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| # @samdolan - Fetch via `curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/amoffat/sh/c361f9450fed03cd3bb34291c4cd2f4cbc7c5bce/sh.py` | |
| """ | |
| http://amoffat.github.io/sh/ | |
| """ | |
| #=============================================================================== | |
| # Copyright (C) 2011-2015 by Andrew Moffat | |
| # | |
| # 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. | |
| #=============================================================================== | |
| __version__ = "1.11" | |
| __project_url__ = "https://github.com/amoffat/sh" | |
| import platform | |
| if "windows" in platform.system().lower(): | |
| raise ImportError("sh %s is currently only supported on linux and osx. \ | |
| please install pbs 0.110 (http://pypi.python.org/pypi/pbs) for windows \ | |
| support." % __version__) | |
| import sys | |
| IS_PY3 = sys.version_info[0] == 3 | |
| import traceback | |
| import os | |
| import re | |
| from glob import glob as original_glob | |
| import time | |
| from types import ModuleType | |
| from functools import partial | |
| import inspect | |
| from contextlib import contextmanager | |
| from locale import getpreferredencoding | |
| DEFAULT_ENCODING = getpreferredencoding() or "UTF-8" | |
| if IS_PY3: | |
| from io import StringIO | |
| from io import BytesIO as cStringIO | |
| from queue import Queue, Empty | |
| # for some reason, python 3.1 removed the builtin "callable", wtf | |
| if not hasattr(__builtins__, "callable"): | |
| def callable(ob): | |
| return hasattr(ob, "__call__") | |
| else: | |
| from StringIO import StringIO | |
| from cStringIO import OutputType as cStringIO | |
| from Queue import Queue, Empty | |
| IS_OSX = platform.system() == "Darwin" | |
| THIS_DIR = os.path.dirname(os.path.realpath(__file__)) | |
| SH_LOGGER_NAME = "sh" | |
| import errno | |
| import warnings | |
| import pty | |
| import termios | |
| import signal | |
| import gc | |
| import select | |
| import threading | |
| import tty | |
| import fcntl | |
| import struct | |
| import resource | |
| from collections import deque | |
| import logging | |
| import weakref | |
| # TODO remove with contexts in next version | |
| def with_context_warning(): | |
| warnings.warn(""" | |
| with contexts are deprecated because they are not thread safe. they will be \ | |
| removed in the next version. use subcommands instead \ | |
| http://amoffat.github.io/sh/#sub-commands. see \ | |
| https://github.com/amoffat/sh/issues/195 | |
| """.strip(), stacklevel=3) | |
| if IS_PY3: | |
| raw_input = input | |
| unicode = str | |
| basestring = str | |
| _unicode_methods = set(dir(unicode())) | |
| def encode_to_py3bytes_or_py2str(s): | |
| """ takes anything and attempts to return a py2 string or py3 bytes. this | |
| is typically used when creating command + arguments to be executed via | |
| os.exec* """ | |
| fallback_encoding = "utf8" | |
| if IS_PY3: | |
| # if we're already bytes, do nothing | |
| if isinstance(s, bytes): | |
| pass | |
| else: | |
| s = str(s) | |
| try: | |
| s = bytes(s, DEFAULT_ENCODING) | |
| except UnicodeEncodeError: | |
| s = bytes(s, fallback_encoding) | |
| else: | |
| # attempt to convert the thing to unicode from the system's encoding | |
| try: | |
| s = unicode(s, DEFAULT_ENCODING) | |
| # if the thing is already unicode, or it's a number, it can't be | |
| # coerced to unicode with an encoding argument, but if we leave out | |
| # the encoding argument, it will convert it to a string, then to unicode | |
| except TypeError: | |
| s = unicode(s) | |
| # now that we have guaranteed unicode, encode to our system encoding, | |
| # but attempt to fall back to something | |
| try: | |
| s = s.encode(DEFAULT_ENCODING) | |
| except: | |
| s = s.encode(fallback_encoding) | |
| return s | |
| class ErrorReturnCode(Exception): | |
| """ base class for all exceptions as a result of a command's exit status | |
| being deemed an error. this base class is dynamically subclassed into | |
| derived classes with the format: ErrorReturnCode_NNN where NNN is the exit | |
| code number. the reason for this is it reduces boiler plate code when | |
| testing error return codes: | |
| try: | |
| some_cmd() | |
| except ErrorReturnCode_12: | |
| print("couldn't do X") | |
| vs: | |
| try: | |
| some_cmd() | |
| except ErrorReturnCode as e: | |
| if e.exit_code == 12: | |
| print("couldn't do X") | |
| it's not much of a savings, but i believe it makes the code easier to read """ | |
| truncate_cap = 750 | |
| def __init__(self, full_cmd, stdout, stderr): | |
| self.full_cmd = full_cmd | |
| self.stdout = stdout | |
| self.stderr = stderr | |
| if self.stdout is None: | |
| exc_stdout = "<redirected>" | |
| else: | |
| exc_stdout = self.stdout[:self.truncate_cap] | |
| out_delta = len(self.stdout) - len(exc_stdout) | |
| if out_delta: | |
| exc_stdout += ("... (%d more, please see e.stdout)" % out_delta).encode() | |
| if self.stderr is None: | |
| exc_stderr = "<redirected>" | |
| else: | |
| exc_stderr = self.stderr[:self.truncate_cap] | |
| err_delta = len(self.stderr) - len(exc_stderr) | |
| if err_delta: | |
| exc_stderr += ("... (%d more, please see e.stderr)" % err_delta).encode() | |
| msg = "\n\n RAN: %r\n\n STDOUT:\n%s\n\n STDERR:\n%s" % \ | |
| (full_cmd, exc_stdout.decode(DEFAULT_ENCODING, "replace"), | |
| exc_stderr.decode(DEFAULT_ENCODING, "replace")) | |
| super(ErrorReturnCode, self).__init__(msg) | |
| class SignalException(ErrorReturnCode): pass | |
| class TimeoutException(Exception): | |
| """ the exception thrown when a command is killed because a specified | |
| timeout (via _timeout) was hit """ | |
| def __init__(self, exit_code): | |
| self.exit_code = exit_code | |
| super(Exception, self).__init__() | |
| SIGNALS_THAT_SHOULD_THROW_EXCEPTION = ( | |
| signal.SIGABRT, | |
| signal.SIGBUS, | |
| signal.SIGFPE, | |
| signal.SIGILL, | |
| signal.SIGINT, | |
| signal.SIGKILL, | |
| signal.SIGPIPE, | |
| signal.SIGQUIT, | |
| signal.SIGSEGV, | |
| signal.SIGTERM, | |
| signal.SIGSYS, | |
| ) | |
| # we subclass AttributeError because: | |
| # https://github.com/ipython/ipython/issues/2577 | |
| # https://github.com/amoffat/sh/issues/97#issuecomment-10610629 | |
| class CommandNotFound(AttributeError): pass | |
| rc_exc_regex = re.compile("(ErrorReturnCode|SignalException)_((\d+)|SIG\w+)") | |
| rc_exc_cache = {} | |
| def get_exc_from_name(name): | |
| """ takes an exception name, like: | |
| ErrorReturnCode_1 | |
| SignalException_9 | |
| SignalException_SIGHUP | |
| and returns the corresponding exception. this is primarily used for | |
| importing exceptions from sh into user code, for instance, to capture those | |
| exceptions """ | |
| exc = None | |
| try: | |
| return rc_exc_cache[name] | |
| except KeyError: | |
| m = rc_exc_regex.match(name) | |
| if m: | |
| base = m.group(1) | |
| rc_or_sig_name = m.group(2) | |
| if base == "SignalException": | |
| try: | |
| rc = -int(rc_or_sig_name) | |
| except ValueError: | |
| rc = -getattr(signal, rc_or_sig_name) | |
| else: | |
| rc = int(rc_or_sig_name) | |
| exc = get_rc_exc(rc) | |
| return exc | |
| def get_rc_exc(rc_or_sig_name): | |
| """ takes a exit code, signal number, or signal name, and produces an | |
| exception that corresponds to that return code. positive return codes yield | |
| ErrorReturnCode exception, negative return codes yield SignalException | |
| we also cache the generated exception so that only one signal of that type | |
| exists, preserving identity """ | |
| try: | |
| rc = int(rc_or_sig_name) | |
| except ValueError: | |
| rc = -getattr(signal, rc_or_sig_name) | |
| try: | |
| return rc_exc_cache[rc] | |
| except KeyError: | |
| pass | |
| if rc > 0: | |
| name = "ErrorReturnCode_%d" % rc | |
| base = ErrorReturnCode | |
| else: | |
| name = "SignalException_%d" % abs(rc) | |
| base = SignalException | |
| exc = type(name, (base,), {"exit_code": rc}) | |
| rc_exc_cache[rc] = exc | |
| return exc | |
| def which(program): | |
| def is_exe(fpath): | |
| return (os.path.exists(fpath) and | |
| os.access(fpath, os.X_OK) and | |
| os.path.isfile(os.path.realpath(fpath))) | |
| fpath, fname = os.path.split(program) | |
| if fpath: | |
| if is_exe(program): | |
| return program | |
| else: | |
| if "PATH" not in os.environ: | |
| return None | |
| for path in os.environ["PATH"].split(os.pathsep): | |
| exe_file = os.path.join(path, program) | |
| if is_exe(exe_file): | |
| return exe_file | |
| return None | |
| def resolve_program(program): | |
| path = which(program) | |
| if not path: | |
| # our actual command might have a dash in it, but we can't call | |
| # that from python (we have to use underscores), so we'll check | |
| # if a dash version of our underscore command exists and use that | |
| # if it does | |
| if "_" in program: | |
| path = which(program.replace("_", "-")) | |
| if not path: | |
| return None | |
| return path | |
| # we add this thin wrapper to glob.glob because of a specific edge case where | |
| # glob does not expand to anything. for example, if you try to do | |
