs and dots, and pretend that there is + # an implicit dot in between a release segment and a pre-release segment. + split_spec = _version_split(normalized_spec) + + # Split the prospective version out by bangs and dots, and pretend + # that there is an implicit dot in between a release segment and + # a pre-release segment. + split_prospective = _version_split(normalized_prospective) + + # 0-pad the prospective version before shortening it to get the correct + # shortened version. + padded_prospective, _ = _pad_version(split_prospective, split_spec) + + # 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 = padded_prospective[: len(split_spec)] + + return shortened_prospective == split_spec + else: + # Convert our spec string into a Version + spec_version = self._require_spec_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 = _public_version(prospective) + + return prospective == spec_version + + def _compare_not_equal(self, prospective: Version, spec: str) -> bool: + return not self._compare_equal(prospective, spec) + + def _compare_less_than_equal(self, prospective: Version, 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 _public_version(prospective) <= self._require_spec_version(spec) + + def _compare_greater_than_equal(self, prospective: Version, 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 _public_version(prospective) >= self._require_spec_version(spec) + + def _compare_less_than(self, prospective: Version, spec_str: str) -> bool: + # Convert our spec to a Version instance, since we'll want to work with + # it as a version. + spec = self._require_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 + and _base_version(prospective) == _base_version(spec) + ): + 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 + + def _compare_greater_than(self, prospective: Version, spec_str: str) -> bool: + # Convert our spec to a Version instance, since we'll want to work with + # it as a version. + spec = self._require_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 + and _base_version(prospective) == _base_version(spec) + ): + 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 and _base_version( + prospective + ) == _base_version(spec): + 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 | str, spec: str) -> bool: + return str(prospective).lower() == str(spec).lower() + + def __contains__(self, item: str | Version) -> bool: + """Return whether or not the item is contained in this specifier. + + :param item: The item to check for. + + This is used for the ``in`` operator and behaves the same as + :meth:`contains` with no ``prereleases`` argument passed. + + >>> "1.2.3" in Specifier(">=1.2.3") + True + >>> Version("1.2.3") in Specifier(">=1.2.3") + True + >>> "1.0.0" in Specifier(">=1.2.3") + False + >>> "1.3.0a1" in Specifier(">=1.2.3") + True + >>> "1.3.0a1" in Specifier(">=1.2.3", prereleases=True) + True + """ + return self.contains(item) + + def contains(self, item: UnparsedVersion, prereleases: bool | None = None) -> bool: + """Return whether or not the item is contained in this specifier. + + :param item: + The item to check for, which can be a version string or a + :class:`Version` instance. + :param prereleases: + Whether or not to match prereleases with this Specifier. If set to + ``None`` (the default), it will follow the recommendation from + :pep:`440` and match prereleases, as there are no other versions. + + >>> Specifier(">=1.2.3").contains("1.2.3") + True + >>> Specifier(">=1.2.3").contains(Version("1.2.3")) + True + >>> Specifier(">=1.2.3").contains("1.0.0") + False + >>> Specifier(">=1.2.3").contains("1.3.0a1") + True + >>> Specifier(">=1.2.3", prereleases=False).contains("1.3.0a1") + False + >>> Specifier(">=1.2.3").contains("1.3.0a1") + True + """ + + return bool(list(self.filter([item], prereleases=prereleases))) + + def filter( + self, iterable: Iterable[UnparsedVersionVar], prereleases: bool | None = None + ) -> Iterator[UnparsedVersionVar]: + """Filter items in the given iterable, that match the specifier. + + :param iterable: + An iterable that can contain version strings and :class:`Version` instances. + The items in the iterable will be filtered according to the specifier. + :param prereleases: + Whether or not to allow prereleases in the returned iterator. If set to + ``None`` (the default), it will follow the recommendation from :pep:`440` + and match prereleases if there are no other versions. + + >>> list(Specifier(">=1.2.3").filter(["1.2", "1.3", "1.5a1"])) + ['1.3'] + >>> list(Specifier(">=1.2.3").filter(["1.2", "1.2.3", "1.3", Version("1.4")])) + ['1.2.3', '1.3', ] + >>> list(Specifier(">=1.2.3").filter(["1.2", "1.5a1"])) + ['1.5a1'] + >>> list(Specifier(">=1.2.3").filter(["1.3", "1.5a1"], prereleases=True)) + ['1.3', '1.5a1'] + >>> list(Specifier(">=1.2.3", prereleases=True).filter(["1.3", "1.5a1"])) + ['1.3', '1.5a1'] + """ + prereleases_versions = [] + found_non_prereleases = False + + # Determine if to include prereleases by default + include_prereleases = ( + prereleases if prereleases is not None else self.prereleases + ) + + # Get the matching operator + operator_callable = self._get_operator(self.operator) + + # Filter versions + for version in iterable: + parsed_version = _coerce_version(version) + if parsed_version is None: + # === operator can match arbitrary (non-version) strings + if self.operator == "===" and self._compare_arbitrary( + version, self.version + ): + yield version + elif operator_callable(parsed_version, self.version): + # If it's not a prerelease or prereleases are allowed, yield it directly + if not parsed_version.is_prerelease or include_prereleases: + found_non_prereleases = True + yield version + # Otherwise collect prereleases for potential later use + elif prereleases is None and self._prereleases is not False: + prereleases_versions.append(version) + + # If no non-prereleases were found and prereleases weren't + # explicitly forbidden, yield the collected prereleases + if ( + not found_non_prereleases + and prereleases is None + and self._prereleases is not False + ): + yield from prereleases_versions + + +_prefix_regex = re.compile(r"([0-9]+)((?:a|b|c|rc)[0-9]+)") + + +def _version_split(version: str) -> list[str]: + """Split version into components. + + The split components are intended for version comparison. The logic does + not attempt to retain the original version string, so joining the + components back with :func:`_version_join` may not produce the original + version string. + """ + result: list[str] = [] + + epoch, _, rest = version.rpartition("!") + result.append(epoch or "0") + + for item in rest.split("."): + match = _prefix_regex.fullmatch(item) + if match: + result.extend(match.groups()) + else: + result.append(item) + return result + + +def _version_join(components: list[str]) -> str: + """Join split version components into a version string. + + This function assumes the input came from :func:`_version_split`, where the + first component must be the epoch (either empty or numeric), and all other + components numeric. + """ + epoch, *rest = components + return f"{epoch}!{'.'.join(rest)}" + + +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.from_iterable(left_split)), + list(itertools.chain.from_iterable(right_split)), + ) + + +class SpecifierSet(BaseSpecifier): + """This class abstracts handling of a set of version specifiers. + + It can be passed a single specifier (``>=3.0``), a comma-separated list of + specifiers (``>=3.0,!=3.1``), or no specifier at all. + """ + + __slots__ = ("_prereleases", "_specs") + + def __init__( + self, + specifiers: str | Iterable[Specifier] = "", + prereleases: bool | None = None, + ) -> None: + """Initialize a SpecifierSet instance. + + :param specifiers: + The string representation of a specifier or a comma-separated list of + specifiers which will be parsed and normalized before use. + May also be an iterable of ``Specifier`` instances, which will be used + as is. + :param prereleases: + This tells the SpecifierSet if it should accept prerelease versions if + applicable or not. The default of ``None`` will autodetect it from the + given specifiers. + + :raises InvalidSpecifier: + If the given ``specifiers`` are not parseable than this exception will be + raised. + """ + + if isinstance(specifiers, str): + # Split on `,` to break each individual specifier into its own item, and + # strip each item to remove leading/trailing whitespace. + split_specifiers = [s.strip() for s in specifiers.split(",") if s.strip()] + + # Make each individual specifier a Specifier and save in a frozen set + # for later. + self._specs = frozenset(map(Specifier, split_specifiers)) + else: + # Save the supplied specifiers in a frozen set. + self._specs = frozenset(specifiers) + + # Store our prereleases value so we can use it later to determine if + # we accept prereleases or not. + self._prereleases = prereleases + + @property + def prereleases(self) -> bool | None: + # 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. + if any(s.prereleases for s in self._specs): + return True + + return None + + @prereleases.setter + def prereleases(self, value: bool | None) -> None: + self._prereleases = value + + def __repr__(self) -> str: + """A representation of the specifier set that shows all internal state. + + Note that the ordering of the individual specifiers within the set may not + match the input string. + + >>> SpecifierSet('>=1.0.0,!=2.0.0') + =1.0.0')> + >>> SpecifierSet('>=1.0.0,!=2.0.0', prereleases=False) + =1.0.0', prereleases=False)> + >>> SpecifierSet('>=1.0.0,!=2.0.0', prereleases=True) + =1.0.0', prereleases=True)> + """ + pre = ( + f", prereleases={self.prereleases!r}" + if self._prereleases is not None + else "" + ) + + return f"" + + def __str__(self) -> str: + """A string representation of the specifier set that can be round-tripped. + + Note that the ordering of the individual specifiers within the set may not + match the input string. + + >>> str(SpecifierSet(">=1.0.0,!=1.0.1")) + '!=1.0.1,>=1.0.0' + >>> str(SpecifierSet(">=1.0.0,!=1.0.1", prereleases=False)) + '!=1.0.1,>=1.0.0' + """ + return ",".join(sorted(str(s) for s in self._specs)) + + def __hash__(self) -> int: + return hash(self._specs) + + def __and__(self, other: SpecifierSet | str) -> SpecifierSet: + """Return a SpecifierSet which is a combination of the two sets. + + :param other: The other object to combine with. + + >>> SpecifierSet(">=1.0.0,!=1.0.1") & '<=2.0.0,!=2.0.1' + =1.0.0')> + >>> SpecifierSet(">=1.0.0,!=1.0.1") & SpecifierSet('<=2.0.0,!=2.0.1') + =1.0.0')> + """ + 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 + ) or 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: + """Whether or not the two SpecifierSet-like objects are equal. + + :param other: The other object to check against. + + The value of :attr:`prereleases` is ignored. + + >>> SpecifierSet(">=1.0.0,!=1.0.1") == SpecifierSet(">=1.0.0,!=1.0.1") + True + >>> (SpecifierSet(">=1.0.0,!=1.0.1", prereleases=False) == + ... SpecifierSet(">=1.0.0,!=1.0.1", prereleases=True)) + True + >>> SpecifierSet(">=1.0.0,!=1.0.1") == ">=1.0.0,!=1.0.1" + True + >>> SpecifierSet(">=1.0.0,!=1.0.1") == SpecifierSet(">=1.0.0") + False + >>> SpecifierSet(">=1.0.0,!=1.0.1") == SpecifierSet(">=1.0.0,!=1.0.2") + False + """ + if isinstance(other, (str, Specifier)): + other = SpecifierSet(str(other)) + elif not isinstance(other, SpecifierSet): + return NotImplemented + + return self._specs == other._specs + + def __len__(self) -> int: + """Returns the number of specifiers in this specifier set.""" + return len(self._specs) + + def __iter__(self) -> Iterator[Specifier]: + """ + Returns an iterator over all the underlying :class:`Specifier` instances + in this specifier set. + + >>> sorted(SpecifierSet(">=1.0.0,!=1.0.1"), key=str) + [, =1.0.0')>] + """ + return iter(self._specs) + + def __contains__(self, item: UnparsedVersion) -> bool: + """Return whether or not the item is contained in this specifier. + + :param item: The item to check for. + + This is used for the ``in`` operator and behaves the same as + :meth:`contains` with no ``prereleases`` argument passed. + + >>> "1.2.3" in SpecifierSet(">=1.0.0,!=1.0.1") + True + >>> Version("1.2.3") in SpecifierSet(">=1.0.0,!=1.0.1") + True + >>> "1.0.1" in SpecifierSet(">=1.0.0,!=1.0.1") + False + >>> "1.3.0a1" in SpecifierSet(">=1.0.0,!=1.0.1") + True + >>> "1.3.0a1" in SpecifierSet(">=1.0.0,!=1.0.1", prereleases=True) + True + """ + return self.contains(item) + + def contains( + self, + item: UnparsedVersion, + prereleases: bool | None = None, + installed: bool | None = None, + ) -> bool: + """Return whether or not the item is contained in this SpecifierSet. + + :param item: + The item to check for, which can be a version string or a + :class:`Version` instance. + :param prereleases: + Whether or not to match prereleases with this SpecifierSet. If set to + ``None`` (the default), it will follow the recommendation from :pep:`440` + and match prereleases, as there are no other versions. + :param installed: + Whether or not the item is installed. If set to ``True``, it will + accept prerelease versions even if the specifier does not allow them. + + >>> SpecifierSet(">=1.0.0,!=1.0.1").contains("1.2.3") + True + >>> SpecifierSet(">=1.0.0,!=1.0.1").contains(Version("1.2.3")) + True + >>> SpecifierSet(">=1.0.0,!=1.0.1").contains("1.0.1") + False + >>> SpecifierSet(">=1.0.0,!=1.0.1").contains("1.3.0a1") + True + >>> SpecifierSet(">=1.0.0,!=1.0.1", prereleases=False).contains("1.3.0a1") + False + >>> SpecifierSet(">=1.0.0,!=1.0.1").contains("1.3.0a1", prereleases=True) + True + """ + version = _coerce_version(item) + + if version is not None and installed and version.is_prerelease: + prereleases = True + + check_item = item if version is None else version + return bool(list(self.filter([check_item], prereleases=prereleases))) + + def filter( + self, iterable: Iterable[UnparsedVersionVar], prereleases: bool | None = None + ) -> Iterator[UnparsedVersionVar]: + """Filter items in the given iterable, that match the specifiers in this set. + + :param iterable: + An iterable that can contain version strings and :class:`Version` instances. + The items in the iterable will be filtered according to the specifier. + :param prereleases: + Whether or not to allow prereleases in the returned iterator. If set to + ``None`` (the default), it will follow the recommendation from :pep:`440` + and match prereleases if there are no other versions. + + >>> list(SpecifierSet(">=1.2.3").filter(["1.2", "1.3", "1.5a1"])) + ['1.3'] + >>> list(SpecifierSet(">=1.2.3").filter(["1.2", "1.3", Version("1.4")])) + ['1.3', ] + >>> list(SpecifierSet(">=1.2.3").filter(["1.2", "1.5a1"])) + ['1.5a1'] + >>> list(SpecifierSet(">=1.2.3").filter(["1.3", "1.5a1"], prereleases=True)) + ['1.3', '1.5a1'] + >>> list(SpecifierSet(">=1.2.3", prereleases=True).filter(["1.3", "1.5a1"])) + ['1.3', '1.5a1'] + + An "empty" SpecifierSet will filter items based on the presence of prerelease + versions in the set. + + >>> list(SpecifierSet("").filter(["1.3", "1.5a1"])) + ['1.3'] + >>> list(SpecifierSet("").filter(["1.5a1"])) + ['1.5a1'] + >>> list(SpecifierSet("", prereleases=True).filter(["1.3", "1.5a1"])) + ['1.3', '1.5a1'] + >>> list(SpecifierSet("").filter(["1.3", "1.5a1"], prereleases=True)) + ['1.3', '1.5a1'] + """ + # 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 and self.prereleases is not 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: + # When prereleases is None, we need to let all versions through + # the individual filters, then decide about prereleases at the end + # based on whether any non-prereleases matched ALL specs. + for spec in self._specs: + iterable = spec.filter( + iterable, prereleases=True if prereleases is None else prereleases + ) + + if prereleases is not None: + # If we have a forced prereleases value, + # we can immediately return the iterator. + return iter(iterable) + else: + # Handle empty SpecifierSet cases where prereleases is not None. + if prereleases is True: + return iter(iterable) + + if prereleases is False: + return ( + item + for item in iterable + if (version := _coerce_version(item)) is None + or not version.is_prerelease + ) + + # Finally if prereleases is None, apply PEP 440 logic: + # exclude prereleases unless there are no final releases that matched. + filtered_items: list[UnparsedVersionVar] = [] + found_prereleases: list[UnparsedVersionVar] = [] + found_final_release = False + + for item in iterable: + parsed_version = _coerce_version(item) + # Arbitrary strings are always included as it is not + # possible to determine if they are prereleases, + # and they have already passed all specifiers. + if parsed_version is None: + filtered_items.append(item) + found_prereleases.append(item) + elif parsed_version.is_prerelease: + found_prereleases.append(item) + else: + filtered_items.append(item) + found_final_release = True + + return iter(filtered_items if found_final_release else found_prereleases) diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/tags.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/tags.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..5ef27c897a4df35a2a6923b608a5e04a0a38b9ee --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/tags.py @@ -0,0 +1,651 @@ +# 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 __future__ import annotations + +import logging +import platform +import re +import struct +import subprocess +import sys +import sysconfig +from importlib.machinery import EXTENSION_SUFFIXES +from typing import ( + Any, + Iterable, + Iterator, + Sequence, + Tuple, + cast, +) + +from . import _manylinux, _musllinux + +logger = logging.getLogger(__name__) + +PythonVersion = Sequence[int] +AppleVersion = Tuple[int, int] + +INTERPRETER_SHORT_NAMES: dict[str, str] = { + "python": "py", # Generic. + "cpython": "cp", + "pypy": "pp", + "ironpython": "ip", + "jython": "jy", +} + + +_32_BIT_INTERPRETER = struct.calcsize("P") == 4 + + +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__ = ["_abi", "_hash", "_interpreter", "_platform"] + + 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 __setstate__(self, state: tuple[None, dict[str, Any]]) -> None: + # The cached _hash is wrong when unpickling. + _, slots = state + for k, v in slots.items(): + setattr(self, k, v) + self._hash = hash((self._interpreter, self._abi, self._platform)) + + +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) -> int | str | None: + value: int | str | None = 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("-", "_").replace(" ", "_") + + +def _is_threaded_cpython(abis: list[str]) -> bool: + """ + Determine if the ABI corresponds to a threaded (`--disable-gil`) build. + + The threaded builds are indicated by a "t" in the abiflags. + """ + if len(abis) == 0: + return False + # expect e.g., cp313 + m = re.match(r"cp\d+(.*)", abis[0]) + if not m: + return False + abiflags = m.group(1) + return "t" in abiflags + + +def _abi3_applies(python_version: PythonVersion, threading: bool) -> bool: + """ + Determine if the Python version supports abi3. + + PEP 384 was first implemented in Python 3.2. The threaded (`--disable-gil`) + builds do not support abi3. + """ + return len(python_version) > 1 and tuple(python_version) >= (3, 2) and not threading + + +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]) + threading = 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, 13) and _get_config_var("Py_GIL_DISABLED", warn): + threading = "t" + 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}{threading}") + abis.insert(0, f"cp{version}{threading}{debug}{pymalloc}{ucs4}") + return abis + + +def cpython_tags( + python_version: PythonVersion | None = None, + abis: Iterable[str] | None = None, + platforms: Iterable[str] | None = None, + *, + warn: bool = False, +) -> Iterator[Tag]: + """ + Yields the tags for a CPython interpreter. + + The tags consist of: + - cp-- + - cp-abi3- + - cp-none- + - cp-abi3- # 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: + abis = _cpython_abis(python_version, warn) if len(python_version) > 1 else [] + abis = list(abis) + # 'abi3' and 'none' are explicitly handled later. + for explicit_abi in ("abi3", "none"): + try: + abis.remove(explicit_abi) + except ValueError: # noqa: PERF203 + pass + + platforms = list(platforms or platform_tags()) + for abi in abis: + for platform_ in platforms: + yield Tag(interpreter, abi, platform_) + + threading = _is_threaded_cpython(abis) + use_abi3 = _abi3_applies(python_version, threading) + if use_abi3: + yield from (Tag(interpreter, "abi3", platform_) for platform_ in platforms) + yield from (Tag(interpreter, "none", platform_) for platform_ in platforms) + + if use_abi3: + for minor_version in range(python_version[1] - 1, 1, -1): + for platform_ in platforms: + version = _version_nodot((python_version[0], minor_version)) + interpreter = f"cp{version}" + yield Tag(interpreter, "abi3", platform_) + + +def _generic_abi() -> list[str]: + """ + Return the ABI tag based on EXT_SUFFIX. + """ + # The following are examples of `EXT_SUFFIX`. + # We want to keep the parts which are related to the ABI and remove the + # parts which are related to the platform: + # - linux: '.cpython-310-x86_64-linux-gnu.so' => cp310 + # - mac: '.cpython-310-darwin.so' => cp310 + # - win: '.cp310-win_amd64.pyd' => cp310 + # - win: '.pyd' => cp37 (uses _cpython_abis()) + # - pypy: '.pypy38-pp73-x86_64-linux-gnu.so' => pypy38_pp73 + # - graalpy: '.graalpy-38-native-x86_64-darwin.dylib' + # => graalpy_38_native + + ext_suffix = _get_config_var("EXT_SUFFIX", warn=True) + if not isinstance(ext_suffix, str) or ext_suffix[0] != ".": + raise SystemError("invalid sysconfig.get_config_var('EXT_SUFFIX')") + parts = ext_suffix.split(".") + if len(parts) < 3: + # CPython3.7 and earlier uses ".pyd" on Windows. + return _cpython_abis(sys.version_info[:2]) + soabi = parts[1] + if soabi.startswith("cpython"): + # non-windows + abi = "cp" + soabi.split("-")[1] + elif soabi.startswith("cp"): + # windows + abi = soabi.split("-")[0] + elif soabi.startswith("pypy"): + abi = "-".join(soabi.split("-")[:2]) + elif soabi.startswith("graalpy"): + abi = "-".join(soabi.split("-")[:3]) + elif soabi: + # pyston, ironpython, others? + abi = soabi + else: + return [] + return [_normalize_string(abi)] + + +def generic_tags( + interpreter: str | None = None, + abis: Iterable[str] | None = None, + platforms: Iterable[str] | None = None, + *, + warn: bool = False, +) -> Iterator[Tag]: + """ + Yields the tags for a generic interpreter. + + The tags consist of: + - -- + + 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 = f"{interp_name}{interp_version}" + abis = _generic_abi() if abis is None else list(abis) + platforms = list(platforms or platform_tags()) + 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: PythonVersion | None = None, + interpreter: str | None = None, + platforms: Iterable[str] | None = None, +) -> Iterator[Tag]: + """ + Yields the sequence of tags that are compatible with a specific version of Python. + + The tags consist of: + - py*-none- + - -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: AppleVersion, 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: AppleVersion | None = None, arch: str | None = 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("AppleVersion", tuple(map(int, version_str.split(".")[:2]))) + if version == (10, 16): + # When built against an older macOS SDK, Python will report macOS 10.16 + # instead of the real version. + version_str = subprocess.run( + [ + sys.executable, + "-sS", + "-c", + "import platform; print(platform.mac_ver()[0])", + ], + check=True, + env={"SYSTEM_VERSION_COMPAT": "0"}, + stdout=subprocess.PIPE, + text=True, + ).stdout + version = cast("AppleVersion", tuple(map(int, version_str.split(".")[:2]))) + + if arch is None: + arch = _mac_arch(cpu_arch) + + if (10, 0) <= 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. + major_version = 10 + for minor_version in range(version[1], -1, -1): + compat_version = major_version, minor_version + binary_formats = _mac_binary_formats(compat_version, arch) + for binary_format in binary_formats: + yield f"macosx_{major_version}_{minor_version}_{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. + minor_version = 0 + for major_version in range(version[0], 10, -1): + compat_version = major_version, minor_version + binary_formats = _mac_binary_formats(compat_version, arch) + for binary_format in binary_formats: + yield f"macosx_{major_version}_{minor_version}_{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. + major_version = 10 + if arch == "x86_64": + for minor_version in range(16, 3, -1): + compat_version = major_version, minor_version + binary_formats = _mac_binary_formats(compat_version, arch) + for binary_format in binary_formats: + yield f"macosx_{major_version}_{minor_version}_{binary_format}" + else: + for minor_version in range(16, 3, -1): + compat_version = major_version, minor_version + binary_format = "universal2" + yield f"macosx_{major_version}_{minor_version}_{binary_format}" + + +def ios_platforms( + version: AppleVersion | None = None, multiarch: str | None = None +) -> Iterator[str]: + """ + Yields the platform tags for an iOS system. + + :param version: A two-item tuple specifying the iOS version to generate + platform tags for. Defaults to the current iOS version. + :param multiarch: The CPU architecture+ABI to generate platform tags for - + (the value used by `sys.implementation._multiarch` e.g., + `arm64_iphoneos` or `x84_64_iphonesimulator`). Defaults to the current + multiarch value. + """ + if version is None: + # if iOS is the current platform, ios_ver *must* be defined. However, + # it won't exist for CPython versions before 3.13, which causes a mypy + # error. + _, release, _, _ = platform.ios_ver() # type: ignore[attr-defined, unused-ignore] + version = cast("AppleVersion", tuple(map(int, release.split(".")