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"""
Define names for built-in types that aren't directly accessible as a builtin.
"""
import sys

# Iterators in Python aren't a matter of type but of protocol.  A large
# and changing number of builtin types implement *some* flavor of
# iterator.  Don't check the type!  Use hasattr to check for both
# "__iter__" and "__next__" attributes instead.

def _f(): pass
FunctionType = type(_f)
LambdaType = type(lambda: None)         # Same as FunctionType
CodeType = type(_f.__code__)
MappingProxyType = type(type.__dict__)
SimpleNamespace = type(sys.implementation)

def _cell_factory():
    a = 1
    def f():
        nonlocal a
    return f.__closure__[0]
CellType = type(_cell_factory())

def _g():
    yield 1
GeneratorType = type(_g())

async def _c(): pass
_c = _c()
CoroutineType = type(_c)
_c.close()  # Prevent ResourceWarning

async def _ag():
    yield
_ag = _ag()
AsyncGeneratorType = type(_ag)

class _C:
    def _m(self): pass
MethodType = type(_C()._m)

BuiltinFunctionType = type(len)
BuiltinMethodType = type([].append)     # Same as BuiltinFunctionType

WrapperDescriptorType = type(object.__init__)
MethodWrapperType = type(object().__str__)
MethodDescriptorType = type(str.join)
ClassMethodDescriptorType = type(dict.__dict__['fromkeys'])

ModuleType = type(sys)

try:
    raise TypeError
except TypeError:
    tb = sys.exc_info()[2]
    TracebackType = type(tb)
    FrameType = type(tb.tb_frame)
    tb = None; del tb

# For Jython, the following two types are identical
GetSetDescriptorType = type(FunctionType.__code__)
MemberDescriptorType = type(FunctionType.__globals__)

del sys, _f, _g, _C, _c, _ag  # Not for export


# Provide a PEP 3115 compliant mechanism for class creation
def new_class(name, bases=(), kwds=None, exec_body=None):
    """Create a class object dynamically using the appropriate metaclass."""
    resolved_bases = resolve_bases(bases)
    meta, ns, kwds = prepare_class(name, resolved_bases, kwds)
    if exec_body is not None:
        exec_body(ns)
    if resolved_bases is not bases:
        ns['__orig_bases__'] = bases
    return meta(name, resolved_bases, ns, **kwds)

def resolve_bases(bases):
    """Resolve MRO entries dynamically as specified by PEP 560."""
    new_bases = list(bases)
    updated = False
    shift = 0
    for i, base in enumerate(bases):
        if isinstance(base, type):
            continue
        if not hasattr(base, "__mro_entries__"):
            continue
        new_base = base.__mro_entries__(bases)
        updated = True
        if not isinstance(new_base, tuple):
            raise TypeError("__mro_entries__ must return a tuple")
        else:
            new_bases[i+shift:i+shift+1] = new_base
            shift += len(new_base) - 1
    if not updated:
        return bases
    return tuple(new_bases)

def prepare_class(name, bases=(), kwds=None):
    """Call the __prepare__ method of the appropriate metaclass.

    Returns (metaclass, namespace, kwds) as a 3-tuple

    *metaclass* is the appropriate metaclass
    *namespace* is the prepared class namespace
    *kwds* is an updated copy of the passed in kwds argument with any
    'metaclass' entry removed. If no kwds argument is passed in, this will
    be an empty dict.
    """
    if kwds is None:
        kwds = {}
    else:
        kwds = dict(kwds) # Don't alter the provided mapping
    if 'metaclass' in kwds:
        meta = kwds.pop('metaclass')
    else:
        if bases:
            meta = type(bases[0])
        else:
            meta = type
    if isinstance(meta, type):
        # when meta is a type, we first determine the most-derived metaclass
        # instead of invoking the initial candidate directly
        meta = _calculate_meta(meta, bases)
    if hasattr(meta, '__prepare__'):
        ns = meta.__prepare__(name, bases, **kwds)
    else:
        ns = {}
    return meta, ns, kwds

def _calculate_meta(meta, bases):
    """Calculate the most derived metaclass."""
    winner = meta
    for base in bases:
        base_meta = type(base)
        if issubclass(winner, base_meta):
            continue
        if issubclass(base_meta, winner):
            winner = base_meta
            continue
        # else:
        raise TypeError("metaclass conflict: "
                        "the metaclass of a derived class "
                        "must be a (non-strict) subclass "
                        "of the metaclasses of all its bases")
    return winner

class DynamicClassAttribute:
    """Route attribute access on a class to __getattr__.

