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authorDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2024-04-07 19:33:14 +0000
committerDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2024-04-07 19:33:14 +0000
commit36d22d82aa202bb199967e9512281e9a53db42c9 (patch)
tree105e8c98ddea1c1e4784a60a5a6410fa416be2de /third_party/python/setuptools
parentInitial commit. (diff)
downloadfirefox-esr-36d22d82aa202bb199967e9512281e9a53db42c9.tar.xz
firefox-esr-36d22d82aa202bb199967e9512281e9a53db42c9.zip
Adding upstream version 115.7.0esr.upstream/115.7.0esr
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'third_party/python/setuptools')
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/_distutils_hack/__init__.py123
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/_distutils_hack/override.py1
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/distutils-precedence.pth1
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/easy_install.py5
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/__init__.py3285
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/__init__.py0
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/appdirs.py608
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/__about__.py27
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/__init__.py26
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/_compat.py38
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/_structures.py86
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/_typing.py48
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/markers.py328
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/requirements.py145
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/specifiers.py863
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/tags.py751
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/utils.py65
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/version.py535
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/pyparsing.py5742
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/extern/__init__.py66
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools-51.2.0.dist-info/LICENSE19
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools-51.2.0.dist-info/METADATA110
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools-51.2.0.dist-info/RECORD156
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools-51.2.0.dist-info/WHEEL5
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools-51.2.0.dist-info/dependency_links.txt2
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools-51.2.0.dist-info/entry_points.txt68
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools-51.2.0.dist-info/top_level.txt4
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/__init__.py241
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_deprecation_warning.py7
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/__init__.py15
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/_msvccompiler.py561
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/archive_util.py256
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/bcppcompiler.py393
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/ccompiler.py1116
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/cmd.py403
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/__init__.py31
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/bdist.py143
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/bdist_dumb.py123
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/bdist_msi.py749
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/bdist_rpm.py579
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/bdist_wininst.py377
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/build.py157
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/build_clib.py209
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/build_ext.py755
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/build_py.py416
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/build_scripts.py160
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/check.py148
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/clean.py76
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/config.py344
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/install.py677
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/install_data.py79
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/install_egg_info.py77
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/install_headers.py47
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/install_lib.py217
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/install_scripts.py60
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/py37compat.py30
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/register.py304
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/sdist.py494
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/upload.py214
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/config.py130
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/core.py234
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/cygwinccompiler.py403
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/debug.py5
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/dep_util.py92
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/dir_util.py210
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/dist.py1257
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/errors.py97
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/extension.py240
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/fancy_getopt.py457
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/file_util.py238
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/filelist.py327
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/log.py77
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/msvc9compiler.py788
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/msvccompiler.py643
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/py35compat.py19
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/py38compat.py7
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/spawn.py125
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/sysconfig.py573
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/text_file.py286
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/unixccompiler.py328
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/util.py561
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/version.py347
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/versionpredicate.py166
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_imp.py82
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/__init__.py0
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/ordered_set.py488
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/__about__.py27
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/__init__.py26
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_compat.py38
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_structures.py86
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_typing.py48
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/markers.py328
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/requirements.py145
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/specifiers.py863
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/tags.py751
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/utils.py65
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/version.py535
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/pyparsing.py5742
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/archive_util.py175
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/build_meta.py276
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/cli-32.exebin0 -> 65536 bytes
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/cli-64.exebin0 -> 74752 bytes
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/cli.exebin0 -> 65536 bytes
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/__init__.py17
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/alias.py78
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/bdist_egg.py501
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/bdist_rpm.py31
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/bdist_wininst.py30
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/build_clib.py101
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/build_ext.py322
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/build_py.py270
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/develop.py216
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/dist_info.py36
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/easy_install.py2318
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/egg_info.py722
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/install.py125
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/install_egg_info.py62
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/install_lib.py122
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/install_scripts.py68
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/launcher manifest.xml15
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/py36compat.py134
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/register.py18
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/rotate.py64
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/saveopts.py22
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/sdist.py222
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/setopt.py148
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/test.py274
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/upload.py17
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/upload_docs.py202
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/config.py693
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/dep_util.py25
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/depends.py175
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/dist.py1009
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/errors.py16
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/extension.py55
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/extern/__init__.py66
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/glob.py174
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/gui-32.exebin0 -> 65536 bytes
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/gui-64.exebin0 -> 75264 bytes
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/gui.exebin0 -> 65536 bytes
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/installer.py148
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/launch.py36
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/lib2to3_ex.py68
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/monkey.py177
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/msvc.py1830
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/namespaces.py107
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/package_index.py1139
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/py34compat.py13
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/sandbox.py496
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/script (dev).tmpl6
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/script.tmpl3
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/ssl_support.py266
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/unicode_utils.py42
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/version.py6
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/wheel.py213
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/windows_support.py29
156 files changed, 52777 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/_distutils_hack/__init__.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/_distutils_hack/__init__.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..c31edfed17
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/_distutils_hack/__init__.py
@@ -0,0 +1,123 @@
+import sys
+import os
+import re
+import importlib
+import warnings
+
+
+is_pypy = '__pypy__' in sys.builtin_module_names
+
+
+def warn_distutils_present():
+ if 'distutils' not in sys.modules:
+ return
+ if is_pypy and sys.version_info < (3, 7):
+ # PyPy for 3.6 unconditionally imports distutils, so bypass the warning
+ # https://foss.heptapod.net/pypy/pypy/-/blob/be829135bc0d758997b3566062999ee8b23872b4/lib-python/3/site.py#L250
+ return
+ warnings.warn(
+ "Distutils was imported before Setuptools, but importing Setuptools "
+ "also replaces the `distutils` module in `sys.modules`. This may lead "
+ "to undesirable behaviors or errors. To avoid these issues, avoid "
+ "using distutils directly, ensure that setuptools is installed in the "
+ "traditional way (e.g. not an editable install), and/or make sure "
+ "that setuptools is always imported before distutils.")
+
+
+def clear_distutils():
+ if 'distutils' not in sys.modules:
+ return
+ warnings.warn("Setuptools is replacing distutils.")
+ mods = [name for name in sys.modules if re.match(r'distutils\b', name)]
+ for name in mods:
+ del sys.modules[name]
+
+
+def enabled():
+ """
+ Allow selection of distutils by environment variable.
+ """
+ which = os.environ.get('SETUPTOOLS_USE_DISTUTILS', 'stdlib')
+ return which == 'local'
+
+
+def ensure_local_distutils():
+ clear_distutils()
+ distutils = importlib.import_module('setuptools._distutils')
+ distutils.__name__ = 'distutils'
+ sys.modules['distutils'] = distutils
+
+ # sanity check that submodules load as expected
+ core = importlib.import_module('distutils.core')
+ assert '_distutils' in core.__file__, core.__file__
+
+
+def do_override():
+ """
+ Ensure that the local copy of distutils is preferred over stdlib.
+
+ See https://github.com/pypa/setuptools/issues/417#issuecomment-392298401
+ for more motivation.
+ """
+ if enabled():
+ warn_distutils_present()
+ ensure_local_distutils()
+
+
+class DistutilsMetaFinder:
+ def find_spec(self, fullname, path, target=None):
+ if path is not None:
+ return
+
+ method_name = 'spec_for_{fullname}'.format(**locals())
+ method = getattr(self, method_name, lambda: None)
+ return method()
+
+ def spec_for_distutils(self):
+ import importlib.abc
+ import importlib.util
+
+ class DistutilsLoader(importlib.abc.Loader):
+
+ def create_module(self, spec):
+ return importlib.import_module('setuptools._distutils')
+
+ def exec_module(self, module):
+ pass
+
+ return importlib.util.spec_from_loader('distutils', DistutilsLoader())
+
+ def spec_for_pip(self):
+ """
+ Ensure stdlib distutils when running under pip.
+ See pypa/pip#8761 for rationale.
+ """
+ if self.pip_imported_during_build():
+ return
+ clear_distutils()
+ self.spec_for_distutils = lambda: None
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def pip_imported_during_build():
+ """
+ Detect if pip is being imported in a build script. Ref #2355.
+ """
+ import traceback
+ return any(
+ frame.f_globals['__file__'].endswith('setup.py')
+ for frame, line in traceback.walk_stack(None)
+ )
+
+
+DISTUTILS_FINDER = DistutilsMetaFinder()
+
+
+def add_shim():
+ sys.meta_path.insert(0, DISTUTILS_FINDER)
+
+
+def remove_shim():
+ try:
+ sys.meta_path.remove(DISTUTILS_FINDER)
+ except ValueError:
+ pass
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/_distutils_hack/override.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/_distutils_hack/override.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..2cc433a4a5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/_distutils_hack/override.py
@@ -0,0 +1 @@
+__import__('_distutils_hack').do_override()
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/distutils-precedence.pth b/third_party/python/setuptools/distutils-precedence.pth
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..6de4198fcc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/distutils-precedence.pth
@@ -0,0 +1 @@
+import os; var = 'SETUPTOOLS_USE_DISTUTILS'; enabled = os.environ.get(var, 'stdlib') == 'local'; enabled and __import__('_distutils_hack').add_shim();
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/easy_install.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/easy_install.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..d87e984034
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/easy_install.py
@@ -0,0 +1,5 @@
+"""Run the EasyInstall command"""
+
+if __name__ == '__main__':
+ from setuptools.command.easy_install import main
+ main()
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/__init__.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/__init__.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..99b7f68075
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/__init__.py
@@ -0,0 +1,3285 @@
+"""
+Package resource API
+--------------------
+
+A resource is a logical file contained within a package, or a logical
+subdirectory thereof. The package resource API expects resource names
+to have their path parts separated with ``/``, *not* whatever the local
+path separator is. Do not use os.path operations to manipulate resource
+names being passed into the API.
+
+The package resource API is designed to work with normal filesystem packages,
+.egg files, and unpacked .egg files. It can also work in a limited way with
+.zip files and with custom PEP 302 loaders that support the ``get_data()``
+method.
+"""
+
+import sys
+import os
+import io
+import time
+import re
+import types
+import zipfile
+import zipimport
+import warnings
+import stat
+import functools
+import pkgutil
+import operator
+import platform
+import collections
+import plistlib
+import email.parser
+import errno
+import tempfile
+import textwrap
+import itertools
+import inspect
+import ntpath
+import posixpath
+import importlib
+from pkgutil import get_importer
+
+try:
+ import _imp
+except ImportError:
+ # Python 3.2 compatibility
+ import imp as _imp
+
+try:
+ FileExistsError
+except NameError:
+ FileExistsError = OSError
+
+# capture these to bypass sandboxing
+from os import utime
+try:
+ from os import mkdir, rename, unlink
+ WRITE_SUPPORT = True
+except ImportError:
+ # no write support, probably under GAE
+ WRITE_SUPPORT = False
+
+from os import open as os_open
+from os.path import isdir, split
+
+try:
+ import importlib.machinery as importlib_machinery
+ # access attribute to force import under delayed import mechanisms.
+ importlib_machinery.__name__
+except ImportError:
+ importlib_machinery = None
+
+from pkg_resources.extern import appdirs
+from pkg_resources.extern import packaging
+__import__('pkg_resources.extern.packaging.version')
+__import__('pkg_resources.extern.packaging.specifiers')
+__import__('pkg_resources.extern.packaging.requirements')
+__import__('pkg_resources.extern.packaging.markers')
+
+if sys.version_info < (3, 5):
+ raise RuntimeError("Python 3.5 or later is required")
+
+# declare some globals that will be defined later to
+# satisfy the linters.
+require = None
+working_set = None
+add_activation_listener = None
+resources_stream = None
+cleanup_resources = None
+resource_dir = None
+resource_stream = None
+set_extraction_path = None
+resource_isdir = None
+resource_string = None
+iter_entry_points = None
+resource_listdir = None
+resource_filename = None
+resource_exists = None
+_distribution_finders = None
+_namespace_handlers = None
+_namespace_packages = None
+
+
+class PEP440Warning(RuntimeWarning):
+ """
+ Used when there is an issue with a version or specifier not complying with
+ PEP 440.
+ """
+
+
+def parse_version(v):
+ try:
+ return packaging.version.Version(v)
+ except packaging.version.InvalidVersion:
+ return packaging.version.LegacyVersion(v)
+
+
+_state_vars = {}
+
+
+def _declare_state(vartype, **kw):
+ globals().update(kw)
+ _state_vars.update(dict.fromkeys(kw, vartype))
+
+
+def __getstate__():
+ state = {}
+ g = globals()
+ for k, v in _state_vars.items():
+ state[k] = g['_sget_' + v](g[k])
+ return state
+
+
+def __setstate__(state):
+ g = globals()
+ for k, v in state.items():
+ g['_sset_' + _state_vars[k]](k, g[k], v)
+ return state
+
+
+def _sget_dict(val):
+ return val.copy()
+
+
+def _sset_dict(key, ob, state):
+ ob.clear()
+ ob.update(state)
+
+
+def _sget_object(val):
+ return val.__getstate__()
+
+
+def _sset_object(key, ob, state):
+ ob.__setstate__(state)
+
+
+_sget_none = _sset_none = lambda *args: None
+
+
+def get_supported_platform():
+ """Return this platform's maximum compatible version.
+
+ distutils.util.get_platform() normally reports the minimum version
+ of macOS that would be required to *use* extensions produced by
+ distutils. But what we want when checking compatibility is to know the
+ version of macOS that we are *running*. To allow usage of packages that
+ explicitly require a newer version of macOS, we must also know the
+ current version of the OS.
+
+ If this condition occurs for any other platform with a version in its
+ platform strings, this function should be extended accordingly.
+ """
+ plat = get_build_platform()
+ m = macosVersionString.match(plat)
+ if m is not None and sys.platform == "darwin":
+ try:
+ plat = 'macosx-%s-%s' % ('.'.join(_macos_vers()[:2]), m.group(3))
+ except ValueError:
+ # not macOS
+ pass
+ return plat
+
+
+__all__ = [
+ # Basic resource access and distribution/entry point discovery
+ 'require', 'run_script', 'get_provider', 'get_distribution',
+ 'load_entry_point', 'get_entry_map', 'get_entry_info',
+ 'iter_entry_points',
+ 'resource_string', 'resource_stream', 'resource_filename',
+ 'resource_listdir', 'resource_exists', 'resource_isdir',
+
+ # Environmental control
+ 'declare_namespace', 'working_set', 'add_activation_listener',
+ 'find_distributions', 'set_extraction_path', 'cleanup_resources',
+ 'get_default_cache',
+
+ # Primary implementation classes
+ 'Environment', 'WorkingSet', 'ResourceManager',
+ 'Distribution', 'Requirement', 'EntryPoint',
+
+ # Exceptions
+ 'ResolutionError', 'VersionConflict', 'DistributionNotFound',
+ 'UnknownExtra', 'ExtractionError',
+
+ # Warnings
+ 'PEP440Warning',
+
+ # Parsing functions and string utilities
+ 'parse_requirements', 'parse_version', 'safe_name', 'safe_version',
+ 'get_platform', 'compatible_platforms', 'yield_lines', 'split_sections',
+ 'safe_extra', 'to_filename', 'invalid_marker', 'evaluate_marker',
+
+ # filesystem utilities
+ 'ensure_directory', 'normalize_path',
+
+ # Distribution "precedence" constants
+ 'EGG_DIST', 'BINARY_DIST', 'SOURCE_DIST', 'CHECKOUT_DIST', 'DEVELOP_DIST',
+
+ # "Provider" interfaces, implementations, and registration/lookup APIs
+ 'IMetadataProvider', 'IResourceProvider', 'FileMetadata',
+ 'PathMetadata', 'EggMetadata', 'EmptyProvider', 'empty_provider',
+ 'NullProvider', 'EggProvider', 'DefaultProvider', 'ZipProvider',
+ 'register_finder', 'register_namespace_handler', 'register_loader_type',
+ 'fixup_namespace_packages', 'get_importer',
+
+ # Warnings
+ 'PkgResourcesDeprecationWarning',
+
+ # Deprecated/backward compatibility only
+ 'run_main', 'AvailableDistributions',
+]
+
+
+class ResolutionError(Exception):
+ """Abstract base for dependency resolution errors"""
+
+ def __repr__(self):
+ return self.__class__.__name__ + repr(self.args)
+
+
+class VersionConflict(ResolutionError):
+ """
+ An already-installed version conflicts with the requested version.
+
+ Should be initialized with the installed Distribution and the requested
+ Requirement.
+ """
+
+ _template = "{self.dist} is installed but {self.req} is required"
+
+ @property
+ def dist(self):
+ return self.args[0]
+
+ @property
+ def req(self):
+ return self.args[1]
+
+ def report(self):
+ return self._template.format(**locals())
+
+ def with_context(self, required_by):
+ """
+ If required_by is non-empty, return a version of self that is a
+ ContextualVersionConflict.
+ """
+ if not required_by:
+ return self
+ args = self.args + (required_by,)
+ return ContextualVersionConflict(*args)
+
+
+class ContextualVersionConflict(VersionConflict):
+ """
+ A VersionConflict that accepts a third parameter, the set of the
+ requirements that required the installed Distribution.
+ """
+
+ _template = VersionConflict._template + ' by {self.required_by}'
+
+ @property
+ def required_by(self):
+ return self.args[2]
+
+
+class DistributionNotFound(ResolutionError):
+ """A requested distribution was not found"""
+
+ _template = ("The '{self.req}' distribution was not found "
+ "and is required by {self.requirers_str}")
+
+ @property
+ def req(self):
+ return self.args[0]
+
+ @property
+ def requirers(self):
+ return self.args[1]
+
+ @property
+ def requirers_str(self):
+ if not self.requirers:
+ return 'the application'
+ return ', '.join(self.requirers)
+
+ def report(self):
+ return self._template.format(**locals())
+
+ def __str__(self):
+ return self.report()
+
+
+class UnknownExtra(ResolutionError):
+ """Distribution doesn't have an "extra feature" of the given name"""
+
+
+_provider_factories = {}
+
+PY_MAJOR = '{}.{}'.format(*sys.version_info)
+EGG_DIST = 3
+BINARY_DIST = 2
+SOURCE_DIST = 1
+CHECKOUT_DIST = 0
+DEVELOP_DIST = -1
+
+
+def register_loader_type(loader_type, provider_factory):
+ """Register `provider_factory` to make providers for `loader_type`
+
+ `loader_type` is the type or class of a PEP 302 ``module.__loader__``,
+ and `provider_factory` is a function that, passed a *module* object,
+ returns an ``IResourceProvider`` for that module.
+ """
+ _provider_factories[loader_type] = provider_factory
+
+
+def get_provider(moduleOrReq):
+ """Return an IResourceProvider for the named module or requirement"""
+ if isinstance(moduleOrReq, Requirement):
+ return working_set.find(moduleOrReq) or require(str(moduleOrReq))[0]
+ try:
+ module = sys.modules[moduleOrReq]
+ except KeyError:
+ __import__(moduleOrReq)
+ module = sys.modules[moduleOrReq]
+ loader = getattr(module, '__loader__', None)
+ return _find_adapter(_provider_factories, loader)(module)
+
+
+def _macos_vers(_cache=[]):
+ if not _cache:
+ version = platform.mac_ver()[0]
+ # fallback for MacPorts
+ if version == '':
+ plist = '/System/Library/CoreServices/SystemVersion.plist'
+ if os.path.exists(plist):
+ if hasattr(plistlib, 'readPlist'):
+ plist_content = plistlib.readPlist(plist)
+ if 'ProductVersion' in plist_content:
+ version = plist_content['ProductVersion']
+
+ _cache.append(version.split('.'))
+ return _cache[0]
+
+
+def _macos_arch(machine):
+ return {'PowerPC': 'ppc', 'Power_Macintosh': 'ppc'}.get(machine, machine)
+
+
+def get_build_platform():
+ """Return this platform's string for platform-specific distributions
+
+ XXX Currently this is the same as ``distutils.util.get_platform()``, but it
+ needs some hacks for Linux and macOS.
+ """
+ from sysconfig import get_platform
+
+ plat = get_platform()
+ if sys.platform == "darwin" and not plat.startswith('macosx-'):
+ try:
+ version = _macos_vers()
+ machine = os.uname()[4].replace(" ", "_")
+ return "macosx-%d.%d-%s" % (
+ int(version[0]), int(version[1]),
+ _macos_arch(machine),
+ )
+ except ValueError:
+ # if someone is running a non-Mac darwin system, this will fall
+ # through to the default implementation
+ pass
+ return plat
+
+
+macosVersionString = re.compile(r"macosx-(\d+)\.(\d+)-(.*)")
+darwinVersionString = re.compile(r"darwin-(\d+)\.(\d+)\.(\d+)-(.*)")
+# XXX backward compat
+get_platform = get_build_platform
+
+
+def compatible_platforms(provided, required):
+ """Can code for the `provided` platform run on the `required` platform?
+
+ Returns true if either platform is ``None``, or the platforms are equal.
+
+ XXX Needs compatibility checks for Linux and other unixy OSes.
+ """
+ if provided is None or required is None or provided == required:
+ # easy case
+ return True
+
+ # macOS special cases
+ reqMac = macosVersionString.match(required)
+ if reqMac:
+ provMac = macosVersionString.match(provided)
+
+ # is this a Mac package?
+ if not provMac:
+ # this is backwards compatibility for packages built before
+ # setuptools 0.6. All packages built after this point will
+ # use the new macOS designation.
+ provDarwin = darwinVersionString.match(provided)
+ if provDarwin:
+ dversion = int(provDarwin.group(1))
+ macosversion = "%s.%s" % (reqMac.group(1), reqMac.group(2))
+ if dversion == 7 and macosversion >= "10.3" or \
+ dversion == 8 and macosversion >= "10.4":
+ return True
+ # egg isn't macOS or legacy darwin
+ return False
+
+ # are they the same major version and machine type?
+ if provMac.group(1) != reqMac.group(1) or \
+ provMac.group(3) != reqMac.group(3):
+ return False
+
+ # is the required OS major update >= the provided one?
+ if int(provMac.group(2)) > int(reqMac.group(2)):
+ return False
+
+ return True
+
+ # XXX Linux and other platforms' special cases should go here
+ return False
+
+
+def run_script(dist_spec, script_name):
+ """Locate distribution `dist_spec` and run its `script_name` script"""
+ ns = sys._getframe(1).f_globals
+ name = ns['__name__']
+ ns.clear()
+ ns['__name__'] = name
+ require(dist_spec)[0].run_script(script_name, ns)
+
+
+# backward compatibility
+run_main = run_script
+
+
+def get_distribution(dist):
+ """Return a current distribution object for a Requirement or string"""
+ if isinstance(dist, str):
+ dist = Requirement.parse(dist)
+ if isinstance(dist, Requirement):
+ dist = get_provider(dist)
+ if not isinstance(dist, Distribution):
+ raise TypeError("Expected string, Requirement, or Distribution", dist)
+ return dist
+
+
+def load_entry_point(dist, group, name):
+ """Return `name` entry point of `group` for `dist` or raise ImportError"""
+ return get_distribution(dist).load_entry_point(group, name)
+
+
+def get_entry_map(dist, group=None):
+ """Return the entry point map for `group`, or the full entry map"""
+ return get_distribution(dist).get_entry_map(group)
+
+
+def get_entry_info(dist, group, name):
+ """Return the EntryPoint object for `group`+`name`, or ``None``"""
+ return get_distribution(dist).get_entry_info(group, name)
+
+
+class IMetadataProvider:
+ def has_metadata(name):
+ """Does the package's distribution contain the named metadata?"""
+
+ def get_metadata(name):
+ """The named metadata resource as a string"""
+
+ def get_metadata_lines(name):
+ """Yield named metadata resource as list of non-blank non-comment lines
+
+ Leading and trailing whitespace is stripped from each line, and lines
+ with ``#`` as the first non-blank character are omitted."""
+
+ def metadata_isdir(name):
+ """Is the named metadata a directory? (like ``os.path.isdir()``)"""
+
+ def metadata_listdir(name):
+ """List of metadata names in the directory (like ``os.listdir()``)"""
+
+ def run_script(script_name, namespace):
+ """Execute the named script in the supplied namespace dictionary"""
+
+
+class IResourceProvider(IMetadataProvider):
+ """An object that provides access to package resources"""
+
+ def get_resource_filename(manager, resource_name):
+ """Return a true filesystem path for `resource_name`
+
+ `manager` must be an ``IResourceManager``"""
+
+ def get_resource_stream(manager, resource_name):
+ """Return a readable file-like object for `resource_name`
+
+ `manager` must be an ``IResourceManager``"""
+
+ def get_resource_string(manager, resource_name):
+ """Return a string containing the contents of `resource_name`
+
+ `manager` must be an ``IResourceManager``"""
+
+ def has_resource(resource_name):
+ """Does the package contain the named resource?"""
+
+ def resource_isdir(resource_name):
+ """Is the named resource a directory? (like ``os.path.isdir()``)"""
+
+ def resource_listdir(resource_name):
+ """List of resource names in the directory (like ``os.listdir()``)"""
+
+
+class WorkingSet:
+ """A collection of active distributions on sys.path (or a similar list)"""
+
+ def __init__(self, entries=None):
+ """Create working set from list of path entries (default=sys.path)"""
+ self.entries = []
+ self.entry_keys = {}
+ self.by_key = {}
+ self.callbacks = []
+
+ if entries is None:
+ entries = sys.path
+
+ for entry in entries:
+ self.add_entry(entry)
+
+ @classmethod
+ def _build_master(cls):
+ """
+ Prepare the master working set.
+ """
+ ws = cls()
+ try:
+ from __main__ import __requires__
+ except ImportError:
+ # The main program does not list any requirements
+ return ws
+
+ # ensure the requirements are met
+ try:
+ ws.require(__requires__)
+ except VersionConflict:
+ return cls._build_from_requirements(__requires__)
+
+ return ws
+
+ @classmethod
+ def _build_from_requirements(cls, req_spec):
+ """
+ Build a working set from a requirement spec. Rewrites sys.path.
+ """
+ # try it without defaults already on sys.path
+ # by starting with an empty path
+ ws = cls([])
+ reqs = parse_requirements(req_spec)
+ dists = ws.resolve(reqs, Environment())
+ for dist in dists:
+ ws.add(dist)
+
+ # add any missing entries from sys.path
+ for entry in sys.path:
+ if entry not in ws.entries:
+ ws.add_entry(entry)
+
+ # then copy back to sys.path
+ sys.path[:] = ws.entries
+ return ws
+
+ def add_entry(self, entry):
+ """Add a path item to ``.entries``, finding any distributions on it
+
+ ``find_distributions(entry, True)`` is used to find distributions
+ corresponding to the path entry, and they are added. `entry` is
+ always appended to ``.entries``, even if it is already present.
+ (This is because ``sys.path`` can contain the same value more than
+ once, and the ``.entries`` of the ``sys.path`` WorkingSet should always
+ equal ``sys.path``.)
+ """
+ self.entry_keys.setdefault(entry, [])
+ self.entries.append(entry)
+ for dist in find_distributions(entry, True):
+ self.add(dist, entry, False)
+
+ def __contains__(self, dist):
+ """True if `dist` is the active distribution for its project"""
+ return self.by_key.get(dist.key) == dist
+
+ def find(self, req):
+ """Find a distribution matching requirement `req`
+
+ If there is an active distribution for the requested project, this
+ returns it as long as it meets the version requirement specified by
+ `req`. But, if there is an active distribution for the project and it
+ does *not* meet the `req` requirement, ``VersionConflict`` is raised.
+ If there is no active distribution for the requested project, ``None``
+ is returned.
+ """
+ dist = self.by_key.get(req.key)
+ if dist is not None and dist not in req:
+ # XXX add more info
+ raise VersionConflict(dist, req)
+ return dist
+
+ def iter_entry_points(self, group, name=None):
+ """Yield entry point objects from `group` matching `name`
+
+ If `name` is None, yields all entry points in `group` from all
+ distributions in the working set, otherwise only ones matching
+ both `group` and `name` are yielded (in distribution order).
+ """
+ return (
+ entry
+ for dist in self
+ for entry in dist.get_entry_map(group).values()
+ if name is None or name == entry.name
+ )
+
+ def run_script(self, requires, script_name):
+ """Locate distribution for `requires` and run `script_name` script"""
+ ns = sys._getframe(1).f_globals
+ name = ns['__name__']
+ ns.clear()
+ ns['__name__'] = name
+ self.require(requires)[0].run_script(script_name, ns)
+
+ def __iter__(self):
+ """Yield distributions for non-duplicate projects in the working set
+
+ The yield order is the order in which the items' path entries were
+ added to the working set.
+ """
+ seen = {}
+ for item in self.entries:
+ if item not in self.entry_keys:
+ # workaround a cache issue
+ continue
+
+ for key in self.entry_keys[item]:
+ if key not in seen:
+ seen[key] = 1
+ yield self.by_key[key]
+
+ def add(self, dist, entry=None, insert=True, replace=False):
+ """Add `dist` to working set, associated with `entry`
+
+ If `entry` is unspecified, it defaults to the ``.location`` of `dist`.
+ On exit from this routine, `entry` is added to the end of the working
+ set's ``.entries`` (if it wasn't already present).
+
+ `dist` is only added to the working set if it's for a project that
+ doesn't already have a distribution in the set, unless `replace=True`.
+ If it's added, any callbacks registered with the ``subscribe()`` method
+ will be called.
+ """
+ if insert:
+ dist.insert_on(self.entries, entry, replace=replace)
+
+ if entry is None:
+ entry = dist.location
+ keys = self.entry_keys.setdefault(entry, [])
+ keys2 = self.entry_keys.setdefault(dist.location, [])
+ if not replace and dist.key in self.by_key:
+ # ignore hidden distros
+ return
+
+ self.by_key[dist.key] = dist
+ if dist.key not in keys:
+ keys.append(dist.key)
+ if dist.key not in keys2:
+ keys2.append(dist.key)
+ self._added_new(dist)
+
+ def resolve(self, requirements, env=None, installer=None,
+ replace_conflicting=False, extras=None):
+ """List all distributions needed to (recursively) meet `requirements`
+
+ `requirements` must be a sequence of ``Requirement`` objects. `env`,
+ if supplied, should be an ``Environment`` instance. If
+ not supplied, it defaults to all distributions available within any
+ entry or distribution in the working set. `installer`, if supplied,
+ will be invoked with each requirement that cannot be met by an
+ already-installed distribution; it should return a ``Distribution`` or
+ ``None``.
+
+ Unless `replace_conflicting=True`, raises a VersionConflict exception
+ if
+ any requirements are found on the path that have the correct name but
+ the wrong version. Otherwise, if an `installer` is supplied it will be
+ invoked to obtain the correct version of the requirement and activate
+ it.
+
+ `extras` is a list of the extras to be used with these requirements.
+ This is important because extra requirements may look like `my_req;
+ extra = "my_extra"`, which would otherwise be interpreted as a purely
+ optional requirement. Instead, we want to be able to assert that these
+ requirements are truly required.
+ """
+
+ # set up the stack
+ requirements = list(requirements)[::-1]
+ # set of processed requirements
+ processed = {}
+ # key -> dist
+ best = {}
+ to_activate = []
+
+ req_extras = _ReqExtras()
+
+ # Mapping of requirement to set of distributions that required it;
+ # useful for reporting info about conflicts.
+ required_by = collections.defaultdict(set)
+
+ while requirements:
+ # process dependencies breadth-first
+ req = requirements.pop(0)
+ if req in processed:
+ # Ignore cyclic or redundant dependencies
+ continue
+
+ if not req_extras.markers_pass(req, extras):
+ continue
+
+ dist = best.get(req.key)
+ if dist is None:
+ # Find the best distribution and add it to the map
+ dist = self.by_key.get(req.key)
+ if dist is None or (dist not in req and replace_conflicting):
+ ws = self
+ if env is None:
+ if dist is None:
+ env = Environment(self.entries)
+ else:
+ # Use an empty environment and workingset to avoid
+ # any further conflicts with the conflicting
+ # distribution
+ env = Environment([])
+ ws = WorkingSet([])
+ dist = best[req.key] = env.best_match(
+ req, ws, installer,
+ replace_conflicting=replace_conflicting
+ )
+ if dist is None:
+ requirers = required_by.get(req, None)
+ raise DistributionNotFound(req, requirers)
+ to_activate.append(dist)
+ if dist not in req:
+ # Oops, the "best" so far conflicts with a dependency
+ dependent_req = required_by[req]
+ raise VersionConflict(dist, req).with_context(dependent_req)
+
+ # push the new requirements onto the stack
+ new_requirements = dist.requires(req.extras)[::-1]
+ requirements.extend(new_requirements)
+
+ # Register the new requirements needed by req
+ for new_requirement in new_requirements:
+ required_by[new_requirement].add(req.project_name)
+ req_extras[new_requirement] = req.extras
+
+ processed[req] = True
+
+ # return list of distros to activate
+ return to_activate
+
+ def find_plugins(
+ self, plugin_env, full_env=None, installer=None, fallback=True):
+ """Find all activatable distributions in `plugin_env`
+
+ Example usage::
+
+ distributions, errors = working_set.find_plugins(
+ Environment(plugin_dirlist)
+ )
+ # add plugins+libs to sys.path
+ map(working_set.add, distributions)
+ # display errors
+ print('Could not load', errors)
+
+ The `plugin_env` should be an ``Environment`` instance that contains
+ only distributions that are in the project's "plugin directory" or
+ directories. The `full_env`, if supplied, should be an ``Environment``
+ contains all currently-available distributions. If `full_env` is not
+ supplied, one is created automatically from the ``WorkingSet`` this
+ method is called on, which will typically mean that every directory on
+ ``sys.path`` will be scanned for distributions.
+
+ `installer` is a standard installer callback as used by the
+ ``resolve()`` method. The `fallback` flag indicates whether we should
+ attempt to resolve older versions of a plugin if the newest version
+ cannot be resolved.
+
+ This method returns a 2-tuple: (`distributions`, `error_info`), where
+ `distributions` is a list of the distributions found in `plugin_env`
+ that were loadable, along with any other distributions that are needed
+ to resolve their dependencies. `error_info` is a dictionary mapping
+ unloadable plugin distributions to an exception instance describing the
+ error that occurred. Usually this will be a ``DistributionNotFound`` or
+ ``VersionConflict`` instance.
+ """
+
+ plugin_projects = list(plugin_env)
+ # scan project names in alphabetic order
+ plugin_projects.sort()
+
+ error_info = {}
+ distributions = {}
+
+ if full_env is None:
+ env = Environment(self.entries)
+ env += plugin_env
+ else:
+ env = full_env + plugin_env
+
+ shadow_set = self.__class__([])
+ # put all our entries in shadow_set
+ list(map(shadow_set.add, self))
+
+ for project_name in plugin_projects:
+
+ for dist in plugin_env[project_name]:
+
+ req = [dist.as_requirement()]
+
+ try:
+ resolvees = shadow_set.resolve(req, env, installer)
+
+ except ResolutionError as v:
+ # save error info
+ error_info[dist] = v
+ if fallback:
+ # try the next older version of project
+ continue
+ else:
+ # give up on this project, keep going
+ break
+
+ else:
+ list(map(shadow_set.add, resolvees))
+ distributions.update(dict.fromkeys(resolvees))
+
+ # success, no need to try any more versions of this project
+ break
+
+ distributions = list(distributions)
+ distributions.sort()
+
+ return distributions, error_info
+
+ def require(self, *requirements):
+ """Ensure that distributions matching `requirements` are activated
+
+ `requirements` must be a string or a (possibly-nested) sequence
+ thereof, specifying the distributions and versions required. The
+ return value is a sequence of the distributions that needed to be
+ activated to fulfill the requirements; all relevant distributions are
+ included, even if they were already activated in this working set.
+ """
+ needed = self.resolve(parse_requirements(requirements))
+
+ for dist in needed:
+ self.add(dist)
+
+ return needed
+
+ def subscribe(self, callback, existing=True):
+ """Invoke `callback` for all distributions
+
+ If `existing=True` (default),
+ call on all existing ones, as well.
+ """
+ if callback in self.callbacks:
+ return
+ self.callbacks.append(callback)
+ if not existing:
+ return
+ for dist in self:
+ callback(dist)
+
+ def _added_new(self, dist):
+ for callback in self.callbacks:
+ callback(dist)
+
+ def __getstate__(self):
+ return (
+ self.entries[:], self.entry_keys.copy(), self.by_key.copy(),
+ self.callbacks[:]
+ )
+
+ def __setstate__(self, e_k_b_c):
+ entries, keys, by_key, callbacks = e_k_b_c
+ self.entries = entries[:]
+ self.entry_keys = keys.copy()
+ self.by_key = by_key.copy()
+ self.callbacks = callbacks[:]
+
+
+class _ReqExtras(dict):
+ """
+ Map each requirement to the extras that demanded it.
+ """
+
+ def markers_pass(self, req, extras=None):
+ """
+ Evaluate markers for req against each extra that
+ demanded it.
+
+ Return False if the req has a marker and fails
+ evaluation. Otherwise, return True.
+ """
+ extra_evals = (
+ req.marker.evaluate({'extra': extra})
+ for extra in self.get(req, ()) + (extras or (None,))
+ )
+ return not req.marker or any(extra_evals)
+
+
+class Environment:
+ """Searchable snapshot of distributions on a search path"""
+
+ def __init__(
+ self, search_path=None, platform=get_supported_platform(),
+ python=PY_MAJOR):
+ """Snapshot distributions available on a search path
+
+ Any distributions found on `search_path` are added to the environment.
+ `search_path` should be a sequence of ``sys.path`` items. If not
+ supplied, ``sys.path`` is used.
+
+ `platform` is an optional string specifying the name of the platform
+ that platform-specific distributions must be compatible with. If
+ unspecified, it defaults to the current platform. `python` is an
+ optional string naming the desired version of Python (e.g. ``'3.6'``);
+ it defaults to the current version.
+
+ You may explicitly set `platform` (and/or `python`) to ``None`` if you
+ wish to map *all* distributions, not just those compatible with the
+ running platform or Python version.
+ """
+ self._distmap = {}
+ self.platform = platform
+ self.python = python
+ self.scan(search_path)
+
+ def can_add(self, dist):
+ """Is distribution `dist` acceptable for this environment?
+
+ The distribution must match the platform and python version
+ requirements specified when this environment was created, or False
+ is returned.
+ """
+ py_compat = (
+ self.python is None
+ or dist.py_version is None
+ or dist.py_version == self.python
+ )
+ return py_compat and compatible_platforms(dist.platform, self.platform)
+
+ def remove(self, dist):
+ """Remove `dist` from the environment"""
+ self._distmap[dist.key].remove(dist)
+
+ def scan(self, search_path=None):
+ """Scan `search_path` for distributions usable in this environment
+
+ Any distributions found are added to the environment.
+ `search_path` should be a sequence of ``sys.path`` items. If not
+ supplied, ``sys.path`` is used. Only distributions conforming to
+ the platform/python version defined at initialization are added.
+ """
+ if search_path is None:
+ search_path = sys.path
+
+ for item in search_path:
+ for dist in find_distributions(item):
+ self.add(dist)
+
+ def __getitem__(self, project_name):
+ """Return a newest-to-oldest list of distributions for `project_name`
+
+ Uses case-insensitive `project_name` comparison, assuming all the
+ project's distributions use their project's name converted to all
+ lowercase as their key.
+
+ """
+ distribution_key = project_name.lower()
+ return self._distmap.get(distribution_key, [])
+
+ def add(self, dist):
+ """Add `dist` if we ``can_add()`` it and it has not already been added
+ """
+ if self.can_add(dist) and dist.has_version():
+ dists = self._distmap.setdefault(dist.key, [])
+ if dist not in dists:
+ dists.append(dist)
+ dists.sort(key=operator.attrgetter('hashcmp'), reverse=True)
+
+ def best_match(
+ self, req, working_set, installer=None, replace_conflicting=False):
+ """Find distribution best matching `req` and usable on `working_set`
+
+ This calls the ``find(req)`` method of the `working_set` to see if a
+ suitable distribution is already active. (This may raise
+ ``VersionConflict`` if an unsuitable version of the project is already
+ active in the specified `working_set`.) If a suitable distribution
+ isn't active, this method returns the newest distribution in the
+ environment that meets the ``Requirement`` in `req`. If no suitable
+ distribution is found, and `installer` is supplied, then the result of
+ calling the environment's ``obtain(req, installer)`` method will be
+ returned.
+ """
+ try:
+ dist = working_set.find(req)
+ except VersionConflict:
+ if not replace_conflicting:
+ raise
+ dist = None
+ if dist is not None:
+ return dist
+ for dist in self[req.key]:
+ if dist in req:
+ return dist
+ # try to download/install
+ return self.obtain(req, installer)
+
+ def obtain(self, requirement, installer=None):
+ """Obtain a distribution matching `requirement` (e.g. via download)
+
+ Obtain a distro that matches requirement (e.g. via download). In the
+ base ``Environment`` class, this routine just returns
+ ``installer(requirement)``, unless `installer` is None, in which case
+ None is returned instead. This method is a hook that allows subclasses
+ to attempt other ways of obtaining a distribution before falling back
+ to the `installer` argument."""
+ if installer is not None:
+ return installer(requirement)
+
+ def __iter__(self):
+ """Yield the unique project names of the available distributions"""
+ for key in self._distmap.keys():
+ if self[key]:
+ yield key
+
+ def __iadd__(self, other):
+ """In-place addition of a distribution or environment"""
+ if isinstance(other, Distribution):
+ self.add(other)
+ elif isinstance(other, Environment):
+ for project in other:
+ for dist in other[project]:
+ self.add(dist)
+ else:
+ raise TypeError("Can't add %r to environment" % (other,))
+ return self
+
+ def __add__(self, other):
+ """Add an environment or distribution to an environment"""
+ new = self.__class__([], platform=None, python=None)
+ for env in self, other:
+ new += env
+ return new
+
+
+# XXX backward compatibility
+AvailableDistributions = Environment
+
+
+class ExtractionError(RuntimeError):
+ """An error occurred extracting a resource
+
+ The following attributes are available from instances of this exception:
+
+ manager
+ The resource manager that raised this exception
+
+ cache_path
+ The base directory for resource extraction
+
+ original_error
+ The exception instance that caused extraction to fail
+ """
+
+
+class ResourceManager:
+ """Manage resource extraction and packages"""
+ extraction_path = None
+
+ def __init__(self):
+ self.cached_files = {}
+
+ def resource_exists(self, package_or_requirement, resource_name):
+ """Does the named resource exist?"""
+ return get_provider(package_or_requirement).has_resource(resource_name)
+
+ def resource_isdir(self, package_or_requirement, resource_name):
+ """Is the named resource an existing directory?"""
+ return get_provider(package_or_requirement).resource_isdir(
+ resource_name
+ )
+
+ def resource_filename(self, package_or_requirement, resource_name):
+ """Return a true filesystem path for specified resource"""
+ return get_provider(package_or_requirement).get_resource_filename(
+ self, resource_name
+ )
+
+ def resource_stream(self, package_or_requirement, resource_name):
+ """Return a readable file-like object for specified resource"""
+ return get_provider(package_or_requirement).get_resource_stream(
+ self, resource_name
+ )
+
+ def resource_string(self, package_or_requirement, resource_name):
+ """Return specified resource as a string"""
+ return get_provider(package_or_requirement).get_resource_string(
+ self, resource_name
+ )
+
+ def resource_listdir(self, package_or_requirement, resource_name):
+ """List the contents of the named resource directory"""
+ return get_provider(package_or_requirement).resource_listdir(
+ resource_name
+ )
+
+ def extraction_error(self):
+ """Give an error message for problems extracting file(s)"""
+
+ old_exc = sys.exc_info()[1]
+ cache_path = self.extraction_path or get_default_cache()
+
+ tmpl = textwrap.dedent("""
+ Can't extract file(s) to egg cache
+
+ The following error occurred while trying to extract file(s)
+ to the Python egg cache:
+
+ {old_exc}
+
+ The Python egg cache directory is currently set to:
+
+ {cache_path}
+
+ Perhaps your account does not have write access to this directory?
+ You can change the cache directory by setting the PYTHON_EGG_CACHE
+ environment variable to point to an accessible directory.
+ """).lstrip()
+ err = ExtractionError(tmpl.format(**locals()))
+ err.manager = self
+ err.cache_path = cache_path
+ err.original_error = old_exc
+ raise err
+
+ def get_cache_path(self, archive_name, names=()):
+ """Return absolute location in cache for `archive_name` and `names`
+
+ The parent directory of the resulting path will be created if it does
+ not already exist. `archive_name` should be the base filename of the
+ enclosing egg (which may not be the name of the enclosing zipfile!),
+ including its ".egg" extension. `names`, if provided, should be a
+ sequence of path name parts "under" the egg's extraction location.
+
+ This method should only be called by resource providers that need to
+ obtain an extraction location, and only for names they intend to
+ extract, as it tracks the generated names for possible cleanup later.
+ """
+ extract_path = self.extraction_path or get_default_cache()
+ target_path = os.path.join(extract_path, archive_name + '-tmp', *names)
+ try:
+ _bypass_ensure_directory(target_path)
+ except Exception:
+ self.extraction_error()
+
+ self._warn_unsafe_extraction_path(extract_path)
+
+ self.cached_files[target_path] = 1
+ return target_path
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _warn_unsafe_extraction_path(path):
+ """
+ If the default extraction path is overridden and set to an insecure
+ location, such as /tmp, it opens up an opportunity for an attacker to
+ replace an extracted file with an unauthorized payload. Warn the user
+ if a known insecure location is used.
+
+ See Distribute #375 for more details.
+ """
+ if os.name == 'nt' and not path.startswith(os.environ['windir']):
+ # On Windows, permissions are generally restrictive by default
+ # and temp directories are not writable by other users, so
+ # bypass the warning.
+ return
+ mode = os.stat(path).st_mode
+ if mode & stat.S_IWOTH or mode & stat.S_IWGRP:
+ msg = (
+ "Extraction path is writable by group/others "
+ "and vulnerable to attack when "
+ "used with get_resource_filename ({path}). "
+ "Consider a more secure "
+ "location (set with .set_extraction_path or the "
+ "PYTHON_EGG_CACHE environment variable)."
+ ).format(**locals())
+ warnings.warn(msg, UserWarning)
+
+ def postprocess(self, tempname, filename):
+ """Perform any platform-specific postprocessing of `tempname`
+
+ This is where Mac header rewrites should be done; other platforms don't
+ have anything special they should do.
+
+ Resource providers should call this method ONLY after successfully
+ extracting a compressed resource. They must NOT call it on resources
+ that are already in the filesystem.
+
+ `tempname` is the current (temporary) name of the file, and `filename`
+ is the name it will be renamed to by the caller after this routine
+ returns.
+ """
+
+ if os.name == 'posix':
+ # Make the resource executable
+ mode = ((os.stat(tempname).st_mode) | 0o555) & 0o7777
+ os.chmod(tempname, mode)
+
+ def set_extraction_path(self, path):
+ """Set the base path where resources will be extracted to, if needed.
+
+ If you do not call this routine before any extractions take place, the
+ path defaults to the return value of ``get_default_cache()``. (Which
+ is based on the ``PYTHON_EGG_CACHE`` environment variable, with various
+ platform-specific fallbacks. See that routine's documentation for more
+ details.)
+
+ Resources are extracted to subdirectories of this path based upon
+ information given by the ``IResourceProvider``. You may set this to a
+ temporary directory, but then you must call ``cleanup_resources()`` to
+ delete the extracted files when done. There is no guarantee that
+ ``cleanup_resources()`` will be able to remove all extracted files.
+
+ (Note: you may not change the extraction path for a given resource
+ manager once resources have been extracted, unless you first call
+ ``cleanup_resources()``.)
+ """
+ if self.cached_files:
+ raise ValueError(
+ "Can't change extraction path, files already extracted"
+ )
+
+ self.extraction_path = path
+
+ def cleanup_resources(self, force=False):
+ """
+ Delete all extracted resource files and directories, returning a list
+ of the file and directory names that could not be successfully removed.
+ This function does not have any concurrency protection, so it should
+ generally only be called when the extraction path is a temporary
+ directory exclusive to a single process. This method is not
+ automatically called; you must call it explicitly or register it as an
+ ``atexit`` function if you wish to ensure cleanup of a temporary
+ directory used for extractions.
+ """
+ # XXX
+
+
+def get_default_cache():
+ """
+ Return the ``PYTHON_EGG_CACHE`` environment variable
+ or a platform-relevant user cache dir for an app
+ named "Python-Eggs".
+ """
+ return (
+ os.environ.get('PYTHON_EGG_CACHE')
+ or appdirs.user_cache_dir(appname='Python-Eggs')
+ )
+
+
+def safe_name(name):
+ """Convert an arbitrary string to a standard distribution name
+
+ Any runs of non-alphanumeric/. characters are replaced with a single '-'.
+ """
+ return re.sub('[^A-Za-z0-9.]+', '-', name)
+
+
+def safe_version(version):
+ """
+ Convert an arbitrary string to a standard version string
+ """
+ try:
+ # normalize the version
+ return str(packaging.version.Version(version))
+ except packaging.version.InvalidVersion:
+ version = version.replace(' ', '.')
+ return re.sub('[^A-Za-z0-9.]+', '-', version)
+
+
+def safe_extra(extra):
+ """Convert an arbitrary string to a standard 'extra' name
+
+ Any runs of non-alphanumeric characters are replaced with a single '_',
+ and the result is always lowercased.
+ """
+ return re.sub('[^A-Za-z0-9.-]+', '_', extra).lower()
+
+
+def to_filename(name):
+ """Convert a project or version name to its filename-escaped form
+
+ Any '-' characters are currently replaced with '_'.
+ """
+ return name.replace('-', '_')
+
+
+def invalid_marker(text):
+ """
+ Validate text as a PEP 508 environment marker; return an exception
+ if invalid or False otherwise.
+ """
+ try:
+ evaluate_marker(text)
+ except SyntaxError as e:
+ e.filename = None
+ e.lineno = None
+ return e
+ return False
+
+
+def evaluate_marker(text, extra=None):
+ """
+ Evaluate a PEP 508 environment marker.
+ Return a boolean indicating the marker result in this environment.
+ Raise SyntaxError if marker is invalid.
+
+ This implementation uses the 'pyparsing' module.
+ """
+ try:
+ marker = packaging.markers.Marker(text)
+ return marker.evaluate()
+ except packaging.markers.InvalidMarker as e:
+ raise SyntaxError(e) from e
+
+
+class NullProvider:
+ """Try to implement resources and metadata for arbitrary PEP 302 loaders"""
+
+ egg_name = None
+ egg_info = None
+ loader = None
+
+ def __init__(self, module):
+ self.loader = getattr(module, '__loader__', None)
+ self.module_path = os.path.dirname(getattr(module, '__file__', ''))
+
+ def get_resource_filename(self, manager, resource_name):
+ return self._fn(self.module_path, resource_name)
+
+ def get_resource_stream(self, manager, resource_name):
+ return io.BytesIO(self.get_resource_string(manager, resource_name))
+
+ def get_resource_string(self, manager, resource_name):
+ return self._get(self._fn(self.module_path, resource_name))
+
+ def has_resource(self, resource_name):
+ return self._has(self._fn(self.module_path, resource_name))
+
+ def _get_metadata_path(self, name):
+ return self._fn(self.egg_info, name)
+
+ def has_metadata(self, name):
+ if not self.egg_info:
+ return self.egg_info
+
+ path = self._get_metadata_path(name)
+ return self._has(path)
+
+ def get_metadata(self, name):
+ if not self.egg_info:
+ return ""
+ path = self._get_metadata_path(name)
+ value = self._get(path)
+ try:
+ return value.decode('utf-8')
+ except UnicodeDecodeError as exc:
+ # Include the path in the error message to simplify
+ # troubleshooting, and without changing the exception type.
+ exc.reason += ' in {} file at path: {}'.format(name, path)
+ raise
+
+ def get_metadata_lines(self, name):
+ return yield_lines(self.get_metadata(name))
+
+ def resource_isdir(self, resource_name):
+ return self._isdir(self._fn(self.module_path, resource_name))
+
+ def metadata_isdir(self, name):
+ return self.egg_info and self._isdir(self._fn(self.egg_info, name))
+
+ def resource_listdir(self, resource_name):
+ return self._listdir(self._fn(self.module_path, resource_name))
+
+ def metadata_listdir(self, name):
+ if self.egg_info:
+ return self._listdir(self._fn(self.egg_info, name))
+ return []
+
+ def run_script(self, script_name, namespace):
+ script = 'scripts/' + script_name
+ if not self.has_metadata(script):
+ raise ResolutionError(
+ "Script {script!r} not found in metadata at {self.egg_info!r}"
+ .format(**locals()),
+ )
+ script_text = self.get_metadata(script).replace('\r\n', '\n')
+ script_text = script_text.replace('\r', '\n')
+ script_filename = self._fn(self.egg_info, script)
+ namespace['__file__'] = script_filename
+ if os.path.exists(script_filename):
+ with open(script_filename) as fid:
+ source = fid.read()
+ code = compile(source, script_filename, 'exec')
+ exec(code, namespace, namespace)
+ else:
+ from linecache import cache
+ cache[script_filename] = (
+ len(script_text), 0, script_text.split('\n'), script_filename
+ )
+ script_code = compile(script_text, script_filename, 'exec')
+ exec(script_code, namespace, namespace)
+
+ def _has(self, path):
+ raise NotImplementedError(
+ "Can't perform this operation for unregistered loader type"
+ )
+
+ def _isdir(self, path):
+ raise NotImplementedError(
+ "Can't perform this operation for unregistered loader type"
+ )
+
+ def _listdir(self, path):
+ raise NotImplementedError(
+ "Can't perform this operation for unregistered loader type"
+ )
+
+ def _fn(self, base, resource_name):
+ self._validate_resource_path(resource_name)
+ if resource_name:
+ return os.path.join(base, *resource_name.split('/'))
+ return base
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _validate_resource_path(path):
+ """
+ Validate the resource paths according to the docs.
+ https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/pkg_resources.html#basic-resource-access
+
+ >>> warned = getfixture('recwarn')
+ >>> warnings.simplefilter('always')
+ >>> vrp = NullProvider._validate_resource_path
+ >>> vrp('foo/bar.txt')
+ >>> bool(warned)
+ False
+ >>> vrp('../foo/bar.txt')
+ >>> bool(warned)
+ True
+ >>> warned.clear()
+ >>> vrp('/foo/bar.txt')
+ >>> bool(warned)
+ True
+ >>> vrp('foo/../../bar.txt')
+ >>> bool(warned)
+ True
+ >>> warned.clear()
+ >>> vrp('foo/f../bar.txt')
+ >>> bool(warned)
+ False
+
+ Windows path separators are straight-up disallowed.
+ >>> vrp(r'\\foo/bar.txt')
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ ValueError: Use of .. or absolute path in a resource path \
+is not allowed.
+
+ >>> vrp(r'C:\\foo/bar.txt')
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ ValueError: Use of .. or absolute path in a resource path \
+is not allowed.
+
+ Blank values are allowed
+
+ >>> vrp('')
+ >>> bool(warned)
+ False
+
+ Non-string values are not.
+
+ >>> vrp(None)
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ AttributeError: ...
+ """
+ invalid = (
+ os.path.pardir in path.split(posixpath.sep) or
+ posixpath.isabs(path) or
+ ntpath.isabs(path)
+ )
+ if not invalid:
+ return
+
+ msg = "Use of .. or absolute path in a resource path is not allowed."
+
+ # Aggressively disallow Windows absolute paths
+ if ntpath.isabs(path) and not posixpath.isabs(path):
+ raise ValueError(msg)
+
+ # for compatibility, warn; in future
+ # raise ValueError(msg)
+ warnings.warn(
+ msg[:-1] + " and will raise exceptions in a future release.",
+ DeprecationWarning,
+ stacklevel=4,
+ )
+
+ def _get(self, path):
+ if hasattr(self.loader, 'get_data'):
+ return self.loader.get_data(path)
+ raise NotImplementedError(
+ "Can't perform this operation for loaders without 'get_data()'"
+ )
+
+
+register_loader_type(object, NullProvider)
+
+
+def _parents(path):
+ """
+ yield all parents of path including path
+ """
+ last = None
+ while path != last:
+ yield path
+ last = path
+ path, _ = os.path.split(path)
+
+
+class EggProvider(NullProvider):
+ """Provider based on a virtual filesystem"""
+
+ def __init__(self, module):
+ NullProvider.__init__(self, module)
+ self._setup_prefix()
+
+ def _setup_prefix(self):
+ # Assume that metadata may be nested inside a "basket"
+ # of multiple eggs and use module_path instead of .archive.
+ eggs = filter(_is_egg_path, _parents(self.module_path))
+ egg = next(eggs, None)
+ egg and self._set_egg(egg)
+
+ def _set_egg(self, path):
+ self.egg_name = os.path.basename(path)
+ self.egg_info = os.path.join(path, 'EGG-INFO')
+ self.egg_root = path
+
+
+class DefaultProvider(EggProvider):
+ """Provides access to package resources in the filesystem"""
+
+ def _has(self, path):
+ return os.path.exists(path)
+
+ def _isdir(self, path):
+ return os.path.isdir(path)
+
+ def _listdir(self, path):
+ return os.listdir(path)
+
+ def get_resource_stream(self, manager, resource_name):
+ return open(self._fn(self.module_path, resource_name), 'rb')
+
+ def _get(self, path):
+ with open(path, 'rb') as stream:
+ return stream.read()
+
+ @classmethod
+ def _register(cls):
+ loader_names = 'SourceFileLoader', 'SourcelessFileLoader',
+ for name in loader_names:
+ loader_cls = getattr(importlib_machinery, name, type(None))
+ register_loader_type(loader_cls, cls)
+
+
+DefaultProvider._register()
+
+
+class EmptyProvider(NullProvider):
+ """Provider that returns nothing for all requests"""
+
+ module_path = None
+
+ _isdir = _has = lambda self, path: False
+
+ def _get(self, path):
+ return ''
+
+ def _listdir(self, path):
+ return []
+
+ def __init__(self):
+ pass
+
+
+empty_provider = EmptyProvider()
+
+
+class ZipManifests(dict):
+ """
+ zip manifest builder
+ """
+
+ @classmethod
+ def build(cls, path):
+ """
+ Build a dictionary similar to the zipimport directory
+ caches, except instead of tuples, store ZipInfo objects.
+
+ Use a platform-specific path separator (os.sep) for the path keys
+ for compatibility with pypy on Windows.
+ """
+ with zipfile.ZipFile(path) as zfile:
+ items = (
+ (
+ name.replace('/', os.sep),
+ zfile.getinfo(name),
+ )
+ for name in zfile.namelist()
+ )
+ return dict(items)
+
+ load = build
+
+
+class MemoizedZipManifests(ZipManifests):
+ """
+ Memoized zipfile manifests.
+ """
+ manifest_mod = collections.namedtuple('manifest_mod', 'manifest mtime')
+
+ def load(self, path):
+ """
+ Load a manifest at path or return a suitable manifest already loaded.
+ """
+ path = os.path.normpath(path)
+ mtime = os.stat(path).st_mtime
+
+ if path not in self or self[path].mtime != mtime:
+ manifest = self.build(path)
+ self[path] = self.manifest_mod(manifest, mtime)
+
+ return self[path].manifest
+
+
+class ZipProvider(EggProvider):
+ """Resource support for zips and eggs"""
+
+ eagers = None
+ _zip_manifests = MemoizedZipManifests()
+
+ def __init__(self, module):
+ EggProvider.__init__(self, module)
+ self.zip_pre = self.loader.archive + os.sep
+
+ def _zipinfo_name(self, fspath):
+ # Convert a virtual filename (full path to file) into a zipfile subpath
+ # usable with the zipimport directory cache for our target archive
+ fspath = fspath.rstrip(os.sep)
+ if fspath == self.loader.archive:
+ return ''
+ if fspath.startswith(self.zip_pre):
+ return fspath[len(self.zip_pre):]
+ raise AssertionError(
+ "%s is not a subpath of %s" % (fspath, self.zip_pre)
+ )
+
+ def _parts(self, zip_path):
+ # Convert a zipfile subpath into an egg-relative path part list.
+ # pseudo-fs path
+ fspath = self.zip_pre + zip_path
+ if fspath.startswith(self.egg_root + os.sep):
+ return fspath[len(self.egg_root) + 1:].split(os.sep)
+ raise AssertionError(
+ "%s is not a subpath of %s" % (fspath, self.egg_root)
+ )
+
+ @property
+ def zipinfo(self):
+ return self._zip_manifests.load(self.loader.archive)
+
+ def get_resource_filename(self, manager, resource_name):
+ if not self.egg_name:
+ raise NotImplementedError(
+ "resource_filename() only supported for .egg, not .zip"
+ )
+ # no need to lock for extraction, since we use temp names
+ zip_path = self._resource_to_zip(resource_name)
+ eagers = self._get_eager_resources()
+ if '/'.join(self._parts(zip_path)) in eagers:
+ for name in eagers:
+ self._extract_resource(manager, self._eager_to_zip(name))
+ return self._extract_resource(manager, zip_path)
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _get_date_and_size(zip_stat):
+ size = zip_stat.file_size
+ # ymdhms+wday, yday, dst
+ date_time = zip_stat.date_time + (0, 0, -1)
+ # 1980 offset already done
+ timestamp = time.mktime(date_time)
+ return timestamp, size
+
+ def _extract_resource(self, manager, zip_path):
+
+ if zip_path in self._index():
+ for name in self._index()[zip_path]:
+ last = self._extract_resource(
+ manager, os.path.join(zip_path, name)
+ )
+ # return the extracted directory name
+ return os.path.dirname(last)
+
+ timestamp, size = self._get_date_and_size(self.zipinfo[zip_path])
+
+ if not WRITE_SUPPORT:
+ raise IOError('"os.rename" and "os.unlink" are not supported '
+ 'on this platform')
+ try:
+
+ real_path = manager.get_cache_path(
+ self.egg_name, self._parts(zip_path)
+ )
+
+ if self._is_current(real_path, zip_path):
+ return real_path
+
+ outf, tmpnam = _mkstemp(
+ ".$extract",
+ dir=os.path.dirname(real_path),
+ )
+ os.write(outf, self.loader.get_data(zip_path))
+ os.close(outf)
+ utime(tmpnam, (timestamp, timestamp))
+ manager.postprocess(tmpnam, real_path)
+
+ try:
+ rename(tmpnam, real_path)
+
+ except os.error:
+ if os.path.isfile(real_path):
+ if self._is_current(real_path, zip_path):
+ # the file became current since it was checked above,
+ # so proceed.
+ return real_path
+ # Windows, del old file and retry
+ elif os.name == 'nt':
+ unlink(real_path)
+ rename(tmpnam, real_path)
+ return real_path
+ raise
+
+ except os.error:
+ # report a user-friendly error
+ manager.extraction_error()
+
+ return real_path
+
+ def _is_current(self, file_path, zip_path):
+ """
+ Return True if the file_path is current for this zip_path
+ """
+ timestamp, size = self._get_date_and_size(self.zipinfo[zip_path])
+ if not os.path.isfile(file_path):
+ return False
+ stat = os.stat(file_path)
+ if stat.st_size != size or stat.st_mtime != timestamp:
+ return False
+ # check that the contents match
+ zip_contents = self.loader.get_data(zip_path)
+ with open(file_path, 'rb') as f:
+ file_contents = f.read()
+ return zip_contents == file_contents
+
+ def _get_eager_resources(self):
+ if self.eagers is None:
+ eagers = []
+ for name in ('native_libs.txt', 'eager_resources.txt'):
+ if self.has_metadata(name):
+ eagers.extend(self.get_metadata_lines(name))
+ self.eagers = eagers
+ return self.eagers
+
+ def _index(self):
+ try:
+ return self._dirindex
+ except AttributeError:
+ ind = {}
+ for path in self.zipinfo:
+ parts = path.split(os.sep)
+ while parts:
+ parent = os.sep.join(parts[:-1])
+ if parent in ind:
+ ind[parent].append(parts[-1])
+ break
+ else:
+ ind[parent] = [parts.pop()]
+ self._dirindex = ind
+ return ind
+
+ def _has(self, fspath):
+ zip_path = self._zipinfo_name(fspath)
+ return zip_path in self.zipinfo or zip_path in self._index()
+
+ def _isdir(self, fspath):
+ return self._zipinfo_name(fspath) in self._index()
+
+ def _listdir(self, fspath):
+ return list(self._index().get(self._zipinfo_name(fspath), ()))
+
+ def _eager_to_zip(self, resource_name):
+ return self._zipinfo_name(self._fn(self.egg_root, resource_name))
+
+ def _resource_to_zip(self, resource_name):
+ return self._zipinfo_name(self._fn(self.module_path, resource_name))
+
+
+register_loader_type(zipimport.zipimporter, ZipProvider)
+
+
+class FileMetadata(EmptyProvider):
+ """Metadata handler for standalone PKG-INFO files
+
+ Usage::
+
+ metadata = FileMetadata("/path/to/PKG-INFO")
+
+ This provider rejects all data and metadata requests except for PKG-INFO,
+ which is treated as existing, and will be the contents of the file at
+ the provided location.
+ """
+
+ def __init__(self, path):
+ self.path = path
+
+ def _get_metadata_path(self, name):
+ return self.path
+
+ def has_metadata(self, name):
+ return name == 'PKG-INFO' and os.path.isfile(self.path)
+
+ def get_metadata(self, name):
+ if name != 'PKG-INFO':
+ raise KeyError("No metadata except PKG-INFO is available")
+
+ with io.open(self.path, encoding='utf-8', errors="replace") as f:
+ metadata = f.read()
+ self._warn_on_replacement(metadata)
+ return metadata
+
+ def _warn_on_replacement(self, metadata):
+ replacement_char = '�'
+ if replacement_char in metadata:
+ tmpl = "{self.path} could not be properly decoded in UTF-8"
+ msg = tmpl.format(**locals())
+ warnings.warn(msg)
+
+ def get_metadata_lines(self, name):
+ return yield_lines(self.get_metadata(name))
+
+
+class PathMetadata(DefaultProvider):
+ """Metadata provider for egg directories
+
+ Usage::
+
+ # Development eggs:
+
+ egg_info = "/path/to/PackageName.egg-info"
+ base_dir = os.path.dirname(egg_info)
+ metadata = PathMetadata(base_dir, egg_info)
+ dist_name = os.path.splitext(os.path.basename(egg_info))[0]
+ dist = Distribution(basedir, project_name=dist_name, metadata=metadata)
+
+ # Unpacked egg directories:
+
+ egg_path = "/path/to/PackageName-ver-pyver-etc.egg"
+ metadata = PathMetadata(egg_path, os.path.join(egg_path,'EGG-INFO'))
+ dist = Distribution.from_filename(egg_path, metadata=metadata)
+ """
+
+ def __init__(self, path, egg_info):
+ self.module_path = path
+ self.egg_info = egg_info
+
+
+class EggMetadata(ZipProvider):
+ """Metadata provider for .egg files"""
+
+ def __init__(self, importer):
+ """Create a metadata provider from a zipimporter"""
+
+ self.zip_pre = importer.archive + os.sep
+ self.loader = importer
+ if importer.prefix:
+ self.module_path = os.path.join(importer.archive, importer.prefix)
+ else:
+ self.module_path = importer.archive
+ self._setup_prefix()
+
+
+_declare_state('dict', _distribution_finders={})
+
+
+def register_finder(importer_type, distribution_finder):
+ """Register `distribution_finder` to find distributions in sys.path items
+
+ `importer_type` is the type or class of a PEP 302 "Importer" (sys.path item
+ handler), and `distribution_finder` is a callable that, passed a path
+ item and the importer instance, yields ``Distribution`` instances found on
+ that path item. See ``pkg_resources.find_on_path`` for an example."""
+ _distribution_finders[importer_type] = distribution_finder
+
+
+def find_distributions(path_item, only=False):
+ """Yield distributions accessible via `path_item`"""
+ importer = get_importer(path_item)
+ finder = _find_adapter(_distribution_finders, importer)
+ return finder(importer, path_item, only)
+
+
+def find_eggs_in_zip(importer, path_item, only=False):
+ """
+ Find eggs in zip files; possibly multiple nested eggs.
+ """
+ if importer.archive.endswith('.whl'):
+ # wheels are not supported with this finder
+ # they don't have PKG-INFO metadata, and won't ever contain eggs
+ return
+ metadata = EggMetadata(importer)
+ if metadata.has_metadata('PKG-INFO'):
+ yield Distribution.from_filename(path_item, metadata=metadata)
+ if only:
+ # don't yield nested distros
+ return
+ for subitem in metadata.resource_listdir(''):
+ if _is_egg_path(subitem):
+ subpath = os.path.join(path_item, subitem)
+ dists = find_eggs_in_zip(zipimport.zipimporter(subpath), subpath)
+ for dist in dists:
+ yield dist
+ elif subitem.lower().endswith('.dist-info'):
+ subpath = os.path.join(path_item, subitem)
+ submeta = EggMetadata(zipimport.zipimporter(subpath))
+ submeta.egg_info = subpath
+ yield Distribution.from_location(path_item, subitem, submeta)
+
+
+register_finder(zipimport.zipimporter, find_eggs_in_zip)
+
+
+def find_nothing(importer, path_item, only=False):
+ return ()
+
+
+register_finder(object, find_nothing)
+
+
+def _by_version_descending(names):
+ """
+ Given a list of filenames, return them in descending order
+ by version number.
+
+ >>> names = 'bar', 'foo', 'Python-2.7.10.egg', 'Python-2.7.2.egg'
+ >>> _by_version_descending(names)
+ ['Python-2.7.10.egg', 'Python-2.7.2.egg', 'foo', 'bar']
+ >>> names = 'Setuptools-1.2.3b1.egg', 'Setuptools-1.2.3.egg'
+ >>> _by_version_descending(names)
+ ['Setuptools-1.2.3.egg', 'Setuptools-1.2.3b1.egg']
+ >>> names = 'Setuptools-1.2.3b1.egg', 'Setuptools-1.2.3.post1.egg'
+ >>> _by_version_descending(names)
+ ['Setuptools-1.2.3.post1.egg', 'Setuptools-1.2.3b1.egg']
+ """
+ def _by_version(name):
+ """
+ Parse each component of the filename
+ """
+ name, ext = os.path.splitext(name)
+ parts = itertools.chain(name.split('-'), [ext])
+ return [packaging.version.parse(part) for part in parts]
+
+ return sorted(names, key=_by_version, reverse=True)
+
+
+def find_on_path(importer, path_item, only=False):
+ """Yield distributions accessible on a sys.path directory"""
+ path_item = _normalize_cached(path_item)
+
+ if _is_unpacked_egg(path_item):
+ yield Distribution.from_filename(
+ path_item, metadata=PathMetadata(
+ path_item, os.path.join(path_item, 'EGG-INFO')
+ )
+ )
+ return
+
+ entries = (
+ os.path.join(path_item, child)
+ for child in safe_listdir(path_item)
+ )
+
+ # for performance, before sorting by version,
+ # screen entries for only those that will yield
+ # distributions
+ filtered = (
+ entry
+ for entry in entries
+ if dist_factory(path_item, entry, only)
+ )
+
+ # scan for .egg and .egg-info in directory
+ path_item_entries = _by_version_descending(filtered)
+ for entry in path_item_entries:
+ fullpath = os.path.join(path_item, entry)
+ factory = dist_factory(path_item, entry, only)
+ for dist in factory(fullpath):
+ yield dist
+
+
+def dist_factory(path_item, entry, only):
+ """Return a dist_factory for the given entry."""
+ lower = entry.lower()
+ is_egg_info = lower.endswith('.egg-info')
+ is_dist_info = (
+ lower.endswith('.dist-info') and
+ os.path.isdir(os.path.join(path_item, entry))
+ )
+ is_meta = is_egg_info or is_dist_info
+ return (
+ distributions_from_metadata
+ if is_meta else
+ find_distributions
+ if not only and _is_egg_path(entry) else
+ resolve_egg_link
+ if not only and lower.endswith('.egg-link') else
+ NoDists()
+ )
+
+
+class NoDists:
+ """
+ >>> bool(NoDists())
+ False
+
+ >>> list(NoDists()('anything'))
+ []
+ """
+ def __bool__(self):
+ return False
+
+ def __call__(self, fullpath):
+ return iter(())
+
+
+def safe_listdir(path):
+ """
+ Attempt to list contents of path, but suppress some exceptions.
+ """
+ try:
+ return os.listdir(path)
+ except (PermissionError, NotADirectoryError):
+ pass
+ except OSError as e:
+ # Ignore the directory if does not exist, not a directory or
+ # permission denied
+ if e.errno not in (errno.ENOTDIR, errno.EACCES, errno.ENOENT):
+ raise
+ return ()
+
+
+def distributions_from_metadata(path):
+ root = os.path.dirname(path)
+ if os.path.isdir(path):
+ if len(os.listdir(path)) == 0:
+ # empty metadata dir; skip
+ return
+ metadata = PathMetadata(root, path)
+ else:
+ metadata = FileMetadata(path)
+ entry = os.path.basename(path)
+ yield Distribution.from_location(
+ root, entry, metadata, precedence=DEVELOP_DIST,
+ )
+
+
+def non_empty_lines(path):
+ """
+ Yield non-empty lines from file at path
+ """
+ with open(path) as f:
+ for line in f:
+ line = line.strip()
+ if line:
+ yield line
+
+
+def resolve_egg_link(path):
+ """
+ Given a path to an .egg-link, resolve distributions
+ present in the referenced path.
+ """
+ referenced_paths = non_empty_lines(path)
+ resolved_paths = (
+ os.path.join(os.path.dirname(path), ref)
+ for ref in referenced_paths
+ )
+ dist_groups = map(find_distributions, resolved_paths)
+ return next(dist_groups, ())
+
+
+register_finder(pkgutil.ImpImporter, find_on_path)
+
+if hasattr(importlib_machinery, 'FileFinder'):
+ register_finder(importlib_machinery.FileFinder, find_on_path)
+
+_declare_state('dict', _namespace_handlers={})
+_declare_state('dict', _namespace_packages={})
+
+
+def register_namespace_handler(importer_type, namespace_handler):
+ """Register `namespace_handler` to declare namespace packages
+
+ `importer_type` is the type or class of a PEP 302 "Importer" (sys.path item
+ handler), and `namespace_handler` is a callable like this::
+
+ def namespace_handler(importer, path_entry, moduleName, module):
+ # return a path_entry to use for child packages
+
+ Namespace handlers are only called if the importer object has already
+ agreed that it can handle the relevant path item, and they should only
+ return a subpath if the module __path__ does not already contain an
+ equivalent subpath. For an example namespace handler, see
+ ``pkg_resources.file_ns_handler``.
+ """
+ _namespace_handlers[importer_type] = namespace_handler
+
+
+def _handle_ns(packageName, path_item):
+ """Ensure that named package includes a subpath of path_item (if needed)"""
+
+ importer = get_importer(path_item)
+ if importer is None:
+ return None
+
+ # use find_spec (PEP 451) and fall-back to find_module (PEP 302)
+ try:
+ loader = importer.find_spec(packageName).loader
+ except AttributeError:
+ # capture warnings due to #1111
+ with warnings.catch_warnings():
+ warnings.simplefilter("ignore")
+ loader = importer.find_module(packageName)
+
+ if loader is None:
+ return None
+ module = sys.modules.get(packageName)
+ if module is None:
+ module = sys.modules[packageName] = types.ModuleType(packageName)
+ module.__path__ = []
+ _set_parent_ns(packageName)
+ elif not hasattr(module, '__path__'):
+ raise TypeError("Not a package:", packageName)
+ handler = _find_adapter(_namespace_handlers, importer)
+ subpath = handler(importer, path_item, packageName, module)
+ if subpath is not None:
+ path = module.__path__
+ path.append(subpath)
+ importlib.import_module(packageName)
+ _rebuild_mod_path(path, packageName, module)
+ return subpath
+
+
+def _rebuild_mod_path(orig_path, package_name, module):
+ """
+ Rebuild module.__path__ ensuring that all entries are ordered
+ corresponding to their sys.path order
+ """
+ sys_path = [_normalize_cached(p) for p in sys.path]
+
+ def safe_sys_path_index(entry):
+ """
+ Workaround for #520 and #513.
+ """
+ try:
+ return sys_path.index(entry)
+ except ValueError:
+ return float('inf')
+
+ def position_in_sys_path(path):
+ """
+ Return the ordinal of the path based on its position in sys.path
+ """
+ path_parts = path.split(os.sep)
+ module_parts = package_name.count('.') + 1
+ parts = path_parts[:-module_parts]
+ return safe_sys_path_index(_normalize_cached(os.sep.join(parts)))
+
+ new_path = sorted(orig_path, key=position_in_sys_path)
+ new_path = [_normalize_cached(p) for p in new_path]
+
+ if isinstance(module.__path__, list):
+ module.__path__[:] = new_path
+ else:
+ module.__path__ = new_path
+
+
+def declare_namespace(packageName):
+ """Declare that package 'packageName' is a namespace package"""
+
+ _imp.acquire_lock()
+ try:
+ if packageName in _namespace_packages:
+ return
+
+ path = sys.path
+ parent, _, _ = packageName.rpartition('.')
+
+ if parent:
+ declare_namespace(parent)
+ if parent not in _namespace_packages:
+ __import__(parent)
+ try:
+ path = sys.modules[parent].__path__
+ except AttributeError as e:
+ raise TypeError("Not a package:", parent) from e
+
+ # Track what packages are namespaces, so when new path items are added,
+ # they can be updated
+ _namespace_packages.setdefault(parent or None, []).append(packageName)
+ _namespace_packages.setdefault(packageName, [])
+
+ for path_item in path:
+ # Ensure all the parent's path items are reflected in the child,
+ # if they apply
+ _handle_ns(packageName, path_item)
+
+ finally:
+ _imp.release_lock()
+
+
+def fixup_namespace_packages(path_item, parent=None):
+ """Ensure that previously-declared namespace packages include path_item"""
+ _imp.acquire_lock()
+ try:
+ for package in _namespace_packages.get(parent, ()):
+ subpath = _handle_ns(package, path_item)
+ if subpath:
+ fixup_namespace_packages(subpath, package)
+ finally:
+ _imp.release_lock()
+
+
+def file_ns_handler(importer, path_item, packageName, module):
+ """Compute an ns-package subpath for a filesystem or zipfile importer"""
+
+ subpath = os.path.join(path_item, packageName.split('.')[-1])
+ normalized = _normalize_cached(subpath)
+ for item in module.__path__:
+ if _normalize_cached(item) == normalized:
+ break
+ else:
+ # Only return the path if it's not already there
+ return subpath
+
+
+register_namespace_handler(pkgutil.ImpImporter, file_ns_handler)
+register_namespace_handler(zipimport.zipimporter, file_ns_handler)
+
+if hasattr(importlib_machinery, 'FileFinder'):
+ register_namespace_handler(importlib_machinery.FileFinder, file_ns_handler)
+
+
+def null_ns_handler(importer, path_item, packageName, module):
+ return None
+
+
+register_namespace_handler(object, null_ns_handler)
+
+
+def normalize_path(filename):
+ """Normalize a file/dir name for comparison purposes"""
+ return os.path.normcase(os.path.realpath(os.path.normpath(
+ _cygwin_patch(filename))))
+
+
+def _cygwin_patch(filename): # pragma: nocover
+ """
+ Contrary to POSIX 2008, on Cygwin, getcwd (3) contains
+ symlink components. Using
+ os.path.abspath() works around this limitation. A fix in os.getcwd()
+ would probably better, in Cygwin even more so, except
+ that this seems to be by design...
+ """
+ return os.path.abspath(filename) if sys.platform == 'cygwin' else filename
+
+
+def _normalize_cached(filename, _cache={}):
+ try:
+ return _cache[filename]
+ except KeyError:
+ _cache[filename] = result = normalize_path(filename)
+ return result
+
+
+def _is_egg_path(path):
+ """
+ Determine if given path appears to be an egg.
+ """
+ return _is_zip_egg(path) or _is_unpacked_egg(path)
+
+
+def _is_zip_egg(path):
+ return (
+ path.lower().endswith('.egg') and
+ os.path.isfile(path) and
+ zipfile.is_zipfile(path)
+ )
+
+
+def _is_unpacked_egg(path):
+ """
+ Determine if given path appears to be an unpacked egg.
+ """
+ return (
+ path.lower().endswith('.egg') and
+ os.path.isfile(os.path.join(path, 'EGG-INFO', 'PKG-INFO'))
+ )
+
+
+def _set_parent_ns(packageName):
+ parts = packageName.split('.')
+ name = parts.pop()
+ if parts:
+ parent = '.'.join(parts)
+ setattr(sys.modules[parent], name, sys.modules[packageName])
+
+
+def yield_lines(strs):
+ """Yield non-empty/non-comment lines of a string or sequence"""
+ if isinstance(strs, str):
+ for s in strs.splitlines():
+ s = s.strip()
+ # skip blank lines/comments
+ if s and not s.startswith('#'):
+ yield s
+ else:
+ for ss in strs:
+ for s in yield_lines(ss):
+ yield s
+
+
+MODULE = re.compile(r"\w+(\.\w+)*$").match
+EGG_NAME = re.compile(
+ r"""
+ (?P<name>[^-]+) (
+ -(?P<ver>[^-]+) (
+ -py(?P<pyver>[^-]+) (
+ -(?P<plat>.+)
+ )?
+ )?
+ )?
+ """,
+ re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE,
+).match
+
+
+class EntryPoint:
+ """Object representing an advertised importable object"""
+
+ def __init__(self, name, module_name, attrs=(), extras=(), dist=None):
+ if not MODULE(module_name):
+ raise ValueError("Invalid module name", module_name)
+ self.name = name
+ self.module_name = module_name
+ self.attrs = tuple(attrs)
+ self.extras = tuple(extras)
+ self.dist = dist
+
+ def __str__(self):
+ s = "%s = %s" % (self.name, self.module_name)
+ if self.attrs:
+ s += ':' + '.'.join(self.attrs)
+ if self.extras:
+ s += ' [%s]' % ','.join(self.extras)
+ return s
+
+ def __repr__(self):
+ return "EntryPoint.parse(%r)" % str(self)
+
+ def load(self, require=True, *args, **kwargs):
+ """
+ Require packages for this EntryPoint, then resolve it.
+ """
+ if not require or args or kwargs:
+ warnings.warn(
+ "Parameters to load are deprecated. Call .resolve and "
+ ".require separately.",
+ PkgResourcesDeprecationWarning,
+ stacklevel=2,
+ )
+ if require:
+ self.require(*args, **kwargs)
+ return self.resolve()
+
+ def resolve(self):
+ """
+ Resolve the entry point from its module and attrs.
+ """
+ module = __import__(self.module_name, fromlist=['__name__'], level=0)
+ try:
+ return functools.reduce(getattr, self.attrs, module)
+ except AttributeError as exc:
+ raise ImportError(str(exc)) from exc
+
+ def require(self, env=None, installer=None):
+ if self.extras and not self.dist:
+ raise UnknownExtra("Can't require() without a distribution", self)
+
+ # Get the requirements for this entry point with all its extras and
+ # then resolve them. We have to pass `extras` along when resolving so
+ # that the working set knows what extras we want. Otherwise, for
+ # dist-info distributions, the working set will assume that the
+ # requirements for that extra are purely optional and skip over them.
