##// END OF EJS Templates
zeroconf: fix an invalid argument error on Windows...
zeroconf: fix an invalid argument error on Windows The idea that pyoxidizer was triggering the problem when standing up the previous incarnation of CI for Windows was misleading- it was a Windows problem in general. See the inline bug link. Unfortunately, there's no commit referenced there, and it looks like OP closed the report himself with the suggested workaround. IOW, very modern python may not work, but it's extremely unlikely that there are any users of this extension, especially on Windows.

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urllibcompat.py
156 lines | 3.5 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# urllibcompat.py - adapters to ease using urllib2 on Py2 and urllib on Py3
#
# Copyright 2017 Google, Inc.
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
from __future__ import annotations
import http.server
import urllib.error
import urllib.parse
import urllib.request
import urllib.response
from . import pycompat
_sysstr = pycompat.sysstr
class _pycompatstub:
def __init__(self):
self._aliases = {}
def _registeraliases(self, origin, items):
"""Add items that will be populated at the first access"""
items = map(_sysstr, items)
self._aliases.update(
(item.replace('_', '').lower(), (origin, item)) for item in items
)
def _registeralias(self, origin, attr, name):
"""Alias ``origin``.``attr`` as ``name``"""
self._aliases[_sysstr(name)] = (origin, _sysstr(attr))
def __getattr__(self, name):
try:
origin, item = self._aliases[name]
except KeyError:
raise AttributeError(name)
self.__dict__[name] = obj = getattr(origin, item)
return obj
httpserver = _pycompatstub()
urlreq = _pycompatstub()
urlerr = _pycompatstub()
urlreq._registeraliases(
urllib.parse,
(
b"splitattr",
b"splitpasswd",
b"splitport",
b"splituser",
b"urlparse",
b"urlunparse",
),
)
urlreq._registeralias(urllib.parse, b"parse_qs", b"parseqs")
urlreq._registeralias(urllib.parse, b"parse_qsl", b"parseqsl")
urlreq._registeralias(urllib.parse, b"unquote_to_bytes", b"unquote")
urlreq._registeraliases(
urllib.request,
(
b"AbstractHTTPHandler",
b"BaseHandler",
b"build_opener",
b"FileHandler",
b"FTPHandler",
b"ftpwrapper",
b"HTTPCookieProcessor",
b"HTTPHandler",
b"HTTPSHandler",
b"install_opener",
b"pathname2url",
b"HTTPBasicAuthHandler",
b"HTTPDigestAuthHandler",
b"HTTPPasswordMgrWithDefaultRealm",
b"ProxyHandler",
b"Request",
b"url2pathname",
b"urlopen",
),
)
urlreq._registeraliases(
urllib.response,
(
b"addclosehook",
b"addinfourl",
),
)
urlerr._registeraliases(
urllib.error,
(
b"HTTPError",
b"URLError",
),
)
httpserver._registeraliases(
http.server,
(
b"HTTPServer",
b"BaseHTTPRequestHandler",
b"SimpleHTTPRequestHandler",
b"CGIHTTPRequestHandler",
),
)
# urllib.parse.quote() accepts both str and bytes, decodes bytes
# (if necessary), and returns str. This is wonky. We provide a custom
# implementation that only accepts bytes and emits bytes.
def quote(s, safe='/'):
# bytestr has an __iter__ that emits characters. quote_from_bytes()
# does an iteration and expects ints. We coerce to bytes to appease it.
if isinstance(s, pycompat.bytestr):
s = bytes(s)
s = urllib.parse.quote_from_bytes(s, safe=safe)
return s.encode('ascii', 'strict')
# urllib.parse.urlencode() returns str. We use this function to make
# sure we return bytes.
def urlencode(query, doseq=False):
s = urllib.parse.urlencode(query, doseq=doseq)
return s.encode('ascii')
urlreq.quote = quote
urlreq.urlencode = urlencode
def getfullurl(req):
return req.full_url
def gethost(req):
return req.host
def getselector(req):
return req.selector
def getdata(req):
return req.data
def hasdata(req):
return req.data is not None