From 227b2d30a8675b44918f9d9ca89b24144a938215 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Shubham Saini Date: Mon, 5 Aug 2019 14:02:33 +0530 Subject: removing venv files --- .../pip/_vendor/distlib/compat.py | 1120 -------------------- 1 file changed, 1120 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 venv/lib/python3.7/site-packages/pip-10.0.1-py3.7.egg/pip/_vendor/distlib/compat.py (limited to 'venv/lib/python3.7/site-packages/pip-10.0.1-py3.7.egg/pip/_vendor/distlib/compat.py') diff --git a/venv/lib/python3.7/site-packages/pip-10.0.1-py3.7.egg/pip/_vendor/distlib/compat.py b/venv/lib/python3.7/site-packages/pip-10.0.1-py3.7.egg/pip/_vendor/distlib/compat.py deleted file mode 100644 index 09929b0..0000000 --- a/venv/lib/python3.7/site-packages/pip-10.0.1-py3.7.egg/pip/_vendor/distlib/compat.py +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1120 +0,0 @@ -# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- -# -# Copyright (C) 2013-2017 Vinay Sajip. -# Licensed to the Python Software Foundation under a contributor agreement. -# See LICENSE.txt and CONTRIBUTORS.txt. -# -from __future__ import absolute_import - -import os -import re -import sys - -try: - import ssl -except ImportError: # pragma: no cover - ssl = None - -if sys.version_info[0] < 3: # pragma: no cover - from StringIO import StringIO - string_types = basestring, - text_type = unicode - from types import FileType as file_type - import __builtin__ as builtins - import ConfigParser as configparser - from ._backport import shutil - from urlparse import urlparse, urlunparse, urljoin, urlsplit, urlunsplit - from urllib import (urlretrieve, quote as _quote, unquote, url2pathname, - pathname2url, ContentTooShortError, splittype) - - def quote(s): - if isinstance(s, unicode): - s = s.encode('utf-8') - return _quote(s) - - import urllib2 - from urllib2 import (Request, urlopen, URLError, HTTPError, - HTTPBasicAuthHandler, HTTPPasswordMgr, - HTTPHandler, HTTPRedirectHandler, - build_opener) - if ssl: - from urllib2 import HTTPSHandler - import httplib - import xmlrpclib - import Queue as queue - from HTMLParser import HTMLParser - import htmlentitydefs - raw_input = raw_input - from itertools import ifilter as filter - from itertools import ifilterfalse as filterfalse - - _userprog = None - def splituser(host): - """splituser('user[:passwd]@host[:port]') --> 'user[:passwd]', 'host[:port]'.""" - global _userprog - if _userprog is None: - import re - _userprog = re.compile('^(.*)@(.*)$') - - match = _userprog.match(host) - if match: return match.group(1, 2) - return None, host - -else: # pragma: no cover - from io import StringIO - string_types = str, - text_type = str - from io import TextIOWrapper as file_type - import builtins - import configparser - import shutil - from urllib.parse import (urlparse, urlunparse, urljoin, splituser, quote, - unquote, urlsplit, urlunsplit, splittype) - from urllib.request import (urlopen, urlretrieve, Request, url2pathname, - pathname2url, - HTTPBasicAuthHandler, HTTPPasswordMgr, - HTTPHandler, HTTPRedirectHandler, - build_opener) - if ssl: - from urllib.request import HTTPSHandler - from urllib.error import HTTPError, URLError, ContentTooShortError - import http.client as httplib - import urllib.request as urllib2 - import xmlrpc.client as xmlrpclib - import queue - from html.parser import HTMLParser - import html.entities as htmlentitydefs - raw_input = input - from itertools import filterfalse - filter = filter - -try: - from ssl import match_hostname, CertificateError -except ImportError: # pragma: no cover - class CertificateError(ValueError): - pass - - - def _dnsname_match(dn, hostname, max_wildcards=1): - """Matching according to RFC 6125, section 6.4.3 - - http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6125#section-6.4.3 - """ - pats = [] - if not dn: - return False - - parts = dn.split('.') - leftmost, remainder = parts[0], 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, match_hostname needs a " - "SSL socket or SSL context with either " - "CERT_OPTIONAL or CERT_REQUIRED") - 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") - - -try: - from types import SimpleNamespace as Container -except ImportError: # pragma: no cover - class Container(object): - """ - A generic container for when multiple values need to be returned - """ - def __init__(self, **kwargs): - self.