    This is a descriptor, used to define attributes that act differently when
    accessed through an instance and through a class.  Instance access remains
    normal, but access to an attribute through a class will be routed to the
    class's __getattr__ method; this is done by raising AttributeError.

    This allows one to have properties active on an instance, and have virtual
    attributes on the class with the same name.  (Enum used this between Python
    versions 3.4 - 3.9 .)

    Subclass from this to use a different method of accessing virtual attributes
    and still be treated properly by the inspect module. (Enum uses this since
    Python 3.10 .)

    """
    def __init__(self, fget=None, fset=None, fdel=None, doc=None):
        self.fget = fget
        self.fset = fset
        self.fdel = fdel
        # next two lines make DynamicClassAttribute act the same as property
        self.__doc__ = doc or fget.__doc__
        self.overwrite_doc = doc is None
        # support for abstract methods
        self.__isabstractmethod__ = bool(getattr(fget, '__isabstractmethod__', False))

    def __get__(self, instance, ownerclass=None):
        if instance is None:
            if self.__isabstractmethod__:
                return self
            raise AttributeError()
        elif self.fget is None:
            raise AttributeError("unreadable attribute")
        return self.fget(instance)

    def __set__(self, instance, value):
        if self.fset is None:
            raise AttributeError("can't set attribute")
        self.fset(instance, value)

    def __delete__(self, instance):
        if self.fdel is None:
            raise AttributeError("can't delete attribute")
        self.fdel(instance)

    def getter(self, fget):
        fdoc = fget.__doc__ if self.overwrite_doc else None
        result = type(self)(fget, self.fset, self.fdel, fdoc or self.__doc__)
        result.overwrite_doc = self.overwrite_doc
        return result

    def setter(self, fset):
        result = type(self)(self.fget, fset, self.fdel, self.__doc__)
        result.overwrite_doc = self.overwrite_doc
        return result

    def deleter(self, fdel):
        result = type(self)(self.fget, self.fset, fdel, self.__doc__)
        result.overwrite_doc = self.overwrite_doc
        return result


class _GeneratorWrapper:
    # TODO: Implement this in C.
    def __init__(self, gen):
        self.__wrapped = gen
        self.__isgen = gen.__class__ is GeneratorType
        self.__name__ = getattr(gen, '__name__', None)
        self.__qualname__ = getattr(gen, '__qualname__', None)
    def send(self, val):
        return self.__wrapped.send(val)
    def throw(self, tp, *rest):
        return self.__wrapped.throw(tp, *rest)
    def close(self):
        return self.__wrapped.close()
    @property
    def gi_code(self):
        return self.__wrapped.gi_code
    @property
    def gi_frame(self):
        return self.__wrapped.gi_frame
    @property
    def gi_running(self):
        return self.__wrapped.gi_running
    @property
    def gi_yieldfrom(self):
        return self.__wrapped.gi_yieldfrom
    cr_code = gi_code
    cr_frame = gi_frame
    cr_running = gi_running
    cr_await = gi_yieldfrom
    def __next__(self):
        return next(self.__wrapped)
    def __iter__(self):
        if self.__isgen:
            return self.__wrapped
        return self
    __await__ = __iter__

def coroutine(func):
    """Convert regular generator function to a coroutine."""

    if not callable(func):
        raise TypeError('types.coroutine() expects a callable')

    if (func.__class__ is FunctionType and
        getattr(func, '__code__', None).__class__ is CodeType):

        co_flags = func.__code__.co_flags

        # Check if 'func' is a coroutine function.
        # (0x180 == CO_COROUTINE | CO_ITERABLE_COROUTINE)
        if co_flags & 0x180:
            return func

        # Check if 'func' is a generator function.
        # (0x20 == CO_GENERATOR)
        if co_flags & 0x20:
            # TODO: Implement this in C.
            co = func.__code__
            # 0x100 == CO_ITERABLE_COROUTINE
            func.__code__ = co.replace(co_flags=co.co_flags | 0x100)
            return func

    # The following code is primarily to support functions that
    # return generator-like objects (for instance generators
    # compiled with Cython).

