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| # Copyright 2017 The Abseil Authors. | |
| # | |
| # Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); | |
| # you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. | |
| # You may obtain a copy of the License at | |
| # | |
| # http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 | |
| # | |
| # Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software | |
| # distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, | |
| # WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. | |
| # See the License for the specific language governing permissions and | |
| # limitations under the License. | |
| """Internal helper functions for Abseil Python flags library.""" | |
| import os | |
| import re | |
| import struct | |
| import sys | |
| import textwrap | |
| import types | |
| from typing import Any, Dict, Iterable, List, NamedTuple, Optional, Sequence, Set | |
| from xml.dom import minidom | |
| # pylint: disable=g-import-not-at-top | |
| try: | |
| import fcntl | |
| except ImportError: | |
| fcntl = None | |
| try: | |
| # Importing termios will fail on non-unix platforms. | |
| import termios | |
| except ImportError: | |
| termios = None | |
| # pylint: enable=g-import-not-at-top | |
| _DEFAULT_HELP_WIDTH = 80 # Default width of help output. | |
| # Minimal "sane" width of help output. We assume that any value below 40 is | |
| # unreasonable. | |
| _MIN_HELP_WIDTH = 40 | |
| # Define the allowed error rate in an input string to get suggestions. | |
| # | |
| # We lean towards a high threshold because we tend to be matching a phrase, | |
| # and the simple algorithm used here is geared towards correcting word | |
| # spellings. | |
| # | |
| # For manual testing, consider "<command> --list" which produced a large number | |
| # of spurious suggestions when we used "least_errors > 0.5" instead of | |
| # "least_erros >= 0.5". | |
| _SUGGESTION_ERROR_RATE_THRESHOLD = 0.50 | |
| # Characters that cannot appear or are highly discouraged in an XML 1.0 | |
| # document. (See http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml/#charsets or | |
| # https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valid_characters_in_XML#XML_1.0) | |
| _ILLEGAL_XML_CHARS_REGEX = re.compile( | |
| u'[\x00-\x08\x0b\x0c\x0e-\x1f\x7f-\x84\x86-\x9f\ud800-\udfff\ufffe\uffff]') | |
| # This is a set of module ids for the modules that disclaim key flags. | |
| # This module is explicitly added to this set so that we never consider it to | |
| # define key flag. | |
| disclaim_module_ids: Set[int] = set([id(sys.modules[__name__])]) | |
| # Define special flags here so that help may be generated for them. | |
| # NOTE: Please do NOT use SPECIAL_FLAGS from outside flags module. | |
| # Initialized inside flagvalues.py. | |
| # NOTE: This cannot be annotated as its actual FlagValues type since this would | |
| # create a circular dependency. | |
| SPECIAL_FLAGS: Any = None | |
| # This points to the flags module, initialized in flags/__init__.py. | |
| # This should only be used in adopt_module_key_flags to take SPECIAL_FLAGS into | |
| # account. | |
| FLAGS_MODULE: types.ModuleType = None | |
| class _ModuleObjectAndName(NamedTuple): | |
| """Module object and name. | |
| Fields: | |
| - module: object, module object. | |
| - module_name: str, module name. | |
| """ | |
| module: types.ModuleType | |
| module_name: str | |
| def get_module_object_and_name( | |
| globals_dict: Dict[str, Any] | |
| ) -> _ModuleObjectAndName: | |
| """Returns the module that defines a global environment, and its name. | |
| Args: | |
| globals_dict: A dictionary that should correspond to an environment | |
| providing the values of the globals. | |
| Returns: | |
| _ModuleObjectAndName - pair of module object & module name. | |
| Returns (None, None) if the module could not be identified. | |
| """ | |
| name = globals_dict.get('__name__', None) | |
| module = sys.modules.get(name, None) | |
| # Pick a more informative name for the main module. | |
| return _ModuleObjectAndName(module, | |
| (sys.argv[0] if name == '__main__' else name)) | |
| def get_calling_module_object_and_name() -> _ModuleObjectAndName: | |
| """Returns the module that's calling into this module. | |
| We generally use this function to get the name of the module calling a | |
| DEFINE_foo... function. | |
| Returns: | |
| The module object that called into this one. | |
| Raises: | |
| AssertionError: Raised when no calling module could be identified. | |
| """ | |
| for depth in range(1, sys.getrecursionlimit()): | |
| # sys._getframe is the right thing to use here, as it's the best | |
| # way to walk up the call stack. | |
| globals_for_frame = sys._getframe(depth).f_globals # pylint: disable=protected-access | |
| module, module_name = get_module_object_and_name(globals_for_frame) | |
| if id(module) not in disclaim_module_ids and module_name is not None: | |
| return _ModuleObjectAndName(module, module_name) | |
