##// END OF EJS Templates
Sets error_before_exec to be the value of the exception instead of the stack trace
lllf -
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@@ -1,3707 +1,3707 b''
1 1 # -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
2 2 """Main IPython class."""
3 3
4 4 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
5 5 # Copyright (C) 2001 Janko Hauser <jhauser@zscout.de>
6 6 # Copyright (C) 2001-2007 Fernando Perez. <fperez@colorado.edu>
7 7 # Copyright (C) 2008-2011 The IPython Development Team
8 8 #
9 9 # Distributed under the terms of the BSD License. The full license is in
10 10 # the file COPYING, distributed as part of this software.
11 11 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
12 12
13 13
14 14 import abc
15 15 import ast
16 16 import asyncio
17 17 import atexit
18 18 import builtins as builtin_mod
19 19 import functools
20 20 import inspect
21 21 import os
22 22 import re
23 23 import runpy
24 24 import sys
25 25 import tempfile
26 26 import traceback
27 27 import types
28 28 import subprocess
29 29 import warnings
30 30 from io import open as io_open
31 31
32 32 from pickleshare import PickleShareDB
33 33
34 34 from traitlets.config.configurable import SingletonConfigurable
35 35 from traitlets.utils.importstring import import_item
36 36 from IPython.core import oinspect
37 37 from IPython.core import magic
38 38 from IPython.core import page
39 39 from IPython.core import prefilter
40 40 from IPython.core import ultratb
41 41 from IPython.core.alias import Alias, AliasManager
42 42 from IPython.core.autocall import ExitAutocall
43 43 from IPython.core.builtin_trap import BuiltinTrap
44 44 from IPython.core.events import EventManager, available_events
45 45 from IPython.core.compilerop import CachingCompiler, check_linecache_ipython
46 46 from IPython.core.debugger import Pdb
47 47 from IPython.core.display_trap import DisplayTrap
48 48 from IPython.core.displayhook import DisplayHook
49 49 from IPython.core.displaypub import DisplayPublisher
50 50 from IPython.core.error import InputRejected, UsageError
51 51 from IPython.core.extensions import ExtensionManager
52 52 from IPython.core.formatters import DisplayFormatter
53 53 from IPython.core.history import HistoryManager
54 54 from IPython.core.inputtransformer2 import ESC_MAGIC, ESC_MAGIC2
55 55 from IPython.core.logger import Logger
56 56 from IPython.core.macro import Macro
57 57 from IPython.core.payload import PayloadManager
58 58 from IPython.core.prefilter import PrefilterManager
59 59 from IPython.core.profiledir import ProfileDir
60 60 from IPython.core.usage import default_banner
61 61 from IPython.display import display
62 62 from IPython.testing.skipdoctest import skip_doctest
63 63 from IPython.utils import PyColorize
64 64 from IPython.utils import io
65 65 from IPython.utils import py3compat
66 66 from IPython.utils import openpy
67 67 from IPython.utils.decorators import undoc
68 68 from IPython.utils.io import ask_yes_no
69 69 from IPython.utils.ipstruct import Struct
70 70 from IPython.paths import get_ipython_dir
71 71 from IPython.utils.path import get_home_dir, get_py_filename, ensure_dir_exists
72 72 from IPython.utils.process import system, getoutput
73 73 from IPython.utils.strdispatch import StrDispatch
74 74 from IPython.utils.syspathcontext import prepended_to_syspath
75 75 from IPython.utils.text import format_screen, LSString, SList, DollarFormatter
76 76 from IPython.utils.tempdir import TemporaryDirectory
77 77 from traitlets import (
78 78 Integer, Bool, CaselessStrEnum, Enum, List, Dict, Unicode, Instance, Type,
79 79 observe, default, validate, Any
80 80 )
81 81 from warnings import warn
82 82 from logging import error
83 83 import IPython.core.hooks
84 84
85 85 from typing import List as ListType, Tuple
86 86 from ast import AST
87 87
88 88 # NoOpContext is deprecated, but ipykernel imports it from here.
89 89 # See https://github.com/ipython/ipykernel/issues/157
90 90 from IPython.utils.contexts import NoOpContext
91 91
92 92 try:
93 93 import docrepr.sphinxify as sphx
94 94
95 95 def sphinxify(doc):
96 96 with TemporaryDirectory() as dirname:
97 97 return {
98 98 'text/html': sphx.sphinxify(doc, dirname),
99 99 'text/plain': doc
100 100 }
101 101 except ImportError:
102 102 sphinxify = None
103 103
104 104
105 105 class ProvisionalWarning(DeprecationWarning):
106 106 """
107 107 Warning class for unstable features
108 108 """
109 109 pass
110 110
111 111 if sys.version_info > (3,8):
112 112 from ast import Module
113 113 else :
114 114 # mock the new API, ignore second argument
115 115 # see https://github.com/ipython/ipython/issues/11590
116 116 from ast import Module as OriginalModule
117 117 Module = lambda nodelist, type_ignores: OriginalModule(nodelist)
118 118
119 119 if sys.version_info > (3,6):
120 120 _assign_nodes = (ast.AugAssign, ast.AnnAssign, ast.Assign)
121 121 _single_targets_nodes = (ast.AugAssign, ast.AnnAssign)
122 122 else:
123 123 _assign_nodes = (ast.AugAssign, ast.Assign )
124 124 _single_targets_nodes = (ast.AugAssign, )
125 125
126 126 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
127 127 # Await Helpers
128 128 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
129 129
130 130 def removed_co_newlocals(function:types.FunctionType) -> types.FunctionType:
131 131 """Return a function that do not create a new local scope.
132 132
133 133 Given a function, create a clone of this function where the co_newlocal flag
134 134 has been removed, making this function code actually run in the sourounding
135 135 scope.
136 136
137 137 We need this in order to run asynchronous code in user level namespace.
138 138 """
139 139 from types import CodeType, FunctionType
140 140 CO_NEWLOCALS = 0x0002
141 141 code = function.__code__
142 142 new_co_flags = code.co_flags & ~CO_NEWLOCALS
143 143 if sys.version_info > (3, 8, 0, 'alpha', 3):
144 144 new_code = code.replace(co_flags=new_co_flags)
145 145 else:
146 146 new_code = CodeType(
147 147 code.co_argcount,
148 148 code.co_kwonlyargcount,
149 149 code.co_nlocals,
150 150 code.co_stacksize,
151 151 new_co_flags,
152 152 code.co_code,
153 153 code.co_consts,
154 154 code.co_names,
155 155 code.co_varnames,
156 156 code.co_filename,
157 157 code.co_name,
158 158 code.co_firstlineno,
159 159 code.co_lnotab,
160 160 code.co_freevars,
161 161 code.co_cellvars
162 162 )
163 163 return FunctionType(new_code, globals(), function.__name__, function.__defaults__)
164 164
165 165
166 166 # we still need to run things using the asyncio eventloop, but there is no
167 167 # async integration
168 168 from .async_helpers import (_asyncio_runner, _asyncify, _pseudo_sync_runner)
169 169 if sys.version_info > (3, 5):
170 170 from .async_helpers import _curio_runner, _trio_runner, _should_be_async
171 171 else :
172 172 _curio_runner = _trio_runner = None
173 173
174 174 def _should_be_async(cell:str)->bool:
175 175 return False
176 176
177 177
178 178 def _ast_asyncify(cell:str, wrapper_name:str) -> ast.Module:
179 179 """
180 180 Parse a cell with top-level await and modify the AST to be able to run it later.
181 181
182 182 Parameter
183 183 ---------
184 184
185 185 cell: str
186 186 The code cell to asyncronify
187 187 wrapper_name: str
188 188 The name of the function to be used to wrap the passed `cell`. It is
189 189 advised to **not** use a python identifier in order to not pollute the
190 190 global namespace in which the function will be ran.
191 191
192 192 Return
193 193 ------
194 194
195 195 A module object AST containing **one** function named `wrapper_name`.
196 196
197 197 The given code is wrapped in a async-def function, parsed into an AST, and
198 198 the resulting function definition AST is modified to return the last
199 199 expression.
200 200
201 201 The last expression or await node is moved into a return statement at the
202 202 end of the function, and removed from its original location. If the last
203 203 node is not Expr or Await nothing is done.
204 204
205 205 The function `__code__` will need to be later modified (by
206 206 ``removed_co_newlocals``) in a subsequent step to not create new `locals()`
207 207 meaning that the local and global scope are the same, ie as if the body of
208 208 the function was at module level.
209 209
210 210 Lastly a call to `locals()` is made just before the last expression of the
211 211 function, or just after the last assignment or statement to make sure the
212 212 global dict is updated as python function work with a local fast cache which
213 213 is updated only on `local()` calls.
214 214 """
215 215
216 216 from ast import Expr, Await, Return
217 217 if sys.version_info >= (3,8):
218 218 return ast.parse(cell)
219 219 tree = ast.parse(_asyncify(cell))
220 220
221 221 function_def = tree.body[0]
222 222 function_def.name = wrapper_name
223 223 try_block = function_def.body[0]
224 224 lastexpr = try_block.body[-1]
225 225 if isinstance(lastexpr, (Expr, Await)):
226 226 try_block.body[-1] = Return(lastexpr.value)
227 227 ast.fix_missing_locations(tree)
228 228 return tree
229 229 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
230 230 # Globals
231 231 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
232 232
233 233 # compiled regexps for autoindent management
234 234 dedent_re = re.compile(r'^\s+raise|^\s+return|^\s+pass')
235 235
236 236 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
237 237 # Utilities
238 238 #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
239 239
240 240 @undoc
241 241 def softspace(file, newvalue):
242 242 """Copied from code.py, to remove the dependency"""
243 243
244 244 oldvalue = 0
245 245 try:
246 246 oldvalue = file.softspace
247 247 except AttributeError:
248 248 pass
249 249 try:
250 250 file.softspace = newvalue
251 251 except (AttributeError, TypeError):
252 252 # "attribute-less object" or "read-only attributes"
253 253 pass
254 254 return oldvalue
255 255
256 256 @undoc
257 257 def no_op(*a, **kw):
258 258 pass
259 259
260 260
261 261 class SpaceInInput(Exception): pass
262 262
263 263
264 264 def get_default_colors():
265 265 "DEPRECATED"
266 266 warn('get_default_color is deprecated since IPython 5.0, and returns `Neutral` on all platforms.',
267 267 DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2)
268 268 return 'Neutral'
269 269
270 270
271 271 class SeparateUnicode(Unicode):
272 272 r"""A Unicode subclass to validate separate_in, separate_out, etc.
273 273
274 274 This is a Unicode based trait that converts '0'->'' and ``'\\n'->'\n'``.
275 275 """
276 276
277 277 def validate(self, obj, value):
278 278 if value == '0': value = ''
279 279 value = value.replace('\\n','\n')
280 280 return super(SeparateUnicode, self).validate(obj, value)
281 281
282 282
283 283 @undoc
284 284 class DummyMod(object):
285 285 """A dummy module used for IPython's interactive module when
286 286 a namespace must be assigned to the module's __dict__."""
287 287 __spec__ = None
288 288
289 289
290 290 class ExecutionInfo(object):
291 291 """The arguments used for a call to :meth:`InteractiveShell.run_cell`
292 292
293 293 Stores information about what is going to happen.
294 294 """
295 295 raw_cell = None
296 296 store_history = False
297 297 silent = False
298 298 shell_futures = True
299 299
300 300 def __init__(self, raw_cell, store_history, silent, shell_futures):
301 301 self.raw_cell = raw_cell
302 302 self.store_history = store_history
303 303 self.silent = silent
304 304 self.shell_futures = shell_futures
305 305
306 306 def __repr__(self):
307 307 name = self.__class__.__qualname__
308 308 raw_cell = ((self.raw_cell[:50] + '..')
309 309 if len(self.raw_cell) > 50 else self.raw_cell)
310 310 return '<%s object at %x, raw_cell="%s" store_history=%s silent=%s shell_futures=%s>' %\
311 311 (name, id(self), raw_cell, self.store_history, self.silent, self.shell_futures)
312 312
313 313
314 314 class ExecutionResult(object):
315 315 """The result of a call to :meth:`InteractiveShell.run_cell`
316 316
317 317 Stores information about what took place.
318 318 """
319 319 execution_count = None
320 320 error_before_exec = None
321 321 error_in_exec = None
322 322 info = None
323 323 result = None
324 324
325 325 def __init__(self, info):
326 326 self.info = info
327 327
328 328 @property
329 329 def success(self):
330 330 return (self.error_before_exec is None) and (self.error_in_exec is None)
331 331
332 332 def raise_error(self):
333 333 """Reraises error if `success` is `False`, otherwise does nothing"""
334 334 if self.error_before_exec is not None:
335 335 raise self.error_before_exec
336 336 if self.error_in_exec is not None:
337 337 raise self.error_in_exec
338 338
339 339 def __repr__(self):
340 340 name = self.__class__.__qualname__
341 341 return '<%s object at %x, execution_count=%s error_before_exec=%s error_in_exec=%s info=%s result=%s>' %\
342 342 (name, id(self), self.execution_count, self.error_before_exec, self.error_in_exec, repr(self.info), repr(self.result))
343 343
344 344
345 345 class InteractiveShell(SingletonConfigurable):
346 346 """An enhanced, interactive shell for Python."""
347 347
348 348 _instance = None
349 349
350 350 ast_transformers = List([], help=
351 351 """
352 352 A list of ast.NodeTransformer subclass instances, which will be applied
353 353 to user input before code is run.
354 354 """
355 355 ).tag(config=True)
356 356
357 357 autocall = Enum((0,1,2), default_value=0, help=
358 358 """
359 359 Make IPython automatically call any callable object even if you didn't
360 360 type explicit parentheses. For example, 'str 43' becomes 'str(43)'
361 361 automatically. The value can be '0' to disable the feature, '1' for
362 362 'smart' autocall, where it is not applied if there are no more
363 363 arguments on the line, and '2' for 'full' autocall, where all callable
364 364 objects are automatically called (even if no arguments are present).
365 365 """
366 366 ).tag(config=True)
367 367
368 368 autoindent = Bool(True, help=
369 369 """
370 370 Autoindent IPython code entered interactively.
371 371 """
372 372 ).tag(config=True)
373 373
374 374 autoawait = Bool(True, help=
375 375 """
376 376 Automatically run await statement in the top level repl.
377 377 """
378 378 ).tag(config=True)
379 379
380 380 loop_runner_map ={
381 381 'asyncio':(_asyncio_runner, True),
382 382 'curio':(_curio_runner, True),
383 383 'trio':(_trio_runner, True),
384 384 'sync': (_pseudo_sync_runner, False)
385 385 }
386 386
387 387 loop_runner = Any(default_value="IPython.core.interactiveshell._asyncio_runner",
388 388 allow_none=True,
389 389 help="""Select the loop runner that will be used to execute top-level asynchronous code"""
390 390 ).tag(config=True)
391 391
392 392 @default('loop_runner')
393 393 def _default_loop_runner(self):
394 394 return import_item("IPython.core.interactiveshell._asyncio_runner")
395 395
396 396 @validate('loop_runner')
397 397 def _import_runner(self, proposal):
398 398 if isinstance(proposal.value, str):
399 399 if proposal.value in self.loop_runner_map:
400 400 runner, autoawait = self.loop_runner_map[proposal.value]
401 401 self.autoawait = autoawait
402 402 return runner
403 403 runner = import_item(proposal.value)
404 404 if not callable(runner):
405 405 raise ValueError('loop_runner must be callable')
406 406 return runner
407 407 if not callable(proposal.value):
408 408 raise ValueError('loop_runner must be callable')
409 409 return proposal.value
410 410
411 411 automagic = Bool(True, help=
412 412 """
413 413 Enable magic commands to be called without the leading %.
414 414 """
415 415 ).tag(config=True)
416 416
417 417 banner1 = Unicode(default_banner,
418 418 help="""The part of the banner to be printed before the profile"""
419 419 ).tag(config=True)
420 420 banner2 = Unicode('',
421 421 help="""The part of the banner to be printed after the profile"""
422 422 ).tag(config=True)
423 423
424 424 cache_size = Integer(1000, help=
425 425 """
426 426 Set the size of the output cache. The default is 1000, you can
427 427 change it permanently in your config file. Setting it to 0 completely
428 428 disables the caching system, and the minimum value accepted is 3 (if
429 429 you provide a value less than 3, it is reset to 0 and a warning is
430 430 issued). This limit is defined because otherwise you'll spend more
431 431 time re-flushing a too small cache than working
432 432 """
433 433 ).tag(config=True)
434 434 color_info = Bool(True, help=
435 435 """
436 436 Use colors for displaying information about objects. Because this
437 437 information is passed through a pager (like 'less'), and some pagers
438 438 get confused with color codes, this capability can be turned off.
439 439 """
440 440 ).tag(config=True)
441 441 colors = CaselessStrEnum(('Neutral', 'NoColor','LightBG','Linux'),
442 442 default_value='Neutral',
443 443 help="Set the color scheme (NoColor, Neutral, Linux, or LightBG)."
444 444 ).tag(config=True)
445 445 debug = Bool(False).tag(config=True)
446 446 disable_failing_post_execute = Bool(False,
447 447 help="Don't call post-execute functions that have failed in the past."
448 448 ).tag(config=True)
449 449 display_formatter = Instance(DisplayFormatter, allow_none=True)
450 450 displayhook_class = Type(DisplayHook)
451 451 display_pub_class = Type(DisplayPublisher)
452 452
453 453 sphinxify_docstring = Bool(False, help=
454 454 """
455 455 Enables rich html representation of docstrings. (This requires the
456 456 docrepr module).
457 457 """).tag(config=True)
458 458
459 459 @observe("sphinxify_docstring")
460 460 def _sphinxify_docstring_changed(self, change):
461 461 if change['new']:
462 462 warn("`sphinxify_docstring` is provisional since IPython 5.0 and might change in future versions." , ProvisionalWarning)
463 463
464 464 enable_html_pager = Bool(False, help=
465 465 """
466 466 (Provisional API) enables html representation in mime bundles sent
467 467 to pagers.
468 468 """).tag(config=True)
469 469
470 470 @observe("enable_html_pager")
471 471 def _enable_html_pager_changed(self, change):
472 472 if change['new']:
473 473 warn("`enable_html_pager` is provisional since IPython 5.0 and might change in future versions.", ProvisionalWarning)
474 474
475 475 data_pub_class = None
476 476
477 477 exit_now = Bool(False)
478 478 exiter = Instance(ExitAutocall)
479 479 @default('exiter')
480 480 def _exiter_default(self):
481 481 return ExitAutocall(self)
482 482 # Monotonically increasing execution counter
483 483 execution_count = Integer(1)
484 484 filename = Unicode("<ipython console>")
485 485 ipython_dir= Unicode('').tag(config=True) # Set to get_ipython_dir() in __init__
486 486
487 487 # Used to transform cells before running them, and check whether code is complete
488 488 input_transformer_manager = Instance('IPython.core.inputtransformer2.TransformerManager',
489 489 ())
490 490
491 491 @property
492 492 def input_transformers_cleanup(self):
493 493 return self.input_transformer_manager.cleanup_transforms
494 494
495 495 input_transformers_post = List([],
496 496 help="A list of string input transformers, to be applied after IPython's "
497 497 "own input transformations."
498 498 )
499 499
500 500 @property
501 501 def input_splitter(self):
502 502 """Make this available for backward compatibility (pre-7.0 release) with existing code.
503 503
504 504 For example, ipykernel ipykernel currently uses
505 505 `shell.input_splitter.check_complete`
506 506 """
507 507 from warnings import warn
508 508 warn("`input_splitter` is deprecated since IPython 7.0, prefer `input_transformer_manager`.",
509 509 DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2
510 510 )
511 511 return self.input_transformer_manager
512 512
513 513 logstart = Bool(False, help=
514 514 """
515 515 Start logging to the default log file in overwrite mode.