    # Delay functools and _collections_abc import for speeding up types import.
    import functools
    import _collections_abc
    @functools.wraps(func)
    def wrapped(*args, **kwargs):
        coro = func(*args, **kwargs)
        if (coro.__class__ is CoroutineType or
            coro.__class__ is GeneratorType and coro.gi_code.co_flags & 0x100):
            # 'coro' is a native coroutine object or an iterable coroutine
            return coro
        if (isinstance(coro, _collections_abc.Generator) and
            not isinstance(coro, _collections_abc.Coroutine)):
            # 'coro' is either a pure Python generator iterator, or it
            # implements collections.abc.Generator (and does not implement
            # collections.abc.Coroutine).
            return _GeneratorWrapper(coro)
        # 'coro' is either an instance of collections.abc.Coroutine or
        # some other object -- pass it through.
        return coro

    return wrapped


GenericAlias = type(list[int])
Union = type(int | str)

EllipsisType = type(Ellipsis)
NoneType = type(None)
NotImplementedType = type(NotImplemented)

__all__ = [n for n in globals() if n[:1] != '_']
str"> If optional arg 'topdown' is true or not specified, the triple for a directory is generated before the triples for any of its subdirectories (directories are generated top down). If topdown is false, the triple for a directory is generated after the triples for all of its subdirectories (directories are generated bottom up). When topdown is true, the caller can modify the dirnames list in-place (e.g., via del or slice assignment), and walk will only recurse into the subdirectories whose names remain in dirnames; this can be used to prune the search, or to impose a specific order of visiting. Modifying dirnames when topdown is false is ineffective, since the directories in dirnames have already been generated by the time dirnames itself is generated. By default errors from the os.listdir() call are ignored. If optional arg 'onerror' is specified, it should be a function; it will be called with one argument, an os.error instance. It can report the error to continue with the walk, or raise the exception to abort the walk. Note that the filename is available as the filename attribute of the exception object. By default, os.walk does not follow symbolic links to subdirectories on systems that support them. In order to get this functionality, set the optional argument 'followlinks' to true. Caution: if you pass a relative pathname for top, don't change the current working directory between resumptions of walk. walk never changes the current directory, and assumes that the client doesn't either. Example: import os from os.path import join, getsize for root, dirs, files in os.walk('python/Lib/email'): print root, "consumes", print sum([getsize(join(root, name)) for name in files]), print "bytes in", len(files), "non-directory files" if 'CVS' in dirs: dirs.remove('CVS') # don't visit CVS directories """ islink, join, isdir = path.islink, path.join, path.isdir # We may not have read permission for top, in which case we can't # get a list of the files the directory contains. os.path.walk # always suppressed the exception then, rather than blow up for a # minor reason when (say) a thousand readable directories are still # left to visit. That logic is copied here. try: # Note that listdir and error are globals in this module due # to earlier import-*. names = listdir(top) except error, err: if onerror is not None: onerror(err) return dirs, nondirs = [], [] for name in names: if isdir(join(top, name)): dirs.append(name) else: nondirs.append(name) if topdown: yield top, dirs, nondirs for name in dirs: new_path = join(top, name) if followlinks or not islink(new_path): for x in walk(new_path, topdown, onerror, followlinks): yield x if not topdown: yield top, dirs, nondirs __all__.append("walk") # Make sure os.environ exists, at least try: environ except NameError: environ = {} def execl(file, *args): """execl(file, *args) Execute the executable file with argument list args, replacing the current process. """ execv(file, args) def execle(file, *args): """execle(file, *args, env) Execute the