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@@ -1,270 +1,272 b'' | |||
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1 | 1 | # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- |
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2 | 2 | """Modified input prompt for executing files. |
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3 | 3 | |
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4 | 4 | We define a special input line filter to allow typing lines which begin with |
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5 | 5 | '~', '/' or '.'. If one of those strings is encountered, it is automatically |
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6 | 6 | executed. |
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7 | 7 | |
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8 |
$Id: InterpreterExec.py |
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8 | $Id: InterpreterExec.py 638 2005-07-18 03:01:41Z fperez $""" | |
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9 | 9 | |
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10 | 10 | #***************************************************************************** |
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11 | 11 | # Copyright (C) 2004 W.J. van der Laan <gnufnork@hetdigitalegat.nl> |
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12 | 12 | # Copyright (C) 2004 Fernando Perez <fperez@colorado.edu> |
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13 | 13 | # |
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14 | 14 | # Distributed under the terms of the BSD License. The full license is in |
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15 | 15 | # the file COPYING, distributed as part of this software. |
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16 | 16 | #***************************************************************************** |
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17 | 17 | |
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18 | 18 | from IPython import Release |
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19 | 19 | __author__ = 'W.J. van der Laan <gnufnork@hetdigitalegat.nl>, '\ |
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20 | 20 | '%s <%s>' % Release.authors['Fernando'] |
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21 | 21 | __license__ = Release.license |
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22 | 22 | |
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23 | 23 | def prefilter_shell(self,line,continuation): |
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24 | 24 | """Alternate prefilter, modified for shell-like functionality. |
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25 | 25 | |
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26 | 26 | - Execute all lines beginning with '~', '/' or '.' |
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27 | 27 | - $var=cmd <=> %sc var=cmd |
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28 | 28 | - $$var=cmd <=> %sc -l var=cmd |
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29 | 29 | """ |
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30 | 30 | |
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31 | 31 | if line: |
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32 | 32 | l0 = line[0] |
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33 | 33 | if l0 in '~/.': |
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34 | 34 | return self._prefilter("!%s"%line,continuation) |
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35 | 35 | elif l0=='$': |
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36 | 36 | lrest = line[1:] |
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37 | 37 | if lrest.startswith('$'): |
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38 | 38 | # $$var=cmd <=> %sc -l var=cmd |
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39 | 39 | return self._prefilter("%ssc -l %s" % (self.ESC_MAGIC,lrest[1:]), |
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40 | 40 | continuation) |
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41 | 41 | else: |
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42 | 42 | # $var=cmd <=> %sc var=cmd |
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43 | 43 | return self._prefilter("%ssc %s" % (self.ESC_MAGIC,lrest), |
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44 | 44 | continuation) |
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45 | 45 | else: |
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46 | 46 | return self._prefilter(line,continuation) |
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47 | 47 | else: |
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48 | 48 | return self._prefilter(line,continuation) |
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49 | 49 | |
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50 | 50 | # Rebind this to be the new IPython prefilter: |
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51 | 51 | from IPython.iplib import InteractiveShell |
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52 | 52 | InteractiveShell.prefilter = prefilter_shell |
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53 | 53 | # Clean up the namespace. |
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54 | 54 | del InteractiveShell,prefilter_shell |
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55 | 55 | |
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56 | 56 | # Provide pysh and further shell-oriented services |
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57 | 57 | import os,sys,shutil |
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58 | 58 | from IPython.genutils import system,shell,getoutput,getoutputerror |
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59 | 59 | |
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60 | 60 | # Short aliases for getting shell output as a string and a list |
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61 | 61 | sout = getoutput |
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62 | 62 | lout = lambda cmd: getoutput(cmd,split=1) |
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63 | 63 | |
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64 | 64 | # Empty function, meant as a docstring holder so help(pysh) works. |
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65 | 65 | def pysh(): |
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66 | 66 | """Pysh is a set of modules and extensions to IPython which make shell-like |
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67 | 67 | usage with Python syntax more convenient. Keep in mind that pysh is NOT a |
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68 | 68 | full-blown shell, so don't try to make it your /etc/passwd entry! |
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69 | 69 | |
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70 | 70 | In particular, it has no job control, so if you type Ctrl-Z (under Unix), |
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71 | 71 | you'll suspend pysh itself, not the process you just started. |
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72 | 72 | |
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73 | 73 | Since pysh is really nothing but a customized IPython, you should |
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74 | 74 | familiarize yourself with IPython's features. This brief help mainly |
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75 | 75 | documents areas in which pysh differs from the normal IPython. |
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76 | 76 | |
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77 | 77 | ALIASES |
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78 | 78 | ------- |
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79 | 79 | All of your $PATH has been loaded as IPython aliases, so you should be |
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80 | 80 | able to type any normal system command and have it executed. See %alias? |
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81 | 81 | and %unalias? for details on the alias facilities. |
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82 | 82 | |
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83 | 83 | SPECIAL SYNTAX |
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84 | 84 | -------------- |
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85 | 85 | Any lines which begin with '~', '/' and '.' will be executed as shell |
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86 | 86 | commands instead of as Python code. The special escapes below are also |
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87 | 87 | recognized. !cmd is valid in single or multi-line input, all others are |
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88 | 88 | only valid in single-line input: |
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89 | 89 | |
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90 | 90 | !cmd - pass 'cmd' directly to the shell |
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91 | 91 | !!cmd - execute 'cmd' and return output as a list (split on '\\n') |
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92 | 92 | $var=cmd - capture output of cmd into var, as a string |
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93 | 93 | $$var=cmd - capture output of cmd into var, as a list (split on '\\n') |
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94 | 94 | |
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95 | 95 | The $/$$ syntaxes make Python variables from system output, which you can |
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96 | 96 | later use for further scripting. The converse is also possible: when |
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97 | 97 | executing an alias or calling to the system via !/!!, you can expand any |
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98 | 98 | python variable or expression by prepending it with $. Full details of |
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99 | 99 | the allowed syntax can be found in Python's PEP 215. |
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100 | 100 | |
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101 | 101 | A few brief examples will illustrate these: |
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102 | 102 | |
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103 | 103 | fperez[~/test]|3> !ls *s.py |
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104 | 104 | scopes.py strings.py |
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105 | 105 | |
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106 | 106 | ls is an internal alias, so there's no need to use !: |
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107 | 107 | fperez[~/test]|4> ls *s.py |
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108 | 108 | scopes.py* strings.py |
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109 | 109 | |
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110 | 110 | !!ls will return the output into a Python variable: |
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111 | 111 | fperez[~/test]|5> !!ls *s.py |
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112 | 112 | <5> ['scopes.py', 'strings.py'] |
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113 | 113 | fperez[~/test]|6> print _5 |
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114 | 114 | ['scopes.py', 'strings.py'] |
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115 | 115 | |
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116 | 116 | $ and $$ allow direct capture to named variables: |
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117 | 117 | fperez[~/test]|7> $astr = ls *s.py |
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118 | 118 | fperez[~/test]|8> astr |
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119 | 119 | <8> 'scopes.py\\nstrings.py' |
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120 | 120 | |
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121 | 121 | fperez[~/test]|9> $$alist = ls *s.py |
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122 | 122 | fperez[~/test]|10> alist |
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123 | 123 | <10> ['scopes.py', 'strings.py'] |
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124 | 124 | |
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125 | 125 | alist is now a normal python list you can loop over. Using $ will expand |
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126 | 126 | back the python values when alias calls are made: |
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127 | 127 | fperez[~/test]|11> for f in alist: |
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128 | 128 | |..> print 'file',f, |
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129 | 129 | |..> wc -l $f |
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130 | 130 | |..> |
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131 | 131 | file scopes.py 13 scopes.py |
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132 | 132 | file strings.py 4 strings.py |
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133 | 133 | |
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134 | 134 | Note that you may need to protect your variables with braces if you want |
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135 | 135 | to append strings to their names. To copy all files in alist to .bak |
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136 | 136 | extensions, you must use: |
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137 | 137 | fperez[~/test]|12> for f in alist: |
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138 | 138 | |..> cp $f ${f}.bak |
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139 | 139 | |
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140 | 140 | If you try using $f.bak, you'll get an AttributeError exception saying |
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141 | 141 | that your string object doesn't have a .bak attribute. This is because |
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142 | 142 | the $ expansion mechanism allows you to expand full Python expressions: |
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143 | 143 | fperez[~/test]|13> echo "sys.platform is: $sys.platform" |
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144 | 144 | sys.platform is: linux2 |
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145 | 145 | |
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146 | 146 | IPython's input history handling is still active, which allows you to |
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147 | 147 | rerun a single block of multi-line input by simply using exec: |
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148 | 148 | fperez[~/test]|14> $$alist = ls *.eps |
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149 | 149 | fperez[~/test]|15> exec _i11 |
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150 | 150 | file image2.eps 921 image2.eps |
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151 | 151 | file image.eps 921 image.eps |
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152 | 152 | |
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153 | 153 | While these are new special-case syntaxes, they are designed to allow very |
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154 | 154 | efficient use of the shell with minimal typing. At an interactive shell |
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155 | 155 | prompt, conciseness of expression wins over readability. |
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156 | 156 | |
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157 | 157 | USEFUL FUNCTIONS AND MODULES |
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158 | 158 | ---------------------------- |
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159 | 159 | The os, sys and shutil modules from the Python standard library are |
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160 | 160 | automatically loaded. Some additional functions, useful for shell usage, |
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161 | 161 | are listed below. You can request more help about them with '?'. |
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162 | 162 | |
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163 | 163 | shell - execute a command in the underlying system shell |
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164 | 164 | system - like shell(), but return the exit status of the command |
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165 | 165 | sout - capture the output of a command as a string |
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166 | 166 | lout - capture the output of a command as a list (split on '\\n') |
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167 | 167 | getoutputerror - capture (output,error) of a shell command |
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168 | 168 | |
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169 | 169 | sout/lout are the functional equivalents of $/$$. They are provided to |
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170 | 170 | allow you to capture system output in the middle of true python code, |
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171 | 171 | function definitions, etc (where $ and $$ are invalid). |
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172 | 172 | |
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173 | 173 | DIRECTORY MANAGEMENT |
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174 | 174 | -------------------- |
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175 | 175 | Since each command passed by pysh to the underlying system is executed in |
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176 | 176 | a subshell which exits immediately, you can NOT use !cd to navigate the |
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177 | 177 | filesystem. |
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178 | 178 | |
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179 | 179 | Pysh provides its own builtin '%cd' magic command to move in the |
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180 | 180 | filesystem (the % is not required with automagic on). It also maintains a |
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181 | 181 | list of visited directories (use %dhist to see it) and allows direct |
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182 | 182 | switching to any of them. Type 'cd?' for more details. |
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183 | 183 | |
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184 | 184 | %pushd, %popd and %dirs are provided for directory stack handling. |
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185 | 185 | |
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186 | 186 | PROMPT CUSTOMIZATION |
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187 | 187 | -------------------- |
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188 | 188 | |
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189 | 189 | The supplied ipythonrc-pysh profile comes with an example of a very |
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190 | 190 | colored and detailed prompt, mainly to serve as an illustration. The |
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191 | 191 | valid escape sequences, besides color names, are: |
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192 | 192 | |
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193 | 193 | \\# - Prompt number. |
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194 | 194 | \\D - Dots, as many as there are digits in \\# (so they align). |
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195 | 195 | \\w - Current working directory (cwd). |
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196 | 196 | \\W - Basename of current working directory. |
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197 | 197 | \\XN - Where N=0..5. N terms of the cwd, with $HOME written as ~. |
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198 | 198 | \\YN - Where N=0..5. Like XN, but if ~ is term N+1 it's also shown. |
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199 | 199 | \\u - Username. |
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200 | 200 | \\H - Full hostname. |
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201 | 201 | \\h - Hostname up to first '.' |
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202 | 202 | \\$ - Root symbol ($ or #). |
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203 | 203 | \\t - Current time, in H:M:S format. |
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204 | 204 | \\v - IPython release version. |
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205 | 205 | \\n - Newline. |
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206 | 206 | \\r - Carriage return. |
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207 | 207 | \\\\ - An explicitly escaped '\\'. |
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208 | 208 | |
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209 | 209 | You can configure your prompt colors using any ANSI color escape. Each |
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210 | 210 | color escape sets the color for any subsequent text, until another escape |
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211 | 211 | comes in and changes things. The valid color escapes are: |
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212 | 212 | |
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213 | 213 | \\C_Black |
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214 | 214 | \\C_Blue |
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215 | 215 | \\C_Brown |
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216 | 216 | \\C_Cyan |
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217 | 217 | \\C_DarkGray |
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218 | 218 | \\C_Green |
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219 | 219 | \\C_LightBlue |
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220 | 220 | \\C_LightCyan |
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221 | 221 | \\C_LightGray |
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222 | 222 | \\C_LightGreen |
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223 | 223 | \\C_LightPurple |
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224 | 224 | \\C_LightRed |
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225 | 225 | \\C_Purple |
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226 | 226 | \\C_Red |
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227 | 227 | \\C_White |
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228 | 228 | \\C_Yellow |
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229 | 229 | \\C_Normal - Stop coloring, defaults to your terminal settings. |
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230 | 230 | """ |
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231 | 231 | pass |
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232 | 232 | |
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233 | 233 | # Configure a few things. Much of this is fairly hackish, since IPython |
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234 | 234 | # doesn't really expose a clean API for it. Be careful if you start making |
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235 | 235 | # many modifications here. |
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236 | 236 | |
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237 | 237 | print """\ |
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238 | 238 | Welcome to pysh, a set of extensions to IPython for shell usage. |
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239 | 239 | help(pysh) -> help on the installed shell extensions and syntax. |
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240 | 240 | """ |
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241 | 241 | |
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242 | 242 | # Set the 'cd' command to quiet mode, a more shell-like behavior |
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243 | 243 | __IPYTHON__.default_option('cd','-q') |
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244 | 244 | |
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245 | 245 | # Load all of $PATH as aliases |
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246 | 246 | if os.name == 'posix': |
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247 | 247 | # %rehash is very fast, but it doesn't check for executability, it simply |
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248 | 248 | # dumps everything in $PATH as an alias. Use rehashx if you want more |
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249 | 249 | # checks. |
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250 | 250 | __IPYTHON__.magic_rehash() |
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251 | 251 | else: |
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252 | 252 | # Windows users: the list of extensions considered executable is read from |
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253 | 253 | # the environment variable 'pathext'. If this is undefined, IPython |
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254 | 254 | # defaults to EXE, COM and BAT. |
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255 | 255 | # %rehashx is the one which does extension analysis, at the cost of |
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256 | 256 | # being much slower than %rehash. |
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257 | 257 | __IPYTHON__.magic_rehashx() |
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258 | 258 | |
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259 | 259 | # Remove %sc,%sx if present as aliases |
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260 | 260 | __IPYTHON__.magic_unalias('sc') |
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261 | 261 | __IPYTHON__.magic_unalias('sx') |
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262 | 262 | |
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263 | 263 | # We need different criteria for line-splitting, so that aliases such as |
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264 | 264 | # 'gnome-terminal' are interpreted as a single alias instead of variable |
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265 | 265 | # 'gnome' minus variable 'terminal'. |
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266 | 266 | import re |
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267 |
__IPYTHON__.line_split = re.compile(r'^(\s* |
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267 | __IPYTHON__.line_split = re.compile(r'^([\s*,;/])' | |
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268 | r'([\?\w\.\-\+]+\w*\s*)' | |
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269 | r'(\(?.*$)') | |
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268 | 270 | |
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269 | 271 | # Namespace cleanup |
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270 | 272 | del re |
@@ -1,199 +1,192 b'' | |||
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1 | 1 | # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- |
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2 | 2 | """Word completion for GNU readline 2.0. |
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3 | 3 | |
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4 | 4 | --------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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5 | 5 | NOTE: This version is a re-implementation of rlcompleter with selectable |
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6 | 6 | namespace. |
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7 | 7 | |
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8 | 8 | The problem with rlcompleter is that it's hardwired to work with |
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9 | 9 | __main__.__dict__, and in some cases one may have 'sandboxed' namespaces. So |
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10 | 10 | this class is a ripoff of rlcompleter, with the namespace to work in as an |
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11 | 11 | optional parameter. |
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12 | 12 | |
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13 | 13 | This class can be used just like rlcompleter, but the Completer class now has |
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14 | 14 | a constructor with the optional 'namespace' parameter. |
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15 | 15 | |
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16 | 16 | A patch has been submitted to Python@sourceforge for these changes to go in |
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17 | 17 | the standard Python distribution. |
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18 | 18 | |
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19 | 19 | The patch went in for Python 2.3. Once IPython drops support for Python 2.2, |
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20 | 20 | this file can be significantly reduced. |
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21 | 21 | --------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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22 | 22 | |
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23 | 23 | Original rlcompleter documentation: |
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24 | 24 | |
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25 | 25 | This requires the latest extension to the readline module (the |
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26 | 26 | completes keywords, built-ins and globals in __main__; when completing |
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27 | 27 | NAME.NAME..., it evaluates (!) the expression up to the last dot and |
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28 | 28 | completes its attributes. |
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29 | 29 | |
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30 | 30 | It's very cool to do "import string" type "string.", hit the |
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31 | 31 | completion key (twice), and see the list of names defined by the |
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32 | 32 | string module! |
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33 | 33 | |
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34 | 34 | Tip: to use the tab key as the completion key, call |
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35 | 35 | |
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36 | 36 | readline.parse_and_bind("tab: complete") |
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37 | 37 | |
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38 | 38 | Notes: |
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39 | 39 | |
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40 | 40 | - Exceptions raised by the completer function are *ignored* (and |
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41 | 41 | generally cause the completion to fail). This is a feature -- since |
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42 | 42 | readline sets the tty device in raw (or cbreak) mode, printing a |
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43 | 43 | traceback wouldn't work well without some complicated hoopla to save, |
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44 | 44 | reset and restore the tty state. |
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45 | 45 | |
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46 | 46 | - The evaluation of the NAME.NAME... form may cause arbitrary |
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47 | 47 | application defined code to be executed if an object with a |
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48 | 48 | __getattr__ hook is found. Since it is the responsibility of the |
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49 | 49 | application (or the user) to enable this feature, I consider this an |
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50 | 50 | acceptable risk. More complicated expressions (e.g. function calls or |
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51 | 51 | indexing operations) are *not* evaluated. |
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52 | 52 | |
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53 | 53 | - GNU readline is also used by the built-in functions input() and |
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54 | 54 | raw_input(), and thus these also benefit/suffer from the completer |
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55 | 55 | features. Clearly an interactive application can benefit by |
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56 | 56 | specifying its own completer function and using raw_input() for all |
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57 | 57 | its input. |
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58 | 58 | |
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59 | 59 | - When the original stdin is not a tty device, GNU readline is never |
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60 | 60 | used, and this module (and the readline module) are silently inactive. |
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61 | 61 | |
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62 | 62 | """ |
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63 | 63 | |
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64 | 64 | #***************************************************************************** |
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65 | 65 | # |
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66 | 66 | # Since this file is essentially a minimally modified copy of the rlcompleter |
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67 | 67 | # module which is part of the standard Python distribution, I assume that the |
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68 | 68 | # proper procedure is to maintain its copyright as belonging to the Python |
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69 | 69 | # Software Foundation: |
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70 | 70 | # |
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71 | 71 | # Copyright (C) 2001 Python Software Foundation, www.python.org |
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72 | 72 | # |
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73 | 73 | # Distributed under the terms of the Python Software Foundation license. |
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74 | 74 | # |
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75 | 75 | # Full text available at: |
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76 | 76 | # |
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77 | 77 | # http://www.python.org/2.1/license.html |
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78 | 78 | # |
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79 | 79 | #***************************************************************************** |
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80 | 80 | |
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81 | 81 | import readline |
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82 | 82 | import __builtin__ |
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83 | 83 | import __main__ |
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84 | 84 | |
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85 | 85 | __all__ = ["Completer"] |
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86 | 86 | |
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87 | # declares Python 2.2 compatibility symbols: | |
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88 | try: | |
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89 | basestring | |
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90 | except NameError: | |
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91 | import types | |
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92 | basestring = (types.StringType, types.UnicodeType) | |
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93 | ||
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94 | 87 | class Completer: |
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95 | 88 | def __init__(self, namespace = None): |
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96 | 89 | """Create a new completer for the command line. |
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97 | 90 | |
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98 | 91 | Completer([namespace]) -> completer instance. |
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99 | 92 | |
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100 | 93 | If unspecified, the default namespace where completions are performed |
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101 | 94 | is __main__ (technically, __main__.__dict__). Namespaces should be |
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102 | 95 | given as dictionaries. |
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103 | 96 | |
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104 | 97 | Completer instances should be used as the completion mechanism of |
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105 | 98 | readline via the set_completer() call: |
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106 | 99 | |
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107 | 100 | readline.set_completer(Completer(my_namespace).complete) |
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108 | 101 | """ |
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109 | 102 | |
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110 | 103 | if namespace and type(namespace) != type({}): |
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111 | 104 | raise TypeError,'namespace must be a dictionary' |
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112 | 105 | |
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113 | 106 | # Don't bind to namespace quite yet, but flag whether the user wants a |
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114 | 107 | # specific namespace or to use __main__.__dict__. This will allow us |
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115 | 108 | # to bind to __main__.__dict__ at completion time, not now. |
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116 | 109 | if namespace is None: |
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117 | 110 | self.use_main_ns = 1 |
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118 | 111 | else: |
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119 | 112 | self.use_main_ns = 0 |
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120 | 113 | self.namespace = namespace |
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121 | 114 | |
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122 | 115 | def complete(self, text, state): |
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123 | 116 | """Return the next possible completion for 'text'. |
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124 | 117 | |
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125 | 118 | This is called successively with state == 0, 1, 2, ... until it |
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126 | 119 | returns None. The completion should begin with 'text'. |
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127 | 120 | |
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128 | 121 | """ |
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129 | 122 | if self.use_main_ns: |
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130 | 123 | self.namespace = __main__.__dict__ |
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131 | 124 | |
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132 | 125 | if state == 0: |
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133 | 126 | if "." in text: |
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134 | 127 | self.matches = self.attr_matches(text) |
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135 | 128 | else: |
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136 | 129 | self.matches = self.global_matches(text) |