| # glob.glob("*.py") and there are no *.py files in the directory, glob.glob | |
| # returns an empty list. this empty list gets passed to the command, and | |
| # then the command fails with a misleading error message. this thin wrapper | |
| # ensures that if there is no expansion, we pass in the original argument, | |
| # so that when the command fails, the error message is clearer | |
| def glob(arg): | |
| return original_glob(arg) or arg | |
| class Logger(object): | |
| """ provides a memory-inexpensive logger. a gotcha about python's builtin | |
| logger is that logger objects are never garbage collected. if you create a | |
| thousand loggers with unique names, they'll sit there in memory until your | |
| script is done. with sh, it's easy to create loggers with unique names if | |
| we want our loggers to include our command arguments. for example, these | |
| are all unique loggers: | |
| ls -l | |
| ls -l /tmp | |
| ls /tmp | |
| so instead of creating unique loggers, and without sacrificing logging | |
| output, we use this class, which maintains as part of its state, the logging | |
| "context", which will be the very unique name. this allows us to get a | |
| logger with a very general name, eg: "command", and have a unique name | |
| appended to it via the context, eg: "ls -l /tmp" """ | |
| def __init__(self, name, context=None): | |
| self.name = name | |
| if context: | |
| context = context.replace("%", "%%") | |
| self.context = context | |
| self.log = logging.getLogger("%s.%s" % (SH_LOGGER_NAME, name)) | |
| def _format_msg(self, msg, *args): | |
| if self.context: | |
| msg = "%s: %s" % (self.context, msg) | |
| return msg % args | |
| def get_child(self, name, context): | |
| new_name = self.name + "." + name | |
| new_context = self.context + "." + context | |
| l = Logger(new_name, new_context) | |
| return l | |
| def info(self, msg, *args): | |
| self.log.info(self._format_msg(msg, *args)) | |
| def debug(self, msg, *args): | |
| self.log.debug(self._format_msg(msg, *args)) | |
| def error(self, msg, *args): | |
| self.log.error(self._format_msg(msg, *args)) | |
| def exception(self, msg, *args): | |
| self.log.exception(self._format_msg(msg, *args)) | |
| def friendly_truncate(s, max_len): | |
| if len(s) > max_len: | |
| s = "%s...(%d more)" % (s[:max_len], len(s) - max_len) | |
| return s | |
| class RunningCommand(object): | |
| """ this represents an executing Command object. it is returned as the | |
| result of __call__() being executed on a Command instance. this creates a | |
| reference to a OProc instance, which is a low-level wrapper around the | |
| process that was exec'd | |
| this is the class that gets manipulated the most by user code, and so it | |
| implements various convenience methods and logical mechanisms for the | |
| underlying process. for example, if a user tries to access a | |
| backgrounded-process's stdout/err, the RunningCommand object is smart enough | |
| to know to wait() on the process to finish first. and when the process | |
| finishes, RunningCommand is smart enough to translate exit codes to | |
| exceptions. """ | |
| def __init__(self, cmd, call_args, stdin, stdout, stderr): | |
| # self.ran is used for auditing what actually ran. for example, in | |
| # exceptions, or if you just want to know what was ran after the | |
| # command ran | |
| if IS_PY3: | |
| self.ran = " ".join([arg.decode(DEFAULT_ENCODING, "ignore") for arg in cmd]) | |
| else: | |
| self.ran = " ".join(cmd) | |
| friendly_cmd = friendly_truncate(self.ran, 20) | |
| friendly_call_args = friendly_truncate(str(call_args), 20) | |
| # we're setting up the logger string here, instead of __repr__ because | |
| # we reserve __repr__ to behave as if it was evaluating the child | |
| # process's output | |
| logger_str = "<Command %r call_args %s>" % (friendly_cmd, | |
| friendly_call_args) | |
| self.log = Logger("command", logger_str) | |
| self.call_args = call_args | |
| self.cmd = cmd | |
| self.process = None | |
| self._process_completed = False | |
| should_wait = True | |
| spawn_process = True | |
| # with contexts shouldn't run at all yet, they prepend | |
| # to every command in the context | |
| if call_args["with"]: | |
| spawn_process = False | |
| Command._prepend_stack.append(self) | |
| if call_args["piped"] or call_args["iter"] or call_args["iter_noblock"]: | |
| should_wait = False | |
| # we're running in the background, return self and let us lazily | |
| # evaluate | |
| if call_args["bg"]: | |
| should_wait = False | |
| # redirection | |
| if call_args["err_to_out"]: | |
| stderr = OProc.STDOUT | |
| # set up which stream should write to the pipe | |
| # TODO, make pipe None by default and limit the size of the Queue | |
| # in oproc.OProc | |
| pipe = OProc.STDOUT | |
| if call_args["iter"] == "out" or call_args["iter"] is True: | |
| pipe = OProc.STDOUT | |
| elif call_args["iter"] == "err": | |
| pipe = OProc.STDERR | |
| if call_args["iter_noblock"] == "out" or call_args["iter_noblock"] is True: | |
| pipe = OProc.STDOUT | |
| elif call_args["iter_noblock"] == "err": | |
| pipe = OProc.STDERR | |
| # there's currently only one case where we wouldn't spawn a child | |
| # process, and that's if we're using a with-context with our command | |
| if spawn_process: | |
| self.log.info("starting process") | |
| self.process = OProc(self.log, cmd, stdin, stdout, stderr, | |
| self.call_args, pipe) | |
| if should_wait: | |
| self.wait() | |
| def wait(self): | |
| if not self._process_completed: | |
| self._process_completed = True | |
| exit_code = self.process.wait() | |
| if self.process.timed_out: | |
| # if we timed out, our exit code represents a signal, which is | |
| # negative, so let's make it positive to store in our | |
| # TimeoutException | |
| raise TimeoutException(-exit_code) | |
| else: | |
| self.handle_command_exit_code(exit_code) | |
| # https://github.com/amoffat/sh/issues/185 | |
| if self.call_args["done"]: | |
| self.call_args["done"](self) | |
| return self | |
| def handle_command_exit_code(self, code): | |
| """ here we determine if we had an exception, or an error code that we | |
| weren't expecting to see. if we did, we create and raise an exception | |
| """ | |
| if (code not in self.call_args["ok_code"] and (code > 0 or -code in | |
| SIGNALS_THAT_SHOULD_THROW_EXCEPTION)): | |
| exc = get_rc_exc(code) | |
| raise exc(self.ran, self.process.stdout, self.process.stderr) | |
| @property | |
| def stdout(self): | |
| self.wait() | |
| return self.process.stdout | |
| @property | |
| def stderr(self): | |
| self.wait() | |
| return self.process.stderr | |
| @property | |
| def exit_code(self): | |
| self.wait() | |
| return self.process.exit_code | |
| @property | |
| def pid(self): | |
| return self.process.pid | |
| def __len__(self): | |
| return len(str(self)) | |
| def __enter__(self): | |
| """ we don't actually do anything here because anything that should have | |
| been done would have been done in the Command.__call__ call. | |
| essentially all that has to happen is the comand be pushed on the | |
| prepend stack. """ | |
| with_context_warning() | |
| def __iter__(self): | |
| return self | |
| def next(self): | |
| """ allow us to iterate over the output of our command """ | |
| # we do this because if get blocks, we can't catch a KeyboardInterrupt | |
| # so the slight timeout allows for that. | |
| while True: | |
| try: | |
| chunk = self.process._pipe_queue.get(True, 0.001) | |
| except Empty: | |
| if self.call_args["iter_noblock"]: | |
| return errno.EWOULDBLOCK | |
| else: | |
| if chunk is None: | |
| self.wait() | |
| raise StopIteration() | |
| try: | |
| return chunk.decode(self.call_args["encoding"], | |
| self.call_args["decode_errors"]) | |
| except UnicodeDecodeError: | |
| return chunk | |
| # python 3 | |
| __next__ = next | |
| def __exit__(self, typ, value, traceback): | |
| if self.call_args["with"] and Command._prepend_stack: | |
| Command._prepend_stack.pop() | |
| def __str__(self): | |
| """ in python3, should return unicode. in python2, should return a | |
| string of bytes """ | |
| if IS_PY3: | |
| return self.__unicode__() | |
| else: | |
| return unicode(self).encode(self.call_args["encoding"]) | |
| def __unicode__(self): | |
| """ a magic method defined for python2. calling unicode() on a | |
| RunningCommand object will call this """ | |
| if self.process and self.stdout: | |
| return self.stdout.decode(self.call_args["encoding"], | |
| self.call_args["decode_errors"]) | |
| elif IS_PY3: | |
| return "" | |
| else: | |
| return unicode("") | |
| def __eq__(self, other): | |
| return unicode(self) == unicode(other) | |
| __hash__ = None # Avoid DeprecationWarning in Python < 3 | |
| def __contains__(self, item): | |
| return item in str(self) | |
| def __getattr__(self, p): | |
| # let these three attributes pass through to the OProc object | |
| if p in ("signal", "terminate", "kill"): | |
| if self.process: | |
| return getattr(self.process, p) | |
| else: | |
| raise AttributeError | |
| # see if strings have what we're looking for. we're looking at the | |
