diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'Lib')
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/dospath.py | 458 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/filecmp.py | 337 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/fpformat.py | 206 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/gopherlib.py | 286 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/gzip.py | 12 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/htmlentitydefs.py | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/imghdr.py | 176 | ||||
-rwxr-xr-x | Lib/keyword.py | 19 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/linecache.py | 130 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/macpath.py | 292 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/mailcap.py | 21 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/mhlib.py | 297 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/mimetools.py | 25 | ||||
-rwxr-xr-x | Lib/mimify.py | 25 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/multifile.py | 79 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/mutex.py | 59 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/netrc.py | 6 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/nntplib.py | 348 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/nturl2path.py | 5 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/os.py | 37 | ||||
-rwxr-xr-x | Lib/pdb.py | 27 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/pickle.py | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/pipes.py | 147 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/popen2.py | 27 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/posixfile.py | 120 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/posixpath.py | 22 | ||||
-rwxr-xr-x | Lib/profile.py | 110 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/pstats.py | 96 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/pty.py | 28 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/py_compile.py | 2 |
30 files changed, 1578 insertions, 1823 deletions
diff --git a/Lib/dospath.py b/Lib/dospath.py index bd5e560..2ad21f0 100644 --- a/Lib/dospath.py +++ b/Lib/dospath.py @@ -1,64 +1,64 @@ -# Module 'dospath' -- common operations on DOS pathnames +"""Module 'dospath' -- common operations on DOS pathnames""" import os import stat import string -# Normalize the case of a pathname. -# On MS-DOS it maps the pathname to lowercase, turns slashes into -# backslashes. -# Other normalizations (such as optimizing '../' away) are not allowed -# (this is done by normpath). -# Previously, this version mapped invalid consecutive characters to a -# single '_', but this has been removed. This functionality should -# possibly be added as a new function. - def normcase(s): - return string.lower(string.replace(s, "/", "\\")) + """Normalize the case of a pathname. + On MS-DOS it maps the pathname to lowercase, turns slashes into + backslashes. + Other normalizations (such as optimizing '../' away) are not allowed + (this is done by normpath). + Previously, this version mapped invalid consecutive characters to a + single '_', but this has been removed. This functionality should + possibly be added as a new function.""" + return string.lower(string.replace(s, "/", "\\")) -# Return wheter a path is absolute. -# Trivial in Posix, harder on the Mac or MS-DOS. -# For DOS it is absolute if it starts with a slash or backslash (current -# volume), or if a pathname after the volume letter and colon starts with -# a slash or backslash. def isabs(s): - s = splitdrive(s)[1] - return s != '' and s[:1] in '/\\' + """Return whether a path is absolute. + Trivial in Posix, harder on the Mac or MS-DOS. + For DOS it is absolute if it starts with a slash or backslash (current + volume), or if a pathname after the volume letter and colon starts with + a slash or backslash.""" + s = splitdrive(s)[1] + return s != '' and s[:1] in '/\\' -# Join two (or more) paths. def join(a, *p): - path = a - for b in p: - if isabs(b): - path = b - elif path == '' or path[-1:] in '/\\': - path = path + b - else: - path = path + os.sep + b - return path + """Join two (or more) paths.""" + path = a + for b in p: + if isabs(b): + path = b + elif path == '' or path[-1:] in '/\\': + path = path + b + else: + path = path + os.sep + b + return path -# Split a path in a drive specification (a drive letter followed by a -# colon) and the path specification. -# It is always true that drivespec + pathspec == p def splitdrive(p): - if p[1:2] == ':': - return p[0:2], p[2:] - return '', p + """Split a path into a drive specification (a drive letter followed + by a colon) and path specification. + It is always true that drivespec + pathspec == p.""" + if p[1:2] == ':': + return p[0:2], p[2:] + return '', p -# Split a path in head (everything up to the last '/') and tail (the -# rest). After the trailing '/' is stripped, the invariant -# join(head, tail) == p holds. -# The resulting head won't end in '/' unless it is the root. def split(p): + """Split a path into head (everything up to the last '/') and tail + (the rest). After the trailing '/' is stripped, the invariant + join(head, tail) == p holds. + The resulting head won't end in '/' unless it is the root.""" + d, p = splitdrive(p) # set i to index beyond p's last slash i = len(p) @@ -73,47 +73,47 @@ def split(p): return d + head, tail -# Split a path in root and extension. -# The extension is everything starting at the first dot in the last -# pathname component; the root is everything before that. -# It is always true that root + ext == p. - def splitext(p): - root, ext = '', '' - for c in p: - if c in '/\\': - root, ext = root + ext + c, '' - elif c == '.' or ext: - ext = ext + c - else: - root = root + c - return root, ext + """Split a path into root and extension. + The extension is everything starting at the first dot in the last + pathname component; the root is everything before that. + It is always true that root + ext == p.""" + + root, ext = '', '' + for c in p: + if c in '/\\': + root, ext = root + ext + c, '' + elif c == '.' or ext: + ext = ext + c + else: + root = root + c + return root, ext -# Return the tail (basename) part of a path. - def basename(p): - return split(p)[1] + """Return the tail (basename) part of a path.""" + return split(p)[1] -# Return the head (dirname) part of a path. def dirname(p): - return split(p)[0] + """Return the head (dirname) part of a path.""" + return split(p)[0] -# Return the longest prefix of all list elements. def commonprefix(m): - if not m: return '' - prefix = m[0] - for item in m: - for i in range(len(prefix)): - if prefix[:i+1] <> item[:i+1]: - prefix = prefix[:i] - if i == 0: return '' - break - return prefix + """Return the longest prefix of all list elements.""" + + if not m: return '' + prefix = m[0] + for item in m: + for i in range(len(prefix)): + if prefix[:i+1] <> item[:i+1]: + prefix = prefix[:i] + if i == 0: return '' + break + return prefix # Get size, mtime, atime of files. @@ -134,200 +134,196 @@ def getatime(filename): return st[stat.ST_MTIME] -# Is a path a symbolic link? -# This will always return false on systems where posix.lstat doesn't exist. - def islink(path): - return 0 + """Is a path a symbolic link? + This will always return false on systems where posix.lstat doesn't exist.""" + return 0 -# Does a path exist? -# This is false for dangling symbolic links. def exists(path): - try: - st = os.stat(path) - except os.error: - return 0 - return 1 + """Does a path exist? + This is false for dangling symbolic links.""" + try: + st = os.stat(path) + except os.error: + return 0 + return 1 -# Is a path a dos directory? -# This follows symbolic links, so both islink() and isdir() can be true -# for the same path. def isdir(path): - try: - st = os.stat(path) - except os.error: - return 0 - return stat.S_ISDIR(st[stat.ST_MODE]) + """Is a path a dos directory?""" + try: + st = os.stat(path) + except os.error: + return 0 + return stat.S_ISDIR(st[stat.ST_MODE]) -# Is a path a regular file? -# This follows symbolic links, so both islink() and isdir() can be true -# for the same path. def isfile(path): - try: - st = os.stat(path) - except os.error: - return 0 - return stat.S_ISREG(st[stat.ST_MODE]) + """Is a path a regular file?""" + try: + st = os.stat(path) + except os.error: + return 0 + return stat.S_ISREG(st[stat.ST_MODE]) -# Is a path a mount point? -# XXX This degenerates in: 'is this the root?' on DOS def ismount(path): - return isabs(splitdrive(path)[1]) + """Is a path a mount point?""" + # XXX This degenerates in: 'is this the root?' on DOS + return isabs(splitdrive(path)[1]) -# Directory tree walk. -# For each directory under top (including top itself, but excluding -# '.' and '..'), func(arg, dirname, filenames) is called, where -# dirname is the name of the directory and filenames is the list -# files files (and subdirectories etc.) in the directory. -# The func may modify the filenames list, to implement a filter, -# or to impose a different order of visiting. def walk(top, func, arg): - try: - names = os.listdir(top) - except os.error: - return - func(arg, top, names) - exceptions = ('.', '..') - for name in names: - if name not in exceptions: - name = join(top, name) - if isdir(name): - walk(name, func, arg) - - -# Expand paths beginning with '~' or '~user'. -# '~' means $HOME; '~user' means that user's home directory. -# If the path doesn't begin with '~', or if the user or $HOME is unknown, -# the path is returned unchanged (leaving error reporting to whatever -# function is called with the expanded path as argument). -# See also module 'glob' for expansion of *, ? and [...] in pathnames. -# (A function should also be defined to do full *sh-style environment -# variable expansion.) + """Directory tree walk. + For each directory under top (including top itself, but excluding + '.' and '..'), func(arg, dirname, filenames) is called, where + dirname is the name of the directory and filenames is the list + files files (and subdirectories etc.) in the directory. + The func may modify the filenames list, to implement a filter, + or to impose a different order of visiting.""" + + try: + names = os.listdir(top) + except os.error: + return + func(arg, top, names) + exceptions = ('.', '..') + for name in names: + if name not in exceptions: + name = join(top, name) + if isdir(name): + walk(name, func, arg) + def expanduser(path): - if path[:1] <> '~': - return path - i, n = 1, len(path) - while i < n and path[i] not in '/\\': - i = i+1 - if i == 1: - if not os.environ.has_key('HOME'): - return path - userhome = os.environ['HOME'] - else: - return path - return userhome + path[i:] - - -# Expand paths containing shell variable substitutions. -# The following rules apply: -# - no expansion within single quotes -# - no escape character, except for '$$' which is translated into '$' -# - ${varname} is accepted. -# - varnames can be made out of letters, digits and the character '_' -# XXX With COMMAND.COM you can use any characters in a variable name, -# XXX except '^|<>='. + """Expand paths beginning with '~' or '~user'. + '~' means $HOME; '~user' means that user's home directory. + If the path doesn't begin with '~', or if the user or $HOME is unknown, + the path is returned unchanged (leaving error reporting to whatever + function is called with the expanded path as argument). + See also module 'glob' for expansion of *, ? and [...] in pathnames. + (A function should also be defined to do full *sh-style environment + variable expansion.)""" + + if path[:1] <> '~': + return path + i, n = 1, len(path) + while i < n and path[i] not in '/\\': + i = i+1 + if i == 1: + if not os.environ.has_key('HOME'): + return path + userhome = os.environ['HOME'] + else: + return path + return userhome + path[i:] + varchars = string.letters + string.digits + '_-' def expandvars(path): - if '$' not in path: - return path - res = '' - index = 0 - pathlen = len(path) - while index < pathlen: - c = path[index] - if c == '\'': # no expansion within single quotes - path = path[index + 1:] - pathlen = len(path) - try: - index = string.index(path, '\'') - res = res + '\'' + path[:index + 1] - except string.index_error: - res = res + path - index = pathlen -1 - elif c == '$': # variable or '$$' - if path[index + 1:index + 2] == '$': - res = res + c - index = index + 1 - elif path[index + 1:index + 2] == '{': - path = path[index+2:] - pathlen = len(path) - try: - index = string.index(path, '}') - var = path[:index] - if os.environ.has_key(var): - res = res + os.environ[var] - except string.index_error: - res = res + path - index = pathlen - 1 - else: - var = '' - index = index + 1 - c = path[index:index + 1] - while c != '' and c in varchars: - var = var + c - index = index + 1 - c = path[index:index + 1] - if os.environ.has_key(var): - res = res + os.environ[var] - if c != '': - res = res + c - else: - res = res + c - index = index + 1 - return res - - -# Normalize a path, e.g. A//B, A/./B and A/foo/../B all become A/B. -# Also, components of the path are silently truncated to 8+3 notation. + """Expand paths containing shell variable substitutions. + The following rules apply: + - no expansion within single quotes + - no escape character, except for '$$' which is translated into '$' + - ${varname} is accepted. + - varnames can be made out of letters, digits and the character '_'""" + # XXX With COMMAND.COM you can use any characters in a variable name, + # XXX except '^|<>='. + + if '$' not in path: + return path + res = '' + index = 0 + pathlen = len(path) + while index < pathlen: + c = path[index] + if c == '\'': # no expansion within single quotes + path = path[index + 1:] + pathlen = len(path) + try: + index = string.index(path, '\'') + res = res + '\'' + path[:index + 1] + except string.index_error: + res = res + path + index = pathlen -1 + elif c == '$': # variable or '$$' + if path[index + 1:index + 2] == '$': + res = res + c + index = index + 1 + elif path[index + 1:index + 2] == '{': + path = path[index+2:] + pathlen = len(path) + try: + index = string.index(path, '}') + var = path[:index] + if os.environ.has_key(var): + res = res + os.environ[var] + except string.index_error: + res = res + path + index = pathlen - 1 + else: + var = '' + index = index + 1 + c = path[index:index + 1] + while c != '' and c in varchars: + var = var + c + index = index + 1 + c = path[index:index + 1] + if os.environ.has_key(var): + res = res + os.environ[var] + if c != '': + res = res + c + else: + res = res + c + index = index + 1 + return res + def normpath(path): - path = string.replace(path, "/", "\\") - prefix, path = splitdrive(path) - while path[:1] == os.sep: - prefix = prefix + os.sep - path = path[1:] - comps = string.splitfields(path, os.sep) - i = 0 - while i < len(comps): - if comps[i] == '.': - del comps[i] - elif comps[i] == '..' and i > 0 and \ - comps[i-1] not in ('', '..'): - del comps[i-1:i+1] - i = i-1 - elif comps[i] == '' and i > 0 and comps[i-1] <> '': - del comps[i] - elif '.' in comps[i]: - comp = string.splitfields(comps[i], '.') - comps[i] = comp[0][:8] + '.' + comp[1][:3] - i = i+1 - elif len(comps[i]) > 8: - comps[i] = comps[i][:8] - i = i+1 - else: - i = i+1 - # If the path is now empty, substitute '.' - if not prefix and not comps: - comps.append('.') - return prefix + string.joinfields(comps, os.sep) - - - -# Return an absolute path. + """Normalize a path, e.g. A//B, A/./B and A/foo/../B all become A/B. + Also, components of the path are silently truncated to 8+3 notation.""" + + path = string.replace(path, "/", "\\") + prefix, path = splitdrive(path) + while path[:1] == os.sep: + prefix = prefix + os.sep + path = path[1:] + comps = string.splitfields(path, os.sep) + i = 0 + while i < len(comps): + if comps[i] == '.': + del comps[i] + elif comps[i] == '..' and i > 0 and \ + comps[i-1] not in ('', '..'): + del comps[i-1:i+1] + i = i-1 + elif comps[i] == '' and i > 0 and comps[i-1] <> '': + del comps[i] + elif '.' in comps[i]: + comp = string.splitfields(comps[i], '.') + comps[i] = comp[0][:8] + '.' + comp[1][:3] + i = i+1 + elif len(comps[i]) > 8: + comps[i] = comps[i][:8] + i = i+1 + else: + i = i+1 + # If the path is now empty, substitute '.' + if not prefix and not comps: + comps.append('.') + return prefix + string.joinfields(comps, os.sep) + + + def abspath(path): + """Return an absolute path.""" if not isabs(path): path = join(os.getcwd(), path) return normpath(path) diff --git a/Lib/filecmp.py b/Lib/filecmp.py index 7060c99..e1a30bc 100644 --- a/Lib/filecmp.py +++ b/Lib/filecmp.py @@ -1,318 +1,57 @@ -"""Utilities for comparing files and directories. +"""Compare files.""" -Classes: - dircmp - -Functions: - cmp(f1, f2, shallow=1, use_statcache=0) -> int - cmpfiles(a, b, common) -> ([], [], []) - -""" - -import os -import stat -import statcache +import os, stat, statcache _cache = {} BUFSIZE=8*1024 -def cmp(f1, f2, shallow=1,use_statcache=0): - """Compare two files. +def cmp(f1, f2, shallow=1,use_statcache=0): + """Compare two files. - Arguments: + Arguments: - f1 -- First file name + f1 -- First file name - f2 -- Second file name + f2 -- Second file name - shallow -- Just check stat signature (do not read the files). - defaults to 1. + shallow -- Just check stat signature (do not read the files). + defaults to 1. - use_statcache -- Do not stat() each file directly: go through - the statcache module for more efficiency. + use_statcache -- Do not stat() each file directly: go through + the statcache module for more efficiency. - Return value: + Return value: - integer -- 1 if the files are the same, 0 otherwise. + integer -- 1 if the files are the same, 0 otherwise. - This function uses a cache for past comparisons and the results, - with a cache invalidation mechanism relying on stale signatures. - Of course, if 'use_statcache' is true, this mechanism is defeated, - and the cache will never grow stale. + This function uses a cache for past comparisons and the results, + with a cache invalidation mechanism relying on stale signatures. + Of course, if 'use_statcache' is true, this mechanism is defeated, + and the cache will never grow stale. - """ - stat_function = (os.stat, statcache.stat)[use_statcache] - s1, s2 = _sig(stat_function(f1)), _sig(stat_function(f2)) - if s1[0]!=stat.S_IFREG or s2[0]!=stat.S_IFREG: return 0 - if shallow and s1 == s2: return 1 - if s1[1]!=s2[1]: return 0 + """ + stat_function = (os.stat, statcache.stat)[use_statcache] + s1, s2 = _sig(stat_function(f1)), _sig(stat_function(f2)) + if s1[0]!=stat.S_IFREG or s2[0]!=stat.S_IFREG: return 0 + if shallow and s1 == s2: return 1 + if s1[1]!