Source code for SCons.Util

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"""Various SCons utility functions."""

import copy
import hashlib
import os
import pprint
import re
import sys
import time
from collections import UserDict, UserList, UserString, OrderedDict
from collections.abc import MappingView
from contextlib import suppress
from types import MethodType, FunctionType
from typing import Optional, Union

# Note: Util module cannot import other bits of SCons globally without getting
# into import loops. Both the below modules import SCons.Util early on.
# --> SCons.Warnings
# --> SCons.Errors
# Thus the local imports, which are annotated for pylint to show we mean it.


PYPY = hasattr(sys, 'pypy_translation_info')

# this string will be hashed if a Node refers to a file that doesn't exist
# in order to distinguish from a file that exists but is empty.
NOFILE = "SCONS_MAGIC_MISSING_FILE_STRING"

# unused?
[docs]def dictify(keys, values, result=None) -> dict: if result is None: result = {} result.update(zip(keys, values)) return result
_ALTSEP = os.altsep if _ALTSEP is None and sys.platform == 'win32': # My ActivePython 2.0.1 doesn't set os.altsep! What gives? _ALTSEP = '/' if _ALTSEP: def rightmost_separator(path, sep): return max(path.rfind(sep), path.rfind(_ALTSEP)) else:
[docs] def rightmost_separator(path, sep): return path.rfind(sep)
# First two from the Python Cookbook, just for completeness. # (Yeah, yeah, YAGNI...)
[docs]def containsAny(s, pat) -> bool: """Check whether string `s` contains ANY of the items in `pat`.""" return any(c in s for c in pat)
[docs]def containsAll(s, pat) -> bool: """Check whether string `s` contains ALL of the items in `pat`.""" return all(c in s for c in pat)
[docs]def containsOnly(s, pat) -> bool: """Check whether string `s` contains ONLY items in `pat`.""" for c in s: if c not in pat: return False return True
# TODO: Verify this method is STILL faster than os.path.splitext
[docs]def splitext(path) -> tuple: """Split `path` into a (root, ext) pair. Same as :mod:`os.path.splitext` but faster. """ sep = rightmost_separator(path, os.sep) dot = path.rfind('.') # An ext is only real if it has at least one non-digit char if dot > sep and not path[dot + 1:].isdigit(): return path[:dot], path[dot:] return path, ""
[docs]def updrive(path) -> str: """Make the drive letter (if any) upper case. This is useful because Windows is inconsistent on the case of the drive letter, which can cause inconsistencies when calculating command signatures. """ drive, rest = os.path.splitdrive(path) if drive: path = drive.upper() + rest return path
[docs]class NodeList(UserList): """A list of Nodes with special attribute retrieval. Unlike an ordinary list, access to a member's attribute returns a `NodeList` containing the same attribute for each member. Although this can hold any object, it is intended for use when processing Nodes, where fetching an attribute of each member is very commone, for example getting the content signature of each node. The term "attribute" here includes the string representation. Example: >>> someList = NodeList([' foo ', ' bar ']) >>> someList.strip() ['foo', 'bar'] """ def __bool__(self): return bool(self.data) def __str__(self): return ' '.join(map(str, self.data)) def __iter__(self): return iter(self.data) def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs) -> 'NodeList': result = [x(*args, **kwargs) for x in self.data] return self.__class__(result)
[docs] def __getattr__(self, name) -> 'NodeList': """Returns a NodeList of `name` from each member.""" result = [getattr(x, name) for x in self.data] return self.__class__(result)
[docs] def __getitem__(self, index): """Returns one item, forces a `NodeList` if `index` is a slice.""" # TODO: annotate return how? Union[] - don't know type of single item if isinstance(index, slice): return self.__class__(self.data[index]) return self.data[index]
_get_env_var = re.compile(r'^\$([_a-zA-Z]\w*|{[_a-zA-Z]\w*})$')
[docs]def get_environment_var(varstr) -> Optional[str]: """Return undecorated construction variable string. Determine if `varstr` looks like a reference to a single environment variable, like `"$FOO"` or `"${FOO}"`. If so, return that variable with no decorations, like `"FOO"`. If not, return `None`. """ mo = _get_env_var.match(to_String(varstr)) if mo: var = mo.group(1) if var[0] == '{': return var[1:-1] return var return None
[docs]class DisplayEngine: """A callable class used to display SCons messages.""" print_it = True def __call__(self, text, append_newline=1): if not self.print_it: return if append_newline: text = text + '\n' try: sys.stdout.write(str(text)) except IOError: # Stdout might be connected to a pipe that has been closed # by now. The most likely reason for the pipe being closed # is that the user has press ctrl-c. It this is the case, # then SCons is currently shutdown. We therefore ignore # IOError's here so that SCons can continue and shutdown # properly so that the .sconsign is correctly written # before SCons exits. pass
[docs] def set_mode(self, mode): self.print_it = mode
# TODO: W0102: Dangerous default value [] as argument (dangerous-default-value)
[docs]def render_tree(root, child_func, prune=0, margin=[0], visited=None): """Render a tree of nodes into an ASCII tree view. Args: root: the root node of the tree child_func: the function called to get the children of a node prune: don't visit the same node twice margin: the format of the left margin to use for children of `root`. 1 results in a pipe, and 0 results in no pipe. visited: a dictionary of visited nodes in the current branch if `prune` is 0, or in the whole tree if `prune` is 1. """ rname = str(root) # Initialize 'visited' dict, if required if visited is None: visited = {} children = child_func(root) retval = "" for pipe in margin[:-1]: if pipe: retval = retval + "| " else: retval = retval + " " if rname in visited: return retval + "+-[" + rname + "]\n" retval = retval + "+-" + rname + "\n" if not prune: visited = copy.copy(visited) visited[rname] = True for i, child in enumerate(children): margin.append(i < len(children)-1) retval = retval + render_tree(child, child_func, prune, margin, visited) margin.pop() return retval
[docs]def IDX(n) -> bool: """Generate in index into strings from the tree legends. These are always a choice between two, so bool works fine. """ return bool(n)
