Spaces:
Sleeping
Sleeping
| # 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. | |
| """Decorator and context manager for saving and restoring flag values. | |
| There are many ways to save and restore. Always use the most convenient method | |
| for a given use case. | |
| Here are examples of each method. They all call ``do_stuff()`` while | |
| ``FLAGS.someflag`` is temporarily set to ``'foo'``:: | |
| from absl.testing import flagsaver | |
| # Use a decorator which can optionally override flags via arguments. | |
| @flagsaver.flagsaver(someflag='foo') | |
| def some_func(): | |
| do_stuff() | |
| # Use a decorator which can optionally override flags with flagholders. | |
| @flagsaver.flagsaver((module.FOO_FLAG, 'foo'), (other_mod.BAR_FLAG, 23)) | |
| def some_func(): | |
| do_stuff() | |
| # Use a decorator which does not override flags itself. | |
| @flagsaver.flagsaver | |
| def some_func(): | |
| FLAGS.someflag = 'foo' | |
| do_stuff() | |
| # Use a context manager which can optionally override flags via arguments. | |
| with flagsaver.flagsaver(someflag='foo'): | |
| do_stuff() | |
| # Save and restore the flag values yourself. | |
| saved_flag_values = flagsaver.save_flag_values() | |
| try: | |
| FLAGS.someflag = 'foo' | |
| do_stuff() | |
| finally: | |
| flagsaver.restore_flag_values(saved_flag_values) | |
| # Use the parsing version to emulate users providing the flags. | |
| # Note that all flags must be provided as strings (unparsed). | |
| @flagsaver.as_parsed(some_int_flag='123') | |
| def some_func(): | |
| # Because the flag was parsed it is considered "present". | |
| assert FLAGS.some_int_flag.present | |
| do_stuff() | |
| # flagsaver.as_parsed() can also be used as a context manager just like | |
| # flagsaver.flagsaver() | |
| with flagsaver.as_parsed(some_int_flag='123'): | |
| do_stuff() | |
| # The flagsaver.as_parsed() interface also supports FlagHolder objects. | |
| @flagsaver.as_parsed((module.FOO_FLAG, 'foo'), (other_mod.BAR_FLAG, '23')) | |
| def some_func(): | |
| do_stuff() | |
| # Using as_parsed with a multi_X flag requires a sequence of strings. | |
| @flagsaver.as_parsed(some_multi_int_flag=['123', '456']) | |
| def some_func(): | |
| assert FLAGS.some_multi_int_flag.present | |
| do_stuff() | |
| # If a flag name includes non-identifier characters it can be specified like | |
| # so: | |
| @flagsaver.as_parsed(**{'i-like-dashes': 'true'}) | |
| def some_func(): | |
| do_stuff() | |
| We save and restore a shallow copy of each Flag object's ``__dict__`` attribute. | |
| This preserves all attributes of the flag, such as whether or not it was | |
| overridden from its default value. | |
| WARNING: Currently a flag that is saved and then deleted cannot be restored. An | |
| exception will be raised. However if you *add* a flag after saving flag values, | |
| and then restore flag values, the added flag will be deleted with no errors. | |
| """ | |
| import collections | |
| import functools | |
| import inspect | |
| from typing import overload, Any, Callable, Mapping, Tuple, TypeVar, Type, Sequence, Union | |
| from absl import flags | |
| FLAGS = flags.FLAGS | |
| # The type of pre/post wrapped functions. | |
| _CallableT = TypeVar('_CallableT', bound=Callable) | |
| def flagsaver(*args: Tuple[flags.FlagHolder, Any], | |
| **kwargs: Any) -> '_FlagOverrider': | |
| ... | |
| def flagsaver(func: _CallableT) -> _CallableT: | |
| ... | |
| def flagsaver(*args, **kwargs): | |
| """The main flagsaver interface. See module doc for usage.""" | |
| return _construct_overrider(_FlagOverrider, *args, **kwargs) | |
| def as_parsed(*args: Tuple[flags.FlagHolder, Union[str, Sequence[str]]], | |
| **kwargs: Union[str, Sequence[str]]) -> '_ParsingFlagOverrider': | |
| ... | |
| def as_parsed(func: _CallableT) -> _CallableT: | |
| ... | |
| def as_parsed(*args, **kwargs): | |
| """Overrides flags by parsing strings, saves flag state similar to flagsaver. | |
| This function can be used as either a decorator or context manager similar to | |
| flagsaver.flagsaver(). However, where flagsaver.flagsaver() directly sets the | |
| flags to new values, this function will parse the provided arguments as if | |
| they were provided on the command line. Among other things, this will cause | |
| `FLAGS['flag_name'].present == True`. | |
| A note on unparsed input: For many flag types, the unparsed version will be | |
