"""Configuration file parser. A configuration file consists of sections, lead by a "[section]" header, and followed by "name: value" entries, with continuations and such in the style of RFC 822. Intrinsic defaults can be specified by passing them into the ConfigParser constructor as a dictionary. class: ConfigParser -- responsible for parsing a list of configuration files, and managing the parsed database. methods: __init__(defaults=None, dict_type=_default_dict, allow_no_value=False, delimiters=('=', ':'), comment_prefixes=('#', ';'), inline_comment_prefixes=None, strict=True, empty_lines_in_values=True): Create the parser. When `defaults' is given, it is initialized into the dictionary or intrinsic defaults. The keys must be strings, the values must be appropriate for %()s string interpolation. When `dict_type' is given, it will be used to create the dictionary objects for the list of sections, for the options within a section, and for the default values. When `delimiters' is given, it will be used as the set of substrings that divide keys from values. When `comment_prefixes' is given, it will be used as the set of substrings that prefix comments in empty lines. Comments can be indented. When `inline_comment_prefixes' is given, it will be used as the set of substrings that prefix comments in non-empty lines. When `strict` is True, the parser won't allow for any section or option duplicates while reading from a single source (file, string or dictionary). Default is True. When `empty_lines_in_values' is False (default: True), each empty line marks the end of an option. Otherwise, internal empty lines of a multiline option are kept as part of the value. When `allow_no_value' is True (default: False), options without values are accepted; the value presented for these is None. sections() Return all the configuration section names, sans DEFAULT. has_section(section) Return whether the given section exists. has_option(section, option) Return whether the given option exists in the given section. options(section) Return list of configuration options for the named section. read(filenames, encoding=None) Read and parse the list of named configuration files, given by name. A single filename is also allowed. Non-existing files are ignored. Return list of successfully read files. read_file(f, filename=None) Read and parse one configuration file, given as a file object. The filename defaults to f.name; it is only used in error messages (if f has no `name' attribute, the string `' is used). read_string(string) Read configuration from a given string. read_dict(dictionary) Read configuration from a dictionary. Keys are section names, values are dictionaries with keys and values that should be present in the section. If the used dictionary type preserves order, sections and their keys will be added in order. Values are automatically converted to strings. get(section, option, raw=False, vars=None, fallback=_UNSET) Return a string value for the named option. All % interpolations are expanded in the return values, based on the defaults passed into the constructor and the DEFAULT section. Additional substitutions may be provided using the `vars' argument, which must be a dictionary whose contents override any pre-existing defaults. If `option' is a key in `vars', the value from `vars' is used. getint(section, options, raw=False, vars=None, fallback=_UNSET) Like get(), but convert value to an integer. getfloat(section, options, raw=False, vars=None, fallback=_UNSET) Like get(), but convert value to a float. getboolean(section, options, raw=False, vars=None, fallback=_UNSET) Like get(), but convert value to a boolean (currently case insensitively defined as 0, false, no, off for False, and 1, true, yes, on for True). Returns False or True. items(section=_UNSET, raw=False, vars=None) If section is given, return a list of tuples with (section_name, section_proxy) for each section, including DEFAULTSECT. Otherwise, return a list of tuples with (name, value) for each option in the section. remove_section(section) Remove the given file section and all its options. remove_option(section, option) Remove the given option from the given section. set(section, option, value) Set the given option. write(fp, space_around_delimiters=True) Write the configuration state in .ini format. If `space_around_delimiters' is True (the default), delimiters between keys and values are surrounded by spaces. """ from collections.abc import MutableMapping from collections import OrderedDict as _default_dict, _ChainMap import functools import io import itertools import re import sys import warnings __all__ = ["NoSectionError", "DuplicateOptionError", "DuplicateSectionError", "NoOptionError", "InterpolationError", "InterpolationDepthError", "InterpolationSyntaxError", "ParsingError", "MissingSectionHeaderError", "ConfigParser", "SafeConfigParser", "RawConfigParser", "DEFAULTSECT", "MAX_INTERPOLATION_DEPTH"] DEFAULTSECT = "DEFAULT" MAX_INTERPOLATION_DEPTH = 10 # exception classes class Error(Exception): """Base class for ConfigParser exceptions.""" def _get_message(self): """Getter for 'message'; needed only to override deprecation in BaseException. """ return self.__message def _set_message(self, value): """Setter for 'message'; needed only to override deprecation in BaseException. """ self.