516 516 Use `logappend` to specify a log file to **append** logs to.
517 517 """
518 518 ).tag(config=True)
519 519 logfile = Unicode('', help=
520 520 """
521 521 The name of the logfile to use.
522 522 """
523 523 ).tag(config=True)
524 524 logappend = Unicode('', help=
525 525 """
526 526 Start logging to the given file in append mode.
527 527 Use `logfile` to specify a log file to **overwrite** logs to.
528 528 """
529 529 ).tag(config=True)
530 530 object_info_string_level = Enum((0,1,2), default_value=0,
531 531 ).tag(config=True)
532 532 pdb = Bool(False, help=
533 533 """
534 534 Automatically call the pdb debugger after every exception.
535 535 """
536 536 ).tag(config=True)
537 537 display_page = Bool(False,
538 538 help="""If True, anything that would be passed to the pager
539 539 will be displayed as regular output instead."""
540 540 ).tag(config=True)
541 541
542 542 # deprecated prompt traits:
543 543
544 544 prompt_in1 = Unicode('In [\\#]: ',
545 545 help="Deprecated since IPython 4.0 and ignored since 5.0, set TerminalInteractiveShell.prompts object directly."
546 546 ).tag(config=True)
547 547 prompt_in2 = Unicode(' .\\D.: ',
548 548 help="Deprecated since IPython 4.0 and ignored since 5.0, set TerminalInteractiveShell.prompts object directly."
549 549 ).tag(config=True)
550 550 prompt_out = Unicode('Out[\\#]: ',
551 551 help="Deprecated since IPython 4.0 and ignored since 5.0, set TerminalInteractiveShell.prompts object directly."
552 552 ).tag(config=True)
553 553 prompts_pad_left = Bool(True,
554 554 help="Deprecated since IPython 4.0 and ignored since 5.0, set TerminalInteractiveShell.prompts object directly."
555 555 ).tag(config=True)
556 556
557 557 @observe('prompt_in1', 'prompt_in2', 'prompt_out', 'prompt_pad_left')
558 558 def _prompt_trait_changed(self, change):
559 559 name = change['name']
560 560 warn("InteractiveShell.{name} is deprecated since IPython 4.0"
561 561 " and ignored since 5.0, set TerminalInteractiveShell.prompts"
562 562 " object directly.".format(name=name))
563 563
564 564 # protect against weird cases where self.config may not exist:
565 565
566 566 show_rewritten_input = Bool(True,
567 567 help="Show rewritten input, e.g. for autocall."
568 568 ).tag(config=True)
569 569
570 570 quiet = Bool(False).tag(config=True)
571 571
572 572 history_length = Integer(10000,
573 573 help='Total length of command history'
574 574 ).tag(config=True)
575 575
576 576 history_load_length = Integer(1000, help=
577 577 """
578 578 The number of saved history entries to be loaded
579 579 into the history buffer at startup.
580 580 """
581 581 ).tag(config=True)
582 582
583 583 ast_node_interactivity = Enum(['all', 'last', 'last_expr', 'none', 'last_expr_or_assign'],
584 584 default_value='last_expr',
585 585 help="""
586 586 'all', 'last', 'last_expr' or 'none', 'last_expr_or_assign' specifying
587 587 which nodes should be run interactively (displaying output from expressions).
588 588 """
589 589 ).tag(config=True)
590 590
591 591 # TODO: this part of prompt management should be moved to the frontends.
592 592 # Use custom TraitTypes that convert '0'->'' and '\\n'->'\n'
593 593 separate_in = SeparateUnicode('\n').tag(config=True)
594 594 separate_out = SeparateUnicode('').tag(config=True)
595 595 separate_out2 = SeparateUnicode('').tag(config=True)
596 596 wildcards_case_sensitive = Bool(True).tag(config=True)
597 597 xmode = CaselessStrEnum(('Context', 'Plain', 'Verbose', 'Minimal'),
598 598 default_value='Context',
599 599 help="Switch modes for the IPython exception handlers."
600 600 ).tag(config=True)
601 601
602 602 # Subcomponents of InteractiveShell
603 603 alias_manager = Instance('IPython.core.alias.AliasManager', allow_none=True)
604 604 prefilter_manager = Instance('IPython.core.prefilter.PrefilterManager', allow_none=True)
605 605 builtin_trap = Instance('IPython.core.builtin_trap.BuiltinTrap', allow_none=True)
606 606 display_trap = Instance('IPython.core.display_trap.DisplayTrap', allow_none=True)
607 607 extension_manager = Instance('IPython.core.extensions.ExtensionManager', allow_none=True)
608 608 payload_manager = Instance('IPython.core.payload.PayloadManager', allow_none=True)
609 609 history_manager = Instance('IPython.core.history.HistoryAccessorBase', allow_none=True)
610 610 magics_manager = Instance('IPython.core.magic.MagicsManager', allow_none=True)
611 611
612 612 profile_dir = Instance('IPython.core.application.ProfileDir', allow_none=True)
613 613 @property
614 614 def profile(self):
615 615 if self.profile_dir is not None:
616 616 name = os.path.basename(self.profile_dir.location)
617 617 return name.replace('profile_','')
618 618
619 619
620 620 # Private interface
621 621 _post_execute = Dict()
622 622
623 623 # Tracks any GUI loop loaded for pylab
624 624 pylab_gui_select = None
625 625
626 626 last_execution_succeeded = Bool(True, help='Did last executed command succeeded')
627 627
628 628 last_execution_result = Instance('IPython.core.interactiveshell.ExecutionResult', help='Result of executing the last command', allow_none=True)
629 629
630 630 def __init__(self, ipython_dir=None, profile_dir=None,
631 631 user_module=None, user_ns=None,
632 632 custom_exceptions=((), None), **kwargs):
633 633
634 634 # This is where traits with a config_key argument are updated
635 635 # from the values on config.
636 636 super(InteractiveShell, self).__init__(**kwargs)
637 637 if 'PromptManager' in self.config:
638 638 warn('As of IPython 5.0 `PromptManager` config will have no effect'
639 639 ' and has been replaced by TerminalInteractiveShell.prompts_class')
640 640 self.configurables = [self]
641 641
642 642 # These are relatively independent and stateless
643 643 self.init_ipython_dir(ipython_dir)
644 644 self.init_profile_dir(profile_dir)
645 645 self.init_instance_attrs()
646 646 self.init_environment()
647 647
648 648 # Check if we're in a virtualenv, and set up sys.path.
649 649 self.init_virtualenv()
650 650
651 651 # Create namespaces (user_ns, user_global_ns, etc.)
652 652 self.init_create_namespaces(user_module, user_ns)
653 653 # This has to be done after init_create_namespaces because it uses
654 654 # something in self.user_ns, but before init_sys_modules, which
655 655 # is the first thing to modify sys.
656 656 # TODO: When we override sys.stdout and sys.stderr before this class
657 657 # is created, we are saving the overridden ones here. Not sure if this
658 658 # is what we want to do.
659 659 self.save_sys_module_state()
660 660 self.init_sys_modules()
661 661
662 662 # While we're trying to have each part of the code directly access what
663 663 # it needs without keeping redundant references to objects, we have too
664 664 # much legacy code that expects ip.db to exist.
665 665 self.db = PickleShareDB(os.path.join(self.profile_dir.location, 'db'))
666 666
667 667 self.init_history()
668 668 self.init_encoding()
669 669 self.init_prefilter()
670 670
671 671 self.init_syntax_highlighting()
672 672 self.init_hooks()
673 673 self.init_events()
674 674 self.init_pushd_popd_magic()
675 675 self.init_user_ns()
676 676 self.init_logger()
677 677 self.init_builtins()
678 678
679 679 # The following was in post_config_initialization
680 680 self.init_inspector()
681 681 self.raw_input_original = input
682 682 self.init_completer()
683 683 # TODO: init_io() needs to happen before init_traceback handlers
684 684 # because the traceback handlers hardcode the stdout/stderr streams.
685 685 # This logic in in debugger.Pdb and should eventually be changed.
686 686 self.init_io()
687 687 self.init_traceback_handlers(custom_exceptions)
688 688 self.init_prompts()
689 689 self.init_display_formatter()
690 690 self.init_display_pub()
691 691 self.init_data_pub()
692 692 self.init_displayhook()
693 693 self.init_magics()
694 694 self.init_alias()
695 695 self.init_logstart()
696 696 self.init_pdb()
697 697 self.init_extension_manager()
698 698 self.init_payload()
699 699 self.init_deprecation_warnings()
700 700 self.hooks.late_startup_hook()
701 701 self.events.trigger('shell_initialized', self)
702 702 atexit.register(self.atexit_operations)
703 703
704 704 def get_ipython(self):
705 705 """Return the currently running IPython instance."""
706 706 return self
707 707
708 708 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
709 709 # Trait changed handlers
710 710 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
711 711 @observe('ipython_dir')
712 712 def _ipython_dir_changed(self, change):
713 713 ensure_dir_exists(change['new'])
714 714
715 715 def set_autoindent(self,value=None):
716 716 """Set the autoindent flag.
717 717
718 718 If called with no arguments, it acts as a toggle."""
719 719 if value is None:
720 720 self.autoindent = not self.autoindent
721 721 else:
722 722 self.autoindent = value
723 723
724 724 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
725 725 # init_* methods called by __init__
726 726 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
727 727
728 728 def init_ipython_dir(self, ipython_dir):
729 729 if ipython_dir is not None:
730 730 self.ipython_dir = ipython_dir
731 731 return
732 732
733 733 self.ipython_dir = get_ipython_dir()
734 734
735 735 def init_profile_dir(self, profile_dir):
736 736 if profile_dir is not None:
737 737 self.profile_dir = profile_dir
738 738 return
739 739 self.profile_dir =\
740 740 ProfileDir.create_profile_dir_by_name(self.ipython_dir, 'default')
741 741
742 742 def init_instance_attrs(self):
743 743 self.more = False
744 744
745 745 # command compiler
746 746 self.compile = CachingCompiler()
747 747
748 748 # Make an empty namespace, which extension writers can rely on both
749 749 # existing and NEVER being used by ipython itself. This gives them a
750 750 # convenient location for storing additional information and state
751 751 # their extensions may require, without fear of collisions with other
752 752 # ipython names that may develop later.
753 753 self.meta = Struct()
754 754
755 755 # Temporary files used for various purposes. Deleted at exit.
756 756 self.tempfiles = []
757 757 self.tempdirs = []
758 758
759 759 # keep track of where we started running (mainly for crash post-mortem)
760 760 # This is not being used anywhere currently.
761 761 self.starting_dir = os.getcwd()
762 762
763 763 # Indentation management
764 764 self.indent_current_nsp = 0
765 765
766 766 # Dict to track post-execution functions that have been registered
767 767 self._post_execute = {}
768 768
769 769 def init_environment(self):
770 770 """Any changes we need to make to the user's environment."""
771 771 pass
772 772
773 773 def init_encoding(self):
774 774 # Get system encoding at startup time. Certain terminals (like Emacs
775 775 # under Win32 have it set to None, and we need to have a known valid
776 776 # encoding to use in the raw_input() method
777 777 try:
778 778 self.stdin_encoding = sys.stdin.encoding or 'ascii'
779 779 except AttributeError:
780 780 self.stdin_encoding = 'ascii'
781 781
782 782
783 783 @observe('colors')
784 784 def init_syntax_highlighting(self, changes=None):
785 785 # Python source parser/formatter for syntax highlighting
786 786 pyformat = PyColorize.Parser(style=self.colors, parent=self).format
787 787 self.pycolorize = lambda src: pyformat(src,'str')
788 788
789 789 def refresh_style(self):
790 790 # No-op here, used in subclass
791 791 pass
792 792
793 793 def init_pushd_popd_magic(self):
794 794 # for pushd/popd management
795 795 self.home_dir = get_home_dir()
796 796
797 797 self.dir_stack = []
798 798
799 799 def init_logger(self):
800 800 self.logger = Logger(self.home_dir, logfname='ipython_log.py',
801 801 logmode='rotate')
802 802
803 803 def init_logstart(self):
804 804 """Initialize logging in case it was requested at the command line.
805 805 """
806 806 if self.logappend:
807 807 self.magic('logstart %s append' % self.logappend)
808 808 elif self.logfile:
809 809 self.magic('logstart %s' % self.logfile)
810 810 elif self.logstart:
811 811 self.magic('logstart')
812 812
813 813 def init_deprecation_warnings(self):
814 814 """
815 815 register default filter for deprecation warning.
816 816
817 817 This will allow deprecation warning of function used interactively to show
818 818 warning to users, and still hide deprecation warning from libraries import.
819 819 """
820 820 if sys.version_info < (3,7):
821 821 warnings.filterwarnings("default", category=DeprecationWarning, module=self.user_ns.get("__name__"))
822 822
823 823
824 824 def init_builtins(self):
825 825 # A single, static flag that we set to True. Its presence indicates
826 826 # that an IPython shell has been created, and we make no attempts at
827 827 # removing on exit or representing the existence of more than one
828 828 # IPython at a time.
829 829 builtin_mod.__dict__['__IPYTHON__'] = True
830 830 builtin_mod.__dict__['display'] = display
831 831
832 832 self.builtin_trap = BuiltinTrap(shell=self)
833 833
834 834 @observe('colors')
835 835 def init_inspector(self, changes=None):
836 836 # Object inspector
837 837 self.inspector = oinspect.Inspector(oinspect.InspectColors,
838 838 PyColorize.ANSICodeColors,
839 839 self.colors,
840 840 self.object_info_string_level)
841 841
842 842 def init_io(self):
843 843 # This will just use sys.stdout and sys.stderr. If you want to
844 844 # override sys.stdout and sys.stderr themselves, you need to do that
845 845 # *before* instantiating this class, because io holds onto
846 846 # references to the underlying streams.
847 847 # io.std* are deprecated, but don't show our own deprecation warnings
848 848 # during initialization of the deprecated API.
849 849 with warnings.catch_warnings():
850 850 warnings.simplefilter('ignore', DeprecationWarning)
851 851 io.stdout = io.IOStream(sys.stdout)
852 852 io.stderr = io.IOStream(sys.stderr)
853 853
854 854 def init_prompts(self):
855 855 # Set system prompts, so that scripts can decide if they are running
856 856 # interactively.
857 857 sys.ps1 = 'In : '
858 858 sys.ps2 = '...: '
859 859 sys.ps3 = 'Out: '
860 860
861 861 def init_display_formatter(self):
862 862 self.display_formatter = DisplayFormatter(parent=self)
863 863 self.configurables.append(self.display_formatter)
864 864
865 865 def init_display_pub(self):
866 866 self.display_pub = self.display_pub_class(parent=self)
867 867 self.configurables.append(self.display_pub)
868 868
869 869 def init_data_pub(self):
870 870 if not self.data_pub_class:
871 871 self.data_pub = None
872 872 return
873 873 self.data_pub = self.data_pub_class(parent=self)
874 874 self.configurables.append(self.data_pub)
875 875
876 876 def init_displayhook(self):
877 877 # Initialize displayhook, set in/out prompts and printing system
878 878 self.displayhook = self.displayhook_class(
879 879 parent=self,
880 880 shell=self,
881 881 cache_size=self.cache_size,
882 882 )
883 883 self.configurables.append(self.displayhook)
884 884 # This is a context manager that installs/revmoes the displayhook at
885 885 # the appropriate time.
886 886 self.display_trap = DisplayTrap(hook=self.displayhook)
887 887
888 888 def init_virtualenv(self):
889 889 """Add a virtualenv to sys.path so the user can import modules from it.
890 890 This isn't perfect: it doesn't use the Python interpreter with which the
891 891 virtualenv was built, and it ignores the --no-site-packages option. A
892 892 warning will appear suggesting the user installs IPython in the
893 893 virtualenv, but for many cases, it probably works well enough.
894 894
895 895 Adapted from code snippets online.
896 896
897 897 http://blog.ufsoft.org/2009/1/29/ipython-and-virtualenv
898 898 """
899 899 if 'VIRTUAL_ENV' not in os.environ:
900 900 # Not in a virtualenv
901 901 return
902 902
903 903 p = os.path.normcase(sys.executable)
904 904 p_venv = os.path.normcase(os.environ['VIRTUAL_ENV'])
905 905
906 906 # executable path should end like /bin/python or \\scripts\\python.exe
907 907 p_exe_up2 = os.path.dirname(os.path.dirname(p))
908 908 if p_exe_up2 and os.path.exists(p_venv) and os.path.samefile(p_exe_up2, p_venv):
909 909 # Our exe is inside the virtualenv, don't need to do anything.
910 910 return
911 911
912 912 # fallback venv detection:
913 913 # stdlib venv may symlink sys.executable, so we can't use realpath.
914 914 # but others can symlink *to* the venv Python, so we can't just use sys.executable.
915 915 # So we just check every item in the symlink tree (generally <= 3)
916 916 paths = [p]
917 917 while os.path.islink(p):
918 918 p = os.path.normcase(os.path.join(os.path.dirname(p), os.readlink(p)))
919 919 paths.append(p)
920 920
921 921 # In Cygwin paths like "c:\..." and '\cygdrive\c\...' are possible
922 922 if p_venv.startswith('\\cygdrive'):
923 923 p_venv = p_venv[11:]
924 924 elif len(p_venv) >= 2 and p_venv[1] == ':':
925 925 p_venv = p_venv[2:]
926 926
927 927 if any(p_venv in p for p in paths):
928 928 # Running properly in the virtualenv, don't need to do anything
929 929 return
930 930
931 931 warn("Attempting to work in a virtualenv. If you encounter problems, please "
932 932 "install IPython inside the virtualenv.")
933 933 if sys.platform == "win32":
934 934 virtual_env = os.path.join(os.environ['VIRTUAL_ENV'], 'Lib', 'site-packages')
935 935 else:
936 936 virtual_env = os.path.join(os.environ['VIRTUAL_ENV'], 'lib',
937 937 'python%d.%d' % sys.version_info[:2], 'site-packages')
938 938
939 939 import site
940 940 sys.path.insert(0, virtual_env)
941 941 site.addsitedir(virtual_env)
942 942
943 943 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
944 944 # Things related to injections into the sys module
945 945 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
946 946
947 947 def save_sys_module_state(self):
948 948 """Save the state of hooks in the sys module.
949 949
950 950 This has to be called after self.user_module is created.
951 951 """
952 952 self._orig_sys_module_state = {'stdin': sys.stdin,
953 953 'stdout': sys.stdout,
954 954 'stderr': sys.stderr,
955 955 'excepthook': sys.excepthook}
956 956 self._orig_sys_modules_main_name = self.user_module.__name__
957 957 self._orig_sys_modules_main_mod = sys.modules.get(self.user_module.__name__)
958 958
959 959 def restore_sys_module_state(self):
960 960 """Restore the state of the sys module."""
961 961 try:
962 962 for k, v in self._orig_sys_module_state.items():
963 963 setattr(sys, k, v)
964 964 except AttributeError:
965 965 pass
966 966 # Reset what what done in self.init_sys_modules
967 967 if self._orig_sys_modules_main_mod is not None:
968 968 sys.modules[self._orig_sys_modules_main_name] = self._orig_sys_modules_main_mod
969 969
970 970 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
971 971 # Things related to the banner
972 972 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
973 973
974 974 @property
975 975 def banner(self):
976 976 banner = self.banner1
977 977 if self.profile and self.profile != 'default':
978 978 banner += '\nIPython profile: %s\n' % self.profile
979 979 if self.banner2:
980 980 banner += '\n' + self.banner2
981 981 return banner
982 982
983 983 def show_banner(self, banner=None):
984 984 if banner is None:
985 985 banner = self.banner
986 986 sys.stdout.write(banner)
987 987
988 988 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
989 989 # Things related to hooks
990 990 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
991 991
992 992 def init_hooks(self):
993 993 # hooks holds pointers used for user-side customizations
994 994 self.hooks = Struct()
995 995
996 996 self.strdispatchers = {}
997 997
998 998 # Set all default hooks, defined in the IPython.hooks module.