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137 | 130 | try: |
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138 | 131 | return self.matches[state] |
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139 | 132 | except IndexError: |
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140 | 133 | return None |
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141 | 134 | |
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142 | 135 | def global_matches(self, text): |
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143 | 136 | """Compute matches when text is a simple name. |
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144 | 137 | |
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145 | 138 | Return a list of all keywords, built-in functions and names currently |
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146 | 139 | defined in self.namespace that match. |
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147 | 140 | |
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148 | 141 | """ |
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149 | 142 | import keyword |
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150 | 143 | matches = [] |
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151 | 144 | n = len(text) |
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152 | 145 | for list in [keyword.kwlist, |
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153 | 146 | __builtin__.__dict__.keys(), |
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154 | 147 | self.namespace.keys()]: |
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155 | 148 | for word in list: |
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156 | 149 | if word[:n] == text and word != "__builtins__": |
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157 | 150 | matches.append(word) |
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158 | 151 | return matches |
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159 | 152 | |
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160 | 153 | def attr_matches(self, text): |
|
161 | 154 | """Compute matches when text contains a dot. |
|
162 | 155 | |
|
163 | 156 | Assuming the text is of the form NAME.NAME....[NAME], and is |
|
164 | 157 | evaluatable in self.namespace, it will be evaluated and its attributes |
|
165 | 158 | (as revealed by dir()) are used as possible completions. (For class |
|
166 | 159 | instances, class members are are also considered.) |
|
167 | 160 | |
|
168 | 161 | WARNING: this can still invoke arbitrary C code, if an object |
|
169 | 162 | with a __getattr__ hook is evaluated. |
|
170 | 163 | |
|
171 | 164 | """ |
|
172 | 165 | import re |
|
173 | 166 | |
|
174 | 167 | # Another option, seems to work great. Catches things like ''.<tab> |
|
175 | 168 | m = re.match(r"(\S+(\.\w+)*)\.(\w*)$", text) |
|
176 | 169 | |
|
177 | 170 | if not m: |
|
178 | 171 | return [] |
|
179 | 172 | expr, attr = m.group(1, 3) |
|
180 | 173 | object = eval(expr, self.namespace) |
|
181 | 174 | words = [w for w in dir(object) if isinstance(w, basestring)] |
|
182 | 175 | if hasattr(object,'__class__'): |
|
183 | 176 | words.append('__class__') |
|
184 | 177 | words.extend(get_class_members(object.__class__)) |
|
185 | 178 | n = len(attr) |
|
186 | 179 | matches = [] |
|
187 | 180 | for word in words: |
|
188 | 181 | if word[:n] == attr and word != "__builtins__": |
|
189 | 182 | matches.append("%s.%s" % (expr, word)) |
|
190 | 183 | return matches |
|
191 | 184 | |
|
192 | 185 | def get_class_members(klass): |
|
193 | 186 | ret = dir(klass) |
|
194 | 187 | if hasattr(klass,'__bases__'): |
|
195 | 188 | for base in klass.__bases__: |
|
196 | 189 | ret.extend(get_class_members(base)) |
|
197 | 190 | return ret |
|
198 | 191 | |
|
199 | 192 | readline.set_completer(Completer().complete) |
@@ -1,253 +1,277 b'' | |||
|
1 | 1 | # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- |
|
2 | 2 | """String interpolation for Python (by Ka-Ping Yee, 14 Feb 2000). |
|
3 | 3 | |
|
4 | 4 | This module lets you quickly and conveniently interpolate values into |
|
5 | 5 | strings (in the flavour of Perl or Tcl, but with less extraneous |
|
6 | 6 | punctuation). You get a bit more power than in the other languages, |
|
7 | 7 | because this module allows subscripting, slicing, function calls, |
|
8 | 8 | attribute lookup, or arbitrary expressions. Variables and expressions |
|
9 | 9 | are evaluated in the namespace of the caller. |
|
10 | 10 | |
|
11 | 11 | The itpl() function returns the result of interpolating a string, and |
|
12 | 12 | printpl() prints out an interpolated string. Here are some examples: |
|
13 | 13 | |
|
14 | 14 | from Itpl import printpl |
|
15 | 15 | printpl("Here is a $string.") |
|
16 | 16 | printpl("Here is a $module.member.") |
|
17 | 17 | printpl("Here is an $object.member.") |
|
18 | 18 | printpl("Here is a $functioncall(with, arguments).") |
|
19 | 19 | printpl("Here is an ${arbitrary + expression}.") |
|
20 | 20 | printpl("Here is an $array[3] member.") |
|
21 | 21 | printpl("Here is a $dictionary['member'].") |
|
22 | 22 | |
|
23 | 23 | The filter() function filters a file object so that output through it |
|
24 | 24 | is interpolated. This lets you produce the illusion that Python knows |
|
25 | 25 | how to do interpolation: |
|
26 | 26 | |
|
27 | 27 | import Itpl |
|
28 | 28 | sys.stdout = Itpl.filter() |
|
29 | 29 | f = "fancy" |
|
30 | 30 | print "Isn't this $f?" |
|
31 | 31 | print "Standard output has been replaced with a $sys.stdout object." |
|
32 | 32 | sys.stdout = Itpl.unfilter() |
|
33 | 33 | print "Okay, back $to $normal." |
|
34 | 34 | |
|
35 | 35 | Under the hood, the Itpl class represents a string that knows how to |
|
36 | 36 | interpolate values. An instance of the class parses the string once |
|
37 | 37 | upon initialization; the evaluation and substitution can then be done |
|
38 | 38 | each time the instance is evaluated with str(instance). For example: |
|
39 | 39 | |
|
40 | 40 | from Itpl import Itpl |
|
41 | 41 | s = Itpl("Here is $foo.") |
|
42 | 42 | foo = 5 |
|
43 | 43 | print str(s) |
|
44 | 44 | foo = "bar" |
|
45 | 45 | print str(s) |
|
46 | 46 | |
|
47 |
$Id: Itpl.py |
|
|
47 | $Id: Itpl.py 638 2005-07-18 03:01:41Z fperez $ | |
|
48 | 48 | """ # ' -> close an open quote for stupid emacs |
|
49 | 49 | |
|
50 | 50 | #***************************************************************************** |
|
51 | 51 | # |
|
52 | 52 | # Copyright (c) 2001 Ka-Ping Yee <ping@lfw.org> |
|
53 | 53 | # |
|
54 | 54 | # |
|
55 | 55 | # Published under the terms of the MIT license, hereby reproduced: |
|
56 | 56 | # |
|
57 | 57 | # Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy |
|
58 | 58 | # of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to |
|
59 | 59 | # deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the |
|
60 | 60 | # rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or |
|
61 | 61 | # sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is |
|
62 | 62 | # furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: |
|
63 | 63 | # |
|
64 | 64 | # The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in |
|
65 | 65 | # all copies or substantial portions of the Software. |
|
66 | 66 | # |
|
67 | 67 | # THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR |
|
68 | 68 | # IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, |
|
69 | 69 | # FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE |
|
70 | 70 | # AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER |
|
71 | 71 | # LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING |
|
72 | 72 | # FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS |
|
73 | 73 | # IN THE SOFTWARE. |
|
74 | 74 | # |
|
75 | 75 | #***************************************************************************** |
|
76 | 76 | |
|
77 | 77 | __author__ = 'Ka-Ping Yee <ping@lfw.org>' |
|
78 | 78 | __license__ = 'MIT' |
|
79 | 79 | |
|
80 | 80 | import sys, string |
|
81 | 81 | from types import StringType |
|
82 | 82 | from tokenize import tokenprog |
|
83 | 83 | |
|
84 | 84 | class ItplError(ValueError): |
|
85 | 85 | def __init__(self, text, pos): |
|
86 | 86 | self.text = text |
|
87 | 87 | self.pos = pos |
|
88 | 88 | def __str__(self): |
|
89 | 89 | return "unfinished expression in %s at char %d" % ( |
|
90 | 90 | repr(self.text), self.pos) |
|
91 | 91 | |
|
92 | 92 | def matchorfail(text, pos): |
|
93 | 93 | match = tokenprog.match(text, pos) |
|
94 | 94 | if match is None: |
|
95 | 95 | raise ItplError(text, pos) |
|
96 | 96 | return match, match.end() |
|
97 | 97 | |
|
98 | 98 | class Itpl: |
|
99 | 99 | """Class representing a string with interpolation abilities. |
|
100 | 100 | |
|
101 | 101 | Upon creation, an instance works out what parts of the format |
|
102 | 102 | string are literal and what parts need to be evaluated. The |
|
103 | 103 | evaluation and substitution happens in the namespace of the |
|
104 | 104 | caller when str(instance) is called.""" |
|
105 | 105 | |
|
106 | def __init__(self, format): | |
|
107 |
"""The single argument to this constructor is a format |
|
|
106 | def __init__(self, format,codec='utf_8',encoding_errors='backslashreplace'): | |
|
107 | """The single mandatory argument to this constructor is a format | |
|
108 | string. | |
|
108 | 109 | |
|
109 | 110 | The format string is parsed according to the following rules: |
|
110 | 111 | |
|
111 | 112 | 1. A dollar sign and a name, possibly followed by any of: |
|
112 | 113 | - an open-paren, and anything up to the matching paren |
|
113 | 114 | - an open-bracket, and anything up to the matching bracket |
|
114 | 115 | - a period and a name |
|
115 | 116 | any number of times, is evaluated as a Python expression. |
|
116 | 117 | |
|
117 | 118 | 2. A dollar sign immediately followed by an open-brace, and |
|
118 | 119 | anything up to the matching close-brace, is evaluated as |
|
119 | 120 | a Python expression. |
|
120 | 121 | |
|
121 | 122 | 3. Outside of the expressions described in the above two rules, |
|
122 |
two dollar signs in a row give you one literal dollar sign. |
|
|
123 | two dollar signs in a row give you one literal dollar sign. | |
|
123 | 124 |
|
|
124 | if type(format) != StringType: | |
|
125 | Optional arguments: | |
|
126 | ||
|
127 | - codec('utf_8'): a string containing the name of a valid Python | |
|
128 | codec. | |
|
129 | ||
|
130 | - encoding_errors('backslashreplace'): a string with a valid error handling | |
|
131 | policy. See the codecs module documentation for details. | |
|
132 | ||
|
133 | These are used to encode the format string if a call to str() fails on | |
|
134 | the expanded result.""" | |
|
135 | ||
|
136 | if not isinstance(format,basestring): | |
|
125 | 137 | raise TypeError, "needs string initializer" |
|
126 | 138 | self.format = format |
|
127 | ||
|
139 | self.codec = codec | |
|
140 | self.encoding_errors = encoding_errors | |
|
141 | ||
|
128 | 142 | namechars = "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz" \ |
|
129 | 143 | "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ0123456789_"; |
|
130 | 144 | chunks = [] |
|
131 | 145 | pos = 0 |
|
132 | 146 | |
|
133 | 147 | while 1: |
|
134 | 148 | dollar = string.find(format, "$", pos) |
|
135 | 149 | if dollar < 0: break |
|
136 | 150 | nextchar = format[dollar+1] |
|
137 | 151 | |
|
138 | 152 | if nextchar == "{": |
|
139 | 153 | chunks.append((0, format[pos:dollar])) |
|
140 | 154 | pos, level = dollar+2, 1 |
|
141 | 155 | while level: |
|
142 | 156 | match, pos = matchorfail(format, pos) |
|
143 | 157 | tstart, tend = match.regs[3] |
|
144 | 158 | token = format[tstart:tend] |
|
145 | 159 | if token == "{": level = level+1 |
|
146 | 160 | elif token == "}": level = level-1 |
|
147 | 161 | chunks.append((1, format[dollar+2:pos-1])) |
|
148 | 162 | |
|
149 | 163 | elif nextchar in namechars: |
|
150 | 164 | chunks.append((0, format[pos:dollar])) |
|
151 | 165 | match, pos = matchorfail(format, dollar+1) |
|
152 | 166 | while pos < len(format): |
|
153 | 167 | if format[pos] == "." and \ |
|
154 | 168 | pos+1 < len(format) and format[pos+1] in namechars: |
|
155 | 169 | match, pos = matchorfail(format, pos+1) |
|
156 | 170 | elif format[pos] in "([": |
|
157 | 171 | pos, level = pos+1, 1 |
|
158 | 172 | while level: |
|
159 | 173 | match, pos = matchorfail(format, pos) |
|
160 | 174 | tstart, tend = match.regs[3] |
|
161 | 175 | token = format[tstart:tend] |
|
162 | 176 | if token[0] in "([": level = level+1 |
|
163 | 177 | elif token[0] in ")]": level = level-1 |
|
164 | 178 | else: break |
|
165 | 179 | chunks.append((1, format[dollar+1:pos])) |
|
166 | 180 | |
|
167 | 181 | else: |
|
168 | 182 | chunks.append((0, format[pos:dollar+1])) |
|
169 | 183 | pos = dollar + 1 + (nextchar == "$") |
|
170 | 184 | |
|
171 | 185 | if pos < len(format): chunks.append((0, format[pos:])) |
|
172 | 186 | self.chunks = chunks |
|
173 | 187 | |
|
174 | 188 | def __repr__(self): |
|
175 | 189 | return "<Itpl %s >" % repr(self.format) |
|
176 | 190 | |
|
191 | def _str(self,glob,loc): | |
|
192 | """Evaluate to a string in the given globals/locals. | |
|
193 | ||
|
194 | The final output is built by calling str(), but if this fails, the | |
|
195 | result is encoded with the instance's codec and error handling policy, | |
|
196 | via a call to out.encode(self.codec,self.encoding_errors)""" | |
|
197 | result = [] | |
|
198 | app = result.append | |
|
199 | for live, chunk in self.chunks: | |
|
200 | if live: app(str(eval(chunk,glob,loc))) | |
|
201 | else: app(chunk) | |
|
202 | out = ''.join(result) | |
|
203 | try: | |
|
204 | return str(out) | |
|
205 | except UnicodeError: | |
|
206 | return out.encode(self.codec,self.encoding_errors) | |
|
207 | ||
|
177 | 208 | def __str__(self): |
|
178 | 209 | """Evaluate and substitute the appropriate parts of the string.""" |
|
179 | 210 | |
|
180 | 211 | # We need to skip enough frames to get to the actual caller outside of |
|
181 | 212 | # Itpl. |
|
182 | 213 | frame = sys._getframe(1) |
|
183 | 214 | while frame.f_globals["__name__"] == __name__: frame = frame.f_back |
|
184 | 215 | loc, glob = frame.f_locals, frame.f_globals |
|
185 | 216 | |
|
186 | result = [] | |
|
187 | for live, chunk in self.chunks: | |
|
188 | if live: result.append(str(eval(chunk,glob,loc))) | |
|
189 | else: result.append(chunk) | |
|
190 | ||
|
191 | return ''.join(result) | |
|
192 | ||
|
217 | return self._str(glob,loc) | |
|
218 | ||
|
193 | 219 | class ItplNS(Itpl): |
|
194 | 220 | """Class representing a string with interpolation abilities. |
|
195 | 221 | |
|
196 | 222 | This inherits from Itpl, but at creation time a namespace is provided |
|
197 | 223 | where the evaluation will occur. The interpolation becomes a bit more |
|
198 | 224 | efficient, as no traceback needs to be extracte. It also allows the |
|
199 | 225 | caller to supply a different namespace for the interpolation to occur than |
|
200 | 226 | its own.""" |
|
201 | 227 | |
|
202 |
def __init__(self, format,globals,locals=None |
|
|
228 | def __init__(self, format,globals,locals=None, | |
|
229 | codec='utf_8',encoding_errors='backslashreplace'): | |
|
203 | 230 | """ItplNS(format,globals[,locals]) -> interpolating string instance. |
|
204 | 231 | |
|
205 | 232 | This constructor, besides a format string, takes a globals dictionary |
|
206 | 233 | and optionally a locals (which defaults to globals if not provided). |
|
207 | 234 | |
|
208 | 235 | For further details, see the Itpl constructor.""" |
|
209 | 236 | |
|
210 | 237 | if locals is None: |
|
211 | 238 | locals = globals |
|
212 | 239 | self.globals = globals |
|
213 | 240 | self.locals = locals |
|
214 | Itpl.__init__(self,format) | |
|
241 | Itpl.__init__(self,format,codec,encoding_errors) | |
|
215 | 242 | |
|
216 | 243 | def __str__(self): |
|
217 | 244 | """Evaluate and substitute the appropriate parts of the string.""" |
|
218 | glob = self.globals | |
|
219 | loc = self.locals | |
|
220 | result = [] | |
|
221 | for live, chunk in self.chunks: | |
|
222 | if live: result.append(str(eval(chunk,glob,loc))) | |
|
223 | else: result.append(chunk) | |
|
224 | return ''.join(result) | |
|
245 | return self._str(self.globals,self.locals) | |
|
246 | ||
|
247 | def __repr__(self): | |
|
248 | return "<ItplNS %s >" % repr(self.format) | |
|
225 | 249 | |
|
226 | 250 | # utilities for fast printing |
|
227 | 251 | def itpl(text): return str(Itpl(text)) |
|
228 | 252 | def printpl(text): print itpl(text) |
|
229 | 253 | # versions with namespace |
|
230 | 254 | def itplns(text,globals,locals=None): return str(ItplNS(text,globals,locals)) |
|
231 | 255 | def printplns(text,globals,locals=None): print itplns(text,globals,locals) |
|
232 | 256 | |
|
233 | 257 | class ItplFile: |
|
234 | 258 | """A file object that filters each write() through an interpolator.""" |
|
235 | 259 | def __init__(self, file): self.file = file |
|
236 | 260 | def __repr__(self): return "<interpolated " + repr(self.file) + ">" |
|
237 | 261 | def __getattr__(self, attr): return getattr(self.file, attr) |
|
238 | 262 | def write(self, text): self.file.write(str(Itpl(text))) |
|
239 | 263 | |
|
240 | 264 | def filter(file=sys.stdout): |
|
241 | 265 | """Return an ItplFile that filters writes to the given file object. |
|
242 | 266 | |
|
243 | 267 | 'file = filter(file)' replaces 'file' with a filtered object that |
|
244 | 268 | has a write() method. When called with no argument, this creates |
|
245 | 269 | a filter to sys.stdout.""" |
|
246 | 270 | return ItplFile(file) |
|
247 | 271 | |
|
248 | 272 | def unfilter(ifile=None): |
|
249 | 273 | """Return the original file that corresponds to the given ItplFile. |
|
250 | 274 | |
|
251 | 275 | 'file = unfilter(file)' undoes the effect of 'file = filter(file)'. |
|
252 | 276 | 'sys.stdout = unfilter()' undoes the effect of 'sys.stdout = filter()'.""" |
|
253 | 277 | return ifile and ifile.file or sys.stdout.file |
@@ -1,574 +1,572 b'' | |||
|
1 | 1 | # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- |
|
2 | 2 | """ |
|
3 | 3 | Classes for handling input/output prompts. |
|
4 | 4 | |
|
5 |
$Id: Prompts.py |
|
|
5 | $Id: Prompts.py 638 2005-07-18 03:01:41Z fperez $""" | |
|
6 | 6 | |
|
7 | 7 | #***************************************************************************** |
|
8 | 8 | # Copyright (C) 2001-2004 Fernando Perez <fperez@colorado.edu> |
|
9 | 9 | # |
|
10 | 10 | # Distributed under the terms of the BSD License. The full license is in |
|
11 | 11 | # the file COPYING, distributed as part of this software. |
|
12 | 12 | #***************************************************************************** |
|
13 | 13 | |
|
14 | 14 | from IPython import Release |
|
15 | 15 | __author__ = '%s <%s>' % Release.authors['Fernando'] |
|
16 | 16 | __license__ = Release.license |
|
17 | 17 | __version__ = Release.version |
|
18 | 18 | |
|
19 | 19 | #**************************************************************************** |
|
20 | 20 | # Required modules |
|
21 | 21 | import __builtin__ |
|
22 | 22 | import os,sys,socket |
|
23 | 23 | import time |
|
24 | 24 | from pprint import pprint,pformat |
|
25 | 25 | |
|
26 | 26 | # IPython's own |
|
27 | 27 | from IPython.genutils import * |
|
28 | 28 | from IPython.Struct import Struct |
|
29 | 29 | from IPython.Magic import Macro |
|
30 | 30 | from IPython.Itpl import ItplNS |
|
31 | 31 | from IPython import ColorANSI |
|
32 | 32 | |
|
33 | 33 | #**************************************************************************** |
|
34 | 34 | #Color schemes for Prompts. |
|
35 | 35 | |
|
36 | 36 | PromptColors = ColorANSI.ColorSchemeTable() |
|
37 | 37 | InputColors = ColorANSI.InputTermColors # just a shorthand |
|
38 | 38 | Colors = ColorANSI.TermColors # just a shorthand |
|
39 | 39 | |
|
40 | 40 | PromptColors.add_scheme(ColorANSI.ColorScheme( |
|
41 | 41 | 'NoColor', |
|
42 | 42 | in_prompt = InputColors.NoColor, # Input prompt |
|
43 | 43 | in_number = InputColors.NoColor, # Input prompt number |
|
44 | 44 | in_prompt2 = InputColors.NoColor, # Continuation prompt |
|
45 | 45 | in_normal = InputColors.NoColor, # color off (usu. Colors.Normal) |
|
46 | 46 | |
|
47 | 47 | out_prompt = Colors.NoColor, # Output prompt |
|
48 | 48 | out_number = Colors.NoColor, # Output prompt number |
|
49 | 49 | |
|
50 | 50 | normal = Colors.NoColor # color off (usu. Colors.Normal) |
|
51 | 51 | )) |
|
52 | 52 | # make some schemes as instances so we can copy them for modification easily: |
|
53 | 53 | __PColLinux = ColorANSI.ColorScheme( |
|
54 | 54 | 'Linux', |
|
55 | 55 | in_prompt = InputColors.Green, |
|
56 | 56 | in_number = InputColors.LightGreen, |
|
57 | 57 | in_prompt2 = InputColors.Green, |
|
58 | 58 | in_normal = InputColors.Normal, # color off (usu. Colors.Normal) |
|
59 | 59 | |
|
60 | 60 | out_prompt = Colors.Red, |
|
61 | 61 | out_number = Colors.LightRed, |
|
62 | 62 | |
|
63 | 63 | normal = Colors.Normal |
|
64 | 64 | ) |
|
65 | 65 | # Don't forget to enter it into the table! |
|
66 | 66 | PromptColors.add_scheme(__PColLinux) |
|
67 | 67 | # Slightly modified Linux for light backgrounds |
|
68 | 68 | __PColLightBG = ColorANSI.ColorScheme('LightBG',**__PColLinux.colors.dict().copy()) |
|
69 | 69 | |
|
70 | 70 | __PColLightBG.colors.update( |
|
71 | 71 | in_prompt = InputColors.Blue, |
|
72 | 72 | in_number = InputColors.LightBlue, |
|
73 | 73 | in_prompt2 = InputColors.Blue |
|
74 | 74 | ) |
|
75 | 75 | PromptColors.add_scheme(__PColLightBG) |
|
76 | 76 | |
|
77 | 77 | del Colors,InputColors |
|
78 | 78 | |
|
79 | 79 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
80 | 80 | def multiple_replace(dict, text): |
|
81 | 81 | """ Replace in 'text' all occurences of any key in the given |
|
82 | 82 | dictionary by its corresponding value. Returns the new string.""" |
|
83 | 83 | |
|
84 | 84 | # Function by Xavier Defrang, originally found at: |
|
85 | 85 | # http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/81330 |
|
86 | 86 | |
|
87 | 87 | # Create a regular expression from the dictionary keys |
|
88 | 88 | regex = re.compile("(%s)" % "|".join(map(re.escape, dict.keys()))) |
|
89 | 89 | # For each match, look-up corresponding value in dictionary |
|
90 | 90 | return regex.sub(lambda mo: dict[mo.string[mo.start():mo.end()]], text) |
|
91 | 91 | |
|
92 | 92 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
93 | 93 | # Special characters that can be used in prompt templates, mainly bash-like |
|
94 | 94 | |
|
95 | 95 | # If $HOME isn't defined (Windows), make it an absurd string so that it can |
|
96 | 96 | # never be expanded out into '~'. Basically anything which can never be a |
|
97 | 97 | # reasonable directory name will do, we just want the $HOME -> '~' operation |
|
98 | 98 | # to become a no-op. We pre-compute $HOME here so it's not done on every |
|
99 | 99 | # prompt call. |
|
100 | 100 | |
|
101 | 101 | # FIXME: |
|
102 | 102 | |
|
103 | 103 | # - This should be turned into a class which does proper namespace management, |
|
104 | 104 | # since the prompt specials need to be evaluated in a certain namespace. |
|
105 | 105 | # Currently it's just globals, which need to be managed manually by code |
|
106 | 106 | # below. |
|
107 | 107 | |
|
108 | 108 | # - I also need to split up the color schemes from the prompt specials |
|
109 | 109 | # somehow. I don't have a clean design for that quite yet. |
|
110 | 110 | |
|
111 | 111 | HOME = os.environ.get("HOME","//////:::::ZZZZZ,,,~~~") |
|
112 | 112 | |
|
113 | 113 | # We precompute a few more strings here for the prompt_specials, which are |
|
114 | 114 | # fixed once ipython starts. This reduces the runtime overhead of computing |
|
115 | 115 | # prompt strings. |
|
116 | 116 | USER = os.environ.get("USER") |
|
117 | 117 | HOSTNAME = socket.gethostname() |
|
118 | 118 | HOSTNAME_SHORT = HOSTNAME.split(".")[0] |
|
119 | 119 | ROOT_SYMBOL = "$#"[os.name=='nt' or os.getuid()==0] |
|
120 | 120 | |
|
121 | 121 | prompt_specials_color = { |
|
122 | 122 | # Prompt/history count |
|
123 | 123 | '%n' : '${self.col_num}' '${self.cache.prompt_count}' '${self.col_p}', |
|
124 | 124 | '\\#': '${self.col_num}' '${self.cache.prompt_count}' '${self.col_p}', |
|
125 | 125 | # Prompt/history count, with the actual digits replaced by dots. Used |
|
126 | 126 | # mainly in continuation prompts (prompt_in2) |
|
127 | 127 | '\\D': '${"."*len(str(self.cache.prompt_count))}', |
|
128 | 128 | # Current working directory |
|
129 | 129 | '\\w': '${os.getcwd()}', |
|
130 | 130 | # Current time |
|
131 | 131 | '\\t' : '${time.strftime("%H:%M:%S")}', |
|
132 | 132 | # Basename of current working directory. |
|
133 | 133 | # (use os.sep to make this portable across OSes) |
|
134 | 134 | '\\W' : '${os.getcwd().split("%s")[-1]}' % os.sep, |
|
135 | 135 | # These X<N> are an extension to the normal bash prompts. They return |
|
136 | 136 | # N terms of the path, after replacing $HOME with '~' |
|
137 | 137 | '\\X0': '${os.getcwd().replace("%s","~")}' % HOME, |
|
138 | 138 | '\\X1': '${self.cwd_filt(1)}', |
|
139 | 139 | '\\X2': '${self.cwd_filt(2)}', |
|
140 | 140 | '\\X3': '${self.cwd_filt(3)}', |
|
141 | 141 | '\\X4': '${self.cwd_filt(4)}', |
|
142 | 142 | '\\X5': '${self.cwd_filt(5)}', |
|
143 | 143 | # Y<N> are similar to X<N>, but they show '~' if it's the directory |
|
144 | 144 | # N+1 in the list. Somewhat like %cN in tcsh. |
|
145 | 145 | '\\Y0': '${self.cwd_filt2(0)}', |
|
146 | 146 | '\\Y1': '${self.cwd_filt2(1)}', |
|
147 | 147 | '\\Y2': '${self.cwd_filt2(2)}', |
|
148 | 148 | '\\Y3': '${self.cwd_filt2(3)}', |
|
149 | 149 | '\\Y4': '${self.cwd_filt2(4)}', |
|
150 | 150 | '\\Y5': '${self.cwd_filt2(5)}', |
|
151 | 151 | # Hostname up to first . |
|
152 | 152 | '\\h': HOSTNAME_SHORT, |
|
153 | 153 | # Full hostname |
|
154 | 154 | '\\H': HOSTNAME, |
|
155 | 155 | # Username of current user |
|
156 | 156 | '\\u': USER, |
|
157 | 157 | # Escaped '\' |
|
158 | 158 | '\\\\': '\\', |
|
159 | 159 | # Newline |
|
160 | 160 | '\\n': '\n', |
|
161 | 161 | # Carriage return |
|
162 | 162 | '\\r': '\r', |
|
163 | 163 | # Release version |
|
164 | 164 | '\\v': __version__, |
|
165 | 165 | # Root symbol ($ or #) |
|
166 | 166 | '\\$': ROOT_SYMBOL, |
|
167 | 167 | } |
|
168 | 168 | |
|
169 | 169 | # A copy of the prompt_specials dictionary but with all color escapes removed, |
|
170 | 170 | # so we can correctly compute the prompt length for the auto_rewrite method. |
|
171 | 171 | prompt_specials_nocolor = prompt_specials_color.copy() |
|
172 | 172 | prompt_specials_nocolor['%n'] = '${self.cache.prompt_count}' |
|
173 | 173 | prompt_specials_nocolor['\\#'] = '${self.cache.prompt_count}' |
|
174 | 174 | |
|
175 | 175 | # Add in all the InputTermColors color escapes as valid prompt characters. |
|
176 | 176 | # They all get added as \\C_COLORNAME, so that we don't have any conflicts |
|
177 | 177 | # with a color name which may begin with a letter used by any other of the |
|
178 | 178 | # allowed specials. This of course means that \\C will never be allowed for |
|
179 | 179 | # anything else. |
|
180 | 180 | input_colors = ColorANSI.InputTermColors |
|
181 | 181 | for _color in dir(input_colors): |
|
182 | 182 | if _color[0] != '_': |
|
183 | 183 | c_name = '\\C_'+_color |
|
184 | 184 | prompt_specials_color[c_name] = getattr(input_colors,_color) |
|
185 | 185 | prompt_specials_nocolor[c_name] = '' |
|
186 | 186 | |
|
187 | 187 | # we default to no color for safety. Note that prompt_specials is a global |
|
188 | 188 | # variable used by all prompt objects. |
|
189 | 189 | prompt_specials = prompt_specials_nocolor |
|
190 | 190 | |
|
191 | 191 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
192 | 192 | def str_safe(arg): |
|
193 | 193 | """Convert to a string, without ever raising an exception. |
|
194 | 194 | |
|
195 | 195 | If str(arg) fails, <ERROR: ... > is returned, where ... is the exception |
|
196 | 196 | error message.""" |
|
197 | ||
|
197 | ||
|
198 | 198 | try: |
|
199 |
|
|
|
199 | out = str(arg) | |
|
200 | except UnicodeError: | |
|
201 | try: | |
|
202 | out = arg.encode('utf_8','replace') | |
|
203 | except Exception,msg: | |
|
204 | # let's keep this little duplication here, so that the most common | |
|
205 | # case doesn't suffer from a double try wrapping. | |
|
206 | out = '<ERROR: %s>' % msg | |
|
200 | 207 | except Exception,msg: |
|
201 |
|
|
|
208 | out = '<ERROR: %s>' % msg | |
|
209 | return out | |
|
202 | 210 | |
|
203 | 211 | class BasePrompt: |
|
204 | 212 | """Interactive prompt similar to Mathematica's.""" |
|
205 | 213 | def __init__(self,cache,sep,prompt,pad_left=False): |
|
206 | 214 | |
|
207 | 215 | # Hack: we access information about the primary prompt through the |
|
208 | 216 | # cache argument. We need this, because we want the secondary prompt |
|
209 | 217 | # to be aligned with the primary one. Color table info is also shared |
|
210 | 218 | # by all prompt classes through the cache. Nice OO spaghetti code! |
|
211 | 219 | self.cache = cache |
|
212 | 220 | self.sep = sep |
|
213 | 221 | |
|
214 | 222 | # regexp to count the number of spaces at the end of a prompt |
|
215 | 223 | # expression, useful for prompt auto-rewriting |
|
216 | 224 | self.rspace = re.compile(r'(\s*)$') |
|
217 | 225 | # Flag to left-pad prompt strings to match the length of the primary |
|
218 | 226 | # prompt |
|
219 | 227 | self.pad_left = pad_left |
|
220 | 228 | # Set template to create each actual prompt (where numbers change) |
|
221 | 229 | self.p_template = prompt |
|
222 | 230 | self.set_p_str() |
|
223 | 231 | |
|
224 | 232 | def set_p_str(self): |
|
225 | 233 | """ Set the interpolating prompt strings. |
|
226 | 234 | |
|
227 | 235 | This must be called every time the color settings change, because the |
|
228 | 236 | prompt_specials global may have changed.""" |
|
229 | 237 | |
|
230 | 238 | import os,time # needed in locals for prompt string handling |
|
231 | 239 | loc = locals() |
|
232 | 240 | self.p_str = ItplNS('%s%s%s' % |
|
233 | 241 | ('${self.sep}${self.col_p}', |
|
234 | 242 | multiple_replace(prompt_specials, self.p_template), |
|
235 | 243 | '${self.col_norm}'),self.cache.user_ns,loc) |
|
236 | 244 | |
|
237 | 245 | self.p_str_nocolor = ItplNS(multiple_replace(prompt_specials_nocolor, |
|
238 | 246 | self.p_template), |
|
239 | 247 | self.cache.user_ns,loc) |
|
240 | 248 | |
|
241 | 249 | def write(self,msg): # dbg |
|
242 | 250 | sys.stdout.write(msg) |
|
243 | 251 | return '' |
|
244 | 252 | |
|
245 | 253 | def __str__(self): |
|
246 | 254 | """Return a string form of the prompt. |
|
247 | 255 | |
|
248 | 256 | This for is useful for continuation and output prompts, since it is |
|
249 | 257 | left-padded to match lengths with the primary one (if the |
|
250 | 258 | self.pad_left attribute is set).""" |
|
251 | 259 | |
|
252 | 260 | out_str = str_safe(self.p_str) |
|
253 | 261 | if self.pad_left: |
|
254 | 262 | # We must find the amount of padding required to match lengths, |
|
255 | 263 | # taking the color escapes (which are invisible on-screen) into |
|
256 | 264 | # account. |
|
257 | 265 | esc_pad = len(out_str) - len(str_safe(self.p_str_nocolor)) |
|
258 | 266 | format = '%%%ss' % (len(str(self.cache.last_prompt))+esc_pad) |
|
259 | 267 | return format % out_str |
|
260 | 268 | else: |
|
261 | 269 | return out_str |
|
262 | 270 | |
|
263 | 271 | # these path filters are put in as methods so that we can control the |
|
264 | 272 | # namespace where the prompt strings get evaluated |
|
265 | 273 | def cwd_filt(self,depth): |
|
266 | 274 | """Return the last depth elements of the current working directory. |
|
267 | 275 | |
|
268 | 276 | $HOME is always replaced with '~'. |
|
269 | 277 | If depth==0, the full path is returned.""" |
|
270 | 278 | |
|
271 | 279 | cwd = os.getcwd().replace(HOME,"~") |
|
272 | 280 | out = os.sep.join(cwd.split(os.sep)[-depth:]) |
|
273 | 281 | if out: |
|
274 | 282 | return out |
|
275 | 283 | else: |
|
276 | 284 | return os.sep |
|
277 | 285 | |
|
278 | 286 | def cwd_filt2(self,depth): |
|
279 | 287 | """Return the last depth elements of the current working directory. |
|
280 | 288 | |
|
281 | 289 | $HOME is always replaced with '~'. |
|
282 | 290 | If depth==0, the full path is returned.""" |
|
283 | 291 | |
|
284 | 292 | cwd = os.getcwd().replace(HOME,"~").split(os.sep) |
|
285 | 293 | if '~' in cwd and len(cwd) == depth+1: |
|
286 | 294 | depth += 1 |
|
287 | 295 | out = os.sep.join(cwd[-depth:]) |
|
288 | 296 | if out: |
|
289 | 297 | return out |
|
290 | 298 | else: |
|
291 | 299 | return os.sep |
|
292 | 300 | |
|
293 | 301 | class Prompt1(BasePrompt): |
|
294 | 302 | """Input interactive prompt similar to Mathematica's.""" |
|
295 | 303 | |
|
296 | 304 | def __init__(self,cache,sep='\n',prompt='In [\\#]: ',pad_left=True): |
|
297 | 305 | BasePrompt.__init__(self,cache,sep,prompt,pad_left) |
|
298 | 306 | |
|
299 | 307 | def set_colors(self): |
|
300 | 308 | self.set_p_str() |
|
301 | 309 | Colors = self.cache.color_table.active_colors # shorthand |
|
302 | 310 | self.col_p = Colors.in_prompt |
|
303 | 311 | self.col_num = Colors.in_number |
|
304 | 312 | self.col_norm = Colors.in_normal |
|
305 | 313 | # We need a non-input version of these escapes for the '--->' |
|
306 | 314 | # auto-call prompts used in the auto_rewrite() method. |
|
307 | 315 | self.col_p_ni = self.col_p.replace('\001','').replace('\002','') |
|
308 | 316 | self.col_norm_ni = Colors.normal |
|
309 | 317 | |
|
310 | 318 | def __str__(self): |
|
311 | 319 | self.cache.prompt_count += 1 |
|
312 | 320 | self.cache.last_prompt = str_safe(self.p_str_nocolor).split('\n')[-1] |
|
313 | 321 | return str_safe(self.p_str) |
|
314 | 322 | |
|
315 | 323 | def auto_rewrite(self): |
|
316 | 324 | """Print a string of the form '--->' which lines up with the previous |
|
317 | 325 | input string. Useful for systems which re-write the user input when |
|
318 | 326 | handling automatically special syntaxes.""" |
|
319 | 327 | |
|
320 | 328 | curr = str(self.cache.last_prompt) |
|
321 | 329 | nrspaces = len(self.rspace.search(curr).group()) |
|
322 | 330 | return '%s%s>%s%s' % (self.col_p_ni,'-'*(len(curr)-nrspaces-1), |
|
323 | 331 | ' '*nrspaces,self.col_norm_ni) |
|
324 | 332 | |
|
325 | 333 | class PromptOut(BasePrompt): |
|
326 | 334 | """Output interactive prompt similar to Mathematica's.""" |
|
327 | 335 | |
|
328 | 336 | def __init__(self,cache,sep='',prompt='Out[\\#]: ',pad_left=True): |
|
329 | 337 | BasePrompt.__init__(self,cache,sep,prompt,pad_left) |
|
330 | 338 | if not self.p_template: |
|
331 | 339 | self.__str__ = lambda: '' |
|
332 | 340 | |
|
333 | 341 | def set_colors(self): |
|
334 | 342 | self.set_p_str() |
|
335 | 343 | Colors = self.cache.color_table.active_colors # shorthand |
|
336 | 344 | self.col_p = Colors.out_prompt |
|
337 | 345 | self.col_num = Colors.out_number |
|
338 | 346 | self.col_norm = Colors.normal |
|
339 | 347 | |
|
340 | 348 | class Prompt2(BasePrompt): |
|
341 | 349 | """Interactive continuation prompt.""" |
|
342 | 350 | |
|
343 | 351 | def __init__(self,cache,prompt=' .\\D.: ',pad_left=True): |
|
344 | 352 | self.cache = cache |
|
345 | 353 | self.p_template = prompt |
|
346 | 354 | self.pad_left = pad_left |
|
347 | 355 | self.set_p_str() |
|
348 | 356 | |
|
349 | 357 | def set_p_str(self): |
|
350 | 358 | import os,time # needed in locals for prompt string handling |
|
351 | 359 | loc = locals() |
|
352 | 360 | self.p_str = ItplNS('%s%s%s' % |
|
353 | 361 | ('${self.col_p2}', |
|
354 | 362 | multiple_replace(prompt_specials, self.p_template), |
|
355 | 363 | '$self.col_norm'), |
|
356 | 364 | self.cache.user_ns,loc) |
|
357 | 365 | self.p_str_nocolor = ItplNS(multiple_replace(prompt_specials_nocolor, |
|
358 | 366 | self.p_template), |
|
359 | 367 | self.cache.user_ns,loc) |
|
360 | 368 | |
|
361 | 369 | def set_colors(self): |
|
362 | 370 | self.set_p_str() |
|
363 | 371 | Colors = self.cache.color_table.active_colors |
|
364 | 372 | self.col_p2 = Colors.in_prompt2 |
|
365 | 373 | self.col_norm = Colors.in_normal |
|
366 | 374 | # FIXME (2004-06-16) HACK: prevent crashes for users who haven't |
|
367 | 375 | # updated their prompt_in2 definitions. Remove eventually. |
|
368 | 376 | self.col_p = Colors.out_prompt |
|
369 | 377 | self.col_num = Colors.out_number |
|
370 | 378 | |
|
371 | 379 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
372 | 380 | class CachedOutput: |
|
373 | 381 | """Class for printing output from calculations while keeping a cache of |
|
374 | 382 | reults. It dynamically creates global variables prefixed with _ which |
|
375 | 383 | contain these results. |
|
376 | 384 | |
|
377 | 385 | Meant to be used as a sys.displayhook replacement, providing numbered |
|
378 | 386 | prompts and cache services. |
|
379 | 387 | |
|
380 | 388 | Initialize with initial and final values for cache counter (this defines |
|
381 | 389 | the maximum size of the cache.""" |
|
382 | 390 | |
|
383 | 391 | def __init__(self,cache_size,Pprint,colors='NoColor',input_sep='\n', |
|
384 | 392 | output_sep='\n',output_sep2='',user_ns={}, |
|
385 | 393 | ps1 = None, ps2 = None,ps_out = None, |
|
386 | 394 | input_hist = None,pad_left=True): |
|
387 | 395 | |
|
388 | 396 | cache_size_min = 20 |
|
389 | 397 | if cache_size <= 0: |
|
390 | 398 | self.do_full_cache = 0 |
|
391 | 399 | cache_size = 0 |
|
392 | 400 | elif cache_size < cache_size_min: |
|
393 | 401 | self.do_full_cache = 0 |
|
394 | 402 | cache_size = 0 |
|
395 | 403 | warn('caching was disabled (min value for cache size is %s).' % |
|
396 | 404 | cache_size_min,level=3) |
|
397 | 405 | else: |
|
398 | 406 | self.do_full_cache = 1 |
|
399 | 407 | |
|
400 | 408 | self.cache_size = cache_size |
|
401 | 409 | self.input_sep = input_sep |
|
402 | 410 | |
|
403 | 411 | # we need a reference to the user-level namespace |
|
404 | 412 | self.user_ns = user_ns |
|
405 | 413 | # and to the user's input |
|
406 | 414 | self.input_hist = input_hist |
|
407 | 415 | |
|
408 | 416 | # Set input prompt strings and colors |
|
409 | 417 | if cache_size == 0: |
|
410 | 418 | if ps1.find('%n') > -1 or ps1.find('\\#') > -1: ps1 = '>>> ' |
|
411 | 419 | if ps2.find('%n') > -1 or ps2.find('\\#') > -1: ps2 = '... ' |
|
412 | 420 | self.ps1_str = self._set_prompt_str(ps1,'In [\\#]: ','>>> ') |
|
413 | 421 | self.ps2_str = self._set_prompt_str(ps2,' .\\D.: ','... ') |
|
414 | 422 | self.ps_out_str = self._set_prompt_str(ps_out,'Out[\\#]: ','') |
|
415 | 423 | |
|
424 | self.color_table = PromptColors | |
|
416 | 425 | self.prompt1 = Prompt1(self,sep=input_sep,prompt=self.ps1_str, |
|
417 | 426 | pad_left=pad_left) |
|
418 | 427 | self.prompt2 = Prompt2(self,prompt=self.ps2_str,pad_left=pad_left) |
|
419 | 428 | self.prompt_out = PromptOut(self,sep='',prompt=self.ps_out_str, |
|
420 | 429 | pad_left=pad_left) |
|
421 | self.color_table = PromptColors | |
|
422 | 430 | self.set_colors(colors) |
|
423 | 431 | |
|
424 | 432 | # other more normal stuff |
|
425 | 433 | # b/c each call to the In[] prompt raises it by 1, even the first. |
|
426 | 434 | self.prompt_count = 0 |
|
427 | 435 | self.cache_count = 1 |
|
428 | 436 | # Store the last prompt string each time, we need it for aligning |
|
429 | 437 | # continuation and auto-rewrite prompts |
|
430 | 438 | self.last_prompt = '' |
|
431 | 439 | self.entries = [None] # output counter starts at 1 for the user |
|
432 | 440 | self.Pprint = Pprint |
|
433 | 441 | self.output_sep = output_sep |
|
434 | 442 | self.output_sep2 = output_sep2 |
|
435 | 443 | self._,self.__,self.___ = '','','' |
|
436 | 444 | self.pprint_types = map(type,[(),[],{}]) |
|
437 | 445 | |
|
438 | 446 | # these are deliberately global: |
|
439 | 447 | to_user_ns = {'_':self._,'__':self.__,'___':self.___} |
|
440 | 448 | self.user_ns.update(to_user_ns) |
|
441 | 449 | |
|
442 | 450 | def _set_prompt_str(self,p_str,cache_def,no_cache_def): |
|
443 | 451 | if p_str is None: |
|
444 | 452 | if self.do_full_cache: |
|
445 | 453 | return cache_def |
|
446 | 454 | else: |
|
447 | 455 | return no_cache_def |
|
448 | 456 | else: |
|
449 | 457 | return p_str |
|
450 | 458 | |
|
451 | 459 | def set_colors(self,colors): |
|
452 | 460 | """Set the active color scheme and configure colors for the three |
|
453 | 461 | prompt subsystems.""" |
|
454 | 462 | |
|
455 | 463 | # FIXME: the prompt_specials global should be gobbled inside this |
|
456 | 464 | # class instead. Do it when cleaning up the whole 3-prompt system. |
|
457 | 465 | global prompt_specials |
|
458 | 466 | if colors.lower()=='nocolor': |
|
459 | 467 | prompt_specials = prompt_specials_nocolor |
|
460 | 468 | else: |
|
461 | 469 | prompt_specials = prompt_specials_color |
|
462 | 470 | |
|
463 | 471 | self.color_table.set_active_scheme(colors) |
|
464 | 472 | self.prompt1.set_colors() |
|
465 | 473 | self.prompt2.set_colors() |
|
466 | 474 | self.prompt_out.set_colors() |
|
467 | 475 | |
|
468 | 476 | def __call__(self,arg=None): |
|
469 | 477 | """Printing with history cache management. |
|
470 | 478 | |
|
471 | 479 | This is invoked everytime the interpreter needs to print, and is |
|
472 | 480 | activated by setting the variable sys.displayhook to it.""" |
