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@@ -1,322 +1,322 b'' | |||
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1 | 1 | # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- |
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2 | 2 | """Pylab (matplotlib) support utilities. |
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3 | 3 | |
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4 | 4 | Authors |
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5 | 5 | ------- |
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6 | 6 | |
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7 | 7 | * Fernando Perez. |
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8 | 8 | * Brian Granger |
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9 | 9 | """ |
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10 | 10 | |
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11 | 11 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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12 | 12 | # Copyright (C) 2009 The IPython Development Team |
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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 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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19 | 19 | # Imports |
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20 | 20 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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21 | 21 | |
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22 | 22 | from io import BytesIO |
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23 | 23 | |
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24 | 24 | from IPython.utils.decorators import flag_calls |
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25 | 25 | |
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26 | 26 | # If user specifies a GUI, that dictates the backend, otherwise we read the |
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27 | 27 | # user's mpl default from the mpl rc structure |
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28 | 28 | backends = {'tk': 'TkAgg', |
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29 | 29 | 'gtk': 'GTKAgg', |
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30 | 30 | 'wx': 'WXAgg', |
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31 | 31 | 'qt': 'Qt4Agg', # qt3 not supported |
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32 | 32 | 'qt4': 'Qt4Agg', |
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33 | 33 | 'osx': 'MacOSX', |
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34 | 34 | 'inline' : 'module://IPython.zmq.pylab.backend_inline'} |
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35 | 35 | |
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36 | 36 | # We also need a reverse backends2guis mapping that will properly choose which |
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37 | 37 | # GUI support to activate based on the desired matplotlib backend. For the |
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38 | 38 | # most part it's just a reverse of the above dict, but we also need to add a |
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39 | 39 | # few others that map to the same GUI manually: |
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40 | 40 | backend2gui = dict(zip(backends.values(), backends.keys())) |
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41 | 41 | # In the reverse mapping, there are a few extra valid matplotlib backends that |
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42 | 42 | # map to the same GUI support |
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43 | 43 | backend2gui['GTK'] = backend2gui['GTKCairo'] = 'gtk' |
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44 | 44 | backend2gui['WX'] = 'wx' |
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45 | 45 | backend2gui['CocoaAgg'] = 'osx' |
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46 | 46 | |
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47 | 47 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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48 | 48 | # Matplotlib utilities |
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49 | 49 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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50 | 50 | |
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51 | 51 | |
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52 | 52 | def getfigs(*fig_nums): |
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53 | 53 | """Get a list of matplotlib figures by figure numbers. |
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54 | 54 | |
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55 | 55 | If no arguments are given, all available figures are returned. If the |
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56 | 56 | argument list contains references to invalid figures, a warning is printed |
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57 | 57 | but the function continues pasting further figures. |
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58 | 58 | |
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59 | 59 | Parameters |
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60 | 60 | ---------- |
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61 | 61 | figs : tuple |
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62 | 62 | A tuple of ints giving the figure numbers of the figures to return. |
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63 | 63 | """ |
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64 | 64 | from matplotlib._pylab_helpers import Gcf |
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65 | 65 | if not fig_nums: |
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66 | 66 | fig_managers = Gcf.get_all_fig_managers() |
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67 | 67 | return [fm.canvas.figure for fm in fig_managers] |
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68 | 68 | else: |
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69 | 69 | figs = [] |
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70 | 70 | for num in fig_nums: |
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71 | 71 | f = Gcf.figs.get(num) |
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72 | 72 | if f is None: |
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73 | 73 | print('Warning: figure %s not available.' % num) |
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74 | 74 | else: |
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75 | 75 | figs.append(f.canvas.figure) |
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76 | 76 | return figs |
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77 | 77 | |
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78 | 78 | |
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79 | 79 | def figsize(sizex, sizey): |
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80 | 80 | """Set the default figure size to be [sizex, sizey]. |
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81 | 81 | |
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82 | 82 | This is just an easy to remember, convenience wrapper that sets:: |
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83 | 83 | |
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84 | 84 | matplotlib.rcParams['figure.figsize'] = [sizex, sizey] |
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85 | 85 | """ |
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86 | 86 | import matplotlib |
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87 | 87 | matplotlib.rcParams['figure.figsize'] = [sizex, sizey] |
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88 | 88 | |
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89 | 89 | |
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90 | 90 | def print_figure(fig, fmt='png'): |
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91 | 91 | """Convert a figure to svg or png for inline display.""" |
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92 | 92 | # When there's an empty figure, we shouldn't return anything, otherwise we |
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93 | 93 | # get big blank areas in the qt console. |
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94 | 94 | if not fig.axes: |
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95 | 95 | return |
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96 | 96 | |
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97 | 97 | fc = fig.get_facecolor() |
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98 | 98 | ec = fig.get_edgecolor() |
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99 | 99 | fig.set_facecolor('white') |
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100 | 100 | fig.set_edgecolor('white') |
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101 | 101 | try: |
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102 | 102 | bytes_io = BytesIO() |
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103 | 103 | # use 72 dpi to match QTConsole's dpi |
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104 | 104 | fig.canvas.print_figure(bytes_io, format=fmt, dpi=72, |
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105 | 105 | bbox_inches='tight') |
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106 | 106 | data = bytes_io.getvalue() |
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107 | 107 | finally: |
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108 | 108 | fig.set_facecolor(fc) |
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109 | 109 | fig.set_edgecolor(ec) |
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110 | 110 | return data |
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111 | 111 | |
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112 | 112 | |
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113 | 113 | # We need a little factory function here to create the closure where |
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114 | 114 | # safe_execfile can live. |
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115 | 115 | def mpl_runner(safe_execfile): |
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116 | 116 | """Factory to return a matplotlib-enabled runner for %run. |
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117 | 117 | |
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118 | 118 | Parameters |
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119 | 119 | ---------- |
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120 | 120 | safe_execfile : function |
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121 | 121 | This must be a function with the same interface as the |
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122 | 122 | :meth:`safe_execfile` method of IPython. |
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123 | 123 | |
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124 | 124 | Returns |
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125 | 125 | ------- |
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126 | 126 | A function suitable for use as the ``runner`` argument of the %run magic |
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127 | 127 | function. |
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128 | 128 | """ |
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129 | 129 | |
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130 | 130 | def mpl_execfile(fname,*where,**kw): |
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131 | 131 | """matplotlib-aware wrapper around safe_execfile. |
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132 | 132 | |
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133 | 133 | Its interface is identical to that of the :func:`execfile` builtin. |
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134 | 134 | |
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135 | 135 | This is ultimately a call to execfile(), but wrapped in safeties to |
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136 | 136 | properly handle interactive rendering.""" |
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137 | 137 | |
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138 | 138 | import matplotlib |
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139 | 139 | import matplotlib.pylab as pylab |
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140 | 140 | |
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141 | 141 | #print '*** Matplotlib runner ***' # dbg |
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142 | 142 | # turn off rendering until end of script |
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143 | 143 | is_interactive = matplotlib.rcParams['interactive'] |
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144 | 144 | matplotlib.interactive(False) |
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145 | 145 | safe_execfile(fname,*where,**kw) |
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146 | 146 | matplotlib.interactive(is_interactive) |