# unicode line drawing chars: BOX_HORIZ = chr(0x2500) # '─' BOX_VERT = chr(0x2502) # '│' BOX_UP_RIGHT = chr(0x2514) # '└' BOX_DOWN_RIGHT = chr(0x250c) # '┌' BOX_DOWN_LEFT = chr(0x2510) # '┐' BOX_UP_LEFT = chr(0x2518) # '┘' BOX_VERT_RIGHT = chr(0x251c) # '├' BOX_HORIZ_DOWN = chr(0x252c) # '┬' # TODO: W0102: Dangerous default value [] as argument (dangerous-default-value) # Functions for deciding if things are like various types, mainly to # handle UserDict, UserList and UserString like their underlying types. # # Yes, all of this manual testing breaks polymorphism, and the real # Pythonic way to do all of this would be to just try it and handle the # exception, but handling the exception when it's not the right type is # often too slow. # We are using the following trick to speed up these # functions. Default arguments are used to take a snapshot of # the global functions and constants used by these functions. This # transforms accesses to global variable into local variables # accesses (i.e. LOAD_FAST instead of LOAD_GLOBAL). # Since checkers dislike this, it's now annotated for pylint to flag # (mostly for other readers of this code) we're doing this intentionally. # TODO: PY3 check these are still valid choices for all of these funcs. DictTypes = (dict, UserDict) ListTypes = (list, UserList) # Handle getting dictionary views. SequenceTypes = (list, tuple, UserList, MappingView) # Note that profiling data shows a speed-up when comparing # explicitly with str instead of simply comparing # with basestring. (at least on Python 2.5.1) # TODO: PY3 check this benchmarking is still correct. StringTypes = (str, UserString) # Empirically, it is faster to check explicitly for str than for basestring. BaseStringTypes = str
[docs]def is_Dict( # pylint: disable=redefined-outer-name,redefined-builtin obj, isinstance=isinstance, DictTypes=DictTypes ) -> bool: return isinstance(obj, DictTypes)
[docs]def is_List( # pylint: disable=redefined-outer-name,redefined-builtin obj, isinstance=isinstance, ListTypes=ListTypes ) -> bool: return isinstance(obj, ListTypes)
[docs]def is_Sequence( # pylint: disable=redefined-outer-name,redefined-builtin obj, isinstance=isinstance, SequenceTypes=SequenceTypes ) -> bool: return isinstance(obj, SequenceTypes)
[docs]def is_Tuple( # pylint: disable=redefined-builtin obj, isinstance=isinstance, tuple=tuple ) -> bool: return isinstance(obj, tuple)
[docs]def is_String( # pylint: disable=redefined-outer-name,redefined-builtin obj, isinstance=isinstance, StringTypes=StringTypes ) -> bool: return isinstance(obj, StringTypes)
[docs]def is_Scalar( # pylint: disable=redefined-outer-name,redefined-builtin obj, isinstance=isinstance, StringTypes=StringTypes, SequenceTypes=SequenceTypes ) -> bool: # Profiling shows that there is an impressive speed-up of 2x # when explicitly checking for strings instead of just not # sequence when the argument (i.e. obj) is already a string. # But, if obj is a not string then it is twice as fast to # check only for 'not sequence'. The following code therefore # assumes that the obj argument is a string most of the time. return isinstance(obj, StringTypes) or not isinstance(obj, SequenceTypes)
[docs]def do_flatten( sequence, result, isinstance=isinstance, StringTypes=StringTypes, SequenceTypes=SequenceTypes, ): # pylint: disable=redefined-outer-name,redefined-builtin for item in sequence: if isinstance(item, StringTypes) or not isinstance(item, SequenceTypes): result.append(item) else: do_flatten(item, result)
[docs]def flatten( # pylint: disable=redefined-outer-name,redefined-builtin obj, isinstance=isinstance, StringTypes=StringTypes, SequenceTypes=SequenceTypes, do_flatten=do_flatten, ) -> list: """Flatten a sequence to a non-nested list. Converts either a single scalar or a nested sequence to a non-nested list. Note that :func:`flatten` considers strings to be scalars instead of sequences like pure Python would. """ if isinstance(obj, StringTypes) or not isinstance(obj, SequenceTypes): return [obj] result = [] for item in obj: if isinstance(item, StringTypes) or not isinstance(item, SequenceTypes): result.append(item) else: do_flatten(item, result) return result
[docs]def flatten_sequence( # pylint: disable=redefined-outer-name,redefined-builtin sequence, isinstance=isinstance, StringTypes=StringTypes, SequenceTypes=SequenceTypes, do_flatten=do_flatten, ) -> list: """Flatten a sequence to a non-nested list. Same as :func:`flatten`, but it does not handle the single scalar case. This is slightly more efficient when one knows that the sequence to flatten can not be a scalar. """ result = [] for item in sequence: if isinstance(item, StringTypes) or not isinstance(item, SequenceTypes): result.append(item) else: do_flatten(item, result) return result
# Generic convert-to-string functions. The wrapper # to_String_for_signature() will use a for_signature() method if the # specified object has one.
[docs]def to_String( # pylint: disable=redefined-outer-name,redefined-builtin obj, isinstance=isinstance, str=str, UserString=UserString, BaseStringTypes=BaseStringTypes, ) -> str: """Return a string version of obj.""" if isinstance(obj, BaseStringTypes): # Early out when already a string! return obj if isinstance(obj, UserString): # obj.data can only be a regular string. Please see the UserString initializer. return obj.data return str(obj)
[docs]def to_String_for_subst( # pylint: disable=redefined-outer-name,redefined-builtin obj, isinstance=isinstance, str=str, BaseStringTypes=BaseStringTypes, SequenceTypes=SequenceTypes, UserString=UserString, ) -> str: """Return a string version of obj for subst usage.""" # Note that the test cases are sorted by order of probability. if isinstance(obj, BaseStringTypes): return obj if isinstance(obj, SequenceTypes): return ' '.join([to_String_for_subst(e) for e in obj]) if isinstance(obj, UserString): # obj.data can only a regular string. Please see the UserString initializer. return obj.data return str(obj)
[docs]def to_String_for_signature( # pylint: disable=redefined-outer-name,redefined-builtin obj, to_String_for_subst=to_String_for_subst, AttributeError=AttributeError ) -> str: """Return a string version of obj for signature usage. Like :func:`to_String_for_subst` but has special handling for scons objects that have a :meth:`for_signature` method, and for dicts. """ try: f = obj.for_signature except AttributeError: if isinstance(obj, dict): # pprint will output dictionary in key sorted order # with py3.5 the order was randomized. In general depending on dictionary order # which was undefined until py3.6 (where it's by insertion order) was not wise. # TODO: Change code when floor is raised to PY36 return pprint.pformat(obj, width=1000000) return to_String_for_subst(obj) else: return f()
# The SCons "semi-deep" copy. # # This makes separate copies of lists (including UserList objects) # dictionaries (including UserDict objects) and tuples, but just copies # references to anything else it finds. # # A special case is any object that has a __semi_deepcopy__() method, # which we invoke to create the copy. Currently only used by # BuilderDict to actually prevent the copy operation (as invalid on that object). # # The dispatch table approach used here is a direct rip-off from the # normal Python copy module.