|
473 | 481 | |
|
474 | 482 | # If something injected a '_' variable in __builtin__, delete |
|
475 | 483 | # ipython's automatic one so we don't clobber that. gettext() in |
|
476 | 484 | # particular uses _, so we need to stay away from it. |
|
477 | 485 | if '_' in __builtin__.__dict__: |
|
478 | 486 | try: |
|
479 | 487 | del self.user_ns['_'] |
|
480 | 488 | except KeyError: |
|
481 | 489 | pass |
|
482 | 490 | if arg is not None: |
|
491 | cout_write = Term.cout.write # fast lookup | |
|
483 | 492 | # first handle the cache and counters |
|
484 | 493 | self.update(arg) |
|
485 | 494 | # do not print output if input ends in ';' |
|
486 | 495 | if self.input_hist[self.prompt_count].endswith(';\n'): |
|
487 | 496 | return |
|
488 | 497 | # don't use print, puts an extra space |
|
489 |
|
|
|
498 | cout_write(self.output_sep) | |
|
490 | 499 | if self.do_full_cache: |
|
491 |
|
|
|
500 | cout_write(str(self.prompt_out)) | |
|
492 | 501 | |
|
493 | 502 | if isinstance(arg,Macro): |
|
494 | 503 | print 'Executing Macro...' |
|
495 | 504 | # in case the macro takes a long time to execute |
|
496 | 505 | Term.cout.flush() |
|
497 | 506 | exec arg.value in self.user_ns |
|
498 | 507 | return None |
|
499 | 508 | |
|
500 | 509 | # and now call a possibly user-defined print mechanism |
|
501 | 510 | self.display(arg) |
|
502 |
|
|
|
511 | cout_write(self.output_sep2) | |
|
503 | 512 | Term.cout.flush() |
|
504 | 513 | |
|
505 | 514 | def _display(self,arg): |
|
506 | 515 | """Default printer method, uses pprint. |
|
507 | 516 | |
|
508 | 517 | This can be over-ridden by the users to implement special formatting |
|
509 | 518 | of certain types of output.""" |
|
510 | 519 | |
|
511 | 520 | if self.Pprint: |
|
512 | # The following is an UGLY kludge, b/c python fails to properly | |
|
513 | # identify instances of classes imported in the user namespace | |
|
514 | # (they have different memory locations, I guess). Structs are | |
|
515 | # essentially dicts but pprint doesn't know what to do with them. | |
|
516 | try: | |
|
517 | if arg.__class__.__module__ == 'Struct' and \ | |
|
518 | arg.__class__.__name__ == 'Struct': | |
|
519 | out = 'Struct:\n%s' % pformat(arg.dict()) | |
|
520 | else: | |
|
521 | out = pformat(arg) | |
|
522 | except: | |
|
523 | out = pformat(arg) | |
|
521 | out = pformat(arg) | |
|
524 | 522 | if '\n' in out: |
|
525 | 523 | # So that multi-line strings line up with the left column of |
|
526 | 524 | # the screen, instead of having the output prompt mess up |
|
527 | 525 | # their first line. |
|
528 | 526 | Term.cout.write('\n') |
|
529 | 527 | print >>Term.cout, out |
|
530 | 528 | else: |
|
531 | 529 | print >>Term.cout, arg |
|
532 | 530 | |
|
533 | 531 | # Assign the default display method: |
|
534 | 532 | display = _display |
|
535 | 533 | |
|
536 | 534 | def update(self,arg): |
|
537 | 535 | #print '***cache_count', self.cache_count # dbg |
|
538 | 536 | if self.cache_count >= self.cache_size and self.do_full_cache: |
|
539 | 537 | self.flush() |
|
540 | 538 | # Don't overwrite '_' and friends if '_' is in __builtin__ (otherwise |
|
541 | 539 | # we cause buggy behavior for things like gettext). |
|
542 | 540 | if '_' not in __builtin__.__dict__: |
|
543 | 541 | self.___ = self.__ |
|
544 | 542 | self.__ = self._ |
|
545 | 543 | self._ = arg |
|
546 | 544 | self.user_ns.update({'_':self._,'__':self.__,'___':self.___}) |
|
547 | 545 | |
|
548 | 546 | # hackish access to top-level namespace to create _1,_2... dynamically |
|
549 | 547 | to_main = {} |
|
550 | 548 | if self.do_full_cache: |
|
551 | 549 | self.cache_count += 1 |
|
552 | 550 | self.entries.append(arg) |
|
553 | 551 | new_result = '_'+`self.prompt_count` |
|
554 | 552 | to_main[new_result] = self.entries[-1] |
|
555 | 553 | self.user_ns.update(to_main) |
|
556 | 554 | self.user_ns['_oh'][self.prompt_count] = arg |
|
557 | 555 | |
|
558 | 556 | def flush(self): |
|
559 | 557 | if not self.do_full_cache: |
|
560 | 558 | raise ValueError,"You shouldn't have reached the cache flush "\ |
|
561 | 559 | "if full caching is not enabled!" |
|
562 | 560 | warn('Output cache limit (currently '+\ |
|
563 | 561 | `self.cache_count`+' entries) hit.\n' |
|
564 | 562 | 'Flushing cache and resetting history counter...\n' |
|
565 | 563 | 'The only history variables available will be _,__,___ and _1\n' |
|
566 | 564 | 'with the current result.') |
|
567 | 565 | # delete auto-generated vars from global namespace |
|
568 | 566 | for n in range(1,self.prompt_count + 1): |
|
569 | 567 | key = '_'+`n` |
|
570 | 568 | try: |
|
571 | 569 | del self.user_ns[key] |
|
572 | 570 | except: pass |
|
573 | 571 | self.prompt_count = 1 |
|
574 | 572 | self.cache_count = 1 |
@@ -1,376 +1,375 b'' | |||
|
1 | 1 | # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- |
|
2 | 2 | """Mimic C structs with lots of extra functionality. |
|
3 | 3 | |
|
4 |
$Id: Struct.py |
|
|
4 | $Id: Struct.py 638 2005-07-18 03:01:41Z fperez $""" | |
|
5 | 5 | |
|
6 | 6 | #***************************************************************************** |
|
7 | 7 | # Copyright (C) 2001-2004 Fernando Perez <fperez@colorado.edu> |
|
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 | from IPython import Release |
|
14 | 14 | __author__ = '%s <%s>' % Release.authors['Fernando'] |
|
15 | 15 | __license__ = Release.license |
|
16 | 16 | |
|
17 | 17 | __all__ = ['Struct'] |
|
18 | 18 | |
|
19 | 19 | import types |
|
20 | 20 | from IPython.genutils import list2dict2 |
|
21 | 21 | |
|
22 | 22 | class Struct: |
|
23 | 23 | """Class to mimic C structs but also provide convenient dictionary-like |
|
24 | 24 | functionality. |
|
25 | 25 | |
|
26 | 26 | Instances can be initialized with a dictionary, a list of key=value pairs |
|
27 | 27 | or both. If both are present, the dictionary must come first. |
|
28 | 28 | |
|
29 | 29 | Because Python classes provide direct assignment to their members, it's |
|
30 | 30 | easy to overwrite normal methods (S.copy = 1 would destroy access to |
|
31 | 31 | S.copy()). For this reason, all builtin method names are protected and |
|
32 | 32 | can't be assigned to. An attempt to do s.copy=1 or s['copy']=1 will raise |
|
33 | 33 | a KeyError exception. If you really want to, you can bypass this |
|
34 | 34 | protection by directly assigning to __dict__: s.__dict__['copy']=1 will |
|
35 | 35 | still work. Doing this will break functionality, though. As in most of |
|
36 | 36 | Python, namespace protection is weakly enforced, so feel free to shoot |
|
37 | 37 | yourself if you really want to. |
|
38 | 38 | |
|
39 | 39 | Note that this class uses more memory and is *much* slower than a regular |
|
40 | 40 | dictionary, so be careful in situations where memory or performance are |
|
41 | 41 | critical. But for day to day use it should behave fine. It is particularly |
|
42 | 42 | convenient for storing configuration data in programs. |
|
43 | 43 | |
|
44 | 44 | +,+=,- and -= are implemented. +/+= do merges (non-destructive updates), |
|
45 | 45 | -/-= remove keys from the original. See the method descripitions. |
|
46 | 46 | |
|
47 | 47 | This class allows a quick access syntax: both s.key and s['key'] are |
|
48 | 48 | valid. This syntax has a limitation: each 'key' has to be explicitly |
|
49 | 49 | accessed by its original name. The normal s.key syntax doesn't provide |
|
50 | 50 | access to the keys via variables whose values evaluate to the desired |
|
51 | 51 | keys. An example should clarify this: |
|
52 | 52 | |
|
53 | 53 | Define a dictionary and initialize both with dict and k=v pairs: |
|
54 | 54 | >>> d={'a':1,'b':2} |
|
55 | 55 | >>> s=Struct(d,hi=10,ho=20) |
|
56 | 56 | The return of __repr__ can be used to create a new instance: |
|
57 | 57 | >>> s |
|
58 | 58 | Struct({'ho': 20, 'b': 2, 'hi': 10, 'a': 1}) |
|
59 | 59 | __str__ (called by print) shows it's not quite a regular dictionary: |
|
60 | 60 | >>> print s |
|
61 | 61 | Struct {a: 1, b: 2, hi: 10, ho: 20} |
|
62 | 62 | Access by explicitly named key with dot notation: |
|
63 | 63 | >>> s.a |
|
64 | 64 | 1 |
|
65 | 65 | Or like a dictionary: |
|
66 | 66 | >>> s['a'] |
|
67 | 67 | 1 |
|
68 | 68 | If you want a variable to hold the key value, only dictionary access works: |
|
69 | 69 | >>> key='hi' |
|
70 | 70 | >>> s.key |
|
71 | 71 | Traceback (most recent call last): |
|
72 | 72 | File "<stdin>", line 1, in ? |
|
73 | 73 | AttributeError: Struct instance has no attribute 'key' |
|
74 | 74 | >>> s[key] |
|
75 | 75 | 10 |
|
76 | 76 | |
|
77 | 77 | Another limitation of the s.key syntax (and Struct(key=val) |
|
78 | 78 | initialization): keys can't be numbers. But numeric keys can be used and |
|
79 | 79 | accessed using the dictionary syntax. Again, an example: |
|
80 | 80 | |
|
81 | 81 | This doesn't work: |
|
82 | 82 | >>> s=Struct(4='hi') |
|
83 | 83 | SyntaxError: keyword can't be an expression |
|
84 | 84 | But this does: |
|
85 | 85 | >>> s=Struct() |
|
86 | 86 | >>> s[4]='hi' |
|
87 | 87 | >>> s |
|
88 | 88 | Struct({4: 'hi'}) |
|
89 | 89 | >>> s[4] |
|
90 | 90 | 'hi' |
|
91 | 91 | """ |
|
92 | 92 | |
|
93 | 93 | # Attributes to which __setitem__ and __setattr__ will block access. |
|
94 | 94 | # Note: much of this will be moot in Python 2.2 and will be done in a much |
|
95 | 95 | # cleaner way. |
|
96 | 96 | __protected = ('copy dict dictcopy get has_attr has_key items keys ' |
|
97 | 97 | 'merge popitem setdefault update values ' |
|
98 | 98 | '__make_dict __dict_invert ').split() |
|
99 | 99 | |
|
100 | 100 | def __init__(self,dict=None,**kw): |
|
101 | 101 | """Initialize with a dictionary, another Struct, or by giving |
|
102 | 102 | explicitly the list of attributes. |
|
103 | 103 | |
|
104 | 104 | Both can be used, but the dictionary must come first: |
|
105 | 105 | Struct(dict), Struct(k1=v1,k2=v2) or Struct(dict,k1=v1,k2=v2). |
|
106 | 106 | """ |
|
107 | 107 | if dict is None: |
|
108 | 108 | dict = {} |
|
109 | 109 | if isinstance(dict,Struct): |
|
110 | 110 | dict = dict.dict() |
|
111 | 111 | elif dict and type(dict) is not types.DictType: |
|
112 | 112 | raise TypeError,\ |
|
113 | 113 | 'Initialize with a dictionary or key=val pairs.' |
|
114 | 114 | dict.update(kw) |
|
115 | 115 | # do the updating by hand to guarantee that we go through the |
|
116 | 116 | # safety-checked __setitem__ |
|
117 | 117 | for k,v in dict.items(): |
|
118 | 118 | self[k] = v |
|
119 | 119 | |
|
120 | 120 | def __setitem__(self,key,value): |
|
121 | 121 | """Used when struct[key] = val calls are made.""" |
|
122 | 122 | if key in Struct.__protected: |
|
123 | 123 | raise KeyError,'Key '+`key`+' is a protected key of class Struct.' |
|
124 | 124 | self.__dict__[key] = value |
|
125 | 125 | |
|
126 | 126 | def __setattr__(self, key, value): |
|
127 | 127 | """Used when struct.key = val calls are made.""" |
|
128 | 128 | self.__setitem__(key,value) |
|
129 | 129 | |
|
130 | 130 | def __str__(self): |
|
131 | 131 | """Gets called by print.""" |
|
132 | 132 | |
|
133 | 133 | return 'Struct('+str(self.__dict__)+')' |
|
134 | 134 | |
|
135 | 135 | def __repr__(self): |
|
136 | 136 | """Gets called by repr. |
|
137 | 137 | |
|
138 | 138 | A Struct can be recreated with S_new=eval(repr(S_old)).""" |
|
139 | 139 | return 'Struct('+str(self.__dict__)+')' |
|
140 | 140 | |
|
141 | 141 | def __getitem__(self,key): |
|
142 | 142 | """Allows struct[key] access.""" |
|
143 | 143 | return self.__dict__[key] |
|
144 | 144 | |
|
145 | 145 | def __contains__(self,key): |
|
146 | 146 | """Allows use of the 'in' operator.""" |
|
147 | 147 | return self.__dict__.has_key(key) |
|
148 | 148 | |
|
149 | 149 | def __iadd__(self,other): |
|
150 | 150 | """S += S2 is a shorthand for S.merge(S2).""" |
|
151 | 151 | self.merge(other) |
|
152 | 152 | return self |
|
153 | 153 | |
|
154 | 154 | def __add__(self,other): |
|
155 | 155 | """S + S2 -> New Struct made form S and S.merge(S2)""" |
|
156 | 156 | Sout = self.copy() |
|
157 | 157 | Sout.merge(other) |
|
158 | 158 | return Sout |
|
159 | 159 | |
|
160 | 160 | def __sub__(self,other): |
|
161 | 161 | """Return S1-S2, where all keys in S2 have been deleted (if present) |
|
162 | 162 | from S1.""" |
|
163 | 163 | Sout = self.copy() |
|
164 | 164 | Sout -= other |
|
165 | 165 | return Sout |
|
166 | 166 | |
|
167 | 167 | def __isub__(self,other): |
|
168 | 168 | """Do in place S = S - S2, meaning all keys in S2 have been deleted |
|
169 | 169 | (if present) from S1.""" |
|
170 | 170 | |
|
171 | 171 | for k in other.keys(): |
|
172 | 172 | if self.has_key(k): |
|
173 | 173 | del self.__dict__[k] |
|
174 | 174 | |
|
175 | 175 | def __make_dict(self,__loc_data__,**kw): |
|
176 | 176 | "Helper function for update and merge. Return a dict from data." |
|
177 | 177 | |
|
178 | 178 | if __loc_data__ == None: |
|
179 | 179 | dict = {} |
|
180 | 180 | elif type(__loc_data__) is types.DictType: |
|
181 | 181 | dict = __loc_data__ |
|
182 | 182 | elif isinstance(__loc_data__,Struct): |
|
183 | 183 | dict = __loc_data__.__dict__ |
|
184 | 184 | else: |
|
185 | 185 | raise TypeError, 'Update with a dict, a Struct or key=val pairs.' |
|
186 | 186 | if kw: |
|
187 | 187 | dict.update(kw) |
|
188 | 188 | return dict |
|
189 | 189 | |
|
190 | 190 | def __dict_invert(self,dict): |
|
191 | 191 | """Helper function for merge. Takes a dictionary whose values are |
|
192 | 192 | lists and returns a dict. with the elements of each list as keys and |
|
193 | 193 | the original keys as values.""" |
|
194 | 194 | |
|
195 | 195 | outdict = {} |
|
196 | 196 | for k,lst in dict.items(): |
|
197 | 197 | if type(lst) is types.StringType: |
|
198 | 198 | lst = lst.split() |
|
199 | 199 | for entry in lst: |
|
200 | 200 | outdict[entry] = k |
|
201 | 201 | return outdict |
|
202 | 202 | |
|
203 | 203 | def clear(self): |
|
204 | 204 | """Clear all attributes.""" |
|
205 | 205 | self.__dict__.clear() |
|
206 | 206 | |
|
207 | 207 | def copy(self): |
|
208 | 208 | """Return a (shallow) copy of a Struct.""" |
|
209 | 209 | return Struct(self.__dict__.copy()) |
|
210 | 210 | |
|
211 | 211 | def dict(self): |
|
212 | 212 | """Return the Struct's dictionary.""" |
|
213 | 213 | return self.__dict__ |
|
214 | 214 | |
|
215 | 215 | def dictcopy(self): |
|
216 | 216 | """Return a (shallow) copy of the Struct's dictionary.""" |
|
217 | 217 | return self.__dict__.copy() |
|
218 | 218 | |
|
219 | 219 | def popitem(self): |
|
220 | 220 | """S.popitem() -> (k, v), remove and return some (key, value) pair as |
|
221 | 221 | a 2-tuple; but raise KeyError if S is empty.""" |
|
222 | 222 | return self.__dict__.popitem() |
|
223 | 223 | |
|
224 | 224 | def update(self,__loc_data__=None,**kw): |
|
225 | 225 | """Update (merge) with data from another Struct or from a dictionary. |
|
226 | 226 | Optionally, one or more key=value pairs can be given at the end for |
|
227 | 227 | direct update.""" |
|
228 | 228 | |
|
229 | 229 | # The funny name __loc_data__ is to prevent a common variable name which |
|
230 | 230 | # could be a fieled of a Struct to collide with this parameter. The problem |
|
231 | 231 | # would arise if the function is called with a keyword with this same name |
|
232 | 232 | # that a user means to add as a Struct field. |
|
233 | 233 | newdict = Struct.__make_dict(self,__loc_data__,**kw) |
|
234 | 234 | for k,v in newdict.items(): |
|
235 | 235 | self[k] = v |
|
236 | 236 | |
|
237 | 237 | def merge(self,__loc_data__=None,__conflict_solve=None,**kw): |
|
238 | 238 | """S.merge(data,conflict,k=v1,k=v2,...) -> merge data and k=v into S. |
|
239 | 239 | |
|
240 | 240 | This is similar to update(), but much more flexible. First, a dict is |
|
241 | 241 | made from data+key=value pairs. When merging this dict with the Struct |
|
242 | 242 | S, the optional dictionary 'conflict' is used to decide what to do. |
|
243 | 243 | |
|
244 | 244 | If conflict is not given, the default behavior is to preserve any keys |
|
245 | 245 | with their current value (the opposite of the update method's |
|
246 | 246 | behavior). |
|
247 | 247 | |
|
248 | 248 | conflict is a dictionary of binary functions which will be used to |
|
249 | 249 | solve key conflicts. It must have the following structure: |
|
250 | 250 | |
|
251 | 251 | conflict == { fn1 : [Skey1,Skey2,...], fn2 : [Skey3], etc } |
|
252 | 252 | |
|
253 | 253 | Values must be lists or whitespace separated strings which are |
|
254 | 254 | automatically converted to lists of strings by calling string.split(). |
|
255 | 255 | |
|
256 | 256 | Each key of conflict is a function which defines a policy for |
|
257 | 257 | resolving conflicts when merging with the input data. Each fn must be |
|
258 | 258 | a binary function which returns the desired outcome for a key |
|
259 | 259 | conflict. These functions will be called as fn(old,new). |
|
260 | 260 | |
|
261 | 261 | An example is probably in order. Suppose you are merging the struct S |
|
262 | 262 | with a dict D and the following conflict policy dict: |
|
263 | 263 | |
|
264 | 264 | S.merge(D,{fn1:['a','b',4], fn2:'key_c key_d'}) |
|
265 | 265 | |
|
266 | 266 | If the key 'a' is found in both S and D, the merge method will call: |
|
267 | 267 | |
|
268 | 268 | S['a'] = fn1(S['a'],D['a']) |
|
269 | 269 | |
|
270 | 270 | As a convenience, merge() provides five (the most commonly needed) |
|
271 | 271 | pre-defined policies: preserve, update, add, add_flip and add_s. The |
|
272 | 272 | easiest explanation is their implementation: |
|
273 | 273 | |
|
274 | 274 | preserve = lambda old,new: old |
|
275 | 275 | update = lambda old,new: new |
|
276 | 276 | add = lambda old,new: old + new |
|
277 | 277 | add_flip = lambda old,new: new + old # note change of order! |
|
278 | 278 | add_s = lambda old,new: old + ' ' + new # only works for strings! |
|
279 | 279 | |
|
280 | 280 | You can use those four words (as strings) as keys in conflict instead |
|
281 | 281 | of defining them as functions, and the merge method will substitute |
|
282 | 282 | the appropriate functions for you. That is, the call |
|
283 | 283 | |
|
284 | 284 | S.merge(D,{'preserve':'a b c','add':[4,5,'d'],my_function:[6]}) |
|
285 | 285 | |
|
286 | 286 | will automatically substitute the functions preserve and add for the |
|
287 | 287 | names 'preserve' and 'add' before making any function calls. |
|
288 | 288 | |
|
289 | 289 | For more complicated conflict resolution policies, you still need to |
|
290 | 290 | construct your own functions. """ |
|
291 | 291 | |
|
292 | 292 | data_dict = Struct.__make_dict(self,__loc_data__,**kw) |
|
293 | 293 | |
|
294 | 294 | # policies for conflict resolution: two argument functions which return |
|
295 | 295 | # the value that will go in the new struct |
|
296 | 296 | preserve = lambda old,new: old |
|
297 | 297 | update = lambda old,new: new |
|
298 | 298 | add = lambda old,new: old + new |
|
299 | 299 | add_flip = lambda old,new: new + old # note change of order! |
|
300 | 300 | add_s = lambda old,new: old + ' ' + new |
|
301 | 301 | |
|
302 | 302 | # default policy is to keep current keys when there's a conflict |
|
303 | 303 | conflict_solve = list2dict2(self.keys(),default = preserve) |
|
304 | 304 | |
|
305 | 305 | # the conflict_solve dictionary is given by the user 'inverted': we |
|
306 | 306 | # need a name-function mapping, it comes as a function -> names |
|
307 | 307 | # dict. Make a local copy (b/c we'll make changes), replace user |
|
308 | 308 | # strings for the three builtin policies and invert it. |
|
309 | 309 | if __conflict_solve: |
|
310 | 310 | inv_conflict_solve_user = __conflict_solve.copy() |
|
311 | 311 | for name, func in [('preserve',preserve), ('update',update), |
|
312 | 312 | ('add',add), ('add_flip',add_flip), ('add_s',add_s)]: |
|
313 | 313 | if name in inv_conflict_solve_user.keys(): |
|
314 | 314 | inv_conflict_solve_user[func] = inv_conflict_solve_user[name] |
|
315 | 315 | del inv_conflict_solve_user[name] |
|
316 | 316 | conflict_solve.update(Struct.__dict_invert(self,inv_conflict_solve_user)) |
|
317 | 317 | #print 'merge. conflict_solve: '; pprint(conflict_solve) # dbg |
|
318 | # after Python 2.2, use iterators: for key in data_dict will then work | |
|
319 | 318 | #print '*'*50,'in merger. conflict_solver:'; pprint(conflict_solve) |
|
320 |
for key in data_dict |
|
|
319 | for key in data_dict: | |
|
321 | 320 | if key not in self: |
|
322 | 321 | self[key] = data_dict[key] |
|
323 | 322 | else: |
|
324 | 323 | self[key] = conflict_solve[key](self[key],data_dict[key]) |
|
325 | 324 | |
|
326 | 325 | def has_key(self,key): |
|
327 | 326 | """Like has_key() dictionary method.""" |
|
328 | 327 | return self.__dict__.has_key(key) |
|
329 | 328 | |
|
330 | 329 | def hasattr(self,key): |
|
331 | 330 | """hasattr function available as a method. |
|
332 | 331 | |
|
333 | 332 | Implemented like has_key, to make sure that all available keys in the |
|
334 | 333 | internal dictionary of the Struct appear also as attributes (even |
|
335 | 334 | numeric keys).""" |
|
336 | 335 | return self.__dict__.has_key(key) |
|
337 | 336 | |
|
338 | 337 | def items(self): |
|
339 | 338 | """Return the items in the Struct's dictionary, in the same format |
|
340 | 339 | as a call to {}.items().""" |
|
341 | 340 | return self.__dict__.items() |
|
342 | 341 | |
|
343 | 342 | def keys(self): |
|
344 | 343 | """Return the keys in the Struct's dictionary, in the same format |
|
345 | 344 | as a call to {}.keys().""" |
|
346 | 345 | return self.__dict__.keys() |
|
347 | 346 | |
|
348 | 347 | def values(self,keys=None): |
|
349 | 348 | """Return the values in the Struct's dictionary, in the same format |
|
350 | 349 | as a call to {}.values(). |
|
351 | 350 | |
|
352 | 351 | Can be called with an optional argument keys, which must be a list or |
|
353 | 352 | tuple of keys. In this case it returns only the values corresponding |
|
354 | 353 | to those keys (allowing a form of 'slicing' for Structs).""" |
|
355 | 354 | if not keys: |
|
356 | 355 | return self.__dict__.values() |
|
357 | 356 | else: |
|
358 | 357 | ret=[] |
|
359 | 358 | for k in keys: |
|
360 | 359 | ret.append(self[k]) |
|
361 | 360 | return ret |
|
362 | 361 | |
|
363 | 362 | def get(self,attr,val=None): |
|
364 | 363 | """S.get(k[,d]) -> S[k] if S.has_key(k), else d. d defaults to None.""" |
|
365 | 364 | try: |
|
366 | 365 | return self[attr] |
|
367 | 366 | except KeyError: |
|
368 | 367 | return val |
|
369 | 368 | |
|
370 | 369 | def setdefault(self,attr,val=None): |
|
371 | 370 | """S.setdefault(k[,d]) -> S.get(k,d), also set S[k]=d if not S.has_key(k)""" |
|
372 | 371 | if not self.has_key(attr): |
|
373 | 372 | self[attr] = val |
|
374 | 373 | return self.get(attr,val) |
|
375 | 374 | # end class Struct |
|
376 | 375 |
@@ -1,504 +1,495 b'' | |||
|
1 | 1 | # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- |
|
2 | 2 | """Manage background (threaded) jobs conveniently from an interactive shell. |
|
3 | 3 | |
|
4 | 4 | This module provides a BackgroundJobManager class. This is the main class |
|
5 | 5 | meant for public usage, it implements an object which can create and manage |
|
6 | 6 | new background jobs. |
|
7 | 7 | |
|
8 | 8 | It also provides the actual job classes managed by these BackgroundJobManager |
|
9 | 9 | objects, see their docstrings below. |
|
10 | 10 | |
|
11 | 11 | |
|
12 | 12 | This system was inspired by discussions with B. Granger and the |
|
13 | 13 | BackgroundCommand class described in the book Python Scripting for |
|
14 | 14 | Computational Science, by H. P. Langtangen: |
|
15 | 15 | |
|
16 | 16 | http://folk.uio.no/hpl/scripting |
|
17 | 17 | |
|
18 | 18 | (although ultimately no code from this text was used, as IPython's system is a |
|
19 | 19 | separate implementation). |
|
20 | 20 | |
|
21 |
$Id: background_jobs.py |
|
|
21 | $Id: background_jobs.py 638 2005-07-18 03:01:41Z fperez $ | |
|
22 | 22 | """ |
|
23 | 23 | |
|
24 | 24 | #***************************************************************************** |
|
25 | 25 | # Copyright (C) 2005 Fernando Perez <fperez@colorado.edu> |
|
26 | 26 | # |
|
27 | 27 | # Distributed under the terms of the BSD License. The full license is in |
|
28 | 28 | # the file COPYING, distributed as part of this software. |
|
29 | 29 | #***************************************************************************** |
|
30 | 30 | |
|
31 | 31 | from IPython import Release |
|
32 | 32 | __author__ = '%s <%s>' % Release.authors['Fernando'] |
|
33 | 33 | __license__ = Release.license |
|
34 | 34 | |
|
35 | 35 | # Code begins |
|
36 | 36 | import threading,sys |
|
37 | 37 | |
|
38 | 38 | from IPython.ultraTB import AutoFormattedTB |
|
39 | 39 | from IPython.genutils import warn,error |
|
40 | 40 | |
|
41 | # declares Python 2.2 compatibility symbols: | |
|
42 | try: | |
|
43 | basestring | |
|
44 | except NameError: | |
|
45 | import types | |
|
46 | basestring = (types.StringType, types.UnicodeType) | |
|
47 | True = 1==1 | |
|
48 | False = 1==0 | |
|
49 | ||
|
50 | 41 | class BackgroundJobManager: |
|
51 | 42 | """Class to manage a pool of backgrounded threaded jobs. |
|
52 | 43 | |
|
53 | 44 | Below, we assume that 'jobs' is a BackgroundJobManager instance. |
|
54 | 45 | |
|
55 | 46 | Usage summary (see the method docstrings for details): |
|
56 | 47 | |
|
57 | 48 | jobs.new(...) -> start a new job |
|
58 | 49 | |
|
59 | 50 | jobs() or jobs.status() -> print status summary of all jobs |
|
60 | 51 | |
|
61 | 52 | jobs[N] -> returns job number N. |
|
62 | 53 | |
|
63 | 54 | foo = jobs[N].result -> assign to variable foo the result of job N |
|
64 | 55 | |
|
65 | 56 | jobs[N].traceback() -> print the traceback of dead job N |
|
66 | 57 | |
|
67 | 58 | jobs.remove(N) -> remove (finished) job N |
|
68 | 59 | |
|
69 | 60 | jobs.flush_finished() -> remove all finished jobs |
|
70 | 61 | |
|
71 | 62 | As a convenience feature, BackgroundJobManager instances provide the |
|
72 | 63 | utility result and traceback methods which retrieve the corresponding |
|
73 | 64 | information from the jobs list: |
|
74 | 65 | |
|
75 | 66 | jobs.result(N) <--> jobs[N].result |
|
76 | 67 | jobs.traceback(N) <--> jobs[N].traceback() |
|
77 | 68 | |
|
78 | 69 | While this appears minor, it allows you to use tab completion |
|
79 | 70 | interactively on the job manager instance. |
|
80 | 71 | |
|
81 | 72 | In interactive mode, IPython provides the magic fuction %bg for quick |
|
82 | 73 | creation of backgrounded expression-based jobs. Type bg? for details.""" |
|
83 | 74 | |
|
84 | 75 | def __init__(self): |
|
85 | 76 | # Lists for job management |
|
86 | 77 | self.jobs_run = [] |
|
87 | 78 | self.jobs_comp = [] |
|
88 | 79 | self.jobs_dead = [] |
|
89 | 80 | # A dict of all jobs, so users can easily access any of them |
|
90 | 81 | self.jobs_all = {} |
|
91 | 82 | # For reporting |
|
92 | 83 | self._comp_report = [] |
|
93 | 84 | self._dead_report = [] |
|
94 | 85 | # Store status codes locally for fast lookups |
|
95 | 86 | self._s_created = BackgroundJobBase.stat_created_c |
|
96 | 87 | self._s_running = BackgroundJobBase.stat_running_c |
|
97 | 88 | self._s_completed = BackgroundJobBase.stat_completed_c |
|
98 | 89 | self._s_dead = BackgroundJobBase.stat_dead_c |
|
99 | 90 | |
|
100 | 91 | def new(self,func_or_exp,*args,**kwargs): |
|
101 | 92 | """Add a new background job and start it in a separate thread. |
|
102 | 93 | |
|
103 | 94 | There are two types of jobs which can be created: |
|
104 | 95 | |
|
105 | 96 | 1. Jobs based on expressions which can be passed to an eval() call. |
|
106 | 97 | The expression must be given as a string. For example: |
|
107 | 98 | |
|
108 | 99 | job_manager.new('myfunc(x,y,z=1)'[,glob[,loc]]) |
|
109 | 100 | |
|
110 | 101 | The given expression is passed to eval(), along with the optional |
|
111 | 102 | global/local dicts provided. If no dicts are given, they are |
|
112 | 103 | extracted automatically from the caller's frame. |
|
113 | 104 | |
|
114 | 105 | A Python statement is NOT a valid eval() expression. Basically, you |
|
115 | 106 | can only use as an eval() argument something which can go on the right |
|
116 | 107 | of an '=' sign and be assigned to a variable. |
|
117 | 108 | |
|
118 | 109 | For example,"print 'hello'" is not valid, but '2+3' is. |
|
119 | 110 | |
|
120 | 111 | 2. Jobs given a function object, optionally passing additional |
|
121 | 112 | positional arguments: |
|
122 | 113 | |
|
123 | 114 | job_manager.new(myfunc,x,y) |
|
124 | 115 | |
|
125 | 116 | The function is called with the given arguments. |
|
126 | 117 | |
|
127 | 118 | If you need to pass keyword arguments to your function, you must |
|
128 | 119 | supply them as a dict named kw: |
|
129 | 120 | |
|
130 | 121 | job_manager.new(myfunc,x,y,kw=dict(z=1)) |
|
131 | 122 | |
|
132 | 123 | The reason for this assymmetry is that the new() method needs to |
|
133 | 124 | maintain access to its own keywords, and this prevents name collisions |
|
134 | 125 | between arguments to new() and arguments to your own functions. |
|
135 | 126 | |
|
136 | 127 | In both cases, the result is stored in the job.result field of the |
|
137 | 128 | background job object. |
|
138 | 129 | |
|
139 | 130 | |
|
140 | 131 | Notes and caveats: |
|
141 | 132 | |
|
142 | 133 | 1. All threads running share the same standard output. Thus, if your |
|
143 | 134 | background jobs generate output, it will come out on top of whatever |
|
144 | 135 | you are currently writing. For this reason, background jobs are best |
|
145 | 136 | used with silent functions which simply return their output. |
|
146 | 137 | |
|
147 | 138 | 2. Threads also all work within the same global namespace, and this |
|
148 | 139 | system does not lock interactive variables. So if you send job to the |
|
149 | 140 | background which operates on a mutable object for a long time, and |
|
150 | 141 | start modifying that same mutable object interactively (or in another |
|
151 | 142 | backgrounded job), all sorts of bizarre behaviour will occur. |
|
152 | 143 | |
|
153 | 144 | 3. If a background job is spending a lot of time inside a C extension |
|
154 | 145 | module which does not release the Python Global Interpreter Lock |
|
155 | 146 | (GIL), this will block the IPython prompt. This is simply because the |
|
156 | 147 | Python interpreter can only switch between threads at Python |
|
157 | 148 | bytecodes. While the execution is inside C code, the interpreter must |
|
158 | 149 | simply wait unless the extension module releases the GIL. |
|
159 | 150 | |
|
160 | 151 | 4. There is no way, due to limitations in the Python threads library, |
|
161 | 152 | to kill a thread once it has started.""" |
|
162 | 153 | |
|
163 | 154 | if callable(func_or_exp): |
|
164 | 155 | kw = kwargs.get('kw',{}) |
|
165 | 156 | job = BackgroundJobFunc(func_or_exp,*args,**kw) |
|
166 | 157 | elif isinstance(func_or_exp,basestring): |
|
167 | 158 | if not args: |
|
168 | 159 | frame = sys._getframe(1) |
|
169 | 160 | glob, loc = frame.f_globals, frame.f_locals |
|
170 | 161 | elif len(args)==1: |
|
171 | 162 | glob = loc = args[0] |
|
172 | 163 | elif len(args)==2: |
|
173 | 164 | glob,loc = args |
|
174 | 165 | else: |
|
175 | 166 | raise ValueError,\ |
|
176 | 167 | 'Expression jobs take at most 2 args (globals,locals)' |
|
177 | 168 | job = BackgroundJobExpr(func_or_exp,glob,loc) |
|
178 | 169 | else: |
|
179 | 170 | raise |
|
180 | 171 | jkeys = self.jobs_all.keys() |
|
181 | 172 | if jkeys: |
|
182 | 173 | job.num = max(jkeys)+1 |
|
183 | 174 | else: |
|
184 | 175 | job.num = 0 |
|
185 | 176 | self.jobs_run.append(job) |
|
186 | 177 | self.jobs_all[job.num] = job |
|
187 | 178 | print 'Starting job # %s in a separate thread.' % job.num |
|
188 | 179 | job.start() |
|
189 | 180 | return job |
|
190 | 181 | |
|
191 | 182 | def __getitem__(self,key): |
|
192 | 183 | return self.jobs_all[key] |
|
193 | 184 | |
|
194 | 185 | def __call__(self): |
|
195 | 186 | """An alias to self.status(), |
|
196 | 187 | |
|
197 | 188 | This allows you to simply call a job manager instance much like the |
|
198 | 189 | Unix jobs shell command.""" |
|
199 | 190 | |
|
200 | 191 | return self.status() |
|
201 | 192 | |
|
202 | 193 | def _update_status(self): |
|
203 | 194 | """Update the status of the job lists. |
|
204 | 195 | |
|
205 | 196 | This method moves finished jobs to one of two lists: |
|
206 | 197 | - self.jobs_comp: jobs which completed successfully |
|
207 | 198 | - self.jobs_dead: jobs which finished but died. |
|
208 | 199 | |
|
209 | 200 | It also copies those jobs to corresponding _report lists. These lists |
|
210 | 201 | are used to report jobs completed/dead since the last update, and are |
|
211 | 202 | then cleared by the reporting function after each call.""" |
|
212 | 203 | |
|
213 | 204 | run,comp,dead = self._s_running,self._s_completed,self._s_dead |
|
214 | 205 | jobs_run = self.jobs_run |
|
215 | 206 | for num in range(len(jobs_run)): |
|
216 | 207 | job = jobs_run[num] |
|
217 | 208 | stat = job.stat_code |
|
218 | 209 | if stat == run: |
|
219 | 210 | continue |
|
220 | 211 | elif stat == comp: |
|
221 | 212 | self.jobs_comp.append(job) |
|
222 | 213 | self._comp_report.append(job) |
|
223 | 214 | jobs_run[num] = False |
|
224 | 215 | elif stat == dead: |
|
225 | 216 | self.jobs_dead.append(job) |
|
226 | 217 | self._dead_report.append(job) |
|
227 | 218 | jobs_run[num] = False |
|
228 | 219 | self.jobs_run = filter(None,self.jobs_run) |
|
229 | 220 | |
|
230 | 221 | def _group_report(self,group,name): |
|
231 | 222 | """Report summary for a given job group. |
|
232 | 223 | |
|
233 | 224 | Return True if the group had any elements.""" |
|
234 | 225 | |
|
235 | 226 | if group: |
|
236 | 227 | print '%s jobs:' % name |
|
237 | 228 | for job in group: |
|
238 | 229 | print '%s : %s' % (job.num,job) |
|
239 | 230 | |
|
240 | 231 | return True |
|
241 | 232 | |
|
242 | 233 | def _group_flush(self,group,name): |
|
243 | 234 | """Flush a given job group |
|
244 | 235 | |
|
245 | 236 | Return True if the group had any elements.""" |
|
246 | 237 | |
|
247 | 238 | njobs = len(group) |
|
248 | 239 | if njobs: |
|
249 | 240 | plural = {1:''}.setdefault(njobs,'s') |
|
250 | 241 | print 'Flushing %s %s job%s.' % (njobs,name,plural) |
|
251 | 242 | group[:] = [] |
|
252 | 243 | return True |
|
253 | 244 | |
|
254 | 245 | def _status_new(self): |
|
255 | 246 | """Print the status of newly finished jobs. |
|
256 | 247 | |
|
257 | 248 | Return True if any new jobs are reported. |
|
258 | 249 | |
|
259 | 250 | This call resets its own state every time, so it only reports jobs |
|
260 | 251 | which have finished since the last time it was called.""" |
|
261 | 252 | |
|
262 | 253 | self._update_status() |
|
263 | 254 | new_comp = self._group_report(self._comp_report,'Completed') |
|
264 | 255 | new_dead = self._group_report(self._dead_report, |
|
265 | 256 | 'Dead, call job.traceback() for details') |
|
266 | 257 | self._comp_report[:] = [] |
|
267 | 258 | self._dead_report[:] = [] |
|
268 | 259 | return new_comp or new_dead |
|
269 | 260 | |
|
270 | 261 | def status(self,verbose=0): |
|
271 | 262 | """Print a status of all jobs currently being managed.""" |
|
272 | 263 | |
|
273 | 264 | self._update_status() |
|
274 | 265 | self._group_report(self.jobs_run,'Running') |
|
275 | 266 | self._group_report(self.jobs_comp,'Completed') |
|
276 | 267 | self._group_report(self.jobs_dead,'Dead') |
|
277 | 268 | # Also flush the report queues |
|
278 | 269 | self._comp_report[:] = [] |
|
279 | 270 | self._dead_report[:] = [] |
|
280 | 271 | |
|
281 | 272 | def remove(self,num): |
|
282 | 273 | """Remove a finished (completed or dead) job.""" |
|
283 | 274 | |
|
284 | 275 | try: |
|
285 | 276 | job = self.jobs_all[num] |
|
286 | 277 | except KeyError: |
|
287 | 278 | error('Job #%s not found' % num) |
|
288 | 279 | else: |
|
289 | 280 | stat_code = job.stat_code |
|
290 | 281 | if stat_code == self._s_running: |
|
291 | 282 | error('Job #%s is still running, it can not be removed.' % num) |
|
292 | 283 | return |
|
293 | 284 | elif stat_code == self._s_completed: |
|
294 | 285 | self.jobs_comp.remove(job) |
|
295 | 286 | elif stat_code == self._s_dead: |
|
296 | 287 | self.jobs_dead.remove(job) |
|
297 | 288 | |
|
298 | 289 | def flush_finished(self): |
|
299 | 290 | """Flush all jobs finished (completed and dead) from lists. |
|
300 | 291 | |
|
301 | 292 | Running jobs are never flushed. |
|
302 | 293 | |
|
303 | 294 | It first calls _status_new(), to update info. If any jobs have |
|
304 | 295 | completed since the last _status_new() call, the flush operation |
|
305 | 296 | aborts.""" |
|
306 | 297 | |
|
307 | 298 | if self._status_new(): |
|
308 | 299 | error('New jobs completed since last '\ |
|
309 | 300 | '_status_new(), aborting flush.') |
|
310 | 301 | return |
|
311 | 302 | |
|
312 | 303 | # Remove the finished jobs from the master dict |
|
313 | 304 | jobs_all = self.jobs_all |
|
314 | 305 | for job in self.jobs_comp+self.jobs_dead: |
|
315 | 306 | del(jobs_all[job.num]) |
|
316 | 307 | |
|
317 | 308 | # Now flush these lists completely |
|
318 | 309 | fl_comp = self._group_flush(self.jobs_comp,'Completed') |
|
319 | 310 | fl_dead = self._group_flush(self.jobs_dead,'Dead') |
|
320 | 311 | if not (fl_comp or fl_dead): |
|
321 | 312 | print 'No jobs to flush.' |
|
322 | 313 | |
|
323 | 314 | def result(self,num): |
|
324 | 315 | """result(N) -> return the result of job N.""" |
|
325 | 316 | try: |
|
326 | 317 | return self.jobs_all[num].result |
|
327 | 318 | except KeyError: |
|
328 | 319 | error('Job #%s not found' % num) |
|
329 | 320 | |
|
330 | 321 | def traceback(self,num): |
|
331 | 322 | try: |
|
332 | 323 | self.jobs_all[num].traceback() |
|
333 | 324 | except KeyError: |
|
334 | 325 | error('Job #%s not found' % num) |
|
335 | 326 | |
|
336 | 327 | |
|
337 | 328 | class BackgroundJobBase(threading.Thread): |
|
338 | 329 | """Base class to build BackgroundJob classes. |
|
339 | 330 | |
|
340 | 331 | The derived classes must implement: |
|
341 | 332 | |
|
342 | 333 | - Their own __init__, since the one here raises NotImplementedError. The |
|
343 | 334 | derived constructor must call self._init() at the end, to provide common |
|
344 | 335 | initialization. |
|
345 | 336 | |
|
346 | 337 | - A strform attribute used in calls to __str__. |
|
347 | 338 | |
|
348 | 339 | - A call() method, which will make the actual execution call and must |
|
349 | 340 | return a value to be held in the 'result' field of the job object.""" |
|
350 | 341 | |
|
351 | 342 | # Class constants for status, in string and as numerical codes (when |
|
352 | 343 | # updating jobs lists, we don't want to do string comparisons). This will |
|
353 | 344 | # be done at every user prompt, so it has to be as fast as possible |
|
354 | 345 | stat_created = 'Created'; stat_created_c = 0 |
|
355 | 346 | stat_running = 'Running'; stat_running_c = 1 |
|
356 | 347 | stat_completed = 'Completed'; stat_completed_c = 2 |
|
357 | 348 | stat_dead = 'Dead (Exception), call job.traceback() for details' |
|
358 | 349 | stat_dead_c = -1 |
|
359 | 350 | |
|
360 | 351 | def __init__(self): |
|
361 | 352 | raise NotImplementedError, \ |
|
362 | 353 | "This class can not be instantiated directly." |
|
363 | 354 | |
|
364 | 355 | def _init(self): |
|
365 | 356 | """Common initialization for all BackgroundJob objects""" |
|
366 | 357 | |
|
367 | 358 | for attr in ['call','strform']: |
|
368 | 359 | assert hasattr(self,attr), "Missing attribute <%s>" % attr |
|
369 | 360 | |
|
370 | 361 | # The num tag can be set by an external job manager |
|
371 | 362 | self.num = None |
|
372 | 363 | |
|
373 | 364 | self.status = BackgroundJobBase.stat_created |
|
374 | 365 | self.stat_code = BackgroundJobBase.stat_created_c |
|
375 | 366 | self.finished = False |
|
376 | 367 | self.result = '<BackgroundJob has not completed>' |
|
377 | 368 | # reuse the ipython traceback handler if we can get to it, otherwise |
|
378 | 369 | # make a new one |
|
379 | 370 | try: |
|
380 | 371 | self._make_tb = __IPYTHON__.InteractiveTB.text |
|
381 | 372 | except: |
|
382 | 373 | self._make_tb = AutoFormattedTB(mode = 'Context', |
|
383 | 374 | color_scheme='NoColor', |
|
384 | 375 | tb_offset = 1).text |
|
385 | 376 | # Hold a formatted traceback if one is generated. |
|
386 | 377 | self._tb = None |
|
387 | 378 | |
|
388 | 379 | threading.Thread.__init__(self) |
|
389 | 380 | |
|
390 | 381 | def __str__(self): |
|
391 | 382 | return self.strform |
|
392 | 383 | |
|
393 | 384 | def __repr__(self): |
|
394 | 385 | return '<BackgroundJob: %s>' % self.strform |
|
395 | 386 | |
|
396 | 387 | def traceback(self): |
|
397 | 388 | print self._tb |
|
398 | 389 | |
|
399 | 390 | def run(self): |
|
400 | 391 | try: |
|
401 | 392 | self.status = BackgroundJobBase.stat_running |
|
402 | 393 | self.stat_code = BackgroundJobBase.stat_running_c |
|
403 | 394 | self.result = self.call() |
|
404 | 395 | except: |
|
405 | 396 | self.status = BackgroundJobBase.stat_dead |
|
406 | 397 | self.stat_code = BackgroundJobBase.stat_dead_c |
|
407 | 398 | self.finished = None |
|
408 | 399 | self.result = ('<BackgroundJob died, call job.traceback() for details>') |
|
