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qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/aniso8601
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/aniso8601/tests/test_init.py
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- # Copyright (c) 2019, Brandon Nielsen # All rights reserved. # # This software may be modified and distributed under the terms # of the BSD license. See the LICENSE file for details. import unittest import aniso8601 class TestInitFunctions(unittest.TestCase): def test_import(self): #Verify the function mappings self.assertEqual(aniso8601.parse_datetime, aniso8601.time.parse_datetime) self.assertEqual(aniso8601.parse_time, aniso8601.time.parse_time) self.assertEqual(aniso8601.get_time_resolution, aniso8601.time.get_time_resolution) self.assertEqual(aniso8601.parse_date, aniso8601.date.parse_date) self.assertEqual(aniso8601.get_date_resolution, aniso8601.date.get_date_resolution) self.assertEqual(aniso8601.parse_duration, aniso8601.duration.parse_duration) self.assertEqual(aniso8601.parse_interval, aniso8601.interval.parse_interval) self.assertEqual(aniso8601.parse_repeating_interval, aniso8601.interval.parse_repeating_interval)
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/autopep8-1.5.6.dist-info/RECORD
../../Scripts/autopep8.exe,sha256=kqJlFiAiJRRn3gGS_10HUEzYF_tHR8IPIfvGM35_vsc,106409 __pycache__/autopep8.cpython-39.pyc,, autopep8-1.5.6.dist-info/AUTHORS.rst,sha256=tiTPsbzGl9dtXCMEWXbWSV1zan1M-BoWtiixs46GIWk,2003 autopep8-1.5.6.dist-info/INSTALLER,sha256=zuuue4knoyJ-UwPPXg8fezS7VCrXJQrAP7zeNuwvFQg,4 autopep8-1.5.6.dist-info/LICENSE,sha256=jR0COOSFQ0QZFMqwdB1N4-Bwobg2f3h69fIJr7YLCWo,1181 autopep8-1.5.6.dist-info/METADATA,sha256=f5pn0aVSAUMaM6J_WhXm_T4ZaaN85eky1uVLmH3Y8-c,16661 autopep8-1.5.6.dist-info/RECORD,, autopep8-1.5.6.dist-info/REQUESTED,sha256=47DEQpj8HBSa-_TImW-5JCeuQeRkm5NMpJWZG3hSuFU,0 autopep8-1.5.6.dist-info/WHEEL,sha256=Z-nyYpwrcSqxfdux5Mbn_DQ525iP7J2DG3JgGvOYyTQ,110 autopep8-1.5.6.dist-info/entry_points.txt,sha256=iHNa5_cSXw2ablVbRmfiFGMG1CNrpEPRCEjn3nspaJ8,44 autopep8-1.5.6.dist-info/top_level.txt,sha256=s2x-di3QBwGxr7kd5xErt2pom8dsFRdINbmwsOEgLfU,9 autopep8.py,sha256=wXlK4sGQ1RNCeh_JGdQnyQRJEtd9gqp_lzFbTYklHCI,153221
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qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/autopep8-1.5.6.dist-info/LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2010-2011 Hideo Hattori Copyright (C) 2011-2013 Hideo Hattori, Steven Myint Copyright (C) 2013-2016 Hideo Hattori, Steven Myint, Bill Wendling Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
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qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/autopep8-1.5.6.dist-info/WHEEL
Wheel-Version: 1.0 Generator: bdist_wheel (0.36.2) Root-Is-Purelib: true Tag: py2-none-any Tag: py3-none-any
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qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/autopep8-1.5.6.dist-info/entry_points.txt
[console_scripts] autopep8 = autopep8:main
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qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/autopep8-1.5.6.dist-info/AUTHORS.rst
Main contributors ----------------- - Hideo Hattori (https://github.com/hhatto) - Steven Myint (https://github.com/myint) - Bill Wendling (https://github.com/gwelymernans) Patches ------- - Fraser Tweedale (https://github.com/frasertweedale) - clach04 (https://github.com/clach04) - Marc Abramowitz (https://github.com/msabramo) - dellis23 (https://github.com/dellis23) - Sam Vilain (https://github.com/samv) - Florent Xicluna (https://github.com/florentx) - Andras Tim (https://github.com/andras-tim) - tomscytale (https://github.com/tomscytale) - Filip Noetzel (https://github.com/peritus) - Erik Bray (https://github.com/iguananaut) - Christopher Medrela (https://github.com/chrismedrela) - 小明 (https://github.com/dongweiming) - Andy Hayden (https://github.com/hayd) - Fabio Zadrozny (https://github.com/fabioz) - Alex Chernetz (https://github.com/achernet) - Marc Schlaich (https://github.com/schlamar) - E. M. Bray (https://github.com/embray) - Thomas Hisch (https://github.com/thisch) - Florian Best (https://github.com/spaceone) - Ian Clark (https://github.com/evenicoulddoit) - Khairi Hafsham (https://github.com/khairihafsham) - Neil Halelamien (https://github.com/neilsh) - Hashem Nasarat (https://github.com/Hnasar) - Hugo van Kemenade (https://github.com/hugovk) - gmbnomis (https://github.com/gmbnomis) - Samuel Lelièvre (https://github.com/slel) - bigredengineer (https://github.com/bigredengineer) - Kai Chen (https://github.com/kx-chen) - Anthony Sottile (https://github.com/asottile) - 秋葉 (https://github.com/Hanaasagi) - Christian Clauss (https://github.com/cclauss) - tobixx (https://github.com/tobixx) - bigredengineer (https://github.com/bigredengineer) - Bastien Gérard (https://github.com/bagerard) - nicolasbonifas (https://github.com/nicolasbonifas) - Andrii Yurchuk (https://github.com/Ch00k) - José M. Guisado (https://github.com/pvxe) - Dai Truong (https://github.com/NovaDev94) - jnozsc (https://github.com/jnozsc) - Edwin Shepherd (https://github.com/shardros)
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qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/autopep8-1.5.6.dist-info/top_level.txt
autopep8
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qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/autopep8-1.5.6.dist-info/INSTALLER
pip
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qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/autopep8-1.5.6.dist-info/METADATA
Metadata-Version: 2.1 Name: autopep8 Version: 1.5.6 Summary: A tool that automatically formats Python code to conform to the PEP 8 style guide Home-page: https://github.com/hhatto/autopep8 Author: Hideo Hattori Author-email: hhatto.jp@gmail.com License: Expat License Keywords: automation,pep8,format,pycodestyle Platform: UNKNOWN Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable Classifier: Environment :: Console Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent Classifier: Programming Language :: Python Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.7 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.8 Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries :: Python Modules Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Quality Assurance Requires-Dist: pycodestyle (>=2.7.0) Requires-Dist: toml ======== autopep8 ======== .. image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/autopep8.svg :target: https://pypi.org/project/autopep8/ :alt: PyPI Version .. image:: https://github.com/hhatto/autopep8/workflows/Python%20package/badge.svg :target: https://github.com/hhatto/autopep8/actions :alt: Build status .. image:: https://codecov.io/gh/hhatto/autopep8/branch/master/graph/badge.svg :target: https://codecov.io/gh/hhatto/autopep8 :alt: Code Coverage autopep8 automatically formats Python code to conform to the `PEP 8`_ style guide. It uses the pycodestyle_ utility to determine what parts of the code needs to be formatted. autopep8 is capable of fixing most of the formatting issues_ that can be reported by pycodestyle. .. _PEP 8: https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/ .. _issues: https://pycodestyle.readthedocs.org/en/latest/intro.html#error-codes .. contents:: Installation ============ From pip:: $ pip install --upgrade autopep8 Consider using the ``--user`` option_. .. _option: https://pip.pypa.io/en/latest/user_guide/#user-installs Requirements ============ autopep8 requires pycodestyle_. .. _pycodestyle: https://github.com/PyCQA/pycodestyle Usage ===== To modify a file in place (with aggressive level 2):: $ autopep8 --in-place --aggressive --aggressive <filename> Before running autopep8. .. code-block:: python import math, sys; def example1(): ####This is a long comment. This should be wrapped to fit within 72 characters. some_tuple=( 1,2, 3,'a' ); some_variable={'long':'Long code lines should be wrapped within 79 characters.', 'other':[math.pi, 100,200,300,9876543210,'This is a long string that goes on'], 'more':{'inner':'This whole logical line should be wrapped.',some_tuple:[1, 20,300,40000,500000000,60000000000000000]}} return (some_tuple, some_variable) def example2(): return {'has_key() is deprecated':True}.has_key({'f':2}.has_key('')); class Example3( object ): def __init__ ( self, bar ): #Comments should have a space after the hash. if bar : bar+=1; bar=bar* bar ; return bar else: some_string = """ Indentation in multiline strings should not be touched. Only actual code should be reindented. """ return (sys.path, some_string) After running autopep8. .. code-block:: python import math import sys def example1(): # This is a long comment. This should be wrapped to fit within 72 # characters. some_tuple = (1, 2, 3, 'a') some_variable = { 'long': 'Long code lines should be wrapped within 79 characters.', 'other': [ math.pi, 100, 200, 300, 9876543210, 'This is a long string that goes on'], 'more': { 'inner': 'This whole logical line should be wrapped.', some_tuple: [ 1, 20, 300, 40000, 500000000, 60000000000000000]}} return (some_tuple, some_variable) def example2(): return ('' in {'f': 2}) in {'has_key() is deprecated': True} class Example3(object): def __init__(self, bar): # Comments should have a space after the hash. if bar: bar += 1 bar = bar * bar return bar else: some_string = """ Indentation in multiline strings should not be touched. Only actual code should be reindented. """ return (sys.path, some_string) Options:: usage: autopep8 [-h] [--version] [-v] [-d] [-i] [--global-config filename] [--ignore-local-config] [-r] [-j n] [-p n] [-a] [--experimental] [--exclude globs] [--list-fixes] [--ignore errors] [--select errors] [--max-line-length n] [--line-range line line] [--hang-closing] [--exit-code] [files [files ...]] Automatically formats Python code to conform to the PEP 8 style guide. positional arguments: files files to format or '-' for standard in optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit --version show program's version number and exit -v, --verbose print verbose messages; multiple -v result in more verbose messages -d, --diff print the diff for the fixed source -i, --in-place make changes to files in place --global-config filename path to a global pep8 config file; if this file does not exist then this is ignored (default: ~/.config/pep8) --ignore-local-config don't look for and apply local config files; if not passed, defaults are updated with any config files in the project's root directory -r, --recursive run recursively over directories; must be used with --in-place or --diff -j n, --jobs n number of parallel jobs; match CPU count if value is less than 1 -p n, --pep8-passes n maximum number of additional pep8 passes (default: infinite) -a, --aggressive enable non-whitespace changes; multiple -a result in more aggressive changes --experimental enable experimental fixes --exclude globs exclude file/directory names that match these comma- separated globs --list-fixes list codes for fixes; used by --ignore and --select --ignore errors do not fix these errors/warnings (default: E226,E24,W50,W690) --select errors fix only these errors/warnings (e.g. E4,W) --max-line-length n set maximum allowed line length (default: 79) --line-range line line, --range line line only fix errors found within this inclusive range of line numbers (e.g. 1 99); line numbers are indexed at 1 --hang-closing hang-closing option passed to pycodestyle --exit-code change to behavior of exit code. default behavior of return value, 0 is no differences, 1 is error exit. return 2 when add this option. 2 is exists differences. Features ======== autopep8 fixes the following issues_ reported by pycodestyle_:: E101 - Reindent all lines. E11 - Fix indentation. E121 - Fix indentation to be a multiple of four. E122 - Add absent indentation for hanging indentation. E123 - Align closing bracket to match opening bracket. E124 - Align closing bracket to match visual indentation. E125 - Indent to distinguish line from next logical line. E126 - Fix over-indented hanging indentation. E127 - Fix visual indentation. E128 - Fix visual indentation. E129 - Fix visual indentation. E131 - Fix hanging indent for unaligned continuation line. E133 - Fix missing indentation for closing bracket. E20 - Remove extraneous whitespace. E211 - Remove extraneous whitespace. E22 - Fix extraneous whitespace around keywords. E224 - Remove extraneous whitespace around operator. E225 - Fix missing whitespace around operator. E226 - Fix missing whitespace around arithmetic operator. E227 - Fix missing whitespace around bitwise/shift operator. E228 - Fix missing whitespace around modulo operator. E231 - Add missing whitespace. E241 - Fix extraneous whitespace around keywords. E242 - Remove extraneous whitespace around operator. E251 - Remove whitespace around parameter '=' sign. E252 - Missing whitespace around parameter equals. E26 - Fix spacing after comment hash for inline comments. E265 - Fix spacing after comment hash for block comments. E266 - Fix too many leading '#' for block comments. E27 - Fix extraneous whitespace around keywords. E301 - Add missing blank line. E302 - Add missing 2 blank lines. E303 - Remove extra blank lines. E304 - Remove blank line following function decorator. E305 - Expected 2 blank lines after end of function or class. E306 - Expected 1 blank line before a nested definition. E401 - Put imports on separate lines. E402 - Fix module level import not at top of file E501 - Try to make lines fit within --max-line-length characters. E502 - Remove extraneous escape of newline. E701 - Put colon-separated compound statement on separate lines. E70 - Put semicolon-separated compound statement on separate lines. E711 - Fix comparison with None. E712 - Fix comparison with boolean. E713 - Use 'not in' for test for membership. E714 - Use 'is not' test for object identity. E721 - Use "isinstance()" instead of comparing types directly. E722 - Fix bare except. E731 - Use a def when use do not assign a lambda expression. W291 - Remove trailing whitespace. W292 - Add a single newline at the end of the file. W293 - Remove trailing whitespace on blank line. W391 - Remove trailing blank lines. W503 - Fix line break before binary operator. W504 - Fix line break after binary operator. W601 - Use "in" rather than "has_key()". W602 - Fix deprecated form of raising exception. W603 - Use "!=" instead of "<>" W604 - Use "repr()" instead of backticks. W605 - Fix invalid escape sequence 'x'. W690 - Fix various deprecated code (via lib2to3). autopep8 also fixes some issues not found by pycodestyle_. - Correct deprecated or non-idiomatic Python code (via ``lib2to3``). Use this for making Python 2.7 code more compatible with Python 3. (This is triggered if ``W690`` is enabled.) - Normalize files with mixed line endings. - Put a blank line between a class docstring and its first method declaration. (Enabled with ``E301``.) - Remove blank lines between a function declaration and its docstring. (Enabled with ``E303``.) autopep8 avoids fixing some issues found by pycodestyle_. - ``E112``/``E113`` for non comments are reports of bad indentation that break syntax rules. These should not be modified at all. - ``E265``, which refers to spacing after comment hash, is ignored if the comment looks like code. autopep8 avoids modifying these since they are not real comments. If you really want to get rid of the pycodestyle_ warning, consider just removing the commented-out code. (This can be automated via eradicate_.) .. _eradicate: https://github.com/myint/eradicate More advanced usage =================== By default autopep8 only makes whitespace changes. Thus, by default, it does not fix ``E711`` and ``E712``. (Changing ``x == None`` to ``x is None`` may change the meaning of the program if ``x`` has its ``__eq__`` method overridden.) Nor does it correct deprecated code ``W6``. To enable these more aggressive fixes, use the ``--aggressive`` option:: $ autopep8 --aggressive <filename> Use multiple ``--aggressive`` to increase the aggressiveness level. For example, ``E712`` requires aggressiveness level 2 (since ``x == True`` could be changed to either ``x`` or ``x is True``, but autopep8 chooses the former). ``--aggressive`` will also shorten lines more aggressively. It will also remove trailing whitespace more aggressively. (Usually, we don't touch trailing whitespace in docstrings and other multiline strings. And to do even more aggressive changes to docstrings, use docformatter_.) .. _docformatter: https://github.com/myint/docformatter To enable only a subset of the fixes, use the ``--select`` option. For example, to fix various types of indentation issues:: $ autopep8 --select=E1,W1 <filename> Similarly, to just fix deprecated code:: $ autopep8 --aggressive --select=W6 <filename> The above is useful when trying to port a single code base to work with both Python 2 and Python 3 at the same time. If the file being fixed is large, you may want to enable verbose progress messages:: $ autopep8 -v <filename> Passing in ``--experimental`` enables the following functionality: - Shortens code lines by taking its length into account :: $ autopep8 --experimental <filename> Use as a module =============== The simplest way of using autopep8 as a module is via the ``fix_code()`` function: >>> import autopep8 >>> autopep8.fix_code('x= 123\n') 'x = 123\n' Or with options: >>> import autopep8 >>> autopep8.fix_code('x.has_key(y)\n', ... options={'aggressive': 1}) 'y in x\n' >>> autopep8.fix_code('print( 123 )\n', ... options={'ignore': ['E']}) 'print( 123 )\n' Configuration ============= By default, if ``$HOME/.config/pycodestyle`` (``~\.pycodestyle`` in Windows environment) exists, it will be used as global configuration file. Alternatively, you can specify the global configuration file with the ``--global-config`` option. Also, if ``setup.cfg``, ``tox.ini``, ``.pep8`` and ``.flake8`` files exist in the directory where the target file exists, it will be used as the configuration file. ``pep8``, ``pycodestyle``, and ``flake8`` can be used as a section. configuration file example:: [pycodestyle] max_line_length = 120 ignore = E501 pyproject.toml -------------- autopep8 can also use ``pyproject.toml``. section must use ``[tool.autopep8]``, and ``pyproject.toml`` takes precedence over any other configuration files. configuration file example:: [tool.autopep8] max_line_length = 120 ignore = "E501,W6" # or ["E501", "W6"] Testing ======= Test cases are in ``test/test_autopep8.py``. They can be run directly via ``python test/test_autopep8.py`` or via tox_. The latter is useful for testing against multiple Python interpreters. (We currently test against CPython versions 2.7, 3.6 3.7 and 3.8. We also test against PyPy.) .. _`tox`: https://pypi.org/project/tox/ Broad spectrum testing is available via ``test/acid.py``. This script runs autopep8 against Python code and checks for correctness and completeness of the code fixes. It can check that the bytecode remains identical. ``test/acid_pypi.py`` makes use of ``acid.py`` to test against the latest released packages on PyPI. Troubleshooting =============== ``pkg_resources.DistributionNotFound`` -------------------------------------- If you are using an ancient version of ``setuptools``, you might encounter ``pkg_resources.DistributionNotFound`` when trying to run ``autopep8``. Try upgrading ``setuptools`` to workaround this ``setuptools`` problem:: $ pip install --upgrade setuptools Use ``sudo`` if you are installing to the system. Links ===== * PyPI_ * GitHub_ * `Travis CI`_ * Coveralls_ .. _PyPI: https://pypi.org/project/autopep8/ .. _GitHub: https://github.com/hhatto/autopep8 .. _`Travis CI`: https://travis-ci.org/hhatto/autopep8 .. _`Coveralls`: https://coveralls.io/r/hhatto/autopep8
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/ssl_support.py
import os import socket import atexit import re import functools from setuptools.extern.six.moves import urllib, http_client, map, filter from pkg_resources import ResolutionError, ExtractionError try: import ssl except ImportError: ssl = None __all__ = [ 'VerifyingHTTPSHandler', 'find_ca_bundle', 'is_available', 'cert_paths', 'opener_for' ] cert_paths = """ /etc/pki/tls/certs/ca-bundle.crt /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt /usr/share/ssl/certs/ca-bundle.crt /usr/local/share/certs/ca-root.crt /etc/ssl/cert.pem /System/Library/OpenSSL/certs/cert.pem /usr/local/share/certs/ca-root-nss.crt /etc/ssl/ca-bundle.pem """.strip().split() try: HTTPSHandler = urllib.request.HTTPSHandler HTTPSConnection = http_client.HTTPSConnection except AttributeError: HTTPSHandler = HTTPSConnection = object is_available = ssl is not None and object not in ( HTTPSHandler, HTTPSConnection) try: from ssl import CertificateError, match_hostname except ImportError: try: from backports.ssl_match_hostname import CertificateError from backports.ssl_match_hostname import match_hostname except ImportError: CertificateError = None match_hostname = None if not CertificateError: class CertificateError(ValueError): pass if not match_hostname: def _dnsname_match(dn, hostname, max_wildcards=1): """Matching according to RFC 6125, section 6.4.3 https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6125#section-6.4.3 """ pats = [] if not dn: return False # Ported from python3-syntax: # leftmost, *remainder = dn.split(r'.') parts = dn.split(r'.') leftmost = parts[0] remainder = parts[1:] wildcards = leftmost.count('*') if wildcards > max_wildcards: # Issue #17980: avoid denials of service by refusing more # than one wildcard per fragment. A survey of established # policy among SSL implementations showed it to be a # reasonable choice. raise CertificateError( "too many wildcards in certificate DNS name: " + repr(dn)) # speed up common case w/o wildcards if not wildcards: return dn.lower() == hostname.lower() # RFC 6125, section 6.4.3, subitem 1. # The client SHOULD NOT attempt to match a # presented identifier in which the wildcard # character comprises a label other than the # left-most label. if leftmost == '*': # When '*' is a fragment by itself, it matches a non-empty dotless # fragment. pats.append('[^.]+') elif leftmost.startswith('xn--') or hostname.startswith('xn--'): # RFC 6125, section 6.4.3, subitem 3. # The client SHOULD NOT attempt to match a presented identifier # where the wildcard character is embedded within an A-label or # U-label of an internationalized domain name. pats.append(re.escape(leftmost)) else: # Otherwise, '*' matches any dotless string, e.g. www* pats.append(re.escape(leftmost).replace(r'\*', '[^.]*')) # add the remaining fragments, ignore any wildcards for frag in remainder: pats.append(re.escape(frag)) pat = re.compile(r'\A' + r'\.'.join(pats) + r'\Z', re.IGNORECASE) return pat.match(hostname) def match_hostname(cert, hostname): """Verify that *cert* (in decoded format as returned by SSLSocket.getpeercert()) matches the *hostname*. RFC 2818 and RFC 6125 rules are followed, but IP addresses are not accepted for *hostname*. CertificateError is raised on failure. On success, the function returns nothing. """ if not cert: raise ValueError("empty or no certificate") dnsnames = [] san = cert.get('subjectAltName', ()) for key, value in san: if key == 'DNS': if _dnsname_match(value, hostname): return dnsnames.append(value) if not dnsnames: # The subject is only checked when there is no dNSName entry # in subjectAltName for sub in cert.get('subject', ()): for key, value in sub: # XXX according to RFC 2818, the most specific Common Name # must be used. if key == 'commonName': if _dnsname_match(value, hostname): return dnsnames.append(value) if len(dnsnames) > 1: raise CertificateError( "hostname %r doesn't match either of %s" % (hostname, ', '.join(map(repr, dnsnames)))) elif len(dnsnames) == 1: raise CertificateError( "hostname %r doesn't match %r" % (hostname, dnsnames[0])) else: raise CertificateError( "no appropriate commonName or " "subjectAltName fields were found") class VerifyingHTTPSHandler(HTTPSHandler): """Simple verifying handler: no auth, subclasses, timeouts, etc.""" def __init__(self, ca_bundle): self.ca_bundle = ca_bundle HTTPSHandler.__init__(self) def https_open(self, req): return self.do_open( lambda host, **kw: VerifyingHTTPSConn(host, self.ca_bundle, **kw), req ) class VerifyingHTTPSConn(HTTPSConnection): """Simple verifying connection: no auth, subclasses, timeouts, etc.""" def __init__(self, host, ca_bundle, **kw): HTTPSConnection.__init__(self, host, **kw) self.ca_bundle = ca_bundle def connect(self): sock = socket.create_connection( (self.host, self.port), getattr(self, 'source_address', None) ) # Handle the socket if a (proxy) tunnel is present if hasattr(self, '_tunnel') and getattr(self, '_tunnel_host', None): self.sock = sock self._tunnel() # http://bugs.python.org/issue7776: Python>=3.4.1 and >=2.7.7 # change self.host to mean the proxy server host when tunneling is # being used. Adapt, since we are interested in the destination # host for the match_hostname() comparison. actual_host = self._tunnel_host else: actual_host = self.host if hasattr(ssl, 'create_default_context'): ctx = ssl.create_default_context(cafile=self.ca_bundle) self.sock = ctx.wrap_socket(sock, server_hostname=actual_host) else: # This is for python < 2.7.9 and < 3.4? self.sock = ssl.wrap_socket( sock, cert_reqs=ssl.CERT_REQUIRED, ca_certs=self.ca_bundle ) try: match_hostname(self.sock.getpeercert(), actual_host) except CertificateError: self.sock.shutdown(socket.SHUT_RDWR) self.sock.close() raise def opener_for(ca_bundle=None): """Get a urlopen() replacement that uses ca_bundle for verification""" return urllib.request.build_opener( VerifyingHTTPSHandler(ca_bundle or find_ca_bundle()) ).open # from jaraco.functools def once(func): @functools.wraps(func) def wrapper(*args, **kwargs): if not hasattr(func, 'always_returns'): func.always_returns = func(*args, **kwargs) return func.always_returns return wrapper @once def get_win_certfile(): try: import wincertstore except ImportError: return None class CertFile(wincertstore.CertFile): def __init__(self): super(CertFile, self).__init__() atexit.register(self.close) def close(self): try: super(CertFile, self).close() except OSError: pass _wincerts = CertFile() _wincerts.addstore('CA') _wincerts.addstore('ROOT') return _wincerts.name def find_ca_bundle(): """Return an existing CA bundle path, or None""" extant_cert_paths = filter(os.path.isfile, cert_paths) return ( get_win_certfile() or next(extant_cert_paths, None) or _certifi_where() ) def _certifi_where(): try: return __import__('certifi').where() except (ImportError, ResolutionError, ExtractionError): pass
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/windows_support.py
import platform import ctypes def windows_only(func): if platform.system() != 'Windows': return lambda *args, **kwargs: None return func @windows_only def hide_file(path): """ Set the hidden attribute on a file or directory. From http://stackoverflow.com/questions/19622133/ `path` must be text. """ __import__('ctypes.wintypes') SetFileAttributes = ctypes.windll.kernel32.SetFileAttributesW SetFileAttributes.argtypes = ctypes.wintypes.LPWSTR, ctypes.wintypes.DWORD SetFileAttributes.restype = ctypes.wintypes.BOOL FILE_ATTRIBUTE_HIDDEN = 0x02 ret = SetFileAttributes(path, FILE_ATTRIBUTE_HIDDEN) if not ret: raise ctypes.WinError()
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_deprecation_warning.py
class SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning(Warning): """ Base class for warning deprecations in ``setuptools`` This class is not derived from ``DeprecationWarning``, and as such is visible by default. """
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/package_index.py
"""PyPI and direct package downloading""" import sys import os import re import shutil import socket import base64 import hashlib import itertools import warnings from functools import wraps from setuptools.extern import six from setuptools.extern.six.moves import urllib, http_client, configparser, map import setuptools from pkg_resources import ( CHECKOUT_DIST, Distribution, BINARY_DIST, normalize_path, SOURCE_DIST, Environment, find_distributions, safe_name, safe_version, to_filename, Requirement, DEVELOP_DIST, EGG_DIST, ) from setuptools import ssl_support from distutils import log from distutils.errors import DistutilsError from fnmatch import translate from setuptools.py27compat import get_all_headers from setuptools.py33compat import unescape from setuptools.wheel import Wheel __metaclass__ = type EGG_FRAGMENT = re.compile(r'^egg=([-A-Za-z0-9_.+!]+)$') HREF = re.compile(r"""href\s*=\s*['"]?([^'"> ]+)""", re.I) PYPI_MD5 = re.compile( r'<a href="([^"#]+)">([^<]+)</a>\n\s+\(<a (?:title="MD5 hash"\n\s+)' r'href="[^?]+\?:action=show_md5&amp;digest=([0-9a-f]{32})">md5</a>\)' ) URL_SCHEME = re.compile('([-+.a-z0-9]{2,}):', re.I).match EXTENSIONS = ".tar.gz .tar.bz2 .tar .zip .tgz".split() __all__ = [ 'PackageIndex', 'distros_for_url', 'parse_bdist_wininst', 'interpret_distro_name', ] _SOCKET_TIMEOUT = 15 _tmpl = "setuptools/{setuptools.__version__} Python-urllib/{py_major}" user_agent = _tmpl.format( py_major='{}.{}'.format(*sys.version_info), setuptools=setuptools) def parse_requirement_arg(spec): try: return Requirement.parse(spec) except ValueError as e: raise DistutilsError( "Not a URL, existing file, or requirement spec: %r" % (spec,) ) from e def parse_bdist_wininst(name): """Return (base,pyversion) or (None,None) for possible .exe name""" lower = name.lower() base, py_ver, plat = None, None, None if lower.endswith('.exe'): if lower.endswith('.win32.exe'): base = name[:-10] plat = 'win32' elif lower.startswith('.win32-py', -16): py_ver = name[-7:-4] base = name[:-16] plat = 'win32' elif lower.endswith('.win-amd64.exe'): base = name[:-14] plat = 'win-amd64' elif lower.startswith('.win-amd64-py', -20): py_ver = name[-7:-4] base = name[:-20] plat = 'win-amd64' return base, py_ver, plat def egg_info_for_url(url): parts = urllib.parse.urlparse(url) scheme, server, path, parameters, query, fragment = parts base = urllib.parse.unquote(path.split('/')[-1]) if server == 'sourceforge.net' and base == 'download': # XXX Yuck base = urllib.parse.unquote(path.split('/')[-2]) if '#' in base: base, fragment = base.split('#', 1) return base, fragment def distros_for_url(url, metadata=None): """Yield egg or source distribution objects that might be found at a URL""" base, fragment = egg_info_for_url(url) for dist in distros_for_location(url, base, metadata): yield dist if fragment: match = EGG_FRAGMENT.match(fragment) if match: for dist in interpret_distro_name( url, match.group(1), metadata, precedence=CHECKOUT_DIST ): yield dist def distros_for_location(location, basename, metadata=None): """Yield egg or source distribution objects based on basename""" if basename.endswith('.egg.zip'): basename = basename[:-4] # strip the .zip if basename.endswith('.egg') and '-' in basename: # only one, unambiguous interpretation return [Distribution.from_location(location, basename, metadata)] if basename.endswith('.whl') and '-' in basename: wheel = Wheel(basename) if not wheel.is_compatible(): return [] return [Distribution( location=location, project_name=wheel.project_name, version=wheel.version, # Increase priority over eggs. precedence=EGG_DIST + 1, )] if basename.endswith('.exe'): win_base, py_ver, platform = parse_bdist_wininst(basename) if win_base is not None: return interpret_distro_name( location, win_base, metadata, py_ver, BINARY_DIST, platform ) # Try source distro extensions (.zip, .tgz, etc.) # for ext in EXTENSIONS: if basename.endswith(ext): basename = basename[:-len(ext)] return interpret_distro_name(location, basename, metadata) return [] # no extension matched def distros_for_filename(filename, metadata=None): """Yield possible egg or source distribution objects based on a filename""" return distros_for_location( normalize_path(filename), os.path.basename(filename), metadata ) def interpret_distro_name( location, basename, metadata, py_version=None, precedence=SOURCE_DIST, platform=None ): """Generate alternative interpretations of a source distro name Note: if `location` is a filesystem filename, you should call ``pkg_resources.normalize_path()`` on it before passing it to this routine! """ # Generate alternative interpretations of a source distro name # Because some packages are ambiguous as to name/versions split # e.g. "adns-python-1.1.0", "egenix-mx-commercial", etc. # So, we generate each possible interepretation (e.g. "adns, python-1.1.0" # "adns-python, 1.1.0", and "adns-python-1.1.0, no version"). In practice, # the spurious interpretations should be ignored, because in the event # there's also an "adns" package, the spurious "python-1.1.0" version will # compare lower than any numeric version number, and is therefore unlikely # to match a request for it. It's still a potential problem, though, and # in the long run PyPI and the distutils should go for "safe" names and # versions in distribution archive names (sdist and bdist). parts = basename.split('-') if not py_version and any(re.match(r'py\d\.\d$', p) for p in parts[2:]): # it is a bdist_dumb, not an sdist -- bail out return for p in range(1, len(parts) + 1): yield Distribution( location, metadata, '-'.join(parts[:p]), '-'.join(parts[p:]), py_version=py_version, precedence=precedence, platform=platform ) # From Python 2.7 docs def unique_everseen(iterable, key=None): "List unique elements, preserving order. Remember all elements ever seen." # unique_everseen('AAAABBBCCDAABBB') --> A B C D # unique_everseen('ABBCcAD', str.lower) --> A B C D seen = set() seen_add = seen.add if key is None: for element in six.moves.filterfalse(seen.__contains__, iterable): seen_add(element) yield element else: for element in iterable: k = key(element) if k not in seen: seen_add(k) yield element def unique_values(func): """ Wrap a function returning an iterable such that the resulting iterable only ever yields unique items. """ @wraps(func) def wrapper(*args, **kwargs): return unique_everseen(func(*args, **kwargs)) return wrapper REL = re.compile(r"""<([^>]*\srel\s*=\s*['"]?([^'">]+)[^>]*)>""", re.I) # this line is here to fix emacs' cruddy broken syntax highlighting @unique_values def find_external_links(url, page): """Find rel="homepage" and rel="download" links in `page`, yielding URLs""" for match in REL.finditer(page): tag, rel = match.groups() rels = set(map(str.strip, rel.lower().split(','))) if 'homepage' in rels or 'download' in rels: for match in HREF.finditer(tag): yield urllib.parse.urljoin(url, htmldecode(match.group(1))) for tag in ("<th>Home Page", "<th>Download URL"): pos = page.find(tag) if pos != -1: match = HREF.search(page, pos) if match: yield urllib.parse.urljoin(url, htmldecode(match.group(1))) class ContentChecker: """ A null content checker that defines the interface for checking content """ def feed(self, block): """ Feed a block of data to the hash. """ return def is_valid(self): """ Check the hash. Return False if validation fails. """ return True def report(self, reporter, template): """ Call reporter with information about the checker (hash name) substituted into the template. """ return class HashChecker(ContentChecker): pattern = re.compile( r'(?P<hash_name>sha1|sha224|sha384|sha256|sha512|md5)=' r'(?P<expected>[a-f0-9]+)' ) def __init__(self, hash_name, expected): self.hash_name = hash_name self.hash = hashlib.new(hash_name) self.expected = expected @classmethod def from_url(cls, url): "Construct a (possibly null) ContentChecker from a URL" fragment = urllib.parse.urlparse(url)[-1] if not fragment: return ContentChecker() match = cls.pattern.search(fragment) if not match: return ContentChecker() return cls(**match.groupdict()) def feed(self, block): self.hash.update(block) def is_valid(self): return self.hash.hexdigest() == self.expected def report(self, reporter, template): msg = template % self.hash_name return reporter(msg) class PackageIndex(Environment): """A distribution index that scans web pages for download URLs""" def __init__( self, index_url="https://pypi.org/simple/", hosts=('*',), ca_bundle=None, verify_ssl=True, *args, **kw ): Environment.__init__(self, *args, **kw) self.index_url = index_url + "/" [:not index_url.endswith('/')] self.scanned_urls = {} self.fetched_urls = {} self.package_pages = {} self.allows = re.compile('|'.join(map(translate, hosts))).match self.to_scan = [] use_ssl = ( verify_ssl and ssl_support.is_available and (ca_bundle or ssl_support.find_ca_bundle()) ) if use_ssl: self.opener = ssl_support.opener_for(ca_bundle) else: self.opener = urllib.request.urlopen def process_url(self, url, retrieve=False): """Evaluate a URL as a possible download, and maybe retrieve it""" if url in self.scanned_urls and not retrieve: return self.scanned_urls[url] = True if not URL_SCHEME(url): self.process_filename(url) return else: dists = list(distros_for_url(url)) if dists: if not self.url_ok(url): return self.debug("Found link: %s", url) if dists or not retrieve or url in self.fetched_urls: list(map(self.add, dists)) return # don't need the actual page if not self.url_ok(url): self.fetched_urls[url] = True return self.info("Reading %s", url) self.fetched_urls[url] = True # prevent multiple fetch attempts tmpl = "Download error on %s: %%s -- Some packages may not be found!" f = self.open_url(url, tmpl % url) if f is None: return if isinstance(f, urllib.error.HTTPError) and f.code == 401: self.info("Authentication error: %s" % f.msg) self.fetched_urls[f.url] = True if 'html' not in f.headers.get('content-type', '').lower(): f.close() # not html, we can't process it return base = f.url # handle redirects page = f.read() if not isinstance(page, str): # In Python 3 and got bytes but want str. if isinstance(f, urllib.error.HTTPError): # Errors have no charset, assume latin1: charset = 'latin-1' else: charset = f.headers.get_param('charset') or 'latin-1' page = page.decode(charset, "ignore") f.close() for match in HREF.finditer(page): link = urllib.parse.urljoin(base, htmldecode(match.group(1))) self.process_url(link) if url.startswith(self.index_url) and getattr(f, 'code', None) != 404: page = self.process_index(url, page) def process_filename(self, fn, nested=False): # process filenames or directories if not os.path.exists(fn): self.warn("Not found: %s", fn) return if os.path.isdir(fn) and not nested: path = os.path.realpath(fn) for item in os.listdir(path): self.process_filename(os.path.join(path, item), True) dists = distros_for_filename(fn) if dists: self.debug("Found: %s", fn) list(map(self.add, dists)) def url_ok(self, url, fatal=False): s = URL_SCHEME(url) is_file = s and s.group(1).lower() == 'file' if is_file or self.allows(urllib.parse.urlparse(url)[1]): return True msg = ( "\nNote: Bypassing %s (disallowed host; see " "http://bit.ly/2hrImnY for details).\n") if fatal: raise DistutilsError(msg % url) else: self.warn(msg, url) def scan_egg_links(self, search_path): dirs = filter(os.path.isdir, search_path) egg_links = ( (path, entry) for path in dirs for entry in os.listdir(path) if entry.endswith('.egg-link') ) list(itertools.starmap(self.scan_egg_link, egg_links)) def scan_egg_link(self, path, entry): with open(os.path.join(path, entry)) as raw_lines: # filter non-empty lines lines = list(filter(None, map(str.strip, raw_lines))) if len(lines) != 2: # format is not recognized; punt return egg_path, setup_path = lines for dist in find_distributions(os.path.join(path, egg_path)): dist.location = os.path.join(path, *lines) dist.precedence = SOURCE_DIST self.add(dist) def process_index(self, url, page): """Process the contents of a PyPI page""" def scan(link): # Process a URL to see if it's for a package page if link.startswith(self.index_url): parts = list(map( urllib.parse.unquote, link[len(self.index_url):].split('/') )) if len(parts) == 2 and '#' not in parts[1]: # it's a package page, sanitize and index it pkg = safe_name(parts[0]) ver = safe_version(parts[1]) self.package_pages.setdefault(pkg.lower(), {})[link] = True return to_filename(pkg), to_filename(ver) return None, None # process an index page into the package-page index for match in HREF.finditer(page): try: scan(urllib.parse.urljoin(url, htmldecode(match.group(1)))) except ValueError: pass pkg, ver = scan(url) # ensure this page is in the page index if pkg: # process individual package page for new_url in find_external_links(url, page): # Process the found URL base, frag = egg_info_for_url(new_url) if base.endswith('.py') and not frag: if ver: new_url += '#egg=%s-%s' % (pkg, ver) else: self.need_version_info(url) self.scan_url(new_url) return PYPI_MD5.sub( lambda m: '<a href="%s#md5=%s">%s</a>' % m.group(1, 3, 2), page ) else: return "" # no sense double-scanning non-package pages def need_version_info(self, url): self.scan_all( "Page at %s links to .py file(s) without version info; an index " "scan is required.", url ) def scan_all(self, msg=None, *args): if self.index_url not in self.fetched_urls: if msg: self.warn(msg, *args) self.info( "Scanning index of all packages (this may take a while)" ) self.scan_url(self.index_url) def find_packages(self, requirement): self.scan_url(self.index_url + requirement.unsafe_name + '/') if not self.package_pages.get(requirement.key): # Fall back to safe version of the name self.scan_url(self.index_url + requirement.project_name + '/') if not self.package_pages.get(requirement.key): # We couldn't find the target package, so search the index page too self.not_found_in_index(requirement) for url in list(self.package_pages.get(requirement.key, ())): # scan each page that might be related to the desired package self.scan_url(url) def obtain(self, requirement, installer=None): self.prescan() self.find_packages(requirement) for dist in self[requirement.key]: if dist in requirement: return dist self.debug("%s does not match %s", requirement, dist) return super(PackageIndex, self).obtain(requirement, installer) def check_hash(self, checker, filename, tfp): """ checker is a ContentChecker """ checker.report( self.debug, "Validating %%s checksum for %s" % filename) if not checker.is_valid(): tfp.close() os.unlink(filename) raise DistutilsError( "%s validation failed for %s; " "possible download problem?" % (checker.hash.name, os.path.basename(filename)) ) def add_find_links(self, urls): """Add `urls` to the list that will be prescanned for searches""" for url in urls: if ( self.to_scan is None # if we have already "gone online" or not URL_SCHEME(url) # or it's a local file/directory or url.startswith('file:') or list(distros_for_url(url)) # or a direct package link ): # then go ahead and process it now self.scan_url(url) else: # otherwise, defer retrieval till later self.to_scan.append(url) def prescan(self): """Scan urls scheduled for prescanning (e.g. --find-links)""" if self.to_scan: list(map(self.scan_url, self.to_scan)) self.to_scan = None # from now on, go ahead and process immediately def not_found_in_index(self, requirement): if self[requirement.key]: # we've seen at least one distro meth, msg = self.info, "Couldn't retrieve index page for %r" else: # no distros seen for this name, might be misspelled meth, msg = ( self.warn, "Couldn't find index page for %r (maybe misspelled?)") meth(msg, requirement.unsafe_name) self.scan_all() def download(self, spec, tmpdir): """Locate and/or download `spec` to `tmpdir`, returning a local path `spec` may be a ``Requirement`` object, or a string containing a URL, an existing local filename, or a project/version requirement spec (i.e. the string form of a ``Requirement`` object). If it is the URL of a .py file with an unambiguous ``#egg=name-version`` tag (i.e., one that escapes ``-`` as ``_`` throughout), a trivial ``setup.py`` is automatically created alongside the downloaded file. If `spec` is a ``Requirement`` object or a string containing a project/version requirement spec, this method returns the location of a matching distribution (possibly after downloading it to `tmpdir`). If `spec` is a locally existing file or directory name, it is simply returned unchanged. If `spec` is a URL, it is downloaded to a subpath of `tmpdir`, and the local filename is returned. Various errors may be raised if a problem occurs during downloading. """ if not isinstance(spec, Requirement): scheme = URL_SCHEME(spec) if scheme: # It's a url, download it to tmpdir found = self._download_url(scheme.group(1), spec, tmpdir) base, fragment = egg_info_for_url(spec) if base.endswith('.py'): found = self.gen_setup(found, fragment, tmpdir) return found elif os.path.exists(spec): # Existing file or directory, just return it return spec else: spec = parse_requirement_arg(spec) return getattr(self.fetch_distribution(spec, tmpdir), 'location', None) def fetch_distribution( self, requirement, tmpdir, force_scan=False, source=False, develop_ok=False, local_index=None): """Obtain a distribution suitable for fulfilling `requirement` `requirement` must be a ``pkg_resources.Requirement`` instance. If necessary, or if the `force_scan` flag is set, the requirement is searched for in the (online) package index as well as the locally installed packages. If a distribution matching `requirement` is found, the returned distribution's ``location`` is the value you would have gotten from calling the ``download()`` method with the matching distribution's URL or filename. If no matching distribution is found, ``None`` is returned. If the `source` flag is set, only source distributions and source checkout links will be considered. Unless the `develop_ok` flag is set, development and system eggs (i.e., those using the ``.egg-info`` format) will be ignored. """ # process a Requirement self.info("Searching for %s", requirement) skipped = {} dist = None def find(req, env=None): if env is None: env = self # Find a matching distribution; may be called more than once for dist in env[req.key]: if dist.precedence == DEVELOP_DIST and not develop_ok: if dist not in skipped: self.warn( "Skipping development or system egg: %s", dist, ) skipped[dist] = 1 continue test = ( dist in req and (dist.precedence <= SOURCE_DIST or not source) ) if test: loc = self.download(dist.location, tmpdir) dist.download_location = loc if os.path.exists(dist.download_location): return dist if force_scan: self.prescan() self.find_packages(requirement) dist = find(requirement) if not dist and local_index is not None: dist = find(requirement, local_index) if dist is None: if self.to_scan is not None: self.prescan() dist = find(requirement) if dist is None and not force_scan: self.find_packages(requirement) dist = find(requirement) if dist is None: self.warn( "No local packages or working download links found for %s%s", (source and "a source distribution of " or ""), requirement, ) else: self.info("Best match: %s", dist) return dist.clone(location=dist.download_location) def fetch(self, requirement, tmpdir, force_scan=False, source=False): """Obtain a file suitable for fulfilling `requirement` DEPRECATED; use the ``fetch_distribution()`` method now instead. For backward compatibility, this routine is identical but returns the ``location`` of the downloaded distribution instead of a distribution object. """ dist = self.fetch_distribution(requirement, tmpdir, force_scan, source) if dist is not None: return dist.location return None def gen_setup(self, filename, fragment, tmpdir): match = EGG_FRAGMENT.match(fragment) dists = match and [ d for d in interpret_distro_name(filename, match.group(1), None) if d.version ] or [] if len(dists) == 1: # unambiguous ``#egg`` fragment basename = os.path.basename(filename) # Make sure the file has been downloaded to the temp dir. if os.path.dirname(filename) != tmpdir: dst = os.path.join(tmpdir, basename) from setuptools.command.easy_install import samefile if not samefile(filename, dst): shutil.copy2(filename, dst) filename = dst with open(os.path.join(tmpdir, 'setup.py'), 'w') as file: file.write( "from setuptools import setup\n" "setup(name=%r, version=%r, py_modules=[%r])\n" % ( dists[0].project_name, dists[0].version, os.path.splitext(basename)[0] ) ) return filename elif match: raise DistutilsError( "Can't unambiguously interpret project/version identifier %r; " "any dashes in the name or version should be escaped using " "underscores. %r" % (fragment, dists) ) else: raise DistutilsError( "Can't process plain .py files without an '#egg=name-version'" " suffix to enable automatic setup script generation." ) dl_blocksize = 8192 def _download_to(self, url, filename): self.info("Downloading %s", url) # Download the file fp = None try: checker = HashChecker.from_url(url) fp = self.open_url(url) if isinstance(fp, urllib.error.HTTPError): raise DistutilsError( "Can't download %s: %s %s" % (url, fp.code, fp.msg) ) headers = fp.info() blocknum = 0 bs = self.dl_blocksize size = -1 if "content-length" in headers: # Some servers return multiple Content-Length headers :( sizes = get_all_headers(headers, 'Content-Length') size = max(map(int, sizes)) self.reporthook(url, filename, blocknum, bs, size) with open(filename, 'wb') as tfp: while True: block = fp.read(bs) if block: checker.feed(block) tfp.write(block) blocknum += 1 self.reporthook(url, filename, blocknum, bs, size) else: break self.check_hash(checker, filename, tfp) return headers finally: if fp: fp.close() def reporthook(self, url, filename, blocknum, blksize, size): pass # no-op def open_url(self, url, warning=None): if url.startswith('file:'): return local_open(url) try: return open_with_auth(url, self.opener) except (ValueError, http_client.InvalidURL) as v: msg = ' '.join([str(arg) for arg in v.args]) if warning: self.warn(warning, msg) else: raise DistutilsError('%s %s' % (url, msg)) from v except urllib.error.HTTPError as v: return v except urllib.error.URLError as v: if warning: self.warn(warning, v.reason) else: raise DistutilsError("Download error for %s: %s" % (url, v.reason)) from v except http_client.BadStatusLine as v: if warning: self.warn(warning, v.line) else: raise DistutilsError( '%s returned a bad status line. The server might be ' 'down, %s' % (url, v.line) ) from v except (http_client.HTTPException, socket.error) as v: if warning: self.warn(warning, v) else: raise DistutilsError("Download error for %s: %s" % (url, v)) from v def _download_url(self, scheme, url, tmpdir): # Determine download filename # name, fragment = egg_info_for_url(url) if name: while '..' in name: name = name.replace('..', '.').replace('\\', '_') else: name = "__downloaded__" # default if URL has no path contents if name.endswith('.egg.zip'): name = name[:-4] # strip the extra .zip before download filename = os.path.join(tmpdir, name) # Download the file # if scheme == 'svn' or scheme.startswith('svn+'): return self._download_svn(url, filename) elif scheme == 'git' or scheme.startswith('git+'): return self._download_git(url, filename) elif scheme.startswith('hg+'): return self._download_hg(url, filename) elif scheme == 'file': return urllib.request.url2pathname(urllib.parse.urlparse(url)[2]) else: self.url_ok(url, True) # raises error if not allowed return self._attempt_download(url, filename) def scan_url(self, url): self.process_url(url, True) def _attempt_download(self, url, filename): headers = self._download_to(url, filename) if 'html' in headers.get('content-type', '').lower(): return self._download_html(url, headers, filename) else: return filename def _download_html(self, url, headers, filename): file = open(filename) for line in file: if line.strip(): # Check for a subversion index page if re.search(r'<title>([^- ]+ - )?Revision \d+:', line): # it's a subversion index page: file.close() os.unlink(filename) return self._download_svn(url, filename) break # not an index page file.close() os.unlink(filename) raise DistutilsError("Unexpected HTML page found at " + url) def _download_svn(self, url, filename): warnings.warn("SVN download support is deprecated", UserWarning) url = url.split('#', 1)[0] # remove any fragment for svn's sake creds = '' if url.lower().startswith('svn:') and '@' in url: scheme, netloc, path, p, q, f = urllib.parse.urlparse(url) if not netloc and path.startswith('//') and '/' in path[2:]: netloc, path = path[2:].split('/', 1) auth, host = _splituser(netloc) if auth: if ':' in auth: user, pw = auth.split(':', 1) creds = " --username=%s --password=%s" % (user, pw) else: creds = " --username=" + auth netloc = host parts = scheme, netloc, url, p, q, f url = urllib.parse.urlunparse(parts) self.info("Doing subversion checkout from %s to %s", url, filename) os.system("svn checkout%s -q %s %s" % (creds, url, filename)) return filename @staticmethod def _vcs_split_rev_from_url(url, pop_prefix=False): scheme, netloc, path, query, frag = urllib.parse.urlsplit(url) scheme = scheme.split('+', 1)[-1] # Some fragment identification fails path = path.split('#', 1)[0] rev = None if '@' in path: path, rev = path.rsplit('@', 1) # Also, discard fragment url = urllib.parse.urlunsplit((scheme, netloc, path, query, '')) return url, rev def _download_git(self, url, filename): filename = filename.split('#', 1)[0] url, rev = self._vcs_split_rev_from_url(url, pop_prefix=True) self.info("Doing git clone from %s to %s", url, filename) os.system("git clone --quiet %s %s" % (url, filename)) if rev is not None: self.info("Checking out %s", rev) os.system("git -C %s checkout --quiet %s" % ( filename, rev, )) return filename def _download_hg(self, url, filename): filename = filename.split('#', 1)[0] url, rev = self._vcs_split_rev_from_url(url, pop_prefix=True) self.info("Doing hg clone from %s to %s", url, filename) os.system("hg clone --quiet %s %s" % (url, filename)) if rev is not None: self.info("Updating to %s", rev) os.system("hg --cwd %s up -C -r %s -q" % ( filename, rev, )) return filename def debug(self, msg, *args): log.debug(msg, *args) def info(self, msg, *args): log.info(msg, *args) def warn(self, msg, *args): log.warn(msg, *args) # This pattern matches a character entity reference (a decimal numeric # references, a hexadecimal numeric reference, or a named reference). entity_sub = re.compile(r'&(#(\d+|x[\da-fA-F]+)|[\w.:-]+);?').sub def decode_entity(match): what = match.group(0) return unescape(what) def htmldecode(text): """ Decode HTML entities in the given text. >>> htmldecode( ... 'https://../package_name-0.1.2.tar.gz' ... '?tokena=A&amp;tokenb=B">package_name-0.1.2.tar.gz') 'https://../package_name-0.1.2.tar.gz?tokena=A&tokenb=B">package_name-0.1.2.tar.gz' """ return entity_sub(decode_entity, text) def socket_timeout(timeout=15): def _socket_timeout(func): def _socket_timeout(*args, **kwargs): old_timeout = socket.getdefaulttimeout() socket.setdefaulttimeout(timeout) try: return func(*args, **kwargs) finally: socket.setdefaulttimeout(old_timeout) return _socket_timeout return _socket_timeout def _encode_auth(auth): """ A function compatible with Python 2.3-3.3 that will encode auth from a URL suitable for an HTTP header. >>> str(_encode_auth('username%3Apassword')) 'dXNlcm5hbWU6cGFzc3dvcmQ=' Long auth strings should not cause a newline to be inserted. >>> long_auth = 'username:' + 'password'*10 >>> chr(10) in str(_encode_auth(long_auth)) False """ auth_s = urllib.parse.unquote(auth) # convert to bytes auth_bytes = auth_s.encode() encoded_bytes = base64.b64encode(auth_bytes) # convert back to a string encoded = encoded_bytes.decode() # strip the trailing carriage return return encoded.replace('\n', '') class Credential: """ A username/password pair. Use like a namedtuple. """ def __init__(self, username, password): self.username = username self.password = password def __iter__(self): yield self.username yield self.password def __str__(self): return '%(username)s:%(password)s' % vars(self) class PyPIConfig(configparser.RawConfigParser): def __init__(self): """ Load from ~/.pypirc """ defaults = dict.fromkeys(['username', 'password', 'repository'], '') configparser.RawConfigParser.__init__(self, defaults) rc = os.path.join(os.path.expanduser('~'), '.pypirc') if os.path.exists(rc): self.read(rc) @property def creds_by_repository(self): sections_with_repositories = [ section for section in self.sections() if self.get(section, 'repository').strip() ] return dict(map(self._get_repo_cred, sections_with_repositories)) def _get_repo_cred(self, section): repo = self.get(section, 'repository').strip() return repo, Credential( self.get(section, 'username').strip(), self.get(section, 'password').strip(), ) def find_credential(self, url): """ If the URL indicated appears to be a repository defined in this config, return the credential for that repository. """ for repository, cred in self.creds_by_repository.items(): if url.startswith(repository): return cred def open_with_auth(url, opener=urllib.request.urlopen): """Open a urllib2 request, handling HTTP authentication""" parsed = urllib.parse.urlparse(url) scheme, netloc, path, params, query, frag = parsed # Double scheme does not raise on macOS as revealed by a # failing test. We would expect "nonnumeric port". Refs #20. if netloc.endswith(':'): raise http_client.InvalidURL("nonnumeric port: ''") if scheme in ('http', 'https'): auth, address = _splituser(netloc) else: auth = None if not auth: cred = PyPIConfig().find_credential(url) if cred: auth = str(cred) info = cred.username, url log.info('Authenticating as %s for %s (from .pypirc)', *info) if auth: auth = "Basic " + _encode_auth(auth) parts = scheme, address, path, params, query, frag new_url = urllib.parse.urlunparse(parts) request = urllib.request.Request(new_url) request.add_header("Authorization", auth) else: request = urllib.request.Request(url) request.add_header('User-Agent', user_agent) fp = opener(request) if auth: # Put authentication info back into request URL if same host, # so that links found on the page will work s2, h2, path2, param2, query2, frag2 = urllib.parse.urlparse(fp.url) if s2 == scheme and h2 == address: parts = s2, netloc, path2, param2, query2, frag2 fp.url = urllib.parse.urlunparse(parts) return fp # copy of urllib.parse._splituser from Python 3.8 def _splituser(host): """splituser('user[:passwd]@host[:port]') --> 'user[:passwd]', 'host[:port]'.""" user, delim, host = host.rpartition('@') return (user if delim else None), host # adding a timeout to avoid freezing package_index open_with_auth = socket_timeout(_SOCKET_TIMEOUT)(open_with_auth) def fix_sf_url(url): return url # backward compatibility def local_open(url): """Read a local path, with special support for directories""" scheme, server, path, param, query, frag = urllib.parse.urlparse(url) filename = urllib.request.url2pathname(path) if os.path.isfile(filename): return urllib.request.urlopen(url) elif path.endswith('/') and os.path.isdir(filename): files = [] for f in os.listdir(filename): filepath = os.path.join(filename, f) if f == 'index.html': with open(filepath, 'r') as fp: body = fp.read() break elif os.path.isdir(filepath): f += '/' files.append('<a href="{name}">{name}</a>'.format(name=f)) else: tmpl = ( "<html><head><title>{url}</title>" "</head><body>{files}</body></html>") body = tmpl.format(url=url, files='\n'.join(files)) status, message = 200, "OK" else: status, message, body = 404, "Path not found", "Not found" headers = {'content-type': 'text/html'} body_stream = six.StringIO(body) return urllib.error.HTTPError(url, status, message, headers, body_stream)
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/archive_util.py
"""Utilities for extracting common archive formats""" import zipfile import tarfile import os import shutil import posixpath import contextlib from distutils.errors import DistutilsError from pkg_resources import ensure_directory __all__ = [ "unpack_archive", "unpack_zipfile", "unpack_tarfile", "default_filter", "UnrecognizedFormat", "extraction_drivers", "unpack_directory", ] class UnrecognizedFormat(DistutilsError): """Couldn't recognize the archive type""" def default_filter(src, dst): """The default progress/filter callback; returns True for all files""" return dst def unpack_archive( filename, extract_dir, progress_filter=default_filter, drivers=None): """Unpack `filename` to `extract_dir`, or raise ``UnrecognizedFormat`` `progress_filter` is a function taking two arguments: a source path internal to the archive ('/'-separated), and a filesystem path where it will be extracted. The callback must return the desired extract path (which may be the same as the one passed in), or else ``None`` to skip that file or directory. The callback can thus be used to report on the progress of the extraction, as well as to filter the items extracted or alter their extraction paths. `drivers`, if supplied, must be a non-empty sequence of functions with the same signature as this function (minus the `drivers` argument), that raise ``UnrecognizedFormat`` if they do not support extracting the designated archive type. The `drivers` are tried in sequence until one is found that does not raise an error, or until all are exhausted (in which case ``UnrecognizedFormat`` is raised). If you do not supply a sequence of drivers, the module's ``extraction_drivers`` constant will be used, which means that ``unpack_zipfile`` and ``unpack_tarfile`` will be tried, in that order. """ for driver in drivers or extraction_drivers: try: driver(filename, extract_dir, progress_filter) except UnrecognizedFormat: continue else: return else: raise UnrecognizedFormat( "Not a recognized archive type: %s" % filename ) def unpack_directory(filename, extract_dir, progress_filter=default_filter): """"Unpack" a directory, using the same interface as for archives Raises ``UnrecognizedFormat`` if `filename` is not a directory """ if not os.path.isdir(filename): raise UnrecognizedFormat("%s is not a directory" % filename) paths = { filename: ('', extract_dir), } for base, dirs, files in os.walk(filename): src, dst = paths[base] for d in dirs: paths[os.path.join(base, d)] = src + d + '/', os.path.join(dst, d) for f in files: target = os.path.join(dst, f) target = progress_filter(src + f, target) if not target: # skip non-files continue ensure_directory(target) f = os.path.join(base, f) shutil.copyfile(f, target) shutil.copystat(f, target) def unpack_zipfile(filename, extract_dir, progress_filter=default_filter): """Unpack zip `filename` to `extract_dir` Raises ``UnrecognizedFormat`` if `filename` is not a zipfile (as determined by ``zipfile.is_zipfile()``). See ``unpack_archive()`` for an explanation of the `progress_filter` argument. """ if not zipfile.is_zipfile(filename): raise UnrecognizedFormat("%s is not a zip file" % (filename,)) with zipfile.ZipFile(filename) as z: for info in z.infolist(): name = info.filename # don't extract absolute paths or ones with .. in them if name.startswith('/') or '..' in name.split('/'): continue target = os.path.join(extract_dir, *name.split('/')) target = progress_filter(name, target) if not target: continue if name.endswith('/'): # directory ensure_directory(target) else: # file ensure_directory(target) data = z.read(info.filename) with open(target, 'wb') as f: f.write(data) unix_attributes = info.external_attr >> 16 if unix_attributes: os.chmod(target, unix_attributes) def unpack_tarfile(filename, extract_dir, progress_filter=default_filter): """Unpack tar/tar.gz/tar.bz2 `filename` to `extract_dir` Raises ``UnrecognizedFormat`` if `filename` is not a tarfile (as determined by ``tarfile.open()``). See ``unpack_archive()`` for an explanation of the `progress_filter` argument. """ try: tarobj = tarfile.open(filename) except tarfile.TarError as e: raise UnrecognizedFormat( "%s is not a compressed or uncompressed tar file" % (filename,) ) from e with contextlib.closing(tarobj): # don't do any chowning! tarobj.chown = lambda *args: None for member in tarobj: name = member.name # don't extract absolute paths or ones with .. in them if not name.startswith('/') and '..' not in name.split('/'): prelim_dst = os.path.join(extract_dir, *name.split('/')) # resolve any links and to extract the link targets as normal # files while member is not None and ( member.islnk() or member.issym()): linkpath = member.linkname if member.issym(): base = posixpath.dirname(member.name) linkpath = posixpath.join(base, linkpath) linkpath = posixpath.normpath(linkpath) member = tarobj._getmember(linkpath) if member is not None and (member.isfile() or member.isdir()): final_dst = progress_filter(name, prelim_dst) if final_dst: if final_dst.endswith(os.sep): final_dst = final_dst[:-1] try: # XXX Ugh tarobj._extract_member(member, final_dst) except tarfile.ExtractError: # chown/chmod/mkfifo/mknode/makedev failed pass return True extraction_drivers = unpack_directory, unpack_zipfile, unpack_tarfile
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_imp.py
""" Re-implementation of find_module and get_frozen_object from the deprecated imp module. """ import os import importlib.util import importlib.machinery from .py34compat import module_from_spec PY_SOURCE = 1 PY_COMPILED = 2 C_EXTENSION = 3 C_BUILTIN = 6 PY_FROZEN = 7 def find_spec(module, paths): finder = ( importlib.machinery.PathFinder().find_spec if isinstance(paths, list) else importlib.util.find_spec ) return finder(module, paths) def find_module(module, paths=None): """Just like 'imp.find_module()', but with package support""" spec = find_spec(module, paths) if spec is None: raise ImportError("Can't find %s" % module) if not spec.has_location and hasattr(spec, 'submodule_search_locations'): spec = importlib.util.spec_from_loader('__init__.py', spec.loader) kind = -1 file = None static = isinstance(spec.loader, type) if spec.origin == 'frozen' or static and issubclass( spec.loader, importlib.machinery.FrozenImporter): kind = PY_FROZEN path = None # imp compabilty suffix = mode = '' # imp compability elif spec.origin == 'built-in' or static and issubclass( spec.loader, importlib.machinery.BuiltinImporter): kind = C_BUILTIN path = None # imp compabilty suffix = mode = '' # imp compability elif spec.has_location: path = spec.origin suffix = os.path.splitext(path)[1] mode = 'r' if suffix in importlib.machinery.SOURCE_SUFFIXES else 'rb' if suffix in importlib.machinery.SOURCE_SUFFIXES: kind = PY_SOURCE elif suffix in importlib.machinery.BYTECODE_SUFFIXES: kind = PY_COMPILED elif suffix in importlib.machinery.EXTENSION_SUFFIXES: kind = C_EXTENSION if kind in {PY_SOURCE, PY_COMPILED}: file = open(path, mode) else: path = None suffix = mode = '' return file, path, (suffix, mode, kind) def get_frozen_object(module, paths=None): spec = find_spec(module, paths) if not spec: raise ImportError("Can't find %s" % module) return spec.loader.get_code(module) def get_module(module, paths, info): spec = find_spec(module, paths) if not spec: raise ImportError("Can't find %s" % module) return module_from_spec(spec)
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/config.py
from __future__ import absolute_import, unicode_literals import ast import io import os import sys import warnings import functools import importlib from collections import defaultdict from functools import partial from functools import wraps import contextlib from distutils.errors import DistutilsOptionError, DistutilsFileError from setuptools.extern.packaging.version import LegacyVersion, parse from setuptools.extern.packaging.specifiers import SpecifierSet from setuptools.extern.six import string_types, PY3 __metaclass__ = type class StaticModule: """ Attempt to load the module by the name """ def __init__(self, name): spec = importlib.util.find_spec(name) with open(spec.origin) as strm: src = strm.read() module = ast.parse(src) vars(self).update(locals()) del self.self def __getattr__(self, attr): try: return next( ast.literal_eval(statement.value) for statement in self.module.body if isinstance(statement, ast.Assign) for target in statement.targets if isinstance(target, ast.Name) and target.id == attr ) except Exception as e: raise AttributeError( "{self.name} has no attribute {attr}".format(**locals()) ) from e @contextlib.contextmanager def patch_path(path): """ Add path to front of sys.path for the duration of the context. """ try: sys.path.insert(0, path) yield finally: sys.path.remove(path) def read_configuration( filepath, find_others=False, ignore_option_errors=False): """Read given configuration file and returns options from it as a dict. :param str|unicode filepath: Path to configuration file to get options from. :param bool find_others: Whether to search for other configuration files which could be on in various places. :param bool ignore_option_errors: Whether to silently ignore options, values of which could not be resolved (e.g. due to exceptions in directives such as file:, attr:, etc.). If False exceptions are propagated as expected. :rtype: dict """ from setuptools.dist import Distribution, _Distribution filepath = os.path.abspath(filepath) if not os.path.isfile(filepath): raise DistutilsFileError( 'Configuration file %s does not exist.' % filepath) current_directory = os.getcwd() os.chdir(os.path.dirname(filepath)) try: dist = Distribution() filenames = dist.find_config_files() if find_others else [] if filepath not in filenames: filenames.append(filepath) _Distribution.parse_config_files(dist, filenames=filenames) handlers = parse_configuration( dist, dist.command_options, ignore_option_errors=ignore_option_errors) finally: os.chdir(current_directory) return configuration_to_dict(handlers) def _get_option(target_obj, key): """ Given a target object and option key, get that option from the target object, either through a get_{key} method or from an attribute directly. """ getter_name = 'get_{key}'.format(**locals()) by_attribute = functools.partial(getattr, target_obj, key) getter = getattr(target_obj, getter_name, by_attribute) return getter() def configuration_to_dict(handlers): """Returns configuration data gathered by given handlers as a dict. :param list[ConfigHandler] handlers: Handlers list, usually from parse_configuration() :rtype: dict """ config_dict = defaultdict(dict) for handler in handlers: for option in handler.set_options: value = _get_option(handler.target_obj, option) config_dict[handler.section_prefix][option] = value return config_dict def parse_configuration( distribution, command_options, ignore_option_errors=False): """Performs additional parsing of configuration options for a distribution. Returns a list of used option handlers. :param Distribution distribution: :param dict command_options: :param bool ignore_option_errors: Whether to silently ignore options, values of which could not be resolved (e.g. due to exceptions in directives such as file:, attr:, etc.). If False exceptions are propagated as expected. :rtype: list """ options = ConfigOptionsHandler( distribution, command_options, ignore_option_errors) options.parse() meta = ConfigMetadataHandler( distribution.metadata, command_options, ignore_option_errors, distribution.package_dir) meta.parse() return meta, options class ConfigHandler: """Handles metadata supplied in configuration files.""" section_prefix = None """Prefix for config sections handled by this handler. Must be provided by class heirs. """ aliases = {} """Options aliases. For compatibility with various packages. E.g.: d2to1 and pbr. Note: `-` in keys is replaced with `_` by config parser. """ def __init__(self, target_obj, options, ignore_option_errors=False): sections = {} section_prefix = self.section_prefix for section_name, section_options in options.items(): if not section_name.startswith(section_prefix): continue section_name = section_name.replace(section_prefix, '').strip('.') sections[section_name] = section_options self.ignore_option_errors = ignore_option_errors self.target_obj = target_obj self.sections = sections self.set_options = [] @property def parsers(self): """Metadata item name to parser function mapping.""" raise NotImplementedError( '%s must provide .parsers property' % self.__class__.__name__) def __setitem__(self, option_name, value): unknown = tuple() target_obj = self.target_obj # Translate alias into real name. option_name = self.aliases.get(option_name, option_name) current_value = getattr(target_obj, option_name, unknown) if current_value is unknown: raise KeyError(option_name) if current_value: # Already inhabited. Skipping. return skip_option = False parser = self.parsers.get(option_name) if parser: try: value = parser(value) except Exception: skip_option = True if not self.ignore_option_errors: raise if skip_option: return setter = getattr(target_obj, 'set_%s' % option_name, None) if setter is None: setattr(target_obj, option_name, value) else: setter(value) self.set_options.append(option_name) @classmethod def _parse_list(cls, value, separator=','): """Represents value as a list. Value is split either by separator (defaults to comma) or by lines. :param value: :param separator: List items separator character. :rtype: list """ if isinstance(value, list): # _get_parser_compound case return value if '\n' in value: value = value.splitlines() else: value = value.split(separator) return [chunk.strip() for chunk in value if chunk.strip()] @classmethod def _parse_dict(cls, value): """Represents value as a dict. :param value: :rtype: dict """ separator = '=' result = {} for line in cls._parse_list(value): key, sep, val = line.partition(separator) if sep != separator: raise DistutilsOptionError( 'Unable to parse option value to dict: %s' % value) result[key.strip()] = val.strip() return result @classmethod def _parse_bool(cls, value): """Represents value as boolean. :param value: :rtype: bool """ value = value.lower() return value in ('1', 'true', 'yes') @classmethod def _exclude_files_parser(cls, key): """Returns a parser function to make sure field inputs are not files. Parses a value after getting the key so error messages are more informative. :param key: :rtype: callable """ def parser(value): exclude_directive = 'file:' if value.startswith(exclude_directive): raise ValueError( 'Only strings are accepted for the {0} field, ' 'files are not accepted'.format(key)) return value return parser @classmethod def _parse_file(cls, value): """Represents value as a string, allowing including text from nearest files using `file:` directive. Directive is sandboxed and won't reach anything outside directory with setup.py. Examples: file: README.rst, CHANGELOG.md, src/file.txt :param str value: :rtype: str """ include_directive = 'file:' if not isinstance(value, string_types): return value if not value.startswith(include_directive): return value spec = value[len(include_directive):] filepaths = (os.path.abspath(path.strip()) for path in spec.split(',')) return '\n'.join( cls._read_file(path) for path in filepaths if (cls._assert_local(path) or True) and os.path.isfile(path) ) @staticmethod def _assert_local(filepath): if not filepath.startswith(os.getcwd()): raise DistutilsOptionError( '`file:` directive can not access %s' % filepath) @staticmethod def _read_file(filepath): with io.open(filepath, encoding='utf-8') as f: return f.read() @classmethod def _parse_attr(cls, value, package_dir=None): """Represents value as a module attribute. Examples: attr: package.attr attr: package.module.attr :param str value: :rtype: str """ attr_directive = 'attr:' if not value.startswith(attr_directive): return value attrs_path = value.replace(attr_directive, '').strip().split('.') attr_name = attrs_path.pop() module_name = '.'.join(attrs_path) module_name = module_name or '__init__' parent_path = os.getcwd() if package_dir: if attrs_path[0] in package_dir: # A custom path was specified for the module we want to import custom_path = package_dir[attrs_path[0]] parts = custom_path.rsplit('/', 1) if len(parts) > 1: parent_path = os.path.join(os.getcwd(), parts[0]) module_name = parts[1] else: module_name = custom_path elif '' in package_dir: # A custom parent directory was specified for all root modules parent_path = os.path.join(os.getcwd(), package_dir['']) with patch_path(parent_path): try: # attempt to load value statically return getattr(StaticModule(module_name), attr_name) except Exception: # fallback to simple import module = importlib.import_module(module_name) return getattr(module, attr_name) @classmethod def _get_parser_compound(cls, *parse_methods): """Returns parser function to represents value as a list. Parses a value applying given methods one after another. :param parse_methods: :rtype: callable """ def parse(value): parsed = value for method in parse_methods: parsed = method(parsed) return parsed return parse @classmethod def _parse_section_to_dict(cls, section_options, values_parser=None): """Parses section options into a dictionary. Optionally applies a given parser to values. :param dict section_options: :param callable values_parser: :rtype: dict """ value = {} values_parser = values_parser or (lambda val: val) for key, (_, val) in section_options.items(): value[key] = values_parser(val) return value def parse_section(self, section_options): """Parses configuration file section. :param dict section_options: """ for (name, (_, value)) in section_options.items(): try: self[name] = value except KeyError: pass # Keep silent for a new option may appear anytime. def parse(self): """Parses configuration file items from one or more related sections. """ for section_name, section_options in self.sections.items(): method_postfix = '' if section_name: # [section.option] variant method_postfix = '_%s' % section_name section_parser_method = getattr( self, # Dots in section names are translated into dunderscores. ('parse_section%s' % method_postfix).replace('.', '__'), None) if section_parser_method is None: raise DistutilsOptionError( 'Unsupported distribution option section: [%s.%s]' % ( self.section_prefix, section_name)) section_parser_method(section_options) def _deprecated_config_handler(self, func, msg, warning_class): """ this function will wrap around parameters that are deprecated :param msg: deprecation message :param warning_class: class of warning exception to be raised :param func: function to be wrapped around """ @wraps(func) def config_handler(*args, **kwargs): warnings.warn(msg, warning_class) return func(*args, **kwargs) return config_handler class ConfigMetadataHandler(ConfigHandler): section_prefix = 'metadata' aliases = { 'home_page': 'url', 'summary': 'description', 'classifier': 'classifiers', 'platform': 'platforms', } strict_mode = False """We need to keep it loose, to be partially compatible with `pbr` and `d2to1` packages which also uses `metadata` section. """ def __init__(self, target_obj, options, ignore_option_errors=False, package_dir=None): super(ConfigMetadataHandler, self).__init__(target_obj, options, ignore_option_errors) self.package_dir = package_dir @property def parsers(self): """Metadata item name to parser function mapping.""" parse_list = self._parse_list parse_file = self._parse_file parse_dict = self._parse_dict exclude_files_parser = self._exclude_files_parser return { 'platforms': parse_list, 'keywords': parse_list, 'provides': parse_list, 'requires': self._deprecated_config_handler( parse_list, "The requires parameter is deprecated, please use " "install_requires for runtime dependencies.", DeprecationWarning), 'obsoletes': parse_list, 'classifiers': self._get_parser_compound(parse_file, parse_list), 'license': exclude_files_parser('license'), 'license_files': parse_list, 'description': parse_file, 'long_description': parse_file, 'version': self._parse_version, 'project_urls': parse_dict, } def _parse_version(self, value): """Parses `version` option value. :param value: :rtype: str """ version = self._parse_file(value) if version != value: version = version.strip() # Be strict about versions loaded from file because it's easy to # accidentally include newlines and other unintended content if isinstance(parse(version), LegacyVersion): tmpl = ( 'Version loaded from {value} does not ' 'comply with PEP 440: {version}' ) raise DistutilsOptionError(tmpl.format(**locals())) return version version = self._parse_attr(value, self.package_dir) if callable(version): version = version() if not isinstance(version, string_types): if hasattr(version, '__iter__'): version = '.'.join(map(str, version)) else: version = '%s' % version return version class ConfigOptionsHandler(ConfigHandler): section_prefix = 'options' @property def parsers(self): """Metadata item name to parser function mapping.""" parse_list = self._parse_list parse_list_semicolon = partial(self._parse_list, separator=';') parse_bool = self._parse_bool parse_dict = self._parse_dict return { 'zip_safe': parse_bool, 'use_2to3': parse_bool, 'include_package_data': parse_bool, 'package_dir': parse_dict, 'use_2to3_fixers': parse_list, 'use_2to3_exclude_fixers': parse_list, 'convert_2to3_doctests': parse_list, 'scripts': parse_list, 'eager_resources': parse_list, 'dependency_links': parse_list, 'namespace_packages': parse_list, 'install_requires': parse_list_semicolon, 'setup_requires': parse_list_semicolon, 'tests_require': parse_list_semicolon, 'packages': self._parse_packages, 'entry_points': self._parse_file, 'py_modules': parse_list, 'python_requires': SpecifierSet, } def _parse_packages(self, value): """Parses `packages` option value. :param value: :rtype: list """ find_directives = ['find:', 'find_namespace:'] trimmed_value = value.strip() if trimmed_value not in find_directives: return self._parse_list(value) findns = trimmed_value == find_directives[1] if findns and not PY3: raise DistutilsOptionError( 'find_namespace: directive is unsupported on Python < 3.3') # Read function arguments from a dedicated section. find_kwargs = self.parse_section_packages__find( self.sections.get('packages.find', {})) if findns: from setuptools import find_namespace_packages as find_packages else: from setuptools import find_packages return find_packages(**find_kwargs) def parse_section_packages__find(self, section_options): """Parses `packages.find` configuration file section. To be used in conjunction with _parse_packages(). :param dict section_options: """ section_data = self._parse_section_to_dict( section_options, self._parse_list) valid_keys = ['where', 'include', 'exclude'] find_kwargs = dict( [(k, v) for k, v in section_data.items() if k in valid_keys and v]) where = find_kwargs.get('where') if where is not None: find_kwargs['where'] = where[0] # cast list to single val return find_kwargs def parse_section_entry_points(self, section_options): """Parses `entry_points` configuration file section. :param dict section_options: """ parsed = self._parse_section_to_dict(section_options, self._parse_list) self['entry_points'] = parsed def _parse_package_data(self, section_options): parsed = self._parse_section_to_dict(section_options, self._parse_list) root = parsed.get('*') if root: parsed[''] = root del parsed['*'] return parsed def parse_section_package_data(self, section_options): """Parses `package_data` configuration file section. :param dict section_options: """ self['package_data'] = self._parse_package_data(section_options) def parse_section_exclude_package_data(self, section_options): """Parses `exclude_package_data` configuration file section. :param dict section_options: """ self['exclude_package_data'] = self._parse_package_data( section_options) def parse_section_extras_require(self, section_options): """Parses `extras_require` configuration file section. :param dict section_options: """ parse_list = partial(self._parse_list, separator=';') self['extras_require'] = self._parse_section_to_dict( section_options, parse_list) def parse_section_data_files(self, section_options): """Parses `data_files` configuration file section. :param dict section_options: """ parsed = self._parse_section_to_dict(section_options, self._parse_list) self['data_files'] = [(k, v) for k, v in parsed.items()]
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/version.py
import pkg_resources try: __version__ = pkg_resources.get_distribution('setuptools').version except Exception: __version__ = 'unknown'
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/py31compat.py
__all__ = [] __metaclass__ = type try: # Python >=3.2 from tempfile import TemporaryDirectory except ImportError: import shutil import tempfile class TemporaryDirectory: """ Very simple temporary directory context manager. Will try to delete afterward, but will also ignore OS and similar errors on deletion. """ def __init__(self, **kwargs): self.name = None # Handle mkdtemp raising an exception self.name = tempfile.mkdtemp(**kwargs) def __enter__(self): return self.name def __exit__(self, exctype, excvalue, exctrace): try: shutil.rmtree(self.name, True) except OSError: # removal errors are not the only possible pass self.name = None
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/depends.py
import sys import marshal import contextlib from distutils.version import StrictVersion from .py33compat import Bytecode from .py27compat import find_module, PY_COMPILED, PY_FROZEN, PY_SOURCE from . import py27compat __all__ = [ 'Require', 'find_module', 'get_module_constant', 'extract_constant' ] class Require: """A prerequisite to building or installing a distribution""" def __init__( self, name, requested_version, module, homepage='', attribute=None, format=None): if format is None and requested_version is not None: format = StrictVersion if format is not None: requested_version = format(requested_version) if attribute is None: attribute = '__version__' self.__dict__.update(locals()) del self.self def full_name(self): """Return full package/distribution name, w/version""" if self.requested_version is not None: return '%s-%s' % (self.name, self.requested_version) return self.name def version_ok(self, version): """Is 'version' sufficiently up-to-date?""" return self.attribute is None or self.format is None or \ str(version) != "unknown" and version >= self.requested_version def get_version(self, paths=None, default="unknown"): """Get version number of installed module, 'None', or 'default' Search 'paths' for module. If not found, return 'None'. If found, return the extracted version attribute, or 'default' if no version attribute was specified, or the value cannot be determined without importing the module. The version is formatted according to the requirement's version format (if any), unless it is 'None' or the supplied 'default'. """ if self.attribute is None: try: f, p, i = find_module(self.module, paths) if f: f.close() return default except ImportError: return None v = get_module_constant(self.module, self.attribute, default, paths) if v is not None and v is not default and self.format is not None: return self.format(v) return v def is_present(self, paths=None): """Return true if dependency is present on 'paths'""" return self.get_version(paths) is not None def is_current(self, paths=None): """Return true if dependency is present and up-to-date on 'paths'""" version = self.get_version(paths) if version is None: return False return self.version_ok(version) def maybe_close(f): @contextlib.contextmanager def empty(): yield return if not f: return empty() return contextlib.closing(f) def get_module_constant(module, symbol, default=-1, paths=None): """Find 'module' by searching 'paths', and extract 'symbol' Return 'None' if 'module' does not exist on 'paths', or it does not define 'symbol'. If the module defines 'symbol' as a constant, return the constant. Otherwise, return 'default'.""" try: f, path, (suffix, mode, kind) = info = find_module(module, paths) except ImportError: # Module doesn't exist return None with maybe_close(f): if kind == PY_COMPILED: f.read(8) # skip magic & date code = marshal.load(f) elif kind == PY_FROZEN: code = py27compat.get_frozen_object(module, paths) elif kind == PY_SOURCE: code = compile(f.read(), path, 'exec') else: # Not something we can parse; we'll have to import it. :( imported = py27compat.get_module(module, paths, info) return getattr(imported, symbol, None) return extract_constant(code, symbol, default) def extract_constant(code, symbol, default=-1): """Extract the constant value of 'symbol' from 'code' If the name 'symbol' is bound to a constant value by the Python code object 'code', return that value. If 'symbol' is bound to an expression, return 'default'. Otherwise, return 'None'. Return value is based on the first assignment to 'symbol'. 'symbol' must be a global, or at least a non-"fast" local in the code block. That is, only 'STORE_NAME' and 'STORE_GLOBAL' opcodes are checked, and 'symbol' must be present in 'code.co_names'. """ if symbol not in code.co_names: # name's not there, can't possibly be an assignment return None name_idx = list(code.co_names).index(symbol) STORE_NAME = 90 STORE_GLOBAL = 97 LOAD_CONST = 100 const = default for byte_code in Bytecode(code): op = byte_code.opcode arg = byte_code.arg if op == LOAD_CONST: const = code.co_consts[arg] elif arg == name_idx and (op == STORE_NAME or op == STORE_GLOBAL): return const else: const = default def _update_globals(): """ Patch the globals to remove the objects not available on some platforms. XXX it'd be better to test assertions about bytecode instead. """ if not sys.platform.startswith('java') and sys.platform != 'cli': return incompatible = 'extract_constant', 'get_module_constant' for name in incompatible: del globals()[name] __all__.remove(name) _update_globals()
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/py27compat.py
""" Compatibility Support for Python 2.7 and earlier """ import sys import platform from setuptools.extern import six def get_all_headers(message, key): """ Given an HTTPMessage, return all headers matching a given key. """ return message.get_all(key) if six.PY2: def get_all_headers(message, key): # noqa return message.getheaders(key) linux_py2_ascii = ( platform.system() == 'Linux' and six.PY2 ) rmtree_safe = str if linux_py2_ascii else lambda x: x """Workaround for http://bugs.python.org/issue24672""" try: from ._imp import find_module, PY_COMPILED, PY_FROZEN, PY_SOURCE from ._imp import get_frozen_object, get_module except ImportError: import imp from imp import PY_COMPILED, PY_FROZEN, PY_SOURCE # noqa def find_module(module, paths=None): """Just like 'imp.find_module()', but with package support""" parts = module.split('.') while parts: part = parts.pop(0) f, path, (suffix, mode, kind) = info = imp.find_module(part, paths) if kind == imp.PKG_DIRECTORY: parts = parts or ['__init__'] paths = [path] elif parts: raise ImportError("Can't find %r in %s" % (parts, module)) return info def get_frozen_object(module, paths): return imp.get_frozen_object(module) def get_module(module, paths, info): imp.load_module(module, *info) return sys.modules[module]
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/__init__.py
"""Extensions to the 'distutils' for large or complex distributions""" import os import functools # Disabled for now due to: #2228, #2230 import setuptools.distutils_patch # noqa: F401 import distutils.core import distutils.filelist import re from distutils.errors import DistutilsOptionError from distutils.util import convert_path from fnmatch import fnmatchcase from ._deprecation_warning import SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning from setuptools.extern.six import PY3, string_types from setuptools.extern.six.moves import filter, map import setuptools.version from setuptools.extension import Extension from setuptools.dist import Distribution from setuptools.depends import Require from . import monkey __metaclass__ = type __all__ = [ 'setup', 'Distribution', 'Command', 'Extension', 'Require', 'SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning', 'find_packages' ] if PY3: __all__.append('find_namespace_packages') __version__ = setuptools.version.__version__ bootstrap_install_from = None # If we run 2to3 on .py files, should we also convert docstrings? # Default: yes; assume that we can detect doctests reliably run_2to3_on_doctests = True # Standard package names for fixer packages lib2to3_fixer_packages = ['lib2to3.fixes'] class PackageFinder: """ Generate a list of all Python packages found within a directory """ @classmethod def find(cls, where='.', exclude=(), include=('*',)): """Return a list all Python packages found within directory 'where' 'where' is the root directory which will be searched for packages. It should be supplied as a "cross-platform" (i.e. URL-style) path; it will be converted to the appropriate local path syntax. 'exclude' is a sequence of package names to exclude; '*' can be used as a wildcard in the names, such that 'foo.*' will exclude all subpackages of 'foo' (but not 'foo' itself). 'include' is a sequence of package names to include. If it's specified, only the named packages will be included. If it's not specified, all found packages will be included. 'include' can contain shell style wildcard patterns just like 'exclude'. """ return list(cls._find_packages_iter( convert_path(where), cls._build_filter('ez_setup', '*__pycache__', *exclude), cls._build_filter(*include))) @classmethod def _find_packages_iter(cls, where, exclude, include): """ All the packages found in 'where' that pass the 'include' filter, but not the 'exclude' filter. """ for root, dirs, files in os.walk(where, followlinks=True): # Copy dirs to iterate over it, then empty dirs. all_dirs = dirs[:] dirs[:] = [] for dir in all_dirs: full_path = os.path.join(root, dir) rel_path = os.path.relpath(full_path, where) package = rel_path.replace(os.path.sep, '.') # Skip directory trees that are not valid packages if ('.' in dir or not cls._looks_like_package(full_path)): continue # Should this package be included? if include(package) and not exclude(package): yield package # Keep searching subdirectories, as there may be more packages # down there, even if the parent was excluded. dirs.append(dir) @staticmethod def _looks_like_package(path): """Does a directory look like a package?""" return os.path.isfile(os.path.join(path, '__init__.py')) @staticmethod def _build_filter(*patterns): """ Given a list of patterns, return a callable that will be true only if the input matches at least one of the patterns. """ return lambda name: any(fnmatchcase(name, pat=pat) for pat in patterns) class PEP420PackageFinder(PackageFinder): @staticmethod def _looks_like_package(path): return True find_packages = PackageFinder.find if PY3: find_namespace_packages = PEP420PackageFinder.find def _install_setup_requires(attrs): # Note: do not use `setuptools.Distribution` directly, as # our PEP 517 backend patch `distutils.core.Distribution`. class MinimalDistribution(distutils.core.Distribution): """ A minimal version of a distribution for supporting the fetch_build_eggs interface. """ def __init__(self, attrs): _incl = 'dependency_links', 'setup_requires' filtered = { k: attrs[k] for k in set(_incl) & set(attrs) } distutils.core.Distribution.__init__(self, filtered) def finalize_options(self): """ Disable finalize_options to avoid building the working set. Ref #2158. """ dist = MinimalDistribution(attrs) # Honor setup.cfg's options. dist.parse_config_files(ignore_option_errors=True) if dist.setup_requires: dist.fetch_build_eggs(dist.setup_requires) def setup(**attrs): # Make sure we have any requirements needed to interpret 'attrs'. _install_setup_requires(attrs) return distutils.core.setup(**attrs) setup.__doc__ = distutils.core.setup.__doc__ _Command = monkey.get_unpatched(distutils.core.Command) class Command(_Command): __doc__ = _Command.__doc__ command_consumes_arguments = False def __init__(self, dist, **kw): """ Construct the command for dist, updating vars(self) with any keyword parameters. """ _Command.__init__(self, dist) vars(self).update(kw) 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, string_types): raise DistutilsOptionError("'%s' must be a %s (got `%s`)" % (option, what, val)) return val def ensure_string_list(self, option): 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, string_types): setattr(self, option, re.split(r',\s*|\s+', val)) else: if isinstance(val, list): ok = all(isinstance(v, string_types) for v in val) else: ok = False if not ok: raise DistutilsOptionError( "'%s' must be a list of strings (got %r)" % (option, val)) def reinitialize_command(self, command, reinit_subcommands=0, **kw): cmd = _Command.reinitialize_command(self, command, reinit_subcommands) vars(cmd).update(kw) return cmd def _find_all_simple(path): """ Find all files under 'path' """ results = ( os.path.join(base, file) for base, dirs, files in os.walk(path, followlinks=True) for file in files ) return filter(os.path.isfile, results) def findall(dir=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) class sic(str): """Treat this string as-is (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sic)""" # Apply monkey patches monkey.patch_all()
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/installer.py
import glob import os import subprocess import sys from distutils import log from distutils.errors import DistutilsError import pkg_resources from setuptools.command.easy_install import easy_install from setuptools.extern import six from setuptools.wheel import Wheel from .py31compat import TemporaryDirectory def _fixup_find_links(find_links): """Ensure find-links option end-up being a list of strings.""" if isinstance(find_links, six.string_types): return find_links.split() assert isinstance(find_links, (tuple, list)) return find_links def _legacy_fetch_build_egg(dist, req): """Fetch an egg needed for building. Legacy path using EasyInstall. """ tmp_dist = dist.__class__({'script_args': ['easy_install']}) opts = tmp_dist.get_option_dict('easy_install') opts.clear() opts.update( (k, v) for k, v in dist.get_option_dict('easy_install').items() if k in ( # don't use any other settings 'find_links', 'site_dirs', 'index_url', 'optimize', 'site_dirs', 'allow_hosts', )) if dist.dependency_links: links = dist.dependency_links[:] if 'find_links' in opts: links = _fixup_find_links(opts['find_links'][1]) + links opts['find_links'] = ('setup', links) install_dir = dist.get_egg_cache_dir() cmd = easy_install( tmp_dist, args=["x"], install_dir=install_dir, exclude_scripts=True, always_copy=False, build_directory=None, editable=False, upgrade=False, multi_version=True, no_report=True, user=False ) cmd.ensure_finalized() return cmd.easy_install(req) def fetch_build_egg(dist, req): """Fetch an egg needed for building. Use pip/wheel to fetch/build a wheel.""" # Check pip is available. try: pkg_resources.get_distribution('pip') except pkg_resources.DistributionNotFound: dist.announce( 'WARNING: The pip package is not available, falling back ' 'to EasyInstall for handling setup_requires/test_requires; ' 'this is deprecated and will be removed in a future version.', log.WARN ) return _legacy_fetch_build_egg(dist, req) # Warn if wheel is not. try: pkg_resources.get_distribution('wheel') except pkg_resources.DistributionNotFound: dist.announce('WARNING: The wheel package is not available.', log.WARN) # Ignore environment markers; if supplied, it is required. req = strip_marker(req) # Take easy_install options into account, but do not override relevant # pip environment variables (like PIP_INDEX_URL or PIP_QUIET); they'll # take precedence. opts = dist.get_option_dict('easy_install') if 'allow_hosts' in opts: raise DistutilsError('the `allow-hosts` option is not supported ' 'when using pip to install requirements.') if 'PIP_QUIET' in os.environ or 'PIP_VERBOSE' in os.environ: quiet = False else: quiet = True if 'PIP_INDEX_URL' in os.environ: index_url = None elif 'index_url' in opts: index_url = opts['index_url'][1] else: index_url = None if 'find_links' in opts: find_links = _fixup_find_links(opts['find_links'][1])[:] else: find_links = [] if dist.dependency_links: find_links.extend(dist.dependency_links) eggs_dir = os.path.realpath(dist.get_egg_cache_dir()) environment = pkg_resources.Environment() for egg_dist in pkg_resources.find_distributions(eggs_dir): if egg_dist in req and environment.can_add(egg_dist): return egg_dist with TemporaryDirectory() as tmpdir: cmd = [ sys.executable, '-m', 'pip', '--disable-pip-version-check', 'wheel', '--no-deps', '-w', tmpdir, ] if quiet: cmd.append('--quiet') if index_url is not None: cmd.extend(('--index-url', index_url)) if find_links is not None: for link in find_links: cmd.extend(('--find-links', link)) # If requirement is a PEP 508 direct URL, directly pass # the URL to pip, as `req @ url` does not work on the # command line. if req.url: cmd.append(req.url) else: cmd.append(str(req)) try: subprocess.check_call(cmd) except subprocess.CalledProcessError as e: raise DistutilsError(str(e)) from e wheel = Wheel(glob.glob(os.path.join(tmpdir, '*.whl'))[0]) dist_location = os.path.join(eggs_dir, wheel.egg_name()) wheel.install_as_egg(dist_location) dist_metadata = pkg_resources.PathMetadata( dist_location, os.path.join(dist_location, 'EGG-INFO')) dist = pkg_resources.Distribution.from_filename( dist_location, metadata=dist_metadata) return dist def strip_marker(req): """ Return a new requirement without the environment marker to avoid calling pip with something like `babel; extra == "i18n"`, which would always be ignored. """ # create a copy to avoid mutating the input req = pkg_resources.Requirement.parse(str(req)) req.marker = None return req