999 999 hooks = IPython.core.hooks
1000 1000 for hook_name in hooks.__all__:
1001 1001 # default hooks have priority 100, i.e. low; user hooks should have
1002 1002 # 0-100 priority
1003 1003 self.set_hook(hook_name,getattr(hooks,hook_name), 100, _warn_deprecated=False)
1004 1004
1005 1005 if self.display_page:
1006 1006 self.set_hook('show_in_pager', page.as_hook(page.display_page), 90)
1007 1007
1008 1008 def set_hook(self,name,hook, priority=50, str_key=None, re_key=None,
1009 1009 _warn_deprecated=True):
1010 1010 """set_hook(name,hook) -> sets an internal IPython hook.
1011 1011
1012 1012 IPython exposes some of its internal API as user-modifiable hooks. By
1013 1013 adding your function to one of these hooks, you can modify IPython's
1014 1014 behavior to call at runtime your own routines."""
1015 1015
1016 1016 # At some point in the future, this should validate the hook before it
1017 1017 # accepts it. Probably at least check that the hook takes the number
1018 1018 # of args it's supposed to.
1019 1019
1020 1020 f = types.MethodType(hook,self)
1021 1021
1022 1022 # check if the hook is for strdispatcher first
1023 1023 if str_key is not None:
1024 1024 sdp = self.strdispatchers.get(name, StrDispatch())
1025 1025 sdp.add_s(str_key, f, priority )
1026 1026 self.strdispatchers[name] = sdp
1027 1027 return
1028 1028 if re_key is not None:
1029 1029 sdp = self.strdispatchers.get(name, StrDispatch())
1030 1030 sdp.add_re(re.compile(re_key), f, priority )
1031 1031 self.strdispatchers[name] = sdp
1032 1032 return
1033 1033
1034 1034 dp = getattr(self.hooks, name, None)
1035 1035 if name not in IPython.core.hooks.__all__:
1036 1036 print("Warning! Hook '%s' is not one of %s" % \
1037 1037 (name, IPython.core.hooks.__all__ ))
1038 1038
1039 1039 if _warn_deprecated and (name in IPython.core.hooks.deprecated):
1040 1040 alternative = IPython.core.hooks.deprecated[name]
1041 1041 warn("Hook {} is deprecated. Use {} instead.".format(name, alternative), stacklevel=2)
1042 1042
1043 1043 if not dp:
1044 1044 dp = IPython.core.hooks.CommandChainDispatcher()
1045 1045
1046 1046 try:
1047 1047 dp.add(f,priority)
1048 1048 except AttributeError:
1049 1049 # it was not commandchain, plain old func - replace
1050 1050 dp = f
1051 1051
1052 1052 setattr(self.hooks,name, dp)
1053 1053
1054 1054 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
1055 1055 # Things related to events
1056 1056 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
1057 1057
1058 1058 def init_events(self):
1059 1059 self.events = EventManager(self, available_events)
1060 1060
1061 1061 self.events.register("pre_execute", self._clear_warning_registry)
1062 1062
1063 1063 def register_post_execute(self, func):
1064 1064 """DEPRECATED: Use ip.events.register('post_run_cell', func)
1065 1065
1066 1066 Register a function for calling after code execution.
1067 1067 """
1068 1068 warn("ip.register_post_execute is deprecated, use "
1069 1069 "ip.events.register('post_run_cell', func) instead.", stacklevel=2)
1070 1070 self.events.register('post_run_cell', func)
1071 1071
1072 1072 def _clear_warning_registry(self):
1073 1073 # clear the warning registry, so that different code blocks with
1074 1074 # overlapping line number ranges don't cause spurious suppression of
1075 1075 # warnings (see gh-6611 for details)
1076 1076 if "__warningregistry__" in self.user_global_ns:
1077 1077 del self.user_global_ns["__warningregistry__"]
1078 1078
1079 1079 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
1080 1080 # Things related to the "main" module
1081 1081 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
1082 1082
1083 1083 def new_main_mod(self, filename, modname):
1084 1084 """Return a new 'main' module object for user code execution.
1085 1085
1086 1086 ``filename`` should be the path of the script which will be run in the
1087 1087 module. Requests with the same filename will get the same module, with
1088 1088 its namespace cleared.
1089 1089
1090 1090 ``modname`` should be the module name - normally either '__main__' or
1091 1091 the basename of the file without the extension.
1092 1092
1093 1093 When scripts are executed via %run, we must keep a reference to their
1094 1094 __main__ module around so that Python doesn't
1095 1095 clear it, rendering references to module globals useless.
1096 1096
1097 1097 This method keeps said reference in a private dict, keyed by the
1098 1098 absolute path of the script. This way, for multiple executions of the
1099 1099 same script we only keep one copy of the namespace (the last one),
1100 1100 thus preventing memory leaks from old references while allowing the
1101 1101 objects from the last execution to be accessible.
1102 1102 """
1103 1103 filename = os.path.abspath(filename)
1104 1104 try:
1105 1105 main_mod = self._main_mod_cache[filename]
1106 1106 except KeyError:
1107 1107 main_mod = self._main_mod_cache[filename] = types.ModuleType(
1108 1108 modname,
1109 1109 doc="Module created for script run in IPython")
1110 1110 else:
1111 1111 main_mod.__dict__.clear()
1112 1112 main_mod.__name__ = modname
1113 1113
1114 1114 main_mod.__file__ = filename
1115 1115 # It seems pydoc (and perhaps others) needs any module instance to
1116 1116 # implement a __nonzero__ method
1117 1117 main_mod.__nonzero__ = lambda : True
1118 1118
1119 1119 return main_mod
1120 1120
1121 1121 def clear_main_mod_cache(self):
1122 1122 """Clear the cache of main modules.
1123 1123
1124 1124 Mainly for use by utilities like %reset.
1125 1125
1126 1126 Examples
1127 1127 --------
1128 1128
1129 1129 In [15]: import IPython
1130 1130
1131 1131 In [16]: m = _ip.new_main_mod(IPython.__file__, 'IPython')
1132 1132
1133 1133 In [17]: len(_ip._main_mod_cache) > 0
1134 1134 Out[17]: True
1135 1135
1136 1136 In [18]: _ip.clear_main_mod_cache()
1137 1137
1138 1138 In [19]: len(_ip._main_mod_cache) == 0
1139 1139 Out[19]: True
1140 1140 """
1141 1141 self._main_mod_cache.clear()
1142 1142
1143 1143 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
1144 1144 # Things related to debugging
1145 1145 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
1146 1146
1147 1147 def init_pdb(self):
1148 1148 # Set calling of pdb on exceptions
1149 1149 # self.call_pdb is a property
1150 1150 self.call_pdb = self.pdb
1151 1151
1152 1152 def _get_call_pdb(self):
1153 1153 return self._call_pdb
1154 1154
1155 1155 def _set_call_pdb(self,val):
1156 1156
1157 1157 if val not in (0,1,False,True):
1158 1158 raise ValueError('new call_pdb value must be boolean')
1159 1159
1160 1160 # store value in instance
1161 1161 self._call_pdb = val
1162 1162
1163 1163 # notify the actual exception handlers
1164 1164 self.InteractiveTB.call_pdb = val
1165 1165
1166 1166 call_pdb = property(_get_call_pdb,_set_call_pdb,None,
1167 1167 'Control auto-activation of pdb at exceptions')
1168 1168
1169 1169 def debugger(self,force=False):
1170 1170 """Call the pdb debugger.
1171 1171
1172 1172 Keywords:
1173 1173
1174 1174 - force(False): by default, this routine checks the instance call_pdb
1175 1175 flag and does not actually invoke the debugger if the flag is false.
1176 1176 The 'force' option forces the debugger to activate even if the flag
1177 1177 is false.
1178 1178 """
1179 1179
1180 1180 if not (force or self.call_pdb):
1181 1181 return
1182 1182
1183 1183 if not hasattr(sys,'last_traceback'):
1184 1184 error('No traceback has been produced, nothing to debug.')
1185 1185 return
1186 1186
1187 1187 self.InteractiveTB.debugger(force=True)
1188 1188
1189 1189 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
1190 1190 # Things related to IPython's various namespaces
1191 1191 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
1192 1192 default_user_namespaces = True
1193 1193
1194 1194 def init_create_namespaces(self, user_module=None, user_ns=None):
1195 1195 # Create the namespace where the user will operate. user_ns is
1196 1196 # normally the only one used, and it is passed to the exec calls as
1197 1197 # the locals argument. But we do carry a user_global_ns namespace
1198 1198 # given as the exec 'globals' argument, This is useful in embedding
1199 1199 # situations where the ipython shell opens in a context where the
1200 1200 # distinction between locals and globals is meaningful. For
1201 1201 # non-embedded contexts, it is just the same object as the user_ns dict.
1202 1202
1203 1203 # FIXME. For some strange reason, __builtins__ is showing up at user
1204 1204 # level as a dict instead of a module. This is a manual fix, but I
1205 1205 # should really track down where the problem is coming from. Alex
1206 1206 # Schmolck reported this problem first.
1207 1207
1208 1208 # A useful post by Alex Martelli on this topic:
1209 1209 # Re: inconsistent value from __builtins__
1210 1210 # Von: Alex Martelli <aleaxit@yahoo.com>
1211 1211 # Datum: Freitag 01 Oktober 2004 04:45:34 nachmittags/abends
1212 1212 # Gruppen: comp.lang.python
1213 1213
1214 1214 # Michael Hohn <hohn@hooknose.lbl.gov> wrote:
1215 1215 # > >>> print type(builtin_check.get_global_binding('__builtins__'))
1216 1216 # > <type 'dict'>
1217 1217 # > >>> print type(__builtins__)
1218 1218 # > <type 'module'>
1219 1219 # > Is this difference in return value intentional?
1220 1220
1221 1221 # Well, it's documented that '__builtins__' can be either a dictionary
1222 1222 # or a module, and it's been that way for a long time. Whether it's
1223 1223 # intentional (or sensible), I don't know. In any case, the idea is
1224 1224 # that if you need to access the built-in namespace directly, you
1225 1225 # should start with "import __builtin__" (note, no 's') which will
1226 1226 # definitely give you a module. Yeah, it's somewhat confusing:-(.
1227 1227
1228 1228 # These routines return a properly built module and dict as needed by
1229 1229 # the rest of the code, and can also be used by extension writers to
1230 1230 # generate properly initialized namespaces.
1231 1231 if (user_ns is not None) or (user_module is not None):
1232 1232 self.default_user_namespaces = False
1233 1233 self.user_module, self.user_ns = self.prepare_user_module(user_module, user_ns)
1234 1234
1235 1235 # A record of hidden variables we have added to the user namespace, so
1236 1236 # we can list later only variables defined in actual interactive use.
1237 1237 self.user_ns_hidden = {}
1238 1238
1239 1239 # Now that FakeModule produces a real module, we've run into a nasty
1240 1240 # problem: after script execution (via %run), the module where the user
1241 1241 # code ran is deleted. Now that this object is a true module (needed
1242 1242 # so doctest and other tools work correctly), the Python module
1243 1243 # teardown mechanism runs over it, and sets to None every variable
1244 1244 # present in that module. Top-level references to objects from the
1245 1245 # script survive, because the user_ns is updated with them. However,
1246 1246 # calling functions defined in the script that use other things from
1247 1247 # the script will fail, because the function's closure had references
1248 1248 # to the original objects, which are now all None. So we must protect
1249 1249 # these modules from deletion by keeping a cache.
1250 1250 #
1251 1251 # To avoid keeping stale modules around (we only need the one from the
1252 1252 # last run), we use a dict keyed with the full path to the script, so
1253 1253 # only the last version of the module is held in the cache. Note,
1254 1254 # however, that we must cache the module *namespace contents* (their
1255 1255 # __dict__). Because if we try to cache the actual modules, old ones
1256 1256 # (uncached) could be destroyed while still holding references (such as
1257 1257 # those held by GUI objects that tend to be long-lived)>
1258 1258 #
1259 1259 # The %reset command will flush this cache. See the cache_main_mod()
1260 1260 # and clear_main_mod_cache() methods for details on use.
1261 1261
1262 1262 # This is the cache used for 'main' namespaces
1263 1263 self._main_mod_cache = {}
1264 1264
1265 1265 # A table holding all the namespaces IPython deals with, so that
1266 1266 # introspection facilities can search easily.
1267 1267 self.ns_table = {'user_global':self.user_module.__dict__,
1268 1268 'user_local':self.user_ns,
1269 1269 'builtin':builtin_mod.__dict__
1270 1270 }
1271 1271
1272 1272 @property
1273 1273 def user_global_ns(self):
1274 1274 return self.user_module.__dict__
1275 1275
1276 1276 def prepare_user_module(self, user_module=None, user_ns=None):
1277 1277 """Prepare the module and namespace in which user code will be run.
1278 1278
1279 1279 When IPython is started normally, both parameters are None: a new module
1280 1280 is created automatically, and its __dict__ used as the namespace.
1281 1281
1282 1282 If only user_module is provided, its __dict__ is used as the namespace.
1283 1283 If only user_ns is provided, a dummy module is created, and user_ns
1284 1284 becomes the global namespace. If both are provided (as they may be
1285 1285 when embedding), user_ns is the local namespace, and user_module
1286 1286 provides the global namespace.
1287 1287
1288 1288 Parameters
1289 1289 ----------
1290 1290 user_module : module, optional
1291 1291 The current user module in which IPython is being run. If None,
1292 1292 a clean module will be created.
1293 1293 user_ns : dict, optional
1294 1294 A namespace in which to run interactive commands.
1295 1295
1296 1296 Returns
1297 1297 -------
1298 1298 A tuple of user_module and user_ns, each properly initialised.
1299 1299 """
1300 1300 if user_module is None and user_ns is not None:
1301 1301 user_ns.setdefault("__name__", "__main__")
1302 1302 user_module = DummyMod()
1303 1303 user_module.__dict__ = user_ns
1304 1304
1305 1305 if user_module is None:
1306 1306 user_module = types.ModuleType("__main__",
1307 1307 doc="Automatically created module for IPython interactive environment")
1308 1308
1309 1309 # We must ensure that __builtin__ (without the final 's') is always
1310 1310 # available and pointing to the __builtin__ *module*. For more details:
1311 1311 # http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2001-April/014068.html
1312 1312 user_module.__dict__.setdefault('__builtin__', builtin_mod)
1313 1313 user_module.__dict__.setdefault('__builtins__', builtin_mod)
1314 1314
1315 1315 if user_ns is None:
1316 1316 user_ns = user_module.__dict__
1317 1317
1318 1318 return user_module, user_ns
1319 1319
1320 1320 def init_sys_modules(self):
1321 1321 # We need to insert into sys.modules something that looks like a
1322 1322 # module but which accesses the IPython namespace, for shelve and
1323 1323 # pickle to work interactively. Normally they rely on getting
1324 1324 # everything out of __main__, but for embedding purposes each IPython
1325 1325 # instance has its own private namespace, so we can't go shoving
1326 1326 # everything into __main__.
1327 1327
1328 1328 # note, however, that we should only do this for non-embedded
1329 1329 # ipythons, which really mimic the __main__.__dict__ with their own
1330 1330 # namespace. Embedded instances, on the other hand, should not do
1331 1331 # this because they need to manage the user local/global namespaces
1332 1332 # only, but they live within a 'normal' __main__ (meaning, they
1333 1333 # shouldn't overtake the execution environment of the script they're
1334 1334 # embedded in).
1335 1335
1336 1336 # This is overridden in the InteractiveShellEmbed subclass to a no-op.
1337 1337 main_name = self.user_module.__name__
1338 1338 sys.modules[main_name] = self.user_module
1339 1339
1340 1340 def init_user_ns(self):
1341 1341 """Initialize all user-visible namespaces to their minimum defaults.
1342 1342
1343 1343 Certain history lists are also initialized here, as they effectively
1344 1344 act as user namespaces.
1345 1345
1346 1346 Notes
1347 1347 -----
1348 1348 All data structures here are only filled in, they are NOT reset by this
1349 1349 method. If they were not empty before, data will simply be added to
1350 1350 them.
1351 1351 """
1352 1352 # This function works in two parts: first we put a few things in
1353 1353 # user_ns, and we sync that contents into user_ns_hidden so that these
1354 1354 # initial variables aren't shown by %who. After the sync, we add the
1355 1355 # rest of what we *do* want the user to see with %who even on a new
1356 1356 # session (probably nothing, so they really only see their own stuff)
1357 1357
1358 1358 # The user dict must *always* have a __builtin__ reference to the
1359 1359 # Python standard __builtin__ namespace, which must be imported.
1360 1360 # This is so that certain operations in prompt evaluation can be
1361 1361 # reliably executed with builtins. Note that we can NOT use
1362 1362 # __builtins__ (note the 's'), because that can either be a dict or a
1363 1363 # module, and can even mutate at runtime, depending on the context
1364 1364 # (Python makes no guarantees on it). In contrast, __builtin__ is
1365 1365 # always a module object, though it must be explicitly imported.
1366 1366
1367 1367 # For more details:
1368 1368 # http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2001-April/014068.html
1369 1369 ns = {}
1370 1370
1371 1371 # make global variables for user access to the histories
1372 1372 ns['_ih'] = self.history_manager.input_hist_parsed
1373 1373 ns['_oh'] = self.history_manager.output_hist
1374 1374 ns['_dh'] = self.history_manager.dir_hist
1375 1375
1376 1376 # user aliases to input and output histories. These shouldn't show up
1377 1377 # in %who, as they can have very large reprs.
1378 1378 ns['In'] = self.history_manager.input_hist_parsed
1379 1379 ns['Out'] = self.history_manager.output_hist
1380 1380
1381 1381 # Store myself as the public api!!!
1382 1382 ns['get_ipython'] = self.get_ipython
1383 1383
1384 1384 ns['exit'] = self.exiter
1385 1385 ns['quit'] = self.exiter
1386 1386
1387 1387 # Sync what we've added so far to user_ns_hidden so these aren't seen
1388 1388 # by %who
1389 1389 self.user_ns_hidden.update(ns)
1390 1390
1391 1391 # Anything put into ns now would show up in %who. Think twice before
1392 1392 # putting anything here, as we really want %who to show the user their
1393 1393 # stuff, not our variables.
1394 1394
1395 1395 # Finally, update the real user's namespace
1396 1396 self.user_ns.update(ns)
1397 1397
1398 1398 @property
1399 1399 def all_ns_refs(self):
1400 1400 """Get a list of references to all the namespace dictionaries in which
1401 1401 IPython might store a user-created object.
1402 1402
1403 1403 Note that this does not include the displayhook, which also caches
1404 1404 objects from the output."""
1405 1405 return [self.user_ns, self.user_global_ns, self.user_ns_hidden] + \
1406 1406 [m.__dict__ for m in self._main_mod_cache.values()]
1407 1407
1408 1408 def reset(self, new_session=True):
1409 1409 """Clear all internal namespaces, and attempt to release references to
1410 1410 user objects.
1411 1411
1412 1412 If new_session is True, a new history session will be opened.