=s2[1]: return 0 - result = _cache.get((f1, f2)) - if result and (s1, s2)==result[:2]: - return result[2] - outcome = _do_cmp(f1, f2) - _cache[f1, f2] = s1, s2, outcome - return outcome + result = _cache.get((f1, f2)) + if result and (s1, s2)==result[:2]: + return result[2] + outcome = _do_cmp(f1, f2) + _cache[f1, f2] = s1, s2, outcome + return outcome def _sig(st): - return (stat.S_IFMT(st[stat.ST_MODE]), - st[stat.ST_SIZE], - st[stat.ST_MTIME]) + return (stat.S_IFMT(st[stat.ST_MODE]), + st[stat.ST_SIZE], + st[stat.ST_MTIME]) def _do_cmp(f1, f2): - bufsize = BUFSIZE - fp1 , fp2 = open(f1, 'rb'), open(f2, 'rb') - while 1: - b1, b2 = fp1.read(bufsize), fp2.read(bufsize) - if b1!=b2: return 0 - if not b1: return 1 - -# Directory comparison class. -# -class dircmp: - """A class that manages the comparison of 2 directories. - - dircmp(a,b,ignore=None,hide=None) - A and B are directories. - IGNORE is a list of names to ignore, - defaults to ['RCS', 'CVS', 'tags']. - HIDE is a list of names to hide, - defaults to [os.curdir, os.pardir]. - - High level usage: - x = dircmp(dir1, dir2) - x.report() -> prints a report on the differences between dir1 and dir2 - or - x.report_partial_closure() -> prints report on differences between dir1 - and dir2, and reports on common immediate subdirectories. - x.report_full_closure() -> like report_partial_closure, - but fully recursive. - - Attributes: - left_list, right_list: The files in dir1 and dir2, - filtered by hide and ignore. - common: a list of names in both dir1 and dir2. - left_only, right_only: names only in dir1, dir2. - common_dirs: subdirectories in both dir1 and dir2. - common_files: files in both dir1 and dir2. - common_funny: names in both dir1 and dir2 where the type differs between - dir1 and dir2, or the name is not stat-able. - same_files: list of identical files. - diff_files: list of filenames which differ. - funny_files: list of files which could not be compared. - subdirs: a dictionary of dircmp objects, keyed by names in common_dirs. - """ - - def __init__(self, a, b, ignore=None, hide=None): # Initialize - self.left = a - self.right = b - if hide is None: - self.hide = [os.curdir, os.pardir] # Names never to be shown - else: - self.hide = hide - if ignore is None: - self.ignore = ['RCS', 'CVS', 'tags'] # Names ignored in comparison - else: - self.ignore = ignore - - def phase0(self): # Compare everything except common subdirectories - self.left_list = _filter(os.listdir(self.left), - self.hide+self.ignore) - self.right_list = _filter(os.listdir(self.right), - self.hide+self.ignore) - self.left_list.sort() - self.right_list.sort() - - __p4_attrs = ('subdirs',) - __p3_attrs = ('same_files', 'diff_files', 'funny_files') - __p2_attrs = ('common_dirs', 'common_files', 'common_funny') - __p1_attrs = ('common', 'left_only', 'right_only') - __p0_attrs = ('left_list', 'right_list') - - def __getattr__(self, attr): - if attr in self.__p4_attrs: - self.phase4() - elif attr in self.__p3_attrs: - self.phase3() - elif attr in self.__p2_attrs: - self.phase2() - elif attr in self.__p1_attrs: - self.phase1() - elif attr in self.__p0_attrs: - self.phase0() - else: - raise AttributeError, attr - return getattr(self, attr) - - def phase1(self): # Compute common names - a_only, b_only = [], [] - common = {} - b = {} - for fnm in self.right_list: - b[fnm] = 1 - for x in self.left_list: - if b.get(x, 0): - common[x] = 1 - else: - a_only.append(x) - for x in self.right_list: - if common.get(x, 0): - pass - else: - b_only.append(x) - self.common = common.keys() - self.left_only = a_only - self.right_only = b_only - - def phase2(self): # Distinguish files, directories, funnies - self.common_dirs = [] - self.common_files = [] - self.common_funny = [] - - for x in self.common: - a_path = os.path.join(self.left, x) - b_path = os.path.join(self.right, x) - - ok = 1 - try: - a_stat = statcache.stat(a_path) - except os.error, why: - # print 'Can\'t stat', a_path, ':', why[1] - ok = 0 - try: - b_stat = statcache.stat(b_path) - except os.error, why: - # print 'Can\'t stat', b_path, ':', why[1] - ok = 0 - - if ok: - a_type = stat.S_IFMT(a_stat[stat.ST_MODE]) - b_type = stat.S_IFMT(b_stat[stat.ST_MODE]) - if a_type <> b_type: - self.common_funny.append(x) - elif stat.S_ISDIR(a_type): - self.common_dirs.append(x) - elif stat.S_ISREG(a_type): - self.common_files.append(x) - else: - self.common_funny.append(x) - else: - self.common_funny.append(x) - - def phase3(self): # Find out differences between common files - xx = cmpfiles(self.left, self.right, self.common_files) - self.same_files, self.diff_files, self.funny_files = xx - - def phase4(self): # Find out differences between common subdirectories - # A new dircmp object is created for each common subdirectory, - # these are stored in a dictionary indexed by filename. - # The hide and ignore properties are inherited from the parent - self.subdirs = {} - for x in self.common_dirs: - a_x = os.path.join(self.left, x) - b_x = os.path.join(self.right, x) - self.subdirs[x] = dircmp(a_x, b_x, self.ignore, self.hide) - - def phase4_closure(self): # Recursively call phase4() on subdirectories - self.phase4() - for x in self.subdirs.keys(): - self.subdirs[x].phase4_closure() - - def report(self): # Print a report on the differences between a and b - # Output format is purposely lousy - print 'diff', self.left, self.right - if self.left_only: - self.left_only.sort() - print 'Only in', self.left, ':', self.left_only - if self.right_only: - self.right_only.sort() - print 'Only in', self.right, ':', self.right_only - if self.same_files: - self.same_files.sort() - print 'Identical files :', self.same_files - if self.diff_files: - self.diff_files.sort() - print 'Differing files :', self.diff_files - if self.funny_files: - self.funny_files.sort() - print 'Trouble with common files :', self.funny_files - if self.common_dirs: - self.common_dirs.sort() - print 'Common subdirectories :', self.common_dirs - if self.common_funny: - self.common_funny.sort() - print 'Common funny cases :', self.common_funny - - def report_partial_closure(self): # Print reports on self and on subdirs - self.report() - for x in self.subdirs.keys(): - print - self.subdirs[x].report() - - def report_full_closure(self): # Report on self and subdirs recursively - self.report() - for x in self.subdirs.keys(): - print - self.subdirs[x].report_full_closure() - - -# Compare common files in two directories. -# Return: -# - files that compare equal -# - files that compare different -# - funny cases (can't stat etc.) -# -def cmpfiles(a, b, common): - """Compare common files in two directories. - - cmpfiles(a,b,common) - A and B are directory names - COMMON is a list of file names - returns a tuple of three lists: - files that compare equal - files that are different - filenames that aren't regular files.""" - - res = ([], [], []) - for x in common: - res[_cmp(os.path.join(a, x), os.path.join(b, x))].append(x) - return res - - -# Compare two files. -# Return: -# 0 for equal -# 1 for different -# 2 for funny cases (can't stat, etc.) -# -def _cmp(a, b): - try: - return not abs(cmp(a, b)) - except os.error: - return 2 - - -# Return a copy with items that occur in skip removed. -# -def _filter(list, skip): - result = [] - for item in list: - if item not in skip: result.append(item) - return result - - -# Demonstration and testing. -# -def demo(): - import sys - import getopt - options, args = getopt.getopt(sys.argv[1:], 'r') - if len(args) <> 2: raise getopt.error, 'need exactly two args' - dd = dircmp(args[0], args[1]) - if ('-r', '') in options: - dd.report_full_closure() - else: - dd.report() - -if __name__ == '__main__': - demo() + bufsize = BUFSIZE + fp1 , fp2 = open(f1, 'rb'), open(f2, 'rb') + while 1: + b1, b2 = fp1.read(bufsize), fp2.read(bufsize) + if b1!=b2: return 0 + if not b1: return 1 diff --git a/Lib/fpformat.py b/Lib/fpformat.py index 523f3ce..31debba 100644 --- a/Lib/fpformat.py +++ b/Lib/fpformat.py @@ -22,120 +22,120 @@ decoder = re.compile(r'^([-+]?)0*(\d*)((?:\.\d*)?)(([eE][-+]?\d+)?)$') # \4 exponent part (empty or begins with 'e' or 'E') try: - class NotANumber(ValueError): - pass + class NotANumber(ValueError): + pass except TypeError: - NotANumber = 'fpformat.NotANumber' + NotANumber = 'fpformat.NotANumber' -# Return (sign, intpart, fraction, expo) or raise an exception: -# sign is '+' or '-' -# intpart is 0 or more digits beginning with a nonzero -# fraction is 0 or more digits -# expo is an integer def extract(s): - res = decoder.match(s) - if res is None: raise NotANumber, s - sign, intpart, fraction, exppart = res.group(1,2,3,4) - if sign == '+': sign = '' - if fraction: fraction = fraction[1:] - if exppart: expo = int(exppart[1:]) - else: expo = 0 - return sign, intpart, fraction, expo + """Return (sign, intpart, fraction, expo) or raise an exception: + sign is '+' or '-' + intpart is 0 or more digits beginning with a nonzero + fraction is 0 or more digits + expo is an integer""" + res = decoder.match(s) + if res is None: raise NotANumber, s + sign, intpart, fraction, exppart = res.group(1,2,3,4) + if sign == '+': sign = '' + if fraction: fraction = fraction[1:] + if exppart: expo = int(exppart[1:]) + else: expo = 0 + return sign, intpart, fraction, expo -# Remove the exponent by changing intpart and fraction def unexpo(intpart, fraction, expo): - if expo > 0: # Move the point left - f = len(fraction) - intpart, fraction = intpart + fraction[:expo], fraction[expo:] - if expo > f: - intpart = intpart + '0'*(expo-f) - elif expo < 0: # Move the point right - i = len(intpart) - intpart, fraction = intpart[:expo], intpart[expo:] + fraction - if expo < -i: - fraction = '0'*(-expo-i) + fraction - return intpart, fraction + """Remove the exponent by changing intpart and fraction.""" + if expo > 0: # Move the point left + f = len(fraction) + intpart, fraction = intpart + fraction[:expo], fraction[expo:] + if expo > f: + intpart = intpart + '0'*(expo-f) + elif expo < 0: # Move the point right + i = len(intpart) + intpart, fraction = intpart[:expo], intpart[expo:] + fraction + if expo < -i: + fraction = '0'*(-expo-i) + fraction + return intpart, fraction -# Round or extend the fraction to size digs def roundfrac(intpart, fraction, digs): - f = len(fraction) - if f <= digs: - return intpart, fraction + '0'*(digs-f) - i = len(intpart) - if i+digs < 0: - return '0'*-digs, '' - total = intpart + fraction - nextdigit = total[i+digs] - if nextdigit >= '5': # Hard case: increment last digit, may have carry! - n = i + digs - 1 - while n >= 0: - if total[n] != '9': break - n = n-1 - else: - total = '0' + total - i = i+1 - n = 0 - total = total[:n] + chr(ord(total[n]) + 1) + '0'*(len(total)-n-1) - intpart, fraction = total[:i], total[i:] - if digs >= 0: - return intpart, fraction[:digs] - else: - return intpart[:digs] + '0'*-digs, '' + """Round or extend the fraction to size digs.""" + f = len(fraction) + if f <= digs: + return intpart, fraction + '0'*(digs-f) + i = len(intpart) + if i+digs < 0: + return '0'*-digs, '' + total = intpart + fraction + nextdigit = total[i+digs] + if nextdigit >= '5': # Hard case: increment last digit, may have carry! + n = i + digs - 1 + while n >= 0: + if total[n] != '9': break + n = n-1 + else: + total = '0' + total + i = i+1 + n = 0 + total = total[:n] + chr(ord(total[n]) + 1) + '0'*(len(total)-n-1) + intpart, fraction = total[:i], total[i:] + if digs >= 0: + return intpart, fraction[:digs] + else: + return intpart[:digs] + '0'*-digs, '' -# Format x as [-]ddd.ddd with 'digs' digits after the point -# and at least one digit before. -# If digs <= 0, the point is suppressed. def fix(x, digs): - if type(x) != type(''): x = `x` - try: - sign, intpart, fraction, expo = extract(x) - except NotANumber: - return x - intpart, fraction = unexpo(intpart, fraction, expo) - intpart, fraction = roundfrac(intpart, fraction, digs) - while intpart and intpart[0] == '0': intpart = intpart[1:] - if intpart == '': intpart = '0' - if digs > 0: return sign + intpart + '.' + fraction - else: return sign + intpart + """Format x as [-]ddd.ddd with 'digs' digits after the point + and at least one digit before. + If digs <= 0, the point is suppressed.""" + if type(x) != type(''): x = `x` + try: + sign, intpart, fraction, expo = extract(x) + except NotANumber: + return x + intpart, fraction = unexpo(intpart, fraction, expo) + intpart, fraction = roundfrac(intpart, fraction, digs) + while intpart and intpart[0] == '0': intpart = intpart[1:] + if intpart == '': intpart = '0' + if digs > 0: return sign + intpart + '.' + fraction + else: return sign + intpart -# Format x as [-]d.dddE[+-]ddd with 'digs' digits after the point -# and exactly one digit before. -# If digs is <= 0, one digit is kept and the point is suppressed. def sci(x, digs): - if type(x) != type(''): x = `x` - sign, intpart, fraction, expo = extract(x) - if not intpart: - while fraction and fraction[0] == '0': - fraction = fraction[1:] - expo = expo - 1 - if fraction: - intpart, fraction = fraction[0], fraction[1:] - expo = expo - 1 - else: - intpart = '0' - else: - expo = expo + len(intpart) - 1 - intpart, fraction = intpart[0], intpart[1:] + fraction - digs = max(0, digs) - intpart, fraction = roundfrac(intpart, fraction, digs) - if len(intpart) > 1: - intpart, fraction, expo = \ - intpart[0], intpart[1:] + fraction[:-1], \ - expo + len(intpart) - 1 - s = sign + intpart - if digs > 0: s = s + '.' + fraction - e = `abs(expo)` - e = '0'*(3-len(e)) + e - if expo < 0: e = '-' + e - else: e = '+' + e - return s + 'e' + e + """Format x as [-]d.dddE[+-]ddd with 'digs' digits after the point + and exactly one digit before. + If digs is <= 0, one digit is kept and the point is suppressed.""" + if type(x) != type(''): x = `x` + sign, intpart, fraction, expo = extract(x) + if not intpart: + while fraction and fraction[0] == '0': + fraction = fraction[1:] + expo = expo - 1 + if fraction: + intpart, fraction = fraction[0], fraction[1:] + expo = expo - 1 + else: + intpart = '0' + else: + expo = expo + len(intpart) - 1 + intpart, fraction = intpart[0], intpart[1:] + fraction + digs = max(0, digs) + intpart, fraction = roundfrac(intpart, fraction, digs) + if len(intpart) > 1: + intpart, fraction, expo = \ + intpart[0], intpart[1:] + fraction[:-1], \ + expo + len(intpart) - 1 + s = sign + intpart + if digs > 0: s = s + '.' + fraction + e = `abs(expo)` + e = '0'*(3-len(e)) + e + if expo < 0: e = '-' + e + else: e = '+' + e + return s + 'e' + e -# Interactive test run def test(): - try: - while 1: - x, digs = input('Enter (x, digs): ') - print x, fix(x, digs), sci(x, digs) - except (EOFError, KeyboardInterrupt): - pass + """Interactive test run.""" + try: + while 1: + x, digs = input('Enter (x, digs): ') + print x, fix(x, digs), sci(x, digs) + except (EOFError, KeyboardInterrupt): + pass diff --git a/Lib/gopherlib.py b/Lib/gopherlib.py index 033e579..d805f15 100644 --- a/Lib/gopherlib.py +++ b/Lib/gopherlib.py @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -# Gopher protocol client interface +"""Gopher protocol client interface.""" import string @@ -29,180 +29,180 @@ A_IMAGE = 'I' A_WHOIS = 'w' A_QUERY = 'q' A_GIF = 'g' -A_HTML = 'h' # HTML file -A_WWW = 'w' # WWW address +A_HTML = 'h' # HTML file +A_WWW = 'w' # WWW address A_PLUS_IMAGE = ':' A_PLUS_MOVIE = ';' A_PLUS_SOUND = '<' -# Function mapping all file types to strings; unknown types become TYPE='x' _names = dir() _type_to_name_map = {} def type_to_name(gtype): - global _type_to_name_map - if _type_to_name_map=={}: - for name in _names: - if name[:2] == 'A_': - _type_to_name_map[eval(name)] = name[2:] - if _type_to_name_map.has_key(gtype): - return _type_to_name_map[gtype] - return 'TYPE=' + `gtype` + """Map all file types to strings; unknown types become TYPE='x'.""" + global _type_to_name_map + if _type_to_name_map=={}: + for name in _names: + if name[:2] == 'A_': + _type_to_name_map[eval(name)] = name[2:] + if _type_to_name_map.has_key(gtype): + return _type_to_name_map[gtype] + return 'TYPE=' + `gtype` # Names for characters and strings CRLF = '\r\n' TAB = '\t' -# Send a selector to a given host and port, return a file with the reply def send_selector(selector, host, port = 0): - import socket - import string - if not port: - i = string.find(host, ':') - if i >= 0: - host, port = host[:i], string.atoi(host[i+1:]) - if not port: - port = DEF_PORT - elif type(port) == type(''): - port = string.atoi(port) - s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM) - s.connect(host, port) - s.send(selector + CRLF) - s.shutdown(1) - return s.makefile('rb') - -# Send a selector and a query string + """Send a selector to a given host and port, return a file with the reply.""" + import socket + import string + if not port: + i = string.find(host, ':') + if i >= 0: + host, port = host[:i], string.atoi(host[i+1:]) + if not port: + port = DEF_PORT + elif type(port) == type(''): + port = string.atoi(port) + s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM) + s.connect(host, port) + s.send(selector + CRLF) + s.shutdown(1) + return s.makefile('rb') + def send_query(selector, query, host, port = 0): - return send_selector(selector + '\t' + query, host, port) + """Send a selector and a query string.""" + return send_selector(selector + '\t' + query, host, port) -# Takes a path as returned by urlparse and returns the appropriate selector def path_to_selector(path): - if path=="/": - return "/" - else: - return path[2:] # Cuts initial slash and data type identifier + """Takes a path as returned by urlparse and returns the appropriate selector.""" + if path=="/": + return "/" + else: + return path[2:] # Cuts initial slash and data type identifier -# Takes a path as returned by urlparse and maps it to a string -# See section 3.4 of RFC 1738 for details def path_to_datatype_name(path): - if path=="/": - # No way to tell, although "INDEX" is likely - return "TYPE='unknown'" - else: - return type_to_name(path[1]) + """Takes a path as returned by urlparse and maps it to a string. + See section 3.4 of RFC 1738 for details.""" + if path=="/": + # No way to tell, although "INDEX" is likely + return "TYPE='unknown'" + else: + return type_to_name(path[1]) # The following functions interpret the data returned by the gopher # server according to the expected type, e.g. textfile or directory -# Get a directory in the form of a list of entries def get_directory(f): - import string - list = [] - while 1: - line = f.readline() - if not line: - print '(Unexpected EOF from server)' - break - if line[-2:] == CRLF: - line = line[:-2] - elif line[-1:] in CRLF: - line = line[:-1] - if line == '.': - break - if not line: - print '(Empty line from server)' - continue - gtype = line[0] - parts = string.splitfields(line[1:], TAB) - if len(parts) < 4: - print '(Bad line from server:', `line`, ')' - continue - if len(parts) > 4: - if parts[4:] != ['+']: - print '(Extra info from server:', - print parts[4:], ')' - else: - parts.append('') - parts.insert(0, gtype) - list.append(parts) - return list - -# Get a text file as a list of lines, with trailing CRLF stripped + """Get a directory in the form of a list of entries.""" + import string + list = [] + while 1: + line = f.readline() + if