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inputhook.py
571 lines | 19.0 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
#!/usr/bin/env python
# coding: utf-8
"""
Inputhook management for GUI event loop integration.
"""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# 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 ctypes
import sys
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Constants
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Constants for identifying the GUI toolkits.
GUI_WX = 'wx'
GUI_QT = 'qt'
GUI_QT4 = 'qt4'
GUI_GTK = 'gtk'
GUI_TK = 'tk'
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Utility classes
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
class _DummyMainloop(object):
"""A special manager to hijack GUI mainloops that is mostly a no-op.
We are not using this class currently as it breaks GUI code that calls
a mainloop function after the app has started to process pending events.
"""
def __init__(self, ml, ihm, gui_type):
self.ml = ml
self.ihm = ihm
self.gui_type = gui_type
def __call__(self, *args, **kw):
if self.ihm.current_gui() == self.gui_type:
pass
else:
self.ml(*args, **kw)
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Appstart and spin functions
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
def appstart_qt4(app):
"""Start the qt4 event loop in a way that plays with IPython.
When a qt4 app is run interactively in IPython, the event loop should
not be started. This function checks to see if IPython's qt4 integration
is activated and if so, it passes. If not, it will call the :meth:`exec_`
method of the main qt4 app.
This function should be used by users who want their qt4 scripts to work
both at the command line and in IPython. These users should put the
following logic at the bottom on their script, after they create a
:class:`QApplication` instance (called ``app`` here)::
try:
from IPython.lib.inputhook import appstart_qt4
appstart_qt4(app)
except ImportError:
app.exec_()
"""
from PyQt4 import QtCore, QtGui
assert isinstance(app, QtCore.QCoreApplication)
if app is not None:
if current_gui() == GUI_QT4:
pass
else:
app.exec_()
def appstart_wx(app):
"""Start the wx event loop in a way that plays with IPython.
When a wx app is run interactively in IPython, the event loop should
not be started. This function checks to see if IPython's wx integration
is activated and if so, it passes. If not, it will call the
:meth:`MainLoop` method of the main qt4 app.
This function should be used by users who want their wx scripts to work
both at the command line and in IPython. These users should put the
following logic at the bottom on their script, after they create a
:class:`App` instance (called ``app`` here)::
try:
from IPython.lib.inputhook import appstart_wx
appstart_wx(app)
except ImportError:
app.MainLoop()
"""
import wx
assert isinstance(app, wx.App)
if app is not None:
if current_gui() == GUI_WX:
pass
else:
app.MainLoop()
def appstart_tk(app):
"""Start the tk event loop in a way that plays with IPython.
When a tk app is run interactively in IPython, the event loop should
not be started. This function checks to see if IPython's tk integration
is activated and if so, it passes. If not, it will call the
:meth:`mainloop` method of the tk object passed to this method.
This function should be used by users who want their tk scripts to work
both at the command line and in IPython. These users should put the
following logic at the bottom on their script, after they create a
:class:`Tk` instance (called ``app`` here)::
try:
from IPython.lib.inputhook import appstart_tk
appstart_tk(app)
except ImportError:
app.mainloop()
"""
if app is not None:
if current_gui() == GUI_TK:
pass
else:
app.mainloop()
def appstart_gtk():
"""Start the gtk event loop in a way that plays with IPython.
When a gtk app is run interactively in IPython, the event loop should
not be started. This function checks to see if IPython's gtk integration
is activated and if so, it passes. If not, it will call
:func:`gtk.main`. Unlike the other appstart implementations, this does
not take an ``app`` argument.
This function should be used by users who want their gtk scripts to work
both at the command line and in IPython. These users should put the
following logic at the bottom on their script::
try:
from IPython.lib.inputhook import appstart_gtk
appstart_gtk()
except ImportError:
gtk.main()
"""
import gtk
if current_gui() == GUI_GTK:
pass
else:
gtk.main()
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Main InputHookManager class
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
class InputHookManager(object):
"""Manage PyOS_InputHook for different GUI toolkits.
