diff options
| -rw-r--r-- | scripts/lib/wic/creator.py | 115 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | scripts/lib/wic/plugins/imager/direct_plugin.py | 2 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | scripts/lib/wic/utils/cmdln.py | 1604 |
3 files changed, 27 insertions, 1694 deletions
diff --git a/scripts/lib/wic/creator.py b/scripts/lib/wic/creator.py index 760848f320..5231297282 100644 --- a/scripts/lib/wic/creator.py +++ b/scripts/lib/wic/creator.py | |||
| @@ -16,15 +16,15 @@ | |||
| 16 | # Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. | 16 | # Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. |
| 17 | 17 | ||
| 18 | import os, sys | 18 | import os, sys |
| 19 | from optparse import SUPPRESS_HELP | 19 | from optparse import OptionParser, SUPPRESS_HELP |
| 20 | 20 | ||
| 21 | from wic import msger | 21 | from wic import msger |
| 22 | from wic.utils import cmdln, errors | 22 | from wic.utils import errors |
| 23 | from wic.conf import configmgr | 23 | from wic.conf import configmgr |
| 24 | from wic.plugin import pluginmgr | 24 | from wic.plugin import pluginmgr |
| 25 | 25 | ||
| 26 | 26 | ||
| 27 | class Creator(cmdln.Cmdln): | 27 | class Creator(object): |
| 28 | """${name}: create an image | 28 | """${name}: create an image |
| 29 | 29 | ||
| 30 | Usage: | 30 | Usage: |
| @@ -37,8 +37,7 @@ class Creator(cmdln.Cmdln): | |||
| 37 | name = 'wic create(cr)' | 37 | name = 'wic create(cr)' |
| 38 | 38 | ||
| 39 | def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): | 39 | def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): |
| 40 | cmdln.Cmdln.__init__(self, *args, **kwargs) | 40 | self._subcmds = {} |
| 41 | self._subcmds = [] | ||
| 42 | 41 | ||
| 43 | # get cmds from pluginmgr | 42 | # get cmds from pluginmgr |
| 44 | # mix-in do_subcmd interface | 43 | # mix-in do_subcmd interface |
| @@ -48,11 +47,10 @@ class Creator(cmdln.Cmdln): | |||
| 48 | continue | 47 | continue |
| 49 | 48 | ||
| 50 | func = getattr(klass, 'do_create') | 49 | func = getattr(klass, 'do_create') |
| 51 | setattr(self.__class__, "do_"+subcmd, func) | 50 | self._subcmds[subcmd] = func |
| 52 | self._subcmds.append(subcmd) | ||
| 53 | 51 | ||
| 54 | def get_optparser(self): | 52 | def get_optparser(self): |
| 55 | optparser = cmdln.CmdlnOptionParser(self) | 53 | optparser = OptionParser() |
| 56 | optparser.add_option('-d', '--debug', action='store_true', | 54 | optparser.add_option('-d', '--debug', action='store_true', |
| 57 | dest='debug', | 55 | dest='debug', |
| 58 | help=SUPPRESS_HELP) | 56 | help=SUPPRESS_HELP) |
| @@ -73,69 +71,31 @@ class Creator(cmdln.Cmdln): | |||
| 73 | ' feature, use it if you have more than 4G memory') | 71 | ' feature, use it if you have more than 4G memory') |
| 74 | return optparser | 72 | return optparser |
| 75 | 73 | ||
| 76 | def preoptparse(self, argv): | 74 | def postoptparse(self, options): |
| 77 | optparser = self.get_optparser() | ||
| 78 | |||
| 79 | largs = [] | ||
| 80 | rargs = [] | ||
| 81 | while argv: | ||
| 82 | arg = argv.pop(0) | ||
| 83 | |||
| 84 | if arg in ('-h', '--help'): | ||
| 85 | rargs.append(arg) | ||
| 86 | |||
| 87 | elif optparser.has_option(arg): | ||
| 88 | largs.append(arg) | ||
| 89 | |||
| 90 | if optparser.get_option(arg).takes_value(): | ||
| 91 | try: | ||
| 92 | largs.append(argv.pop(0)) | ||
| 93 | except IndexError: | ||
| 94 | raise errors.Usage("option %s requires arguments" % arg) | ||
| 95 | |||
| 96 | else: | ||
| 97 | if arg.startswith("--"): | ||
| 98 | if "=" in arg: | ||
| 99 | opt = arg.split("=")[0] | ||
| 100 | else: | ||
| 101 | opt = None | ||
| 102 | elif arg.startswith("-") and len(arg) > 2: | ||
| 103 | opt = arg[0:2] | ||
| 104 | else: | ||
| 105 | opt = None | ||
| 106 | |||
| 107 | if opt and optparser.has_option(opt): | ||
| 108 | largs.append(arg) | ||
| 109 | else: | ||
| 110 | rargs.append(arg) | ||
| 111 | |||
| 112 | return largs + rargs | ||
| 113 | |||
| 114 | def postoptparse(self): | ||
| 115 | abspath = lambda pth: os.path.abspath(os.path.expanduser(pth)) | 75 | abspath = lambda pth: os.path.abspath(os.path.expanduser(pth)) |
| 116 | 76 | ||
| 117 | if self.options.verbose: | 77 | if options.verbose: |
| 118 | msger.set_loglevel('verbose') | 78 | msger.set_loglevel('verbose') |
| 119 | if self.options.debug: | 79 | if options.debug: |
| 120 | msger.set_loglevel('debug') | 80 | msger.set_loglevel('debug') |
| 121 | 81 | ||
| 122 | if self.options.logfile: | 82 | if options.logfile: |
| 123 | logfile_abs_path = abspath(self.options.logfile) | 83 | logfile_abs_path = abspath(options.logfile) |
| 124 | if os.path.isdir(logfile_abs_path): | 84 | if os.path.isdir(logfile_abs_path): |
| 125 | raise errors.Usage("logfile's path %s should be file" | 85 | raise errors.Usage("logfile's path %s should be file" |
| 126 | % self.options.logfile) | 86 | % options.logfile) |
| 127 | if not os.path.exists(os.path.dirname(logfile_abs_path)): | 87 | if not os.path.exists(os.path.dirname(logfile_abs_path)): |
| 128 | os.makedirs(os.path.dirname(logfile_abs_path)) | 88 | os.makedirs(os.path.dirname(logfile_abs_path)) |
| 129 | msger.set_interactive(False) | 89 | msger.set_interactive(False) |
| 130 | msger.set_logfile(logfile_abs_path) | 90 | msger.set_logfile(logfile_abs_path) |
| 131 | configmgr.create['logfile'] = self.options.logfile | 91 | configmgr.create['logfile'] = options.logfile |
| 132 | 92 | ||
| 133 | if self.options.config: | 93 | if options.config: |
| 134 | configmgr.reset() | 94 | configmgr.reset() |
| 135 | configmgr._siteconf = self.options.config | 95 | configmgr._siteconf = options.config |
| 136 | 96 | ||
| 137 | if self.options.outdir is not None: | 97 | if options.outdir is not None: |
| 138 | configmgr.create['outdir'] = abspath(self.options.outdir) | 98 | configmgr.create['outdir'] = abspath(options.outdir) |
| 139 | 99 | ||
| 140 | cdir = 'outdir' | 100 | cdir = 'outdir' |
| 141 | if os.path.exists(configmgr.create[cdir]) \ | 101 | if os.path.exists(configmgr.create[cdir]) \ |
| @@ -143,8 +103,8 @@ class Creator(cmdln.Cmdln): | |||
| 143 | msger.error('Invalid directory specified: %s' \ | 103 | msger.error('Invalid directory specified: %s' \ |
| 144 | % configmgr.create[cdir]) | 104 | % configmgr.create[cdir]) |
| 145 | 105 | ||
| 146 | if self.options.enabletmpfs: | 106 | if options.enabletmpfs: |
| 147 | configmgr.create['enabletmpfs'] = self.options.enabletmpfs | 107 | configmgr.create['enabletmpfs'] = options.enabletmpfs |
| 148 | 108 | ||
| 149 | def main(self, argv=None): | 109 | def main(self, argv=None): |
| 150 | if argv is None: | 110 | if argv is None: |
| @@ -152,36 +112,13 @@ class Creator(cmdln.Cmdln): | |||
| 152 | else: | 112 | else: |
| 153 | argv = argv[:] # don't modify caller's list | 113 | argv = argv[:] # don't modify caller's list |
| 154 | 114 | ||
| 155 | self.optparser = self.get_optparser() | 115 | pname = argv[0] |
| 156 | if self.optparser: | 116 | if pname not in self._subcmds: |
| 157 | try: | 117 | msger.error('Unknown plugin: %s' % pname) |
| 158 | argv = self.preoptparse(argv) | ||
| 159 | self.options, args = self.optparser.parse_args(argv) | ||
| 160 | |||
| 161 | except cmdln.CmdlnUserError, ex: | ||
| 162 | msg = "%s: %s\nTry '%s help' for info.\n"\ | ||
| 163 | % (self.name, ex, self.name) | ||
| 164 | msger.error(msg) | ||
| 165 | |||
| 166 | except cmdln.StopOptionProcessing, ex: | ||
| 167 | return 0 | ||
| 168 | else: | ||
| 169 | # optparser=None means no process for opts | ||
| 170 | self.options, args = None, argv[1:] | ||
| 171 | |||
| 172 | if not args: | ||
| 173 | return self.emptyline() | ||
| 174 | |||
| 175 | self.postoptparse() | ||
| 176 | |||
| 177 | return self.cmd(args) | ||
| 178 | 118 | ||
| 179 | def precmd(self, argv): # check help before cmd | 119 | optparser = self.get_optparser() |
| 180 | 120 | options, args = optparser.parse_args(argv) | |
| 181 | if '-h' in argv or '?' in argv or '--help' in argv or 'help' in argv: | ||
| 182 | return argv | ||
| 183 | 121 | ||
| 184 | if len(argv) == 1: | 122 | self.postoptparse(options) |
| 185 | return ['help', argv[0]] | ||
| 186 | 123 | ||
| 187 | return argv | 124 | return self._subcmds[pname](options, *args[1:]) |
diff --git a/scripts/lib/wic/plugins/imager/direct_plugin.py b/scripts/lib/wic/plugins/imager/direct_plugin.py index eb17e8d7b7..e9672fe274 100644 --- a/scripts/lib/wic/plugins/imager/direct_plugin.py +++ b/scripts/lib/wic/plugins/imager/direct_plugin.py | |||
| @@ -56,7 +56,7 @@ class DirectPlugin(ImagerPlugin): | |||
| 56 | return krootfs_dir | 56 | return krootfs_dir |
| 57 | 57 | ||
| 58 | @classmethod | 58 | @classmethod |
| 59 | def do_create(cls, subcmd, opts, *args): | 59 | def do_create(cls, opts, *args): |
| 60 | """ | 60 | """ |
| 61 | Create direct image, called from creator as 'direct' cmd | 61 | Create direct image, called from creator as 'direct' cmd |
| 62 | """ | 62 | """ |
diff --git a/scripts/lib/wic/utils/cmdln.py b/scripts/lib/wic/utils/cmdln.py deleted file mode 100644 index 47654b934f..0000000000 --- a/scripts/lib/wic/utils/cmdln.py +++ /dev/null | |||
| @@ -1,1604 +0,0 @@ | |||
| 1 | #!/usr/bin/env python | ||
| 2 | # Copyright (c) 2002-2007 ActiveState Software Inc. | ||