[docs]def semi_deepcopy_dict(obj, exclude=None) -> dict: if exclude is None: exclude = [] return {k: semi_deepcopy(v) for k, v in obj.items() if k not in exclude}
[docs]def _semi_deepcopy_list(obj) -> list: return [semi_deepcopy(item) for item in obj]
[docs]def _semi_deepcopy_tuple(obj) -> tuple: return tuple(map(semi_deepcopy, obj))
_semi_deepcopy_dispatch = { dict: semi_deepcopy_dict, list: _semi_deepcopy_list, tuple: _semi_deepcopy_tuple, }
[docs]def semi_deepcopy(obj): copier = _semi_deepcopy_dispatch.get(type(obj)) if copier: return copier(obj) if hasattr(obj, '__semi_deepcopy__') and callable(obj.__semi_deepcopy__): return obj.__semi_deepcopy__() if isinstance(obj, UserDict): return obj.__class__(semi_deepcopy_dict(obj)) if isinstance(obj, UserList): return obj.__class__(_semi_deepcopy_list(obj)) return obj
[docs]class Proxy: """A simple generic Proxy class, forwarding all calls to subject. This means you can take an object, let's call it `'obj_a`, and wrap it in this Proxy class, with a statement like this:: proxy_obj = Proxy(obj_a) Then, if in the future, you do something like this:: x = proxy_obj.var1 since the :class:`Proxy` class does not have a :attr:`var1` attribute (but presumably `objA` does), the request actually is equivalent to saying:: x = obj_a.var1 Inherit from this class to create a Proxy. With Python 3.5+ this does *not* work transparently for :class:`Proxy` subclasses that use special .__*__() method names, because those names are now bound to the class, not the individual instances. You now need to know in advance which special method names you want to pass on to the underlying Proxy object, and specifically delegate their calls like this:: class Foo(Proxy): __str__ = Delegate('__str__') """ def __init__(self, subject): """Wrap an object as a Proxy object""" self._subject = subject
[docs] def __getattr__(self, name): """Retrieve an attribute from the wrapped object. Raises: AttributeError: if attribute `name` doesn't exist. """ return getattr(self._subject, name)
[docs] def get(self): """Retrieve the entire wrapped object""" return self._subject
def __eq__(self, other): if issubclass(other.__class__, self._subject.__class__): return self._subject == other return self.__dict__ == other.__dict__
[docs]class Delegate: """A Python Descriptor class that delegates attribute fetches to an underlying wrapped subject of a Proxy. Typical use:: class Foo(Proxy): __str__ = Delegate('__str__') """ def __init__(self, attribute): self.attribute = attribute def __get__(self, obj, cls): if isinstance(obj, cls): return getattr(obj._subject, self.attribute) return self
[docs]class MethodWrapper: """A generic Wrapper class that associates a method with an object. As part of creating this MethodWrapper object an attribute with the specified name (by default, the name of the supplied method) is added to the underlying object. When that new "method" is called, our :meth:`__call__` method adds the object as the first argument, simulating the Python behavior of supplying "self" on method calls. We hang on to the name by which the method was added to the underlying base class so that we can provide a method to "clone" ourselves onto a new underlying object being copied (without which we wouldn't need to save that info). """ def __init__(self, obj, method, name=None): if name is None: name = method.__name__ self.object = obj self.method = method self.name = name setattr(self.object, name, self) def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs): nargs = (self.object,) + args return self.method(*nargs, **kwargs)
[docs] def clone(self, new_object): """ Returns an object that re-binds the underlying "method" to the specified new object. """ return self.__class__(new_object, self.method, self.name)
# attempt to load the windows registry module: can_read_reg = False try: import winreg can_read_reg = True hkey_mod = winreg except ImportError:
[docs] class _NoError(Exception): pass
RegError = _NoError if can_read_reg: HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT = hkey_mod.HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE = hkey_mod.HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE HKEY_CURRENT_USER = hkey_mod.HKEY_CURRENT_USER HKEY_USERS = hkey_mod.HKEY_USERS RegOpenKeyEx = winreg.OpenKeyEx RegEnumKey = winreg.EnumKey RegEnumValue = winreg.EnumValue RegQueryValueEx = winreg.QueryValueEx RegError = winreg.error def RegGetValue(root, key): r"""Returns a registry value without having to open the key first. Only available on Windows platforms with a version of Python that can read the registry. Returns the same thing as :func:`RegQueryValueEx`, except you just specify the entire path to the value, and don't have to bother opening the key first. So, instead of:: k = SCons.Util.RegOpenKeyEx(SCons.Util.HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, r'SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion') out = SCons.Util.RegQueryValueEx(k, 'ProgramFilesDir') You can write:: out = SCons.Util.RegGetValue(SCons.Util.HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, r'SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\ProgramFilesDir') """ # I would use os.path.split here, but it's not a filesystem # path... p = key.rfind('\\') + 1 keyp = key[: p - 1] # -1 to omit trailing slash val = key[p:] k = RegOpenKeyEx(root, keyp) return RegQueryValueEx(k, val) else: HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT = None HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE = None HKEY_CURRENT_USER = None HKEY_USERS = None
[docs] def RegGetValue(root, key): raise OSError
[docs] def RegOpenKeyEx(root, key): raise OSError
if sys.platform == 'win32': def WhereIs(file, path=None, pathext=None, reject=None) -> Optional[str]: if path is None: try: path = os.environ['PATH'] except KeyError: return None if is_String(path): path = path.split(os.pathsep) if pathext is None: try: pathext = os.environ['PATHEXT'] except KeyError: pathext = '.COM;.EXE;.BAT;.CMD' if is_String(pathext): pathext = pathext.split(os.pathsep) for ext in pathext: if ext.lower() == file[-len(ext):].lower(): pathext = [''] break if reject is None: reject = [] if not is_List(reject) and not is_Tuple(reject): reject = [reject] for p in path: f = os.path.join(p, file) for ext in pathext: fext = f + ext if os.path.isfile(fext): try: reject.index(fext) except ValueError: return os.path.normpath(fext) continue return None elif os.name == 'os2': def WhereIs(file, path=None, pathext=None, reject=None) -> Optional[str]: if path is None: try: path = os.environ['PATH'] except KeyError: return None if is_String(path): path = path.split(os.pathsep) if pathext is None: pathext = ['.exe', '.cmd'] for ext in pathext: if ext.lower() == file[-len(ext):].lower(): pathext = [''] break if reject is None: reject = [] if not is_List(reject) and not is_Tuple(reject): reject = [reject] for p in path: f = os.path.join(p, file) for ext in pathext: fext = f + ext if os.path.isfile(fext): try: reject.index(fext) except ValueError: return os.path.normpath(fext) continue return None else:
