# encoding: utf-8 """ Utilities for getting information about IPython and the system it's running in. """ #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Copyright (C) 2008-2011 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 #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- import os import platform import pprint import sys import subprocess from IPython.core import release from IPython.utils import py3compat, _sysinfo, encoding #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Code #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- def pkg_commit_hash(pkg_path): """Get short form of commit hash given directory `pkg_path` We get the commit hash from (in order of preference): * IPython.utils._sysinfo.commit * git output, if we are in a git repository If these fail, we return a not-found placeholder tuple Parameters ---------- pkg_path : str directory containing package only used for getting commit from active repo 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 if _sysinfo.commit: return "installation", _sysinfo.commit # 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().decode('ascii') return '(none found)', u'' 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, default_encoding=encoding.DEFAULT_ENCODING, ) def get_sys_info(): """Return useful information about IPython and the system, as a dict.""" p = os.path path = p.realpath(p.dirname(p.abspath(p.join(__file__, '..')))) return pkg_info(path) @py3compat.doctest_refactor_print def sys_info(): """Return useful information about IPython and the system, as a string. Examples -------- :: 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]'} """ return pprint.pformat(get_sys_info()) 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 } 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