executable file with argument list args and environment env, replacing the current process. """ env = args[-1] execve(file, args[:-1], env) def execlp(file, *args): """execlp(file, *args) Execute the executable file (which is searched for along $PATH) with argument list args, replacing the current process. """ execvp(file, args) def execlpe(file, *args): """execlpe(file, *args, env) Execute the executable file (which is searched for along $PATH) with argument list args and environment env, replacing the current process. """ env = args[-1] execvpe(file, args[:-1], env) def execvp(file, args): """execp(file, args) Execute the executable file (which is searched for along $PATH) with argument list args, replacing the current process. args may be a list or tuple of strings. """ _execvpe(file, args) def execvpe(file, args, env): """execvpe(file, args, env) Execute the executable file (which is searched for along $PATH) with argument list args and environment env , replacing the current process. args may be a list or tuple of strings. """ _execvpe(file, args, env) __all__.extend(["execl","execle","execlp","execlpe","execvp","execvpe"]) def _execvpe(file, args, env=None): if env is not None: func = execve argrest = (args, env) else: func = execv argrest = (args,) env = environ head, tail = path.split(file) if head: func(file, *argrest) return if 'PATH' in env: envpath = env['PATH'] else: envpath = defpath PATH = envpath.split(pathsep) saved_exc = None saved_tb = None for dir in PATH: fullname = path.join(dir, file) try: func(fullname, *argrest) except error, e: tb = sys.exc_info()[2] if (e.errno != errno.ENOENT and e.errno != errno.ENOTDIR and saved_exc is None): saved_exc = e saved_tb = tb if saved_exc: raise error, saved_exc, saved_tb raise error, e, tb # Change environ to automatically call putenv() if it exists try: # This will fail if there's no putenv putenv except NameError: pass else: import UserDict # Fake unsetenv() for Windows # not sure about os2 here but # I'm guessing they are the same. if name in ('os2', 'nt'): def unsetenv(key): putenv(key, "") if name == "riscos": # On RISC OS, all env access goes through getenv and putenv from riscosenviron import _Environ elif name in ('os2', 'nt'): # Where Env Var Names Must Be UPPERCASE # But we store them as upper case class _Environ(UserDict.IterableUserDict): def __init__(self, environ): UserDict.UserDict.__init__(self) data = self.data for k, v in environ.items(): data[k.upper()] = v def __setitem__(self, key, item): putenv(key, item) self.data[key.upper()] = item def __getitem__(self, key): return self.data[key.upper()] try: unsetenv except NameError: def __delitem__(self, key): del self.data[key.upper()] else: def __delitem__(self, key): unsetenv(key) del self.data[key.upper()] def clear(self): for key in self.data.keys(): unsetenv(key) del self.data[key] def pop(self, key, *args): unsetenv(key) return self.data.pop(key.upper(), *args) def has_key(self, key): return key.upper() in self.data def __contains__(self, key): return key.upper() in self.data def get(self, key, failobj=None): return self.data.get(key.upper(), failobj) def update(self, dict=None, **kwargs): if dict: try: keys = dict.keys() except AttributeError: # List of (key, value) for k, v in dict: self[k] = v else: # got keys # cannot use items(), since mappings # may not have them. for k in keys: self[k] = dict[k] if kwargs: self.update(kwargs) def copy(self): return dict(self) else: # Where Env Var Names Can Be Mixed Case class _Environ(UserDict.IterableUserDict): def __init__(self, environ): UserDict.UserDict.