[docs] def WhereIs(file, path=None, pathext=None, reject=None) -> Optional[str]: import stat # pylint: disable=import-outside-toplevel if path is None: try: path = os.environ['PATH'] except KeyError: return None if is_String(path): path = path.split(os.pathsep) if reject is None: reject = [] if not is_List(reject) and not is_Tuple(reject): reject = [reject] for p in path: f = os.path.join(p, file) if os.path.isfile(f): try: st = os.stat(f) except OSError: # os.stat() raises OSError, not IOError if the file # doesn't exist, so in this case we let IOError get # raised so as to not mask possibly serious disk or # network issues. continue if stat.S_IMODE(st[stat.ST_MODE]) & 0o111: try: reject.index(f) except ValueError: return os.path.normpath(f) continue return None
WhereIs.__doc__ = """\ Return the path to an executable that matches `file`. Searches the given `path` for `file`, respecting any filename extensions `pathext` (on the Windows platform only), and returns the full path to the matching command. If no command is found, return ``None``. If `path` is not specified, :attr:`os.environ[PATH]` is used. If `pathext` is not specified, :attr:`os.environ[PATHEXT]` is used. Will not select any path name or names in the optional `reject` list. """
[docs]def PrependPath( oldpath, newpath, sep=os.pathsep, delete_existing=True, canonicalize=None ) -> Union[list, str]: """Prepends `newpath` path elements to `oldpath`. Will only add any particular path once (leaving the first one it encounters and ignoring the rest, to preserve path order), and will :mod:`os.path.normpath` and :mod:`os.path.normcase` all paths to help assure this. This can also handle the case where `oldpath` is a list instead of a string, in which case a list will be returned instead of a string. For example: >>> p = PrependPath("/foo/bar:/foo", "/biz/boom:/foo") >>> print(p) /biz/boom:/foo:/foo/bar If `delete_existing` is ``False``, then adding a path that exists will not move it to the beginning; it will stay where it is in the list. >>> p = PrependPath("/foo/bar:/foo", "/biz/boom:/foo", delete_existing=False) >>> print(p) /biz/boom:/foo/bar:/foo If `canonicalize` is not ``None``, it is applied to each element of `newpath` before use. """ orig = oldpath is_list = True paths = orig if not is_List(orig) and not is_Tuple(orig): paths = paths.split(sep) is_list = False if is_String(newpath): newpaths = newpath.split(sep) elif not is_List(newpath) and not is_Tuple(newpath): newpaths = [ newpath ] # might be a Dir else: newpaths = newpath if canonicalize: newpaths=list(map(canonicalize, newpaths)) if not delete_existing: # First uniquify the old paths, making sure to # preserve the first instance (in Unix/Linux, # the first one wins), and remembering them in normpaths. # Then insert the new paths at the head of the list # if they're not already in the normpaths list. result = [] normpaths = [] for path in paths: if not path: continue normpath = os.path.normpath(os.path.normcase(path)) if normpath not in normpaths: result.append(path) normpaths.append(normpath) newpaths.reverse() # since we're inserting at the head for path in newpaths: if not path: continue normpath = os.path.normpath(os.path.normcase(path)) if normpath not in normpaths: result.insert(0, path) normpaths.append(normpath) paths = result else: newpaths = newpaths + paths # prepend new paths normpaths = [] paths = [] # now we add them only if they are unique for path in newpaths: normpath = os.path.normpath(os.path.normcase(path)) if path and normpath not in normpaths: paths.append(path) normpaths.append(normpath) if is_list: return paths return sep.join(paths)
[docs]def AppendPath( oldpath, newpath, sep=os.pathsep, delete_existing=True, canonicalize=None ) -> Union[list, str]: """Appends `newpath` path elements to `oldpath`. Will only add any particular path once (leaving the last one it encounters and ignoring the rest, to preserve path order), and will :mod:`os.path.normpath` and :mod:`os.path.normcase` all paths to help assure this. This can also handle the case where `oldpath` is a list instead of a string, in which case a list will be returned instead of a string. For example: >>> p = AppendPath("/foo/bar:/foo", "/biz/boom:/foo") >>> print(p) /foo/bar:/biz/boom:/foo If `delete_existing` is ``False``, then adding a path that exists will not move it to the end; it will stay where it is in the list. >>> p = AppendPath("/foo/bar:/foo", "/biz/boom:/foo", delete_existing=False) >>> print(p) /foo/bar:/foo:/biz/boom If `canonicalize` is not ``None``, it is applied to each element of `newpath` before use. """ orig = oldpath is_list = True paths = orig if not is_List(orig) and not is_Tuple(orig): paths = paths.split(sep) is_list = False if is_String(newpath): newpaths = newpath.split(sep) elif not is_List(newpath) and not is_Tuple(newpath): newpaths = [newpath] # might be a Dir else: newpaths = newpath if canonicalize: newpaths=list(map(canonicalize, newpaths)) if not delete_existing: # add old paths to result, then # add new paths if not already present # (I thought about using a dict for normpaths for speed, # but it's not clear hashing the strings would be faster # than linear searching these typically short lists.) result = [] normpaths = [] for path in paths: if not path: continue result.append(path) normpaths.append(os.path.normpath(os.path.normcase(path))) for path in newpaths: if not path: continue normpath = os.path.normpath(os.path.normcase(path)) if normpath not in normpaths: result.append(path) normpaths.append(normpath) paths = result else: # start w/ new paths, add old ones if not present, # then reverse. newpaths = paths + newpaths # append new paths newpaths.reverse() normpaths = [] paths = [] # now we add them only if they are unique for path in newpaths: normpath = os.path.normpath(os.path.normcase(path)) if path and normpath not in normpaths: paths.append(path) normpaths.append(normpath) paths.reverse() if is_list: return paths return sep.join(paths)
[docs]def AddPathIfNotExists(env_dict, key, path, sep=os.pathsep): """Add a path element to a construction variable. `key` is looked up in `env_dict`, and `path` is added to it if it is not already present. `env_dict[key]` is assumed to be in the format of a PATH variable: a list of paths separated by `sep` tokens. Example: >>> env = {'PATH': '/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/bin'} >>> AddPathIfNotExists(env, 'PATH', '/opt/bin') >>> print(env['PATH']) /opt/bin:/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/bin """ try: is_list = True paths = env_dict[key] if not is_List(env_dict[key]): paths = paths.split(sep) is_list = False if os.path.normcase(path) not in list(map(os.path.normcase, paths)): paths = [ path ] + paths if is_list: env_dict[key] = paths else: env_dict[key] = sep.join(paths) except KeyError: env_dict[key] = path
if sys.platform == 'cygwin': import subprocess # pylint: disable=import-outside-toplevel def get_native_path(path) -> str: cp = subprocess.run(('cygpath', '-w', path), check=False, stdout=subprocess.PIPE) return cp.stdout.decode().replace('\n', '') else:
[docs] def get_native_path(path) -> str: return path
get_native_path.__doc__ = """\ Transform an absolute path into a native path for the system. In Cygwin, this converts from a Cygwin path to a Windows path, without regard to whether `path` refers to an existing file system object. For other platforms, `path` is unchanged. """ display = DisplayEngine()