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/glob.py
""" Filename globbing utility. Mostly a copy of `glob` from Python 3.5. Changes include: * `yield from` and PEP3102 `*` removed. * Hidden files are not ignored. """ import os import re import fnmatch __all__ = ["glob", "iglob", "escape"] def glob(pathname, recursive=False): """Return a list of paths matching a pathname pattern. The pattern may contain simple shell-style wildcards a la fnmatch. However, unlike fnmatch, filenames starting with a dot are special cases that are not matched by '*' and '?' patterns. If recursive is true, the pattern '**' will match any files and zero or more directories and subdirectories. """ return list(iglob(pathname, recursive=recursive)) def iglob(pathname, recursive=False): """Return an iterator which yields the paths matching a pathname pattern. The pattern may contain simple shell-style wildcards a la fnmatch. However, unlike fnmatch, filenames starting with a dot are special cases that are not matched by '*' and '?' patterns. If recursive is true, the pattern '**' will match any files and zero or more directories and subdirectories. """ it = _iglob(pathname, recursive) if recursive and _isrecursive(pathname): s = next(it) # skip empty string assert not s return it def _iglob(pathname, recursive): dirname, basename = os.path.split(pathname) if not has_magic(pathname): if basename: if os.path.lexists(pathname): yield pathname else: # Patterns ending with a slash should match only directories if os.path.isdir(dirname): yield pathname return if not dirname: if recursive and _isrecursive(basename): for x in glob2(dirname, basename): yield x else: for x in glob1(dirname, basename): yield x return # `os.path.split()` returns the argument itself as a dirname if it is a # drive or UNC path. Prevent an infinite recursion if a drive or UNC path # contains magic characters (i.e. r'\\?\C:'). if dirname != pathname and has_magic(dirname): dirs = _iglob(dirname, recursive) else: dirs = [dirname] if has_magic(basename): if recursive and _isrecursive(basename): glob_in_dir = glob2 else: glob_in_dir = glob1 else: glob_in_dir = glob0 for dirname in dirs: for name in glob_in_dir(dirname, basename): yield os.path.join(dirname, name) # These 2 helper functions non-recursively glob inside a literal directory. # They return a list of basenames. `glob1` accepts a pattern while `glob0` # takes a literal basename (so it only has to check for its existence). def glob1(dirname, pattern): if not dirname: if isinstance(pattern, bytes): dirname = os.curdir.encode('ASCII') else: dirname = os.curdir try: names = os.listdir(dirname) except OSError: return [] return fnmatch.filter(names, pattern) def glob0(dirname, basename): if not basename: # `os.path.split()` returns an empty basename for paths ending with a # directory separator. 'q*x/' should match only directories. if os.path.isdir(dirname): return [basename] else: if os.path.lexists(os.path.join(dirname, basename)): return [basename] return [] # This helper function recursively yields relative pathnames inside a literal # directory. def glob2(dirname, pattern): assert _isrecursive(pattern) yield pattern[:0] for x in _rlistdir(dirname): yield x # Recursively yields relative pathnames inside a literal directory. def _rlistdir(dirname): if not dirname: if isinstance(dirname, bytes): dirname = os.curdir.encode('ASCII') else: dirname = os.curdir try: names = os.listdir(dirname) except os.error: return for x in names: yield x path = os.path.join(dirname, x) if dirname else x for y in _rlistdir(path): yield os.path.join(x, y) magic_check = re.compile('([*?[])') magic_check_bytes = re.compile(b'([*?[])') def has_magic(s): if isinstance(s, bytes): match = magic_check_bytes.search(s) else: match = magic_check.search(s) return match is not None def _isrecursive(pattern): if isinstance(pattern, bytes): return pattern == b'**' else: return pattern == '**' def escape(pathname): """Escape all special characters. """ # Escaping is done by wrapping any of "*?[" between square brackets. # Metacharacters do not work in the drive part and shouldn't be escaped. drive, pathname = os.path.splitdrive(pathname) if isinstance(pathname, bytes): pathname = magic_check_bytes.sub(br'[\1]', pathname) else: pathname = magic_check.sub(r'[\1]', pathname) return drive + pathname
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/sandbox.py
import os import sys import tempfile import operator import functools import itertools import re import contextlib import pickle import textwrap from setuptools.extern import six from setuptools.extern.six.moves import builtins, map import pkg_resources from distutils.errors import DistutilsError from pkg_resources import working_set if sys.platform.startswith('java'): import org.python.modules.posix.PosixModule as _os else: _os = sys.modules[os.name] try: _file = file except NameError: _file = None _open = open __all__ = [ "AbstractSandbox", "DirectorySandbox", "SandboxViolation", "run_setup", ] def _execfile(filename, globals, locals=None): """ Python 3 implementation of execfile. """ mode = 'rb' with open(filename, mode) as stream: script = stream.read() if locals is None: locals = globals code = compile(script, filename, 'exec') exec(code, globals, locals) @contextlib.contextmanager def save_argv(repl=None): saved = sys.argv[:] if repl is not None: sys.argv[:] = repl try: yield saved finally: sys.argv[:] = saved @contextlib.contextmanager def save_path(): saved = sys.path[:] try: yield saved finally: sys.path[:] = saved @contextlib.contextmanager def override_temp(replacement): """ Monkey-patch tempfile.tempdir with replacement, ensuring it exists """ os.makedirs(replacement, exist_ok=True) saved = tempfile.tempdir tempfile.tempdir = replacement try: yield finally: tempfile.tempdir = saved @contextlib.contextmanager def pushd(target): saved = os.getcwd() os.chdir(target) try: yield saved finally: os.chdir(saved) class UnpickleableException(Exception): """ An exception representing another Exception that could not be pickled. """ @staticmethod def dump(type, exc): """ Always return a dumped (pickled) type and exc. If exc can't be pickled, wrap it in UnpickleableException first. """ try: return pickle.dumps(type), pickle.dumps(exc) except Exception: # get UnpickleableException inside the sandbox from setuptools.sandbox import UnpickleableException as cls return cls.dump(cls, cls(repr(exc))) class ExceptionSaver: """ A Context Manager that will save an exception, serialized, and restore it later. """ def __enter__(self): return self def __exit__(self, type, exc, tb): if not exc: return # dump the exception self._saved = UnpickleableException.dump(type, exc) self._tb = tb # suppress the exception return True def resume(self): "restore and re-raise any exception" if '_saved' not in vars(self): return type, exc = map(pickle.loads, self._saved) six.reraise(type, exc, self._tb) @contextlib.contextmanager def save_modules(): """ Context in which imported modules are saved. Translates exceptions internal to the context into the equivalent exception outside the context. """ saved = sys.modules.copy() with ExceptionSaver() as saved_exc: yield saved sys.modules.update(saved) # remove any modules imported since del_modules = ( mod_name for mod_name in sys.modules if mod_name not in saved # exclude any encodings modules. See #285 and not mod_name.startswith('encodings.') ) _clear_modules(del_modules) saved_exc.resume() def _clear_modules(module_names): for mod_name in list(module_names): del sys.modules[mod_name] @contextlib.contextmanager def save_pkg_resources_state(): saved = pkg_resources.__getstate__() try: yield saved finally: pkg_resources.__setstate__(saved) @contextlib.contextmanager def setup_context(setup_dir): temp_dir = os.path.join(setup_dir, 'temp') with save_pkg_resources_state(): with save_modules(): hide_setuptools() with save_path(): with save_argv(): with override_temp(temp_dir): with pushd(setup_dir): # ensure setuptools commands are available __import__('setuptools') yield def _needs_hiding(mod_name): """ >>> _needs_hiding('setuptools') True >>> _needs_hiding('pkg_resources') True >>> _needs_hiding('setuptools_plugin') False >>> _needs_hiding('setuptools.__init__') True >>> _needs_hiding('distutils') True >>> _needs_hiding('os') False >>> _needs_hiding('Cython') True """ pattern = re.compile(r'(setuptools|pkg_resources|distutils|Cython)(\.|$)') return bool(pattern.match(mod_name)) def hide_setuptools(): """ Remove references to setuptools' modules from sys.modules to allow the invocation to import the most appropriate setuptools. This technique is necessary to avoid issues such as #315 where setuptools upgrading itself would fail to find a function declared in the metadata. """ modules = filter(_needs_hiding, sys.modules) _clear_modules(modules) def run_setup(setup_script, args): """Run a distutils setup script, sandboxed in its directory""" setup_dir = os.path.abspath(os.path.dirname(setup_script)) with setup_context(setup_dir): try: sys.argv[:] = [setup_script] + list(args) sys.path.insert(0, setup_dir) # reset to include setup dir, w/clean callback list working_set.__init__() working_set.callbacks.append(lambda dist: dist.activate()) # __file__ should be a byte string on Python 2 (#712) dunder_file = ( setup_script if isinstance(setup_script, str) else setup_script.encode(sys.getfilesystemencoding()) ) with DirectorySandbox(setup_dir): ns = dict(__file__=dunder_file, __name__='__main__') _execfile(setup_script, ns) except SystemExit as v: if v.args and v.args[0]: raise # Normal exit, just return class AbstractSandbox: """Wrap 'os' module and 'open()' builtin for virtualizing setup scripts""" _active = False def __init__(self): self._attrs = [ name for name in dir(_os) if not name.startswith('_') and hasattr(self, name) ] def _copy(self, source): for name in self._attrs: setattr(os, name, getattr(source, name)) def __enter__(self): self._copy(self) if _file: builtins.file = self._file builtins.open = self._open self._active = True def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, traceback): self._active = False if _file: builtins.file = _file builtins.open = _open self._copy(_os) def run(self, func): """Run 'func' under os sandboxing""" with self: return func() def _mk_dual_path_wrapper(name): original = getattr(_os, name) def wrap(self, src, dst, *args, **kw): if self._active: src, dst = self._remap_pair(name, src, dst, *args, **kw) return original(src, dst, *args, **kw) return wrap for name in ["rename", "link", "symlink"]: if hasattr(_os, name): locals()[name] = _mk_dual_path_wrapper(name) def _mk_single_path_wrapper(name, original=None): original = original or getattr(_os, name) def wrap(self, path, *args, **kw): if self._active: path = self._remap_input(name, path, *args, **kw) return original(path, *args, **kw) return wrap if _file: _file = _mk_single_path_wrapper('file', _file) _open = _mk_single_path_wrapper('open', _open) for name in [ "stat", "listdir", "chdir", "open", "chmod", "chown", "mkdir", "remove", "unlink", "rmdir", "utime", "lchown", "chroot", "lstat", "startfile", "mkfifo", "mknod", "pathconf", "access" ]: if hasattr(_os, name): locals()[name] = _mk_single_path_wrapper(name) def _mk_single_with_return(name): original = getattr(_os, name) def wrap(self, path, *args, **kw): if self._active: path = self._remap_input(name, path, *args, **kw) return self._remap_output(name, original(path, *args, **kw)) return original(path, *args, **kw) return wrap for name in ['readlink', 'tempnam']: if hasattr(_os, name): locals()[name] = _mk_single_with_return(name) def _mk_query(name): original = getattr(_os, name) def wrap(self, *args, **kw): retval = original(*args, **kw) if self._active: return self._remap_output(name, retval) return retval return wrap for name in ['getcwd', 'tmpnam']: if hasattr(_os, name): locals()[name] = _mk_query(name) def _validate_path(self, path): """Called to remap or validate any path, whether input or output""" return path def _remap_input(self, operation, path, *args, **kw): """Called for path inputs""" return self._validate_path(path) def _remap_output(self, operation, path): """Called for path outputs""" return self._validate_path(path) def _remap_pair(self, operation, src, dst, *args, **kw): """Called for path pairs like rename, link, and symlink operations""" return ( self._remap_input(operation + '-from', src, *args, **kw), self._remap_input(operation + '-to', dst, *args, **kw) ) if hasattr(os, 'devnull'): _EXCEPTIONS = [os.devnull] else: _EXCEPTIONS = [] class DirectorySandbox(AbstractSandbox): """Restrict operations to a single subdirectory - pseudo-chroot""" write_ops = dict.fromkeys([ "open", "chmod", "chown", "mkdir", "remove", "unlink", "rmdir", "utime", "lchown", "chroot", "mkfifo", "mknod", "tempnam", ]) _exception_patterns = [ # Allow lib2to3 to attempt to save a pickled grammar object (#121) r'.*lib2to3.*\.pickle$', ] "exempt writing to paths that match the pattern" def __init__(self, sandbox, exceptions=_EXCEPTIONS): self._sandbox = os.path.normcase(os.path.realpath(sandbox)) self._prefix = os.path.join(self._sandbox, '') self._exceptions = [ os.path.normcase(os.path.realpath(path)) for path in exceptions ] AbstractSandbox.__init__(self) def _violation(self, operation, *args, **kw): from setuptools.sandbox import SandboxViolation raise SandboxViolation(operation, args, kw) if _file: def _file(self, path, mode='r', *args, **kw): if mode not in ('r', 'rt', 'rb', 'rU', 'U') and not self._ok(path): self._violation("file", path, mode, *args, **kw) return _file(path, mode, *args, **kw) def _open(self, path, mode='r', *args, **kw): if mode not in ('r', 'rt', 'rb', 'rU', 'U') and not self._ok(path): self._violation("open", path, mode, *args, **kw) return _open(path, mode, *args, **kw) def tmpnam(self): self._violation("tmpnam") def _ok(self, path): active = self._active try: self._active = False realpath = os.path.normcase(os.path.realpath(path)) return ( self._exempted(realpath) or realpath == self._sandbox or realpath.startswith(self._prefix) ) finally: self._active = active def _exempted(self, filepath): start_matches = ( filepath.startswith(exception) for exception in self._exceptions ) pattern_matches = ( re.match(pattern, filepath) for pattern in self._exception_patterns ) candidates = itertools.chain(start_matches, pattern_matches) return any(candidates) def _remap_input(self, operation, path, *args, **kw): """Called for path inputs""" if operation in self.write_ops and not self._ok(path): self._violation(operation, os.path.realpath(path), *args, **kw) return path def _remap_pair(self, operation, src, dst, *args, **kw): """Called for path pairs like rename, link, and symlink operations""" if not self._ok(src) or not self._ok(dst): self._violation(operation, src, dst, *args, **kw) return (src, dst) def open(self, file, flags, mode=0o777, *args, **kw): """Called for low-level os.open()""" if flags & WRITE_FLAGS and not self._ok(file): self._violation("os.open", file, flags, mode, *args, **kw) return _os.open(file, flags, mode, *args, **kw) WRITE_FLAGS = functools.reduce( operator.or_, [ getattr(_os, a, 0) for a in "O_WRONLY O_RDWR O_APPEND O_CREAT O_TRUNC O_TEMPORARY".split()] ) class SandboxViolation(DistutilsError): """A setup script attempted to modify the filesystem outside the sandbox""" tmpl = textwrap.dedent(""" SandboxViolation: {cmd}{args!r} {kwargs} The package setup script has attempted to modify files on your system that are not within the EasyInstall build area, and has been aborted. This package cannot be safely installed by EasyInstall, and may not support alternate installation locations even if you run its setup script by hand. Please inform the package's author and the EasyInstall maintainers to find out if a fix or workaround is available. """).lstrip() def __str__(self): cmd, args, kwargs = self.args return self.tmpl.format(**locals())
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/py34compat.py
import importlib try: import importlib.util except ImportError: pass try: module_from_spec = importlib.util.module_from_spec except AttributeError: def module_from_spec(spec): return spec.loader.load_module(spec.name)
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/script.tmpl
# EASY-INSTALL-SCRIPT: %(spec)r,%(script_name)r __requires__ = %(spec)r __import__('pkg_resources').run_script(%(spec)r, %(script_name)r)
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/launch.py
""" Launch the Python script on the command line after setuptools is bootstrapped via import. """ # Note that setuptools gets imported implicitly by the # invocation of this script using python -m setuptools.launch import tokenize import sys def run(): """ Run the script in sys.argv[1] as if it had been invoked naturally. """ __builtins__ script_name = sys.argv[1] namespace = dict( __file__=script_name, __name__='__main__', __doc__=None, ) sys.argv[:] = sys.argv[1:] open_ = getattr(tokenize, 'open', open) with open_(script_name) as fid: script = fid.read() norm_script = script.replace('\\r\\n', '\\n') code = compile(norm_script, script_name, 'exec') exec(code, namespace) if __name__ == '__main__': run()
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/extension.py
import re import functools import distutils.core import distutils.errors import distutils.extension from setuptools.extern.six.moves import map from .monkey import get_unpatched def _have_cython(): """ Return True if Cython can be imported. """ cython_impl = 'Cython.Distutils.build_ext' try: # from (cython_impl) import build_ext __import__(cython_impl, fromlist=['build_ext']).build_ext return True except Exception: pass return False # for compatibility have_pyrex = _have_cython _Extension = get_unpatched(distutils.core.Extension) class Extension(_Extension): """Extension that uses '.c' files in place of '.pyx' files""" def __init__(self, name, sources, *args, **kw): # The *args is needed for compatibility as calls may use positional # arguments. py_limited_api may be set only via keyword. self.py_limited_api = kw.pop("py_limited_api", False) _Extension.__init__(self, name, sources, *args, **kw) def _convert_pyx_sources_to_lang(self): """ Replace sources with .pyx extensions to sources with the target language extension. This mechanism allows language authors to supply pre-converted sources but to prefer the .pyx sources. """ if _have_cython(): # the build has Cython, so allow it to compile the .pyx files return lang = self.language or '' target_ext = '.cpp' if lang.lower() == 'c++' else '.c' sub = functools.partial(re.sub, '.pyx$', target_ext) self.sources = list(map(sub, self.sources)) class Library(Extension): """Just like a regular Extension, but built as a library instead"""
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/distutils_patch.py
""" Ensure that the local copy of distutils is preferred over stdlib. See https://github.com/pypa/setuptools/issues/417#issuecomment-392298401 for more motivation. """ import sys import re import os import importlib import warnings is_pypy = '__pypy__' in sys.builtin_module_names def warn_distutils_present(): if 'distutils' not in sys.modules: return if is_pypy and sys.version_info < (3, 7): # PyPy for 3.6 unconditionally imports distutils, so bypass the warning # https://foss.heptapod.net/pypy/pypy/-/blob/be829135bc0d758997b3566062999ee8b23872b4/lib-python/3/site.py#L250 return warnings.warn( "Distutils was imported before Setuptools. This usage is discouraged " "and may exhibit undesirable behaviors or errors. Please use " "Setuptools' objects directly or at least import Setuptools first.") def clear_distutils(): if 'distutils' not in sys.modules: return warnings.warn("Setuptools is replacing distutils.") mods = [name for name in sys.modules if re.match(r'distutils\b', name)] for name in mods: del sys.modules[name] def enabled(): """ Allow selection of distutils by environment variable. """ which = os.environ.get('SETUPTOOLS_USE_DISTUTILS', 'stdlib') return which == 'local' def ensure_local_distutils(): clear_distutils() distutils = importlib.import_module('setuptools._distutils') distutils.__name__ = 'distutils' sys.modules['distutils'] = distutils # sanity check that submodules load as expected core = importlib.import_module('distutils.core') assert '_distutils' in core.__file__, core.__file__ warn_distutils_present() if enabled(): ensure_local_distutils()
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/unicode_utils.py
import unicodedata import sys from setuptools.extern import six # HFS Plus uses decomposed UTF-8 def decompose(path): if isinstance(path, six.text_type): return unicodedata.normalize('NFD', path) try: path = path.decode('utf-8') path = unicodedata.normalize('NFD', path) path = path.encode('utf-8') except UnicodeError: pass # Not UTF-8 return path def filesys_decode(path): """ Ensure that the given path is decoded, NONE when no expected encoding works """ if isinstance(path, six.text_type): return path fs_enc = sys.getfilesystemencoding() or 'utf-8' candidates = fs_enc, 'utf-8' for enc in candidates: try: return path.decode(enc) except UnicodeDecodeError: continue def try_encode(string, enc): "turn unicode encoding into a functional routine" try: return string.encode(enc) except UnicodeEncodeError: return None
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/monkey.py
""" Monkey patching of distutils. """ import sys import distutils.filelist import platform import types import functools from importlib import import_module import inspect from setuptools.extern import six import setuptools __all__ = [] """ Everything is private. Contact the project team if you think you need this functionality. """ def _get_mro(cls): """ Returns the bases classes for cls sorted by the MRO. Works around an issue on Jython where inspect.getmro will not return all base classes if multiple classes share the same name. Instead, this function will return a tuple containing the class itself, and the contents of cls.__bases__. See https://github.com/pypa/setuptools/issues/1024. """ if platform.python_implementation() == "Jython": return (cls,) + cls.__bases__ return inspect.getmro(cls) def get_unpatched(item): lookup = ( get_unpatched_class if isinstance(item, six.class_types) else get_unpatched_function if isinstance(item, types.FunctionType) else lambda item: None ) return lookup(item) def get_unpatched_class(cls): """Protect against re-patching the distutils if reloaded Also ensures that no other distutils extension monkeypatched the distutils first. """ external_bases = ( cls for cls in _get_mro(cls) if not cls.__module__.startswith('setuptools') ) base = next(external_bases) if not base.__module__.startswith('distutils'): msg = "distutils has already been patched by %r" % cls raise AssertionError(msg) return base def patch_all(): # we can't patch distutils.cmd, alas distutils.core.Command = setuptools.Command has_issue_12885 = sys.version_info <= (3, 5, 3) if has_issue_12885: # fix findall bug in distutils (http://bugs.python.org/issue12885) distutils.filelist.findall = setuptools.findall needs_warehouse = ( sys.version_info < (2, 7, 13) or (3, 4) < sys.version_info < (3, 4, 6) or (3, 5) < sys.version_info <= (3, 5, 3) ) if needs_warehouse: warehouse = 'https://upload.pypi.org/legacy/' distutils.config.PyPIRCCommand.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY = warehouse _patch_distribution_metadata() # Install Distribution throughout the distutils for module in distutils.dist, distutils.core, distutils.cmd: module.Distribution = setuptools.dist.Distribution # Install the patched Extension distutils.core.Extension = setuptools.extension.Extension distutils.extension.Extension = setuptools.extension.Extension if 'distutils.command.build_ext' in sys.modules: sys.modules['distutils.command.build_ext'].Extension = ( setuptools.extension.Extension ) patch_for_msvc_specialized_compiler() def _patch_distribution_metadata(): """Patch write_pkg_file and read_pkg_file for higher metadata standards""" for attr in ('write_pkg_file', 'read_pkg_file', 'get_metadata_version'): new_val = getattr(setuptools.dist, attr) setattr(distutils.dist.DistributionMetadata, attr, new_val) def patch_func(replacement, target_mod, func_name): """ Patch func_name in target_mod with replacement Important - original must be resolved by name to avoid patching an already patched function. """ original = getattr(target_mod, func_name) # set the 'unpatched' attribute on the replacement to # point to the original. vars(replacement).setdefault('unpatched', original) # replace the function in the original module setattr(target_mod, func_name, replacement) def get_unpatched_function(candidate): return getattr(candidate, 'unpatched') def patch_for_msvc_specialized_compiler(): """ Patch functions in distutils to use standalone Microsoft Visual C++ compilers. """ # import late to avoid circular imports on Python < 3.5 msvc = import_module('setuptools.msvc') if platform.system() != 'Windows': # Compilers only availables on Microsoft Windows return def patch_params(mod_name, func_name): """ Prepare the parameters for patch_func to patch indicated function. """ repl_prefix = 'msvc9_' if 'msvc9' in mod_name else 'msvc14_' repl_name = repl_prefix + func_name.lstrip('_') repl = getattr(msvc, repl_name) mod = import_module(mod_name) if not hasattr(mod, func_name): raise ImportError(func_name) return repl, mod, func_name # Python 2.7 to 3.4 msvc9 = functools.partial(patch_params, 'distutils.msvc9compiler') # Python 3.5+ msvc14 = functools.partial(patch_params, 'distutils._msvccompiler') try: # Patch distutils.msvc9compiler patch_func(*msvc9('find_vcvarsall')) patch_func(*msvc9('query_vcvarsall')) except ImportError: pass try: # Patch distutils._msvccompiler._get_vc_env patch_func(*msvc14('_get_vc_env')) except ImportError: pass try: # Patch distutils._msvccompiler.gen_lib_options for Numpy patch_func(*msvc14('gen_lib_options')) except ImportError: pass
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/build_meta.py
"""A PEP 517 interface to setuptools Previously, when a user or a command line tool (let's call it a "frontend") needed to make a request of setuptools to take a certain action, for example, generating a list of installation requirements, the frontend would would call "setup.py egg_info" or "setup.py bdist_wheel" on the command line. PEP 517 defines a different method of interfacing with setuptools. Rather than calling "setup.py" directly, the frontend should: 1. Set the current directory to the directory with a setup.py file 2. Import this module into a safe python interpreter (one in which setuptools can potentially set global variables or crash hard). 3. Call one of the functions defined in PEP 517. What each function does is defined in PEP 517. However, here is a "casual" definition of the functions (this definition should not be relied on for bug reports or API stability): - `build_wheel`: build a wheel in the folder and return the basename - `get_requires_for_build_wheel`: get the `setup_requires` to build - `prepare_metadata_for_build_wheel`: get the `install_requires` - `build_sdist`: build an sdist in the folder and return the basename - `get_requires_for_build_sdist`: get the `setup_requires` to build Again, this is not a formal definition! Just a "taste" of the module. """ import io import os import sys import tokenize import shutil import contextlib import setuptools import distutils from setuptools.py31compat import TemporaryDirectory from pkg_resources import parse_requirements __all__ = ['get_requires_for_build_sdist', 'get_requires_for_build_wheel', 'prepare_metadata_for_build_wheel', 'build_wheel', 'build_sdist', '__legacy__', 'SetupRequirementsError'] class SetupRequirementsError(BaseException): def __init__(self, specifiers): self.specifiers = specifiers class Distribution(setuptools.dist.Distribution): def fetch_build_eggs(self, specifiers): specifier_list = list(map(str, parse_requirements(specifiers))) raise SetupRequirementsError(specifier_list) @classmethod @contextlib.contextmanager def patch(cls): """ Replace distutils.dist.Distribution with this class for the duration of this context. """ orig = distutils.core.Distribution distutils.core.Distribution = cls try: yield finally: distutils.core.Distribution = orig def _to_str(s): """ Convert a filename to a string (on Python 2, explicitly a byte string, not Unicode) as distutils checks for the exact type str. """ if sys.version_info[0] == 2 and not isinstance(s, str): # Assume it's Unicode, as that's what the PEP says # should be provided. return s.encode(sys.getfilesystemencoding()) return s def _get_immediate_subdirectories(a_dir): return [name for name in os.listdir(a_dir) if os.path.isdir(os.path.join(a_dir, name))] def _file_with_extension(directory, extension): matching = ( f for f in os.listdir(directory) if f.endswith(extension) ) file, = matching return file def _open_setup_script(setup_script): if not os.path.exists(setup_script): # Supply a default setup.py return io.StringIO(u"from setuptools import setup; setup()") return getattr(tokenize, 'open', open)(setup_script) class _BuildMetaBackend(object): def _fix_config(self, config_settings): config_settings = config_settings or {} config_settings.setdefault('--global-option', []) return config_settings def _get_build_requires(self, config_settings, requirements): config_settings = self._fix_config(config_settings) sys.argv = sys.argv[:1] + ['egg_info'] + \ config_settings["--global-option"] try: with Distribution.patch(): self.run_setup() except SetupRequirementsError as e: requirements += e.specifiers return requirements def run_setup(self, setup_script='setup.py'): # Note that we can reuse our build directory between calls # Correctness comes first, then optimization later __file__ = setup_script __name__ = '__main__' with _open_setup_script(__file__) as f: code = f.read().replace(r'\r\n', r'\n') exec(compile(code, __file__, 'exec'), locals()) def get_requires_for_build_wheel(self, config_settings=None): config_settings = self._fix_config(config_settings) return self._get_build_requires( config_settings, requirements=['wheel']) def get_requires_for_build_sdist(self, config_settings=None): config_settings = self._fix_config(config_settings) return self._get_build_requires(config_settings, requirements=[]) def prepare_metadata_for_build_wheel(self, metadata_directory, config_settings=None): sys.argv = sys.argv[:1] + ['dist_info', '--egg-base', _to_str(metadata_directory)] self.run_setup() dist_info_directory = metadata_directory while True: dist_infos = [f for f in os.listdir(dist_info_directory) if f.endswith('.dist-info')] if ( len(dist_infos) == 0 and len(_get_immediate_subdirectories(dist_info_directory)) == 1 ): dist_info_directory = os.path.join( dist_info_directory, os.listdir(dist_info_directory)[0]) continue assert len(dist_infos) == 1 break # PEP 517 requires that the .dist-info directory be placed in the # metadata_directory. To comply, we MUST copy the directory to the root if dist_info_directory != metadata_directory: shutil.move( os.path.join(dist_info_directory, dist_infos[0]), metadata_directory) shutil.rmtree(dist_info_directory, ignore_errors=True) return dist_infos[0] def _build_with_temp_dir(self, setup_command, result_extension, result_directory, config_settings): config_settings = self._fix_config(config_settings) result_directory = os.path.abspath(result_directory) # Build in a temporary directory, then copy to the target. os.makedirs(result_directory, exist_ok=True) with TemporaryDirectory(dir=result_directory) as tmp_dist_dir: sys.argv = (sys.argv[:1] + setup_command + ['--dist-dir', tmp_dist_dir] + config_settings["--global-option"]) self.run_setup() result_basename = _file_with_extension( tmp_dist_dir, result_extension) result_path = os.path.join(result_directory, result_basename) if os.path.exists(result_path): # os.rename will fail overwriting on non-Unix. os.remove(result_path) os.rename(os.path.join(tmp_dist_dir, result_basename), result_path) return result_basename def build_wheel(self, wheel_directory, config_settings=None, metadata_directory=None): return self._build_with_temp_dir(['bdist_wheel'], '.whl', wheel_directory, config_settings) def build_sdist(self, sdist_directory, config_settings=None): return self._build_with_temp_dir(['sdist', '--formats', 'gztar'], '.tar.gz', sdist_directory, config_settings) class _BuildMetaLegacyBackend(_BuildMetaBackend): """Compatibility backend for setuptools This is a version of setuptools.build_meta that endeavors to maintain backwards compatibility with pre-PEP 517 modes of invocation. It exists as a temporary bridge between the old packaging mechanism and the new packaging mechanism, and will eventually be removed. """ def run_setup(self, setup_script='setup.py'): # In order to maintain compatibility with scripts assuming that # the setup.py script is in a directory on the PYTHONPATH, inject # '' into sys.path. (pypa/setuptools#1642) sys_path = list(sys.path) # Save the original path script_dir = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(setup_script)) if script_dir not in sys.path: sys.path.insert(0, script_dir) # Some setup.py scripts (e.g. in pygame and numpy) use sys.argv[0] to # get the directory of the source code. They expect it to refer to the # setup.py script. sys_argv_0 = sys.argv[0] sys.argv[0] = setup_script try: super(_BuildMetaLegacyBackend, self).run_setup(setup_script=setup_script) finally: # While PEP 517 frontends should be calling each hook in a fresh # subprocess according to the standard (and thus it should not be # strictly necessary to restore the old sys.path), we'll restore # the original path so that the path manipulation does not persist # within the hook after run_setup is called. sys.path[:] = sys_path sys.argv[0] = sys_argv_0 # The primary backend _BACKEND = _BuildMetaBackend() get_requires_for_build_wheel = _BACKEND.get_requires_for_build_wheel get_requires_for_build_sdist = _BACKEND.get_requires_for_build_sdist prepare_metadata_for_build_wheel = _BACKEND.prepare_metadata_for_build_wheel build_wheel = _BACKEND.build_wheel build_sdist = _BACKEND.build_sdist # The legacy backend __legacy__ = _BuildMetaLegacyBackend()
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/errors.py
"""setuptools.errors Provides exceptions used by setuptools modules. """ from distutils.errors import DistutilsError class RemovedCommandError(DistutilsError, RuntimeError): """Error used for commands that have been removed in setuptools. Since ``setuptools`` is built on ``distutils``, simply removing a command from ``setuptools`` will make the behavior fall back to ``distutils``; this error is raised if a command exists in ``distutils`` but has been actively removed in ``setuptools``. """
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/dep_util.py
from distutils.dep_util import newer_group # yes, this is was almost entirely copy-pasted from # 'newer_pairwise()', this is just another convenience # function. def newer_pairwise_group(sources_groups, targets): """Walk both arguments in parallel, testing if each source group is newer than its corresponding target. Returns a pair of lists (sources_groups, targets) where sources is newer than target, according to the semantics of 'newer_group()'. """ if len(sources_groups) != len(targets): raise ValueError( "'sources_group' and 'targets' must be the same length") # build a pair of lists (sources_groups, targets) where source is newer n_sources = [] n_targets = [] for i in range(len(sources_groups)): if newer_group(sources_groups[i], targets[i]): n_sources.append(sources_groups[i]) n_targets.append(targets[i]) return n_sources, n_targets
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/msvc.py
""" Improved support for Microsoft Visual C++ compilers. Known supported compilers: -------------------------- Microsoft Visual C++ 9.0: Microsoft Visual C++ Compiler for Python 2.7 (x86, amd64) Microsoft Windows SDK 6.1 (x86, x64, ia64) Microsoft Windows SDK 7.0 (x86, x64, ia64) Microsoft Visual C++ 10.0: Microsoft Windows SDK 7.1 (x86, x64, ia64) Microsoft Visual C++ 14.X: Microsoft Visual C++ Build Tools 2015 (x86, x64, arm) Microsoft Visual Studio Build Tools 2017 (x86, x64, arm, arm64) Microsoft Visual Studio Build Tools 2019 (x86, x64, arm, arm64) This may also support compilers shipped with compatible Visual Studio versions. """ import json from io import open from os import listdir, pathsep from os.path import join, isfile, isdir, dirname import sys import platform import itertools import subprocess import distutils.errors from setuptools.extern.packaging.version import LegacyVersion from setuptools.extern.six.moves import filterfalse from .monkey import get_unpatched if platform.system() == 'Windows': from setuptools.extern.six.moves import winreg from os import environ else: # Mock winreg and environ so the module can be imported on this platform. class winreg: HKEY_USERS = None HKEY_CURRENT_USER = None HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE = None HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT = None environ = dict() _msvc9_suppress_errors = ( # msvc9compiler isn't available on some platforms ImportError, # msvc9compiler raises DistutilsPlatformError in some # environments. See #1118. distutils.errors.DistutilsPlatformError, ) try: from distutils.msvc9compiler import Reg except _msvc9_suppress_errors: pass def msvc9_find_vcvarsall(version): """ Patched "distutils.msvc9compiler.find_vcvarsall" to use the standalone compiler build for Python (VCForPython / Microsoft Visual C++ Compiler for Python 2.7). Fall back to original behavior when the standalone compiler is not available. Redirect the path of "vcvarsall.bat". Parameters ---------- version: float Required Microsoft Visual C++ version. Return ------ str vcvarsall.bat path """ vc_base = r'Software\%sMicrosoft\DevDiv\VCForPython\%0.1f' key = vc_base % ('', version) try: # Per-user installs register the compiler path here productdir = Reg.get_value(key, "installdir") except KeyError: try: # All-user installs on a 64-bit system register here key = vc_base % ('Wow6432Node\\', version) productdir = Reg.get_value(key, "installdir") except KeyError: productdir = None if productdir: vcvarsall = join(productdir, "vcvarsall.bat") if isfile(vcvarsall): return vcvarsall return get_unpatched(msvc9_find_vcvarsall)(version) def msvc9_query_vcvarsall(ver, arch='x86', *args, **kwargs): """ Patched "distutils.msvc9compiler.query_vcvarsall" for support extra Microsoft Visual C++ 9.0 and 10.0 compilers. Set environment without use of "vcvarsall.bat". Parameters ---------- ver: float Required Microsoft Visual C++ version. arch: str Target architecture. Return ------ dict environment """ # Try to get environment from vcvarsall.bat (Classical way) try: orig = get_unpatched(msvc9_query_vcvarsall) return orig(ver, arch, *args, **kwargs) except distutils.errors.DistutilsPlatformError: # Pass error if Vcvarsall.bat is missing pass except ValueError: # Pass error if environment not set after executing vcvarsall.bat pass # If error, try to set environment directly try: return EnvironmentInfo(arch, ver).return_env() except distutils.errors.DistutilsPlatformError as exc: _augment_exception(exc, ver, arch) raise def _msvc14_find_vc2015(): """Python 3.8 "distutils/_msvccompiler.py" backport""" try: key = winreg.OpenKey( winreg.HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, r"Software\Microsoft\VisualStudio\SxS\VC7", 0, winreg.KEY_READ | winreg.KEY_WOW64_32KEY ) except OSError: return None, None best_version = 0 best_dir = None with key: for i in itertools.count(): try: v, vc_dir, vt = winreg.EnumValue(key, i) except OSError: break if v and vt == winreg.REG_SZ and isdir(vc_dir): try: version = int(float(v)) except (ValueError, TypeError): continue if version >= 14 and version > best_version: best_version, best_dir = version, vc_dir return best_version, best_dir def _msvc14_find_vc2017(): """Python 3.8 "distutils/_msvccompiler.py" backport Returns "15, path" based on the result of invoking vswhere.exe If no install is found, returns "None, None" The version is returned to avoid unnecessarily changing the function result. It may be ignored when the path is not None. If vswhere.exe is not available, by definition, VS 2017 is not installed. """ root = environ.get("ProgramFiles(x86)") or environ.get("ProgramFiles") if not root: return None, None try: path = subprocess.check_output([ join(root, "Microsoft Visual Studio", "Installer", "vswhere.exe"), "-latest", "-prerelease", "-requires", "Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.VC.Tools.x86.x64", "-property", "installationPath", "-products", "*", ]).decode(encoding="mbcs", errors="strict").strip() except (subprocess.CalledProcessError, OSError, UnicodeDecodeError): return None, None path = join(path, "VC", "Auxiliary", "Build") if isdir(path): return 15, path return None, None PLAT_SPEC_TO_RUNTIME = { 'x86': 'x86', 'x86_amd64': 'x64', 'x86_arm': 'arm', 'x86_arm64': 'arm64' } def _msvc14_find_vcvarsall(plat_spec): """Python 3.8 "distutils/_msvccompiler.py" backport""" _, best_dir = _msvc14_find_vc2017() vcruntime = None if plat_spec in PLAT_SPEC_TO_RUNTIME: vcruntime_plat = PLAT_SPEC_TO_RUNTIME[plat_spec] else: vcruntime_plat = 'x64' if 'amd64' in plat_spec else 'x86' if best_dir: vcredist = join(best_dir, "..", "..", "redist", "MSVC", "**", vcruntime_plat, "Microsoft.VC14*.CRT", "vcruntime140.dll") try: import glob vcruntime = glob.glob(vcredist, recursive=True)[-1] except (ImportError, OSError, LookupError): vcruntime = None if not best_dir: best_version, best_dir = _msvc14_find_vc2015() if best_version: vcruntime = join(best_dir, 'redist', vcruntime_plat, "Microsoft.VC140.CRT", "vcruntime140.dll") if not best_dir: return None, None vcvarsall = join(best_dir, "vcvarsall.bat") if not isfile(vcvarsall): return None, None if not vcruntime or not isfile(vcruntime): vcruntime = None return vcvarsall, vcruntime def _msvc14_get_vc_env(plat_spec): """Python 3.8 "distutils/_msvccompiler.py" backport""" if "DISTUTILS_USE_SDK" in environ: return { key.lower(): value for key, value in environ.items() } vcvarsall, vcruntime = _msvc14_find_vcvarsall(plat_spec) if not vcvarsall: raise distutils.errors.DistutilsPlatformError( "Unable to find vcvarsall.bat" ) try: out = subprocess.check_output( 'cmd /u /c "{}" {} && set'.format(vcvarsall, plat_spec), stderr=subprocess.STDOUT, ).decode('utf-16le', errors='replace') except subprocess.CalledProcessError as exc: raise distutils.errors.DistutilsPlatformError( "Error executing {}".format(exc.cmd) ) from exc env = { key.lower(): value for key, _, value in (line.partition('=') for line in out.splitlines()) if key and value } if vcruntime: env['py_vcruntime_redist'] = vcruntime return env def msvc14_get_vc_env(plat_spec): """ Patched "distutils._msvccompiler._get_vc_env" for support extra Microsoft Visual C++ 14.X compilers. Set environment without use of "vcvarsall.bat". Parameters ---------- plat_spec: str Target architecture. Return ------ dict environment """ # Always use backport from CPython 3.8 try: return _msvc14_get_vc_env(plat_spec) except distutils.errors.DistutilsPlatformError as exc: _augment_exception(exc, 14.0) raise def msvc14_gen_lib_options(*args, **kwargs): """ Patched "distutils._msvccompiler.gen_lib_options" for fix compatibility between "numpy.distutils" and "distutils._msvccompiler" (for Numpy < 1.11.2) """ if "numpy.distutils" in sys.modules: import numpy as np if LegacyVersion(np.__version__) < LegacyVersion('1.11.2'): return np.distutils.ccompiler.gen_lib_options(*args, **kwargs) return get_unpatched(msvc14_gen_lib_options)(*args, **kwargs) def _augment_exception(exc, version, arch=''): """ Add details to the exception message to help guide the user as to what action will resolve it. """ # Error if MSVC++ directory not found or environment not set message = exc.args[0] if "vcvarsall" in message.lower() or "visual c" in message.lower(): # Special error message if MSVC++ not installed tmpl = 'Microsoft Visual C++ {version:0.1f} is required.' message = tmpl.format(**locals()) msdownload = 'www.microsoft.com/download/details.aspx?id=%d' if version == 9.0: if arch.lower().find('ia64') > -1: # For VC++ 9.0, if IA64 support is needed, redirect user # to Windows SDK 7.0. # Note: No download link available from Microsoft. message += ' Get it with "Microsoft Windows SDK 7.0"' else: # For VC++ 9.0 redirect user to Vc++ for Python 2.7 : # This redirection link is maintained by Microsoft. # Contact vspython@microsoft.com if it needs updating. message += ' Get it from http://aka.ms/vcpython27' elif version == 10.0: # For VC++ 10.0 Redirect user to Windows SDK 7.1 message += ' Get it with "Microsoft Windows SDK 7.1": ' message += msdownload % 8279 elif version >= 14.0: # For VC++ 14.X Redirect user to latest Visual C++ Build Tools message += (' Get it with "Build Tools for Visual Studio": ' r'https://visualstudio.microsoft.com/downloads/') exc.args = (message, ) class PlatformInfo: """ Current and Target Architectures information. Parameters ---------- arch: str Target architecture. """ current_cpu = environ.get('processor_architecture', '').lower() def __init__(self, arch): self.arch = arch.lower().replace('x64', 'amd64') @property def target_cpu(self): """ Return Target CPU architecture. Return ------ str Target CPU """ return self.arch[self.arch.find('_') + 1:] def target_is_x86(self): """ Return True if target CPU is x86 32 bits.. Return ------ bool CPU is x86 32 bits """ return self.target_cpu == 'x86' def current_is_x86(self): """ Return True if current CPU is x86 32 bits.. Return ------ bool CPU is x86 32 bits """ return self.current_cpu == 'x86' def current_dir(self, hidex86=False, x64=False): """ Current platform specific subfolder. Parameters ---------- hidex86: bool return '' and not '\x86' if architecture is x86. x64: bool return '\x64' and not '\amd64' if architecture is amd64. Return ------ str subfolder: '\target', or '' (see hidex86 parameter) """ return ( '' if (self.current_cpu == 'x86' and hidex86) else r'\x64' if (self.current_cpu == 'amd64' and x64) else r'\%s' % self.current_cpu ) def target_dir(self, hidex86=False, x64=False): r""" Target platform specific subfolder. Parameters ---------- hidex86: bool return '' and not '\x86' if architecture is x86. x64: bool return '\x64' and not '\amd64' if architecture is amd64. Return ------ str subfolder: '\current', or '' (see hidex86 parameter) """ return ( '' if (self.target_cpu == 'x86' and hidex86) else r'\x64' if (self.target_cpu == 'amd64' and x64) else r'\%s' % self.target_cpu ) def cross_dir(self, forcex86=False): r""" Cross platform specific subfolder. Parameters ---------- forcex86: bool Use 'x86' as current architecture even if current architecture is not x86. Return ------ str subfolder: '' if target architecture is current architecture, '\current_target' if not. """ current = 'x86' if forcex86 else self.current_cpu return ( '' if self.target_cpu == current else self.target_dir().replace('\\', '\\%s_' % current) ) class RegistryInfo: """ Microsoft Visual Studio related registry information. Parameters ---------- platform_info: PlatformInfo "PlatformInfo" instance. """ HKEYS = (winreg.HKEY_USERS, winreg.HKEY_CURRENT_USER, winreg.HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, winreg.HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT) def __init__(self, platform_info): self.pi = platform_info @property def visualstudio(self): """ Microsoft Visual Studio root registry key. Return ------ str Registry key """ return 'VisualStudio' @property def sxs(self): """ Microsoft Visual Studio SxS registry key. Return ------ str Registry key """ return join(self.visualstudio, 'SxS') @property def vc(self): """ Microsoft Visual C++ VC7 registry key. Return ------ str Registry key """ return join(self.sxs, 'VC7') @property def vs(self): """ Microsoft Visual Studio VS7 registry key. Return ------ str Registry key """ return join(self.sxs, 'VS7') @property def vc_for_python(self): """ Microsoft Visual C++ for Python registry key. Return ------ str Registry key """ return r'DevDiv\VCForPython' @property def microsoft_sdk(self): """ Microsoft SDK registry key. Return ------ str Registry key """ return 'Microsoft SDKs' @property def windows_sdk(self): """ Microsoft Windows/Platform SDK registry key. Return ------ str Registry key """ return join(self.microsoft_sdk, 'Windows') @property def netfx_sdk(self): """ Microsoft .NET Framework SDK registry key. Return ------ str Registry key """ return join(self.microsoft_sdk, 'NETFXSDK') @property def windows_kits_roots(self): """ Microsoft Windows Kits Roots registry key. Return ------ str Registry key """ return r'Windows Kits\Installed Roots' def microsoft(self, key, x86=False): """ Return key in Microsoft software registry. Parameters ---------- key: str Registry key path where look. x86: str Force x86 software registry. Return ------ str Registry key """ node64 = '' if self.pi.current_is_x86() or x86 else 'Wow6432Node' return join('Software', node64, 'Microsoft', key) def lookup(self, key, name): """ Look for values in registry in Microsoft software registry. Parameters ---------- key: str Registry key path where look. name: str Value name to find. Return ------ str value """ key_read = winreg.KEY_READ openkey = winreg.OpenKey closekey = winreg.CloseKey ms = self.microsoft for hkey in self.HKEYS: bkey = None try: bkey = openkey(hkey, ms(key), 0, key_read) except (OSError, IOError): if not self.pi.current_is_x86(): try: bkey = openkey(hkey, ms(key, True), 0, key_read) except (OSError, IOError): continue else: continue try: return winreg.QueryValueEx(bkey, name)[0] except (OSError, IOError): pass finally: if bkey: closekey(bkey) class SystemInfo: """ Microsoft Windows and Visual Studio related system information. Parameters ---------- registry_info: RegistryInfo "RegistryInfo" instance. vc_ver: float Required Microsoft Visual C++ version. """ # Variables and properties in this class use originals CamelCase variables # names from Microsoft source files for more easy comparison. WinDir = environ.get('WinDir', '') ProgramFiles = environ.get('ProgramFiles', '') ProgramFilesx86 = environ.get('ProgramFiles(x86)', ProgramFiles) def __init__(self, registry_info, vc_ver=None): self.ri = registry_info self.pi = self.ri.pi self.known_vs_paths = self.find_programdata_vs_vers() # Except for VS15+, VC version is aligned with VS version self.vs_ver = self.vc_ver = ( vc_ver or self._find_latest_available_vs_ver()) def _find_latest_available_vs_ver(self): """ Find the latest VC version Return ------ float version """ reg_vc_vers = self.find_reg_vs_vers() if not (reg_vc_vers or self.known_vs_paths): raise distutils.errors.DistutilsPlatformError( 'No Microsoft Visual C++ version found') vc_vers = set(reg_vc_vers) vc_vers.update(self.known_vs_paths) return sorted(vc_vers)[-1] def find_reg_vs_vers(self): """ Find Microsoft Visual Studio versions available in registry. Return ------ list of float Versions """ ms = self.ri.microsoft vckeys = (self.ri.vc, self.ri.vc_for_python, self.ri.vs) vs_vers = [] for hkey in self.ri.HKEYS: for key in vckeys: try: bkey = winreg.OpenKey(hkey, ms(key), 0, winreg.KEY_READ) except (OSError, IOError): continue with bkey: subkeys, values, _ = winreg.QueryInfoKey(bkey) for i in range(values): try: ver = float(winreg.EnumValue(bkey, i)[0]) if ver not in vs_vers: vs_vers.append(ver) except ValueError: pass for i in range(subkeys): try: ver = float(winreg.EnumKey(bkey, i)) if ver not in vs_vers: vs_vers.append(ver) except ValueError: pass return sorted(vs_vers) def find_programdata_vs_vers(self): r""" Find Visual studio 2017+ versions from information in "C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\VisualStudio\Packages\_Instances". Return ------ dict float version as key, path as value. """ vs_versions = {} instances_dir = \ r'C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\VisualStudio\Packages\_Instances' try: hashed_names = listdir(instances_dir) except (OSError, IOError): # Directory not exists with all Visual Studio versions return vs_versions for name in hashed_names: try: # Get VS installation path from "state.json" file state_path = join(instances_dir, name, 'state.json') with open(state_path, 'rt', encoding='utf-8') as state_file: state = json.load(state_file) vs_path = state['installationPath'] # Raises OSError if this VS installation does not contain VC listdir(join(vs_path, r'VC\Tools\MSVC')) # Store version and path vs_versions[self._as_float_version( state['installationVersion'])] = vs_path except (OSError, IOError, KeyError): # Skip if "state.json" file is missing or bad format continue return vs_versions @staticmethod def _as_float_version(version): """ Return a string version as a simplified float version (major.minor) Parameters ---------- version: str Version. Return ------ float version """ return float('.'.join(version.split('.')[:2])) @property def VSInstallDir(self): """ Microsoft Visual Studio directory. Return ------ str path """ # Default path default = join(self.ProgramFilesx86, 'Microsoft Visual Studio %0.1f' % self.vs_ver) # Try to get path from registry, if fail use default path return self.ri.lookup(self.ri.vs, '%0.1f' % self.vs_ver) or default @property def VCInstallDir(self): """ Microsoft Visual C++ directory. Return ------ str path """ path = self._guess_vc() or self._guess_vc_legacy() if not isdir(path): msg = 'Microsoft Visual C++ directory not found' raise distutils.errors.DistutilsPlatformError(msg) return path def _guess_vc(self): """ Locate Visual C++ for VS2017+. Return ------ str path """ if self.vs_ver <= 14.0: return '' try: # First search in known VS paths vs_dir = self.known_vs_paths[self.vs_ver] except KeyError: # Else, search with path from registry vs_dir = self.VSInstallDir guess_vc = join(vs_dir, r'VC\Tools\MSVC') # Subdir with VC exact version as name try: # Update the VC version with real one instead of VS version vc_ver = listdir(guess_vc)[-1] self.vc_ver = self._as_float_version(vc_ver) return join(guess_vc, vc_ver) except (OSError, IOError, IndexError): return '' def _guess_vc_legacy(self): """ Locate Visual C++ for versions prior to 2017. Return ------ str path """ default = join(self.ProgramFilesx86, r'Microsoft Visual Studio %0.1f\VC' % self.vs_ver) # Try to get "VC++ for Python" path from registry as default path reg_path = join(self.ri.vc_for_python, '%0.1f' % self.vs_ver) python_vc = self.ri.lookup(reg_path, 'installdir') default_vc = join(python_vc, 'VC') if python_vc else default # Try to get path from registry, if fail use default path return self.ri.lookup(self.ri.vc, '%0.1f' % self.vs_ver) or default_vc @property def WindowsSdkVersion(self): """ Microsoft Windows SDK versions for specified MSVC++ version. Return ------ tuple of str versions """ if self.vs_ver <= 9.0: return '7.0', '6.1', '6.0a' elif self.vs_ver == 10.0: return '7.1', '7.0a' elif self.vs_ver == 11.0: return '8.0', '8.0a' elif self.vs_ver == 12.0: return '8.1', '8.1a' elif self.vs_ver >= 14.0: return '10.0', '8.1' @property def WindowsSdkLastVersion(self): """ Microsoft Windows SDK last version. Return ------ str version """ return self._use_last_dir_name(join(self.WindowsSdkDir, 'lib')) @property def WindowsSdkDir(self): """ Microsoft Windows SDK directory. Return ------ str path """ sdkdir = '' for ver in self.WindowsSdkVersion: # Try to get it from registry loc = join(self.ri.windows_sdk, 'v%s' % ver) sdkdir = self.ri.lookup(loc, 'installationfolder') if sdkdir: break if not sdkdir or not isdir(sdkdir): # Try to get "VC++ for Python" version from registry path = join(self.ri.vc_for_python, '%0.1f' % self.vc_ver) install_base = self.ri.lookup(path, 'installdir') if install_base: sdkdir = join(install_base, 'WinSDK') if not sdkdir or not isdir(sdkdir): # If fail, use default new path for ver in self.WindowsSdkVersion: intver = ver[:ver.rfind('.')] path = r'Microsoft SDKs\Windows Kits\%s' % intver d = join(self.ProgramFiles, path) if isdir(d): sdkdir = d if not sdkdir or not isdir(sdkdir): # If fail, use default old path for ver in self.WindowsSdkVersion: path = r'Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v%s' % ver d = join(self.ProgramFiles, path) if isdir(d): sdkdir = d if not sdkdir: # If fail, use Platform SDK sdkdir = join(self.VCInstallDir, 'PlatformSDK') return sdkdir @property def WindowsSDKExecutablePath(self): """ Microsoft Windows SDK executable directory. Return ------ str path """ # Find WinSDK NetFx Tools registry dir name if self.vs_ver <= 11.0: netfxver = 35 arch = '' else: netfxver = 40 hidex86 = True if self.vs_ver <= 12.0 else False arch = self.pi.current_dir(x64=True, hidex86=hidex86) fx = 'WinSDK-NetFx%dTools%s' % (netfxver, arch.replace('\\', '-')) # list all possibles registry paths regpaths = [] if self.vs_ver >= 14.0: for ver in self.NetFxSdkVersion: regpaths += [join(self.ri.netfx_sdk, ver, fx)] for ver in self.WindowsSdkVersion: regpaths += [join(self.ri.windows_sdk, 'v%sA' % ver, fx)] # Return installation folder from the more recent path for path in regpaths: execpath = self.ri.lookup(path, 'installationfolder') if execpath: return execpath @property def FSharpInstallDir(self): """ Microsoft Visual F# directory. Return ------ str path """ path = join(self.ri.visualstudio, r'%0.1f\Setup\F#' % self.vs_ver) return self.ri.lookup(path, 'productdir') or '' @property def UniversalCRTSdkDir(self): """ Microsoft Universal CRT SDK directory. Return ------ str path """ # Set Kit Roots versions for specified MSVC++ version vers = ('10', '81') if self.vs_ver >= 14.0 else () # Find path of the more recent Kit for ver in vers: sdkdir = self.ri.lookup(self.ri.windows_kits_roots, 'kitsroot%s' % ver) if sdkdir: return sdkdir or '' @property def UniversalCRTSdkLastVersion(self): """ Microsoft Universal C Runtime SDK last version. Return ------ str version """ return self._use_last_dir_name(join(self.UniversalCRTSdkDir, 'lib')) @property def NetFxSdkVersion(self): """ Microsoft .NET Framework SDK versions. Return ------ tuple of str versions """ # Set FxSdk versions for specified VS version return (('4.7.2', '4.7.1', '4.7', '4.6.2', '4.6.1', '4.6', '4.5.2', '4.5.1', '4.5') if self.vs_ver >= 14.0 else ()) @property def NetFxSdkDir(self): """ Microsoft .NET Framework SDK directory. Return ------ str path """ sdkdir = '' for ver in self.NetFxSdkVersion: loc = join(self.ri.netfx_sdk, ver) sdkdir = self.ri.lookup(loc, 'kitsinstallationfolder') if sdkdir: break return sdkdir @property def FrameworkDir32(self): """ Microsoft .NET Framework 32bit directory. Return ------ str path """ # Default path guess_fw = join(self.WinDir, r'Microsoft.NET\Framework') # Try to get path from registry, if fail use default path return self.ri.lookup(self.ri.vc, 'frameworkdir32') or guess_fw @property def FrameworkDir64(self): """ Microsoft .NET Framework 64bit directory. Return ------ str path """ # Default path guess_fw = join(self.WinDir, r'Microsoft.NET\Framework64') # Try to get path from registry, if fail use default path return self.ri.lookup(self.ri.vc, 'frameworkdir64') or guess_fw @property def FrameworkVersion32(self): """ Microsoft .NET Framework 32bit versions. Return ------ tuple of str versions """ return self._find_dot_net_versions(32) @property def FrameworkVersion64(self): """ Microsoft .NET Framework 64bit versions. Return ------ tuple of str versions """ return self._find_dot_net_versions(64) def _find_dot_net_versions(self, bits): """ Find Microsoft .NET Framework versions. Parameters ---------- bits: int Platform number of bits: 32 or 64. Return ------ tuple of str versions """ # Find actual .NET version in registry reg_ver = self.ri.lookup(self.ri.vc, 'frameworkver%d' % bits) dot_net_dir = getattr(self, 'FrameworkDir%d' % bits) ver = reg_ver or self._use_last_dir_name(dot_net_dir, 'v') or '' # Set .NET versions for specified MSVC++ version if self.vs_ver >= 12.0: return ver, 'v4.0' elif self.vs_ver >= 10.0: return 'v4.0.30319' if ver.lower()[:2] != 'v4' else ver, 'v3.5' elif self.vs_ver == 9.0: return 'v3.5', 'v2.0.50727' elif self.vs_ver == 8.0: return 'v3.0', 'v2.0.50727' @staticmethod def _use_last_dir_name(path, prefix=''): """ Return name of the last dir in path or '' if no dir found. Parameters ---------- path: str Use dirs in this path prefix: str Use only dirs starting by this prefix Return ------ str name """ matching_dirs = ( dir_name for dir_name in reversed(listdir(path)) if isdir(join(path, dir_name)) and dir_name.startswith(prefix) ) return next(matching_dirs, None) or '' class EnvironmentInfo: """ Return environment variables for specified Microsoft Visual C++ version and platform : Lib, Include, Path and libpath. This function is compatible with Microsoft Visual C++ 9.0 to 14.X. Script created by analysing Microsoft environment configuration files like "vcvars[...].bat", "SetEnv.Cmd", "vcbuildtools.bat", ... Parameters ---------- arch: str Target architecture. vc_ver: float Required Microsoft Visual C++ version. If not set, autodetect the last version. vc_min_ver: float Minimum Microsoft Visual C++ version. """ # Variables and properties in this class use originals CamelCase variables # names from Microsoft source files for more easy comparison. def __init__(self, arch, vc_ver=None, vc_min_ver=0): self.pi = PlatformInfo(arch) self.ri = RegistryInfo(self.pi) self.si = SystemInfo(self.ri, vc_ver) if self.vc_ver < vc_min_ver: err = 'No suitable Microsoft Visual C++ version found' raise distutils.errors.DistutilsPlatformError(err) @property def vs_ver(self): """ Microsoft Visual Studio. Return ------ float version """ return self.si.vs_ver @property def vc_ver(self): """ Microsoft Visual C++ version. Return ------ float version """ return self.si.vc_ver @property def VSTools(self): """ Microsoft Visual Studio Tools. Return ------ list of str paths """ paths = [r'Common7\IDE', r'Common7\Tools'] if self.vs_ver >= 14.0: arch_subdir = self.pi.current_dir(hidex86=True, x64=True) paths += [r'Common7\IDE\CommonExtensions\Microsoft\TestWindow'] paths += [r'Team Tools\Performance Tools'] paths += [r'Team Tools\Performance Tools%s' % arch_subdir] return [join(self.si.VSInstallDir, path) for path in paths] @property def VCIncludes(self): """ Microsoft Visual C++ & Microsoft Foundation Class Includes. Return ------ list of str paths """ return [join(self.si.VCInstallDir, 'Include'), join(self.si.VCInstallDir, r'ATLMFC\Include')] @property def VCLibraries(self): """ Microsoft Visual C++ & Microsoft Foundation Class Libraries. Return ------ list of str paths """ if self.vs_ver >= 15.0: arch_subdir = self.pi.target_dir(x64=True) else: arch_subdir = self.pi.target_dir(hidex86=True) paths = ['Lib%s' % arch_subdir, r'ATLMFC\Lib%s' % arch_subdir] if self.vs_ver >= 14.0: paths += [r'Lib\store%s' % arch_subdir] return [join(self.si.VCInstallDir, path) for path in paths] @property def VCStoreRefs(self): """ Microsoft Visual C++ store references Libraries. Return ------ list of str paths """ if self.vs_ver < 14.0: return [] return [join(self.si.VCInstallDir, r'Lib\store\references')] @property def VCTools(self): """ Microsoft Visual C++ Tools. Return ------ list of str paths """ si = self.si tools = [join(si.VCInstallDir, 'VCPackages')] forcex86 = True if self.vs_ver <= 10.0 else False arch_subdir = self.pi.cross_dir(forcex86) if arch_subdir: tools += [join(si.VCInstallDir, 'Bin%s' % arch_subdir)] if self.vs_ver == 14.0: path = 'Bin%s' % self.pi.current_dir(hidex86=True) tools += [join(si.VCInstallDir, path)] elif self.vs_ver >= 15.0: host_dir = (r'bin\HostX86%s' if self.pi.current_is_x86() else r'bin\HostX64%s') tools += [join( si.VCInstallDir, host_dir % self.pi.target_dir(x64=True))] if self.pi.current_cpu != self.pi.target_cpu: tools += [join( si.VCInstallDir, host_dir % self.pi.current_dir(x64=True))] else: tools += [join(si.VCInstallDir, 'Bin')] return tools @property def OSLibraries(self): """ Microsoft Windows SDK Libraries. Return ------ list of str paths """ if self.vs_ver <= 10.0: arch_subdir = self.pi.target_dir(hidex86=True, x64=True) return [join(self.si.WindowsSdkDir, 'Lib%s' % arch_subdir)] else: arch_subdir = self.pi.target_dir(x64=True) lib = join(self.si.WindowsSdkDir, 'lib') libver = self._sdk_subdir return [join(lib, '%sum%s' % (libver, arch_subdir))] @property def OSIncludes(self): """ Microsoft Windows SDK Include. Return ------ list of str paths """ include = join(self.si.WindowsSdkDir, 'include') if self.vs_ver <= 10.0: return [include, join(include, 'gl')] else: if self.vs_ver >= 14.0: sdkver = self._sdk_subdir else: sdkver = '' return [join(include, '%sshared' % sdkver), join(include, '%sum' % sdkver), join(include, '%swinrt' % sdkver)] @property def OSLibpath(self): """ Microsoft Windows SDK Libraries Paths. Return ------ list of str paths """ ref = join(self.si.WindowsSdkDir, 'References') libpath = [] if self.vs_ver <= 9.0: libpath += self.OSLibraries if self.vs_ver >= 11.0: libpath += [join(ref, r'CommonConfiguration\Neutral')] if self.vs_ver >= 14.0: libpath += [ ref, join(self.si.WindowsSdkDir, 'UnionMetadata'), join( ref, 'Windows.Foundation.UniversalApiContract', '1.0.0.0'), join(ref, 'Windows.Foundation.FoundationContract', '1.0.0.0'), join( ref, 'Windows.Networking.Connectivity.WwanContract', '1.0.0.0'), join( self.si.WindowsSdkDir, 'ExtensionSDKs', 'Microsoft.VCLibs', '%0.1f' % self.vs_ver, 'References', 'CommonConfiguration', 'neutral'), ] return libpath @property def SdkTools(self): """ Microsoft Windows SDK Tools. Return ------ list of str paths """ return list(self._sdk_tools()) def _sdk_tools(self): """ Microsoft Windows SDK Tools paths generator. Return ------ generator of str paths """ if self.vs_ver < 15.0: bin_dir = 'Bin' if self.vs_ver <= 11.0 else r'Bin\x86' yield join(self.si.WindowsSdkDir, bin_dir) if not self.pi.current_is_x86(): arch_subdir = self.pi.current_dir(x64=True) path = 'Bin%s' % arch_subdir yield join(self.si.WindowsSdkDir, path) if self.vs_ver in (10.0, 11.0): if self.pi.target_is_x86(): arch_subdir = '' else: arch_subdir = self.pi.current_dir(hidex86=True, x64=True) path = r'Bin\NETFX 4.0 Tools%s' % arch_subdir yield join(self.si.WindowsSdkDir, path) elif self.vs_ver >= 15.0: path = join(self.si.WindowsSdkDir, 'Bin') arch_subdir = self.pi.current_dir(x64=True) sdkver = self.si.WindowsSdkLastVersion yield join(path, '%s%s' % (sdkver, arch_subdir)) if self.si.WindowsSDKExecutablePath: yield self.si.WindowsSDKExecutablePath @property def _sdk_subdir(self): """ Microsoft Windows SDK version subdir. Return ------ str subdir """ ucrtver = self.si.WindowsSdkLastVersion return ('%s\\' % ucrtver) if ucrtver else '' @property def SdkSetup(self): """ Microsoft Windows SDK Setup. Return ------ list of str paths """ if self.vs_ver > 9.0: return [] return [join(self.si.WindowsSdkDir, 'Setup')] @property def FxTools(self): """ Microsoft .NET Framework Tools. Return ------ list of str paths """ pi = self.pi si = self.si if self.vs_ver <= 10.0: include32 = True include64 = not pi.target_is_x86() and not pi.current_is_x86() else: include32 = pi.target_is_x86() or pi.current_is_x86() include64 = pi.current_cpu == 'amd64' or pi.target_cpu == 'amd64' tools = [] if include32: tools += [join(si.FrameworkDir32, ver) for ver in si.FrameworkVersion32] if include64: tools += [join(si.FrameworkDir64, ver) for ver in si.FrameworkVersion64] return tools @property def NetFxSDKLibraries(self): """ Microsoft .Net Framework SDK Libraries. Return ------ list of str paths """ if self.vs_ver < 14.0 or not self.si.NetFxSdkDir: return [] arch_subdir = self.pi.target_dir(x64=True) return [join(self.si.NetFxSdkDir, r'lib\um%s' % arch_subdir)] @property def NetFxSDKIncludes(self): """ Microsoft .Net Framework SDK Includes. Return ------ list of str paths """ if self.vs_ver < 14.0 or not self.si.NetFxSdkDir: return [] return [join(self.si.NetFxSdkDir, r'include\um')] @property def VsTDb(self): """ Microsoft Visual Studio Team System Database. Return ------ list of str paths """ return [join(self.si.VSInstallDir, r'VSTSDB\Deploy')] @property def MSBuild(self): """ Microsoft Build Engine. Return ------ list of str paths """ if self.vs_ver < 12.0: return [] elif self.vs_ver < 15.0: base_path = self.si.ProgramFilesx86 arch_subdir = self.pi.current_dir(hidex86=True) else: base_path = self.si.VSInstallDir arch_subdir = '' path = r'MSBuild\%0.1f\bin%s' % (self.vs_ver, arch_subdir) build = [join(base_path, path)] if self.vs_ver >= 15.0: # Add Roslyn C# & Visual Basic Compiler build += [join(base_path, path, 'Roslyn')] return build @property def HTMLHelpWorkshop(self): """ Microsoft HTML Help Workshop. Return ------ list of str paths """ if self.vs_ver < 11.0: return [] return [join(self.si.ProgramFilesx86, 'HTML Help Workshop')] @property def UCRTLibraries(self): """ Microsoft Universal C Runtime SDK Libraries. Return ------ list of str paths """ if self.vs_ver < 14.0: return [] arch_subdir = self.pi.target_dir(x64=True) lib = join(self.si.UniversalCRTSdkDir, 'lib') ucrtver = self._ucrt_subdir return [join(lib, '%sucrt%s' % (ucrtver, arch_subdir))] @property def UCRTIncludes(self): """ Microsoft Universal C Runtime SDK Include. Return ------ list of str paths """ if self.vs_ver < 14.0: return [] include = join(self.si.UniversalCRTSdkDir, 'include') return [join(include, '%sucrt' % self._ucrt_subdir)] @property def _ucrt_subdir(self): """ Microsoft Universal C Runtime SDK version subdir. Return ------ str subdir """ ucrtver = self.si.UniversalCRTSdkLastVersion return ('%s\\' % ucrtver) if ucrtver else '' @property def FSharp(self): """ Microsoft Visual F#. Return ------ list of str paths """ if 11.0 > self.vs_ver > 12.0: return [] return [self.si.FSharpInstallDir] @property def VCRuntimeRedist(self): """ Microsoft Visual C++ runtime redistributable dll. Return ------ str path """ vcruntime = 'vcruntime%d0.dll' % self.vc_ver arch_subdir = self.pi.target_dir(x64=True).strip('\\') # Installation prefixes candidates prefixes = [] tools_path = self.si.VCInstallDir redist_path = dirname(tools_path.replace(r'\Tools', r'\Redist')) if isdir(redist_path): # Redist version may not be exactly the same as tools redist_path = join(redist_path, listdir(redist_path)[-1]) prefixes += [redist_path, join(redist_path, 'onecore')] prefixes += [join(tools_path, 'redist')] # VS14 legacy path # CRT directory crt_dirs = ('Microsoft.VC%d.CRT' % (self.vc_ver * 10), # Sometime store in directory with VS version instead of VC 'Microsoft.VC%d.CRT' % (int(self.vs_ver) * 10)) # vcruntime path for prefix, crt_dir in itertools.product(prefixes, crt_dirs): path = join(prefix, arch_subdir, crt_dir, vcruntime) if isfile(path): return path def return_env(self, exists=True): """ Return environment dict. Parameters ---------- exists: bool It True, only return existing paths. Return ------ dict environment """ env = dict( include=self._build_paths('include', [self.VCIncludes, self.OSIncludes, self.UCRTIncludes, self.NetFxSDKIncludes], exists), lib=self._build_paths('lib', [self.VCLibraries, self.OSLibraries, self.FxTools, self.UCRTLibraries, self.NetFxSDKLibraries], exists), libpath=self._build_paths('libpath', [self.VCLibraries, self.FxTools, self.VCStoreRefs, self.OSLibpath], exists), path=self._build_paths('path', [self.VCTools, self.VSTools, self.VsTDb, self.SdkTools, self.SdkSetup, self.FxTools, self.MSBuild, self.HTMLHelpWorkshop, self.FSharp], exists), ) if self.vs_ver >= 14 and isfile(self.VCRuntimeRedist): env['py_vcruntime_redist'] = self.VCRuntimeRedist return env def _build_paths(self, name, spec_path_lists, exists): """ Given an environment variable name and specified paths, return a pathsep-separated string of paths containing unique, extant, directories from those paths and from the environment variable. Raise an error if no paths are resolved. Parameters ---------- name: str Environment variable name spec_path_lists: list of str Paths exists: bool It True, only return existing paths. Return ------ str Pathsep-separated paths """ # flatten spec_path_lists spec_paths = itertools.chain.from_iterable(spec_path_lists) env_paths = environ.get(name, '').split(pathsep) paths = itertools.chain(spec_paths, env_paths) extant_paths = list(filter(isdir, paths)) if exists else paths if not extant_paths: msg = "%s environment variable is empty" % name.upper() raise distutils.errors.DistutilsPlatformError(msg) unique_paths = self._unique_everseen(extant_paths) return pathsep.join(unique_paths) # from Python docs @staticmethod def _unique_everseen(iterable, key=None): """ List unique elements, preserving order. Remember all elements ever seen. _unique_everseen('AAAABBBCCDAABBB') --> A B C D _unique_everseen('ABBCcAD', str.lower) --> A B C D """ seen = set() seen_add = seen.add if key is None: for element in filterfalse(seen.__contains__, iterable): seen_add(element) yield element else: for element in iterable: k = key(element) if k not in seen: seen_add(k) yield element
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qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/dist.py
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- __all__ = ['Distribution'] import io import sys import re import os import warnings import numbers import distutils.log import distutils.core import distutils.cmd import distutils.dist from distutils.util import strtobool from distutils.debug import DEBUG from distutils.fancy_getopt import translate_longopt import itertools from collections import defaultdict from email import message_from_file from distutils.errors import DistutilsOptionError, DistutilsSetupError from distutils.util import rfc822_escape from distutils.version import StrictVersion from setuptools.extern import six from setuptools.extern import packaging from setuptools.extern import ordered_set from setuptools.extern.six.moves import map, filter, filterfalse from . import SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning import setuptools from setuptools import windows_support from setuptools.monkey import get_unpatched from setuptools.config import parse_configuration import pkg_resources __import__('setuptools.extern.packaging.specifiers') __import__('setuptools.extern.packaging.version') def _get_unpatched(cls): warnings.warn("Do not call this function", DistDeprecationWarning) return get_unpatched(cls) def get_metadata_version(self): mv = getattr(self, 'metadata_version', None) if mv is None: if self.long_description_content_type or self.provides_extras: mv = StrictVersion('2.1') elif (self.maintainer is not None or self.maintainer_email is not None or getattr(self, 'python_requires', None) is not None or self.project_urls): mv = StrictVersion('1.2') elif (self.provides or self.requires or self.obsoletes or self.classifiers or self.download_url): mv = StrictVersion('1.1') else: mv = StrictVersion('1.0') self.metadata_version = mv return mv def read_pkg_file(self, file): """Reads the metadata values from a file object.""" msg = message_from_file(file) def _read_field(name): value = msg[name] if value == 'UNKNOWN': return None return value def _read_list(name): values = msg.get_all(name, None) if values == []: return None return values self.metadata_version = StrictVersion(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 self.metadata_version == StrictVersion('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 # Based on Python 3.5 version def write_pkg_file(self, file): """Write the PKG-INFO format data to a file object. """ version = self.get_metadata_version() if six.PY2: def write_field(key, value): file.write("%s: %s\n" % (key, self._encode_field(value))) else: def write_field(key, value): file.write("%s: %s\n" % (key, value)) write_field('Metadata-Version', str(version)) write_field('Name', self.get_name()) write_field('Version', self.get_version()) write_field('Summary', self.get_description()) write_field('Home-page', self.get_url()) if version < StrictVersion('1.2'): write_field('Author', self.get_contact()) write_field('Author-email', self.get_contact_email()) else: optional_fields = ( ('Author', 'author'), ('Author-email', 'author_email'), ('Maintainer', 'maintainer'), ('Maintainer-email', 'maintainer_email'), ) for field, attr in optional_fields: attr_val = getattr(self, attr) if attr_val is not None: write_field(field, attr_val) write_field('License', self.get_license()) if self.download_url: write_field('Download-URL', self.download_url) for project_url in self.project_urls.items(): write_field('Project-URL', '%s, %s' % project_url) long_desc = rfc822_escape(self.get_long_description()) write_field('Description', long_desc) keywords = ','.join(self.get_keywords()) if keywords: write_field('Keywords', keywords) if version >= StrictVersion('1.2'): for platform in self.get_platforms(): write_field('Platform', platform) else: 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()) # Setuptools specific for PEP 345 if hasattr(self, 'python_requires'): write_field('Requires-Python', self.python_requires) # PEP 566 if self.long_description_content_type: write_field( 'Description-Content-Type', self.long_description_content_type ) if self.provides_extras: for extra in self.provides_extras: write_field('Provides-Extra', extra) sequence = tuple, list def check_importable(dist, attr, value): try: ep = pkg_resources.EntryPoint.parse('x=' + value) assert not ep.extras except (TypeError, ValueError, AttributeError, AssertionError) as e: raise DistutilsSetupError( "%r must be importable 'module:attrs' string (got %r)" % (attr, value) ) from e def assert_string_list(dist, attr, value): """Verify that value is a string list""" try: # verify that value is a list or tuple to exclude unordered # or single-use iterables assert isinstance(value, (list, tuple)) # verify that elements of value are strings assert ''.join(value) != value except (TypeError, ValueError, AttributeError, AssertionError) as e: raise DistutilsSetupError( "%r must be a list of strings (got %r)" % (attr, value) ) from e def check_nsp(dist, attr, value): """Verify that namespace packages are valid""" ns_packages = value assert_string_list(dist, attr, ns_packages) for nsp in ns_packages: if not dist.has_contents_for(nsp): raise DistutilsSetupError( "Distribution contains no modules or packages for " + "namespace package %r" % nsp ) parent, sep, child = nsp.rpartition('.') if parent and parent not in ns_packages: distutils.log.warn( "WARNING: %r is declared as a package namespace, but %r" " is not: please correct this in setup.py", nsp, parent ) def check_extras(dist, attr, value): """Verify that extras_require mapping is valid""" try: list(itertools.starmap(_check_extra, value.items())) except (TypeError, ValueError, AttributeError) as e: raise DistutilsSetupError( "'extras_require' must be a dictionary whose values are " "strings or lists of strings containing valid project/version " "requirement specifiers." ) from e def _check_extra(extra, reqs): name, sep, marker = extra.partition(':') if marker and pkg_resources.invalid_marker(marker): raise DistutilsSetupError("Invalid environment marker: " + marker) list(pkg_resources.parse_requirements(reqs)) def assert_bool(dist, attr, value): """Verify that value is True, False, 0, or 1""" if bool(value) != value: tmpl = "{attr!r} must be a boolean value (got {value!r})" raise DistutilsSetupError(tmpl.format(attr=attr, value=value)) def check_requirements(dist, attr, value): """Verify that install_requires is a valid requirements list""" try: list(pkg_resources.parse_requirements(value)) if isinstance(value, (dict, set)): raise TypeError("Unordered types are not allowed") except (TypeError, ValueError) as error: tmpl = ( "{attr!r} must be a string or list of strings " "containing valid project/version requirement specifiers; {error}" ) raise DistutilsSetupError( tmpl.format(attr=attr, error=error) ) from error def check_specifier(dist, attr, value): """Verify that value is a valid version specifier""" try: packaging.specifiers.SpecifierSet(value) except packaging.specifiers.InvalidSpecifier as error: tmpl = ( "{attr!r} must be a string " "containing valid version specifiers; {error}" ) raise DistutilsSetupError( tmpl.format(attr=attr, error=error) ) from error def check_entry_points(dist, attr, value): """Verify that entry_points map is parseable""" try: pkg_resources.EntryPoint.parse_map(value) except ValueError as e: raise DistutilsSetupError(e) from e def check_test_suite(dist, attr, value): if not isinstance(value, six.string_types): raise DistutilsSetupError("test_suite must be a string") def check_package_data(dist, attr, value): """Verify that value is a dictionary of package names to glob lists""" if not isinstance(value, dict): raise DistutilsSetupError( "{!r} must be a dictionary mapping package names to lists of " "string wildcard patterns".format(attr)) for k, v in value.items(): if not isinstance(k, six.string_types): raise DistutilsSetupError( "keys of {!r} dict must be strings (got {!r})" .format(attr, k) ) assert_string_list(dist, 'values of {!r} dict'.format(attr), v) def check_packages(dist, attr, value): for pkgname in value: if not re.match(r'\w+(\.\w+)*', pkgname): distutils.log.warn( "WARNING: %r not a valid package name; please use only " ".-separated package names in setup.py", pkgname ) _Distribution = get_unpatched(distutils.core.Distribution) class Distribution(_Distribution): """Distribution with support for tests and package data This is an enhanced version of 'distutils.dist.Distribution' that effectively adds the following new optional keyword arguments to 'setup()': 'install_requires' -- a string or sequence of strings specifying project versions that the distribution requires when installed, in the format used by 'pkg_resources.require()'. They will be installed automatically when the package is installed. If you wish to use packages that are not available in PyPI, or want to give your users an alternate download location, you can add a 'find_links' option to the '[easy_install]' section of your project's 'setup.cfg' file, and then setuptools will scan the listed web pages for links that satisfy the requirements. 'extras_require' -- a dictionary mapping names of optional "extras" to the additional requirement(s) that using those extras incurs. For example, this:: extras_require = dict(reST = ["docutils>=0.3", "reSTedit"]) indicates that the distribution can optionally provide an extra capability called "reST", but it can only be used if docutils and reSTedit are installed. If the user installs your package using EasyInstall and requests one of your extras, the corresponding additional requirements will be installed if needed. 'test_suite' -- the name of a test suite to run for the 'test' command. If the user runs 'python setup.py test', the package will be installed, and the named test suite will be run. The format is the same as would be used on a 'unittest.py' command line. That is, it is the dotted name of an object to import and call to generate a test suite. 'package_data' -- a dictionary mapping package names to lists of filenames or globs to use to find data files contained in the named packages. If the dictionary has filenames or globs listed under '""' (the empty string), those names will be searched for in every package, in addition to any names for the specific package. Data files found using these names/globs will be installed along with the package, in the same location as the package. Note that globs are allowed to reference the contents of non-package subdirectories, as long as you use '/' as a path separator. (Globs are automatically converted to platform-specific paths at runtime.) In addition to these new keywords, this class also has several new methods for manipulating the distribution's contents. For example, the 'include()' and 'exclude()' methods can be thought of as in-place add and subtract commands that add or remove packages, modules, extensions, and so on from the distribution. """ _DISTUTILS_UNSUPPORTED_METADATA = { 'long_description_content_type': None, 'project_urls': dict, 'provides_extras': ordered_set.OrderedSet, 'license_files': ordered_set.OrderedSet, } _patched_dist = None def patch_missing_pkg_info(self, attrs): # Fake up a replacement for the data that would normally come from # PKG-INFO, but which might not yet be built if this is a fresh # checkout. # if not attrs or 'name' not in attrs or 'version' not in attrs: return key = pkg_resources.safe_name(str(attrs['name'])).lower() dist = pkg_resources.working_set.by_key.get(key) if dist is not None and not dist.has_metadata('PKG-INFO'): dist._version = pkg_resources.safe_version(str(attrs['version'])) self._patched_dist = dist def __init__(self, attrs=None): have_package_data = hasattr(self, "package_data") if not have_package_data: self.package_data = {} attrs = attrs or {} self.dist_files = [] # Filter-out setuptools' specific options. self.src_root = attrs.pop("src_root", None) self.patch_missing_pkg_info(attrs) self.dependency_links = attrs.pop('dependency_links', []) self.setup_requires = attrs.pop('setup_requires', []) for ep in pkg_resources.iter_entry_points('distutils.setup_keywords'): vars(self).setdefault(ep.name, None) _Distribution.__init__(self, { k: v for k, v in attrs.items() if k not in self._DISTUTILS_UNSUPPORTED_METADATA }) # Fill-in missing metadata fields not supported by distutils. # Note some fields may have been set by other tools (e.g. pbr) # above; they are taken preferrentially to setup() arguments for option, default in self._DISTUTILS_UNSUPPORTED_METADATA.items(): for source in self.metadata.__dict__, attrs: if option in source: value = source[option] break else: value = default() if default else None setattr(self.metadata, option, value) self.metadata.version = self._normalize_version( self._validate_version(self.metadata.version)) self._finalize_requires() @staticmethod def _normalize_version(version): if isinstance(version, setuptools.sic) or version is None: return version normalized = str(packaging.version.Version(version)) if version != normalized: tmpl = "Normalizing '{version}' to '{normalized}'" warnings.warn(tmpl.format(**locals())) return normalized return version @staticmethod def _validate_version(version): if isinstance(version, numbers.Number): # Some people apparently take "version number" too literally :) version = str(version) if version is not None: try: packaging.version.Version(version) except (packaging.version.InvalidVersion, TypeError): warnings.warn( "The version specified (%r) is an invalid version, this " "may not work as expected with newer versions of " "setuptools, pip, and PyPI. Please see PEP 440 for more " "details." % version ) return setuptools.sic(version) return version def _finalize_requires(self): """ Set `metadata.python_requires` and fix environment markers in `install_requires` and `extras_require`. """ if getattr(self, 'python_requires', None): self.metadata.python_requires = self.python_requires if getattr(self, 'extras_require', None): for extra in self.extras_require.keys(): # Since this gets called multiple times at points where the # keys have become 'converted' extras, ensure that we are only # truly adding extras we haven't seen before here. extra = extra.split(':')[0] if extra: self.metadata.provides_extras.add(extra) self._convert_extras_requirements() self._move_install_requirements_markers() def _convert_extras_requirements(self): """ Convert requirements in `extras_require` of the form `"extra": ["barbazquux; {marker}"]` to `"extra:{marker}": ["barbazquux"]`. """ spec_ext_reqs = getattr(self, 'extras_require', None) or {} self._tmp_extras_require = defaultdict(list) for section, v in spec_ext_reqs.items(): # Do not strip empty sections. self._tmp_extras_require[section] for r in pkg_resources.parse_requirements(v): suffix = self._suffix_for(r) self._tmp_extras_require[section + suffix].append(r) @staticmethod def _suffix_for(req): """ For a requirement, return the 'extras_require' suffix for that requirement. """ return ':' + str(req.marker) if req.marker else '' def _move_install_requirements_markers(self): """ Move requirements in `install_requires` that are using environment markers `extras_require`. """ # divide the install_requires into two sets, simple ones still # handled by install_requires and more complex ones handled # by extras_require. def is_simple_req(req): return not req.marker spec_inst_reqs = getattr(self, 'install_requires', None) or () inst_reqs = list(pkg_resources.parse_requirements(spec_inst_reqs)) simple_reqs = filter(is_simple_req, inst_reqs) complex_reqs = filterfalse(is_simple_req, inst_reqs) self.install_requires = list(map(str, simple_reqs)) for r in complex_reqs: self._tmp_extras_require[':' + str(r.marker)].append(r) self.extras_require = dict( (k, [str(r) for r in map(self._clean_req, v)]) for k, v in self._tmp_extras_require.items() ) def _clean_req(self, req): """ Given a Requirement, remove environment markers and return it. """ req.marker = None return req def _parse_config_files(self, filenames=None): """ Adapted from distutils.dist.Distribution.parse_config_files, this method provides the same functionality in subtly-improved ways. """ from setuptools.extern.six.moves.configparser import ConfigParser # Ignore install directory options if we have a venv if not six.PY2 and 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: with io.open(filename, encoding='utf-8') as reader: if DEBUG: self.announce(" reading {filename}".format(**locals())) (parser.readfp if six.PY2 else parser.read_file)(reader) 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 = self._try_str(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', 'dry_run'): # ugh! setattr(self, opt, strtobool(val)) else: setattr(self, opt, val) except ValueError as e: raise DistutilsOptionError(e) from e @staticmethod def _try_str(val): """ On Python 2, much of distutils relies on string values being of type 'str' (bytes) and not unicode text. If the value can be safely encoded to bytes using the default encoding, prefer that. Why the default encoding? Because that value can be implicitly decoded back to text if needed. Ref #1653 """ if not six.PY2: return val try: return val.encode() except UnicodeEncodeError: pass return val def _set_command_options(self, command_obj, option_dict=None): """ 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'). (Adopted from distutils.dist.Distribution._set_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(" setting options for '%s' command:" % command_name) for (option, (source, value)) in option_dict.items(): if DEBUG: self.announce(" %s = %s (from %s)" % (option, value, 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, six.string_types) 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( "error in %s: command '%s' has no such option '%s'" % (source, command_name, option)) except ValueError as e: raise DistutilsOptionError(e) from e def parse_config_files(self, filenames=None, ignore_option_errors=False): """Parses configuration files from various levels and loads configuration. """ self._parse_config_files(filenames=filenames) parse_configuration(self, self.command_options, ignore_option_errors=ignore_option_errors) self._finalize_requires() def fetch_build_eggs(self, requires): """Resolve pre-setup requirements""" resolved_dists = pkg_resources.working_set.resolve( pkg_resources.parse_requirements(requires), installer=self.fetch_build_egg, replace_conflicting=True, ) for dist in resolved_dists: pkg_resources.working_set.add(dist, replace=True) return resolved_dists def finalize_options(self): """ Allow plugins to apply arbitrary operations to the distribution. Each hook may optionally define a 'order' to influence the order of execution. Smaller numbers go first and the default is 0. """ group = 'setuptools.finalize_distribution_options' def by_order(hook): return getattr(hook, 'order', 0) eps = map(lambda e: e.load(), pkg_resources.iter_entry_points(group)) for ep in sorted(eps, key=by_order): ep(self) def _finalize_setup_keywords(self): for ep in pkg_resources.iter_entry_points('distutils.setup_keywords'): value = getattr(self, ep.name, None) if value is not None: ep.require(installer=self.fetch_build_egg) ep.load()(self, ep.name, value) def _finalize_2to3_doctests(self): if getattr(self, 'convert_2to3_doctests', None): # XXX may convert to set here when we can rely on set being builtin self.convert_2to3_doctests = [ os.path.abspath(p) for p in self.convert_2to3_doctests ] else: self.convert_2to3_doctests = [] def get_egg_cache_dir(self): egg_cache_dir = os.path.join(os.curdir, '.eggs') if not os.path.exists(egg_cache_dir): os.mkdir(egg_cache_dir) windows_support.hide_file(egg_cache_dir) readme_txt_filename = os.path.join(egg_cache_dir, 'README.txt') with open(readme_txt_filename, 'w') as f: f.write('This directory contains eggs that were downloaded ' 'by setuptools to build, test, and run plug-ins.\n\n') f.write('This directory caches those eggs to prevent ' 'repeated downloads.\n\n') f.write('However, it is safe to delete this directory.\n\n') return egg_cache_dir def fetch_build_egg(self, req): """Fetch an egg needed for building""" from setuptools.installer import fetch_build_egg return fetch_build_egg(self, req) def get_command_class(self, command): """Pluggable version of get_command_class()""" if command in self.cmdclass: return self.cmdclass[command] eps = pkg_resources.iter_entry_points('distutils.commands', command) for ep in eps: ep.require(installer=self.fetch_build_egg) self.cmdclass[command] = cmdclass = ep.load() return cmdclass else: return _Distribution.get_command_class(self, command) def print_commands(self): for ep in pkg_resources.iter_entry_points('distutils.commands'): if ep.name not in self.cmdclass: # don't require extras as the commands won't be invoked cmdclass = ep.resolve() self.cmdclass[ep.name] = cmdclass return _Distribution.print_commands(self) def get_command_list(self): for ep in pkg_resources.iter_entry_points('distutils.commands'): if ep.name not in self.cmdclass: # don't require extras as the commands won't be invoked cmdclass = ep.resolve() self.cmdclass[ep.name] = cmdclass return _Distribution.get_command_list(self) def include(self, **attrs): """Add items to distribution that are named in keyword arguments For example, 'dist.include(py_modules=["x"])' would add 'x' to the distribution's 'py_modules' attribute, if it was not already there. Currently, this method only supports inclusion for attributes that are lists or tuples. If you need to add support for adding to other attributes in this or a subclass, you can add an '_include_X' method, where 'X' is the name of the attribute. The method will be called with the value passed to 'include()'. So, 'dist.include(foo={"bar":"baz"})' will try to call 'dist._include_foo({"bar":"baz"})', which can then handle whatever special inclusion logic is needed. """ for k, v in attrs.items(): include = getattr(self, '_include_' + k, None) if include: include(v) else: self._include_misc(k, v) def exclude_package(self, package): """Remove packages, modules, and extensions in named package""" pfx = package + '.' if self.packages: self.packages = [ p for p in self.packages if p != package and not p.startswith(pfx) ] if self.py_modules: self.py_modules = [ p for p in self.py_modules if p != package and not p.startswith(pfx) ] if self.ext_modules: self.ext_modules = [ p for p in self.ext_modules if p.name != package and not p.name.startswith(pfx) ] def has_contents_for(self, package): """Return true if 'exclude_package(package)' would do something""" pfx = package + '.' for p in self.iter_distribution_names(): if p == package or p.startswith(pfx): return True def _exclude_misc(self, name, value): """Handle 'exclude()' for list/tuple attrs without a special handler""" if not isinstance(value, sequence): raise DistutilsSetupError( "%s: setting must be a list or tuple (%r)" % (name, value) ) try: old = getattr(self, name) except AttributeError as e: raise DistutilsSetupError( "%s: No such distribution setting" % name ) from e if old is not None and not isinstance(old, sequence): raise DistutilsSetupError( name + ": this setting cannot be changed via include/exclude" ) elif old: setattr(self, name, [item for item in old if item not in value]) def _include_misc(self, name, value): """Handle 'include()' for list/tuple attrs without a special handler""" if not isinstance(value, sequence): raise DistutilsSetupError( "%s: setting must be a list (%r)" % (name, value) ) try: old = getattr(self, name) except AttributeError as e: raise DistutilsSetupError( "%s: No such distribution setting" % name ) from e if old is None: setattr(self, name, value) elif not isinstance(old, sequence): raise DistutilsSetupError( name + ": this setting cannot be changed via include/exclude" ) else: new = [item for item in value if item not in old] setattr(self, name, old + new) def exclude(self, **attrs): """Remove items from distribution that are named in keyword arguments For example, 'dist.exclude(py_modules=["x"])' would remove 'x' from the distribution's 'py_modules' attribute. Excluding packages uses the 'exclude_package()' method, so all of the package's contained packages, modules, and extensions are also excluded. Currently, this method only supports exclusion from attributes that are lists or tuples. If you need to add support for excluding from other attributes in this or a subclass, you can add an '_exclude_X' method, where 'X' is the name of the attribute. The method will be called with the value passed to 'exclude()'. So, 'dist.exclude(foo={"bar":"baz"})' will try to call 'dist._exclude_foo({"bar":"baz"})', which can then handle whatever special exclusion logic is needed. """ for k, v in attrs.items(): exclude = getattr(self, '_exclude_' + k, None) if exclude: exclude(v) else: self._exclude_misc(k, v) def _exclude_packages(self, packages): if not isinstance(packages, sequence): raise DistutilsSetupError( "packages: setting must be a list or tuple (%r)" % (packages,) ) list(map(self.exclude_package, packages)) def _parse_command_opts(self, parser, args): # Remove --with-X/--without-X options when processing command args self.global_options = self.__class__.global_options self.negative_opt = self.__class__.negative_opt # First, expand any aliases command = args[0] aliases = self.get_option_dict('aliases') while command in aliases: src, alias = aliases[command] del aliases[command] # ensure each alias can expand only once! import shlex args[:1] = shlex.split(alias, True) command = args[0] nargs = _Distribution._parse_command_opts(self, parser, args) # Handle commands that want to consume all remaining arguments cmd_class = self.get_command_class(command) if getattr(cmd_class, 'command_consumes_arguments', None): self.get_option_dict(command)['args'] = ("command line", nargs) if nargs is not None: return [] return nargs def get_cmdline_options(self): """Return a '{cmd: {opt:val}}' map of all command-line options Option names are all long, but do not include the leading '--', and contain dashes rather than underscores. If the option doesn't take an argument (e.g. '--quiet'), the 'val' is 'None'. Note that options provided by config files are intentionally excluded. """ d = {} for cmd, opts in self.command_options.items(): for opt, (src, val) in opts.items(): if src != "command line": continue opt = opt.replace('_', '-') if val == 0: cmdobj = self.get_command_obj(cmd) neg_opt = self.negative_opt.copy() neg_opt.update(getattr(cmdobj, 'negative_opt', {})) for neg, pos in neg_opt.items(): if pos == opt: opt = neg val = None break else: raise AssertionError("Shouldn't be able to get here") elif val == 1: val = None d.setdefault(cmd, {})[opt] = val return d def iter_distribution_names(self): """Yield all packages, modules, and extension names in distribution""" for pkg in self.packages or (): yield pkg for module in self.py_modules or (): yield module for ext in self.ext_modules or (): if isinstance(ext, tuple): name, buildinfo = ext else: name = ext.name if name.endswith('module'): name = name[:-6] yield 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. """ import sys if six.PY2 or self.help_commands: return _Distribution.handle_display_options(self, option_order) # Stdout may be StringIO (e.g. in tests) if not isinstance(sys.stdout, io.TextIOWrapper): return _Distribution.handle_display_options(self, option_order) # Don't wrap stdout if utf-8 is already the encoding. Provides # workaround for #334. if sys.stdout.encoding.lower() in ('utf-8', 'utf8'): return _Distribution.handle_display_options(self, option_order) # Print metadata in UTF-8 no matter the platform encoding = sys.stdout.encoding errors = sys.stdout.errors newline = sys.platform != 'win32' and '\n' or None line_buffering = sys.stdout.line_buffering sys.stdout = io.TextIOWrapper( sys.stdout.detach(), 'utf-8', errors, newline, line_buffering) try: return _Distribution.handle_display_options(self, option_order) finally: sys.stdout = io.TextIOWrapper( sys.stdout.detach(), encoding, errors, newline, line_buffering) class DistDeprecationWarning(SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning): """Class for warning about deprecations in dist in setuptools. Not ignored by default, unlike DeprecationWarning."""
