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author | Guido van Rossum <guido@python.org> | 2002-12-02 14:54:20 (GMT) |
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committer | Guido van Rossum <guido@python.org> | 2002-12-02 14:54:20 (GMT) |
commit | 0ed7aa1e031f3194ebb2e7373c492201b8f43bc7 (patch) | |
tree | 42322c52b58c6b416606ab40bbdb9caba9bb12c8 /Lib | |
parent | c706c28d75f1455a39e4eca3cf6ddc4be3002149 (diff) | |
download | cpython-0ed7aa1e031f3194ebb2e7373c492201b8f43bc7.zip cpython-0ed7aa1e031f3194ebb2e7373c492201b8f43bc7.tar.gz cpython-0ed7aa1e031f3194ebb2e7373c492201b8f43bc7.tar.bz2 |
Moderately heavy reorganization of pyclbr to fix package-related bugs.
- The _modules cache now uses the full module name.
- The meaning of the (internal!!!) inpackage argument is changed: it
now is the parent package name, or None. readmodule() doesn't
support this argument any more.
- The meaning of the path argument is changed: when inpackage is set,
the module *must* be found in this path (as is the case for the real
package search).
- Miscellaneous cleanup, e.g. fixed __all__, changed some comments and
doc strings, etc.
- Adapted the unit tests to the new semantics (nothing much changed,
really). Added some debugging code to the unit tests that print
helpful extra info to stderr when a test fails (interpreting the
test failures turned out to be hard without these).
Diffstat (limited to 'Lib')
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/pyclbr.py | 118 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/test/test_pyclbr.py | 48 |
2 files changed, 99 insertions, 67 deletions
diff --git a/Lib/pyclbr.py b/Lib/pyclbr.py index fe34208..aa00f6f 100644 --- a/Lib/pyclbr.py +++ b/Lib/pyclbr.py @@ -16,6 +16,7 @@ are class instances of the class Class defined here. A class is described by the class Class in this module. Instances of this class have the following instance variables: + module -- the module name name -- the name of the class super -- a list of super classes (Class instances) methods -- a dictionary of methods @@ -29,24 +30,21 @@ string giving the name of the super class. Since import statements are recognized and imported modules are scanned as well, this shouldn't happen often. -XXX describe the Function class. +A function is described by the class Function in this module. +Instances of this class have the following instance variables: + module -- the module name + name -- the name of the class + file -- the file in which the class was defined + lineno -- the line in the file on which the class statement occurred + BUGS - Nested classes and functions can confuse it. -PACKAGE RELATED BUGS -- If you have a package and a module inside that or another package - with the same name, module caching doesn't work properly since the - key is the base name of the module/package. -- The only entry that is returned when you readmodule a package is a - __path__ whose value is a list which confuses certain class browsers. -- When code does: - from package import subpackage - class MyClass(subpackage.SuperClass): - ... - It can't locate the parent. It probably needs to have the same - hairy logic that the import locator already does. (This logic - exists coded in Python in the freeze package.) +PACKAGE CAVEAT +- When you call readmodule_ex for a package, dict['__path__'] is a + list, which may confuse older class browsers. (readmodule filters + these out though.) """ import sys @@ -54,7 +52,7 @@ import imp import tokenize # Python tokenizer from token import NAME -__all__ = ["readmodule"] +__all__ = ["readmodule", "readmodule_ex", "Class", "Function"] _modules = {} # cache of modules we've seen @@ -74,76 +72,84 @@ class Class: def _addmethod(self, name, lineno): self.methods[name] = lineno -class Function(Class): +class Function: '''Class to represent a top-level Python function''' def __init__(self, module, name, file, lineno): - Class.__init__(self, module, name, None, file, lineno) - def _addmethod(self, name, lineno): - assert 0, "Function._addmethod() shouldn't be called" + self.module = module + self.name = name + self.file = file + self.lineno = lineno -def readmodule(module, path=[], inpackage=False): +def readmodule(module, path=[]): '''Backwards compatible interface. - Like readmodule_ex() but strips Function objects from the + Call readmodule_ex() and then only keep Class objects from the resulting dictionary.''' - dict = readmodule_ex(module, path, inpackage) + dict = readmodule_ex(module, path) res = {} for key, value in dict.items(): - if not isinstance(value, Function): + if isinstance(value, Class): res[key] = value return res -def readmodule_ex(module, path=[], inpackage=False): +def readmodule_ex(module, path=[], inpackage=None): '''Read a module file and return a dictionary of classes. Search for MODULE in PATH and sys.path, read and parse the module and return a dictionary with one entry for each class - found in the module.''' + found in the module. + + If INPACKAGE is true, it must be the dotted name of the package in + which we are searching for a submodule, and then PATH must be the + package search path; otherwise, we are searching for a top-level + module, and PATH is combined with sys.path. + ''' + + # Compute the full module name (prepending inpackage if set) + if inpackage: + fullmodule = "%s.