| a single string. However for multi_x (multi_string, multi_integer, multi_enum) | |
| the unparsed version will be a Sequence of strings. | |
| Args: | |
| *args: Tuples of FlagHolders and their unparsed value. | |
| **kwargs: The keyword args are flag names, and the values are unparsed | |
| values. | |
| Returns: | |
| _ParsingFlagOverrider that serves as a context manager or decorator. Will | |
| save previous flag state and parse new flags, then on cleanup it will | |
| restore the previous flag state. | |
| """ | |
| return _construct_overrider(_ParsingFlagOverrider, *args, **kwargs) | |
| # NOTE: the order of these overload declarations matters. The type checker will | |
| # pick the first match which could be incorrect. | |
| def _construct_overrider( | |
| flag_overrider_cls: Type['_ParsingFlagOverrider'], | |
| *args: Tuple[flags.FlagHolder, Union[str, Sequence[str]]], | |
| **kwargs: Union[str, Sequence[str]]) -> '_ParsingFlagOverrider': | |
| ... | |
| def _construct_overrider(flag_overrider_cls: Type['_FlagOverrider'], | |
| *args: Tuple[flags.FlagHolder, Any], | |
| **kwargs: Any) -> '_FlagOverrider': | |
| ... | |
| def _construct_overrider(flag_overrider_cls: Type['_FlagOverrider'], | |
| func: _CallableT) -> _CallableT: | |
| ... | |
| def _construct_overrider(flag_overrider_cls, *args, **kwargs): | |
| """Handles the args/kwargs returning an instance of flag_overrider_cls. | |
| If flag_overrider_cls is _FlagOverrider then values should be native python | |
| types matching the python types. Otherwise if flag_overrider_cls is | |
| _ParsingFlagOverrider the values should be strings or sequences of strings. | |
| Args: | |
| flag_overrider_cls: The class that will do the overriding. | |
| *args: Tuples of FlagHolder and the new flag value. | |
| **kwargs: Keword args mapping flag name to new flag value. | |
| Returns: | |
| A _FlagOverrider to be used as a decorator or context manager. | |
| """ | |
| if not args: | |
| return flag_overrider_cls(**kwargs) | |
| # args can be [func] if used as `@flagsaver` instead of `@flagsaver(...)` | |
| if len(args) == 1 and callable(args[0]): | |
| if kwargs: | |
| raise ValueError( | |
| "It's invalid to specify both positional and keyword parameters.") | |
| func = args[0] | |
| if inspect.isclass(func): | |
| raise TypeError('@flagsaver.flagsaver cannot be applied to a class.') | |
| return _wrap(flag_overrider_cls, func, {}) | |
| # args can be a list of (FlagHolder, value) pairs. | |
| # In which case they augment any specified kwargs. | |
| for arg in args: | |
| if not isinstance(arg, tuple) or len(arg) != 2: | |
| raise ValueError('Expected (FlagHolder, value) pair, found %r' % (arg,)) | |
| holder, value = arg | |
| if not isinstance(holder, flags.FlagHolder): | |
| raise ValueError('Expected (FlagHolder, value) pair, found %r' % (arg,)) | |
| if holder.name in kwargs: | |
| raise ValueError('Cannot set --%s multiple times' % holder.name) | |
| kwargs[holder.name] = value | |
| return flag_overrider_cls(**kwargs) | |
| def save_flag_values( | |
| flag_values: flags.FlagValues = FLAGS) -> Mapping[str, Mapping[str, Any]]: | |
| """Returns copy of flag values as a dict. | |
| Args: | |
| flag_values: FlagValues, the FlagValues instance with which the flag will be | |
| saved. This should almost never need to be overridden. | |
| Returns: | |
| Dictionary mapping keys to values. Keys are flag names, values are | |
| corresponding ``__dict__`` members. E.g. ``{'key': value_dict, ...}``. | |
| """ | |
| return {name: _copy_flag_dict(flag_values[name]) for name in flag_values} | |
| def restore_flag_values(saved_flag_values: Mapping[str, Mapping[str, Any]], | |
| flag_values: flags.FlagValues = FLAGS): | |
| """Restores flag values based on the dictionary of flag values. | |
| Args: | |
| saved_flag_values: {'flag_name': value_dict, ...} | |
| flag_values: FlagValues, the FlagValues instance from which the flag will be | |
| restored. This should almost never need to be overridden. | |
| """ | |
| new_flag_names = list(flag_values) | |
| for name in new_flag_names: | |
| saved = saved_flag_values.get(name) | |
| if saved is None: | |
| # If __dict__ was not saved delete "new" flag. | |
| delattr(flag_values, name) | |
| else: | |
| if flag_values[name].value != saved['_value']: | |
| flag_values[name].value = saved['_value'] # Ensure C++ value is set. | |
| flag_values[name].__dict__ = saved | |