__init__(self) self.data = environ def __setitem__(self, key, item): putenv(key, item) self.data[key] = item def update(self, dict=None, **kwargs): if dict: try: keys = dict.keys() except AttributeError: # List of (key, value) for k, v in dict: self[k] = v else: # got keys # cannot use items(), since mappings # may not have them. for k in keys: self[k] = dict[k] if kwargs: self.update(kwargs) try: unsetenv except NameError: pass else: def __delitem__(self, key): unsetenv(key) del self.data[key] def clear(self): for key in self.data.keys(): unsetenv(key) del self.data[key] def pop(self, key, *args): unsetenv(key) return self.data.pop(key, *args) def copy(self): return dict(self) environ = _Environ(environ) def getenv(key, default=None): """Get an environment variable, return None if it doesn't exist. The optional second argument can specify an alternate default.""" return environ.get(key, default) __all__.append("getenv") def _exists(name): return name in globals() # Supply spawn*() (probably only for Unix) if _exists("fork") and not _exists("spawnv") and _exists("execv"): P_WAIT = 0 P_NOWAIT = P_NOWAITO = 1 # XXX Should we support P_DETACH? I suppose it could fork()**2 # and close the std I/O streams. Also, P_OVERLAY is the same # as execv*()? def _spawnvef(mode, file, args, env, func): # Internal helper; func is the exec*() function to use pid = fork() if not pid: # Child try: if env is None: func(file, args) else: func(file, args, env) except: _exit(127) else: # Parent if mode == P_NOWAIT: return pid # Caller is responsible for waiting! while 1: wpid, sts = waitpid(pid, 0) if WIFSTOPPED(sts): continue elif WIFSIGNALED(sts): return -WTERMSIG(sts) elif WIFEXITED(sts): return WEXITSTATUS(sts) else: raise error, "Not stopped, signaled or exited???" def spawnv(mode, file, args): """spawnv(mode, file, args) -> integer Execute file with arguments from args in a subprocess. If mode == P_NOWAIT return the pid of the process. If mode == P_WAIT return the process's exit code if it exits normally; otherwise return -SIG, where SIG is the signal that killed it. """ return _spawnvef(mode, file, args, None, execv) def spawnve(mode, file, args, env): """spawnve(mode, file, args, env) -> integer Execute file with arguments from args in a subprocess with the specified environment. If mode == P_NOWAIT return the pid of the process. If mode == P_WAIT return the process's exit code if it exits normally; otherwise return -SIG, where SIG is the signal that killed it. """ return _spawnvef(mode, file, args, env, execve) # Note: spawnvp[e] is't currently supported on Windows def spawnvp(mode, file, args): """spawnvp(mode, file, args) -> integer Execute file (which is looked for along $PATH) with arguments from args in a subprocess. If mode == P_NOWAIT return the pid of the process. If mode == P_WAIT return the process's exit code if it exits normally; otherwise return -SIG, where SIG is the signal that killed it. """ return _spawnvef(mode, file, args, None, execvp) def spawnvpe(mode, file, args, env): """spawnvpe(mode, file, args, env) -> integer Execute file (which is looked for along $PATH) with arguments from args in a subprocess with the supplied environment. If mode == P_NOWAIT return the pid of the process. If mode == P_WAIT return the process's exit code if it exits normally; otherwise return -SIG, where SIG is the signal that killed it. """ return _spawnvef(mode, file, args, env, execvpe) if _exists("spawnv"): # These aren't supplied by the basic Windows code # but can be easily implemented in Python def spawnl(mode, file, *args): """spawnl(mode, file, *args) -> integer Execute file with arguments from args in a subprocess. If mode == P_NOWAIT return the pid of the process. If mode == P_WAIT return the process's exit code if it exits normally; otherwise return -SIG, where SIG is the signal that killed it. """ return spawnv(mode, file, args) def spawnle(mode, file, *args): """spawnle(mode, file, *args, env) -> integer Execute file with arguments from args in a subprocess with the supplied environment. If mode == P_NOWAIT return the pid of the process. If mode == P_WAIT return the process's exit code if it exits normally; otherwise return -SIG, where SIG is the signal that killed it. """ env = args[-1] return spawnve(mode, file, args[:-1], env) __all__.extend(["spawnv", "spawnve", "spawnl", "spawnle",]) if _exists("spawnvp"): # At the moment, Windows doesn't implement spawnvp[e], # so it won't have spawnlp[e] either. def spawnlp(mode, file, *args): """spawnlp(mode, file, *args) -> integer Execute file (which is looked for along $PATH) with arguments from args in a subprocess with the supplied environment. If mode == P_NOWAIT return the pid of the process. If mode == P_WAIT return the process's exit code if it exits normally; otherwise return -SIG, where SIG