# encoding: utf-8 """ IO related utilities. """ # Copyright (c) IPython Development Team. # Distributed under the terms of the Modified BSD License. from __future__ import print_function from __future__ import absolute_import import codecs from contextlib import contextmanager import io import os import shutil import sys import tempfile import warnings from .capture import CapturedIO, capture_output from .py3compat import string_types, input, PY3 class IOStream: def __init__(self,stream, fallback=None): if not hasattr(stream,'write') or not hasattr(stream,'flush'): if fallback is not None: stream = fallback else: raise ValueError("fallback required, but not specified") self.stream = stream self._swrite = stream.write # clone all methods not overridden: def clone(meth): return not hasattr(self, meth) and not meth.startswith('_') for meth in filter(clone, dir(stream)): setattr(self, meth, getattr(stream, meth)) def __repr__(self): cls = self.__class__ tpl = '{mod}.{cls}({args})' return tpl.format(mod=cls.__module__, cls=cls.__name__, args=self.stream) def write(self,data): try: self._swrite(data) except: try: # print handles some unicode issues which may trip a plain # write() call. Emulate write() by using an empty end # argument. print(data, end='', file=self.stream) except: # if we get here, something is seriously broken. print('ERROR - failed to write data to stream:', self.stream, file=sys.stderr) def writelines(self, lines): if isinstance(lines, string_types): lines = [lines] for line in lines: self.write(line) # This class used to have a writeln method, but regular files and streams # in Python don't have this method. We need to keep this completely # compatible so we removed it. @property def closed(self): return self.stream.closed def close(self): pass # setup stdin/stdout/stderr to sys.stdin/sys.stdout/sys.stderr devnull = open(os.devnull, 'w') stdin = IOStream(sys.stdin, fallback=devnull) stdout = IOStream(sys.stdout, fallback=devnull) stderr = IOStream(sys.stderr, fallback=devnull) class IOTerm: """ Term holds the file or file-like objects for handling I/O operations. These are normally just sys.stdin, sys.stdout and sys.stderr but for Windows they can can replaced to allow editing the strings before they are displayed.""" # In the future, having IPython channel all its I/O operations through # this class will make it easier to embed it into other environments which # are not a normal terminal (such as a GUI-based shell) def __init__(self, stdin=None, stdout=None, stderr=None): mymodule = sys.modules[__name__] self.stdin = IOStream(stdin, mymodule.stdin) self.stdout = IOStream(stdout, mymodule.stdout) self.stderr = IOStream(stderr, mymodule.stderr) class Tee(object): """A class to duplicate an output stream to stdout/err. This works in a manner very similar to the Unix 'tee' command. When the object is closed or deleted, it closes the original file given to it for duplication. """ # Inspired by: # http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-list/2007-May/442737.html def __init__(self, file_or_name, mode="w", channel='stdout'): """Construct a new Tee object. Parameters ---------- file_or_name : filename or open filehandle (writable) File that will be duplicated mode : optional, valid mode for open(). If a filename was give, open with this mode. channel : str, one of ['stdout', 'stderr'] """ if channel not in ['stdout', 'stderr']: raise ValueError('Invalid channel spec %s' % channel) if hasattr(file_or_name, 'write') and hasattr(file_or_name, 'seek'): self.file = file_or_name else: self.file = open(file_or_name, mode) self.channel = channel self.ostream = getattr(sys, channel) setattr(sys, channel, self) self._closed = False def close(self): """Close the file and restore the channel.""" self.flush() setattr(sys, self.channel, self.ostream) self.file.close() self._closed = True def write(self, data): """Write data to both channels.""" self.file.write(data) self.ostream.write(data) self.ostream.flush() def flush(self): """Flush both channels.""" self.file.flush() self.ostream.flush() def __del__(self): if not self._closed: self.close() def ask_yes_no(prompt, default=None, interrupt=None): """Asks a question and returns a boolean (y/n) answer. If default is given (one of 