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Code Editor : compat.py
# -*- test-case-name: twisted.test.test_compat -*- # # Copyright (c) Twisted Matrix Laboratories. # See LICENSE for details. """ Compatibility module to provide backwards compatibility for useful Python features. This is mainly for use of internal Twisted code. We encourage you to use the latest version of Python directly from your code, if possible. @var unicode: The type of Unicode strings, C{unicode} on Python 2 and C{str} on Python 3. @var NativeStringIO: An in-memory file-like object that operates on the native string type (bytes in Python 2, unicode in Python 3). @var urllib_parse: a URL-parsing module (urlparse on Python 2, urllib.parse on Python 3) """ from __future__ import absolute_import, division import inspect import os import platform import socket import struct import sys import tokenize from types import MethodType as _MethodType import warnings from io import TextIOBase, IOBase if sys.version_info < (3, 0): _PY3 = False else: _PY3 = True if sys.version_info >= (3, 5, 0): _PY35PLUS = True else: _PY35PLUS = False if sys.version_info >= (3, 7, 0): _PY37PLUS = True else: _PY37PLUS = False if platform.python_implementation() == 'PyPy': _PYPY = True else: _PYPY = False def _shouldEnableNewStyle(): """ Returns whether or not we should enable the new-style conversion of old-style classes. It inspects the environment for C{TWISTED_NEWSTYLE}, accepting an empty string, C{no}, C{false}, C{False}, and C{0} as falsey values and everything else as a truthy value. @rtype: L{bool} """ value = os.environ.get('TWISTED_NEWSTYLE', '') if value in ['', 'no', 'false', 'False', '0']: return False else: return True _EXPECT_NEWSTYLE = _PY3 or _shouldEnableNewStyle() def currentframe(n=0): """ In Python 3, L{inspect.currentframe} does not take a stack-level argument. Restore that functionality from Python 2 so we don't have to re-implement the C{f_back}-walking loop in places where it's called. @param n: The number of stack levels above the caller to walk. @type n: L{int} @return: a frame, n levels up the stack from the caller. @rtype: L{types.FrameType} """ f = inspect.currentframe() for x in range(n + 1): f = f.f_back return f def inet_pton(af, addr): """ Emulator of L{socket.inet_pton}. @param af: An address family to parse; C{socket.AF_INET} or C{socket.AF_INET6}. @type af: L{int} @param addr: An address. @type addr: native L{str} @return: The binary packed version of the passed address. @rtype: L{bytes} """ if not addr: raise ValueError("illegal IP address string passed to inet_pton") if af == socket.AF_INET: return socket.inet_aton(addr) elif af == getattr(socket, 'AF_INET6', 'AF_INET6'): if '%' in addr and (addr.count('%') > 1 or addr.index("%") == 0): raise ValueError("illegal IP address string passed to inet_pton") addr = addr.split('%')[0] parts = addr.split(':') elided = parts.count('') ipv4Component = '.' in parts[-1] if len(parts) > (8 - ipv4Component) or elided > 3: raise ValueError("Syntactically invalid address") if elided == 3: return '\x00' * 16 if elided: zeros = ['0'] * (8 - len(parts) - ipv4Component + elided) if addr.startswith('::'): parts[:2] = zeros elif addr.endswith('::'): parts[-2:] = zeros else: idx = parts.index('') parts[idx:idx+1] = zeros if len(parts) != 8 - ipv4Component: raise ValueError("Syntactically invalid address") else: if len(parts) != (8 - ipv4Component): raise ValueError("Syntactically invalid address") if ipv4Component: if parts[-1].count('.') != 3: raise ValueError("Syntactically invalid address") rawipv4 = socket.inet_aton(parts[-1]) unpackedipv4 = struct.unpack('!HH', rawipv4) parts[-1:] = [hex(x)[2:] for x in unpackedipv4] parts = [int(x, 16) for x in parts] return struct.pack('!8H', *parts) else: raise socket.error(97, 'Address family not supported by protocol') def inet_ntop(af, addr): if af == socket.AF_INET: return socket.inet_ntoa(addr) elif af == socket.AF_INET6: if len(addr) != 16: raise ValueError("address length incorrect") parts = struct.unpack('!8H', addr) curBase = bestBase = None for i in range(8): if not parts[i]: if curBase is None: curBase = i curLen = 0 curLen += 1 else: if curBase is not None: bestLen = None if bestBase is None or curLen > bestLen: bestBase = curBase bestLen = curLen curBase = None if curBase is not None and (bestBase is None or curLen > bestLen): bestBase = curBase bestLen = curLen parts = [hex(x)[2:] for x in parts] if bestBase is not None: parts[bestBase:bestBase + bestLen] = [''] if parts[0] == '': parts.insert(0, '') if parts[-1] == '': parts.insert(len(parts) - 1, '') return ':'.join(parts) else: raise socket.error(97, 'Address family not supported by protocol') try: socket.AF_INET6 except AttributeError: socket.AF_INET6 = 'AF_INET6' try: socket.inet_pton(socket.AF_INET6, "::") except (AttributeError, NameError, socket.error): socket.inet_pton = inet_pton socket.inet_ntop = inet_ntop adict = dict if _PY3: # These are actually useless in Python 2 as well, but we need to go # through deprecation process there (ticket #5895): del adict, inet_pton, inet_ntop set = set frozenset = frozenset try: from functools import reduce except ImportError: reduce = reduce def execfile(filename, globals, locals=None): """ Execute a Python script in the given namespaces. Similar to the execfile builtin, but a namespace is mandatory, partly because that's a sensible thing to require, and because otherwise we'd have to do some frame hacking. This is a compatibility implementation for Python 3 porting, to avoid the use of the deprecated builtin C{execfile} function. """ if locals is None: locals = globals with open(filename, "rb") as fin: source = fin.read() code = compile(source, filename, "exec") exec(code, globals, locals) try: cmp = cmp except NameError: def cmp(a, b): """ Compare two objects. Returns a negative number if C{a < b}, zero if they are equal, and a positive number if C{a > b}. """ if a < b: return -1 elif a == b: return 0 else: return 1 def comparable(klass): """ Class decorator that ensures support for the special C{__cmp__} method. On Python 2 this does nothing. On Python 3, C{__eq__}, C{__lt__}, etc. methods are added to the class, relying on C{__cmp__} to implement their comparisons. """ # On Python 2, __cmp__ will just work, so no need to add extra methods: if not _PY3: return klass def __eq__(self, other): c = self.__cmp__(other) if c is NotImplemented: return c return c == 0 def __ne__(self, other): c = self.__cmp__(other) if c is NotImplemented: return c return c != 0 def __lt__(self, other): c = self.__cmp__(other) if c is NotImplemented: return c return c < 0 def __le__(self, other): c = self.__cmp__(other) if c is NotImplemented: return c return c <= 0 def __gt__(self, other): c = self.__cmp__(other) if c is NotImplemented: return c return c > 0 def __ge__(self, other): c = self.__cmp__(other) if c is NotImplemented: return c return c >= 0 klass.__lt__ = __lt__ klass.__gt__ = __gt__ klass.__le__ = __le__ klass.__ge__ = __ge__ klass.__eq__ = __eq__ klass.__ne__ = __ne__ return klass if _PY3: unicode = str long = int else: unicode = unicode long = long def ioType(fileIshObject, default=unicode): """ Determine the type which will be returned from the given file object's read() and accepted by its write() method as an argument. In other words, determine whether the given file is 'opened in text mode'. @param fileIshObject: Any object, but ideally one which resembles a file. @type fileIshObject: L{object} @param default: A default value to return when the type of C{fileIshObject} cannot be determined. @type default: L{type} @return: There are 3 possible return values: 1. L{unicode}, if the file is unambiguously opened in text mode. 2. L{bytes}, if the file is unambiguously opened in binary mode. 3. L{basestring}, if we are on python 2 (the L{basestring} type does not exist on python 3) and the file is opened in binary mode, but has an encoding and can therefore accept both bytes and text reliably for writing, but will return L{bytes} from read methods. 