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147 | 147 | # make rendering call now, if the user tried to do it |
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148 | 148 | if pylab.draw_if_interactive.called: |
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149 | 149 | pylab.draw() |
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150 | 150 | pylab.draw_if_interactive.called = False |
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151 | 151 | |
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152 | 152 | return mpl_execfile |
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153 | 153 | |
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154 | 154 | |
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155 | 155 | def select_figure_format(shell, fmt): |
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156 | 156 | """Select figure format for inline backend, either 'png' or 'svg'. |
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157 | 157 | |
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158 | 158 | Using this method ensures only one figure format is active at a time. |
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159 | 159 | """ |
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160 | 160 | from matplotlib.figure import Figure |
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161 | 161 | from IPython.zmq.pylab import backend_inline |
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162 | 162 | |
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163 | 163 | svg_formatter = shell.display_formatter.formatters['image/svg+xml'] |
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164 | 164 | png_formatter = shell.display_formatter.formatters['image/png'] |
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165 | 165 | |
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166 | 166 | if fmt=='png': |
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167 | 167 | svg_formatter.type_printers.pop(Figure, None) |
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168 | 168 | png_formatter.for_type(Figure, lambda fig: print_figure(fig, 'png')) |
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169 | 169 | elif fmt=='svg': |
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170 | 170 | png_formatter.type_printers.pop(Figure, None) |
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171 | 171 | svg_formatter.for_type(Figure, lambda fig: print_figure(fig, 'svg')) |
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172 | 172 | else: |
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173 | 173 | raise ValueError("supported formats are: 'png', 'svg', not %r"%fmt) |
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174 | 174 | |
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175 | 175 | # set the format to be used in the backend() |
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176 | 176 | backend_inline._figure_format = fmt |
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177 | 177 | |
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178 | 178 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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179 | 179 | # Code for initializing matplotlib and importing pylab |
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180 | 180 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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181 | 181 | |
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182 | 182 | |
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183 | 183 | def find_gui_and_backend(gui=None): |
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184 | 184 | """Given a gui string return the gui and mpl backend. |
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185 | 185 | |
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186 | 186 | Parameters |
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187 | 187 | ---------- |
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188 | 188 | gui : str |
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189 | 189 | Can be one of ('tk','gtk','wx','qt','qt4','inline'). |
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190 | 190 | |
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191 | 191 | Returns |
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192 | 192 | ------- |
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193 | 193 | A tuple of (gui, backend) where backend is one of ('TkAgg','GTKAgg', |
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194 | 194 | 'WXAgg','Qt4Agg','module://IPython.zmq.pylab.backend_inline'). |
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195 | 195 | """ |
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196 | 196 | |
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197 | 197 | import matplotlib |
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198 | 198 | |
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199 | 199 | if gui: |
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200 | 200 | # select backend based on requested gui |
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201 | 201 | backend = backends[gui] |
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202 | 202 | else: |
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203 | 203 | backend = matplotlib.rcParams['backend'] |
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204 | 204 | # In this case, we need to find what the appropriate gui selection call |
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205 | 205 | # should be for IPython, so we can activate inputhook accordingly |
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206 | 206 | gui = backend2gui.get(backend, None) |
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207 | 207 | return gui, backend |
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208 | 208 | |
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209 | 209 | |
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210 | 210 | def activate_matplotlib(backend): |
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211 | 211 | """Activate the given backend and set interactive to True.""" |
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212 | 212 | |
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213 | 213 | import matplotlib |
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214 | 214 | if backend.startswith('module://'): |
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215 | 215 | # Work around bug in matplotlib: matplotlib.use converts the |
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216 | 216 | # backend_id to lowercase even if a module name is specified! |
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217 | 217 | matplotlib.rcParams['backend'] = backend |
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218 | 218 | else: |
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219 | 219 | matplotlib.use(backend) |
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220 | 220 | matplotlib.interactive(True) |
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221 | 221 | |
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222 | 222 | # This must be imported last in the matplotlib series, after |
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223 | 223 | # backend/interactivity choices have been made |
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224 | 224 | import matplotlib.pylab as pylab |
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225 | 225 | |
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226 | 226 | # XXX For now leave this commented out, but depending on discussions with |
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227 | 227 | # mpl-dev, we may be able to allow interactive switching... |
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228 | 228 | #import matplotlib.pyplot |
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229 | 229 | #matplotlib.pyplot.switch_backend(backend) |
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230 | 230 | |
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231 | 231 | pylab.show._needmain = False |
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232 | 232 | # We need to detect at runtime whether show() is called by the user. |
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233 | 233 | # For this, we wrap it into a decorator which adds a 'called' flag. |
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234 | 234 | pylab.draw_if_interactive = flag_calls(pylab.draw_if_interactive) |
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235 | 235 | |
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236 | 236 | def import_pylab(user_ns, backend, import_all=True, shell=None): |
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237 | 237 | """Import the standard pylab symbols into user_ns.""" |
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238 | 238 | |
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239 | 239 | # Import numpy as np/pyplot as plt are conventions we're trying to |
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240 | 240 | # somewhat standardize on. Making them available to users by default |
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241 | 241 | # will greatly help this. |
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242 | 242 | s = ("import numpy\n" |
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243 | 243 | "import matplotlib\n" |
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244 | 244 | "from matplotlib import pylab, mlab, pyplot\n" |
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245 | 245 | "np = numpy\n" |
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246 | 246 | "plt = pyplot\n" |
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247 | 247 | ) |
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248 | 248 | exec s in user_ns |
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249 | 249 | |
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250 | 250 | if shell is not None: |
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251 | 251 | exec s in shell.user_ns_hidden |
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252 | 252 | # If using our svg payload backend, register the post-execution |
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253 | 253 | # function that will pick up the results for display. This can only be |
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254 | 254 | # done with access to the real shell object. |
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255 | 255 | # |
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256 | 256 | from IPython.zmq.pylab.backend_inline import InlineBackendConfig |
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257 | 257 | |
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258 | 258 | cfg = InlineBackendConfig.instance(config=shell.config) |
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259 | 259 | cfg.shell = shell |
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260 | 260 | |
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261 | 261 | if backend == backends['inline']: |
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262 | 262 | from IPython.zmq.pylab.backend_inline import flush_figures |
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263 | 263 | from matplotlib import pyplot |
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264 | 264 | shell.register_post_execute(flush_figures) |
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265 | 265 | # load inline_rc |
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266 | 266 | pyplot.rcParams.update(cfg.rc) |
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267 | 267 | |
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268 | 268 | # Add 'figsize' to pyplot and to the user's namespace |
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269 | 269 | user_ns['figsize'] = pyplot.figsize = figsize |
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270 | 270 | shell.user_ns_hidden['figsize'] = figsize |
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271 | 271 | |
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272 | 272 | # Setup the default figure format |
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273 | 273 | fmt = cfg.figure_format |
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274 | 274 | select_figure_format(shell, fmt) |
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275 | 275 | |
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276 | 276 | # The old pastefig function has been replaced by display |
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277 | 277 | from IPython.core.display import display |
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278 | 278 | # Add display and display_png to the user's namespace |
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279 | 279 | user_ns['display'] = display |
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280 | 280 | shell.user_ns_hidden['display'] = display |
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281 | 281 | user_ns['getfigs'] = getfigs |