__dict__.update(kwargs) - - -try: - from shutil import which -except ImportError: # pragma: no cover - # Implementation from Python 3.3 - def which(cmd, mode=os.F_OK | os.X_OK, path=None): - """Given a command, mode, and a PATH string, return the path which - conforms to the given mode on the PATH, or None if there is no such - file. - - `mode` defaults to os.F_OK | os.X_OK. `path` defaults to the result - of os.environ.get("PATH"), or can be overridden with a custom search - path. - - """ - # Check that a given file can be accessed with the correct mode. - # Additionally check that `file` is not a directory, as on Windows - # directories pass the os.access check. - def _access_check(fn, mode): - return (os.path.exists(fn) and os.access(fn, mode) - and not os.path.isdir(fn)) - - # If we're given a path with a directory part, look it up directly rather - # than referring to PATH directories. This includes checking relative to the - # current directory, e.g. ./script - if os.path.dirname(cmd): - if _access_check(cmd, mode): - return cmd - return None - - if path is None: - path = os.environ.get("PATH", os.defpath) - if not path: - return None - path = path.split(os.pathsep) - - if sys.platform == "win32": - # The current directory takes precedence on Windows. - if not os.curdir in path: - path.insert(0, os.curdir) - - # PATHEXT is necessary to check on Windows. - pathext = os.environ.get("PATHEXT", "").split(os.pathsep) - # See if the given file matches any of the expected path extensions. - # This will allow us to short circuit when given "python.exe". - # If it does match, only test that one, otherwise we have to try - # others. - if any(cmd.lower().endswith(ext.lower()) for ext in pathext): - files = [cmd] - else: - files = [cmd + ext for ext in pathext] - else: - # On other platforms you don't have things like PATHEXT to tell you - # what file suffixes are executable, so just pass on cmd as-is. - files = [cmd] - - seen = set() - for dir in path: - normdir = os.path.normcase(dir) - if not normdir in seen: - seen.add(normdir) - for thefile in files: - name = os.path.join(dir, thefile) - if _access_check(name, mode): - return name - return None - - -# ZipFile is a context manager in 2.7, but not in 2.6 - -from zipfile import ZipFile as BaseZipFile - -if hasattr(BaseZipFile, '__enter__'): # pragma: no cover - ZipFile = BaseZipFile -else: # pragma: no cover - from zipfile import ZipExtFile as BaseZipExtFile - - class ZipExtFile(BaseZipExtFile): - def __init__(self, base): - self.__dict__.update(base.__dict__) - - def __enter__(self): - return self - - def __exit__(self, *exc_info): - self.close() - # return None, so if an exception occurred, it will propagate - - class ZipFile(BaseZipFile): - def __enter__(self): - return self - - def __exit__(self, *exc_info): - self.close() - # return None, so if an exception occurred, it will propagate - - def open(self, *args, **kwargs): - base = BaseZipFile.open(self, *args, **kwargs) - return ZipExtFile(base) - -try: - from platform import python_implementation -except ImportError: # pragma: no cover - def python_implementation(): - """Return a string identifying the Python implementation.""" - if 'PyPy' in sys.version: - return 'PyPy' - if os.name == 'java': - return 'Jython' - if sys.version.startswith('IronPython'): - return 'IronPython' - return 'CPython' - -try: - import sysconfig -except ImportError: # pragma: no cover - from ._backport import sysconfig - -try: - callable = callable -except NameError: # pragma: no cover - from collections import Callable - - def callable(obj): - return isinstance(obj, Callable) - - -try: - fsencode = os.fsencode - fsdecode = os.fsdecode -except AttributeError: # pragma: no cover - # Issue #99: on some systems (e.g. containerised), - # sys.getfilesystemencoding() returns None, and we need a real value, - # so fall back to utf-8. From the CPython 2.7 docs relating to Unix and - # sys.getfilesystemencoding(): the return value is "the user’s preference - # according to the result of nl_langinfo(CODESET), or None if the - # nl_langinfo(CODESET) failed." - _fsencoding = sys.getfilesystemencoding() or 'utf-8' - if _fsencoding == 'mbcs': - _fserrors = 'strict' - else: - _fserrors = 'surrogateescape' - - def fsencode(filename): - if isinstance(filename, bytes): - return filename - elif isinstance(filename, text_type): - return filename.encode(_fsencoding, _fserrors) - else: - raise TypeError("expect bytes or str, not %s" % - type(filename).