4. The C{default} parameter, if the given type is not understood. @rtype: L{type} """ if isinstance(fileIshObject, TextIOBase): # If it's for text I/O, then it's for text I/O. return unicode if isinstance(fileIshObject, IOBase): # If it's for I/O but it's _not_ for text I/O, it's for bytes I/O. return bytes encoding = getattr(fileIshObject, 'encoding', None) import codecs if isinstance(fileIshObject, (codecs.StreamReader, codecs.StreamWriter)): # On StreamReaderWriter, the 'encoding' attribute has special meaning; # it is unambiguously unicode. if encoding: return unicode else: return bytes if not _PY3: # Special case: if we have an encoding file, we can *give* it unicode, # but we can't expect to *get* unicode. if isinstance(fileIshObject, file): if encoding is not None: return basestring else: return bytes from cStringIO import InputType, OutputType from StringIO import StringIO if isinstance(fileIshObject, (StringIO, InputType, OutputType)): return bytes return default def nativeString(s): """ Convert C{bytes} or C{unicode} to the native C{str} type, using ASCII encoding if conversion is necessary. @raise UnicodeError: The input string is not ASCII encodable/decodable. @raise TypeError: The input is neither C{bytes} nor C{unicode}. """ if not isinstance(s, (bytes, unicode)): raise TypeError("%r is neither bytes nor unicode" % s) if _PY3: if isinstance(s, bytes): return s.decode("ascii") else: # Ensure we're limited to ASCII subset: s.encode("ascii") else: if isinstance(s, unicode): return s.encode("ascii") else: # Ensure we're limited to ASCII subset: s.decode("ascii") return s def _matchingString(constantString, inputString): """ Some functions, such as C{os.path.join}, operate on string arguments which may be bytes or text, and wish to return a value of the same type. In those cases you may wish to have a string constant (in the case of C{os.path.join}, that constant would be C{os.path.sep}) involved in the parsing or processing, that must be of a matching type in order to use string operations on it. L{_matchingString} will take a constant string (either L{bytes} or L{unicode}) and convert it to the same type as the input string. C{constantString} should contain only characters from ASCII; to ensure this, it will be encoded or decoded regardless. @param constantString: A string literal used in processing. @type constantString: L{unicode} or L{bytes} @param inputString: A byte string or text string provided by the user. @type inputString: L{unicode} or L{bytes} @return: C{constantString} converted into the same type as C{inputString} @rtype: the type of C{inputString} """ if isinstance(constantString, bytes): otherType = constantString.decode("ascii") else: otherType = constantString.encode("ascii") if type(constantString) == type(inputString): return constantString else: return otherType if _PY3: def reraise(exception, traceback): raise exception.with_traceback(traceback) else: exec("""def reraise(exception, traceback): raise exception.__class__, exception, traceback""") reraise.__doc__ = """ Re-raise an exception, with an optional traceback, in a way that is compatible with both Python 2 and Python 3. Note that on Python 3, re-raised exceptions will be mutated, with their C{__traceback__} attribute being set. @param exception: The exception instance. @param traceback: The traceback to use, or L{None} indicating a new traceback. """ if _PY3: from io import StringIO as NativeStringIO else: from io import BytesIO as NativeStringIO # Functions for dealing with Python 3's bytes type, which is somewhat # different than Python 2's: if _PY3: def iterbytes(originalBytes): for i in range(len(originalBytes)): yield originalBytes[i:i+1] def intToBytes(i): return ("%d" % i).encode("ascii") def