| # method names explicitly because we don't want to evaluate self unless | |
| # we absolutely have to, the reason being, in python2, hasattr swallows | |
| # exceptions, and if we try to run hasattr on a command that failed and | |
| # is being run with _iter=True, the command will be evaluated, throw an | |
| # exception, but hasattr will discard it | |
| if p in _unicode_methods: | |
| return getattr(unicode(self), p) | |
| raise AttributeError | |
| def __repr__(self): | |
| """ in python3, should return unicode. in python2, should return a | |
| string of bytes """ | |
| try: | |
| return str(self) | |
| except UnicodeDecodeError: | |
| if self.process: | |
| if self.stdout: | |
| return repr(self.stdout) | |
| return repr("") | |
| def __long__(self): | |
| return long(str(self).strip()) | |
| def __float__(self): | |
| return float(str(self).strip()) | |
| def __int__(self): | |
| return int(str(self).strip()) | |
| def output_redirect_is_filename(out): | |
| return out \ | |
| and not callable(out) \ | |
| and not hasattr(out, "write") \ | |
| and not isinstance(out, (cStringIO, StringIO)) | |
| class Command(object): | |
| """ represents an un-run system program, like "ls" or "cd". because it | |
| represents the program itself (and not a running instance of it), it should | |
| hold very little state. in fact, the only state it does hold is baked | |
| arguments. | |
| when a Command object is called, the result that is returned is a | |
| RunningCommand object, which represents the Command put into an execution | |
| state. """ | |
| _prepend_stack = [] | |
| _call_args = { | |
| # currently unsupported | |
| #"fg": False, # run command in foreground | |
| # run a command in the background. commands run in the background | |
| # ignore SIGHUP and do not automatically exit when the parent process | |
| # ends | |
| "bg": False, | |
| "with": False, # prepend the command to every command after it | |
| "in": None, | |
| "out": None, # redirect STDOUT | |
| "err": None, # redirect STDERR | |
| "err_to_out": None, # redirect STDERR to STDOUT | |
| # stdin buffer size | |
| # 1 for line, 0 for unbuffered, any other number for that amount | |
| "in_bufsize": 0, | |
| # stdout buffer size, same values as above | |
| "out_bufsize": 1, | |
| "err_bufsize": 1, | |
| # this is how big the output buffers will be for stdout and stderr. | |
| # this is essentially how much output they will store from the process. | |
| # we use a deque, so if it overflows past this amount, the first items | |
| # get pushed off as each new item gets added. | |
| # | |
| # NOTICE | |
| # this is not a *BYTE* size, this is a *CHUNK* size...meaning, that if | |
| # you're buffering out/err at 1024 bytes, the internal buffer size will | |
| # be "internal_bufsize" CHUNKS of 1024 bytes | |
| "internal_bufsize": 3 * 1024 ** 2, | |
| "env": None, | |
| "piped": None, | |
| "iter": None, | |
| "iter_noblock": None, | |
| "ok_code": 0, | |
| "cwd": None, | |
| # the separator delimiting between a long-argument's name and its value | |
| # for example, --arg=derp, '=' is the long_sep | |
| "long_sep": "=", | |
| # this is for programs that expect their input to be from a terminal. | |
| # ssh is one of those programs | |
| "tty_in": False, | |
| "tty_out": True, | |
| "encoding": DEFAULT_ENCODING, | |
| "decode_errors": "strict", | |
| # how long the process should run before it is auto-killed | |
| "timeout": 0, | |
| "timeout_signal": signal.SIGKILL, | |
| # TODO write some docs on "long-running processes" | |
| # these control whether or not stdout/err will get aggregated together | |
| # as the process runs. this has memory usage implications, so sometimes | |
| # with long-running processes with a lot of data, it makes sense to | |
| # set these to true | |
| "no_out": False, | |
| "no_err": False, | |
| "no_pipe": False, | |
| # if any redirection is used for stdout or stderr, internal buffering | |
| # of that data is not stored. this forces it to be stored, as if | |
| # the output is being T'd to both the redirected destination and our | |
| # internal buffers | |
| "tee": None, | |
| # will be called when a process terminates without exception. this | |
| # option also puts the command in the background, since it doesn't make | |
| # sense to have an un-backgrounded command with a done callback | |
| "done": None, | |
| # a tuple (rows, columns) of the desired size of both the stdout and | |
| # stdin ttys, if ttys are being used | |
| "tty_size": (20, 80), | |
| } | |
| # these are arguments that cannot be called together, because they wouldn't | |
| # make any sense | |
| _incompatible_call_args = ( | |
| #("fg", "bg", "Command can't be run in the foreground and background"), | |
| ("err", "err_to_out", "Stderr is already being redirected"), | |
| ("piped", "iter", "You cannot iterate when this command is being piped"), | |
| ("piped", "no_pipe", "Using a pipe doesn't make sense if you've \ | |
| disabled the pipe"), | |
| ("no_out", "iter", "You cannot iterate over output if there is no \ | |
| output"), | |
| ) | |
| # this method exists because of the need to have some way of letting | |
| # manual object instantiation not perform the underscore-to-dash command | |
| # conversion that resolve_program uses. | |
| # | |
| # there are 2 ways to create a Command object. using sh.Command(<program>) | |
| # or by using sh.<program>. the method fed into sh.Command must be taken | |
| # literally, and so no underscore-dash conversion is performed. the one | |
| # for sh.<program> must do the underscore-dash converesion, because we | |
| # can't type dashes in method names | |
| @classmethod | |
| def _create(cls, program, **default_kwargs): | |
| path = resolve_program(program) | |
| if not path: | |
| raise CommandNotFound(program) | |
| cmd = cls(path) | |
| if default_kwargs: | |
| cmd = cmd.bake(**default_kwargs) | |
| return cmd | |
| def __init__(self, path): | |
| found = which(path) | |
| if not found: | |
| raise CommandNotFound(path) | |
| self._path = encode_to_py3bytes_or_py2str(found) | |
| self._partial = False | |
| self._partial_baked_args = [] | |
| self._partial_call_args = {} | |
| # bugfix for functools.wraps. issue #121 | |
| self.__name__ = str(self) | |
| def __getattribute__(self, name): | |
| # convenience | |
| getattr = partial(object.__getattribute__, self) | |
| if name.startswith("_"): | |
| return getattr(name) | |
| if name == "bake": | |
| return getattr("bake") | |
| if name.endswith("_"): | |
| name = name[:-1] | |
| return getattr("bake")(name) | |
| @staticmethod | |
| def _extract_call_args(kwargs, to_override={}): | |
| kwargs = kwargs.copy() | |
| call_args = {} | |
| for parg, default in Command._call_args.items(): | |
| key = "_" + parg | |
| if key in kwargs: | |
| call_args[parg] = kwargs[key] | |
| del kwargs[key] | |
| elif parg in to_override: | |
| call_args[parg] = to_override[parg] | |
| # test for incompatible call args | |
| s1 = set(call_args.keys()) | |
| for args in Command._incompatible_call_args: | |
| args = list(args) | |
| error = args.pop() | |
| if s1.issuperset(args): | |
| raise TypeError("Invalid special arguments %r: %s" % (args, error)) | |
| return call_args, kwargs | |
| def _aggregate_keywords(self, keywords, sep, raw=False): | |
| processed = [] | |
| for k, v in keywords.items(): | |
| # we're passing a short arg as a kwarg, example: | |
| # cut(d="\t") | |
| if len(k) == 1: | |
| if v is not False: | |
| processed.append(encode_to_py3bytes_or_py2str("-" + k)) | |
| if v is not True: | |
| processed.append(encode_to_py3bytes_or_py2str(v)) | |
| # we're doing a long arg | |
| else: | |
| if not raw: | |
| k = k.replace("_", "-") | |
| if v is True: | |
| processed.append(encode_to_py3bytes_or_py2str("--" + k)) | |
| elif v is False: | |
| pass | |
| else: | |
| arg = encode_to_py3bytes_or_py2str("--%s%s%s" % (k, sep, v)) | |
| processed.append(arg) | |
| return processed | |
| def _compile_args(self, args, kwargs, sep): | |
| processed_args = [] | |
| # aggregate positional args | |
| for arg in args: | |
| if isinstance(arg, (list, tuple)): | |
| if not arg: | |
| warnings.warn("Empty list passed as an argument to %r. \ | |
| If you're using glob.glob(), please use sh.glob() instead." % self._path, stacklevel=3) | |
| for sub_arg in arg: | |
| processed_args.append(encode_to_py3bytes_or_py2str(sub_arg)) | |
| elif isinstance(arg, dict): | |
| processed_args += self._aggregate_keywords(arg, sep, raw=True) | |
| else: | |
| processed_args.append(encode_to_py3bytes_or_py2str(arg)) | |
| # aggregate the keyword arguments | |
| processed_args += self._aggregate_keywords(kwargs, sep) | |
| return processed_args | |
| # TODO needs documentation | |
| def bake(self, *args, **kwargs): | |
| fn = Command(self._path) | |
| fn._partial = True | |
| call_args, kwargs = self._extract_call_args(kwargs) | |
| pruned_call_args = call_args | |
| for k, v in Command._call_args.items(): | |
| try: | |
| if pruned_call_args[k] == v: | |
| del pruned_call_args[k] | |
| except KeyError: | |
| continue | |
| fn._partial_call_args.update(self._partial_call_args) | |
| fn._partial_call_args.update(pruned_call_args) | |