__name__) - - def fsdecode(filename): - if isinstance(filename, text_type): - return filename - elif isinstance(filename, bytes): - return filename.decode(_fsencoding, _fserrors) - else: - raise TypeError("expect bytes or str, not %s" % - type(filename).__name__) - -try: - from tokenize import detect_encoding -except ImportError: # pragma: no cover - from codecs import BOM_UTF8, lookup - import re - - cookie_re = re.compile(r"coding[:=]\s*([-\w.]+)") - - def _get_normal_name(orig_enc): - """Imitates get_normal_name in tokenizer.c.""" - # Only care about the first 12 characters. - enc = orig_enc[:12].lower().replace("_", "-") - if enc == "utf-8" or enc.startswith("utf-8-"): - return "utf-8" - if enc in ("latin-1", "iso-8859-1", "iso-latin-1") or \ - enc.startswith(("latin-1-", "iso-8859-1-", "iso-latin-1-")): - return "iso-8859-1" - return orig_enc - - def detect_encoding(readline): - """ - The detect_encoding() function is used to detect the encoding that should - be used to decode a Python source file. It requires one argument, readline, - in the same way as the tokenize() generator. - - It will call readline a maximum of twice, and return the encoding used - (as a string) and a list of any lines (left as bytes) it has read in. - - It detects the encoding from the presence of a utf-8 bom or an encoding - cookie as specified in pep-0263. If both a bom and a cookie are present, - but disagree, a SyntaxError will be raised. If the encoding cookie is an - invalid charset, raise a SyntaxError. Note that if a utf-8 bom is found, - 'utf-8-sig' is returned. - - If no encoding is specified, then the default of 'utf-8' will be returned. - """ - try: - filename = readline.__self__.name - except AttributeError: - filename = None - bom_found = False - encoding = None - default = 'utf-8' - def read_or_stop(): - try: - return readline() - except StopIteration: - return b'' - - def find_cookie(line): - try: - # Decode as UTF-8. Either the line is an encoding declaration, - # in which case it should be pure ASCII, or it must be UTF-8 - # per default encoding. - line_string = line.decode('utf-8') - except UnicodeDecodeError: - msg = "invalid or missing encoding declaration" - if filename is not None: - msg = '{} for {!r}'.format(msg, filename) - raise SyntaxError(msg) - - matches = cookie_re.findall(line_string) - if not matches: - return None - encoding = _get_normal_name(matches[0]) - try: - codec = lookup(encoding) - except LookupError: - # This behaviour mimics the Python interpreter - if filename is None: - msg = "unknown encoding: " + encoding - else: - msg = "unknown encoding for {!r}: {}".format(filename, - encoding) - raise SyntaxError(msg) - - if bom_found: - if codec.name != 'utf-8': - # This behaviour mimics the Python interpreter - if filename is None: - msg = 'encoding problem: utf-8' - else: - msg = 'encoding problem for {!r}: utf-8'.format(filename) - raise SyntaxError(msg) - encoding += '-sig' - return encoding - - first = read_or_stop() - if first.startswith(BOM_UTF8): - bom_found = True - first = first[3:] - default = 'utf-8-sig' - if not first: - return default, [] - - encoding = find_cookie(first) - if encoding: - return encoding, [first] - - second = read_or_stop() - if not second: - return default, [first] - - encoding = find_cookie(second) - if encoding: - return encoding, [first, second] - - return default, [first, second] - -# For converting & <-> & etc. -try: - from html import escape -except ImportError: - from cgi import escape -if sys.version_info[:2] < (3, 4): - unescape = HTMLParser().unescape -else: - from html import unescape - -try: - from collections import ChainMap -except ImportError: # pragma: no cover - from collections import MutableMapping - - try: - from reprlib import recursive_repr as _recursive_repr - except ImportError: - def _recursive_repr(fillvalue='...'): - ''' - Decorator to make a repr function return fillvalue for a recursive - call - ''' - - def decorating_function(user_function): - repr_running = set() - - def wrapper(self): - key = id(self), get_ident() - if key in repr_running: - return fillvalue - repr_running.add(key) - try: - result = user_function(self) - finally: - repr_running.discard(key) - return result - - # Can't use functools.wraps() here because of bootstrap issues - wrapper.__module__ = getattr(user_function, '__module__') - wrapper.