| 3 | # License: MIT (see LICENSE.txt for license details) | ||
| 4 | # Author: Trent Mick | ||
| 5 | # Home: http://trentm.com/projects/cmdln/ | ||
| 6 | |||
| 7 | """An improvement on Python's standard cmd.py module. | ||
| 8 | |||
| 9 | As with cmd.py, this module provides "a simple framework for writing | ||
| 10 | line-oriented command intepreters." This module provides a 'RawCmdln' | ||
| 11 | class that fixes some design flaws in cmd.Cmd, making it more scalable | ||
| 12 | and nicer to use for good 'cvs'- or 'svn'-style command line interfaces | ||
| 13 | or simple shells. And it provides a 'Cmdln' class that add | ||
| 14 | optparse-based option processing. Basically you use it like this: | ||
| 15 | |||
| 16 | import cmdln | ||
| 17 | |||
| 18 | class MySVN(cmdln.Cmdln): | ||
| 19 | name = "svn" | ||
| 20 | |||
| 21 | @cmdln.alias('stat', 'st') | ||
| 22 | @cmdln.option('-v', '--verbose', action='store_true' | ||
| 23 | help='print verbose information') | ||
| 24 | def do_status(self, subcmd, opts, *paths): | ||
| 25 | print "handle 'svn status' command" | ||
| 26 | |||
| 27 | #... | ||
| 28 | |||
| 29 | if __name__ == "__main__": | ||
| 30 | shell = MySVN() | ||
| 31 | retval = shell.main() | ||
| 32 | sys.exit(retval) | ||
| 33 | |||
| 34 | See the README.txt or <http://trentm.com/projects/cmdln/> for more | ||
| 35 | details. | ||
| 36 | """ | ||
| 37 | |||
| 38 | __version_info__ = (1, 1, 2) | ||
| 39 | __version__ = '.'.join(map(str, __version_info__)) | ||
| 40 | |||
| 41 | import os | ||
| 42 | import sys | ||
| 43 | import re | ||
| 44 | import cmd | ||
| 45 | import optparse | ||
| 46 | import sys | ||
| 47 | |||
| 48 | |||
| 49 | |||
| 50 | |||
| 51 | #---- globals | ||
| 52 | |||
| 53 | LOOP_ALWAYS, LOOP_NEVER, LOOP_IF_EMPTY = range(3) | ||
| 54 | |||
| 55 | # An unspecified optional argument when None is a meaningful value. | ||
| 56 | _NOT_SPECIFIED = ("Not", "Specified") | ||
| 57 | |||
| 58 | # Pattern to match a TypeError message from a call that | ||
| 59 | # failed because of incorrect number of arguments (see | ||
| 60 | # Python/getargs.c). | ||
| 61 | _INCORRECT_NUM_ARGS_RE = re.compile( | ||
| 62 | r"(takes [\w ]+ )(\d+)( arguments? \()(\d+)( given\))") | ||
| 63 | |||
| 64 | |||
| 65 | |||
| 66 | #---- exceptions | ||
| 67 | |||
| 68 | class CmdlnError(Exception): | ||
| 69 | """A cmdln.py usage error.""" | ||
| 70 | def __init__(self, msg): | ||
| 71 | self.msg = msg | ||
| 72 | def __str__(self): | ||
| 73 | return self.msg | ||
| 74 | |||
| 75 | class CmdlnUserError(Exception): | ||
| 76 | """An error by a user of a cmdln-based tool/shell.""" | ||
| 77 | pass | ||
| 78 | |||
| 79 | |||
| 80 | |||
| 81 | #---- public methods and classes | ||
| 82 | |||
| 83 | def alias(*aliases): | ||
| 84 | """Decorator to add aliases for Cmdln.do_* command handlers. | ||
| 85 | |||
| 86 | Example: | ||
| 87 | class MyShell(cmdln.Cmdln): | ||
| 88 | @cmdln.alias("!", "sh") | ||
| 89 | def do_shell(self, argv): | ||
| 90 | #...implement 'shell' command | ||
| 91 | """ | ||
| 92 | def decorate(f): | ||
| 93 | if not hasattr(f, "aliases"): | ||
| 94 | f.aliases = [] | ||
| 95 | f.aliases += aliases | ||
| 96 | return f | ||
| 97 | return decorate | ||
| 98 | |||
| 99 | |||
| 100 | class RawCmdln(cmd.Cmd): | ||
| 101 | """An improved (on cmd.Cmd) framework for building multi-subcommand | ||
| 102 | scripts (think "svn" & "cvs") and simple shells (think "pdb" and | ||
| 103 | "gdb"). | ||
| 104 | |||
| 105 | A simple example: | ||
| 106 | |||
| 107 | import cmdln | ||
| 108 | |||
| 109 | class MySVN(cmdln.RawCmdln): | ||
| 110 | name = "svn" | ||
| 111 | |||
| 112 | @cmdln.aliases('stat', 'st') | ||
| 113 | def do_status(self, argv): | ||
| 114 | print "handle 'svn status' command" | ||
| 115 | |||
| 116 | if __name__ == "__main__": | ||
| 117 | shell = MySVN() | ||
| 118 | retval = shell.main() | ||
| 119 | sys.exit(retval) | ||
| 120 | |||
| 121 | See <http://trentm.com/projects/cmdln> for more information. | ||
| 122 | """ | ||
| 123 | name = None # if unset, defaults basename(sys.argv[0]) | ||
| 124 | prompt = None # if unset, defaults to self.name+"> " | ||
| 125 | version = None # if set, default top-level options include --version | ||
| 126 | |||
| 127 | # Default messages for some 'help' command error cases. | ||
| 128 | # They are interpolated with one arg: the command. | ||
| 129 | nohelp = "no help on '%s'" | ||
| 130 | unknowncmd = "unknown command: '%s'" | ||
| 131 | |||
| 132 | helpindent = '' # string with which to indent help output | ||
| 133 | |||
| 134 | def __init__(self, completekey='tab', | ||
| 135 | stdin=None, stdout=None, stderr=None): | ||
| 136 | """Cmdln(completekey='tab', stdin=None, stdout=None, stderr=None) | ||
| 137 | |||
| 138 | The optional argument 'completekey' is the readline name of a | ||
| 139 | completion key; it defaults to the Tab key. If completekey is | ||
| 140 | not None and the readline module is available, command completion | ||
| 141 | is done automatically. | ||
| 142 | |||
| 143 | The optional arguments 'stdin', 'stdout' and 'stderr' specify | ||
| 144 | alternate input, output and error output file objects; if not | ||
| 145 | specified, sys.* are used. | ||
| 146 | |||
| 147 | If 'stdout' but not 'stderr' is specified, stdout is used for | ||
| 148 | error output. This is to provide least surprise for users used | ||
| 149 | to only the 'stdin' and 'stdout' options with cmd.Cmd. | ||
| 150 | """ | ||
| 151 | import sys | ||
| 152 | if self.name is None: | ||
| 153 | self.name = os.path.basename(sys.argv[0]) | ||
| 154 | if self.prompt is None: | ||
| 155 | self.prompt = self.name+"> " | ||
| 156 | self._name_str = self._str(self.name) | ||
| 157 | self._prompt_str = self._str(self.prompt) | ||
| 158 | if stdin is not None: | ||
| 159 | self.stdin = stdin | ||
| 160 | else: | ||
| 161 | self.stdin = sys.stdin | ||
| 162 | if stdout is not None: | ||
| 163 | self.stdout = stdout | ||
| 164 | else: | ||
| 165 | self.stdout = sys.stdout | ||
| 166 | if stderr is not None: | ||
| 167 | self.stderr = stderr | ||
| 168 | elif stdout is not None: | ||
| 169 | self.stderr = stdout | ||
| 170 | else: | ||
| 171 | self.stderr = sys.stderr | ||
| 172 | self.cmdqueue = [] | ||
| 173 | self.completekey = completekey | ||
| 174 | self.cmdlooping = False | ||
| 175 | |||
| 176 | def get_optparser(self): | ||
| 177 | """Hook for subclasses to set the option parser for the | ||
| 178 | top-level command/shell. | ||
| 179 | |||
| 180 | This option parser is used retrieved and used by `.main()' to | ||
| 181 | handle top-level options. | ||
| 182 | |||
| 183 | The default implements a single '-h|--help' option. Sub-classes | ||
| 184 | can return None to have no options at the top-level. Typically | ||
| 185 | an instance of CmdlnOptionParser should be returned. | ||
| 186 | """ | ||
| 187 | version = (self.version is not None | ||
| 188 | and "%s %s" % (self._name_str, self.version) | ||
| 189 | or None) | ||
| 190 | return CmdlnOptionParser(self, version=version) | ||
| 191 | |||
| 192 | def postoptparse(self): | ||
| 193 | """Hook method executed just after `.main()' parses top-level | ||
| 194 | options. | ||
| 195 | |||
| 196 | When called `self.options' holds the results of the option parse. | ||
| 197 | """ | ||
| 198 | pass | ||
| 199 | |||
| 200 | def main(self, argv=None, loop=LOOP_NEVER): | ||
| 201 | """A possible mainline handler for a script, like so: | ||
| 202 | |||
| 203 | import cmdln | ||
| 204 | class MyCmd(cmdln.Cmdln): | ||
| 205 | name = "mycmd" | ||
| 206 | ... | ||
| 207 | |||
| 208 | if __name__ == "__main__": | ||
| 209 | MyCmd().main() | ||
| 210 | |||
| 211 | By default this will use sys.argv to issue a single command to | ||
| 212 | 'MyCmd', then exit. The 'loop' argument can be use to control | ||
| 213 | interactive shell behaviour. | ||
| 214 | |||
| 215 | Arguments: | ||
| 216 | "argv" (optional, default sys.argv) is the command to run. | ||
| 217 | It must be a sequence, where the first element is the | ||
| 218 | command name and subsequent elements the args for that | ||
| 219 | command. | ||
| 220 | "loop" (optional, default LOOP_NEVER) is a constant | ||
| 221 | indicating if a command loop should be started (i.e. an | ||
| 222 | interactive shell). Valid values (constants on this module): | ||
| 223 | LOOP_ALWAYS start loop and run "argv", if any | ||
| 224 | LOOP_NEVER run "argv" (or .emptyline()) and exit | ||
| 225 | LOOP_IF_EMPTY run "argv", if given, and exit; | ||
| 226 | otherwise, start loop | ||
| 227 | """ | ||
| 228 | if argv is None: | ||
| 229 | import sys | ||
| 230 | argv = sys.argv | ||
| 231 | else: | ||
| 232 | argv = argv[:] # don't modify caller's list | ||
| 233 | |||
| 234 | self.optparser = self.get_optparser() | ||
| 235 | if self.optparser: # i.e. optparser=None means don't process for opts | ||
| 236 | try: | ||
| 237 | self.options, args = self.optparser.parse_args(argv[1:]) | ||
| 238 | except CmdlnUserError, ex: | ||
| 239 | msg = "%s: %s\nTry '%s help' for info.\n"\ | ||
| 240 | % (self.name, ex, self.name) | ||
| 241 | self.stderr.write(self._str(msg)) | ||