+ reqs = self.dist.requires(self.extras)
+ items = working_set.resolve(reqs, env, installer, extras=self.extras)
+ list(map(working_set.add, items))
+
+ pattern = re.compile(
+ r'\s*'
+ r'(?P<name>.+?)\s*'
+ r'=\s*'
+ r'(?P<module>[\w.]+)\s*'
+ r'(:\s*(?P<attr>[\w.]+))?\s*'
+ r'(?P<extras>\[.*\])?\s*$'
+ )
+
+ @classmethod
+ def parse(cls, src, dist=None):
+ """Parse a single entry point from string `src`
+
+ Entry point syntax follows the form::
+
+ name = some.module:some.attr [extra1, extra2]
+
+ The entry name and module name are required, but the ``:attrs`` and
+ ``[extras]`` parts are optional
+ """
+ m = cls.pattern.match(src)
+ if not m:
+ msg = "EntryPoint must be in 'name=module:attrs [extras]' format"
+ raise ValueError(msg, src)
+ res = m.groupdict()
+ extras = cls._parse_extras(res['extras'])
+ attrs = res['attr'].split('.') if res['attr'] else ()
+ return cls(res['name'], res['module'], attrs, extras, dist)
+
+ @classmethod
+ def _parse_extras(cls, extras_spec):
+ if not extras_spec:
+ return ()
+ req = Requirement.parse('x' + extras_spec)
+ if req.specs:
+ raise ValueError()
+ return req.extras
+
+ @classmethod
+ def parse_group(cls, group, lines, dist=None):
+ """Parse an entry point group"""
+ if not MODULE(group):
+ raise ValueError("Invalid group name", group)
+ this = {}
+ for line in yield_lines(lines):
+ ep = cls.parse(line, dist)
+ if ep.name in this:
+ raise ValueError("Duplicate entry point", group, ep.name)
+ this[ep.name] = ep
+ return this
+
+ @classmethod
+ def parse_map(cls, data, dist=None):
+ """Parse a map of entry point groups"""
+ if isinstance(data, dict):
+ data = data.items()
+ else:
+ data = split_sections(data)
+ maps = {}
+ for group, lines in data:
+ if group is None:
+ if not lines:
+ continue
+ raise ValueError("Entry points must be listed in groups")
+ group = group.strip()
+ if group in maps:
+ raise ValueError("Duplicate group name", group)
+ maps[group] = cls.parse_group(group, lines, dist)
+ return maps
+
+
+def _version_from_file(lines):
+ """
+ Given an iterable of lines from a Metadata file, return
+ the value of the Version field, if present, or None otherwise.
+ """
+ def is_version_line(line):
+ return line.lower().startswith('version:')
+ version_lines = filter(is_version_line, lines)
+ line = next(iter(version_lines), '')
+ _, _, value = line.partition(':')
+ return safe_version(value.strip()) or None
+
+
+class Distribution:
+ """Wrap an actual or potential sys.path entry w/metadata"""
+ PKG_INFO = 'PKG-INFO'
+
+ def __init__(
+ self, location=None, metadata=None, project_name=None,
+ version=None, py_version=PY_MAJOR, platform=None,
+ precedence=EGG_DIST):
+ self.project_name = safe_name(project_name or 'Unknown')
+ if version is not None:
+ self._version = safe_version(version)
+ self.py_version = py_version
+ self.platform = platform
+ self.location = location
+ self.precedence = precedence
+ self._provider = metadata or empty_provider
+
+ @classmethod
+ def from_location(cls, location, basename, metadata=None, **kw):
+ project_name, version, py_version, platform = [None] * 4
+ basename, ext = os.path.splitext(basename)
+ if ext.lower() in _distributionImpl:
+ cls = _distributionImpl[ext.lower()]
+
+ match = EGG_NAME(basename)
+ if match:
+ project_name, version, py_version, platform = match.group(
+ 'name', 'ver', 'pyver', 'plat'
+ )
+ return cls(
+ location, metadata, project_name=project_name, version=version,
+ py_version=py_version, platform=platform, **kw
+ )._reload_version()
+
+ def _reload_version(self):
+ return self
+
+ @property
+ def hashcmp(self):
+ return (
+ self.parsed_version,
+ self.precedence,
+ self.key,
+ self.location,
+ self.py_version or '',
+ self.platform or '',
+ )
+
+ def __hash__(self):
+ return hash(self.hashcmp)
+
+ def __lt__(self, other):
+ return self.hashcmp < other.hashcmp
+
+ def __le__(self, other):
+ return self.hashcmp <= other.hashcmp
+
+ def __gt__(self, other):
+ return self.hashcmp > other.hashcmp
+
+ def __ge__(self, other):
+ return self.hashcmp >= other.hashcmp
+
+ def __eq__(self, other):
+ if not isinstance(other, self.__class__):
+ # It's not a Distribution, so they are not equal
+ return False
+ return self.hashcmp == other.hashcmp
+
+ def __ne__(self, other):
+ return not self == other
+
+ # These properties have to be lazy so that we don't have to load any
+ # metadata until/unless it's actually needed. (i.e., some distributions
+ # may not know their name or version without loading PKG-INFO)
+
+ @property
+ def key(self):
+ try:
+ return self._key
+ except AttributeError:
+ self._key = key = self.project_name.lower()
+ return key
+
+ @property
+ def parsed_version(self):
+ if not hasattr(self, "_parsed_version"):
+ self._parsed_version = parse_version(self.version)
+
+ return self._parsed_version
+
+ def _warn_legacy_version(self):
+ LV = packaging.version.LegacyVersion
+ is_legacy = isinstance(self._parsed_version, LV)
+ if not is_legacy:
+ return
+
+ # While an empty version is technically a legacy version and
+ # is not a valid PEP 440 version, it's also unlikely to
+ # actually come from someone and instead it is more likely that
+ # it comes from setuptools attempting to parse a filename and
+ # including it in the list. So for that we'll gate this warning
+ # on if the version is anything at all or not.
+ if not self.version:
+ return
+
+ tmpl = textwrap.dedent("""
+ '{project_name} ({version})' is being parsed as a legacy,
+ non PEP 440,
+ version. You may find odd behavior and sort order.
+ In particular it will be sorted as less than 0.0. It
+ is recommended to migrate to PEP 440 compatible
+ versions.
+ """).strip().replace('\n', ' ')
+
+ warnings.warn(tmpl.format(**vars(self)), PEP440Warning)
+
+ @property
+ def version(self):
+ try:
+ return self._version
+ except AttributeError as e:
+ version = self._get_version()
+ if version is None:
+ path = self._get_metadata_path_for_display(self.PKG_INFO)
+ msg = (
+ "Missing 'Version:' header and/or {} file at path: {}"
+ ).format(self.PKG_INFO, path)
+ raise ValueError(msg, self) from e
+
+ return version
+
+ @property
+ def _dep_map(self):
+ """
+ A map of extra to its list of (direct) requirements
+ for this distribution, including the null extra.
+ """
+ try:
+ return self.__dep_map
+ except AttributeError:
+ self.__dep_map = self._filter_extras(self._build_dep_map())
+ return self.__dep_map
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _filter_extras(dm):
+ """
+ Given a mapping of extras to dependencies, strip off
+ environment markers and filter out any dependencies
+ not matching the markers.
+ """
+ for extra in list(filter(None, dm)):
+ new_extra = extra
+ reqs = dm.pop(extra)
+ new_extra, _, marker = extra.partition(':')
+ fails_marker = marker and (
+ invalid_marker(marker)
+ or not evaluate_marker(marker)
+ )
+ if fails_marker:
+ reqs = []
+ new_extra = safe_extra(new_extra) or None
+
+ dm.setdefault(new_extra, []).extend(reqs)
+ return dm
+
+ def _build_dep_map(self):
+ dm = {}
+ for name in 'requires.txt', 'depends.txt':
+ for extra, reqs in split_sections(self._get_metadata(name)):
+ dm.setdefault(extra, []).extend(parse_requirements(reqs))
+ return dm
+
+ def requires(self, extras=()):
+ """List of Requirements needed for this distro if `extras` are used"""
+ dm = self._dep_map
+ deps = []
+ deps.extend(dm.get(None, ()))
+ for ext in extras:
+ try:
+ deps.extend(dm[safe_extra(ext)])
+ except KeyError as e:
+ raise UnknownExtra(
+ "%s has no such extra feature %r" % (self, ext)
+ ) from e
+ return deps
+
+ def _get_metadata_path_for_display(self, name):
+ """
+ Return the path to the given metadata file, if available.
+ """
+ try:
+ # We need to access _get_metadata_path() on the provider object
+ # directly rather than through this class's __getattr__()
+ # since _get_metadata_path() is marked private.
+ path = self._provider._get_metadata_path(name)
+
+ # Handle exceptions e.g. in case the distribution's metadata
+ # provider doesn't support _get_metadata_path().
+ except Exception:
+ return '[could not detect]'
+
+ return path
+
+ def _get_metadata(self, name):
+ if self.has_metadata(name):
+ for line in self.get_metadata_lines(name):
+ yield line
+
+ def _get_version(self):
+ lines = self._get_metadata(self.PKG_INFO)
+ version = _version_from_file(lines)
+
+ return version
+
+ def activate(self, path=None, replace=False):
+ """Ensure distribution is importable on `path` (default=sys.path)"""
+ if path is None:
+ path = sys.path
+ self.insert_on(path, replace=replace)
+ if path is sys.path:
+ fixup_namespace_packages(self.location)
+ for pkg in self._get_metadata('namespace_packages.txt'):
+ if pkg in sys.modules:
+ declare_namespace(pkg)
+
+ def egg_name(self):
+ """Return what this distribution's standard .egg filename should be"""
+ filename = "%s-%s-py%s" % (
+ to_filename(self.project_name), to_filename(self.version),
+ self.py_version or PY_MAJOR
+ )
+
+ if self.platform:
+ filename += '-' + self.platform
+ return filename
+
+ def __repr__(self):
+ if self.location:
+ return "%s (%s)" % (self, self.location)
+ else:
+ return str(self)
+
+ def __str__(self):
+ try:
+ version = getattr(self, 'version', None)
+ except ValueError:
+ version = None
+ version = version or "[unknown version]"
+ return "%s %s" % (self.project_name, version)
+
+ def __getattr__(self, attr):
+ """Delegate all unrecognized public attributes to .metadata provider"""
+ if attr.startswith('_'):
+ raise AttributeError(attr)
+ return getattr(self._provider, attr)
+
+ def __dir__(self):
+ return list(
+ set(super(Distribution, self).__dir__())
+ | set(
+ attr for attr in self._provider.__dir__()
+ if not attr.startswith('_')
+ )
+ )
+
+ @classmethod
+ def from_filename(cls, filename, metadata=None, **kw):
+ return cls.from_location(
+ _normalize_cached(filename), os.path.basename(filename), metadata,
+ **kw
+ )
+
+ def as_requirement(self):
+ """Return a ``Requirement`` that matches this distribution exactly"""
+ if isinstance(self.parsed_version, packaging.version.Version):
+ spec = "%s==%s" % (self.project_name, self.parsed_version)
+ else:
+ spec = "%s===%s" % (self.project_name, self.parsed_version)
+
+ return Requirement.parse(spec)
+
+ def load_entry_point(self, group, name):
+ """Return the `name` entry point of `group` or raise ImportError"""
+ ep = self.get_entry_info(group, name)
+ if ep is None:
+ raise ImportError("Entry point %r not found" % ((group, name),))
+ return ep.load()
+
+ def get_entry_map(self, group=None):
+ """Return the entry point map for `group`, or the full entry map"""
+ try:
+ ep_map = self._ep_map
+ except AttributeError:
+ ep_map = self._ep_map = EntryPoint.parse_map(
+ self._get_metadata('entry_points.txt'), self
+ )
+ if group is not None:
+ return ep_map.get(group, {})
+ return ep_map
+
+ def get_entry_info(self, group, name):
+ """Return the EntryPoint object for `group`+`name`, or ``None``"""
+ return self.get_entry_map(group).get(name)
+
+ def insert_on(self, path, loc=None, replace=False):
+ """Ensure self.location is on path
+
+ If replace=False (default):
+ - If location is already in path anywhere, do nothing.
+ - Else:
+ - If it's an egg and its parent directory is on path,
+ insert just ahead of the parent.
+ - Else: add to the end of path.
+ If replace=True:
+ - If location is already on path anywhere (not eggs)
+ or higher priority than its parent (eggs)
+ do nothing.
+ - Else:
+ - If it's an egg and its parent directory is on path,
+ insert just ahead of the parent,
+ removing any lower-priority entries.
+ - Else: add it to the front of path.
+ """
+
+ loc = loc or self.location
+ if not loc:
+ return
+
+ nloc = _normalize_cached(loc)
+ bdir = os.path.dirname(nloc)
+ npath = [(p and _normalize_cached(p) or p) for p in path]
+
+ for p, item in enumerate(npath):
+ if item == nloc:
+ if replace:
+ break
+ else:
+ # don't modify path (even removing duplicates) if
+ # found and not replace
+ return
+ elif item == bdir and self.precedence == EGG_DIST:
+ # if it's an .egg, give it precedence over its directory
+ # UNLESS it's already been added to sys.path and replace=False
+ if (not replace) and nloc in npath[p:]:
+ return
+ if path is sys.path:
+ self.check_version_conflict()
+ path.insert(p, loc)
+ npath.insert(p, nloc)
+ break
+ else:
+ if path is sys.path:
+ self.check_version_conflict()
+ if replace:
+ path.insert(0, loc)
+ else:
+ path.append(loc)
+ return
+
+ # p is the spot where we found or inserted loc; now remove duplicates
+ while True:
+ try:
+ np = npath.index(nloc, p + 1)
+ except ValueError:
+ break
+ else:
+ del npath[np], path[np]
+ # ha!
+ p = np
+
+ return
+
+ def check_version_conflict(self):
+ if self.key == 'setuptools':
+ # ignore the inevitable setuptools self-conflicts :(
+ return
+
+ nsp = dict.fromkeys(self._get_metadata('namespace_packages.txt'))
+ loc = normalize_path(self.location)
+ for modname in self._get_metadata('top_level.txt'):
+ if (modname not in sys.modules or modname in nsp
+ or modname in _namespace_packages):
+ continue
+ if modname in ('pkg_resources', 'setuptools', 'site'):
+ continue
+ fn = getattr(sys.modules[modname], '__file__', None)
+ if fn and (normalize_path(fn).startswith(loc) or
+ fn.startswith(self.location)):
+ continue
+ issue_warning(
+ "Module %s was already imported from %s, but %s is being added"
+ " to sys.path" % (modname, fn, self.location),
+ )
+
+ def has_version(self):
+ try:
+ self.version
+ except ValueError:
+ issue_warning("Unbuilt egg for " + repr(self))
+ return False
+ return True
+
+ def clone(self, **kw):
+ """Copy this distribution, substituting in any changed keyword args"""
+ names = 'project_name version py_version platform location precedence'
+ for attr in names.split():
+ kw.setdefault(attr, getattr(self, attr, None))
+ kw.setdefault('metadata', self._provider)
+ return self.__class__(**kw)
+
+ @property
+ def extras(self):
+ return [dep for dep in self._dep_map if dep]
+
+
+class EggInfoDistribution(Distribution):
+ def _reload_version(self):
+ """
+ Packages installed by distutils (e.g. numpy or scipy),
+ which uses an old safe_version, and so
+ their version numbers can get mangled when
+ converted to filenames (e.g., 1.11.0.dev0+2329eae to
+ 1.11.0.dev0_2329eae). These distributions will not be
+ parsed properly
+ downstream by Distribution and safe_version, so
+ take an extra step and try to get the version number from
+ the metadata file itself instead of the filename.
+ """
+ md_version = self._get_version()
+ if md_version:
+ self._version = md_version
+ return self
+
+
+class DistInfoDistribution(Distribution):
+ """
+ Wrap an actual or potential sys.path entry
+ w/metadata, .dist-info style.
+ """
+ PKG_INFO = 'METADATA'
+ EQEQ = re.compile(r"([\(,])\s*(\d.*?)\s*([,\)])")
+
+ @property
+ def _parsed_pkg_info(self):
+ """Parse and cache metadata"""
+ try:
+ return self._pkg_info
+ except AttributeError:
+ metadata = self.get_metadata(self.PKG_INFO)
+ self._pkg_info = email.parser.Parser().parsestr(metadata)
+ return self._pkg_info
+
+ @property
+ def _dep_map(self):
+ try:
+ return self.__dep_map
+ except AttributeError:
+ self.__dep_map = self._compute_dependencies()
+ return self.__dep_map
+
+ def _compute_dependencies(self):
+ """Recompute this distribution's dependencies."""
+ dm = self.__dep_map = {None: []}
+
+ reqs = []
+ # Including any condition expressions
+ for req in self._parsed_pkg_info.get_all('Requires-Dist') or []:
+ reqs.extend(parse_requirements(req))
+
+ def reqs_for_extra(extra):
+ for req in reqs:
+ if not req.marker or req.marker.evaluate({'extra': extra}):
+ yield req
+
+ common = frozenset(reqs_for_extra(None))
+ dm[None].extend(common)
+
+ for extra in self._parsed_pkg_info.get_all('Provides-Extra') or []:
+ s_extra = safe_extra(extra.strip())
+ dm[s_extra] = list(frozenset(reqs_for_extra(extra)) - common)
+
+ return dm
+
+
+_distributionImpl = {
+ '.egg': Distribution,
+ '.egg-info': EggInfoDistribution,
+ '.dist-info': DistInfoDistribution,
+}
+
+
+def issue_warning(*args, **kw):
+ level = 1
+ g = globals()
+ try:
+ # find the first stack frame that is *not* code in
+ # the pkg_resources module, to use for the warning
+ while sys._getframe(level).f_globals is g:
+ level += 1
+ except ValueError:
+ pass
+ warnings.warn(stacklevel=level + 1, *args, **kw)
+
+
+def parse_requirements(strs):
+ """Yield ``Requirement`` objects for each specification in `strs`
+
+ `strs` must be a string, or a (possibly-nested) iterable thereof.
+ """
+ # create a steppable iterator, so we can handle \-continuations
+ lines = iter(yield_lines(strs))
+
+ for line in lines:
+ # Drop comments -- a hash without a space may be in a URL.
+ if ' #' in line:
+ line = line[:line.find(' #')]
+ # If there is a line continuation, drop it, and append the next line.
+ if line.endswith('\\'):
+ line = line[:-2].strip()
+ try:
+ line += next(lines)
+ except StopIteration:
+ return
+ yield Requirement(line)
+
+
+class RequirementParseError(packaging.requirements.InvalidRequirement):
+ "Compatibility wrapper for InvalidRequirement"
+
+
+class Requirement(packaging.requirements.Requirement):
+ def __init__(self, requirement_string):
+ """DO NOT CALL THIS UNDOCUMENTED METHOD; use Requirement.parse()!"""
+ super(Requirement, self).__init__(requirement_string)
+ self.unsafe_name = self.name
+ project_name = safe_name(self.name)
+ self.project_name, self.key = project_name, project_name.lower()
+ self.specs = [
+ (spec.operator, spec.version) for spec in self.specifier]
+ self.extras = tuple(map(safe_extra, self.extras))
+ self.hashCmp = (
+ self.key,
+ self.url,
+ self.specifier,
+ frozenset(self.extras),
+ str(self.marker) if self.marker else None,
+ )
+ self.__hash = hash(self.hashCmp)
+
+ def __eq__(self, other):
+ return (
+ isinstance(other, Requirement) and
+ self.hashCmp == other.hashCmp
+ )
+
+ def __ne__(self, other):
+ return not self == other
+
+ def __contains__(self, item):
+ if isinstance(item, Distribution):
+ if item.key != self.key:
+ return False
+
+ item = item.version
+
+ # Allow prereleases always in order to match the previous behavior of
+ # this method. In the future this should be smarter and follow PEP 440
+ # more accurately.
+ return self.specifier.contains(item, prereleases=True)
+
+ def __hash__(self):
+ return self.__hash
+
+ def __repr__(self):
+ return "Requirement.parse(%r)" % str(self)
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def parse(s):
+ req, = parse_requirements(s)
+ return req
+
+
+def _always_object(classes):
+ """
+ Ensure object appears in the mro even
+ for old-style classes.
+ """
+ if object not in classes:
+ return classes + (object,)
+ return classes
+
+
+def _find_adapter(registry, ob):
+ """Return an adapter factory for `ob` from `registry`"""
+ types = _always_object(inspect.getmro(getattr(ob, '__class__', type(ob))))
+ for t in types:
+ if t in registry:
+ return registry[t]
+
+
+def ensure_directory(path):
+ """Ensure that the parent directory of `path` exists"""
+ dirname = os.path.dirname(path)
+ os.makedirs(dirname, exist_ok=True)
+
+
+def _bypass_ensure_directory(path):
+ """Sandbox-bypassing version of ensure_directory()"""
+ if not WRITE_SUPPORT:
+ raise IOError('"os.mkdir" not supported on this platform.')
+ dirname, filename = split(path)
+ if dirname and filename and not isdir(dirname):
+ _bypass_ensure_directory(dirname)
+ try:
+ mkdir(dirname, 0o755)
+ except FileExistsError:
+ pass
+
+
+def split_sections(s):
+ """Split a string or iterable thereof into (section, content) pairs
+
+ Each ``section`` is a stripped version of the section header ("[section]")
+ and each ``content`` is a list of stripped lines excluding blank lines and
+ comment-only lines. If there are any such lines before the first section
+ header, they're returned in a first ``section`` of ``None``.
+ """
+ section = None
+ content = []
+ for line in yield_lines(s):
+ if line.startswith("["):
+ if line.endswith("]"):
+ if section or content:
+ yield section, content
+ section = line[1:-1].strip()
+ content = []
+ else:
+ raise ValueError("Invalid section heading", line)
+ else:
+ content.append(line)
+
+ # wrap up last segment
+ yield section, content
+
+
+def _mkstemp(*args, **kw):
+ old_open = os.open
+ try:
+ # temporarily bypass sandboxing
+ os.open = os_open
+ return tempfile.mkstemp(*args, **kw)
+ finally:
+ # and then put it back
+ os.open = old_open
+
+
+# Silence the PEP440Warning by default, so that end users don't get hit by it
+# randomly just because they use pkg_resources. We want to append the rule
+# because we want earlier uses of filterwarnings to take precedence over this
+# one.
+warnings.filterwarnings("ignore", category=PEP440Warning, append=True)
+
+
+# from jaraco.functools 1.3
+def _call_aside(f, *args, **kwargs):
+ f(*args, **kwargs)
+ return f
+
+
+@_call_aside
+def _initialize(g=globals()):
+ "Set up global resource manager (deliberately not state-saved)"
+ manager = ResourceManager()
+ g['_manager'] = manager
+ g.update(
+ (name, getattr(manager, name))
+ for name in dir(manager)
+ if not name.startswith('_')
+ )
+
+
+@_call_aside
+def _initialize_master_working_set():
+ """
+ Prepare the master working set and make the ``require()``
+ API available.
+
+ This function has explicit effects on the global state
+ of pkg_resources. It is intended to be invoked once at
+ the initialization of this module.
+
+ Invocation by other packages is unsupported and done
+ at their own risk.
+ """
+ working_set = WorkingSet._build_master()
+ _declare_state('object', working_set=working_set)
+
+ require = working_set.require
+ iter_entry_points = working_set.iter_entry_points
+ add_activation_listener = working_set.subscribe
+ run_script = working_set.run_script
+ # backward compatibility
+ run_main = run_script
+ # Activate all distributions already on sys.path with replace=False and
+ # ensure that all distributions added to the working set in the future
+ # (e.g. by calling ``require()``) will get activated as well,
+ # with higher priority (replace=True).
+ tuple(
+ dist.activate(replace=False)
+ for dist in working_set
+ )
+ add_activation_listener(
+ lambda dist: dist.activate(replace=True),
+ existing=False,
+ )
+ working_set.entries = []
+ # match order
+ list(map(working_set.add_entry, sys.path))
+ globals().update(locals())
+
+
+class PkgResourcesDeprecationWarning(Warning):
+ """
+ Base class for warning about deprecations in ``pkg_resources``
+
+ This class is not derived from ``DeprecationWarning``, and as such is
+ visible by default.
+ """
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/__init__.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/__init__.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..e69de29bb2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/__init__.py
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/appdirs.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/appdirs.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..ae67001af8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/appdirs.py
@@ -0,0 +1,608 @@
+#!/usr/bin/env python
+# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
+# Copyright (c) 2005-2010 ActiveState Software Inc.
+# Copyright (c) 2013 Eddy Petrișor
+
+"""Utilities for determining application-specific dirs.
+
+See <http://github.com/ActiveState/appdirs> for details and usage.
+"""
+# Dev Notes:
+# - MSDN on where to store app data files:
+# http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;310294#XSLTH3194121123120121120120
+# - Mac OS X: http://developer.apple.com/documentation/MacOSX/Conceptual/BPFileSystem/index.html
+# - XDG spec for Un*x: http://standards.freedesktop.org/basedir-spec/basedir-spec-latest.html
+
+__version_info__ = (1, 4, 3)
+__version__ = '.'.join(map(str, __version_info__))
+
+
+import sys
+import os
+
+PY3 = sys.version_info[0] == 3
+
+if PY3:
+ unicode = str
+
+if sys.platform.startswith('java'):
+ import platform
+ os_name = platform.java_ver()[3][0]
+ if os_name.startswith('Windows'): # "Windows XP", "Windows 7", etc.
+ system = 'win32'
+ elif os_name.startswith('Mac'): # "Mac OS X", etc.
+ system = 'darwin'
+ else: # "Linux", "SunOS", "FreeBSD", etc.
+ # Setting this to "linux2" is not ideal, but only Windows or Mac
+ # are actually checked for and the rest of the module expects
+ # *sys.platform* style strings.
+ system = 'linux2'
+else:
+ system = sys.platform
+
+
+
+def user_data_dir(appname=None, appauthor=None, version=None, roaming=False):
+ r"""Return full path to the user-specific data dir for this application.
+
+ "appname" is the name of application.
+ If None, just the system directory is returned.
+ "appauthor" (only used on Windows) is the name of the
+ appauthor or distributing body for this application. Typically
+ it is the owning company name. This falls back to appname. You may
+ pass False to disable it.
+ "version" is an optional version path element to append to the
+ path. You might want to use this if you want multiple versions
+ of your app to be able to run independently. If used, this
+ would typically be "<major>.<minor>".
+ Only applied when appname is present.
+ "roaming" (boolean, default False) can be set True to use the Windows
+ roaming appdata directory. That means that for users on a Windows
+ network setup for roaming profiles, this user data will be
+ sync'd on login. See
+ <http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc766489(WS.10).aspx>
+ for a discussion of issues.
+
+ Typical user data directories are:
+ Mac OS X: ~/Library/Application Support/<AppName>
+ Unix: ~/.local/share/<AppName> # or in $XDG_DATA_HOME, if defined
+ Win XP (not roaming): C:\Documents and Settings\<username>\Application Data\<AppAuthor>\<AppName>
+ Win XP (roaming): C:\Documents and Settings\<username>\Local Settings\Application Data\<AppAuthor>\<AppName>
+ Win 7 (not roaming): C:\Users\<username>\AppData\Local\<AppAuthor>\<AppName>
+ Win 7 (roaming): C:\Users\<username>\AppData\Roaming\<AppAuthor>\<AppName>
+
+ For Unix, we follow the XDG spec and support $XDG_DATA_HOME.
+ That means, by default "~/.local/share/<AppName>".
+ """
+ if system == "win32":
+ if appauthor is None:
+ appauthor = appname
+ const = roaming and "CSIDL_APPDATA" or "CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATA"
+ path = os.path.normpath(_get_win_folder(const))
+ if appname:
+ if appauthor is not False:
+ path = os.path.join(path, appauthor, appname)
+ else:
+ path = os.path.join(path, appname)
+ elif system == 'darwin':
+ path = os.path.expanduser('~/Library/Application Support/')
+ if appname:
+ path = os.path.join(path, appname)
+ else:
+ path = os.getenv('XDG_DATA_HOME', os.path.expanduser("~/.local/share"))
+ if appname:
+ path = os.path.join(path, appname)
+ if appname and version:
+ path = os.path.join(path, version)
+ return path
+
+
+def site_data_dir(appname=None, appauthor=None, version=None, multipath=False):
+ r"""Return full path to the user-shared data dir for this application.
+
+ "appname" is the name of application.
+ If None, just the system directory is returned.
+ "appauthor" (only used on Windows) is the name of the
+ appauthor or distributing body for this application. Typically
+ it is the owning company name. This falls back to appname. You may
+ pass False to disable it.
+ "version" is an optional version path element to append to the
+ path. You might want to use this if you want multiple versions
+ of your app to be able to run independently. If used, this
+ would typically be "<major>.<minor>".
+ Only applied when appname is present.
+ "multipath" is an optional parameter only applicable to *nix
+ which indicates that the entire list of data dirs should be
+ returned. By default, the first item from XDG_DATA_DIRS is
+ returned, or '/usr/local/share/<AppName>',
+ if XDG_DATA_DIRS is not set
+
+ Typical site data directories are:
+ Mac OS X: /Library/Application Support/<AppName>
+ Unix: /usr/local/share/<AppName> or /usr/share/<AppName>
+ Win XP: C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\<AppAuthor>\<AppName>
+ Vista: (Fail! "C:\ProgramData" is a hidden *system* directory on Vista.)
+ Win 7: C:\ProgramData\<AppAuthor>\<AppName> # Hidden, but writeable on Win 7.
+
+ For Unix, this is using the $XDG_DATA_DIRS[0] default.
+
+ WARNING: Do not use this on Windows. See the Vista-Fail note above for why.
+ """
+ if system == "win32":
+ if appauthor is None:
+ appauthor = appname
+ path = os.path.normpath(_get_win_folder("CSIDL_COMMON_APPDATA"))
+ if appname:
+ if appauthor is not False:
+ path = os.path.join(path, appauthor, appname)
+ else:
+ path = os.path.join(path, appname)
+ elif system == 'darwin':
+ path = os.path.expanduser('/Library/Application Support')
+ if appname:
+ path = os.path.join(path, appname)
+ else:
+ # XDG default for $XDG_DATA_DIRS
+ # only first, if multipath is False
+ path = os.getenv('XDG_DATA_DIRS',
+ os.pathsep.join(['/usr/local/share', '/usr/share']))
+ pathlist = [os.path.expanduser(x.rstrip(os.sep)) for x in path.split(os.pathsep)]
+ if appname:
+ if version:
+ appname = os.path.join(appname, version)
+ pathlist = [os.sep.join([x, appname]) for x in pathlist]
+
+ if multipath:
+ path = os.pathsep.join(pathlist)
+ else:
+ path = pathlist[0]
+ return path
+
+ if appname and version:
+ path = os.path.join(path, version)
+ return path
+
+
+def user_config_dir(appname=None, appauthor=None, version=None, roaming=False):
+ r"""Return full path to the user-specific config dir for this application.
+
+ "appname" is the name of application.
+ If None, just the system directory is returned.
+ "appauthor" (only used on Windows) is the name of the
+ appauthor or distributing body for this application. Typically
+ it is the owning company name. This falls back to appname. You may
+ pass False to disable it.
+ "version" is an optional version path element to append to the
+ path. You might want to use this if you want multiple versions
+ of your app to be able to run independently. If used, this
+ would typically be "<major>.<minor>".
+ Only applied when appname is present.
+ "roaming" (boolean, default False) can be set True to use the Windows
+ roaming appdata directory. That means that for users on a Windows
+ network setup for roaming profiles, this user data will be
+ sync'd on login. See
+ <http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc766489(WS.10).aspx>
+ for a discussion of issues.
+
+ Typical user config directories are:
+ Mac OS X: same as user_data_dir
+ Unix: ~/.config/<AppName> # or in $XDG_CONFIG_HOME, if defined
+ Win *: same as user_data_dir
+
+ For Unix, we follow the XDG spec and support $XDG_CONFIG_HOME.
+ That means, by default "~/.config/<AppName>".
+ """
+ if system in ["win32", "darwin"]:
+ path = user_data_dir(appname, appauthor, None, roaming)
+ else:
+ path = os.getenv('XDG_CONFIG_HOME', os.path.expanduser("~/.config"))
+ if appname:
+ path = os.path.join(path, appname)
+ if appname and version:
+ path = os.path.join(path, version)
+ return path
+
+
+def site_config_dir(appname=None, appauthor=None, version=None, multipath=False):
+ r"""Return full path to the user-shared data dir for this application.
+
+ "appname" is the name of application.
+ If None, just the system directory is returned.
+ "appauthor" (only used on Windows) is the name of the
+ appauthor or distributing body for this application. Typically
+ it is the owning company name. This falls back to appname. You may
+ pass False to disable it.
+ "version" is an optional version path element to append to the
+ path. You might want to use this if you want multiple versions
+ of your app to be able to run independently. If used, this
+ would typically be "<major>.<minor>".
+ Only applied when appname is present.
+ "multipath" is an optional parameter only applicable to *nix
+ which indicates that the entire list of config dirs should be
+ returned. By default, the first item from XDG_CONFIG_DIRS is
+ returned, or '/etc/xdg/<AppName>', if XDG_CONFIG_DIRS is not set
+
+ Typical site config directories are:
+ Mac OS X: same as site_data_dir
+ Unix: /etc/xdg/<AppName> or $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS[i]/<AppName> for each value in
+ $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS
+ Win *: same as site_data_dir
+ Vista: (Fail! "C:\ProgramData" is a hidden *system* directory on Vista.)
+
+ For Unix, this is using the $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS[0] default, if multipath=False
+
+ WARNING: Do not use this on Windows. See the Vista-Fail note above for why.
+ """
+ if system in ["win32", "darwin"]:
+ path = site_data_dir(appname, appauthor)
+ if appname and version:
+ path = os.path.join(path, version)
+ else:
+ # XDG default for $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS
+ # only first, if multipath is False
+ path = os.getenv('XDG_CONFIG_DIRS', '/etc/xdg')
+ pathlist = [os.path.expanduser(x.rstrip(os.sep)) for x in path.split(os.pathsep)]
+ if appname:
+ if version:
+ appname = os.path.join(appname, version)
+ pathlist = [os.sep.join([x, appname]) for x in pathlist]
+
+ if multipath:
+ path = os.pathsep.join(pathlist)
+ else:
+ path = pathlist[0]
+ return path
+
+
+def user_cache_dir(appname=None, appauthor=None, version=None, opinion=True):
+ r"""Return full path to the user-specific cache dir for this application.
+
+ "appname" is the name of application.
+ If None, just the system directory is returned.
+ "appauthor" (only used on Windows) is the name of the
+ appauthor or distributing body for this application. Typically
+ it is the owning company name. This falls back to appname. You may
+ pass False to disable it.
+ "version" is an optional version path element to append to the
+ path. You might want to use this if you want multiple versions
+ of your app to be able to run independently. If used, this
+ would typically be "<major>.<minor>".
+ Only applied when appname is present.
+ "opinion" (boolean) can be False to disable the appending of
+ "Cache" to the base app data dir for Windows. See
+ discussion below.
+
+ Typical user cache directories are:
+ Mac OS X: ~/Library/Caches/<AppName>
+ Unix: ~/.cache/<AppName> (XDG default)
+ Win XP: C:\Documents and Settings\<username>\Local Settings\Application Data\<AppAuthor>\<AppName>\Cache
+ Vista: C:\Users\<username>\AppData\Local\<AppAuthor>\<AppName>\Cache
+
+ On Windows the only suggestion in the MSDN docs is that local settings go in
+ the `CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATA` directory. This is identical to the non-roaming
+ app data dir (the default returned by `user_data_dir` above). Apps typically
+ put cache data somewhere *under* the given dir here. Some examples:
+ ...\Mozilla\Firefox\Profiles\<ProfileName>\Cache
+ ...\Acme\SuperApp\Cache\1.0
+ OPINION: This function appends "Cache" to the `CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATA` value.
+ This can be disabled with the `opinion=False` option.
+ """
+ if system == "win32":
+ if appauthor is None:
+ appauthor = appname
+ path = os.path.normpath(_get_win_folder("CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATA"))
+ if appname:
+ if appauthor is not False:
+ path = os.path.join(path, appauthor, appname)
+ else:
+ path = os.path.join(path, appname)
+ if opinion:
+ path = os.path.join(path, "Cache")
+ elif system == 'darwin':
+ path = os.path.expanduser('~/Library/Caches')
+ if appname:
+ path = os.path.join(path, appname)
+ else:
+ path = os.getenv('XDG_CACHE_HOME', os.path.expanduser('~/.cache'))
+ if appname:
+ path = os.path.join(path, appname)
+ if appname and version:
+ path = os.path.join(path, version)
+ return path
+
+
+def user_state_dir(appname=None, appauthor=None, version=None, roaming=False):
+ r"""Return full path to the user-specific state dir for this application.
+
+ "appname" is the name of application.
+ If None, just the system directory is returned.
+ "appauthor" (only used on Windows) is the name of the
+ appauthor or distributing body for this application. Typically
+ it is the owning company name. This falls back to appname. You may
+ pass False to disable it.
+ "version" is an optional version path element to append to the
+ path. You might want to use this if you want multiple versions
+ of your app to be able to run independently. If used, this
+ would typically be "<major>.<minor>".
+ Only applied when appname is present.
+ "roaming" (boolean, default False) can be set True to use the Windows
+ roaming appdata directory. That means that for users on a Windows
+ network setup for roaming profiles, this user data will be
+ sync'd on login. See
+ <http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc766489(WS.10).aspx>
+ for a discussion of issues.
+
+ Typical user state directories are:
+ Mac OS X: same as user_data_dir
+ Unix: ~/.local/state/<AppName> # or in $XDG_STATE_HOME, if defined
+ Win *: same as user_data_dir
+
+ For Unix, we follow this Debian proposal <https://wiki.debian.org/XDGBaseDirectorySpecification#state>
+ to extend the XDG spec and support $XDG_STATE_HOME.
+
+ That means, by default "~/.local/state/<AppName>".
+ """
+ if system in ["win32", "darwin"]:
+ path = user_data_dir(appname, appauthor, None, roaming)
+ else:
+ path = os.getenv('XDG_STATE_HOME', os.path.expanduser("~/.local/state"))
+ if appname:
+ path = os.path.join(path, appname)
+ if appname and version:
+ path = os.path.join(path, version)
+ return path
+
+
+def user_log_dir(appname=None, appauthor=None, version=None, opinion=True):
+ r"""Return full path to the user-specific log dir for this application.
+
+ "appname" is the name of application.
+ If None, just the system directory is returned.
+ "appauthor" (only used on Windows) is the name of the
+ appauthor or distributing body for this application. Typically
+ it is the owning company name. This falls back to appname. You may
+ pass False to disable it.
+ "version" is an optional version path element to append to the
+ path. You might want to use this if you want multiple versions
+ of your app to be able to run independently. If used, this
+ would typically be "<major>.<minor>".
+ Only applied when appname is present.
+ "opinion" (boolean) can be False to disable the appending of
+ "Logs" to the base app data dir for Windows, and "log" to the
+ base cache dir for Unix. See discussion below.
+
+ Typical user log directories are:
+ Mac OS X: ~/Library/Logs/<AppName>
+ Unix: ~/.cache/<AppName>/log # or under $XDG_CACHE_HOME if defined
+ Win XP: C:\Documents and Settings\<username>\Local Settings\Application Data\<AppAuthor>\<AppName>\Logs
+ Vista: C:\Users\<username>\AppData\Local\<AppAuthor>\<AppName>\Logs
+
+ On Windows the only suggestion in the MSDN docs is that local settings
+ go in the `CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATA` directory. (Note: I'm interested in
+ examples of what some windows apps use for a logs dir.)
+
+ OPINION: This function appends "Logs" to the `CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATA`
+ value for Windows and appends "log" to the user cache dir for Unix.
+ This can be disabled with the `opinion=False` option.
+ """
+ if system == "darwin":
+ path = os.path.join(
+ os.path.expanduser('~/Library/Logs'),
+ appname)
+ elif system == "win32":
+ path = user_data_dir(appname, appauthor, version)
+ version = False
+ if opinion:
+ path = os.path.join(path, "Logs")
+ else:
+ path = user_cache_dir(appname, appauthor, version)
+ version = False
+ if opinion:
+ path = os.path.join(path, "log")
+ if appname and version:
+ path = os.path.join(path, version)
+ return path
+
+
+class AppDirs(object):
+ """Convenience wrapper for getting application dirs."""
+ def __init__(self, appname=None, appauthor=None, version=None,
+ roaming=False, multipath=False):
+ self.appname = appname
+ self.appauthor = appauthor
+ self.version = version
+ self.roaming = roaming
+ self.multipath = multipath
+
+ @property
+ def user_data_dir(self):
+ return user_data_dir(self.appname, self.appauthor,
+ version=self.version, roaming=self.roaming)
+
+ @property
+ def site_data_dir(self):
+ return site_data_dir(self.appname, self.appauthor,
+ version=self.version, multipath=self.multipath)
+
+ @property
+ def user_config_dir(self):
+ return user_config_dir(self.appname, self.appauthor,
+ version=self.version, roaming=self.roaming)
+
+ @property
+ def site_config_dir(self):
+ return site_config_dir(self.appname, self.appauthor,
+ version=self.version, multipath=self.multipath)
+
+ @property
+ def user_cache_dir(self):
+ return user_cache_dir(self.appname, self.appauthor,
+ version=self.version)
+
+ @property
+ def user_state_dir(self):
+ return user_state_dir(self.appname, self.appauthor,
+ version=self.version)
+
+ @property
+ def user_log_dir(self):
+ return user_log_dir(self.appname, self.appauthor,
+ version=self.version)
+
+
+#---- internal support stuff
+
+def _get_win_folder_from_registry(csidl_name):
+ """This is a fallback technique at best. I'm not sure if using the
+ registry for this guarantees us the correct answer for all CSIDL_*
+ names.
+ """
+ if PY3:
+ import winreg as _winreg
+ else:
+ import _winreg
+
+ shell_folder_name = {
+ "CSIDL_APPDATA": "AppData",
+ "CSIDL_COMMON_APPDATA": "Common AppData",
+ "CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATA": "Local AppData",
+ }[csidl_name]
+
+ key = _winreg.OpenKey(
+ _winreg.HKEY_CURRENT_USER,
+ r"Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\Shell Folders"
+ )
+ dir, type = _winreg.QueryValueEx(key, shell_folder_name)
+ return dir
+
+
+def _get_win_folder_with_pywin32(csidl_name):
+ from win32com.shell import shellcon, shell
+ dir = shell.SHGetFolderPath(0, getattr(shellcon, csidl_name), 0, 0)
+ # Try to make this a unicode path because SHGetFolderPath does
+ # not return unicode strings when there is unicode data in the
+ # path.
+ try:
+ dir = unicode(dir)
+
+ # Downgrade to short path name if have highbit chars. See
+ # <http://bugs.activestate.com/show_bug.cgi?id=85099>.
+ has_high_char = False
+ for c in dir:
+ if ord(c) > 255:
+ has_high_char = True
+ break
+ if has_high_char:
+ try:
+ import win32api
+ dir = win32api.GetShortPathName(dir)
+ except ImportError:
+ pass
+ except UnicodeError:
+ pass
+ return dir
+
+
+def _get_win_folder_with_ctypes(csidl_name):
+ import ctypes
+
+ csidl_const = {
+ "CSIDL_APPDATA": 26,
+ "CSIDL_COMMON_APPDATA": 35,
+ "CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATA": 28,
+ }[csidl_name]
+
+ buf = ctypes.create_unicode_buffer(1024)
+ ctypes.windll.shell32.SHGetFolderPathW(None, csidl_const, None, 0, buf)
+
+ # Downgrade to short path name if have highbit chars. See
+ # <http://bugs.activestate.com/show_bug.cgi?id=85099>.
+ has_high_char = False
+ for c in buf:
+ if ord(c) > 255:
+ has_high_char = True
+ break
+ if has_high_char:
+ buf2 = ctypes.create_unicode_buffer(1024)
+ if ctypes.windll.kernel32.GetShortPathNameW(buf.value, buf2, 1024):
+ buf = buf2
+
+ return buf.value
+
+def _get_win_folder_with_jna(csidl_name):
+ import array
+ from com.sun import jna
+ from com.sun.jna.platform import win32
+
+ buf_size = win32.WinDef.MAX_PATH * 2
+ buf = array.zeros('c', buf_size)
+ shell = win32.Shell32.INSTANCE
+ shell.SHGetFolderPath(None, getattr(win32.ShlObj, csidl_name), None, win32.ShlObj.SHGFP_TYPE_CURRENT, buf)
+ dir = jna.Native.toString(buf.tostring()).rstrip("\0")
+
+ # Downgrade to short path name if have highbit chars. See
+ # <http://bugs.activestate.com/show_bug.cgi?id=85099>.
+ has_high_char = False
+ for c in dir:
+ if ord(c) > 255:
+ has_high_char = True
+ break
+ if has_high_char:
+ buf = array.zeros('c', buf_size)
+ kernel = win32.Kernel32.INSTANCE
+ if kernel.GetShortPathName(dir, buf, buf_size):
+ dir = jna.Native.toString(buf.tostring()).rstrip("\0")
+
+ return dir
+
+if system == "win32":
+ try:
+ import win32com.shell
+ _get_win_folder = _get_win_folder_with_pywin32
+ except ImportError:
+ try:
+ from ctypes import windll
+ _get_win_folder = _get_win_folder_with_ctypes
+ except ImportError:
+ try:
+ import com.sun.jna
+ _get_win_folder = _get_win_folder_with_jna
+ except ImportError:
+ _get_win_folder = _get_win_folder_from_registry
+
+
+#---- self test code
+
+if __name__ == "__main__":
+ appname = "MyApp"
+ appauthor = "MyCompany"
+
+ props = ("user_data_dir",
+ "user_config_dir",
+ "user_cache_dir",
+ "user_state_dir",
+ "user_log_dir",
+ "site_data_dir",
+ "site_config_dir")
+
+ print("-- app dirs %s --" % __version__)
+
+ print("-- app dirs (with optional 'version')")
+ dirs = AppDirs(appname, appauthor, version="1.0")
+ for prop in props:
+ print("%s: %s" % (prop, getattr(dirs, prop)))
+
+ print("\n-- app dirs (without optional 'version')")
+ dirs = AppDirs(appname, appauthor)
+ for prop in props:
+ print("%s: %s" % (prop, getattr(dirs, prop)))
+
+ print("\n-- app dirs (without optional 'appauthor')")
+ dirs = AppDirs(appname)
+ for prop in props:
+ print("%s: %s" % (prop, getattr(dirs, prop)))
+
+ print("\n-- app dirs (with disabled 'appauthor')")
+ dirs = AppDirs(appname, appauthor=False)
+ for prop in props:
+ print("%s: %s" % (prop, getattr(dirs, prop)))
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/__about__.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/__about__.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..4d998578d7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/__about__.py
@@ -0,0 +1,27 @@
+# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
+# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
+# for complete details.
+from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
+
+__all__ = [
+ "__title__",
+ "__summary__",
+ "__uri__",
+ "__version__",
+ "__author__",
+ "__email__",
+ "__license__",
+ "__copyright__",
+]
+
+__title__ = "packaging"
+__summary__ = "Core utilities for Python packages"
+__uri__ = "https://github.com/pypa/packaging"
+
+__version__ = "20.4"
+
+__author__ = "Donald Stufft and individual contributors"
+__email__ = "donald@stufft.io"
+
+__license__ = "BSD-2-Clause or Apache-2.0"
+__copyright__ = "Copyright 2014-2019 %s" % __author__
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/__init__.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/__init__.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..a0cf67df52
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/__init__.py
@@ -0,0 +1,26 @@
+# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
+# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
+# for complete details.
+from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
+
+from .__about__ import (
+ __author__,
+ __copyright__,
+ __email__,
+ __license__,
+ __summary__,
+ __title__,
+ __uri__,
+ __version__,
+)
+
+__all__ = [
+ "__title__",
+ "__summary__",
+ "__uri__",
+ "__version__",
+ "__author__",
+ "__email__",
+ "__license__",
+ "__copyright__",
+]
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/_compat.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/_compat.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..e54bd4ede8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/_compat.py
@@ -0,0 +1,38 @@
+# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
+# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
+# for complete details.
+from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
+
+import sys
+
+from ._typing import TYPE_CHECKING
+
+if TYPE_CHECKING: # pragma: no cover
+ from typing import Any, Dict, Tuple, Type
+
+
+PY2 = sys.version_info[0] == 2
+PY3 = sys.version_info[0] == 3
+
+# flake8: noqa
+
+if PY3:
+ string_types = (str,)
+else:
+ string_types = (basestring,)
+
+
+def with_metaclass(meta, *bases):
+ # type: (Type[Any], Tuple[Type[Any], ...]) -> Any
+ """
+ Create a base class with a metaclass.
+ """
+ # This requires a bit of explanation: the basic idea is to make a dummy
+ # metaclass for one level of class instantiation that replaces itself with
+ # the actual metaclass.
+ class metaclass(meta): # type: ignore
+ def __new__(cls, name, this_bases, d):
+ # type: (Type[Any], str, Tuple[Any], Dict[Any, Any]) -> Any
+ return meta(name, bases, d)
+
+ return type.__new__(metaclass, "temporary_class", (), {})
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/_structures.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/_structures.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..800d5c5588
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/_structures.py
@@ -0,0 +1,86 @@
+# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
+# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
+# for complete details.
+from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
+
+
+class InfinityType(object):
+ def __repr__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return "Infinity"
+
+ def __hash__(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ return hash(repr(self))
+
+ def __lt__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return False
+
+ def __le__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return False
+
+ def __eq__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return isinstance(other, self.__class__)
+
+ def __ne__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return not isinstance(other, self.__class__)
+
+ def __gt__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return True
+
+ def __ge__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return True
+
+ def __neg__(self):
+ # type: (object) -> NegativeInfinityType
+ return NegativeInfinity
+
+
+Infinity = InfinityType()
+
+
+class NegativeInfinityType(object):
+ def __repr__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return "-Infinity"
+
+ def __hash__(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ return hash(repr(self))
+
+ def __lt__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return True
+
+ def __le__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return True
+
+ def __eq__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return isinstance(other, self.__class__)
+
+ def __ne__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return not isinstance(other, self.__class__)
+
+ def __gt__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return False
+
+ def __ge__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return False
+
+ def __neg__(self):
+ # type: (object) -> InfinityType
+ return Infinity
+
+
+NegativeInfinity = NegativeInfinityType()
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/_typing.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/_typing.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..77a8b9185a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/_typing.py
@@ -0,0 +1,48 @@
+"""For neatly implementing static typing in packaging.
+
+`mypy` - the static type analysis tool we use - uses the `typing` module, which
+provides core functionality fundamental to mypy's functioning.
+
+Generally, `typing` would be imported at runtime and used in that fashion -
+it acts as a no-op at runtime and does not have any run-time overhead by
+design.
+
+As it turns out, `typing` is not vendorable - it uses separate sources for
+Python 2/Python 3. Thus, this codebase can not expect it to be present.
+To work around this, mypy allows the typing import to be behind a False-y
+optional to prevent it from running at runtime and type-comments can be used
+to remove the need for the types to be accessible directly during runtime.
+
+This module provides the False-y guard in a nicely named fashion so that a
+curious maintainer can reach here to read this.
+
+In packaging, all static-typing related imports should be guarded as follows:
+
+ from packaging._typing import TYPE_CHECKING
+
+ if TYPE_CHECKING:
+ from typing import ...
+
+Ref: https://github.com/python/mypy/issues/3216
+"""
+
+__all__ = ["TYPE_CHECKING", "cast"]
+
+# The TYPE_CHECKING constant defined by the typing module is False at runtime
+# but True while type checking.
+if False: # pragma: no cover
+ from typing import TYPE_CHECKING
+else:
+ TYPE_CHECKING = False
+
+# typing's cast syntax requires calling typing.cast at runtime, but we don't
+# want to import typing at runtime. Here, we inform the type checkers that
+# we're importing `typing.cast` as `cast` and re-implement typing.cast's
+# runtime behavior in a block that is ignored by type checkers.
+if TYPE_CHECKING: # pragma: no cover
+ # not executed at runtime
+ from typing import cast
+else:
+ # executed at runtime
+ def cast(type_, value): # noqa
+ return value
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/markers.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/markers.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..fd1559c10e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/markers.py
@@ -0,0 +1,328 @@
+# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
+# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
+# for complete details.
+from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
+
+import operator
+import os
+import platform
+import sys
+
+from pkg_resources.extern.pyparsing import ParseException, ParseResults, stringStart, stringEnd
+from pkg_resources.extern.pyparsing import ZeroOrMore, Group, Forward, QuotedString
+from pkg_resources.extern.pyparsing import Literal as L # noqa
+
+from ._compat import string_types
+from ._typing import TYPE_CHECKING
+from .specifiers import Specifier, InvalidSpecifier
+
+if TYPE_CHECKING: # pragma: no cover
+ from typing import Any, Callable, Dict, List, Optional, Tuple, Union
+
+ Operator = Callable[[str, str], bool]
+
+
+__all__ = [
+ "InvalidMarker",
+ "UndefinedComparison",
+ "UndefinedEnvironmentName",
+ "Marker",
+ "default_environment",
+]
+
+
+class InvalidMarker(ValueError):
+ """
+ An invalid marker was found, users should refer to PEP 508.
+ """
+
+
+class UndefinedComparison(ValueError):
+ """
+ An invalid operation was attempted on a value that doesn't support it.
+ """
+
+
+class UndefinedEnvironmentName(ValueError):
+ """
+ A name was attempted to be used that does not exist inside of the
+ environment.
+ """
+
+
+class Node(object):
+ def __init__(self, value):
+ # type: (Any) -> None
+ self.value = value
+
+ def __str__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return str(self.value)
+
+ def __repr__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return "<{0}({1!r})>".format(self.__class__.__name__, str(self))
+
+ def serialize(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ raise NotImplementedError
+
+
+class Variable(Node):
+ def serialize(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return str(self)
+
+
+class Value(Node):
+ def serialize(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return '"{0}"'.format(self)
+
+
+class Op(Node):
+ def serialize(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return str(self)
+
+
+VARIABLE = (
+ L("implementation_version")
+ | L("platform_python_implementation")
+ | L("implementation_name")
+ | L("python_full_version")
+ | L("platform_release")
+ | L("platform_version")
+ | L("platform_machine")
+ | L("platform_system")
+ | L("python_version")
+ | L("sys_platform")
+ | L("os_name")
+ | L("os.name") # PEP-345
+ | L("sys.platform") # PEP-345
+ | L("platform.version") # PEP-345
+ | L("platform.machine") # PEP-345
+ | L("platform.python_implementation") # PEP-345
+ | L("python_implementation") # undocumented setuptools legacy
+ | L("extra") # PEP-508
+)
+ALIASES = {
+ "os.name": "os_name",
+ "sys.platform": "sys_platform",
+ "platform.version": "platform_version",
+ "platform.machine": "platform_machine",
+ "platform.python_implementation": "platform_python_implementation",
+ "python_implementation": "platform_python_implementation",
+}
+VARIABLE.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: Variable(ALIASES.get(t[0], t[0])))
+
+VERSION_CMP = (
+ L("===") | L("==") | L(">=") | L("<=") | L("!=") | L("~=") | L(">") | L("<")
+)
+
+MARKER_OP = VERSION_CMP | L("not in") | L("in")
+MARKER_OP.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: Op(t[0]))
+
+MARKER_VALUE = QuotedString("'") | QuotedString('"')
+MARKER_VALUE.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: Value(t[0]))
+
+BOOLOP = L("and") | L("or")
+
+MARKER_VAR = VARIABLE | MARKER_VALUE
+
+MARKER_ITEM = Group(MARKER_VAR + MARKER_OP + MARKER_VAR)
+MARKER_ITEM.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: tuple(t[0]))
+
+LPAREN = L("(").suppress()
+RPAREN = L(")").suppress()
+
+MARKER_EXPR = Forward()
+MARKER_ATOM = MARKER_ITEM | Group(LPAREN + MARKER_EXPR + RPAREN)
+MARKER_EXPR << MARKER_ATOM + ZeroOrMore(BOOLOP + MARKER_EXPR)
+
+MARKER = stringStart + MARKER_EXPR + stringEnd
+
+
+def _coerce_parse_result(results):
+ # type: (Union[ParseResults, List[Any]]) -> List[Any]
+ if isinstance(results, ParseResults):
+ return [_coerce_parse_result(i) for i in results]
+ else:
+ return results
+
+
+def _format_marker(marker, first=True):
+ # type: (Union[List[str], Tuple[Node, ...], str], Optional[bool]) -> str
+
+ assert isinstance(marker, (list, tuple, string_types))
+
+ # Sometimes we have a structure like [[...]] which is a single item list
+ # where the single item is itself it's own list. In that case we want skip
+ # the rest of this function so that we don't get extraneous () on the
+ # outside.
+ if (
+ isinstance(marker, list)
+ and len(marker) == 1
+ and isinstance(marker[0], (list, tuple))
+ ):
+ return _format_marker(marker[0])
+
+ if isinstance(marker, list):
+ inner = (_format_marker(m, first=False) for m in marker)
+ if first:
+ return " ".join(inner)
+ else:
+ return "(" + " ".join(inner) + ")"
+ elif isinstance(marker, tuple):
+ return " ".join([m.serialize() for m in marker])
+ else:
+ return marker
+
+
+_operators = {
+ "in": lambda lhs, rhs: lhs in rhs,
+ "not in": lambda lhs, rhs: lhs not in rhs,
+ "<": operator.lt,
+ "<=": operator.le,
+ "==": operator.eq,
+ "!=": operator.ne,
+ ">=": operator.ge,
+ ">": operator.gt,
+} # type: Dict[str, Operator]
+
+
+def _eval_op(lhs, op, rhs):
+ # type: (str, Op, str) -> bool
+ try:
+ spec = Specifier("".join([op.serialize(), rhs]))
+ except InvalidSpecifier:
+ pass
+ else:
+ return spec.contains(lhs)
+
+ oper = _operators.get(op.serialize()) # type: Optional[Operator]
+ if oper is None:
+ raise UndefinedComparison(
+ "Undefined {0!r} on {1!r} and {2!r}.".format(op, lhs, rhs)
+ )
+
+ return oper(lhs, rhs)
+
+
+class Undefined(object):
+ pass
+
+
+_undefined = Undefined()
+
+
+def _get_env(environment, name):
+ # type: (Dict[str, str], str) -> str
+ value = environment.get(name, _undefined) # type: Union[str, Undefined]
+
+ if isinstance(value, Undefined):
+ raise UndefinedEnvironmentName(
+ "{0!r} does not exist in evaluation environment.".format(name)
+ )
+
+ return value
+
+
+def _evaluate_markers(markers, environment):
+ # type: (List[Any], Dict[str, str]) -> bool
+ groups = [[]] # type: List[List[bool]]
+
+ for marker in markers:
+ assert isinstance(marker, (list, tuple, string_types))
+
+ if isinstance(marker, list):
+ groups[-1].append(_evaluate_markers(marker, environment))
+ elif isinstance(marker, tuple):
+ lhs, op, rhs = marker
+
+ if isinstance(lhs, Variable):
+ lhs_value = _get_env(environment, lhs.value)
+ rhs_value = rhs.value
+ else:
+ lhs_value = lhs.value
+ rhs_value = _get_env(environment, rhs.value)
+
+ groups[-1].append(_eval_op(lhs_value, op, rhs_value))
+ else:
+ assert marker in ["and", "or"]
+ if marker == "or":
+ groups.append([])
+
+ return any(all(item) for item in groups)
+
+
+def format_full_version(info):
+ # type: (sys._version_info) -> str
+ version = "{0.major}.{0.minor}.{0.micro}".format(info)
+ kind = info.releaselevel
+ if kind != "final":
+ version += kind[0] + str(info.serial)
+ return version
+
+
+def default_environment():
+ # type: () -> Dict[str, str]
+ if hasattr(sys, "implementation"):
+ # Ignoring the `sys.implementation` reference for type checking due to
+ # mypy not liking that the attribute doesn't exist in Python 2.7 when
+ # run with the `--py27` flag.
+ iver = format_full_version(sys.implementation.version) # type: ignore
+ implementation_name = sys.implementation.name # type: ignore
+ else:
+ iver = "0"
+ implementation_name = ""
+
+ return {
+ "implementation_name": implementation_name,
+ "implementation_version": iver,
+ "os_name": os.name,
+ "platform_machine": platform.machine(),
+ "platform_release": platform.release(),
+ "platform_system": platform.system(),
+ "platform_version": platform.version(),
+ "python_full_version": platform.python_version(),
+ "platform_python_implementation": platform.python_implementation(),
+ "python_version": ".".join(platform.python_version_tuple()[:2]),
+ "sys_platform": sys.platform,
+ }
+
+
+class Marker(object):
+ def __init__(self, marker):
+ # type: (str) -> None
+ try:
+ self._markers = _coerce_parse_result(MARKER.parseString(marker))
+ except ParseException as e:
+ err_str = "Invalid marker: {0!r}, parse error at {1!r}".format(
+ marker, marker[e.loc : e.loc + 8]
+ )
+ raise InvalidMarker(err_str)
+
+ def __str__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return _format_marker(self._markers)
+
+ def __repr__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return "<Marker({0!r})>".format(str(self))
+
+ def evaluate(self, environment=None):
+ # type: (Optional[Dict[str, str]]) -> bool
+ """Evaluate a marker.
+
+ Return the boolean from evaluating the given marker against the
+ environment. environment is an optional argument to override all or
+ part of the determined environment.
+
+ The environment is determined from the current Python process.
+ """
+ current_environment = default_environment()
+ if environment is not None:
+ current_environment.update(environment)
+
+ return _evaluate_markers(self._markers, current_environment)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/requirements.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/requirements.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..9495a1df1e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/requirements.py
@@ -0,0 +1,145 @@
+# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
+# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
+# for complete details.
+from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
+
+import string
+import re
+
+from pkg_resources.extern.pyparsing import stringStart, stringEnd, originalTextFor, ParseException
+from pkg_resources.extern.pyparsing import ZeroOrMore, Word, Optional, Regex, Combine
+from pkg_resources.extern.pyparsing import Literal as L # noqa
+from urllib import parse as urlparse
+
+from ._typing import TYPE_CHECKING
+from .markers import MARKER_EXPR, Marker
+from .specifiers import LegacySpecifier, Specifier, SpecifierSet
+
+if TYPE_CHECKING: # pragma: no cover
+ from typing import List
+
+
+class InvalidRequirement(ValueError):
+ """
+ An invalid requirement was found, users should refer to PEP 508.
+ """
+
+
+ALPHANUM = Word(string.ascii_letters + string.digits)
+
+LBRACKET = L("[").suppress()
+RBRACKET = L("]").suppress()
+LPAREN = L("(").suppress()
+RPAREN = L(")").suppress()
+COMMA = L(",").suppress()
+SEMICOLON = L(";").suppress()
+AT = L("@").suppress()
+
+PUNCTUATION = Word("-_.")
+IDENTIFIER_END = ALPHANUM | (ZeroOrMore(PUNCTUATION) + ALPHANUM)
+IDENTIFIER = Combine(ALPHANUM + ZeroOrMore(IDENTIFIER_END))
+
+NAME = IDENTIFIER("name")
+EXTRA = IDENTIFIER
+
+URI = Regex(r"[^ ]+")("url")
+URL = AT + URI
+
+EXTRAS_LIST = EXTRA + ZeroOrMore(COMMA + EXTRA)
+EXTRAS = (LBRACKET + Optional(EXTRAS_LIST) + RBRACKET)("extras")
+
+VERSION_PEP440 = Regex(Specifier._regex_str, re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE)
+VERSION_LEGACY = Regex(LegacySpecifier._regex_str, re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE)
+
+VERSION_ONE = VERSION_PEP440 ^ VERSION_LEGACY
+VERSION_MANY = Combine(
+ VERSION_ONE + ZeroOrMore(COMMA + VERSION_ONE), joinString=",", adjacent=False
+)("_raw_spec")
+_VERSION_SPEC = Optional(((LPAREN + VERSION_MANY + RPAREN) | VERSION_MANY))
+_VERSION_SPEC.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: t._raw_spec or "")
+
+VERSION_SPEC = originalTextFor(_VERSION_SPEC)("specifier")
+VERSION_SPEC.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: t[1])
+
+MARKER_EXPR = originalTextFor(MARKER_EXPR())("marker")
+MARKER_EXPR.setParseAction(
+ lambda s, l, t: Marker(s[t._original_start : t._original_end])
+)
+MARKER_SEPARATOR = SEMICOLON
+MARKER = MARKER_SEPARATOR + MARKER_EXPR
+
+VERSION_AND_MARKER = VERSION_SPEC + Optional(MARKER)
+URL_AND_MARKER = URL + Optional(MARKER)
+
+NAMED_REQUIREMENT = NAME + Optional(EXTRAS) + (URL_AND_MARKER | VERSION_AND_MARKER)
+
+REQUIREMENT = stringStart + NAMED_REQUIREMENT + stringEnd
+# pkg_resources.extern.pyparsing isn't thread safe during initialization, so we do it eagerly, see
+# issue #104
+REQUIREMENT.parseString("x[]")
+
+
+class Requirement(object):
+ """Parse a requirement.
+
+ Parse a given requirement string into its parts, such as name, specifier,
+ URL, and extras. Raises InvalidRequirement on a badly-formed requirement
+ string.
+ """
+
+ # TODO: Can we test whether something is contained within a requirement?
+ # If so how do we do that? Do we need to test against the _name_ of
+ # the thing as well as the version? What about the markers?
+ # TODO: Can we normalize the name and extra name?
+
+ def __init__(self, requirement_string):
+ # type: (str) -> None
+ try:
+ req = REQUIREMENT.parseString(requirement_string)
+ except ParseException as e:
+ raise InvalidRequirement(
+ 'Parse error at "{0!r}": {1}'.format(
+ requirement_string[e.loc : e.loc + 8], e.msg
+ )
+ )
+
+ self.name = req.name
+ if req.url:
+ parsed_url = urlparse.urlparse(req.url)
+ if parsed_url.scheme == "file":
+ if urlparse.urlunparse(parsed_url) != req.url:
+ raise InvalidRequirement("Invalid URL given")
+ elif not (parsed_url.scheme and parsed_url.netloc) or (
+ not parsed_url.scheme and not parsed_url.netloc
+ ):
+ raise InvalidRequirement("Invalid URL: {0}".format(req.url))
+ self.url = req.url
+ else:
+ self.url = None
+ self.extras = set(req.extras.asList() if req.extras else [])
+ self.specifier = SpecifierSet(req.specifier)
+ self.marker = req.marker if req.marker else None
+
+ def __str__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ parts = [self.name] # type: List[str]
+
+ if self.extras:
+ parts.append("[{0}]".format(",".join(sorted(self.extras))))
+
+ if self.specifier:
+ parts.append(str(self.specifier))
+
+ if self.url:
+ parts.append("@ {0}".format(self.url))
+ if self.marker:
+ parts.append(" ")
+
+ if self.marker:
+ parts.append("; {0}".format(self.marker))
+
+ return "".join(parts)
+
+ def __repr__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return "<Requirement({0!r})>".format(str(self))
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/specifiers.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/specifiers.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..fe09bb1dbb
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/specifiers.py
@@ -0,0 +1,863 @@
+# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
+# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
+# for complete details.
+from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
+
+import abc
+import functools
+import itertools
+import re
+
+from ._compat import string_types, with_metaclass
+from ._typing import TYPE_CHECKING
+from .utils import canonicalize_version
+from .version import Version, LegacyVersion, parse
+
+if TYPE_CHECKING: # pragma: no cover
+ from typing import (
+ List,
+ Dict,
+ Union,
+ Iterable,
+ Iterator,
+ Optional,
+ Callable,
+ Tuple,
+ FrozenSet,
+ )
+
+ ParsedVersion = Union[Version, LegacyVersion]
+ UnparsedVersion = Union[Version, LegacyVersion, str]
+ CallableOperator = Callable[[ParsedVersion, str], bool]
+
+
+class InvalidSpecifier(ValueError):
+ """
+ An invalid specifier was found, users should refer to PEP 440.
+ """
+
+
+class BaseSpecifier(with_metaclass(abc.ABCMeta, object)): # type: ignore
+ @abc.abstractmethod
+ def __str__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ """
+ Returns the str representation of this Specifier like object. This
+ should be representative of the Specifier itself.
+ """
+
+ @abc.abstractmethod
+ def __hash__(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ """
+ Returns a hash value for this Specifier like object.
+ """
+
+ @abc.abstractmethod
+ def __eq__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ """
+ Returns a boolean representing whether or not the two Specifier like
+ objects are equal.
+ """
+
+ @abc.abstractmethod
+ def __ne__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ """
+ Returns a boolean representing whether or not the two Specifier like
+ objects are not equal.
+ """
+
+ @abc.abstractproperty
+ def prereleases(self):
+ # type: () -> Optional[bool]
+ """
+ Returns whether or not pre-releases as a whole are allowed by this
+ specifier.
+ """
+
+ @prereleases.setter
+ def prereleases(self, value):
+ # type: (bool) -> None
+ """
+ Sets whether or not pre-releases as a whole are allowed by this
+ specifier.
+ """
+
+ @abc.abstractmethod
+ def contains(self, item, prereleases=None):
+ # type: (str, Optional[bool]) -> bool
+ """
+ Determines if the given item is contained within this specifier.
+ """
+
+ @abc.abstractmethod
+ def filter(self, iterable, prereleases=None):
+ # type: (Iterable[UnparsedVersion], Optional[bool]) -> Iterable[UnparsedVersion]
+ """
+ Takes an iterable of items and filters them so that only items which
+ are contained within this specifier are allowed in it.
+ """
+
+
+class _IndividualSpecifier(BaseSpecifier):
+
+ _operators = {} # type: Dict[str, str]
+
+ def __init__(self, spec="", prereleases=None):
+ # type: (str, Optional[bool]) -> None
+ match = self._regex.search(spec)
+ if not match:
+ raise InvalidSpecifier("Invalid specifier: '{0}'".format(spec))
+
+ self._spec = (
+ match.group("operator").strip(),
+ match.group("version").strip(),
+ ) # type: Tuple[str, str]
+
+ # Store whether or not this Specifier should accept prereleases
+ self._prereleases = prereleases
+
+ def __repr__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ pre = (
+ ", prereleases={0!r}".format(self.prereleases)
+ if self._prereleases is not None
+ else ""
+ )
+
+ return "<{0}({1!r}{2})>".format(self.__class__.__name__, str(self), pre)
+
+ def __str__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return "{0}{1}".format(*self._spec)
+
+ @property
+ def _canonical_spec(self):
+ # type: () -> Tuple[str, Union[Version, str]]
+ return self._spec[0], canonicalize_version(self._spec[1])
+
+ def __hash__(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ return hash(self._canonical_spec)
+
+ def __eq__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ if isinstance(other, string_types):
+ try:
+ other = self.__class__(str(other))
+ except InvalidSpecifier:
+ return NotImplemented
+ elif not isinstance(other, self.__class__):
+ return NotImplemented
+
+ return self._canonical_spec == other._canonical_spec
+
+ def __ne__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ if isinstance(other, string_types):
+ try:
+ other = self.__class__(str(other))
+ except InvalidSpecifier:
+ return NotImplemented
+ elif not isinstance(other, self.__class__):
+ return NotImplemented
+
+ return self._spec != other._spec
+
+ def _get_operator(self, op):
+ # type: (str) -> CallableOperator
+ operator_callable = getattr(
+ self, "_compare_{0}".format(self._operators[op])
+ ) # type: CallableOperator
+ return operator_callable
+
+ def _coerce_version(self, version):
+ # type: (UnparsedVersion) -> ParsedVersion
+ if not isinstance(version, (LegacyVersion, Version)):
+ version = parse(version)
+ return version
+
+ @property
+ def operator(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return self._spec[0]
+
+ @property
+ def version(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return self._spec[1]
+
+ @property
+ def prereleases(self):
+ # type: () -> Optional[bool]
+ return self._prereleases
+
+ @prereleases.setter
+ def prereleases(self, value):
+ # type: (bool) -> None
+ self._prereleases = value
+
+ def __contains__(self, item):
+ # type: (str) -> bool
+ return self.contains(item)
+
+ def contains(self, item, prereleases=None):
+ # type: (UnparsedVersion, Optional[bool]) -> bool
+
+ # Determine if prereleases are to be allowed or not.
+ if prereleases is None:
+ prereleases = self.prereleases
+
+ # Normalize item to a Version or LegacyVersion, this allows us to have
+ # a shortcut for ``"2.0" in Specifier(">=2")
+ normalized_item = self._coerce_version(item)
+
+ # Determine if we should be supporting prereleases in this specifier
+ # or not, if we do not support prereleases than we can short circuit
+ # logic if this version is a prereleases.
+ if normalized_item.is_prerelease and not prereleases:
+ return False
+
+ # Actually do the comparison to determine if this item is contained
+ # within this Specifier or not.
+ operator_callable = self._get_operator(self.operator) # type: CallableOperator
+ return operator_callable(normalized_item, self.version)
+
+ def filter(self, iterable, prereleases=None):
+ # type: (Iterable[UnparsedVersion], Optional[bool]) -> Iterable[UnparsedVersion]
+
+ yielded = False
+ found_prereleases = []
+
+ kw = {"prereleases": prereleases if prereleases is not None else True}
+
+ # Attempt to iterate over all the values in the iterable and if any of
+ # them match, yield them.
+ for version in iterable:
+ parsed_version = self._coerce_version(version)
+
+ if self.contains(parsed_version, **kw):
+ # If our version is a prerelease, and we were not set to allow
+ # prereleases, then we'll store it for later incase nothing
+ # else matches this specifier.
+ if parsed_version.is_prerelease and not (
+ prereleases or self.prereleases
+ ):
+ found_prereleases.append(version)
+ # Either this is not a prerelease, or we should have been
+ # accepting prereleases from the beginning.
+ else:
+ yielded = True
+ yield version
+
+ # Now that we've iterated over everything, determine if we've yielded
+ # any values, and if we have not and we have any prereleases stored up
+ # then we will go ahead and yield the prereleases.
+ if not yielded and found_prereleases:
+ for version in found_prereleases:
+ yield version
+
+
+class LegacySpecifier(_IndividualSpecifier):
+
+ _regex_str = r"""
+ (?P<operator>(==|!=|<=|>=|<|>))
+ \s*
+ (?P<version>
+ [^,;\s)]* # Since this is a "legacy" specifier, and the version
+ # string can be just about anything, we match everything
+ # except for whitespace, a semi-colon for marker support,
+ # a closing paren since versions can be enclosed in
+ # them, and a comma since it's a version separator.
+ )
+ """
+
+ _regex = re.compile(r"^\s*" + _regex_str + r"\s*$", re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE)
+
+ _operators = {
+ "==": "equal",
+ "!=": "not_equal",
+ "<=": "less_than_equal",
+ ">=": "greater_than_equal",
+ "<": "less_than",
+ ">": "greater_than",
+ }
+
+ def _coerce_version(self, version):
+ # type: (Union[ParsedVersion, str]) -> LegacyVersion
+ if not isinstance(version, LegacyVersion):
+ version = LegacyVersion(str(version))
+ return version
+
+ def _compare_equal(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (LegacyVersion, str) -> bool
+ return prospective == self._coerce_version(spec)
+
+ def _compare_not_equal(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (LegacyVersion, str) -> bool
+ return prospective != self._coerce_version(spec)
+
+ def _compare_less_than_equal(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (LegacyVersion, str) -> bool
+ return prospective <= self._coerce_version(spec)
+
+ def _compare_greater_than_equal(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (LegacyVersion, str) -> bool
+ return prospective >= self._coerce_version(spec)
+
+ def _compare_less_than(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (LegacyVersion, str) -> bool
+ return prospective < self._coerce_version(spec)
+
+ def _compare_greater_than(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (LegacyVersion, str) -> bool
+ return prospective > self._coerce_version(spec)
+
+
+def _require_version_compare(
+ fn # type: (Callable[[Specifier, ParsedVersion, str], bool])
+):
+ # type: (...) -> Callable[[Specifier, ParsedVersion, str], bool]
+ @functools.wraps(fn)
+ def wrapped(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (Specifier, ParsedVersion, str) -> bool
+ if not isinstance(prospective, Version):
+ return False
+ return fn(self, prospective, spec)
+
+ return wrapped
+
+
+class Specifier(_IndividualSpecifier):
+
+ _regex_str = r"""
+ (?P<operator>(~=|==|!=|<=|>=|<|>|===))
+ (?P<version>
+ (?:
+ # The identity operators allow for an escape hatch that will
+ # do an exact string match of the version you wish to install.
+ # This will not be parsed by PEP 440 and we cannot determine
+ # any semantic meaning from it. This operator is discouraged
+ # but included entirely as an escape hatch.
+ (?<====) # Only match for the identity operator
+ \s*
+ [^\s]* # We just match everything, except for whitespace
+ # since we are only testing for strict identity.
+ )
+ |
+ (?:
+ # The (non)equality operators allow for wild card and local
+ # versions to be specified so we have to define these two
+ # operators separately to enable that.
+ (?<===|!=) # Only match for equals and not equals
+
+ \s*
+ v?
+ (?:[0-9]+!)? # epoch
+ [0-9]+(?:\.[0-9]+)* # release
+ (?: # pre release
+ [-_\.]?
+ (a|b|c|rc|alpha|beta|pre|preview)
+ [-_\.]?
+ [0-9]*
+ )?
+ (?: # post release
+ (?:-[0-9]+)|(?:[-_\.]?(post|rev|r)[-_\.]?[0-9]*)
+ )?
+
+ # You cannot use a wild card and a dev or local version
+ # together so group them with a | and make them optional.
+ (?:
+ (?:[-_\.]?dev[-_\.]?[0-9]*)? # dev release
+ (?:\+[a-z0-9]+(?:[-_\.][a-z0-9]+)*)? # local
+ |
+ \.\* # Wild card syntax of .*
+ )?
+ )
+ |
+ (?:
+ # The compatible operator requires at least two digits in the
+ # release segment.
+ (?<=~=) # Only match for the compatible operator
+
+ \s*
+ v?
+ (?:[0-9]+!)? # epoch
+ [0-9]+(?:\.[0-9]+)+ # release (We have a + instead of a *)
+ (?: # pre release
+ [-_\.]?
+ (a|b|c|rc|alpha|beta|pre|preview)
+ [-_\.]?
+ [0-9]*
+ )?
+ (?: # post release
+ (?:-[0-9]+)|(?:[-_\.]?(post|rev|r)[-_\.]?[0-9]*)
+ )?
+ (?:[-_\.]?dev[-_\.]?[0-9]*)? # dev release
+ )
+ |
+ (?:
+ # All other operators only allow a sub set of what the
+ # (non)equality operators do. Specifically they do not allow
+ # local versions to be specified nor do they allow the prefix
+ # matching wild cards.
+ (?<!==|!=|~=) # We have special cases for these
+ # operators so we want to make sure they
+ # don't match here.
+
+ \s*
+ v?
+ (?:[0-9]+!)? # epoch
+ [0-9]+(?:\.[0-9]+)* # release
+ (?: # pre release
+ [-_\.]?
+ (a|b|c|rc|alpha|beta|pre|preview)
+ [-_\.]?
+ [0-9]*
+ )?
+ (?: # post release
+ (?:-[0-9]+)|(?:[-_\.]?(post|rev|r)[-_\.]?[0-9]*)
+ )?
+ (?:[-_\.]?dev[-_\.]?[0-9]*)? # dev release
+ )
+ )
+ """
+
+ _regex = re.compile(r"^\s*" + _regex_str + r"\s*$", re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE)
+
+ _operators = {
+ "~=": "compatible",
+ "==": "equal",
+ "!=": "not_equal",
+ "<=": "less_than_equal",
+ ">=": "greater_than_equal",
+ "<": "less_than",
+ ">": "greater_than",
+ "===": "arbitrary",
+ }
+
+ @_require_version_compare
+ def _compare_compatible(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (ParsedVersion, str) -> bool
+
+ # Compatible releases have an equivalent combination of >= and ==. That
+ # is that ~=2.2 is equivalent to >=2.2,==2.*. This allows us to
+ # implement this in terms of the other specifiers instead of
+ # implementing it ourselves. The only thing we need to do is construct
+ # the other specifiers.
+
+ # We want everything but the last item in the version, but we want to
+ # ignore post and dev releases and we want to treat the pre-release as
+ # it's own separate segment.
+ prefix = ".".join(
+ list(
+ itertools.takewhile(
+ lambda x: (not x.startswith("post") and not x.startswith("dev")),
+ _version_split(spec),
+ )
+ )[:-1]
+ )
+
+ # Add the prefix notation to the end of our string
+ prefix += ".*"
+
+ return self._get_operator(">=")(prospective, spec) and self._get_operator("==")(
+ prospective, prefix
+ )
+
+ @_require_version_compare
+ def _compare_equal(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (ParsedVersion, str) -> bool
+
+ # We need special logic to handle prefix matching
+ if spec.endswith(".*"):
+ # In the case of prefix matching we want to ignore local segment.
+ prospective = Version(prospective.public)
+ # Split the spec out by dots, and pretend that there is an implicit
+ # dot in between a release segment and a pre-release segment.
+ split_spec = _version_split(spec[:-2]) # Remove the trailing .*
+
+ # Split the prospective version out by dots, and pretend that there
+ # is an implicit dot in between a release segment and a pre-release
+ # segment.
+ split_prospective = _version_split(str(prospective))
+
+ # Shorten the prospective version to be the same length as the spec
+ # so that we can determine if the specifier is a prefix of the
+ # prospective version or not.
+ shortened_prospective = split_prospective[: len(split_spec)]
+
+ # Pad out our two sides with zeros so that they both equal the same
+ # length.
+ padded_spec, padded_prospective = _pad_version(
+ split_spec, shortened_prospective
+ )
+
+ return padded_prospective == padded_spec
+ else:
+ # Convert our spec string into a Version
+ spec_version = Version(spec)
+
+ # If the specifier does not have a local segment, then we want to
+ # act as if the prospective version also does not have a local
+ # segment.
+ if not spec_version.local:
+ prospective = Version(prospective.public)
+
+ return prospective == spec_version
+
+ @_require_version_compare
+ def _compare_not_equal(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (ParsedVersion, str) -> bool
+ return not self._compare_equal(prospective, spec)
+
+ @_require_version_compare
+ def _compare_less_than_equal(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (ParsedVersion, str) -> bool
+
+ # NB: Local version identifiers are NOT permitted in the version
+ # specifier, so local version labels can be universally removed from
+ # the prospective version.