[docs]def Split(arg) -> list: """Returns a list of file names or other objects. If `arg` is a string, it will be split on strings of white-space characters within the string. If `arg` is already a list, the list will be returned untouched. If `arg` is any other type of object, it will be returned as a list containing just the object. >>> print(Split(" this is a string ")) ['this', 'is', 'a', 'string'] >>> print(Split(["stringlist", " preserving ", " spaces "])) ['stringlist', ' preserving ', ' spaces '] """ if is_List(arg) or is_Tuple(arg): return arg if is_String(arg): return arg.split() return [arg]
[docs]class CLVar(UserList): """A container for command-line construction variables. Forces the use of a list of strings intended as command-line arguments. Like :class:`collections.UserList`, but the argument passed to the initializter will be processed by the :func:`Split` function, which includes special handling for string types: they will be split into a list of words, not coereced directly to a list. The same happens if a string is added to a :class:`CLVar`, which allows doing the right thing with both :func:`Append`/:func:`Prepend` methods, as well as with pure Python addition, regardless of whether adding a list or a string to a construction variable. Side effect: spaces will be stripped from individual string arguments. If you need spaces preserved, pass strings containing spaces inside a list argument. >>> u = UserList("--some --opts and args") >>> print(len(u), repr(u)) 22 ['-', '-', 's', 'o', 'm', 'e', ' ', '-', '-', 'o', 'p', 't', 's', ' ', 'a', 'n', 'd', ' ', 'a', 'r', 'g', 's'] >>> c = CLVar("--some --opts and args") >>> print(len(c), repr(c)) 4 ['--some', '--opts', 'and', 'args'] >>> c += " strips spaces " >>> print(len(c), repr(c)) 6 ['--some', '--opts', 'and', 'args', 'strips', 'spaces'] """ def __init__(self, initlist=None): super().__init__(Split(initlist if initlist is not None else [])) def __add__(self, other): return super().__add__(CLVar(other)) def __radd__(self, other): return super().__radd__(CLVar(other)) def __iadd__(self, other): return super().__iadd__(CLVar(other)) def __str__(self): # Some cases the data can contain Nodes, so make sure they # processed to string before handing them over to join. return ' '.join([str(d) for d in self.data])
[docs]class Selector(OrderedDict): """A callable ordered dictionary that maps file suffixes to dictionary values. We preserve the order in which items are added so that :func:`get_suffix` calls always return the first suffix added. """ def __call__(self, env, source, ext=None): if ext is None: try: ext = source[0].get_suffix() except IndexError: ext = "" try: return self[ext] except KeyError: # Try to perform Environment substitution on the keys of # the dictionary before giving up. s_dict = {} for (k,v) in self.items(): if k is not None: s_k = env.subst(k) if s_k in s_dict: # We only raise an error when variables point # to the same suffix. If one suffix is literal # and a variable suffix contains this literal, # the literal wins and we don't raise an error. raise KeyError(s_dict[s_k][0], k, s_k) s_dict[s_k] = (k,v) try: return s_dict[ext][1] except KeyError: try: return self[None] except KeyError: return None
if sys.platform == 'cygwin': # On Cygwin, os.path.normcase() lies, so just report back the # fact that the underlying Windows OS is case-insensitive. def case_sensitive_suffixes(s1, s2) -> bool: # pylint: disable=unused-argument return False else:
[docs] def case_sensitive_suffixes(s1, s2) -> bool: return os.path.normcase(s1) != os.path.normcase(s2)
[docs]def adjustixes(fname, pre, suf, ensure_suffix=False) -> str: """Adjust filename prefixes and suffixes as needed. Add `prefix` to `fname` if specified. Add `suffix` to `fname` if specified and if `ensure_suffix` is ``True`` """ if pre: path, fn = os.path.split(os.path.normpath(fname)) # Handle the odd case where the filename = the prefix. # In that case, we still want to add the prefix to the file if not fn.startswith(pre) or fn == pre: fname = os.path.join(path, pre + fn) # Only append a suffix if the suffix we're going to add isn't already # there, and if either we've been asked to ensure the specific suffix # is present or there's no suffix on it at all. # Also handle the odd case where the filename = the suffix. # in that case we still want to append the suffix if suf and not fname.endswith(suf) and \ (ensure_suffix or not splitext(fname)[1]): fname = fname + suf return fname
# From Tim Peters, # https://code.activestate.com/recipes/52560 # ASPN: Python Cookbook: Remove duplicates from a sequence # (Also in the printed Python Cookbook.) # Updated. This algorithm is used by some scanners and tools.
[docs]def unique(seq): """Return a list of the elements in seq without duplicates, ignoring order. >>> mylist = unique([1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3]) >>> print(sorted(mylist)) [1, 2, 3] >>> mylist = unique("abcabc") >>> print(sorted(mylist)) ['a', 'b', 'c'] >>> mylist = unique(([1, 2], [2, 3], [1, 2])) >>> print(sorted(mylist)) [[1, 2], [2, 3]] For best speed, all sequence elements should be hashable. Then unique() will usually work in linear time. If not possible, the sequence elements should enjoy a total ordering, and if list(s).sort() doesn't raise TypeError it's assumed that they do enjoy a total ordering. Then unique() will usually work in O(N*log2(N)) time. If that's not possible either, the sequence elements must support equality-testing. Then unique() will usually work in quadratic time. """ if not seq: return [] # Try using a dict first, as that's the fastest and will usually # work. If it doesn't work, it will usually fail quickly, so it # usually doesn't cost much to *try* it. It requires that all the # sequence elements be hashable, and support equality comparison. # TODO: should be even faster: return(list(set(seq))) with suppress(TypeError): return list(dict.fromkeys(seq)) # We couldn't hash all the elements (got a TypeError). # Next fastest is to sort, which brings the equal elements together; # then duplicates are easy to weed out in a single pass. # NOTE: Python's list.sort() was designed to be efficient in the # presence of many duplicate elements. This isn't true of all # sort functions in all languages or libraries, so this approach # is more effective in Python than it may be elsewhere. n = len(seq) try: t = sorted(seq) except TypeError: pass # move on to the next method else: last = t[0] lasti = i = 1 while i < n: if t[i] != last: t[lasti] = last = t[i] lasti = lasti + 1 i = i + 1 return t[:lasti] # Brute force is all that's left. u = [] for x in seq: if x not in u: u.append(x) return u
# From Alex Martelli, # https://code.activestate.com/recipes/52560 # ASPN: Python Cookbook: Remove duplicates from a sequence # First comment, dated 2001/10/13. # (Also in the printed Python Cookbook.) # This not currently used, in favor of the next function...
[docs]def uniquer(seq, idfun=None): def default_idfun(x): return x if not idfun: idfun = default_idfun seen = {} result = [] result_append = result.append # perf: avoid repeated method lookups for item in seq: marker = idfun(item) if marker in seen: continue seen[marker] = 1 result_append(item) return result
# A more efficient implementation of Alex's uniquer(), this avoids the # idfun() argument and function-call overhead by assuming that all # items in the sequence are hashable. Order-preserving.