| 242 | self.stderr.flush() | ||
| 243 | return 1 | ||
| 244 | except StopOptionProcessing, ex: | ||
| 245 | return 0 | ||
| 246 | else: | ||
| 247 | self.options, args = None, argv[1:] | ||
| 248 | self.postoptparse() | ||
| 249 | |||
| 250 | if loop == LOOP_ALWAYS: | ||
| 251 | if args: | ||
| 252 | self.cmdqueue.append(args) | ||
| 253 | return self.cmdloop() | ||
| 254 | elif loop == LOOP_NEVER: | ||
| 255 | if args: | ||
| 256 | return self.cmd(args) | ||
| 257 | else: | ||
| 258 | return self.emptyline() | ||
| 259 | elif loop == LOOP_IF_EMPTY: | ||
| 260 | if args: | ||
| 261 | return self.cmd(args) | ||
| 262 | else: | ||
| 263 | return self.cmdloop() | ||
| 264 | |||
| 265 | def cmd(self, argv): | ||
| 266 | """Run one command and exit. | ||
| 267 | |||
| 268 | "argv" is the arglist for the command to run. argv[0] is the | ||
| 269 | command to run. If argv is an empty list then the | ||
| 270 | 'emptyline' handler is run. | ||
| 271 | |||
| 272 | Returns the return value from the command handler. | ||
| 273 | """ | ||
| 274 | assert isinstance(argv, (list, tuple)), \ | ||
| 275 | "'argv' is not a sequence: %r" % argv | ||
| 276 | retval = None | ||
| 277 | try: | ||
| 278 | argv = self.precmd(argv) | ||
| 279 | retval = self.onecmd(argv) | ||
| 280 | self.postcmd(argv) | ||
| 281 | except: | ||
| 282 | if not self.cmdexc(argv): | ||
| 283 | raise | ||
| 284 | retval = 1 | ||
| 285 | return retval | ||
| 286 | |||
| 287 | def _str(self, s): | ||
| 288 | """Safely convert the given str/unicode to a string for printing.""" | ||
| 289 | try: | ||
| 290 | return str(s) | ||
| 291 | except UnicodeError: | ||
| 292 | #XXX What is the proper encoding to use here? 'utf-8' seems | ||
| 293 | # to work better than "getdefaultencoding" (usually | ||
| 294 | # 'ascii'), on OS X at least. | ||
| 295 | #import sys | ||
| 296 | #return s.encode(sys.getdefaultencoding(), "replace") | ||
| 297 | return s.encode("utf-8", "replace") | ||
| 298 | |||
| 299 | def cmdloop(self, intro=None): | ||
| 300 | """Repeatedly issue a prompt, accept input, parse into an argv, and | ||
| 301 | dispatch (via .precmd(), .onecmd() and .postcmd()), passing them | ||
| 302 | the argv. In other words, start a shell. | ||
| 303 | |||
| 304 | "intro" (optional) is a introductory message to print when | ||
| 305 | starting the command loop. This overrides the class | ||
| 306 | "intro" attribute, if any. | ||
| 307 | """ | ||
| 308 | self.cmdlooping = True | ||
| 309 | self.preloop() | ||
| 310 | if self.use_rawinput and self.completekey: | ||
| 311 | try: | ||
| 312 | import readline | ||
| 313 | self.old_completer = readline.get_completer() | ||
| 314 | readline.set_completer(self.complete) | ||
| 315 | readline.parse_and_bind(self.completekey+": complete") | ||
| 316 | except ImportError: | ||
| 317 | pass | ||
| 318 | try: | ||
| 319 | if intro is None: | ||
| 320 | intro = self.intro | ||
| 321 | if intro: | ||
| 322 | intro_str = self._str(intro) | ||
| 323 | self.stdout.write(intro_str+'\n') | ||
| 324 | self.stop = False | ||
| 325 | retval = None | ||
| 326 | while not self.stop: | ||
| 327 | if self.cmdqueue: | ||
| 328 | argv = self.cmdqueue.pop(0) | ||
| 329 | assert isinstance(argv, (list, tuple)), \ | ||
| 330 | "item on 'cmdqueue' is not a sequence: %r" % argv | ||
| 331 | else: | ||
| 332 | if self.use_rawinput: | ||
| 333 | try: | ||
| 334 | line = raw_input(self._prompt_str) | ||
| 335 | except EOFError: | ||
| 336 | line = 'EOF' | ||
| 337 | else: | ||
| 338 | self.stdout.write(self._prompt_str) | ||
| 339 | self.stdout.flush() | ||
| 340 | line = self.stdin.readline() | ||
| 341 | if not len(line): | ||
| 342 | line = 'EOF' | ||
| 343 | else: | ||
| 344 | line = line[:-1] # chop '\n' | ||
| 345 | argv = line2argv(line) | ||
| 346 | try: | ||
| 347 | argv = self.precmd(argv) | ||
| 348 | retval = self.onecmd(argv) | ||
| 349 | self.postcmd(argv) | ||
| 350 | except: | ||
| 351 | if not self.cmdexc(argv): | ||
| 352 | raise | ||
| 353 | retval = 1 | ||
| 354 | self.lastretval = retval | ||
| 355 | self.postloop() | ||
| 356 | finally: | ||
| 357 | if self.use_rawinput and self.completekey: | ||
| 358 | try: | ||
| 359 | import readline | ||
| 360 | readline.set_completer(self.old_completer) | ||
| 361 | except ImportError: | ||
| 362 | pass | ||
| 363 | self.cmdlooping = False | ||
| 364 | return retval | ||
| 365 | |||
| 366 | def precmd(self, argv): | ||
| 367 | """Hook method executed just before the command argv is | ||
| 368 | interpreted, but after the input prompt is generated and issued. | ||
| 369 | |||
| 370 | "argv" is the cmd to run. | ||
| 371 | |||
| 372 | Returns an argv to run (i.e. this method can modify the command | ||
| 373 | to run). | ||
| 374 | """ | ||
| 375 | return argv | ||
| 376 | |||
| 377 | def postcmd(self, argv): | ||
| 378 | """Hook method executed just after a command dispatch is finished. | ||
| 379 | |||
| 380 | "argv" is the command that was run. | ||
| 381 | """ | ||
| 382 | pass | ||
| 383 | |||
| 384 | def cmdexc(self, argv): | ||
| 385 | """Called if an exception is raised in any of precmd(), onecmd(), | ||
| 386 | or postcmd(). If True is returned, the exception is deemed to have | ||
| 387 | been dealt with. Otherwise, the exception is re-raised. | ||
| 388 | |||
| 389 | The default implementation handles CmdlnUserError's, which | ||
| 390 | typically correspond to user error in calling commands (as | ||
| 391 | opposed to programmer error in the design of the script using | ||
| 392 | cmdln.py). | ||
| 393 | """ | ||
| 394 | import sys | ||
| 395 | type, exc, traceback = sys.exc_info() | ||
| 396 | if isinstance(exc, CmdlnUserError): | ||
| 397 | msg = "%s %s: %s\nTry '%s help %s' for info.\n"\ | ||
| 398 | % (self.name, argv[0], exc, self.name, argv[0]) | ||
| 399 | self.stderr.write(self._str(msg)) | ||
| 400 | self.stderr.flush() | ||
| 401 | return True | ||
| 402 | |||
| 403 | def onecmd(self, argv): | ||
| 404 | if not argv: | ||
| 405 | return self.emptyline() | ||
| 406 | self.lastcmd = argv | ||
| 407 | cmdname = self._get_canonical_cmd_name(argv[0]) | ||
| 408 | if cmdname: | ||
| 409 | handler = self._get_cmd_handler(cmdname) | ||
| 410 | if handler: | ||
| 411 | return self._dispatch_cmd(handler, argv) | ||
| 412 | return self.default(argv) | ||
| 413 | |||
| 414 | def _dispatch_cmd(self, handler, argv): | ||
| 415 | return handler(argv) | ||
| 416 | |||
| 417 | def default(self, argv): | ||
| 418 | """Hook called to handle a command for which there is no handler. | ||
| 419 | |||
| 420 | "argv" is the command and arguments to run. | ||
| 421 | |||
| 422 | The default implementation writes and error message to stderr | ||
| 423 | and returns an error exit status. | ||
| 424 | |||
| 425 | Returns a numeric command exit status. | ||
| 426 | """ | ||
| 427 | errmsg = self._str(self.unknowncmd % (argv[0],)) | ||
| 428 | if self.cmdlooping: | ||
| 429 | self.stderr.write(errmsg+"\n") | ||
| 430 | else: | ||
| 431 | self.stderr.write("%s: %s\nTry '%s help' for info.\n" | ||
| 432 | % (self._name_str, errmsg, self._name_str)) | ||
| 433 | self.stderr.flush() | ||
| 434 | return 1 | ||
| 435 | |||
| 436 | def parseline(self, line): | ||
| 437 | # This is used by Cmd.complete (readline completer function) to | ||
| 438 | # massage the current line buffer before completion processing. | ||
| 439 | # We override to drop special '!' handling. | ||
| 440 | line = line.strip() | ||
| 441 | if not line: | ||
| 442 | return None, None, line | ||
| 443 | elif line[0] == '?': | ||
| 444 | line = 'help ' + line[1:] | ||
| 445 | i, n = 0, len(line) | ||
| 446 | while i < n and line[i] in self.identchars: | ||
| 447 | i = i+1 | ||
| 448 | cmd, arg = line[:i], line[i:].strip() | ||
| 449 | return cmd, arg, line | ||
| 450 | |||
| 451 | def helpdefault(self, cmd, known): | ||
| 452 | """Hook called to handle help on a command for which there is no | ||
| 453 | help handler. | ||
| 454 | |||
| 455 | "cmd" is the command name on which help was requested. | ||
| 456 | "known" is a boolean indicating if this command is known | ||
| 457 | (i.e. if there is a handler for it). | ||
| 458 | |||
| 459 | Returns a return code. | ||
| 460 | """ | ||
| 461 | if known: | ||
| 462 | msg = self._str(self.nohelp % (cmd,)) | ||
| 463 | if self.cmdlooping: | ||
| 464 | self.stderr.write(msg + '\n') | ||
| 465 | else: | ||
| 466 | self.stderr.write("%s: %s\n" % (self.name, msg)) | ||
| 467 | else: | ||
| 468 | msg = self.unknowncmd % (cmd,) | ||
| 469 | if self.cmdlooping: | ||
| 470 | self.stderr.write(msg + '\n') | ||
| 471 | else: | ||
| 472 | self.stderr.write("%s: %s\n" | ||
| 473 | "Try '%s help' for info.\n" | ||
| 474 | % (self.name, msg, self.name)) | ||
| 475 | self.stderr.flush() | ||
| 476 | return 1 | ||
| 477 | |||
| 478 | def do_help(self, argv): | ||
| 479 | """${cmd_name}: give detailed help on a specific sub-command | ||
| 480 | |||
| 481 | Usage: | ||
| 482 | ${name} help [COMMAND] | ||
| 483 | """ | ||
| 484 | if len(argv) > 1: # asking for help on a particular command | ||
| 485 | doc = None | ||
| 486 | cmdname = self._get_canonical_cmd_name(argv[1]) or argv[1] | ||
| 487 | if not cmdname: | ||
