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diff --git a/doc/source/tutorials/apt-cdrom.rst b/doc/source/tutorials/apt-cdrom.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..7e1d794 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/source/tutorials/apt-cdrom.rst @@ -0,0 +1,156 @@ +Writing your own apt-cdrom +========================== +:Author: Julian Andres Klode <jak@debian.org> +:Release: |release| +:Date: |today| + +This article explains how to utilise python-apt to build your own clone of the +:command:`apt-cdrom` command. To do this, we will take a look at the +:mod:`apt.cdrom` and :mod:`apt.progress.text` modules, and we will learn how +to use apt_pkg.parse_commandline to parse commandline arguments. The code shown +here works on Python 2 and Python 3. + +Basics +------ +The first step in building your own :command:`apt-cdrom` clone is to import the +:mod:`apt` package, which will import :mod:`apt.cdrom` and +:mod:`apt.progress.text`:: + + import apt + +Now we have to create a new :class:`apt.cdrom.Cdrom` object and pass to it an +:class:`apt.progress.text.CdromProgress` object, which is responsible for +displaying the progress and asking questions:: + + cdrom = apt.Cdrom(apt.progress.text.CdromProgress()) + +Now we have to choose the action, depending on the given options on the +command line. For now, we simply use the value of ``sys.argv[1]``:: + + import sys + if sys.argv[1] == 'add': + cdrom.add() + elif sys.argv[1] == 'ident': + cdrom.ident() + +Now we have a basic :command:`apt-cdrom` clone which can add and identify +CD-ROMs:: + + import sys + + import apt + + cdrom = apt.Cdrom(apt.progress.text.CdromProgress()) + if sys.argv[1] == 'add': + cdrom.add() + elif sys.argv[1] == 'ident': + cdrom.ident() + +Advanced example with command-line parsing +------------------------------------------- +Our example clearly misses a way to parse the commandline in a correct +manner. Luckily, :mod:`apt_pkg` provides us with a function to do this: +:func:`apt_pkg.parse_commandline`. To use it, we add ``import apt_pkg`` right +after import apt:: + + import sys + + import apt_pkg + import apt + + +:func:`apt_pkg.parse_commandline` is similar to :mod:`getopt` functions, it +takes a list of recognized options and the arguments and returns all unknown +arguments. If it encounters an unknown argument which starts with a leading +'-', the function raises an error indicating that the option is unknown. The +major difference is that this function manipulates the apt configuration space. + +The function takes 3 arguments. The first argument is an +:class:`apt_pkg.Configuration` object. The second argument is a list of tuples +of the form ``(shortopt, longopt, config, type)``, whereas *shortopt* is a +character indicating the short option name, *longopt* a string indicating the +corresponding long option (e.g. ``"--help"``), *config* the name of the +configuration item which should be set and *type* the type of the argument. + +For apt-cdrom, we can use the following statement:: + + arguments = apt_pkg.parse_commandline(apt_pkg.config, + [('h', "help", "help"), + ('v', "version", "version"), + ('d', "cdrom", "Acquire::cdrom::mount", "HasArg"), + ('r', "rename", "APT::CDROM::Rename"), + ('m', "no-mount", "APT::CDROM::NoMount"), + ('f', "fast", "APT::CDROM::Fast"), + ('n', "just-print", "APT::CDROM::NoAct"), + ('n', "recon", "APT::CDROM::NoAct"), + ('n', "no-act", "APT::CDROM::NoAct"), + ('a', "thorough", "APT::CDROM::Thorough"), + ('c', "config-file", "", "ConfigFile"), + ('o', "option", "", "ArbItem")], args) + + +This allows us to support all options supported by apt-cdrom. The first option +is --help. As you can see, it omits the fourth field of the tuple; which means +it is a boolean argument. Afterwards you could use +``apt_pkg.config.find_b("help")`` to see whether ``--help`` was specified. In +``('d',"cdrom","Acquire::cdrom::mount","HasArg")`` the fourth field is +``"HasArg"``. This means that the option has an argument, in this case the +location of the mount point. ``('c',"config-file","","ConfigFile")`` shows how +to include configuration files. This option takes a parameter which points to +a configuration file which will be added to the configuration space. +``('o',"option","","ArbItem")`` is yet another type of option, which allows users +to set configuration options on the commandline. + +Now we have to check whether help or version is specified, and print a message +and exit afterwards. To do this, we use :meth:`apt_pkg.Configuration.find_b` +which returns ``True`` if the configuration option exists and evaluates to +``True``:: + + if apt_pkg.config.find_b("help"): + print("This should be a help message") + sys.exit(0) + elif apt_pkg.config.find_b("version"): + print("Version blah.") + sys.exit(0) + + +Now we are ready to create our progress object and our cdrom object. Instead +of using :class:`apt.Cdrom` like in the first example, we will use +:class:`apt_pkg.Cdrom` which provides a very similar interface. We could also +use :class:`apt.Cdrom`, but `apt.Cdrom` provides options like *nomount* which +conflict with our commandline parsing:: + + progress = apt.progress.text.CdromProgress() + cdrom = apt_pkg.Cdrom() + + +Now we have to do the action requested by the user on the commandline. To see +which option was requested, we check the list ``arguments`` which was returned +by ``apt_pkg.parse_commandline`` above, and afterwards call ``cdrom.add`` or +``cdrom.ident``:: + + if apt_pkg.config.find_b("help"): + print("This should be a help message") + sys.exit(0) + elif apt_pkg.config.find_b("version"): + print("Version blah.") + sys.exit(0) + + if not arguments: + sys.stderr.write('E: No operation specified\n') + sys.exit(1) + elif arguments[0] == 'add': + cdrom.add(progress) + elif arguments[0] == 'ident': + cdrom.ident(progress) + else: + sys.stderr.write('E: Invalid operation %s\n' % arguments[0]) + sys.exit(1) + + +After putting all our actions into a main() function, we get a completely +working apt-cdrom clone, which just misses useful ``--help`` and ``--version`` +options. If we add a function show_help(), we get an even more complete +apt-cdrom clone: + +.. literalinclude:: ../examples/apt-cdrom.py |