lazyByteSlice(object, offset=0, size=None): """ Return a copy of the given bytes-like object. If an offset is given, the copy starts at that offset. If a size is given, the copy will only be of that length. @param object: C{bytes} to be copied. @param offset: C{int}, starting index of copy. @param size: Optional, if an C{int} is given limit the length of copy to this size. """ view = memoryview(object) if size is None: return view[offset:] else: return view[offset:(offset + size)] def networkString(s): if not isinstance(s, unicode): raise TypeError("Can only convert text to bytes on Python 3") return s.encode('ascii') else: def iterbytes(originalBytes): return originalBytes def intToBytes(i): return b"%d" % i lazyByteSlice = buffer def networkString(s): if not isinstance(s, str): raise TypeError("Can only pass-through bytes on Python 2") # Ensure we're limited to ASCII subset: s.decode('ascii') return s iterbytes.__doc__ = """ Return an iterable wrapper for a C{bytes} object that provides the behavior of iterating over C{bytes} on Python 2. In particular, the results of iteration are the individual bytes (rather than integers as on Python 3). @param originalBytes: A C{bytes} object that will be wrapped. """ intToBytes.__doc__ = """ Convert the given integer into C{bytes}, as ASCII-encoded Arab numeral. In other words, this is equivalent to calling C{bytes} in Python 2 on an integer. @param i: The C{int} to convert to C{bytes}. @rtype: C{bytes} """ networkString.__doc__ = """ Convert the native string type to C{bytes} if it is not already C{bytes} using ASCII encoding if conversion is necessary. This is useful for sending text-like bytes that are constructed using string interpolation. For example, this is safe on Python 2 and Python 3: networkString("Hello %d" % (n,)) @param s: A native string to convert to bytes if necessary. @type s: C{str} @raise UnicodeError: The input string is not ASCII encodable/decodable. @raise TypeError: The input is neither C{bytes} nor C{unicode}. @rtype: C{bytes} """ try: StringType = basestring except NameError: # Python 3+ StringType = str try: from types import InstanceType except ImportError: # Python 3+ InstanceType = object try: from types import FileType except ImportError: # Python 3+ FileType = IOBase if _PY3: import urllib.parse as urllib_parse from html import escape from urllib.parse import quote as urlquote from urllib.parse import unquote as urlunquote from http import cookiejar as cookielib else: import urlparse as urllib_parse from cgi import escape from urllib import quote as urlquote from urllib import unquote as urlunquote import cookielib # Dealing with the differences in items/iteritems if _PY3: def iteritems(d): return d.items() def itervalues(d): return d.values() def items(d): return list(d.items()) range = range xrange = range izip = zip else: def iteritems(d): return d.iteritems() def itervalues(d): return d.itervalues() def items(d): return d.items() range = xrange xrange = xrange from itertools import izip izip # shh pyflakes iteritems.__doc__ = """ Return an iterable of the items of C{d}. @type d: L{dict} @rtype: iterable """ itervalues.__doc__ = """ Return an iterable of the values of C{d}. @type d: L{dict} @rtype: iterable """ items.__doc__ = """ Return a list of the items of C{d}. @type d: L{dict} @rtype: L{list} """ def _keys(d): """ Return a list of the keys of C{d}. @type d: L{dict} @rtype: L{list} """ if _PY3: return list(d.keys()) else: return d.keys() def bytesEnviron(): """ Return a L{dict} of L{os.environ} where all text-strings are encoded into L{bytes}. This function is POSIX only; environment variables are always text strings on Windows. """ if not _PY3: # On py2, nothing to do. return dict(os.environ) target = dict() for x, y in os.environ.items(): target[os.environ.encodekey(x)] = os.environ.encodevalue(y) return target def _constructMethod(cls, name, self): """ Construct a bound method. @param cls: The class that the method should be bound to. @type cls: L{types.ClassType} or L{type}. @param name: The name of the method. @type name: native L{str} @param self: The object that the method is bound to. @type self: any object @return: a bound method @rtype: L{types.MethodType} """ func = cls.