| def _wrap(flag_overrider_cls: Type['_FlagOverrider'], func: _CallableT, | |
| overrides: Mapping[str, Any]) -> _CallableT: | |
| ... | |
| def _wrap(flag_overrider_cls: Type['_ParsingFlagOverrider'], func: _CallableT, | |
| overrides: Mapping[str, Union[str, Sequence[str]]]) -> _CallableT: | |
| ... | |
| def _wrap(flag_overrider_cls, func, overrides): | |
| """Creates a wrapper function that saves/restores flag values. | |
| Args: | |
| flag_overrider_cls: The class that will be used as a context manager. | |
| func: This will be called between saving flags and restoring flags. | |
| overrides: Flag names mapped to their values. These flags will be set after | |
| saving the original flag state. The type of the values depends on if | |
| _FlagOverrider or _ParsingFlagOverrider was specified. | |
| Returns: | |
| A wrapped version of func. | |
| """ | |
| def _flagsaver_wrapper(*args, **kwargs): | |
| """Wrapper function that saves and restores flags.""" | |
| with flag_overrider_cls(**overrides): | |
| return func(*args, **kwargs) | |
| return _flagsaver_wrapper | |
| class _FlagOverrider(object): | |
| """Overrides flags for the duration of the decorated function call. | |
| It also restores all original values of flags after decorated method | |
| completes. | |
| """ | |
| def __init__(self, **overrides: Any): | |
| self._overrides = overrides | |
| self._saved_flag_values = None | |
| def __call__(self, func: _CallableT) -> _CallableT: | |
| if inspect.isclass(func): | |
| raise TypeError('flagsaver cannot be applied to a class.') | |
| return _wrap(self.__class__, func, self._overrides) | |
| def __enter__(self): | |
| self._saved_flag_values = save_flag_values(FLAGS) | |
| try: | |
| FLAGS._set_attributes(**self._overrides) | |
| except: | |
| # It may fail because of flag validators. | |
| restore_flag_values(self._saved_flag_values, FLAGS) | |
| raise | |
| def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, traceback): | |
| restore_flag_values(self._saved_flag_values, FLAGS) | |
| class _ParsingFlagOverrider(_FlagOverrider): | |
| """Context manager for overriding flags. | |
| Simulates command line parsing. | |
| This is simlar to _FlagOverrider except that all **overrides should be | |
| strings or sequences of strings, and when context is entered this class calls | |
| .parse(value) | |
| This results in the flags having .present set properly. | |
| """ | |
| def __init__(self, **overrides: Union[str, Sequence[str]]): | |
| for flag_name, new_value in overrides.items(): | |
| if isinstance(new_value, str): | |
| continue | |
| if (isinstance(new_value, collections.abc.Sequence) and | |
| all(isinstance(single_value, str) for single_value in new_value)): | |
| continue | |
| raise TypeError( | |
| f'flagsaver.as_parsed() cannot parse {flag_name}. Expected a single ' | |
| f'string or sequence of strings but {type(new_value)} was provided.') | |
| super().__init__(**overrides) | |
| def __enter__(self): | |
| self._saved_flag_values = save_flag_values(FLAGS) | |
| try: | |
| for flag_name, unparsed_value in self._overrides.items(): | |
| # LINT.IfChange(flag_override_parsing) | |
| FLAGS[flag_name].parse(unparsed_value) | |
| FLAGS[flag_name].using_default_value = False | |
| # LINT.ThenChange() | |
| # Perform the validation on all modified flags. This is something that | |
| # FLAGS._set_attributes() does for you in _FlagOverrider. | |
| for flag_name in self._overrides: | |
| FLAGS._assert_validators(FLAGS[flag_name].validators) | |
| except KeyError as e: | |
| # If a flag doesn't exist, an UnrecognizedFlagError is more specific. | |
| restore_flag_values(self._saved_flag_values, FLAGS) | |
| raise flags.UnrecognizedFlagError('Unknown command line flag.') from e | |
| except: | |
| # It may fail because of flag validators or general parsing issues. | |
| restore_flag_values(self._saved_flag_values, FLAGS) | |
| raise | |
| def _copy_flag_dict(flag: flags.Flag) -> Mapping[str, Any]: | |
| """Returns a copy of the flag object's ``__dict__``. | |
| It's mostly a shallow copy of the ``__dict__``, except it also does a shallow | |
| copy of the validator list. | |
| Args: | |
| flag: flags.Flag, the flag to copy. | |
| Returns: | |
| A copy of the flag object's ``__dict__``. | |
| """ | |
| copy = flag.__dict__.copy() | |
| copy['_value'] = flag.value # Ensure correct restore for C++ flags. | |
| copy['validators'] = list(flag.validators) | |
| return copy | |