not line: + print '(Unexpected EOF from server)' + break + if line[-2:] == CRLF: + line = line[:-2] + elif line[-1:] in CRLF: + line = line[:-1] + if line == '.': + break + if not line: + print '(Empty line from server)' + continue + gtype = line[0] + parts = string.splitfields(line[1:], TAB) + if len(parts) < 4: + print '(Bad line from server:', `line`, ')' + continue + if len(parts) > 4: + if parts[4:] != ['+']: + print '(Extra info from server:', + print parts[4:], ')' + else: + parts.append('') + parts.insert(0, gtype) + list.append(parts) + return list + def get_textfile(f): - list = [] - get_alt_textfile(f, list.append) - return list + """Get a text file as a list of lines, with trailing CRLF stripped.""" + list = [] + get_alt_textfile(f, list.append) + return list -# Get a text file and pass each line to a function, with trailing CRLF stripped def get_alt_textfile(f, func): - while 1: - line = f.readline() - if not line: - print '(Unexpected EOF from server)' - break - if line[-2:] == CRLF: - line = line[:-2] - elif line[-1:] in CRLF: - line = line[:-1] - if line == '.': - break - if line[:2] == '..': - line = line[1:] - func(line) - -# Get a binary file as one solid data block + """Get a text file and pass each line to a function, with trailing CRLF stripped.""" + while 1: + line = f.readline() + if not line: + print '(Unexpected EOF from server)' + break + if line[-2:] == CRLF: + line = line[:-2] + elif line[-1:] in CRLF: + line = line[:-1] + if line == '.': + break + if line[:2] == '..': + line = line[1:] + func(line) + def get_binary(f): - data = f.read() - return data + """Get a binary file as one solid data block.""" + data = f.read() + return data -# Get a binary file and pass each block to a function def get_alt_binary(f, func, blocksize): - while 1: - data = f.read(blocksize) - if not data: - break - func(data) + """Get a binary file and pass each block to a function.""" + while 1: + data = f.read(blocksize) + if not data: + break + func(data) -# Trivial test program def test(): - import sys - import getopt - opts, args = getopt.getopt(sys.argv[1:], '') - selector = DEF_SELECTOR - type = selector[0] - host = DEF_HOST - port = DEF_PORT - if args: - host = args[0] - args = args[1:] - if args: - type = args[0] - args = args[1:] - if len(type) > 1: - type, selector = type[0], type - else: - selector = '' - if args: - selector = args[0] - args = args[1:] - query = '' - if args: - query = args[0] - args = args[1:] - if type == A_INDEX: - f = send_query(selector, query, host) - else: - f = send_selector(selector, host) - if type == A_TEXT: - list = get_textfile(f) - for item in list: print item - elif type in (A_MENU, A_INDEX): - list = get_directory(f) - for item in list: print item - else: - data = get_binary(f) - print 'binary data:', len(data), 'bytes:', `data[:100]`[:40] + """Trivial test program.""" + import sys + import getopt + opts, args = getopt.getopt(sys.argv[1:], '') + selector = DEF_SELECTOR + type = selector[0] + host = DEF_HOST + port = DEF_PORT + if args: + host = args[0] + args = args[1:] + if args: + type = args[0] + args = args[1:] + if len(type) > 1: + type, selector = type[0], type + else: + selector = '' + if args: + selector = args[0] + args = args[1:] + query = '' + if args: + query = args[0] + args = args[1:] + if type == A_INDEX: + f = send_query(selector, query, host) + else: + f = send_selector(selector, host) + if type == A_TEXT: + list = get_textfile(f) + for item in list: print item + elif type in (A_MENU, A_INDEX): + list = get_directory(f) + for item in list: print item + else: + data = get_binary(f) + print 'binary data:', len(data), 'bytes:', `data[:100]`[:40] # Run the test when run as script if __name__ == '__main__': - test() + test() diff --git a/Lib/gzip.py b/Lib/gzip.py index 0ba2ac2..ee39169 100644 --- a/Lib/gzip.py +++ b/Lib/gzip.py @@ -1,15 +1,15 @@ +"""This module implements a function that reads and writes a gzipped file. +The user of the file doesn't have to worry about the compression, +but random access is not allowed.""" + +# based on Andrew Kuchling's minigzip.py distributed with the zlib module + import time import string import zlib import struct import __builtin__ -# implements a python function that reads and writes a gzipped file -# the user of the file doesn't have to worry about the compression, -# but random access is not allowed - -# based on Andrew Kuchling's minigzip.py distributed with the zlib module - FTEXT, FHCRC, FEXTRA, FNAME, FCOMMENT = 1, 2, 4, 8, 16 READ, WRITE = 1, 2 diff --git a/Lib/htmlentitydefs.py b/Lib/htmlentitydefs.py index 3edb27e..6682bf2 100644 --- a/Lib/htmlentitydefs.py +++ b/Lib/htmlentitydefs.py @@ -1,3 +1,5 @@ +"""HTML character entity references.""" + entitydefs = { 'AElig': '\306', # latin capital letter AE = latin capital ligature AE, U+00C6 ISOlat1 'Aacute': '\301', # latin capital letter A with acute, U+00C1 ISOlat1 diff --git a/Lib/imghdr.py b/Lib/imghdr.py index 422471f..5a538d5 100644 --- a/Lib/imghdr.py +++ b/Lib/imghdr.py @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -# Recognizing image files based on their first few bytes. +"""Recognize image file formats based on their first few bytes.""" #-------------------------# @@ -6,25 +6,25 @@ #-------------------------# def what(file, h=None): - if h is None: - if type(file) == type(''): - f = open(file, 'rb') - h = f.read(32) - else: - location = file.tell() - h = file.read(32) - file.seek(location) - f = None - else: - f = None - try: - for tf in tests: - res = tf(h, f) - if res: - return res - finally: - if f: f.close() - return None + if h is None: + if type(file) == type(''): + f = open(file, 'rb') + h = f.read(32) + else: + location = file.tell() + h = file.read(32) + file.seek(location) + f = None + else: + f = None + try: + for tf in tests: + res = tf(h, f) + if res: + return res + finally: + if f: f.close() + return None #---------------------------------# @@ -34,81 +34,81 @@ def what(file, h=None): tests = [] def test_rgb(h, f): - # SGI image library - if h[:2] == '\001\332': - return 'rgb' + """SGI image library""" + if h[:2] == '\001\332': + return 'rgb' tests.append(test_rgb) def test_gif(h, f): - # GIF ('87 and '89 variants) - if h[:6] in ('GIF87a', 'GIF89a'): - return 'gif' + """GIF ('87 and '89 variants)""" + if h[:6] in ('GIF87a', 'GIF89a'): + return 'gif' tests.append(test_gif) def test_pbm(h, f): - # PBM (portable bitmap) - if len(h) >= 3 and \ - h[0] == 'P' and h[1] in '14' and h[2] in ' \t\n\r': - return 'pbm' + """PBM (portable bitmap)""" + if len(h) >= 3 and \ + h[0] == 'P' and h[1] in '14' and h[2] in ' \t\n\r': + return 'pbm' tests.append(test_pbm) def test_pgm(h, f): - # PGM (portable graymap) - if len(h) >= 3 and \ - h[0] == 'P' and h[1] in '25' and h[2] in ' \t\n\r': - return 'pgm' + """PGM (portable graymap)""" + if len(h) >= 3 and \ + h[0] == 'P' and h[1] in '25' and h[2] in ' \t\n\r': + return 'pgm' tests.append(test_pgm) def test_ppm(h, f): - # PPM (portable pixmap) - if len(h) >= 3 and \ - h[0] == 'P' and h[1] in '36' and h[2] in ' \t\n\r': - return 'ppm' + """PPM (portable pixmap)""" + if len(h) >= 3 and \ + h[0] == 'P' and h[1] in '36' and h[2] in ' \t\n\r': + return 'ppm' tests.append(test_ppm) def test_tiff(h, f): - # TIFF (can be in Motorola or Intel byte order) - if h[:2] in ('MM', 'II'): - return 'tiff' + """TIFF (can be in Motorola or Intel byte order)""" + if h[:2] in ('MM', 'II'): + return 'tiff' tests.append(test_tiff) def test_rast(h, f): - # Sun raster file - if h[:4] == '\x59\xA6\x6A\x95': - return 'rast' + """Sun raster file""" + if h[:4] == '\x59\xA6\x6A\x95': + return 'rast' tests.append(test_rast) def test_xbm(h, f): - # X bitmap (X10 or X11) - s = '#define ' - if h[:len(s)] == s: - return 'xbm' + """X bitmap (X10 or X11)""" + s = '#define ' + if h[:len(s)] == s: + return 'xbm' tests.append(test_xbm) def test_jpeg(h, f): - # JPEG data in JFIF format - if h[6:10] == 'JFIF': - return 'jpeg' + """JPEG data in JFIF format""" + if h[6:10] == 'JFIF': + return 'jpeg' tests.append(test_jpeg) def test_bmp(h, f): - if h[:2] == 'BM': - return 'bmp' - + if h[:2] == 'BM': + return 'bmp' + tests.append(test_bmp) def test_png(h, f): - if h[:8] == "\211PNG\r\n\032\n": - return 'png' + if h[:8] == "\211PNG\r\n\032\n": + return 'png' tests.append(test_png) @@ -117,37 +117,37 @@ tests.append(test_png) #--------------------# def test(): - import sys - recursive = 0 - if sys.argv[1:] and sys.argv[1] == '-r': - del sys.argv[1:2] - recursive = 1 - try: - if sys.argv[1:]: - testall(sys.argv[1:], recursive, 1) - else: - testall(['.'], recursive, 1) - except KeyboardInterrupt: - sys.stderr.write('\n[Interrupted]\n') - sys.exit(1) + import sys + recursive = 0 + if sys.argv[1:] and sys.argv[1] == '-r': + del sys.argv[1:2] + recursive = 1 + try: + if sys.argv[1:]: + testall(sys.argv[1:], recursive, 1) + else: + testall(['.'], recursive, 1) + except KeyboardInterrupt: + sys.stderr.write('\n[Interrupted]\n') + sys.exit(1) def testall(list, recursive, toplevel): - import sys - import os - for filename in list: - if os.path.isdir(filename): - print filename + '/:', - if recursive or toplevel: - print 'recursing down:' - import glob - names = glob.glob(os.path.join(filename, '*')) - testall(names, recursive, 0) - else: - print '*** directory (use -r) ***' - else: - print filename + ':', - sys.stdout.flush() - try: - print what(filename) - except IOError: - print '*** not found ***' + import sys + import os + for filename in list: + if os.path.isdir(filename): + print filename + '/:', + if recursive or toplevel: + print 'recursing down:' + import glob + names = glob.glob(os.path.join(filename, '*')) + testall(names, recursive, 0) + else: + print '*** directory (use -r) ***' + else: + print filename + ':', + sys.stdout.flush() + try: + print what(filename) + except IOError: + print '*** not found ***' diff --git a/Lib/keyword.py b/Lib/keyword.py index 3cf8a2e..0c3dec2 100755 --- a/Lib/keyword.py +++ b/Lib/keyword.py @@ -1,13 +1,14 @@ #! /usr/bin/env python -# -# Keywords (from "graminit.c") -# -# This file is automatically generated; please don't muck it up! -# -# To update the symbols in this file, 'cd' to the top directory of -# the python source tree after building the interpreter and run: -# -# python Lib/keyword.py + +"""Keywords (from "graminit.c") + +This file is automatically generated; please don't muck it up! + +To update the symbols in this file, 'cd' to the top directory of +the python source tree after building the interpreter and run: + + python Lib/keyword.py +""" kwlist = [ #--start keywords-- diff --git a/Lib/linecache.py b/Lib/linecache.py index 7de373f..bca40b2 100644 --- a/Lib/linecache.py +++ b/Lib/linecache.py @@ -1,18 +1,20 @@ -# Cache lines from files. -# This is intended to read lines from modules imported -- hence if a filename -# is not found, it will look down the module search path for a file by -# that name. +"""Cache lines from files. + +This is intended to read lines from modules imported -- hence if a filename +is not found, it will look down the module search path for a file by +that name. +""" import sys import os from stat import * def getline(filename, lineno): - lines = getlines(filename) - if 1 <= lineno <= len(lines): - return lines[lineno-1] - else: - return '' + lines = getlines(filename) + if 1 <= lineno <= len(lines): + return lines[lineno-1] + else: + return '' # The cache @@ -20,71 +22,71 @@ def getline(filename, lineno): cache = {} # The cache -# Clear the cache entirely - def clearcache(): - global cache - cache = {} + """Clear the cache entirely.""" + global cache + cache = {} -# Get the lines for a file from the cache. -# Update the cache if it doesn't contain an entry for this file already. def getlines(filename): - if cache.has_key(filename): - return cache[filename][2] - else: - return updatecache(filename) + """Get the lines for a file from the cache. + Update the cache if it doesn't contain an entry for this file already.""" + if cache.has_key(filename): + return cache[filename][2] + else: + return updatecache(filename) -# Discard cache entries that are out of date. -# (This is not checked upon each call!) def checkcache(): - for filename in cache.keys(): - size, mtime, lines, fullname = cache[filename] - try: - stat = os.stat(fullname) - except os.error: - del cache[filename] - continue - if size <> stat[ST_SIZE] or mtime <> stat[ST_MTIME]: - del cache[filename] + """Discard cache entries that are out of date. + (This is not checked upon each call!)""" + for filename in cache.keys(): + size, mtime, lines, fullname = cache[filename] + try: + stat = os.stat(fullname) + except os.error: + del cache[filename] + continue + if size <> stat[ST_SIZE] or mtime <> stat[ST_MTIME]: + del cache[filename] -# Update a cache entry and return its list of lines. -# If something's wrong, print a message, discard the cache entry, -# and return an empty list. def updatecache(filename): - if cache.has_key(filename): - del cache[filename] - if not filename or filename[0] + filename[-1] == '<>': - return [] - fullname = filename - try: - stat = os.stat(fullname) - except os.error, msg: - # Try looking through the module search path - basename = os.path.split(filename)[1] - for dirname in sys.path: - fullname = os.path.join(dirname, basename) - try: - stat = os.stat(fullname) - break - except os.error: - pass - else: - # No luck -## print '*** Cannot stat', filename, ':', msg - return [] - try: - fp = open(fullname, 'r') - lines = fp.readlines() - fp.close() - except IOError, msg: -## print '*** Cannot open', fullname, ':', msg - return [] - size, mtime = stat[ST_SIZE], stat[ST_MTIME] - cache[filename] = size, mtime, lines, fullname - return lines + """Update a cache entry and return its list of lines. + If something's wrong, print a message, discard the cache entry, + and return an empty list.""" + + if cache.has_key(filename): + del cache[filename] + if not filename or filename[0] + filename[-1] == '<>': + return [] + fullname = filename + try: + stat = os.stat(fullname) + except os.error, msg: + # Try looking through the module search path + basename = os.path.split(filename)[1] + for dirname in sys.path: + fullname = os.path.join(dirname, basename) + try: + stat = os.stat(fullname) + break + except os.error: + pass + else: + # No luck +## print '*** Cannot stat', filename, ':', msg + return [] + try: + fp = open(fullname, 'r') + lines = fp.readlines() + fp.close() + except IOError, msg: +## print '*** Cannot open', fullname, ':', msg + return [] + size, mtime = stat[ST_SIZE], stat[ST_MTIME] + cache[filename] = size, mtime, lines, fullname + return lines diff --git a/Lib/macpath.py b/Lib/macpath.py index bd016d8..3e36f79 100644 --- a/Lib/macpath.py +++ b/Lib/macpath.py @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -# module 'macpath' -- pathname (or -related) operations for the Macintosh +"""Pathname and path-related operations for the Macintosh.""" import string import os @@ -10,77 +10,77 @@ from stat import * normcase = string.lower -# Return true if a path is absolute. -# On the Mac, relative paths begin with a colon, -# but as a special case, paths with no colons at all are also relative. -# Anything else is absolute (the string up to the first colon is the -# volume name). - def isabs(s): - return ':' in s and s[0] <> ':' + """Return true if a path is absolute. + On the Mac, relative paths begin with a colon, + but as a special case, paths with no colons at all are also relative. + Anything else is absolute (the string up to the first colon is the + volume name).""" + + return ':' in s and s[0] <> ':' def join(s, *p): - path = s - for t in p: - if (not s) or isabs(t): - path = t - continue - if t[:1] == ':': - t = t[1:] - if ':' not in path: - path = ':' + path - if path[-1:] <> ':': - path = path + ':' - path = path + t - return path - - -# Split a pathname in two parts: the directory leading up to the final bit, -# and the basename (the filename, without colons, in that directory). -# The result (s, t) is such that join(s, t) yields the original argument. + path = s + for t in p: + if (not s) or isabs(t): + path = t + continue + if t[:1] == ':': + t = t[1:] + if ':' not in path: + path = ':' + path + if path[-1:] <> ':': + path = path + ':' + path = path + t + return path + def split(s): - if ':' not in s: return '', s - colon = 0 - for i in range(len(s)): - if s[i] == ':': colon = i+1 - path, file = s[:colon-1], s[colon:] - if path and not ':' in path: - path = path + ':' - return path, file + """Split a pathname into two parts: the directory leading up to the final + bit, and the basename (the filename, without colons, in that directory). + The result (s, t) is such that join(s, t) yields the original argument.""" + if ':' not in s: return '', s + colon = 0 + for i in range(len(s)): + if s[i] == ':': colon = i+1 + path, file = s[:colon-1], s[colon:] + if path and not ':' in path: + path = path + ':' + return path, file -# Split a path in root and extension. -# The extension is everything starting at the last dot in the last -# pathname component; the root is everything before that. -# It is always true that root + ext == p. def splitext(p): - root, ext = '', '' - for c in p: - if c == ':': - root, ext = root + ext + c, '' - elif c == '.': - if ext: - root, ext = root + ext, c - else: - ext = c - elif ext: - ext = ext + c - else: - root = root + c - return root, ext - - -# Split a pathname into a drive specification and the rest of the -# path. Useful on DOS/Windows/NT; on the Mac, the drive is always -# empty (don't use the volume name -- it doesn't have the same -# syntactic and semantic oddities as DOS drive letters, such as there -# being a separate current directory per drive). + """Split a path into root and extension. + The extension is everything starting at the last dot in the last + pathname component; the root is everything before that. + It is always true that root + ext == p.""" + + root, ext = '', '' + for c in p: + if c == ':': + root, ext = root + ext + c, '' + elif c == '.': + if ext: + root, ext = root + ext, c + else: + ext = c + elif ext: + ext = ext + c + else: + root = root + c + return root, ext + def splitdrive(p): - return '', p + """Split a pathname into a drive specification and the rest of the + path. Useful on DOS/Windows/NT; on the Mac, the drive is always + empty (don't use the volume name -- it doesn't have the same + syntactic and semantic oddities as DOS drive letters, such as there + being a separate current directory per drive).""" + + return '', p # Short interfaces to split() @@ -89,14 +89,14 @@ def dirname(s): return split(s)[0] def basename(s): return split(s)[1] -# Return true if the pathname refers to an existing directory. - def isdir(s): - try: - st = os.stat(s) - except os.error: - return 0 - return S_ISDIR(st[ST_MODE]) + """Return true if the pathname refers to an existing directory.""" + + try: + st = os.stat(s) + except os.error: + return 0 + return S_ISDIR(st[ST_MODE]) # Get size, mtime, atime of files. @@ -117,105 +117,103 @@ def getatime(filename): return st[ST_MTIME] -# Return true if the pathname refers to a symbolic link. -# (Always false on the Mac, until we understand Aliases.) - def islink(s): - return 0 + """Return true if the pathname refers to a symbolic link. + Always false on the Mac, until we understand Aliases.)""" + return 0 -# Return true if the pathname refers to an existing regular file. def isfile(s): - try: - st = os.stat(s) - except os.error: - return 0 - return S_ISREG(st[ST_MODE]) + """Return true if the pathname refers to an existing regular file.""" + try: + st = os.stat(s) + except os.error: + return 0 + return S_ISREG(st[ST_MODE]) -# Return true if the pathname refers to an existing file or directory. def exists(s): - try: - st = os.stat(s) - except os.error: - return 0 - return 1 - -# -# dummy expandvars to retain interface-compatability with other -# operating systems. + """Return true if the pathname refers to an existing file or directory.""" + + try: + st = os.stat(s) + except os.error: + return 0 + return 1 + + def expandvars(path): - return path + """Dummy to retain interface-compatibility with other operating systems.""" + return path -# -# dummy expanduser to retain interface-compatability with other -# operating systems. -def expanduser(path): - return path -# Normalize a pathname: get rid of '::' sequences by backing up, -# e.g., 'foo:bar::bletch' becomes 'foo:bletch'. -# Raise the exception norm_error below if backing up is impossible, -# e.g., for '::foo'. -# XXX The Unix version doesn't raise an exception but simply -# returns an unnormalized path. Should do so here too. +def expanduser(path): + """Dummy to retain interface-compatibility with other operating systems.""" + return path norm_error = 'macpath.norm_error: path cannot be normalized' def normpath(s): - import string - if ':' not in s: - return ':' + s - f = string.splitfields(s, ':') - pre = [] - post = [] - if not f[0]: - pre = f[:1] - f = f[1:] - if not f[len(f)-1]: - post = f[-1:] - f = f[:-1] - res = [] - for seg in f: - if seg: - res.append(seg) - else: - if not res: raise norm_error, 'path starts with ::' - del res[len(res)-1] - if not (pre or res): - raise norm_error, 'path starts with volume::' - if pre: res = pre + res - if post: res = res + post - s = res[0] - for seg in res[1:]: - s = s + ':' + seg - return s - - -# Directory tree walk. -# For each directory under top (including top itself), -# func(arg, dirname, filenames) is called, where -# dirname is the name of the directory and filenames is the list -# of files (and subdirectories etc.) in the directory. -# The func may modify the filenames list, to implement a filter, -# or to impose a different order of visiting. + """Normalize a pathname: get rid of '::' sequences by backing up, + e.g., 'foo:bar::bletch' becomes 'foo:bletch'. + Raise the exception norm_error below if backing up is impossible, + e.g., for '::foo'.""" + # XXX The Unix version doesn't raise an exception but simply + # returns an unnormalized path. Should do so here too. + + import string + if ':' not in s: + return ':' + s + f = string.splitfields(s, ':') + pre = [] + post = [] + if not f[0]: + pre = f[:1] + f = f[1:] + if not f[len(f)-1]: + post = f[-1:] + f = f[:-1] + res = [] + for seg in f: + if seg: + res.append(seg) + else: + if not res: raise norm_error, 'path starts with ::' + del res[len(res)-1] + if not (pre or res): + raise norm_error, 'path starts with volume::' + if pre: res = pre + res + if post: res = res + post + s = res[0] + for seg in res[1:]: + s = s + ':' + seg + return s + def walk(top, func, arg): - try: - names = os.listdir(top) - except os.error: - return - func(arg, top, names) - for name in names: - name = join(top, name) - if isdir(name): - walk(name, func, arg) - - -# Return an absolute path. + """Directory tree walk. + For each directory under top (including top itself), + func(arg, dirname, filenames) is called, where + dirname is the name of the directory and filenames is the list + of files (and subdirectories etc.) in the directory. + The func may modify the filenames list, to implement a filter, + or to impose a different order of visiting.""" + + try: + names = os.listdir(top) + except os.error: + return + func(arg, top, names) + for name in names: + name = join(top, name) + if isdir(name): + walk(name, func, arg) + + def abspath(path): + """Return an absolute path.""" if not isabs(path): path = join(os.getcwd(), path) return normpath(path) diff --git a/Lib/mailcap.py b/Lib/mailcap.py index e19a746..636f2dd 100644 --- a/Lib/mailcap.py +++ b/Lib/mailcap.py @@ -9,8 +9,11 @@ import string def getcaps(): """Return a dictionary containing the mailcap database. - The dictionary maps a MIME type (in all lowercase, - e.g. 'text/plain') to a list of corresponding mailcap entries. + The dictionary maps a MIME type (in all lowercase, e.g. 'text/plain') + to a list of dictionaries corresponding to mailcap entries. The list + collects all the entries for that MIME type from all available mailcap + files. Each dictionary contains key-value pairs for that MIME type, + where the viewing command is stored with the key "view". """ caps = {} @@ -48,6 +51,14 @@ def listmailcapfiles(): # Part 2: the parser. def readmailcapfile(fp): + """Read a mailcap file and return a dictionary keyed by MIME type. + + Each MIME type is mapped to an entry consisting of a list of + dictionaries; the list will contain more than one such dictionary + if a given MIME type appears more than once in the mailcap file. + Each dictionary contains key-value pairs for that MIME type, where + the viewing command is stored with the key "view". + """ caps = {} while 1: line = fp.readline() @@ -78,6 +89,11 @@ def readmailcapfile(fp): return caps def parseline(line): + """Parse one entry in a mailcap file and return a dictionary. + + The viewing command is stored as the value with the key "view", + and the rest of the fields produce key-value pairs in the dict. + """ fields = [] i, n = 0, len(line) while i < n: @@ -104,6 +120,7 @@ def parseline(line): return key, fields def parsefield(line, i, n): + """Separate one key-value pair in a mailcap entry.""" start = i while i < n: c = line[i] diff --git a/Lib/mhlib.py b/Lib/mhlib.py index 23e936d..f7c39fa 100644 --- a/Lib/mhlib.py +++ b/Lib/mhlib.py @@ -1,57 +1,58 @@ -# MH interface -- purely object-oriented (well, almost) -# -# Executive summary: -# -# import mhlib -# -# mh = mhlib.MH() # use default mailbox directory and profile -# mh = mhlib.MH(mailbox) # override mailbox location (default from profile) -# mh = mhlib.MH(mailbox, profile) # override mailbox and profile -# -# mh.error(format, ...) # print error message -- can be overridden -# s = mh.getprofile(key) # profile entry (None if not set) -# path = mh.getpath() # mailbox pathname -# name = mh.getcontext() # name of current folder -# mh.setcontext(name) # set name of current folder -# -# list = mh.listfolders() # names of top-level folders -# list = mh.listallfolders() # names of all folders, including subfolders -# list = mh.listsubfolders(name) # direct subfolders of given folder -# list = mh.listallsubfolders(name) # all subfolders of given folder -# -# mh.makefolder(name) # create new folder -# mh.deletefolder(name) # delete folder -- must have no subfolders -# -# f = mh.openfolder(name) # new open folder object -# -# f.error(format, ...) # same as mh.error(format, ...) -# path = f.getfullname() # folder's full pathname -# path = f.getsequencesfilename() # full pathname of folder's sequences file -# path = f.getmessagefilename(n) # full pathname of message n in folder -# -# list = f.listmessages() # list of messages in folder (as numbers) -# n = f.getcurrent() # get current message -# f.setcurrent(n) # set current message -# list = f.parsesequence(seq) # parse msgs syntax into list of messages -# n = f.getlast() # get last message (0 if no messagse) -# f.setlast(n) # set last message (internal use only) -# -# dict = f.getsequences() # dictionary of sequences in folder {name: list} -# f.putsequences(dict) # write sequences back to folder -# -# f.createmessage(n, fp) # add message from file f as number n -# f.removemessages(list) # remove messages in list from folder -# f.refilemessages(list, tofolder) # move messages in list to other folder -# f.movemessage(n, tofolder, ton) # move one message to a given destination -# f.copymessage(n, tofolder, ton) # copy one message to a given destination -# -# m = f.openmessage(n) # new open message object (costs a file descriptor) -# m is a derived class of mimetools.Message(rfc822.Message), with: -# s = m.getheadertext() # text of message's headers -# s = m.getheadertext(pred) # text of message's headers, filtered by pred -# s = m.getbodytext() # text of message's body, decoded -# s = m.getbodytext(0) # text of message's body, not decoded -# +"""MH interface -- purely object-oriented (well, almost) + +Executive summary: + +import mhlib + +mh = mhlib.MH() # use default mailbox directory and profile +mh = mhlib.MH(mailbox) # override mailbox location (default from profile) +mh = mhlib.MH(mailbox, profile) # override mailbox and profile + +mh.error(format, ...) # print error message -- can be overridden +s = mh.getprofile(key) # profile entry (None if not set) +path = mh.getpath() # mailbox pathname +name = mh.getcontext() # name of current folder +mh.setcontext(name) # set name of current folder + +list = mh.listfolders() # names of top-level folders +list = mh.listallfolders() # names of all folders, including subfolders +list = mh.listsubfolders(name) # direct subfolders of given folder +list = mh.listallsubfolders(name) # all subfolders of given folder + +mh.makefolder(name) # create new folder +mh.deletefolder(name) # delete folder -- must have no subfolders + +f = mh.openfolder(name) # new open folder object + +f.error(format, ...) # same as mh.error(format, ...) +path = f.getfullname() # folder's full pathname +path = f.getsequencesfilename() # full pathname of folder's sequences file +path = f.getmessagefilename(n) # full pathname of message n in folder + +list = f.listmessages() # list of messages in folder (as numbers) +n = f.getcurrent() # get current message +f.setcurrent(n) # set current message +list = f.parsesequence(seq) # parse msgs syntax into list of messages +n = f.getlast() # get last message (0 if no messagse) +f.setlast(n) # set last message (internal use only) + +dict = f.getsequences() # dictionary of sequences in folder {name: list} +f.putsequences(dict) # write sequences back to folder + +f.createmessage(n, fp) # add message from file f as number n +f.removemessages(list) # remove messages in list from folder +f.refilemessages(list, tofolder) # move messages in list to other folder +f.movemessage(n, tofolder, ton) # move one message to a given destination +f.copymessage(n, tofolder, ton) # copy one message to a given destination + +m = f.openmessage(n) # new open message object (costs a file descriptor) +m is a derived class of mimetools.Message(rfc822.Message), with: +s = m.getheadertext() # text of message's headers +s = m.getheadertext(pred) # text of message's headers, filtered by pred +s = m.getbodytext() # text of message's body, decoded +s = m.getbodytext(0) # text of message's body, not decoded +""" + # XXX To do, functionality: # - annotate messages # - send messages @@ -87,16 +88,15 @@ from bisect import bisect Error = 'mhlib.Error' -# Class representing a particular collection of folders. -# Optional constructor arguments are the pathname for the directory -# containing the collection, and the MH profile to use. -# If either is omitted or empty a default is used; the default -# directory is taken from the MH profile if it is specified there. - class MH: + """Class representing a particular collection of folders. + Optional constructor arguments are the pathname for the directory + containing the collection, and the MH profile to use. + If either is omitted or empty a default is used; the default + directory is taken from the MH profile if it is specified there.""" - # Constructor def __init__(self, path = None, profile = None): + """Constructor.""" if not profile: profile = MH_PROFILE self.profile = os.path.expanduser(profile) if not path: path = self.getprofile('Path') @@ -107,38 +107,38 @@ class MH: if not os.path.isdir(path): raise Error, 'MH() path not found' self.path = path - # String representation def __repr__(self): + """String representation.""" return 'MH(%s, %s)' % (`self.path`, `self.profile`) - # Routine to print an error. May be overridden by a derived class def error(self, msg, *args): + """Routine to print an error. May be overridden by a derived class.""" sys.stderr.write('MH error: %s\n' % (msg % args)) - # Return a profile entry, None if not found def getprofile(self, key): + """Return a profile entry, None if not found.""" return pickline(self.profile, key) - # Return the path (the name of the collection's directory) def getpath(self): + """Return the path (the name of the collection's directory).""" return self.path - # Return the name of the current folder def getcontext(self): + """Return the name of the current folder.""" context = pickline(os.path.join(self.getpath(), 'context'), 'Current-Folder') if not context: context = 'inbox' return context - # Set the name of the current folder def setcontext(self, context): + """Set the name of the current folder.""" fn = os.path.join(self.getpath(), 'context') f = open(fn, "w") f.write("Current-Folder: %s\n" % context) f.close() - # Return the names of the top-level folders def listfolders(self): + """Return the names of the top-level folders.""" folders = [] path = self.getpath() for name in os.listdir(path): @@ -148,9 +148,9 @@ class MH: folders.sort() return folders - # Return the names of the subfolders in a given folder - # (prefixed with the given folder name) def listsubfolders(self, name): + """Return the names of the subfolders in a given folder + (prefixed with the given folder name).""" fullname = os.path.join(self.path, name) # Get the link count so we can avoid listing folders # that have no subfolders. @@ -173,12 +173,12 @@ class MH: subfolders.sort() return subfolders - # Return the names of all folders, including subfolders, recursively def listallfolders(self): + """Return the names of all folders and subfolders, recursively.""" return self.listallsubfolders('') - # Return the names of subfolders in a given folder, recursively def listallsubfolders(self, name): + """Return the names of subfolders in a given folder, recursively.""" fullname = os.path.join(self.path, name) # Get the link count so we can avoid listing folders # that have no subfolders. @@ -206,13 +206,12 @@ class MH: subfolders.sort() return subfolders - # Return a new Folder object for the named folder def openfolder(self, name): + """Return a new Folder object for the named folder.""" return Folder(self, name) - # Create a new folder. This raises os.error if the folder - # cannot be created def makefolder(self, name): + """Create a new folder (or raise os.error if it cannot be created).""" protect = pickline(self.profile, 'Folder-Protect') if protect and isnumeric(protect): mode = string.atoi(protect, 8) @@ -220,10 +219,9 @@ class MH: mode = FOLDER_PROTECT os.mkdir(os.path.join(self.getpath(), name), mode) - # Delete a folder. This removes files in the folder but not - # subdirectories. If deleting the folder itself fails it - # raises os.error def deletefolder(self, name): + """Delete a folder. This removes files in the folder but not + subdirectories. Raise os.error if deleting the folder itself fails.""" fullname = os.path.join(self.getpath(), name) for subname in os.listdir(fullname): fullsubname = os.path.join(fullname, subname) @@ -235,52 +233,51 @@ class MH: os.rmdir(fullname) -# Class representing a particular folder - numericprog = re.compile('^[1-9][0-9]*$') def isnumeric(str): return numericprog.match(str) is not None class Folder: + """Class representing a particular folder.""" - # Constructor def __init__(self, mh, name): + """Constructor.""" self.mh = mh self.name = name if not os.path.isdir(self.getfullname()): raise Error, 'no folder %s' % name - # String representation def __repr__(self): + """String representation.""" return 'Folder(%s, %s)' % (`self.mh`, `self.name`) - # Error message handler def error(self, *args): + """Error message handler.""" apply(self.mh.error, args) - # Return the full pathname of the folder def getfullname(self): + """Return the full pathname of the folder.""" return os.path.join(self.mh.path, self.name) - # Return the full pathname of the folder's sequences file def getsequencesfilename(self): + """Return the full pathname of the folder's sequences file.""" return os.path.join(self.getfullname(), MH_SEQUENCES) - # Return the full pathname of a message in the folder def getmessagefilename(self, n): + """Return the full pathname of a message in the folder.""" return os.path.join(self.getfullname(), str(n)) - # Return list of direct subfolders def listsubfolders(self): + """Return list of direct subfolders.""" return self.mh.listsubfolders(self.name) - # Return list of all subfolders def listallsubfolders(self): + """Return list of all subfolders.""" return self.mh.listallsubfolders(self.name) - # Return the list of messages currently present in the folder. - # As a side effect, set self.last to the last message (or 0) def listmessages(self): + """Return the list of messages currently present in the folder. + As a side effect, set self.last to the last message (or 0).""" messages = [] match = numericprog.match append = messages.append @@ -295,8 +292,8 @@ class Folder: self.last = 0 return messages - # Return the set of sequences for the folder def getsequences(self): + """Return the set of sequences for the folder.""" sequences = {} fullname = self.getsequencesfilename() try: @@ -315,8 +312,8 @@ class Folder: sequences[key] = value return sequences - # Write the set of sequences back to the folder def putsequences(self, sequences): + """Write the set of sequences back to the folder.""" fullname = self.getsequencesfilename() f = None for key in sequences.keys(): @@ -332,23 +329,23 @@ class Folder: else: f.close() - # Return the current message. Raise KeyError when there is none def getcurrent(self): + """Return the current message. Raise KeyError when there is none.""" seqs = self.getsequences() try: return max(seqs['cur']) except (ValueError, KeyError): raise Error, "no cur message" - # Set the current message def setcurrent(self, n): + """Set the current message.""" updateline(self.getsequencesfilename(), 'cur', str(n), 0) - # Parse an MH sequence specification into a message list. - # Attempt to mimic mh-sequence(5) as close as possible. - # Also attempt to mimic observed behavior regarding which - # conditions cause which error messages def