| 488 | return self.helpdefault(argv[1], False) | ||
| 489 | else: | ||
| 490 | helpfunc = getattr(self, "help_"+cmdname, None) | ||
| 491 | if helpfunc: | ||
| 492 | doc = helpfunc() | ||
| 493 | else: | ||
| 494 | handler = self._get_cmd_handler(cmdname) | ||
| 495 | if handler: | ||
| 496 | doc = handler.__doc__ | ||
| 497 | if doc is None: | ||
| 498 | return self.helpdefault(argv[1], handler != None) | ||
| 499 | else: # bare "help" command | ||
| 500 | doc = self.__class__.__doc__ # try class docstring | ||
| 501 | if doc is None: | ||
| 502 | # Try to provide some reasonable useful default help. | ||
| 503 | if self.cmdlooping: | ||
| 504 | prefix = "" | ||
| 505 | else: | ||
| 506 | prefix = self.name+' ' | ||
| 507 | doc = """Usage: | ||
| 508 | %sCOMMAND [ARGS...] | ||
| 509 | %shelp [COMMAND] | ||
| 510 | |||
| 511 | ${option_list} | ||
| 512 | ${command_list} | ||
| 513 | ${help_list} | ||
| 514 | """ % (prefix, prefix) | ||
| 515 | cmdname = None | ||
| 516 | |||
| 517 | if doc: # *do* have help content, massage and print that | ||
| 518 | doc = self._help_reindent(doc) | ||
| 519 | doc = self._help_preprocess(doc, cmdname) | ||
| 520 | doc = doc.rstrip() + '\n' # trim down trailing space | ||
| 521 | self.stdout.write(self._str(doc)) | ||
| 522 | self.stdout.flush() | ||
| 523 | do_help.aliases = ["?"] | ||
| 524 | |||
| 525 | def _help_reindent(self, help, indent=None): | ||
| 526 | """Hook to re-indent help strings before writing to stdout. | ||
| 527 | |||
| 528 | "help" is the help content to re-indent | ||
| 529 | "indent" is a string with which to indent each line of the | ||
| 530 | help content after normalizing. If unspecified or None | ||
| 531 | then the default is use: the 'self.helpindent' class | ||
| 532 | attribute. By default this is the empty string, i.e. | ||
| 533 | no indentation. | ||
| 534 | |||
| 535 | By default, all common leading whitespace is removed and then | ||
| 536 | the lot is indented by 'self.helpindent'. When calculating the | ||
| 537 | common leading whitespace the first line is ignored -- hence | ||
| 538 | help content for Conan can be written as follows and have the | ||
| 539 | expected indentation: | ||
| 540 | |||
| 541 | def do_crush(self, ...): | ||
| 542 | '''${cmd_name}: crush your enemies, see them driven before you... | ||
| 543 | |||
| 544 | c.f. Conan the Barbarian''' | ||
| 545 | """ | ||
| 546 | if indent is None: | ||
| 547 | indent = self.helpindent | ||
| 548 | lines = help.splitlines(0) | ||
| 549 | _dedentlines(lines, skip_first_line=True) | ||
| 550 | lines = [(indent+line).rstrip() for line in lines] | ||
| 551 | return '\n'.join(lines) | ||
| 552 | |||
| 553 | def _help_preprocess(self, help, cmdname): | ||
| 554 | """Hook to preprocess a help string before writing to stdout. | ||
| 555 | |||
| 556 | "help" is the help string to process. | ||
| 557 | "cmdname" is the canonical sub-command name for which help | ||
| 558 | is being given, or None if the help is not specific to a | ||
| 559 | command. | ||
| 560 | |||
| 561 | By default the following template variables are interpolated in | ||
| 562 | help content. (Note: these are similar to Python 2.4's | ||
| 563 | string.Template interpolation but not quite.) | ||
| 564 | |||
| 565 | ${name} | ||
| 566 | The tool's/shell's name, i.e. 'self.name'. | ||
| 567 | ${option_list} | ||
| 568 | A formatted table of options for this shell/tool. | ||
| 569 | ${command_list} | ||
| 570 | A formatted table of available sub-commands. | ||
| 571 | ${help_list} | ||
| 572 | A formatted table of additional help topics (i.e. 'help_*' | ||
| 573 | methods with no matching 'do_*' method). | ||
| 574 | ${cmd_name} | ||
| 575 | The name (and aliases) for this sub-command formatted as: | ||
| 576 | "NAME (ALIAS1, ALIAS2, ...)". | ||
| 577 | ${cmd_usage} | ||
| 578 | A formatted usage block inferred from the command function | ||
| 579 | signature. | ||
| 580 | ${cmd_option_list} | ||
| 581 | A formatted table of options for this sub-command. (This is | ||
| 582 | only available for commands using the optparse integration, | ||
| 583 | i.e. using @cmdln.option decorators or manually setting the | ||
| 584 | 'optparser' attribute on the 'do_*' method.) | ||
| 585 | |||
| 586 | Returns the processed help. | ||
| 587 | """ | ||
| 588 | preprocessors = { | ||
| 589 | "${name}": self._help_preprocess_name, | ||
| 590 | "${option_list}": self._help_preprocess_option_list, | ||
| 591 | "${command_list}": self._help_preprocess_command_list, | ||
| 592 | "${help_list}": self._help_preprocess_help_list, | ||
| 593 | "${cmd_name}": self._help_preprocess_cmd_name, | ||
| 594 | "${cmd_usage}": self._help_preprocess_cmd_usage, | ||
| 595 | "${cmd_option_list}": self._help_preprocess_cmd_option_list, | ||
| 596 | } | ||
| 597 | |||
| 598 | for marker, preprocessor in preprocessors.items(): | ||
| 599 | if marker in help: | ||
| 600 | help = preprocessor(help, cmdname) | ||
| 601 | return help | ||
| 602 | |||
| 603 | def _help_preprocess_name(self, help, cmdname=None): | ||
| 604 | return help.replace("${name}", self.name) | ||
| 605 | |||
| 606 | def _help_preprocess_option_list(self, help, cmdname=None): | ||
| 607 | marker = "${option_list}" | ||
| 608 | indent, indent_width = _get_indent(marker, help) | ||
| 609 | suffix = _get_trailing_whitespace(marker, help) | ||
| 610 | |||
| 611 | if self.optparser: | ||
| 612 | # Setup formatting options and format. | ||
| 613 | # - Indentation of 4 is better than optparse default of 2. | ||
| 614 | # C.f. Damian Conway's discussion of this in Perl Best | ||
| 615 | # Practices. | ||
| 616 | self.optparser.formatter.indent_increment = 4 | ||
| 617 | self.optparser.formatter.current_indent = indent_width | ||
| 618 | block = self.optparser.format_option_help() + '\n' | ||
| 619 | else: | ||
| 620 | block = "" | ||
| 621 | |||
| 622 | help = help.replace(indent+marker+suffix, block, 1) | ||
| 623 | return help | ||
| 624 | |||
| 625 | |||
| 626 | def _help_preprocess_command_list(self, help, cmdname=None): | ||
| 627 | marker = "${command_list}" | ||
| 628 | indent, indent_width = _get_indent(marker, help) | ||
| 629 | suffix = _get_trailing_whitespace(marker, help) | ||
| 630 | |||
| 631 | # Find any aliases for commands. | ||
| 632 | token2canonical = self._get_canonical_map() | ||
| 633 | aliases = {} | ||
| 634 | for token, cmdname in token2canonical.items(): | ||
| 635 | if token == cmdname: | ||
| 636 | continue | ||
| 637 | aliases.setdefault(cmdname, []).append(token) | ||
| 638 | |||
| 639 | # Get the list of (non-hidden) commands and their | ||
| 640 | # documentation, if any. | ||
| 641 | cmdnames = {} # use a dict to strip duplicates | ||
| 642 | for attr in self.get_names(): | ||
| 643 | if attr.startswith("do_"): | ||
| 644 | cmdnames[attr[3:]] = True | ||
| 645 | cmdnames = cmdnames.keys() | ||
| 646 | cmdnames.sort() | ||
| 647 | linedata = [] | ||
| 648 | for cmdname in cmdnames: | ||
| 649 | if aliases.get(cmdname): | ||
| 650 | a = aliases[cmdname] | ||
| 651 | a.sort() | ||
| 652 | cmdstr = "%s (%s)" % (cmdname, ", ".join(a)) | ||
| 653 | else: | ||
| 654 | cmdstr = cmdname | ||
| 655 | doc = None | ||
| 656 | try: | ||
| 657 | helpfunc = getattr(self, 'help_'+cmdname) | ||
| 658 | except AttributeError: | ||
| 659 | handler = self._get_cmd_handler(cmdname) | ||
| 660 | if handler: | ||
| 661 | doc = handler.__doc__ | ||
| 662 | else: | ||
| 663 | doc = helpfunc() | ||
| 664 | |||
| 665 | # Strip "${cmd_name}: " from the start of a command's doc. Best | ||
| 666 | # practice dictates that command help strings begin with this, but | ||
| 667 | # it isn't at all wanted for the command list. | ||
| 668 | to_strip = "${cmd_name}:" | ||
| 669 | if doc and doc.startswith(to_strip): | ||
| 670 | #log.debug("stripping %r from start of %s's help string", | ||
| 671 | # to_strip, cmdname) | ||
| 672 | doc = doc[len(to_strip):].lstrip() | ||
| 673 | linedata.append( (cmdstr, doc) ) | ||
| 674 | |||
| 675 | if linedata: | ||
| 676 | subindent = indent + ' '*4 | ||
| 677 | lines = _format_linedata(linedata, subindent, indent_width+4) | ||
| 678 | block = indent + "Commands:\n" \ | ||
| 679 | + '\n'.join(lines) + "\n\n" | ||
| 680 | help = help.replace(indent+marker+suffix, block, 1) | ||
| 681 | return help | ||
| 682 | |||
| 683 | def _gen_names_and_attrs(self): | ||
| 684 | # Inheritance says we have to look in class and | ||
| 685 | # base classes; order is not important. | ||
| 686 | names = [] | ||
| 687 | classes = [self.__class__] | ||
| 688 | while classes: | ||
| 689 | aclass = classes.pop(0) | ||
| 690 | if aclass.__bases__: | ||
| 691 | classes = classes + list(aclass.__bases__) | ||
| 692 | for name in dir(aclass): | ||
| 693 | yield (name, getattr(aclass, name)) | ||
| 694 | |||
| 695 | def _help_preprocess_help_list(self, help, cmdname=None): | ||
| 696 | marker = "${help_list}" | ||
| 697 | indent, indent_width = _get_indent(marker, help) | ||
| 698 | suffix = _get_trailing_whitespace(marker, help) | ||
| 699 | |||
| 700 | # Determine the additional help topics, if any. | ||
| 701 | helpnames = {} | ||
| 702 | token2cmdname = self._get_canonical_map() | ||