[:2]))) + + if multiarch is None: + multiarch = sys.implementation._multiarch + multiarch = multiarch.replace("-", "_") + + ios_platform_template = "ios_{major}_{minor}_{multiarch}" + + # Consider any iOS major.minor version from the version requested, down to + # 12.0. 12.0 is the first iOS version that is known to have enough features + # to support CPython. Consider every possible minor release up to X.9. There + # highest the minor has ever gone is 8 (14.8 and 15.8) but having some extra + # candidates that won't ever match doesn't really hurt, and it saves us from + # having to keep an explicit list of known iOS versions in the code. Return + # the results descending order of version number. + + # If the requested major version is less than 12, there won't be any matches. + if version[0] < 12: + return + + # Consider the actual X.Y version that was requested. + yield ios_platform_template.format( + major=version[0], minor=version[1], multiarch=multiarch + ) + + # Consider every minor version from X.0 to the minor version prior to the + # version requested by the platform. + for minor in range(version[1] - 1, -1, -1): + yield ios_platform_template.format( + major=version[0], minor=minor, multiarch=multiarch + ) + + for major in range(version[0] - 1, 11, -1): + for minor in range(9, -1, -1): + yield ios_platform_template.format( + major=major, minor=minor, multiarch=multiarch + ) + + +def android_platforms( + api_level: int | None = None, abi: str | None = None +) -> Iterator[str]: + """ + Yields the :attr:`~Tag.platform` tags for Android. If this function is invoked on + non-Android platforms, the ``api_level`` and ``abi`` arguments are required. + + :param int api_level: The maximum `API level + `__ to return. Defaults + to the current system's version, as returned by ``platform.android_ver``. + :param str abi: The `Android ABI `__, + e.g. ``arm64_v8a``. Defaults to the current system's ABI , as returned by + ``sysconfig.get_platform``. Hyphens and periods will be replaced with + underscores. + """ + if platform.system() != "Android" and (api_level is None or abi is None): + raise TypeError( + "on non-Android platforms, the api_level and abi arguments are required" + ) + + if api_level is None: + # Python 3.13 was the first version to return platform.system() == "Android", + # and also the first version to define platform.android_ver(). + api_level = platform.android_ver().api_level # type: ignore[attr-defined] + + if abi is None: + abi = sysconfig.get_platform().split("-")[-1] + abi = _normalize_string(abi) + + # 16 is the minimum API level known to have enough features to support CPython + # without major patching. Yield every API level from the maximum down to the + # minimum, inclusive. + min_api_level = 16 + for ver in range(api_level, min_api_level - 1, -1): + yield f"android_{ver}_{abi}" + + +def _linux_platforms(is_32bit: bool = _32_BIT_INTERPRETER) -> Iterator[str]: + linux = _normalize_string(sysconfig.get_platform()) + if not linux.startswith("linux_"): + # we should never be here, just yield the sysconfig one and return + yield linux + return + if is_32bit: + if linux == "linux_x86_64": + linux = "linux_i686" + elif linux == "linux_aarch64": + linux = "linux_armv8l" + _, arch = linux.split("_", 1) + archs = {"armv8l": ["armv8l", "armv7l"]}.get(arch, [arch]) + yield from _manylinux.platform_tags(archs) + yield from _musllinux.platform_tags(archs) + for arch in archs: + yield f"linux_{arch}" + + +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() == "iOS": + return ios_platforms() + elif platform.system() == "Android": + return android_platforms() + elif platform.system() == "Linux": + return _linux_platforms() + else: + return _generic_platforms() + + +def interpreter_name() -> str: + """ + Returns the name of the running interpreter. + + Some implementations have a reserved, two-letter abbreviation which will + be returned when appropriate. + """ + 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) + return str(version) if version else _version_nodot(sys.version_info[:2]) + + +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": + interp = "pp3" + elif interp_name == "cp": + interp = "cp" + interpreter_version(warn=warn) + else: + interp = None + yield from compatible_tags(interpreter=interp) diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/utils.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/utils.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..c41c8137f2679a0fac21bb845596e231ae88dbd8 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/utils.py @@ -0,0 +1,158 @@ +# 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 __future__ import annotations + +import re +from typing import NewType, Tuple, Union, cast + +from .tags import Tag, parse_tag +from .version import InvalidVersion, Version, _TrimmedRelease + +BuildTag = Union[Tuple[()], Tuple[int, str]] +NormalizedName = NewType("NormalizedName", str) + + +class InvalidName(ValueError): + """ + An invalid distribution name; users should refer to the packaging user guide. + """ + + +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. + """ + + +# Core metadata spec for `Name` +_validate_regex = re.compile(r"[A-Z0-9]|[A-Z0-9][A-Z0-9._-]*[A-Z0-9]", re.IGNORECASE) +_normalized_regex = re.compile(r"[a-z0-9]|[a-z0-9]([a-z0-9-](?!--))*[a-z0-9]") +# PEP 427: The build number must start with a digit. +_build_tag_regex = re.compile(r"(\d+)(.*)") + + +def canonicalize_name(name: str, *, validate: bool = False) -> NormalizedName: + if validate and not _validate_regex.fullmatch(name): + raise InvalidName(f"name is invalid: {name!r}") + # Ensure all ``.`` and ``_`` are ``-`` + # Emulates ``re.sub(r"[-_.]+", "-", name).lower()`` from PEP 503 + # Much faster than re, and even faster than str.translate + value = name.lower().replace("_", "-").replace(".", "-") + # Condense repeats (faster than regex) + while "--" in value: + value = value.replace("--", "-") + return cast("NormalizedName", value) + + +def is_normalized_name(name: str) -> bool: + return _normalized_regex.fullmatch(name) is not None + + +def canonicalize_version( + version: Version | str, *, strip_trailing_zero: bool = True +) -> str: + """ + Return a canonical form of a version as a string. + + >>> canonicalize_version('1.0.1') + '1.0.1' + + Per PEP 625, versions may have multiple canonical forms, differing + only by trailing zeros. + + >>> canonicalize_version('1.0.0') + '1' + >>> canonicalize_version('1.0.0', strip_trailing_zero=False) + '1.0.0' + + Invalid versions are returned unaltered. + + >>> canonicalize_version('foo bar baz') + 'foo bar baz' + """ + if isinstance(version, str): + try: + version = Version(version) + except InvalidVersion: + return str(version) + return str(_TrimmedRelease(version) if strip_trailing_zero else version) + + +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!r}" + ) + + filename = filename[:-4] + dashes = filename.count("-") + if dashes not in (4, 5): + raise InvalidWheelFilename( + f"Invalid wheel filename (wrong number of parts): {filename!r}" + ) + + 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!r}") + name = canonicalize_name(name_part) + + try: + version = Version(parts[1]) + except InvalidVersion as e: + raise InvalidWheelFilename( + f"Invalid wheel filename (invalid version): {filename!r}" + ) from e + + 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!r}" + ) + 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!r}" + ) + + # 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!r}") + + name = canonicalize_name(name_part) + + try: + version = Version(version_part) + except InvalidVersion as e: + raise InvalidSdistFilename( + f"Invalid sdist filename (invalid version): {filename!r}" + ) from e + + return (name, version) diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/version.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/version.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..1206c462d4fcaa670a816e201bb88b27dfc9cf88 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/version.py @@ -0,0 +1,792 @@ +# 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. +""" +.. testsetup:: + + from packaging.version import parse, Version +""" + +from __future__ import annotations + +import re +import sys +import typing +from typing import ( + Any, + Callable, + Literal, + NamedTuple, + SupportsInt, + Tuple, + TypedDict, + Union, +) + +from ._structures import Infinity, InfinityType, NegativeInfinity, NegativeInfinityType + +if typing.TYPE_CHECKING: + from typing_extensions import Self, Unpack + +if sys.version_info >= (3, 13): # pragma: no cover + from warnings import deprecated as _deprecated +elif typing.TYPE_CHECKING: + from typing_extensions import deprecated as _deprecated +else: # pragma: no cover + import functools + import warnings + + def _deprecated(message: str) -> object: + def decorator(func: object) -> object: + @functools.wraps(func) + def wrapper(*args: object, **kwargs: object) -> object: + warnings.warn( + message, + category=DeprecationWarning, + stacklevel=2, + ) + return func(*args, **kwargs) + + return wrapper + + return decorator + + +_LETTER_NORMALIZATION = { + "alpha": "a", + "beta": "b", + "c": "rc", + "pre": "rc", + "preview": "rc", + "rev": "post", + "r": "post", +} + +__all__ = ["VERSION_PATTERN", "InvalidVersion", "Version", "parse"] + +LocalType = Tuple[Union[int, str], ...] + +CmpPrePostDevType = Union[InfinityType, NegativeInfinityType, Tuple[str, int]] +CmpLocalType = Union[ + NegativeInfinityType, + Tuple[Union[Tuple[int, str], Tuple[NegativeInfinityType, Union[int, str]]], ...], +] +CmpKey = Tuple[ + int, + Tuple[int, ...], + CmpPrePostDevType, + CmpPrePostDevType, + CmpPrePostDevType, + CmpLocalType, +] +VersionComparisonMethod = Callable[[CmpKey, CmpKey], bool] + + +class _VersionReplace(TypedDict, total=False): + epoch: int | None + release: tuple[int, ...] | None + pre: tuple[Literal["a", "b", "rc"], int] | None + post: int | None + dev: int | None + local: str | None + + +def parse(version: str) -> Version: + """Parse the given version string. + + >>> parse('1.0.dev1') + + + :param version: The version string to parse. + :raises InvalidVersion: When the version string is not a valid version. + """ + return Version(version) + + +class InvalidVersion(ValueError): + """Raised when a version string is not a valid version. + + >>> Version("invalid") + Traceback (most recent call last): + ... + packaging.version.InvalidVersion: Invalid version: 'invalid' + """ + + +class _BaseVersion: + __slots__ = () + + # This can also be a normal member (see the packaging_legacy package); + # we are just requiring it to be readable. Actually defining a property + # has runtime effect on subclasses, so it's typing only. + if typing.TYPE_CHECKING: + + @property + def _key(self) -> tuple[Any, ...]: ... + + 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 + + +# Deliberately not anchored to the start and end of the string, to make it +# easier for 3rd party code to reuse + +# Note that ++ doesn't behave identically on CPython and PyPy, so not using it here +_VERSION_PATTERN = r""" + v?+ # optional leading v + (?: + (?:(?P[0-9]+)!)?+ # epoch + (?P[0-9]+(?:\.[0-9]+)*+) # release segment + (?P
                                          # pre-release
+            [._-]?+
+            (?Palpha|a|beta|b|preview|pre|c|rc)
+            [._-]?+
+            (?P[0-9]+)?
+        )?+
+        (?P                                         # post release
+            (?:-(?P[0-9]+))
+            |
+            (?:
+                [._-]?
+                (?Ppost|rev|r)
+                [._-]?
+                (?P[0-9]+)?
+            )
+        )?+
+        (?P                                          # dev release
+            [._-]?+
+            (?Pdev)
+            [._-]?+
+            (?P[0-9]+)?
+        )?+
+    )
+    (?:\+
+        (?P                                        # local version
+            [a-z0-9]+
+            (?:[._-][a-z0-9]+)*+
+        )
+    )?+
+"""
+
+_VERSION_PATTERN_OLD = _VERSION_PATTERN.replace("*+", "*").replace("?+", "?")
+
+# Possessive qualifiers were added in Python 3.11.
+# CPython 3.11.0-3.11.4 had a bug: https://github.com/python/cpython/pull/107795
+# Older PyPy also had a bug.
+VERSION_PATTERN = (
+    _VERSION_PATTERN_OLD
+    if (sys.implementation.name == "cpython" and sys.version_info < (3, 11, 5))
+    or (sys.implementation.name == "pypy" and sys.version_info < (3, 11, 13))
+    or sys.version_info < (3, 11)
+    else _VERSION_PATTERN
+)
+"""
+A string containing the regular expression used to match a valid version.
+
+The pattern is not anchored at either end, and is intended for embedding in larger
+expressions (for example, matching a version number as part of a file name). The
+regular expression should be compiled with the ``re.VERBOSE`` and ``re.IGNORECASE``
+flags set.
+
+:meta hide-value:
+"""
+
+
+# Validation pattern for local version in replace()
+_LOCAL_PATTERN = re.compile(r"[a-z0-9]+(?:[._-][a-z0-9]+)*", re.IGNORECASE)
+
+
+def _validate_epoch(value: object, /) -> int:
+    epoch = value or 0
+    if isinstance(epoch, int) and epoch >= 0:
+        return epoch
+    msg = f"epoch must be non-negative integer, got {epoch}"
+    raise InvalidVersion(msg)
+
+
+def _validate_release(value: object, /) -> tuple[int, ...]:
+    release = (0,) if value is None else value
+    if (
+        isinstance(release, tuple)
+        and len(release) > 0
+        and all(isinstance(i, int) and i >= 0 for i in release)
+    ):
+        return release
+    msg = f"release must be a non-empty tuple of non-negative integers, got {release}"
+    raise InvalidVersion(msg)
+
+
+def _validate_pre(value: object, /) -> tuple[Literal["a", "b", "rc"], int] | None:
+    if value is None:
+        return value
+    if (
+        isinstance(value, tuple)
+        and len(value) == 2
+        and value[0] in ("a", "b", "rc")
+        and isinstance(value[1], int)
+        and value[1] >= 0
+    ):
+        return value
+    msg = f"pre must be a tuple of ('a'|'b'|'rc', non-negative int), got {value}"
+    raise InvalidVersion(msg)
+
+
+def _validate_post(value: object, /) -> tuple[Literal["post"], int] | None:
+    if value is None:
+        return value
+    if isinstance(value, int) and value >= 0:
+        return ("post", value)
+    msg = f"post must be non-negative integer, got {value}"
+    raise InvalidVersion(msg)
+
+
+def _validate_dev(value: object, /) -> tuple[Literal["dev"], int] | None:
+    if value is None:
+        return value
+    if isinstance(value, int) and value >= 0:
+        return ("dev", value)
+    msg = f"dev must be non-negative integer, got {value}"
+    raise InvalidVersion(msg)
+
+
+def _validate_local(value: object, /) -> LocalType | None:
+    if value is None:
+        return value
+    if isinstance(value, str) and _LOCAL_PATTERN.fullmatch(value):
+        return _parse_local_version(value)
+    msg = f"local must be a valid version string, got {value!r}"
+    raise InvalidVersion(msg)
+
+
+# Backward compatibility for internals before 26.0. Do not use.
+class _Version(NamedTuple):
+    epoch: int
+    release: tuple[int, ...]
+    dev: tuple[str, int] | None
+    pre: tuple[str, int] | None
+    post: tuple[str, int] | None
+    local: LocalType | None
+
+
+class Version(_BaseVersion):
+    """This class abstracts handling of a project's versions.
+
+    A :class:`Version` instance is comparison aware and can be compared and
+    sorted using the standard Python interfaces.
+
+    >>> v1 = Version("1.0a5")
+    >>> v2 = Version("1.0")
+    >>> v1
+    
+    >>> v2
+    
+    >>> v1 < v2
+    True
+    >>> v1 == v2
+    False
+    >>> v1 > v2
+    False
+    >>> v1 >= v2
+    False
+    >>> v1 <= v2
+    True
+    """
+
+    __slots__ = ("_dev", "_epoch", "_key_cache", "_local", "_post", "_pre", "_release")
+    __match_args__ = ("_str",)
+
+    _regex = re.compile(r"\s*" + VERSION_PATTERN + r"\s*", re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE)
+
+    _epoch: int
+    _release: tuple[int, ...]
+    _dev: tuple[str, int] | None
+    _pre: tuple[str, int] | None
+    _post: tuple[str, int] | None
+    _local: LocalType | None
+
+    _key_cache: CmpKey | None
+
+    def __init__(self, version: str) -> None:
+        """Initialize a Version object.
+
+        :param version:
+            The string representation of a version which will be parsed and normalized
+            before use.
+        :raises InvalidVersion:
+            If the ``version`` does not conform to PEP 440 in any way then this
+            exception will be raised.
+        """
+        # Validate the version and parse it into pieces
+        match = self._regex.fullmatch(version)
+        if not match:
+            raise InvalidVersion(f"Invalid version: {version!r}")
+        self._epoch = int(match.group("epoch")) if match.group("epoch") else 0
+        self._release = tuple(map(int, match.group("release").split(".")))
+        self._pre = _parse_letter_version(match.group("pre_l"), match.group("pre_n"))
+        self._post = _parse_letter_version(
+            match.group("post_l"), match.group("post_n1") or match.group("post_n2")
+        )
+        self._dev = _parse_letter_version(match.group("dev_l"), match.group("dev_n"))
+        self._local = _parse_local_version(match.group("local"))
+
+        # Key which will be used for sorting
+        self._key_cache = None
+
+    def __replace__(self, **kwargs: Unpack[_VersionReplace]) -> Self:
+        epoch = _validate_epoch(kwargs["epoch"]) if "epoch" in kwargs else self._epoch
+        release = (
+            _validate_release(kwargs["release"])
+            if "release" in kwargs
+            else self._release
+        )
+        pre = _validate_pre(kwargs["pre"]) if "pre" in kwargs else self._pre
+        post = _validate_post(kwargs["post"]) if "post" in kwargs else self._post
+        dev = _validate_dev(kwargs["dev"]) if "dev" in kwargs else self._dev
+        local = _validate_local(kwargs["local"]) if "local" in kwargs else self._local
+
+        if (
+            epoch == self._epoch
+            and release == self._release
+            and pre == self._pre
+            and post == self._post
+            and dev == self._dev
+            and local == self._local
+        ):
+            return self
+
+        new_version = self.__class__.__new__(self.__class__)
+        new_version._key_cache = None
+        new_version._epoch = epoch
+        new_version._release = release
+        new_version._pre = pre
+        new_version._post = post
+        new_version._dev = dev
+        new_version._local = local
+
+        return new_version
+
+    @property
+    def _key(self) -> CmpKey:
+        if self._key_cache is None:
+            self._key_cache = _cmpkey(
+                self._epoch,
+                self._release,
+                self._pre,
+                self._post,
+                self._dev,
+                self._local,
+            )
+        return self._key_cache
+
+    @property
+    @_deprecated("Version._version is private and will be removed soon")
+    def _version(self) -> _Version:
+        return _Version(
+            self._epoch, self._release, self._dev, self._pre, self._post, self._local
+        )
+
+    @_version.setter
+    @_deprecated("Version._version is private and will be removed soon")
+    def _version(self, value: _Version) -> None:
+        self._epoch = value.epoch
+        self._release = value.release
+        self._dev = value.dev
+        self._pre = value.pre
+        self._post = value.post
+        self._local = value.local
+        self._key_cache = None
+
+    def __repr__(self) -> str:
+        """A representation of the Version that shows all internal state.
+
+        >>> Version('1.0.0')
+        
+        """
+        return f""
+
+    def __str__(self) -> str:
+        """A string representation of the version that can be round-tripped.
+
+        >>> str(Version("1.0a5"))
+        '1.0a5'
+        """
+        # This is a hot function, so not calling self.base_version
+        version = ".".join(map(str, self.release))
+
+        # Epoch
+        if self.epoch:
+            version = f"{self.epoch}!{version}"
+
+        # Pre-release
+        if self.pre is not None:
+            version += "".join(map(str, self.pre))
+
+        # Post-release
+        if self.post is not None:
+            version += f".post{self.post}"
+
+        # Development release
+        if self.dev is not None:
+            version += f".dev{self.dev}"
+
+        # Local version segment
+        if self.local is not None:
+            version += f"+{self.local}"
+
+        return version
+
+    @property
+    def _str(self) -> str:
+        """Internal property for match_args"""
+        return str(self)
+
+    @property
+    def epoch(self) -> int:
+        """The epoch of the version.
+
+        >>> Version("2.0.0").epoch
+        0
+        >>> Version("1!2.0.0").epoch
+        1
+        """
+        return self._epoch
+
+    @property
+    def release(self) -> tuple[int, ...]:
+        """The components of the "release" segment of the version.
+
+        >>> Version("1.2.3").release
+        (1, 2, 3)
+        >>> Version("2.0.0").release
+        (2, 0, 0)
+        >>> Version("1!2.0.0.post0").release
+        (2, 0, 0)
+
+        Includes trailing zeroes but not the epoch or any pre-release / development /
+        post-release suffixes.
+        """
+        return self._release
+
+    @property
+    def pre(self) -> tuple[str, int] | None:
+        """The pre-release segment of the version.
+
+        >>> print(Version("1.2.3").pre)
+        None
+        >>> Version("1.2.3a1").pre
+        ('a', 1)
+        >>> Version("1.2.3b1").pre
+        ('b', 1)
+        >>> Version("1.2.3rc1").pre
+        ('rc', 1)
+        """
+        return self._pre
+
+    @property
+    def post(self) -> int | None:
+        """The post-release number of the version.
+
+        >>> print(Version("1.2.3").post)
+        None
+        >>> Version("1.2.3.post1").post
+        1
+        """
+        return self._post[1] if self._post else None
+
+    @property
+    def dev(self) -> int | None:
+        """The development number of the version.
+
+        >>> print(Version("1.2.3").dev)
+        None
+        >>> Version("1.2.3.dev1").dev
+        1
+        """
+        return self._dev[1] if self._dev else None
+
+    @property
+    def local(self) -> str | None:
+        """The local version segment of the version.
+
+        >>> print(Version("1.2.3").local)
+        None
+        >>> Version("1.2.3+abc").local
+        'abc'
+        """
+        if self._local:
+            return ".".join(str(x) for x in self._local)
+        else:
+            return None
+
+    @property
+    def public(self) -> str:
+        """The public portion of the version.
+
+        >>> Version("1.2.3").public
+        '1.2.3'
+        >>> Version("1.2.3+abc").public
+        '1.2.3'
+        >>> Version("1!1.2.3dev1+abc").public
+        '1!1.2.3.dev1'
+        """
+        return str(self).split("+", 1)[0]
+
+    @property
+    def base_version(self) -> str:
+        """The "base version" of the version.
+
+        >>> Version("1.2.3").base_version
+        '1.2.3'
+        >>> Version("1.2.3+abc").base_version
+        '1.2.3'
+        >>> Version("1!1.2.3dev1+abc").base_version
+        '1!1.2.3'
+
+        The "base version" is the public version of the project without any pre or post
+        release markers.
+        """
+        release_segment = ".".join(map(str, self.release))
+        return f"{self.epoch}!{release_segment}" if self.epoch else release_segment
+
+    @property
+    def is_prerelease(self) -> bool:
+        """Whether this version is a pre-release.
+
+        >>> Version("1.2.3").is_prerelease
+        False
+        >>> Version("1.2.3a1").is_prerelease
+        True
+        >>> Version("1.2.3b1").is_prerelease
+        True
+        >>> Version("1.2.3rc1").is_prerelease
+        True
+        >>> Version("1.2.3dev1").is_prerelease
+        True
+        """
+        return self.dev is not None or self.pre is not None
+
+    @property
+    def is_postrelease(self) -> bool:
+        """Whether this version is a post-release.
+
+        >>> Version("1.2.3").is_postrelease
+        False
+        >>> Version("1.2.3.post1").is_postrelease
+        True
+        """
+        return self.post is not None
+
+    @property
+    def is_devrelease(self) -> bool:
+        """Whether this version is a development release.
+
+        >>> Version("1.2.3").is_devrelease
+        False
+        >>> Version("1.2.3.dev1").is_devrelease
+        True
+        """
+        return self.dev is not None
+
+    @property
+    def major(self) -> int:
+        """The first item of :attr:`release` or ``0`` if unavailable.
+
+        >>> Version("1.2.3").major
+        1
+        """
+        return self.release[0] if len(self.release) >= 1 else 0
+
+    @property
+    def minor(self) -> int:
+        """The second item of :attr:`release` or ``0`` if unavailable.