| fn._partial_baked_args.extend(self._partial_baked_args) | |
| sep = pruned_call_args.get("long_sep", self._call_args["long_sep"]) | |
| fn._partial_baked_args.extend(self._compile_args(args, kwargs, sep)) | |
| return fn | |
| def __str__(self): | |
| """ in python3, should return unicode. in python2, should return a | |
| string of bytes """ | |
| if IS_PY3: | |
| return self.__unicode__() | |
| else: | |
| return self.__unicode__().encode(DEFAULT_ENCODING) | |
| def __eq__(self, other): | |
| try: | |
| return str(self) == str(other) | |
| except: | |
| return False | |
| __hash__ = None # Avoid DeprecationWarning in Python < 3 | |
| def __repr__(self): | |
| """ in python3, should return unicode. in python2, should return a | |
| string of bytes """ | |
| return "<Command %r>" % str(self) | |
| def __unicode__(self): | |
| """ a magic method defined for python2. calling unicode() on a | |
| self will call this """ | |
| baked_args = " ".join(item.decode(DEFAULT_ENCODING) for item in self._partial_baked_args) | |
| if baked_args: | |
| baked_args = " " + baked_args | |
| return self._path.decode(DEFAULT_ENCODING) + baked_args | |
| def __enter__(self): | |
| with_context_warning() | |
| self(_with=True) | |
| def __exit__(self, typ, value, traceback): | |
| Command._prepend_stack.pop() | |
| def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs): | |
| kwargs = kwargs.copy() | |
| args = list(args) | |
| cmd = [] | |
| # aggregate any 'with' contexts | |
| call_args = Command._call_args.copy() | |
| for prepend in self._prepend_stack: | |
| # don't pass the 'with' call arg | |
| pcall_args = prepend.call_args.copy() | |
| try: | |
| del pcall_args["with"] | |
| except: | |
| pass | |
| call_args.update(pcall_args) | |
| cmd.extend(prepend.cmd) | |
| cmd.append(self._path) | |
| # here we extract the special kwargs and override any | |
| # special kwargs from the possibly baked command | |
| tmp_call_args, kwargs = self._extract_call_args(kwargs, self._partial_call_args) | |
| call_args.update(tmp_call_args) | |
| if not getattr(call_args["ok_code"], "__iter__", None): | |
| call_args["ok_code"] = [call_args["ok_code"]] | |
| if call_args["done"]: | |
| call_args["bg"] = True | |
| # check if we're piping via composition | |
| stdin = call_args["in"] | |
| if args: | |
| first_arg = args.pop(0) | |
| if isinstance(first_arg, RunningCommand): | |
| # it makes sense that if the input pipe of a command is running | |
| # in the background, then this command should run in the | |
| # background as well | |
| if first_arg.call_args["bg"]: | |
| call_args["bg"] = True | |
| if first_arg.call_args["piped"] == "direct": | |
| stdin = first_arg.process | |
| else: | |
| stdin = first_arg.process._pipe_queue | |
| else: | |
| args.insert(0, first_arg) | |
| processed_args = self._compile_args(args, kwargs, call_args["long_sep"]) | |
| # makes sure our arguments are broken up correctly | |
| split_args = self._partial_baked_args + processed_args | |
| final_args = split_args | |
| cmd.extend(final_args) | |
| # stdout redirection | |
| stdout = call_args["out"] | |
| if output_redirect_is_filename(stdout): | |
| stdout = open(str(stdout), "wb") | |
| # stderr redirection | |
| stderr = call_args["err"] | |
| if output_redirect_is_filename(stderr): | |
| stderr = open(str(stderr), "wb") | |
| return RunningCommand(cmd, call_args, stdin, stdout, stderr) | |
| def _start_daemon_thread(fn, *args): | |
| thrd = threading.Thread(target=fn, args=args) | |
| thrd.daemon = True | |
| thrd.start() | |
| return thrd | |
| def setwinsize(fd, rows_cols): | |
| """ set the terminal size of a tty file descriptor. borrowed logic | |
| from pexpect.py """ | |
| rows, cols = rows_cols | |
| TIOCSWINSZ = getattr(termios, 'TIOCSWINSZ', -2146929561) | |
| s = struct.pack('HHHH', rows, cols, 0, 0) | |
| fcntl.ioctl(fd, TIOCSWINSZ, s) | |
| def construct_streamreader_callback(process, handler): | |
| """ here we're constructing a closure for our streamreader callback. this | |
| is used in the case that we pass a callback into _out or _err, meaning we | |
| want to our callback to handle each bit of output | |
| we construct the closure based on how many arguments it takes. the reason | |
| for this is to make it as easy as possible for people to use, without | |
| limiting them. a new user will assume the callback takes 1 argument (the | |
| data). as they get more advanced, they may want to terminate the process, | |
| or pass some stdin back, and will realize that they can pass a callback of | |
| more args """ | |
| # implied arg refers to the "self" that methods will pass in. we need to | |
| # account for this implied arg when figuring out what function the user | |
| # passed in based on number of args | |
| implied_arg = 0 | |
| partial_args = 0 | |
| handler_to_inspect = handler | |
| if isinstance(handler, partial): | |
| partial_args = len(handler.args) | |
| handler_to_inspect = handler.func | |
| if inspect.ismethod(handler_to_inspect): | |
| implied_arg = 1 | |
| num_args = len(inspect.getargspec(handler_to_inspect).args) | |
| else: | |
| if inspect.isfunction(handler_to_inspect): | |
| num_args = len(inspect.getargspec(handler_to_inspect).args) | |
| # is an object instance with __call__ method | |
| else: | |
| implied_arg = 1 | |
| num_args = len(inspect.getargspec(handler_to_inspect.__call__).args) | |
| net_args = num_args - implied_arg - partial_args | |
| handler_args = () | |
| # just the chunk | |
| if net_args == 1: | |
| handler_args = () | |
| # chunk, stdin | |
| if net_args == 2: | |
| handler_args = (process.stdin,) | |
| # chunk, stdin, process | |
| elif net_args == 3: | |
| # notice we're only storing a weakref, to prevent cyclic references | |
| # (where the process holds a streamreader, and a streamreader holds a | |
| # handler-closure with a reference to the process | |
| handler_args = (process.stdin, weakref.ref(process)) | |
| def fn(chunk): | |
| # this is pretty ugly, but we're evaluating the process at call-time, | |
| # because it's a weakref | |
| args = handler_args | |
| if len(args) == 2: | |
| args = (handler_args[0], handler_args[1]()) | |
| return handler(chunk, *args) | |
| return fn | |
| def handle_process_exit_code(exit_code): | |
| """ this should only ever be called once for each child process """ | |
| # if we exited from a signal, let our exit code reflect that | |
| if os.WIFSIGNALED(exit_code): | |
| return -os.WTERMSIG(exit_code) | |
| # otherwise just give us a normal exit code | |
| elif os.WIFEXITED(exit_code): | |
| return os.WEXITSTATUS(exit_code) | |
| else: | |
| raise RuntimeError("Unknown child exit status!") | |
| class OProc(object): | |
| """ this class is instantiated by RunningCommand for a command to be exec'd. | |
| it handles all the nasty business involved with correctly setting up the | |
| input/output to the child process. it gets its name for subprocess.Popen | |
| (process open) but we're calling ours OProc (open process) """ | |
| _default_window_size = (24, 80) | |
| # used in redirecting | |
| STDOUT = -1 | |
| STDERR = -2 | |
| def __init__(self, parent_log, cmd, stdin, stdout, stderr, call_args, pipe): | |
| """ | |
| cmd is the full string that will be exec'd. it includes the program | |
| name and all its arguments | |
| stdin, stdout, stderr are what the child will use for standard | |
| input/output/err | |
| call_args is a mapping of all the special keyword arguments to apply | |
| to the child process | |
| """ | |
| self.call_args = call_args | |
| # I had issues with getting 'Input/Output error reading stdin' from dd, | |
| # until I set _tty_out=False | |
| if self.call_args["piped"] == "direct": | |
| self.call_args["tty_out"] = False | |
| self._single_tty = self.call_args["tty_in"] and self.call_args["tty_out"] | |
| # this logic is a little convoluted, but basically this top-level | |
| # if/else is for consolidating input and output TTYs into a single | |
| # TTY. this is the only way some secure programs like ssh will | |
| # output correctly (is if stdout and stdin are both the same TTY) | |
| if self._single_tty: | |
| self._stdin_fd, self._slave_stdin_fd = pty.openpty() | |
| self._stdout_fd = self._stdin_fd | |
| self._slave_stdout_fd = self._slave_stdin_fd | |
| self._stderr_fd = self._stdin_fd | |
| self._slave_stderr_fd = self._slave_stdin_fd | |
| # do not consolidate stdin and stdout. this is the most common use- | |
| # case | |
| else: | |
| # this check here is because we may be doing "direct" piping | |
| # (_piped="direct"), and so our stdin might be an instance of | |
| # OProc | |
| if isinstance(stdin, OProc): | |
| self._slave_stdin_fd = stdin._stdout_fd | |
| self._stdin_fd = None | |
| elif self.call_args["tty_in"]: | |
| self._slave_stdin_fd, self._stdin_fd = pty.openpty() | |
| # tty_in=False is the default | |
| else: | |
| self._slave_stdin_fd, self._stdin_fd = os.pipe() | |
| # tty_out=True is the default | |
| if self.call_args["tty_out"]: | |
| self._stdout_fd, self._slave_stdout_fd = pty.openpty() | |
| else: | |
| self._stdout_fd, self._slave_stdout_fd = os.pipe() | |