__doc__ = getattr(user_function, '__doc__') - wrapper.__name__ = getattr(user_function, '__name__') - wrapper.__annotations__ = getattr(user_function, '__annotations__', {}) - return wrapper - - return decorating_function - - class ChainMap(MutableMapping): - ''' A ChainMap groups multiple dicts (or other mappings) together - to create a single, updateable view. - - The underlying mappings are stored in a list. That list is public and can - accessed or updated using the *maps* attribute. There is no other state. - - Lookups search the underlying mappings successively until a key is found. - In contrast, writes, updates, and deletions only operate on the first - mapping. - - ''' - - def __init__(self, *maps): - '''Initialize a ChainMap by setting *maps* to the given mappings. - If no mappings are provided, a single empty dictionary is used. - - ''' - self.maps = list(maps) or [{}] # always at least one map - - def __missing__(self, key): - raise KeyError(key) - - def __getitem__(self, key): - for mapping in self.maps: - try: - return mapping[key] # can't use 'key in mapping' with defaultdict - except KeyError: - pass - return self.__missing__(key) # support subclasses that define __missing__ - - def get(self, key, default=None): - return self[key] if key in self else default - - def __len__(self): - return len(set().union(*self.maps)) # reuses stored hash values if possible - - def __iter__(self): - return iter(set().union(*self.maps)) - - def __contains__(self, key): - return any(key in m for m in self.maps) - - def __bool__(self): - return any(self.maps) - - @_recursive_repr() - def __repr__(self): - return '{0.__class__.__name__}({1})'.format( - self, ', '.join(map(repr, self.maps))) - - @classmethod - def fromkeys(cls, iterable, *args): - 'Create a ChainMap with a single dict created from the iterable.' - return cls(dict.fromkeys(iterable, *args)) - - def copy(self): - 'New ChainMap or subclass with a new copy of maps[0] and refs to maps[1:]' - return self.__class__(self.maps[0].copy(), *self.maps[1:]) - - __copy__ = copy - - def new_child(self): # like Django's Context.push() - 'New ChainMap with a new dict followed by all previous maps.' - return self.__class__({}, *self.maps) - - @property - def parents(self): # like Django's Context.pop() - 'New ChainMap from maps[1:].' - return self.__class__(*self.maps[1:]) - - def __setitem__(self, key, value): - self.maps[0][key] = value - - def __delitem__(self, key): - try: - del self.maps[0][key] - except KeyError: - raise KeyError('Key not found in the first mapping: {!r}'.format(key)) - - def popitem(self): - 'Remove and return an item pair from maps[0]. Raise KeyError is maps[0] is empty.' - try: - return self.maps[0].popitem() - except KeyError: - raise KeyError('No keys found in the first mapping.') - - def pop(self, key, *args): - 'Remove *key* from maps[0] and return its value. Raise KeyError if *key* not in maps[0].' - try: - return self.maps[0].pop(key, *args) - except KeyError: - raise KeyError('Key not found in the first mapping: {!r}'.format(key)) - - def clear(self): - 'Clear maps[0], leaving maps[1:] intact.' - self.maps[0].clear() - -try: - from importlib.util import cache_from_source # Python >= 3.4 -except ImportError: # pragma: no cover - try: - from imp import cache_from_source - except ImportError: # pragma: no cover - def cache_from_source(path, debug_override=None): - assert path.endswith('.py') - if debug_override is None: - debug_override = __debug__ - if debug_override: - suffix = 'c' - else: - suffix = 'o' - return path + suffix - -try: - from collections import OrderedDict -except ImportError: # pragma: no cover -## {{{ http://code.activestate.com/recipes/576693/ (r9) -# Backport of OrderedDict() class that runs on Python 2.4, 2.5, 2.6, 2.7 and pypy. -# Passes Python2.7's test suite and incorporates all the latest updates. - try: - from thread import get_ident as _get_ident - except ImportError: - from dummy_thread import get_ident as _get_ident - - try: - from _abcoll import KeysView, ValuesView, ItemsView - except ImportError: - pass - - - class OrderedDict(dict): - 'Dictionary that remembers insertion order' - # An inherited dict maps keys to values. - # The inherited dict provides __getitem__, __len__, __contains__, and get. - # The remaining methods are order-aware. - # Big-O running times for all methods are the same as for regular dictionaries. - - # The internal self.