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-rw-r--r--src/prompt_toolkit/input/vt100.py320
1 files changed, 320 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/src/prompt_toolkit/input/vt100.py b/src/prompt_toolkit/input/vt100.py
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--- /dev/null
+++ b/src/prompt_toolkit/input/vt100.py
@@ -0,0 +1,320 @@
+import sys
+
+assert sys.platform != "win32"
+
+import contextlib
+import io
+import termios
+import tty
+from asyncio import AbstractEventLoop
+from typing import (
+ Callable,
+ ContextManager,
+ Dict,
+ Generator,
+ List,
+ Optional,
+ Set,
+ TextIO,
+ Tuple,
+ Union,
+)
+
+from prompt_toolkit.eventloop import get_event_loop
+
+from ..key_binding import KeyPress
+from .base import Input
+from .posix_utils import PosixStdinReader
+from .vt100_parser import Vt100Parser
+
+__all__ = [
+ "Vt100Input",
+ "raw_mode",
+ "cooked_mode",
+]
+
+
+class Vt100Input(Input):
+ """
+ Vt100 input for Posix systems.
+ (This uses a posix file descriptor that can be registered in the event loop.)
+ """
+
+ # For the error messages. Only display "Input is not a terminal" once per
+ # file descriptor.
+ _fds_not_a_terminal: Set[int] = set()
+
+ def __init__(self, stdin: TextIO) -> None:
+ # Test whether the given input object has a file descriptor.
+ # (Idle reports stdin to be a TTY, but fileno() is not implemented.)
+ try:
+ # This should not raise, but can return 0.
+ stdin.fileno()
+ except io.UnsupportedOperation as e:
+ if "idlelib.run" in sys.modules:
+ raise io.UnsupportedOperation(
+ "Stdin is not a terminal. Running from Idle is not supported."
+ ) from e
+ else:
+ raise io.UnsupportedOperation("Stdin is not a terminal.") from e
+
+ # Even when we have a file descriptor, it doesn't mean it's a TTY.
+ # Normally, this requires a real TTY device, but people instantiate
+ # this class often during unit tests as well. They use for instance
+ # pexpect to pipe data into an application. For convenience, we print
+ # an error message and go on.
+ isatty = stdin.isatty()
+ fd = stdin.fileno()
+
+ if not isatty and fd not in Vt100Input._fds_not_a_terminal:
+ msg = "Warning: Input is not a terminal (fd=%r).\n"
+ sys.stderr.write(msg % fd)
+ sys.stderr.flush()
+ Vt100Input._fds_not_a_terminal.add(fd)
+
+ #
+ self.stdin = stdin
+
+ # Create a backup of the fileno(). We want this to work even if the
+ # underlying file is closed, so that `typeahead_hash()` keeps working.
+ self._fileno = stdin.fileno()
+
+ self._buffer: List[KeyPress] = [] # Buffer to collect the Key objects.
+ self.stdin_reader = PosixStdinReader(self._fileno, encoding=stdin.encoding)
+ self.vt100_parser = Vt100Parser(
+ lambda key_press: self._buffer.append(key_press)
+ )
+
+ def attach(self, input_ready_callback: Callable[[], None]) -> ContextManager[None]:
+ """
+ Return a context manager that makes this input active in the current
+ event loop.
+ """
+ return _attached_input(self, input_ready_callback)
+
+ def detach(self) -> ContextManager[None]:
+ """
+ Return a context manager that makes sure that this input is not active
+ in the current event loop.
+ """
+ return _detached_input(self)
+
+ def read_keys(self) -> List[KeyPress]:
+ "Read list of KeyPress."
+ # Read text from stdin.
+ data = self.stdin_reader.read()
+
+ # Pass it through our vt100 parser.
+ self.vt100_parser.feed(data)
+
+ # Return result.
+ result = self._buffer
+ self._buffer = []
+ return result
+
+ def flush_keys(self) -> List[KeyPress]:
+ """
+ Flush pending keys and return them.
+ (Used for flushing the 'escape' key.)
+ """
+ # Flush all pending keys. (This is most important to flush the vt100
+ # 'Escape' key early when nothing else follows.)
+ self.vt100_parser.flush()
+
+ # Return result.
+ result = self._buffer
+ self._buffer = []
+ return result
+
+ @property
+ def closed(self) -> bool:
+ return self.stdin_reader.closed
+
+ def raw_mode(self) -> ContextManager[None]:
+ return raw_mode(self.stdin.fileno())
+
+ def cooked_mode(self) -> ContextManager[None]:
+ return cooked_mode(self.stdin.fileno())
+
+ def fileno(self) -> int:
+ return self.stdin.fileno()
+
+ def typeahead_hash(self) -> str:
+ return f"fd-{self._fileno}"
+
+
+_current_callbacks: Dict[
+ Tuple[AbstractEventLoop, int], Optional[Callable[[], None]]
+] = {} # (loop, fd) -> current callback
+
+
+@contextlib.contextmanager
+def _attached_input(
+ input: Vt100Input, callback: Callable[[], None]
+) -> Generator[None, None, None]:
+ """
+ Context manager that makes this input active in the current event loop.
+
+ :param input: :class:`~prompt_toolkit.input.Input` object.
+ :param callback: Called when the input is ready to read.
+ """
+ loop = get_event_loop()
+ fd = input.fileno()
+ previous = _current_callbacks.get((loop, fd))
+
+ def callback_wrapper() -> None:
+ """Wrapper around the callback that already removes the reader when
+ the input is closed. Otherwise, we keep continuously calling this
+ callback, until we leave the context manager (which can happen a bit
+ later). This fixes issues when piping /dev/null into a prompt_toolkit
+ application."""
