##// END OF EJS Templates
inputhook: disable CTRL+C when a hook is active....
inputhook: disable CTRL+C when a hook is active. On systems with 'readline', it's very likely to intercept a signal during a select() call. The default SIGINT handler will schedule a KeyboardInterrupt exception to be raised as soon as possible. If ctypes is used to install a Python callback for PyOS_InputHook, this will happen as soon as the bytecode execution starts, so even if the first instruction of the callback is a `try: ... except KeyboardInterrupt` clause, it's actually too late. As ctypes doesn't allow a Python callback to raise an exception, this ends up with IPython detecting an internal error... not pretty. We must therefore ignore the SIGINT signals until we are sure the exception handler is active, in the Python callback.

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process.py
147 lines | 4.7 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# encoding: utf-8
"""
Utilities for working with external processes.
"""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (C) 2008-2009 The IPython Development Team
#
# Distributed under the terms of the BSD License. The full license is in
# the file COPYING, distributed as part of this software.
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Imports
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
from __future__ import print_function
# Stdlib
import os
import sys
import shlex
# Our own
if sys.platform == 'win32':
from ._process_win32 import _find_cmd, system, getoutput, AvoidUNCPath
else:
from ._process_posix import _find_cmd, system, getoutput
from ._process_common import getoutputerror
from IPython.utils import py3compat
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Code
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
class FindCmdError(Exception):
pass
def find_cmd(cmd):
"""Find absolute path to executable cmd in a cross platform manner.
This function tries to determine the full path to a command line program
using `which` on Unix/Linux/OS X and `win32api` on Windows. Most of the
time it will use the version that is first on the users `PATH`. If
cmd is `python` return `sys.executable`.
Warning, don't use this to find IPython command line programs as there
is a risk you will find the wrong one. Instead find those using the
following code and looking for the application itself::
from IPython.utils.path import get_ipython_module_path
from IPython.utils.process import pycmd2argv
argv = pycmd2argv(get_ipython_module_path('IPython.frontend.terminal.ipapp'))
Parameters
----------
cmd : str
The command line program to look for.
"""
if cmd == 'python':
return os.path.abspath(sys.executable)
try:
path = _find_cmd(cmd).rstrip()
except OSError:
raise FindCmdError('command could not be found: %s' % cmd)
# which returns empty if not found
if path == b'':
raise FindCmdError('command could not be found: %s' % cmd)
return os.path.abspath(path)
def pycmd2argv(cmd):
r"""Take the path of a python command and return a list (argv-style).
This only works on Python based command line programs and will find the
location of the ``python`` executable using ``sys.executable`` to make
sure the right version is used.
For a given path ``cmd``, this returns [cmd] if cmd's extension is .exe,
.com or .bat, and [, cmd] otherwise.
Parameters
----------
cmd : string
The path of the command.
Returns
-------
argv-style list.
"""
ext = os.path.splitext(cmd)[1]
if ext in ['.exe', '.com', '.bat']:
return [cmd]
else:
if sys.platform == 'win32':
# The -u option here turns on unbuffered output, which is required
# on Win32 to prevent wierd conflict and problems with Twisted.
# Also, use sys.executable to make sure we are picking up the
# right python exe.
return [sys.executable, '-u', cmd]
else:
return [sys.executable, cmd]
def arg_split(s, posix=False):
"""Split a command line's arguments in a shell-like manner.
This is a modified version of the standard library's shlex.split()
function, but with a default of posix=False for splitting, so that quotes
in inputs are respected."""
# Unfortunately, python's shlex module is buggy with unicode input:
# http://bugs.python.org/issue1170
# At least encoding the input when it's unicode seems to help, but there
# may be more problems lurking. Apparently this is fixed in python3.
is_unicode = False
if (not py3compat.PY3) and isinstance(s, unicode):
is_unicode = True
s = s.encode('utf-8')
lex = shlex.shlex(s, posix=posix)
lex.whitespace_split = True
tokens = list(lex)
if is_unicode:
# Convert the tokens back to unicode.
tokens = [x.decode('utf-8') for x in tokens]
return tokens
def abbrev_cwd():
""" Return abbreviated version of cwd, e.g. d:mydir """
cwd = os.getcwdu().replace('\\','/')
drivepart = ''
tail = cwd
if sys.platform == 'win32':
if len(cwd) < 4:
return cwd
drivepart,tail = os.path.splitdrive(cwd)
parts = tail.split('/')
if len(parts) > 2:
tail = '/'.join(parts[-2:])
return (drivepart + (
cwd == '/' and '/' or tail))