+ return Version(prospective.public) <= Version(spec)
+
+ @_require_version_compare
+ def _compare_greater_than_equal(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (ParsedVersion, str) -> bool
+
+ # NB: Local version identifiers are NOT permitted in the version
+ # specifier, so local version labels can be universally removed from
+ # the prospective version.
+ return Version(prospective.public) >= Version(spec)
+
+ @_require_version_compare
+ def _compare_less_than(self, prospective, spec_str):
+ # type: (ParsedVersion, str) -> bool
+
+ # Convert our spec to a Version instance, since we'll want to work with
+ # it as a version.
+ spec = Version(spec_str)
+
+ # Check to see if the prospective version is less than the spec
+ # version. If it's not we can short circuit and just return False now
+ # instead of doing extra unneeded work.
+ if not prospective < spec:
+ return False
+
+ # This special case is here so that, unless the specifier itself
+ # includes is a pre-release version, that we do not accept pre-release
+ # versions for the version mentioned in the specifier (e.g. <3.1 should
+ # not match 3.1.dev0, but should match 3.0.dev0).
+ if not spec.is_prerelease and prospective.is_prerelease:
+ if Version(prospective.base_version) == Version(spec.base_version):
+ return False
+
+ # If we've gotten to here, it means that prospective version is both
+ # less than the spec version *and* it's not a pre-release of the same
+ # version in the spec.
+ return True
+
+ @_require_version_compare
+ def _compare_greater_than(self, prospective, spec_str):
+ # type: (ParsedVersion, str) -> bool
+
+ # Convert our spec to a Version instance, since we'll want to work with
+ # it as a version.
+ spec = Version(spec_str)
+
+ # Check to see if the prospective version is greater than the spec
+ # version. If it's not we can short circuit and just return False now
+ # instead of doing extra unneeded work.
+ if not prospective > spec:
+ return False
+
+ # This special case is here so that, unless the specifier itself
+ # includes is a post-release version, that we do not accept
+ # post-release versions for the version mentioned in the specifier
+ # (e.g. >3.1 should not match 3.0.post0, but should match 3.2.post0).
+ if not spec.is_postrelease and prospective.is_postrelease:
+ if Version(prospective.base_version) == Version(spec.base_version):
+ return False
+
+ # Ensure that we do not allow a local version of the version mentioned
+ # in the specifier, which is technically greater than, to match.
+ if prospective.local is not None:
+ if Version(prospective.base_version) == Version(spec.base_version):
+ return False
+
+ # If we've gotten to here, it means that prospective version is both
+ # greater than the spec version *and* it's not a pre-release of the
+ # same version in the spec.
+ return True
+
+ def _compare_arbitrary(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (Version, str) -> bool
+ return str(prospective).lower() == str(spec).lower()
+
+ @property
+ def prereleases(self):
+ # type: () -> bool
+
+ # If there is an explicit prereleases set for this, then we'll just
+ # blindly use that.
+ if self._prereleases is not None:
+ return self._prereleases
+
+ # Look at all of our specifiers and determine if they are inclusive
+ # operators, and if they are if they are including an explicit
+ # prerelease.
+ operator, version = self._spec
+ if operator in ["==", ">=", "<=", "~=", "==="]:
+ # The == specifier can include a trailing .*, if it does we
+ # want to remove before parsing.
+ if operator == "==" and version.endswith(".*"):
+ version = version[:-2]
+
+ # Parse the version, and if it is a pre-release than this
+ # specifier allows pre-releases.
+ if parse(version).is_prerelease:
+ return True
+
+ return False
+
+ @prereleases.setter
+ def prereleases(self, value):
+ # type: (bool) -> None
+ self._prereleases = value
+
+
+_prefix_regex = re.compile(r"^([0-9]+)((?:a|b|c|rc)[0-9]+)$")
+
+
+def _version_split(version):
+ # type: (str) -> List[str]
+ result = [] # type: List[str]
+ for item in version.split("."):
+ match = _prefix_regex.search(item)
+ if match:
+ result.extend(match.groups())
+ else:
+ result.append(item)
+ return result
+
+
+def _pad_version(left, right):
+ # type: (List[str], List[str]) -> Tuple[List[str], List[str]]
+ left_split, right_split = [], []
+
+ # Get the release segment of our versions
+ left_split.append(list(itertools.takewhile(lambda x: x.isdigit(), left)))
+ right_split.append(list(itertools.takewhile(lambda x: x.isdigit(), right)))
+
+ # Get the rest of our versions
+ left_split.append(left[len(left_split[0]) :])
+ right_split.append(right[len(right_split[0]) :])
+
+ # Insert our padding
+ left_split.insert(1, ["0"] * max(0, len(right_split[0]) - len(left_split[0])))
+ right_split.insert(1, ["0"] * max(0, len(left_split[0]) - len(right_split[0])))
+
+ return (list(itertools.chain(*left_split)), list(itertools.chain(*right_split)))
+
+
+class SpecifierSet(BaseSpecifier):
+ def __init__(self, specifiers="", prereleases=None):
+ # type: (str, Optional[bool]) -> None
+
+ # Split on , to break each individual specifier into it's own item, and
+ # strip each item to remove leading/trailing whitespace.
+ split_specifiers = [s.strip() for s in specifiers.split(",") if s.strip()]
+
+ # Parsed each individual specifier, attempting first to make it a
+ # Specifier and falling back to a LegacySpecifier.
+ parsed = set()
+ for specifier in split_specifiers:
+ try:
+ parsed.add(Specifier(specifier))
+ except InvalidSpecifier:
+ parsed.add(LegacySpecifier(specifier))
+
+ # Turn our parsed specifiers into a frozen set and save them for later.
+ self._specs = frozenset(parsed)
+
+ # Store our prereleases value so we can use it later to determine if
+ # we accept prereleases or not.
+ self._prereleases = prereleases
+
+ def __repr__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ pre = (
+ ", prereleases={0!r}".format(self.prereleases)
+ if self._prereleases is not None
+ else ""
+ )
+
+ return "<SpecifierSet({0!r}{1})>".format(str(self), pre)
+
+ def __str__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return ",".join(sorted(str(s) for s in self._specs))
+
+ def __hash__(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ return hash(self._specs)
+
+ def __and__(self, other):
+ # type: (Union[SpecifierSet, str]) -> SpecifierSet
+ if isinstance(other, string_types):
+ other = SpecifierSet(other)
+ elif not isinstance(other, SpecifierSet):
+ return NotImplemented
+
+ specifier = SpecifierSet()
+ specifier._specs = frozenset(self._specs | other._specs)
+
+ if self._prereleases is None and other._prereleases is not None:
+ specifier._prereleases = other._prereleases
+ elif self._prereleases is not None and other._prereleases is None:
+ specifier._prereleases = self._prereleases
+ elif self._prereleases == other._prereleases:
+ specifier._prereleases = self._prereleases
+ else:
+ raise ValueError(
+ "Cannot combine SpecifierSets with True and False prerelease "
+ "overrides."
+ )
+
+ return specifier
+
+ def __eq__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ if isinstance(other, (string_types, _IndividualSpecifier)):
+ other = SpecifierSet(str(other))
+ elif not isinstance(other, SpecifierSet):
+ return NotImplemented
+
+ return self._specs == other._specs
+
+ def __ne__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ if isinstance(other, (string_types, _IndividualSpecifier)):
+ other = SpecifierSet(str(other))
+ elif not isinstance(other, SpecifierSet):
+ return NotImplemented
+
+ return self._specs != other._specs
+
+ def __len__(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ return len(self._specs)
+
+ def __iter__(self):
+ # type: () -> Iterator[FrozenSet[_IndividualSpecifier]]
+ return iter(self._specs)
+
+ @property
+ def prereleases(self):
+ # type: () -> Optional[bool]
+
+ # If we have been given an explicit prerelease modifier, then we'll
+ # pass that through here.
+ if self._prereleases is not None:
+ return self._prereleases
+
+ # If we don't have any specifiers, and we don't have a forced value,
+ # then we'll just return None since we don't know if this should have
+ # pre-releases or not.
+ if not self._specs:
+ return None
+
+ # Otherwise we'll see if any of the given specifiers accept
+ # prereleases, if any of them do we'll return True, otherwise False.
+ return any(s.prereleases for s in self._specs)
+
+ @prereleases.setter
+ def prereleases(self, value):
+ # type: (bool) -> None
+ self._prereleases = value
+
+ def __contains__(self, item):
+ # type: (Union[ParsedVersion, str]) -> bool
+ return self.contains(item)
+
+ def contains(self, item, prereleases=None):
+ # type: (Union[ParsedVersion, str], Optional[bool]) -> bool
+
+ # Ensure that our item is a Version or LegacyVersion instance.
+ if not isinstance(item, (LegacyVersion, Version)):
+ item = parse(item)
+
+ # Determine if we're forcing a prerelease or not, if we're not forcing
+ # one for this particular filter call, then we'll use whatever the
+ # SpecifierSet thinks for whether or not we should support prereleases.
+ if prereleases is None:
+ prereleases = self.prereleases
+
+ # We can determine if we're going to allow pre-releases by looking to
+ # see if any of the underlying items supports them. If none of them do
+ # and this item is a pre-release then we do not allow it and we can
+ # short circuit that here.
+ # Note: This means that 1.0.dev1 would not be contained in something
+ # like >=1.0.devabc however it would be in >=1.0.debabc,>0.0.dev0
+ if not prereleases and item.is_prerelease:
+ return False
+
+ # We simply dispatch to the underlying specs here to make sure that the
+ # given version is contained within all of them.
+ # Note: This use of all() here means that an empty set of specifiers
+ # will always return True, this is an explicit design decision.
+ return all(s.contains(item, prereleases=prereleases) for s in self._specs)
+
+ def filter(
+ self,
+ iterable, # type: Iterable[Union[ParsedVersion, str]]
+ prereleases=None, # type: Optional[bool]
+ ):
+ # type: (...) -> Iterable[Union[ParsedVersion, str]]
+
+ # Determine if we're forcing a prerelease or not, if we're not forcing
+ # one for this particular filter call, then we'll use whatever the
+ # SpecifierSet thinks for whether or not we should support prereleases.
+ if prereleases is None:
+ prereleases = self.prereleases
+
+ # If we have any specifiers, then we want to wrap our iterable in the
+ # filter method for each one, this will act as a logical AND amongst
+ # each specifier.
+ if self._specs:
+ for spec in self._specs:
+ iterable = spec.filter(iterable, prereleases=bool(prereleases))
+ return iterable
+ # If we do not have any specifiers, then we need to have a rough filter
+ # which will filter out any pre-releases, unless there are no final
+ # releases, and which will filter out LegacyVersion in general.
+ else:
+ filtered = [] # type: List[Union[ParsedVersion, str]]
+ found_prereleases = [] # type: List[Union[ParsedVersion, str]]
+
+ for item in iterable:
+ # Ensure that we some kind of Version class for this item.
+ if not isinstance(item, (LegacyVersion, Version)):
+ parsed_version = parse(item)
+ else:
+ parsed_version = item
+
+ # Filter out any item which is parsed as a LegacyVersion
+ if isinstance(parsed_version, LegacyVersion):
+ continue
+
+ # Store any item which is a pre-release for later unless we've
+ # already found a final version or we are accepting prereleases
+ if parsed_version.is_prerelease and not prereleases:
+ if not filtered:
+ found_prereleases.append(item)
+ else:
+ filtered.append(item)
+
+ # If we've found no items except for pre-releases, then we'll go
+ # ahead and use the pre-releases
+ if not filtered and found_prereleases and prereleases is None:
+ return found_prereleases
+
+ return filtered
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/tags.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/tags.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..9064910b8b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/tags.py
@@ -0,0 +1,751 @@
+# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
+# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
+# for complete details.
+
+from __future__ import absolute_import
+
+import distutils.util
+
+try:
+ from importlib.machinery import EXTENSION_SUFFIXES
+except ImportError: # pragma: no cover
+ import imp
+
+ EXTENSION_SUFFIXES = [x[0] for x in imp.get_suffixes()]
+ del imp
+import logging
+import os
+import platform
+import re
+import struct
+import sys
+import sysconfig
+import warnings
+
+from ._typing import TYPE_CHECKING, cast
+
+if TYPE_CHECKING: # pragma: no cover
+ from typing import (
+ Dict,
+ FrozenSet,
+ IO,
+ Iterable,
+ Iterator,
+ List,
+ Optional,
+ Sequence,
+ Tuple,
+ Union,
+ )
+
+ PythonVersion = Sequence[int]
+ MacVersion = Tuple[int, int]
+ GlibcVersion = Tuple[int, int]
+
+
+logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
+
+INTERPRETER_SHORT_NAMES = {
+ "python": "py", # Generic.
+ "cpython": "cp",
+ "pypy": "pp",
+ "ironpython": "ip",
+ "jython": "jy",
+} # type: Dict[str, str]
+
+
+_32_BIT_INTERPRETER = sys.maxsize <= 2 ** 32
+
+
+class Tag(object):
+ """
+ A representation of the tag triple for a wheel.
+
+ Instances are considered immutable and thus are hashable. Equality checking
+ is also supported.
+ """
+
+ __slots__ = ["_interpreter", "_abi", "_platform"]
+
+ def __init__(self, interpreter, abi, platform):
+ # type: (str, str, str) -> None
+ self._interpreter = interpreter.lower()
+ self._abi = abi.lower()
+ self._platform = platform.lower()
+
+ @property
+ def interpreter(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return self._interpreter
+
+ @property
+ def abi(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return self._abi
+
+ @property
+ def platform(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return self._platform
+
+ def __eq__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ if not isinstance(other, Tag):
+ return NotImplemented
+
+ return (
+ (self.platform == other.platform)
+ and (self.abi == other.abi)
+ and (self.interpreter == other.interpreter)
+ )
+
+ def __hash__(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ return hash((self._interpreter, self._abi, self._platform))
+
+ def __str__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return "{}-{}-{}".format(self._interpreter, self._abi, self._platform)
+
+ def __repr__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return "<{self} @ {self_id}>".format(self=self, self_id=id(self))
+
+
+def parse_tag(tag):
+ # type: (str) -> FrozenSet[Tag]
+ """
+ Parses the provided tag (e.g. `py3-none-any`) into a frozenset of Tag instances.
+
+ Returning a set is required due to the possibility that the tag is a
+ compressed tag set.
+ """
+ tags = set()
+ interpreters, abis, platforms = tag.split("-")
+ for interpreter in interpreters.split("."):
+ for abi in abis.split("."):
+ for platform_ in platforms.split("."):
+ tags.add(Tag(interpreter, abi, platform_))
+ return frozenset(tags)
+
+
+def _warn_keyword_parameter(func_name, kwargs):
+ # type: (str, Dict[str, bool]) -> bool
+ """
+ Backwards-compatibility with Python 2.7 to allow treating 'warn' as keyword-only.
+ """
+ if not kwargs:
+ return False
+ elif len(kwargs) > 1 or "warn" not in kwargs:
+ kwargs.pop("warn", None)
+ arg = next(iter(kwargs.keys()))
+ raise TypeError(
+ "{}() got an unexpected keyword argument {!r}".format(func_name, arg)
+ )
+ return kwargs["warn"]
+
+
+def _get_config_var(name, warn=False):
+ # type: (str, bool) -> Union[int, str, None]
+ value = sysconfig.get_config_var(name)
+ if value is None and warn:
+ logger.debug(
+ "Config variable '%s' is unset, Python ABI tag may be incorrect", name
+ )
+ return value
+
+
+def _normalize_string(string):
+ # type: (str) -> str
+ return string.replace(".", "_").replace("-", "_")
+
+
+def _abi3_applies(python_version):
+ # type: (PythonVersion) -> bool
+ """
+ Determine if the Python version supports abi3.
+
+ PEP 384 was first implemented in Python 3.2.
+ """
+ return len(python_version) > 1 and tuple(python_version) >= (3, 2)
+
+
+def _cpython_abis(py_version, warn=False):
+ # type: (PythonVersion, bool) -> List[str]
+ py_version = tuple(py_version) # To allow for version comparison.
+ abis = []
+ version = _version_nodot(py_version[:2])
+ debug = pymalloc = ucs4 = ""
+ with_debug = _get_config_var("Py_DEBUG", warn)
+ has_refcount = hasattr(sys, "gettotalrefcount")
+ # Windows doesn't set Py_DEBUG, so checking for support of debug-compiled
+ # extension modules is the best option.
+ # https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues/3383#issuecomment-173267692
+ has_ext = "_d.pyd" in EXTENSION_SUFFIXES
+ if with_debug or (with_debug is None and (has_refcount or has_ext)):
+ debug = "d"
+ if py_version < (3, 8):
+ with_pymalloc = _get_config_var("WITH_PYMALLOC", warn)
+ if with_pymalloc or with_pymalloc is None:
+ pymalloc = "m"
+ if py_version < (3, 3):
+ unicode_size = _get_config_var("Py_UNICODE_SIZE", warn)
+ if unicode_size == 4 or (
+ unicode_size is None and sys.maxunicode == 0x10FFFF
+ ):
+ ucs4 = "u"
+ elif debug:
+ # Debug builds can also load "normal" extension modules.
+ # We can also assume no UCS-4 or pymalloc requirement.
+ abis.append("cp{version}".format(version=version))
+ abis.insert(
+ 0,
+ "cp{version}{debug}{pymalloc}{ucs4}".format(
+ version=version, debug=debug, pymalloc=pymalloc, ucs4=ucs4
+ ),
+ )
+ return abis
+
+
+def cpython_tags(
+ python_version=None, # type: Optional[PythonVersion]
+ abis=None, # type: Optional[Iterable[str]]
+ platforms=None, # type: Optional[Iterable[str]]
+ **kwargs # type: bool
+):
+ # type: (...) -> Iterator[Tag]
+ """
+ Yields the tags for a CPython interpreter.
+
+ The tags consist of:
+ - cp<python_version>-<abi>-<platform>
+ - cp<python_version>-abi3-<platform>
+ - cp<python_version>-none-<platform>
+ - cp<less than python_version>-abi3-<platform> # Older Python versions down to 3.2.
+
+ If python_version only specifies a major version then user-provided ABIs and
+ the 'none' ABItag will be used.
+
+ If 'abi3' or 'none' are specified in 'abis' then they will be yielded at
+ their normal position and not at the beginning.
+ """
+ warn = _warn_keyword_parameter("cpython_tags", kwargs)
+ if not python_version:
+ python_version = sys.version_info[:2]
+
+ interpreter = "cp{}".format(_version_nodot(python_version[:2]))
+
+ if abis is None:
+ if len(python_version) > 1:
+ abis = _cpython_abis(python_version, warn)
+ else:
+ abis = []
+ abis = list(abis)
+ # 'abi3' and 'none' are explicitly handled later.
+ for explicit_abi in ("abi3", "none"):
+ try:
+ abis.remove(explicit_abi)
+ except ValueError:
+ pass
+
+ platforms = list(platforms or _platform_tags())
+ for abi in abis:
+ for platform_ in platforms:
+ yield Tag(interpreter, abi, platform_)
+ if _abi3_applies(python_version):
+ for tag in (Tag(interpreter, "abi3", platform_) for platform_ in platforms):
+ yield tag
+ for tag in (Tag(interpreter, "none", platform_) for platform_ in platforms):
+ yield tag
+
+ if _abi3_applies(python_version):
+ for minor_version in range(python_version[1] - 1, 1, -1):
+ for platform_ in platforms:
+ interpreter = "cp{version}".format(
+ version=_version_nodot((python_version[0], minor_version))
+ )
+ yield Tag(interpreter, "abi3", platform_)
+
+
+def _generic_abi():
+ # type: () -> Iterator[str]
+ abi = sysconfig.get_config_var("SOABI")
+ if abi:
+ yield _normalize_string(abi)
+
+
+def generic_tags(
+ interpreter=None, # type: Optional[str]
+ abis=None, # type: Optional[Iterable[str]]
+ platforms=None, # type: Optional[Iterable[str]]
+ **kwargs # type: bool
+):
+ # type: (...) -> Iterator[Tag]
+ """
+ Yields the tags for a generic interpreter.
+
+ The tags consist of:
+ - <interpreter>-<abi>-<platform>
+
+ The "none" ABI will be added if it was not explicitly provided.
+ """
+ warn = _warn_keyword_parameter("generic_tags", kwargs)
+ if not interpreter:
+ interp_name = interpreter_name()
+ interp_version = interpreter_version(warn=warn)
+ interpreter = "".join([interp_name, interp_version])
+ if abis is None:
+ abis = _generic_abi()
+ platforms = list(platforms or _platform_tags())
+ abis = list(abis)
+ if "none" not in abis:
+ abis.append("none")
+ for abi in abis:
+ for platform_ in platforms:
+ yield Tag(interpreter, abi, platform_)
+
+
+def _py_interpreter_range(py_version):
+ # type: (PythonVersion) -> Iterator[str]
+ """
+ Yields Python versions in descending order.
+
+ After the latest version, the major-only version will be yielded, and then
+ all previous versions of that major version.
+ """
+ if len(py_version) > 1:
+ yield "py{version}".format(version=_version_nodot(py_version[:2]))
+ yield "py{major}".format(major=py_version[0])
+ if len(py_version) > 1:
+ for minor in range(py_version[1] - 1, -1, -1):
+ yield "py{version}".format(version=_version_nodot((py_version[0], minor)))
+
+
+def compatible_tags(
+ python_version=None, # type: Optional[PythonVersion]
+ interpreter=None, # type: Optional[str]
+ platforms=None, # type: Optional[Iterable[str]]
+):
+ # type: (...) -> Iterator[Tag]
+ """
+ Yields the sequence of tags that are compatible with a specific version of Python.
+
+ The tags consist of:
+ - py*-none-<platform>
+ - <interpreter>-none-any # ... if `interpreter` is provided.
+ - py*-none-any
+ """
+ if not python_version:
+ python_version = sys.version_info[:2]
+ platforms = list(platforms or _platform_tags())
+ for version in _py_interpreter_range(python_version):
+ for platform_ in platforms:
+ yield Tag(version, "none", platform_)
+ if interpreter:
+ yield Tag(interpreter, "none", "any")
+ for version in _py_interpreter_range(python_version):
+ yield Tag(version, "none", "any")
+
+
+def _mac_arch(arch, is_32bit=_32_BIT_INTERPRETER):
+ # type: (str, bool) -> str
+ if not is_32bit:
+ return arch
+
+ if arch.startswith("ppc"):
+ return "ppc"
+
+ return "i386"
+
+
+def _mac_binary_formats(version, cpu_arch):
+ # type: (MacVersion, str) -> List[str]
+ formats = [cpu_arch]
+ if cpu_arch == "x86_64":
+ if version < (10, 4):
+ return []
+ formats.extend(["intel", "fat64", "fat32"])
+
+ elif cpu_arch == "i386":
+ if version < (10, 4):
+ return []
+ formats.extend(["intel", "fat32", "fat"])
+
+ elif cpu_arch == "ppc64":
+ # TODO: Need to care about 32-bit PPC for ppc64 through 10.2?
+ if version > (10, 5) or version < (10, 4):
+ return []
+ formats.append("fat64")
+
+ elif cpu_arch == "ppc":
+ if version > (10, 6):
+ return []
+ formats.extend(["fat32", "fat"])
+
+ formats.append("universal")
+ return formats
+
+
+def mac_platforms(version=None, arch=None):
+ # type: (Optional[MacVersion], Optional[str]) -> Iterator[str]
+ """
+ Yields the platform tags for a macOS system.
+
+ The `version` parameter is a two-item tuple specifying the macOS version to
+ generate platform tags for. The `arch` parameter is the CPU architecture to
+ generate platform tags for. Both parameters default to the appropriate value
+ for the current system.
+ """
+ version_str, _, cpu_arch = platform.mac_ver() # type: ignore
+ if version is None:
+ version = cast("MacVersion", tuple(map(int, version_str.split(".")[:2])))
+ else:
+ version = version
+ if arch is None:
+ arch = _mac_arch(cpu_arch)
+ else:
+ arch = arch
+ for minor_version in range(version[1], -1, -1):
+ compat_version = version[0], minor_version
+ binary_formats = _mac_binary_formats(compat_version, arch)
+ for binary_format in binary_formats:
+ yield "macosx_{major}_{minor}_{binary_format}".format(
+ major=compat_version[0],
+ minor=compat_version[1],
+ binary_format=binary_format,
+ )
+
+
+# From PEP 513.
+def _is_manylinux_compatible(name, glibc_version):
+ # type: (str, GlibcVersion) -> bool
+ # Check for presence of _manylinux module.
+ try:
+ import _manylinux # noqa
+
+ return bool(getattr(_manylinux, name + "_compatible"))
+ except (ImportError, AttributeError):
+ # Fall through to heuristic check below.
+ pass
+
+ return _have_compatible_glibc(*glibc_version)
+
+
+def _glibc_version_string():
+ # type: () -> Optional[str]
+ # Returns glibc version string, or None if not using glibc.
+ return _glibc_version_string_confstr() or _glibc_version_string_ctypes()
+
+
+def _glibc_version_string_confstr():
+ # type: () -> Optional[str]
+ """
+ Primary implementation of glibc_version_string using os.confstr.
+ """
+ # os.confstr is quite a bit faster than ctypes.DLL. It's also less likely
+ # to be broken or missing. This strategy is used in the standard library
+ # platform module.
+ # https://github.com/python/cpython/blob/fcf1d003bf4f0100c9d0921ff3d70e1127ca1b71/Lib/platform.py#L175-L183
+ try:
+ # os.confstr("CS_GNU_LIBC_VERSION") returns a string like "glibc 2.17".
+ version_string = os.confstr( # type: ignore[attr-defined] # noqa: F821
+ "CS_GNU_LIBC_VERSION"
+ )
+ assert version_string is not None
+ _, version = version_string.split() # type: Tuple[str, str]
+ except (AssertionError, AttributeError, OSError, ValueError):
+ # os.confstr() or CS_GNU_LIBC_VERSION not available (or a bad value)...
+ return None
+ return version
+
+
+def _glibc_version_string_ctypes():
+ # type: () -> Optional[str]
+ """
+ Fallback implementation of glibc_version_string using ctypes.
+ """
+ try:
+ import ctypes
+ except ImportError:
+ return None
+
+ # ctypes.CDLL(None) internally calls dlopen(NULL), and as the dlopen
+ # manpage says, "If filename is NULL, then the returned handle is for the
+ # main program". This way we can let the linker do the work to figure out
+ # which libc our process is actually using.
+ #
+ # Note: typeshed is wrong here so we are ignoring this line.
+ process_namespace = ctypes.CDLL(None) # type: ignore
+ try:
+ gnu_get_libc_version = process_namespace.gnu_get_libc_version
+ except AttributeError:
+ # Symbol doesn't exist -> therefore, we are not linked to
+ # glibc.
+ return None
+
+ # Call gnu_get_libc_version, which returns a string like "2.5"
+ gnu_get_libc_version.restype = ctypes.c_char_p
+ version_str = gnu_get_libc_version() # type: str
+ # py2 / py3 compatibility:
+ if not isinstance(version_str, str):
+ version_str = version_str.decode("ascii")
+
+ return version_str
+
+
+# Separated out from have_compatible_glibc for easier unit testing.
+def _check_glibc_version(version_str, required_major, minimum_minor):
+ # type: (str, int, int) -> bool
+ # Parse string and check against requested version.
+ #
+ # We use a regexp instead of str.split because we want to discard any
+ # random junk that might come after the minor version -- this might happen
+ # in patched/forked versions of glibc (e.g. Linaro's version of glibc
+ # uses version strings like "2.20-2014.11"). See gh-3588.
+ m = re.match(r"(?P<major>[0-9]+)\.(?P<minor>[0-9]+)", version_str)
+ if not m:
+ warnings.warn(
+ "Expected glibc version with 2 components major.minor,"
+ " got: %s" % version_str,
+ RuntimeWarning,
+ )
+ return False
+ return (
+ int(m.group("major")) == required_major
+ and int(m.group("minor")) >= minimum_minor
+ )
+
+
+def _have_compatible_glibc(required_major, minimum_minor):
+ # type: (int, int) -> bool
+ version_str = _glibc_version_string()
+ if version_str is None:
+ return False
+ return _check_glibc_version(version_str, required_major, minimum_minor)
+
+
+# Python does not provide platform information at sufficient granularity to
+# identify the architecture of the running executable in some cases, so we
+# determine it dynamically by reading the information from the running
+# process. This only applies on Linux, which uses the ELF format.
+class _ELFFileHeader(object):
+ # https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Executable_and_Linkable_Format#File_header
+ class _InvalidELFFileHeader(ValueError):
+ """
+ An invalid ELF file header was found.
+ """
+
+ ELF_MAGIC_NUMBER = 0x7F454C46
+ ELFCLASS32 = 1
+ ELFCLASS64 = 2
+ ELFDATA2LSB = 1
+ ELFDATA2MSB = 2
+ EM_386 = 3
+ EM_S390 = 22
+ EM_ARM = 40
+ EM_X86_64 = 62
+ EF_ARM_ABIMASK = 0xFF000000
+ EF_ARM_ABI_VER5 = 0x05000000
+ EF_ARM_ABI_FLOAT_HARD = 0x00000400
+
+ def __init__(self, file):
+ # type: (IO[bytes]) -> None
+ def unpack(fmt):
+ # type: (str) -> int
+ try:
+ (result,) = struct.unpack(
+ fmt, file.read(struct.calcsize(fmt))
+ ) # type: (int, )
+ except struct.error:
+ raise _ELFFileHeader._InvalidELFFileHeader()
+ return result
+
+ self.e_ident_magic = unpack(">I")
+ if self.e_ident_magic != self.ELF_MAGIC_NUMBER:
+ raise _ELFFileHeader._InvalidELFFileHeader()
+ self.e_ident_class = unpack("B")
+ if self.e_ident_class not in {self.ELFCLASS32, self.ELFCLASS64}:
+ raise _ELFFileHeader._InvalidELFFileHeader()
+ self.e_ident_data = unpack("B")
+ if self.e_ident_data not in {self.ELFDATA2LSB, self.ELFDATA2MSB}:
+ raise _ELFFileHeader._InvalidELFFileHeader()
+ self.e_ident_version = unpack("B")
+ self.e_ident_osabi = unpack("B")
+ self.e_ident_abiversion = unpack("B")
+ self.e_ident_pad = file.read(7)
+ format_h = "<H" if self.e_ident_data == self.ELFDATA2LSB else ">H"
+ format_i = "<I" if self.e_ident_data == self.ELFDATA2LSB else ">I"
+ format_q = "<Q" if self.e_ident_data == self.ELFDATA2LSB else ">Q"
+ format_p = format_i if self.e_ident_class == self.ELFCLASS32 else format_q
+ self.e_type = unpack(format_h)
+ self.e_machine = unpack(format_h)
+ self.e_version = unpack(format_i)
+ self.e_entry = unpack(format_p)
+ self.e_phoff = unpack(format_p)
+ self.e_shoff = unpack(format_p)
+ self.e_flags = unpack(format_i)
+ self.e_ehsize = unpack(format_h)
+ self.e_phentsize = unpack(format_h)
+ self.e_phnum = unpack(format_h)
+ self.e_shentsize = unpack(format_h)
+ self.e_shnum = unpack(format_h)
+ self.e_shstrndx = unpack(format_h)
+
+
+def _get_elf_header():
+ # type: () -> Optional[_ELFFileHeader]
+ try:
+ with open(sys.executable, "rb") as f:
+ elf_header = _ELFFileHeader(f)
+ except (IOError, OSError, TypeError, _ELFFileHeader._InvalidELFFileHeader):
+ return None
+ return elf_header
+
+
+def _is_linux_armhf():
+ # type: () -> bool
+ # hard-float ABI can be detected from the ELF header of the running
+ # process
+ # https://static.docs.arm.com/ihi0044/g/aaelf32.pdf
+ elf_header = _get_elf_header()
+ if elf_header is None:
+ return False
+ result = elf_header.e_ident_class == elf_header.ELFCLASS32
+ result &= elf_header.e_ident_data == elf_header.ELFDATA2LSB
+ result &= elf_header.e_machine == elf_header.EM_ARM
+ result &= (
+ elf_header.e_flags & elf_header.EF_ARM_ABIMASK
+ ) == elf_header.EF_ARM_ABI_VER5
+ result &= (
+ elf_header.e_flags & elf_header.EF_ARM_ABI_FLOAT_HARD
+ ) == elf_header.EF_ARM_ABI_FLOAT_HARD
+ return result
+
+
+def _is_linux_i686():
+ # type: () -> bool
+ elf_header = _get_elf_header()
+ if elf_header is None:
+ return False
+ result = elf_header.e_ident_class == elf_header.ELFCLASS32
+ result &= elf_header.e_ident_data == elf_header.ELFDATA2LSB
+ result &= elf_header.e_machine == elf_header.EM_386
+ return result
+
+
+def _have_compatible_manylinux_abi(arch):
+ # type: (str) -> bool
+ if arch == "armv7l":
+ return _is_linux_armhf()
+ if arch == "i686":
+ return _is_linux_i686()
+ return True
+
+
+def _linux_platforms(is_32bit=_32_BIT_INTERPRETER):
+ # type: (bool) -> Iterator[str]
+ linux = _normalize_string(distutils.util.get_platform())
+ if is_32bit:
+ if linux == "linux_x86_64":
+ linux = "linux_i686"
+ elif linux == "linux_aarch64":
+ linux = "linux_armv7l"
+ manylinux_support = []
+ _, arch = linux.split("_", 1)
+ if _have_compatible_manylinux_abi(arch):
+ if arch in {"x86_64", "i686", "aarch64", "armv7l", "ppc64", "ppc64le", "s390x"}:
+ manylinux_support.append(
+ ("manylinux2014", (2, 17))
+ ) # CentOS 7 w/ glibc 2.17 (PEP 599)
+ if arch in {"x86_64", "i686"}:
+ manylinux_support.append(
+ ("manylinux2010", (2, 12))
+ ) # CentOS 6 w/ glibc 2.12 (PEP 571)
+ manylinux_support.append(
+ ("manylinux1", (2, 5))
+ ) # CentOS 5 w/ glibc 2.5 (PEP 513)
+ manylinux_support_iter = iter(manylinux_support)
+ for name, glibc_version in manylinux_support_iter:
+ if _is_manylinux_compatible(name, glibc_version):
+ yield linux.replace("linux", name)
+ break
+ # Support for a later manylinux implies support for an earlier version.
+ for name, _ in manylinux_support_iter:
+ yield linux.replace("linux", name)
+ yield linux
+
+
+def _generic_platforms():
+ # type: () -> Iterator[str]
+ yield _normalize_string(distutils.util.get_platform())
+
+
+def _platform_tags():
+ # type: () -> Iterator[str]
+ """
+ Provides the platform tags for this installation.
+ """
+ if platform.system() == "Darwin":
+ return mac_platforms()
+ elif platform.system() == "Linux":
+ return _linux_platforms()
+ else:
+ return _generic_platforms()
+
+
+def interpreter_name():
+ # type: () -> str
+ """
+ Returns the name of the running interpreter.
+ """
+ try:
+ name = sys.implementation.name # type: ignore
+ except AttributeError: # pragma: no cover
+ # Python 2.7 compatibility.
+ name = platform.python_implementation().lower()
+ return INTERPRETER_SHORT_NAMES.get(name) or name
+
+
+def interpreter_version(**kwargs):
+ # type: (bool) -> str
+ """
+ Returns the version of the running interpreter.
+ """
+ warn = _warn_keyword_parameter("interpreter_version", kwargs)
+ version = _get_config_var("py_version_nodot", warn=warn)
+ if version:
+ version = str(version)
+ else:
+ version = _version_nodot(sys.version_info[:2])
+ return version
+
+
+def _version_nodot(version):
+ # type: (PythonVersion) -> str
+ if any(v >= 10 for v in version):
+ sep = "_"
+ else:
+ sep = ""
+ return sep.join(map(str, version))
+
+
+def sys_tags(**kwargs):
+ # type: (bool) -> Iterator[Tag]
+ """
+ Returns the sequence of tag triples for the running interpreter.
+
+ The order of the sequence corresponds to priority order for the
+ interpreter, from most to least important.
+ """
+ warn = _warn_keyword_parameter("sys_tags", kwargs)
+
+ interp_name = interpreter_name()
+ if interp_name == "cp":
+ for tag in cpython_tags(warn=warn):
+ yield tag
+ else:
+ for tag in generic_tags():
+ yield tag
+
+ for tag in compatible_tags():
+ yield tag
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/utils.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/utils.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..19579c1a0f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/utils.py
@@ -0,0 +1,65 @@
+# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
+# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
+# for complete details.
+from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
+
+import re
+
+from ._typing import TYPE_CHECKING, cast
+from .version import InvalidVersion, Version
+
+if TYPE_CHECKING: # pragma: no cover
+ from typing import NewType, Union
+
+ NormalizedName = NewType("NormalizedName", str)
+
+_canonicalize_regex = re.compile(r"[-_.]+")
+
+
+def canonicalize_name(name):
+ # type: (str) -> NormalizedName
+ # This is taken from PEP 503.
+ value = _canonicalize_regex.sub("-", name).lower()
+ return cast("NormalizedName", value)
+
+
+def canonicalize_version(_version):
+ # type: (str) -> Union[Version, str]
+ """
+ This is very similar to Version.__str__, but has one subtle difference
+ with the way it handles the release segment.
+ """
+
+ try:
+ version = Version(_version)
+ except InvalidVersion:
+ # Legacy versions cannot be normalized
+ return _version
+
+ parts = []
+
+ # Epoch
+ if version.epoch != 0:
+ parts.append("{0}!".format(version.epoch))
+
+ # Release segment
+ # NB: This strips trailing '.0's to normalize
+ parts.append(re.sub(r"(\.0)+$", "", ".".join(str(x) for x in version.release)))
+
+ # Pre-release
+ if version.pre is not None:
+ parts.append("".join(str(x) for x in version.pre))
+
+ # Post-release
+ if version.post is not None:
+ parts.append(".post{0}".format(version.post))
+
+ # Development release
+ if version.dev is not None:
+ parts.append(".dev{0}".format(version.dev))
+
+ # Local version segment
+ if version.local is not None:
+ parts.append("+{0}".format(version.local))
+
+ return "".join(parts)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/version.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/version.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..00371e86a8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/packaging/version.py
@@ -0,0 +1,535 @@
+# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
+# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
+# for complete details.
+from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
+
+import collections
+import itertools
+import re
+
+from ._structures import Infinity, NegativeInfinity
+from ._typing import TYPE_CHECKING
+
+if TYPE_CHECKING: # pragma: no cover
+ from typing import Callable, Iterator, List, Optional, SupportsInt, Tuple, Union
+
+ from ._structures import InfinityType, NegativeInfinityType
+
+ InfiniteTypes = Union[InfinityType, NegativeInfinityType]
+ PrePostDevType = Union[InfiniteTypes, Tuple[str, int]]
+ SubLocalType = Union[InfiniteTypes, int, str]
+ LocalType = Union[
+ NegativeInfinityType,
+ Tuple[
+ Union[
+ SubLocalType,
+ Tuple[SubLocalType, str],
+ Tuple[NegativeInfinityType, SubLocalType],
+ ],
+ ...,
+ ],
+ ]
+ CmpKey = Tuple[
+ int, Tuple[int, ...], PrePostDevType, PrePostDevType, PrePostDevType, LocalType
+ ]
+ LegacyCmpKey = Tuple[int, Tuple[str, ...]]
+ VersionComparisonMethod = Callable[
+ [Union[CmpKey, LegacyCmpKey], Union[CmpKey, LegacyCmpKey]], bool
+ ]
+
+__all__ = ["parse", "Version", "LegacyVersion", "InvalidVersion", "VERSION_PATTERN"]
+
+
+_Version = collections.namedtuple(
+ "_Version", ["epoch", "release", "dev", "pre", "post", "local"]
+)
+
+
+def parse(version):
+ # type: (str) -> Union[LegacyVersion, Version]
+ """
+ Parse the given version string and return either a :class:`Version` object
+ or a :class:`LegacyVersion` object depending on if the given version is
+ a valid PEP 440 version or a legacy version.
+ """
+ try:
+ return Version(version)
+ except InvalidVersion:
+ return LegacyVersion(version)
+
+
+class InvalidVersion(ValueError):
+ """
+ An invalid version was found, users should refer to PEP 440.
+ """
+
+
+class _BaseVersion(object):
+ _key = None # type: Union[CmpKey, LegacyCmpKey]
+
+ def __hash__(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ return hash(self._key)
+
+ def __lt__(self, other):
+ # type: (_BaseVersion) -> bool
+ return self._compare(other, lambda s, o: s < o)
+
+ def __le__(self, other):
+ # type: (_BaseVersion) -> bool
+ return self._compare(other, lambda s, o: s <= o)
+
+ def __eq__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return self._compare(other, lambda s, o: s == o)
+
+ def __ge__(self, other):
+ # type: (_BaseVersion) -> bool
+ return self._compare(other, lambda s, o: s >= o)
+
+ def __gt__(self, other):
+ # type: (_BaseVersion) -> bool
+ return self._compare(other, lambda s, o: s > o)
+
+ def __ne__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return self._compare(other, lambda s, o: s != o)
+
+ def _compare(self, other, method):
+ # type: (object, VersionComparisonMethod) -> Union[bool, NotImplemented]
+ if not isinstance(other, _BaseVersion):
+ return NotImplemented
+
+ return method(self._key, other._key)
+
+
+class LegacyVersion(_BaseVersion):
+ def __init__(self, version):
+ # type: (str) -> None
+ self._version = str(version)
+ self._key = _legacy_cmpkey(self._version)
+
+ def __str__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return self._version
+
+ def __repr__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return "<LegacyVersion({0})>".format(repr(str(self)))
+
+ @property
+ def public(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return self._version
+
+ @property
+ def base_version(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return self._version
+
+ @property
+ def epoch(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ return -1
+
+ @property
+ def release(self):
+ # type: () -> None
+ return None
+
+ @property
+ def pre(self):
+ # type: () -> None
+ return None
+
+ @property
+ def post(self):
+ # type: () -> None
+ return None
+
+ @property
+ def dev(self):
+ # type: () -> None
+ return None
+
+ @property
+ def local(self):
+ # type: () -> None
+ return None
+
+ @property
+ def is_prerelease(self):
+ # type: () -> bool
+ return False
+
+ @property
+ def is_postrelease(self):
+ # type: () -> bool
+ return False
+
+ @property
+ def is_devrelease(self):
+ # type: () -> bool
+ return False
+
+
+_legacy_version_component_re = re.compile(r"(\d+ | [a-z]+ | \.| -)", re.VERBOSE)
+
+_legacy_version_replacement_map = {
+ "pre": "c",
+ "preview": "c",
+ "-": "final-",
+ "rc": "c",
+ "dev": "@",
+}
+
+
+def _parse_version_parts(s):
+ # type: (str) -> Iterator[str]
+ for part in _legacy_version_component_re.split(s):
+ part = _legacy_version_replacement_map.get(part, part)
+
+ if not part or part == ".":
+ continue
+
+ if part[:1] in "0123456789":
+ # pad for numeric comparison
+ yield part.zfill(8)
+ else:
+ yield "*" + part
+
+ # ensure that alpha/beta/candidate are before final
+ yield "*final"
+
+
+def _legacy_cmpkey(version):
+ # type: (str) -> LegacyCmpKey
+
+ # We hardcode an epoch of -1 here. A PEP 440 version can only have a epoch
+ # greater than or equal to 0. This will effectively put the LegacyVersion,
+ # which uses the defacto standard originally implemented by setuptools,
+ # as before all PEP 440 versions.
+ epoch = -1
+
+ # This scheme is taken from pkg_resources.parse_version setuptools prior to
+ # it's adoption of the packaging library.
+ parts = [] # type: List[str]
+ for part in _parse_version_parts(version.lower()):
+ if part.startswith("*"):
+ # remove "-" before a prerelease tag
+ if part < "*final":
+ while parts and parts[-1] == "*final-":
+ parts.pop()
+
+ # remove trailing zeros from each series of numeric parts
+ while parts and parts[-1] == "00000000":
+ parts.pop()
+
+ parts.append(part)
+
+ return epoch, tuple(parts)
+
+
+# Deliberately not anchored to the start and end of the string, to make it
+# easier for 3rd party code to reuse
+VERSION_PATTERN = r"""
+ v?
+ (?:
+ (?:(?P<epoch>[0-9]+)!)? # epoch
+ (?P<release>[0-9]+(?:\.[0-9]+)*) # release segment
+ (?P<pre> # pre-release
+ [-_\.]?
+ (?P<pre_l>(a|b|c|rc|alpha|beta|pre|preview))
+ [-_\.]?
+ (?P<pre_n>[0-9]+)?
+ )?
+ (?P<post> # post release
+ (?:-(?P<post_n1>[0-9]+))
+ |
+ (?:
+ [-_\.]?
+ (?P<post_l>post|rev|r)
+ [-_\.]?
+ (?P<post_n2>[0-9]+)?
+ )
+ )?
+ (?P<dev> # dev release
+ [-_\.]?
+ (?P<dev_l>dev)
+ [-_\.]?
+ (?P<dev_n>[0-9]+)?
+ )?
+ )
+ (?:\+(?P<local>[a-z0-9]+(?:[-_\.][a-z0-9]+)*))? # local version
+"""
+
+
+class Version(_BaseVersion):
+
+ _regex = re.compile(r"^\s*" + VERSION_PATTERN + r"\s*$", re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE)
+
+ def __init__(self, version):
+ # type: (str) -> None
+
+ # Validate the version and parse it into pieces
+ match = self._regex.search(version)
+ if not match:
+ raise InvalidVersion("Invalid version: '{0}'".format(version))
+
+ # Store the parsed out pieces of the version
+ self._version = _Version(
+ epoch=int(match.group("epoch")) if match.group("epoch") else 0,
+ release=tuple(int(i) for i in match.group("release").split(".")),
+ pre=_parse_letter_version(match.group("pre_l"), match.group("pre_n")),
+ post=_parse_letter_version(
+ match.group("post_l"), match.group("post_n1") or match.group("post_n2")
+ ),
+ dev=_parse_letter_version(match.group("dev_l"), match.group("dev_n")),
+ local=_parse_local_version(match.group("local")),
+ )
+
+ # Generate a key which will be used for sorting
+ self._key = _cmpkey(
+ self._version.epoch,
+ self._version.release,
+ self._version.pre,
+ self._version.post,
+ self._version.dev,
+ self._version.local,
+ )
+
+ def __repr__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return "<Version({0})>".format(repr(str(self)))
+
+ def __str__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ parts = []
+
+ # Epoch
+ if self.epoch != 0:
+ parts.append("{0}!".format(self.epoch))
+
+ # Release segment
+ parts.append(".".join(str(x) for x in self.release))
+
+ # Pre-release
+ if self.pre is not None:
+ parts.append("".join(str(x) for x in self.pre))
+
+ # Post-release
+ if self.post is not None:
+ parts.append(".post{0}".format(self.post))
+
+ # Development release
+ if self.dev is not None:
+ parts.append(".dev{0}".format(self.dev))
+
+ # Local version segment
+ if self.local is not None:
+ parts.append("+{0}".format(self.local))
+
+ return "".join(parts)
+
+ @property
+ def epoch(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ _epoch = self._version.epoch # type: int
+ return _epoch
+
+ @property
+ def release(self):
+ # type: () -> Tuple[int, ...]
+ _release = self._version.release # type: Tuple[int, ...]
+ return _release
+
+ @property
+ def pre(self):
+ # type: () -> Optional[Tuple[str, int]]
+ _pre = self._version.pre # type: Optional[Tuple[str, int]]
+ return _pre
+
+ @property
+ def post(self):
+ # type: () -> Optional[Tuple[str, int]]
+ return self._version.post[1] if self._version.post else None
+
+ @property
+ def dev(self):
+ # type: () -> Optional[Tuple[str, int]]
+ return self._version.dev[1] if self._version.dev else None
+
+ @property
+ def local(self):
+ # type: () -> Optional[str]
+ if self._version.local:
+ return ".".join(str(x) for x in self._version.local)
+ else:
+ return None
+
+ @property
+ def public(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return str(self).split("+", 1)[0]
+
+ @property
+ def base_version(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ parts = []
+
+ # Epoch
+ if self.epoch != 0:
+ parts.append("{0}!".format(self.epoch))
+
+ # Release segment
+ parts.append(".".join(str(x) for x in self.release))
+
+ return "".join(parts)
+
+ @property
+ def is_prerelease(self):
+ # type: () -> bool
+ return self.dev is not None or self.pre is not None
+
+ @property
+ def is_postrelease(self):
+ # type: () -> bool
+ return self.post is not None
+
+ @property
+ def is_devrelease(self):
+ # type: () -> bool
+ return self.dev is not None
+
+ @property
+ def major(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ return self.release[0] if len(self.release) >= 1 else 0
+
+ @property
+ def minor(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ return self.release[1] if len(self.release) >= 2 else 0
+
+ @property
+ def micro(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ return self.release[2] if len(self.release) >= 3 else 0
+
+
+def _parse_letter_version(
+ letter, # type: str
+ number, # type: Union[str, bytes, SupportsInt]
+):
+ # type: (...) -> Optional[Tuple[str, int]]
+
+ if letter:
+ # We consider there to be an implicit 0 in a pre-release if there is
+ # not a numeral associated with it.
+ if number is None:
+ number = 0
+
+ # We normalize any letters to their lower case form
+ letter = letter.lower()
+
+ # We consider some words to be alternate spellings of other words and
+ # in those cases we want to normalize the spellings to our preferred
+ # spelling.
+ if letter == "alpha":
+ letter = "a"
+ elif letter == "beta":
+ letter = "b"
+ elif letter in ["c", "pre", "preview"]:
+ letter = "rc"
+ elif letter in ["rev", "r"]:
+ letter = "post"
+
+ return letter, int(number)
+ if not letter and number:
+ # We assume if we are given a number, but we are not given a letter
+ # then this is using the implicit post release syntax (e.g. 1.0-1)
+ letter = "post"
+
+ return letter, int(number)
+
+ return None
+
+
+_local_version_separators = re.compile(r"[\._-]")
+
+
+def _parse_local_version(local):
+ # type: (str) -> Optional[LocalType]
+ """
+ Takes a string like abc.1.twelve and turns it into ("abc", 1, "twelve").
+ """
+ if local is not None:
+ return tuple(
+ part.lower() if not part.isdigit() else int(part)
+ for part in _local_version_separators.split(local)
+ )
+ return None
+
+
+def _cmpkey(
+ epoch, # type: int
+ release, # type: Tuple[int, ...]
+ pre, # type: Optional[Tuple[str, int]]
+ post, # type: Optional[Tuple[str, int]]
+ dev, # type: Optional[Tuple[str, int]]
+ local, # type: Optional[Tuple[SubLocalType]]
+):
+ # type: (...) -> CmpKey
+
+ # When we compare a release version, we want to compare it with all of the
+ # trailing zeros removed. So we'll use a reverse the list, drop all the now
+ # leading zeros until we come to something non zero, then take the rest
+ # re-reverse it back into the correct order and make it a tuple and use
+ # that for our sorting key.
+ _release = tuple(
+ reversed(list(itertools.dropwhile(lambda x: x == 0, reversed(release))))
+ )
+
+ # We need to "trick" the sorting algorithm to put 1.0.dev0 before 1.0a0.
+ # We'll do this by abusing the pre segment, but we _only_ want to do this
+ # if there is not a pre or a post segment. If we have one of those then
+ # the normal sorting rules will handle this case correctly.
+ if pre is None and post is None and dev is not None:
+ _pre = NegativeInfinity # type: PrePostDevType
+ # Versions without a pre-release (except as noted above) should sort after
+ # those with one.
+ elif pre is None:
+ _pre = Infinity
+ else:
+ _pre = pre
+
+ # Versions without a post segment should sort before those with one.
+ if post is None:
+ _post = NegativeInfinity # type: PrePostDevType
+
+ else:
+ _post = post
+
+ # Versions without a development segment should sort after those with one.
+ if dev is None:
+ _dev = Infinity # type: PrePostDevType
+
+ else:
+ _dev = dev
+
+ if local is None:
+ # Versions without a local segment should sort before those with one.
+ _local = NegativeInfinity # type: LocalType
+ else:
+ # Versions with a local segment need that segment parsed to implement
+ # the sorting rules in PEP440.
+ # - Alpha numeric segments sort before numeric segments
+ # - Alpha numeric segments sort lexicographically
+ # - Numeric segments sort numerically
+ # - Shorter versions sort before longer versions when the prefixes
+ # match exactly
+ _local = tuple(
+ (i, "") if isinstance(i, int) else (NegativeInfinity, i) for i in local
+ )
+
+ return epoch, _release, _pre, _post, _dev, _local
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/pyparsing.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/pyparsing.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..cf75e1e5fc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/pyparsing.py
@@ -0,0 +1,5742 @@
+# module pyparsing.py
+#
+# Copyright (c) 2003-2018 Paul T. McGuire
+#
+# Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
+# a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
+# "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
+# without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
+# distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
+# permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
+# the following conditions:
+#
+# The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
+# included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
+#
+# THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
+# EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
+# MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT.
+# IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY
+# CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT,
+# TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE
+# SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
+#
+
+__doc__ = \
+"""
+pyparsing module - Classes and methods to define and execute parsing grammars
+=============================================================================
+
+The pyparsing module is an alternative approach to creating and executing simple grammars,
+vs. the traditional lex/yacc approach, or the use of regular expressions. With pyparsing, you
+don't need to learn a new syntax for defining grammars or matching expressions - the parsing module
+provides a library of classes that you use to construct the grammar directly in Python.
+
+Here is a program to parse "Hello, World!" (or any greeting of the form
+C{"<salutation>, <addressee>!"}), built up using L{Word}, L{Literal}, and L{And} elements
+(L{'+'<ParserElement.__add__>} operator gives L{And} expressions, strings are auto-converted to
+L{Literal} expressions)::
+
+ from pyparsing import Word, alphas
+
+ # define grammar of a greeting
+ greet = Word(alphas) + "," + Word(alphas) + "!"
+
+ hello = "Hello, World!"
+ print (hello, "->", greet.parseString(hello))
+
+The program outputs the following::
+
+ Hello, World! -> ['Hello', ',', 'World', '!']
+
+The Python representation of the grammar is quite readable, owing to the self-explanatory
+class names, and the use of '+', '|' and '^' operators.
+
+The L{ParseResults} object returned from L{ParserElement.parseString<ParserElement.parseString>} can be accessed as a nested list, a dictionary, or an
+object with named attributes.
+
+The pyparsing module handles some of the problems that are typically vexing when writing text parsers:
+ - extra or missing whitespace (the above program will also handle "Hello,World!", "Hello , World !", etc.)
+ - quoted strings
+ - embedded comments
+
+
+Getting Started -
+-----------------
+Visit the classes L{ParserElement} and L{ParseResults} to see the base classes that most other pyparsing
+classes inherit from. Use the docstrings for examples of how to:
+ - construct literal match expressions from L{Literal} and L{CaselessLiteral} classes
+ - construct character word-group expressions using the L{Word} class
+ - see how to create repetitive expressions using L{ZeroOrMore} and L{OneOrMore} classes
+ - use L{'+'<And>}, L{'|'<MatchFirst>}, L{'^'<Or>}, and L{'&'<Each>} operators to combine simple expressions into more complex ones
+ - associate names with your parsed results using L{ParserElement.setResultsName}
+ - find some helpful expression short-cuts like L{delimitedList} and L{oneOf}
+ - find more useful common expressions in the L{pyparsing_common} namespace class
+"""
+
+__version__ = "2.2.1"
+__versionTime__ = "18 Sep 2018 00:49 UTC"
+__author__ = "Paul McGuire <ptmcg@users.sourceforge.net>"
+
+import string
+from weakref import ref as wkref
+import copy
+import sys
+import warnings
+import re
+import sre_constants
+import collections
+import pprint
+import traceback
+import types
+from datetime import datetime
+
+try:
+ from _thread import RLock
+except ImportError:
+ from threading import RLock
+
+try:
+ # Python 3
+ from collections.abc import Iterable
+ from collections.abc import MutableMapping
+except ImportError:
+ # Python 2.7
+ from collections import Iterable
+ from collections import MutableMapping
+
+try:
+ from collections import OrderedDict as _OrderedDict
+except ImportError:
+ try:
+ from ordereddict import OrderedDict as _OrderedDict
+ except ImportError:
+ _OrderedDict = None
+
+#~ sys.stderr.write( "testing pyparsing module, version %s, %s\n" % (__version__,__versionTime__ ) )
+
+__all__ = [
+'And', 'CaselessKeyword', 'CaselessLiteral', 'CharsNotIn', 'Combine', 'Dict', 'Each', 'Empty',
+'FollowedBy', 'Forward', 'GoToColumn', 'Group', 'Keyword', 'LineEnd', 'LineStart', 'Literal',
+'MatchFirst', 'NoMatch', 'NotAny', 'OneOrMore', 'OnlyOnce', 'Optional', 'Or',
+'ParseBaseException', 'ParseElementEnhance', 'ParseException', 'ParseExpression', 'ParseFatalException',
+'ParseResults', 'ParseSyntaxException', 'ParserElement', 'QuotedString', 'RecursiveGrammarException',
+'Regex', 'SkipTo', 'StringEnd', 'StringStart', 'Suppress', 'Token', 'TokenConverter',
+'White', 'Word', 'WordEnd', 'WordStart', 'ZeroOrMore',
+'alphanums', 'alphas', 'alphas8bit', 'anyCloseTag', 'anyOpenTag', 'cStyleComment', 'col',
+'commaSeparatedList', 'commonHTMLEntity', 'countedArray', 'cppStyleComment', 'dblQuotedString',
+'dblSlashComment', 'delimitedList', 'dictOf', 'downcaseTokens', 'empty', 'hexnums',
+'htmlComment', 'javaStyleComment', 'line', 'lineEnd', 'lineStart', 'lineno',
+'makeHTMLTags', 'makeXMLTags', 'matchOnlyAtCol', 'matchPreviousExpr', 'matchPreviousLiteral',
+'nestedExpr', 'nullDebugAction', 'nums', 'oneOf', 'opAssoc', 'operatorPrecedence', 'printables',
+'punc8bit', 'pythonStyleComment', 'quotedString', 'removeQuotes', 'replaceHTMLEntity',
+'replaceWith', 'restOfLine', 'sglQuotedString', 'srange', 'stringEnd',
+'stringStart', 'traceParseAction', 'unicodeString', 'upcaseTokens', 'withAttribute',
+'indentedBlock', 'originalTextFor', 'ungroup', 'infixNotation','locatedExpr', 'withClass',
+'CloseMatch', 'tokenMap', 'pyparsing_common',
+]
+
+system_version = tuple(sys.version_info)[:3]
+PY_3 = system_version[0] == 3
+if PY_3:
+ _MAX_INT = sys.maxsize
+ basestring = str
+ unichr = chr
+ _ustr = str
+
+ # build list of single arg builtins, that can be used as parse actions
+ singleArgBuiltins = [sum, len, sorted, reversed, list, tuple, set, any, all, min, max]
+
+else:
+ _MAX_INT = sys.maxint
+ range = xrange
+
+ def _ustr(obj):
+ """Drop-in replacement for str(obj) that tries to be Unicode friendly. It first tries
+ str(obj). If that fails with a UnicodeEncodeError, then it tries unicode(obj). It
+ then < returns the unicode object | encodes it with the default encoding | ... >.
+ """
+ if isinstance(obj,unicode):
+ return obj
+
+ try:
+ # If this works, then _ustr(obj) has the same behaviour as str(obj), so
+ # it won't break any existing code.
+ return str(obj)
+
+ except UnicodeEncodeError:
+ # Else encode it
+ ret = unicode(obj).encode(sys.getdefaultencoding(), 'xmlcharrefreplace')
+ xmlcharref = Regex(r'&#\d+;')
+ xmlcharref.setParseAction(lambda t: '\\u' + hex(int(t[0][2:-1]))[2:])
+ return xmlcharref.transformString(ret)
+
+ # build list of single arg builtins, tolerant of Python version, that can be used as parse actions
+ singleArgBuiltins = []
+ import __builtin__
+ for fname in "sum len sorted reversed list tuple set any all min max".split():
+ try:
+ singleArgBuiltins.append(getattr(__builtin__,fname))
+ except AttributeError:
+ continue
+
+_generatorType = type((y for y in range(1)))
+
+def _xml_escape(data):
+ """Escape &, <, >, ", ', etc. in a string of data."""
+
+ # ampersand must be replaced first
+ from_symbols = '&><"\''
+ to_symbols = ('&'+s+';' for s in "amp gt lt quot apos".split())
+ for from_,to_ in zip(from_symbols, to_symbols):
+ data = data.replace(from_, to_)
+ return data
+
+class _Constants(object):
+ pass
+
+alphas = string.ascii_uppercase + string.ascii_lowercase
+nums = "0123456789"
+hexnums = nums + "ABCDEFabcdef"
+alphanums = alphas + nums
+_bslash = chr(92)
+printables = "".join(c for c in string.printable if c not in string.whitespace)
+
+class ParseBaseException(Exception):
+ """base exception class for all parsing runtime exceptions"""
+ # Performance tuning: we construct a *lot* of these, so keep this
+ # constructor as small and fast as possible
+ def __init__( self, pstr, loc=0, msg=None, elem=None ):
+ self.loc = loc
+ if msg is None:
+ self.msg = pstr
+ self.pstr = ""
+ else:
+ self.msg = msg
+ self.pstr = pstr
+ self.parserElement = elem
+ self.args = (pstr, loc, msg)
+
+ @classmethod
+ def _from_exception(cls, pe):
+ """
+ internal factory method to simplify creating one type of ParseException
+ from another - avoids having __init__ signature conflicts among subclasses
+ """
+ return cls(pe.pstr, pe.loc, pe.msg, pe.parserElement)
+
+ def __getattr__( self, aname ):
+ """supported attributes by name are:
+ - lineno - returns the line number of the exception text
+ - col - returns the column number of the exception text
+ - line - returns the line containing the exception text
+ """
+ if( aname == "lineno" ):
+ return lineno( self.loc, self.pstr )
+ elif( aname in ("col", "column") ):
+ return col( self.loc, self.pstr )
+ elif( aname == "line" ):
+ return line( self.loc, self.pstr )
+ else:
+ raise AttributeError(aname)
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ return "%s (at char %d), (line:%d, col:%d)" % \
+ ( self.msg, self.loc, self.lineno, self.column )
+ def __repr__( self ):
+ return _ustr(self)
+ def markInputline( self, markerString = ">!<" ):
+ """Extracts the exception line from the input string, and marks
+ the location of the exception with a special symbol.
+ """
+ line_str = self.line
+ line_column = self.column - 1
+ if markerString:
+ line_str = "".join((line_str[:line_column],
+ markerString, line_str[line_column:]))
+ return line_str.strip()
+ def __dir__(self):
+ return "lineno col line".split() + dir(type(self))
+
+class ParseException(ParseBaseException):
+ """
+ Exception thrown when parse expressions don't match class;
+ supported attributes by name are:
+ - lineno - returns the line number of the exception text
+ - col - returns the column number of the exception text
+ - line - returns the line containing the exception text
+
+ Example::
+ try:
+ Word(nums).setName("integer").parseString("ABC")
+ except ParseException as pe:
+ print(pe)
+ print("column: {}".format(pe.col))
+
+ prints::
+ Expected integer (at char 0), (line:1, col:1)
+ column: 1
+ """
+ pass
+
+class ParseFatalException(ParseBaseException):
+ """user-throwable exception thrown when inconsistent parse content
+ is found; stops all parsing immediately"""
+ pass
+
+class ParseSyntaxException(ParseFatalException):
+ """just like L{ParseFatalException}, but thrown internally when an
+ L{ErrorStop<And._ErrorStop>} ('-' operator) indicates that parsing is to stop
+ immediately because an unbacktrackable syntax error has been found"""
+ pass
+
+#~ class ReparseException(ParseBaseException):
+ #~ """Experimental class - parse actions can raise this exception to cause
+ #~ pyparsing to reparse the input string:
+ #~ - with a modified input string, and/or
+ #~ - with a modified start location
+ #~ Set the values of the ReparseException in the constructor, and raise the
+ #~ exception in a parse action to cause pyparsing to use the new string/location.
+ #~ Setting the values as None causes no change to be made.
+ #~ """
+ #~ def __init_( self, newstring, restartLoc ):
+ #~ self.newParseText = newstring
+ #~ self.reparseLoc = restartLoc
+
+class RecursiveGrammarException(Exception):
+ """exception thrown by L{ParserElement.validate} if the grammar could be improperly recursive"""
+ def __init__( self, parseElementList ):
+ self.parseElementTrace = parseElementList
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ return "RecursiveGrammarException: %s" % self.parseElementTrace
+
+class _ParseResultsWithOffset(object):
+ def __init__(self,p1,p2):
+ self.tup = (p1,p2)
+ def __getitem__(self,i):
+ return self.tup[i]
+ def __repr__(self):
+ return repr(self.tup[0])
+ def setOffset(self,i):
+ self.tup = (self.tup[0],i)
+
+class ParseResults(object):
+ """
+ Structured parse results, to provide multiple means of access to the parsed data:
+ - as a list (C{len(results)})
+ - by list index (C{results[0], results[1]}, etc.)
+ - by attribute (C{results.<resultsName>} - see L{ParserElement.setResultsName})
+
+ Example::
+ integer = Word(nums)
+ date_str = (integer.setResultsName("year") + '/'
+ + integer.setResultsName("month") + '/'
+ + integer.setResultsName("day"))
+ # equivalent form:
+ # date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day")
+
+ # parseString returns a ParseResults object
+ result = date_str.parseString("1999/12/31")
+
+ def test(s, fn=repr):
+ print("%s -> %s" % (s, fn(eval(s))))
+ test("list(result)")
+ test("result[0]")
+ test("result['month']")
+ test("result.day")
+ test("'month' in result")
+ test("'minutes' in result")
+ test("result.dump()", str)
+ prints::
+ list(result) -> ['1999', '/', '12', '/', '31']
+ result[0] -> '1999'
+ result['month'] -> '12'
+ result.day -> '31'
+ 'month' in result -> True
+ 'minutes' in result -> False
+ result.dump() -> ['1999', '/', '12', '/', '31']
+ - day: 31
+ - month: 12
+ - year: 1999
+ """
+ def __new__(cls, toklist=None, name=None, asList=True, modal=True ):
+ if isinstance(toklist, cls):
+ return toklist
+ retobj = object.__new__(cls)
+ retobj.__doinit = True
+ return retobj
+
+ # Performance tuning: we construct a *lot* of these, so keep this
+ # constructor as small and fast as possible
+ def __init__( self, toklist=None, name=None, asList=True, modal=True, isinstance=isinstance ):
+ if self.__doinit:
+ self.__doinit = False
+ self.__name = None
+ self.__parent = None
+ self.__accumNames = {}
+ self.__asList = asList
+ self.__modal = modal
+ if toklist is None:
+ toklist = []
+ if isinstance(toklist, list):
+ self.__toklist = toklist[:]
+ elif isinstance(toklist, _generatorType):
+ self.__toklist = list(toklist)
+ else:
+ self.__toklist = [toklist]
+ self.__tokdict = dict()
+
+ if name is not None and name:
+ if not modal:
+ self.__accumNames[name] = 0
+ if isinstance(name,int):
+ name = _ustr(name) # will always return a str, but use _ustr for consistency
+ self.__name = name
+ if not (isinstance(toklist, (type(None), basestring, list)) and toklist in (None,'',[])):
+ if isinstance(toklist,basestring):
+ toklist = [ toklist ]
+ if asList:
+ if isinstance(toklist,ParseResults):
+ self[name] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(toklist.copy(),0)
+ else:
+ self[name] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(ParseResults(toklist[0]),0)
+ self[name].__name = name
+ else:
+ try:
+ self[name] = toklist[0]
+ except (KeyError,TypeError,IndexError):
+ self[name] = toklist
+
+ def __getitem__( self, i ):
+ if isinstance( i, (int,slice) ):
+ return self.__toklist[i]
+ else:
+ if i not in self.__accumNames:
+ return self.__tokdict[i][-1][0]
+ else:
+ return ParseResults([ v[0] for v in self.__tokdict[i] ])
+
+ def __setitem__( self, k, v, isinstance=isinstance ):
+ if isinstance(v,_ParseResultsWithOffset):
+ self.__tokdict[k] = self.__tokdict.get(k,list()) + [v]
+ sub = v[0]
+ elif isinstance(k,(int,slice)):
+ self.__toklist[k] = v
+ sub = v
+ else:
+ self.__tokdict[k] = self.__tokdict.get(k,list()) + [_ParseResultsWithOffset(v,0)]
+ sub = v
+ if isinstance(sub,ParseResults):
+ sub.__parent = wkref(self)
+
+ def __delitem__( self, i ):
+ if isinstance(i,(int,slice)):
+ mylen = len( self.__toklist )
+ del self.__toklist[i]
+
+ # convert int to slice
+ if isinstance(i, int):
+ if i < 0:
+ i += mylen
+ i = slice(i, i+1)
+ # get removed indices
+ removed = list(range(*i.indices(mylen)))
+ removed.reverse()
+ # fixup indices in token dictionary
+ for name,occurrences in self.__tokdict.items():
+ for j in removed:
+ for k, (value, position) in enumerate(occurrences):
+ occurrences[k] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(value, position - (position > j))
+ else:
+ del self.__tokdict[i]
+
+ def __contains__( self, k ):
+ return k in self.__tokdict
+
+ def __len__( self ): return len( self.__toklist )
+ def __bool__(self): return ( not not self.__toklist )
+ __nonzero__ = __bool__
+ def __iter__( self ): return iter( self.__toklist )
+ def __reversed__( self ): return iter( self.__toklist[::-1] )
+ def _iterkeys( self ):
+ if hasattr(self.__tokdict, "iterkeys"):
+ return self.__tokdict.iterkeys()
+ else:
+ return iter(self.__tokdict)
+
+ def _itervalues( self ):
+ return (self[k] for k in self._iterkeys())
+
+ def _iteritems( self ):
+ return ((k, self[k]) for k in self._iterkeys())
+
+ if PY_3:
+ keys = _iterkeys
+ """Returns an iterator of all named result keys (Python 3.x only)."""
+
+ values = _itervalues
+ """Returns an iterator of all named result values (Python 3.x only)."""
+
+ items = _iteritems
+ """Returns an iterator of all named result key-value tuples (Python 3.x only)."""
+
+ else:
+ iterkeys = _iterkeys
+ """Returns an iterator of all named result keys (Python 2.x only)."""
+
+ itervalues = _itervalues
+ """Returns an iterator of all named result values (Python 2.x only)."""
+
+ iteritems = _iteritems
+ """Returns an iterator of all named result key-value tuples (Python 2.x only)."""
+
+ def keys( self ):
+ """Returns all named result keys (as a list in Python 2.x, as an iterator in Python 3.x)."""
+ return list(self.iterkeys())
+
+ def values( self ):
+ """Returns all named result values (as a list in Python 2.x, as an iterator in Python 3.x)."""
+ return list(self.itervalues())
+
+ def items( self ):
+ """Returns all named result key-values (as a list of tuples in Python 2.x, as an iterator in Python 3.x)."""
+ return list(self.iteritems())
+
+ def haskeys( self ):
+ """Since keys() returns an iterator, this method is helpful in bypassing
+ code that looks for the existence of any defined results names."""
+ return bool(self.__tokdict)
+
+ def pop( self, *args, **kwargs):
+ """
+ Removes and returns item at specified index (default=C{last}).
+ Supports both C{list} and C{dict} semantics for C{pop()}. If passed no
+ argument or an integer argument, it will use C{list} semantics
+ and pop tokens from the list of parsed tokens. If passed a
+ non-integer argument (most likely a string), it will use C{dict}
+ semantics and pop the corresponding value from any defined
+ results names. A second default return value argument is
+ supported, just as in C{dict.pop()}.
+
+ Example::
+ def remove_first(tokens):
+ tokens.pop(0)
+ print(OneOrMore(Word(nums)).parseString("0 123 321")) # -> ['0', '123', '321']
+ print(OneOrMore(Word(nums)).addParseAction(remove_first).parseString("0 123 321")) # -> ['123', '321']
+
+ label = Word(alphas)
+ patt = label("LABEL") + OneOrMore(Word(nums))
+ print(patt.parseString("AAB 123 321").dump())
+
+ # Use pop() in a parse action to remove named result (note that corresponding value is not
+ # removed from list form of results)
+ def remove_LABEL(tokens):
+ tokens.pop("LABEL")
+ return tokens
+ patt.addParseAction(remove_LABEL)
+ print(patt.parseString("AAB 123 321").dump())
+ prints::
+ ['AAB', '123', '321']
+ - LABEL: AAB
+
+ ['AAB', '123', '321']
+ """
+ if not args:
+ args = [-1]
+ for k,v in kwargs.items():
+ if k == 'default':
+ args = (args[0], v)
+ else:
+ raise TypeError("pop() got an unexpected keyword argument '%s'" % k)
+ if (isinstance(args[0], int) or
+ len(args) == 1 or
+ args[0] in self):
+ index = args[0]
+ ret = self[index]
+ del self[index]
+ return ret
+ else:
+ defaultvalue = args[1]
+ return defaultvalue
+
+ def get(self, key, defaultValue=None):
+ """
+ Returns named result matching the given key, or if there is no
+ such name, then returns the given C{defaultValue} or C{None} if no
+ C{defaultValue} is specified.
+
+ Similar to C{dict.get()}.
+
+ Example::
+ integer = Word(nums)
+ date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day")
+
+ result = date_str.parseString("1999/12/31")
+ print(result.get("year")) # -> '1999'
+ print(result.get("hour", "not specified")) # -> 'not specified'
+ print(result.get("hour")) # -> None
+ """
+ if key in self:
+ return self[key]
+ else:
+ return defaultValue
+
+ def insert( self, index, insStr ):
+ """
+ Inserts new element at location index in the list of parsed tokens.
+
+ Similar to C{list.insert()}.
+
+ Example::
+ print(OneOrMore(Word(nums)).parseString("0 123 321")) # -> ['0', '123', '321']
+
+ # use a parse action to insert the parse location in the front of the parsed results
+ def insert_locn(locn, tokens):
+ tokens.insert(0, locn)
+ print(OneOrMore(Word(nums)).addParseAction(insert_locn).parseString("0 123 321")) # -> [0, '0', '123', '321']
+ """
+ self.__toklist.insert(index, insStr)
+ # fixup indices in token dictionary
+ for name,occurrences in self.__tokdict.items():
+ for k, (value, position) in enumerate(occurrences):
+ occurrences[k] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(value, position + (position > index))
+
+ def append( self, item ):
+ """
+ Add single element to end of ParseResults list of elements.
+
+ Example::
+ print(OneOrMore(Word(nums)).parseString("0 123 321")) # -> ['0', '123', '321']
+
+ # use a parse action to compute the sum of the parsed integers, and add it to the end
+ def append_sum(tokens):
+ tokens.append(sum(map(int, tokens)))
+ print(OneOrMore(Word(nums)).addParseAction(append_sum).parseString("0 123 321")) # -> ['0', '123', '321', 444]
+ """
+ self.__toklist.append(item)
+
+ def extend( self, itemseq ):
+ """
+ Add sequence of elements to end of ParseResults list of elements.
+
+ Example::
+ patt = OneOrMore(Word(alphas))
+
+ # use a parse action to append the reverse of the matched strings, to make a palindrome
+ def make_palindrome(tokens):
+ tokens.extend(reversed([t[::-1] for t in tokens]))
+ return ''.join(tokens)
+ print(patt.addParseAction(make_palindrome).parseString("lskdj sdlkjf lksd")) # -> 'lskdjsdlkjflksddsklfjkldsjdksl'
+ """
+ if isinstance(itemseq, ParseResults):
+ self += itemseq
+ else:
+ self.__toklist.extend(itemseq)
+
+ def clear( self ):
+ """
+ Clear all elements and results names.
+ """
+ del self.__toklist[:]
+ self.__tokdict.clear()
+
+ def __getattr__( self, name ):
+ try:
+ return self[name]
+ except KeyError:
+ return ""
+
+ if name in self.__tokdict:
+ if name not in self.__accumNames:
+ return self.__tokdict[name][-1][0]
+ else:
+ return ParseResults([ v[0] for v in self.__tokdict[name] ])
+ else:
+ return ""
+
+ def __add__( self, other ):
+ ret = self.copy()
+ ret += other
+ return ret
+
+ def __iadd__( self, other ):
+ if other.__tokdict:
+ offset = len(self.__toklist)
+ addoffset = lambda a: offset if a<0 else a+offset
+ otheritems = other.__tokdict.items()
+ otherdictitems = [(k, _ParseResultsWithOffset(v[0],addoffset(v[1])) )
+ for (k,vlist) in otheritems for v in vlist]
+ for k,v in otherdictitems:
+ self[k] = v
+ if isinstance(v[0],ParseResults):
+ v[0].__parent = wkref(self)
+
+ self.__toklist += other.__toklist
+ self.__accumNames.update( other.__accumNames )
+ return self
+
+ def __radd__(self, other):
+ if isinstance(other,int) and other == 0:
+ # useful for merging many ParseResults using sum() builtin
+ return self.copy()
+ else:
+ # this may raise a TypeError - so be it
+ return other + self
+
+ def __repr__( self ):
+ return "(%s, %s)" % ( repr( self.__toklist ), repr( self.__tokdict ) )
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ return '[' + ', '.join(_ustr(i) if isinstance(i, ParseResults) else repr(i) for i in self.__toklist) + ']'
+
+ def _asStringList( self, sep='' ):
+ out = []
+ for item in self.__toklist:
+ if out and sep:
+ out.append(sep)
+ if isinstance( item, ParseResults ):
+ out += item._asStringList()
+ else:
+ out.append( _ustr(item) )
+ return out
+
+ def asList( self ):
+ """
+ Returns the parse results as a nested list of matching tokens, all converted to strings.
+
+ Example::
+ patt = OneOrMore(Word(alphas))
+ result = patt.parseString("sldkj lsdkj sldkj")
+ # even though the result prints in string-like form, it is actually a pyparsing ParseResults
+ print(type(result), result) # -> <class 'pyparsing.ParseResults'> ['sldkj', 'lsdkj', 'sldkj']
+
+ # Use asList() to create an actual list
+ result_list = result.asList()
+ print(type(result_list), result_list) # -> <class 'list'> ['sldkj', 'lsdkj', 'sldkj']
+ """
+ return [res.asList() if isinstance(res,ParseResults) else res for res in self.__toklist]
+
+ def asDict( self ):
+ """
+ Returns the named parse results as a nested dictionary.
+
+ Example::
+ integer = Word(nums)
+ date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day")
+
+ result = date_str.parseString('12/31/1999')
+ print(type(result), repr(result)) # -> <class 'pyparsing.ParseResults'> (['12', '/', '31', '/', '1999'], {'day': [('1999', 4)], 'year': [('12', 0)], 'month': [('31', 2)]})
+
+ result_dict = result.asDict()
+ print(type(result_dict), repr(result_dict)) # -> <class 'dict'> {'day': '1999', 'year': '12', 'month': '31'}
+
+ # even though a ParseResults supports dict-like access, sometime you just need to have a dict
+ import json
+ print(json.dumps(result)) # -> Exception: TypeError: ... is not JSON serializable
+ print(json.dumps(result.asDict())) # -> {"month": "31", "day": "1999", "year": "12"}
+ """
+ if PY_3:
+ item_fn = self.items
+ else:
+ item_fn = self.iteritems
+
+ def toItem(obj):
+ if isinstance(obj, ParseResults):
+ if obj.haskeys():
+ return obj.asDict()
+ else:
+ return [toItem(v) for v in obj]
+ else:
+ return obj
+
+ return dict((k,toItem(v)) for k,v in item_fn())
+
+ def copy( self ):
+ """
+ Returns a new copy of a C{ParseResults} object.
+ """
+ ret = ParseResults( self.__toklist )
+ ret.__tokdict = self.__tokdict.copy()
+ ret.__parent = self.__parent
+ ret.__accumNames.update( self.__accumNames )
+ ret.__name = self.__name
+ return ret
+
+ def asXML( self, doctag=None, namedItemsOnly=False, indent="", formatted=True ):
+ """
+ (Deprecated) Returns the parse results as XML. Tags are created for tokens and lists that have defined results names.
+ """
+ nl = "\n"
+ out = []
+ namedItems = dict((v[1],k) for (k,vlist) in self.__tokdict.items()
+ for v in vlist)
+ nextLevelIndent = indent + " "
+
+ # collapse out indents if formatting is not desired
+ if not formatted:
+ indent = ""
+ nextLevelIndent = ""
+ nl = ""
+
+ selfTag = None
+ if doctag is not None:
+ selfTag = doctag
+ else:
+ if self.__name:
+ selfTag = self.__name
+
+ if not selfTag:
+ if namedItemsOnly:
+ return ""
+ else:
+ selfTag = "ITEM"
+
+ out += [ nl, indent, "<", selfTag, ">" ]
+
+ for i,res in enumerate(self.__toklist):
+ if isinstance(res,ParseResults):
+ if i in namedItems:
+ out += [ res.asXML(namedItems[i],
+ namedItemsOnly and doctag is None,
+ nextLevelIndent,
+ formatted)]
+ else:
+ out += [ res.asXML(None,
+ namedItemsOnly and doctag is None,
+ nextLevelIndent,
+ formatted)]
+ else:
+ # individual token, see if there is a name for it
+ resTag = None
+ if i in namedItems:
+ resTag = namedItems[i]
+ if not resTag:
+ if namedItemsOnly:
+ continue
+ else:
+ resTag = "ITEM"
+ xmlBodyText = _xml_escape(_ustr(res))
+ out += [ nl, nextLevelIndent, "<", resTag, ">",
+ xmlBodyText,
+ "</", resTag, ">" ]
+
+ out += [ nl, indent, "</", selfTag, ">" ]
+ return "".join(out)
+
+ def __lookup(self,sub):
+ for k,vlist in self.__tokdict.items():
+ for v,loc in vlist:
+ if sub is v:
+ return k
+ return None
+
+ def getName(self):
+ r"""
+ Returns the results name for this token expression. Useful when several
+ different expressions might match at a particular location.
+
+ Example::
+ integer = Word(nums)
+ ssn_expr = Regex(r"\d\d\d-\d\d-\d\d\d\d")
+ house_number_expr = Suppress('#') + Word(nums, alphanums)
+ user_data = (Group(house_number_expr)("house_number")
+ | Group(ssn_expr)("ssn")
+ | Group(integer)("age"))
+ user_info = OneOrMore(user_data)
+
+ result = user_info.parseString("22 111-22-3333 #221B")
+ for item in result:
+ print(item.getName(), ':', item[0])
+ prints::
+ age : 22
+ ssn : 111-22-3333
+ house_number : 221B
+ """
+ if self.__name:
+ return self.__name
+ elif self.__parent:
+ par = self.__parent()
+ if par:
+ return par.__lookup(self)
+ else:
+ return None
+ elif (len(self) == 1 and
+ len(self.__tokdict) == 1 and
+ next(iter(self.__tokdict.values()))[0][1] in (0,-1)):
+ return next(iter(self.__tokdict.keys()))
+ else:
+ return None
+
+ def dump(self, indent='', depth=0, full=True):
+ """
+ Diagnostic method for listing out the contents of a C{ParseResults}.