| raise AssertionError('No module was found') | |
| def get_calling_module() -> str: | |
| """Returns the name of the module that's calling into this module.""" | |
| return get_calling_module_object_and_name().module_name | |
| def create_xml_dom_element( | |
| doc: minidom.Document, name: str, value: Any | |
| ) -> minidom.Element: | |
| """Returns an XML DOM element with name and text value. | |
| Args: | |
| doc: minidom.Document, the DOM document it should create nodes from. | |
| name: str, the tag of XML element. | |
| value: object, whose string representation will be used | |
| as the value of the XML element. Illegal or highly discouraged xml 1.0 | |
| characters are stripped. | |
| Returns: | |
| An instance of minidom.Element. | |
| """ | |
| s = str(value) | |
| if isinstance(value, bool): | |
| # Display boolean values as the C++ flag library does: no caps. | |
| s = s.lower() | |
| # Remove illegal xml characters. | |
| s = _ILLEGAL_XML_CHARS_REGEX.sub(u'', s) | |
| e = doc.createElement(name) | |
| e.appendChild(doc.createTextNode(s)) | |
| return e | |
| def get_help_width() -> int: | |
| """Returns the integer width of help lines that is used in TextWrap.""" | |
| if not sys.stdout.isatty() or termios is None or fcntl is None: | |
| return _DEFAULT_HELP_WIDTH | |
| try: | |
| data = fcntl.ioctl(sys.stdout, termios.TIOCGWINSZ, b'1234') | |
| columns = struct.unpack('hh', data)[1] | |
| # Emacs mode returns 0. | |
| # Here we assume that any value below 40 is unreasonable. | |
| if columns >= _MIN_HELP_WIDTH: | |
| return columns | |
| # Returning an int as default is fine, int(int) just return the int. | |
| return int(os.getenv('COLUMNS', _DEFAULT_HELP_WIDTH)) | |
| except (TypeError, IOError, struct.error): | |
| return _DEFAULT_HELP_WIDTH | |
| def get_flag_suggestions( | |
| attempt: Optional[str], longopt_list: Sequence[str] | |
| ) -> List[str]: | |
| """Returns helpful similar matches for an invalid flag.""" | |
| # Don't suggest on very short strings, or if no longopts are specified. | |
| if len(attempt) <= 2 or not longopt_list: | |
| return [] | |
| option_names = [v.split('=')[0] for v in longopt_list] | |
| # Find close approximations in flag prefixes. | |
| # This also handles the case where the flag is spelled right but ambiguous. | |
| distances = [(_damerau_levenshtein(attempt, option[0:len(attempt)]), option) | |
| for option in option_names] | |
| # t[0] is distance, and sorting by t[1] allows us to have stable output. | |
| distances.sort() | |
| least_errors, _ = distances[0] | |
| # Don't suggest excessively bad matches. | |
| if least_errors >= _SUGGESTION_ERROR_RATE_THRESHOLD * len(attempt): | |
| return [] | |
| suggestions = [] | |
| for errors, name in distances: | |
| if errors == least_errors: | |
| suggestions.append(name) | |
| else: | |
| break | |
| return suggestions | |
| def _damerau_levenshtein(a, b): | |
| """Returns Damerau-Levenshtein edit distance from a to b.""" | |
| memo = {} | |
| def distance(x, y): | |
| """Recursively defined string distance with memoization.""" | |
| if (x, y) in memo: | |
| return memo[x, y] | |
| if not x: | |
| d = len(y) | |
| elif not y: | |
| d = len(x) | |
| else: | |
| d = min( | |
| distance(x[1:], y) + 1, # correct an insertion error | |
| distance(x, y[1:]) + 1, # correct a deletion error | |
| distance(x[1:], y[1:]) + (x[0] != y[0])) # correct a wrong character | |
| if len(x) >= 2 and len(y) >= 2 and x[0] == y[1] and x[1] == y[0]: | |
| # Correct a transposition. | |
| t = distance(x[2:], y[2:]) + 1 | |
| if d > t: | |
| d = t | |
| memo[x, y] = d | |
| return d | |
| return distance(a, b) | |
| def text_wrap( | |
| text: str, | |
| length: Optional[int] = None, | |
| indent: str = '', | |
| firstline_indent: Optional[str] = None, | |
| ) -> str: | |
| """Wraps a given text to a maximum line length and returns it. | |
| It turns lines that only contain whitespace into empty lines, keeps new lines, | |
| and expands tabs using 4 spaces. | |
| Args: | |
| text: str, text to wrap. | |
| length: int, maximum length of a line, includes indentation. | |
| If this is None then use get_help_width() | |
| indent: str, indent for all but first line. | |
| firstline_indent: str, indent for first line; if None, fall back to indent. | |
| Returns: | |
| str, the wrapped text. | |
| Raises: | |
| ValueError: Raised if indent or firstline_indent not shorter than length. | |
| """ | |
| # Get defaults where callee used None | |
| if length is None: | |
| length = get_help_width() | |
| if indent is None: | |
| indent = '' | |
| if firstline_indent is None: | |
| firstline_indent = indent | |
| if len(indent) >= length: | |
| raise ValueError('Length of indent exceeds length') | |
| if len(firstline_indent) >= length: | |
| raise ValueError('Length of first line indent exceeds length') | |
| text = text.expandtabs(4) | |
| result = [] | |
| # Create one wrapper for the first paragraph and one for subsequent | |
| # paragraphs that does not have the initial wrapping. | |
| wrapper = textwrap.TextWrapper( | |