+
+        >>> Version("1.2.3").minor
+        2
+        >>> Version("1").minor
+        0
+        """
+        return self.release[1] if len(self.release) >= 2 else 0
+
+    @property
+    def micro(self) -> int:
+        """The third item of :attr:`release` or ``0`` if unavailable.
+
+        >>> Version("1.2.3").micro
+        3
+        >>> Version("1").micro
+        0
+        """
+        return self.release[2] if len(self.release) >= 3 else 0
+
+
+class _TrimmedRelease(Version):
+    __slots__ = ()
+
+    def __init__(self, version: str | Version) -> None:
+        if isinstance(version, Version):
+            self._epoch = version._epoch
+            self._release = version._release
+            self._dev = version._dev
+            self._pre = version._pre
+            self._post = version._post
+            self._local = version._local
+            self._key_cache = version._key_cache
+            return
+        super().__init__(version)  # pragma: no cover
+
+    @property
+    def release(self) -> tuple[int, ...]:
+        """
+        Release segment without any trailing zeros.
+
+        >>> _TrimmedRelease('1.0.0').release
+        (1,)
+        >>> _TrimmedRelease('0.0').release
+        (0,)
+        """
+        # This leaves one 0.
+        rel = super().release
+        len_release = len(rel)
+        i = len_release
+        while i > 1 and rel[i - 1] == 0:
+            i -= 1
+        return rel if i == len_release else rel[:i]
+
+
+def _parse_letter_version(
+    letter: str | None, number: str | bytes | SupportsInt | None
+) -> tuple[str, int] | None:
+    if letter:
+        # 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.
+        letter = _LETTER_NORMALIZATION.get(letter, letter)
+
+        # We consider there to be an implicit 0 in a pre-release if there is
+        # not a numeral associated with it.
+        return letter, int(number or 0)
+
+    if 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)
+        return "post", int(number)
+
+    return None
+
+
+_local_version_separators = re.compile(r"[\._-]")
+
+
+def _parse_local_version(local: str | None) -> LocalType | None:
+    """
+    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: tuple[str, int] | None,
+    post: tuple[str, int] | None,
+    dev: tuple[str, int] | None,
+    local: LocalType | None,
+) -> CmpKey:
+    # When we compare a release version, we want to compare it with all of the
+    # trailing zeros removed. We will use this for our sorting key.
+    len_release = len(release)
+    i = len_release
+    while i and release[i - 1] == 0:
+        i -= 1
+    _release = release if i == len_release else release[:i]
+
+    # 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: CmpPrePostDevType = 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: CmpPrePostDevType = NegativeInfinity
+
+    else:
+        _post = post
+
+    # Versions without a development segment should sort after those with one.
+    if dev is None:
+        _dev: CmpPrePostDevType = Infinity
+
+    else:
+        _dev = dev
+
+    if local is None:
+        # Versions without a local segment should sort before those with one.
+        _local: CmpLocalType = 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
diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs-4.4.0.dist-info/INSTALLER b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs-4.4.0.dist-info/INSTALLER
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..5c69047b2eb8235994febeeae1da4a82365a240a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs-4.4.0.dist-info/INSTALLER
@@ -0,0 +1 @@
+uv
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs-4.4.0.dist-info/METADATA b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs-4.4.0.dist-info/METADATA
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..6b0908fb707440b3828bfe2edb1799382693199e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs-4.4.0.dist-info/METADATA
@@ -0,0 +1,350 @@
+Metadata-Version: 2.4
+Name: platformdirs
+Version: 4.4.0
+Summary: A small Python package for determining appropriate platform-specific dirs, e.g. a `user data dir`.
+Project-URL: Changelog, https://github.com/tox-dev/platformdirs/releases
+Project-URL: Documentation, https://platformdirs.readthedocs.io
+Project-URL: Homepage, https://github.com/tox-dev/platformdirs
+Project-URL: Source, https://github.com/tox-dev/platformdirs
+Project-URL: Tracker, https://github.com/tox-dev/platformdirs/issues
+Maintainer-email: Bernát Gábor , Julian Berman , Ofek Lev , Ronny Pfannschmidt 
+License-Expression: MIT
+License-File: LICENSE
+Keywords: appdirs,application,cache,directory,log,user
+Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
+Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
+Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
+Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
+Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
+Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3 :: Only
+Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9
+Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.10
+Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.11
+Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.12
+Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.13
+Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: CPython
+Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: PyPy
+Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries :: Python Modules
+Requires-Python: >=3.9
+Provides-Extra: docs
+Requires-Dist: furo>=2024.8.6; extra == 'docs'
+Requires-Dist: proselint>=0.14; extra == 'docs'
+Requires-Dist: sphinx-autodoc-typehints>=3; extra == 'docs'
+Requires-Dist: sphinx>=8.1.3; extra == 'docs'
+Provides-Extra: test
+Requires-Dist: appdirs==1.4.4; extra == 'test'
+Requires-Dist: covdefaults>=2.3; extra == 'test'
+Requires-Dist: pytest-cov>=6; extra == 'test'
+Requires-Dist: pytest-mock>=3.14; extra == 'test'
+Requires-Dist: pytest>=8.3.4; extra == 'test'
+Provides-Extra: type
+Requires-Dist: mypy>=1.14.1; extra == 'type'
+Description-Content-Type: text/x-rst
+
+The problem
+===========
+
+.. image:: https://badge.fury.io/py/platformdirs.svg
+   :target: https://badge.fury.io/py/platformdirs
+.. image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/pyversions/platformdirs.svg
+   :target: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/platformdirs/
+.. image:: https://github.com/tox-dev/platformdirs/actions/workflows/check.yaml/badge.svg
+   :target: https://github.com/platformdirs/platformdirs/actions
+.. image:: https://static.pepy.tech/badge/platformdirs/month
+   :target: https://pepy.tech/project/platformdirs
+
+When writing desktop application, finding the right location to store user data
+and configuration varies per platform. Even for single-platform apps, there
+may by plenty of nuances in figuring out the right location.
+
+For example, if running on macOS, you should use::
+
+    ~/Library/Application Support/
+
+If on Windows (at least English Win) that should be::
+
+    C:\Documents and Settings\\Application Data\Local Settings\\
+
+or possibly::
+
+    C:\Documents and Settings\\Application Data\\
+
+for `roaming profiles `_ but that is another story.
+
+On Linux (and other Unices), according to the `XDG Basedir Spec`_, it should be::
+
+    ~/.local/share/
+
+.. _XDG Basedir Spec: https://specifications.freedesktop.org/basedir-spec/basedir-spec-latest.html
+
+``platformdirs`` to the rescue
+==============================
+
+This kind of thing is what the ``platformdirs`` package is for.
+``platformdirs`` will help you choose an appropriate:
+
+- user data dir (``user_data_dir``)
+- user config dir (``user_config_dir``)
+- user cache dir (``user_cache_dir``)
+- site data dir (``site_data_dir``)
+- site config dir (``site_config_dir``)
+- user log dir (``user_log_dir``)
+- user documents dir (``user_documents_dir``)
+- user downloads dir (``user_downloads_dir``)
+- user pictures dir (``user_pictures_dir``)
+- user videos dir (``user_videos_dir``)
+- user music dir (``user_music_dir``)
+- user desktop dir (``user_desktop_dir``)
+- user runtime dir (``user_runtime_dir``)
+
+And also:
+
+- Is slightly opinionated on the directory names used. Look for "OPINION" in
+  documentation and code for when an opinion is being applied.
+
+Example output
+==============
+
+On macOS:
+
+.. code-block:: pycon
+
+    >>> from platformdirs import *
+    >>> appname = "SuperApp"
+    >>> appauthor = "Acme"
+    >>> user_data_dir(appname, appauthor)
+    '/Users/trentm/Library/Application Support/SuperApp'
+    >>> user_config_dir(appname, appauthor)
+    '/Users/trentm/Library/Application Support/SuperApp'
+    >>> user_cache_dir(appname, appauthor)
+    '/Users/trentm/Library/Caches/SuperApp'
+    >>> site_data_dir(appname, appauthor)
+    '/Library/Application Support/SuperApp'
+    >>> site_config_dir(appname, appauthor)
+    '/Library/Application Support/SuperApp'
+    >>> user_log_dir(appname, appauthor)
+    '/Users/trentm/Library/Logs/SuperApp'
+    >>> user_documents_dir()
+    '/Users/trentm/Documents'
+    >>> user_downloads_dir()
+    '/Users/trentm/Downloads'
+    >>> user_pictures_dir()
+    '/Users/trentm/Pictures'
+    >>> user_videos_dir()
+    '/Users/trentm/Movies'
+    >>> user_music_dir()
+    '/Users/trentm/Music'
+    >>> user_desktop_dir()
+    '/Users/trentm/Desktop'
+    >>> user_runtime_dir(appname, appauthor)
+    '/Users/trentm/Library/Caches/TemporaryItems/SuperApp'
+
+On Windows:
+
+.. code-block:: pycon
+
+    >>> from platformdirs import *
+    >>> appname = "SuperApp"
+    >>> appauthor = "Acme"
+    >>> user_data_dir(appname, appauthor)
+    'C:\\Users\\trentm\\AppData\\Local\\Acme\\SuperApp'
+    >>> user_data_dir(appname, appauthor, roaming=True)
+    'C:\\Users\\trentm\\AppData\\Roaming\\Acme\\SuperApp'
+    >>> user_config_dir(appname, appauthor)
+    'C:\\Users\\trentm\\AppData\\Local\\Acme\\SuperApp'
+    >>> user_cache_dir(appname, appauthor)
+    'C:\\Users\\trentm\\AppData\\Local\\Acme\\SuperApp\\Cache'
+    >>> site_data_dir(appname, appauthor)
+    'C:\\ProgramData\\Acme\\SuperApp'
+    >>> site_config_dir(appname, appauthor)
+    'C:\\ProgramData\\Acme\\SuperApp'
+    >>> user_log_dir(appname, appauthor)
+    'C:\\Users\\trentm\\AppData\\Local\\Acme\\SuperApp\\Logs'
+    >>> user_documents_dir()
+    'C:\\Users\\trentm\\Documents'
+    >>> user_downloads_dir()
+    'C:\\Users\\trentm\\Downloads'
+    >>> user_pictures_dir()
+    'C:\\Users\\trentm\\Pictures'
+    >>> user_videos_dir()
+    'C:\\Users\\trentm\\Videos'
+    >>> user_music_dir()
+    'C:\\Users\\trentm\\Music'
+    >>> user_desktop_dir()
+    'C:\\Users\\trentm\\Desktop'
+    >>> user_runtime_dir(appname, appauthor)
+    'C:\\Users\\trentm\\AppData\\Local\\Temp\\Acme\\SuperApp'
+
+On Linux:
+
+.. code-block:: pycon
+
+    >>> from platformdirs import *
+    >>> appname = "SuperApp"
+    >>> appauthor = "Acme"
+    >>> user_data_dir(appname, appauthor)
+    '/home/trentm/.local/share/SuperApp'
+    >>> user_config_dir(appname)
+    '/home/trentm/.config/SuperApp'
+    >>> user_cache_dir(appname, appauthor)
+    '/home/trentm/.cache/SuperApp'
+    >>> site_data_dir(appname, appauthor)
+    '/usr/local/share/SuperApp'
+    >>> site_data_dir(appname, appauthor, multipath=True)
+    '/usr/local/share/SuperApp:/usr/share/SuperApp'
+    >>> site_config_dir(appname)
+    '/etc/xdg/SuperApp'
+    >>> os.environ["XDG_CONFIG_DIRS"] = "/etc:/usr/local/etc"
+    >>> site_config_dir(appname, multipath=True)
+    '/etc/SuperApp:/usr/local/etc/SuperApp'
+    >>> user_log_dir(appname, appauthor)
+    '/home/trentm/.local/state/SuperApp/log'
+    >>> user_documents_dir()
+    '/home/trentm/Documents'
+    >>> user_downloads_dir()
+    '/home/trentm/Downloads'
+    >>> user_pictures_dir()
+    '/home/trentm/Pictures'
+    >>> user_videos_dir()
+    '/home/trentm/Videos'
+    >>> user_music_dir()
+    '/home/trentm/Music'
+    >>> user_desktop_dir()
+    '/home/trentm/Desktop'
+    >>> user_runtime_dir(appname, appauthor)
+    '/run/user/{os.getuid()}/SuperApp'
+
+On Android::
+
+    >>> from platformdirs import *
+    >>> appname = "SuperApp"
+    >>> appauthor = "Acme"
+    >>> user_data_dir(appname, appauthor)
+    '/data/data/com.myApp/files/SuperApp'
+    >>> user_config_dir(appname)
+    '/data/data/com.myApp/shared_prefs/SuperApp'
+    >>> user_cache_dir(appname, appauthor)
+    '/data/data/com.myApp/cache/SuperApp'
+    >>> site_data_dir(appname, appauthor)
+    '/data/data/com.myApp/files/SuperApp'
+    >>> site_config_dir(appname)
+    '/data/data/com.myApp/shared_prefs/SuperApp'
+    >>> user_log_dir(appname, appauthor)
+    '/data/data/com.myApp/cache/SuperApp/log'
+    >>> user_documents_dir()
+    '/storage/emulated/0/Documents'
+    >>> user_downloads_dir()
+    '/storage/emulated/0/Downloads'
+    >>> user_pictures_dir()
+    '/storage/emulated/0/Pictures'
+    >>> user_videos_dir()
+    '/storage/emulated/0/DCIM/Camera'
+    >>> user_music_dir()
+    '/storage/emulated/0/Music'
+    >>> user_desktop_dir()
+    '/storage/emulated/0/Desktop'
+    >>> user_runtime_dir(appname, appauthor)
+    '/data/data/com.myApp/cache/SuperApp/tmp'
+
+Note: Some android apps like Termux and Pydroid are used as shells. These
+apps are used by the end user to emulate Linux environment. Presence of
+``SHELL`` environment variable is used by Platformdirs to differentiate
+between general android apps and android apps used as shells. Shell android
+apps also support ``XDG_*`` environment variables.
+
+
+``PlatformDirs`` for convenience
+================================
+
+.. code-block:: pycon
+
+    >>> from platformdirs import PlatformDirs
+    >>> dirs = PlatformDirs("SuperApp", "Acme")
+    >>> dirs.user_data_dir
+    '/Users/trentm/Library/Application Support/SuperApp'
+    >>> dirs.user_config_dir
+    '/Users/trentm/Library/Application Support/SuperApp'
+    >>> dirs.user_cache_dir
+    '/Users/trentm/Library/Caches/SuperApp'
+    >>> dirs.site_data_dir
+    '/Library/Application Support/SuperApp'
+    >>> dirs.site_config_dir
+    '/Library/Application Support/SuperApp'
+    >>> dirs.user_cache_dir
+    '/Users/trentm/Library/Caches/SuperApp'
+    >>> dirs.user_log_dir
+    '/Users/trentm/Library/Logs/SuperApp'
+    >>> dirs.user_documents_dir
+    '/Users/trentm/Documents'
+    >>> dirs.user_downloads_dir
+    '/Users/trentm/Downloads'
+    >>> dirs.user_pictures_dir
+    '/Users/trentm/Pictures'
+    >>> dirs.user_videos_dir
+    '/Users/trentm/Movies'
+    >>> dirs.user_music_dir
+    '/Users/trentm/Music'
+    >>> dirs.user_desktop_dir
+    '/Users/trentm/Desktop'
+    >>> dirs.user_runtime_dir
+    '/Users/trentm/Library/Caches/TemporaryItems/SuperApp'
+
+Per-version isolation
+=====================
+
+If you have multiple versions of your app in use that you want to be
+able to run side-by-side, then you may want version-isolation for these
+dirs::
+
+    >>> from platformdirs import PlatformDirs
+    >>> dirs = PlatformDirs("SuperApp", "Acme", version="1.0")
+    >>> dirs.user_data_dir
+    '/Users/trentm/Library/Application Support/SuperApp/1.0'
+    >>> dirs.user_config_dir
+    '/Users/trentm/Library/Application Support/SuperApp/1.0'
+    >>> dirs.user_cache_dir
+    '/Users/trentm/Library/Caches/SuperApp/1.0'
+    >>> dirs.site_data_dir
+    '/Library/Application Support/SuperApp/1.0'
+    >>> dirs.site_config_dir
+    '/Library/Application Support/SuperApp/1.0'
+    >>> dirs.user_log_dir
+    '/Users/trentm/Library/Logs/SuperApp/1.0'
+    >>> dirs.user_documents_dir
+    '/Users/trentm/Documents'
+    >>> dirs.user_downloads_dir
+    '/Users/trentm/Downloads'
+    >>> dirs.user_pictures_dir
+    '/Users/trentm/Pictures'
+    >>> dirs.user_videos_dir
+    '/Users/trentm/Movies'
+    >>> dirs.user_music_dir
+    '/Users/trentm/Music'
+    >>> dirs.user_desktop_dir
+    '/Users/trentm/Desktop'
+    >>> dirs.user_runtime_dir
+    '/Users/trentm/Library/Caches/TemporaryItems/SuperApp/1.0'
+
+Be wary of using this for configuration files though; you'll need to handle
+migrating configuration files manually.
+
+Why this Fork?
+==============
+
+This repository is a friendly fork of the wonderful work started by
+`ActiveState `_ who created
+``appdirs``, this package's ancestor.
+
+Maintaining an open source project is no easy task, particularly
+from within an organization, and the Python community is indebted
+to ``appdirs`` (and to Trent Mick and Jeff Rouse in particular) for
+creating an incredibly useful simple module, as evidenced by the wide
+number of users it has attracted over the years.
+
+Nonetheless, given the number of long-standing open issues
+and pull requests, and no clear path towards `ensuring
+that maintenance of the package would continue or grow
+`_, this fork was
+created.
+
+Contributions are most welcome.
diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs-4.4.0.dist-info/RECORD b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs-4.4.0.dist-info/RECORD
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..09572f1780ad3554e93d8309547e9bc802a60371
--- /dev/null
+++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs-4.4.0.dist-info/RECORD
@@ -0,0 +1,15 @@
+platformdirs-4.4.0.dist-info/INSTALLER,sha256=5hhM4Q4mYTT9z6QB6PGpUAW81PGNFrYrdXMj4oM_6ak,2
+platformdirs-4.4.0.dist-info/METADATA,sha256=u8UhbV9Md7-8VyJyZNUuZrzN5xzPeedeGmBG0CnTAiM,12831
+platformdirs-4.4.0.dist-info/RECORD,,
+platformdirs-4.4.0.dist-info/REQUESTED,sha256=47DEQpj8HBSa-_TImW-5JCeuQeRkm5NMpJWZG3hSuFU,0
+platformdirs-4.4.0.dist-info/WHEEL,sha256=qtCwoSJWgHk21S1Kb4ihdzI2rlJ1ZKaIurTj_ngOhyQ,87
+platformdirs-4.4.0.dist-info/licenses/LICENSE,sha256=KeD9YukphQ6G6yjD_czwzv30-pSHkBHP-z0NS-1tTbY,1089
+platformdirs/__init__.py,sha256=iORRy6_lZ9tXLvO0W6fJPn8QV7F532ivl-f2WGmabBc,22284
+platformdirs/__main__.py,sha256=HnsUQHpiBaiTxwcmwVw-nFaPdVNZtQIdi1eWDtI-MzI,1493
+platformdirs/android.py,sha256=r0DshVBf-RO1jXJGX8C4Til7F1XWt-bkdWMgmvEiaYg,9013
+platformdirs/api.py,sha256=wPHOlwOsfz2oqQZ6A2FcCu5kEAj-JondzoNOHYFQ0h8,9281
+platformdirs/macos.py,sha256=0XoOgin1NK7Qki7iskD-oS8xKxw6bXgoKEgdqpCRAFQ,6322
+platformdirs/py.typed,sha256=47DEQpj8HBSa-_TImW-5JCeuQeRkm5NMpJWZG3hSuFU,0
+platformdirs/unix.py,sha256=WZmkUA--L3JNRGmz32s35YfoD3ica6xKIPdCV_HhLcs,10458
+platformdirs/version.py,sha256=i31fi3nNO19D2FdSx8aldD7IFLSqm2YrAo6SmkV0FLM,704
+platformdirs/windows.py,sha256=IFpiohUBwxPtCzlyKwNtxyW4Jk8haa6W8o59mfrDXVo,10125
diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs-4.4.0.dist-info/REQUESTED b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs-4.4.0.dist-info/REQUESTED
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..e69de29bb2d1d6434b8b29ae775ad8c2e48c5391
diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs-4.4.0.dist-info/WHEEL b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs-4.4.0.dist-info/WHEEL
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..12228d414b6cfed7c39d3781c85c63256a1d7fb5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs-4.4.0.dist-info/WHEEL
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+Wheel-Version: 1.0
+Generator: hatchling 1.27.0
+Root-Is-Purelib: true
+Tag: py3-none-any
diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/__init__.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/__init__.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..02daa5914a82da08293dc1675e75c11ed3fb2bd8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/__init__.py
@@ -0,0 +1,631 @@
+"""
+Utilities for determining application-specific dirs.
+
+See  for details and usage.
+
+"""
+
+from __future__ import annotations
+
+import os
+import sys
+from typing import TYPE_CHECKING
+
+from .api import PlatformDirsABC
+from .version import __version__
+from .version import __version_tuple__ as __version_info__
+
+if TYPE_CHECKING:
+    from pathlib import Path
+    from typing import Literal
+
+if sys.platform == "win32":
+    from platformdirs.windows import Windows as _Result
+elif sys.platform == "darwin":
+    from platformdirs.macos import MacOS as _Result
+else:
+    from platformdirs.unix import Unix as _Result
+
+
+def _set_platform_dir_class() -> type[PlatformDirsABC]:
+    if os.getenv("ANDROID_DATA") == "/data" and os.getenv("ANDROID_ROOT") == "/system":
+        if os.getenv("SHELL") or os.getenv("PREFIX"):
+            return _Result
+
+        from platformdirs.android import _android_folder  # noqa: PLC0415
+
+        if _android_folder() is not None:
+            from platformdirs.android import Android  # noqa: PLC0415
+
+            return Android  # return to avoid redefinition of a result
+
+    return _Result
+
+
+if TYPE_CHECKING:
+    # Work around mypy issue: https://github.com/python/mypy/issues/10962
+    PlatformDirs = _Result
+else:
+    PlatformDirs = _set_platform_dir_class()  #: Currently active platform
+AppDirs = PlatformDirs  #: Backwards compatibility with appdirs
+
+
+def user_data_dir(
+    appname: str | None = None,
+    appauthor: str | Literal[False] | None = None,
+    version: str | None = None,
+    roaming: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+    ensure_exists: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+) -> str:
+    """
+    :param appname: See `appname `.
+    :param appauthor: See `appauthor `.
+    :param version: See `version `.
+    :param roaming: See `roaming `.
+    :param ensure_exists: See `ensure_exists `.
+    :returns: data directory tied to the user
+    """
+    return PlatformDirs(
+        appname=appname,
+        appauthor=appauthor,
+        version=version,
+        roaming=roaming,
+        ensure_exists=ensure_exists,
+    ).user_data_dir
+
+
+def site_data_dir(
+    appname: str | None = None,
+    appauthor: str | Literal[False] | None = None,
+    version: str | None = None,
+    multipath: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+    ensure_exists: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+) -> str:
+    """
+    :param appname: See `appname `.
+    :param appauthor: See `appauthor `.
+    :param version: See `version `.
+    :param multipath: See `roaming `.
+    :param ensure_exists: See `ensure_exists `.
+    :returns: data directory shared by users
+    """
+    return PlatformDirs(
+        appname=appname,
+        appauthor=appauthor,
+        version=version,
+        multipath=multipath,
+        ensure_exists=ensure_exists,
+    ).site_data_dir
+
+
+def user_config_dir(
+    appname: str | None = None,
+    appauthor: str | Literal[False] | None = None,
+    version: str | None = None,
+    roaming: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+    ensure_exists: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+) -> str:
+    """
+    :param appname: See `appname `.
+    :param appauthor: See `appauthor `.
+    :param version: See `version `.
+    :param roaming: See `roaming `.
+    :param ensure_exists: See `ensure_exists `.
