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add get_security_file() function to utils.path...
add get_security_file() function to utils.path This makes it easier for third party tools to retrieve security files (e.g. json connection files) by name and [optional] profile name alone, without knowledge of IPython's directory structure. For example, whenever ipkernel outputs: ` --existing kernel-12345.json --profile foo` that file can be found with: get_security_file('kernel-12345.json', profile='foo')

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path.py
509 lines | 17.1 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# encoding: utf-8
"""
Utilities for path handling.
"""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# 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
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
import os
import sys
import tempfile
import warnings
from hashlib import md5
import IPython
from IPython.utils.process import system
from IPython.utils.importstring import import_item
from IPython.utils import py3compat
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Code
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
fs_encoding = sys.getfilesystemencoding()
def _get_long_path_name(path):
"""Dummy no-op."""
return path
def _writable_dir(path):
"""Whether `path` is a directory, to which the user has write access."""
return os.path.isdir(path) and os.access(path, os.W_OK)
if sys.platform == 'win32':
def _get_long_path_name(path):
"""Get a long path name (expand ~) on Windows using ctypes.
Examples
--------
>>> get_long_path_name('c:\\docume~1')
u'c:\\\\Documents and Settings'
"""
try:
import ctypes
except ImportError:
raise ImportError('you need to have ctypes installed for this to work')
_GetLongPathName = ctypes.windll.kernel32.GetLongPathNameW
_GetLongPathName.argtypes = [ctypes.c_wchar_p, ctypes.c_wchar_p,
ctypes.c_uint ]
buf = ctypes.create_unicode_buffer(260)
rv = _GetLongPathName(path, buf, 260)
if rv == 0 or rv > 260:
return path
else:
return buf.value
def get_long_path_name(path):
"""Expand a path into its long form.
On Windows this expands any ~ in the paths. On other platforms, it is
a null operation.
"""
return _get_long_path_name(path)
def unquote_filename(name, win32=(sys.platform=='win32')):
""" On Windows, remove leading and trailing quotes from filenames.
"""
if win32:
if name.startswith(("'", '"')) and name.endswith(("'", '"')):
name = name[1:-1]
return name
def get_py_filename(name, force_win32=None):
"""Return a valid python filename in the current directory.
If the given name is not a file, it adds '.py' and searches again.
Raises IOError with an informative message if the file isn't found.
On Windows, apply Windows semantics to the filename. In particular, remove
any quoting that has been applied to it. This option can be forced for
testing purposes.
"""
name = os.path.expanduser(name)
if force_win32 is None:
win32 = (sys.platform == 'win32')
else:
win32 = force_win32
name = unquote_filename(name, win32=win32)
if not os.path.isfile(name) and not name.endswith('.py'):
name += '.py'
if os.path.isfile(name):
return name
else:
raise IOError,'File `%s` not found.' % name
def filefind(filename, path_dirs=None):
"""Find a file by looking through a sequence of paths.
This iterates through a sequence of paths looking for a file and returns
the full, absolute path of the first occurence of the file. If no set of
path dirs is given, the filename is tested as is, after running through
:func:`expandvars` and :func:`expanduser`. Thus a simple call::
filefind('myfile.txt')
will find the file in the current working dir, but::
filefind('~/myfile.txt')
Will find the file in the users home directory. This function does not
automatically try any paths, such as the cwd or the user's home directory.
Parameters
----------
filename : str
The filename to look for.
path_dirs : str, None or sequence of str
The sequence of paths to look for the file in. If None, the filename
need to be absolute or be in the cwd. If a string, the string is
put into a sequence and the searched. If a sequence, walk through
each element and join with ``filename``, calling :func:`expandvars`
and :func:`expanduser` before testing for existence.
Returns
-------
Raises :exc:`IOError` or returns absolute path to file.
"""
# If paths are quoted, abspath gets confused, strip them...
filename = filename.strip('"').strip("'")
# If the input is an absolute path, just check it exists
if os.path.isabs(filename) and os.path.isfile(filename):
return filename
if path_dirs is None:
path_dirs = ("",)
elif isinstance(path_dirs, basestring):
path_dirs = (path_dirs,)
for path in path_dirs:
if path == '.': path = os.getcwdu()
testname = expand_path(os.path.join(path, filename))
if os.path.isfile(testname):
return os.path.abspath(testname)
raise IOError("File %r does not exist in any of the search paths: %r" %
(filename, path_dirs) )
class HomeDirError(Exception):
pass
def get_home_dir():
"""Return the closest possible equivalent to a 'home' directory.
* On POSIX, we try $HOME.
* On Windows we try:
- %HOMESHARE%
- %HOMEDRIVE\%HOMEPATH%
- %USERPROFILE%
- Registry hack for My Documents
- %HOME%: rare, but some people with unix-like setups may have defined it
* On Dos C:\
Currently only Posix and NT are implemented, a HomeDirError exception is
raised for all other OSes.