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/lib2to3_ex.py
""" Customized Mixin2to3 support: - adds support for converting doctests This module raises an ImportError on Python 2. """ import warnings from distutils.util import Mixin2to3 as _Mixin2to3 from distutils import log from lib2to3.refactor import RefactoringTool, get_fixers_from_package import setuptools from ._deprecation_warning import SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning class DistutilsRefactoringTool(RefactoringTool): def log_error(self, msg, *args, **kw): log.error(msg, *args) def log_message(self, msg, *args): log.info(msg, *args) def log_debug(self, msg, *args): log.debug(msg, *args) class Mixin2to3(_Mixin2to3): def run_2to3(self, files, doctests=False): # See of the distribution option has been set, otherwise check the # setuptools default. if self.distribution.use_2to3 is not True: return if not files: return warnings.warn( "2to3 support is deprecated. If the project still " "requires Python 2 support, please migrate to " "a single-codebase solution or employ an " "independent conversion process.", SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning) log.info("Fixing " + " ".join(files)) self.__build_fixer_names() self.__exclude_fixers() if doctests: if setuptools.run_2to3_on_doctests: r = DistutilsRefactoringTool(self.fixer_names) r.refactor(files, write=True, doctests_only=True) else: _Mixin2to3.run_2to3(self, files) def __build_fixer_names(self): if self.fixer_names: return self.fixer_names = [] for p in setuptools.lib2to3_fixer_packages: self.fixer_names.extend(get_fixers_from_package(p)) if self.distribution.use_2to3_fixers is not None: for p in self.distribution.use_2to3_fixers: self.fixer_names.extend(get_fixers_from_package(p)) def __exclude_fixers(self): excluded_fixers = getattr(self, 'exclude_fixers', []) if self.distribution.use_2to3_exclude_fixers is not None: excluded_fixers.extend(self.distribution.use_2to3_exclude_fixers) for fixer_name in excluded_fixers: if fixer_name in self.fixer_names: self.fixer_names.remove(fixer_name)
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/py33compat.py
import dis import array import collections try: import html except ImportError: html = None from setuptools.extern import six from setuptools.extern.six.moves import html_parser __metaclass__ = type OpArg = collections.namedtuple('OpArg', 'opcode arg') class Bytecode_compat: def __init__(self, code): self.code = code def __iter__(self): """Yield '(op,arg)' pair for each operation in code object 'code'""" bytes = array.array('b', self.code.co_code) eof = len(self.code.co_code) ptr = 0 extended_arg = 0 while ptr < eof: op = bytes[ptr] if op >= dis.HAVE_ARGUMENT: arg = bytes[ptr + 1] + bytes[ptr + 2] * 256 + extended_arg ptr += 3 if op == dis.EXTENDED_ARG: long_type = six.integer_types[-1] extended_arg = arg * long_type(65536) continue else: arg = None ptr += 1 yield OpArg(op, arg) Bytecode = getattr(dis, 'Bytecode', Bytecode_compat) unescape = getattr(html, 'unescape', None) if unescape is None: # HTMLParser.unescape is deprecated since Python 3.4, and will be removed # from 3.9. unescape = html_parser.HTMLParser().unescape
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/wheel.py
"""Wheels support.""" from distutils.util import get_platform from distutils import log import email import itertools import os import posixpath import re import zipfile import pkg_resources import setuptools from pkg_resources import parse_version from setuptools.extern.packaging.tags import sys_tags from setuptools.extern.packaging.utils import canonicalize_name from setuptools.extern.six import PY3 from setuptools.command.egg_info import write_requirements __metaclass__ = type WHEEL_NAME = re.compile( r"""^(?P<project_name>.+?)-(?P<version>\d.*?) ((-(?P<build>\d.*?))?-(?P<py_version>.+?)-(?P<abi>.+?)-(?P<platform>.+?) )\.whl$""", re.VERBOSE).match NAMESPACE_PACKAGE_INIT = \ "__import__('pkg_resources').declare_namespace(__name__)\n" def unpack(src_dir, dst_dir): '''Move everything under `src_dir` to `dst_dir`, and delete the former.''' for dirpath, dirnames, filenames in os.walk(src_dir): subdir = os.path.relpath(dirpath, src_dir) for f in filenames: src = os.path.join(dirpath, f) dst = os.path.join(dst_dir, subdir, f) os.renames(src, dst) for n, d in reversed(list(enumerate(dirnames))): src = os.path.join(dirpath, d) dst = os.path.join(dst_dir, subdir, d) if not os.path.exists(dst): # Directory does not exist in destination, # rename it and prune it from os.walk list. os.renames(src, dst) del dirnames[n] # Cleanup. for dirpath, dirnames, filenames in os.walk(src_dir, topdown=True): assert not filenames os.rmdir(dirpath) class Wheel: def __init__(self, filename): match = WHEEL_NAME(os.path.basename(filename)) if match is None: raise ValueError('invalid wheel name: %r' % filename) self.filename = filename for k, v in match.groupdict().items(): setattr(self, k, v) def tags(self): '''List tags (py_version, abi, platform) supported by this wheel.''' return itertools.product( self.py_version.split('.'), self.abi.split('.'), self.platform.split('.'), ) def is_compatible(self): '''Is the wheel is compatible with the current platform?''' supported_tags = set( (t.interpreter, t.abi, t.platform) for t in sys_tags()) return next((True for t in self.tags() if t in supported_tags), False) def egg_name(self): return pkg_resources.Distribution( project_name=self.project_name, version=self.version, platform=(None if self.platform == 'any' else get_platform()), ).egg_name() + '.egg' def get_dist_info(self, zf): # find the correct name of the .dist-info dir in the wheel file for member in zf.namelist(): dirname = posixpath.dirname(member) if (dirname.endswith('.dist-info') and canonicalize_name(dirname).startswith( canonicalize_name(self.project_name))): return dirname raise ValueError("unsupported wheel format. .dist-info not found") def install_as_egg(self, destination_eggdir): '''Install wheel as an egg directory.''' with zipfile.ZipFile(self.filename) as zf: self._install_as_egg(destination_eggdir, zf) def _install_as_egg(self, destination_eggdir, zf): dist_basename = '%s-%s' % (self.project_name, self.version) dist_info = self.get_dist_info(zf) dist_data = '%s.data' % dist_basename egg_info = os.path.join(destination_eggdir, 'EGG-INFO') self._convert_metadata(zf, destination_eggdir, dist_info, egg_info) self._move_data_entries(destination_eggdir, dist_data) self._fix_namespace_packages(egg_info, destination_eggdir) @staticmethod def _convert_metadata(zf, destination_eggdir, dist_info, egg_info): def get_metadata(name): with zf.open(posixpath.join(dist_info, name)) as fp: value = fp.read().decode('utf-8') if PY3 else fp.read() return email.parser.Parser().parsestr(value) wheel_metadata = get_metadata('WHEEL') # Check wheel format version is supported. wheel_version = parse_version(wheel_metadata.get('Wheel-Version')) wheel_v1 = ( parse_version('1.0') <= wheel_version < parse_version('2.0dev0') ) if not wheel_v1: raise ValueError( 'unsupported wheel format version: %s' % wheel_version) # Extract to target directory. os.mkdir(destination_eggdir) zf.extractall(destination_eggdir) # Convert metadata. dist_info = os.path.join(destination_eggdir, dist_info) dist = pkg_resources.Distribution.from_location( destination_eggdir, dist_info, metadata=pkg_resources.PathMetadata(destination_eggdir, dist_info), ) # Note: Evaluate and strip markers now, # as it's difficult to convert back from the syntax: # foobar; "linux" in sys_platform and extra == 'test' def raw_req(req): req.marker = None return str(req) install_requires = list(sorted(map(raw_req, dist.requires()))) extras_require = { extra: sorted( req for req in map(raw_req, dist.requires((extra,))) if req not in install_requires ) for extra in dist.extras } os.rename(dist_info, egg_info) os.rename( os.path.join(egg_info, 'METADATA'), os.path.join(egg_info, 'PKG-INFO'), ) setup_dist = setuptools.Distribution( attrs=dict( install_requires=install_requires, extras_require=extras_require, ), ) # Temporarily disable info traces. log_threshold = log._global_log.threshold log.set_threshold(log.WARN) try: write_requirements( setup_dist.get_command_obj('egg_info'), None, os.path.join(egg_info, 'requires.txt'), ) finally: log.set_threshold(log_threshold) @staticmethod def _move_data_entries(destination_eggdir, dist_data): """Move data entries to their correct location.""" dist_data = os.path.join(destination_eggdir, dist_data) dist_data_scripts = os.path.join(dist_data, 'scripts') if os.path.exists(dist_data_scripts): egg_info_scripts = os.path.join( destination_eggdir, 'EGG-INFO', 'scripts') os.mkdir(egg_info_scripts) for entry in os.listdir(dist_data_scripts): # Remove bytecode, as it's not properly handled # during easy_install scripts install phase. if entry.endswith('.pyc'): os.unlink(os.path.join(dist_data_scripts, entry)) else: os.rename( os.path.join(dist_data_scripts, entry), os.path.join(egg_info_scripts, entry), ) os.rmdir(dist_data_scripts) for subdir in filter(os.path.exists, ( os.path.join(dist_data, d) for d in ('data', 'headers', 'purelib', 'platlib') )): unpack(subdir, destination_eggdir) if os.path.exists(dist_data): os.rmdir(dist_data) @staticmethod def _fix_namespace_packages(egg_info, destination_eggdir): namespace_packages = os.path.join( egg_info, 'namespace_packages.txt') if os.path.exists(namespace_packages): with open(namespace_packages) as fp: namespace_packages = fp.read().split() for mod in namespace_packages: mod_dir = os.path.join(destination_eggdir, *mod.split('.')) mod_init = os.path.join(mod_dir, '__init__.py') if not os.path.exists(mod_dir): os.mkdir(mod_dir) if not os.path.exists(mod_init): with open(mod_init, 'w') as fp: fp.write(NAMESPACE_PACKAGE_INIT)
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/namespaces.py
import os from distutils import log import itertools from setuptools.extern.six.moves import map flatten = itertools.chain.from_iterable class Installer: nspkg_ext = '-nspkg.pth' def install_namespaces(self): nsp = self._get_all_ns_packages() if not nsp: return filename, ext = os.path.splitext(self._get_target()) filename += self.nspkg_ext self.outputs.append(filename) log.info("Installing %s", filename) lines = map(self._gen_nspkg_line, nsp) if self.dry_run: # always generate the lines, even in dry run list(lines) return with open(filename, 'wt') as f: f.writelines(lines) def uninstall_namespaces(self): filename, ext = os.path.splitext(self._get_target()) filename += self.nspkg_ext if not os.path.exists(filename): return log.info("Removing %s", filename) os.remove(filename) def _get_target(self): return self.target _nspkg_tmpl = ( "import sys, types, os", "has_mfs = sys.version_info > (3, 5)", "p = os.path.join(%(root)s, *%(pth)r)", "importlib = has_mfs and __import__('importlib.util')", "has_mfs and __import__('importlib.machinery')", ( "m = has_mfs and " "sys.modules.setdefault(%(pkg)r, " "importlib.util.module_from_spec(" "importlib.machinery.PathFinder.find_spec(%(pkg)r, " "[os.path.dirname(p)])))" ), ( "m = m or " "sys.modules.setdefault(%(pkg)r, types.ModuleType(%(pkg)r))" ), "mp = (m or []) and m.__dict__.setdefault('__path__',[])", "(p not in mp) and mp.append(p)", ) "lines for the namespace installer" _nspkg_tmpl_multi = ( 'm and setattr(sys.modules[%(parent)r], %(child)r, m)', ) "additional line(s) when a parent package is indicated" def _get_root(self): return "sys._getframe(1).f_locals['sitedir']" def _gen_nspkg_line(self, pkg): # ensure pkg is not a unicode string under Python 2.7 pkg = str(pkg) pth = tuple(pkg.split('.')) root = self._get_root() tmpl_lines = self._nspkg_tmpl parent, sep, child = pkg.rpartition('.') if parent: tmpl_lines += self._nspkg_tmpl_multi return ';'.join(tmpl_lines) % locals() + '\n' def _get_all_ns_packages(self): """Return sorted list of all package namespaces""" pkgs = self.distribution.namespace_packages or [] return sorted(flatten(map(self._pkg_names, pkgs))) @staticmethod def _pkg_names(pkg): """ Given a namespace package, yield the components of that package. >>> names = Installer._pkg_names('a.b.c') >>> set(names) == set(['a', 'a.b', 'a.b.c']) True """ parts = pkg.split('.') while parts: yield '.'.join(parts) parts.pop() class DevelopInstaller(Installer): def _get_root(self): return repr(str(self.egg_path)) def _get_target(self): return self.egg_link
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/script (dev).tmpl
# EASY-INSTALL-DEV-SCRIPT: %(spec)r,%(script_name)r __requires__ = %(spec)r __import__('pkg_resources').require(%(spec)r) __file__ = %(dev_path)r with open(__file__) as f: exec(compile(f.read(), __file__, 'exec'))
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/six.py
"""Utilities for writing code that runs on Python 2 and 3""" # Copyright (c) 2010-2015 Benjamin Peterson # # Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy # of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal # in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights # to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell # copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is # furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: # # The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all # copies or substantial portions of the Software. # # THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR # IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, # FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE # AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER # LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, # OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE # SOFTWARE. from __future__ import absolute_import import functools import itertools import operator import sys import types __author__ = "Benjamin Peterson <benjamin@python.org>" __version__ = "1.10.0" # Useful for very coarse version differentiation. PY2 = sys.version_info[0] == 2 PY3 = sys.version_info[0] == 3 PY34 = sys.version_info[0:2] >= (3, 4) if PY3: string_types = str, integer_types = int, class_types = type, text_type = str binary_type = bytes MAXSIZE = sys.maxsize else: string_types = basestring, integer_types = (int, long) class_types = (type, types.ClassType) text_type = unicode binary_type = str if sys.platform.startswith("java"): # Jython always uses 32 bits. MAXSIZE = int((1 << 31) - 1) else: # It's possible to have sizeof(long) != sizeof(Py_ssize_t). class X(object): def __len__(self): return 1 << 31 try: len(X()) except OverflowError: # 32-bit MAXSIZE = int((1 << 31) - 1) else: # 64-bit MAXSIZE = int((1 << 63) - 1) del X def _add_doc(func, doc): """Add documentation to a function.""" func.__doc__ = doc def _import_module(name): """Import module, returning the module after the last dot.""" __import__(name) return sys.modules[name] class _LazyDescr(object): def __init__(self, name): self.name = name def __get__(self, obj, tp): result = self._resolve() setattr(obj, self.name, result) # Invokes __set__. try: # This is a bit ugly, but it avoids running this again by # removing this descriptor. delattr(obj.__class__, self.name) except AttributeError: pass return result class MovedModule(_LazyDescr): def __init__(self, name, old, new=None): super(MovedModule, self).__init__(name) if PY3: if new is None: new = name self.mod = new else: self.mod = old def _resolve(self): return _import_module(self.mod) def __getattr__(self, attr): _module = self._resolve() value = getattr(_module, attr) setattr(self, attr, value) return value class _LazyModule(types.ModuleType): def __init__(self, name): super(_LazyModule, self).__init__(name) self.__doc__ = self.__class__.__doc__ def __dir__(self): attrs = ["__doc__", "__name__"] attrs += [attr.name for attr in self._moved_attributes] return attrs # Subclasses should override this _moved_attributes = [] class MovedAttribute(_LazyDescr): def __init__(self, name, old_mod, new_mod, old_attr=None, new_attr=None): super(MovedAttribute, self).__init__(name) if PY3: if new_mod is None: new_mod = name self.mod = new_mod if new_attr is None: if old_attr is None: new_attr = name else: new_attr = old_attr self.attr = new_attr else: self.mod = old_mod if old_attr is None: old_attr = name self.attr = old_attr def _resolve(self): module = _import_module(self.mod) return getattr(module, self.attr) class _SixMetaPathImporter(object): """ A meta path importer to import six.moves and its submodules. This class implements a PEP302 finder and loader. It should be compatible with Python 2.5 and all existing versions of Python3 """ def __init__(self, six_module_name): self.name = six_module_name self.known_modules = {} def _add_module(self, mod, *fullnames): for fullname in fullnames: self.known_modules[self.name + "." + fullname] = mod def _get_module(self, fullname): return self.known_modules[self.name + "." + fullname] def find_module(self, fullname, path=None): if fullname in self.known_modules: return self return None def __get_module(self, fullname): try: return self.known_modules[fullname] except KeyError: raise ImportError("This loader does not know module " + fullname) def load_module(self, fullname): try: # in case of a reload return sys.modules[fullname] except KeyError: pass mod = self.__get_module(fullname) if isinstance(mod, MovedModule): mod = mod._resolve() else: mod.__loader__ = self sys.modules[fullname] = mod return mod def is_package(self, fullname): """ Return true, if the named module is a package. We need this method to get correct spec objects with Python 3.4 (see PEP451) """ return hasattr(self.__get_module(fullname), "__path__") def get_code(self, fullname): """Return None Required, if is_package is implemented""" self.__get_module(fullname) # eventually raises ImportError return None get_source = get_code # same as get_code _importer = _SixMetaPathImporter(__name__) class _MovedItems(_LazyModule): """Lazy loading of moved objects""" __path__ = [] # mark as package _moved_attributes = [ MovedAttribute("cStringIO", "cStringIO", "io", "StringIO"), MovedAttribute("filter", "itertools", "builtins", "ifilter", "filter"), MovedAttribute("filterfalse", "itertools", "itertools", "ifilterfalse", "filterfalse"), MovedAttribute("input", "__builtin__", "builtins", "raw_input", "input"), MovedAttribute("intern", "__builtin__", "sys"), MovedAttribute("map", "itertools", "builtins", "imap", "map"), MovedAttribute("getcwd", "os", "os", "getcwdu", "getcwd"), MovedAttribute("getcwdb", "os", "os", "getcwd", "getcwdb"), MovedAttribute("range", "__builtin__", "builtins", "xrange", "range"), MovedAttribute("reload_module", "__builtin__", "importlib" if PY34 else "imp", "reload"), MovedAttribute("reduce", "__builtin__", "functools"), MovedAttribute("shlex_quote", "pipes", "shlex", "quote"), MovedAttribute("StringIO", "StringIO", "io"), MovedAttribute("UserDict", "UserDict", "collections"), MovedAttribute("UserList", "UserList", "collections"), MovedAttribute("UserString", "UserString", "collections"), MovedAttribute("xrange", "__builtin__", "builtins", "xrange", "range"), MovedAttribute("zip", "itertools", "builtins", "izip", "zip"), MovedAttribute("zip_longest", "itertools", "itertools", "izip_longest", "zip_longest"), MovedModule("builtins", "__builtin__"), MovedModule("configparser", "ConfigParser"), MovedModule("copyreg", "copy_reg"), MovedModule("dbm_gnu", "gdbm", "dbm.gnu"), MovedModule("_dummy_thread", "dummy_thread", "_dummy_thread"), MovedModule("http_cookiejar", "cookielib", "http.cookiejar"), MovedModule("http_cookies", "Cookie", "http.cookies"), MovedModule("html_entities", "htmlentitydefs", "html.entities"), MovedModule("html_parser", "HTMLParser", "html.parser"), MovedModule("http_client", "httplib", "http.client"), MovedModule("email_mime_multipart", "email.MIMEMultipart", "email.mime.multipart"), MovedModule("email_mime_nonmultipart", "email.MIMENonMultipart", "email.mime.nonmultipart"), MovedModule("email_mime_text", "email.MIMEText", "email.mime.text"), MovedModule("email_mime_base", "email.MIMEBase", "email.mime.base"), MovedModule("BaseHTTPServer", "BaseHTTPServer", "http.server"), MovedModule("CGIHTTPServer", "CGIHTTPServer", "http.server"), MovedModule("SimpleHTTPServer", "SimpleHTTPServer", "http.server"), MovedModule("cPickle", "cPickle", "pickle"), MovedModule("queue", "Queue"), MovedModule("reprlib", "repr"), MovedModule("socketserver", "SocketServer"), MovedModule("_thread", "thread", "_thread"), MovedModule("tkinter", "Tkinter"), MovedModule("tkinter_dialog", "Dialog", "tkinter.dialog"), MovedModule("tkinter_filedialog", "FileDialog", "tkinter.filedialog"), MovedModule("tkinter_scrolledtext", "ScrolledText", "tkinter.scrolledtext"), MovedModule("tkinter_simpledialog", "SimpleDialog", "tkinter.simpledialog"), MovedModule("tkinter_tix", "Tix", "tkinter.tix"), MovedModule("tkinter_ttk", "ttk", "tkinter.ttk"), MovedModule("tkinter_constants", "Tkconstants", "tkinter.constants"), MovedModule("tkinter_dnd", "Tkdnd", "tkinter.dnd"), MovedModule("tkinter_colorchooser", "tkColorChooser", "tkinter.colorchooser"), MovedModule("tkinter_commondialog", "tkCommonDialog", "tkinter.commondialog"), MovedModule("tkinter_tkfiledialog", "tkFileDialog", "tkinter.filedialog"), MovedModule("tkinter_font", "tkFont", "tkinter.font"), MovedModule("tkinter_messagebox", "tkMessageBox", "tkinter.messagebox"), MovedModule("tkinter_tksimpledialog", "tkSimpleDialog", "tkinter.simpledialog"), MovedModule("urllib_parse", __name__ + ".moves.urllib_parse", "urllib.parse"), MovedModule("urllib_error", __name__ + ".moves.urllib_error", "urllib.error"), MovedModule("urllib", __name__ + ".moves.urllib", __name__ + ".moves.urllib"), MovedModule("urllib_robotparser", "robotparser", "urllib.robotparser"), MovedModule("xmlrpc_client", "xmlrpclib", "xmlrpc.client"), MovedModule("xmlrpc_server", "SimpleXMLRPCServer", "xmlrpc.server"), ] # Add windows specific modules. if sys.platform == "win32": _moved_attributes += [ MovedModule("winreg", "_winreg"), ] for attr in _moved_attributes: setattr(_MovedItems, attr.name, attr) if isinstance(attr, MovedModule): _importer._add_module(attr, "moves." + attr.name) del attr _MovedItems._moved_attributes = _moved_attributes moves = _MovedItems(__name__ + ".moves") _importer._add_module(moves, "moves") class Module_six_moves_urllib_parse(_LazyModule): """Lazy loading of moved objects in six.moves.urllib_parse""" _urllib_parse_moved_attributes = [ MovedAttribute("ParseResult", "urlparse", "urllib.parse"), MovedAttribute("SplitResult", "urlparse", "urllib.parse"), MovedAttribute("parse_qs", "urlparse", "urllib.parse"), MovedAttribute("parse_qsl", "urlparse", "urllib.parse"), MovedAttribute("urldefrag", "urlparse", "urllib.parse"), MovedAttribute("urljoin", "urlparse", "urllib.parse"), MovedAttribute("urlparse", "urlparse", "urllib.parse"), MovedAttribute("urlsplit", "urlparse", "urllib.parse"), MovedAttribute("urlunparse", "urlparse", "urllib.parse"), MovedAttribute("urlunsplit", "urlparse", "urllib.parse"), MovedAttribute("quote", "urllib", "urllib.parse"), MovedAttribute("quote_plus", "urllib", "urllib.parse"), MovedAttribute("unquote", "urllib", "urllib.parse"), MovedAttribute("unquote_plus", "urllib", "urllib.parse"), MovedAttribute("urlencode", "urllib", "urllib.parse"), MovedAttribute("splitquery", "urllib", "urllib.parse"), MovedAttribute("splittag", "urllib", "urllib.parse"), MovedAttribute("splituser", "urllib", "urllib.parse"), MovedAttribute("uses_fragment", "urlparse", "urllib.parse"), MovedAttribute("uses_netloc", "urlparse", "urllib.parse"), MovedAttribute("uses_params", "urlparse", "urllib.parse"), MovedAttribute("uses_query", "urlparse", "urllib.parse"), MovedAttribute("uses_relative", "urlparse", "urllib.parse"), ] for attr in _urllib_parse_moved_attributes: setattr(Module_six_moves_urllib_parse, attr.name, attr) del attr Module_six_moves_urllib_parse._moved_attributes = _urllib_parse_moved_attributes _importer._add_module(Module_six_moves_urllib_parse(__name__ + ".moves.urllib_parse"), "moves.urllib_parse", "moves.urllib.parse") class Module_six_moves_urllib_error(_LazyModule): """Lazy loading of moved objects in six.moves.urllib_error""" _urllib_error_moved_attributes = [ MovedAttribute("URLError", "urllib2", "urllib.error"), MovedAttribute("HTTPError", "urllib2", "urllib.error"), MovedAttribute("ContentTooShortError", "urllib", "urllib.error"), ] for attr in _urllib_error_moved_attributes: setattr(Module_six_moves_urllib_error, attr.name, attr) del attr Module_six_moves_urllib_error._moved_attributes = _urllib_error_moved_attributes _importer._add_module(Module_six_moves_urllib_error(__name__ + ".moves.urllib.error"), "moves.urllib_error", "moves.urllib.error") class Module_six_moves_urllib_request(_LazyModule): """Lazy loading of moved objects in six.moves.urllib_request""" _urllib_request_moved_attributes = [ MovedAttribute("urlopen", "urllib2", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("install_opener", "urllib2", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("build_opener", "urllib2", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("pathname2url", "urllib", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("url2pathname", "urllib", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("getproxies", "urllib", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("Request", "urllib2", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("OpenerDirector", "urllib2", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("HTTPDefaultErrorHandler", "urllib2", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("HTTPRedirectHandler", "urllib2", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("HTTPCookieProcessor", "urllib2", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("ProxyHandler", "urllib2", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("BaseHandler", "urllib2", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("HTTPPasswordMgr", "urllib2", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("HTTPPasswordMgrWithDefaultRealm", "urllib2", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("AbstractBasicAuthHandler", "urllib2", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("HTTPBasicAuthHandler", "urllib2", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("ProxyBasicAuthHandler", "urllib2", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("AbstractDigestAuthHandler", "urllib2", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("HTTPDigestAuthHandler", "urllib2", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("ProxyDigestAuthHandler", "urllib2", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("HTTPHandler", "urllib2", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("HTTPSHandler", "urllib2", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("FileHandler", "urllib2", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("FTPHandler", "urllib2", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("CacheFTPHandler", "urllib2", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("UnknownHandler", "urllib2", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("HTTPErrorProcessor", "urllib2", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("urlretrieve", "urllib", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("urlcleanup", "urllib", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("URLopener", "urllib", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("FancyURLopener", "urllib", "urllib.request"), MovedAttribute("proxy_bypass", "urllib", "urllib.request"), ] for attr in _urllib_request_moved_attributes: setattr(Module_six_moves_urllib_request, attr.name, attr) del attr Module_six_moves_urllib_request._moved_attributes = _urllib_request_moved_attributes _importer._add_module(Module_six_moves_urllib_request(__name__ + ".moves.urllib.request"), "moves.urllib_request", "moves.urllib.request") class Module_six_moves_urllib_response(_LazyModule): """Lazy loading of moved objects in six.moves.urllib_response""" _urllib_response_moved_attributes = [ MovedAttribute("addbase", "urllib", "urllib.response"), MovedAttribute("addclosehook", "urllib", "urllib.response"), MovedAttribute("addinfo", "urllib", "urllib.response"), MovedAttribute("addinfourl", "urllib", "urllib.response"), ] for attr in _urllib_response_moved_attributes: setattr(Module_six_moves_urllib_response, attr.name, attr) del attr Module_six_moves_urllib_response._moved_attributes = _urllib_response_moved_attributes _importer._add_module(Module_six_moves_urllib_response(__name__ + ".moves.urllib.response"), "moves.urllib_response", "moves.urllib.response") class Module_six_moves_urllib_robotparser(_LazyModule): """Lazy loading of moved objects in six.moves.urllib_robotparser""" _urllib_robotparser_moved_attributes = [ MovedAttribute("RobotFileParser", "robotparser", "urllib.robotparser"), ] for attr in _urllib_robotparser_moved_attributes: setattr(Module_six_moves_urllib_robotparser, attr.name, attr) del attr Module_six_moves_urllib_robotparser._moved_attributes = _urllib_robotparser_moved_attributes _importer._add_module(Module_six_moves_urllib_robotparser(__name__ + ".moves.urllib.robotparser"), "moves.urllib_robotparser", "moves.urllib.robotparser") class Module_six_moves_urllib(types.ModuleType): """Create a six.moves.urllib namespace that resembles the Python 3 namespace""" __path__ = [] # mark as package parse = _importer._get_module("moves.urllib_parse") error = _importer._get_module("moves.urllib_error") request = _importer._get_module("moves.urllib_request") response = _importer._get_module("moves.urllib_response") robotparser = _importer._get_module("moves.urllib_robotparser") def __dir__(self): return ['parse', 'error', 'request', 'response', 'robotparser'] _importer._add_module(Module_six_moves_urllib(__name__ + ".moves.urllib"), "moves.urllib") def add_move(move): """Add an item to six.moves.""" setattr(_MovedItems, move.name, move) def remove_move(name): """Remove item from six.moves.""" try: delattr(_MovedItems, name) except AttributeError: try: del moves.__dict__[name] except KeyError: raise AttributeError("no such move, %r" % (name,)) if PY3: _meth_func = "__func__" _meth_self = "__self__" _func_closure = "__closure__" _func_code = "__code__" _func_defaults = "__defaults__" _func_globals = "__globals__" else: _meth_func = "im_func" _meth_self = "im_self" _func_closure = "func_closure" _func_code = "func_code" _func_defaults = "func_defaults" _func_globals = "func_globals" try: advance_iterator = next except NameError: def advance_iterator(it): return it.next() next = advance_iterator try: callable = callable except NameError: def callable(obj): return any("__call__" in klass.__dict__ for klass in type(obj).__mro__) if PY3: def get_unbound_function(unbound): return unbound create_bound_method = types.MethodType def create_unbound_method(func, cls): return func Iterator = object else: def get_unbound_function(unbound): return unbound.im_func def create_bound_method(func, obj): return types.MethodType(func, obj, obj.__class__) def create_unbound_method(func, cls): return types.MethodType(func, None, cls) class Iterator(object): def next(self): return type(self).__next__(self) callable = callable _add_doc(get_unbound_function, """Get the function out of a possibly unbound function""") get_method_function = operator.attrgetter(_meth_func) get_method_self = operator.attrgetter(_meth_self) get_function_closure = operator.attrgetter(_func_closure) get_function_code = operator.attrgetter(_func_code) get_function_defaults = operator.attrgetter(_func_defaults) get_function_globals = operator.attrgetter(_func_globals) if PY3: def iterkeys(d, **kw): return iter(d.keys(**kw)) def itervalues(d, **kw): return iter(d.values(**kw)) def iteritems(d, **kw): return iter(d.items(**kw)) def iterlists(d, **kw): return iter(d.lists(**kw)) viewkeys = operator.methodcaller("keys") viewvalues = operator.methodcaller("values") viewitems = operator.methodcaller("items") else: def iterkeys(d, **kw): return d.iterkeys(**kw) def itervalues(d, **kw): return d.itervalues(**kw) def iteritems(d, **kw): return d.iteritems(**kw) def iterlists(d, **kw): return d.iterlists(**kw) viewkeys = operator.methodcaller("viewkeys") viewvalues = operator.methodcaller("viewvalues") viewitems = operator.methodcaller("viewitems") _add_doc(iterkeys, "Return an iterator over the keys of a dictionary.") _add_doc(itervalues, "Return an iterator over the values of a dictionary.") _add_doc(iteritems, "Return an iterator over the (key, value) pairs of a dictionary.") _add_doc(iterlists, "Return an iterator over the (key, [values]) pairs of a dictionary.") if PY3: def b(s): return s.encode("latin-1") def u(s): return s unichr = chr import struct int2byte = struct.Struct(">B").pack del struct byte2int = operator.itemgetter(0) indexbytes = operator.getitem iterbytes = iter import io StringIO = io.StringIO BytesIO = io.BytesIO _assertCountEqual = "assertCountEqual" if sys.version_info[1] <= 1: _assertRaisesRegex = "assertRaisesRegexp" _assertRegex = "assertRegexpMatches" else: _assertRaisesRegex = "assertRaisesRegex" _assertRegex = "assertRegex" else: def b(s): return s # Workaround for standalone backslash def u(s): return unicode(s.replace(r'\\', r'\\\\'), "unicode_escape") unichr = unichr int2byte = chr def byte2int(bs): return ord(bs[0]) def indexbytes(buf, i): return ord(buf[i]) iterbytes = functools.partial(itertools.imap, ord) import StringIO StringIO = BytesIO = StringIO.StringIO _assertCountEqual = "assertItemsEqual" _assertRaisesRegex = "assertRaisesRegexp" _assertRegex = "assertRegexpMatches" _add_doc(b, """Byte literal""") _add_doc(u, """Text literal""") def assertCountEqual(self, *args, **kwargs): return getattr(self, _assertCountEqual)(*args, **kwargs) def assertRaisesRegex(self, *args, **kwargs): return getattr(self, _assertRaisesRegex)(*args, **kwargs) def assertRegex(self, *args, **kwargs): return getattr(self, _assertRegex)(*args, **kwargs) if PY3: exec_ = getattr(moves.builtins, "exec") def reraise(tp, value, tb=None): if value is None: value = tp() if value.__traceback__ is not tb: raise value.with_traceback(tb) raise value else: def exec_(_code_, _globs_=None, _locs_=None): """Execute code in a namespace.""" if _globs_ is None: frame = sys._getframe(1) _globs_ = frame.f_globals if _locs_ is None: _locs_ = frame.f_locals del frame elif _locs_ is None: _locs_ = _globs_ exec("""exec _code_ in _globs_, _locs_""") exec_("""def reraise(tp, value, tb=None): raise tp, value, tb """) if sys.version_info[:2] == (3, 2): exec_("""def raise_from(value, from_value): if from_value is None: raise value raise value from from_value """) elif sys.version_info[:2] > (3, 2): exec_("""def raise_from(value, from_value): raise value from from_value """) else: def raise_from(value, from_value): raise value print_ = getattr(moves.builtins, "print", None) if print_ is None: def print_(*args, **kwargs): """The new-style print function for Python 2.4 and 2.5.""" fp = kwargs.pop("file", sys.stdout) if fp is None: return def write(data): if not isinstance(data, basestring): data = str(data) # If the file has an encoding, encode unicode with it. if (isinstance(fp, file) and isinstance(data, unicode) and fp.encoding is not None): errors = getattr(fp, "errors", None) if errors is None: errors = "strict" data = data.encode(fp.encoding, errors) fp.write(data) want_unicode = False sep = kwargs.pop("sep", None) if sep is not None: if isinstance(sep, unicode): want_unicode = True elif not isinstance(sep, str): raise TypeError("sep must be None or a string") end = kwargs.pop("end", None) if end is not None: if isinstance(end, unicode): want_unicode = True elif not isinstance(end, str): raise TypeError("end must be None or a string") if kwargs: raise TypeError("invalid keyword arguments to print()") if not want_unicode: for arg in args: if isinstance(arg, unicode): want_unicode = True break if want_unicode: newline = unicode("\n") space = unicode(" ") else: newline = "\n" space = " " if sep is None: sep = space if end is None: end = newline for i, arg in enumerate(args): if i: write(sep) write(arg) write(end) if sys.version_info[:2] < (3, 3): _print = print_ def print_(*args, **kwargs): fp = kwargs.get("file", sys.stdout) flush = kwargs.pop("flush", False) _print(*args, **kwargs) if flush and fp is not None: fp.flush() _add_doc(reraise, """Reraise an exception.""") if sys.version_info[0:2] < (3, 4): def wraps(wrapped, assigned=functools.WRAPPER_ASSIGNMENTS, updated=functools.WRAPPER_UPDATES): def wrapper(f): f = functools.wraps(wrapped, assigned, updated)(f) f.__wrapped__ = wrapped return f return wrapper else: wraps = functools.wraps def with_metaclass(meta, *bases): """Create a base class with a metaclass.""" # This requires a bit of explanation: the basic idea is to make a dummy # metaclass for one level of class instantiation that replaces itself with # the actual metaclass. class metaclass(meta): def __new__(cls, name, this_bases, d): return meta(name, bases, d) return type.__new__(metaclass, 'temporary_class', (), {}) def add_metaclass(metaclass): """Class decorator for creating a class with a metaclass.""" def wrapper(cls): orig_vars = cls.__dict__.copy() slots = orig_vars.get('__slots__') if slots is not None: if isinstance(slots, str): slots = [slots] for slots_var in slots: orig_vars.pop(slots_var) orig_vars.pop('__dict__', None) orig_vars.pop('__weakref__', None) return metaclass(cls.__name__, cls.__bases__, orig_vars) return wrapper def python_2_unicode_compatible(klass): """ A decorator that defines __unicode__ and __str__ methods under Python 2. Under Python 3 it does nothing. To support Python 2 and 3 with a single code base, define a __str__ method returning text and apply this decorator to the class. """ if PY2: if '__str__' not in klass.__dict__: raise ValueError("@python_2_unicode_compatible cannot be applied " "to %s because it doesn't define __str__()." % klass.__name__) klass.__unicode__ = klass.__str__ klass.__str__ = lambda self: self.__unicode__().encode('utf-8') return klass # Complete the moves implementation. # This code is at the end of this module to speed up module loading. # Turn this module into a package. __path__ = [] # required for PEP 302 and PEP 451 __package__ = __name__ # see PEP 366 @ReservedAssignment if globals().get("__spec__") is not None: __spec__.submodule_search_locations = [] # PEP 451 @UndefinedVariable # Remove other six meta path importers, since they cause problems. This can # happen if six is removed from sys.modules and then reloaded. (Setuptools does # this for some reason.) if sys.meta_path: for i, importer in enumerate(sys.meta_path): # Here's some real nastiness: Another "instance" of the six module might # be floating around. Therefore, we can't use isinstance() to check for # the six meta path importer, since the other six instance will have # inserted an importer with different class. if (type(importer).__name__ == "_SixMetaPathImporter" and importer.name == __name__): del sys.meta_path[i] break del i, importer # Finally, add the importer to the meta path import hook. sys.meta_path.append(_importer)
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/ordered_set.py
""" An OrderedSet is a custom MutableSet that remembers its order, so that every entry has an index that can be looked up. Based on a recipe originally posted to ActiveState Recipes by Raymond Hettiger, and released under the MIT license. """ import itertools as it from collections import deque try: # Python 3 from collections.abc import MutableSet, Sequence except ImportError: # Python 2.7 from collections import MutableSet, Sequence SLICE_ALL = slice(None) __version__ = "3.1" def is_iterable(obj): """ Are we being asked to look up a list of things, instead of a single thing? We check for the `__iter__` attribute so that this can cover types that don't have to be known by this module, such as NumPy arrays. Strings, however, should be considered as atomic values to look up, not iterables. The same goes for tuples, since they are immutable and therefore valid entries. We don't need to check for the Python 2 `unicode` type, because it doesn't have an `__iter__` attribute anyway. """ return ( hasattr(obj, "__iter__") and not isinstance(obj, str) and not isinstance(obj, tuple) ) class OrderedSet(MutableSet, Sequence): """ An OrderedSet is a custom MutableSet that remembers its order, so that every entry has an index that can be looked up. Example: >>> OrderedSet([1, 1, 2, 3, 2]) OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) """ def __init__(self, iterable=None): self.items = [] self.map = {} if iterable is not None: self |= iterable def __len__(self): """ Returns the number of unique elements in the ordered set Example: >>> len(OrderedSet([])) 0 >>> len(OrderedSet([1, 2])) 2 """ return len(self.items) def __getitem__(self, index): """ Get the item at a given index. If `index` is a slice, you will get back that slice of items, as a new OrderedSet. If `index` is a list or a similar iterable, you'll get a list of items corresponding to those indices. This is similar to NumPy's "fancy indexing". The result is not an OrderedSet because you may ask for duplicate indices, and the number of elements returned should be the number of elements asked for. Example: >>> oset = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) >>> oset[1] 2 """ if isinstance(index, slice) and index == SLICE_ALL: return self.copy() elif is_iterable(index): return [self.items[i] for i in index] elif hasattr(index, "__index__") or isinstance(index, slice): result = self.items[index] if isinstance(result, list): return self.__class__(result) else: return result else: raise TypeError("Don't know how to index an OrderedSet by %r" % index) def copy(self): """ Return a shallow copy of this object. Example: >>> this = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) >>> other = this.copy() >>> this == other True >>> this is other False """ return self.__class__(self) def __getstate__(self): if len(self) == 0: # The state can't be an empty list. # We need to return a truthy value, or else __setstate__ won't be run. # # This could have been done more gracefully by always putting the state # in a tuple, but this way is backwards- and forwards- compatible with # previous versions of OrderedSet. return (None,) else: return list(self) def __setstate__(self, state): if state == (None,): self.__init__([]) else: self.__init__(state) def __contains__(self, key): """ Test if the item is in this ordered set Example: >>> 1 in OrderedSet([1, 3, 2]) True >>> 5 in OrderedSet([1, 3, 2]) False """ return key in self.map def add(self, key): """ Add `key` as an item to this OrderedSet, then return its index. If `key` is already in the OrderedSet, return the index it already had. Example: >>> oset = OrderedSet() >>> oset.append(3) 0 >>> print(oset) OrderedSet([3]) """ if key not in self.map: self.map[key] = len(self.items) self.items.append(key) return self.map[key] append = add def update(self, sequence): """ Update the set with the given iterable sequence, then return the index of the last element inserted. Example: >>> oset = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) >>> oset.update([3, 1, 5, 1, 4]) 4 >>> print(oset) OrderedSet([1, 2, 3, 5, 4]) """ item_index = None try: for item in sequence: item_index = self.add(item) except TypeError: raise ValueError( "Argument needs to be an iterable, got %s" % type(sequence) ) return item_index def index(self, key): """ Get the index of a given entry, raising an IndexError if it's not present. `key` can be an iterable of entries that is not a string, in which case this returns a list of indices. Example: >>> oset = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) >>> oset.index(2) 1 """ if is_iterable(key): return [self.index(subkey) for subkey in key] return self.map[key] # Provide some compatibility with pd.Index get_loc = index get_indexer = index def pop(self): """ Remove and return the last element from the set. Raises KeyError if the set is empty. Example: >>> oset = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) >>> oset.pop() 3 """ if not self.items: raise KeyError("Set is empty") elem = self.items[-1] del self.items[-1] del self.map[elem] return elem def discard(self, key): """ Remove an element. Do not raise an exception if absent. The MutableSet mixin uses this to implement the .remove() method, which *does* raise an error when asked to remove a non-existent item. Example: >>> oset = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) >>> oset.discard(2) >>> print(oset) OrderedSet([1, 3]) >>> oset.discard(2) >>> print(oset) OrderedSet([1, 3]) """ if key in self: i = self.map[key] del self.items[i] del self.map[key] for k, v in self.map.items(): if v >= i: self.map[k] = v - 1 def clear(self): """ Remove all items from this OrderedSet. """ del self.items[:] self.map.clear() def __iter__(self): """ Example: >>> list(iter(OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]))) [1, 2, 3] """ return iter(self.items) def __reversed__(self): """ Example: >>> list(reversed(OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]))) [3, 2, 1] """ return reversed(self.items) def __repr__(self): if not self: return "%s()" % (self.__class__.__name__,) return "%s(%r)" % (self.__class__.__name__, list(self)) def __eq__(self, other): """ Returns true if the containers have the same items. If `other` is a Sequence, then order is checked, otherwise it is ignored. Example: >>> oset = OrderedSet([1, 3, 2]) >>> oset == [1, 3, 2] True >>> oset == [1, 2, 3] False >>> oset == [2, 3] False >>> oset == OrderedSet([3, 2, 1]) False """ # In Python 2 deque is not a Sequence, so treat it as one for # consistent behavior with Python 3. if isinstance(other, (Sequence, deque)): # Check that this OrderedSet contains the same elements, in the # same order, as the other object. return list(self) == list(other) try: other_as_set = set(other) except TypeError: # If `other` can't be converted into a set, it's not equal. return False else: return set(self) == other_as_set def union(self, *sets): """ Combines all unique items. Each items order is defined by its first appearance. Example: >>> oset = OrderedSet.union(OrderedSet([3, 1, 4, 1, 5]), [1, 3], [2, 0]) >>> print(oset) OrderedSet([3, 1, 4, 5, 2, 0]) >>> oset.union([8, 9]) OrderedSet([3, 1, 4, 5, 2, 0, 8, 9]) >>> oset | {10} OrderedSet([3, 1, 4, 5, 2, 0, 10]) """ cls = self.__class__ if isinstance(self, OrderedSet) else OrderedSet containers = map(list, it.chain([self], sets)) items = it.chain.from_iterable(containers) return cls(items) def __and__(self, other): # the parent implementation of this is backwards return self.intersection(other) def intersection(self, *sets): """ Returns elements in common between all sets. Order is defined only by the first set. Example: >>> oset = OrderedSet.intersection(OrderedSet([0, 1, 2, 3]), [1, 2, 3]) >>> print(oset) OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) >>> oset.intersection([2, 4, 5], [1, 2, 3, 4]) OrderedSet([2]) >>> oset.intersection() OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) """ cls = self.__class__ if isinstance(self, OrderedSet) else OrderedSet if sets: common = set.intersection(*map(set, sets)) items = (item for item in self if item in common) else: items = self return cls(items) def difference(self, *sets): """ Returns all elements that are in this set but not the others. Example: >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]).difference(OrderedSet([2])) OrderedSet([1, 3]) >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]).difference(OrderedSet([2]), OrderedSet([3])) OrderedSet([1]) >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) - OrderedSet([2]) OrderedSet([1, 3]) >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]).difference() OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) """ cls = self.__class__ if sets: other = set.union(*map(set, sets)) items = (item for item in self if item not in other) else: items = self return cls(items) def issubset(self, other): """ Report whether another set contains this set. Example: >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]).issubset({1, 2}) False >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]).issubset({1, 2, 3, 4}) True >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]).issubset({1, 4, 3, 5}) False """ if len(self) > len(other): # Fast check for obvious cases return False return all(item in other for item in self) def issuperset(self, other): """ Report whether this set contains another set. Example: >>> OrderedSet([1, 2]).issuperset([1, 2, 3]) False >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3, 4]).issuperset({1, 2, 3}) True >>> OrderedSet([1, 4, 3, 5]).issuperset({1, 2, 3}) False """ if len(self) < len(other): # Fast check for obvious cases return False return all(item in self for item in other) def symmetric_difference(self, other): """ Return the symmetric difference of two OrderedSets as a new set. That is, the new set will contain all elements that are in exactly one of the sets. Their order will be preserved, with elements from `self` preceding elements from `other`. Example: >>> this = OrderedSet([1, 4, 3, 5, 7]) >>> other = OrderedSet([9, 7, 1, 3, 2]) >>> this.symmetric_difference(other) OrderedSet([4, 5, 9, 2]) """ cls = self.__class__ if isinstance(self, OrderedSet) else OrderedSet diff1 = cls(self).difference(other) diff2 = cls(other).difference(self) return diff1.union(diff2) def _update_items(self, items): """ Replace the 'items' list of this OrderedSet with a new one, updating self.map accordingly. """ self.items = items self.map = {item: idx for (idx, item) in enumerate(items)} def difference_update(self, *sets): """ Update this OrderedSet to remove items from one or more other sets. Example: >>> this = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) >>> this.difference_update(OrderedSet([2, 4])) >>> print(this) OrderedSet([1, 3]) >>> this = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]) >>> this.difference_update(OrderedSet([2, 4]), OrderedSet([1, 4, 6])) >>> print(this) OrderedSet([3, 5]) """ items_to_remove = set() for other in sets: items_to_remove |= set(other) self._update_items([item for item in self.items if item not in items_to_remove]) def intersection_update(self, other): """ Update this OrderedSet to keep only items in another set, preserving their order in this set. Example: >>> this = OrderedSet([1, 4, 3, 5, 7]) >>> other = OrderedSet([9, 7, 1, 3, 2]) >>> this.intersection_update(other) >>> print(this) OrderedSet([1, 3, 7]) """ other = set(other) self._update_items([item for item in self.items if item in other]) def symmetric_difference_update(self, other): """ Update this OrderedSet to remove items from another set, then add items from the other set that were not present in this set. Example: >>> this = OrderedSet([1, 4, 3, 5, 7]) >>> other = OrderedSet([9, 7, 1, 3, 2]) >>> this.symmetric_difference_update(other) >>> print(this) OrderedSet([4, 5, 9, 2]) """ items_to_add = [item for item in other if item not in self] items_to_remove = set(other) self._update_items( [item for item in self.items if item not in items_to_remove] + items_to_add )
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qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/pyparsing.py
# module pyparsing.py # # Copyright (c) 2003-2018 Paul T. McGuire # # Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining # a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the # "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including # without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, # distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to # permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to # the following conditions: # # The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be # included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. # # THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, # EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF # MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. # IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY # CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, # TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE # SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. # __doc__ = \ """ pyparsing module - Classes and methods to define and execute parsing grammars ============================================================================= The pyparsing module is an alternative approach to creating and executing simple grammars, vs. the traditional lex/yacc approach, or the use of regular expressions. With pyparsing, you don't need to learn a new syntax for defining grammars or matching expressions - the parsing module provides a library of classes that you use to construct the grammar directly in Python. Here is a program to parse "Hello, World!" (or any greeting of the form C{"<salutation>, <addressee>!"}), built up using L{Word}, L{Literal}, and L{And} elements (L{'+'<ParserElement.__add__>} operator gives L{And} expressions, strings are auto-converted to L{Literal} expressions):: from pyparsing import Word, alphas # define grammar of a greeting greet = Word(alphas) + "," + Word(alphas) + "!" hello = "Hello, World!" print (hello, "->", greet.parseString(hello)) The program outputs the following:: Hello, World! -> ['Hello', ',', 'World', '!'] The Python representation of the grammar is quite readable, owing to the self-explanatory class names, and the use of '+', '|' and '^' operators. The L{ParseResults} object returned from L{ParserElement.parseString<ParserElement.parseString>} can be accessed as a nested list, a dictionary, or an object with named attributes. The pyparsing module handles some of the problems that are typically vexing when writing text parsers: - extra or missing whitespace (the above program will also handle "Hello,World!", "Hello , World !", etc.) - quoted strings - embedded comments Getting Started - ----------------- Visit the classes L{ParserElement} and L{ParseResults} to see the base classes that most other pyparsing classes inherit from. Use the docstrings for examples of how to: - construct literal match expressions from L{Literal} and L{CaselessLiteral} classes - construct character word-group expressions using the L{Word} class - see how to create repetitive expressions using L{ZeroOrMore} and L{OneOrMore} classes - use L{'+'<And>}, L{'|'<MatchFirst>}, L{'^'<Or>}, and L{'&'<Each>} operators to combine simple expressions into more complex ones - associate names with your parsed results using L{ParserElement.setResultsName} - find some helpful expression short-cuts like L{delimitedList} and L{oneOf} - find more useful common expressions in the L{pyparsing_common} namespace class """ __version__ = "2.2.1" __versionTime__ = "18 Sep 2018 00:49 UTC" __author__ = "Paul McGuire <ptmcg@users.sourceforge.net>" import string from weakref import ref as wkref import copy import sys import warnings import re import sre_constants import collections import pprint import traceback import types from datetime import datetime try: from _thread import RLock except ImportError: from threading import RLock try: # Python 3 from collections.abc import Iterable from collections.abc import MutableMapping except ImportError: # Python 2.7 from collections import Iterable from collections import MutableMapping try: from collections import OrderedDict as _OrderedDict except ImportError: try: from ordereddict import OrderedDict as _OrderedDict except ImportError: _OrderedDict = None #~ sys.stderr.write( "testing pyparsing module, version %s, %s\n" % (__version__,__versionTime__ ) ) __all__ = [ 'And', 'CaselessKeyword', 'CaselessLiteral', 'CharsNotIn', 'Combine', 'Dict', 'Each', 'Empty', 'FollowedBy', 'Forward', 'GoToColumn', 'Group', 'Keyword', 'LineEnd', 'LineStart', 'Literal', 'MatchFirst', 'NoMatch', 'NotAny', 'OneOrMore', 'OnlyOnce', 'Optional', 'Or', 'ParseBaseException', 'ParseElementEnhance', 'ParseException', 'ParseExpression', 'ParseFatalException', 'ParseResults', 'ParseSyntaxException', 'ParserElement', 'QuotedString', 'RecursiveGrammarException', 'Regex', 'SkipTo', 'StringEnd', 'StringStart', 'Suppress', 'Token', 'TokenConverter', 'White', 'Word', 'WordEnd', 'WordStart', 'ZeroOrMore', 'alphanums', 'alphas', 'alphas8bit', 'anyCloseTag', 'anyOpenTag', 'cStyleComment', 'col', 'commaSeparatedList', 'commonHTMLEntity', 'countedArray', 'cppStyleComment', 'dblQuotedString', 'dblSlashComment', 'delimitedList', 'dictOf', 'downcaseTokens', 'empty', 'hexnums', 'htmlComment', 'javaStyleComment', 'line', 'lineEnd', 'lineStart', 'lineno', 'makeHTMLTags', 'makeXMLTags', 'matchOnlyAtCol', 'matchPreviousExpr', 'matchPreviousLiteral', 'nestedExpr', 'nullDebugAction', 'nums', 'oneOf', 'opAssoc', 'operatorPrecedence', 'printables', 'punc8bit', 'pythonStyleComment', 'quotedString', 'removeQuotes', 'replaceHTMLEntity', 'replaceWith', 'restOfLine', 'sglQuotedString', 'srange', 'stringEnd', 'stringStart', 'traceParseAction', 'unicodeString', 'upcaseTokens', 'withAttribute', 'indentedBlock', 'originalTextFor', 'ungroup', 'infixNotation','locatedExpr', 'withClass', 'CloseMatch', 'tokenMap', 'pyparsing_common', ] system_version = tuple(sys.version_info)[:3] PY_3 = system_version[0] == 3 if PY_3: _MAX_INT = sys.maxsize basestring = str unichr = chr _ustr = str # build list of single arg builtins, that can be used as parse actions singleArgBuiltins = [sum, len, sorted, reversed, list, tuple, set, any, all, min, max] else: _MAX_INT = sys.maxint range = xrange def _ustr(obj): """Drop-in replacement for str(obj) that tries to be Unicode friendly. It first tries str(obj). If that fails with a UnicodeEncodeError, then it tries unicode(obj). It then < returns the unicode object | encodes it with the default encoding | ... >. """ if isinstance(obj,unicode): return obj try: # If this works, then _ustr(obj) has the same behaviour as str(obj), so # it won't break any existing code. return str(obj) except UnicodeEncodeError: # Else encode it ret = unicode(obj).encode(sys.getdefaultencoding(), 'xmlcharrefreplace') xmlcharref = Regex(r'&#\d+;') xmlcharref.setParseAction(lambda t: '\\u' + hex(int(t[0][2:-1]))[2:]) return xmlcharref.transformString(ret) # build list of single arg builtins, tolerant of Python version, that can be used as parse actions singleArgBuiltins = [] import __builtin__ for fname in "sum len sorted reversed list tuple set any all min max".split(): try: singleArgBuiltins.append(getattr(__builtin__,fname)) except AttributeError: continue _generatorType = type((y for y in range(1))) def _xml_escape(data): """Escape &, <, >, ", ', etc. in a string of data.""" # ampersand must be replaced first from_symbols = '&><"\'' to_symbols = ('&'+s+';' for s in "amp gt lt quot apos".split()) for from_,to_ in zip(from_symbols, to_symbols): data = data.replace(from_, to_) return data class _Constants(object): pass alphas = string.ascii_uppercase + string.ascii_lowercase nums = "0123456789" hexnums = nums + "ABCDEFabcdef" alphanums = alphas + nums _bslash = chr(92) printables = "".join(c for c in string.printable if c not in string.whitespace) class ParseBaseException(Exception): """base exception class for all parsing runtime exceptions""" # Performance tuning: we construct a *lot* of these, so keep this # constructor as small and fast as possible def __init__( self, pstr, loc=0, msg=None, elem=None ): self.loc = loc if msg is None: self.msg = pstr self.pstr = "" else: self.msg = msg self.pstr = pstr self.parserElement = elem self.args = (pstr, loc, msg) @classmethod def _from_exception(cls, pe): """ internal factory method to simplify creating one type of ParseException from another - avoids having __init__ signature conflicts among subclasses """ return cls(pe.pstr, pe.loc, pe.msg, pe.parserElement) def __getattr__( self, aname ): """supported attributes by name are: - lineno - returns the line number of the exception text - col - returns the column number of the exception text - line - returns the line containing the exception text """ if( aname == "lineno" ): return lineno( self.loc, self.pstr ) elif( aname in ("col", "column") ): return col( self.loc, self.pstr ) elif( aname == "line" ): return line( self.loc, self.pstr ) else: raise AttributeError(aname) def __str__( self ): return "%s (at char %d), (line:%d, col:%d)" % \ ( self.msg, self.loc, self.lineno, self.column ) def __repr__( self ): return _ustr(self) def markInputline( self, markerString = ">!<" ): """Extracts the exception line from the input string, and marks the location of the exception with a special symbol. """ line_str = self.line line_column = self.column - 1 if markerString: line_str = "".join((line_str[:line_column], markerString, line_str[line_column:])) return line_str.strip() def __dir__(self): return "lineno col line".split() + dir(type(self)) class ParseException(ParseBaseException): """ Exception thrown when parse expressions don't match class; supported attributes by name are: - lineno - returns the line number of the exception text - col - returns the column number of the exception text - line - returns the line containing the exception text Example:: try: Word(nums).setName("integer").parseString("ABC") except ParseException as pe: print(pe) print("column: {}".format(pe.col)) prints:: Expected integer (at char 0), (line:1, col:1) column: 1 """ pass class ParseFatalException(ParseBaseException): """user-throwable exception thrown when inconsistent parse content is found; stops all parsing immediately""" pass class ParseSyntaxException(ParseFatalException): """just like L{ParseFatalException}, but thrown internally when an L{ErrorStop<And._ErrorStop>} ('-' operator) indicates that parsing is to stop immediately because an unbacktrackable syntax error has been found""" pass #~ class ReparseException(ParseBaseException): #~ """Experimental class - parse actions can raise this exception to cause #~ pyparsing to reparse the input string: #~ - with a modified input string, and/or #~ - with a modified start location #~ Set the values of the ReparseException in the constructor, and raise the #~ exception in a parse action to cause pyparsing to use the new string/location. #~ Setting the values as None causes no change to be made. #~ """ #~ def __init_( self, newstring, restartLoc ): #~ self.newParseText = newstring #~ self.reparseLoc = restartLoc class RecursiveGrammarException(Exception): """exception thrown by L{ParserElement.validate} if the grammar could be improperly recursive""" def __init__( self, parseElementList ): self.parseElementTrace = parseElementList def __str__( self ): return "RecursiveGrammarException: %s" % self.parseElementTrace class _ParseResultsWithOffset(object): def __init__(self,p1,p2): self.tup = (p1,p2) def __getitem__(self,i): return self.tup[i] def __repr__(self): return repr(self.tup[0]) def setOffset(self,i): self.tup = (self.tup[0],i) class ParseResults(object): """ Structured parse results, to provide multiple means of access to the parsed data: - as a list (C{len(results)}) - by list index (C{results[0], results[1]}, etc.) - by attribute (C{results.<resultsName>} - see L{ParserElement.setResultsName}) Example:: integer = Word(nums) date_str = (integer.setResultsName("year") + '/' + integer.setResultsName("month") + '/' + integer.setResultsName("day")) # equivalent form: # date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day") # parseString returns a ParseResults object result = date_str.parseString("1999/12/31") def test(s, fn=repr): print("%s -> %s" % (s, fn(eval(s)))) test("list(result)") test("result[0]") test("result['month']") test("result.day") test("'month' in result") test("'minutes' in result") test("result.dump()", str) prints:: list(result) -> ['1999', '/', '12', '/', '31'] result[0] -> '1999' result['month'] -> '12' result.day -> '31' 'month' in result -> True 'minutes' in result -> False result.dump() -> ['1999', '/', '12', '/', '31'] - day: 31 - month: 12 - year: 1999 """ def __new__(cls, toklist=None, name=None, asList=True, modal=True ): if isinstance(toklist, cls): return toklist retobj = object.__new__(cls) retobj.__doinit = True return retobj # Performance tuning: we construct a *lot* of these, so keep this # constructor as small and fast as possible def __init__( self, toklist=None, name=None, asList=True, modal=True, isinstance=isinstance ): if self.__doinit: self.__doinit = False self.__name = None self.__parent = None self.__accumNames = {} self.__asList = asList self.__modal = modal if toklist is None: toklist = [] if isinstance(toklist, list): self.__toklist = toklist[:] elif isinstance(toklist, _generatorType): self.__toklist = list(toklist) else: self.__toklist = [toklist] self.__tokdict = dict() if name is not None and name: if not modal: self.__accumNames[name] = 0 if isinstance(name,int): name = _ustr(name) # will always return a str, but use _ustr for consistency self.__name = name if not (isinstance(toklist, (type(None), basestring, list)) and toklist in (None,'',[])): if isinstance(toklist,basestring): toklist = [ toklist ] if asList: if isinstance(toklist,ParseResults): self[name] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(toklist.copy(),0) else: self[name] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(ParseResults(toklist[0]),0) self[name].__name = name else: try: self[name] = toklist[0] except (KeyError,TypeError,IndexError): self[name] = toklist def __getitem__( self, i ): if isinstance( i, (int,slice) ): return self.__toklist[i] else: if i not in self.__accumNames: return self.__tokdict[i][-1][0] else: return ParseResults([ v[0] for v in self.__tokdict[i] ]) def __setitem__( self, k, v, isinstance=isinstance ): if isinstance(v,_ParseResultsWithOffset): self.__tokdict[k] = self.__tokdict.get(k,list()) + [v] sub = v[0] elif isinstance(k,(int,slice)): self.__toklist[k] = v sub = v else: self.__tokdict[k] = self.__tokdict.get(k,list()) + [_ParseResultsWithOffset(v,0)] sub = v if isinstance(sub,ParseResults): sub.__parent = wkref(self) def __delitem__( self, i ): if isinstance(i,(int,slice)): mylen = len( self.__toklist ) del self.__toklist[i] # convert int to slice if isinstance(i, int): if i < 0: i += mylen i = slice(i, i+1) # get removed indices removed = list(range(*i.indices(mylen))) removed.reverse() # fixup indices in token dictionary for name,occurrences in self.__tokdict.items(): for j in removed: for k, (value, position) in enumerate(occurrences): occurrences[k] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(value, position - (position > j)) else: del self.__tokdict[i] def __contains__( self, k ): return k in self.__tokdict def __len__( self ): return len( self.__toklist ) def __bool__(self): return ( not not self.__toklist ) __nonzero__ = __bool__ def __iter__( self ): return iter( self.__toklist ) def __reversed__( self ): return iter( self.__toklist[::-1] ) def _iterkeys( self ): if hasattr(self.__tokdict, "iterkeys"): return self.__tokdict.iterkeys() else: return iter(self.__tokdict) def _itervalues( self ): return (self[k] for k in self._iterkeys()) def _iteritems( self ): return ((k, self[k]) for k in self._iterkeys()) if PY_3: keys = _iterkeys """Returns an iterator of all named result keys (Python 3.x only).""" values = _itervalues """Returns an iterator of all named result values (Python 3.x only).""" items = _iteritems """Returns an iterator of all named result key-value tuples (Python 3.x only).""" else: iterkeys = _iterkeys """Returns an iterator of all named result keys (Python 2.x only).""" itervalues = _itervalues """Returns an iterator of all named result values (Python 2.x only).""" iteritems = _iteritems """Returns an iterator of all named result key-value tuples (Python 2.x only).""" def keys( self ): """Returns all named result keys (as a list in Python 2.x, as an iterator in Python 3.x).""" return list(self.iterkeys()) def values( self ): """Returns all named result values (as a list in Python 2.x, as an iterator in Python 3.x).""" return list(self.itervalues()) def items( self ): """Returns all named result key-values (as a list of tuples in Python 2.x, as an iterator in Python 3.x).""" return list(self.iteritems()) def haskeys( self ): """Since keys() returns an iterator, this method is helpful in bypassing code that looks for the existence of any defined results names.""" return bool(self.__tokdict) def pop( self, *args, **kwargs): """ Removes and returns item at specified index (default=C{last}). Supports both C{list} and C{dict} semantics for C{pop()}. If passed no argument or an integer argument, it will use C{list} semantics and pop tokens from the list of parsed tokens. If passed a non-integer argument (most likely a string), it will use C{dict} semantics and pop the corresponding value from any defined results names. A second default return value argument is supported, just as in C{dict.pop()}. Example:: def remove_first(tokens): tokens.pop(0) print(OneOrMore(Word(nums)).parseString("0 123 321")) # -> ['0', '123', '321'] print(OneOrMore(Word(nums)).addParseAction(remove_first).parseString("0 123 321")) # -> ['123', '321'] label = Word(alphas) patt = label("LABEL") + OneOrMore(Word(nums)) print(patt.parseString("AAB 123 321").dump()) # Use pop() in a parse action to remove named result (note that corresponding value is not # removed from list form of results) def remove_LABEL(tokens): tokens.pop("LABEL") return tokens patt.addParseAction(remove_LABEL) print(patt.parseString("AAB 123 321").dump()) prints:: ['AAB', '123', '321'] - LABEL: AAB ['AAB', '123', '321'] """ if not args: args = [-1] for k,v in kwargs.items(): if k == 'default': args = (args[0], v) else: raise TypeError("pop() got an unexpected keyword argument '%s'" % k) if (isinstance(args[0], int) or len(args) == 1 or args[0] in self): index = args[0] ret = self[index] del self[index] return ret else: defaultvalue = args[1] return defaultvalue def get(self, key, defaultValue=None): """ Returns named result matching the given key, or if there is no such name, then returns the given C{defaultValue} or C{None} if no C{defaultValue} is specified. Similar to C{dict.get()}. Example:: integer = Word(nums) date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day") result = date_str.parseString("1999/12/31") print(result.get("year")) # -> '1999' print(result.get("hour", "not specified")) # -> 'not specified' print(result.get("hour")) # -> None """ if key in self: return self[key] else: return defaultValue def insert( self, index, insStr ): """ Inserts new element at location index in the list of parsed tokens. Similar to C{list.insert()}. Example:: print(OneOrMore(Word(nums)).parseString("0 123 321")) # -> ['0', '123', '321'] # use a parse action to insert the parse location in the front of the parsed results def insert_locn(locn, tokens): tokens.insert(0, locn) print(OneOrMore(Word(nums)).addParseAction(insert_locn).parseString("0 123 321")) # -> [0, '0', '123', '321'] """ self.__toklist.insert(index, insStr) # fixup indices in token dictionary for name,occurrences in self.__tokdict.items(): for k, (value, position) in enumerate(occurrences): occurrences[k] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(value, position + (position > index)) def append( self, item ): """ Add single element to end of ParseResults list of elements. Example:: print(OneOrMore(Word(nums)).parseString("0 123 321")) # -> ['0', '123', '321'] # use a parse action to compute the sum of the parsed integers, and add it to the end def append_sum(tokens): tokens.append(sum(map(int, tokens))) print(OneOrMore(Word(nums)).addParseAction(append_sum).parseString("0 123 321")) # -> ['0', '123', '321', 444] """ self.__toklist.append(item) def extend( self, itemseq ): """ Add sequence of elements to end of ParseResults list of elements. Example:: patt = OneOrMore(Word(alphas)) # use a parse action to append the reverse of the matched strings, to make a palindrome def make_palindrome(tokens): tokens.extend(reversed([t[::-1] for t in tokens])) return ''.join(tokens) print(patt.addParseAction(make_palindrome).parseString("lskdj sdlkjf lksd")) # -> 'lskdjsdlkjflksddsklfjkldsjdksl' """ if isinstance(itemseq, ParseResults): self += itemseq else: self.__toklist.extend(itemseq) def clear( self ): """ Clear all elements and results names. """ del self.__toklist[:] self.__tokdict.clear() def __getattr__( self, name ): try: return self[name] except KeyError: return "" if name in self.__tokdict: if name not in self.__accumNames: return self.__tokdict[name][-1][0] else: return ParseResults([ v[0] for v in self.__tokdict[name] ]) else: return "" def __add__( self, other ): ret = self.copy() ret += other return ret def __iadd__( self, other ): if other.__tokdict: offset = len(self.__toklist) addoffset = lambda a: offset if a<0 else a+offset otheritems = other.__tokdict.items() otherdictitems = [(k, _ParseResultsWithOffset(v[0],addoffset(v[1])) ) for (k,vlist) in otheritems for v in vlist] for k,v in otherdictitems: self[k] = v if isinstance(v[0],ParseResults): v[0].__parent = wkref(self) self.__toklist += other.__toklist self.__accumNames.update( other.__accumNames ) return self def __radd__(self, other): if isinstance(other,int) and other == 0: # useful for merging many ParseResults using sum() builtin return self.copy() else: # this may raise a TypeError - so be it return other + self def __repr__( self ): return "(%s, %s)" % ( repr( self.__toklist ), repr( self.__tokdict ) ) def __str__( self ): return '[' + ', '.join(_ustr(i) if isinstance(i, ParseResults) else repr(i) for i in self.__toklist) + ']' def _asStringList( self, sep='' ): out = [] for item in self.__toklist: if out and sep: out.append(sep) if isinstance( item, ParseResults ): out += item._asStringList() else: out.append( _ustr(item) ) return out def asList( self ): """ Returns the parse results as a nested list of matching tokens, all converted to strings. Example:: patt = OneOrMore(Word(alphas)) result = patt.parseString("sldkj lsdkj sldkj") # even though the result prints in string-like form, it is actually a pyparsing ParseResults print(type(result), result) # -> <class 'pyparsing.ParseResults'> ['sldkj', 'lsdkj', 'sldkj'] # Use asList() to create an actual list result_list = result.asList() print(type(result_list), result_list) # -> <class 'list'> ['sldkj', 'lsdkj', 'sldkj'] """ return [res.asList() if isinstance(res,ParseResults) else res for res in self.__toklist] def asDict( self ): """ Returns the named parse results as a nested dictionary. Example:: integer = Word(nums) date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day") result = date_str.parseString('12/31/1999') print(type(result), repr(result)) # -> <class 'pyparsing.ParseResults'> (['12', '/', '31', '/', '1999'], {'day': [('1999', 4)], 'year': [('12', 0)], 'month': [('31', 2)]}) result_dict = result.asDict() print(type(result_dict), repr(result_dict)) # -> <class 'dict'> {'day': '1999', 'year': '12', 'month': '31'} # even though a ParseResults supports dict-like access, sometime you just need to have a dict import json print(json.dumps(result)) # -> Exception: TypeError: ... is not JSON serializable print(json.dumps(result.asDict())) # -> {"month": "31", "day": "1999", "year": "12"} """ if PY_3: item_fn = self.items else: item_fn = self.iteritems def toItem(obj): if isinstance(obj, ParseResults): if obj.haskeys(): return obj.asDict() else: return [toItem(v) for v in obj] else: return obj return dict((k,toItem(v)) for k,v in item_fn()) def copy( self ): """ Returns a new copy of a C{ParseResults} object. """ ret = ParseResults( self.__toklist ) ret.__tokdict = self.__tokdict.copy() ret.__parent = self.__parent ret.__accumNames.update( self.__accumNames ) ret.__name = self.__name return ret def asXML( self, doctag=None, namedItemsOnly=False, indent="", formatted=True ): """ (Deprecated) Returns the parse results as XML. Tags are created for tokens and lists that have defined results names. """ nl = "\n" out = [] namedItems = dict((v[1],k) for (k,vlist) in self.__tokdict.items() for v in vlist) nextLevelIndent = indent + " " # collapse out indents if formatting is not desired if not formatted: indent = "" nextLevelIndent = "" nl = "" selfTag = None if doctag is not None: selfTag = doctag else: if self.__name: selfTag = self.__name if not selfTag: if namedItemsOnly: return "" else: selfTag = "ITEM" out += [ nl, indent, "<", selfTag, ">" ] for i,res in enumerate(self.__toklist): if isinstance(res,ParseResults): if i in namedItems: out += [ res.asXML(namedItems[i], namedItemsOnly and doctag is None, nextLevelIndent, formatted)] else: out += [ res.asXML(None, namedItemsOnly and doctag is None, nextLevelIndent, formatted)] else: # individual token, see if there is a name for it resTag = None if i in namedItems: resTag = namedItems[i] if not resTag: if namedItemsOnly: continue else: resTag = "ITEM" xmlBodyText = _xml_escape(_ustr(res)) out += [ nl, nextLevelIndent, "<", resTag, ">", xmlBodyText, "</", resTag, ">" ] out += [ nl, indent, "</", selfTag, ">" ] return "".join(out) def __lookup(self,sub): for k,vlist in self.__tokdict.items(): for v,loc in vlist: if sub is v: return k return None def getName(self): r""" Returns the results name for this token expression. Useful when several different expressions might match at a particular location. Example:: integer = Word(nums) ssn_expr = Regex(r"\d\d\d-\d\d-\d\d\d\d") house_number_expr = Suppress('#') + Word(nums, alphanums) user_data = (Group(house_number_expr)("house_number") | Group(ssn_expr)("ssn") | Group(integer)("age")) user_info = OneOrMore(user_data) result = user_info.parseString("22 111-22-3333 #221B") for item in result: print(item.getName(), ':', item[0]) prints:: age : 22 ssn : 111-22-3333 house_number : 221B """ if self.__name: return self.__name elif self.__parent: par = self.__parent() if par: return par.__lookup(self) else: return None elif (len(self) == 1 and len(self.__tokdict) == 1 and next(iter(self.__tokdict.values()))[0][1] in (0,-1)): return next(iter(self.__tokdict.keys())) else: return None def dump(self, indent='', depth=0, full=True): """ Diagnostic method for listing out the contents of a C{ParseResults}. Accepts an optional C{indent} argument so that this string can be embedded in a nested display of other data. Example:: integer = Word(nums) date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day") result = date_str.parseString('12/31/1999') print(result.dump()) prints:: ['12', '/', '31', '/', '1999'] - day: 1999 - month: 31 - year: 12 """ out = [] NL = '\n' out.append( indent+_ustr(self.asList()) ) if full: if self.haskeys(): items = sorted((str(k), v) for k,v in self.items()) for k,v in items: if out: out.append(NL) out.append( "%s%s- %s: " % (indent,(' '*depth), k) ) if isinstance(v,ParseResults): if v: out.append( v.dump(indent,depth+1) ) else: out.append(_ustr(v)) else: out.append(repr(v)) elif any(isinstance(vv,ParseResults) for vv in self): v = self for i,vv in enumerate(v): if isinstance(vv,ParseResults): out.append("\n%s%s[%d]:\n%s%s%s" % (indent,(' '*(depth)),i,indent,(' '*(depth+1)),vv.dump(indent,depth+1) )) else: out.append("\n%s%s[%d]:\n%s%s%s" % (indent,(' '*(depth)),i,indent,(' '*(depth+1)),_ustr(vv))) return "".join(out) def pprint(self, *args, **kwargs): """ Pretty-printer for parsed results as a list, using the C{pprint} module. Accepts additional positional or keyword args as defined for the C{pprint.pprint} method. (U{http://docs.python.org/3/library/pprint.html#pprint.pprint}) Example:: ident = Word(alphas, alphanums) num = Word(nums) func = Forward() term = ident | num | Group('(' + func + ')') func <<= ident + Group(Optional(delimitedList(term))) result = func.parseString("fna a,b,(fnb c,d,200),100") result.pprint(width=40) prints:: ['fna', ['a', 'b', ['(', 'fnb', ['c', 'd', '200'], ')'], '100']] """ pprint.pprint(self.asList(), *args, **kwargs) # add support for pickle protocol def __getstate__(self): return ( self.__toklist, ( self.__tokdict.copy(), self.__parent is not None and self.__parent() or None, self.__accumNames, self.__name ) ) def __setstate__(self,state): self.__toklist = state[0] (self.__tokdict, par, inAccumNames, self.__name) = state[1] self.__accumNames = {} self.__accumNames.update(inAccumNames) if par is not None: self.__parent = wkref(par) else: self.__parent = None def __getnewargs__(self): return self.__toklist, self.__name, self.__asList, self.__modal def __dir__(self): return (dir(type(self)) + list(self.keys())) MutableMapping.register(ParseResults) def col (loc,strg): """Returns current column within a string, counting newlines as line separators. The first column is number 1. Note: the default parsing behavior is to expand tabs in the input string before starting the parsing process. See L{I{ParserElement.parseString}<ParserElement.parseString>} for more information on parsing strings containing C{<TAB>}s, and suggested methods to maintain a consistent view of the parsed string, the parse location, and line and column positions within the parsed string. """ s = strg return 1 if 0<loc<len(s) and s[loc-1] == '\n' else loc - s.rfind("\n", 0, loc) def lineno(loc,strg): """Returns current line number within a string, counting newlines as line separators. The first line is number 1. Note: the default parsing behavior is to expand tabs in the input string before starting the parsing process. See L{I{ParserElement.parseString}<ParserElement.parseString>} for more information on parsing strings containing C{<TAB>}s, and suggested methods to maintain a consistent view of the parsed string, the parse location, and line and column positions within the parsed string. """ return strg.count("\n",0,loc) + 1 def line( loc, strg ): """Returns the line of text containing loc within a string, counting newlines as line separators. """ lastCR = strg.rfind("\n", 0, loc) nextCR = strg.find("\n", loc) if nextCR >= 0: return strg[lastCR+1:nextCR] else: return strg[lastCR+1:] def _defaultStartDebugAction( instring, loc, expr ): print (("Match " + _ustr(expr) + " at loc " + _ustr(loc) + "(%d,%d)" % ( lineno(loc,instring), col(loc,instring) ))) def _defaultSuccessDebugAction( instring, startloc, endloc, expr, toks ): print ("Matched " + _ustr(expr) + " -> " + str(toks.asList())) def _defaultExceptionDebugAction( instring, loc, expr, exc ): print ("Exception raised:" + _ustr(exc)) def nullDebugAction(*args): """'Do-nothing' debug action, to suppress debugging output during parsing.""" pass # Only works on Python 3.x - nonlocal is toxic to Python 2 installs #~ 'decorator to trim function calls to match the arity of the target' #~ def _trim_arity(func, maxargs=3): #~ if func in singleArgBuiltins: #~ return lambda s,l,t: func(t) #~ limit = 0 #~ foundArity = False #~ def wrapper(*args): #~ nonlocal limit,foundArity #~ while 1: #~ try: #~ ret = func(*args[limit:]) #~ foundArity = True #~ return ret #~ except TypeError: #~ if limit == maxargs or foundArity: #~ raise #~ limit += 1 #~ continue #~ return wrapper # this version is Python 2.x-3.x cross-compatible 'decorator to trim function calls to match the arity of the target' def _trim_arity(func, maxargs=2): if func in singleArgBuiltins: return lambda s,l,t: func(t) limit = [0] foundArity = [False] # traceback return data structure changed in Py3.5 - normalize back to plain tuples if system_version[:2] >= (3,5): def extract_stack(limit=0): # special handling for Python 3.5.0 - extra deep call stack by 1 offset = -3 if system_version == (3,5,0) else -2 frame_summary = traceback.extract_stack(limit=-offset+limit-1)[offset] return [frame_summary[:2]] def extract_tb(tb, limit=0): frames = traceback.extract_tb(tb, limit=limit) frame_summary = frames[-1] return [frame_summary[:2]] else: extract_stack = traceback.extract_stack extract_tb = traceback.extract_tb # synthesize what would be returned by traceback.extract_stack at the call to # user's parse action 'func', so that we don't incur call penalty at parse time LINE_DIFF = 6 # IF ANY CODE CHANGES, EVEN JUST COMMENTS OR BLANK LINES, BETWEEN THE NEXT LINE AND # THE CALL TO FUNC INSIDE WRAPPER, LINE_DIFF MUST BE MODIFIED!!!! this_line = extract_stack(limit=2)[-1] pa_call_line_synth = (this_line[0], this_line[1]+LINE_DIFF) def wrapper(*args): while 1: try: ret = func(*args[limit[0]:]) foundArity[0] = True return ret except TypeError: # re-raise TypeErrors if they did not come from our arity testing if foundArity[0]: raise else: try: tb = sys.exc_info()[-1] if not extract_tb(tb, limit=2)[-1][:2] == pa_call_line_synth: raise finally: del tb if limit[0] <= maxargs: limit[0] += 1 continue raise # copy func name to wrapper for sensible debug output func_name = "<parse action>" try: func_name = getattr(func, '__name__', getattr(func, '__class__').__name__) except Exception: func_name = str(func) wrapper.__name__ = func_name return wrapper class ParserElement(object): """Abstract base level parser element class.""" DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS = " \n\t\r" verbose_stacktrace = False @staticmethod def setDefaultWhitespaceChars( chars ): r""" Overrides the default whitespace chars Example:: # default whitespace chars are space, <TAB> and newline OneOrMore(Word(alphas)).parseString("abc def\nghi jkl") # -> ['abc', 'def', 'ghi', 'jkl'] # change to just treat newline as significant ParserElement.setDefaultWhitespaceChars(" \t") OneOrMore(Word(alphas)).parseString("abc def\nghi jkl") # -> ['abc', 'def'] """ ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS = chars @staticmethod def inlineLiteralsUsing(cls): """ Set class to be used for inclusion of string literals into a parser. Example:: # default literal class used is Literal integer = Word(nums) date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day") date_str.parseString("1999/12/31") # -> ['1999', '/', '12', '/', '31'] # change to Suppress ParserElement.inlineLiteralsUsing(Suppress) date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day") date_str.parseString("1999/12/31") # -> ['1999', '12', '31'] """ ParserElement._literalStringClass = cls def __init__( self, savelist=False ): self.parseAction = list() self.failAction = None #~ self.name = "<unknown>" # don't define self.name, let subclasses try/except upcall self.strRepr = None self.resultsName = None self.saveAsList = savelist self.skipWhitespace = True self.whiteChars = ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS self.copyDefaultWhiteChars = True self.mayReturnEmpty = False # used when checking for left-recursion self.keepTabs = False self.ignoreExprs = list() self.debug = False self.streamlined = False self.mayIndexError = True # used to optimize exception handling for subclasses that don't advance parse index self.errmsg = "" self.modalResults = True # used to mark results names as modal (report only last) or cumulative (list all) self.debugActions = ( None, None, None ) #custom debug actions self.re = None self.callPreparse = True # used to avoid redundant calls to preParse self.callDuringTry = False def copy( self ): """ Make a copy of this C{ParserElement}. Useful for defining different parse actions for the same parsing pattern, using copies of the original parse element. Example:: integer = Word(nums).setParseAction(lambda toks: int(toks[0])) integerK = integer.copy().addParseAction(lambda toks: toks[0]*1024) + Suppress("K") integerM = integer.copy().addParseAction(lambda toks: toks[0]*1024*1024) + Suppress("M") print(OneOrMore(integerK | integerM | integer).parseString("5K 100 640K 256M")) prints:: [5120, 100, 655360, 268435456] Equivalent form of C{expr.copy()} is just C{expr()}:: integerM = integer().addParseAction(lambda toks: toks[0]*1024*1024) + Suppress("M") """ cpy = copy.copy( self ) cpy.parseAction = self.parseAction[:] cpy.ignoreExprs = self.ignoreExprs[:] if self.copyDefaultWhiteChars: cpy.whiteChars = ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS return cpy def setName( self, name ): """ Define name for this expression, makes debugging and exception messages clearer. Example:: Word(nums).parseString("ABC") # -> Exception: Expected W:(0123...) (at char 0), (line:1, col:1) Word(nums).setName("integer").parseString("ABC") # -> Exception: Expected integer (at char 0), (line:1, col:1) """ self.name = name self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name if hasattr(self,"exception"): self.exception.msg = self.errmsg return self def setResultsName( self, name, listAllMatches=False ): """ Define name for referencing matching tokens as a nested attribute of the returned parse results. NOTE: this returns a *copy* of the original C{ParserElement} object; this is so that the client can define a basic element, such as an integer, and reference it in multiple places with different names. You can also set results names using the abbreviated syntax, C{expr("name")} in place of C{expr.setResultsName("name")} - see L{I{__call__}<__call__>}. Example:: date_str = (integer.setResultsName("year") + '/' + integer.setResultsName("month") + '/' + integer.setResultsName("day")) # equivalent form: date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day") """ newself = self.copy() if name.endswith("*"): name = name[:-1] listAllMatches=True newself.resultsName = name newself.modalResults = not listAllMatches return newself def setBreak(self,breakFlag = True): """Method to invoke the Python pdb debugger when this element is about to be parsed. Set C{breakFlag} to True to enable, False to disable. """ if breakFlag: _parseMethod = self._parse def breaker(instring, loc, doActions=True, callPreParse=True): import pdb pdb.set_trace() return _parseMethod( instring, loc, doActions, callPreParse ) breaker._originalParseMethod = _parseMethod self._parse = breaker else: if hasattr(self._parse,"_originalParseMethod"): self._parse = self._parse._originalParseMethod return self def setParseAction( self, *fns, **kwargs ): """ Define one or more actions to perform when successfully matching parse element definition. Parse action fn is a callable method with 0-3 arguments, called as C{fn(s,loc,toks)}, C{fn(loc,toks)}, C{fn(toks)}, or just C{fn()}, where: - s = the original string being parsed (see note below) - loc = the location of the matching substring - toks = a list of the matched tokens, packaged as a C{L{ParseResults}} object If the functions in fns modify the tokens, they can return them as the return value from fn, and the modified list of tokens will replace the original. Otherwise, fn does not need to return any value. Optional keyword arguments: - callDuringTry = (default=C{False}) indicate if parse action should be run during lookaheads and alternate testing Note: the default parsing behavior is to expand tabs in the input string before starting the parsing process. See L{I{parseString}<parseString>} for more information on parsing strings containing C{<TAB>}s, and suggested methods to maintain a consistent view of the parsed string, the parse location, and line and column positions within the parsed string. Example:: integer = Word(nums) date_str = integer + '/' + integer + '/' + integer date_str.parseString("1999/12/31") # -> ['1999', '/', '12', '/', '31'] # use parse action to convert to ints at parse time integer = Word(nums).setParseAction(lambda toks: int(toks[0])) date_str = integer + '/' + integer + '/' + integer # note that integer fields are now ints, not strings date_str.parseString("1999/12/31") # -> [1999, '/', 12, '/', 31] """ self.parseAction = list(map(_trim_arity, list(fns))) self.callDuringTry = kwargs.get("callDuringTry", False) return self def addParseAction( self, *fns, **kwargs ): """ Add one or more parse actions to expression's list of parse actions. See L{I{setParseAction}<setParseAction>}. See examples in L{I{copy}<copy>}. """ self.parseAction += list(map(_trim_arity, list(fns))) self.callDuringTry = self.callDuringTry or kwargs.get("callDuringTry", False) return self def addCondition(self, *fns, **kwargs): """Add a boolean predicate function to expression's list of parse actions. See L{I{setParseAction}<setParseAction>} for function call signatures. Unlike C{setParseAction}, functions passed to C{addCondition} need to return boolean success/fail of the condition. Optional keyword arguments: - message = define a custom message to be used in the raised exception - fatal = if True, will raise ParseFatalException to stop parsing immediately; otherwise will raise ParseException Example:: integer = Word(nums).setParseAction(lambda toks: int(toks[0])) year_int = integer.copy() year_int.addCondition(lambda toks: toks[0] >= 2000, message="Only support years 2000 and later") date_str = year_int + '/' + integer + '/' + integer result = date_str.parseString("1999/12/31") # -> Exception: Only support years 2000 and later (at char 0), (line:1, col:1) """ msg = kwargs.get("message", "failed user-defined condition") exc_type = ParseFatalException if kwargs.get("fatal", False) else ParseException for fn in fns: def pa(s,l,t): if not bool(_trim_arity(fn)(s,l,t)): raise exc_type(s,l,msg) self.parseAction.append(pa) self.callDuringTry = self.callDuringTry or kwargs.get("callDuringTry", False) return self def setFailAction( self, fn ): """Define action to perform if parsing fails at this expression. Fail acton fn is a callable function that takes the arguments C{fn(s,loc,expr,err)} where: - s = string being parsed - loc = location where expression match was attempted and failed - expr = the parse expression that failed - err = the exception thrown The function returns no value. It may throw C{L{ParseFatalException}} if it is desired to stop parsing immediately.""" self.failAction = fn return self def _skipIgnorables( self, instring, loc ): exprsFound = True while exprsFound: exprsFound = False for e in self.ignoreExprs: try: while 1: loc,dummy = e._parse( instring, loc ) exprsFound = True except ParseException: pass return loc def preParse( self, instring, loc ): if self.ignoreExprs: loc = self._skipIgnorables( instring, loc ) if self.skipWhitespace: wt = self.whiteChars instrlen = len(instring) while loc < instrlen and instring[loc] in wt: loc += 1 return loc def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): return loc, [] def postParse( self, instring, loc, tokenlist ): return tokenlist #~ @profile def _parseNoCache( self, instring, loc, doActions=True, callPreParse=True ): debugging = ( self.debug ) #and doActions ) if debugging or self.failAction: #~ print ("Match",self,"at loc",loc,"(%d,%d)" % ( lineno(loc,instring), col(loc,instring) )) if (self.debugActions[0] ): self.debugActions[0]( instring, loc, self ) if callPreParse and self.callPreparse: preloc = self.preParse( instring, loc ) else: preloc = loc tokensStart = preloc try: try: loc,tokens = self.parseImpl( instring, preloc, doActions ) except IndexError: raise ParseException( instring, len(instring), self.errmsg, self ) except ParseBaseException as err: #~ print ("Exception raised:", err) if self.debugActions[2]: self.debugActions[2]( instring, tokensStart, self, err ) if self.failAction: self.failAction( instring, tokensStart, self, err ) raise else: if callPreParse and self.callPreparse: preloc = self.preParse( instring, loc ) else: preloc = loc tokensStart = preloc if self.mayIndexError or preloc >= len(instring): try: loc,tokens = self.parseImpl( instring, preloc, doActions ) except IndexError: raise ParseException( instring, len(instring), self.errmsg, self ) else: loc,tokens = self.parseImpl( instring, preloc, doActions ) tokens = self.postParse( instring, loc, tokens ) retTokens = ParseResults( tokens, self.resultsName, asList=self.saveAsList, modal=self.modalResults ) if self.parseAction and (doActions or self.callDuringTry): if debugging: try: for fn in self.parseAction: tokens = fn( instring, tokensStart, retTokens ) if tokens is not None: retTokens = ParseResults( tokens, self.resultsName, asList=self.saveAsList and isinstance(tokens,(ParseResults,list)), modal=self.modalResults ) except ParseBaseException as err: #~ print "Exception raised in user parse action:", err if (self.debugActions[2] ): self.debugActions[2]( instring, tokensStart, self, err ) raise else: for fn in self.parseAction: tokens = fn( instring, tokensStart, retTokens ) if tokens is not None: retTokens = ParseResults( tokens, self.resultsName, asList=self.saveAsList and isinstance(tokens,(ParseResults,list)), modal=self.modalResults ) if debugging: #~ print ("Matched",self,"->",retTokens.asList()) if (self.debugActions[1] ): self.debugActions[1]( instring, tokensStart, loc, self, retTokens ) return loc, retTokens def tryParse( self, instring, loc ): try: return self._parse( instring, loc, doActions=False )[0] except ParseFatalException: raise ParseException( instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) def canParseNext(self, instring, loc): try: self.tryParse(instring, loc) except (ParseException, IndexError): return False else: return True class _UnboundedCache(object): def __init__(self): cache = {} self.not_in_cache = not_in_cache = object() def get(self, key): return cache.get(key, not_in_cache) def set(self, key, value): cache[key] = value def clear(self): cache.clear() def cache_len(self): return len(cache) self.get = types.MethodType(get, self) self.set = types.MethodType(set, self) self.clear = types.MethodType(clear, self) self.__len__ = types.MethodType(cache_len, self) if _OrderedDict is not None: class _FifoCache(object): def __init__(self, size): self.not_in_cache = not_in_cache = object() cache = _OrderedDict() def get(self, key): return cache.get(key, not_in_cache) def set(self, key, value): cache[key] = value while len(cache) > size: try: cache.popitem(False) except KeyError: pass def clear(self): cache.clear() def cache_len(self): return len(cache) self.get = types.MethodType(get, self) self.set = types.MethodType(set, self) self.clear = types.MethodType(clear, self) self.__len__ = types.MethodType(cache_len, self) else: class _FifoCache(object): def __init__(self, size): self.not_in_cache = not_in_cache = object() cache = {} key_fifo = collections.deque([], size) def get(self, key): return cache.get(key, not_in_cache) def set(self, key, value): cache[key] = value while len(key_fifo) > size: cache.pop(key_fifo.popleft(), None) key_fifo.append(key) def clear(self): cache.clear() key_fifo.clear() def cache_len(self): return len(cache) self.get = types.MethodType(get, self) self.set = types.MethodType(set, self) self.clear = types.MethodType(clear, self) self.__len__ = types.MethodType(cache_len, self) # argument cache for optimizing repeated calls when backtracking through recursive expressions packrat_cache = {} # this is set later by enabledPackrat(); this is here so that resetCache() doesn't fail packrat_cache_lock = RLock() packrat_cache_stats = [0, 0] # this method gets repeatedly called during backtracking with the same arguments - # we can cache these arguments and save ourselves the trouble of re-parsing the contained expression def _parseCache( self, instring, loc, doActions=True, callPreParse=True ): HIT, MISS = 0, 1 lookup = (self, instring, loc, callPreParse, doActions) with ParserElement.packrat_cache_lock: cache = ParserElement.packrat_cache value = cache.get(lookup) if value is cache.not_in_cache: ParserElement.packrat_cache_stats[MISS] += 1 try: value = self._parseNoCache(instring, loc, doActions, callPreParse) except ParseBaseException as pe: # cache a copy of the exception, without the traceback cache.set(lookup, pe.