| # unless STDERR is going to STDOUT, it ALWAYS needs to be a pipe, | |
| # and never a PTY. the reason for this is not totally clear to me, | |
| # but it has to do with the fact that if STDERR isn't set as the | |
| # CTTY (because STDOUT is), the STDERR buffer won't always flush | |
| # by the time the process exits, and the data will be lost. | |
| # i've only seen this on OSX. | |
| if stderr is not OProc.STDOUT: | |
| self._stderr_fd, self._slave_stderr_fd = os.pipe() | |
| # this is a hack, but what we're doing here is intentionally throwing an | |
| # OSError exception if our child processes's directory doesn't exist, | |
| # but we're doing it BEFORE we fork. the reason for before the fork is | |
| # error handling. i'm currently too lazy to implement what | |
| # subprocess.py did and set up a error pipe to handle exceptions that | |
| # happen in the child between fork and exec. it has only been seen in | |
| # the wild for a missing cwd, so we'll handle it here. | |
| cwd = self.call_args["cwd"] | |
| if cwd is not None and not os.path.exists(cwd): | |
| os.chdir(cwd) | |
| gc_enabled = gc.isenabled() | |
| if gc_enabled: | |
| gc.disable() | |
| self.pid = os.fork() | |
| # child | |
| if self.pid == 0: # pragma: no cover | |
| try: | |
| # ignoring SIGHUP lets us persist even after the parent process | |
| # exits. only ignore if we're backgrounded | |
| if self.call_args["bg"] is True: | |
| signal.signal(signal.SIGHUP, signal.SIG_IGN) | |
| # this piece of ugliness is due to a bug where we can lose output | |
| # if we do os.close(self._slave_stdout_fd) in the parent after | |
| # the child starts writing. | |
| # see http://bugs.python.org/issue15898 | |
| if IS_OSX: | |
| time.sleep(0.01) | |
| os.setsid() | |
| if self.call_args["tty_out"]: | |
| # set raw mode, so there isn't any weird translation of | |
| # newlines to \r\n and other oddities. we're not outputting | |
| # to a terminal anyways | |
| # | |
| # we HAVE to do this here, and not in the parent process, | |
| # because we have to guarantee that this is set before the | |
| # child process is run, and we can't do it twice. | |
| tty.setraw(self._slave_stdout_fd) | |
| # if the parent-side fd for stdin exists, close it. the case | |
| # where it may not exist is if we're using piped="direct" | |
| if self._stdin_fd: | |
| os.close(self._stdin_fd) | |
| if not self._single_tty: | |
| os.close(self._stdout_fd) | |
| if stderr is not OProc.STDOUT: | |
| os.close(self._stderr_fd) | |
| if cwd: | |
| os.chdir(cwd) | |
| os.dup2(self._slave_stdin_fd, 0) | |
| os.dup2(self._slave_stdout_fd, 1) | |
| # we're not directing stderr to stdout? then set self._slave_stderr_fd to | |
| # fd 2, the common stderr fd | |
| if stderr is OProc.STDOUT: | |
| os.dup2(self._slave_stdout_fd, 2) | |
| else: | |
| os.dup2(self._slave_stderr_fd, 2) | |
| # don't inherit file descriptors | |
| max_fd = resource.getrlimit(resource.RLIMIT_NOFILE)[0] | |
| os.closerange(3, max_fd) | |
| # set our controlling terminal. tty_out defaults to true | |
| if self.call_args["tty_out"]: | |
| tmp_fd = os.open(os.ttyname(1), os.O_RDWR) | |
| os.close(tmp_fd) | |
| if self.call_args["tty_out"]: | |
| setwinsize(1, self.call_args["tty_size"]) | |
| # actually execute the process | |
| if self.call_args["env"] is None: | |
| os.execv(cmd[0], cmd) | |
| else: | |
| os.execve(cmd[0], cmd, self.call_args["env"]) | |
| # we must ensure that we ALWAYS exit the child process, otherwise | |
| # the parent process code will be executed twice on exception | |
| # https://github.com/amoffat/sh/issues/202 | |
| # | |
| # if your parent process experiences an exit code 255, it is most | |
| # likely that an exception occurred between the fork of the child | |
| # and the exec. this should be reported. | |
| finally: | |
| os._exit(255) | |
| # parent | |
| else: | |
| if gc_enabled: | |
| gc.enable() | |
| # used to determine what exception to raise. if our process was | |
| # killed via a timeout counter, we'll raise something different than | |
| # a SIGKILL exception | |
| self.timed_out = False | |
| self.started = time.time() | |
| self.cmd = cmd | |
| # exit code should only be manipulated from within self._wait_lock | |
| # to prevent race conditions | |
| self.exit_code = None | |
| self.stdin = stdin or Queue() | |
| # _pipe_queue is used internally to hand off stdout from one process | |
| # to another. by default, all stdout from a process gets dumped | |
| # into this pipe queue, to be consumed in real time (hence the | |
| # thread-safe Queue), or at a potentially later time | |
| self._pipe_queue = Queue() | |
| # this is used to prevent a race condition when we're waiting for | |
| # a process to end, and the OProc's internal threads are also checking | |
| # for the processes's end | |
| self._wait_lock = threading.Lock() | |
| # these are for aggregating the stdout and stderr. we use a deque | |
| # because we don't want to overflow | |
| self._stdout = deque(maxlen=self.call_args["internal_bufsize"]) | |
| self._stderr = deque(maxlen=self.call_args["internal_bufsize"]) | |
| if self.call_args["tty_in"]: | |
| setwinsize(self._stdin_fd, self.call_args["tty_size"]) | |
| self.log = parent_log.get_child("process", repr(self)) | |
| os.close(self._slave_stdin_fd) | |
| if not self._single_tty: | |
| os.close(self._slave_stdout_fd) | |
| if stderr is not OProc.STDOUT: | |
| os.close(self._slave_stderr_fd) | |
| self.log.debug("started process") | |
| if self.call_args["tty_in"]: | |
| attr = termios.tcgetattr(self._stdin_fd) | |
| attr[3] &= ~termios.ECHO | |
| termios.tcsetattr(self._stdin_fd, termios.TCSANOW, attr) | |
| # this represents the connection from a Queue object (or whatever | |
| # we're using to feed STDIN) to the process's STDIN fd | |
| self._stdin_stream = None | |
| if not isinstance(self.stdin, OProc): | |
| self._stdin_stream = \ | |
| StreamWriter(self.log.get_child("streamwriter", | |
| "stdin"), self._stdin_fd, self.stdin, | |
| self.call_args["in_bufsize"], | |
| self.call_args["encoding"], | |
| self.call_args["tty_in"]) | |
| stdout_pipe = None | |
| if pipe is OProc.STDOUT and not self.call_args["no_pipe"]: | |
| stdout_pipe = self._pipe_queue | |
| # this represents the connection from a process's STDOUT fd to | |
| # wherever it has to go, sometimes a pipe Queue (that we will use | |
| # to pipe data to other processes), and also an internal deque | |
| # that we use to aggregate all the output | |
| save_stdout = not self.call_args["no_out"] and \ | |
| (self.call_args["tee"] in (True, "out") or stdout is None) | |
| # if we're piping directly into another process's filedescriptor, we | |
| # bypass reading from the stdout stream altogether, because we've | |
| # already hooked up this processes's stdout fd to the other | |
| # processes's stdin fd | |
| self._stdout_stream = None | |
| if self.call_args["piped"] != "direct": | |
| if callable(stdout): | |
| stdout = construct_streamreader_callback(self, stdout) | |
| self._stdout_stream = \ | |
| StreamReader(self.log.get_child("streamreader", | |
| "stdout"), self._stdout_fd, stdout, self._stdout, | |
| self.call_args["out_bufsize"], | |
| self.call_args["encoding"], | |
| self.call_args["decode_errors"], stdout_pipe, | |
| save_data=save_stdout) | |
| if stderr is OProc.STDOUT or self._single_tty: | |
| self._stderr_stream = None | |
| else: | |
| stderr_pipe = None | |
| if pipe is OProc.STDERR and not self.call_args["no_pipe"]: | |
| stderr_pipe = self._pipe_queue | |
| save_stderr = not self.call_args["no_err"] and \ | |
| (self.call_args["tee"] in ("err",) or stderr is None) | |
| if callable(stderr): | |
| stderr = construct_streamreader_callback(self, stderr) | |
| self._stderr_stream = StreamReader(Logger("streamreader"), | |
| self._stderr_fd, stderr, self._stderr, | |
| self.call_args["err_bufsize"], self.call_args["encoding"], | |
| self.call_args["decode_errors"], stderr_pipe, | |
| save_data=save_stderr) | |
| # start the main io threads | |
| # stdin thread is not needed if we are connecting from another process's stdout pipe | |
| self._input_thread = None | |
| if self._stdin_stream: | |
| self._input_thread = _start_daemon_thread(self.input_thread, | |
| self._stdin_stream) | |
| self._output_thread = _start_daemon_thread(self.output_thread, | |
| self._stdout_stream, self._stderr_stream, | |
| self.call_args["timeout"], self.started, | |
| self.call_args["timeout_signal"]) | |
| def __repr__(self): | |
| return "<Process %d %r>" % (self.pid, self.cmd[:500]) | |
| def change_in_bufsize(self, buf): | |
| self._stdin_stream.stream_bufferer.change_buffering(buf) | |
| def change_out_bufsize(self, buf): | |
| self._stdout_stream.stream_bufferer.change_buffering(buf) | |
| def change_err_bufsize(self, buf): | |
| self._stderr_stream.stream_bufferer.change_buffering(buf) | |
| def input_thread(self, stdin): | |
| """ this is run in a separate thread. it writes into our process's | |
| stdin (a streamwriter) and waits the process to end AND everything that | |
| can be written to be written """ | |
| done = False | |
| while not done and self.is_alive(): | |