"""
env = os.environ
# first, check py2exe distribution root directory for _ipython.
# This overrides all. Normally does not exist.
if hasattr(sys, "frozen"): #Is frozen by py2exe
if '\\library.zip\\' in IPython.__file__.lower():#libraries compressed to zip-file
root, rest = IPython.__file__.lower().split('library.zip')
else:
root=os.path.join(os.path.split(IPython.__file__)[0],"../../")
root=os.path.abspath(root).rstrip('\\')
if _writable_dir(os.path.join(root, '_ipython')):
os.environ["IPYKITROOT"] = root
return py3compat.cast_unicode(root, fs_encoding)
if os.name == 'posix':
# Linux, Unix, AIX, OS X
try:
homedir = env['HOME']
except KeyError:
# Last-ditch attempt at finding a suitable $HOME, on systems where
# it may not be defined in the environment but the system shell
# still knows it - reported once as:
# https://github.com/ipython/ipython/issues/154
from subprocess import Popen, PIPE
homedir = Popen('echo $HOME', shell=True,
stdout=PIPE).communicate()[0].strip()
if homedir:
return py3compat.cast_unicode(homedir, fs_encoding)
else:
raise HomeDirError('Undefined $HOME, IPython cannot proceed.')
else:
return py3compat.cast_unicode(homedir, fs_encoding)
elif os.name == 'nt':
# Now for win9x, XP, Vista, 7?
# For some strange reason all of these return 'nt' for os.name.
# First look for a network home directory. This will return the UNC
# path (\\server\\Users\%username%) not the mapped path (Z:\). This
# is needed when running IPython on cluster where all paths have to
# be UNC.
try:
homedir = env['HOMESHARE']
except KeyError:
pass
else:
if _writable_dir(homedir):
return py3compat.cast_unicode(homedir, fs_encoding)
# Now look for a local home directory
try:
homedir = os.path.join(env['HOMEDRIVE'],env['HOMEPATH'])
except KeyError:
pass
else:
if _writable_dir(homedir):
return py3compat.cast_unicode(homedir, fs_encoding)
# Now the users profile directory
try:
homedir = os.path.join(env['USERPROFILE'])
except KeyError:
pass
else:
if _writable_dir(homedir):
return py3compat.cast_unicode(homedir, fs_encoding)
# Use the registry to get the 'My Documents' folder.
try:
import _winreg as wreg
key = wreg.OpenKey(
wreg.HKEY_CURRENT_USER,
"Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\Shell Folders"
)
homedir = wreg.QueryValueEx(key,'Personal')[0]
key.Close()
except:
pass
else:
if _writable_dir(homedir):
return py3compat.cast_unicode(homedir, fs_encoding)
# A user with a lot of unix tools in win32 may have defined $HOME.
# Try this as a last ditch option.
try:
homedir = env['HOME']
except KeyError:
pass
else:
if _writable_dir(homedir):
return py3compat.cast_unicode(homedir, fs_encoding)
# If all else fails, raise HomeDirError
raise HomeDirError('No valid home directory could be found')
elif os.name == 'dos':
# Desperate, may do absurd things in classic MacOS. May work under DOS.
return u'C:\\'
else:
raise HomeDirError('No valid home directory could be found for your OS')
def get_xdg_dir():
"""Return the XDG_CONFIG_HOME, if it is defined and exists, else None.
This is only for posix (Linux,Unix,OS X, etc) systems.
"""
env = os.environ
if os.name == 'posix':
# Linux, Unix, AIX, OS X
# use ~/.config if not set OR empty
xdg = env.get("XDG_CONFIG_HOME", None) or os.path.join(get_home_dir(), '.config')
if xdg and _writable_dir(xdg):
return py3compat.cast_unicode(xdg, fs_encoding)
return None
def get_ipython_dir():
"""Get the IPython directory for this platform and user.
This uses the logic in `get_home_dir` to find the home directory
and then adds .ipython to the end of the path.
"""
env = os.environ
pjoin = os.path.join
ipdir_def = '.ipython'
xdg_def = 'ipython'
home_dir = get_home_dir()
xdg_dir = get_xdg_dir()
# import pdb; pdb.set_trace() # dbg
ipdir = env.get('IPYTHON_DIR', env.get('IPYTHONDIR', None))
if ipdir is None:
# not set explicitly, use XDG_CONFIG_HOME or HOME
home_ipdir = pjoin(home_dir, ipdir_def)
if xdg_dir:
# use XDG, as long as the user isn't already
# using $HOME/.ipython and *not* XDG/ipython
xdg_ipdir = pjoin(xdg_dir, xdg_def)
if _writable_dir(xdg_ipdir) or not _writable_dir(home_ipdir):
ipdir = xdg_ipdir
if ipdir is None:
# not using XDG
ipdir = home_ipdir
ipdir = os.path.normpath(os.path.expanduser(ipdir))
if os.path.exists(ipdir) and not _writable_dir(ipdir):
# ipdir exists, but is not writable
warnings.warn("IPython dir '%s' is not a writable location,"
" using a temp directory."%ipdir)
ipdir = tempfile.mkdtemp()
elif not os.path.exists(ipdir):
parent = ipdir.rsplit(os.path.sep, 1)[0]
if not _writable_dir(parent):
# ipdir does not exist and parent isn't writable
warnings.warn("IPython parent '%s' is not a writable location,"
" using a temp directory."%parent)
ipdir = tempfile.mkdtemp()
return py3compat.cast_unicode(ipdir, fs_encoding)
def get_ipython_package_dir():
"""Get the base directory where IPython itself is installed."""
ipdir = os.path.dirname(IPython.__file__)
return py3compat.cast_unicode(ipdir, fs_encoding)
def get_ipython_module_path(module_str):
"""Find the path to an IPython module in this version of IPython.