409 | 400 | self._tb = self._make_tb() |
|
410 | 401 | else: |
|
411 | 402 | self.status = BackgroundJobBase.stat_completed |
|
412 | 403 | self.stat_code = BackgroundJobBase.stat_completed_c |
|
413 | 404 | self.finished = True |
|
414 | 405 | |
|
415 | 406 | class BackgroundJobExpr(BackgroundJobBase): |
|
416 | 407 | """Evaluate an expression as a background job (uses a separate thread).""" |
|
417 | 408 | |
|
418 | 409 | def __init__(self,expression,glob=None,loc=None): |
|
419 | 410 | """Create a new job from a string which can be fed to eval(). |
|
420 | 411 | |
|
421 | 412 | global/locals dicts can be provided, which will be passed to the eval |
|
422 | 413 | call.""" |
|
423 | 414 | |
|
424 | 415 | # fail immediately if the given expression can't be compiled |
|
425 | 416 | self.code = compile(expression,'<BackgroundJob compilation>','eval') |
|
426 | 417 | |
|
427 | 418 | if glob is None: |
|
428 | 419 | glob = {} |
|
429 | 420 | if loc is None: |
|
430 | 421 | loc = {} |
|
431 | 422 | |
|
432 | 423 | self.expression = self.strform = expression |
|
433 | 424 | self.glob = glob |
|
434 | 425 | self.loc = loc |
|
435 | 426 | self._init() |
|
436 | 427 | |
|
437 | 428 | def call(self): |
|
438 | 429 | return eval(self.code,self.glob,self.loc) |
|
439 | 430 | |
|
440 | 431 | class BackgroundJobFunc(BackgroundJobBase): |
|
441 | 432 | """Run a function call as a background job (uses a separate thread).""" |
|
442 | 433 | |
|
443 | 434 | def __init__(self,func,*args,**kwargs): |
|
444 | 435 | """Create a new job from a callable object. |
|
445 | 436 | |
|
446 | 437 | Any positional arguments and keyword args given to this constructor |
|
447 | 438 | after the initial callable are passed directly to it.""" |
|
448 | 439 | |
|
449 | 440 | assert callable(func),'first argument must be callable' |
|
450 | 441 | |
|
451 | 442 | if args is None: |
|
452 | 443 | args = [] |
|
453 | 444 | if kwargs is None: |
|
454 | 445 | kwargs = {} |
|
455 | 446 | |
|
456 | 447 | self.func = func |
|
457 | 448 | self.args = args |
|
458 | 449 | self.kwargs = kwargs |
|
459 | 450 | # The string form will only include the function passed, because |
|
460 | 451 | # generating string representations of the arguments is a potentially |
|
461 | 452 | # _very_ expensive operation (e.g. with large arrays). |
|
462 | 453 | self.strform = str(func) |
|
463 | 454 | self._init() |
|
464 | 455 | |
|
465 | 456 | def call(self): |
|
466 | 457 | return self.func(*self.args,**self.kwargs) |
|
467 | 458 | |
|
468 | 459 | |
|
469 | 460 | if __name__=='__main__': |
|
470 | 461 | |
|
471 | 462 | import time |
|
472 | 463 | |
|
473 | 464 | def sleepfunc(interval=2,*a,**kw): |
|
474 | 465 | args = dict(interval=interval, |
|
475 | 466 | args=a, |
|
476 | 467 | kwargs=kw) |
|
477 | 468 | time.sleep(interval) |
|
478 | 469 | return args |
|
479 | 470 | |
|
480 | 471 | def diefunc(interval=2,*a,**kw): |
|
481 | 472 | time.sleep(interval) |
|
482 | 473 | die |
|
483 | 474 | |
|
484 | 475 | def printfunc(interval=1,reps=5): |
|
485 | 476 | for n in range(reps): |
|
486 | 477 | time.sleep(interval) |
|
487 | 478 | print 'In the background...' |
|
488 | 479 | |
|
489 | 480 | jobs = BackgroundJobManager() |
|
490 | 481 | # first job will have # 0 |
|
491 | 482 | jobs.new(sleepfunc,4) |
|
492 | 483 | jobs.new(sleepfunc,kw={'reps':2}) |
|
493 | 484 | # This makes a job which will die |
|
494 | 485 | jobs.new(diefunc,1) |
|
495 | 486 | jobs.new('printfunc(1,3)') |
|
496 | 487 | |
|
497 | 488 | # after a while, you can get the traceback of a dead job. Run the line |
|
498 | 489 | # below again interactively until it prints a traceback (check the status |
|
499 | 490 | # of the job): |
|
500 | 491 | print jobs[1].status |
|
501 | 492 | jobs[1].traceback() |
|
502 | 493 | |
|
503 | 494 | # Run this line again until the printed result changes |
|
504 | 495 | print "The result of job #0 is:",jobs[0].result |
@@ -1,1519 +1,1508 b'' | |||
|
1 | 1 | # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- |
|
2 | 2 | """ |
|
3 | 3 | General purpose utilities. |
|
4 | 4 | |
|
5 | 5 | This is a grab-bag of stuff I find useful in most programs I write. Some of |
|
6 | 6 | these things are also convenient when working at the command line. |
|
7 | 7 | |
|
8 |
$Id: genutils.py 63 |
|
|
8 | $Id: genutils.py 638 2005-07-18 03:01:41Z fperez $""" | |
|
9 | 9 | |
|
10 | 10 | #***************************************************************************** |
|
11 | 11 | # Copyright (C) 2001-2004 Fernando Perez. <fperez@colorado.edu> |
|
12 | 12 | # |
|
13 | 13 | # Distributed under the terms of the BSD License. The full license is in |
|
14 | 14 | # the file COPYING, distributed as part of this software. |
|
15 | 15 | #***************************************************************************** |
|
16 | 16 | |
|
17 | 17 | from IPython import Release |
|
18 | 18 | __author__ = '%s <%s>' % Release.authors['Fernando'] |
|
19 | 19 | __license__ = Release.license |
|
20 | 20 | |
|
21 | 21 | #**************************************************************************** |
|
22 | 22 | # required modules |
|
23 | 23 | import __main__ |
|
24 | 24 | import types,commands,time,sys,os,re,shutil |
|
25 | 25 | import tempfile |
|
26 | import codecs | |
|
26 | 27 | from IPython.Itpl import Itpl,itpl,printpl |
|
27 | 28 | from IPython import DPyGetOpt |
|
28 | 29 | |
|
30 | # Build objects which appeared in Python 2.3 for 2.2, to make ipython | |
|
31 | # 2.2-friendly | |
|
32 | try: | |
|
33 | basestring | |
|
34 | except NameError: | |
|
35 | import types | |
|
36 | basestring = (types.StringType, types.UnicodeType) | |
|
37 | True = 1==1 | |
|
38 | False = 1==0 | |
|
39 | ||
|
40 | def enumerate(obj): | |
|
41 | i = -1 | |
|
42 | for item in obj: | |
|
43 | i += 1 | |
|
44 | yield i, item | |
|
45 | ||
|
46 | # add these to the builtin namespace, so that all modules find them | |
|
47 | import __builtin__ | |
|
48 | __builtin__.basestring = basestring | |
|
49 | __builtin__.True = True | |
|
50 | __builtin__.False = False | |
|
51 | __builtin__.enumerate = enumerate | |
|
52 | ||
|
29 | 53 | #**************************************************************************** |
|
30 | 54 | # Exceptions |
|
31 | 55 | class Error(Exception): |
|
32 | 56 | """Base class for exceptions in this module.""" |
|
33 | 57 | pass |
|
34 | 58 | |
|
35 | 59 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
36 | class Stream: | |
|
37 | """Simple class to hold the various I/O streams in Term""" | |
|
38 | ||
|
39 | def __init__(self,stream,name): | |
|
60 | class IOStream: | |
|
61 | def __init__(self,stream,fallback): | |
|
62 | if not hasattr(stream,'write') or not hasattr(stream,'flush'): | |
|
63 | stream = fallback | |
|
40 | 64 | self.stream = stream |
|
41 |
self. |
|
|
42 | try: | |
|
43 | self.fileno = stream.fileno() | |
|
44 | except AttributeError: | |
|
45 | msg = ("Stream <%s> looks suspicious: it lacks a 'fileno' attribute." | |
|
46 | % name) | |
|
47 | print >> sys.stderr, 'WARNING:',msg | |
|
48 | try: | |
|
49 | self.mode = stream.mode | |
|
50 | except AttributeError: | |
|
51 | msg = ("Stream <%s> looks suspicious: it lacks a 'mode' attribute." | |
|
52 | % name) | |
|
53 | print >> sys.stderr, 'WARNING:',msg | |
|
65 | self._swrite = stream.write | |
|
66 | self.flush = stream.flush | |
|
54 | 67 | |
|
55 | class Term: | |
|
68 | def write(self,data): | |
|
69 | try: | |
|
70 | self._swrite(data) | |
|
71 | except: | |
|
72 | try: | |
|
73 | # print handles some unicode issues which may trip a plain | |
|
74 | # write() call. Attempt to emulate write() by using a | |
|
75 | # trailing comma | |
|
76 | print >> self.stream, data, | |
|
77 | except: | |
|
78 | # if we get here, something is seriously broken. | |
|
79 | print >> sys.stderr, \ | |
|
80 | 'ERROR - failed to write data to stream:', stream | |
|
81 | ||
|
82 | class IOTerm: | |
|
56 | 83 | """ Term holds the file or file-like objects for handling I/O operations. |
|
57 | 84 | |
|
58 | 85 | These are normally just sys.stdin, sys.stdout and sys.stderr but for |
|
59 | 86 | Windows they can can replaced to allow editing the strings before they are |
|
60 | 87 | displayed.""" |
|
61 | 88 | |
|
62 | 89 | # In the future, having IPython channel all its I/O operations through |
|
63 | 90 | # this class will make it easier to embed it into other environments which |
|
64 | 91 | # are not a normal terminal (such as a GUI-based shell) |
|
65 | in_s = Stream(sys.stdin,'cin') | |
|
66 | out_s = Stream(sys.stdout,'cout') | |
|
67 | err_s = Stream(sys.stderr,'cerr') | |
|
68 | ||
|
69 | # Store the three streams in (err,out,in) order so that if we need to reopen | |
|
70 | # them, the error channel is reopened first to provide info. | |
|
71 | streams = [err_s,out_s,in_s] | |
|
72 | ||
|
73 | # The class globals should be the actual 'bare' streams for normal I/O to work | |
|
74 | cin = streams[2].stream | |
|
75 | cout = streams[1].stream | |
|
76 | cerr = streams[0].stream | |
|
77 | ||
|
78 | def reopen_all(cls): | |
|
79 | """Reopen all streams if necessary. | |
|
80 | ||
|
81 | This should only be called if it is suspected that someting closed | |
|
82 | accidentally one of the I/O streams.""" | |
|
83 | ||
|
84 | any_closed = 0 | |
|
85 | ||
|
86 | for sn in range(len(cls.streams)): | |
|
87 | st = cls.streams[sn] | |
|
88 | if st.stream.closed: | |
|
89 | any_closed = 1 | |
|
90 | new_stream = os.fdopen(os.dup(st.fileno), st.mode,0) | |
|
91 | cls.streams[sn] = Stream(new_stream,st.name) | |
|
92 | print >> cls.streams[0].stream, \ | |
|
93 | '\nWARNING:\nStream Term.%s had to be reopened!' % st.name | |
|
94 | ||
|
95 | # Rebuild the class globals | |
|
96 | cls.cin = cls.streams[2].stream | |
|
97 | cls.cout = cls.streams[1].stream | |
|
98 | cls.cerr = cls.streams[0].stream | |
|
99 | ||
|
100 | reopen_all = classmethod(reopen_all) | |
|
101 | ||
|
102 | def set_stdout(cls,stream): | |
|
103 | """Set the stream """ | |
|
104 | cls.cout = stream | |
|
105 | set_stdout = classmethod(set_stdout) | |
|
106 | ||
|
107 | def set_stderr(cls,stream): | |
|
108 | cls.cerr = stream | |
|
109 | set_stderr = classmethod(set_stderr) | |
|
92 | def __init__(self,cin=None,cout=None,cerr=None): | |
|
93 | self.cin = IOStream(cin,sys.stdin) | |
|
94 | self.cout = IOStream(cout,sys.stdout) | |
|
95 | self.cerr = IOStream(cerr,sys.stderr) | |
|
96 | ||
|
97 | # Global variable to be used for all I/O | |
|
98 | Term = IOTerm() | |
|
110 | 99 | |
|
111 | 100 | # Windows-specific code to load Gary Bishop's readline and configure it |
|
112 | 101 | # automatically for the users |
|
113 | 102 | # Note: os.name on cygwin returns posix, so this should only pick up 'native' |
|
114 | 103 | # windows. Cygwin returns 'cygwin' for sys.platform. |
|
115 | 104 | if os.name == 'nt': |
|
116 | 105 | try: |
|
117 | 106 | import readline |
|
118 | 107 | except ImportError: |
|
119 | 108 | pass |
|
120 | 109 | else: |
|
121 | 110 | try: |
|
122 | 111 | _out = readline.GetOutputFile() |
|
123 | 112 | except AttributeError: |
|
124 | 113 | pass |
|
125 | 114 | else: |
|
126 | Term.set_stdout(_out) | |
|
127 |
Term |
|
|
115 | # Remake Term to use the readline i/o facilities | |
|
116 | Term = IOTerm(cout=_out,cerr=_out) | |
|
128 | 117 | del _out |
|
129 | 118 | |
|
130 | 119 | #**************************************************************************** |
|
131 | 120 | # Generic warning/error printer, used by everything else |
|
132 | 121 | def warn(msg,level=2,exit_val=1): |
|
133 | 122 | """Standard warning printer. Gives formatting consistency. |
|
134 | 123 | |
|
135 | 124 | Output is sent to Term.cerr (sys.stderr by default). |
|
136 | 125 | |
|
137 | 126 | Options: |
|
138 | 127 | |
|
139 | 128 | -level(2): allows finer control: |
|
140 | 129 | 0 -> Do nothing, dummy function. |
|
141 | 130 | 1 -> Print message. |
|
142 | 131 | 2 -> Print 'WARNING:' + message. (Default level). |
|
143 | 132 | 3 -> Print 'ERROR:' + message. |
|
144 | 133 | 4 -> Print 'FATAL ERROR:' + message and trigger a sys.exit(exit_val). |
|
145 | 134 | |
|
146 | 135 | -exit_val (1): exit value returned by sys.exit() for a level 4 |
|
147 | 136 | warning. Ignored for all other levels.""" |
|
148 | 137 | |
|
149 | 138 | if level>0: |
|
150 | 139 | header = ['','','WARNING: ','ERROR: ','FATAL ERROR: '] |
|
151 | 140 | print >> Term.cerr, '%s%s' % (header[level],msg) |
|
152 | 141 | if level == 4: |
|
153 | 142 | print >> Term.cerr,'Exiting.\n' |
|
154 | 143 | sys.exit(exit_val) |
|
155 | 144 | |
|
156 | 145 | def info(msg): |
|
157 | 146 | """Equivalent to warn(msg,level=1).""" |
|
158 | 147 | |
|
159 | 148 | warn(msg,level=1) |
|
160 | 149 | |
|
161 | 150 | def error(msg): |
|
162 | 151 | """Equivalent to warn(msg,level=3).""" |
|
163 | 152 | |
|
164 | 153 | warn(msg,level=3) |
|
165 | 154 | |
|
166 | 155 | def fatal(msg,exit_val=1): |
|
167 | 156 | """Equivalent to warn(msg,exit_val=exit_val,level=4).""" |
|
168 | 157 | |
|
169 | 158 | warn(msg,exit_val=exit_val,level=4) |
|
170 | 159 | |
|
171 | 160 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
172 | 161 | StringTypes = types.StringTypes |
|
173 | 162 | |
|
174 | 163 | # Basic timing functionality |
|
175 | 164 | |
|
176 | 165 | # If possible (Unix), use the resource module instead of time.clock() |
|
177 | 166 | try: |
|
178 | 167 | import resource |
|
179 | 168 | def clock(): |
|
180 | 169 | """clock() -> floating point number |
|
181 | 170 | |
|
182 | 171 | Return the CPU time in seconds (user time only, system time is |
|
183 | 172 | ignored) since the start of the process. This is done via a call to |
|
184 | 173 | resource.getrusage, so it avoids the wraparound problems in |
|
185 | 174 | time.clock().""" |
|
186 | 175 | |
|
187 | 176 | return resource.getrusage(resource.RUSAGE_SELF)[0] |
|
188 | 177 | |
|
189 | 178 | def clock2(): |
|
190 | 179 | """clock2() -> (t_user,t_system) |
|
191 | 180 | |
|
192 | 181 | Similar to clock(), but return a tuple of user/system times.""" |
|
193 | 182 | return resource.getrusage(resource.RUSAGE_SELF)[:2] |
|
194 | 183 | |
|
195 | 184 | except ImportError: |
|
196 | 185 | clock = time.clock |
|
197 | 186 | def clock2(): |
|
198 | 187 | """Under windows, system CPU time can't be measured. |
|
199 | 188 | |
|
200 | 189 | This just returns clock() and zero.""" |
|
201 | 190 | return time.clock(),0.0 |
|
202 | 191 | |
|
203 | 192 | def timings_out(reps,func,*args,**kw): |
|
204 | 193 | """timings_out(reps,func,*args,**kw) -> (t_total,t_per_call,output) |
|
205 | 194 | |
|
206 | 195 | Execute a function reps times, return a tuple with the elapsed total |
|
207 | 196 | CPU time in seconds, the time per call and the function's output. |
|
208 | 197 | |
|
209 | 198 | Under Unix, the return value is the sum of user+system time consumed by |
|
210 | 199 | the process, computed via the resource module. This prevents problems |
|
211 | 200 | related to the wraparound effect which the time.clock() function has. |
|
212 | 201 | |
|
213 | 202 | Under Windows the return value is in wall clock seconds. See the |
|
214 | 203 | documentation for the time module for more details.""" |
|
215 | 204 | |
|
216 | 205 | reps = int(reps) |
|
217 | 206 | assert reps >=1, 'reps must be >= 1' |
|
218 | 207 | if reps==1: |
|
219 | 208 | start = clock() |
|
220 | 209 | out = func(*args,**kw) |
|
221 | 210 | tot_time = clock()-start |
|
222 | 211 | else: |
|
223 | 212 | rng = xrange(reps-1) # the last time is executed separately to store output |
|
224 | 213 | start = clock() |
|
225 | 214 | for dummy in rng: func(*args,**kw) |
|
226 | 215 | out = func(*args,**kw) # one last time |
|
227 | 216 | tot_time = clock()-start |
|
228 | 217 | av_time = tot_time / reps |
|
229 | 218 | return tot_time,av_time,out |
|
230 | 219 | |
|
231 | 220 | def timings(reps,func,*args,**kw): |
|
232 | 221 | """timings(reps,func,*args,**kw) -> (t_total,t_per_call) |
|
233 | 222 | |
|
234 | 223 | Execute a function reps times, return a tuple with the elapsed total CPU |
|
235 | 224 | time in seconds and the time per call. These are just the first two values |
|
236 | 225 | in timings_out().""" |
|
237 | 226 | |
|
238 | 227 | return timings_out(reps,func,*args,**kw)[0:2] |
|
239 | 228 | |
|
240 | 229 | def timing(func,*args,**kw): |
|
241 | 230 | """timing(func,*args,**kw) -> t_total |
|
242 | 231 | |
|
243 | 232 | Execute a function once, return the elapsed total CPU time in |
|
244 | 233 | seconds. This is just the first value in timings_out().""" |
|
245 | 234 | |
|
246 | 235 | return timings_out(1,func,*args,**kw)[0] |
|
247 | 236 | |
|
248 | 237 | #**************************************************************************** |
|
249 | 238 | # file and system |
|
250 | 239 | |
|
251 | 240 | def system(cmd,verbose=0,debug=0,header=''): |
|
252 | 241 | """Execute a system command, return its exit status. |
|
253 | 242 | |
|
254 | 243 | Options: |
|
255 | 244 | |
|
256 | 245 | - verbose (0): print the command to be executed. |
|
257 | 246 | |
|
258 | 247 | - debug (0): only print, do not actually execute. |
|
259 | 248 | |
|
260 | 249 | - header (''): Header to print on screen prior to the executed command (it |
|
261 | 250 | is only prepended to the command, no newlines are added). |
|
262 | 251 | |
|
263 | 252 | Note: a stateful version of this function is available through the |
|
264 | 253 | SystemExec class.""" |
|
265 | 254 | |
|
266 | 255 | stat = 0 |
|
267 | 256 | if verbose or debug: print header+cmd |
|
268 | 257 | sys.stdout.flush() |
|
269 | 258 | if not debug: stat = os.system(cmd) |
|
270 | 259 | return stat |
|
271 | 260 | |
|
272 | 261 | def shell(cmd,verbose=0,debug=0,header=''): |
|
273 | 262 | """Execute a command in the system shell, always return None. |
|
274 | 263 | |
|
275 | 264 | Options: |
|
276 | 265 | |
|
277 | 266 | - verbose (0): print the command to be executed. |
|
278 | 267 | |
|
279 | 268 | - debug (0): only print, do not actually execute. |
|
280 | 269 | |
|
281 | 270 | - header (''): Header to print on screen prior to the executed command (it |
|
282 | 271 | is only prepended to the command, no newlines are added). |
|
283 | 272 | |
|
284 | 273 | Note: this is similar to genutils.system(), but it returns None so it can |
|
285 | 274 | be conveniently used in interactive loops without getting the return value |
|
286 | 275 | (typically 0) printed many times.""" |
|
287 | 276 | |
|
288 | 277 | stat = 0 |
|
289 | 278 | if verbose or debug: print header+cmd |
|
290 | 279 | # flush stdout so we don't mangle python's buffering |
|
291 | 280 | sys.stdout.flush() |
|
292 | 281 | if not debug: |
|
293 | 282 | os.system(cmd) |
|
294 | 283 | |
|
295 | 284 | def getoutput(cmd,verbose=0,debug=0,header='',split=0): |
|
296 | 285 | """Dummy substitute for perl's backquotes. |
|
297 | 286 | |
|
298 | 287 | Executes a command and returns the output. |
|
299 | 288 | |
|
300 | 289 | Accepts the same arguments as system(), plus: |
|
301 | 290 | |
|
302 | 291 | - split(0): if true, the output is returned as a list split on newlines. |
|
303 | 292 | |
|
304 | 293 | Note: a stateful version of this function is available through the |
|
305 | 294 | SystemExec class.""" |
|
306 | 295 | |
|
307 | 296 | if verbose or debug: print header+cmd |
|
308 | 297 | if not debug: |
|
309 | 298 | output = commands.getoutput(cmd) |
|
310 | 299 | if split: |
|
311 | 300 | return output.split('\n') |
|
312 | 301 | else: |
|
313 | 302 | return output |
|
314 | 303 | |
|
315 | 304 | def getoutputerror(cmd,verbose=0,debug=0,header='',split=0): |
|
316 | 305 | """Return (standard output,standard error) of executing cmd in a shell. |
|
317 | 306 | |
|
318 | 307 | Accepts the same arguments as system(), plus: |
|
319 | 308 | |
|
320 | 309 | - split(0): if true, each of stdout/err is returned as a list split on |
|
321 | 310 | newlines. |
|
322 | 311 | |
|
323 | 312 | Note: a stateful version of this function is available through the |
|
324 | 313 | SystemExec class.""" |
|
325 | 314 | |
|
326 | 315 | if verbose or debug: print header+cmd |
|
327 | 316 | if not cmd: |
|
328 | 317 | if split: |
|
329 | 318 | return [],[] |
|
330 | 319 | else: |
|
331 | 320 | return '','' |
|
332 | 321 | if not debug: |
|
333 | 322 | pin,pout,perr = os.popen3(cmd) |
|
334 | 323 | tout = pout.read().rstrip() |
|
335 | 324 | terr = perr.read().rstrip() |
|
336 | 325 | pin.close() |
|
337 | 326 | pout.close() |
|
338 | 327 | perr.close() |
|
339 | 328 | if split: |
|
340 | 329 | return tout.split('\n'),terr.split('\n') |
|
341 | 330 | else: |
|
342 | 331 | return tout,terr |
|
343 | 332 | |
|
344 | 333 | # for compatibility with older naming conventions |
|
345 | 334 | xsys = system |
|
346 | 335 | bq = getoutput |
|
347 | 336 | |
|
348 | 337 | class SystemExec: |
|
349 | 338 | """Access the system and getoutput functions through a stateful interface. |
|
350 | 339 | |
|
351 | 340 | Note: here we refer to the system and getoutput functions from this |
|
352 | 341 | library, not the ones from the standard python library. |
|
353 | 342 | |
|
354 | 343 | This class offers the system and getoutput functions as methods, but the |
|
355 | 344 | verbose, debug and header parameters can be set for the instance (at |
|
356 | 345 | creation time or later) so that they don't need to be specified on each |
|
357 | 346 | call. |
|
358 | 347 | |
|
359 | 348 | For efficiency reasons, there's no way to override the parameters on a |
|
360 | 349 | per-call basis other than by setting instance attributes. If you need |
|
361 | 350 | local overrides, it's best to directly call system() or getoutput(). |
|
362 | 351 | |
|
363 | 352 | The following names are provided as alternate options: |
|
364 | 353 | - xsys: alias to system |
|
365 | 354 | - bq: alias to getoutput |
|
366 | 355 | |
|
367 | 356 | An instance can then be created as: |
|
368 | 357 | >>> sysexec = SystemExec(verbose=1,debug=0,header='Calling: ') |
|
369 | 358 | |
|
370 | 359 | And used as: |
|
371 | 360 | >>> sysexec.xsys('pwd') |
|
372 | 361 | >>> dirlist = sysexec.bq('ls -l') |
|
373 | 362 | """ |
|
374 | 363 | |
|
375 | 364 | def __init__(self,verbose=0,debug=0,header='',split=0): |
|
376 | 365 | """Specify the instance's values for verbose, debug and header.""" |
|
377 | 366 | setattr_list(self,'verbose debug header split') |
|
378 | 367 | |
|
379 | 368 | def system(self,cmd): |
|
380 | 369 | """Stateful interface to system(), with the same keyword parameters.""" |
|
381 | 370 | |
|
382 | 371 | system(cmd,self.verbose,self.debug,self.header) |
|
383 | 372 | |
|
384 | 373 | def shell(self,cmd): |
|
385 | 374 | """Stateful interface to shell(), with the same keyword parameters.""" |
|
386 | 375 | |
|
387 | 376 | shell(cmd,self.verbose,self.debug,self.header) |
|
388 | 377 | |
|
389 | 378 | xsys = system # alias |
|
390 | 379 | |
|
391 | 380 | def getoutput(self,cmd): |
|
392 | 381 | """Stateful interface to getoutput().""" |
|
393 | 382 | |
|
394 | 383 | return getoutput(cmd,self.verbose,self.debug,self.header,self.split) |
|
395 | 384 | |
|
396 | 385 | def getoutputerror(self,cmd): |
|
397 | 386 | """Stateful interface to getoutputerror().""" |
|
398 | 387 | |
|
399 | 388 | return getoutputerror(cmd,self.verbose,self.debug,self.header,self.split) |
|
400 | 389 | |
|
401 | 390 | bq = getoutput # alias |
|
402 | 391 | |
|
403 | 392 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
404 | 393 | def mutex_opts(dict,ex_op): |
|
405 | 394 | """Check for presence of mutually exclusive keys in a dict. |
|
406 | 395 | |
|
407 | 396 | Call: mutex_opts(dict,[[op1a,op1b],[op2a,op2b]...]""" |
|
408 | 397 | for op1,op2 in ex_op: |
|
409 | 398 | if op1 in dict and op2 in dict: |
|
410 | 399 | raise ValueError,'\n*** ERROR in Arguments *** '\ |
|
411 | 400 | 'Options '+op1+' and '+op2+' are mutually exclusive.' |
|
412 | 401 | |
|
413 | 402 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
414 | 403 | def filefind(fname,alt_dirs = None): |
|
415 | 404 | """Return the given filename either in the current directory, if it |
|
416 | 405 | exists, or in a specified list of directories. |
|
417 | 406 | |
|
418 | 407 | ~ expansion is done on all file and directory names. |
|
419 | 408 | |
|
420 | 409 | Upon an unsuccessful search, raise an IOError exception.""" |
|
421 | 410 | |
|
422 | 411 | if alt_dirs is None: |
|
423 | 412 | try: |
|
424 | 413 | alt_dirs = get_home_dir() |
|
425 | 414 | except HomeDirError: |
|
426 | 415 | alt_dirs = os.getcwd() |
|
427 | 416 | search = [fname] + list_strings(alt_dirs) |
|
428 | 417 | search = map(os.path.expanduser,search) |
|
429 | 418 | #print 'search list for',fname,'list:',search # dbg |
|
430 | 419 | fname = search[0] |
|
431 | 420 | if os.path.isfile(fname): |
|
432 | 421 | return fname |
|
433 | 422 | for direc in search[1:]: |
|
434 | 423 | testname = os.path.join(direc,fname) |
|
435 | 424 | #print 'testname',testname # dbg |
|
436 | 425 | if os.path.isfile(testname): |
|
437 | 426 | return testname |
|
438 | 427 | raise IOError,'File' + `fname` + \ |
|
439 | 428 | ' not found in current or supplied directories:' + `alt_dirs` |
|
440 | 429 | |
|
441 | 430 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
442 | 431 | def target_outdated(target,deps): |
|
443 | 432 | """Determine whether a target is out of date. |
|
444 | 433 | |
|
445 | 434 | target_outdated(target,deps) -> 1/0 |
|
446 | 435 | |
|
447 | 436 | deps: list of filenames which MUST exist. |
|
448 | 437 | target: single filename which may or may not exist. |
|
449 | 438 | |
|
450 | 439 | If target doesn't exist or is older than any file listed in deps, return |
|
451 | 440 | true, otherwise return false. |
|
452 | 441 | """ |
|
453 | 442 | try: |
|
454 | 443 | target_time = os.path.getmtime(target) |
|
455 | 444 | except os.error: |
|
456 | 445 | return 1 |
|
457 | 446 | for dep in deps: |
|
458 | 447 | dep_time = os.path.getmtime(dep) |
|
459 | 448 | if dep_time > target_time: |
|
460 | 449 | #print "For target",target,"Dep failed:",dep # dbg |
|
461 | 450 | #print "times (dep,tar):",dep_time,target_time # dbg |
|
462 | 451 | return 1 |
|
463 | 452 | return 0 |
|
464 | 453 | |
|
465 | 454 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
466 | 455 | def target_update(target,deps,cmd): |
|
467 | 456 | """Update a target with a given command given a list of dependencies. |
|
468 | 457 | |
|
469 | 458 | target_update(target,deps,cmd) -> runs cmd if target is outdated. |
|
470 | 459 | |
|
471 | 460 | This is just a wrapper around target_outdated() which calls the given |
|
472 | 461 | command if target is outdated.""" |
|
473 | 462 | |
|
474 | 463 | if target_outdated(target,deps): |
|
475 | 464 | xsys(cmd) |
|
476 | 465 | |
|
477 | 466 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
478 | 467 | def unquote_ends(istr): |
|
479 | 468 | """Remove a single pair of quotes from the endpoints of a string.""" |
|
480 | 469 | |
|
481 | 470 | if not istr: |
|
482 | 471 | return istr |
|
483 | 472 | if (istr[0]=="'" and istr[-1]=="'") or \ |
|
484 | 473 | (istr[0]=='"' and istr[-1]=='"'): |
|
485 | 474 | return istr[1:-1] |
|
486 | 475 | else: |
|
487 | 476 | return istr |
|
488 | 477 | |
|
489 | 478 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
490 | 479 | def process_cmdline(argv,names=[],defaults={},usage=''): |
|
491 | 480 | """ Process command-line options and arguments. |
|
492 | 481 | |
|
493 | 482 | Arguments: |
|
494 | 483 | |
|
495 | 484 | - argv: list of arguments, typically sys.argv. |
|
496 | 485 | |
|
497 | 486 | - names: list of option names. See DPyGetOpt docs for details on options |
|
498 | 487 | syntax. |
|
499 | 488 | |
|
500 | 489 | - defaults: dict of default values. |
|
501 | 490 | |
|
502 | 491 | - usage: optional usage notice to print if a wrong argument is passed. |
|
503 | 492 | |
|
504 | 493 | Return a dict of options and a list of free arguments.""" |
|
505 | 494 | |
|
506 | 495 | getopt = DPyGetOpt.DPyGetOpt() |
|
507 | 496 | getopt.setIgnoreCase(0) |
|
508 | 497 | getopt.parseConfiguration(names) |
|
509 | 498 | |
|
510 | 499 | try: |
|
511 | 500 | getopt.processArguments(argv) |
|
512 | 501 | except: |
|
513 | 502 | print usage |
|
514 | 503 | warn(`sys.exc_value`,level=4) |
|
515 | 504 | |
|
516 | 505 | defaults.update(getopt.optionValues) |
|
517 | 506 | args = getopt.freeValues |
|
518 | 507 | |
|
519 | 508 | return defaults,args |
|
520 | 509 | |
|
521 | 510 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
522 | 511 | def optstr2types(ostr): |
|
523 | 512 | """Convert a string of option names to a dict of type mappings. |
|
524 | 513 | |
|
525 | 514 | optstr2types(str) -> {None:'string_opts',int:'int_opts',float:'float_opts'} |
|
526 | 515 | |
|
527 | 516 | This is used to get the types of all the options in a string formatted |
|
528 | 517 | with the conventions of DPyGetOpt. The 'type' None is used for options |
|
529 | 518 | which are strings (they need no further conversion). This function's main |
|
530 | 519 | use is to get a typemap for use with read_dict(). |
|
531 | 520 | """ |
|
532 | 521 | |
|
533 | 522 | typeconv = {None:'',int:'',float:''} |
|
534 | 523 | typemap = {'s':None,'i':int,'f':float} |
|
535 | 524 | opt_re = re.compile(r'([\w]*)([^:=]*:?=?)([sif]?)') |
|
536 | 525 | |
|
537 | 526 | for w in ostr.split(): |
|
538 | 527 | oname,alias,otype = opt_re.match(w).groups() |
|
539 | 528 | if otype == '' or alias == '!': # simple switches are integers too |
|
540 | 529 | otype = 'i' |
|
541 | 530 | typeconv[typemap[otype]] += oname + ' ' |
|
542 | 531 | return typeconv |
|
543 | 532 | |
|
544 | 533 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
545 | 534 | def read_dict(filename,type_conv=None,**opt): |
|
546 | 535 | |
|
547 | 536 | """Read a dictionary of key=value pairs from an input file, optionally |
|
548 | 537 | performing conversions on the resulting values. |
|
549 | 538 | |
|
550 | 539 | read_dict(filename,type_conv,**opt) -> dict |
|
551 | 540 | |
|
552 | 541 | Only one value per line is accepted, the format should be |
|
553 | 542 | # optional comments are ignored |
|
554 | 543 | key value\n |
|
555 | 544 | |
|
556 | 545 | Args: |
|
557 | 546 | |
|
558 | 547 | - type_conv: A dictionary specifying which keys need to be converted to |
|
559 | 548 | which types. By default all keys are read as strings. This dictionary |
|
560 | 549 | should have as its keys valid conversion functions for strings |
|
561 | 550 | (int,long,float,complex, or your own). The value for each key |
|
562 | 551 | (converter) should be a whitespace separated string containing the names |
|
563 | 552 | of all the entries in the file to be converted using that function. For |
|
564 | 553 | keys to be left alone, use None as the conversion function (only needed |
|
565 | 554 | with purge=1, see below). |
|
566 | 555 | |
|
567 | 556 | - opt: dictionary with extra options as below (default in parens) |
|
568 | 557 | |
|
569 | 558 | purge(0): if set to 1, all keys *not* listed in type_conv are purged out |
|
570 | 559 | of the dictionary to be returned. If purge is going to be used, the |
|
571 | 560 | set of keys to be left as strings also has to be explicitly specified |
|
572 | 561 | using the (non-existent) conversion function None. |
|
573 | 562 | |
|
574 | 563 | fs(None): field separator. This is the key/value separator to be used |
|
575 | 564 | when parsing the file. The None default means any whitespace [behavior |
|
576 | 565 | of string.split()]. |
|
577 | 566 | |
|
578 | 567 | strip(0): if 1, strip string values of leading/trailinig whitespace. |
|
579 | 568 | |
|
580 | 569 | warn(1): warning level if requested keys are not found in file. |
|
581 | 570 | - 0: silently ignore. |
|
582 | 571 | - 1: inform but proceed. |
|
583 | 572 | - 2: raise KeyError exception. |
|
584 | 573 | |
|
585 | 574 | no_empty(0): if 1, remove keys with whitespace strings as a value. |
|
586 | 575 | |
|
587 | 576 | unique([]): list of keys (or space separated string) which can't be |
|
588 | 577 | repeated. If one such key is found in the file, each new instance |
|
589 | 578 | overwrites the previous one. For keys not listed here, the behavior is |
|
590 | 579 | to make a list of all appearances. |
|
591 | 580 | |
|
592 | 581 | Example: |
|
593 | 582 | If the input file test.ini has: |
|
594 | 583 | i 3 |
|
595 | 584 | x 4.5 |
|
596 | 585 | y 5.5 |
|
597 | 586 | s hi ho |
|
598 | 587 | Then: |
|
599 | 588 | |
|
600 | 589 | >>> type_conv={int:'i',float:'x',None:'s'} |
|
601 | 590 | >>> read_dict('test.ini') |
|
602 | 591 | {'i': '3', 's': 'hi ho', 'x': '4.5', 'y': '5.5'} |
|
603 | 592 | >>> read_dict('test.ini',type_conv) |
|
604 | 593 | {'i': 3, 's': 'hi ho', 'x': 4.5, 'y': '5.5'} |
|
605 | 594 | >>> read_dict('test.ini',type_conv,purge=1) |
|
606 | 595 | {'i': 3, 's': 'hi ho', 'x': 4.5} |
|
607 | 596 | """ |
|
608 | 597 | |
|
609 | 598 | # starting config |
|
610 | 599 | opt.setdefault('purge',0) |
|
611 | 600 | opt.setdefault('fs',None) # field sep defaults to any whitespace |
|
612 | 601 | opt.setdefault('strip',0) |
|
613 | 602 | opt.setdefault('warn',1) |
|
614 | 603 | opt.setdefault('no_empty',0) |
|
615 | 604 | opt.setdefault('unique','') |
|
616 | 605 | if type(opt['unique']) in StringTypes: |
|
617 | 606 | unique_keys = qw(opt['unique']) |
|
618 | 607 | elif type(opt['unique']) in (types.TupleType,types.ListType): |
|
619 | 608 | unique_keys = opt['unique'] |
|
620 | 609 | else: |
|
621 | 610 | raise ValueError, 'Unique keys must be given as a string, List or Tuple' |
|
622 | 611 | |
|
623 | 612 | dict = {} |
|
624 | 613 | # first read in table of values as strings |
|
625 | 614 | file = open(filename,'r') |
|
626 | 615 | for line in file.readlines(): |
|
627 | 616 | line = line.strip() |
|
628 | 617 | if len(line) and line[0]=='#': continue |
|
629 | 618 | if len(line)>0: |
|
630 | 619 | lsplit = line.split(opt['fs'],1) |
|
631 | 620 | try: |
|
632 | 621 | key,val = lsplit |
|
633 | 622 | except ValueError: |
|
634 | 623 | key,val = lsplit[0],'' |
|
635 | 624 | key = key.strip() |
|
636 | 625 | if opt['strip']: val = val.strip() |
|
637 | 626 | if val == "''" or val == '""': val = '' |
|
638 | 627 | if opt['no_empty'] and (val=='' or val.isspace()): |
|
639 | 628 | continue |
|
640 | 629 | # if a key is found more than once in the file, build a list |
|
641 | 630 | # unless it's in the 'unique' list. In that case, last found in file |
|
642 | 631 | # takes precedence. User beware. |
|
643 | 632 | try: |
|
644 | 633 | if dict[key] and key in unique_keys: |
|
645 | 634 | dict[key] = val |
|
646 | 635 | elif type(dict[key]) is types.ListType: |
|
647 | 636 | dict[key].append(val) |
|
648 | 637 | else: |
|
649 | 638 | dict[key] = [dict[key],val] |
|
650 | 639 | except KeyError: |
|
651 | 640 | dict[key] = val |
|
652 | 641 | # purge if requested |
|
653 | 642 | if opt['purge']: |
|
654 | 643 | accepted_keys = qwflat(type_conv.values()) |
|
655 | 644 | for key in dict.keys(): |
|
656 | 645 | if key in accepted_keys: continue |
|
657 | 646 | del(dict[key]) |
|
658 | 647 | # now convert if requested |
|
659 | 648 | if type_conv==None: return dict |
|
660 | 649 | conversions = type_conv.keys() |
|
661 | 650 | try: conversions.remove(None) |
|
662 | 651 | except: pass |
|
663 | 652 | for convert in conversions: |
|
664 | 653 | for val in qw(type_conv[convert]): |
|
665 | 654 | try: |
|
666 | 655 | dict[val] = convert(dict[val]) |
|
667 | 656 | except KeyError,e: |
|
668 | 657 | if opt['warn'] == 0: |
|
669 | 658 | pass |
|
670 | 659 | elif opt['warn'] == 1: |
|
671 | 660 | print >>sys.stderr, 'Warning: key',val,\ |
|
672 | 661 | 'not found in file',filename |
|
673 | 662 | elif opt['warn'] == 2: |
|
674 | 663 | raise KeyError,e |
|
675 | 664 | else: |
|
676 | 665 | raise ValueError,'Warning level must be 0,1 or 2' |
|
677 | 666 | |
|
678 | 667 | return dict |
|
679 | 668 | |
|
680 | 669 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
681 | 670 | def flag_calls(func): |
|
682 | 671 | """Wrap a function to detect and flag when it gets called. |
|
683 | 672 | |
|
684 | 673 | This is a decorator which takes a function and wraps it in a function with |
|
685 | 674 | a 'called' attribute. wrapper.called is initialized to False. |
|
686 | 675 | |
|
687 | 676 | The wrapper.called attribute is set to False right before each call to the |
|
688 | 677 | wrapped function, so if the call fails it remains False. After the call |
|
689 | 678 | completes, wrapper.called is set to True and the output is returned. |
|
690 | 679 | |
|
691 | 680 | Testing for truth in wrapper.called allows you to determine if a call to |
|
692 | 681 | func() was attempted and succeeded.""" |
|
693 | 682 | |
|
694 | 683 | def wrapper(*args,**kw): |
|
695 | 684 | wrapper.called = False |
|
696 | 685 | out = func(*args,**kw) |
|
697 | 686 | wrapper.called = True |
|
698 | 687 | return out |
|
699 | 688 | |
|
700 | 689 | wrapper.called = False |
|
701 | 690 | wrapper.__doc__ = func.__doc__ |
|
702 | 691 | return wrapper |
|
703 | 692 | |
|
704 | 693 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
705 | 694 | class HomeDirError(Error): |
|
706 | 695 | pass |
|
707 | 696 | |
|
708 | 697 | def get_home_dir(): |
|
709 | 698 | """Return the closest possible equivalent to a 'home' directory. |
|
710 | 699 | |
|
711 | 700 | We first try $HOME. Absent that, on NT it's $HOMEDRIVE\$HOMEPATH. |
|
712 | 701 | |
|
713 | 702 | Currently only Posix and NT are implemented, a HomeDirError exception is |
|
714 | 703 | raised for all other OSes. """ |
|
715 | 704 | |
|
716 | 705 | try: |
|
717 | 706 | return os.environ['HOME'] |
|
718 | 707 | except KeyError: |
|
719 | 708 | if os.name == 'posix': |
|
720 | 709 | raise HomeDirError,'undefined $HOME, IPython can not proceed.' |
|
721 | 710 | elif os.name == 'nt': |
|
722 | 711 | # For some strange reason, win9x returns 'nt' for os.name. |
|
723 | 712 | try: |
|
724 | 713 | return os.path.join(os.environ['HOMEDRIVE'],os.environ['HOMEPATH']) |
|
725 | 714 | except: |
|
726 | 715 | try: |
|
727 | 716 | # Use the registry to get the 'My Documents' folder. |
|
728 | 717 | import _winreg as wreg |
|
729 | 718 | key = wreg.OpenKey(wreg.HKEY_CURRENT_USER, |
|
730 | 719 | "Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\Shell Folders") |
|
731 | 720 | homedir = wreg.QueryValueEx(key,'Personal')[0] |
|
732 | 721 | key.Close() |
|
733 | 722 | return homedir |
|
734 | 723 | except: |
|
735 | 724 | return 'C:\\' |
|
736 | 725 | elif os.name == 'dos': |
|
737 | 726 | # Desperate, may do absurd things in classic MacOS. May work under DOS. |
|
738 | 727 | return 'C:\\' |
|
739 | 728 | else: |
|
740 | 729 | raise HomeDirError,'support for your operating system not implemented.' |
|
741 | 730 | |
|
742 | 731 | #**************************************************************************** |
|
743 | 732 | # strings and text |
|
744 | 733 | |
|
745 | 734 | class LSString(str): |
|
746 | 735 | """String derivative with a special access attributes. |
|
747 | 736 | |
|
748 | 737 | These are normal strings, but with the special attributes: |
|
749 | 738 | |
|
750 | 739 | .l (or .list) : value as list (split on newlines). |
|
751 | 740 | .n (or .nlstr): original value (the string itself). |
|
752 | 741 | .s (or .spstr): value as whitespace-separated string. |
|
753 | 742 | |
|
754 | 743 | Any values which require transformations are computed only once and |
|
755 | 744 | cached. |
|
756 | 745 | |
|
757 | 746 | Such strings are very useful to efficiently interact with the shell, which |
|
758 | 747 | typically only understands whitespace-separated options for commands.""" |
|
759 | 748 | |
|
760 | 749 | def get_list(self): |
|
761 | 750 | try: |
|
762 | 751 | return self.__list |
|
763 | 752 | except AttributeError: |
|
764 | 753 | self.__list = self.split('\n') |
|
765 | 754 | return self.__list |
|
766 | 755 | |
|
767 | 756 | l = list = property(get_list) |
|
768 | 757 | |
|
769 | 758 | def get_spstr(self): |
|
770 | 759 | try: |
|
771 | 760 | return self.__spstr |
|
772 | 761 | except AttributeError: |
|
773 | 762 | self.__spstr = self.replace('\n',' ') |
|
774 | 763 | return self.__spstr |
|
775 | 764 | |
|
776 | 765 | s = spstr = property(get_spstr) |
|
777 | 766 | |
|
778 | 767 | def get_nlstr(self): |
|
779 | 768 | return self |
|
780 | 769 | |
|
781 | 770 | n = nlstr = property(get_nlstr) |
|
782 | 771 | |
|
783 | 772 | class SList(list): |
|
784 | 773 | """List derivative with a special access attributes. |
|
785 | 774 | |
|
786 | 775 | These are normal lists, but with the special attributes: |
|
787 | 776 | |
|
788 | 777 | .l (or .list) : value as list (the list itself). |
|
789 | 778 | .n (or .nlstr): value as a string, joined on newlines. |
|
790 | 779 | .s (or .spstr): value as a string, joined on spaces. |
|
791 | 780 | |
|
792 | 781 | Any values which require transformations are computed only once and |
|
793 | 782 | cached.""" |
|
794 | 783 | |
|
795 | 784 | def get_list(self): |
|
796 | 785 | return self |
|
797 | 786 | |
|
798 | 787 | l = list = property(get_list) |
|
799 | 788 | |
|
800 | 789 | def get_spstr(self): |
|
801 | 790 | try: |
|
802 | 791 | return self.__spstr |
|
803 | 792 | except AttributeError: |
|
804 | 793 | self.__spstr = ' '.join(self) |
