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avoid missing readline warning in zmqshell...
avoid missing readline warning in zmqshell InteractiveShell.set_autoindent() warns when readline is missing, and the zmqshell no longer loads readline. This changes the condition of the warning to only if it is being enabled, and prevents enabling autoindent in the zmqshell.

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sysinfo.py
185 lines | 6.1 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# encoding: utf-8
"""
Utilities for getting information about IPython and the system it's running in.
"""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# 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 platform
import pprint
import sys
import subprocess
from ConfigParser import ConfigParser
from IPython.core import release
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Globals
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
COMMIT_INFO_FNAME = '.git_commit_info.ini'
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Code
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
def pkg_commit_hash(pkg_path):
"""Get short form of commit hash given directory `pkg_path`
There should be a file called 'COMMIT_INFO.txt' in `pkg_path`. This is a
file in INI file format, with at least one section: ``commit hash``, and two
variables ``archive_subst_hash`` and ``install_hash``. The first has a
substitution pattern in it which may have been filled by the execution of
``git archive`` if this is an archive generated that way. The second is
filled in by the installation, if the installation is from a git archive.
We get the commit hash from (in order of preference):
* A substituted value in ``archive_subst_hash``
* A written commit hash value in ``install_hash`
* git output, if we are in a git repository
If all these fail, we return a not-found placeholder tuple
Parameters
----------
pkg_path : str
directory containing package
Returns
-------
hash_from : str
Where we got the hash from - description
hash_str : str
short form of hash
"""
# Try and get commit from written commit text file
pth = os.path.join(pkg_path, COMMIT_INFO_FNAME)
if not os.path.isfile(pth):
raise IOError('Missing commit info file %s' % pth)
cfg_parser = ConfigParser()
cfg_parser.read(pth)
archive_subst = cfg_parser.get('commit hash', 'archive_subst_hash')
if not archive_subst.startswith('$Format'): # it has been substituted
return 'archive substitution', archive_subst
install_subst = cfg_parser.get('commit hash', 'install_hash')
if install_subst != '':
return 'installation', install_subst
# maybe we are in a repository
proc = subprocess.Popen('git rev-parse --short HEAD',
stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
stderr=subprocess.PIPE,
cwd=pkg_path, shell=True)
repo_commit, _ = proc.communicate()
if repo_commit:
return 'repository', repo_commit.strip()
return '(none found)', '<not found>'
def pkg_info(pkg_path):
"""Return dict describing the context of this package
Parameters
----------
pkg_path : str
path containing __init__.py for package
Returns
-------
context : dict
with named parameters of interest
"""
src, hsh = pkg_commit_hash(pkg_path)
return dict(
ipython_version=release.version,
ipython_path=pkg_path,
commit_source=src,
commit_hash=hsh,
sys_version=sys.version,
sys_executable=sys.executable,
sys_platform=sys.platform,
platform=platform.platform(),
os_name=os.name,
)
def sys_info():
"""Return useful information about IPython and the system, as a string.
Example
-------
In [2]: print sys_info()
{'commit_hash': '144fdae', # random
'commit_source': 'repository',
'ipython_path': '/home/fperez/usr/lib/python2.6/site-packages/IPython',
'ipython_version': '0.11.dev',
'os_name': 'posix',
'platform': 'Linux-2.6.35-22-generic-i686-with-Ubuntu-10.10-maverick',
'sys_executable': '/usr/bin/python',
'sys_platform': 'linux2',
'sys_version': '2.6.6 (r266:84292, Sep 15 2010, 15:52:39) \\n[GCC 4.4.5]'}
"""
p = os.path
path = p.dirname(p.abspath(p.join(__file__, '..')))
return pprint.pformat(pkg_info(path))
def _num_cpus_unix():
"""Return the number of active CPUs on a Unix system."""
return os.sysconf("SC_NPROCESSORS_ONLN")
def _num_cpus_darwin():
"""Return the number of active CPUs on a Darwin system."""
p = subprocess.Popen(['sysctl','-n','hw.ncpu'],stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
return p.stdout.read()
def _num_cpus_windows():
"""Return the number of active CPUs on a Windows system."""
return os.environ.get("NUMBER_OF_PROCESSORS")
def num_cpus():
"""Return the effective number of CPUs in the system as an integer.
This cross-platform function makes an attempt at finding the total number of
available CPUs in the system, as returned by various underlying system and
python calls.
If it can't find a sensible answer, it returns 1 (though an error *may* make
it return a large positive number that's actually incorrect).
"""
# Many thanks to the Parallel Python project (http://www.parallelpython.com)
# for the names of the keys we needed to look up for this function. This
# code was inspired by their equivalent function.
ncpufuncs = {'Linux':_num_cpus_unix,
'Darwin':_num_cpus_darwin,
'Windows':_num_cpus_windows,
# On Vista, python < 2.5.2 has a bug and returns 'Microsoft'
# See http://bugs.python.org/issue1082 for details.
'Microsoft':_num_cpus_windows,
}
ncpufunc = ncpufuncs.get(platform.system(),
# default to unix version (Solaris, AIX, etc)
_num_cpus_unix)
try:
ncpus = max(1,int(ncpufunc()))
except:
ncpus = 1
return ncpus