| width=length, initial_indent=firstline_indent, subsequent_indent=indent) | |
| subsequent_wrapper = textwrap.TextWrapper( | |
| width=length, initial_indent=indent, subsequent_indent=indent) | |
| # textwrap does not have any special treatment for newlines. From the docs: | |
| # "...newlines may appear in the middle of a line and cause strange output. | |
| # For this reason, text should be split into paragraphs (using | |
| # str.splitlines() or similar) which are wrapped separately." | |
| for paragraph in (p.strip() for p in text.splitlines()): | |
| if paragraph: | |
| result.extend(wrapper.wrap(paragraph)) | |
| else: | |
| result.append('') # Keep empty lines. | |
| # Replace initial wrapper with wrapper for subsequent paragraphs. | |
| wrapper = subsequent_wrapper | |
| return '\n'.join(result) | |
| def flag_dict_to_args( | |
| flag_map: Dict[str, Any], multi_flags: Optional[Set[str]] = None | |
| ) -> Iterable[str]: | |
| """Convert a dict of values into process call parameters. | |
| This method is used to convert a dictionary into a sequence of parameters | |
| for a binary that parses arguments using this module. | |
| Args: | |
| flag_map: dict, a mapping where the keys are flag names (strings). | |
| values are treated according to their type: | |
| * If value is ``None``, then only the name is emitted. | |
| * If value is ``True``, then only the name is emitted. | |
| * If value is ``False``, then only the name prepended with 'no' is | |
| emitted. | |
| * If value is a string then ``--name=value`` is emitted. | |
| * If value is a collection, this will emit | |
| ``--name=value1,value2,value3``, unless the flag name is in | |
| ``multi_flags``, in which case this will emit | |
| ``--name=value1 --name=value2 --name=value3``. | |
| * Everything else is converted to string an passed as such. | |
| multi_flags: set, names (strings) of flags that should be treated as | |
| multi-flags. | |
| Yields: | |
| sequence of string suitable for a subprocess execution. | |
| """ | |
| for key, value in flag_map.items(): | |
| if value is None: | |
| yield '--%s' % key | |
| elif isinstance(value, bool): | |
| if value: | |
| yield '--%s' % key | |
| else: | |
| yield '--no%s' % key | |
| elif isinstance(value, (bytes, type(u''))): | |
| # We don't want strings to be handled like python collections. | |
| yield '--%s=%s' % (key, value) | |
| else: | |
| # Now we attempt to deal with collections. | |
| try: | |
| if multi_flags and key in multi_flags: | |
| for item in value: | |
| yield '--%s=%s' % (key, str(item)) | |
| else: | |
| yield '--%s=%s' % (key, ','.join(str(item) for item in value)) | |
| except TypeError: | |
| # Default case. | |
| yield '--%s=%s' % (key, value) | |
| def trim_docstring(docstring: str) -> str: | |
| """Removes indentation from triple-quoted strings. | |
| This is the function specified in PEP 257 to handle docstrings: | |
| https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0257/. | |
| Args: | |
| docstring: str, a python docstring. | |
| Returns: | |
| str, docstring with indentation removed. | |
| """ | |
| if not docstring: | |
| return '' | |
| # If you've got a line longer than this you have other problems... | |
| max_indent = 1 << 29 | |
| # Convert tabs to spaces (following the normal Python rules) | |
| # and split into a list of lines: | |
| lines = docstring.expandtabs().splitlines() | |
| # Determine minimum indentation (first line doesn't count): | |
| indent = max_indent | |
| for line in lines[1:]: | |
| stripped = line.lstrip() | |
| if stripped: | |
| indent = min(indent, len(line) - len(stripped)) | |
| # Remove indentation (first line is special): | |
| trimmed = [lines[0].strip()] | |
| if indent < max_indent: | |
| for line in lines[1:]: | |
| trimmed.append(line[indent:].rstrip()) | |
| # Strip off trailing and leading blank lines: | |
| while trimmed and not trimmed[-1]: | |
| trimmed.pop() | |
| while trimmed and not trimmed[0]: | |
| trimmed.pop(0) | |
| # Return a single string: | |
| return '\n'.join(trimmed) | |
| def doc_to_help(doc: str) -> str: | |
| """Takes a __doc__ string and reformats it as help.""" | |
| # Get rid of starting and ending white space. Using lstrip() or even | |
| # strip() could drop more than maximum of first line and right space | |
| # of last line. | |
| doc = doc.strip() | |
| # Get rid of all empty lines. | |
| whitespace_only_line = re.compile('^[ \t]+$', re.M) | |
| doc = whitespace_only_line.sub('', doc) | |
| # Cut out common space at line beginnings. | |
| doc = trim_docstring(doc) | |
| # Just like this module's comment, comments tend to be aligned somehow. | |
| # In other words they all start with the same amount of white space. | |
| # 1) keep double new lines; | |
| # 2) keep ws after new lines if not empty line; | |
| # 3) all other new lines shall be changed to a space; | |
| # Solution: Match new lines between non white space and replace with space. | |
| doc = re.sub(r'(?<=\S)\n(?=\S)', ' ', doc, flags=re.M) | |
| return doc | |