1413 1413 """
1414 1414 # Clear histories
1415 1415 self.history_manager.reset(new_session)
1416 1416 # Reset counter used to index all histories
1417 1417 if new_session:
1418 1418 self.execution_count = 1
1419 1419
1420 1420 # Reset last execution result
1421 1421 self.last_execution_succeeded = True
1422 1422 self.last_execution_result = None
1423 1423
1424 1424 # Flush cached output items
1425 1425 if self.displayhook.do_full_cache:
1426 1426 self.displayhook.flush()
1427 1427
1428 1428 # The main execution namespaces must be cleared very carefully,
1429 1429 # skipping the deletion of the builtin-related keys, because doing so
1430 1430 # would cause errors in many object's __del__ methods.
1431 1431 if self.user_ns is not self.user_global_ns:
1432 1432 self.user_ns.clear()
1433 1433 ns = self.user_global_ns
1434 1434 drop_keys = set(ns.keys())
1435 1435 drop_keys.discard('__builtin__')
1436 1436 drop_keys.discard('__builtins__')
1437 1437 drop_keys.discard('__name__')
1438 1438 for k in drop_keys:
1439 1439 del ns[k]
1440 1440
1441 1441 self.user_ns_hidden.clear()
1442 1442
1443 1443 # Restore the user namespaces to minimal usability
1444 1444 self.init_user_ns()
1445 1445
1446 1446 # Restore the default and user aliases
1447 1447 self.alias_manager.clear_aliases()
1448 1448 self.alias_manager.init_aliases()
1449 1449
1450 1450 # Now define aliases that only make sense on the terminal, because they
1451 1451 # need direct access to the console in a way that we can't emulate in
1452 1452 # GUI or web frontend
1453 1453 if os.name == 'posix':
1454 1454 for cmd in ('clear', 'more', 'less', 'man'):
1455 1455 self.alias_manager.soft_define_alias(cmd, cmd)
1456 1456
1457 1457 # Flush the private list of module references kept for script
1458 1458 # execution protection
1459 1459 self.clear_main_mod_cache()
1460 1460
1461 1461 def del_var(self, varname, by_name=False):
1462 1462 """Delete a variable from the various namespaces, so that, as
1463 1463 far as possible, we're not keeping any hidden references to it.
1464 1464
1465 1465 Parameters
1466 1466 ----------
1467 1467 varname : str
1468 1468 The name of the variable to delete.
1469 1469 by_name : bool
1470 1470 If True, delete variables with the given name in each
1471 1471 namespace. If False (default), find the variable in the user
1472 1472 namespace, and delete references to it.
1473 1473 """
1474 1474 if varname in ('__builtin__', '__builtins__'):
1475 1475 raise ValueError("Refusing to delete %s" % varname)
1476 1476
1477 1477 ns_refs = self.all_ns_refs
1478 1478
1479 1479 if by_name: # Delete by name
1480 1480 for ns in ns_refs:
1481 1481 try:
1482 1482 del ns[varname]
1483 1483 except KeyError:
1484 1484 pass
1485 1485 else: # Delete by object
1486 1486 try:
1487 1487 obj = self.user_ns[varname]
1488 1488 except KeyError:
1489 1489 raise NameError("name '%s' is not defined" % varname)
1490 1490 # Also check in output history
1491 1491 ns_refs.append(self.history_manager.output_hist)
1492 1492 for ns in ns_refs:
1493 1493 to_delete = [n for n, o in ns.items() if o is obj]
1494 1494 for name in to_delete:
1495 1495 del ns[name]
1496 1496
1497 1497 # Ensure it is removed from the last execution result
1498 1498 if self.last_execution_result.result is obj:
1499 1499 self.last_execution_result = None
1500 1500
1501 1501 # displayhook keeps extra references, but not in a dictionary
1502 1502 for name in ('_', '__', '___'):
1503 1503 if getattr(self.displayhook, name) is obj:
1504 1504 setattr(self.displayhook, name, None)
1505 1505
1506 1506 def reset_selective(self, regex=None):
1507 1507 """Clear selective variables from internal namespaces based on a
1508 1508 specified regular expression.
1509 1509
1510 1510 Parameters
1511 1511 ----------
1512 1512 regex : string or compiled pattern, optional
1513 1513 A regular expression pattern that will be used in searching
1514 1514 variable names in the users namespaces.
1515 1515 """
1516 1516 if regex is not None:
1517 1517 try:
1518 1518 m = re.compile(regex)
1519 1519 except TypeError:
1520 1520 raise TypeError('regex must be a string or compiled pattern')
1521 1521 # Search for keys in each namespace that match the given regex
1522 1522 # If a match is found, delete the key/value pair.
1523 1523 for ns in self.all_ns_refs:
1524 1524 for var in ns:
1525 1525 if m.search(var):
1526 1526 del ns[var]
1527 1527
1528 1528 def push(self, variables, interactive=True):
1529 1529 """Inject a group of variables into the IPython user namespace.
1530 1530
1531 1531 Parameters
1532 1532 ----------
1533 1533 variables : dict, str or list/tuple of str
1534 1534 The variables to inject into the user's namespace. If a dict, a
1535 1535 simple update is done. If a str, the string is assumed to have
1536 1536 variable names separated by spaces. A list/tuple of str can also
1537 1537 be used to give the variable names. If just the variable names are
1538 1538 give (list/tuple/str) then the variable values looked up in the
1539 1539 callers frame.
1540 1540 interactive : bool
1541 1541 If True (default), the variables will be listed with the ``who``
1542 1542 magic.
1543 1543 """
1544 1544 vdict = None
1545 1545
1546 1546 # We need a dict of name/value pairs to do namespace updates.
1547 1547 if isinstance(variables, dict):
1548 1548 vdict = variables
1549 1549 elif isinstance(variables, (str, list, tuple)):
1550 1550 if isinstance(variables, str):
1551 1551 vlist = variables.split()
1552 1552 else:
1553 1553 vlist = variables
1554 1554 vdict = {}
1555 1555 cf = sys._getframe(1)
1556 1556 for name in vlist:
1557 1557 try:
1558 1558 vdict[name] = eval(name, cf.f_globals, cf.f_locals)
1559 1559 except:
1560 1560 print('Could not get variable %s from %s' %
1561 1561 (name,cf.f_code.co_name))
1562 1562 else:
1563 1563 raise ValueError('variables must be a dict/str/list/tuple')
1564 1564
1565 1565 # Propagate variables to user namespace
1566 1566 self.user_ns.update(vdict)
1567 1567
1568 1568 # And configure interactive visibility
1569 1569 user_ns_hidden = self.user_ns_hidden
1570 1570 if interactive:
1571 1571 for name in vdict:
1572 1572 user_ns_hidden.pop(name, None)
1573 1573 else:
1574 1574 user_ns_hidden.update(vdict)
1575 1575
1576 1576 def drop_by_id(self, variables):
1577 1577 """Remove a dict of variables from the user namespace, if they are the
1578 1578 same as the values in the dictionary.
1579 1579
1580 1580 This is intended for use by extensions: variables that they've added can
1581 1581 be taken back out if they are unloaded, without removing any that the
1582 1582 user has overwritten.
1583 1583
1584 1584 Parameters
1585 1585 ----------
1586 1586 variables : dict
1587 1587 A dictionary mapping object names (as strings) to the objects.
1588 1588 """
1589 1589 for name, obj in variables.items():
1590 1590 if name in self.user_ns and self.user_ns[name] is obj:
1591 1591 del self.user_ns[name]
1592 1592 self.user_ns_hidden.pop(name, None)
1593 1593
1594 1594 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
1595 1595 # Things related to object introspection
1596 1596 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
1597 1597
1598 1598 def _ofind(self, oname, namespaces=None):
1599 1599 """Find an object in the available namespaces.
1600 1600
1601 1601 self._ofind(oname) -> dict with keys: found,obj,ospace,ismagic
1602 1602
1603 1603 Has special code to detect magic functions.
1604 1604 """
1605 1605 oname = oname.strip()
1606 1606 if not oname.startswith(ESC_MAGIC) and \
1607 1607 not oname.startswith(ESC_MAGIC2) and \
1608 1608 not all(a.isidentifier() for a in oname.split(".")):
1609 1609 return {'found': False}
1610 1610
1611 1611 if namespaces is None:
1612 1612 # Namespaces to search in:
1613 1613 # Put them in a list. The order is important so that we
1614 1614 # find things in the same order that Python finds them.
1615 1615 namespaces = [ ('Interactive', self.user_ns),
1616 1616 ('Interactive (global)', self.user_global_ns),
1617 1617 ('Python builtin', builtin_mod.__dict__),
1618 1618 ]
1619 1619
1620 1620 ismagic = False
1621 1621 isalias = False
1622 1622 found = False
1623 1623 ospace = None
1624 1624 parent = None
1625 1625 obj = None
1626 1626
1627 1627
1628 1628 # Look for the given name by splitting it in parts. If the head is
1629 1629 # found, then we look for all the remaining parts as members, and only
1630 1630 # declare success if we can find them all.
1631 1631 oname_parts = oname.split('.')
1632 1632 oname_head, oname_rest = oname_parts[0],oname_parts[1:]
1633 1633 for nsname,ns in namespaces:
1634 1634 try:
1635 1635 obj = ns[oname_head]
1636 1636 except KeyError:
1637 1637 continue
1638 1638 else:
1639 1639 for idx, part in enumerate(oname_rest):
1640 1640 try:
1641 1641 parent = obj
1642 1642 # The last part is looked up in a special way to avoid
1643 1643 # descriptor invocation as it may raise or have side
1644 1644 # effects.
1645 1645 if idx == len(oname_rest) - 1:
1646 1646 obj = self._getattr_property(obj, part)
1647 1647 else:
1648 1648 obj = getattr(obj, part)
1649 1649 except:
1650 1650 # Blanket except b/c some badly implemented objects
1651 1651 # allow __getattr__ to raise exceptions other than
1652 1652 # AttributeError, which then crashes IPython.
1653 1653 break
1654 1654 else:
1655 1655 # If we finish the for loop (no break), we got all members
1656 1656 found = True
1657 1657 ospace = nsname
1658 1658 break # namespace loop
1659 1659
1660 1660 # Try to see if it's magic
1661 1661 if not found:
1662 1662 obj = None
1663 1663 if oname.startswith(ESC_MAGIC2):
1664 1664 oname = oname.lstrip(ESC_MAGIC2)
1665 1665 obj = self.find_cell_magic(oname)
1666 1666 elif oname.startswith(ESC_MAGIC):
1667 1667 oname = oname.lstrip(ESC_MAGIC)
1668 1668 obj = self.find_line_magic(oname)
1669 1669 else:
1670 1670 # search without prefix, so run? will find %run?
1671 1671 obj = self.find_line_magic(oname)
1672 1672 if obj is None:
1673 1673 obj = self.find_cell_magic(oname)
1674 1674 if obj is not None:
1675 1675 found = True
1676 1676 ospace = 'IPython internal'
1677 1677 ismagic = True
1678 1678 isalias = isinstance(obj, Alias)
1679 1679
1680 1680 # Last try: special-case some literals like '', [], {}, etc:
1681 1681 if not found and oname_head in ["''",'""','[]','{}','()']:
1682 1682 obj = eval(oname_head)
1683 1683 found = True
1684 1684 ospace = 'Interactive'
1685 1685
1686 1686 return {
1687 1687 'obj':obj,
1688 1688 'found':found,
1689 1689 'parent':parent,
1690 1690 'ismagic':ismagic,
1691 1691 'isalias':isalias,
1692 1692 'namespace':ospace
1693 1693 }
1694 1694
1695 1695 @staticmethod
1696 1696 def _getattr_property(obj, attrname):
1697 1697 """Property-aware getattr to use in object finding.
1698 1698
1699 1699 If attrname represents a property, return it unevaluated (in case it has
1700 1700 side effects or raises an error.
1701 1701
1702 1702 """
1703 1703 if not isinstance(obj, type):
1704 1704 try:
1705 1705 # `getattr(type(obj), attrname)` is not guaranteed to return
1706 1706 # `obj`, but does so for property:
1707 1707 #
1708 1708 # property.__get__(self, None, cls) -> self
1709 1709 #
1710 1710 # The universal alternative is to traverse the mro manually
1711 1711 # searching for attrname in class dicts.
1712 1712 attr = getattr(type(obj), attrname)
1713 1713 except AttributeError:
1714 1714 pass
1715 1715 else:
1716 1716 # This relies on the fact that data descriptors (with both
1717 1717 # __get__ & __set__ magic methods) take precedence over
1718 1718 # instance-level attributes:
1719 1719 #
1720 1720 # class A(object):
1721 1721 # @property
1722 1722 # def foobar(self): return 123
1723 1723 # a = A()
1724 1724 # a.__dict__['foobar'] = 345
1725 1725 # a.foobar # == 123
1726 1726 #
1727 1727 # So, a property may be returned right away.
1728 1728 if isinstance(attr, property):
1729 1729 return attr
1730 1730
1731 1731 # Nothing helped, fall back.
1732 1732 return getattr(obj, attrname)
1733 1733
1734 1734 def _object_find(self, oname, namespaces=None):
1735 1735 """Find an object and return a struct with info about it."""
1736 1736 return Struct(self._ofind(oname, namespaces))
1737 1737
1738 1738 def _inspect(self, meth, oname, namespaces=None, **kw):
1739 1739 """Generic interface to the inspector system.
1740 1740
1741 1741 This function is meant to be called by pdef, pdoc & friends.
1742 1742 """
1743 1743 info = self._object_find(oname, namespaces)
1744 1744 docformat = sphinxify if self.sphinxify_docstring else None
1745 1745 if info.found:
1746 1746 pmethod = getattr(self.inspector, meth)
1747 1747 # TODO: only apply format_screen to the plain/text repr of the mime
1748 1748 # bundle.
1749 1749 formatter = format_screen if info.ismagic else docformat
1750 1750 if meth == 'pdoc':
1751 1751 pmethod(info.obj, oname, formatter)
1752 1752 elif meth == 'pinfo':
1753 1753 pmethod(info.obj, oname, formatter, info,
1754 1754 enable_html_pager=self.enable_html_pager, **kw)
1755 1755 else:
1756 1756 pmethod(info.obj, oname)
1757 1757 else:
1758 1758 print('Object `%s` not found.' % oname)
1759 1759 return 'not found' # so callers can take other action
1760 1760
1761 1761 def object_inspect(self, oname, detail_level=0):
1762 1762 """Get object info about oname"""
1763 1763 with self.builtin_trap:
1764 1764 info = self._object_find(oname)
1765 1765 if info.found:
1766 1766 return self.inspector.info(info.obj, oname, info=info,
1767 1767 detail_level=detail_level
1768 1768 )
1769 1769 else:
1770 1770 return oinspect.object_info(name=oname, found=False)
1771 1771
1772 1772 def object_inspect_text(self, oname, detail_level=0):
1773 1773 """Get object info as formatted text"""
1774 1774 return self.object_inspect_mime(oname, detail_level)['text/plain']
1775 1775
1776 1776 def object_inspect_mime(self, oname, detail_level=0):
1777 1777 """Get object info as a mimebundle of formatted representations.
1778 1778
1779 1779 A mimebundle is a dictionary, keyed by mime-type.
1780 1780 It must always have the key `'text/plain'`.
1781 1781 """
1782 1782 with self.builtin_trap:
1783 1783 info = self._object_find(oname)
1784 1784 if info.found:
1785 1785 return self.inspector._get_info(info.obj, oname, info=info,
1786 1786 detail_level=detail_level
1787 1787 )
1788 1788 else:
1789 1789 raise KeyError(oname)
1790 1790
1791 1791 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
1792 1792 # Things related to history management
1793 1793 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
1794 1794
1795 1795 def init_history(self):
1796 1796 """Sets up the command history, and starts regular autosaves."""
1797 1797 self.history_manager = HistoryManager(shell=self, parent=self)
1798 1798 self.configurables.append(self.history_manager)
1799 1799
1800 1800 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
1801 1801 # Things related to exception handling and tracebacks (not debugging)
1802 1802 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
1803 1803
1804 1804 debugger_cls = Pdb
1805 1805
1806 1806 def init_traceback_handlers(self, custom_exceptions):
1807 1807 # Syntax error handler.
1808 1808 self.SyntaxTB = ultratb.SyntaxTB(color_scheme='NoColor', parent=self)
1809 1809
1810 1810 # The interactive one is initialized with an offset, meaning we always
1811 1811 # want to remove the topmost item in the traceback, which is our own
1812 1812 # internal code. Valid modes: ['Plain','Context','Verbose','Minimal']
1813 1813 self.InteractiveTB = ultratb.AutoFormattedTB(mode = 'Plain',
1814 1814 color_scheme='NoColor',
1815 1815 tb_offset = 1,
1816 1816 check_cache=check_linecache_ipython,
1817 1817 debugger_cls=self.debugger_cls, parent=self)
1818 1818
1819 1819 # The instance will store a pointer to the system-wide exception hook,
1820 1820 # so that runtime code (such as magics) can access it. This is because
1821 1821 # during the read-eval loop, it may get temporarily overwritten.
1822 1822 self.sys_excepthook = sys.excepthook
1823 1823
1824 1824 # and add any custom exception handlers the user may have specified
1825 1825 self.set_custom_exc(*custom_exceptions)
1826 1826
1827 1827 # Set the exception mode
1828 1828 self.InteractiveTB.set_mode(mode=self.xmode)
1829 1829
1830 1830 def set_custom_exc(self, exc_tuple, handler):
1831 1831 """set_custom_exc(exc_tuple, handler)
1832 1832
1833 1833 Set a custom exception handler, which will be called if any of the
1834 1834 exceptions in exc_tuple occur in the mainloop (specifically, in the
1835 1835 run_code() method).
1836 1836
1837 1837 Parameters
1838 1838 ----------
1839 1839
1840 1840 exc_tuple : tuple of exception classes
1841 1841 A *tuple* of exception classes, for which to call the defined
1842 1842 handler. It is very important that you use a tuple, and NOT A
1843 1843 LIST here, because of the way Python's except statement works. If
1844 1844 you only want to trap a single exception, use a singleton tuple::
1845 1845
1846 1846 exc_tuple == (MyCustomException,)
1847 1847
1848 1848 handler : callable
1849 1849 handler must have the following signature::
1850 1850
1851 1851 def my_handler(self, etype, value, tb, tb_offset=None):
1852 1852 ...
1853 1853 return structured_traceback
1854 1854
1855 1855 Your handler must return a structured traceback (a list of strings),
1856 1856 or None.
1857 1857
1858 1858 This will be made into an instance method (via types.MethodType)
1859 1859 of IPython itself, and it will be called if any of the exceptions
1860 1860 listed in the exc_tuple are caught. If the handler is None, an
1861 1861 internal basic one is used, which just prints basic info.
1862 1862
1863 1863 To protect IPython from crashes, if your handler ever raises an
1864 1864 exception or returns an invalid result, it will be immediately
1865 1865 disabled.
1866 1866
1867 1867 WARNING: by putting in your own exception handler into IPython's main
1868 1868 execution loop, you run a very good chance of nasty crashes. This
1869 1869 facility should only be used if you really know what you are doing."""
1870 1870 if not isinstance(exc_tuple, tuple):
1871 1871 raise TypeError("The custom exceptions must be given as a tuple.")
1872 1872
1873 1873 def dummy_handler(self, etype, value, tb, tb_offset=None):
1874 1874 print('*** Simple custom exception handler ***')
1875 1875 print('Exception type :', etype)
1876 1876 print('Exception value:', value)
1877 1877 print('Traceback :', tb)
1878 1878
1879 1879 def validate_stb(stb):
1880 1880 """validate structured traceback return type
1881 1881
1882 1882 return type of CustomTB *should* be a list of strings, but allow
1883 1883 single strings or None, which are harmless.