| 703 | for attrname, attr in self._gen_names_and_attrs(): | ||
| 704 | if not attrname.startswith("help_"): | ||
| 705 | continue | ||
| 706 | helpname = attrname[5:] | ||
| 707 | if helpname not in token2cmdname: | ||
| 708 | helpnames[helpname] = attr | ||
| 709 | |||
| 710 | if helpnames: | ||
| 711 | linedata = [(n, a.__doc__ or "") for n, a in helpnames.items()] | ||
| 712 | linedata.sort() | ||
| 713 | |||
| 714 | subindent = indent + ' '*4 | ||
| 715 | lines = _format_linedata(linedata, subindent, indent_width+4) | ||
| 716 | block = (indent | ||
| 717 | + "Additional help topics (run `%s help TOPIC'):\n" % self.name | ||
| 718 | + '\n'.join(lines) | ||
| 719 | + "\n\n") | ||
| 720 | else: | ||
| 721 | block = '' | ||
| 722 | help = help.replace(indent+marker+suffix, block, 1) | ||
| 723 | return help | ||
| 724 | |||
| 725 | def _help_preprocess_cmd_name(self, help, cmdname=None): | ||
| 726 | marker = "${cmd_name}" | ||
| 727 | handler = self._get_cmd_handler(cmdname) | ||
| 728 | if not handler: | ||
| 729 | raise CmdlnError("cannot preprocess '%s' into help string: " | ||
| 730 | "could not find command handler for %r" | ||
| 731 | % (marker, cmdname)) | ||
| 732 | s = cmdname | ||
| 733 | if hasattr(handler, "aliases"): | ||
| 734 | s += " (%s)" % (", ".join(handler.aliases)) | ||
| 735 | help = help.replace(marker, s) | ||
| 736 | return help | ||
| 737 | |||
| 738 | #TODO: this only makes sense as part of the Cmdln class. | ||
| 739 | # Add hooks to add help preprocessing template vars and put | ||
| 740 | # this one on that class. | ||
| 741 | def _help_preprocess_cmd_usage(self, help, cmdname=None): | ||
| 742 | marker = "${cmd_usage}" | ||
| 743 | handler = self._get_cmd_handler(cmdname) | ||
| 744 | if not handler: | ||
| 745 | raise CmdlnError("cannot preprocess '%s' into help string: " | ||
| 746 | "could not find command handler for %r" | ||
| 747 | % (marker, cmdname)) | ||
| 748 | indent, indent_width = _get_indent(marker, help) | ||
| 749 | suffix = _get_trailing_whitespace(marker, help) | ||
| 750 | |||
| 751 | # Extract the introspection bits we need. | ||
| 752 | func = handler.im_func | ||
| 753 | if func.func_defaults: | ||
| 754 | func_defaults = list(func.func_defaults) | ||
| 755 | else: | ||
| 756 | func_defaults = [] | ||
| 757 | co_argcount = func.func_code.co_argcount | ||
| 758 | co_varnames = func.func_code.co_varnames | ||
| 759 | co_flags = func.func_code.co_flags | ||
| 760 | CO_FLAGS_ARGS = 4 | ||
| 761 | CO_FLAGS_KWARGS = 8 | ||
| 762 | |||
| 763 | # Adjust argcount for possible *args and **kwargs arguments. | ||
| 764 | argcount = co_argcount | ||
| 765 | if co_flags & CO_FLAGS_ARGS: | ||
| 766 | argcount += 1 | ||
| 767 | if co_flags & CO_FLAGS_KWARGS: | ||
| 768 | argcount += 1 | ||
| 769 | |||
| 770 | # Determine the usage string. | ||
| 771 | usage = "%s %s" % (self.name, cmdname) | ||
| 772 | if argcount <= 2: # handler ::= do_FOO(self, argv) | ||
| 773 | usage += " [ARGS...]" | ||
| 774 | elif argcount >= 3: # handler ::= do_FOO(self, subcmd, opts, ...) | ||
| 775 | argnames = list(co_varnames[3:argcount]) | ||
| 776 | tail = "" | ||
| 777 | if co_flags & CO_FLAGS_KWARGS: | ||
| 778 | name = argnames.pop(-1) | ||
| 779 | import warnings | ||
| 780 | # There is no generally accepted mechanism for passing | ||
| 781 | # keyword arguments from the command line. Could | ||
| 782 | # *perhaps* consider: arg=value arg2=value2 ... | ||
| 783 | warnings.warn("argument '**%s' on '%s.%s' command " | ||
| 784 | "handler will never get values" | ||
| 785 | % (name, self.__class__.__name__, | ||
| 786 | func.func_name)) | ||
| 787 | if co_flags & CO_FLAGS_ARGS: | ||
| 788 | name = argnames.pop(-1) | ||
| 789 | tail = "[%s...]" % name.upper() | ||
| 790 | while func_defaults: | ||
| 791 | func_defaults.pop(-1) | ||
| 792 | name = argnames.pop(-1) | ||
| 793 | tail = "[%s%s%s]" % (name.upper(), (tail and ' ' or ''), tail) | ||
| 794 | while argnames: | ||
| 795 | name = argnames.pop(-1) | ||
| 796 | tail = "%s %s" % (name.upper(), tail) | ||
| 797 | usage += ' ' + tail | ||
| 798 | |||
| 799 | block_lines = [ | ||
| 800 | self.helpindent + "Usage:", | ||
| 801 | self.helpindent + ' '*4 + usage | ||
| 802 | ] | ||
| 803 | block = '\n'.join(block_lines) + '\n\n' | ||
| 804 | |||
| 805 | help = help.replace(indent+marker+suffix, block, 1) | ||
| 806 | return help | ||
| 807 | |||
| 808 | #TODO: this only makes sense as part of the Cmdln class. | ||
| 809 | # Add hooks to add help preprocessing template vars and put | ||
| 810 | # this one on that class. | ||
| 811 | def _help_preprocess_cmd_option_list(self, help, cmdname=None): | ||
| 812 | marker = "${cmd_option_list}" | ||
| 813 | handler = self._get_cmd_handler(cmdname) | ||
| 814 | if not handler: | ||
| 815 | raise CmdlnError("cannot preprocess '%s' into help string: " | ||
| 816 | "could not find command handler for %r" | ||
| 817 | % (marker, cmdname)) | ||
| 818 | indent, indent_width = _get_indent(marker, help) | ||
| 819 | suffix = _get_trailing_whitespace(marker, help) | ||
| 820 | if hasattr(handler, "optparser"): | ||
| 821 | # Setup formatting options and format. | ||
| 822 | # - Indentation of 4 is better than optparse default of 2. | ||
| 823 | # C.f. Damian Conway's discussion of this in Perl Best | ||
| 824 | # Practices. | ||
| 825 | handler.optparser.formatter.indent_increment = 4 | ||
| 826 | handler.optparser.formatter.current_indent = indent_width | ||
| 827 | block = handler.optparser.format_option_help() + '\n' | ||
| 828 | else: | ||
| 829 | block = "" | ||
| 830 | |||
| 831 | help = help.replace(indent+marker+suffix, block, 1) | ||
| 832 | return help | ||
| 833 | |||
| 834 | def _get_canonical_cmd_name(self, token): | ||
| 835 | map = self._get_canonical_map() | ||
| 836 | return map.get(token, None) | ||
| 837 | |||
| 838 | def _get_canonical_map(self): | ||
| 839 | """Return a mapping of available command names and aliases to | ||
| 840 | their canonical command name. | ||
| 841 | """ | ||
| 842 | cacheattr = "_token2canonical" | ||
| 843 | if not hasattr(self, cacheattr): | ||
| 844 | # Get the list of commands and their aliases, if any. | ||
| 845 | token2canonical = {} | ||
| 846 | cmd2funcname = {} # use a dict to strip duplicates | ||
| 847 | for attr in self.get_names(): | ||
| 848 | if attr.startswith("do_"): | ||
| 849 | cmdname = attr[3:] | ||
| 850 | elif attr.startswith("_do_"): | ||
| 851 | cmdname = attr[4:] | ||
| 852 | else: | ||
| 853 | continue | ||
| 854 | cmd2funcname[cmdname] = attr | ||
| 855 | token2canonical[cmdname] = cmdname | ||
| 856 | for cmdname, funcname in cmd2funcname.items(): # add aliases | ||
| 857 | func = getattr(self, funcname) | ||
| 858 | aliases = getattr(func, "aliases", []) | ||
| 859 | for alias in aliases: | ||
| 860 | if alias in cmd2funcname: | ||
| 861 | import warnings | ||
| 862 | warnings.warn("'%s' alias for '%s' command conflicts " | ||
| 863 | "with '%s' handler" | ||
| 864 | % (alias, cmdname, cmd2funcname[alias])) | ||
| 865 | continue | ||
| 866 | token2canonical[alias] = cmdname | ||
| 867 | setattr(self, cacheattr, token2canonical) | ||
| 868 | return getattr(self, cacheattr) | ||
| 869 | |||
| 870 | def _get_cmd_handler(self, cmdname): | ||
| 871 | handler = None | ||
| 872 | try: | ||
| 873 | handler = getattr(self, 'do_' + cmdname) | ||
| 874 | except AttributeError: | ||
| 875 | try: | ||
| 876 | # Private command handlers begin with "_do_". | ||
| 877 | handler = getattr(self, '_do_' + cmdname) | ||
| 878 | except AttributeError: | ||
| 879 | pass | ||
| 880 | return handler | ||
| 881 | |||
| 882 | def _do_EOF(self, argv): | ||
| 883 | # Default EOF handler | ||
| 884 | # Note: an actual EOF is redirected to this command. | ||
| 885 | #TODO: separate name for this. Currently it is available from | ||
| 886 | # command-line. Is that okay? | ||
| 887 | self.stdout.write('\n') | ||
| 888 | self.stdout.flush() | ||
| 889 | self.stop = True | ||
| 890 | |||
| 891 | def emptyline(self): | ||
| 892 | # Different from cmd.Cmd: don't repeat the last command for an | ||
| 893 | # emptyline. | ||
| 894 | if self.cmdlooping: | ||
| 895 | pass | ||
| 896 | else: | ||
| 897 | return self.do_help(["help"]) | ||
| 898 | |||
| 899 | |||
| 900 | #---- optparse.py extension to fix (IMO) some deficiencies | ||
| 901 | # | ||
| 902 | # See the class _OptionParserEx docstring for details. | ||
| 903 | # | ||
| 904 | |||
| 905 | class StopOptionProcessing(Exception): | ||
| 906 | """Indicate that option *and argument* processing should stop | ||
| 907 | cleanly. This is not an error condition. It is similar in spirit to | ||
| 908 | StopIteration. This is raised by _OptionParserEx's default "help" | ||
| 909 | and "version" option actions and can be raised by custom option | ||
| 910 | callbacks too. | ||
| 911 | |||
| 912 | Hence the typical CmdlnOptionParser (a subclass of _OptionParserEx) | ||
| 913 | usage is: | ||
| 914 | |||
| 915 | parser = CmdlnOptionParser(mycmd) | ||
| 916 | parser.add_option("-f", "--force", dest="force") | ||
| 917 | ... | ||
| 918 | try: | ||
| 919 | opts, args = parser.parse_args() | ||
| 920 | except StopOptionProcessing: | ||
| 921 | # normal termination, "--help" was probably given | ||