__message = value # BaseException.message has been deprecated since Python 2.6. To prevent # DeprecationWarning from popping up over this pre-existing attribute, use # a new property that takes lookup precedence. message = property(_get_message, _set_message) def __init__(self, msg=''): self.message = msg Exception.__init__(self, msg) def __repr__(self): return self.message __str__ = __repr__ class NoSectionError(Error): """Raised when no section matches a requested option.""" def __init__(self, section): Error.__init__(self, 'No section: %r' % (section,)) self.section = section self.args = (section, ) class DuplicateSectionError(Error): """Raised when a section is repeated in an input source. Possible repetitions that raise this exception are: multiple creation using the API or in strict parsers when a section is found more than once in a single input file, string or dictionary. """ def __init__(self, section, source=None, lineno=None): msg = [repr(section), " already exists"] if source is not None: message = ["While reading from ", source] if lineno is not None: message.append(" [line {0:2d}]".format(lineno)) message.append(": section ") message.extend(msg) msg = message else: msg.insert(0, "Section ") Error.__init__(self, "".join(msg)) self.section = section self.source = source self.lineno = lineno self.args = (section, source, lineno) class DuplicateOptionError(Error): """Raised by strict parsers when an option is repeated in an input source. Current implementation raises this exception only when an option is found more than once in a single file, string or dictionary. """ def __init__(self, section, option, source=None, lineno=None): msg = [repr(option), " in section ", repr(section), " already exists"] if source is not None: message = ["While reading from ", source] if lineno is not None: message.append(" [line {0:2d}]".format(lineno)) message.append(": option ") message.extend(msg) msg = message else: msg.insert(0, "Option ") Error.__init__(self, "".join(msg)) self.section = section self.option = option self.source = source self.lineno = lineno self.args = (section, option, source, lineno) class NoOptionError(Error): """A requested option was not found.""" def __init__(self, option, section): Error.__init__(self, "No option %r in section: %r" % (option, section)) self.option = option self.section = section self.args = (option, section) class InterpolationError(Error): """Base class for interpolation-related exceptions.""" def __init__(self, option, section, msg): Error.__init__(self, msg) self.option = option self.section = section self.args = (option, section, msg) class InterpolationMissingOptionError(InterpolationError): """A string substitution required a setting which was not available.""" def __init__(self, option, section, rawval, reference): msg = ("Bad value substitution:\n" "\tsection: [%s]\n" "\toption : %s\n" "\tkey : %s\n" "\trawval : %s\n" % (section, option, reference, rawval)) InterpolationError.__init__(self, option, section, msg) self.reference = reference self.args = (option, section, rawval, reference) class InterpolationSyntaxError(InterpolationError): """Raised when the source text contains invalid syntax. Current implementation raises this exception when the source text into which substitutions are made does not conform to the required syntax. """ class InterpolationDepthError(InterpolationError): """Raised when substitutions are nested too deeply.""" def __init__(self, option, section, rawval): msg = ("Value interpolation too deeply recursive:\n" "\tsection: [%s]\n" "\toption : %s\n" "\trawval : %s\n" % (section, option, rawval)) InterpolationError.__init__(self, option, section, msg) self.args = (option, section, rawval) class ParsingError(Error): """Raised when a configuration file does not follow legal syntax.""" def __init__(self, source=None, filename=None): # Exactly one of `source'/`filename' arguments has to be given. # `filename' kept for compatibility. if filename and source: raise ValueError("Cannot specify both `filename' and `source'. " "Use `source'.") elif not filename and not source: raise ValueError("Required argument `source' not given.") elif filename: source = filename Error.__init__(self, 'Source contains parsing errors: %s' % source) self.source = source self.errors = [] self.args = (source, ) @property def filename(self): """Deprecated, use `source'.""" warnings.warn( "The 'filename' attribute will be removed in future versions. " "Use 'source' instead.", DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2 ) return self.source @filename.setter def filename(self, value): """Deprecated, user `source'.""" warnings.warn( "The 'filename' attribute will be removed in future versions. " "Use 'source' instead.", DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2 ) self.source = value def append(self, lineno, line): self.errors.append((lineno, line)) self.message += '\n\t[line %2d]: %s' % (lineno, line) class MissingSectionHeaderError(ParsingError): """Raised when a key-value pair is found before any section header.""" def __init__(self, filename, lineno, line): Error.__init__( self, 'File contains no section headers.\nfile: %s, line: %d\n%r' % (filename, lineno, line)) self.source = filename self.lineno = lineno self.line = line self.args = (filename, lineno, line) # Used in parser getters to indicate the default behaviour when a specific # option is not found it to raise an exception. Created to enable `None' as # a valid fallback value. _UNSET = object() class Interpolation: """Dummy interpolation that passes the value through with no changes.""" def before_get(self, parser, section, option, value, defaults): return value def before_set(self, parser, section, option, value): return value def before_read(self, parser, section, option, value): return value def before_write(self, parser, section, option, value): return value class BasicInterpolation(Interpolation): """Interpolation as implemented in the classic ConfigParser. The option values can contain format strings which refer to other values in the same section, or values in the special default section. For example: something: %(dir)s/whatever would resolve the "%(dir)s" to the value of dir. All reference expansions are done late, on demand. If a user needs to use a bare % in a configuration file, she can escape it by writing %%. Other other % usage is considered a user error and raises `InterpolationSyntaxError'.""" _KEYCRE = re.compile(r"%\(([^)]+)\)s") def before_get(self, parser, section, option, value, defaults): L = [] self._interpolate_some(parser, option, L, value, section, defaults, 1) return ''.join(L) def before_set(self, parser, section, option, value): tmp_value = value.replace('%%', '') # escaped percent signs tmp_value = self._KEYCRE.sub('', tmp_value) # valid syntax if '%' in tmp_value: raise ValueError("invalid interpolation syntax in %r at " "position %d" % (value, tmp_value.find('%'))) return value def _interpolate_some(self, parser, option, accum, rest, section, map, depth): if depth > MAX_INTERPOLATION_DEPTH: raise InterpolationDepthError(option, section, rest) while rest: p = rest.find("%") if p < 0: accum.append(rest) return if p > 0: accum.append(rest[:p]) rest = rest[p:] # p is no longer used c = rest[1:2] if c == "%": accum.append("%") rest = rest[2:] elif c == "(": m = self._KEYCRE.match(rest) if m is None: raise InterpolationSyntaxError(option, section, "bad interpolation variable reference %r" % rest) var = parser.optionxform(m.group(1)) rest = rest[m.end():] try: v = map[var] except KeyError: raise InterpolationMissingOptionError( option, section, rest, var) if "%" in v: self._interpolate_some(parser, option, accum, v, section, map, depth + 1) else: accum.append(v) else: raise InterpolationSyntaxError( option, section, "'%%' must be followed by '%%' or '(', " "found: %r" % (rest,)) class ExtendedInterpolation(Interpolation): """Advanced variant of interpolation, supports the syntax used by `zc.buildout'. Enables interpolation between sections.""" _KEYCRE = re.compile(r"\$\{([^}]+)\}") def before_get(self, parser, section, option, value, defaults): L = [] self._interpolate_some(parser, option, L, value, section, defaults, 1) return ''.join(L) def before_set(self, parser, section, option, value): tmp_value = value.replace('$$', '') # escaped dollar signs tmp_value = self._KEYCRE.sub('', tmp_value) # valid syntax if '$' in tmp_value: raise ValueError("invalid interpolation syntax in %r at " "position %d" % (value, tmp_value.find('%'))) return value def _interpolate_some(self, parser, option, accum, rest, section, map, depth): if depth > MAX_INTERPOLATION_DEPTH: raise InterpolationDepthError(option, section, rest) while rest: p = rest.find("$") if p < 0: accum.append(rest) return if p > 0: accum.append(rest[:p]) rest = rest[p:] # p is no longer used c = rest[1:2] if c == "$": accum.append("$") rest = rest[2:] elif c == "{": m = self._KEYCRE.match(rest) if m is None: raise InterpolationSyntaxError(option, section, "bad interpolation variable reference %r" % rest) path = parser.optionxform(m.group(1)).split(':') rest = rest[m.end():] sect = section opt = option try: if len(path) == 1: opt = path[0] v = map[opt] elif len(path) == 2: sect = path[0] opt = path[1] v = parser.get(sect, opt, raw=True) else: raise InterpolationSyntaxError( option, section, "More than one ':' found: %r" % (rest,)) except (KeyError, NoSectionError, NoOptionError): raise InterpolationMissingOptionError( option, section, rest, ":".join(path)) if "$" in v: self._interpolate_some(parser, opt, accum, v, sect, dict(parser.items(sect, raw=True)), depth + 1) else: accum.append(v) else: raise InterpolationSyntaxError( option, section, "'$' must be followed by '$' or '{', " "found: %r" % (rest,)) class LegacyInterpolation(Interpolation): """Deprecated interpolation used in old versions of ConfigParser. Use BasicInterpolation or ExtendedInterpolation instead.""" _KEYCRE = re.compile(r"%\(([^)]*)\)s|.") def before_get(self, parser, section, option, value, vars): rawval = value depth = MAX_INTERPOLATION_DEPTH while depth: # Loop through this until it's done depth -= 1 if value and "%(" in value: replace = functools.partial(self._interpolation_replace, parser=parser) value = self._KEYCRE.sub(replace, value) try: value = value % vars except KeyError as e: raise InterpolationMissingOptionError( option, section, rawval, e.args[0]) else: break if value and "%(" in value: raise InterpolationDepthError(option, section, rawval) return value def before_set(self, parser, section, option, value): return value @staticmethod def _interpolation_replace(match, parser): s = match.group(1) if s is None: return match.group() else: return "%%(%s)s" % parser.optionxform(s) class RawConfigParser(MutableMapping): """ConfigParser that does not do interpolation.""" # Regular expressions for parsing section headers and options _SECT_TMPL = r""" \[ # [ (?P
[^]]+) # very permissive! \] # ] """ _OPT_TMPL = r""" (?P