__class__(*pe.args)) raise else: cache.set(lookup, (value[0], value[1].copy())) return value else: ParserElement.packrat_cache_stats[HIT] += 1 if isinstance(value, Exception): raise value return (value[0], value[1].copy()) _parse = _parseNoCache @staticmethod def resetCache(): ParserElement.packrat_cache.clear() ParserElement.packrat_cache_stats[:] = [0] * len(ParserElement.packrat_cache_stats) _packratEnabled = False @staticmethod def enablePackrat(cache_size_limit=128): """Enables "packrat" parsing, which adds memoizing to the parsing logic. Repeated parse attempts at the same string location (which happens often in many complex grammars) can immediately return a cached value, instead of re-executing parsing/validating code. Memoizing is done of both valid results and parsing exceptions. Parameters: - cache_size_limit - (default=C{128}) - if an integer value is provided will limit the size of the packrat cache; if None is passed, then the cache size will be unbounded; if 0 is passed, the cache will be effectively disabled. This speedup may break existing programs that use parse actions that have side-effects. For this reason, packrat parsing is disabled when you first import pyparsing. To activate the packrat feature, your program must call the class method C{ParserElement.enablePackrat()}. If your program uses C{psyco} to "compile as you go", you must call C{enablePackrat} before calling C{psyco.full()}. If you do not do this, Python will crash. For best results, call C{enablePackrat()} immediately after importing pyparsing. Example:: import pyparsing pyparsing.ParserElement.enablePackrat() """ if not ParserElement._packratEnabled: ParserElement._packratEnabled = True if cache_size_limit is None: ParserElement.packrat_cache = ParserElement._UnboundedCache() else: ParserElement.packrat_cache = ParserElement._FifoCache(cache_size_limit) ParserElement._parse = ParserElement._parseCache def parseString( self, instring, parseAll=False ): """ Execute the parse expression with the given string. This is the main interface to the client code, once the complete expression has been built. If you want the grammar to require that the entire input string be successfully parsed, then set C{parseAll} to True (equivalent to ending the grammar with C{L{StringEnd()}}). Note: C{parseString} implicitly calls C{expandtabs()} on the input string, in order to report proper column numbers in parse actions. If the input string contains tabs and the grammar uses parse actions that use the C{loc} argument to index into the string being parsed, you can ensure you have a consistent view of the input string by: - calling C{parseWithTabs} on your grammar before calling C{parseString} (see L{I{parseWithTabs}<parseWithTabs>}) - define your parse action using the full C{(s,loc,toks)} signature, and reference the input string using the parse action's C{s} argument - explictly expand the tabs in your input string before calling C{parseString} Example:: Word('a').parseString('aaaaabaaa') # -> ['aaaaa'] Word('a').parseString('aaaaabaaa', parseAll=True) # -> Exception: Expected end of text """ ParserElement.resetCache() if not self.streamlined: self.streamline() #~ self.saveAsList = True for e in self.ignoreExprs: e.streamline() if not self.keepTabs: instring = instring.expandtabs() try: loc, tokens = self._parse( instring, 0 ) if parseAll: loc = self.preParse( instring, loc ) se = Empty() + StringEnd() se._parse( instring, loc ) except ParseBaseException as exc: if ParserElement.verbose_stacktrace: raise else: # catch and re-raise exception from here, clears out pyparsing internal stack trace raise exc else: return tokens def scanString( self, instring, maxMatches=_MAX_INT, overlap=False ): """ Scan the input string for expression matches. Each match will return the matching tokens, start location, and end location. May be called with optional C{maxMatches} argument, to clip scanning after 'n' matches are found. If C{overlap} is specified, then overlapping matches will be reported. Note that the start and end locations are reported relative to the string being parsed. See L{I{parseString}<parseString>} for more information on parsing strings with embedded tabs. Example:: source = "sldjf123lsdjjkf345sldkjf879lkjsfd987" print(source) for tokens,start,end in Word(alphas).scanString(source): print(' '*start + '^'*(end-start)) print(' '*start + tokens[0]) prints:: sldjf123lsdjjkf345sldkjf879lkjsfd987 ^^^^^ sldjf ^^^^^^^ lsdjjkf ^^^^^^ sldkjf ^^^^^^ lkjsfd """ if not self.streamlined: self.streamline() for e in self.ignoreExprs: e.streamline() if not self.keepTabs: instring = _ustr(instring).expandtabs() instrlen = len(instring) loc = 0 preparseFn = self.preParse parseFn = self._parse ParserElement.resetCache() matches = 0 try: while loc <= instrlen and matches < maxMatches: try: preloc = preparseFn( instring, loc ) nextLoc,tokens = parseFn( instring, preloc, callPreParse=False ) except ParseException: loc = preloc+1 else: if nextLoc > loc: matches += 1 yield tokens, preloc, nextLoc if overlap: nextloc = preparseFn( instring, loc ) if nextloc > loc: loc = nextLoc else: loc += 1 else: loc = nextLoc else: loc = preloc+1 except ParseBaseException as exc: if ParserElement.verbose_stacktrace: raise else: # catch and re-raise exception from here, clears out pyparsing internal stack trace raise exc def transformString( self, instring ): """ Extension to C{L{scanString}}, to modify matching text with modified tokens that may be returned from a parse action. To use C{transformString}, define a grammar and attach a parse action to it that modifies the returned token list. Invoking C{transformString()} on a target string will then scan for matches, and replace the matched text patterns according to the logic in the parse action. C{transformString()} returns the resulting transformed string. Example:: wd = Word(alphas) wd.setParseAction(lambda toks: toks[0].title()) print(wd.transformString("now is the winter of our discontent made glorious summer by this sun of york.")) Prints:: Now Is The Winter Of Our Discontent Made Glorious Summer By This Sun Of York. """ out = [] lastE = 0 # force preservation of <TAB>s, to minimize unwanted transformation of string, and to # keep string locs straight between transformString and scanString self.keepTabs = True try: for t,s,e in self.scanString( instring ): out.append( instring[lastE:s] ) if t: if isinstance(t,ParseResults): out += t.asList() elif isinstance(t,list): out += t else: out.append(t) lastE = e out.append(instring[lastE:]) out = [o for o in out if o] return "".join(map(_ustr,_flatten(out))) except ParseBaseException as exc: if ParserElement.verbose_stacktrace: raise else: # catch and re-raise exception from here, clears out pyparsing internal stack trace raise exc def searchString( self, instring, maxMatches=_MAX_INT ): """ Another extension to C{L{scanString}}, simplifying the access to the tokens found to match the given parse expression. May be called with optional C{maxMatches} argument, to clip searching after 'n' matches are found. Example:: # a capitalized word starts with an uppercase letter, followed by zero or more lowercase letters cap_word = Word(alphas.upper(), alphas.lower()) print(cap_word.searchString("More than Iron, more than Lead, more than Gold I need Electricity")) # the sum() builtin can be used to merge results into a single ParseResults object print(sum(cap_word.searchString("More than Iron, more than Lead, more than Gold I need Electricity"))) prints:: [['More'], ['Iron'], ['Lead'], ['Gold'], ['I'], ['Electricity']] ['More', 'Iron', 'Lead', 'Gold', 'I', 'Electricity'] """ try: return ParseResults([ t for t,s,e in self.scanString( instring, maxMatches ) ]) except ParseBaseException as exc: if ParserElement.verbose_stacktrace: raise else: # catch and re-raise exception from here, clears out pyparsing internal stack trace raise exc def split(self, instring, maxsplit=_MAX_INT, includeSeparators=False): """ Generator method to split a string using the given expression as a separator. May be called with optional C{maxsplit} argument, to limit the number of splits; and the optional C{includeSeparators} argument (default=C{False}), if the separating matching text should be included in the split results. Example:: punc = oneOf(list(".,;:/-!?")) print(list(punc.split("This, this?, this sentence, is badly punctuated!"))) prints:: ['This', ' this', '', ' this sentence', ' is badly punctuated', ''] """ splits = 0 last = 0 for t,s,e in self.scanString(instring, maxMatches=maxsplit): yield instring[last:s] if includeSeparators: yield t[0] last = e yield instring[last:] def __add__(self, other ): """ Implementation of + operator - returns C{L{And}}. Adding strings to a ParserElement converts them to L{Literal}s by default. Example:: greet = Word(alphas) + "," + Word(alphas) + "!" hello = "Hello, World!" print (hello, "->", greet.parseString(hello)) Prints:: Hello, World! -> ['Hello', ',', 'World', '!'] """ if isinstance( other, basestring ): other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other ) if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ): warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other), SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2) return None return And( [ self, other ] ) def __radd__(self, other ): """ Implementation of + operator when left operand is not a C{L{ParserElement}} """ if isinstance( other, basestring ): other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other ) if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ): warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other), SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2) return None return other + self def __sub__(self, other): """ Implementation of - operator, returns C{L{And}} with error stop """ if isinstance( other, basestring ): other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other ) if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ): warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other), SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2) return None return self + And._ErrorStop() + other def __rsub__(self, other ): """ Implementation of - operator when left operand is not a C{L{ParserElement}} """ if isinstance( other, basestring ): other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other ) if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ): warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other), SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2) return None return other - self def __mul__(self,other): """ Implementation of * operator, allows use of C{expr * 3} in place of C{expr + expr + expr}. Expressions may also me multiplied by a 2-integer tuple, similar to C{{min,max}} multipliers in regular expressions. Tuples may also include C{None} as in: - C{expr*(n,None)} or C{expr*(n,)} is equivalent to C{expr*n + L{ZeroOrMore}(expr)} (read as "at least n instances of C{expr}") - C{expr*(None,n)} is equivalent to C{expr*(0,n)} (read as "0 to n instances of C{expr}") - C{expr*(None,None)} is equivalent to C{L{ZeroOrMore}(expr)} - C{expr*(1,None)} is equivalent to C{L{OneOrMore}(expr)} Note that C{expr*(None,n)} does not raise an exception if more than n exprs exist in the input stream; that is, C{expr*(None,n)} does not enforce a maximum number of expr occurrences. If this behavior is desired, then write C{expr*(None,n) + ~expr} """ if isinstance(other,int): minElements, optElements = other,0 elif isinstance(other,tuple): other = (other + (None, None))[:2] if other[0] is None: other = (0, other[1]) if isinstance(other[0],int) and other[1] is None: if other[0] == 0: return ZeroOrMore(self) if other[0] == 1: return OneOrMore(self) else: return self*other[0] + ZeroOrMore(self) elif isinstance(other[0],int) and isinstance(other[1],int): minElements, optElements = other optElements -= minElements else: raise TypeError("cannot multiply 'ParserElement' and ('%s','%s') objects", type(other[0]),type(other[1])) else: raise TypeError("cannot multiply 'ParserElement' and '%s' objects", type(other)) if minElements < 0: raise ValueError("cannot multiply ParserElement by negative value") if optElements < 0: raise ValueError("second tuple value must be greater or equal to first tuple value") if minElements == optElements == 0: raise ValueError("cannot multiply ParserElement by 0 or (0,0)") if (optElements): def makeOptionalList(n): if n>1: return Optional(self + makeOptionalList(n-1)) else: return Optional(self) if minElements: if minElements == 1: ret = self + makeOptionalList(optElements) else: ret = And([self]*minElements) + makeOptionalList(optElements) else: ret = makeOptionalList(optElements) else: if minElements == 1: ret = self else: ret = And([self]*minElements) return ret def __rmul__(self, other): return self.__mul__(other) def __or__(self, other ): """ Implementation of | operator - returns C{L{MatchFirst}} """ if isinstance( other, basestring ): other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other ) if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ): warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other), SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2) return None return MatchFirst( [ self, other ] ) def __ror__(self, other ): """ Implementation of | operator when left operand is not a C{L{ParserElement}} """ if isinstance( other, basestring ): other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other ) if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ): warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other), SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2) return None return other | self def __xor__(self, other ): """ Implementation of ^ operator - returns C{L{Or}} """ if isinstance( other, basestring ): other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other ) if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ): warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other), SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2) return None return Or( [ self, other ] ) def __rxor__(self, other ): """ Implementation of ^ operator when left operand is not a C{L{ParserElement}} """ if isinstance( other, basestring ): other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other ) if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ): warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other), SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2) return None return other ^ self def __and__(self, other ): """ Implementation of & operator - returns C{L{Each}} """ if isinstance( other, basestring ): other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other ) if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ): warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other), SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2) return None return Each( [ self, other ] ) def __rand__(self, other ): """ Implementation of & operator when left operand is not a C{L{ParserElement}} """ if isinstance( other, basestring ): other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other ) if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ): warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other), SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2) return None return other & self def __invert__( self ): """ Implementation of ~ operator - returns C{L{NotAny}} """ return NotAny( self ) def __call__(self, name=None): """ Shortcut for C{L{setResultsName}}, with C{listAllMatches=False}. If C{name} is given with a trailing C{'*'} character, then C{listAllMatches} will be passed as C{True}. If C{name} is omitted, same as calling C{L{copy}}. Example:: # these are equivalent userdata = Word(alphas).setResultsName("name") + Word(nums+"-").setResultsName("socsecno") userdata = Word(alphas)("name") + Word(nums+"-")("socsecno") """ if name is not None: return self.setResultsName(name) else: return self.copy() def suppress( self ): """ Suppresses the output of this C{ParserElement}; useful to keep punctuation from cluttering up returned output. """ return Suppress( self ) def leaveWhitespace( self ): """ Disables the skipping of whitespace before matching the characters in the C{ParserElement}'s defined pattern. This is normally only used internally by the pyparsing module, but may be needed in some whitespace-sensitive grammars. """ self.skipWhitespace = False return self def setWhitespaceChars( self, chars ): """ Overrides the default whitespace chars """ self.skipWhitespace = True self.whiteChars = chars self.copyDefaultWhiteChars = False return self def parseWithTabs( self ): """ Overrides default behavior to expand C{<TAB>}s to spaces before parsing the input string. Must be called before C{parseString} when the input grammar contains elements that match C{<TAB>} characters. """ self.keepTabs = True return self def ignore( self, other ): """ Define expression to be ignored (e.g., comments) while doing pattern matching; may be called repeatedly, to define multiple comment or other ignorable patterns. Example:: patt = OneOrMore(Word(alphas)) patt.parseString('ablaj /* comment */ lskjd') # -> ['ablaj'] patt.ignore(cStyleComment) patt.parseString('ablaj /* comment */ lskjd') # -> ['ablaj', 'lskjd'] """ if isinstance(other, basestring): other = Suppress(other) if isinstance( other, Suppress ): if other not in self.ignoreExprs: self.ignoreExprs.append(other) else: self.ignoreExprs.append( Suppress( other.copy() ) ) return self def setDebugActions( self, startAction, successAction, exceptionAction ): """ Enable display of debugging messages while doing pattern matching. """ self.debugActions = (startAction or _defaultStartDebugAction, successAction or _defaultSuccessDebugAction, exceptionAction or _defaultExceptionDebugAction) self.debug = True return self def setDebug( self, flag=True ): """ Enable display of debugging messages while doing pattern matching. Set C{flag} to True to enable, False to disable. Example:: wd = Word(alphas).setName("alphaword") integer = Word(nums).setName("numword") term = wd | integer # turn on debugging for wd wd.setDebug() OneOrMore(term).parseString("abc 123 xyz 890") prints:: Match alphaword at loc 0(1,1) Matched alphaword -> ['abc'] Match alphaword at loc 3(1,4) Exception raised:Expected alphaword (at char 4), (line:1, col:5) Match alphaword at loc 7(1,8) Matched alphaword -> ['xyz'] Match alphaword at loc 11(1,12) Exception raised:Expected alphaword (at char 12), (line:1, col:13) Match alphaword at loc 15(1,16) Exception raised:Expected alphaword (at char 15), (line:1, col:16) The output shown is that produced by the default debug actions - custom debug actions can be specified using L{setDebugActions}. Prior to attempting to match the C{wd} expression, the debugging message C{"Match <exprname> at loc <n>(<line>,<col>)"} is shown. Then if the parse succeeds, a C{"Matched"} message is shown, or an C{"Exception raised"} message is shown. Also note the use of L{setName} to assign a human-readable name to the expression, which makes debugging and exception messages easier to understand - for instance, the default name created for the C{Word} expression without calling C{setName} is C{"W:(ABCD...)"}. """ if flag: self.setDebugActions( _defaultStartDebugAction, _defaultSuccessDebugAction, _defaultExceptionDebugAction ) else: self.debug = False return self def __str__( self ): return self.name def __repr__( self ): return _ustr(self) def streamline( self ): self.streamlined = True self.strRepr = None return self def checkRecursion( self, parseElementList ): pass def validate( self, validateTrace=[] ): """ Check defined expressions for valid structure, check for infinite recursive definitions. """ self.checkRecursion( [] ) def parseFile( self, file_or_filename, parseAll=False ): """ Execute the parse expression on the given file or filename. If a filename is specified (instead of a file object), the entire file is opened, read, and closed before parsing. """ try: file_contents = file_or_filename.read() except AttributeError: with open(file_or_filename, "r") as f: file_contents = f.read() try: return self.parseString(file_contents, parseAll) except ParseBaseException as exc: if ParserElement.verbose_stacktrace: raise else: # catch and re-raise exception from here, clears out pyparsing internal stack trace raise exc def __eq__(self,other): if isinstance(other, ParserElement): return self is other or vars(self) == vars(other) elif isinstance(other, basestring): return self.matches(other) else: return super(ParserElement,self)==other def __ne__(self,other): return not (self == other) def __hash__(self): return hash(id(self)) def __req__(self,other): return self == other def __rne__(self,other): return not (self == other) def matches(self, testString, parseAll=True): """ Method for quick testing of a parser against a test string. Good for simple inline microtests of sub expressions while building up larger parser. Parameters: - testString - to test against this expression for a match - parseAll - (default=C{True}) - flag to pass to C{L{parseString}} when running tests Example:: expr = Word(nums) assert expr.matches("100") """ try: self.parseString(_ustr(testString), parseAll=parseAll) return True except ParseBaseException: return False def runTests(self, tests, parseAll=True, comment='#', fullDump=True, printResults=True, failureTests=False): """ Execute the parse expression on a series of test strings, showing each test, the parsed results or where the parse failed. Quick and easy way to run a parse expression against a list of sample strings. Parameters: - tests - a list of separate test strings, or a multiline string of test strings - parseAll - (default=C{True}) - flag to pass to C{L{parseString}} when running tests - comment - (default=C{'#'}) - expression for indicating embedded comments in the test string; pass None to disable comment filtering - fullDump - (default=C{True}) - dump results as list followed by results names in nested outline; if False, only dump nested list - printResults - (default=C{True}) prints test output to stdout - failureTests - (default=C{False}) indicates if these tests are expected to fail parsing Returns: a (success, results) tuple, where success indicates that all tests succeeded (or failed if C{failureTests} is True), and the results contain a list of lines of each test's output Example:: number_expr = pyparsing_common.number.copy() result = number_expr.runTests(''' # unsigned integer 100 # negative integer -100 # float with scientific notation 6.02e23 # integer with scientific notation 1e-12 ''') print("Success" if result[0] else "Failed!") result = number_expr.runTests(''' # stray character 100Z # missing leading digit before '.' -.100 # too many '.' 3.14.159 ''', failureTests=True) print("Success" if result[0] else "Failed!") prints:: # unsigned integer 100 [100] # negative integer -100 [-100] # float with scientific notation 6.02e23 [6.02e+23] # integer with scientific notation 1e-12 [1e-12] Success # stray character 100Z ^ FAIL: Expected end of text (at char 3), (line:1, col:4) # missing leading digit before '.' -.100 ^ FAIL: Expected {real number with scientific notation | real number | signed integer} (at char 0), (line:1, col:1) # too many '.' 3.14.159 ^ FAIL: Expected end of text (at char 4), (line:1, col:5) Success Each test string must be on a single line. If you want to test a string that spans multiple lines, create a test like this:: expr.runTest(r"this is a test\\n of strings that spans \\n 3 lines") (Note that this is a raw string literal, you must include the leading 'r'.) """ if isinstance(tests, basestring): tests = list(map(str.strip, tests.rstrip().splitlines())) if isinstance(comment, basestring): comment = Literal(comment) allResults = [] comments = [] success = True for t in tests: if comment is not None and comment.matches(t, False) or comments and not t: comments.append(t) continue if not t: continue out = ['\n'.join(comments), t] comments = [] try: t = t.replace(r'\n','\n') result = self.parseString(t, parseAll=parseAll) out.append(result.dump(full=fullDump)) success = success and not failureTests except ParseBaseException as pe: fatal = "(FATAL)" if isinstance(pe, ParseFatalException) else "" if '\n' in t: out.append(line(pe.loc, t)) out.append(' '*(col(pe.loc,t)-1) + '^' + fatal) else: out.append(' '*pe.loc + '^' + fatal) out.append("FAIL: " + str(pe)) success = success and failureTests result = pe except Exception as exc: out.append("FAIL-EXCEPTION: " + str(exc)) success = success and failureTests result = exc if printResults: if fullDump: out.append('') print('\n'.join(out)) allResults.append((t, result)) return success, allResults class Token(ParserElement): """ Abstract C{ParserElement} subclass, for defining atomic matching patterns. """ def __init__( self ): super(Token,self).__init__( savelist=False ) class Empty(Token): """ An empty token, will always match. """ def __init__( self ): super(Empty,self).__init__() self.name = "Empty" self.mayReturnEmpty = True self.mayIndexError = False class NoMatch(Token): """ A token that will never match. """ def __init__( self ): super(NoMatch,self).__init__() self.name = "NoMatch" self.mayReturnEmpty = True self.mayIndexError = False self.errmsg = "Unmatchable token" def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) class Literal(Token): """ Token to exactly match a specified string. Example:: Literal('blah').parseString('blah') # -> ['blah'] Literal('blah').parseString('blahfooblah') # -> ['blah'] Literal('blah').parseString('bla') # -> Exception: Expected "blah" For case-insensitive matching, use L{CaselessLiteral}. For keyword matching (force word break before and after the matched string), use L{Keyword} or L{CaselessKeyword}. """ def __init__( self, matchString ): super(Literal,self).__init__() self.match = matchString self.matchLen = len(matchString) try: self.firstMatchChar = matchString[0] except IndexError: warnings.warn("null string passed to Literal; use Empty() instead", SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2) self.__class__ = Empty self.name = '"%s"' % _ustr(self.match) self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name self.mayReturnEmpty = False self.mayIndexError = False # Performance tuning: this routine gets called a *lot* # if this is a single character match string and the first character matches, # short-circuit as quickly as possible, and avoid calling startswith #~ @profile def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): if (instring[loc] == self.firstMatchChar and (self.matchLen==1 or instring.startswith(self.match,loc)) ): return loc+self.matchLen, self.match raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) _L = Literal ParserElement._literalStringClass = Literal class Keyword(Token): """ Token to exactly match a specified string as a keyword, that is, it must be immediately followed by a non-keyword character. Compare with C{L{Literal}}: - C{Literal("if")} will match the leading C{'if'} in C{'ifAndOnlyIf'}. - C{Keyword("if")} will not; it will only match the leading C{'if'} in C{'if x=1'}, or C{'if(y==2)'} Accepts two optional constructor arguments in addition to the keyword string: - C{identChars} is a string of characters that would be valid identifier characters, defaulting to all alphanumerics + "_" and "$" - C{caseless} allows case-insensitive matching, default is C{False}. Example:: Keyword("start").parseString("start") # -> ['start'] Keyword("start").parseString("starting") # -> Exception For case-insensitive matching, use L{CaselessKeyword}. """ DEFAULT_KEYWORD_CHARS = alphanums+"_$" def __init__( self, matchString, identChars=None, caseless=False ): super(Keyword,self).__init__() if identChars is None: identChars = Keyword.DEFAULT_KEYWORD_CHARS self.match = matchString self.matchLen = len(matchString) try: self.firstMatchChar = matchString[0] except IndexError: warnings.warn("null string passed to Keyword; use Empty() instead", SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2) self.name = '"%s"' % self.match self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name self.mayReturnEmpty = False self.mayIndexError = False self.caseless = caseless if caseless: self.caselessmatch = matchString.upper() identChars = identChars.upper() self.identChars = set(identChars) def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): if self.caseless: if ( (instring[ loc:loc+self.matchLen ].upper() == self.caselessmatch) and (loc >= len(instring)-self.matchLen or instring[loc+self.matchLen].upper() not in self.identChars) and (loc == 0 or instring[loc-1].upper() not in self.identChars) ): return loc+self.matchLen, self.match else: if (instring[loc] == self.firstMatchChar and (self.matchLen==1 or instring.startswith(self.match,loc)) and (loc >= len(instring)-self.matchLen or instring[loc+self.matchLen] not in self.identChars) and (loc == 0 or instring[loc-1] not in self.identChars) ): return loc+self.matchLen, self.match raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) def copy(self): c = super(Keyword,self).copy() c.identChars = Keyword.DEFAULT_KEYWORD_CHARS return c @staticmethod def setDefaultKeywordChars( chars ): """Overrides the default Keyword chars """ Keyword.DEFAULT_KEYWORD_CHARS = chars class CaselessLiteral(Literal): """ Token to match a specified string, ignoring case of letters. Note: the matched results will always be in the case of the given match string, NOT the case of the input text. Example:: OneOrMore(CaselessLiteral("CMD")).parseString("cmd CMD Cmd10") # -> ['CMD', 'CMD', 'CMD'] (Contrast with example for L{CaselessKeyword}.) """ def __init__( self, matchString ): super(CaselessLiteral,self).__init__( matchString.upper() ) # Preserve the defining literal. self.returnString = matchString self.name = "'%s'" % self.returnString self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): if instring[ loc:loc+self.matchLen ].upper() == self.match: return loc+self.matchLen, self.returnString raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) class CaselessKeyword(Keyword): """ Caseless version of L{Keyword}. Example:: OneOrMore(CaselessKeyword("CMD")).parseString("cmd CMD Cmd10") # -> ['CMD', 'CMD'] (Contrast with example for L{CaselessLiteral}.) """ def __init__( self, matchString, identChars=None ): super(CaselessKeyword,self).__init__( matchString, identChars, caseless=True ) def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): if ( (instring[ loc:loc+self.matchLen ].upper() == self.caselessmatch) and (loc >= len(instring)-self.matchLen or instring[loc+self.matchLen].upper() not in self.identChars) ): return loc+self.matchLen, self.match raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) class CloseMatch(Token): """ A variation on L{Literal} which matches "close" matches, that is, strings with at most 'n' mismatching characters. C{CloseMatch} takes parameters: - C{match_string} - string to be matched - C{maxMismatches} - (C{default=1}) maximum number of mismatches allowed to count as a match The results from a successful parse will contain the matched text from the input string and the following named results: - C{mismatches} - a list of the positions within the match_string where mismatches were found - C{original} - the original match_string used to compare against the input string If C{mismatches} is an empty list, then the match was an exact match. Example:: patt = CloseMatch("ATCATCGAATGGA") patt.parseString("ATCATCGAAXGGA") # -> (['ATCATCGAAXGGA'], {'mismatches': [[9]], 'original': ['ATCATCGAATGGA']}) patt.parseString("ATCAXCGAAXGGA") # -> Exception: Expected 'ATCATCGAATGGA' (with up to 1 mismatches) (at char 0), (line:1, col:1) # exact match patt.parseString("ATCATCGAATGGA") # -> (['ATCATCGAATGGA'], {'mismatches': [[]], 'original': ['ATCATCGAATGGA']}) # close match allowing up to 2 mismatches patt = CloseMatch("ATCATCGAATGGA", maxMismatches=2) patt.parseString("ATCAXCGAAXGGA") # -> (['ATCAXCGAAXGGA'], {'mismatches': [[4, 9]], 'original': ['ATCATCGAATGGA']}) """ def __init__(self, match_string, maxMismatches=1): super(CloseMatch,self).__init__() self.name = match_string self.match_string = match_string self.maxMismatches = maxMismatches self.errmsg = "Expected %r (with up to %d mismatches)" % (self.match_string, self.maxMismatches) self.mayIndexError = False self.mayReturnEmpty = False def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): start = loc instrlen = len(instring) maxloc = start + len(self.match_string) if maxloc <= instrlen: match_string = self.match_string match_stringloc = 0 mismatches = [] maxMismatches = self.maxMismatches for match_stringloc,s_m in enumerate(zip(instring[loc:maxloc], self.match_string)): src,mat = s_m if src != mat: mismatches.append(match_stringloc) if len(mismatches) > maxMismatches: break else: loc = match_stringloc + 1 results = ParseResults([instring[start:loc]]) results['original'] = self.match_string results['mismatches'] = mismatches return loc, results raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) class Word(Token): """ Token for matching words composed of allowed character sets. Defined with string containing all allowed initial characters, an optional string containing allowed body characters (if omitted, defaults to the initial character set), and an optional minimum, maximum, and/or exact length. The default value for C{min} is 1 (a minimum value < 1 is not valid); the default values for C{max} and C{exact} are 0, meaning no maximum or exact length restriction. An optional C{excludeChars} parameter can list characters that might be found in the input C{bodyChars} string; useful to define a word of all printables except for one or two characters, for instance. L{srange} is useful for defining custom character set strings for defining C{Word} expressions, using range notation from regular expression character sets. A common mistake is to use C{Word} to match a specific literal string, as in C{Word("Address")}. Remember that C{Word} uses the string argument to define I{sets} of matchable characters. This expression would match "Add", "AAA", "dAred", or any other word made up of the characters 'A', 'd', 'r', 'e', and 's'. To match an exact literal string, use L{Literal} or L{Keyword}. pyparsing includes helper strings for building Words: - L{alphas} - L{nums} - L{alphanums} - L{hexnums} - L{alphas8bit} (alphabetic characters in ASCII range 128-255 - accented, tilded, umlauted, etc.) - L{punc8bit} (non-alphabetic characters in ASCII range 128-255 - currency, symbols, superscripts, diacriticals, etc.) - L{printables} (any non-whitespace character) Example:: # a word composed of digits integer = Word(nums) # equivalent to Word("0123456789") or Word(srange("0-9")) # a word with a leading capital, and zero or more lowercase capital_word = Word(alphas.upper(), alphas.lower()) # hostnames are alphanumeric, with leading alpha, and '-' hostname = Word(alphas, alphanums+'-') # roman numeral (not a strict parser, accepts invalid mix of characters) roman = Word("IVXLCDM") # any string of non-whitespace characters, except for ',' csv_value = Word(printables, excludeChars=",") """ def __init__( self, initChars, bodyChars=None, min=1, max=0, exact=0, asKeyword=False, excludeChars=None ): super(Word,self).__init__() if excludeChars: initChars = ''.join(c for c in initChars if c not in excludeChars) if bodyChars: bodyChars = ''.join(c for c in bodyChars if c not in excludeChars) self.initCharsOrig = initChars self.initChars = set(initChars) if bodyChars : self.bodyCharsOrig = bodyChars self.bodyChars = set(bodyChars) else: self.bodyCharsOrig = initChars self.bodyChars = set(initChars) self.maxSpecified = max > 0 if min < 1: raise ValueError("cannot specify a minimum length < 1; use Optional(Word()) if zero-length word is permitted") self.minLen = min if max > 0: self.maxLen = max else: self.maxLen = _MAX_INT if exact > 0: self.maxLen = exact self.minLen = exact self.name = _ustr(self) self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name self.mayIndexError = False self.asKeyword = asKeyword if ' ' not in self.initCharsOrig+self.bodyCharsOrig and (min==1 and max==0 and exact==0): if self.bodyCharsOrig == self.initCharsOrig: self.reString = "[%s]+" % _escapeRegexRangeChars(self.initCharsOrig) elif len(self.initCharsOrig) == 1: self.reString = "%s[%s]*" % \ (re.escape(self.initCharsOrig), _escapeRegexRangeChars(self.bodyCharsOrig),) else: self.reString = "[%s][%s]*" % \ (_escapeRegexRangeChars(self.initCharsOrig), _escapeRegexRangeChars(self.bodyCharsOrig),) if self.asKeyword: self.reString = r"\b"+self.reString+r"\b" try: self.re = re.compile( self.reString ) except Exception: self.re = None def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): if self.re: result = self.re.match(instring,loc) if not result: raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) loc = result.end() return loc, result.group() if not(instring[ loc ] in self.initChars): raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) start = loc loc += 1 instrlen = len(instring) bodychars = self.bodyChars maxloc = start + self.maxLen maxloc = min( maxloc, instrlen ) while loc < maxloc and instring[loc] in bodychars: loc += 1 throwException = False if loc - start < self.minLen: throwException = True if self.maxSpecified and loc < instrlen and instring[loc] in bodychars: throwException = True if self.asKeyword: if (start>0 and instring[start-1] in bodychars) or (loc<instrlen and instring[loc] in bodychars): throwException = True if throwException: raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) return loc, instring[start:loc] def __str__( self ): try: return super(Word,self).__str__() except Exception: pass if self.strRepr is None: def charsAsStr(s): if len(s)>4: return s[:4]+"..." else: return s if ( self.initCharsOrig != self.bodyCharsOrig ): self.strRepr = "W:(%s,%s)" % ( charsAsStr(self.initCharsOrig), charsAsStr(self.bodyCharsOrig) ) else: self.strRepr = "W:(%s)" % charsAsStr(self.initCharsOrig) return self.strRepr class Regex(Token): r""" Token for matching strings that match a given regular expression. Defined with string specifying the regular expression in a form recognized by the inbuilt Python re module. If the given regex contains named groups (defined using C{(?P<name>...)}), these will be preserved as named parse results. Example:: realnum = Regex(r"[+-]?\d+\.\d*") date = Regex(r'(?P<year>\d{4})-(?P<month>\d\d?)-(?P<day>\d\d?)') # ref: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/267399/how-do-you-match-only-valid-roman-numerals-with-a-regular-expression roman = Regex(r"M{0,4}(CM|CD|D?C{0,3})(XC|XL|L?X{0,3})(IX|IV|V?I{0,3})") """ compiledREtype = type(re.compile("[A-Z]")) def __init__( self, pattern, flags=0): """The parameters C{pattern} and C{flags} are passed to the C{re.compile()} function as-is. See the Python C{re} module for an explanation of the acceptable patterns and flags.""" super(Regex,self).__init__() if isinstance(pattern, basestring): if not pattern: warnings.warn("null string passed to Regex; use Empty() instead", SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2) self.pattern = pattern self.flags = flags try: self.re = re.compile(self.pattern, self.flags) self.reString = self.pattern except sre_constants.error: warnings.warn("invalid pattern (%s) passed to Regex" % pattern, SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2) raise elif isinstance(pattern, Regex.compiledREtype): self.re = pattern self.pattern = \ self.reString = str(pattern) self.flags = flags else: raise ValueError("Regex may only be constructed with a string or a compiled RE object") self.name = _ustr(self) self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name self.mayIndexError = False self.mayReturnEmpty = True def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): result = self.re.match(instring,loc) if not result: raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) loc = result.end() d = result.groupdict() ret = ParseResults(result.group()) if d: for k in d: ret[k] = d[k] return loc,ret def __str__( self ): try: return super(Regex,self).__str__() except Exception: pass if self.strRepr is None: self.strRepr = "Re:(%s)" % repr(self.pattern) return self.strRepr class QuotedString(Token): r""" Token for matching strings that are delimited by quoting characters. Defined with the following parameters: - quoteChar - string of one or more characters defining the quote delimiting string - escChar - character to escape quotes, typically backslash (default=C{None}) - escQuote - special quote sequence to escape an embedded quote string (such as SQL's "" to escape an embedded ") (default=C{None}) - multiline - boolean indicating whether quotes can span multiple lines (default=C{False}) - unquoteResults - boolean indicating whether the matched text should be unquoted (default=C{True}) - endQuoteChar - string of one or more characters defining the end of the quote delimited string (default=C{None} => same as quoteChar) - convertWhitespaceEscapes - convert escaped whitespace (C{'\t'}, C{'\n'}, etc.) to actual whitespace (default=C{True}) Example:: qs = QuotedString('"') print(qs.searchString('lsjdf "This is the quote" sldjf')) complex_qs = QuotedString('{{', endQuoteChar='}}') print(complex_qs.searchString('lsjdf {{This is the "quote"}} sldjf')) sql_qs = QuotedString('"', escQuote='""') print(sql_qs.searchString('lsjdf "This is the quote with ""embedded"" quotes" sldjf')) prints:: [['This is the quote']] [['This is the "quote"']] [['This is the quote with "embedded" quotes']] """ def __init__( self, quoteChar, escChar=None, escQuote=None, multiline=False, unquoteResults=True, endQuoteChar=None, convertWhitespaceEscapes=True): super(QuotedString,self).__init__() # remove white space from quote chars - wont work anyway quoteChar = quoteChar.strip() if not quoteChar: warnings.warn("quoteChar cannot be the empty string",SyntaxWarning,stacklevel=2) raise SyntaxError() if endQuoteChar is None: endQuoteChar = quoteChar else: endQuoteChar = endQuoteChar.strip() if not endQuoteChar: warnings.warn("endQuoteChar cannot be the empty string",SyntaxWarning,stacklevel=2) raise SyntaxError() self.quoteChar = quoteChar self.quoteCharLen = len(quoteChar) self.firstQuoteChar = quoteChar[0] self.endQuoteChar = endQuoteChar self.endQuoteCharLen = len(endQuoteChar) self.escChar = escChar self.escQuote = escQuote self.unquoteResults = unquoteResults self.convertWhitespaceEscapes = convertWhitespaceEscapes if multiline: self.flags = re.MULTILINE | re.DOTALL self.pattern = r'%s(?:[^%s%s]' % \ ( re.escape(self.quoteChar), _escapeRegexRangeChars(self.endQuoteChar[0]), (escChar is not None and _escapeRegexRangeChars(escChar) or '') ) else: self.flags = 0 self.pattern = r'%s(?:[^%s\n\r%s]' % \ ( re.escape(self.quoteChar), _escapeRegexRangeChars(self.endQuoteChar[0]), (escChar is not None and _escapeRegexRangeChars(escChar) or '') ) if len(self.endQuoteChar) > 1: self.pattern += ( '|(?:' + ')|(?:'.join("%s[^%s]" % (re.escape(self.endQuoteChar[:i]), _escapeRegexRangeChars(self.endQuoteChar[i])) for i in range(len(self.endQuoteChar)-1,0,-1)) + ')' ) if escQuote: self.pattern += (r'|(?:%s)' % re.escape(escQuote)) if escChar: self.pattern += (r'|(?:%s.)' % re.escape(escChar)) self.escCharReplacePattern = re.escape(self.escChar)+"(.)" self.pattern += (r')*%s' % re.escape(self.endQuoteChar)) try: self.re = re.compile(self.pattern, self.flags) self.reString = self.pattern except sre_constants.error: warnings.warn("invalid pattern (%s) passed to Regex" % self.pattern, SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2) raise self.name = _ustr(self) self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name self.mayIndexError = False self.mayReturnEmpty = True def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): result = instring[loc] == self.firstQuoteChar and self.re.match(instring,loc) or None if not result: raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) loc = result.end() ret = result.group() if self.unquoteResults: # strip off quotes ret = ret[self.quoteCharLen:-self.endQuoteCharLen] if isinstance(ret,basestring): # replace escaped whitespace if '\\' in ret and self.convertWhitespaceEscapes: ws_map = { r'\t' : '\t', r'\n' : '\n', r'\f' : '\f', r'\r' : '\r', } for wslit,wschar in ws_map.items(): ret = ret.replace(wslit, wschar) # replace escaped characters if self.escChar: ret = re.sub(self.escCharReplacePattern, r"\g<1>", ret) # replace escaped quotes if self.escQuote: ret = ret.replace(self.escQuote, self.endQuoteChar) return loc, ret def __str__( self ): try: return super(QuotedString,self).__str__() except Exception: pass if self.strRepr is None: self.strRepr = "quoted string, starting with %s ending with %s" % (self.quoteChar, self.endQuoteChar) return self.strRepr class CharsNotIn(Token): """ Token for matching words composed of characters I{not} in a given set (will include whitespace in matched characters if not listed in the provided exclusion set - see example). Defined with string containing all disallowed characters, and an optional minimum, maximum, and/or exact length. The default value for C{min} is 1 (a minimum value < 1 is not valid); the default values for C{max} and C{exact} are 0, meaning no maximum or exact length restriction. Example:: # define a comma-separated-value as anything that is not a ',' csv_value = CharsNotIn(',') print(delimitedList(csv_value).parseString("dkls,lsdkjf,s12 34,@!#,213")) prints:: ['dkls', 'lsdkjf', 's12 34', '@!#', '213'] """ def __init__( self, notChars, min=1, max=0, exact=0 ): super(CharsNotIn,self).__init__() self.skipWhitespace = False self.notChars = notChars if min < 1: raise ValueError("cannot specify a minimum length < 1; use Optional(CharsNotIn()) if zero-length char group is permitted") self.minLen = min if max > 0: self.maxLen = max else: self.maxLen = _MAX_INT if exact > 0: self.maxLen = exact self.minLen = exact self.name = _ustr(self) self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name self.mayReturnEmpty = ( self.minLen == 0 ) self.mayIndexError = False def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): if instring[loc] in self.notChars: raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) start = loc loc += 1 notchars = self.notChars maxlen = min( start+self.maxLen, len(instring) ) while loc < maxlen and \ (instring[loc] not in notchars): loc += 1 if loc - start < self.minLen: raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) return loc, instring[start:loc] def __str__( self ): try: return super(CharsNotIn, self).__str__() except Exception: pass if self.strRepr is None: if len(self.notChars) > 4: self.strRepr = "!W:(%s...)" % self.notChars[:4] else: self.strRepr = "!W:(%s)" % self.notChars return self.strRepr class White(Token): """ Special matching class for matching whitespace. Normally, whitespace is ignored by pyparsing grammars. This class is included when some whitespace structures are significant. Define with a string containing the whitespace characters to be matched; default is C{" \\t\\r\\n"}. Also takes optional C{min}, C{max}, and C{exact} arguments, as defined for the C{L{Word}} class. """ whiteStrs = { " " : "<SPC>", "\t": "<TAB>", "\n": "<LF>", "\r": "<CR>", "\f": "<FF>", } def __init__(self, ws=" \t\r\n", min=1, max=0, exact=0): super(White,self).__init__() self.matchWhite = ws self.setWhitespaceChars( "".join(c for c in self.whiteChars if c not in self.matchWhite) ) #~ self.leaveWhitespace() self.name = ("".join(White.whiteStrs[c] for c in self.matchWhite)) self.mayReturnEmpty = True self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name self.minLen = min if max > 0: self.maxLen = max else: self.maxLen = _MAX_INT if exact > 0: self.maxLen = exact self.minLen = exact def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): if not(instring[ loc ] in self.matchWhite): raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) start = loc loc += 1 maxloc = start + self.maxLen maxloc = min( maxloc, len(instring) ) while loc < maxloc and instring[loc] in self.matchWhite: loc += 1 if loc - start < self.minLen: raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) return loc, instring[start:loc] class _PositionToken(Token): def __init__( self ): super(_PositionToken,self).__init__() self.name=self.__class__.__name__ self.mayReturnEmpty = True self.mayIndexError = False class GoToColumn(_PositionToken): """ Token to advance to a specific column of input text; useful for tabular report scraping. """ def __init__( self, colno ): super(GoToColumn,self).__init__() self.col = colno def preParse( self, instring, loc ): if col(loc,instring) != self.col: instrlen = len(instring) if self.ignoreExprs: loc = self._skipIgnorables( instring, loc ) while loc < instrlen and instring[loc].isspace() and col( loc, instring ) != self.col : loc += 1 return loc def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): thiscol = col( loc, instring ) if thiscol > self.col: raise ParseException( instring, loc, "Text not in expected column", self ) newloc = loc + self.col - thiscol ret = instring[ loc: newloc ] return newloc, ret class LineStart(_PositionToken): """ Matches if current position is at the beginning of a line within the parse string Example:: test = '''\ AAA this line AAA and this line AAA but not this one B AAA and definitely not this one ''' for t in (LineStart() + 'AAA' + restOfLine).searchString(test): print(t) Prints:: ['AAA', ' this line'] ['AAA', ' and this line'] """ def __init__( self ): super(LineStart,self).__init__() self.errmsg = "Expected start of line" def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): if col(loc, instring) == 1: return loc, [] raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) class LineEnd(_PositionToken): """ Matches if current position is at the end of a line within the parse string """ def __init__( self ): super(LineEnd,self).__init__() self.setWhitespaceChars( ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS.replace("\n","") ) self.errmsg = "Expected end of line" def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): if loc<len(instring): if instring[loc] == "\n": return loc+1, "\n" else: raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) elif loc == len(instring): return loc+1, [] else: raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) class StringStart(_PositionToken): """ Matches if current position is at the beginning of the parse string """ def __init__( self ): super(StringStart,self).__init__() self.errmsg = "Expected start of text" def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): if loc != 0: # see if entire string up to here is just whitespace and ignoreables if loc != self.preParse( instring, 0 ): raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) return loc, [] class StringEnd(_PositionToken): """ Matches if current position is at the end of the parse string """ def __init__( self ): super(StringEnd,self).__init__() self.errmsg = "Expected end of text" def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): if loc < len(instring): raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) elif loc == len(instring): return loc+1, [] elif loc > len(instring): return loc, [] else: raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) class WordStart(_PositionToken): """ Matches if the current position is at the beginning of a Word, and is not preceded by any character in a given set of C{wordChars} (default=C{printables}). To emulate the C{\b} behavior of regular expressions, use C{WordStart(alphanums)}. C{WordStart} will also match at the beginning of the string being parsed, or at the beginning of a line. """ def __init__(self, wordChars = printables): super(WordStart,self).__init__() self.wordChars = set(wordChars) self.errmsg = "Not at the start of a word" def parseImpl(self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): if loc != 0: if (instring[loc-1] in self.wordChars or instring[loc] not in self.wordChars): raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) return loc, [] class WordEnd(_PositionToken): """ Matches if the current position is at the end of a Word, and is not followed by any character in a given set of C{wordChars} (default=C{printables}). To emulate the C{\b} behavior of regular expressions, use C{WordEnd(alphanums)}. C{WordEnd} will also match at the end of the string being parsed, or at the end of a line. """ def __init__(self, wordChars = printables): super(WordEnd,self).__init__() self.wordChars = set(wordChars) self.skipWhitespace = False self.errmsg = "Not at the end of a word" def parseImpl(self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): instrlen = len(instring) if instrlen>0 and loc<instrlen: if (instring[loc] in self.wordChars or instring[loc-1] not in self.wordChars): raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) return loc, [] class ParseExpression(ParserElement): """ Abstract subclass of ParserElement, for combining and post-processing parsed tokens. """ def __init__( self, exprs, savelist = False ): super(ParseExpression,self).__init__(savelist) if isinstance( exprs, _generatorType ): exprs = list(exprs) if isinstance( exprs, basestring ): self.exprs = [ ParserElement._literalStringClass( exprs ) ] elif isinstance( exprs, Iterable ): exprs = list(exprs) # if sequence of strings provided, wrap with Literal if all(isinstance(expr, basestring) for expr in exprs): exprs = map(ParserElement._literalStringClass, exprs) self.exprs = list(exprs) else: try: self.exprs = list( exprs ) except TypeError: self.exprs = [ exprs ] self.callPreparse = False def __getitem__( self, i ): return self.exprs[i] def append( self, other ): self.exprs.append( other ) self.strRepr = None return self def leaveWhitespace( self ): """Extends C{leaveWhitespace} defined in base class, and also invokes C{leaveWhitespace} on all contained expressions.""" self.skipWhitespace = False self.exprs = [ e.copy() for e in self.exprs ] for e in self.exprs: e.leaveWhitespace() return self def ignore( self, other ): if isinstance( other, Suppress ): if other not in self.ignoreExprs: super( ParseExpression, self).ignore( other ) for e in self.exprs: e.ignore( self.ignoreExprs[-1] ) else: super( ParseExpression, self).ignore( other ) for e in self.exprs: e.ignore( self.ignoreExprs[-1] ) return self def __str__( self ): try: return super(ParseExpression,self).__str__() except Exception: pass if self.strRepr is None: self.strRepr = "%s:(%s)" % ( self.__class__.__name__, _ustr(self.exprs) ) return self.strRepr def streamline( self ): super(ParseExpression,self).streamline() for e in self.exprs: e.streamline() # collapse nested And's of the form And( And( And( a,b), c), d) to And( a,b,c,d ) # but only if there are no parse actions or resultsNames on the nested And's # (likewise for Or's and MatchFirst's) if ( len(self.exprs) == 2 ): other = self.exprs[0] if ( isinstance( other, self.__class__ ) and not(other.parseAction) and other.resultsName is None and not other.debug ): self.exprs = other.exprs[:] + [ self.exprs[1] ] self.strRepr = None self.mayReturnEmpty |= other.mayReturnEmpty self.mayIndexError |= other.mayIndexError other = self.exprs[-1] if ( isinstance( other, self.__class__ ) and not(other.parseAction) and other.resultsName is None and not other.debug ): self.exprs = self.exprs[:-1] + other.exprs[:] self.strRepr = None self.mayReturnEmpty |= other.mayReturnEmpty self.mayIndexError |= other.mayIndexError self.errmsg = "Expected " + _ustr(self) return self def setResultsName( self, name, listAllMatches=False ): ret = super(ParseExpression,self).setResultsName(name,listAllMatches) return ret def validate( self, validateTrace=[] ): tmp = validateTrace[:]+[self] for e in self.exprs: e.validate(tmp) self.checkRecursion( [] ) def copy(self): ret = super(ParseExpression,self).copy() ret.exprs = [e.copy() for e in self.exprs] return ret class And(ParseExpression): """ Requires all given C{ParseExpression}s to be found in the given order. Expressions may be separated by whitespace. May be constructed using the C{'+'} operator. May also be constructed using the C{'-'} operator, which will suppress backtracking. Example:: integer = Word(nums) name_expr = OneOrMore(Word(alphas)) expr = And([integer("id"),name_expr("name"),integer("age")]) # more easily written as: expr = integer("id") + name_expr("name") + integer("age") """ class _ErrorStop(Empty): def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): super(And._ErrorStop,self).__init__(*args, **kwargs) self.name = '-' self.leaveWhitespace() def __init__( self, exprs, savelist = True ): super(And,self).__init__(exprs, savelist) self.mayReturnEmpty = all(e.mayReturnEmpty for e in self.exprs) self.setWhitespaceChars( self.exprs[0].whiteChars ) self.skipWhitespace = self.exprs[0].skipWhitespace self.callPreparse = True def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): # pass False as last arg to _parse for first element, since we already # pre-parsed the string as part of our And pre-parsing loc, resultlist = self.exprs[0]._parse( instring, loc, doActions, callPreParse=False ) errorStop = False for e in self.exprs[1:]: if isinstance(e, And._ErrorStop): errorStop = True continue if errorStop: try: loc, exprtokens = e._parse( instring, loc, doActions ) except ParseSyntaxException: raise except ParseBaseException as pe: pe.__traceback__ = None raise ParseSyntaxException._from_exception(pe) except IndexError: raise ParseSyntaxException(instring, len(instring), self.errmsg, self) else: loc, exprtokens = e._parse( instring, loc, doActions ) if exprtokens or exprtokens.haskeys(): resultlist += exprtokens return loc, resultlist def __iadd__(self, other ): if isinstance( other, basestring ): other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other ) return self.append( other ) #And( [ self, other ] ) def checkRecursion( self, parseElementList ): subRecCheckList = parseElementList[:] + [ self ] for e in self.exprs: e.checkRecursion( subRecCheckList ) if not e.mayReturnEmpty: break def __str__( self ): if hasattr(self,"name"): return self.name if self.strRepr is None: self.strRepr = "{" + " ".join(_ustr(e) for e in self.exprs) + "}" return self.strRepr class Or(ParseExpression): """ Requires that at least one C{ParseExpression} is found. If two expressions match, the expression that matches the longest string will be used. May be constructed using the C{'^'} operator. Example:: # construct Or using '^' operator number = Word(nums) ^ Combine(Word(nums) + '.' + Word(nums)) print(number.searchString("123 3.1416 789")) prints:: [['123'], ['3.1416'], ['789']] """ def __init__( self, exprs, savelist = False ): super(Or,self).__init__(exprs, savelist) if self.exprs: self.mayReturnEmpty = any(e.mayReturnEmpty for e in self.exprs) else: self.mayReturnEmpty = True def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): maxExcLoc = -1 maxException = None matches = [] for e in self.exprs: try: loc2 = e.tryParse( instring, loc ) except ParseException as err: err.__traceback__ = None if err.loc > maxExcLoc: maxException = err maxExcLoc = err.loc except IndexError: if len(instring) > maxExcLoc: maxException = ParseException(instring,len(instring),e.errmsg,self) maxExcLoc = len(instring) else: # save match among all matches, to retry longest to shortest matches.append((loc2, e)) if matches: matches.sort(key=lambda x: -x[0]) for _,e in matches: try: return e._parse( instring, loc, doActions ) except ParseException as err: err.__traceback__ = None if err.loc > maxExcLoc: maxException = err maxExcLoc = err.loc if maxException is not None: maxException.msg = self.errmsg raise maxException else: raise ParseException(instring, loc, "no defined alternatives to match", self) def __ixor__(self, other ): if isinstance( other, basestring ): other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other ) return self.append( other ) #Or( [ self, other ] ) def __str__( self ): if hasattr(self,"name"): return self.name if self.strRepr is None: self.strRepr = "{" + " ^ ".join(_ustr(e) for e in self.exprs) + "}" return self.strRepr def checkRecursion( self, parseElementList ): subRecCheckList = parseElementList[:] + [ self ] for e in self.exprs: e.checkRecursion( subRecCheckList ) class MatchFirst(ParseExpression): """ Requires that at least one C{ParseExpression} is found. If two expressions match, the first one listed is the one that will match. May be constructed using the C{'|'} operator. Example:: # construct MatchFirst using '|' operator # watch the order of expressions to match number = Word(nums) | Combine(Word(nums) + '.' + Word(nums)) print(number.searchString("123 3.1416 789")) # Fail! -> [['123'], ['3'], ['1416'], ['789']] # put more selective expression first number = Combine(Word(nums) + '.' + Word(nums)) | Word(nums) print(number.searchString("123 3.1416 789")) # Better -> [['123'], ['3.1416'], ['789']] """ def __init__( self, exprs, savelist = False ): super(MatchFirst,self).__init__(exprs, savelist) if self.exprs: self.mayReturnEmpty = any(e.mayReturnEmpty for e in self.exprs) else: self.mayReturnEmpty = True def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): maxExcLoc = -1 maxException = None for e in self.exprs: try: ret = e._parse( instring, loc, doActions ) return ret except ParseException as err: if err.loc > maxExcLoc: maxException = err maxExcLoc = err.loc except IndexError: if len(instring) > maxExcLoc: maxException = ParseException(instring,len(instring),e.errmsg,self) maxExcLoc = len(instring) # only got here if no expression matched, raise exception for match that made it the furthest else: if maxException is not None: maxException.msg = self.errmsg raise maxException else: raise ParseException(instring, loc, "no defined alternatives to match", self) def __ior__(self, other ): if isinstance( other, basestring ): other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other ) return self.append( other ) #MatchFirst( [ self, other ] ) def __str__( self ): if hasattr(self,"name"): return self.name if self.strRepr is None: self.strRepr = "{" + " | ".join(_ustr(e) for e in self.exprs) + "}" return self.strRepr def checkRecursion( self, parseElementList ): subRecCheckList = parseElementList[:] + [ self ] for e in self.exprs: e.checkRecursion( subRecCheckList ) class Each(ParseExpression): """ Requires all given C{ParseExpression}s to be found, but in any order. Expressions may be separated by whitespace. May be constructed using the C{'&'} operator. Example:: color = oneOf("RED ORANGE YELLOW GREEN BLUE PURPLE BLACK WHITE BROWN") shape_type = oneOf("SQUARE CIRCLE TRIANGLE STAR HEXAGON OCTAGON") integer = Word(nums) shape_attr = "shape:" + shape_type("shape") posn_attr = "posn:" + Group(integer("x") + ',' + integer("y"))("posn") color_attr = "color:" + color("color") size_attr = "size:" + integer("size") # use Each (using operator '&') to accept attributes in any order # (shape and posn are required, color and size are optional) shape_spec = shape_attr & posn_attr & Optional(color_attr) & Optional(size_attr) shape_spec.runTests(''' shape: SQUARE color: BLACK posn: 100, 120 shape: CIRCLE size: 50 color: BLUE posn: 50,80 color:GREEN size:20 shape:TRIANGLE posn:20,40 ''' ) prints:: shape: SQUARE color: BLACK posn: 100, 120 ['shape:', 'SQUARE', 'color:', 'BLACK', 'posn:', ['100', ',', '120']] - color: BLACK - posn: ['100', ',', '120'] - x: 100 - y: 120 - shape: SQUARE shape: CIRCLE size: 50 color: BLUE posn: 50,80 ['shape:', 'CIRCLE', 'size:', '50', 'color:', 'BLUE', 'posn:', ['50', ',', '80']] - color: BLUE - posn: ['50', ',', '80'] - x: 50 - y: 80 - shape: CIRCLE - size: 50 color: GREEN size: 20 shape: TRIANGLE posn: 20,40 ['color:', 'GREEN', 'size:', '20', 'shape:', 'TRIANGLE', 'posn:', ['20', ',', '40']] - color: GREEN - posn: ['20', ',', '40'] - x: 20 - y: 40 - shape: TRIANGLE - size: 20 """ def __init__( self, exprs, savelist = True ): super(Each,self).__init__(exprs, savelist) self.mayReturnEmpty = all(e.mayReturnEmpty for e in self.exprs) self.skipWhitespace = True self.initExprGroups = True def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): if self.initExprGroups: self.opt1map = dict((id(e.expr),e) for e in self.exprs if isinstance(e,Optional)) opt1 = [ e.expr for e in self.exprs if isinstance(e,Optional) ] opt2 = [ e for e in self.exprs if e.mayReturnEmpty and not isinstance(e,Optional)] self.optionals = opt1 + opt2 self.multioptionals = [ e.expr for e in self.exprs if isinstance(e,ZeroOrMore) ] self.multirequired = [ e.expr for e in self.exprs if isinstance(e,OneOrMore) ] self.required = [ e for e in self.exprs if not isinstance(e,(Optional,ZeroOrMore,OneOrMore)) ] self.required += self.multirequired self.initExprGroups = False tmpLoc = loc tmpReqd = self.required[:] tmpOpt = self.optionals[:] matchOrder = [] keepMatching = True while keepMatching: tmpExprs = tmpReqd + tmpOpt + self.multioptionals + self.multirequired failed = [] for e in tmpExprs: try: tmpLoc = e.tryParse( instring, tmpLoc ) except ParseException: failed.append(e) else: matchOrder.append(self.opt1map.get(id(e),e)) if e in tmpReqd: tmpReqd.remove(e) elif e in tmpOpt: tmpOpt.remove(e) if len(failed) == len(tmpExprs): keepMatching = False if tmpReqd: missing = ", ".join(_ustr(e) for e in tmpReqd) raise ParseException(instring,loc,"Missing one or more required elements (%s)" % missing ) # add any unmatched Optionals, in case they have default values defined matchOrder += [e for e in self.exprs if isinstance(e,Optional) and e.expr in tmpOpt] resultlist = [] for e in matchOrder: loc,results = e._parse(instring,loc,doActions) resultlist.append(results) finalResults = sum(resultlist, ParseResults([])) return loc, finalResults def __str__( self ): if hasattr(self,"name"): return self.name if self.strRepr is None: self.strRepr = "{" + " & ".join(_ustr(e) for e in self.exprs) + "}" return self.strRepr def checkRecursion( self, parseElementList ): subRecCheckList = parseElementList[:] + [ self ] for e in self.exprs: e.checkRecursion( subRecCheckList ) class ParseElementEnhance(ParserElement): """ Abstract subclass of C{ParserElement}, for combining and post-processing parsed tokens. """ def __init__( self, expr, savelist=False ): super(ParseElementEnhance,self).__init__(savelist) if isinstance( expr, basestring ): if issubclass(ParserElement._literalStringClass, Token): expr = ParserElement._literalStringClass(expr) else: expr = ParserElement._literalStringClass(Literal(expr)) self.expr = expr self.strRepr = None if expr is not None: self.mayIndexError = expr.mayIndexError self.mayReturnEmpty = expr.mayReturnEmpty self.setWhitespaceChars( expr.whiteChars ) self.skipWhitespace = expr.skipWhitespace self.saveAsList = expr.saveAsList self.callPreparse = expr.callPreparse self.ignoreExprs.extend(expr.ignoreExprs) def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): if self.expr is not None: return self.expr._parse( instring, loc, doActions, callPreParse=False ) else: raise ParseException("",loc,self.errmsg,self) def leaveWhitespace( self ): self.skipWhitespace = False self.expr = self.expr.copy() if self.expr is not None: self.expr.leaveWhitespace() return self def ignore( self, other ): if isinstance( other, Suppress ): if other not in self.ignoreExprs: super( ParseElementEnhance, self).ignore( other ) if self.expr is not None: self.expr.ignore( self.ignoreExprs[-1] ) else: super( ParseElementEnhance, self).ignore( other ) if self.expr is not None: self.expr.ignore( self.ignoreExprs[-1] ) return self def streamline( self ): super(ParseElementEnhance,self).streamline() if self.expr is not None: self.expr.streamline() return self def checkRecursion( self, parseElementList ): if self in parseElementList: raise RecursiveGrammarException( parseElementList+[self] ) subRecCheckList = parseElementList[:] + [ self ] if self.expr is not None: self.expr.checkRecursion( subRecCheckList ) def validate( self, validateTrace=[] ): tmp = validateTrace[:]+[self] if self.expr is not None: self.expr.validate(tmp) self.checkRecursion( [] ) def __str__( self ): try: return super(ParseElementEnhance,self).__str__() except Exception: pass if self.strRepr is None and self.expr is not None: self.strRepr = "%s:(%s)" % ( self.__class__.__name__, _ustr(self.expr) ) return self.strRepr class FollowedBy(ParseElementEnhance): """ Lookahead matching of the given parse expression. C{FollowedBy} does I{not} advance the parsing position within the input string, it only verifies that the specified parse expression matches at the current position. C{FollowedBy} always returns a null token list. Example:: # use FollowedBy to match a label only if it is followed by a ':' data_word = Word(alphas) label = data_word + FollowedBy(':') attr_expr = Group(label + Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word, stopOn=label).setParseAction(' '.join)) OneOrMore(attr_expr).parseString("shape: SQUARE color: BLACK posn: upper left").pprint() prints:: [['shape', 'SQUARE'], ['color', 'BLACK'], ['posn', 'upper left']] """ def __init__( self, expr ): super(FollowedBy,self).__init__(expr) self.mayReturnEmpty = True def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): self.expr.tryParse( instring, loc ) return loc, [] class NotAny(ParseElementEnhance): """ Lookahead to disallow matching with the given parse expression. C{NotAny} does I{not} advance the parsing position within the input string, it only verifies that the specified parse expression does I{not} match at the current position. Also, C{NotAny} does I{not} skip over leading whitespace. C{NotAny} always returns a null token list. May be constructed using the '~' operator. Example:: """ def __init__( self, expr ): super(NotAny,self).__init__(expr) #~ self.leaveWhitespace() self.skipWhitespace = False # do NOT use self.leaveWhitespace(), don't want to propagate to exprs self.mayReturnEmpty = True self.errmsg = "Found unwanted token, "+_ustr(self.expr) def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): if self.expr.canParseNext(instring, loc): raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) return loc, [] def __str__( self ): if hasattr(self,"name"): return self.name if self.strRepr is None: self.strRepr = "~{" + _ustr(self.expr) + "}" return self.strRepr class _MultipleMatch(ParseElementEnhance): def __init__( self, expr, stopOn=None): super(_MultipleMatch, self).__init__(expr) self.saveAsList = True ender = stopOn if isinstance(ender, basestring): ender = ParserElement._literalStringClass(ender) self.not_ender = ~ender if ender is not None else None def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): self_expr_parse = self.expr._parse self_skip_ignorables = self._skipIgnorables check_ender = self.not_ender is not None if check_ender: try_not_ender = self.not_ender.tryParse # must be at least one (but first see if we are the stopOn sentinel; # if so, fail) if check_ender: try_not_ender(instring, loc) loc, tokens = self_expr_parse( instring, loc, doActions, callPreParse=False ) try: hasIgnoreExprs = (not not self.ignoreExprs) while 1: if check_ender: try_not_ender(instring, loc) if hasIgnoreExprs: preloc = self_skip_ignorables( instring, loc ) else: preloc = loc loc, tmptokens = self_expr_parse( instring, preloc, doActions ) if tmptokens or tmptokens.haskeys(): tokens += tmptokens except (ParseException,IndexError): pass return loc, tokens class OneOrMore(_MultipleMatch): """ Repetition of one or more of the given expression. Parameters: - expr - expression that must match one or more times - stopOn - (default=C{None}) - expression for a terminating sentinel (only required if the sentinel would ordinarily match the repetition expression) Example:: data_word = Word(alphas) label = data_word + FollowedBy(':') attr_expr = Group(label + Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word).setParseAction(' '.join)) text = "shape: SQUARE posn: upper left color: BLACK" OneOrMore(attr_expr).parseString(text).pprint() # Fail! read 'color' as data instead of next label -> [['shape', 'SQUARE color']] # use stopOn attribute for OneOrMore to avoid reading label string as part of the data attr_expr = Group(label + Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word, stopOn=label).setParseAction(' '.join)) OneOrMore(attr_expr).parseString(text).pprint() # Better -> [['shape', 'SQUARE'], ['posn', 'upper left'], ['color', 'BLACK']] # could also be written as (attr_expr * (1,)).parseString(text).pprint() """ def __str__( self ): if hasattr(self,"name"): return self.name if self.strRepr is None: self.strRepr = "{" + _ustr(self.expr) + "}..." return self.strRepr class ZeroOrMore(_MultipleMatch): """ Optional repetition of zero or more of the given expression. Parameters: - expr - expression that must match zero or more times - stopOn - (default=C{None}) - expression for a terminating sentinel (only required if the sentinel would ordinarily match the repetition expression) Example: similar to L{OneOrMore} """ def __init__( self, expr, stopOn=None): super(ZeroOrMore,self).__init__(expr, stopOn=stopOn) self.mayReturnEmpty = True def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): try: return super(ZeroOrMore, self).parseImpl(instring, loc, doActions) except (ParseException,IndexError): return loc, [] def __str__( self ): if hasattr(self,"name"): return self.name if self.strRepr is None: self.strRepr = "[" + _ustr(self.expr) + "]..." return self.strRepr class _NullToken(object): def __bool__(self): return False __nonzero__ = __bool__ def __str__(self): return "" _optionalNotMatched = _NullToken() class Optional(ParseElementEnhance): """ Optional matching of the given expression. Parameters: - expr - expression that must match zero or more times - default (optional) - value to be returned if the optional expression is not found. Example:: # US postal code can be a 5-digit zip, plus optional 4-digit qualifier zip = Combine(Word(nums, exact=5) + Optional('-' + Word(nums, exact=4))) zip.runTests(''' # traditional ZIP code 12345 # ZIP+4 form 12101-0001 # invalid ZIP 98765- ''') prints:: # traditional ZIP code 12345 ['12345'] # ZIP+4 form 12101-0001 ['12101-0001'] # invalid ZIP 98765- ^ FAIL: Expected end of text (at char 5), (line:1, col:6) """ def __init__( self, expr, default=_optionalNotMatched ): super(Optional,self).__init__( expr, savelist=False ) self.saveAsList = self.expr.saveAsList self.defaultValue = default self.mayReturnEmpty = True def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): try: loc, tokens = self.expr._parse( instring, loc, doActions, callPreParse=False ) except (ParseException,IndexError): if self.defaultValue is not _optionalNotMatched: if self.expr.resultsName: tokens = ParseResults([ self.defaultValue ]) tokens[self.expr.resultsName] = self.defaultValue else: tokens = [ self.defaultValue ] else: tokens = [] return loc, tokens def __str__( self ): if hasattr(self,"name"): return self.name if self.strRepr is None: self.strRepr = "[" + _ustr(self.expr) + "]" return self.strRepr class SkipTo(ParseElementEnhance): """ Token for skipping over all undefined text until the matched expression is found. Parameters: - expr - target expression marking the end of the data to be skipped - include - (default=C{False}) if True, the target expression is also parsed (the skipped text and target expression are returned as a 2-element list). - ignore - (default=C{None}) used to define grammars (typically quoted strings and comments) that might contain false matches to the target expression - failOn - (default=C{None}) define expressions that are not allowed to be included in the skipped test; if found before the target expression is found, the SkipTo is not a match Example:: report = ''' Outstanding Issues Report - 1 Jan 2000 # | Severity | Description | Days Open -----+----------+-------------------------------------------+----------- 101 | Critical | Intermittent system crash | 6 94 | Cosmetic | Spelling error on Login ('log|n') | 14 79 | Minor | System slow when running too many reports | 47 ''' integer = Word(nums) SEP = Suppress('|') # use SkipTo to simply match everything up until the next SEP # - ignore quoted strings, so that a '|' character inside a quoted string does not match # - parse action will call token.strip() for each matched token, i.e., the description body string_data = SkipTo(SEP, ignore=quotedString) string_data.setParseAction(tokenMap(str.strip)) ticket_expr = (integer("issue_num") + SEP + string_data("sev") + SEP + string_data("desc") + SEP + integer("days_open")) for tkt in ticket_expr.searchString(report): print tkt.dump() prints:: ['101', 'Critical', 'Intermittent system crash', '6'] - days_open: 6 - desc: Intermittent system crash - issue_num: 101 - sev: Critical ['94', 'Cosmetic', "Spelling error on Login ('log|n')", '14'] - days_open: 14 - desc: Spelling error on Login ('log|n') - issue_num: 94 - sev: Cosmetic ['79', 'Minor', 'System slow when running too many reports', '47'] - days_open: 47 - desc: System slow when running too many reports - issue_num: 79 - sev: Minor """ def __init__( self, other, include=False, ignore=None, failOn=None ): super( SkipTo, self ).__init__( other ) self.ignoreExpr = ignore self.mayReturnEmpty = True self.mayIndexError = False self.includeMatch = include self.asList = False if isinstance(failOn, basestring): self.failOn = ParserElement._literalStringClass(failOn) else: self.failOn = failOn self.errmsg = "No match found for "+_ustr(self.expr) def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ): startloc = loc instrlen = len(instring) expr = self.expr expr_parse = self.expr._parse self_failOn_canParseNext = self.failOn.canParseNext if self.failOn is not None else None self_ignoreExpr_tryParse = self.ignoreExpr.tryParse if self.ignoreExpr is not None else None tmploc = loc while tmploc <= instrlen: if self_failOn_canParseNext is not None: # break if failOn expression matches if self_failOn_canParseNext(instring, tmploc): break if self_ignoreExpr_tryParse is not None: # advance past ignore expressions while 1: try: tmploc = self_ignoreExpr_tryParse(instring, tmploc) except ParseBaseException: break try: expr_parse(instring, tmploc, doActions=False, callPreParse=False) except (ParseException, IndexError): # no match, advance loc in string tmploc += 1 else: # matched skipto expr, done break else: # ran off the end of the input string without matching skipto expr, fail raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self) # build up return values loc = tmploc skiptext = instring[startloc:loc] skipresult = ParseResults(skiptext) if self.includeMatch: loc, mat = expr_parse(instring,loc,doActions,callPreParse=False) skipresult += mat return loc, skipresult class Forward(ParseElementEnhance): """ Forward declaration of an expression to be defined later - used for recursive grammars, such as algebraic infix notation. When the expression is known, it is assigned to the C{Forward} variable using the '<<' operator. Note: take care when assigning to C{Forward} not to overlook precedence of operators. Specifically, '|' has a lower precedence than '<<', so that:: fwdExpr << a | b | c will actually be evaluated as:: (fwdExpr << a) | b | c thereby leaving b and c out as parseable alternatives. It is recommended that you explicitly group the values inserted into the C{Forward}:: fwdExpr << (a | b | c) Converting to use the '<<=' operator instead will avoid this problem. See L{ParseResults.pprint} for an example of a recursive parser created using C{Forward}. """ def __init__( self, other=None ): super(Forward,self).__init__( other, savelist=False ) def __lshift__( self, other ): if isinstance( other, basestring ): other = ParserElement._literalStringClass(other) self.expr = other self.strRepr = None self.mayIndexError = self.expr.mayIndexError self.mayReturnEmpty = self.expr.mayReturnEmpty self.setWhitespaceChars( self.expr.whiteChars ) self.skipWhitespace = self.expr.skipWhitespace self.saveAsList = self.expr.saveAsList self.ignoreExprs.extend(self.expr.ignoreExprs) return self def __ilshift__(self, other): return self << other def leaveWhitespace( self ): self.skipWhitespace = False return self def streamline( self ): if not self.streamlined: self.streamlined = True if self.expr is not None: self.expr.streamline() return self def validate( self, validateTrace=[] ): if self not in validateTrace: tmp = validateTrace[:]+[self] if self.expr is not None: self.expr.validate(tmp) self.checkRecursion([]) def __str__( self ): if hasattr(self,"name"): return self.name return self.__class__.__name__ + ": ..." # stubbed out for now - creates awful memory and perf issues self._revertClass = self.__class__ self.__class__ = _ForwardNoRecurse try: if self.expr is not None: retString = _ustr(self.expr) else: retString = "None" finally: self.__class__ = self._revertClass return self.__class__.__name__ + ": " + retString def copy(self): if self.expr is not None: return super(Forward,self).copy() else: ret = Forward() ret <<= self return ret class _ForwardNoRecurse(Forward): def __str__( self ): return "..." class TokenConverter(ParseElementEnhance): """ Abstract subclass of C{ParseExpression}, for converting parsed results. """ def __init__( self, expr, savelist=False ): super(TokenConverter,self).__init__( expr )#, savelist ) self.saveAsList = False class Combine(TokenConverter): """ Converter to concatenate all matching tokens to a single string. By default, the matching patterns must also be contiguous in the input string; this can be disabled by specifying C{'adjacent=False'} in the constructor. Example:: real = Word(nums) + '.' + Word(nums) print(real.parseString('3.1416')) # -> ['3', '.', '1416'] # will also erroneously match the following print(real.parseString('3. 1416')) # -> ['3', '.', '1416'] real = Combine(Word(nums) + '.' + Word(nums)) print(real.parseString('3.1416')) # -> ['3.1416'] # no match when there are internal spaces print(real.parseString('3. 1416')) # -> Exception: Expected W:(0123...) """ def __init__( self, expr, joinString="", adjacent=True ): super(Combine,self).__init__( expr ) # suppress whitespace-stripping in contained parse expressions, but re-enable it on the Combine itself if adjacent: self.leaveWhitespace() self.adjacent = adjacent self.skipWhitespace = True self.joinString = joinString self.callPreparse = True def ignore( self, other ): if self.adjacent: ParserElement.ignore(self, other) else: super( Combine, self).ignore( other ) return self def postParse( self, instring, loc, tokenlist ): retToks = tokenlist.copy() del retToks[:] retToks += ParseResults([ "".join(tokenlist._asStringList(self.joinString)) ], modal=self.modalResults) if self.resultsName and retToks.haskeys(): return [ retToks ] else: return retToks class Group(TokenConverter): """ Converter to return the matched tokens as a list - useful for returning tokens of C{L{ZeroOrMore}} and C{L{OneOrMore}} expressions. Example:: ident = Word(alphas) num = Word(nums) term = ident | num func = ident + Optional(delimitedList(term)) print(func.parseString("fn a,b,100")) # -> ['fn', 'a', 'b', '100'] func = ident + Group(Optional(delimitedList(term))) print(func.parseString("fn a,b,100")) # -> ['fn', ['a', 'b', '100']] """ def __init__( self, expr ): super(Group,self).__init__( expr ) self.saveAsList = True def postParse( self, instring, loc, tokenlist ): return [ tokenlist ] class Dict(TokenConverter): """ Converter to return a repetitive expression as a list, but also as a dictionary. Each element can also be referenced using the first token in the expression as its key. Useful for tabular report scraping when the first column can be used as a item key. Example:: data_word = Word(alphas) label = data_word + FollowedBy(':') attr_expr = Group(label + Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word).setParseAction(' '.join)) text = "shape: SQUARE posn: upper left color: light blue texture: burlap" attr_expr = (label + Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word, stopOn=label).setParseAction(' '.join)) # print attributes as plain groups print(OneOrMore(attr_expr).parseString(text).dump()) # instead of OneOrMore(expr), parse using Dict(OneOrMore(Group(expr))) - Dict will auto-assign names result = Dict(OneOrMore(Group(attr_expr))).parseString(text) print(result.dump()) # access named fields as dict entries, or output as dict print(result['shape']) print(result.asDict()) prints:: ['shape', 'SQUARE', 'posn', 'upper left', 'color', 'light blue', 'texture', 'burlap'] [['shape', 'SQUARE'], ['posn', 'upper left'], ['color', 'light blue'], ['texture', 'burlap']] - color: light blue - posn: upper left - shape: SQUARE - texture: burlap SQUARE {'color': 'light blue', 'posn': 'upper left', 'texture': 'burlap', 'shape': 'SQUARE'} See more examples at L{ParseResults} of accessing fields by results name. """ def __init__( self, expr ): super(Dict,self).__init__( expr ) self.saveAsList = True def postParse( self, instring, loc, tokenlist ): for i,tok in enumerate(tokenlist): if len(tok) == 0: continue ikey = tok[0] if isinstance(ikey,int): ikey = _ustr(tok[0]).strip() if len(tok)==1: tokenlist[ikey] = _ParseResultsWithOffset("",i) elif len(tok)==2 and not isinstance(tok[1],ParseResults): tokenlist[ikey] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(tok[1],i) else: dictvalue = tok.copy() #ParseResults(i) del dictvalue[0] if len(dictvalue)!= 1 or (isinstance(dictvalue,ParseResults) and dictvalue.haskeys()): tokenlist[ikey] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(dictvalue,i) else: tokenlist[ikey] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(dictvalue[0],i) if self.resultsName: return [ tokenlist ] else: return tokenlist class Suppress(TokenConverter): """ Converter for ignoring the results of a parsed expression. Example:: source = "a, b, c,d" wd = Word(alphas) wd_list1 = wd + ZeroOrMore(',' + wd) print(wd_list1.parseString(source)) # often, delimiters that are useful during parsing are just in the # way afterward - use Suppress to keep them out of the parsed output wd_list2 = wd + ZeroOrMore(Suppress(',') + wd) print(wd_list2.parseString(source)) prints:: ['a', ',', 'b', ',', 'c', ',', 'd'] ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'] (See also L{delimitedList}.) """ def postParse( self, instring, loc, tokenlist ): return [] def suppress( self ): return self class OnlyOnce(object): """ Wrapper for parse actions, to ensure they are only called once. """ def __init__(self, methodCall): self.callable = _trim_arity(methodCall) self.called = False def __call__(self,s,l,t): if not self.called: results = self.callable(s,l,t) self.called = True return results raise ParseException(s,l,"") def reset(self): self.called = False def traceParseAction(f): """ Decorator for debugging parse actions. When the parse action is called, this decorator will print C{">> entering I{method-name}(line:I{current_source_line}, I{parse_location}, I{matched_tokens})".} When the parse action completes, the decorator will print C{"<<"} followed by the returned value, or any exception that the parse action raised. Example:: wd = Word(alphas) @traceParseAction def remove_duplicate_chars(tokens): return ''.join(sorted(set(''.join(tokens)))) wds = OneOrMore(wd).setParseAction(remove_duplicate_chars) print(wds.parseString("slkdjs sld sldd sdlf sdljf")) prints:: >>entering remove_duplicate_chars(line: 'slkdjs sld sldd sdlf sdljf', 0, (['slkdjs', 'sld', 'sldd', 'sdlf', 'sdljf'], {})) <<leaving remove_duplicate_chars (ret: 'dfjkls') ['dfjkls'] """ f = _trim_arity(f) def z(*paArgs): thisFunc = f.__name__ s,l,t = paArgs[-3:] if len(paArgs)>3: thisFunc = paArgs[0].__class__.__name__ + '.' + thisFunc sys.stderr.write( ">>entering %s(line: '%s', %d, %r)\n" % (thisFunc,line(l,s),l,t) ) try: ret = f(*paArgs) except Exception as exc: sys.stderr.write( "<<leaving %s (exception: %s)\n" % (thisFunc,exc) ) raise sys.stderr.write( "<<leaving %s (ret: %r)\n" % (thisFunc,ret) ) return ret try: z.__name__ = f.__name__ except AttributeError: pass return z # # global helpers # def delimitedList( expr, delim=",", combine=False ): """ Helper to define a delimited list of expressions - the delimiter defaults to ','. By default, the list elements and delimiters can have intervening whitespace, and comments, but this can be overridden by passing C{combine=True} in the constructor. If C{combine} is set to C{True}, the matching tokens are returned as a single token string, with the delimiters included; otherwise, the matching tokens are returned as a list of tokens, with the delimiters suppressed. Example:: delimitedList(Word(alphas)).parseString("aa,bb,cc") # -> ['aa', 'bb', 'cc'] delimitedList(Word(hexnums), delim=':', combine=True).parseString("AA:BB:CC:DD:EE") # -> ['AA:BB:CC:DD:EE'] """ dlName = _ustr(expr)+" ["+_ustr(delim)+" "+_ustr(expr)+"]..." if combine: return Combine( expr + ZeroOrMore( delim + expr ) ).setName(dlName) else: return ( expr + ZeroOrMore( Suppress( delim ) + expr ) ).setName(dlName) def countedArray( expr, intExpr=None ): """ Helper to define a counted list of expressions. This helper defines a pattern of the form:: integer expr expr expr... where the leading integer tells how many expr expressions follow. The matched tokens returns the array of expr tokens as a list - the leading count token is suppressed. If C{intExpr} is specified, it should be a pyparsing expression that produces an integer value. Example:: countedArray(Word(alphas)).parseString('2 ab cd ef') # -> ['ab', 'cd'] # in this parser, the leading integer value is given in binary, # '10' indicating that 2 values are in the array binaryConstant = Word('01').setParseAction(lambda t: int(t[0], 2)) countedArray(Word(alphas), intExpr=binaryConstant).parseString('10 ab cd ef') # -> ['ab', 'cd'] """ arrayExpr = Forward() def countFieldParseAction(s,l,t): n = t[0] arrayExpr << (n and Group(And([expr]*n)) or Group(empty)) return [] if intExpr is None: intExpr = Word(nums).setParseAction(lambda t:int(t[0])) else: intExpr = intExpr.copy() intExpr.setName("arrayLen") intExpr.addParseAction(countFieldParseAction, callDuringTry=True) return ( intExpr + arrayExpr ).setName('(len) ' + _ustr(expr) + '...') def _flatten(L): ret = [] for i in L: if isinstance(i,list): ret.extend(_flatten(i)) else: ret.append(i) return ret def matchPreviousLiteral(expr): """ Helper to define an expression that is indirectly defined from the tokens matched in a previous expression, that is, it looks for a 'repeat' of a previous expression. For example:: first = Word(nums) second = matchPreviousLiteral(first) matchExpr = first + ":" + second will match C{"1:1"}, but not C{"1:2"}. Because this matches a previous literal, will also match the leading C{"1:1"} in C{"1:10"}. If this is not desired, use C{matchPreviousExpr}. Do I{not} use with packrat parsing enabled. """ rep = Forward() def copyTokenToRepeater(s,l,t): if t: if len(t) == 1: rep << t[0] else: # flatten t tokens tflat = _flatten(t.asList()) rep << And(Literal(tt) for tt in tflat) else: rep << Empty() expr.addParseAction(copyTokenToRepeater, callDuringTry=True) rep.setName('(prev) ' + _ustr(expr)) return rep def matchPreviousExpr(expr): """ Helper to define an expression that is indirectly defined from the tokens matched in a previous expression, that is, it looks for a 'repeat' of a previous expression. For example:: first = Word(nums) second = matchPreviousExpr(first) matchExpr = first + ":" + second will match C{"1:1"}, but not C{"1:2"}. Because this matches by expressions, will I{not} match the leading C{"1:1"} in C{"1:10"}; the expressions are evaluated first, and then compared, so C{"1"} is compared with C{"10"}. Do I{not} use with packrat parsing enabled. """ rep = Forward() e2 = expr.copy() rep <<= e2 def copyTokenToRepeater(s,l,t): matchTokens = _flatten(t.asList()) def mustMatchTheseTokens(s,l,t): theseTokens = _flatten(t.asList()) if theseTokens != matchTokens: raise ParseException("",0,"") rep.setParseAction( mustMatchTheseTokens, callDuringTry=True ) expr.addParseAction(copyTokenToRepeater, callDuringTry=True) rep.setName('(prev) ' + _ustr(expr)) return rep def _escapeRegexRangeChars(s): #~ escape these chars: ^-] for c in r"\^-]": s = s.replace(c,_bslash+c) s = s.replace("\n",r"\n") s = s.replace("\t",r"\t") return _ustr(s) def oneOf( strs, caseless=False, useRegex=True ): """ Helper to quickly define a set of alternative Literals, and makes sure to do longest-first testing when there is a conflict, regardless of the input order, but returns a C{L{MatchFirst}} for best performance. Parameters: - strs - a string of space-delimited literals, or a collection of string literals - caseless - (default=C{False}) - treat all literals as caseless - useRegex - (default=C{True}) - as an optimization, will generate a Regex object; otherwise, will generate a C{MatchFirst} object (if C{caseless=True}, or if creating a C{Regex} raises an exception) Example:: comp_oper = oneOf("< = > <= >= !=") var = Word(alphas) number = Word(nums) term = var | number comparison_expr = term + comp_oper + term print(comparison_expr.searchString("B = 12 AA=23 B<=AA AA>12")) prints:: [['B', '=', '12'], ['AA', '=', '23'], ['B', '<=', 'AA'], ['AA', '>', '12']] """ if caseless: isequal = ( lambda a,b: a.upper() == b.upper() ) masks = ( lambda a,b: b.upper().startswith(a.upper()) ) parseElementClass = CaselessLiteral else: isequal = ( lambda a,b: a == b ) masks = ( lambda a,b: b.startswith(a) ) parseElementClass = Literal symbols = [] if isinstance(strs,basestring): symbols = strs.split() elif isinstance(strs, Iterable): symbols = list(strs) else: warnings.warn("Invalid argument to oneOf, expected string or iterable", SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2) if not symbols: return NoMatch() i = 0 while i < len(symbols)-1: cur = symbols[i] for j,other in enumerate(symbols[i+1:]): if ( isequal(other, cur) ): del symbols[i+j+1] break elif ( masks(cur, other) ): del symbols[i+j+1] symbols.insert(i,other) cur = other break else: i += 1 if not caseless and useRegex: #~ print (strs,"->", "|".join( [ _escapeRegexChars(sym) for sym in symbols] )) try: if len(symbols)==len("".join(symbols)): return Regex( "[%s]" % "".join(_escapeRegexRangeChars(sym) for sym in symbols) ).setName(' | '.join(symbols)) else: return Regex( "|".join(re.escape(sym) for sym in symbols) ).setName(' | '.join(symbols)) except Exception: warnings.warn("Exception creating Regex for oneOf, building MatchFirst", SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2) # last resort, just use MatchFirst return MatchFirst(parseElementClass(sym) for sym in symbols).setName(' | '.join(symbols)) def dictOf( key, value ): """ Helper to easily and clearly define a dictionary by specifying the respective patterns for the key and value. Takes care of defining the C{L{Dict}}, C{L{ZeroOrMore}}, and C{L{Group}} tokens in the proper order. The key pattern can include delimiting markers or punctuation, as long as they are suppressed, thereby leaving the significant key text. The value pattern can include named results, so that the C{Dict} results can include named token fields. Example:: text = "shape: SQUARE posn: upper left color: light blue texture: burlap" attr_expr = (label + Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word, stopOn=label).setParseAction(' '.join)) print(OneOrMore(attr_expr).parseString(text).dump()) attr_label = label attr_value = Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word, stopOn=label).setParseAction(' '.join) # similar to Dict, but simpler call format result = dictOf(attr_label, attr_value).parseString(text) print(result.dump()) print(result['shape']) print(result.shape) # object attribute access works too print(result.asDict()) prints:: [['shape', 'SQUARE'], ['posn', 'upper left'], ['color', 'light blue'], ['texture', 'burlap']] - color: light blue - posn: upper left - shape: SQUARE - texture: burlap SQUARE SQUARE {'color': 'light blue', 'shape': 'SQUARE', 'posn': 'upper left', 'texture': 'burlap'} """ return Dict( ZeroOrMore( Group ( key + value ) ) ) def originalTextFor(expr, asString=True): """ Helper to return the original, untokenized text for a given expression. Useful to restore the parsed fields of an HTML start tag into the raw tag text itself, or to revert separate tokens with intervening whitespace back to the original matching input text. By default, returns astring containing the original parsed text. If the optional C{asString} argument is passed as C{False}, then the return value is a C{L{ParseResults}} containing any results names that were originally matched, and a single token containing the original matched text from the input string. So if the expression passed to C{L{originalTextFor}} contains expressions with defined results names, you must set C{asString} to C{False} if you want to preserve those results name values. Example:: src = "this is test <b> bold <i>text</i> </b> normal text " for tag in ("b","i"): opener,closer = makeHTMLTags(tag) patt = originalTextFor(opener + SkipTo(closer) + closer) print(patt.searchString(src)[0]) prints:: ['<b> bold <i>text</i> </b>'] ['<i>text</i>'] """ locMarker = Empty().setParseAction(lambda s,loc,t: loc) endlocMarker = locMarker.copy() endlocMarker.callPreparse = False matchExpr = locMarker("_original_start") + expr + endlocMarker("_original_end") if asString: extractText = lambda s,l,t: s[t._original_start:t._original_end] else: def extractText(s,l,t): t[:] = [s[t.pop('_original_start'):t.pop('_original_end')]] matchExpr.setParseAction(extractText) matchExpr.ignoreExprs = expr.ignoreExprs return matchExpr def ungroup(expr): """ Helper to undo pyparsing's default grouping of And expressions, even if all but one are non-empty. """ return TokenConverter(expr).setParseAction(lambda t:t[0]) def locatedExpr(expr): """ Helper to decorate a returned token with its starting and ending locations in the input string. This helper adds the following results names: - locn_start = location where matched expression begins - locn_end = location where matched expression ends - value = the actual parsed results Be careful if the input text contains C{<TAB>} characters, you may want to call C{L{ParserElement.parseWithTabs}} Example:: wd = Word(alphas) for match in locatedExpr(wd).searchString("ljsdf123lksdjjf123lkkjj1222"): print(match) prints:: [[0, 'ljsdf', 5]] [[8, 'lksdjjf', 15]] [[18, 'lkkjj', 23]] """ locator = Empty().setParseAction(lambda s,l,t: l) return Group(locator("locn_start") + expr("value") + locator.copy().leaveWhitespace()("locn_end")) # convenience constants for positional expressions empty = Empty().setName("empty") lineStart = LineStart().setName("lineStart") lineEnd = LineEnd().setName("lineEnd") stringStart = StringStart().setName("stringStart") stringEnd = StringEnd().setName("stringEnd") _escapedPunc = Word( _bslash, r"\[]-*.$+^?()~ ", exact=2 ).setParseAction(lambda s,l,t:t[0][1]) _escapedHexChar = Regex(r"\\0?[xX][0-9a-fA-F]+").setParseAction(lambda s,l,t:unichr(int(t[0].lstrip(r'\0x'),16))) _escapedOctChar = Regex(r"\\0[0-7]+").setParseAction(lambda s,l,t:unichr(int(t[0][1:],8))) _singleChar = _escapedPunc | _escapedHexChar | _escapedOctChar | CharsNotIn(r'\]', exact=1) _charRange = Group(_singleChar + Suppress("-") + _singleChar) _reBracketExpr = Literal("[") + Optional("^").setResultsName("negate") + Group( OneOrMore( _charRange | _singleChar ) ).setResultsName("body") + "]" def srange(s): r""" Helper to easily define string ranges for use in Word construction. Borrows syntax from regexp '[]' string range definitions:: srange("[0-9]") -> "0123456789" srange("[a-z]") -> "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz" srange("[a-z$_]") -> "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz$_" The input string must be enclosed in []'s, and the returned string is the expanded character set joined into a single string. The values enclosed in the []'s may be: - a single character - an escaped character with a leading backslash (such as C{\-} or C{\]}) - an escaped hex character with a leading C{'\x'} (C{\x21}, which is a C{'!'} character) (C{\0x##} is also supported for backwards compatibility) - an escaped octal character with a leading C{'\0'} (C{\041}, which is a C{'!'} character) - a range of any of the above, separated by a dash (C{'a-z'}, etc.) - any combination of the above (C{'aeiouy'}, C{'a-zA-Z0-9_$'}, etc.) """ _expanded = lambda p: p if not isinstance(p,ParseResults) else ''.join(unichr(c) for c in range(ord(p[0]),ord(p[1])+1)) try: return "".join(_expanded(part) for part in _reBracketExpr.parseString(s).body) except Exception: return "" def matchOnlyAtCol(n): """ Helper method for defining parse actions that require matching at a specific column in the input text. """ def verifyCol(strg,locn,toks): if col(locn,strg) != n: raise ParseException(strg,locn,"matched token not at column %d" % n) return verifyCol def replaceWith(replStr): """ Helper method for common parse actions that simply return a literal value. Especially useful when used with C{L{transformString<ParserElement.transformString>}()}. Example:: num = Word(nums).setParseAction(lambda toks: int(toks[0])) na = oneOf("N/A NA").setParseAction(replaceWith(math.nan)) term = na | num OneOrMore(term).parseString("324 234 N/A 234") # -> [324, 234, nan, 234] """ return lambda s,l,t: [replStr] def removeQuotes(s,l,t): """ Helper parse action for removing quotation marks from parsed quoted strings. Example:: # by default, quotation marks are included in parsed results quotedString.parseString("'Now is the Winter of our Discontent'") # -> ["'Now is the Winter of our Discontent'"] # use removeQuotes to strip quotation marks from parsed results quotedString.setParseAction(removeQuotes) quotedString.parseString("'Now is the Winter of our Discontent'") # -> ["Now is the Winter of our Discontent"] """ return t[0][1:-1] def tokenMap(func, *args): """ Helper to define a parse action by mapping a function to all elements of a ParseResults list.If any additional args are passed, they are forwarded to the given function as additional arguments after the token, as in C{hex_integer = Word(hexnums).setParseAction(tokenMap(int, 16))}, which will convert the parsed data to an integer using base 16. Example (compare the last to example in L{ParserElement.transformString}:: hex_ints = OneOrMore(Word(hexnums)).setParseAction(tokenMap(int, 16)) hex_ints.runTests(''' 00 11 22 aa FF 0a 0d 1a ''') upperword = Word(alphas).setParseAction(tokenMap(str.upper)) OneOrMore(upperword).runTests(''' my kingdom for a horse ''') wd = Word(alphas).setParseAction(tokenMap(str.title)) OneOrMore(wd).setParseAction(' '.join).runTests(''' now is the winter of our discontent made glorious summer by this sun of york ''') prints:: 00 11 22 aa FF 0a 0d 1a [0, 17, 34, 170, 255, 10, 13, 26] my kingdom for a horse ['MY', 'KINGDOM', 'FOR', 'A', 'HORSE'] now is the winter of our discontent made glorious summer by this sun of york ['Now Is The Winter Of Our Discontent Made Glorious Summer By This Sun Of York'] """ def pa(s,l,t): return [func(tokn, *args) for tokn in t] try: func_name = getattr(func, '__name__', getattr(func, '__class__').__name__) except Exception: func_name = str(func) pa.