'y','n'), it is used if the user input is empty. If interrupt is given (one of 'y','n'), it is used if the user presses Ctrl-C. Otherwise the question is repeated until an answer is given. An EOF is treated as the default answer. If there is no default, an exception is raised to prevent infinite loops. Valid answers are: y/yes/n/no (match is not case sensitive).""" answers = {'y':True,'n':False,'yes':True,'no':False} ans = None while ans not in answers.keys(): try: ans = input(prompt+' ').lower() if not ans: # response was an empty string ans = default except KeyboardInterrupt: if interrupt: ans = interrupt except EOFError: if default in answers.keys(): ans = default print() else: raise return answers[ans] def temp_pyfile(src, ext='.py'): """Make a temporary python file, return filename and filehandle. Parameters ---------- src : string or list of strings (no need for ending newlines if list) Source code to be written to the file. ext : optional, string Extension for the generated file. Returns ------- (filename, open filehandle) It is the caller's responsibility to close the open file and unlink it. """ fname = tempfile.mkstemp(ext)[1] f = open(fname,'w') f.write(src) f.flush() return fname, f def _copy_metadata(src, dst): """Copy the set of metadata we want for atomic_writing. Permission bits and flags. We'd like to copy file ownership as well, but we can't do that. """ shutil.copymode(src, dst) st = os.stat(src) if hasattr(os, 'chflags') and hasattr(st, 'st_flags'): os.chflags(dst, st.st_flags) @contextmanager def atomic_writing(path, text=True, encoding='utf-8', **kwargs): """Context manager to write to a file only if the entire write is successful. This works by creating a temporary file in the same directory, and renaming it over the old file if the context is exited without an error. If other file names are hard linked to the target file, this relationship will not be preserved. On Windows, there is a small chink in the atomicity: the target file is deleted before renaming the temporary file over it. This appears to be unavoidable. Parameters ---------- path : str The target file to write to. text : bool, optional Whether to open the file in text mode (i.e. to write unicode). Default is True. encoding : str, optional The encoding to use for files opened in text mode. Default is UTF-8. **kwargs Passed to :func:`io.open`. """ # realpath doesn't work on Windows: http://bugs.python.org/issue9949 # Luckily, we only need to resolve the file itself being a symlink, not # any of its directories, so this will suffice: if os.path.islink(path): path = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(path), os.readlink(path)) dirname, basename = os.path.split(path) tmp_dir = tempfile.mkdtemp(prefix=basename, dir=dirname) tmp_path = os.path.join(tmp_dir, basename) if text: fileobj = io.open(tmp_path, 'w', encoding=encoding, **kwargs) else: fileobj = io.open(tmp_path, 'wb', **kwargs) try: yield fileobj except: fileobj.close() shutil.rmtree(tmp_dir) raise # Flush to disk fileobj.flush() os.fsync(fileobj.fileno()) # Written successfully, now rename it fileobj.close() # Copy permission bits, access time, etc. try: _copy_metadata(path, tmp_path) except OSError: # e.g. the file didn't already exist. Ignore any failure to copy metadata pass if os.name == 'nt' and os.path.exists(path): # Rename over existing file doesn't work on Windows os.remove(path) os.rename(tmp_path, path) shutil.rmtree(tmp_dir) def raw_print(*args, **kw): """Raw print to sys.__stdout__, otherwise identical interface to print().""" print(*args, sep=kw.get('sep', ' '), end=kw.get('end', '\n'), file=sys.__stdout__) sys.__stdout__.flush() def raw_print_err(*args, **kw): """Raw print to sys.__stderr__, otherwise identical interface to print().""" print(*args, sep=kw.get('sep', ' '), end=kw.get('end', '\n'), file=sys.__stderr__) sys.__stderr__.flush() # Short aliases for quick debugging, do NOT use these in production code. rprint = raw_print rprinte = raw_print_err def unicode_std_stream(stream='stdout'): """DEPRECATED, moved to jupyter_nbconvert.utils.io""" warn("IPython.utils.io.unicode_std_stream has moved to jupyter_nbconvert.utils.io") from jupyter_nbconvert.utils.io import unicode_std_stream return unicode_std_stream(stream)