# Copyright (C) 2012 Anaconda, Inc # SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause """Common I/O utilities.""" import logging import os import signal import sys from collections import defaultdict from concurrent.futures import Executor, Future, ThreadPoolExecutor, as_completed from contextlib import contextmanager from enum import Enum from errno import EPIPE, ESHUTDOWN from functools import partial, wraps from io import BytesIO, StringIO from logging import CRITICAL, WARN, Formatter, StreamHandler, getLogger from os.path import dirname, isdir, isfile, join from threading import Lock from time import time from ..auxlib.decorators import memoizemethod from ..auxlib.logz import NullHandler from ..auxlib.type_coercion import boolify from ..common.serialize import json from ..deprecations import deprecated from .compat import encode_environment, on_win from .constants import NULL from .path import expand log = getLogger(__name__) IS_INTERACTIVE = hasattr(sys.stdout, "isatty") and sys.stdout.isatty() class DeltaSecondsFormatter(Formatter): """ Logging formatter with additional attributes for run time logging. Attributes: `delta_secs`: Elapsed seconds since last log/format call (or creation of logger). `relative_created_secs`: Like `relativeCreated`, time relative to the initialization of the `logging` module but conveniently scaled to seconds as a `float` value. """ def __init__(self, fmt=None, datefmt=None): self.prev_time = time() super().__init__(fmt=fmt, datefmt=datefmt) def format(self, record): now = time() prev_time = self.prev_time self.prev_time = max(self.prev_time, now) record.delta_secs = now - prev_time record.relative_created_secs = record.relativeCreated / 1000 return super().format(record) if boolify(os.environ.get("CONDA_TIMED_LOGGING")): _FORMATTER = DeltaSecondsFormatter( "%(relative_created_secs) 7.2f %(delta_secs) 7.2f " "%(levelname)s %(name)s:%(funcName)s(%(lineno)d): %(message)s" ) else: _FORMATTER = Formatter( "%(levelname)s %(name)s:%(funcName)s(%(lineno)d): %(message)s" ) def dashlist(iterable, indent=2): return "".join("\n" + " " * indent + "- " + str(x) for x in iterable) class ContextDecorator: """Base class for a context manager class (implementing __enter__() and __exit__()) that also makes it a decorator. """ # TODO: figure out how to improve this pattern so e.g. swallow_broken_pipe doesn't have to be instantiated def __call__(self, f): @wraps(f) def decorated(*args, **kwds): with self: return f(*args, **kwds) return decorated class SwallowBrokenPipe(ContextDecorator): # Ignore BrokenPipeError and errors related to stdout or stderr being # closed by a downstream program. def __enter__(self): pass def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_val, exc_tb): if ( exc_val and isinstance(exc_val, EnvironmentError) and getattr(exc_val, "errno", None) and exc_val.errno in (EPIPE, ESHUTDOWN) ): return True swallow_broken_pipe = SwallowBrokenPipe() class CaptureTarget(Enum): """Constants used for contextmanager captured. Used similarly like the constants PIPE, STDOUT for stdlib's subprocess.Popen. """ STRING = -1 STDOUT = -2 @contextmanager def env_vars(var_map=None, callback=None, stack_callback=None): if var_map is None: var_map = {} new_var_map = encode_environment(var_map) saved_vars = {} for name, value in new_var_map.items(): saved_vars[name] = os.environ.get(name, NULL) os.environ[name] = value try: if callback: callback() if stack_callback: stack_callback(True) yield finally: for name, value in saved_vars.items(): if value is NULL: del os.environ[name] else: os.environ[name] = value if callback: callback() if stack_callback: stack_callback(False) @contextmanager def env_var(name, value, callback=None, stack_callback=None): d = {name: value} with env_vars(d, callback=callback, stack_callback=stack_callback) as es: yield es @contextmanager def env_unmodified(callback=None): with env_vars(callback=callback) as es: yield es @contextmanager def captured(stdout=CaptureTarget.STRING, stderr=CaptureTarget.STRING): r"""Capture outputs of sys.stdout and sys.stderr. If stdout is STRING, capture sys.stdout as a string, if stdout is None, do not capture sys.stdout, leaving it untouched, otherwise redirect sys.stdout to the file-like object given by stdout. Behave correspondingly for stderr with the exception that if stderr is STDOUT, redirect sys.stderr to stdout target and set stderr attribute of yielded object to None. .. code-block:: pycon >>> from conda.common.io import captured >>> with captured() as c: ... print("hello world!") ... >>> c.stdout 'hello world!