parsesequence(self, seq): + """Parse an MH sequence specification into a message list. + Attempt to mimic mh-sequence(5) as close as possible. + Also attempt to mimic observed behavior regarding which + conditions cause which error messages.""" # XXX Still not complete (see mh-format(5)). # Missing are: # - 'prev', 'next' as count @@ -428,8 +425,8 @@ class Folder: else: return [n] - # Internal: parse a message number (or cur, first, etc.) def _parseindex(self, seq, all): + """Internal: parse a message number (or cur, first, etc.).""" if isnumeric(seq): try: return string.atoi(seq) @@ -459,12 +456,12 @@ class Folder: raise Error, "no prev message" raise Error, None - # Open a message -- returns a Message object def openmessage(self, n): + """Open a message -- returns a Message object.""" return Message(self, n) - # Remove one or more messages -- may raise os.error def removemessages(self, list): + """Remove one or more messages -- may raise os.error.""" errors = [] deleted = [] for n in list: @@ -488,9 +485,9 @@ class Folder: else: raise os.error, ('multiple errors:', errors) - # Refile one or more messages -- may raise os.error. - # 'tofolder' is an open folder object def refilemessages(self, list, tofolder, keepsequences=0): + """Refile one or more messages -- may raise os.error. + 'tofolder' is an open folder object.""" errors = [] refiled = {} for n in list: @@ -523,8 +520,8 @@ class Folder: else: raise os.error, ('multiple errors:', errors) - # Helper for refilemessages() to copy sequences def _copysequences(self, fromfolder, refileditems): + """Helper for refilemessages() to copy sequences.""" fromsequences = fromfolder.getsequences() tosequences = self.getsequences() changed = 0 @@ -544,9 +541,9 @@ class Folder: if changed: self.putsequences(tosequences) - # Move one message over a specific destination message, - # which may or may not already exist. def movemessage(self, n, tofolder, ton): + """Move one message over a specific destination message, + which may or may not already exist.""" path = self.getmessagefilename(n) # Open it to check that it exists f = open(path) @@ -576,9 +573,9 @@ class Folder: os.unlink(path) self.removefromallsequences([n]) - # Copy one message over a specific destination message, - # which may or may not already exist. def copymessage(self, n, tofolder, ton): + """Copy one message over a specific destination message, + which may or may not already exist.""" path = self.getmessagefilename(n) # Open it to check that it exists f = open(path) @@ -602,8 +599,8 @@ class Folder: except os.error: pass - # Create a message, with text from the open file txt. def createmessage(self, n, txt): + """Create a message, with text from the open file txt.""" path = self.getmessagefilename(n) backuppath = self.getmessagefilename(',%d' % n) try: @@ -628,9 +625,9 @@ class Folder: except os.error: pass - # Remove one or more messages from all sequeuces (including last) - # -- but not from 'cur'!!! def removefromallsequences(self, list): + """Remove one or more messages from all sequeuces (including last) + -- but not from 'cur'!!!""" if hasattr(self, 'last') and self.last in list: del self.last sequences = self.getsequences() @@ -647,14 +644,14 @@ class Folder: if changed: self.putsequences(sequences) - # Return the last message number def getlast(self): + """Return the last message number.""" if not hasattr(self, 'last'): messages = self.listmessages() return self.last - # Set the last message number def setlast(self, last): + """Set the last message number.""" if last is None: if hasattr(self, 'last'): del self.last @@ -663,8 +660,8 @@ class Folder: class Message(mimetools.Message): - # Constructor def __init__(self, f, n, fp = None): + """Constructor.""" self.folder = f self.number = n if not fp: @@ -672,15 +669,15 @@ class Message(mimetools.Message): fp = open(path, 'r') mimetools.Message.__init__(self, fp) - # String representation def __repr__(self): + """String representation.""" return 'Message(%s, %s)' % (repr(self.folder), self.number) - # Return the message's header text as a string. If an - # argument is specified, it is used as a filter predicate to - # decide which headers to return (its argument is the header - # name converted to lower case). def getheadertext(self, pred = None): + """Return the message's header text as a string. If an + argument is specified, it is used as a filter predicate to + decide which headers to return (its argument is the header + name converted to lower case).""" if not pred: return string.joinfields(self.headers, '') headers = [] @@ -693,11 +690,11 @@ class Message(mimetools.Message): if hit: headers.append(line) return string.joinfields(headers, '') - # Return the message's body text as string. This undoes a - # Content-Transfer-Encoding, but does not interpret other MIME - # features (e.g. multipart messages). To suppress to - # decoding, pass a 0 as argument def getbodytext(self, decode = 1): + """Return the message's body text as string. This undoes a + Content-Transfer-Encoding, but does not interpret other MIME + features (e.g. multipart messages). To suppress decoding, + pass 0 as an argument.""" self.fp.seek(self.startofbody) encoding = self.getencoding() if not decode or encoding in ('', '7bit', '8bit', 'binary'): @@ -707,10 +704,10 @@ class Message(mimetools.Message): mimetools.decode(self.fp, output, encoding) return output.getvalue() - # Only for multipart messages: return the message's body as a - # list of SubMessage objects. Each submessage object behaves - # (almost) as a Message object. def getbodyparts(self): + """Only for multipart messages: return the message's body as a + list of SubMessage objects. Each submessage object behaves + (almost) as a Message object.""" if self.getmaintype() != 'multipart': raise Error, 'Content-Type is not multipart/*' bdry = self.getparam('boundary') @@ -727,8 +724,8 @@ class Message(mimetools.Message): mf.pop() return parts - # Return body, either a string or a list of messages def getbody(self): + """Return body, either a string or a list of messages.""" if self.getmaintype() == 'multipart': return self.getbodyparts() else: @@ -737,8 +734,8 @@ class Message(mimetools.Message): class SubMessage(Message): - # Constructor def __init__(self, f, n, fp): + """Constructor.""" Message.__init__(self, f, n, fp) if self.getmaintype() == 'multipart': self.body = Message.getbodyparts(self) @@ -747,8 +744,8 @@ class SubMessage(Message): self.bodyencoded = Message.getbodytext(self, decode=0) # XXX If this is big, should remember file pointers - # String representation def __repr__(self): + """String representation.""" f, n, fp = self.folder, self.number, self.fp return 'SubMessage(%s, %s, %s)' % (f, n, fp) @@ -766,28 +763,28 @@ class SubMessage(Message): return self.body -# Class implementing sets of integers. -# -# This is an efficient representation for sets consisting of several -# continuous ranges, e.g. 1-100,200-400,402-1000 is represented -# internally as a list of three pairs: [(1,100), (200,400), -# (402,1000)]. The internal representation is always kept normalized. -# -# The constructor has up to three arguments: -# - the string used to initialize the set (default ''), -# - the separator between ranges (default ',') -# - the separator between begin and end of a range (default '-') -# The separators must be strings (not regexprs) and should be different. -# -# The tostring() function yields a string that can be passed to another -# IntSet constructor; __repr__() is a valid IntSet constructor itself. -# -# XXX The default begin/end separator means that negative numbers are -# not supported very well. -# -# XXX There are currently no operations to remove set elements. - class IntSet: + """Class implementing sets of integers. + + This is an efficient representation for sets consisting of several + continuous ranges, e.g. 1-100,200-400,402-1000 is represented + internally as a list of three pairs: [(1,100), (200,400), + (402,1000)]. The internal representation is always kept normalized. + + The constructor has up to three arguments: + - the string used to initialize the set (default ''), + - the separator between ranges (default ',') + - the separator between begin and end of a range (default '-') + The separators must be strings (not regexprs) and should be different. + + The tostring() function yields a string that can be passed to another + IntSet constructor; __repr__() is a valid IntSet constructor itself. + """ + + # XXX The default begin/end separator means that negative numbers are + # not supported very well. + # + # XXX There are currently no operations to remove set elements. def __init__(self, data = None, sep = ',', rng = '-'): self.pairs = [] diff --git a/Lib/mimetools.py b/Lib/mimetools.py index fc72c79..b519c54 100644 --- a/Lib/mimetools.py +++ b/Lib/mimetools.py @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -# Various tools used by MIME-reading or MIME-writing programs. +"""Various tools used by MIME-reading or MIME-writing programs.""" import os @@ -7,10 +7,9 @@ import string import tempfile -# A derived class of rfc822.Message that knows about MIME headers and -# contains some hooks for decoding encoded and multipart messages. - class Message(rfc822.Message): + """A derived class of rfc822.Message that knows about MIME headers and + contains some hooks for decoding encoded and multipart messages.""" def __init__(self, fp, seekable = 1): rfc822.Message.__init__(self, fp, seekable) @@ -96,17 +95,17 @@ class Message(rfc822.Message): # ----------------- -# Return a random string usable as a multipart boundary. -# The method used is so that it is *very* unlikely that the same -# string of characters will every occur again in the Universe, -# so the caller needn't check the data it is packing for the -# occurrence of the boundary. -# -# The boundary contains dots so you have to quote it in the header. - _prefix = None def choose_boundary(): + """Return a random string usable as a multipart boundary. + The method used is so that it is *very* unlikely that the same + string of characters will every occur again in the Universe, + so the caller needn't check the data it is packing for the + occurrence of the boundary. + + The boundary contains dots so you have to quote it in the header.""" + global _prefix import time import random @@ -131,6 +130,7 @@ def choose_boundary(): # Subroutines for decoding some common content-transfer-types def decode(input, output, encoding): + """Decode common content-transfer-encodings (base64, quopri, uuencode).""" if encoding == 'base64': import base64 return base64.decode(input, output) @@ -147,6 +147,7 @@ def decode(input, output, encoding): 'unknown Content-Transfer-Encoding: %s' % encoding def encode(input, output, encoding): + """Encode common content-transfer-encodings (base64, quopri, uuencode).""" if encoding == 'base64': import base64 return base64.encode(input, output) diff --git a/Lib/mimify.py b/Lib/mimify.py index cb967cd..354cdb7 100755 --- a/Lib/mimify.py +++ b/Lib/mimify.py @@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ '''Mimification and unmimification of mail messages. -decode quoted-printable parts of a mail message or encode using +Decode quoted-printable parts of a mail message or encode using quoted-printable. Usage: @@ -39,9 +39,8 @@ mime_head = re.compile('=\\?iso-8859-1\\?q\\?([^? \t\n]+)\\?=', re.I) repl = re.compile('^subject:\\s+re: ', re.I) class File: - '''A simple fake file object that knows about limited - read-ahead and boundaries. - The only supported method is readline().''' + """A simple fake file object that knows about limited read-ahead and + boundaries. The only supported method is readline().""" def __init__(self, file, boundary): self.file = file @@ -87,7 +86,7 @@ class HeaderFile: self.peek = None def mime_decode(line): - '''Decode a single line of quoted-printable text to 8bit.''' + """Decode a single line of quoted-printable text to 8bit.""" newline = '' pos = 0 while 1: @@ -100,7 +99,7 @@ def mime_decode(line): return newline + line[pos:] def mime_decode_header(line): - '''Decode a header line to 8bit.''' + """Decode a header line to 8bit.""" newline = '' pos = 0 while 1: @@ -115,7 +114,7 @@ def mime_decode_header(line): return newline + line[pos:] def unmimify_part(ifile, ofile, decode_base64 = 0): - '''Convert a quoted-printable part of a MIME mail message to 8bit.''' + """Convert a quoted-printable part of a MIME mail message to 8bit.""" multipart = None quoted_printable = 0 is_base64 = 0 @@ -200,7 +199,7 @@ def unmimify_part(ifile, ofile, decode_base64 = 0): ofile.write(pref + line) def unmimify(infile, outfile, decode_base64 = 0): - '''Convert quoted-printable parts of a MIME mail message to 8bit.''' + """Convert quoted-printable parts of a MIME mail message to 8bit.""" if type(infile) == type(''): ifile = open(infile) if type(outfile) == type('') and infile == outfile: @@ -221,8 +220,8 @@ mime_char = re.compile('[=\177-\377]') # quote these chars in body mime_header_char = re.compile('[=?\177-\377]') # quote these in header def mime_encode(line, header): - '''Code a single line as quoted-printable. - If header is set, quote some extra characters.''' + """Code a single line as quoted-printable. + If header is set, quote some extra characters.""" if header: reg = mime_header_char else: @@ -255,7 +254,7 @@ def mime_encode(line, header): mime_header = re.compile('([ \t(]|^)([-a-zA-Z0-9_+]*[\177-\377][-a-zA-Z0-9_+\177-\377]*)([ \t)]|\n)') def mime_encode_header(line): - '''Code a single header line as quoted-printable.''' + """Code a single header line as quoted-printable.""" newline = '' pos = 0 while 1: @@ -273,7 +272,7 @@ cte = re.compile('^content-transfer-encoding:', re.I) iso_char = re.compile('[\177-\377]') def mimify_part(ifile, ofile, is_mime): - '''Convert an 8bit part of a MIME mail message to quoted-printable.''' + """Convert an 8bit part of a MIME mail message to quoted-printable.""" has_cte = is_qp = is_base64 = 0 multipart = None must_quote_body = must_quote_header = has_iso_chars = 0 @@ -408,7 +407,7 @@ def mimify_part(ifile, ofile, is_mime): ofile.write(line) def mimify(infile, outfile): - '''Convert 8bit parts of a MIME mail message to quoted-printable.''' + """Convert 8bit parts of a MIME mail message to quoted-printable.""" if type(infile) == type(''): ifile = open(infile) if type(outfile) == type('') and infile == outfile: diff --git a/Lib/multifile.py b/Lib/multifile.py index ce84087..977b92f 100644 --- a/Lib/multifile.py +++ b/Lib/multifile.py @@ -1,28 +1,31 @@ -# A class that makes each part of a multipart message "feel" like an -# ordinary file, as long as you use fp.readline(). Allows recursive -# use, for nested multipart messages. Probably best used together -# with module mimetools. -# -# Suggested use: -# -# real_fp = open(...) -# fp = MultiFile(real_fp) -# -# "read some lines from fp" -# fp.push(separator) -# while 1: -# "read lines from fp until it returns an empty string" (A) -# if not fp.next(): break -# fp.pop() -# "read remaining lines from fp until it returns an empty string" -# -# The latter sequence may be used recursively at (A). -# It is also allowed to use multiple push()...pop() sequences. -# -# If seekable is given as 0, the class code will not do the bookeeping -# it normally attempts in order to make seeks relative to the beginning of the -# current file part. This may be useful when using MultiFile with a non- -# seekable stream object. +"""A readline()-style interface to the parts of a multipart message. + +The MultiFile class makes each part of a multipart message "feel" like +an ordinary file, as long as you use fp.readline(). Allows recursive +use, for nested multipart messages. Probably best used together +with module mimetools. + +Suggested use: + +real_fp = open(...) +fp = MultiFile(real_fp) + +"read some lines from fp" +fp.push(separator) +while 1: + "read lines from fp until it returns an empty string" (A) + if not fp.next(): break +fp.pop() +"read remaining lines from fp until it returns an empty string" + +The latter sequence may be used recursively at (A). +It is also allowed to use multiple push()...pop() sequences. + +If seekable is given as 0, the class code will not do the bookeeping +it normally attempts in order to make seeks relative to the beginning of the +current file part. This may be useful when using MultiFile with a non- +seekable stream object. +""" import sys import string @@ -30,9 +33,9 @@ import string Error = 'multifile.Error' class MultiFile: - # + seekable = 0 - # + def __init__(self, fp, seekable=1): self.fp = fp self.stack = [] # Grows down @@ -42,12 +45,12 @@ class MultiFile: self.seekable = 1 self.start = self.fp.tell() self.posstack = [] # Grows down - # + def tell(self): if self.level > 0: return self.lastpos return self.fp.tell() - self.start - # + def seek(self, pos, whence=0): here = self.tell() if whence: @@ -64,7 +67,7 @@ class MultiFile: self.fp.seek(pos + self.start) self.level = 0 self.last = 0 - # + def readline(self): if self.level > 0: return '' @@ -105,7 +108,7 @@ class MultiFile: if self.level > 1: raise Error,'Missing endmarker in MultiFile.readline()' return '' - # + def readlines(self): list = [] while 1: @@ -113,10 +116,10 @@ class MultiFile: if not line: break list.append(line) return list - # + def read(self): # Note: no size argument -- read until EOF only! return string.joinfields(self.readlines(), '') - # + def next(self): while self.readline(): pass if self.level > 1 or self.last: @@ -126,7 +129,7 @@ class MultiFile: if self.seekable: self.start = self.fp.tell() return 1 - # + def push(self, sep): if self.level > 0: raise Error, 'bad MultiFile.push() call' @@ -134,7 +137,7 @@ class MultiFile: if self.seekable: self.posstack.insert(0, self.start) self.start = self.fp.tell() - # + def pop(self): if self.stack == []: raise Error, 'bad MultiFile.pop() call' @@ -149,12 +152,12 @@ class MultiFile: del self.posstack[0] if self.level > 0: self.lastpos = abslastpos - self.start - # + def is_data(self, line): return line[:2] <> '--' - # + def section_divider(self, str): return "--" + str - # + def end_marker(self, str): return "--" + str + "--" diff --git a/Lib/mutex.py b/Lib/mutex.py index 33509c7..9271d34 100644 --- a/Lib/mutex.py +++ b/Lib/mutex.py @@ -1,58 +1,51 @@ -# Mutual exclusion -- for use with module sched +"""Mutual exclusion -- for use with module sched + +A mutex has two pieces of state -- a 'locked' bit and a queue. +When the mutex is not locked, the queue is empty. +Otherwise, the queue contains 0 or more (function, argument) pairs +representing functions (or methods) waiting to acquire the lock. +When the mutex is unlocked while the queue is not empty, +the first queue entry is removed and its function(argument) pair called, +implying it now has the lock. + +Of course, no multi-threading is implied -- hence the funny interface +for lock, where a function is called once the lock is aquired. +""" -# A mutex has