__name__ = func_name return pa upcaseTokens = tokenMap(lambda t: _ustr(t).upper()) """(Deprecated) Helper parse action to convert tokens to upper case. Deprecated in favor of L{pyparsing_common.upcaseTokens}""" downcaseTokens = tokenMap(lambda t: _ustr(t).lower()) """(Deprecated) Helper parse action to convert tokens to lower case. Deprecated in favor of L{pyparsing_common.downcaseTokens}""" def _makeTags(tagStr, xml): """Internal helper to construct opening and closing tag expressions, given a tag name""" if isinstance(tagStr,basestring): resname = tagStr tagStr = Keyword(tagStr, caseless=not xml) else: resname = tagStr.name tagAttrName = Word(alphas,alphanums+"_-:") if (xml): tagAttrValue = dblQuotedString.copy().setParseAction( removeQuotes ) openTag = Suppress("<") + tagStr("tag") + \ Dict(ZeroOrMore(Group( tagAttrName + Suppress("=") + tagAttrValue ))) + \ Optional("/",default=[False]).setResultsName("empty").setParseAction(lambda s,l,t:t[0]=='/') + Suppress(">") else: printablesLessRAbrack = "".join(c for c in printables if c not in ">") tagAttrValue = quotedString.copy().setParseAction( removeQuotes ) | Word(printablesLessRAbrack) openTag = Suppress("<") + tagStr("tag") + \ Dict(ZeroOrMore(Group( tagAttrName.setParseAction(downcaseTokens) + \ Optional( Suppress("=") + tagAttrValue ) ))) + \ Optional("/",default=[False]).setResultsName("empty").setParseAction(lambda s,l,t:t[0]=='/') + Suppress(">") closeTag = Combine(_L("</") + tagStr + ">") openTag = openTag.setResultsName("start"+"".join(resname.replace(":"," ").title().split())).setName("<%s>" % resname) closeTag = closeTag.setResultsName("end"+"".join(resname.replace(":"," ").title().split())).setName("</%s>" % resname) openTag.tag = resname closeTag.tag = resname return openTag, closeTag def makeHTMLTags(tagStr): """ Helper to construct opening and closing tag expressions for HTML, given a tag name. Matches tags in either upper or lower case, attributes with namespaces and with quoted or unquoted values. Example:: text = '<td>More info at the <a href="http://pyparsing.wikispaces.com">pyparsing</a> wiki page</td>' # makeHTMLTags returns pyparsing expressions for the opening and closing tags as a 2-tuple a,a_end = makeHTMLTags("A") link_expr = a + SkipTo(a_end)("link_text") + a_end for link in link_expr.searchString(text): # attributes in the <A> tag (like "href" shown here) are also accessible as named results print(link.link_text, '->', link.href) prints:: pyparsing -> http://pyparsing.wikispaces.com """ return _makeTags( tagStr, False ) def makeXMLTags(tagStr): """ Helper to construct opening and closing tag expressions for XML, given a tag name. Matches tags only in the given upper/lower case. Example: similar to L{makeHTMLTags} """ return _makeTags( tagStr, True ) def withAttribute(*args,**attrDict): """ Helper to create a validating parse action to be used with start tags created with C{L{makeXMLTags}} or C{L{makeHTMLTags}}. Use C{withAttribute} to qualify a starting tag with a required attribute value, to avoid false matches on common tags such as C{<TD>} or C{<DIV>}. Call C{withAttribute} with a series of attribute names and values. Specify the list of filter attributes names and values as: - keyword arguments, as in C{(align="right")}, or - as an explicit dict with C{**} operator, when an attribute name is also a Python reserved word, as in C{**{"class":"Customer", "align":"right"}} - a list of name-value tuples, as in ( ("ns1:class", "Customer"), ("ns2:align","right") ) For attribute names with a namespace prefix, you must use the second form. Attribute names are matched insensitive to upper/lower case. If just testing for C{class} (with or without a namespace), use C{L{withClass}}. To verify that the attribute exists, but without specifying a value, pass C{withAttribute.ANY_VALUE} as the value. Example:: html = ''' <div> Some text <div type="grid">1 4 0 1 0</div> <div type="graph">1,3 2,3 1,1</div> <div>this has no type</div> </div> ''' div,div_end = makeHTMLTags("div") # only match div tag having a type attribute with value "grid" div_grid = div().setParseAction(withAttribute(type="grid")) grid_expr = div_grid + SkipTo(div | div_end)("body") for grid_header in grid_expr.searchString(html): print(grid_header.body) # construct a match with any div tag having a type attribute, regardless of the value div_any_type = div().setParseAction(withAttribute(type=withAttribute.ANY_VALUE)) div_expr = div_any_type + SkipTo(div | div_end)("body") for div_header in div_expr.searchString(html): print(div_header.body) prints:: 1 4 0 1 0 1 4 0 1 0 1,3 2,3 1,1 """ if args: attrs = args[:] else: attrs = attrDict.items() attrs = [(k,v) for k,v in attrs] def pa(s,l,tokens): for attrName,attrValue in attrs: if attrName not in tokens: raise ParseException(s,l,"no matching attribute " + attrName) if attrValue != withAttribute.ANY_VALUE and tokens[attrName] != attrValue: raise ParseException(s,l,"attribute '%s' has value '%s', must be '%s'" % (attrName, tokens[attrName], attrValue)) return pa withAttribute.ANY_VALUE = object() def withClass(classname, namespace=''): """ Simplified version of C{L{withAttribute}} when matching on a div class - made difficult because C{class} is a reserved word in Python. Example:: html = ''' <div> Some text <div class="grid">1 4 0 1 0</div> <div class="graph">1,3 2,3 1,1</div> <div>this &lt;div&gt; has no class</div> </div> ''' div,div_end = makeHTMLTags("div") div_grid = div().setParseAction(withClass("grid")) grid_expr = div_grid + SkipTo(div | div_end)("body") for grid_header in grid_expr.searchString(html): print(grid_header.body) div_any_type = div().setParseAction(withClass(withAttribute.ANY_VALUE)) div_expr = div_any_type + SkipTo(div | div_end)("body") for div_header in div_expr.searchString(html): print(div_header.body) prints:: 1 4 0 1 0 1 4 0 1 0 1,3 2,3 1,1 """ classattr = "%s:class" % namespace if namespace else "class" return withAttribute(**{classattr : classname}) opAssoc = _Constants() opAssoc.LEFT = object() opAssoc.RIGHT = object() def infixNotation( baseExpr, opList, lpar=Suppress('('), rpar=Suppress(')') ): """ Helper method for constructing grammars of expressions made up of operators working in a precedence hierarchy. Operators may be unary or binary, left- or right-associative. Parse actions can also be attached to operator expressions. The generated parser will also recognize the use of parentheses to override operator precedences (see example below). Note: if you define a deep operator list, you may see performance issues when using infixNotation. See L{ParserElement.enablePackrat} for a mechanism to potentially improve your parser performance. Parameters: - baseExpr - expression representing the most basic element for the nested - opList - list of tuples, one for each operator precedence level in the expression grammar; each tuple is of the form (opExpr, numTerms, rightLeftAssoc, parseAction), where: - opExpr is the pyparsing expression for the operator; may also be a string, which will be converted to a Literal; if numTerms is 3, opExpr is a tuple of two expressions, for the two operators separating the 3 terms - numTerms is the number of terms for this operator (must be 1, 2, or 3) - rightLeftAssoc is the indicator whether the operator is right or left associative, using the pyparsing-defined constants C{opAssoc.RIGHT} and C{opAssoc.LEFT}. - parseAction is the parse action to be associated with expressions matching this operator expression (the parse action tuple member may be omitted); if the parse action is passed a tuple or list of functions, this is equivalent to calling C{setParseAction(*fn)} (L{ParserElement.setParseAction}) - lpar - expression for matching left-parentheses (default=C{Suppress('(')}) - rpar - expression for matching right-parentheses (default=C{Suppress(')')}) Example:: # simple example of four-function arithmetic with ints and variable names integer = pyparsing_common.signed_integer varname = pyparsing_common.identifier arith_expr = infixNotation(integer | varname, [ ('-', 1, opAssoc.RIGHT), (oneOf('* /'), 2, opAssoc.LEFT), (oneOf('+ -'), 2, opAssoc.LEFT), ]) arith_expr.runTests(''' 5+3*6 (5+3)*6 -2--11 ''', fullDump=False) prints:: 5+3*6 [[5, '+', [3, '*', 6]]] (5+3)*6 [[[5, '+', 3], '*', 6]] -2--11 [[['-', 2], '-', ['-', 11]]] """ ret = Forward() lastExpr = baseExpr | ( lpar + ret + rpar ) for i,operDef in enumerate(opList): opExpr,arity,rightLeftAssoc,pa = (operDef + (None,))[:4] termName = "%s term" % opExpr if arity < 3 else "%s%s term" % opExpr if arity == 3: if opExpr is None or len(opExpr) != 2: raise ValueError("if numterms=3, opExpr must be a tuple or list of two expressions") opExpr1, opExpr2 = opExpr thisExpr = Forward().setName(termName) if rightLeftAssoc == opAssoc.LEFT: if arity == 1: matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr + opExpr) + Group( lastExpr + OneOrMore( opExpr ) ) elif arity == 2: if opExpr is not None: matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr + opExpr + lastExpr) + Group( lastExpr + OneOrMore( opExpr + lastExpr ) ) else: matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr+lastExpr) + Group( lastExpr + OneOrMore(lastExpr) ) elif arity == 3: matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr + opExpr1 + lastExpr + opExpr2 + lastExpr) + \ Group( lastExpr + opExpr1 + lastExpr + opExpr2 + lastExpr ) else: raise ValueError("operator must be unary (1), binary (2), or ternary (3)") elif rightLeftAssoc == opAssoc.RIGHT: if arity == 1: # try to avoid LR with this extra test if not isinstance(opExpr, Optional): opExpr = Optional(opExpr) matchExpr = FollowedBy(opExpr.expr + thisExpr) + Group( opExpr + thisExpr ) elif arity == 2: if opExpr is not None: matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr + opExpr + thisExpr) + Group( lastExpr + OneOrMore( opExpr + thisExpr ) ) else: matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr + thisExpr) + Group( lastExpr + OneOrMore( thisExpr ) ) elif arity == 3: matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr + opExpr1 + thisExpr + opExpr2 + thisExpr) + \ Group( lastExpr + opExpr1 + thisExpr + opExpr2 + thisExpr ) else: raise ValueError("operator must be unary (1), binary (2), or ternary (3)") else: raise ValueError("operator must indicate right or left associativity") if pa: if isinstance(pa, (tuple, list)): matchExpr.setParseAction(*pa) else: matchExpr.setParseAction(pa) thisExpr <<= ( matchExpr.setName(termName) | lastExpr ) lastExpr = thisExpr ret <<= lastExpr return ret operatorPrecedence = infixNotation """(Deprecated) Former name of C{L{infixNotation}}, will be dropped in a future release.""" dblQuotedString = Combine(Regex(r'"(?:[^"\n\r\\]|(?:"")|(?:\\(?:[^x]|x[0-9a-fA-F]+)))*')+'"').setName("string enclosed in double quotes") sglQuotedString = Combine(Regex(r"'(?:[^'\n\r\\]|(?:'')|(?:\\(?:[^x]|x[0-9a-fA-F]+)))*")+"'").setName("string enclosed in single quotes") quotedString = Combine(Regex(r'"(?:[^"\n\r\\]|(?:"")|(?:\\(?:[^x]|x[0-9a-fA-F]+)))*')+'"'| Regex(r"'(?:[^'\n\r\\]|(?:'')|(?:\\(?:[^x]|x[0-9a-fA-F]+)))*")+"'").setName("quotedString using single or double quotes") unicodeString = Combine(_L('u') + quotedString.copy()).setName("unicode string literal") def nestedExpr(opener="(", closer=")", content=None, ignoreExpr=quotedString.copy()): """ Helper method for defining nested lists enclosed in opening and closing delimiters ("(" and ")" are the default). Parameters: - opener - opening character for a nested list (default=C{"("}); can also be a pyparsing expression - closer - closing character for a nested list (default=C{")"}); can also be a pyparsing expression - content - expression for items within the nested lists (default=C{None}) - ignoreExpr - expression for ignoring opening and closing delimiters (default=C{quotedString}) If an expression is not provided for the content argument, the nested expression will capture all whitespace-delimited content between delimiters as a list of separate values. Use the C{ignoreExpr} argument to define expressions that may contain opening or closing characters that should not be treated as opening or closing characters for nesting, such as quotedString or a comment expression. Specify multiple expressions using an C{L{Or}} or C{L{MatchFirst}}. The default is L{quotedString}, but if no expressions are to be ignored, then pass C{None} for this argument. Example:: data_type = oneOf("void int short long char float double") decl_data_type = Combine(data_type + Optional(Word('*'))) ident = Word(alphas+'_', alphanums+'_') number = pyparsing_common.number arg = Group(decl_data_type + ident) LPAR,RPAR = map(Suppress, "()") code_body = nestedExpr('{', '}', ignoreExpr=(quotedString | cStyleComment)) c_function = (decl_data_type("type") + ident("name") + LPAR + Optional(delimitedList(arg), [])("args") + RPAR + code_body("body")) c_function.ignore(cStyleComment) source_code = ''' int is_odd(int x) { return (x%2); } int dec_to_hex(char hchar) { if (hchar >= '0' && hchar <= '9') { return (ord(hchar)-ord('0')); } else { return (10+ord(hchar)-ord('A')); } } ''' for func in c_function.searchString(source_code): print("%(name)s (%(type)s) args: %(args)s" % func) prints:: is_odd (int) args: [['int', 'x']] dec_to_hex (int) args: [['char', 'hchar']] """ if opener == closer: raise ValueError("opening and closing strings cannot be the same") if content is None: if isinstance(opener,basestring) and isinstance(closer,basestring): if len(opener) == 1 and len(closer)==1: if ignoreExpr is not None: content = (Combine(OneOrMore(~ignoreExpr + CharsNotIn(opener+closer+ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS,exact=1)) ).setParseAction(lambda t:t[0].strip())) else: content = (empty.copy()+CharsNotIn(opener+closer+ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS ).setParseAction(lambda t:t[0].strip())) else: if ignoreExpr is not None: content = (Combine(OneOrMore(~ignoreExpr + ~Literal(opener) + ~Literal(closer) + CharsNotIn(ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS,exact=1)) ).setParseAction(lambda t:t[0].strip())) else: content = (Combine(OneOrMore(~Literal(opener) + ~Literal(closer) + CharsNotIn(ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS,exact=1)) ).setParseAction(lambda t:t[0].strip())) else: raise ValueError("opening and closing arguments must be strings if no content expression is given") ret = Forward() if ignoreExpr is not None: ret <<= Group( Suppress(opener) + ZeroOrMore( ignoreExpr | ret | content ) + Suppress(closer) ) else: ret <<= Group( Suppress(opener) + ZeroOrMore( ret | content ) + Suppress(closer) ) ret.setName('nested %s%s expression' % (opener,closer)) return ret def indentedBlock(blockStatementExpr, indentStack, indent=True): """ Helper method for defining space-delimited indentation blocks, such as those used to define block statements in Python source code. Parameters: - blockStatementExpr - expression defining syntax of statement that is repeated within the indented block - indentStack - list created by caller to manage indentation stack (multiple statementWithIndentedBlock expressions within a single grammar should share a common indentStack) - indent - boolean indicating whether block must be indented beyond the the current level; set to False for block of left-most statements (default=C{True}) A valid block must contain at least one C{blockStatement}. Example:: data = ''' def A(z): A1 B = 100 G = A2 A2 A3 B def BB(a,b,c): BB1 def BBA(): bba1 bba2 bba3 C D def spam(x,y): def eggs(z): pass ''' indentStack = [1] stmt = Forward() identifier = Word(alphas, alphanums) funcDecl = ("def" + identifier + Group( "(" + Optional( delimitedList(identifier) ) + ")" ) + ":") func_body = indentedBlock(stmt, indentStack) funcDef = Group( funcDecl + func_body ) rvalue = Forward() funcCall = Group(identifier + "(" + Optional(delimitedList(rvalue)) + ")") rvalue << (funcCall | identifier | Word(nums)) assignment = Group(identifier + "=" + rvalue) stmt << ( funcDef | assignment | identifier ) module_body = OneOrMore(stmt) parseTree = module_body.parseString(data) parseTree.pprint() prints:: [['def', 'A', ['(', 'z', ')'], ':', [['A1'], [['B', '=', '100']], [['G', '=', 'A2']], ['A2'], ['A3']]], 'B', ['def', 'BB', ['(', 'a', 'b', 'c', ')'], ':', [['BB1'], [['def', 'BBA', ['(', ')'], ':', [['bba1'], ['bba2'], ['bba3']]]]]], 'C', 'D', ['def', 'spam', ['(', 'x', 'y', ')'], ':', [[['def', 'eggs', ['(', 'z', ')'], ':', [['pass']]]]]]] """ def checkPeerIndent(s,l,t): if l >= len(s): return curCol = col(l,s) if curCol != indentStack[-1]: if curCol > indentStack[-1]: raise ParseFatalException(s,l,"illegal nesting") raise ParseException(s,l,"not a peer entry") def checkSubIndent(s,l,t): curCol = col(l,s) if curCol > indentStack[-1]: indentStack.append( curCol ) else: raise ParseException(s,l,"not a subentry") def checkUnindent(s,l,t): if l >= len(s): return curCol = col(l,s) if not(indentStack and curCol < indentStack[-1] and curCol <= indentStack[-2]): raise ParseException(s,l,"not an unindent") indentStack.pop() NL = OneOrMore(LineEnd().setWhitespaceChars("\t ").suppress()) INDENT = (Empty() + Empty().setParseAction(checkSubIndent)).setName('INDENT') PEER = Empty().setParseAction(checkPeerIndent).setName('') UNDENT = Empty().setParseAction(checkUnindent).setName('UNINDENT') if indent: smExpr = Group( Optional(NL) + #~ FollowedBy(blockStatementExpr) + INDENT + (OneOrMore( PEER + Group(blockStatementExpr) + Optional(NL) )) + UNDENT) else: smExpr = Group( Optional(NL) + (OneOrMore( PEER + Group(blockStatementExpr) + Optional(NL) )) ) blockStatementExpr.ignore(_bslash + LineEnd()) return smExpr.setName('indented block') alphas8bit = srange(r"[\0xc0-\0xd6\0xd8-\0xf6\0xf8-\0xff]") punc8bit = srange(r"[\0xa1-\0xbf\0xd7\0xf7]") anyOpenTag,anyCloseTag = makeHTMLTags(Word(alphas,alphanums+"_:").setName('any tag')) _htmlEntityMap = dict(zip("gt lt amp nbsp quot apos".split(),'><& "\'')) commonHTMLEntity = Regex('&(?P<entity>' + '|'.join(_htmlEntityMap.keys()) +");").setName("common HTML entity") def replaceHTMLEntity(t): """Helper parser action to replace common HTML entities with their special characters""" return _htmlEntityMap.get(t.entity) # it's easy to get these comment structures wrong - they're very common, so may as well make them available cStyleComment = Combine(Regex(r"/\*(?:[^*]|\*(?!/))*") + '*/').setName("C style comment") "Comment of the form C{/* ... */}" htmlComment = Regex(r"<!--[\s\S]*?-->").setName("HTML comment") "Comment of the form C{<!-- ... -->}" restOfLine = Regex(r".*").leaveWhitespace().setName("rest of line") dblSlashComment = Regex(r"//(?:\\\n|[^\n])*").setName("// comment") "Comment of the form C{// ... (to end of line)}" cppStyleComment = Combine(Regex(r"/\*(?:[^*]|\*(?!/))*") + '*/'| dblSlashComment).setName("C++ style comment") "Comment of either form C{L{cStyleComment}} or C{L{dblSlashComment}}" javaStyleComment = cppStyleComment "Same as C{L{cppStyleComment}}" pythonStyleComment = Regex(r"#.*").setName("Python style comment") "Comment of the form C{# ... (to end of line)}" _commasepitem = Combine(OneOrMore(Word(printables, excludeChars=',') + Optional( Word(" \t") + ~Literal(",") + ~LineEnd() ) ) ).streamline().setName("commaItem") commaSeparatedList = delimitedList( Optional( quotedString.copy() | _commasepitem, default="") ).setName("commaSeparatedList") """(Deprecated) Predefined expression of 1 or more printable words or quoted strings, separated by commas. This expression is deprecated in favor of L{pyparsing_common.comma_separated_list}.""" # some other useful expressions - using lower-case class name since we are really using this as a namespace class pyparsing_common: """ Here are some common low-level expressions that may be useful in jump-starting parser development: - numeric forms (L{integers<integer>}, L{reals<real>}, L{scientific notation<sci_real>}) - common L{programming identifiers<identifier>} - network addresses (L{MAC<mac_address>}, L{IPv4<ipv4_address>}, L{IPv6<ipv6_address>}) - ISO8601 L{dates<iso8601_date>} and L{datetime<iso8601_datetime>} - L{UUID<uuid>} - L{comma-separated list<comma_separated_list>} Parse actions: - C{L{convertToInteger}} - C{L{convertToFloat}} - C{L{convertToDate}} - C{L{convertToDatetime}} - C{L{stripHTMLTags}} - C{L{upcaseTokens}} - C{L{downcaseTokens}} Example:: pyparsing_common.number.runTests(''' # any int or real number, returned as the appropriate type 100 -100 +100 3.14159 6.02e23 1e-12 ''') pyparsing_common.fnumber.runTests(''' # any int or real number, returned as float 100 -100 +100 3.14159 6.02e23 1e-12 ''') pyparsing_common.hex_integer.runTests(''' # hex numbers 100 FF ''') pyparsing_common.fraction.runTests(''' # fractions 1/2 -3/4 ''') pyparsing_common.mixed_integer.runTests(''' # mixed fractions 1 1/2 -3/4 1-3/4 ''') import uuid pyparsing_common.uuid.setParseAction(tokenMap(uuid.UUID)) pyparsing_common.uuid.runTests(''' # uuid 12345678-1234-5678-1234-567812345678 ''') prints:: # any int or real number, returned as the appropriate type 100 [100] -100 [-100] +100 [100] 3.14159 [3.14159] 6.02e23 [6.02e+23] 1e-12 [1e-12] # any int or real number, returned as float 100 [100.0] -100 [-100.0] +100 [100.0] 3.14159 [3.14159] 6.02e23 [6.02e+23] 1e-12 [1e-12] # hex numbers 100 [256] FF [255] # fractions 1/2 [0.5] -3/4 [-0.75] # mixed fractions 1 [1] 1/2 [0.5] -3/4 [-0.75] 1-3/4 [1.75] # uuid 12345678-1234-5678-1234-567812345678 [UUID('12345678-1234-5678-1234-567812345678')] """ convertToInteger = tokenMap(int) """ Parse action for converting parsed integers to Python int """ convertToFloat = tokenMap(float) """ Parse action for converting parsed numbers to Python float """ integer = Word(nums).setName("integer").setParseAction(convertToInteger) """expression that parses an unsigned integer, returns an int""" hex_integer = Word(hexnums).setName("hex integer").setParseAction(tokenMap(int,16)) """expression that parses a hexadecimal integer, returns an int""" signed_integer = Regex(r'[+-]?\d+').setName("signed integer").setParseAction(convertToInteger) """expression that parses an integer with optional leading sign, returns an int""" fraction = (signed_integer().setParseAction(convertToFloat) + '/' + signed_integer().setParseAction(convertToFloat)).setName("fraction") """fractional expression of an integer divided by an integer, returns a float""" fraction.addParseAction(lambda t: t[0]/t[-1]) mixed_integer = (fraction | signed_integer + Optional(Optional('-').suppress() + fraction)).setName("fraction or mixed integer-fraction") """mixed integer of the form 'integer - fraction', with optional leading integer, returns float""" mixed_integer.addParseAction(sum) real = Regex(r'[+-]?\d+\.\d*').setName("real number").setParseAction(convertToFloat) """expression that parses a floating point number and returns a float""" sci_real = Regex(r'[+-]?\d+([eE][+-]?\d+|\.\d*([eE][+-]?\d+)?)').setName("real number with scientific notation").setParseAction(convertToFloat) """expression that parses a floating point number with optional scientific notation and returns a float""" # streamlining this expression makes the docs nicer-looking number = (sci_real | real | signed_integer).streamline() """any numeric expression, returns the corresponding Python type""" fnumber = Regex(r'[+-]?\d+\.?\d*([eE][+-]?\d+)?').setName("fnumber").setParseAction(convertToFloat) """any int or real number, returned as float""" identifier = Word(alphas+'_', alphanums+'_').setName("identifier") """typical code identifier (leading alpha or '_', followed by 0 or more alphas, nums, or '_')""" ipv4_address = Regex(r'(25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|1?[0-9]{1,2})(\.(25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|1?[0-9]{1,2})){3}').setName("IPv4 address") "IPv4 address (C{0.0.0.0 - 255.255.255.255})" _ipv6_part = Regex(r'[0-9a-fA-F]{1,4}').setName("hex_integer") _full_ipv6_address = (_ipv6_part + (':' + _ipv6_part)*7).setName("full IPv6 address") _short_ipv6_address = (Optional(_ipv6_part + (':' + _ipv6_part)*(0,6)) + "::" + Optional(_ipv6_part + (':' + _ipv6_part)*(0,6))).setName("short IPv6 address") _short_ipv6_address.addCondition(lambda t: sum(1 for tt in t if pyparsing_common._ipv6_part.matches(tt)) < 8) _mixed_ipv6_address = ("::ffff:" + ipv4_address).setName("mixed IPv6 address") ipv6_address = Combine((_full_ipv6_address | _mixed_ipv6_address | _short_ipv6_address).setName("IPv6 address")).setName("IPv6 address") "IPv6 address (long, short, or mixed form)" mac_address = Regex(r'[0-9a-fA-F]{2}([:.-])[0-9a-fA-F]{2}(?:\1[0-9a-fA-F]{2}){4}').setName("MAC address") "MAC address xx:xx:xx:xx:xx (may also have '-' or '.' delimiters)" @staticmethod def convertToDate(fmt="%Y-%m-%d"): """ Helper to create a parse action for converting parsed date string to Python datetime.date Params - - fmt - format to be passed to datetime.strptime (default=C{"%Y-%m-%d"}) Example:: date_expr = pyparsing_common.iso8601_date.copy() date_expr.setParseAction(pyparsing_common.convertToDate()) print(date_expr.parseString("1999-12-31")) prints:: [datetime.date(1999, 12, 31)] """ def cvt_fn(s,l,t): try: return datetime.strptime(t[0], fmt).date() except ValueError as ve: raise ParseException(s, l, str(ve)) return cvt_fn @staticmethod def convertToDatetime(fmt="%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%f"): """ Helper to create a parse action for converting parsed datetime string to Python datetime.datetime Params - - fmt - format to be passed to datetime.strptime (default=C{"%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%f"}) Example:: dt_expr = pyparsing_common.iso8601_datetime.copy() dt_expr.setParseAction(pyparsing_common.convertToDatetime()) print(dt_expr.parseString("1999-12-31T23:59:59.999")) prints:: [datetime.datetime(1999, 12, 31, 23, 59, 59, 999000)] """ def cvt_fn(s,l,t): try: return datetime.strptime(t[0], fmt) except ValueError as ve: raise ParseException(s, l, str(ve)) return cvt_fn iso8601_date = Regex(r'(?P<year>\d{4})(?:-(?P<month>\d\d)(?:-(?P<day>\d\d))?)?').setName("ISO8601 date") "ISO8601 date (C{yyyy-mm-dd})" iso8601_datetime = Regex(r'(?P<year>\d{4})-(?P<month>\d\d)-(?P<day>\d\d)[T ](?P<hour>\d\d):(?P<minute>\d\d)(:(?P<second>\d\d(\.\d*)?)?)?(?P<tz>Z|[+-]\d\d:?\d\d)?').setName("ISO8601 datetime") "ISO8601 datetime (C{yyyy-mm-ddThh:mm:ss.s(Z|+-00:00)}) - trailing seconds, milliseconds, and timezone optional; accepts separating C{'T'} or C{' '}" uuid = Regex(r'[0-9a-fA-F]{8}(-[0-9a-fA-F]{4}){3}-[0-9a-fA-F]{12}').setName("UUID") "UUID (C{xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx})" _html_stripper = anyOpenTag.suppress() | anyCloseTag.suppress() @staticmethod def stripHTMLTags(s, l, tokens): """ Parse action to remove HTML tags from web page HTML source Example:: # strip HTML links from normal text text = '<td>More info at the <a href="http://pyparsing.wikispaces.com">pyparsing</a> wiki page</td>' td,td_end = makeHTMLTags("TD") table_text = td + SkipTo(td_end).setParseAction(pyparsing_common.stripHTMLTags)("body") + td_end print(table_text.parseString(text).body) # -> 'More info at the pyparsing wiki page' """ return pyparsing_common._html_stripper.transformString(tokens[0]) _commasepitem = Combine(OneOrMore(~Literal(",") + ~LineEnd() + Word(printables, excludeChars=',') + Optional( White(" \t") ) ) ).streamline().setName("commaItem") comma_separated_list = delimitedList( Optional( quotedString.copy() | _commasepitem, default="") ).setName("comma separated list") """Predefined expression of 1 or more printable words or quoted strings, separated by commas.""" upcaseTokens = staticmethod(tokenMap(lambda t: _ustr(t).upper())) """Parse action to convert tokens to upper case.""" downcaseTokens = staticmethod(tokenMap(lambda t: _ustr(t).lower())) """Parse action to convert tokens to lower case.""" if __name__ == "__main__": selectToken = CaselessLiteral("select") fromToken = CaselessLiteral("from") ident = Word(alphas, alphanums + "_$") columnName = delimitedList(ident, ".", combine=True).setParseAction(upcaseTokens) columnNameList = Group(delimitedList(columnName)).setName("columns") columnSpec = ('*' | columnNameList) tableName = delimitedList(ident, ".", combine=True).setParseAction(upcaseTokens) tableNameList = Group(delimitedList(tableName)).setName("tables") simpleSQL = selectToken("command") + columnSpec("columns") + fromToken + tableNameList("tables") # demo runTests method, including embedded comments in test string simpleSQL.runTests(""" # '*' as column list and dotted table name select * from SYS.XYZZY # caseless match on "SELECT", and casts back to "select" SELECT * from XYZZY, ABC # list of column names, and mixed case SELECT keyword Select AA,BB,CC from Sys.dual # multiple tables Select A, B, C from Sys.dual, Table2 # invalid SELECT keyword - should fail Xelect A, B, C from Sys.dual # incomplete command - should fail Select # invalid column name - should fail Select ^^^ frox Sys.dual """) pyparsing_common.number.runTests(""" 100 -100 +100 3.14159 6.02e23 1e-12 """) # any int or real number, returned as float pyparsing_common.fnumber.runTests(""" 100 -100 +100 3.14159 6.02e23 1e-12 """) pyparsing_common.hex_integer.runTests(""" 100 FF """) import uuid pyparsing_common.uuid.setParseAction(tokenMap(uuid.UUID)) pyparsing_common.uuid.runTests(""" 12345678-1234-5678-1234-567812345678 """)
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/tags.py
# 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 absolute_import import distutils.util try: from importlib.machinery import EXTENSION_SUFFIXES except ImportError: # pragma: no cover import imp EXTENSION_SUFFIXES = [x[0] for x in imp.get_suffixes()] del imp import platform import re import sys import sysconfig import warnings INTERPRETER_SHORT_NAMES = { "python": "py", # Generic. "cpython": "cp", "pypy": "pp", "ironpython": "ip", "jython": "jy", } _32_BIT_INTERPRETER = sys.maxsize <= 2 ** 32 class Tag(object): __slots__ = ["_interpreter", "_abi", "_platform"] def __init__(self, interpreter, abi, platform): self._interpreter = interpreter.lower() self._abi = abi.lower() self._platform = platform.lower() @property def interpreter(self): return self._interpreter @property def abi(self): return self._abi @property def platform(self): return self._platform def __eq__(self, other): return ( (self.platform == other.platform) and (self.abi == other.abi) and (self.interpreter == other.interpreter) ) def __hash__(self): return hash((self._interpreter, self._abi, self._platform)) def __str__(self): return "{}-{}-{}".format(self._interpreter, self._abi, self._platform) def __repr__(self): return "<{self} @ {self_id}>".format(self=self, self_id=id(self)) def parse_tag(tag): 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 _normalize_string(string): return string.replace(".", "_").replace("-", "_") def _cpython_interpreter(py_version): # TODO: Is using py_version_nodot for interpreter version critical? return "cp{major}{minor}".format(major=py_version[0], minor=py_version[1]) def _cpython_abis(py_version): abis = [] version = "{}{}".format(*py_version[:2]) debug = pymalloc = ucs4 = "" with_debug = sysconfig.get_config_var("Py_DEBUG") has_refcount = hasattr(sys, "gettotalrefcount") # Windows doesn't set Py_DEBUG, so checking for support of debug-compiled # extension modules is the best option. # https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues/3383#issuecomment-173267692 has_ext = "_d.pyd" in EXTENSION_SUFFIXES if with_debug or (with_debug is None and (has_refcount or has_ext)): debug = "d" if py_version < (3, 8): with_pymalloc = sysconfig.get_config_var("WITH_PYMALLOC") if with_pymalloc or with_pymalloc is None: pymalloc = "m" if py_version < (3, 3): unicode_size = sysconfig.get_config_var("Py_UNICODE_SIZE") 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("cp{version}".format(version=version)) abis.insert( 0, "cp{version}{debug}{pymalloc}{ucs4}".format( version=version, debug=debug, pymalloc=pymalloc, ucs4=ucs4 ), ) return abis def _cpython_tags(py_version, interpreter, abis, platforms): for abi in abis: for platform_ in platforms: yield Tag(interpreter, abi, platform_) for tag in (Tag(interpreter, "abi3", platform_) for platform_ in platforms): yield tag for tag in (Tag(interpreter, "none", platform_) for platform_ in platforms): yield tag # PEP 384 was first implemented in Python 3.2. for minor_version in range(py_version[1] - 1, 1, -1): for platform_ in platforms: interpreter = "cp{major}{minor}".format( major=py_version[0], minor=minor_version ) yield Tag(interpreter, "abi3", platform_) def _pypy_interpreter(): return "pp{py_major}{pypy_major}{pypy_minor}".format( py_major=sys.version_info[0], pypy_major=sys.pypy_version_info.major, pypy_minor=sys.pypy_version_info.minor, ) def _generic_abi(): abi = sysconfig.get_config_var("SOABI") if abi: return _normalize_string(abi) else: return "none" def _pypy_tags(py_version, interpreter, abi, platforms): for tag in (Tag(interpreter, abi, platform) for platform in platforms): yield tag for tag in (Tag(interpreter, "none", platform) for platform in platforms): yield tag def _generic_tags(interpreter, py_version, abi, platforms): for tag in (Tag(interpreter, abi, platform) for platform in platforms): yield tag if abi != "none": tags = (Tag(interpreter, "none", platform_) for platform_ in platforms) for tag in tags: yield tag def _py_interpreter_range(py_version): """ Yield Python versions in descending order. After the latest version, the major-only version will be yielded, and then all following versions up to 'end'. """ yield "py{major}{minor}".format(major=py_version[0], minor=py_version[1]) yield "py{major}".format(major=py_version[0]) for minor in range(py_version[1] - 1, -1, -1): yield "py{major}{minor}".format(major=py_version[0], minor=minor) def _independent_tags(interpreter, py_version, platforms): """ Return the sequence of tags that are consistent across implementations. The tags consist of: - py*-none-<platform> - <interpreter>-none-any - py*-none-any """ for version in _py_interpreter_range(py_version): for platform_ in platforms: yield Tag(version, "none", platform_) yield Tag(interpreter, "none", "any") for version in _py_interpreter_range(py_version): yield Tag(version, "none", "any") def _mac_arch(arch, is_32bit=_32_BIT_INTERPRETER): if not is_32bit: return arch if arch.startswith("ppc"): return "ppc" return "i386" def _mac_binary_formats(version, cpu_arch): 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"]) formats.append("universal") return formats def _mac_platforms(version=None, arch=None): version_str, _, cpu_arch = platform.mac_ver() if version is None: version = tuple(map(int, version_str.split(".")[:2])) if arch is None: arch = _mac_arch(cpu_arch) platforms = [] for minor_version in range(version[1], -1, -1): compat_version = version[0], minor_version binary_formats = _mac_binary_formats(compat_version, arch) for binary_format in binary_formats: platforms.append( "macosx_{major}_{minor}_{binary_format}".format( major=compat_version[0], minor=compat_version[1], binary_format=binary_format, ) ) return platforms # From PEP 513. def _is_manylinux_compatible(name, glibc_version): # Check for presence of _manylinux module. try: import _manylinux return bool(getattr(_manylinux, name + "_compatible")) except (ImportError, AttributeError): # Fall through to heuristic check below. pass return _have_compatible_glibc(*glibc_version) def _glibc_version_string(): # Returns glibc version string, or None if not using glibc. import ctypes # 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. process_namespace = ctypes.CDLL(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 = gnu_get_libc_version() # py2 / py3 compatibility: if not isinstance(version_str, str): version_str = version_str.decode("ascii") return version_str # Separated out from have_compatible_glibc for easier unit testing. def _check_glibc_version(version_str, required_major, minimum_minor): # Parse string and check against requested version. # # We use a regexp instead of str.split because we want to discard any # random junk that might come after the minor version -- this might happen # in patched/forked versions of glibc (e.g. Linaro's version of glibc # uses version strings like "2.20-2014.11"). See gh-3588. m = re.match(r"(?P<major>[0-9]+)\.(?P<minor>[0-9]+)", version_str) if not m: warnings.warn( "Expected glibc version with 2 components major.minor," " got: %s" % version_str, RuntimeWarning, ) return False return ( int(m.group("major")) == required_major and int(m.group("minor")) >= minimum_minor ) def _have_compatible_glibc(required_major, minimum_minor): version_str = _glibc_version_string() if version_str is None: return False return _check_glibc_version(version_str, required_major, minimum_minor) def _linux_platforms(is_32bit=_32_BIT_INTERPRETER): linux = _normalize_string(distutils.util.get_platform()) if linux == "linux_x86_64" and is_32bit: linux = "linux_i686" manylinux_support = ( ("manylinux2014", (2, 17)), # CentOS 7 w/ glibc 2.17 (PEP 599) ("manylinux2010", (2, 12)), # CentOS 6 w/ glibc 2.12 (PEP 571) ("manylinux1", (2, 5)), # CentOS 5 w/ glibc 2.5 (PEP 513) ) manylinux_support_iter = iter(manylinux_support) for name, glibc_version in manylinux_support_iter: if _is_manylinux_compatible(name, glibc_version): platforms = [linux.replace("linux", name)] break else: platforms = [] # Support for a later manylinux implies support for an earlier version. platforms += [linux.replace("linux", name) for name, _ in manylinux_support_iter] platforms.append(linux) return platforms def _generic_platforms(): platform = _normalize_string(distutils.util.get_platform()) return [platform] def _interpreter_name(): name = platform.python_implementation().lower() return INTERPRETER_SHORT_NAMES.get(name) or name def _generic_interpreter(name, py_version): version = sysconfig.get_config_var("py_version_nodot") if not version: version = "".join(map(str, py_version[:2])) return "{name}{version}".format(name=name, version=version) def sys_tags(): """ 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. """ py_version = sys.version_info[:2] interpreter_name = _interpreter_name() if platform.system() == "Darwin": platforms = _mac_platforms() elif platform.system() == "Linux": platforms = _linux_platforms() else: platforms = _generic_platforms() if interpreter_name == "cp": interpreter = _cpython_interpreter(py_version) abis = _cpython_abis(py_version) for tag in _cpython_tags(py_version, interpreter, abis, platforms): yield tag elif interpreter_name == "pp": interpreter = _pypy_interpreter() abi = _generic_abi() for tag in _pypy_tags(py_version, interpreter, abi, platforms): yield tag else: interpreter = _generic_interpreter(interpreter_name, py_version) abi = _generic_abi() for tag in _generic_tags(interpreter, py_version, abi, platforms): yield tag for tag in _independent_tags(interpreter, py_version, platforms): yield tag
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qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/version.py
# 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 absolute_import, division, print_function import collections import itertools import re from ._structures import Infinity __all__ = ["parse", "Version", "LegacyVersion", "InvalidVersion", "VERSION_PATTERN"] _Version = collections.namedtuple( "_Version", ["epoch", "release", "dev", "pre", "post", "local"] ) def parse(version): """ Parse the given version string and return either a :class:`Version` object or a :class:`LegacyVersion` object depending on if the given version is a valid PEP 440 version or a legacy version. """ try: return Version(version) except InvalidVersion: return LegacyVersion(version) class InvalidVersion(ValueError): """ An invalid version was found, users should refer to PEP 440. """ class _BaseVersion(object): def __hash__(self): return hash(self._key) def __lt__(self, other): return self._compare(other, lambda s, o: s < o) def __le__(self, other): return self._compare(other, lambda s, o: s <= o) def __eq__(self, other): return self._compare(other, lambda s, o: s == o) def __ge__(self, other): return self._compare(other, lambda s, o: s >= o) def __gt__(self, other): return self._compare(other, lambda s, o: s > o) def __ne__(self, other): return self._compare(other, lambda s, o: s != o) def _compare(self, other, method): if not isinstance(other, _BaseVersion): return NotImplemented return method(self._key, other._key) class LegacyVersion(_BaseVersion): def __init__(self, version): self._version = str(version) self._key = _legacy_cmpkey(self._version) def __str__(self): return self._version def __repr__(self): return "<LegacyVersion({0})>".format(repr(str(self))) @property def public(self): return self._version @property def base_version(self): return self._version @property def epoch(self): return -1 @property def release(self): return None @property def pre(self): return None @property def post(self): return None @property def dev(self): return None @property def local(self): return None @property def is_prerelease(self): return False @property def is_postrelease(self): return False @property def is_devrelease(self): return False _legacy_version_component_re = re.compile(r"(\d+ | [a-z]+ | \.| -)", re.VERBOSE) _legacy_version_replacement_map = { "pre": "c", "preview": "c", "-": "final-", "rc": "c", "dev": "@", } def _parse_version_parts(s): for part in _legacy_version_component_re.split(s): part = _legacy_version_replacement_map.get(part, part) if not part or part == ".": continue if part[:1] in "0123456789": # pad for numeric comparison yield part.zfill(8) else: yield "*" + part # ensure that alpha/beta/candidate are before final yield "*final" def _legacy_cmpkey(version): # We hardcode an epoch of -1 here. A PEP 440 version can only have a epoch # greater than or equal to 0. This will effectively put the LegacyVersion, # which uses the defacto standard originally implemented by setuptools, # as before all PEP 440 versions. epoch = -1 # This scheme is taken from pkg_resources.parse_version setuptools prior to # it's adoption of the packaging library. parts = [] for part in _parse_version_parts(version.lower()): if part.startswith("*"): # remove "-" before a prerelease tag if part < "*final": while parts and parts[-1] == "*final-": parts.pop() # remove trailing zeros from each series of numeric parts while parts and parts[-1] == "00000000": parts.pop() parts.append(part) parts = tuple(parts) return epoch, parts # Deliberately not anchored to the start and end of the string, to make it # easier for 3rd party code to reuse VERSION_PATTERN = r""" v? (?: (?:(?P<epoch>[0-9]+)!)? # epoch (?P<release>[0-9]+(?:\.[0-9]+)*) # release segment (?P<pre> # pre-release [-_\.]? (?P<pre_l>(a|b|c|rc|alpha|beta|pre|preview)) [-_\.]? (?P<pre_n>[0-9]+)? )? (?P<post> # post release (?:-(?P<post_n1>[0-9]+)) | (?: [-_\.]? (?P<post_l>post|rev|r) [-_\.]? (?P<post_n2>[0-9]+)? ) )? (?P<dev> # dev release [-_\.]? (?P<dev_l>dev) [-_\.]? (?P<dev_n>[0-9]+)? )? ) (?:\+(?P<local>[a-z0-9]+(?:[-_\.][a-z0-9]+)*))? # local version """ class Version(_BaseVersion): _regex = re.compile(r"^\s*" + VERSION_PATTERN + r"\s*$", re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE) def __init__(self, version): # Validate the version and parse it into pieces match = self._regex.search(version) if not match: raise InvalidVersion("Invalid version: '{0}'".format(version)) # Store the parsed out pieces of the version self._version = _Version( epoch=int(match.group("epoch")) if match.group("epoch") else 0, release=tuple(int(i) for i in match.group("release").split(".")), pre=_parse_letter_version(match.group("pre_l"), match.group("pre_n")), post=_parse_letter_version( match.group("post_l"), match.group("post_n1") or match.group("post_n2") ), dev=_parse_letter_version(match.group("dev_l"), match.group("dev_n")), local=_parse_local_version(match.group("local")), ) # Generate a key which will be used for sorting self._key = _cmpkey( self._version.epoch, self._version.release, self._version.pre, self._version.post, self._version.dev, self._version.local, ) def __repr__(self): return "<Version({0})>".format(repr(str(self))) def __str__(self): parts = [] # Epoch if self.epoch != 0: parts.append("{0}!".format(self.epoch)) # Release segment parts.append(".".join(str(x) for x in self.release)) # Pre-release if self.pre is not None: parts.append("".join(str(x) for x in self.pre)) # Post-release if self.post is not None: parts.append(".post{0}".format(self.post)) # Development release if self.dev is not None: parts.append(".dev{0}".format(self.dev)) # Local version segment if self.local is not None: parts.append("+{0}".format(self.local)) return "".join(parts) @property def epoch(self): return self._version.epoch @property def release(self): return self._version.release @property def pre(self): return self._version.pre @property def post(self): return self._version.post[1] if self._version.post else None @property def dev(self): return self._version.dev[1] if self._version.dev else None @property def local(self): if self._version.local: return ".".join(str(x) for x in self._version.local) else: return None @property def public(self): return str(self).split("+", 1)[0] @property def base_version(self): parts = [] # Epoch if self.epoch != 0: parts.append("{0}!".format(self.epoch)) # Release segment parts.append(".".join(str(x) for x in self.release)) return "".join(parts) @property def is_prerelease(self): return self.dev is not None or self.pre is not None @property def is_postrelease(self): return self.post is not None @property def is_devrelease(self): return self.dev is not None def _parse_letter_version(letter, number): if letter: # We consider there to be an implicit 0 in a pre-release if there is # not a numeral associated with it. if number is None: number = 0 # We normalize any letters to their lower case form letter = letter.lower() # We consider some words to be alternate spellings of other words and # in those cases we want to normalize the spellings to our preferred # spelling. if letter == "alpha": letter = "a" elif letter == "beta": letter = "b" elif letter in ["c", "pre", "preview"]: letter = "rc" elif letter in ["rev", "r"]: letter = "post" return letter, int(number) if not letter and number: # We assume if we are given a number, but we are not given a letter # then this is using the implicit post release syntax (e.g. 1.0-1) letter = "post" return letter, int(number) _local_version_separators = re.compile(r"[\._-]") def _parse_local_version(local): """ 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) ) def _cmpkey(epoch, release, pre, post, dev, local): # When we compare a release version, we want to compare it with all of the # trailing zeros removed. So we'll use a reverse the list, drop all the now # leading zeros until we come to something non zero, then take the rest # re-reverse it back into the correct order and make it a tuple and use # that for our sorting key. release = tuple( reversed(list(itertools.dropwhile(lambda x: x == 0, reversed(release)))) ) # We need to "trick" the sorting algorithm to put 1.0.dev0 before 1.0a0. # We'll do this by abusing the pre segment, but we _only_ want to do this # if there is not a pre or a post segment. If we have one of those then # the normal sorting rules will handle this case correctly. if pre is None and post is None and dev is not None: pre = -Infinity # Versions without a pre-release (except as noted above) should sort after # those with one. elif pre is None: pre = Infinity # Versions without a post segment should sort before those with one. if post is None: post = -Infinity # Versions without a development segment should sort after those with one. if dev is None: dev = Infinity if local is None: # Versions without a local segment should sort before those with one. local = -Infinity 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 (-Infinity, i) for i in local) return epoch, release, pre, post, dev, local
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qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/__init__.py
# 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 absolute_import, division, print_function from .__about__ import ( __author__, __copyright__, __email__, __license__, __summary__, __title__, __uri__, __version__, ) __all__ = [ "__title__", "__summary__", "__uri__", "__version__", "__author__", "__email__", "__license__", "__copyright__", ]
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qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/utils.py
# 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 absolute_import, division, print_function import re from .version import InvalidVersion, Version _canonicalize_regex = re.compile(r"[-_.]+") def canonicalize_name(name): # This is taken from PEP 503. return _canonicalize_regex.sub("-", name).lower() def canonicalize_version(version): """ This is very similar to Version.__str__, but has one subtle differences with the way it handles the release segment. """ try: version = Version(version) except InvalidVersion: # Legacy versions cannot be normalized return version parts = [] # Epoch if version.epoch != 0: parts.append("{0}!".format(version.epoch)) # Release segment # NB: This strips trailing '.0's to normalize parts.append(re.sub(r"(\.0)+$", "", ".".join(str(x) for x in version.release))) # Pre-release if version.pre is not None: parts.append("".join(str(x) for x in version.pre)) # Post-release if version.post is not None: parts.append(".post{0}".format(version.post)) # Development release if version.dev is not None: parts.append(".dev{0}".format(version.dev)) # Local version segment if version.local is not None: parts.append("+{0}".format(version.local)) return "".join(parts)
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qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/requirements.py
# 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 absolute_import, division, print_function import string import re from setuptools.extern.pyparsing import stringStart, stringEnd, originalTextFor, ParseException from setuptools.extern.pyparsing import ZeroOrMore, Word, Optional, Regex, Combine from setuptools.extern.pyparsing import Literal as L # noqa from setuptools.extern.six.moves.urllib import parse as urlparse from .markers import MARKER_EXPR, Marker from .specifiers import LegacySpecifier, Specifier, SpecifierSet class InvalidRequirement(ValueError): """ An invalid requirement was found, users should refer to PEP 508. """ ALPHANUM = Word(string.ascii_letters + string.digits) LBRACKET = L("[").suppress() RBRACKET = L("]").suppress() LPAREN = L("(").suppress() RPAREN = L(")").suppress() COMMA = L(",").suppress() SEMICOLON = L(";").suppress() AT = L("@").suppress() PUNCTUATION = Word("-_.") IDENTIFIER_END = ALPHANUM | (ZeroOrMore(PUNCTUATION) + ALPHANUM) IDENTIFIER = Combine(ALPHANUM + ZeroOrMore(IDENTIFIER_END)) NAME = IDENTIFIER("name") EXTRA = IDENTIFIER URI = Regex(r"[^ ]+")("url") URL = AT + URI EXTRAS_LIST = EXTRA + ZeroOrMore(COMMA + EXTRA) EXTRAS = (LBRACKET + Optional(EXTRAS_LIST) + RBRACKET)("extras") VERSION_PEP440 = Regex(Specifier._regex_str, re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE) VERSION_LEGACY = Regex(LegacySpecifier._regex_str, re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE) VERSION_ONE = VERSION_PEP440 ^ VERSION_LEGACY VERSION_MANY = Combine( VERSION_ONE + ZeroOrMore(COMMA + VERSION_ONE), joinString=",", adjacent=False )("_raw_spec") _VERSION_SPEC = Optional(((LPAREN + VERSION_MANY + RPAREN) | VERSION_MANY)) _VERSION_SPEC.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: t._raw_spec or "") VERSION_SPEC = originalTextFor(_VERSION_SPEC)("specifier") VERSION_SPEC.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: t[1]) MARKER_EXPR = originalTextFor(MARKER_EXPR())("marker") MARKER_EXPR.setParseAction( lambda s, l, t: Marker(s[t._original_start : t._original_end]) ) MARKER_SEPARATOR = SEMICOLON MARKER = MARKER_SEPARATOR + MARKER_EXPR VERSION_AND_MARKER = VERSION_SPEC + Optional(MARKER) URL_AND_MARKER = URL + Optional(MARKER) NAMED_REQUIREMENT = NAME + Optional(EXTRAS) + (URL_AND_MARKER | VERSION_AND_MARKER) REQUIREMENT = stringStart + NAMED_REQUIREMENT + stringEnd # setuptools.extern.pyparsing isn't thread safe during initialization, so we do it eagerly, see # issue #104 REQUIREMENT.parseString("x[]") class Requirement(object): """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): try: req = REQUIREMENT.parseString(requirement_string) except ParseException as e: raise InvalidRequirement( 'Parse error at "{0!r}": {1}'.format( requirement_string[e.loc : e.loc + 8], e.msg ) ) self.name = req.name if req.url: parsed_url = urlparse.urlparse(req.url) if parsed_url.scheme == "file": if urlparse.urlunparse(parsed_url) != req.url: raise InvalidRequirement("Invalid URL given") elif not (parsed_url.scheme and parsed_url.netloc) or ( not parsed_url.scheme and not parsed_url.netloc ): raise InvalidRequirement("Invalid URL: {0}".format(req.url)) self.url = req.url else: self.url = None self.extras = set(req.extras.asList() if req.extras else []) self.specifier = SpecifierSet(req.specifier) self.marker = req.marker if req.marker else None def __str__(self): parts = [self.name] if self.extras: parts.append("[{0}]".format(",".join(sorted(self.extras)))) if self.specifier: parts.append(str(self.specifier)) if self.url: parts.append("@ {0}".format(self.url)) if self.marker: parts.append(" ") if self.marker: parts.append("; {0}".format(self.marker)) return "".join(parts) def __repr__(self): return "<Requirement({0!r})>".format(str(self))
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qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_structures.py
# 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 absolute_import, division, print_function class Infinity(object): def __repr__(self): return "Infinity" def __hash__(self): return hash(repr(self)) def __lt__(self, other): return False def __le__(self, other): return False def __eq__(self, other): return isinstance(other, self.__class__) def __ne__(self, other): return not isinstance(other, self.__class__) def __gt__(self, other): return True def __ge__(self, other): return True def __neg__(self): return NegativeInfinity Infinity = Infinity() class NegativeInfinity(object): def __repr__(self): return "-Infinity" def __hash__(self): return hash(repr(self)) def __lt__(self, other): return True def __le__(self, other): return True def __eq__(self, other): return isinstance(other, self.__class__) def __ne__(self, other): return not isinstance(other, self.__class__) def __gt__(self, other): return False def __ge__(self, other): return False def __neg__(self): return Infinity NegativeInfinity = NegativeInfinity()
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qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/markers.py
# 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 absolute_import, division, print_function import operator import os import platform import sys from setuptools.extern.pyparsing import ParseException, ParseResults, stringStart, stringEnd from setuptools.extern.pyparsing import ZeroOrMore, Group, Forward, QuotedString from setuptools.extern.pyparsing import Literal as L # noqa from ._compat import string_types from .specifiers import Specifier, InvalidSpecifier __all__ = [ "InvalidMarker", "UndefinedComparison", "UndefinedEnvironmentName", "Marker", "default_environment", ] class InvalidMarker(ValueError): """ An invalid marker was found, users should refer to PEP 508. """ class UndefinedComparison(ValueError): """ An invalid operation was attempted on a value that doesn't support it. """ class UndefinedEnvironmentName(ValueError): """ A name was attempted to be used that does not exist inside of the environment. """ class Node(object): def __init__(self, value): self.value = value def __str__(self): return str(self.value) def __repr__(self): return "<{0}({1!r})>".format(self.__class__.__name__, str(self)) def serialize(self): raise NotImplementedError class Variable(Node): def serialize(self): return str(self) class Value(Node): def serialize(self): return '"{0}"'.format(self) class Op(Node): def serialize(self): return str(self) VARIABLE = ( L("implementation_version") | L("platform_python_implementation") | L("implementation_name") | L("python_full_version") | L("platform_release") | L("platform_version") | L("platform_machine") | L("platform_system") | L("python_version") | L("sys_platform") | L("os_name") | L("os.name") | L("sys.platform") # PEP-345 | L("platform.version") # PEP-345 | L("platform.machine") # PEP-345 | L("platform.python_implementation") # PEP-345 | L("python_implementation") # PEP-345 | L("extra") # undocumented setuptools legacy ) ALIASES = { "os.name": "os_name", "sys.platform": "sys_platform", "platform.version": "platform_version", "platform.machine": "platform_machine", "platform.python_implementation": "platform_python_implementation", "python_implementation": "platform_python_implementation", } VARIABLE.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: Variable(ALIASES.get(t[0], t[0]))) VERSION_CMP = ( L("===") | L("==") | L(">=") | L("<=") | L("!=") | L("~=") | L(">") | L("<") ) MARKER_OP = VERSION_CMP | L("not in") | L("in") MARKER_OP.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: Op(t[0])) MARKER_VALUE = QuotedString("'") | QuotedString('"') MARKER_VALUE.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: Value(t[0])) BOOLOP = L("and") | L("or") MARKER_VAR = VARIABLE | MARKER_VALUE MARKER_ITEM = Group(MARKER_VAR + MARKER_OP + MARKER_VAR) MARKER_ITEM.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: tuple(t[0])) LPAREN = L("(").suppress() RPAREN = L(")").suppress() MARKER_EXPR = Forward() MARKER_ATOM = MARKER_ITEM | Group(LPAREN + MARKER_EXPR + RPAREN) MARKER_EXPR << MARKER_ATOM + ZeroOrMore(BOOLOP + MARKER_EXPR) MARKER = stringStart + MARKER_EXPR + stringEnd def _coerce_parse_result(results): if isinstance(results, ParseResults): return [_coerce_parse_result(i) for i in results] else: return results def _format_marker(marker, first=True): assert isinstance(marker, (list, tuple, string_types)) # 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 = { "in": lambda lhs, rhs: lhs in rhs, "not in": lambda lhs, rhs: lhs not in rhs, "<": operator.lt, "<=": operator.le, "==": operator.eq, "!=": operator.ne, ">=": operator.ge, ">": operator.gt, } def _eval_op(lhs, op, rhs): try: spec = Specifier("".join([op.serialize(), rhs])) except InvalidSpecifier: pass else: return spec.contains(lhs) oper = _operators.get(op.serialize()) if oper is None: raise UndefinedComparison( "Undefined {0!r} on {1!r} and {2!r}.".format(op, lhs, rhs) ) return oper(lhs, rhs) _undefined = object() def _get_env(environment, name): value = environment.get(name, _undefined) if value is _undefined: raise UndefinedEnvironmentName( "{0!r} does not exist in evaluation environment.".format(name) ) return value def _evaluate_markers(markers, environment): groups = [[]] for marker in markers: assert isinstance(marker, (list, tuple, string_types)) if isinstance(marker, list): groups[-1].append(_evaluate_markers(marker, environment)) elif isinstance(marker, tuple): lhs, op, rhs = marker if isinstance(lhs, Variable): lhs_value = _get_env(environment, lhs.value) rhs_value = rhs.value else: lhs_value = lhs.value rhs_value = _get_env(environment, rhs.value) groups[-1].append(_eval_op(lhs_value, op, rhs_value)) else: assert marker in ["and", "or"] if marker == "or": groups.append([]) return any(all(item) for item in groups) def format_full_version(info): version = "{0.major}.{0.minor}.{0.micro}".format(info) kind = info.releaselevel if kind != "final": version += kind[0] + str(info.serial) return version def default_environment(): if hasattr(sys, "implementation"): iver = format_full_version(sys.implementation.version) implementation_name = sys.implementation.name else: iver = "0" 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(object): def __init__(self, marker): try: self._markers = _coerce_parse_result(MARKER.parseString(marker)) except ParseException as e: err_str = "Invalid marker: {0!r}, parse error at {1!r}".format( marker, marker[e.loc : e.loc + 8] ) raise InvalidMarker(err_str) def __str__(self): return _format_marker(self._markers) def __repr__(self): return "<Marker({0!r})>".format(str(self)) def evaluate(self, environment=None): """Evaluate a marker. Return the boolean from evaluating the given marker against the environment. environment is an optional argument to override all or part of the determined environment. The environment is determined from the current Python process. """ current_environment = default_environment() if environment is not None: current_environment.update(environment) return _evaluate_markers(self._markers, current_environment)
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qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/__about__.py
# 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 absolute_import, division, print_function __all__ = [ "__title__", "__summary__", "__uri__", "__version__", "__author__", "__email__", "__license__", "__copyright__", ] __title__ = "packaging" __summary__ = "Core utilities for Python packages" __uri__ = "https://github.com/pypa/packaging" __version__ = "19.2" __author__ = "Donald Stufft and individual contributors" __email__ = "donald@stufft.io" __license__ = "BSD or Apache License, Version 2.0" __copyright__ = "Copyright 2014-2019 %s" % __author__
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qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_compat.py
# 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 absolute_import, division, print_function import sys PY2 = sys.version_info[0] == 2 PY3 = sys.version_info[0] == 3 # flake8: noqa if PY3: string_types = (str,) else: string_types = (basestring,) def with_metaclass(meta, *bases): """ Create a base class with a metaclass. """ # This requires a bit of explanation: the basic idea is to make a dummy # metaclass for one level of class instantiation that replaces itself with # the actual metaclass. class metaclass(meta): def __new__(cls, name, this_bases, d): return meta(name, bases, d) return type.__new__(metaclass, "temporary_class", (), {})
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qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/specifiers.py
# 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 absolute_import, division, print_function import abc import functools import itertools import re from ._compat import string_types, with_metaclass from .version import Version, LegacyVersion, parse class InvalidSpecifier(ValueError): """ An invalid specifier was found, users should refer to PEP 440. """ class BaseSpecifier(with_metaclass(abc.ABCMeta, object)): @abc.abstractmethod def __str__(self): """ Returns the str representation of this Specifier like object. This should be representative of the Specifier itself. """ @abc.abstractmethod def __hash__(self): """ Returns a hash value for this Specifier like object. """ @abc.abstractmethod def __eq__(self, other): """ Returns a boolean representing whether or not the two Specifier like objects are equal. """ @abc.abstractmethod def __ne__(self, other): """ Returns a boolean representing whether or not the two Specifier like objects are not equal. """ @abc.abstractproperty def prereleases(self): """ Returns whether or not pre-releases as a whole are allowed by this specifier. """ @prereleases.setter def prereleases(self, value): """ Sets whether or not pre-releases as a whole are allowed by this specifier. """ @abc.abstractmethod def contains(self, item, prereleases=None): """ Determines if the given item is contained within this specifier. """ @abc.abstractmethod def filter(self, iterable, prereleases=None): """ Takes an iterable of items and filters them so that only items which are contained within this specifier are allowed in it. """ class _IndividualSpecifier(BaseSpecifier): _operators = {} def __init__(self, spec="", prereleases=None): match = self._regex.search(spec) if not match: raise InvalidSpecifier("Invalid specifier: '{0}'".format(spec)) self._spec = (match.group("operator").strip(), match.group("version").strip()) # Store whether or not this Specifier should accept prereleases self._prereleases = prereleases def __repr__(self): pre = ( ", prereleases={0!r}".format(self.prereleases) if self._prereleases is not None else "" ) return "<{0}({1!r}{2})>".format(self.__class__.__name__, str(self), pre) def __str__(self): return "{0}{1}".format(*self._spec) def __hash__(self): return hash(self._spec) def __eq__(self, other): if isinstance(other, string_types): try: other = self.__class__(other) except InvalidSpecifier: return NotImplemented elif not isinstance(other, self.__class__): return NotImplemented return self._spec == other._spec def __ne__(self, other): if isinstance(other, string_types): try: other = self.__class__(other) except InvalidSpecifier: return NotImplemented elif not isinstance(other, self.__class__): return NotImplemented return self._spec != other._spec def _get_operator(self, op): return getattr(self, "_compare_{0}".format(self._operators[op])) def _coerce_version(self, version): if not isinstance(version, (LegacyVersion, Version)): version = parse(version) return version @property def operator(self): return self._spec[0] @property def version(self): return self._spec[1] @property def prereleases(self): return self._prereleases @prereleases.setter def prereleases(self, value): self._prereleases = value def __contains__(self, item): return self.contains(item) def contains(self, item, prereleases=None): # Determine if prereleases are to be allowed or not. if prereleases is None: prereleases = self.prereleases # Normalize item to a Version or LegacyVersion, this allows us to have # a shortcut for ``"2.0" in Specifier(">=2") item = self._coerce_version(item) # Determine if we should be supporting prereleases in this specifier # or not, if we do not support prereleases than we can short circuit # logic if this version is a prereleases. if item.is_prerelease and not prereleases: return False # Actually do the comparison to determine if this item is contained # within this Specifier or not. return self._get_operator(self.operator)(item, self.version) def filter(self, iterable, prereleases=None): yielded = False found_prereleases = [] kw = {"prereleases": prereleases if prereleases is not None else True} # Attempt to iterate over all the values in the iterable and if any of # them match, yield them. for version in iterable: parsed_version = self._coerce_version(version) if self.contains(parsed_version, **kw): # If our version is a prerelease, and we were not set to allow # prereleases, then we'll store it for later incase nothing # else matches this specifier. if parsed_version.is_prerelease and not ( prereleases or self.prereleases ): found_prereleases.append(version) # Either this is not a prerelease, or we should have been # accepting prereleases from the beginning. else: yielded = True yield version # Now that we've iterated over everything, determine if we've yielded # any values, and if we have not and we have any prereleases stored up # then we will go ahead and yield the prereleases. if not yielded and found_prereleases: for version in found_prereleases: yield version class LegacySpecifier(_IndividualSpecifier): _regex_str = r""" (?P<operator>(==|!=|<=|>=|<|>)) \s* (?P<version> [^,;\s)]* # Since this is a "legacy" specifier, and the version # string can be just about anything, we match everything # except for whitespace, a semi-colon for marker support, # a closing paren since versions can be enclosed in # them, and a comma since it's a version separator. ) """ _regex = re.compile(r"^\s*" + _regex_str + r"\s*$", re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE) _operators = { "==": "equal", "!=": "not_equal", "<=": "less_than_equal", ">=": "greater_than_equal", "<": "less_than", ">": "greater_than", } def _coerce_version(self, version): if not isinstance(version, LegacyVersion): version = LegacyVersion(str(version)) return version def _compare_equal(self, prospective, spec): return prospective == self._coerce_version(spec) def _compare_not_equal(self, prospective, spec): return prospective != self._coerce_version(spec) def _compare_less_than_equal(self, prospective, spec): return prospective <= self._coerce_version(spec) def _compare_greater_than_equal(self, prospective, spec): return prospective >= self._coerce_version(spec) def _compare_less_than(self, prospective, spec): return prospective < self._coerce_version(spec) def _compare_greater_than(self, prospective, spec): return prospective > self._coerce_version(spec) def _require_version_compare(fn): @functools.wraps(fn) def wrapped(self, prospective, spec): if not isinstance(prospective, Version): return False return fn(self, prospective, spec) return wrapped class Specifier(_IndividualSpecifier): _regex_str = r""" (?P<operator>(~=|==|!=|<=|>=|<|>|===)) (?P<version> (?: # The identity operators allow for an escape hatch that will # do an exact string match of the version you wish to install. # This will not be parsed by PEP 440 and we cannot determine # any semantic meaning from it. This operator is discouraged # but included entirely as an escape hatch. (?<====) # Only match for the identity operator \s* [^\s]* # We just match everything, except for whitespace # since we are only testing for strict identity. ) | (?: # The (non)equality operators allow for wild card and local # versions to be specified so we have to define these two # operators separately to enable that. (?<===|!=) # Only match for equals and not equals \s* v? (?:[0-9]+!)? # epoch [0-9]+(?:\.[0-9]+)* # release (?: # pre release [-_\.]? (a|b|c|rc|alpha|beta|pre|preview) [-_\.]? [0-9]* )? (?: # post release (?:-[0-9]+)|(?:[-_\.]?(post|rev|r)[-_\.]?[0-9]*) )? # You cannot use a wild card and a dev or local version # together so group them with a | and make them optional. (?: (?:[-_\.]?dev[-_\.]?[0-9]*)? # dev release (?:\+[a-z0-9]+(?:[-_\.][a-z0-9]+)*)? # local | \.\* # Wild card syntax of .* )? ) | (?: # The compatible operator requires at least two digits in the # release segment. (?<=~=) # Only match for the compatible operator \s* v? (?:[0-9]+!)? # epoch [0-9]+(?:\.[0-9]+)+ # release (We have a + instead of a *) (?: # pre release [-_\.]? (a|b|c|rc|alpha|beta|pre|preview) [-_\.]? [0-9]* )? (?: # post release (?:-[0-9]+)|(?:[-_\.]?(post|rev|r)[-_\.]?[0-9]*) )? (?:[-_\.]?dev[-_\.]?[0-9]*)? # dev release ) | (?: # All other operators only allow a sub set of what the # (non)equality operators do. Specifically they do not allow # local versions to be specified nor do they allow the prefix # matching wild cards. (?<!==|!=|~=) # We have special cases for these # operators so we want to make sure they # don't match here. \s* v? (?:[0-9]+!)? # epoch [0-9]+(?:\.[0-9]+)* # release (?: # pre release [-_\.]? (a|b|c|rc|alpha|beta|pre|preview) [-_\.]? [0-9]* )? (?: # post release (?:-[0-9]+)|(?:[-_\.]?(post|rev|r)[-_\.]?[0-9]*) )? (?:[-_\.]?dev[-_\.]?[0-9]*)? # dev release ) ) """ _regex = re.compile(r"^\s*" + _regex_str + r"\s*$", re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE) _operators = { "~=": "compatible", "==": "equal", "!=": "not_equal", "<=": "less_than_equal", ">=": "greater_than_equal", "<": "less_than", ">": "greater_than", "===": "arbitrary", } @_require_version_compare def _compare_compatible(self, prospective, spec): # 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 post and dev releases and we want to treat the pre-release as # it's own separate segment. prefix = ".".join( list( itertools.takewhile( lambda x: (not x.startswith("post") and not x.startswith("dev")), _version_split(spec), ) )[:-1] ) # Add the prefix notation to the end of our string prefix += ".*" return self._get_operator(">=")(prospective, spec) and self._get_operator("==")( prospective, prefix ) @_require_version_compare def _compare_equal(self, prospective, spec): # We need special logic to handle prefix matching if spec.endswith(".*"): # In the case of prefix matching we want to ignore local segment. prospective = Version(prospective.public) # Split the spec out by dots, and pretend that there is an implicit # dot in between a release segment and a pre-release segment. spec = _version_split(spec[:-2]) # Remove the trailing .* # Split the prospective version out by dots, and pretend that there # is an implicit dot in between a release segment and a pre-release # segment. prospective = _version_split(str(prospective)) # Shorten the prospective version to be the same length as the spec # so that we can determine if the specifier is a prefix of the # prospective version or not. prospective = prospective[: len(spec)] # Pad out our two sides with zeros so that they both equal the same # length. spec, prospective = _pad_version(spec, prospective) else: # Convert our spec string into a Version 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.local: prospective = Version(prospective.public) return prospective == spec @_require_version_compare def _compare_not_equal(self, prospective, spec): return not self._compare_equal(prospective, spec) @_require_version_compare def _compare_less_than_equal(self, prospective, spec): return prospective <= Version(spec) @_require_version_compare def _compare_greater_than_equal(self, prospective, spec): return prospective >= Version(spec) @_require_version_compare def _compare_less_than(self, prospective, spec): # Convert our spec to a Version instance, since we'll want to work with # it as a version. spec = Version(spec) # Check to see if the prospective version is less than the spec # version. If it's not we can short circuit and just return False now # instead of doing extra unneeded work. if not prospective < spec: return False # This special case is here so that, unless the specifier itself # includes is a pre-release version, that we do not accept pre-release # versions for the version mentioned in the specifier (e.g. <3.1 should # not match 3.1.dev0, but should match 3.0.dev0). if not spec.is_prerelease and prospective.is_prerelease: if Version(prospective.base_version) == Version(spec.base_version): return False # If we've gotten to here, it means that prospective version is both # less than the spec version *and* it's not a pre-release of the same # version in the spec. return True @_require_version_compare def _compare_greater_than(self, prospective, spec): # Convert our spec to a Version instance, since we'll want to work with # it as a version. spec = Version(spec) # Check to see if the prospective version is greater than the spec # version. If it's not we can short circuit and just return False now # instead of doing extra unneeded work. if not prospective > spec: return False # This special case is here so that, unless the specifier itself # includes is a post-release version, that we do not accept # post-release versions for the version mentioned in the specifier # (e.g. >3.1 should not match 3.0.post0, but should match 3.2.post0). if not spec.is_postrelease and prospective.is_postrelease: if Version(prospective.base_version) == Version(spec.base_version): return False # Ensure that we do not allow a local version of the version mentioned # in the specifier, which is technically greater than, to match. if prospective.local is not None: if Version(prospective.base_version) == Version(spec.base_version): return False # If we've gotten to here, it means that prospective version is both # greater than the spec version *and* it's not a pre-release of the # same version in the spec. return True def _compare_arbitrary(self, prospective, spec): return str(prospective).lower() == str(spec).lower() @property def prereleases(self): # If there is an explicit prereleases set for this, then we'll just # blindly use that. if self._prereleases is not None: return self._prereleases # Look at all of our specifiers and determine if they are inclusive # operators, and if they are if they are including an explicit # prerelease. operator, version = self._spec if operator in ["==", ">=", "<=", "~=", "==="]: # The == specifier can include a trailing .*, if it does we # want to remove before parsing. if operator == "==" and version.endswith(".*"): version = version[:-2] # Parse the version, and if it is a pre-release than this # specifier allows pre-releases. if parse(version).is_prerelease: return True return False @prereleases.setter def prereleases(self, value): self._prereleases = value _prefix_regex = re.compile(r"^([0-9]+)((?:a|b|c|rc)[0-9]+)$") def _version_split(version): result = [] for item in version.split("."): match = _prefix_regex.search(item) if match: result.extend(match.groups()) else: result.append(item) return result def _pad_version(left, right): left_split, right_split = [], [] # Get the release segment of our versions left_split.append(list(itertools.takewhile(lambda x: x.isdigit(), left))) right_split.append(list(itertools.takewhile(lambda x: x.isdigit(), right))) # Get the rest of our versions left_split.append(left[len(left_split[0]) :]) right_split.append(right[len(right_split[0]) :]) # Insert our padding left_split.insert(1, ["0"] * max(0, len(right_split[0]) - len(left_split[0]))) right_split.insert(1, ["0"] * max(0, len(left_split[0]) - len(right_split[0]))) return (list(itertools.chain(*left_split)), list(itertools.chain(*right_split))) class SpecifierSet(BaseSpecifier): def __init__(self, specifiers="", prereleases=None): # Split on , to break each indidivual specifier into it's own item, and # strip each item to remove leading/trailing whitespace. specifiers = [s.strip() for s in specifiers.split(",") if s.strip()] # Parsed each individual specifier, attempting first to make it a # Specifier and falling back to a LegacySpecifier. parsed = set() for specifier in specifiers: try: parsed.add(Specifier(specifier)) except InvalidSpecifier: parsed.add(LegacySpecifier(specifier)) # Turn our parsed specifiers into a frozen set and save them for later. self._specs = frozenset(parsed) # Store our prereleases value so we can use it later to determine if # we accept prereleases or not. self._prereleases = prereleases def __repr__(self): pre = ( ", prereleases={0!r}".format(self.prereleases) if self._prereleases is not None else "" ) return "<SpecifierSet({0!r}{1})>".format(str(self), pre) def __str__(self): return ",".join(sorted(str(s) for s in self._specs)) def __hash__(self): return hash(self._specs) def __and__(self, other): if isinstance(other, string_types): other = SpecifierSet(other) elif not isinstance(other, SpecifierSet): return NotImplemented specifier = SpecifierSet() specifier._specs = frozenset(self._specs | other._specs) if self._prereleases is None and other._prereleases is not None: specifier._prereleases = other._prereleases elif self._prereleases is not None and other._prereleases is None: specifier._prereleases = self._prereleases elif self._prereleases == other._prereleases: specifier._prereleases = self._prereleases else: raise ValueError( "Cannot combine SpecifierSets with True and False prerelease " "overrides." ) return specifier def __eq__(self, other): if isinstance(other, string_types): other = SpecifierSet(other) elif isinstance(other, _IndividualSpecifier): other = SpecifierSet(str(other)) elif not isinstance(other, SpecifierSet): return NotImplemented return self._specs == other._specs def __ne__(self, other): if isinstance(other, string_types): other = SpecifierSet(other) elif isinstance(other, _IndividualSpecifier): other = SpecifierSet(str(other)) elif not isinstance(other, SpecifierSet): return NotImplemented return self._specs != other._specs def __len__(self): return len(self._specs) def __iter__(self): return iter(self._specs) @property def prereleases(self): # If we have been given an explicit prerelease modifier, then we'll # pass that through here. if self._prereleases is not None: return self._prereleases # If we don't have any specifiers, and we don't have a forced value, # then we'll just return None since we don't know if this should have # pre-releases or not. if not self._specs: return None # Otherwise we'll see if any of the given specifiers accept # prereleases, if any of them do we'll return True, otherwise False. return any(s.prereleases for s in self._specs) @prereleases.setter def prereleases(self, value): self._prereleases = value def __contains__(self, item): return self.contains(item) def contains(self, item, prereleases=None): # Ensure that our item is a Version or LegacyVersion instance. if not isinstance(item, (LegacyVersion, Version)): item = parse(item) # Determine if we're forcing a prerelease or not, if we're not forcing # one for this particular filter call, then we'll use whatever the # SpecifierSet thinks for whether or not we should support prereleases. if prereleases is None: prereleases = self.prereleases # We can determine if we're going to allow pre-releases by looking to # see if any of the underlying items supports them. If none of them do # and this item is a pre-release then we do not allow it and we can # short circuit that here. # Note: This means that 1.0.dev1 would not be contained in something # like >=1.0.devabc however it would be in >=1.0.debabc,>0.0.dev0 if not prereleases and item.is_prerelease: return False # We simply dispatch to the underlying specs here to make sure that the # given version is contained within all of them. # Note: This use of all() here means that an empty set of specifiers # will always return True, this is an explicit design decision. return all(s.contains(item, prereleases=prereleases) for s in self._specs) def filter(self, iterable, prereleases=None): # Determine if we're forcing a prerelease or not, if we're not forcing # one for this particular filter call, then we'll use whatever the # SpecifierSet thinks for whether or not we should support prereleases. if prereleases is None: prereleases = self.prereleases # If we have any specifiers, then we want to wrap our iterable in the # filter method for each one, this will act as a logical AND amongst # each specifier. if self._specs: for spec in self._specs: iterable = spec.filter(iterable, prereleases=bool(prereleases)) return iterable # If we do not have any specifiers, then we need to have a rough filter # which will filter out any pre-releases, unless there are no final # releases, and which will filter out LegacyVersion in general. else: filtered = [] found_prereleases = [] for item in iterable: # Ensure that we some kind of Version class for this item. if not isinstance(item, (LegacyVersion, Version)): parsed_version = parse(item) else: parsed_version = item # Filter out any item which is parsed as a LegacyVersion if isinstance(parsed_version, LegacyVersion): continue # Store any item which is a pre-release for later unless we've # already found a final version or we are accepting prereleases if parsed_version.is_prerelease and not prereleases: if not filtered: found_prereleases.append(item) else: filtered.append(item) # If we've found no items except for pre-releases, then we'll go # ahead and use the pre-releases if not filtered and found_prereleases and prereleases is None: return found_prereleases return filtered
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/bdist_egg.py
"""setuptools.command.bdist_egg Build .egg distributions""" from distutils.errors import DistutilsSetupError from distutils.dir_util import remove_tree, mkpath from distutils import log from types import CodeType import sys import os import re import textwrap import marshal import warnings from setuptools.extern import six from pkg_resources import get_build_platform, Distribution, ensure_directory from pkg_resources import EntryPoint from setuptools.extension import Library from setuptools import Command, SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning try: # Python 2.7 or >=3.2 from sysconfig import get_path, get_python_version def _get_purelib(): return get_path("purelib") except ImportError: from distutils.sysconfig import get_python_lib, get_python_version def _get_purelib(): return get_python_lib(False) def strip_module(filename): if '.' in filename: filename = os.path.splitext(filename)[0] if filename.endswith('module'): filename = filename[:-6] return filename def sorted_walk(dir): """Do os.walk in a reproducible way, independent of indeterministic filesystem readdir order """ for base, dirs, files in os.walk(dir): dirs.sort() files.sort() yield base, dirs, files def write_stub(resource, pyfile): _stub_template = textwrap.dedent(""" def __bootstrap__(): global __bootstrap__, __loader__, __file__ import sys, pkg_resources from importlib.machinery import ExtensionFileLoader __file__ = pkg_resources.resource_filename(__name__, %r) __loader__ = None; del __bootstrap__, __loader__ ExtensionFileLoader(__name__,__file__).load_module() __bootstrap__() """).lstrip() with open(pyfile, 'w') as f: f.write(_stub_template % resource) class bdist_egg(Command): description = "create an \"egg\" distribution" user_options = [ ('bdist-dir=', 'b', "temporary directory for creating the distribution"), ('plat-name=', 'p', "platform name to embed in generated filenames " "(default: %s)" % get_build_platform()), ('exclude-source-files', None, "remove all .py files from the generated egg"), ('keep-temp', 'k', "keep the pseudo-installation tree around after " + "creating the distribution archive"), ('dist-dir=', 'd', "directory to put final built distributions in"), ('skip-build', None, "skip rebuilding everything (for testing/debugging)"), ] boolean_options = [ 'keep-temp', 'skip-build', 'exclude-source-files' ] def initialize_options(self): self.bdist_dir = None self.plat_name = None self.keep_temp = 0 self.dist_dir = None self.skip_build = 0 self.egg_output = None self.exclude_source_files = None def finalize_options(self): ei_cmd = self.ei_cmd = self.get_finalized_command("egg_info") self.egg_info = ei_cmd.egg_info if self.bdist_dir is None: bdist_base = self.get_finalized_command('bdist').bdist_base self.bdist_dir = os.path.join(bdist_base, 'egg') if self.plat_name is None: self.plat_name = get_build_platform() self.set_undefined_options('bdist', ('dist_dir', 'dist_dir')) if self.egg_output is None: # Compute filename of the output egg basename = Distribution( None, None, ei_cmd.egg_name, ei_cmd.egg_version, get_python_version(), self.distribution.has_ext_modules() and self.plat_name ).egg_name() self.egg_output = os.path.join(self.dist_dir, basename + '.egg') def do_install_data(self): # Hack for packages that install data to install's --install-lib self.get_finalized_command('install').install_lib = self.bdist_dir site_packages = os.path.normcase(os.path.realpath(_get_purelib())) old, self.distribution.data_files = self.distribution.data_files, [] for item in old: if isinstance(item, tuple) and len(item) == 2: if os.path.isabs(item[0]): realpath = os.path.realpath(item[0]) normalized = os.path.normcase(realpath) if normalized == site_packages or normalized.startswith( site_packages + os.sep ): item = realpath[len(site_packages) + 1:], item[1] # XXX else: raise ??? self.distribution.data_files.append(item) try: log.info("installing package data to %s", self.bdist_dir) self.call_command('install_data', force=0, root=None) finally: self.distribution.data_files = old def get_outputs(self): return [self.egg_output] def call_command(self, cmdname, **kw): """Invoke reinitialized command `cmdname` with keyword args""" for dirname in INSTALL_DIRECTORY_ATTRS: kw.setdefault(dirname, self.bdist_dir) kw.setdefault('skip_build', self.skip_build) kw.setdefault('dry_run', self.dry_run) cmd = self.reinitialize_command(cmdname, **kw) self.run_command(cmdname) return cmd def run(self): # Generate metadata first self.run_command("egg_info") # We run install_lib before install_data, because some data hacks # pull their data path from the install_lib command. log.info("installing library code to %s", self.bdist_dir) instcmd = self.get_finalized_command('install') old_root = instcmd.root instcmd.root = None if self.distribution.has_c_libraries() and not self.skip_build: self.run_command('build_clib') cmd = self.call_command('install_lib', warn_dir=0) instcmd.root = old_root all_outputs, ext_outputs = self.get_ext_outputs() self.stubs = [] to_compile = [] for (p, ext_name) in enumerate(ext_outputs): filename, ext = os.path.splitext(ext_name) pyfile = os.path.join(self.bdist_dir, strip_module(filename) + '.py') self.stubs.append(pyfile) log.info("creating stub loader for %s", ext_name) if not self.dry_run: write_stub(os.path.basename(ext_name), pyfile) to_compile.append(pyfile) ext_outputs[p] = ext_name.replace(os.sep, '/') if to_compile: cmd.byte_compile(to_compile) if self.distribution.data_files: self.do_install_data() # Make the EGG-INFO directory archive_root = self.bdist_dir egg_info = os.path.join(archive_root, 'EGG-INFO') self.mkpath(egg_info) if self.distribution.scripts: script_dir = os.path.join(egg_info, 'scripts') log.info("installing scripts to %s", script_dir) self.call_command('install_scripts', install_dir=script_dir, no_ep=1) self.copy_metadata_to(egg_info) native_libs = os.path.join(egg_info, "native_libs.txt") if all_outputs: log.info("writing %s", native_libs) if not self.dry_run: ensure_directory(native_libs) libs_file = open(native_libs, 'wt') libs_file.write('\n'.join(all_outputs)) libs_file.write('\n') libs_file.close() elif os.path.isfile(native_libs): log.info("removing %s", native_libs) if not self.dry_run: os.unlink(native_libs) write_safety_flag( os.path.join(archive_root, 'EGG-INFO'), self.zip_safe() ) if os.path.exists(os.path.join(self.egg_info, 'depends.txt')): log.warn( "WARNING: 'depends.txt' will not be used by setuptools 0.6!\n" "Use the install_requires/extras_require setup() args instead." ) if self.exclude_source_files: self.zap_pyfiles() # Make the archive make_zipfile(self.egg_output, archive_root, verbose=self.verbose, dry_run=self.dry_run, mode=self.gen_header()) if not self.keep_temp: remove_tree(self.bdist_dir, dry_run=self.dry_run) # Add to 'Distribution.dist_files' so that the "upload" command works getattr(self.distribution, 'dist_files', []).append( ('bdist_egg', get_python_version(), self.egg_output)) def zap_pyfiles(self): log.info("Removing .py files from temporary directory") for base, dirs, files in walk_egg(self.bdist_dir): for name in files: path = os.path.join(base, name) if name.endswith('.py'): log.debug("Deleting %s", path) os.unlink(path) if base.endswith('__pycache__'): path_old = path pattern = r'(?P<name>.+)\.(?P<magic>[^.]+)\.pyc' m = re.match(pattern, name) path_new = os.path.join( base, os.pardir, m.group('name') + '.pyc') log.info( "Renaming file from [%s] to [%s]" % (path_old, path_new)) try: os.remove(path_new) except OSError: pass os.rename(path_old, path_new) def zip_safe(self): safe = getattr(self.distribution, 'zip_safe', None) if safe is not None: return safe log.warn("zip_safe flag not set; analyzing archive contents...") return analyze_egg(self.bdist_dir, self.stubs) def gen_header(self): epm = EntryPoint.parse_map(self.distribution.entry_points or '') ep = epm.get('setuptools.installation', {}).get('eggsecutable') if ep is None: return 'w' # not an eggsecutable, do it the usual way. warnings.warn( "Eggsecutables are deprecated and will be removed in a future " "version.", SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning ) if not ep.attrs or ep.extras: raise DistutilsSetupError( "eggsecutable entry point (%r) cannot have 'extras' " "or refer to a module" % (ep,) ) pyver = '{}.{}'.format(*sys.version_info) pkg = ep.module_name full = '.'.join(ep.attrs) base = ep.attrs[0] basename = os.path.basename(self.egg_output) header = ( "#!/bin/sh\n" 'if [ `basename $0` = "%(basename)s" ]\n' 'then exec python%(pyver)s -c "' "import sys, os; sys.path.insert(0, os.path.abspath('$0')); " "from %(pkg)s import %(base)s; sys.exit(%(full)s())" '" "$@"\n' 'else\n' ' echo $0 is not the correct name for this egg file.\n' ' echo Please rename it back to %(basename)s and try again.\n' ' exec false\n' 'fi\n' ) % locals() if not self.dry_run: mkpath(os.path.dirname(self.egg_output), dry_run=self.dry_run) f = open(self.egg_output, 'w') f.write(header) f.close() return 'a' def copy_metadata_to(self, target_dir): "Copy metadata (egg info) to the target_dir" # normalize the path (so that a forward-slash in egg_info will # match using startswith below) norm_egg_info = os.path.normpath(self.egg_info) prefix = os.path.join(norm_egg_info, '') for path in self.ei_cmd.filelist.files: if path.startswith(prefix): target = os.path.join(target_dir, path[len(prefix):]) ensure_directory(target) self.copy_file(path, target) def get_ext_outputs(self): """Get a list of relative paths to C extensions in the output distro""" all_outputs = [] ext_outputs = [] paths = {self.bdist_dir: ''} for base, dirs, files in sorted_walk(self.bdist_dir): for filename in files: if os.path.splitext(filename)[1].lower() in NATIVE_EXTENSIONS: all_outputs.append(paths[base] + filename) for filename in dirs: paths[os.path.join(base, filename)] = (paths[base] + filename + '/') if self.distribution.has_ext_modules(): build_cmd = self.get_finalized_command('build_ext') for ext in build_cmd.extensions: if isinstance(ext, Library): continue fullname = build_cmd.get_ext_fullname(ext.name) filename = build_cmd.get_ext_filename(fullname) if not os.path.basename(filename).startswith('dl-'): if os.path.exists(os.path.join(self.bdist_dir, filename)): ext_outputs.append(filename) return all_outputs, ext_outputs NATIVE_EXTENSIONS = dict.fromkeys('.dll .so .dylib .pyd'.split()) def walk_egg(egg_dir): """Walk an unpacked egg's contents, skipping the metadata directory""" walker = sorted_walk(egg_dir) base, dirs, files = next(walker) if 'EGG-INFO' in dirs: dirs.remove('EGG-INFO') yield base, dirs, files for bdf in walker: yield bdf def analyze_egg(egg_dir, stubs): # check for existing flag in EGG-INFO for flag, fn in safety_flags.items(): if os.path.exists(os.path.join(egg_dir, 'EGG-INFO', fn)): return flag if not can_scan(): return False safe = True for base, dirs, files in walk_egg(egg_dir): for name in files: if name.endswith('.py') or name.endswith('.pyw'): continue elif name.endswith('.pyc') or name.endswith('.pyo'): # always scan, even if we already know we're not safe safe = scan_module(egg_dir, base, name, stubs) and safe return safe def write_safety_flag(egg_dir, safe): # Write or remove zip safety flag file(s) for flag, fn in safety_flags.items(): fn = os.path.join(egg_dir, fn) if os.path.exists(fn): if safe is None or bool(safe) != flag: os.unlink(fn) elif safe is not None and bool(safe) == flag: f = open(fn, 'wt') f.write('\n') f.close() safety_flags = { True: 'zip-safe', False: 'not-zip-safe', } def scan_module(egg_dir, base, name, stubs): """Check whether module possibly uses unsafe-for-zipfile stuff""" filename = os.path.join(base, name) if filename[:-1] in stubs: return True # Extension module pkg = base[len(egg_dir) + 1:].replace(os.sep, '.') module = pkg + (pkg and '.' or '') + os.path.splitext(name)[0] if six.PY2: skip = 8 # skip magic & date elif sys.version_info < (3, 7): skip = 12 # skip magic & date & file size else: skip = 16 # skip magic & reserved? & date & file size f = open(filename, 'rb') f.read(skip) code = marshal.load(f) f.close() safe = True symbols = dict.fromkeys(iter_symbols(code)) for bad in ['__file__', '__path__']: if bad in symbols: log.warn("%s: module references %s", module, bad) safe = False if 'inspect' in symbols: for bad in [ 'getsource', 'getabsfile', 'getsourcefile', 'getfile' 'getsourcelines', 'findsource', 'getcomments', 'getframeinfo', 'getinnerframes', 'getouterframes', 'stack', 'trace' ]: if bad in symbols: log.warn("%s: module MAY be using inspect.%s", module, bad) safe = False return safe def iter_symbols(code): """Yield names and strings used by `code` and its nested code objects""" for name in code.co_names: yield name for const in code.co_consts: if isinstance(const, six.string_types): yield const elif isinstance(const, CodeType): for name in iter_symbols(const): yield name def can_scan(): if not sys.platform.startswith('java') and sys.platform != 'cli': # CPython, PyPy, etc. return True log.warn("Unable to analyze compiled code on this platform.") log.warn("Please ask the author to include a 'zip_safe'" " setting (either True or False) in the package's setup.py") # Attribute names of options for commands that might need to be convinced to # install to the egg build directory INSTALL_DIRECTORY_ATTRS = [ 'install_lib', 'install_dir', 'install_data', 'install_base' ] def make_zipfile(zip_filename, base_dir, verbose=0, dry_run=0, compress=True, mode='w'): """Create a zip file from all the files under 'base_dir'. The output zip file will be named 'base_dir' + ".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. """ import zipfile mkpath(os.path.dirname(zip_filename), dry_run=dry_run) log.info("creating '%s' and adding '%s' to it", zip_filename, base_dir) def visit(z, dirname, names): for name in names: path = os.path.normpath(os.path.join(dirname, name)) if os.path.isfile(path): p = path[len(base_dir) + 1:] if not dry_run: z.write(path, p) log.debug("adding '%s'", p) compression = zipfile.ZIP_DEFLATED if compress else zipfile.ZIP_STORED if not dry_run: z = zipfile.ZipFile(zip_filename, mode, compression=compression) for dirname, dirs, files in sorted_walk(base_dir): visit(z, dirname, files) z.close() else: for dirname, dirs, files in sorted_walk(base_dir): visit(None, dirname, files) return zip_filename
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/alias.py
from distutils.errors import DistutilsOptionError from setuptools.extern.six.moves import map from setuptools.command.setopt import edit_config, option_base, config_file def shquote(arg): """Quote an argument for later parsing by shlex.split()""" for c in '"', "'", "\\", "#": if c in arg: return repr(arg) if arg.split() != [arg]: return repr(arg) return arg class alias(option_base): """Define a shortcut that invokes one or more commands""" description = "define a shortcut to invoke one or more commands" command_consumes_arguments = True user_options = [ ('remove', 'r', 'remove (unset) the alias'), ] + option_base.user_options boolean_options = option_base.boolean_options + ['remove'] def initialize_options(self): option_base.initialize_options(self) self.args = None self.remove = None def finalize_options(self): option_base.finalize_options(self) if self.remove and len(self.args) != 1: raise DistutilsOptionError( "Must specify exactly one argument (the alias name) when " "using --remove" ) def run(self): aliases = self.distribution.get_option_dict('aliases') if not self.args: print("Command Aliases") print("---------------") for alias in aliases: print("setup.py alias", format_alias(alias, aliases)) return elif len(self.args) == 1: alias, = self.args if self.remove: command = None elif alias in aliases: print("setup.py alias", format_alias(alias, aliases)) return else: print("No alias definition found for %r" % alias) return else: alias = self.args[0] command = ' '.join(map(shquote, self.args[1:])) edit_config(self.filename, {'aliases': {alias: command}}, self.dry_run) def format_alias(name, aliases): source, command = aliases[name] if source == config_file('global'): source = '--global-config ' elif source == config_file('user'): source = '--user-config ' elif source == config_file('local'): source = '' else: source = '--filename=%r' % source return source + name + ' ' + command
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/py36compat.py
import os from glob import glob from distutils.util import convert_path from distutils.command import sdist from setuptools.extern.six.moves import filter class sdist_add_defaults: """ Mix-in providing forward-compatibility for functionality as found in distutils on Python 3.7. Do not edit the code in this class except to update functionality as implemented in distutils. Instead, override in the subclass. """ def add_defaults(self): """Add all the default files to self.filelist: - README or README.txt - setup.py - test/test*.py - all pure Python modules mentioned in setup script - all files pointed by package_data (build_py) - all files defined in data_files. - all files defined as scripts. - all C sources listed as part of extensions or C libraries in the setup script (doesn't catch C headers!) Warns if (README or README.txt) or setup.py are missing; everything else is optional. """ self._add_defaults_standards() self._add_defaults_optional() self._add_defaults_python() self._add_defaults_data_files() self._add_defaults_ext() self._add_defaults_c_libs() self._add_defaults_scripts() @staticmethod def _cs_path_exists(fspath): """ Case-sensitive path existence check >>> sdist_add_defaults._cs_path_exists(__file__) True >>> sdist_add_defaults._cs_path_exists(__file__.upper()) False """ if not os.path.exists(fspath): return False # make absolute so we always have a directory abspath = os.path.abspath(fspath) directory, filename = os.path.split(abspath) return filename in os.listdir(directory) def _add_defaults_standards(self): standards = [self.READMES, self.distribution.script_name] for fn in standards: if isinstance(fn, tuple): alts = fn got_it = False for fn in alts: if self._cs_path_exists(fn): got_it = True self.filelist.append(fn) break if not got_it: self.warn("standard file not found: should have one of " + ', '.join(alts)) else: if self._cs_path_exists(fn): self.filelist.append(fn) else: self.warn("standard file '%s' not found" % fn) def _add_defaults_optional(self): optional = ['test/test*.py', 'setup.cfg'] for pattern in optional: files = filter(os.path.isfile, glob(pattern)) self.filelist.extend(files) def _add_defaults_python(self): # build_py is used to get: # - python modules # - files defined in package_data build_py = self.get_finalized_command('build_py') # getting python files if self.distribution.has_pure_modules(): self.filelist.extend(build_py.get_source_files()) # getting package_data files # (computed in build_py.data_files by build_py.finalize_options) for pkg, src_dir, build_dir, filenames in build_py.data_files: for filename in filenames: self.filelist.append(os.path.join(src_dir, filename)) def _add_defaults_data_files(self): # getting distribution.data_files if self.distribution.has_data_files(): for item in self.distribution.data_files: if isinstance(item, str): # plain file item = convert_path(item) if os.path.isfile(item): self.filelist.append(item) else: # a (dirname, filenames) tuple dirname, filenames = item for f in filenames: f = convert_path(f) if os.path.isfile(f): self.filelist.append(f) def _add_defaults_ext(self): if self.distribution.has_ext_modules(): build_ext = self.get_finalized_command('build_ext') self.filelist.extend(build_ext.get_source_files()) def _add_defaults_c_libs(self): if self.distribution.has_c_libraries(): build_clib = self.get_finalized_command('build_clib') self.filelist.extend(build_clib.get_source_files()) def _add_defaults_scripts(self): if self.distribution.has_scripts(): build_scripts = self.get_finalized_command('build_scripts') self.filelist.extend(build_scripts.get_source_files()) if hasattr(sdist.sdist, '_add_defaults_standards'): # disable the functionality already available upstream class sdist_add_defaults: # noqa pass
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/build_ext.py
import os import sys import itertools from distutils.command.build_ext import build_ext as _du_build_ext from distutils.file_util import copy_file from distutils.ccompiler import new_compiler from distutils.sysconfig import customize_compiler, get_config_var from distutils.errors import DistutilsError from distutils import log from setuptools.extension import Library from setuptools.extern import six if six.PY2: import imp EXTENSION_SUFFIXES = [ s for s, _, tp in imp.get_suffixes() if tp == imp.C_EXTENSION] else: from importlib.machinery import EXTENSION_SUFFIXES try: # Attempt to use Cython for building extensions, if available from Cython.Distutils.build_ext import build_ext as _build_ext # Additionally, assert that the compiler module will load # also. Ref #1229. __import__('Cython.Compiler.Main') except ImportError: _build_ext = _du_build_ext # make sure _config_vars is initialized get_config_var("LDSHARED") from distutils.sysconfig import _config_vars as _CONFIG_VARS # noqa def _customize_compiler_for_shlib(compiler): if sys.platform == "darwin": # building .dylib requires additional compiler flags on OSX; here we # temporarily substitute the pyconfig.h variables so that distutils' # 'customize_compiler' uses them before we build the shared libraries. tmp = _CONFIG_VARS.copy() try: # XXX Help! I don't have any idea whether these are right... _CONFIG_VARS['LDSHARED'] = ( "gcc -Wl,-x -dynamiclib -undefined dynamic_lookup") _CONFIG_VARS['CCSHARED'] = " -dynamiclib" _CONFIG_VARS['SO'] = ".dylib" customize_compiler(compiler) finally: _CONFIG_VARS.clear() _CONFIG_VARS.update(tmp) else: customize_compiler(compiler) have_rtld = False use_stubs = False libtype = 'shared' if sys.platform == "darwin": use_stubs = True elif os.name != 'nt': try: import dl use_stubs = have_rtld = hasattr(dl, 'RTLD_NOW') except ImportError: pass def if_dl(s): return s if have_rtld else '' def get_abi3_suffix(): """Return the file extension for an abi3-compliant Extension()""" for suffix in EXTENSION_SUFFIXES: if '.abi3' in suffix: # Unix return suffix elif suffix == '.pyd': # Windows return suffix class build_ext(_build_ext): def run(self): """Build extensions in build directory, then copy if --inplace""" old_inplace, self.inplace = self.inplace, 0 _build_ext.run(self) self.inplace = old_inplace if old_inplace: self.copy_extensions_to_source() def copy_extensions_to_source(self): build_py = self.get_finalized_command('build_py') for ext in self.extensions: fullname = self.get_ext_fullname(ext.name) filename = self.get_ext_filename(fullname) modpath = fullname.split('.') package = '.'.join(modpath[:-1]) package_dir = build_py.get_package_dir(package) dest_filename = os.path.join(package_dir, os.path.basename(filename)) src_filename = os.path.join(self.build_lib, filename) # Always copy, even if source is older than destination, to ensure # that the right extensions for the current Python/platform are # used. copy_file( src_filename, dest_filename, verbose=self.verbose, dry_run=self.dry_run ) if ext._needs_stub: self.write_stub(package_dir or os.curdir, ext, True) def get_ext_filename(self, fullname): filename = _build_ext.get_ext_filename(self, fullname) if fullname in self.ext_map: ext = self.ext_map[fullname] use_abi3 = ( not six.PY2 and getattr(ext, 'py_limited_api') and get_abi3_suffix() ) if use_abi3: so_ext = get_config_var('EXT_SUFFIX') filename = filename[:-len(so_ext)] filename = filename + get_abi3_suffix() if isinstance(ext, Library): fn, ext = os.path.splitext(filename) return self.shlib_compiler.library_filename(fn, libtype) elif use_stubs and ext._links_to_dynamic: d, fn = os.path.split(filename) return os.path.join(d, 'dl-' + fn) return filename def initialize_options(self): _build_ext.initialize_options(self) self.shlib_compiler = None self.shlibs = [] self.ext_map = {} def finalize_options(self): _build_ext.finalize_options(self) self.extensions = self.extensions or [] self.check_extensions_list(self.extensions) self.shlibs = [ext for ext in self.extensions if isinstance(ext, Library)] if self.shlibs: self.setup_shlib_compiler() for ext in self.extensions: ext._full_name = self.get_ext_fullname(ext.name) for ext in self.extensions: fullname = ext._full_name self.ext_map[fullname] = ext # distutils 3.1 will also ask for module names # XXX what to do with conflicts? self.ext_map[fullname.split('.')[-1]] = ext ltd = self.shlibs and self.links_to_dynamic(ext) or False ns = ltd and use_stubs and not isinstance(ext, Library) ext._links_to_dynamic = ltd ext._needs_stub = ns filename = ext._file_name = self.get_ext_filename(fullname) libdir = os.path.dirname(os.path.join(self.build_lib, filename)) if ltd and libdir not in ext.library_dirs: ext.library_dirs.append(libdir) if ltd and use_stubs and os.curdir not in ext.runtime_library_dirs: ext.runtime_library_dirs.append(os.curdir) def setup_shlib_compiler(self): compiler = self.shlib_compiler = new_compiler( compiler=self.compiler, dry_run=self.dry_run, force=self.force ) _customize_compiler_for_shlib(compiler) if self.include_dirs is not None: compiler.set_include_dirs(self.include_dirs) if self.define is not None: # 'define' option is a list of (name,value) tuples for (name, value) in self.define: compiler.define_macro(name, value) if self.undef is not None: for macro in self.undef: compiler.undefine_macro(macro) if self.libraries is not None: compiler.set_libraries(self.libraries) if self.library_dirs is not None: compiler.set_library_dirs(self.library_dirs) if self.rpath is not None: compiler.set_runtime_library_dirs(self.rpath) if self.link_objects is not None: compiler.set_link_objects(self.link_objects) # hack so distutils' build_extension() builds a library instead compiler.link_shared_object = link_shared_object.__get__(compiler) def get_export_symbols(self, ext): if isinstance(ext, Library): return ext.export_symbols return _build_ext.get_export_symbols(self, ext) def build_extension(self, ext): ext._convert_pyx_sources_to_lang() _compiler = self.compiler try: if isinstance(ext, Library): self.compiler = self.shlib_compiler _build_ext.build_extension(self, ext) if ext._needs_stub: cmd = self.get_finalized_command('build_py').build_lib self.write_stub(cmd, ext) finally: self.compiler = _compiler def links_to_dynamic(self, ext): """Return true if 'ext' links to a dynamic lib in the same package""" # XXX this should check to ensure the lib is actually being built # XXX as dynamic, and not just using a locally-found version or a # XXX static-compiled version libnames = dict.fromkeys([lib._full_name for lib in self.shlibs]) pkg = '.'.join(ext._full_name.split('.')[:-1] + ['']) return any(pkg + libname in libnames for libname in ext.libraries) def get_outputs(self): return _build_ext.get_outputs(self) + self.__get_stubs_outputs() def __get_stubs_outputs(self): # assemble the base name for each extension that needs a stub ns_ext_bases = ( os.path.join(self.build_lib, *ext._full_name.split('.')) for ext in self.extensions if ext._needs_stub ) # pair each base with the extension pairs = itertools.product(ns_ext_bases, self.__get_output_extensions()) return list(base + fnext for base, fnext in pairs) def __get_output_extensions(self): yield '.py' yield '.pyc' if self.get_finalized_command('build_py').optimize: yield '.pyo' def write_stub(self, output_dir, ext, compile=False): log.info("writing stub loader for %s to %s", ext._full_name, output_dir) stub_file = (os.path.join(output_dir, *ext._full_name.split('.')) + '.py') if compile and os.path.exists(stub_file): raise DistutilsError(stub_file + " already exists! Please delete.") if not self.dry_run: f = open(stub_file, 'w') f.write( '\n'.join([ "def __bootstrap__():", " global __bootstrap__, __file__, __loader__", " import sys, os, pkg_resources" + if_dl(", dl"), " from importlib.machinery import ExtensionFileLoader", " __file__ = pkg_resources.resource_filename" "(__name__,%r)" % os.path.basename(ext._file_name), " del __bootstrap__", " if '__loader__' in globals():", " del __loader__", if_dl(" old_flags = sys.getdlopenflags()"), " old_dir = os.getcwd()", " try:", " os.chdir(os.path.dirname(__file__))", if_dl(" sys.setdlopenflags(dl.RTLD_NOW)"), " ExtensionFileLoader(__name__,", " __file__).load_module()", " finally:", if_dl(" sys.setdlopenflags(old_flags)"), " os.chdir(old_dir)", "__bootstrap__()", "" # terminal \n ]) ) f.close() if compile: from distutils.util import byte_compile byte_compile([stub_file], optimize=0, force=True, dry_run=self.dry_run) optimize = self.get_finalized_command('install_lib').optimize if optimize > 0: byte_compile([stub_file], optimize=optimize, force=True, dry_run=self.dry_run) if os.path.exists(stub_file) and not self.dry_run: os.unlink(stub_file) if use_stubs or os.name == 'nt': # Build shared libraries # def link_shared_object( self, objects, output_libname, output_dir=None, libraries=None, library_dirs=None, runtime_library_dirs=None, export_symbols=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, build_temp=None, target_lang=None): self.link( self.SHARED_LIBRARY, objects, output_libname, output_dir, libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs, export_symbols, debug, extra_preargs, extra_postargs, build_temp, target_lang ) else: # Build static libraries everywhere else libtype = 'static' def link_shared_object( self, objects, output_libname, output_dir=None, libraries=None, library_dirs=None, runtime_library_dirs=None, export_symbols=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, build_temp=None, target_lang=None): # XXX we need to either disallow these attrs on Library instances, # or warn/abort here if set, or something... # libraries=None, library_dirs=None, runtime_library_dirs=None, # export_symbols=None, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, # build_temp=None assert output_dir is None # distutils build_ext doesn't pass this output_dir, filename = os.path.split(output_libname) basename, ext = os.path.splitext(filename) if self.library_filename("x").startswith('lib'): # strip 'lib' prefix; this is kludgy if some platform uses # a different prefix basename = basename[3:] self.create_static_lib( objects, basename, output_dir, debug, target_lang )
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/easy_install.py
""" Easy Install ------------ A tool for doing automatic download/extract/build of distutils-based Python packages. For detailed documentation, see the accompanying EasyInstall.txt file, or visit the `EasyInstall home page`__. __ https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/easy_install.html """ from glob import glob from distutils.util import get_platform from distutils.util import convert_path, subst_vars from distutils.errors import ( DistutilsArgError, DistutilsOptionError, DistutilsError, DistutilsPlatformError, ) from distutils.command.install import INSTALL_SCHEMES, SCHEME_KEYS from distutils import log, dir_util from distutils.command.build_scripts import first_line_re from distutils.spawn import find_executable import sys import os import zipimport import shutil import tempfile import zipfile import re import stat import random import textwrap import warnings import site import struct import contextlib import subprocess import shlex import io from sysconfig import get_config_vars, get_path from setuptools import SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning from setuptools.extern import six from setuptools.extern.six.moves import configparser, map from setuptools import Command from setuptools.sandbox import run_setup from setuptools.py27compat import rmtree_safe from setuptools.command import setopt from setuptools.archive_util import unpack_archive from setuptools.package_index import ( PackageIndex, parse_requirement_arg, URL_SCHEME, ) from setuptools.command import bdist_egg, egg_info from setuptools.wheel import Wheel from pkg_resources import ( yield_lines, normalize_path, resource_string, ensure_directory, get_distribution, find_distributions, Environment, Requirement, Distribution, PathMetadata, EggMetadata, WorkingSet, DistributionNotFound, VersionConflict, DEVELOP_DIST, ) import pkg_resources __metaclass__ = type # Turn on PEP440Warnings warnings.filterwarnings("default", category=pkg_resources.PEP440Warning) __all__ = [ 'samefile', 'easy_install', 'PthDistributions', 'extract_wininst_cfg', 'main', 'get_exe_prefixes', ] def is_64bit(): return struct.calcsize("P") == 8 def samefile(p1, p2): """ Determine if two paths reference the same file. Augments os.path.samefile to work on Windows and suppresses errors if the path doesn't exist. """ both_exist = os.path.exists(p1) and os.path.exists(p2) use_samefile = hasattr(os.path, 'samefile') and both_exist if use_samefile: return os.path.samefile(p1, p2) norm_p1 = os.path.normpath(os.path.normcase(p1)) norm_p2 = os.path.normpath(os.path.normcase(p2)) return norm_p1 == norm_p2 if six.PY2: def _to_bytes(s): return s def isascii(s): try: six.text_type(s, 'ascii') return True except UnicodeError: return False else: def _to_bytes(s): return s.encode('utf8') def isascii(s): try: s.encode('ascii') return True except UnicodeError: return False def _one_liner(text): return textwrap.dedent(text).strip().replace('\n', '; ') class easy_install(Command): """Manage a download/build/install process""" description = "Find/get/install Python packages" command_consumes_arguments = True user_options = [ ('prefix=', None, "installation prefix"), ("zip-ok", "z", "install package as a zipfile"), ("multi-version", "m", "make apps have to require() a version"), ("upgrade", "U", "force upgrade (searches PyPI for latest versions)"), ("install-dir=", "d", "install package to DIR"), ("script-dir=", "s", "install scripts to DIR"), ("exclude-scripts", "x", "Don't install scripts"), ("always-copy", "a", "Copy all needed packages to install dir"), ("index-url=", "i", "base URL of Python Package Index"), ("find-links=", "f", "additional URL(s) to search for packages"), ("build-directory=", "b", "download/extract/build in DIR; keep the results"), ('optimize=', 'O', "also compile with optimization: -O1 for \"python -O\", " "-O2 for \"python -OO\", and -O0 to disable [default: -O0]"), ('record=', None, "filename in which to record list of installed files"), ('always-unzip', 'Z', "don't install as a zipfile, no matter what"), ('site-dirs=', 'S', "list of directories where .pth files work"), ('editable', 'e', "Install specified packages in editable form"), ('no-deps', 'N', "don't install dependencies"), ('allow-hosts=', 'H', "pattern(s) that hostnames must match"), ('local-snapshots-ok', 'l', "allow building eggs from local checkouts"), ('version', None, "print version information and exit"), ('no-find-links', None, "Don't load find-links defined in packages being installed"), ('user', None, "install in user site-package '%s'" % site.USER_SITE) ] boolean_options = [ 'zip-ok', 'multi-version', 'exclude-scripts', 'upgrade', 'always-copy', 'editable', 'no-deps', 'local-snapshots-ok', 'version', 'user' ] negative_opt = {'always-unzip': 'zip-ok'} create_index = PackageIndex def initialize_options(self): # the --user option seems to be an opt-in one, # so the default should be False. self.user = 0 self.zip_ok = self.local_snapshots_ok = None self.install_dir = self.script_dir = self.exclude_scripts = None self.index_url = None self.find_links = None self.build_directory = None self.args = None self.optimize = self.record = None self.upgrade = self.always_copy = self.multi_version = None self.editable = self.no_deps = self.allow_hosts = None self.root = self.prefix = self.no_report = None self.version = None self.install_purelib = None # for pure module distributions self.install_platlib = None # non-pure (dists w/ extensions) self.install_headers = None # for C/C++ headers self.install_lib = None # set to either purelib or platlib self.install_scripts = None self.install_data = None self.install_base = None self.install_platbase = None if site.ENABLE_USER_SITE: self.install_userbase = site.USER_BASE self.install_usersite = site.USER_SITE else: self.install_userbase = None self.install_usersite = None self.no_find_links = None # Options not specifiable via command line self.package_index = None self.pth_file = self.always_copy_from = None self.site_dirs = None self.installed_projects = {} # Always read easy_install options, even if we are subclassed, or have # an independent instance created. This ensures that defaults will # always come from the standard configuration file(s)' "easy_install" # section, even if this is a "develop" or "install" command, or some # other embedding. self._dry_run = None self.verbose = self.distribution.verbose self.distribution._set_command_options( self, self.distribution.get_option_dict('easy_install') ) def delete_blockers(self, blockers): extant_blockers = ( filename for filename in blockers if os.path.exists(filename) or os.path.islink(filename) ) list(map(self._delete_path, extant_blockers)) def _delete_path(self, path): log.info("Deleting %s", path) if self.dry_run: return is_tree = os.path.isdir(path) and not os.path.islink(path) remover = rmtree if is_tree else os.unlink remover(path) @staticmethod def _render_version(): """ Render the Setuptools version and installation details, then exit. """ ver = '{}.{}'.format(*sys.version_info) dist = get_distribution('setuptools') tmpl = 'setuptools {dist.version} from {dist.location} (Python {ver})' print(tmpl.format(**locals())) raise SystemExit() def finalize_options(self): self.version and self._render_version() py_version = sys.version.split()[0] prefix, exec_prefix = get_config_vars('prefix', 'exec_prefix') self.config_vars = { 'dist_name': self.distribution.get_name(), 'dist_version': self.distribution.get_version(), 'dist_fullname': self.distribution.get_fullname(), 'py_version': py_version, 'py_version_short': py_version[0:3], 'py_version_nodot': py_version[0] + py_version[2], 'sys_prefix': prefix, 'prefix': prefix, 'sys_exec_prefix': exec_prefix, 'exec_prefix': exec_prefix, # Only python 3.2+ has abiflags 'abiflags': getattr(sys, 'abiflags', ''), } if site.ENABLE_USER_SITE: self.config_vars['userbase'] = self.install_userbase self.config_vars['usersite'] = self.install_usersite elif self.user: log.warn("WARNING: The user site-packages directory is disabled.") self._fix_install_dir_for_user_site() self.expand_basedirs() self.expand_dirs() self._expand( 'install_dir', 'script_dir', 'build_directory', 'site_dirs', ) # If a non-default installation directory was specified, default the # script directory to match it. if self.script_dir is None: self.script_dir = self.install_dir if self.no_find_links is None: self.no_find_links = False # Let install_dir get set by install_lib command, which in turn # gets its info from the install command, and takes into account # --prefix and --home and all that other crud. self.set_undefined_options( 'install_lib', ('install_dir', 'install_dir') ) # Likewise, set default script_dir from 'install_scripts.install_dir' self.set_undefined_options( 'install_scripts', ('install_dir', 'script_dir') ) if self.user and self.install_purelib: self.install_dir = self.install_purelib self.script_dir = self.install_scripts # default --record from the install command self.set_undefined_options('install', ('record', 'record')) # Should this be moved to the if statement below? It's not used # elsewhere normpath = map(normalize_path, sys.path) self.all_site_dirs = get_site_dirs() if self.site_dirs is not None: site_dirs = [ os.path.expanduser(s.strip()) for s in self.site_dirs.split(',') ] for d in site_dirs: if not os.path.isdir(d): log.warn("%s (in --site-dirs) does not exist", d) elif normalize_path(d) not in normpath: raise DistutilsOptionError( d + " (in --site-dirs) is not on sys.path" ) else: self.all_site_dirs.append(normalize_path(d)) if not self.editable: self.check_site_dir() self.index_url = self.index_url or "https://pypi.org/simple/" self.shadow_path = self.all_site_dirs[:] for path_item in self.install_dir, normalize_path(self.script_dir): if path_item not in self.shadow_path: self.shadow_path.insert(0, path_item) if self.allow_hosts is not None: hosts = [s.strip() for s in self.allow_hosts.split(',')] else: hosts = ['*'] if self.package_index is None: self.package_index = self.create_index( self.index_url, search_path=self.shadow_path, hosts=hosts, ) self.local_index = Environment(self.shadow_path + sys.path) if self.find_links is not None: if isinstance(self.find_links, six.string_types): self.find_links = self.find_links.split() else: self.find_links = [] if self.local_snapshots_ok: self.package_index.scan_egg_links(self.shadow_path + sys.path) if not self.no_find_links: self.package_index.add_find_links(self.find_links) self.set_undefined_options('install_lib', ('optimize', 'optimize')) if not isinstance(self.optimize, int): try: self.optimize = int(self.optimize) if not (0 <= self.optimize <= 2): raise ValueError except ValueError as e: raise DistutilsOptionError( "--optimize must be 0, 1, or 2" ) from e if self.editable and not self.build_directory: raise DistutilsArgError( "Must specify a build directory (-b) when using --editable" ) if not self.args: raise DistutilsArgError( "No urls, filenames, or requirements specified (see --help)") self.outputs = [] def _fix_install_dir_for_user_site(self): """ Fix the install_dir if "--user" was used. """ if not self.user or not site.ENABLE_USER_SITE: return self.create_home_path() if self.install_userbase is None: msg = "User base directory is not specified" raise DistutilsPlatformError(msg) self.install_base = self.install_platbase = self.install_userbase scheme_name = os.name.replace('posix', 'unix') + '_user' self.select_scheme(scheme_name) def _expand_attrs(self, attrs): for attr in attrs: val = getattr(self, attr) if val is not None: if os.name == 'posix' or os.name == 'nt': val = os.path.expanduser(val) val = subst_vars(val, self.config_vars) setattr(self, attr, val) def expand_basedirs(self): """Calls `os.path.expanduser` on install_base, install_platbase and root.""" self._expand_attrs(['install_base', 'install_platbase', 'root']) def expand_dirs(self): """Calls `os.path.expanduser` on install dirs.""" dirs = [ 'install_purelib', 'install_platlib', 'install_lib', 'install_headers', 'install_scripts', 'install_data', ] self._expand_attrs(dirs) def run(self, show_deprecation=True): if show_deprecation: self.announce( "WARNING: The easy_install command is deprecated " "and will be removed in a future version.", log.WARN, ) if self.verbose != self.distribution.verbose: log.set_verbosity(self.verbose) try: for spec in self.args: self.easy_install(spec, not self.no_deps) if self.record: outputs = self.outputs if self.root: # strip any package prefix root_len = len(self.root) for counter in range(len(outputs)): outputs[counter] = outputs[counter][root_len:] from distutils import file_util self.execute( file_util.write_file, (self.record, outputs), "writing list of installed files to '%s'" % self.record ) self.warn_deprecated_options() finally: log.set_verbosity(self.distribution.verbose) def pseudo_tempname(self): """Return a pseudo-tempname base in the install directory. This code is intentionally naive; if a malicious party can write to the target directory you're already in deep doodoo. """ try: pid = os.getpid() except Exception: pid = random.randint(0, sys.maxsize) return os.path.join(self.install_dir, "test-easy-install-%s" % pid) def warn_deprecated_options(self): pass def check_site_dir(self): """Verify that self.install_dir is .pth-capable dir, if needed""" instdir = normalize_path(self.install_dir) pth_file = os.path.join(instdir, 'easy-install.pth') if not os.path.exists(instdir): try: os.makedirs(instdir) except (OSError, IOError): self.cant_write_to_target() # Is it a configured, PYTHONPATH, implicit, or explicit site dir? is_site_dir = instdir in self.all_site_dirs if not is_site_dir and not self.multi_version: # No? Then directly test whether it does .pth file processing is_site_dir = self.check_pth_processing() else: # make sure we can write to target dir testfile = self.pseudo_tempname() + '.write-test' test_exists = os.path.exists(testfile) try: if test_exists: os.unlink(testfile) open(testfile, 'w').close() os.unlink(testfile) except (OSError, IOError): self.cant_write_to_target() if not is_site_dir and not self.multi_version: # Can't install non-multi to non-site dir with easy_install pythonpath = os.environ.get('PYTHONPATH', '') log.warn(self.__no_default_msg, self.install_dir, pythonpath) if is_site_dir: if self.pth_file is None: self.pth_file = PthDistributions(pth_file, self.all_site_dirs) else: self.pth_file = None if self.multi_version and not os.path.exists(pth_file): self.pth_file = None # don't create a .pth file self.install_dir = instdir __cant_write_msg = textwrap.dedent(""" can't create or remove files in install directory The following error occurred while trying to add or remove files in the installation directory: %s The installation directory you specified (via --install-dir, --prefix, or the distutils default setting) was: %s """).lstrip() # noqa __not_exists_id = textwrap.dedent(""" This directory does not currently exist. Please create it and try again, or choose a different installation directory (using the -d or --install-dir option). """).lstrip() # noqa __access_msg = textwrap.dedent(""" Perhaps your account does not have write access to this directory? If the installation directory is a system-owned directory, you may need to sign in as the administrator or "root" account. If you do not have administrative access to this machine, you may wish to choose a different installation directory, preferably one that is listed in your PYTHONPATH environment variable. For information on other options, you may wish to consult the documentation at: https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/easy_install.html Please make the appropriate changes for your system and try again. """).lstrip() # noqa def cant_write_to_target(self): msg = self.__cant_write_msg % (sys.exc_info()[1], self.install_dir,) if not os.path.exists(self.install_dir): msg += '\n' + self.__not_exists_id else: msg += '\n' + self.__access_msg raise DistutilsError(msg) def check_pth_processing(self): """Empirically verify whether .pth files are supported in inst. dir""" instdir = self.install_dir log.info("Checking .pth file support in %s", instdir) pth_file = self.pseudo_tempname() + ".pth" ok_file = pth_file + '.ok' ok_exists = os.path.exists(ok_file) tmpl = _one_liner(""" import os f = open({ok_file!r}, 'w') f.write('OK') f.close() """) + '\n' try: if ok_exists: os.unlink(ok_file) dirname = os.path.dirname(ok_file) os.makedirs(dirname, exist_ok=True) f = open(pth_file, 'w') except (OSError, IOError): self.cant_write_to_target() else: try: f.write(tmpl.format(**locals())) f.close() f = None executable = sys.executable if os.name == 'nt': dirname, basename = os.path.split(executable) alt = os.path.join(dirname, 'pythonw.exe') use_alt = ( basename.lower() == 'python.exe' and os.path.exists(alt) ) if use_alt: # use pythonw.exe to avoid opening a console window executable = alt from distutils.spawn import spawn spawn([executable, '-E', '-c', 'pass'], 0) if os.path.exists(ok_file): log.info( "TEST PASSED: %s appears to support .pth files", instdir ) return True finally: if f: f.close() if os.path.exists(ok_file): os.unlink(ok_file) if os.path.exists(pth_file): os.unlink(pth_file) if not self.multi_version: log.warn("TEST FAILED: %s does NOT support .pth files", instdir) return False def install_egg_scripts(self, dist): """Write all the scripts for `dist`, unless scripts are excluded""" if not self.exclude_scripts and dist.metadata_isdir('scripts'): for script_name in dist.metadata_listdir('scripts'): if dist.metadata_isdir('scripts/' + script_name): # The "script" is a directory, likely a Python 3 # __pycache__ directory, so skip it. continue self.install_script( dist, script_name, dist.get_metadata('scripts/' + script_name) ) self.install_wrapper_scripts(dist) def add_output(self, path): if os.path.isdir(path): for base, dirs, files in os.walk(path): for filename in files: self.outputs.append(os.path.join(base, filename)) else: self.outputs.append(path) def not_editable(self, spec): if self.editable: raise DistutilsArgError( "Invalid argument %r: you can't use filenames or URLs " "with --editable (except via the --find-links option)." % (spec,) ) def check_editable(self, spec): if not self.editable: return if os.path.exists(os.path.join(self.build_directory, spec.key)): raise DistutilsArgError( "%r already exists in %s; can't do a checkout there" % (spec.key, self.build_directory) ) @contextlib.contextmanager def _tmpdir(self): tmpdir = tempfile.mkdtemp(prefix=u"easy_install-") try: # cast to str as workaround for #709 and #710 and #712 yield str(tmpdir) finally: os.path.exists(tmpdir) and rmtree(rmtree_safe(tmpdir)) def easy_install(self, spec, deps=False): with self._tmpdir() as tmpdir: if not isinstance(spec, Requirement): if URL_SCHEME(spec): # It's a url, download it to tmpdir and process self.not_editable(spec) dl = self.package_index.download(spec, tmpdir) return self.install_item(None, dl, tmpdir, deps, True) elif os.path.exists(spec): # Existing file or directory, just process it directly self.not_editable(spec) return self.install_item(None, spec, tmpdir, deps, True) else: spec = parse_requirement_arg(spec) self.check_editable(spec) dist = self.package_index.fetch_distribution( spec, tmpdir, self.upgrade, self.editable, not self.always_copy, self.local_index ) if dist is None: msg = "Could not find suitable distribution for %r" % spec if self.always_copy: msg += " (--always-copy skips system and development eggs)" raise DistutilsError(msg) elif dist.precedence == DEVELOP_DIST: # .egg-info dists don't need installing, just process deps self.process_distribution(spec, dist, deps, "Using") return dist else: return self.install_item(spec, dist.location, tmpdir, deps) def install_item(self, spec, download, tmpdir, deps, install_needed=False): # Installation is also needed if file in tmpdir or is not an egg install_needed = install_needed or self.always_copy install_needed = install_needed or os.path.dirname(download) == tmpdir install_needed = install_needed or not download.endswith('.egg') install_needed = install_needed or ( self.always_copy_from is not None and os.path.dirname(normalize_path(download)) == normalize_path(self.always_copy_from) ) if spec and not install_needed: # at this point, we know it's a local .egg, we just don't know if # it's already installed. for dist in self.local_index[spec.project_name]: if dist.location == download: break else: install_needed = True # it's not in the local index log.info("Processing %s", os.path.basename(download)) if install_needed: dists = self.install_eggs(spec, download, tmpdir) for dist in dists: self.process_distribution(spec, dist, deps) else: dists = [self.egg_distribution(download)] self.process_distribution(spec, dists[0], deps, "Using") if spec is not None: for dist in dists: if dist in spec: return dist def select_scheme(self, name): """Sets the install directories by applying the install schemes.""" # it's the caller's problem if they supply a bad name! scheme = INSTALL_SCHEMES[name] for key in SCHEME_KEYS: attrname = 'install_' + key if getattr(self, attrname) is None: setattr(self, attrname, scheme[key]) def process_distribution(self, requirement, dist, deps=True, *info): self.update_pth(dist) self.package_index.add(dist) if dist in self.local_index[dist.key]: self.local_index.remove(dist) self.local_index.add(dist) self.install_egg_scripts(dist) self.installed_projects[dist.key] = dist log.info(self.installation_report(requirement, dist, *info)) if (dist.has_metadata('dependency_links.txt') and not self.no_find_links): self.package_index.add_find_links( dist.get_metadata_lines('dependency_links.txt') ) if not deps and not self.always_copy: return elif requirement is not None and dist.key != requirement.key: log.warn("Skipping dependencies for %s", dist) return # XXX this is not the distribution we were looking for elif requirement is None or dist not in requirement: # if we wound up with a different version, resolve what we've got distreq = dist.as_requirement() requirement = Requirement(str(distreq)) log.info("Processing dependencies for %s", requirement) try: distros = WorkingSet([]).resolve( [requirement], self.local_index, self.easy_install ) except DistributionNotFound as e: raise DistutilsError(str(e)) from e except VersionConflict as e: raise DistutilsError(e.report()) from e if self.always_copy or self.always_copy_from: # Force all the relevant distros to be copied or activated for dist in distros: if dist.key not in self.installed_projects: self.easy_install(dist.as_requirement()) log.info("Finished processing dependencies for %s", requirement) def should_unzip(self, dist): if self.zip_ok is not None: return not self.zip_ok if dist.has_metadata('not-zip-safe'): return True if not dist.has_metadata('zip-safe'): return True return False def maybe_move(self, spec, dist_filename, setup_base): dst = os.path.join(self.build_directory, spec.key) if os.path.exists(dst): msg = ( "%r already exists in %s; build directory %s will not be kept" ) log.warn(msg, spec.key, self.build_directory, setup_base) return setup_base if os.path.isdir(dist_filename): setup_base = dist_filename else: if os.path.dirname(dist_filename) == setup_base: os.unlink(dist_filename) # get it out of the tmp dir contents = os.listdir(setup_base) if len(contents) == 1: dist_filename = os.path.join(setup_base, contents[0]) if os.path.isdir(dist_filename): # if the only thing there is a directory, move it instead setup_base = dist_filename ensure_directory(dst) shutil.move(setup_base, dst) return dst def install_wrapper_scripts(self, dist): if self.exclude_scripts: return for args in ScriptWriter.best().get_args(dist): self.write_script(*args) def install_script(self, dist, script_name, script_text, dev_path=None): """Generate a legacy script wrapper and install it""" spec = str(dist.as_requirement()) is_script = is_python_script(script_text, script_name) if is_script: body = self._load_template(dev_path) % locals() script_text = ScriptWriter.get_header(script_text) + body self.write_script(script_name, _to_bytes(script_text), 'b') @staticmethod def _load_template(dev_path): """ There are a couple of template scripts in the package. This function loads one of them and prepares it for use. """ # See https://github.com/pypa/setuptools/issues/134 for info # on script file naming and downstream issues with SVR4 name = 'script.tmpl' if dev_path: name = name.replace('.tmpl', ' (dev).tmpl') raw_bytes = resource_string('setuptools', name) return raw_bytes.decode('utf-8') def write_script(self, script_name, contents, mode="t", blockers=()): """Write an executable file to the scripts directory""" self.delete_blockers( # clean up old .py/.pyw w/o a script [os.path.join(self.script_dir, x) for x in blockers] ) log.info("Installing %s script to %s", script_name, self.script_dir) target = os.path.join(self.script_dir, script_name) self.add_output(target) if self.dry_run: return mask = current_umask() ensure_directory(target) if os.path.exists(target): os.unlink(target) with open(target, "w" + mode) as f: f.write(contents) chmod(target, 0o777 - mask) def install_eggs(self, spec, dist_filename, tmpdir): # .egg dirs or files are already built, so just return them if dist_filename.lower().endswith('.egg'): return [self.install_egg(dist_filename, tmpdir)] elif dist_filename.lower().endswith('.exe'): return [self.install_exe(dist_filename, tmpdir)] elif dist_filename.lower().endswith('.whl'): return [self.install_wheel(dist_filename, tmpdir)] # Anything else, try to extract and build setup_base = tmpdir if os.path.isfile(dist_filename) and not dist_filename.endswith('.py'): unpack_archive(dist_filename, tmpdir, self.unpack_progress) elif os.path.isdir(dist_filename): setup_base = os.path.abspath(dist_filename) if (setup_base.startswith(tmpdir) # something we downloaded and self.build_directory and spec is not None): setup_base = self.maybe_move(spec, dist_filename, setup_base) # Find the setup.py file setup_script = os.path.join(setup_base, 'setup.py') if not os.path.exists(setup_script): setups = glob(os.path.join(setup_base, '*', 'setup.py')) if not setups: raise DistutilsError( "Couldn't find a setup script in %s" % os.path.abspath(dist_filename) ) if len(setups) > 1: raise DistutilsError( "Multiple setup scripts in %s" % os.path.abspath(dist_filename) ) setup_script = setups[0] # Now run it, and return the result if self.editable: log.info(self.report_editable(spec, setup_script)) return [] else: return self.build_and_install(setup_script, setup_base) def egg_distribution(self, egg_path): if os.path.isdir(egg_path): metadata = PathMetadata(egg_path, os.path.join(egg_path, 'EGG-INFO')) else: metadata = EggMetadata(zipimport.zipimporter(egg_path)) return Distribution.from_filename(egg_path, metadata=metadata) def install_egg(self, egg_path, tmpdir): destination = os.path.join( self.install_dir, os.path.basename(egg_path), ) destination = os.path.abspath(destination) if not self.dry_run: ensure_directory(destination) dist = self.egg_distribution(egg_path) if not samefile(egg_path, destination): if os.path.isdir(destination) and not os.path.islink(destination): dir_util.remove_tree(destination, dry_run=self.dry_run) elif os.path.exists(destination): self.execute( os.unlink, (destination,), "Removing " + destination, ) try: new_dist_is_zipped = False if os.path.isdir(egg_path): if egg_path.startswith(tmpdir): f, m = shutil.move, "Moving" else: f, m = shutil.copytree, "Copying" elif self.should_unzip(dist): self.mkpath(destination) f, m = self.unpack_and_compile, "Extracting" else: new_dist_is_zipped = True if egg_path.startswith(tmpdir): f, m = shutil.move, "Moving" else: f, m = shutil.copy2, "Copying" self.execute( f, (egg_path, destination), (m + " %s to %s") % ( os.path.basename(egg_path), os.path.dirname(destination) ), ) update_dist_caches( destination, fix_zipimporter_caches=new_dist_is_zipped, ) except Exception: update_dist_caches(destination, fix_zipimporter_caches=False) raise self.add_output(destination) return self.egg_distribution(destination) def install_exe(self, dist_filename, tmpdir): # See if it's valid, get data cfg = extract_wininst_cfg(dist_filename) if cfg is None: raise DistutilsError( "%s is not a valid distutils Windows .exe" % dist_filename ) # Create a dummy distribution object until we build the real distro dist = Distribution( None, project_name=cfg.get('metadata', 'name'), version=cfg.get('metadata', 'version'), platform=get_platform(), ) # Convert the .exe to an unpacked egg egg_path = os.path.join(tmpdir, dist.egg_name() + '.egg') dist.location = egg_path egg_tmp = egg_path + '.tmp' _egg_info = os.path.join(egg_tmp, 'EGG-INFO') pkg_inf = os.path.join(_egg_info, 'PKG-INFO') ensure_directory(pkg_inf) # make sure EGG-INFO dir exists dist._provider = PathMetadata(egg_tmp, _egg_info) # XXX self.exe_to_egg(dist_filename, egg_tmp) # Write EGG-INFO/PKG-INFO if not os.path.exists(pkg_inf): f = open(pkg_inf, 'w') f.write('Metadata-Version: 1.0\n') for k, v in cfg.items('metadata'): if k != 'target_version': f.write('%s: %s\n' % (k.replace('_', '-').title(), v)) f.close() script_dir = os.path.join(_egg_info, 'scripts') # delete entry-point scripts to avoid duping self.delete_blockers([ os.path.join(script_dir, args[0]) for args in ScriptWriter.get_args(dist) ]) # Build .egg file from tmpdir bdist_egg.make_zipfile( egg_path, egg_tmp, verbose=self.verbose, dry_run=self.dry_run, ) # install the .egg return self.install_egg(egg_path, tmpdir) def exe_to_egg(self, dist_filename, egg_tmp): """Extract a bdist_wininst to the directories an egg would use""" # Check for .pth file and set up prefix translations prefixes = get_exe_prefixes(dist_filename) to_compile = [] native_libs = [] top_level = {} def process(src, dst): s = src.lower() for old, new in prefixes: if s.startswith(old): src = new + src[len(old):] parts = src.split('/') dst = os.path.join(egg_tmp, *parts) dl = dst.lower() if dl.endswith('.pyd') or dl.endswith('.dll'): parts[-1] = bdist_egg.strip_module(parts[-1]) top_level[os.path.splitext(parts[0])[0]] = 1 native_libs.append(src) elif dl.endswith('.py') and old != 'SCRIPTS/': top_level[os.path.splitext(parts[0])[0]] = 1 to_compile.append(dst) return dst if not src.endswith('.pth'): log.warn("WARNING: can't process %s", src) return None # extract, tracking .pyd/.dll->native_libs and .py -> to_compile unpack_archive(dist_filename, egg_tmp, process) stubs = [] for res in native_libs: if res.lower().endswith('.pyd'): # create stubs for .pyd's parts = res.split('/') resource = parts[-1] parts[-1] = bdist_egg.strip_module(parts[-1]) + '.py' pyfile = os.path.join(egg_tmp, *parts) to_compile.append(pyfile) stubs.append(pyfile) bdist_egg.write_stub(resource, pyfile) self.byte_compile(to_compile) # compile .py's bdist_egg.write_safety_flag( os.path.join(egg_tmp, 'EGG-INFO'), bdist_egg.analyze_egg(egg_tmp, stubs)) # write zip-safety flag for name in 'top_level', 'native_libs': if locals()[name]: txt = os.path.join(egg_tmp, 'EGG-INFO', name + '.txt') if not os.path.exists(txt): f = open(txt, 'w') f.write('\n'.join(locals()[name]) + '\n') f.close() def install_wheel(self, wheel_path, tmpdir): wheel = Wheel(wheel_path) assert wheel.is_compatible() destination = os.path.join(self.install_dir, wheel.egg_name()) destination = os.path.abspath(destination) if not self.dry_run: ensure_directory(destination) if os.path.isdir(destination) and not os.path.islink(destination): dir_util.remove_tree(destination, dry_run=self.dry_run) elif os.path.exists(destination): self.execute( os.unlink, (destination,), "Removing " + destination, ) try: self.execute( wheel.install_as_egg, (destination,), ("Installing %s to %s") % ( os.path.basename(wheel_path), os.path.dirname(destination) ), ) finally: update_dist_caches(destination, fix_zipimporter_caches=False) self.add_output(destination) return self.egg_distribution(destination) __mv_warning = textwrap.dedent(""" Because this distribution was installed --multi-version, before you can import modules from this package in an application, you will need to 'import pkg_resources' and then use a 'require()' call similar to one of these examples, in order to select the desired version: pkg_resources.require("%(name)s") # latest installed version pkg_resources.require("%(name)s==%(version)s") # this exact version pkg_resources.require("%(name)s>=%(version)s") # this version or higher """).lstrip() # noqa __id_warning = textwrap.dedent(""" Note also that the installation directory must be on sys.path at runtime for this to work. (e.g. by being the application's script directory, by being on PYTHONPATH, or by being added to sys.path by your code.) """) # noqa def installation_report(self, req, dist, what="Installed"): """Helpful installation message for display to package users""" msg = "\n%(what)s %(eggloc)s%(extras)s" if self.multi_version and not self.no_report: msg += '\n' + self.__mv_warning if self.install_dir not in map(normalize_path, sys.path): msg += '\n' + self.__id_warning eggloc = dist.location name = dist.project_name version = dist.version extras = '' # TODO: self.report_extras(req, dist) return msg % locals() __editable_msg = textwrap.dedent(""" Extracted editable version of %(spec)s to %(dirname)s If it uses setuptools in its setup script, you can activate it in "development" mode by going to that directory and running:: %(python)s setup.py develop See the setuptools documentation for the "develop" command for more info. """).lstrip() # noqa def report_editable(self, spec, setup_script): dirname = os.path.dirname(setup_script) python = sys.executable return '\n' + self.__editable_msg % locals() def run_setup(self, setup_script, setup_base, args): sys.modules.setdefault('distutils.command.bdist_egg', bdist_egg) sys.modules.setdefault('distutils.command.egg_info', egg_info) args = list(args) if self.verbose > 2: v = 'v' * (self.verbose - 1) args.insert(0, '-' + v) elif self.verbose < 2: args.insert(0, '-q') if self.dry_run: args.insert(0, '-n') log.info( "Running %s %s", setup_script[len(setup_base) + 1:], ' '.join(args) ) try: run_setup(setup_script, args) except SystemExit as v: raise DistutilsError( "Setup script exited with %s" % (v.args[0],) ) from v def build_and_install(self, setup_script, setup_base): args = ['bdist_egg', '--dist-dir'] dist_dir = tempfile.mkdtemp( prefix='egg-dist-tmp-', dir=os.path.dirname(setup_script) ) try: self._set_fetcher_options(os.path.dirname(setup_script)) args.append(dist_dir) self.run_setup(setup_script, setup_base, args) all_eggs = Environment([dist_dir]) eggs = [] for key in all_eggs: for dist in all_eggs[key]: eggs.append(self.install_egg(dist.location, setup_base)) if not eggs and not self.dry_run: log.warn("No eggs found in %s (setup script problem?)", dist_dir) return eggs finally: rmtree(dist_dir) log.set_verbosity(self.verbose) # restore our log verbosity def _set_fetcher_options(self, base): """ When easy_install is about to run bdist_egg on a source dist, that source dist might have 'setup_requires' directives, requiring additional fetching. Ensure the fetcher options given to easy_install are available to that command as well. """ # find the fetch options from easy_install and write them out # to the setup.cfg file. ei_opts = self.distribution.get_option_dict('easy_install').copy() fetch_directives = ( 'find_links', 'site_dirs', 'index_url', 'optimize', 'allow_hosts', ) fetch_options = {} for key, val in ei_opts.items(): if key not in fetch_directives: continue fetch_options[key.replace('_', '-')] = val[1] # create a settings dictionary suitable for `edit_config` settings = dict(easy_install=fetch_options) cfg_filename = os.path.join(base, 'setup.cfg') setopt.edit_config(cfg_filename, settings) def update_pth(self, dist): if self.pth_file is None: return for d in self.pth_file[dist.key]: # drop old entries if self.multi_version or d.location != dist.location: log.info("Removing %s from easy-install.pth file", d) self.pth_file.remove(d) if d.location in self.shadow_path: self.shadow_path.remove(d.location) if not self.multi_version: if dist.location in self.pth_file.paths: log.info( "%s is already the active version in easy-install.pth", dist, ) else: log.info("Adding %s to easy-install.pth file", dist) self.pth_file.add(dist) # add new entry if dist.location not in self.shadow_path: self.shadow_path.append(dist.location) if not self.dry_run: self.pth_file.save() if dist.key == 'setuptools': # Ensure that setuptools itself never becomes unavailable! # XXX should this check for latest version? filename = os.path.join(self.install_dir, 'setuptools.pth') if os.path.islink(filename): os.unlink(filename) f = open(filename, 'wt') f.write(self.pth_file.make_relative(dist.location) + '\n') f.close() def unpack_progress(self, src, dst): # Progress filter for unpacking log.debug("Unpacking %s to %s", src, dst) return dst # only unpack-and-compile skips files for dry run def unpack_and_compile(self, egg_path, destination): to_compile = [] to_chmod = [] def pf(src, dst): if dst.endswith('.py') and not src.startswith('EGG-INFO/'): to_compile.append(dst) elif dst.endswith('.dll') or dst.endswith('.so'): to_chmod.append(dst) self.unpack_progress(src, dst) return not self.dry_run and dst or None unpack_archive(egg_path, destination, pf) self.byte_compile(to_compile) if not self.dry_run: for f in to_chmod: mode = ((os.stat(f)[stat.ST_MODE]) | 0o555) & 0o7755 chmod(f, mode) def byte_compile(self, to_compile): if sys.dont_write_bytecode: return from distutils.util import byte_compile try: # try to make the byte compile messages quieter log.set_verbosity(self.verbose - 1) byte_compile(to_compile, optimize=0, force=1, dry_run=self.dry_run) if self.optimize: byte_compile( to_compile, optimize=self.optimize, force=1, dry_run=self.dry_run, ) finally: log.set_verbosity(self.verbose) # restore original verbosity __no_default_msg = textwrap.dedent(""" bad install directory or PYTHONPATH You are attempting to install a package to a directory that is not on PYTHONPATH and which Python does not read ".pth" files from. The installation directory you specified (via --install-dir, --prefix, or the distutils default setting) was: %s and your PYTHONPATH environment variable currently contains: %r Here are some of your options for correcting the problem: * You can choose a different installation directory, i.e., one that is on PYTHONPATH or supports .pth files * You can add the installation directory to the PYTHONPATH environment variable. (It must then also be on PYTHONPATH whenever you run Python and want to use the package(s) you are installing.) * You can set up the installation directory to support ".pth" files by using one of the approaches described here: https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/easy_install.html#custom-installation-locations Please make the appropriate changes for your system and try again. """).strip() def create_home_path(self): """Create directories under ~.""" if not self.user: return home = convert_path(os.path.expanduser("~")) for name, path in six.iteritems(self.config_vars): if path.startswith(home) and not os.path.isdir(path): self.debug_print("os.makedirs('%s', 0o700)" % path) os.makedirs(path, 0o700) INSTALL_SCHEMES = dict( posix=dict( install_dir='$base/lib/python$py_version_short/site-packages', script_dir='$base/bin', ), ) DEFAULT_SCHEME = dict( install_dir='$base/Lib/site-packages', script_dir='$base/Scripts', ) def _expand(self, *attrs): config_vars = self.get_finalized_command('install').config_vars if self.prefix: # Set default install_dir/scripts from --prefix config_vars = config_vars.copy() config_vars['base'] = self.prefix scheme = self.INSTALL_SCHEMES.get(os.name, self.DEFAULT_SCHEME) for attr, val in scheme.items(): if getattr(self, attr, None) is None: setattr(self, attr, val) from distutils.util import subst_vars for attr in attrs: val = getattr(self, attr) if val is not None: val = subst_vars(val, config_vars) if os.name == 'posix': val = os.path.expanduser(val) setattr(self, attr, val) def _pythonpath(): items = os.environ.get('PYTHONPATH', '').split(os.pathsep) return filter(None, items) def get_site_dirs(): """ Return a list of 'site' dirs """ sitedirs = [] # start with PYTHONPATH sitedirs.extend(_pythonpath()) prefixes = [sys.prefix] if sys.exec_prefix != sys.prefix: prefixes.append(sys.exec_prefix) for prefix in prefixes: if prefix: if sys.platform in ('os2emx', 'riscos'): sitedirs.append(os.path.join(prefix, "Lib", "site-packages")) elif os.sep == '/': sitedirs.extend([ os.path.join( prefix, "lib", "python{}.{}".format(*sys.version_info), "site-packages", ), os.path.join(prefix, "lib", "site-python"), ]) else: sitedirs.extend([ prefix, os.path.join(prefix, "lib", "site-packages"), ]) if sys.platform == 'darwin': # for framework builds *only* we add the standard Apple # locations. Currently only per-user, but /Library and # /Network/Library could be added too if 'Python.framework' in prefix: home = os.environ.get('HOME') if home: home_sp = os.path.join( home, 'Library', 'Python', '{}.{}'.format(*sys.version_info), 'site-packages', ) sitedirs.append(home_sp) lib_paths = get_path('purelib'), get_path('platlib') for site_lib in lib_paths: if site_lib not in sitedirs: sitedirs.append(site_lib) if site.ENABLE_USER_SITE: sitedirs.append(site.USER_SITE) try: sitedirs.extend(site.getsitepackages()) except AttributeError: pass sitedirs = list(map(normalize_path, sitedirs)) return sitedirs def expand_paths(inputs): """Yield sys.path directories that might contain "old-style" packages""" seen = {} for dirname in inputs: dirname = normalize_path(dirname) if dirname in seen: continue seen[dirname] = 1 if not os.path.isdir(dirname): continue files = os.listdir(dirname) yield dirname, files for name in files: if not name.endswith('.pth'): # We only care about the .pth files continue if name in ('easy-install.pth', 'setuptools.pth'): # Ignore .pth files that we control continue # Read the .pth file f = open(os.path.join(dirname, name)) lines = list(yield_lines(f)) f.close() # Yield existing non-dupe, non-import directory lines from it for line in lines: if not line.startswith("import"): line = normalize_path(line.rstrip()) if line not in seen: seen[line] = 1 if not os.path.isdir(line): continue yield line, os.listdir(line) def extract_wininst_cfg(dist_filename): """Extract configuration data from a bdist_wininst .exe Returns a configparser.RawConfigParser, or None """ f = open(dist_filename, 'rb') try: endrec = zipfile._EndRecData(f) if endrec is None: return None prepended = (endrec[9] - endrec[5]) - endrec[6] if prepended < 12: # no wininst data here return None f.seek(prepended - 12) tag, cfglen, bmlen = struct.unpack("<iii", f.read(12)) if tag not in (0x1234567A, 0x1234567B): return None # not a valid tag f.seek(prepended - (12 + cfglen)) init = {'version': '', 'target_version': ''} cfg = configparser.RawConfigParser(init) try: part = f.read(cfglen) # Read up to the first null byte. config = part.split(b'\0', 1)[0] # Now the config is in bytes, but for RawConfigParser, it should # be text, so decode it. config = config.decode(sys.getfilesystemencoding()) cfg.readfp(six.StringIO(config)) except configparser.Error: return None if not cfg.has_section('metadata') or not cfg.has_section('Setup'): return None return cfg finally: f.close() def get_exe_prefixes(exe_filename): """Get exe->egg path translations for a given .exe file""" prefixes = [ ('PURELIB/', ''), ('PLATLIB/pywin32_system32', ''), ('PLATLIB/', ''), ('SCRIPTS/', 'EGG-INFO/scripts/'), ('DATA/lib/site-packages', ''), ] z = zipfile.ZipFile(exe_filename) try: for info in z.infolist(): name = info.filename parts = name.split('/') if len(parts) == 3 and parts[2] == 'PKG-INFO': if parts[1].endswith('.egg-info'): prefixes.insert(0, ('/'.join(parts[:2]), 'EGG-INFO/')) break if len(parts) != 2 or not name.endswith('.pth'): continue if name.endswith('-nspkg.pth'): continue if parts[0].upper() in ('PURELIB', 'PLATLIB'): contents = z.read(name) if not six.PY2: contents = contents.decode() for pth in yield_lines(contents): pth = pth.strip().replace('\\', '/') if not pth.startswith('import'): prefixes.append((('%s/%s/' % (parts[0], pth)), '')) finally: z.close() prefixes = [(x.lower(), y) for x, y in prefixes] prefixes.sort() prefixes.reverse() return prefixes class PthDistributions(Environment): """A .pth file with Distribution paths in it""" dirty = False def __init__(self, filename, sitedirs=()): self.filename = filename self.sitedirs = list(map(normalize_path, sitedirs)) self.basedir = normalize_path(os.path.dirname(self.filename)) self._load() Environment.__init__(self, [], None, None) for path in yield_lines(self.paths): list(map(self.add, find_distributions(path, True))) def _load(self): self.paths = [] saw_import = False seen = dict.fromkeys(self.sitedirs) if os.path.isfile(self.filename): f = open(self.filename, 'rt') for line in f: if line.startswith('import'): saw_import = True continue path = line.rstrip() self.paths.append(path) if not path.strip() or path.strip().startswith('#'): continue # skip non-existent paths, in case somebody deleted a package # manually, and duplicate paths as well path = self.paths[-1] = normalize_path( os.path.join(self.basedir, path) ) if not os.path.exists(path) or path in seen: self.paths.pop() # skip it self.dirty = True # we cleaned up, so we're dirty now :) continue seen[path] = 1 f.close() if self.paths and not saw_import: self.dirty = True # ensure anything we touch has import wrappers while self.paths and not self.paths[-1].strip(): self.paths.pop() def save(self): """Write changed .pth file back to disk""" if not self.dirty: return rel_paths = list(map(self.make_relative, self.paths)) if rel_paths: log.debug("Saving %s", self.filename) lines = self._wrap_lines(rel_paths) data = '\n'.join(lines) + '\n' if os.path.islink(self.filename): os.unlink(self.filename) with open(self.filename, 'wt') as f: f.write(data) elif os.path.exists(self.filename): log.debug("Deleting empty %s", self.filename) os.unlink(self.filename) self.dirty = False @staticmethod def _wrap_lines(lines): return lines def add(self, dist): """Add `dist` to the distribution map""" new_path = ( dist.location not in self.paths and ( dist.location not in self.sitedirs or # account for '.' being in PYTHONPATH dist.location == os.getcwd() ) ) if new_path: self.paths.append(dist.location) self.dirty = True Environment.add(self, dist) def remove(self, dist): """Remove `dist` from the distribution map""" while dist.location in self.paths: self.paths.remove(dist.location) self.dirty = True Environment.remove(self, dist) def make_relative(self, path): npath, last = os.path.split(normalize_path(path)) baselen = len(self.basedir) parts = [last] sep = os.altsep == '/' and '/' or os.sep while len(npath) >= baselen: if npath == self.basedir: parts.append(os.curdir) parts.reverse() return sep.join(parts) npath, last = os.path.split(npath) parts.append(last) else: return path class RewritePthDistributions(PthDistributions): @classmethod def _wrap_lines(cls, lines): yield cls.prelude for line in lines: yield line yield cls.postlude prelude = _one_liner(""" import sys sys.__plen = len(sys.path) """) postlude = _one_liner(""" import sys new = sys.path[sys.__plen:] del sys.path[sys.__plen:] p = getattr(sys, '__egginsert', 0) sys.path[p:p] = new sys.__egginsert = p + len(new) """) if os.environ.get('SETUPTOOLS_SYS_PATH_TECHNIQUE', 'raw') == 'rewrite': PthDistributions = RewritePthDistributions def _first_line_re(): """ Return a regular expression based on first_line_re suitable for matching strings. """ if isinstance(first_line_re.pattern, str): return first_line_re # first_line_re in Python >=3.1.4 and >=3.2.1 is a bytes pattern. return re.compile(first_line_re.pattern.decode()) def auto_chmod(func, arg, exc): if func in [os.unlink, os.remove] and os.name == 'nt': chmod(arg, stat.S_IWRITE) return func(arg) et, ev, _ = sys.exc_info() six.reraise(et, (ev[0], ev[1] + (" %s %s" % (func, arg)))) def update_dist_caches(dist_path, fix_zipimporter_caches): """ Fix any globally cached `dist_path` related data `dist_path` should be a path of a newly installed egg distribution (zipped or unzipped). sys.path_importer_cache contains finder objects that have been cached when importing data from the original distribution. Any such finders need to be cleared since the replacement distribution might be packaged differently, e.g. a zipped egg distribution might get replaced with an unzipped egg folder or vice versa. Having the old finders cached may then cause Python to attempt loading modules from the replacement distribution using an incorrect loader. zipimport.zipimporter objects are Python loaders charged with importing data packaged inside zip archives. If stale loaders referencing the original distribution, are left behind, they can fail to load modules from the replacement distribution. E.g. if an old zipimport.zipimporter instance is used to load data from a new zipped egg archive, it may cause the operation to attempt to locate the requested data in the wrong location - one indicated by the original distribution's zip archive directory information. Such an operation may then fail outright, e.g. report having read a 'bad local file header', or even worse, it may fail silently & return invalid data. zipimport._zip_directory_cache contains cached zip archive directory information for all existing zipimport.zipimporter instances and all such instances connected to the same archive share the same cached directory information. If asked, and the underlying Python implementation allows it, we can fix all existing zipimport.zipimporter instances instead of having to track them down and remove them one by one, by updating their shared cached zip archive directory information. This, of course, assumes that the replacement distribution is packaged as a zipped egg. If not asked to fix existing zipimport.zipimporter instances, we still do our best to clear any remaining zipimport.zipimporter related cached data that might somehow later get used when attempting to load data from the new distribution and thus cause such load operations to fail. Note that when tracking down such remaining stale data, we can not catch every conceivable usage from here, and we clear only those that we know of and have found to cause problems if left alive. Any remaining caches should be updated by whomever is in charge of maintaining them, i.e. they should be ready to handle us replacing their zip archives with new distributions at runtime. """ # There are several other known sources of stale zipimport.zipimporter # instances that we do not clear here, but might if ever given a reason to # do so: # * Global setuptools pkg_resources.working_set (a.k.a. 'master working # set') may contain distributions which may in turn contain their # zipimport.zipimporter loaders. # * Several zipimport.zipimporter loaders held by local variables further # up the function call stack when running the setuptools installation. # * Already loaded modules may have their __loader__ attribute set to the # exact loader instance used when importing them. Python 3.4 docs state # that this information is intended mostly for introspection and so is # not expected to cause us problems. normalized_path = normalize_path(dist_path) _uncache(normalized_path, sys.path_importer_cache) if fix_zipimporter_caches: _replace_zip_directory_cache_data(normalized_path) else: # Here, even though we do not want to fix existing and now stale # zipimporter cache information, we still want to remove it. Related to # Python's zip archive directory information cache, we clear each of # its stale entries in two phases: # 1. Clear the entry so attempting to access zip archive information # via any existing stale zipimport.zipimporter instances fails. # 2. Remove the entry from the cache so any newly constructed # zipimport.zipimporter instances do not end up using old stale # zip archive directory information. # This whole stale data removal step does not seem strictly necessary, # but has been left in because it was done before we started replacing # the zip archive directory information cache content if possible, and # there are no relevant unit tests that we can depend on to tell us if # this is really needed. _remove_and_clear_zip_directory_cache_data(normalized_path) def _collect_zipimporter_cache_entries(normalized_path, cache): """ Return zipimporter cache entry keys related to a given normalized path. Alternative path spellings (e.g. those using different character case or those using alternative path separators) related to the same path are included. Any sub-path entries are included as well, i.e. those corresponding to zip archives embedded in other zip archives. """ result = [] prefix_len = len(normalized_path) for p in cache: np = normalize_path(p) if (np.startswith(normalized_path) and np[prefix_len:prefix_len + 1] in (os.sep, '')): result.append(p) return result def _update_zipimporter_cache(normalized_path, cache, updater=None): """ Update zipimporter cache data for a given normalized path. Any sub-path entries are processed as well, i.e. those corresponding to zip archives embedded in other zip archives. Given updater is a callable taking a cache entry key and the original entry (after already removing the entry from the cache), and expected to update the entry and possibly return a new one to be inserted in its place. Returning None indicates that the entry should not be replaced with a new one. If no updater is given, the cache entries are simply removed without any additional processing, the same as if the updater simply returned None. """ for p in _collect_zipimporter_cache_entries(normalized_path, cache): # N.B. pypy's custom zipimport._zip_directory_cache implementation does # not support the complete dict interface: # * Does not support item assignment, thus not allowing this function # to be used only for removing existing cache entries. # * Does not support the dict.pop() method, forcing us to use the # get/del patterns instead. For more detailed information see the # following links: # https://github.com/pypa/setuptools/issues/202#issuecomment-202913420 # http://bit.ly/2h9itJX old_entry = cache[p] del cache[p] new_entry = updater and updater(p, old_entry) if new_entry is not None: cache[p] = new_entry def _uncache(normalized_path, cache): _update_zipimporter_cache(normalized_path, cache) def _remove_and_clear_zip_directory_cache_data(normalized_path): def clear_and_remove_cached_zip_archive_directory_data(path, old_entry): old_entry.clear() _update_zipimporter_cache( normalized_path, zipimport._zip_directory_cache, updater=clear_and_remove_cached_zip_archive_directory_data) # PyPy Python implementation does not allow directly writing to the # zipimport._zip_directory_cache and so prevents us from attempting to correct # its content. The best we can do there is clear the problematic cache content # and have PyPy repopulate it as needed. The downside is that if there are any # stale zipimport.zipimporter instances laying around, attempting to use them # will fail due to not having its zip archive directory information available # instead of being automatically corrected to use the new correct zip archive # directory information. if '__pypy__' in sys.builtin_module_names: _replace_zip_directory_cache_data = \ _remove_and_clear_zip_directory_cache_data else: def _replace_zip_directory_cache_data(normalized_path): def replace_cached_zip_archive_directory_data(path, old_entry): # N.B. In theory, we could load the zip directory information just # once for all updated path spellings, and then copy it locally and # update its contained path strings to contain the correct # spelling, but that seems like a way too invasive move (this cache # structure is not officially documented anywhere and could in # theory change with new Python releases) for no significant # benefit. old_entry.clear() zipimport.zipimporter(path) old_entry.update(zipimport._zip_directory_cache[path]) return old_entry _update_zipimporter_cache( normalized_path, zipimport._zip_directory_cache, updater=replace_cached_zip_archive_directory_data) def is_python(text, filename='<string>'): "Is this string a valid Python script?" try: compile(text, filename, 'exec') except (SyntaxError, TypeError): return False else: return True def is_sh(executable): """Determine if the specified executable is a .sh (contains a #! line)""" try: with io.open(executable, encoding='latin-1') as fp: magic = fp.read(2) except (OSError, IOError): return executable return magic == '#!' def nt_quote_arg(arg): """Quote a command line argument according to Windows parsing rules""" return subprocess.list2cmdline([arg]) def is_python_script(script_text, filename): """Is this text, as a whole, a Python script? (as opposed to shell/bat/etc. """ if filename.endswith('.py') or filename.endswith('.pyw'): return True # extension says it's Python if is_python(script_text, filename): return True # it's syntactically valid Python if script_text.startswith('#!'): # It begins with a '#!' line, so check if 'python' is in it somewhere return 'python' in script_text.splitlines()[0].lower() return False # Not any Python I can recognize try: from os import chmod as _chmod except ImportError: # Jython compatibility def _chmod(*args): pass def chmod(path, mode): log.debug("changing mode of %s to %o", path, mode) try: _chmod(path, mode) except os.error as e: log.debug("chmod failed: %s", e) class CommandSpec(list): """ A command spec for a #! header, specified as a list of arguments akin to those passed to Popen. """ options = [] split_args = dict() @classmethod def best(cls): """ Choose the best CommandSpec class based on environmental conditions. """ return cls @classmethod def _sys_executable(cls): _default = os.path.normpath(sys.executable) return os.environ.get('__PYVENV_LAUNCHER__', _default) @classmethod def from_param(cls, param): """ Construct a CommandSpec from a parameter to build_scripts, which may be None. """ if isinstance(param, cls): return param if isinstance(param, list): return cls(param) if param is None: return cls.from_environment() # otherwise, assume it's a string. return cls.from_string(param) @classmethod def from_environment(cls): return cls([cls._sys_executable()]) @classmethod def from_string(cls, string): """ Construct a command spec from a simple string representing a command line parseable by shlex.split. """ items = shlex.split(string, **cls.split_args) return cls(items) def install_options(self, script_text): self.options = shlex.split(self._extract_options(script_text)) cmdline = subprocess.list2cmdline(self) if not isascii(cmdline): self.options[:0] = ['-x'] @staticmethod def _extract_options(orig_script): """ Extract any options from the first line of the script. """ first = (orig_script + '\n').splitlines()[0] match = _first_line_re().match(first) options = match.group(1) or '' if match else '' return options.strip() def as_header(self): return self._render(self + list(self.options)) @staticmethod def _strip_quotes(item): _QUOTES = '"\'' for q in _QUOTES: if item.startswith(q) and item.endswith(q): return item[1:-1] return item @staticmethod def _render(items): cmdline = subprocess.list2cmdline( CommandSpec._strip_quotes(item.strip()) for item in items) return '#!' + cmdline + '\n' # For pbr compat; will be removed in a future version. sys_executable = CommandSpec._sys_executable() class WindowsCommandSpec(CommandSpec): split_args = dict(posix=False) class ScriptWriter: """ Encapsulates behavior around writing entry point scripts for console and gui apps. """ template = textwrap.dedent(r""" # EASY-INSTALL-ENTRY-SCRIPT: %(spec)r,%(group)r,%(name)r import re import sys # for compatibility with easy_install; see #2198 __requires__ = %(spec)r try: from importlib.metadata import distribution except ImportError: try: from importlib_metadata import distribution except ImportError: from pkg_resources import load_entry_point def importlib_load_entry_point(spec, group, name): dist_name, _, _ = spec.partition('==') matches = ( entry_point for entry_point in distribution(dist_name).entry_points if entry_point.group == group and entry_point.name == name ) return next(matches).load() globals().setdefault('load_entry_point', importlib_load_entry_point) if __name__ == '__main__': sys.argv[0] = re.sub(r'(-script\.pyw?|\.exe)?$', '', sys.argv[0]) sys.exit(load_entry_point(%(spec)r, %(group)r, %(name)r)()) """).lstrip() command_spec_class = CommandSpec @classmethod def get_script_args(cls, dist, executable=None, wininst=False): # for backward compatibility warnings.warn("Use get_args", EasyInstallDeprecationWarning) writer = (WindowsScriptWriter if wininst else ScriptWriter).best() header = cls.get_script_header("", executable, wininst) return writer.get_args(dist, header) @classmethod def get_script_header(cls, script_text, executable=None, wininst=False): # for backward compatibility warnings.warn( "Use get_header", EasyInstallDeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2) if wininst: executable = "python.exe" return cls.get_header(script_text, executable) @classmethod def get_args(cls, dist, header=None): """ Yield write_script() argument tuples for a distribution's console_scripts and gui_scripts entry points. """ if header is None: header = cls.get_header() spec = str(dist.as_requirement()) for type_ in 'console', 'gui': group = type_ + '_scripts' for name, ep in dist.get_entry_map(group).items(): cls._ensure_safe_name(name) script_text = cls.template % locals() args = cls._get_script_args(type_, name, header, script_text) for res in args: yield res @staticmethod def _ensure_safe_name(name): """ Prevent paths in *_scripts entry point names. """ has_path_sep = re.search(r'[\\/]', name) if has_path_sep: raise ValueError("Path separators not allowed in script names") @classmethod def get_writer(cls, force_windows): # for backward compatibility warnings.warn("Use best", EasyInstallDeprecationWarning) return WindowsScriptWriter.best() if force_windows else cls.best() @classmethod def best(cls): """ Select the best ScriptWriter for this environment. """ if sys.platform == 'win32' or (os.name == 'java' and os._name == 'nt'): return WindowsScriptWriter.best() else: return cls @classmethod def _get_script_args(cls, type_, name, header, script_text): # Simply write the stub with no extension. yield (name, header + script_text) @classmethod def get_header(cls, script_text="", executable=None): """Create a #! line, getting options (if any) from script_text""" cmd = cls.command_spec_class.best().from_param(executable) cmd.install_options(script_text) return cmd.as_header() class WindowsScriptWriter(ScriptWriter): command_spec_class = WindowsCommandSpec @classmethod def get_writer(cls): # for backward compatibility warnings.warn("Use best", EasyInstallDeprecationWarning) return cls.best() @classmethod def best(cls): """ Select the best ScriptWriter suitable for Windows """ writer_lookup = dict( executable=WindowsExecutableLauncherWriter, natural=cls, ) # for compatibility, use the executable launcher by default launcher = os.environ.get('SETUPTOOLS_LAUNCHER', 'executable') return writer_lookup[launcher] @classmethod def _get_script_args(cls, type_, name, header, script_text): "For Windows, add a .py extension" ext = dict(console='.pya', gui='.pyw')[type_] if ext not in os.environ['PATHEXT'].lower().split(';'): msg = ( "{ext} not listed in PATHEXT; scripts will not be " "recognized as executables." ).format(**locals()) warnings.warn(msg, UserWarning) old = ['.pya', '.py', '-script.py', '.pyc', '.pyo', '.pyw', '.exe'] old.remove(ext) header = cls._adjust_header(type_, header) blockers = [name + x for x in old] yield name + ext, header + script_text, 't', blockers @classmethod def _adjust_header(cls, type_, orig_header): """ Make sure 'pythonw' is used for gui and and 'python' is used for console (regardless of what sys.executable is). """ pattern = 'pythonw.exe' repl = 'python.exe' if type_ == 'gui': pattern, repl = repl, pattern pattern_ob = re.compile(re.escape(pattern), re.IGNORECASE) new_header = pattern_ob.sub(string=orig_header, repl=repl) return new_header if cls._use_header(new_header) else orig_header @staticmethod def _use_header(new_header): """ Should _adjust_header use the replaced header? On non-windows systems, always use. On Windows systems, only use the replaced header if it resolves to an executable on the system. """ clean_header = new_header[2:-1].strip('"') return sys.platform != 'win32' or find_executable(clean_header) class WindowsExecutableLauncherWriter(WindowsScriptWriter): @classmethod def _get_script_args(cls, type_, name, header, script_text): """ For Windows, add a .py extension and an .exe launcher """ if type_ == 'gui': launcher_type = 'gui' ext = '-script.pyw' old = ['.pyw'] else: launcher_type = 'cli' ext = '-script.py' old = ['.py', '.pyc', '.pyo'] hdr = cls._adjust_header(type_, header) blockers = [name + x for x in old] yield (name + ext, hdr + script_text, 't', blockers) yield ( name + '.exe', get_win_launcher(launcher_type), 'b' # write in binary mode ) if not is_64bit(): # install a manifest for the launcher to prevent Windows # from detecting it as an installer (which it will for # launchers like easy_install.exe). Consider only # adding a manifest for launchers detected as installers. # See Distribute #143 for details. m_name = name + '.exe.manifest' yield (m_name, load_launcher_manifest(name), 't') # for backward-compatibility get_script_args = ScriptWriter.get_script_args get_script_header = ScriptWriter.get_script_header def get_win_launcher(type): """ Load the Windows launcher (executable) suitable for launching a script. `type` should be either 'cli' or 'gui' Returns the executable as a byte string. """ launcher_fn = '%s.exe' % type if is_64bit(): launcher_fn = launcher_fn.replace(".", "-64.") else: launcher_fn = launcher_fn.replace(".", "-32.") return resource_string('setuptools', launcher_fn) def load_launcher_manifest(name): manifest = pkg_resources.resource_string(__name__, 'launcher manifest.xml') if six.PY2: return manifest % vars() else: return manifest.decode('utf-8') % vars() def rmtree(path, ignore_errors=False, onerror=auto_chmod): return shutil.rmtree(path, ignore_errors, onerror) def current_umask(): tmp = os.umask(0o022) os.umask(tmp) return tmp def bootstrap(): # This function is called when setuptools*.egg is run using /bin/sh import setuptools argv0 = os.path.dirname(setuptools.__path__[0]) sys.argv[0] = argv0 sys.argv.append(argv0) main() def main(argv=None, **kw): from setuptools import setup from setuptools.dist import Distribution class DistributionWithoutHelpCommands(Distribution): common_usage = "" def _show_help(self, *args, **kw): with _patch_usage(): Distribution._show_help(self, *args, **kw) if argv is None: argv = sys.argv[1:] with _patch_usage(): setup( script_args=['-q', 'easy_install', '-v'] + argv, script_name=sys.argv[0] or 'easy_install', distclass=DistributionWithoutHelpCommands, **kw ) @contextlib.contextmanager def _patch_usage(): import distutils.core USAGE = textwrap.dedent(""" usage: %(script)s [options] requirement_or_url ... or: %(script)s --help """).lstrip() def gen_usage(script_name): return USAGE % dict( script=os.path.basename(script_name), ) saved = distutils.core.gen_usage distutils.core.gen_usage = gen_usage try: yield finally: distutils.core.gen_usage = saved class EasyInstallDeprecationWarning(SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning): """ Warning for EasyInstall deprecations, bypassing suppression. """
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/launcher manifest.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?> <assembly xmlns="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:asm.v1" manifestVersion="1.0"> <assemblyIdentity version="1.0.0.0" processorArchitecture="X86" name="%(name)s" type="win32"/> <!-- Identify the application security requirements. --> <trustInfo xmlns="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:asm.v3"> <security> <requestedPrivileges> <requestedExecutionLevel level="asInvoker" uiAccess="false"/> </requestedPrivileges> </security> </trustInfo> </assembly>
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/install_scripts.py
from distutils import log import distutils.command.install_scripts as orig import os import sys from pkg_resources import Distribution, PathMetadata, ensure_directory class install_scripts(orig.install_scripts): """Do normal script install, plus any egg_info wrapper scripts""" def initialize_options(self): orig.install_scripts.initialize_options(self) self.no_ep = False def run(self): import setuptools.command.easy_install as ei self.run_command("egg_info") if self.distribution.scripts: orig.install_scripts.run(self) # run first to set up self.outfiles else: self.outfiles = [] if self.no_ep: # don't install entry point scripts into .egg file! return ei_cmd = self.get_finalized_command("egg_info") dist = Distribution( ei_cmd.egg_base, PathMetadata(ei_cmd.egg_base, ei_cmd.egg_info), ei_cmd.egg_name, ei_cmd.egg_version, ) bs_cmd = self.get_finalized_command('build_scripts') exec_param = getattr(bs_cmd, 'executable', None) try: bw_cmd = self.get_finalized_command("bdist_wininst") is_wininst = getattr(bw_cmd, '_is_running', False) except ImportError: is_wininst = False writer = ei.ScriptWriter if is_wininst: exec_param = "python.exe" writer = ei.WindowsScriptWriter if exec_param == sys.executable: # In case the path to the Python executable contains a space, wrap # it so it's not split up. exec_param = [exec_param] # resolve the writer to the environment writer = writer.best() cmd = writer.command_spec_class.best().from_param(exec_param) for args in writer.get_args(dist, cmd.as_header()): self.write_script(*args) def write_script(self, script_name, contents, mode="t", *ignored): """Write an executable file to the scripts directory""" from setuptools.command.easy_install import chmod, current_umask log.info("Installing %s script to %s", script_name, self.install_dir) target = os.path.join(self.install_dir, script_name) self.outfiles.append(target) mask = current_umask() if not self.dry_run: ensure_directory(target) f = open(target, "w" + mode) f.write(contents) f.close() chmod(target, 0o777 - mask)
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/upload.py
from distutils import log from distutils.command import upload as orig from setuptools.errors import RemovedCommandError class upload(orig.upload): """Formerly used to upload packages to PyPI.""" def run(self): msg = ( "The upload command has been removed, use twine to upload " + "instead (https://pypi.org/p/twine)" ) self.announce("ERROR: " + msg, log.ERROR) raise RemovedCommandError(msg)
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/register.py
from distutils import log import distutils.command.register as orig from setuptools.errors import RemovedCommandError class register(orig.register): """Formerly used to register packages on PyPI.""" def run(self): msg = ( "The register command has been removed, use twine to upload " + "instead (https://pypi.org/p/twine)" ) self.announce("ERROR: " + msg, log.ERROR) raise RemovedCommandError(msg)
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/bdist_wininst.py
import distutils.command.bdist_wininst as orig import warnings from setuptools import SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning class bdist_wininst(orig.bdist_wininst): def reinitialize_command(self, command, reinit_subcommands=0): """ Supplement reinitialize_command to work around http://bugs.python.org/issue20819 """ cmd = self.distribution.reinitialize_command( command, reinit_subcommands) if command in ('install', 'install_lib'): cmd.install_lib = None return cmd def run(self): warnings.warn( "bdist_wininst is deprecated and will be removed in a future " "version. Use bdist_wheel (wheel packages) instead.", SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning ) self._is_running = True try: orig.bdist_wininst.run(self) finally: self._is_running = False
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/dist_info.py
""" Create a dist_info directory As defined in the wheel specification """ import os from distutils.core import Command from distutils import log class dist_info(Command): description = 'create a .dist-info directory' user_options = [ ('egg-base=', 'e', "directory containing .egg-info directories" " (default: top of the source tree)"), ] def initialize_options(self): self.egg_base = None def finalize_options(self): pass def run(self): egg_info = self.get_finalized_command('egg_info') egg_info.egg_base = self.egg_base egg_info.finalize_options() egg_info.run() dist_info_dir = egg_info.egg_info[:-len('.egg-info')] + '.dist-info' log.info("creating '{}'".format(os.path.abspath(dist_info_dir))) bdist_wheel = self.get_finalized_command('bdist_wheel') bdist_wheel.egg2dist(egg_info.egg_info, dist_info_dir)
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/install_lib.py
import os import sys from itertools import product, starmap import distutils.command.install_lib as orig class install_lib(orig.install_lib): """Don't add compiled flags to filenames of non-Python files""" def run(self): self.build() outfiles = self.install() if outfiles is not None: # always compile, in case we have any extension stubs to deal with self.byte_compile(outfiles) def get_exclusions(self): """ Return a collections.Sized collections.Container of paths to be excluded for single_version_externally_managed installations. """ all_packages = ( pkg for ns_pkg in self._get_SVEM_NSPs() for pkg in self._all_packages(ns_pkg) ) excl_specs = product(all_packages, self._gen_exclusion_paths()) return set(starmap(self._exclude_pkg_path, excl_specs)) def _exclude_pkg_path(self, pkg, exclusion_path): """ Given a package name and exclusion path within that package, compute the full exclusion path. """ parts = pkg.split('.') + [exclusion_path] return os.path.join(self.install_dir, *parts) @staticmethod def _all_packages(pkg_name): """ >>> list(install_lib._all_packages('foo.bar.baz')) ['foo.bar.baz', 'foo.bar', 'foo'] """ while pkg_name: yield pkg_name pkg_name, sep, child = pkg_name.rpartition('.') def _get_SVEM_NSPs(self): """ Get namespace packages (list) but only for single_version_externally_managed installations and empty otherwise. """ # TODO: is it necessary to short-circuit here? i.e. what's the cost # if get_finalized_command is called even when namespace_packages is # False? if not self.distribution.namespace_packages: return [] install_cmd = self.get_finalized_command('install') svem = install_cmd.single_version_externally_managed return self.distribution.namespace_packages if svem else [] @staticmethod def _gen_exclusion_paths(): """ Generate file paths to be excluded for namespace packages (bytecode cache files). """ # always exclude the package module itself yield '__init__.py' yield '__init__.pyc' yield '__init__.pyo' if not hasattr(sys, 'implementation'): return base = os.path.join( '__pycache__', '__init__.' + sys.implementation.cache_tag) yield base + '.pyc' yield base + '.pyo' yield base + '.opt-1.pyc' yield base + '.opt-2.pyc' def copy_tree( self, infile, outfile, preserve_mode=1, preserve_times=1, preserve_symlinks=0, level=1 ): assert preserve_mode and preserve_times and not preserve_symlinks exclude = self.get_exclusions() if not exclude: return orig.install_lib.copy_tree(self, infile, outfile) # Exclude namespace package __init__.py* files from the output from setuptools.archive_util import unpack_directory from distutils import log outfiles = [] def pf(src, dst): if dst in exclude: log.warn("Skipping installation of %s (namespace package)", dst) return False log.info("copying %s -> %s", src, os.path.dirname(dst)) outfiles.append(dst) return dst unpack_directory(infile, outfile, pf) return outfiles def get_outputs(self): outputs = orig.install_lib.get_outputs(self) exclude = self.get_exclusions() if exclude: return [f for f in outputs if f not in exclude] return outputs
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/upload_docs.py
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- """upload_docs Implements a Distutils 'upload_docs' subcommand (upload documentation to PyPI's pythonhosted.org). """ from base64 import standard_b64encode from distutils import log from distutils.errors import DistutilsOptionError import os import socket import zipfile import tempfile import shutil import itertools import functools from setuptools.extern import six from setuptools.extern.six.moves import http_client, urllib from pkg_resources import iter_entry_points from .upload import upload def _encode(s): errors = 'strict' if six.PY2 else 'surrogateescape' return s.encode('utf-8', errors) class upload_docs(upload): # override the default repository as upload_docs isn't # supported by Warehouse (and won't be). DEFAULT_REPOSITORY = 'https://pypi.python.org/pypi/' description = 'Upload documentation to PyPI' user_options = [ ('repository=', 'r', "url of repository [default: %s]" % upload.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY), ('show-response', None, 'display full response text from server'), ('upload-dir=', None, 'directory to upload'), ] boolean_options = upload.boolean_options def has_sphinx(self): if self.upload_dir is None: for ep in iter_entry_points('distutils.commands', 'build_sphinx'): return True sub_commands = [('build_sphinx', has_sphinx)] def initialize_options(self): upload.initialize_options(self) self.upload_dir = None self.target_dir = None def finalize_options(self): upload.finalize_options(self) if self.upload_dir is None: if self.has_sphinx(): build_sphinx = self.get_finalized_command('build_sphinx') self.target_dir = build_sphinx.builder_target_dir else: build = self.get_finalized_command('build') self.target_dir = os.path.join(build.build_base, 'docs') else: self.ensure_dirname('upload_dir') self.target_dir = self.upload_dir if 'pypi.python.org' in self.repository: log.warn("Upload_docs command is deprecated. Use RTD instead.") self.announce('Using upload directory %s' % self.target_dir) def create_zipfile(self, filename): zip_file = zipfile.ZipFile(filename, "w") try: self.mkpath(self.target_dir) # just in case for root, dirs, files in os.walk(self.target_dir): if root == self.target_dir and not files: tmpl = "no files found in upload directory '%s'" raise DistutilsOptionError(tmpl % self.target_dir) for name in files: full = os.path.join(root, name) relative = root[len(self.target_dir):].lstrip(os.path.sep) dest = os.path.join(relative, name) zip_file.write(full, dest) finally: zip_file.close() def run(self): # Run sub commands for cmd_name in self.get_sub_commands(): self.run_command(cmd_name) tmp_dir = tempfile.mkdtemp() name = self.distribution.metadata.get_name() zip_file = os.path.join(tmp_dir, "%s.zip" % name) try: self.create_zipfile(zip_file) self.upload_file(zip_file) finally: shutil.rmtree(tmp_dir) @staticmethod def _build_part(item, sep_boundary): key, values = item title = '\nContent-Disposition: form-data; name="%s"' % key # handle multiple entries for the same name if not isinstance(values, list): values = [values] for value in values: if isinstance(value, tuple): title += '; filename="%s"' % value[0] value = value[1] else: value = _encode(value) yield sep_boundary yield _encode(title) yield b"\n\n" yield value if value and value[-1:] == b'\r': yield b'\n' # write an extra newline (lurve Macs) @classmethod def _build_multipart(cls, data): """ Build up the MIME payload for the POST data """ boundary = '--------------GHSKFJDLGDS7543FJKLFHRE75642756743254' sep_boundary = b'\n--' + boundary.encode('ascii') end_boundary = sep_boundary + b'--' end_items = end_boundary, b"\n", builder = functools.partial( cls._build_part, sep_boundary=sep_boundary, ) part_groups = map(builder, data.items()) parts = itertools.chain.from_iterable(part_groups) body_items = itertools.chain(parts, end_items) content_type = 'multipart/form-data; boundary=%s' % boundary return b''.join(body_items), content_type def upload_file(self, filename): with open(filename, 'rb') as f: content = f.read() meta = self.distribution.metadata data = { ':action': 'doc_upload', 'name': meta.get_name(), 'content': (os.path.basename(filename), content), } # set up the authentication credentials = _encode(self.username + ':' + self.password) credentials = standard_b64encode(credentials) if not six.PY2: credentials = credentials.decode('ascii') auth = "Basic " + credentials body, ct = self._build_multipart(data) msg = "Submitting documentation to %s" % (self.repository) self.announce(msg, log.INFO) # build the Request # We can't use urllib2 since we need to send the Basic # auth right with the first request schema, netloc, url, params, query, fragments = \ urllib.parse.urlparse(self.repository) assert not params and not query and not fragments if schema == 'http': conn = http_client.HTTPConnection(netloc) elif schema == 'https': conn = http_client.HTTPSConnection(netloc) else: raise AssertionError("unsupported schema " + schema) data = '' try: conn.connect() conn.putrequest("POST", url) content_type = ct conn.putheader('Content-type', content_type) conn.putheader('Content-length', str(len(body))) conn.putheader('Authorization', auth) conn.endheaders() conn.send(body) except socket.error as e: self.announce(str(e), log.ERROR) return r = conn.getresponse() if r.status == 200: msg = 'Server response (%s): %s' % (r.status, r.reason) self.announce(msg, log.INFO) elif r.status == 301: location = r.getheader('Location') if location is None: location = 'https://pythonhosted.org/%s/' % meta.get_name() msg = 'Upload successful. Visit %s' % location self.announce(msg, log.INFO) else: msg = 'Upload failed (%s): %s' % (r.status, r.reason) self.announce(msg, log.ERROR) if self.show_response: print('-' * 75, r.read(), '-' * 75)
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/build_py.py
from glob import glob from distutils.util import convert_path import distutils.command.build_py as orig import os import fnmatch import textwrap import io import distutils.errors import itertools import stat from setuptools.extern import six from setuptools.extern.six.moves import map, filter, filterfalse try: from setuptools.lib2to3_ex import Mixin2to3 except ImportError: class Mixin2to3: def run_2to3(self, files, doctests=True): "do nothing" def make_writable(target): os.chmod(target, os.stat(target).st_mode | stat.S_IWRITE) class build_py(orig.build_py, Mixin2to3): """Enhanced 'build_py' command that includes data files with packages The data files are specified via a 'package_data' argument to 'setup()'. See 'setuptools.dist.Distribution' for more details. Also, this version of the 'build_py' command allows you to specify both 'py_modules' and 'packages' in the same setup operation. """ def finalize_options(self): orig.build_py.finalize_options(self) self.package_data = self.distribution.package_data self.exclude_package_data = (self.distribution.exclude_package_data or {}) if 'data_files' in self.__dict__: del self.__dict__['data_files'] self.__updated_files = [] self.__doctests_2to3 = [] def run(self): """Build modules, packages, and copy data files to build directory""" if not self.py_modules and not self.packages: return if self.py_modules: self.build_modules() if self.packages: self.build_packages() self.build_package_data() self.run_2to3(self.__updated_files, False) self.run_2to3(self.__updated_files, True) self.run_2to3(self.__doctests_2to3, True) # Only compile actual .py files, using our base class' idea of what our # output files are. self.byte_compile(orig.build_py.get_outputs(self, include_bytecode=0)) def __getattr__(self, attr): "lazily compute data files" if attr == 'data_files': self.data_files = self._get_data_files() return self.data_files return orig.build_py.__getattr__(self, attr) def build_module(self, module, module_file, package): if six.PY2 and isinstance(package, six.string_types): # avoid errors on Python 2 when unicode is passed (#190) package = package.split('.') outfile, copied = orig.build_py.build_module(self, module, module_file, package) if copied: self.__updated_files.append(outfile) return outfile, copied def _get_data_files(self): """Generate list of '(package,src_dir,build_dir,filenames)' tuples""" self.analyze_manifest() return list(map(self._get_pkg_data_files, self.packages or ())) def _get_pkg_data_files(self, package): # Locate package source directory src_dir = self.get_package_dir(package) # Compute package build directory build_dir = os.path.join(*([self.build_lib] + package.split('.'))) # Strip directory from globbed filenames filenames = [ os.path.relpath(file, src_dir) for file in self.find_data_files(package, src_dir) ] return package, src_dir, build_dir, filenames def find_data_files(self, package, src_dir): """Return filenames for package's data files in 'src_dir'""" patterns = self._get_platform_patterns( self.package_data, package, src_dir, ) globs_expanded = map(glob, patterns) # flatten the expanded globs into an iterable of matches globs_matches = itertools.chain.from_iterable(globs_expanded) glob_files = filter(os.path.isfile, globs_matches) files = itertools.chain( self.manifest_files.get(package, []), glob_files, ) return self.exclude_data_files(package, src_dir, files) def build_package_data(self): """Copy data files into build directory""" for package, src_dir, build_dir, filenames in self.data_files: for filename in filenames: target = os.path.join(build_dir, filename) self.mkpath(os.path.dirname(target)) srcfile = os.path.join(src_dir, filename) outf, copied = self.copy_file(srcfile, target) make_writable(target) srcfile = os.path.abspath(srcfile) if (copied and srcfile in self.distribution.convert_2to3_doctests): self.__doctests_2to3.append(outf) def analyze_manifest(self): self.manifest_files = mf = {} if not self.distribution.include_package_data: return src_dirs = {} for package in self.packages or (): # Locate package source directory src_dirs[assert_relative(self.get_package_dir(package))] = package self.run_command('egg_info') ei_cmd = self.get_finalized_command('egg_info') for path in ei_cmd.filelist.files: d, f = os.path.split(assert_relative(path)) prev = None oldf = f while d and d != prev and d not in src_dirs: prev = d d, df = os.path.split(d) f = os.path.join(df, f) if d in src_dirs: if path.endswith('.py') and f == oldf: continue # it's a module, not data mf.setdefault(src_dirs[d], []).append(path) def get_data_files(self): pass # Lazily compute data files in _get_data_files() function. def check_package(self, package, package_dir): """Check namespace packages' __init__ for declare_namespace""" try: return self.packages_checked[package] except KeyError: pass init_py = orig.build_py.check_package(self, package, package_dir) self.packages_checked[package] = init_py if not init_py or not self.distribution.namespace_packages: return init_py for pkg in self.distribution.namespace_packages: if pkg == package or pkg.startswith(package + '.'): break else: return init_py with io.open(init_py, 'rb') as f: contents = f.read() if b'declare_namespace' not in contents: raise distutils.errors.DistutilsError( "Namespace package problem: %s is a namespace package, but " "its\n__init__.py does not call declare_namespace()! Please " 'fix it.\n(See the setuptools manual under ' '"Namespace Packages" for details.)\n"' % (package,) ) return init_py def initialize_options(self): self.packages_checked = {} orig.build_py.initialize_options(self) def get_package_dir(self, package): res = orig.build_py.get_package_dir(self, package) if self.distribution.src_root is not None: return os.path.join(self.distribution.src_root, res) return res def exclude_data_files(self, package, src_dir, files): """Filter filenames for package's data files in 'src_dir'""" files = list(files) patterns = self._get_platform_patterns( self.exclude_package_data, package, src_dir, ) match_groups = ( fnmatch.filter(files, pattern) for pattern in patterns ) # flatten the groups of matches into an iterable of matches matches = itertools.chain.from_iterable(match_groups) bad = set(matches) keepers = ( fn for fn in files if fn not in bad ) # ditch dupes return list(_unique_everseen(keepers)) @staticmethod def _get_platform_patterns(spec, package, src_dir): """ yield platform-specific path patterns (suitable for glob or fn_match) from a glob-based spec (such as self.package_data or self.exclude_package_data) matching package in src_dir. """ raw_patterns = itertools.chain( spec.get('', []), spec.get(package, []), ) return ( # Each pattern has to be converted to a platform-specific path os.path.join(src_dir, convert_path(pattern)) for pattern in raw_patterns ) # from Python docs def _unique_everseen(iterable, key=None): "List unique elements, preserving order. Remember all elements ever seen." # unique_everseen('AAAABBBCCDAABBB') --> A B C D # unique_everseen('ABBCcAD', str.lower) --> A B C D seen = set() seen_add = seen.add if key is None: for element in filterfalse(seen.__contains__, iterable): seen_add(element) yield element else: for element in iterable: k = key(element) if k not in seen: seen_add(k) yield element def assert_relative(path): if not os.path.isabs(path): return path from distutils.errors import DistutilsSetupError msg = textwrap.dedent(""" Error: setup script specifies an absolute path: %s setup() arguments must *always* be /-separated paths relative to the setup.py directory, *never* absolute paths. """).lstrip() % path raise DistutilsSetupError(msg)
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/__init__.py
__all__ = [ 'alias', 'bdist_egg', 'bdist_rpm', 'build_ext', 'build_py', 'develop', 'easy_install', 'egg_info', 'install', 'install_lib', 'rotate', 'saveopts', 'sdist', 'setopt', 'test', 'install_egg_info', 'install_scripts', 'bdist_wininst', 'upload_docs', 'build_clib', 'dist_info', ] from distutils.command.bdist import bdist import sys from setuptools.command import install_scripts if 'egg' not in bdist.format_commands: bdist.format_command['egg'] = ('bdist_egg', "Python .egg file") bdist.format_commands.append('egg') del bdist, sys
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/sdist.py
from distutils import log import distutils.command.sdist as orig import os import sys import io import contextlib from setuptools.extern import six, ordered_set from .py36compat import sdist_add_defaults import pkg_resources _default_revctrl = list def walk_revctrl(dirname=''): """Find all files under revision control""" for ep in pkg_resources.iter_entry_points('setuptools.file_finders'): for item in ep.load()(dirname): yield item class sdist(sdist_add_defaults, orig.sdist): """Smart sdist that finds anything supported by revision control""" user_options = [ ('formats=', None, "formats for source distribution (comma-separated list)"), ('keep-temp', 'k', "keep the distribution tree around after creating " + "archive file(s)"), ('dist-dir=', 'd', "directory to put the source distribution archive(s) in " "[default: dist]"), ] negative_opt = {} README_EXTENSIONS = ['', '.rst', '.txt', '.md'] READMES = tuple('README{0}'.format(ext) for ext in README_EXTENSIONS) def run(self): self.run_command('egg_info') ei_cmd = self.get_finalized_command('egg_info') self.filelist = ei_cmd.filelist self.filelist.append(os.path.join(ei_cmd.egg_info, 'SOURCES.txt')) self.check_readme() # Run sub commands for cmd_name in self.get_sub_commands(): self.run_command(cmd_name) self.make_distribution() dist_files = getattr(self.distribution, 'dist_files', []) for file in self.archive_files: data = ('sdist', '', file) if data not in dist_files: dist_files.append(data) def initialize_options(self): orig.sdist.initialize_options(self) self._default_to_gztar() def _default_to_gztar(self): # only needed on Python prior to 3.6. if sys.version_info >= (3, 6, 0, 'beta', 1): return self.formats = ['gztar'] def make_distribution(self): """ Workaround for #516 """ with self._remove_os_link(): orig.sdist.make_distribution(self) @staticmethod @contextlib.contextmanager def _remove_os_link(): """ In a context, remove and restore os.link if it exists """ class NoValue: pass orig_val = getattr(os, 'link', NoValue) try: del os.link except Exception: pass try: yield finally: if orig_val is not NoValue: setattr(os, 'link', orig_val) def __read_template_hack(self): # This grody hack closes the template file (MANIFEST.in) if an # exception occurs during read_template. # Doing so prevents an error when easy_install attempts to delete the # file. try: orig.sdist.read_template(self) except Exception: _, _, tb = sys.exc_info() tb.tb_next.tb_frame.f_locals['template'].close() raise # Beginning with Python 2.7.2, 3.1.4, and 3.2.1, this leaky file handle # has been fixed, so only override the method if we're using an earlier # Python. has_leaky_handle = ( sys.version_info < (2, 7, 2) or (3, 0) <= sys.version_info < (3, 1, 4) or (3, 2) <= sys.version_info < (3, 2, 1) ) if has_leaky_handle: read_template = __read_template_hack def _add_defaults_optional(self): if six.PY2: sdist_add_defaults._add_defaults_optional(self) else: super()._add_defaults_optional() if os.path.isfile('pyproject.toml'): self.filelist.append('pyproject.toml') def _add_defaults_python(self): """getting python files""" if self.distribution.has_pure_modules(): build_py = self.get_finalized_command('build_py') self.filelist.extend(build_py.get_source_files()) self._add_data_files(self._safe_data_files(build_py)) def _safe_data_files(self, build_py): """ Extracting data_files from build_py is known to cause infinite recursion errors when `include_package_data` is enabled, so suppress it in that case. """ if self.distribution.include_package_data: return () return build_py.data_files def _add_data_files(self, data_files): """ Add data files as found in build_py.data_files. """ self.filelist.extend( os.path.join(src_dir, name) for _, src_dir, _, filenames in data_files for name in filenames ) def _add_defaults_data_files(self): try: if six.PY2: sdist_add_defaults._add_defaults_data_files(self) else: super()._add_defaults_data_files() except TypeError: log.warn("data_files contains unexpected objects") def check_readme(self): for f in self.READMES: if os.path.exists(f): return else: self.warn( "standard file not found: should have one of " + ', '.join(self.READMES) ) def make_release_tree(self, base_dir, files): orig.sdist.make_release_tree(self, base_dir, files) # Save any egg_info command line options used to create this sdist dest = os.path.join(base_dir, 'setup.cfg') if hasattr(os, 'link') and os.path.exists(dest): # unlink and re-copy, since it might be hard-linked, and # we don't want to change the source version os.unlink(dest) self.copy_file('setup.cfg', dest) self.get_finalized_command('egg_info').save_version_info(dest) def _manifest_is_not_generated(self): # check for special comment used in 2.7.1 and higher if not os.path.isfile(self.manifest): return False with io.open(self.manifest, 'rb') as fp: first_line = fp.readline() return (first_line != '# file GENERATED by distutils, do NOT edit\n'.encode()) def read_manifest(self): """Read the manifest file (named by 'self.manifest') and use it to fill in 'self.filelist', the list of files to include in the source distribution. """ log.info("reading manifest file '%s'", self.manifest) manifest = open(self.manifest, 'rb') for line in manifest: # The manifest must contain UTF-8. See #303. if not six.PY2: try: line = line.decode('UTF-8') except UnicodeDecodeError: log.warn("%r not UTF-8 decodable -- skipping" % line) continue # ignore comments and blank lines line = line.strip() if line.startswith('#') or not line: continue self.filelist.append(line) manifest.close() def check_license(self): """Checks if license_file' or 'license_files' is configured and adds any valid paths to 'self.filelist'. """ files = ordered_set.OrderedSet() opts = self.distribution.get_option_dict('metadata') # ignore the source of the value _, license_file = opts.get('license_file', (None, None)) if license_file is None: log.debug("'license_file' option was not specified") else: files.add(license_file) try: files.update(self.distribution.metadata.license_files) except TypeError: log.warn("warning: 'license_files' option is malformed") for f in files: if not os.path.exists(f): log.warn( "warning: Failed to find the configured license file '%s'", f) files.remove(f) self.filelist.extend(files)
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/test.py
import os import operator import sys import contextlib import itertools import unittest from distutils.errors import DistutilsError, DistutilsOptionError from distutils import log from unittest import TestLoader from setuptools.extern import six from setuptools.extern.six.moves import map, filter from pkg_resources import (resource_listdir, resource_exists, normalize_path, working_set, _namespace_packages, evaluate_marker, add_activation_listener, require, EntryPoint) from setuptools import Command from .build_py import _unique_everseen __metaclass__ = type class ScanningLoader(TestLoader): def __init__(self): TestLoader.__init__(self) self._visited = set() def loadTestsFromModule(self, module, pattern=None): """Return a suite of all tests cases contained in the given module If the module is a package, load tests from all the modules in it. If the module has an ``additional_tests`` function, call it and add the return value to the tests. """ if module in self._visited: return None self._visited.add(module) tests = [] tests.append(TestLoader.loadTestsFromModule(self, module)) if hasattr(module, "additional_tests"): tests.append(module.additional_tests()) if hasattr(module, '__path__'): for file in resource_listdir(module.__name__, ''): if file.endswith('.py') and file != '__init__.py': submodule = module.__name__ + '.' + file[:-3] else: if resource_exists(module.__name__, file + '/__init__.py'): submodule = module.__name__ + '.' + file else: continue tests.append(self.loadTestsFromName(submodule)) if len(tests) != 1: return self.suiteClass(tests) else: return tests[0] # don't create a nested suite for only one return # adapted from jaraco.classes.properties:NonDataProperty class NonDataProperty: def __init__(self, fget): self.fget = fget def __get__(self, obj, objtype=None): if obj is None: return self return self.fget(obj) class test(Command): """Command to run unit tests after in-place build""" description = "run unit tests after in-place build (deprecated)" user_options = [ ('test-module=', 'm', "Run 'test_suite' in specified module"), ('test-suite=', 's', "Run single test, case or suite (e.g. 'module.test_suite')"), ('test-runner=', 'r', "Test runner to use"), ] def initialize_options(self): self.test_suite = None self.test_module = None self.test_loader = None self.test_runner = None def finalize_options(self): if self.test_suite and self.test_module: msg = "You may specify a module or a suite, but not both" raise DistutilsOptionError(msg) if self.test_suite is None: if self.test_module is None: self.test_suite = self.distribution.test_suite else: self.test_suite = self.test_module + ".test_suite" if self.test_loader is None: self.test_loader = getattr(self.distribution, 'test_loader', None) if self.test_loader is None: self.test_loader = "setuptools.command.test:ScanningLoader" if self.test_runner is None: self.test_runner = getattr(self.distribution, 'test_runner', None) @NonDataProperty def test_args(self): return list(self._test_args()) def _test_args(self): if not self.test_suite and sys.version_info >= (2, 7): yield 'discover' if self.verbose: yield '--verbose' if self.test_suite: yield self.test_suite def with_project_on_sys_path(self, func): """ Backward compatibility for project_on_sys_path context. """ with self.project_on_sys_path(): func() @contextlib.contextmanager def project_on_sys_path(self, include_dists=[]): with_2to3 = not six.PY2 and getattr( self.distribution, 'use_2to3', False) if with_2to3: # If we run 2to3 we can not do this inplace: # Ensure metadata is up-to-date self.reinitialize_command('build_py', inplace=0) self.run_command('build_py') bpy_cmd = self.get_finalized_command("build_py") build_path = normalize_path(bpy_cmd.build_lib) # Build extensions self.reinitialize_command('egg_info', egg_base=build_path) self.run_command('egg_info') self.reinitialize_command('build_ext', inplace=0) self.run_command('build_ext') else: # Without 2to3 inplace works fine: self.run_command('egg_info') # Build extensions in-place self.reinitialize_command('build_ext', inplace=1) self.run_command('build_ext') ei_cmd = self.get_finalized_command("egg_info") old_path = sys.path[:] old_modules = sys.modules.copy() try: project_path = normalize_path(ei_cmd.egg_base) sys.path.insert(0, project_path) working_set.__init__() add_activation_listener(lambda dist: dist.activate()) require('%s==%s' % (ei_cmd.egg_name, ei_cmd.egg_version)) with self.paths_on_pythonpath([project_path]): yield finally: sys.path[:] = old_path sys.modules.clear() sys.modules.update(old_modules) working_set.__init__() @staticmethod @contextlib.contextmanager def paths_on_pythonpath(paths): """ Add the indicated paths to the head of the PYTHONPATH environment variable so that subprocesses will also see the packages at these paths. Do this in a context that restores the value on exit. """ nothing = object() orig_pythonpath = os.environ.get('PYTHONPATH', nothing) current_pythonpath = os.environ.get('PYTHONPATH', '') try: prefix = os.pathsep.join(_unique_everseen(paths)) to_join = filter(None, [prefix, current_pythonpath]) new_path = os.pathsep.join(to_join) if new_path: os.environ['PYTHONPATH'] = new_path yield finally: if orig_pythonpath is nothing: os.environ.pop('PYTHONPATH', None) else: os.environ['PYTHONPATH'] = orig_pythonpath @staticmethod def install_dists(dist): """ Install the requirements indicated by self.distribution and return an iterable of the dists that were built. """ ir_d = dist.fetch_build_eggs(dist.install_requires) tr_d = dist.fetch_build_eggs(dist.tests_require or []) er_d = dist.fetch_build_eggs( v for k, v in dist.extras_require.items() if k.startswith(':') and evaluate_marker(k[1:]) ) return itertools.chain(ir_d, tr_d, er_d) def run(self): self.announce( "WARNING: Testing via this command is deprecated and will be " "removed in a future version. Users looking for a generic test " "entry point independent of test runner are encouraged to use " "tox.", log.WARN, ) installed_dists = self.install_dists(self.distribution) cmd = ' '.join(self._argv) if self.dry_run: self.announce('skipping "%s" (dry run)' % cmd) return self.announce('running "%s"' % cmd) paths = map(operator.attrgetter('location'), installed_dists) with self.paths_on_pythonpath(paths): with self.project_on_sys_path(): self.run_tests() def run_tests(self): # Purge modules under test from sys.modules. The test loader will # re-import them from the build location. Required when 2to3 is used # with namespace packages. if not six.PY2 and getattr(self.distribution, 'use_2to3', False): module = self.test_suite.split('.')[0] if module in _namespace_packages: del_modules = [] if module in sys.modules: del_modules.append(module) module += '.' for name in sys.modules: if name.startswith(module): del_modules.append(name) list(map(sys.modules.__delitem__, del_modules)) test = unittest.main( None, None, self._argv, testLoader=self._resolve_as_ep(self.test_loader), testRunner=self._resolve_as_ep(self.test_runner), exit=False, ) if not test.result.wasSuccessful(): msg = 'Test failed: %s' % test.result self.announce(msg, log.ERROR) raise DistutilsError(msg) @property def _argv(self): return ['unittest'] + self.test_args @staticmethod def _resolve_as_ep(val): """ Load the indicated attribute value, called, as a as if it were specified as an entry point. """ if val is None: return parsed = EntryPoint.parse("x=" + val) return parsed.resolve()()
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/saveopts.py
from setuptools.command.setopt import edit_config, option_base class saveopts(option_base): """Save command-line options to a file""" description = "save supplied options to setup.cfg or other config file" def run(self): dist = self.distribution settings = {} for cmd in dist.command_options: if cmd == 'saveopts': continue # don't save our own options! for opt, (src, val) in dist.get_option_dict(cmd).items(): if src == "command line": settings.setdefault(cmd, {})[opt] = val edit_config(self.filename, settings, self.dry_run)
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/bdist_rpm.py
import distutils.command.bdist_rpm as orig class bdist_rpm(orig.bdist_rpm): """ Override the default bdist_rpm behavior to do the following: 1. Run egg_info to ensure the name and version are properly calculated. 2. Always run 'install' using --single-version-externally-managed to disable eggs in RPM distributions. 3. Replace dash with underscore in the version numbers for better RPM compatibility. """ def run(self): # ensure distro name is up-to-date self.run_command('egg_info') orig.bdist_rpm.run(self) def _make_spec_file(self): version = self.distribution.get_version() rpmversion = version.replace('-', '_') spec = orig.bdist_rpm._make_spec_file(self) line23 = '%define version ' + version line24 = '%define version ' + rpmversion spec = [ line.replace( "Source0: %{name}-%{version}.tar", "Source0: %{name}-%{unmangled_version}.tar" ).replace( "setup.py install ", "setup.py install --single-version-externally-managed " ).replace( "%setup", "%setup -n %{name}-%{unmangled_version}" ).replace(line23, line24) for line in spec ] insert_loc = spec.index(line24) + 1 unmangled_version = "%define unmangled_version " + version spec.insert(insert_loc, unmangled_version) return spec
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/build_clib.py
import distutils.command.build_clib as orig from distutils.errors import DistutilsSetupError from distutils import log from setuptools.dep_util import newer_pairwise_group class build_clib(orig.build_clib): """ Override the default build_clib behaviour to do the following: 1. Implement a rudimentary timestamp-based dependency system so 'compile()' doesn't run every time. 2. Add more keys to the 'build_info' dictionary: * obj_deps - specify dependencies for each object compiled. this should be a dictionary mapping a key with the source filename to a list of dependencies. Use an empty string for global dependencies. * cflags - specify a list of additional flags to pass to the compiler. """ def build_libraries(self, libraries): for (lib_name, build_info) in libraries: sources = build_info.get('sources') if sources is None or not isinstance(sources, (list, tuple)): raise DistutilsSetupError( "in 'libraries' option (library '%s'), " "'sources' must be present and must be " "a list of source filenames" % lib_name) sources = list(sources) log.info("building '%s' library", lib_name) # Make sure everything is the correct type. # obj_deps should be a dictionary of keys as sources # and a list/tuple of files that are its dependencies. obj_deps = build_info.get('obj_deps', dict()) if not isinstance(obj_deps, dict): raise DistutilsSetupError( "in 'libraries' option (library '%s'), " "'obj_deps' must be a dictionary of " "type 'source: list'" % lib_name) dependencies = [] # Get the global dependencies that are specified by the '' key. # These will go into every source's dependency list. global_deps = obj_deps.get('', list()) if not isinstance(global_deps, (list, tuple)): raise DistutilsSetupError( "in 'libraries' option (library '%s'), " "'obj_deps' must be a dictionary of " "type 'source: list'" % lib_name) # Build the list to be used by newer_pairwise_group # each source will be auto-added to its dependencies. for source in sources: src_deps = [source] src_deps.extend(global_deps) extra_deps = obj_deps.get(source, list()) if not isinstance(extra_deps, (list, tuple)): raise DistutilsSetupError( "in 'libraries' option (library '%s'), " "'obj_deps' must be a dictionary of " "type 'source: list'" % lib_name) src_deps.extend(extra_deps) dependencies.append(src_deps) expected_objects = self.compiler.object_filenames( sources, output_dir=self.build_temp, ) if ( newer_pairwise_group(dependencies, expected_objects) != ([], []) ): # First, compile the source code to object files in the library # directory. (This should probably change to putting object # files in a temporary build directory.) macros = build_info.get('macros') include_dirs = build_info.get('include_dirs') cflags = build_info.get('cflags') self.compiler.compile( sources, output_dir=self.build_temp, macros=macros, include_dirs=include_dirs, extra_postargs=cflags, debug=self.debug ) # Now "link" the object files together into a static library. # (On Unix at least, this isn't really linking -- it just # builds an archive. Whatever.) self.compiler.create_static_lib( expected_objects, lib_name, output_dir=self.build_clib, debug=self.debug )
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/egg_info.py
"""setuptools.command.egg_info Create a distribution's .egg-info directory and contents""" from distutils.filelist import FileList as _FileList from distutils.errors import DistutilsInternalError from distutils.util import convert_path from distutils import log import distutils.errors import distutils.filelist import os import re import sys import io import warnings import time import collections from setuptools.extern import six from setuptools.extern.six.moves import map from setuptools import Command from setuptools.command.sdist import sdist from setuptools.command.sdist import walk_revctrl from setuptools.command.setopt import edit_config from setuptools.command import bdist_egg from pkg_resources import ( parse_requirements, safe_name, parse_version, safe_version, yield_lines, EntryPoint, iter_entry_points, to_filename) import setuptools.unicode_utils as unicode_utils from setuptools.glob import glob from setuptools.extern import packaging from setuptools import SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning def translate_pattern(glob): """ Translate a file path glob like '*.txt' in to a regular expression. This differs from fnmatch.translate which allows wildcards to match directory separators. It also knows about '**/' which matches any number of directories. """ pat = '' # This will split on '/' within [character classes]. This is deliberate. chunks = glob.split(os.path.sep) sep = re.escape(os.sep) valid_char = '[^%s]' % (sep,) for c, chunk in enumerate(chunks): last_chunk = c == len(chunks) - 1 # Chunks that are a literal ** are globstars. They match anything. if chunk == '**': if last_chunk: # Match anything if this is the last component pat += '.*' else: # Match '(name/)*' pat += '(?:%s+%s)*' % (valid_char, sep) continue # Break here as the whole path component has been handled # Find any special characters in the remainder i = 0 chunk_len = len(chunk) while i < chunk_len: char = chunk[i] if char == '*': # Match any number of name characters pat += valid_char + '*' elif char == '?': # Match a name character pat += valid_char elif char == '[': # Character class inner_i = i + 1 # Skip initial !/] chars if inner_i < chunk_len and chunk[inner_i] == '!': inner_i = inner_i + 1 if inner_i < chunk_len and chunk[inner_i] == ']': inner_i = inner_i + 1 # Loop till the closing ] is found while inner_i < chunk_len and chunk[inner_i] != ']': inner_i = inner_i + 1 if inner_i >= chunk_len: # Got to the end of the string without finding a closing ] # Do not treat this as a matching group, but as a literal [ pat += re.escape(char) else: # Grab the insides of the [brackets] inner = chunk[i + 1:inner_i] char_class = '' # Class negation if inner[0] == '!': char_class = '^' inner = inner[1:] char_class += re.escape(inner) pat += '[%s]' % (char_class,) # Skip to the end ] i = inner_i else: pat += re.escape(char) i += 1 # Join each chunk with the dir separator if not last_chunk: pat += sep pat += r'\Z' return re.compile(pat, flags=re.MULTILINE | re.DOTALL) class InfoCommon: tag_build = None tag_date = None @property def name(self): return safe_name(self.distribution.get_name()) def tagged_version(self): version = self.distribution.get_version() # egg_info may be called more than once for a distribution, # in which case the version string already contains all tags. if self.vtags and version.endswith(self.vtags): return safe_version(version) return safe_version(version + self.vtags) def tags(self): version = '' if self.tag_build: version += self.tag_build if self.tag_date: version += time.strftime("-%Y%m%d") return version vtags = property(tags) class egg_info(InfoCommon, Command): description = "create a distribution's .egg-info directory" user_options = [ ('egg-base=', 'e', "directory containing .egg-info directories" " (default: top of the source tree)"), ('tag-date', 'd', "Add date stamp (e.g. 20050528) to version number"), ('tag-build=', 'b', "Specify explicit tag to add to version number"), ('no-date', 'D', "Don't include date stamp [default]"), ] boolean_options = ['tag-date'] negative_opt = { 'no-date': 'tag-date', } def initialize_options(self): self.egg_base = None self.egg_name = None self.egg_info = None self.egg_version = None self.broken_egg_info = False #################################### # allow the 'tag_svn_revision' to be detected and # set, supporting sdists built on older Setuptools. @property def tag_svn_revision(self): pass @tag_svn_revision.setter def tag_svn_revision(self, value): pass #################################### def save_version_info(self, filename): """ Materialize the value of date into the build tag. Install build keys in a deterministic order to avoid arbitrary reordering on subsequent builds. """ egg_info = collections.OrderedDict() # follow the order these keys would have been added # when PYTHONHASHSEED=0 egg_info['tag_build'] = self.tags() egg_info['tag_date'] = 0 edit_config(filename, dict(egg_info=egg_info)) def finalize_options(self): # Note: we need to capture the current value returned # by `self.tagged_version()`, so we can later update # `self.distribution.metadata.version` without # repercussions. self.egg_name = self.name self.egg_version = self.tagged_version() parsed_version = parse_version(self.egg_version) try: is_version = isinstance(parsed_version, packaging.version.Version) spec = ( "%s==%s" if is_version else "%s===%s" ) list( parse_requirements(spec % (self.egg_name, self.egg_version)) ) except ValueError as e: raise distutils.errors.DistutilsOptionError( "Invalid distribution name or version syntax: %s-%s" % (self.egg_name, self.egg_version) ) from e if self.egg_base is None: dirs = self.distribution.package_dir self.egg_base = (dirs or {}).get('', os.curdir) self.ensure_dirname('egg_base') self.egg_info = to_filename(self.egg_name) + '.egg-info' if self.egg_base != os.curdir: self.egg_info = os.path.join(self.egg_base, self.egg_info) if '-' in self.egg_name: self.check_broken_egg_info() # Set package version for the benefit of dumber commands # (e.g. sdist, bdist_wininst, etc.) # self.distribution.metadata.version = self.egg_version # If we bootstrapped around the lack of a PKG-INFO, as might be the # case in a fresh checkout, make sure that any special tags get added # to the version info # pd = self.distribution._patched_dist if pd is not None and pd.key == self.egg_name.lower(): pd._version = self.egg_version pd._parsed_version = parse_version(self.egg_version) self.distribution._patched_dist = None def write_or_delete_file(self, what, filename, data, force=False): """Write `data` to `filename` or delete if empty If `data` is non-empty, this routine is the same as ``write_file()``. If `data` is empty but not ``None``, this is the same as calling ``delete_file(filename)`. If `data` is ``None``, then this is a no-op unless `filename` exists, in which case a warning is issued about the orphaned file (if `force` is false), or deleted (if `force` is true). """ if data: self.write_file(what, filename, data) elif os.path.exists(filename): if data is None and not force: log.warn( "%s not set in setup(), but %s exists", what, filename ) return else: self.delete_file(filename) def write_file(self, what, filename, data): """Write `data` to `filename` (if not a dry run) after announcing it `what` is used in a log message to identify what is being written to the file. """ log.info("writing %s to %s", what, filename) if not six.PY2: data = data.encode("utf-8") if not self.dry_run: f = open(filename, 'wb') f.write(data) f.close() def delete_file(self, filename): """Delete `filename` (if not a dry run) after announcing it""" log.info("deleting %s", filename) if not self.dry_run: os.unlink(filename) def run(self): self.mkpath(self.egg_info) os.utime(self.egg_info, None) installer = self.distribution.fetch_build_egg for ep in iter_entry_points('egg_info.writers'): ep.require(installer=installer) writer = ep.resolve() writer(self, ep.name, os.path.join(self.egg_info, ep.name)) # Get rid of native_libs.txt if it was put there by older bdist_egg nl = os.path.join(self.egg_info, "native_libs.txt") if os.path.exists(nl): self.delete_file(nl) self.find_sources() def find_sources(self): """Generate SOURCES.txt manifest file""" manifest_filename = os.path.join(self.egg_info, "SOURCES.txt") mm = manifest_maker(self.distribution) mm.manifest = manifest_filename mm.run() self.filelist = mm.filelist def check_broken_egg_info(self): bei = self.egg_name + '.egg-info' if self.egg_base != os.curdir: bei = os.path.join(self.egg_base, bei) if os.path.exists(bei): log.warn( "-" * 78 + '\n' "Note: Your current .egg-info directory has a '-' in its name;" '\nthis will not work correctly with "setup.py develop".\n\n' 'Please rename %s to %s to correct this problem.\n' + '-' * 78, bei, self.egg_info ) self.broken_egg_info = self.egg_info self.egg_info = bei # make it work for now class FileList(_FileList): # Implementations of the various MANIFEST.in commands def process_template_line(self, line): # 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): log.warn("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): log.warn(("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.global_include(pattern): log.warn(("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.global_exclude(pattern): log.warn(("warning: no previously-included files matching " "'%s' found anywhere in distribution"), pattern) elif action == 'recursive-include': self.debug_print("recursive-include %s %s" % (dir, ' '.join(patterns))) for pattern in patterns: if not self.recursive_include(dir, pattern): log.warn(("warning: no files found matching '%s' " "under directory '%s'"), pattern, dir) elif action == 'recursive-exclude': self.debug_print("recursive-exclude %s %s" % (dir, ' '.join(patterns))) for pattern in patterns: if not self.recursive_exclude(dir, pattern): log.warn(("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.graft(dir_pattern): log.warn("warning: no directories found matching '%s'", dir_pattern) elif action == 'prune': self.debug_print("prune " + dir_pattern) if not self.prune(dir_pattern): log.warn(("no previously-included directories found " "matching '%s'"), dir_pattern) else: raise DistutilsInternalError( "this cannot happen: invalid action '%s'" % action) def _remove_files(self, predicate): """ Remove all files from the file list that match the predicate. Return True if any matching files were removed """ found = False for i in range(len(self.files) - 1, -1, -1): if predicate(self.files[i]): self.debug_print(" removing " + self.files[i]) del self.files[i] found = True return found def include(self, pattern): """Include files that match 'pattern'.""" found = [f for f in glob(pattern) if not os.path.isdir(f)] self.extend(found) return bool(found) def exclude(self, pattern): """Exclude files that match 'pattern'.""" match = translate_pattern(pattern) return self._remove_files(match.match) def recursive_include(self, dir, pattern): """ Include all files anywhere in 'dir/' that match the pattern. """ full_pattern = os.path.join(dir, '**', pattern) found = [f for f in glob(full_pattern, recursive=True) if not os.path.isdir(f)] self.extend(found) return bool(found) def recursive_exclude(self, dir, pattern): """ Exclude any file anywhere in 'dir/' that match the pattern. """ match = translate_pattern(os.path.join(dir, '**', pattern)) return self._remove_files(match.match) def graft(self, dir): """Include all files from 'dir/'.""" found = [ item for match_dir in glob(dir) for item in distutils.filelist.findall(match_dir) ] self.extend(found) return bool(found) def prune(self, dir): """Filter out files from 'dir/'.""" match = translate_pattern(os.path.join(dir, '**')) return self._remove_files(match.match) def global_include(self, pattern): """ Include all files anywhere in the current directory that match the pattern. This is very inefficient on large file trees. """ if self.allfiles is None: self.findall() match = translate_pattern(os.path.join('**', pattern)) found = [f for f in self.allfiles if match.match(f)] self.extend(found) return bool(found) def global_exclude(self, pattern): """ Exclude all files anywhere that match the pattern. """ match = translate_pattern(os.path.join('**', pattern)) return self._remove_files(match.match) def append(self, item): if item.endswith('\r'): # Fix older sdists built on Windows item = item[:-1] path = convert_path(item) if self._safe_path(path): self.files.append(path) def extend(self, paths): self.files.extend(filter(self._safe_path, paths)) def _repair(self): """ Replace self.files with only safe paths Because some owners of FileList manipulate the underlying ``files`` attribute directly, this method must be called to repair those paths. """ self.files = list(filter(self._safe_path, self.files)) def _safe_path(self, path): enc_warn = "'%s' not %s encodable -- skipping" # To avoid accidental trans-codings errors, first to unicode u_path = unicode_utils.filesys_decode(path) if u_path is None: log.warn("'%s' in unexpected encoding -- skipping" % path) return False # Must ensure utf-8 encodability utf8_path = unicode_utils.try_encode(u_path, "utf-8") if utf8_path is None: log.warn(enc_warn, path, 'utf-8') return False try: # accept is either way checks out if os.path.exists(u_path) or os.path.exists(utf8_path): return True # this will catch any encode errors decoding u_path except UnicodeEncodeError: log.warn(enc_warn, path, sys.getfilesystemencoding()) class manifest_maker(sdist): template = "MANIFEST.in" def initialize_options(self): self.use_defaults = 1 self.prune = 1 self.manifest_only = 1 self.force_manifest = 1 def finalize_options(self): pass def run(self): self.filelist = FileList() if not os.path.exists(self.manifest): self.write_manifest() # it must exist so it'll get in the list self.add_defaults() if os.path.exists(self.template): self.read_template() self.prune_file_list() self.filelist.sort() self.filelist.remove_duplicates() self.write_manifest() def _manifest_normalize(self, path): path = unicode_utils.filesys_decode(path) return path.replace(os.sep, '/') def write_manifest(self): """ Write the file list in 'self.filelist' to the manifest file named by 'self.manifest'. """ self.filelist._repair() # Now _repairs should encodability, but not unicode files = [self._manifest_normalize(f) for f in self.filelist.files] msg = "writing manifest file '%s'" % self.manifest self.execute(write_file, (self.manifest, files), msg) def warn(self, msg): if not self._should_suppress_warning(msg): sdist.warn(self, msg) @staticmethod def _should_suppress_warning(msg): """ suppress missing-file warnings from sdist """ return re.match(r"standard file .*not found", msg) def add_defaults(self): sdist.add_defaults(self) self.check_license() self.filelist.append(self.template) self.filelist.append(self.manifest) rcfiles = list(walk_revctrl()) if rcfiles: self.filelist.extend(rcfiles) elif os.path.exists(self.manifest): self.read_manifest() if os.path.exists("setup.py"): # setup.py should be included by default, even if it's not # the script called to create the sdist self.filelist.append("setup.py") ei_cmd = self.get_finalized_command('egg_info') self.filelist.graft(ei_cmd.egg_info) def prune_file_list(self): build = self.get_finalized_command('build') base_dir = self.distribution.get_fullname() self.filelist.prune(build.build_base) self.filelist.prune(base_dir) sep = re.escape(os.sep) self.filelist.exclude_pattern(r'(^|' + sep + r')(RCS|CVS|\.svn)' + sep, is_regex=1) def write_file(filename, contents): """Create a file with the specified name and write 'contents' (a sequence of strings without line terminators) to it. """ contents = "\n".join(contents) # assuming the contents has been vetted for utf-8 encoding contents = contents.encode("utf-8") with open(filename, "wb") as f: # always write POSIX-style manifest f.write(contents) def write_pkg_info(cmd, basename, filename): log.info("writing %s", filename) if not cmd.dry_run: metadata = cmd.distribution.metadata metadata.version, oldver = cmd.egg_version, metadata.version metadata.name, oldname = cmd.egg_name, metadata.name try: # write unescaped data to PKG-INFO, so older pkg_resources # can still parse it metadata.write_pkg_info(cmd.egg_info) finally: metadata.name, metadata.version = oldname, oldver safe = getattr(cmd.distribution, 'zip_safe', None) bdist_egg.write_safety_flag(cmd.egg_info, safe) def warn_depends_obsolete(cmd, basename, filename): if os.path.exists(filename): log.warn( "WARNING: 'depends.txt' is not used by setuptools 0.6!\n" "Use the install_requires/extras_require setup() args instead." ) def _write_requirements(stream, reqs): lines = yield_lines(reqs or ()) def append_cr(line): return line + '\n' lines = map(append_cr, lines) stream.writelines(lines) def write_requirements(cmd, basename, filename): dist = cmd.distribution data = six.StringIO() _write_requirements(data, dist.install_requires) extras_require = dist.extras_require or {} for extra in sorted(extras_require): data.write('\n[{extra}]\n'.format(**vars())) _write_requirements(data, extras_require[extra]) cmd.write_or_delete_file("requirements", filename, data.getvalue()) def write_setup_requirements(cmd, basename, filename): data = io.StringIO() _write_requirements(data, cmd.distribution.setup_requires) cmd.write_or_delete_file("setup-requirements", filename, data.getvalue()) def write_toplevel_names(cmd, basename, filename): pkgs = dict.fromkeys( [ k.split('.', 1)[0] for k in cmd.distribution.iter_distribution_names() ] ) cmd.write_file("top-level names", filename, '\n'.join(sorted(pkgs)) + '\n') def overwrite_arg(cmd, basename, filename): write_arg(cmd, basename, filename, True) def write_arg(cmd, basename, filename, force=False): argname = os.path.splitext(basename)[0] value = getattr(cmd.distribution, argname, None) if value is not None: value = '\n'.join(value) + '\n' cmd.write_or_delete_file(argname, filename, value, force) def write_entries(cmd, basename, filename): ep = cmd.distribution.entry_points if isinstance(ep, six.string_types) or ep is None: data = ep elif ep is not None: data = [] for section, contents in sorted(ep.items()): if not isinstance(contents, six.string_types): contents = EntryPoint.parse_group(section, contents) contents = '\n'.join(sorted(map(str, contents.values()))) data.append('[%s]\n%s\n\n' % (section, contents)) data = ''.join(data) cmd.write_or_delete_file('entry points', filename, data, True) def get_pkg_info_revision(): """ Get a -r### off of PKG-INFO Version in case this is an sdist of a subversion revision. """ warnings.warn( "get_pkg_info_revision is deprecated.", EggInfoDeprecationWarning) if os.path.exists('PKG-INFO'): with io.open('PKG-INFO') as f: for line in f: match = re.match(r"Version:.*-r(\d+)\s*$", line) if match: return int(match.group(1)) return 0 class EggInfoDeprecationWarning(SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning): """Deprecated behavior warning for EggInfo, bypassing suppression."""
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/install.py
from distutils.errors import DistutilsArgError import inspect import glob import warnings import platform import distutils.command.install as orig import setuptools # Prior to numpy 1.9, NumPy relies on the '_install' name, so provide it for # now. See https://github.com/pypa/setuptools/issues/199/ _install = orig.install class install(orig.install): """Use easy_install to install the package, w/dependencies""" user_options = orig.install.user_options + [ ('old-and-unmanageable', None, "Try not to use this!"), ('single-version-externally-managed', None, "used by system package builders to create 'flat' eggs"), ] boolean_options = orig.install.boolean_options + [ 'old-and-unmanageable', 'single-version-externally-managed', ] new_commands = [ ('install_egg_info', lambda self: True), ('install_scripts', lambda self: True), ] _nc = dict(new_commands) def initialize_options(self): orig.install.initialize_options(self) self.old_and_unmanageable = None self.single_version_externally_managed = None def finalize_options(self): orig.install.finalize_options(self) if self.root: self.single_version_externally_managed = True elif self.single_version_externally_managed: if not self.root and not self.record: raise DistutilsArgError( "You must specify --record or --root when building system" " packages" ) def handle_extra_path(self): if self.root or self.single_version_externally_managed: # explicit backward-compatibility mode, allow extra_path to work return orig.install.handle_extra_path(self) # Ignore extra_path when installing an egg (or being run by another # command without --root or --single-version-externally-managed self.path_file = None self.extra_dirs = '' def run(self): # Explicit request for old-style install? Just do it if self.old_and_unmanageable or self.single_version_externally_managed: return orig.install.run(self) if not self._called_from_setup(inspect.currentframe()): # Run in backward-compatibility mode to support bdist_* commands. orig.install.run(self) else: self.do_egg_install() @staticmethod def _called_from_setup(run_frame): """ Attempt to detect whether run() was called from setup() or by another command. If called by setup(), the parent caller will be the 'run_command' method in 'distutils.dist', and *its* caller will be the 'run_commands' method. If called any other way, the immediate caller *might* be 'run_command', but it won't have been called by 'run_commands'. Return True in that case or if a call stack is unavailable. Return False otherwise. """ if run_frame is None: msg = "Call stack not available. bdist_* commands may fail." warnings.warn(msg) if platform.python_implementation() == 'IronPython': msg = "For best results, pass -X:Frames to enable call stack." warnings.warn(msg) return True res = inspect.getouterframes(run_frame)[2] caller, = res[:1] info = inspect.getframeinfo(caller) caller_module = caller.f_globals.get('__name__', '') return ( caller_module == 'distutils.dist' and info.function == 'run_commands' ) def do_egg_install(self): easy_install = self.distribution.get_command_class('easy_install') cmd = easy_install( self.distribution, args="x", root=self.root, record=self.record, ) cmd.ensure_finalized() # finalize before bdist_egg munges install cmd cmd.always_copy_from = '.' # make sure local-dir eggs get installed # pick up setup-dir .egg files only: no .egg-info cmd.package_index.scan(glob.glob('*.egg')) self.run_command('bdist_egg') args = [self.distribution.get_command_obj('bdist_egg').egg_output] if setuptools.bootstrap_install_from: # Bootstrap self-installation of setuptools args.insert(0, setuptools.bootstrap_install_from) cmd.args = args cmd.run(show_deprecation=False) setuptools.bootstrap_install_from = None # XXX Python 3.1 doesn't see _nc if this is inside the class install.sub_commands = ( [cmd for cmd in orig.install.sub_commands if cmd[0] not in install._nc] + install.new_commands )
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/develop.py
from distutils.util import convert_path from distutils import log from distutils.errors import DistutilsError, DistutilsOptionError import os import glob import io from setuptools.extern import six import pkg_resources from setuptools.command.easy_install import easy_install from setuptools import namespaces import setuptools __metaclass__ = type class develop(namespaces.DevelopInstaller, easy_install): """Set up package for development""" description = "install package in 'development mode'" user_options = easy_install.user_options + [ ("uninstall", "u", "Uninstall this source package"), ("egg-path=", None, "Set the path to be used in the .egg-link file"), ] boolean_options = easy_install.boolean_options + ['uninstall'] command_consumes_arguments = False # override base def run(self): if self.uninstall: self.multi_version = True self.uninstall_link() self.uninstall_namespaces() else: self.install_for_development() self.warn_deprecated_options() def initialize_options(self): self.uninstall = None self.egg_path = None easy_install.initialize_options(self) self.setup_path = None self.always_copy_from = '.' # always copy eggs installed in curdir def finalize_options(self): ei = self.get_finalized_command("egg_info") if ei.broken_egg_info: template = "Please rename %r to %r before using 'develop'" args = ei.egg_info, ei.broken_egg_info raise DistutilsError(template % args) self.args = [ei.egg_name] easy_install.finalize_options(self) self.expand_basedirs() self.expand_dirs() # pick up setup-dir .egg files only: no .egg-info self.package_index.scan(glob.glob('*.egg')) egg_link_fn = ei.egg_name + '.egg-link' self.egg_link = os.path.join(self.install_dir, egg_link_fn) self.egg_base = ei.egg_base if self.egg_path is None: self.egg_path = os.path.abspath(ei.egg_base) target = pkg_resources.normalize_path(self.egg_base) egg_path = pkg_resources.normalize_path( os.path.join(self.install_dir, self.egg_path)) if egg_path != target: raise DistutilsOptionError( "--egg-path must be a relative path from the install" " directory to " + target ) # Make a distribution for the package's source self.dist = pkg_resources.Distribution( target, pkg_resources.PathMetadata(target, os.path.abspath(ei.egg_info)), project_name=ei.egg_name ) self.setup_path = self._resolve_setup_path( self.egg_base, self.install_dir, self.egg_path, ) @staticmethod def _resolve_setup_path(egg_base, install_dir, egg_path): """ Generate a path from egg_base back to '.' where the setup script resides and ensure that path points to the setup path from $install_dir/$egg_path. """ path_to_setup = egg_base.replace(os.sep, '/').rstrip('/') if path_to_setup != os.curdir: path_to_setup = '../' * (path_to_setup.count('/') + 1) resolved = pkg_resources.normalize_path( os.path.join(install_dir, egg_path, path_to_setup) ) if resolved != pkg_resources.normalize_path(os.curdir): raise DistutilsOptionError( "Can't get a consistent path to setup script from" " installation directory", resolved, pkg_resources.normalize_path(os.curdir)) return path_to_setup def install_for_development(self): if not six.PY2 and getattr(self.distribution, 'use_2to3', False): # If we run 2to3 we can not do this inplace: # Ensure metadata is up-to-date self.reinitialize_command('build_py', inplace=0) self.run_command('build_py') bpy_cmd = self.get_finalized_command("build_py") build_path = pkg_resources.normalize_path(bpy_cmd.build_lib) # Build extensions self.reinitialize_command('egg_info', egg_base=build_path) self.run_command('egg_info') self.reinitialize_command('build_ext', inplace=0) self.run_command('build_ext') # Fixup egg-link and easy-install.pth ei_cmd = self.get_finalized_command("egg_info") self.egg_path = build_path self.dist.location = build_path # XXX self.dist._provider = pkg_resources.PathMetadata( build_path, ei_cmd.egg_info) else: # Without 2to3 inplace works fine: self.run_command('egg_info') # Build extensions in-place self.reinitialize_command('build_ext', inplace=1) self.run_command('build_ext') if setuptools.bootstrap_install_from: self.easy_install(setuptools.bootstrap_install_from) setuptools.bootstrap_install_from = None self.install_namespaces() # create an .egg-link in the installation dir, pointing to our egg log.info("Creating %s (link to %s)", self.egg_link, self.egg_base) if not self.dry_run: with open(self.egg_link, "w") as f: f.write(self.egg_path + "\n" + self.setup_path) # postprocess the installed distro, fixing up .pth, installing scripts, # and handling requirements self.process_distribution(None, self.dist, not self.no_deps) def uninstall_link(self): if os.path.exists(self.egg_link): log.info("Removing %s (link to %s)", self.egg_link, self.egg_base) egg_link_file = open(self.egg_link) contents = [line.rstrip() for line in egg_link_file] egg_link_file.close() if contents not in ([self.egg_path], [self.egg_path, self.setup_path]): log.warn("Link points to %s: uninstall aborted", contents) return if not self.dry_run: os.unlink(self.egg_link) if not self.dry_run: self.update_pth(self.dist) # remove any .pth link to us if self.distribution.scripts: # XXX should also check for entry point scripts! log.warn("Note: you must uninstall or replace scripts manually!") def install_egg_scripts(self, dist): if dist is not self.dist: # Installing a dependency, so fall back to normal behavior return easy_install.install_egg_scripts(self, dist) # create wrapper scripts in the script dir, pointing to dist.scripts # new-style... self.install_wrapper_scripts(dist) # ...and old-style for script_name in self.distribution.scripts or []: script_path = os.path.abspath(convert_path(script_name)) script_name = os.path.basename(script_path) with io.open(script_path) as strm: script_text = strm.read() self.install_script(dist, script_name, script_text, script_path) def install_wrapper_scripts(self, dist): dist = VersionlessRequirement(dist) return easy_install.install_wrapper_scripts(self, dist) class VersionlessRequirement: """ Adapt a pkg_resources.Distribution to simply return the project name as the 'requirement' so that scripts will work across multiple versions. >>> from pkg_resources import Distribution >>> dist = Distribution(project_name='foo', version='1.0') >>> str(dist.as_requirement()) 'foo==1.0' >>> adapted_dist = VersionlessRequirement(dist) >>> str(adapted_dist.as_requirement()) 'foo' """ def __init__(self, dist): self.__dist = dist def __getattr__(self, name): return getattr(self.__dist, name) def as_requirement(self): return self.project_name
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qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/rotate.py
from distutils.util import convert_path from distutils import log from distutils.errors import DistutilsOptionError import os import shutil from setuptools.extern import six from setuptools import Command class rotate(Command): """Delete older distributions""" description = "delete older distributions, keeping N newest files" user_options = [ ('match=', 'm', "patterns to match (required)"), ('dist-dir=', 'd', "directory where the distributions are"), ('keep=', 'k', "number of matching distributions to keep"), ] boolean_options = [] def initialize_options(self): self.match = None self.dist_dir = None self.keep = None def finalize_options(self): if self.match is None: raise DistutilsOptionError( "Must specify one or more (comma-separated) match patterns " "(e.g. '.zip' or '.egg')" ) if self.keep is None: raise DistutilsOptionError("Must specify number of files to keep") try: self.keep = int(self.keep) except ValueError as e: raise DistutilsOptionError("--keep must be an integer") from e if isinstance(self.match, six.string_types): self.match = [ convert_path(p.strip()) for p in self.match.split(',') ] self.set_undefined_options('bdist', ('dist_dir', 'dist_dir')) def run(self): self.run_command("egg_info") from glob import glob for pattern in self.match: pattern = self.distribution.get_name() + '*' + pattern files = glob(os.path.join(self.dist_dir, pattern)) files = [(os.path.getmtime(f), f) for f in files] files.sort() files.reverse() log.info("%d file(s) matching %s", len(files), pattern) files = files[self.keep:] for (t, f) in files: log.info("Deleting %s", f) if not self.dry_run: if os.path.isdir(f): shutil.rmtree(f) else: os.unlink(f)
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/install_egg_info.py
from distutils import log, dir_util import os from setuptools import Command from setuptools import namespaces from setuptools.archive_util import unpack_archive import pkg_resources class install_egg_info(namespaces.Installer, Command): """Install an .egg-info directory for the package""" description = "Install an .egg-info directory for the package" user_options = [ ('install-dir=', 'd', "directory to install to"), ] def initialize_options(self): self.install_dir = None def finalize_options(self): self.set_undefined_options('install_lib', ('install_dir', 'install_dir')) ei_cmd = self.get_finalized_command("egg_info") basename = pkg_resources.Distribution( None, None, ei_cmd.egg_name, ei_cmd.egg_version ).egg_name() + '.egg-info' self.source = ei_cmd.egg_info self.target = os.path.join(self.install_dir, basename) self.outputs = [] def run(self): self.run_command('egg_info') if os.path.isdir(self.target) and not os.path.islink(self.target): dir_util.remove_tree(self.target, dry_run=self.dry_run) elif os.path.exists(self.target): self.execute(os.unlink, (self.target,), "Removing " + self.target) if not self.dry_run: pkg_resources.ensure_directory(self.target) self.execute( self.copytree, (), "Copying %s to %s" % (self.source, self.target) ) self.install_namespaces() def get_outputs(self): return self.outputs def copytree(self): # Copy the .egg-info tree to site-packages def skimmer(src, dst): # filter out source-control directories; note that 'src' is always # a '/'-separated path, regardless of platform. 'dst' is a # platform-specific path. for skip in '.svn/', 'CVS/': if src.startswith(skip) or '/' + skip in src: return None self.outputs.append(dst) log.debug("Copying %s to %s", src, dst) return dst unpack_archive(self.source, self.target, skimmer)
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qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/command/setopt.py
from distutils.util import convert_path from distutils import log from distutils.errors import DistutilsOptionError import distutils import os from setuptools.extern.six.moves import configparser from setuptools import Command __all__ = ['config_file', 'edit_config', 'option_base', 'setopt'] def config_file(kind="local"): """Get the filename of the distutils, local, global, or per-user config `kind` must be one of "local", "global", or "user" """ if kind == 'local': return 'setup.cfg' if kind == 'global': return os.path.join( os.path.dirname(distutils.__file__), 'distutils.cfg' ) if kind == 'user': dot = os.name == 'posix' and '.' or '' return os.path.expanduser(convert_path("~/%spydistutils.cfg" % dot)) raise ValueError( "config_file() type must be 'local', 'global', or 'user'", kind ) def edit_config(filename, settings, dry_run=False): """Edit a configuration file to include `settings` `settings` is a dictionary of dictionaries or ``None`` values, keyed by command/section name. A ``None`` value means to delete the entire section, while a dictionary lists settings to be changed or deleted in that section. A setting of ``None`` means to delete that setting. """ log.debug("Reading configuration from %s", filename) opts = configparser.RawConfigParser() opts.read([filename]) for section, options in settings.items(): if options is None: log.info("Deleting section [%s] from %s", section, filename) opts.remove_section(section) else: if not opts.has_section(section): log.debug("Adding new section [%s] to %s", section, filename) opts.add_section(section) for option, value in options.items(): if value is None: log.debug( "Deleting %s.%s from %s", section, option, filename ) opts.remove_option(section, option) if not opts.options(section): log.info("Deleting empty [%s] section from %s", section, filename) opts.remove_section(section) else: log.debug( "Setting %s.%s to %r in %s", section, option, value, filename ) opts.set(section, option, value) log.info("Writing %s", filename) if not dry_run: with open(filename, 'w') as f: opts.write(f) class option_base(Command): """Abstract base class for commands that mess with config files""" user_options = [ ('global-config', 'g', "save options to the site-wide distutils.cfg file"), ('user-config', 'u', "save options to the current user's pydistutils.cfg file"), ('filename=', 'f', "configuration file to use (default=setup.cfg)"), ] boolean_options = [ 'global-config', 'user-config', ] def initialize_options(self): self.global_config = None self.user_config = None self.filename = None def finalize_options(self): filenames = [] if self.global_config: filenames.append(config_file('global')) if self.user_config: filenames.append(config_file('user')) if self.filename is not None: filenames.append(self.filename) if not filenames: filenames.append(config_file('local')) if len(filenames) > 1: raise DistutilsOptionError( "Must specify only one configuration file option", filenames ) self.filename, = filenames class setopt(option_base): """Save command-line options to a file""" description = "set an option in setup.cfg or another config file" user_options = [ ('command=', 'c', 'command to set an option for'), ('option=', 'o', 'option to set'), ('set-value=', 's', 'value of the option'), ('remove', 'r', 'remove (unset) the value'), ] + option_base.user_options boolean_options = option_base.boolean_options + ['remove'] def initialize_options(self): option_base.initialize_options(self) self.command = None self.option = None self.set_value = None self.remove = None def finalize_options(self): option_base.finalize_options(self) if self.command is None or self.option is None: raise DistutilsOptionError("Must specify --command *and* --option") if self.set_value is None and not self.remove: raise DistutilsOptionError("Must specify --set-value or --remove") def run(self): edit_config( self.filename, { self.command: {self.option.replace('-', '_'): self.set_value} }, self.dry_run )
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/extern/__init__.py
import sys class VendorImporter: """ A PEP 302 meta path importer for finding optionally-vendored or otherwise naturally-installed packages from root_name. """ def __init__(self, root_name, vendored_names=(), vendor_pkg=None): self.root_name = root_name self.vendored_names = set(vendored_names) self.vendor_pkg = vendor_pkg or root_name.replace('extern', '_vendor') @property def search_path(self): """ Search first the vendor package then as a natural package. """ yield self.vendor_pkg + '.' yield '' def find_module(self, fullname, path=None): """ Return self when fullname starts with root_name and the target module is one vendored through this importer. """ root, base, target = fullname.partition(self.root_name + '.') if root: return if not any(map(target.startswith, self.vendored_names)): return return self def load_module(self, fullname): """ Iterate over the search path to locate and load fullname. """ root, base, target = fullname.partition(self.root_name + '.') for prefix in self.search_path: try: extant = prefix + target __import__(extant) mod = sys.modules[extant] sys.modules[fullname] = mod return mod except ImportError: pass else: raise ImportError( "The '{target}' package is required; " "normally this is bundled with this package so if you get " "this warning, consult the packager of your " "distribution.".format(**locals()) ) def install(self): """ Install this importer into sys.meta_path if not already present. """ if self not in sys.meta_path: sys.meta_path.append(self) names = 'six', 'packaging', 'pyparsing', 'ordered_set', VendorImporter(__name__, names, 'setuptools._vendor').install()
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qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/_msvccompiler.py
"""distutils._msvccompiler Contains MSVCCompiler, an implementation of the abstract CCompiler class for Microsoft Visual Studio 2015. The module is compatible with VS 2015 and later. You can find legacy support for older versions in distutils.msvc9compiler and distutils.msvccompiler. """ # Written by Perry Stoll # hacked by Robin Becker and Thomas Heller to do a better job of # finding DevStudio (through the registry) # ported to VS 2005 and VS 2008 by Christian Heimes # ported to VS 2015 by Steve Dower import os import subprocess import contextlib with contextlib.suppress(ImportError): import winreg from distutils.errors import DistutilsExecError, DistutilsPlatformError, \ CompileError, LibError, LinkError from distutils.ccompiler import CCompiler, gen_lib_options from distutils import log from distutils.util import get_platform from itertools import count def _find_vc2015(): try: key = winreg.OpenKeyEx( winreg.HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, r"Software\Microsoft\VisualStudio\SxS\VC7", access=winreg.KEY_READ | winreg.KEY_WOW64_32KEY ) except OSError: log.debug("Visual C++ is not registered") return None, None best_version = 0 best_dir = None with key: for i in count(): try: v, vc_dir, vt = winreg.EnumValue(key, i) except OSError: break if v and vt == winreg.REG_SZ and os.path.isdir(vc_dir): try: version = int(float(v)) except (ValueError, TypeError): continue if version >= 14 and version > best_version: best_version, best_dir = version, vc_dir return best_version, best_dir def _find_vc2017(): """Returns "15, path" based on the result of invoking vswhere.exe If no install is found, returns "None, None" The version is returned to avoid unnecessarily changing the function result. It may be ignored when the path is not None. If vswhere.exe is not available, by definition, VS 2017 is not installed. """ root = os.environ.get("ProgramFiles(x86)") or os.environ.get("ProgramFiles") if not root: return None, None try: path = subprocess.check_output([ os.path.join(root, "Microsoft Visual Studio", "Installer", "vswhere.exe"), "-latest", "-prerelease", "-requires", "Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.VC.Tools.x86.x64", "-property", "installationPath", "-products", "*", ], encoding="mbcs", errors="strict").strip() except (subprocess.CalledProcessError, OSError, UnicodeDecodeError): return None, None path = os.path.join(path, "VC", "Auxiliary", "Build") if os.path.isdir(path): return 15, path return None, None PLAT_SPEC_TO_RUNTIME = { 'x86' : 'x86', 'x86_amd64' : 'x64', 'x86_arm' : 'arm', 'x86_arm64' : 'arm64' } def _find_vcvarsall(plat_spec): # bpo-38597: Removed vcruntime return value _, best_dir = _find_vc2017() if not best_dir: best_version, best_dir = _find_vc2015() if not best_dir: log.debug("No suitable Visual C++ version found") return None, None vcvarsall = os.path.join(best_dir, "vcvarsall.bat") if not os.path.isfile(vcvarsall): log.debug("%s cannot be found", vcvarsall) return None, None return vcvarsall, None def _get_vc_env(plat_spec): if os.getenv("DISTUTILS_USE_SDK"): return { key.lower(): value for key, value in os.environ.items() } vcvarsall, _ = _find_vcvarsall(plat_spec) if not vcvarsall: raise DistutilsPlatformError("Unable to find vcvarsall.bat") try: out = subprocess.check_output( 'cmd /u /c "{}" {} && set'.format(vcvarsall, plat_spec), stderr=subprocess.STDOUT, ).decode('utf-16le', errors='replace') except subprocess.CalledProcessError as exc: log.error(exc.output) raise DistutilsPlatformError("Error executing {}" .format(exc.cmd)) env = { key.lower(): value for key, _, value in (line.partition('=') for line in out.splitlines()) if key and value } return env def _find_exe(exe, paths=None): """Return path to an MSVC executable program. Tries to find the program in several places: first, one of the MSVC program search paths from the registry; next, the directories in the PATH environment variable. If any of those work, return an absolute path that is known to exist. If none of them work, just return the original program name, 'exe'. """ if not paths: paths = os.getenv('path').split(os.pathsep) for p in paths: fn = os.path.join(os.path.abspath(p), exe) if os.path.isfile(fn): return fn return exe # A map keyed by get_platform() return values to values accepted by # 'vcvarsall.bat'. Always cross-compile from x86 to work with the # lighter-weight MSVC installs that do not include native 64-bit tools. PLAT_TO_VCVARS = { 'win32' : 'x86', 'win-amd64' : 'x86_amd64', 'win-arm32' : 'x86_arm', 'win-arm64' : 'x86_arm64' } class MSVCCompiler(CCompiler) : """Concrete class that implements an interface to Microsoft Visual C++, as defined by the CCompiler abstract class.""" compiler_type = 'msvc' # Just set this so CCompiler's constructor doesn't barf. We currently # don't use the 'set_executables()' bureaucracy provided by CCompiler, # as it really isn't necessary for this sort of single-compiler class. # Would be nice to have a consistent interface with UnixCCompiler, # though, so it's worth thinking about. executables = {} # Private class data (need to distinguish C from C++ source for compiler) _c_extensions = ['.c'] _cpp_extensions = ['.cc', '.cpp', '.cxx'] _rc_extensions = ['.rc'] _mc_extensions = ['.mc'] # Needed for the filename generation methods provided by the # base class, CCompiler. src_extensions = (_c_extensions + _cpp_extensions + _rc_extensions + _mc_extensions) res_extension = '.res' obj_extension = '.obj' static_lib_extension = '.lib' shared_lib_extension = '.dll' static_lib_format = shared_lib_format = '%s%s' exe_extension = '.exe' def __init__(self, verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0): CCompiler.__init__ (self, verbose, dry_run, force) # target platform (.plat_name is consistent with 'bdist') self.plat_name = None self.initialized = False def initialize(self, plat_name=None): # multi-init means we would need to check platform same each time... assert not self.initialized, "don't init multiple times" if plat_name is None: plat_name = get_platform() # sanity check for platforms to prevent obscure errors later. if plat_name not in PLAT_TO_VCVARS: raise DistutilsPlatformError("--plat-name must be one of {}" .format(tuple(PLAT_TO_VCVARS))) # Get the vcvarsall.bat spec for the requested platform. plat_spec = PLAT_TO_VCVARS[plat_name] vc_env = _get_vc_env(plat_spec) if not vc_env: raise DistutilsPlatformError("Unable to find a compatible " "Visual Studio installation.") self._paths = vc_env.get('path', '') paths = self._paths.split(os.pathsep) self.cc = _find_exe("cl.exe", paths) self.linker = _find_exe("link.exe", paths) self.lib = _find_exe("lib.exe", paths) self.rc = _find_exe("rc.exe", paths) # resource compiler self.mc = _find_exe("mc.exe", paths) # message compiler self.mt = _find_exe("mt.exe", paths) # message compiler for dir in vc_env.get('include', '').split(os.pathsep): if dir: self.add_include_dir(dir.rstrip(os.sep)) for dir in vc_env.get('lib', '').split(os.pathsep): if dir: self.add_library_dir(dir.rstrip(os.sep)) self.preprocess_options = None # bpo-38597: Always compile with dynamic linking # Future releases of Python 3.x will include all past # versions of vcruntime*.dll for compatibility. self.compile_options = [ '/nologo', '/Ox', '/W3', '/GL', '/DNDEBUG', '/MD' ] self.compile_options_debug = [ '/nologo', '/Od', '/MDd', '/Zi', '/W3', '/D_DEBUG' ] ldflags = [ '/nologo', '/INCREMENTAL:NO', '/LTCG' ] ldflags_debug = [ '/nologo', '/INCREMENTAL:NO', '/LTCG', '/DEBUG:FULL' ] self.ldflags_exe = [*ldflags, '/MANIFEST:EMBED,ID=1'] self.ldflags_exe_debug = [*ldflags_debug, '/MANIFEST:EMBED,ID=1'] self.ldflags_shared = [*ldflags, '/DLL', '/MANIFEST:EMBED,ID=2', '/MANIFESTUAC:NO'] self.ldflags_shared_debug = [*ldflags_debug, '/DLL', '/MANIFEST:EMBED,ID=2', '/MANIFESTUAC:NO'] self.ldflags_static = [*ldflags] self.ldflags_static_debug = [*ldflags_debug] self._ldflags = { (CCompiler.EXECUTABLE, None): self.ldflags_exe, (CCompiler.EXECUTABLE, False): self.ldflags_exe, (CCompiler.EXECUTABLE, True): self.ldflags_exe_debug, (CCompiler.SHARED_OBJECT, None): self.ldflags_shared, (CCompiler.SHARED_OBJECT, False): self.ldflags_shared, (CCompiler.SHARED_OBJECT, True): self.ldflags_shared_debug, (CCompiler.SHARED_LIBRARY, None): self.ldflags_static, (CCompiler.SHARED_LIBRARY, False): self.ldflags_static, (CCompiler.SHARED_LIBRARY, True): self.ldflags_static_debug, } self.initialized = True # -- Worker methods ------------------------------------------------ def object_filenames(self, source_filenames, strip_dir=0, output_dir=''): ext_map = { **{ext: self.obj_extension for ext in self.src_extensions}, **{ext: self.res_extension for ext in self._rc_extensions + self._mc_extensions}, } output_dir = output_dir or '' def make_out_path(p): base, ext = os.path.splitext(p) if strip_dir: base = os.path.basename(base) else: _, base = os.path.splitdrive(base) if base.startswith((os.path.sep, os.path.altsep)): base = base[1:] try: # XXX: This may produce absurdly long paths. We should check # the length of the result and trim base until we fit within # 260 characters. return os.path.join(output_dir, base + ext_map[ext]) except LookupError: # Better to raise an exception instead of silently continuing # and later complain about sources and targets having # different lengths raise CompileError("Don't know how to compile {}".format(p)) return list(map(make_out_path, source_filenames)) def compile(self, sources, output_dir=None, macros=None, include_dirs=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, depends=None): if not self.initialized: self.initialize() compile_info = self._setup_compile(output_dir, macros, include_dirs, sources, depends, extra_postargs) macros, objects, extra_postargs, pp_opts, build = compile_info compile_opts = extra_preargs or [] compile_opts.append('/c') if debug: compile_opts.extend(self.compile_options_debug) else: compile_opts.extend(self.compile_options) add_cpp_opts = False for obj in objects: try: src, ext = build[obj] except KeyError: continue if debug: # pass the full pathname to MSVC in debug mode, # this allows the debugger to find the source file # without asking the user to browse for it src = os.path.abspath(src) if ext in self._c_extensions: input_opt = "/Tc" + src elif ext in self._cpp_extensions: input_opt = "/Tp" + src add_cpp_opts = True elif ext in self._rc_extensions: # compile .RC to .RES file input_opt = src output_opt = "/fo" + obj try: self.spawn([self.rc] + pp_opts + [output_opt, input_opt]) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise CompileError(msg) continue elif ext in self._mc_extensions: # Compile .MC to .RC file to .RES file. # * '-h dir' specifies the directory for the # generated include file # * '-r dir' specifies the target directory of the # generated RC file and the binary message resource # it includes # # For now (since there are no options to change this), # we use the source-directory for the include file and # the build directory for the RC file and message # resources. This works at least for win32all. h_dir = os.path.dirname(src) rc_dir = os.path.dirname(obj) try: # first compile .MC to .RC and .H file self.spawn([self.mc, '-h', h_dir, '-r', rc_dir, src]) base, _ = os.path.splitext(os.path.basename (src)) rc_file = os.path.join(rc_dir, base + '.rc') # then compile .RC to .RES file self.spawn([self.rc, "/fo" + obj, rc_file]) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise CompileError(msg) continue else: # how to handle this file? raise CompileError("Don't know how to compile {} to {}" .format(src, obj)) args = [self.cc] + compile_opts + pp_opts if add_cpp_opts: args.append('/EHsc') args.append(input_opt) args.append("/Fo" + obj) args.extend(extra_postargs) try: self.spawn(args) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise CompileError(msg) return objects def create_static_lib(self, objects, output_libname, output_dir=None, debug=0, target_lang=None): if not self.initialized: self.initialize() objects, output_dir = self._fix_object_args(objects, output_dir) output_filename = self.library_filename(output_libname, output_dir=output_dir) if self._need_link(objects, output_filename): lib_args = objects + ['/OUT:' + output_filename] if debug: pass # XXX what goes here? try: log.debug('Executing "%s" %s', self.lib, ' '.join(lib_args)) self.spawn([self.lib] + lib_args) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise LibError(msg) else: log.debug("skipping %s (up-to-date)", output_filename) def link(self, target_desc, objects, output_filename, output_dir=None, libraries=None, library_dirs=None, runtime_library_dirs=None, export_symbols=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, build_temp=None, target_lang=None): if not self.initialized: self.initialize() objects, output_dir = self._fix_object_args(objects, output_dir) fixed_args = self._fix_lib_args(libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs) libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs = fixed_args if runtime_library_dirs: self.warn("I don't know what to do with 'runtime_library_dirs': " + str(runtime_library_dirs)) lib_opts = gen_lib_options(self, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs, libraries) if output_dir is not None: output_filename = os.path.join(output_dir, output_filename) if self._need_link(objects, output_filename): ldflags = self._ldflags[target_desc, debug] export_opts = ["/EXPORT:" + sym for sym in (export_symbols or [])] ld_args = (ldflags + lib_opts + export_opts + objects + ['/OUT:' + output_filename]) # The MSVC linker generates .lib and .exp files, which cannot be # suppressed by any linker switches. The .lib files may even be # needed! Make sure they are generated in the temporary build # directory. Since they have different names for debug and release # builds, they can go into the same directory. build_temp = os.path.dirname(objects[0]) if export_symbols is not None: (dll_name, dll_ext) = os.path.splitext( os.path.basename(output_filename)) implib_file = os.path.join( build_temp, self.library_filename(dll_name)) ld_args.append ('/IMPLIB:' + implib_file) if extra_preargs: ld_args[:0] = extra_preargs if extra_postargs: ld_args.extend(extra_postargs) output_dir = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(output_filename)) self.mkpath(output_dir) try: log.debug('Executing "%s" %s', self.linker, ' '.join(ld_args)) self.spawn([self.linker] + ld_args) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise LinkError(msg) else: log.debug("skipping %s (up-to-date)", output_filename) def spawn(self, cmd): env = dict(os.environ, PATH=self._paths) return super().spawn(cmd, env=env) # -- Miscellaneous methods ----------------------------------------- # These are all used by the 'gen_lib_options() function, in # ccompiler.py. def library_dir_option(self, dir): return "/LIBPATH:" + dir def runtime_library_dir_option(self, dir): raise DistutilsPlatformError( "don't know how to set runtime library search path for MSVC") def library_option(self, lib): return self.library_filename(lib) def find_library_file(self, dirs, lib, debug=0): # Prefer a debugging library if found (and requested), but deal # with it if we don't have one. if debug: try_names = [lib + "_d", lib] else: try_names = [lib] for dir in dirs: for name in try_names: libfile = os.path.join(dir, self.library_filename(name)) if os.path.isfile(libfile): return libfile else: # Oops, didn't find it in *any* of 'dirs' return None
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/unixccompiler.py
"""distutils.unixccompiler Contains the UnixCCompiler class, a subclass of CCompiler that handles the "typical" Unix-style command-line C compiler: * macros defined with -Dname[=value] * macros undefined with -Uname * include search directories specified with -Idir * libraries specified with -lllib * library search directories specified with -Ldir * compile handled by 'cc' (or similar) executable with -c option: compiles .c to .o * link static library handled by 'ar' command (possibly with 'ranlib') * link shared library handled by 'cc -shared' """ import os, sys, re from distutils import sysconfig from distutils.dep_util import newer from distutils.ccompiler import \ CCompiler, gen_preprocess_options, gen_lib_options from distutils.errors import \ DistutilsExecError, CompileError, LibError, LinkError from distutils import log if sys.platform == 'darwin': import _osx_support # XXX Things not currently handled: # * optimization/debug/warning flags; we just use whatever's in Python's # Makefile and live with it. Is this adequate? If not, we might # have to have a bunch of subclasses GNUCCompiler, SGICCompiler, # SunCCompiler, and I suspect down that road lies madness. # * even if we don't know a warning flag from an optimization flag, # we need some way for outsiders to feed preprocessor/compiler/linker # flags in to us -- eg. a sysadmin might want to mandate certain flags # via a site config file, or a user might want to set something for # compiling this module distribution only via the setup.py command # line, whatever. As long as these options come from something on the # current system, they can be as system-dependent as they like, and we # should just happily stuff them into the preprocessor/compiler/linker # options and carry on. class UnixCCompiler(CCompiler): compiler_type = 'unix' # These are used by CCompiler in two places: the constructor sets # instance attributes 'preprocessor', 'compiler', etc. from them, and # 'set_executable()' allows any of these to be set. The defaults here # are pretty generic; they will probably have to be set by an outsider # (eg. using information discovered by the sysconfig about building # Python extensions). executables = {'preprocessor' : None, 'compiler' : ["cc"], 'compiler_so' : ["cc"], 'compiler_cxx' : ["cc"], 'linker_so' : ["cc", "-shared"], 'linker_exe' : ["cc"], 'archiver' : ["ar", "-cr"], 'ranlib' : None, } if sys.platform[:6] == "darwin": executables['ranlib'] = ["ranlib"] # Needed for the filename generation methods provided by the base # class, CCompiler. NB. whoever instantiates/uses a particular # UnixCCompiler instance should set 'shared_lib_ext' -- we set a # reasonable common default here, but it's not necessarily used on all # Unices! src_extensions = [".c",".C",".cc",".cxx",".cpp",".m"] obj_extension = ".o" static_lib_extension = ".a" shared_lib_extension = ".so" dylib_lib_extension = ".dylib" xcode_stub_lib_extension = ".tbd" static_lib_format = shared_lib_format = dylib_lib_format = "lib%s%s" xcode_stub_lib_format = dylib_lib_format if sys.platform == "cygwin": exe_extension = ".exe" def preprocess(self, source, output_file=None, macros=None, include_dirs=None, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None): fixed_args = self._fix_compile_args(None, macros, include_dirs) ignore, macros, include_dirs = fixed_args pp_opts = gen_preprocess_options(macros, include_dirs) pp_args = self.preprocessor + pp_opts if output_file: pp_args.extend(['-o', output_file]) if extra_preargs: pp_args[:0] = extra_preargs if extra_postargs: pp_args.extend(extra_postargs) pp_args.append(source) # We need to preprocess: either we're being forced to, or we're # generating output to stdout, or there's a target output file and # the source file is newer than the target (or the target doesn't # exist). if self.force or output_file is None or newer(source, output_file): if output_file: self.mkpath(os.path.dirname(output_file)) try: self.spawn(pp_args) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise CompileError(msg) def _compile(self, obj, src, ext, cc_args, extra_postargs, pp_opts): compiler_so = self.compiler_so if sys.platform == 'darwin': compiler_so = _osx_support.compiler_fixup(compiler_so, cc_args + extra_postargs) try: self.spawn(compiler_so + cc_args + [src, '-o', obj] + extra_postargs) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise CompileError(msg) def create_static_lib(self, objects, output_libname, output_dir=None, debug=0, target_lang=None): objects, output_dir = self._fix_object_args(objects, output_dir) output_filename = \ self.library_filename(output_libname, output_dir=output_dir) if self._need_link(objects, output_filename): self.mkpath(os.path.dirname(output_filename)) self.spawn(self.archiver + [output_filename] + objects + self.objects) # Not many Unices required ranlib anymore -- SunOS 4.x is, I # think the only major Unix that does. Maybe we need some # platform intelligence here to skip ranlib if it's not # needed -- or maybe Python's configure script took care of # it for us, hence the check for leading colon. if self.ranlib: try: self.spawn(self.ranlib + [output_filename]) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise LibError(msg) else: log.debug("skipping %s (up-to-date)", output_filename) def link(self, target_desc, objects, output_filename, output_dir=None, libraries=None, library_dirs=None, runtime_library_dirs=None, export_symbols=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, build_temp=None, target_lang=None): objects, output_dir = self._fix_object_args(objects, output_dir) fixed_args = self._fix_lib_args(libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs) libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs = fixed_args lib_opts = gen_lib_options(self, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs, libraries) if not isinstance(output_dir, (str, type(None))): raise TypeError("'output_dir' must be a string or None") if output_dir is not None: output_filename = os.path.join(output_dir, output_filename) if self._need_link(objects, output_filename): ld_args = (objects + self.objects + lib_opts + ['-o', output_filename]) if debug: ld_args[:0] = ['-g'] if extra_preargs: ld_args[:0] = extra_preargs if extra_postargs: ld_args.extend(extra_postargs) self.mkpath(os.path.dirname(output_filename)) try: if target_desc == CCompiler.EXECUTABLE: linker = self.linker_exe[:] else: linker = self.linker_so[:] if target_lang == "c++" and self.compiler_cxx: # skip over environment variable settings if /usr/bin/env # is used to set up the linker's environment. # This is needed on OSX. Note: this assumes that the # normal and C++ compiler have the same environment # settings. i = 0 if os.path.basename(linker[0]) == "env": i = 1 while '=' in linker[i]: i += 1 if os.path.basename(linker[i]) == 'ld_so_aix': # AIX platforms prefix the compiler with the ld_so_aix # script, so we need to adjust our linker index offset = 1 else: offset = 0 linker[i+offset] = self.compiler_cxx[i] if sys.platform == 'darwin': linker = _osx_support.compiler_fixup(linker, ld_args) self.spawn(linker + ld_args) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise LinkError(msg) else: log.debug("skipping %s (up-to-date)", output_filename) # -- Miscellaneous methods ----------------------------------------- # These are all used by the 'gen_lib_options() function, in # ccompiler.py. def library_dir_option(self, dir): return "-L" + dir def _is_gcc(self, compiler_name): return "gcc" in compiler_name or "g++" in compiler_name def runtime_library_dir_option(self, dir): # XXX Hackish, at the very least. See Python bug #445902: # http://sourceforge.net/tracker/index.php # ?func=detail&aid=445902&group_id=5470&atid=105470 # Linkers on different platforms need different options to # specify that directories need to be added to the list of # directories searched for dependencies when a dynamic library # is sought. GCC on GNU systems (Linux, FreeBSD, ...) has to # be told to pass the -R option through to the linker, whereas # other compilers and gcc on other systems just know this. # Other compilers may need something slightly different. At # this time, there's no way to determine this information from # the configuration data stored in the Python installation, so # we use this hack. compiler = os.path.basename(sysconfig.get_config_var("CC")) if sys.platform[:6] == "darwin": # MacOSX's linker doesn't understand the -R flag at all return "-L" + dir elif sys.platform[:7] == "freebsd": return "-Wl,-rpath=" + dir elif sys.platform[:5] == "hp-ux": if self._is_gcc(compiler): return ["-Wl,+s", "-L" + dir] return ["+s", "-L" + dir] else: if self._is_gcc(compiler): # gcc on non-GNU systems does not need -Wl, but can # use it anyway. Since distutils has always passed in # -Wl whenever gcc was used in the past it is probably # safest to keep doing so. if sysconfig.get_config_var("GNULD") == "yes": # GNU ld needs an extra option to get a RUNPATH # instead of just an RPATH. return "-Wl,--enable-new-dtags,-R" + dir else: return "-Wl,-R" + dir else: # No idea how --enable-new-dtags would be passed on to # ld if this system was using GNU ld. Don't know if a # system like this even exists. return "-R" + dir def library_option(self, lib): return "-l" + lib def find_library_file(self, dirs, lib, debug=0): shared_f = self.library_filename(lib, lib_type='shared') dylib_f = self.library_filename(lib, lib_type='dylib') xcode_stub_f = self.library_filename(lib, lib_type='xcode_stub') static_f = self.library_filename(lib, lib_type='static') if sys.platform == 'darwin': # On OSX users can specify an alternate SDK using # '-isysroot', calculate the SDK root if it is specified # (and use it further on) # # Note that, as of Xcode 7, Apple SDKs may contain textual stub # libraries with .tbd extensions rather than the normal .dylib # shared libraries installed in /. The Apple compiler tool # chain handles this transparently but it can cause problems # for programs that are being built with an SDK and searching # for specific libraries. Callers of find_library_file need to # keep in mind that the base filename of the returned SDK library # file might have a different extension from that of the library # file installed on the running system, for example: # /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/ # MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.11.sdk/ # usr/lib/libedit.tbd # vs # /usr/lib/libedit.dylib cflags = sysconfig.get_config_var('CFLAGS') m = re.search(r'-isysroot\s*(\S+)', cflags) if m is None: sysroot = '/' else: sysroot = m.group(1) for dir in dirs: shared = os.path.join(dir, shared_f) dylib = os.path.join(dir, dylib_f) static = os.path.join(dir, static_f) xcode_stub = os.path.join(dir, xcode_stub_f) if sys.platform == 'darwin' and ( dir.startswith('/System/') or ( dir.startswith('/usr/') and not dir.startswith('/usr/local/'))): shared = os.path.join(sysroot, dir[1:], shared_f) dylib = os.path.join(sysroot, dir[1:], dylib_f) static = os.path.join(sysroot, dir[1:], static_f) xcode_stub = os.path.join(sysroot, dir[1:], xcode_stub_f) # We're second-guessing the linker here, with not much hard # data to go on: GCC seems to prefer the shared library, so I'm # assuming that *all* Unix C compilers do. And of course I'm # ignoring even GCC's "-static" option. So sue me. if os.path.exists(dylib): return dylib elif os.path.exists(xcode_stub): return xcode_stub elif os.path.exists(shared): return shared elif os.path.exists(static): return static # Oops, didn't find it in *any* of 'dirs' return None
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/filelist.py
"""distutils.filelist Provides the FileList class, used for poking about the filesystem and building lists of files. """ import os, re import fnmatch import functools from distutils.util import convert_path from distutils.errors import DistutilsTemplateError, DistutilsInternalError from distutils import log 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=None, debug_print=None): # ignore argument to FileList, but keep them for backwards # compatibility self.allfiles = None self.files = [] def set_allfiles(self, allfiles): self.allfiles = allfiles def findall(self, dir=os.curdir): self.allfiles = findall(dir) def debug_print(self, msg): """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) # -- List-like methods --------------------------------------------- def append(self, item): self.files.append(item) def extend(self, items): self.files.extend(items) def sort(self): # 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): # 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( "'%s' expects <pattern1> <pattern2> ..." % action) patterns = [convert_path(w) for w in words[1:]] elif action in ('recursive-include', 'recursive-exclude'): if len(words) < 3: raise DistutilsTemplateError( "'%s' expects <dir> <pattern1> <pattern2> ..." % action) 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( "'%s' expects a single <dir_pattern>" % action) dir_pattern = convert_path(words[1]) else: raise DistutilsTemplateError("unknown action '%s'" % action) return (action, patterns, dir, dir_pattern) def process_template_line(self, line): # 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=1): log.warn("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=1): log.warn(("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=0): log.warn(("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=0): log.warn(("warning: no previously-included files matching " "'%s' found anywhere in distribution"), pattern) elif action == 'recursive-include': self.debug_print("recursive-include %s %s" % (dir, ' '.join(patterns))) for pattern in patterns: if not self.include_pattern(pattern, prefix=dir): log.warn(("warning: no files found matching '%s' " "under directory '%s'"), pattern, dir) elif action == 'recursive-exclude': self.debug_print("recursive-exclude %s %s" % (dir, ' '.join(patterns))) for pattern in patterns: if not self.exclude_pattern(pattern, prefix=dir): log.warn(("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.warn("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.warn(("no previously-included directories found " "matching '%s'"), dir_pattern) else: raise DistutilsInternalError( "this cannot happen: invalid action '%s'" % action) # -- Filtering/selection methods ----------------------------------- def include_pattern(self, pattern, anchor=1, prefix=None, is_regex=0): """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("include_pattern: applying regex r'%s'" % 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 def exclude_pattern (self, pattern, anchor=1, prefix=None, is_regex=0): """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("exclude_pattern: applying regex r'%s'" % 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' """ results = ( os.path.join(base, file) for base, dirs, files in os.walk(path, followlinks=True) for file in files ) return filter(os.path.isfile, results) def findall(dir=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 = r'\1[^%s]' % sep pattern_re = re.sub(r'((?<!\\)(\\\\)*)\.', escaped, pattern_re) return pattern_re def translate_pattern(pattern, anchor=1, prefix=None, is_regex=0): """Translate a shell-like wildcard pattern to a compiled regular expression. Return the compiled regex. If 'is_regex' true, then 'pattern' is directly compiled to a regex (if it's a string) or just returned as-is (assumes it's a regex object). """ if is_regex: if isinstance(pattern, str): return re.compile(pattern) else: return pattern # ditch start and end characters start, _, end = glob_to_re('_').partition('_') if pattern: pattern_re = glob_to_re(pattern) assert pattern_re.startswith(start) and pattern_re.endswith(end) else: pattern_re = '' if prefix is not None: prefix_re = glob_to_re(prefix) assert prefix_re.startswith(start) and prefix_re.endswith(end) prefix_re = prefix_re[len(start): len(prefix_re) - len(end)] sep = os.sep if os.sep == '\\': sep = r'\\' pattern_re = pattern_re[len(start): len(pattern_re) - len(end)] pattern_re = r'%s\A%s%s.*%s%s' % (start, prefix_re, sep, pattern_re, end) else: # no prefix -- respect anchor flag if anchor: pattern_re = r'%s\A%s' % (start, pattern_re[len(start):]) return re.compile(pattern_re)
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/ccompiler.py