This will always find the version of the module that is in this importable
IPython package. This will always return the path to the ``.py``
version of the module.
"""
if module_str == 'IPython':
return os.path.join(get_ipython_package_dir(), '__init__.py')
mod = import_item(module_str)
the_path = mod.__file__.replace('.pyc', '.py')
the_path = the_path.replace('.pyo', '.py')
return py3compat.cast_unicode(the_path, fs_encoding)
def expand_path(s):
"""Expand $VARS and ~names in a string, like a shell
:Examples:
In [2]: os.environ['FOO']='test'
In [3]: expand_path('variable FOO is $FOO')
Out[3]: 'variable FOO is test'
"""
# This is a pretty subtle hack. When expand user is given a UNC path
# on Windows (\\server\share$\%username%), os.path.expandvars, removes
# the $ to get (\\server\share\%username%). I think it considered $
# alone an empty var. But, we need the $ to remains there (it indicates
# a hidden share).
if os.name=='nt':
s = s.replace('$\\', 'IPYTHON_TEMP')
s = os.path.expandvars(os.path.expanduser(s))
if os.name=='nt':
s = s.replace('IPYTHON_TEMP', '$\\')
return s
def target_outdated(target,deps):
"""Determine whether a target is out of date.
target_outdated(target,deps) -> 1/0
deps: list of filenames which MUST exist.
target: single filename which may or may not exist.
If target doesn't exist or is older than any file listed in deps, return
true, otherwise return false.
"""
try:
target_time = os.path.getmtime(target)
except os.error:
return 1
for dep in deps:
dep_time = os.path.getmtime(dep)
if dep_time > target_time:
#print "For target",target,"Dep failed:",dep # dbg
#print "times (dep,tar):",dep_time,target_time # dbg
return 1
return 0
def target_update(target,deps,cmd):
"""Update a target with a given command given a list of dependencies.
target_update(target,deps,cmd) -> runs cmd if target is outdated.
This is just a wrapper around target_outdated() which calls the given
command if target is outdated."""
if target_outdated(target,deps):
system(cmd)
def filehash(path):
"""Make an MD5 hash of a file, ignoring any differences in line
ending characters."""
with open(path, "rU") as f:
return md5(py3compat.str_to_bytes(f.read())).hexdigest()
# If the config is unmodified from the default, we'll just delete it.
# These are consistent for 0.10.x, thankfully. We're not going to worry about
# older versions.
old_config_md5 = {'ipy_user_conf.py': 'fc108bedff4b9a00f91fa0a5999140d3',
'ipythonrc': '12a68954f3403eea2eec09dc8fe5a9b5'}
def check_for_old_config(ipython_dir=None):
"""Check for old config files, and present a warning if they exist.
A link to the docs of the new config is included in the message.
This should mitigate confusion with the transition to the new
config system in 0.11.
"""
if ipython_dir is None:
ipython_dir = get_ipython_dir()
old_configs = ['ipy_user_conf.py', 'ipythonrc', 'ipython_config.py']
warned = False
for cfg in old_configs:
f = os.path.join(ipython_dir, cfg)
if os.path.exists(f):
if filehash(f) == old_config_md5.get(cfg, ''):
os.unlink(f)
else:
warnings.warn("Found old IPython config file %r (modified by user)"%f)
warned = True
if warned:
warnings.warn("""
The IPython configuration system has changed as of 0.11, and these files will
be ignored. See http://ipython.github.com/ipython-doc/dev/config for details
of the new config system.
To start configuring IPython, do `ipython profile create`, and edit
`ipython_config.py` in <ipython_dir>/profile_default.
If you need to leave the old config files in place for an older version of
IPython and want to suppress this warning message, set
`c.InteractiveShellApp.ignore_old_config=True` in the new config.""")
def get_security_file(filename, profile='default'):
"""Return the absolute path of a security file given by filename and profile
This allows users and developers to find security files without
knowledge of the IPython directory structure. The search path
will be ['.', profile.security_dir]
Parameters
----------
filename : str
The file to be found. If it is passed as an absolute path, it will
simply be returned.
profile : str [default: 'default']
The name of the profile to search. Leaving this unspecified
The file to be found. If it is passed as an absolute path, fname will
simply be returned.
Returns
-------
Raises :exc:`IOError` if file not found or returns absolute path to file.
"""
# import here, because profiledir also imports from utils.path
from IPython.core.profiledir import ProfileDir
try:
pd = ProfileDir.find_profile_dir_by_name(get_ipython_dir(), profile)
except Exception:
# will raise ProfileDirError if no such profile
raise IOError("Profile %r not found")
return filefind(filename, ['.', pd.security_dir])