\n' Args: stdout: capture target for sys.stdout, one of STRING, None, or file-like object stderr: capture target for sys.stderr, one of STRING, STDOUT, None, or file-like object Yields: CapturedText: has attributes stdout, stderr which are either strings, None or the corresponding file-like function argument. """ def write_wrapper(self, to_write): # NOTE: This function is not thread-safe. Using within multi-threading may cause spurious # behavior of not returning sys.stdout and sys.stderr back to their 'proper' state # This may have to deal with a *lot* of text. if hasattr(self, "mode") and "b" in self.mode: wanted = bytes elif isinstance(self, BytesIO): wanted = bytes else: wanted = str if not isinstance(to_write, wanted): if hasattr(to_write, "decode"): decoded = to_write.decode("utf-8") self.old_write(decoded) elif hasattr(to_write, "encode"): b = to_write.encode("utf-8") self.old_write(b) else: self.old_write(to_write) class CapturedText: pass # sys.stdout.write(u'unicode out') # sys.stdout.write(bytes('bytes out', encoding='utf-8')) # sys.stdout.write(str('str out')) saved_stdout, saved_stderr = sys.stdout, sys.stderr if stdout == CaptureTarget.STRING: outfile = StringIO() outfile.old_write = outfile.write outfile.write = partial(write_wrapper, outfile) sys.stdout = outfile else: outfile = stdout if outfile is not None: sys.stdout = outfile if stderr == CaptureTarget.STRING: errfile = StringIO() errfile.old_write = errfile.write errfile.write = partial(write_wrapper, errfile) sys.stderr = errfile elif stderr == CaptureTarget.STDOUT: sys.stderr = errfile = outfile else: errfile = stderr if errfile is not None: sys.stderr = errfile c = CapturedText() log.debug("overtaking stderr and stdout") try: yield c finally: if stdout == CaptureTarget.STRING: c.stdout = outfile.getvalue() else: c.stdout = outfile if stderr == CaptureTarget.STRING: c.stderr = errfile.getvalue() elif stderr == CaptureTarget.STDOUT: c.stderr = None else: c.stderr = errfile sys.stdout, sys.stderr = saved_stdout, saved_stderr log.debug("stderr and stdout yielding back") @contextmanager def argv(args_list): saved_args = sys.argv sys.argv = args_list try: yield finally: sys.argv = saved_args @deprecated("25.9", "26.3", addendum="Use `logging._lock` instead.") @contextmanager def _logger_lock(): logging._acquireLock() try: yield finally: logging._releaseLock() @contextmanager def disable_logger(logger_name): logr = getLogger(logger_name) _lvl, _dsbld, _prpgt = logr.level, logr.disabled, logr.propagate null_handler = NullHandler() with logging._lock: logr.addHandler(null_handler) logr.setLevel(CRITICAL + 1) logr.disabled, logr.propagate = True, False try: yield finally: with logging._lock: logr.removeHandler(null_handler) # restore list logr.handlers logr.level, logr.disabled = _lvl, _dsbld logr.propagate = _prpgt @contextmanager def stderr_log_level(level, logger_name=None): logr = getLogger(logger_name) _hndlrs, _lvl, _dsbld, _prpgt = ( logr.handlers, logr.level, logr.disabled, logr.propagate, ) handler = StreamHandler(sys.stderr) handler.name = "stderr" handler.setLevel(level) handler.setFormatter(_FORMATTER) with logging._lock: logr.setLevel(level) logr.handlers, logr.disabled, logr.propagate = [], False, False logr.addHandler(handler) logr.setLevel(level) try: yield finally: with logging._lock: logr.handlers, logr.level, logr.disabled = _hndlrs, _lvl, _dsbld logr.propagate = _prpgt def attach_stderr_handler( level=WARN, logger_name=None, propagate=False, formatter=None, filters=None, ): """Attach a new `stderr` handler to the given logger and configure both. This function creates a new StreamHandler that writes to `stderr` and attaches it to the logger given by `logger_name` (which maybe `None`, in which case the root logger is used). If the logger already has a handler by the name of `stderr`, it is removed first. The given `level` is set **for the handler**, not for the logger; however, this function also sets the level of the given logger to the minimum of its current effective level and the new handler level, ensuring that the handler will receive the required log records, while minimizing the number of unnecessary log events. It also sets the loggers `propagate` property according to the `propagate` argument. The `formatter` argument can be used to set the formatter of the handler. """ # get old stderr logger logr = getLogger(logger_name) old_stderr_handler = next( (handler for handler in logr.handlers if handler.name == "stderr"), None ) # create new stderr logger new_stderr_handler = StreamHandler(sys.stderr) new_stderr_handler.name = "stderr" new_stderr_handler.setLevel(level) new_stderr_handler.setFormatter(formatter or _FORMATTER) for filter_ in filters or (): new_stderr_handler.addFilter(filter_) # do the switch with logging._lock: if old_stderr_handler: logr.removeHandler(old_stderr_handler) logr.addHandler(new_stderr_handler) if level < logr.getEffectiveLevel(): logr.setLevel(level) logr.propagate = propagate def timeout(timeout_secs, func, *args, default_return=None, **kwargs): """Enforce a maximum time for a callable to complete. Not yet implemented on Windows. """ if on_win: # Why does Windows have to be so difficult all the time? Kind of gets old. # Guess we'll bypass Windows timeouts for now. try: return func(*args, **kwargs) except KeyboardInterrupt: # pragma: no cover return default_return else: class TimeoutException(Exception): pass def interrupt(signum, frame): raise TimeoutException() signal.signal(signal.SIGALRM, interrupt) signal.alarm(timeout_secs) try: ret = func(*args, **kwargs) signal.alarm(0) return ret except (TimeoutException, KeyboardInterrupt): # pragma: no cover return default_return # use this for debugging, because ProcessPoolExecutor isn't pdb/ipdb friendly class DummyExecutor(Executor): def __init__(self): self._shutdown = False self._shutdownLock = Lock() def submit(self, fn, *args, **kwargs): with self._shutdownLock: if self._shutdown: raise RuntimeError("cannot schedule new futures after shutdown") f = Future() try: result = fn(*args, **kwargs) except BaseException as e: f.set_exception(e) else: f.set_result(result) return f def map(self, func, *iterables): for iterable in iterables: for thing in iterable: yield func(thing) def shutdown(self, wait=True): with self._shutdownLock: self._shutdown = True class ThreadLimitedThreadPoolExecutor(ThreadPoolExecutor): def __init__(self, max_workers=10): super().__init__(max_workers) def _adjust_thread_count(self): try: return super()._adjust_thread_count() except RuntimeError: # RuntimeError: can't start new thread # See https://github.com/conda/conda/issues/6624 if len(self._threads) > 0: # It's ok to not be able to start new threads if we already have at least # one thread alive. pass else: raise as_completed = as_completed def get_instrumentation_record_file(): default_record_file = join("~", ".conda", "instrumentation-record.csv") return expand( os.environ.get("CONDA_INSTRUMENTATION_RECORD_FILE", default_record_file) ) class time_recorder(ContextDecorator): # pragma: no cover record_file = get_instrumentation_record_file() start_time = None total_call_num = defaultdict(int) total_run_time = defaultdict(float) def __init__(self, entry_name=None, module_name=None): self.entry_name = entry_name self.module_name = module_name def _set_entry_name(self, f): if self.entry_name is None: if hasattr(f, "__qualname__"): entry_name = f.__qualname__ else: entry_name = ":" + f.__name__ if self.module_name: entry_name = ".".join((self.module_name, entry_name)) self.entry_name = entry_name def __call__(self, f): self._set_entry_name(f) return super().__call__(f) def __enter__(self): enabled = os.environ.get("CONDA_INSTRUMENTATION_ENABLED") if enabled and boolify(enabled): self.start_time = time() return self def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_val, exc_tb): if self.start_time: entry_name = self.entry_name end_time = time() run_time = end_time - self.start_time self.total_call_num[entry_name] += 1 self.total_run_time[entry_name] += run_time self._ensure_dir() with open(self.record_file, "a") as fh: fh.write(f"{entry_name},{run_time:f}\n") # total_call_num = self.total_call_num[entry_name] # total_run_time = self.total_run_time[entry_name] # log.debug('%s %9.3f %9.3f %d', entry_name, run_time, total_run_time, total_call_num) @classmethod def log_totals(cls): enabled = os.environ.get("CONDA_INSTRUMENTATION_ENABLED") if not (enabled and boolify(enabled)): return log.info("=== time_recorder total time and calls ===") for entry_name in sorted(cls.total_run_time.keys()): log.info( "TOTAL %9.3f % 9d %s", cls.total_run_time[entry_name], cls.total_call_num[entry_name], entry_name, ) @memoizemethod def _ensure_dir(self): if not isdir(dirname(self.record_file)): os.makedirs(dirname(self.record_file)) def print_instrumentation_data(): # pragma: no cover record_file = get_instrumentation_record_file() grouped_data = defaultdict(list) final_data = {} if not isfile(record_file): return with open(record_file) as fh: for line in fh: entry_name, total_time = line.strip().split(",") grouped_data[entry_name].append(float(total_time)) for entry_name in sorted(grouped_data): all_times = grouped_data[entry_name] counts = len(all_times) total_time = sum(all_times) average_time = total_time / counts final_data[entry_name] = { "counts": counts, "total_time": total_time, "average_time": average_time, } print(json.dumps(final_data, sort_keys=True, indent=2, separators=(",", ": "))) if __name__ == "__main__": print_instrumentation_data()