+    :returns: config directory tied to the user
+    """
+    return PlatformDirs(
+        appname=appname,
+        appauthor=appauthor,
+        version=version,
+        roaming=roaming,
+        ensure_exists=ensure_exists,
+    ).user_config_dir
+
+
+def site_config_dir(
+    appname: str | None = None,
+    appauthor: str | Literal[False] | None = None,
+    version: str | None = None,
+    multipath: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+    ensure_exists: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+) -> str:
+    """
+    :param appname: See `appname `.
+    :param appauthor: See `appauthor `.
+    :param version: See `version `.
+    :param multipath: See `roaming `.
+    :param ensure_exists: See `ensure_exists `.
+    :returns: config directory shared by the users
+    """
+    return PlatformDirs(
+        appname=appname,
+        appauthor=appauthor,
+        version=version,
+        multipath=multipath,
+        ensure_exists=ensure_exists,
+    ).site_config_dir
+
+
+def user_cache_dir(
+    appname: str | None = None,
+    appauthor: str | Literal[False] | None = None,
+    version: str | None = None,
+    opinion: bool = True,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+    ensure_exists: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+) -> str:
+    """
+    :param appname: See `appname `.
+    :param appauthor: See `appauthor `.
+    :param version: See `version `.
+    :param opinion: See `roaming `.
+    :param ensure_exists: See `ensure_exists `.
+    :returns: cache directory tied to the user
+    """
+    return PlatformDirs(
+        appname=appname,
+        appauthor=appauthor,
+        version=version,
+        opinion=opinion,
+        ensure_exists=ensure_exists,
+    ).user_cache_dir
+
+
+def site_cache_dir(
+    appname: str | None = None,
+    appauthor: str | Literal[False] | None = None,
+    version: str | None = None,
+    opinion: bool = True,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+    ensure_exists: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+) -> str:
+    """
+    :param appname: See `appname `.
+    :param appauthor: See `appauthor `.
+    :param version: See `version `.
+    :param opinion: See `opinion `.
+    :param ensure_exists: See `ensure_exists `.
+    :returns: cache directory tied to the user
+    """
+    return PlatformDirs(
+        appname=appname,
+        appauthor=appauthor,
+        version=version,
+        opinion=opinion,
+        ensure_exists=ensure_exists,
+    ).site_cache_dir
+
+
+def user_state_dir(
+    appname: str | None = None,
+    appauthor: str | Literal[False] | None = None,
+    version: str | None = None,
+    roaming: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+    ensure_exists: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+) -> str:
+    """
+    :param appname: See `appname `.
+    :param appauthor: See `appauthor `.
+    :param version: See `version `.
+    :param roaming: See `roaming `.
+    :param ensure_exists: See `ensure_exists `.
+    :returns: state directory tied to the user
+    """
+    return PlatformDirs(
+        appname=appname,
+        appauthor=appauthor,
+        version=version,
+        roaming=roaming,
+        ensure_exists=ensure_exists,
+    ).user_state_dir
+
+
+def user_log_dir(
+    appname: str | None = None,
+    appauthor: str | Literal[False] | None = None,
+    version: str | None = None,
+    opinion: bool = True,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+    ensure_exists: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+) -> str:
+    """
+    :param appname: See `appname `.
+    :param appauthor: See `appauthor `.
+    :param version: See `version `.
+    :param opinion: See `roaming `.
+    :param ensure_exists: See `ensure_exists `.
+    :returns: log directory tied to the user
+    """
+    return PlatformDirs(
+        appname=appname,
+        appauthor=appauthor,
+        version=version,
+        opinion=opinion,
+        ensure_exists=ensure_exists,
+    ).user_log_dir
+
+
+def user_documents_dir() -> str:
+    """:returns: documents directory tied to the user"""
+    return PlatformDirs().user_documents_dir
+
+
+def user_downloads_dir() -> str:
+    """:returns: downloads directory tied to the user"""
+    return PlatformDirs().user_downloads_dir
+
+
+def user_pictures_dir() -> str:
+    """:returns: pictures directory tied to the user"""
+    return PlatformDirs().user_pictures_dir
+
+
+def user_videos_dir() -> str:
+    """:returns: videos directory tied to the user"""
+    return PlatformDirs().user_videos_dir
+
+
+def user_music_dir() -> str:
+    """:returns: music directory tied to the user"""
+    return PlatformDirs().user_music_dir
+
+
+def user_desktop_dir() -> str:
+    """:returns: desktop directory tied to the user"""
+    return PlatformDirs().user_desktop_dir
+
+
+def user_runtime_dir(
+    appname: str | None = None,
+    appauthor: str | Literal[False] | None = None,
+    version: str | None = None,
+    opinion: bool = True,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+    ensure_exists: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+) -> str:
+    """
+    :param appname: See `appname `.
+    :param appauthor: See `appauthor `.
+    :param version: See `version `.
+    :param opinion: See `opinion `.
+    :param ensure_exists: See `ensure_exists `.
+    :returns: runtime directory tied to the user
+    """
+    return PlatformDirs(
+        appname=appname,
+        appauthor=appauthor,
+        version=version,
+        opinion=opinion,
+        ensure_exists=ensure_exists,
+    ).user_runtime_dir
+
+
+def site_runtime_dir(
+    appname: str | None = None,
+    appauthor: str | Literal[False] | None = None,
+    version: str | None = None,
+    opinion: bool = True,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+    ensure_exists: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+) -> str:
+    """
+    :param appname: See `appname `.
+    :param appauthor: See `appauthor `.
+    :param version: See `version `.
+    :param opinion: See `opinion `.
+    :param ensure_exists: See `ensure_exists `.
+    :returns: runtime directory shared by users
+    """
+    return PlatformDirs(
+        appname=appname,
+        appauthor=appauthor,
+        version=version,
+        opinion=opinion,
+        ensure_exists=ensure_exists,
+    ).site_runtime_dir
+
+
+def user_data_path(
+    appname: str | None = None,
+    appauthor: str | Literal[False] | None = None,
+    version: str | None = None,
+    roaming: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+    ensure_exists: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+) -> Path:
+    """
+    :param appname: See `appname `.
+    :param appauthor: See `appauthor `.
+    :param version: See `version `.
+    :param roaming: See `roaming `.
+    :param ensure_exists: See `ensure_exists `.
+    :returns: data path tied to the user
+    """
+    return PlatformDirs(
+        appname=appname,
+        appauthor=appauthor,
+        version=version,
+        roaming=roaming,
+        ensure_exists=ensure_exists,
+    ).user_data_path
+
+
+def site_data_path(
+    appname: str | None = None,
+    appauthor: str | Literal[False] | None = None,
+    version: str | None = None,
+    multipath: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+    ensure_exists: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+) -> Path:
+    """
+    :param appname: See `appname `.
+    :param appauthor: See `appauthor `.
+    :param version: See `version `.
+    :param multipath: See `multipath `.
+    :param ensure_exists: See `ensure_exists `.
+    :returns: data path shared by users
+    """
+    return PlatformDirs(
+        appname=appname,
+        appauthor=appauthor,
+        version=version,
+        multipath=multipath,
+        ensure_exists=ensure_exists,
+    ).site_data_path
+
+
+def user_config_path(
+    appname: str | None = None,
+    appauthor: str | Literal[False] | None = None,
+    version: str | None = None,
+    roaming: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+    ensure_exists: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+) -> Path:
+    """
+    :param appname: See `appname `.
+    :param appauthor: See `appauthor `.
+    :param version: See `version `.
+    :param roaming: See `roaming `.
+    :param ensure_exists: See `ensure_exists `.
+    :returns: config path tied to the user
+    """
+    return PlatformDirs(
+        appname=appname,
+        appauthor=appauthor,
+        version=version,
+        roaming=roaming,
+        ensure_exists=ensure_exists,
+    ).user_config_path
+
+
+def site_config_path(
+    appname: str | None = None,
+    appauthor: str | Literal[False] | None = None,
+    version: str | None = None,
+    multipath: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+    ensure_exists: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+) -> Path:
+    """
+    :param appname: See `appname `.
+    :param appauthor: See `appauthor `.
+    :param version: See `version `.
+    :param multipath: See `roaming `.
+    :param ensure_exists: See `ensure_exists `.
+    :returns: config path shared by the users
+    """
+    return PlatformDirs(
+        appname=appname,
+        appauthor=appauthor,
+        version=version,
+        multipath=multipath,
+        ensure_exists=ensure_exists,
+    ).site_config_path
+
+
+def site_cache_path(
+    appname: str | None = None,
+    appauthor: str | Literal[False] | None = None,
+    version: str | None = None,
+    opinion: bool = True,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+    ensure_exists: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+) -> Path:
+    """
+    :param appname: See `appname `.
+    :param appauthor: See `appauthor `.
+    :param version: See `version `.
+    :param opinion: See `opinion `.
+    :param ensure_exists: See `ensure_exists `.
+    :returns: cache directory tied to the user
+    """
+    return PlatformDirs(
+        appname=appname,
+        appauthor=appauthor,
+        version=version,
+        opinion=opinion,
+        ensure_exists=ensure_exists,
+    ).site_cache_path
+
+
+def user_cache_path(
+    appname: str | None = None,
+    appauthor: str | Literal[False] | None = None,
+    version: str | None = None,
+    opinion: bool = True,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+    ensure_exists: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+) -> Path:
+    """
+    :param appname: See `appname `.
+    :param appauthor: See `appauthor `.
+    :param version: See `version `.
+    :param opinion: See `roaming `.
+    :param ensure_exists: See `ensure_exists `.
+    :returns: cache path tied to the user
+    """
+    return PlatformDirs(
+        appname=appname,
+        appauthor=appauthor,
+        version=version,
+        opinion=opinion,
+        ensure_exists=ensure_exists,
+    ).user_cache_path
+
+
+def user_state_path(
+    appname: str | None = None,
+    appauthor: str | Literal[False] | None = None,
+    version: str | None = None,
+    roaming: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+    ensure_exists: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+) -> Path:
+    """
+    :param appname: See `appname `.
+    :param appauthor: See `appauthor `.
+    :param version: See `version `.
+    :param roaming: See `roaming `.
+    :param ensure_exists: See `ensure_exists `.
+    :returns: state path tied to the user
+    """
+    return PlatformDirs(
+        appname=appname,
+        appauthor=appauthor,
+        version=version,
+        roaming=roaming,
+        ensure_exists=ensure_exists,
+    ).user_state_path
+
+
+def user_log_path(
+    appname: str | None = None,
+    appauthor: str | Literal[False] | None = None,
+    version: str | None = None,
+    opinion: bool = True,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+    ensure_exists: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+) -> Path:
+    """
+    :param appname: See `appname `.
+    :param appauthor: See `appauthor `.
+    :param version: See `version `.
+    :param opinion: See `roaming `.
+    :param ensure_exists: See `ensure_exists `.
+    :returns: log path tied to the user
+    """
+    return PlatformDirs(
+        appname=appname,
+        appauthor=appauthor,
+        version=version,
+        opinion=opinion,
+        ensure_exists=ensure_exists,
+    ).user_log_path
+
+
+def user_documents_path() -> Path:
+    """:returns: documents a path tied to the user"""
+    return PlatformDirs().user_documents_path
+
+
+def user_downloads_path() -> Path:
+    """:returns: downloads path tied to the user"""
+    return PlatformDirs().user_downloads_path
+
+
+def user_pictures_path() -> Path:
+    """:returns: pictures path tied to the user"""
+    return PlatformDirs().user_pictures_path
+
+
+def user_videos_path() -> Path:
+    """:returns: videos path tied to the user"""
+    return PlatformDirs().user_videos_path
+
+
+def user_music_path() -> Path:
+    """:returns: music path tied to the user"""
+    return PlatformDirs().user_music_path
+
+
+def user_desktop_path() -> Path:
+    """:returns: desktop path tied to the user"""
+    return PlatformDirs().user_desktop_path
+
+
+def user_runtime_path(
+    appname: str | None = None,
+    appauthor: str | Literal[False] | None = None,
+    version: str | None = None,
+    opinion: bool = True,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+    ensure_exists: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+) -> Path:
+    """
+    :param appname: See `appname `.
+    :param appauthor: See `appauthor `.
+    :param version: See `version `.
+    :param opinion: See `opinion `.
+    :param ensure_exists: See `ensure_exists `.
+    :returns: runtime path tied to the user
+    """
+    return PlatformDirs(
+        appname=appname,
+        appauthor=appauthor,
+        version=version,
+        opinion=opinion,
+        ensure_exists=ensure_exists,
+    ).user_runtime_path
+
+
+def site_runtime_path(
+    appname: str | None = None,
+    appauthor: str | Literal[False] | None = None,
+    version: str | None = None,
+    opinion: bool = True,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+    ensure_exists: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+) -> Path:
+    """
+    :param appname: See `appname `.
+    :param appauthor: See `appauthor `.
+    :param version: See `version `.
+    :param opinion: See `opinion `.
+    :param ensure_exists: See `ensure_exists `.
+    :returns: runtime path shared by users
+    """
+    return PlatformDirs(
+        appname=appname,
+        appauthor=appauthor,
+        version=version,
+        opinion=opinion,
+        ensure_exists=ensure_exists,
+    ).site_runtime_path
+
+
+__all__ = [
+    "AppDirs",
+    "PlatformDirs",
+    "PlatformDirsABC",
+    "__version__",
+    "__version_info__",
+    "site_cache_dir",
+    "site_cache_path",
+    "site_config_dir",
+    "site_config_path",
+    "site_data_dir",
+    "site_data_path",
+    "site_runtime_dir",
+    "site_runtime_path",
+    "user_cache_dir",
+    "user_cache_path",
+    "user_config_dir",
+    "user_config_path",
+    "user_data_dir",
+    "user_data_path",
+    "user_desktop_dir",
+    "user_desktop_path",
+    "user_documents_dir",
+    "user_documents_path",
+    "user_downloads_dir",
+    "user_downloads_path",
+    "user_log_dir",
+    "user_log_path",
+    "user_music_dir",
+    "user_music_path",
+    "user_pictures_dir",
+    "user_pictures_path",
+    "user_runtime_dir",
+    "user_runtime_path",
+    "user_state_dir",
+    "user_state_path",
+    "user_videos_dir",
+    "user_videos_path",
+]
diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/__main__.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/__main__.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..922c521358e349470ec48d6372b8f8ee8641128a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/__main__.py
@@ -0,0 +1,55 @@
+"""Main entry point."""
+
+from __future__ import annotations
+
+from platformdirs import PlatformDirs, __version__
+
+PROPS = (
+    "user_data_dir",
+    "user_config_dir",
+    "user_cache_dir",
+    "user_state_dir",
+    "user_log_dir",
+    "user_documents_dir",
+    "user_downloads_dir",
+    "user_pictures_dir",
+    "user_videos_dir",
+    "user_music_dir",
+    "user_runtime_dir",
+    "site_data_dir",
+    "site_config_dir",
+    "site_cache_dir",
+    "site_runtime_dir",
+)
+
+
+def main() -> None:
+    """Run the main entry point."""
+    app_name = "MyApp"
+    app_author = "MyCompany"
+
+    print(f"-- platformdirs {__version__} --")  # noqa: T201
+
+    print("-- app dirs (with optional 'version')")  # noqa: T201
+    dirs = PlatformDirs(app_name, app_author, version="1.0")
+    for prop in PROPS:
+        print(f"{prop}: {getattr(dirs, prop)}")  # noqa: T201
+
+    print("\n-- app dirs (without optional 'version')")  # noqa: T201
+    dirs = PlatformDirs(app_name, app_author)
+    for prop in PROPS:
+        print(f"{prop}: {getattr(dirs, prop)}")  # noqa: T201
+
+    print("\n-- app dirs (without optional 'appauthor')")  # noqa: T201
+    dirs = PlatformDirs(app_name)
+    for prop in PROPS:
+        print(f"{prop}: {getattr(dirs, prop)}")  # noqa: T201
+
+    print("\n-- app dirs (with disabled 'appauthor')")  # noqa: T201
+    dirs = PlatformDirs(app_name, appauthor=False)
+    for prop in PROPS:
+        print(f"{prop}: {getattr(dirs, prop)}")  # noqa: T201
+
+
+if __name__ == "__main__":
+    main()
diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/android.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/android.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..92efc852d3818b70a708ab61ba2b291eb5a6ee67
--- /dev/null
+++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/android.py
@@ -0,0 +1,249 @@
+"""Android."""
+
+from __future__ import annotations
+
+import os
+import re
+import sys
+from functools import lru_cache
+from typing import TYPE_CHECKING, cast
+
+from .api import PlatformDirsABC
+
+
+class Android(PlatformDirsABC):
+    """
+    Follows the guidance `from here `_.
+
+    Makes use of the `appname `, `version
+    `, `ensure_exists `.
+
+    """
+
+    @property
+    def user_data_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: data directory tied to the user, e.g. ``/data/user///files/``"""
+        return self._append_app_name_and_version(cast("str", _android_folder()), "files")
+
+    @property
+    def site_data_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: data directory shared by users, same as `user_data_dir`"""
+        return self.user_data_dir
+
+    @property
+    def user_config_dir(self) -> str:
+        """
+        :return: config directory tied to the user, e.g. \
+        ``/data/user///shared_prefs/``
+        """
+        return self._append_app_name_and_version(cast("str", _android_folder()), "shared_prefs")
+
+    @property
+    def site_config_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: config directory shared by the users, same as `user_config_dir`"""
+        return self.user_config_dir
+
+    @property
+    def user_cache_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: cache directory tied to the user, e.g.,``/data/user///cache/``"""
+        return self._append_app_name_and_version(cast("str", _android_folder()), "cache")
+
+    @property
+    def site_cache_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: cache directory shared by users, same as `user_cache_dir`"""
+        return self.user_cache_dir
+
+    @property
+    def user_state_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: state directory tied to the user, same as `user_data_dir`"""
+        return self.user_data_dir
+
+    @property
+    def user_log_dir(self) -> str:
+        """
+        :return: log directory tied to the user, same as `user_cache_dir` if not opinionated else ``log`` in it,
+          e.g. ``/data/user///cache//log``
+        """
+        path = self.user_cache_dir
+        if self.opinion:
+            path = os.path.join(path, "log")  # noqa: PTH118
+        return path
+
+    @property
+    def user_documents_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: documents directory tied to the user e.g. ``/storage/emulated/0/Documents``"""
+        return _android_documents_folder()
+
+    @property
+    def user_downloads_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: downloads directory tied to the user e.g. ``/storage/emulated/0/Downloads``"""
+        return _android_downloads_folder()
+
+    @property
+    def user_pictures_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: pictures directory tied to the user e.g. ``/storage/emulated/0/Pictures``"""
+        return _android_pictures_folder()
+
+    @property
+    def user_videos_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: videos directory tied to the user e.g. ``/storage/emulated/0/DCIM/Camera``"""
+        return _android_videos_folder()
+
+    @property
+    def user_music_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: music directory tied to the user e.g. ``/storage/emulated/0/Music``"""
+        return _android_music_folder()
+
+    @property
+    def user_desktop_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: desktop directory tied to the user e.g. ``/storage/emulated/0/Desktop``"""
+        return "/storage/emulated/0/Desktop"
+
+    @property
+    def user_runtime_dir(self) -> str:
+        """
+        :return: runtime directory tied to the user, same as `user_cache_dir` if not opinionated else ``tmp`` in it,
+          e.g. ``/data/user///cache//tmp``
+        """
+        path = self.user_cache_dir
+        if self.opinion:
+            path = os.path.join(path, "tmp")  # noqa: PTH118
+        return path
+
+    @property
+    def site_runtime_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: runtime directory shared by users, same as `user_runtime_dir`"""
+        return self.user_runtime_dir
+
+
+@lru_cache(maxsize=1)
+def _android_folder() -> str | None:  # noqa: C901
+    """:return: base folder for the Android OS or None if it cannot be found"""
+    result: str | None = None
+    # type checker isn't happy with our "import android", just don't do this when type checking see
+    # https://stackoverflow.com/a/61394121
+    if not TYPE_CHECKING:
+        try:
+            # First try to get a path to android app using python4android (if available)...
+            from android import mActivity  # noqa: PLC0415
+
+            context = cast("android.content.Context", mActivity.getApplicationContext())  # noqa: F821
+            result = context.getFilesDir().getParentFile().getAbsolutePath()
+        except Exception:  # noqa: BLE001
+            result = None
+    if result is None:
+        try:
+            # ...and fall back to using plain pyjnius, if python4android isn't available or doesn't deliver any useful
+            # result...
+            from jnius import autoclass  # noqa: PLC0415
+
+            context = autoclass("android.content.Context")
+            result = context.getFilesDir().getParentFile().getAbsolutePath()
+        except Exception:  # noqa: BLE001
+            result = None
+    if result is None:
+        # and if that fails, too, find an android folder looking at path on the sys.path
+        # warning: only works for apps installed under /data, not adopted storage etc.
+        pattern = re.compile(r"/data/(data|user/\d+)/(.+)/files")
+        for path in sys.path:
+            if pattern.match(path):
+                result = path.split("/files")[0]
+                break
+        else:
+            result = None
+    if result is None:
+        # one last try: find an android folder looking at path on the sys.path taking adopted storage paths into
+        # account
+        pattern = re.compile(r"/mnt/expand/[a-fA-F0-9-]{36}/(data|user/\d+)/(.+)/files")
+        for path in sys.path:
+            if pattern.match(path):
+                result = path.split("/files")[0]
+                break
+        else:
+            result = None
+    return result
+
+
+@lru_cache(maxsize=1)
+def _android_documents_folder() -> str:
+    """:return: documents folder for the Android OS"""
+    # Get directories with pyjnius
+    try:
+        from jnius import autoclass  # noqa: PLC0415
+
+        context = autoclass("android.content.Context")
+        environment = autoclass("android.os.Environment")
+        documents_dir: str = context.getExternalFilesDir(environment.DIRECTORY_DOCUMENTS).getAbsolutePath()
+    except Exception:  # noqa: BLE001
+        documents_dir = "/storage/emulated/0/Documents"
+
+    return documents_dir
+
+
+@lru_cache(maxsize=1)
+def _android_downloads_folder() -> str:
+    """:return: downloads folder for the Android OS"""
+    # Get directories with pyjnius
+    try:
+        from jnius import autoclass  # noqa: PLC0415
+
+        context = autoclass("android.content.Context")
+        environment = autoclass("android.os.Environment")
+        downloads_dir: str = context.getExternalFilesDir(environment.DIRECTORY_DOWNLOADS).getAbsolutePath()
+    except Exception:  # noqa: BLE001
+        downloads_dir = "/storage/emulated/0/Downloads"
+
+    return downloads_dir
+
+
+@lru_cache(maxsize=1)
+def _android_pictures_folder() -> str:
+    """:return: pictures folder for the Android OS"""
+    # Get directories with pyjnius
+    try:
+        from jnius import autoclass  # noqa: PLC0415
+
+        context = autoclass("android.content.Context")
+        environment = autoclass("android.os.Environment")
+        pictures_dir: str = context.getExternalFilesDir(environment.DIRECTORY_PICTURES).getAbsolutePath()
+    except Exception:  # noqa: BLE001
+        pictures_dir = "/storage/emulated/0/Pictures"
+
+    return pictures_dir
+
+
+@lru_cache(maxsize=1)
+def _android_videos_folder() -> str:
+    """:return: videos folder for the Android OS"""
+    # Get directories with pyjnius
+    try:
+        from jnius import autoclass  # noqa: PLC0415
+
+        context = autoclass("android.content.Context")
+        environment = autoclass("android.os.Environment")
+        videos_dir: str = context.getExternalFilesDir(environment.DIRECTORY_DCIM).getAbsolutePath()
+    except Exception:  # noqa: BLE001
+        videos_dir = "/storage/emulated/0/DCIM/Camera"
+
+    return videos_dir
+
+
+@lru_cache(maxsize=1)
+def _android_music_folder() -> str:
+    """:return: music folder for the Android OS"""
+    # Get directories with pyjnius
+    try:
+        from jnius import autoclass  # noqa: PLC0415
+
+        context = autoclass("android.content.Context")
+        environment = autoclass("android.os.Environment")
+        music_dir: str = context.getExternalFilesDir(environment.DIRECTORY_MUSIC).getAbsolutePath()
+    except Exception:  # noqa: BLE001
+        music_dir = "/storage/emulated/0/Music"
+
+    return music_dir
+
+
+__all__ = [
+    "Android",
+]
diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/api.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/api.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..251600e6d1b6f7d38f6fee0b91de34d31b2124d0
--- /dev/null
+++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/api.py
@@ -0,0 +1,299 @@
+"""Base API."""
