From 26a029d407be480d791972afb5975cf62c9360a6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Fri, 19 Apr 2024 02:47:55 +0200 Subject: Adding upstream version 124.0.1. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- .../looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/LICENSE | 48 +++++ .../looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/METADATA | 56 ++++++ .../looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/RECORD | 6 + .../looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/WHEEL | 5 + .../looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/top_level.txt | 1 + third_party/python/looseversion/looseversion.py | 204 +++++++++++++++++++++ 6 files changed, 320 insertions(+) create mode 100644 third_party/python/looseversion/looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/LICENSE create mode 100644 third_party/python/looseversion/looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/METADATA create mode 100644 third_party/python/looseversion/looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/RECORD create mode 100644 third_party/python/looseversion/looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/WHEEL create mode 100644 third_party/python/looseversion/looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/top_level.txt create mode 100644 third_party/python/looseversion/looseversion.py (limited to 'third_party/python/looseversion') diff --git a/third_party/python/looseversion/looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/LICENSE b/third_party/python/looseversion/looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/LICENSE new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..a9b2196fd1 --- /dev/null +++ b/third_party/python/looseversion/looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/LICENSE @@ -0,0 +1,48 @@ +PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2 +-------------------------------------------- + +1. This LICENSE AGREEMENT is between the Python Software Foundation +("PSF"), and the Individual or Organization ("Licensee") accessing and +otherwise using this software ("Python") in source or binary form and +its associated documentation. + +2. Subject to the terms and conditions of this License Agreement, PSF hereby +grants Licensee a nonexclusive, royalty-free, world-wide license to reproduce, +analyze, test, perform and/or display publicly, prepare derivative works, +distribute, and otherwise use Python alone or in any derivative version, +provided, however, that PSF's License Agreement and PSF's notice of copyright, +i.e., "Copyright (c) 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, +2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022 Python Software Foundation; +All Rights Reserved" are retained in Python alone or in any derivative version +prepared by Licensee. + +3. In the event Licensee prepares a derivative work that is based on +or incorporates Python or any part thereof, and wants to make +the derivative work available to others as provided herein, then +Licensee hereby agrees to include in any such work a brief summary of +the changes made to Python. + +4. PSF is making Python available to Licensee on an "AS IS" +basis. PSF MAKES NO REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR +IMPLIED. BY WAY OF EXAMPLE, BUT NOT LIMITATION, PSF MAKES NO AND +DISCLAIMS ANY REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS +FOR ANY PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR THAT THE USE OF PYTHON WILL NOT +INFRINGE ANY THIRD PARTY RIGHTS. + +5. PSF SHALL NOT BE LIABLE TO LICENSEE OR ANY OTHER USERS OF PYTHON +FOR ANY INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR LOSS AS +A RESULT OF MODIFYING, DISTRIBUTING, OR OTHERWISE USING PYTHON, +OR ANY DERIVATIVE THEREOF, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY THEREOF. + +6. This License Agreement will automatically terminate upon a material +breach of its terms and conditions. + +7. Nothing in this License Agreement shall be deemed to create any +relationship of agency, partnership, or joint venture between PSF and +Licensee. This License Agreement does not grant permission to use PSF +trademarks or trade name in a trademark sense to endorse or promote +products or services of Licensee, or any third party. + +8. By copying, installing or otherwise using Python, Licensee +agrees to be bound by the terms and conditions of this License +Agreement. diff --git a/third_party/python/looseversion/looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/METADATA b/third_party/python/looseversion/looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/METADATA new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..2ba9f265d0 --- /dev/null +++ b/third_party/python/looseversion/looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/METADATA @@ -0,0 +1,56 @@ +Metadata-Version: 2.1 +Name: looseversion +Version: 1.0.1 +Summary: Version numbering for anarchists and software realists +Home-page: https://github.com/effigies/looseversion +Author: Chris Markiewicz +Author-email: effigies@gmail.com +License: PSF-2.0 +Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3 +Classifier: Development Status :: 6 - Mature +Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: Python Software Foundation License +Requires-Python: >=3 +Description-Content-Type: text/markdown +License-File: LICENSE + +# looseversion - Version numbering for anarchists and software realists + +A backwards/forwards-compatible fork of `distutils.version.LooseVersion`, +for times when PEP-440 isn't what you need. + +The goal of this package is to be a drop-in replacement for the original `LooseVersion`. +It implements an identical interface and comparison logic to `LooseVersion`. +The only major change is that a `looseversion.LooseVersion` is comparable to a +`distutils.version.LooseVersion`, which means tools should not need to worry whether +all dependencies that use LooseVersion have migrated. + +If you are simply comparing versions of Python packages, consider moving to +[packaging.version.Version](https://packaging.pypa.io/en/latest/version.html#packaging.version.Version), +which follows [PEP-440](https://peps.python.org/pep-0440). +`LooseVersion` is better suited to interacting with heterogeneous version schemes that +do not follow PEP-440. + +## Installation + +### From PyPI + +``` +pip install looseversion +``` + +### From source + +``` +git clone https://github.com/effigies/looseversion.git +pip install looseversion/ +``` + +## Usage + +```Python +>>> from looseversion import LooseVersion +>>> LooseVersion("1.0.0") < LooseVersion("2.0.0") +True +>>> LooseVersion("1.0.0") < "2" +True +``` diff --git a/third_party/python/looseversion/looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/RECORD b/third_party/python/looseversion/looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/RECORD new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..8cdae607b9 --- /dev/null +++ b/third_party/python/looseversion/looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/RECORD @@ -0,0 +1,6 @@ +looseversion.py,sha256=ZcTnLvMPdx3yVGbgcaUuwK3-s40QkaOR0_usF_VbrHU,8029 +looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/LICENSE,sha256=9PgMmBYfVjIATURxO1y5XkABRbQMvAKX8fUMJ7VL79s,2490 +looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/METADATA,sha256=-c48feSKsGGyLOWaWQfPNMawhA6OGKNoy5PjUhLlCk8,1757 +looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/WHEEL,sha256=G16H4A3IeoQmnOrYV4ueZGKSjhipXx8zc8nu9FGlvMA,92 +looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/top_level.txt,sha256=gZsH8AUlCFqOEpKD_foyCUB2uKao5ePwjMqWWO7hpoM,13 +looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/RECORD,, diff --git a/third_party/python/looseversion/looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/WHEEL b/third_party/python/looseversion/looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/WHEEL new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..becc9a66ea --- /dev/null +++ b/third_party/python/looseversion/looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/WHEEL @@ -0,0 +1,5 @@ +Wheel-Version: 1.0 +Generator: bdist_wheel (0.37.1) +Root-Is-Purelib: true +Tag: py3-none-any + diff --git a/third_party/python/looseversion/looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/top_level.txt b/third_party/python/looseversion/looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/top_level.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..c08202104d --- /dev/null +++ b/third_party/python/looseversion/looseversion-1.0.1.dist-info/top_level.txt @@ -0,0 +1 @@ +looseversion diff --git a/third_party/python/looseversion/looseversion.py b/third_party/python/looseversion/looseversion.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..c75bdf3878 --- /dev/null +++ b/third_party/python/looseversion/looseversion.py @@ -0,0 +1,204 @@ +"""Provides classes to represent module version numbers (one class for +each style of version numbering). There are currently two such classes +implemented: StrictVersion and LooseVersion. + +Every version number class implements the following interface: + * the 'parse' method takes a string and parses it to some internal + representation; if the string is an invalid version number, + 'parse' raises a ValueError exception + * the class constructor takes an optional string argument which, + if supplied, is passed to 'parse' + * __str__ reconstructs the string that was passed to 'parse' (or + an equivalent string -- ie. one that will generate an equivalent + version number instance) + * __repr__ generates Python code to recreate the version number instance + * _cmp compares the current instance with either another instance + of the same class or a string (which will be parsed to an instance + of the same class, thus must follow the same rules) +""" + +import sys +import re + + +# The rules according to Greg Stein: +# 1) a version number has 1 or more numbers separated by a period or by +# sequences of letters. If only periods, then these are compared +# left-to-right to determine an ordering. +# 2) sequences of letters are part of the tuple for comparison and are +# compared lexicographically +# 3) recognize the numeric components may have leading zeroes +# +# The LooseVersion class below implements these rules: a version number +# string is split up into a tuple of integer and string components, and +# comparison is a simple tuple comparison. This means that version +# numbers behave in a predictable and obvious way, but a way that might +# not necessarily be how people *want* version numbers to behave. There +# wouldn't be a problem if people could stick to purely numeric version +# numbers: just split on period and compare the numbers as tuples. +# However, people insist on putting letters into their version numbers; +# the most common purpose seems to be: +# - indicating a "pre-release" version +# ('alpha', 'beta', 'a', 'b', 'pre', 'p') +# - indicating a post-release patch ('p', 'pl', 'patch') +# but of course this can't cover all version number schemes, and there's +# no way to know what a programmer means without asking him. +# +# The problem is what to do with letters (and other non-numeric +# characters) in a version number. The current implementation does the +# obvious and predictable thing: keep them as strings and compare +# lexically within a tuple comparison. This has the desired effect if +# an appended letter sequence implies something "post-release": +# eg. "0.99" < "0.99pl14" < "1.0", and "5.001" < "5.001m" < "5.002". +# +# However, if letters in a version number imply a pre-release version, +# the "obvious" thing isn't correct. Eg. you would expect that +# "1.5.1" < "1.5.2a2" < "1.5.2", but under the tuple/lexical comparison +# implemented here, this just isn't so. +# +# Two possible solutions come to mind. The first is to tie the +# comparison algorithm to a particular set of semantic rules, as has +# been done in the StrictVersion class above. This works great as long +# as everyone can go along with bondage and discipline. Hopefully a +# (large) subset of Python module programmers will agree that the +# particular flavour of bondage and discipline provided by StrictVersion +# provides enough benefit to be worth using, and will submit their +# version numbering scheme to its domination. The free-thinking +# anarchists in the lot will never give in, though, and something needs +# to be done to accommodate them. +# +# Perhaps a "moderately strict" version class could be implemented that +# lets almost anything slide (syntactically), and makes some heuristic +# assumptions about non-digits in version number strings. This could +# sink into special-case-hell, though; if I was as talented and +# idiosyncratic as Larry Wall, I'd go ahead and implement a class that +# somehow knows that "1.2.1" < "1.2.2a2" < "1.2.2" < "1.2.2pl3", and is +# just as happy dealing with things like "2g6" and "1.13++". I don't +# think I'm smart enough to do it right though. +# +# In any case, I've coded the test suite for this module (see +# ../test/test_version.py) specifically to fail on things like comparing +# "1.2a2" and "1.2". That's not because the *code* is doing anything +# wrong, it's because the simple, obvious design doesn't match my +# complicated, hairy expectations for real-world version numbers. It +# would be a snap to fix the test suite to say, "Yep, LooseVersion does +# the Right Thing" (ie. the code matches the conception). But I'd rather +# have a conception that matches common notions about version numbers. + + +class LooseVersion: + + """Version numbering for anarchists and software realists. + Implements the standard interface for version number classes as + described above. A version number consists of a series of numbers, + separated by either periods or strings of letters. When comparing + version numbers, the numeric components will be compared + numerically, and the alphabetic components lexically. The following + are all valid version numbers, in no particular order: + + 1.5.1 + 1.5.2b2 + 161 + 3.10a + 8.02 + 3.4j + 1996.07.12 + 3.2.pl0 + 3.1.1.6 + 2g6 + 11g + 0.960923 + 2.2beta29 + 1.13++ + 5.5.kw + 2.0b1pl0 + + In fact, there is no such thing as an invalid version number under + this scheme; the rules for comparison are simple and predictable, + but may not always give the results you want (for some definition + of "want"). + """ + + component_re = re.compile(r"(\d+ | [a-z]+ | \.)", re.VERBOSE) + + def __init__(self, vstring=None): + if vstring: + self.parse(vstring) + + def __eq__(self, other): + c = self._cmp(other) + if c is NotImplemented: + return c + return c == 0 + + def __lt__(self, other): + c = self._cmp(other) + if c is NotImplemented: + return c + return c < 0 + + def __le__(self, other): + c = self._cmp(other) + if c is NotImplemented: + return c + return c <= 0 + + def __gt__(self, other): + c = self._cmp(other) + if c is NotImplemented: + return c + return c > 0 + + def __ge__(self, other): + c = self._cmp(other) + if c is NotImplemented: + return c + return c >= 0 + + def parse(self, vstring): + # I've given up on thinking I can reconstruct the version string + # from the parsed tuple -- so I just store the string here for + # use by __str__ + self.vstring = vstring + components = [x for x in self.component_re.split(vstring) if x and x != "."] + for i, obj in enumerate(components): + try: + components[i] = int(obj) + except ValueError: + pass + + self.version = components + + def __str__(self): + return self.vstring + + def __repr__(self): + return "LooseVersion ('%s')" % str(self) + + def _cmp(self, other): + other = self._coerce(other) + if other is NotImplemented: + return NotImplemented + + if self.version == other.version: + return 0 + if self.version < other.version: + return -1 + if self.version > other.version: + return 1 + + @staticmethod + def _coerce(other): + if isinstance(other, LooseVersion): + return other + elif isinstance(other, str): + return LooseVersion(other) + elif "distutils" in sys.modules: + # Using this check to avoid importing distutils and suppressing the warning + try: + from distutils.version import LooseVersion as deprecated + except ImportError: + return NotImplemented + if isinstance(other, deprecated): + return LooseVersion(str(other)) + return NotImplemented -- cgit v1.2.3