| 922 | sys.exit(0) | ||
| 923 | """ | ||
| 924 | |||
| 925 | class _OptionParserEx(optparse.OptionParser): | ||
| 926 | """An optparse.OptionParser that uses exceptions instead of sys.exit. | ||
| 927 | |||
| 928 | This class is an extension of optparse.OptionParser that differs | ||
| 929 | as follows: | ||
| 930 | - Correct (IMO) the default OptionParser error handling to never | ||
| 931 | sys.exit(). Instead OptParseError exceptions are passed through. | ||
| 932 | - Add the StopOptionProcessing exception (a la StopIteration) to | ||
| 933 | indicate normal termination of option processing. | ||
| 934 | See StopOptionProcessing's docstring for details. | ||
| 935 | |||
| 936 | I'd also like to see the following in the core optparse.py, perhaps | ||
| 937 | as a RawOptionParser which would serve as a base class for the more | ||
| 938 | generally used OptionParser (that works as current): | ||
| 939 | - Remove the implicit addition of the -h|--help and --version | ||
| 940 | options. They can get in the way (e.g. if want '-?' and '-V' for | ||
| 941 | these as well) and it is not hard to do: | ||
| 942 | optparser.add_option("-h", "--help", action="help") | ||
| 943 | optparser.add_option("--version", action="version") | ||
| 944 | These are good practices, just not valid defaults if they can | ||
| 945 | get in the way. | ||
| 946 | """ | ||
| 947 | def error(self, msg): | ||
| 948 | raise optparse.OptParseError(msg) | ||
| 949 | |||
| 950 | def exit(self, status=0, msg=None): | ||
| 951 | if status == 0: | ||
| 952 | raise StopOptionProcessing(msg) | ||
| 953 | else: | ||
| 954 | #TODO: don't lose status info here | ||
| 955 | raise optparse.OptParseError(msg) | ||
| 956 | |||
| 957 | |||
| 958 | |||
| 959 | #---- optparse.py-based option processing support | ||
| 960 | |||
| 961 | class CmdlnOptionParser(_OptionParserEx): | ||
| 962 | """An optparse.OptionParser class more appropriate for top-level | ||
| 963 | Cmdln options. For parsing of sub-command options, see | ||
| 964 | SubCmdOptionParser. | ||
| 965 | |||
| 966 | Changes: | ||
| 967 | - disable_interspersed_args() by default, because a Cmdln instance | ||
| 968 | has sub-commands which may themselves have options. | ||
| 969 | - Redirect print_help() to the Cmdln.do_help() which is better | ||
| 970 | equiped to handle the "help" action. | ||
| 971 | - error() will raise a CmdlnUserError: OptionParse.error() is meant | ||
| 972 | to be called for user errors. Raising a well-known error here can | ||
| 973 | make error handling clearer. | ||
| 974 | - Also see the changes in _OptionParserEx. | ||
| 975 | """ | ||
| 976 | def __init__(self, cmdln, **kwargs): | ||
| 977 | self.cmdln = cmdln | ||
| 978 | kwargs["prog"] = self.cmdln.name | ||
| 979 | _OptionParserEx.__init__(self, **kwargs) | ||
| 980 | self.disable_interspersed_args() | ||
| 981 | |||
| 982 | def print_help(self, file=None): | ||
| 983 | self.cmdln.onecmd(["help"]) | ||
| 984 | |||
| 985 | def error(self, msg): | ||
| 986 | raise CmdlnUserError(msg) | ||
| 987 | |||
| 988 | |||
| 989 | class SubCmdOptionParser(_OptionParserEx): | ||
| 990 | def set_cmdln_info(self, cmdln, subcmd): | ||
| 991 | """Called by Cmdln to pass relevant info about itself needed | ||
| 992 | for print_help(). | ||
| 993 | """ | ||
| 994 | self.cmdln = cmdln | ||
| 995 | self.subcmd = subcmd | ||
| 996 | |||
| 997 | def print_help(self, file=None): | ||
| 998 | self.cmdln.onecmd(["help", self.subcmd]) | ||
| 999 | |||
| 1000 | def error(self, msg): | ||
| 1001 | raise CmdlnUserError(msg) | ||
| 1002 | |||
| 1003 | |||
| 1004 | def option(*args, **kwargs): | ||
| 1005 | """Decorator to add an option to the optparser argument of a Cmdln | ||
| 1006 | subcommand. | ||
| 1007 | |||
| 1008 | Example: | ||
| 1009 | class MyShell(cmdln.Cmdln): | ||
| 1010 | @cmdln.option("-f", "--force", help="force removal") | ||
| 1011 | def do_remove(self, subcmd, opts, *args): | ||
| 1012 | #... | ||
| 1013 | """ | ||
| 1014 | #XXX Is there a possible optimization for many options to not have a | ||
| 1015 | # large stack depth here? | ||
| 1016 | def decorate(f): | ||
| 1017 | if not hasattr(f, "optparser"): | ||
| 1018 | f.optparser = SubCmdOptionParser() | ||
| 1019 | f.optparser.add_option(*args, **kwargs) | ||
| 1020 | return f | ||
| 1021 | return decorate | ||
| 1022 | |||
| 1023 | |||
| 1024 | class Cmdln(RawCmdln): | ||
| 1025 | """An improved (on cmd.Cmd) framework for building multi-subcommand | ||
| 1026 | scripts (think "svn" & "cvs") and simple shells (think "pdb" and | ||
| 1027 | "gdb"). | ||
| 1028 | |||
| 1029 | A simple example: | ||
| 1030 | |||
| 1031 | import cmdln | ||
| 1032 | |||
| 1033 | class MySVN(cmdln.Cmdln): | ||
| 1034 | name = "svn" | ||
| 1035 | |||
| 1036 | @cmdln.aliases('stat', 'st') | ||
| 1037 | @cmdln.option('-v', '--verbose', action='store_true' | ||
| 1038 | help='print verbose information') | ||
| 1039 | def do_status(self, subcmd, opts, *paths): | ||
| 1040 | print "handle 'svn status' command" | ||
| 1041 | |||
| 1042 | #... | ||
| 1043 | |||
| 1044 | if __name__ == "__main__": | ||
| 1045 | shell = MySVN() | ||
| 1046 | retval = shell.main() | ||
| 1047 | sys.exit(retval) | ||
| 1048 | |||
| 1049 | 'Cmdln' extends 'RawCmdln' by providing optparse option processing | ||
| 1050 | integration. See this class' _dispatch_cmd() docstring and | ||
| 1051 | <http://trentm.com/projects/cmdln> for more information. | ||
| 1052 | """ | ||
| 1053 | def _dispatch_cmd(self, handler, argv): | ||
| 1054 | """Introspect sub-command handler signature to determine how to | ||
| 1055 | dispatch the command. The raw handler provided by the base | ||
| 1056 | 'RawCmdln' class is still supported: | ||
| 1057 | |||
| 1058 | def do_foo(self, argv): | ||
| 1059 | # 'argv' is the vector of command line args, argv[0] is | ||
| 1060 | # the command name itself (i.e. "foo" or an alias) | ||
| 1061 | pass | ||
| 1062 | |||
| 1063 | In addition, if the handler has more than 2 arguments option | ||
| 1064 | processing is automatically done (using optparse): | ||
| 1065 | |||
| 1066 | @cmdln.option('-v', '--verbose', action='store_true') | ||
| 1067 | def do_bar(self, subcmd, opts, *args): | ||
| 1068 | # subcmd = <"bar" or an alias> | ||
| 1069 | # opts = <an optparse.Values instance> | ||
| 1070 | if opts.verbose: | ||
| 1071 | print "lots of debugging output..." | ||
| 1072 | # args = <tuple of arguments> | ||
| 1073 | for arg in args: | ||
| 1074 | bar(arg) | ||
| 1075 | |||
| 1076 | TODO: explain that "*args" can be other signatures as well. | ||
| 1077 | |||
| 1078 | The `cmdln.option` decorator corresponds to an `add_option()` | ||
| 1079 | method call on an `optparse.OptionParser` instance. | ||
| 1080 | |||
| 1081 | You can declare a specific number of arguments: | ||
| 1082 | |||
| 1083 | @cmdln.option('-v', '--verbose', action='store_true') | ||
| 1084 | def do_bar2(self, subcmd, opts, bar_one, bar_two): | ||
| 1085 | #... | ||
| 1086 | |||
| 1087 | and an appropriate error message will be raised/printed if the | ||
| 1088 | command is called with a different number of args. | ||
| 1089 | """ | ||
| 1090 | co_argcount = handler.im_func.func_code.co_argcount | ||
| 1091 | if co_argcount == 2: # handler ::= do_foo(self, argv) | ||
| 1092 | return handler(argv) | ||
| 1093 | elif co_argcount >= 3: # handler ::= do_foo(self, subcmd, opts, ...) | ||
| 1094 | try: | ||
| 1095 | optparser = handler.optparser | ||
| 1096 | except AttributeError: | ||
| 1097 | optparser = handler.im_func.optparser = SubCmdOptionParser() | ||
| 1098 | assert isinstance(optparser, SubCmdOptionParser) | ||
| 1099 | optparser.set_cmdln_info(self, argv[0]) | ||
| 1100 | try: | ||
| 1101 | opts, args = optparser.parse_args(argv[1:]) | ||
| 1102 | except StopOptionProcessing: | ||
| 1103 | #TODO: this doesn't really fly for a replacement of | ||
| 1104 | # optparse.py behaviour, does it? | ||
| 1105 | return 0 # Normal command termination | ||
| 1106 | |||
| 1107 | try: | ||
| 1108 | return handler(argv[0], opts, *args) | ||
| 1109 | except TypeError, ex: | ||
| 1110 | # Some TypeError's are user errors: | ||
| 1111 | # do_foo() takes at least 4 arguments (3 given) | ||
| 1112 | # do_foo() takes at most 5 arguments (6 given) | ||
| 1113 | # do_foo() takes exactly 5 arguments (6 given) | ||
| 1114 | # Raise CmdlnUserError for these with a suitably | ||
| 1115 | # massaged error message. | ||
| 1116 | import sys | ||
| 1117 | tb = sys.exc_info()[2] # the traceback object | ||
| 1118 | if tb.tb_next is not None: | ||
| 1119 | # If the traceback is more than one level deep, then the | ||
| 1120 | # TypeError do *not* happen on the "handler(...)" call | ||
| 1121 | # above. In that we don't want to handle it specially | ||
| 1122 | # here: it would falsely mask deeper code errors. | ||
| 1123 | raise | ||
| 1124 | msg = ex.args[0] | ||
| 1125 | match = _INCORRECT_NUM_ARGS_RE.search(msg) | ||
| 1126 | if match: | ||
| 1127 | msg = list(match.groups()) | ||
| 1128 | msg[1] = int(msg[1]) - 3 | ||
| 1129 | if msg[1] == 1: | ||
| 1130 | msg[2] = msg[2].replace("arguments", "argument") | ||
| 1131 | msg[3] = int(msg[3]) - 3 | ||
