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Merge pull request #937 from minrk/readline...
Merge pull request #937 from minrk/readline Add dirty trick for readline import on OSX to more aggressively detect the presence of libedit masquerading as true GNU readline. Also made the libedit warning extremely loud, so people don't miss it. See the original PR page for the gory details; short version: 1. remove lib-dynload from sys.path before trying to import readline the first time 2. after import, restore lib-dynload to its place in sys.path 3. if import failed without lib-dynload, try it one more time, to get the default module

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alias.py
263 lines | 9.2 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# encoding: utf-8
"""
System command aliases.
Authors:
* Fernando Perez
* Brian Granger
"""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (C) 2008-2010 The IPython Development Team
#
# Distributed under the terms of the BSD License.
#
# The full license is in the file COPYING.txt, distributed with this software.
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Imports
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
import __builtin__
import keyword
import os
import re
import sys
from IPython.config.configurable import Configurable
from IPython.core.splitinput import split_user_input
from IPython.utils.traitlets import List, Instance
from IPython.utils.autoattr import auto_attr
from IPython.utils.warn import warn, error
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Utilities
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# This is used as the pattern for calls to split_user_input.
shell_line_split = re.compile(r'^(\s*)()(\S+)(.*$)')
def default_aliases():
"""Return list of shell aliases to auto-define.
"""
# Note: the aliases defined here should be safe to use on a kernel
# regardless of what frontend it is attached to. Frontends that use a
# kernel in-process can define additional aliases that will only work in
# their case. For example, things like 'less' or 'clear' that manipulate
# the terminal should NOT be declared here, as they will only work if the
# kernel is running inside a true terminal, and not over the network.
if os.name == 'posix':
default_aliases = [('mkdir', 'mkdir'), ('rmdir', 'rmdir'),
('mv', 'mv -i'), ('rm', 'rm -i'), ('cp', 'cp -i'),
('cat', 'cat'),
]
# Useful set of ls aliases. The GNU and BSD options are a little
# different, so we make aliases that provide as similar as possible
# behavior in ipython, by passing the right flags for each platform
if sys.platform.startswith('linux'):
ls_aliases = [('ls', 'ls -F --color'),
# long ls
('ll', 'ls -F -o --color'),
# ls normal files only
('lf', 'ls -F -o --color %l | grep ^-'),
# ls symbolic links
('lk', 'ls -F -o --color %l | grep ^l'),
# directories or links to directories,
('ldir', 'ls -F -o --color %l | grep /$'),
# things which are executable
('lx', 'ls -F -o --color %l | grep ^-..x'),
]
else:
# BSD, OSX, etc.
ls_aliases = [('ls', 'ls -F'),
# long ls
('ll', 'ls -F -l'),
# ls normal files only
('lf', 'ls -F -l %l | grep ^-'),
# ls symbolic links
('lk', 'ls -F -l %l | grep ^l'),
# directories or links to directories,
('ldir', 'ls -F -l %l | grep /$'),
# things which are executable
('lx', 'ls -F -l %l | grep ^-..x'),
]
default_aliases = default_aliases + ls_aliases
elif os.name in ['nt', 'dos']:
default_aliases = [('ls', 'dir /on'),
('ddir', 'dir /ad /on'), ('ldir', 'dir /ad /on'),
('mkdir', 'mkdir'), ('rmdir', 'rmdir'),
('echo', 'echo'), ('ren', 'ren'), ('copy', 'copy'),
]
else:
default_aliases = []
return default_aliases
class AliasError(Exception):
pass
class InvalidAliasError(AliasError):
pass
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Main AliasManager class
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
class AliasManager(Configurable):
default_aliases = List(default_aliases(), config=True)
user_aliases = List(default_value=[], config=True)
shell = Instance('IPython.core.interactiveshell.InteractiveShellABC')
def __init__(self, shell=None, config=None):
super(AliasManager, self).__init__(shell=shell, config=config)
self.alias_table = {}
self.exclude_aliases()
self.init_aliases()
def __contains__(self, name):
return name in self.alias_table
@property
def aliases(self):
return [(item[0], item[1][1]) for item in self.alias_table.iteritems()]
def exclude_aliases(self):
# set of things NOT to alias (keywords, builtins and some magics)
no_alias = set(['cd','popd','pushd','dhist','alias','unalias'])
no_alias.update(set(keyword.kwlist))
no_alias.update(set(__builtin__.__dict__.keys()))
self.no_alias = no_alias
def init_aliases(self):
# Load default aliases
for name, cmd in self.default_aliases:
self.soft_define_alias(name, cmd)
# Load user aliases
for name, cmd in self.user_aliases:
self.soft_define_alias(name, cmd)
def clear_aliases(self):
self.alias_table.clear()
def soft_define_alias(self, name, cmd):
"""Define an alias, but don't raise on an AliasError."""