[docs]def uniquer_hashables(seq): seen = {} result = [] result_append = result.append # perf: avoid repeated method lookups for item in seq: if item not in seen: seen[item] = 1 result_append(item) return result
# Recipe 19.11 "Reading Lines with Continuation Characters", # by Alex Martelli, straight from the Python CookBook (2nd edition).
[docs]def logical_lines(physical_lines, joiner=''.join): logical_line = [] for line in physical_lines: stripped = line.rstrip() if stripped.endswith('\\'): # a line which continues w/the next physical line logical_line.append(stripped[:-1]) else: # a line which does not continue, end of logical line logical_line.append(line) yield joiner(logical_line) logical_line = [] if logical_line: # end of sequence implies end of last logical line yield joiner(logical_line)
[docs]class LogicalLines: """ Wrapper class for the logical_lines method. Allows us to read all "logical" lines at once from a given file object. """ def __init__(self, fileobj): self.fileobj = fileobj
[docs] def readlines(self): return list(logical_lines(self.fileobj))
[docs]class UniqueList(UserList): """A list which maintains uniqueness. Uniquing is lazy: rather than being assured on list changes, it is fixed up on access by those methods which need to act on a uniqe list to be correct. That means things like "in" don't have to eat the uniquing time. """ def __init__(self, initlist=None): super().__init__(initlist) self.unique = True def __make_unique(self): if not self.unique: self.data = uniquer_hashables(self.data) self.unique = True def __repr__(self): self.__make_unique() return super().__repr__() def __lt__(self, other): self.__make_unique() return super().__lt__(other) def __le__(self, other): self.__make_unique() return super().__le__(other) def __eq__(self, other): self.__make_unique() return super().__eq__(other) def __ne__(self, other): self.__make_unique() return super().__ne__(other) def __gt__(self, other): self.__make_unique() return super().__gt__(other) def __ge__(self, other): self.__make_unique() return super().__ge__(other) # __contains__ doesn't need to worry about uniquing, inherit def __len__(self): self.__make_unique() return super().__len__() def __getitem__(self, i): self.__make_unique() return super().__getitem__(i) def __setitem__(self, i, item): super().__setitem__(i, item) self.unique = False # __delitem__ doesn't need to worry about uniquing, inherit def __add__(self, other): result = super().__add__(other) result.unique = False return result def __radd__(self, other): result = super().__radd__(other) result.unique = False return result def __iadd__(self, other): result = super().__iadd__(other) result.unique = False return result def __mul__(self, other): result = super().__mul__(other) result.unique = False return result def __rmul__(self, other): result = super().__rmul__(other) result.unique = False return result def __imul__(self, other): result = super().__imul__(other) result.unique = False return result
[docs] def append(self, item): super().append(item) self.unique = False
[docs] def insert(self, i, item): super().insert(i, item) self.unique = False
[docs] def count(self, item): self.__make_unique() return super().count(item)
[docs] def index(self, item, *args): self.__make_unique() return super().index(item, *args)
[docs] def reverse(self): self.__make_unique() super().reverse()
# TODO: Py3.8: def sort(self, /, *args, **kwds):
[docs] def sort(self, *args, **kwds): self.__make_unique() return super().sort(*args, **kwds)
[docs] def extend(self, other): super().extend(other) self.unique = False
[docs]class Unbuffered: """A proxy that wraps a file object, flushing after every write. Delegates everything else to the wrapped object. """ def __init__(self, file): self.file = file
[docs] def write(self, arg): # Stdout might be connected to a pipe that has been closed # by now. The most likely reason for the pipe being closed # is that the user has press ctrl-c. It this is the case, # then SCons is currently shutdown. We therefore ignore # IOError's here so that SCons can continue and shutdown # properly so that the .sconsign is correctly written # before SCons exits. with suppress(IOError): self.file.write(arg) self.file.flush()
[docs] def writelines(self, arg): with suppress(IOError): self.file.writelines(arg) self.file.flush()
def __getattr__(self, attr): return getattr(self.file, attr)
[docs]def make_path_relative(path) -> str: """Converts an absolute path name to a relative pathname.""" if os.path.isabs(path): drive_s, path = os.path.splitdrive(path) if not drive_s: path=re.compile(r"/*(.*)").findall(path)[0] else: path=path[1:] assert not os.path.isabs(path), path return path
# The original idea for AddMethod() came from the # following post to the ActiveState Python Cookbook: # # ASPN: Python Cookbook : Install bound methods in an instance # https://code.activestate.com/recipes/223613 # # Changed as follows: # * Switched the installmethod() "object" and "function" arguments, # so the order reflects that the left-hand side is the thing being # "assigned to" and the right-hand side is the value being assigned. # * The instance/class detection is changed a bit, as it's all # new-style classes now with Py3. # * The by-hand construction of the function object from renamefunction() # is not needed, the remaining bit is now used inline in AddMethod.
[docs]def AddMethod(obj, function, name=None): """Adds a method to an object. Adds `function` to `obj` if `obj` is a class object. Adds `function` as a bound method if `obj` is an instance object. If `obj` looks like an environment instance, use `MethodWrapper` to add it. If `name` is supplied it is used as the name of `function`. Although this works for any class object, the intent as a public API is to be used on Environment, to be able to add a method to all construction environments; it is preferred to use env.AddMethod to add to an individual environment. >>> class A: ... ... >>> a = A() >>> def f(self, x, y): ... self.z = x + y >>> AddMethod(A, f, "add") >>> a.add(2, 4) >>> print(a.z) 6 >>> a.data = ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e', 'f'] >>> AddMethod(a, lambda self, i: self.data[i], "listIndex") >>> print(a.listIndex(3)) d """ if name is None: name = function.__name__ else: # "rename" function = FunctionType( function.__code__, function.__globals__, name, function.__defaults__ ) if hasattr(obj, '__class__') and obj.__class__ is not type: # obj is an instance, so it gets a bound method. if hasattr(obj, "added_methods"): method = MethodWrapper(obj, function, name) obj.added_methods.append(method) else: method = MethodType(function, obj) else: # obj is a class method = function setattr(obj, name, method)