%s" % (inpackage, module) + else: + fullmodule = module + + # Check in the cache + if fullmodule in _modules: + return _modules[fullmodule] + # Initialize the dict for this module's contents dict = {} + # Check if it is a built-in module; we don't do much for these + if module in sys.builtin_module_names and not inpackage: + _modules[module] = dict + return dict + + # Check for a dotted module name i = module.rfind('.') if i >= 0: - # Dotted module name - package = module[:i].strip() - submodule = module[i+1:].strip() + package = module[:i] + submodule = module[i+1:] parent = readmodule_ex(package, path, inpackage) - child = readmodule_ex(submodule, parent['__path__'], True) - return child + if inpackage: + package = "%s.%s" % (inpackage, package) + return readmodule_ex(submodule, parent['__path__'], package) - if module in _modules: - # we've seen this module before... - return _modules[module] - if module in sys.builtin_module_names: - # this is a built-in module - _modules[module] = dict - return dict - - # search the path for the module + # Search the path for the module f = None if inpackage: - try: - f, file, (suff, mode, type) = \ - imp.find_module(module, path) - except ImportError: - f = None - if f is None: - fullpath = list(path) + sys.path - f, file, (suff, mode, type) = imp.find_module(module, fullpath) + f, file, (suff, mode, type) = imp.find_module(module, path) + else: + f, file, (suff, mode, type) = imp.find_module(module, path + sys.path) if type == imp.PKG_DIRECTORY: dict['__path__'] = [file] - _modules[module] = dict path = [file] + path - f, file, (suff, mode, type) = \ - imp.find_module('__init__', [file]) + f, file, (suff, mode, type) = imp.find_module('__init__', [file]) + _modules[fullmodule] = dict if type != imp.PY_SOURCE: # not Python source, can't do anything with this module f.close() - _modules[module] = dict return dict - _modules[module] = dict classstack = [] # stack of (class, indent) pairs g = tokenize.generate_tokens(f.readline) @@ -221,7 +227,13 @@ def readmodule_ex(module, path=[], inpackage=False): for mod, mod2 in modules: try: # Recursively read the imported module - readmodule_ex(mod, path, inpackage) + if not inpackage: + readmodule_ex(mod, path) + else: + try: + readmodule_ex(mod, path, inpackage) + except ImportError: + readmodule_ex(mod) except: # If we can't find or parse the imported module, # too bad -- don't die here. diff --git a/Lib/test/test_pyclbr.py b/Lib/test/test_pyclbr.py index 61d59f7..03eb221 100644 --- a/Lib/test/test_pyclbr.py +++ b/Lib/test/test_pyclbr.py @@ -6,6 +6,7 @@ from test.test_support import run_unittest import unittest, sys from types import ClassType, FunctionType, MethodType import pyclbr +from unittest import TestCase # This next line triggers an error on old versions of pyclbr. @@ -18,16 +19,19 @@ from commands import getstatus # is imperfect (as designed), testModule is called with a set of # members to ignore. -class PyclbrTest(unittest.TestCase): +class PyclbrTest(TestCase): def assertListEq(self, l1, l2, ignore): ''' succeed iff {l1} - {ignore} == {l2} - {ignore} ''' - for p1, p2 in (l1, l2), (l2, l1): - for item in p1: - ok = (item in p2) or (item in ignore) - if not ok: - self.fail("%r missing" % item) - + try: + for p1, p2 in (l1, l2), (l2, l1): + for item in p1: + ok = (item in p2) or (item in ignore) + if not ok: + self.fail("%r missing" % item) + except: + print >>sys.stderr, "l1=%r, l2=%r, ignore=%r" % (l1, l2, ignore) + raise def assertHasattr(self, obj, attr, ignore): ''' succeed iff hasattr(obj,attr) or attr in ignore. ''' @@ -40,7 +44,8 @@ class PyclbrTest(unittest.TestCase): def assertHaskey(self, obj, key, ignore): ''' succeed iff obj.has_key(key) or key in ignore. ''' if key in ignore: return - if not obj.has_key(key): print "***",key + if not obj.has_key(key): + print >>sys.stderr, "***",key self.failUnless(obj.has_key(key)) def assertEquals(self, a, b, ignore=None): @@ -56,7 +61,9 @@ class PyclbrTest(unittest.TestCase): module is loaded with __import__.''' if module == None: - module = __import__(moduleName, globals(), {}, []) + # Import it. + # ('<silly>' is to work around an API silliness in __import__) + module = __import__(moduleName, globals(), {}, ['<silly>']) dict = pyclbr.readmodule_ex(moduleName) @@ -74,7 +81,11 @@ class PyclbrTest(unittest.TestCase): pyclbr_bases = [ getattr(base, 'name', base) for base in value.super ] - self.assertListEq(real_bases, pyclbr_bases, ignore) + try: + self.assertListEq(real_bases, pyclbr_bases, ignore) + except: + print >>sys.stderr, "class=%s" % py_item + raise actualMethods = [] for m in py_item.__dict__.keys(): @@ -94,10 +105,17 @@ class PyclbrTest(unittest.TestCase): # can't check file or lineno # Now check for missing stuff. + def defined_in(item, module): + if isinstance(item, ClassType): + return item.__module__ == module.__name__ + if isinstance(item, FunctionType): + return item.func_globals is module.__dict__ + return False for name in dir(module): item = getattr(module, name) - if type(item) in (ClassType, FunctionType): - self.assertHaskey(dict, name, ignore) + if isinstance(item, (ClassType, FunctionType)): + if defined_in(item, module): + self.assertHaskey(dict, name, ignore) def test_easy(self): self.checkModule('pyclbr') @@ -136,8 +154,10 @@ class PyclbrTest(unittest.TestCase): 'makedict', 'dump' # from sre_constants )) - cm('test.test_pyclbr', - module=sys.modules[__name__]) + # Tests for modules inside packages + cm('email.Parser') + + cm('test.test_pyclbr', ignore=('defined_in',)) # pydoc doesn't work because of string issues # cm('pydoc', pydoc) |