try:
self.define_alias(name, cmd)
except AliasError, e:
error("Invalid alias: %s" % e)
def define_alias(self, name, cmd):
"""Define a new alias after validating it.
This will raise an :exc:`AliasError` if there are validation
problems.
"""
nargs = self.validate_alias(name, cmd)
self.alias_table[name] = (nargs, cmd)
def undefine_alias(self, name):
if self.alias_table.has_key(name):
del self.alias_table[name]
def validate_alias(self, name, cmd):
"""Validate an alias and return the its number of arguments."""
if name in self.no_alias:
raise InvalidAliasError("The name %s can't be aliased "
"because it is a keyword or builtin." % name)
if not (isinstance(cmd, basestring)):
raise InvalidAliasError("An alias command must be a string, "
"got: %r" % name)
nargs = cmd.count('%s')
if nargs>0 and cmd.find('%l')>=0:
raise InvalidAliasError('The %s and %l specifiers are mutually '
'exclusive in alias definitions.')
return nargs
def call_alias(self, alias, rest=''):
"""Call an alias given its name and the rest of the line."""
cmd = self.transform_alias(alias, rest)
try:
self.shell.system(cmd)
except:
self.shell.showtraceback()
def transform_alias(self, alias,rest=''):
"""Transform alias to system command string."""
nargs, cmd = self.alias_table[alias]
if ' ' in cmd and os.path.isfile(cmd):
cmd = '"%s"' % cmd
# Expand the %l special to be the user's input line
if cmd.find('%l') >= 0:
cmd = cmd.replace('%l', rest)
rest = ''
if nargs==0:
# Simple, argument-less aliases
cmd = '%s %s' % (cmd, rest)
else:
# Handle aliases with positional arguments
args = rest.split(None, nargs)
if len(args) < nargs:
raise AliasError('Alias <%s> requires %s arguments, %s given.' %
(alias, nargs, len(args)))
cmd = '%s %s' % (cmd % tuple(args[:nargs]),' '.join(args[nargs:]))
return cmd
def expand_alias(self, line):
""" Expand an alias in the command line
Returns the provided command line, possibly with the first word
(command) translated according to alias expansion rules.
[ipython]|16> _ip.expand_aliases("np myfile.txt")
<16> 'q:/opt/np/notepad++.exe myfile.txt'
"""
pre,_,fn,rest = split_user_input(line)
res = pre + self.expand_aliases(fn, rest)
return res
def expand_aliases(self, fn, rest):
"""Expand multiple levels of aliases:
if:
alias foo bar /tmp
alias baz foo
then:
baz huhhahhei -> bar /tmp huhhahhei
"""
line = fn + " " + rest
done = set()
while 1:
pre,_,fn,rest = split_user_input(line, shell_line_split)
if fn in self.alias_table:
if fn in done:
warn("Cyclic alias definition, repeated '%s'" % fn)
return ""
done.add(fn)
l2 = self.transform_alias(fn, rest)
if l2 == line:
break
# ls -> ls -F should not recurse forever
if l2.split(None,1)[0] == line.split(None,1)[0]:
line = l2
break
line=l2
else:
break
return line