1884 1884
1885 1885 This function will *always* return a list of strings,
1886 1886 and will raise a TypeError if stb is inappropriate.
1887 1887 """
1888 1888 msg = "CustomTB must return list of strings, not %r" % stb
1889 1889 if stb is None:
1890 1890 return []
1891 1891 elif isinstance(stb, str):
1892 1892 return [stb]
1893 1893 elif not isinstance(stb, list):
1894 1894 raise TypeError(msg)
1895 1895 # it's a list
1896 1896 for line in stb:
1897 1897 # check every element
1898 1898 if not isinstance(line, str):
1899 1899 raise TypeError(msg)
1900 1900 return stb
1901 1901
1902 1902 if handler is None:
1903 1903 wrapped = dummy_handler
1904 1904 else:
1905 1905 def wrapped(self,etype,value,tb,tb_offset=None):
1906 1906 """wrap CustomTB handler, to protect IPython from user code
1907 1907
1908 1908 This makes it harder (but not impossible) for custom exception
1909 1909 handlers to crash IPython.
1910 1910 """
1911 1911 try:
1912 1912 stb = handler(self,etype,value,tb,tb_offset=tb_offset)
1913 1913 return validate_stb(stb)
1914 1914 except:
1915 1915 # clear custom handler immediately
1916 1916 self.set_custom_exc((), None)
1917 1917 print("Custom TB Handler failed, unregistering", file=sys.stderr)
1918 1918 # show the exception in handler first
1919 1919 stb = self.InteractiveTB.structured_traceback(*sys.exc_info())
1920 1920 print(self.InteractiveTB.stb2text(stb))
1921 1921 print("The original exception:")
1922 1922 stb = self.InteractiveTB.structured_traceback(
1923 1923 (etype,value,tb), tb_offset=tb_offset
1924 1924 )
1925 1925 return stb
1926 1926
1927 1927 self.CustomTB = types.MethodType(wrapped,self)
1928 1928 self.custom_exceptions = exc_tuple
1929 1929
1930 1930 def excepthook(self, etype, value, tb):
1931 1931 """One more defense for GUI apps that call sys.excepthook.
1932 1932
1933 1933 GUI frameworks like wxPython trap exceptions and call
1934 1934 sys.excepthook themselves. I guess this is a feature that
1935 1935 enables them to keep running after exceptions that would
1936 1936 otherwise kill their mainloop. This is a bother for IPython
1937 1937 which excepts to catch all of the program exceptions with a try:
1938 1938 except: statement.
1939 1939
1940 1940 Normally, IPython sets sys.excepthook to a CrashHandler instance, so if
1941 1941 any app directly invokes sys.excepthook, it will look to the user like
1942 1942 IPython crashed. In order to work around this, we can disable the
1943 1943 CrashHandler and replace it with this excepthook instead, which prints a
1944 1944 regular traceback using our InteractiveTB. In this fashion, apps which
1945 1945 call sys.excepthook will generate a regular-looking exception from
1946 1946 IPython, and the CrashHandler will only be triggered by real IPython
1947 1947 crashes.
1948 1948
1949 1949 This hook should be used sparingly, only in places which are not likely
1950 1950 to be true IPython errors.
1951 1951 """
1952 1952 self.showtraceback((etype, value, tb), tb_offset=0)
1953 1953
1954 1954 def _get_exc_info(self, exc_tuple=None):
1955 1955 """get exc_info from a given tuple, sys.exc_info() or sys.last_type etc.
1956 1956
1957 1957 Ensures sys.last_type,value,traceback hold the exc_info we found,
1958 1958 from whichever source.
1959 1959
1960 1960 raises ValueError if none of these contain any information
1961 1961 """
1962 1962 if exc_tuple is None:
1963 1963 etype, value, tb = sys.exc_info()
1964 1964 else:
1965 1965 etype, value, tb = exc_tuple
1966 1966
1967 1967 if etype is None:
1968 1968 if hasattr(sys, 'last_type'):
1969 1969 etype, value, tb = sys.last_type, sys.last_value, \
1970 1970 sys.last_traceback
1971 1971
1972 1972 if etype is None:
1973 1973 raise ValueError("No exception to find")
1974 1974
1975 1975 # Now store the exception info in sys.last_type etc.
1976 1976 # WARNING: these variables are somewhat deprecated and not
1977 1977 # necessarily safe to use in a threaded environment, but tools
1978 1978 # like pdb depend on their existence, so let's set them. If we
1979 1979 # find problems in the field, we'll need to revisit their use.
1980 1980 sys.last_type = etype
1981 1981 sys.last_value = value
1982 1982 sys.last_traceback = tb
1983 1983
1984 1984 return etype, value, tb
1985 1985
1986 1986 def show_usage_error(self, exc):
1987 1987 """Show a short message for UsageErrors
1988 1988
1989 1989 These are special exceptions that shouldn't show a traceback.
1990 1990 """
1991 1991 print("UsageError: %s" % exc, file=sys.stderr)
1992 1992
1993 1993 def get_exception_only(self, exc_tuple=None):
1994 1994 """
1995 1995 Return as a string (ending with a newline) the exception that
1996 1996 just occurred, without any traceback.
1997 1997 """
1998 1998 etype, value, tb = self._get_exc_info(exc_tuple)
1999 1999 msg = traceback.format_exception_only(etype, value)
2000 2000 return ''.join(msg)
2001 2001
2002 2002 def showtraceback(self, exc_tuple=None, filename=None, tb_offset=None,
2003 2003 exception_only=False, running_compiled_code=False):
2004 2004 """Display the exception that just occurred.
2005 2005
2006 2006 If nothing is known about the exception, this is the method which
2007 2007 should be used throughout the code for presenting user tracebacks,
2008 2008 rather than directly invoking the InteractiveTB object.
2009 2009
2010 2010 A specific showsyntaxerror() also exists, but this method can take
2011 2011 care of calling it if needed, so unless you are explicitly catching a
2012 2012 SyntaxError exception, don't try to analyze the stack manually and
2013 2013 simply call this method."""
2014 2014
2015 2015 try:
2016 2016 try:
2017 2017 etype, value, tb = self._get_exc_info(exc_tuple)
2018 2018 except ValueError:
2019 2019 print('No traceback available to show.', file=sys.stderr)
2020 2020 return
2021 2021
2022 2022 if issubclass(etype, SyntaxError):
2023 2023 # Though this won't be called by syntax errors in the input
2024 2024 # line, there may be SyntaxError cases with imported code.
2025 2025 self.showsyntaxerror(filename, running_compiled_code)
2026 2026 elif etype is UsageError:
2027 2027 self.show_usage_error(value)
2028 2028 else:
2029 2029 if exception_only:
2030 2030 stb = ['An exception has occurred, use %tb to see '
2031 2031 'the full traceback.\n']
2032 2032 stb.extend(self.InteractiveTB.get_exception_only(etype,
2033 2033 value))
2034 2034 else:
2035 2035 try:
2036 2036 # Exception classes can customise their traceback - we
2037 2037 # use this in IPython.parallel for exceptions occurring
2038 2038 # in the engines. This should return a list of strings.
2039 2039 stb = value._render_traceback_()
2040 2040 except Exception:
2041 2041 stb = self.InteractiveTB.structured_traceback(etype,
2042 2042 value, tb, tb_offset=tb_offset)
2043 2043
2044 2044 self._showtraceback(etype, value, stb)
2045 2045 if self.call_pdb:
2046 2046 # drop into debugger
2047 2047 self.debugger(force=True)
2048 2048 return
2049 2049
2050 2050 # Actually show the traceback
2051 2051 self._showtraceback(etype, value, stb)
2052 2052
2053 2053 except KeyboardInterrupt:
2054 2054 print('\n' + self.get_exception_only(), file=sys.stderr)
2055 2055
2056 2056 def _showtraceback(self, etype, evalue, stb):
2057 2057 """Actually show a traceback.
2058 2058
2059 2059 Subclasses may override this method to put the traceback on a different
2060 2060 place, like a side channel.
2061 2061 """
2062 2062 print(self.InteractiveTB.stb2text(stb))
2063 2063
2064 2064 def showsyntaxerror(self, filename=None, running_compiled_code=False):
2065 2065 """Display the syntax error that just occurred.
2066 2066
2067 2067 This doesn't display a stack trace because there isn't one.
2068 2068
2069 2069 If a filename is given, it is stuffed in the exception instead
2070 2070 of what was there before (because Python's parser always uses
2071 2071 "<string>" when reading from a string).
2072 2072
2073 2073 If the syntax error occurred when running a compiled code (i.e. running_compile_code=True),
2074 2074 longer stack trace will be displayed.
2075 2075 """
2076 2076 etype, value, last_traceback = self._get_exc_info()
2077 2077
2078 2078 if filename and issubclass(etype, SyntaxError):
2079 2079 try:
2080 2080 value.filename = filename
2081 2081 except:
2082 2082 # Not the format we expect; leave it alone
2083 2083 pass
2084 2084
2085 2085 # If the error occurred when executing compiled code, we should provide full stacktrace.
2086 2086 elist = traceback.extract_tb(last_traceback) if running_compiled_code else []
2087 2087 stb = self.SyntaxTB.structured_traceback(etype, value, elist)
2088 2088 self._showtraceback(etype, value, stb)
2089 2089
2090 2090 # This is overridden in TerminalInteractiveShell to show a message about
2091 2091 # the %paste magic.
2092 2092 def showindentationerror(self):
2093 2093 """Called by _run_cell when there's an IndentationError in code entered
2094 2094 at the prompt.
2095 2095
2096 2096 This is overridden in TerminalInteractiveShell to show a message about
2097 2097 the %paste magic."""
2098 2098 self.showsyntaxerror()
2099 2099
2100 2100 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2101 2101 # Things related to readline
2102 2102 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2103 2103
2104 2104 def init_readline(self):
2105 2105 """DEPRECATED
2106 2106
2107 2107 Moved to terminal subclass, here only to simplify the init logic."""
2108 2108 # Set a number of methods that depend on readline to be no-op
2109 2109 warnings.warn('`init_readline` is no-op since IPython 5.0 and is Deprecated',
2110 2110 DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2)
2111 2111 self.set_custom_completer = no_op
2112 2112
2113 2113 @skip_doctest
2114 2114 def set_next_input(self, s, replace=False):
2115 2115 """ Sets the 'default' input string for the next command line.
2116 2116
2117 2117 Example::
2118 2118
2119 2119 In [1]: _ip.set_next_input("Hello Word")
2120 2120 In [2]: Hello Word_ # cursor is here
2121 2121 """
2122 2122 self.rl_next_input = s
2123 2123
2124 2124 def _indent_current_str(self):
2125 2125 """return the current level of indentation as a string"""
2126 2126 return self.input_splitter.get_indent_spaces() * ' '
2127 2127
2128 2128 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2129 2129 # Things related to text completion
2130 2130 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2131 2131
2132 2132 def init_completer(self):
2133 2133 """Initialize the completion machinery.
2134 2134
2135 2135 This creates completion machinery that can be used by client code,
2136 2136 either interactively in-process (typically triggered by the readline
2137 2137 library), programmatically (such as in test suites) or out-of-process
2138 2138 (typically over the network by remote frontends).
2139 2139 """
2140 2140 from IPython.core.completer import IPCompleter
2141 2141 from IPython.core.completerlib import (module_completer,
2142 2142 magic_run_completer, cd_completer, reset_completer)
2143 2143
2144 2144 self.Completer = IPCompleter(shell=self,
2145 2145 namespace=self.user_ns,
2146 2146 global_namespace=self.user_global_ns,
2147 2147 parent=self,
2148 2148 )
2149 2149 self.configurables.append(self.Completer)
2150 2150
2151 2151 # Add custom completers to the basic ones built into IPCompleter
2152 2152 sdisp = self.strdispatchers.get('complete_command', StrDispatch())
2153 2153 self.strdispatchers['complete_command'] = sdisp
2154 2154 self.Completer.custom_completers = sdisp
2155 2155
2156 2156 self.set_hook('complete_command', module_completer, str_key = 'import')
2157 2157 self.set_hook('complete_command', module_completer, str_key = 'from')
2158 2158 self.set_hook('complete_command', module_completer, str_key = '%aimport')
2159 2159 self.set_hook('complete_command', magic_run_completer, str_key = '%run')
2160 2160 self.set_hook('complete_command', cd_completer, str_key = '%cd')
2161 2161 self.set_hook('complete_command', reset_completer, str_key = '%reset')
2162 2162
2163 2163 @skip_doctest
2164 2164 def complete(self, text, line=None, cursor_pos=None):
2165 2165 """Return the completed text and a list of completions.
2166 2166
2167 2167 Parameters
2168 2168 ----------
2169 2169
2170 2170 text : string
2171 2171 A string of text to be completed on. It can be given as empty and
2172 2172 instead a line/position pair are given. In this case, the
2173 2173 completer itself will split the line like readline does.
2174 2174
2175 2175 line : string, optional
2176 2176 The complete line that text is part of.
2177 2177
2178 2178 cursor_pos : int, optional
2179 2179 The position of the cursor on the input line.
2180 2180
2181 2181 Returns
2182 2182 -------
2183 2183 text : string
2184 2184 The actual text that was completed.
2185 2185
2186 2186 matches : list
2187 2187 A sorted list with all possible completions.
2188 2188
2189 2189 The optional arguments allow the completion to take more context into
2190 2190 account, and are part of the low-level completion API.
2191 2191
2192 2192 This is a wrapper around the completion mechanism, similar to what
2193 2193 readline does at the command line when the TAB key is hit. By
2194 2194 exposing it as a method, it can be used by other non-readline
2195 2195 environments (such as GUIs) for text completion.
2196 2196
2197 2197 Simple usage example:
2198 2198
2199 2199 In [1]: x = 'hello'
2200 2200
2201 2201 In [2]: _ip.complete('x.l')
2202 2202 Out[2]: ('x.l', ['x.ljust', 'x.lower', 'x.lstrip'])
2203 2203 """
2204 2204
2205 2205 # Inject names into __builtin__ so we can complete on the added names.
2206 2206 with self.builtin_trap:
2207 2207 return self.Completer.complete(text, line, cursor_pos)
2208 2208
2209 2209 def set_custom_completer(self, completer, pos=0):
2210 2210 """Adds a new custom completer function.
2211 2211
2212 2212 The position argument (defaults to 0) is the index in the completers
2213 2213 list where you want the completer to be inserted."""
2214 2214
2215 2215 newcomp = types.MethodType(completer,self.Completer)
2216 2216 self.Completer.matchers.insert(pos,newcomp)
2217 2217
2218 2218 def set_completer_frame(self, frame=None):
2219 2219 """Set the frame of the completer."""
2220 2220 if frame:
2221 2221 self.Completer.namespace = frame.f_locals
2222 2222 self.Completer.global_namespace = frame.f_globals
2223 2223 else:
2224 2224 self.Completer.namespace = self.user_ns
2225 2225 self.Completer.global_namespace = self.user_global_ns
2226 2226
2227 2227 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2228 2228 # Things related to magics
2229 2229 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2230 2230
2231 2231 def init_magics(self):
2232 2232 from IPython.core import magics as m
2233 2233 self.magics_manager = magic.MagicsManager(shell=self,
2234 2234 parent=self,
2235 2235 user_magics=m.UserMagics(self))
2236 2236 self.configurables.append(self.magics_manager)
2237 2237
2238 2238 # Expose as public API from the magics manager
2239 2239 self.register_magics = self.magics_manager.register
2240 2240
2241 2241 self.register_magics(m.AutoMagics, m.BasicMagics, m.CodeMagics,
2242 2242 m.ConfigMagics, m.DisplayMagics, m.ExecutionMagics,
2243 2243 m.ExtensionMagics, m.HistoryMagics, m.LoggingMagics,
2244 2244 m.NamespaceMagics, m.OSMagics, m.PackagingMagics,
2245 2245 m.PylabMagics, m.ScriptMagics,
2246 2246 )
2247 2247 if sys.version_info >(3,5):
2248 2248 self.register_magics(m.AsyncMagics)
2249 2249
2250 2250 # Register Magic Aliases
2251 2251 mman = self.magics_manager
2252 2252 # FIXME: magic aliases should be defined by the Magics classes
2253 2253 # or in MagicsManager, not here
2254 2254 mman.register_alias('ed', 'edit')
2255 2255 mman.register_alias('hist', 'history')
2256 2256 mman.register_alias('rep', 'recall')
2257 2257 mman.register_alias('SVG', 'svg', 'cell')
2258 2258 mman.register_alias('HTML', 'html', 'cell')
2259 2259 mman.register_alias('file', 'writefile', 'cell')
2260 2260
2261 2261 # FIXME: Move the color initialization to the DisplayHook, which
2262 2262 # should be split into a prompt manager and displayhook. We probably
2263 2263 # even need a centralize colors management object.
2264 2264 self.run_line_magic('colors', self.colors)
2265 2265
2266 2266 # Defined here so that it's included in the documentation
2267 2267 @functools.wraps(magic.MagicsManager.register_function)
2268 2268 def register_magic_function(self, func, magic_kind='line', magic_name=None):
2269 2269 self.magics_manager.register_function(func,
2270 2270 magic_kind=magic_kind, magic_name=magic_name)
2271 2271
2272 2272 def run_line_magic(self, magic_name, line, _stack_depth=1):
2273 2273 """Execute the given line magic.
2274 2274
2275 2275 Parameters
2276 2276 ----------
2277 2277 magic_name : str
2278 2278 Name of the desired magic function, without '%' prefix.
2279 2279
2280 2280 line : str
2281 2281 The rest of the input line as a single string.
2282 2282
2283 2283 _stack_depth : int
2284 2284 If run_line_magic() is called from magic() then _stack_depth=2.
2285 2285 This is added to ensure backward compatibility for use of 'get_ipython().magic()'
2286 2286 """
2287 2287 fn = self.find_line_magic(magic_name)
2288 2288 if fn is None:
2289 2289 cm = self.find_cell_magic(magic_name)
2290 2290 etpl = "Line magic function `%%%s` not found%s."
2291 2291 extra = '' if cm is None else (' (But cell magic `%%%%%s` exists, '
2292 2292 'did you mean that instead?)' % magic_name )
2293 2293 raise UsageError(etpl % (magic_name, extra))
2294 2294 else:
2295 2295 # Note: this is the distance in the stack to the user's frame.
2296 2296 # This will need to be updated if the internal calling logic gets
2297 2297 # refactored, or else we'll be expanding the wrong variables.
2298 2298
2299 2299 # Determine stack_depth depending on where run_line_magic() has been called
2300 2300 stack_depth = _stack_depth
2301 2301 if getattr(fn, magic.MAGIC_NO_VAR_EXPAND_ATTR, False):
2302 2302 # magic has opted out of var_expand
2303 2303 magic_arg_s = line
2304 2304 else:
2305 2305 magic_arg_s = self.var_expand(line, stack_depth)
2306 2306 # Put magic args in a list so we can call with f(*a) syntax
2307 2307 args = [magic_arg_s]
2308 2308 kwargs = {}
2309 2309 # Grab local namespace if we need it:
2310 2310 if getattr(fn, "needs_local_scope", False):
2311 2311 kwargs['local_ns'] = sys._getframe(stack_depth).f_locals
2312 2312 with self.builtin_trap:
2313 2313 result = fn(*args, **kwargs)
2314 2314 return result
2315 2315
2316 2316 def run_cell_magic(self, magic_name, line, cell):
2317 2317 """Execute the given cell magic.
2318 2318
2319 2319 Parameters
2320 2320 ----------
2321 2321 magic_name : str
2322 2322 Name of the desired magic function, without '%' prefix.
2323 2323
2324 2324 line : str
2325 2325 The rest of the first input line as a single string.