+
+from __future__ import annotations
+
+import os
+from abc import ABC, abstractmethod
+from pathlib import Path
+from typing import TYPE_CHECKING
+
+if TYPE_CHECKING:
+    from collections.abc import Iterator
+    from typing import Literal
+
+
+class PlatformDirsABC(ABC):  # noqa: PLR0904
+    """Abstract base class for platform directories."""
+
+    def __init__(  # noqa: PLR0913, PLR0917
+        self,
+        appname: str | None = None,
+        appauthor: str | Literal[False] | None = None,
+        version: str | None = None,
+        roaming: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+        multipath: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+        opinion: bool = True,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+        ensure_exists: bool = False,  # noqa: FBT001, FBT002
+    ) -> None:
+        """
+        Create a new platform directory.
+
+        :param appname: See `appname`.
+        :param appauthor: See `appauthor`.
+        :param version: See `version`.
+        :param roaming: See `roaming`.
+        :param multipath: See `multipath`.
+        :param opinion: See `opinion`.
+        :param ensure_exists: See `ensure_exists`.
+
+        """
+        self.appname = appname  #: The name of application.
+        self.appauthor = appauthor
+        """
+        The name of the app author or distributing body for this application.
+
+        Typically, it is the owning company name. Defaults to `appname`. You may pass ``False`` to disable it.
+
+        """
+        self.version = version
+        """
+        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 ``.``.
+
+        """
+        self.roaming = roaming
+        """
+        Whether to use the roaming appdata directory on Windows.
+
+        That means that for users on a Windows network setup for roaming profiles, this user data will be synced on
+        login (see
+        `here `_).
+
+        """
+        self.multipath = multipath
+        """
+        An optional parameter which indicates that the entire list of data dirs should be returned.
+
+        By default, the first item would only be returned.
+
+        """
+        self.opinion = opinion  #: A flag to indicating to use opinionated values.
+        self.ensure_exists = ensure_exists
+        """
+        Optionally create the directory (and any missing parents) upon access if it does not exist.
+
+        By default, no directories are created.
+
+        """
+
+    def _append_app_name_and_version(self, *base: str) -> str:
+        params = list(base[1:])
+        if self.appname:
+            params.append(self.appname)
+            if self.version:
+                params.append(self.version)
+        path = os.path.join(base[0], *params)  # noqa: PTH118
+        self._optionally_create_directory(path)
+        return path
+
+    def _optionally_create_directory(self, path: str) -> None:
+        if self.ensure_exists:
+            Path(path).mkdir(parents=True, exist_ok=True)
+
+    def _first_item_as_path_if_multipath(self, directory: str) -> Path:
+        if self.multipath:
+            # If multipath is True, the first path is returned.
+            directory = directory.partition(os.pathsep)[0]
+        return Path(directory)
+
+    @property
+    @abstractmethod
+    def user_data_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: data directory tied to the user"""
+
+    @property
+    @abstractmethod
+    def site_data_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: data directory shared by users"""
+
+    @property
+    @abstractmethod
+    def user_config_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: config directory tied to the user"""
+
+    @property
+    @abstractmethod
+    def site_config_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: config directory shared by the users"""
+
+    @property
+    @abstractmethod
+    def user_cache_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: cache directory tied to the user"""
+
+    @property
+    @abstractmethod
+    def site_cache_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: cache directory shared by users"""
+
+    @property
+    @abstractmethod
+    def user_state_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: state directory tied to the user"""
+
+    @property
+    @abstractmethod
+    def user_log_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: log directory tied to the user"""
+
+    @property
+    @abstractmethod
+    def user_documents_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: documents directory tied to the user"""
+
+    @property
+    @abstractmethod
+    def user_downloads_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: downloads directory tied to the user"""
+
+    @property
+    @abstractmethod
+    def user_pictures_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: pictures directory tied to the user"""
+
+    @property
+    @abstractmethod
+    def user_videos_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: videos directory tied to the user"""
+
+    @property
+    @abstractmethod
+    def user_music_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: music directory tied to the user"""
+
+    @property
+    @abstractmethod
+    def user_desktop_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: desktop directory tied to the user"""
+
+    @property
+    @abstractmethod
+    def user_runtime_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: runtime directory tied to the user"""
+
+    @property
+    @abstractmethod
+    def site_runtime_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: runtime directory shared by users"""
+
+    @property
+    def user_data_path(self) -> Path:
+        """:return: data path tied to the user"""
+        return Path(self.user_data_dir)
+
+    @property
+    def site_data_path(self) -> Path:
+        """:return: data path shared by users"""
+        return Path(self.site_data_dir)
+
+    @property
+    def user_config_path(self) -> Path:
+        """:return: config path tied to the user"""
+        return Path(self.user_config_dir)
+
+    @property
+    def site_config_path(self) -> Path:
+        """:return: config path shared by the users"""
+        return Path(self.site_config_dir)
+
+    @property
+    def user_cache_path(self) -> Path:
+        """:return: cache path tied to the user"""
+        return Path(self.user_cache_dir)
+
+    @property
+    def site_cache_path(self) -> Path:
+        """:return: cache path shared by users"""
+        return Path(self.site_cache_dir)
+
+    @property
+    def user_state_path(self) -> Path:
+        """:return: state path tied to the user"""
+        return Path(self.user_state_dir)
+
+    @property
+    def user_log_path(self) -> Path:
+        """:return: log path tied to the user"""
+        return Path(self.user_log_dir)
+
+    @property
+    def user_documents_path(self) -> Path:
+        """:return: documents a path tied to the user"""
+        return Path(self.user_documents_dir)
+
+    @property
+    def user_downloads_path(self) -> Path:
+        """:return: downloads path tied to the user"""
+        return Path(self.user_downloads_dir)
+
+    @property
+    def user_pictures_path(self) -> Path:
+        """:return: pictures path tied to the user"""
+        return Path(self.user_pictures_dir)
+
+    @property
+    def user_videos_path(self) -> Path:
+        """:return: videos path tied to the user"""
+        return Path(self.user_videos_dir)
+
+    @property
+    def user_music_path(self) -> Path:
+        """:return: music path tied to the user"""
+        return Path(self.user_music_dir)
+
+    @property
+    def user_desktop_path(self) -> Path:
+        """:return: desktop path tied to the user"""
+        return Path(self.user_desktop_dir)
+
+    @property
+    def user_runtime_path(self) -> Path:
+        """:return: runtime path tied to the user"""
+        return Path(self.user_runtime_dir)
+
+    @property
+    def site_runtime_path(self) -> Path:
+        """:return: runtime path shared by users"""
+        return Path(self.site_runtime_dir)
+
+    def iter_config_dirs(self) -> Iterator[str]:
+        """:yield: all user and site configuration directories."""
+        yield self.user_config_dir
+        yield self.site_config_dir
+
+    def iter_data_dirs(self) -> Iterator[str]:
+        """:yield: all user and site data directories."""
+        yield self.user_data_dir
+        yield self.site_data_dir
+
+    def iter_cache_dirs(self) -> Iterator[str]:
+        """:yield: all user and site cache directories."""
+        yield self.user_cache_dir
+        yield self.site_cache_dir
+
+    def iter_runtime_dirs(self) -> Iterator[str]:
+        """:yield: all user and site runtime directories."""
+        yield self.user_runtime_dir
+        yield self.site_runtime_dir
+
+    def iter_config_paths(self) -> Iterator[Path]:
+        """:yield: all user and site configuration paths."""
+        for path in self.iter_config_dirs():
+            yield Path(path)
+
+    def iter_data_paths(self) -> Iterator[Path]:
+        """:yield: all user and site data paths."""
+        for path in self.iter_data_dirs():
+            yield Path(path)
+
+    def iter_cache_paths(self) -> Iterator[Path]:
+        """:yield: all user and site cache paths."""
+        for path in self.iter_cache_dirs():
+            yield Path(path)
+
+    def iter_runtime_paths(self) -> Iterator[Path]:
+        """:yield: all user and site runtime paths."""
+        for path in self.iter_runtime_dirs():
+            yield Path(path)
diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/macos.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/macos.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..30ab368913061aa4b7935e65f5696f7d8cffcf4f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/macos.py
@@ -0,0 +1,146 @@
+"""macOS."""
+
+from __future__ import annotations
+
+import os.path
+import sys
+from typing import TYPE_CHECKING
+
+from .api import PlatformDirsABC
+
+if TYPE_CHECKING:
+    from pathlib import Path
+
+
+class MacOS(PlatformDirsABC):
+    """
+    Platform directories for the macOS operating system.
+
+    Follows the guidance from
+    `Apple documentation `_.
+    Makes use of the `appname `,
+    `version `,
+    `ensure_exists `.
+
+    """
+
+    @property
+    def user_data_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: data directory tied to the user, e.g. ``~/Library/Application Support/$appname/$version``"""
+        return self._append_app_name_and_version(os.path.expanduser("~/Library/Application Support"))  # noqa: PTH111
+
+    @property
+    def site_data_dir(self) -> str:
+        """
+        :return: data directory shared by users, e.g. ``/Library/Application Support/$appname/$version``.
+          If we're using a Python binary managed by `Homebrew `_, the directory
+          will be under the Homebrew prefix, e.g. ``$homebrew_prefix/share/$appname/$version``.
+          If `multipath ` is enabled, and we're in Homebrew,
+          the response is a multi-path string separated by ":", e.g.
+          ``$homebrew_prefix/share/$appname/$version:/Library/Application Support/$appname/$version``
+        """
+        is_homebrew = "/opt/python" in sys.prefix
+        homebrew_prefix = sys.prefix.split("/opt/python")[0] if is_homebrew else ""
+        path_list = [self._append_app_name_and_version(f"{homebrew_prefix}/share")] if is_homebrew else []
+        path_list.append(self._append_app_name_and_version("/Library/Application Support"))
+        if self.multipath:
+            return os.pathsep.join(path_list)
+        return path_list[0]
+
+    @property
+    def site_data_path(self) -> Path:
+        """:return: data path shared by users. Only return the first item, even if ``multipath`` is set to ``True``"""
+        return self._first_item_as_path_if_multipath(self.site_data_dir)
+
+    @property
+    def user_config_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: config directory tied to the user, same as `user_data_dir`"""
+        return self.user_data_dir
+
+    @property
+    def site_config_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: config directory shared by the users, same as `site_data_dir`"""
+        return self.site_data_dir
+
+    @property
+    def user_cache_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: cache directory tied to the user, e.g. ``~/Library/Caches/$appname/$version``"""
+        return self._append_app_name_and_version(os.path.expanduser("~/Library/Caches"))  # noqa: PTH111
+
+    @property
+    def site_cache_dir(self) -> str:
+        """
+        :return: cache directory shared by users, e.g. ``/Library/Caches/$appname/$version``.
+          If we're using a Python binary managed by `Homebrew `_, the directory
+          will be under the Homebrew prefix, e.g. ``$homebrew_prefix/var/cache/$appname/$version``.
+          If `multipath ` is enabled, and we're in Homebrew,
+          the response is a multi-path string separated by ":", e.g.
+          ``$homebrew_prefix/var/cache/$appname/$version:/Library/Caches/$appname/$version``
+        """
+        is_homebrew = "/opt/python" in sys.prefix
+        homebrew_prefix = sys.prefix.split("/opt/python")[0] if is_homebrew else ""
+        path_list = [self._append_app_name_and_version(f"{homebrew_prefix}/var/cache")] if is_homebrew else []
+        path_list.append(self._append_app_name_and_version("/Library/Caches"))
+        if self.multipath:
+            return os.pathsep.join(path_list)
+        return path_list[0]
+
+    @property
+    def site_cache_path(self) -> Path:
+        """:return: cache path shared by users. Only return the first item, even if ``multipath`` is set to ``True``"""
+        return self._first_item_as_path_if_multipath(self.site_cache_dir)
+
+    @property
+    def user_state_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: state directory tied to the user, same as `user_data_dir`"""
+        return self.user_data_dir
+
+    @property
+    def user_log_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: log directory tied to the user, e.g. ``~/Library/Logs/$appname/$version``"""
+        return self._append_app_name_and_version(os.path.expanduser("~/Library/Logs"))  # noqa: PTH111
+
+    @property
+    def user_documents_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: documents directory tied to the user, e.g. ``~/Documents``"""
+        return os.path.expanduser("~/Documents")  # noqa: PTH111
+
+    @property
+    def user_downloads_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: downloads directory tied to the user, e.g. ``~/Downloads``"""
+        return os.path.expanduser("~/Downloads")  # noqa: PTH111
+
+    @property
+    def user_pictures_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: pictures directory tied to the user, e.g. ``~/Pictures``"""
+        return os.path.expanduser("~/Pictures")  # noqa: PTH111
+
+    @property
+    def user_videos_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: videos directory tied to the user, e.g. ``~/Movies``"""
+        return os.path.expanduser("~/Movies")  # noqa: PTH111
+
+    @property
+    def user_music_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: music directory tied to the user, e.g. ``~/Music``"""
+        return os.path.expanduser("~/Music")  # noqa: PTH111
+
+    @property
+    def user_desktop_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: desktop directory tied to the user, e.g. ``~/Desktop``"""
+        return os.path.expanduser("~/Desktop")  # noqa: PTH111
+
+    @property
+    def user_runtime_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: runtime directory tied to the user, e.g. ``~/Library/Caches/TemporaryItems/$appname/$version``"""
+        return self._append_app_name_and_version(os.path.expanduser("~/Library/Caches/TemporaryItems"))  # noqa: PTH111
+
+    @property
+    def site_runtime_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: runtime directory shared by users, same as `user_runtime_dir`"""
+        return self.user_runtime_dir
+
+
+__all__ = [
+    "MacOS",
+]
diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/py.typed b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/py.typed
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..e69de29bb2d1d6434b8b29ae775ad8c2e48c5391
diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/unix.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/unix.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..fc75d8d0747b0d5ce84b96cfc37877a126d1a9b6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/unix.py
@@ -0,0 +1,272 @@
+"""Unix."""
+
+from __future__ import annotations
+
+import os
+import sys
+from configparser import ConfigParser
+from pathlib import Path
+from typing import TYPE_CHECKING, NoReturn
+
+from .api import PlatformDirsABC
+
+if TYPE_CHECKING:
+    from collections.abc import Iterator
+
+if sys.platform == "win32":
+
+    def getuid() -> NoReturn:
+        msg = "should only be used on Unix"
+        raise RuntimeError(msg)
+
+else:
+    from os import getuid
+
+
+class Unix(PlatformDirsABC):  # noqa: PLR0904
+    """
+    On Unix/Linux, we follow the `XDG Basedir Spec `_.
+
+    The spec allows overriding directories with environment variables. The examples shown are the default values,
+    alongside the name of the environment variable that overrides them. Makes use of the `appname
+    `, `version `, `multipath
+    `, `opinion `, `ensure_exists
+    `.
+
+    """
+
+    @property
+    def user_data_dir(self) -> str:
+        """
+        :return: data directory tied to the user, e.g. ``~/.local/share/$appname/$version`` or
+         ``$XDG_DATA_HOME/$appname/$version``
+        """
+        path = os.environ.get("XDG_DATA_HOME", "")
+        if not path.strip():
+            path = os.path.expanduser("~/.local/share")  # noqa: PTH111
+        return self._append_app_name_and_version(path)
+
+    @property
+    def _site_data_dirs(self) -> list[str]:
+        path = os.environ.get("XDG_DATA_DIRS", "")
+        if not path.strip():
+            path = f"/usr/local/share{os.pathsep}/usr/share"
+        return [self._append_app_name_and_version(p) for p in path.split(os.pathsep)]
+
+    @property
+    def site_data_dir(self) -> str:
+        """
+        :return: data directories shared by users (if `multipath ` is
+         enabled and ``XDG_DATA_DIRS`` is set and a multi path the response is also a multi path separated by the
+         OS path separator), e.g. ``/usr/local/share/$appname/$version`` or ``/usr/share/$appname/$version``
+        """
+        # XDG default for $XDG_DATA_DIRS; only first, if multipath is False
+        dirs = self._site_data_dirs
+        if not self.multipath:
+            return dirs[0]
+        return os.pathsep.join(dirs)
+
+    @property
+    def user_config_dir(self) -> str:
+        """
+        :return: config directory tied to the user, e.g. ``~/.config/$appname/$version`` or
+         ``$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/$appname/$version``
+        """
+        path = os.environ.get("XDG_CONFIG_HOME", "")
+        if not path.strip():
+            path = os.path.expanduser("~/.config")  # noqa: PTH111
+        return self._append_app_name_and_version(path)
+
+    @property
+    def _site_config_dirs(self) -> list[str]:
+        path = os.environ.get("XDG_CONFIG_DIRS", "")
+        if not path.strip():
+            path = "/etc/xdg"
+        return [self._append_app_name_and_version(p) for p in path.split(os.pathsep)]
+
+    @property
+    def site_config_dir(self) -> str:
+        """
+        :return: config directories shared by users (if `multipath `
+         is enabled and ``XDG_CONFIG_DIRS`` is set and a multi path the response is also a multi path separated by
+         the OS path separator), e.g. ``/etc/xdg/$appname/$version``
+        """
+        # XDG default for $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS only first, if multipath is False
+        dirs = self._site_config_dirs
+        if not self.multipath:
+            return dirs[0]
+        return os.pathsep.join(dirs)
+
+    @property
+    def user_cache_dir(self) -> str:
+        """
+        :return: cache directory tied to the user, e.g. ``~/.cache/$appname/$version`` or
+         ``~/$XDG_CACHE_HOME/$appname/$version``
+        """
+        path = os.environ.get("XDG_CACHE_HOME", "")
+        if not path.strip():
+            path = os.path.expanduser("~/.cache")  # noqa: PTH111
+        return self._append_app_name_and_version(path)
+
+    @property
+    def site_cache_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: cache directory shared by users, e.g. ``/var/cache/$appname/$version``"""
+        return self._append_app_name_and_version("/var/cache")
+
+    @property
+    def user_state_dir(self) -> str:
+        """
+        :return: state directory tied to the user, e.g. ``~/.local/state/$appname/$version`` or
+         ``$XDG_STATE_HOME/$appname/$version``
+        """
+        path = os.environ.get("XDG_STATE_HOME", "")
+        if not path.strip():
+            path = os.path.expanduser("~/.local/state")  # noqa: PTH111
+        return self._append_app_name_and_version(path)
+
+    @property
+    def user_log_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: log directory tied to the user, same as `user_state_dir` if not opinionated else ``log`` in it"""
+        path = self.user_state_dir
+        if self.opinion:
+            path = os.path.join(path, "log")  # noqa: PTH118
+            self._optionally_create_directory(path)
+        return path
+
+    @property
+    def user_documents_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: documents directory tied to the user, e.g. ``~/Documents``"""
+        return _get_user_media_dir("XDG_DOCUMENTS_DIR", "~/Documents")
+
+    @property
+    def user_downloads_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: downloads directory tied to the user, e.g. ``~/Downloads``"""
+        return _get_user_media_dir("XDG_DOWNLOAD_DIR", "~/Downloads")
+
+    @property
+    def user_pictures_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: pictures directory tied to the user, e.g. ``~/Pictures``"""
+        return _get_user_media_dir("XDG_PICTURES_DIR", "~/Pictures")
+
+    @property
+    def user_videos_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: videos directory tied to the user, e.g. ``~/Videos``"""
+        return _get_user_media_dir("XDG_VIDEOS_DIR", "~/Videos")
+
+    @property
+    def user_music_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: music directory tied to the user, e.g. ``~/Music``"""
+        return _get_user_media_dir("XDG_MUSIC_DIR", "~/Music")
+
+    @property
+    def user_desktop_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: desktop directory tied to the user, e.g. ``~/Desktop``"""
+        return _get_user_media_dir("XDG_DESKTOP_DIR", "~/Desktop")
+
+    @property
+    def user_runtime_dir(self) -> str:
+        """
+        :return: runtime directory tied to the user, e.g. ``/run/user/$(id -u)/$appname/$version`` or
+         ``$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/$appname/$version``.
+
+         For FreeBSD/OpenBSD/NetBSD, it would return ``/var/run/user/$(id -u)/$appname/$version`` if
+         exists, otherwise ``/tmp/runtime-$(id -u)/$appname/$version``, if``$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR``
+         is not set.
+        """
+        path = os.environ.get("XDG_RUNTIME_DIR", "")
+        if not path.strip():
+            if sys.platform.startswith(("freebsd", "openbsd", "netbsd")):
+                path = f"/var/run/user/{getuid()}"
+                if not Path(path).exists():
+                    path = f"/tmp/runtime-{getuid()}"  # noqa: S108
+            else:
+                path = f"/run/user/{getuid()}"
+        return self._append_app_name_and_version(path)
+
+    @property
+    def site_runtime_dir(self) -> str:
+        """
+        :return: runtime directory shared by users, e.g. ``/run/$appname/$version`` or \
+        ``$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/$appname/$version``.
+
+        Note that this behaves almost exactly like `user_runtime_dir` if ``$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR`` is set, but will
+        fall back to paths associated to the root user instead of a regular logged-in user if it's not set.
+
+        If you wish to ensure that a logged-in root user path is returned e.g. ``/run/user/0``, use `user_runtime_dir`
+        instead.
+
+        For FreeBSD/OpenBSD/NetBSD, it would return ``/var/run/$appname/$version`` if ``$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR`` is not set.
+        """
+        path = os.environ.get("XDG_RUNTIME_DIR", "")
+        if not path.strip():
+            if sys.platform.startswith(("freebsd", "openbsd", "netbsd")):
+                path = "/var/run"
+            else:
+                path = "/run"
+        return self._append_app_name_and_version(path)
+
+    @property
+    def site_data_path(self) -> Path:
+        """:return: data path shared by users. Only return the first item, even if ``multipath`` is set to ``True``"""
+        return self._first_item_as_path_if_multipath(self.site_data_dir)
+
+    @property
+    def site_config_path(self) -> Path:
+        """:return: config path shared by the users, returns the first item, even if ``multipath`` is set to ``True``"""
+        return self._first_item_as_path_if_multipath(self.site_config_dir)
+
+    @property
+    def site_cache_path(self) -> Path:
+        """:return: cache path shared by users. Only return the first item, even if ``multipath`` is set to ``True``"""
+        return self._first_item_as_path_if_multipath(self.site_cache_dir)
+
+    def iter_config_dirs(self) -> Iterator[str]:
+        """:yield: all user and site configuration directories."""
+        yield self.user_config_dir
+        yield from self._site_config_dirs
+
+    def iter_data_dirs(self) -> Iterator[str]:
+        """:yield: all user and site data directories."""
+        yield self.user_data_dir
+        yield from self._site_data_dirs
+
+
+def _get_user_media_dir(env_var: str, fallback_tilde_path: str) -> str:
+    media_dir = _get_user_dirs_folder(env_var)
+    if media_dir is None:
+        media_dir = os.environ.get(env_var, "").strip()
+        if not media_dir:
+            media_dir = os.path.expanduser(fallback_tilde_path)  # noqa: PTH111
+
+    return media_dir
+
+
+def _get_user_dirs_folder(key: str) -> str | None:
+    """
+    Return directory from user-dirs.dirs config file.
+
+    See https://freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/xdg-user-dirs/.
+
+    """
+    user_dirs_config_path = Path(Unix().user_config_dir) / "user-dirs.dirs"
+    if user_dirs_config_path.exists():
+        parser = ConfigParser()
+
+        with user_dirs_config_path.open() as stream:
+            # Add fake section header, so ConfigParser doesn't complain
+            parser.read_string(f"[top]\n{stream.read()}")
+
+        if key not in parser["top"]:
+            return None
+
+        path = parser["top"][key].strip('"')
+        # Handle relative home paths
+        return path.replace("$HOME", os.path.expanduser("~"))  # noqa: PTH111
+
+    return None
+
+
+__all__ = [
+    "Unix",
+]
diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/version.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/version.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..b9451472c3c68e0d775e32c8b193bf93bf217107
--- /dev/null
+++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/version.py
@@ -0,0 +1,34 @@
+# file generated by setuptools-scm
+# don't change, don't track in version control
+
+__all__ = [
+    "__version__",
+    "__version_tuple__",
+    "version",
+    "version_tuple",
+    "__commit_id__",
+    "commit_id",
+]
+
+TYPE_CHECKING = False
+if TYPE_CHECKING:
+    from typing import Tuple
+    from typing import Union
+
+    VERSION_TUPLE = Tuple[Union[int, str], ...]