| self.log.debug("%r ready for more input", stdin) | |
| done = stdin.write() | |
| stdin.close() | |
| def output_thread(self, stdout, stderr, timeout, started, timeout_exc): | |
| """ this function is run in a separate thread. it reads from the | |
| process's stdout stream (a streamreader), and waits for it to claim that | |
| its done """ | |
| readers = [] | |
| errors = [] | |
| if stdout is not None: | |
| readers.append(stdout) | |
| errors.append(stdout) | |
| if stderr is not None: | |
| readers.append(stderr) | |
| errors.append(stderr) | |
| # this is our select loop for polling stdout or stderr that is ready to | |
| # be read and processed. if one of those streamreaders indicate that it | |
| # is done altogether being read from, we remove it from our list of | |
| # things to poll. when no more things are left to poll, we leave this | |
| # loop and clean up | |
| while readers: | |
| outputs, inputs, err = select.select(readers, [], errors, 0.1) | |
| # stdout and stderr | |
| for stream in outputs: | |
| self.log.debug("%r ready to be read from", stream) | |
| done = stream.read() | |
| if done: | |
| readers.remove(stream) | |
| for stream in err: | |
| pass | |
| # test if the process has been running too long | |
| if timeout: | |
| now = time.time() | |
| if now - started > timeout: | |
| self.log.debug("we've been running too long") | |
| self.timed_out = True | |
| self.signal(timeout_exc) | |
| # this is here because stdout may be the controlling TTY, and | |
| # we can't close it until the process has ended, otherwise the | |
| # child will get SIGHUP. typically, if we've broken out of | |
| # the above loop, and we're here, the process is just about to | |
| # end, so it's probably ok to aggressively poll self.is_alive() | |
| # | |
| # the other option to this would be to do the CTTY close from | |
| # the method that does the actual os.waitpid() call, but the | |
| # problem with that is that the above loop might still be | |
| # running, and closing the fd will cause some operation to | |
| # fail. this is less complex than wrapping all the ops | |
| # in the above loop with out-of-band fd-close exceptions | |
| while self.is_alive(): | |
| time.sleep(0.001) | |
| if stdout: | |
| stdout.close() | |
| if stderr: | |
| stderr.close() | |
| @property | |
| def stdout(self): | |
| return "".encode(self.call_args["encoding"]).join(self._stdout) | |
| @property | |
| def stderr(self): | |
| return "".encode(self.call_args["encoding"]).join(self._stderr) | |
| def signal(self, sig): | |
| self.log.debug("sending signal %d", sig) | |
| try: | |
| os.kill(self.pid, sig) | |
| except OSError: | |
| pass | |
| def kill(self): | |
| self.log.debug("killing") | |
| self.signal(signal.SIGKILL) | |
| def terminate(self): | |
| self.log.debug("terminating") | |
| self.signal(signal.SIGTERM) | |
| def is_alive(self): | |
| """ polls if our child process has completed, without blocking. this | |
| method has side-effects, such as setting our exit_code, if we happen to | |
| see our child exit while this is running """ | |
| if self.exit_code is not None: | |
| return False | |
| # what we're doing here essentially is making sure that the main thread | |
| # (or another thread), isn't calling .wait() on the process. because | |
| # .wait() calls os.waitpid(self.pid, 0), we can't do an os.waitpid | |
| # here...because if we did, and the process exited while in this | |
| # thread, the main thread's os.waitpid(self.pid, 0) would raise OSError | |
| # (because the process ended in another thread). | |
| # | |
| # so essentially what we're doing is, using this lock, checking if | |
| # we're calling .wait(), and if we are, let .wait() get the exit code | |
| # and handle the status, otherwise let us do it. | |
| acquired = self._wait_lock.acquire(False) | |
| if not acquired: | |
| if self.exit_code is not None: | |
| return False | |
| return True | |
| try: | |
| # WNOHANG is just that...we're calling waitpid without hanging... | |
| # essentially polling the process. the return result is (0, 0) if | |
| # there's no process status, so we check that pid == self.pid below | |
| # in order to determine how to proceed | |
| pid, exit_code = os.waitpid(self.pid, os.WNOHANG) | |
| if pid == self.pid: | |
| self.exit_code = handle_process_exit_code(exit_code) | |
| return False | |
| # no child process | |
| except OSError: | |
| return False | |
| else: | |
| return True | |
| finally: | |
| self._wait_lock.release() | |
| def wait(self): | |
| """ waits for the process to complete, handles the exit code """ | |
| self.log.debug("acquiring wait lock to wait for completion") | |
| # using the lock in a with-context blocks, which is what we want if | |
| # we're running wait() | |
| with self._wait_lock: | |
| self.log.debug("got wait lock") | |
| if self.exit_code is None: | |
| self.log.debug("exit code not set, waiting on pid") | |
| pid, exit_code = os.waitpid(self.pid, 0) # blocks | |
| self.exit_code = handle_process_exit_code(exit_code) | |
| else: | |
| self.log.debug("exit code already set (%d), no need to wait", self.exit_code) | |
| # we may not have a thread for stdin, if the pipe has been connected | |
| # via _piped="direct" | |
| if self._input_thread: | |
| self._input_thread.join() | |
| # wait for our stdout and stderr streamreaders to finish reading and | |
| # aggregating the process output | |
| self._output_thread.join() | |
| return self.exit_code | |
| class DoneReadingForever(Exception): pass | |
| class NotYetReadyToRead(Exception): pass | |
| def determine_how_to_read_input(input_obj): | |
| """ given some kind of input object, return a function that knows how to | |
| read chunks of that input object. | |
| each reader function should return a chunk and raise a DoneReadingForever | |
| exception, or return None, when there's no more data to read | |
| NOTE: the function returned does not need to care much about the requested | |
| buffering type (eg, unbuffered vs newline-buffered). the StreamBufferer | |
| will take care of that. these functions just need to return a | |
| reasonably-sized chunk of data. """ | |
| get_chunk = None | |
| if isinstance(input_obj, Queue): | |
| log_msg = "queue" | |
| get_chunk = get_queue_chunk_reader(input_obj) | |
| elif callable(input_obj): | |
| log_msg = "callable" | |
| get_chunk = get_callable_chunk_reader(input_obj) | |
| # also handles stringio | |
| elif hasattr(input_obj, "read"): | |
| log_msg = "file descriptor" | |
| get_chunk = get_file_chunk_reader(input_obj) | |
| elif isinstance(input_obj, basestring): | |
| log_msg = "string" | |
| get_chunk = get_iter_string_reader(input_obj) | |
| else: | |
| log_msg = "general iterable" | |
| get_chunk = get_iter_chunk_reader(iter(input_obj)) | |
| return get_chunk, log_msg | |
| def get_queue_chunk_reader(stdin): | |
| def fn(): | |
| try: | |
| chunk = stdin.get(True, 0.01) | |
| except Empty: | |
| raise NotYetReadyToRead | |
| if chunk is None: | |
| raise DoneReadingForever | |
| return chunk | |
| return fn | |
| def get_callable_chunk_reader(stdin): | |
| def fn(): | |
| try: | |
| return stdin() | |
| except: | |
| raise DoneReadingForever | |
| return fn | |
| def get_iter_string_reader(stdin): | |
| """ return an iterator that returns a chunk of a string every time it is | |
| called. notice that even though bufsize_type might be line buffered, we're | |
| not doing any line buffering here. that's because our StreamBufferer | |
| handles all buffering. we just need to return a reasonable-sized chunk. """ | |
| bufsize = 1024 | |
| iter_str = (stdin[i:i + bufsize] for i in range(0, len(stdin), bufsize)) | |
| return get_iter_chunk_reader(iter_str) | |
| def get_iter_chunk_reader(stdin): | |
| def fn(): | |
| try: | |
| if IS_PY3: | |
| chunk = stdin.__next__() | |
| else: | |
| chunk = stdin.next() | |
| return chunk | |
| except StopIteration: | |
| raise DoneReadingForever | |
| return fn | |
| def get_file_chunk_reader(stdin): | |
| bufsize = 1024 | |
| def fn(): | |
| chunk = stdin.read(bufsize) | |
| if not chunk: | |
| raise DoneReadingForever | |
| else: | |
| return chunk | |
| return fn | |
| def bufsize_type_to_bufsize(bf_type): | |
| """ for a given bufsize type, return the actual bufsize we will read. | |
| notice that although 1 means "newline-buffered", we're reading a chunk size | |
| of 1024. this is because we have to read something. we let a | |
| StreamBufferer instance handle splitting our chunk on newlines """ | |
| # newlines | |
| if bf_type == 1: | |
| bufsize = 1024 | |
| # unbuffered | |
| elif bf_type == 0: | |
| bufsize = 1 | |
| # or buffered by specific amount | |
| else: | |
| bufsize = bf_type | |
| return bufsize | |
| class StreamWriter(object): | |
| """ StreamWriter reads from some input (the stdin param) and writes to a fd | |
| (the stream param). the stdin may be a Queue, a callable, something with | |
| the "read" method, a string, or an iterable """ | |
| def __init__(self, log, stream, stdin, bufsize_type, encoding, tty_in): | |
| self.stream = stream | |
| self.stdin = stdin | |
| self.log = log | |
| self.encoding = encoding | |
| self.tty_in = tty_in | |