__dict__[name] if _PY3: return _MethodType(func, self) return _MethodType(func, self, cls) from incremental import Version from twisted.python.deprecate import deprecatedModuleAttribute from collections import OrderedDict deprecatedModuleAttribute( Version("Twisted", 15, 5, 0), "Use collections.OrderedDict instead.", "twisted.python.compat", "OrderedDict") if _PY3: from base64 import encodebytes as _b64encodebytes from base64 import decodebytes as _b64decodebytes else: from base64 import encodestring as _b64encodebytes from base64 import decodestring as _b64decodebytes def _bytesChr(i): """ Like L{chr} but always works on ASCII, returning L{bytes}. @param i: The ASCII code point to return. @type i: L{int} @rtype: L{bytes} """ if _PY3: return bytes([i]) else: return chr(i) try: from sys import intern except ImportError: intern = intern def _coercedUnicode(s): """ Coerce ASCII-only byte strings into unicode for Python 2. In Python 2 C{unicode(b'bytes')} returns a unicode string C{'bytes'}. In Python 3, the equivalent C{str(b'bytes')} will return C{"b'bytes'"} instead. This function mimics the behavior for Python 2. It will decode the byte string as ASCII. In Python 3 it simply raises a L{TypeError} when passing a byte string. Unicode strings are returned as-is. @param s: The string to coerce. @type s: L{bytes} or L{unicode} @raise UnicodeError: The input L{bytes} is not ASCII decodable. @raise TypeError: The input is L{bytes} on Python 3. """ if isinstance(s, bytes): if _PY3: raise TypeError("Expected str not %r (bytes)" % (s,)) else: return s.decode('ascii') else: return s if _PY3: unichr = chr raw_input = input else: unichr = unichr raw_input = raw_input def _bytesRepr(bytestring): """ Provide a repr for a byte string that begins with 'b' on both Python 2 and 3. @param bytestring: The string to repr. @type bytestring: L{bytes} @raise TypeError: The input is not L{bytes}. @return: The repr with a leading 'b'. @rtype: L{bytes} """ if not isinstance(bytestring, bytes): raise TypeError("Expected bytes not %r" % (bytestring,)) if _PY3: return repr(bytestring) else: return 'b' + repr(bytestring) if _PY3: _tokenize = tokenize.tokenize else: _tokenize = tokenize.generate_tokens try: from collections.abc import Sequence except ImportError: from collections import Sequence def _get_async_param(isAsync=None, **kwargs): """ Provide a backwards-compatible way to get async param value that does not cause a syntax error under Python 3.7. @param isAsync: isAsync param value (should default to None) @type isAsync: L{bool} @param kwargs: keyword arguments of the caller (only async is allowed) @type kwargs: L{dict} @raise TypeError: Both isAsync and async specified. @return: Final isAsync param value @rtype: L{bool} """ if 'async' in kwargs: warnings.warn( "'async' keyword argument is deprecated, please use isAsync", DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2) if isAsync is None and 'async' in kwargs: isAsync = kwargs.pop('async') if kwargs: raise TypeError return bool(isAsync) __all__ = [ "reraise", "execfile", "frozenset", "reduce", "set", "cmp", "comparable", "OrderedDict", "nativeString", "NativeStringIO", "networkString", "unicode", "iterbytes", "intToBytes", "lazyByteSlice", "StringType", "InstanceType", "FileType", "items", "iteritems", "itervalues", "range", "xrange", "urllib_parse", "bytesEnviron", "escape", "urlquote", "urlunquote", "cookielib", "_keys", "_b64encodebytes", "_b64decodebytes", "_bytesChr", "_coercedUnicode", "_bytesRepr", "intern", "unichr", "raw_input", "_tokenize", "_get_async_param", "Sequence", ]
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