This class installs various hooks under ``PyOSInputHook`` to handle
GUI event loop integration.
"""
def __init__(self):
self.PYFUNC = ctypes.PYFUNCTYPE(ctypes.c_int)
self._apps = {}
self._spinner_dict = {
GUI_QT4 : self._spin_qt4,
GUI_WX : self._spin_wx,
GUI_GTK : self._spin_gtk,
GUI_TK : self._spin_tk}
self._reset()
def _reset(self):
self._callback_pyfunctype = None
self._callback = None
self._installed = False
self._current_gui = None
def _hijack_wx(self):
"""Hijack the wx mainloop so a user calling it won't cause badness.
We are not currently using this as it breaks GUI code that calls a
mainloop at anytime but startup.
"""
import wx
if hasattr(wx, '_core_'): core = getattr(wx, '_core_')
elif hasattr(wx, '_core'): core = getattr(wx, '_core')
else: raise AttributeError('Could not find wx core module')
orig_mainloop = core.PyApp_MainLoop
core.PyApp_MainLoop = _DummyMainloop
return orig_mainloop
def _hijack_qt4(self):
"""Hijack the qt4 mainloop so a user calling it won't cause badness.
We are not currently using this as it breaks GUI code that calls a
mainloop at anytime but startup.
"""
from PyQt4 import QtGui, QtCore
orig_mainloop = QtGui.qApp.exec_
dumb_ml = _DummyMainloop(orig_mainloop, self, GUI_QT4)
QtGui.qApp.exec_ = dumb_ml
QtGui.QApplication.exec_ = dumb_ml
QtCore.QCoreApplication.exec_ = dumb_ml
return orig_mainloop
def _hijack_gtk(self):
"""Hijack the gtk mainloop so a user calling it won't cause badness.
We are not currently using this as it breaks GUI code that calls a
mainloop at anytime but startup.
"""
import gtk
orig_mainloop = gtk.main
dumb_ml = _DummyMainloop(orig_mainloop, self, GUI_GTK)
gtk.mainloop = dumb_ml
gtk.main = dumb_ml
return orig_mainloop
def _hijack_tk(self):
"""Hijack the tk mainloop so a user calling it won't cause badness.
We are not currently using this as it breaks GUI code that calls a
mainloop at anytime but startup.
"""
import Tkinter
orig_mainloop = gtk.main
dumb_ml = _DummyMainloop(orig_mainloop, self, GUI_TK)
Tkinter.Misc.mainloop = dumb_ml
Tkinter.mainloop = dumb_ml
def _spin_qt4(self):
"""Process all pending events in the qt4 event loop.
This is for internal IPython use only and user code should not call this.
Instead, they should issue the raw GUI calls themselves.
"""
from PyQt4 import QtCore, QtGui
app = QtCore.QCoreApplication.instance()
if app is not None:
QtCore.QCoreApplication.processEvents(QtCore.QEventLoop.AllEvents)
def _spin_wx(self):
"""Process all pending events in the wx event loop.
This is for internal IPython use only and user code should not call this.
Instead, they should issue the raw GUI calls themselves.
"""
import wx
app = wx.GetApp()
if app is not None and wx.Thread_IsMain():
evtloop = wx.EventLoop()
ea = wx.EventLoopActivator(evtloop)
while evtloop.Pending():
evtloop.Dispatch()
app.ProcessIdle()
del ea
def _spin_gtk(self):
"""Process all pending events in the gtk event loop.
This is for internal IPython use only and user code should not call this.
Instead, they should issue the raw GUI calls themselves.
"""
import gtk
gtk.gdk.threads_enter()
while gtk.events_pending():
gtk.main_iteration(False)
gtk.gdk.flush()
gtk.gdk.threads_leave()
def _spin_tk(self):
"""Process all pending events in the tk event loop.
This is for internal IPython use only and user code should not call this.
Instead, they should issue the raw GUI calls themselves.