|
805 | 794 | return self.__spstr |
|
806 | 795 | |
|
807 | 796 | s = spstr = property(get_spstr) |
|
808 | 797 | |
|
809 | 798 | def get_nlstr(self): |
|
810 | 799 | try: |
|
811 | 800 | return self.__nlstr |
|
812 | 801 | except AttributeError: |
|
813 | 802 | self.__nlstr = '\n'.join(self) |
|
814 | 803 | return self.__nlstr |
|
815 | 804 | |
|
816 | 805 | n = nlstr = property(get_nlstr) |
|
817 | 806 | |
|
818 | 807 | def raw_input_multi(header='', ps1='==> ', ps2='..> ',terminate_str = '.'): |
|
819 | 808 | """Take multiple lines of input. |
|
820 | 809 | |
|
821 | 810 | A list with each line of input as a separate element is returned when a |
|
822 | 811 | termination string is entered (defaults to a single '.'). Input can also |
|
823 | 812 | terminate via EOF (^D in Unix, ^Z-RET in Windows). |
|
824 | 813 | |
|
825 | 814 | Lines of input which end in \\ are joined into single entries (and a |
|
826 | 815 | secondary continuation prompt is issued as long as the user terminates |
|
827 | 816 | lines with \\). This allows entering very long strings which are still |
|
828 | 817 | meant to be treated as single entities. |
|
829 | 818 | """ |
|
830 | 819 | |
|
831 | 820 | try: |
|
832 | 821 | if header: |
|
833 | 822 | header += '\n' |
|
834 | 823 | lines = [raw_input(header + ps1)] |
|
835 | 824 | except EOFError: |
|
836 | 825 | return [] |
|
837 | 826 | terminate = [terminate_str] |
|
838 | 827 | try: |
|
839 | 828 | while lines[-1:] != terminate: |
|
840 | 829 | new_line = raw_input(ps1) |
|
841 | 830 | while new_line.endswith('\\'): |
|
842 | 831 | new_line = new_line[:-1] + raw_input(ps2) |
|
843 | 832 | lines.append(new_line) |
|
844 | 833 | |
|
845 | 834 | return lines[:-1] # don't return the termination command |
|
846 | 835 | except EOFError: |
|
847 | 836 | |
|
848 | 837 | return lines |
|
849 | 838 | |
|
850 | 839 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
851 | 840 | def raw_input_ext(prompt='', ps2='... '): |
|
852 | 841 | """Similar to raw_input(), but accepts extended lines if input ends with \\.""" |
|
853 | 842 | |
|
854 | 843 | line = raw_input(prompt) |
|
855 | 844 | while line.endswith('\\'): |
|
856 | 845 | line = line[:-1] + raw_input(ps2) |
|
857 | 846 | return line |
|
858 | 847 | |
|
859 | 848 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
860 | 849 | def ask_yes_no(prompt,default=None): |
|
861 | 850 | """Asks a question and returns an integer 1/0 (y/n) answer. |
|
862 | 851 | |
|
863 | 852 | If default is given (one of 'y','n'), it is used if the user input is |
|
864 | 853 | empty. Otherwise the question is repeated until an answer is given. |
|
865 | 854 | If EOF occurs 20 times consecutively, the default answer is assumed, |
|
866 | 855 | or if there is no default, an exception is raised to prevent infinite |
|
867 | 856 | loops. |
|
868 | 857 | |
|
869 | 858 | Valid answers are: y/yes/n/no (match is not case sensitive).""" |
|
870 | 859 | |
|
871 | 860 | answers = {'y':1,'n':0,'yes':1,'no':0} |
|
872 | 861 | ans = None |
|
873 | 862 | eofs, max_eofs = 0, 20 |
|
874 | 863 | while ans not in answers.keys(): |
|
875 | 864 | try: |
|
876 | 865 | ans = raw_input(prompt+' ').lower() |
|
877 | 866 | if not ans: # response was an empty string |
|
878 | 867 | ans = default |
|
879 | 868 | eofs = 0 |
|
880 | 869 | except (EOFError,KeyboardInterrupt): |
|
881 | 870 | eofs = eofs + 1 |
|
882 | 871 | if eofs >= max_eofs: |
|
883 | 872 | if default in answers.keys(): |
|
884 | 873 | ans = default |
|
885 | 874 | else: |
|
886 | 875 | raise |
|
887 | 876 | |
|
888 | 877 | return answers[ans] |
|
889 | 878 | |
|
890 | 879 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
891 | 880 | class EvalDict: |
|
892 | 881 | """ |
|
893 | 882 | Emulate a dict which evaluates its contents in the caller's frame. |
|
894 | 883 | |
|
895 | 884 | Usage: |
|
896 | 885 | >>>number = 19 |
|
897 | 886 | >>>text = "python" |
|
898 | 887 | >>>print "%(text.capitalize())s %(number/9.0).1f rules!" % EvalDict() |
|
899 | 888 | """ |
|
900 | 889 | |
|
901 | 890 | # This version is due to sismex01@hebmex.com on c.l.py, and is basically a |
|
902 | 891 | # modified (shorter) version of: |
|
903 | 892 | # http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/66018 by |
|
904 | 893 | # Skip Montanaro (skip@pobox.com). |
|
905 | 894 | |
|
906 | 895 | def __getitem__(self, name): |
|
907 | 896 | frame = sys._getframe(1) |
|
908 | 897 | return eval(name, frame.f_globals, frame.f_locals) |
|
909 | 898 | |
|
910 | 899 | EvalString = EvalDict # for backwards compatibility |
|
911 | 900 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
912 | 901 | def qw(words,flat=0,sep=None,maxsplit=-1): |
|
913 | 902 | """Similar to Perl's qw() operator, but with some more options. |
|
914 | 903 | |
|
915 | 904 | qw(words,flat=0,sep=' ',maxsplit=-1) -> words.split(sep,maxsplit) |
|
916 | 905 | |
|
917 | 906 | words can also be a list itself, and with flat=1, the output will be |
|
918 | 907 | recursively flattened. Examples: |
|
919 | 908 | |
|
920 | 909 | >>> qw('1 2') |
|
921 | 910 | ['1', '2'] |
|
922 | 911 | >>> qw(['a b','1 2',['m n','p q']]) |
|
923 | 912 | [['a', 'b'], ['1', '2'], [['m', 'n'], ['p', 'q']]] |
|
924 | 913 | >>> qw(['a b','1 2',['m n','p q']],flat=1) |
|
925 | 914 | ['a', 'b', '1', '2', 'm', 'n', 'p', 'q'] """ |
|
926 | 915 | |
|
927 | 916 | if type(words) in StringTypes: |
|
928 | 917 | return [word.strip() for word in words.split(sep,maxsplit) |
|
929 | 918 | if word and not word.isspace() ] |
|
930 | 919 | if flat: |
|
931 | 920 | return flatten(map(qw,words,[1]*len(words))) |
|
932 | 921 | return map(qw,words) |
|
933 | 922 | |
|
934 | 923 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
935 | 924 | def qwflat(words,sep=None,maxsplit=-1): |
|
936 | 925 | """Calls qw(words) in flat mode. It's just a convenient shorthand.""" |
|
937 | 926 | return qw(words,1,sep,maxsplit) |
|
938 | 927 | |
|
939 | 928 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
940 | 929 | def list_strings(arg): |
|
941 | 930 | """Always return a list of strings, given a string or list of strings |
|
942 | 931 | as input.""" |
|
943 | 932 | |
|
944 | 933 | if type(arg) in StringTypes: return [arg] |
|
945 | 934 | else: return arg |
|
946 | 935 | |
|
947 | 936 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
948 | 937 | def grep(pat,list,case=1): |
|
949 | 938 | """Simple minded grep-like function. |
|
950 | 939 | grep(pat,list) returns occurrences of pat in list, None on failure. |
|
951 | 940 | |
|
952 | 941 | It only does simple string matching, with no support for regexps. Use the |
|
953 | 942 | option case=0 for case-insensitive matching.""" |
|
954 | 943 | |
|
955 | 944 | # This is pretty crude. At least it should implement copying only references |
|
956 | 945 | # to the original data in case it's big. Now it copies the data for output. |
|
957 | 946 | out=[] |
|
958 | 947 | if case: |
|
959 | 948 | for term in list: |
|
960 | 949 | if term.find(pat)>-1: out.append(term) |
|
961 | 950 | else: |
|
962 | 951 | lpat=pat.lower() |
|
963 | 952 | for term in list: |
|
964 | 953 | if term.lower().find(lpat)>-1: out.append(term) |
|
965 | 954 | |
|
966 | 955 | if len(out): return out |
|
967 | 956 | else: return None |
|
968 | 957 | |
|
969 | 958 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
970 | 959 | def dgrep(pat,*opts): |
|
971 | 960 | """Return grep() on dir()+dir(__builtins__). |
|
972 | 961 | |
|
973 | 962 | A very common use of grep() when working interactively.""" |
|
974 | 963 | |
|
975 | 964 | return grep(pat,dir(__main__)+dir(__main__.__builtins__),*opts) |
|
976 | 965 | |
|
977 | 966 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
978 | 967 | def idgrep(pat): |
|
979 | 968 | """Case-insensitive dgrep()""" |
|
980 | 969 | |
|
981 | 970 | return dgrep(pat,0) |
|
982 | 971 | |
|
983 | 972 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
984 | 973 | def igrep(pat,list): |
|
985 | 974 | """Synonym for case-insensitive grep.""" |
|
986 | 975 | |
|
987 | 976 | return grep(pat,list,case=0) |
|
988 | 977 | |
|
989 | 978 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
990 | 979 | def indent(str,nspaces=4,ntabs=0): |
|
991 | 980 | """Indent a string a given number of spaces or tabstops. |
|
992 | 981 | |
|
993 | 982 | indent(str,nspaces=4,ntabs=0) -> indent str by ntabs+nspaces. |
|
994 | 983 | """ |
|
995 | 984 | if str is None: |
|
996 | 985 | return |
|
997 | 986 | ind = '\t'*ntabs+' '*nspaces |
|
998 | 987 | outstr = '%s%s' % (ind,str.replace(os.linesep,os.linesep+ind)) |
|
999 | 988 | if outstr.endswith(os.linesep+ind): |
|
1000 | 989 | return outstr[:-len(ind)] |
|
1001 | 990 | else: |
|
1002 | 991 | return outstr |
|
1003 | 992 | |
|
1004 | 993 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
1005 | 994 | def native_line_ends(filename,backup=1): |
|
1006 | 995 | """Convert (in-place) a file to line-ends native to the current OS. |
|
1007 | 996 | |
|
1008 | 997 | If the optional backup argument is given as false, no backup of the |
|
1009 | 998 | original file is left. """ |
|
1010 | 999 | |
|
1011 | 1000 | backup_suffixes = {'posix':'~','dos':'.bak','nt':'.bak','mac':'.bak'} |
|
1012 | 1001 | |
|
1013 | 1002 | bak_filename = filename + backup_suffixes[os.name] |
|
1014 | 1003 | |
|
1015 | 1004 | original = open(filename).read() |
|
1016 | 1005 | shutil.copy2(filename,bak_filename) |
|
1017 | 1006 | try: |
|
1018 | 1007 | new = open(filename,'wb') |
|
1019 | 1008 | new.write(os.linesep.join(original.splitlines())) |
|
1020 | 1009 | new.write(os.linesep) # ALWAYS put an eol at the end of the file |
|
1021 | 1010 | new.close() |
|
1022 | 1011 | except: |
|
1023 | 1012 | os.rename(bak_filename,filename) |
|
1024 | 1013 | if not backup: |
|
1025 | 1014 | try: |
|
1026 | 1015 | os.remove(bak_filename) |
|
1027 | 1016 | except: |
|
1028 | 1017 | pass |
|
1029 | 1018 | |
|
1030 | 1019 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
1031 | 1020 | def get_pager_cmd(pager_cmd = None): |
|
1032 | 1021 | """Return a pager command. |
|
1033 | 1022 | |
|
1034 | 1023 | Makes some attempts at finding an OS-correct one.""" |
|
1035 | 1024 | |
|
1036 | 1025 | if os.name == 'posix': |
|
1037 | 1026 | default_pager_cmd = 'less -r' # -r for color control sequences |
|
1038 | 1027 | elif os.name in ['nt','dos']: |
|
1039 | 1028 | default_pager_cmd = 'type' |
|
1040 | 1029 | |
|
1041 | 1030 | if pager_cmd is None: |
|
1042 | 1031 | try: |
|
1043 | 1032 | pager_cmd = os.environ['PAGER'] |
|
1044 | 1033 | except: |
|
1045 | 1034 | pager_cmd = default_pager_cmd |
|
1046 | 1035 | return pager_cmd |
|
1047 | 1036 | |
|
1048 | 1037 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
1049 | 1038 | def get_pager_start(pager,start): |
|
1050 | 1039 | """Return the string for paging files with an offset. |
|
1051 | 1040 | |
|
1052 | 1041 | This is the '+N' argument which less and more (under Unix) accept. |
|
1053 | 1042 | """ |
|
1054 | 1043 | |
|
1055 | 1044 | if pager in ['less','more']: |
|
1056 | 1045 | if start: |
|
1057 | 1046 | start_string = '+' + str(start) |
|
1058 | 1047 | else: |
|
1059 | 1048 | start_string = '' |
|
1060 | 1049 | else: |
|
1061 | 1050 | start_string = '' |
|
1062 | 1051 | return start_string |
|
1063 | 1052 | |
|
1064 | 1053 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
1065 | 1054 | def page_dumb(strng,start=0,screen_lines=25): |
|
1066 | 1055 | """Very dumb 'pager' in Python, for when nothing else works. |
|
1067 | 1056 | |
|
1068 | 1057 | Only moves forward, same interface as page(), except for pager_cmd and |
|
1069 | 1058 | mode.""" |
|
1070 | 1059 | |
|
1071 | 1060 | out_ln = strng.splitlines()[start:] |
|
1072 | 1061 | screens = chop(out_ln,screen_lines-1) |
|
1073 | 1062 | if len(screens) == 1: |
|
1074 | 1063 | print >>Term.cout, os.linesep.join(screens[0]) |
|
1075 | 1064 | else: |
|
1076 | 1065 | for scr in screens[0:-1]: |
|
1077 | 1066 | print >>Term.cout, os.linesep.join(scr) |
|
1078 | 1067 | ans = raw_input('---Return to continue, q to quit--- ') |
|
1079 | 1068 | if ans.lower().startswith('q'): |
|
1080 | 1069 | return |
|
1081 | 1070 | print >>Term.cout, os.linesep.join(screens[-1]) |
|
1082 | 1071 | |
|
1083 | 1072 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
1084 | 1073 | def page(strng,start=0,screen_lines=0,pager_cmd = None): |
|
1085 | 1074 | """Print a string, piping through a pager after a certain length. |
|
1086 | 1075 | |
|
1087 | 1076 | The screen_lines parameter specifies the number of *usable* lines of your |
|
1088 | 1077 | terminal screen (total lines minus lines you need to reserve to show other |
|
1089 | 1078 | information). |
|
1090 | 1079 | |
|
1091 | 1080 | If you set screen_lines to a number <=0, page() will try to auto-determine |
|
1092 | 1081 | your screen size and will only use up to (screen_size+screen_lines) for |
|
1093 | 1082 | printing, paging after that. That is, if you want auto-detection but need |
|
1094 | 1083 | to reserve the bottom 3 lines of the screen, use screen_lines = -3, and for |
|
1095 | 1084 | auto-detection without any lines reserved simply use screen_lines = 0. |
|
1096 | 1085 | |
|
1097 | 1086 | If a string won't fit in the allowed lines, it is sent through the |
|
1098 | 1087 | specified pager command. If none given, look for PAGER in the environment, |
|
1099 | 1088 | and ultimately default to less. |
|
1100 | 1089 | |
|
1101 | 1090 | If no system pager works, the string is sent through a 'dumb pager' |
|
1102 | 1091 | written in python, very simplistic. |
|
1103 | 1092 | """ |
|
1104 | 1093 | |
|
1105 | 1094 | # Ugly kludge, but calling curses.initscr() flat out crashes in emacs |
|
1106 | 1095 | TERM = os.environ.get('TERM','dumb') |
|
1107 | 1096 | if TERM in ['dumb','emacs'] and os.name != 'nt': |
|
1108 | 1097 | print strng |
|
1109 | 1098 | return |
|
1110 | 1099 | # chop off the topmost part of the string we don't want to see |
|
1111 | 1100 | str_lines = strng.split(os.linesep)[start:] |
|
1112 | 1101 | str_toprint = os.linesep.join(str_lines) |
|
1113 | 1102 | num_newlines = len(str_lines) |
|
1114 | 1103 | len_str = len(str_toprint) |
|
1115 | 1104 | |
|
1116 | 1105 | # Dumb heuristics to guesstimate number of on-screen lines the string |
|
1117 | 1106 | # takes. Very basic, but good enough for docstrings in reasonable |
|
1118 | 1107 | # terminals. If someone later feels like refining it, it's not hard. |
|
1119 | 1108 | numlines = max(num_newlines,int(len_str/80)+1) |
|
1120 | 1109 | |
|
1121 | 1110 | screen_lines_def = 25 # default value if we can't auto-determine |
|
1122 | 1111 | |
|
1123 | 1112 | # auto-determine screen size |
|
1124 | 1113 | if screen_lines <= 0: |
|
1125 | 1114 | if TERM=='xterm': |
|
1126 | 1115 | try: |
|
1127 | 1116 | import curses |
|
1128 | 1117 | if hasattr(curses,'initscr'): |
|
1129 | 1118 | use_curses = 1 |
|
1130 | 1119 | else: |
|
1131 | 1120 | use_curses = 0 |
|
1132 | 1121 | except ImportError: |
|
1133 | 1122 | use_curses = 0 |
|
1134 | 1123 | else: |
|
1135 | 1124 | # curses causes problems on many terminals other than xterm. |
|
1136 | 1125 | use_curses = 0 |
|
1137 | 1126 | if use_curses: |
|
1138 | 1127 | scr = curses.initscr() |
|
1139 | 1128 | screen_lines_real,screen_cols = scr.getmaxyx() |
|
1140 | 1129 | curses.endwin() |
|
1141 | 1130 | screen_lines += screen_lines_real |
|
1142 | 1131 | #print '***Screen size:',screen_lines_real,'lines x',\ |
|
1143 | 1132 | #screen_cols,'columns.' # dbg |
|
1144 | 1133 | else: |
|
1145 | 1134 | screen_lines += screen_lines_def |
|
1146 | 1135 | |
|
1147 | 1136 | #print 'numlines',numlines,'screenlines',screen_lines # dbg |
|
1148 | 1137 | if numlines <= screen_lines : |
|
1149 | 1138 | #print '*** normal print' # dbg |
|
1150 | 1139 | print >>Term.cout, str_toprint |
|
1151 | 1140 | else: |
|
1152 | 1141 | # Try to open pager and default to internal one if that fails. |
|
1153 | 1142 | # All failure modes are tagged as 'retval=1', to match the return |
|
1154 | 1143 | # value of a failed system command. If any intermediate attempt |
|
1155 | 1144 | # sets retval to 1, at the end we resort to our own page_dumb() pager. |
|
1156 | 1145 | pager_cmd = get_pager_cmd(pager_cmd) |
|
1157 | 1146 | pager_cmd += ' ' + get_pager_start(pager_cmd,start) |
|
1158 | 1147 | if os.name == 'nt': |
|
1159 | 1148 | if pager_cmd.startswith('type'): |
|
1160 | 1149 | # The default WinXP 'type' command is failing on complex strings. |
|
1161 | 1150 | retval = 1 |
|
1162 | 1151 | else: |
|
1163 | 1152 | tmpname = tempfile.mktemp('.txt') |
|
1164 | 1153 | tmpfile = file(tmpname,'wt') |
|
1165 | 1154 | tmpfile.write(strng) |
|
1166 | 1155 | tmpfile.close() |
|
1167 | 1156 | cmd = "%s < %s" % (pager_cmd,tmpname) |
|
1168 | 1157 | if os.system(cmd): |
|
1169 | 1158 | retval = 1 |
|
1170 | 1159 | else: |
|
1171 | 1160 | retval = None |
|
1172 | 1161 | os.remove(tmpname) |
|
1173 | 1162 | else: |
|
1174 | 1163 | try: |
|
1175 | 1164 | retval = None |
|
1176 | 1165 | # if I use popen4, things hang. No idea why. |
|
1177 | 1166 | #pager,shell_out = os.popen4(pager_cmd) |
|
1178 | 1167 | pager = os.popen(pager_cmd,'w') |
|
1179 | 1168 | pager.write(strng) |
|
1180 | 1169 | pager.close() |
|
1181 | 1170 | retval = pager.close() # success returns None |
|
1182 | 1171 | except IOError,msg: # broken pipe when user quits |
|
1183 | 1172 | if msg.args == (32,'Broken pipe'): |
|
1184 | 1173 | retval = None |
|
1185 | 1174 | else: |
|
1186 | 1175 | retval = 1 |
|
1187 | 1176 | except OSError: |
|
1188 | 1177 | # Other strange problems, sometimes seen in Win2k/cygwin |
|
1189 | 1178 | retval = 1 |
|
1190 | 1179 | if retval is not None: |
|
1191 | 1180 | page_dumb(strng,screen_lines=screen_lines) |
|
1192 | 1181 | |
|
1193 | 1182 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
1194 | 1183 | def page_file(fname,start = 0, pager_cmd = None): |
|
1195 | 1184 | """Page a file, using an optional pager command and starting line. |
|
1196 | 1185 | """ |
|
1197 | 1186 | |
|
1198 | 1187 | pager_cmd = get_pager_cmd(pager_cmd) |
|
1199 | 1188 | pager_cmd += ' ' + get_pager_start(pager_cmd,start) |
|
1200 | 1189 | |
|
1201 | 1190 | try: |
|
1202 | 1191 | if os.environ['TERM'] in ['emacs','dumb']: |
|
1203 | 1192 | raise EnvironmentError |
|
1204 | 1193 | xsys(pager_cmd + ' ' + fname) |
|
1205 | 1194 | except: |
|
1206 | 1195 | try: |
|
1207 | 1196 | if start > 0: |
|
1208 | 1197 | start -= 1 |
|
1209 | 1198 | page(open(fname).read(),start) |
|
1210 | 1199 | except: |
|
1211 | 1200 | print 'Unable to show file',`fname` |
|
1212 | 1201 | |
|
1213 | 1202 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
1214 | 1203 | def snip_print(str,width = 75,print_full = 0,header = ''): |
|
1215 | 1204 | """Print a string snipping the midsection to fit in width. |
|
1216 | 1205 | |
|
1217 | 1206 | print_full: mode control: |
|
1218 | 1207 | - 0: only snip long strings |
|
1219 | 1208 | - 1: send to page() directly. |
|
1220 | 1209 | - 2: snip long strings and ask for full length viewing with page() |
|
1221 | 1210 | Return 1 if snipping was necessary, 0 otherwise.""" |
|
1222 | 1211 | |
|
1223 | 1212 | if print_full == 1: |
|
1224 | 1213 | page(header+str) |
|
1225 | 1214 | return 0 |
|
1226 | 1215 | |
|
1227 | 1216 | print header, |
|
1228 | 1217 | if len(str) < width: |
|
1229 | 1218 | print str |
|
1230 | 1219 | snip = 0 |
|
1231 | 1220 | else: |
|
1232 | 1221 | whalf = int((width -5)/2) |
|
1233 | 1222 | print str[:whalf] + ' <...> ' + str[-whalf:] |
|
1234 | 1223 | snip = 1 |
|
1235 | 1224 | if snip and print_full == 2: |
|
1236 | 1225 | if raw_input(header+' Snipped. View (y/n)? [N]').lower() == 'y': |
|
1237 | 1226 | page(str) |
|
1238 | 1227 | return snip |
|
1239 | 1228 | |
|
1240 | 1229 | #**************************************************************************** |
|
1241 | 1230 | # lists, dicts and structures |
|
1242 | 1231 | |
|
1243 | 1232 | def belong(candidates,checklist): |
|
1244 | 1233 | """Check whether a list of items appear in a given list of options. |
|
1245 | 1234 | |
|
1246 | 1235 | Returns a list of 1 and 0, one for each candidate given.""" |
|
1247 | 1236 | |
|
1248 | 1237 | return [x in checklist for x in candidates] |
|
1249 | 1238 | |
|
1250 | 1239 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
1251 | 1240 | def uniq_stable(elems): |
|
1252 | 1241 | """uniq_stable(elems) -> list |
|
1253 | 1242 | |
|
1254 | 1243 | Return from an iterable, a list of all the unique elements in the input, |
|
1255 | 1244 | but maintaining the order in which they first appear. |
|
1256 | 1245 | |
|
1257 | 1246 | A naive solution to this problem which just makes a dictionary with the |
|
1258 | 1247 | elements as keys fails to respect the stability condition, since |
|
1259 | 1248 | dictionaries are unsorted by nature. |
|
1260 | 1249 | |
|
1261 | 1250 | Note: All elements in the input must be valid dictionary keys for this |
|
1262 | 1251 | routine to work, as it internally uses a dictionary for efficiency |
|
1263 | 1252 | reasons.""" |
|
1264 | 1253 | |
|
1265 | 1254 | unique = [] |
|
1266 | 1255 | unique_dict = {} |
|
1267 | 1256 | for nn in elems: |
|
1268 | 1257 | if nn not in unique_dict: |
|
1269 | 1258 | unique.append(nn) |
|
1270 | 1259 | unique_dict[nn] = None |
|
1271 | 1260 | return unique |
|
1272 | 1261 | |
|
1273 | 1262 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
1274 | 1263 | class NLprinter: |
|
1275 | 1264 | """Print an arbitrarily nested list, indicating index numbers. |
|
1276 | 1265 | |
|
1277 | 1266 | An instance of this class called nlprint is available and callable as a |
|
1278 | 1267 | function. |
|
1279 | 1268 | |
|
1280 | 1269 | nlprint(list,indent=' ',sep=': ') -> prints indenting each level by 'indent' |
|
1281 | 1270 | and using 'sep' to separate the index from the value. """ |
|
1282 | 1271 | |
|
1283 | 1272 | def __init__(self): |
|
1284 | 1273 | self.depth = 0 |
|
1285 | 1274 | |
|
1286 | 1275 | def __call__(self,lst,pos='',**kw): |
|
1287 | 1276 | """Prints the nested list numbering levels.""" |
|
1288 | 1277 | kw.setdefault('indent',' ') |
|
1289 | 1278 | kw.setdefault('sep',': ') |
|
1290 | 1279 | kw.setdefault('start',0) |
|
1291 | 1280 | kw.setdefault('stop',len(lst)) |
|
1292 | 1281 | # we need to remove start and stop from kw so they don't propagate |
|
1293 | 1282 | # into a recursive call for a nested list. |
|
1294 | 1283 | start = kw['start']; del kw['start'] |
|
1295 | 1284 | stop = kw['stop']; del kw['stop'] |
|
1296 | 1285 | if self.depth == 0 and 'header' in kw.keys(): |
|
1297 | 1286 | print kw['header'] |
|
1298 | 1287 | |
|
1299 | 1288 | for idx in range(start,stop): |
|
1300 | 1289 | elem = lst[idx] |
|
1301 | 1290 | if type(elem)==type([]): |
|
1302 | 1291 | self.depth += 1 |
|
1303 | 1292 | self.__call__(elem,itpl('$pos$idx,'),**kw) |
|
1304 | 1293 | self.depth -= 1 |
|
1305 | 1294 | else: |
|
1306 | 1295 | printpl(kw['indent']*self.depth+'$pos$idx$kw["sep"]$elem') |
|
1307 | 1296 | |
|
1308 | 1297 | nlprint = NLprinter() |
|
1309 | 1298 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
1310 | 1299 | def all_belong(candidates,checklist): |
|
1311 | 1300 | """Check whether a list of items ALL appear in a given list of options. |
|
1312 | 1301 | |
|
1313 | 1302 | Returns a single 1 or 0 value.""" |
|
1314 | 1303 | |
|
1315 | 1304 | return 1-(0 in [x in checklist for x in candidates]) |
|
1316 | 1305 | |
|
1317 | 1306 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
1318 | 1307 | def sort_compare(lst1,lst2,inplace = 1): |
|
1319 | 1308 | """Sort and compare two lists. |
|
1320 | 1309 | |
|
1321 | 1310 | By default it does it in place, thus modifying the lists. Use inplace = 0 |
|
1322 | 1311 | to avoid that (at the cost of temporary copy creation).""" |
|
1323 | 1312 | if not inplace: |
|
1324 | 1313 | lst1 = lst1[:] |
|
1325 | 1314 | lst2 = lst2[:] |
|
1326 | 1315 | lst1.sort(); lst2.sort() |
|
1327 | 1316 | return lst1 == lst2 |
|
1328 | 1317 | |
|
1329 | 1318 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
1330 | 1319 | def mkdict(**kwargs): |
|
1331 | 1320 | """Return a dict from a keyword list. |
|
1332 | 1321 | |
|
1333 | 1322 | It's just syntactic sugar for making ditcionary creation more convenient: |
|
1334 | 1323 | # the standard way |
|
1335 | 1324 | >>>data = { 'red' : 1, 'green' : 2, 'blue' : 3 } |
|
1336 | 1325 | # a cleaner way |
|
1337 | 1326 | >>>data = dict(red=1, green=2, blue=3) |
|
1338 | 1327 | |
|
1339 | 1328 | If you need more than this, look at the Struct() class.""" |
|
1340 | 1329 | |
|
1341 | 1330 | return kwargs |
|
1342 | 1331 | |
|
1343 | 1332 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
1344 | 1333 | def list2dict(lst): |
|
1345 | 1334 | """Takes a list of (key,value) pairs and turns it into a dict.""" |
|
1346 | 1335 | |
|
1347 | 1336 | dic = {} |
|
1348 | 1337 | for k,v in lst: dic[k] = v |
|
1349 | 1338 | return dic |
|
1350 | 1339 | |
|
1351 | 1340 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
1352 | 1341 | def list2dict2(lst,default=''): |
|
1353 | 1342 | """Takes a list and turns it into a dict. |
|
1354 | 1343 | Much slower than list2dict, but more versatile. This version can take |
|
1355 | 1344 | lists with sublists of arbitrary length (including sclars).""" |
|
1356 | 1345 | |
|
1357 | 1346 | dic = {} |
|
1358 | 1347 | for elem in lst: |
|
1359 | 1348 | if type(elem) in (types.ListType,types.TupleType): |
|
1360 | 1349 | size = len(elem) |
|
1361 | 1350 | if size == 0: |
|
1362 | 1351 | pass |
|
1363 | 1352 | elif size == 1: |
|
1364 | 1353 | dic[elem] = default |
|
1365 | 1354 | else: |
|
1366 | 1355 | k,v = elem[0], elem[1:] |
|
1367 | 1356 | if len(v) == 1: v = v[0] |
|
1368 | 1357 | dic[k] = v |
|
1369 | 1358 | else: |
|
1370 | 1359 | dic[elem] = default |
|
1371 | 1360 | return dic |
|
1372 | 1361 | |
|
1373 | 1362 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
1374 | 1363 | def flatten(seq): |
|
1375 | 1364 | """Flatten a list of lists (NOT recursive, only works for 2d lists).""" |
|
1376 | 1365 | |
|
1377 | 1366 | # bug in python??? (YES. Fixed in 2.2, let's leave the kludgy fix in). |
|
1378 | 1367 | |
|
1379 | 1368 | # if the x=0 isn't made, a *global* variable x is left over after calling |
|
1380 | 1369 | # this function, with the value of the last element in the return |
|
1381 | 1370 | # list. This does seem like a bug big time to me. |
|
1382 | 1371 | |
|
1383 | 1372 | # the problem is fixed with the x=0, which seems to force the creation of |
|
1384 | 1373 | # a local name |
|
1385 | 1374 | |
|
1386 | 1375 | x = 0 |
|
1387 | 1376 | return [x for subseq in seq for x in subseq] |
|
1388 | 1377 | |
|
1389 | 1378 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
1390 | 1379 | def get_slice(seq,start=0,stop=None,step=1): |
|
1391 | 1380 | """Get a slice of a sequence with variable step. Specify start,stop,step.""" |
|
1392 | 1381 | if stop == None: |
|
1393 | 1382 | stop = len(seq) |
|
1394 | 1383 | item = lambda i: seq[i] |
|
1395 | 1384 | return map(item,xrange(start,stop,step)) |
|
1396 | 1385 | |
|
1397 | 1386 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
1398 | 1387 | def chop(seq,size): |
|
1399 | 1388 | """Chop a sequence into chunks of the given size.""" |
|
1400 | 1389 | chunk = lambda i: seq[i:i+size] |
|
1401 | 1390 | return map(chunk,xrange(0,len(seq),size)) |
|
1402 | 1391 | |
|
1403 | 1392 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
1404 | 1393 | def with(object, **args): |
|
1405 | 1394 | """Set multiple attributes for an object, similar to Pascal's with. |
|
1406 | 1395 | |
|
1407 | 1396 | Example: |
|
1408 | 1397 | with(jim, |
|
1409 | 1398 | born = 1960, |
|
1410 | 1399 | haircolour = 'Brown', |
|
1411 | 1400 | eyecolour = 'Green') |
|
1412 | 1401 | |
|
1413 | 1402 | Credit: Greg Ewing, in |
|
1414 | 1403 | http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-list/2001-May/040703.html""" |
|
1415 | 1404 | |
|
1416 | 1405 | object.__dict__.update(args) |
|
1417 | 1406 | |
|
1418 | 1407 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
1419 | 1408 | def setattr_list(obj,alist,nspace = None): |
|
1420 | 1409 | """Set a list of attributes for an object taken from a namespace. |
|
1421 | 1410 | |
|
1422 | 1411 | setattr_list(obj,alist,nspace) -> sets in obj all the attributes listed in |
|
1423 | 1412 | alist with their values taken from nspace, which must be a dict (something |
|
1424 | 1413 | like locals() will often do) If nspace isn't given, locals() of the |
|
1425 | 1414 | *caller* is used, so in most cases you can omit it. |
|
1426 | 1415 | |
|
1427 | 1416 | Note that alist can be given as a string, which will be automatically |
|
1428 | 1417 | split into a list on whitespace. If given as a list, it must be a list of |
|
1429 | 1418 | *strings* (the variable names themselves), not of variables.""" |
|
1430 | 1419 | |
|
1431 | 1420 | # this grabs the local variables from the *previous* call frame -- that is |
|
1432 | 1421 | # the locals from the function that called setattr_list(). |
|
1433 | 1422 | # - snipped from weave.inline() |
|
1434 | 1423 | if nspace is None: |
|
1435 | 1424 | call_frame = sys._getframe().f_back |
|
1436 | 1425 | nspace = call_frame.f_locals |
|
1437 | 1426 | |
|
1438 | 1427 | if type(alist) in StringTypes: |
|
1439 | 1428 | alist = alist.split() |
|
1440 | 1429 | for attr in alist: |
|
1441 | 1430 | val = eval(attr,nspace) |
|
1442 | 1431 | setattr(obj,attr,val) |
|
1443 | 1432 | |
|
1444 | 1433 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
1445 | 1434 | def getattr_list(obj,alist,*args): |
|
1446 | 1435 | """getattr_list(obj,alist[, default]) -> attribute list. |
|
1447 | 1436 | |
|
1448 | 1437 | Get a list of named attributes for an object. When a default argument is |
|
1449 | 1438 | given, it is returned when the attribute doesn't exist; without it, an |
|
1450 | 1439 | exception is raised in that case. |
|
1451 | 1440 | |
|
1452 | 1441 | Note that alist can be given as a string, which will be automatically |
|
1453 | 1442 | split into a list on whitespace. If given as a list, it must be a list of |
|
1454 | 1443 | *strings* (the variable names themselves), not of variables.""" |
|
1455 | 1444 | |
|
1456 | 1445 | if type(alist) in StringTypes: |
|
1457 | 1446 | alist = alist.split() |
|
1458 | 1447 | if args: |
|
1459 | 1448 | if len(args)==1: |
|
1460 | 1449 | default = args[0] |
|
1461 | 1450 | return map(lambda attr: getattr(obj,attr,default),alist) |
|
1462 | 1451 | else: |
|
1463 | 1452 | raise ValueError,'getattr_list() takes only one optional argument' |
|
1464 | 1453 | else: |
|
1465 | 1454 | return map(lambda attr: getattr(obj,attr),alist) |
|
1466 | 1455 | |
|
1467 | 1456 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
1468 | 1457 | def map_method(method,object_list,*argseq,**kw): |
|
1469 | 1458 | """map_method(method,object_list,*args,**kw) -> list |
|
1470 | 1459 | |
|
1471 | 1460 | Return a list of the results of applying the methods to the items of the |
|
1472 | 1461 | argument sequence(s). If more than one sequence is given, the method is |
|
1473 | 1462 | called with an argument list consisting of the corresponding item of each |
|
1474 | 1463 | sequence. All sequences must be of the same length. |
|
1475 | 1464 | |
|
1476 | 1465 | Keyword arguments are passed verbatim to all objects called. |
|
1477 | 1466 | |
|
1478 | 1467 | This is Python code, so it's not nearly as fast as the builtin map().""" |
|
1479 | 1468 | |
|
1480 | 1469 | out_list = [] |
|
1481 | 1470 | idx = 0 |
|
1482 | 1471 | for object in object_list: |
|
1483 | 1472 | try: |
|
1484 | 1473 | handler = getattr(object, method) |
|
1485 | 1474 | except AttributeError: |
|
1486 | 1475 | out_list.append(None) |
|
1487 | 1476 | else: |
|
1488 | 1477 | if argseq: |
|
1489 | 1478 | args = map(lambda lst:lst[idx],argseq) |
|
1490 | 1479 | #print 'ob',object,'hand',handler,'ar',args # dbg |
|
1491 | 1480 | out_list.append(handler(args,**kw)) |
|
1492 | 1481 | else: |
|
1493 | 1482 | out_list.append(handler(**kw)) |
|
1494 | 1483 | idx += 1 |
|
1495 | 1484 | return out_list |
|
1496 | 1485 | |
|
1497 | 1486 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
1498 | 1487 | # Proposed popitem() extension, written as a method |
|
1499 | 1488 | |
|
1500 | 1489 | class NotGiven: pass |
|
1501 | 1490 | |
|
1502 | 1491 | def popkey(dct,key,default=NotGiven): |
|
1503 | 1492 | """Return dct[key] and delete dct[key]. |
|
1504 | 1493 | |
|
1505 | 1494 | If default is given, return it if dct[key] doesn't exist, otherwise raise |
|
1506 | 1495 | KeyError. """ |
|
1507 | 1496 | |
|
1508 | 1497 | try: |
|
1509 | 1498 | val = dct[key] |
|
1510 | 1499 | except KeyError: |
|
1511 | 1500 | if default is NotGiven: |
|
1512 | 1501 | raise |
|
1513 | 1502 | else: |
|
1514 | 1503 | return default |
|
1515 | 1504 | else: |
|
1516 | 1505 | del dct[key] |
|
1517 | 1506 | return val |
|
1518 | 1507 | #*************************** end of file <genutils.py> ********************** |
|
1519 | 1508 |
@@ -1,2084 +1,1999 b'' | |||
|
1 | 1 | # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- |
|
2 | 2 | """ |
|
3 | 3 | IPython -- An enhanced Interactive Python |
|
4 | 4 | |
|
5 | 5 | Requires Python 2.1 or newer. |
|
6 | 6 | |
|
7 | 7 | This file contains all the classes and helper functions specific to IPython. |
|
8 | 8 | |
|
9 |
$Id: iplib.py 6 |
|
|
9 | $Id: iplib.py 638 2005-07-18 03:01:41Z fperez $ | |
|
10 | 10 | """ |
|
11 | 11 | |
|
12 | 12 | #***************************************************************************** |
|
13 | 13 | # Copyright (C) 2001 Janko Hauser <jhauser@zscout.de> and |
|
14 | 14 | # Copyright (C) 2001-2004 Fernando Perez. <fperez@colorado.edu> |
|
15 | 15 | # |
|
16 | 16 | # Distributed under the terms of the BSD License. The full license is in |
|
17 | 17 | # the file COPYING, distributed as part of this software. |
|
18 | 18 | # |
|
19 | 19 | # Note: this code originally subclassed code.InteractiveConsole from the |
|
20 | 20 | # Python standard library. Over time, much of that class has been copied |
|
21 | 21 | # verbatim here for modifications which could not be accomplished by |
|
22 | 22 | # subclassing. The Python License (sec. 2) allows for this, but it's always |
|
23 | 23 | # nice to acknowledge credit where credit is due. |
|
24 | 24 | #***************************************************************************** |
|
25 | 25 | |
|
26 | 26 | #**************************************************************************** |
|
27 | 27 | # Modules and globals |
|
28 | 28 | |
|
29 | 29 | from __future__ import generators # for 2.2 backwards-compatibility |
|
30 | 30 | |
|
31 | 31 | from IPython import Release |
|
32 | 32 | __author__ = '%s <%s>\n%s <%s>' % \ |
|
33 | 33 | ( Release.authors['Janko'] + Release.authors['Fernando'] ) |
|
34 | 34 | __license__ = Release.license |
|
35 | 35 | __version__ = Release.version |
|
36 | 36 | |
|
37 | 37 | # Python standard modules |
|
38 | 38 | import __main__ |
|
39 | 39 | import __builtin__ |
|
40 | 40 | import exceptions |
|
41 | 41 | import keyword |
|
42 | 42 | import new |
|
43 | 43 | import os, sys, shutil |
|
44 | 44 | import code, glob, types, re |
|
45 | 45 | import string, StringIO |
|
46 | 46 | import inspect, pydoc |
|
47 | 47 | import bdb, pdb |
|
48 | 48 | import UserList # don't subclass list so this works with Python2.1 |
|
49 | 49 | from pprint import pprint, pformat |
|
50 | 50 | import cPickle as pickle |
|
51 | 51 | import traceback |
|
52 | 52 | |
|
53 | 53 | # IPython's own modules |
|
54 | 54 | import IPython |
|
55 | 55 | from IPython import OInspect,PyColorize,ultraTB |
|
56 | 56 | from IPython.ultraTB import ColorScheme,ColorSchemeTable # too long names |
|
57 | 57 | from IPython.Logger import Logger |
|
58 | 58 | from IPython.Magic import Magic,magic2python,shlex_split |
|
59 | 59 | from IPython.usage import cmd_line_usage,interactive_usage |
|
60 | 60 | from IPython.Struct import Struct |
|
61 | 61 | from IPython.Itpl import Itpl,itpl,printpl,ItplNS,itplns |
|
62 | 62 | from IPython.FakeModule import FakeModule |
|
63 | 63 | from IPython.background_jobs import BackgroundJobManager |
|
64 | 64 | from IPython.genutils import * |
|
65 | 65 | |
|
66 | 66 | # Global pointer to the running |
|
67 | 67 | |
|
68 | 68 | # store the builtin raw_input globally, and use this always, in case user code |
|
69 | 69 | # overwrites it (like wx.py.PyShell does) |
|
70 | 70 | raw_input_original = raw_input |
|
71 | 71 | |
|
72 | # declares Python 2.2 compatibility symbols: | |
|
73 | try: | |
|
74 | enumerate | |
|
75 | except NameError: | |
|
76 | def enumerate(obj): | |
|
77 | i = -1 | |
|
78 | for item in obj: | |
|
79 | i += 1 | |
|
80 | yield i, item | |
|
81 | 72 | #**************************************************************************** |
|
82 | 73 | # Some utility function definitions |
|
83 | 74 | |
|
84 | 75 | class Bunch: pass |
|
85 | 76 | |
|
86 | 77 | def esc_quotes(strng): |
|
87 | 78 | """Return the input string with single and double quotes escaped out""" |
|
88 | 79 | |
|
89 | 80 | return strng.replace('"','\\"').replace("'","\\'") |
|
90 | 81 | |
|
91 | 82 | def import_fail_info(mod_name,fns=None): |
|
92 | 83 | """Inform load failure for a module.""" |
|
93 | 84 | |
|
94 | 85 | if fns == None: |
|
95 | 86 | warn("Loading of %s failed.\n" % (mod_name,)) |
|
96 | 87 | else: |
|
97 | 88 | warn("Loading of %s from %s failed.\n" % (fns,mod_name)) |
|
98 | 89 | |
|
99 | 90 | def qw_lol(indata): |
|
100 | 91 | """qw_lol('a b') -> [['a','b']], |
|
101 | 92 | otherwise it's just a call to qw(). |
|
102 | 93 | |
|
103 | 94 | We need this to make sure the modules_some keys *always* end up as a |
|
104 | 95 | list of lists.""" |
|
105 | 96 | |
|
106 | 97 | if type(indata) in StringTypes: |
|
107 | 98 | return [qw(indata)] |
|
108 | 99 | else: |
|
109 | 100 | return qw(indata) |
|
110 | 101 | |
|
111 | 102 | def ipmagic(arg_s): |
|
112 | 103 | """Call a magic function by name. |
|
113 | 104 | |
|
114 | 105 | Input: a string containing the name of the magic function to call and any |
|
115 | 106 | additional arguments to be passed to the magic. |
|
116 | 107 | |
|
117 | 108 | ipmagic('name -opt foo bar') is equivalent to typing at the ipython |
|
118 | 109 | prompt: |
|
119 | 110 | |
|
120 | 111 | In[1]: %name -opt foo bar |
|
121 | 112 | |
|
122 | 113 | To call a magic without arguments, simply use ipmagic('name'). |
|
123 | 114 | |
|
124 | 115 | This provides a proper Python function to call IPython's magics in any |
|
125 | 116 | valid Python code you can type at the interpreter, including loops and |
|
126 | 117 | compound statements. It is added by IPython to the Python builtin |
|
127 | 118 | namespace upon initialization.""" |
|
128 | 119 | |
|
129 | 120 | args = arg_s.split(' ',1) |
|
130 | 121 | magic_name = args[0] |
|
131 | 122 | if magic_name.startswith(__IPYTHON__.ESC_MAGIC): |
|
132 | 123 | magic_name = magic_name[1:] |
|
133 | 124 | try: |
|
134 | 125 | magic_args = args[1] |
|
135 | 126 | except IndexError: |
|
136 | 127 | magic_args = '' |
|
137 | 128 | fn = getattr(__IPYTHON__,'magic_'+magic_name,None) |
|
138 | 129 | if fn is None: |
|
139 | 130 | error("Magic function `%s` not found." % magic_name) |
|
140 | 131 | else: |
|
141 | 132 | magic_args = __IPYTHON__.var_expand(magic_args) |
|
142 | 133 | return fn(magic_args) |
|
143 | 134 | |
|
144 | 135 | def ipalias(arg_s): |
|
145 | 136 | """Call an alias by name. |
|
146 | 137 | |
|
147 | 138 | Input: a string containing the name of the alias to call and any |
|
148 | 139 | additional arguments to be passed to the magic. |
|
149 | 140 | |
|
150 | 141 | ipalias('name -opt foo bar') is equivalent to typing at the ipython |
|
151 | 142 | prompt: |
|
152 | 143 | |
|
153 | 144 | In[1]: name -opt foo bar |
|
154 | 145 | |
|
155 | 146 | To call an alias without arguments, simply use ipalias('name'). |
|
156 | 147 | |
|
157 | 148 | This provides a proper Python function to call IPython's aliases in any |
|
158 | 149 | valid Python code you can type at the interpreter, including loops and |
|
159 | 150 | compound statements. It is added by IPython to the Python builtin |
|
160 | 151 | namespace upon initialization.""" |
|
161 | 152 | |
|
162 | 153 | args = arg_s.split(' ',1) |
|
163 | 154 | alias_name = args[0] |
|
164 | 155 | try: |
|
165 | 156 | alias_args = args[1] |
|
166 | 157 | except IndexError: |
|
167 | 158 | alias_args = '' |
|
168 | 159 | if alias_name in __IPYTHON__.alias_table: |
|
169 | 160 | __IPYTHON__.call_alias(alias_name,alias_args) |
|
170 | 161 | else: |
|
171 | 162 | error("Alias `%s` not found." % alias_name) |
|
172 | 163 | |
|
173 | 164 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
174 | 165 | # Local use classes |
|
175 | 166 | try: |
|
176 | 167 | from IPython import FlexCompleter |
|
177 | 168 | |
|
178 | 169 | class MagicCompleter(FlexCompleter.Completer): |
|
179 | 170 | """Extension of the completer class to work on %-prefixed lines.""" |
|
180 | 171 | |
|
181 | 172 | def __init__(self,shell,namespace=None,omit__names=0,alias_table=None): |
|
182 | 173 | """MagicCompleter() -> completer |
|
183 | 174 | |
|
184 | 175 | Return a completer object suitable for use by the readline library |
|
185 | 176 | via readline.set_completer(). |
|
186 | 177 | |
|
187 | 178 | Inputs: |
|
188 | 179 | |
|
189 | 180 | - shell: a pointer to the ipython shell itself. This is needed |
|
190 | 181 | because this completer knows about magic functions, and those can |
|
191 | 182 | only be accessed via the ipython instance. |
|
192 | 183 | |
|
193 | 184 | - namespace: an optional dict where completions are performed. |
|
194 | 185 | |
|
195 | 186 | - The optional omit__names parameter sets the completer to omit the |
|
196 | 187 | 'magic' names (__magicname__) for python objects unless the text |
|
197 | 188 | to be completed explicitly starts with one or more underscores. |
|
198 | 189 | |
|
199 | 190 | - If alias_table is supplied, it should be a dictionary of aliases |
|
200 | 191 | to complete. """ |
|
201 | 192 | |
|
202 | 193 | FlexCompleter.Completer.__init__(self,namespace) |
|
203 | 194 | self.magic_prefix = shell.name+'.magic_' |
|
204 | 195 | self.magic_escape = shell.ESC_MAGIC |
|
205 | 196 | self.readline = FlexCompleter.readline |
|
206 | 197 | delims = self.readline.get_completer_delims() |
|
207 | 198 | delims = delims.replace(self.magic_escape,'') |
|
208 | 199 | self.readline.set_completer_delims(delims) |
|
209 | 200 | self.get_line_buffer = self.readline.get_line_buffer |
|
210 | 201 | self.omit__names = omit__names |
|
211 | 202 | self.merge_completions = shell.rc.readline_merge_completions |
|
212 | 203 | |
|
213 | 204 | if alias_table is None: |
|
214 | 205 | alias_table = {} |
|
215 | 206 | self.alias_table = alias_table |
|
216 | 207 | # Regexp to split filenames with spaces in them |
|
217 | 208 | self.space_name_re = re.compile(r'([^\\] )') |
|
218 | 209 | # Hold a local ref. to glob.glob for speed |
|
219 | 210 | self.glob = glob.glob |
|
220 | 211 | # Special handling of backslashes needed in win32 platforms |
|
221 | 212 | if sys.platform == "win32": |
|
222 | 213 | self.clean_glob = self._clean_glob_win32 |
|
223 | 214 | else: |
|
224 | 215 | self.clean_glob = self._clean_glob |
|
225 | 216 | self.matchers = [self.python_matches, |
|
226 | 217 | self.file_matches, |
|
227 | 218 | self.alias_matches, |
|
228 | 219 | self.python_func_kw_matches] |
|
229 | 220 | |
|
230 | 221 | # Code contributed by Alex Schmolck, for ipython/emacs integration |
|
231 | 222 | def all_completions(self, text): |
|
232 | 223 | """Return all possible completions for the benefit of emacs.""" |
|
233 | 224 | |
|
234 | 225 | completions = [] |
|
235 | 226 | try: |
|
236 | 227 | for i in xrange(sys.maxint): |
|
237 | 228 | res = self.complete(text, i) |
|
238 | 229 | |
|
239 | 230 | if not res: break |
|
240 | 231 | |
|
241 | 232 | completions.append(res) |
|
242 | 233 | #XXX workaround for ``notDefined.<tab>`` |
|
243 | 234 | except NameError: |
|
244 | 235 | pass |
|
245 | 236 | return completions |
|
246 | 237 | # /end Alex Schmolck code. |
|
247 | 238 | |
|
248 | 239 | def _clean_glob(self,text): |
|
249 | 240 | return self.glob("%s*" % text) |
|
250 | 241 | |
|
251 | 242 | def _clean_glob_win32(self,text): |
|
252 | 243 | return [f.replace("\\","/") |
|
253 | 244 | for f in self.glob("%s*" % text)] |
|
254 | 245 | |
|
255 | 246 | def file_matches(self, text): |
|
256 | 247 | """Match filneames, expanding ~USER type strings. |
|
257 | 248 | |
|
258 | 249 | Most of the seemingly convoluted logic in this completer is an |
|
259 | 250 | attempt to handle filenames with spaces in them. And yet it's not |
|
260 | 251 | quite perfect, because Python's readline doesn't expose all of the |
|
261 | 252 | GNU readline details needed for this to be done correctly. |
|
262 | 253 | |
|
263 | 254 | For a filename with a space in it, the printed completions will be |
|
264 | 255 | only the parts after what's already been typed (instead of the |
|
265 | 256 | full completions, as is normally done). I don't think with the |
|
266 | 257 | current (as of Python 2.3) Python readline it's possible to do |
|
267 | 258 | better.""" |
|
268 | 259 | |
|
269 | 260 | #print 'Completer->file_matches: <%s>' % text # dbg |
|
270 | 261 | |
|
271 | 262 | # chars that require escaping with backslash - i.e. chars |
|
272 | 263 | # that readline treats incorrectly as delimiters, but we |
|
273 | 264 | # don't want to treat as delimiters in filename matching |
|
274 | 265 | # when escaped with backslash |
|
275 | 266 | |
|
276 | 267 | protectables = ' ()[]{}' |
|
277 | 268 | |
|
278 | 269 | def protect_filename(s): |
|
279 | 270 | return "".join([(ch in protectables and '\\' + ch or ch) |
|
280 | 271 | for ch in s]) |
|
281 | 272 | |
|
282 | 273 | lbuf = self.get_line_buffer()[:self.readline.get_endidx()] |
|
283 | 274 | open_quotes = 0 # track strings with open quotes |
|
284 | 275 | try: |
|
285 | 276 | lsplit = shlex_split(lbuf)[-1] |
|
286 | 277 | except ValueError: |
|
287 | 278 | # typically an unmatched ", or backslash without escaped char. |
|
288 | 279 | if lbuf.count('"')==1: |
|
289 | 280 | open_quotes = 1 |
|
290 | 281 | lsplit = lbuf.split('"')[-1] |
|
291 | 282 | elif lbuf.count("'")==1: |
|
292 | 283 | open_quotes = 1 |
|
293 | 284 | lsplit = lbuf.split("'")[-1] |
|
294 | 285 | else: |
|
295 | 286 | return None |
|
296 | 287 | except IndexError: |
|
297 | 288 | # tab pressed on empty line |
|
298 | 289 | lsplit = "" |
|
299 | 290 | |
|
300 | 291 | if lsplit != protect_filename(lsplit): |
|
301 | 292 | # if protectables are found, do matching on the whole escaped |
|
302 | 293 | # name |
|
303 | 294 | has_protectables = 1 |
|
304 | 295 | text0,text = text,lsplit |
|
305 | 296 | else: |
|
306 | 297 | has_protectables = 0 |
|
307 | 298 | text = os.path.expanduser(text) |
|
308 | 299 | |
|
309 | 300 | if text == "": |
|
310 | 301 | return [protect_filename(f) for f in self.glob("*")] |
|
311 | 302 | |
|
312 | 303 | m0 = self.clean_glob(text.replace('\\','')) |
|
313 | 304 | if has_protectables: |
|
314 | 305 | # If we had protectables, we need to revert our changes to the |
|
315 | 306 | # beginning of filename so that we don't double-write the part |
|
316 | 307 | # of the filename we have so far |
|
317 | 308 | len_lsplit = len(lsplit) |
|
318 | 309 | matches = [text0 + protect_filename(f[len_lsplit:]) for f in m0] |
|
319 | 310 | else: |
|
320 | 311 | if open_quotes: |
|
321 | 312 | # if we have a string with an open quote, we don't need to |
|
322 | 313 | # protect the names at all (and we _shouldn't_, as it |
|
323 | 314 | # would cause bugs when the filesystem call is made). |
|
324 | 315 | matches = m0 |
|
325 | 316 | else: |
|
326 | 317 | matches = [protect_filename(f) for f in m0] |
|
327 | 318 | if len(matches) == 1 and os.path.isdir(matches[0]): |
|
328 | 319 | # Takes care of links to directories also. Use '/' |
|
329 | 320 | # explicitly, even under Windows, so that name completions |
|
330 | 321 | # don't end up escaped. |
|
331 | 322 | matches[0] += '/' |
|
332 | 323 | return matches |
|
333 | 324 | |
|
334 | 325 | def alias_matches(self, text): |
|
335 | 326 | """Match internal system aliases""" |
|
336 | 327 | #print 'Completer->alias_matches:',text # dbg |
|
337 | 328 | text = os.path.expanduser(text) |
|
338 | 329 | aliases = self.alias_table.keys() |
|
339 | 330 | if text == "": |
|
340 | 331 | return aliases |
|
341 | 332 | else: |
|
342 | 333 | return [alias for alias in aliases if alias.startswith(text)] |
|
343 | 334 | |
|
344 | 335 | def python_matches(self,text): |
|
345 | 336 | """Match attributes or global python names""" |
|
346 | 337 | #print 'Completer->python_matches' # dbg |
|
347 | 338 | if "." in text: |
|
348 | 339 | try: |
|
349 | 340 | matches = self.attr_matches(text) |
|
350 | 341 | if text.endswith('.') and self.omit__names: |
|
351 | 342 | if self.omit__names == 1: |
|
352 | 343 | # true if txt is _not_ a __ name, false otherwise: |
|
353 | 344 | no__name = (lambda txt: |
|
354 | 345 | re.match(r'.*\.__.*?__',txt) is None) |
|
355 | 346 | else: |
|
356 | 347 | # true if txt is _not_ a _ name, false otherwise: |
|
357 | 348 | no__name = (lambda txt: |
|
358 | 349 | re.match(r'.*\._.*?',txt) is None) |
|
359 | 350 | matches = filter(no__name, matches) |
|
360 | 351 | except NameError: |
|
361 | 352 | # catches <undefined attributes>.<tab> |
|
362 | 353 | matches = [] |
|
363 | 354 | else: |
|
364 | 355 | matches = self.global_matches(text) |
|
365 | 356 | # this is so completion finds magics when automagic is on: |
|
366 | 357 | if matches == [] and not text.startswith(os.sep): |
|
367 | 358 | matches = self.attr_matches(self.magic_prefix+text) |
|
368 | 359 | return matches |
|
369 | 360 | |
|
370 | 361 | def _default_arguments(self, obj): |
|
371 | 362 | """Return the list of default arguments of obj if it is callable, |
|
372 | 363 | or empty list otherwise.""" |
|
373 | 364 | |
|
374 | 365 | if not (inspect.isfunction(obj) or inspect.ismethod(obj)): |
|
375 | 366 | # for classes, check for __init__,__new__ |
|
376 | 367 | if inspect.isclass(obj): |
|
377 | 368 | obj = (getattr(obj,'__init__',None) or |
|
378 | 369 | getattr(obj,'__new__',None)) |
|
379 | 370 | # for all others, check if they are __call__able |
|
380 | 371 | elif hasattr(obj, '__call__'): |
|
381 | 372 | obj = obj.__call__ |
|
382 | 373 | # XXX: is there a way to handle the builtins ? |
|
383 | 374 | try: |
|
384 | 375 | args,_,_1,defaults = inspect.getargspec(obj) |
|
385 | 376 | if defaults: |
|
386 | 377 | return args[-len(defaults):] |
|
387 | 378 | except TypeError: pass |
|
388 | 379 | return [] |
|
389 | 380 | |
|
390 | 381 | def python_func_kw_matches(self,text): |
|
391 | 382 | """Match named parameters (kwargs) of the last open function""" |
|
392 | 383 | |
|
393 | 384 | if "." in text: # a parameter cannot be dotted |
|
394 | 385 | return [] |
|
395 | 386 | try: regexp = self.__funcParamsRegex |
|
396 | 387 | except AttributeError: |
|
397 | 388 | regexp = self.__funcParamsRegex = re.compile(r''' |
|
398 | 389 | '.*?' | # single quoted strings or |
|
399 | 390 | ".*?" | # double quoted strings or |
|
400 | 391 | \w+ | # identifier |
|
401 | 392 | \S # other characters |
|
402 | 393 | ''', re.VERBOSE | re.DOTALL) |
|
403 | 394 | # 1. find the nearest identifier that comes before an unclosed |
|
404 | 395 | # parenthesis e.g. for "foo (1+bar(x), pa", the candidate is "foo" |
|
405 | 396 | tokens = regexp.findall(self.get_line_buffer()) |
|
406 | 397 | tokens.reverse() |
|
407 | 398 | iterTokens = iter(tokens); openPar = 0 |
|
408 | 399 | for token in iterTokens: |
|
409 | 400 | if token == ')': |
|
410 | 401 | openPar -= 1 |
|
411 | 402 | elif token == '(': |
|
412 | 403 | openPar += 1 |
|
413 | 404 | if openPar > 0: |
|
414 | 405 | # found the last unclosed parenthesis |
|
415 | 406 | break |
|
416 | 407 | else: |
|
417 | 408 | return [] |
|
418 | 409 | # 2. Concatenate any dotted names (e.g. "foo.bar" for "foo.bar(x, pa" ) |
|
419 | 410 | ids = [] |
|
420 | 411 | isId = re.compile(r'\w+$').match |
|
421 | 412 | while True: |
|
422 | 413 | try: |
|
423 | 414 | ids.append(iterTokens.next()) |
|
424 | 415 | if not isId(ids[-1]): |
|
425 | 416 | ids.pop(); break |
|
426 | 417 | if not iterTokens.next() == '.': |
|
427 | 418 | break |
|
428 | 419 | except StopIteration: |
|
429 | 420 | break |
|
430 | 421 | # lookup the candidate callable matches either using global_matches |
|
431 | 422 | # or attr_matches for dotted names |
|
432 | 423 | if len(ids) == 1: |
|
433 | 424 | callableMatches = self.global_matches(ids[0]) |
|
434 | 425 | else: |
|
435 | 426 | callableMatches = self.attr_matches('.'.join(ids[::-1])) |
|
436 | 427 | argMatches = [] |
|
437 | 428 | for callableMatch in callableMatches: |
|
438 | 429 | try: namedArgs = self._default_arguments(eval(callableMatch, |
|
439 | 430 | self.namespace)) |
|
440 | 431 | except: continue |
|
441 | 432 | for namedArg in namedArgs: |
|
442 | 433 | if namedArg.startswith(text): |
|
443 | 434 | argMatches.append("%s=" %namedArg) |
|
444 | 435 | return argMatches |
|
445 | 436 | |
|
446 | 437 | def complete(self, text, state): |
|
447 | 438 | """Return the next possible completion for 'text'. |
|
448 | 439 | |
|
449 | 440 | This is called successively with state == 0, 1, 2, ... until it |
|
450 | 441 | returns None. The completion should begin with 'text'. """ |
|
451 | 442 | |
|
452 | 443 | #print '\n*** COMPLETE: <%s> (%s)' % (text,state) # dbg |
|
453 | 444 | magic_escape = self.magic_escape |
|
454 | 445 | magic_prefix = self.magic_prefix |
|
455 | 446 | |
|
456 | 447 | try: |
|
457 | 448 | if text.startswith(magic_escape): |
|
458 | 449 | text = text.replace(magic_escape,magic_prefix) |
|
459 | 450 | elif text.startswith('~'): |
|
460 | 451 | text = os.path.expanduser(text) |
|
461 | 452 | if state == 0: |
|
462 | 453 | # Extend the list of completions with the results of each |
|
463 | 454 | # matcher, so we return results to the user from all |
|
464 | 455 | # namespaces. |
|
465 | 456 | if self.merge_completions: |
|
466 | 457 | self.matches = [] |
|
467 | 458 | for matcher in self.matchers: |
|
468 | 459 | self.matches.extend(matcher(text)) |
|
469 | 460 | else: |
|
470 | 461 | for matcher in self.matchers: |
|
471 | 462 | self.matches = matcher(text) |
|
472 | 463 | if self.matches: |
|
473 | 464 | break |
|
474 | 465 | |
|
475 | 466 | try: |
|
476 | 467 | return self.matches[state].replace(magic_prefix,magic_escape) |
|
477 | 468 | except IndexError: |
|
478 | 469 | return None |
|
479 | 470 | except: |
|
480 | 471 | # If completion fails, don't annoy the user. |
|
481 | 472 | pass |
|
482 | 473 | |
|
483 | 474 | except ImportError: |
|
484 | 475 | pass # no readline support |
|
485 | 476 | |
|
486 | 477 | except KeyError: |
|
487 | 478 | pass # Windows doesn't set TERM, it doesn't matter |
|
488 | 479 | |
|
489 | 480 | |
|
490 | 481 | class InputList(UserList.UserList): |
|
491 | 482 | """Class to store user input. |
|
492 | 483 | |
|
493 | 484 | It's basically a list, but slices return a string instead of a list, thus |
|
494 | 485 | allowing things like (assuming 'In' is an instance): |
|
495 | 486 | |
|
496 | 487 | exec In[4:7] |
|
497 | 488 | |
|
498 | 489 | or |
|
499 | 490 | |
|
500 | 491 | exec In[5:9] + In[14] + In[21:25]""" |
|
501 | 492 | |
|
502 | 493 | def __getslice__(self,i,j): |
|
503 | 494 | return ''.join(UserList.UserList.__getslice__(self,i,j)) |
|
504 | 495 | |
|
505 | 496 | #**************************************************************************** |
|
506 | 497 | # Local use exceptions |
|
507 | 498 | class SpaceInInput(exceptions.Exception): |
|
508 | 499 | pass |
|
509 | 500 | |
|
510 | 501 | #**************************************************************************** |
|
511 | 502 | # Main IPython class |
|
512 | 503 | |
|
513 | 504 | class InteractiveShell(code.InteractiveConsole, Logger, Magic): |
|
514 | 505 | """An enhanced console for Python.""" |
|
515 | 506 | |
|
516 | 507 | def __init__(self,name,usage=None,rc=Struct(opts=None,args=None), |
|
517 | 508 | user_ns = None,banner2='', |
|
518 | 509 | custom_exceptions=((),None)): |
|
519 | 510 | |
|
520 | 511 | # Put a reference to self in builtins so that any form of embedded or |
|
521 | 512 | # imported code can test for being inside IPython. |
|
522 | 513 | __builtin__.__IPYTHON__ = self |
|
523 | 514 | |
|
524 | 515 | # And load into builtins ipmagic/ipalias as well |
|
525 | 516 | __builtin__.ipmagic = ipmagic |
|
526 | 517 | __builtin__.ipalias = ipalias |
|
527 | 518 | |
|
528 | 519 | # Add to __builtin__ other parts of IPython's public API |
|
529 | 520 | __builtin__.ip_set_hook = self.set_hook |
|
530 | 521 | |
|
531 | 522 | # Keep in the builtins a flag for when IPython is active. We set it |
|
532 | 523 | # with setdefault so that multiple nested IPythons don't clobber one |
|
533 | 524 | # another. Each will increase its value by one upon being activated, |
|
534 | 525 | # which also gives us a way to determine the nesting level. |
|
535 | 526 | __builtin__.__dict__.setdefault('__IPYTHON__active',0) |
|
536 | 527 | |
|
537 | 528 | # Inform the user of ipython's fast exit magics. |
|
538 | 529 | _exit = ' Use %Exit or %Quit to exit without confirmation.' |
|
539 | 530 | __builtin__.exit += _exit |
|
540 | 531 | __builtin__.quit += _exit |
|
541 | 532 | |
|
542 | 533 | # Create the namespace where the user will operate: |
|
543 | 534 | |
|
544 | 535 | # FIXME. For some strange reason, __builtins__ is showing up at user |
|
545 | 536 | # level as a dict instead of a module. This is a manual fix, but I |
|
546 | 537 | # should really track down where the problem is coming from. Alex |
|
547 | 538 | # Schmolck reported this problem first. |
|
548 | 539 | |
|
549 | 540 | # A useful post by Alex Martelli on this topic: |
|
550 | 541 | # Re: inconsistent value from __builtins__ |
|
551 | 542 | # Von: Alex Martelli <aleaxit@yahoo.com> |
|
552 | 543 | # Datum: Freitag 01 Oktober 2004 04:45:34 nachmittags/abends |
|
553 | 544 | # Gruppen: comp.lang.python |
|
554 | 545 | # Referenzen: 1 |
|
555 | 546 | |
|
556 | 547 | # Michael Hohn <hohn@hooknose.lbl.gov> wrote: |
|
557 | 548 | # > >>> print type(builtin_check.get_global_binding('__builtins__')) |
|
558 | 549 | # > <type 'dict'> |
|
559 | 550 | # > >>> print type(__builtins__) |
|
560 | 551 | # > <type 'module'> |
|
561 | 552 | # > Is this difference in return value intentional? |
|
562 | 553 | |
|
563 | 554 | # Well, it's documented that '__builtins__' can be either a dictionary |
|
564 | 555 | # or a module, and it's been that way for a long time. Whether it's |
|
565 | 556 | # intentional (or sensible), I don't know. In any case, the idea is that |
|
566 | 557 | # if you need to access the built-in namespace directly, you should start |
|
567 | 558 | # with "import __builtin__" (note, no 's') which will definitely give you |
|
568 | 559 | # a module. Yeah, it's somewhat confusing:-(. |
|
569 | 560 | |
|
570 | 561 | if user_ns is None: |
|
571 | 562 | # Set __name__ to __main__ to better match the behavior of the |
|
572 | 563 | # normal interpreter. |
|
573 | 564 | self.user_ns = {'__name__' :'__main__', |
|
574 | 565 | '__builtins__' : __builtin__, |
|
575 | 566 | } |
|
576 | 567 | else: |
|
577 | 568 | self.user_ns = user_ns |
|
578 | 569 | |
|
579 | 570 | # The user namespace MUST have a pointer to the shell itself. |
|
580 | 571 | self.user_ns[name] = self |
|
581 | 572 | |
|
582 | 573 | # We need to insert into sys.modules something that looks like a |
|
583 | 574 | # module but which accesses the IPython namespace, for shelve and |
|
584 | 575 | # pickle to work interactively. Normally they rely on getting |
|
585 | 576 | # everything out of __main__, but for embedding purposes each IPython |
|
586 | 577 | # instance has its own private namespace, so we can't go shoving |
|
587 | 578 | # everything into __main__. |
|
588 | 579 | |
|
589 | 580 | try: |
|
590 | 581 | main_name = self.user_ns['__name__'] |
|
591 | 582 | except KeyError: |
|
592 | 583 | raise KeyError,'user_ns dictionary MUST have a "__name__" key' |
|
593 | 584 | else: |
|
594 | 585 | #print "pickle hack in place" # dbg |
|
595 | 586 | sys.modules[main_name] = FakeModule(self.user_ns) |
|
596 | 587 | |
|
597 | 588 | # List of input with multi-line handling. |
|
598 | 589 | # Fill its zero entry, user counter starts at 1 |
|
599 | 590 | self.input_hist = InputList(['\n']) |
|
600 | 591 | |
|
601 | 592 | # list of visited directories |
|
602 | 593 | self.dir_hist = [os.getcwd()] |
|
603 | 594 | |
|
604 | 595 | # dict of output history |
|
605 | 596 | self.output_hist = {} |
|
606 | 597 | |
|
607 | 598 | # dict of names to be treated as system aliases. Each entry in the |
|
608 | 599 | # alias table must be a 2-tuple of the form (N,name), where N is the |
|
609 | 600 | # number of positional arguments of the alias. |
|
610 | 601 | self.alias_table = {} |
|
611 | 602 | |
|
612 | 603 | # dict of things NOT to alias (keywords and builtins) |
|
613 | 604 | self.no_alias = {} |
|
614 | 605 | for key in keyword.kwlist: |
|
615 | 606 | self.no_alias[key] = 1 |
|
616 | 607 | self.no_alias.update(__builtin__.__dict__) |
|
617 | 608 | |
|
618 | 609 | # make global variables for user access to these |
|
619 | 610 | self.user_ns['_ih'] = self.input_hist |
|
620 | 611 | self.user_ns['_oh'] = self.output_hist |
|
621 | 612 | self.user_ns['_dh'] = self.dir_hist |
|
622 | 613 | |
|
623 | 614 | # user aliases to input and output histories |
|
624 | 615 | self.user_ns['In'] = self.input_hist |
|
625 | 616 | self.user_ns['Out'] = self.output_hist |
|
626 | 617 | |
|
627 | 618 | # Store the actual shell's name |
|
628 | 619 | self.name = name |
|
629 | 620 | |
|
630 | 621 | # Object variable to store code object waiting execution. This is |
|
631 | 622 | # used mainly by the multithreaded shells, but it can come in handy in |
|
632 | 623 | # other situations. No need to use a Queue here, since it's a single |
|
633 | 624 | # item which gets cleared once run. |
|
634 | 625 | self.code_to_run = None |
|
635 | 626 | self.code_to_run_src = '' # corresponding source |
|
636 | 627 | |
|
637 | 628 | # Job manager (for jobs run as background threads) |
|
638 | 629 | self.jobs = BackgroundJobManager() |
|
639 | 630 | # Put the job manager into builtins so it's always there. |
|
640 | 631 | __builtin__.jobs = self.jobs |
|
641 | 632 | |
|
642 | 633 | # escapes for automatic behavior on the command line |
|
643 | 634 | self.ESC_SHELL = '!' |
|
644 | 635 | self.ESC_HELP = '?' |
|
645 | 636 | self.ESC_MAGIC = '%' |
|
646 | 637 | self.ESC_QUOTE = ',' |
|
647 | 638 | self.ESC_QUOTE2 = ';' |
|
648 | 639 | self.ESC_PAREN = '/' |
|
649 | 640 | |
|
650 | 641 | # And their associated handlers |
|
651 | 642 | self.esc_handlers = {self.ESC_PAREN:self.handle_auto, |
|
652 | 643 | self.ESC_QUOTE:self.handle_auto, |
|
653 | 644 | self.ESC_QUOTE2:self.handle_auto, |
|
654 | 645 | self.ESC_MAGIC:self.handle_magic, |
|
655 | 646 | self.ESC_HELP:self.handle_help, |
|
656 | 647 | self.ESC_SHELL:self.handle_shell_escape, |
|
657 | 648 | } |
|
658 | 649 | |
|
659 | 650 | # class initializations |
|
660 | 651 | code.InteractiveConsole.__init__(self,locals = self.user_ns) |
|
661 | 652 | Logger.__init__(self,log_ns = self.user_ns) |
|
662 | 653 | Magic.__init__(self,self) |
|
663 | 654 | |
|
664 | 655 | # an ugly hack to get a pointer to the shell, so I can start writing |
|
665 | 656 | # magic code via this pointer instead of the current mixin salad. |
|
666 | 657 | Magic.set_shell(self,self) |
|
667 | 658 | |
|
668 | 659 | # hooks holds pointers used for user-side customizations |
|
669 | 660 | self.hooks = Struct() |
|
670 | 661 | |
|
671 | 662 | # Set all default hooks, defined in the IPython.hooks module. |
|
672 | 663 | hooks = IPython.hooks |
|
673 | 664 | for hook_name in hooks.__all__: |
|
674 | 665 | self.set_hook(hook_name,getattr(hooks,hook_name)) |
|
675 | 666 | |
|
676 | 667 | # Flag to mark unconditional exit |
|
677 | 668 | self.exit_now = False |
|
678 | 669 | |
|
679 | 670 | self.usage_min = """\ |
|
680 | 671 | An enhanced console for Python. |
|
681 | 672 | Some of its features are: |
|
682 | 673 | - Readline support if the readline library is present. |
|
683 | 674 | - Tab completion in the local namespace. |
|
684 | 675 | - Logging of input, see command-line options. |
|
685 | 676 | - System shell escape via ! , eg !ls. |
|
686 | 677 | - Magic commands, starting with a % (like %ls, %pwd, %cd, etc.) |
|
687 | 678 | - Keeps track of locally defined variables via %who, %whos. |
|
688 | 679 | - Show object information with a ? eg ?x or x? (use ?? for more info). |
|
689 | 680 | """ |
|
690 | 681 | if usage: self.usage = usage |
|
691 | 682 | else: self.usage = self.usage_min |
|
692 | 683 | |
|
693 | 684 | # Storage |
|
694 | 685 | self.rc = rc # This will hold all configuration information |
|
695 | 686 | self.inputcache = [] |
|
696 | 687 | self._boundcache = [] |
|
697 | 688 | self.pager = 'less' |
|
698 | 689 | # temporary files used for various purposes. Deleted at exit. |
|
699 | 690 | self.tempfiles = [] |
|
700 | 691 | |
|
701 | 692 | # for pushd/popd management |
|
702 | 693 | try: |
|
703 | 694 | self.home_dir = get_home_dir() |
|
704 | 695 | except HomeDirError,msg: |
|
705 | 696 | fatal(msg) |
|
706 | 697 | |
|
707 | 698 | self.dir_stack = [os.getcwd().replace(self.home_dir,'~')] |
|
708 | 699 | |
|
709 | 700 | # Functions to call the underlying shell. |
|
710 | 701 | |
|
711 | 702 | # utility to expand user variables via Itpl |
|
712 | 703 | self.var_expand = lambda cmd: str(ItplNS(cmd.replace('#','\#'), |
|
713 | 704 | self.user_ns)) |
|
714 | 705 | # The first is similar to os.system, but it doesn't return a value, |
|
715 | 706 | # and it allows interpolation of variables in the user's namespace. |
|
716 | 707 | self.system = lambda cmd: shell(self.var_expand(cmd), |
|
717 | 708 | header='IPython system call: ', |
|
718 | 709 | verbose=self.rc.system_verbose) |
|
719 | 710 | # These are for getoutput and getoutputerror: |
|
720 | 711 | self.getoutput = lambda cmd: \ |
|
721 | 712 | getoutput(self.var_expand(cmd), |
|
722 | 713 | header='IPython system call: ', |
|
723 | 714 | verbose=self.rc.system_verbose) |
|
724 | 715 | self.getoutputerror = lambda cmd: \ |
|
725 | 716 | getoutputerror(str(ItplNS(cmd.replace('#','\#'), |
|
726 | 717 | self.user_ns)), |
|
727 | 718 | header='IPython system call: ', |
|
728 | 719 | verbose=self.rc.system_verbose) |
|
729 | 720 | |
|
730 | 721 | # RegExp for splitting line contents into pre-char//first |
|
731 | 722 | # word-method//rest. For clarity, each group in on one line. |
|
732 | 723 | |
|
733 | 724 | # WARNING: update the regexp if the above escapes are changed, as they |
|
734 | 725 | # are hardwired in. |
|
735 | 726 | |
|
736 | 727 | # Don't get carried away with trying to make the autocalling catch too |
|
737 | 728 | # much: it's better to be conservative rather than to trigger hidden |
|
738 | 729 | # evals() somewhere and end up causing side effects. |
|
739 | 730 | |
|
740 | 731 | self.line_split = re.compile(r'^([\s*,;/])' |
|
741 | 732 | r'([\?\w\.]+\w*\s*)' |
|
742 | 733 | r'(\(?.*$)') |
|
743 | 734 | |
|
744 | 735 | # Original re, keep around for a while in case changes break something |
|
745 | 736 | #self.line_split = re.compile(r'(^[\s*!\?%,/]?)' |
|
746 | 737 | # r'(\s*[\?\w\.]+\w*\s*)' |
|
747 | 738 | # r'(\(?.*$)') |
|
748 | 739 | |
|
749 | 740 | # RegExp to identify potential function names |
|
750 | 741 | self.re_fun_name = re.compile(r'[a-zA-Z_]([a-zA-Z0-9_.]*) *$') |
|
751 | 742 | # RegExp to exclude strings with this start from autocalling |
|
752 | 743 | self.re_exclude_auto = re.compile('^[!=()<>,\*/\+-]|^is ') |
|
753 | 744 | # try to catch also methods for stuff in lists/tuples/dicts: off |
|
754 | 745 | # (experimental). For this to work, the line_split regexp would need |
|
755 | 746 | # to be modified so it wouldn't break things at '['. That line is |
|
756 | 747 | # nasty enough that I shouldn't change it until I can test it _well_. |
|
757 | 748 | #self.re_fun_name = re.compile (r'[a-zA-Z_]([a-zA-Z0-9_.\[\]]*) ?$') |
|
758 | 749 | |
|
759 | 750 | # keep track of where we started running (mainly for crash post-mortem) |
|
760 | 751 | self.starting_dir = os.getcwd() |
|
761 | 752 | |
|
762 | 753 | # Attributes for Logger mixin class, make defaults here |
|
763 | 754 | self._dolog = 0 |
|
764 | 755 | self.LOG = '' |
|
765 | 756 | self.LOGDEF = '.InteractiveShell.log' |
|
766 | 757 | self.LOGMODE = 'over' |
|
767 | 758 | self.LOGHEAD = Itpl( |
|
768 | 759 | """#log# Automatic Logger file. *** THIS MUST BE THE FIRST LINE *** |
|
769 | 760 | #log# DO NOT CHANGE THIS LINE OR THE TWO BELOW |
|
770 | 761 | #log# opts = $self.rc.opts |
|
771 | 762 | #log# args = $self.rc.args |
|
772 | 763 | #log# It is safe to make manual edits below here. |
|
773 | 764 | #log#----------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
774 | 765 | """) |
|
775 | 766 | # Various switches which can be set |
|
776 | 767 | self.CACHELENGTH = 5000 # this is cheap, it's just text |
|
777 | 768 | self.BANNER = "Python %(version)s on %(platform)s\n" % sys.__dict__ |
|
778 | 769 | self.banner2 = banner2 |
|
779 | 770 | |
|
780 | 771 | # TraceBack handlers: |
|
781 | 772 | # Need two, one for syntax errors and one for other exceptions. |
|
782 | 773 | self.SyntaxTB = ultraTB.ListTB(color_scheme='NoColor') |
|
783 | 774 | # This one is initialized with an offset, meaning we always want to |
|
784 | 775 | # remove the topmost item in the traceback, which is our own internal |
|
785 | 776 | # code. Valid modes: ['Plain','Context','Verbose'] |
|
786 | 777 | self.InteractiveTB = ultraTB.AutoFormattedTB(mode = 'Plain', |
|
787 | 778 | color_scheme='NoColor', |
|
788 | 779 | tb_offset = 1) |
|
789 | 780 | # and add any custom exception handlers the user may have specified |
|
790 | 781 | self.set_custom_exc(*custom_exceptions) |
|
791 | 782 | |
|
792 | 783 | # Object inspector |
|
793 | 784 | ins_colors = OInspect.InspectColors |
|
794 | 785 | code_colors = PyColorize.ANSICodeColors |
|
795 | 786 | self.inspector = OInspect.Inspector(ins_colors,code_colors,'NoColor') |
|
796 | 787 | self.autoindent = 0 |
|
797 | 788 | |
|
798 | 789 | # Make some aliases automatically |
|
799 | 790 | # Prepare list of shell aliases to auto-define |
|
800 | 791 | if os.name == 'posix': |
|
801 | 792 | auto_alias = ('mkdir mkdir', 'rmdir rmdir', |
|
802 | 793 | 'mv mv -i','rm rm -i','cp cp -i', |
|
803 | 794 | 'cat cat','less less','clear clear', |
|
804 | 795 | # a better ls |
|
805 | 796 | 'ls ls -F', |
|
806 | 797 | # long ls |
|
807 | 798 | 'll ls -lF', |
|
808 | 799 | # color ls |
|
809 | 800 | 'lc ls -F -o --color', |
|
810 | 801 | # ls normal files only |
|
811 | 802 | 'lf ls -F -o --color %l | grep ^-', |
|
812 | 803 | # ls symbolic links |
|
813 | 804 | 'lk ls -F -o --color %l | grep ^l', |
|
814 | 805 | # directories or links to directories, |
|
815 | 806 | 'ldir ls -F -o --color %l | grep /$', |
|
816 | 807 | # things which are executable |
|
817 | 808 | 'lx ls -F -o --color %l | grep ^-..x', |
|
818 | 809 | ) |
|
819 | 810 | elif os.name in ['nt','dos']: |
|
820 | 811 | auto_alias = ('dir dir /on', 'ls dir /on', |
|
821 | 812 | 'ddir dir /ad /on', 'ldir dir /ad /on', |
|
822 | 813 | 'mkdir mkdir','rmdir rmdir','echo echo', |
|
823 | 814 | 'ren ren','cls cls','copy copy') |
|
824 | 815 | else: |
|
825 | 816 | auto_alias = () |
|
826 | 817 | self.auto_alias = map(lambda s:s.split(None,1),auto_alias) |
|
827 | 818 | # Call the actual (public) initializer |
|
828 | 819 | self.init_auto_alias() |
|
829 | 820 | # end __init__ |
|
830 | 821 | |
|
831 | 822 | def set_hook(self,name,hook): |
|
832 | 823 | """set_hook(name,hook) -> sets an internal IPython hook. |
|
833 | 824 | |
|
834 | 825 | IPython exposes some of its internal API as user-modifiable hooks. By |
|
835 | 826 | resetting one of these hooks, you can modify IPython's behavior to |
|
836 | 827 | call at runtime your own routines.""" |
|
837 | 828 | |
|
838 | 829 | # At some point in the future, this should validate the hook before it |
|
839 | 830 | # accepts it. Probably at least check that the hook takes the number |
|
840 | 831 | # of args it's supposed to. |
|
841 | 832 | setattr(self.hooks,name,new.instancemethod(hook,self,self.__class__)) |
|
842 | 833 | |
|
843 | 834 | def set_custom_exc(self,exc_tuple,handler): |
|
844 | 835 | """set_custom_exc(exc_tuple,handler) |
|
845 | 836 | |
|
846 | 837 | Set a custom exception handler, which will be called if any of the |
|
847 | 838 | exceptions in exc_tuple occur in the mainloop (specifically, in the |
|
848 | 839 | runcode() method. |
|
849 | 840 | |
|
850 | 841 | Inputs: |
|
851 | 842 | |
|
852 | 843 | - exc_tuple: a *tuple* of valid exceptions to call the defined |
|
853 | 844 | handler for. It is very important that you use a tuple, and NOT A |
|
854 | 845 | LIST here, because of the way Python's except statement works. If |
|
855 | 846 | you only want to trap a single exception, use a singleton tuple: |
|
856 | 847 | |
|
857 | 848 | exc_tuple == (MyCustomException,) |
|
858 | 849 | |
|
859 | 850 | - handler: this must be defined as a function with the following |
|
860 | 851 | basic interface: def my_handler(self,etype,value,tb). |
|
861 | 852 | |
|
862 | 853 | This will be made into an instance method (via new.instancemethod) |
|
863 | 854 | of IPython itself, and it will be called if any of the exceptions |
|
864 | 855 | listed in the exc_tuple are caught. If the handler is None, an |
|
865 | 856 | internal basic one is used, which just prints basic info. |
|
866 | 857 | |
|
867 | 858 | WARNING: by putting in your own exception handler into IPython's main |
|
868 | 859 | execution loop, you run a very good chance of nasty crashes. This |
|
869 | 860 | facility should only be used if you really know what you are doing.""" |
|
870 | 861 | |
|
871 | 862 | assert type(exc_tuple)==type(()) , \ |
|
872 | 863 | "The custom exceptions must be given AS A TUPLE." |
|
873 | 864 | |
|
874 | 865 | def dummy_handler(self,etype,value,tb): |
|
875 | 866 | print '*** Simple custom exception handler ***' |
|
876 | 867 | print 'Exception type :',etype |
|
877 | 868 | print 'Exception value:',value |
|
878 | 869 | print 'Traceback :',tb |
|
879 | 870 | print 'Source code :',self.code_to_run_src |
|
880 | 871 | |
|
881 | 872 | if handler is None: handler = dummy_handler |
|
882 | 873 | |
|
883 | 874 | self.CustomTB = new.instancemethod(handler,self,self.__class__) |
|
884 | 875 | self.custom_exceptions = exc_tuple |
|
885 | 876 | |
|
886 | 877 | def set_custom_completer(self,completer,pos=0): |
|
887 | 878 | """set_custom_completer(completer,pos=0) |
|
888 | 879 | |
|
889 | 880 | Adds a new custom completer function. |
|
890 | 881 | |
|
891 | 882 | The position argument (defaults to 0) is the index in the completers |
|
892 | 883 | list where you want the completer to be inserted.""" |
|
893 | 884 | |
|
894 | 885 | newcomp = new.instancemethod(completer,self.Completer, |
|
895 | 886 | self.Completer.__class__) |
|
896 | 887 | self.Completer.matchers.insert(pos,newcomp) |
|
897 | 888 | |
|
898 | 889 | def post_config_initialization(self): |
|
899 | 890 | """Post configuration init method |
|
900 | 891 | |
|
901 | 892 | This is called after the configuration files have been processed to |
|
902 | 893 | 'finalize' the initialization.""" |
|
903 | 894 | |
|
904 | 895 | # dynamic data that survives through sessions |
|
905 | 896 | # XXX make the filename a config option? |
|
906 | 897 | persist_base = 'persist' |
|
907 | 898 | if self.rc.profile: |
|
908 | 899 | persist_base += '_%s' % self.rc.profile |
|
909 | 900 | self.persist_fname = os.path.join(self.rc.ipythondir,persist_base) |
|
910 | 901 | |
|
911 | 902 | try: |
|
912 | 903 | self.persist = pickle.load(file(self.persist_fname)) |
|
913 | 904 | except: |
|
914 | 905 | self.persist = {} |
|
915 | 906 | |
|
916 | 907 | def init_auto_alias(self): |
|
917 | 908 | """Define some aliases automatically. |
|
918 | 909 | |
|
919 | 910 | These are ALL parameter-less aliases""" |
|
920 | 911 | for alias,cmd in self.auto_alias: |
|
921 | 912 | self.alias_table[alias] = (0,cmd) |
|
922 | 913 | |
|
923 | 914 | def alias_table_validate(self,verbose=0): |
|
924 | 915 | """Update information about the alias table. |
|
925 | 916 | |
|
926 | 917 | In particular, make sure no Python keywords/builtins are in it.""" |
|
927 | 918 | |
|
928 | 919 | no_alias = self.no_alias |
|
929 | 920 | for k in self.alias_table.keys(): |
|
930 | 921 | if k in no_alias: |
|
931 | 922 | del self.alias_table[k] |
|
932 | 923 | if verbose: |
|
933 | 924 | print ("Deleting alias <%s>, it's a Python " |
|
934 | 925 | "keyword or builtin." % k) |
|
935 | 926 | |
|
936 | 927 | def set_autoindent(self,value=None): |
|
937 | 928 | """Set the autoindent flag, checking for readline support. |
|
938 | 929 | |
|
939 | 930 | If called with no arguments, it acts as a toggle.""" |
|
940 | 931 | |
|
941 | 932 | if not self.has_readline: |
|
942 | 933 | if os.name == 'posix': |
|
943 | 934 | warn("The auto-indent feature requires the readline library") |
|
944 | 935 | self.autoindent = 0 |
|
945 | 936 | return |
|
946 | 937 | if value is None: |
|
947 | 938 | self.autoindent = not self.autoindent |
|
948 | 939 | else: |
|
949 | 940 | self.autoindent = value |
|
950 | 941 | |
|
951 | 942 | def rc_set_toggle(self,rc_field,value=None): |
|
952 | 943 | """Set or toggle a field in IPython's rc config. structure. |
|
953 | 944 | |
|
954 | 945 | If called with no arguments, it acts as a toggle. |
|
955 | 946 | |
|
956 | 947 | If called with a non-existent field, the resulting AttributeError |
|
957 | 948 | exception will propagate out.""" |
|
958 | 949 | |
|
959 | 950 | rc_val = getattr(self.rc,rc_field) |
|
960 | 951 | if value is None: |
|
961 | 952 | value = not rc_val |
|
962 | 953 | setattr(self.rc,rc_field,value) |
|
963 | 954 | |
|
964 | 955 | def user_setup(self,ipythondir,rc_suffix,mode='install'): |
|
965 | 956 | """Install the user configuration directory. |
|
966 | 957 | |
|
967 | 958 | Can be called when running for the first time or to upgrade the user's |
|
968 | 959 | .ipython/ directory with the mode parameter. Valid modes are 'install' |
|
969 | 960 | and 'upgrade'.""" |
|
970 | 961 | |
|
971 | 962 | def wait(): |
|
972 | 963 | try: |
|
973 | 964 | raw_input("Please press <RETURN> to start IPython.") |
|
974 | 965 | except EOFError: |
|
975 | 966 | print >> Term.cout |
|
976 | 967 | print '*'*70 |
|
977 | 968 | |
|
978 | 969 | cwd = os.getcwd() # remember where we started |
|
979 | 970 | glb = glob.glob |
|
980 | 971 | print '*'*70 |
|
981 | 972 | if mode == 'install': |
|
982 | 973 | print \ |
|
983 | 974 | """Welcome to IPython. I will try to create a personal configuration directory |
|
984 | 975 | where you can customize many aspects of IPython's functionality in:\n""" |
|
985 | 976 | else: |
|
986 | 977 | print 'I am going to upgrade your configuration in:' |
|
987 | 978 | |
|
988 | 979 | print ipythondir |
|
989 | 980 | |
|
990 | 981 | rcdirend = os.path.join('IPython','UserConfig') |
|
991 | 982 | cfg = lambda d: os.path.join(d,rcdirend) |
|
992 | 983 | try: |
|
993 | 984 | rcdir = filter(os.path.isdir,map(cfg,sys.path))[0] |
|
994 | 985 | except IOError: |
|
995 | 986 | warning = """ |
|
996 | 987 | Installation error. IPython's directory was not found. |
|
997 | 988 | |
|
998 | 989 | Check the following: |
|
999 | 990 | |
|
1000 | 991 | The ipython/IPython directory should be in a directory belonging to your |
|
1001 | 992 | PYTHONPATH environment variable (that is, it should be in a directory |
|
1002 | 993 | belonging to sys.path). You can copy it explicitly there or just link to it. |
|
1003 | 994 | |
|
1004 | 995 | IPython will proceed with builtin defaults. |
|
1005 | 996 | """ |
|
1006 | 997 | warn(warning) |
|
1007 | 998 | wait() |
|
1008 | 999 | return |
|
1009 | 1000 | |
|
1010 | 1001 | if mode == 'install': |
|
1011 | 1002 | try: |
|
1012 | 1003 | shutil.copytree(rcdir,ipythondir) |
|
1013 | 1004 | os.chdir(ipythondir) |
|
1014 | 1005 | rc_files = glb("ipythonrc*") |
|
1015 | 1006 | for rc_file in rc_files: |
|
1016 | 1007 | os.rename(rc_file,rc_file+rc_suffix) |
|
1017 | 1008 | except: |
|
1018 | 1009 | warning = """ |
|
1019 | 1010 | |
|
1020 | 1011 | There was a problem with the installation: |
|
1021 | 1012 | %s |
|
1022 | 1013 | Try to correct it or contact the developers if you think it's a bug. |
|
1023 | 1014 | IPython will proceed with builtin defaults.""" % sys.exc_info()[1] |
|
1024 | 1015 | warn(warning) |
|
1025 | 1016 | wait() |
|
1026 | 1017 | return |
|
1027 | 1018 | |
|
1028 | 1019 | elif mode == 'upgrade': |
|
1029 | 1020 | try: |
|
1030 | 1021 | os.chdir(ipythondir) |
|
1031 | 1022 | except: |
|
1032 | 1023 | print """ |
|
1033 | 1024 | Can not upgrade: changing to directory %s failed. Details: |
|
1034 | 1025 | %s |
|
1035 | 1026 | """ % (ipythondir,sys.exc_info()[1]) |
|
1036 | 1027 | wait() |
|
1037 | 1028 | return |
|
1038 | 1029 | else: |
|
1039 | 1030 | sources = glb(os.path.join(rcdir,'[A-Za-z]*')) |
|
1040 | 1031 | for new_full_path in sources: |
|
1041 | 1032 | new_filename = os.path.basename(new_full_path) |
|
1042 | 1033 | if new_filename.startswith('ipythonrc'): |
|
1043 | 1034 | new_filename = new_filename + rc_suffix |
|
1044 | 1035 | # The config directory should only contain files, skip any |
|
1045 | 1036 | # directories which may be there (like CVS) |
|
1046 | 1037 | if os.path.isdir(new_full_path): |
|
1047 | 1038 | continue |
|
1048 | 1039 | if os.path.exists(new_filename): |
|
1049 | 1040 | old_file = new_filename+'.old' |
|
1050 | 1041 | if os.path.exists(old_file): |
|
1051 | 1042 | os.remove(old_file) |
|
1052 | 1043 | os.rename(new_filename,old_file) |
|
1053 | 1044 | shutil.copy(new_full_path,new_filename) |
|
1054 | 1045 | else: |
|
1055 | 1046 | raise ValueError,'unrecognized mode for install:',`mode` |
|
1056 | 1047 | |
|
1057 | 1048 | # Fix line-endings to those native to each platform in the config |
|
1058 | 1049 | # directory. |
|
1059 | 1050 | try: |
|
1060 | 1051 | os.chdir(ipythondir) |
|
1061 | 1052 | except: |
|
1062 | 1053 | print """ |
|
1063 | 1054 | Problem: changing to directory %s failed. |
|
1064 | 1055 | Details: |
|
1065 | 1056 | %s |
|
1066 | 1057 | |
|
1067 | 1058 | Some configuration files may have incorrect line endings. This should not |
|
1068 | 1059 | cause any problems during execution. """ % (ipythondir,sys.exc_info()[1]) |
|
1069 | 1060 | wait() |
|
1070 | 1061 | else: |
|
1071 | 1062 | for fname in glb('ipythonrc*'): |
|
1072 | 1063 | try: |
|
1073 | 1064 | native_line_ends(fname,backup=0) |
|
1074 | 1065 | except IOError: |
|
1075 | 1066 | pass |
|
1076 | 1067 | |
|
1077 | 1068 | if mode == 'install': |
|
1078 | 1069 | print """ |
|
1079 | 1070 | Successful installation! |
|
1080 | 1071 | |
|
1081 | 1072 | Please read the sections 'Initial Configuration' and 'Quick Tips' in the |
|
1082 | 1073 | IPython manual (there are both HTML and PDF versions supplied with the |
|
1083 | 1074 | distribution) to make sure that your system environment is properly configured |
|
1084 | 1075 | to take advantage of IPython's features.""" |
|
1085 | 1076 | else: |
|
1086 | 1077 | print """ |
|
1087 | 1078 | Successful upgrade! |
|
1088 | 1079 | |
|
1089 | 1080 | All files in your directory: |
|
1090 | 1081 | %(ipythondir)s |
|
1091 | 1082 | which would have been overwritten by the upgrade were backed up with a .old |
|
1092 | 1083 | extension. If you had made particular customizations in those files you may |
|
1093 | 1084 | want to merge them back into the new files.""" % locals() |
|
1094 | 1085 | wait() |
|
1095 | 1086 | os.chdir(cwd) |
|
1096 | 1087 | # end user_setup() |
|
1097 | 1088 | |
|
1098 | 1089 | def atexit_operations(self): |
|
1099 | 1090 | """This will be executed at the time of exit. |
|
1100 | 1091 | |
|
1101 | 1092 | Saving of persistent data should be performed here. """ |
|
1102 | 1093 | |
|
1103 | 1094 | # input history |
|
1104 | 1095 | self.savehist() |
|
1105 | 1096 | |
|
1106 | 1097 | # Cleanup all tempfiles left around |
|
1107 | 1098 | for tfile in self.tempfiles: |
|
1108 | 1099 | try: |
|
1109 | 1100 | os.unlink(tfile) |
|
1110 | 1101 | except OSError: |
|
1111 | 1102 | pass |
|
1112 | 1103 | |
|
1113 | 1104 | # save the "persistent data" catch-all dictionary |
|
1114 | 1105 | try: |
|
1115 | 1106 | pickle.dump(self.persist, open(self.persist_fname,"w")) |
|
1116 | 1107 | except: |
|
1117 | 1108 | print "*** ERROR *** persistent data saving failed." |
|
1118 | 1109 | |
|
1119 | 1110 | def savehist(self): |
|
1120 | 1111 | """Save input history to a file (via readline library).""" |
|
1121 | 1112 | try: |
|
1122 | 1113 | self.readline.write_history_file(self.histfile) |
|
1123 | 1114 | except: |
|
1124 | 1115 | print 'Unable to save IPython command history to file: ' + \ |
|
1125 | 1116 | `self.histfile` |
|
1126 | 1117 | |
|
1127 | 1118 | def pre_readline(self): |
|
1128 | 1119 | """readline hook to be used at the start of each line. |
|
1129 | 1120 | |
|
1130 | 1121 | Currently it handles auto-indent only.""" |
|
1131 | 1122 | |
|
1132 | 1123 | self.readline.insert_text(' '* self.readline_indent) |
|
1133 | 1124 | |
|
1134 | 1125 | def init_readline(self): |
|
1135 | 1126 | """Command history completion/saving/reloading.""" |
|
1136 | 1127 | try: |
|
1137 | 1128 | import readline |
|
1138 | 1129 | self.Completer = MagicCompleter(self, |
|
1139 | 1130 | self.user_ns, |
|
1140 | 1131 | self.rc.readline_omit__names, |
|
1141 | 1132 | self.alias_table) |
|
1142 | 1133 | except ImportError,NameError: |
|
1143 | 1134 | # If FlexCompleter failed to import, MagicCompleter won't be |
|
1144 | 1135 | # defined. This can happen because of a problem with readline |
|
1145 | 1136 | self.has_readline = 0 |
|
1146 | 1137 | # no point in bugging windows users with this every time: |
|
1147 | 1138 | if os.name == 'posix': |
|
1148 | 1139 | warn('Readline services not available on this platform.') |
|
1149 | 1140 | else: |
|
1150 | 1141 | import atexit |
|
1151 | 1142 | |
|
1152 | 1143 | # Platform-specific configuration |
|
1153 | 1144 | if os.name == 'nt': |
|
1154 | 1145 | # readline under Windows modifies the default exit behavior |
|
1155 | 1146 | # from being Ctrl-Z/Return to the Unix Ctrl-D one. |
|
1156 | 1147 | __builtin__.exit = __builtin__.quit = \ |
|
1157 | 1148 | ('Use Ctrl-D (i.e. EOF) to exit. ' |
|
1158 | 1149 | 'Use %Exit or %Quit to exit without confirmation.') |
|
1159 | 1150 | self.readline_startup_hook = readline.set_pre_input_hook |
|
1160 | 1151 | else: |
|
1161 | 1152 | self.readline_startup_hook = readline.set_startup_hook |
|
1162 | 1153 | |
|
1163 | 1154 | # Load user's initrc file (readline config) |
|
1164 | 1155 | inputrc_name = os.environ.get('INPUTRC') |
|
1165 | 1156 | if inputrc_name is None: |
|
1166 | 1157 | home_dir = get_home_dir() |
|
1167 | 1158 | if home_dir is not None: |
|
1168 | 1159 | inputrc_name = os.path.join(home_dir,'.inputrc') |
|
1169 | 1160 | if os.path.isfile(inputrc_name): |
|
1170 | 1161 | try: |
|
1171 | 1162 | readline.read_init_file(inputrc_name) |
|
1172 | 1163 | except: |
|
1173 | 1164 | warn('Problems reading readline initialization file <%s>' |
|
1174 | 1165 | % inputrc_name) |
|
1175 | 1166 | |
|
1176 | 1167 | self.has_readline = 1 |
|
1177 | 1168 | self.readline = readline |
|
1178 | 1169 | self.readline_indent = 0 # for auto-indenting via readline |
|
1179 | 1170 | # save this in sys so embedded copies can restore it properly |
|
1180 | 1171 | sys.ipcompleter = self.Completer.complete |
|
1181 | 1172 | readline.set_completer(self.Completer.complete) |
|
1182 | 1173 | |
|
1183 | 1174 | # Configure readline according to user's prefs |
|
1184 | 1175 | for rlcommand in self.rc.readline_parse_and_bind: |
|
1185 | 1176 | readline.parse_and_bind(rlcommand) |
|
1186 | 1177 | |
|
1187 | 1178 | # remove some chars from the delimiters list |
|
1188 | 1179 | delims = readline.get_completer_delims() |
|
1189 | 1180 | delims = delims.translate(string._idmap, |
|
1190 | 1181 | self.rc.readline_remove_delims) |
|
1191 | 1182 | readline.set_completer_delims(delims) |
|
1192 | 1183 | # otherwise we end up with a monster history after a while: |
|
1193 | 1184 | readline.set_history_length(1000) |
|
1194 | 1185 | try: |
|
1195 | 1186 | #print '*** Reading readline history' # dbg |
|
1196 | 1187 | readline.read_history_file(self.histfile) |
|
1197 | 1188 | except IOError: |
|
1198 | 1189 | pass # It doesn't exist yet. |
|
1199 | 1190 | |
|
1200 | 1191 | atexit.register(self.atexit_operations) |
|
1201 | 1192 | del atexit |
|
1202 | 1193 | |
|
1203 | 1194 | # Configure auto-indent for all platforms |
|
1204 | 1195 | self.set_autoindent(self.rc.autoindent) |
|
1205 | 1196 | |
|
1206 | 1197 | def showsyntaxerror(self, filename=None): |
|
1207 | 1198 | """Display the syntax error that just occurred. |
|
1208 | 1199 | |
|
1209 | 1200 | This doesn't display a stack trace because there isn't one. |
|
1210 | 1201 | |
|
1211 | 1202 | If a filename is given, it is stuffed in the exception instead |
|
1212 | 1203 | of what was there before (because Python's parser always uses |
|
1213 | 1204 | "<string>" when reading from a string). |
|
1214 | 1205 | """ |
|
1215 | 1206 | type, value, sys.last_traceback = sys.exc_info() |
|
1216 | 1207 | sys.last_type = type |
|
1217 | 1208 | sys.last_value = value |
|
1218 | 1209 | if filename and type is SyntaxError: |
|
1219 | 1210 | # Work hard to stuff the correct filename in the exception |
|
1220 | 1211 | try: |
|
1221 | 1212 | msg, (dummy_filename, lineno, offset, line) = value |
|
1222 | 1213 | except: |
|
1223 | 1214 | # Not the format we expect; leave it alone |
|
1224 | 1215 | pass |
|
1225 | 1216 | else: |
|
1226 | 1217 | # Stuff in the right filename |
|
1227 | 1218 | try: |
|
1228 | 1219 | # Assume SyntaxError is a class exception |
|
1229 | 1220 | value = SyntaxError(msg, (filename, lineno, offset, line)) |
|
1230 | 1221 | except: |
|
1231 | 1222 | # If that failed, assume SyntaxError is a string |
|
1232 | 1223 | value = msg, (filename, lineno, offset, line) |
|
1233 | 1224 | self.SyntaxTB(type,value,[]) |
|
1234 | 1225 | |
|
1235 | 1226 | def debugger(self): |
|
1236 | 1227 | """Call the pdb debugger.""" |
|
1237 | 1228 | |
|
1238 | 1229 | if not self.rc.pdb: |
|
1239 | 1230 | return |
|
1240 | 1231 | pdb.pm() |
|
1241 | 1232 | |
|
1242 | 1233 | def showtraceback(self,exc_tuple = None): |
|
1243 | 1234 | """Display the exception that just occurred.""" |
|
1244 | 1235 | |
|
1245 | 1236 | # Though this won't be called by syntax errors in the input line, |
|
1246 | 1237 | # there may be SyntaxError cases whith imported code. |
|
1247 | 1238 | if exc_tuple is None: |
|
1248 | 1239 | type, value, tb = sys.exc_info() |
|
1249 | 1240 | else: |
|
1250 | 1241 | type, value, tb = exc_tuple |
|
1251 | 1242 | if type is SyntaxError: |
|
1252 | 1243 | self.showsyntaxerror() |
|
1253 | 1244 | else: |
|
1254 | 1245 | sys.last_type = type |
|
1255 | 1246 | sys.last_value = value |
|
1256 | 1247 | sys.last_traceback = tb |
|
1257 | 1248 | self.InteractiveTB() |
|
1258 | 1249 | if self.InteractiveTB.call_pdb and self.has_readline: |
|
1259 | 1250 | # pdb mucks up readline, fix it back |
|
1260 | 1251 | self.readline.set_completer(self.Completer.complete) |
|
1261 | 1252 | |
|
1262 | 1253 | def update_cache(self, line): |
|
1263 | 1254 | """puts line into cache""" |
|
1264 | 1255 | self.inputcache.insert(0, line) # This copies the cache every time ... :-( |
|
1265 | 1256 | if len(self.inputcache) >= self.CACHELENGTH: |
|
1266 | 1257 | self.inputcache.pop() # This not :-) |
|
1267 | 1258 | |
|
1268 | 1259 | def name_space_init(self): |
|
1269 | 1260 | """Create local namespace.""" |
|
1270 | 1261 | # We want this to be a method to facilitate embedded initialization. |
|
1271 | 1262 | code.InteractiveConsole.__init__(self,self.user_ns) |
|
1272 | 1263 | |
|
1273 | 1264 | def mainloop(self,banner=None): |
|
1274 | 1265 | """Creates the local namespace and starts the mainloop. |
|
1275 | 1266 | |
|
1276 | 1267 | If an optional banner argument is given, it will override the |
|
1277 | 1268 | internally created default banner.""" |
|
1278 | 1269 | |
|
1279 | 1270 | self.name_space_init() |
|
1280 | 1271 | if self.rc.c: # Emulate Python's -c option |
|
1281 | 1272 | self.exec_init_cmd() |
|
1282 | 1273 | if banner is None: |
|
1283 | 1274 | if self.rc.banner: |
|
1284 | 1275 | banner = self.BANNER+self.banner2 |
|
1285 | 1276 | else: |
|
1286 | 1277 | banner = '' |
|
1287 | 1278 | self.interact(banner) |
|
1288 | 1279 | |
|
1289 | 1280 | def exec_init_cmd(self): |
|
1290 | 1281 | """Execute a command given at the command line. |
|
1291 | 1282 | |
|
1292 | 1283 | This emulates Python's -c option.""" |
|
1293 | 1284 | |
|
1294 | 1285 | sys.argv = ['-c'] |
|
1295 | 1286 | self.push(self.rc.c) |
|
1296 | 1287 | |
|
1297 | 1288 | def embed_mainloop(self,header='',local_ns=None,global_ns=None,stack_depth=0): |
|
1298 | 1289 | """Embeds IPython into a running python program. |
|
1299 | 1290 | |
|
1300 | 1291 | Input: |
|
1301 | 1292 | |
|
1302 | 1293 | - header: An optional header message can be specified. |
|
1303 | 1294 | |
|
1304 | 1295 | - local_ns, global_ns: working namespaces. If given as None, the |
|
1305 | 1296 | IPython-initialized one is updated with __main__.__dict__, so that |
|
1306 | 1297 | program variables become visible but user-specific configuration |
|
1307 | 1298 | remains possible. |
|
1308 | 1299 | |
|
1309 | 1300 | - stack_depth: specifies how many levels in the stack to go to |
|
1310 | 1301 | looking for namespaces (when local_ns and global_ns are None). This |
|
1311 | 1302 | allows an intermediate caller to make sure that this function gets |
|
1312 | 1303 | the namespace from the intended level in the stack. By default (0) |
|
1313 | 1304 | it will get its locals and globals from the immediate caller. |
|
1314 | 1305 | |
|
1315 | 1306 | Warning: it's possible to use this in a program which is being run by |
|
1316 | 1307 | IPython itself (via %run), but some funny things will happen (a few |
|
1317 | 1308 | globals get overwritten). In the future this will be cleaned up, as |
|
1318 | 1309 | there is no fundamental reason why it can't work perfectly.""" |
|
1319 | 1310 | |
|
1320 | 1311 | # Patch for global embedding to make sure that things don't overwrite |
|
1321 | 1312 | # user globals accidentally. Thanks to Richard <rxe@renre-europe.com> |
|
1322 | 1313 | # FIXME. Test this a bit more carefully (the if.. is new) |
|
1323 | 1314 | if local_ns is None and global_ns is None: |
|
1324 | 1315 | self.user_ns.update(__main__.__dict__) |
|
1325 | 1316 | |
|
1326 | 1317 | # Get locals and globals from caller |
|
1327 | 1318 | if local_ns is None or global_ns is None: |
|
1328 | 1319 | call_frame = sys._getframe(stack_depth).f_back |
|
1329 | 1320 | |
|
1330 | 1321 | if local_ns is None: |
|
1331 | 1322 | local_ns = call_frame.f_locals |
|
1332 | 1323 | if global_ns is None: |
|
1333 | 1324 | global_ns = call_frame.f_globals |
|
1334 | 1325 | |
|
1335 | 1326 | # Update namespaces and fire up interpreter |
|
1336 | 1327 | self.user_ns.update(local_ns) |
|
1337 | 1328 | self.interact(header) |
|
1338 | 1329 | |
|
1339 | 1330 | # Remove locals from namespace |
|
1340 |
for k in local_ns |
|
|
1331 | for k in local_ns: | |
|
1341 | 1332 | del self.user_ns[k] |
|
1342 | 1333 | |
|
1343 | 1334 | def interact(self, banner=None): |
|
1344 | 1335 | """Closely emulate the interactive Python console. |
|
1345 | 1336 | |
|
1346 | 1337 | The optional banner argument specify the banner to print |
|
1347 | 1338 | before the first interaction; by default it prints a banner |
|
1348 | 1339 | similar to the one printed by the real Python interpreter, |
|
1349 | 1340 | followed by the current class name in parentheses (so as not |
|
1350 | 1341 | to confuse this with the real interpreter -- since it's so |
|
1351 | 1342 | close!). |
|
1352 | 1343 | |
|
1353 | 1344 | """ |
|
1354 | 1345 | cprt = 'Type "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.' |
|
1355 | 1346 | if banner is None: |
|
1356 | 1347 | self.write("Python %s on %s\n%s\n(%s)\n" % |
|
1357 | 1348 | (sys.version, sys.platform, cprt, |
|
1358 | 1349 | self.__class__.__name__)) |
|
1359 | 1350 | else: |
|
1360 | 1351 | self.write(banner) |
|
1361 | 1352 | |
|
1362 | 1353 | more = 0 |
|
1363 | 1354 | |
|
1364 | 1355 | # Mark activity in the builtins |
|
1365 | 1356 | __builtin__.__dict__['__IPYTHON__active'] += 1 |
|
1366 | while 1: | |
|
1367 |
|
|
|
1368 |
|
|
|
1369 | break | |
|
1357 | ||
|
1358 | # exit_now is set by a call to %Exit or %Quit | |
|
1359 | while not self.exit_now: | |
|
1370 | 1360 | try: |
|
1371 | 1361 | if more: |
|
1372 | 1362 | prompt = self.outputcache.prompt2 |
|
1373 | 1363 | if self.autoindent: |
|
1374 | 1364 | self.readline_startup_hook(self.pre_readline) |
|
1375 | 1365 | else: |
|
1376 | 1366 | prompt = self.outputcache.prompt1 |
|
1377 | 1367 | try: |
|
1378 | 1368 | line = self.raw_input(prompt) |
|
1379 | 1369 | if self.autoindent: |
|
1380 | 1370 | self.readline_startup_hook(None) |
|
1381 | 1371 | except EOFError: |
|
1382 | 1372 | if self.autoindent: |
|
1383 | 1373 | self.readline_startup_hook(None) |
|
1384 | 1374 | self.write("\n") |
|
1385 | 1375 | if self.rc.confirm_exit: |
|
1386 | 1376 | if ask_yes_no('Do you really want to exit ([y]/n)?','y'): |
|
1387 | 1377 | break |
|
1388 | 1378 | else: |
|
1389 | 1379 | break |
|
1390 | 1380 | else: |
|
1391 | 1381 | more = self.push(line) |
|
1392 | 1382 | # Auto-indent management |
|
1393 | 1383 | if self.autoindent: |
|
1394 | 1384 | if line: |
|
1395 | 1385 | ini_spaces = re.match('^(\s+)',line) |
|
1396 | 1386 | if ini_spaces: |
|
1397 | 1387 | nspaces = ini_spaces.end() |
|
1398 | 1388 | else: |
|
1399 | 1389 | nspaces = 0 |
|
1400 | 1390 | self.readline_indent = nspaces |
|
1401 | 1391 | |
|
1402 | 1392 | if line[-1] == ':': |
|
1403 | 1393 | self.readline_indent += 4 |
|
1404 | 1394 | elif re.match(r'^\s+raise|^\s+return',line): |
|
1405 | 1395 | self.readline_indent -= 4 |
|
1406 | 1396 | else: |
|
1407 | 1397 | self.readline_indent = 0 |
|
1408 | 1398 | |
|
1409 | 1399 | except KeyboardInterrupt: |
|
1410 | 1400 | self.write("\nKeyboardInterrupt\n") |
|
1411 | 1401 | self.resetbuffer() |
|
1412 | 1402 | more = 0 |
|
1413 | 1403 | # keep cache in sync with the prompt counter: |
|
1414 | 1404 | self.outputcache.prompt_count -= 1 |
|
1415 | 1405 | |
|
1416 | 1406 | if self.autoindent: |
|
1417 | 1407 | self.readline_indent = 0 |
|
1418 | 1408 | |
|
1419 | 1409 | except bdb.BdbQuit: |
|
1420 | 1410 | warn("The Python debugger has exited with a BdbQuit exception.\n" |
|
1421 | 1411 | "Because of how pdb handles the stack, it is impossible\n" |
|
1422 | 1412 | "for IPython to properly format this particular exception.\n" |
|
1423 | 1413 | "IPython will resume normal operation.") |
|
1424 |
|
|
|
1425 | # We should never get here except in fairly bizarre situations | |
|
1426 | # (or b/c of an IPython bug). One reasonable exception is if | |
|
1427 | # the user sets stdin/out/err to a broken object (or closes | |
|
1428 | # any of them!) | |
|
1429 | ||
|
1430 | fixed_in_out_err = 0 | |
|
1431 | ||
|
1432 | # Call the Term I/O class and have it reopen any stream which | |
|
1433 | # the user might have closed. | |
|
1434 | Term.reopen_all() | |
|
1435 | ||
|
1436 | # Do the same manually for sys.stderr/out/in | |
|
1437 | ||
|
1438 | # err first, so we can print at least warnings | |
|
1439 | if sys.__stderr__.closed: | |
|
1440 | sys.__stderr__ = os.fdopen(os.dup(2),'w',0) | |
|
1441 | fixed_err_err = 1 | |
|
1442 | print >> sys.__stderr__,""" | |
|
1443 | WARNING: | |
|
1444 | sys.__stderr__ was closed! | |
|
1445 | I've tried to reopen it, but bear in mind that things may not work normally | |
|
1446 | from now. In particular, readline support may have broken. | |
|
1447 | """ | |
|
1448 | # Next, check stdin/out | |
|
1449 | if sys.__stdin__.closed: | |
|
1450 | sys.__stdin__ = os.fdopen(os.dup(0),'r',0) | |
|
1451 | fixed_in_out_err = 1 | |
|
1452 | print >> sys.__stderr__,""" | |
|
1453 | WARNING: | |
|
1454 | sys.__stdin__ was closed! | |
|
1455 | I've tried to reopen it, but bear in mind that things may not work normally | |
|
1456 | from now. In particular, readline support may have broken. | |
|
1457 | """ | |
|
1458 | if sys.__stdout__.closed: | |
|
1459 | sys.__stdout__ = os.fdopen(os.dup(1),'w',0) | |
|
1460 | fixed_in_out_err = 1 | |
|
1461 | print >> sys.__stderr__,""" | |
|
1462 | WARNING: | |
|
1463 | sys.__stdout__ was closed! | |
|
1464 | I've tried to reopen it, but bear in mind that things may not work normally | |
|
1465 | from now. In particular, readline support may have broken. | |
|
1466 | """ | |
|
1467 | ||
|
1468 | # Now, check mismatch of objects | |
|
1469 | if sys.stdin is not sys.__stdin__: | |
|
1470 | sys.stdin = sys.__stdin__ | |
|
1471 | fixed_in_out_err = 1 | |
|
1472 | print >> sys.__stderr__,""" | |
|
1473 | WARNING: | |
|
1474 | sys.stdin has been reset to sys.__stdin__. | |
|
1475 | There seemed to be a problem with your sys.stdin. | |
|
1476 | """ | |
|
1477 | if sys.stdout is not sys.__stdout__: | |
|
1478 | sys.stdout = sys.__stdout__ | |
|
1479 | fixed_in_out_err = 1 | |
|
1480 | print >> sys.__stderr__,""" | |
|
1481 | WARNING: | |
|
1482 | sys.stdout has been reset to sys.__stdout__. | |
|
1483 | There seemed to be a problem with your sys.stdout. | |
|
1484 | """ | |
|
1485 | ||
|
1486 | if sys.stderr is not sys.__stderr__: | |
|
1487 | sys.stderr = sys.__stderr__ | |
|
1488 | fixed_in_out_err = 1 | |
|
1489 | print >> sys.__stderr__,""" | |
|
1490 | WARNING: | |
|
1491 | sys.stderr has been reset to sys.__stderr__. | |
|
1492 | There seemed to be a problem with your sys.stderr. | |
|
1493 | """ | |
|
1494 | # If the problem wasn't a broken out/err, it's an IPython bug | |
|
1495 | # I wish we could ask the user whether to crash or not, but | |
|
1496 | # calling any function at this point messes up the stack. | |
|
1497 | if not fixed_in_out_err: | |
|
1498 | raise | |
|
1499 | ||
|
1414 | ||
|
1500 | 1415 | # We are off again... |
|
1501 | 1416 | __builtin__.__dict__['__IPYTHON__active'] -= 1 |
|
1502 | 1417 | |
|
1503 | 1418 | def excepthook(self, type, value, tb): |
|
1504 | 1419 | """One more defense for GUI apps that call sys.excepthook. |
|
1505 | 1420 | |
|
1506 | 1421 | GUI frameworks like wxPython trap exceptions and call |
|
1507 | 1422 | sys.excepthook themselves. I guess this is a feature that |
|
1508 | 1423 | enables them to keep running after exceptions that would |
|
1509 | 1424 | otherwise kill their mainloop. This is a bother for IPython |
|
1510 | 1425 | which excepts to catch all of the program exceptions with a try: |
|
1511 | 1426 | except: statement. |
|
1512 | 1427 | |
|
1513 | 1428 | Normally, IPython sets sys.excepthook to a CrashHandler instance, so if |
|
1514 | 1429 | any app directly invokes sys.excepthook, it will look to the user like |
|
1515 | 1430 | IPython crashed. In order to work around this, we can disable the |
|
1516 | 1431 | CrashHandler and replace it with this excepthook instead, which prints a |
|
1517 | 1432 | regular traceback using our InteractiveTB. In this fashion, apps which |
|
1518 | 1433 | call sys.excepthook will generate a regular-looking exception from |
|
1519 | 1434 | IPython, and the CrashHandler will only be triggered by real IPython |
|
1520 | 1435 | crashes. |
|
1521 | 1436 | |
|
1522 | 1437 | This hook should be used sparingly, only in places which are not likely |
|
1523 | 1438 | to be true IPython errors. |
|
1524 | 1439 | """ |
|
1525 | 1440 | |
|
1526 | 1441 | self.InteractiveTB(type, value, tb, tb_offset=0) |
|
1527 | 1442 | if self.InteractiveTB.call_pdb and self.has_readline: |
|
1528 | 1443 | self.readline.set_completer(self.Completer.complete) |
|
1529 | 1444 | |
|
1530 | 1445 | def call_alias(self,alias,rest=''): |
|
1531 | 1446 | """Call an alias given its name and the rest of the line. |
|
1532 | 1447 | |
|
1533 | 1448 | This function MUST be given a proper alias, because it doesn't make |
|
1534 | 1449 | any checks when looking up into the alias table. The caller is |
|
1535 | 1450 | responsible for invoking it only with a valid alias.""" |
|
1536 | 1451 | |
|
1537 | 1452 | #print 'ALIAS: <%s>+<%s>' % (alias,rest) # dbg |
|
1538 | 1453 | nargs,cmd = self.alias_table[alias] |
|
1539 | 1454 | # Expand the %l special to be the user's input line |
|
1540 | 1455 | if cmd.find('%l') >= 0: |
|
1541 | 1456 | cmd = cmd.replace('%l',rest) |
|
1542 | 1457 | rest = '' |
|
1543 | 1458 | if nargs==0: |
|
1544 | 1459 | # Simple, argument-less aliases |
|
1545 | 1460 | cmd = '%s %s' % (cmd,rest) |
|
1546 | 1461 | else: |
|
1547 | 1462 | # Handle aliases with positional arguments |
|
1548 | 1463 | args = rest.split(None,nargs) |
|
1549 | 1464 | if len(args)< nargs: |
|
1550 | 1465 | error('Alias <%s> requires %s arguments, %s given.' % |
|
1551 | 1466 | (alias,nargs,len(args))) |
|
1552 | 1467 | return |
|
1553 | 1468 | cmd = '%s %s' % (cmd % tuple(args[:nargs]),' '.join(args[nargs:])) |
|
1554 | 1469 | # Now call the macro, evaluating in the user's namespace |
|
1555 | 1470 | try: |
|
1556 | 1471 | self.system(cmd) |
|
1557 | 1472 | except: |
|
1558 | 1473 | self.showtraceback() |
|
1559 | 1474 | |
|
1560 | 1475 | def runlines(self,lines): |
|
1561 | 1476 | """Run a string of one or more lines of source. |
|
1562 | 1477 | |
|
1563 | 1478 | This method is capable of running a string containing multiple source |
|
1564 | 1479 | lines, as if they had been entered at the IPython prompt. Since it |
|
1565 | 1480 | exposes IPython's processing machinery, the given strings can contain |
|
1566 | 1481 | magic calls (%magic), special shell access (!cmd), etc.""" |
|
1567 | 1482 | |
|
1568 | 1483 | # We must start with a clean buffer, in case this is run from an |
|
1569 | 1484 | # interactive IPython session (via a magic, for example). |
|
1570 | 1485 | self.resetbuffer() |
|
1571 | 1486 | lines = lines.split('\n') |
|
1572 | 1487 | more = 0 |
|
1573 | 1488 | for line in lines: |
|
1574 | 1489 | # skip blank lines so we don't mess up the prompt counter, but do |
|
1575 | 1490 | # NOT skip even a blank line if we are in a code block (more is |
|
1576 | 1491 | # true) |
|
1577 | 1492 | if line or more: |
|
1578 | 1493 | more = self.push((self.prefilter(line,more))) |
|
1579 | 1494 | # IPython's runsource returns None if there was an error |
|
1580 | 1495 | # compiling the code. This allows us to stop processing right |
|
1581 | 1496 | # away, so the user gets the error message at the right place. |
|
1582 | 1497 | if more is None: |
|
1583 | 1498 | break |
|
1584 | 1499 | # final newline in case the input didn't have it, so that the code |
|
1585 | 1500 | # actually does get executed |
|
1586 | 1501 | if more: |
|
1587 | 1502 | self.push('\n') |
|
1588 | 1503 | |
|
1589 | 1504 | def runsource(self, source, filename="<input>", symbol="single"): |
|
1590 | 1505 | """Compile and run some source in the interpreter. |
|
1591 | 1506 | |
|
1592 | 1507 | Arguments are as for compile_command(). |
|
1593 | 1508 | |
|
1594 | 1509 | One several things can happen: |
|
1595 | 1510 | |
|
1596 | 1511 | 1) The input is incorrect; compile_command() raised an |
|
1597 | 1512 | exception (SyntaxError or OverflowError). A syntax traceback |
|
1598 | 1513 | will be printed by calling the showsyntaxerror() method. |
|
1599 | 1514 | |
|
1600 | 1515 | 2) The input is incomplete, and more input is required; |
|
1601 | 1516 | compile_command() returned None. Nothing happens. |
|
1602 | 1517 | |
|
1603 | 1518 | 3) The input is complete; compile_command() returned a code |
|
1604 | 1519 | object. The code is executed by calling self.runcode() (which |
|
1605 | 1520 | also handles run-time exceptions, except for SystemExit). |
|
1606 | 1521 | |
|
1607 | 1522 | The return value is: |
|
1608 | 1523 | |
|
1609 | 1524 | - True in case 2 |
|
1610 | 1525 | |
|
1611 | 1526 | - False in the other cases, unless an exception is raised, where |
|
1612 | 1527 | None is returned instead. This can be used by external callers to |
|
1613 | 1528 | know whether to continue feeding input or not. |
|
1614 | 1529 | |
|
1615 | 1530 | The return value can be used to decide whether to use sys.ps1 or |
|
1616 | 1531 | sys.ps2 to prompt the next line.""" |
|
1617 | 1532 | try: |
|
1618 | 1533 | code = self.compile(source, filename, symbol) |
|
1619 | 1534 | except (OverflowError, SyntaxError, ValueError): |
|
1620 | 1535 | # Case 1 |
|
1621 | 1536 | self.showsyntaxerror(filename) |
|
1622 | 1537 | return None |
|
1623 | 1538 | |
|
1624 | 1539 | if code is None: |
|
1625 | 1540 | # Case 2 |
|
1626 | 1541 | return True |
|
1627 | 1542 | |
|
1628 | 1543 | # Case 3 |
|
1629 | 1544 | # We store the code source and object so that threaded shells and |
|
1630 | 1545 | # custom exception handlers can access all this info if needed. |
|
1631 | 1546 | self.code_to_run_src = source |
|
1632 | 1547 | self.code_to_run = code |
|
1633 | 1548 | # now actually execute the code object |
|
1634 | 1549 | if self.runcode(code) == 0: |
|
1635 | 1550 | return False |
|
1636 | 1551 | else: |
|
1637 | 1552 | return None |
|
1638 | 1553 | |
|
1639 | 1554 | def runcode(self,code_obj): |
|
1640 | 1555 | """Execute a code object. |
|
1641 | 1556 | |
|
1642 | 1557 | When an exception occurs, self.showtraceback() is called to display a |
|
1643 | 1558 | traceback. |
|
1644 | 1559 | |
|
1645 | 1560 | Return value: a flag indicating whether the code to be run completed |
|
1646 | 1561 | successfully: |
|
1647 | 1562 | |
|
1648 | 1563 | - 0: successful execution. |
|
1649 | 1564 | - 1: an error occurred. |
|
1650 | 1565 | """ |
|
1651 | 1566 | |
|
1652 | 1567 | # Set our own excepthook in case the user code tries to call it |
|
1653 | 1568 | # directly, so that the IPython crash handler doesn't get triggered |
|
1654 | 1569 | old_excepthook,sys.excepthook = sys.excepthook, self.excepthook |
|
1655 | 1570 | outflag = 1 # happens in more places, so it's easier as default |
|
1656 | 1571 | try: |
|
1657 | 1572 | try: |
|
1658 | 1573 | exec code_obj in self.locals |
|
1659 | 1574 | finally: |
|
1660 | 1575 | # Reset our crash handler in place |
|
1661 | 1576 | sys.excepthook = old_excepthook |
|
1662 | 1577 | except SystemExit: |
|
1663 | 1578 | self.resetbuffer() |
|
1664 | 1579 | self.showtraceback() |
|
1665 | 1580 | warn( __builtin__.exit,level=1) |
|
1666 | 1581 | except self.custom_exceptions: |
|
1667 | 1582 | etype,value,tb = sys.exc_info() |
|
1668 | 1583 | self.CustomTB(etype,value,tb) |
|
1669 | 1584 | except: |
|
1670 | 1585 | self.showtraceback() |
|
1671 | 1586 | else: |
|
1672 | 1587 | outflag = 0 |
|
1673 | 1588 | if code.softspace(sys.stdout, 0): |
|
1674 | 1589 | |
|
1675 | 1590 | # Flush out code object which has been run (and source) |
|
1676 | 1591 | self.code_to_run = None |
|
1677 | 1592 | self.code_to_run_src = '' |
|
1678 | 1593 | return outflag |
|
1679 | 1594 | |
|
1680 | 1595 | def raw_input(self, prompt=""): |
|
1681 | 1596 | """Write a prompt and read a line. |
|
1682 | 1597 | |
|
1683 | 1598 | The returned line does not include the trailing newline. |
|
1684 | 1599 | When the user enters the EOF key sequence, EOFError is raised. |
|
1685 | 1600 | |
|
1686 | 1601 | The base implementation uses the built-in function |
|
1687 | 1602 | raw_input(); a subclass may replace this with a different |
|
1688 | 1603 | implementation. |
|
1689 | 1604 | """ |
|
1690 | 1605 | return self.prefilter(raw_input_original(prompt), |
|
1691 | 1606 | prompt==self.outputcache.prompt2) |
|
1692 | 1607 | |
|
1693 | 1608 | def split_user_input(self,line): |
|
1694 | 1609 | """Split user input into pre-char, function part and rest.""" |
|
1695 | 1610 | |
|
1696 | 1611 | lsplit = self.line_split.match(line) |
|
1697 | 1612 | if lsplit is None: # no regexp match returns None |
|
1698 | 1613 | try: |
|
1699 | 1614 | iFun,theRest = line.split(None,1) |
|
1700 | 1615 | except ValueError: |
|
1701 | 1616 | iFun,theRest = line,'' |
|
1702 | 1617 | pre = re.match('^(\s*)(.*)',line).groups()[0] |
|
1703 | 1618 | else: |
|
1704 | 1619 | pre,iFun,theRest = lsplit.groups() |
|
1705 | 1620 | |
|
1706 | 1621 | #print 'line:<%s>' % line # dbg |
|
1707 | 1622 | #print 'pre <%s> iFun <%s> rest <%s>' % (pre,iFun.strip(),theRest) # dbg |
|
1708 | 1623 | return pre,iFun.strip(),theRest |
|
1709 | 1624 | |
|
1710 | 1625 | def _prefilter(self, line, continue_prompt): |
|
1711 | 1626 | """Calls different preprocessors, depending on the form of line.""" |
|
1712 | 1627 | |
|
1713 | 1628 | # All handlers *must* return a value, even if it's blank (''). |
|
1714 | 1629 | |
|
1715 | 1630 | # Lines are NOT logged here. Handlers should process the line as |
|
1716 | 1631 | # needed, update the cache AND log it (so that the input cache array |
|
1717 | 1632 | # stays synced). |
|
1718 | 1633 | |
|
1719 | 1634 | # This function is _very_ delicate, and since it's also the one which |
|
1720 | 1635 | # determines IPython's response to user input, it must be as efficient |
|
1721 | 1636 | # as possible. For this reason it has _many_ returns in it, trying |
|
1722 | 1637 | # always to exit as quickly as it can figure out what it needs to do. |
|
1723 | 1638 | |
|
1724 | 1639 | # This function is the main responsible for maintaining IPython's |
|
1725 | 1640 | # behavior respectful of Python's semantics. So be _very_ careful if |
|
1726 | 1641 | # making changes to anything here. |
|
1727 | 1642 | |
|
1728 | 1643 | #..................................................................... |
|
1729 | 1644 | # Code begins |
|
1730 | 1645 | |
|
1731 | 1646 | #if line.startswith('%crash'): raise RuntimeError,'Crash now!' # dbg |
|
1732 | 1647 | |
|
1733 | 1648 | # save the line away in case we crash, so the post-mortem handler can |
|
1734 | 1649 | # record it |
|
1735 | 1650 | self._last_input_line = line |
|
1736 | 1651 | |
|
1737 | 1652 | #print '***line: <%s>' % line # dbg |
|
1738 | 1653 | |
|
1739 | 1654 | # the input history needs to track even empty lines |
|
1740 | 1655 | if not line.strip(): |
|
1741 | 1656 | if not continue_prompt: |
|
1742 | 1657 | self.outputcache.prompt_count -= 1 |
|
1743 | 1658 | return self.handle_normal('',continue_prompt) |
|
1744 | 1659 | |
|
1745 | 1660 | # print '***cont',continue_prompt # dbg |
|
1746 | 1661 | # special handlers are only allowed for single line statements |
|
1747 | 1662 | if continue_prompt and not self.rc.multi_line_specials: |
|
1748 | 1663 | return self.handle_normal(line,continue_prompt) |
|
1749 | 1664 | |
|
1750 | 1665 | # For the rest, we need the structure of the input |
|
1751 | 1666 | pre,iFun,theRest = self.split_user_input(line) |
|
1752 | 1667 | #print 'pre <%s> iFun <%s> rest <%s>' % (pre,iFun,theRest) # dbg |
|
1753 | 1668 | |
|
1754 | 1669 | # First check for explicit escapes in the last/first character |
|
1755 | 1670 | handler = None |
|
1756 | 1671 | if line[-1] == self.ESC_HELP: |
|
1757 | 1672 | handler = self.esc_handlers.get(line[-1]) # the ? can be at the end |
|
1758 | 1673 | if handler is None: |
|
1759 | 1674 | # look at the first character of iFun, NOT of line, so we skip |
|
1760 | 1675 | # leading whitespace in multiline input |
|
1761 | 1676 | handler = self.esc_handlers.get(iFun[0:1]) |
|
1762 | 1677 | if handler is not None: |
|
1763 | 1678 | return handler(line,continue_prompt,pre,iFun,theRest) |
|
1764 | 1679 | # Emacs ipython-mode tags certain input lines |
|
1765 | 1680 | if line.endswith('# PYTHON-MODE'): |
|
1766 | 1681 | return self.handle_emacs(line,continue_prompt) |
|
1767 | 1682 | |
|
1768 | 1683 | # Next, check if we can automatically execute this thing |
|
1769 | 1684 | |
|
1770 | 1685 | # Allow ! in multi-line statements if multi_line_specials is on: |
|
1771 | 1686 | if continue_prompt and self.rc.multi_line_specials and \ |
|
1772 | 1687 | iFun.startswith(self.ESC_SHELL): |
|
1773 | 1688 | return self.handle_shell_escape(line,continue_prompt, |
|
1774 | 1689 | pre=pre,iFun=iFun, |
|
1775 | 1690 | theRest=theRest) |
|
1776 | 1691 | |
|
1777 | 1692 | # Let's try to find if the input line is a magic fn |
|
1778 | 1693 | oinfo = None |
|
1779 | 1694 | if hasattr(self,'magic_'+iFun): |
|
1780 | 1695 | oinfo = self._ofind(iFun) # FIXME - _ofind is part of Magic |
|
1781 | 1696 | if oinfo['ismagic']: |
|
1782 | 1697 | # Be careful not to call magics when a variable assignment is |
|
1783 | 1698 | # being made (ls='hi', for example) |
|
1784 | 1699 | if self.rc.automagic and \ |
|
1785 | 1700 | (len(theRest)==0 or theRest[0] not in '!=()<>,') and \ |
|
1786 | 1701 | (self.rc.multi_line_specials or not continue_prompt): |
|
1787 | 1702 | return self.handle_magic(line,continue_prompt, |
|
1788 | 1703 | pre,iFun,theRest) |
|
1789 | 1704 | else: |
|
1790 | 1705 | return self.handle_normal(line,continue_prompt) |
|
1791 | 1706 | |
|
1792 | 1707 | # If the rest of the line begins with an (in)equality, assginment or |
|
1793 | 1708 | # function call, we should not call _ofind but simply execute it. |
|
1794 | 1709 | # This avoids spurious geattr() accesses on objects upon assignment. |
|
1795 | 1710 | # |
|
1796 | 1711 | # It also allows users to assign to either alias or magic names true |
|
1797 | 1712 | # python variables (the magic/alias systems always take second seat to |
|
1798 | 1713 | # true python code). |
|
1799 | 1714 | if theRest and theRest[0] in '!=()': |
|
1800 | 1715 | return self.handle_normal(line,continue_prompt) |
|
1801 | 1716 | |
|
1802 | 1717 | if oinfo is None: |
|
1803 | 1718 | oinfo = self._ofind(iFun) # FIXME - _ofind is part of Magic |
|
1804 | 1719 | |
|
1805 | 1720 | if not oinfo['found']: |
|
1806 | 1721 | return self.handle_normal(line,continue_prompt) |
|
1807 | 1722 | else: |
|
1808 | 1723 | #print 'iFun <%s> rest <%s>' % (iFun,theRest) # dbg |
|
1809 | 1724 | if oinfo['isalias']: |
|
1810 | 1725 | return self.handle_alias(line,continue_prompt, |
|
1811 | 1726 | pre,iFun,theRest) |
|
1812 | 1727 | |
|
1813 | 1728 | if self.rc.autocall and \ |
|
1814 | 1729 | not self.re_exclude_auto.match(theRest) and \ |
|
1815 | 1730 | self.re_fun_name.match(iFun) and \ |
|
1816 | 1731 | callable(oinfo['obj']) : |
|
1817 | 1732 | #print 'going auto' # dbg |
|
1818 | 1733 | return self.handle_auto(line,continue_prompt,pre,iFun,theRest) |
|
1819 | 1734 | else: |
|
1820 | 1735 | #print 'was callable?', callable(oinfo['obj']) # dbg |
|
1821 | 1736 | return self.handle_normal(line,continue_prompt) |
|
1822 | 1737 | |
|
1823 | 1738 | # If we get here, we have a normal Python line. Log and return. |
|
1824 | 1739 | return self.handle_normal(line,continue_prompt) |
|
1825 | 1740 | |
|
1826 | 1741 | def _prefilter_dumb(self, line, continue_prompt): |
|
1827 | 1742 | """simple prefilter function, for debugging""" |
|
1828 | 1743 | return self.handle_normal(line,continue_prompt) |
|
1829 | 1744 | |
|
1830 | 1745 | # Set the default prefilter() function (this can be user-overridden) |
|
1831 | 1746 | prefilter = _prefilter |
|
1832 | 1747 | |
|
1833 | 1748 | def handle_normal(self,line,continue_prompt=None, |
|
1834 | 1749 | pre=None,iFun=None,theRest=None): |
|
1835 | 1750 | """Handle normal input lines. Use as a template for handlers.""" |
|
1836 | 1751 | |
|
1837 | 1752 | self.log(line,continue_prompt) |
|
1838 | 1753 | self.update_cache(line) |
|
1839 | 1754 | return line |
|
1840 | 1755 | |
|
1841 | 1756 | def handle_alias(self,line,continue_prompt=None, |
|
1842 | 1757 | pre=None,iFun=None,theRest=None): |
|
1843 | 1758 | """Handle alias input lines. """ |
|
1844 | 1759 | |
|
1845 | 1760 | theRest = esc_quotes(theRest) |
|
1846 | 1761 | line_out = "%s%s.call_alias('%s','%s')" % (pre,self.name,iFun,theRest) |
|
1847 | 1762 | self.log(line_out,continue_prompt) |
|
1848 | 1763 | self.update_cache(line_out) |
|
1849 | 1764 | return line_out |
|
1850 | 1765 | |
|
1851 | 1766 | def handle_shell_escape(self, line, continue_prompt=None, |
|
1852 | 1767 | pre=None,iFun=None,theRest=None): |
|
1853 | 1768 | """Execute the line in a shell, empty return value""" |
|
1854 | 1769 | |
|
1855 | 1770 | # Example of a special handler. Others follow a similar pattern. |
|
1856 | 1771 | if continue_prompt: # multi-line statements |
|
1857 | 1772 | if iFun.startswith('!!'): |
|
1858 | 1773 | print 'SyntaxError: !! is not allowed in multiline statements' |
|
1859 | 1774 | return pre |
|
1860 | 1775 | else: |
|
1861 | 1776 | cmd = ("%s %s" % (iFun[1:],theRest)).replace('"','\\"') |
|
1862 | 1777 | line_out = '%s%s.system("%s")' % (pre,self.name,cmd) |
|
1863 | 1778 | else: # single-line input |
|
1864 | 1779 | if line.startswith('!!'): |
|
1865 | 1780 | # rewrite iFun/theRest to properly hold the call to %sx and |
|
1866 | 1781 | # the actual command to be executed, so handle_magic can work |
|
1867 | 1782 | # correctly |
|
1868 | 1783 | theRest = '%s %s' % (iFun[2:],theRest) |
|
1869 | 1784 | iFun = 'sx' |
|
1870 | 1785 | return self.handle_magic('%ssx %s' % (self.ESC_MAGIC,line[2:]), |
|
1871 | 1786 | continue_prompt,pre,iFun,theRest) |
|
1872 | 1787 | else: |
|
1873 | 1788 | cmd = esc_quotes(line[1:]) |
|
1874 | 1789 | line_out = '%s.system("%s")' % (self.name,cmd) |
|
1875 | 1790 | # update cache/log and return |
|
1876 | 1791 | self.log(line_out,continue_prompt) |
|
1877 | 1792 | self.update_cache(line_out) # readline cache gets normal line |
|
1878 | 1793 | return line_out |
|
1879 | 1794 | |
|
1880 | 1795 | def handle_magic(self, line, continue_prompt=None, |
|
1881 | 1796 | pre=None,iFun=None,theRest=None): |
|
1882 | 1797 | """Execute magic functions. |
|
1883 | 1798 | |
|
1884 | 1799 | Also log them with a prepended # so the log is clean Python.""" |
|
1885 | 1800 | |
|
1886 | 1801 | cmd = '%sipmagic("%s")' % (pre,esc_quotes('%s %s' % (iFun,theRest))) |
|
1887 | 1802 | self.log(cmd,continue_prompt) |
|
1888 | 1803 | self.update_cache(line) |
|
1889 | 1804 | #print 'in handle_magic, cmd=<%s>' % cmd # dbg |
|
1890 | 1805 | return cmd |
|
1891 | 1806 | |
|
1892 | 1807 | def handle_auto(self, line, continue_prompt=None, |
|
1893 | 1808 | pre=None,iFun=None,theRest=None): |
|
1894 | 1809 | """Hande lines which can be auto-executed, quoting if requested.""" |
|
1895 | 1810 | |
|
1896 | 1811 | #print 'pre <%s> iFun <%s> rest <%s>' % (pre,iFun,theRest) # dbg |
|
1897 | 1812 | |
|
1898 | 1813 | # This should only be active for single-line input! |
|
1899 | 1814 | if continue_prompt: |
|
1900 | 1815 | return line |
|
1901 | 1816 | |
|
1902 | 1817 | if pre == self.ESC_QUOTE: |
|
1903 | 1818 | # Auto-quote splitting on whitespace |
|
1904 | 1819 | newcmd = '%s("%s")\n' % (iFun,'", "'.join(theRest.split()) ) |
|
1905 | 1820 | elif pre == self.ESC_QUOTE2: |
|
1906 | 1821 | # Auto-quote whole string |
|
1907 | 1822 | newcmd = '%s("%s")\n' % (iFun,theRest) |
|
1908 | 1823 | else: |
|
1909 | 1824 | # Auto-paren |
|
1910 | 1825 | if theRest[0:1] in ('=','['): |
|
1911 | 1826 | # Don't autocall in these cases. They can be either |
|
1912 | 1827 | # rebindings of an existing callable's name, or item access |
|
1913 | 1828 | # for an object which is BOTH callable and implements |
|
1914 | 1829 | # __getitem__. |
|
1915 | 1830 | return '%s %s\n' % (iFun,theRest) |
|
1916 | 1831 | if theRest.endswith(';'): |
|
1917 | 1832 | newcmd = '%s(%s);\n' % (iFun.rstrip(),theRest[:-1]) |
|
1918 | 1833 | else: |
|
1919 | 1834 | newcmd = '%s(%s)\n' % (iFun.rstrip(),theRest) |
|
1920 | 1835 | |
|
1921 | 1836 | print >>Term.cout, self.outputcache.prompt1.auto_rewrite() + newcmd, |
|
1922 | 1837 | # log what is now valid Python, not the actual user input (without the |
|
1923 | 1838 | # final newline) |
|
1924 | 1839 | self.log(newcmd.strip(),continue_prompt) |
|
1925 | 1840 | return newcmd |
|
1926 | 1841 | |
|
1927 | 1842 | def handle_help(self, line, continue_prompt=None, |
|
1928 | 1843 | pre=None,iFun=None,theRest=None): |
|
1929 | 1844 | """Try to get some help for the object. |
|
1930 | 1845 | |
|
1931 | 1846 | obj? or ?obj -> basic information. |
|
1932 | 1847 | obj?? or ??obj -> more details. |
|
1933 | 1848 | """ |
|
1934 | 1849 | |
|
1935 | 1850 | # We need to make sure that we don't process lines which would be |
|
1936 | 1851 | # otherwise valid python, such as "x=1 # what?" |
|
1937 | 1852 | try: |
|
1938 | 1853 | code.compile_command(line) |
|
1939 | 1854 | except SyntaxError: |
|
1940 | 1855 | # We should only handle as help stuff which is NOT valid syntax |
|
1941 | 1856 | if line[0]==self.ESC_HELP: |
|
1942 | 1857 | line = line[1:] |
|
1943 | 1858 | elif line[-1]==self.ESC_HELP: |
|
1944 | 1859 | line = line[:-1] |
|
1945 | 1860 | self.log('#?'+line) |
|
1946 | 1861 | self.update_cache(line) |
|
1947 | 1862 | if line: |
|
1948 | 1863 | self.magic_pinfo(line) |
|
1949 | 1864 | else: |
|
1950 | 1865 | page(self.usage,screen_lines=self.rc.screen_length) |
|
1951 | 1866 | return '' # Empty string is needed here! |
|
1952 | 1867 | except: |
|
1953 | 1868 | # Pass any other exceptions through to the normal handler |
|
1954 | 1869 | return self.handle_normal(line,continue_prompt) |
|
1955 | 1870 | else: |
|
1956 | 1871 | # If the code compiles ok, we should handle it normally |
|
1957 | 1872 | return self.handle_normal(line,continue_prompt) |
|
1958 | 1873 | |
|
1959 | 1874 | def handle_emacs(self,line,continue_prompt=None, |
|
1960 | 1875 | pre=None,iFun=None,theRest=None): |
|
1961 | 1876 | """Handle input lines marked by python-mode.""" |
|
1962 | 1877 | |
|
1963 | 1878 | # Currently, nothing is done. Later more functionality can be added |
|
1964 | 1879 | # here if needed. |
|
1965 | 1880 | |
|
1966 | 1881 | # The input cache shouldn't be updated |
|
1967 | 1882 | |
|
1968 | 1883 | return line |
|
1969 | 1884 | |
|
1970 | 1885 | def write(self,data): |
|
1971 | 1886 | """Write a string to the default output""" |
|
1972 | 1887 | Term.cout.write(data) |
|
1973 | 1888 | |
|
1974 | 1889 | def write_err(self,data): |
|
1975 | 1890 | """Write a string to the default error output""" |
|
1976 | 1891 | Term.cerr.write(data) |
|
1977 | 1892 | |
|
1978 | 1893 | def safe_execfile(self,fname,*where,**kw): |
|
1979 | 1894 | fname = os.path.expanduser(fname) |
|
1980 | 1895 | |
|
1981 | 1896 | # find things also in current directory |
|
1982 | 1897 | dname = os.path.dirname(fname) |
|
1983 | 1898 | if not sys.path.count(dname): |
|
1984 | 1899 | sys.path.append(dname) |
|
1985 | 1900 | |
|
1986 | 1901 | try: |
|
1987 | 1902 | xfile = open(fname) |
|
1988 | 1903 | except: |
|
1989 | 1904 | print >> Term.cerr, \ |
|
1990 | 1905 | 'Could not open file <%s> for safe execution.' % fname |
|
1991 | 1906 | return None |
|
1992 | 1907 | |
|
1993 | 1908 | kw.setdefault('islog',0) |
|
1994 | 1909 | kw.setdefault('quiet',1) |
|
1995 | 1910 | kw.setdefault('exit_ignore',0) |
|
1996 | 1911 | first = xfile.readline() |
|
1997 | 1912 | _LOGHEAD = str(self.LOGHEAD).split('\n',1)[0].strip() |
|
1998 | 1913 | xfile.close() |
|
1999 | 1914 | # line by line execution |
|
2000 | 1915 | if first.startswith(_LOGHEAD) or kw['islog']: |
|
2001 | 1916 | print 'Loading log file <%s> one line at a time...' % fname |
|
2002 | 1917 | if kw['quiet']: |
|
2003 | 1918 | stdout_save = sys.stdout |
|
2004 | 1919 | sys.stdout = StringIO.StringIO() |
|
2005 | 1920 | try: |
|
2006 | 1921 | globs,locs = where[0:2] |
|
2007 | 1922 | except: |
|
2008 | 1923 | try: |
|
2009 | 1924 | globs = locs = where[0] |
|
2010 | 1925 | except: |
|
2011 | 1926 | globs = locs = globals() |
|
2012 | 1927 | badblocks = [] |
|
2013 | 1928 | |
|
2014 | 1929 | # we also need to identify indented blocks of code when replaying |
|
2015 | 1930 | # logs and put them together before passing them to an exec |
|
2016 | 1931 | # statement. This takes a bit of regexp and look-ahead work in the |
|
2017 | 1932 | # file. It's easiest if we swallow the whole thing in memory |
|
2018 | 1933 | # first, and manually walk through the lines list moving the |
|
2019 | 1934 | # counter ourselves. |
|
2020 | 1935 | indent_re = re.compile('\s+\S') |
|
2021 | 1936 | xfile = open(fname) |
|
2022 | 1937 | filelines = xfile.readlines() |
|
2023 | 1938 | xfile.close() |
|
2024 | 1939 | nlines = len(filelines) |
|
2025 | 1940 | lnum = 0 |
|
2026 | 1941 | while lnum < nlines: |
|
2027 | 1942 | line = filelines[lnum] |
|
2028 | 1943 | lnum += 1 |
|
2029 | 1944 | # don't re-insert logger status info into cache |
|
2030 | 1945 | if line.startswith('#log#'): |
|
2031 | 1946 | continue |
|
2032 | 1947 | elif line.startswith('#%s'% self.ESC_MAGIC): |
|
2033 | 1948 | self.update_cache(line[1:]) |
|
2034 | 1949 | line = magic2python(line) |
|
2035 | 1950 | elif line.startswith('#!'): |
|
2036 | 1951 | self.update_cache(line[1:]) |
|
2037 | 1952 | else: |
|
2038 | 1953 | # build a block of code (maybe a single line) for execution |
|
2039 | 1954 | block = line |
|
2040 | 1955 | try: |
|
2041 | 1956 | next = filelines[lnum] # lnum has already incremented |
|
2042 | 1957 | except: |
|
2043 | 1958 | next = None |
|
2044 | 1959 | while next and indent_re.match(next): |
|
2045 | 1960 | block += next |
|
2046 | 1961 | lnum += 1 |
|
2047 | 1962 | try: |
|
2048 | 1963 | next = filelines[lnum] |
|
2049 | 1964 | except: |
|
2050 | 1965 | next = None |
|
2051 | 1966 | # now execute the block of one or more lines |
|
2052 | 1967 | try: |
|
2053 | 1968 | exec block in globs,locs |
|
2054 | 1969 | self.update_cache(block.rstrip()) |
|
2055 | 1970 | except SystemExit: |
|
2056 | 1971 | pass |
|
2057 | 1972 | except: |
|
2058 | 1973 | badblocks.append(block.rstrip()) |
|
2059 | 1974 | if kw['quiet']: # restore stdout |
|
2060 | 1975 | sys.stdout.close() |
|
2061 | 1976 | sys.stdout = stdout_save |
|
2062 | 1977 | print 'Finished replaying log file <%s>' % fname |
|
2063 | 1978 | if badblocks: |
|
2064 | 1979 | print >> sys.stderr, \ |
|
2065 | 1980 | '\nThe following lines/blocks in file <%s> reported errors:' \ |
|
2066 | 1981 | % fname |
|
2067 | 1982 | for badline in badblocks: |
|
2068 | 1983 | print >> sys.stderr, badline |
|
2069 | 1984 | else: # regular file execution |
|
2070 | 1985 | try: |
|
2071 | 1986 | execfile(fname,*where) |
|
2072 | 1987 | except SyntaxError: |
|
2073 | 1988 | etype, evalue = sys.exc_info()[0:2] |
|
2074 | 1989 | self.SyntaxTB(etype,evalue,[]) |
|
2075 | 1990 | warn('Failure executing file: <%s>' % fname) |
|
2076 | 1991 | except SystemExit,status: |
|
2077 | 1992 | if not kw['exit_ignore']: |
|
2078 | 1993 | self.InteractiveTB() |
|
2079 | 1994 | warn('Failure executing file: <%s>' % fname) |
|
2080 | 1995 | except: |
|
2081 | 1996 | self.InteractiveTB() |
|
2082 | 1997 | warn('Failure executing file: <%s>' % fname) |
|
2083 | 1998 | |
|
2084 | 1999 | #************************* end of file <iplib.py> ***************************** |
@@ -1,736 +1,725 b'' | |||
|
1 | 1 | # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- |
|
2 | 2 | """ |
|
3 | 3 | IPython -- An enhanced Interactive Python |
|
4 | 4 | |
|
5 | 5 | Requires Python 2.1 or better. |
|
6 | 6 | |
|
7 | 7 | This file contains the main make_IPython() starter function. |
|
8 | 8 | |
|
9 |
$Id: ipmaker.py |
|
|
9 | $Id: ipmaker.py 638 2005-07-18 03:01:41Z fperez $""" | |
|
10 | 10 | |
|
11 | 11 | #***************************************************************************** |
|
12 | 12 | # Copyright (C) 2001-2004 Fernando Perez. <fperez@colorado.edu> |
|
13 | 13 | # |
|
14 | 14 | # Distributed under the terms of the BSD License. The full license is in |
|
15 | 15 | # the file COPYING, distributed as part of this software. |
|
16 | 16 | #***************************************************************************** |
|
17 | 17 | |
|
18 | 18 | from IPython import Release |
|
19 | 19 | __author__ = '%s <%s>' % Release.authors['Fernando'] |
|
20 | 20 | __license__ = Release.license |
|
21 | 21 | __version__ = Release.version |
|
22 | 22 | |
|
23 | 23 | credits._Printer__data = """ |
|
24 | 24 | Python: %s |
|
25 | 25 | |
|
26 | 26 | IPython: Fernando Perez, Janko Hauser, Nathan Gray, and many users. |
|
27 | 27 | See http://ipython.scipy.org for more information.""" \ |
|
28 | 28 | % credits._Printer__data |
|
29 | 29 | |
|
30 | 30 | copyright._Printer__data += """ |
|
31 | 31 | |
|
32 | 32 | Copyright (c) 2001-2004 Fernando Perez, Janko Hauser, Nathan Gray. |
|
33 | 33 | All Rights Reserved.""" |
|
34 | 34 | |
|
35 | 35 | #**************************************************************************** |
|
36 | 36 | # Required modules |
|
37 | 37 | |
|
38 | 38 | # From the standard library |
|
39 | 39 | import __main__, __builtin__ |
|
40 | 40 | import os,sys,types,re |
|
41 | 41 | from pprint import pprint,pformat |
|
42 | 42 | |
|
43 | 43 | # Our own |
|
44 | 44 | from IPython import DPyGetOpt |
|
45 | 45 | from IPython.Struct import Struct |
|
46 | 46 | from IPython.OutputTrap import OutputTrap |
|
47 | 47 | from IPython.ConfigLoader import ConfigLoader |
|
48 | 48 | from IPython.iplib import InteractiveShell,qw_lol,import_fail_info |
|
49 | 49 | from IPython.usage import cmd_line_usage,interactive_usage |
|
50 | 50 | from IPython.Prompts import CachedOutput |
|
51 | 51 | from IPython.genutils import * |
|
52 | 52 | |
|
53 | 53 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
54 | 54 | def make_IPython(argv=None,user_ns=None,debug=1,rc_override=None, |
|
55 | 55 | shell_class=InteractiveShell,embedded=False,**kw): |
|
56 | 56 | """This is a dump of IPython into a single function. |
|
57 | 57 | |
|
58 | 58 | Later it will have to be broken up in a sensible manner. |
|
59 | 59 | |
|
60 | 60 | Arguments: |
|
61 | 61 | |
|
62 | 62 | - argv: a list similar to sys.argv[1:]. It should NOT contain the desired |
|
63 | 63 | script name, b/c DPyGetOpt strips the first argument only for the real |
|
64 | 64 | sys.argv. |
|
65 | 65 | |
|
66 | 66 | - user_ns: a dict to be used as the user's namespace.""" |
|
67 | 67 | |
|
68 | 68 | #---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
69 | 69 | # Defaults and initialization |
|
70 | 70 | |
|
71 | 71 | # For developer debugging, deactivates crash handler and uses pdb. |
|
72 | 72 | DEVDEBUG = False |
|
73 | 73 | |
|
74 | 74 | if argv is None: |
|
75 | 75 | argv = sys.argv |
|
76 | 76 | |
|
77 | 77 | # __IP is the main global that lives throughout and represents the whole |
|
78 | 78 | # application. If the user redefines it, all bets are off as to what |
|
79 | 79 | # happens. |
|
80 | 80 | |
|
81 | 81 | # __IP is the name of he global which the caller will have accessible as |
|
82 | 82 | # __IP.name. We set its name via the first parameter passed to |
|
83 | 83 | # InteractiveShell: |
|
84 | 84 | |
|
85 | 85 | IP = shell_class('__IP',user_ns=user_ns,**kw) |
|
86 | 86 | |
|
87 | 87 | # Put 'help' in the user namespace |
|
88 | try: | |
|
89 | from site import _Helper | |
|
90 | except ImportError: | |
|
91 | # Use the _Helper class from Python 2.2 for older Python versions | |
|
92 | class _Helper: | |
|
93 | def __repr__(self): | |
|
94 | return "Type help() for interactive help, " \ | |
|
95 | "or help(object) for help about object." | |
|
96 | def __call__(self, *args, **kwds): | |
|
97 | import pydoc | |
|
98 | return pydoc.help(*args, **kwds) | |
|
99 | else: | |
|
100 | IP.user_ns['help'] = _Helper() | |
|
88 | from site import _Helper | |
|
89 | IP.user_ns['help'] = _Helper() | |
|
101 | 90 | |
|
102 | 91 | if DEVDEBUG: |
|
103 | 92 | # For developer debugging only (global flag) |
|
104 | 93 | from IPython import ultraTB |
|
105 | 94 | sys.excepthook = ultraTB.VerboseTB(call_pdb=1) |
|
106 | 95 | else: |
|
107 | 96 | # IPython itself shouldn't crash. This will produce a detailed |
|
108 | 97 | # post-mortem if it does |
|
109 | 98 | from IPython import CrashHandler |
|
110 | 99 | sys.excepthook = CrashHandler.CrashHandler(IP) |
|
111 | 100 | |
|
112 | 101 | IP.BANNER_PARTS = ['Python %s\n' |
|
113 | 102 | 'Type "copyright", "credits" or "license" ' |
|
114 | 103 | 'for more information.\n' |
|
115 | 104 | % (sys.version.split('\n')[0],), |
|
116 | 105 | "IPython %s -- An enhanced Interactive Python." |
|
117 | 106 | % (__version__,), |
|
118 | 107 | """? -> Introduction to IPython's features. |
|
119 | 108 | %magic -> Information about IPython's 'magic' % functions. |
|
120 | 109 | help -> Python's own help system. |
|
121 | 110 | object? -> Details about 'object'. ?object also works, ?? prints more. |
|
122 | 111 | """ ] |
|
123 | 112 | |
|
124 | 113 | IP.usage = interactive_usage |
|
125 | 114 | |
|
126 | 115 | # Platform-dependent suffix and directory names |
|
127 | 116 | if os.name == 'posix': |
|
128 | 117 | rc_suffix = '' |
|
129 | 118 | ipdir_def = '.ipython' |
|
130 | 119 | else: |
|
131 | 120 | rc_suffix = '.ini' |
|
132 | 121 | ipdir_def = '_ipython' |
|
133 | 122 | |
|
134 | 123 | # default directory for configuration |
|
135 | 124 | ipythondir = os.path.abspath(os.environ.get('IPYTHONDIR', |
|
136 | 125 | os.path.join(IP.home_dir,ipdir_def))) |
|
137 | 126 | |
|
138 | 127 | # we need the directory where IPython itself is installed |
|
139 | 128 | import IPython |
|
140 | 129 | IPython_dir = os.path.dirname(IPython.__file__) |
|
141 | 130 | del IPython |
|
142 | 131 | |
|
143 | 132 | #------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
144 | 133 | # Command line handling |
|
145 | 134 | |
|
146 | 135 | # Valid command line options (uses DPyGetOpt syntax, like Perl's |
|
147 | 136 | # GetOpt::Long) |
|
148 | 137 | |
|
149 | 138 | # Any key not listed here gets deleted even if in the file (like session |
|
150 | 139 | # or profile). That's deliberate, to maintain the rc namespace clean. |
|
151 | 140 | |
|
152 | 141 | # Each set of options appears twice: under _conv only the names are |
|
153 | 142 | # listed, indicating which type they must be converted to when reading the |
|
154 | 143 | # ipythonrc file. And under DPyGetOpt they are listed with the regular |
|
155 | 144 | # DPyGetOpt syntax (=s,=i,:f,etc). |
|
156 | 145 | |
|
157 | 146 | # Make sure there's a space before each end of line (they get auto-joined!) |
|
158 | 147 | cmdline_opts = ('autocall! autoindent! automagic! banner! cache_size|cs=i ' |
|
159 | 148 | 'c=s classic|cl color_info! colors=s confirm_exit! ' |
|
160 | 149 | 'debug! deep_reload! editor=s log|l messages! nosep pdb! ' |
|
161 | 150 | 'pprint! prompt_in1|pi1=s prompt_in2|pi2=s prompt_out|po=s ' |
|
162 | 151 | 'quick screen_length|sl=i prompts_pad_left=i ' |
|
163 | 152 | 'logfile|lf=s logplay|lp=s profile|p=s ' |
|
164 | 153 | 'readline! readline_merge_completions! ' |
|
165 | 154 | 'readline_omit__names! ' |
|
166 | 155 | 'rcfile=s separate_in|si=s separate_out|so=s ' |
|
167 | 156 | 'separate_out2|so2=s xmode=s ' |
|
168 | 157 | 'magic_docstrings system_verbose! ' |
|
169 | 158 | 'multi_line_specials!') |
|
170 | 159 | |
|
171 | 160 | # Options that can *only* appear at the cmd line (not in rcfiles). |
|
172 | 161 | |
|
173 | 162 | # The "ignore" option is a kludge so that Emacs buffers don't crash, since |
|
174 | 163 | # the 'C-c !' command in emacs automatically appends a -i option at the end. |
|
175 | 164 | cmdline_only = ('help ignore|i ipythondir=s Version upgrade ' |
|
176 | 165 | 'gthread! qthread! wthread! pylab! tk!') |
|
177 | 166 | |
|
178 | 167 | # Build the actual name list to be used by DPyGetOpt |
|
179 | 168 | opts_names = qw(cmdline_opts) + qw(cmdline_only) |
|
180 | 169 | |
|
181 | 170 | # Set sensible command line defaults. |
|
182 | 171 | # This should have everything from cmdline_opts and cmdline_only |
|
183 | 172 | opts_def = Struct(autocall = 1, |
|
184 | 173 | autoindent=0, |
|
185 | 174 | automagic = 1, |
|
186 | 175 | banner = 1, |
|
187 | 176 | cache_size = 1000, |
|
188 | 177 | c = '', |
|
189 | 178 | classic = 0, |
|
190 | 179 | colors = 'NoColor', |
|
191 | 180 | color_info = 0, |
|
192 | 181 | confirm_exit = 1, |
|
193 | 182 | debug = 0, |
|
194 | 183 | deep_reload = 0, |
|
195 | 184 | editor = '0', |
|
196 | 185 | help = 0, |
|
197 | 186 | ignore = 0, |
|
198 | 187 | ipythondir = ipythondir, |
|
199 | 188 | log = 0, |
|
200 | 189 | logfile = '', |
|
201 | 190 | logplay = '', |
|
202 | 191 | multi_line_specials = 1, |
|
203 | 192 | messages = 1, |
|
204 | 193 | nosep = 0, |
|
205 | 194 | pdb = 0, |
|
206 | 195 | pprint = 0, |
|
207 | 196 | profile = '', |
|
208 | 197 | prompt_in1 = 'In [\\#]:', |
|
209 | 198 | prompt_in2 = ' .\\D.:', |
|
210 | 199 | prompt_out = 'Out[\\#]:', |
|
211 | 200 | prompts_pad_left = 1, |
|
212 | 201 | quick = 0, |
|
213 | 202 | readline = 1, |
|
214 | 203 | readline_merge_completions = 1, |
|
215 | 204 | readline_omit__names = 0, |
|
216 | 205 | rcfile = 'ipythonrc' + rc_suffix, |
|
217 | 206 | screen_length = 0, |
|
218 | 207 | separate_in = '\n', |
|
219 | 208 | separate_out = '\n', |
|
220 | 209 | separate_out2 = '', |
|
221 | 210 | system_verbose = 0, |
|
222 | 211 | gthread = 0, |
|
223 | 212 | qthread = 0, |
|
224 | 213 | wthread = 0, |
|
225 | 214 | pylab = 0, |
|
226 | 215 | tk = 0, |
|
227 | 216 | upgrade = 0, |
|
228 | 217 | Version = 0, |
|
229 | 218 | xmode = 'Verbose', |
|
230 | 219 | magic_docstrings = 0, # undocumented, for doc generation |
|
231 | 220 | ) |
|
232 | 221 | |
|
233 | 222 | # Things that will *only* appear in rcfiles (not at the command line). |
|
234 | 223 | # Make sure there's a space before each end of line (they get auto-joined!) |
|
235 | 224 | rcfile_opts = { qwflat: 'include import_mod import_all execfile ', |
|
236 | 225 | qw_lol: 'import_some ', |
|
237 | 226 | # for things with embedded whitespace: |
|
238 | 227 | list_strings:'execute alias readline_parse_and_bind ', |
|
239 | 228 | # Regular strings need no conversion: |
|
240 | 229 | None:'readline_remove_delims ', |
|
241 | 230 | } |
|
242 | 231 | # Default values for these |
|
243 | 232 | rc_def = Struct(include = [], |
|
244 | 233 | import_mod = [], |
|
245 | 234 | import_all = [], |
|
246 | 235 | import_some = [[]], |
|
247 | 236 | execute = [], |
|
248 | 237 | execfile = [], |
|
249 | 238 | alias = [], |
|
250 | 239 | readline_parse_and_bind = [], |
|
251 | 240 | readline_remove_delims = '', |
|
252 | 241 | ) |
|
253 | 242 | |
|
254 | 243 | # Build the type conversion dictionary from the above tables: |
|
255 | 244 | typeconv = rcfile_opts.copy() |
|
256 | 245 | typeconv.update(optstr2types(cmdline_opts)) |
|
257 | 246 | |
|
258 | 247 | # FIXME: the None key appears in both, put that back together by hand. Ugly! |
|
259 | 248 | typeconv[None] += ' ' + rcfile_opts[None] |
|
260 | 249 | |
|
261 | 250 | # Remove quotes at ends of all strings (used to protect spaces) |
|
262 | 251 | typeconv[unquote_ends] = typeconv[None] |
|
263 | 252 | del typeconv[None] |
|
264 | 253 | |
|
265 | 254 | # Build the list we'll use to make all config decisions with defaults: |
|
266 | 255 | opts_all = opts_def.copy() |
|
267 | 256 | opts_all.update(rc_def) |
|
268 | 257 | |
|
269 | 258 | # Build conflict resolver for recursive loading of config files: |
|
270 | 259 | # - preserve means the outermost file maintains the value, it is not |
|
271 | 260 | # overwritten if an included file has the same key. |
|
272 | 261 | # - add_flip applies + to the two values, so it better make sense to add |
|
273 | 262 | # those types of keys. But it flips them first so that things loaded |
|
274 | 263 | # deeper in the inclusion chain have lower precedence. |
|
275 | 264 | conflict = {'preserve': ' '.join([ typeconv[int], |
|
276 | 265 | typeconv[unquote_ends] ]), |
|
277 | 266 | 'add_flip': ' '.join([ typeconv[qwflat], |
|
278 | 267 | typeconv[qw_lol], |
|
279 | 268 | typeconv[list_strings] ]) |
|
280 | 269 | } |
|
281 | 270 | |
|
282 | 271 | # Now actually process the command line |
|
283 | 272 | getopt = DPyGetOpt.DPyGetOpt() |
|
284 | 273 | getopt.setIgnoreCase(0) |
|
285 | 274 | |
|
286 | 275 | getopt.parseConfiguration(opts_names) |
|
287 | 276 | |
|
288 | 277 | try: |
|
289 | 278 | getopt.processArguments(argv) |
|
290 | 279 | except: |
|
291 | 280 | print cmd_line_usage |
|
292 | 281 | warn('\nError in Arguments: ' + `sys.exc_value`) |
|
293 | 282 | sys.exit() |
|
294 | 283 | |
|
295 | 284 | # convert the options dict to a struct for much lighter syntax later |
|
296 | 285 | opts = Struct(getopt.optionValues) |
|
297 | 286 | args = getopt.freeValues |
|
298 | 287 | |
|
299 | 288 | # this is the struct (which has default values at this point) with which |
|
300 | 289 | # we make all decisions: |
|
301 | 290 | opts_all.update(opts) |
|
302 | 291 | |
|
303 | 292 | # Options that force an immediate exit |
|
304 | 293 | if opts_all.help: |
|
305 | 294 | page(cmd_line_usage) |
|
306 | 295 | sys.exit() |
|
307 | 296 | |
|
308 | 297 | if opts_all.Version: |
|
309 | 298 | print __version__ |
|
310 | 299 | sys.exit() |
|
311 | 300 | |
|
312 | 301 | if opts_all.magic_docstrings: |
|
313 | 302 | IP.magic_magic('-latex') |
|
314 | 303 | sys.exit() |
|
315 | 304 | |
|
316 | 305 | # Create user config directory if it doesn't exist. This must be done |
|
317 | 306 | # *after* getting the cmd line options. |
|
318 | 307 | if not os.path.isdir(opts_all.ipythondir): |
|
319 | 308 | IP.user_setup(opts_all.ipythondir,rc_suffix,'install') |
|
320 | 309 | |
|
321 | 310 | # upgrade user config files while preserving a copy of the originals |
|
322 | 311 | if opts_all.upgrade: |
|
323 | 312 | IP.user_setup(opts_all.ipythondir,rc_suffix,'upgrade') |
|
324 | 313 | |
|
325 | 314 | # check mutually exclusive options in the *original* command line |
|
326 | 315 | mutex_opts(opts,[qw('log logfile'),qw('rcfile profile'), |
|
327 | 316 | qw('classic profile'),qw('classic rcfile')]) |
|
328 | 317 | |
|
329 | 318 | # default logfilename used when -log is called. |
|
330 | 319 | IP.LOGDEF = 'ipython.log' |
|
331 | 320 | |
|
332 | 321 | #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
333 | 322 | # Log replay |
|
334 | 323 | |
|
335 | 324 | # if -logplay, we need to 'become' the other session. That basically means |
|
336 | 325 | # replacing the current command line environment with that of the old |
|
337 | 326 | # session and moving on. |
|
338 | 327 | |
|
339 | 328 | # this is needed so that later we know we're in session reload mode, as |
|
340 | 329 | # opts_all will get overwritten: |
|
341 | 330 | load_logplay = 0 |
|
342 | 331 | |
|
343 | 332 | if opts_all.logplay: |
|
344 | 333 | load_logplay = opts_all.logplay |
|
345 | 334 | opts_debug_save = opts_all.debug |
|
346 | 335 | try: |
|
347 | 336 | logplay = open(opts_all.logplay) |
|
348 | 337 | except IOError: |
|
349 | 338 | if opts_all.debug: IP.InteractiveTB() |
|
350 | 339 | warn('Could not open logplay file '+`opts_all.logplay`) |
|
351 | 340 | # restore state as if nothing had happened and move on, but make |
|
352 | 341 | # sure that later we don't try to actually load the session file |
|
353 | 342 | logplay = None |
|
354 | 343 | load_logplay = 0 |
|
355 | 344 | del opts_all.logplay |
|
356 | 345 | else: |
|
357 | 346 | try: |
|
358 | 347 | logplay.readline() |
|
359 | 348 | logplay.readline(); |
|
360 | 349 | # this reloads that session's command line |
|
361 | 350 | cmd = logplay.readline()[6:] |
|
362 | 351 | exec cmd |
|
363 | 352 | # restore the true debug flag given so that the process of |
|
364 | 353 | # session loading itself can be monitored. |
|
365 | 354 | opts.debug = opts_debug_save |
|
366 | 355 | # save the logplay flag so later we don't overwrite the log |
|
367 | 356 | opts.logplay = load_logplay |
|
368 | 357 | # now we must update our own structure with defaults |
|
369 | 358 | opts_all.update(opts) |
|
370 | 359 | # now load args |
|
371 | 360 | cmd = logplay.readline()[6:] |
|
372 | 361 | exec cmd |
|
373 | 362 | logplay.close() |
|
374 | 363 | except: |
|
375 | 364 | logplay.close() |
|
376 | 365 | if opts_all.debug: IP.InteractiveTB() |
|
377 | 366 | warn("Logplay file lacking full configuration information.\n" |
|
378 | 367 | "I'll try to read it, but some things may not work.") |
|
379 | 368 | |
|
380 | 369 | #------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
381 | 370 | # set up output traps: catch all output from files, being run, modules |
|
382 | 371 | # loaded, etc. Then give it to the user in a clean form at the end. |
|
383 | 372 | |
|
384 | 373 | msg_out = 'Output messages. ' |
|
385 | 374 | msg_err = 'Error messages. ' |
|
386 | 375 | msg_sep = '\n' |
|
387 | 376 | msg = Struct(config = OutputTrap('Configuration Loader',msg_out, |
|
388 | 377 | msg_err,msg_sep,debug, |
|
389 | 378 | quiet_out=1), |
|
390 | 379 | user_exec = OutputTrap('User File Execution',msg_out, |
|
391 | 380 | msg_err,msg_sep,debug), |
|
392 | 381 | logplay = OutputTrap('Log Loader',msg_out, |
|
393 | 382 | msg_err,msg_sep,debug), |
|
394 | 383 | summary = '' |
|
395 | 384 | ) |
|
396 | 385 | |
|
397 | 386 | #------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
398 | 387 | # Process user ipythonrc-type configuration files |
|
399 | 388 | |
|
400 | 389 | # turn on output trapping and log to msg.config |
|
401 | 390 | # remember that with debug on, trapping is actually disabled |
|
402 | 391 | msg.config.trap_all() |
|
403 | 392 | |
|
404 | 393 | # look for rcfile in current or default directory |
|
405 | 394 | try: |
|
406 | 395 | opts_all.rcfile = filefind(opts_all.rcfile,opts_all.ipythondir) |
|
407 | 396 | except IOError: |
|
408 | 397 | if opts_all.debug: IP.InteractiveTB() |
|
409 | 398 | warn('Configuration file %s not found. Ignoring request.' |
|
410 | 399 | % (opts_all.rcfile) ) |
|
411 | 400 | |
|
412 | 401 | # 'profiles' are a shorthand notation for config filenames |
|
413 | 402 | if opts_all.profile: |
|
414 | 403 | try: |
|
415 | 404 | opts_all.rcfile = filefind('ipythonrc-' + opts_all.profile |
|
416 | 405 | + rc_suffix, |
|
417 | 406 | opts_all.ipythondir) |
|
418 | 407 | except IOError: |
|
419 | 408 | if opts_all.debug: IP.InteractiveTB() |
|
420 | 409 | opts.profile = '' # remove profile from options if invalid |
|
421 | 410 | warn('Profile configuration file %s not found. Ignoring request.' |
|
422 | 411 | % (opts_all.profile) ) |
|
423 | 412 | |
|
424 | 413 | # load the config file |
|
425 | 414 | rcfiledata = None |
|
426 | 415 | if opts_all.quick: |
|
427 | 416 | print 'Launching IPython in quick mode. No config file read.' |
|
428 | 417 | elif opts_all.classic: |
|
429 | 418 | print 'Launching IPython in classic mode. No config file read.' |
|
430 | 419 | elif opts_all.rcfile: |
|
431 | 420 | try: |
|
432 | 421 | cfg_loader = ConfigLoader(conflict) |
|
433 | 422 | rcfiledata = cfg_loader.load(opts_all.rcfile,typeconv, |
|
434 | 423 | 'include',opts_all.ipythondir, |
|
435 | 424 | purge = 1, |
|
436 | 425 | unique = conflict['preserve']) |
|
437 | 426 | except: |
|
438 | 427 | IP.InteractiveTB() |
|
439 | 428 | warn('Problems loading configuration file '+ |
|
440 | 429 | `opts_all.rcfile`+ |
|
441 | 430 | '\nStarting with default -bare bones- configuration.') |
|
442 | 431 | else: |
|
443 | 432 | warn('No valid configuration file found in either currrent directory\n'+ |
|
444 | 433 | 'or in the IPython config. directory: '+`opts_all.ipythondir`+ |
|
445 | 434 | '\nProceeding with internal defaults.') |
|
446 | 435 | |
|
447 | 436 | #------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
|
448 | 437 | # Set exception handlers in mode requested by user. |
|
449 | 438 | otrap = OutputTrap(trap_out=1) # trap messages from magic_xmode |
|
450 | 439 | IP.magic_xmode(opts_all.xmode) |
|
451 | 440 | otrap.release_out() |
|
452 | 441 | |
|
453 | 442 | #------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
|
454 | 443 | # Execute user config |
|
455 | 444 | |
|
456 | 445 | # first, create a valid config structure with the right precedence order: |
|
457 | 446 | # defaults < rcfile < command line |
|
458 | 447 | IP.rc = rc_def.copy() |
|
459 | 448 | IP.rc.update(opts_def) |
|
460 | 449 | if rcfiledata: |
|
461 | 450 | # now we can update |
|
462 | 451 | IP.rc.update(rcfiledata) |
|
463 | 452 | IP.rc.update(opts) |
|
464 | 453 | IP.rc.update(rc_override) |
|
465 | 454 | |
|
466 | 455 | # Store the original cmd line for reference: |
|
467 | 456 | IP.rc.opts = opts |
|
468 | 457 | IP.rc.args = args |
|
469 | 458 | |
|
470 | 459 | # create a *runtime* Struct like rc for holding parameters which may be |
|
471 | 460 | # created and/or modified by runtime user extensions. |
|
472 | 461 | IP.runtime_rc = Struct() |
|
473 | 462 | |
|
474 | 463 | # from this point on, all config should be handled through IP.rc, |
|
475 | 464 | # opts* shouldn't be used anymore. |
|
476 | 465 | |
|
477 | 466 | # add personal .ipython dir to sys.path so that users can put things in |
|
478 | 467 | # there for customization |
|
479 | 468 | sys.path.append(IP.rc.ipythondir) |
|
480 | 469 | sys.path.insert(0, '') # add . to sys.path. Fix from Prabhu Ramachandran |
|
481 | 470 | |
|
482 | 471 | # update IP.rc with some special things that need manual |
|
483 | 472 | # tweaks. Basically options which affect other options. I guess this |
|
484 | 473 | # should just be written so that options are fully orthogonal and we |
|
485 | 474 | # wouldn't worry about this stuff! |
|
486 | 475 | |
|
487 | 476 | if IP.rc.classic: |
|
488 | 477 | IP.rc.quick = 1 |
|
489 | 478 | IP.rc.cache_size = 0 |
|
490 | 479 | IP.rc.pprint = 0 |
|
491 | 480 | IP.rc.prompt_in1 = '>>> ' |
|
492 | 481 | IP.rc.prompt_in2 = '... ' |
|
493 | 482 | IP.rc.prompt_out = '' |
|
494 | 483 | IP.rc.separate_in = IP.rc.separate_out = IP.rc.separate_out2 = '0' |
|
495 | 484 | IP.rc.colors = 'NoColor' |
|
496 | 485 | IP.rc.xmode = 'Plain' |
|
497 | 486 | |
|
498 | 487 | # configure readline |
|
499 | 488 | # Define the history file for saving commands in between sessions |
|
500 | 489 | if IP.rc.profile: |
|
501 | 490 | histfname = 'history-%s' % IP.rc.profile |
|
502 | 491 | else: |
|
503 | 492 | histfname = 'history' |
|
504 | 493 | IP.histfile = os.path.join(opts_all.ipythondir,histfname) |
|
505 | 494 | # Load readline proper |
|
506 | 495 | if IP.rc.readline: |
|
507 | 496 | IP.init_readline() |
|
508 | 497 | |
|
509 | 498 | # update exception handlers with rc file status |
|
510 | 499 | otrap.trap_out() # I don't want these messages ever. |
|
511 | 500 | IP.magic_xmode(IP.rc.xmode) |
|
512 | 501 | otrap.release_out() |
|
513 | 502 | |
|
514 | 503 | # activate logging if requested and not reloading a log |
|
515 | 504 | if IP.rc.logplay: |
|
516 | 505 | IP.magic_logstart(IP.rc.logplay + ' append') |
|
517 | 506 | elif IP.rc.logfile: |
|
518 | 507 | IP.magic_logstart(IP.rc.logfile) |
|
519 | 508 | elif IP.rc.log: |
|
520 | 509 | IP.magic_logstart() |
|
521 | 510 | |
|
522 | 511 | # find user editor so that it we don't have to look it up constantly |
|
523 | 512 | if IP.rc.editor.strip()=='0': |
|
524 | 513 | try: |
|
525 | 514 | ed = os.environ['EDITOR'] |
|
526 | 515 | except KeyError: |
|
527 | 516 | if os.name == 'posix': |
|
528 | 517 | ed = 'vi' # the only one guaranteed to be there! |
|
529 | 518 | else: |
|
530 | 519 | ed = 'notepad' # same in Windows! |
|
531 | 520 | IP.rc.editor = ed |
|
532 | 521 | |
|
533 | 522 | # Recursive reload |
|
534 | 523 | try: |
|
535 | 524 | from IPython import deep_reload |
|
536 | 525 | if IP.rc.deep_reload: |
|
537 | 526 | __builtin__.reload = deep_reload.reload |
|
538 | 527 | else: |
|
539 | 528 | __builtin__.dreload = deep_reload.reload |
|
540 | 529 | del deep_reload |
|
541 | 530 | except ImportError: |
|
542 | 531 | pass |
|
543 | 532 | |
|
544 | 533 | # Save the current state of our namespace so that the interactive shell |
|
545 | 534 | # can later know which variables have been created by us from config files |
|
546 | 535 | # and loading. This way, loading a file (in any way) is treated just like |
|
547 | 536 | # defining things on the command line, and %who works as expected. |
|
548 | 537 | |
|
549 | 538 | # DON'T do anything that affects the namespace beyond this point! |
|
550 | 539 | IP.internal_ns = __main__.__dict__.copy() |
|
551 | 540 | |
|
552 | 541 | #IP.internal_ns.update(locals()) # so our stuff doesn't show up in %who |
|
553 | 542 | |
|
554 | 543 | # Now run through the different sections of the users's config |
|
555 | 544 | if IP.rc.debug: |
|
556 | 545 | print 'Trying to execute the following configuration structure:' |
|
557 | 546 | print '(Things listed first are deeper in the inclusion tree and get' |
|
558 | 547 | print 'loaded first).\n' |
|
559 | 548 | pprint(IP.rc.__dict__) |
|
560 | 549 | |
|
561 | 550 | for mod in IP.rc.import_mod: |
|
562 | 551 | try: |
|
563 | 552 | exec 'import '+mod in IP.user_ns |
|
564 | 553 | except : |
|
565 | 554 | IP.InteractiveTB() |
|
566 | 555 | import_fail_info(mod) |
|
567 | 556 | |
|
568 | 557 | for mod_fn in IP.rc.import_some: |
|
569 | 558 | if mod_fn == []: break |
|
570 | 559 | mod,fn = mod_fn[0],','.join(mod_fn[1:]) |
|
571 | 560 | try: |
|
572 | 561 | exec 'from '+mod+' import '+fn in IP.user_ns |
|
573 | 562 | except : |
|
574 | 563 | IP.InteractiveTB() |
|
575 | 564 | import_fail_info(mod,fn) |
|
576 | 565 | |
|
577 | 566 | for mod in IP.rc.import_all: |
|
578 | 567 | try: |
|
579 | 568 | exec 'from '+mod+' import *' in IP.user_ns |
|
580 | 569 | except : |
|
581 | 570 | IP.InteractiveTB() |
|
582 | 571 | import_fail_info(mod) |
|
583 | 572 | |
|
584 | 573 | for code in IP.rc.execute: |
|
585 | 574 | try: |
|
586 | 575 | exec code in IP.user_ns |
|
587 | 576 | except: |
|
588 | 577 | IP.InteractiveTB() |
|
589 | 578 | warn('Failure executing code: ' + `code`) |
|
590 | 579 | |
|
591 | 580 | # Execute the files the user wants in ipythonrc |
|
592 | 581 | for file in IP.rc.execfile: |
|
593 | 582 | try: |
|
594 | 583 | file = filefind(file,sys.path+[IPython_dir]) |
|
595 | 584 | except IOError: |
|
596 | 585 | warn(itpl('File $file not found. Skipping it.')) |
|
597 | 586 | else: |
|
598 | 587 | IP.safe_execfile(os.path.expanduser(file),IP.user_ns) |
|
599 | 588 | |
|
600 | 589 | # Load user aliases |
|
601 | 590 | for alias in IP.rc.alias: |
|
602 | 591 | IP.magic_alias(alias) |
|
603 | 592 | |
|
604 | 593 | # release stdout and stderr and save config log into a global summary |
|
605 | 594 | msg.config.release_all() |
|
606 | 595 | if IP.rc.messages: |
|
607 | 596 | msg.summary += msg.config.summary_all() |
|
608 | 597 | |
|
609 | 598 | #------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
|
610 | 599 | # Setup interactive session |
|
611 | 600 | |
|
612 | 601 | # Now we should be fully configured. We can then execute files or load |
|
613 | 602 | # things only needed for interactive use. Then we'll open the shell. |
|
614 | 603 | |
|
615 | 604 | # Take a snapshot of the user namespace before opening the shell. That way |
|
616 | 605 | # we'll be able to identify which things were interactively defined and |
|
617 | 606 | # which were defined through config files. |
|
618 | 607 | IP.user_config_ns = IP.user_ns.copy() |
|
619 | 608 | |
|
620 | 609 | # Force reading a file as if it were a session log. Slower but safer. |
|
621 | 610 | if load_logplay: |
|
622 | 611 | print 'Replaying log...' |
|
623 | 612 | try: |
|
624 | 613 | if IP.rc.debug: |
|
625 | 614 | logplay_quiet = 0 |
|
626 | 615 | else: |
|
627 | 616 | logplay_quiet = 1 |
|
628 | 617 | |
|
629 | 618 | msg.logplay.trap_all() |
|
630 | 619 | IP.safe_execfile(load_logplay,IP.user_ns, |
|
631 | 620 | islog = 1, quiet = logplay_quiet) |
|
632 | 621 | msg.logplay.release_all() |
|
633 | 622 | if IP.rc.messages: |
|
634 | 623 | msg.summary += msg.logplay.summary_all() |
|
635 | 624 | except: |
|
636 | 625 | warn('Problems replaying logfile %s.' % load_logplay) |
|
637 | 626 | IP.InteractiveTB() |
|
638 | 627 | |
|
639 | 628 | # Load remaining files in command line |
|
640 | 629 | msg.user_exec.trap_all() |
|
641 | 630 | |
|
642 | 631 | # Do NOT execute files named in the command line as scripts to be loaded |
|
643 | 632 | # by embedded instances. Doing so has the potential for an infinite |
|
644 | 633 | # recursion if there are exceptions thrown in the process. |
|
645 | 634 | |
|
646 | 635 | # XXX FIXME: the execution of user files should be moved out to after |
|
647 | 636 | # ipython is fully initialized, just as if they were run via %run at the |
|
648 | 637 | # ipython prompt. This would also give them the benefit of ipython's |
|
649 | 638 | # nice tracebacks. |
|
650 | 639 | |
|
651 | 640 | if not embedded and IP.rc.args: |
|
652 | 641 | name_save = IP.user_ns['__name__'] |
|
653 | 642 | IP.user_ns['__name__'] = '__main__' |
|
654 | 643 | try: |
|
655 | 644 | # Set our own excepthook in case the user code tries to call it |
|
656 | 645 | # directly. This prevents triggering the IPython crash handler. |
|
657 | 646 | old_excepthook,sys.excepthook = sys.excepthook, IP.excepthook |
|
658 | 647 | for run in args: |
|
659 | 648 | IP.safe_execfile(run,IP.user_ns) |
|
660 | 649 | finally: |
|
661 | 650 | # Reset our crash handler in place |
|
662 | 651 | sys.excepthook = old_excepthook |
|
663 | 652 | |
|
664 | 653 | IP.user_ns['__name__'] = name_save |
|
665 | 654 | |
|
666 | 655 | msg.user_exec.release_all() |
|
667 | 656 | if IP.rc.messages: |
|
668 | 657 | msg.summary += msg.user_exec.summary_all() |
|
669 | 658 | |
|
670 | 659 | # since we can't specify a null string on the cmd line, 0 is the equivalent: |
|
671 | 660 | if IP.rc.nosep: |
|
672 | 661 | IP.rc.separate_in = IP.rc.separate_out = IP.rc.separate_out2 = '0' |
|
673 | 662 | if IP.rc.separate_in == '0': IP.rc.separate_in = '' |
|
674 | 663 | if IP.rc.separate_out == '0': IP.rc.separate_out = '' |
|
675 | 664 | if IP.rc.separate_out2 == '0': IP.rc.separate_out2 = '' |
|
676 | 665 | IP.rc.separate_in = IP.rc.separate_in.replace('\\n','\n') |
|
677 | 666 | IP.rc.separate_out = IP.rc.separate_out.replace('\\n','\n') |
|
678 | 667 | IP.rc.separate_out2 = IP.rc.separate_out2.replace('\\n','\n') |
|
679 | 668 | |
|
680 | 669 | # Determine how many lines at the bottom of the screen are needed for |
|
681 | 670 | # showing prompts, so we can know wheter long strings are to be printed or |
|
682 | 671 | # paged: |
|
683 | 672 | num_lines_bot = IP.rc.separate_in.count('\n')+1 |
|
684 | 673 | IP.rc.screen_length = IP.rc.screen_length - num_lines_bot |
|
685 | 674 | # Initialize cache, set in/out prompts and printing system |
|
686 | 675 | IP.outputcache = CachedOutput(IP.rc.cache_size, |
|
687 | 676 | IP.rc.pprint, |
|
688 | 677 | input_sep = IP.rc.separate_in, |
|
689 | 678 | output_sep = IP.rc.separate_out, |
|
690 | 679 | output_sep2 = IP.rc.separate_out2, |
|
691 | 680 | ps1 = IP.rc.prompt_in1, |
|
692 | 681 | ps2 = IP.rc.prompt_in2, |
|
693 | 682 | ps_out = IP.rc.prompt_out, |
|
694 | 683 | user_ns = IP.user_ns, |
|
695 | 684 | input_hist = IP.input_hist, |
|
696 | 685 | pad_left = IP.rc.prompts_pad_left) |
|
697 | 686 | |
|
698 | 687 | # Set user colors (don't do it in the constructor above so that it doesn't |
|
699 | 688 | # crash if colors option is invalid) |
|
700 | 689 | IP.magic_colors(IP.rc.colors) |
|
701 | 690 | |
|
702 | 691 | # user may have over-ridden the default print hook: |
|
703 | 692 | try: |
|
704 | 693 | IP.outputcache.__class__.display = IP.hooks.display |
|
705 | 694 | except AttributeError: |
|
706 | 695 | pass |
|
707 | 696 | |
|
708 | 697 | # Set calling of pdb on exceptions |
|
709 | 698 | IP.InteractiveTB.call_pdb = IP.rc.pdb |
|
710 | 699 | |
|
711 | 700 | # I don't like assigning globally to sys, because it means when embedding |
|
712 | 701 | # instances, each embedded instance overrides the previous choice. But |
|
713 | 702 | # sys.displayhook seems to be called internally by exec, so I don't see a |
|
714 | 703 | # way around it. |
|
715 | 704 | sys.displayhook = IP.outputcache |
|
716 | 705 | |
|
717 | 706 | # we need to know globally if we're caching i/o or not |
|
718 | 707 | IP.do_full_cache = IP.outputcache.do_full_cache |
|
719 | 708 | |
|
720 | 709 | # configure startup banner |
|
721 | 710 | if IP.rc.c: # regular python doesn't print the banner with -c |
|
722 | 711 | IP.rc.banner = 0 |
|
723 | 712 | if IP.rc.banner: |
|
724 | 713 | IP.BANNER = '\n'.join(IP.BANNER_PARTS) |
|
725 | 714 | else: |
|
726 | 715 | IP.BANNER = '' |
|
727 | 716 | |
|
728 | 717 | if IP.rc.profile: IP.BANNER += '\nIPython profile: '+IP.rc.profile+'\n' |
|
729 | 718 | |
|
730 | 719 | # add message log (possibly empty) |
|
731 | 720 | IP.BANNER += msg.summary |
|
732 | 721 | |
|
733 | 722 | IP.post_config_initialization() |
|
734 | 723 | |
|
735 | 724 | return IP |
|
736 | 725 | #************************ end of file <ipmaker.py> ************************** |
|
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