two pieces of state -- a 'locked' bit and a queue. -# When the mutex is not locked, the queue is empty. -# Otherwise, the queue contains 0 or more (function, argument) pairs -# representing functions (or methods) waiting to acquire the lock. -# When the mutex is unlocked while the queue is not empty, -# the first queue entry is removed and its function(argument) pair called, -# implying it now has the lock. -# -# Of course, no multi-threading is implied -- hence the funny interface -# for lock, where a function is called once the lock is aquired. -# class mutex: - # - # Create a new mutex -- initially unlocked - # def __init__(self): + """Create a new mutex -- initially unlocked.""" self.locked = 0 self.queue = [] - # - # Test the locked bit of the mutex - # + def test(self): + """Test the locked bit of the mutex.""" return self.locked - # - # Atomic test-and-set -- grab the lock if it is not set, - # return true if it succeeded - # + def testandset(self): + """Atomic test-and-set -- grab the lock if it is not set, + return true if it succeeded.""" if not self.locked: self.locked = 1 return 1 else: return 0 - # - # Lock a mutex, call the function with supplied argument - # when it is acquired. - # If the mutex is already locked, place function and argument - # in the queue. - # + def lock(self, function, argument): + """Lock a mutex, call the function with supplied argument + when it is acquired. If the mutex is already locked, place + function and argument in the queue.""" if self.testandset(): function(argument) else: self.queue.append((function, argument)) - # - # Unlock a mutex. If the queue is not empty, call the next - # function with its argument. - # + def unlock(self): + """Unlock a mutex. If the queue is not empty, call the next + function with its argument.""" if self.queue: function, argument = self.queue[0] del self.queue[0] function(argument) else: self.locked = 0 - # diff --git a/Lib/netrc.py b/Lib/netrc.py index 9f47bab..d24c388 100644 --- a/Lib/netrc.py +++ b/Lib/netrc.py @@ -1,3 +1,5 @@ +"""An object-oriented interface to .netrc files.""" + # Module and documentation by Eric S. Raymond, 21 Dec 1998 import os, shlex @@ -63,7 +65,7 @@ class netrc: raise SyntaxError, "bad follower token %s, file %s, line %d"%(tt,file,lexer.lineno) def authenticators(self, host): - "Return a (user, account, password) tuple for given host." + """Return a (user, account, password) tuple for given host.""" if self.hosts.has_key(host): return self.hosts[host] elif self.hosts.has_key('default'): @@ -72,7 +74,7 @@ class netrc: return None def __repr__(self): - "Dump the class data in the format of a .netrc file" + """Dump the class data in the format of a .netrc file.""" rep = "" for host in self.hosts.keys(): attrs = self.hosts[host] diff --git a/Lib/nntplib.py b/Lib/nntplib.py index 21649a0..5a16fcb 100644 --- a/Lib/nntplib.py +++ b/Lib/nntplib.py @@ -1,31 +1,31 @@ -# An NNTP client class. Based on RFC 977: Network News Transfer -# Protocol, by Brian Kantor and Phil Lapsley. - - -# Example: -# -# >>> from nntplib import NNTP -# >>> s = NNTP('news') -# >>> resp, count, first, last, name = s.group('comp.lang.python') -# >>> print 'Group', name, 'has', count, 'articles, range', first, 'to', last -# Group comp.lang.python has 51 articles, range 5770 to 5821 -# >>> resp, subs = s.xhdr('subject', first + '-' + last) -# >>> resp = s.quit() -# >>> -# -# Here 'resp' is the server response line. -# Error responses are turned into exceptions. -# -# To post an article from a file: -# >>> f = open(filename, 'r') # file containing article, including header -# >>> resp = s.post(f) -# >>> -# -# For descriptions of all methods, read the comments in the code below. -# Note that all arguments and return values representing article numbers -# are strings, not numbers, since they are rarely used for calculations. - -# (xover, xgtitle, xpath, date methods by Kevan Heydon) +"""An NNTP client class based on RFC 977: Network News Transfer Protocol. + +Example: + +>>> from nntplib import NNTP +>>> s = NNTP('news') +>>> resp, count, first, last, name = s.group('comp.lang.python') +>>> print 'Group', name, 'has', count, 'articles, range', first, 'to', last +Group comp.lang.python has 51 articles, range 5770 to 5821 +>>> resp, subs = s.xhdr('subject', first + '-' + last) +>>> resp = s.quit() +>>> + +Here 'resp' is the server response line. +Error responses are turned into exceptions. + +To post an article from a file: +>>> f = open(filename, 'r') # file containing article, including header +>>> resp = s.post(f) +>>> + +For descriptions of all methods, read the comments in the code below. +Note that all arguments and return values representing article numbers +are strings, not numbers, since they are rarely used for calculations. +""" + +# RFC 977 by Brian Kantor and Phil Lapsley. +# xover, xgtitle, xpath, date methods by Kevan Heydon # Imports @@ -35,7 +35,6 @@ import string # Exception raised when an error or invalid response is received - error_reply = 'nntplib.error_reply' # unexpected [123]xx reply error_temp = 'nntplib.error_temp' # 4xx errors error_perm = 'nntplib.error_perm' # 5xx errors @@ -59,11 +58,11 @@ CRLF = '\r\n' class NNTP: - # Initialize an instance. Arguments: - # - host: hostname to connect to - # - port: port to connect to (default the standard NNTP port) - def __init__(self, host, port = NNTP_PORT, user=None, password=None): + """Initialize an instance. Arguments: + - host: hostname to connect to + - port: port to connect to (default the standard NNTP port)""" + self.host = host self.port = port self.sock = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM) @@ -82,38 +81,38 @@ class NNTP: if resp[:3] != '281': raise error_perm, resp - # Get the welcome message from the server - # (this is read and squirreled away by __init__()). - # If the response code is 200, posting is allowed; - # if it 201, posting is not allowed - def getwelcome(self): + """Get the welcome message from the server + (this is read and squirreled away by __init__()). + If the response code is 200, posting is allowed; + if it 201, posting is not allowed.""" + if self.debugging: print '*welcome*', `self.welcome` return self.welcome - # Set the debugging level. Argument level means: - # 0: no debugging output (default) - # 1: print commands and responses but not body text etc. - # 2: also print raw lines read and sent before stripping CR/LF - def set_debuglevel(self, level): + """Set the debugging level. Argument 'level' means: + 0: no debugging output (default) + 1: print commands and responses but not body text etc. + 2: also print raw lines read and sent before stripping CR/LF""" + self.debugging = level debug = set_debuglevel - # Internal: send one line to the server, appending CRLF def putline(self, line): + """Internal: send one line to the server, appending CRLF.""" line = line + CRLF if self.debugging > 1: print '*put*', `line` self.sock.send(line) - # Internal: send one command to the server (through putline()) def putcmd(self, line): + """Internal: send one command to the server (through putline()).""" if self.debugging: print '*cmd*', `line` self.putline(line) - # Internal: return one line from the server, stripping CRLF. - # Raise EOFError if the connection is closed def getline(self): + """Internal: return one line from the server, stripping CRLF. + Raise EOFError if the connection is closed.""" line = self.file.readline() if self.debugging > 1: print '*get*', `line` @@ -122,9 +121,9 @@ class NNTP: elif line[-1:] in CRLF: line = line[:-1] return line - # Internal: get a response from the server. - # Raise various errors if the response indicates an error def getresp(self): + """Internal: get a response from the server. + Raise various errors if the response indicates an error.""" resp = self.getline() if self.debugging: print '*resp*', `resp` c = resp[:1] @@ -136,9 +135,9 @@ class NNTP: raise error_proto, resp return resp - # Internal: get a response plus following text from the server. - # Raise various errors if the response indicates an error def getlongresp(self): + """Internal: get a response plus following text from the server. + Raise various errors if the response indicates an error.""" resp = self.getresp() if resp[:3] not in LONGRESP: raise error_reply, resp @@ -152,59 +151,59 @@ class NNTP: list.append(line) return resp, list - # Internal: send a command and get the response def shortcmd(self, line): + """Internal: send a command and get the response.""" self.putcmd(line) return self.getresp() - # Internal: send a command and get the response plus following text def longcmd(self, line): + """Internal: send a command and get the response plus following text.""" self.putcmd(line) return self.getlongresp() - # Process a NEWGROUPS command. Arguments: - # - date: string 'yymmdd' indicating the date - # - time: string 'hhmmss' indicating the time - # Return: - # - resp: server response if succesful - # - list: list of newsgroup names - def newgroups(self, date, time): - return self.longcmd('NEWGROUPS ' + date + ' ' + time) + """Process a NEWGROUPS command. Arguments: + - date: string 'yymmdd' indicating the date + - time: string 'hhmmss' indicating the time + Return: + - resp: server response if succesful + - list: list of newsgroup names""" - # Process a NEWNEWS command. Arguments: - # - group: group name or '*' - # - date: string 'yymmdd' indicating the date - # - time: string 'hhmmss' indicating the time - # Return: - # - resp: server response if succesful - # - list: list of article ids + return self.longcmd('NEWGROUPS ' + date + ' ' + time) def newnews(self, group, date, time): + """Process a NEWNEWS command. Arguments: + - group: group name or '*' + - date: string 'yymmdd' indicating the date + - time: string 'hhmmss' indicating the time + Return: + - resp: server response if succesful + - list: list of article ids""" + cmd = 'NEWNEWS ' + group + ' ' + date + ' ' + time return self.longcmd(cmd) - # Process a LIST command. Return: - # - resp: server response if succesful - # - list: list of (group, last, first, flag) (strings) - def list(self): + """Process a LIST command. Return: + - resp: server response if succesful + - list: list of (group, last, first, flag) (strings)""" + resp, list = self.longcmd('LIST') for i in range(len(list)): # Parse lines into "group last first flag" list[i] = tuple(string.split(list[i])) return resp, list - # Process a GROUP command. Argument: - # - group: the group name - # Returns: - # - resp: server response if succesful - # - count: number of articles (string) - # - first: first article number (string) - # - last: last article number (string) - # - name: the group name - def group(self, name): + """Process a GROUP command. Argument: + - group: the group name + Returns: + - resp: server response if succesful + - count: number of articles (string) + - first: first article number (string) + - last: last article number (string) + - name: the group name""" + resp = self.shortcmd('GROUP ' + name) if resp[:3] <> '211': raise error_reply, resp @@ -221,15 +220,15 @@ class NNTP: name = string.lower(words[4]) return resp, count, first, last, name - # Process a HELP command. Returns: - # - resp: server response if succesful - # - list: list of strings - def help(self): + """Process a HELP command. Returns: + - resp: server response if succesful + - list: list of strings""" + return self.longcmd('HELP') - # Internal: parse the response of a STAT, NEXT or LAST command def statparse(self, resp): + """Internal: parse the response of a STAT, NEXT or LAST command.""" if resp[:2] <> '22': raise error_reply, resp words = string.split(resp) @@ -242,84 +241,82 @@ class NNTP: id = words[2] return resp, nr, id - # Internal: process a STAT, NEXT or LAST command def statcmd(self, line): + """Internal: process a STAT, NEXT or LAST command.""" resp = self.shortcmd(line) return self.statparse(resp) - # Process a STAT command. Argument: - # - id: article number or message id - # Returns: - # - resp: server response if succesful - # - nr: the article number - # - id: the article id - def stat(self, id): - return self.statcmd('STAT ' + id) + """Process a STAT command. Argument: + - id: article number or message id + Returns: + - resp: server response if succesful + - nr: the article number + - id: the article id""" - # Process a NEXT command. No arguments. Return as for STAT + return self.statcmd('STAT ' + id) def next(self): + """Process a NEXT command. No arguments. Return as for STAT.""" return self.statcmd('NEXT') - # Process a LAST command. No arguments. Return as for STAT - def last(self): + """Process a LAST command. No arguments. Return as for STAT.""" return self.statcmd('LAST') - # Internal: process a HEAD, BODY or ARTICLE command def artcmd(self, line): + """Internal: process a HEAD, BODY or ARTICLE command.""" resp, list = self.longcmd(line) resp, nr, id = self.statparse(resp) return resp, nr, id, list - # Process a HEAD command. Argument: - # - id: article number or message id - # Returns: - # - resp: server response if succesful - # - nr: article number - # - id: message id - # - list: the lines of the article's header - def head(self, id): - return self.artcmd('HEAD ' + id) + """Process a HEAD command. Argument: + - id: article number or message id + Returns: + - resp: server response if succesful + - nr: article number + - id: message id + - list: the lines of the article's header""" - # Process a BODY command. Argument: - # - id: article number or message id - # Returns: - # - resp: server response if succesful - # - nr: article number - # - id: message id - # - list: the lines of the article's body + return self.artcmd('HEAD ' + id) def body(self, id): - return self.artcmd('BODY ' + id) + """Process a BODY command. Argument: + - id: article number or message id + Returns: + - resp: server response if succesful + - nr: article number + - id: message id + - list: the lines of the article's body""" - # Process an ARTICLE command. Argument: - # - id: article number or message id - # Returns: - # - resp: server response if succesful - # - nr: article number - # - id: message id - # - list: the lines of the article + return self.artcmd('BODY ' + id) def article(self, id): - return self.artcmd('ARTICLE ' + id) + """Process an ARTICLE command. Argument: + - id: article number or message id + Returns: + - resp: server response if succesful + - nr: article number + - id: message id + - list: the lines of the article""" - # Process a SLAVE command. Returns: - # - resp: server response if succesful + return self.artcmd('ARTICLE ' + id) def slave(self): - return self.shortcmd('SLAVE') + """Process a SLAVE command. Returns: + - resp: server response if succesful""" - # Process an XHDR command (optional server extension). Arguments: - # - hdr: the header type (e.g. 'subject') - # - str: an article nr, a message id, or a range nr1-nr2 - # Returns: - # - resp: server response if succesful - # - list: list of (nr, value) strings + return self.shortcmd('SLAVE') def xhdr(self, hdr, str): + """Process an XHDR command (optional server extension). Arguments: + - hdr: the header type (e.g. 'subject') + - str: an article nr, a message id, or a range nr1-nr2 + Returns: + - resp: server response if succesful + - list: list of (nr, value) strings""" + pat = re.compile('^([0-9]+) ?(.*)\n?') resp, lines = self.longcmd('XHDR ' + hdr + ' ' + str) for i in range(len(lines)): @@ -329,14 +326,15 @@ class NNTP: lines[i] = m.group(1, 2) return resp, lines - # Process an XOVER command (optional server extension) Arguments: - # - start: start of range - # - end: end of range - # Returns: - # - resp: server response if succesful - # - list: list of (art-nr, subject, poster, date, id, refrences, size, lines) - def xover(self,start,end): + """Process an XOVER command (optional server extension) Arguments: + - start: start of range + - end: end of range + Returns: + - resp: server response if succesful + - list: list of (art-nr, subject, poster, date, + id, references, size, lines)""" + resp, lines = self.longcmd('XOVER ' + start + '-' + end) xover_lines = [] for line in lines: @@ -354,13 +352,13 @@ class NNTP: raise error_data,line return resp,xover_lines - # Process an XGTITLE command (optional server extension) Arguments: - # - group: group name wildcard (i.e. news.*) - # Returns: - # - resp: server response if succesful - # - list: list of (name,title) strings - def xgtitle(self, group): + """Process an XGTITLE command (optional server extension) Arguments: + - group: group name wildcard (i.e. news.*) + Returns: + - resp: server response if succesful + - list: list of (name,title) strings""" + line_pat = re.compile("^([^ \t]+)[ \t]+(.