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282 | 282 | shell.user_ns_hidden['getfigs'] = getfigs |
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283 | 283 | |
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284 | 284 | if import_all: |
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285 | 285 | s = ("from matplotlib.pylab import *\n" |
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286 | 286 | "from numpy import *\n") |
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287 | 287 | exec s in user_ns |
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288 | 288 | if shell is not None: |
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289 | 289 | exec s in shell.user_ns_hidden |
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290 | 290 | |
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291 | 291 | |
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292 | def pylab_activate(user_ns, gui=None, import_all=True): | |
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292 | def pylab_activate(user_ns, gui=None, import_all=True, shell=None): | |
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293 | 293 | """Activate pylab mode in the user's namespace. |
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294 | 294 | |
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295 | 295 | Loads and initializes numpy, matplotlib and friends for interactive use. |
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296 | 296 | |
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297 | 297 | Parameters |
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298 | 298 | ---------- |
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299 | 299 | user_ns : dict |
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300 | 300 | Namespace where the imports will occur. |
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301 | 301 | |
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302 | 302 | gui : optional, string |
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303 | 303 | A valid gui name following the conventions of the %gui magic. |
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304 | 304 | |
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305 | 305 | import_all : optional, boolean |
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306 | 306 | If true, an 'import *' is done from numpy and pylab. |
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307 | 307 | |
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308 | 308 | Returns |
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309 | 309 | ------- |
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310 | 310 | The actual gui used (if not given as input, it was obtained from matplotlib |
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311 | 311 | itself, and will be needed next to configure IPython's gui integration. |
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312 | 312 | """ |
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313 | 313 | gui, backend = find_gui_and_backend(gui) |
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314 | 314 | activate_matplotlib(backend) |
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315 | import_pylab(user_ns, backend, import_all) | |
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315 | import_pylab(user_ns, backend, import_all, shell) | |
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316 | 316 | |
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317 | 317 | print """ |
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318 | 318 | Welcome to pylab, a matplotlib-based Python environment [backend: %s]. |
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319 | 319 | For more information, type 'help(pylab)'.""" % backend |
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320 | 320 | |
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321 | 321 | return gui |
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322 | 322 |
@@ -1,782 +1,790 b'' | |||
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1 | 1 | #!/usr/bin/env python |
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2 | 2 | """A simple interactive kernel that talks to a frontend over 0MQ. |
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3 | 3 | |
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4 | 4 | Things to do: |
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5 | 5 | |
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6 | 6 | * Implement `set_parent` logic. Right before doing exec, the Kernel should |
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7 | 7 | call set_parent on all the PUB objects with the message about to be executed. |
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8 | 8 | * Implement random port and security key logic. |
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9 | 9 | * Implement control messages. |
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10 | 10 | * Implement event loop and poll version. |
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11 | 11 | """ |
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12 | 12 | |
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13 | 13 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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14 | 14 | # Imports |
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15 | 15 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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16 | 16 | from __future__ import print_function |
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17 | 17 | |
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18 | 18 | # Standard library imports. |
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19 | 19 | import __builtin__ |
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20 | 20 | import atexit |
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21 | 21 | import sys |
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22 | 22 | import time |
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23 | 23 | import traceback |
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24 | 24 | import logging |
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25 | ||
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25 | 26 | # System library imports. |
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26 | 27 | import zmq |
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27 | 28 | |
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28 | 29 | # Local imports. |
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29 | 30 | from IPython.config.configurable import Configurable |
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30 | 31 | from IPython.config.application import boolean_flag |
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31 | 32 | from IPython.core.application import ProfileDir |
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32 | 33 | from IPython.core.error import StdinNotImplementedError |
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33 | 34 | from IPython.core.shellapp import ( |
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34 | 35 | InteractiveShellApp, shell_flags, shell_aliases |
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35 | 36 | ) |
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36 | 37 | from IPython.utils import io |
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37 | 38 | from IPython.utils import py3compat |
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38 | 39 | from IPython.utils.jsonutil import json_clean |
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39 | 40 | from IPython.lib import pylabtools |
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40 | 41 | from IPython.utils.traitlets import ( |
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41 | List, Instance, Float, Dict, Bool, Int, Unicode, CaselessStrEnum | |
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42 | Any, List, Instance, Float, Dict, Bool, Int, Unicode, CaselessStrEnum | |
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42 | 43 | ) |
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43 | 44 | |
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44 | 45 | from entry_point import base_launch_kernel |
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45 | 46 | from kernelapp import KernelApp, kernel_flags, kernel_aliases |
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46 | 47 | from iostream import OutStream |
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47 | 48 | from session import Session, Message |
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48 | 49 | from zmqshell import ZMQInteractiveShell |
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49 | 50 | |
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50 | 51 | |
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51 | 52 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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52 | 53 | # Main kernel class |
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53 | 54 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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54 | 55 | |
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55 | 56 | class Kernel(Configurable): |
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56 | 57 | |
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57 | 58 | #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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58 | 59 | # Kernel interface |
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59 | 60 | #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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60 | 61 | |
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62 | # attribute to override with a GUI | |
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63 | eventloop = Any(None) | |
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64 | ||
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61 | 65 | shell = Instance('IPython.core.interactiveshell.InteractiveShellABC') |
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62 | 66 | session = Instance(Session) |
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63 | 67 | shell_socket = Instance('zmq.Socket') |
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64 | 68 | iopub_socket = Instance('zmq.Socket') |
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65 | 69 | stdin_socket = Instance('zmq.Socket') |
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66 | 70 | log = Instance(logging.Logger) |
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67 | 71 | |
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68 | 72 | # Private interface |
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69 | 73 | |
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70 | 74 | # Time to sleep after flushing the stdout/err buffers in each execute |
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71 | 75 | # cycle. While this introduces a hard limit on the minimal latency of the |
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72 | 76 | # execute cycle, it helps prevent output synchronization problems for |
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73 | 77 | # clients. |
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74 | 78 | # Units are in seconds. The minimum zmq latency on local host is probably |
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75 | 79 | # ~150 microseconds, set this to 500us for now. We may need to increase it |
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76 | 80 | # a little if it's not enough after more interactive testing. |
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77 | 81 | _execute_sleep = Float(0.0005, config=True) |
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78 | 82 | |
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79 | 83 | # Frequency of the kernel's event loop. |
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80 | 84 | # Units are in seconds, kernel subclasses for GUI toolkits may need to |
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81 | 85 | # adapt to milliseconds. |
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82 | 86 | _poll_interval = Float(0.05, config=True) |
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83 | 87 | |
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84 | 88 | # If the shutdown was requested over the network, we leave here the |
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85 | 89 | # necessary reply message so it can be sent by our registered atexit |
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86 | 90 | # handler. This ensures that the reply is only sent to clients truly at |
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87 | 91 | # the end of our shutdown process (which happens after the underlying |
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88 | 92 | # IPython shell's own shutdown). |
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89 | 93 | _shutdown_message = None |
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90 | 94 | |
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91 | 95 | # This is a dict of port number that the kernel is listening on. It is set |
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92 | 96 | # by record_ports and used by connect_request. |
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93 | 97 | _recorded_ports = Dict() |
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94 | 98 | |
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95 | 99 | |
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96 | 100 | |
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97 | 101 | def __init__(self, **kwargs): |
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98 | 102 | super(Kernel, self).__init__(**kwargs) |
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99 | 103 | |
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100 | 104 | # Before we even start up the shell, register *first* our exit handlers |
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101 | 105 | # so they come before the shell's |
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102 | 106 | atexit.register(self._at_shutdown) |
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103 | 107 | |
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104 | 108 | # Initialize the InteractiveShell subclass |
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105 | 109 | self.shell = ZMQInteractiveShell.instance(config=self.config) |
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106 | 110 | self.shell.displayhook.session = self.session |
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107 | 111 | self.shell.displayhook.pub_socket = self.iopub_socket |
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108 | 112 | self.shell.display_pub.session = self.session |
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109 | 113 | self.shell.display_pub.pub_socket = self.iopub_socket |
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110 | 114 | |
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111 | 115 | # TMP - hack while developing |
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112 | 116 | self.shell._reply_content = None |
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113 | 117 | |
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114 | 118 | # Build dict of handlers for message types |
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115 | 119 | msg_types = [ 'execute_request', 'complete_request', |
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116 | 120 | 'object_info_request', 'history_request', |
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117 | 121 | 'connect_request', 'shutdown_request'] |
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118 | 122 | self.handlers = {} |
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119 | 123 | for msg_type in msg_types: |
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120 | 124 | self.handlers[msg_type] = getattr(self, msg_type) |
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121 | 125 | |
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122 | 126 | def do_one_iteration(self): |
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123 | 127 | """Do one iteration of the kernel's evaluation loop. |
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124 | 128 | """ |
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125 | 129 | try: |
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126 | 130 | ident,msg = self.session.recv(self.shell_socket, zmq.NOBLOCK) |
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127 | 131 | except Exception: |
|
128 | 132 | self.log.warn("Invalid Message:", exc_info=True) |
|
129 | 133 | return |
|
130 | 134 | if msg is None: |
|
131 | 135 | return |
|
132 | 136 | |
|
133 | 137 | msg_type = msg['header']['msg_type'] |
|
134 | 138 | |
|
135 | 139 | # This assert will raise in versions of zeromq 2.0.7 and lesser. |
|
136 | 140 | # We now require 2.0.8 or above, so we can uncomment for safety. |
|
137 | 141 | # print(ident,msg, file=sys.__stdout__) |
|
138 | 142 | assert ident is not None, "Missing message part." |
|
139 | 143 | |
|
140 | 144 | # Print some info about this message and leave a '--->' marker, so it's |
|
141 | 145 | # easier to trace visually the message chain when debugging. Each |
|
142 | 146 | # handler prints its message at the end. |
|
143 | 147 | self.log.debug('\n*** MESSAGE TYPE:'+str(msg_type)+'***') |
|
144 | 148 | self.log.debug(' Content: '+str(msg['content'])+'\n --->\n ') |
|
145 | 149 | |
|
146 | 150 | # Find and call actual handler for message |
|
147 | 151 | handler = self.handlers.get(msg_type, None) |
|
148 | 152 | if handler is None: |
|
149 | 153 | self.log.error("UNKNOWN MESSAGE TYPE:" +str(msg)) |
|
150 | 154 | else: |
|
151 | 155 | handler(ident, msg) |
|
152 | 156 | |
|
153 | 157 | # Check whether we should exit, in case the incoming message set the |
|
154 | 158 | # exit flag on |
|
155 | 159 | if self.shell.exit_now: |
|
156 | 160 | self.log.debug('\nExiting IPython kernel...') |
|
157 | 161 | # We do a normal, clean exit, which allows any actions registered |
|
158 | 162 | # via atexit (such as history saving) to take place. |
|
159 | 163 | sys.exit(0) |
|
160 | 164 | |
|
161 | 165 | |
|
162 | 166 | def start(self): |
|
163 | 167 | """ Start the kernel main loop. |
|
164 | 168 | """ |
|
165 | 169 | poller = zmq.Poller() |
|
166 | 170 | poller.register(self.shell_socket, zmq.POLLIN) |
|
167 | while True: | |
|
171 | # loop while self.eventloop has not been overridden | |
|
172 | while self.eventloop is None: | |
|
168 | 173 | try: |
|
169 | 174 | # scale by extra factor of 10, because there is no |
|
170 | 175 | # reason for this to be anything less than ~ 0.1s |
|
171 | 176 | # since it is a real poller and will respond |
|
172 | 177 | # to events immediately |
|
173 | 178 | |
|
174 | 179 | # double nested try/except, to properly catch KeyboardInterrupt |
|
175 | 180 | # due to pyzmq Issue #130 |
|
176 | 181 | try: |
|
177 | 182 | poller.poll(10*1000*self._poll_interval) |
|
178 | 183 | self.do_one_iteration() |
|
179 | 184 | except: |
|
180 | 185 | raise |
|
181 | 186 | except KeyboardInterrupt: |
|
182 | 187 | # Ctrl-C shouldn't crash the kernel |
|
183 | 188 | io.raw_print("KeyboardInterrupt caught in kernel") |
|
189 | if self.eventloop is not None: | |
|
190 | try: | |
|
191 | self.eventloop(self) | |
|
192 | except KeyboardInterrupt: | |
|
193 | # Ctrl-C shouldn't crash the kernel | |
|
194 | io.raw_print("KeyboardInterrupt caught in kernel") | |
|
195 | ||
|
184 | 196 | |
|
185 | 197 | def record_ports(self, ports): |
|
186 | 198 | """Record the ports that this kernel is using. |
|
187 | 199 | |
|
188 | 200 | The creator of the Kernel instance must call this methods if they |
|
189 | 201 | want the :meth:`connect_request` method to return the port numbers. |
|
190 | 202 | """ |
|
191 | 203 | self._recorded_ports = ports |
|
192 | 204 | |
|
193 | 205 | #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
194 | 206 | # Kernel request handlers |
|
195 | 207 | #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
196 | 208 | |
|
197 | 209 | def _publish_pyin(self, code, parent): |
|
198 | 210 | """Publish the code request on the pyin stream.""" |
|
199 | 211 | |
|
200 | 212 | pyin_msg = self.session.send(self.iopub_socket, u'pyin',{u'code':code}, parent=parent) |
|
201 | 213 | |
|
202 | 214 | def execute_request(self, ident, parent): |
|
203 | 215 | |
|
204 | 216 | status_msg = self.session.send(self.iopub_socket, |
|
205 | 217 | u'status', |
|
206 | 218 | {u'execution_state':u'busy'}, |
|
207 | 219 | parent=parent |
|
208 | 220 | ) |
|
209 | 221 | |
|
210 | 222 | try: |
|
211 | 223 | content = parent[u'content'] |
|
212 | 224 | code = content[u'code'] |
|
213 | 225 | silent = content[u'silent'] |
|
214 | 226 | except: |
|
215 | 227 | self.log.error("Got bad msg: ") |
|
216 | 228 | self.log.error(str(Message(parent))) |
|
217 | 229 | return |
|
218 | 230 | |
|
219 | 231 | shell = self.shell # we'll need this a lot here |
|
220 | 232 | |
|
221 | 233 | # Replace raw_input. Note that is not sufficient to replace |
|
222 | 234 | # raw_input in the user namespace. |
|
223 | 235 | if content.get('allow_stdin', False): |
|
224 | 236 | raw_input = lambda prompt='': self._raw_input(prompt, ident, parent) |
|
225 | 237 | else: |
|
226 | 238 | raw_input = lambda prompt='' : self._no_raw_input() |
|
227 | 239 | |
|
228 | 240 | if py3compat.PY3: |
|
229 | 241 | __builtin__.input = raw_input |
|
230 | 242 | else: |
|
231 | 243 | __builtin__.raw_input = raw_input |
|
232 | 244 | |
|
233 | 245 | # Set the parent message of the display hook and out streams. |
|
234 | 246 | shell.displayhook.set_parent(parent) |
|
235 | 247 | shell.display_pub.set_parent(parent) |
|
236 | 248 | sys.stdout.set_parent(parent) |
|
237 | 249 | sys.stderr.set_parent(parent) |
|
238 | 250 | |
|
239 | 251 | # Re-broadcast our input for the benefit of listening clients, and |
|
240 | 252 | # start computing output |
|
241 | 253 | if not silent: |
|
242 | 254 | self._publish_pyin(code, parent) |
|
243 | 255 | |
|
244 | 256 | reply_content = {} |
|
245 | 257 | try: |
|
246 | 258 | if silent: |
|
247 | 259 | # run_code uses 'exec' mode, so no displayhook will fire, and it |
|
248 | 260 | # doesn't call logging or history manipulations. Print |
|
249 | 261 | # statements in that code will obviously still execute. |
|
250 | 262 | shell.run_code(code) |
|
251 | 263 | else: |
|
252 | 264 | # FIXME: the shell calls the exception handler itself. |
|
253 | 265 | shell.run_cell(code, store_history=True) |
|
254 | 266 | except: |
|
255 | 267 | status = u'error' |
|
256 | 268 | # FIXME: this code right now isn't being used yet by default, |
|
257 | 269 | # because the run_cell() call above directly fires off exception |
|
258 | 270 | # reporting. This code, therefore, is only active in the scenario |
|
259 | 271 | # where runlines itself has an unhandled exception. We need to |
|
260 | 272 | # uniformize this, for all exception construction to come from a |
|
261 | 273 | # single location in the codbase. |
|
262 | 274 | etype, evalue, tb = sys.exc_info() |
|
263 | 275 | tb_list = traceback.format_exception(etype, evalue, tb) |
|
264 | 276 | reply_content.update(shell._showtraceback(etype, evalue, tb_list)) |
|
265 | 277 | else: |
|
266 | 278 | status = u'ok' |
|
267 | 279 | |
|
268 | 280 | reply_content[u'status'] = status |
|
269 | 281 | |
|
270 | 282 | # Return the execution counter so clients can display prompts |
|
271 | 283 | reply_content['execution_count'] = shell.execution_count -1 |
|
272 | 284 | |
|
273 | 285 | # FIXME - fish exception info out of shell, possibly left there by |
|
274 | 286 | # runlines. We'll need to clean up this logic later. |
|
275 | 287 | if shell._reply_content is not None: |
|
276 | 288 | reply_content.update(shell._reply_content) |
|
277 | 289 | # reset after use |
|
278 | 290 | shell._reply_content = None |
|
279 | 291 | |
|
280 | 292 | # At this point, we can tell whether the main code execution succeeded |
|
281 | 293 | # or not. If it did, we proceed to evaluate user_variables/expressions |
|
282 | 294 | if reply_content['status'] == 'ok': |
|
283 | 295 | reply_content[u'user_variables'] = \ |
|
284 | 296 | shell.user_variables(content[u'user_variables']) |
|
285 | 297 | reply_content[u'user_expressions'] = \ |
|
286 | 298 | shell.user_expressions(content[u'user_expressions']) |
|
287 | 299 | else: |
|
288 | 300 | # If there was an error, don't even try to compute variables or |
|
289 | 301 | # expressions |
|
290 | 302 | reply_content[u'user_variables'] = {} |
|
291 | 303 | reply_content[u'user_expressions'] = {} |
|
292 | 304 | |
|
293 | 305 | # Payloads should be retrieved regardless of outcome, so we can both |
|
294 | 306 | # recover partial output (that could have been generated early in a |
|
295 | 307 | # block, before an error) and clear the payload system always. |
|
296 | 308 | reply_content[u'payload'] = shell.payload_manager.read_payload() |
|
297 | 309 | # Be agressive about clearing the payload because we don't want |
|
298 | 310 | # it to sit in memory until the next execute_request comes in. |
|
299 | 311 | shell.payload_manager.clear_payload() |
|
300 | 312 | |
|
301 | 313 | # Flush output before sending the reply. |
|
302 | 314 | sys.stdout.flush() |
|
303 | 315 | sys.stderr.flush() |
|
304 | 316 | # FIXME: on rare occasions, the flush doesn't seem to make it to the |
|
305 | 317 | # clients... This seems to mitigate the problem, but we definitely need |
|
306 | 318 | # to better understand what's going on. |
|
307 | 319 | if self._execute_sleep: |
|
308 | 320 | time.sleep(self._execute_sleep) |
|
309 | 321 | |
|
310 | 322 | # Send the reply. |
|
311 | 323 | reply_content = json_clean(reply_content) |
|
312 | 324 | reply_msg = self.session.send(self.shell_socket, u'execute_reply', |
|
313 | 325 | reply_content, parent, ident=ident) |
|
314 | 326 | self.log.debug(str(reply_msg)) |
|
315 | 327 | |
|
316 | 328 | if reply_msg['content']['status'] == u'error': |
|
317 | 329 | self._abort_queue() |
|
318 | 330 | |
|
319 | 331 | status_msg = self.session.send(self.iopub_socket, |
|
320 | 332 | u'status', |
|
321 | 333 | {u'execution_state':u'idle'}, |
|
322 | 334 | parent=parent |
|
323 | 335 | ) |
|
324 | 336 | |
|
325 | 337 | def complete_request(self, ident, parent): |
|
326 | 338 | txt, matches = self._complete(parent) |
|
327 | 339 | matches = {'matches' : matches, |
|
328 | 340 | 'matched_text' : txt, |
|
329 | 341 | 'status' : 'ok'} |
|
330 | 342 | matches = json_clean(matches) |
|
331 | 343 | completion_msg = self.session.send(self.shell_socket, 'complete_reply', |
|
332 | 344 | matches, parent, ident) |
|
333 | 345 | self.log.debug(str(completion_msg)) |
|
334 | 346 | |
|
335 | 347 | def object_info_request(self, ident, parent): |
|
336 | 348 | object_info = self.shell.object_inspect(parent['content']['oname']) |
|
337 | 349 | # Before we send this object over, we scrub it for JSON usage |
|
338 | 350 | oinfo = json_clean(object_info) |
|
339 | 351 | msg = self.session.send(self.shell_socket, 'object_info_reply', |
|
340 | 352 | oinfo, parent, ident) |
|
341 | 353 | self.log.debug(msg) |
|
342 | 354 | |
|
343 | 355 | def history_request(self, ident, parent): |
|
344 | 356 | # We need to pull these out, as passing **kwargs doesn't work with |
|
345 | 357 | # unicode keys before Python 2.6.5. |
|
346 | 358 | hist_access_type = parent['content']['hist_access_type'] |
|
347 | 359 | raw = parent['content']['raw'] |
|
348 | 360 | output = parent['content']['output'] |
|
349 | 361 | if hist_access_type == 'tail': |
|
350 | 362 | n = parent['content']['n'] |
|
351 | 363 | hist = self.shell.history_manager.get_tail(n, raw=raw, output=output, |
|
352 | 364 | include_latest=True) |
|
353 | 365 | |
|
354 | 366 | elif hist_access_type == 'range': |
|
355 | 367 | session = parent['content']['session'] |
|
356 | 368 | start = parent['content']['start'] |
|
357 | 369 | stop = parent['content']['stop'] |
|
358 | 370 | hist = self.shell.history_manager.get_range(session, start, stop, |
|
359 | 371 | raw=raw, output=output) |
|
360 | 372 | |
|
361 | 373 | elif hist_access_type == 'search': |
|
362 | 374 | pattern = parent['content']['pattern'] |
|
363 | 375 | hist = self.shell.history_manager.search(pattern, raw=raw, output=output) |
|
364 | 376 | |
|
365 | 377 | else: |
|
366 | 378 | hist = [] |
|
367 | 379 | content = {'history' : list(hist)} |
|
368 | 380 | content = json_clean(content) |
|
369 | 381 | msg = self.session.send(self.shell_socket, 'history_reply', |
|
370 | 382 | content, parent, ident) |
|
371 | 383 | self.log.debug(str(msg)) |
|
372 | 384 | |
|
373 | 385 | def connect_request(self, ident, parent): |
|
374 | 386 | if self._recorded_ports is not None: |
|
375 | 387 | content = self._recorded_ports.copy() |
|
376 | 388 | else: |
|
377 | 389 | content = {} |
|
378 | 390 | msg = self.session.send(self.shell_socket, 'connect_reply', |
|
379 | 391 | content, parent, ident) |
|
380 | 392 | self.log.debug(msg) |
|
381 | 393 | |
|
382 | 394 | def shutdown_request(self, ident, parent): |
|
383 | 395 | self.shell.exit_now = True |
|
384 | 396 | self._shutdown_message = self.session.msg(u'shutdown_reply', parent['content'], parent) |
|
385 | 397 | sys.exit(0) |
|
386 | 398 | |
|
387 | 399 | #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
388 | 400 | # Protected interface |
|
389 | 401 | #--------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
390 | 402 | |
|
391 | 403 | def _abort_queue(self): |
|
392 | 404 | while True: |
|
393 | 405 | try: |
|
394 | 406 | ident,msg = self.session.recv(self.shell_socket, zmq.NOBLOCK) |
|
395 | 407 | except Exception: |
|
396 | 408 | self.log.warn("Invalid Message:", exc_info=True) |
|
397 | 409 | continue |
|
398 | 410 | if msg is None: |
|
399 | 411 | break |
|
400 | 412 | else: |
|
401 | 413 | assert ident is not None, \ |
|
402 | 414 | "Unexpected missing message part." |
|
403 | 415 | |
|
404 | 416 | self.log.debug("Aborting:\n"+str(Message(msg))) |
|
405 | 417 | msg_type = msg['header']['msg_type'] |
|
406 | 418 | reply_type = msg_type.split('_')[0] + '_reply' |
|
407 | 419 | reply_msg = self.session.send(self.shell_socket, reply_type, |
|
408 | 420 | {'status' : 'aborted'}, msg, ident=ident) |
|
409 | 421 | self.log.debug(reply_msg) |
|
410 | 422 | # We need to wait a bit for requests to come in. This can probably |
|
411 | 423 | # be set shorter for true asynchronous clients. |
|
412 | 424 | time.sleep(0.1) |
|
413 | 425 | |
|
414 | 426 | def _no_raw_input(self): |
|
415 | 427 | """Raise StdinNotImplentedError if active frontend doesn't support stdin.""" |
|
416 | 428 | raise StdinNotImplementedError("raw_input was called, but this frontend does not support stdin.") |
|
417 | 429 | |
|
418 | 430 | def _raw_input(self, prompt, ident, parent): |
|
419 | 431 | # Flush output before making the request. |
|
420 | 432 | sys.stderr.flush() |
|
421 | 433 | sys.stdout.flush() |
|
422 | 434 | |
|
423 | 435 | # Send the input request. |
|
424 | 436 | content = json_clean(dict(prompt=prompt)) |
|
425 | 437 | msg = self.session.send(self.stdin_socket, u'input_request', content, parent, ident=ident) |
|
426 | 438 | |
|
427 | 439 | # Await a response. |
|
428 | 440 | while True: |
|
429 | 441 | try: |
|
430 | 442 | ident, reply = self.session.recv(self.stdin_socket, 0) |
|
431 | 443 | except Exception: |
|
432 | 444 | self.log.warn("Invalid Message:", exc_info=True) |
|
433 | 445 | else: |
|
434 | 446 | break |
|
435 | 447 | try: |
|
436 | 448 | value = reply['content']['value'] |
|
437 | 449 | except: |
|
438 | 450 | self.log.error("Got bad raw_input reply: ") |
|
439 | 451 | self.log.error(str(Message(parent))) |
|
440 | 452 | value = '' |
|
441 | 453 | return value |
|
442 | 454 | |
|
443 | 455 | def _complete(self, msg): |
|
444 | 456 | c = msg['content'] |
|
445 | 457 | try: |
|
446 | 458 | cpos = int(c['cursor_pos']) |
|
447 | 459 | except: |
|
448 | 460 | # If we don't get something that we can convert to an integer, at |
|
449 | 461 | # least attempt the completion guessing the cursor is at the end of |
|
450 | 462 | # the text, if there's any, and otherwise of the line |
|
451 | 463 | cpos = len(c['text']) |
|
452 | 464 | if cpos==0: |
|
453 | 465 | cpos = len(c['line']) |
|
454 | 466 | return self.shell.complete(c['text'], c['line'], cpos) |
|
455 | 467 | |
|
456 | 468 | def _object_info(self, context): |
|
457 | 469 | symbol, leftover = self._symbol_from_context(context) |
|
458 | 470 | if symbol is not None and not leftover: |
|
459 | 471 | doc = getattr(symbol, '__doc__', '') |
|
460 | 472 | else: |
|
461 | 473 | doc = '' |
|
462 | 474 | object_info = dict(docstring = doc) |
|
463 | 475 | return object_info |
|
464 | 476 | |
|
465 | 477 | def _symbol_from_context(self, context): |
|
466 | 478 | if not context: |
|
467 | 479 | return None, context |
|
468 | 480 | |
|
469 | 481 | base_symbol_string = context[0] |
|
470 | 482 | symbol = self.shell.user_ns.get(base_symbol_string, None) |
|
471 | 483 | if symbol is None: |
|
472 | 484 | symbol = __builtin__.__dict__.get(base_symbol_string, None) |
|
473 | 485 | if symbol is None: |
|
474 | 486 | return None, context |
|
475 | 487 | |
|
476 | 488 | context = context[1:] |
|
477 | 489 | for i, name in enumerate(context): |
|
478 | 490 | new_symbol = getattr(symbol, name, None) |
|
479 | 491 | if new_symbol is None: |
|
480 | 492 | return symbol, context[i:] |
|
481 | 493 | else: |
|
482 | 494 | symbol = new_symbol |
|
483 | 495 | |
|
484 | 496 | return symbol, [] |
|
485 | 497 | |
|
486 | 498 | def _at_shutdown(self): |
|
487 | 499 | """Actions taken at shutdown by the kernel, called by python's atexit. |
|
488 | 500 | """ |
|
489 | 501 | # io.rprint("Kernel at_shutdown") # dbg |
|
490 | 502 | if self._shutdown_message is not None: |
|
491 | 503 | self.session.send(self.shell_socket, self._shutdown_message) |
|
492 | 504 | self.session.send(self.iopub_socket, self._shutdown_message) |
|
493 | 505 | self.log.debug(str(self._shutdown_message)) |
|
494 | 506 | # A very short sleep to give zmq time to flush its message buffers |
|
495 | 507 | # before Python truly shuts down. |
|
496 | 508 | time.sleep(0.01) |
|
497 | 509 | |
|
498 | 510 | |
|
499 | class QtKernel(Kernel): | |
|
500 | """A Kernel subclass with Qt support.""" | |
|
511 | #------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
|
512 | # Eventloops for integrating the Kernel into different GUIs | |
|
513 | #------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
|
501 | 514 | |
|
502 | def start(self): | |
|
503 | """Start a kernel with QtPy4 event loop integration.""" | |
|
504 | 515 | |
|
505 | from IPython.external.qt_for_kernel import QtCore | |
|
506 | from IPython.lib.guisupport import get_app_qt4, start_event_loop_qt4 | |
|
516 | def loop_qt4(kernel): | |
|
517 | """Start a kernel with PyQt4 event loop integration.""" | |
|
507 | 518 | |
|
508 | self.app = get_app_qt4([" "]) | |
|
509 | self.app.setQuitOnLastWindowClosed(False) | |
|
510 | self.timer = QtCore.QTimer() | |
|
511 | self.timer.timeout.connect(self.do_one_iteration) | |
|
512 | # Units for the timer are in milliseconds | |
|
513 | self.timer.start(1000*self._poll_interval) | |
|
514 | start_event_loop_qt4(self.app) | |
|
519 | from IPython.external.qt_for_kernel import QtCore | |
|
520 | from IPython.lib.guisupport import get_app_qt4, start_event_loop_qt4 | |
|
515 | 521 | |
|
522 | kernel.app = get_app_qt4([" "]) | |
|
523 | kernel.app.setQuitOnLastWindowClosed(False) | |
|
524 | kernel.timer = QtCore.QTimer() | |
|
525 | kernel.timer.timeout.connect(kernel.do_one_iteration) | |
|
526 | # Units for the timer are in milliseconds | |
|
527 | kernel.timer.start(1000*kernel._poll_interval) | |
|
528 | start_event_loop_qt4(kernel.app) | |
|
516 | 529 | |
|
517 | class WxKernel(Kernel): | |
|
518 | """A Kernel subclass with Wx support.""" | |
|
519 | 530 | |
|
520 | def start(self): | |
|
521 |
|
|
|
522 | ||
|
523 | import wx | |
|
524 | from IPython.lib.guisupport import start_event_loop_wx | |
|
525 | ||
|
526 | doi = self.do_one_iteration | |
|
527 | # Wx uses milliseconds | |
|
528 | poll_interval = int(1000*self._poll_interval) | |
|
529 | ||
|
530 | # We have to put the wx.Timer in a wx.Frame for it to fire properly. | |
|
531 | # We make the Frame hidden when we create it in the main app below. | |
|
532 | class TimerFrame(wx.Frame): | |
|
533 | def __init__(self, func): | |
|
534 | wx.Frame.__init__(self, None, -1) | |
|
535 | self.timer = wx.Timer(self) | |
|
536 | # Units for the timer are in milliseconds | |
|
537 | self.timer.Start(poll_interval) | |
|
538 | self.Bind(wx.EVT_TIMER, self.on_timer) | |
|
539 | self.func = func | |
|
540 | ||
|
541 | def on_timer(self, event): | |
|
542 | self.func() | |
|
543 | ||
|
544 | # We need a custom wx.App to create our Frame subclass that has the | |
|
545 | # wx.Timer to drive the ZMQ event loop. | |
|
546 | class IPWxApp(wx.App): | |
|
547 | def OnInit(self): | |
|
548 | self.frame = TimerFrame(doi) | |
|
549 | self.frame.Show(False) | |
|
550 | return True | |
|
551 | ||
|
552 | # The redirect=False here makes sure that wx doesn't replace | |
|
553 | # sys.stdout/stderr with its own classes. | |
|
554 | self.app = IPWxApp(redirect=False) | |
|
555 | start_event_loop_wx(self.app) | |
|
556 | ||
|
557 | ||
|
558 | class TkKernel(Kernel): | |
|
559 | """A Kernel subclass with Tk support.""" | |
|
531 | def loop_wx(kernel): | |
|
532 | """Start a kernel with wx event loop support.""" | |
|
560 | 533 | |
|
561 | def start(self): | |
|
562 | """Start a Tk enabled event loop.""" | |
|
534 | import wx | |
|
535 | from IPython.lib.guisupport import start_event_loop_wx | |
|
563 | 536 | |
|
564 | import Tkinter | |
|
565 | doi = self.do_one_iteration | |
|
566 | # Tk uses milliseconds | |
|
567 | poll_interval = int(1000*self._poll_interval) | |
|
568 | # For Tkinter, we create a Tk object and call its withdraw method. | |
|
569 | class Timer(object): | |
|
570 | def __init__(self, func): | |
|
571 | self.app = Tkinter.Tk() | |
|
572 | self.app.withdraw() | |
|
573 | self.func = func | |
|
537 | doi = kernel.do_one_iteration | |
|
538 | # Wx uses milliseconds | |
|
539 | poll_interval = int(1000*kernel._poll_interval) | |
|
574 | 540 | |
|
575 | def on_timer(self): | |
|
576 | self.func() | |
|
577 | self.app.after(poll_interval, self.on_timer) | |
|
541 | # We have to put the wx.Timer in a wx.Frame for it to fire properly. | |
|
542 | # We make the Frame hidden when we create it in the main app below. | |
|
543 | class TimerFrame(wx.Frame): | |
|
544 | def __init__(self, func): | |
|
545 | wx.Frame.__init__(self, None, -1) | |
|
546 | self.timer = wx.Timer(self) | |
|
547 | # Units for the timer are in milliseconds | |
|
548 | self.timer.Start(poll_interval) | |
|
549 | self.Bind(wx.EVT_TIMER, self.on_timer) | |
|
550 | self.func = func | |
|
578 | 551 | |
|
579 |
|
|
|
580 | self.on_timer() # Call it once to get things going. | |
|
581 | self.app.mainloop() | |
|
552 | def on_timer(self, event): | |
|
553 | self.func() | |
|
582 | 554 | |
|
583 | self.timer = Timer(doi) | |
|
584 | self.timer.start() | |
|
555 | # We need a custom wx.App to create our Frame subclass that has the | |
|
556 | # wx.Timer to drive the ZMQ event loop. | |
|
557 | class IPWxApp(wx.App): | |
|
558 | def OnInit(self): | |
|
559 | self.frame = TimerFrame(doi) | |
|
560 | self.frame.Show(False) | |
|
561 | return True | |
|
585 | 562 | |
|
563 | # The redirect=False here makes sure that wx doesn't replace | |
|
564 | # sys.stdout/stderr with its own classes. | |
|
565 | kernel.app = IPWxApp(redirect=False) | |
|
566 | start_event_loop_wx(kernel.app) | |
|
586 | 567 | |
|
587 | class GTKKernel(Kernel): | |
|
588 | """A Kernel subclass with GTK support.""" | |
|
589 | 568 | |
|
590 | def start(self): | |
|
591 |
|
|
|
592 | from .gui.gtkembed import GTKEmbed | |
|
569 | def loop_tk(kernel): | |
|
570 | """Start a kernel with the Tk event loop.""" | |
|
571 | ||
|
572 | import Tkinter | |
|
573 | doi = kernel.do_one_iteration | |
|
574 | # Tk uses milliseconds | |
|
575 | poll_interval = int(1000*kernel._poll_interval) | |
|
576 | # For Tkinter, we create a Tk object and call its withdraw method. | |
|
577 | class Timer(object): | |
|
578 | def __init__(self, func): | |
|
579 | self.app = Tkinter.Tk() | |
|
580 | self.app.withdraw() | |
|
581 | self.func = func | |
|
593 | 582 | |
|
594 | gtk_kernel = GTKEmbed(self) | |
|
595 | gtk_kernel.start() | |
|
583 | def on_timer(self): | |
|
584 | self.func() | |
|
585 | self.app.after(poll_interval, self.on_timer) | |
|
596 | 586 | |
|
587 | def start(self): | |
|
588 | self.on_timer() # Call it once to get things going. | |
|
589 | self.app.mainloop() | |
|
597 | 590 | |
|
598 | class OSXKernel(TkKernel): | |
|
599 | """A Kernel subclass with Cocoa support via the matplotlib OSX backend.""" | |
|
591 | kernel.timer = Timer(doi) | |
|
592 | kernel.timer.start() | |
|
593 | ||
|
594 | ||
|
595 | def loop_gtk(kernel): | |
|
596 | """Start the kernel, coordinating with the GTK event loop""" | |
|
597 | from .gui.gtkembed import GTKEmbed | |
|
598 | ||
|
599 | gtk_kernel = GTKEmbed(kernel) | |
|
600 | gtk_kernel.start() | |
|
601 | ||
|
602 | ||
|
603 | def loop_cocoa(kernel): | |
|
604 | """Start the kernel, coordinating with the Cocoa CFRunLoop event loop | |
|
605 | via the matplotlib MacOSX backend. | |
|
606 | """ | |
|
607 | import matplotlib | |
|
608 | if matplotlib.__version__ < '1.1.0': | |
|
609 | kernel.log.warn( | |
|
610 | "MacOSX backend in matplotlib %s doesn't have a Timer, " | |
|
611 | "falling back on Tk for CFRunLoop integration. Note that " | |
|
612 | "even this won't work if Tk is linked against X11 instead of " | |
|
613 | "Cocoa (e.g. EPD). To use the MacOSX backend in the kernel, " | |
|
614 | "you must use matplotlib >= 1.1.0, or a native libtk." | |
|
615 | ) | |
|
616 | return loop_tk(kernel) | |
|
600 | 617 | |
|
601 | def start(self): | |
|
602 | """Start the kernel, coordinating with the Cocoa CFRunLoop event loop | |
|
603 | via the matplotlib MacOSX backend. | |
|
604 | """ | |
|
605 | import matplotlib | |
|
606 | if matplotlib.__version__ < '1.1.0': | |
|
607 | self.log.warn( | |
|
608 | "MacOSX backend in matplotlib %s doesn't have a Timer, " | |
|
609 | "falling back on Tk for CFRunLoop integration. Note that " | |
|
610 | "even this won't work if Tk is linked against X11 instead of " | |
|
611 | "Cocoa (e.g. EPD). To use the MacOSX backend in the kernel, " | |
|
612 | "you must use matplotlib >= 1.1.0, or a native libtk." | |
|
613 | ) | |
|
614 | return TkKernel.start(self) | |
|
615 | ||
|
616 | from matplotlib.backends.backend_macosx import TimerMac, show | |
|
617 | ||
|
618 | # scale interval for sec->ms | |
|
619 | poll_interval = int(1000*self._poll_interval) | |
|
620 | ||
|
621 | real_excepthook = sys.excepthook | |
|
622 | def handle_int(etype, value, tb): | |
|
623 | """don't let KeyboardInterrupts look like crashes""" | |
|
624 | if etype is KeyboardInterrupt: | |
|
625 | io.raw_print("KeyboardInterrupt caught in CFRunLoop") | |
|
626 | else: | |
|
627 | real_excepthook(etype, value, tb) | |
|
628 | ||
|
629 | # add doi() as a Timer to the CFRunLoop | |
|
630 | def doi(): | |
|
631 | # restore excepthook during IPython code | |
|
632 | sys.excepthook = real_excepthook | |
|
633 | self.do_one_iteration() | |
|
634 | # and back: | |
|
635 | sys.excepthook = handle_int | |
|
636 | ||
|
637 | t = TimerMac(poll_interval) | |
|
638 | t.add_callback(doi) | |
|
639 | t.start() | |
|
640 | ||
|
641 | # but still need a Poller for when there are no active windows, | |
|
642 | # during which time mainloop() returns immediately | |
|
643 | poller = zmq.Poller() | |
|
644 | poller.register(self.shell_socket, zmq.POLLIN) | |
|
645 | ||
|
646 | while True: | |
|
618 | from matplotlib.backends.backend_macosx import TimerMac, show | |
|
619 | ||
|
620 | # scale interval for sec->ms | |
|
621 | poll_interval = int(1000*kernel._poll_interval) | |
|
622 | ||
|
623 | real_excepthook = sys.excepthook | |
|
624 | def handle_int(etype, value, tb): | |
|
625 | """don't let KeyboardInterrupts look like crashes""" | |
|
626 | if etype is KeyboardInterrupt: | |
|
627 | io.raw_print("KeyboardInterrupt caught in CFRunLoop") | |
|
628 | else: | |
|
629 | real_excepthook(etype, value, tb) | |
|
630 | ||
|
631 | # add doi() as a Timer to the CFRunLoop | |
|
632 | def doi(): | |
|
633 | # restore excepthook during IPython code | |
|
634 | sys.excepthook = real_excepthook | |
|
635 | kernel.do_one_iteration() | |
|
636 | # and back: | |
|
637 | sys.excepthook = handle_int | |
|
638 | ||
|
639 | t = TimerMac(poll_interval) | |
|
640 | t.add_callback(doi) | |
|
641 | t.start() | |
|
642 | ||
|
643 | # but still need a Poller for when there are no active windows, | |
|
644 | # during which time mainloop() returns immediately | |
|
645 | poller = zmq.Poller() | |
|
646 | poller.register(kernel.shell_socket, zmq.POLLIN) | |
|
647 | ||
|
648 | while True: | |
|
649 | try: | |
|
650 | # double nested try/except, to properly catch KeyboardInterrupt | |
|
651 | # due to pyzmq Issue #130 | |
|
647 | 652 | try: |
|
648 | # double nested try/except, to properly catch KeyboardInterrupt | |
|
649 | # due to pyzmq Issue #130 | |
|
650 |
|
|
|
651 | # don't let interrupts during mainloop invoke crash_handler: | |
|
652 | sys.excepthook = handle_int | |
|
653 | show.mainloop() | |
|
654 | sys.excepthook = real_excepthook | |
|
655 | # use poller if mainloop returned (no windows) | |
|
656 | # scale by extra factor of 10, since it's a real poll | |
|
657 | poller.poll(10*poll_interval) | |
|
658 | self.do_one_iteration() | |
|
659 | except: | |
|
660 | raise | |
|
661 | except KeyboardInterrupt: | |
|
662 | # Ctrl-C shouldn't crash the kernel | |
|
663 | io.raw_print("KeyboardInterrupt caught in kernel") | |
|
664 | finally: | |
|
665 | # ensure excepthook is restored | |
|
653 | # don't let interrupts during mainloop invoke crash_handler: | |
|
654 | sys.excepthook = handle_int | |
|
655 | show.mainloop() | |
|
666 | 656 | sys.excepthook = real_excepthook |
|
657 | # use poller if mainloop returned (no windows) | |
|
658 | # scale by extra factor of 10, since it's a real poll | |
|
659 | poller.poll(10*poll_interval) | |
|
660 | kernel.do_one_iteration() | |
|
661 | except: | |
|
662 | raise | |
|
663 | except KeyboardInterrupt: | |
|
664 | # Ctrl-C shouldn't crash the kernel | |
|
665 | io.raw_print("KeyboardInterrupt caught in kernel") | |
|
666 | finally: | |
|
667 | # ensure excepthook is restored | |
|
668 | sys.excepthook = real_excepthook | |
|
669 | ||
|
670 | # mapping of keys to loop functions | |
|
671 | loop_map = { | |
|
672 | 'qt' : loop_qt4, | |
|
673 | 'qt4': loop_qt4, | |
|
674 | 'inline': None, | |
|
675 | 'osx': loop_cocoa, | |
|
676 | 'wx' : loop_wx, | |
|
677 | 'tk' : loop_tk, | |
|
678 | 'gtk': loop_gtk, | |
|
679 | } | |
|
680 | ||
|
681 | def enable_gui(gui, kernel=None): | |
|
682 | """Enable integration with a give GUI""" | |
|
683 | if kernel is None: | |
|
684 | kernel = IPKernelApp.instance().kernel | |
|
685 | if gui not in loop_map: | |
|
686 | raise ValueError("GUI %r not supported" % gui) | |
|
687 | loop = loop_map[gui] | |
|
688 | if kernel.eventloop is not None and kernel.eventloop is not loop: | |
|
689 | raise RuntimeError("Cannot activate multiple GUI eventloops") | |
|
690 | kernel.eventloop = loop | |
|
667 | 691 | |
|
668 | 692 | |
|
669 | 693 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
670 | 694 | # Aliases and Flags for the IPKernelApp |
|
671 | 695 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
672 | 696 | |
|
673 | 697 | flags = dict(kernel_flags) |
|
674 | 698 | flags.update(shell_flags) |
|
675 | 699 | |
|
676 | 700 | addflag = lambda *args: flags.update(boolean_flag(*args)) |
|
677 | 701 | |
|
678 | 702 | flags['pylab'] = ( |
|
679 | 703 | {'IPKernelApp' : {'pylab' : 'auto'}}, |
|
680 | 704 | """Pre-load matplotlib and numpy for interactive use with |
|
681 | 705 | the default matplotlib backend.""" |
|
682 | 706 | ) |
|
683 | 707 | |
|
684 | 708 | aliases = dict(kernel_aliases) |
|
685 | 709 | aliases.update(shell_aliases) |
|
686 | 710 | |
|
687 | 711 | # it's possible we don't want short aliases for *all* of these: |
|
688 | 712 | aliases.update(dict( |
|
689 | 713 | pylab='IPKernelApp.pylab', |
|
690 | 714 | )) |
|
691 | 715 | |
|
692 | 716 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
693 | 717 | # The IPKernelApp class |
|
694 | 718 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
695 | 719 | |
|
696 | 720 | class IPKernelApp(KernelApp, InteractiveShellApp): |
|
697 | 721 | name = 'ipkernel' |
|
698 | 722 | |
|
699 | 723 | aliases = Dict(aliases) |
|
700 | 724 | flags = Dict(flags) |
|
701 | 725 | classes = [Kernel, ZMQInteractiveShell, ProfileDir, Session] |
|
702 | 726 | # configurables |
|
703 | 727 | pylab = CaselessStrEnum(['tk', 'qt', 'wx', 'gtk', 'osx', 'inline', 'auto'], |
|
704 | 728 | config=True, |
|
705 | 729 | help="""Pre-load matplotlib and numpy for interactive use, |
|
706 | 730 | selecting a particular matplotlib backend and loop integration. |
|
707 | 731 | """ |
|
708 | 732 | ) |
|
709 | 733 | def initialize(self, argv=None): |
|
710 | 734 | super(IPKernelApp, self).initialize(argv) |
|
711 | 735 | self.init_shell() |
|
712 | 736 | self.init_extensions() |
|
713 | 737 | self.init_code() |
|
714 | 738 | |
|
715 | 739 | def init_kernel(self): |
|
716 | 740 | kernel_factory = Kernel |
|
717 | 741 | |
|
718 | kernel_map = { | |
|
719 | 'qt' : QtKernel, | |
|
720 | 'qt4': QtKernel, | |
|
721 | 'inline': Kernel, | |
|
722 | 'osx': OSXKernel, | |
|
723 | 'wx' : WxKernel, | |
|
724 | 'tk' : TkKernel, | |
|
725 | 'gtk': GTKKernel, | |
|
726 | } | |
|
727 | ||
|
728 | 742 | if self.pylab: |
|
729 | 743 | key = None if self.pylab == 'auto' else self.pylab |
|
730 | 744 | gui, backend = pylabtools.find_gui_and_backend(key) |
|
731 | kernel_factory = kernel_map.get(gui) | |
|
732 | if kernel_factory is None: | |
|
733 | raise ValueError('GUI is not supported: %r' % gui) | |
|
734 | pylabtools.activate_matplotlib(backend) | |
|
735 | 745 | |
|
736 | 746 | kernel = kernel_factory(config=self.config, session=self.session, |
|
737 | 747 | shell_socket=self.shell_socket, |
|
738 | 748 | iopub_socket=self.iopub_socket, |
|
739 | 749 | stdin_socket=self.stdin_socket, |
|
740 | log=self.log | |
|
750 | log=self.log, | |
|
741 | 751 | ) |
|
742 | 752 | self.kernel = kernel |
|
743 | 753 | kernel.record_ports(self.ports) |
|
744 | 754 | |
|
745 | 755 | if self.pylab: |
|
746 |
import_all |
|
|
747 | pylabtools.import_pylab(kernel.shell.user_ns, backend, import_all, | |
|
748 | shell=kernel.shell) | |
|
756 | kernel.shell.enable_pylab(gui, import_all=self.pylab_import_all) | |
|
749 | 757 | |
|
750 | 758 | def init_shell(self): |
|
751 | 759 | self.shell = self.kernel.shell |
|
752 | 760 | |
|
753 | 761 | |
|
754 | 762 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
755 | 763 | # Kernel main and launch functions |
|
756 | 764 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
757 | 765 | |
|
758 | 766 | def launch_kernel(*args, **kwargs): |
|
759 | 767 | """Launches a localhost IPython kernel, binding to the specified ports. |
|
760 | 768 | |
|
761 | 769 | This function simply calls entry_point.base_launch_kernel with the right first |
|
762 | 770 | command to start an ipkernel. See base_launch_kernel for arguments. |
|
763 | 771 | |
|
764 | 772 | Returns |
|
765 | 773 | ------- |
|
766 | 774 | A tuple of form: |
|
767 | 775 | (kernel_process, shell_port, iopub_port, stdin_port, hb_port) |
|
768 | 776 | where kernel_process is a Popen object and the ports are integers. |
|
769 | 777 | """ |
|
770 | 778 | return base_launch_kernel('from IPython.zmq.ipkernel import main; main()', |
|
771 | 779 | *args, **kwargs) |
|
772 | 780 | |
|
773 | 781 | |
|
774 | 782 | def main(): |
|
775 | 783 | """Run an IPKernel as an application""" |
|
776 | 784 | app = IPKernelApp.instance() |
|
777 | 785 | app.initialize() |
|
778 | 786 | app.start() |
|
779 | 787 | |
|
780 | 788 | |
|
781 | 789 | if __name__ == '__main__': |
|
782 | 790 | main() |
@@ -1,495 +1,548 b'' | |||
|
1 | 1 | """A ZMQ-based subclass of InteractiveShell. |
|
2 | 2 | |
|
3 | 3 | This code is meant to ease the refactoring of the base InteractiveShell into |
|
4 | 4 | something with a cleaner architecture for 2-process use, without actually |
|
5 | 5 | breaking InteractiveShell itself. So we're doing something a bit ugly, where |
|
6 | 6 | we subclass and override what we want to fix. Once this is working well, we |
|
7 | 7 | can go back to the base class and refactor the code for a cleaner inheritance |
|
8 | 8 | implementation that doesn't rely on so much monkeypatching. |
|
9 | 9 | |
|
10 | 10 | But this lets us maintain a fully working IPython as we develop the new |
|
11 | 11 | machinery. This should thus be thought of as scaffolding. |
|
12 | 12 | """ |
|
13 | 13 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
14 | 14 | # Imports |
|
15 | 15 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
16 | 16 | from __future__ import print_function |
|
17 | 17 | |
|
18 | 18 | # Stdlib |
|
19 | 19 | import inspect |
|
20 | 20 | import os |
|
21 | 21 | import sys |
|
22 | 22 | from subprocess import Popen, PIPE |
|
23 | 23 | |
|
24 | 24 | # Our own |
|
25 | 25 | from IPython.core.interactiveshell import ( |
|
26 | 26 | InteractiveShell, InteractiveShellABC |
|
27 | 27 | ) |
|
28 | 28 | from IPython.core import page |
|
29 | 29 | from IPython.core.autocall import ZMQExitAutocall |
|
30 | 30 | from IPython.core.displaypub import DisplayPublisher |
|
31 | 31 | from IPython.core.macro import Macro |
|
32 | 32 | from IPython.core.magic import MacroToEdit |
|
33 | 33 | from IPython.core.payloadpage import install_payload_page |
|
34 | from IPython.lib import pylabtools | |
|
34 | 35 | from IPython.lib.kernel import ( |
|
35 | 36 | get_connection_file, get_connection_info, connect_qtconsole |
|
36 | 37 | ) |
|
37 | 38 | from IPython.utils import io |
|
38 | 39 | from IPython.utils.jsonutil import json_clean |
|
39 | 40 | from IPython.utils.path import get_py_filename |
|
40 | 41 | from IPython.utils.process import arg_split |
|
41 | 42 | from IPython.utils.traitlets import Instance, Type, Dict, CBool |
|
42 | 43 | from IPython.utils.warn import warn, error |
|
43 | 44 | from IPython.zmq.displayhook import ZMQShellDisplayHook, _encode_binary |
|
44 | 45 | from IPython.zmq.session import extract_header |
|
45 | 46 | from session import Session |
|
46 | 47 | |
|
47 | 48 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
48 | 49 | # Globals and side-effects |
|
49 | 50 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
50 | 51 | |
|
51 | 52 | # Install the payload version of page. |
|
52 | 53 | install_payload_page() |
|
53 | 54 | |
|
54 | 55 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
55 | 56 | # Functions and classes |
|
56 | 57 | #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
57 | 58 | |
|
58 | 59 | class ZMQDisplayPublisher(DisplayPublisher): |
|
59 | 60 | """A display publisher that publishes data using a ZeroMQ PUB socket.""" |
|
60 | 61 | |
|
61 | 62 | session = Instance(Session) |
|
62 | 63 | pub_socket = Instance('zmq.Socket') |
|
63 | 64 | parent_header = Dict({}) |
|
64 | 65 | |
|
65 | 66 | def set_parent(self, parent): |
|
66 | 67 | """Set the parent for outbound messages.""" |
|
67 | 68 | self.parent_header = extract_header(parent) |
|
68 | 69 | |
|
69 | 70 | def publish(self, source, data, metadata=None): |
|
70 | 71 | if metadata is None: |
|
71 | 72 | metadata = {} |
|
72 | 73 | self._validate_data(source, data, metadata) |
|
73 | 74 | content = {} |
|
74 | 75 | content['source'] = source |
|
75 | 76 | _encode_binary(data) |
|
76 | 77 | content['data'] = data |
|
77 | 78 | content['metadata'] = metadata |
|
78 | 79 | self.session.send( |
|
79 | 80 | self.pub_socket, u'display_data', json_clean(content), |
|
80 | 81 | parent=self.parent_header |
|
81 | 82 | ) |
|
82 | 83 | |
|
83 | 84 | def clear_output(self, stdout=True, stderr=True, other=True): |
|
84 | 85 | content = dict(stdout=stdout, stderr=stderr, other=other) |
|
85 | 86 | self.session.send( |
|
86 | 87 | self.pub_socket, u'clear_output', content, |
|
87 | 88 | parent=self.parent_header |
|
88 | 89 | ) |
|
89 | 90 | |
|
90 | 91 | class ZMQInteractiveShell(InteractiveShell): |
|
91 | 92 | """A subclass of InteractiveShell for ZMQ.""" |
|
92 | 93 | |
|
93 | 94 | displayhook_class = Type(ZMQShellDisplayHook) |
|
94 | 95 | display_pub_class = Type(ZMQDisplayPublisher) |
|
95 | 96 | |
|
96 | 97 | # Override the traitlet in the parent class, because there's no point using |
|
97 | 98 | # readline for the kernel. Can be removed when the readline code is moved |
|
98 | 99 | # to the terminal frontend. |
|
99 | 100 | colors_force = CBool(True) |
|
100 | 101 | readline_use = CBool(False) |
|
101 | 102 | # autoindent has no meaning in a zmqshell, and attempting to enable it |
|
102 | 103 | # will print a warning in the absence of readline. |
|
103 | 104 | autoindent = CBool(False) |
|
104 | 105 | |
|
105 | 106 | exiter = Instance(ZMQExitAutocall) |
|
106 | 107 | def _exiter_default(self): |
|
107 | 108 | return ZMQExitAutocall(self) |
|
108 | 109 | |
|
109 | 110 | keepkernel_on_exit = None |
|
110 | 111 | |
|
111 | 112 | def init_environment(self): |
|
112 | 113 | """Configure the user's environment. |
|
113 | 114 | |
|
114 | 115 | """ |
|
115 | 116 | env = os.environ |
|
116 | 117 | # These two ensure 'ls' produces nice coloring on BSD-derived systems |
|
117 | 118 | env['TERM'] = 'xterm-color' |
|
118 | 119 | env['CLICOLOR'] = '1' |
|
119 | 120 | # Since normal pagers don't work at all (over pexpect we don't have |
|
120 | 121 | # single-key control of the subprocess), try to disable paging in |
|
121 | 122 | # subprocesses as much as possible. |
|
122 | 123 | env['PAGER'] = 'cat' |
|
123 | 124 | env['GIT_PAGER'] = 'cat' |
|
124 | 125 | |
|
125 | 126 | def auto_rewrite_input(self, cmd): |
|
126 | 127 | """Called to show the auto-rewritten input for autocall and friends. |
|
127 | 128 | |
|
128 | 129 | FIXME: this payload is currently not correctly processed by the |
|
129 | 130 | frontend. |
|
130 | 131 | """ |
|
131 | 132 | new = self.displayhook.prompt1.auto_rewrite() + cmd |
|
132 | 133 | payload = dict( |
|
133 | 134 | source='IPython.zmq.zmqshell.ZMQInteractiveShell.auto_rewrite_input', |
|
134 | 135 | transformed_input=new, |
|
135 | 136 | ) |
|
136 | 137 | self.payload_manager.write_payload(payload) |
|
137 | 138 | |
|
138 | 139 | def ask_exit(self): |
|
139 | 140 | """Engage the exit actions.""" |
|
140 | 141 | payload = dict( |
|
141 | 142 | source='IPython.zmq.zmqshell.ZMQInteractiveShell.ask_exit', |
|
142 | 143 | exit=True, |
|
143 | 144 | keepkernel=self.keepkernel_on_exit, |
|
144 | 145 | ) |
|
145 | 146 | self.payload_manager.write_payload(payload) |
|
146 | 147 | |
|
147 | 148 | def _showtraceback(self, etype, evalue, stb): |
|
148 | 149 | |
|
149 | 150 | exc_content = { |
|
150 | 151 | u'traceback' : stb, |
|
151 | 152 | u'ename' : unicode(etype.__name__), |
|
152 | 153 | u'evalue' : unicode(evalue) |
|
153 | 154 | } |
|
154 | 155 | |
|
155 | 156 | dh = self.displayhook |
|
156 | 157 | # Send exception info over pub socket for other clients than the caller |
|
157 | 158 | # to pick up |
|
158 | 159 | exc_msg = dh.session.send(dh.pub_socket, u'pyerr', json_clean(exc_content), dh.parent_header) |
|
159 | 160 | |
|
160 | 161 | # FIXME - Hack: store exception info in shell object. Right now, the |
|
161 | 162 | # caller is reading this info after the fact, we need to fix this logic |
|
162 | 163 | # to remove this hack. Even uglier, we need to store the error status |
|
163 | 164 | # here, because in the main loop, the logic that sets it is being |
|
164 | 165 | # skipped because runlines swallows the exceptions. |
|
165 | 166 | exc_content[u'status'] = u'error' |
|
166 | 167 | self._reply_content = exc_content |
|
167 | 168 | # /FIXME |
|
168 | 169 | |
|
169 | 170 | return exc_content |
|
170 | 171 | |
|
171 | 172 | #------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
|
172 | 173 | # Magic overrides |
|
173 | 174 | #------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
|
174 | 175 | # Once the base class stops inheriting from magic, this code needs to be |
|
175 | 176 | # moved into a separate machinery as well. For now, at least isolate here |
|
176 | 177 | # the magics which this class needs to implement differently from the base |
|
177 | 178 | # class, or that are unique to it. |
|
178 | 179 | |
|
179 | 180 | def magic_doctest_mode(self,parameter_s=''): |
|
180 | 181 | """Toggle doctest mode on and off. |
|
181 | 182 | |
|
182 | 183 | This mode is intended to make IPython behave as much as possible like a |
|
183 | 184 | plain Python shell, from the perspective of how its prompts, exceptions |
|
184 | 185 | and output look. This makes it easy to copy and paste parts of a |
|
185 | 186 | session into doctests. It does so by: |
|
186 | 187 | |
|
187 | 188 | - Changing the prompts to the classic ``>>>`` ones. |
|
188 | 189 | - Changing the exception reporting mode to 'Plain'. |
|
189 | 190 | - Disabling pretty-printing of output. |
|
190 | 191 | |
|
191 | 192 | Note that IPython also supports the pasting of code snippets that have |
|
192 | 193 | leading '>>>' and '...' prompts in them. This means that you can paste |
|
193 | 194 | doctests from files or docstrings (even if they have leading |
|
194 | 195 | whitespace), and the code will execute correctly. You can then use |
|
195 | 196 | '%history -t' to see the translated history; this will give you the |
|
196 | 197 | input after removal of all the leading prompts and whitespace, which |
|
197 | 198 | can be pasted back into an editor. |
|
198 | 199 | |
|
199 | 200 | With these features, you can switch into this mode easily whenever you |
|
200 | 201 | need to do testing and changes to doctests, without having to leave |
|
201 | 202 | your existing IPython session. |
|
202 | 203 | """ |
|
203 | 204 | |
|
204 | 205 | from IPython.utils.ipstruct import Struct |
|
205 | 206 | |
|
206 | 207 | # Shorthands |
|
207 | 208 | shell = self.shell |
|
208 | 209 | disp_formatter = self.shell.display_formatter |
|
209 | 210 | ptformatter = disp_formatter.formatters['text/plain'] |
|
210 | 211 | # dstore is a data store kept in the instance metadata bag to track any |
|
211 | 212 | # changes we make, so we can undo them later. |
|
212 | 213 | dstore = shell.meta.setdefault('doctest_mode', Struct()) |
|
213 | 214 | save_dstore = dstore.setdefault |
|
214 | 215 | |
|
215 | 216 | # save a few values we'll need to recover later |
|
216 | 217 | mode = save_dstore('mode', False) |
|
217 | 218 | save_dstore('rc_pprint', ptformatter.pprint) |
|
218 | 219 | save_dstore('rc_plain_text_only',disp_formatter.plain_text_only) |
|
219 | 220 | save_dstore('xmode', shell.InteractiveTB.mode) |
|
220 | 221 | |
|
221 | 222 | if mode == False: |
|
222 | 223 | # turn on |
|
223 | 224 | ptformatter.pprint = False |
|
224 | 225 | disp_formatter.plain_text_only = True |
|
225 | 226 | shell.magic_xmode('Plain') |
|
226 | 227 | else: |
|
227 | 228 | # turn off |
|
228 | 229 | ptformatter.pprint = dstore.rc_pprint |
|
229 | 230 | disp_formatter.plain_text_only = dstore.rc_plain_text_only |
|
230 | 231 | shell.magic_xmode(dstore.xmode) |
|
231 | 232 | |
|
232 | 233 | # Store new mode and inform on console |
|
233 | 234 | dstore.mode = bool(1-int(mode)) |
|
234 | 235 | mode_label = ['OFF','ON'][dstore.mode] |
|
235 | 236 | print('Doctest mode is:', mode_label) |
|
236 | 237 | |
|
237 | 238 | # Send the payload back so that clients can modify their prompt display |
|
238 | 239 | payload = dict( |
|
239 | 240 | source='IPython.zmq.zmqshell.ZMQInteractiveShell.magic_doctest_mode', |
|
240 | 241 | mode=dstore.mode) |
|
241 | 242 | self.payload_manager.write_payload(payload) |
|
242 | 243 | |
|
243 | 244 | def magic_edit(self,parameter_s='',last_call=['','']): |
|
244 | 245 | """Bring up an editor and execute the resulting code. |
|
245 | 246 | |
|
246 | 247 | Usage: |
|
247 | 248 | %edit [options] [args] |
|
248 | 249 | |
|
249 | 250 | %edit runs an external text editor. You will need to set the command for |
|
250 | 251 | this editor via the ``TerminalInteractiveShell.editor`` option in your |
|
251 | 252 | configuration file before it will work. |
|
252 | 253 | |
|
253 | 254 | This command allows you to conveniently edit multi-line code right in |
|
254 | 255 | your IPython session. |
|
255 | 256 | |
|
256 | 257 | If called without arguments, %edit opens up an empty editor with a |
|
257 | 258 | temporary file and will execute the contents of this file when you |
|
258 | 259 | close it (don't forget to save it!). |
|
259 | 260 | |
|
260 | 261 | |
|
261 | 262 | Options: |
|
262 | 263 | |
|
263 | 264 | -n <number>: open the editor at a specified line number. By default, |
|
264 | 265 | the IPython editor hook uses the unix syntax 'editor +N filename', but |
|
265 | 266 | you can configure this by providing your own modified hook if your |
|
266 | 267 | favorite editor supports line-number specifications with a different |
|
267 | 268 | syntax. |
|
268 | 269 | |
|
269 | 270 | -p: this will call the editor with the same data as the previous time |
|
270 | 271 | it was used, regardless of how long ago (in your current session) it |
|
271 | 272 | was. |
|
272 | 273 | |
|
273 | 274 | -r: use 'raw' input. This option only applies to input taken from the |
|
274 | 275 | user's history. By default, the 'processed' history is used, so that |
|
275 | 276 | magics are loaded in their transformed version to valid Python. If |
|
276 | 277 | this option is given, the raw input as typed as the command line is |
|
277 | 278 | used instead. When you exit the editor, it will be executed by |
|
278 | 279 | IPython's own processor. |
|
279 | 280 | |
|