__map dictionary maps keys to links in a doubly linked list. - # The circular doubly linked list starts and ends with a sentinel element. - # The sentinel element never gets deleted (this simplifies the algorithm). - # Each link is stored as a list of length three: [PREV, NEXT, KEY]. - - def __init__(self, *args, **kwds): - '''Initialize an ordered dictionary. Signature is the same as for - regular dictionaries, but keyword arguments are not recommended - because their insertion order is arbitrary. - - ''' - if len(args) > 1: - raise TypeError('expected at most 1 arguments, got %d' % len(args)) - try: - self.__root - except AttributeError: - self.__root = root = [] # sentinel node - root[:] = [root, root, None] - self.__map = {} - self.__update(*args, **kwds) - - def __setitem__(self, key, value, dict_setitem=dict.__setitem__): - 'od.__setitem__(i, y) <==> od[i]=y' - # Setting a new item creates a new link which goes at the end of the linked - # list, and the inherited dictionary is updated with the new key/value pair. - if key not in self: - root = self.__root - last = root[0] - last[1] = root[0] = self.__map[key] = [last, root, key] - dict_setitem(self, key, value) - - def __delitem__(self, key, dict_delitem=dict.__delitem__): - 'od.__delitem__(y) <==> del od[y]' - # Deleting an existing item uses self.__map to find the link which is - # then removed by updating the links in the predecessor and successor nodes. - dict_delitem(self, key) - link_prev, link_next, key = self.__map.pop(key) - link_prev[1] = link_next - link_next[0] = link_prev - - def __iter__(self): - 'od.__iter__() <==> iter(od)' - root = self.__root - curr = root[1] - while curr is not root: - yield curr[2] - curr = curr[1] - - def __reversed__(self): - 'od.__reversed__() <==> reversed(od)' - root = self.__root - curr = root[0] - while curr is not root: - yield curr[2] - curr = curr[0] - - def clear(self): - 'od.clear() -> None. Remove all items from od.' - try: - for node in self.__map.itervalues(): - del node[:] - root = self.__root - root[:] = [root, root, None] - self.__map.clear() - except AttributeError: - pass - dict.clear(self) - - def popitem(self, last=True): - '''od.popitem() -> (k, v), return and remove a (key, value) pair. - Pairs are returned in LIFO order if last is true or FIFO order if false. - - ''' - if not self: - raise KeyError('dictionary is empty') - root = self.__root - if last: - link = root[0] - link_prev = link[0] - link_prev[1] = root - root[0] = link_prev - else: - link = root[1] - link_next = link[1] - root[1] = link_next - link_next[0] = root - key = link[2] - del self.__map[key] - value = dict.pop(self, key) - return key, value - - # -- the following methods do not depend on the internal structure -- - - def keys(self): - 'od.keys() -> list of keys in od' - return list(self) - - def values(self): - 'od.values() -> list of values in od' - return [self[key] for key in self] - - def items(self): - 'od.items() -> list of (key, value) pairs in od' - return [(key, self[key]) for key in self] - - def iterkeys(self): - 'od.iterkeys() -> an iterator over the keys in od' - return iter(self) - - def itervalues(self): - 'od.itervalues -> an iterator over the values in od' - for k in self: - yield self[k] - - def iteritems(self): - 'od.iteritems -> an iterator over the (key, value) items in od' - for k in self: - yield (k, self[k]) - - def update(*args, **kwds): - '''od.update(E, **F) -> None. Update od from dict/iterable E and F. - - If E is a dict instance, does: for k in E: od[k] = E[k] - If E has a .keys() method, does: for k in E.keys(): od[k] = E[k] - Or if E is an iterable of items, does: for k, v in E: od[k] = v - In either case, this is followed by: for k, v in F.items(): od[k] = v - - ''' - if len(args) > 2: - raise TypeError('update() takes at most 2 positional ' - 'arguments (%d given)' % (len(args),)) - elif not args: - raise TypeError('update() takes at least 1 argument (0 given)') - self = args[0] - # Make progressively weaker assumptions about "other" - other = () - if len(args) == 2: - other = args[1] - if isinstance(other, dict): - for key in other: - self[key] = other[key] - elif hasattr(other, 'keys'): - for key in other.keys(): - self[key] = other[key] - else: - for key, value in other: - self[key] = value - for key, value in kwds.items(): - self[key] = value - - __update = update # let subclasses override update without breaking __init__ - - __marker = object() - - def pop(self, key, default=__marker): - '''od.pop(k[,d]) -> v, remove specified key and return the corresponding value. - If key is not found, d is returned if given, otherwise KeyError is raised. - - ''' - if key in self: - result = self[key] - del self[key] - return result - if default is self.