| 1132 | msg = ''.join(map(str, msg)) | ||
| 1133 | raise CmdlnUserError(msg) | ||
| 1134 | else: | ||
| 1135 | raise | ||
| 1136 | else: | ||
| 1137 | raise CmdlnError("incorrect argcount for %s(): takes %d, must " | ||
| 1138 | "take 2 for 'argv' signature or 3+ for 'opts' " | ||
| 1139 | "signature" % (handler.__name__, co_argcount)) | ||
| 1140 | |||
| 1141 | |||
| 1142 | |||
| 1143 | #---- internal support functions | ||
| 1144 | |||
| 1145 | def _format_linedata(linedata, indent, indent_width): | ||
| 1146 | """Format specific linedata into a pleasant layout. | ||
| 1147 | |||
| 1148 | "linedata" is a list of 2-tuples of the form: | ||
| 1149 | (<item-display-string>, <item-docstring>) | ||
| 1150 | "indent" is a string to use for one level of indentation | ||
| 1151 | "indent_width" is a number of columns by which the | ||
| 1152 | formatted data will be indented when printed. | ||
| 1153 | |||
| 1154 | The <item-display-string> column is held to 15 columns. | ||
| 1155 | """ | ||
| 1156 | lines = [] | ||
| 1157 | WIDTH = 78 - indent_width | ||
| 1158 | SPACING = 2 | ||
| 1159 | NAME_WIDTH_LOWER_BOUND = 13 | ||
| 1160 | NAME_WIDTH_UPPER_BOUND = 16 | ||
| 1161 | NAME_WIDTH = max([len(s) for s,d in linedata]) | ||
| 1162 | if NAME_WIDTH < NAME_WIDTH_LOWER_BOUND: | ||
| 1163 | NAME_WIDTH = NAME_WIDTH_LOWER_BOUND | ||
| 1164 | else: | ||
| 1165 | NAME_WIDTH = NAME_WIDTH_UPPER_BOUND | ||
| 1166 | |||
| 1167 | DOC_WIDTH = WIDTH - NAME_WIDTH - SPACING | ||
| 1168 | for namestr, doc in linedata: | ||
| 1169 | line = indent + namestr | ||
| 1170 | if len(namestr) <= NAME_WIDTH: | ||
| 1171 | line += ' ' * (NAME_WIDTH + SPACING - len(namestr)) | ||
| 1172 | else: | ||
| 1173 | lines.append(line) | ||
| 1174 | line = indent + ' ' * (NAME_WIDTH + SPACING) | ||
| 1175 | line += _summarize_doc(doc, DOC_WIDTH) | ||
| 1176 | lines.append(line.rstrip()) | ||
| 1177 | return lines | ||
| 1178 | |||
| 1179 | def _summarize_doc(doc, length=60): | ||
| 1180 | r"""Parse out a short one line summary from the given doclines. | ||
| 1181 | |||
| 1182 | "doc" is the doc string to summarize. | ||
| 1183 | "length" is the max length for the summary | ||
| 1184 | |||
| 1185 | >>> _summarize_doc("this function does this") | ||
| 1186 | 'this function does this' | ||
| 1187 | >>> _summarize_doc("this function does this", 10) | ||
| 1188 | 'this fu...' | ||
| 1189 | >>> _summarize_doc("this function does this\nand that") | ||
| 1190 | 'this function does this and that' | ||
| 1191 | >>> _summarize_doc("this function does this\n\nand that") | ||
| 1192 | 'this function does this' | ||
| 1193 | """ | ||
| 1194 | import re | ||
| 1195 | if doc is None: | ||
| 1196 | return "" | ||
| 1197 | assert length > 3, "length <= 3 is absurdly short for a doc summary" | ||
| 1198 | doclines = doc.strip().splitlines(0) | ||
| 1199 | if not doclines: | ||
| 1200 | return "" | ||
| 1201 | |||
| 1202 | summlines = [] | ||
| 1203 | for i, line in enumerate(doclines): | ||
| 1204 | stripped = line.strip() | ||
| 1205 | if not stripped: | ||
| 1206 | break | ||
| 1207 | summlines.append(stripped) | ||
| 1208 | if len(''.join(summlines)) >= length: | ||
| 1209 | break | ||
| 1210 | |||
| 1211 | summary = ' '.join(summlines) | ||
| 1212 | if len(summary) > length: | ||
| 1213 | summary = summary[:length-3] + "..." | ||
| 1214 | return summary | ||
| 1215 | |||
| 1216 | |||
| 1217 | def line2argv(line): | ||
| 1218 | r"""Parse the given line into an argument vector. | ||
| 1219 | |||
| 1220 | "line" is the line of input to parse. | ||
| 1221 | |||
| 1222 | This may get niggly when dealing with quoting and escaping. The | ||
| 1223 | current state of this parsing may not be completely thorough/correct | ||
| 1224 | in this respect. | ||
| 1225 | |||
| 1226 | >>> from cmdln import line2argv | ||
| 1227 | >>> line2argv("foo") | ||
| 1228 | ['foo'] | ||
| 1229 | >>> line2argv("foo bar") | ||
| 1230 | ['foo', 'bar'] | ||
| 1231 | >>> line2argv("foo bar ") | ||
| 1232 | ['foo', 'bar'] | ||
| 1233 | >>> line2argv(" foo bar") | ||
| 1234 | ['foo', 'bar'] | ||
| 1235 | |||
| 1236 | Quote handling: | ||
| 1237 | |||
| 1238 | >>> line2argv("'foo bar'") | ||
| 1239 | ['foo bar'] | ||
| 1240 | >>> line2argv('"foo bar"') | ||
| 1241 | ['foo bar'] | ||
| 1242 | >>> line2argv(r'"foo\"bar"') | ||
| 1243 | ['foo"bar'] | ||
| 1244 | >>> line2argv("'foo bar' spam") | ||
| 1245 | ['foo bar', 'spam'] | ||
| 1246 | >>> line2argv("'foo 'bar spam") | ||
| 1247 | ['foo bar', 'spam'] | ||
| 1248 | |||
| 1249 | >>> line2argv('some\tsimple\ttests') | ||
| 1250 | ['some', 'simple', 'tests'] | ||
| 1251 | >>> line2argv('a "more complex" test') | ||
| 1252 | ['a', 'more complex', 'test'] | ||
| 1253 | >>> line2argv('a more="complex test of " quotes') | ||
| 1254 | ['a', 'more=complex test of ', 'quotes'] | ||
| 1255 | >>> line2argv('a more" complex test of " quotes') | ||
| 1256 | ['a', 'more complex test of ', 'quotes'] | ||
| 1257 | >>> line2argv('an "embedded \\"quote\\""') | ||
| 1258 | ['an', 'embedded "quote"'] | ||
| 1259 | |||
| 1260 | # Komodo bug 48027 | ||
| 1261 | >>> line2argv('foo bar C:\\') | ||
| 1262 | ['foo', 'bar', 'C:\\'] | ||
| 1263 | |||
| 1264 | # Komodo change 127581 | ||
| 1265 | >>> line2argv(r'"\test\slash" "foo bar" "foo\"bar"') | ||
| 1266 | ['\\test\\slash', 'foo bar', 'foo"bar'] | ||
| 1267 | |||
| 1268 | # Komodo change 127629 | ||
| 1269 | >>> if sys.platform == "win32": | ||
| 1270 | ... line2argv(r'\foo\bar') == ['\\foo\\bar'] | ||
| 1271 | ... line2argv(r'\\foo\\bar') == ['\\\\foo\\\\bar'] | ||
| 1272 | ... line2argv('"foo') == ['foo'] | ||
| 1273 | ... else: | ||
| 1274 | ... line2argv(r'\foo\bar') == ['foobar'] | ||
| 1275 | ... line2argv(r'\\foo\\bar') == ['\\foo\\bar'] | ||
| 1276 | ... try: | ||
| 1277 | ... line2argv('"foo') | ||
| 1278 | ... except ValueError, ex: | ||
| 1279 | ... "not terminated" in str(ex) | ||
| 1280 | True | ||
| 1281 | True | ||
| 1282 | True | ||
| 1283 | """ | ||
| 1284 | import string | ||
| 1285 | line = line.strip() | ||
| 1286 | argv = [] | ||
| 1287 | state = "default" | ||
| 1288 | arg = None # the current argument being parsed | ||
| 1289 | i = -1 | ||
| 1290 | while 1: | ||
| 1291 | i += 1 | ||
| 1292 | if i >= len(line): | ||
| 1293 | break | ||
| 1294 | ch = line[i] | ||
| 1295 | |||
| 1296 | if ch == "\\" and i+1 < len(line): | ||
| 1297 | # escaped char always added to arg, regardless of state | ||
| 1298 | if arg is None: | ||
| 1299 | arg = "" | ||
| 1300 | if (sys.platform == "win32" | ||
| 1301 | or state in ("double-quoted", "single-quoted") | ||
| 1302 | ) and line[i+1] not in tuple('"\''): | ||
| 1303 | arg += ch | ||
| 1304 | i += 1 | ||
| 1305 | arg += line[i] | ||
| 1306 | continue | ||
| 1307 | |||
| 1308 | if state == "single-quoted": | ||
| 1309 | if ch == "'": | ||
| 1310 | state = "default" | ||
| 1311 | else: | ||
| 1312 | arg += ch | ||
| 1313 | elif state == "double-quoted": | ||
| 1314 | if ch == '"': | ||
| 1315 | state = "default" | ||
| 1316 | else: | ||
| 1317 | arg += ch | ||
| 1318 | elif state == "default": | ||
| 1319 | if ch == '"': | ||
| 1320 | if arg is None: | ||
| 1321 | arg = "" | ||
| 1322 | state = "double-quoted" | ||
| 1323 | elif ch == "'": | ||
| 1324 | if arg is None: | ||
| 1325 | arg = "" | ||
| 1326 | state = "single-quoted" | ||
| 1327 | elif ch in string.whitespace: | ||
| 1328 | if arg is not None: | ||
| 1329 | argv.append(arg) | ||
| 1330 | arg = None | ||
| 1331 | else: | ||
| 1332 | if arg is None: | ||
| 1333 | arg = "" | ||
| 1334 | arg += ch | ||
| 1335 | if arg is not None: | ||
| 1336 | argv.append(arg) | ||
| 1337 | if not sys.platform == "win32" and state != "default": | ||
| 1338 | raise ValueError("command line is not terminated: unfinished %s " | ||
| 1339 | "segment" % state) | ||
| 1340 | return argv | ||
| 1341 | |||
| 1342 | |||
| 1343 | def argv2line(argv): | ||
| 1344 | r"""Put together the given argument vector into a command line. | ||
| 1345 | |||
| 1346 | "argv" is the argument vector to process. | ||
| 1347 | |||
| 1348 | >>> from cmdln import argv2line | ||
| 1349 | >>> argv2line(['foo']) | ||
| 1350 | 'foo' | ||
| 1351 | >>> argv2line(['foo', 'bar']) | ||
| 1352 | 'foo bar' | ||
| 1353 | >>> argv2line(['foo', 'bar baz']) | ||
| 1354 | 'foo "bar baz"' | ||
| 1355 | >>> argv2line(['foo"bar']) | ||
| 1356 | 'foo"bar' | ||
| 1357 | >>> print argv2line(['foo" bar']) | ||
| 1358 | 'foo" bar' | ||
| 1359 | >>> print argv2line(["foo' bar"]) | ||
| 1360 | "foo' bar" | ||
| 1361 | >>> argv2line(["foo'bar"]) | ||
| 1362 | "foo'bar" | ||
| 1363 | """ | ||
| 1364 | escapedArgs = [] | ||
| 1365 | for arg in argv: | ||
| 1366 | if ' ' in arg and '"' not in arg: | ||
| 1367 | arg = '"'+arg+'"' | ||
| 1368 | elif ' ' in arg and "'" not in arg: | ||
| 1369 | arg = "'"+arg+"'" | ||
| 1370 | elif ' ' in arg: | ||
| 1371 | arg = arg.replace('"', r'\"') | ||
| 1372 | arg = '"'+arg+'"' | ||
| 1373 | escapedArgs.append(arg) | ||
| 1374 | return ' '.join(escapedArgs) | ||
| 1375 | |||
| 1376 | |||
| 1377 | # Recipe: dedent (0.1) in /Users/trentm/tm/recipes/cookbook | ||
| 1378 | def _dedentlines(lines, tabsize=8, skip_first_line=False): | ||