+ Accepts an optional C{indent} argument so that this string can be embedded
+ in a nested display of other data.
+
+ Example::
+ integer = Word(nums)
+ date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day")
+
+ result = date_str.parseString('12/31/1999')
+ print(result.dump())
+ prints::
+ ['12', '/', '31', '/', '1999']
+ - day: 1999
+ - month: 31
+ - year: 12
+ """
+ out = []
+ NL = '\n'
+ out.append( indent+_ustr(self.asList()) )
+ if full:
+ if self.haskeys():
+ items = sorted((str(k), v) for k,v in self.items())
+ for k,v in items:
+ if out:
+ out.append(NL)
+ out.append( "%s%s- %s: " % (indent,(' '*depth), k) )
+ if isinstance(v,ParseResults):
+ if v:
+ out.append( v.dump(indent,depth+1) )
+ else:
+ out.append(_ustr(v))
+ else:
+ out.append(repr(v))
+ elif any(isinstance(vv,ParseResults) for vv in self):
+ v = self
+ for i,vv in enumerate(v):
+ if isinstance(vv,ParseResults):
+ out.append("\n%s%s[%d]:\n%s%s%s" % (indent,(' '*(depth)),i,indent,(' '*(depth+1)),vv.dump(indent,depth+1) ))
+ else:
+ out.append("\n%s%s[%d]:\n%s%s%s" % (indent,(' '*(depth)),i,indent,(' '*(depth+1)),_ustr(vv)))
+
+ return "".join(out)
+
+ def pprint(self, *args, **kwargs):
+ """
+ Pretty-printer for parsed results as a list, using the C{pprint} module.
+ Accepts additional positional or keyword args as defined for the
+ C{pprint.pprint} method. (U{http://docs.python.org/3/library/pprint.html#pprint.pprint})
+
+ Example::
+ ident = Word(alphas, alphanums)
+ num = Word(nums)
+ func = Forward()
+ term = ident | num | Group('(' + func + ')')
+ func <<= ident + Group(Optional(delimitedList(term)))
+ result = func.parseString("fna a,b,(fnb c,d,200),100")
+ result.pprint(width=40)
+ prints::
+ ['fna',
+ ['a',
+ 'b',
+ ['(', 'fnb', ['c', 'd', '200'], ')'],
+ '100']]
+ """
+ pprint.pprint(self.asList(), *args, **kwargs)
+
+ # add support for pickle protocol
+ def __getstate__(self):
+ return ( self.__toklist,
+ ( self.__tokdict.copy(),
+ self.__parent is not None and self.__parent() or None,
+ self.__accumNames,
+ self.__name ) )
+
+ def __setstate__(self,state):
+ self.__toklist = state[0]
+ (self.__tokdict,
+ par,
+ inAccumNames,
+ self.__name) = state[1]
+ self.__accumNames = {}
+ self.__accumNames.update(inAccumNames)
+ if par is not None:
+ self.__parent = wkref(par)
+ else:
+ self.__parent = None
+
+ def __getnewargs__(self):
+ return self.__toklist, self.__name, self.__asList, self.__modal
+
+ def __dir__(self):
+ return (dir(type(self)) + list(self.keys()))
+
+MutableMapping.register(ParseResults)
+
+def col (loc,strg):
+ """Returns current column within a string, counting newlines as line separators.
+ The first column is number 1.
+
+ Note: the default parsing behavior is to expand tabs in the input string
+ before starting the parsing process. See L{I{ParserElement.parseString}<ParserElement.parseString>} for more information
+ on parsing strings containing C{<TAB>}s, and suggested methods to maintain a
+ consistent view of the parsed string, the parse location, and line and column
+ positions within the parsed string.
+ """
+ s = strg
+ return 1 if 0<loc<len(s) and s[loc-1] == '\n' else loc - s.rfind("\n", 0, loc)
+
+def lineno(loc,strg):
+ """Returns current line number within a string, counting newlines as line separators.
+ The first line is number 1.
+
+ Note: the default parsing behavior is to expand tabs in the input string
+ before starting the parsing process. See L{I{ParserElement.parseString}<ParserElement.parseString>} for more information
+ on parsing strings containing C{<TAB>}s, and suggested methods to maintain a
+ consistent view of the parsed string, the parse location, and line and column
+ positions within the parsed string.
+ """
+ return strg.count("\n",0,loc) + 1
+
+def line( loc, strg ):
+ """Returns the line of text containing loc within a string, counting newlines as line separators.
+ """
+ lastCR = strg.rfind("\n", 0, loc)
+ nextCR = strg.find("\n", loc)
+ if nextCR >= 0:
+ return strg[lastCR+1:nextCR]
+ else:
+ return strg[lastCR+1:]
+
+def _defaultStartDebugAction( instring, loc, expr ):
+ print (("Match " + _ustr(expr) + " at loc " + _ustr(loc) + "(%d,%d)" % ( lineno(loc,instring), col(loc,instring) )))
+
+def _defaultSuccessDebugAction( instring, startloc, endloc, expr, toks ):
+ print ("Matched " + _ustr(expr) + " -> " + str(toks.asList()))
+
+def _defaultExceptionDebugAction( instring, loc, expr, exc ):
+ print ("Exception raised:" + _ustr(exc))
+
+def nullDebugAction(*args):
+ """'Do-nothing' debug action, to suppress debugging output during parsing."""
+ pass
+
+# Only works on Python 3.x - nonlocal is toxic to Python 2 installs
+#~ 'decorator to trim function calls to match the arity of the target'
+#~ def _trim_arity(func, maxargs=3):
+ #~ if func in singleArgBuiltins:
+ #~ return lambda s,l,t: func(t)
+ #~ limit = 0
+ #~ foundArity = False
+ #~ def wrapper(*args):
+ #~ nonlocal limit,foundArity
+ #~ while 1:
+ #~ try:
+ #~ ret = func(*args[limit:])
+ #~ foundArity = True
+ #~ return ret
+ #~ except TypeError:
+ #~ if limit == maxargs or foundArity:
+ #~ raise
+ #~ limit += 1
+ #~ continue
+ #~ return wrapper
+
+# this version is Python 2.x-3.x cross-compatible
+'decorator to trim function calls to match the arity of the target'
+def _trim_arity(func, maxargs=2):
+ if func in singleArgBuiltins:
+ return lambda s,l,t: func(t)
+ limit = [0]
+ foundArity = [False]
+
+ # traceback return data structure changed in Py3.5 - normalize back to plain tuples
+ if system_version[:2] >= (3,5):
+ def extract_stack(limit=0):
+ # special handling for Python 3.5.0 - extra deep call stack by 1
+ offset = -3 if system_version == (3,5,0) else -2
+ frame_summary = traceback.extract_stack(limit=-offset+limit-1)[offset]
+ return [frame_summary[:2]]
+ def extract_tb(tb, limit=0):
+ frames = traceback.extract_tb(tb, limit=limit)
+ frame_summary = frames[-1]
+ return [frame_summary[:2]]
+ else:
+ extract_stack = traceback.extract_stack
+ extract_tb = traceback.extract_tb
+
+ # synthesize what would be returned by traceback.extract_stack at the call to
+ # user's parse action 'func', so that we don't incur call penalty at parse time
+
+ LINE_DIFF = 6
+ # IF ANY CODE CHANGES, EVEN JUST COMMENTS OR BLANK LINES, BETWEEN THE NEXT LINE AND
+ # THE CALL TO FUNC INSIDE WRAPPER, LINE_DIFF MUST BE MODIFIED!!!!
+ this_line = extract_stack(limit=2)[-1]
+ pa_call_line_synth = (this_line[0], this_line[1]+LINE_DIFF)
+
+ def wrapper(*args):
+ while 1:
+ try:
+ ret = func(*args[limit[0]:])
+ foundArity[0] = True
+ return ret
+ except TypeError:
+ # re-raise TypeErrors if they did not come from our arity testing
+ if foundArity[0]:
+ raise
+ else:
+ try:
+ tb = sys.exc_info()[-1]
+ if not extract_tb(tb, limit=2)[-1][:2] == pa_call_line_synth:
+ raise
+ finally:
+ del tb
+
+ if limit[0] <= maxargs:
+ limit[0] += 1
+ continue
+ raise
+
+ # copy func name to wrapper for sensible debug output
+ func_name = "<parse action>"
+ try:
+ func_name = getattr(func, '__name__',
+ getattr(func, '__class__').__name__)
+ except Exception:
+ func_name = str(func)
+ wrapper.__name__ = func_name
+
+ return wrapper
+
+class ParserElement(object):
+ """Abstract base level parser element class."""
+ DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS = " \n\t\r"
+ verbose_stacktrace = False
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def setDefaultWhitespaceChars( chars ):
+ r"""
+ Overrides the default whitespace chars
+
+ Example::
+ # default whitespace chars are space, <TAB> and newline
+ OneOrMore(Word(alphas)).parseString("abc def\nghi jkl") # -> ['abc', 'def', 'ghi', 'jkl']
+
+ # change to just treat newline as significant
+ ParserElement.setDefaultWhitespaceChars(" \t")
+ OneOrMore(Word(alphas)).parseString("abc def\nghi jkl") # -> ['abc', 'def']
+ """
+ ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS = chars
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def inlineLiteralsUsing(cls):
+ """
+ Set class to be used for inclusion of string literals into a parser.
+
+ Example::
+ # default literal class used is Literal
+ integer = Word(nums)
+ date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day")
+
+ date_str.parseString("1999/12/31") # -> ['1999', '/', '12', '/', '31']
+
+
+ # change to Suppress
+ ParserElement.inlineLiteralsUsing(Suppress)
+ date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day")
+
+ date_str.parseString("1999/12/31") # -> ['1999', '12', '31']
+ """
+ ParserElement._literalStringClass = cls
+
+ def __init__( self, savelist=False ):
+ self.parseAction = list()
+ self.failAction = None
+ #~ self.name = "<unknown>" # don't define self.name, let subclasses try/except upcall
+ self.strRepr = None
+ self.resultsName = None
+ self.saveAsList = savelist
+ self.skipWhitespace = True
+ self.whiteChars = ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS
+ self.copyDefaultWhiteChars = True
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = False # used when checking for left-recursion
+ self.keepTabs = False
+ self.ignoreExprs = list()
+ self.debug = False
+ self.streamlined = False
+ self.mayIndexError = True # used to optimize exception handling for subclasses that don't advance parse index
+ self.errmsg = ""
+ self.modalResults = True # used to mark results names as modal (report only last) or cumulative (list all)
+ self.debugActions = ( None, None, None ) #custom debug actions
+ self.re = None
+ self.callPreparse = True # used to avoid redundant calls to preParse
+ self.callDuringTry = False
+
+ def copy( self ):
+ """
+ Make a copy of this C{ParserElement}. Useful for defining different parse actions
+ for the same parsing pattern, using copies of the original parse element.
+
+ Example::
+ integer = Word(nums).setParseAction(lambda toks: int(toks[0]))
+ integerK = integer.copy().addParseAction(lambda toks: toks[0]*1024) + Suppress("K")
+ integerM = integer.copy().addParseAction(lambda toks: toks[0]*1024*1024) + Suppress("M")
+
+ print(OneOrMore(integerK | integerM | integer).parseString("5K 100 640K 256M"))
+ prints::
+ [5120, 100, 655360, 268435456]
+ Equivalent form of C{expr.copy()} is just C{expr()}::
+ integerM = integer().addParseAction(lambda toks: toks[0]*1024*1024) + Suppress("M")
+ """
+ cpy = copy.copy( self )
+ cpy.parseAction = self.parseAction[:]
+ cpy.ignoreExprs = self.ignoreExprs[:]
+ if self.copyDefaultWhiteChars:
+ cpy.whiteChars = ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS
+ return cpy
+
+ def setName( self, name ):
+ """
+ Define name for this expression, makes debugging and exception messages clearer.
+
+ Example::
+ Word(nums).parseString("ABC") # -> Exception: Expected W:(0123...) (at char 0), (line:1, col:1)
+ Word(nums).setName("integer").parseString("ABC") # -> Exception: Expected integer (at char 0), (line:1, col:1)
+ """
+ self.name = name
+ self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+ if hasattr(self,"exception"):
+ self.exception.msg = self.errmsg
+ return self
+
+ def setResultsName( self, name, listAllMatches=False ):
+ """
+ Define name for referencing matching tokens as a nested attribute
+ of the returned parse results.
+ NOTE: this returns a *copy* of the original C{ParserElement} object;
+ this is so that the client can define a basic element, such as an
+ integer, and reference it in multiple places with different names.
+
+ You can also set results names using the abbreviated syntax,
+ C{expr("name")} in place of C{expr.setResultsName("name")} -
+ see L{I{__call__}<__call__>}.
+
+ Example::
+ date_str = (integer.setResultsName("year") + '/'
+ + integer.setResultsName("month") + '/'
+ + integer.setResultsName("day"))
+
+ # equivalent form:
+ date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day")
+ """
+ newself = self.copy()
+ if name.endswith("*"):
+ name = name[:-1]
+ listAllMatches=True
+ newself.resultsName = name
+ newself.modalResults = not listAllMatches
+ return newself
+
+ def setBreak(self,breakFlag = True):
+ """Method to invoke the Python pdb debugger when this element is
+ about to be parsed. Set C{breakFlag} to True to enable, False to
+ disable.
+ """
+ if breakFlag:
+ _parseMethod = self._parse
+ def breaker(instring, loc, doActions=True, callPreParse=True):
+ import pdb
+ pdb.set_trace()
+ return _parseMethod( instring, loc, doActions, callPreParse )
+ breaker._originalParseMethod = _parseMethod
+ self._parse = breaker
+ else:
+ if hasattr(self._parse,"_originalParseMethod"):
+ self._parse = self._parse._originalParseMethod
+ return self
+
+ def setParseAction( self, *fns, **kwargs ):
+ """
+ Define one or more actions to perform when successfully matching parse element definition.
+ Parse action fn is a callable method with 0-3 arguments, called as C{fn(s,loc,toks)},
+ C{fn(loc,toks)}, C{fn(toks)}, or just C{fn()}, where:
+ - s = the original string being parsed (see note below)
+ - loc = the location of the matching substring
+ - toks = a list of the matched tokens, packaged as a C{L{ParseResults}} object
+ If the functions in fns modify the tokens, they can return them as the return
+ value from fn, and the modified list of tokens will replace the original.
+ Otherwise, fn does not need to return any value.
+
+ Optional keyword arguments:
+ - callDuringTry = (default=C{False}) indicate if parse action should be run during lookaheads and alternate testing
+
+ Note: the default parsing behavior is to expand tabs in the input string
+ before starting the parsing process. See L{I{parseString}<parseString>} for more information
+ on parsing strings containing C{<TAB>}s, and suggested methods to maintain a
+ consistent view of the parsed string, the parse location, and line and column
+ positions within the parsed string.
+
+ Example::
+ integer = Word(nums)
+ date_str = integer + '/' + integer + '/' + integer
+
+ date_str.parseString("1999/12/31") # -> ['1999', '/', '12', '/', '31']
+
+ # use parse action to convert to ints at parse time
+ integer = Word(nums).setParseAction(lambda toks: int(toks[0]))
+ date_str = integer + '/' + integer + '/' + integer
+
+ # note that integer fields are now ints, not strings
+ date_str.parseString("1999/12/31") # -> [1999, '/', 12, '/', 31]
+ """
+ self.parseAction = list(map(_trim_arity, list(fns)))
+ self.callDuringTry = kwargs.get("callDuringTry", False)
+ return self
+
+ def addParseAction( self, *fns, **kwargs ):
+ """
+ Add one or more parse actions to expression's list of parse actions. See L{I{setParseAction}<setParseAction>}.
+
+ See examples in L{I{copy}<copy>}.
+ """
+ self.parseAction += list(map(_trim_arity, list(fns)))
+ self.callDuringTry = self.callDuringTry or kwargs.get("callDuringTry", False)
+ return self
+
+ def addCondition(self, *fns, **kwargs):
+ """Add a boolean predicate function to expression's list of parse actions. See
+ L{I{setParseAction}<setParseAction>} for function call signatures. Unlike C{setParseAction},
+ functions passed to C{addCondition} need to return boolean success/fail of the condition.
+
+ Optional keyword arguments:
+ - message = define a custom message to be used in the raised exception
+ - fatal = if True, will raise ParseFatalException to stop parsing immediately; otherwise will raise ParseException
+
+ Example::
+ integer = Word(nums).setParseAction(lambda toks: int(toks[0]))
+ year_int = integer.copy()
+ year_int.addCondition(lambda toks: toks[0] >= 2000, message="Only support years 2000 and later")
+ date_str = year_int + '/' + integer + '/' + integer
+
+ result = date_str.parseString("1999/12/31") # -> Exception: Only support years 2000 and later (at char 0), (line:1, col:1)
+ """
+ msg = kwargs.get("message", "failed user-defined condition")
+ exc_type = ParseFatalException if kwargs.get("fatal", False) else ParseException
+ for fn in fns:
+ def pa(s,l,t):
+ if not bool(_trim_arity(fn)(s,l,t)):
+ raise exc_type(s,l,msg)
+ self.parseAction.append(pa)
+ self.callDuringTry = self.callDuringTry or kwargs.get("callDuringTry", False)
+ return self
+
+ def setFailAction( self, fn ):
+ """Define action to perform if parsing fails at this expression.
+ Fail acton fn is a callable function that takes the arguments
+ C{fn(s,loc,expr,err)} where:
+ - s = string being parsed
+ - loc = location where expression match was attempted and failed
+ - expr = the parse expression that failed
+ - err = the exception thrown
+ The function returns no value. It may throw C{L{ParseFatalException}}
+ if it is desired to stop parsing immediately."""
+ self.failAction = fn
+ return self
+
+ def _skipIgnorables( self, instring, loc ):
+ exprsFound = True
+ while exprsFound:
+ exprsFound = False
+ for e in self.ignoreExprs:
+ try:
+ while 1:
+ loc,dummy = e._parse( instring, loc )
+ exprsFound = True
+ except ParseException:
+ pass
+ return loc
+
+ def preParse( self, instring, loc ):
+ if self.ignoreExprs:
+ loc = self._skipIgnorables( instring, loc )
+
+ if self.skipWhitespace:
+ wt = self.whiteChars
+ instrlen = len(instring)
+ while loc < instrlen and instring[loc] in wt:
+ loc += 1
+
+ return loc
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ return loc, []
+
+ def postParse( self, instring, loc, tokenlist ):
+ return tokenlist
+
+ #~ @profile
+ def _parseNoCache( self, instring, loc, doActions=True, callPreParse=True ):
+ debugging = ( self.debug ) #and doActions )
+
+ if debugging or self.failAction:
+ #~ print ("Match",self,"at loc",loc,"(%d,%d)" % ( lineno(loc,instring), col(loc,instring) ))
+ if (self.debugActions[0] ):
+ self.debugActions[0]( instring, loc, self )
+ if callPreParse and self.callPreparse:
+ preloc = self.preParse( instring, loc )
+ else:
+ preloc = loc
+ tokensStart = preloc
+ try:
+ try:
+ loc,tokens = self.parseImpl( instring, preloc, doActions )
+ except IndexError:
+ raise ParseException( instring, len(instring), self.errmsg, self )
+ except ParseBaseException as err:
+ #~ print ("Exception raised:", err)
+ if self.debugActions[2]:
+ self.debugActions[2]( instring, tokensStart, self, err )
+ if self.failAction:
+ self.failAction( instring, tokensStart, self, err )
+ raise
+ else:
+ if callPreParse and self.callPreparse:
+ preloc = self.preParse( instring, loc )
+ else:
+ preloc = loc
+ tokensStart = preloc
+ if self.mayIndexError or preloc >= len(instring):
+ try:
+ loc,tokens = self.parseImpl( instring, preloc, doActions )
+ except IndexError:
+ raise ParseException( instring, len(instring), self.errmsg, self )
+ else:
+ loc,tokens = self.parseImpl( instring, preloc, doActions )
+
+ tokens = self.postParse( instring, loc, tokens )
+
+ retTokens = ParseResults( tokens, self.resultsName, asList=self.saveAsList, modal=self.modalResults )
+ if self.parseAction and (doActions or self.callDuringTry):
+ if debugging:
+ try:
+ for fn in self.parseAction:
+ tokens = fn( instring, tokensStart, retTokens )
+ if tokens is not None:
+ retTokens = ParseResults( tokens,
+ self.resultsName,
+ asList=self.saveAsList and isinstance(tokens,(ParseResults,list)),
+ modal=self.modalResults )
+ except ParseBaseException as err:
+ #~ print "Exception raised in user parse action:", err
+ if (self.debugActions[2] ):
+ self.debugActions[2]( instring, tokensStart, self, err )
+ raise
+ else:
+ for fn in self.parseAction:
+ tokens = fn( instring, tokensStart, retTokens )
+ if tokens is not None:
+ retTokens = ParseResults( tokens,
+ self.resultsName,
+ asList=self.saveAsList and isinstance(tokens,(ParseResults,list)),
+ modal=self.modalResults )
+ if debugging:
+ #~ print ("Matched",self,"->",retTokens.asList())
+ if (self.debugActions[1] ):
+ self.debugActions[1]( instring, tokensStart, loc, self, retTokens )
+
+ return loc, retTokens
+
+ def tryParse( self, instring, loc ):
+ try:
+ return self._parse( instring, loc, doActions=False )[0]
+ except ParseFatalException:
+ raise ParseException( instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+ def canParseNext(self, instring, loc):
+ try:
+ self.tryParse(instring, loc)
+ except (ParseException, IndexError):
+ return False
+ else:
+ return True
+
+ class _UnboundedCache(object):
+ def __init__(self):
+ cache = {}
+ self.not_in_cache = not_in_cache = object()
+
+ def get(self, key):
+ return cache.get(key, not_in_cache)
+
+ def set(self, key, value):
+ cache[key] = value
+
+ def clear(self):
+ cache.clear()
+
+ def cache_len(self):
+ return len(cache)
+
+ self.get = types.MethodType(get, self)
+ self.set = types.MethodType(set, self)
+ self.clear = types.MethodType(clear, self)
+ self.__len__ = types.MethodType(cache_len, self)
+
+ if _OrderedDict is not None:
+ class _FifoCache(object):
+ def __init__(self, size):
+ self.not_in_cache = not_in_cache = object()
+
+ cache = _OrderedDict()
+
+ def get(self, key):
+ return cache.get(key, not_in_cache)
+
+ def set(self, key, value):
+ cache[key] = value
+ while len(cache) > size:
+ try:
+ cache.popitem(False)
+ except KeyError:
+ pass
+
+ def clear(self):
+ cache.clear()
+
+ def cache_len(self):
+ return len(cache)
+
+ self.get = types.MethodType(get, self)
+ self.set = types.MethodType(set, self)
+ self.clear = types.MethodType(clear, self)
+ self.__len__ = types.MethodType(cache_len, self)
+
+ else:
+ class _FifoCache(object):
+ def __init__(self, size):
+ self.not_in_cache = not_in_cache = object()
+
+ cache = {}
+ key_fifo = collections.deque([], size)
+
+ def get(self, key):
+ return cache.get(key, not_in_cache)
+
+ def set(self, key, value):
+ cache[key] = value
+ while len(key_fifo) > size:
+ cache.pop(key_fifo.popleft(), None)
+ key_fifo.append(key)
+
+ def clear(self):
+ cache.clear()
+ key_fifo.clear()
+
+ def cache_len(self):
+ return len(cache)
+
+ self.get = types.MethodType(get, self)
+ self.set = types.MethodType(set, self)
+ self.clear = types.MethodType(clear, self)
+ self.__len__ = types.MethodType(cache_len, self)
+
+ # argument cache for optimizing repeated calls when backtracking through recursive expressions
+ packrat_cache = {} # this is set later by enabledPackrat(); this is here so that resetCache() doesn't fail
+ packrat_cache_lock = RLock()
+ packrat_cache_stats = [0, 0]
+
+ # this method gets repeatedly called during backtracking with the same arguments -
+ # we can cache these arguments and save ourselves the trouble of re-parsing the contained expression
+ def _parseCache( self, instring, loc, doActions=True, callPreParse=True ):
+ HIT, MISS = 0, 1
+ lookup = (self, instring, loc, callPreParse, doActions)
+ with ParserElement.packrat_cache_lock:
+ cache = ParserElement.packrat_cache
+ value = cache.get(lookup)
+ if value is cache.not_in_cache:
+ ParserElement.packrat_cache_stats[MISS] += 1
+ try:
+ value = self._parseNoCache(instring, loc, doActions, callPreParse)
+ except ParseBaseException as pe:
+ # cache a copy of the exception, without the traceback
+ cache.set(lookup, pe.__class__(*pe.args))
+ raise
+ else:
+ cache.set(lookup, (value[0], value[1].copy()))
+ return value
+ else:
+ ParserElement.packrat_cache_stats[HIT] += 1
+ if isinstance(value, Exception):
+ raise value
+ return (value[0], value[1].copy())
+
+ _parse = _parseNoCache
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def resetCache():
+ ParserElement.packrat_cache.clear()
+ ParserElement.packrat_cache_stats[:] = [0] * len(ParserElement.packrat_cache_stats)
+
+ _packratEnabled = False
+ @staticmethod
+ def enablePackrat(cache_size_limit=128):
+ """Enables "packrat" parsing, which adds memoizing to the parsing logic.
+ Repeated parse attempts at the same string location (which happens
+ often in many complex grammars) can immediately return a cached value,
+ instead of re-executing parsing/validating code. Memoizing is done of
+ both valid results and parsing exceptions.
+
+ Parameters:
+ - cache_size_limit - (default=C{128}) - if an integer value is provided
+ will limit the size of the packrat cache; if None is passed, then
+ the cache size will be unbounded; if 0 is passed, the cache will
+ be effectively disabled.
+
+ This speedup may break existing programs that use parse actions that
+ have side-effects. For this reason, packrat parsing is disabled when
+ you first import pyparsing. To activate the packrat feature, your
+ program must call the class method C{ParserElement.enablePackrat()}. If
+ your program uses C{psyco} to "compile as you go", you must call
+ C{enablePackrat} before calling C{psyco.full()}. If you do not do this,
+ Python will crash. For best results, call C{enablePackrat()} immediately
+ after importing pyparsing.
+
+ Example::
+ import pyparsing
+ pyparsing.ParserElement.enablePackrat()
+ """
+ if not ParserElement._packratEnabled:
+ ParserElement._packratEnabled = True
+ if cache_size_limit is None:
+ ParserElement.packrat_cache = ParserElement._UnboundedCache()
+ else:
+ ParserElement.packrat_cache = ParserElement._FifoCache(cache_size_limit)
+ ParserElement._parse = ParserElement._parseCache
+
+ def parseString( self, instring, parseAll=False ):
+ """
+ Execute the parse expression with the given string.
+ This is the main interface to the client code, once the complete
+ expression has been built.
+
+ If you want the grammar to require that the entire input string be
+ successfully parsed, then set C{parseAll} to True (equivalent to ending
+ the grammar with C{L{StringEnd()}}).
+
+ Note: C{parseString} implicitly calls C{expandtabs()} on the input string,
+ in order to report proper column numbers in parse actions.
+ If the input string contains tabs and
+ the grammar uses parse actions that use the C{loc} argument to index into the
+ string being parsed, you can ensure you have a consistent view of the input
+ string by:
+ - calling C{parseWithTabs} on your grammar before calling C{parseString}
+ (see L{I{parseWithTabs}<parseWithTabs>})
+ - define your parse action using the full C{(s,loc,toks)} signature, and
+ reference the input string using the parse action's C{s} argument
+ - explictly expand the tabs in your input string before calling
+ C{parseString}
+
+ Example::
+ Word('a').parseString('aaaaabaaa') # -> ['aaaaa']
+ Word('a').parseString('aaaaabaaa', parseAll=True) # -> Exception: Expected end of text
+ """
+ ParserElement.resetCache()
+ if not self.streamlined:
+ self.streamline()
+ #~ self.saveAsList = True
+ for e in self.ignoreExprs:
+ e.streamline()
+ if not self.keepTabs:
+ instring = instring.expandtabs()
+ try:
+ loc, tokens = self._parse( instring, 0 )
+ if parseAll:
+ loc = self.preParse( instring, loc )
+ se = Empty() + StringEnd()
+ se._parse( instring, loc )
+ except ParseBaseException as exc:
+ if ParserElement.verbose_stacktrace:
+ raise
+ else:
+ # catch and re-raise exception from here, clears out pyparsing internal stack trace
+ raise exc
+ else:
+ return tokens
+
+ def scanString( self, instring, maxMatches=_MAX_INT, overlap=False ):
+ """
+ Scan the input string for expression matches. Each match will return the
+ matching tokens, start location, and end location. May be called with optional
+ C{maxMatches} argument, to clip scanning after 'n' matches are found. If
+ C{overlap} is specified, then overlapping matches will be reported.
+
+ Note that the start and end locations are reported relative to the string
+ being parsed. See L{I{parseString}<parseString>} for more information on parsing
+ strings with embedded tabs.
+
+ Example::
+ source = "sldjf123lsdjjkf345sldkjf879lkjsfd987"
+ print(source)
+ for tokens,start,end in Word(alphas).scanString(source):
+ print(' '*start + '^'*(end-start))
+ print(' '*start + tokens[0])
+
+ prints::
+
+ sldjf123lsdjjkf345sldkjf879lkjsfd987
+ ^^^^^
+ sldjf
+ ^^^^^^^
+ lsdjjkf
+ ^^^^^^
+ sldkjf
+ ^^^^^^
+ lkjsfd
+ """
+ if not self.streamlined:
+ self.streamline()
+ for e in self.ignoreExprs:
+ e.streamline()
+
+ if not self.keepTabs:
+ instring = _ustr(instring).expandtabs()
+ instrlen = len(instring)
+ loc = 0
+ preparseFn = self.preParse
+ parseFn = self._parse
+ ParserElement.resetCache()
+ matches = 0
+ try:
+ while loc <= instrlen and matches < maxMatches:
+ try:
+ preloc = preparseFn( instring, loc )
+ nextLoc,tokens = parseFn( instring, preloc, callPreParse=False )
+ except ParseException:
+ loc = preloc+1
+ else:
+ if nextLoc > loc:
+ matches += 1
+ yield tokens, preloc, nextLoc
+ if overlap:
+ nextloc = preparseFn( instring, loc )
+ if nextloc > loc:
+ loc = nextLoc
+ else:
+ loc += 1
+ else:
+ loc = nextLoc
+ else:
+ loc = preloc+1
+ except ParseBaseException as exc:
+ if ParserElement.verbose_stacktrace:
+ raise
+ else:
+ # catch and re-raise exception from here, clears out pyparsing internal stack trace
+ raise exc
+
+ def transformString( self, instring ):
+ """
+ Extension to C{L{scanString}}, to modify matching text with modified tokens that may
+ be returned from a parse action. To use C{transformString}, define a grammar and
+ attach a parse action to it that modifies the returned token list.
+ Invoking C{transformString()} on a target string will then scan for matches,
+ and replace the matched text patterns according to the logic in the parse
+ action. C{transformString()} returns the resulting transformed string.
+
+ Example::
+ wd = Word(alphas)
+ wd.setParseAction(lambda toks: toks[0].title())
+
+ print(wd.transformString("now is the winter of our discontent made glorious summer by this sun of york."))
+ Prints::
+ Now Is The Winter Of Our Discontent Made Glorious Summer By This Sun Of York.
+ """
+ out = []
+ lastE = 0
+ # force preservation of <TAB>s, to minimize unwanted transformation of string, and to
+ # keep string locs straight between transformString and scanString
+ self.keepTabs = True
+ try:
+ for t,s,e in self.scanString( instring ):
+ out.append( instring[lastE:s] )
+ if t:
+ if isinstance(t,ParseResults):
+ out += t.asList()
+ elif isinstance(t,list):
+ out += t
+ else:
+ out.append(t)
+ lastE = e
+ out.append(instring[lastE:])
+ out = [o for o in out if o]
+ return "".join(map(_ustr,_flatten(out)))
+ except ParseBaseException as exc:
+ if ParserElement.verbose_stacktrace:
+ raise
+ else:
+ # catch and re-raise exception from here, clears out pyparsing internal stack trace
+ raise exc
+
+ def searchString( self, instring, maxMatches=_MAX_INT ):
+ """
+ Another extension to C{L{scanString}}, simplifying the access to the tokens found
+ to match the given parse expression. May be called with optional
+ C{maxMatches} argument, to clip searching after 'n' matches are found.
+
+ Example::
+ # a capitalized word starts with an uppercase letter, followed by zero or more lowercase letters
+ cap_word = Word(alphas.upper(), alphas.lower())
+
+ print(cap_word.searchString("More than Iron, more than Lead, more than Gold I need Electricity"))
+
+ # the sum() builtin can be used to merge results into a single ParseResults object
+ print(sum(cap_word.searchString("More than Iron, more than Lead, more than Gold I need Electricity")))
+ prints::
+ [['More'], ['Iron'], ['Lead'], ['Gold'], ['I'], ['Electricity']]
+ ['More', 'Iron', 'Lead', 'Gold', 'I', 'Electricity']
+ """
+ try:
+ return ParseResults([ t for t,s,e in self.scanString( instring, maxMatches ) ])
+ except ParseBaseException as exc:
+ if ParserElement.verbose_stacktrace:
+ raise
+ else:
+ # catch and re-raise exception from here, clears out pyparsing internal stack trace
+ raise exc
+
+ def split(self, instring, maxsplit=_MAX_INT, includeSeparators=False):
+ """
+ Generator method to split a string using the given expression as a separator.
+ May be called with optional C{maxsplit} argument, to limit the number of splits;
+ and the optional C{includeSeparators} argument (default=C{False}), if the separating
+ matching text should be included in the split results.
+
+ Example::
+ punc = oneOf(list(".,;:/-!?"))
+ print(list(punc.split("This, this?, this sentence, is badly punctuated!")))
+ prints::
+ ['This', ' this', '', ' this sentence', ' is badly punctuated', '']
+ """
+ splits = 0
+ last = 0
+ for t,s,e in self.scanString(instring, maxMatches=maxsplit):
+ yield instring[last:s]
+ if includeSeparators:
+ yield t[0]
+ last = e
+ yield instring[last:]
+
+ def __add__(self, other ):
+ """
+ Implementation of + operator - returns C{L{And}}. Adding strings to a ParserElement
+ converts them to L{Literal}s by default.
+
+ Example::
+ greet = Word(alphas) + "," + Word(alphas) + "!"
+ hello = "Hello, World!"
+ print (hello, "->", greet.parseString(hello))
+ Prints::
+ Hello, World! -> ['Hello', ',', 'World', '!']
+ """
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+ warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ return None
+ return And( [ self, other ] )
+
+ def __radd__(self, other ):
+ """
+ Implementation of + operator when left operand is not a C{L{ParserElement}}
+ """
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+ warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ return None
+ return other + self
+
+ def __sub__(self, other):
+ """
+ Implementation of - operator, returns C{L{And}} with error stop
+ """
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+ warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ return None
+ return self + And._ErrorStop() + other
+
+ def __rsub__(self, other ):
+ """
+ Implementation of - operator when left operand is not a C{L{ParserElement}}
+ """
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+ warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ return None
+ return other - self
+
+ def __mul__(self,other):
+ """
+ Implementation of * operator, allows use of C{expr * 3} in place of
+ C{expr + expr + expr}. Expressions may also me multiplied by a 2-integer
+ tuple, similar to C{{min,max}} multipliers in regular expressions. Tuples
+ may also include C{None} as in:
+ - C{expr*(n,None)} or C{expr*(n,)} is equivalent
+ to C{expr*n + L{ZeroOrMore}(expr)}
+ (read as "at least n instances of C{expr}")
+ - C{expr*(None,n)} is equivalent to C{expr*(0,n)}
+ (read as "0 to n instances of C{expr}")
+ - C{expr*(None,None)} is equivalent to C{L{ZeroOrMore}(expr)}
+ - C{expr*(1,None)} is equivalent to C{L{OneOrMore}(expr)}
+
+ Note that C{expr*(None,n)} does not raise an exception if
+ more than n exprs exist in the input stream; that is,
+ C{expr*(None,n)} does not enforce a maximum number of expr
+ occurrences. If this behavior is desired, then write
+ C{expr*(None,n) + ~expr}
+ """
+ if isinstance(other,int):
+ minElements, optElements = other,0
+ elif isinstance(other,tuple):
+ other = (other + (None, None))[:2]
+ if other[0] is None:
+ other = (0, other[1])
+ if isinstance(other[0],int) and other[1] is None:
+ if other[0] == 0:
+ return ZeroOrMore(self)
+ if other[0] == 1:
+ return OneOrMore(self)
+ else:
+ return self*other[0] + ZeroOrMore(self)
+ elif isinstance(other[0],int) and isinstance(other[1],int):
+ minElements, optElements = other
+ optElements -= minElements
+ else:
+ raise TypeError("cannot multiply 'ParserElement' and ('%s','%s') objects", type(other[0]),type(other[1]))
+ else:
+ raise TypeError("cannot multiply 'ParserElement' and '%s' objects", type(other))
+
+ if minElements < 0:
+ raise ValueError("cannot multiply ParserElement by negative value")
+ if optElements < 0:
+ raise ValueError("second tuple value must be greater or equal to first tuple value")
+ if minElements == optElements == 0:
+ raise ValueError("cannot multiply ParserElement by 0 or (0,0)")
+
+ if (optElements):
+ def makeOptionalList(n):
+ if n>1:
+ return Optional(self + makeOptionalList(n-1))
+ else:
+ return Optional(self)
+ if minElements:
+ if minElements == 1:
+ ret = self + makeOptionalList(optElements)
+ else:
+ ret = And([self]*minElements) + makeOptionalList(optElements)
+ else:
+ ret = makeOptionalList(optElements)
+ else:
+ if minElements == 1:
+ ret = self
+ else:
+ ret = And([self]*minElements)
+ return ret
+
+ def __rmul__(self, other):
+ return self.__mul__(other)
+
+ def __or__(self, other ):
+ """
+ Implementation of | operator - returns C{L{MatchFirst}}
+ """
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+ warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ return None
+ return MatchFirst( [ self, other ] )
+
+ def __ror__(self, other ):
+ """
+ Implementation of | operator when left operand is not a C{L{ParserElement}}
+ """
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+ warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ return None
+ return other | self
+
+ def __xor__(self, other ):
+ """
+ Implementation of ^ operator - returns C{L{Or}}
+ """
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+ warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ return None
+ return Or( [ self, other ] )
+
+ def __rxor__(self, other ):
+ """
+ Implementation of ^ operator when left operand is not a C{L{ParserElement}}
+ """
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+ warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ return None
+ return other ^ self
+
+ def __and__(self, other ):
+ """
+ Implementation of & operator - returns C{L{Each}}
+ """
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+ warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ return None
+ return Each( [ self, other ] )
+
+ def __rand__(self, other ):
+ """
+ Implementation of & operator when left operand is not a C{L{ParserElement}}
+ """
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+ warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ return None
+ return other & self
+
+ def __invert__( self ):
+ """
+ Implementation of ~ operator - returns C{L{NotAny}}
+ """
+ return NotAny( self )
+
+ def __call__(self, name=None):
+ """
+ Shortcut for C{L{setResultsName}}, with C{listAllMatches=False}.
+
+ If C{name} is given with a trailing C{'*'} character, then C{listAllMatches} will be
+ passed as C{True}.
+
+ If C{name} is omitted, same as calling C{L{copy}}.
+
+ Example::
+ # these are equivalent
+ userdata = Word(alphas).setResultsName("name") + Word(nums+"-").setResultsName("socsecno")
+ userdata = Word(alphas)("name") + Word(nums+"-")("socsecno")
+ """
+ if name is not None:
+ return self.setResultsName(name)
+ else:
+ return self.copy()
+
+ def suppress( self ):
+ """
+ Suppresses the output of this C{ParserElement}; useful to keep punctuation from
+ cluttering up returned output.
+ """
+ return Suppress( self )
+
+ def leaveWhitespace( self ):
+ """
+ Disables the skipping of whitespace before matching the characters in the
+ C{ParserElement}'s defined pattern. This is normally only used internally by
+ the pyparsing module, but may be needed in some whitespace-sensitive grammars.
+ """
+ self.skipWhitespace = False
+ return self
+
+ def setWhitespaceChars( self, chars ):
+ """
+ Overrides the default whitespace chars
+ """
+ self.skipWhitespace = True
+ self.whiteChars = chars
+ self.copyDefaultWhiteChars = False
+ return self
+
+ def parseWithTabs( self ):
+ """
+ Overrides default behavior to expand C{<TAB>}s to spaces before parsing the input string.
+ Must be called before C{parseString} when the input grammar contains elements that
+ match C{<TAB>} characters.
+ """
+ self.keepTabs = True
+ return self
+
+ def ignore( self, other ):
+ """
+ Define expression to be ignored (e.g., comments) while doing pattern
+ matching; may be called repeatedly, to define multiple comment or other
+ ignorable patterns.
+
+ Example::
+ patt = OneOrMore(Word(alphas))
+ patt.parseString('ablaj /* comment */ lskjd') # -> ['ablaj']
+
+ patt.ignore(cStyleComment)
+ patt.parseString('ablaj /* comment */ lskjd') # -> ['ablaj', 'lskjd']
+ """
+ if isinstance(other, basestring):
+ other = Suppress(other)
+
+ if isinstance( other, Suppress ):
+ if other not in self.ignoreExprs:
+ self.ignoreExprs.append(other)
+ else:
+ self.ignoreExprs.append( Suppress( other.copy() ) )
+ return self
+
+ def setDebugActions( self, startAction, successAction, exceptionAction ):
+ """
+ Enable display of debugging messages while doing pattern matching.
+ """
+ self.debugActions = (startAction or _defaultStartDebugAction,
+ successAction or _defaultSuccessDebugAction,
+ exceptionAction or _defaultExceptionDebugAction)
+ self.debug = True
+ return self
+
+ def setDebug( self, flag=True ):
+ """
+ Enable display of debugging messages while doing pattern matching.
+ Set C{flag} to True to enable, False to disable.
+
+ Example::
+ wd = Word(alphas).setName("alphaword")
+ integer = Word(nums).setName("numword")
+ term = wd | integer
+
+ # turn on debugging for wd
+ wd.setDebug()
+
+ OneOrMore(term).parseString("abc 123 xyz 890")
+
+ prints::
+ Match alphaword at loc 0(1,1)
+ Matched alphaword -> ['abc']
+ Match alphaword at loc 3(1,4)
+ Exception raised:Expected alphaword (at char 4), (line:1, col:5)
+ Match alphaword at loc 7(1,8)
+ Matched alphaword -> ['xyz']
+ Match alphaword at loc 11(1,12)
+ Exception raised:Expected alphaword (at char 12), (line:1, col:13)
+ Match alphaword at loc 15(1,16)
+ Exception raised:Expected alphaword (at char 15), (line:1, col:16)
+
+ The output shown is that produced by the default debug actions - custom debug actions can be
+ specified using L{setDebugActions}. Prior to attempting
+ to match the C{wd} expression, the debugging message C{"Match <exprname> at loc <n>(<line>,<col>)"}
+ is shown. Then if the parse succeeds, a C{"Matched"} message is shown, or an C{"Exception raised"}
+ message is shown. Also note the use of L{setName} to assign a human-readable name to the expression,
+ which makes debugging and exception messages easier to understand - for instance, the default
+ name created for the C{Word} expression without calling C{setName} is C{"W:(ABCD...)"}.
+ """
+ if flag:
+ self.setDebugActions( _defaultStartDebugAction, _defaultSuccessDebugAction, _defaultExceptionDebugAction )
+ else:
+ self.debug = False
+ return self
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ return self.name
+
+ def __repr__( self ):
+ return _ustr(self)
+
+ def streamline( self ):
+ self.streamlined = True
+ self.strRepr = None
+ return self
+
+ def checkRecursion( self, parseElementList ):
+ pass
+
+ def validate( self, validateTrace=[] ):
+ """
+ Check defined expressions for valid structure, check for infinite recursive definitions.
+ """
+ self.checkRecursion( [] )
+
+ def parseFile( self, file_or_filename, parseAll=False ):
+ """
+ Execute the parse expression on the given file or filename.
+ If a filename is specified (instead of a file object),
+ the entire file is opened, read, and closed before parsing.
+ """
+ try:
+ file_contents = file_or_filename.read()
+ except AttributeError:
+ with open(file_or_filename, "r") as f:
+ file_contents = f.read()
+ try:
+ return self.parseString(file_contents, parseAll)
+ except ParseBaseException as exc:
+ if ParserElement.verbose_stacktrace:
+ raise
+ else:
+ # catch and re-raise exception from here, clears out pyparsing internal stack trace
+ raise exc
+
+ def __eq__(self,other):
+ if isinstance(other, ParserElement):
+ return self is other or vars(self) == vars(other)
+ elif isinstance(other, basestring):
+ return self.matches(other)
+ else:
+ return super(ParserElement,self)==other
+
+ def __ne__(self,other):
+ return not (self == other)
+
+ def __hash__(self):
+ return hash(id(self))
+
+ def __req__(self,other):
+ return self == other
+
+ def __rne__(self,other):
+ return not (self == other)
+
+ def matches(self, testString, parseAll=True):
+ """
+ Method for quick testing of a parser against a test string. Good for simple
+ inline microtests of sub expressions while building up larger parser.
+
+ Parameters:
+ - testString - to test against this expression for a match
+ - parseAll - (default=C{True}) - flag to pass to C{L{parseString}} when running tests
+
+ Example::
+ expr = Word(nums)
+ assert expr.matches("100")
+ """
+ try:
+ self.parseString(_ustr(testString), parseAll=parseAll)
+ return True
+ except ParseBaseException:
+ return False
+
+ def runTests(self, tests, parseAll=True, comment='#', fullDump=True, printResults=True, failureTests=False):
+ """
+ Execute the parse expression on a series of test strings, showing each
+ test, the parsed results or where the parse failed. Quick and easy way to
+ run a parse expression against a list of sample strings.
+
+ Parameters:
+ - tests - a list of separate test strings, or a multiline string of test strings
+ - parseAll - (default=C{True}) - flag to pass to C{L{parseString}} when running tests
+ - comment - (default=C{'#'}) - expression for indicating embedded comments in the test
+ string; pass None to disable comment filtering
+ - fullDump - (default=C{True}) - dump results as list followed by results names in nested outline;
+ if False, only dump nested list
+ - printResults - (default=C{True}) prints test output to stdout
+ - failureTests - (default=C{False}) indicates if these tests are expected to fail parsing
+
+ Returns: a (success, results) tuple, where success indicates that all tests succeeded
+ (or failed if C{failureTests} is True), and the results contain a list of lines of each
+ test's output
+
+ Example::
+ number_expr = pyparsing_common.number.copy()
+
+ result = number_expr.runTests('''
+ # unsigned integer
+ 100
+ # negative integer
+ -100
+ # float with scientific notation
+ 6.02e23
+ # integer with scientific notation
+ 1e-12
+ ''')
+ print("Success" if result[0] else "Failed!")
+
+ result = number_expr.runTests('''
+ # stray character
+ 100Z
+ # missing leading digit before '.'
+ -.100
+ # too many '.'
+ 3.14.159
+ ''', failureTests=True)
+ print("Success" if result[0] else "Failed!")
+ prints::
+ # unsigned integer
+ 100
+ [100]
+
+ # negative integer
+ -100
+ [-100]
+
+ # float with scientific notation
+ 6.02e23
+ [6.02e+23]
+
+ # integer with scientific notation
+ 1e-12
+ [1e-12]
+
+ Success
+
+ # stray character
+ 100Z
+ ^
+ FAIL: Expected end of text (at char 3), (line:1, col:4)
+
+ # missing leading digit before '.'
+ -.100
+ ^
+ FAIL: Expected {real number with scientific notation | real number | signed integer} (at char 0), (line:1, col:1)
+
+ # too many '.'
+ 3.14.159
+ ^
+ FAIL: Expected end of text (at char 4), (line:1, col:5)
+
+ Success
+
+ Each test string must be on a single line. If you want to test a string that spans multiple
+ lines, create a test like this::
+
+ expr.runTest(r"this is a test\\n of strings that spans \\n 3 lines")
+
+ (Note that this is a raw string literal, you must include the leading 'r'.)
+ """
+ if isinstance(tests, basestring):
+ tests = list(map(str.strip, tests.rstrip().splitlines()))
+ if isinstance(comment, basestring):
+ comment = Literal(comment)
+ allResults = []
+ comments = []
+ success = True
+ for t in tests:
+ if comment is not None and comment.matches(t, False) or comments and not t:
+ comments.append(t)
+ continue
+ if not t:
+ continue
+ out = ['\n'.join(comments), t]
+ comments = []
+ try:
+ t = t.replace(r'\n','\n')
+ result = self.parseString(t, parseAll=parseAll)
+ out.append(result.dump(full=fullDump))
+ success = success and not failureTests
+ except ParseBaseException as pe:
+ fatal = "(FATAL)" if isinstance(pe, ParseFatalException) else ""
+ if '\n' in t:
+ out.append(line(pe.loc, t))
+ out.append(' '*(col(pe.loc,t)-1) + '^' + fatal)
+ else:
+ out.append(' '*pe.loc + '^' + fatal)
+ out.append("FAIL: " + str(pe))
+ success = success and failureTests
+ result = pe
+ except Exception as exc:
+ out.append("FAIL-EXCEPTION: " + str(exc))
+ success = success and failureTests
+ result = exc
+
+ if printResults:
+ if fullDump:
+ out.append('')
+ print('\n'.join(out))
+
+ allResults.append((t, result))
+
+ return success, allResults
+
+
+class Token(ParserElement):
+ """
+ Abstract C{ParserElement} subclass, for defining atomic matching patterns.
+ """
+ def __init__( self ):
+ super(Token,self).__init__( savelist=False )
+
+
+class Empty(Token):
+ """
+ An empty token, will always match.
+ """
+ def __init__( self ):
+ super(Empty,self).__init__()
+ self.name = "Empty"
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+ self.mayIndexError = False
+
+
+class NoMatch(Token):
+ """
+ A token that will never match.
+ """
+ def __init__( self ):
+ super(NoMatch,self).__init__()
+ self.name = "NoMatch"
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+ self.mayIndexError = False
+ self.errmsg = "Unmatchable token"
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+
+class Literal(Token):
+ """
+ Token to exactly match a specified string.
+
+ Example::
+ Literal('blah').parseString('blah') # -> ['blah']
+ Literal('blah').parseString('blahfooblah') # -> ['blah']
+ Literal('blah').parseString('bla') # -> Exception: Expected "blah"
+
+ For case-insensitive matching, use L{CaselessLiteral}.
+
+ For keyword matching (force word break before and after the matched string),
+ use L{Keyword} or L{CaselessKeyword}.
+ """
+ def __init__( self, matchString ):
+ super(Literal,self).__init__()
+ self.match = matchString
+ self.matchLen = len(matchString)
+ try:
+ self.firstMatchChar = matchString[0]
+ except IndexError:
+ warnings.warn("null string passed to Literal; use Empty() instead",
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ self.__class__ = Empty
+ self.name = '"%s"' % _ustr(self.match)
+ self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = False
+ self.mayIndexError = False
+
+ # Performance tuning: this routine gets called a *lot*
+ # if this is a single character match string and the first character matches,
+ # short-circuit as quickly as possible, and avoid calling startswith
+ #~ @profile
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if (instring[loc] == self.firstMatchChar and
+ (self.matchLen==1 or instring.startswith(self.match,loc)) ):
+ return loc+self.matchLen, self.match
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+_L = Literal
+ParserElement._literalStringClass = Literal
+
+class Keyword(Token):
+ """
+ Token to exactly match a specified string as a keyword, that is, it must be
+ immediately followed by a non-keyword character. Compare with C{L{Literal}}:
+ - C{Literal("if")} will match the leading C{'if'} in C{'ifAndOnlyIf'}.
+ - C{Keyword("if")} will not; it will only match the leading C{'if'} in C{'if x=1'}, or C{'if(y==2)'}
+ Accepts two optional constructor arguments in addition to the keyword string:
+ - C{identChars} is a string of characters that would be valid identifier characters,
+ defaulting to all alphanumerics + "_" and "$"
+ - C{caseless} allows case-insensitive matching, default is C{False}.
+
+ Example::
+ Keyword("start").parseString("start") # -> ['start']
+ Keyword("start").parseString("starting") # -> Exception
+
+ For case-insensitive matching, use L{CaselessKeyword}.
+ """
+ DEFAULT_KEYWORD_CHARS = alphanums+"_$"
+
+ def __init__( self, matchString, identChars=None, caseless=False ):
+ super(Keyword,self).__init__()
+ if identChars is None:
+ identChars = Keyword.DEFAULT_KEYWORD_CHARS
+ self.match = matchString
+ self.matchLen = len(matchString)
+ try:
+ self.firstMatchChar = matchString[0]
+ except IndexError:
+ warnings.warn("null string passed to Keyword; use Empty() instead",
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ self.name = '"%s"' % self.match
+ self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = False
+ self.mayIndexError = False
+ self.caseless = caseless
+ if caseless:
+ self.caselessmatch = matchString.upper()
+ identChars = identChars.upper()
+ self.identChars = set(identChars)
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if self.caseless:
+ if ( (instring[ loc:loc+self.matchLen ].upper() == self.caselessmatch) and
+ (loc >= len(instring)-self.matchLen or instring[loc+self.matchLen].upper() not in self.identChars) and
+ (loc == 0 or instring[loc-1].upper() not in self.identChars) ):
+ return loc+self.matchLen, self.match
+ else:
+ if (instring[loc] == self.firstMatchChar and
+ (self.matchLen==1 or instring.startswith(self.match,loc)) and
+ (loc >= len(instring)-self.matchLen or instring[loc+self.matchLen] not in self.identChars) and
+ (loc == 0 or instring[loc-1] not in self.identChars) ):
+ return loc+self.matchLen, self.match
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+ def copy(self):
+ c = super(Keyword,self).copy()
+ c.identChars = Keyword.DEFAULT_KEYWORD_CHARS
+ return c
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def setDefaultKeywordChars( chars ):
+ """Overrides the default Keyword chars
+ """
+ Keyword.DEFAULT_KEYWORD_CHARS = chars
+
+class CaselessLiteral(Literal):
+ """
+ Token to match a specified string, ignoring case of letters.
+ Note: the matched results will always be in the case of the given
+ match string, NOT the case of the input text.
+
+ Example::
+ OneOrMore(CaselessLiteral("CMD")).parseString("cmd CMD Cmd10") # -> ['CMD', 'CMD', 'CMD']
+
+ (Contrast with example for L{CaselessKeyword}.)
+ """
+ def __init__( self, matchString ):
+ super(CaselessLiteral,self).__init__( matchString.upper() )
+ # Preserve the defining literal.
+ self.returnString = matchString
+ self.name = "'%s'" % self.returnString
+ self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if instring[ loc:loc+self.matchLen ].upper() == self.match:
+ return loc+self.matchLen, self.returnString
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+class CaselessKeyword(Keyword):
+ """
+ Caseless version of L{Keyword}.
+
+ Example::
+ OneOrMore(CaselessKeyword("CMD")).parseString("cmd CMD Cmd10") # -> ['CMD', 'CMD']
+
+ (Contrast with example for L{CaselessLiteral}.)
+ """
+ def __init__( self, matchString, identChars=None ):
+ super(CaselessKeyword,self).__init__( matchString, identChars, caseless=True )
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if ( (instring[ loc:loc+self.matchLen ].upper() == self.caselessmatch) and
+ (loc >= len(instring)-self.matchLen or instring[loc+self.matchLen].upper() not in self.identChars) ):
+ return loc+self.matchLen, self.match
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+class CloseMatch(Token):
+ """
+ A variation on L{Literal} which matches "close" matches, that is,
+ strings with at most 'n' mismatching characters. C{CloseMatch} takes parameters:
+ - C{match_string} - string to be matched
+ - C{maxMismatches} - (C{default=1}) maximum number of mismatches allowed to count as a match
+
+ The results from a successful parse will contain the matched text from the input string and the following named results:
+ - C{mismatches} - a list of the positions within the match_string where mismatches were found
+ - C{original} - the original match_string used to compare against the input string
+
+ If C{mismatches} is an empty list, then the match was an exact match.
+
+ Example::
+ patt = CloseMatch("ATCATCGAATGGA")
+ patt.parseString("ATCATCGAAXGGA") # -> (['ATCATCGAAXGGA'], {'mismatches': [[9]], 'original': ['ATCATCGAATGGA']})
+ patt.parseString("ATCAXCGAAXGGA") # -> Exception: Expected 'ATCATCGAATGGA' (with up to 1 mismatches) (at char 0), (line:1, col:1)
+
+ # exact match
+ patt.parseString("ATCATCGAATGGA") # -> (['ATCATCGAATGGA'], {'mismatches': [[]], 'original': ['ATCATCGAATGGA']})
+
+ # close match allowing up to 2 mismatches
+ patt = CloseMatch("ATCATCGAATGGA", maxMismatches=2)
+ patt.parseString("ATCAXCGAAXGGA") # -> (['ATCAXCGAAXGGA'], {'mismatches': [[4, 9]], 'original': ['ATCATCGAATGGA']})
+ """
+ def __init__(self, match_string, maxMismatches=1):
+ super(CloseMatch,self).__init__()
+ self.name = match_string
+ self.match_string = match_string
+ self.maxMismatches = maxMismatches
+ self.errmsg = "Expected %r (with up to %d mismatches)" % (self.match_string, self.maxMismatches)
+ self.mayIndexError = False
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = False
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ start = loc
+ instrlen = len(instring)
+ maxloc = start + len(self.match_string)
+
+ if maxloc <= instrlen:
+ match_string = self.match_string
+ match_stringloc = 0
+ mismatches = []
+ maxMismatches = self.maxMismatches
+
+ for match_stringloc,s_m in enumerate(zip(instring[loc:maxloc], self.match_string)):
+ src,mat = s_m
+ if src != mat:
+ mismatches.append(match_stringloc)
+ if len(mismatches) > maxMismatches:
+ break
+ else:
+ loc = match_stringloc + 1
+ results = ParseResults([instring[start:loc]])
+ results['original'] = self.match_string
+ results['mismatches'] = mismatches
+ return loc, results
+
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+
+class Word(Token):
+ """
+ Token for matching words composed of allowed character sets.
+ Defined with string containing all allowed initial characters,
+ an optional string containing allowed body characters (if omitted,
+ defaults to the initial character set), and an optional minimum,
+ maximum, and/or exact length. The default value for C{min} is 1 (a
+ minimum value < 1 is not valid); the default values for C{max} and C{exact}
+ are 0, meaning no maximum or exact length restriction. An optional
+ C{excludeChars} parameter can list characters that might be found in
+ the input C{bodyChars} string; useful to define a word of all printables
+ except for one or two characters, for instance.
+
+ L{srange} is useful for defining custom character set strings for defining
+ C{Word} expressions, using range notation from regular expression character sets.
+
+ A common mistake is to use C{Word} to match a specific literal string, as in
+ C{Word("Address")}. Remember that C{Word} uses the string argument to define
+ I{sets} of matchable characters. This expression would match "Add", "AAA",
+ "dAred", or any other word made up of the characters 'A', 'd', 'r', 'e', and 's'.
+ To match an exact literal string, use L{Literal} or L{Keyword}.
+
+ pyparsing includes helper strings for building Words:
+ - L{alphas}
+ - L{nums}
+ - L{alphanums}
+ - L{hexnums}
+ - L{alphas8bit} (alphabetic characters in ASCII range 128-255 - accented, tilded, umlauted, etc.)
+ - L{punc8bit} (non-alphabetic characters in ASCII range 128-255 - currency, symbols, superscripts, diacriticals, etc.)
+ - L{printables} (any non-whitespace character)
+
+ Example::
+ # a word composed of digits
+ integer = Word(nums) # equivalent to Word("0123456789") or Word(srange("0-9"))
+
+ # a word with a leading capital, and zero or more lowercase
+ capital_word = Word(alphas.upper(), alphas.lower())
+
+ # hostnames are alphanumeric, with leading alpha, and '-'
+ hostname = Word(alphas, alphanums+'-')
+
+ # roman numeral (not a strict parser, accepts invalid mix of characters)
+ roman = Word("IVXLCDM")
+
+ # any string of non-whitespace characters, except for ','
+ csv_value = Word(printables, excludeChars=",")
+ """
+ def __init__( self, initChars, bodyChars=None, min=1, max=0, exact=0, asKeyword=False, excludeChars=None ):
+ super(Word,self).__init__()
+ if excludeChars:
+ initChars = ''.join(c for c in initChars if c not in excludeChars)
+ if bodyChars:
+ bodyChars = ''.join(c for c in bodyChars if c not in excludeChars)
+ self.initCharsOrig = initChars
+ self.initChars = set(initChars)
+ if bodyChars :
+ self.bodyCharsOrig = bodyChars
+ self.bodyChars = set(bodyChars)
+ else:
+ self.bodyCharsOrig = initChars
+ self.bodyChars = set(initChars)
+
+ self.maxSpecified = max > 0
+
+ if min < 1:
+ raise ValueError("cannot specify a minimum length < 1; use Optional(Word()) if zero-length word is permitted")
+
+ self.minLen = min
+
+ if max > 0:
+ self.maxLen = max
+ else:
+ self.maxLen = _MAX_INT
+
+ if exact > 0:
+ self.maxLen = exact
+ self.minLen = exact
+
+ self.name = _ustr(self)
+ self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+ self.mayIndexError = False
+ self.asKeyword = asKeyword
+
+ if ' ' not in self.initCharsOrig+self.bodyCharsOrig and (min==1 and max==0 and exact==0):
+ if self.bodyCharsOrig == self.initCharsOrig:
+ self.reString = "[%s]+" % _escapeRegexRangeChars(self.initCharsOrig)
+ elif len(self.initCharsOrig) == 1:
+ self.reString = "%s[%s]*" % \
+ (re.escape(self.initCharsOrig),
+ _escapeRegexRangeChars(self.bodyCharsOrig),)
+ else:
+ self.reString = "[%s][%s]*" % \
+ (_escapeRegexRangeChars(self.initCharsOrig),
+ _escapeRegexRangeChars(self.bodyCharsOrig),)
+ if self.asKeyword:
+ self.reString = r"\b"+self.reString+r"\b"
+ try:
+ self.re = re.compile( self.reString )
+ except Exception:
+ self.re = None
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if self.re:
+ result = self.re.match(instring,loc)
+ if not result:
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+ loc = result.end()
+ return loc, result.group()
+
+ if not(instring[ loc ] in self.initChars):
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+ start = loc
+ loc += 1
+ instrlen = len(instring)
+ bodychars = self.bodyChars
+ maxloc = start + self.maxLen
+ maxloc = min( maxloc, instrlen )
+ while loc < maxloc and instring[loc] in bodychars:
+ loc += 1
+
+ throwException = False
+ if loc - start < self.minLen:
+ throwException = True
+ if self.maxSpecified and loc < instrlen and instring[loc] in bodychars:
+ throwException = True
+ if self.asKeyword:
+ if (start>0 and instring[start-1] in bodychars) or (loc<instrlen and instring[loc] in bodychars):
+ throwException = True
+
+ if throwException:
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+ return loc, instring[start:loc]
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ try:
+ return super(Word,self).__str__()
+ except Exception:
+ pass
+
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+
+ def charsAsStr(s):
+ if len(s)>4:
+ return s[:4]+"..."
+ else:
+ return s
+
+ if ( self.initCharsOrig != self.bodyCharsOrig ):
+ self.strRepr = "W:(%s,%s)" % ( charsAsStr(self.initCharsOrig), charsAsStr(self.bodyCharsOrig) )
+ else:
+ self.strRepr = "W:(%s)" % charsAsStr(self.initCharsOrig)
+
+ return self.strRepr
+
+
+class Regex(Token):
+ r"""
+ Token for matching strings that match a given regular expression.
+ Defined with string specifying the regular expression in a form recognized by the inbuilt Python re module.
+ If the given regex contains named groups (defined using C{(?P<name>...)}), these will be preserved as
+ named parse results.
+
+ Example::
+ realnum = Regex(r"[+-]?\d+\.\d*")
+ date = Regex(r'(?P<year>\d{4})-(?P<month>\d\d?)-(?P<day>\d\d?)')
+ # ref: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/267399/how-do-you-match-only-valid-roman-numerals-with-a-regular-expression
+ roman = Regex(r"M{0,4}(CM|CD|D?C{0,3})(XC|XL|L?X{0,3})(IX|IV|V?I{0,3})")
+ """
+ compiledREtype = type(re.compile("[A-Z]"))
+ def __init__( self, pattern, flags=0):
+ """The parameters C{pattern} and C{flags} are passed to the C{re.compile()} function as-is. See the Python C{re} module for an explanation of the acceptable patterns and flags."""
+ super(Regex,self).__init__()
+
+ if isinstance(pattern, basestring):
+ if not pattern:
+ warnings.warn("null string passed to Regex; use Empty() instead",
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+
+ self.pattern = pattern
+ self.flags = flags
+
+ try:
+ self.re = re.compile(self.pattern, self.flags)
+ self.reString = self.pattern
+ except sre_constants.error:
+ warnings.warn("invalid pattern (%s) passed to Regex" % pattern,
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ raise
+
+ elif isinstance(pattern, Regex.compiledREtype):
+ self.re = pattern
+ self.pattern = \
+ self.reString = str(pattern)
+ self.flags = flags
+
+ else:
+ raise ValueError("Regex may only be constructed with a string or a compiled RE object")
+
+ self.name = _ustr(self)
+ self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+ self.mayIndexError = False
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ result = self.re.match(instring,loc)
+ if not result:
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+ loc = result.end()
+ d = result.groupdict()
+ ret = ParseResults(result.group())
+ if d:
+ for k in d:
+ ret[k] = d[k]
+ return loc,ret
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ try:
+ return super(Regex,self).__str__()
+ except Exception:
+ pass
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+ self.strRepr = "Re:(%s)" % repr(self.pattern)
+
+ return self.strRepr
+
+
+class QuotedString(Token):
+ r"""
+ Token for matching strings that are delimited by quoting characters.
+
+ Defined with the following parameters:
+ - quoteChar - string of one or more characters defining the quote delimiting string
+ - escChar - character to escape quotes, typically backslash (default=C{None})
+ - escQuote - special quote sequence to escape an embedded quote string (such as SQL's "" to escape an embedded ") (default=C{None})
+ - multiline - boolean indicating whether quotes can span multiple lines (default=C{False})
+ - unquoteResults - boolean indicating whether the matched text should be unquoted (default=C{True})
+ - endQuoteChar - string of one or more characters defining the end of the quote delimited string (default=C{None} => same as quoteChar)
+ - convertWhitespaceEscapes - convert escaped whitespace (C{'\t'}, C{'\n'}, etc.) to actual whitespace (default=C{True})
+
+ Example::
+ qs = QuotedString('"')
+ print(qs.searchString('lsjdf "This is the quote" sldjf'))
+ complex_qs = QuotedString('{{', endQuoteChar='}}')
+ print(complex_qs.searchString('lsjdf {{This is the "quote"}} sldjf'))
+ sql_qs = QuotedString('"', escQuote='""')
+ print(sql_qs.searchString('lsjdf "This is the quote with ""embedded"" quotes" sldjf'))
+ prints::
+ [['This is the quote']]
+ [['This is the "quote"']]
+ [['This is the quote with "embedded" quotes']]
+ """
+ def __init__( self, quoteChar, escChar=None, escQuote=None, multiline=False, unquoteResults=True, endQuoteChar=None, convertWhitespaceEscapes=True):
+ super(QuotedString,self).__init__()
+
+ # remove white space from quote chars - wont work anyway
+ quoteChar = quoteChar.strip()
+ if not quoteChar:
+ warnings.warn("quoteChar cannot be the empty string",SyntaxWarning,stacklevel=2)
+ raise SyntaxError()
+
+ if endQuoteChar is None:
+ endQuoteChar = quoteChar
+ else:
+ endQuoteChar = endQuoteChar.strip()
+ if not endQuoteChar:
+ warnings.warn("endQuoteChar cannot be the empty string",SyntaxWarning,stacklevel=2)
+ raise SyntaxError()
+
+ self.quoteChar = quoteChar
+ self.quoteCharLen = len(quoteChar)
+ self.firstQuoteChar = quoteChar[0]
+ self.endQuoteChar = endQuoteChar
+ self.endQuoteCharLen = len(endQuoteChar)
+ self.escChar = escChar
+ self.escQuote = escQuote
+ self.unquoteResults = unquoteResults
+ self.convertWhitespaceEscapes = convertWhitespaceEscapes
+
+ if multiline:
+ self.flags = re.MULTILINE | re.DOTALL
+ self.pattern = r'%s(?:[^%s%s]' % \
+ ( re.escape(self.quoteChar),
+ _escapeRegexRangeChars(self.endQuoteChar[0]),
+ (escChar is not None and _escapeRegexRangeChars(escChar) or '') )
+ else:
+ self.flags = 0
+ self.pattern = r'%s(?:[^%s\n\r%s]' % \
+ ( re.escape(self.quoteChar),
+ _escapeRegexRangeChars(self.endQuoteChar[0]),
+ (escChar is not None and _escapeRegexRangeChars(escChar) or '') )
+ if len(self.endQuoteChar) > 1:
+ self.pattern += (
+ '|(?:' + ')|(?:'.join("%s[^%s]" % (re.escape(self.endQuoteChar[:i]),
+ _escapeRegexRangeChars(self.endQuoteChar[i]))
+ for i in range(len(self.endQuoteChar)-1,0,-1)) + ')'
+ )
+ if escQuote:
+ self.pattern += (r'|(?:%s)' % re.escape(escQuote))
+ if escChar:
+ self.pattern += (r'|(?:%s.)' % re.escape(escChar))
+ self.escCharReplacePattern = re.escape(self.escChar)+"(.)"
+ self.pattern += (r')*%s' % re.escape(self.endQuoteChar))
+
+ try:
+ self.re = re.compile(self.pattern, self.flags)
+ self.reString = self.pattern
+ except sre_constants.error:
+ warnings.warn("invalid pattern (%s) passed to Regex" % self.pattern,
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ raise
+
+ self.name = _ustr(self)
+ self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+ self.mayIndexError = False
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ result = instring[loc] == self.firstQuoteChar and self.re.match(instring,loc) or None
+ if not result:
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+ loc = result.end()
+ ret = result.group()
+
+ if self.unquoteResults:
+
+ # strip off quotes
+ ret = ret[self.quoteCharLen:-self.endQuoteCharLen]
+
+ if isinstance(ret,basestring):
+ # replace escaped whitespace
+ if '\\' in ret and self.convertWhitespaceEscapes:
+ ws_map = {
+ r'\t' : '\t',
+ r'\n' : '\n',
+ r'\f' : '\f',
+ r'\r' : '\r',
+ }
+ for wslit,wschar in ws_map.items():
+ ret = ret.replace(wslit, wschar)
+
+ # replace escaped characters
+ if self.escChar:
+ ret = re.sub(self.escCharReplacePattern, r"\g<1>", ret)
+
+ # replace escaped quotes
+ if self.escQuote:
+ ret = ret.replace(self.escQuote, self.endQuoteChar)
+
+ return loc, ret
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ try:
+ return super(QuotedString,self).__str__()
+ except Exception:
+ pass
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+ self.strRepr = "quoted string, starting with %s ending with %s" % (self.quoteChar, self.endQuoteChar)
+
+ return self.strRepr
+
+
+class CharsNotIn(Token):
+ """
+ Token for matching words composed of characters I{not} in a given set (will
+ include whitespace in matched characters if not listed in the provided exclusion set - see example).
+ Defined with string containing all disallowed characters, and an optional
+ minimum, maximum, and/or exact length. The default value for C{min} is 1 (a
+ minimum value < 1 is not valid); the default values for C{max} and C{exact}
+ are 0, meaning no maximum or exact length restriction.
+
+ Example::
+ # define a comma-separated-value as anything that is not a ','
+ csv_value = CharsNotIn(',')
+ print(delimitedList(csv_value).parseString("dkls,lsdkjf,s12 34,@!#,213"))
+ prints::
+ ['dkls', 'lsdkjf', 's12 34', '@!#', '213']
+ """
+ def __init__( self, notChars, min=1, max=0, exact=0 ):
+ super(CharsNotIn,self).__init__()
+ self.skipWhitespace = False
+ self.notChars = notChars
+
+ if min < 1:
+ raise ValueError("cannot specify a minimum length < 1; use Optional(CharsNotIn()) if zero-length char group is permitted")
+
+ self.minLen = min
+
+ if max > 0:
+ self.maxLen = max
+ else:
+ self.maxLen = _MAX_INT
+
+ if exact > 0:
+ self.maxLen = exact
+ self.minLen = exact
+
+ self.name = _ustr(self)
+ self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = ( self.minLen == 0 )
+ self.mayIndexError = False
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if instring[loc] in self.notChars:
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+ start = loc
+ loc += 1
+ notchars = self.notChars
+ maxlen = min( start+self.maxLen, len(instring) )
+ while loc < maxlen and \
+ (instring[loc] not in notchars):
+ loc += 1
+
+ if loc - start < self.minLen:
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+ return loc, instring[start:loc]
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ try:
+ return super(CharsNotIn, self).__str__()
+ except Exception:
+ pass
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+ if len(self.notChars) > 4:
+ self.strRepr = "!W:(%s...)" % self.notChars[:4]
+ else:
+ self.strRepr = "!W:(%s)" % self.notChars
+
+ return self.strRepr
+
+class White(Token):
+ """
+ Special matching class for matching whitespace. Normally, whitespace is ignored
+ by pyparsing grammars. This class is included when some whitespace structures
+ are significant. Define with a string containing the whitespace characters to be
+ matched; default is C{" \\t\\r\\n"}. Also takes optional C{min}, C{max}, and C{exact} arguments,
+ as defined for the C{L{Word}} class.
+ """
+ whiteStrs = {
+ " " : "<SPC>",
+ "\t": "<TAB>",
+ "\n": "<LF>",
+ "\r": "<CR>",
+ "\f": "<FF>",
+ }
+ def __init__(self, ws=" \t\r\n", min=1, max=0, exact=0):
+ super(White,self).__init__()
+ self.matchWhite = ws
+ self.setWhitespaceChars( "".join(c for c in self.whiteChars if c not in self.matchWhite) )
+ #~ self.leaveWhitespace()
+ self.name = ("".join(White.whiteStrs[c] for c in self.matchWhite))
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+ self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+
+ self.minLen = min
+
+ if max > 0:
+ self.maxLen = max
+ else:
+ self.maxLen = _MAX_INT
+
+ if exact > 0:
+ self.maxLen = exact
+ self.minLen = exact
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if not(instring[ loc ] in self.matchWhite):
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+ start = loc
+ loc += 1
+ maxloc = start + self.maxLen
+ maxloc = min( maxloc, len(instring) )
+ while loc < maxloc and instring[loc] in self.matchWhite:
+ loc += 1
+
+ if loc - start < self.minLen:
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+ return loc, instring[start:loc]
+
+
+class _PositionToken(Token):
+ def __init__( self ):
+ super(_PositionToken,self).__init__()
+ self.name=self.__class__.__name__
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+ self.mayIndexError = False
+
+class GoToColumn(_PositionToken):
+ """
+ Token to advance to a specific column of input text; useful for tabular report scraping.
+ """
+ def __init__( self, colno ):
+ super(GoToColumn,self).__init__()
+ self.col = colno
+
+ def preParse( self, instring, loc ):
+ if col(loc,instring) != self.col:
+ instrlen = len(instring)
+ if self.ignoreExprs:
+ loc = self._skipIgnorables( instring, loc )
+ while loc < instrlen and instring[loc].isspace() and col( loc, instring ) != self.col :
+ loc += 1
+ return loc
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ thiscol = col( loc, instring )
+ if thiscol > self.col:
+ raise ParseException( instring, loc, "Text not in expected column", self )
+ newloc = loc + self.col - thiscol
+ ret = instring[ loc: newloc ]
+ return newloc, ret
+
+
+class LineStart(_PositionToken):
+ """
+ Matches if current position is at the beginning of a line within the parse string
+
+ Example::
+
+ test = '''\
+ AAA this line
+ AAA and this line
+ AAA but not this one
+ B AAA and definitely not this one
+ '''
+
+ for t in (LineStart() + 'AAA' + restOfLine).searchString(test):
+ print(t)
+
+ Prints::
+ ['AAA', ' this line']
+ ['AAA', ' and this line']
+
+ """
+ def __init__( self ):
+ super(LineStart,self).__init__()
+ self.errmsg = "Expected start of line"
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if col(loc, instring) == 1:
+ return loc, []
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+class LineEnd(_PositionToken):
+ """
+ Matches if current position is at the end of a line within the parse string
+ """
+ def __init__( self ):
+ super(LineEnd,self).__init__()
+ self.setWhitespaceChars( ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS.replace("\n","") )
+ self.errmsg = "Expected end of line"
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if loc<len(instring):
+ if instring[loc] == "\n":
+ return loc+1, "\n"
+ else:
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+ elif loc == len(instring):
+ return loc+1, []
+ else:
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+class StringStart(_PositionToken):
+ """
+ Matches if current position is at the beginning of the parse string
+ """
+ def __init__( self ):
+ super(StringStart,self).__init__()
+ self.errmsg = "Expected start of text"
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if loc != 0:
+ # see if entire string up to here is just whitespace and ignoreables
+ if loc != self.preParse( instring, 0 ):
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+ return loc, []
+
+class StringEnd(_PositionToken):
+ """
+ Matches if current position is at the end of the parse string
+ """
+ def __init__( self ):
+ super(StringEnd,self).__init__()
+ self.errmsg = "Expected end of text"
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if loc < len(instring):
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+ elif loc == len(instring):
+ return loc+1, []
+ elif loc > len(instring):
+ return loc, []
+ else:
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+class WordStart(_PositionToken):
+ """
+ Matches if the current position is at the beginning of a Word, and
+ is not preceded by any character in a given set of C{wordChars}
+ (default=C{printables}). To emulate the C{\b} behavior of regular expressions,
+ use C{WordStart(alphanums)}. C{WordStart} will also match at the beginning of
+ the string being parsed, or at the beginning of a line.
+ """
+ def __init__(self, wordChars = printables):
+ super(WordStart,self).__init__()
+ self.wordChars = set(wordChars)
+ self.errmsg = "Not at the start of a word"
+
+ def parseImpl(self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if loc != 0:
+ if (instring[loc-1] in self.wordChars or
+ instring[loc] not in self.wordChars):
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+ return loc, []
+
+class WordEnd(_PositionToken):
+ """
+ Matches if the current position is at the end of a Word, and
+ is not followed by any character in a given set of C{wordChars}
+ (default=C{printables}). To emulate the C{\b} behavior of regular expressions,
+ use C{WordEnd(alphanums)}. C{WordEnd} will also match at the end of
+ the string being parsed, or at the end of a line.
+ """
+ def __init__(self, wordChars = printables):
+ super(WordEnd,self).__init__()
+ self.wordChars = set(wordChars)
+ self.skipWhitespace = False
+ self.errmsg = "Not at the end of a word"
+
+ def parseImpl(self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ instrlen = len(instring)
+ if instrlen>0 and loc<instrlen:
+ if (instring[loc] in self.wordChars or
+ instring[loc-1] not in self.wordChars):
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+ return loc, []
+
+
+class ParseExpression(ParserElement):
+ """
+ Abstract subclass of ParserElement, for combining and post-processing parsed tokens.
+ """
+ def __init__( self, exprs, savelist = False ):
+ super(ParseExpression,self).__init__(savelist)
+ if isinstance( exprs, _generatorType ):
+ exprs = list(exprs)
+
+ if isinstance( exprs, basestring ):
+ self.exprs = [ ParserElement._literalStringClass( exprs ) ]
+ elif isinstance( exprs, Iterable ):
+ exprs = list(exprs)
+ # if sequence of strings provided, wrap with Literal
+ if all(isinstance(expr, basestring) for expr in exprs):
+ exprs = map(ParserElement._literalStringClass, exprs)
+ self.exprs = list(exprs)
+ else:
+ try:
+ self.exprs = list( exprs )
+ except TypeError:
+ self.exprs = [ exprs ]
+ self.callPreparse = False
+
+ def __getitem__( self, i ):
+ return self.exprs[i]
+
+ def append( self, other ):
+ self.exprs.append( other )
+ self.strRepr = None
+ return self
+
+ def leaveWhitespace( self ):
+ """Extends C{leaveWhitespace} defined in base class, and also invokes C{leaveWhitespace} on
+ all contained expressions."""
+ self.skipWhitespace = False
+ self.exprs = [ e.copy() for e in self.exprs ]
+ for e in self.exprs:
+ e.leaveWhitespace()
+ return self
+
+ def ignore( self, other ):
+ if isinstance( other, Suppress ):
+ if other not in self.ignoreExprs:
+ super( ParseExpression, self).ignore( other )
+ for e in self.exprs:
+ e.ignore( self.ignoreExprs[-1] )
+ else:
+ super( ParseExpression, self).ignore( other )
+ for e in self.exprs:
+ e.ignore( self.ignoreExprs[-1] )
+ return self
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ try:
+ return super(ParseExpression,self).__str__()
+ except Exception:
+ pass
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+ self.strRepr = "%s:(%s)" % ( self.__class__.__name__, _ustr(self.exprs) )
+ return self.strRepr
+
+ def streamline( self ):
+ super(ParseExpression,self).streamline()
+
+ for e in self.exprs:
+ e.streamline()
+
+ # collapse nested And's of the form And( And( And( a,b), c), d) to And( a,b,c,d )
+ # but only if there are no parse actions or resultsNames on the nested And's
+ # (likewise for Or's and MatchFirst's)
+ if ( len(self.exprs) == 2 ):
+ other = self.exprs[0]
+ if ( isinstance( other, self.__class__ ) and
+ not(other.parseAction) and
+ other.resultsName is None and
+ not other.debug ):
+ self.exprs = other.exprs[:] + [ self.exprs[1] ]
+ self.strRepr = None
+ self.mayReturnEmpty |= other.mayReturnEmpty
+ self.mayIndexError |= other.mayIndexError
+
+ other = self.exprs[-1]
+ if ( isinstance( other, self.__class__ ) and
+ not(other.parseAction) and
+ other.resultsName is None and
+ not other.debug ):
+ self.exprs = self.exprs[:-1] + other.exprs[:]
+ self.strRepr = None
+ self.mayReturnEmpty |= other.mayReturnEmpty
+ self.mayIndexError |= other.mayIndexError
+
+ self.errmsg = "Expected " + _ustr(self)
+
+ return self
+
+ def setResultsName( self, name, listAllMatches=False ):
+ ret = super(ParseExpression,self).setResultsName(name,listAllMatches)
+ return ret
+
+ def validate( self, validateTrace=[] ):
+ tmp = validateTrace[:]+[self]
+ for e in self.exprs:
+ e.validate(tmp)
+ self.checkRecursion( [] )
+
+ def copy(self):
+ ret = super(ParseExpression,self).copy()
+ ret.exprs = [e.copy() for e in self.exprs]
+ return ret
+
+class And(ParseExpression):
+ """
+ Requires all given C{ParseExpression}s to be found in the given order.
