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"""Helper functions for commonly used utilities.""" |
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import functools |
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import inspect |
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import logging |
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import urllib |
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logger = logging.getLogger(__name__) |
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POSITIONAL_WARNING = "WARNING" |
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POSITIONAL_EXCEPTION = "EXCEPTION" |
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POSITIONAL_IGNORE = "IGNORE" |
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POSITIONAL_SET = frozenset( |
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[POSITIONAL_WARNING, POSITIONAL_EXCEPTION, POSITIONAL_IGNORE] |
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) |
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positional_parameters_enforcement = POSITIONAL_WARNING |
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_SYM_LINK_MESSAGE = "File: {0}: Is a symbolic link." |
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_IS_DIR_MESSAGE = "{0}: Is a directory" |
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_MISSING_FILE_MESSAGE = "Cannot access {0}: No such file or directory" |
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def positional(max_positional_args): |
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"""A decorator to declare that only the first N arguments may be positional. |
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This decorator makes it easy to support Python 3 style keyword-only |
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parameters. For example, in Python 3 it is possible to write:: |
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def fn(pos1, *, kwonly1=None, kwonly2=None): |
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... |
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All named parameters after ``*`` must be a keyword:: |
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fn(10, 'kw1', 'kw2') # Raises exception. |
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fn(10, kwonly1='kw1') # Ok. |
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Example |
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^^^^^^^ |
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To define a function like above, do:: |
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@positional(1) |
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def fn(pos1, kwonly1=None, kwonly2=None): |
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... |
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If no default value is provided to a keyword argument, it becomes a |
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required keyword argument:: |
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@positional(0) |
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def fn(required_kw): |
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... |
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This must be called with the keyword parameter:: |
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fn() # Raises exception. |
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fn(10) # Raises exception. |
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fn(required_kw=10) # Ok. |
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When defining instance or class methods always remember to account for |
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``self`` and ``cls``:: |
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class MyClass(object): |
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@positional(2) |
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def my_method(self, pos1, kwonly1=None): |
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... |
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@classmethod |
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@positional(2) |
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def my_method(cls, pos1, kwonly1=None): |
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... |
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The positional decorator behavior is controlled by |
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``_helpers.positional_parameters_enforcement``, which may be set to |
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``POSITIONAL_EXCEPTION``, ``POSITIONAL_WARNING`` or |
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``POSITIONAL_IGNORE`` to raise an exception, log a warning, or do |
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nothing, respectively, if a declaration is violated. |
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Args: |
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max_positional_arguments: Maximum number of positional arguments. All |
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parameters after this index must be |
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keyword only. |
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Returns: |
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A decorator that prevents using arguments after max_positional_args |
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from being used as positional parameters. |
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Raises: |
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TypeError: if a keyword-only argument is provided as a positional |
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parameter, but only if |
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_helpers.positional_parameters_enforcement is set to |
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POSITIONAL_EXCEPTION. |
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""" |
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def positional_decorator(wrapped): |
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@functools.wraps(wrapped) |
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def positional_wrapper(*args, **kwargs): |
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if len(args) > max_positional_args: |
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plural_s = "" |
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if max_positional_args != 1: |
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plural_s = "s" |
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message = ( |
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"{function}() takes at most {args_max} positional " |
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"argument{plural} ({args_given} given)".format( |
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function=wrapped.__name__, |
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args_max=max_positional_args, |
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args_given=len(args), |
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plural=plural_s, |
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) |
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) |
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if positional_parameters_enforcement == POSITIONAL_EXCEPTION: |
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raise TypeError(message) |
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elif positional_parameters_enforcement == POSITIONAL_WARNING: |
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logger.warning(message) |
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return wrapped(*args, **kwargs) |
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return positional_wrapper |
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if isinstance(max_positional_args, int): |
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return positional_decorator |
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else: |
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args, _, _, defaults, _, _, _ = inspect.getfullargspec(max_positional_args) |
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return positional(len(args) - len(defaults))(max_positional_args) |
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def parse_unique_urlencoded(content): |
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"""Parses unique key-value parameters from urlencoded content. |
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Args: |
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content: string, URL-encoded key-value pairs. |
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Returns: |
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dict, The key-value pairs from ``content``. |
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Raises: |
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ValueError: if one of the keys is repeated. |
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""" |
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urlencoded_params = urllib.parse.parse_qs(content) |
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params = {} |
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for key, value in urlencoded_params.items(): |
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if len(value) != 1: |
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msg = "URL-encoded content contains a repeated value:" "%s -> %s" % ( |
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key, |
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", ".join(value), |
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) |
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raise ValueError(msg) |
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params[key] = value[0] |
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return params |
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def update_query_params(uri, params): |
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"""Updates a URI with new query parameters. |
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If a given key from ``params`` is repeated in the ``uri``, then |
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the URI will be considered invalid and an error will occur. |
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If the URI is valid, then each value from ``params`` will |
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replace the corresponding value in the query parameters (if |
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it exists). |
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Args: |
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uri: string, A valid URI, with potential existing query parameters. |
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params: dict, A dictionary of query parameters. |
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Returns: |
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The same URI but with the new query parameters added. |
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""" |
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parts = urllib.parse.urlparse(uri) |
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query_params = parse_unique_urlencoded(parts.query) |
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query_params.update(params) |
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new_query = urllib.parse.urlencode(query_params) |
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new_parts = parts._replace(query=new_query) |
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return urllib.parse.urlunparse(new_parts) |
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def _add_query_parameter(url, name, value): |
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"""Adds a query parameter to a url. |
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Replaces the current value if it already exists in the URL. |
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Args: |
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url: string, url to add the query parameter to. |
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name: string, query parameter name. |
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value: string, query parameter value. |
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Returns: |
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Updated query parameter. Does not update the url if value is None. |
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""" |
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if value is None: |
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return url |
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else: |
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return update_query_params(url, {name: value}) |
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