is the signal that killed it. """ return spawnvp(mode, file, args) def spawnlpe(mode, file, *args): """spawnlpe(mode, file, *args, env) -> integer Execute file (which is looked for along $PATH) with arguments from args in a subprocess with the supplied environment. If mode == P_NOWAIT return the pid of the process. If mode == P_WAIT return the process's exit code if it exits normally; otherwise return -SIG, where SIG is the signal that killed it. """ env = args[-1] return spawnvpe(mode, file, args[:-1], env) __all__.extend(["spawnvp", "spawnvpe", "spawnlp", "spawnlpe",]) # Supply popen2 etc. (for Unix) if _exists("fork"): if not _exists("popen2"): def popen2(cmd, mode="t", bufsize=-1): """Execute the shell command 'cmd' in a sub-process. On UNIX, 'cmd' may be a sequence, in which case arguments will be passed directly to the program without shell intervention (as with os.spawnv()). If 'cmd' is a string it will be passed to the shell (as with os.system()). If 'bufsize' is specified, it sets the buffer size for the I/O pipes. The file objects (child_stdin, child_stdout) are returned.""" import warnings msg = "os.popen2 is deprecated. Use the subprocess module." warnings.warn(msg, DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2) import subprocess PIPE = subprocess.PIPE p = subprocess.Popen(cmd, shell=isinstance(cmd, basestring), bufsize=bufsize, stdin=PIPE, stdout=PIPE, close_fds=True) return p.stdin, p.stdout __all__.append("popen2") if not _exists("popen3"): def popen3(cmd, mode="t", bufsize=-1): """Execute the shell command 'cmd' in a sub-process. On UNIX, 'cmd' may be a sequence, in which case arguments will be passed directly to the program without shell intervention (as with os.spawnv()). If 'cmd' is a string it will be passed to the shell (as with os.system()). If 'bufsize' is specified, it sets the buffer size for the I/O pipes. The file objects (child_stdin, child_stdout, child_stderr) are returned.""" import warnings msg = "os.popen3 is deprecated. Use the subprocess module." warnings.warn(msg, DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2) import subprocess PIPE = subprocess.PIPE p = subprocess.Popen(cmd, shell=isinstance(cmd, basestring), bufsize=bufsize, stdin=PIPE, stdout=PIPE, stderr=PIPE, close_fds=True) return p.stdin, p.stdout, p.stderr __all__.append("popen3") if not _exists("popen4"): def popen4(cmd, mode="t", bufsize=-1): """Execute the shell command 'cmd' in a sub-process. On UNIX, 'cmd' may be a sequence, in which case arguments will be passed directly to the program without shell intervention (as with os.spawnv()). If 'cmd' is a string it will be passed to the shell (as with os.system()). If 'bufsize' is specified, it sets the buffer size for the I/O pipes. The file objects (child_stdin, child_stdout_stderr) are returned.""" import warnings msg = "os.popen4 is deprecated. Use the subprocess module." warnings.warn(msg, DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2) import subprocess PIPE = subprocess.PIPE p = subprocess.Popen(cmd, shell=isinstance(cmd, basestring), bufsize=bufsize, stdin=PIPE, stdout=PIPE, stderr=subprocess.STDOUT, close_fds=True) return p.stdin, p.stdout __all__.append("popen4") import copy_reg as _copy_reg def _make_stat_result(tup, dict): return stat_result(tup, dict) def _pickle_stat_result(sr): (type, args) = sr.__reduce__() return (_make_stat_result, args) try: _copy_reg.pickle(stat_result, _pickle_stat_result, _make_stat_result) except NameError: # stat_result may not exist pass def _make_statvfs_result(tup, dict): return statvfs_result(tup, dict) def _pickle_statvfs_result(sr): (type, args) = sr.__reduce__() return (_make_statvfs_result, args) try: _copy_reg.pickle(statvfs_result, _pickle_statvfs_result, _make_statvfs_result) except NameError: # statvfs_result may not exist pass if not _exists("urandom"): def urandom(n): """urandom(n) -> str Return a string of n random bytes suitable for cryptographic use. """ try: _urandomfd = open("/dev/urandom", O_RDONLY) except (OSError, IOError): raise NotImplementedError("/dev/urandom (or equivalent) not found") try: bs = b"" while n - len(bs) >= 1: bs += read(_urandomfd, n - len(bs)) finally: close(_urandomfd) return bs