+ Expressions may be separated by whitespace.
+ May be constructed using the C{'+'} operator.
+ May also be constructed using the C{'-'} operator, which will suppress backtracking.
+
+ Example::
+ integer = Word(nums)
+ name_expr = OneOrMore(Word(alphas))
+
+ expr = And([integer("id"),name_expr("name"),integer("age")])
+ # more easily written as:
+ expr = integer("id") + name_expr("name") + integer("age")
+ """
+
+ class _ErrorStop(Empty):
+ def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
+ super(And._ErrorStop,self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
+ self.name = '-'
+ self.leaveWhitespace()
+
+ def __init__( self, exprs, savelist = True ):
+ super(And,self).__init__(exprs, savelist)
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = all(e.mayReturnEmpty for e in self.exprs)
+ self.setWhitespaceChars( self.exprs[0].whiteChars )
+ self.skipWhitespace = self.exprs[0].skipWhitespace
+ self.callPreparse = True
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ # pass False as last arg to _parse for first element, since we already
+ # pre-parsed the string as part of our And pre-parsing
+ loc, resultlist = self.exprs[0]._parse( instring, loc, doActions, callPreParse=False )
+ errorStop = False
+ for e in self.exprs[1:]:
+ if isinstance(e, And._ErrorStop):
+ errorStop = True
+ continue
+ if errorStop:
+ try:
+ loc, exprtokens = e._parse( instring, loc, doActions )
+ except ParseSyntaxException:
+ raise
+ except ParseBaseException as pe:
+ pe.__traceback__ = None
+ raise ParseSyntaxException._from_exception(pe)
+ except IndexError:
+ raise ParseSyntaxException(instring, len(instring), self.errmsg, self)
+ else:
+ loc, exprtokens = e._parse( instring, loc, doActions )
+ if exprtokens or exprtokens.haskeys():
+ resultlist += exprtokens
+ return loc, resultlist
+
+ def __iadd__(self, other ):
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ return self.append( other ) #And( [ self, other ] )
+
+ def checkRecursion( self, parseElementList ):
+ subRecCheckList = parseElementList[:] + [ self ]
+ for e in self.exprs:
+ e.checkRecursion( subRecCheckList )
+ if not e.mayReturnEmpty:
+ break
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ if hasattr(self,"name"):
+ return self.name
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+ self.strRepr = "{" + " ".join(_ustr(e) for e in self.exprs) + "}"
+
+ return self.strRepr
+
+
+class Or(ParseExpression):
+ """
+ Requires that at least one C{ParseExpression} is found.
+ If two expressions match, the expression that matches the longest string will be used.
+ May be constructed using the C{'^'} operator.
+
+ Example::
+ # construct Or using '^' operator
+
+ number = Word(nums) ^ Combine(Word(nums) + '.' + Word(nums))
+ print(number.searchString("123 3.1416 789"))
+ prints::
+ [['123'], ['3.1416'], ['789']]
+ """
+ def __init__( self, exprs, savelist = False ):
+ super(Or,self).__init__(exprs, savelist)
+ if self.exprs:
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = any(e.mayReturnEmpty for e in self.exprs)
+ else:
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ maxExcLoc = -1
+ maxException = None
+ matches = []
+ for e in self.exprs:
+ try:
+ loc2 = e.tryParse( instring, loc )
+ except ParseException as err:
+ err.__traceback__ = None
+ if err.loc > maxExcLoc:
+ maxException = err
+ maxExcLoc = err.loc
+ except IndexError:
+ if len(instring) > maxExcLoc:
+ maxException = ParseException(instring,len(instring),e.errmsg,self)
+ maxExcLoc = len(instring)
+ else:
+ # save match among all matches, to retry longest to shortest
+ matches.append((loc2, e))
+
+ if matches:
+ matches.sort(key=lambda x: -x[0])
+ for _,e in matches:
+ try:
+ return e._parse( instring, loc, doActions )
+ except ParseException as err:
+ err.__traceback__ = None
+ if err.loc > maxExcLoc:
+ maxException = err
+ maxExcLoc = err.loc
+
+ if maxException is not None:
+ maxException.msg = self.errmsg
+ raise maxException
+ else:
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, "no defined alternatives to match", self)
+
+
+ def __ixor__(self, other ):
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ return self.append( other ) #Or( [ self, other ] )
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ if hasattr(self,"name"):
+ return self.name
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+ self.strRepr = "{" + " ^ ".join(_ustr(e) for e in self.exprs) + "}"
+
+ return self.strRepr
+
+ def checkRecursion( self, parseElementList ):
+ subRecCheckList = parseElementList[:] + [ self ]
+ for e in self.exprs:
+ e.checkRecursion( subRecCheckList )
+
+
+class MatchFirst(ParseExpression):
+ """
+ Requires that at least one C{ParseExpression} is found.
+ If two expressions match, the first one listed is the one that will match.
+ May be constructed using the C{'|'} operator.
+
+ Example::
+ # construct MatchFirst using '|' operator
+
+ # watch the order of expressions to match
+ number = Word(nums) | Combine(Word(nums) + '.' + Word(nums))
+ print(number.searchString("123 3.1416 789")) # Fail! -> [['123'], ['3'], ['1416'], ['789']]
+
+ # put more selective expression first
+ number = Combine(Word(nums) + '.' + Word(nums)) | Word(nums)
+ print(number.searchString("123 3.1416 789")) # Better -> [['123'], ['3.1416'], ['789']]
+ """
+ def __init__( self, exprs, savelist = False ):
+ super(MatchFirst,self).__init__(exprs, savelist)
+ if self.exprs:
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = any(e.mayReturnEmpty for e in self.exprs)
+ else:
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ maxExcLoc = -1
+ maxException = None
+ for e in self.exprs:
+ try:
+ ret = e._parse( instring, loc, doActions )
+ return ret
+ except ParseException as err:
+ if err.loc > maxExcLoc:
+ maxException = err
+ maxExcLoc = err.loc
+ except IndexError:
+ if len(instring) > maxExcLoc:
+ maxException = ParseException(instring,len(instring),e.errmsg,self)
+ maxExcLoc = len(instring)
+
+ # only got here if no expression matched, raise exception for match that made it the furthest
+ else:
+ if maxException is not None:
+ maxException.msg = self.errmsg
+ raise maxException
+ else:
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, "no defined alternatives to match", self)
+
+ def __ior__(self, other ):
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ return self.append( other ) #MatchFirst( [ self, other ] )
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ if hasattr(self,"name"):
+ return self.name
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+ self.strRepr = "{" + " | ".join(_ustr(e) for e in self.exprs) + "}"
+
+ return self.strRepr
+
+ def checkRecursion( self, parseElementList ):
+ subRecCheckList = parseElementList[:] + [ self ]
+ for e in self.exprs:
+ e.checkRecursion( subRecCheckList )
+
+
+class Each(ParseExpression):
+ """
+ Requires all given C{ParseExpression}s to be found, but in any order.
+ Expressions may be separated by whitespace.
+ May be constructed using the C{'&'} operator.
+
+ Example::
+ color = oneOf("RED ORANGE YELLOW GREEN BLUE PURPLE BLACK WHITE BROWN")
+ shape_type = oneOf("SQUARE CIRCLE TRIANGLE STAR HEXAGON OCTAGON")
+ integer = Word(nums)
+ shape_attr = "shape:" + shape_type("shape")
+ posn_attr = "posn:" + Group(integer("x") + ',' + integer("y"))("posn")
+ color_attr = "color:" + color("color")
+ size_attr = "size:" + integer("size")
+
+ # use Each (using operator '&') to accept attributes in any order
+ # (shape and posn are required, color and size are optional)
+ shape_spec = shape_attr & posn_attr & Optional(color_attr) & Optional(size_attr)
+
+ shape_spec.runTests('''
+ shape: SQUARE color: BLACK posn: 100, 120
+ shape: CIRCLE size: 50 color: BLUE posn: 50,80
+ color:GREEN size:20 shape:TRIANGLE posn:20,40
+ '''
+ )
+ prints::
+ shape: SQUARE color: BLACK posn: 100, 120
+ ['shape:', 'SQUARE', 'color:', 'BLACK', 'posn:', ['100', ',', '120']]
+ - color: BLACK
+ - posn: ['100', ',', '120']
+ - x: 100
+ - y: 120
+ - shape: SQUARE
+
+
+ shape: CIRCLE size: 50 color: BLUE posn: 50,80
+ ['shape:', 'CIRCLE', 'size:', '50', 'color:', 'BLUE', 'posn:', ['50', ',', '80']]
+ - color: BLUE
+ - posn: ['50', ',', '80']
+ - x: 50
+ - y: 80
+ - shape: CIRCLE
+ - size: 50
+
+
+ color: GREEN size: 20 shape: TRIANGLE posn: 20,40
+ ['color:', 'GREEN', 'size:', '20', 'shape:', 'TRIANGLE', 'posn:', ['20', ',', '40']]
+ - color: GREEN
+ - posn: ['20', ',', '40']
+ - x: 20
+ - y: 40
+ - shape: TRIANGLE
+ - size: 20
+ """
+ def __init__( self, exprs, savelist = True ):
+ super(Each,self).__init__(exprs, savelist)
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = all(e.mayReturnEmpty for e in self.exprs)
+ self.skipWhitespace = True
+ self.initExprGroups = True
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if self.initExprGroups:
+ self.opt1map = dict((id(e.expr),e) for e in self.exprs if isinstance(e,Optional))
+ opt1 = [ e.expr for e in self.exprs if isinstance(e,Optional) ]
+ opt2 = [ e for e in self.exprs if e.mayReturnEmpty and not isinstance(e,Optional)]
+ self.optionals = opt1 + opt2
+ self.multioptionals = [ e.expr for e in self.exprs if isinstance(e,ZeroOrMore) ]
+ self.multirequired = [ e.expr for e in self.exprs if isinstance(e,OneOrMore) ]
+ self.required = [ e for e in self.exprs if not isinstance(e,(Optional,ZeroOrMore,OneOrMore)) ]
+ self.required += self.multirequired
+ self.initExprGroups = False
+ tmpLoc = loc
+ tmpReqd = self.required[:]
+ tmpOpt = self.optionals[:]
+ matchOrder = []
+
+ keepMatching = True
+ while keepMatching:
+ tmpExprs = tmpReqd + tmpOpt + self.multioptionals + self.multirequired
+ failed = []
+ for e in tmpExprs:
+ try:
+ tmpLoc = e.tryParse( instring, tmpLoc )
+ except ParseException:
+ failed.append(e)
+ else:
+ matchOrder.append(self.opt1map.get(id(e),e))
+ if e in tmpReqd:
+ tmpReqd.remove(e)
+ elif e in tmpOpt:
+ tmpOpt.remove(e)
+ if len(failed) == len(tmpExprs):
+ keepMatching = False
+
+ if tmpReqd:
+ missing = ", ".join(_ustr(e) for e in tmpReqd)
+ raise ParseException(instring,loc,"Missing one or more required elements (%s)" % missing )
+
+ # add any unmatched Optionals, in case they have default values defined
+ matchOrder += [e for e in self.exprs if isinstance(e,Optional) and e.expr in tmpOpt]
+
+ resultlist = []
+ for e in matchOrder:
+ loc,results = e._parse(instring,loc,doActions)
+ resultlist.append(results)
+
+ finalResults = sum(resultlist, ParseResults([]))
+ return loc, finalResults
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ if hasattr(self,"name"):
+ return self.name
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+ self.strRepr = "{" + " & ".join(_ustr(e) for e in self.exprs) + "}"
+
+ return self.strRepr
+
+ def checkRecursion( self, parseElementList ):
+ subRecCheckList = parseElementList[:] + [ self ]
+ for e in self.exprs:
+ e.checkRecursion( subRecCheckList )
+
+
+class ParseElementEnhance(ParserElement):
+ """
+ Abstract subclass of C{ParserElement}, for combining and post-processing parsed tokens.
+ """
+ def __init__( self, expr, savelist=False ):
+ super(ParseElementEnhance,self).__init__(savelist)
+ if isinstance( expr, basestring ):
+ if issubclass(ParserElement._literalStringClass, Token):
+ expr = ParserElement._literalStringClass(expr)
+ else:
+ expr = ParserElement._literalStringClass(Literal(expr))
+ self.expr = expr
+ self.strRepr = None
+ if expr is not None:
+ self.mayIndexError = expr.mayIndexError
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = expr.mayReturnEmpty
+ self.setWhitespaceChars( expr.whiteChars )
+ self.skipWhitespace = expr.skipWhitespace
+ self.saveAsList = expr.saveAsList
+ self.callPreparse = expr.callPreparse
+ self.ignoreExprs.extend(expr.ignoreExprs)
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if self.expr is not None:
+ return self.expr._parse( instring, loc, doActions, callPreParse=False )
+ else:
+ raise ParseException("",loc,self.errmsg,self)
+
+ def leaveWhitespace( self ):
+ self.skipWhitespace = False
+ self.expr = self.expr.copy()
+ if self.expr is not None:
+ self.expr.leaveWhitespace()
+ return self
+
+ def ignore( self, other ):
+ if isinstance( other, Suppress ):
+ if other not in self.ignoreExprs:
+ super( ParseElementEnhance, self).ignore( other )
+ if self.expr is not None:
+ self.expr.ignore( self.ignoreExprs[-1] )
+ else:
+ super( ParseElementEnhance, self).ignore( other )
+ if self.expr is not None:
+ self.expr.ignore( self.ignoreExprs[-1] )
+ return self
+
+ def streamline( self ):
+ super(ParseElementEnhance,self).streamline()
+ if self.expr is not None:
+ self.expr.streamline()
+ return self
+
+ def checkRecursion( self, parseElementList ):
+ if self in parseElementList:
+ raise RecursiveGrammarException( parseElementList+[self] )
+ subRecCheckList = parseElementList[:] + [ self ]
+ if self.expr is not None:
+ self.expr.checkRecursion( subRecCheckList )
+
+ def validate( self, validateTrace=[] ):
+ tmp = validateTrace[:]+[self]
+ if self.expr is not None:
+ self.expr.validate(tmp)
+ self.checkRecursion( [] )
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ try:
+ return super(ParseElementEnhance,self).__str__()
+ except Exception:
+ pass
+
+ if self.strRepr is None and self.expr is not None:
+ self.strRepr = "%s:(%s)" % ( self.__class__.__name__, _ustr(self.expr) )
+ return self.strRepr
+
+
+class FollowedBy(ParseElementEnhance):
+ """
+ Lookahead matching of the given parse expression. C{FollowedBy}
+ does I{not} advance the parsing position within the input string, it only
+ verifies that the specified parse expression matches at the current
+ position. C{FollowedBy} always returns a null token list.
+
+ Example::
+ # use FollowedBy to match a label only if it is followed by a ':'
+ data_word = Word(alphas)
+ label = data_word + FollowedBy(':')
+ attr_expr = Group(label + Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word, stopOn=label).setParseAction(' '.join))
+
+ OneOrMore(attr_expr).parseString("shape: SQUARE color: BLACK posn: upper left").pprint()
+ prints::
+ [['shape', 'SQUARE'], ['color', 'BLACK'], ['posn', 'upper left']]
+ """
+ def __init__( self, expr ):
+ super(FollowedBy,self).__init__(expr)
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ self.expr.tryParse( instring, loc )
+ return loc, []
+
+
+class NotAny(ParseElementEnhance):
+ """
+ Lookahead to disallow matching with the given parse expression. C{NotAny}
+ does I{not} advance the parsing position within the input string, it only
+ verifies that the specified parse expression does I{not} match at the current
+ position. Also, C{NotAny} does I{not} skip over leading whitespace. C{NotAny}
+ always returns a null token list. May be constructed using the '~' operator.
+
+ Example::
+
+ """
+ def __init__( self, expr ):
+ super(NotAny,self).__init__(expr)
+ #~ self.leaveWhitespace()
+ self.skipWhitespace = False # do NOT use self.leaveWhitespace(), don't want to propagate to exprs
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+ self.errmsg = "Found unwanted token, "+_ustr(self.expr)
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if self.expr.canParseNext(instring, loc):
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+ return loc, []
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ if hasattr(self,"name"):
+ return self.name
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+ self.strRepr = "~{" + _ustr(self.expr) + "}"
+
+ return self.strRepr
+
+class _MultipleMatch(ParseElementEnhance):
+ def __init__( self, expr, stopOn=None):
+ super(_MultipleMatch, self).__init__(expr)
+ self.saveAsList = True
+ ender = stopOn
+ if isinstance(ender, basestring):
+ ender = ParserElement._literalStringClass(ender)
+ self.not_ender = ~ender if ender is not None else None
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ self_expr_parse = self.expr._parse
+ self_skip_ignorables = self._skipIgnorables
+ check_ender = self.not_ender is not None
+ if check_ender:
+ try_not_ender = self.not_ender.tryParse
+
+ # must be at least one (but first see if we are the stopOn sentinel;
+ # if so, fail)
+ if check_ender:
+ try_not_ender(instring, loc)
+ loc, tokens = self_expr_parse( instring, loc, doActions, callPreParse=False )
+ try:
+ hasIgnoreExprs = (not not self.ignoreExprs)
+ while 1:
+ if check_ender:
+ try_not_ender(instring, loc)
+ if hasIgnoreExprs:
+ preloc = self_skip_ignorables( instring, loc )
+ else:
+ preloc = loc
+ loc, tmptokens = self_expr_parse( instring, preloc, doActions )
+ if tmptokens or tmptokens.haskeys():
+ tokens += tmptokens
+ except (ParseException,IndexError):
+ pass
+
+ return loc, tokens
+
+class OneOrMore(_MultipleMatch):
+ """
+ Repetition of one or more of the given expression.
+
+ Parameters:
+ - expr - expression that must match one or more times
+ - stopOn - (default=C{None}) - expression for a terminating sentinel
+ (only required if the sentinel would ordinarily match the repetition
+ expression)
+
+ Example::
+ data_word = Word(alphas)
+ label = data_word + FollowedBy(':')
+ attr_expr = Group(label + Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word).setParseAction(' '.join))
+
+ text = "shape: SQUARE posn: upper left color: BLACK"
+ OneOrMore(attr_expr).parseString(text).pprint() # Fail! read 'color' as data instead of next label -> [['shape', 'SQUARE color']]
+
+ # use stopOn attribute for OneOrMore to avoid reading label string as part of the data
+ attr_expr = Group(label + Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word, stopOn=label).setParseAction(' '.join))
+ OneOrMore(attr_expr).parseString(text).pprint() # Better -> [['shape', 'SQUARE'], ['posn', 'upper left'], ['color', 'BLACK']]
+
+ # could also be written as
+ (attr_expr * (1,)).parseString(text).pprint()
+ """
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ if hasattr(self,"name"):
+ return self.name
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+ self.strRepr = "{" + _ustr(self.expr) + "}..."
+
+ return self.strRepr
+
+class ZeroOrMore(_MultipleMatch):
+ """
+ Optional repetition of zero or more of the given expression.
+
+ Parameters:
+ - expr - expression that must match zero or more times
+ - stopOn - (default=C{None}) - expression for a terminating sentinel
+ (only required if the sentinel would ordinarily match the repetition
+ expression)
+
+ Example: similar to L{OneOrMore}
+ """
+ def __init__( self, expr, stopOn=None):
+ super(ZeroOrMore,self).__init__(expr, stopOn=stopOn)
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ try:
+ return super(ZeroOrMore, self).parseImpl(instring, loc, doActions)
+ except (ParseException,IndexError):
+ return loc, []
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ if hasattr(self,"name"):
+ return self.name
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+ self.strRepr = "[" + _ustr(self.expr) + "]..."
+
+ return self.strRepr
+
+class _NullToken(object):
+ def __bool__(self):
+ return False
+ __nonzero__ = __bool__
+ def __str__(self):
+ return ""
+
+_optionalNotMatched = _NullToken()
+class Optional(ParseElementEnhance):
+ """
+ Optional matching of the given expression.
+
+ Parameters:
+ - expr - expression that must match zero or more times
+ - default (optional) - value to be returned if the optional expression is not found.
+
+ Example::
+ # US postal code can be a 5-digit zip, plus optional 4-digit qualifier
+ zip = Combine(Word(nums, exact=5) + Optional('-' + Word(nums, exact=4)))
+ zip.runTests('''
+ # traditional ZIP code
+ 12345
+
+ # ZIP+4 form
+ 12101-0001
+
+ # invalid ZIP
+ 98765-
+ ''')
+ prints::
+ # traditional ZIP code
+ 12345
+ ['12345']
+
+ # ZIP+4 form
+ 12101-0001
+ ['12101-0001']
+
+ # invalid ZIP
+ 98765-
+ ^
+ FAIL: Expected end of text (at char 5), (line:1, col:6)
+ """
+ def __init__( self, expr, default=_optionalNotMatched ):
+ super(Optional,self).__init__( expr, savelist=False )
+ self.saveAsList = self.expr.saveAsList
+ self.defaultValue = default
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ try:
+ loc, tokens = self.expr._parse( instring, loc, doActions, callPreParse=False )
+ except (ParseException,IndexError):
+ if self.defaultValue is not _optionalNotMatched:
+ if self.expr.resultsName:
+ tokens = ParseResults([ self.defaultValue ])
+ tokens[self.expr.resultsName] = self.defaultValue
+ else:
+ tokens = [ self.defaultValue ]
+ else:
+ tokens = []
+ return loc, tokens
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ if hasattr(self,"name"):
+ return self.name
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+ self.strRepr = "[" + _ustr(self.expr) + "]"
+
+ return self.strRepr
+
+class SkipTo(ParseElementEnhance):
+ """
+ Token for skipping over all undefined text until the matched expression is found.
+
+ Parameters:
+ - expr - target expression marking the end of the data to be skipped
+ - include - (default=C{False}) if True, the target expression is also parsed
+ (the skipped text and target expression are returned as a 2-element list).
+ - ignore - (default=C{None}) used to define grammars (typically quoted strings and
+ comments) that might contain false matches to the target expression
+ - failOn - (default=C{None}) define expressions that are not allowed to be
+ included in the skipped test; if found before the target expression is found,
+ the SkipTo is not a match
+
+ Example::
+ report = '''
+ Outstanding Issues Report - 1 Jan 2000
+
+ # | Severity | Description | Days Open
+ -----+----------+-------------------------------------------+-----------
+ 101 | Critical | Intermittent system crash | 6
+ 94 | Cosmetic | Spelling error on Login ('log|n') | 14
+ 79 | Minor | System slow when running too many reports | 47
+ '''
+ integer = Word(nums)
+ SEP = Suppress('|')
+ # use SkipTo to simply match everything up until the next SEP
+ # - ignore quoted strings, so that a '|' character inside a quoted string does not match
+ # - parse action will call token.strip() for each matched token, i.e., the description body
+ string_data = SkipTo(SEP, ignore=quotedString)
+ string_data.setParseAction(tokenMap(str.strip))
+ ticket_expr = (integer("issue_num") + SEP
+ + string_data("sev") + SEP
+ + string_data("desc") + SEP
+ + integer("days_open"))
+
+ for tkt in ticket_expr.searchString(report):
+ print tkt.dump()
+ prints::
+ ['101', 'Critical', 'Intermittent system crash', '6']
+ - days_open: 6
+ - desc: Intermittent system crash
+ - issue_num: 101
+ - sev: Critical
+ ['94', 'Cosmetic', "Spelling error on Login ('log|n')", '14']
+ - days_open: 14
+ - desc: Spelling error on Login ('log|n')
+ - issue_num: 94
+ - sev: Cosmetic
+ ['79', 'Minor', 'System slow when running too many reports', '47']
+ - days_open: 47
+ - desc: System slow when running too many reports
+ - issue_num: 79
+ - sev: Minor
+ """
+ def __init__( self, other, include=False, ignore=None, failOn=None ):
+ super( SkipTo, self ).__init__( other )
+ self.ignoreExpr = ignore
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+ self.mayIndexError = False
+ self.includeMatch = include
+ self.asList = False
+ if isinstance(failOn, basestring):
+ self.failOn = ParserElement._literalStringClass(failOn)
+ else:
+ self.failOn = failOn
+ self.errmsg = "No match found for "+_ustr(self.expr)
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ startloc = loc
+ instrlen = len(instring)
+ expr = self.expr
+ expr_parse = self.expr._parse
+ self_failOn_canParseNext = self.failOn.canParseNext if self.failOn is not None else None
+ self_ignoreExpr_tryParse = self.ignoreExpr.tryParse if self.ignoreExpr is not None else None
+
+ tmploc = loc
+ while tmploc <= instrlen:
+ if self_failOn_canParseNext is not None:
+ # break if failOn expression matches
+ if self_failOn_canParseNext(instring, tmploc):
+ break
+
+ if self_ignoreExpr_tryParse is not None:
+ # advance past ignore expressions
+ while 1:
+ try:
+ tmploc = self_ignoreExpr_tryParse(instring, tmploc)
+ except ParseBaseException:
+ break
+
+ try:
+ expr_parse(instring, tmploc, doActions=False, callPreParse=False)
+ except (ParseException, IndexError):
+ # no match, advance loc in string
+ tmploc += 1
+ else:
+ # matched skipto expr, done
+ break
+
+ else:
+ # ran off the end of the input string without matching skipto expr, fail
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+ # build up return values
+ loc = tmploc
+ skiptext = instring[startloc:loc]
+ skipresult = ParseResults(skiptext)
+
+ if self.includeMatch:
+ loc, mat = expr_parse(instring,loc,doActions,callPreParse=False)
+ skipresult += mat
+
+ return loc, skipresult
+
+class Forward(ParseElementEnhance):
+ """
+ Forward declaration of an expression to be defined later -
+ used for recursive grammars, such as algebraic infix notation.
+ When the expression is known, it is assigned to the C{Forward} variable using the '<<' operator.
+
+ Note: take care when assigning to C{Forward} not to overlook precedence of operators.
+ Specifically, '|' has a lower precedence than '<<', so that::
+ fwdExpr << a | b | c
+ will actually be evaluated as::
+ (fwdExpr << a) | b | c
+ thereby leaving b and c out as parseable alternatives. It is recommended that you
+ explicitly group the values inserted into the C{Forward}::
+ fwdExpr << (a | b | c)
+ Converting to use the '<<=' operator instead will avoid this problem.
+
+ See L{ParseResults.pprint} for an example of a recursive parser created using
+ C{Forward}.
+ """
+ def __init__( self, other=None ):
+ super(Forward,self).__init__( other, savelist=False )
+
+ def __lshift__( self, other ):
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass(other)
+ self.expr = other
+ self.strRepr = None
+ self.mayIndexError = self.expr.mayIndexError
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = self.expr.mayReturnEmpty
+ self.setWhitespaceChars( self.expr.whiteChars )
+ self.skipWhitespace = self.expr.skipWhitespace
+ self.saveAsList = self.expr.saveAsList
+ self.ignoreExprs.extend(self.expr.ignoreExprs)
+ return self
+
+ def __ilshift__(self, other):
+ return self << other
+
+ def leaveWhitespace( self ):
+ self.skipWhitespace = False
+ return self
+
+ def streamline( self ):
+ if not self.streamlined:
+ self.streamlined = True
+ if self.expr is not None:
+ self.expr.streamline()
+ return self
+
+ def validate( self, validateTrace=[] ):
+ if self not in validateTrace:
+ tmp = validateTrace[:]+[self]
+ if self.expr is not None:
+ self.expr.validate(tmp)
+ self.checkRecursion([])
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ if hasattr(self,"name"):
+ return self.name
+ return self.__class__.__name__ + ": ..."
+
+ # stubbed out for now - creates awful memory and perf issues
+ self._revertClass = self.__class__
+ self.__class__ = _ForwardNoRecurse
+ try:
+ if self.expr is not None:
+ retString = _ustr(self.expr)
+ else:
+ retString = "None"
+ finally:
+ self.__class__ = self._revertClass
+ return self.__class__.__name__ + ": " + retString
+
+ def copy(self):
+ if self.expr is not None:
+ return super(Forward,self).copy()
+ else:
+ ret = Forward()
+ ret <<= self
+ return ret
+
+class _ForwardNoRecurse(Forward):
+ def __str__( self ):
+ return "..."
+
+class TokenConverter(ParseElementEnhance):
+ """
+ Abstract subclass of C{ParseExpression}, for converting parsed results.
+ """
+ def __init__( self, expr, savelist=False ):
+ super(TokenConverter,self).__init__( expr )#, savelist )
+ self.saveAsList = False
+
+class Combine(TokenConverter):
+ """
+ Converter to concatenate all matching tokens to a single string.
+ By default, the matching patterns must also be contiguous in the input string;
+ this can be disabled by specifying C{'adjacent=False'} in the constructor.
+
+ Example::
+ real = Word(nums) + '.' + Word(nums)
+ print(real.parseString('3.1416')) # -> ['3', '.', '1416']
+ # will also erroneously match the following
+ print(real.parseString('3. 1416')) # -> ['3', '.', '1416']
+
+ real = Combine(Word(nums) + '.' + Word(nums))
+ print(real.parseString('3.1416')) # -> ['3.1416']
+ # no match when there are internal spaces
+ print(real.parseString('3. 1416')) # -> Exception: Expected W:(0123...)
+ """
+ def __init__( self, expr, joinString="", adjacent=True ):
+ super(Combine,self).__init__( expr )
+ # suppress whitespace-stripping in contained parse expressions, but re-enable it on the Combine itself
+ if adjacent:
+ self.leaveWhitespace()
+ self.adjacent = adjacent
+ self.skipWhitespace = True
+ self.joinString = joinString
+ self.callPreparse = True
+
+ def ignore( self, other ):
+ if self.adjacent:
+ ParserElement.ignore(self, other)
+ else:
+ super( Combine, self).ignore( other )
+ return self
+
+ def postParse( self, instring, loc, tokenlist ):
+ retToks = tokenlist.copy()
+ del retToks[:]
+ retToks += ParseResults([ "".join(tokenlist._asStringList(self.joinString)) ], modal=self.modalResults)
+
+ if self.resultsName and retToks.haskeys():
+ return [ retToks ]
+ else:
+ return retToks
+
+class Group(TokenConverter):
+ """
+ Converter to return the matched tokens as a list - useful for returning tokens of C{L{ZeroOrMore}} and C{L{OneOrMore}} expressions.
+
+ Example::
+ ident = Word(alphas)
+ num = Word(nums)
+ term = ident | num
+ func = ident + Optional(delimitedList(term))
+ print(func.parseString("fn a,b,100")) # -> ['fn', 'a', 'b', '100']
+
+ func = ident + Group(Optional(delimitedList(term)))
+ print(func.parseString("fn a,b,100")) # -> ['fn', ['a', 'b', '100']]
+ """
+ def __init__( self, expr ):
+ super(Group,self).__init__( expr )
+ self.saveAsList = True
+
+ def postParse( self, instring, loc, tokenlist ):
+ return [ tokenlist ]
+
+class Dict(TokenConverter):
+ """
+ Converter to return a repetitive expression as a list, but also as a dictionary.
+ Each element can also be referenced using the first token in the expression as its key.
+ Useful for tabular report scraping when the first column can be used as a item key.
+
+ Example::
+ data_word = Word(alphas)
+ label = data_word + FollowedBy(':')
+ attr_expr = Group(label + Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word).setParseAction(' '.join))
+
+ text = "shape: SQUARE posn: upper left color: light blue texture: burlap"
+ attr_expr = (label + Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word, stopOn=label).setParseAction(' '.join))
+
+ # print attributes as plain groups
+ print(OneOrMore(attr_expr).parseString(text).dump())
+
+ # instead of OneOrMore(expr), parse using Dict(OneOrMore(Group(expr))) - Dict will auto-assign names
+ result = Dict(OneOrMore(Group(attr_expr))).parseString(text)
+ print(result.dump())
+
+ # access named fields as dict entries, or output as dict
+ print(result['shape'])
+ print(result.asDict())
+ prints::
+ ['shape', 'SQUARE', 'posn', 'upper left', 'color', 'light blue', 'texture', 'burlap']
+
+ [['shape', 'SQUARE'], ['posn', 'upper left'], ['color', 'light blue'], ['texture', 'burlap']]
+ - color: light blue
+ - posn: upper left
+ - shape: SQUARE
+ - texture: burlap
+ SQUARE
+ {'color': 'light blue', 'posn': 'upper left', 'texture': 'burlap', 'shape': 'SQUARE'}
+ See more examples at L{ParseResults} of accessing fields by results name.
+ """
+ def __init__( self, expr ):
+ super(Dict,self).__init__( expr )
+ self.saveAsList = True
+
+ def postParse( self, instring, loc, tokenlist ):
+ for i,tok in enumerate(tokenlist):
+ if len(tok) == 0:
+ continue
+ ikey = tok[0]
+ if isinstance(ikey,int):
+ ikey = _ustr(tok[0]).strip()
+ if len(tok)==1:
+ tokenlist[ikey] = _ParseResultsWithOffset("",i)
+ elif len(tok)==2 and not isinstance(tok[1],ParseResults):
+ tokenlist[ikey] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(tok[1],i)
+ else:
+ dictvalue = tok.copy() #ParseResults(i)
+ del dictvalue[0]
+ if len(dictvalue)!= 1 or (isinstance(dictvalue,ParseResults) and dictvalue.haskeys()):
+ tokenlist[ikey] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(dictvalue,i)
+ else:
+ tokenlist[ikey] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(dictvalue[0],i)
+
+ if self.resultsName:
+ return [ tokenlist ]
+ else:
+ return tokenlist
+
+
+class Suppress(TokenConverter):
+ """
+ Converter for ignoring the results of a parsed expression.
+
+ Example::
+ source = "a, b, c,d"
+ wd = Word(alphas)
+ wd_list1 = wd + ZeroOrMore(',' + wd)
+ print(wd_list1.parseString(source))
+
+ # often, delimiters that are useful during parsing are just in the
+ # way afterward - use Suppress to keep them out of the parsed output
+ wd_list2 = wd + ZeroOrMore(Suppress(',') + wd)
+ print(wd_list2.parseString(source))
+ prints::
+ ['a', ',', 'b', ',', 'c', ',', 'd']
+ ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd']
+ (See also L{delimitedList}.)
+ """
+ def postParse( self, instring, loc, tokenlist ):
+ return []
+
+ def suppress( self ):
+ return self
+
+
+class OnlyOnce(object):
+ """
+ Wrapper for parse actions, to ensure they are only called once.
+ """
+ def __init__(self, methodCall):
+ self.callable = _trim_arity(methodCall)
+ self.called = False
+ def __call__(self,s,l,t):
+ if not self.called:
+ results = self.callable(s,l,t)
+ self.called = True
+ return results
+ raise ParseException(s,l,"")
+ def reset(self):
+ self.called = False
+
+def traceParseAction(f):
+ """
+ Decorator for debugging parse actions.
+
+ When the parse action is called, this decorator will print C{">> entering I{method-name}(line:I{current_source_line}, I{parse_location}, I{matched_tokens})".}
+ When the parse action completes, the decorator will print C{"<<"} followed by the returned value, or any exception that the parse action raised.
+
+ Example::
+ wd = Word(alphas)
+
+ @traceParseAction
+ def remove_duplicate_chars(tokens):
+ return ''.join(sorted(set(''.join(tokens))))
+
+ wds = OneOrMore(wd).setParseAction(remove_duplicate_chars)
+ print(wds.parseString("slkdjs sld sldd sdlf sdljf"))
+ prints::
+ >>entering remove_duplicate_chars(line: 'slkdjs sld sldd sdlf sdljf', 0, (['slkdjs', 'sld', 'sldd', 'sdlf', 'sdljf'], {}))
+ <<leaving remove_duplicate_chars (ret: 'dfjkls')
+ ['dfjkls']
+ """
+ f = _trim_arity(f)
+ def z(*paArgs):
+ thisFunc = f.__name__
+ s,l,t = paArgs[-3:]
+ if len(paArgs)>3:
+ thisFunc = paArgs[0].__class__.__name__ + '.' + thisFunc
+ sys.stderr.write( ">>entering %s(line: '%s', %d, %r)\n" % (thisFunc,line(l,s),l,t) )
+ try:
+ ret = f(*paArgs)
+ except Exception as exc:
+ sys.stderr.write( "<<leaving %s (exception: %s)\n" % (thisFunc,exc) )
+ raise
+ sys.stderr.write( "<<leaving %s (ret: %r)\n" % (thisFunc,ret) )
+ return ret
+ try:
+ z.__name__ = f.__name__
+ except AttributeError:
+ pass
+ return z
+
+#
+# global helpers
+#
+def delimitedList( expr, delim=",", combine=False ):
+ """
+ Helper to define a delimited list of expressions - the delimiter defaults to ','.
+ By default, the list elements and delimiters can have intervening whitespace, and
+ comments, but this can be overridden by passing C{combine=True} in the constructor.
+ If C{combine} is set to C{True}, the matching tokens are returned as a single token
+ string, with the delimiters included; otherwise, the matching tokens are returned
+ as a list of tokens, with the delimiters suppressed.
+
+ Example::
+ delimitedList(Word(alphas)).parseString("aa,bb,cc") # -> ['aa', 'bb', 'cc']
+ delimitedList(Word(hexnums), delim=':', combine=True).parseString("AA:BB:CC:DD:EE") # -> ['AA:BB:CC:DD:EE']
+ """
+ dlName = _ustr(expr)+" ["+_ustr(delim)+" "+_ustr(expr)+"]..."
+ if combine:
+ return Combine( expr + ZeroOrMore( delim + expr ) ).setName(dlName)
+ else:
+ return ( expr + ZeroOrMore( Suppress( delim ) + expr ) ).setName(dlName)
+
+def countedArray( expr, intExpr=None ):
+ """
+ Helper to define a counted list of expressions.
+ This helper defines a pattern of the form::
+ integer expr expr expr...
+ where the leading integer tells how many expr expressions follow.
+ The matched tokens returns the array of expr tokens as a list - the leading count token is suppressed.
+
+ If C{intExpr} is specified, it should be a pyparsing expression that produces an integer value.
+
+ Example::
+ countedArray(Word(alphas)).parseString('2 ab cd ef') # -> ['ab', 'cd']
+
+ # in this parser, the leading integer value is given in binary,
+ # '10' indicating that 2 values are in the array
+ binaryConstant = Word('01').setParseAction(lambda t: int(t[0], 2))
+ countedArray(Word(alphas), intExpr=binaryConstant).parseString('10 ab cd ef') # -> ['ab', 'cd']
+ """
+ arrayExpr = Forward()
+ def countFieldParseAction(s,l,t):
+ n = t[0]
+ arrayExpr << (n and Group(And([expr]*n)) or Group(empty))
+ return []
+ if intExpr is None:
+ intExpr = Word(nums).setParseAction(lambda t:int(t[0]))
+ else:
+ intExpr = intExpr.copy()
+ intExpr.setName("arrayLen")
+ intExpr.addParseAction(countFieldParseAction, callDuringTry=True)
+ return ( intExpr + arrayExpr ).setName('(len) ' + _ustr(expr) + '...')
+
+def _flatten(L):
+ ret = []
+ for i in L:
+ if isinstance(i,list):
+ ret.extend(_flatten(i))
+ else:
+ ret.append(i)
+ return ret
+
+def matchPreviousLiteral(expr):
+ """
+ Helper to define an expression that is indirectly defined from
+ the tokens matched in a previous expression, that is, it looks
+ for a 'repeat' of a previous expression. For example::
+ first = Word(nums)
+ second = matchPreviousLiteral(first)
+ matchExpr = first + ":" + second
+ will match C{"1:1"}, but not C{"1:2"}. Because this matches a
+ previous literal, will also match the leading C{"1:1"} in C{"1:10"}.
+ If this is not desired, use C{matchPreviousExpr}.
+ Do I{not} use with packrat parsing enabled.
+ """
+ rep = Forward()
+ def copyTokenToRepeater(s,l,t):
+ if t:
+ if len(t) == 1:
+ rep << t[0]
+ else:
+ # flatten t tokens
+ tflat = _flatten(t.asList())
+ rep << And(Literal(tt) for tt in tflat)
+ else:
+ rep << Empty()
+ expr.addParseAction(copyTokenToRepeater, callDuringTry=True)
+ rep.setName('(prev) ' + _ustr(expr))
+ return rep
+
+def matchPreviousExpr(expr):
+ """
+ Helper to define an expression that is indirectly defined from
+ the tokens matched in a previous expression, that is, it looks
+ for a 'repeat' of a previous expression. For example::
+ first = Word(nums)
+ second = matchPreviousExpr(first)
+ matchExpr = first + ":" + second
+ will match C{"1:1"}, but not C{"1:2"}. Because this matches by
+ expressions, will I{not} match the leading C{"1:1"} in C{"1:10"};
+ the expressions are evaluated first, and then compared, so
+ C{"1"} is compared with C{"10"}.
+ Do I{not} use with packrat parsing enabled.
+ """
+ rep = Forward()
+ e2 = expr.copy()
+ rep <<= e2
+ def copyTokenToRepeater(s,l,t):
+ matchTokens = _flatten(t.asList())
+ def mustMatchTheseTokens(s,l,t):
+ theseTokens = _flatten(t.asList())
+ if theseTokens != matchTokens:
+ raise ParseException("",0,"")
+ rep.setParseAction( mustMatchTheseTokens, callDuringTry=True )
+ expr.addParseAction(copyTokenToRepeater, callDuringTry=True)
+ rep.setName('(prev) ' + _ustr(expr))
+ return rep
+
+def _escapeRegexRangeChars(s):
+ #~ escape these chars: ^-]
+ for c in r"\^-]":
+ s = s.replace(c,_bslash+c)
+ s = s.replace("\n",r"\n")
+ s = s.replace("\t",r"\t")
+ return _ustr(s)
+
+def oneOf( strs, caseless=False, useRegex=True ):
+ """
+ Helper to quickly define a set of alternative Literals, and makes sure to do
+ longest-first testing when there is a conflict, regardless of the input order,
+ but returns a C{L{MatchFirst}} for best performance.
+
+ Parameters:
+ - strs - a string of space-delimited literals, or a collection of string literals
+ - caseless - (default=C{False}) - treat all literals as caseless
+ - useRegex - (default=C{True}) - as an optimization, will generate a Regex
+ object; otherwise, will generate a C{MatchFirst} object (if C{caseless=True}, or
+ if creating a C{Regex} raises an exception)
+
+ Example::
+ comp_oper = oneOf("< = > <= >= !=")
+ var = Word(alphas)
+ number = Word(nums)
+ term = var | number
+ comparison_expr = term + comp_oper + term
+ print(comparison_expr.searchString("B = 12 AA=23 B<=AA AA>12"))
+ prints::
+ [['B', '=', '12'], ['AA', '=', '23'], ['B', '<=', 'AA'], ['AA', '>', '12']]
+ """
+ if caseless:
+ isequal = ( lambda a,b: a.upper() == b.upper() )
+ masks = ( lambda a,b: b.upper().startswith(a.upper()) )
+ parseElementClass = CaselessLiteral
+ else:
+ isequal = ( lambda a,b: a == b )
+ masks = ( lambda a,b: b.startswith(a) )
+ parseElementClass = Literal
+
+ symbols = []
+ if isinstance(strs,basestring):
+ symbols = strs.split()
+ elif isinstance(strs, Iterable):
+ symbols = list(strs)
+ else:
+ warnings.warn("Invalid argument to oneOf, expected string or iterable",
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ if not symbols:
+ return NoMatch()
+
+ i = 0
+ while i < len(symbols)-1:
+ cur = symbols[i]
+ for j,other in enumerate(symbols[i+1:]):
+ if ( isequal(other, cur) ):
+ del symbols[i+j+1]
+ break
+ elif ( masks(cur, other) ):
+ del symbols[i+j+1]
+ symbols.insert(i,other)
+ cur = other
+ break
+ else:
+ i += 1
+
+ if not caseless and useRegex:
+ #~ print (strs,"->", "|".join( [ _escapeRegexChars(sym) for sym in symbols] ))
+ try:
+ if len(symbols)==len("".join(symbols)):
+ return Regex( "[%s]" % "".join(_escapeRegexRangeChars(sym) for sym in symbols) ).setName(' | '.join(symbols))
+ else:
+ return Regex( "|".join(re.escape(sym) for sym in symbols) ).setName(' | '.join(symbols))
+ except Exception:
+ warnings.warn("Exception creating Regex for oneOf, building MatchFirst",
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+
+
+ # last resort, just use MatchFirst
+ return MatchFirst(parseElementClass(sym) for sym in symbols).setName(' | '.join(symbols))
+
+def dictOf( key, value ):
+ """
+ Helper to easily and clearly define a dictionary by specifying the respective patterns
+ for the key and value. Takes care of defining the C{L{Dict}}, C{L{ZeroOrMore}}, and C{L{Group}} tokens
+ in the proper order. The key pattern can include delimiting markers or punctuation,
+ as long as they are suppressed, thereby leaving the significant key text. The value
+ pattern can include named results, so that the C{Dict} results can include named token
+ fields.
+
+ Example::
+ text = "shape: SQUARE posn: upper left color: light blue texture: burlap"
+ attr_expr = (label + Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word, stopOn=label).setParseAction(' '.join))
+ print(OneOrMore(attr_expr).parseString(text).dump())
+
+ attr_label = label
+ attr_value = Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word, stopOn=label).setParseAction(' '.join)
+
+ # similar to Dict, but simpler call format
+ result = dictOf(attr_label, attr_value).parseString(text)
+ print(result.dump())
+ print(result['shape'])
+ print(result.shape) # object attribute access works too
+ print(result.asDict())
+ prints::
+ [['shape', 'SQUARE'], ['posn', 'upper left'], ['color', 'light blue'], ['texture', 'burlap']]
+ - color: light blue
+ - posn: upper left
+ - shape: SQUARE
+ - texture: burlap
+ SQUARE
+ SQUARE
+ {'color': 'light blue', 'shape': 'SQUARE', 'posn': 'upper left', 'texture': 'burlap'}
+ """
+ return Dict( ZeroOrMore( Group ( key + value ) ) )
+
+def originalTextFor(expr, asString=True):
+ """
+ Helper to return the original, untokenized text for a given expression. Useful to
+ restore the parsed fields of an HTML start tag into the raw tag text itself, or to
+ revert separate tokens with intervening whitespace back to the original matching
+ input text. By default, returns astring containing the original parsed text.
+
+ If the optional C{asString} argument is passed as C{False}, then the return value is a
+ C{L{ParseResults}} containing any results names that were originally matched, and a
+ single token containing the original matched text from the input string. So if
+ the expression passed to C{L{originalTextFor}} contains expressions with defined
+ results names, you must set C{asString} to C{False} if you want to preserve those
+ results name values.
+
+ Example::
+ src = "this is test <b> bold <i>text</i> </b> normal text "
+ for tag in ("b","i"):
+ opener,closer = makeHTMLTags(tag)
+ patt = originalTextFor(opener + SkipTo(closer) + closer)
+ print(patt.searchString(src)[0])
+ prints::
+ ['<b> bold <i>text</i> </b>']
+ ['<i>text</i>']
+ """
+ locMarker = Empty().setParseAction(lambda s,loc,t: loc)
+ endlocMarker = locMarker.copy()
+ endlocMarker.callPreparse = False
+ matchExpr = locMarker("_original_start") + expr + endlocMarker("_original_end")
+ if asString:
+ extractText = lambda s,l,t: s[t._original_start:t._original_end]
+ else:
+ def extractText(s,l,t):
+ t[:] = [s[t.pop('_original_start'):t.pop('_original_end')]]
+ matchExpr.setParseAction(extractText)
+ matchExpr.ignoreExprs = expr.ignoreExprs
+ return matchExpr
+
+def ungroup(expr):
+ """
+ Helper to undo pyparsing's default grouping of And expressions, even
+ if all but one are non-empty.
+ """
+ return TokenConverter(expr).setParseAction(lambda t:t[0])
+
+def locatedExpr(expr):
+ """
+ Helper to decorate a returned token with its starting and ending locations in the input string.
+ This helper adds the following results names:
+ - locn_start = location where matched expression begins
+ - locn_end = location where matched expression ends
+ - value = the actual parsed results
+
+ Be careful if the input text contains C{<TAB>} characters, you may want to call
+ C{L{ParserElement.parseWithTabs}}
+
+ Example::
+ wd = Word(alphas)
+ for match in locatedExpr(wd).searchString("ljsdf123lksdjjf123lkkjj1222"):
+ print(match)
+ prints::
+ [[0, 'ljsdf', 5]]
+ [[8, 'lksdjjf', 15]]
+ [[18, 'lkkjj', 23]]
+ """
+ locator = Empty().setParseAction(lambda s,l,t: l)
+ return Group(locator("locn_start") + expr("value") + locator.copy().leaveWhitespace()("locn_end"))
+
+
+# convenience constants for positional expressions
+empty = Empty().setName("empty")
+lineStart = LineStart().setName("lineStart")
+lineEnd = LineEnd().setName("lineEnd")
+stringStart = StringStart().setName("stringStart")
+stringEnd = StringEnd().setName("stringEnd")
+
+_escapedPunc = Word( _bslash, r"\[]-*.$+^?()~ ", exact=2 ).setParseAction(lambda s,l,t:t[0][1])
+_escapedHexChar = Regex(r"\\0?[xX][0-9a-fA-F]+").setParseAction(lambda s,l,t:unichr(int(t[0].lstrip(r'\0x'),16)))
+_escapedOctChar = Regex(r"\\0[0-7]+").setParseAction(lambda s,l,t:unichr(int(t[0][1:],8)))
+_singleChar = _escapedPunc | _escapedHexChar | _escapedOctChar | CharsNotIn(r'\]', exact=1)
+_charRange = Group(_singleChar + Suppress("-") + _singleChar)
+_reBracketExpr = Literal("[") + Optional("^").setResultsName("negate") + Group( OneOrMore( _charRange | _singleChar ) ).setResultsName("body") + "]"
+
+def srange(s):
+ r"""
+ Helper to easily define string ranges for use in Word construction. Borrows
+ syntax from regexp '[]' string range definitions::
+ srange("[0-9]") -> "0123456789"
+ srange("[a-z]") -> "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"
+ srange("[a-z$_]") -> "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz$_"
+ The input string must be enclosed in []'s, and the returned string is the expanded
+ character set joined into a single string.
+ The values enclosed in the []'s may be:
+ - a single character
+ - an escaped character with a leading backslash (such as C{\-} or C{\]})
+ - an escaped hex character with a leading C{'\x'} (C{\x21}, which is a C{'!'} character)
+ (C{\0x##} is also supported for backwards compatibility)
+ - an escaped octal character with a leading C{'\0'} (C{\041}, which is a C{'!'} character)
+ - a range of any of the above, separated by a dash (C{'a-z'}, etc.)
+ - any combination of the above (C{'aeiouy'}, C{'a-zA-Z0-9_$'}, etc.)
+ """
+ _expanded = lambda p: p if not isinstance(p,ParseResults) else ''.join(unichr(c) for c in range(ord(p[0]),ord(p[1])+1))
+ try:
+ return "".join(_expanded(part) for part in _reBracketExpr.parseString(s).body)
+ except Exception:
+ return ""
+
+def matchOnlyAtCol(n):
+ """
+ Helper method for defining parse actions that require matching at a specific
+ column in the input text.
+ """
+ def verifyCol(strg,locn,toks):
+ if col(locn,strg) != n:
+ raise ParseException(strg,locn,"matched token not at column %d" % n)
+ return verifyCol
+
+def replaceWith(replStr):
+ """
+ Helper method for common parse actions that simply return a literal value. Especially
+ useful when used with C{L{transformString<ParserElement.transformString>}()}.
+
+ Example::
+ num = Word(nums).setParseAction(lambda toks: int(toks[0]))
+ na = oneOf("N/A NA").setParseAction(replaceWith(math.nan))
+ term = na | num
+
+ OneOrMore(term).parseString("324 234 N/A 234") # -> [324, 234, nan, 234]
+ """
+ return lambda s,l,t: [replStr]
+
+def removeQuotes(s,l,t):
+ """
+ Helper parse action for removing quotation marks from parsed quoted strings.
+
+ Example::
+ # by default, quotation marks are included in parsed results
+ quotedString.parseString("'Now is the Winter of our Discontent'") # -> ["'Now is the Winter of our Discontent'"]
+
+ # use removeQuotes to strip quotation marks from parsed results
+ quotedString.setParseAction(removeQuotes)
+ quotedString.parseString("'Now is the Winter of our Discontent'") # -> ["Now is the Winter of our Discontent"]
+ """
+ return t[0][1:-1]
+
+def tokenMap(func, *args):
+ """
+ Helper to define a parse action by mapping a function to all elements of a ParseResults list.If any additional
+ args are passed, they are forwarded to the given function as additional arguments after
+ the token, as in C{hex_integer = Word(hexnums).setParseAction(tokenMap(int, 16))}, which will convert the
+ parsed data to an integer using base 16.
+
+ Example (compare the last to example in L{ParserElement.transformString}::
+ hex_ints = OneOrMore(Word(hexnums)).setParseAction(tokenMap(int, 16))
+ hex_ints.runTests('''
+ 00 11 22 aa FF 0a 0d 1a
+ ''')
+
+ upperword = Word(alphas).setParseAction(tokenMap(str.upper))
+ OneOrMore(upperword).runTests('''
+ my kingdom for a horse
+ ''')
+
+ wd = Word(alphas).setParseAction(tokenMap(str.title))
+ OneOrMore(wd).setParseAction(' '.join).runTests('''
+ now is the winter of our discontent made glorious summer by this sun of york
+ ''')
+ prints::
+ 00 11 22 aa FF 0a 0d 1a
+ [0, 17, 34, 170, 255, 10, 13, 26]
+
+ my kingdom for a horse
+ ['MY', 'KINGDOM', 'FOR', 'A', 'HORSE']
+
+ now is the winter of our discontent made glorious summer by this sun of york
+ ['Now Is The Winter Of Our Discontent Made Glorious Summer By This Sun Of York']
+ """
+ def pa(s,l,t):
+ return [func(tokn, *args) for tokn in t]
+
+ try:
+ func_name = getattr(func, '__name__',
+ getattr(func, '__class__').__name__)
+ except Exception:
+ func_name = str(func)
+ pa.__name__ = func_name
+
+ return pa
+
+upcaseTokens = tokenMap(lambda t: _ustr(t).upper())
+"""(Deprecated) Helper parse action to convert tokens to upper case. Deprecated in favor of L{pyparsing_common.upcaseTokens}"""
+
+downcaseTokens = tokenMap(lambda t: _ustr(t).lower())
+"""(Deprecated) Helper parse action to convert tokens to lower case. Deprecated in favor of L{pyparsing_common.downcaseTokens}"""
+
+def _makeTags(tagStr, xml):
+ """Internal helper to construct opening and closing tag expressions, given a tag name"""
+ if isinstance(tagStr,basestring):
+ resname = tagStr
+ tagStr = Keyword(tagStr, caseless=not xml)
+ else:
+ resname = tagStr.name
+
+ tagAttrName = Word(alphas,alphanums+"_-:")
+ if (xml):
+ tagAttrValue = dblQuotedString.copy().setParseAction( removeQuotes )
+ openTag = Suppress("<") + tagStr("tag") + \
+ Dict(ZeroOrMore(Group( tagAttrName + Suppress("=") + tagAttrValue ))) + \
+ Optional("/",default=[False]).setResultsName("empty").setParseAction(lambda s,l,t:t[0]=='/') + Suppress(">")
+ else:
+ printablesLessRAbrack = "".join(c for c in printables if c not in ">")
+ tagAttrValue = quotedString.copy().setParseAction( removeQuotes ) | Word(printablesLessRAbrack)
+ openTag = Suppress("<") + tagStr("tag") + \
+ Dict(ZeroOrMore(Group( tagAttrName.setParseAction(downcaseTokens) + \
+ Optional( Suppress("=") + tagAttrValue ) ))) + \
+ Optional("/",default=[False]).setResultsName("empty").setParseAction(lambda s,l,t:t[0]=='/') + Suppress(">")
+ closeTag = Combine(_L("</") + tagStr + ">")
+
+ openTag = openTag.setResultsName("start"+"".join(resname.replace(":"," ").title().split())).setName("<%s>" % resname)
+ closeTag = closeTag.setResultsName("end"+"".join(resname.replace(":"," ").title().split())).setName("</%s>" % resname)
+ openTag.tag = resname
+ closeTag.tag = resname
+ return openTag, closeTag
+
+def makeHTMLTags(tagStr):
+ """
+ Helper to construct opening and closing tag expressions for HTML, given a tag name. Matches
+ tags in either upper or lower case, attributes with namespaces and with quoted or unquoted values.
+
+ Example::
+ text = '<td>More info at the <a href="http://pyparsing.wikispaces.com">pyparsing</a> wiki page</td>'
+ # makeHTMLTags returns pyparsing expressions for the opening and closing tags as a 2-tuple
+ a,a_end = makeHTMLTags("A")
+ link_expr = a + SkipTo(a_end)("link_text") + a_end
+
+ for link in link_expr.searchString(text):
+ # attributes in the <A> tag (like "href" shown here) are also accessible as named results
+ print(link.link_text, '->', link.href)
+ prints::
+ pyparsing -> http://pyparsing.wikispaces.com
+ """
+ return _makeTags( tagStr, False )
+
+def makeXMLTags(tagStr):
+ """
+ Helper to construct opening and closing tag expressions for XML, given a tag name. Matches
+ tags only in the given upper/lower case.
+
+ Example: similar to L{makeHTMLTags}
+ """
+ return _makeTags( tagStr, True )
+
+def withAttribute(*args,**attrDict):
+ """
+ Helper to create a validating parse action to be used with start tags created
+ with C{L{makeXMLTags}} or C{L{makeHTMLTags}}. Use C{withAttribute} to qualify a starting tag
+ with a required attribute value, to avoid false matches on common tags such as
+ C{<TD>} or C{<DIV>}.
+
+ Call C{withAttribute} with a series of attribute names and values. Specify the list
+ of filter attributes names and values as:
+ - keyword arguments, as in C{(align="right")}, or
+ - as an explicit dict with C{**} operator, when an attribute name is also a Python
+ reserved word, as in C{**{"class":"Customer", "align":"right"}}
+ - a list of name-value tuples, as in ( ("ns1:class", "Customer"), ("ns2:align","right") )
+ For attribute names with a namespace prefix, you must use the second form. Attribute
+ names are matched insensitive to upper/lower case.
+
+ If just testing for C{class} (with or without a namespace), use C{L{withClass}}.
+
+ To verify that the attribute exists, but without specifying a value, pass
+ C{withAttribute.ANY_VALUE} as the value.
+
+ Example::
+ html = '''
+ <div>
+ Some text
+ <div type="grid">1 4 0 1 0</div>
+ <div type="graph">1,3 2,3 1,1</div>
+ <div>this has no type</div>
+ </div>
+
+ '''
+ div,div_end = makeHTMLTags("div")
+
+ # only match div tag having a type attribute with value "grid"
+ div_grid = div().setParseAction(withAttribute(type="grid"))
+ grid_expr = div_grid + SkipTo(div | div_end)("body")
+ for grid_header in grid_expr.searchString(html):
+ print(grid_header.body)
+
+ # construct a match with any div tag having a type attribute, regardless of the value
+ div_any_type = div().setParseAction(withAttribute(type=withAttribute.ANY_VALUE))
+ div_expr = div_any_type + SkipTo(div | div_end)("body")
+ for div_header in div_expr.searchString(html):
+ print(div_header.body)
+ prints::
+ 1 4 0 1 0
+
+ 1 4 0 1 0
+ 1,3 2,3 1,1
+ """
+ if args:
+ attrs = args[:]
+ else:
+ attrs = attrDict.items()
+ attrs = [(k,v) for k,v in attrs]
+ def pa(s,l,tokens):
+ for attrName,attrValue in attrs:
+ if attrName not in tokens:
+ raise ParseException(s,l,"no matching attribute " + attrName)
+ if attrValue != withAttribute.ANY_VALUE and tokens[attrName] != attrValue:
+ raise ParseException(s,l,"attribute '%s' has value '%s', must be '%s'" %
+ (attrName, tokens[attrName], attrValue))
+ return pa
+withAttribute.ANY_VALUE = object()
+
+def withClass(classname, namespace=''):
+ """
+ Simplified version of C{L{withAttribute}} when matching on a div class - made
+ difficult because C{class} is a reserved word in Python.
+
+ Example::
+ html = '''
+ <div>
+ Some text
+ <div class="grid">1 4 0 1 0</div>
+ <div class="graph">1,3 2,3 1,1</div>
+ <div>this &lt;div&gt; has no class</div>
+ </div>
+
+ '''
+ div,div_end = makeHTMLTags("div")
+ div_grid = div().setParseAction(withClass("grid"))
+
+ grid_expr = div_grid + SkipTo(div | div_end)("body")
+ for grid_header in grid_expr.searchString(html):
+ print(grid_header.body)
+
+ div_any_type = div().setParseAction(withClass(withAttribute.ANY_VALUE))
+ div_expr = div_any_type + SkipTo(div | div_end)("body")
+ for div_header in div_expr.searchString(html):
+ print(div_header.body)
+ prints::
+ 1 4 0 1 0
+
+ 1 4 0 1 0
+ 1,3 2,3 1,1
+ """
+ classattr = "%s:class" % namespace if namespace else "class"
+ return withAttribute(**{classattr : classname})
+
+opAssoc = _Constants()
+opAssoc.LEFT = object()
+opAssoc.RIGHT = object()
+
+def infixNotation( baseExpr, opList, lpar=Suppress('('), rpar=Suppress(')') ):
+ """
+ Helper method for constructing grammars of expressions made up of
+ operators working in a precedence hierarchy. Operators may be unary or
+ binary, left- or right-associative. Parse actions can also be attached
+ to operator expressions. The generated parser will also recognize the use
+ of parentheses to override operator precedences (see example below).
+
+ Note: if you define a deep operator list, you may see performance issues
+ when using infixNotation. See L{ParserElement.enablePackrat} for a
+ mechanism to potentially improve your parser performance.
+
+ Parameters:
+ - baseExpr - expression representing the most basic element for the nested
+ - opList - list of tuples, one for each operator precedence level in the
+ expression grammar; each tuple is of the form
+ (opExpr, numTerms, rightLeftAssoc, parseAction), where:
+ - opExpr is the pyparsing expression for the operator;
+ may also be a string, which will be converted to a Literal;
+ if numTerms is 3, opExpr is a tuple of two expressions, for the
+ two operators separating the 3 terms
+ - numTerms is the number of terms for this operator (must
+ be 1, 2, or 3)
+ - rightLeftAssoc is the indicator whether the operator is
+ right or left associative, using the pyparsing-defined
+ constants C{opAssoc.RIGHT} and C{opAssoc.LEFT}.
+ - parseAction is the parse action to be associated with
+ expressions matching this operator expression (the
+ parse action tuple member may be omitted); if the parse action
+ is passed a tuple or list of functions, this is equivalent to
+ calling C{setParseAction(*fn)} (L{ParserElement.setParseAction})
+ - lpar - expression for matching left-parentheses (default=C{Suppress('(')})
+ - rpar - expression for matching right-parentheses (default=C{Suppress(')')})
+
+ Example::
+ # simple example of four-function arithmetic with ints and variable names
+ integer = pyparsing_common.signed_integer
+ varname = pyparsing_common.identifier
+
+ arith_expr = infixNotation(integer | varname,
+ [
+ ('-', 1, opAssoc.RIGHT),
+ (oneOf('* /'), 2, opAssoc.LEFT),
+ (oneOf('+ -'), 2, opAssoc.LEFT),
+ ])
+
+ arith_expr.runTests('''
+ 5+3*6
+ (5+3)*6
+ -2--11
+ ''', fullDump=False)
+ prints::
+ 5+3*6
+ [[5, '+', [3, '*', 6]]]
+
+ (5+3)*6
+ [[[5, '+', 3], '*', 6]]
+
+ -2--11
+ [[['-', 2], '-', ['-', 11]]]
+ """
+ ret = Forward()
+ lastExpr = baseExpr | ( lpar + ret + rpar )
+ for i,operDef in enumerate(opList):
+ opExpr,arity,rightLeftAssoc,pa = (operDef + (None,))[:4]
+ termName = "%s term" % opExpr if arity < 3 else "%s%s term" % opExpr
+ if arity == 3:
+ if opExpr is None or len(opExpr) != 2:
+ raise ValueError("if numterms=3, opExpr must be a tuple or list of two expressions")
+ opExpr1, opExpr2 = opExpr
+ thisExpr = Forward().setName(termName)
+ if rightLeftAssoc == opAssoc.LEFT:
+ if arity == 1:
+ matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr + opExpr) + Group( lastExpr + OneOrMore( opExpr ) )
+ elif arity == 2:
+ if opExpr is not None:
+ matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr + opExpr + lastExpr) + Group( lastExpr + OneOrMore( opExpr + lastExpr ) )
+ else:
+ matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr+lastExpr) + Group( lastExpr + OneOrMore(lastExpr) )
+ elif arity == 3:
+ matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr + opExpr1 + lastExpr + opExpr2 + lastExpr) + \
+ Group( lastExpr + opExpr1 + lastExpr + opExpr2 + lastExpr )
+ else:
+ raise ValueError("operator must be unary (1), binary (2), or ternary (3)")
+ elif rightLeftAssoc == opAssoc.RIGHT:
+ if arity == 1:
+ # try to avoid LR with this extra test
+ if not isinstance(opExpr, Optional):
+ opExpr = Optional(opExpr)
+ matchExpr = FollowedBy(opExpr.expr + thisExpr) + Group( opExpr + thisExpr )
+ elif arity == 2:
+ if opExpr is not None:
+ matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr + opExpr + thisExpr) + Group( lastExpr + OneOrMore( opExpr + thisExpr ) )
+ else:
+ matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr + thisExpr) + Group( lastExpr + OneOrMore( thisExpr ) )
+ elif arity == 3:
+ matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr + opExpr1 + thisExpr + opExpr2 + thisExpr) + \
+ Group( lastExpr + opExpr1 + thisExpr + opExpr2 + thisExpr )
+ else:
+ raise ValueError("operator must be unary (1), binary (2), or ternary (3)")
+ else:
+ raise ValueError("operator must indicate right or left associativity")
+ if pa:
+ if isinstance(pa, (tuple, list)):
+ matchExpr.setParseAction(*pa)
+ else:
+ matchExpr.setParseAction(pa)
+ thisExpr <<= ( matchExpr.setName(termName) | lastExpr )
+ lastExpr = thisExpr
+ ret <<= lastExpr
+ return ret
+
+operatorPrecedence = infixNotation
+"""(Deprecated) Former name of C{L{infixNotation}}, will be dropped in a future release."""
+
+dblQuotedString = Combine(Regex(r'"(?:[^"\n\r\\]|(?:"")|(?:\\(?:[^x]|x[0-9a-fA-F]+)))*')+'"').setName("string enclosed in double quotes")
+sglQuotedString = Combine(Regex(r"'(?:[^'\n\r\\]|(?:'')|(?:\\(?:[^x]|x[0-9a-fA-F]+)))*")+"'").setName("string enclosed in single quotes")
+quotedString = Combine(Regex(r'"(?:[^"\n\r\\]|(?:"")|(?:\\(?:[^x]|x[0-9a-fA-F]+)))*')+'"'|
+ Regex(r"'(?:[^'\n\r\\]|(?:'')|(?:\\(?:[^x]|x[0-9a-fA-F]+)))*")+"'").setName("quotedString using single or double quotes")
+unicodeString = Combine(_L('u') + quotedString.copy()).setName("unicode string literal")
+
+def nestedExpr(opener="(", closer=")", content=None, ignoreExpr=quotedString.copy()):
+ """
+ Helper method for defining nested lists enclosed in opening and closing
+ delimiters ("(" and ")" are the default).
+
+ Parameters:
+ - opener - opening character for a nested list (default=C{"("}); can also be a pyparsing expression
+ - closer - closing character for a nested list (default=C{")"}); can also be a pyparsing expression
+ - content - expression for items within the nested lists (default=C{None})
+ - ignoreExpr - expression for ignoring opening and closing delimiters (default=C{quotedString})
+
+ If an expression is not provided for the content argument, the nested
+ expression will capture all whitespace-delimited content between delimiters
+ as a list of separate values.
+
+ Use the C{ignoreExpr} argument to define expressions that may contain
+ opening or closing characters that should not be treated as opening
+ or closing characters for nesting, such as quotedString or a comment
+ expression. Specify multiple expressions using an C{L{Or}} or C{L{MatchFirst}}.
+ The default is L{quotedString}, but if no expressions are to be ignored,
+ then pass C{None} for this argument.
+
+ Example::
+ data_type = oneOf("void int short long char float double")
+ decl_data_type = Combine(data_type + Optional(Word('*')))
+ ident = Word(alphas+'_', alphanums+'_')
+ number = pyparsing_common.number
+ arg = Group(decl_data_type + ident)
+ LPAR,RPAR = map(Suppress, "()")
+
+ code_body = nestedExpr('{', '}', ignoreExpr=(quotedString | cStyleComment))
+
+ c_function = (decl_data_type("type")
+ + ident("name")
+ + LPAR + Optional(delimitedList(arg), [])("args") + RPAR
+ + code_body("body"))
+ c_function.ignore(cStyleComment)
+
+ source_code = '''
+ int is_odd(int x) {
+ return (x%2);
+ }
+
+ int dec_to_hex(char hchar) {
+ if (hchar >= '0' && hchar <= '9') {
+ return (ord(hchar)-ord('0'));
+ } else {
+ return (10+ord(hchar)-ord('A'));
+ }
+ }
+ '''
+ for func in c_function.searchString(source_code):
+ print("%(name)s (%(type)s) args: %(args)s" % func)
+
+ prints::
+ is_odd (int) args: [['int', 'x']]
+ dec_to_hex (int) args: [['char', 'hchar']]
+ """
+ if opener == closer:
+ raise ValueError("opening and closing strings cannot be the same")
+ if content is None:
+ if isinstance(opener,basestring) and isinstance(closer,basestring):
+ if len(opener) == 1 and len(closer)==1:
+ if ignoreExpr is not None:
+ content = (Combine(OneOrMore(~ignoreExpr +
+ CharsNotIn(opener+closer+ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS,exact=1))
+ ).setParseAction(lambda t:t[0].strip()))
+ else:
+ content = (empty.copy()+CharsNotIn(opener+closer+ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS
+ ).setParseAction(lambda t:t[0].strip()))
+ else:
+ if ignoreExpr is not None:
+ content = (Combine(OneOrMore(~ignoreExpr +
+ ~Literal(opener) + ~Literal(closer) +
+ CharsNotIn(ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS,exact=1))
+ ).setParseAction(lambda t:t[0].strip()))
+ else:
+ content = (Combine(OneOrMore(~Literal(opener) + ~Literal(closer) +
+ CharsNotIn(ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS,exact=1))
+ ).setParseAction(lambda t:t[0].strip()))
+ else:
+ raise ValueError("opening and closing arguments must be strings if no content expression is given")
+ ret = Forward()
+ if ignoreExpr is not None:
+ ret <<= Group( Suppress(opener) + ZeroOrMore( ignoreExpr | ret | content ) + Suppress(closer) )
+ else:
+ ret <<= Group( Suppress(opener) + ZeroOrMore( ret | content ) + Suppress(closer) )
+ ret.setName('nested %s%s expression' % (opener,closer))
+ return ret
+
+def indentedBlock(blockStatementExpr, indentStack, indent=True):
+ """
+ Helper method for defining space-delimited indentation blocks, such as
+ those used to define block statements in Python source code.
+
+ Parameters:
+ - blockStatementExpr - expression defining syntax of statement that
+ is repeated within the indented block
+ - indentStack - list created by caller to manage indentation stack
+ (multiple statementWithIndentedBlock expressions within a single grammar
+ should share a common indentStack)
+ - indent - boolean indicating whether block must be indented beyond the
+ the current level; set to False for block of left-most statements
+ (default=C{True})
+
+ A valid block must contain at least one C{blockStatement}.
+
+ Example::
+ data = '''
+ def A(z):
+ A1
+ B = 100
+ G = A2
+ A2
+ A3
+ B
+ def BB(a,b,c):
+ BB1
+ def BBA():
+ bba1
+ bba2
+ bba3
+ C
+ D
+ def spam(x,y):
+ def eggs(z):
+ pass
+ '''
+
+
+ indentStack = [1]
+ stmt = Forward()
+
+ identifier = Word(alphas, alphanums)
+ funcDecl = ("def" + identifier + Group( "(" + Optional( delimitedList(identifier) ) + ")" ) + ":")
+ func_body = indentedBlock(stmt, indentStack)
+ funcDef = Group( funcDecl + func_body )
+
+ rvalue = Forward()
+ funcCall = Group(identifier + "(" + Optional(delimitedList(rvalue)) + ")")
+ rvalue << (funcCall | identifier | Word(nums))
+ assignment = Group(identifier + "=" + rvalue)
+ stmt << ( funcDef | assignment | identifier )
+
+ module_body = OneOrMore(stmt)
+
+ parseTree = module_body.parseString(data)
+ parseTree.pprint()
+ prints::
+ [['def',
+ 'A',
+ ['(', 'z', ')'],
+ ':',
+ [['A1'], [['B', '=', '100']], [['G', '=', 'A2']], ['A2'], ['A3']]],
+ 'B',
+ ['def',
+ 'BB',
+ ['(', 'a', 'b', 'c', ')'],
+ ':',
+ [['BB1'], [['def', 'BBA', ['(', ')'], ':', [['bba1'], ['bba2'], ['bba3']]]]]],
+ 'C',
+ 'D',
+ ['def',
+ 'spam',
+ ['(', 'x', 'y', ')'],
+ ':',
+ [[['def', 'eggs', ['(', 'z', ')'], ':', [['pass']]]]]]]
+ """
+ def checkPeerIndent(s,l,t):
+ if l >= len(s): return
+ curCol = col(l,s)
+ if curCol != indentStack[-1]:
+ if curCol > indentStack[-1]:
+ raise ParseFatalException(s,l,"illegal nesting")
+ raise ParseException(s,l,"not a peer entry")
+
+ def checkSubIndent(s,l,t):
+ curCol = col(l,s)
+ if curCol > indentStack[-1]:
+ indentStack.append( curCol )
+ else:
+ raise ParseException(s,l,"not a subentry")
+
+ def checkUnindent(s,l,t):
+ if l >= len(s): return
+ curCol = col(l,s)
+ if not(indentStack and curCol < indentStack[-1] and curCol <= indentStack[-2]):
+ raise ParseException(s,l,"not an unindent")
+ indentStack.pop()
+
+ NL = OneOrMore(LineEnd().setWhitespaceChars("\t ").suppress())
+ INDENT = (Empty() + Empty().setParseAction(checkSubIndent)).setName('INDENT')
+ PEER = Empty().setParseAction(checkPeerIndent).setName('')
+ UNDENT = Empty().setParseAction(checkUnindent).setName('UNINDENT')
+ if indent:
+ smExpr = Group( Optional(NL) +
+ #~ FollowedBy(blockStatementExpr) +
+ INDENT + (OneOrMore( PEER + Group(blockStatementExpr) + Optional(NL) )) + UNDENT)
+ else:
+ smExpr = Group( Optional(NL) +
+ (OneOrMore( PEER + Group(blockStatementExpr) + Optional(NL) )) )
+ blockStatementExpr.ignore(_bslash + LineEnd())
+ return smExpr.setName('indented block')
+
+alphas8bit = srange(r"[\0xc0-\0xd6\0xd8-\0xf6\0xf8-\0xff]")
+punc8bit = srange(r"[\0xa1-\0xbf\0xd7\0xf7]")
+
+anyOpenTag,anyCloseTag = makeHTMLTags(Word(alphas,alphanums+"_:").setName('any tag'))
+_htmlEntityMap = dict(zip("gt lt amp nbsp quot apos".split(),'><& "\''))
+commonHTMLEntity = Regex('&(?P<entity>' + '|'.join(_htmlEntityMap.keys()) +");").setName("common HTML entity")
+def replaceHTMLEntity(t):
+ """Helper parser action to replace common HTML entities with their special characters"""
+ return _htmlEntityMap.get(t.entity)
+
+# it's easy to get these comment structures wrong - they're very common, so may as well make them available
+cStyleComment = Combine(Regex(r"/\*(?:[^*]|\*(?!/))*") + '*/').setName("C style comment")
+"Comment of the form C{/* ... */}"
+
+htmlComment = Regex(r"<!--[\s\S]*?-->").setName("HTML comment")
+"Comment of the form C{<!-- ... -->}"
+
+restOfLine = Regex(r".*").leaveWhitespace().setName("rest of line")
+dblSlashComment = Regex(r"//(?:\\\n|[^\n])*").setName("// comment")
+"Comment of the form C{// ... (to end of line)}"
+
+cppStyleComment = Combine(Regex(r"/\*(?:[^*]|\*(?!/))*") + '*/'| dblSlashComment).setName("C++ style comment")
+"Comment of either form C{L{cStyleComment}} or C{L{dblSlashComment}}"
+
+javaStyleComment = cppStyleComment
+"Same as C{L{cppStyleComment}}"
+
+pythonStyleComment = Regex(r"#.*").setName("Python style comment")
+"Comment of the form C{# ... (to end of line)}"
+
+_commasepitem = Combine(OneOrMore(Word(printables, excludeChars=',') +
+ Optional( Word(" \t") +
+ ~Literal(",") + ~LineEnd() ) ) ).streamline().setName("commaItem")
+commaSeparatedList = delimitedList( Optional( quotedString.copy() | _commasepitem, default="") ).setName("commaSeparatedList")
+"""(Deprecated) Predefined expression of 1 or more printable words or quoted strings, separated by commas.
+ This expression is deprecated in favor of L{pyparsing_common.comma_separated_list}."""