*)$") resp, raw_lines = self.longcmd('XGTITLE ' + group) lines = [] @@ -370,13 +368,13 @@ class NNTP: lines.append(match.group(1, 2)) return resp, lines - # Process an XPATH command (optional server extension) Arguments: - # - id: Message id of article - # Returns: - # resp: server response if succesful - # path: directory path to article - def xpath(self,id): + """Process an XPATH command (optional server extension) Arguments: + - id: Message id of article + Returns: + resp: server response if succesful + path: directory path to article""" + resp = self.shortcmd("XPATH " + id) if resp[:3] <> '223': raise error_reply, resp @@ -387,14 +385,14 @@ class NNTP: else: return resp, path - # Process the DATE command. Arguments: - # None - # Returns: - # resp: server response if succesful - # date: Date suitable for newnews/newgroups commands etc. - # time: Time suitable for newnews/newgroups commands etc. - def date (self): + """Process the DATE command. Arguments: + None + Returns: + resp: server response if succesful + date: Date suitable for newnews/newgroups commands etc. + time: Time suitable for newnews/newgroups commands etc.""" + resp = self.shortcmd("DATE") if resp[:3] <> '111': raise error_reply, resp @@ -408,12 +406,12 @@ class NNTP: return resp, date, time - # Process a POST command. Arguments: - # - f: file containing the article - # Returns: - # - resp: server response if succesful - def post(self, f): + """Process a POST command. Arguments: + - f: file containing the article + Returns: + - resp: server response if succesful""" + resp = self.shortcmd('POST') # Raises error_??? if posting is not allowed if resp[0] <> '3': @@ -430,14 +428,14 @@ class NNTP: self.putline('.') return self.getresp() - # Process an IHAVE command. Arguments: - # - id: message-id of the article - # - f: file containing the article - # Returns: - # - resp: server response if succesful - # Note that if the server refuses the article an exception is raised - def ihave(self, id, f): + """Process an IHAVE command. Arguments: + - id: message-id of the article + - f: file containing the article + Returns: + - resp: server response if succesful + Note that if the server refuses the article an exception is raised.""" + resp = self.shortcmd('IHAVE ' + id) # Raises error_??? if the server already has it if resp[0] <> '3': @@ -454,10 +452,10 @@ class NNTP: self.putline('.') return self.getresp() - # Process a QUIT command and close the socket. Returns: - # - resp: server response if succesful - def quit(self): + """Process a QUIT command and close the socket. Returns: + - resp: server response if succesful""" + resp = self.shortcmd('QUIT') self.file.close() self.sock.close() @@ -465,8 +463,8 @@ class NNTP: return resp -# Minimal test function def _test(): + """Minimal test function.""" s = NNTP('news') resp, count, first, last, name = s.group('comp.lang.python') print resp diff --git a/Lib/nturl2path.py b/Lib/nturl2path.py index 8c02049..ae261ba 100644 --- a/Lib/nturl2path.py +++ b/Lib/nturl2path.py @@ -1,6 +1,4 @@ -# -# nturl2path convert a NT pathname to a file URL and -# vice versa +"""Convert a NT pathname to a file URL and vice versa.""" def url2pathname(url): """ Convert a URL to a DOS path... @@ -34,7 +32,6 @@ def url2pathname(url): return path def pathname2url(p): - """ Convert a DOS path name to a file url... C:\foo\bar\spam.foo @@ -1,21 +1,22 @@ -# os.py -- either mac, dos or posix depending on what system we're on. - -# This exports: -# - all functions from either posix or mac, e.g., os.unlink, os.stat, etc. -# - os.path is either module posixpath or macpath -# - os.name is either 'posix' or 'mac' -# - os.curdir is a string representing the current directory ('.' or ':') -# - os.pardir is a string representing the parent directory ('..' or '::') -# - os.sep is the (or a most common) pathname separator ('/' or ':' or '\\') -# - os.altsep is the alternatte pathname separator (None or '/') -# - os.pathsep is the component separator used in $PATH etc -# - os.defpath is the default search path for executables - -# Programs that import and use 'os' stand a better chance of being -# portable between different platforms. Of course, they must then -# only use functions that are defined by all platforms (e.g., unlink -# and opendir), and leave all pathname manipulation to os.path -# (e.g., split and join). +"""os.py -- either mac, dos or posix depending on what system we're on. + +This exports: + - all functions from either posix or mac, e.g., os.unlink, os.stat, etc. + - os.path is either module posixpath or macpath + - os.name is either 'posix' or 'mac' + - os.curdir is a string representing the current directory ('.' or ':') + - os.pardir is a string representing the parent directory ('..' or '::') + - os.sep is the (or a most common) pathname separator ('/' or ':' or '\\') + - os.altsep is the alternatte pathname separator (None or '/') + - os.pathsep is the component separator used in $PATH etc + - os.defpath is the default search path for executables + +Programs that import and use 'os' stand a better chance of being +portable between different platforms. Of course, they must then +only use functions that are defined by all platforms (e.g., unlink +and opendir), and leave all pathname manipulation to os.path +(e.g., split and join). +""" import sys @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ #! /usr/bin/env python -# pdb.py -- finally, a Python debugger! +"""pdb.py -- finally, a Python debugger!""" # (See pdb.doc for documentation.) @@ -106,18 +106,18 @@ class Pdb(bdb.Bdb, cmd.Cmd): # Override Bdb methods (except user_call, for now) def user_line(self, frame): - # This function is called when we stop or break at this line + """This function is called when we stop or break at this line.""" self.interaction(frame, None) def user_return(self, frame, return_value): - # This function is called when a return trap is set here + """This function is called when a return trap is set here.""" frame.f_locals['__return__'] = return_value print '--Return--' self.interaction(frame, None) def user_exception(self, frame, (exc_type, exc_value, exc_traceback)): - # This function is called if an exception occurs, - # but only if we are to stop at or just below this level + """This function is called if an exception occurs, + but only if we are to stop at or just below this level.""" frame.f_locals['__exception__'] = exc_type, exc_value if type(exc_type) == type(''): exc_type_name = exc_type @@ -148,7 +148,7 @@ class Pdb(bdb.Bdb, cmd.Cmd): print '***', exc_type_name + ':', v def precmd(self, line): - # Handle alias expansion and ';;' separator + """Handle alias expansion and ';;' separator.""" if not line: return line args = string.split(line) @@ -262,7 +262,7 @@ class Pdb(bdb.Bdb, cmd.Cmd): # To be overridden in derived debuggers def defaultFile(self): - # Produce a reasonable default + """Produce a reasonable default.""" filename = self.curframe.f_code.co_filename if filename == '<string>' and mainpyfile: filename = mainpyfile @@ -384,7 +384,7 @@ class Pdb(bdb.Bdb, cmd.Cmd): print 'is now unconditional.' def do_ignore(self,arg): - # arg is bp number followed by ignore count + """arg is bp number followed by ignore count.""" args = string.split(arg) bpnum = int(string.strip(args[0])) try: @@ -406,10 +406,10 @@ class Pdb(bdb.Bdb, cmd.Cmd): print bpnum, 'is reached.' def do_clear(self, arg): - # Three possibilities, tried in this order: - # clear -> clear all breaks, ask for confirmation - # clear file:lineno -> clear all breaks at file:lineno - # clear bpno bpno ... -> clear breakpoints by number + """Three possibilities, tried in this order: + clear -> clear all breaks, ask for confirmation + clear file:lineno -> clear all breaks at file:lineno + clear bpno bpno ... -> clear breakpoints by number""" if not arg: try: reply = raw_input('Clear all breaks? ') @@ -851,9 +851,8 @@ class Pdb(bdb.Bdb, cmd.Cmd): def help_pdb(self): help() - # Helper function for break/clear parsing -- may be overridden - def lookupmodule(self, filename): + """Helper function for break/clear parsing -- may be overridden.""" root, ext = os.path.splitext(filename) if ext == '': filename = filename + '.py' diff --git a/Lib/pickle.py b/Lib/pickle.py index 5cc92bf..a958dcd 100644 --- a/Lib/pickle.py +++ b/Lib/pickle.py @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -"""create portable serialized representations of Python objects. +"""Create portable serialized representations of Python objects. See module cPickle for a (much) faster implementation. See module copy_reg for a mechanism for registering custom picklers. diff --git a/Lib/pipes.py b/Lib/pipes.py index b82ed0c..4057fac 100644 --- a/Lib/pipes.py +++ b/Lib/pipes.py @@ -1,63 +1,62 @@ -# Conversion pipeline templates -# ============================= - - -# The problem: -# ------------ -# -# Suppose you have some data that you want to convert to another format -# (e.g. from GIF image format to PPM image format). Maybe the -# conversion involves several steps (e.g. piping it through compress or -# uuencode). Some of the conversion steps may require that their input -# is a disk file, others may be able to read standard input; similar for -# their output. The input to the entire conversion may also be read -# from a disk file or from an open file, and similar for its output. -# -# The module lets you construct a pipeline template by sticking one or -# more conversion steps together. It will take care of creating and -# removing temporary files if they are necessary to hold intermediate -# data. You can then use the template to do conversions from many -# different sources to many different destinations. The temporary -# file names used are different each time the template is used. -# -# The templates are objects so you can create templates for many -# different conversion steps and store them in a dictionary, for -# instance. - - -# Directions: -# ----------- -# -# To create a template: -# t = Template() -# -# To add a conversion step to a template: -# t.append(command, kind) -# where kind is a string of two characters: the first is '-' if the -# command reads its standard input or 'f' if it requires a file; the -# second likewise for the output. The command must be valid /bin/sh -# syntax. If input or output files are required, they are passed as -# $IN and $OUT; otherwise, it must be possible to use the command in -# a pipeline. -# -# To add a conversion step at the beginning: -# t.prepend(command, kind) -# -# To convert a file to another file using a template: -# sts = t.copy(infile, outfile) -# If infile or outfile are the empty string, standard input is read or -# standard output is written, respectively. The return value is the -# exit status of the conversion pipeline. -# -# To open a file for reading or writing through a conversion pipeline: -# fp = t.open(file, mode) -# where mode is 'r' to read the file, or 'w' to write it -- just like -# for the built-in function open() or for os.popen(). -# -# To create a new template object initialized to a given one: -# t2 = t.clone() -# -# For an example, see the function test() at the end of the file. +"""Conversion pipeline templates. + +The problem: +------------ + +Suppose you have some data that you want to convert to another format +(e.g. from GIF image format to PPM image format). Maybe the +conversion involves several steps (e.g. piping it through compress or +uuencode). Some of the conversion steps may require that their input +is a disk file, others may be able to read standard input; similar for +their output. The input to the entire conversion may also be read +from a disk file or from an open file, and similar for its output. + +The module lets you construct a pipeline template by sticking one or +more conversion steps together. It will take care of creating and +removing temporary files if they are necessary to hold intermediate +data. You can then use the template to do conversions from many +different sources to many different destinations. The temporary +file names used are different each time the template is used. + +The templates are objects so you can create templates for many +different conversion steps and store them in a dictionary, for +instance. + + +Directions: +----------- + +To create a template: + t = Template() + +To add a conversion step to a template: + t.append(command, kind) +where kind is a string of two characters: the first is '-' if the +command reads its standard input or 'f' if it requires a file; the +second likewise for the output. The command must be valid /bin/sh +syntax. If input or output files are required, they are passed as +$IN and $OUT; otherwise, it must be possible to use the command in +a pipeline. + +To add a conversion step at the beginning: + t.prepend(command, kind) + +To convert a file to another file using a template: + sts = t.copy(infile, outfile) +If infile or outfile are the empty string, standard input is read or +standard output is written, respectively. The return value is the +exit status of the conversion pipeline. + +To open a file for reading or writing through a conversion pipeline: + fp = t.open(file, mode) +where mode is 'r' to read the file, or 'w' to write it -- just like +for the built-in function open() or for os.popen(). + +To create a new template object initialized to a given one: + t2 = t.clone() + +For an example, see the function test() at the end of the file. +""" import sys @@ -81,37 +80,36 @@ stepkinds = [FILEIN_FILEOUT, STDIN_FILEOUT, FILEIN_STDOUT, STDIN_STDOUT, \ SOURCE, SINK] -# A pipeline template is a Template object: - class Template: + """Class representing a pipeline template.""" - # Template() returns a fresh pipeline template def __init__(self): + """Template() returns a fresh pipeline template.""" self.debugging = 0 self.reset() - # t.__repr__() implements `t` def __repr__(self): + """t.__repr__() implements `t`.""" return '<Template instance, steps=' + `self.steps` + '>' - # t.reset() restores a pipeline template to its initial state def reset(self): + """t.reset() restores a pipeline template to its initial state.""" self.steps = [] - # t.clone() returns a new pipeline template with identical - # initial state as the current one def clone(self): + """t.clone() returns a new pipeline template with identical + initial state as the current one.""" t = Template() t.steps = self.steps[:] t.debugging = self.debugging return t - # t.debug(flag) turns debugging on or off def debug(self, flag): + """t.debug(flag) turns debugging on or off.""" self.debugging = flag - # t.append(cmd, kind) adds a new step at the end def append(self, cmd, kind): + """t.append(cmd, kind) adds a new step at the end.""" if type(cmd) <> type(''): raise TypeError, \ 'Template.append: cmd must be a string' @@ -132,8 +130,8 @@ class Template: 'Template.append: missing $OUT in cmd' self.steps.append((cmd, kind)) - # t.prepend(cmd, kind) adds a new step at the front def prepend(self, cmd, kind): + """t.prepend(cmd, kind) adds a new step at the front.""" if type(cmd) <> type(''): raise TypeError, \ 'Template.prepend: cmd must be a string' @@ -154,9 +152,9 @@ class Template: 'Template.prepend: missing $OUT in cmd' self.steps.insert(0, (cmd, kind)) - # t.open(file, rw) returns a pipe or file object open for - # reading or writing; the file is the other end of the pipeline def open(self, file, rw): + """t.open(file, rw) returns a pipe or file object open for + reading or writing; the file is the other end of the pipeline.""" if rw == 'r': return self.open_r(file) if rw == 'w': @@ -164,10 +162,9 @@ class Template: raise ValueError, \ 'Template.open: rw must be \'r\' or \'w\', not ' + `rw` - # t.open_r(file) and t.open_w(file) implement - # t.open(file, 'r') and t.open(file, 'w') respectively - def open_r(self, file): + """t.open_r(file) and t.open_w(file) implement + t.open(file, 'r') and t.open(file, 'w') respectively.""" if self.steps == []: return open(file, 'r') if self.steps[-1][1] == SINK: diff --git a/Lib/popen2.py b/Lib/popen2.py index d4b5d26..eb8fb9a 100644 --- a/Lib/popen2.py +++ b/Lib/popen2.py @@ -1,3 +1,11 @@ +"""Spawn a command with pipes to its stdin, stdout, and optionally stderr. + +The normal os.popen(cmd, mode) call spawns a shell command and provides a +file interface to just the input or output of the process depending on +whether mode is 'r' or 'w'. This module provides the functions popen2(cmd) +and popen3(cmd) which return two or three pipes to the spawned command. +""" + import os import sys import string @@ -11,7 +19,15 @@ def _cleanup(): inst.poll() class Popen3: + """Class representing a child process. Normally instances are created + by the factory functions popen2() and popen3().""" + def __init__(self, cmd, capturestderr=0, bufsize=-1): + """The parameter 'cmd' is the shell command to execute in a + sub-process. The 'capturestderr' flag, if true, specifies that + the object should capture standard error output of the child process. + The default is false. If the 'bufsize' parameter is specified, it + specifies the size of the I/O buffers to/from the child process.""" if type(cmd) == type(''): cmd = ['/bin/sh', '-c', cmd] p2cread, p2cwrite = os.pipe() @@ -51,7 +67,10 @@ class Popen3: self.childerr = None self.sts = -1 # Child not completed yet _active.append(self) + def poll(self): + """Return the exit status of the child process if it has finished, + or -1 if it hasn't finished yet.""" if self.sts < 0: try: pid, sts = os.waitpid(self.pid, os.WNOHANG) @@ -61,7 +80,9 @@ class Popen3: except os.error: pass return self.sts + def wait(self): + """Wait for and return the exit status of the child process.""" pid, sts = os.waitpid(self.pid, 0) if pid == self.pid: self.sts = sts @@ -69,11 +90,17 @@ class Popen3: return self.sts def popen2(cmd, bufsize=-1): + """Execute the shell command 'cmd' in a sub-process. If 'bufsize' is + specified, it sets the buffer size for the I/O pipes. The file objects + (child_stdout, child_stdin) are returned.""" _cleanup() inst = Popen3(cmd, 0, bufsize) return inst.fromchild, inst.tochild def popen3(cmd, bufsize=-1): + """Execute the shell command 'cmd' in a sub-process. If 'bufsize' is + specified, it sets the buffer size for the I/O pipes. The file objects + (child_stdout, child_stdin, child_stderr) are returned.""" _cleanup() inst = Popen3(cmd, 1, bufsize) return inst.fromchild, inst.tochild, inst.childerr diff --git a/Lib/posixfile.py b/Lib/posixfile.py index ba83b0a..2db37e0 100644 --- a/Lib/posixfile.py +++ b/Lib/posixfile.py @@ -1,64 +1,61 @@ -# -# Start of posixfile.py -# - -# -# Extended file operations -# -# f = posixfile.open(filename, [mode, [bufsize]]) -# will create a new posixfile object -# -# f = posixfile.fileopen(fileobject) -# will create a posixfile object from a builtin file object -# -# f.file() -# will return the original builtin file object -# -# f.dup() -# will return a new file object based on a new filedescriptor -# -# f.dup2(fd) -# will return a new file object based on the given filedescriptor -# -# f.flags(mode) -# will turn on the associated flag (merge) -# mode can contain the following characters: -# -# (character representing a flag) -# a append only flag -# c close on exec flag -# n no delay flag -# s synchronization flag -# (modifiers) -# ! turn flags 'off' instead of default 'on' -# = copy flags 'as is' instead of default 'merge' -# ? return a string in which the characters represent the flags -# that are set -# -# note: - the '!' and '=' modifiers are mutually exclusive. -# - the '?' modifier will return the status of the flags after they -# have been changed by other characters in the mode string -# -# f.lock(mode [, len [, start [, whence]]]) -# will (un)lock a region -# mode can contain the following characters: -# -# (character representing type of lock) -# u unlock -# r read lock -# w write lock -# (modifiers) -# | wait until the lock can be granted -# ? return the first lock conflicting with the requested lock -# or 'None' if there is no conflict. The lock returned is in the -# format (mode, len, start, whence, pid) where mode is a -# character representing the type of lock ('r' or 'w') -# -# note: - the '?' modifier prevents a region from being locked; it is -# query only -# +"""Extended file operations available in POSIX. + +f = posixfile.open(filename, [mode, [bufsize]]) + will create a new posixfile object + +f = posixfile.fileopen(fileobject) + will create a posixfile object from a builtin file object + +f.file() + will return the original builtin file object + +f.dup() + will return a new file object based on a new filedescriptor + +f.dup2(fd) + will return a new file object based on the given filedescriptor + +f.flags(mode) + will turn on the associated flag (merge) + mode can contain the following characters: + + (character representing a flag) + a append only flag + c close on exec flag + n no delay flag + s synchronization flag + (modifiers) + ! turn flags 'off' instead of default 'on' + = copy flags 'as is' instead of default 'merge' + ? return a string in which the characters represent the flags + that are set + + note: - the '!' and '=' modifiers are mutually exclusive. + - the '?' modifier will return the status of