| self.stream_bufferer = StreamBufferer(bufsize_type, self.encoding) | |
| self.get_chunk, log_msg = determine_how_to_read_input(stdin) | |
| self.log.debug("parsed stdin as a %s", log_msg) | |
| def fileno(self): | |
| """ defining this allows us to do select.select on an instance of this | |
| class """ | |
| return self.stream | |
| def write(self): | |
| """ attempt to get a chunk of data to write to our child process's | |
| stdin, then write it. the return value answers the questions "are we | |
| done writing forever?" """ | |
| # get_chunk may sometimes return bytes, and sometimes returns trings | |
| # because of the nature of the different types of STDIN objects we | |
| # support | |
| try: | |
| chunk = self.get_chunk() | |
| if chunk is None: | |
| raise DoneReadingForever | |
| except DoneReadingForever: | |
| self.log.debug("done reading") | |
| if self.tty_in: | |
| # EOF time | |
| try: | |
| char = termios.tcgetattr(self.stream)[6][termios.VEOF] | |
| except: | |
| char = chr(4).encode() | |
| os.write(self.stream, char) | |
| return True | |
| except NotYetReadyToRead: | |
| self.log.debug("received no data") | |
| return False | |
| # if we're not bytes, make us bytes | |
| if IS_PY3 and hasattr(chunk, "encode"): | |
| chunk = chunk.encode(self.encoding) | |
| for proc_chunk in self.stream_bufferer.process(chunk): | |
| self.log.debug("got chunk size %d: %r", len(proc_chunk), | |
| proc_chunk[:30]) | |
| self.log.debug("writing chunk to process") | |
| try: | |
| os.write(self.stream, proc_chunk) | |
| except OSError: | |
| self.log.debug("OSError writing stdin chunk") | |
| return True | |
| def close(self): | |
| self.log.debug("closing, but flushing first") | |
| chunk = self.stream_bufferer.flush() | |
| self.log.debug("got chunk size %d to flush: %r", len(chunk), chunk[:30]) | |
| try: | |
| if chunk: | |
| os.write(self.stream, chunk) | |
| if not self.tty_in: | |
| self.log.debug("we used a TTY, so closing the stream") | |
| os.close(self.stream) | |
| except OSError: | |
| pass | |
| def determine_how_to_feed_output(handler, encoding, decode_errors): | |
| if callable(handler): | |
| process, finish = get_callback_chunk_consumer(handler, encoding, | |
| decode_errors) | |
| elif isinstance(handler, cStringIO): | |
| process, finish = get_cstringio_chunk_consumer(handler) | |
| elif isinstance(handler, StringIO): | |
| process, finish = get_stringio_chunk_consumer(handler, encoding, | |
| decode_errors) | |
| elif hasattr(handler, "write"): | |
| process, finish = get_file_chunk_consumer(handler) | |
| else: | |
| process = lambda chunk: False | |
| finish = lambda: None | |
| return process, finish | |
| def get_file_chunk_consumer(handler): | |
| def process(chunk): | |
| handler.write(chunk) | |
| # we should flush on an fd. chunk is already the correctly-buffered | |
| # size, so we don't need the fd buffering as well | |
| handler.flush() | |
| return False | |
| def finish(): | |
| if hasattr(handler, "flush"): | |
| handler.flush() | |
| return process, finish | |
| def get_callback_chunk_consumer(handler, encoding, decode_errors): | |
| def process(chunk): | |
| # try to use the encoding first, if that doesn't work, send | |
| # the bytes, because it might be binary | |
| try: | |
| chunk = chunk.decode(encoding, decode_errors) | |
| except UnicodeDecodeError: | |
| pass | |
| return handler(chunk) | |
| def finish(): | |
| pass | |
| return process, finish | |
| def get_cstringio_chunk_consumer(handler): | |
| def process(chunk): | |
| handler.write(chunk) | |
| return False | |
| def finish(): | |
| pass | |
| return process, finish | |
| def get_stringio_chunk_consumer(handler, encoding, decode_errors): | |
| def process(chunk): | |
| handler.write(chunk.decode(encoding, decode_errors)) | |
| return False | |
| def finish(): | |
| pass | |
| return process, finish | |
| class StreamReader(object): | |
| """ reads from some output (the stream) and sends what it just read to the | |
| handler. """ | |
| def __init__(self, log, stream, handler, buffer, bufsize_type, encoding, | |
| decode_errors, pipe_queue=None, save_data=True): | |
| self.stream = stream | |
| self.buffer = buffer | |
| self.save_data = save_data | |
| self.encoding = encoding | |
| self.decode_errors = decode_errors | |
| self.pipe_queue = None | |
| if pipe_queue: | |
| self.pipe_queue = weakref.ref(pipe_queue) | |
| self.log = log | |
| self.stream_bufferer = StreamBufferer(bufsize_type, self.encoding, | |
| self.decode_errors) | |
| self.bufsize = bufsize_type_to_bufsize(bufsize_type) | |
| self.process_chunk, self.finish_chunk_processor = \ | |
| determine_how_to_feed_output(handler, encoding, decode_errors) | |
| self.should_quit = False | |
| def fileno(self): | |
| """ defining this allows us to do select.select on an instance of this | |
| class """ | |
| return self.stream | |
| def close(self): | |
| chunk = self.stream_bufferer.flush() | |
| self.log.debug("got chunk size %d to flush: %r", len(chunk), chunk[:30]) | |
| if chunk: | |
| self.write_chunk(chunk) | |
| self.finish_chunk_processor() | |
| if self.pipe_queue and self.save_data: | |
| self.pipe_queue().put(None) | |
| try: | |
| os.close(self.stream) | |
| except OSError: | |
| pass | |
| def write_chunk(self, chunk): | |
| # in PY3, the chunk coming in will be bytes, so keep that in mind | |
| if not self.should_quit: | |
| self.should_quit = self.process_chunk(chunk) | |
| if self.save_data: | |
| self.buffer.append(chunk) | |
| if self.pipe_queue: | |
| self.log.debug("putting chunk onto pipe: %r", chunk[:30]) | |
| self.pipe_queue().put(chunk) | |
| def read(self): | |
| # if we're PY3, we're reading bytes, otherwise we're reading | |
| # str | |
| try: | |
| chunk = os.read(self.stream, self.bufsize) | |
| except OSError as e: | |
| self.log.debug("got errno %d, done reading", e.errno) | |
| return True | |
| if not chunk: | |
| self.log.debug("got no chunk, done reading") | |
| return True | |
| self.log.debug("got chunk size %d: %r", len(chunk), chunk[:30]) | |
| for chunk in self.stream_bufferer.process(chunk): | |
| self.write_chunk(chunk) | |
| class StreamBufferer(object): | |
| """ this is used for feeding in chunks of stdout/stderr, and breaking it up | |
| into chunks that will actually be put into the internal buffers. for | |
| example, if you have two processes, one being piped to the other, and you | |
| want that, first process to feed lines of data (instead of the chunks | |
| however they come in), OProc will use an instance of this class to chop up | |
| the data and feed it as lines to be sent down the pipe """ | |
| def __init__(self, buffer_type, encoding=DEFAULT_ENCODING, | |
| decode_errors="strict"): | |
| # 0 for unbuffered, 1 for line, everything else for that amount | |
| self.type = buffer_type | |
| self.buffer = [] | |
| self.n_buffer_count = 0 | |
| self.encoding = encoding | |
| self.decode_errors = decode_errors | |
| # this is for if we change buffering types. if we change from line | |
| # buffered to unbuffered, its very possible that our self.buffer list | |
| # has data that was being saved up (while we searched for a newline). | |
| # we need to use that up, so we don't lose it | |
| self._use_up_buffer_first = False | |
| # the buffering lock is used because we might chance the buffering | |
| # types from a different thread. for example, if we have a stdout | |
| # callback, we might use it to change the way stdin buffers. so we | |
| # lock | |
| self._buffering_lock = threading.RLock() | |
| self.log = Logger("stream_bufferer") | |
| def change_buffering(self, new_type): | |
| # TODO, when we stop supporting 2.6, make this a with context | |
| self.log.debug("acquiring buffering lock for changing buffering") | |
| self._buffering_lock.acquire() | |
| self.log.debug("got buffering lock for changing buffering") | |
| try: | |
| if new_type == 0: | |
| self._use_up_buffer_first = True | |
| self.type = new_type | |
| finally: | |
| self._buffering_lock.release() | |
| self.log.debug("released buffering lock for changing buffering") | |
| def process(self, chunk): | |
| # MAKE SURE THAT THE INPUT IS PY3 BYTES | |
| # THE OUTPUT IS ALWAYS PY3 BYTES | |
| # TODO, when we stop supporting 2.6, make this a with context | |
| self.log.debug("acquiring buffering lock to process chunk (buffering: %d)", self.type) | |
| self._buffering_lock.acquire() | |
| self.log.debug("got buffering lock to process chunk (buffering: %d)", self.type) | |
| try: | |
| # we've encountered binary, permanently switch to N size buffering | |
| # since matching on newline doesn't make sense anymore | |
| if self.type == 1: | |
| try: | |
| chunk.decode(self.encoding, self.decode_errors) | |
| except: | |
| self.log.debug("detected binary data, changing buffering") | |
| self.change_buffering(1024) | |
| # unbuffered | |
| if self.type == 0: | |
| if self._use_up_buffer_first: | |
| self._use_up_buffer_first = False | |
| to_write = self.buffer | |
| self.buffer = [] | |
| to_write.append(chunk) | |
| return to_write | |
| return [chunk] | |
| # line buffered | |
| # we must decode the bytes before we try to match on newline | |