+ if input.closed:
+ loop.remove_reader(fd)
+ callback()
+
+ try:
+ loop.add_reader(fd, callback_wrapper)
+ except PermissionError:
+ # For `EPollSelector`, adding /dev/null to the event loop will raise
+ # `PermisisonError` (that doesn't happen for `SelectSelector`
+ # apparently). Whenever we get a `PermissionError`, we can raise
+ # `EOFError`, because there's not more to be read anyway. `EOFError` is
+ # an exception that people expect in
+ # `prompt_toolkit.application.Application.run()`.
+ # To reproduce, do: `ptpython 0< /dev/null 1< /dev/null`
+ raise EOFError
+
+ _current_callbacks[loop, fd] = callback
+
+ try:
+ yield
+ finally:
+ loop.remove_reader(fd)
+
+ if previous:
+ loop.add_reader(fd, previous)
+ _current_callbacks[loop, fd] = previous
+ else:
+ del _current_callbacks[loop, fd]
+
+
+@contextlib.contextmanager
+def _detached_input(input: Vt100Input) -> Generator[None, None, None]:
+ loop = get_event_loop()
+ fd = input.fileno()
+ previous = _current_callbacks.get((loop, fd))
+
+ if previous:
+ loop.remove_reader(fd)
+ _current_callbacks[loop, fd] = None
+
+ try:
+ yield
+ finally:
+ if previous:
+ loop.add_reader(fd, previous)
+ _current_callbacks[loop, fd] = previous
+
+
+class raw_mode:
+ """
+ ::
+
+ with raw_mode(stdin):
+ ''' the pseudo-terminal stdin is now used in raw mode '''
+
+ We ignore errors when executing `tcgetattr` fails.
+ """
+
+ # There are several reasons for ignoring errors:
+ # 1. To avoid the "Inappropriate ioctl for device" crash if somebody would
+ # execute this code (In a Python REPL, for instance):
+ #
+ # import os; f = open(os.devnull); os.dup2(f.fileno(), 0)
+ #
+ # The result is that the eventloop will stop correctly, because it has
+ # to logic to quit when stdin is closed. However, we should not fail at
+ # this point. See:
+ # https://github.com/jonathanslenders/python-prompt-toolkit/pull/393
+ # https://github.com/jonathanslenders/python-prompt-toolkit/issues/392
+
+ # 2. Related, when stdin is an SSH pipe, and no full terminal was allocated.
+ # See: https://github.com/jonathanslenders/python-prompt-toolkit/pull/165
+ def __init__(self, fileno: int) -> None:
+ self.fileno = fileno
+ self.attrs_before: Optional[List[Union[int, List[Union[bytes, int]]]]]
+ try:
+ self.attrs_before = termios.tcgetattr(fileno)
+ except termios.error:
+ # Ignore attribute errors.
+ self.attrs_before = None
+
+ def __enter__(self) -> None:
+ # NOTE: On os X systems, using pty.setraw() fails. Therefor we are using this:
+ try:
+ newattr = termios.tcgetattr(self.fileno)
+ except termios.error:
+ pass
+ else:
+ newattr[tty.LFLAG] = self._patch_lflag(newattr[tty.LFLAG])
+ newattr[tty.IFLAG] = self._patch_iflag(newattr[tty.IFLAG])
+
+ # VMIN defines the number of characters read at a time in
+ # non-canonical mode. It seems to default to 1 on Linux, but on
+ # Solaris and derived operating systems it defaults to 4. (This is
+ # because the VMIN slot is the same as the VEOF slot, which
+ # defaults to ASCII EOT = Ctrl-D = 4.)
+ newattr[tty.CC][termios.VMIN] = 1
+
+ termios.tcsetattr(self.fileno, termios.TCSANOW, newattr)
+
+ @classmethod
+ def _patch_lflag(cls, attrs: int) -> int:
+ return attrs & ~(termios.ECHO | termios.ICANON | termios.IEXTEN | termios.ISIG)
+
+ @classmethod
+ def _patch_iflag(cls, attrs: int) -> int:
+ return attrs & ~(
+ # Disable XON/XOFF flow control on output and input.
+ # (Don't capture Ctrl-S and Ctrl-Q.)
+ # Like executing: "stty -ixon."
+ termios.IXON
+ | termios.IXOFF
+ |
+ # Don't translate carriage return into newline on input.
+ termios.ICRNL
+ | termios.INLCR
+ | termios.IGNCR
+ )
+
+ def __exit__(self, *a: object) -> None:
+ if self.attrs_before is not None:
+ try:
+ termios.tcsetattr(self.fileno, termios.TCSANOW, self.attrs_before)
+ except termios.error:
+ pass
+
+ # # Put the terminal in application mode.
+ # self._stdout.write('\x1b[?1h')
+
+
+class cooked_mode(raw_mode):
+ """
+ The opposite of ``raw_mode``, used when we need cooked mode inside a
+ `raw_mode` block. Used in `Application.run_in_terminal`.::
+
+ with cooked_mode(stdin):
+ ''' the pseudo-terminal stdin is now used in cooked mode. '''
+ """
+
+ @classmethod
+ def _patch_lflag(cls, attrs: int) -> int:
+ return attrs | (termios.ECHO | termios.ICANON | termios.IEXTEN | termios.ISIG)
+
+ @classmethod
+ def _patch_iflag(cls, attrs: int) -> int:
+ # Turn the ICRNL flag back on. (Without this, calling `input()` in
+ # run_in_terminal doesn't work and displays ^M instead. Ptpython
+ # evaluates commands using `run_in_terminal`, so it's important that
+ # they translate ^M back into ^J.)
+ return attrs | termios.ICRNL