# Default hash function and format. SCons-internal. DEFAULT_HASH_FORMATS = ['md5', 'sha1', 'sha256'] ALLOWED_HASH_FORMATS = [] _HASH_FUNCTION = None _HASH_FORMAT = None
[docs]def _attempt_init_of_python_3_9_hash_object(hash_function_object, sys_used=sys): """Python 3.9 and onwards lets us initialize the hash function object with the key "usedforsecurity"=false. This lets us continue to use algorithms that have been deprecated either by FIPS or by Python itself, as the MD5 algorithm SCons prefers is not being used for security purposes as much as a short, 32 char hash that is resistant to accidental collisions. In prior versions of python, hashlib returns a native function wrapper, which errors out when it's queried for the optional parameter, so this function wraps that call. It can still throw a ValueError if the initialization fails due to FIPS compliance issues, but that is assumed to be the responsibility of the caller. """ if hash_function_object is None: return None # https://stackoverflow.com/a/11887885 details how to check versions with the "packaging" library. # however, for our purposes checking the version is greater than or equal to 3.9 is good enough, as # the API is guaranteed to have support for the 'usedforsecurity' flag in 3.9. See # https://docs.python.org/3/library/hashlib.html#:~:text=usedforsecurity for the version support notes. if (sys_used.version_info.major > 3) or (sys_used.version_info.major == 3 and sys_used.version_info.minor >= 9): return hash_function_object(usedforsecurity=False) # note that this can throw a ValueError in FIPS-enabled versions of Linux prior to 3.9 # the OpenSSL hashlib will throw on first init here, but that is assumed to be responsibility of # the caller to diagnose the ValueError & potentially display the error to screen. return hash_function_object()
[docs]def _set_allowed_viable_default_hashes(hashlib_used, sys_used=sys): """Checks if SCons has ability to call the default algorithms normally supported. This util class is sometimes called prior to setting the user-selected hash algorithm, meaning that on FIPS-compliant systems the library would default-initialize MD5 and throw an exception in set_hash_format. A common case is using the SConf options, which can run prior to main, and thus ignore the options.hash_format variable. This function checks the DEFAULT_HASH_FORMATS and sets the ALLOWED_HASH_FORMATS to only the ones that can be called. In Python >= 3.9 this will always default to MD5 as in Python 3.9 there is an optional attribute "usedforsecurity" set for the method. Throws if no allowed hash formats are detected. """ global ALLOWED_HASH_FORMATS _last_error = None # note: if you call this method repeatedly, example using timeout, this is needed. # otherwise it keeps appending valid formats to the string ALLOWED_HASH_FORMATS = [] for test_algorithm in DEFAULT_HASH_FORMATS: _test_hash = getattr(hashlib_used, test_algorithm, None) # we know hashlib claims to support it... check to see if we can call it. if _test_hash is not None: # the hashing library will throw an exception on initialization in FIPS mode, # meaning if we call the default algorithm returned with no parameters, it'll # throw if it's a bad algorithm, otherwise it will append it to the known # good formats. try: _attempt_init_of_python_3_9_hash_object(_test_hash, sys_used) ALLOWED_HASH_FORMATS.append(test_algorithm) except ValueError as e: _last_error = e continue if len(ALLOWED_HASH_FORMATS) == 0: from SCons.Errors import SConsEnvironmentError # pylint: disable=import-outside-toplevel # chain the exception thrown with the most recent error from hashlib. raise SConsEnvironmentError( 'No usable hash algorithms found.' 'Most recent error from hashlib attached in trace.' ) from _last_error return
_set_allowed_viable_default_hashes(hashlib)
[docs]def get_hash_format(): """Retrieves the hash format or ``None`` if not overridden. A return value of ``None`` does not guarantee that MD5 is being used; instead, it means that the default precedence order documented in :func:`SCons.Util.set_hash_format` is respected. """ return _HASH_FORMAT
[docs]def _attempt_get_hash_function(hash_name, hashlib_used=hashlib, sys_used=sys): """Wrapper used to try to initialize a hash function given. If successful, returns the name of the hash function back to the user. Otherwise returns None. """ try: _fetch_hash = getattr(hashlib_used, hash_name, None) if _fetch_hash is None: return None _attempt_init_of_python_3_9_hash_object(_fetch_hash, sys_used) return hash_name except ValueError: # if attempt_init_of_python_3_9 throws, this is typically due to FIPS being enabled # however, if we get to this point, the viable hash function check has either been # bypassed or otherwise failed to properly restrict the user to only the supported # functions. As such throw the UserError as an internal assertion-like error. return None
[docs]def set_hash_format(hash_format, hashlib_used=hashlib, sys_used=sys): """Sets the default hash format used by SCons. If `hash_format` is ``None`` or an empty string, the default is determined by this function. Currently the default behavior is to use the first available format of the following options: MD5, SHA1, SHA256. """ global _HASH_FORMAT, _HASH_FUNCTION _HASH_FORMAT = hash_format if hash_format: hash_format_lower = hash_format.lower() if hash_format_lower not in ALLOWED_HASH_FORMATS: from SCons.Errors import UserError # pylint: disable=import-outside-toplevel # user can select something not supported by their OS but normally supported by # SCons, example, selecting MD5 in an OS with FIPS-mode turned on. Therefore we first # check if SCons supports it, and then if their local OS supports it. if hash_format_lower in DEFAULT_HASH_FORMATS: raise UserError('While hash format "%s" is supported by SCons, the ' 'local system indicates only the following hash ' 'formats are supported by the hashlib library: %s' % (hash_format_lower, ', '.join(ALLOWED_HASH_FORMATS)) ) else: # the hash format isn't supported by SCons in any case. Warn the user, and # if we detect that SCons supports more algorithms than their local system # supports, warn the user about that too. if ALLOWED_HASH_FORMATS == DEFAULT_HASH_FORMATS: raise UserError('Hash format "%s" is not supported by SCons. Only ' 'the following hash formats are supported: %s' % (hash_format_lower, ', '.join(ALLOWED_HASH_FORMATS)) ) else: raise UserError('Hash format "%s" is not supported by SCons. ' 'SCons supports more hash formats than your local system ' 'is reporting; SCons supports: %s. Your local system only ' 'supports: %s' % (hash_format_lower, ', '.join(DEFAULT_HASH_FORMATS), ', '.join(ALLOWED_HASH_FORMATS)) ) # this is not expected to fail. If this fails it means the set_allowed_viable_default_hashes # function did not throw, or when it threw, the exception was caught and ignored, or # the global ALLOWED_HASH_FORMATS was changed by an external user. _HASH_FUNCTION = _attempt_get_hash_function(hash_format_lower, hashlib_used, sys_used) if _HASH_FUNCTION is None: from SCons.Errors import UserError # pylint: disable=import-outside-toplevel raise UserError( 'Hash format "%s" is not available in your Python interpreter. ' 'Expected to be supported algorithm by set_allowed_viable_default_hashes, ' 'Assertion error in SCons.' % hash_format_lower ) else: # Set the default hash format based on what is available, defaulting # to the first supported hash algorithm (usually md5) for backwards compatibility. # in FIPS-compliant systems this usually defaults to SHA1, unless that too has been # disabled. for choice in ALLOWED_HASH_FORMATS: _HASH_FUNCTION = _attempt_get_hash_function(choice, hashlib_used, sys_used) if _HASH_FUNCTION is not None: break else: # This is not expected to happen in practice. from SCons.Errors import UserError # pylint: disable=import-outside-toplevel raise UserError( 'Your Python interpreter does not have MD5, SHA1, or SHA256. ' 'SCons requires at least one. Expected to support one or more ' 'during set_allowed_viable_default_hashes.' )