+
+# some other useful expressions - using lower-case class name since we are really using this as a namespace
+class pyparsing_common:
+ """
+ Here are some common low-level expressions that may be useful in jump-starting parser development:
+ - numeric forms (L{integers<integer>}, L{reals<real>}, L{scientific notation<sci_real>})
+ - common L{programming identifiers<identifier>}
+ - network addresses (L{MAC<mac_address>}, L{IPv4<ipv4_address>}, L{IPv6<ipv6_address>})
+ - ISO8601 L{dates<iso8601_date>} and L{datetime<iso8601_datetime>}
+ - L{UUID<uuid>}
+ - L{comma-separated list<comma_separated_list>}
+ Parse actions:
+ - C{L{convertToInteger}}
+ - C{L{convertToFloat}}
+ - C{L{convertToDate}}
+ - C{L{convertToDatetime}}
+ - C{L{stripHTMLTags}}
+ - C{L{upcaseTokens}}
+ - C{L{downcaseTokens}}
+
+ Example::
+ pyparsing_common.number.runTests('''
+ # any int or real number, returned as the appropriate type
+ 100
+ -100
+ +100
+ 3.14159
+ 6.02e23
+ 1e-12
+ ''')
+
+ pyparsing_common.fnumber.runTests('''
+ # any int or real number, returned as float
+ 100
+ -100
+ +100
+ 3.14159
+ 6.02e23
+ 1e-12
+ ''')
+
+ pyparsing_common.hex_integer.runTests('''
+ # hex numbers
+ 100
+ FF
+ ''')
+
+ pyparsing_common.fraction.runTests('''
+ # fractions
+ 1/2
+ -3/4
+ ''')
+
+ pyparsing_common.mixed_integer.runTests('''
+ # mixed fractions
+ 1
+ 1/2
+ -3/4
+ 1-3/4
+ ''')
+
+ import uuid
+ pyparsing_common.uuid.setParseAction(tokenMap(uuid.UUID))
+ pyparsing_common.uuid.runTests('''
+ # uuid
+ 12345678-1234-5678-1234-567812345678
+ ''')
+ prints::
+ # any int or real number, returned as the appropriate type
+ 100
+ [100]
+
+ -100
+ [-100]
+
+ +100
+ [100]
+
+ 3.14159
+ [3.14159]
+
+ 6.02e23
+ [6.02e+23]
+
+ 1e-12
+ [1e-12]
+
+ # any int or real number, returned as float
+ 100
+ [100.0]
+
+ -100
+ [-100.0]
+
+ +100
+ [100.0]
+
+ 3.14159
+ [3.14159]
+
+ 6.02e23
+ [6.02e+23]
+
+ 1e-12
+ [1e-12]
+
+ # hex numbers
+ 100
+ [256]
+
+ FF
+ [255]
+
+ # fractions
+ 1/2
+ [0.5]
+
+ -3/4
+ [-0.75]
+
+ # mixed fractions
+ 1
+ [1]
+
+ 1/2
+ [0.5]
+
+ -3/4
+ [-0.75]
+
+ 1-3/4
+ [1.75]
+
+ # uuid
+ 12345678-1234-5678-1234-567812345678
+ [UUID('12345678-1234-5678-1234-567812345678')]
+ """
+
+ convertToInteger = tokenMap(int)
+ """
+ Parse action for converting parsed integers to Python int
+ """
+
+ convertToFloat = tokenMap(float)
+ """
+ Parse action for converting parsed numbers to Python float
+ """
+
+ integer = Word(nums).setName("integer").setParseAction(convertToInteger)
+ """expression that parses an unsigned integer, returns an int"""
+
+ hex_integer = Word(hexnums).setName("hex integer").setParseAction(tokenMap(int,16))
+ """expression that parses a hexadecimal integer, returns an int"""
+
+ signed_integer = Regex(r'[+-]?\d+').setName("signed integer").setParseAction(convertToInteger)
+ """expression that parses an integer with optional leading sign, returns an int"""
+
+ fraction = (signed_integer().setParseAction(convertToFloat) + '/' + signed_integer().setParseAction(convertToFloat)).setName("fraction")
+ """fractional expression of an integer divided by an integer, returns a float"""
+ fraction.addParseAction(lambda t: t[0]/t[-1])
+
+ mixed_integer = (fraction | signed_integer + Optional(Optional('-').suppress() + fraction)).setName("fraction or mixed integer-fraction")
+ """mixed integer of the form 'integer - fraction', with optional leading integer, returns float"""
+ mixed_integer.addParseAction(sum)
+
+ real = Regex(r'[+-]?\d+\.\d*').setName("real number").setParseAction(convertToFloat)
+ """expression that parses a floating point number and returns a float"""
+
+ sci_real = Regex(r'[+-]?\d+([eE][+-]?\d+|\.\d*([eE][+-]?\d+)?)').setName("real number with scientific notation").setParseAction(convertToFloat)
+ """expression that parses a floating point number with optional scientific notation and returns a float"""
+
+ # streamlining this expression makes the docs nicer-looking
+ number = (sci_real | real | signed_integer).streamline()
+ """any numeric expression, returns the corresponding Python type"""
+
+ fnumber = Regex(r'[+-]?\d+\.?\d*([eE][+-]?\d+)?').setName("fnumber").setParseAction(convertToFloat)
+ """any int or real number, returned as float"""
+
+ identifier = Word(alphas+'_', alphanums+'_').setName("identifier")
+ """typical code identifier (leading alpha or '_', followed by 0 or more alphas, nums, or '_')"""
+
+ ipv4_address = Regex(r'(25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|1?[0-9]{1,2})(\.(25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|1?[0-9]{1,2})){3}').setName("IPv4 address")
+ "IPv4 address (C{0.0.0.0 - 255.255.255.255})"
+
+ _ipv6_part = Regex(r'[0-9a-fA-F]{1,4}').setName("hex_integer")
+ _full_ipv6_address = (_ipv6_part + (':' + _ipv6_part)*7).setName("full IPv6 address")
+ _short_ipv6_address = (Optional(_ipv6_part + (':' + _ipv6_part)*(0,6)) + "::" + Optional(_ipv6_part + (':' + _ipv6_part)*(0,6))).setName("short IPv6 address")
+ _short_ipv6_address.addCondition(lambda t: sum(1 for tt in t if pyparsing_common._ipv6_part.matches(tt)) < 8)
+ _mixed_ipv6_address = ("::ffff:" + ipv4_address).setName("mixed IPv6 address")
+ ipv6_address = Combine((_full_ipv6_address | _mixed_ipv6_address | _short_ipv6_address).setName("IPv6 address")).setName("IPv6 address")
+ "IPv6 address (long, short, or mixed form)"
+
+ mac_address = Regex(r'[0-9a-fA-F]{2}([:.-])[0-9a-fA-F]{2}(?:\1[0-9a-fA-F]{2}){4}').setName("MAC address")
+ "MAC address xx:xx:xx:xx:xx (may also have '-' or '.' delimiters)"
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def convertToDate(fmt="%Y-%m-%d"):
+ """
+ Helper to create a parse action for converting parsed date string to Python datetime.date
+
+ Params -
+ - fmt - format to be passed to datetime.strptime (default=C{"%Y-%m-%d"})
+
+ Example::
+ date_expr = pyparsing_common.iso8601_date.copy()
+ date_expr.setParseAction(pyparsing_common.convertToDate())
+ print(date_expr.parseString("1999-12-31"))
+ prints::
+ [datetime.date(1999, 12, 31)]
+ """
+ def cvt_fn(s,l,t):
+ try:
+ return datetime.strptime(t[0], fmt).date()
+ except ValueError as ve:
+ raise ParseException(s, l, str(ve))
+ return cvt_fn
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def convertToDatetime(fmt="%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%f"):
+ """
+ Helper to create a parse action for converting parsed datetime string to Python datetime.datetime
+
+ Params -
+ - fmt - format to be passed to datetime.strptime (default=C{"%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%f"})
+
+ Example::
+ dt_expr = pyparsing_common.iso8601_datetime.copy()
+ dt_expr.setParseAction(pyparsing_common.convertToDatetime())
+ print(dt_expr.parseString("1999-12-31T23:59:59.999"))
+ prints::
+ [datetime.datetime(1999, 12, 31, 23, 59, 59, 999000)]
+ """
+ def cvt_fn(s,l,t):
+ try:
+ return datetime.strptime(t[0], fmt)
+ except ValueError as ve:
+ raise ParseException(s, l, str(ve))
+ return cvt_fn
+
+ iso8601_date = Regex(r'(?P<year>\d{4})(?:-(?P<month>\d\d)(?:-(?P<day>\d\d))?)?').setName("ISO8601 date")
+ "ISO8601 date (C{yyyy-mm-dd})"
+
+ iso8601_datetime = Regex(r'(?P<year>\d{4})-(?P<month>\d\d)-(?P<day>\d\d)[T ](?P<hour>\d\d):(?P<minute>\d\d)(:(?P<second>\d\d(\.\d*)?)?)?(?P<tz>Z|[+-]\d\d:?\d\d)?').setName("ISO8601 datetime")
+ "ISO8601 datetime (C{yyyy-mm-ddThh:mm:ss.s(Z|+-00:00)}) - trailing seconds, milliseconds, and timezone optional; accepts separating C{'T'} or C{' '}"
+
+ uuid = Regex(r'[0-9a-fA-F]{8}(-[0-9a-fA-F]{4}){3}-[0-9a-fA-F]{12}').setName("UUID")
+ "UUID (C{xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx})"
+
+ _html_stripper = anyOpenTag.suppress() | anyCloseTag.suppress()
+ @staticmethod
+ def stripHTMLTags(s, l, tokens):
+ """
+ Parse action to remove HTML tags from web page HTML source
+
+ Example::
+ # strip HTML links from normal text
+ text = '<td>More info at the <a href="http://pyparsing.wikispaces.com">pyparsing</a> wiki page</td>'
+ td,td_end = makeHTMLTags("TD")
+ table_text = td + SkipTo(td_end).setParseAction(pyparsing_common.stripHTMLTags)("body") + td_end
+
+ print(table_text.parseString(text).body) # -> 'More info at the pyparsing wiki page'
+ """
+ return pyparsing_common._html_stripper.transformString(tokens[0])
+
+ _commasepitem = Combine(OneOrMore(~Literal(",") + ~LineEnd() + Word(printables, excludeChars=',')
+ + Optional( White(" \t") ) ) ).streamline().setName("commaItem")
+ comma_separated_list = delimitedList( Optional( quotedString.copy() | _commasepitem, default="") ).setName("comma separated list")
+ """Predefined expression of 1 or more printable words or quoted strings, separated by commas."""
+
+ upcaseTokens = staticmethod(tokenMap(lambda t: _ustr(t).upper()))
+ """Parse action to convert tokens to upper case."""
+
+ downcaseTokens = staticmethod(tokenMap(lambda t: _ustr(t).lower()))
+ """Parse action to convert tokens to lower case."""
+
+
+if __name__ == "__main__":
+
+ selectToken = CaselessLiteral("select")
+ fromToken = CaselessLiteral("from")
+
+ ident = Word(alphas, alphanums + "_$")
+
+ columnName = delimitedList(ident, ".", combine=True).setParseAction(upcaseTokens)
+ columnNameList = Group(delimitedList(columnName)).setName("columns")
+ columnSpec = ('*' | columnNameList)
+
+ tableName = delimitedList(ident, ".", combine=True).setParseAction(upcaseTokens)
+ tableNameList = Group(delimitedList(tableName)).setName("tables")
+
+ simpleSQL = selectToken("command") + columnSpec("columns") + fromToken + tableNameList("tables")
+
+ # demo runTests method, including embedded comments in test string
+ simpleSQL.runTests("""
+ # '*' as column list and dotted table name
+ select * from SYS.XYZZY
+
+ # caseless match on "SELECT", and casts back to "select"
+ SELECT * from XYZZY, ABC
+
+ # list of column names, and mixed case SELECT keyword
+ Select AA,BB,CC from Sys.dual
+
+ # multiple tables
+ Select A, B, C from Sys.dual, Table2
+
+ # invalid SELECT keyword - should fail
+ Xelect A, B, C from Sys.dual
+
+ # incomplete command - should fail
+ Select
+
+ # invalid column name - should fail
+ Select ^^^ frox Sys.dual
+
+ """)
+
+ pyparsing_common.number.runTests("""
+ 100
+ -100
+ +100
+ 3.14159
+ 6.02e23
+ 1e-12
+ """)
+
+ # any int or real number, returned as float
+ pyparsing_common.fnumber.runTests("""
+ 100
+ -100
+ +100
+ 3.14159
+ 6.02e23
+ 1e-12
+ """)
+
+ pyparsing_common.hex_integer.runTests("""
+ 100
+ FF
+ """)
+
+ import uuid
+ pyparsing_common.uuid.setParseAction(tokenMap(uuid.UUID))
+ pyparsing_common.uuid.runTests("""
+ 12345678-1234-5678-1234-567812345678
+ """)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/extern/__init__.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/extern/__init__.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..4dc3beb2fa
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/extern/__init__.py
@@ -0,0 +1,66 @@
+import sys
+
+
+class VendorImporter:
+ """
+ A PEP 302 meta path importer for finding optionally-vendored
+ or otherwise naturally-installed packages from root_name.
+ """
+
+ def __init__(self, root_name, vendored_names=(), vendor_pkg=None):
+ self.root_name = root_name
+ self.vendored_names = set(vendored_names)
+ self.vendor_pkg = vendor_pkg or root_name.replace('extern', '_vendor')
+
+ @property
+ def search_path(self):
+ """
+ Search first the vendor package then as a natural package.
+ """
+ yield self.vendor_pkg + '.'
+ yield ''
+
+ def find_module(self, fullname, path=None):
+ """
+ Return self when fullname starts with root_name and the
+ target module is one vendored through this importer.
+ """
+ root, base, target = fullname.partition(self.root_name + '.')
+ if root:
+ return
+ if not any(map(target.startswith, self.vendored_names)):
+ return
+ return self
+
+ def load_module(self, fullname):
+ """
+ Iterate over the search path to locate and load fullname.
+ """
+ root, base, target = fullname.partition(self.root_name + '.')
+ for prefix in self.search_path:
+ try:
+ extant = prefix + target
+ __import__(extant)
+ mod = sys.modules[extant]
+ sys.modules[fullname] = mod
+ return mod
+ except ImportError:
+ pass
+ else:
+ raise ImportError(
+ "The '{target}' package is required; "
+ "normally this is bundled with this package so if you get "
+ "this warning, consult the packager of your "
+ "distribution.".format(**locals())
+ )
+
+ def install(self):
+ """
+ Install this importer into sys.meta_path if not already present.
+ """
+ if self not in sys.meta_path:
+ sys.meta_path.append(self)
+
+
+names = 'packaging', 'pyparsing', 'appdirs'
+VendorImporter(__name__, names).install()
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools-51.2.0.dist-info/LICENSE b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools-51.2.0.dist-info/LICENSE
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..353924be0e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools-51.2.0.dist-info/LICENSE
@@ -0,0 +1,19 @@
+Copyright Jason R. Coombs
+
+Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
+of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to
+deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the
+rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or
+sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
+furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
+
+The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
+all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
+
+THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
+IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
+FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
+AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
+LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING
+FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS
+IN THE SOFTWARE.
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools-51.2.0.dist-info/METADATA b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools-51.2.0.dist-info/METADATA
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..9c11c15ca6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools-51.2.0.dist-info/METADATA
@@ -0,0 +1,110 @@
+Metadata-Version: 2.1
+Name: setuptools
+Version: 51.2.0
+Summary: Easily download, build, install, upgrade, and uninstall Python packages
+Home-page: https://github.com/pypa/setuptools
+Author: Python Packaging Authority
+Author-email: distutils-sig@python.org
+License: UNKNOWN
+Project-URL: Documentation, https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/
+Keywords: CPAN PyPI distutils eggs package management
+Platform: UNKNOWN
+Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
+Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
+Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
+Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
+Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3 :: Only
+Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries :: Python Modules
+Classifier: Topic :: System :: Archiving :: Packaging
+Classifier: Topic :: System :: Systems Administration
+Classifier: Topic :: Utilities
+Requires-Python: >=3.6
+Provides-Extra: certs
+Requires-Dist: certifi (==2016.9.26) ; extra == 'certs'
+Provides-Extra: docs
+Requires-Dist: sphinx ; extra == 'docs'
+Requires-Dist: jaraco.packaging (>=8.2) ; extra == 'docs'
+Requires-Dist: rst.linker (>=1.9) ; extra == 'docs'
+Requires-Dist: pygments-github-lexers (==0.0.5) ; extra == 'docs'
+Provides-Extra: ssl
+Requires-Dist: wincertstore (==0.2) ; (sys_platform == "win32") and extra == 'ssl'
+Provides-Extra: testing
+Requires-Dist: pytest (!=3.7.3,>=3.5) ; extra == 'testing'
+Requires-Dist: pytest-checkdocs (>=1.2.3) ; extra == 'testing'
+Requires-Dist: pytest-flake8 ; extra == 'testing'
+Requires-Dist: pytest-cov ; extra == 'testing'
+Requires-Dist: jaraco.test (>=3.2.0) ; extra == 'testing'
+Requires-Dist: mock ; extra == 'testing'
+Requires-Dist: flake8-2020 ; extra == 'testing'
+Requires-Dist: virtualenv (>=13.0.0) ; extra == 'testing'
+Requires-Dist: pytest-virtualenv (>=1.2.7) ; extra == 'testing'
+Requires-Dist: wheel ; extra == 'testing'
+Requires-Dist: paver ; extra == 'testing'
+Requires-Dist: pip (>=19.1) ; extra == 'testing'
+Requires-Dist: jaraco.envs ; extra == 'testing'
+Requires-Dist: pytest-black (>=0.3.7) ; (platform_python_implementation != "PyPy") and extra == 'testing'
+Requires-Dist: pytest-mypy ; (platform_python_implementation != "PyPy") and extra == 'testing'
+
+.. image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/setuptools.svg
+ :target: `PyPI link`_
+
+.. image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/pyversions/setuptools.svg
+ :target: `PyPI link`_
+
+.. _PyPI link: https://pypi.org/project/setuptools
+
+.. image:: https://github.com/pypa/setuptools/workflows/Automated%20Tests/badge.svg
+ :target: https://github.com/pypa/setuptools/actions?query=workflow%3A%22Automated+Tests%22
+ :alt: Automated Tests
+
+.. image:: https://img.shields.io/badge/code%20style-black-000000.svg
+ :target: https://github.com/psf/black
+ :alt: Code style: Black
+
+.. image:: https://img.shields.io/readthedocs/setuptools/latest.svg
+ :target: https://setuptools.readthedocs.io
+
+.. image:: https://img.shields.io/codecov/c/github/pypa/setuptools/master.svg?logo=codecov&logoColor=white
+ :target: https://codecov.io/gh/pypa/setuptools
+
+.. image:: https://tidelift.com/badges/github/pypa/setuptools?style=flat
+ :target: https://tidelift.com/subscription/pkg/pypi-setuptools?utm_source=pypi-setuptools&utm_medium=readme
+
+See the `Installation Instructions
+<https://packaging.python.org/installing/>`_ in the Python Packaging
+User's Guide for instructions on installing, upgrading, and uninstalling
+Setuptools.
+
+Questions and comments should be directed to the `distutils-sig
+mailing list <http://mail.python.org/pipermail/distutils-sig/>`_.
+Bug reports and especially tested patches may be
+submitted directly to the `bug tracker
+<https://github.com/pypa/setuptools/issues>`_.
+
+
+Code of Conduct
+===============
+
+Everyone interacting in the setuptools project's codebases, issue trackers,
+chat rooms, and mailing lists is expected to follow the
+`PSF Code of Conduct <https://github.com/pypa/.github/blob/main/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md>`_.
+
+
+For Enterprise
+==============
+
+Available as part of the Tidelift Subscription.
+
+Setuptools and the maintainers of thousands of other packages are working with Tidelift to deliver one enterprise subscription that covers all of the open source you use.
+
+`Learn more <https://tidelift.com/subscription/pkg/pypi-setuptools?utm_source=pypi-setuptools&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=github>`_.
+
+
+Security Contact
+================
+
+To report a security vulnerability, please use the
+`Tidelift security contact <https://tidelift.com/security>`_.
+Tidelift will coordinate the fix and disclosure.
+
+
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools-51.2.0.dist-info/RECORD b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools-51.2.0.dist-info/RECORD
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..f2107e9abf
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools-51.2.0.dist-info/RECORD
@@ -0,0 +1,156 @@
+distutils-precedence.pth,sha256=fqf_7z_ioRfuEsaO1lU2F_DX_S8FkCV8JcSElZo7c3M,152
+easy_install.py,sha256=MDC9vt5AxDsXX5qcKlBz2TnW6Tpuv_AobnfhCJ9X3PM,126
+_distutils_hack/__init__.py,sha256=wFuARcmlHtkV20HfRBlQaMPY7hQx-TEEtnBpXeysiwI,3552
+_distutils_hack/override.py,sha256=Eu_s-NF6VIZ4Cqd0tbbA5wtWky2IZPNd8et6GLt1mzo,44
+pkg_resources/__init__.py,sha256=lhZRsyFftcjl10dCV_WtPIg9PzS-z4pSckiclF-hYWA,107968
+pkg_resources/_vendor/__init__.py,sha256=47DEQpj8HBSa-_TImW-5JCeuQeRkm5NMpJWZG3hSuFU,0
+pkg_resources/_vendor/appdirs.py,sha256=MievUEuv3l_mQISH5SF0shDk_BNhHHzYiAPrT3ITN4I,24701
+pkg_resources/_vendor/pyparsing.py,sha256=tmrp-lu-qO1i75ZzIN5A12nKRRD1Cm4Vpk-5LR9rims,232055
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+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools-51.2.0.dist-info/dependency_links.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+https://files.pythonhosted.org/packages/source/c/certifi/certifi-2016.9.26.tar.gz#md5=baa81e951a29958563689d868ef1064d
+https://files.pythonhosted.org/packages/source/w/wincertstore/wincertstore-0.2.zip#md5=ae728f2f007185648d0c7a8679b361e2
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools-51.2.0.dist-info/entry_points.txt b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools-51.2.0.dist-info/entry_points.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..64381a4de3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools-51.2.0.dist-info/entry_points.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,68 @@
+[console_scripts]
+easy_install = setuptools.command.easy_install:main
+easy_install-3.9 = setuptools.command.easy_install:main
+
+[distutils.commands]
+alias = setuptools.command.alias:alias
+bdist_egg = setuptools.command.bdist_egg:bdist_egg
+bdist_rpm = setuptools.command.bdist_rpm:bdist_rpm
+bdist_wininst = setuptools.command.bdist_wininst:bdist_wininst
+build_clib = setuptools.command.build_clib:build_clib
+build_ext = setuptools.command.build_ext:build_ext
+build_py = setuptools.command.build_py:build_py
+develop = setuptools.command.develop:develop
+dist_info = setuptools.command.dist_info:dist_info
+easy_install = setuptools.command.easy_install:easy_install
+egg_info = setuptools.command.egg_info:egg_info
+install = setuptools.command.install:install
+install_egg_info = setuptools.command.install_egg_info:install_egg_info
+install_lib = setuptools.command.install_lib:install_lib
+install_scripts = setuptools.command.install_scripts:install_scripts
+rotate = setuptools.command.rotate:rotate
+saveopts = setuptools.command.saveopts:saveopts
+sdist = setuptools.command.sdist:sdist
+setopt = setuptools.command.setopt:setopt
+test = setuptools.command.test:test
+upload_docs = setuptools.command.upload_docs:upload_docs
+
+[distutils.setup_keywords]
+convert_2to3_doctests = setuptools.dist:assert_string_list
+dependency_links = setuptools.dist:assert_string_list
+eager_resources = setuptools.dist:assert_string_list
+entry_points = setuptools.dist:check_entry_points
+exclude_package_data = setuptools.dist:check_package_data
+extras_require = setuptools.dist:check_extras
+include_package_data = setuptools.dist:assert_bool
+install_requires = setuptools.dist:check_requirements
+namespace_packages = setuptools.dist:check_nsp
+package_data = setuptools.dist:check_package_data
+packages = setuptools.dist:check_packages
+python_requires = setuptools.dist:check_specifier
+setup_requires = setuptools.dist:check_requirements
+test_loader = setuptools.dist:check_importable
+test_runner = setuptools.dist:check_importable
+test_suite = setuptools.dist:check_test_suite
+tests_require = setuptools.dist:check_requirements
+use_2to3 = setuptools.dist:assert_bool
+use_2to3_exclude_fixers = setuptools.dist:assert_string_list
+use_2to3_fixers = setuptools.dist:assert_string_list
+zip_safe = setuptools.dist:assert_bool
+
+[egg_info.writers]
+PKG-INFO = setuptools.command.egg_info:write_pkg_info
+dependency_links.txt = setuptools.command.egg_info:overwrite_arg
+depends.txt = setuptools.command.egg_info:warn_depends_obsolete
+eager_resources.txt = setuptools.command.egg_info:overwrite_arg
+entry_points.txt = setuptools.command.egg_info:write_entries
+namespace_packages.txt = setuptools.command.egg_info:overwrite_arg
+requires.txt = setuptools.command.egg_info:write_requirements
+top_level.txt = setuptools.command.egg_info:write_toplevel_names
+
+[setuptools.finalize_distribution_options]
+2to3_doctests = setuptools.dist:Distribution._finalize_2to3_doctests
+keywords = setuptools.dist:Distribution._finalize_setup_keywords
+parent_finalize = setuptools.dist:_Distribution.finalize_options
+
+[setuptools.installation]
+eggsecutable = setuptools.command.easy_install:bootstrap
+
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools-51.2.0.dist-info/top_level.txt b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools-51.2.0.dist-info/top_level.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..0ba4b25ad5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools-51.2.0.dist-info/top_level.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+_distutils_hack
+easy_install
+pkg_resources
+setuptools
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/__init__.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/__init__.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..4d9b835729
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/__init__.py
@@ -0,0 +1,241 @@
+"""Extensions to the 'distutils' for large or complex distributions"""
+
+from fnmatch import fnmatchcase
+import functools
+import os
+import re
+
+import _distutils_hack.override # noqa: F401
+
+import distutils.core
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsOptionError
+from distutils.util import convert_path
+
+from ._deprecation_warning import SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning
+
+import setuptools.version
+from setuptools.extension import Extension
+from setuptools.dist import Distribution
+from setuptools.depends import Require
+from . import monkey
+
+
+__all__ = [
+ 'setup', 'Distribution', 'Command', 'Extension', 'Require',
+ 'SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning',
+ 'find_packages', 'find_namespace_packages',
+]
+
+__version__ = setuptools.version.__version__
+
+bootstrap_install_from = None
+
+# If we run 2to3 on .py files, should we also convert docstrings?
+# Default: yes; assume that we can detect doctests reliably
+run_2to3_on_doctests = True
+# Standard package names for fixer packages
+lib2to3_fixer_packages = ['lib2to3.fixes']
+
+
+class PackageFinder:
+ """
+ Generate a list of all Python packages found within a directory
+ """
+
+ @classmethod
+ def find(cls, where='.', exclude=(), include=('*',)):
+ """Return a list all Python packages found within directory 'where'
+
+ 'where' is the root directory which will be searched for packages. It
+ should be supplied as a "cross-platform" (i.e. URL-style) path; it will
+ be converted to the appropriate local path syntax.
+
+ 'exclude' is a sequence of package names to exclude; '*' can be used
+ as a wildcard in the names, such that 'foo.*' will exclude all
+ subpackages of 'foo' (but not 'foo' itself).
+
+ 'include' is a sequence of package names to include. If it's
+ specified, only the named packages will be included. If it's not
+ specified, all found packages will be included. 'include' can contain
+ shell style wildcard patterns just like 'exclude'.
+ """
+
+ return list(cls._find_packages_iter(
+ convert_path(where),
+ cls._build_filter('ez_setup', '*__pycache__', *exclude),
+ cls._build_filter(*include)))
+
+ @classmethod
+ def _find_packages_iter(cls, where, exclude, include):
+ """
+ All the packages found in 'where' that pass the 'include' filter, but
+ not the 'exclude' filter.
+ """
+ for root, dirs, files in os.walk(where, followlinks=True):
+ # Copy dirs to iterate over it, then empty dirs.
+ all_dirs = dirs[:]
+ dirs[:] = []
+
+ for dir in all_dirs:
+ full_path = os.path.join(root, dir)
+ rel_path = os.path.relpath(full_path, where)
+ package = rel_path.replace(os.path.sep, '.')
+
+ # Skip directory trees that are not valid packages
+ if ('.' in dir or not cls._looks_like_package(full_path)):
+ continue
+
+ # Should this package be included?
+ if include(package) and not exclude(package):
+ yield package
+
+ # Keep searching subdirectories, as there may be more packages
+ # down there, even if the parent was excluded.
+ dirs.append(dir)
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _looks_like_package(path):
+ """Does a directory look like a package?"""
+ return os.path.isfile(os.path.join(path, '__init__.py'))
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _build_filter(*patterns):
+ """
+ Given a list of patterns, return a callable that will be true only if
+ the input matches at least one of the patterns.
+ """
+ return lambda name: any(fnmatchcase(name, pat=pat) for pat in patterns)
+
+
+class PEP420PackageFinder(PackageFinder):
+ @staticmethod
+ def _looks_like_package(path):
+ return True
+
+
+find_packages = PackageFinder.find
+find_namespace_packages = PEP420PackageFinder.find
+
+
+def _install_setup_requires(attrs):
+ # Note: do not use `setuptools.Distribution` directly, as
+ # our PEP 517 backend patch `distutils.core.Distribution`.
+ class MinimalDistribution(distutils.core.Distribution):
+ """
+ A minimal version of a distribution for supporting the
+ fetch_build_eggs interface.
+ """
+ def __init__(self, attrs):
+ _incl = 'dependency_links', 'setup_requires'
+ filtered = {
+ k: attrs[k]
+ for k in set(_incl) & set(attrs)
+ }
+ distutils.core.Distribution.__init__(self, filtered)
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ """
+ Disable finalize_options to avoid building the working set.
+ Ref #2158.
+ """
+
+ dist = MinimalDistribution(attrs)
+
+ # Honor setup.cfg's options.
+ dist.parse_config_files(ignore_option_errors=True)
+ if dist.setup_requires:
+ dist.fetch_build_eggs(dist.setup_requires)
+
+
+def setup(**attrs):
+ # Make sure we have any requirements needed to interpret 'attrs'.
+ _install_setup_requires(attrs)
+ return distutils.core.setup(**attrs)
+
+
+setup.__doc__ = distutils.core.setup.__doc__
+
+
+_Command = monkey.get_unpatched(distutils.core.Command)
+
+
+class Command(_Command):
+ __doc__ = _Command.__doc__
+
+ command_consumes_arguments = False
+
+ def __init__(self, dist, **kw):
+ """
+ Construct the command for dist, updating
+ vars(self) with any keyword parameters.
+ """
+ _Command.__init__(self, dist)
+ vars(self).update(kw)
+
+ def _ensure_stringlike(self, option, what, default=None):
+ val = getattr(self, option)
+ if val is None:
+ setattr(self, option, default)
+ return default
+ elif not isinstance(val, str):
+ raise DistutilsOptionError("'%s' must be a %s (got `%s`)"
+ % (option, what, val))
+ return val
+
+ def ensure_string_list(self, option):
+ r"""Ensure that 'option' is a list of strings. If 'option' is
+ currently a string, we split it either on /,\s*/ or /\s+/, so
+ "foo bar baz", "foo,bar,baz", and "foo, bar baz" all become
+ ["foo", "bar", "baz"].
+ """
+ val = getattr(self, option)
+ if val is None:
+ return
+ elif isinstance(val, str):
+ setattr(self, option, re.split(r',\s*|\s+', val))
+ else:
+ if isinstance(val, list):
+ ok = all(isinstance(v, str) for v in val)
+ else:
+ ok = False
+ if not ok:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ "'%s' must be a list of strings (got %r)"
+ % (option, val))
+
+ def reinitialize_command(self, command, reinit_subcommands=0, **kw):
+ cmd = _Command.reinitialize_command(self, command, reinit_subcommands)
+ vars(cmd).update(kw)
+ return cmd
+
+
+def _find_all_simple(path):
+ """
+ Find all files under 'path'
+ """
+ results = (
+ os.path.join(base, file)
+ for base, dirs, files in os.walk(path, followlinks=True)
+ for file in files
+ )
+ return filter(os.path.isfile, results)
+
+
+def findall(dir=os.curdir):
+ """
+ Find all files under 'dir' and return the list of full filenames.
+ Unless dir is '.', return full filenames with dir prepended.
+ """
+ files = _find_all_simple(dir)
+ if dir == os.curdir:
+ make_rel = functools.partial(os.path.relpath, start=dir)
+ files = map(make_rel, files)
+ return list(files)
+
+
+class sic(str):
+ """Treat this string as-is (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sic)"""
+
+
+# Apply monkey patches
+monkey.patch_all()
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_deprecation_warning.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_deprecation_warning.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..086b64dd38
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_deprecation_warning.py
@@ -0,0 +1,7 @@
+class SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning(Warning):
+ """
+ Base class for warning deprecations in ``setuptools``
+
+ This class is not derived from ``DeprecationWarning``, and as such is
+ visible by default.
+ """
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/__init__.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/__init__.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..7dac55b601
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/__init__.py
@@ -0,0 +1,15 @@
+"""distutils
+
+The main package for the Python Module Distribution Utilities. Normally
+used from a setup script as
+
+ from distutils.core import setup
+
+ setup (...)
+"""
+
+import sys
+
+__version__ = sys.version[:sys.version.index(' ')]
+
+local = True
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/_msvccompiler.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/_msvccompiler.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..e9af4cf52b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/_msvccompiler.py
@@ -0,0 +1,561 @@
+"""distutils._msvccompiler
+
+Contains MSVCCompiler, an implementation of the abstract CCompiler class
+for Microsoft Visual Studio 2015.
+
+The module is compatible with VS 2015 and later. You can find legacy support
+for older versions in distutils.msvc9compiler and distutils.msvccompiler.
+"""
+
+# Written by Perry Stoll
+# hacked by Robin Becker and Thomas Heller to do a better job of
+# finding DevStudio (through the registry)
+# ported to VS 2005 and VS 2008 by Christian Heimes
+# ported to VS 2015 by Steve Dower
+
+import os
+import subprocess
+import contextlib
+import warnings
+import unittest.mock
+with contextlib.suppress(ImportError):
+ import winreg
+
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsExecError, DistutilsPlatformError, \
+ CompileError, LibError, LinkError
+from distutils.ccompiler import CCompiler, gen_lib_options
+from distutils import log
+from distutils.util import get_platform
+
+from itertools import count
+
+def _find_vc2015():
+ try:
+ key = winreg.OpenKeyEx(
+ winreg.HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE,
+ r"Software\Microsoft\VisualStudio\SxS\VC7",
+ access=winreg.KEY_READ | winreg.KEY_WOW64_32KEY
+ )
+ except OSError:
+ log.debug("Visual C++ is not registered")
+ return None, None
+
+ best_version = 0
+ best_dir = None
+ with key:
+ for i in count():
+ try:
+ v, vc_dir, vt = winreg.EnumValue(key, i)
+ except OSError:
+ break
+ if v and vt == winreg.REG_SZ and os.path.isdir(vc_dir):
+ try:
+ version = int(float(v))
+ except (ValueError, TypeError):
+ continue
+ if version >= 14 and version > best_version:
+ best_version, best_dir = version, vc_dir
+ return best_version, best_dir
+
+def _find_vc2017():
+ """Returns "15, path" based on the result of invoking vswhere.exe
+ If no install is found, returns "None, None"
+
+ The version is returned to avoid unnecessarily changing the function
+ result. It may be ignored when the path is not None.
+
+ If vswhere.exe is not available, by definition, VS 2017 is not
+ installed.
+ """
+ root = os.environ.get("ProgramFiles(x86)") or os.environ.get("ProgramFiles")
+ if not root:
+ return None, None
+
+ try:
+ path = subprocess.check_output([
+ os.path.join(root, "Microsoft Visual Studio", "Installer", "vswhere.exe"),
+ "-latest",
+ "-prerelease",
+ "-requires", "Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.VC.Tools.x86.x64",
+ "-property", "installationPath",
+ "-products", "*",
+ ], encoding="mbcs", errors="strict").strip()
+ except (subprocess.CalledProcessError, OSError, UnicodeDecodeError):
+ return None, None
+
+ path = os.path.join(path, "VC", "Auxiliary", "Build")
+ if os.path.isdir(path):
+ return 15, path
+
+ return None, None
+
+PLAT_SPEC_TO_RUNTIME = {
+ 'x86' : 'x86',
+ 'x86_amd64' : 'x64',
+ 'x86_arm' : 'arm',
+ 'x86_arm64' : 'arm64'
+}
+
+def _find_vcvarsall(plat_spec):
+ # bpo-38597: Removed vcruntime return value
+ _, best_dir = _find_vc2017()
+
+ if not best_dir:
+ best_version, best_dir = _find_vc2015()
+
+ if not best_dir:
+ log.debug("No suitable Visual C++ version found")
+ return None, None
+
+ vcvarsall = os.path.join(best_dir, "vcvarsall.bat")
+ if not os.path.isfile(vcvarsall):
+ log.debug("%s cannot be found", vcvarsall)
+ return None, None
+
+ return vcvarsall, None
+
+def _get_vc_env(plat_spec):
+ if os.getenv("DISTUTILS_USE_SDK"):
+ return {
+ key.lower(): value
+ for key, value in os.environ.items()
+ }
+
+ vcvarsall, _ = _find_vcvarsall(plat_spec)
+ if not vcvarsall:
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError("Unable to find vcvarsall.bat")
+
+ try:
+ out = subprocess.check_output(
+ 'cmd /u /c "{}" {} && set'.format(vcvarsall, plat_spec),
+ stderr=subprocess.STDOUT,
+ ).decode('utf-16le', errors='replace')
+ except subprocess.CalledProcessError as exc:
+ log.error(exc.output)
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError("Error executing {}"
+ .format(exc.cmd))
+
+ env = {
+ key.lower(): value
+ for key, _, value in
+ (line.partition('=') for line in out.splitlines())
+ if key and value
+ }
+
+ return env
+
+def _find_exe(exe, paths=None):
+ """Return path to an MSVC executable program.
+
+ Tries to find the program in several places: first, one of the
+ MSVC program search paths from the registry; next, the directories
+ in the PATH environment variable. If any of those work, return an
+ absolute path that is known to exist. If none of them work, just
+ return the original program name, 'exe'.
+ """
+ if not paths:
+ paths = os.getenv('path').split(os.pathsep)
+ for p in paths:
+ fn = os.path.join(os.path.abspath(p), exe)
+ if os.path.isfile(fn):
+ return fn
+ return exe
+
+# A map keyed by get_platform() return values to values accepted by
+# 'vcvarsall.bat'. Always cross-compile from x86 to work with the
+# lighter-weight MSVC installs that do not include native 64-bit tools.
+PLAT_TO_VCVARS = {
+ 'win32' : 'x86',
+ 'win-amd64' : 'x86_amd64',
+ 'win-arm32' : 'x86_arm',
+ 'win-arm64' : 'x86_arm64'
+}
+
+class MSVCCompiler(CCompiler) :
+ """Concrete class that implements an interface to Microsoft Visual C++,
+ as defined by the CCompiler abstract class."""
+
+ compiler_type = 'msvc'
+
+ # Just set this so CCompiler's constructor doesn't barf. We currently
+ # don't use the 'set_executables()' bureaucracy provided by CCompiler,
+ # as it really isn't necessary for this sort of single-compiler class.
+ # Would be nice to have a consistent interface with UnixCCompiler,
+ # though, so it's worth thinking about.
+ executables = {}
+
+ # Private class data (need to distinguish C from C++ source for compiler)
+ _c_extensions = ['.c']
+ _cpp_extensions = ['.cc', '.cpp', '.cxx']
+ _rc_extensions = ['.rc']
+ _mc_extensions = ['.mc']
+
+ # Needed for the filename generation methods provided by the
+ # base class, CCompiler.
+ src_extensions = (_c_extensions + _cpp_extensions +
+ _rc_extensions + _mc_extensions)
+ res_extension = '.res'
+ obj_extension = '.obj'
+ static_lib_extension = '.lib'
+ shared_lib_extension = '.dll'
+ static_lib_format = shared_lib_format = '%s%s'
+ exe_extension = '.exe'
+
+
+ def __init__(self, verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0):
+ CCompiler.__init__ (self, verbose, dry_run, force)
+ # target platform (.plat_name is consistent with 'bdist')
+ self.plat_name = None
+ self.initialized = False
+
+ def initialize(self, plat_name=None):
+ # multi-init means we would need to check platform same each time...
+ assert not self.initialized, "don't init multiple times"
+ if plat_name is None:
+ plat_name = get_platform()
+ # sanity check for platforms to prevent obscure errors later.
+ if plat_name not in PLAT_TO_VCVARS:
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError("--plat-name must be one of {}"
+ .format(tuple(PLAT_TO_VCVARS)))
+
+ # Get the vcvarsall.bat spec for the requested platform.
+ plat_spec = PLAT_TO_VCVARS[plat_name]
+
+ vc_env = _get_vc_env(plat_spec)
+ if not vc_env:
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError("Unable to find a compatible "
+ "Visual Studio installation.")
+
+ self._paths = vc_env.get('path', '')
+ paths = self._paths.split(os.pathsep)
+ self.cc = _find_exe("cl.exe", paths)
+ self.linker = _find_exe("link.exe", paths)
+ self.lib = _find_exe("lib.exe", paths)
+ self.rc = _find_exe("rc.exe", paths) # resource compiler
+ self.mc = _find_exe("mc.exe", paths) # message compiler
+ self.mt = _find_exe("mt.exe", paths) # message compiler
+
+ for dir in vc_env.get('include', '').split(os.pathsep):
+ if dir:
+ self.add_include_dir(dir.rstrip(os.sep))
+
+ for dir in vc_env.get('lib', '').split(os.pathsep):
+ if dir:
+ self.add_library_dir(dir.rstrip(os.sep))
+
+ self.preprocess_options = None
+ # bpo-38597: Always compile with dynamic linking
+ # Future releases of Python 3.x will include all past
+ # versions of vcruntime*.dll for compatibility.
+ self.compile_options = [
+ '/nologo', '/Ox', '/W3', '/GL', '/DNDEBUG', '/MD'
+ ]
+
+ self.compile_options_debug = [
+ '/nologo', '/Od', '/MDd', '/Zi', '/W3', '/D_DEBUG'
+ ]
+
+ ldflags = [
+ '/nologo', '/INCREMENTAL:NO', '/LTCG'
+ ]
+
+ ldflags_debug = [
+ '/nologo', '/INCREMENTAL:NO', '/LTCG', '/DEBUG:FULL'
+ ]
+
+ self.ldflags_exe = [*ldflags, '/MANIFEST:EMBED,ID=1']
+ self.ldflags_exe_debug = [*ldflags_debug, '/MANIFEST:EMBED,ID=1']
+ self.ldflags_shared = [*ldflags, '/DLL', '/MANIFEST:EMBED,ID=2', '/MANIFESTUAC:NO']
+ self.ldflags_shared_debug = [*ldflags_debug, '/DLL', '/MANIFEST:EMBED,ID=2', '/MANIFESTUAC:NO']
+ self.ldflags_static = [*ldflags]
+ self.ldflags_static_debug = [*ldflags_debug]
+
+ self._ldflags = {
+ (CCompiler.EXECUTABLE, None): self.ldflags_exe,
+ (CCompiler.EXECUTABLE, False): self.ldflags_exe,
+ (CCompiler.EXECUTABLE, True): self.ldflags_exe_debug,
+ (CCompiler.SHARED_OBJECT, None): self.ldflags_shared,
+ (CCompiler.SHARED_OBJECT, False): self.ldflags_shared,
+ (CCompiler.SHARED_OBJECT, True): self.ldflags_shared_debug,
+ (CCompiler.SHARED_LIBRARY, None): self.ldflags_static,
+ (CCompiler.SHARED_LIBRARY, False): self.ldflags_static,
+ (CCompiler.SHARED_LIBRARY, True): self.ldflags_static_debug,
+ }
+
+ self.initialized = True
+
+ # -- Worker methods ------------------------------------------------
+
+ def object_filenames(self,
+ source_filenames,
+ strip_dir=0,
+ output_dir=''):
+ ext_map = {
+ **{ext: self.obj_extension for ext in self.src_extensions},
+ **{ext: self.res_extension for ext in self._rc_extensions + self._mc_extensions},
+ }
+
+ output_dir = output_dir or ''
+
+ def make_out_path(p):
+ base, ext = os.path.splitext(p)
+ if strip_dir:
+ base = os.path.basename(base)
+ else:
+ _, base = os.path.splitdrive(base)
+ if base.startswith((os.path.sep, os.path.altsep)):
+ base = base[1:]
+ try:
+ # XXX: This may produce absurdly long paths. We should check
+ # the length of the result and trim base until we fit within
+ # 260 characters.
+ return os.path.join(output_dir, base + ext_map[ext])
+ except LookupError:
+ # Better to raise an exception instead of silently continuing
+ # and later complain about sources and targets having
+ # different lengths
+ raise CompileError("Don't know how to compile {}".format(p))
+
+ return list(map(make_out_path, source_filenames))
+
+
+ def compile(self, sources,
+ output_dir=None, macros=None, include_dirs=None, debug=0,
+ extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, depends=None):
+
+ if not self.initialized:
+ self.initialize()
+ compile_info = self._setup_compile(output_dir, macros, include_dirs,
+ sources, depends, extra_postargs)
+ macros, objects, extra_postargs, pp_opts, build = compile_info
+
+ compile_opts = extra_preargs or []
+ compile_opts.append('/c')
+ if debug:
+ compile_opts.extend(self.compile_options_debug)
+ else:
+ compile_opts.extend(self.compile_options)
+
+
+ add_cpp_opts = False
+
+ for obj in objects:
+ try:
+ src, ext = build[obj]
+ except KeyError:
+ continue
+ if debug:
+ # pass the full pathname to MSVC in debug mode,
+ # this allows the debugger to find the source file
+ # without asking the user to browse for it
+ src = os.path.abspath(src)
+
+ if ext in self._c_extensions:
+ input_opt = "/Tc" + src
+ elif ext in self._cpp_extensions:
+ input_opt = "/Tp" + src
+ add_cpp_opts = True
+ elif ext in self._rc_extensions:
+ # compile .RC to .RES file
+ input_opt = src
+ output_opt = "/fo" + obj
+ try:
+ self.spawn([self.rc] + pp_opts + [output_opt, input_opt])
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise CompileError(msg)
+ continue
+ elif ext in self._mc_extensions:
+ # Compile .MC to .RC file to .RES file.
+ # * '-h dir' specifies the directory for the
+ # generated include file
+ # * '-r dir' specifies the target directory of the
+ # generated RC file and the binary message resource
+ # it includes
+ #
+ # For now (since there are no options to change this),
+ # we use the source-directory for the include file and
+ # the build directory for the RC file and message
+ # resources. This works at least for win32all.
+ h_dir = os.path.dirname(src)
+ rc_dir = os.path.dirname(obj)
+ try:
+ # first compile .MC to .RC and .H file
+ self.spawn([self.mc, '-h', h_dir, '-r', rc_dir, src])
+ base, _ = os.path.splitext(os.path.basename (src))
+ rc_file = os.path.join(rc_dir, base + '.rc')
+ # then compile .RC to .RES file
+ self.spawn([self.rc, "/fo" + obj, rc_file])
+
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise CompileError(msg)
+ continue
+ else:
+ # how to handle this file?
+ raise CompileError("Don't know how to compile {} to {}"
+ .format(src, obj))
+
+ args = [self.cc] + compile_opts + pp_opts
+ if add_cpp_opts:
+ args.append('/EHsc')
+ args.append(input_opt)
+ args.append("/Fo" + obj)
+ args.extend(extra_postargs)
+
+ try:
+ self.spawn(args)
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise CompileError(msg)
+
+ return objects
+
+
+ def create_static_lib(self,
+ objects,
+ output_libname,
+ output_dir=None,
+ debug=0,
+ target_lang=None):
+
+ if not self.initialized:
+ self.initialize()
+ objects, output_dir = self._fix_object_args(objects, output_dir)
+ output_filename = self.library_filename(output_libname,
+ output_dir=output_dir)
+
+ if self._need_link(objects, output_filename):
+ lib_args = objects + ['/OUT:' + output_filename]
+ if debug:
+ pass # XXX what goes here?
+ try:
+ log.debug('Executing "%s" %s', self.lib, ' '.join(lib_args))
+ self.spawn([self.lib] + lib_args)
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise LibError(msg)
+ else:
+ log.debug("skipping %s (up-to-date)", output_filename)
+
+
+ def link(self,
+ target_desc,
+ objects,
+ output_filename,
+ output_dir=None,
+ libraries=None,
+ library_dirs=None,
+ runtime_library_dirs=None,
+ export_symbols=None,
+ debug=0,
+ extra_preargs=None,
+ extra_postargs=None,
+ build_temp=None,
+ target_lang=None):
+
+ if not self.initialized:
+ self.initialize()
+ objects, output_dir = self._fix_object_args(objects, output_dir)
+ fixed_args = self._fix_lib_args(libraries, library_dirs,
+ runtime_library_dirs)
+ libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs = fixed_args
+
+ if runtime_library_dirs:
+ self.warn("I don't know what to do with 'runtime_library_dirs': "
+ + str(runtime_library_dirs))
+
+ lib_opts = gen_lib_options(self,
+ library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs,
+ libraries)
+ if output_dir is not None:
+ output_filename = os.path.join(output_dir, output_filename)
+
+ if self._need_link(objects, output_filename):
+ ldflags = self._ldflags[target_desc, debug]
+
+ export_opts = ["/EXPORT:" + sym for sym in (export_symbols or [])]
+
+ ld_args = (ldflags + lib_opts + export_opts +
+ objects + ['/OUT:' + output_filename])
+
+ # The MSVC linker generates .lib and .exp files, which cannot be
+ # suppressed by any linker switches. The .lib files may even be
+ # needed! Make sure they are generated in the temporary build
+ # directory. Since they have different names for debug and release
+ # builds, they can go into the same directory.
+ build_temp = os.path.dirname(objects[0])
+ if export_symbols is not None:
+ (dll_name, dll_ext) = os.path.splitext(
+ os.path.basename(output_filename))
+ implib_file = os.path.join(
+ build_temp,
+ self.library_filename(dll_name))
+ ld_args.append ('/IMPLIB:' + implib_file)
+
+ if extra_preargs:
+ ld_args[:0] = extra_preargs
+ if extra_postargs:
+ ld_args.extend(extra_postargs)
+
+ output_dir = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(output_filename))
+ self.mkpath(output_dir)
+ try:
+ log.debug('Executing "%s" %s', self.linker, ' '.join(ld_args))
+ self.spawn([self.linker] + ld_args)
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise LinkError(msg)
+ else:
+ log.debug("skipping %s (up-to-date)", output_filename)
+
+ def spawn(self, cmd):
+ env = dict(os.environ, PATH=self._paths)
+ with self._fallback_spawn(cmd, env) as fallback:
+ return super().spawn(cmd, env=env)
+ return fallback.value
+
+ @contextlib.contextmanager
+ def _fallback_spawn(self, cmd, env):
+ """
+ Discovered in pypa/distutils#15, some tools monkeypatch the compiler,
+ so the 'env' kwarg causes a TypeError. Detect this condition and
+ restore the legacy, unsafe behavior.
+ """
+ bag = type('Bag', (), {})()
+ try:
+ yield bag
+ except TypeError as exc:
+ if "unexpected keyword argument 'env'" not in str(exc):
+ raise
+ else:
+ return
+ warnings.warn(
+ "Fallback spawn triggered. Please update distutils monkeypatch.")
+ with unittest.mock.patch('os.environ', env):
+ bag.value = super().spawn(cmd)
+
+ # -- Miscellaneous methods -----------------------------------------
+ # These are all used by the 'gen_lib_options() function, in
+ # ccompiler.py.
+
+ def library_dir_option(self, dir):
+ return "/LIBPATH:" + dir
+
+ def runtime_library_dir_option(self, dir):
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError(
+ "don't know how to set runtime library search path for MSVC")
+
+ def library_option(self, lib):
+ return self.library_filename(lib)
+
+ def find_library_file(self, dirs, lib, debug=0):
+ # Prefer a debugging library if found (and requested), but deal
+ # with it if we don't have one.
+ if debug:
+ try_names = [lib + "_d", lib]
+ else:
+ try_names = [lib]
+ for dir in dirs:
+ for name in try_names:
+ libfile = os.path.join(dir, self.library_filename(name))
+ if os.path.isfile(libfile):
+ return libfile
+ else:
+ # Oops, didn't find it in *any* of 'dirs'
+ return None
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/archive_util.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/archive_util.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..565a3117b4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/archive_util.py
@@ -0,0 +1,256 @@
+"""distutils.archive_util
+
+Utility functions for creating archive files (tarballs, zip files,
+that sort of thing)."""
+
+import os
+from warnings import warn
+import sys
+
+try:
+ import zipfile
+except ImportError:
+ zipfile = None
+
+
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsExecError
+from distutils.spawn import spawn
+from distutils.dir_util import mkpath
+from distutils import log
+
+try:
+ from pwd import getpwnam
+except ImportError:
+ getpwnam = None
+
+try:
+ from grp import getgrnam
+except ImportError:
+ getgrnam = None
+
+def _get_gid(name):
+ """Returns a gid, given a group name."""
+ if getgrnam is None or name is None:
+ return None
+ try:
+ result = getgrnam(name)
+ except KeyError:
+ result = None
+ if result is not None:
+ return result[2]
+ return None
+
+def _get_uid(name):
+ """Returns an uid, given a user name."""
+ if getpwnam is None or name is None:
+ return None
+ try:
+ result = getpwnam(name)
+ except KeyError:
+ result = None
+ if result is not None:
+ return result[2]
+ return None
+
+def make_tarball(base_name, base_dir, compress="gzip", verbose=0, dry_run=0,
+ owner=None, group=None):
+ """Create a (possibly compressed) tar file from all the files under
+ 'base_dir'.
+
+ 'compress' must be "gzip" (the default), "bzip2", "xz", "compress", or
+ None. ("compress" will be deprecated in Python 3.2)
+
+ 'owner' and 'group' can be used to define an owner and a group for the
+ archive that is being built. If not provided, the current owner and group
+ will be used.
+
+ The output tar file will be named 'base_dir' + ".tar", possibly plus
+ the appropriate compression extension (".gz", ".bz2", ".xz" or ".Z").
+
+ Returns the output filename.
+ """
+ tar_compression = {'gzip': 'gz', 'bzip2': 'bz2', 'xz': 'xz', None: '',
+ 'compress': ''}
+ compress_ext = {'gzip': '.gz', 'bzip2': '.bz2', 'xz': '.xz',
+ 'compress': '.Z'}
+
+ # flags for compression program, each element of list will be an argument
+ if compress is not None and compress not in compress_ext.keys():
+ raise ValueError(
+ "bad value for 'compress': must be None, 'gzip', 'bzip2', "
+ "'xz' or 'compress'")
+
+ archive_name = base_name + '.tar'
+ if compress != 'compress':
+ archive_name += compress_ext.get(compress, '')
+
+ mkpath(os.path.dirname(archive_name), dry_run=dry_run)
+
+ # creating the tarball
+ import tarfile # late import so Python build itself doesn't break
+
+ log.info('Creating tar archive')
+
+ uid = _get_uid(owner)
+ gid = _get_gid(group)
+
+ def _set_uid_gid(tarinfo):
+ if gid is not None:
+ tarinfo.gid = gid
+ tarinfo.gname = group
+ if uid is not None:
+ tarinfo.uid = uid
+ tarinfo.uname = owner
+ return tarinfo
+
+ if not dry_run:
+ tar = tarfile.open(archive_name, 'w|%s' % tar_compression[compress])
+ try:
+ tar.add(base_dir, filter=_set_uid_gid)
+ finally:
+ tar.close()
+
+ # compression using `compress`
+ if compress == 'compress':
+ warn("'compress' will be deprecated.", PendingDeprecationWarning)
+ # the option varies depending on the platform
+ compressed_name = archive_name + compress_ext[compress]
+ if sys.platform == 'win32':
+ cmd = [compress, archive_name, compressed_name]
+ else:
+ cmd = [compress, '-f', archive_name]
+ spawn(cmd, dry_run=dry_run)
+ return compressed_name
+
+ return archive_name
+
+def make_zipfile(base_name, base_dir, verbose=0, dry_run=0):
+ """Create a zip file from all the files under 'base_dir'.
+
+ The output zip file will be named 'base_name' + ".zip". Uses either the
+ "zipfile" Python module (if available) or the InfoZIP "zip" utility
+ (if installed and found on the default search path). If neither tool is
+ available, raises DistutilsExecError. Returns the name of the output zip
+ file.
+ """
+ zip_filename = base_name + ".zip"
+ mkpath(os.path.dirname(zip_filename), dry_run=dry_run)
+
+ # If zipfile module is not available, try spawning an external
+ # 'zip' command.
+ if zipfile is None:
+ if verbose:
+ zipoptions = "-r"
+ else:
+ zipoptions = "-rq"
+
+ try:
+ spawn(["zip", zipoptions, zip_filename, base_dir],
+ dry_run=dry_run)
+ except DistutilsExecError:
+ # XXX really should distinguish between "couldn't find
+ # external 'zip' command" and "zip failed".
+ raise DistutilsExecError(("unable to create zip file '%s': "
+ "could neither import the 'zipfile' module nor "
+ "find a standalone zip utility") % zip_filename)
+
+ else:
+ log.info("creating '%s' and adding '%s' to it",
+ zip_filename, base_dir)
+
+ if not dry_run:
+ try:
+ zip = zipfile.ZipFile(zip_filename, "w",
+ compression=zipfile.ZIP_DEFLATED)
+ except RuntimeError:
+ zip = zipfile.ZipFile(zip_filename, "w",
+ compression=zipfile.ZIP_STORED)
+
+ with zip:
+ if base_dir != os.curdir:
+ path = os.path.normpath(os.path.join(base_dir, ''))
+ zip.write(path, path)
+ log.info("adding '%s'", path)
+ for dirpath, dirnames, filenames in os.walk(base_dir):
+ for name in dirnames:
+ path = os.path.normpath(os.path.join(dirpath, name, ''))
+ zip.write(path, path)
+ log.info("adding '%s'", path)
+ for name in filenames:
+ path = os.path.normpath(os.path.join(dirpath, name))
+ if os.path.isfile(path):
+ zip.write(path, path)
+ log.info("adding '%s'", path)
+
+ return zip_filename
+
+ARCHIVE_FORMATS = {
+ 'gztar': (make_tarball, [('compress', 'gzip')], "gzip'ed tar-file"),
+ 'bztar': (make_tarball, [('compress', 'bzip2')], "bzip2'ed tar-file"),
+ 'xztar': (make_tarball, [('compress', 'xz')], "xz'ed tar-file"),
+ 'ztar': (make_tarball, [('compress', 'compress')], "compressed tar file"),
+ 'tar': (make_tarball, [('compress', None)], "uncompressed tar file"),
+ 'zip': (make_zipfile, [],"ZIP file")
+ }
+
+def check_archive_formats(formats):
+ """Returns the first format from the 'format' list that is unknown.
+
+ If all formats are known, returns None
+ """
+ for format in formats:
+ if format not in ARCHIVE_FORMATS:
+ return format
+ return None
+
+def make_archive(base_name, format, root_dir=None, base_dir=None, verbose=0,
+ dry_run=0, owner=None, group=None):
+ """Create an archive file (eg. zip or tar).
+
+ 'base_name' is the name of the file to create, minus any format-specific
+ extension; 'format' is the archive format: one of "zip", "tar", "gztar",
+ "bztar", "xztar", or "ztar".
+
+ 'root_dir' is a directory that will be the root directory of the
+ archive; ie. we typically chdir into 'root_dir' before creating the
+ archive. 'base_dir' is the directory where we start archiving from;
+ ie. 'base_dir' will be the common prefix of all files and
+ directories in the archive. 'root_dir' and 'base_dir' both default
+ to the current directory. Returns the name of the archive file.
+
+ 'owner' and 'group' are used when creating a tar archive. By default,
+ uses the current owner and group.
+ """
+ save_cwd = os.getcwd()
+ if root_dir is not None:
+ log.debug("changing into '%s'", root_dir)
+ base_name = os.path.abspath(base_name)
+ if not dry_run:
+ os.chdir(root_dir)
+
+ if base_dir is None:
+ base_dir = os.curdir
+
+ kwargs = {'dry_run': dry_run}
+
+ try:
+ format_info = ARCHIVE_FORMATS[format]
+ except KeyError:
+ raise ValueError("unknown archive format '%s'" % format)
+
+ func = format_info[0]
+ for arg, val in format_info[1]:
+ kwargs[arg] = val
+
+ if format != 'zip':
+ kwargs['owner'] = owner
+ kwargs['group'] = group
+
+ try:
+ filename = func(base_name, base_dir, **kwargs)
+ finally:
+ if root_dir is not None:
+ log.debug("changing back to '%s'", save_cwd)
+ os.chdir(save_cwd)
+
+ return filename
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/bcppcompiler.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/bcppcompiler.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..071fea5d03
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/bcppcompiler.py
@@ -0,0 +1,393 @@
+"""distutils.bcppcompiler
+
+Contains BorlandCCompiler, an implementation of the abstract CCompiler class
+for the Borland C++ compiler.
+"""
+
+# This implementation by Lyle Johnson, based on the original msvccompiler.py
+# module and using the directions originally published by Gordon Williams.
+
+# XXX looks like there's a LOT of overlap between these two classes:
+# someone should sit down and factor out the common code as
+# WindowsCCompiler! --GPW
+
+
+import os
+from distutils.errors import \
+ DistutilsExecError, \
+ CompileError, LibError, LinkError, UnknownFileError
+from distutils.ccompiler import \
+ CCompiler, gen_preprocess_options
+from distutils.file_util import write_file
+from distutils.dep_util import newer
+from distutils import log
+
+class BCPPCompiler(CCompiler) :
+ """Concrete class that implements an interface to the Borland C/C++
+ compiler, as defined by the CCompiler abstract class.
+ """
+
+ compiler_type = 'bcpp'
+
+ # Just set this so CCompiler's constructor doesn't barf. We currently
+ # don't use the 'set_executables()' bureaucracy provided by CCompiler,
+ # as it really isn't necessary for this sort of single-compiler class.
+ # Would be nice to have a consistent interface with UnixCCompiler,
+ # though, so it's worth thinking about.
+ executables = {}
+
+ # Private class data (need to distinguish C from C++ source for compiler)
+ _c_extensions = ['.c']
+ _cpp_extensions = ['.cc', '.cpp', '.cxx']
+
+ # Needed for the filename generation methods provided by the
+ # base class, CCompiler.
+ src_extensions = _c_extensions + _cpp_extensions
+ obj_extension = '.obj'
+ static_lib_extension = '.lib'
+ shared_lib_extension = '.dll'
+ static_lib_format = shared_lib_format = '%s%s'
+ exe_extension = '.exe'
+
+
+ def __init__ (self,
+ verbose=0,
+ dry_run=0,
+ force=0):
+
+ CCompiler.__init__ (self, verbose, dry_run, force)
+
+ # These executables are assumed to all be in the path.
+ # Borland doesn't seem to use any special registry settings to
+ # indicate their installation locations.
+
+ self.cc = "bcc32.exe"
+ self.linker = "ilink32.exe"
+ self.lib = "tlib.exe"
+
+ self.preprocess_options = None
+ self.compile_options = ['/tWM', '/O2', '/q', '/g0']
+ self.compile_options_debug = ['/tWM', '/Od', '/q', '/g0']
+
+ self.ldflags_shared = ['/Tpd', '/Gn', '/q', '/x']
+ self.ldflags_shared_debug = ['/Tpd', '/Gn', '/q', '/x']
+ self.ldflags_static = []
+ self.ldflags_exe = ['/Gn', '/q', '/x']
+ self.ldflags_exe_debug = ['/Gn', '/q', '/x','/r']
+
+
+ # -- Worker methods ------------------------------------------------
+
+ def compile(self, sources,
+ output_dir=None, macros=None, include_dirs=None, debug=0,
+ extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, depends=None):
+
+ macros, objects, extra_postargs, pp_opts, build = \
+ self._setup_compile(output_dir, macros, include_dirs, sources,
+ depends, extra_postargs)
+ compile_opts = extra_preargs or []
+ compile_opts.append ('-c')
+ if debug:
+ compile_opts.extend (self.compile_options_debug)
+ else:
+ compile_opts.extend (self.compile_options)
+
+ for obj in objects:
+ try:
+ src, ext = build[obj]
+ except KeyError:
+ continue
+ # XXX why do the normpath here?
+ src = os.path.normpath(src)
+ obj = os.path.normpath(obj)
+ # XXX _setup_compile() did a mkpath() too but before the normpath.
+ # Is it possible to skip the normpath?
+ self.mkpath(os.path.dirname(obj))
+
+ if ext == '.res':
+ # This is already a binary file -- skip it.
+ continue # the 'for' loop
+ if ext == '.rc':
+ # This needs to be compiled to a .res file -- do it now.
+ try:
+ self.spawn (["brcc32", "-fo", obj, src])
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise CompileError(msg)
+ continue # the 'for' loop
+
+ # The next two are both for the real compiler.
+ if ext in self._c_extensions:
+ input_opt = ""
+ elif ext in self._cpp_extensions:
+ input_opt = "-P"
+ else:
+ # Unknown file type -- no extra options. The compiler
+ # will probably fail, but let it just in case this is a
+ # file the compiler recognizes even if we don't.
+ input_opt = ""
+
+ output_opt = "-o" + obj
+
+ # Compiler command line syntax is: "bcc32 [options] file(s)".
+ # Note that the source file names must appear at the end of
+ # the command line.
+ try:
+ self.spawn ([self.cc] + compile_opts + pp_opts +
+ [input_opt, output_opt] +
+ extra_postargs + [src])
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise CompileError(msg)
+
+ return objects
+
+ # compile ()
+
+
+ def create_static_lib (self,
+ objects,
+ output_libname,
+ output_dir=None,
+ debug=0,
+ target_lang=None):
+
+ (objects, output_dir) = self._fix_object_args (objects, output_dir)
+ output_filename = \
+ self.library_filename (output_libname, output_dir=output_dir)
+
+ if self._need_link (objects, output_filename):
+ lib_args = [output_filename, '/u'] + objects
+ if debug:
+ pass # XXX what goes here?
+ try:
+ self.spawn ([self.lib] + lib_args)
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise LibError(msg)
+ else:
+ log.debug("skipping %s (up-to-date)", output_filename)
+
+ # create_static_lib ()
+
+
+ def link (self,
+ target_desc,
+ objects,
+ output_filename,
+ output_dir=None,
+ libraries=None,
+ library_dirs=None,
+ runtime_library_dirs=None,
+ export_symbols=None,
+ debug=0,
+ extra_preargs=None,
+ extra_postargs=None,
+ build_temp=None,
+ target_lang=None):
+
+ # XXX this ignores 'build_temp'! should follow the lead of
+ # msvccompiler.py
+
+ (objects, output_dir) = self._fix_object_args (objects, output_dir)
+ (libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs) = \
+ self._fix_lib_args (libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs)
+
+ if runtime_library_dirs:
+ log.warn("I don't know what to do with 'runtime_library_dirs': %s",
+ str(runtime_library_dirs))
+
+ if output_dir is not None:
+ output_filename = os.path.join (output_dir, output_filename)
+
+ if self._need_link (objects, output_filename):
+
+ # Figure out linker args based on type of target.
+ if target_desc == CCompiler.EXECUTABLE:
+ startup_obj = 'c0w32'
+ if debug:
+ ld_args = self.ldflags_exe_debug[:]
+ else:
+ ld_args = self.ldflags_exe[:]
+ else:
+ startup_obj = 'c0d32'
+ if debug:
+ ld_args = self.ldflags_shared_debug[:]
+ else:
+ ld_args = self.ldflags_shared[:]
+
+
+ # Create a temporary exports file for use by the linker
+ if export_symbols is None:
+ def_file = ''
+ else:
+ head, tail = os.path.split (output_filename)
+ modname, ext = os.path.splitext (tail)
+ temp_dir = os.path.dirname(objects[0]) # preserve tree structure
+ def_file = os.path.join (temp_dir, '%s.def' % modname)
+ contents = ['EXPORTS']
+ for sym in (export_symbols or []):
+ contents.append(' %s=_%s' % (sym, sym))
+ self.execute(write_file, (def_file, contents),
+ "writing %s" % def_file)
+
+ # Borland C++ has problems with '/' in paths
+ objects2 = map(os.path.normpath, objects)
+ # split objects in .obj and .res files
+ # Borland C++ needs them at different positions in the command line
+ objects = [startup_obj]
+ resources = []
+ for file in objects2:
+ (base, ext) = os.path.splitext(os.path.normcase(file))
+ if ext == '.res':
+ resources.append(file)
+ else:
+ objects.append(file)
+
+
+ for l in library_dirs:
+ ld_args.append("/L%s" % os.path.normpath(l))
+ ld_args.append("/L.") # we sometimes use relative paths
+
+ # list of object files
+ ld_args.extend(objects)
+
+ # XXX the command-line syntax for Borland C++ is a bit wonky;
+ # certain filenames are jammed together in one big string, but
+ # comma-delimited. This doesn't mesh too well with the
+ # Unix-centric attitude (with a DOS/Windows quoting hack) of
+ # 'spawn()', so constructing the argument list is a bit
+ # awkward. Note that doing the obvious thing and jamming all
+ # the filenames and commas into one argument would be wrong,
+ # because 'spawn()' would quote any filenames with spaces in
+ # them. Arghghh!. Apparently it works fine as coded...
+
+ # name of dll/exe file
+ ld_args.extend([',',output_filename])
+ # no map file and start libraries
+ ld_args.append(',,')
+
+ for lib in libraries:
+ # see if we find it and if there is a bcpp specific lib
+ # (xxx_bcpp.lib)
+ libfile = self.find_library_file(library_dirs, lib, debug)
+ if libfile is None:
+ ld_args.append(lib)
+ # probably a BCPP internal library -- don't warn
+ else:
+ # full name which prefers bcpp_xxx.lib over xxx.lib
+ ld_args.append(libfile)
+
+ # some default libraries
+ ld_args.append ('import32')
+ ld_args.append ('cw32mt')
+
+ # def file for export symbols
+ ld_args.extend([',',def_file])
+ # add resource files
+ ld_args.append(',')
+ ld_args.extend(resources)
+
+
+ if extra_preargs:
+ ld_args[:0] = extra_preargs
+ if extra_postargs:
+ ld_args.extend(extra_postargs)
+
+ self.mkpath (os.path.dirname (output_filename))
+ try:
+ self.spawn ([self.linker] + ld_args)
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise LinkError(msg)
+
+ else:
+ log.debug("skipping %s (up-to-date)", output_filename)
+
+ # link ()
+
+ # -- Miscellaneous methods -----------------------------------------
+
+
+ def find_library_file (self, dirs, lib, debug=0):
+ # List of effective library names to try, in order of preference:
+ # xxx_bcpp.lib is better than xxx.lib
+ # and xxx_d.lib is better than xxx.lib if debug is set
+ #
+ # The "_bcpp" suffix is to handle a Python installation for people
+ # with multiple compilers (primarily Distutils hackers, I suspect
+ # ;-). The idea is they'd have one static library for each
+ # compiler they care about, since (almost?) every Windows compiler
+ # seems to have a different format for static libraries.
+ if debug:
+ dlib = (lib + "_d")
+ try_names = (dlib + "_bcpp", lib + "_bcpp", dlib, lib)
+ else:
+ try_names = (lib + "_bcpp", lib)
+
+ for dir in dirs:
+ for name in try_names:
+ libfile = os.path.join(dir, self.library_filename(name))
+ if os.path.exists(libfile):
+ return libfile
+ else:
+ # Oops, didn't find it in *any* of 'dirs'
+ return None
+
+ # overwrite the one from CCompiler to support rc and res-files
+ def object_filenames (self,
+ source_filenames,
+ strip_dir=0,
+ output_dir=''):
+ if output_dir is None: output_dir = ''
+ obj_names = []
+ for src_name in source_filenames:
+ # use normcase to make sure '.rc' is really '.rc' and not '.RC'
+ (base, ext) = os.path.splitext (os.path.normcase(src_name))
+ if ext not in (self.src_extensions + ['.rc','.res']):
+ raise UnknownFileError("unknown file type '%s' (from '%s')" % \
+ (ext, src_name))
+ if strip_dir:
+ base = os.path.basename (base)
+ if ext == '.res':
+ # these can go unchanged
+ obj_names.append (os.path.join (output_dir, base + ext))
+ elif ext == '.rc':
+ # these need to be compiled to .res-files
+ obj_names.append (os.path.join (output_dir, base + '.res'))
+ else:
+ obj_names.append (os.path.join (output_dir,
+ base + self.obj_extension))
+ return obj_names
+
+ # object_filenames ()
+
+ def preprocess (self,
+ source,
+ output_file=None,
+ macros=None,
+ include_dirs=None,
+ extra_preargs=None,
+ extra_postargs=None):
+
+ (_, macros, include_dirs) = \
+ self._fix_compile_args(None, macros, include_dirs)
+ pp_opts = gen_preprocess_options(macros, include_dirs)
+ pp_args = ['cpp32.exe'] + pp_opts
+ if output_file is not None:
+ pp_args.append('-o' + output_file)
+ if extra_preargs:
+ pp_args[:0] = extra_preargs
+ if extra_postargs:
+ pp_args.extend(extra_postargs)
+ pp_args.append(source)
+
+ # We need to preprocess: either we're being forced to, or the
+ # source file is newer than the target (or the target doesn't
+ # exist).
+ if self.force or output_file is None or newer(source, output_file):
+ if output_file:
+ self.mkpath(os.path.dirname(output_file))
+ try:
+ self.spawn(pp_args)
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ print(msg)
+ raise CompileError(msg)
+
+ # preprocess()
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/ccompiler.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/ccompiler.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..57bb94e8bb
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/ccompiler.py
@@ -0,0 +1,1116 @@
+"""distutils.ccompiler
+
+Contains CCompiler, an abstract base class that defines the interface
+for the Distutils compiler abstraction model."""
+
+import sys, os, re
+from distutils.errors import *
+from distutils.spawn import spawn
+from distutils.file_util import move_file
+from distutils.dir_util import mkpath
+from distutils.dep_util import newer_group
+from distutils.util import split_quoted, execute
+from distutils import log
+
+class CCompiler:
+ """Abstract base class to define the interface that must be implemented
+ by real compiler classes. Also has some utility methods used by
+ several compiler classes.
+
+ The basic idea behind a compiler abstraction class is that each
+ instance can be used for all the compile/link steps in building a
+ single project. Thus, attributes common to all of those compile and
+ link steps -- include directories, macros to define, libraries to link
+ against, etc. -- are attributes of the compiler instance. To allow for
+ variability in how individual files are treated, most of those
+ attributes may be varied on a per-compilation or per-link basis.
+ """
+
+ # 'compiler_type' is a class attribute that identifies this class. It
+ # keeps code that wants to know what kind of compiler it's dealing with
+ # from having to import all possible compiler classes just to do an
+ # 'isinstance'. In concrete CCompiler subclasses, 'compiler_type'
+ # should really, really be one of the keys of the 'compiler_class'
+ # dictionary (see below -- used by the 'new_compiler()' factory
+ # function) -- authors of new compiler interface classes are
+ # responsible for updating 'compiler_class'!
+ compiler_type = None
+
+ # XXX things not handled by this compiler abstraction model:
+ # * client can't provide additional options for a compiler,
+ # e.g. warning, optimization, debugging flags. Perhaps this
+ # should be the domain of concrete compiler abstraction classes
+ # (UnixCCompiler, MSVCCompiler, etc.) -- or perhaps the base
+ # class should have methods for the common ones.
+ # * can't completely override the include or library searchg
+ # path, ie. no "cc -I -Idir1 -Idir2" or "cc -L -Ldir1 -Ldir2".
+ # I'm not sure how widely supported this is even by Unix
+ # compilers, much less on other platforms. And I'm even less
+ # sure how useful it is; maybe for cross-compiling, but
+ # support for that is a ways off. (And anyways, cross
+ # compilers probably have a dedicated binary with the
+ # right paths compiled in. I hope.)
+ # * can't do really freaky things with the library list/library
+ # dirs, e.g. "-Ldir1 -lfoo -Ldir2 -lfoo" to link against
+ # different versions of libfoo.a in different locations. I
+ # think this is useless without the ability to null out the
+ # library search path anyways.
+
+
+ # Subclasses that rely on the standard filename generation methods
+ # implemented below should override these; see the comment near
+ # those methods ('object_filenames()' et. al.) for details:
+ src_extensions = None # list of strings
+ obj_extension = None # string
+ static_lib_extension = None
+ shared_lib_extension = None # string
+ static_lib_format = None # format string
+ shared_lib_format = None # prob. same as static_lib_format
+ exe_extension = None # string
+
+ # Default language settings. language_map is used to detect a source
+ # file or Extension target language, checking source filenames.
+ # language_order is used to detect the language precedence, when deciding
+ # what language to use when mixing source types. For example, if some
+ # extension has two files with ".c" extension, and one with ".cpp", it
+ # is still linked as c++.
+ language_map = {".c" : "c",
+ ".cc" : "c++",
+ ".cpp" : "c++",
+ ".cxx" : "c++",
+ ".m" : "objc",
+ }
+ language_order = ["c++", "objc", "c"]
+
+ def __init__(self, verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0):
+ self.dry_run = dry_run
+ self.force = force
+ self.verbose = verbose
+
+ # 'output_dir': a common output directory for object, library,
+ # shared object, and shared library files
+ self.output_dir = None
+
+ # 'macros': a list of macro definitions (or undefinitions). A
+ # macro definition is a 2-tuple (name, value), where the value is
+ # either a string or None (no explicit value). A macro
+ # undefinition is a 1-tuple (name,).
+ self.macros = []
+
+ # 'include_dirs': a list of directories to search for include files
+ self.include_dirs = []
+
+ # 'libraries': a list of libraries to include in any link
+ # (library names, not filenames: eg. "foo" not "libfoo.a")
+ self.libraries = []
+
+ # 'library_dirs': a list of directories to search for libraries
+ self.library_dirs = []
+
+ # 'runtime_library_dirs': a list of directories to search for
+ # shared libraries/objects at runtime
+ self.runtime_library_dirs = []
+
+ # 'objects': a list of object files (or similar, such as explicitly
+ # named library files) to include on any link
+ self.objects = []
+
+ for key in self.executables.keys():
+ self.set_executable(key, self.executables[key])
+
+ def set_executables(self, **kwargs):
+ """Define the executables (and options for them) that will be run
+ to perform the various stages of compilation. The exact set of
+ executables that may be specified here depends on the compiler
+ class (via the 'executables' class attribute), but most will have:
+ compiler the C/C++ compiler
+ linker_so linker used to create shared objects and libraries
+ linker_exe linker used to create binary executables
+ archiver static library creator
+
+ On platforms with a command-line (Unix, DOS/Windows), each of these
+ is a string that will be split into executable name and (optional)
+ list of arguments. (Splitting the string is done similarly to how
+ Unix shells operate: words are delimited by spaces, but quotes and
+ backslashes can override this. See
+ 'distutils.util.split_quoted()'.)
+ """
+
+ # Note that some CCompiler implementation classes will define class
+ # attributes 'cpp', 'cc', etc. with hard-coded executable names;
+ # this is appropriate when a compiler class is for exactly one
+ # compiler/OS combination (eg. MSVCCompiler). Other compiler
+ # classes (UnixCCompiler, in particular) are driven by information
+ # discovered at run-time, since there are many different ways to do
+ # basically the same things with Unix C compilers.
+
+ for key in kwargs:
+ if key not in self.executables:
+ raise ValueError("unknown executable '%s' for class %s" %
+ (key, self.__class__.__name__))
+ self.set_executable(key, kwargs[key])
+
+ def set_executable(self, key, value):
+ if isinstance(value, str):
+ setattr(self, key, split_quoted(value))
+ else:
+ setattr(self, key, value)
+
+ def _find_macro(self, name):
+ i = 0
+ for defn in self.macros:
+ if defn[0] == name:
+ return i
+ i += 1
+ return None
+
+ def _check_macro_definitions(self, definitions):
+ """Ensures that every element of 'definitions' is a valid macro
+ definition, ie. either (name,value) 2-tuple or a (name,) tuple. Do
+ nothing if all definitions are OK, raise TypeError otherwise.
+ """
+ for defn in definitions:
+ if not (isinstance(defn, tuple) and
+ (len(defn) in (1, 2) and
+ (isinstance (defn[1], str) or defn[1] is None)) and
+ isinstance (defn[0], str)):
+ raise TypeError(("invalid macro definition '%s': " % defn) + \
+ "must be tuple (string,), (string, string), or " + \
+ "(string, None)")
+
+
+ # -- Bookkeeping methods -------------------------------------------
+
+ def define_macro(self, name, value=None):
+ """Define a preprocessor macro for all compilations driven by this
+ compiler object. The optional parameter 'value' should be a
+ string; if it is not supplied, then the macro will be defined
+ without an explicit value and the exact outcome depends on the
+ compiler used (XXX true? does ANSI say anything about this?)
+ """
+ # Delete from the list of macro definitions/undefinitions if
+ # already there (so that this one will take precedence).
+ i = self._find_macro (name)
+ if i is not None:
+ del self.macros[i]
+
+ self.macros.append((name, value))
+
+ def undefine_macro(self, name):
+ """Undefine a preprocessor macro for all compilations driven by
+ this compiler object. If the same macro is defined by
+ 'define_macro()' and undefined by 'undefine_macro()' the last call
+ takes precedence (including multiple redefinitions or
+ undefinitions). If the macro is redefined/undefined on a
+ per-compilation basis (ie. in the call to 'compile()'), then that
+ takes precedence.
+ """
+ # Delete from the list of macro definitions/undefinitions if
+ # already there (so that this one will take precedence).
+ i = self._find_macro (name)
+ if i is not None:
+ del self.macros[i]
+
+ undefn = (name,)
+ self.macros.append(undefn)
+
+ def add_include_dir(self, dir):
+ """Add 'dir' to the list of directories that will be searched for
+ header files. The compiler is instructed to search directories in
+ the order in which they are supplied by successive calls to
+ 'add_include_dir()'.
+ """
+ self.include_dirs.append(dir)
+
+ def set_include_dirs(self, dirs):
+ """Set the list of directories that will be searched to 'dirs' (a
+ list of strings). Overrides any preceding calls to
+ 'add_include_dir()'; subsequence calls to 'add_include_dir()' add
+ to the list passed to 'set_include_dirs()'. This does not affect
+ any list of standard include directories that the compiler may
+ search by default.
+ """
+ self.include_dirs = dirs[:]
+
+ def add_library(self, libname):
+ """Add 'libname' to the list of libraries that will be included in
+ all links driven by this compiler object. Note that 'libname'
+ should *not* be the name of a file containing a library, but the
+ name of the library itself: the actual filename will be inferred by
+ the linker, the compiler, or the compiler class (depending on the
+ platform).
+
+ The linker will be instructed to link against libraries in the
+ order they were supplied to 'add_library()' and/or
+ 'set_libraries()'. It is perfectly valid to duplicate library
+ names; the linker will be instructed to link against libraries as
+ many times as they are mentioned.
+ """
+ self.libraries.append(libname)
+
+ def set_libraries(self, libnames):
+ """Set the list of libraries to be included in all links driven by
+ this compiler object to 'libnames' (a list of strings). This does
+ not affect any standard system libraries that the linker may
+ include by default.
+ """
+ self.libraries = libnames[:]
+
+ def add_library_dir(self, dir):
+ """Add 'dir' to the list of directories that will be searched for
+ libraries specified to 'add_library()' and 'set_libraries()'. The
+ linker will be instructed to search for libraries in the order they
+ are supplied to 'add_library_dir()' and/or 'set_library_dirs()'.
+ """
+ self.library_dirs.append(dir)
+
+ def set_library_dirs(self, dirs):
+ """Set the list of library search directories to 'dirs' (a list of
+ strings). This does not affect any standard library search path
+ that the linker may search by default.
+ """
+ self.library_dirs = dirs[:]
+
+ def add_runtime_library_dir(self, dir):
+ """Add 'dir' to the list of directories that will be searched for
+ shared libraries at runtime.
+ """
+ self.runtime_library_dirs.append(dir)
+
+ def set_runtime_library_dirs(self, dirs):
+ """Set the list of directories to search for shared libraries at
+ runtime to 'dirs' (a list of strings). This does not affect any
+ standard search path that the runtime linker may search by
+ default.
+ """
+ self.runtime_library_dirs = dirs[:]
+
+ def add_link_object(self, object):
+ """Add 'object' to the list of object files (or analogues, such as
+ explicitly named library files or the output of "resource
+ compilers") to be included in every link driven by this compiler
+ object.
+ """
+ self.objects.append(object)
+
+ def set_link_objects(self, objects):
+ """Set the list of object files (or analogues) to be included in
+ every link to 'objects'. This does not affect any standard object
+ files that the linker may include by default (such as system
+ libraries).
+ """
+ self.objects = objects[:]
+
+
+ # -- Private utility methods --------------------------------------
+ # (here for the convenience of subclasses)
+
+ # Helper method to prep compiler in subclass compile() methods
+
+ def _setup_compile(self, outdir, macros, incdirs, sources, depends,
+ extra):
+ """Process arguments and decide which source files to compile."""
+ if outdir is None:
+ outdir = self.output_dir
+ elif not isinstance(outdir, str):
+ raise TypeError("'output_dir' must be a string or None")
+
+ if macros is None:
+ macros = self.macros
+ elif isinstance(macros, list):
+ macros = macros + (self.macros or [])
+ else:
+ raise TypeError("'macros' (if supplied) must be a list of tuples")
+
+ if incdirs is None:
+ incdirs = self.include_dirs
+ elif isinstance(incdirs, (list, tuple)):
+ incdirs = list(incdirs) + (self.include_dirs or [])
+ else:
+ raise TypeError(
+ "'include_dirs' (if supplied) must be a list of strings")
+
+ if extra is None:
+ extra = []
+
+ # Get the list of expected output (object) files
+ objects = self.object_filenames(sources, strip_dir=0,
+ output_dir=outdir)
+ assert len(objects) == len(sources)
+
+ pp_opts = gen_preprocess_options(macros, incdirs)
+
+ build = {}
+ for i in range(len(sources)):
+ src = sources[i]
+ obj = objects[i]
+ ext = os.path.splitext(src)[1]
+ self.mkpath(os.path.dirname(obj))
+ build[obj] = (src, ext)
+
+ return macros, objects, extra, pp_opts, build
+
+ def _get_cc_args(self, pp_opts, debug, before):
+ # works for unixccompiler, cygwinccompiler
+ cc_args = pp_opts + ['-c']
+ if debug:
+ cc_args[:0] = ['-g']
+ if before:
+ cc_args[:0] = before
+ return cc_args
+
+ def _fix_compile_args(self, output_dir, macros, include_dirs):
+ """Typecheck and fix-up some of the arguments to the 'compile()'
+ method, and return fixed-up values. Specifically: if 'output_dir'
+ is None, replaces it with 'self.output_dir'; ensures that 'macros'
+ is a list, and augments it with 'self.macros'; ensures that
+ 'include_dirs' is a list, and augments it with 'self.include_dirs'.