2326 2326
2327 2327 cell : str
2328 2328 The body of the cell as a (possibly multiline) string.
2329 2329 """
2330 2330 fn = self.find_cell_magic(magic_name)
2331 2331 if fn is None:
2332 2332 lm = self.find_line_magic(magic_name)
2333 2333 etpl = "Cell magic `%%{0}` not found{1}."
2334 2334 extra = '' if lm is None else (' (But line magic `%{0}` exists, '
2335 2335 'did you mean that instead?)'.format(magic_name))
2336 2336 raise UsageError(etpl.format(magic_name, extra))
2337 2337 elif cell == '':
2338 2338 message = '%%{0} is a cell magic, but the cell body is empty.'.format(magic_name)
2339 2339 if self.find_line_magic(magic_name) is not None:
2340 2340 message += ' Did you mean the line magic %{0} (single %)?'.format(magic_name)
2341 2341 raise UsageError(message)
2342 2342 else:
2343 2343 # Note: this is the distance in the stack to the user's frame.
2344 2344 # This will need to be updated if the internal calling logic gets
2345 2345 # refactored, or else we'll be expanding the wrong variables.
2346 2346 stack_depth = 2
2347 2347 if getattr(fn, magic.MAGIC_NO_VAR_EXPAND_ATTR, False):
2348 2348 # magic has opted out of var_expand
2349 2349 magic_arg_s = line
2350 2350 else:
2351 2351 magic_arg_s = self.var_expand(line, stack_depth)
2352 2352 kwargs = {}
2353 2353 if getattr(fn, "needs_local_scope", False):
2354 2354 kwargs['local_ns'] = self.user_ns
2355 2355
2356 2356 with self.builtin_trap:
2357 2357 args = (magic_arg_s, cell)
2358 2358 result = fn(*args, **kwargs)
2359 2359 return result
2360 2360
2361 2361 def find_line_magic(self, magic_name):
2362 2362 """Find and return a line magic by name.
2363 2363
2364 2364 Returns None if the magic isn't found."""
2365 2365 return self.magics_manager.magics['line'].get(magic_name)
2366 2366
2367 2367 def find_cell_magic(self, magic_name):
2368 2368 """Find and return a cell magic by name.
2369 2369
2370 2370 Returns None if the magic isn't found."""
2371 2371 return self.magics_manager.magics['cell'].get(magic_name)
2372 2372
2373 2373 def find_magic(self, magic_name, magic_kind='line'):
2374 2374 """Find and return a magic of the given type by name.
2375 2375
2376 2376 Returns None if the magic isn't found."""
2377 2377 return self.magics_manager.magics[magic_kind].get(magic_name)
2378 2378
2379 2379 def magic(self, arg_s):
2380 2380 """DEPRECATED. Use run_line_magic() instead.
2381 2381
2382 2382 Call a magic function by name.
2383 2383
2384 2384 Input: a string containing the name of the magic function to call and
2385 2385 any additional arguments to be passed to the magic.
2386 2386
2387 2387 magic('name -opt foo bar') is equivalent to typing at the ipython
2388 2388 prompt:
2389 2389
2390 2390 In[1]: %name -opt foo bar
2391 2391
2392 2392 To call a magic without arguments, simply use magic('name').
2393 2393
2394 2394 This provides a proper Python function to call IPython's magics in any
2395 2395 valid Python code you can type at the interpreter, including loops and
2396 2396 compound statements.
2397 2397 """
2398 2398 # TODO: should we issue a loud deprecation warning here?
2399 2399 magic_name, _, magic_arg_s = arg_s.partition(' ')
2400 2400 magic_name = magic_name.lstrip(prefilter.ESC_MAGIC)
2401 2401 return self.run_line_magic(magic_name, magic_arg_s, _stack_depth=2)
2402 2402
2403 2403 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2404 2404 # Things related to macros
2405 2405 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2406 2406
2407 2407 def define_macro(self, name, themacro):
2408 2408 """Define a new macro
2409 2409
2410 2410 Parameters
2411 2411 ----------
2412 2412 name : str
2413 2413 The name of the macro.
2414 2414 themacro : str or Macro
2415 2415 The action to do upon invoking the macro. If a string, a new
2416 2416 Macro object is created by passing the string to it.
2417 2417 """
2418 2418
2419 2419 from IPython.core import macro
2420 2420
2421 2421 if isinstance(themacro, str):
2422 2422 themacro = macro.Macro(themacro)
2423 2423 if not isinstance(themacro, macro.Macro):
2424 2424 raise ValueError('A macro must be a string or a Macro instance.')
2425 2425 self.user_ns[name] = themacro
2426 2426
2427 2427 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2428 2428 # Things related to the running of system commands
2429 2429 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2430 2430
2431 2431 def system_piped(self, cmd):
2432 2432 """Call the given cmd in a subprocess, piping stdout/err
2433 2433
2434 2434 Parameters
2435 2435 ----------
2436 2436 cmd : str
2437 2437 Command to execute (can not end in '&', as background processes are
2438 2438 not supported. Should not be a command that expects input
2439 2439 other than simple text.
2440 2440 """
2441 2441 if cmd.rstrip().endswith('&'):
2442 2442 # this is *far* from a rigorous test
2443 2443 # We do not support backgrounding processes because we either use
2444 2444 # pexpect or pipes to read from. Users can always just call
2445 2445 # os.system() or use ip.system=ip.system_raw
2446 2446 # if they really want a background process.
2447 2447 raise OSError("Background processes not supported.")
2448 2448
2449 2449 # we explicitly do NOT return the subprocess status code, because
2450 2450 # a non-None value would trigger :func:`sys.displayhook` calls.
2451 2451 # Instead, we store the exit_code in user_ns.
2452 2452 self.user_ns['_exit_code'] = system(self.var_expand(cmd, depth=1))
2453 2453
2454 2454 def system_raw(self, cmd):
2455 2455 """Call the given cmd in a subprocess using os.system on Windows or
2456 2456 subprocess.call using the system shell on other platforms.
2457 2457
2458 2458 Parameters
2459 2459 ----------
2460 2460 cmd : str
2461 2461 Command to execute.
2462 2462 """
2463 2463 cmd = self.var_expand(cmd, depth=1)
2464 2464 # protect os.system from UNC paths on Windows, which it can't handle:
2465 2465 if sys.platform == 'win32':
2466 2466 from IPython.utils._process_win32 import AvoidUNCPath
2467 2467 with AvoidUNCPath() as path:
2468 2468 if path is not None:
2469 2469 cmd = '"pushd %s &&"%s' % (path, cmd)
2470 2470 try:
2471 2471 ec = os.system(cmd)
2472 2472 except KeyboardInterrupt:
2473 2473 print('\n' + self.get_exception_only(), file=sys.stderr)
2474 2474 ec = -2
2475 2475 else:
2476 2476 # For posix the result of the subprocess.call() below is an exit
2477 2477 # code, which by convention is zero for success, positive for
2478 2478 # program failure. Exit codes above 128 are reserved for signals,
2479 2479 # and the formula for converting a signal to an exit code is usually
2480 2480 # signal_number+128. To more easily differentiate between exit
2481 2481 # codes and signals, ipython uses negative numbers. For instance
2482 2482 # since control-c is signal 2 but exit code 130, ipython's
2483 2483 # _exit_code variable will read -2. Note that some shells like
2484 2484 # csh and fish don't follow sh/bash conventions for exit codes.
2485 2485 executable = os.environ.get('SHELL', None)
2486 2486 try:
2487 2487 # Use env shell instead of default /bin/sh
2488 2488 ec = subprocess.call(cmd, shell=True, executable=executable)
2489 2489 except KeyboardInterrupt:
2490 2490 # intercept control-C; a long traceback is not useful here
2491 2491 print('\n' + self.get_exception_only(), file=sys.stderr)
2492 2492 ec = 130
2493 2493 if ec > 128:
2494 2494 ec = -(ec - 128)
2495 2495
2496 2496 # We explicitly do NOT return the subprocess status code, because
2497 2497 # a non-None value would trigger :func:`sys.displayhook` calls.
2498 2498 # Instead, we store the exit_code in user_ns. Note the semantics
2499 2499 # of _exit_code: for control-c, _exit_code == -signal.SIGNIT,
2500 2500 # but raising SystemExit(_exit_code) will give status 254!
2501 2501 self.user_ns['_exit_code'] = ec
2502 2502
2503 2503 # use piped system by default, because it is better behaved
2504 2504 system = system_piped
2505 2505
2506 2506 def getoutput(self, cmd, split=True, depth=0):
2507 2507 """Get output (possibly including stderr) from a subprocess.
2508 2508
2509 2509 Parameters
2510 2510 ----------
2511 2511 cmd : str
2512 2512 Command to execute (can not end in '&', as background processes are
2513 2513 not supported.
2514 2514 split : bool, optional
2515 2515 If True, split the output into an IPython SList. Otherwise, an
2516 2516 IPython LSString is returned. These are objects similar to normal
2517 2517 lists and strings, with a few convenience attributes for easier
2518 2518 manipulation of line-based output. You can use '?' on them for
2519 2519 details.
2520 2520 depth : int, optional
2521 2521 How many frames above the caller are the local variables which should
2522 2522 be expanded in the command string? The default (0) assumes that the
2523 2523 expansion variables are in the stack frame calling this function.
2524 2524 """
2525 2525 if cmd.rstrip().endswith('&'):
2526 2526 # this is *far* from a rigorous test
2527 2527 raise OSError("Background processes not supported.")
2528 2528 out = getoutput(self.var_expand(cmd, depth=depth+1))
2529 2529 if split:
2530 2530 out = SList(out.splitlines())
2531 2531 else:
2532 2532 out = LSString(out)
2533 2533 return out
2534 2534
2535 2535 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2536 2536 # Things related to aliases
2537 2537 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2538 2538
2539 2539 def init_alias(self):
2540 2540 self.alias_manager = AliasManager(shell=self, parent=self)
2541 2541 self.configurables.append(self.alias_manager)
2542 2542
2543 2543 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2544 2544 # Things related to extensions
2545 2545 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2546 2546
2547 2547 def init_extension_manager(self):
2548 2548 self.extension_manager = ExtensionManager(shell=self, parent=self)
2549 2549 self.configurables.append(self.extension_manager)
2550 2550
2551 2551 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2552 2552 # Things related to payloads
2553 2553 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2554 2554
2555 2555 def init_payload(self):
2556 2556 self.payload_manager = PayloadManager(parent=self)
2557 2557 self.configurables.append(self.payload_manager)
2558 2558
2559 2559 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2560 2560 # Things related to the prefilter
2561 2561 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2562 2562
2563 2563 def init_prefilter(self):
2564 2564 self.prefilter_manager = PrefilterManager(shell=self, parent=self)
2565 2565 self.configurables.append(self.prefilter_manager)
2566 2566 # Ultimately this will be refactored in the new interpreter code, but
2567 2567 # for now, we should expose the main prefilter method (there's legacy
2568 2568 # code out there that may rely on this).
2569 2569 self.prefilter = self.prefilter_manager.prefilter_lines
2570 2570
2571 2571 def auto_rewrite_input(self, cmd):
2572 2572 """Print to the screen the rewritten form of the user's command.
2573 2573
2574 2574 This shows visual feedback by rewriting input lines that cause
2575 2575 automatic calling to kick in, like::
2576 2576
2577 2577 /f x
2578 2578
2579 2579 into::
2580 2580
2581 2581 ------> f(x)
2582 2582
2583 2583 after the user's input prompt. This helps the user understand that the
2584 2584 input line was transformed automatically by IPython.
2585 2585 """
2586 2586 if not self.show_rewritten_input:
2587 2587 return
2588 2588
2589 2589 # This is overridden in TerminalInteractiveShell to use fancy prompts
2590 2590 print("------> " + cmd)
2591 2591
2592 2592 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2593 2593 # Things related to extracting values/expressions from kernel and user_ns
2594 2594 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2595 2595
2596 2596 def _user_obj_error(self):
2597 2597 """return simple exception dict
2598 2598
2599 2599 for use in user_expressions
2600 2600 """
2601 2601
2602 2602 etype, evalue, tb = self._get_exc_info()
2603 2603 stb = self.InteractiveTB.get_exception_only(etype, evalue)
2604 2604
2605 2605 exc_info = {
2606 2606 u'status' : 'error',
2607 2607 u'traceback' : stb,
2608 2608 u'ename' : etype.__name__,
2609 2609 u'evalue' : py3compat.safe_unicode(evalue),
2610 2610 }
2611 2611
2612 2612 return exc_info
2613 2613
2614 2614 def _format_user_obj(self, obj):
2615 2615 """format a user object to display dict
2616 2616
2617 2617 for use in user_expressions
2618 2618 """
2619 2619
2620 2620 data, md = self.display_formatter.format(obj)
2621 2621 value = {
2622 2622 'status' : 'ok',
2623 2623 'data' : data,
2624 2624 'metadata' : md,
2625 2625 }
2626 2626 return value
2627 2627
2628 2628 def user_expressions(self, expressions):
2629 2629 """Evaluate a dict of expressions in the user's namespace.
2630 2630
2631 2631 Parameters
2632 2632 ----------
2633 2633 expressions : dict
2634 2634 A dict with string keys and string values. The expression values
2635 2635 should be valid Python expressions, each of which will be evaluated
2636 2636 in the user namespace.
2637 2637
2638 2638 Returns
2639 2639 -------
2640 2640 A dict, keyed like the input expressions dict, with the rich mime-typed
2641 2641 display_data of each value.
2642 2642 """
2643 2643 out = {}
2644 2644 user_ns = self.user_ns
2645 2645 global_ns = self.user_global_ns
2646 2646
2647 2647 for key, expr in expressions.items():
2648 2648 try:
2649 2649 value = self._format_user_obj(eval(expr, global_ns, user_ns))
2650 2650 except:
2651 2651 value = self._user_obj_error()
2652 2652 out[key] = value
2653 2653 return out
2654 2654
2655 2655 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2656 2656 # Things related to the running of code
2657 2657 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2658 2658
2659 2659 def ex(self, cmd):
2660 2660 """Execute a normal python statement in user namespace."""
2661 2661 with self.builtin_trap:
2662 2662 exec(cmd, self.user_global_ns, self.user_ns)
2663 2663
2664 2664 def ev(self, expr):
2665 2665 """Evaluate python expression expr in user namespace.
2666 2666
2667 2667 Returns the result of evaluation
2668 2668 """
2669 2669 with self.builtin_trap:
2670 2670 return eval(expr, self.user_global_ns, self.user_ns)
2671 2671
2672 2672 def safe_execfile(self, fname, *where, exit_ignore=False, raise_exceptions=False, shell_futures=False):
2673 2673 """A safe version of the builtin execfile().
2674 2674
2675 2675 This version will never throw an exception, but instead print
2676 2676 helpful error messages to the screen. This only works on pure
2677 2677 Python files with the .py extension.
2678 2678
2679 2679 Parameters
2680 2680 ----------
2681 2681 fname : string
2682 2682 The name of the file to be executed.
2683 2683 where : tuple
2684 2684 One or two namespaces, passed to execfile() as (globals,locals).
2685 2685 If only one is given, it is passed as both.
2686 2686 exit_ignore : bool (False)
2687 2687 If True, then silence SystemExit for non-zero status (it is always
2688 2688 silenced for zero status, as it is so common).
2689 2689 raise_exceptions : bool (False)
2690 2690 If True raise exceptions everywhere. Meant for testing.
2691 2691 shell_futures : bool (False)
2692 2692 If True, the code will share future statements with the interactive
2693 2693 shell. It will both be affected by previous __future__ imports, and
2694 2694 any __future__ imports in the code will affect the shell. If False,
2695 2695 __future__ imports are not shared in either direction.
2696 2696
2697 2697 """
2698 2698 fname = os.path.abspath(os.path.expanduser(fname))
2699 2699
2700 2700 # Make sure we can open the file
2701 2701 try:
2702 2702 with open(fname):
2703 2703 pass
2704 2704 except:
2705 2705 warn('Could not open file <%s> for safe execution.' % fname)
2706 2706 return
2707 2707
2708 2708 # Find things also in current directory. This is needed to mimic the
2709 2709 # behavior of running a script from the system command line, where
2710 2710 # Python inserts the script's directory into sys.path
2711 2711 dname = os.path.dirname(fname)
2712 2712
2713 2713 with prepended_to_syspath(dname), self.builtin_trap:
2714 2714 try:
2715 2715 glob, loc = (where + (None, ))[:2]
2716 2716 py3compat.execfile(
2717 2717 fname, glob, loc,
2718 2718 self.compile if shell_futures else None)
2719 2719 except SystemExit as status:
2720 2720 # If the call was made with 0 or None exit status (sys.exit(0)
2721 2721 # or sys.exit() ), don't bother showing a traceback, as both of
2722 2722 # these are considered normal by the OS:
2723 2723 # > python -c'import sys;sys.exit(0)'; echo $?
2724 2724 # 0
2725 2725 # > python -c'import sys;sys.exit()'; echo $?
2726 2726 # 0
2727 2727 # For other exit status, we show the exception unless
2728 2728 # explicitly silenced, but only in short form.
2729 2729 if status.code:
2730 2730 if raise_exceptions:
2731 2731 raise
2732 2732 if not exit_ignore:
2733 2733 self.showtraceback(exception_only=True)
2734 2734 except:
2735 2735 if raise_exceptions:
2736 2736 raise
2737 2737 # tb offset is 2 because we wrap execfile
2738 2738 self.showtraceback(tb_offset=2)
2739 2739
2740 2740 def safe_execfile_ipy(self, fname, shell_futures=False, raise_exceptions=False):
2741 2741 """Like safe_execfile, but for .ipy or .ipynb files with IPython syntax.
2742 2742
2743 2743 Parameters
2744 2744 ----------
2745 2745 fname : str
2746 2746 The name of the file to execute. The filename must have a
2747 2747 .ipy or .ipynb extension.
2748 2748 shell_futures : bool (False)
2749 2749 If True, the code will share future statements with the interactive
2750 2750 shell. It will both be affected by previous __future__ imports, and
2751 2751 any __future__ imports in the code will affect the shell. If False,
2752 2752 __future__ imports are not shared in either direction.
2753 2753 raise_exceptions : bool (False)
2754 2754 If True raise exceptions everywhere. Meant for testing.
2755 2755 """
2756 2756 fname = os.path.abspath(os.path.expanduser(fname))
2757 2757
2758 2758 # Make sure we can open the file
2759 2759 try:
2760 2760 with open(fname):
2761 2761 pass
2762 2762 except:
2763 2763 warn('Could not open file <%s> for safe execution.' % fname)
2764 2764 return
2765 2765
2766 2766 # Find things also in current directory. This is needed to mimic the
2767 2767 # behavior of running a script from the system command line, where
2768 2768 # Python inserts the script's directory into sys.path
2769 2769 dname = os.path.dirname(fname)
2770 2770
2771 2771 def get_cells():
2772 2772 """generator for sequence of code blocks to run"""
2773 2773 if fname.endswith('.ipynb'):
2774 2774 from nbformat import read
2775 2775 nb = read(fname, as_version=4)
2776 2776 if not nb.cells:
2777 2777 return
2778 2778 for cell in nb.cells:
2779 2779 if cell.cell_type == 'code':
2780 2780 yield cell.source
2781 2781 else:
2782 2782 with open(fname) as f:
2783 2783 yield f.read()
2784 2784
2785 2785 with prepended_to_syspath(dname):
2786 2786 try:
2787 2787 for cell in get_cells():
2788 2788 result = self.run_cell(cell, silent=True, shell_futures=shell_futures)
2789 2789 if raise_exceptions:
2790 2790 result.raise_error()
2791 2791 elif not result.success:
2792 2792 break
2793 2793 except:
2794 2794 if raise_exceptions:
2795 2795 raise
2796 2796 self.showtraceback()
2797 2797 warn('Unknown failure executing file: <%s>' % fname)
2798 2798
2799 2799 def safe_run_module(self, mod_name, where):
2800 2800 """A safe version of runpy.run_module().
2801 2801
2802 2802 This version will never throw an exception, but instead print
2803 2803 helpful error messages to the screen.
2804 2804
2805 2805 `SystemExit` exceptions with status code 0 or None are ignored.
2806 2806
2807 2807 Parameters
2808 2808 ----------
2809 2809 mod_name : string
2810 2810 The name of the module to be executed.
2811 2811 where : dict
2812 2812 The globals namespace.
2813 2813 """
2814 2814 try:
2815 2815 try:
2816 2816 where.update(
2817 2817 runpy.run_module(str(mod_name), run_name="__main__",
2818 2818 alter_sys=True)
2819 2819 )
2820 2820 except SystemExit as status:
2821 2821 if status.code:
2822 2822 raise
2823 2823 except:
2824 2824 self.showtraceback()
2825 2825 warn('Unknown failure executing module: <%s>' % mod_name)
2826 2826
2827 2827 def run_cell(self, raw_cell, store_history=False, silent=False, shell_futures=True):
2828 2828 """Run a complete IPython cell.
2829 2829
2830 2830 Parameters
2831 2831 ----------
2832 2832 raw_cell : str
2833 2833 The code (including IPython code such as %magic functions) to run.
2834 2834 store_history : bool
2835 2835 If True, the raw and translated cell will be stored in IPython's
2836 2836 history. For user code calling back into IPython's machinery, this
2837 2837 should be set to False.
2838 2838 silent : bool
2839 2839 If True, avoid side-effects, such as implicit displayhooks and
2840 2840 and logging. silent=True forces store_history=False.
2841 2841 shell_futures : bool
2842 2842 If True, the code will share future statements with the interactive
2843 2843 shell. It will both be affected by previous __future__ imports, and
2844 2844 any __future__ imports in the code will affect the shell. If False,
2845 2845 __future__ imports are not shared in either direction.
2846 2846
2847 2847 Returns
2848 2848 -------
2849 2849 result : :class:`ExecutionResult`
2850 2850 """
2851 2851 result = None
2852 2852 try:
2853 2853 result = self._run_cell(
2854 2854 raw_cell, store_history, silent, shell_futures)
2855 2855 finally:
2856 2856 self.events.trigger('post_execute')
2857 2857 if not silent:
2858 2858 self.events.trigger('post_run_cell', result)
2859 2859 return result
2860 2860
2861 2861 def _run_cell(self, raw_cell:str, store_history:bool, silent:bool, shell_futures:bool):
2862 2862 """Internal method to run a complete IPython cell."""
2863 2863 coro = self.run_cell_async(
2864 2864 raw_cell,
2865 2865 store_history=store_history,
2866 2866 silent=silent,
2867 2867 shell_futures=shell_futures,
2868 2868 )
2869 2869
2870 2870 # run_cell_async is async, but may not actually need an eventloop.
2871 2871 # when this is the case, we want to run it using the pseudo_sync_runner
2872 2872 # so that code can invoke eventloops (for example via the %run , and
2873 2873 # `%paste` magic.
2874 2874 if self.should_run_async(raw_cell):
2875 2875 runner = self.loop_runner
2876 2876 else:
2877 2877 runner = _pseudo_sync_runner
2878 2878
2879 2879 try:
2880 2880 return runner(coro)
2881 2881 except BaseException as e:
2882 2882 info = ExecutionInfo(raw_cell, store_history, silent, shell_futures)
2883 2883 result = ExecutionResult(info)
2884 2884 result.error_in_exec = e
2885 2885 self.showtraceback(running_compiled_code=True)
2886 2886 return result
2887 2887 return
2888 2888
2889 2889 def should_run_async(self, raw_cell: str) -> bool:
2890 2890 """Return whether a cell should be run asynchronously via a coroutine runner
2891 2891
2892 2892 Parameters
2893 2893 ----------
2894 2894 raw_cell: str
2895 2895 The code to be executed
2896 2896
2897 2897 Returns
2898 2898 -------
2899 2899 result: bool
2900 2900 Whether the code needs to be run with a coroutine runner or not
2901 2901
2902 2902 .. versionadded: 7.0
2903 2903 """
2904 2904 if not self.autoawait:
2905 2905 return False
2906 2906 try:
2907 2907 cell = self.transform_cell(raw_cell)
2908 2908 except Exception:
2909 2909 # any exception during transform will be raised
2910 2910 # prior to execution
2911 2911 return False
2912 2912 return _should_be_async(cell)
2913 2913
2914 2914 async def run_cell_async(self, raw_cell: str, store_history=False, silent=False, shell_futures=True) -> ExecutionResult:
2915 2915 """Run a complete IPython cell asynchronously.
2916 2916
2917 2917 Parameters
2918 2918 ----------
2919 2919 raw_cell : str
2920 2920 The code (including IPython code such as %magic functions) to run.
2921 2921 store_history : bool
2922 2922 If True, the raw and translated cell will be stored in IPython's
2923 2923 history. For user code calling back into IPython's machinery, this
2924 2924 should be set to False.
2925 2925 silent : bool
2926 2926 If True, avoid side-effects, such as implicit displayhooks and
2927 2927 and logging. silent=True forces store_history=False.
2928 2928 shell_futures : bool
2929 2929 If True, the code will share future statements with the interactive
2930 2930 shell. It will both be affected by previous __future__ imports, and
2931 2931 any __future__ imports in the code will affect the shell. If False,
2932 2932 __future__ imports are not shared in either direction.
2933 2933
2934 2934 Returns
2935 2935 -------
2936 2936 result : :class:`ExecutionResult`
2937 2937
2938 2938 .. versionadded: 7.0
2939 2939 """
2940 2940 info = ExecutionInfo(
2941 2941 raw_cell, store_history, silent, shell_futures)
2942 2942 result = ExecutionResult(info)
2943 2943
2944 2944 if (not raw_cell) or raw_cell.isspace():
2945 2945 self.last_execution_succeeded = True
2946 2946 self.last_execution_result = result
2947 2947 return result
2948 2948
2949 2949 if silent:
2950 2950 store_history = False
2951 2951
2952 2952 if store_history:
2953 2953 result.execution_count = self.execution_count
2954 2954
2955 2955 def error_before_exec(value):
2956 2956 if store_history:
2957 2957 self.execution_count += 1
2958 2958 result.error_before_exec = value
2959 2959 self.last_execution_succeeded = False
2960 2960 self.last_execution_result = result
2961 2961 return result
2962 2962
2963 2963 self.events.trigger('pre_execute')
2964 2964 if not silent:
2965 2965 self.events.trigger('pre_run_cell', info)
2966 2966
2967 2967 # If any of our input transformation (input_transformer_manager or
2968 2968 # prefilter_manager) raises an exception, we store it in this variable
2969 2969 # so that we can display the error after logging the input and storing
2970 2970 # it in the history.
2971 2971 try:
2972 2972 cell = self.transform_cell(raw_cell)
2973 2973 except Exception:
2974 2974 preprocessing_exc_tuple = sys.exc_info()
2975 2975 cell = raw_cell # cell has to exist so it can be stored/logged
2976 2976 else:
2977 2977 preprocessing_exc_tuple = None
2978 2978
2979 2979 # Store raw and processed history
2980 2980 if store_history:
2981 2981 self.history_manager.store_inputs(self.execution_count,
2982 2982 cell, raw_cell)
2983 2983 if not silent:
2984 2984 self.logger.log(cell, raw_cell)
2985 2985
2986 2986 # Display the exception if input processing failed.
2987 2987 if preprocessing_exc_tuple is not None:
2988 2988 self.showtraceback(preprocessing_exc_tuple)
2989 2989 if store_history:
2990 2990 self.execution_count += 1
2991 return error_before_exec(preprocessing_exc_tuple[2])
2991 return error_before_exec(preprocessing_exc_tuple[1])
2992 2992
2993 2993 # Our own compiler remembers the __future__ environment. If we want to
2994 2994 # run code with a separate __future__ environment, use the default
2995 2995 # compiler
2996 2996 compiler = self.compile if shell_futures else CachingCompiler()
2997 2997
2998 2998 _run_async = False
2999 2999
3000 3000 with self.builtin_trap:
3001 3001 cell_name = self.compile.cache(cell, self.execution_count)
3002 3002
3003 3003 with self.display_trap:
3004 3004 # Compile to bytecode
3005 3005 try:
3006 3006 if sys.version_info < (3,8) and self.autoawait:
3007 3007 if _should_be_async(cell):
3008 3008 # the code AST below will not be user code: we wrap it
3009 3009 # in an `async def`. This will likely make some AST
3010 3010 # transformer below miss some transform opportunity and
3011 3011 # introduce a small coupling to run_code (in which we
3012 3012 # bake some assumptions of what _ast_asyncify returns.
3013 3013 # they are ways around (like grafting part of the ast
3014 3014 # later:
3015 3015 # - Here, return code_ast.body[0].body[1:-1], as well
3016 3016 # as last expression in return statement which is
3017 3017 # the user code part.
3018 3018 # - Let it go through the AST transformers, and graft
3019 3019 # - it back after the AST transform
3020 3020 # But that seem unreasonable, at least while we
3021 3021 # do not need it.
3022 3022 code_ast = _ast_asyncify(cell, 'async-def-wrapper')
3023 3023 _run_async = True
3024 3024 else:
3025 3025 code_ast = compiler.ast_parse(cell, filename=cell_name)
3026 3026 else:
3027 3027 code_ast = compiler.ast_parse(cell, filename=cell_name)
3028 3028 except self.custom_exceptions as e:
3029 3029 etype, value, tb = sys.exc_info()
3030 3030 self.CustomTB(etype, value, tb)
3031 3031 return error_before_exec(e)
3032 3032 except IndentationError as e:
3033 3033 self.showindentationerror()
3034 3034 return error_before_exec(e)
3035 3035 except (OverflowError, SyntaxError, ValueError, TypeError,
3036 3036 MemoryError) as e:
3037 3037 self.showsyntaxerror()
3038 3038 return error_before_exec(e)
3039 3039
3040 3040 # Apply AST transformations
3041 3041 try:
3042 3042 code_ast = self.transform_ast(code_ast)
3043 3043 except InputRejected as e:
3044 3044 self.showtraceback()
3045 3045 return error_before_exec(e)
3046 3046
3047 3047 # Give the displayhook a reference to our ExecutionResult so it
3048 3048 # can fill in the output value.
3049 3049 self.displayhook.exec_result = result
3050 3050
3051 3051 # Execute the user code
3052 3052 interactivity = "none" if silent else self.ast_node_interactivity
3053 3053 if _run_async:
3054 3054 interactivity = 'async'
3055 3055
3056 3056 has_raised = await self.run_ast_nodes(code_ast.body, cell_name,
3057 3057 interactivity=interactivity, compiler=compiler, result=result)
3058 3058
3059 3059 self.last_execution_succeeded = not has_raised
3060 3060 self.last_execution_result = result
3061 3061
3062 3062 # Reset this so later displayed values do not modify the
3063 3063 # ExecutionResult
3064 3064 self.displayhook.exec_result = None
3065 3065
3066 3066 if store_history:
3067 3067 # Write output to the database. Does nothing unless
3068 3068 # history output logging is enabled.
3069 3069 self.history_manager.store_output(self.execution_count)
3070 3070 # Each cell is a *single* input, regardless of how many lines it has
3071 3071 self.execution_count += 1
3072 3072
3073 3073 return result
3074 3074
3075 3075 def transform_cell(self, raw_cell):
3076 3076 """Transform an input cell before parsing it.
3077 3077
3078 3078 Static transformations, implemented in IPython.core.inputtransformer2,
3079 3079 deal with things like ``%magic`` and ``!system`` commands.
3080 3080 These run on all input.
3081 3081 Dynamic transformations, for things like unescaped magics and the exit
3082 3082 autocall, depend on the state of the interpreter.
3083 3083 These only apply to single line inputs.
3084 3084
3085 3085 These string-based transformations are followed by AST transformations;
3086 3086 see :meth:`transform_ast`.
3087 3087 """
3088 3088 # Static input transformations
3089 3089 cell = self.input_transformer_manager.transform_cell(raw_cell)
3090 3090
3091 3091 if len(cell.splitlines()) == 1:
3092 3092 # Dynamic transformations - only applied for single line commands
3093 3093 with self.builtin_trap:
3094 3094 # use prefilter_lines to handle trailing newlines
3095 3095 # restore trailing newline for ast.parse
3096 3096 cell = self.prefilter_manager.prefilter_lines(cell) + '\n'
3097 3097
3098 3098 lines = cell.splitlines(keepends=True)
3099 3099 for transform in self.input_transformers_post:
3100 3100 lines = transform(lines)
3101 3101 cell = ''.join(lines)
3102 3102
3103 3103 return cell
3104 3104
3105 3105 def transform_ast(self, node):
3106 3106 """Apply the AST transformations from self.ast_transformers
3107 3107
3108 3108 Parameters
3109 3109 ----------
3110 3110 node : ast.Node
3111 3111 The root node to be transformed. Typically called with the ast.Module
3112 3112 produced by parsing user input.
3113 3113
3114 3114 Returns
3115 3115 -------
3116 3116 An ast.Node corresponding to the node it was called with. Note that it
3117 3117 may also modify the passed object, so don't rely on references to the
3118 3118 original AST.
3119 3119 """
3120 3120 for transformer in self.ast_transformers:
3121 3121 try:
3122 3122 node = transformer.visit(node)
3123 3123 except InputRejected:
3124 3124 # User-supplied AST transformers can reject an input by raising
3125 3125 # an InputRejected. Short-circuit in this case so that we
3126 3126 # don't unregister the transform.
3127 3127 raise
3128 3128 except Exception:
3129 3129 warn("AST transformer %r threw an error. It will be unregistered." % transformer)
3130 3130 self.ast_transformers.remove(transformer)
3131 3131
3132 3132 if self.ast_transformers:
3133 3133 ast.fix_missing_locations(node)
3134 3134 return node
3135 3135
3136 3136 async def run_ast_nodes(self, nodelist:ListType[AST], cell_name:str, interactivity='last_expr',
3137 3137 compiler=compile, result=None):
3138 3138 """Run a sequence of AST nodes. The execution mode depends on the
3139 3139 interactivity parameter.
3140 3140
3141 3141 Parameters
3142 3142 ----------
3143 3143 nodelist : list
3144 3144 A sequence of AST nodes to run.
3145 3145 cell_name : str
3146 3146 Will be passed to the compiler as the filename of the cell. Typically
3147 3147 the value returned by ip.compile.cache(cell).
3148 3148 interactivity : str
3149 3149 'all', 'last', 'last_expr' , 'last_expr_or_assign' or 'none',
3150 3150 specifying which nodes should be run interactively (displaying output
3151 3151 from expressions). 'last_expr' will run the last node interactively
3152 3152 only if it is an expression (i.e. expressions in loops or other blocks
3153 3153 are not displayed) 'last_expr_or_assign' will run the last expression
3154 3154 or the last assignment. Other values for this parameter will raise a
3155 3155 ValueError.
3156 3156
3157 3157 Experimental value: 'async' Will try to run top level interactive
3158 3158 async/await code in default runner, this will not respect the
3159 3159 interactivty setting and will only run the last node if it is an
3160 3160 expression.
3161 3161
3162 3162 compiler : callable
3163 3163 A function with the same interface as the built-in compile(), to turn
3164 3164 the AST nodes into code objects. Default is the built-in compile().
3165 3165 result : ExecutionResult, optional
3166 3166 An object to store exceptions that occur during execution.
3167 3167
3168 3168 Returns
3169 3169 -------
3170 3170 True if an exception occurred while running code, False if it finished
3171 3171 running.
3172 3172 """
3173 3173 if not nodelist:
3174 3174 return
3175 3175
3176 3176 if interactivity == 'last_expr_or_assign':
3177 3177 if isinstance(nodelist[-1], _assign_nodes):
3178 3178 asg = nodelist[-1]
3179 3179 if isinstance(asg, ast.Assign) and len(asg.targets) == 1:
3180 3180 target = asg.targets[0]
3181 3181 elif isinstance(asg, _single_targets_nodes):
3182 3182 target = asg.target
3183 3183 else:
3184 3184 target = None
3185 3185 if isinstance(target, ast.Name):
3186 3186 nnode = ast.Expr(ast.Name(target.id, ast.Load()))
3187 3187 ast.fix_missing_locations(nnode)
3188 3188 nodelist.append(nnode)
3189 3189 interactivity = 'last_expr'
3190 3190
3191 3191 _async = False
3192 3192 if interactivity == 'last_expr':
3193 3193 if isinstance(nodelist[-1], ast.Expr):
3194 3194 interactivity = "last"
3195 3195 else:
3196 3196 interactivity = "none"
3197 3197
3198 3198 if interactivity == 'none':
3199 3199 to_run_exec, to_run_interactive = nodelist, []
3200 3200 elif interactivity == 'last':
3201 3201 to_run_exec, to_run_interactive = nodelist[:-1], nodelist[-1:]
3202 3202 elif interactivity == 'all':
3203 3203 to_run_exec, to_run_interactive = [], nodelist
3204 3204 elif interactivity == 'async':
3205 3205 to_run_exec, to_run_interactive = [], nodelist
3206 3206 _async = True
3207 3207 else:
3208 3208 raise ValueError("Interactivity was %r" % interactivity)
3209 3209
3210 3210 try:
3211 3211 if _async and sys.version_info > (3,8):
3212 3212 raise ValueError("This branch should never happen on Python 3.8 and above, "
3213 3213 "please try to upgrade IPython and open a bug report with your case.")
3214 3214 if _async:
3215 3215 # If interactivity is async the semantics of run_code are
3216 3216 # completely different Skip usual machinery.
3217 3217 mod = Module(nodelist, [])
3218 3218 async_wrapper_code = compiler(mod, cell_name, 'exec')
3219 3219 exec(async_wrapper_code, self.user_global_ns, self.user_ns)
3220 3220 async_code = removed_co_newlocals(self.user_ns.pop('async-def-wrapper')).__code__
3221 3221 if (await self.run_code(async_code, result, async_=True)):
3222 3222 return True
3223 3223 else:
3224 3224 if sys.version_info > (3, 8):
3225 3225 def compare(code):
3226 3226 is_async = (inspect.CO_COROUTINE & code.co_flags == inspect.CO_COROUTINE)
3227 3227 return is_async
3228 3228 else:
3229 3229 def compare(code):
3230 3230 return _async
3231 3231
3232 3232 # refactor that to just change the mod constructor.
3233 3233 to_run = []
3234 3234 for node in to_run_exec:
3235 3235 to_run.append((node, 'exec'))
3236 3236
3237 3237 for node in to_run_interactive:
3238 3238 to_run.append((node, 'single'))
3239 3239
3240 3240 for node,mode in to_run:
3241 3241 if mode == 'exec':
3242 3242 mod = Module([node], [])
3243 3243 elif mode == 'single':
3244 3244 mod = ast.Interactive([node])
3245 3245 with compiler.extra_flags(getattr(ast, 'PyCF_ALLOW_TOP_LEVEL_AWAIT', 0x0) if self.autoawait else 0x0):
3246 3246 code = compiler(mod, cell_name, mode)
3247 3247 asy = compare(code)
3248 3248 if (await self.run_code(code, result, async_=asy)):
3249 3249 return True
3250 3250
3251 3251 # Flush softspace
3252 3252 if softspace(sys.stdout, 0):
3253 3253 print()
3254 3254
3255 3255 except:
3256 3256 # It's possible to have exceptions raised here, typically by
3257 3257 # compilation of odd code (such as a naked 'return' outside a
3258 3258 # function) that did parse but isn't valid. Typically the exception
3259 3259 # is a SyntaxError, but it's safest just to catch anything and show
3260 3260 # the user a traceback.
