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Fix a bug in renaming notebook...
Fix a bug in renaming notebook There was a bug in NotebookManager.save_notebook_object. Here is how to reproduce: 0. Make sure you don't have Untitled0. 1. Open new notebook Untitled0. 2. Rename it to something else. 3. Copy Untitled0.ipynb to the notebook dir from somewhere. (Do not use notebook UI.) 4. New copied Untitled0 cannot be opened. The renamed notebook is opened when tried. Indeed, accessing to http://localhost:XXXX/notebooks shows duplicated notebook_id. The problem was that NotebookManager.rev_mapping keeps old notebook name after renaming.

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_process_win32.py
185 lines | 6.0 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
"""Windows-specific implementation of process utilities.
This file is only meant to be imported by process.py, not by end-users.
"""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (C) 2010-2011 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 ctypes
import msvcrt
from ctypes import c_int, POINTER
from ctypes.wintypes import LPCWSTR, HLOCAL
from subprocess import STDOUT
# our own imports
from ._process_common import read_no_interrupt, process_handler, arg_split as py_arg_split
from . import py3compat
from . import text
from .encoding import DEFAULT_ENCODING
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Function definitions
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
class AvoidUNCPath(object):
"""A context manager to protect command execution from UNC paths.
In the Win32 API, commands can't be invoked with the cwd being a UNC path.
This context manager temporarily changes directory to the 'C:' drive on
entering, and restores the original working directory on exit.
The context manager returns the starting working directory *if* it made a
change and None otherwise, so that users can apply the necessary adjustment
to their system calls in the event of a change.
Example
-------
::
cmd = 'dir'
with AvoidUNCPath() as path:
if path is not None:
cmd = '"pushd %s &&"%s' % (path, cmd)
os.system(cmd)
"""
def __enter__(self):
self.path = os.getcwdu()
self.is_unc_path = self.path.startswith(r"\\")
if self.is_unc_path:
# change to c drive (as cmd.exe cannot handle UNC addresses)
os.chdir("C:")
return self.path
else:
# We return None to signal that there was no change in the working
# directory
return None
def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, traceback):
if self.is_unc_path:
os.chdir(self.path)
def _find_cmd(cmd):
"""Find the full path to a .bat or .exe using the win32api module."""
try:
from win32api import SearchPath
except ImportError:
raise ImportError('you need to have pywin32 installed for this to work')
else:
PATH = os.environ['PATH']
extensions = ['.exe', '.com', '.bat', '.py']
path = None
for ext in extensions:
try:
path = SearchPath(PATH, cmd + ext)[0]
except:
pass
if path is None:
raise OSError("command %r not found" % cmd)
else:
return path
def _system_body(p):
"""Callback for _system."""
enc = DEFAULT_ENCODING
for line in read_no_interrupt(p.stdout).splitlines():
line = line.decode(enc, 'replace')
print(line, file=sys.stdout)
for line in read_no_interrupt(p.stderr).splitlines():
line = line.decode(enc, 'replace')
print(line, file=sys.stderr)
# Wait to finish for returncode
return p.wait()
def system(cmd):
"""Win32 version of os.system() that works with network shares.
Note that this implementation returns None, as meant for use in IPython.
Parameters
----------
cmd : str
A command to be executed in the system shell.
Returns
-------
None : we explicitly do NOT return the subprocess status code, as this
utility is meant to be used extensively in IPython, where any return value
would trigger :func:`sys.displayhook` calls.
"""
# The controller provides interactivity with both
# stdin and stdout
import _process_win32_controller
_process_win32_controller.system(cmd)
def getoutput(cmd):
"""Return standard output of executing cmd in a shell.
Accepts the same arguments as os.system().
Parameters
----------
cmd : str
A command to be executed in the system shell.
Returns
-------
stdout : str
"""
with AvoidUNCPath() as path:
if path is not None:
cmd = '"pushd %s &&"%s' % (path, cmd)
out = process_handler(cmd, lambda p: p.communicate()[0], STDOUT)
if out is None:
out = ''
return out
try:
CommandLineToArgvW = ctypes.windll.shell32.CommandLineToArgvW
CommandLineToArgvW.arg_types = [LPCWSTR, POINTER(c_int)]
CommandLineToArgvW.restype = POINTER(LPCWSTR)
LocalFree = ctypes.windll.kernel32.LocalFree
LocalFree.res_type = HLOCAL
LocalFree.arg_types = [HLOCAL]
def arg_split(commandline, posix=False, strict=True):
"""Split a command line's arguments in a shell-like manner.
This is a special version for windows that use a ctypes call to CommandLineToArgvW
to do the argv splitting. The posix paramter is ignored.
If strict=False, process_common.arg_split(...strict=False) is used instead.
"""
#CommandLineToArgvW returns path to executable if called with empty string.
if commandline.strip() == "":
return []
if not strict:
# not really a cl-arg, fallback on _process_common
return py_arg_split(commandline, posix=posix, strict=strict)
argvn = c_int()
result_pointer = CommandLineToArgvW(py3compat.cast_unicode(commandline.lstrip()), ctypes.byref(argvn))
result_array_type = LPCWSTR * argvn.value
result = [arg for arg in result_array_type.from_address(ctypes.addressof(result_pointer.contents))]
retval = LocalFree(result_pointer)
return result
except AttributeError:
arg_split = py_arg_split