280 | 281 | -x: do not execute the edited code immediately upon exit. This is |
|
281 | 282 | mainly useful if you are editing programs which need to be called with |
|
282 | 283 | command line arguments, which you can then do using %run. |
|
283 | 284 | |
|
284 | 285 | |
|
285 | 286 | Arguments: |
|
286 | 287 | |
|
287 | 288 | If arguments are given, the following possibilites exist: |
|
288 | 289 | |
|
289 | 290 | - The arguments are numbers or pairs of colon-separated numbers (like |
|
290 | 291 | 1 4:8 9). These are interpreted as lines of previous input to be |
|
291 | 292 | loaded into the editor. The syntax is the same of the %macro command. |
|
292 | 293 | |
|
293 | 294 | - If the argument doesn't start with a number, it is evaluated as a |
|
294 | 295 | variable and its contents loaded into the editor. You can thus edit |
|
295 | 296 | any string which contains python code (including the result of |
|
296 | 297 | previous edits). |
|
297 | 298 | |
|
298 | 299 | - If the argument is the name of an object (other than a string), |
|
299 | 300 | IPython will try to locate the file where it was defined and open the |
|
300 | 301 | editor at the point where it is defined. You can use `%edit function` |
|
301 | 302 | to load an editor exactly at the point where 'function' is defined, |
|
302 | 303 | edit it and have the file be executed automatically. |
|
303 | 304 | |
|
304 | 305 | If the object is a macro (see %macro for details), this opens up your |
|
305 | 306 | specified editor with a temporary file containing the macro's data. |
|
306 | 307 | Upon exit, the macro is reloaded with the contents of the file. |
|
307 | 308 | |
|
308 | 309 | Note: opening at an exact line is only supported under Unix, and some |
|
309 | 310 | editors (like kedit and gedit up to Gnome 2.8) do not understand the |
|
310 | 311 | '+NUMBER' parameter necessary for this feature. Good editors like |
|
311 | 312 | (X)Emacs, vi, jed, pico and joe all do. |
|
312 | 313 | |
|
313 | 314 | - If the argument is not found as a variable, IPython will look for a |
|
314 | 315 | file with that name (adding .py if necessary) and load it into the |
|
315 | 316 | editor. It will execute its contents with execfile() when you exit, |
|
316 | 317 | loading any code in the file into your interactive namespace. |
|
317 | 318 | |
|
318 | 319 | After executing your code, %edit will return as output the code you |
|
319 | 320 | typed in the editor (except when it was an existing file). This way |
|
320 | 321 | you can reload the code in further invocations of %edit as a variable, |
|
321 | 322 | via _<NUMBER> or Out[<NUMBER>], where <NUMBER> is the prompt number of |
|
322 | 323 | the output. |
|
323 | 324 | |
|
324 | 325 | Note that %edit is also available through the alias %ed. |
|
325 | 326 | |
|
326 | 327 | This is an example of creating a simple function inside the editor and |
|
327 | 328 | then modifying it. First, start up the editor: |
|
328 | 329 | |
|
329 | 330 | In [1]: ed |
|
330 | 331 | Editing... done. Executing edited code... |
|
331 | 332 | Out[1]: 'def foo():n print "foo() was defined in an editing session"n' |
|
332 | 333 | |
|
333 | 334 | We can then call the function foo(): |
|
334 | 335 | |
|
335 | 336 | In [2]: foo() |
|
336 | 337 | foo() was defined in an editing session |
|
337 | 338 | |
|
338 | 339 | Now we edit foo. IPython automatically loads the editor with the |
|
339 | 340 | (temporary) file where foo() was previously defined: |
|
340 | 341 | |
|
341 | 342 | In [3]: ed foo |
|
342 | 343 | Editing... done. Executing edited code... |
|
343 | 344 | |
|
344 | 345 | And if we call foo() again we get the modified version: |
|
345 | 346 | |
|
346 | 347 | In [4]: foo() |
|
347 | 348 | foo() has now been changed! |
|
348 | 349 | |
|
349 | 350 | Here is an example of how to edit a code snippet successive |
|
350 | 351 | times. First we call the editor: |
|
351 | 352 | |
|
352 | 353 | In [5]: ed |
|
353 | 354 | Editing... done. Executing edited code... |
|
354 | 355 | hello |
|
355 | 356 | Out[5]: "print 'hello'n" |
|
356 | 357 | |
|
357 | 358 | Now we call it again with the previous output (stored in _): |
|
358 | 359 | |
|
359 | 360 | In [6]: ed _ |
|
360 | 361 | Editing... done. Executing edited code... |
|
361 | 362 | hello world |
|
362 | 363 | Out[6]: "print 'hello world'n" |
|
363 | 364 | |
|
364 | 365 | Now we call it with the output #8 (stored in _8, also as Out[8]): |
|
365 | 366 | |
|
366 | 367 | In [7]: ed _8 |
|
367 | 368 | Editing... done. Executing edited code... |
|
368 | 369 | hello again |
|
369 | 370 | Out[7]: "print 'hello again'n" |
|
370 | 371 | """ |
|
371 | 372 | |
|
372 | 373 | opts,args = self.parse_options(parameter_s,'prn:') |
|
373 | 374 | |
|
374 | 375 | try: |
|
375 | 376 | filename, lineno, _ = self._find_edit_target(args, opts, last_call) |
|
376 | 377 | except MacroToEdit as e: |
|
377 | 378 | # TODO: Implement macro editing over 2 processes. |
|
378 | 379 | print("Macro editing not yet implemented in 2-process model.") |
|
379 | 380 | return |
|
380 | 381 | |
|
381 | 382 | # Make sure we send to the client an absolute path, in case the working |
|
382 | 383 | # directory of client and kernel don't match |
|
383 | 384 | filename = os.path.abspath(filename) |
|
384 | 385 | |
|
385 | 386 | payload = { |
|
386 | 387 | 'source' : 'IPython.zmq.zmqshell.ZMQInteractiveShell.edit_magic', |
|
387 | 388 | 'filename' : filename, |
|
388 | 389 | 'line_number' : lineno |
|
389 | 390 | } |
|
390 | 391 | self.payload_manager.write_payload(payload) |
|
391 | 392 | |
|
392 |
def magic_gui(self, |
|
|
393 | raise NotImplementedError( | |
|
394 | 'Kernel GUI support is not implemented yet, except for --pylab.') | |
|
393 | def magic_gui(self, parameter_s=''): | |
|
394 | """Enable or disable IPython GUI event loop integration. | |
|
395 | ||
|
396 | %gui [GUINAME] | |
|
397 | ||
|
398 | This magic replaces IPython's threaded shells that were activated | |
|
399 | using the (pylab/wthread/etc.) command line flags. GUI toolkits | |
|
400 | can now be enabled at runtime and keyboard | |
|
401 | interrupts should work without any problems. The following toolkits | |
|
402 | are supported: wxPython, PyQt4, PyGTK, Cocoa, and Tk:: | |
|
403 | ||
|
404 | %gui wx # enable wxPython event loop integration | |
|
405 | %gui qt4|qt # enable PyQt4 event loop integration | |
|
406 | %gui gtk # enable PyGTK event loop integration | |
|
407 | %gui OSX # enable Cocoa event loop integration (requires matplotlib 1.1) | |
|
408 | %gui tk # enable Tk event loop integration | |
|
409 | ||
|
410 | WARNING: after any of these has been called you can simply create | |
|
411 | an application object, but DO NOT start the event loop yourself, as | |
|
412 | we have already handled that. | |
|
413 | """ | |
|
414 | from IPython.zmq.ipkernel import enable_gui | |
|
415 | opts, arg = self.parse_options(parameter_s, '') | |
|
416 | if arg=='': arg = None | |
|
417 | return enable_gui(arg) | |
|
418 | ||
|
419 | def enable_pylab(self, gui=None, import_all=True): | |
|
420 | """Activate pylab support at runtime. | |
|
421 | ||
|
422 | This turns on support for matplotlib, preloads into the interactive | |
|
423 | namespace all of numpy and pylab, and configures IPython to correcdtly | |
|
424 | interact with the GUI event loop. The GUI backend to be used can be | |
|
425 | optionally selected with the optional :param:`gui` argument. | |
|
426 | ||
|
427 | Parameters | |
|
428 | ---------- | |
|
429 | gui : optional, string [default: inline] | |
|
430 | ||
|
431 | If given, dictates the choice of matplotlib GUI backend to use | |
|
432 | (should be one of IPython's supported backends, 'inline', 'qt', 'osx', | |
|
433 | 'tk', or 'gtk'), otherwise we use the default chosen by matplotlib | |
|
434 | (as dictated by the matplotlib build-time options plus the user's | |
|
435 | matplotlibrc configuration file). | |
|
436 | """ | |
|
437 | from IPython.zmq.ipkernel import enable_gui | |
|
438 | # We want to prevent the loading of pylab to pollute the user's | |
|
439 | # namespace as shown by the %who* magics, so we execute the activation | |
|
440 | # code in an empty namespace, and we update *both* user_ns and | |
|
441 | # user_ns_hidden with this information. | |
|
442 | ns = {} | |
|
443 | # override default to inline, from auto-detect | |
|
444 | gui = pylabtools.pylab_activate(ns, gui or 'inline', import_all, self) | |
|
445 | self.user_ns.update(ns) | |
|
446 | self.user_ns_hidden.update(ns) | |
|
447 | # Now we must activate the gui pylab wants to use, and fix %run to take | |
|
448 | # plot updates into account | |
|
449 | enable_gui(gui) | |
|
450 | self.magic_run = self._pylab_magic_run | |
|
395 | 451 | |
|
396 | def magic_pylab(self, *args, **kwargs): | |
|
397 | raise NotImplementedError( | |
|
398 | 'pylab support must be enabled in command line options.') | |
|
399 | 452 | |
|
400 | 453 | # A few magics that are adapted to the specifics of using pexpect and a |
|
401 | 454 | # remote terminal |
|
402 | 455 | |
|
403 | 456 | def magic_clear(self, arg_s): |
|
404 | 457 | """Clear the terminal.""" |
|
405 | 458 | if os.name == 'posix': |
|
406 | 459 | self.shell.system("clear") |
|
407 | 460 | else: |
|
408 | 461 | self.shell.system("cls") |
|
409 | 462 | |
|
410 | 463 | if os.name == 'nt': |
|
411 | 464 | # This is the usual name in windows |
|
412 | 465 | magic_cls = magic_clear |
|
413 | 466 | |
|
414 | 467 | # Terminal pagers won't work over pexpect, but we do have our own pager |
|
415 | 468 | |
|
416 | 469 | def magic_less(self, arg_s): |
|
417 | 470 | """Show a file through the pager. |
|
418 | 471 | |
|
419 | 472 | Files ending in .py are syntax-highlighted.""" |
|
420 | 473 | cont = open(arg_s).read() |
|
421 | 474 | if arg_s.endswith('.py'): |
|
422 | 475 | cont = self.shell.pycolorize(cont) |
|
423 | 476 | page.page(cont) |
|
424 | 477 | |
|
425 | 478 | magic_more = magic_less |
|
426 | 479 | |
|
427 | 480 | # Man calls a pager, so we also need to redefine it |
|
428 | 481 | if os.name == 'posix': |
|
429 | 482 | def magic_man(self, arg_s): |
|
430 | 483 | """Find the man page for the given command and display in pager.""" |
|
431 | 484 | page.page(self.shell.getoutput('man %s | col -b' % arg_s, |
|
432 | 485 | split=False)) |
|
433 | 486 | |
|
434 | 487 | # FIXME: this is specific to the GUI, so we should let the gui app load |
|
435 | 488 | # magics at startup that are only for the gui. Once the gui app has proper |
|
436 | 489 | # profile and configuration management, we can have it initialize a kernel |
|
437 | 490 | # with a special config file that provides these. |
|
438 | 491 | def magic_guiref(self, arg_s): |
|
439 | 492 | """Show a basic reference about the GUI console.""" |
|
440 | 493 | from IPython.core.usage import gui_reference |
|
441 | 494 | page.page(gui_reference, auto_html=True) |
|
442 | 495 | |
|
443 | 496 | def magic_connect_info(self, arg_s): |
|
444 | 497 | """Print information for connecting other clients to this kernel |
|
445 | 498 | |
|
446 | 499 | It will print the contents of this session's connection file, as well as |
|
447 | 500 | shortcuts for local clients. |
|
448 | 501 | |
|
449 | 502 | In the simplest case, when called from the most recently launched kernel, |
|
450 | 503 | secondary clients can be connected, simply with: |
|
451 | 504 | |
|
452 | 505 | $> ipython <app> --existing |
|
453 | 506 | |
|
454 | 507 | """ |
|
455 | 508 | try: |
|
456 | 509 | connection_file = get_connection_file() |
|
457 | 510 | info = get_connection_info(unpack=False) |
|
458 | 511 | except Exception as e: |
|
459 | 512 | error("Could not get connection info: %r" % e) |
|
460 | 513 | return |
|
461 | 514 | |
|
462 | 515 | print (info + '\n') |
|
463 | 516 | print ("Paste the above JSON into a file, and connect with:\n" |
|
464 | 517 | " $> ipython <app> --existing <file>\n" |
|
465 | 518 | "or, if you are local, you can connect with just:\n" |
|
466 | 519 | " $> ipython <app> --existing %s\n" |
|
467 | 520 | "or even just:\n" |
|
468 | 521 | " $> ipython <app> --existing\n" |
|
469 | 522 | "if this is the most recent IPython session you have started." |
|
470 | 523 | % os.path.basename(connection_file) |
|
471 | 524 | ) |
|
472 | 525 | |
|
473 | 526 | def magic_qtconsole(self, arg_s): |
|
474 | 527 | """Open a qtconsole connected to this kernel. |
|
475 | 528 | |
|
476 | 529 | Useful for connecting a qtconsole to running notebooks, for better |
|
477 | 530 | debugging. |
|
478 | 531 | """ |
|
479 | 532 | try: |
|
480 | 533 | p = connect_qtconsole(argv=arg_split(arg_s, os.name=='posix')) |
|
481 | 534 | except Exception as e: |
|
482 | 535 | error("Could not start qtconsole: %r" % e) |
|
483 | 536 | return |
|
484 | 537 | |
|
485 | 538 | |
|
486 | 539 | def set_next_input(self, text): |
|
487 | 540 | """Send the specified text to the frontend to be presented at the next |
|
488 | 541 | input cell.""" |
|
489 | 542 | payload = dict( |
|
490 | 543 | source='IPython.zmq.zmqshell.ZMQInteractiveShell.set_next_input', |
|
491 | 544 | text=text |
|
492 | 545 | ) |
|
493 | 546 | self.payload_manager.write_payload(payload) |
|
494 | 547 | |
|
495 | 548 | InteractiveShellABC.register(ZMQInteractiveShell) |
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