| 1379 | """_dedentlines(lines, tabsize=8, skip_first_line=False) -> dedented lines | ||
| 1380 | |||
| 1381 | "lines" is a list of lines to dedent. | ||
| 1382 | "tabsize" is the tab width to use for indent width calculations. | ||
| 1383 | "skip_first_line" is a boolean indicating if the first line should | ||
| 1384 | be skipped for calculating the indent width and for dedenting. | ||
| 1385 | This is sometimes useful for docstrings and similar. | ||
| 1386 | |||
| 1387 | Same as dedent() except operates on a sequence of lines. Note: the | ||
| 1388 | lines list is modified **in-place**. | ||
| 1389 | """ | ||
| 1390 | DEBUG = False | ||
| 1391 | if DEBUG: | ||
| 1392 | print "dedent: dedent(..., tabsize=%d, skip_first_line=%r)"\ | ||
| 1393 | % (tabsize, skip_first_line) | ||
| 1394 | indents = [] | ||
| 1395 | margin = None | ||
| 1396 | for i, line in enumerate(lines): | ||
| 1397 | if i == 0 and skip_first_line: | ||
| 1398 | continue | ||
| 1399 | indent = 0 | ||
| 1400 | for ch in line: | ||
| 1401 | if ch == ' ': | ||
| 1402 | indent += 1 | ||
| 1403 | elif ch == '\t': | ||
| 1404 | indent += tabsize - (indent % tabsize) | ||
| 1405 | elif ch in '\r\n': | ||
| 1406 | continue # skip all-whitespace lines | ||
| 1407 | else: | ||
| 1408 | break | ||
| 1409 | else: | ||
| 1410 | continue # skip all-whitespace lines | ||
| 1411 | if DEBUG: | ||
| 1412 | print "dedent: indent=%d: %r" % (indent, line) | ||
| 1413 | if margin is None: | ||
| 1414 | margin = indent | ||
| 1415 | else: | ||
| 1416 | margin = min(margin, indent) | ||
| 1417 | if DEBUG: | ||
| 1418 | print "dedent: margin=%r" % margin | ||
| 1419 | |||
| 1420 | if margin is not None and margin > 0: | ||
| 1421 | for i, line in enumerate(lines): | ||
| 1422 | if i == 0 and skip_first_line: | ||
| 1423 | continue | ||
| 1424 | removed = 0 | ||
| 1425 | for j, ch in enumerate(line): | ||
| 1426 | if ch == ' ': | ||
| 1427 | removed += 1 | ||
| 1428 | elif ch == '\t': | ||
| 1429 | removed += tabsize - (removed % tabsize) | ||
| 1430 | elif ch in '\r\n': | ||
| 1431 | if DEBUG: | ||
| 1432 | print "dedent: %r: EOL -> strip up to EOL" % line | ||
| 1433 | lines[i] = lines[i][j:] | ||
| 1434 | break | ||
| 1435 | else: | ||
| 1436 | raise ValueError("unexpected non-whitespace char %r in " | ||
| 1437 | "line %r while removing %d-space margin" | ||
| 1438 | % (ch, line, margin)) | ||
| 1439 | if DEBUG: | ||
| 1440 | print "dedent: %r: %r -> removed %d/%d"\ | ||
| 1441 | % (line, ch, removed, margin) | ||
| 1442 | if removed == margin: | ||
| 1443 | lines[i] = lines[i][j+1:] | ||
| 1444 | break | ||
| 1445 | elif removed > margin: | ||
| 1446 | lines[i] = ' '*(removed-margin) + lines[i][j+1:] | ||
| 1447 | break | ||
| 1448 | return lines | ||
| 1449 | |||
| 1450 | def _dedent(text, tabsize=8, skip_first_line=False): | ||
| 1451 | """_dedent(text, tabsize=8, skip_first_line=False) -> dedented text | ||
| 1452 | |||
| 1453 | "text" is the text to dedent. | ||
| 1454 | "tabsize" is the tab width to use for indent width calculations. | ||
| 1455 | "skip_first_line" is a boolean indicating if the first line should | ||
| 1456 | be skipped for calculating the indent width and for dedenting. | ||
| 1457 | This is sometimes useful for docstrings and similar. | ||
| 1458 | |||
| 1459 | textwrap.dedent(s), but don't expand tabs to spaces | ||
| 1460 | """ | ||
| 1461 | lines = text.splitlines(1) | ||
| 1462 | _dedentlines(lines, tabsize=tabsize, skip_first_line=skip_first_line) | ||
| 1463 | return ''.join(lines) | ||
| 1464 | |||
| 1465 | |||
| 1466 | def _get_indent(marker, s, tab_width=8): | ||
| 1467 | """_get_indent(marker, s, tab_width=8) -> | ||
| 1468 | (<indentation-of-'marker'>, <indentation-width>)""" | ||
| 1469 | # Figure out how much the marker is indented. | ||
| 1470 | INDENT_CHARS = tuple(' \t') | ||
| 1471 | start = s.index(marker) | ||
| 1472 | i = start | ||
| 1473 | while i > 0: | ||
| 1474 | if s[i-1] not in INDENT_CHARS: | ||
| 1475 | break | ||
| 1476 | i -= 1 | ||
| 1477 | indent = s[i:start] | ||
| 1478 | indent_width = 0 | ||
| 1479 | for ch in indent: | ||
| 1480 | if ch == ' ': | ||
| 1481 | indent_width += 1 | ||
| 1482 | elif ch == '\t': | ||
| 1483 | indent_width += tab_width - (indent_width % tab_width) | ||
| 1484 | return indent, indent_width | ||
| 1485 | |||
| 1486 | def _get_trailing_whitespace(marker, s): | ||
| 1487 | """Return the whitespace content trailing the given 'marker' in string 's', | ||
| 1488 | up to and including a newline. | ||
| 1489 | """ | ||
| 1490 | suffix = '' | ||
| 1491 | start = s.index(marker) + len(marker) | ||
| 1492 | i = start | ||
| 1493 | while i < len(s): | ||
| 1494 | if s[i] in ' \t': | ||
| 1495 | suffix += s[i] | ||
| 1496 | elif s[i] in '\r\n': | ||
| 1497 | suffix += s[i] | ||
| 1498 | if s[i] == '\r' and i+1 < len(s) and s[i+1] == '\n': | ||
| 1499 | suffix += s[i+1] | ||
| 1500 | break | ||
| 1501 | else: | ||
| 1502 | break | ||
| 1503 | i += 1 | ||
| 1504 | return suffix | ||
| 1505 | |||
| 1506 | |||
| 1507 | |||
| 1508 | #---- bash completion support | ||
| 1509 | # Note: This is still experimental. I expect to change this | ||
| 1510 | # significantly. | ||
| 1511 | # | ||
| 1512 | # To get Bash completion for a cmdln.Cmdln class, run the following | ||
| 1513 | # bash command: | ||
| 1514 | # $ complete -C 'python -m cmdln /path/to/script.py CmdlnClass' cmdname | ||
| 1515 | # For example: | ||
| 1516 | # $ complete -C 'python -m cmdln ~/bin/svn.py SVN' svn | ||
| 1517 | # | ||
| 1518 | #TODO: Simplify the above so don't have to given path to script (try to | ||
| 1519 | # find it on PATH, if possible). Could also make class name | ||
| 1520 | # optional if there is only one in the module (common case). | ||
| 1521 | |||
| 1522 | if __name__ == "__main__" and len(sys.argv) == 6: | ||
| 1523 | def _log(s): | ||
| 1524 | return # no-op, comment out for debugging | ||
| 1525 | from os.path import expanduser | ||
| 1526 | fout = open(expanduser("~/tmp/bashcpln.log"), 'a') | ||
| 1527 | fout.write(str(s) + '\n') | ||
| 1528 | fout.close() | ||
| 1529 | |||
| 1530 | # Recipe: module_from_path (1.0.1+) | ||
| 1531 | def _module_from_path(path): | ||
| 1532 | import imp, os, sys | ||
| 1533 | path = os.path.expanduser(path) | ||
| 1534 | dir = os.path.dirname(path) or os.curdir | ||
| 1535 | name = os.path.splitext(os.path.basename(path))[0] | ||
| 1536 | sys.path.insert(0, dir) | ||
| 1537 | try: | ||
| 1538 | iinfo = imp.find_module(name, [dir]) | ||
| 1539 | return imp.load_module(name, *iinfo) | ||
| 1540 | finally: | ||
| 1541 | sys.path.remove(dir) | ||
| 1542 | |||
| 1543 | def _get_bash_cplns(script_path, class_name, cmd_name, | ||
| 1544 | token, preceding_token): | ||
| 1545 | _log('--') | ||
| 1546 | _log('get_cplns(%r, %r, %r, %r, %r)' | ||
| 1547 | % (script_path, class_name, cmd_name, token, preceding_token)) | ||
| 1548 | comp_line = os.environ["COMP_LINE"] | ||
| 1549 | comp_point = int(os.environ["COMP_POINT"]) | ||
| 1550 | _log("COMP_LINE: %r" % comp_line) | ||
| 1551 | _log("COMP_POINT: %r" % comp_point) | ||
| 1552 | |||
| 1553 | try: | ||
| 1554 | script = _module_from_path(script_path) | ||
| 1555 | except ImportError, ex: | ||
| 1556 | _log("error importing `%s': %s" % (script_path, ex)) | ||
| 1557 | return [] | ||
| 1558 | shell = getattr(script, class_name)() | ||
| 1559 | cmd_map = shell._get_canonical_map() | ||
| 1560 | del cmd_map["EOF"] | ||
| 1561 | |||
| 1562 | # Determine if completing the sub-command name. | ||
| 1563 | parts = comp_line[:comp_point].split(None, 1) | ||
| 1564 | _log(parts) | ||
| 1565 | if len(parts) == 1 or not (' ' in parts[1] or '\t' in parts[1]): | ||
| 1566 | #TODO: if parts[1].startswith('-'): handle top-level opts | ||
| 1567 | _log("complete sub-command names") | ||
| 1568 | matches = {} | ||
| 1569 | for name, canon_name in cmd_map.items(): | ||
| 1570 | if name.startswith(token): | ||
| 1571 | matches[name] = canon_name | ||
| 1572 | if not matches: | ||
| 1573 | return [] | ||
| 1574 | elif len(matches) == 1: | ||
| 1575 | return matches.keys() | ||
| 1576 | elif len(set(matches.values())) == 1: | ||
| 1577 | return [matches.values()[0]] | ||
| 1578 | else: | ||
| 1579 | return matches.keys() | ||
| 1580 | |||
| 1581 | # Otherwise, complete options for the given sub-command. | ||
| 1582 | #TODO: refine this so it does the right thing with option args | ||
| 1583 | if token.startswith('-'): | ||
| 1584 | cmd_name = comp_line.split(None, 2)[1] | ||
| 1585 | try: | ||
| 1586 | cmd_canon_name = cmd_map[cmd_name] | ||
| 1587 | except KeyError: | ||
| 1588 | return [] | ||
| 1589 | handler = shell._get_cmd_handler(cmd_canon_name) | ||
| 1590 | optparser = getattr(handler, "optparser", None) | ||
| 1591 | if optparser is None: | ||
| 1592 | optparser = SubCmdOptionParser() | ||
| 1593 | opt_strs = [] | ||
| 1594 | for option in optparser.option_list: | ||
| 1595 | for opt_str in option._short_opts + option._long_opts: | ||
| 1596 | if opt_str.startswith(token): | ||
| 1597 | opt_strs.append(opt_str) | ||
| 1598 | return opt_strs | ||
| 1599 | |||
| 1600 | return [] | ||
| 1601 | |||
| 1602 | for cpln in _get_bash_cplns(*sys.argv[1:]): | ||
| 1603 | print cpln | ||
| 1604 | |||