+    COMMIT_ID = Union[str, None]
+else:
+    VERSION_TUPLE = object
+    COMMIT_ID = object
+
+version: str
+__version__: str
+__version_tuple__: VERSION_TUPLE
+version_tuple: VERSION_TUPLE
+commit_id: COMMIT_ID
+__commit_id__: COMMIT_ID
+
+__version__ = version = '4.4.0'
+__version_tuple__ = version_tuple = (4, 4, 0)
+
+__commit_id__ = commit_id = None
diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/windows.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/windows.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..d7bc96091a2b1cd078a0847519cb5dd50a5d8898
--- /dev/null
+++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/platformdirs/windows.py
@@ -0,0 +1,272 @@
+"""Windows."""
+
+from __future__ import annotations
+
+import os
+import sys
+from functools import lru_cache
+from typing import TYPE_CHECKING
+
+from .api import PlatformDirsABC
+
+if TYPE_CHECKING:
+    from collections.abc import Callable
+
+
+class Windows(PlatformDirsABC):
+    """
+    `MSDN on where to store app data files `_.
+
+    Makes use of the `appname `, `appauthor
+    `, `version `, `roaming
+    `, `opinion `, `ensure_exists
+    `.
+
+    """
+
+    @property
+    def user_data_dir(self) -> str:
+        """
+        :return: data directory tied to the user, e.g.
+         ``%USERPROFILE%\\AppData\\Local\\$appauthor\\$appname`` (not roaming) or
+         ``%USERPROFILE%\\AppData\\Roaming\\$appauthor\\$appname`` (roaming)
+        """
+        const = "CSIDL_APPDATA" if self.roaming else "CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATA"
+        path = os.path.normpath(get_win_folder(const))
+        return self._append_parts(path)
+
+    def _append_parts(self, path: str, *, opinion_value: str | None = None) -> str:
+        params = []
+        if self.appname:
+            if self.appauthor is not False:
+                author = self.appauthor or self.appname
+                params.append(author)
+            params.append(self.appname)
+            if opinion_value is not None and self.opinion:
+                params.append(opinion_value)
+            if self.version:
+                params.append(self.version)
+        path = os.path.join(path, *params)  # noqa: PTH118
+        self._optionally_create_directory(path)
+        return path
+
+    @property
+    def site_data_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: data directory shared by users, e.g. ``C:\\ProgramData\\$appauthor\\$appname``"""
+        path = os.path.normpath(get_win_folder("CSIDL_COMMON_APPDATA"))
+        return self._append_parts(path)
+
+    @property
+    def user_config_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: config directory tied to the user, same as `user_data_dir`"""
+        return self.user_data_dir
+
+    @property
+    def site_config_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: config directory shared by the users, same as `site_data_dir`"""
+        return self.site_data_dir
+
+    @property
+    def user_cache_dir(self) -> str:
+        """
+        :return: cache directory tied to the user (if opinionated with ``Cache`` folder within ``$appname``) e.g.
+         ``%USERPROFILE%\\AppData\\Local\\$appauthor\\$appname\\Cache\\$version``
+        """
+        path = os.path.normpath(get_win_folder("CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATA"))
+        return self._append_parts(path, opinion_value="Cache")
+
+    @property
+    def site_cache_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: cache directory shared by users, e.g. ``C:\\ProgramData\\$appauthor\\$appname\\Cache\\$version``"""
+        path = os.path.normpath(get_win_folder("CSIDL_COMMON_APPDATA"))
+        return self._append_parts(path, opinion_value="Cache")
+
+    @property
+    def user_state_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: state directory tied to the user, same as `user_data_dir`"""
+        return self.user_data_dir
+
+    @property
+    def user_log_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: log directory tied to the user, same as `user_data_dir` if not opinionated else ``Logs`` in it"""
+        path = self.user_data_dir
+        if self.opinion:
+            path = os.path.join(path, "Logs")  # noqa: PTH118
+            self._optionally_create_directory(path)
+        return path
+
+    @property
+    def user_documents_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: documents directory tied to the user e.g. ``%USERPROFILE%\\Documents``"""
+        return os.path.normpath(get_win_folder("CSIDL_PERSONAL"))
+
+    @property
+    def user_downloads_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: downloads directory tied to the user e.g. ``%USERPROFILE%\\Downloads``"""
+        return os.path.normpath(get_win_folder("CSIDL_DOWNLOADS"))
+
+    @property
+    def user_pictures_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: pictures directory tied to the user e.g. ``%USERPROFILE%\\Pictures``"""
+        return os.path.normpath(get_win_folder("CSIDL_MYPICTURES"))
+
+    @property
+    def user_videos_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: videos directory tied to the user e.g. ``%USERPROFILE%\\Videos``"""
+        return os.path.normpath(get_win_folder("CSIDL_MYVIDEO"))
+
+    @property
+    def user_music_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: music directory tied to the user e.g. ``%USERPROFILE%\\Music``"""
+        return os.path.normpath(get_win_folder("CSIDL_MYMUSIC"))
+
+    @property
+    def user_desktop_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: desktop directory tied to the user, e.g. ``%USERPROFILE%\\Desktop``"""
+        return os.path.normpath(get_win_folder("CSIDL_DESKTOPDIRECTORY"))
+
+    @property
+    def user_runtime_dir(self) -> str:
+        """
+        :return: runtime directory tied to the user, e.g.
+         ``%USERPROFILE%\\AppData\\Local\\Temp\\$appauthor\\$appname``
+        """
+        path = os.path.normpath(os.path.join(get_win_folder("CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATA"), "Temp"))  # noqa: PTH118
+        return self._append_parts(path)
+
+    @property
+    def site_runtime_dir(self) -> str:
+        """:return: runtime directory shared by users, same as `user_runtime_dir`"""
+        return self.user_runtime_dir
+
+
+def get_win_folder_from_env_vars(csidl_name: str) -> str:
+    """Get folder from environment variables."""
+    result = get_win_folder_if_csidl_name_not_env_var(csidl_name)
+    if result is not None:
+        return result
+
+    env_var_name = {
+        "CSIDL_APPDATA": "APPDATA",
+        "CSIDL_COMMON_APPDATA": "ALLUSERSPROFILE",
+        "CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATA": "LOCALAPPDATA",
+    }.get(csidl_name)
+    if env_var_name is None:
+        msg = f"Unknown CSIDL name: {csidl_name}"
+        raise ValueError(msg)
+    result = os.environ.get(env_var_name)
+    if result is None:
+        msg = f"Unset environment variable: {env_var_name}"
+        raise ValueError(msg)
+    return result
+
+
+def get_win_folder_if_csidl_name_not_env_var(csidl_name: str) -> str | None:
+    """Get a folder for a CSIDL name that does not exist as an environment variable."""
+    if csidl_name == "CSIDL_PERSONAL":
+        return os.path.join(os.path.normpath(os.environ["USERPROFILE"]), "Documents")  # noqa: PTH118
+
+    if csidl_name == "CSIDL_DOWNLOADS":
+        return os.path.join(os.path.normpath(os.environ["USERPROFILE"]), "Downloads")  # noqa: PTH118
+
+    if csidl_name == "CSIDL_MYPICTURES":
+        return os.path.join(os.path.normpath(os.environ["USERPROFILE"]), "Pictures")  # noqa: PTH118
+
+    if csidl_name == "CSIDL_MYVIDEO":
+        return os.path.join(os.path.normpath(os.environ["USERPROFILE"]), "Videos")  # noqa: PTH118
+
+    if csidl_name == "CSIDL_MYMUSIC":
+        return os.path.join(os.path.normpath(os.environ["USERPROFILE"]), "Music")  # noqa: PTH118
+    return None
+
+
+def get_win_folder_from_registry(csidl_name: str) -> str:
+    """
+    Get folder from the registry.
+
+    This is a fallback technique at best. I'm not sure if using the registry for these guarantees us the correct answer
+    for all CSIDL_* names.
+
+    """
+    shell_folder_name = {
+        "CSIDL_APPDATA": "AppData",
+        "CSIDL_COMMON_APPDATA": "Common AppData",
+        "CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATA": "Local AppData",
+        "CSIDL_PERSONAL": "Personal",
+        "CSIDL_DOWNLOADS": "{374DE290-123F-4565-9164-39C4925E467B}",
+        "CSIDL_MYPICTURES": "My Pictures",
+        "CSIDL_MYVIDEO": "My Video",
+        "CSIDL_MYMUSIC": "My Music",
+    }.get(csidl_name)
+    if shell_folder_name is None:
+        msg = f"Unknown CSIDL name: {csidl_name}"
+        raise ValueError(msg)
+    if sys.platform != "win32":  # only needed for mypy type checker to know that this code runs only on Windows
+        raise NotImplementedError
+    import winreg  # noqa: PLC0415
+
+    key = winreg.OpenKey(winreg.HKEY_CURRENT_USER, r"Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\Shell Folders")
+    directory, _ = winreg.QueryValueEx(key, shell_folder_name)
+    return str(directory)
+
+
+def get_win_folder_via_ctypes(csidl_name: str) -> str:
+    """Get folder with ctypes."""
+    # There is no 'CSIDL_DOWNLOADS'.
+    # Use 'CSIDL_PROFILE' (40) and append the default folder 'Downloads' instead.
+    # https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/shell/knownfolderid
+
+    import ctypes  # noqa: PLC0415
+
+    csidl_const = {
+        "CSIDL_APPDATA": 26,
+        "CSIDL_COMMON_APPDATA": 35,
+        "CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATA": 28,
+        "CSIDL_PERSONAL": 5,
+        "CSIDL_MYPICTURES": 39,
+        "CSIDL_MYVIDEO": 14,
+        "CSIDL_MYMUSIC": 13,
+        "CSIDL_DOWNLOADS": 40,
+        "CSIDL_DESKTOPDIRECTORY": 16,
+    }.get(csidl_name)
+    if csidl_const is None:
+        msg = f"Unknown CSIDL name: {csidl_name}"
+        raise ValueError(msg)
+
+    buf = ctypes.create_unicode_buffer(1024)
+    windll = getattr(ctypes, "windll")  # noqa: B009 # using getattr to avoid false positive with mypy type checker
+    windll.shell32.SHGetFolderPathW(None, csidl_const, None, 0, buf)
+
+    # Downgrade to short path name if it has high-bit chars.
+    if any(ord(c) > 255 for c in buf):  # noqa: PLR2004
+        buf2 = ctypes.create_unicode_buffer(1024)
+        if windll.kernel32.GetShortPathNameW(buf.value, buf2, 1024):
+            buf = buf2
+
+    if csidl_name == "CSIDL_DOWNLOADS":
+        return os.path.join(buf.value, "Downloads")  # noqa: PTH118
+
+    return buf.value
+
+
+def _pick_get_win_folder() -> Callable[[str], str]:
+    try:
+        import ctypes  # noqa: PLC0415
+    except ImportError:
+        pass
+    else:
+        if hasattr(ctypes, "windll"):
+            return get_win_folder_via_ctypes
+    try:
+        import winreg  # noqa: PLC0415, F401
+    except ImportError:
+        return get_win_folder_from_env_vars
+    else:
+        return get_win_folder_from_registry
+
+
+get_win_folder = lru_cache(maxsize=None)(_pick_get_win_folder())
+
+__all__ = [
+    "Windows",
+]
diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/tomli/_parser.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/tomli/_parser.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..3038891afec8d4e6608ae4209365cf31f94b7f41
--- /dev/null
+++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/tomli/_parser.py
@@ -0,0 +1,782 @@
+# SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
+# SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2021 Taneli Hukkinen
+# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.
+
+from __future__ import annotations
+
+import sys
+from types import MappingProxyType
+
+from ._re import (
+    RE_DATETIME,
+    RE_LOCALTIME,
+    RE_NUMBER,
+    match_to_datetime,
+    match_to_localtime,
+    match_to_number,
+)
+
+TYPE_CHECKING = False
+if TYPE_CHECKING:
+    from collections.abc import Iterable
+    from typing import IO, Any, Final
+
+    from ._types import Key, ParseFloat, Pos
+
+# Inline tables/arrays are implemented using recursion. Pathologically
+# nested documents cause pure Python to raise RecursionError (which is OK),
+# but mypyc binary wheels will crash unrecoverably (not OK). According to
+# mypyc docs this will be fixed in the future:
+# https://mypyc.readthedocs.io/en/latest/differences_from_python.html#stack-overflows
+# Before mypyc's fix is in, recursion needs to be limited by this library.
+# Choosing `sys.getrecursionlimit()` as maximum inline table/array nesting
+# level, as it allows more nesting than pure Python, but still seems a far
+# lower number than where mypyc binaries crash.
+MAX_INLINE_NESTING: Final = sys.getrecursionlimit()
+
+ASCII_CTRL: Final = frozenset(chr(i) for i in range(32)) | frozenset(chr(127))
+
+# Neither of these sets include quotation mark or backslash. They are
+# currently handled as separate cases in the parser functions.
+ILLEGAL_BASIC_STR_CHARS: Final = ASCII_CTRL - frozenset("\t")
+ILLEGAL_MULTILINE_BASIC_STR_CHARS: Final = ASCII_CTRL - frozenset("\t\n")
+
+ILLEGAL_LITERAL_STR_CHARS: Final = ILLEGAL_BASIC_STR_CHARS
+ILLEGAL_MULTILINE_LITERAL_STR_CHARS: Final = ILLEGAL_MULTILINE_BASIC_STR_CHARS
+
+ILLEGAL_COMMENT_CHARS: Final = ILLEGAL_BASIC_STR_CHARS
+
+TOML_WS: Final = frozenset(" \t")
+TOML_WS_AND_NEWLINE: Final = TOML_WS | frozenset("\n")
+BARE_KEY_CHARS: Final = frozenset(
+    "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz" "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ" "0123456789" "-_"
+)
+KEY_INITIAL_CHARS: Final = BARE_KEY_CHARS | frozenset("\"'")
+HEXDIGIT_CHARS: Final = frozenset("abcdef" "ABCDEF" "0123456789")
+
+BASIC_STR_ESCAPE_REPLACEMENTS: Final = MappingProxyType(
+    {
+        "\\b": "\u0008",  # backspace
+        "\\t": "\u0009",  # tab
+        "\\n": "\u000a",  # linefeed
+        "\\f": "\u000c",  # form feed
+        "\\r": "\u000d",  # carriage return
+        "\\e": "\u001b",  # escape
+        '\\"': "\u0022",  # quote
+        "\\\\": "\u005c",  # backslash
+    }
+)
+
+
+class DEPRECATED_DEFAULT:
+    """Sentinel to be used as default arg during deprecation
+    period of TOMLDecodeError's free-form arguments."""
+
+
+class TOMLDecodeError(ValueError):
+    """An error raised if a document is not valid TOML.
+
+    Adds the following attributes to ValueError:
+    msg: The unformatted error message
+    doc: The TOML document being parsed
+    pos: The index of doc where parsing failed
+    lineno: The line corresponding to pos
+    colno: The column corresponding to pos
+    """
+
+    def __init__(
+        self,
+        msg: str | type[DEPRECATED_DEFAULT] = DEPRECATED_DEFAULT,
+        doc: str | type[DEPRECATED_DEFAULT] = DEPRECATED_DEFAULT,
+        pos: Pos | type[DEPRECATED_DEFAULT] = DEPRECATED_DEFAULT,
+        *args: Any,
+    ):
+        if (
+            args
+            or not isinstance(msg, str)
+            or not isinstance(doc, str)
+            or not isinstance(pos, int)
+        ):
+            import warnings
+
+            warnings.warn(
+                "Free-form arguments for TOMLDecodeError are deprecated. "
+                "Please set 'msg' (str), 'doc' (str) and 'pos' (int) arguments only.",
+                DeprecationWarning,
+                stacklevel=2,
+            )
+            if pos is not DEPRECATED_DEFAULT:
+                args = pos, *args
+            if doc is not DEPRECATED_DEFAULT:
+                args = doc, *args
+            if msg is not DEPRECATED_DEFAULT:
+                args = msg, *args
+            ValueError.__init__(self, *args)
+            return
+
+        lineno = doc.count("\n", 0, pos) + 1
+        if lineno == 1:
+            colno = pos + 1
+        else:
+            colno = pos - doc.rindex("\n", 0, pos)
+
+        if pos >= len(doc):
+            coord_repr = "end of document"
+        else:
+            coord_repr = f"line {lineno}, column {colno}"
+        errmsg = f"{msg} (at {coord_repr})"
+        ValueError.__init__(self, errmsg)
+
+        self.msg = msg
+        self.doc = doc
+        self.pos = pos
+        self.lineno = lineno
+        self.colno = colno
+
+
+def load(__fp: IO[bytes], *, parse_float: ParseFloat = float) -> dict[str, Any]:
+    """Parse TOML from a binary file object."""
+    b = __fp.read()
+    try:
+        s = b.decode()
+    except AttributeError:
+        raise TypeError(
+            "File must be opened in binary mode, e.g. use `open('foo.toml', 'rb')`"
+        ) from None
+    return loads(s, parse_float=parse_float)
+
+
+def loads(__s: str, *, parse_float: ParseFloat = float) -> dict[str, Any]:
+    """Parse TOML from a string."""
+
+    # The spec allows converting "\r\n" to "\n", even in string
+    # literals. Let's do so to simplify parsing.
+    try:
+        src = __s.replace("\r\n", "\n")
+    except (AttributeError, TypeError):
+        raise TypeError(
+            f"Expected str object, not '{type(__s).__qualname__}'"
+        ) from None
+    pos = 0
+    out = Output()
+    header: Key = ()
+    parse_float = make_safe_parse_float(parse_float)
+
+    # Parse one statement at a time
+    # (typically means one line in TOML source)
+    while True:
+        # 1. Skip line leading whitespace
+        pos = skip_chars(src, pos, TOML_WS)
+
+        # 2. Parse rules. Expect one of the following:
+        #    - end of file
+        #    - end of line
+        #    - comment
+        #    - key/value pair
+        #    - append dict to list (and move to its namespace)
+        #    - create dict (and move to its namespace)
+        # Skip trailing whitespace when applicable.
+        try:
+            char = src[pos]
+        except IndexError:
+            break
+        if char == "\n":
+            pos += 1
+            continue
+        if char in KEY_INITIAL_CHARS:
+            pos = key_value_rule(src, pos, out, header, parse_float)
+            pos = skip_chars(src, pos, TOML_WS)
+        elif char == "[":
+            try:
+                second_char: str | None = src[pos + 1]
+            except IndexError:
+                second_char = None
+            out.flags.finalize_pending()
+            if second_char == "[":
+                pos, header = create_list_rule(src, pos, out)
+            else:
+                pos, header = create_dict_rule(src, pos, out)
+            pos = skip_chars(src, pos, TOML_WS)
+        elif char != "#":
+            raise TOMLDecodeError("Invalid statement", src, pos)
+
+        # 3. Skip comment
+        pos = skip_comment(src, pos)
+
+        # 4. Expect end of line or end of file
+        try:
+            char = src[pos]
+        except IndexError:
+            break
+        if char != "\n":
+            raise TOMLDecodeError(
+                "Expected newline or end of document after a statement", src, pos
+            )
+        pos += 1
+
+    return out.data.dict
+
+
+class Flags:
+    """Flags that map to parsed keys/namespaces."""
+
+    # Marks an immutable namespace (inline array or inline table).
+    FROZEN: Final = 0
+    # Marks a nest that has been explicitly created and can no longer
+    # be opened using the "[table]" syntax.
+    EXPLICIT_NEST: Final = 1
+
+    def __init__(self) -> None:
+        self._flags: dict[str, dict[Any, Any]] = {}
+        self._pending_flags: set[tuple[Key, int]] = set()
+
+    def add_pending(self, key: Key, flag: int) -> None:
+        self._pending_flags.add((key, flag))
+
+    def finalize_pending(self) -> None:
+        for key, flag in self._pending_flags:
+            self.set(key, flag, recursive=False)
+        self._pending_flags.clear()
+
+    def unset_all(self, key: Key) -> None:
+        cont = self._flags
+        for k in key[:-1]:
+            if k not in cont:
+                return
+            cont = cont[k]["nested"]
+        cont.pop(key[-1], None)
+
+    def set(self, key: Key, flag: int, *, recursive: bool) -> None:  # noqa: A003
+        cont = self._flags
+        key_parent, key_stem = key[:-1], key[-1]
+        for k in key_parent:
+            if k not in cont:
+                cont[k] = {"flags": set(), "recursive_flags": set(), "nested": {}}
+            cont = cont[k]["nested"]
+        if key_stem not in cont:
+            cont[key_stem] = {"flags": set(), "recursive_flags": set(), "nested": {}}
+        cont[key_stem]["recursive_flags" if recursive else "flags"].add(flag)
+
+    def is_(self, key: Key, flag: int) -> bool:
+        if not key:
+            return False  # document root has no flags
+        cont = self._flags
+        for k in key[:-1]:
+            if k not in cont:
+                return False
+            inner_cont = cont[k]
+            if flag in inner_cont["recursive_flags"]:
+                return True
+            cont = inner_cont["nested"]
+        key_stem = key[-1]
+        if key_stem in cont:
+            inner_cont = cont[key_stem]
+            return flag in inner_cont["flags"] or flag in inner_cont["recursive_flags"]
+        return False
+
+
+class NestedDict:
+    def __init__(self) -> None:
+        # The parsed content of the TOML document
+        self.dict: dict[str, Any] = {}
+
+    def get_or_create_nest(
+        self,
+        key: Key,
+        *,
+        access_lists: bool = True,
+    ) -> dict[str, Any]:
+        cont: Any = self.dict
+        for k in key:
+            if k not in cont:
+                cont[k] = {}
+            cont = cont[k]
+            if access_lists and isinstance(cont, list):
+                cont = cont[-1]
+            if not isinstance(cont, dict):
+                raise KeyError("There is no nest behind this key")
+        return cont  # type: ignore[no-any-return]
+
+    def append_nest_to_list(self, key: Key) -> None:
+        cont = self.get_or_create_nest(key[:-1])
+        last_key = key[-1]
+        if last_key in cont:
+            list_ = cont[last_key]
+            if not isinstance(list_, list):
+                raise KeyError("An object other than list found behind this key")
+            list_.append({})
+        else:
+            cont[last_key] = [{}]
+
+
+class Output:
+    def __init__(self) -> None:
+        self.data = NestedDict()
+        self.flags = Flags()
+
+
+def skip_chars(src: str, pos: Pos, chars: Iterable[str]) -> Pos:
+    try:
+        while src[pos] in chars:
+            pos += 1
+    except IndexError:
+        pass
+    return pos
+
+
+def skip_until(
+    src: str,
+    pos: Pos,
+    expect: str,
+    *,
+    error_on: frozenset[str],
+    error_on_eof: bool,
+) -> Pos:
+    try:
+        new_pos = src.index(expect, pos)
+    except ValueError:
+        new_pos = len(src)
+        if error_on_eof:
+            raise TOMLDecodeError(f"Expected {expect!r}", src, new_pos) from None
+
+    if not error_on.isdisjoint(src[pos:new_pos]):
+        while src[pos] not in error_on:
+            pos += 1
+        raise TOMLDecodeError(f"Found invalid character {src[pos]!r}", src, pos)
+    return new_pos
+
+
+def skip_comment(src: str, pos: Pos) -> Pos:
+    try:
+        char: str | None = src[pos]
+    except IndexError:
+        char = None
+    if char == "#":
+        return skip_until(
+            src, pos + 1, "\n", error_on=ILLEGAL_COMMENT_CHARS, error_on_eof=False
+        )
+    return pos
+
+
+def skip_comments_and_array_ws(src: str, pos: Pos) -> Pos:
+    while True:
+        pos_before_skip = pos
+        pos = skip_chars(src, pos, TOML_WS_AND_NEWLINE)
+        pos = skip_comment(src, pos)
+        if pos == pos_before_skip:
+            return pos
+
+
+def create_dict_rule(src: str, pos: Pos, out: Output) -> tuple[Pos, Key]:
+    pos += 1  # Skip "["
+    pos = skip_chars(src, pos, TOML_WS)
+    pos, key = parse_key(src, pos)
+
+    if out.flags.is_(key, Flags.EXPLICIT_NEST) or out.flags.is_(key, Flags.FROZEN):
+        raise TOMLDecodeError(f"Cannot declare {key} twice", src, pos)
+    out.flags.set(key, Flags.EXPLICIT_NEST, recursive=False)
+    try:
+        out.data.get_or_create_nest(key)
+    except KeyError:
+        raise TOMLDecodeError("Cannot overwrite a value", src, pos) from None
+
+    if not src.startswith("]", pos):
+        raise TOMLDecodeError(
+            "Expected ']' at the end of a table declaration", src, pos
+        )
+    return pos + 1, key
+
+
+def create_list_rule(src: str, pos: Pos, out: Output) -> tuple[Pos, Key]:
+    pos += 2  # Skip "[["
+    pos = skip_chars(src, pos, TOML_WS)
+    pos, key = parse_key(src, pos)
+
+    if out.flags.is_(key, Flags.FROZEN):
+        raise TOMLDecodeError(f"Cannot mutate immutable namespace {key}", src, pos)
+    # Free the namespace now that it points to another empty list item...