"""
app = self._apps.get(GUI_TK)
if app is not None:
app.update()
def spin(self):
"""Process pending events in the current gui.
This method is just provided for IPython to use internally if needed
for things like testing. Third party projects should not call this
method, but instead should call the underlying GUI toolkit methods
that we are calling.
"""
spinner = self._spinner_dict.get(self._current_gui, lambda: None)
spinner()
def get_pyos_inputhook(self):
"""Return the current PyOS_InputHook as a ctypes.c_void_p."""
return ctypes.c_void_p.in_dll(ctypes.pythonapi,"PyOS_InputHook")
def get_pyos_inputhook_as_func(self):
"""Return the current PyOS_InputHook as a ctypes.PYFUNCYPE."""
return self.PYFUNC.in_dll(ctypes.pythonapi,"PyOS_InputHook")
def set_inputhook(self, callback):
"""Set PyOS_InputHook to callback and return the previous one."""
self._callback = callback
self._callback_pyfunctype = self.PYFUNC(callback)
pyos_inputhook_ptr = self.get_pyos_inputhook()
original = self.get_pyos_inputhook_as_func()
pyos_inputhook_ptr.value = \
ctypes.cast(self._callback_pyfunctype, ctypes.c_void_p).value
self._installed = True
return original
def clear_inputhook(self, app=None):
"""Set PyOS_InputHook to NULL and return the previous one.
Parameters
----------
app : optional, ignored
This parameter is allowed only so that clear_inputhook() can be
called with a similar interface as all the ``enable_*`` methods. But
the actual value of the parameter is ignored. This uniform interface
makes it easier to have user-level entry points in the main IPython
app like :meth:`enable_gui`."""
pyos_inputhook_ptr = self.get_pyos_inputhook()
original = self.get_pyos_inputhook_as_func()
pyos_inputhook_ptr.value = ctypes.c_void_p(None).value
self._reset()
return original
def clear_app_refs(self, gui=None):
"""Clear IPython's internal reference to an application instance.
Whenever we create an app for a user on qt4 or wx, we hold a
reference to the app. This is needed because in some cases bad things
can happen if a user doesn't hold a reference themselves. This
method is provided to clear the references we are holding.
Parameters
----------
gui : None or str
If None, clear all app references. If ('wx', 'qt4') clear
the app for that toolkit. References are not held for gtk or tk
as those toolkits don't have the notion of an app.
"""
if gui is None:
self._apps = {}
elif self._apps.has_key(gui):
del self._apps[gui]
def enable_wx(self, app=False):
"""Enable event loop integration with wxPython.
Parameters
----------
app : bool
Create a running application object or not.
Notes
-----
This methods sets the ``PyOS_InputHook`` for wxPython, which allows
the wxPython to integrate with terminal based applications like
IPython.
If ``app`` is True, we create an :class:`wx.App` as follows::
import wx
app = wx.App(redirect=False, clearSigInt=False)
Both options this constructor are important for things to work
properly in an interactive context.
But, we first check to see if an application has already been
created. If so, we simply return that instance.
"""
from IPython.lib.inputhookwx import inputhook_wx
self.set_inputhook(inputhook_wx)
self._current_gui = GUI_WX
if app:
import wx
app = wx.GetApp()
if app is None:
app = wx.App(redirect=False, clearSigInt=False)
self._apps[GUI_WX] = app
return app
def disable_wx(self):
"""Disable event loop integration with wxPython.
This merely sets PyOS_InputHook to NULL.
"""
self.clear_inputhook()
def enable_qt4(self, app=False):
"""Enable event loop integration with PyQt4.
Parameters
----------
app : bool
Create a running application object or not.
Notes
-----
This methods sets the PyOS_InputHook for PyQt4, which allows
the PyQt4 to integrate with terminal based applications like
IPython.
If ``app`` is True, we create an :class:`QApplication` as follows::
from PyQt4 import QtCore
app = QtGui.QApplication(sys.argv)
But, we first check to see if an application has already been
created. If so, we simply return that instance.