the flags after they + have been changed by other characters in the mode string + +f.lock(mode [, len [, start [, whence]]]) + will (un)lock a region + mode can contain the following characters: + + (character representing type of lock) + u unlock + r read lock + w write lock + (modifiers) + | wait until the lock can be granted + ? return the first lock conflicting with the requested lock + or 'None' if there is no conflict. The lock returned is in the + format (mode, len, start, whence, pid) where mode is a + character representing the type of lock ('r' or 'w') + + note: - the '?' modifier prevents a region from being locked; it is + query only +""" class _posixfile_: + """File wrapper class that provides extra POSIX file routines.""" + states = ['open', 'closed'] # @@ -215,13 +212,12 @@ class _posixfile_: else: return 'w', l_len, l_start, l_whence, l_pid -# -# Public routine to obtain a posixfile object -# def open(name, mode='r', bufsize=-1): + """Public routine to open a file as a posixfile object.""" return _posixfile_().open(name, mode, bufsize) def fileopen(file): + """Public routine to get a posixfile object from a Python file object.""" return _posixfile_().fileopen(file) # diff --git a/Lib/posixpath.py b/Lib/posixpath.py index 874dc4c..090f245 100644 --- a/Lib/posixpath.py +++ b/Lib/posixpath.py @@ -1,13 +1,13 @@ -# Module 'posixpath' -- common operations on Posix pathnames. -# Some of this can actually be useful on non-Posix systems too, e.g. -# for manipulation of the pathname component of URLs. -# The "os.path" name is an alias for this module on Posix systems; -# on other systems (e.g. Mac, Windows), os.path provides the same -# operations in a manner specific to that platform, and is an alias -# to another module (e.g. macpath, ntpath). -"""Common pathname manipulations, Posix version. -Instead of importing this module -directly, import os and refer to this module as os.path. +"""Common operations on Posix pathnames. + +Instead of importing this module directly, import os and refer to +this module as os.path. The "os.path" name is an alias for this +module on Posix systems; on other systems (e.g. Mac, Windows), +os.path provides the same operations in a manner specific to that +platform, and is an alias to another module (e.g. macpath, ntpath). + +Some of this can actually be useful on non-Posix systems too, e.g. +for manipulation of the pathname component of URLs. """ import os @@ -369,8 +369,8 @@ def normpath(path): return slashes + string.joinfields(comps, '/') -# Return an absolute path. def abspath(path): + """Return an absolute path.""" if not isabs(path): path = join(os.getcwd(), path) return normpath(path) diff --git a/Lib/profile.py b/Lib/profile.py index c1f8f5b..18fd65d 100755 --- a/Lib/profile.py +++ b/Lib/profile.py @@ -7,6 +7,7 @@ # # See profile.doc for more information +"""Class for profiling Python code.""" # Copyright 1994, by InfoSeek Corporation, all rights reserved. # Written by James Roskind @@ -79,44 +80,43 @@ def help(): print 'along the Python search path' -#************************************************************************** -# class Profile documentation: -#************************************************************************** -# self.cur is always a tuple. Each such tuple corresponds to a stack -# frame that is currently active (self.cur[-2]). The following are the -# definitions of its members. We use this external "parallel stack" to -# avoid contaminating the program that we are profiling. (old profiler -# used to write into the frames local dictionary!!) Derived classes -# can change the definition of some entries, as long as they leave -# [-2:] intact. -# -# [ 0] = Time that needs to be charged to the parent frame's function. It is -# used so that a function call will not have to access the timing data -# for the parents frame. -# [ 1] = Total time spent in this frame's function, excluding time in -# subfunctions -# [ 2] = Cumulative time spent in this frame's function, including time in -# all subfunctions to this frame. -# [-3] = Name of the function that corresonds to this frame. -# [-2] = Actual frame that we correspond to (used to sync exception handling) -# [-1] = Our parent 6-tuple (corresonds to frame.f_back) -#************************************************************************** -# Timing data for each function is stored as a 5-tuple in the dictionary -# self.timings[]. The index is always the name stored in self.cur[4]. -# The following are the definitions of the members: -# -# [0] = The number of times this function was called, not counting direct -# or indirect recursion, -# [1] = Number of times this function appears on the stack, minus one -# [2] = Total time spent internal to this function -# [3] = Cumulative time that this function was present on the stack. In -# non-recursive functions, this is the total execution time from start -# to finish of each invocation of a function, including time spent in -# all subfunctions. -# [5] = A dictionary indicating for each function name, the number of times -# it was called by us. -#************************************************************************** class Profile: + """Profiler class. + + self.cur is always a tuple. Each such tuple corresponds to a stack + frame that is currently active (self.cur[-2]). The following are the + definitions of its members. We use this external "parallel stack" to + avoid contaminating the program that we are profiling. (old profiler + used to write into the frames local dictionary!!) Derived classes + can change the definition of some entries, as long as they leave + [-2:] intact. + + [ 0] = Time that needs to be charged to the parent frame's function. + It is used so that a function call will not have to access the + timing data for the parent frame. + [ 1] = Total time spent in this frame's function, excluding time in + subfunctions + [ 2] = Cumulative time spent in this frame's function, including time in + all subfunctions to this frame. + [-3] = Name of the function that corresonds to this frame. + [-2] = Actual frame that we correspond to (used to sync exception handling) + [-1] = Our parent 6-tuple (corresonds to frame.f_back) + + Timing data for each function is stored as a 5-tuple in the dictionary + self.timings[]. The index is always the name stored in self.cur[4]. + The following are the definitions of the members: + + [0] = The number of times this function was called, not counting direct + or indirect recursion, + [1] = Number of times this function appears on the stack, minus one + [2] = Total time spent internal to this function + [3] = Cumulative time that this function was present on the stack. In + non-recursive functions, this is the total execution time from start + to finish of each invocation of a function, including time spent in + all subfunctions. + [5] = A dictionary indicating for each function name, the number of times + it was called by us. + """ def __init__(self, timer=None): self.timings = {} @@ -449,19 +449,16 @@ class Profile: -#**************************************************************************** -# OldProfile class documentation -#**************************************************************************** -# -# The following derived profiler simulates the old style profile, providing -# errant results on recursive functions. The reason for the usefulnes of this -# profiler is that it runs faster (i.e., less overhead). It still creates -# all the caller stats, and is quite useful when there is *no* recursion -# in the user's code. -# -# This code also shows how easy it is to create a modified profiler. -#**************************************************************************** class OldProfile(Profile): + """A derived profiler that simulates the old style profile, providing + errant results on recursive functions. The reason for the usefulness of + this profiler is that it runs faster (i.e., less overhead). It still + creates all the caller stats, and is quite useful when there is *no* + recursion in the user's code. + + This code also shows how easy it is to create a modified profiler. + """ + def trace_dispatch_exception(self, frame, t): rt, rtt, rct, rfn, rframe, rcur = self.cur if rcur and not rframe is frame: @@ -509,16 +506,13 @@ class OldProfile(Profile): -#**************************************************************************** -# HotProfile class documentation -#**************************************************************************** -# -# This profiler is the fastest derived profile example. It does not -# calculate caller-callee relationships, and does not calculate cumulative -# time under a function. It only calculates time spent in a function, so -# it runs very quickly (re: very low overhead) -#**************************************************************************** class HotProfile(Profile): + """The fastest derived profile example. It does not calculate + caller-callee relationships, and does not calculate cumulative + time under a function. It only calculates time spent in a + function, so it runs very quickly due to its very low overhead. + """ + def trace_dispatch_exception(self, frame, t): rt, rtt, rfn, rframe, rcur = self.cur if rcur and not rframe is frame: diff --git a/Lib/pstats.py b/Lib/pstats.py index 25ca7fb..413351d 100644 --- a/Lib/pstats.py +++ b/Lib/pstats.py @@ -1,4 +1,5 @@ -# +"""Class for printing reports on profiled python code.""" + # Class for printing reports on profiled python code. rev 1.0 4/1/94 # # Based on prior profile module by Sjoerd Mullender... @@ -37,41 +38,38 @@ import string import marshal import re -#************************************************************************** -# Class Stats documentation -#************************************************************************** -# This class is used for creating reports from data generated by the -# Profile class. It is a "friend" of that class, and imports data either -# by direct access to members of Profile class, or by reading in a dictionary -# that was emitted (via marshal) from the Profile class. -# -# The big change from the previous Profiler (in terms of raw functionality) -# is that an "add()" method has been provided to combine Stats from -# several distinct profile runs. Both the constructor and the add() -# method now take arbitrarilly many file names as arguments. -# -# All the print methods now take an argument that indicats how many lines -# to print. If the arg is a floating point number between 0 and 1.0, then -# it is taken as a decimal percentage of the availabel lines to be printed -# (e.g., .1 means print 10% of all available lines). If it is an integer, -# it is taken to mean the number of lines of data that you wish to have -# printed. -# -# The sort_stats() method now processes some additionaly options (i.e., in -# addition to the old -1, 0, 1, or 2). It takes an arbitrary number of quoted -# strings to select the sort order. For example sort_stats('time', 'name') -# sorts on the major key of "internal function time", and on the minor -# key of 'the name of the function'. Look at the two tables in sort_stats() -# and get_sort_arg_defs(self) for more examples. -# -# All methods now return "self", so you can string together commands like: -# Stats('foo', 'goo').strip_dirs().sort_stats('calls').\ -# print_stats(5).print_callers(5) -# -#************************************************************************** import fpformat class Stats: + """This class is used for creating reports from data generated by the + Profile class. It is a "friend" of that class, and imports data either + by direct access to members of Profile class, or by reading in a dictionary + that was emitted (via marshal) from the Profile class. + + The big change from the previous Profiler (in terms of raw functionality) + is that an "add()" method has been provided to combine Stats from + several distinct profile runs. Both the constructor and the add() + method now take arbitrarilly many file names as arguments. + + All the print methods now take an argument that indicats how many lines + to print. If the arg is a floating point number between 0 and 1.0, then + it is taken as a decimal percentage of the availabel lines to be printed + (e.g., .1 means print 10% of all available lines). If it is an integer, + it is taken to mean the number of lines of data that you wish to have + printed. + + The sort_stats() method now processes some additionaly options (i.e., in + addition to the old -1, 0, 1, or 2). It takes an arbitrary number of quoted + strings to select the sort order. For example sort_stats('time', 'name') + sorts on the major key of "internal function time", and on the minor + key of 'the name of the function'. Look at the two tables in sort_stats() + and get_sort_arg_defs(self) for more examples. + + All methods now return "self", so you can string together commands like: + Stats('foo', 'goo').strip_dirs().sort_stats('calls').\ + print_stats(5).print_callers(5) + """ + def __init__(self, *args): if not len(args): arg = None @@ -182,8 +180,8 @@ class Stats: "time" : (((2,-1), ), "internal time"),\ } - # Expand all abbreviations that are unique def get_sort_arg_defs(self): + """Expand all abbreviations that are unique.""" if not self.sort_arg_dict: self.sort_arg_dict = dict = {} std_list = dict.keys() @@ -289,9 +287,9 @@ class Stats: all_callees[func2][func] = callers[func2] return - #****************************************************************** + #****************************************************************** # The following functions support actual printing of reports - #****************************************************************** + #****************************************************************** # Optional "amount" is either a line count, or a percentage of lines. @@ -447,17 +445,14 @@ class Stats: pass # has no return value, so use at end of line :-) -#************************************************************************** -# class TupleComp Documentation -#************************************************************************** -# This class provides a generic function for comparing any two tuples. -# Each instance records a list of tuple-indicies (from most significant -# to least significant), and sort direction (ascending or decending) for -# each tuple-index. The compare functions can then be used as the function -# argument to the system sort() function when a list of tuples need to be -# sorted in the instances order. -#************************************************************************** class TupleComp: + """This class provides a generic function for comparing any two tuples. + Each instance records a list of tuple-indicies (from most significant + to least significant), and sort direction (ascending or decending) for + each tuple-index. The compare functions can then be used as the function + argument to the system sort() function when a list of tuples need to be + sorted in the instances order.""" + def __init__(self, comp_select_list): self.comp_select_list = comp_select_list @@ -495,16 +490,16 @@ def func_split(func_name): # such as callers and callees. #************************************************************************** - # Add together all the stats for two profile entries -def add_func_stats(target, source): +def add_func_stats(target, source): + """Add together all the stats for two profile entries.""" cc, nc, tt, ct, callers = source t_cc, t_nc, t_tt, t_ct, t_callers = target return (cc+t_cc, nc+t_nc, tt+t_tt, ct+t_ct, \ add_callers(t_callers, callers)) - # Combine two caller lists in a single list. def add_callers(target, source): + """Combine two caller lists in a single list.""" new_callers = {} for func in target.keys(): new_callers[func] = target[func] @@ -515,8 +510,8 @@ def add_callers(target, source): new_callers[func] = source[func] return new_callers - # Sum the caller statistics to get total number of calls recieved def count_calls(callers): + """Sum the caller statistics to get total number of calls received.""" nc = 0 for func in callers.keys(): nc = nc + callers[func] @@ -529,4 +524,3 @@ def count_calls(callers): def f8(x): return string.rjust(fpformat.fix(x, 3), 8) - @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -# pty.py -- Pseudo terminal utilities. +"""Pseudo terminal utilities.""" # Bugs: No signal handling. Doesn't set slave termios and window size. # Only tested on Linux. @@ -16,8 +16,9 @@ STDERR_FILENO = 2 CHILD = 0 -# Open pty master. Returns (master_fd, tty_name). SGI and Linux/BSD version. def master_open(): + """Open pty master and return (master_fd, tty_name). + SGI and Linux/BSD version.""" try: import sgi except ImportError: @@ -38,14 +39,15 @@ def master_open(): return (fd, '/dev/tty' + x + y) raise os.error, 'out of pty devices' -# Open the pty slave. Acquire the controlling terminal. -# Returns file descriptor. Linux version. (Should be universal? --Guido) def slave_open(tty_name): + """Open the pty slave and acquire the controlling terminal. + Return the file descriptor. Linux version.""" + # (Should be universal? --Guido) return os.open(tty_name, FCNTL.O_RDWR) -# Fork and make the child a session leader with a controlling terminal. -# Returns (pid, master_fd) def fork(): + """Fork and make the child a session leader with a controlling terminal. + Return (pid, master_fd).""" master_fd, tty_name = master_open() pid = os.fork() if pid == CHILD: @@ -66,21 +68,21 @@ def fork(): # Parent and child process. return pid, master_fd -# Write all the data to a descriptor. def writen(fd, data): + """Write all the data to a descriptor.""" while data != '': n = os.write(fd, data) data = data[n:] -# Default read function. def read(fd): + """Default read function.""" return os.read(fd, 1024) -# Parent copy loop. -# Copies -# pty master -> standard output (master_read) -# standard input -> pty master (stdin_read) def copy(master_fd, master_read=read, stdin_read=read): + """Parent copy loop. + Copies + pty master -> standard output (master_read) + standard input -> pty master (stdin_read)""" while 1: rfds, wfds, xfds = select( [master_fd, STDIN_FILENO], [], []) @@ -91,8 +93,8 @@ def copy(master_fd, master_read=read, stdin_read=read): data = stdin_read(STDIN_FILENO) writen(master_fd, data) -# Create a spawned process. def spawn(argv, master_read=read, stdin_read=read): + """Create a spawned process.""" if type(argv) == type(''): argv = (argv,) pid, master_fd = fork() diff --git a/Lib/py_compile.py b/Lib/py_compile.py index e1d0d70..c54d61b 100644 --- a/Lib/py_compile.py +++ b/Lib/py_compile.py @@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ import imp MAGIC = imp.get_magic() def wr_long(f, x): - "Internal; write a 32-bit int to a file in little-endian order." + """Internal; write a 32-bit int to a file in little-endian order.""" f.write(chr( x & 0xff)) f.write(chr((x >> 8) & 0xff)) f.write(chr((x >> 16) & 0xff)) |