+    out.flags.unset_all(key)
+    # ...but this key precisely is still prohibited from table declaration
+    out.flags.set(key, Flags.EXPLICIT_NEST, recursive=False)
+    try:
+        out.data.append_nest_to_list(key)
+    except KeyError:
+        raise TOMLDecodeError("Cannot overwrite a value", src, pos) from None
+
+    if not src.startswith("]]", pos):
+        raise TOMLDecodeError(
+            "Expected ']]' at the end of an array declaration", src, pos
+        )
+    return pos + 2, key
+
+
+def key_value_rule(
+    src: str, pos: Pos, out: Output, header: Key, parse_float: ParseFloat
+) -> Pos:
+    pos, key, value = parse_key_value_pair(src, pos, parse_float, nest_lvl=0)
+    key_parent, key_stem = key[:-1], key[-1]
+    abs_key_parent = header + key_parent
+
+    relative_path_cont_keys = (header + key[:i] for i in range(1, len(key)))
+    for cont_key in relative_path_cont_keys:
+        # Check that dotted key syntax does not redefine an existing table
+        if out.flags.is_(cont_key, Flags.EXPLICIT_NEST):
+            raise TOMLDecodeError(f"Cannot redefine namespace {cont_key}", src, pos)
+        # Containers in the relative path can't be opened with the table syntax or
+        # dotted key/value syntax in following table sections.
+        out.flags.add_pending(cont_key, Flags.EXPLICIT_NEST)
+
+    if out.flags.is_(abs_key_parent, Flags.FROZEN):
+        raise TOMLDecodeError(
+            f"Cannot mutate immutable namespace {abs_key_parent}", src, pos
+        )
+
+    try:
+        nest = out.data.get_or_create_nest(abs_key_parent)
+    except KeyError:
+        raise TOMLDecodeError("Cannot overwrite a value", src, pos) from None
+    if key_stem in nest:
+        raise TOMLDecodeError("Cannot overwrite a value", src, pos)
+    # Mark inline table and array namespaces recursively immutable
+    if isinstance(value, (dict, list)):
+        out.flags.set(header + key, Flags.FROZEN, recursive=True)
+    nest[key_stem] = value
+    return pos
+
+
+def parse_key_value_pair(
+    src: str, pos: Pos, parse_float: ParseFloat, nest_lvl: int
+) -> tuple[Pos, Key, Any]:
+    pos, key = parse_key(src, pos)
+    try:
+        char: str | None = src[pos]
+    except IndexError:
+        char = None
+    if char != "=":
+        raise TOMLDecodeError("Expected '=' after a key in a key/value pair", src, pos)
+    pos += 1
+    pos = skip_chars(src, pos, TOML_WS)
+    pos, value = parse_value(src, pos, parse_float, nest_lvl)
+    return pos, key, value
+
+
+def parse_key(src: str, pos: Pos) -> tuple[Pos, Key]:
+    pos, key_part = parse_key_part(src, pos)
+    key: Key = (key_part,)
+    pos = skip_chars(src, pos, TOML_WS)
+    while True:
+        try:
+            char: str | None = src[pos]
+        except IndexError:
+            char = None
+        if char != ".":
+            return pos, key
+        pos += 1
+        pos = skip_chars(src, pos, TOML_WS)
+        pos, key_part = parse_key_part(src, pos)
+        key += (key_part,)
+        pos = skip_chars(src, pos, TOML_WS)
+
+
+def parse_key_part(src: str, pos: Pos) -> tuple[Pos, str]:
+    try:
+        char: str | None = src[pos]
+    except IndexError:
+        char = None
+    if char in BARE_KEY_CHARS:
+        start_pos = pos
+        pos = skip_chars(src, pos, BARE_KEY_CHARS)
+        return pos, src[start_pos:pos]
+    if char == "'":
+        return parse_literal_str(src, pos)
+    if char == '"':
+        return parse_one_line_basic_str(src, pos)
+    raise TOMLDecodeError("Invalid initial character for a key part", src, pos)
+
+
+def parse_one_line_basic_str(src: str, pos: Pos) -> tuple[Pos, str]:
+    pos += 1
+    return parse_basic_str(src, pos, multiline=False)
+
+
+def parse_array(
+    src: str, pos: Pos, parse_float: ParseFloat, nest_lvl: int
+) -> tuple[Pos, list[Any]]:
+    pos += 1
+    array: list[Any] = []
+
+    pos = skip_comments_and_array_ws(src, pos)
+    if src.startswith("]", pos):
+        return pos + 1, array
+    while True:
+        pos, val = parse_value(src, pos, parse_float, nest_lvl)
+        array.append(val)
+        pos = skip_comments_and_array_ws(src, pos)
+
+        c = src[pos : pos + 1]
+        if c == "]":
+            return pos + 1, array
+        if c != ",":
+            raise TOMLDecodeError("Unclosed array", src, pos)
+        pos += 1
+
+        pos = skip_comments_and_array_ws(src, pos)
+        if src.startswith("]", pos):
+            return pos + 1, array
+
+
+def parse_inline_table(
+    src: str, pos: Pos, parse_float: ParseFloat, nest_lvl: int
+) -> tuple[Pos, dict[str, Any]]:
+    pos += 1
+    nested_dict = NestedDict()
+    flags = Flags()
+
+    pos = skip_comments_and_array_ws(src, pos)
+    if src.startswith("}", pos):
+        return pos + 1, nested_dict.dict
+    while True:
+        pos, key, value = parse_key_value_pair(src, pos, parse_float, nest_lvl)
+        key_parent, key_stem = key[:-1], key[-1]
+        if flags.is_(key, Flags.FROZEN):
+            raise TOMLDecodeError(f"Cannot mutate immutable namespace {key}", src, pos)
+        try:
+            nest = nested_dict.get_or_create_nest(key_parent, access_lists=False)
+        except KeyError:
+            raise TOMLDecodeError("Cannot overwrite a value", src, pos) from None
+        if key_stem in nest:
+            raise TOMLDecodeError(f"Duplicate inline table key {key_stem!r}", src, pos)
+        nest[key_stem] = value
+        pos = skip_comments_and_array_ws(src, pos)
+        c = src[pos : pos + 1]
+        if c == "}":
+            return pos + 1, nested_dict.dict
+        if c != ",":
+            raise TOMLDecodeError("Unclosed inline table", src, pos)
+        pos += 1
+        pos = skip_comments_and_array_ws(src, pos)
+        if src.startswith("}", pos):
+            return pos + 1, nested_dict.dict
+        if isinstance(value, (dict, list)):
+            flags.set(key, Flags.FROZEN, recursive=True)
+
+
+def parse_basic_str_escape(
+    src: str, pos: Pos, *, multiline: bool = False
+) -> tuple[Pos, str]:
+    escape_id = src[pos : pos + 2]
+    pos += 2
+    if multiline and escape_id in {"\\ ", "\\\t", "\\\n"}:
+        # Skip whitespace until next non-whitespace character or end of
+        # the doc. Error if non-whitespace is found before newline.
+        if escape_id != "\\\n":
+            pos = skip_chars(src, pos, TOML_WS)
+            try:
+                char = src[pos]
+            except IndexError:
+                return pos, ""
+            if char != "\n":
+                raise TOMLDecodeError("Unescaped '\\' in a string", src, pos)
+            pos += 1
+        pos = skip_chars(src, pos, TOML_WS_AND_NEWLINE)
+        return pos, ""
+    if escape_id == "\\x":
+        return parse_hex_char(src, pos, 2)
+    if escape_id == "\\u":
+        return parse_hex_char(src, pos, 4)
+    if escape_id == "\\U":
+        return parse_hex_char(src, pos, 8)
+    try:
+        return pos, BASIC_STR_ESCAPE_REPLACEMENTS[escape_id]
+    except KeyError:
+        raise TOMLDecodeError("Unescaped '\\' in a string", src, pos) from None
+
+
+def parse_basic_str_escape_multiline(src: str, pos: Pos) -> tuple[Pos, str]:
+    return parse_basic_str_escape(src, pos, multiline=True)
+
+
+def parse_hex_char(src: str, pos: Pos, hex_len: int) -> tuple[Pos, str]:
+    hex_str = src[pos : pos + hex_len]
+    if len(hex_str) != hex_len or not HEXDIGIT_CHARS.issuperset(hex_str):
+        raise TOMLDecodeError("Invalid hex value", src, pos)
+    pos += hex_len
+    hex_int = int(hex_str, 16)
+    if not is_unicode_scalar_value(hex_int):
+        raise TOMLDecodeError(
+            "Escaped character is not a Unicode scalar value", src, pos
+        )
+    return pos, chr(hex_int)
+
+
+def parse_literal_str(src: str, pos: Pos) -> tuple[Pos, str]:
+    pos += 1  # Skip starting apostrophe
+    start_pos = pos
+    pos = skip_until(
+        src, pos, "'", error_on=ILLEGAL_LITERAL_STR_CHARS, error_on_eof=True
+    )
+    return pos + 1, src[start_pos:pos]  # Skip ending apostrophe
+
+
+def parse_multiline_str(src: str, pos: Pos, *, literal: bool) -> tuple[Pos, str]:
+    pos += 3
+    if src.startswith("\n", pos):
+        pos += 1
+
+    if literal:
+        delim = "'"
+        end_pos = skip_until(
+            src,
+            pos,
+            "'''",
+            error_on=ILLEGAL_MULTILINE_LITERAL_STR_CHARS,
+            error_on_eof=True,
+        )
+        result = src[pos:end_pos]
+        pos = end_pos + 3
+    else:
+        delim = '"'
+        pos, result = parse_basic_str(src, pos, multiline=True)
+
+    # Add at maximum two extra apostrophes/quotes if the end sequence
+    # is 4 or 5 chars long instead of just 3.
+    if not src.startswith(delim, pos):
+        return pos, result
+    pos += 1
+    if not src.startswith(delim, pos):
+        return pos, result + delim
+    pos += 1
+    return pos, result + (delim * 2)
+
+
+def parse_basic_str(src: str, pos: Pos, *, multiline: bool) -> tuple[Pos, str]:
+    if multiline:
+        error_on = ILLEGAL_MULTILINE_BASIC_STR_CHARS
+        parse_escapes = parse_basic_str_escape_multiline
+    else:
+        error_on = ILLEGAL_BASIC_STR_CHARS
+        parse_escapes = parse_basic_str_escape
+    result = ""
+    start_pos = pos
+    while True:
+        try:
+            char = src[pos]
+        except IndexError:
+            raise TOMLDecodeError("Unterminated string", src, pos) from None
+        if char == '"':
+            if not multiline:
+                return pos + 1, result + src[start_pos:pos]
+            if src.startswith('"""', pos):
+                return pos + 3, result + src[start_pos:pos]
+            pos += 1
+            continue
+        if char == "\\":
+            result += src[start_pos:pos]
+            pos, parsed_escape = parse_escapes(src, pos)
+            result += parsed_escape
+            start_pos = pos
+            continue
+        if char in error_on:
+            raise TOMLDecodeError(f"Illegal character {char!r}", src, pos)
+        pos += 1
+
+
+def parse_value(
+    src: str, pos: Pos, parse_float: ParseFloat, nest_lvl: int
+) -> tuple[Pos, Any]:
+    if nest_lvl > MAX_INLINE_NESTING:
+        # Pure Python should have raised RecursionError already.
+        # This ensures mypyc binaries eventually do the same.
+        raise RecursionError(  # pragma: no cover
+            "TOML inline arrays/tables are nested more than the allowed"
+            f" {MAX_INLINE_NESTING} levels"
+        )
+
+    try:
+        char: str | None = src[pos]
+    except IndexError:
+        char = None
+
+    # IMPORTANT: order conditions based on speed of checking and likelihood
+
+    # Basic strings
+    if char == '"':
+        if src.startswith('"""', pos):
+            return parse_multiline_str(src, pos, literal=False)
+        return parse_one_line_basic_str(src, pos)
+
+    # Literal strings
+    if char == "'":
+        if src.startswith("'''", pos):
+            return parse_multiline_str(src, pos, literal=True)
+        return parse_literal_str(src, pos)
+
+    # Booleans
+    if char == "t":
+        if src.startswith("true", pos):
+            return pos + 4, True
+    if char == "f":
+        if src.startswith("false", pos):
+            return pos + 5, False
+
+    # Arrays
+    if char == "[":
+        return parse_array(src, pos, parse_float, nest_lvl + 1)
+
+    # Inline tables
+    if char == "{":
+        return parse_inline_table(src, pos, parse_float, nest_lvl + 1)
+
+    # Dates and times
+    datetime_match = RE_DATETIME.match(src, pos)
+    if datetime_match:
+        try:
+            datetime_obj = match_to_datetime(datetime_match)
+        except ValueError as e:
+            raise TOMLDecodeError("Invalid date or datetime", src, pos) from e
+        return datetime_match.end(), datetime_obj
+    localtime_match = RE_LOCALTIME.match(src, pos)
+    if localtime_match:
+        return localtime_match.end(), match_to_localtime(localtime_match)
+
+    # Integers and "normal" floats.
+    # The regex will greedily match any type starting with a decimal
+    # char, so needs to be located after handling of dates and times.
+    number_match = RE_NUMBER.match(src, pos)
+    if number_match:
+        return number_match.end(), match_to_number(number_match, parse_float)
+
+    # Special floats
+    first_three = src[pos : pos + 3]
+    if first_three in {"inf", "nan"}:
+        return pos + 3, parse_float(first_three)
+    first_four = src[pos : pos + 4]
+    if first_four in {"-inf", "+inf", "-nan", "+nan"}:
+        return pos + 4, parse_float(first_four)
+
+    raise TOMLDecodeError("Invalid value", src, pos)
+
+
+def is_unicode_scalar_value(codepoint: int) -> bool:
+    return (0 <= codepoint <= 55295) or (57344 <= codepoint <= 1114111)
+
+
+def make_safe_parse_float(parse_float: ParseFloat) -> ParseFloat:
+    """A decorator to make `parse_float` safe.
+
+    `parse_float` must not return dicts or lists, because these types
+    would be mixed with parsed TOML tables and arrays, thus confusing
+    the parser. The returned decorated callable raises `ValueError`
+    instead of returning illegal types.
+    """
+    # The default `float` callable never returns illegal types. Optimize it.
+    if parse_float is float:
+        return float
+
+    def safe_parse_float(float_str: str) -> Any:
+        float_value = parse_float(float_str)
+        if isinstance(float_value, (dict, list)):
+            raise ValueError("parse_float must not return dicts or lists")
+        return float_value
+
+    return safe_parse_float
diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/tomli/_re.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/tomli/_re.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..fc374ed63d3e3742a97134349fc25b14223ab57b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/tomli/_re.py
@@ -0,0 +1,119 @@
+# SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
+# SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2021 Taneli Hukkinen
+# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.
+
+from __future__ import annotations
+
+from datetime import date, datetime, time, timedelta, timezone, tzinfo
+from functools import lru_cache
+import re
+
+TYPE_CHECKING = False
+if TYPE_CHECKING:
+    from typing import Any, Final
+
+    from ._types import ParseFloat
+
+_TIME_RE_STR: Final = r"""
+([01][0-9]|2[0-3])             # hours
+:([0-5][0-9])                  # minutes
+(?:
+    :([0-5][0-9])              # optional seconds
+    (?:\.([0-9]{1,6})[0-9]*)?  # optional fractions of a second
+)?
+"""
+
+RE_NUMBER: Final = re.compile(
+    r"""
+0
+(?:
+    x[0-9A-Fa-f](?:_?[0-9A-Fa-f])*   # hex
+    |
+    b[01](?:_?[01])*                 # bin
+    |
+    o[0-7](?:_?[0-7])*               # oct
+)
+|
+[+-]?(?:0|[1-9](?:_?[0-9])*)         # dec, integer part
+(?P
+    (?:\.[0-9](?:_?[0-9])*)?         # optional fractional part
+    (?:[eE][+-]?[0-9](?:_?[0-9])*)?  # optional exponent part
+)
+""",
+    flags=re.VERBOSE,
+)
+RE_LOCALTIME: Final = re.compile(_TIME_RE_STR, flags=re.VERBOSE)
+RE_DATETIME: Final = re.compile(
+    rf"""
+([0-9]{{4}})-(0[1-9]|1[0-2])-(0[1-9]|[12][0-9]|3[01])  # date, e.g. 1988-10-27
+(?:
+    [Tt ]
+    {_TIME_RE_STR}
+    (?:([Zz])|([+-])([01][0-9]|2[0-3]):([0-5][0-9]))?  # optional time offset
+)?
+""",
+    flags=re.VERBOSE,
+)
+
+
+def match_to_datetime(match: re.Match[str]) -> datetime | date:
+    """Convert a `RE_DATETIME` match to `datetime.datetime` or `datetime.date`.
+
+    Raises ValueError if the match does not correspond to a valid date
+    or datetime.
+    """
+    (
+        year_str,
+        month_str,
+        day_str,
+        hour_str,
+        minute_str,
+        sec_str,
+        micros_str,
+        zulu_time,
+        offset_sign_str,
+        offset_hour_str,
+        offset_minute_str,
+    ) = match.groups()
+    year, month, day = int(year_str), int(month_str), int(day_str)
+    if hour_str is None:
+        return date(year, month, day)
+    hour, minute = int(hour_str), int(minute_str)
+    sec = int(sec_str) if sec_str else 0
+    micros = int(micros_str.ljust(6, "0")) if micros_str else 0
+    if offset_sign_str:
+        tz: tzinfo | None = cached_tz(
+            offset_hour_str, offset_minute_str, offset_sign_str
+        )
+    elif zulu_time:
+        tz = timezone.utc
+    else:  # local date-time
+        tz = None
+    return datetime(year, month, day, hour, minute, sec, micros, tzinfo=tz)
+
+
+# No need to limit cache size. This is only ever called on input
+# that matched RE_DATETIME, so there is an implicit bound of
+# 24 (hours) * 60 (minutes) * 2 (offset direction) = 2880.
+@lru_cache(maxsize=None)
+def cached_tz(hour_str: str, minute_str: str, sign_str: str) -> timezone:
+    sign = 1 if sign_str == "+" else -1
+    return timezone(
+        timedelta(
+            hours=sign * int(hour_str),
+            minutes=sign * int(minute_str),
+        )
+    )
+
+
+def match_to_localtime(match: re.Match[str]) -> time:
+    hour_str, minute_str, sec_str, micros_str = match.groups()
+    sec = int(sec_str) if sec_str else 0
+    micros = int(micros_str.ljust(6, "0")) if micros_str else 0
+    return time(int(hour_str), int(minute_str), sec, micros)
+
+
+def match_to_number(match: re.Match[str], parse_float: ParseFloat) -> Any:
+    if match.group("floatpart"):
+        return parse_float(match.group())
+    return int(match.group(), 0)
diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/tomli/_types.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/tomli/_types.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..d949412e03b29d70592c7721fe747e5085c2e280
--- /dev/null
+++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/tomli/_types.py
@@ -0,0 +1,10 @@
+# SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
+# SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2021 Taneli Hukkinen
+# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.
+
+from typing import Any, Callable, Tuple
+
+# Type annotations
+ParseFloat = Callable[[str], Any]
+Key = Tuple[str, ...]
+Pos = int
diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/tomli/py.typed b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/tomli/py.typed
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..7632ecf77545c5e5501cb3fc5719df0761104ca2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/tomli/py.typed
@@ -0,0 +1 @@
+# Marker file for PEP 561
diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/tests/__init__.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/tests/__init__.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..eb70bfb7115a2a94a8b942b31cafc3a550f0c005
--- /dev/null
+++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/tests/__init__.py
@@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
+import locale
+import sys
+
+import pytest
+
+__all__ = ['fail_on_ascii']
+
+if sys.version_info >= (3, 11):
+    locale_encoding = locale.getencoding()
+else:
+    locale_encoding = locale.getpreferredencoding(False)
+is_ascii = locale_encoding == 'ANSI_X3.4-1968'
+fail_on_ascii = pytest.mark.xfail(is_ascii, reason="Test fails in this locale")
diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/tests/test_wheel.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/tests/test_wheel.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..c3b215a4744c8118f2667c8a6cc1e1a2ebdce138
--- /dev/null
+++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/tests/test_wheel.py
@@ -0,0 +1,690 @@
+"""wheel tests"""
+
+from __future__ import annotations
+
+import contextlib
+import glob
+import inspect
+import os
+import pathlib
+import stat
+import subprocess
+import sys
+import sysconfig
+import zipfile
+from typing import Any
+
+import pytest
+from jaraco import path
+from packaging.tags import parse_tag
+
+from setuptools._importlib import metadata
+from setuptools.wheel import Wheel
+
+from .contexts import tempdir
+from .textwrap import DALS
+
+from distutils.sysconfig import get_config_var
+from distutils.util import get_platform
+
+WHEEL_INFO_TESTS = (
+    ('invalid.whl', ValueError),
+    (
+        'simplewheel-2.0-1-py2.py3-none-any.whl',
+        {
+            'project_name': 'simplewheel',
+            'version': '2.0',
+            'build': '1',
+            'py_version': 'py2.py3',
+            'abi': 'none',
+            'platform': 'any',
+        },
+    ),
+    (
+        'simple.dist-0.1-py2.py3-none-any.whl',
+        {
+            'project_name': 'simple.dist',
+            'version': '0.1',
+            'build': None,
+            'py_version': 'py2.py3',
+            'abi': 'none',
+            'platform': 'any',
+        },
+    ),
+    (
+        'example_pkg_a-1-py3-none-any.whl',
+        {
+            'project_name': 'example_pkg_a',
+            'version': '1',
+            'build': None,
+            'py_version': 'py3',
+            'abi': 'none',
+            'platform': 'any',
+        },
+    ),
+    (
+        'PyQt5-5.9-5.9.1-cp35.cp36.cp37-abi3-manylinux1_x86_64.whl',
+        {
+            'project_name': 'PyQt5',
+            'version': '5.9',
+            'build': '5.9.1',
+            'py_version': 'cp35.cp36.cp37',
+            'abi': 'abi3',
+            'platform': 'manylinux1_x86_64',
+        },
+    ),
+)
+
+
+@pytest.mark.parametrize(
+    ('filename', 'info'), WHEEL_INFO_TESTS, ids=[t[0] for t in WHEEL_INFO_TESTS]
+)
+def test_wheel_info(filename, info):
+    if inspect.isclass(info):
+        with pytest.raises(info):
+            Wheel(filename)
+        return
+    w = Wheel(filename)
+    assert {k: getattr(w, k) for k in info.keys()} == info
+
+
+@contextlib.contextmanager
+def build_wheel(extra_file_defs=None, **kwargs):
+    file_defs = {
+        'setup.py': (
+            DALS(
+                """
+            # -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
+            from setuptools import setup
+            import setuptools
+            setup(**%r)
+            """
+            )
+            % kwargs
+        ).encode('utf-8'),
+    }
+    if extra_file_defs:
+        file_defs.update(extra_file_defs)
+    with tempdir() as source_dir:
+        path.build(file_defs, source_dir)
+        subprocess.check_call(
+            (sys.executable, 'setup.py', '-q', 'bdist_wheel'), cwd=source_dir
+        )
+        yield glob.glob(os.path.join(source_dir, 'dist', '*.whl'))[0]
+
+
+def tree_set(root):
+    return {
+        os.path.join(os.path.relpath(dirpath, root), filename)
+        for dirpath, dirnames, filenames in os.walk(root)
+        for filename in filenames
+    }
+
+
+def flatten_tree(tree):
+    """Flatten nested dicts and lists into a full list of paths"""
+    output = set()
+    for node, contents in tree.items():
+        if isinstance(contents, dict):
+            contents = flatten_tree(contents)
+
+        for elem in contents:
+            if isinstance(elem, dict):
+                output |= {os.path.join(node, val) for val in flatten_tree(elem)}
+            else:
+                output.add(os.path.join(node, elem))
+    return output
+
+
+def format_install_tree(tree):
+    return {
+        x.format(
+            py_version=sysconfig.get_python_version(),
+            platform=get_platform(),
+            shlib_ext=get_config_var('EXT_SUFFIX') or get_config_var('SO'),
+        )
+        for x in tree
+    }
+
+
+def _check_wheel_install(
+    filename, install_dir, install_tree_includes, project_name, version, requires_txt
+):
+    w = Wheel(filename)
+    egg_path = os.path.join(install_dir, w.egg_name())
+    w.install_as_egg(egg_path)
+    if install_tree_includes is not None:
+        install_tree = format_install_tree(install_tree_includes)
+        exp = tree_set(install_dir)
+        assert install_tree.issubset(exp), install_tree - exp
+
+    (dist,) = metadata.Distribution.discover(path=[egg_path])
+
+    # pyright is nitpicky; fine to assume dist.metadata.__getitem__ will fail or return None
+    # (https://github.com/pypa/setuptools/pull/5006#issuecomment-2894774288)
+    assert dist.metadata['Name'] == project_name  # pyright: ignore  # noqa: PGH003
+    assert dist.metadata['Version'] == version  # pyright: ignore  # noqa: PGH003
+    assert dist.read_text('requires.txt') == requires_txt
+
+
+class Record:
+    def __init__(self, id, **kwargs) -> None:
+        self._id = id
+        self._fields = kwargs
+
+    def __repr__(self) -> str:
+        return f'{self._id}(**{self._fields!r})'
+
+
+# Using Any to avoid possible type union issues later in test
+# making a TypedDict is not worth in a test and anonymous/inline TypedDict are experimental
+# https://github.com/python/mypy/issues/9884
+WHEEL_INSTALL_TESTS: tuple[dict[str, Any], ...] = (
+    dict(
+        id='basic',
+        file_defs={'foo': {'__init__.py': ''}},
+        setup_kwargs=dict(
+            packages=['foo'],
+        ),
+        install_tree=flatten_tree({
+            'foo-1.0-py{py_version}.egg': {
+                'EGG-INFO': ['PKG-INFO', 'RECORD', 'WHEEL', 'top_level.txt'],
+                'foo': ['__init__.py'],
+            }
+        }),
+    ),
+    dict(
+        id='utf-8',
+        setup_kwargs=dict(
+            description='Description accentuée',
+        ),
+    ),
+    dict(
+        id='data',
+        file_defs={
+            'data.txt': DALS(
+                """
+                Some data...