# Ensure that this is initialized in case either: # 1. This code is running in a unit test. # 2. This code is running in a consumer that does hash operations while # SConscript files are being loaded. set_hash_format(None)
[docs]def get_current_hash_algorithm_used(): """Returns the current hash algorithm name used. Where the python version >= 3.9, this is expected to return md5. If python's version is <= 3.8, this returns md5 on non-FIPS-mode platforms, and sha1 or sha256 on FIPS-mode Linux platforms. This function is primarily useful for testing, where one expects a value to be one of N distinct hashes, and therefore the test needs to know which hash to select. """ return _HASH_FUNCTION
[docs]def _get_hash_object(hash_format, hashlib_used=hashlib, sys_used=sys): """Allocates a hash object using the requested hash format. Args: hash_format: Hash format to use. Returns: hashlib object. """ if hash_format is None: if _HASH_FUNCTION is None: from SCons.Errors import UserError # pylint: disable=import-outside-toplevel raise UserError('There is no default hash function. Did you call ' 'a hashing function before SCons was initialized?') return _attempt_init_of_python_3_9_hash_object(getattr(hashlib_used, _HASH_FUNCTION, None), sys_used) if not hasattr(hashlib, hash_format): from SCons.Errors import UserError # pylint: disable=import-outside-toplevel raise UserError( 'Hash format "%s" is not available in your Python interpreter.' % hash_format) return _attempt_init_of_python_3_9_hash_object(getattr(hashlib, hash_format), sys_used)
[docs]def hash_signature(s, hash_format=None): """ Generate hash signature of a string Args: s: either string or bytes. Normally should be bytes hash_format: Specify to override default hash format Returns: String of hex digits representing the signature """ m = _get_hash_object(hash_format) try: m.update(to_bytes(s)) except TypeError: m.update(to_bytes(str(s))) return m.hexdigest()
[docs]def hash_file_signature(fname, chunksize=65536, hash_format=None): """ Generate the md5 signature of a file Args: fname: file to hash chunksize: chunk size to read hash_format: Specify to override default hash format Returns: String of Hex digits representing the signature """ m = _get_hash_object(hash_format) with open(fname, "rb") as f: while True: blck = f.read(chunksize) if not blck: break m.update(to_bytes(blck)) return m.hexdigest()
[docs]def hash_collect(signatures, hash_format=None): """ Collects a list of signatures into an aggregate signature. Args: signatures: a list of signatures hash_format: Specify to override default hash format Returns: the aggregate signature """ if len(signatures) == 1: return signatures[0] return hash_signature(', '.join(signatures), hash_format)
_MD5_WARNING_SHOWN = False
[docs]def _show_md5_warning(function_name): """Shows a deprecation warning for various MD5 functions.""" global _MD5_WARNING_SHOWN if not _MD5_WARNING_SHOWN: import SCons.Warnings # pylint: disable=import-outside-toplevel SCons.Warnings.warn(SCons.Warnings.DeprecatedWarning, "Function %s is deprecated" % function_name) _MD5_WARNING_SHOWN = True
[docs]def MD5signature(s): """Deprecated. Use :func:`hash_signature` instead.""" _show_md5_warning("MD5signature") return hash_signature(s)
[docs]def MD5filesignature(fname, chunksize=65536): """Deprecated. Use :func:`hash_file_signature` instead.""" _show_md5_warning("MD5filesignature") return hash_file_signature(fname, chunksize)
[docs]def MD5collect(signatures): """Deprecated. Use :func:`hash_collect` instead.""" _show_md5_warning("MD5collect") return hash_collect(signatures)
[docs]def silent_intern(x): """ Perform :mod:`sys.intern` on the passed argument and return the result. If the input is ineligible for interning the original argument is returned and no exception is thrown. """ try: return sys.intern(x) except TypeError: return x
# From Dinu C. Gherman, # Python Cookbook, second edition, recipe 6.17, p. 277. # Also: https://code.activestate.com/recipes/68205 # ASPN: Python Cookbook: Null Object Design Pattern
[docs]class Null: """ Null objects always and reliably "do nothing." """ def __new__(cls, *args, **kwargs): if '_instance' not in vars(cls): cls._instance = super(Null, cls).__new__(cls, *args, **kwargs) return cls._instance def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): pass def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs): return self def __repr__(self): return "Null(0x%08X)" % id(self) def __bool__(self): return False def __getattr__(self, name): return self def __setattr__(self, name, value): return self def __delattr__(self, name): return self
[docs]class NullSeq(Null): """ A Null object that can also be iterated over. """ def __len__(self): return 0 def __iter__(self): return iter(()) def __getitem__(self, i): return self def __delitem__(self, i): return self def __setitem__(self, i, v): return self
[docs]def to_bytes(s) -> bytes: if s is None: return b'None' if isinstance(s, (bytes, bytearray)): # if already bytes return. return s return bytes(s, 'utf-8')
[docs]def to_str(s) -> str: if s is None: return 'None' if is_String(s): return s return str(s, 'utf-8')
[docs]def cmp(a, b) -> bool: """A cmp function because one is no longer available in python3.""" return (a > b) - (a < b)
[docs]def get_env_bool(env, name, default=False) -> bool: """Convert a construction variable to bool. If the value of `name` in `env` is 'true', 'yes', 'y', 'on' (case insensitive) or anything convertible to int that yields non-zero then return ``True``; if 'false', 'no', 'n', 'off' (case insensitive) or a number that converts to integer zero return ``False``. Otherwise, return `default`. Args: env: construction environment, or any dict-like object name: name of the variable default: value to return if `name` not in `env` or cannot be converted (default: False) Returns: the "truthiness" of `name` """ try: var = env[name] except KeyError: return default try: return bool(int(var)) except ValueError: if str(var).lower() in ('true', 'yes', 'y', 'on'): return True if str(var).lower() in ('false', 'no', 'n', 'off'): return False return default
[docs]def get_os_env_bool(name, default=False) -> bool: """Convert an environment variable to bool. Conversion is the same as for :func:`get_env_bool`. """ return get_env_bool(os.environ, name, default)
[docs]def wait_for_process_to_die(pid): """ Wait for specified process to die, or alternatively kill it NOTE: This function operates best with psutil pypi package TODO: Add timeout which raises exception """ # wait for the process to fully killed try: import psutil while True: if pid not in [proc.pid for proc in psutil.process_iter()]: break else: time.sleep(0.1) except ImportError: # if psutil is not installed we can do this the hard way while True: if sys.platform == 'win32': import ctypes PROCESS_QUERY_INFORMATION = 0x1000 processHandle = ctypes.windll.kernel32.OpenProcess(PROCESS_QUERY_INFORMATION, 0,pid) if processHandle == 0: break else: ctypes.windll.kernel32.CloseHandle(processHandle) time.sleep(0.1) else: try: os.kill(pid, 0) except OSError: break else: time.sleep(0.1)
# Local Variables: # tab-width:4 # indent-tabs-mode:nil # End: # vim: set expandtab tabstop=4 shiftwidth=4: