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|
"""distutils.dist
Provides the Distribution class, which represents the module distribution
being built/installed/distributed.
"""
import importlib, sys, os, re
try:
import warnings
except ModuleNotFoundError:
warnings = None
from distutils.errors import *
from distutils.fancy_getopt import FancyGetopt, translate_longopt
from distutils.util import check_environ, strtobool, rfc822_escape
from distutils import log
from distutils.debug import DEBUG
# Regex to define acceptable Distutils command names. This is not *quite*
# the same as a Python NAME -- I don't allow leading underscores. The fact
# that they're very similar is no coincidence; the default naming scheme is
# to look for a Python module named after the command.
command_re = re.compile (r'^[a-zA-Z]([a-zA-Z0-9_]*)$')
class Distribution:
"""The core of the Distutils. Most of the work hiding behind 'setup'
is really done within a Distribution instance, which farms the work out
to the Distutils commands specified on the command line.
Setup scripts will almost never instantiate Distribution directly,
unless the 'setup()' function is totally inadequate to their needs.
However, it is conceivable that a setup script might wish to subclass
Distribution for some specialized purpose, and then pass the subclass
to 'setup()' as the 'distclass' keyword argument. If so, it is
necessary to respect the expectations that 'setup' has of Distribution.
See the code for 'setup()', in core.py, for details.
"""
# 'global_options' describes the command-line options that may be
# supplied to the setup script prior to any actual commands.
# Eg. "./setup.py -n" or "./setup.py --quiet" both take advantage of
# these global options. This list should be kept to a bare minimum,
# since every global option is also valid as a command option -- and we
# don't want to pollute the commands with too many options that they
# have minimal control over.
# The fourth entry for verbose means that it can be repeated.
global_options = [('verbose', 'v', "run verbosely (default)", 1),
('quiet', 'q', "run quietly (turns verbosity off)"),
('dry-run', 'n', "don't actually do anything"),
('help', 'h', "show detailed help message"),
]
# 'common_usage' is a short (2-3 line) string describing the common
# usage of the setup script.
common_usage = """\
Common commands: (see '--help-commands' for more)
setup.py build will build the package underneath 'build/'
setup.py install will install the package
"""
# options that are not propagated to the commands
display_options = [
('help-commands', None,
"list all available commands"),
('name', None,
"print package name"),
('version', 'V',
"print package version"),
('fullname', None,
"print <package name>-<version>"),
('author', None,
"print the author's name"),
('author-email', None,
"print the author's email address"),
('maintainer', None,
"print the maintainer's name"),
('maintainer-email', None,
"print the maintainer's email address"),
('contact', None,
"print the maintainer's name if known, else the author's"),
('contact-email', None,
"print the maintainer's email address if known, else the author's"),
('url', None,
"print the URL for this package"),
('license', None,
"print the license of the package"),
('licence', None,
"alias for --license"),
('description', None,
"print the package description"),
('long-description', None,
"print the long package description"),
('platforms', None,
"print the list of platforms"),
('classifiers', None,
"print the list of classifiers"),
('keywords', None,
"print the list of keywords"),
('provides', None,
"print the list of packages/modules provided"),
('requires', None,
"print the list of packages/modules required"),
('obsoletes', None,
"print the list of packages/modules made obsolete")
]
display_option_names = [translate_longopt(x[0]) for x in display_options]
# negative options are options that exclude other options
negative_opt = {'quiet': 'verbose'}
# -- Creation/initialization methods -------------------------------
def __init__ (self, attrs=None):
"""Construct a new Distribution instance: initialize all the
attributes of a Distribution, and then use 'attrs' (a dictionary
mapping attribute names to values) to assign some of those
attributes their "real" values. (Any attributes not mentioned in
'attrs' will be assigned to some null value: 0, None, an empty list
or dictionary, etc.) Most importantly, initialize the
'command_obj' attribute to the empty dictionary; this will be
filled in with real command objects by 'parse_command_line()'.
"""
# Default values for our command-line options
self.verbose = 1
self.dry_run = 0
self.help = 0
for attr in self.display_option_names:
setattr(self, attr, 0)
# Store the distribution meta-data (name, version, author, and so
# forth) in a separate object -- we're getting to have enough
# information here (and enough command-line options) that it's
# worth it. Also delegate 'get_XXX()' methods to the 'metadata'
# object in a sneaky and underhanded (but efficient!) way.
self.metadata = DistributionMetadata()
for basename in self.metadata._METHOD_BASENAMES:
method_name = "get_" + basename
setattr(self, method_name, getattr(self.metadata, method_name))
# 'cmdclass' maps command names to class objects, so we
# can 1) quickly figure out which class to instantiate when
# we need to create a new command object, and 2) have a way
# for the setup script to override command classes
self.cmdclass = {}
# 'command_packages' is a list of packages in which commands
# are searched for. The factory for command 'foo' is expected
# to be named 'foo' in the module 'foo' in one of the packages
# named here. This list is searched from the left; an error
# is raised if no named package provides the command being
# searched for. (Always access using get_command_packages().)
self.command_packages = None
# 'script_name' and 'script_args' are usually set to sys.argv[0]
# and sys.argv[1:], but they can be overridden when the caller is
# not necessarily a setup script run from the command-line.
self.script_name = None
self.script_args = None
# 'command_options' is where we store command options between
# parsing them (from config files, the command-line, etc.) and when
# they are actually needed -- ie. when the command in question is
# instantiated. It is a dictionary of dictionaries of 2-tuples:
# command_options = { command_name : { option : (source, value) } }
self.command_options = {}
# 'dist_files' is the list of (command, pyversion, file) that
# have been created by any dist commands run so far. This is
# filled regardless of whether the run is dry or not. pyversion
# gives sysconfig.get_python_version() if the dist file is
# specific to a Python version, 'any' if it is good for all
# Python versions on the target platform, and '' for a source
# file. pyversion should not be used to specify minimum or
# maximum required Python versions; use the metainfo for that
# instead.
self.dist_files = []
# These options are really the business of various commands, rather
# than of the Distribution itself. We provide aliases for them in
# Distribution as a convenience to the developer.
self.packages = None
self.package_data = {}
self.package_dir = None
self.py_modules = None
self.libraries = None
self.headers = None
self.ext_modules = None
self.ext_package = None
self.include_dirs = None
self.extra_path = None
self.scripts = None
self.data_files = None
self.password = ''
# And now initialize bookkeeping stuff that can't be supplied by
# the caller at all. 'command_obj' maps command names to
# Command instances -- that's how we enforce that every command
# class is a singleton.
self.command_obj = {}
# 'have_run' maps command names to boolean values; it keeps track
# of whether we have actually run a particular command, to make it
# cheap to "run" a command whenever we think we might need to -- if
# it's already been done, no need for expensive filesystem
# operations, we just check the 'have_run' dictionary and carry on.
# It's only safe to query 'have_run' for a command class that has
# been instantiated -- a false value will be inserted when the
# command object is created, and replaced with a true value when
# the command is successfully run. Thus it's probably best to use
# '.get()' rather than a straight lookup.
self.have_run = {}
# Now we'll use the attrs dictionary (ultimately, keyword args from
# the setup script) to possibly override any or all of these
# distribution options.
if attrs:
# Pull out the set of command options and work on them
# specifically. Note that this order guarantees that aliased
# command options will override any supplied redundantly
# through the general options dictionary.
options = attrs.get('options')
if options is not None:
del attrs['options']
for (command, cmd_options) in options.items():
opt_dict = self.get_option_dict(command)
for (opt, val) in cmd_options.items():
opt_dict[opt] = ("setup script", val)
if 'licence' in attrs:
attrs['license'] = attrs['licence']
del attrs['licence']
msg = "'licence' distribution option is deprecated; use 'license'"
if warnings is not None:
warnings.warn(msg)
else:
sys.stderr.write(msg + "\n")
# Now work on the rest of the attributes. Any attribute that's
# not already defined is invalid!
for (key, val) in attrs.items():
if hasattr(self.metadata, "set_" + key):
getattr(self.metadata, "set_" + key)(val)
elif hasattr(self.metadata, key):
setattr(self.metadata, key, val)
elif hasattr(self, key):
setattr(self, key, val)
else:
msg = "Unknown distribution option: %s" % repr(key)
if warnings is not None:
warnings.warn(msg)
else:
sys.stderr.write(msg + "\n")
self.finalize_options()
def get_option_dict(self, command):
"""Get the option dictionary for a given command. If that
command's option dictionary hasn't been created yet, then create it
and return the new dictionary; otherwise, return the existing
option dictionary.
"""
dict = self.command_options.get(command)
if dict is None:
dict = self.command_options[command] = {}
return dict
def dump_option_dicts(self, header=None, commands=None, indent=""):
from pprint import pformat
if commands is None: # dump all command option dicts
commands = sorted(self.command_options.keys())
if header is not None:
self.announce(indent + header)
indent = indent + " "
if not commands:
self.announce(indent + "no commands known yet")
return
for cmd_name in commands:
opt_dict = self.command_options.get(cmd_name)
if opt_dict is None:
self.announce(indent +
"no option dict for '%s' command" % cmd_name)
else:
self.announce(indent +
"option dict for '%s' command:" % cmd_name)
out = pformat(opt_dict)
for line in out.split('\n'):
self.announce(indent + " " + line)
# -- Config file finding/parsing methods ---------------------------
def find_config_files(self):
"""Find as many configuration files as should be processed for this
platform, and return a list of filenames in the order in which they
should be parsed. The filenames returned are guaranteed to exist
(modulo nasty race conditions).
There are three possible config files: distutils.cfg in the
Distutils installation directory (ie. where the top-level
Distutils __inst__.py file lives), a file in the user's home
directory named .pydistutils.cfg on Unix and pydistutils.cfg
on Windows/Mac, and setup.cfg in the current directory.
"""
files = []
check_environ()
# Where to look for the system-wide Distutils config file
sys_dir = os.path.dirname(sys.modules['distutils'].__file__)
# Look for the system config file
sys_file = os.path.join(sys_dir, "distutils.cfg")
if os.path.isfile(sys_file):
files.append(sys_file)
# What to call the per-user config file
if os.name == 'posix':
user_filename = ".pydistutils.cfg"
else:
user_filename = "pydistutils.cfg"
# And look for the user config file
user_file = os.path.join(os.path.expanduser('~'), user_filename)
if os.path.isfile(user_file):
files.append(user_file)
# All platforms support local setup.cfg
local_file = "setup.cfg"
if os.path.isfile(local_file):
files.append(local_file)
return files
def parse_config_files(self, filenames=None):
from configparser import ConfigParser
# Ignore install directory options if we have a venv
if sys.prefix != sys.base_prefix:
ignore_options = [
'install-base', 'install-platbase', 'install-lib',
'install-platlib', 'install-purelib', 'install-headers',
'install-scripts', 'install-data', 'prefix', 'exec-prefix',
'home', 'user', 'root']
else:
ignore_options = []
ignore_options = frozenset(ignore_options)
if filenames is None:
filenames = self.find_config_files()
if DEBUG:
self.announce("Distribution.parse_config_files():")
parser = ConfigParser()
for filename in filenames:
if DEBUG:
self.announce(" reading %s" % filename)
parser.read(filename)
for section in parser.sections():
options = parser.options(section)
opt_dict = self.get_option_dict(section)
for opt in options:
if opt != '__name__' and opt not in ignore_options:
val = parser.get(section,opt)
opt = opt.replace('-', '_')
opt_dict[opt] = (filename, val)
# Make the ConfigParser forget everything (so we retain
# the original filenames that options come from)
parser.__init__()
# If there was a "global" section in the config file, use it
# to set Distribution options.
if 'global' in self.command_options:
for (opt, (src, val)) in self.command_options['global'].items():
alias = self.negative_opt.get(opt)
try:
if alias:
setattr(self, alias, not strtobool(val))
elif opt in ('verbose', 'dry_run'): # ugh!
setattr(self, opt, strtobool(val))
else:
setattr(self, opt, val)
except ValueError as msg:
raise DistutilsOptionError(msg)
# -- Command-line parsing methods ----------------------------------
def parse_command_line(self):
"""Parse the setup script's command line, taken from the
'script_args' instance attribute (which defaults to 'sys.argv[1:]'
-- see 'setup()' in core.py). This list is first processed for
"global options" -- options that set attributes of the Distribution
instance. Then, it is alternately scanned for Distutils commands
and options for that command. Each new command terminates the
options for the previous command. The allowed options for a
command are determined by the 'user_options' attribute of the
command class -- thus, we have to be able to load command classes
in order to parse the command line. Any error in that 'options'
attribute raises DistutilsGetoptError; any error on the
command-line raises DistutilsArgError. If no Distutils commands
were found on the command line, raises DistutilsArgError. Return
true if command-line was successfully parsed and we should carry
on with executing commands; false if no errors but we shouldn't
execute commands (currently, this only happens if user asks for
help).
"""
#
# We now have enough information to show the Macintosh dialog
# that allows the user to interactively specify the "command line".
#
toplevel_options = self._get_toplevel_options()
# We have to parse the command line a bit at a time -- global
# options, then the first command, then its options, and so on --
# because each command will be handled by a different class, and
# the options that are valid for a particular class aren't known
# until we have loaded the command class, which doesn't happen
# until we know what the command is.
self.commands = []
parser = FancyGetopt(toplevel_options + self.display_options)
parser.set_negative_aliases(self.negative_opt)
parser.set_aliases({'licence': 'license'})
args = parser.getopt(args=self.script_args, object=self)
option_order = parser.get_option_order()
log.set_verbosity(self.verbose)
# for display options we return immediately
if self.handle_display_options(option_order):
return
while args:
args = self._parse_command_opts(parser, args)
if args is None: # user asked for help (and got it)
return
# Handle the cases of --help as a "global" option, ie.
# "setup.py --help" and "setup.py --help command ...". For the
# former, we show global options (--verbose, --dry-run, etc.)
# and display-only options (--name, --version, etc.); for the
# latter, we omit the display-only options and show help for
# each command listed on the command line.
if self.help:
self._show_help(parser,
display_options=len(self.commands) == 0,
commands=self.commands)
return
# Oops, no commands found -- an end-user error
if not self.commands:
raise DistutilsArgError("no commands supplied")
# All is well: return true
return True
def _get_toplevel_options(self):
"""Return the non-display options recognized at the top level.
This includes options that are recognized *only* at the top
level as well as options recognized for commands.
"""
return self.global_options + [
("command-packages=", None,
"list of packages that provide distutils commands"),
]
def _parse_command_opts(self, parser, args):
"""Parse the command-line options for a single command.
'parser' must be a FancyGetopt instance; 'args' must be the list
of arguments, starting with the current command (whose options
we are about to parse). Returns a new version of 'args' with
the next command at the front of the list; will be the empty
list if there are no more commands on the command line. Returns
None if the user asked for help on this command.
"""
# late import because of mutual dependence between these modules
from distutils.cmd import Command
# Pull the current command from the head of the command line
command = args[0]
if not command_re.match(command):
raise SystemExit("invalid command name '%s'" % command)
self.commands.append(command)
# Dig up the command class that implements this command, so we
# 1) know that it's a valid command, and 2) know which options
# it takes.
try:
cmd_class = self.get_command_class(command)
except DistutilsModuleError as msg:
raise DistutilsArgError(msg)
# Require that the command class be derived from Command -- want
# to be sure that the basic "command" interface is implemented.
if not issubclass(cmd_class, Command):
raise DistutilsClassError(
"command class %s must subclass Command" % cmd_class)
# Also make sure that the command object provides a list of its
# known options.
if not (hasattr(cmd_class, 'user_options') and
isinstance(cmd_class.user_options, list)):
raise DistutilsClassError(("command class %s must provide " +
"'user_options' attribute (a list of tuples)") % \
cmd_class)
# If the command class has a list of negative alias options,
# merge it in with the global negative aliases.
negative_opt = self.negative_opt
if hasattr(cmd_class, 'negative_opt'):
negative_opt = negative_opt.copy()
negative_opt.update(cmd_class.negative_opt)
# Check for help_options in command class. They have a different
# format (tuple of four) so we need to preprocess them here.
if (hasattr(cmd_class, 'help_options') and
isinstance(cmd_class.help_options, list)):
help_options = fix_help_options(cmd_class.help_options)
else:
help_options = []
# All commands support the global options too, just by adding
# in 'global_options'.
parser.set_option_table(self.global_options +
cmd_class.user_options +
help_options)
parser.set_negative_aliases(negative_opt)
(args, opts) = parser.getopt(args[1:])
if hasattr(opts, 'help') and opts.help:
self._show_help(parser, display_options=0, commands=[cmd_class])
return
if (hasattr(cmd_class, 'help_options') and
isinstance(cmd_class.help_options, list)):
help_option_found=0
for (help_option, short, desc, func) in cmd_class.help_options:
if hasattr(opts, parser.get_attr_name(help_option)):
help_option_found=1
if callable(func):
func()
else:
raise DistutilsClassError(
"invalid help function %r for help option '%s': "
"must be a callable object (function, etc.)"
% (func, help_option))
if help_option_found:
return
# Put the options from the command-line into their official
# holding pen, the 'command_options' dictionary.
opt_dict = self.get_option_dict(command)
for (name, value) in vars(opts).items():
opt_dict[name] = ("command line", value)
return args
def finalize_options(self):
"""Set final values for all the options on the Distribution
instance, analogous to the .finalize_options() method of Command
objects.
"""
for attr in ('keywords', 'platforms'):
value = getattr(self.metadata, attr)
if value is None:
continue
if isinstance(value, str):
value = [elm.strip() for elm in value.split(',')]
setattr(self.metadata, attr, value)
def _show_help(self, parser, global_options=1, display_options=1,
commands=[]):
"""Show help for the setup script command-line in the form of
several lists of command-line options. 'parser' should be a
FancyGetopt instance; do not expect it to be returned in the
same state, as its option table will be reset to make it
generate the correct help text.
If 'global_options' is true, lists the global options:
--verbose, --dry-run, etc. If 'display_options' is true, lists
the "display-only" options: --name, --version, etc. Finally,
lists per-command help for every command name or command class
in 'commands'.
"""
# late import because of mutual dependence between these modules
from distutils.core import gen_usage
from distutils.cmd import Command
if global_options:
if display_options:
options = self._get_toplevel_options()
else:
options = self.global_options
parser.set_option_table(options)
parser.print_help(self.common_usage + "\nGlobal options:")
print('')
if display_options:
parser.set_option_table(self.display_options)
parser.print_help(
"Information display options (just display " +
"information, ignore any commands)")
print('')
for command in self.commands:
if isinstance(command, type) and issubclass(command, Command):
klass = command
else:
klass = self.get_command_class(command)
if (hasattr(klass, 'help_options') and
isinstance(klass.help_options, list)):
parser.set_option_table(klass.user_options +
fix_help_options(klass.help_options))
else:
parser.set_option_table(klass.user_options)
parser.print_help("Options for '%s' command:" % klass.__name__)
print('')
print(gen_usage(self.script_name))
def handle_display_options(self, option_order):
"""If there were any non-global "display-only" options
(--help-commands or the metadata display options) on the command
line, display the requested info and return true; else return
false.
"""
from distutils.core import gen_usage
# User just wants a list of commands -- we'll print it out and stop
# processing now (ie. if they ran "setup --help-commands foo bar",
# we ignore "foo bar").
if self.help_commands:
self.print_commands()
print('')
print(gen_usage(self.script_name))
return 1
# If user supplied any of the "display metadata" options, then
# display that metadata in the order in which the user supplied the
# metadata options.
any_display_options = 0
is_display_option = {}
for option in self.display_options:
is_display_option[option[0]] = 1
for (opt, val) in option_order:
if val and is_display_option.get(opt):
opt = translate_longopt(opt)
value = getattr(self.metadata, "get_"+opt)()
if opt in ['keywords', 'platforms']:
print(','.join(value))
elif opt in ('classifiers', 'provides', 'requires',
'obsoletes'):
print('\n'.join(value))
else:
print(value)
any_display_options = 1
return any_display_options
def print_command_list(self, commands, header, max_length):
"""Print a subset of the list of all commands -- used by
'print_commands()'.
"""
print(header + ":")
for cmd in commands:
klass = self.cmdclass.get(cmd)
if not klass:
klass = self.get_command_class(cmd)
try:
description = klass.description
except AttributeError:
description = "(no description available)"
print(" %-*s %s" % (max_length, cmd, description))
def print_commands(self):
"""Print out a help message listing all available commands with a
description of each. The list is divided into "standard commands"
(listed in distutils.command.__all__) and "extra commands"
(mentioned in self.cmdclass, but not a standard command). The
descriptions come from the command class attribute
'description'.
"""
import distutils.command
std_commands = distutils.command.__all__
is_std = {}
for cmd in std_commands:
is_std[cmd] = 1
extra_commands = []
for cmd in self.cmdclass.keys():
if not is_std.get(cmd):
extra_commands.append(cmd)
max_length = 0
for cmd in (std_commands + extra_commands):
if len(cmd) > max_length:
max_length = len(cmd)
self.print_command_list(std_commands,
"Standard commands",
max_length)
if extra_commands:
print()
self.print_command_list(extra_commands,
"Extra commands",
max_length)
def get_command_list(self):
"""Get a list of (command, description) tuples.
The list is divided into "standard commands" (listed in
distutils.command.__all__) and "extra commands" (mentioned in
self.cmdclass, but not a standard command). The descriptions come
from the command class attribute 'description'.
"""
# Currently this is only used on Mac OS, for the Mac-only GUI
# Distutils interface (by Jack Jansen)
import distutils.command
std_commands = distutils.command.__all__
is_std = {}
for cmd in std_commands:
is_std[cmd] = 1
extra_commands = []
for cmd in self.cmdclass.keys():
if not is_std.get(cmd):
extra_commands.append(cmd)
rv = []
for cmd in (std_commands + extra_commands):
klass = self.cmdclass.get(cmd)
if not klass:
klass = self.get_command_class(cmd)
try:
description = klass.description
except AttributeError:
description = "(no description available)"
rv.append((cmd, description))
return rv
# -- Command class/object methods ----------------------------------
def get_command_packages(self):
"""Return a list of packages from which commands are loaded."""
pkgs = self.command_packages
if not isinstance(pkgs, list):
if pkgs is None:
pkgs = ''
pkgs = [pkg.strip() for pkg in pkgs.split(',') if pkg != '']
if "distutils.command" not in pkgs:
pkgs.insert(0, "distutils.command")
self.command_packages = pkgs
return pkgs
def get_command_class(self, command):
"""Return the class that implements the Distutils command named by
'command'. First we check the 'cmdclass' dictionary; if the
command is mentioned there, we fetch the class object from the
dictionary and return it. Otherwise we load the command module
("distutils.command." + command) and fetch the command class from
the module. The loaded class is also stored in 'cmdclass'
to speed future calls to 'get_command_class()'.
Raises DistutilsModuleError if the expected module could not be
found, or if that module does not define the expected class.
"""
klass = self.cmdclass.get(command)
if klass:
return klass
for pkgname in self.get_command_packages():
module_name = "%s.%s" % (pkgname, command)
klass_name = command
try:
module = importlib.import_module(module_name)
except ModuleNotFoundError:
continue
try:
klass = getattr(module, klass_name)
except AttributeError:
raise DistutilsModuleError(
"invalid command '%s' (no class '%s' in module '%s')"
% (command, klass_name, module_name))
self.cmdclass[command] = klass
return klass
raise DistutilsModuleError("invalid command '%s'" % command)
def get_command_obj(self, command, create=1):
"""Return the command object for 'command'. Normally this object
is cached on a previous call to 'get_command_obj()'; if no command
object for 'command' is in the cache, then we either create and
return it (if 'create' is true) or return None.
"""
cmd_obj = self.command_obj.get(command)
if not cmd_obj and create:
if DEBUG:
self.announce("Distribution.get_command_obj(): " \
"creating '%s' command object" % command)
klass = self.get_command_class(command)
cmd_obj = self.command_obj[command] = klass(self)
self.have_run[command] = 0
# Set any options that were supplied in config files
# or on the command line. (NB. support for error
# reporting is lame here: any errors aren't reported
# until 'finalize_options()' is called, which means
# we won't report the source of the error.)
options = self.command_options.get(command)
if options:
self._set_command_options(cmd_obj, options)
return cmd_obj
def _set_command_options(self, command_obj, option_dict=None):
"""Set the options for 'command_obj' from 'option_dict'. Basically
this means copying elements of a dictionary ('option_dict') to
attributes of an instance ('command').
'command_obj' must be a Command instance. If 'option_dict' is not
supplied, uses the standard option dictionary for this command
(from 'self.command_options').
"""
command_name = command_obj.get_command_name()
if option_dict is None:
option_dict = self.get_option_dict(command_name)
if DEBUG:
self.announce(" setting options for '%s' command:" % command_name)
for (option, (source, value)) in option_dict.items():
if DEBUG:
self.announce(" %s = %s (from %s)" % (option, value,
source))
try:
bool_opts = [translate_longopt(o)
for o in command_obj.boolean_options]
except AttributeError:
bool_opts = []
try:
neg_opt = command_obj.negative_opt
except AttributeError:
neg_opt = {}
try:
is_string = isinstance(value, str)
if option in neg_opt and is_string:
setattr(command_obj, neg_opt[option], not strtobool(value))
elif option in bool_opts and is_string:
setattr(command_obj, option, strtobool(value))
elif hasattr(command_obj, option):
setattr(command_obj, option, value)
else:
raise DistutilsOptionError(
"error in %s: command '%s' has no such option '%s'"
% (source, command_name, option))
except ValueError as msg:
raise DistutilsOptionError(msg)
def reinitialize_command(self, command, reinit_subcommands=0):
"""Reinitializes a command to the state it was in when first
returned by 'get_command_obj()': ie., initialized but not yet
finalized. This provides the opportunity to sneak option
values in programmatically, overriding or supplementing
user-supplied values from the config files and command line.
You'll have to re-finalize the command object (by calling
'finalize_options()' or 'ensure_finalized()') before using it for
real.
'command' should be a command name (string) or command object. If
'reinit_subcommands' is true, also reinitializes the command's
sub-commands, as declared by the 'sub_commands' class attribute (if
it has one). See the "install" command for an example. Only
reinitializes the sub-commands that actually matter, ie. those
whose test predicates return true.
Returns the reinitialized command object.
"""
from distutils.cmd import Command
if not isinstance(command, Command):
command_name = command
command = self.get_command_obj(command_name)
else:
command_name = command.get_command_name()
if not command.finalized:
return command
command.initialize_options()
command.finalized = 0
self.have_run[command_name] = 0
self._set_command_options(command)
if reinit_subcommands:
for sub in command.get_sub_commands():
self.reinitialize_command(sub, reinit_subcommands)
return command
# -- Methods that operate on the Distribution ----------------------
def announce(self, msg, level=log.INFO):
log.log(level, msg)
def run_commands(self):
"""Run each command that was seen on the setup script command line.
Uses the list of commands found and cache of command objects
created by 'get_command_obj()'.
"""
for cmd in self.commands:
self.run_command(cmd)
# -- Methods that operate on its Commands --------------------------
def run_command(self, command):
"""Do whatever it takes to run a command (including nothing at all,
if the command has already been run). Specifically: if we have
already created and run the command named by 'command', return
silently without doing anything. If the command named by 'command'
doesn't even have a command object yet, create one. Then invoke
'run()' on that command object (or an existing one).
"""
# Already been here, done that? then return silently.
if self.have_run.get(command):
return
log.info("running %s", command)
cmd_obj = self.get_command_obj(command)
cmd_obj.ensure_finalized()
cmd_obj.run()
self.have_run[command] = 1
# -- Distribution query methods ------------------------------------
def has_pure_modules(self):
return len(self.packages or self.py_modules or []) > 0
def has_ext_modules(self):
return self.ext_modules and len(self.ext_modules) > 0
def has_c_libraries(self):
return self.libraries and len(self.libraries) > 0
def has_modules(self):
return self.has_pure_modules() or self.has_ext_modules()
def has_headers(self):
return self.headers and len(self.headers) > 0
def has_scripts(self):
return self.scripts and len(self.scripts) > 0
def has_data_files(self):
return self.data_files and len(self.data_files) > 0
def is_pure(self):
return (self.has_pure_modules() and
not self.has_ext_modules() and
not self.has_c_libraries())
# -- Metadata query methods ----------------------------------------
# If you're looking for 'get_name()', 'get_version()', and so forth,
# they are defined in a sneaky way: the constructor binds self.get_XXX
# to self.metadata.get_XXX. The actual code is in the
# DistributionMetadata class, below.
class DistributionMetadata:
"""Dummy class to hold the distribution meta-data: name, version,
author, and so forth.