__marker: - raise KeyError(key) - return default - - def setdefault(self, key, default=None): - 'od.setdefault(k[,d]) -> od.get(k,d), also set od[k]=d if k not in od' - if key in self: - return self[key] - self[key] = default - return default - - def __repr__(self, _repr_running=None): - 'od.__repr__() <==> repr(od)' - if not _repr_running: _repr_running = {} - call_key = id(self), _get_ident() - if call_key in _repr_running: - return '...' - _repr_running[call_key] = 1 - try: - if not self: - return '%s()' % (self.__class__.__name__,) - return '%s(%r)' % (self.__class__.__name__, self.items()) - finally: - del _repr_running[call_key] - - def __reduce__(self): - 'Return state information for pickling' - items = [[k, self[k]] for k in self] - inst_dict = vars(self).copy() - for k in vars(OrderedDict()): - inst_dict.pop(k, None) - if inst_dict: - return (self.__class__, (items,), inst_dict) - return self.__class__, (items,) - - def copy(self): - 'od.copy() -> a shallow copy of od' - return self.__class__(self) - - @classmethod - def fromkeys(cls, iterable, value=None): - '''OD.fromkeys(S[, v]) -> New ordered dictionary with keys from S - and values equal to v (which defaults to None). - - ''' - d = cls() - for key in iterable: - d[key] = value - return d - - def __eq__(self, other): - '''od.__eq__(y) <==> od==y. Comparison to another OD is order-sensitive - while comparison to a regular mapping is order-insensitive. - - ''' - if isinstance(other, OrderedDict): - return len(self)==len(other) and self.items() == other.items() - return dict.__eq__(self, other) - - def __ne__(self, other): - return not self == other - - # -- the following methods are only used in Python 2.7 -- - - def viewkeys(self): - "od.viewkeys() -> a set-like object providing a view on od's keys" - return KeysView(self) - - def viewvalues(self): - "od.viewvalues() -> an object providing a view on od's values" - return ValuesView(self) - - def viewitems(self): - "od.viewitems() -> a set-like object providing a view on od's items" - return ItemsView(self) - -try: - from logging.config import BaseConfigurator, valid_ident -except ImportError: # pragma: no cover - IDENTIFIER = re.compile('^[a-z_][a-z0-9_]*$', re.I) - - - def valid_ident(s): - m = IDENTIFIER.match(s) - if not m: - raise ValueError('Not a valid Python identifier: %r' % s) - return True - - - # The ConvertingXXX classes are wrappers around standard Python containers, - # and they serve to convert any suitable values in the container. The - # conversion converts base dicts, lists and tuples to their wrapped - # equivalents, whereas strings which match a conversion format are converted - # appropriately. - # - # Each wrapper should have a configurator attribute holding the actual - # configurator to use for conversion. - - class ConvertingDict(dict): - """A converting dictionary wrapper.""" - - def __getitem__(self, key): - value = dict.__getitem__(self, key) - result = self.configurator.convert(value) - #If the converted value is different, save for next time - if value is not result: - self[key] = result - if type(result) in (ConvertingDict, ConvertingList, - ConvertingTuple): - result.parent = self - result.key = key - return result - - def get(self, key, default=None): - value = dict.get(self, key, default) - result = self.configurator.convert(value) - #If the converted value is different, save for next time - if value is not result: - self[key] = result - if type(result) in (ConvertingDict, ConvertingList, - ConvertingTuple): - result.parent = self - result.key = key - return result - - def pop(self, key, default=None): - value = dict.pop(self, key, default) - result = self.configurator.convert(value) - if value is not result: - if type(result) in (ConvertingDict, ConvertingList, - ConvertingTuple): - result.parent = self - result.key = key - return result - - class ConvertingList(list): - """A converting list wrapper.""" - def __getitem__(self, key): - value = list.