"""distutils.ccompiler Contains CCompiler, an abstract base class that defines the interface for the Distutils compiler abstraction model.""" import sys, os, re from distutils.errors import * from distutils.spawn import spawn from distutils.file_util import move_file from distutils.dir_util import mkpath from distutils.dep_util import newer_group from distutils.util import split_quoted, execute from distutils import log class CCompiler: """Abstract base class to define the interface that must be implemented by real compiler classes. Also has some utility methods used by several compiler classes. The basic idea behind a compiler abstraction class is that each instance can be used for all the compile/link steps in building a single project. Thus, attributes common to all of those compile and link steps -- include directories, macros to define, libraries to link against, etc. -- are attributes of the compiler instance. To allow for variability in how individual files are treated, most of those attributes may be varied on a per-compilation or per-link basis. """ # 'compiler_type' is a class attribute that identifies this class. It # keeps code that wants to know what kind of compiler it's dealing with # from having to import all possible compiler classes just to do an # 'isinstance'. In concrete CCompiler subclasses, 'compiler_type' # should really, really be one of the keys of the 'compiler_class' # dictionary (see below -- used by the 'new_compiler()' factory # function) -- authors of new compiler interface classes are # responsible for updating 'compiler_class'! compiler_type = None # XXX things not handled by this compiler abstraction model: # * client can't provide additional options for a compiler, # e.g. warning, optimization, debugging flags. Perhaps this # should be the domain of concrete compiler abstraction classes # (UnixCCompiler, MSVCCompiler, etc.) -- or perhaps the base # class should have methods for the common ones. # * can't completely override the include or library searchg # path, ie. no "cc -I -Idir1 -Idir2" or "cc -L -Ldir1 -Ldir2". # I'm not sure how widely supported this is even by Unix # compilers, much less on other platforms. And I'm even less # sure how useful it is; maybe for cross-compiling, but # support for that is a ways off. (And anyways, cross # compilers probably have a dedicated binary with the # right paths compiled in. I hope.) # * can't do really freaky things with the library list/library # dirs, e.g. "-Ldir1 -lfoo -Ldir2 -lfoo" to link against # different versions of libfoo.a in different locations. I # think this is useless without the ability to null out the # library search path anyways. # Subclasses that rely on the standard filename generation methods # implemented below should override these; see the comment near # those methods ('object_filenames()' et. al.) for details: src_extensions = None # list of strings obj_extension = None # string static_lib_extension = None shared_lib_extension = None # string static_lib_format = None # format string shared_lib_format = None # prob. same as static_lib_format exe_extension = None # string # Default language settings. language_map is used to detect a source # file or Extension target language, checking source filenames. # language_order is used to detect the language precedence, when deciding # what language to use when mixing source types. For example, if some # extension has two files with ".c" extension, and one with ".cpp", it # is still linked as c++. language_map = {".c" : "c", ".cc" : "c++", ".cpp" : "c++", ".cxx" : "c++", ".m" : "objc", } language_order = ["c++", "objc", "c"] def __init__(self, verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0): self.dry_run = dry_run self.force = force self.verbose = verbose # 'output_dir': a common output directory for object, library, # shared object, and shared library files self.output_dir = None # 'macros': a list of macro definitions (or undefinitions). A # macro definition is a 2-tuple (name, value), where the value is # either a string or None (no explicit value). A macro # undefinition is a 1-tuple (name,). self.macros = [] # 'include_dirs': a list of directories to search for include files self.include_dirs = [] # 'libraries': a list of libraries to include in any link # (library names, not filenames: eg. "foo" not "libfoo.a") self.libraries = [] # 'library_dirs': a list of directories to search for libraries self.library_dirs = [] # 'runtime_library_dirs': a list of directories to search for # shared libraries/objects at runtime self.runtime_library_dirs = [] # 'objects': a list of object files (or similar, such as explicitly # named library files) to include on any link self.objects = [] for key in self.executables.keys(): self.set_executable(key, self.executables[key]) def set_executables(self, **kwargs): """Define the executables (and options for them) that will be run to perform the various stages of compilation. The exact set of executables that may be specified here depends on the compiler class (via the 'executables' class attribute), but most will have: compiler the C/C++ compiler linker_so linker used to create shared objects and libraries linker_exe linker used to create binary executables archiver static library creator On platforms with a command-line (Unix, DOS/Windows), each of these is a string that will be split into executable name and (optional) list of arguments. (Splitting the string is done similarly to how Unix shells operate: words are delimited by spaces, but quotes and backslashes can override this. See 'distutils.util.split_quoted()'.) """ # Note that some CCompiler implementation classes will define class # attributes 'cpp', 'cc', etc. with hard-coded executable names; # this is appropriate when a compiler class is for exactly one # compiler/OS combination (eg. MSVCCompiler). Other compiler # classes (UnixCCompiler, in particular) are driven by information # discovered at run-time, since there are many different ways to do # basically the same things with Unix C compilers. for key in kwargs: if key not in self.executables: raise ValueError("unknown executable '%s' for class %s" % (key, self.__class__.__name__)) self.set_executable(key, kwargs[key]) def set_executable(self, key, value): if isinstance(value, str): setattr(self, key, split_quoted(value)) else: setattr(self, key, value) def _find_macro(self, name): i = 0 for defn in self.macros: if defn[0] == name: return i i += 1 return None def _check_macro_definitions(self, definitions): """Ensures that every element of 'definitions' is a valid macro definition, ie. either (name,value) 2-tuple or a (name,) tuple. Do nothing if all definitions are OK, raise TypeError otherwise. """ for defn in definitions: if not (isinstance(defn, tuple) and (len(defn) in (1, 2) and (isinstance (defn[1], str) or defn[1] is None)) and isinstance (defn[0], str)): raise TypeError(("invalid macro definition '%s': " % defn) + \ "must be tuple (string,), (string, string), or " + \ "(string, None)") # -- Bookkeeping methods ------------------------------------------- def define_macro(self, name, value=None): """Define a preprocessor macro for all compilations driven by this compiler object. The optional parameter 'value' should be a string; if it is not supplied, then the macro will be defined without an explicit value and the exact outcome depends on the compiler used (XXX true? does ANSI say anything about this?) """ # Delete from the list of macro definitions/undefinitions if # already there (so that this one will take precedence). i = self._find_macro (name) if i is not None: del self.macros[i] self.macros.append((name, value)) def undefine_macro(self, name): """Undefine a preprocessor macro for all compilations driven by this compiler object. If the same macro is defined by 'define_macro()' and undefined by 'undefine_macro()' the last call takes precedence (including multiple redefinitions or undefinitions). If the macro is redefined/undefined on a per-compilation basis (ie. in the call to 'compile()'), then that takes precedence. """ # Delete from the list of macro definitions/undefinitions if # already there (so that this one will take precedence). i = self._find_macro (name) if i is not None: del self.macros[i] undefn = (name,) self.macros.append(undefn) def add_include_dir(self, dir): """Add 'dir' to the list of directories that will be searched for header files. The compiler is instructed to search directories in the order in which they are supplied by successive calls to 'add_include_dir()'. """ self.include_dirs.append(dir) def set_include_dirs(self, dirs): """Set the list of directories that will be searched to 'dirs' (a list of strings). Overrides any preceding calls to 'add_include_dir()'; subsequence calls to 'add_include_dir()' add to the list passed to 'set_include_dirs()'. This does not affect any list of standard include directories that the compiler may search by default. """ self.include_dirs = dirs[:] def add_library(self, libname): """Add 'libname' to the list of libraries that will be included in all links driven by this compiler object. Note that 'libname' should *not* be the name of a file containing a library, but the name of the library itself: the actual filename will be inferred by the linker, the compiler, or the compiler class (depending on the platform). The linker will be instructed to link against libraries in the order they were supplied to 'add_library()' and/or 'set_libraries()'. It is perfectly valid to duplicate library names; the linker will be instructed to link against libraries as many times as they are mentioned. """ self.libraries.append(libname) def set_libraries(self, libnames): """Set the list of libraries to be included in all links driven by this compiler object to 'libnames' (a list of strings). This does not affect any standard system libraries that the linker may include by default. """ self.libraries = libnames[:] def add_library_dir(self, dir): """Add 'dir' to the list of directories that will be searched for libraries specified to 'add_library()' and 'set_libraries()'. The linker will be instructed to search for libraries in the order they are supplied to 'add_library_dir()' and/or 'set_library_dirs()'. """ self.library_dirs.append(dir) def set_library_dirs(self, dirs): """Set the list of library search directories to 'dirs' (a list of strings). This does not affect any standard library search path that the linker may search by default. """ self.library_dirs = dirs[:] def add_runtime_library_dir(self, dir): """Add 'dir' to the list of directories that will be searched for shared libraries at runtime. """ self.runtime_library_dirs.append(dir) def set_runtime_library_dirs(self, dirs): """Set the list of directories to search for shared libraries at runtime to 'dirs' (a list of strings). This does not affect any standard search path that the runtime linker may search by default. """ self.runtime_library_dirs = dirs[:] def add_link_object(self, object): """Add 'object' to the list of object files (or analogues, such as explicitly named library files or the output of "resource compilers") to be included in every link driven by this compiler object. """ self.objects.append(object) def set_link_objects(self, objects): """Set the list of object files (or analogues) to be included in every link to 'objects'. This does not affect any standard object files that the linker may include by default (such as system libraries). """ self.objects = objects[:] # -- Private utility methods -------------------------------------- # (here for the convenience of subclasses) # Helper method to prep compiler in subclass compile() methods def _setup_compile(self, outdir, macros, incdirs, sources, depends, extra): """Process arguments and decide which source files to compile.""" if outdir is None: outdir = self.output_dir elif not isinstance(outdir, str): raise TypeError("'output_dir' must be a string or None") if macros is None: macros = self.macros elif isinstance(macros, list): macros = macros + (self.macros or []) else: raise TypeError("'macros' (if supplied) must be a list of tuples") if incdirs is None: incdirs = self.include_dirs elif isinstance(incdirs, (list, tuple)): incdirs = list(incdirs) + (self.include_dirs or []) else: raise TypeError( "'include_dirs' (if supplied) must be a list of strings") if extra is None: extra = [] # Get the list of expected output (object) files objects = self.object_filenames(sources, strip_dir=0, output_dir=outdir) assert len(objects) == len(sources) pp_opts = gen_preprocess_options(macros, incdirs) build = {} for i in range(len(sources)): src = sources[i] obj = objects[i] ext = os.path.splitext(src)[1] self.mkpath(os.path.dirname(obj)) build[obj] = (src, ext) return macros, objects, extra, pp_opts, build def _get_cc_args(self, pp_opts, debug, before): # works for unixccompiler, cygwinccompiler cc_args = pp_opts + ['-c'] if debug: cc_args[:0] = ['-g'] if before: cc_args[:0] = before return cc_args def _fix_compile_args(self, output_dir, macros, include_dirs): """Typecheck and fix-up some of the arguments to the 'compile()' method, and return fixed-up values. Specifically: if 'output_dir' is None, replaces it with 'self.output_dir'; ensures that 'macros' is a list, and augments it with 'self.macros'; ensures that 'include_dirs' is a list, and augments it with 'self.include_dirs'. Guarantees that the returned values are of the correct type, i.e. for 'output_dir' either string or None, and for 'macros' and 'include_dirs' either list or None. """ if output_dir is None: output_dir = self.output_dir elif not isinstance(output_dir, str): raise TypeError("'output_dir' must be a string or None") if macros is None: macros = self.macros elif isinstance(macros, list): macros = macros + (self.macros or []) else: raise TypeError("'macros' (if supplied) must be a list of tuples") if include_dirs is None: include_dirs = self.include_dirs elif isinstance(include_dirs, (list, tuple)): include_dirs = list(include_dirs) + (self.include_dirs or []) else: raise TypeError( "'include_dirs' (if supplied) must be a list of strings") return output_dir, macros, include_dirs def _prep_compile(self, sources, output_dir, depends=None): """Decide which souce files must be recompiled. Determine the list of object files corresponding to 'sources', and figure out which ones really need to be recompiled. Return a list of all object files and a dictionary telling which source files can be skipped. """ # Get the list of expected output (object) files objects = self.object_filenames(sources, output_dir=output_dir) assert len(objects) == len(sources) # Return an empty dict for the "which source files can be skipped" # return value to preserve API compatibility. return objects, {} def _fix_object_args(self, objects, output_dir): """Typecheck and fix up some arguments supplied to various methods. Specifically: ensure that 'objects' is a list; if output_dir is None, replace with self.output_dir. Return fixed versions of 'objects' and 'output_dir'. """ if not isinstance(objects, (list, tuple)): raise TypeError("'objects' must be a list or tuple of strings") objects = list(objects) if output_dir is None: output_dir = self.output_dir elif not isinstance(output_dir, str): raise TypeError("'output_dir' must be a string or None") return (objects, output_dir) def _fix_lib_args(self, libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs): """Typecheck and fix up some of the arguments supplied to the 'link_*' methods. Specifically: ensure that all arguments are lists, and augment them with their permanent versions (eg. 'self.libraries' augments 'libraries'). Return a tuple with fixed versions of all arguments. """ if libraries is None: libraries = self.libraries elif isinstance(libraries, (list, tuple)): libraries = list (libraries) + (self.libraries or []) else: raise TypeError( "'libraries' (if supplied) must be a list of strings") if library_dirs is None: library_dirs = self.library_dirs elif isinstance(library_dirs, (list, tuple)): library_dirs = list (library_dirs) + (self.library_dirs or []) else: raise TypeError( "'library_dirs' (if supplied) must be a list of strings") if runtime_library_dirs is None: runtime_library_dirs = self.runtime_library_dirs elif isinstance(runtime_library_dirs, (list, tuple)): runtime_library_dirs = (list(runtime_library_dirs) + (self.runtime_library_dirs or [])) else: raise TypeError("'runtime_library_dirs' (if supplied) " "must be a list of strings") return (libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs) def _need_link(self, objects, output_file): """Return true if we need to relink the files listed in 'objects' to recreate 'output_file'. """ if self.force: return True else: if self.dry_run: newer = newer_group (objects, output_file, missing='newer') else: newer = newer_group (objects, output_file) return newer def detect_language(self, sources): """Detect the language of a given file, or list of files. Uses language_map, and language_order to do the job. """ if not isinstance(sources, list): sources = [sources] lang = None index = len(self.language_order) for source in sources: base, ext = os.path.splitext(source) extlang = self.language_map.get(ext) try: extindex = self.language_order.index(extlang) if extindex < index: lang = extlang index = extindex except ValueError: pass return lang # -- Worker methods ------------------------------------------------ # (must be implemented by subclasses) def preprocess(self, source, output_file=None, macros=None, include_dirs=None, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None): """Preprocess a single C/C++ source file, named in 'source'. Output will be written to file named 'output_file', or stdout if 'output_file' not supplied. 'macros' is a list of macro definitions as for 'compile()', which will augment the macros set with 'define_macro()' and 'undefine_macro()'. 'include_dirs' is a list of directory names that will be added to the default list. Raises PreprocessError on failure. """ pass def compile(self, sources, output_dir=None, macros=None, include_dirs=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, depends=None): """Compile one or more source files. 'sources' must be a list of filenames, most likely C/C++ files, but in reality anything that can be handled by a particular compiler and compiler class (eg. MSVCCompiler can handle resource files in 'sources'). Return a list of object filenames, one per source filename in 'sources'. Depending on the implementation, not all source files will necessarily be compiled, but all corresponding object filenames will be returned. If 'output_dir' is given, object files will be put under it, while retaining their original path component. That is, "foo/bar.c" normally compiles to "foo/bar.o" (for a Unix implementation); if 'output_dir' is "build", then it would compile to "build/foo/bar.o". 'macros', if given, must be a list of macro definitions. A macro definition is either a (name, value) 2-tuple or a (name,) 1-tuple. The former defines a macro; if the value is None, the macro is defined without an explicit value. The 1-tuple case undefines a macro. Later definitions/redefinitions/ undefinitions take precedence. 'include_dirs', if given, must be a list of strings, the directories to add to the default include file search path for this compilation only. 'debug' is a boolean; if true, the compiler will be instructed to output debug symbols in (or alongside) the object file(s). 'extra_preargs' and 'extra_postargs' are implementation- dependent. On platforms that have the notion of a command-line (e.g. Unix, DOS/Windows), they are most likely lists of strings: extra command-line arguments to prepend/append to the compiler command line. On other platforms, consult the implementation class documentation. In any event, they are intended as an escape hatch for those occasions when the abstract compiler framework doesn't cut the mustard. 'depends', if given, is a list of filenames that all targets depend on. If a source file is older than any file in depends, then the source file will be recompiled. This supports dependency tracking, but only at a coarse granularity. Raises CompileError on failure. """ # A concrete compiler class can either override this method # entirely or implement _compile(). macros, objects, extra_postargs, pp_opts, build = \ self._setup_compile(output_dir, macros, include_dirs, sources, depends, extra_postargs) cc_args = self._get_cc_args(pp_opts, debug, extra_preargs) for obj in objects: try: src, ext = build[obj] except KeyError: continue self._compile(obj, src, ext, cc_args, extra_postargs, pp_opts) # Return *all* object filenames, not just the ones we just built. return objects def _compile(self, obj, src, ext, cc_args, extra_postargs, pp_opts): """Compile 'src' to product 'obj'.""" # A concrete compiler class that does not override compile() # should implement _compile(). pass def create_static_lib(self, objects, output_libname, output_dir=None, debug=0, target_lang=None): """Link a bunch of stuff together to create a static library file. The "bunch of stuff" consists of the list of object files supplied as 'objects', the extra object files supplied to 'add_link_object()' and/or 'set_link_objects()', the libraries supplied to 'add_library()' and/or 'set_libraries()', and the libraries supplied as 'libraries' (if any). 'output_libname' should be a library name, not a filename; the filename will be inferred from the library name. 'output_dir' is the directory where the library file will be put. 'debug' is a boolean; if true, debugging information will be included in the library (note that on most platforms, it is the compile step where this matters: the 'debug' flag is included here just for consistency). 'target_lang' is the target language for which the given objects are being compiled. This allows specific linkage time treatment of certain languages. Raises LibError on failure. """ pass # values for target_desc parameter in link() SHARED_OBJECT = "shared_object" SHARED_LIBRARY = "shared_library" EXECUTABLE = "executable" def link(self, target_desc, objects, output_filename, output_dir=None, libraries=None, library_dirs=None, runtime_library_dirs=None, export_symbols=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, build_temp=None, target_lang=None): """Link a bunch of stuff together to create an executable or shared library file. The "bunch of stuff" consists of the list of object files supplied as 'objects'. 'output_filename' should be a filename. If 'output_dir' is supplied, 'output_filename' is relative to it (i.e. 'output_filename' can provide directory components if needed). 'libraries' is a list of libraries to link against. These are library names, not filenames, since they're translated into filenames in a platform-specific way (eg. "foo" becomes "libfoo.a" on Unix and "foo.lib" on DOS/Windows). However, they can include a directory component, which means the linker will look in that specific directory rather than searching all the normal locations. 'library_dirs', if supplied, should be a list of directories to search for libraries that were specified as bare library names (ie. no directory component). These are on top of the system default and those supplied to 'add_library_dir()' and/or 'set_library_dirs()'. 'runtime_library_dirs' is a list of directories that will be embedded into the shared library and used to search for other shared libraries that *it* depends on at run-time. (This may only be relevant on Unix.) 'export_symbols' is a list of symbols that the shared library will export. (This appears to be relevant only on Windows.) 'debug' is as for 'compile()' and 'create_static_lib()', with the slight distinction that it actually matters on most platforms (as opposed to 'create_static_lib()', which includes a 'debug' flag mostly for form's sake). 'extra_preargs' and 'extra_postargs' are as for 'compile()' (except of course that they supply command-line arguments for the particular linker being used). 'target_lang' is the target language for which the given objects are being compiled. This allows specific linkage time treatment of certain languages. Raises LinkError on failure. """ raise NotImplementedError # Old 'link_*()' methods, rewritten to use the new 'link()' method. def link_shared_lib(self, objects, output_libname, output_dir=None, libraries=None, library_dirs=None, runtime_library_dirs=None, export_symbols=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, build_temp=None, target_lang=None): self.link(CCompiler.SHARED_LIBRARY, objects, self.library_filename(output_libname, lib_type='shared'), output_dir, libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs, export_symbols, debug, extra_preargs, extra_postargs, build_temp, target_lang) def link_shared_object(self, objects, output_filename, output_dir=None, libraries=None, library_dirs=None, runtime_library_dirs=None, export_symbols=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, build_temp=None, target_lang=None): self.link(CCompiler.SHARED_OBJECT, objects, output_filename, output_dir, libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs, export_symbols, debug, extra_preargs, extra_postargs, build_temp, target_lang) def link_executable(self, objects, output_progname, output_dir=None, libraries=None, library_dirs=None, runtime_library_dirs=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, target_lang=None): self.link(CCompiler.EXECUTABLE, objects, self.executable_filename(output_progname), output_dir, libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs, None, debug, extra_preargs, extra_postargs, None, target_lang) # -- Miscellaneous methods ----------------------------------------- # These are all used by the 'gen_lib_options() function; there is # no appropriate default implementation so subclasses should # implement all of these. def library_dir_option(self, dir): """Return the compiler option to add 'dir' to the list of directories searched for libraries. """ raise NotImplementedError def runtime_library_dir_option(self, dir): """Return the compiler option to add 'dir' to the list of directories searched for runtime libraries. """ raise NotImplementedError def library_option(self, lib): """Return the compiler option to add 'lib' to the list of libraries linked into the shared library or executable. """ raise NotImplementedError def has_function(self, funcname, includes=None, include_dirs=None, libraries=None, library_dirs=None): """Return a boolean indicating whether funcname is supported on the current platform. The optional arguments can be used to augment the compilation environment. """ # this can't be included at module scope because it tries to # import math which might not be available at that point - maybe # the necessary logic should just be inlined? import tempfile if includes is None: includes = [] if include_dirs is None: include_dirs = [] if libraries is None: libraries = [] if library_dirs is None: library_dirs = [] fd, fname = tempfile.mkstemp(".c", funcname, text=True) f = os.fdopen(fd, "w") try: for incl in includes: f.write("""#include "%s"\n""" % incl) f.write("""\ int main (int argc, char **argv) { %s(); return 0; } """ % funcname) finally: f.close() try: objects = self.compile([fname], include_dirs=include_dirs) except CompileError: return False try: self.link_executable(objects, "a.out", libraries=libraries, library_dirs=library_dirs) except (LinkError, TypeError): return False return True def find_library_file (self, dirs, lib, debug=0): """Search the specified list of directories for a static or shared library file 'lib' and return the full path to that file. If 'debug' true, look for a debugging version (if that makes sense on the current platform). Return None if 'lib' wasn't found in any of the specified directories. """ raise NotImplementedError # -- Filename generation methods ----------------------------------- # The default implementation of the filename generating methods are # prejudiced towards the Unix/DOS/Windows view of the world: # * object files are named by replacing the source file extension # (eg. .c/.cpp -> .o/.obj) # * library files (shared or static) are named by plugging the # library name and extension into a format string, eg. # "lib%s.%s" % (lib_name, ".a") for Unix static libraries # * executables are named by appending an extension (possibly # empty) to the program name: eg. progname + ".exe" for # Windows # # To reduce redundant code, these methods expect to find # several attributes in the current object (presumably defined # as class attributes): # * src_extensions - # list of C/C++ source file extensions, eg. ['.c', '.cpp'] # * obj_extension - # object file extension, eg. '.o' or '.obj' # * static_lib_extension - # extension for static library files, eg. '.a' or '.lib' # * shared_lib_extension - # extension for shared library/object files, eg. '.so', '.dll' # * static_lib_format - # format string for generating static library filenames, # eg. 'lib%s.%s' or '%s.%s' # * shared_lib_format # format string for generating shared library filenames # (probably same as static_lib_format, since the extension # is one of the intended parameters to the format string) # * exe_extension - # extension for executable files, eg. '' or '.exe' def object_filenames(self, source_filenames, strip_dir=0, output_dir=''): if output_dir is None: output_dir = '' obj_names = [] for src_name in source_filenames: base, ext = os.path.splitext(src_name) base = os.path.splitdrive(base)[1] # Chop off the drive base = base[os.path.isabs(base):] # If abs, chop off leading / if ext not in self.src_extensions: raise UnknownFileError( "unknown file type '%s' (from '%s')" % (ext, src_name)) if strip_dir: base = os.path.basename(base) obj_names.append(os.path.join(output_dir, base + self.obj_extension)) return obj_names def shared_object_filename(self, basename, strip_dir=0, output_dir=''): assert output_dir is not None if strip_dir: basename = os.path.basename(basename) return os.path.join(output_dir, basename + self.shared_lib_extension) def executable_filename(self, basename, strip_dir=0, output_dir=''): assert output_dir is not None if strip_dir: basename = os.path.basename(basename) return os.path.join(output_dir, basename + (self.exe_extension or '')) def library_filename(self, libname, lib_type='static', # or 'shared' strip_dir=0, output_dir=''): assert output_dir is not None if lib_type not in ("static", "shared", "dylib", "xcode_stub"): raise ValueError( "'lib_type' must be \"static\", \"shared\", \"dylib\", or \"xcode_stub\"") fmt = getattr(self, lib_type + "_lib_format") ext = getattr(self, lib_type + "_lib_extension") dir, base = os.path.split(libname) filename = fmt % (base, ext) if strip_dir: dir = '' return os.path.join(output_dir, dir, filename) # -- Utility methods ----------------------------------------------- def announce(self, msg, level=1): log.debug(msg) def debug_print(self, msg): from distutils.debug import DEBUG if DEBUG: print(msg) def warn(self, msg): sys.stderr.write("warning: %s\n" % msg) def execute(self, func, args, msg=None, level=1): execute(func, args, msg, self.dry_run) def spawn(self, cmd, **kwargs): spawn(cmd, dry_run=self.dry_run, **kwargs) def move_file(self, src, dst): return move_file(src, dst, dry_run=self.dry_run) def mkpath (self, name, mode=0o777): mkpath(name, mode, dry_run=self.dry_run) # Map a sys.platform/os.name ('posix', 'nt') to the default compiler # type for that platform. Keys are interpreted as re match # patterns. Order is important; platform mappings are preferred over # OS names. _default_compilers = ( # Platform string mappings # on a cygwin built python we can use gcc like an ordinary UNIXish # compiler ('cygwin.*', 'unix'), # OS name mappings ('posix', 'unix'), ('nt', 'msvc'), ) def get_default_compiler(osname=None, platform=None): """Determine the default compiler to use for the given platform. osname should be one of the standard Python OS names (i.e. the ones returned by os.name) and platform the common value returned by sys.platform for the platform in question. The default values are os.name and sys.platform in case the parameters are not given. """ if osname is None: osname = os.name if platform is None: platform = sys.platform for pattern, compiler in _default_compilers: if re.match(pattern, platform) is not None or \ re.match(pattern, osname) is not None: return compiler # Default to Unix compiler return 'unix' # Map compiler types to (module_name, class_name) pairs -- ie. where to # find the code that implements an interface to this compiler. (The module # is assumed to be in the 'distutils' package.) compiler_class = { 'unix': ('unixccompiler', 'UnixCCompiler', "standard UNIX-style compiler"), 'msvc': ('_msvccompiler', 'MSVCCompiler', "Microsoft Visual C++"), 'cygwin': ('cygwinccompiler', 'CygwinCCompiler', "Cygwin port of GNU C Compiler for Win32"), 'mingw32': ('cygwinccompiler', 'Mingw32CCompiler', "Mingw32 port of GNU C Compiler for Win32"), 'bcpp': ('bcppcompiler', 'BCPPCompiler', "Borland C++ Compiler"), } def show_compilers(): """Print list of available compilers (used by the "--help-compiler" options to "build", "build_ext", "build_clib"). """ # XXX this "knows" that the compiler option it's describing is # "--compiler", which just happens to be the case for the three # commands that use it. from distutils.fancy_getopt import FancyGetopt compilers = [] for compiler in compiler_class.keys(): compilers.append(("compiler="+compiler, None, compiler_class[compiler][2])) compilers.sort() pretty_printer = FancyGetopt(compilers) pretty_printer.print_help("List of available compilers:") def new_compiler(plat=None, compiler=None, verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0): """Generate an instance of some CCompiler subclass for the supplied platform/compiler combination. 'plat' defaults to 'os.name' (eg. 'posix', 'nt'), and 'compiler' defaults to the default compiler for that platform. Currently only 'posix' and 'nt' are supported, and the default compilers are "traditional Unix interface" (UnixCCompiler class) and Visual C++ (MSVCCompiler class). Note that it's perfectly possible to ask for a Unix compiler object under Windows, and a Microsoft compiler object under Unix -- if you supply a value for 'compiler', 'plat' is ignored. """ if plat is None: plat = os.name try: if compiler is None: compiler = get_default_compiler(plat) (module_name, class_name, long_description) = compiler_class[compiler] except KeyError: msg = "don't know how to compile C/C++ code on platform '%s'" % plat if compiler is not None: msg = msg + " with '%s' compiler" % compiler raise DistutilsPlatformError(msg) try: module_name = "distutils." + module_name __import__ (module_name) module = sys.modules[module_name] klass = vars(module)[class_name] except ImportError: raise DistutilsModuleError( "can't compile C/C++ code: unable to load module '%s'" % \ module_name) except KeyError: raise DistutilsModuleError( "can't compile C/C++ code: unable to find class '%s' " "in module '%s'" % (class_name, module_name)) # XXX The None is necessary to preserve backwards compatibility # with classes that expect verbose to be the first positional # argument. return klass(None, dry_run, force) def gen_preprocess_options(macros, include_dirs): """Generate C pre-processor options (-D, -U, -I) as used by at least two types of compilers: the typical Unix compiler and Visual C++. 'macros' is the usual thing, a list of 1- or 2-tuples, where (name,) means undefine (-U) macro 'name', and (name,value) means define (-D) macro 'name' to 'value'. 'include_dirs' is just a list of directory names to be added to the header file search path (-I). Returns a list of command-line options suitable for either Unix compilers or Visual C++. """ # XXX it would be nice (mainly aesthetic, and so we don't generate # stupid-looking command lines) to go over 'macros' and eliminate # redundant definitions/undefinitions (ie. ensure that only the # latest mention of a particular macro winds up on the command # line). I don't think it's essential, though, since most (all?) # Unix C compilers only pay attention to the latest -D or -U # mention of a macro on their command line. Similar situation for # 'include_dirs'. I'm punting on both for now. Anyways, weeding out # redundancies like this should probably be the province of # CCompiler, since the data structures used are inherited from it # and therefore common to all CCompiler classes. pp_opts = [] for macro in macros: if not (isinstance(macro, tuple) and 1 <= len(macro) <= 2): raise TypeError( "bad macro definition '%s': " "each element of 'macros' list must be a 1- or 2-tuple" % macro) if len(macro) == 1: # undefine this macro pp_opts.append("-U%s" % macro[0]) elif len(macro) == 2: if macro[1] is None: # define with no explicit value pp_opts.append("-D%s" % macro[0]) else: # XXX *don't* need to be clever about quoting the # macro value here, because we're going to avoid the # shell at all costs when we spawn the command! pp_opts.append("-D%s=%s" % macro) for dir in include_dirs: pp_opts.append("-I%s" % dir) return pp_opts def gen_lib_options (compiler, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs, libraries): """Generate linker options for searching library directories and linking with specific libraries. 'libraries' and 'library_dirs' are, respectively, lists of library names (not filenames!) and search directories. Returns a list of command-line options suitable for use with some compiler (depending on the two format strings passed in). """ lib_opts = [] for dir in library_dirs: lib_opts.append(compiler.library_dir_option(dir)) for dir in runtime_library_dirs: opt = compiler.runtime_library_dir_option(dir) if isinstance(opt, list): lib_opts = lib_opts + opt else: lib_opts.append(opt) # XXX it's important that we *not* remove redundant library mentions! # sometimes you really do have to say "-lfoo -lbar -lfoo" in order to # resolve all symbols. I just hope we never have to say "-lfoo obj.o # -lbar" to get things to work -- that's certainly a possibility, but a # pretty nasty way to arrange your C code. for lib in libraries: (lib_dir, lib_name) = os.path.split(lib) if lib_dir: lib_file = compiler.find_library_file([lib_dir], lib_name) if lib_file: lib_opts.append(lib_file) else: compiler.warn("no library file corresponding to " "'%s' found (skipping)" % lib) else: lib_opts.append(compiler.library_option (lib)) return lib_opts
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qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/msvc9compiler.py
"""distutils.msvc9compiler Contains MSVCCompiler, an implementation of the abstract CCompiler class for the Microsoft Visual Studio 2008. The module is compatible with VS 2005 and VS 2008. You can find legacy support for older versions of VS in distutils.msvccompiler. """ # Written by Perry Stoll # hacked by Robin Becker and Thomas Heller to do a better job of # finding DevStudio (through the registry) # ported to VS2005 and VS 2008 by Christian Heimes import os import subprocess import sys import re from distutils.errors import DistutilsExecError, DistutilsPlatformError, \ CompileError, LibError, LinkError from distutils.ccompiler import CCompiler, gen_lib_options from distutils import log from distutils.util import get_platform import winreg RegOpenKeyEx = winreg.OpenKeyEx RegEnumKey = winreg.EnumKey RegEnumValue = winreg.EnumValue RegError = winreg.error HKEYS = (winreg.HKEY_USERS, winreg.HKEY_CURRENT_USER, winreg.HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, winreg.HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT) NATIVE_WIN64 = (sys.platform == 'win32' and sys.maxsize > 2**32) if NATIVE_WIN64: # Visual C++ is a 32-bit application, so we need to look in # the corresponding registry branch, if we're running a # 64-bit Python on Win64 VS_BASE = r"Software\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\VisualStudio\%0.1f" WINSDK_BASE = r"Software\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\Microsoft SDKs\Windows" NET_BASE = r"Software\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\.NETFramework" else: VS_BASE = r"Software\Microsoft\VisualStudio\%0.1f" WINSDK_BASE = r"Software\Microsoft\Microsoft SDKs\Windows" NET_BASE = r"Software\Microsoft\.NETFramework" # A map keyed by get_platform() return values to values accepted by # 'vcvarsall.bat'. Note a cross-compile may combine these (eg, 'x86_amd64' is # the param to cross-compile on x86 targeting amd64.) PLAT_TO_VCVARS = { 'win32' : 'x86', 'win-amd64' : 'amd64', } class Reg: """Helper class to read values from the registry """ def get_value(cls, path, key): for base in HKEYS: d = cls.read_values(base, path) if d and key in d: return d[key] raise KeyError(key) get_value = classmethod(get_value) def read_keys(cls, base, key): """Return list of registry keys.""" try: handle = RegOpenKeyEx(base, key) except RegError: return None L = [] i = 0 while True: try: k = RegEnumKey(handle, i) except RegError: break L.append(k) i += 1 return L read_keys = classmethod(read_keys) def read_values(cls, base, key): """Return dict of registry keys and values. All names are converted to lowercase. """ try: handle = RegOpenKeyEx(base, key) except RegError: return None d = {} i = 0 while True: try: name, value, type = RegEnumValue(handle, i) except RegError: break name = name.lower() d[cls.convert_mbcs(name)] = cls.convert_mbcs(value) i += 1 return d read_values = classmethod(read_values) def convert_mbcs(s): dec = getattr(s, "decode", None) if dec is not None: try: s = dec("mbcs") except UnicodeError: pass return s convert_mbcs = staticmethod(convert_mbcs) class MacroExpander: def __init__(self, version): self.macros = {} self.vsbase = VS_BASE % version self.load_macros(version) def set_macro(self, macro, path, key): self.macros["$(%s)" % macro] = Reg.get_value(path, key) def load_macros(self, version): self.set_macro("VCInstallDir", self.vsbase + r"\Setup\VC", "productdir") self.set_macro("VSInstallDir", self.vsbase + r"\Setup\VS", "productdir") self.set_macro("FrameworkDir", NET_BASE, "installroot") try: if version >= 8.0: self.set_macro("FrameworkSDKDir", NET_BASE, "sdkinstallrootv2.0") else: raise KeyError("sdkinstallrootv2.0") except KeyError: raise DistutilsPlatformError( """Python was built with Visual Studio 2008; extensions must be built with a compiler than can generate compatible binaries. Visual Studio 2008 was not found on this system. If you have Cygwin installed, you can try compiling with MingW32, by passing "-c mingw32" to setup.py.""") if version >= 9.0: self.set_macro("FrameworkVersion", self.vsbase, "clr version") self.set_macro("WindowsSdkDir", WINSDK_BASE, "currentinstallfolder") else: p = r"Software\Microsoft\NET Framework Setup\Product" for base in HKEYS: try: h = RegOpenKeyEx(base, p) except RegError: continue key = RegEnumKey(h, 0) d = Reg.get_value(base, r"%s\%s" % (p, key)) self.macros["$(FrameworkVersion)"] = d["version"] def sub(self, s): for k, v in self.macros.items(): s = s.replace(k, v) return s def get_build_version(): """Return the version of MSVC that was used to build Python. For Python 2.3 and up, the version number is included in sys.version. For earlier versions, assume the compiler is MSVC 6. """ prefix = "MSC v." i = sys.version.find(prefix) if i == -1: return 6 i = i + len(prefix) s, rest = sys.version[i:].split(" ", 1) majorVersion = int(s[:-2]) - 6 if majorVersion >= 13: # v13 was skipped and should be v14 majorVersion += 1 minorVersion = int(s[2:3]) / 10.0 # I don't think paths are affected by minor version in version 6 if majorVersion == 6: minorVersion = 0 if majorVersion >= 6: return majorVersion + minorVersion # else we don't know what version of the compiler this is return None def normalize_and_reduce_paths(paths): """Return a list of normalized paths with duplicates removed. The current order of paths is maintained. """ # Paths are normalized so things like: /a and /a/ aren't both preserved. reduced_paths = [] for p in paths: np = os.path.normpath(p) # XXX(nnorwitz): O(n**2), if reduced_paths gets long perhaps use a set. if np not in reduced_paths: reduced_paths.append(np) return reduced_paths def removeDuplicates(variable): """Remove duplicate values of an environment variable. """ oldList = variable.split(os.pathsep) newList = [] for i in oldList: if i not in newList: newList.append(i) newVariable = os.pathsep.join(newList) return newVariable def find_vcvarsall(version): """Find the vcvarsall.bat file At first it tries to find the productdir of VS 2008 in the registry. If that fails it falls back to the VS90COMNTOOLS env var. """ vsbase = VS_BASE % version try: productdir = Reg.get_value(r"%s\Setup\VC" % vsbase, "productdir") except KeyError: log.debug("Unable to find productdir in registry") productdir = None if not productdir or not os.path.isdir(productdir): toolskey = "VS%0.f0COMNTOOLS" % version toolsdir = os.environ.get(toolskey, None) if toolsdir and os.path.isdir(toolsdir): productdir = os.path.join(toolsdir, os.pardir, os.pardir, "VC") productdir = os.path.abspath(productdir) if not os.path.isdir(productdir): log.debug("%s is not a valid directory" % productdir) return None else: log.debug("Env var %s is not set or invalid" % toolskey) if not productdir: log.debug("No productdir found") return None vcvarsall = os.path.join(productdir, "vcvarsall.bat") if os.path.isfile(vcvarsall): return vcvarsall log.debug("Unable to find vcvarsall.bat") return None def query_vcvarsall(version, arch="x86"): """Launch vcvarsall.bat and read the settings from its environment """ vcvarsall = find_vcvarsall(version) interesting = {"include", "lib", "libpath", "path"} result = {} if vcvarsall is None: raise DistutilsPlatformError("Unable to find vcvarsall.bat") log.debug("Calling 'vcvarsall.bat %s' (version=%s)", arch, version) popen = subprocess.Popen('"%s" %s & set' % (vcvarsall, arch), stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE) try: stdout, stderr = popen.communicate() if popen.wait() != 0: raise DistutilsPlatformError(stderr.decode("mbcs")) stdout = stdout.decode("mbcs") for line in stdout.split("\n"): line = Reg.convert_mbcs(line) if '=' not in line: continue line = line.strip() key, value = line.split('=', 1) key = key.lower() if key in interesting: if value.endswith(os.pathsep): value = value[:-1] result[key] = removeDuplicates(value) finally: popen.stdout.close() popen.stderr.close() if len(result) != len(interesting): raise ValueError(str(list(result.keys()))) return result # More globals VERSION = get_build_version() if VERSION < 8.0: raise DistutilsPlatformError("VC %0.1f is not supported by this module" % VERSION) # MACROS = MacroExpander(VERSION) class MSVCCompiler(CCompiler) : """Concrete class that implements an interface to Microsoft Visual C++, as defined by the CCompiler abstract class.""" compiler_type = 'msvc' # Just set this so CCompiler's constructor doesn't barf. We currently # don't use the 'set_executables()' bureaucracy provided by CCompiler, # as it really isn't necessary for this sort of single-compiler class. # Would be nice to have a consistent interface with UnixCCompiler, # though, so it's worth thinking about. executables = {} # Private class data (need to distinguish C from C++ source for compiler) _c_extensions = ['.c'] _cpp_extensions = ['.cc', '.cpp', '.cxx'] _rc_extensions = ['.rc'] _mc_extensions = ['.mc'] # Needed for the filename generation methods provided by the # base class, CCompiler. src_extensions = (_c_extensions + _cpp_extensions + _rc_extensions + _mc_extensions) res_extension = '.res' obj_extension = '.obj' static_lib_extension = '.lib' shared_lib_extension = '.dll' static_lib_format = shared_lib_format = '%s%s' exe_extension = '.exe' def __init__(self, verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0): CCompiler.__init__ (self, verbose, dry_run, force) self.__version = VERSION self.__root = r"Software\Microsoft\VisualStudio" # self.__macros = MACROS self.__paths = [] # target platform (.plat_name is consistent with 'bdist') self.plat_name = None self.__arch = None # deprecated name self.initialized = False def initialize(self, plat_name=None): # multi-init means we would need to check platform same each time... assert not self.initialized, "don't init multiple times" if plat_name is None: plat_name = get_platform() # sanity check for platforms to prevent obscure errors later. ok_plats = 'win32', 'win-amd64' if plat_name not in ok_plats: raise DistutilsPlatformError("--plat-name must be one of %s" % (ok_plats,)) if "DISTUTILS_USE_SDK" in os.environ and "MSSdk" in os.environ and self.find_exe("cl.exe"): # Assume that the SDK set up everything alright; don't try to be # smarter self.cc = "cl.exe" self.linker = "link.exe" self.lib = "lib.exe" self.rc = "rc.exe" self.mc = "mc.exe" else: # On x86, 'vcvars32.bat amd64' creates an env that doesn't work; # to cross compile, you use 'x86_amd64'. # On AMD64, 'vcvars32.bat amd64' is a native build env; to cross # compile use 'x86' (ie, it runs the x86 compiler directly) if plat_name == get_platform() or plat_name == 'win32': # native build or cross-compile to win32 plat_spec = PLAT_TO_VCVARS[plat_name] else: # cross compile from win32 -> some 64bit plat_spec = PLAT_TO_VCVARS[get_platform()] + '_' + \ PLAT_TO_VCVARS[plat_name] vc_env = query_vcvarsall(VERSION, plat_spec) self.__paths = vc_env['path'].split(os.pathsep) os.environ['lib'] = vc_env['lib'] os.environ['include'] = vc_env['include'] if len(self.__paths) == 0: raise DistutilsPlatformError("Python was built with %s, " "and extensions need to be built with the same " "version of the compiler, but it isn't installed." % self.__product) self.cc = self.find_exe("cl.exe") self.linker = self.find_exe("link.exe") self.lib = self.find_exe("lib.exe") self.rc = self.find_exe("rc.exe") # resource compiler self.mc = self.find_exe("mc.exe") # message compiler #self.set_path_env_var('lib') #self.set_path_env_var('include') # extend the MSVC path with the current path try: for p in os.environ['path'].split(';'): self.__paths.append(p) except KeyError: pass self.__paths = normalize_and_reduce_paths(self.__paths) os.environ['path'] = ";".join(self.__paths) self.preprocess_options = None if self.__arch == "x86": self.compile_options = [ '/nologo', '/Ox', '/MD', '/W3', '/DNDEBUG'] self.compile_options_debug = ['/nologo', '/Od', '/MDd', '/W3', '/Z7', '/D_DEBUG'] else: # Win64 self.compile_options = [ '/nologo', '/Ox', '/MD', '/W3', '/GS-' , '/DNDEBUG'] self.compile_options_debug = ['/nologo', '/Od', '/MDd', '/W3', '/GS-', '/Z7', '/D_DEBUG'] self.ldflags_shared = ['/DLL', '/nologo', '/INCREMENTAL:NO'] if self.__version >= 7: self.ldflags_shared_debug = [ '/DLL', '/nologo', '/INCREMENTAL:no', '/DEBUG' ] self.ldflags_static = [ '/nologo'] self.initialized = True # -- Worker methods ------------------------------------------------ def object_filenames(self, source_filenames, strip_dir=0, output_dir=''): # Copied from ccompiler.py, extended to return .res as 'object'-file # for .rc input file if output_dir is None: output_dir = '' obj_names = [] for src_name in source_filenames: (base, ext) = os.path.splitext (src_name) base = os.path.splitdrive(base)[1] # Chop off the drive base = base[os.path.isabs(base):] # If abs, chop off leading / if ext not in self.src_extensions: # Better to raise an exception instead of silently continuing # and later complain about sources and targets having # different lengths raise CompileError ("Don't know how to compile %s" % src_name) if strip_dir: base = os.path.basename (base) if ext in self._rc_extensions: obj_names.append (os.path.join (output_dir, base + self.res_extension)) elif ext in self._mc_extensions: obj_names.append (os.path.join (output_dir, base + self.res_extension)) else: obj_names.append (os.path.join (output_dir, base + self.obj_extension)) return obj_names def compile(self, sources, output_dir=None, macros=None, include_dirs=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, depends=None): if not self.initialized: self.initialize() compile_info = self._setup_compile(output_dir, macros, include_dirs, sources, depends, extra_postargs) macros, objects, extra_postargs, pp_opts, build = compile_info compile_opts = extra_preargs or [] compile_opts.append ('/c') if debug: compile_opts.extend(self.compile_options_debug) else: compile_opts.extend(self.compile_options) for obj in objects: try: src, ext = build[obj] except KeyError: continue if debug: # pass the full pathname to MSVC in debug mode, # this allows the debugger to find the source file # without asking the user to browse for it src = os.path.abspath(src) if ext in self._c_extensions: input_opt = "/Tc" + src elif ext in self._cpp_extensions: input_opt = "/Tp" + src elif ext in self._rc_extensions: # compile .RC to .RES file input_opt = src output_opt = "/fo" + obj try: self.spawn([self.rc] + pp_opts + [output_opt] + [input_opt]) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise CompileError(msg) continue elif ext in self._mc_extensions: # Compile .MC to .RC file to .RES file. # * '-h dir' specifies the directory for the # generated include file # * '-r dir' specifies the target directory of the # generated RC file and the binary message resource # it includes # # For now (since there are no options to change this), # we use the source-directory for the include file and # the build directory for the RC file and message # resources. This works at least for win32all. h_dir = os.path.dirname(src) rc_dir = os.path.dirname(obj) try: # first compile .MC to .RC and .H file self.spawn([self.mc] + ['-h', h_dir, '-r', rc_dir] + [src]) base, _ = os.path.splitext (os.path.basename (src)) rc_file = os.path.join (rc_dir, base + '.rc') # then compile .RC to .RES file self.spawn([self.rc] + ["/fo" + obj] + [rc_file]) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise CompileError(msg) continue else: # how to handle this file? raise CompileError("Don't know how to compile %s to %s" % (src, obj)) output_opt = "/Fo" + obj try: self.spawn([self.cc] + compile_opts + pp_opts + [input_opt, output_opt] + extra_postargs) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise CompileError(msg) return objects def create_static_lib(self, objects, output_libname, output_dir=None, debug=0, target_lang=None): if not self.initialized: self.initialize() (objects, output_dir) = self._fix_object_args(objects, output_dir) output_filename = self.library_filename(output_libname, output_dir=output_dir) if self._need_link(objects, output_filename): lib_args = objects + ['/OUT:' + output_filename] if debug: pass # XXX what goes here? try: self.spawn([self.lib] + lib_args) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise LibError(msg) else: log.debug("skipping %s (up-to-date)", output_filename) def link(self, target_desc, objects, output_filename, output_dir=None, libraries=None, library_dirs=None, runtime_library_dirs=None, export_symbols=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, build_temp=None, target_lang=None): if not self.initialized: self.initialize() (objects, output_dir) = self._fix_object_args(objects, output_dir) fixed_args = self._fix_lib_args(libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs) (libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs) = fixed_args if runtime_library_dirs: self.warn ("I don't know what to do with 'runtime_library_dirs': " + str (runtime_library_dirs)) lib_opts = gen_lib_options(self, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs, libraries) if output_dir is not None: output_filename = os.path.join(output_dir, output_filename) if self._need_link(objects, output_filename): if target_desc == CCompiler.EXECUTABLE: if debug: ldflags = self.ldflags_shared_debug[1:] else: ldflags = self.ldflags_shared[1:] else: if debug: ldflags = self.ldflags_shared_debug else: ldflags = self.ldflags_shared export_opts = [] for sym in (export_symbols or []): export_opts.append("/EXPORT:" + sym) ld_args = (ldflags + lib_opts + export_opts + objects + ['/OUT:' + output_filename]) # The MSVC linker generates .lib and .exp files, which cannot be # suppressed by any linker switches. The .lib files may even be # needed! Make sure they are generated in the temporary build # directory. Since they have different names for debug and release # builds, they can go into the same directory. build_temp = os.path.dirname(objects[0]) if export_symbols is not None: (dll_name, dll_ext) = os.path.splitext( os.path.basename(output_filename)) implib_file = os.path.join( build_temp, self.library_filename(dll_name)) ld_args.append ('/IMPLIB:' + implib_file) self.manifest_setup_ldargs(output_filename, build_temp, ld_args) if extra_preargs: ld_args[:0] = extra_preargs if extra_postargs: ld_args.extend(extra_postargs) self.mkpath(os.path.dirname(output_filename)) try: self.spawn([self.linker] + ld_args) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise LinkError(msg) # embed the manifest # XXX - this is somewhat fragile - if mt.exe fails, distutils # will still consider the DLL up-to-date, but it will not have a # manifest. Maybe we should link to a temp file? OTOH, that # implies a build environment error that shouldn't go undetected. mfinfo = self.manifest_get_embed_info(target_desc, ld_args) if mfinfo is not None: mffilename, mfid = mfinfo out_arg = '-outputresource:%s;%s' % (output_filename, mfid) try: self.spawn(['mt.exe', '-nologo', '-manifest', mffilename, out_arg]) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise LinkError(msg) else: log.debug("skipping %s (up-to-date)", output_filename) def manifest_setup_ldargs(self, output_filename, build_temp, ld_args): # If we need a manifest at all, an embedded manifest is recommended. # See MSDN article titled # "How to: Embed a Manifest Inside a C/C++ Application" # (currently at http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms235591(VS.80).aspx) # Ask the linker to generate the manifest in the temp dir, so # we can check it, and possibly embed it, later. temp_manifest = os.path.join( build_temp, os.path.basename(output_filename) + ".manifest") ld_args.append('/MANIFESTFILE:' + temp_manifest) def manifest_get_embed_info(self, target_desc, ld_args): # If a manifest should be embedded, return a tuple of # (manifest_filename, resource_id). Returns None if no manifest # should be embedded. See http://bugs.python.org/issue7833 for why # we want to avoid any manifest for extension modules if we can) for arg in ld_args: if arg.startswith("/MANIFESTFILE:"): temp_manifest = arg.split(":", 1)[1] break else: # no /MANIFESTFILE so nothing to do. return None if target_desc == CCompiler.EXECUTABLE: # by default, executables always get the manifest with the # CRT referenced. mfid = 1 else: # Extension modules try and avoid any manifest if possible. mfid = 2 temp_manifest = self._remove_visual_c_ref(temp_manifest) if temp_manifest is None: return None return temp_manifest, mfid def _remove_visual_c_ref(self, manifest_file): try: # Remove references to the Visual C runtime, so they will # fall through to the Visual C dependency of Python.exe. # This way, when installed for a restricted user (e.g. # runtimes are not in WinSxS folder, but in Python's own # folder), the runtimes do not need to be in every folder # with .pyd's. # Returns either the filename of the modified manifest or # None if no manifest should be embedded. manifest_f = open(manifest_file) try: manifest_buf = manifest_f.read() finally: manifest_f.close() pattern = re.compile( r"""<assemblyIdentity.*?name=("|')Microsoft\."""\ r"""VC\d{2}\.CRT("|').*?(/>|</assemblyIdentity>)""", re.DOTALL) manifest_buf = re.sub(pattern, "", manifest_buf) pattern = r"<dependentAssembly>\s*</dependentAssembly>" manifest_buf = re.sub(pattern, "", manifest_buf) # Now see if any other assemblies are referenced - if not, we # don't want a manifest embedded. pattern = re.compile( r"""<assemblyIdentity.*?name=(?:"|')(.+?)(?:"|')""" r""".*?(?:/>|</assemblyIdentity>)""", re.DOTALL) if re.search(pattern, manifest_buf) is None: return None manifest_f = open(manifest_file, 'w') try: manifest_f.write(manifest_buf) return manifest_file finally: manifest_f.close() except OSError: pass # -- Miscellaneous methods ----------------------------------------- # These are all used by the 'gen_lib_options() function, in # ccompiler.py. def library_dir_option(self, dir): return "/LIBPATH:" + dir def runtime_library_dir_option(self, dir): raise DistutilsPlatformError( "don't know how to set runtime library search path for MSVC++") def library_option(self, lib): return self.library_filename(lib) def find_library_file(self, dirs, lib, debug=0): # Prefer a debugging library if found (and requested), but deal # with it if we don't have one. if debug: try_names = [lib + "_d", lib] else: try_names = [lib] for dir in dirs: for name in try_names: libfile = os.path.join(dir, self.library_filename (name)) if os.path.exists(libfile): return libfile else: # Oops, didn't find it in *any* of 'dirs' return None # Helper methods for using the MSVC registry settings def find_exe(self, exe): """Return path to an MSVC executable program. Tries to find the program in several places: first, one of the MSVC program search paths from the registry; next, the directories in the PATH environment variable. If any of those work, return an absolute path that is known to exist. If none of them work, just return the original program name, 'exe'. """ for p in self.__paths: fn = os.path.join(os.path.abspath(p), exe) if os.path.isfile(fn): return fn # didn't find it; try existing path for p in os.environ['Path'].split(';'): fn = os.path.join(os.path.abspath(p),exe) if os.path.isfile(fn): return fn return exe
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/archive_util.py
"""distutils.archive_util Utility functions for creating archive files (tarballs, zip files, that sort of thing).""" import os from warnings import warn import sys try: import zipfile except ImportError: zipfile = None from distutils.errors import DistutilsExecError from distutils.spawn import spawn from distutils.dir_util import mkpath from distutils import log 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, base_dir, compress="gzip", verbose=0, dry_run=0, owner=None, group=None): """Create a (possibly compressed) tar file from all the files under 'base_dir'. 'compress' must be "gzip" (the default), "bzip2", "xz", "compress", or None. ("compress" will be deprecated in Python 3.2) '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': ''} compress_ext = {'gzip': '.gz', 'bzip2': '.bz2', 'xz': '.xz', 'compress': '.Z'} # 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' or 'compress'") archive_name = base_name + '.tar' if compress != 'compress': archive_name += compress_ext.get(compress, '') mkpath(os.path.dirname(archive_name), dry_run=dry_run) # 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 if not dry_run: tar = tarfile.open(archive_name, 'w|%s' % tar_compression[compress]) try: tar.add(base_dir, filter=_set_uid_gid) finally: tar.close() # compression using `compress` if compress == 'compress': warn("'compress' will be deprecated.", PendingDeprecationWarning) # the option varies depending on the platform compressed_name = archive_name + compress_ext[compress] if sys.platform == 'win32': cmd = [compress, archive_name, compressed_name] else: cmd = [compress, '-f', archive_name] spawn(cmd, dry_run=dry_run) return compressed_name return archive_name def make_zipfile(base_name, base_dir, verbose=0, dry_run=0): """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), dry_run=dry_run) # 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], dry_run=dry_run) except DistutilsExecError: # XXX really should distinguish between "couldn't find # external 'zip' command" and "zip failed". raise DistutilsExecError(("unable to create zip file '%s': " "could neither import the 'zipfile' module nor " "find a standalone zip utility") % zip_filename) else: log.info("creating '%s' and adding '%s' to it", zip_filename, base_dir) if not dry_run: 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 def make_archive(base_name, format, root_dir=None, base_dir=None, verbose=0, dry_run=0, owner=None, group=None): """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) if not dry_run: os.chdir(root_dir) if base_dir is None: base_dir = os.curdir kwargs = {'dry_run': dry_run} try: format_info = ARCHIVE_FORMATS[format] except KeyError: raise ValueError("unknown archive format '%s'" % format) func = format_info[0] for arg, val in format_info[1]: kwargs[arg] = val 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
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/cmd.py
"""distutils.cmd Provides the Command class, the base class for the command classes in the distutils.command package. """ import sys, os, re from distutils.errors import DistutilsOptionError from distutils import util, dir_util, file_util, archive_util, dep_util from distutils import log 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 = [] # -- Creation/initialization methods ------------------------------- def __init__(self, dist): """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", while 0 or 1 mean # false and true (duh). Note that this means figuring out the real # value of each flag is a touch complicated -- hence "self._dry_run" # will be handled by __getattr__, below. # XXX This needs to be fixed. self._dry_run = None # 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 = 0 # '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 = 0 # XXX A more explicit way to customize dry_run would be better. def __getattr__(self, attr): if attr == 'dry_run': myval = getattr(self, "_" + attr) if myval is None: return getattr(self.distribution, attr) else: return myval else: raise AttributeError(attr) def ensure_finalized(self): if not self.finalized: self.finalize_options() self.finalized = 1 # 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 def initialize_options(self): """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("abstract method -- subclass %s must override" % self.__class__) def finalize_options(self): """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("abstract method -- subclass %s must override" % self.__class__) def dump_options(self, header=None, indent=""): from distutils.fancy_getopt import longopt_xlate if header is None: header = "command options for '%s':" % self.get_command_name() self.announce(indent + header, level=log.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 + "%s = %s" % (option, value), level=log.INFO) def run(self): """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("abstract method -- subclass %s must override" % self.__class__) def announce(self, msg, level=1): """If the current verbosity level is of greater than or equal to 'level' print 'msg' to stdout. """ log.log(level, msg) def debug_print(self, msg): """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("'%s' must be a %s (got `%s`)" % (option, what, val)) return val def ensure_string(self, option, default=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): 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( "'%s' must be a list of strings (got %r)" % (option, val)) 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): """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): 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): if hasattr(self, 'command_name'): return self.command_name else: return self.__class__.__name__ def set_undefined_options(self, src_cmd, *option_pairs): """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)) def get_finalized_command(self, command, create=1): """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) def reinitialize_command(self, command, reinit_subcommands=0): return self.distribution.reinitialize_command(command, reinit_subcommands) def run_command(self, command): """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): """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): log.warn("warning: %s: %s\n", self.get_command_name(), msg) def execute(self, func, args, msg=None, level=1): util.execute(func, args, msg, dry_run=self.dry_run) def mkpath(self, name, mode=0o777): dir_util.mkpath(name, mode, dry_run=self.dry_run) def copy_file(self, infile, outfile, preserve_mode=1, preserve_times=1, link=None, level=1): """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, dry_run=self.dry_run) def copy_tree(self, infile, outfile, preserve_mode=1, preserve_times=1, preserve_symlinks=0, level=1): """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, dry_run=self.dry_run) def move_file (self, src, dst, level=1): """Move a file respecting dry-run flag.""" return file_util.move_file(src, dst, dry_run=self.dry_run) def spawn(self, cmd, search_path=1, level=1): """Spawn an external command respecting dry-run flag.""" from distutils.spawn import spawn spawn(cmd, search_path, dry_run=self.dry_run) def make_archive(self, base_name, format, root_dir=None, base_dir=None, owner=None, group=None): return archive_util.make_archive(base_name, format, root_dir, base_dir, dry_run=self.dry_run, owner=owner, group=group) def make_file(self, infiles, outfile, func, args, exec_msg=None, skip_msg=None, level=1): """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 = "skipping %s (inputs unchanged)" % outfile # 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 %s from %s" % (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 dep_util.newer_group(infiles, outfile): self.execute(func, args, exec_msg, level) # Otherwise, print the "skip" message else: log.debug(skip_msg)
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/config.py
"""distutils.pypirc Provides the PyPIRCCommand class, the base class for the command classes that uses .pypirc in the distutils.command package. """ import os from configparser import RawConfigParser from distutils.cmd import Command DEFAULT_PYPIRC = """\ [distutils] index-servers = pypi [pypi] username:%s password:%s """ class PyPIRCCommand(Command): """Base command that knows how to handle the .pypirc file """ DEFAULT_REPOSITORY = 'https://upload.pypi.org/legacy/' DEFAULT_REALM = 'pypi' repository = None realm = None user_options = [ ('repository=', 'r', "url of repository [default: %s]" % \ DEFAULT_REPOSITORY), ('show-response', None, 'display full response text from server')] boolean_options = ['show-response'] def _get_rc_file(self): """Returns rc file path.""" return os.path.join(os.path.expanduser('~'), '.pypirc') def _store_pypirc(self, username, password): """Creates a default .pypirc file.""" rc = self._get_rc_file() with os.fdopen(os.open(rc, os.O_CREAT | os.O_WRONLY, 0o600), 'w') as f: f.write(DEFAULT_PYPIRC % (username, password)) def _read_pypirc(self): """Reads the .pypirc file.""" rc = self._get_rc_file() if os.path.exists(rc): self.announce('Using PyPI login from %s' % rc) repository = self.repository or self.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY config = RawConfigParser() config.read(rc) sections = config.sections() if 'distutils' in sections: # let's get the list of servers index_servers = config.get('distutils', 'index-servers') _servers = [server.strip() for server in index_servers.split('\n') if server.strip() != ''] if _servers == []: # nothing set, let's try to get the default pypi if 'pypi' in sections: _servers = ['pypi'] else: # the file is not properly defined, returning # an empty dict return {} for server in _servers: current = {'server': server} current['username'] = config.get(server, 'username') # optional params for key, default in (('repository', self.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY), ('realm', self.DEFAULT_REALM), ('password', None)): if config.has_option(server, key): current[key] = config.get(server, key) else: current[key] = default # work around people having "repository" for the "pypi" # section of their config set to the HTTP (rather than # HTTPS) URL if (server == 'pypi' and repository in (self.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY, 'pypi')): current['repository'] = self.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY return current if (current['server'] == repository or current['repository'] == repository): return current elif 'server-login' in sections: # old format server = 'server-login' if config.has_option(server, 'repository'): repository = config.get(server, 'repository') else: repository = self.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY return {'username': config.get(server, 'username'), 'password': config.get(server, 'password'), 'repository': repository, 'server': server, 'realm': self.DEFAULT_REALM} return {} def _read_pypi_response(self, response): """Read and decode a PyPI HTTP response.""" import cgi content_type = response.getheader('content-type', 'text/plain') encoding = cgi.parse_header(content_type)[1].get('charset', 'ascii') return response.read().decode(encoding) def initialize_options(self): """Initialize options.""" self.repository = None self.realm = None self.show_response = 0 def finalize_options(self): """Finalizes options.""" if self.repository is None: self.repository = self.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY if self.realm is None: self.realm = self.DEFAULT_REALM
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/version.py
# # 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 re 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) def __repr__ (self): return "%s ('%s')" % (self.__class__.__name__, str(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("invalid version number '%s'" % 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): other = StrictVersion(other) elif not isinstance(other, StrictVersion): return NotImplemented if self.version != other.version: # numeric versions don't match # prerelease stuff doesn't matter if self.version < other.version: return -1 else: return 1 # have to compare prerelease # case 1: neither has prerelease; they're equal # case 2: self has prerelease, other doesn't; other is greater # case 3: self doesn't have prerelease, other does: self is greater # case 4: both have prerelease: must compare them! if (not self.prerelease and not other.prerelease): return 0 elif (self.prerelease and not other.prerelease): return -1 elif (not self.prerelease and other.prerelease): return 1 elif (self.prerelease and other.prerelease): if self.prerelease == other.prerelease: return 0 elif self.prerelease < other.prerelease: return -1 else: return 1 else: assert False, "never get here" # 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 __init__ (self, vstring=None): if vstring: self.parse(vstring) 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 "LooseVersion ('%s')" % str(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
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/log.py
"""A simple log mechanism styled after PEP 282.""" # The class here is styled after PEP 282 so that it could later be # replaced with a standard Python logging implementation. DEBUG = 1 INFO = 2 WARN = 3 ERROR = 4 FATAL = 5 import sys class Log: def __init__(self, threshold=WARN): self.threshold = threshold def _log(self, level, msg, args): if level not in (DEBUG, INFO, WARN, ERROR, FATAL): raise ValueError('%s wrong log level' % str(level)) if level >= self.threshold: if args: msg = msg % args if level in (WARN, ERROR, FATAL): stream = sys.stderr else: stream = sys.stdout try: stream.write('%s\n' % msg) except UnicodeEncodeError: # emulate backslashreplace error handler encoding = stream.encoding msg = msg.encode(encoding, "backslashreplace").decode(encoding) stream.write('%s\n' % msg) stream.flush() def log(self, level, msg, *args): self._log(level, msg, args) def debug(self, msg, *args): self._log(DEBUG, msg, args) def info(self, msg, *args): self._log(INFO, msg, args) def warn(self, msg, *args): self._log(WARN, msg, args) def error(self, msg, *args): self._log(ERROR, msg, args) def fatal(self, msg, *args): self._log(FATAL, msg, args) _global_log = Log() log = _global_log.log debug = _global_log.debug info = _global_log.info warn = _global_log.warn error = _global_log.error fatal = _global_log.fatal def set_threshold(level): # return the old threshold for use from tests old = _global_log.threshold _global_log.threshold = level return old def set_verbosity(v): if v <= 0: set_threshold(WARN) elif v == 1: set_threshold(INFO) elif v >= 2: set_threshold(DEBUG)
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qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/util.py
"""distutils.util Miscellaneous utility functions -- anything that doesn't fit into one of the other *util.py modules. """ import os import re import importlib.util import string import sys from distutils.errors import DistutilsPlatformError from distutils.dep_util import newer from distutils.spawn import spawn from distutils import log from distutils.errors import DistutilsByteCompileError def get_host_platform(): """Return a string that identifies the current platform. This is used mainly to distinguish platform-specific build directories and platform-specific built distributions. Typically includes the OS name and version and the architecture (as supplied by 'os.uname()'), although the exact information included depends on the OS; eg. on Linux, the kernel version isn't particularly important. Examples of returned values: linux-i586 linux-alpha (?) solaris-2.6-sun4u Windows will return one of: win-amd64 (64bit Windows on AMD64 (aka x86_64, Intel64, EM64T, etc) win32 (all others - specifically, sys.platform is returned) For other non-POSIX platforms, currently just returns 'sys.platform'. """ if os.name == 'nt': if 'amd64' in sys.version.lower(): return 'win-amd64' if '(arm)' in sys.version.lower(): return 'win-arm32' if '(arm64)' in sys.version.lower(): return 'win-arm64' return sys.platform # Set for cross builds explicitly if "_PYTHON_HOST_PLATFORM" in os.environ: return os.environ["_PYTHON_HOST_PLATFORM"] if os.name != "posix" or not hasattr(os, 'uname'): # XXX what about the architecture? NT is Intel or Alpha, # Mac OS is M68k or PPC, etc. return sys.platform # Try to distinguish various flavours of Unix (osname, host, release, version, machine) = os.uname() # Convert the OS name to lowercase, remove '/' characters, and translate # spaces (for "Power Macintosh") osname = osname.lower().replace('/', '') machine = machine.replace(' ', '_') machine = machine.replace('/', '-') if osname[:5] == "linux": # At least on Linux/Intel, 'machine' is the processor -- # i386, etc. # XXX what about Alpha, SPARC, etc? return "%s-%s" % (osname, machine) elif osname[:5] == "sunos": if release[0] >= "5": # SunOS 5 == Solaris 2 osname = "solaris" release = "%d.%s" % (int(release[0]) - 3, release[2:]) # We can't use "platform.architecture()[0]" because a # bootstrap problem. We use a dict to get an error # if some suspicious happens. bitness = {2147483647:"32bit", 9223372036854775807:"64bit"} machine += ".%s" % bitness[sys.maxsize] # fall through to standard osname-release-machine representation elif osname[:3] == "aix": from _aix_support import aix_platform return aix_platform() elif osname[:6] == "cygwin": osname = "cygwin" rel_re = re.compile (r'[\d.]+', re.ASCII) m = rel_re.match(release) if m: release = m.group() elif osname[:6] == "darwin": import _osx_support, distutils.sysconfig osname, release, machine = _osx_support.get_platform_osx( distutils.sysconfig.get_config_vars(), osname, release, machine) return "%s-%s-%s" % (osname, release, machine) def get_platform(): if os.name == 'nt': TARGET_TO_PLAT = { 'x86' : 'win32', 'x64' : 'win-amd64', 'arm' : 'win-arm32', } return TARGET_TO_PLAT.get(os.environ.get('VSCMD_ARG_TGT_ARCH')) or get_host_platform() else: return get_host_platform() def convert_path (pathname): """Return 'pathname' as a name that will work on the native filesystem, i.e. split it on '/' and put it back together again using the current directory separator. Needed because filenames in the setup script are always supplied in Unix style, and have to be converted to the local convention before we can actually use them in the filesystem. Raises ValueError on non-Unix-ish systems if 'pathname' either starts or ends with a slash. """ if os.sep == '/': return pathname if not pathname: return pathname if pathname[0] == '/': raise ValueError("path '%s' cannot be absolute" % pathname) if pathname[-1] == '/': raise ValueError("path '%s' cannot end with '/'" % pathname) paths = pathname.split('/') while '.' in paths: paths.remove('.') if not paths: return os.curdir return os.path.join(*paths) # convert_path () def change_root (new_root, pathname): """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] == '\\': path = path[1:] return os.path.join(new_root, path) else: raise DistutilsPlatformError("nothing known about platform '%s'" % os.name) _environ_checked = 0 def check_environ (): """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()') """ global _environ_checked if _environ_checked: return 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() _environ_checked = 1 def subst_vars (s, local_vars): """Perform shell/Perl-style variable substitution on 'string'. Every occurrence of '$' followed by a name is considered a variable, and 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() def _subst (match, local_vars=local_vars): var_name = match.group(1) if var_name in local_vars: return str(local_vars[var_name]) else: return os.environ[var_name] try: return re.sub(r'\$([a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z_0-9]*)', _subst, s) except KeyError as var: raise ValueError("invalid variable '$%s'" % var) # subst_vars () def grok_environment_error (exc, prefix="error: "): # 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(r'[^\\\'\"%s ]*' % string.whitespace) _squote_re = re.compile(r"'(?:[^'\\]|\\.)*'") _dquote_re = re.compile(r'"(?:[^"\\]|\\.)*"') def split_quoted (s): """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 words.append(s[:end]) # we definitely have a word delimiter 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("this can't happen (bad char '%c')" % s[end]) if m is None: raise ValueError("bad string (mismatched %s quotes?)" % s[end]) (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, args, msg=None, verbose=0, dry_run=0): """Perform some action that affects the outside world (eg. by writing to the filesystem). Such actions are special because they are disabled by the 'dry_run' flag. This method takes care of all that bureaucracy for you; all you have to do is supply the function to call and an argument tuple for it (to embody the "external action" being performed), and an optional message to print. """ if msg is None: msg = "%s%r" % (func.__name__, args) if msg[-2:] == ',)': # correct for singleton tuple msg = msg[0:-2] + ')' log.info(msg) if not dry_run: func(*args) def strtobool (val): """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 1 elif val in ('n', 'no', 'f', 'false', 'off', '0'): return 0 else: raise ValueError("invalid truth value %r" % (val,)) def byte_compile (py_files, optimize=0, force=0, prefix=None, base_dir=None, verbose=1, dry_run=0, direct=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. If 'dry_run' is true, doesn't actually do anything that would affect the filesystem. 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. """ # Late import to fix a bootstrap issue: _posixsubprocess is built by # setup.py, but setup.py uses distutils. import subprocess # 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: try: from tempfile import mkstemp (script_fd, script_name) = mkstemp(".py") except ImportError: from tempfile import mktemp (script_fd, script_name) = None, mktemp(".py") log.info("writing byte-compilation script '%s'", script_name) if not dry_run: if script_fd is not None: script = os.fdopen(script_fd, "w") else: script = open(script_name, "w") 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. #py_files = map(os.path.abspath, py_files) #if prefix: # prefix = os.path.abspath(prefix) script.write(",\n".join(map(repr, py_files)) + "]\n") script.write(""" byte_compile(files, optimize=%r, force=%r, prefix=%r, base_dir=%r, verbose=%r, dry_run=0, direct=1) """ % (optimize, force, prefix, base_dir, verbose)) cmd = [sys.executable] cmd.extend(subprocess._optim_args_from_interpreter_flags()) cmd.append(script_name) spawn(cmd, dry_run=dry_run) execute(os.remove, (script_name,), "removing %s" % script_name, dry_run=dry_run) # "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("invalid prefix: filename %r doesn't start with %r" % (file, prefix)) 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) if not dry_run: compile(file, cfile, dfile) else: log.debug("skipping byte-compilation of %s to %s", file, cfile_base) # byte_compile () def rfc822_escape (header): """Return a version of the string escaped for inclusion in an RFC-822 header, by ensuring there are 8 spaces space after each newline. """ lines = header.split('\n') sep = '\n' + 8 * ' ' return sep.join(lines) # 2to3 support def run_2to3(files, fixer_names=None, options=None, explicit=None): """Invoke 2to3 on a list of Python files. The files should all come from the build area, as the modification is done in-place. To reduce the build time, only files modified since the last invocation of this function should be passed in the files argument.""" if not files: return # Make this class local, to delay import of 2to3 from lib2to3.refactor import RefactoringTool, get_fixers_from_package class DistutilsRefactoringTool(RefactoringTool): def log_error(self, msg, *args, **kw): log.error(msg, *args) def log_message(self, msg, *args): log.info(msg, *args) def log_debug(self, msg, *args): log.debug(msg, *args) if fixer_names is None: fixer_names = get_fixers_from_package('lib2to3.fixes') r = DistutilsRefactoringTool(fixer_names, options=options) r.refactor(files, write=True) def copydir_run_2to3(src, dest, template=None, fixer_names=None, options=None, explicit=None): """Recursively copy a directory, only copying new and changed files, running run_2to3 over all newly copied Python modules afterward. If you give a template string, it's parsed like a MANIFEST.in. """ from distutils.dir_util import mkpath from distutils.file_util import copy_file from distutils.filelist import FileList filelist = FileList() curdir = os.getcwd() os.chdir(src) try: filelist.findall() finally: os.chdir(curdir) filelist.files[:] = filelist.allfiles if template: for line in template.splitlines(): line = line.strip() if not line: continue filelist.process_template_line(line) copied = [] for filename in filelist.files: outname = os.path.join(dest, filename) mkpath(os.path.dirname(outname)) res = copy_file(os.path.join(src, filename), outname, update=1) if res[1]: copied.append(outname) run_2to3([fn for fn in copied if fn.lower().endswith('.py')], fixer_names=fixer_names, options=options, explicit=explicit) return copied class Mixin2to3: '''Mixin class for commands that run 2to3. To configure 2to3, setup scripts may either change the class variables, or inherit from individual commands to override how 2to3 is invoked.''' # provide list of fixers to run; # defaults to all from lib2to3.fixers fixer_names = None # options dictionary options = None # list of fixers to invoke even though they are marked as explicit explicit = None def run_2to3(self, files): return run_2to3(files, self.fixer_names, self.options, self.explicit)
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qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/fancy_getopt.py
"""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 """ import sys, string, re import getopt from distutils.errors import * # 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(r'^%s$' % longopt_pat) # For recognizing "negative alias" options, eg. "quiet=!verbose" neg_alias_re = re.compile("^(%s)=!(%s)$" % (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( "option conflict: already an option '%s'" % 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(("invalid %s '%s': " "option '%s' not defined") % (what, alias, alias)) if opt not in self.option_index: raise DistutilsGetoptError(("invalid %s '%s': " "aliased option '%s' not defined") % (what, alias, opt)) 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): """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("invalid option tuple: %r" % (option,)) # Type- and value-check the option names if not isinstance(long, str) or len(long) < 2: raise DistutilsGetoptError(("invalid long option '%s': " "must be a string of length >= 2") % long) if (not ((short is None) or (isinstance(short, str) and len(short) == 1))): raise DistutilsGetoptError("invalid short option '%s': " "must a single character or None" % short) 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] = 1 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( "invalid negative alias '%s': " "aliased option '%s' takes a value" % (long, alias_to)) self.long_opts[-1] = long # XXX redundant?! self.takes_arg[long] = 0 # 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( "invalid alias '%s': inconsistent with " "aliased option '%s' (one of them takes a value, " "the other doesn't" % (long, alias_to)) # 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( "invalid long option name '%s' " "(must be letters, numbers, hyphens only" % long) 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=None, object=None): """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 = 0. 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): """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] l = len(long) if long[-1] == '=': l = l - 1 if short is not None: l = l + 5 # " (-x)" where short == 'x' if l > max_opt: max_opt = l 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(" --%-*s %s" % (max_opt, long, text[0])) else: lines.append(" --%-*s " % (max_opt, long)) # Case 2: we have a short option, so we have to include it # just after the long option else: opt_names = "%s (-%s)" % (long, short) if text: lines.append(" --%-*s %s" % (max_opt, opt_names, text[0])) else: lines.append(" --%-*s" % opt_names) for l in text[1:]: lines.append(big_indent + l) 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): 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: l = len(chunks[0]) if cur_len + l <= width: # can squeeze (at least) this chunk in cur_line.append(chunks[0]) del chunks[0] cur_len = cur_len + l 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=[]): """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("width: %d" % w) print("\n".join(wrap_text(text, w))) print()
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/versionpredicate.py
"""Module for parsing and testing package version predicate strings. """ import re import distutils.version import operator re_validPackage = re.compile(r"(?i)^\s*([a-z_]\w*(?:\.[a-z_]\w*)*)(.*)", re.ASCII) # (package) (rest) re_paren = re.compile(r"^\s*\((.*)\)\s*$") # (list) inside of parentheses re_splitComparison = re.compile(r"^\s*(<=|>=|<|>|!=|==)\s*([^\s,]+)\s*$") # (comp) (version) def splitUp(pred): """Parse a single version comparison. Return (comparison string, StrictVersion) """ res = re_splitComparison.match(pred) if not res: raise ValueError("bad package restriction syntax: %r" % pred) comp, verStr = res.groups() return (comp, distutils.version.StrictVersion(verStr)) compmap = {"<": operator.lt, "<=": operator.le, "==": operator.eq, ">": operator.gt, ">=": operator.ge, "!=": operator.ne} class VersionPredicate: """Parse and test package version predicates. >>> v = VersionPredicate('pyepat.abc (>1.0, <3333.3a1, !=1555.1b3)') The `name` attribute provides the full dotted name that is given:: >>> v.name 'pyepat.abc' The str() of a `VersionPredicate` provides a normalized human-readable version of the expression:: >>> print(v) pyepat.abc (> 1.0, < 3333.3a1, != 1555.1b3) The `satisfied_by()` method can be used to determine with a given version number is included in the set described by the version restrictions:: >>> v.satisfied_by('1.1') True >>> v.satisfied_by('1.4') True >>> v.satisfied_by('1.0') False >>> v.satisfied_by('4444.4') False >>> v.satisfied_by('1555.1b3') False `VersionPredicate` is flexible in accepting extra whitespace:: >>> v = VersionPredicate(' pat( == 0.1 ) ') >>> v.name 'pat' >>> v.satisfied_by('0.1') True >>> v.satisfied_by('0.2') False If any version numbers passed in do not conform to the restrictions of `StrictVersion`, a `ValueError` is raised:: >>> v = VersionPredicate('p1.p2.p3.p4(>=1.0, <=1.3a1, !=1.2zb3)') Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: invalid version number '1.2zb3' It the module or package name given does not conform to what's allowed as a legal module or package name, `ValueError` is raised:: >>> v = VersionPredicate('foo-bar') Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: expected parenthesized list: '-bar' >>> v = VersionPredicate('foo bar (12.21)') Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: expected parenthesized list: 'bar (12.21)' """ def __init__(self, versionPredicateStr): """Parse a version predicate string. """ # Fields: # name: package name # pred: list of (comparison string, StrictVersion) versionPredicateStr = versionPredicateStr.strip() if not versionPredicateStr: raise ValueError("empty package restriction") match = re_validPackage.match(versionPredicateStr) if not match: raise ValueError("bad package name in %r" % versionPredicateStr) self.name, paren = match.groups() paren = paren.strip() if paren: match = re_paren.match(paren) if not match: raise ValueError("expected parenthesized list: %r" % paren) str = match.groups()[0] self.pred = [splitUp(aPred) for aPred in str.split(",")] if not self.pred: raise ValueError("empty parenthesized list in %r" % versionPredicateStr) else: self.pred = [] def __str__(self): if self.pred: seq = [cond + " " + str(ver) for cond, ver in self.pred] return self.name + " (" + ", ".join(seq) + ")" else: return self.name def satisfied_by(self, version): """True if version is compatible with all the predicates in self. The parameter version must be acceptable to the StrictVersion constructor. It may be either a string or StrictVersion. """ for cond, ver in self.pred: if not compmap[cond](version, ver): return False return True _provision_rx = None def split_provision(value): """Return the name and optional version number of a provision. The version number, if given, will be returned as a `StrictVersion` instance, otherwise it will be `None`. >>> split_provision('mypkg') ('mypkg', None) >>> split_provision(' mypkg( 1.2 ) ') ('mypkg', StrictVersion ('1.2')) """ global _provision_rx if _provision_rx is None: _provision_rx = re.compile( r"([a-zA-Z_]\w*(?:\.[a-zA-Z_]\w*)*)(?:\s*\(\s*([^)\s]+)\s*\))?$", re.ASCII) value = value.strip() m = _provision_rx.match(value) if not m: raise ValueError("illegal provides specification: %r" % value) ver = m.group(2) or None if ver: ver = distutils.version.StrictVersion(ver) return m.group(1), ver
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/__init__.py
"""distutils The main package for the Python Module Distribution Utilities. Normally used from a setup script as from distutils.core import setup setup (...) """ import sys __version__ = sys.version[:sys.version.index(' ')] local = True
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/file_util.py
"""distutils.file_util Utility functions for operating on single files. """ import os from distutils.errors import DistutilsFileError from distutils import log # 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): """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("could not open '%s': %s" % (src, e.strerror)) if os.path.exists(dst): try: os.unlink(dst) except OSError as e: raise DistutilsFileError( "could not delete '%s': %s" % (dst, e.strerror)) try: fdst = open(dst, 'wb') except OSError as e: raise DistutilsFileError( "could not create '%s': %s" % (dst, e.strerror)) while True: try: buf = fsrc.read(buffer_size) except OSError as e: raise DistutilsFileError( "could not read from '%s': %s" % (src, e.strerror)) if not buf: break try: fdst.write(buf) except OSError as e: raise DistutilsFileError( "could not write to '%s': %s" % (dst, e.strerror)) finally: if fdst: fdst.close() if fsrc: fsrc.close() def copy_file(src, dst, preserve_mode=1, preserve_times=1, update=0, link=None, verbose=1, dry_run=0): """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 (or would have been copied, if 'dry_run' true). """ # 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.dep_util import newer from stat import ST_ATIME, ST_MTIME, ST_MODE, S_IMODE if not os.path.isfile(src): raise DistutilsFileError( "can't copy '%s': doesn't exist or not a regular file" % src) 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, 0) try: action = _copy_action[link] except KeyError: raise ValueError("invalid value '%s' for 'link' argument" % link) 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 dry_run: return (dst, 1) # If linking (hard or symbolic), use the appropriate system call # (Unix only, of course, but that's the caller's responsibility) elif link == 'hard': if not (os.path.exists(dst) and os.path.samefile(src, dst)): try: os.link(src, dst) return (dst, 1) 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 elif link == 'sym': if not (os.path.exists(dst) and os.path.samefile(src, dst)): os.symlink(src, dst) return (dst, 1) # 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 <da@ski.org>, 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, 1) # XXX I suspect this is Unix-specific -- need porting help! def move_file (src, dst, verbose=1, dry_run=0): """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??? """ from os.path import exists, isfile, isdir, basename, dirname import errno if verbose >= 1: log.info("moving %s -> %s", src, dst) if dry_run: return dst if not isfile(src): raise DistutilsFileError("can't move '%s': not a regular file" % src) if isdir(dst): dst = os.path.join(dst, basename(src)) elif exists(dst): raise DistutilsFileError( "can't move '%s': destination '%s' already exists" % (src, dst)) if not isdir(dirname(dst)): raise DistutilsFileError( "can't move '%s': destination '%s' not a valid path" % (src, dst)) 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( "couldn't move '%s' to '%s': %s" % (src, 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( "couldn't move '%s' to '%s' by copy/delete: " "delete '%s' failed: %s" % (src, dst, src, 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. """ f = open(filename, "w") try: for line in contents: f.write(line + "\n") finally: f.close()
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/core.py
"""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. """ import os import sys from distutils.debug import DEBUG from distutils.errors import * # Mainly import these so setup scripts can "from distutils.core import" them. from distutils.dist import Distribution from distutils.cmd import Command from distutils.config import PyPIRCCommand from distutils.extension import Extension # 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 % vars() # 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): """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: del attrs['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("error in setup command: %s" % msg) else: raise SystemExit("error in %s setup command: %s" % \ (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) + "\nerror: %s" % 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: try: dist.run_commands() except KeyboardInterrupt: raise SystemExit("interrupted") except OSError as exc: if DEBUG: sys.stderr.write("error: %s\n" % (exc,)) raise else: raise SystemExit("error: %s" % (exc,)) except (DistutilsError, CCompilerError) as msg: if DEBUG: raise else: raise SystemExit("error: " + str(msg)) return dist # setup () def run_setup (script_name, script_args=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("invalid value for 'stop_after': %r" % (stop_after,)) global _setup_stop_after, _setup_distribution _setup_stop_after = stop_after save_argv = sys.argv.copy() g = {'__file__': script_name} try: try: sys.argv[0] = script_name if script_args is not None: sys.argv[1:] = script_args with open(script_name, 'rb') as f: exec(f.read(), 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 -- " "perhaps '%s' is not a Distutils setup script?") % \ script_name) # 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 ()
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/cygwinccompiler.py
"""distutils.cygwinccompiler Provides the CygwinCCompiler class, a subclass of UnixCCompiler that handles the Cygwin port of the GNU C compiler to Windows. It also contains the Mingw32CCompiler class which handles the mingw32 port of GCC (same as cygwin in no-cygwin mode). """ # problems: # # * if you use a msvc compiled python version (1.5.2) # 1. you have to insert a __GNUC__ section in its config.h # 2. you have to generate an import library for its dll # - create a def-file for python??.dll # - create an import library using # dlltool --dllname python15.dll --def python15.def \ # --output-lib libpython15.a # # see also http://starship.python.net/crew/kernr/mingw32/Notes.html # # * We put export_symbols in a def-file, and don't use # --export-all-symbols because it doesn't worked reliable in some # tested configurations. And because other windows compilers also # need their symbols specified this no serious problem. # # tested configurations: # # * cygwin gcc 2.91.57/ld 2.9.4/dllwrap 0.2.4 works # (after patching python's config.h and for C++ some other include files) # see also http://starship.python.net/crew/kernr/mingw32/Notes.html # * mingw32 gcc 2.95.2/ld 2.9.4/dllwrap 0.2.4 works # (ld doesn't support -shared, so we use dllwrap) # * cygwin gcc 2.95.2/ld 2.10.90/dllwrap 2.10.90 works now # - its dllwrap doesn't work, there is a bug in binutils 2.10.90 # see also http://sources.redhat.com/ml/cygwin/2000-06/msg01274.html # - using gcc -mdll instead dllwrap doesn't work without -static because # it tries to link against dlls instead their import libraries. (If # it finds the dll first.) # By specifying -static we force ld to link against the import libraries, # this is windows standard and there are normally not the necessary symbols # in the dlls. # *** only the version of June 2000 shows these problems # * cygwin gcc 3.2/ld 2.13.90 works # (ld supports -shared) # * mingw gcc 3.2/ld 2.13 works # (ld supports -shared) import os import sys import copy from subprocess import Popen, PIPE, check_output import re from distutils.unixccompiler import UnixCCompiler from distutils.file_util import write_file from distutils.errors import (DistutilsExecError, CCompilerError, CompileError, UnknownFileError) from distutils.version import LooseVersion from distutils.spawn import find_executable def get_msvcr(): """Include the appropriate MSVC runtime library if Python was built with MSVC 7.0 or later. """ msc_pos = sys.version.find('MSC v.') if msc_pos != -1: msc_ver = sys.version[msc_pos+6:msc_pos+10] if msc_ver == '1300': # MSVC 7.0 return ['msvcr70'] elif msc_ver == '1310': # MSVC 7.1 return ['msvcr71'] elif msc_ver == '1400': # VS2005 / MSVC 8.0 return ['msvcr80'] elif msc_ver == '1500': # VS2008 / MSVC 9.0 return ['msvcr90'] elif msc_ver == '1600': # VS2010 / MSVC 10.0 return ['msvcr100'] else: raise ValueError("Unknown MS Compiler version %s " % msc_ver) class CygwinCCompiler(UnixCCompiler): """ Handles the Cygwin port of the GNU C compiler to Windows. """ compiler_type = 'cygwin' obj_extension = ".o" static_lib_extension = ".a" shared_lib_extension = ".dll" static_lib_format = "lib%s%s" shared_lib_format = "%s%s" exe_extension = ".exe" def __init__(self, verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0): UnixCCompiler.__init__(self, verbose, dry_run, force) status, details = check_config_h() self.debug_print("Python's GCC status: %s (details: %s)" % (status, details)) if status is not CONFIG_H_OK: self.warn( "Python's pyconfig.h doesn't seem to support your compiler. " "Reason: %s. " "Compiling may fail because of undefined preprocessor macros." % details) self.gcc_version, self.ld_version, self.dllwrap_version = \ get_versions() self.debug_print(self.compiler_type + ": gcc %s, ld %s, dllwrap %s\n" % (self.gcc_version, self.ld_version, self.dllwrap_version) ) # ld_version >= "2.10.90" and < "2.13" should also be able to use # gcc -mdll instead of dllwrap # Older dllwraps had own version numbers, newer ones use the # same as the rest of binutils ( also ld ) # dllwrap 2.10.90 is buggy if self.ld_version >= "2.10.90": self.linker_dll = "gcc" else: self.linker_dll = "dllwrap" # ld_version >= "2.13" support -shared so use it instead of # -mdll -static if self.ld_version >= "2.13": shared_option = "-shared" else: shared_option = "-mdll -static" # Hard-code GCC because that's what this is all about. # XXX optimization, warnings etc. should be customizable. self.set_executables(compiler='gcc -mcygwin -O -Wall', compiler_so='gcc -mcygwin -mdll -O -Wall', compiler_cxx='g++ -mcygwin -O -Wall', linker_exe='gcc -mcygwin', linker_so=('%s -mcygwin %s' % (self.linker_dll, shared_option))) # cygwin and mingw32 need different sets of libraries if self.gcc_version == "2.91.57": # cygwin shouldn't need msvcrt, but without the dlls will crash # (gcc version 2.91.57) -- perhaps something about initialization self.dll_libraries=["msvcrt"] self.warn( "Consider upgrading to a newer version of gcc") else: # Include the appropriate MSVC runtime library if Python was built # with MSVC 7.0 or later. self.dll_libraries = get_msvcr() def _compile(self, obj, src, ext, cc_args, extra_postargs, pp_opts): """Compiles the source by spawning GCC and windres if needed.""" if ext == '.rc' or ext == '.res': # gcc needs '.res' and '.rc' compiled to object files !!! try: self.spawn(["windres", "-i", src, "-o", obj]) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise CompileError(msg) else: # for other files use the C-compiler try: self.spawn(self.compiler_so + cc_args + [src, '-o', obj] + extra_postargs) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise CompileError(msg) def link(self, target_desc, objects, output_filename, output_dir=None, libraries=None, library_dirs=None, runtime_library_dirs=None, export_symbols=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, build_temp=None, target_lang=None): """Link the objects.""" # use separate copies, so we can modify the lists extra_preargs = copy.copy(extra_preargs or []) libraries = copy.copy(libraries or []) objects = copy.copy(objects or []) # Additional libraries libraries.extend(self.dll_libraries) # handle export symbols by creating a def-file # with executables this only works with gcc/ld as linker if ((export_symbols is not None) and (target_desc != self.EXECUTABLE or self.linker_dll == "gcc")): # (The linker doesn't do anything if output is up-to-date. # So it would probably better to check if we really need this, # but for this we had to insert some unchanged parts of # UnixCCompiler, and this is not what we want.) # we want to put some files in the same directory as the # object files are, build_temp doesn't help much # where are the object files temp_dir = os.path.dirname(objects[0]) # name of dll to give the helper files the same base name (dll_name, dll_extension) = os.path.splitext( os.path.basename(output_filename)) # generate the filenames for these files def_file = os.path.join(temp_dir, dll_name + ".def") lib_file = os.path.join(temp_dir, 'lib' + dll_name + ".a") # Generate .def file contents = [ "LIBRARY %s" % os.path.basename(output_filename), "EXPORTS"] for sym in export_symbols: contents.append(sym) self.execute(write_file, (def_file, contents), "writing %s" % def_file) # next add options for def-file and to creating import libraries # dllwrap uses different options than gcc/ld if self.linker_dll == "dllwrap": extra_preargs.extend(["--output-lib", lib_file]) # for dllwrap we have to use a special option extra_preargs.extend(["--def", def_file]) # we use gcc/ld here and can be sure ld is >= 2.9.10 else: # doesn't work: bfd_close build\...\libfoo.a: Invalid operation #extra_preargs.extend(["-Wl,--out-implib,%s" % lib_file]) # for gcc/ld the def-file is specified as any object files objects.append(def_file) #end: if ((export_symbols is not None) and # (target_desc != self.EXECUTABLE or self.linker_dll == "gcc")): # who wants symbols and a many times larger output file # should explicitly switch the debug mode on # otherwise we let dllwrap/ld strip the output file # (On my machine: 10KiB < stripped_file < ??100KiB # unstripped_file = stripped_file + XXX KiB # ( XXX=254 for a typical python extension)) if not debug: extra_preargs.append("-s") UnixCCompiler.link(self, target_desc, objects, output_filename, output_dir, libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs, None, # export_symbols, we do this in our def-file debug, extra_preargs, extra_postargs, build_temp, target_lang) # -- Miscellaneous methods ----------------------------------------- def object_filenames(self, source_filenames, strip_dir=0, output_dir=''): """Adds supports for rc and res files.""" if output_dir is None: output_dir = '' obj_names = [] for src_name in source_filenames: # use normcase to make sure '.rc' is really '.rc' and not '.RC' base, ext = os.path.splitext(os.path.normcase(src_name)) if ext not in (self.src_extensions + ['.rc','.res']): raise UnknownFileError("unknown file type '%s' (from '%s')" % \ (ext, src_name)) if strip_dir: base = os.path.basename (base) if ext in ('.res', '.rc'): # these need to be compiled to object files obj_names.append (os.path.join(output_dir, base + ext + self.obj_extension)) else: obj_names.append (os.path.join(output_dir, base + self.obj_extension)) return obj_names # the same as cygwin plus some additional parameters class Mingw32CCompiler(CygwinCCompiler): """ Handles the Mingw32 port of the GNU C compiler to Windows. """ compiler_type = 'mingw32' def __init__(self, verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0): CygwinCCompiler.__init__ (self, verbose, dry_run, force) # ld_version >= "2.13" support -shared so use it instead of # -mdll -static if self.ld_version >= "2.13": shared_option = "-shared" else: shared_option = "-mdll -static" # A real mingw32 doesn't need to specify a different entry point, # but cygwin 2.91.57 in no-cygwin-mode needs it. if self.gcc_version <= "2.91.57": entry_point = '--entry _DllMain@12' else: entry_point = '' if is_cygwingcc(): raise CCompilerError( 'Cygwin gcc cannot be used with --compiler=mingw32') self.set_executables(compiler='gcc -O -Wall', compiler_so='gcc -mdll -O -Wall', compiler_cxx='g++ -O -Wall', linker_exe='gcc', linker_so='%s %s %s' % (self.linker_dll, shared_option, entry_point)) # Maybe we should also append -mthreads, but then the finished # dlls need another dll (mingwm10.dll see Mingw32 docs) # (-mthreads: Support thread-safe exception handling on `Mingw32') # no additional libraries needed self.dll_libraries=[] # Include the appropriate MSVC runtime library if Python was built # with MSVC 7.0 or later. self.dll_libraries = get_msvcr() # Because these compilers aren't configured in Python's pyconfig.h file by # default, we should at least warn the user if he is using an unmodified # version. CONFIG_H_OK = "ok" CONFIG_H_NOTOK = "not ok" CONFIG_H_UNCERTAIN = "uncertain" def check_config_h(): """Check if the current Python installation appears amenable to building extensions with GCC. Returns a tuple (status, details), where 'status' is one of the following constants: - CONFIG_H_OK: all is well, go ahead and compile - CONFIG_H_NOTOK: doesn't look good - CONFIG_H_UNCERTAIN: not sure -- unable to read pyconfig.h 'details' is a human-readable string explaining the situation. Note there are two ways to conclude "OK": either 'sys.version' contains the string "GCC" (implying that this Python was built with GCC), or the installed "pyconfig.h" contains the string "__GNUC__". """ # XXX since this function also checks sys.version, it's not strictly a # "pyconfig.h" check -- should probably be renamed... from distutils import sysconfig # if sys.version contains GCC then python was compiled with GCC, and the # pyconfig.h file should be OK if "GCC" in sys.version: return CONFIG_H_OK, "sys.version mentions 'GCC'" # let's see if __GNUC__ is mentioned in python.h fn = sysconfig.get_config_h_filename() try: config_h = open(fn) try: if "__GNUC__" in config_h.read(): return CONFIG_H_OK, "'%s' mentions '__GNUC__'" % fn else: return CONFIG_H_NOTOK, "'%s' does not mention '__GNUC__'" % fn finally: config_h.close() except OSError as exc: return (CONFIG_H_UNCERTAIN, "couldn't read '%s': %s" % (fn, exc.strerror)) RE_VERSION = re.compile(br'(\d+\.\d+(\.\d+)*)') def _find_exe_version(cmd): """Find the version of an executable by running `cmd` in the shell. If the command is not found, or the output does not match `RE_VERSION`, returns None. """ executable = cmd.split()[0] if find_executable(executable) is None: return None out = Popen(cmd, shell=True, stdout=PIPE).stdout try: out_string = out.read() finally: out.close() result = RE_VERSION.search(out_string) if result is None: return None # LooseVersion works with strings # so we need to decode our bytes return LooseVersion(result.group(1).decode()) def get_versions(): """ Try to find out the versions of gcc, ld and dllwrap. If not possible it returns None for it. """ commands = ['gcc -dumpversion', 'ld -v', 'dllwrap --version'] return tuple([_find_exe_version(cmd) for cmd in commands]) def is_cygwingcc(): '''Try to determine if the gcc that would be used is from cygwin.''' out_string = check_output(['gcc', '-dumpmachine']) return out_string.strip().endswith(b'cygwin')
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/extension.py
"""distutils.extension Provides the Extension class, used to describe C/C++ extension modules in setup scripts.""" import os import warnings # 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 : [string] list of source filenames, relative to the distribution root (where the setup script lives), in Unix form (slash-separated) for portability. 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, sources, include_dirs=None, define_macros=None, undef_macros=None, library_dirs=None, libraries=None, runtime_library_dirs=None, extra_objects=None, extra_compile_args=None, extra_link_args=None, export_symbols=None, swig_opts = None, depends=None, language=None, optional=None, **kw # To catch unknown keywords ): if not isinstance(name, str): raise AssertionError("'name' must be a string") if not (isinstance(sources, list) and all(isinstance(v, str) for v in sources)): raise AssertionError("'sources' must be a list of strings") self.name = name self.sources = sources 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 = "Unknown Extension options: %s" % options warnings.warn(msg) def __repr__(self): return '<%s.%s(%r) at %#x>' % ( self.__class__.__module__, self.__class__.__qualname__, self.name, id(self)) def read_setup_file(filename): """Reads a Setup file and returns Extension instances.""" from distutils.sysconfig import (parse_makefile, expand_makefile_vars, _variable_rx) 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 # <module> ... [<sourcefile> ...] [<cpparg> ...] [<library> ...] file = TextFile(filename, strip_comments=1, skip_blanks=1, join_lines=1, lstrip_ws=1, rstrip_ws=1) 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("'%s' lines not handled yet" % line) 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("unrecognized argument '%s'" % word) extensions.append(ext) finally: file.close() return extensions
0
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools
qxf2_public_repos/what-is-confusing-backend/venv/Lib/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/debug.py
import os # If DISTUTILS_DEBUG is anything other than the empty string, we run in # debug mode. DEBUG = os.environ.get('DISTUTILS_DEBUG')
0