+ Guarantees that the returned values are of the correct type,
+ i.e. for 'output_dir' either string or None, and for 'macros' and
+ 'include_dirs' either list or None.
+ """
+ if output_dir is None:
+ output_dir = self.output_dir
+ elif not isinstance(output_dir, str):
+ raise TypeError("'output_dir' must be a string or None")
+
+ if macros is None:
+ macros = self.macros
+ elif isinstance(macros, list):
+ macros = macros + (self.macros or [])
+ else:
+ raise TypeError("'macros' (if supplied) must be a list of tuples")
+
+ if include_dirs is None:
+ include_dirs = self.include_dirs
+ elif isinstance(include_dirs, (list, tuple)):
+ include_dirs = list(include_dirs) + (self.include_dirs or [])
+ else:
+ raise TypeError(
+ "'include_dirs' (if supplied) must be a list of strings")
+
+ return output_dir, macros, include_dirs
+
+ def _prep_compile(self, sources, output_dir, depends=None):
+ """Decide which souce files must be recompiled.
+
+ Determine the list of object files corresponding to 'sources',
+ and figure out which ones really need to be recompiled.
+ Return a list of all object files and a dictionary telling
+ which source files can be skipped.
+ """
+ # Get the list of expected output (object) files
+ objects = self.object_filenames(sources, output_dir=output_dir)
+ assert len(objects) == len(sources)
+
+ # Return an empty dict for the "which source files can be skipped"
+ # return value to preserve API compatibility.
+ return objects, {}
+
+ def _fix_object_args(self, objects, output_dir):
+ """Typecheck and fix up some arguments supplied to various methods.
+ Specifically: ensure that 'objects' is a list; if output_dir is
+ None, replace with self.output_dir. Return fixed versions of
+ 'objects' and 'output_dir'.
+ """
+ if not isinstance(objects, (list, tuple)):
+ raise TypeError("'objects' must be a list or tuple of strings")
+ objects = list(objects)
+
+ if output_dir is None:
+ output_dir = self.output_dir
+ elif not isinstance(output_dir, str):
+ raise TypeError("'output_dir' must be a string or None")
+
+ return (objects, output_dir)
+
+ def _fix_lib_args(self, libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs):
+ """Typecheck and fix up some of the arguments supplied to the
+ 'link_*' methods. Specifically: ensure that all arguments are
+ lists, and augment them with their permanent versions
+ (eg. 'self.libraries' augments 'libraries'). Return a tuple with
+ fixed versions of all arguments.
+ """
+ if libraries is None:
+ libraries = self.libraries
+ elif isinstance(libraries, (list, tuple)):
+ libraries = list (libraries) + (self.libraries or [])
+ else:
+ raise TypeError(
+ "'libraries' (if supplied) must be a list of strings")
+
+ if library_dirs is None:
+ library_dirs = self.library_dirs
+ elif isinstance(library_dirs, (list, tuple)):
+ library_dirs = list (library_dirs) + (self.library_dirs or [])
+ else:
+ raise TypeError(
+ "'library_dirs' (if supplied) must be a list of strings")
+
+ if runtime_library_dirs is None:
+ runtime_library_dirs = self.runtime_library_dirs
+ elif isinstance(runtime_library_dirs, (list, tuple)):
+ runtime_library_dirs = (list(runtime_library_dirs) +
+ (self.runtime_library_dirs or []))
+ else:
+ raise TypeError("'runtime_library_dirs' (if supplied) "
+ "must be a list of strings")
+
+ return (libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs)
+
+ def _need_link(self, objects, output_file):
+ """Return true if we need to relink the files listed in 'objects'
+ to recreate 'output_file'.
+ """
+ if self.force:
+ return True
+ else:
+ if self.dry_run:
+ newer = newer_group (objects, output_file, missing='newer')
+ else:
+ newer = newer_group (objects, output_file)
+ return newer
+
+ def detect_language(self, sources):
+ """Detect the language of a given file, or list of files. Uses
+ language_map, and language_order to do the job.
+ """
+ if not isinstance(sources, list):
+ sources = [sources]
+ lang = None
+ index = len(self.language_order)
+ for source in sources:
+ base, ext = os.path.splitext(source)
+ extlang = self.language_map.get(ext)
+ try:
+ extindex = self.language_order.index(extlang)
+ if extindex < index:
+ lang = extlang
+ index = extindex
+ except ValueError:
+ pass
+ return lang
+
+
+ # -- Worker methods ------------------------------------------------
+ # (must be implemented by subclasses)
+
+ def preprocess(self, source, output_file=None, macros=None,
+ include_dirs=None, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None):
+ """Preprocess a single C/C++ source file, named in 'source'.
+ Output will be written to file named 'output_file', or stdout if
+ 'output_file' not supplied. 'macros' is a list of macro
+ definitions as for 'compile()', which will augment the macros set
+ with 'define_macro()' and 'undefine_macro()'. 'include_dirs' is a
+ list of directory names that will be added to the default list.
+
+ Raises PreprocessError on failure.
+ """
+ pass
+
+ def compile(self, sources, output_dir=None, macros=None,
+ include_dirs=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None,
+ extra_postargs=None, depends=None):
+ """Compile one or more source files.
+
+ 'sources' must be a list of filenames, most likely C/C++
+ files, but in reality anything that can be handled by a
+ particular compiler and compiler class (eg. MSVCCompiler can
+ handle resource files in 'sources'). Return a list of object
+ filenames, one per source filename in 'sources'. Depending on
+ the implementation, not all source files will necessarily be
+ compiled, but all corresponding object filenames will be
+ returned.
+
+ If 'output_dir' is given, object files will be put under it, while
+ retaining their original path component. That is, "foo/bar.c"
+ normally compiles to "foo/bar.o" (for a Unix implementation); if
+ 'output_dir' is "build", then it would compile to
+ "build/foo/bar.o".
+
+ 'macros', if given, must be a list of macro definitions. A macro
+ definition is either a (name, value) 2-tuple or a (name,) 1-tuple.
+ The former defines a macro; if the value is None, the macro is
+ defined without an explicit value. The 1-tuple case undefines a
+ macro. Later definitions/redefinitions/ undefinitions take
+ precedence.
+
+ 'include_dirs', if given, must be a list of strings, the
+ directories to add to the default include file search path for this
+ compilation only.
+
+ 'debug' is a boolean; if true, the compiler will be instructed to
+ output debug symbols in (or alongside) the object file(s).
+
+ 'extra_preargs' and 'extra_postargs' are implementation- dependent.
+ On platforms that have the notion of a command-line (e.g. Unix,
+ DOS/Windows), they are most likely lists of strings: extra
+ command-line arguments to prepend/append to the compiler command
+ line. On other platforms, consult the implementation class
+ documentation. In any event, they are intended as an escape hatch
+ for those occasions when the abstract compiler framework doesn't
+ cut the mustard.
+
+ 'depends', if given, is a list of filenames that all targets
+ depend on. If a source file is older than any file in
+ depends, then the source file will be recompiled. This
+ supports dependency tracking, but only at a coarse
+ granularity.
+
+ Raises CompileError on failure.
+ """
+ # A concrete compiler class can either override this method
+ # entirely or implement _compile().
+ macros, objects, extra_postargs, pp_opts, build = \
+ self._setup_compile(output_dir, macros, include_dirs, sources,
+ depends, extra_postargs)
+ cc_args = self._get_cc_args(pp_opts, debug, extra_preargs)
+
+ for obj in objects:
+ try:
+ src, ext = build[obj]
+ except KeyError:
+ continue
+ self._compile(obj, src, ext, cc_args, extra_postargs, pp_opts)
+
+ # Return *all* object filenames, not just the ones we just built.
+ return objects
+
+ def _compile(self, obj, src, ext, cc_args, extra_postargs, pp_opts):
+ """Compile 'src' to product 'obj'."""
+ # A concrete compiler class that does not override compile()
+ # should implement _compile().
+ pass
+
+ def create_static_lib(self, objects, output_libname, output_dir=None,
+ debug=0, target_lang=None):
+ """Link a bunch of stuff together to create a static library file.
+ The "bunch of stuff" consists of the list of object files supplied
+ as 'objects', the extra object files supplied to
+ 'add_link_object()' and/or 'set_link_objects()', the libraries
+ supplied to 'add_library()' and/or 'set_libraries()', and the
+ libraries supplied as 'libraries' (if any).
+
+ 'output_libname' should be a library name, not a filename; the
+ filename will be inferred from the library name. 'output_dir' is
+ the directory where the library file will be put.
+
+ 'debug' is a boolean; if true, debugging information will be
+ included in the library (note that on most platforms, it is the
+ compile step where this matters: the 'debug' flag is included here
+ just for consistency).
+
+ 'target_lang' is the target language for which the given objects
+ are being compiled. This allows specific linkage time treatment of
+ certain languages.
+
+ Raises LibError on failure.
+ """
+ pass
+
+
+ # values for target_desc parameter in link()
+ SHARED_OBJECT = "shared_object"
+ SHARED_LIBRARY = "shared_library"
+ EXECUTABLE = "executable"
+
+ def link(self,
+ target_desc,
+ objects,
+ output_filename,
+ output_dir=None,
+ libraries=None,
+ library_dirs=None,
+ runtime_library_dirs=None,
+ export_symbols=None,
+ debug=0,
+ extra_preargs=None,
+ extra_postargs=None,
+ build_temp=None,
+ target_lang=None):
+ """Link a bunch of stuff together to create an executable or
+ shared library file.
+
+ The "bunch of stuff" consists of the list of object files supplied
+ as 'objects'. 'output_filename' should be a filename. If
+ 'output_dir' is supplied, 'output_filename' is relative to it
+ (i.e. 'output_filename' can provide directory components if
+ needed).
+
+ 'libraries' is a list of libraries to link against. These are
+ library names, not filenames, since they're translated into
+ filenames in a platform-specific way (eg. "foo" becomes "libfoo.a"
+ on Unix and "foo.lib" on DOS/Windows). However, they can include a
+ directory component, which means the linker will look in that
+ specific directory rather than searching all the normal locations.
+
+ 'library_dirs', if supplied, should be a list of directories to
+ search for libraries that were specified as bare library names
+ (ie. no directory component). These are on top of the system
+ default and those supplied to 'add_library_dir()' and/or
+ 'set_library_dirs()'. 'runtime_library_dirs' is a list of
+ directories that will be embedded into the shared library and used
+ to search for other shared libraries that *it* depends on at
+ run-time. (This may only be relevant on Unix.)
+
+ 'export_symbols' is a list of symbols that the shared library will
+ export. (This appears to be relevant only on Windows.)
+
+ 'debug' is as for 'compile()' and 'create_static_lib()', with the
+ slight distinction that it actually matters on most platforms (as
+ opposed to 'create_static_lib()', which includes a 'debug' flag
+ mostly for form's sake).
+
+ 'extra_preargs' and 'extra_postargs' are as for 'compile()' (except
+ of course that they supply command-line arguments for the
+ particular linker being used).
+
+ 'target_lang' is the target language for which the given objects
+ are being compiled. This allows specific linkage time treatment of
+ certain languages.
+
+ Raises LinkError on failure.
+ """
+ raise NotImplementedError
+
+
+ # Old 'link_*()' methods, rewritten to use the new 'link()' method.
+
+ def link_shared_lib(self,
+ objects,
+ output_libname,
+ output_dir=None,
+ libraries=None,
+ library_dirs=None,
+ runtime_library_dirs=None,
+ export_symbols=None,
+ debug=0,
+ extra_preargs=None,
+ extra_postargs=None,
+ build_temp=None,
+ target_lang=None):
+ self.link(CCompiler.SHARED_LIBRARY, objects,
+ self.library_filename(output_libname, lib_type='shared'),
+ output_dir,
+ libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs,
+ export_symbols, debug,
+ extra_preargs, extra_postargs, build_temp, target_lang)
+
+
+ def link_shared_object(self,
+ objects,
+ output_filename,
+ output_dir=None,
+ libraries=None,
+ library_dirs=None,
+ runtime_library_dirs=None,
+ export_symbols=None,
+ debug=0,
+ extra_preargs=None,
+ extra_postargs=None,
+ build_temp=None,
+ target_lang=None):
+ self.link(CCompiler.SHARED_OBJECT, objects,
+ output_filename, output_dir,
+ libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs,
+ export_symbols, debug,
+ extra_preargs, extra_postargs, build_temp, target_lang)
+
+
+ def link_executable(self,
+ objects,
+ output_progname,
+ output_dir=None,
+ libraries=None,
+ library_dirs=None,
+ runtime_library_dirs=None,
+ debug=0,
+ extra_preargs=None,
+ extra_postargs=None,
+ target_lang=None):
+ self.link(CCompiler.EXECUTABLE, objects,
+ self.executable_filename(output_progname), output_dir,
+ libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs, None,
+ debug, extra_preargs, extra_postargs, None, target_lang)
+
+
+ # -- Miscellaneous methods -----------------------------------------
+ # These are all used by the 'gen_lib_options() function; there is
+ # no appropriate default implementation so subclasses should
+ # implement all of these.
+
+ def library_dir_option(self, dir):
+ """Return the compiler option to add 'dir' to the list of
+ directories searched for libraries.
+ """
+ raise NotImplementedError
+
+ def runtime_library_dir_option(self, dir):
+ """Return the compiler option to add 'dir' to the list of
+ directories searched for runtime libraries.
+ """
+ raise NotImplementedError
+
+ def library_option(self, lib):
+ """Return the compiler option to add 'lib' to the list of libraries
+ linked into the shared library or executable.
+ """
+ raise NotImplementedError
+
+ def has_function(self, funcname, includes=None, include_dirs=None,
+ libraries=None, library_dirs=None):
+ """Return a boolean indicating whether funcname is supported on
+ the current platform. The optional arguments can be used to
+ augment the compilation environment.
+ """
+ # this can't be included at module scope because it tries to
+ # import math which might not be available at that point - maybe
+ # the necessary logic should just be inlined?
+ import tempfile
+ if includes is None:
+ includes = []
+ if include_dirs is None:
+ include_dirs = []
+ if libraries is None:
+ libraries = []
+ if library_dirs is None:
+ library_dirs = []
+ fd, fname = tempfile.mkstemp(".c", funcname, text=True)
+ f = os.fdopen(fd, "w")
+ try:
+ for incl in includes:
+ f.write("""#include "%s"\n""" % incl)
+ f.write("""\
+int main (int argc, char **argv) {
+ %s();
+ return 0;
+}
+""" % funcname)
+ finally:
+ f.close()
+ try:
+ objects = self.compile([fname], include_dirs=include_dirs)
+ except CompileError:
+ return False
+
+ try:
+ self.link_executable(objects, "a.out",
+ libraries=libraries,
+ library_dirs=library_dirs)
+ except (LinkError, TypeError):
+ return False
+ return True
+
+ def find_library_file (self, dirs, lib, debug=0):
+ """Search the specified list of directories for a static or shared
+ library file 'lib' and return the full path to that file. If
+ 'debug' true, look for a debugging version (if that makes sense on
+ the current platform). Return None if 'lib' wasn't found in any of
+ the specified directories.
+ """
+ raise NotImplementedError
+
+ # -- Filename generation methods -----------------------------------
+
+ # The default implementation of the filename generating methods are
+ # prejudiced towards the Unix/DOS/Windows view of the world:
+ # * object files are named by replacing the source file extension
+ # (eg. .c/.cpp -> .o/.obj)
+ # * library files (shared or static) are named by plugging the
+ # library name and extension into a format string, eg.
+ # "lib%s.%s" % (lib_name, ".a") for Unix static libraries
+ # * executables are named by appending an extension (possibly
+ # empty) to the program name: eg. progname + ".exe" for
+ # Windows
+ #
+ # To reduce redundant code, these methods expect to find
+ # several attributes in the current object (presumably defined
+ # as class attributes):
+ # * src_extensions -
+ # list of C/C++ source file extensions, eg. ['.c', '.cpp']
+ # * obj_extension -
+ # object file extension, eg. '.o' or '.obj'
+ # * static_lib_extension -
+ # extension for static library files, eg. '.a' or '.lib'
+ # * shared_lib_extension -
+ # extension for shared library/object files, eg. '.so', '.dll'
+ # * static_lib_format -
+ # format string for generating static library filenames,
+ # eg. 'lib%s.%s' or '%s.%s'
+ # * shared_lib_format
+ # format string for generating shared library filenames
+ # (probably same as static_lib_format, since the extension
+ # is one of the intended parameters to the format string)
+ # * exe_extension -
+ # extension for executable files, eg. '' or '.exe'
+
+ def object_filenames(self, source_filenames, strip_dir=0, output_dir=''):
+ if output_dir is None:
+ output_dir = ''
+ obj_names = []
+ for src_name in source_filenames:
+ base, ext = os.path.splitext(src_name)
+ base = os.path.splitdrive(base)[1] # Chop off the drive
+ base = base[os.path.isabs(base):] # If abs, chop off leading /
+ if ext not in self.src_extensions:
+ raise UnknownFileError(
+ "unknown file type '%s' (from '%s')" % (ext, src_name))
+ if strip_dir:
+ base = os.path.basename(base)
+ obj_names.append(os.path.join(output_dir,
+ base + self.obj_extension))
+ return obj_names
+
+ def shared_object_filename(self, basename, strip_dir=0, output_dir=''):
+ assert output_dir is not None
+ if strip_dir:
+ basename = os.path.basename(basename)
+ return os.path.join(output_dir, basename + self.shared_lib_extension)
+
+ def executable_filename(self, basename, strip_dir=0, output_dir=''):
+ assert output_dir is not None
+ if strip_dir:
+ basename = os.path.basename(basename)
+ return os.path.join(output_dir, basename + (self.exe_extension or ''))
+
+ def library_filename(self, libname, lib_type='static', # or 'shared'
+ strip_dir=0, output_dir=''):
+ assert output_dir is not None
+ if lib_type not in ("static", "shared", "dylib", "xcode_stub"):
+ raise ValueError(
+ "'lib_type' must be \"static\", \"shared\", \"dylib\", or \"xcode_stub\"")
+ fmt = getattr(self, lib_type + "_lib_format")
+ ext = getattr(self, lib_type + "_lib_extension")
+
+ dir, base = os.path.split(libname)
+ filename = fmt % (base, ext)
+ if strip_dir:
+ dir = ''
+
+ return os.path.join(output_dir, dir, filename)
+
+
+ # -- Utility methods -----------------------------------------------
+
+ def announce(self, msg, level=1):
+ log.debug(msg)
+
+ def debug_print(self, msg):
+ from distutils.debug import DEBUG
+ if DEBUG:
+ print(msg)
+
+ def warn(self, msg):
+ sys.stderr.write("warning: %s\n" % msg)
+
+ def execute(self, func, args, msg=None, level=1):
+ execute(func, args, msg, self.dry_run)
+
+ def spawn(self, cmd, **kwargs):
+ spawn(cmd, dry_run=self.dry_run, **kwargs)
+
+ def move_file(self, src, dst):
+ return move_file(src, dst, dry_run=self.dry_run)
+
+ def mkpath (self, name, mode=0o777):
+ mkpath(name, mode, dry_run=self.dry_run)
+
+
+# Map a sys.platform/os.name ('posix', 'nt') to the default compiler
+# type for that platform. Keys are interpreted as re match
+# patterns. Order is important; platform mappings are preferred over
+# OS names.
+_default_compilers = (
+
+ # Platform string mappings
+
+ # on a cygwin built python we can use gcc like an ordinary UNIXish
+ # compiler
+ ('cygwin.*', 'unix'),
+
+ # OS name mappings
+ ('posix', 'unix'),
+ ('nt', 'msvc'),
+
+ )
+
+def get_default_compiler(osname=None, platform=None):
+ """Determine the default compiler to use for the given platform.
+
+ osname should be one of the standard Python OS names (i.e. the
+ ones returned by os.name) and platform the common value
+ returned by sys.platform for the platform in question.
+
+ The default values are os.name and sys.platform in case the
+ parameters are not given.
+ """
+ if osname is None:
+ osname = os.name
+ if platform is None:
+ platform = sys.platform
+ for pattern, compiler in _default_compilers:
+ if re.match(pattern, platform) is not None or \
+ re.match(pattern, osname) is not None:
+ return compiler
+ # Default to Unix compiler
+ return 'unix'
+
+# Map compiler types to (module_name, class_name) pairs -- ie. where to
+# find the code that implements an interface to this compiler. (The module
+# is assumed to be in the 'distutils' package.)
+compiler_class = { 'unix': ('unixccompiler', 'UnixCCompiler',
+ "standard UNIX-style compiler"),
+ 'msvc': ('_msvccompiler', 'MSVCCompiler',
+ "Microsoft Visual C++"),
+ 'cygwin': ('cygwinccompiler', 'CygwinCCompiler',
+ "Cygwin port of GNU C Compiler for Win32"),
+ 'mingw32': ('cygwinccompiler', 'Mingw32CCompiler',
+ "Mingw32 port of GNU C Compiler for Win32"),
+ 'bcpp': ('bcppcompiler', 'BCPPCompiler',
+ "Borland C++ Compiler"),
+ }
+
+def show_compilers():
+ """Print list of available compilers (used by the "--help-compiler"
+ options to "build", "build_ext", "build_clib").
+ """
+ # XXX this "knows" that the compiler option it's describing is
+ # "--compiler", which just happens to be the case for the three
+ # commands that use it.
+ from distutils.fancy_getopt import FancyGetopt
+ compilers = []
+ for compiler in compiler_class.keys():
+ compilers.append(("compiler="+compiler, None,
+ compiler_class[compiler][2]))
+ compilers.sort()
+ pretty_printer = FancyGetopt(compilers)
+ pretty_printer.print_help("List of available compilers:")
+
+
+def new_compiler(plat=None, compiler=None, verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0):
+ """Generate an instance of some CCompiler subclass for the supplied
+ platform/compiler combination. 'plat' defaults to 'os.name'
+ (eg. 'posix', 'nt'), and 'compiler' defaults to the default compiler
+ for that platform. Currently only 'posix' and 'nt' are supported, and
+ the default compilers are "traditional Unix interface" (UnixCCompiler
+ class) and Visual C++ (MSVCCompiler class). Note that it's perfectly
+ possible to ask for a Unix compiler object under Windows, and a
+ Microsoft compiler object under Unix -- if you supply a value for
+ 'compiler', 'plat' is ignored.
+ """
+ if plat is None:
+ plat = os.name
+
+ try:
+ if compiler is None:
+ compiler = get_default_compiler(plat)
+
+ (module_name, class_name, long_description) = compiler_class[compiler]
+ except KeyError:
+ msg = "don't know how to compile C/C++ code on platform '%s'" % plat
+ if compiler is not None:
+ msg = msg + " with '%s' compiler" % compiler
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError(msg)
+
+ try:
+ module_name = "distutils." + module_name
+ __import__ (module_name)
+ module = sys.modules[module_name]
+ klass = vars(module)[class_name]
+ except ImportError:
+ raise DistutilsModuleError(
+ "can't compile C/C++ code: unable to load module '%s'" % \
+ module_name)
+ except KeyError:
+ raise DistutilsModuleError(
+ "can't compile C/C++ code: unable to find class '%s' "
+ "in module '%s'" % (class_name, module_name))
+
+ # XXX The None is necessary to preserve backwards compatibility
+ # with classes that expect verbose to be the first positional
+ # argument.
+ return klass(None, dry_run, force)
+
+
+def gen_preprocess_options(macros, include_dirs):
+ """Generate C pre-processor options (-D, -U, -I) as used by at least
+ two types of compilers: the typical Unix compiler and Visual C++.
+ 'macros' is the usual thing, a list of 1- or 2-tuples, where (name,)
+ means undefine (-U) macro 'name', and (name,value) means define (-D)
+ macro 'name' to 'value'. 'include_dirs' is just a list of directory
+ names to be added to the header file search path (-I). Returns a list
+ of command-line options suitable for either Unix compilers or Visual
+ C++.
+ """
+ # XXX it would be nice (mainly aesthetic, and so we don't generate
+ # stupid-looking command lines) to go over 'macros' and eliminate
+ # redundant definitions/undefinitions (ie. ensure that only the
+ # latest mention of a particular macro winds up on the command
+ # line). I don't think it's essential, though, since most (all?)
+ # Unix C compilers only pay attention to the latest -D or -U
+ # mention of a macro on their command line. Similar situation for
+ # 'include_dirs'. I'm punting on both for now. Anyways, weeding out
+ # redundancies like this should probably be the province of
+ # CCompiler, since the data structures used are inherited from it
+ # and therefore common to all CCompiler classes.
+ pp_opts = []
+ for macro in macros:
+ if not (isinstance(macro, tuple) and 1 <= len(macro) <= 2):
+ raise TypeError(
+ "bad macro definition '%s': "
+ "each element of 'macros' list must be a 1- or 2-tuple"
+ % macro)
+
+ if len(macro) == 1: # undefine this macro
+ pp_opts.append("-U%s" % macro[0])
+ elif len(macro) == 2:
+ if macro[1] is None: # define with no explicit value
+ pp_opts.append("-D%s" % macro[0])
+ else:
+ # XXX *don't* need to be clever about quoting the
+ # macro value here, because we're going to avoid the
+ # shell at all costs when we spawn the command!
+ pp_opts.append("-D%s=%s" % macro)
+
+ for dir in include_dirs:
+ pp_opts.append("-I%s" % dir)
+ return pp_opts
+
+
+def gen_lib_options (compiler, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs, libraries):
+ """Generate linker options for searching library directories and
+ linking with specific libraries. 'libraries' and 'library_dirs' are,
+ respectively, lists of library names (not filenames!) and search
+ directories. Returns a list of command-line options suitable for use
+ with some compiler (depending on the two format strings passed in).
+ """
+ lib_opts = []
+
+ for dir in library_dirs:
+ lib_opts.append(compiler.library_dir_option(dir))
+
+ for dir in runtime_library_dirs:
+ opt = compiler.runtime_library_dir_option(dir)
+ if isinstance(opt, list):
+ lib_opts = lib_opts + opt
+ else:
+ lib_opts.append(opt)
+
+ # XXX it's important that we *not* remove redundant library mentions!
+ # sometimes you really do have to say "-lfoo -lbar -lfoo" in order to
+ # resolve all symbols. I just hope we never have to say "-lfoo obj.o
+ # -lbar" to get things to work -- that's certainly a possibility, but a
+ # pretty nasty way to arrange your C code.
+
+ for lib in libraries:
+ (lib_dir, lib_name) = os.path.split(lib)
+ if lib_dir:
+ lib_file = compiler.find_library_file([lib_dir], lib_name)
+ if lib_file:
+ lib_opts.append(lib_file)
+ else:
+ compiler.warn("no library file corresponding to "
+ "'%s' found (skipping)" % lib)
+ else:
+ lib_opts.append(compiler.library_option (lib))
+ return lib_opts
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/cmd.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/cmd.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..dba3191e58
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/cmd.py
@@ -0,0 +1,403 @@
+"""distutils.cmd
+
+Provides the Command class, the base class for the command classes
+in the distutils.command package.
+"""
+
+import sys, os, re
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsOptionError
+from distutils import util, dir_util, file_util, archive_util, dep_util
+from distutils import log
+
+class Command:
+ """Abstract base class for defining command classes, the "worker bees"
+ of the Distutils. A useful analogy for command classes is to think of
+ them as subroutines with local variables called "options". The options
+ are "declared" in 'initialize_options()' and "defined" (given their
+ final values, aka "finalized") in 'finalize_options()', both of which
+ must be defined by every command class. The distinction between the
+ two is necessary because option values might come from the outside
+ world (command line, config file, ...), and any options dependent on
+ other options must be computed *after* these outside influences have
+ been processed -- hence 'finalize_options()'. The "body" of the
+ subroutine, where it does all its work based on the values of its
+ options, is the 'run()' method, which must also be implemented by every
+ command class.
+ """
+
+ # 'sub_commands' formalizes the notion of a "family" of commands,
+ # eg. "install" as the parent with sub-commands "install_lib",
+ # "install_headers", etc. The parent of a family of commands
+ # defines 'sub_commands' as a class attribute; it's a list of
+ # (command_name : string, predicate : unbound_method | string | None)
+ # tuples, where 'predicate' is a method of the parent command that
+ # determines whether the corresponding command is applicable in the
+ # current situation. (Eg. we "install_headers" is only applicable if
+ # we have any C header files to install.) If 'predicate' is None,
+ # that command is always applicable.
+ #
+ # 'sub_commands' is usually defined at the *end* of a class, because
+ # predicates can be unbound methods, so they must already have been
+ # defined. The canonical example is the "install" command.
+ sub_commands = []
+
+
+ # -- Creation/initialization methods -------------------------------
+
+ def __init__(self, dist):
+ """Create and initialize a new Command object. Most importantly,
+ invokes the 'initialize_options()' method, which is the real
+ initializer and depends on the actual command being
+ instantiated.
+ """
+ # late import because of mutual dependence between these classes
+ from distutils.dist import Distribution
+
+ if not isinstance(dist, Distribution):
+ raise TypeError("dist must be a Distribution instance")
+ if self.__class__ is Command:
+ raise RuntimeError("Command is an abstract class")
+
+ self.distribution = dist
+ self.initialize_options()
+
+ # Per-command versions of the global flags, so that the user can
+ # customize Distutils' behaviour command-by-command and let some
+ # commands fall back on the Distribution's behaviour. None means
+ # "not defined, check self.distribution's copy", while 0 or 1 mean
+ # false and true (duh). Note that this means figuring out the real
+ # value of each flag is a touch complicated -- hence "self._dry_run"
+ # will be handled by __getattr__, below.
+ # XXX This needs to be fixed.
+ self._dry_run = None
+
+ # verbose is largely ignored, but needs to be set for
+ # backwards compatibility (I think)?
+ self.verbose = dist.verbose
+
+ # Some commands define a 'self.force' option to ignore file
+ # timestamps, but methods defined *here* assume that
+ # 'self.force' exists for all commands. So define it here
+ # just to be safe.
+ self.force = None
+
+ # The 'help' flag is just used for command-line parsing, so
+ # none of that complicated bureaucracy is needed.
+ self.help = 0
+
+ # 'finalized' records whether or not 'finalize_options()' has been
+ # called. 'finalize_options()' itself should not pay attention to
+ # this flag: it is the business of 'ensure_finalized()', which
+ # always calls 'finalize_options()', to respect/update it.
+ self.finalized = 0
+
+ # XXX A more explicit way to customize dry_run would be better.
+ def __getattr__(self, attr):
+ if attr == 'dry_run':
+ myval = getattr(self, "_" + attr)
+ if myval is None:
+ return getattr(self.distribution, attr)
+ else:
+ return myval
+ else:
+ raise AttributeError(attr)
+
+ def ensure_finalized(self):
+ if not self.finalized:
+ self.finalize_options()
+ self.finalized = 1
+
+ # Subclasses must define:
+ # initialize_options()
+ # provide default values for all options; may be customized by
+ # setup script, by options from config file(s), or by command-line
+ # options
+ # finalize_options()
+ # decide on the final values for all options; this is called
+ # after all possible intervention from the outside world
+ # (command-line, option file, etc.) has been processed
+ # run()
+ # run the command: do whatever it is we're here to do,
+ # controlled by the command's various option values
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ """Set default values for all the options that this command
+ supports. Note that these defaults may be overridden by other
+ commands, by the setup script, by config files, or by the
+ command-line. Thus, this is not the place to code dependencies
+ between options; generally, 'initialize_options()' implementations
+ are just a bunch of "self.foo = None" assignments.
+
+ This method must be implemented by all command classes.
+ """
+ raise RuntimeError("abstract method -- subclass %s must override"
+ % self.__class__)
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ """Set final values for all the options that this command supports.
+ This is always called as late as possible, ie. after any option
+ assignments from the command-line or from other commands have been
+ done. Thus, this is the place to code option dependencies: if
+ 'foo' depends on 'bar', then it is safe to set 'foo' from 'bar' as
+ long as 'foo' still has the same value it was assigned in
+ 'initialize_options()'.
+
+ This method must be implemented by all command classes.
+ """
+ raise RuntimeError("abstract method -- subclass %s must override"
+ % self.__class__)
+
+
+ def dump_options(self, header=None, indent=""):
+ from distutils.fancy_getopt import longopt_xlate
+ if header is None:
+ header = "command options for '%s':" % self.get_command_name()
+ self.announce(indent + header, level=log.INFO)
+ indent = indent + " "
+ for (option, _, _) in self.user_options:
+ option = option.translate(longopt_xlate)
+ if option[-1] == "=":
+ option = option[:-1]
+ value = getattr(self, option)
+ self.announce(indent + "%s = %s" % (option, value),
+ level=log.INFO)
+
+ def run(self):
+ """A command's raison d'etre: carry out the action it exists to
+ perform, controlled by the options initialized in
+ 'initialize_options()', customized by other commands, the setup
+ script, the command-line, and config files, and finalized in
+ 'finalize_options()'. All terminal output and filesystem
+ interaction should be done by 'run()'.
+
+ This method must be implemented by all command classes.
+ """
+ raise RuntimeError("abstract method -- subclass %s must override"
+ % self.__class__)
+
+ def announce(self, msg, level=1):
+ """If the current verbosity level is of greater than or equal to
+ 'level' print 'msg' to stdout.
+ """
+ log.log(level, msg)
+
+ def debug_print(self, msg):
+ """Print 'msg' to stdout if the global DEBUG (taken from the
+ DISTUTILS_DEBUG environment variable) flag is true.
+ """
+ from distutils.debug import DEBUG
+ if DEBUG:
+ print(msg)
+ sys.stdout.flush()
+
+
+ # -- Option validation methods -------------------------------------
+ # (these are very handy in writing the 'finalize_options()' method)
+ #
+ # NB. the general philosophy here is to ensure that a particular option
+ # value meets certain type and value constraints. If not, we try to
+ # force it into conformance (eg. if we expect a list but have a string,
+ # split the string on comma and/or whitespace). If we can't force the
+ # option into conformance, raise DistutilsOptionError. Thus, command
+ # classes need do nothing more than (eg.)
+ # self.ensure_string_list('foo')
+ # and they can be guaranteed that thereafter, self.foo will be
+ # a list of strings.
+
+ def _ensure_stringlike(self, option, what, default=None):
+ val = getattr(self, option)
+ if val is None:
+ setattr(self, option, default)
+ return default
+ elif not isinstance(val, str):
+ raise DistutilsOptionError("'%s' must be a %s (got `%s`)"
+ % (option, what, val))
+ return val
+
+ def ensure_string(self, option, default=None):
+ """Ensure that 'option' is a string; if not defined, set it to
+ 'default'.
+ """
+ self._ensure_stringlike(option, "string", default)
+
+ def ensure_string_list(self, option):
+ r"""Ensure that 'option' is a list of strings. If 'option' is
+ currently a string, we split it either on /,\s*/ or /\s+/, so
+ "foo bar baz", "foo,bar,baz", and "foo, bar baz" all become
+ ["foo", "bar", "baz"].
+ """
+ val = getattr(self, option)
+ if val is None:
+ return
+ elif isinstance(val, str):
+ setattr(self, option, re.split(r',\s*|\s+', val))
+ else:
+ if isinstance(val, list):
+ ok = all(isinstance(v, str) for v in val)
+ else:
+ ok = False
+ if not ok:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ "'%s' must be a list of strings (got %r)"
+ % (option, val))
+
+ def _ensure_tested_string(self, option, tester, what, error_fmt,
+ default=None):
+ val = self._ensure_stringlike(option, what, default)
+ if val is not None and not tester(val):
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(("error in '%s' option: " + error_fmt)
+ % (option, val))
+
+ def ensure_filename(self, option):
+ """Ensure that 'option' is the name of an existing file."""
+ self._ensure_tested_string(option, os.path.isfile,
+ "filename",
+ "'%s' does not exist or is not a file")
+
+ def ensure_dirname(self, option):
+ self._ensure_tested_string(option, os.path.isdir,
+ "directory name",
+ "'%s' does not exist or is not a directory")
+
+
+ # -- Convenience methods for commands ------------------------------
+
+ def get_command_name(self):
+ if hasattr(self, 'command_name'):
+ return self.command_name
+ else:
+ return self.__class__.__name__
+
+ def set_undefined_options(self, src_cmd, *option_pairs):
+ """Set the values of any "undefined" options from corresponding
+ option values in some other command object. "Undefined" here means
+ "is None", which is the convention used to indicate that an option
+ has not been changed between 'initialize_options()' and
+ 'finalize_options()'. Usually called from 'finalize_options()' for
+ options that depend on some other command rather than another
+ option of the same command. 'src_cmd' is the other command from
+ which option values will be taken (a command object will be created
+ for it if necessary); the remaining arguments are
+ '(src_option,dst_option)' tuples which mean "take the value of
+ 'src_option' in the 'src_cmd' command object, and copy it to
+ 'dst_option' in the current command object".
+ """
+ # Option_pairs: list of (src_option, dst_option) tuples
+ src_cmd_obj = self.distribution.get_command_obj(src_cmd)
+ src_cmd_obj.ensure_finalized()
+ for (src_option, dst_option) in option_pairs:
+ if getattr(self, dst_option) is None:
+ setattr(self, dst_option, getattr(src_cmd_obj, src_option))
+
+ def get_finalized_command(self, command, create=1):
+ """Wrapper around Distribution's 'get_command_obj()' method: find
+ (create if necessary and 'create' is true) the command object for
+ 'command', call its 'ensure_finalized()' method, and return the
+ finalized command object.
+ """
+ cmd_obj = self.distribution.get_command_obj(command, create)
+ cmd_obj.ensure_finalized()
+ return cmd_obj
+
+ # XXX rename to 'get_reinitialized_command()'? (should do the
+ # same in dist.py, if so)
+ def reinitialize_command(self, command, reinit_subcommands=0):
+ return self.distribution.reinitialize_command(command,
+ reinit_subcommands)
+
+ def run_command(self, command):
+ """Run some other command: uses the 'run_command()' method of
+ Distribution, which creates and finalizes the command object if
+ necessary and then invokes its 'run()' method.
+ """
+ self.distribution.run_command(command)
+
+ def get_sub_commands(self):
+ """Determine the sub-commands that are relevant in the current
+ distribution (ie., that need to be run). This is based on the
+ 'sub_commands' class attribute: each tuple in that list may include
+ a method that we call to determine if the subcommand needs to be
+ run for the current distribution. Return a list of command names.
+ """
+ commands = []
+ for (cmd_name, method) in self.sub_commands:
+ if method is None or method(self):
+ commands.append(cmd_name)
+ return commands
+
+
+ # -- External world manipulation -----------------------------------
+
+ def warn(self, msg):
+ log.warn("warning: %s: %s\n", self.get_command_name(), msg)
+
+ def execute(self, func, args, msg=None, level=1):
+ util.execute(func, args, msg, dry_run=self.dry_run)
+
+ def mkpath(self, name, mode=0o777):
+ dir_util.mkpath(name, mode, dry_run=self.dry_run)
+
+ def copy_file(self, infile, outfile, preserve_mode=1, preserve_times=1,
+ link=None, level=1):
+ """Copy a file respecting verbose, dry-run and force flags. (The
+ former two default to whatever is in the Distribution object, and
+ the latter defaults to false for commands that don't define it.)"""
+ return file_util.copy_file(infile, outfile, preserve_mode,
+ preserve_times, not self.force, link,
+ dry_run=self.dry_run)
+
+ def copy_tree(self, infile, outfile, preserve_mode=1, preserve_times=1,
+ preserve_symlinks=0, level=1):
+ """Copy an entire directory tree respecting verbose, dry-run,
+ and force flags.
+ """
+ return dir_util.copy_tree(infile, outfile, preserve_mode,
+ preserve_times, preserve_symlinks,
+ not self.force, dry_run=self.dry_run)
+
+ def move_file (self, src, dst, level=1):
+ """Move a file respecting dry-run flag."""
+ return file_util.move_file(src, dst, dry_run=self.dry_run)
+
+ def spawn(self, cmd, search_path=1, level=1):
+ """Spawn an external command respecting dry-run flag."""
+ from distutils.spawn import spawn
+ spawn(cmd, search_path, dry_run=self.dry_run)
+
+ def make_archive(self, base_name, format, root_dir=None, base_dir=None,
+ owner=None, group=None):
+ return archive_util.make_archive(base_name, format, root_dir, base_dir,
+ dry_run=self.dry_run,
+ owner=owner, group=group)
+
+ def make_file(self, infiles, outfile, func, args,
+ exec_msg=None, skip_msg=None, level=1):
+ """Special case of 'execute()' for operations that process one or
+ more input files and generate one output file. Works just like
+ 'execute()', except the operation is skipped and a different
+ message printed if 'outfile' already exists and is newer than all
+ files listed in 'infiles'. If the command defined 'self.force',
+ and it is true, then the command is unconditionally run -- does no
+ timestamp checks.
+ """
+ if skip_msg is None:
+ skip_msg = "skipping %s (inputs unchanged)" % outfile
+
+ # Allow 'infiles' to be a single string
+ if isinstance(infiles, str):
+ infiles = (infiles,)
+ elif not isinstance(infiles, (list, tuple)):
+ raise TypeError(
+ "'infiles' must be a string, or a list or tuple of strings")
+
+ if exec_msg is None:
+ exec_msg = "generating %s from %s" % (outfile, ', '.join(infiles))
+
+ # If 'outfile' must be regenerated (either because it doesn't
+ # exist, is out-of-date, or the 'force' flag is true) then
+ # perform the action that presumably regenerates it
+ if self.force or dep_util.newer_group(infiles, outfile):
+ self.execute(func, args, exec_msg, level)
+ # Otherwise, print the "skip" message
+ else:
+ log.debug(skip_msg)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/__init__.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/__init__.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..481eea9fd4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/__init__.py
@@ -0,0 +1,31 @@
+"""distutils.command
+
+Package containing implementation of all the standard Distutils
+commands."""
+
+__all__ = ['build',
+ 'build_py',
+ 'build_ext',
+ 'build_clib',
+ 'build_scripts',
+ 'clean',
+ 'install',
+ 'install_lib',
+ 'install_headers',
+ 'install_scripts',
+ 'install_data',
+ 'sdist',
+ 'register',
+ 'bdist',
+ 'bdist_dumb',
+ 'bdist_rpm',
+ 'bdist_wininst',
+ 'check',
+ 'upload',
+ # These two are reserved for future use:
+ #'bdist_sdux',
+ #'bdist_pkgtool',
+ # Note:
+ # bdist_packager is not included because it only provides
+ # an abstract base class
+ ]
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/bdist.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/bdist.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..014871d280
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/bdist.py
@@ -0,0 +1,143 @@
+"""distutils.command.bdist
+
+Implements the Distutils 'bdist' command (create a built [binary]
+distribution)."""
+
+import os
+from distutils.core import Command
+from distutils.errors import *
+from distutils.util import get_platform
+
+
+def show_formats():
+ """Print list of available formats (arguments to "--format" option).
+ """
+ from distutils.fancy_getopt import FancyGetopt
+ formats = []
+ for format in bdist.format_commands:
+ formats.append(("formats=" + format, None,
+ bdist.format_command[format][1]))
+ pretty_printer = FancyGetopt(formats)
+ pretty_printer.print_help("List of available distribution formats:")
+
+
+class bdist(Command):
+
+ description = "create a built (binary) distribution"
+
+ user_options = [('bdist-base=', 'b',
+ "temporary directory for creating built distributions"),
+ ('plat-name=', 'p',
+ "platform name to embed in generated filenames "
+ "(default: %s)" % get_platform()),
+ ('formats=', None,
+ "formats for distribution (comma-separated list)"),
+ ('dist-dir=', 'd',
+ "directory to put final built distributions in "
+ "[default: dist]"),
+ ('skip-build', None,
+ "skip rebuilding everything (for testing/debugging)"),
+ ('owner=', 'u',
+ "Owner name used when creating a tar file"
+ " [default: current user]"),
+ ('group=', 'g',
+ "Group name used when creating a tar file"
+ " [default: current group]"),
+ ]
+
+ boolean_options = ['skip-build']
+
+ help_options = [
+ ('help-formats', None,
+ "lists available distribution formats", show_formats),
+ ]
+
+ # The following commands do not take a format option from bdist
+ no_format_option = ('bdist_rpm',)
+
+ # This won't do in reality: will need to distinguish RPM-ish Linux,
+ # Debian-ish Linux, Solaris, FreeBSD, ..., Windows, Mac OS.
+ default_format = {'posix': 'gztar',
+ 'nt': 'zip'}
+
+ # Establish the preferred order (for the --help-formats option).
+ format_commands = ['rpm', 'gztar', 'bztar', 'xztar', 'ztar', 'tar',
+ 'wininst', 'zip', 'msi']
+
+ # And the real information.
+ format_command = {'rpm': ('bdist_rpm', "RPM distribution"),
+ 'gztar': ('bdist_dumb', "gzip'ed tar file"),
+ 'bztar': ('bdist_dumb', "bzip2'ed tar file"),
+ 'xztar': ('bdist_dumb', "xz'ed tar file"),
+ 'ztar': ('bdist_dumb', "compressed tar file"),
+ 'tar': ('bdist_dumb', "tar file"),
+ 'wininst': ('bdist_wininst',
+ "Windows executable installer"),
+ 'zip': ('bdist_dumb', "ZIP file"),
+ 'msi': ('bdist_msi', "Microsoft Installer")
+ }
+
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.bdist_base = None
+ self.plat_name = None
+ self.formats = None
+ self.dist_dir = None
+ self.skip_build = 0
+ self.group = None
+ self.owner = None
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ # have to finalize 'plat_name' before 'bdist_base'
+ if self.plat_name is None:
+ if self.skip_build:
+ self.plat_name = get_platform()
+ else:
+ self.plat_name = self.get_finalized_command('build').plat_name
+
+ # 'bdist_base' -- parent of per-built-distribution-format
+ # temporary directories (eg. we'll probably have
+ # "build/bdist.<plat>/dumb", "build/bdist.<plat>/rpm", etc.)
+ if self.bdist_base is None:
+ build_base = self.get_finalized_command('build').build_base
+ self.bdist_base = os.path.join(build_base,
+ 'bdist.' + self.plat_name)
+
+ self.ensure_string_list('formats')
+ if self.formats is None:
+ try:
+ self.formats = [self.default_format[os.name]]
+ except KeyError:
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError(
+ "don't know how to create built distributions "
+ "on platform %s" % os.name)
+
+ if self.dist_dir is None:
+ self.dist_dir = "dist"
+
+ def run(self):
+ # Figure out which sub-commands we need to run.
+ commands = []
+ for format in self.formats:
+ try:
+ commands.append(self.format_command[format][0])
+ except KeyError:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError("invalid format '%s'" % format)
+
+ # Reinitialize and run each command.
+ for i in range(len(self.formats)):
+ cmd_name = commands[i]
+ sub_cmd = self.reinitialize_command(cmd_name)
+ if cmd_name not in self.no_format_option:
+ sub_cmd.format = self.formats[i]
+
+ # passing the owner and group names for tar archiving
+ if cmd_name == 'bdist_dumb':
+ sub_cmd.owner = self.owner
+ sub_cmd.group = self.group
+
+ # If we're going to need to run this command again, tell it to
+ # keep its temporary files around so subsequent runs go faster.
+ if cmd_name in commands[i+1:]:
+ sub_cmd.keep_temp = 1
+ self.run_command(cmd_name)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/bdist_dumb.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/bdist_dumb.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..f0d6b5b8cd
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/bdist_dumb.py
@@ -0,0 +1,123 @@
+"""distutils.command.bdist_dumb
+
+Implements the Distutils 'bdist_dumb' command (create a "dumb" built
+distribution -- i.e., just an archive to be unpacked under $prefix or
+$exec_prefix)."""
+
+import os
+from distutils.core import Command
+from distutils.util import get_platform
+from distutils.dir_util import remove_tree, ensure_relative
+from distutils.errors import *
+from distutils.sysconfig import get_python_version
+from distutils import log
+
+class bdist_dumb(Command):
+
+ description = "create a \"dumb\" built distribution"
+
+ user_options = [('bdist-dir=', 'd',
+ "temporary directory for creating the distribution"),
+ ('plat-name=', 'p',
+ "platform name to embed in generated filenames "
+ "(default: %s)" % get_platform()),
+ ('format=', 'f',
+ "archive format to create (tar, gztar, bztar, xztar, "
+ "ztar, zip)"),
+ ('keep-temp', 'k',
+ "keep the pseudo-installation tree around after " +
+ "creating the distribution archive"),
+ ('dist-dir=', 'd',
+ "directory to put final built distributions in"),
+ ('skip-build', None,
+ "skip rebuilding everything (for testing/debugging)"),
+ ('relative', None,
+ "build the archive using relative paths "
+ "(default: false)"),
+ ('owner=', 'u',
+ "Owner name used when creating a tar file"
+ " [default: current user]"),
+ ('group=', 'g',
+ "Group name used when creating a tar file"
+ " [default: current group]"),
+ ]
+
+ boolean_options = ['keep-temp', 'skip-build', 'relative']
+
+ default_format = { 'posix': 'gztar',
+ 'nt': 'zip' }
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.bdist_dir = None
+ self.plat_name = None
+ self.format = None
+ self.keep_temp = 0
+ self.dist_dir = None
+ self.skip_build = None
+ self.relative = 0
+ self.owner = None
+ self.group = None
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ if self.bdist_dir is None:
+ bdist_base = self.get_finalized_command('bdist').bdist_base
+ self.bdist_dir = os.path.join(bdist_base, 'dumb')
+
+ if self.format is None:
+ try:
+ self.format = self.default_format[os.name]
+ except KeyError:
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError(
+ "don't know how to create dumb built distributions "
+ "on platform %s" % os.name)
+
+ self.set_undefined_options('bdist',
+ ('dist_dir', 'dist_dir'),
+ ('plat_name', 'plat_name'),
+ ('skip_build', 'skip_build'))
+
+ def run(self):
+ if not self.skip_build:
+ self.run_command('build')
+
+ install = self.reinitialize_command('install', reinit_subcommands=1)
+ install.root = self.bdist_dir
+ install.skip_build = self.skip_build
+ install.warn_dir = 0
+
+ log.info("installing to %s", self.bdist_dir)
+ self.run_command('install')
+
+ # And make an archive relative to the root of the
+ # pseudo-installation tree.
+ archive_basename = "%s.%s" % (self.distribution.get_fullname(),
+ self.plat_name)
+
+ pseudoinstall_root = os.path.join(self.dist_dir, archive_basename)
+ if not self.relative:
+ archive_root = self.bdist_dir
+ else:
+ if (self.distribution.has_ext_modules() and
+ (install.install_base != install.install_platbase)):
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError(
+ "can't make a dumb built distribution where "
+ "base and platbase are different (%s, %s)"
+ % (repr(install.install_base),
+ repr(install.install_platbase)))
+ else:
+ archive_root = os.path.join(self.bdist_dir,
+ ensure_relative(install.install_base))
+
+ # Make the archive
+ filename = self.make_archive(pseudoinstall_root,
+ self.format, root_dir=archive_root,
+ owner=self.owner, group=self.group)
+ if self.distribution.has_ext_modules():
+ pyversion = get_python_version()
+ else:
+ pyversion = 'any'
+ self.distribution.dist_files.append(('bdist_dumb', pyversion,
+ filename))
+
+ if not self.keep_temp:
+ remove_tree(self.bdist_dir, dry_run=self.dry_run)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/bdist_msi.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/bdist_msi.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..0863a1883e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/bdist_msi.py
@@ -0,0 +1,749 @@
+# Copyright (C) 2005, 2006 Martin von Löwis
+# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.
+# The bdist_wininst command proper
+# based on bdist_wininst
+"""
+Implements the bdist_msi command.
+"""
+
+import os
+import sys
+import warnings
+from distutils.core import Command
+from distutils.dir_util import remove_tree
+from distutils.sysconfig import get_python_version
+from distutils.version import StrictVersion
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsOptionError
+from distutils.util import get_platform
+from distutils import log
+import msilib
+from msilib import schema, sequence, text
+from msilib import Directory, Feature, Dialog, add_data
+
+class PyDialog(Dialog):
+ """Dialog class with a fixed layout: controls at the top, then a ruler,
+ then a list of buttons: back, next, cancel. Optionally a bitmap at the
+ left."""
+ def __init__(self, *args, **kw):
+ """Dialog(database, name, x, y, w, h, attributes, title, first,
+ default, cancel, bitmap=true)"""
+ Dialog.__init__(self, *args)
+ ruler = self.h - 36
+ bmwidth = 152*ruler/328
+ #if kw.get("bitmap", True):
+ # self.bitmap("Bitmap", 0, 0, bmwidth, ruler, "PythonWin")
+ self.line("BottomLine", 0, ruler, self.w, 0)
+
+ def title(self, title):
+ "Set the title text of the dialog at the top."
+ # name, x, y, w, h, flags=Visible|Enabled|Transparent|NoPrefix,
+ # text, in VerdanaBold10
+ self.text("Title", 15, 10, 320, 60, 0x30003,
+ r"{\VerdanaBold10}%s" % title)
+
+ def back(self, title, next, name = "Back", active = 1):
+ """Add a back button with a given title, the tab-next button,
+ its name in the Control table, possibly initially disabled.
+
+ Return the button, so that events can be associated"""
+ if active:
+ flags = 3 # Visible|Enabled
+ else:
+ flags = 1 # Visible
+ return self.pushbutton(name, 180, self.h-27 , 56, 17, flags, title, next)
+
+ def cancel(self, title, next, name = "Cancel", active = 1):
+ """Add a cancel button with a given title, the tab-next button,
+ its name in the Control table, possibly initially disabled.
+
+ Return the button, so that events can be associated"""
+ if active:
+ flags = 3 # Visible|Enabled
+ else:
+ flags = 1 # Visible
+ return self.pushbutton(name, 304, self.h-27, 56, 17, flags, title, next)
+
+ def next(self, title, next, name = "Next", active = 1):
+ """Add a Next button with a given title, the tab-next button,
+ its name in the Control table, possibly initially disabled.
+
+ Return the button, so that events can be associated"""
+ if active:
+ flags = 3 # Visible|Enabled
+ else:
+ flags = 1 # Visible
+ return self.pushbutton(name, 236, self.h-27, 56, 17, flags, title, next)
+
+ def xbutton(self, name, title, next, xpos):
+ """Add a button with a given title, the tab-next button,
+ its name in the Control table, giving its x position; the
+ y-position is aligned with the other buttons.
+
+ Return the button, so that events can be associated"""
+ return self.pushbutton(name, int(self.w*xpos - 28), self.h-27, 56, 17, 3, title, next)
+
+class bdist_msi(Command):
+
+ description = "create a Microsoft Installer (.msi) binary distribution"
+
+ user_options = [('bdist-dir=', None,
+ "temporary directory for creating the distribution"),
+ ('plat-name=', 'p',
+ "platform name to embed in generated filenames "
+ "(default: %s)" % get_platform()),
+ ('keep-temp', 'k',
+ "keep the pseudo-installation tree around after " +
+ "creating the distribution archive"),
+ ('target-version=', None,
+ "require a specific python version" +
+ " on the target system"),
+ ('no-target-compile', 'c',
+ "do not compile .py to .pyc on the target system"),
+ ('no-target-optimize', 'o',
+ "do not compile .py to .pyo (optimized) "
+ "on the target system"),
+ ('dist-dir=', 'd',
+ "directory to put final built distributions in"),
+ ('skip-build', None,
+ "skip rebuilding everything (for testing/debugging)"),
+ ('install-script=', None,
+ "basename of installation script to be run after "
+ "installation or before deinstallation"),
+ ('pre-install-script=', None,
+ "Fully qualified filename of a script to be run before "
+ "any files are installed. This script need not be in the "
+ "distribution"),
+ ]
+
+ boolean_options = ['keep-temp', 'no-target-compile', 'no-target-optimize',
+ 'skip-build']
+
+ all_versions = ['2.0', '2.1', '2.2', '2.3', '2.4',
+ '2.5', '2.6', '2.7', '2.8', '2.9',
+ '3.0', '3.1', '3.2', '3.3', '3.4',
+ '3.5', '3.6', '3.7', '3.8', '3.9']
+ other_version = 'X'
+
+ def __init__(self, *args, **kw):
+ super().__init__(*args, **kw)
+ warnings.warn("bdist_msi command is deprecated since Python 3.9, "
+ "use bdist_wheel (wheel packages) instead",
+ DeprecationWarning, 2)
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.bdist_dir = None
+ self.plat_name = None
+ self.keep_temp = 0
+ self.no_target_compile = 0
+ self.no_target_optimize = 0
+ self.target_version = None
+ self.dist_dir = None
+ self.skip_build = None
+ self.install_script = None
+ self.pre_install_script = None
+ self.versions = None
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ self.set_undefined_options('bdist', ('skip_build', 'skip_build'))
+
+ if self.bdist_dir is None:
+ bdist_base = self.get_finalized_command('bdist').bdist_base
+ self.bdist_dir = os.path.join(bdist_base, 'msi')
+
+ short_version = get_python_version()
+ if (not self.target_version) and self.distribution.has_ext_modules():
+ self.target_version = short_version
+
+ if self.target_version:
+ self.versions = [self.target_version]
+ if not self.skip_build and self.distribution.has_ext_modules()\
+ and self.target_version != short_version:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ "target version can only be %s, or the '--skip-build'"
+ " option must be specified" % (short_version,))
+ else:
+ self.versions = list(self.all_versions)
+
+ self.set_undefined_options('bdist',
+ ('dist_dir', 'dist_dir'),
+ ('plat_name', 'plat_name'),
+ )
+
+ if self.pre_install_script:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ "the pre-install-script feature is not yet implemented")
+
+ if self.install_script:
+ for script in self.distribution.scripts:
+ if self.install_script == os.path.basename(script):
+ break
+ else:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ "install_script '%s' not found in scripts"
+ % self.install_script)
+ self.install_script_key = None
+
+ def run(self):
+ if not self.skip_build:
+ self.run_command('build')
+
+ install = self.reinitialize_command('install', reinit_subcommands=1)
+ install.prefix = self.bdist_dir
+ install.skip_build = self.skip_build
+ install.warn_dir = 0
+
+ install_lib = self.reinitialize_command('install_lib')
+ # we do not want to include pyc or pyo files
+ install_lib.compile = 0
+ install_lib.optimize = 0
+
+ if self.distribution.has_ext_modules():
+ # If we are building an installer for a Python version other
+ # than the one we are currently running, then we need to ensure
+ # our build_lib reflects the other Python version rather than ours.
+ # Note that for target_version!=sys.version, we must have skipped the
+ # build step, so there is no issue with enforcing the build of this
+ # version.
+ target_version = self.target_version
+ if not target_version:
+ assert self.skip_build, "Should have already checked this"
+ target_version = '%d.%d' % sys.version_info[:2]
+ plat_specifier = ".%s-%s" % (self.plat_name, target_version)
+ build = self.get_finalized_command('build')
+ build.build_lib = os.path.join(build.build_base,
+ 'lib' + plat_specifier)
+
+ log.info("installing to %s", self.bdist_dir)
+ install.ensure_finalized()
+
+ # avoid warning of 'install_lib' about installing
+ # into a directory not in sys.path
+ sys.path.insert(0, os.path.join(self.bdist_dir, 'PURELIB'))
+
+ install.run()
+
+ del sys.path[0]
+
+ self.mkpath(self.dist_dir)
+ fullname = self.distribution.get_fullname()
+ installer_name = self.get_installer_filename(fullname)
+ installer_name = os.path.abspath(installer_name)
+ if os.path.exists(installer_name): os.unlink(installer_name)
+
+ metadata = self.distribution.metadata
+ author = metadata.author
+ if not author:
+ author = metadata.maintainer
+ if not author:
+ author = "UNKNOWN"
+ version = metadata.get_version()
+ # ProductVersion must be strictly numeric
+ # XXX need to deal with prerelease versions
+ sversion = "%d.%d.%d" % StrictVersion(version).version
+ # Prefix ProductName with Python x.y, so that
+ # it sorts together with the other Python packages
+ # in Add-Remove-Programs (APR)
+ fullname = self.distribution.get_fullname()
+ if self.target_version:
+ product_name = "Python %s %s" % (self.target_version, fullname)
+ else:
+ product_name = "Python %s" % (fullname)
+ self.db = msilib.init_database(installer_name, schema,
+ product_name, msilib.gen_uuid(),
+ sversion, author)
+ msilib.add_tables(self.db, sequence)
+ props = [('DistVersion', version)]
+ email = metadata.author_email or metadata.maintainer_email
+ if email:
+ props.append(("ARPCONTACT", email))
+ if metadata.url:
+ props.append(("ARPURLINFOABOUT", metadata.url))
+ if props:
+ add_data(self.db, 'Property', props)
+
+ self.add_find_python()
+ self.add_files()
+ self.add_scripts()
+ self.add_ui()
+ self.db.Commit()
+
+ if hasattr(self.distribution, 'dist_files'):
+ tup = 'bdist_msi', self.target_version or 'any', fullname
+ self.distribution.dist_files.append(tup)
+
+ if not self.keep_temp:
+ remove_tree(self.bdist_dir, dry_run=self.dry_run)
+
+ def add_files(self):
+ db = self.db
+ cab = msilib.CAB("distfiles")
+ rootdir = os.path.abspath(self.bdist_dir)
+
+ root = Directory(db, cab, None, rootdir, "TARGETDIR", "SourceDir")
+ f = Feature(db, "Python", "Python", "Everything",
+ 0, 1, directory="TARGETDIR")
+
+ items = [(f, root, '')]
+ for version in self.versions + [self.other_version]:
+ target = "TARGETDIR" + version
+ name = default = "Python" + version
+ desc = "Everything"
+ if version is self.other_version:
+ title = "Python from another location"
+ level = 2
+ else:
+ title = "Python %s from registry" % version
+ level = 1
+ f = Feature(db, name, title, desc, 1, level, directory=target)
+ dir = Directory(db, cab, root, rootdir, target, default)
+ items.append((f, dir, version))
+ db.Commit()
+
+ seen = {}
+ for feature, dir, version in items:
+ todo = [dir]
+ while todo:
+ dir = todo.pop()
+ for file in os.listdir(dir.absolute):
+ afile = os.path.join(dir.absolute, file)
+ if os.path.isdir(afile):
+ short = "%s|%s" % (dir.make_short(file), file)
+ default = file + version
+ newdir = Directory(db, cab, dir, file, default, short)
+ todo.append(newdir)
+ else:
+ if not dir.component:
+ dir.start_component(dir.logical, feature, 0)
+ if afile not in seen:
+ key = seen[afile] = dir.add_file(file)
+ if file==self.install_script:
+ if self.install_script_key:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ "Multiple files with name %s" % file)
+ self.install_script_key = '[#%s]' % key
+ else:
+ key = seen[afile]
+ add_data(self.db, "DuplicateFile",
+ [(key + version, dir.component, key, None, dir.logical)])
+ db.Commit()
+ cab.commit(db)
+
+ def add_find_python(self):
+ """Adds code to the installer to compute the location of Python.
+
+ Properties PYTHON.MACHINE.X.Y and PYTHON.USER.X.Y will be set from the
+ registry for each version of Python.
+
+ Properties TARGETDIRX.Y will be set from PYTHON.USER.X.Y if defined,
+ else from PYTHON.MACHINE.X.Y.
+
+ Properties PYTHONX.Y will be set to TARGETDIRX.Y\\python.exe"""
+
+ start = 402
+ for ver in self.versions:
+ install_path = r"SOFTWARE\Python\PythonCore\%s\InstallPath" % ver
+ machine_reg = "python.machine." + ver
+ user_reg = "python.user." + ver
+ machine_prop = "PYTHON.MACHINE." + ver
+ user_prop = "PYTHON.USER." + ver
+ machine_action = "PythonFromMachine" + ver
+ user_action = "PythonFromUser" + ver
+ exe_action = "PythonExe" + ver
+ target_dir_prop = "TARGETDIR" + ver
+ exe_prop = "PYTHON" + ver
+ if msilib.Win64:
+ # type: msidbLocatorTypeRawValue + msidbLocatorType64bit
+ Type = 2+16
+ else:
+ Type = 2
+ add_data(self.db, "RegLocator",
+ [(machine_reg, 2, install_path, None, Type),
+ (user_reg, 1, install_path, None, Type)])
+ add_data(self.db, "AppSearch",
+ [(machine_prop, machine_reg),
+ (user_prop, user_reg)])
+ add_data(self.db, "CustomAction",
+ [(machine_action, 51+256, target_dir_prop, "[" + machine_prop + "]"),
+ (user_action, 51+256, target_dir_prop, "[" + user_prop + "]"),
+ (exe_action, 51+256, exe_prop, "[" + target_dir_prop + "]\\python.exe"),
+ ])
+ add_data(self.db, "InstallExecuteSequence",
+ [(machine_action, machine_prop, start),
+ (user_action, user_prop, start + 1),
+ (exe_action, None, start + 2),
+ ])
+ add_data(self.db, "InstallUISequence",
+ [(machine_action, machine_prop, start),
+ (user_action, user_prop, start + 1),
+ (exe_action, None, start + 2),
+ ])
+ add_data(self.db, "Condition",
+ [("Python" + ver, 0, "NOT TARGETDIR" + ver)])
+ start += 4
+ assert start < 500
+
+ def add_scripts(self):
+ if self.install_script:
+ start = 6800
+ for ver in self.versions + [self.other_version]:
+ install_action = "install_script." + ver
+ exe_prop = "PYTHON" + ver
+ add_data(self.db, "CustomAction",
+ [(install_action, 50, exe_prop, self.install_script_key)])
+ add_data(self.db, "InstallExecuteSequence",
+ [(install_action, "&Python%s=3" % ver, start)])
+ start += 1
+ # XXX pre-install scripts are currently refused in finalize_options()
+ # but if this feature is completed, it will also need to add
+ # entries for each version as the above code does
+ if self.pre_install_script:
+ scriptfn = os.path.join(self.bdist_dir, "preinstall.bat")
+ with open(scriptfn, "w") as f:
+ # The batch file will be executed with [PYTHON], so that %1
+ # is the path to the Python interpreter; %0 will be the path
+ # of the batch file.
+ # rem ="""
+ # %1 %0
+ # exit
+ # """
+ # <actual script>
+ f.write('rem ="""\n%1 %0\nexit\n"""\n')
+ with open(self.pre_install_script) as fin:
+ f.write(fin.read())
+ add_data(self.db, "Binary",
+ [("PreInstall", msilib.Binary(scriptfn))
+ ])
+ add_data(self.db, "CustomAction",
+ [("PreInstall", 2, "PreInstall", None)
+ ])
+ add_data(self.db, "InstallExecuteSequence",
+ [("PreInstall", "NOT Installed", 450)])
+
+
+ def add_ui(self):
+ db = self.db
+ x = y = 50
+ w = 370
+ h = 300
+ title = "[ProductName] Setup"
+
+ # see "Dialog Style Bits"
+ modal = 3 # visible | modal
+ modeless = 1 # visible
+ track_disk_space = 32
+
+ # UI customization properties
+ add_data(db, "Property",
+ # See "DefaultUIFont Property"
+ [("DefaultUIFont", "DlgFont8"),
+ # See "ErrorDialog Style Bit"
+ ("ErrorDialog", "ErrorDlg"),
+ ("Progress1", "Install"), # modified in maintenance type dlg
+ ("Progress2", "installs"),
+ ("MaintenanceForm_Action", "Repair"),
+ # possible values: ALL, JUSTME
+ ("WhichUsers", "ALL")
+ ])
+
+ # Fonts, see "TextStyle Table"
+ add_data(db, "TextStyle",
+ [("DlgFont8", "Tahoma", 9, None, 0),
+ ("DlgFontBold8", "Tahoma", 8, None, 1), #bold
+ ("VerdanaBold10", "Verdana", 10, None, 1),
+ ("VerdanaRed9", "Verdana", 9, 255, 0),
+ ])
+
+ # UI Sequences, see "InstallUISequence Table", "Using a Sequence Table"
+ # Numbers indicate sequence; see sequence.py for how these action integrate
+ add_data(db, "InstallUISequence",
+ [("PrepareDlg", "Not Privileged or Windows9x or Installed", 140),
+ ("WhichUsersDlg", "Privileged and not Windows9x and not Installed", 141),
+ # In the user interface, assume all-users installation if privileged.
+ ("SelectFeaturesDlg", "Not Installed", 1230),
+ # XXX no support for resume installations yet
+ #("ResumeDlg", "Installed AND (RESUME OR Preselected)", 1240),
+ ("MaintenanceTypeDlg", "Installed AND NOT RESUME AND NOT Preselected", 1250),
+ ("ProgressDlg", None, 1280)])
+
+ add_data(db, 'ActionText', text.ActionText)
+ add_data(db, 'UIText', text.UIText)
+ #####################################################################
+ # Standard dialogs: FatalError, UserExit, ExitDialog
+ fatal=PyDialog(db, "FatalError", x, y, w, h, modal, title,
+ "Finish", "Finish", "Finish")
+ fatal.title("[ProductName] Installer ended prematurely")
+ fatal.back("< Back", "Finish", active = 0)
+ fatal.cancel("Cancel", "Back", active = 0)
+ fatal.text("Description1", 15, 70, 320, 80, 0x30003,
+ "[ProductName] setup ended prematurely because of an error. Your system has not been modified. To install this program at a later time, please run the installation again.")
+ fatal.text("Description2", 15, 155, 320, 20, 0x30003,
+ "Click the Finish button to exit the Installer.")
+ c=fatal.next("Finish", "Cancel", name="Finish")
+ c.event("EndDialog", "Exit")
+
+ user_exit=PyDialog(db, "UserExit", x, y, w, h, modal, title,
+ "Finish", "Finish", "Finish")
+ user_exit.title("[ProductName] Installer was interrupted")
+ user_exit.back("< Back", "Finish", active = 0)
+ user_exit.cancel("Cancel", "Back", active = 0)
+ user_exit.text("Description1", 15, 70, 320, 80, 0x30003,
+ "[ProductName] setup was interrupted. Your system has not been modified. "
+ "To install this program at a later time, please run the installation again.")
+ user_exit.text("Description2", 15, 155, 320, 20, 0x30003,
+ "Click the Finish button to exit the Installer.")
+ c = user_exit.next("Finish", "Cancel", name="Finish")
+ c.event("EndDialog", "Exit")
+
+ exit_dialog = PyDialog(db, "ExitDialog", x, y, w, h, modal, title,
+ "Finish", "Finish", "Finish")
+ exit_dialog.title("Completing the [ProductName] Installer")
+ exit_dialog.back("< Back", "Finish", active = 0)
+ exit_dialog.cancel("Cancel", "Back", active = 0)
+ exit_dialog.text("Description", 15, 235, 320, 20, 0x30003,
+ "Click the Finish button to exit the Installer.")
+ c = exit_dialog.next("Finish", "Cancel", name="Finish")
+ c.event("EndDialog", "Return")
+
+ #####################################################################
+ # Required dialog: FilesInUse, ErrorDlg
+ inuse = PyDialog(db, "FilesInUse",
+ x, y, w, h,
+ 19, # KeepModeless|Modal|Visible
+ title,
+ "Retry", "Retry", "Retry", bitmap=False)
+ inuse.text("Title", 15, 6, 200, 15, 0x30003,
+ r"{\DlgFontBold8}Files in Use")
+ inuse.text("Description", 20, 23, 280, 20, 0x30003,
+ "Some files that need to be updated are currently in use.")
+ inuse.text("Text", 20, 55, 330, 50, 3,
+ "The following applications are using files that need to be updated by this setup. Close these applications and then click Retry to continue the installation or Cancel to exit it.")
+ inuse.control("List", "ListBox", 20, 107, 330, 130, 7, "FileInUseProcess",
+ None, None, None)
+ c=inuse.back("Exit", "Ignore", name="Exit")
+ c.event("EndDialog", "Exit")
+ c=inuse.next("Ignore", "Retry", name="Ignore")
+ c.event("EndDialog", "Ignore")
+ c=inuse.cancel("Retry", "Exit", name="Retry")
+ c.event("EndDialog","Retry")
+
+ # See "Error Dialog". See "ICE20" for the required names of the controls.
+ error = Dialog(db, "ErrorDlg",
+ 50, 10, 330, 101,
+ 65543, # Error|Minimize|Modal|Visible
+ title,
+ "ErrorText", None, None)
+ error.text("ErrorText", 50,9,280,48,3, "")
+ #error.control("ErrorIcon", "Icon", 15, 9, 24, 24, 5242881, None, "py.ico", None, None)
+ error.pushbutton("N",120,72,81,21,3,"No",None).event("EndDialog","ErrorNo")
+ error.pushbutton("Y",240,72,81,21,3,"Yes",None).event("EndDialog","ErrorYes")
+ error.pushbutton("A",0,72,81,21,3,"Abort",None).event("EndDialog","ErrorAbort")
+ error.pushbutton("C",42,72,81,21,3,"Cancel",None).event("EndDialog","ErrorCancel")
+ error.pushbutton("I",81,72,81,21,3,"Ignore",None).event("EndDialog","ErrorIgnore")
+ error.pushbutton("O",159,72,81,21,3,"Ok",None).event("EndDialog","ErrorOk")
+ error.pushbutton("R",198,72,81,21,3,"Retry",None).event("EndDialog","ErrorRetry")
+
+ #####################################################################
+ # Global "Query Cancel" dialog
+ cancel = Dialog(db, "CancelDlg", 50, 10, 260, 85, 3, title,
+ "No", "No", "No")
+ cancel.text("Text", 48, 15, 194, 30, 3,
+ "Are you sure you want to cancel [ProductName] installation?")
+ #cancel.control("Icon", "Icon", 15, 15, 24, 24, 5242881, None,
+ # "py.ico", None, None)
+ c=cancel.pushbutton("Yes", 72, 57, 56, 17, 3, "Yes", "No")
+ c.event("EndDialog", "Exit")
+
+ c=cancel.pushbutton("No", 132, 57, 56, 17, 3, "No", "Yes")
+ c.event("EndDialog", "Return")
+
+ #####################################################################
+ # Global "Wait for costing" dialog
+ costing = Dialog(db, "WaitForCostingDlg", 50, 10, 260, 85, modal, title,
+ "Return", "Return", "Return")
+ costing.text("Text", 48, 15, 194, 30, 3,
+ "Please wait while the installer finishes determining your disk space requirements.")
+ c = costing.pushbutton("Return", 102, 57, 56, 17, 3, "Return", None)
+ c.event("EndDialog", "Exit")
+
+ #####################################################################
+ # Preparation dialog: no user input except cancellation
+ prep = PyDialog(db, "PrepareDlg", x, y, w, h, modeless, title,
+ "Cancel", "Cancel", "Cancel")
+ prep.text("Description", 15, 70, 320, 40, 0x30003,
+ "Please wait while the Installer prepares to guide you through the installation.")
+ prep.title("Welcome to the [ProductName] Installer")
+ c=prep.text("ActionText", 15, 110, 320, 20, 0x30003, "Pondering...")
+ c.mapping("ActionText", "Text")
+ c=prep.text("ActionData", 15, 135, 320, 30, 0x30003, None)
+ c.mapping("ActionData", "Text")
+ prep.back("Back", None, active=0)
+ prep.next("Next", None, active=0)
+ c=prep.cancel("Cancel", None)
+ c.event("SpawnDialog", "CancelDlg")
+
+ #####################################################################
+ # Feature (Python directory) selection
+ seldlg = PyDialog(db, "SelectFeaturesDlg", x, y, w, h, modal, title,
+ "Next", "Next", "Cancel")
+ seldlg.title("Select Python Installations")
+
+ seldlg.text("Hint", 15, 30, 300, 20, 3,
+ "Select the Python locations where %s should be installed."
+ % self.distribution.get_fullname())
+
+ seldlg.back("< Back", None, active=0)
+ c = seldlg.next("Next >", "Cancel")
+ order = 1
+ c.event("[TARGETDIR]", "[SourceDir]", ordering=order)
+ for version in self.versions + [self.other_version]:
+ order += 1
+ c.event("[TARGETDIR]", "[TARGETDIR%s]" % version,
+ "FEATURE_SELECTED AND &Python%s=3" % version,
+ ordering=order)
+ c.event("SpawnWaitDialog", "WaitForCostingDlg", ordering=order + 1)
+ c.event("EndDialog", "Return", ordering=order + 2)
+ c = seldlg.cancel("Cancel", "Features")
+ c.event("SpawnDialog", "CancelDlg")
+
+ c = seldlg.control("Features", "SelectionTree", 15, 60, 300, 120, 3,
+ "FEATURE", None, "PathEdit", None)
+ c.event("[FEATURE_SELECTED]", "1")
+ ver = self.other_version
+ install_other_cond = "FEATURE_SELECTED AND &Python%s=3" % ver
+ dont_install_other_cond = "FEATURE_SELECTED AND &Python%s<>3" % ver
+
+ c = seldlg.text("Other", 15, 200, 300, 15, 3,
+ "Provide an alternate Python location")
+ c.condition("Enable", install_other_cond)
+ c.condition("Show", install_other_cond)
+ c.condition("Disable", dont_install_other_cond)
+ c.condition("Hide", dont_install_other_cond)
+
+ c = seldlg.control("PathEdit", "PathEdit", 15, 215, 300, 16, 1,
+ "TARGETDIR" + ver, None, "Next", None)
+ c.condition("Enable", install_other_cond)
+ c.condition("Show", install_other_cond)
+ c.condition("Disable", dont_install_other_cond)
+ c.condition("Hide", dont_install_other_cond)
+
+ #####################################################################
+ # Disk cost
+ cost = PyDialog(db, "DiskCostDlg", x, y, w, h, modal, title,
+ "OK", "OK", "OK", bitmap=False)
+ cost.text("Title", 15, 6, 200, 15, 0x30003,
+ r"{\DlgFontBold8}Disk Space Requirements")
+ cost.text("Description", 20, 20, 280, 20, 0x30003,
+ "The disk space required for the installation of the selected features.")
+ cost.text("Text", 20, 53, 330, 60, 3,
+ "The highlighted volumes (if any) do not have enough disk space "
+ "available for the currently selected features. You can either "
+ "remove some files from the highlighted volumes, or choose to "
+ "install less features onto local drive(s), or select different "
+ "destination drive(s).")
+ cost.control("VolumeList", "VolumeCostList", 20, 100, 330, 150, 393223,
+ None, "{120}{70}{70}{70}{70}", None, None)
+ cost.xbutton("OK", "Ok", None, 0.5).event("EndDialog", "Return")
+
+ #####################################################################
+ # WhichUsers Dialog. Only available on NT, and for privileged users.
+ # This must be run before FindRelatedProducts, because that will
+ # take into account whether the previous installation was per-user
+ # or per-machine. We currently don't support going back to this
+ # dialog after "Next" was selected; to support this, we would need to
+ # find how to reset the ALLUSERS property, and how to re-run
+ # FindRelatedProducts.
+ # On Windows9x, the ALLUSERS property is ignored on the command line
+ # and in the Property table, but installer fails according to the documentation
+ # if a dialog attempts to set ALLUSERS.
+ whichusers = PyDialog(db, "WhichUsersDlg", x, y, w, h, modal, title,
+ "AdminInstall", "Next", "Cancel")
+ whichusers.title("Select whether to install [ProductName] for all users of this computer.")
+ # A radio group with two options: allusers, justme
+ g = whichusers.radiogroup("AdminInstall", 15, 60, 260, 50, 3,
+ "WhichUsers", "", "Next")
+ g.add("ALL", 0, 5, 150, 20, "Install for all users")
+ g.add("JUSTME", 0, 25, 150, 20, "Install just for me")
+
+ whichusers.back("Back", None, active=0)
+
+ c = whichusers.next("Next >", "Cancel")
+ c.event("[ALLUSERS]", "1", 'WhichUsers="ALL"', 1)
+ c.event("EndDialog", "Return", ordering = 2)
+
+ c = whichusers.cancel("Cancel", "AdminInstall")
+ c.event("SpawnDialog", "CancelDlg")
+
+ #####################################################################
+ # Installation Progress dialog (modeless)
+ progress = PyDialog(db, "ProgressDlg", x, y, w, h, modeless, title,
+ "Cancel", "Cancel", "Cancel", bitmap=False)
+ progress.text("Title", 20, 15, 200, 15, 0x30003,
+ r"{\DlgFontBold8}[Progress1] [ProductName]")
+ progress.text("Text", 35, 65, 300, 30, 3,
+ "Please wait while the Installer [Progress2] [ProductName]. "
+ "This may take several minutes.")
+ progress.text("StatusLabel", 35, 100, 35, 20, 3, "Status:")
+
+ c=progress.text("ActionText", 70, 100, w-70, 20, 3, "Pondering...")
+ c.mapping("ActionText", "Text")
+
+ #c=progress.text("ActionData", 35, 140, 300, 20, 3, None)
+ #c.mapping("ActionData", "Text")
+
+ c=progress.control("ProgressBar", "ProgressBar", 35, 120, 300, 10, 65537,
+ None, "Progress done", None, None)
+ c.mapping("SetProgress", "Progress")
+
+ progress.back("< Back", "Next", active=False)
+ progress.next("Next >", "Cancel", active=False)
+ progress.cancel("Cancel", "Back").event("SpawnDialog", "CancelDlg")
+
+ ###################################################################
+ # Maintenance type: repair/uninstall
+ maint = PyDialog(db, "MaintenanceTypeDlg", x, y, w, h, modal, title,
+ "Next", "Next", "Cancel")
+ maint.title("Welcome to the [ProductName] Setup Wizard")
+ maint.text("BodyText", 15, 63, 330, 42, 3,
+ "Select whether you want to repair or remove [ProductName].")