"""
_METHOD_BASENAMES = ("name", "version", "author", "author_email",
"maintainer", "maintainer_email", "url",
"license", "description", "long_description",
"keywords", "platforms", "fullname", "contact",
"contact_email", "license", "classifiers",
"download_url",
# PEP 314
"provides", "requires", "obsoletes",
)
def __init__ (self):
self.name = None
self.version = None
self.author = None
self.author_email = None
self.maintainer = None
self.maintainer_email = None
self.url = None
self.license = None
self.description = None
self.long_description = None
self.keywords = None
self.platforms = None
self.classifiers = None
self.download_url = None
# PEP 314
self.provides = None
self.requires = None
self.obsoletes = None
def write_pkg_info(self, base_dir):
"""Write the PKG-INFO file into the release tree.
"""
with open(os.path.join(base_dir, 'PKG-INFO'), 'w',
encoding='UTF-8') as pkg_info:
self.write_pkg_file(pkg_info)
def write_pkg_file(self, file):
"""Write the PKG-INFO format data to a file object.
"""
version = '1.0'
if (self.provides or self.requires or self.obsoletes or
self.classifiers or self.download_url):
version = '1.1'
file.write('Metadata-Version: %s\n' % version)
file.write('Name: %s\n' % self.get_name() )
file.write('Version: %s\n' % self.get_version() )
file.write('Summary: %s\n' % self.get_description() )
file.write('Home-page: %s\n' % self.get_url() )
file.write('Author: %s\n' % self.get_contact() )
file.write('Author-email: %s\n' % self.get_contact_email() )
file.write('License: %s\n' % self.get_license() )
if self.download_url:
file.write('Download-URL: %s\n' % self.download_url)
long_desc = rfc822_escape(self.get_long_description())
file.write('Description: %s\n' % long_desc)
keywords = ','.join(self.get_keywords())
if keywords:
file.write('Keywords: %s\n' % keywords )
self._write_list(file, 'Platform', self.get_platforms())
self._write_list(file, 'Classifier', self.get_classifiers())
# PEP 314
self._write_list(file, 'Requires', self.get_requires())
self._write_list(file, 'Provides', self.get_provides())
self._write_list(file, 'Obsoletes', self.get_obsoletes())
def _write_list(self, file, name, values):
for value in values:
file.write('%s: %s\n' % (name, value))
# -- Metadata query methods ----------------------------------------
def get_name(self):
return self.name or "UNKNOWN"
def get_version(self):
return self.version or "0.0.0"
def get_fullname(self):
return "%s-%s" % (self.get_name(), self.get_version())
def get_author(self):
return self.author or "UNKNOWN"
def get_author_email(self):
return self.author_email or "UNKNOWN"
def get_maintainer(self):
return self.maintainer or "UNKNOWN"
def get_maintainer_email(self):
return self.maintainer_email or "UNKNOWN"
def get_contact(self):
return self.maintainer or self.author or "UNKNOWN"
def get_contact_email(self):
return self.maintainer_email or self.author_email or "UNKNOWN"
def get_url(self):
return self.url or "UNKNOWN"
def get_license(self):
return self.license or "UNKNOWN"
get_licence = get_license
def get_description(self):
return self.description or "UNKNOWN"
def get_long_description(self):
return self.long_description or "UNKNOWN"
def get_keywords(self):
return self.keywords or []
def get_platforms(self):
return self.platforms or ["UNKNOWN"]
def get_classifiers(self):
return self.classifiers or []
def get_download_url(self):
return self.download_url or "UNKNOWN"
# PEP 314
def get_requires(self):
return self.requires or []
def set_requires(self, value):
import distutils.versionpredicate
for v in value:
distutils.versionpredicate.VersionPredicate(v)
self.requires = value
def get_provides(self):
return self.provides or []
def set_provides(self, value):
value = [v.strip() for v in value]
for v in value:
import distutils.versionpredicate
distutils.versionpredicate.split_provision(v)
self.provides = value
def get_obsoletes(self):
return self.obsoletes or []
def set_obsoletes(self, value):
import distutils.versionpredicate
for v in value:
distutils.versionpredicate.VersionPredicate(v)
self.obsoletes = value
def fix_help_options(options):
"""Convert a 4-tuple 'help_options' list as found in various command
classes to the 3-tuple form required by FancyGetopt.
"""
new_options = []
for help_tuple in options:
new_options.append(help_tuple[0:3])
return new_options
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