"""
from PyQt4 import QtCore
# PyQt4 has had this since 4.3.1. In version 4.2, PyOS_InputHook
# was set when QtCore was imported, but if it ever got removed,
# you couldn't reset it. For earlier versions we can
# probably implement a ctypes version.
try:
QtCore.pyqtRestoreInputHook()
except AttributeError:
pass
self._current_gui = GUI_QT4
if app:
from PyQt4 import QtGui
app = QtCore.QCoreApplication.instance()
if app is None:
app = QtGui.QApplication(sys.argv)
self._apps[GUI_QT4] = app
return app
def disable_qt4(self):
"""Disable event loop integration with PyQt4.
This merely sets PyOS_InputHook to NULL.
"""
self.clear_inputhook()
def enable_gtk(self, app=False):
"""Enable event loop integration with PyGTK.
Parameters
----------
app : bool
Create a running application object or not. Because gtk does't
have an app class, this does nothing.
Notes
-----
This methods sets the PyOS_InputHook for PyGTK, which allows
the PyGTK to integrate with terminal based applications like
IPython.
"""
import gtk
try:
gtk.set_interactive(True)
self._current_gui = GUI_GTK
except AttributeError:
# For older versions of gtk, use our own ctypes version
from IPython.lib.inputhookgtk import inputhook_gtk
self.set_inputhook(inputhook_gtk)
self._current_gui = GUI_GTK
def disable_gtk(self):
"""Disable event loop integration with PyGTK.
This merely sets PyOS_InputHook to NULL.
"""
self.clear_inputhook()
def enable_tk(self, app=False):
"""Enable event loop integration with Tk.
Parameters
----------
app : bool
Create a running application object or not.
Notes
-----
Currently this is a no-op as creating a :class:`Tkinter.Tk` object
sets ``PyOS_InputHook``.
"""
self._current_gui = GUI_TK
if app:
import Tkinter
app = Tkinter.Tk()
app.withdraw()
self._apps[GUI_TK] = app
return app
def disable_tk(self):
"""Disable event loop integration with Tkinter.
This merely sets PyOS_InputHook to NULL.
"""
self.clear_inputhook()
def current_gui(self):
"""Return a string indicating the currently active GUI or None."""
return self._current_gui
inputhook_manager = InputHookManager()
enable_wx = inputhook_manager.enable_wx
disable_wx = inputhook_manager.disable_wx
enable_qt4 = inputhook_manager.enable_qt4
disable_qt4 = inputhook_manager.disable_qt4
enable_gtk = inputhook_manager.enable_gtk
disable_gtk = inputhook_manager.disable_gtk
enable_tk = inputhook_manager.enable_tk
disable_tk = inputhook_manager.disable_tk
clear_inputhook = inputhook_manager.clear_inputhook
set_inputhook = inputhook_manager.set_inputhook
current_gui = inputhook_manager.current_gui
clear_app_refs = inputhook_manager.clear_app_refs
spin = inputhook_manager.spin
# Convenience function to switch amongst them
def enable_gui(gui=None, app=True):
"""Switch amongst GUI input hooks by name.
This is just a utility wrapper around the methods of the InputHookManager
object.
Parameters
----------
gui : optional, string or None
If None, clears input hook, otherwise it must be one of the recognized
GUI names (see ``GUI_*`` constants in module).
app : optional, bool
If true, create an app object and return it.
Returns
-------
The output of the underlying gui switch routine, typically the actual
PyOS_InputHook wrapper object or the GUI toolkit app created, if there was
one.
"""
guis = {None: clear_inputhook,
GUI_TK: enable_tk,
GUI_GTK: enable_gtk,
GUI_WX: enable_wx,
GUI_QT: enable_qt4, # qt3 not supported
GUI_QT4: enable_qt4 }
try:
gui_hook = guis[gui]
except KeyError:
e="Invalid GUI request %r, valid ones are:%s" % (gui, guis.keys())
raise ValueError(e)
return gui_hook(app)