3261 3261
3262 3262 # We do only one try/except outside the loop to minimize the impact
3263 3263 # on runtime, and also because if any node in the node list is
3264 3264 # broken, we should stop execution completely.
3265 3265 if result:
3266 3266 result.error_before_exec = sys.exc_info()[1]
3267 3267 self.showtraceback()
3268 3268 return True
3269 3269
3270 3270 return False
3271 3271
3272 3272 def _async_exec(self, code_obj: types.CodeType, user_ns: dict):
3273 3273 """
3274 3274 Evaluate an asynchronous code object using a code runner
3275 3275
3276 3276 Fake asynchronous execution of code_object in a namespace via a proxy namespace.
3277 3277
3278 3278 Returns coroutine object, which can be executed via async loop runner
3279 3279
3280 3280 WARNING: The semantics of `async_exec` are quite different from `exec`,
3281 3281 in particular you can only pass a single namespace. It also return a
3282 3282 handle to the value of the last things returned by code_object.
3283 3283 """
3284 3284
3285 3285 return eval(code_obj, user_ns)
3286 3286
3287 3287 async def run_code(self, code_obj, result=None, *, async_=False):
3288 3288 """Execute a code object.
3289 3289
3290 3290 When an exception occurs, self.showtraceback() is called to display a
3291 3291 traceback.
3292 3292
3293 3293 Parameters
3294 3294 ----------
3295 3295 code_obj : code object
3296 3296 A compiled code object, to be executed
3297 3297 result : ExecutionResult, optional
3298 3298 An object to store exceptions that occur during execution.
3299 3299 async_ : Bool (Experimental)
3300 3300 Attempt to run top-level asynchronous code in a default loop.
3301 3301
3302 3302 Returns
3303 3303 -------
3304 3304 False : successful execution.
3305 3305 True : an error occurred.
3306 3306 """
3307 3307 # Set our own excepthook in case the user code tries to call it
3308 3308 # directly, so that the IPython crash handler doesn't get triggered
3309 3309 old_excepthook, sys.excepthook = sys.excepthook, self.excepthook
3310 3310
3311 3311 # we save the original sys.excepthook in the instance, in case config
3312 3312 # code (such as magics) needs access to it.
3313 3313 self.sys_excepthook = old_excepthook
3314 3314 outflag = True # happens in more places, so it's easier as default
3315 3315 try:
3316 3316 try:
3317 3317 self.hooks.pre_run_code_hook()
3318 3318 if async_ and sys.version_info < (3,8):
3319 3319 last_expr = (await self._async_exec(code_obj, self.user_ns))
3320 3320 code = compile('last_expr', 'fake', "single")
3321 3321 exec(code, {'last_expr': last_expr})
3322 3322 elif async_ :
3323 3323 await eval(code_obj, self.user_global_ns, self.user_ns)
3324 3324 else:
3325 3325 exec(code_obj, self.user_global_ns, self.user_ns)
3326 3326 finally:
3327 3327 # Reset our crash handler in place
3328 3328 sys.excepthook = old_excepthook
3329 3329 except SystemExit as e:
3330 3330 if result is not None:
3331 3331 result.error_in_exec = e
3332 3332 self.showtraceback(exception_only=True)
3333 3333 warn("To exit: use 'exit', 'quit', or Ctrl-D.", stacklevel=1)
3334 3334 except self.custom_exceptions:
3335 3335 etype, value, tb = sys.exc_info()
3336 3336 if result is not None:
3337 3337 result.error_in_exec = value
3338 3338 self.CustomTB(etype, value, tb)
3339 3339 except:
3340 3340 if result is not None:
3341 3341 result.error_in_exec = sys.exc_info()[1]
3342 3342 self.showtraceback(running_compiled_code=True)
3343 3343 else:
3344 3344 outflag = False
3345 3345 return outflag
3346 3346
3347 3347 # For backwards compatibility
3348 3348 runcode = run_code
3349 3349
3350 3350 def check_complete(self, code: str) -> Tuple[str, str]:
3351 3351 """Return whether a block of code is ready to execute, or should be continued
3352 3352
3353 3353 Parameters
3354 3354 ----------
3355 3355 source : string
3356 3356 Python input code, which can be multiline.
3357 3357
3358 3358 Returns
3359 3359 -------
3360 3360 status : str
3361 3361 One of 'complete', 'incomplete', or 'invalid' if source is not a
3362 3362 prefix of valid code.
3363 3363 indent : str
3364 3364 When status is 'incomplete', this is some whitespace to insert on
3365 3365 the next line of the prompt.
3366 3366 """
3367 3367 status, nspaces = self.input_transformer_manager.check_complete(code)
3368 3368 return status, ' ' * (nspaces or 0)
3369 3369
3370 3370 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
3371 3371 # Things related to GUI support and pylab
3372 3372 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
3373 3373
3374 3374 active_eventloop = None
3375 3375
3376 3376 def enable_gui(self, gui=None):
3377 3377 raise NotImplementedError('Implement enable_gui in a subclass')
3378 3378
3379 3379 def enable_matplotlib(self, gui=None):
3380 3380 """Enable interactive matplotlib and inline figure support.
3381 3381
3382 3382 This takes the following steps:
3383 3383
3384 3384 1. select the appropriate eventloop and matplotlib backend
3385 3385 2. set up matplotlib for interactive use with that backend
3386 3386 3. configure formatters for inline figure display
3387 3387 4. enable the selected gui eventloop
3388 3388
3389 3389 Parameters
3390 3390 ----------
3391 3391 gui : optional, string
3392 3392 If given, dictates the choice of matplotlib GUI backend to use
3393 3393 (should be one of IPython's supported backends, 'qt', 'osx', 'tk',
3394 3394 'gtk', 'wx' or 'inline'), otherwise we use the default chosen by
3395 3395 matplotlib (as dictated by the matplotlib build-time options plus the
3396 3396 user's matplotlibrc configuration file). Note that not all backends
3397 3397 make sense in all contexts, for example a terminal ipython can't
3398 3398 display figures inline.
3399 3399 """
3400 3400 from IPython.core import pylabtools as pt
3401 3401 gui, backend = pt.find_gui_and_backend(gui, self.pylab_gui_select)
3402 3402
3403 3403 if gui != 'inline':
3404 3404 # If we have our first gui selection, store it
3405 3405 if self.pylab_gui_select is None:
3406 3406 self.pylab_gui_select = gui
3407 3407 # Otherwise if they are different
3408 3408 elif gui != self.pylab_gui_select:
3409 3409 print('Warning: Cannot change to a different GUI toolkit: %s.'
3410 3410 ' Using %s instead.' % (gui, self.pylab_gui_select))
3411 3411 gui, backend = pt.find_gui_and_backend(self.pylab_gui_select)
3412 3412
3413 3413 pt.activate_matplotlib(backend)
3414 3414 pt.configure_inline_support(self, backend)
3415 3415
3416 3416 # Now we must activate the gui pylab wants to use, and fix %run to take
3417 3417 # plot updates into account
3418 3418 self.enable_gui(gui)
3419 3419 self.magics_manager.registry['ExecutionMagics'].default_runner = \
3420 3420 pt.mpl_runner(self.safe_execfile)
3421 3421
3422 3422 return gui, backend
3423 3423
3424 3424 def enable_pylab(self, gui=None, import_all=True, welcome_message=False):
3425 3425 """Activate pylab support at runtime.
3426 3426
3427 3427 This turns on support for matplotlib, preloads into the interactive
3428 3428 namespace all of numpy and pylab, and configures IPython to correctly
3429 3429 interact with the GUI event loop. The GUI backend to be used can be
3430 3430 optionally selected with the optional ``gui`` argument.
3431 3431
3432 3432 This method only adds preloading the namespace to InteractiveShell.enable_matplotlib.
3433 3433
3434 3434 Parameters
3435 3435 ----------
3436 3436 gui : optional, string
3437 3437 If given, dictates the choice of matplotlib GUI backend to use
3438 3438 (should be one of IPython's supported backends, 'qt', 'osx', 'tk',
3439 3439 'gtk', 'wx' or 'inline'), otherwise we use the default chosen by
3440 3440 matplotlib (as dictated by the matplotlib build-time options plus the
3441 3441 user's matplotlibrc configuration file). Note that not all backends
3442 3442 make sense in all contexts, for example a terminal ipython can't
3443 3443 display figures inline.
3444 3444 import_all : optional, bool, default: True
3445 3445 Whether to do `from numpy import *` and `from pylab import *`
3446 3446 in addition to module imports.
3447 3447 welcome_message : deprecated
3448 3448 This argument is ignored, no welcome message will be displayed.
3449 3449 """
3450 3450 from IPython.core.pylabtools import import_pylab
3451 3451
3452 3452 gui, backend = self.enable_matplotlib(gui)
3453 3453
3454 3454 # We want to prevent the loading of pylab to pollute the user's
3455 3455 # namespace as shown by the %who* magics, so we execute the activation
3456 3456 # code in an empty namespace, and we update *both* user_ns and
3457 3457 # user_ns_hidden with this information.
3458 3458 ns = {}
3459 3459 import_pylab(ns, import_all)
3460 3460 # warn about clobbered names
3461 3461 ignored = {"__builtins__"}
3462 3462 both = set(ns).intersection(self.user_ns).difference(ignored)
3463 3463 clobbered = [ name for name in both if self.user_ns[name] is not ns[name] ]
3464 3464 self.user_ns.update(ns)
3465 3465 self.user_ns_hidden.update(ns)
3466 3466 return gui, backend, clobbered
3467 3467
3468 3468 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
3469 3469 # Utilities
3470 3470 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
3471 3471
3472 3472 def var_expand(self, cmd, depth=0, formatter=DollarFormatter()):
3473 3473 """Expand python variables in a string.
3474 3474
3475 3475 The depth argument indicates how many frames above the caller should
3476 3476 be walked to look for the local namespace where to expand variables.
3477 3477
3478 3478 The global namespace for expansion is always the user's interactive
3479 3479 namespace.
3480 3480 """
3481 3481 ns = self.user_ns.copy()
3482 3482 try:
3483 3483 frame = sys._getframe(depth+1)
3484 3484 except ValueError:
3485 3485 # This is thrown if there aren't that many frames on the stack,
3486 3486 # e.g. if a script called run_line_magic() directly.
3487 3487 pass
3488 3488 else:
3489 3489 ns.update(frame.f_locals)
3490 3490
3491 3491 try:
3492 3492 # We have to use .vformat() here, because 'self' is a valid and common
3493 3493 # name, and expanding **ns for .format() would make it collide with
3494 3494 # the 'self' argument of the method.
3495 3495 cmd = formatter.vformat(cmd, args=[], kwargs=ns)
3496 3496 except Exception:
3497 3497 # if formatter couldn't format, just let it go untransformed
3498 3498 pass
3499 3499 return cmd
3500 3500
3501 3501 def mktempfile(self, data=None, prefix='ipython_edit_'):
3502 3502 """Make a new tempfile and return its filename.
3503 3503
3504 3504 This makes a call to tempfile.mkstemp (created in a tempfile.mkdtemp),
3505 3505 but it registers the created filename internally so ipython cleans it up
3506 3506 at exit time.
3507 3507
3508 3508 Optional inputs:
3509 3509
3510 3510 - data(None): if data is given, it gets written out to the temp file
3511 3511 immediately, and the file is closed again."""
3512 3512
3513 3513 dirname = tempfile.mkdtemp(prefix=prefix)
3514 3514 self.tempdirs.append(dirname)
3515 3515
3516 3516 handle, filename = tempfile.mkstemp('.py', prefix, dir=dirname)
3517 3517 os.close(handle) # On Windows, there can only be one open handle on a file
3518 3518 self.tempfiles.append(filename)
3519 3519
3520 3520 if data:
3521 3521 with open(filename, 'w') as tmp_file:
3522 3522 tmp_file.write(data)
3523 3523 return filename
3524 3524
3525 3525 @undoc
3526 3526 def write(self,data):
3527 3527 """DEPRECATED: Write a string to the default output"""
3528 3528 warn('InteractiveShell.write() is deprecated, use sys.stdout instead',
3529 3529 DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2)
3530 3530 sys.stdout.write(data)
3531 3531
3532 3532 @undoc
3533 3533 def write_err(self,data):
3534 3534 """DEPRECATED: Write a string to the default error output"""
3535 3535 warn('InteractiveShell.write_err() is deprecated, use sys.stderr instead',
3536 3536 DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2)
3537 3537 sys.stderr.write(data)
3538 3538
3539 3539 def ask_yes_no(self, prompt, default=None, interrupt=None):
3540 3540 if self.quiet:
3541 3541 return True
3542 3542 return ask_yes_no(prompt,default,interrupt)
3543 3543
3544 3544 def show_usage(self):
3545 3545 """Show a usage message"""
3546 3546 page.page(IPython.core.usage.interactive_usage)
3547 3547
3548 3548 def extract_input_lines(self, range_str, raw=False):
3549 3549 """Return as a string a set of input history slices.
3550 3550
3551 3551 Parameters
3552 3552 ----------
3553 3553 range_str : string
3554 3554 The set of slices is given as a string, like "~5/6-~4/2 4:8 9",
3555 3555 since this function is for use by magic functions which get their
3556 3556 arguments as strings. The number before the / is the session
3557 3557 number: ~n goes n back from the current session.
3558 3558
3559 3559 raw : bool, optional
3560 3560 By default, the processed input is used. If this is true, the raw
3561 3561 input history is used instead.
3562 3562
3563 3563 Notes
3564 3564 -----
3565 3565
3566 3566 Slices can be described with two notations:
3567 3567
3568 3568 * ``N:M`` -> standard python form, means including items N...(M-1).
3569 3569 * ``N-M`` -> include items N..M (closed endpoint).
3570 3570 """
3571 3571 lines = self.history_manager.get_range_by_str(range_str, raw=raw)
3572 3572 return "\n".join(x for _, _, x in lines)
3573 3573
3574 3574 def find_user_code(self, target, raw=True, py_only=False, skip_encoding_cookie=True, search_ns=False):
3575 3575 """Get a code string from history, file, url, or a string or macro.
3576 3576
3577 3577 This is mainly used by magic functions.
3578 3578
3579 3579 Parameters
3580 3580 ----------
3581 3581
3582 3582 target : str
3583 3583
3584 3584 A string specifying code to retrieve. This will be tried respectively
3585 3585 as: ranges of input history (see %history for syntax), url,
3586 3586 corresponding .py file, filename, or an expression evaluating to a
3587 3587 string or Macro in the user namespace.
3588 3588
3589 3589 raw : bool
3590 3590 If true (default), retrieve raw history. Has no effect on the other
3591 3591 retrieval mechanisms.
3592 3592
3593 3593 py_only : bool (default False)
3594 3594 Only try to fetch python code, do not try alternative methods to decode file
3595 3595 if unicode fails.
3596 3596
3597 3597 Returns
3598 3598 -------
3599 3599 A string of code.
3600 3600
3601 3601 ValueError is raised if nothing is found, and TypeError if it evaluates
3602 3602 to an object of another type. In each case, .args[0] is a printable
3603 3603 message.
3604 3604 """
3605 3605 code = self.extract_input_lines(target, raw=raw) # Grab history
3606 3606 if code:
3607 3607 return code
3608 3608 try:
3609 3609 if target.startswith(('http://', 'https://')):
3610 3610 return openpy.read_py_url(target, skip_encoding_cookie=skip_encoding_cookie)
3611 3611 except UnicodeDecodeError:
3612 3612 if not py_only :
3613 3613 # Deferred import
3614 3614 from urllib.request import urlopen
3615 3615 response = urlopen(target)
3616 3616 return response.read().decode('latin1')
3617 3617 raise ValueError(("'%s' seem to be unreadable.") % target)
3618 3618
3619 3619 potential_target = [target]
3620 3620 try :
3621 3621 potential_target.insert(0,get_py_filename(target))
3622 3622 except IOError:
3623 3623 pass
3624 3624
3625 3625 for tgt in potential_target :
3626 3626 if os.path.isfile(tgt): # Read file
3627 3627 try :
3628 3628 return openpy.read_py_file(tgt, skip_encoding_cookie=skip_encoding_cookie)
3629 3629 except UnicodeDecodeError :
3630 3630 if not py_only :
3631 3631 with io_open(tgt,'r', encoding='latin1') as f :
3632 3632 return f.read()
3633 3633 raise ValueError(("'%s' seem to be unreadable.") % target)
3634 3634 elif os.path.isdir(os.path.expanduser(tgt)):
3635 3635 raise ValueError("'%s' is a directory, not a regular file." % target)
3636 3636
3637 3637 if search_ns:
3638 3638 # Inspect namespace to load object source
3639 3639 object_info = self.object_inspect(target, detail_level=1)
3640 3640 if object_info['found'] and object_info['source']:
3641 3641 return object_info['source']
3642 3642
3643 3643 try: # User namespace
3644 3644 codeobj = eval(target, self.user_ns)
3645 3645 except Exception:
3646 3646 raise ValueError(("'%s' was not found in history, as a file, url, "
3647 3647 "nor in the user namespace.") % target)
3648 3648
3649 3649 if isinstance(codeobj, str):
3650 3650 return codeobj
3651 3651 elif isinstance(codeobj, Macro):
3652 3652 return codeobj.value
3653 3653
3654 3654 raise TypeError("%s is neither a string nor a macro." % target,
3655 3655 codeobj)
3656 3656
3657 3657 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
3658 3658 # Things related to IPython exiting
3659 3659 #-------------------------------------------------------------------------
3660 3660 def atexit_operations(self):
3661 3661 """This will be executed at the time of exit.
3662 3662
3663 3663 Cleanup operations and saving of persistent data that is done
3664 3664 unconditionally by IPython should be performed here.
3665 3665
3666 3666 For things that may depend on startup flags or platform specifics (such
3667 3667 as having readline or not), register a separate atexit function in the
3668 3668 code that has the appropriate information, rather than trying to
3669 3669 clutter
3670 3670 """
3671 3671 # Close the history session (this stores the end time and line count)
3672 3672 # this must be *before* the tempfile cleanup, in case of temporary
3673 3673 # history db
3674 3674 self.history_manager.end_session()
3675 3675
3676 3676 # Cleanup all tempfiles and folders left around
3677 3677 for tfile in self.tempfiles:
3678 3678 try:
3679 3679 os.unlink(tfile)
3680 3680 except OSError:
3681 3681 pass
3682 3682
3683 3683 for tdir in self.tempdirs:
3684 3684 try:
3685 3685 os.rmdir(tdir)
3686 3686 except OSError:
3687 3687 pass
3688 3688
3689 3689 # Clear all user namespaces to release all references cleanly.
3690 3690 self.reset(new_session=False)
3691 3691
3692 3692 # Run user hooks
3693 3693 self.hooks.shutdown_hook()
3694 3694
3695 3695 def cleanup(self):
3696 3696 self.restore_sys_module_state()
3697 3697
3698 3698
3699 3699 # Overridden in terminal subclass to change prompts
3700 3700 def switch_doctest_mode(self, mode):
3701 3701 pass
3702 3702
3703 3703
3704 3704 class InteractiveShellABC(metaclass=abc.ABCMeta):
3705 3705 """An abstract base class for InteractiveShell."""
3706 3706
3707 3707 InteractiveShellABC.register(InteractiveShell)
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