__getitem__(self, key) - result = self.configurator.convert(value) - #If the converted value is different, save for next time - if value is not result: - self[key] = result - if type(result) in (ConvertingDict, ConvertingList, - ConvertingTuple): - result.parent = self - result.key = key - return result - - def pop(self, idx=-1): - value = list.pop(self, idx) - result = self.configurator.convert(value) - if value is not result: - if type(result) in (ConvertingDict, ConvertingList, - ConvertingTuple): - result.parent = self - return result - - class ConvertingTuple(tuple): - """A converting tuple wrapper.""" - def __getitem__(self, key): - value = tuple.__getitem__(self, key) - result = self.configurator.convert(value) - if value is not result: - if type(result) in (ConvertingDict, ConvertingList, - ConvertingTuple): - result.parent = self - result.key = key - return result - - class BaseConfigurator(object): - """ - The configurator base class which defines some useful defaults. - """ - - CONVERT_PATTERN = re.compile(r'^(?P[a-z]+)://(?P.*)$') - - WORD_PATTERN = re.compile(r'^\s*(\w+)\s*') - DOT_PATTERN = re.compile(r'^\.\s*(\w+)\s*') - INDEX_PATTERN = re.compile(r'^\[\s*(\w+)\s*\]\s*') - DIGIT_PATTERN = re.compile(r'^\d+$') - - value_converters = { - 'ext' : 'ext_convert', - 'cfg' : 'cfg_convert', - } - - # We might want to use a different one, e.g. importlib - importer = staticmethod(__import__) - - def __init__(self, config): - self.config = ConvertingDict(config) - self.config.configurator = self - - def resolve(self, s): - """ - Resolve strings to objects using standard import and attribute - syntax. - """ - name = s.split('.') - used = name.pop(0) - try: - found = self.importer(used) - for frag in name: - used += '.' + frag - try: - found = getattr(found, frag) - except AttributeError: - self.importer(used) - found = getattr(found, frag) - return found - except ImportError: - e, tb = sys.exc_info()[1:] - v = ValueError('Cannot resolve %r: %s' % (s, e)) - v.__cause__, v.__traceback__ = e, tb - raise v - - def ext_convert(self, value): - """Default converter for the ext:// protocol.""" - return self.resolve(value) - - def cfg_convert(self, value): - """Default converter for the cfg:// protocol.""" - rest = value - m = self.WORD_PATTERN.match(rest) - if m is None: - raise ValueError("Unable to convert %r" % value) - else: - rest = rest[m.end():] - d = self.config[m.groups()[0]] - #print d, rest - while rest: - m = self.DOT_PATTERN.match(rest) - if m: - d = d[m.groups()[0]] - else: - m = self.INDEX_PATTERN.match(rest) - if m: - idx = m.groups()[0] - if not self.DIGIT_PATTERN.match(idx): - d = d[idx] - else: - try: - n = int(idx) # try as number first (most likely) - d = d[n] - except TypeError: - d = d[idx] - if m: - rest = rest[m.end():] - else: - raise ValueError('Unable to convert ' - '%r at %r' % (value, rest)) - #rest should be empty - return d - - def convert(self, value): - """ - Convert values to an appropriate type. dicts, lists and tuples are - replaced by their converting alternatives. Strings are checked to - see if they have a conversion format and are converted if they do. - """ - if not isinstance(value, ConvertingDict) and isinstance(value, dict): - value = ConvertingDict(value) - value.configurator = self - elif not isinstance(value, ConvertingList) and isinstance(value, list): - value = ConvertingList(value) - value.configurator = self - elif not isinstance(value, ConvertingTuple) and\ - isinstance(value, tuple): - value = ConvertingTuple(value) - value.configurator = self - elif isinstance(value, string_types): - m = self.CONVERT_PATTERN.match(value) - if m: - d = m.groupdict() - prefix = d['prefix'] - converter = self.value_converters.get(prefix, None) - if converter: - suffix = d['suffix'] - converter = getattr(self, converter) - value = converter(suffix) - return value - - def configure_custom(self, config): - """Configure an object with a user-supplied factory.""" - c = config.pop('()') - if not callable(c): - c = self.resolve(c) - props = config.pop('.', None) - # Check for valid identifiers - kwargs = dict([(k, config[k]) for k in config if valid_ident(k)]) - result = c(**kwargs) - if props: - for name, value in props.items(): - setattr(result, name, value) - return result - - def as_tuple(self, value): - """Utility function which converts lists to tuples.""" - if isinstance(value, list): - value = tuple(value) - return value -- cgit v1.2.3