+                """
+            ),
+        },
+        setup_kwargs=dict(
+            data_files=[('data_dir', ['data.txt'])],
+        ),
+        install_tree=flatten_tree({
+            'foo-1.0-py{py_version}.egg': {
+                'EGG-INFO': ['PKG-INFO', 'RECORD', 'WHEEL', 'top_level.txt'],
+                'data_dir': ['data.txt'],
+            }
+        }),
+    ),
+    dict(
+        id='extension',
+        file_defs={
+            'extension.c': DALS(
+                """
+                #include "Python.h"
+
+                #if PY_MAJOR_VERSION >= 3
+
+                static struct PyModuleDef moduledef = {
+                        PyModuleDef_HEAD_INIT,
+                        "extension",
+                        NULL,
+                        0,
+                        NULL,
+                        NULL,
+                        NULL,
+                        NULL,
+                        NULL
+                };
+
+                #define INITERROR return NULL
+
+                PyMODINIT_FUNC PyInit_extension(void)
+
+                #else
+
+                #define INITERROR return
+
+                void initextension(void)
+
+                #endif
+                {
+                #if PY_MAJOR_VERSION >= 3
+                    PyObject *module = PyModule_Create(&moduledef);
+                #else
+                    PyObject *module = Py_InitModule("extension", NULL);
+                #endif
+                    if (module == NULL)
+                        INITERROR;
+                #if PY_MAJOR_VERSION >= 3
+                    return module;
+                #endif
+                }
+                """
+            ),
+        },
+        setup_kwargs=dict(
+            ext_modules=[
+                Record(
+                    'setuptools.Extension', name='extension', sources=['extension.c']
+                )
+            ],
+        ),
+        install_tree=flatten_tree({
+            'foo-1.0-py{py_version}-{platform}.egg': [
+                'extension{shlib_ext}',
+                {
+                    'EGG-INFO': [
+                        'PKG-INFO',
+                        'RECORD',
+                        'WHEEL',
+                        'top_level.txt',
+                    ]
+                },
+            ]
+        }),
+    ),
+    dict(
+        id='header',
+        file_defs={
+            'header.h': DALS(
+                """
+                """
+            ),
+        },
+        setup_kwargs=dict(
+            headers=['header.h'],
+        ),
+        install_tree=flatten_tree({
+            'foo-1.0-py{py_version}.egg': [
+                'header.h',
+                {
+                    'EGG-INFO': [
+                        'PKG-INFO',
+                        'RECORD',
+                        'WHEEL',
+                        'top_level.txt',
+                    ]
+                },
+            ]
+        }),
+    ),
+    dict(
+        id='script',
+        file_defs={
+            'script.py': DALS(
+                """
+                #/usr/bin/python
+                print('hello world!')
+                """
+            ),
+            'script.sh': DALS(
+                """
+                #/bin/sh
+                echo 'hello world!'
+                """
+            ),
+        },
+        setup_kwargs=dict(
+            scripts=['script.py', 'script.sh'],
+        ),
+        install_tree=flatten_tree({
+            'foo-1.0-py{py_version}.egg': {
+                'EGG-INFO': [
+                    'PKG-INFO',
+                    'RECORD',
+                    'WHEEL',
+                    'top_level.txt',
+                    {'scripts': ['script.py', 'script.sh']},
+                ]
+            }
+        }),
+    ),
+    dict(
+        id='requires1',
+        install_requires='foobar==2.0',
+        install_tree=flatten_tree({
+            'foo-1.0-py{py_version}.egg': {
+                'EGG-INFO': [
+                    'PKG-INFO',
+                    'RECORD',
+                    'WHEEL',
+                    'requires.txt',
+                    'top_level.txt',
+                ]
+            }
+        }),
+        requires_txt=DALS(
+            """
+            foobar==2.0
+            """
+        ),
+    ),
+    dict(
+        id='requires2',
+        install_requires=f"""
+        bar
+        foo<=2.0; {sys.platform!r} in sys_platform
+        """,
+        requires_txt=DALS(
+            """
+            bar
+            foo<=2.0
+            """
+        ),
+    ),
+    dict(
+        id='requires3',
+        install_requires=f"""
+        bar; {sys.platform!r} != sys_platform
+        """,
+    ),
+    dict(
+        id='requires4',
+        install_requires="""
+        foo
+        """,
+        extras_require={
+            'extra': 'foobar>3',
+        },
+        requires_txt=DALS(
+            """
+            foo
+
+            [extra]
+            foobar>3
+            """
+        ),
+    ),
+    dict(
+        id='requires5',
+        extras_require={
+            'extra': f'foobar; {sys.platform!r} != sys_platform',
+        },
+        requires_txt='\n'
+        + DALS(
+            """
+            [extra]
+            """
+        ),
+    ),
+    dict(
+        id='requires_ensure_order',
+        install_requires="""
+        foo
+        bar
+        baz
+        qux
+        """,
+        extras_require={
+            'extra': """
+            foobar>3
+            barbaz>4
+            bazqux>5
+            quxzap>6
+            """,
+        },
+        requires_txt=DALS(
+            """
+            foo
+            bar
+            baz
+            qux
+
+            [extra]
+            foobar>3
+            barbaz>4
+            bazqux>5
+            quxzap>6
+            """
+        ),
+    ),
+    dict(
+        id='namespace_package',
+        file_defs={
+            'foo': {
+                'bar': {'__init__.py': ''},
+            },
+        },
+        setup_kwargs=dict(
+            namespace_packages=['foo'],
+            packages=['foo.bar'],
+        ),
+        install_tree=flatten_tree({
+            'foo-1.0-py{py_version}.egg': [
+                'foo-1.0-py{py_version}-nspkg.pth',
+                {
+                    'EGG-INFO': [
+                        'PKG-INFO',
+                        'RECORD',
+                        'WHEEL',
+                        'namespace_packages.txt',
+                        'top_level.txt',
+                    ]
+                },
+                {
+                    'foo': [
+                        '__init__.py',
+                        {'bar': ['__init__.py']},
+                    ]
+                },
+            ]
+        }),
+    ),
+    dict(
+        id='empty_namespace_package',
+        file_defs={
+            'foobar': {
+                '__init__.py': (
+                    "__import__('pkg_resources').declare_namespace(__name__)"
+                )
+            },
+        },
+        setup_kwargs=dict(
+            namespace_packages=['foobar'],
+            packages=['foobar'],
+        ),
+        install_tree=flatten_tree({
+            'foo-1.0-py{py_version}.egg': [
+                'foo-1.0-py{py_version}-nspkg.pth',
+                {
+                    'EGG-INFO': [
+                        'PKG-INFO',
+                        'RECORD',
+                        'WHEEL',
+                        'namespace_packages.txt',
+                        'top_level.txt',
+                    ]
+                },
+                {
+                    'foobar': [
+                        '__init__.py',
+                    ]
+                },
+            ]
+        }),
+    ),
+    dict(
+        id='data_in_package',
+        file_defs={
+            'foo': {
+                '__init__.py': '',
+                'data_dir': {
+                    'data.txt': DALS(
+                        """
+                        Some data...
+                        """
+                    ),
+                },
+            }
+        },
+        setup_kwargs=dict(
+            packages=['foo'],
+            data_files=[('foo/data_dir', ['foo/data_dir/data.txt'])],
+        ),
+        install_tree=flatten_tree({
+            'foo-1.0-py{py_version}.egg': {
+                'EGG-INFO': [
+                    'PKG-INFO',
+                    'RECORD',
+                    'WHEEL',
+                    'top_level.txt',
+                ],
+                'foo': [
+                    '__init__.py',
+                    {
+                        'data_dir': [
+                            'data.txt',
+                        ]
+                    },
+                ],
+            }
+        }),
+    ),
+)
+
+
+@pytest.mark.parametrize(
+    'params',
+    WHEEL_INSTALL_TESTS,
+    ids=[params['id'] for params in WHEEL_INSTALL_TESTS],
+)
+def test_wheel_install(params):
+    project_name = params.get('name', 'foo')
+    version = params.get('version', '1.0')
+    install_requires = params.get('install_requires', [])
+    extras_require = params.get('extras_require', {})
+    requires_txt = params.get('requires_txt', None)
+    install_tree = params.get('install_tree')
+    file_defs = params.get('file_defs', {})
+    setup_kwargs = params.get('setup_kwargs', {})
+    with (
+        build_wheel(
+            name=project_name,
+            version=version,
+            install_requires=install_requires,
+            extras_require=extras_require,
+            extra_file_defs=file_defs,
+            **setup_kwargs,
+        ) as filename,
+        tempdir() as install_dir,
+    ):
+        _check_wheel_install(
+            filename, install_dir, install_tree, project_name, version, requires_txt
+        )
+
+
+def test_wheel_no_dist_dir():
+    project_name = 'nodistinfo'
+    version = '1.0'
+    wheel_name = f'{project_name}-{version}-py2.py3-none-any.whl'
+    with tempdir() as source_dir:
+        wheel_path = os.path.join(source_dir, wheel_name)
+        # create an empty zip file
+        zipfile.ZipFile(wheel_path, 'w').close()
+        with tempdir() as install_dir:
+            with pytest.raises(ValueError):
+                _check_wheel_install(
+                    wheel_path, install_dir, None, project_name, version, None
+                )
+
+
+def test_wheel_is_compatible(monkeypatch):
+    def sys_tags():
+        return {
+            (t.interpreter, t.abi, t.platform)
+            for t in parse_tag('cp36-cp36m-manylinux1_x86_64')
+        }
+
+    monkeypatch.setattr('setuptools.wheel._get_supported_tags', sys_tags)
+    assert Wheel('onnxruntime-0.1.2-cp36-cp36m-manylinux1_x86_64.whl').is_compatible()
+
+
+def test_wheel_mode():
+    @contextlib.contextmanager
+    def build_wheel(extra_file_defs=None, **kwargs):
+        file_defs = {
+            'setup.py': (
+                DALS(
+                    """
+                # -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
+                from setuptools import setup
+                import setuptools
+                setup(**%r)
+                """
+                )
+                % kwargs
+            ).encode('utf-8'),
+        }
+        if extra_file_defs:
+            file_defs.update(extra_file_defs)
+        with tempdir() as source_dir:
+            path.build(file_defs, source_dir)
+            runsh = pathlib.Path(source_dir) / "script.sh"
+            os.chmod(runsh, 0o777)
+            subprocess.check_call(
+                (sys.executable, 'setup.py', '-q', 'bdist_wheel'), cwd=source_dir
+            )
+            yield glob.glob(os.path.join(source_dir, 'dist', '*.whl'))[0]
+
+    params = dict(
+        id='script',
+        file_defs={
+            'script.py': DALS(
+                """
+                #/usr/bin/python
+                print('hello world!')
+                """
+            ),
+            'script.sh': DALS(
+                """
+                #/bin/sh
+                echo 'hello world!'
+                """
+            ),
+        },
+        setup_kwargs=dict(
+            scripts=['script.py', 'script.sh'],
+        ),
+        install_tree=flatten_tree({
+            'foo-1.0-py{py_version}.egg': {
+                'EGG-INFO': [
+                    'PKG-INFO',
+                    'RECORD',
+                    'WHEEL',
+                    'top_level.txt',
+                    {'scripts': ['script.py', 'script.sh']},
+                ]
+            }
+        }),
+    )
+
+    project_name = params.get('name', 'foo')
+    version = params.get('version', '1.0')
+    install_tree = params.get('install_tree')
+    file_defs = params.get('file_defs', {})
+    setup_kwargs = params.get('setup_kwargs', {})
+
+    with (
+        build_wheel(
+            name=project_name,
+            version=version,
+            install_requires=[],
+            extras_require={},
+            extra_file_defs=file_defs,
+            **setup_kwargs,
+        ) as filename,
+        tempdir() as install_dir,
+    ):
+        _check_wheel_install(
+            filename, install_dir, install_tree, project_name, version, None
+        )
+        w = Wheel(filename)
+        base = pathlib.Path(install_dir) / w.egg_name()
+        script_sh = base / "EGG-INFO" / "scripts" / "script.sh"
+        assert script_sh.exists()
+        if sys.platform != 'win32':
+            # Editable file mode has no effect on Windows
+            assert oct(stat.S_IMODE(script_sh.stat().st_mode)) == "0o777"
diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/tests/test_windows_wrappers.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/tests/test_windows_wrappers.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..4f990eb1c3cc67c61ea17f791430651e91040f18
--- /dev/null
+++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/tests/test_windows_wrappers.py
@@ -0,0 +1,258 @@
+"""
+Python Script Wrapper for Windows
+=================================
+
+setuptools includes wrappers for Python scripts that allows them to be
+executed like regular windows programs.  There are 2 wrappers, one
+for command-line programs, cli.exe, and one for graphical programs,
+gui.exe.  These programs are almost identical, function pretty much
+the same way, and are generated from the same source file.  The
+wrapper programs are used by copying them to the directory containing
+the script they are to wrap and with the same name as the script they
+are to wrap.
+"""
+
+import pathlib
+import platform
+import subprocess
+import sys
+import textwrap
+
+import pytest
+
+from setuptools._importlib import resources
+
+pytestmark = pytest.mark.skipif(sys.platform != 'win32', reason="Windows only")
+
+
+class WrapperTester:
+    @classmethod
+    def prep_script(cls, template):
+        python_exe = subprocess.list2cmdline([sys.executable])
+        return template % locals()
+
+    @classmethod
+    def create_script(cls, tmpdir):
+        """
+        Create a simple script, foo-script.py
+
+        Note that the script starts with a Unix-style '#!' line saying which
+        Python executable to run.  The wrapper will use this line to find the
+        correct Python executable.
+        """
+
+        script = cls.prep_script(cls.script_tmpl)
+
+        with (tmpdir / cls.script_name).open('w') as f:
+            f.write(script)
+
+        # also copy cli.exe to the sample directory
+        with (tmpdir / cls.wrapper_name).open('wb') as f:
+            w = resources.files('setuptools').joinpath(cls.wrapper_source).read_bytes()
+            f.write(w)
+
+
+def win_launcher_exe(prefix):
+    """A simple routine to select launcher script based on platform."""
+    assert prefix in ('cli', 'gui')
+    if platform.machine() == "ARM64":
+        return f"{prefix}-arm64.exe"
+    else:
+        return f"{prefix}-32.exe"
+
+
+class TestCLI(WrapperTester):
+    script_name = 'foo-script.py'
+    wrapper_name = 'foo.exe'
+    wrapper_source = win_launcher_exe('cli')
+
+    script_tmpl = textwrap.dedent(
+        """
+        #!%(python_exe)s
+        import sys
+        input = repr(sys.stdin.read())
+        print(sys.argv[0][-14:])
+        print(sys.argv[1:])
+        print(input)
+        if __debug__:
+            print('non-optimized')
+        """
+    ).lstrip()
+
+    def test_basic(self, tmpdir):
+        """
+        When the copy of cli.exe, foo.exe in this example, runs, it examines
+        the path name it was run with and computes a Python script path name
+        by removing the '.exe' suffix and adding the '-script.py' suffix. (For
+        GUI programs, the suffix '-script.pyw' is added.)  This is why we
+        named out script the way we did.  Now we can run out script by running
+        the wrapper:
+
+        This example was a little pathological in that it exercised windows
+        (MS C runtime) quoting rules:
+
+        - Strings containing spaces are surrounded by double quotes.
+
+        - Double quotes in strings need to be escaped by preceding them with
+          back slashes.
+
+        - One or more backslashes preceding double quotes need to be escaped
+          by preceding each of them with back slashes.
+        """
+        self.create_script(tmpdir)
+        cmd = [
+            str(tmpdir / 'foo.exe'),
+            'arg1',
+            'arg 2',
+            'arg "2\\"',
+            'arg 4\\',
+            'arg5 a\\\\b',
+        ]
+        proc = subprocess.Popen(
+            cmd,
+            stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
+            stdin=subprocess.PIPE,
+            text=True,
+            encoding="utf-8",
+        )
+        stdout, _stderr = proc.communicate('hello\nworld\n')
+        actual = stdout.replace('\r\n', '\n')
+        expected = textwrap.dedent(
+            r"""
+            \foo-script.py
+            ['arg1', 'arg 2', 'arg "2\\"', 'arg 4\\', 'arg5 a\\\\b']
+            'hello\nworld\n'
+            non-optimized
+            """
+        ).lstrip()
+        assert actual == expected
+
+    def test_symlink(self, tmpdir):
+        """
+        Ensure that symlink for the foo.exe is working correctly.
+        """
+        script_dir = tmpdir / "script_dir"
+        script_dir.mkdir()
+        self.create_script(script_dir)
+        symlink = pathlib.Path(tmpdir / "foo.exe")
+        symlink.symlink_to(script_dir / "foo.exe")
+
+        cmd = [
+            str(tmpdir / 'foo.exe'),
+            'arg1',
+            'arg 2',
+            'arg "2\\"',
+            'arg 4\\',
+            'arg5 a\\\\b',
+        ]
+        proc = subprocess.Popen(
+            cmd,
+            stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
+            stdin=subprocess.PIPE,
+            text=True,
+            encoding="utf-8",
+        )
+        stdout, _stderr = proc.communicate('hello\nworld\n')
+        actual = stdout.replace('\r\n', '\n')
+        expected = textwrap.dedent(
+            r"""
+            \foo-script.py
+            ['arg1', 'arg 2', 'arg "2\\"', 'arg 4\\', 'arg5 a\\\\b']
+            'hello\nworld\n'
+            non-optimized
+            """
+        ).lstrip()
+        assert actual == expected
+
+    def test_with_options(self, tmpdir):
+        """
+        Specifying Python Command-line Options
+        --------------------------------------
+
+        You can specify a single argument on the '#!' line.  This can be used
+        to specify Python options like -O, to run in optimized mode or -i
+        to start the interactive interpreter.  You can combine multiple
+        options as usual. For example, to run in optimized mode and
+        enter the interpreter after running the script, you could use -Oi:
+        """
+        self.create_script(tmpdir)
+        tmpl = textwrap.dedent(
+            """
+            #!%(python_exe)s  -Oi
+            import sys
+            input = repr(sys.stdin.read())
+            print(sys.argv[0][-14:])
+            print(sys.argv[1:])
+            print(input)
+            if __debug__:
+                print('non-optimized')
+            sys.ps1 = '---'
+            """
+        ).lstrip()
+        with (tmpdir / 'foo-script.py').open('w') as f:
+            f.write(self.prep_script(tmpl))
+        cmd = [str(tmpdir / 'foo.exe')]
+        proc = subprocess.Popen(
+            cmd,
+            stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
+            stdin=subprocess.PIPE,
+            stderr=subprocess.STDOUT,
+            text=True,
+            encoding="utf-8",
+        )
+        stdout, _stderr = proc.communicate()
+        actual = stdout.replace('\r\n', '\n')
+        expected = textwrap.dedent(
+            r"""
+            \foo-script.py
+            []
+            ''
+            ---
+            """
+        ).lstrip()
+        assert actual == expected
+
+
+class TestGUI(WrapperTester):
+    """
+    Testing the GUI Version
+    -----------------------
+    """
+
+    script_name = 'bar-script.pyw'
+    wrapper_source = win_launcher_exe('gui')
+    wrapper_name = 'bar.exe'
+
+    script_tmpl = textwrap.dedent(
+        """
+        #!%(python_exe)s
+        import sys
+        f = open(sys.argv[1], 'wb')
+        bytes_written = f.write(repr(sys.argv[2]).encode('utf-8'))
+        f.close()
+        """
+    ).strip()
+
+    def test_basic(self, tmpdir):
+        """Test the GUI version with the simple script, bar-script.py"""
+        self.create_script(tmpdir)
+
+        cmd = [
+            str(tmpdir / 'bar.exe'),
+            str(tmpdir / 'test_output.txt'),
+            'Test Argument',
+        ]
+        proc = subprocess.Popen(
+            cmd,
+            stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
+            stdin=subprocess.PIPE,
+            stderr=subprocess.STDOUT,
+            text=True,
+            encoding="utf-8",
+        )
+        stdout, stderr = proc.communicate()
+        assert not stdout
+        assert not stderr
+        with (tmpdir / 'test_output.txt').open('rb') as f_out:
+            actual = f_out.read().decode('ascii')
+        assert actual == repr('Test Argument')
diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/tests/text.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/tests/text.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..e05cc633ede9e5ce4f74b66a7bf76327c2000caa
--- /dev/null
+++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/tests/text.py
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+class Filenames:
+    unicode = 'smörbröd.py'
+    latin_1 = unicode.encode('latin-1')
+    utf_8 = unicode.encode('utf-8')
diff --git a/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/tests/textwrap.py b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/tests/textwrap.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..5e39618dca4ad6c3f0d4c8cb20af59ab85fb0eba
--- /dev/null
+++ b/python/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/tests/textwrap.py
@@ -0,0 +1,6 @@
+import textwrap
+
+
+def DALS(s):
+    "dedent and left-strip"
+    return textwrap.dedent(s).lstrip()