| elif self.type == 1: | |
| total_to_write = [] | |
| chunk = chunk.decode(self.encoding, self.decode_errors) | |
| while True: | |
| newline = chunk.find("\n") | |
| if newline == -1: | |
| break | |
| chunk_to_write = chunk[:newline + 1] | |
| if self.buffer: | |
| # this is ugly, but it's designed to take the existing | |
| # bytes buffer, join it together, tack on our latest | |
| # chunk, then convert the whole thing to a string. | |
| # it's necessary, i'm sure. read the whole block to | |
| # see why. | |
| chunk_to_write = "".encode(self.encoding).join(self.buffer) \ | |
| + chunk_to_write.encode(self.encoding) | |
| chunk_to_write = chunk_to_write.decode(self.encoding) | |
| self.buffer = [] | |
| self.n_buffer_count = 0 | |
| chunk = chunk[newline + 1:] | |
| total_to_write.append(chunk_to_write.encode(self.encoding)) | |
| if chunk: | |
| self.buffer.append(chunk.encode(self.encoding)) | |
| self.n_buffer_count += len(chunk) | |
| return total_to_write | |
| # N size buffered | |
| else: | |
| total_to_write = [] | |
| while True: | |
| overage = self.n_buffer_count + len(chunk) - self.type | |
| if overage >= 0: | |
| ret = "".encode(self.encoding).join(self.buffer) + chunk | |
| chunk_to_write = ret[:self.type] | |
| chunk = ret[self.type:] | |
| total_to_write.append(chunk_to_write) | |
| self.buffer = [] | |
| self.n_buffer_count = 0 | |
| else: | |
| self.buffer.append(chunk) | |
| self.n_buffer_count += len(chunk) | |
| break | |
| return total_to_write | |
| finally: | |
| self._buffering_lock.release() | |
| self.log.debug("released buffering lock for processing chunk (buffering: %d)", self.type) | |
| def flush(self): | |
| self.log.debug("acquiring buffering lock for flushing buffer") | |
| self._buffering_lock.acquire() | |
| self.log.debug("got buffering lock for flushing buffer") | |
| try: | |
| ret = "".encode(self.encoding).join(self.buffer) | |
| self.buffer = [] | |
| return ret | |
| finally: | |
| self._buffering_lock.release() | |
| self.log.debug("released buffering lock for flushing buffer") | |
| @contextmanager | |
| def pushd(path): | |
| """ pushd is just a specialized form of args, where we're passing in the | |
| current working directory """ | |
| with args(_cwd=path): | |
| yield | |
| @contextmanager | |
| def args(*args, **kwargs): | |
| """ allows us to temporarily override all the special keyword parameters in | |
| a with context """ | |
| call_args = Command._call_args | |
| old_args = call_args.copy() | |
| for key,value in kwargs.items(): | |
| key = key.lstrip("_") | |
| call_args[key] = value | |
| yield | |
| call_args.update(old_args) | |
| class Environment(dict): | |
| """ this allows lookups to names that aren't found in the global scope to be | |
| searched for as a program name. for example, if "ls" isn't found in this | |
| module's scope, we consider it a system program and try to find it. | |
| we use a dict instead of just a regular object as the base class because the | |
| exec() statement used in this file requires the "globals" argument to be a | |
| dictionary """ | |
| # this is a list of all of the names that the sh module exports that will | |
| # not resolve to functions. we don't want to accidentally shadow real | |
| # commands with functions/imports that we define in sh.py. for example, | |
| # "import time" may override the time system program | |
| whitelist = set([ | |
| "Command", | |
| "CommandNotFound", | |
| "DEFAULT_ENCODING", | |
| "DoneReadingForever", | |
| "ErrorReturnCode", | |
| "NotYetReadyToRead", | |
| "SignalException", | |
| "TimeoutException", | |
| "__project_url__", | |
| "__version__", | |
| "args", | |
| "glob", | |
| "pushd", | |
| ]) | |
| def __init__(self, globs, baked_args={}): | |
| self.globs = globs | |
| self.baked_args = baked_args | |
| self.disable_whitelist = False | |
| def __setitem__(self, k, v): | |
| self.globs[k] = v | |
| def __getitem__(self, k): | |
| # if we first import "_disable_whitelist" from sh, we can import | |
| # anything defined in the global scope of sh.py. this is useful for our | |
| # tests | |
| if k == "_disable_whitelist": | |
| self.disable_whitelist = True | |
| return None | |
| # we're trying to import something real (maybe), see if it's in our | |
| # global scope | |
| if k in self.whitelist or self.disable_whitelist: | |
| try: | |
| return self.globs[k] | |
| except KeyError: | |
| pass | |
| # somebody tried to be funny and do "from sh import *" | |
| if k == "__all__": | |
| raise AttributeError("Cannot import * from sh. \ | |
| Please import sh or import programs individually.") | |
| # check if we're naming a dynamically generated ReturnCode exception | |
| exc = get_exc_from_name(k) | |
| if exc: | |
| return exc | |
| # https://github.com/ipython/ipython/issues/2577 | |
| # https://github.com/amoffat/sh/issues/97#issuecomment-10610629 | |
| if k.startswith("__") and k.endswith("__"): | |
| raise AttributeError | |
| # how about an environment variable? | |
| try: | |
| return os.environ[k] | |
| except KeyError: | |
| pass | |
| # is it a custom builtin? | |
| builtin = getattr(self, "b_" + k, None) | |
| if builtin: | |
| return builtin | |
| # it must be a command then | |
| # we use _create instead of instantiating the class directly because | |
| # _create uses resolve_program, which will automatically do underscore- | |
| # to-dash conversions. instantiating directly does not use that | |
| return Command._create(k, **self.baked_args) | |
| # methods that begin with "b_" are custom builtins and will override any | |
| # program that exists in our path. this is useful for things like | |
| # common shell builtins that people are used to, but which aren't actually | |
| # full-fledged system binaries | |
| def b_cd(self, path): | |
| os.chdir(path) | |
| def b_which(self, program): | |
| return which(program) | |
| def run_repl(env): # pragma: no cover | |
| banner = "\n>> sh v{version}\n>> https://github.com/amoffat/sh\n" | |
| print(banner.format(version=__version__)) | |
| while True: | |
| try: | |
| line = raw_input("sh> ") | |
| except (ValueError, EOFError): | |
| break | |
| try: | |
| exec(compile(line, "<dummy>", "single"), env, env) | |
| except SystemExit: | |
| break | |
| except: | |
| print(traceback.format_exc()) | |
| # cleans up our last line | |
| print("") | |
| # this is a thin wrapper around THIS module (we patch sys.modules[__name__]). | |
| # this is in the case that the user does a "from sh import whatever" | |
| # in other words, they only want to import certain programs, not the whole | |
| # system PATH worth of commands. in this case, we just proxy the | |
| # import lookup to our Environment class | |
| class SelfWrapper(ModuleType): | |
| def __init__(self, self_module, baked_args={}): | |
| # this is super ugly to have to copy attributes like this, | |
| # but it seems to be the only way to make reload() behave | |
| # nicely. if i make these attributes dynamic lookups in | |
| # __getattr__, reload sometimes chokes in weird ways... | |
| for attr in ["__builtins__", "__doc__", "__name__", "__package__"]: | |
| setattr(self, attr, getattr(self_module, attr, None)) | |
| # python 3.2 (2.7 and 3.3 work fine) breaks on osx (not ubuntu) | |
| # if we set this to None. and 3.3 needs a value for __path__ | |
| self.__path__ = [] | |
| self.__self_module = self_module | |
| self.__env = Environment(globals(), baked_args) | |
| def __setattr__(self, name, value): | |
| if hasattr(self, "__env"): | |
| self.__env[name] = value | |
| else: | |
| ModuleType.__setattr__(self, name, value) | |
| def __getattr__(self, name): | |
| if name == "__env": | |
| raise AttributeError | |
| return self.__env[name] | |
| # accept special keywords argument to define defaults for all operations | |
| # that will be processed with given by return SelfWrapper | |
| def __call__(self, **kwargs): | |
| return SelfWrapper(self.__self_module, kwargs) | |
| # we're being run as a stand-alone script | |
| if __name__ == "__main__": # pragma: no cover | |
| try: | |
| arg = sys.argv.pop(1) | |
| except: | |
| arg = None | |
| if arg == "test": | |
| import subprocess | |
| def run_test(version, locale): | |
| py_version = "python%s" % version | |
| py_bin = which(py_version) | |
| if py_bin: | |
| print("Testing %s, locale %r" % (py_version.capitalize(), | |
| locale)) | |
| env = os.environ.copy() | |
| env["LANG"] = locale | |
| p = subprocess.Popen([py_bin, os.path.join(THIS_DIR, "test.py")] | |
| + sys.argv[1:], env=env) | |
| return_code = p.wait() | |
| if return_code != 0: | |
| exit(1) | |
| else: | |
| print("Couldn't find %s, skipping" % py_version.capitalize()) | |
| versions = ("2.6", "2.7", "3.1", "3.2", "3.3", "3.4") | |
| locales = ("en_US.UTF-8", "C") | |
| for locale in locales: | |
| for version in versions: | |
| run_test(version, locale) | |
| else: | |
| env = Environment(globals()) | |
| run_repl(env) | |
| # we're being imported from somewhere | |
| else: | |
| self = sys.modules[__name__] | |
| sys.modules[__name__] = SelfWrapper(self) |
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