+ g=maint.radiogroup("RepairRadioGroup", 15, 108, 330, 60, 3,
+ "MaintenanceForm_Action", "", "Next")
+ #g.add("Change", 0, 0, 200, 17, "&Change [ProductName]")
+ g.add("Repair", 0, 18, 200, 17, "&Repair [ProductName]")
+ g.add("Remove", 0, 36, 200, 17, "Re&move [ProductName]")
+
+ maint.back("< Back", None, active=False)
+ c=maint.next("Finish", "Cancel")
+ # Change installation: Change progress dialog to "Change", then ask
+ # for feature selection
+ #c.event("[Progress1]", "Change", 'MaintenanceForm_Action="Change"', 1)
+ #c.event("[Progress2]", "changes", 'MaintenanceForm_Action="Change"', 2)
+
+ # Reinstall: Change progress dialog to "Repair", then invoke reinstall
+ # Also set list of reinstalled features to "ALL"
+ c.event("[REINSTALL]", "ALL", 'MaintenanceForm_Action="Repair"', 5)
+ c.event("[Progress1]", "Repairing", 'MaintenanceForm_Action="Repair"', 6)
+ c.event("[Progress2]", "repairs", 'MaintenanceForm_Action="Repair"', 7)
+ c.event("Reinstall", "ALL", 'MaintenanceForm_Action="Repair"', 8)
+
+ # Uninstall: Change progress to "Remove", then invoke uninstall
+ # Also set list of removed features to "ALL"
+ c.event("[REMOVE]", "ALL", 'MaintenanceForm_Action="Remove"', 11)
+ c.event("[Progress1]", "Removing", 'MaintenanceForm_Action="Remove"', 12)
+ c.event("[Progress2]", "removes", 'MaintenanceForm_Action="Remove"', 13)
+ c.event("Remove", "ALL", 'MaintenanceForm_Action="Remove"', 14)
+
+ # Close dialog when maintenance action scheduled
+ c.event("EndDialog", "Return", 'MaintenanceForm_Action<>"Change"', 20)
+ #c.event("NewDialog", "SelectFeaturesDlg", 'MaintenanceForm_Action="Change"', 21)
+
+ maint.cancel("Cancel", "RepairRadioGroup").event("SpawnDialog", "CancelDlg")
+
+ def get_installer_filename(self, fullname):
+ # Factored out to allow overriding in subclasses
+ if self.target_version:
+ base_name = "%s.%s-py%s.msi" % (fullname, self.plat_name,
+ self.target_version)
+ else:
+ base_name = "%s.%s.msi" % (fullname, self.plat_name)
+ installer_name = os.path.join(self.dist_dir, base_name)
+ return installer_name
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/bdist_rpm.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/bdist_rpm.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..550cbfa1e2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/bdist_rpm.py
@@ -0,0 +1,579 @@
+"""distutils.command.bdist_rpm
+
+Implements the Distutils 'bdist_rpm' command (create RPM source and binary
+distributions)."""
+
+import subprocess, sys, os
+from distutils.core import Command
+from distutils.debug import DEBUG
+from distutils.file_util import write_file
+from distutils.errors import *
+from distutils.sysconfig import get_python_version
+from distutils import log
+
+class bdist_rpm(Command):
+
+ description = "create an RPM distribution"
+
+ user_options = [
+ ('bdist-base=', None,
+ "base directory for creating built distributions"),
+ ('rpm-base=', None,
+ "base directory for creating RPMs (defaults to \"rpm\" under "
+ "--bdist-base; must be specified for RPM 2)"),
+ ('dist-dir=', 'd',
+ "directory to put final RPM files in "
+ "(and .spec files if --spec-only)"),
+ ('python=', None,
+ "path to Python interpreter to hard-code in the .spec file "
+ "(default: \"python\")"),
+ ('fix-python', None,
+ "hard-code the exact path to the current Python interpreter in "
+ "the .spec file"),
+ ('spec-only', None,
+ "only regenerate spec file"),
+ ('source-only', None,
+ "only generate source RPM"),
+ ('binary-only', None,
+ "only generate binary RPM"),
+ ('use-bzip2', None,
+ "use bzip2 instead of gzip to create source distribution"),
+
+ # More meta-data: too RPM-specific to put in the setup script,
+ # but needs to go in the .spec file -- so we make these options
+ # to "bdist_rpm". The idea is that packagers would put this
+ # info in setup.cfg, although they are of course free to
+ # supply it on the command line.
+ ('distribution-name=', None,
+ "name of the (Linux) distribution to which this "
+ "RPM applies (*not* the name of the module distribution!)"),
+ ('group=', None,
+ "package classification [default: \"Development/Libraries\"]"),
+ ('release=', None,
+ "RPM release number"),
+ ('serial=', None,
+ "RPM serial number"),
+ ('vendor=', None,
+ "RPM \"vendor\" (eg. \"Joe Blow <joe@example.com>\") "
+ "[default: maintainer or author from setup script]"),
+ ('packager=', None,
+ "RPM packager (eg. \"Jane Doe <jane@example.net>\") "
+ "[default: vendor]"),
+ ('doc-files=', None,
+ "list of documentation files (space or comma-separated)"),
+ ('changelog=', None,
+ "RPM changelog"),
+ ('icon=', None,
+ "name of icon file"),
+ ('provides=', None,
+ "capabilities provided by this package"),
+ ('requires=', None,
+ "capabilities required by this package"),
+ ('conflicts=', None,
+ "capabilities which conflict with this package"),
+ ('build-requires=', None,
+ "capabilities required to build this package"),
+ ('obsoletes=', None,
+ "capabilities made obsolete by this package"),
+ ('no-autoreq', None,
+ "do not automatically calculate dependencies"),
+
+ # Actions to take when building RPM
+ ('keep-temp', 'k',
+ "don't clean up RPM build directory"),
+ ('no-keep-temp', None,
+ "clean up RPM build directory [default]"),
+ ('use-rpm-opt-flags', None,
+ "compile with RPM_OPT_FLAGS when building from source RPM"),
+ ('no-rpm-opt-flags', None,
+ "do not pass any RPM CFLAGS to compiler"),
+ ('rpm3-mode', None,
+ "RPM 3 compatibility mode (default)"),
+ ('rpm2-mode', None,
+ "RPM 2 compatibility mode"),
+
+ # Add the hooks necessary for specifying custom scripts
+ ('prep-script=', None,
+ "Specify a script for the PREP phase of RPM building"),
+ ('build-script=', None,
+ "Specify a script for the BUILD phase of RPM building"),
+
+ ('pre-install=', None,
+ "Specify a script for the pre-INSTALL phase of RPM building"),
+ ('install-script=', None,
+ "Specify a script for the INSTALL phase of RPM building"),
+ ('post-install=', None,
+ "Specify a script for the post-INSTALL phase of RPM building"),
+
+ ('pre-uninstall=', None,
+ "Specify a script for the pre-UNINSTALL phase of RPM building"),
+ ('post-uninstall=', None,
+ "Specify a script for the post-UNINSTALL phase of RPM building"),
+
+ ('clean-script=', None,
+ "Specify a script for the CLEAN phase of RPM building"),
+
+ ('verify-script=', None,
+ "Specify a script for the VERIFY phase of the RPM build"),
+
+ # Allow a packager to explicitly force an architecture
+ ('force-arch=', None,
+ "Force an architecture onto the RPM build process"),
+
+ ('quiet', 'q',
+ "Run the INSTALL phase of RPM building in quiet mode"),
+ ]
+
+ boolean_options = ['keep-temp', 'use-rpm-opt-flags', 'rpm3-mode',
+ 'no-autoreq', 'quiet']
+
+ negative_opt = {'no-keep-temp': 'keep-temp',
+ 'no-rpm-opt-flags': 'use-rpm-opt-flags',
+ 'rpm2-mode': 'rpm3-mode'}
+
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.bdist_base = None
+ self.rpm_base = None
+ self.dist_dir = None
+ self.python = None
+ self.fix_python = None
+ self.spec_only = None
+ self.binary_only = None
+ self.source_only = None
+ self.use_bzip2 = None
+
+ self.distribution_name = None
+ self.group = None
+ self.release = None
+ self.serial = None
+ self.vendor = None
+ self.packager = None
+ self.doc_files = None
+ self.changelog = None
+ self.icon = None
+
+ self.prep_script = None
+ self.build_script = None
+ self.install_script = None
+ self.clean_script = None
+ self.verify_script = None
+ self.pre_install = None
+ self.post_install = None
+ self.pre_uninstall = None
+ self.post_uninstall = None
+ self.prep = None
+ self.provides = None
+ self.requires = None
+ self.conflicts = None
+ self.build_requires = None
+ self.obsoletes = None
+
+ self.keep_temp = 0
+ self.use_rpm_opt_flags = 1
+ self.rpm3_mode = 1
+ self.no_autoreq = 0
+
+ self.force_arch = None
+ self.quiet = 0
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ self.set_undefined_options('bdist', ('bdist_base', 'bdist_base'))
+ if self.rpm_base is None:
+ if not self.rpm3_mode:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ "you must specify --rpm-base in RPM 2 mode")
+ self.rpm_base = os.path.join(self.bdist_base, "rpm")
+
+ if self.python is None:
+ if self.fix_python:
+ self.python = sys.executable
+ else:
+ self.python = "python3"
+ elif self.fix_python:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ "--python and --fix-python are mutually exclusive options")
+
+ if os.name != 'posix':
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError("don't know how to create RPM "
+ "distributions on platform %s" % os.name)
+ if self.binary_only and self.source_only:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ "cannot supply both '--source-only' and '--binary-only'")
+
+ # don't pass CFLAGS to pure python distributions
+ if not self.distribution.has_ext_modules():
+ self.use_rpm_opt_flags = 0
+
+ self.set_undefined_options('bdist', ('dist_dir', 'dist_dir'))
+ self.finalize_package_data()
+
+ def finalize_package_data(self):
+ self.ensure_string('group', "Development/Libraries")
+ self.ensure_string('vendor',
+ "%s <%s>" % (self.distribution.get_contact(),
+ self.distribution.get_contact_email()))
+ self.ensure_string('packager')
+ self.ensure_string_list('doc_files')
+ if isinstance(self.doc_files, list):
+ for readme in ('README', 'README.txt'):
+ if os.path.exists(readme) and readme not in self.doc_files:
+ self.doc_files.append(readme)
+
+ self.ensure_string('release', "1")
+ self.ensure_string('serial') # should it be an int?
+
+ self.ensure_string('distribution_name')
+
+ self.ensure_string('changelog')
+ # Format changelog correctly
+ self.changelog = self._format_changelog(self.changelog)
+
+ self.ensure_filename('icon')
+
+ self.ensure_filename('prep_script')
+ self.ensure_filename('build_script')
+ self.ensure_filename('install_script')
+ self.ensure_filename('clean_script')
+ self.ensure_filename('verify_script')
+ self.ensure_filename('pre_install')
+ self.ensure_filename('post_install')
+ self.ensure_filename('pre_uninstall')
+ self.ensure_filename('post_uninstall')
+
+ # XXX don't forget we punted on summaries and descriptions -- they
+ # should be handled here eventually!
+
+ # Now *this* is some meta-data that belongs in the setup script...
+ self.ensure_string_list('provides')
+ self.ensure_string_list('requires')
+ self.ensure_string_list('conflicts')
+ self.ensure_string_list('build_requires')
+ self.ensure_string_list('obsoletes')
+
+ self.ensure_string('force_arch')
+
+ def run(self):
+ if DEBUG:
+ print("before _get_package_data():")
+ print("vendor =", self.vendor)
+ print("packager =", self.packager)
+ print("doc_files =", self.doc_files)
+ print("changelog =", self.changelog)
+
+ # make directories
+ if self.spec_only:
+ spec_dir = self.dist_dir
+ self.mkpath(spec_dir)
+ else:
+ rpm_dir = {}
+ for d in ('SOURCES', 'SPECS', 'BUILD', 'RPMS', 'SRPMS'):
+ rpm_dir[d] = os.path.join(self.rpm_base, d)
+ self.mkpath(rpm_dir[d])
+ spec_dir = rpm_dir['SPECS']
+
+ # Spec file goes into 'dist_dir' if '--spec-only specified',
+ # build/rpm.<plat> otherwise.
+ spec_path = os.path.join(spec_dir,
+ "%s.spec" % self.distribution.get_name())
+ self.execute(write_file,
+ (spec_path,
+ self._make_spec_file()),
+ "writing '%s'" % spec_path)
+
+ if self.spec_only: # stop if requested
+ return
+
+ # Make a source distribution and copy to SOURCES directory with
+ # optional icon.
+ saved_dist_files = self.distribution.dist_files[:]
+ sdist = self.reinitialize_command('sdist')
+ if self.use_bzip2:
+ sdist.formats = ['bztar']
+ else:
+ sdist.formats = ['gztar']
+ self.run_command('sdist')
+ self.distribution.dist_files = saved_dist_files
+
+ source = sdist.get_archive_files()[0]
+ source_dir = rpm_dir['SOURCES']
+ self.copy_file(source, source_dir)
+
+ if self.icon:
+ if os.path.exists(self.icon):
+ self.copy_file(self.icon, source_dir)
+ else:
+ raise DistutilsFileError(
+ "icon file '%s' does not exist" % self.icon)
+
+ # build package
+ log.info("building RPMs")
+ rpm_cmd = ['rpmbuild']
+
+ if self.source_only: # what kind of RPMs?
+ rpm_cmd.append('-bs')
+ elif self.binary_only:
+ rpm_cmd.append('-bb')
+ else:
+ rpm_cmd.append('-ba')
+ rpm_cmd.extend(['--define', '__python %s' % self.python])
+ if self.rpm3_mode:
+ rpm_cmd.extend(['--define',
+ '_topdir %s' % os.path.abspath(self.rpm_base)])
+ if not self.keep_temp:
+ rpm_cmd.append('--clean')
+
+ if self.quiet:
+ rpm_cmd.append('--quiet')
+
+ rpm_cmd.append(spec_path)
+ # Determine the binary rpm names that should be built out of this spec
+ # file
+ # Note that some of these may not be really built (if the file
+ # list is empty)
+ nvr_string = "%{name}-%{version}-%{release}"
+ src_rpm = nvr_string + ".src.rpm"
+ non_src_rpm = "%{arch}/" + nvr_string + ".%{arch}.rpm"
+ q_cmd = r"rpm -q --qf '%s %s\n' --specfile '%s'" % (
+ src_rpm, non_src_rpm, spec_path)
+
+ out = os.popen(q_cmd)
+ try:
+ binary_rpms = []
+ source_rpm = None
+ while True:
+ line = out.readline()
+ if not line:
+ break
+ l = line.strip().split()
+ assert(len(l) == 2)
+ binary_rpms.append(l[1])
+ # The source rpm is named after the first entry in the spec file
+ if source_rpm is None:
+ source_rpm = l[0]
+
+ status = out.close()
+ if status:
+ raise DistutilsExecError("Failed to execute: %s" % repr(q_cmd))
+
+ finally:
+ out.close()
+
+ self.spawn(rpm_cmd)
+
+ if not self.dry_run:
+ if self.distribution.has_ext_modules():
+ pyversion = get_python_version()
+ else:
+ pyversion = 'any'
+
+ if not self.binary_only:
+ srpm = os.path.join(rpm_dir['SRPMS'], source_rpm)
+ assert(os.path.exists(srpm))
+ self.move_file(srpm, self.dist_dir)
+ filename = os.path.join(self.dist_dir, source_rpm)
+ self.distribution.dist_files.append(
+ ('bdist_rpm', pyversion, filename))
+
+ if not self.source_only:
+ for rpm in binary_rpms:
+ rpm = os.path.join(rpm_dir['RPMS'], rpm)
+ if os.path.exists(rpm):
+ self.move_file(rpm, self.dist_dir)
+ filename = os.path.join(self.dist_dir,
+ os.path.basename(rpm))
+ self.distribution.dist_files.append(
+ ('bdist_rpm', pyversion, filename))
+
+ def _dist_path(self, path):
+ return os.path.join(self.dist_dir, os.path.basename(path))
+
+ def _make_spec_file(self):
+ """Generate the text of an RPM spec file and return it as a
+ list of strings (one per line).
+ """
+ # definitions and headers
+ spec_file = [
+ '%define name ' + self.distribution.get_name(),
+ '%define version ' + self.distribution.get_version().replace('-','_'),
+ '%define unmangled_version ' + self.distribution.get_version(),
+ '%define release ' + self.release.replace('-','_'),
+ '',
+ 'Summary: ' + self.distribution.get_description(),
+ ]
+
+ # Workaround for #14443 which affects some RPM based systems such as
+ # RHEL6 (and probably derivatives)
+ vendor_hook = subprocess.getoutput('rpm --eval %{__os_install_post}')
+ # Generate a potential replacement value for __os_install_post (whilst
+ # normalizing the whitespace to simplify the test for whether the
+ # invocation of brp-python-bytecompile passes in __python):
+ vendor_hook = '\n'.join([' %s \\' % line.strip()
+ for line in vendor_hook.splitlines()])
+ problem = "brp-python-bytecompile \\\n"
+ fixed = "brp-python-bytecompile %{__python} \\\n"
+ fixed_hook = vendor_hook.replace(problem, fixed)
+ if fixed_hook != vendor_hook:
+ spec_file.append('# Workaround for http://bugs.python.org/issue14443')
+ spec_file.append('%define __os_install_post ' + fixed_hook + '\n')
+
+ # put locale summaries into spec file
+ # XXX not supported for now (hard to put a dictionary
+ # in a config file -- arg!)
+ #for locale in self.summaries.keys():
+ # spec_file.append('Summary(%s): %s' % (locale,
+ # self.summaries[locale]))
+
+ spec_file.extend([
+ 'Name: %{name}',
+ 'Version: %{version}',
+ 'Release: %{release}',])
+
+ # XXX yuck! this filename is available from the "sdist" command,
+ # but only after it has run: and we create the spec file before
+ # running "sdist", in case of --spec-only.
+ if self.use_bzip2:
+ spec_file.append('Source0: %{name}-%{unmangled_version}.tar.bz2')
+ else:
+ spec_file.append('Source0: %{name}-%{unmangled_version}.tar.gz')
+
+ spec_file.extend([
+ 'License: ' + self.distribution.get_license(),
+ 'Group: ' + self.group,
+ 'BuildRoot: %{_tmppath}/%{name}-%{version}-%{release}-buildroot',
+ 'Prefix: %{_prefix}', ])
+
+ if not self.force_arch:
+ # noarch if no extension modules
+ if not self.distribution.has_ext_modules():
+ spec_file.append('BuildArch: noarch')
+ else:
+ spec_file.append( 'BuildArch: %s' % self.force_arch )
+
+ for field in ('Vendor',
+ 'Packager',
+ 'Provides',
+ 'Requires',
+ 'Conflicts',
+ 'Obsoletes',
+ ):
+ val = getattr(self, field.lower())
+ if isinstance(val, list):
+ spec_file.append('%s: %s' % (field, ' '.join(val)))
+ elif val is not None:
+ spec_file.append('%s: %s' % (field, val))
+
+
+ if self.distribution.get_url() != 'UNKNOWN':
+ spec_file.append('Url: ' + self.distribution.get_url())
+
+ if self.distribution_name:
+ spec_file.append('Distribution: ' + self.distribution_name)
+
+ if self.build_requires:
+ spec_file.append('BuildRequires: ' +
+ ' '.join(self.build_requires))
+
+ if self.icon:
+ spec_file.append('Icon: ' + os.path.basename(self.icon))
+
+ if self.no_autoreq:
+ spec_file.append('AutoReq: 0')
+
+ spec_file.extend([
+ '',
+ '%description',
+ self.distribution.get_long_description()
+ ])
+
+ # put locale descriptions into spec file
+ # XXX again, suppressed because config file syntax doesn't
+ # easily support this ;-(
+ #for locale in self.descriptions.keys():
+ # spec_file.extend([
+ # '',
+ # '%description -l ' + locale,
+ # self.descriptions[locale],
+ # ])
+
+ # rpm scripts
+ # figure out default build script
+ def_setup_call = "%s %s" % (self.python,os.path.basename(sys.argv[0]))
+ def_build = "%s build" % def_setup_call
+ if self.use_rpm_opt_flags:
+ def_build = 'env CFLAGS="$RPM_OPT_FLAGS" ' + def_build
+
+ # insert contents of files
+
+ # XXX this is kind of misleading: user-supplied options are files
+ # that we open and interpolate into the spec file, but the defaults
+ # are just text that we drop in as-is. Hmmm.
+
+ install_cmd = ('%s install -O1 --root=$RPM_BUILD_ROOT '
+ '--record=INSTALLED_FILES') % def_setup_call
+
+ script_options = [
+ ('prep', 'prep_script', "%setup -n %{name}-%{unmangled_version}"),
+ ('build', 'build_script', def_build),
+ ('install', 'install_script', install_cmd),
+ ('clean', 'clean_script', "rm -rf $RPM_BUILD_ROOT"),
+ ('verifyscript', 'verify_script', None),
+ ('pre', 'pre_install', None),
+ ('post', 'post_install', None),
+ ('preun', 'pre_uninstall', None),
+ ('postun', 'post_uninstall', None),
+ ]
+
+ for (rpm_opt, attr, default) in script_options:
+ # Insert contents of file referred to, if no file is referred to
+ # use 'default' as contents of script
+ val = getattr(self, attr)
+ if val or default:
+ spec_file.extend([
+ '',
+ '%' + rpm_opt,])
+ if val:
+ with open(val) as f:
+ spec_file.extend(f.read().split('\n'))
+ else:
+ spec_file.append(default)
+
+
+ # files section
+ spec_file.extend([
+ '',
+ '%files -f INSTALLED_FILES',
+ '%defattr(-,root,root)',
+ ])
+
+ if self.doc_files:
+ spec_file.append('%doc ' + ' '.join(self.doc_files))
+
+ if self.changelog:
+ spec_file.extend([
+ '',
+ '%changelog',])
+ spec_file.extend(self.changelog)
+
+ return spec_file
+
+ def _format_changelog(self, changelog):
+ """Format the changelog correctly and convert it to a list of strings
+ """
+ if not changelog:
+ return changelog
+ new_changelog = []
+ for line in changelog.strip().split('\n'):
+ line = line.strip()
+ if line[0] == '*':
+ new_changelog.extend(['', line])
+ elif line[0] == '-':
+ new_changelog.append(line)
+ else:
+ new_changelog.append(' ' + line)
+
+ # strip trailing newline inserted by first changelog entry
+ if not new_changelog[0]:
+ del new_changelog[0]
+
+ return new_changelog
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/bdist_wininst.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/bdist_wininst.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..0e9ddaa214
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/bdist_wininst.py
@@ -0,0 +1,377 @@
+"""distutils.command.bdist_wininst
+
+Implements the Distutils 'bdist_wininst' command: create a windows installer
+exe-program."""
+
+import os
+import sys
+import warnings
+from distutils.core import Command
+from distutils.util import get_platform
+from distutils.dir_util import remove_tree
+from distutils.errors import *
+from distutils.sysconfig import get_python_version
+from distutils import log
+
+class bdist_wininst(Command):
+
+ description = "create an executable installer for MS Windows"
+
+ user_options = [('bdist-dir=', None,
+ "temporary directory for creating the distribution"),
+ ('plat-name=', 'p',
+ "platform name to embed in generated filenames "
+ "(default: %s)" % get_platform()),
+ ('keep-temp', 'k',
+ "keep the pseudo-installation tree around after " +
+ "creating the distribution archive"),
+ ('target-version=', None,
+ "require a specific python version" +
+ " on the target system"),
+ ('no-target-compile', 'c',
+ "do not compile .py to .pyc on the target system"),
+ ('no-target-optimize', 'o',
+ "do not compile .py to .pyo (optimized) "
+ "on the target system"),
+ ('dist-dir=', 'd',
+ "directory to put final built distributions in"),
+ ('bitmap=', 'b',
+ "bitmap to use for the installer instead of python-powered logo"),
+ ('title=', 't',
+ "title to display on the installer background instead of default"),
+ ('skip-build', None,
+ "skip rebuilding everything (for testing/debugging)"),
+ ('install-script=', None,
+ "basename of installation script to be run after "
+ "installation or before deinstallation"),
+ ('pre-install-script=', None,
+ "Fully qualified filename of a script to be run before "
+ "any files are installed. This script need not be in the "
+ "distribution"),
+ ('user-access-control=', None,
+ "specify Vista's UAC handling - 'none'/default=no "
+ "handling, 'auto'=use UAC if target Python installed for "
+ "all users, 'force'=always use UAC"),
+ ]
+
+ boolean_options = ['keep-temp', 'no-target-compile', 'no-target-optimize',
+ 'skip-build']
+
+ # bpo-10945: bdist_wininst requires mbcs encoding only available on Windows
+ _unsupported = (sys.platform != "win32")
+
+ def __init__(self, *args, **kw):
+ super().__init__(*args, **kw)
+ warnings.warn("bdist_wininst command is deprecated since Python 3.8, "
+ "use bdist_wheel (wheel packages) instead",
+ DeprecationWarning, 2)
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.bdist_dir = None
+ self.plat_name = None
+ self.keep_temp = 0
+ self.no_target_compile = 0
+ self.no_target_optimize = 0
+ self.target_version = None
+ self.dist_dir = None
+ self.bitmap = None
+ self.title = None
+ self.skip_build = None
+ self.install_script = None
+ self.pre_install_script = None
+ self.user_access_control = None
+
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ self.set_undefined_options('bdist', ('skip_build', 'skip_build'))
+
+ if self.bdist_dir is None:
+ if self.skip_build and self.plat_name:
+ # If build is skipped and plat_name is overridden, bdist will
+ # not see the correct 'plat_name' - so set that up manually.
+ bdist = self.distribution.get_command_obj('bdist')
+ bdist.plat_name = self.plat_name
+ # next the command will be initialized using that name
+ bdist_base = self.get_finalized_command('bdist').bdist_base
+ self.bdist_dir = os.path.join(bdist_base, 'wininst')
+
+ if not self.target_version:
+ self.target_version = ""
+
+ if not self.skip_build and self.distribution.has_ext_modules():
+ short_version = get_python_version()
+ if self.target_version and self.target_version != short_version:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ "target version can only be %s, or the '--skip-build'" \
+ " option must be specified" % (short_version,))
+ self.target_version = short_version
+
+ self.set_undefined_options('bdist',
+ ('dist_dir', 'dist_dir'),
+ ('plat_name', 'plat_name'),
+ )
+
+ if self.install_script:
+ for script in self.distribution.scripts:
+ if self.install_script == os.path.basename(script):
+ break
+ else:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ "install_script '%s' not found in scripts"
+ % self.install_script)
+
+ def run(self):
+ if (sys.platform != "win32" and
+ (self.distribution.has_ext_modules() or
+ self.distribution.has_c_libraries())):
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError \
+ ("distribution contains extensions and/or C libraries; "
+ "must be compiled on a Windows 32 platform")
+
+ if not self.skip_build:
+ self.run_command('build')
+
+ install = self.reinitialize_command('install', reinit_subcommands=1)
+ install.root = self.bdist_dir
+ install.skip_build = self.skip_build
+ install.warn_dir = 0
+ install.plat_name = self.plat_name
+
+ install_lib = self.reinitialize_command('install_lib')
+ # we do not want to include pyc or pyo files
+ install_lib.compile = 0
+ install_lib.optimize = 0
+
+ if self.distribution.has_ext_modules():
+ # If we are building an installer for a Python version other
+ # than the one we are currently running, then we need to ensure
+ # our build_lib reflects the other Python version rather than ours.
+ # Note that for target_version!=sys.version, we must have skipped the
+ # build step, so there is no issue with enforcing the build of this
+ # version.
+ target_version = self.target_version
+ if not target_version:
+ assert self.skip_build, "Should have already checked this"
+ target_version = '%d.%d' % sys.version_info[:2]
+ plat_specifier = ".%s-%s" % (self.plat_name, target_version)
+ build = self.get_finalized_command('build')
+ build.build_lib = os.path.join(build.build_base,
+ 'lib' + plat_specifier)
+
+ # Use a custom scheme for the zip-file, because we have to decide
+ # at installation time which scheme to use.
+ for key in ('purelib', 'platlib', 'headers', 'scripts', 'data'):
+ value = key.upper()
+ if key == 'headers':
+ value = value + '/Include/$dist_name'
+ setattr(install,
+ 'install_' + key,
+ value)
+
+ log.info("installing to %s", self.bdist_dir)
+ install.ensure_finalized()
+
+ # avoid warning of 'install_lib' about installing
+ # into a directory not in sys.path
+ sys.path.insert(0, os.path.join(self.bdist_dir, 'PURELIB'))
+
+ install.run()
+
+ del sys.path[0]
+
+ # And make an archive relative to the root of the
+ # pseudo-installation tree.
+ from tempfile import mktemp
+ archive_basename = mktemp()
+ fullname = self.distribution.get_fullname()
+ arcname = self.make_archive(archive_basename, "zip",
+ root_dir=self.bdist_dir)
+ # create an exe containing the zip-file
+ self.create_exe(arcname, fullname, self.bitmap)
+ if self.distribution.has_ext_modules():
+ pyversion = get_python_version()
+ else:
+ pyversion = 'any'
+ self.distribution.dist_files.append(('bdist_wininst', pyversion,
+ self.get_installer_filename(fullname)))
+ # remove the zip-file again
+ log.debug("removing temporary file '%s'", arcname)
+ os.remove(arcname)
+
+ if not self.keep_temp:
+ remove_tree(self.bdist_dir, dry_run=self.dry_run)
+
+ def get_inidata(self):
+ # Return data describing the installation.
+ lines = []
+ metadata = self.distribution.metadata
+
+ # Write the [metadata] section.
+ lines.append("[metadata]")
+
+ # 'info' will be displayed in the installer's dialog box,
+ # describing the items to be installed.
+ info = (metadata.long_description or '') + '\n'
+
+ # Escape newline characters
+ def escape(s):
+ return s.replace("\n", "\\n")
+
+ for name in ["author", "author_email", "description", "maintainer",
+ "maintainer_email", "name", "url", "version"]:
+ data = getattr(metadata, name, "")
+ if data:
+ info = info + ("\n %s: %s" % \
+ (name.capitalize(), escape(data)))
+ lines.append("%s=%s" % (name, escape(data)))
+
+ # The [setup] section contains entries controlling
+ # the installer runtime.
+ lines.append("\n[Setup]")
+ if self.install_script:
+ lines.append("install_script=%s" % self.install_script)
+ lines.append("info=%s" % escape(info))
+ lines.append("target_compile=%d" % (not self.no_target_compile))
+ lines.append("target_optimize=%d" % (not self.no_target_optimize))
+ if self.target_version:
+ lines.append("target_version=%s" % self.target_version)
+ if self.user_access_control:
+ lines.append("user_access_control=%s" % self.user_access_control)
+
+ title = self.title or self.distribution.get_fullname()
+ lines.append("title=%s" % escape(title))
+ import time
+ import distutils
+ build_info = "Built %s with distutils-%s" % \
+ (time.ctime(time.time()), distutils.__version__)
+ lines.append("build_info=%s" % build_info)
+ return "\n".join(lines)
+
+ def create_exe(self, arcname, fullname, bitmap=None):
+ import struct
+
+ self.mkpath(self.dist_dir)
+
+ cfgdata = self.get_inidata()
+
+ installer_name = self.get_installer_filename(fullname)
+ self.announce("creating %s" % installer_name)
+
+ if bitmap:
+ with open(bitmap, "rb") as f:
+ bitmapdata = f.read()
+ bitmaplen = len(bitmapdata)
+ else:
+ bitmaplen = 0
+
+ with open(installer_name, "wb") as file:
+ file.write(self.get_exe_bytes())
+ if bitmap:
+ file.write(bitmapdata)
+
+ # Convert cfgdata from unicode to ascii, mbcs encoded
+ if isinstance(cfgdata, str):
+ cfgdata = cfgdata.encode("mbcs")
+
+ # Append the pre-install script
+ cfgdata = cfgdata + b"\0"
+ if self.pre_install_script:
+ # We need to normalize newlines, so we open in text mode and
+ # convert back to bytes. "latin-1" simply avoids any possible
+ # failures.
+ with open(self.pre_install_script, "r",
+ encoding="latin-1") as script:
+ script_data = script.read().encode("latin-1")
+ cfgdata = cfgdata + script_data + b"\n\0"
+ else:
+ # empty pre-install script
+ cfgdata = cfgdata + b"\0"
+ file.write(cfgdata)
+
+ # The 'magic number' 0x1234567B is used to make sure that the
+ # binary layout of 'cfgdata' is what the wininst.exe binary
+ # expects. If the layout changes, increment that number, make
+ # the corresponding changes to the wininst.exe sources, and
+ # recompile them.
+ header = struct.pack("<iii",
+ 0x1234567B, # tag
+ len(cfgdata), # length
+ bitmaplen, # number of bytes in bitmap
+ )
+ file.write(header)
+ with open(arcname, "rb") as f:
+ file.write(f.read())
+
+ def get_installer_filename(self, fullname):
+ # Factored out to allow overriding in subclasses
+ if self.target_version:
+ # if we create an installer for a specific python version,
+ # it's better to include this in the name
+ installer_name = os.path.join(self.dist_dir,
+ "%s.%s-py%s.exe" %
+ (fullname, self.plat_name, self.target_version))
+ else:
+ installer_name = os.path.join(self.dist_dir,
+ "%s.%s.exe" % (fullname, self.plat_name))
+ return installer_name
+
+ def get_exe_bytes(self):
+ # If a target-version other than the current version has been
+ # specified, then using the MSVC version from *this* build is no good.
+ # Without actually finding and executing the target version and parsing
+ # its sys.version, we just hard-code our knowledge of old versions.
+ # NOTE: Possible alternative is to allow "--target-version" to
+ # specify a Python executable rather than a simple version string.
+ # We can then execute this program to obtain any info we need, such
+ # as the real sys.version string for the build.
+ cur_version = get_python_version()
+
+ # If the target version is *later* than us, then we assume they
+ # use what we use
+ # string compares seem wrong, but are what sysconfig.py itself uses
+ if self.target_version and self.target_version < cur_version:
+ if self.target_version < "2.4":
+ bv = '6.0'
+ elif self.target_version == "2.4":
+ bv = '7.1'
+ elif self.target_version == "2.5":
+ bv = '8.0'
+ elif self.target_version <= "3.2":
+ bv = '9.0'
+ elif self.target_version <= "3.4":
+ bv = '10.0'
+ else:
+ bv = '14.0'
+ else:
+ # for current version - use authoritative check.
+ try:
+ from msvcrt import CRT_ASSEMBLY_VERSION
+ except ImportError:
+ # cross-building, so assume the latest version
+ bv = '14.0'
+ else:
+ # as far as we know, CRT is binary compatible based on
+ # the first field, so assume 'x.0' until proven otherwise
+ major = CRT_ASSEMBLY_VERSION.partition('.')[0]
+ bv = major + '.0'
+
+
+ # wininst-x.y.exe is in the same directory as this file
+ directory = os.path.dirname(__file__)
+ # we must use a wininst-x.y.exe built with the same C compiler
+ # used for python. XXX What about mingw, borland, and so on?
+
+ # if plat_name starts with "win" but is not "win32"
+ # we want to strip "win" and leave the rest (e.g. -amd64)
+ # for all other cases, we don't want any suffix
+ if self.plat_name != 'win32' and self.plat_name[:3] == 'win':
+ sfix = self.plat_name[3:]
+ else:
+ sfix = ''
+
+ filename = os.path.join(directory, "wininst-%s%s.exe" % (bv, sfix))
+ f = open(filename, "rb")
+ try:
+ return f.read()
+ finally:
+ f.close()
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/build.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/build.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..a86df0bc7f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/build.py
@@ -0,0 +1,157 @@
+"""distutils.command.build
+
+Implements the Distutils 'build' command."""
+
+import sys, os
+from distutils.core import Command
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsOptionError
+from distutils.util import get_platform
+
+
+def show_compilers():
+ from distutils.ccompiler import show_compilers
+ show_compilers()
+
+
+class build(Command):
+
+ description = "build everything needed to install"
+
+ user_options = [
+ ('build-base=', 'b',
+ "base directory for build library"),
+ ('build-purelib=', None,
+ "build directory for platform-neutral distributions"),
+ ('build-platlib=', None,
+ "build directory for platform-specific distributions"),
+ ('build-lib=', None,
+ "build directory for all distribution (defaults to either " +
+ "build-purelib or build-platlib"),
+ ('build-scripts=', None,
+ "build directory for scripts"),
+ ('build-temp=', 't',
+ "temporary build directory"),
+ ('plat-name=', 'p',
+ "platform name to build for, if supported "
+ "(default: %s)" % get_platform()),
+ ('compiler=', 'c',
+ "specify the compiler type"),
+ ('parallel=', 'j',
+ "number of parallel build jobs"),
+ ('debug', 'g',
+ "compile extensions and libraries with debugging information"),
+ ('force', 'f',
+ "forcibly build everything (ignore file timestamps)"),
+ ('executable=', 'e',
+ "specify final destination interpreter path (build.py)"),
+ ]
+
+ boolean_options = ['debug', 'force']
+
+ help_options = [
+ ('help-compiler', None,
+ "list available compilers", show_compilers),
+ ]
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.build_base = 'build'
+ # these are decided only after 'build_base' has its final value
+ # (unless overridden by the user or client)
+ self.build_purelib = None
+ self.build_platlib = None
+ self.build_lib = None
+ self.build_temp = None
+ self.build_scripts = None
+ self.compiler = None
+ self.plat_name = None
+ self.debug = None
+ self.force = 0
+ self.executable = None
+ self.parallel = None
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ if self.plat_name is None:
+ self.plat_name = get_platform()
+ else:
+ # plat-name only supported for windows (other platforms are
+ # supported via ./configure flags, if at all). Avoid misleading
+ # other platforms.
+ if os.name != 'nt':
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ "--plat-name only supported on Windows (try "
+ "using './configure --help' on your platform)")
+
+ plat_specifier = ".%s-%d.%d" % (self.plat_name, *sys.version_info[:2])
+
+ # Make it so Python 2.x and Python 2.x with --with-pydebug don't
+ # share the same build directories. Doing so confuses the build
+ # process for C modules
+ if hasattr(sys, 'gettotalrefcount'):
+ plat_specifier += '-pydebug'
+
+ # 'build_purelib' and 'build_platlib' just default to 'lib' and
+ # 'lib.<plat>' under the base build directory. We only use one of
+ # them for a given distribution, though --
+ if self.build_purelib is None:
+ self.build_purelib = os.path.join(self.build_base, 'lib')
+ if self.build_platlib is None:
+ self.build_platlib = os.path.join(self.build_base,
+ 'lib' + plat_specifier)
+
+ # 'build_lib' is the actual directory that we will use for this
+ # particular module distribution -- if user didn't supply it, pick
+ # one of 'build_purelib' or 'build_platlib'.
+ if self.build_lib is None:
+ if self.distribution.ext_modules:
+ self.build_lib = self.build_platlib
+ else:
+ self.build_lib = self.build_purelib
+
+ # 'build_temp' -- temporary directory for compiler turds,
+ # "build/temp.<plat>"
+ if self.build_temp is None:
+ self.build_temp = os.path.join(self.build_base,
+ 'temp' + plat_specifier)
+ if self.build_scripts is None:
+ self.build_scripts = os.path.join(self.build_base,
+ 'scripts-%d.%d' % sys.version_info[:2])
+
+ if self.executable is None and sys.executable:
+ self.executable = os.path.normpath(sys.executable)
+
+ if isinstance(self.parallel, str):
+ try:
+ self.parallel = int(self.parallel)
+ except ValueError:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError("parallel should be an integer")
+
+ def run(self):
+ # Run all relevant sub-commands. This will be some subset of:
+ # - build_py - pure Python modules
+ # - build_clib - standalone C libraries
+ # - build_ext - Python extensions
+ # - build_scripts - (Python) scripts
+ for cmd_name in self.get_sub_commands():
+ self.run_command(cmd_name)
+
+
+ # -- Predicates for the sub-command list ---------------------------
+
+ def has_pure_modules(self):
+ return self.distribution.has_pure_modules()
+
+ def has_c_libraries(self):
+ return self.distribution.has_c_libraries()
+
+ def has_ext_modules(self):
+ return self.distribution.has_ext_modules()
+
+ def has_scripts(self):
+ return self.distribution.has_scripts()
+
+
+ sub_commands = [('build_py', has_pure_modules),
+ ('build_clib', has_c_libraries),
+ ('build_ext', has_ext_modules),
+ ('build_scripts', has_scripts),
+ ]
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/build_clib.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/build_clib.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..3e20ef23cd
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/build_clib.py
@@ -0,0 +1,209 @@
+"""distutils.command.build_clib
+
+Implements the Distutils 'build_clib' command, to build a C/C++ library
+that is included in the module distribution and needed by an extension
+module."""
+
+
+# XXX this module has *lots* of code ripped-off quite transparently from
+# build_ext.py -- not surprisingly really, as the work required to build
+# a static library from a collection of C source files is not really all
+# that different from what's required to build a shared object file from
+# a collection of C source files. Nevertheless, I haven't done the
+# necessary refactoring to account for the overlap in code between the
+# two modules, mainly because a number of subtle details changed in the
+# cut 'n paste. Sigh.
+
+import os
+from distutils.core import Command
+from distutils.errors import *
+from distutils.sysconfig import customize_compiler
+from distutils import log
+
+def show_compilers():
+ from distutils.ccompiler import show_compilers
+ show_compilers()
+
+
+class build_clib(Command):
+
+ description = "build C/C++ libraries used by Python extensions"
+
+ user_options = [
+ ('build-clib=', 'b',
+ "directory to build C/C++ libraries to"),
+ ('build-temp=', 't',
+ "directory to put temporary build by-products"),
+ ('debug', 'g',
+ "compile with debugging information"),
+ ('force', 'f',
+ "forcibly build everything (ignore file timestamps)"),
+ ('compiler=', 'c',
+ "specify the compiler type"),
+ ]
+
+ boolean_options = ['debug', 'force']
+
+ help_options = [
+ ('help-compiler', None,
+ "list available compilers", show_compilers),
+ ]
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.build_clib = None
+ self.build_temp = None
+
+ # List of libraries to build
+ self.libraries = None
+
+ # Compilation options for all libraries
+ self.include_dirs = None
+ self.define = None
+ self.undef = None
+ self.debug = None
+ self.force = 0
+ self.compiler = None
+
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ # This might be confusing: both build-clib and build-temp default
+ # to build-temp as defined by the "build" command. This is because
+ # I think that C libraries are really just temporary build
+ # by-products, at least from the point of view of building Python
+ # extensions -- but I want to keep my options open.
+ self.set_undefined_options('build',
+ ('build_temp', 'build_clib'),
+ ('build_temp', 'build_temp'),
+ ('compiler', 'compiler'),
+ ('debug', 'debug'),
+ ('force', 'force'))
+
+ self.libraries = self.distribution.libraries
+ if self.libraries:
+ self.check_library_list(self.libraries)
+
+ if self.include_dirs is None:
+ self.include_dirs = self.distribution.include_dirs or []
+ if isinstance(self.include_dirs, str):
+ self.include_dirs = self.include_dirs.split(os.pathsep)
+
+ # XXX same as for build_ext -- what about 'self.define' and
+ # 'self.undef' ?
+
+
+ def run(self):
+ if not self.libraries:
+ return
+
+ # Yech -- this is cut 'n pasted from build_ext.py!
+ from distutils.ccompiler import new_compiler
+ self.compiler = new_compiler(compiler=self.compiler,
+ dry_run=self.dry_run,
+ force=self.force)
+ customize_compiler(self.compiler)
+
+ if self.include_dirs is not None:
+ self.compiler.set_include_dirs(self.include_dirs)
+ if self.define is not None:
+ # 'define' option is a list of (name,value) tuples
+ for (name,value) in self.define:
+ self.compiler.define_macro(name, value)
+ if self.undef is not None:
+ for macro in self.undef:
+ self.compiler.undefine_macro(macro)
+
+ self.build_libraries(self.libraries)
+
+
+ def check_library_list(self, libraries):
+ """Ensure that the list of libraries is valid.
+
+ `library` is presumably provided as a command option 'libraries'.
+ This method checks that it is a list of 2-tuples, where the tuples
+ are (library_name, build_info_dict).
+
+ Raise DistutilsSetupError if the structure is invalid anywhere;
+ just returns otherwise.
+ """
+ if not isinstance(libraries, list):
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "'libraries' option must be a list of tuples")
+
+ for lib in libraries:
+ if not isinstance(lib, tuple) and len(lib) != 2:
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "each element of 'libraries' must a 2-tuple")
+
+ name, build_info = lib
+
+ if not isinstance(name, str):
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "first element of each tuple in 'libraries' "
+ "must be a string (the library name)")
+
+ if '/' in name or (os.sep != '/' and os.sep in name):
+ raise DistutilsSetupError("bad library name '%s': "
+ "may not contain directory separators" % lib[0])
+
+ if not isinstance(build_info, dict):
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "second element of each tuple in 'libraries' "
+ "must be a dictionary (build info)")
+
+
+ def get_library_names(self):
+ # Assume the library list is valid -- 'check_library_list()' is
+ # called from 'finalize_options()', so it should be!
+ if not self.libraries:
+ return None
+
+ lib_names = []
+ for (lib_name, build_info) in self.libraries:
+ lib_names.append(lib_name)
+ return lib_names
+
+
+ def get_source_files(self):
+ self.check_library_list(self.libraries)
+ filenames = []
+ for (lib_name, build_info) in self.libraries:
+ sources = build_info.get('sources')
+ if sources is None or not isinstance(sources, (list, tuple)):
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "in 'libraries' option (library '%s'), "
+ "'sources' must be present and must be "
+ "a list of source filenames" % lib_name)
+
+ filenames.extend(sources)
+ return filenames
+
+
+ def build_libraries(self, libraries):
+ for (lib_name, build_info) in libraries:
+ sources = build_info.get('sources')
+ if sources is None or not isinstance(sources, (list, tuple)):
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "in 'libraries' option (library '%s'), "
+ "'sources' must be present and must be "
+ "a list of source filenames" % lib_name)
+ sources = list(sources)
+
+ log.info("building '%s' library", lib_name)
+
+ # First, compile the source code to object files in the library
+ # directory. (This should probably change to putting object
+ # files in a temporary build directory.)
+ macros = build_info.get('macros')
+ include_dirs = build_info.get('include_dirs')
+ objects = self.compiler.compile(sources,
+ output_dir=self.build_temp,
+ macros=macros,
+ include_dirs=include_dirs,
+ debug=self.debug)
+
+ # Now "link" the object files together into a static library.
+ # (On Unix at least, this isn't really linking -- it just
+ # builds an archive. Whatever.)
+ self.compiler.create_static_lib(objects, lib_name,
+ output_dir=self.build_clib,
+ debug=self.debug)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/build_ext.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/build_ext.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..bbb348331b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/build_ext.py
@@ -0,0 +1,755 @@
+"""distutils.command.build_ext
+
+Implements the Distutils 'build_ext' command, for building extension
+modules (currently limited to C extensions, should accommodate C++
+extensions ASAP)."""
+
+import contextlib
+import os
+import re
+import sys
+from distutils.core import Command
+from distutils.errors import *
+from distutils.sysconfig import customize_compiler, get_python_version
+from distutils.sysconfig import get_config_h_filename
+from distutils.dep_util import newer_group
+from distutils.extension import Extension
+from distutils.util import get_platform
+from distutils import log
+from . import py37compat
+
+from site import USER_BASE
+
+# An extension name is just a dot-separated list of Python NAMEs (ie.
+# the same as a fully-qualified module name).
+extension_name_re = re.compile \
+ (r'^[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z_0-9]*(\.[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z_0-9]*)*$')
+
+
+def show_compilers ():
+ from distutils.ccompiler import show_compilers
+ show_compilers()
+
+
+class build_ext(Command):
+
+ description = "build C/C++ extensions (compile/link to build directory)"
+
+ # XXX thoughts on how to deal with complex command-line options like
+ # these, i.e. how to make it so fancy_getopt can suck them off the
+ # command line and make it look like setup.py defined the appropriate
+ # lists of tuples of what-have-you.
+ # - each command needs a callback to process its command-line options
+ # - Command.__init__() needs access to its share of the whole
+ # command line (must ultimately come from
+ # Distribution.parse_command_line())
+ # - it then calls the current command class' option-parsing
+ # callback to deal with weird options like -D, which have to
+ # parse the option text and churn out some custom data
+ # structure
+ # - that data structure (in this case, a list of 2-tuples)
+ # will then be present in the command object by the time
+ # we get to finalize_options() (i.e. the constructor
+ # takes care of both command-line and client options
+ # in between initialize_options() and finalize_options())
+
+ sep_by = " (separated by '%s')" % os.pathsep
+ user_options = [
+ ('build-lib=', 'b',
+ "directory for compiled extension modules"),
+ ('build-temp=', 't',
+ "directory for temporary files (build by-products)"),
+ ('plat-name=', 'p',
+ "platform name to cross-compile for, if supported "
+ "(default: %s)" % get_platform()),
+ ('inplace', 'i',
+ "ignore build-lib and put compiled extensions into the source " +
+ "directory alongside your pure Python modules"),
+ ('include-dirs=', 'I',
+ "list of directories to search for header files" + sep_by),
+ ('define=', 'D',
+ "C preprocessor macros to define"),
+ ('undef=', 'U',
+ "C preprocessor macros to undefine"),
+ ('libraries=', 'l',
+ "external C libraries to link with"),
+ ('library-dirs=', 'L',
+ "directories to search for external C libraries" + sep_by),
+ ('rpath=', 'R',
+ "directories to search for shared C libraries at runtime"),
+ ('link-objects=', 'O',
+ "extra explicit link objects to include in the link"),
+ ('debug', 'g',
+ "compile/link with debugging information"),
+ ('force', 'f',
+ "forcibly build everything (ignore file timestamps)"),
+ ('compiler=', 'c',
+ "specify the compiler type"),
+ ('parallel=', 'j',
+ "number of parallel build jobs"),
+ ('swig-cpp', None,
+ "make SWIG create C++ files (default is C)"),
+ ('swig-opts=', None,
+ "list of SWIG command line options"),
+ ('swig=', None,
+ "path to the SWIG executable"),
+ ('user', None,
+ "add user include, library and rpath")
+ ]
+
+ boolean_options = ['inplace', 'debug', 'force', 'swig-cpp', 'user']
+
+ help_options = [
+ ('help-compiler', None,
+ "list available compilers", show_compilers),
+ ]
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.extensions = None
+ self.build_lib = None
+ self.plat_name = None
+ self.build_temp = None
+ self.inplace = 0
+ self.package = None
+
+ self.include_dirs = None
+ self.define = None
+ self.undef = None
+ self.libraries = None
+ self.library_dirs = None
+ self.rpath = None
+ self.link_objects = None
+ self.debug = None
+ self.force = None
+ self.compiler = None
+ self.swig = None
+ self.swig_cpp = None
+ self.swig_opts = None
+ self.user = None
+ self.parallel = None
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ from distutils import sysconfig
+
+ self.set_undefined_options('build',
+ ('build_lib', 'build_lib'),
+ ('build_temp', 'build_temp'),
+ ('compiler', 'compiler'),
+ ('debug', 'debug'),
+ ('force', 'force'),
+ ('parallel', 'parallel'),
+ ('plat_name', 'plat_name'),
+ )
+
+ if self.package is None:
+ self.package = self.distribution.ext_package
+
+ self.extensions = self.distribution.ext_modules
+
+ # Make sure Python's include directories (for Python.h, pyconfig.h,
+ # etc.) are in the include search path.
+ py_include = sysconfig.get_python_inc()
+ plat_py_include = sysconfig.get_python_inc(plat_specific=1)
+ if self.include_dirs is None:
+ self.include_dirs = self.distribution.include_dirs or []
+ if isinstance(self.include_dirs, str):
+ self.include_dirs = self.include_dirs.split(os.pathsep)
+
+ # If in a virtualenv, add its include directory
+ # Issue 16116
+ if sys.exec_prefix != sys.base_exec_prefix:
+ self.include_dirs.append(os.path.join(sys.exec_prefix, 'include'))
+
+ # Put the Python "system" include dir at the end, so that
+ # any local include dirs take precedence.
+ self.include_dirs.extend(py_include.split(os.path.pathsep))
+ if plat_py_include != py_include:
+ self.include_dirs.extend(
+ plat_py_include.split(os.path.pathsep))
+
+ self.ensure_string_list('libraries')
+ self.ensure_string_list('link_objects')
+
+ # Life is easier if we're not forever checking for None, so
+ # simplify these options to empty lists if unset
+ if self.libraries is None:
+ self.libraries = []
+ if self.library_dirs is None:
+ self.library_dirs = []
+ elif isinstance(self.library_dirs, str):
+ self.library_dirs = self.library_dirs.split(os.pathsep)
+
+ if self.rpath is None:
+ self.rpath = []
+ elif isinstance(self.rpath, str):
+ self.rpath = self.rpath.split(os.pathsep)
+
+ # for extensions under windows use different directories
+ # for Release and Debug builds.
+ # also Python's library directory must be appended to library_dirs
+ if os.name == 'nt':
+ # the 'libs' directory is for binary installs - we assume that
+ # must be the *native* platform. But we don't really support
+ # cross-compiling via a binary install anyway, so we let it go.
+ self.library_dirs.append(os.path.join(sys.exec_prefix, 'libs'))
+ if sys.base_exec_prefix != sys.prefix: # Issue 16116
+ self.library_dirs.append(os.path.join(sys.base_exec_prefix, 'libs'))
+ if self.debug:
+ self.build_temp = os.path.join(self.build_temp, "Debug")
+ else:
+ self.build_temp = os.path.join(self.build_temp, "Release")
+
+ # Append the source distribution include and library directories,
+ # this allows distutils on windows to work in the source tree
+ self.include_dirs.append(os.path.dirname(get_config_h_filename()))
+ _sys_home = getattr(sys, '_home', None)
+ if _sys_home:
+ self.library_dirs.append(_sys_home)
+
+ # Use the .lib files for the correct architecture
+ if self.plat_name == 'win32':
+ suffix = 'win32'
+ else:
+ # win-amd64
+ suffix = self.plat_name[4:]
+ new_lib = os.path.join(sys.exec_prefix, 'PCbuild')
+ if suffix:
+ new_lib = os.path.join(new_lib, suffix)
+ self.library_dirs.append(new_lib)
+
+ # For extensions under Cygwin, Python's library directory must be
+ # appended to library_dirs
+ if sys.platform[:6] == 'cygwin':
+ if sys.executable.startswith(os.path.join(sys.exec_prefix, "bin")):
+ # building third party extensions
+ self.library_dirs.append(os.path.join(sys.prefix, "lib",
+ "python" + get_python_version(),
+ "config"))
+ else:
+ # building python standard extensions
+ self.library_dirs.append('.')
+
+ # For building extensions with a shared Python library,
+ # Python's library directory must be appended to library_dirs
+ # See Issues: #1600860, #4366
+ if (sysconfig.get_config_var('Py_ENABLE_SHARED')):
+ if not sysconfig.python_build:
+ # building third party extensions
+ self.library_dirs.append(sysconfig.get_config_var('LIBDIR'))
+ else:
+ # building python standard extensions
+ self.library_dirs.append('.')
+
+ # The argument parsing will result in self.define being a string, but
+ # it has to be a list of 2-tuples. All the preprocessor symbols
+ # specified by the 'define' option will be set to '1'. Multiple
+ # symbols can be separated with commas.
+
+ if self.define:
+ defines = self.define.split(',')
+ self.define = [(symbol, '1') for symbol in defines]
+
+ # The option for macros to undefine is also a string from the
+ # option parsing, but has to be a list. Multiple symbols can also
+ # be separated with commas here.
+ if self.undef:
+ self.undef = self.undef.split(',')
+
+ if self.swig_opts is None:
+ self.swig_opts = []
+ else:
+ self.swig_opts = self.swig_opts.split(' ')
+
+ # Finally add the user include and library directories if requested
+ if self.user:
+ user_include = os.path.join(USER_BASE, "include")
+ user_lib = os.path.join(USER_BASE, "lib")
+ if os.path.isdir(user_include):
+ self.include_dirs.append(user_include)
+ if os.path.isdir(user_lib):
+ self.library_dirs.append(user_lib)
+ self.rpath.append(user_lib)
+
+ if isinstance(self.parallel, str):
+ try:
+ self.parallel = int(self.parallel)
+ except ValueError:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError("parallel should be an integer")
+
+ def run(self):
+ from distutils.ccompiler import new_compiler
+
+ # 'self.extensions', as supplied by setup.py, is a list of
+ # Extension instances. See the documentation for Extension (in
+ # distutils.extension) for details.
+ #
+ # For backwards compatibility with Distutils 0.8.2 and earlier, we
+ # also allow the 'extensions' list to be a list of tuples:
+ # (ext_name, build_info)
+ # where build_info is a dictionary containing everything that
+ # Extension instances do except the name, with a few things being
+ # differently named. We convert these 2-tuples to Extension
+ # instances as needed.
+
+ if not self.extensions:
+ return
+
+ # If we were asked to build any C/C++ libraries, make sure that the
+ # directory where we put them is in the library search path for
+ # linking extensions.
+ if self.distribution.has_c_libraries():
+ build_clib = self.get_finalized_command('build_clib')
+ self.libraries.extend(build_clib.get_library_names() or [])
+ self.library_dirs.append(build_clib.build_clib)
+
+ # Setup the CCompiler object that we'll use to do all the
+ # compiling and linking
+ self.compiler = new_compiler(compiler=self.compiler,
+ verbose=self.verbose,
+ dry_run=self.dry_run,
+ force=self.force)
+ customize_compiler(self.compiler)
+ # If we are cross-compiling, init the compiler now (if we are not
+ # cross-compiling, init would not hurt, but people may rely on
+ # late initialization of compiler even if they shouldn't...)
+ if os.name == 'nt' and self.plat_name != get_platform():
+ self.compiler.initialize(self.plat_name)
+
+ # And make sure that any compile/link-related options (which might
+ # come from the command-line or from the setup script) are set in
+ # that CCompiler object -- that way, they automatically apply to
+ # all compiling and linking done here.
+ if self.include_dirs is not None:
+ self.compiler.set_include_dirs(self.include_dirs)
+ if self.define is not None:
+ # 'define' option is a list of (name,value) tuples
+ for (name, value) in self.define:
+ self.compiler.define_macro(name, value)
+ if self.undef is not None:
+ for macro in self.undef:
+ self.compiler.undefine_macro(macro)
+ if self.libraries is not None:
+ self.compiler.set_libraries(self.libraries)
+ if self.library_dirs is not None:
+ self.compiler.set_library_dirs(self.library_dirs)
+ if self.rpath is not None:
+ self.compiler.set_runtime_library_dirs(self.rpath)
+ if self.link_objects is not None:
+ self.compiler.set_link_objects(self.link_objects)
+
+ # Now actually compile and link everything.
+ self.build_extensions()
+
+ def check_extensions_list(self, extensions):
+ """Ensure that the list of extensions (presumably provided as a
+ command option 'extensions') is valid, i.e. it is a list of
+ Extension objects. We also support the old-style list of 2-tuples,
+ where the tuples are (ext_name, build_info), which are converted to
+ Extension instances here.
+
+ Raise DistutilsSetupError if the structure is invalid anywhere;
+ just returns otherwise.
+ """
+ if not isinstance(extensions, list):
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "'ext_modules' option must be a list of Extension instances")
+
+ for i, ext in enumerate(extensions):
+ if isinstance(ext, Extension):
+ continue # OK! (assume type-checking done
+ # by Extension constructor)
+
+ if not isinstance(ext, tuple) or len(ext) != 2:
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "each element of 'ext_modules' option must be an "
+ "Extension instance or 2-tuple")
+
+ ext_name, build_info = ext
+
+ log.warn("old-style (ext_name, build_info) tuple found in "
+ "ext_modules for extension '%s' "
+ "-- please convert to Extension instance", ext_name)
+
+ if not (isinstance(ext_name, str) and
+ extension_name_re.match(ext_name)):
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "first element of each tuple in 'ext_modules' "
+ "must be the extension name (a string)")
+
+ if not isinstance(build_info, dict):
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "second element of each tuple in 'ext_modules' "
+ "must be a dictionary (build info)")
+
+ # OK, the (ext_name, build_info) dict is type-safe: convert it
+ # to an Extension instance.
+ ext = Extension(ext_name, build_info['sources'])
+
+ # Easy stuff: one-to-one mapping from dict elements to
+ # instance attributes.
+ for key in ('include_dirs', 'library_dirs', 'libraries',
+ 'extra_objects', 'extra_compile_args',
+ 'extra_link_args'):
+ val = build_info.get(key)
+ if val is not None:
+ setattr(ext, key, val)
+
+ # Medium-easy stuff: same syntax/semantics, different names.
+ ext.runtime_library_dirs = build_info.get('rpath')
+ if 'def_file' in build_info:
+ log.warn("'def_file' element of build info dict "
+ "no longer supported")
+
+ # Non-trivial stuff: 'macros' split into 'define_macros'
+ # and 'undef_macros'.
+ macros = build_info.get('macros')
+ if macros:
+ ext.define_macros = []
+ ext.undef_macros = []
+ for macro in macros:
+ if not (isinstance(macro, tuple) and len(macro) in (1, 2)):
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "'macros' element of build info dict "
+ "must be 1- or 2-tuple")
+ if len(macro) == 1:
+ ext.undef_macros.append(macro[0])
+ elif len(macro) == 2:
+ ext.define_macros.append(macro)
+
+ extensions[i] = ext
+
+ def get_source_files(self):
+ self.check_extensions_list(self.extensions)
+ filenames = []
+
+ # Wouldn't it be neat if we knew the names of header files too...
+ for ext in self.extensions:
+ filenames.extend(ext.sources)
+ return filenames
+
+ def get_outputs(self):
+ # Sanity check the 'extensions' list -- can't assume this is being
+ # done in the same run as a 'build_extensions()' call (in fact, we
+ # can probably assume that it *isn't*!).
+ self.check_extensions_list(self.extensions)
+
+ # And build the list of output (built) filenames. Note that this
+ # ignores the 'inplace' flag, and assumes everything goes in the
+ # "build" tree.
+ outputs = []
+ for ext in self.extensions:
+ outputs.append(self.get_ext_fullpath(ext.name))
+ return outputs
+
+ def build_extensions(self):
+ # First, sanity-check the 'extensions' list
+ self.check_extensions_list(self.extensions)
+ if self.parallel:
+ self._build_extensions_parallel()
+ else:
+ self._build_extensions_serial()
+
+ def _build_extensions_parallel(self):
+ workers = self.parallel
+ if self.parallel is True:
+ workers = os.cpu_count() # may return None
+ try:
+ from concurrent.futures import ThreadPoolExecutor
+ except ImportError:
+ workers = None
+
+ if workers is None:
+ self._build_extensions_serial()
+ return
+
+ with ThreadPoolExecutor(max_workers=workers) as executor:
+ futures = [executor.submit(self.build_extension, ext)
+ for ext in self.extensions]
+ for ext, fut in zip(self.extensions, futures):
+ with self._filter_build_errors(ext):
+ fut.result()
+
+ def _build_extensions_serial(self):
+ for ext in self.extensions:
+ with self._filter_build_errors(ext):
+ self.build_extension(ext)
+
+ @contextlib.contextmanager
+ def _filter_build_errors(self, ext):
+ try:
+ yield
+ except (CCompilerError, DistutilsError, CompileError) as e:
+ if not ext.optional:
+ raise
+ self.warn('building extension "%s" failed: %s' %
+ (ext.name, e))
+
+ def build_extension(self, ext):
+ sources = ext.sources
+ if sources is None or not isinstance(sources, (list, tuple)):
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "in 'ext_modules' option (extension '%s'), "
+ "'sources' must be present and must be "
+ "a list of source filenames" % ext.name)
+ # sort to make the resulting .so file build reproducible
+ sources = sorted(sources)
+
+ ext_path = self.get_ext_fullpath(ext.name)
+ depends = sources + ext.depends
+ if not (self.force or newer_group(depends, ext_path, 'newer')):
+ log.debug("skipping '%s' extension (up-to-date)", ext.name)
+ return
+ else:
+ log.info("building '%s' extension", ext.name)
+
+ # First, scan the sources for SWIG definition files (.i), run
+ # SWIG on 'em to create .c files, and modify the sources list
+ # accordingly.
+ sources = self.swig_sources(sources, ext)
+
+ # Next, compile the source code to object files.
+
+ # XXX not honouring 'define_macros' or 'undef_macros' -- the
+ # CCompiler API needs to change to accommodate this, and I
+ # want to do one thing at a time!
+
+ # Two possible sources for extra compiler arguments:
+ # - 'extra_compile_args' in Extension object
+ # - CFLAGS environment variable (not particularly
+ # elegant, but people seem to expect it and I
+ # guess it's useful)
+ # The environment variable should take precedence, and
+ # any sensible compiler will give precedence to later
+ # command line args. Hence we combine them in order:
+ extra_args = ext.extra_compile_args or []
+
+ macros = ext.define_macros[:]
+ for undef in ext.undef_macros:
+ macros.append((undef,))
+
+ objects = self.compiler.compile(sources,
+ output_dir=self.build_temp,
+ macros=macros,
+ include_dirs=ext.include_dirs,
+ debug=self.debug,
+ extra_postargs=extra_args,
+ depends=ext.depends)
+
+ # XXX outdated variable, kept here in case third-part code
+ # needs it.
+ self._built_objects = objects[:]
+
+ # Now link the object files together into a "shared object" --
+ # of course, first we have to figure out all the other things
+ # that go into the mix.
+ if ext.extra_objects:
+ objects.extend(ext.extra_objects)
+ extra_args = ext.extra_link_args or []
+
+ # Detect target language, if not provided
+ language = ext.language or self.compiler.detect_language(sources)
+
+ self.compiler.link_shared_object(
+ objects, ext_path,
+ libraries=self.get_libraries(ext),
+ library_dirs=ext.library_dirs,
+ runtime_library_dirs=ext.runtime_library_dirs,
+ extra_postargs=extra_args,
+ export_symbols=self.get_export_symbols(ext),
+ debug=self.debug,
+ build_temp=self.build_temp,
+ target_lang=language)
+
+ def swig_sources(self, sources, extension):
+ """Walk the list of source files in 'sources', looking for SWIG
+ interface (.i) files. Run SWIG on all that are found, and
+ return a modified 'sources' list with SWIG source files replaced
+ by the generated C (or C++) files.
+ """
+ new_sources = []
+ swig_sources = []
+ swig_targets = {}
+
+ # XXX this drops generated C/C++ files into the source tree, which
+ # is fine for developers who want to distribute the generated
+ # source -- but there should be an option to put SWIG output in
+ # the temp dir.
+
+ if self.swig_cpp:
+ log.warn("--swig-cpp is deprecated - use --swig-opts=-c++")
+
+ if self.swig_cpp or ('-c++' in self.swig_opts) or \
+ ('-c++' in extension.swig_opts):
+ target_ext = '.cpp'
+ else:
+ target_ext = '.c'
+
+ for source in sources:
+ (base, ext) = os.path.splitext(source)
+ if ext == ".i": # SWIG interface file
+ new_sources.append(base + '_wrap' + target_ext)
+ swig_sources.append(source)
+ swig_targets[source] = new_sources[-1]
+ else:
+ new_sources.append(source)
+
+ if not swig_sources:
+ return new_sources
+
+ swig = self.swig or self.find_swig()
+ swig_cmd = [swig, "-python"]
+ swig_cmd.extend(self.swig_opts)
+ if self.swig_cpp:
+ swig_cmd.append("-c++")
+
+ # Do not override commandline arguments
+ if not self.swig_opts:
+ for o in extension.swig_opts:
+ swig_cmd.append(o)
+
+ for source in swig_sources:
+ target = swig_targets[source]
+ log.info("swigging %s to %s", source, target)
+ self.spawn(swig_cmd + ["-o", target, source])
+
+ return new_sources
+
+ def find_swig(self):
+ """Return the name of the SWIG executable. On Unix, this is
+ just "swig" -- it should be in the PATH. Tries a bit harder on
+ Windows.
+ """
+ if os.name == "posix":
+ return "swig"
+ elif os.name == "nt":
+ # Look for SWIG in its standard installation directory on
+ # Windows (or so I presume!). If we find it there, great;
+ # if not, act like Unix and assume it's in the PATH.
+ for vers in ("1.3", "1.2", "1.1"):
+ fn = os.path.join("c:\\swig%s" % vers, "swig.exe")
+ if os.path.isfile(fn):
+ return fn
+ else:
+ return "swig.exe"
+ else:
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError(
+ "I don't know how to find (much less run) SWIG "
+ "on platform '%s'" % os.name)
+
+ # -- Name generators -----------------------------------------------
+ # (extension names, filenames, whatever)
+ def get_ext_fullpath(self, ext_name):
+ """Returns the path of the filename for a given extension.
+
+ The file is located in `build_lib` or directly in the package
+ (inplace option).
+ """
+ fullname = self.get_ext_fullname(ext_name)
+ modpath = fullname.split('.')
+ filename = self.get_ext_filename(modpath[-1])
+
+ if not self.inplace:
+ # no further work needed
+ # returning :
+ # build_dir/package/path/filename
+ filename = os.path.join(*modpath[:-1]+[filename])
+ return os.path.join(self.build_lib, filename)
+
+ # the inplace option requires to find the package directory
+ # using the build_py command for that
+ package = '.'.join(modpath[0:-1])
+ build_py = self.get_finalized_command('build_py')
+ package_dir = os.path.abspath(build_py.get_package_dir(package))
+
+ # returning
+ # package_dir/filename
+ return os.path.join(package_dir, filename)
+
+ def get_ext_fullname(self, ext_name):
+ """Returns the fullname of a given extension name.
+
+ Adds the `package.` prefix"""
+ if self.package is None:
+ return ext_name
+ else:
+ return self.package + '.' + ext_name
+
+ def get_ext_filename(self, ext_name):
+ r"""Convert the name of an extension (eg. "foo.bar") into the name
+ of the file from which it will be loaded (eg. "foo/bar.so", or
+ "foo\bar.pyd").
+ """
+ from distutils.sysconfig import get_config_var
+ ext_path = ext_name.split('.')
+ ext_suffix = get_config_var('EXT_SUFFIX')
+ return os.path.join(*ext_path) + ext_suffix
+
+ def get_export_symbols(self, ext):
+ """Return the list of symbols that a shared extension has to
+ export. This either uses 'ext.export_symbols' or, if it's not
+ provided, "PyInit_" + module_name. Only relevant on Windows, where
+ the .pyd file (DLL) must export the module "PyInit_" function.
+ """
+ suffix = '_' + ext.name.split('.')[-1]
+ try:
+ # Unicode module name support as defined in PEP-489
+ # https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0489/#export-hook-name
+ suffix.encode('ascii')
+ except UnicodeEncodeError:
+ suffix = 'U' + suffix.encode('punycode').replace(b'-', b'_').decode('ascii')
+
+ initfunc_name = "PyInit" + suffix
+ if initfunc_name not in ext.export_symbols:
+ ext.export_symbols.append(initfunc_name)
+ return ext.export_symbols
+
+ def get_libraries(self, ext):
+ """Return the list of libraries to link against when building a
+ shared extension. On most platforms, this is just 'ext.libraries';
+ on Windows, we add the Python library (eg. python20.dll).
+ """
+ # The python library is always needed on Windows. For MSVC, this
+ # is redundant, since the library is mentioned in a pragma in
+ # pyconfig.h that MSVC groks. The other Windows compilers all seem
+ # to need it mentioned explicitly, though, so that's what we do.
+ # Append '_d' to the python import library on debug builds.
+ if sys.platform == "win32":
+ from distutils._msvccompiler import MSVCCompiler
+ if not isinstance(self.compiler, MSVCCompiler):
+ template = "python%d%d"
+ if self.debug:
+ template = template + '_d'
+ pythonlib = (template %
+ (sys.hexversion >> 24, (sys.hexversion >> 16) & 0xff))
+ # don't extend ext.libraries, it may be shared with other
+ # extensions, it is a reference to the original list
+ return ext.libraries + [pythonlib]
+ else:
+ # On Android only the main executable and LD_PRELOADs are considered
+ # to be RTLD_GLOBAL, all the dependencies of the main executable
+ # remain RTLD_LOCAL and so the shared libraries must be linked with
+ # libpython when python is built with a shared python library (issue
+ # bpo-21536).
+ # On Cygwin (and if required, other POSIX-like platforms based on
+ # Windows like MinGW) it is simply necessary that all symbols in
+ # shared libraries are resolved at link time.
+ from distutils.sysconfig import get_config_var
+ link_libpython = False
+ if get_config_var('Py_ENABLE_SHARED'):
+ # A native build on an Android device or on Cygwin
+ if hasattr(sys, 'getandroidapilevel'):
+ link_libpython = True
+ elif sys.platform == 'cygwin':
+ link_libpython = True
+ elif '_PYTHON_HOST_PLATFORM' in os.environ:
+ # We are cross-compiling for one of the relevant platforms
+ if get_config_var('ANDROID_API_LEVEL') != 0:
+ link_libpython = True
+ elif get_config_var('MACHDEP') == 'cygwin':
+ link_libpython = True
+
+ if link_libpython:
+ ldversion = get_config_var('LDVERSION')
+ return ext.libraries + ['python' + ldversion]
+
+ return ext.libraries + py37compat.pythonlib()
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/build_py.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/build_py.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..edc2171cd1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/build_py.py
@@ -0,0 +1,416 @@
+"""distutils.command.build_py
+
+Implements the Distutils 'build_py' command."""
+
+import os
+import importlib.util
+import sys
+import glob
+
+from distutils.core import Command
+from distutils.errors import *
+from distutils.util import convert_path, Mixin2to3
+from distutils import log
+
+class build_py (Command):
+
+ description = "\"build\" pure Python modules (copy to build directory)"
+
+ user_options = [
+ ('build-lib=', 'd', "directory to \"build\" (copy) to"),
+ ('compile', 'c', "compile .py to .pyc"),
+ ('no-compile', None, "don't compile .py files [default]"),
+ ('optimize=', 'O',
+ "also compile with optimization: -O1 for \"python -O\", "
+ "-O2 for \"python -OO\", and -O0 to disable [default: -O0]"),
+ ('force', 'f', "forcibly build everything (ignore file timestamps)"),
+ ]
+
+ boolean_options = ['compile', 'force']
+ negative_opt = {'no-compile' : 'compile'}
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.build_lib = None
+ self.py_modules = None
+ self.package = None
+ self.package_data = None
+ self.package_dir = None
+ self.compile = 0
+ self.optimize = 0
+ self.force = None
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ self.set_undefined_options('build',
+ ('build_lib', 'build_lib'),
+ ('force', 'force'))
+
+ # Get the distribution options that are aliases for build_py
+ # options -- list of packages and list of modules.
+ self.packages = self.distribution.packages
+ self.py_modules = self.distribution.py_modules
+ self.package_data = self.distribution.package_data
+ self.package_dir = {}
+ if self.distribution.package_dir:
+ for name, path in self.distribution.package_dir.items():
+ self.package_dir[name] = convert_path(path)
+ self.data_files = self.get_data_files()
+
+ # Ick, copied straight from install_lib.py (fancy_getopt needs a
+ # type system! Hell, *everything* needs a type system!!!)
+ if not isinstance(self.optimize, int):
+ try:
+ self.optimize = int(self.optimize)
+ assert 0 <= self.optimize <= 2
+ except (ValueError, AssertionError):
+ raise DistutilsOptionError("optimize must be 0, 1, or 2")
+
+ def run(self):
+ # XXX copy_file by default preserves atime and mtime. IMHO this is
+ # the right thing to do, but perhaps it should be an option -- in
+ # particular, a site administrator might want installed files to
+ # reflect the time of installation rather than the last
+ # modification time before the installed release.
+
+ # XXX copy_file by default preserves mode, which appears to be the
+ # wrong thing to do: if a file is read-only in the working
+ # directory, we want it to be installed read/write so that the next
+ # installation of the same module distribution can overwrite it
+ # without problems. (This might be a Unix-specific issue.) Thus
+ # we turn off 'preserve_mode' when copying to the build directory,
+ # since the build directory is supposed to be exactly what the
+ # installation will look like (ie. we preserve mode when
+ # installing).
+
+ # Two options control which modules will be installed: 'packages'
+ # and 'py_modules'. The former lets us work with whole packages, not
+ # specifying individual modules at all; the latter is for
+ # specifying modules one-at-a-time.
+
+ if self.py_modules:
+ self.build_modules()
+ if self.packages:
+ self.build_packages()
+ self.build_package_data()
+
+ self.byte_compile(self.get_outputs(include_bytecode=0))
+
+ def get_data_files(self):
+ """Generate list of '(package,src_dir,build_dir,filenames)' tuples"""
+ data = []
+ if not self.packages:
+ return data
+ for package in self.packages:
+ # Locate package source directory
+ src_dir = self.get_package_dir(package)
+
+ # Compute package build directory
+ build_dir = os.path.join(*([self.build_lib] + package.split('.')))
+
+ # Length of path to strip from found files
+ plen = 0
+ if src_dir:
+ plen = len(src_dir)+1
+
+ # Strip directory from globbed filenames
+ filenames = [
+ file[plen:] for file in self.find_data_files(package, src_dir)
+ ]
+ data.append((package, src_dir, build_dir, filenames))
+ return data
+
+ def find_data_files(self, package, src_dir):
+ """Return filenames for package's data files in 'src_dir'"""
+ globs = (self.package_data.get('', [])
+ + self.package_data.get(package, []))
+ files = []
+ for pattern in globs:
+ # Each pattern has to be converted to a platform-specific path
+ filelist = glob.glob(os.path.join(glob.escape(src_dir), convert_path(pattern)))
+ # Files that match more than one pattern are only added once
+ files.extend([fn for fn in filelist if fn not in files
+ and os.path.isfile(fn)])
+ return files
+
+ def build_package_data(self):
+ """Copy data files into build directory"""
+ lastdir = None
+ for package, src_dir, build_dir, filenames in self.data_files:
+ for filename in filenames:
+ target = os.path.join(build_dir, filename)
+ self.mkpath(os.path.dirname(target))
+ self.copy_file(os.path.join(src_dir, filename), target,
+ preserve_mode=False)
+
+ def get_package_dir(self, package):
+ """Return the directory, relative to the top of the source
+ distribution, where package 'package' should be found
+ (at least according to the 'package_dir' option, if any)."""
+ path = package.split('.')
+
+ if not self.package_dir:
+ if path:
+ return os.path.join(*path)
+ else:
+ return ''
+ else:
+ tail = []
+ while path:
+ try:
+ pdir = self.package_dir['.'.join(path)]
+ except KeyError:
+ tail.insert(0, path[-1])
+ del path[-1]
+ else:
+ tail.insert(0, pdir)
+ return os.path.join(*tail)
+ else:
+ # Oops, got all the way through 'path' without finding a
+ # match in package_dir. If package_dir defines a directory
+ # for the root (nameless) package, then fallback on it;
+ # otherwise, we might as well have not consulted
+ # package_dir at all, as we just use the directory implied
+ # by 'tail' (which should be the same as the original value
+ # of 'path' at this point).
+ pdir = self.package_dir.get('')
+ if pdir is not None:
+ tail.insert(0, pdir)
+
+ if tail:
+ return os.path.join(*tail)
+ else:
+ return ''
+
+ def check_package(self, package, package_dir):
+ # Empty dir name means current directory, which we can probably
+ # assume exists. Also, os.path.exists and isdir don't know about
+ # my "empty string means current dir" convention, so we have to
+ # circumvent them.
+ if package_dir != "":
+ if not os.path.exists(package_dir):
+ raise DistutilsFileError(
+ "package directory '%s' does not exist" % package_dir)
+ if not os.path.isdir(package_dir):
+ raise DistutilsFileError(
+ "supposed package directory '%s' exists, "
+ "but is not a directory" % package_dir)
+
+ # Require __init__.py for all but the "root package"
+ if package:
+ init_py = os.path.join(package_dir, "__init__.py")
+ if os.path.isfile(init_py):
+ return init_py
+ else:
+ log.warn(("package init file '%s' not found " +
+ "(or not a regular file)"), init_py)
+
+ # Either not in a package at all (__init__.py not expected), or
+ # __init__.py doesn't exist -- so don't return the filename.
+ return None
+
+ def check_module(self, module, module_file):
+ if not os.path.isfile(module_file):
+ log.warn("file %s (for module %s) not found", module_file, module)
+ return False
+ else:
+ return True
+
+ def find_package_modules(self, package, package_dir):
+ self.check_package(package, package_dir)
+ module_files = glob.glob(os.path.join(glob.escape(package_dir), "*.py"))
+ modules = []
+ setup_script = os.path.abspath(self.distribution.script_name)
+
+ for f in module_files:
+ abs_f = os.path.abspath(f)
+ if abs_f != setup_script:
+ module = os.path.splitext(os.path.basename(f))[0]
+ modules.append((package, module, f))
+ else:
+ self.debug_print("excluding %s" % setup_script)
+ return modules
+
+ def find_modules(self):
+ """Finds individually-specified Python modules, ie. those listed by
+ module name in 'self.py_modules'. Returns a list of tuples (package,
+ module_base, filename): 'package' is a tuple of the path through
+ package-space to the module; 'module_base' is the bare (no
+ packages, no dots) module name, and 'filename' is the path to the
+ ".py" file (relative to the distribution root) that implements the
+ module.
+ """
+ # Map package names to tuples of useful info about the package:
+ # (package_dir, checked)
+ # package_dir - the directory where we'll find source files for
+ # this package
+ # checked - true if we have checked that the package directory
+ # is valid (exists, contains __init__.py, ... ?)
+ packages = {}
+
+ # List of (package, module, filename) tuples to return
+ modules = []
+
+ # We treat modules-in-packages almost the same as toplevel modules,
+ # just the "package" for a toplevel is empty (either an empty
+ # string or empty list, depending on context). Differences:
+ # - don't check for __init__.py in directory for empty package
+ for module in self.py_modules:
+ path = module.split('.')
+ package = '.'.join(path[0:-1])
+ module_base = path[-1]
+
+ try:
+ (package_dir, checked) = packages[package]
+ except KeyError:
+ package_dir = self.get_package_dir(package)
+ checked = 0
+
+ if not checked:
+ init_py = self.check_package(package, package_dir)
+ packages[package] = (package_dir, 1)
+ if init_py:
+ modules.append((package, "__init__", init_py))
+
+ # XXX perhaps we should also check for just .pyc files
+ # (so greedy closed-source bastards can distribute Python
+ # modules too)
+ module_file = os.path.join(package_dir, module_base + ".py")
+ if not self.check_module(module, module_file):
+ continue
+
+ modules.append((package, module_base, module_file))
+
+ return modules
+
+ def find_all_modules(self):
+ """Compute the list of all modules that will be built, whether
+ they are specified one-module-at-a-time ('self.py_modules') or
+ by whole packages ('self.packages'). Return a list of tuples
+ (package, module, module_file), just like 'find_modules()' and
+ 'find_package_modules()' do."""
+ modules = []
+ if self.py_modules:
+ modules.extend(self.find_modules())
+ if self.packages:
+ for package in self.packages:
+ package_dir = self.get_package_dir(package)
+ m = self.find_package_modules(package, package_dir)
+ modules.extend(m)
+ return modules
+
+ def get_source_files(self):
+ return [module[-1] for module in self.find_all_modules()]
+
+ def get_module_outfile(self, build_dir, package, module):
+ outfile_path = [build_dir] + list(package) + [module + ".py"]
+ return os.path.join(*outfile_path)
+
+ def get_outputs(self, include_bytecode=1):
+ modules = self.find_all_modules()
+ outputs = []
+ for (package, module, module_file) in modules:
+ package = package.split('.')
+ filename = self.get_module_outfile(self.build_lib, package, module)
+ outputs.append(filename)
+ if include_bytecode:
+ if self.compile:
+ outputs.append(importlib.util.cache_from_source(
+ filename, optimization=''))
+ if self.optimize > 0:
+ outputs.append(importlib.util.cache_from_source(
+ filename, optimization=self.optimize))
+
+ outputs += [
+ os.path.join(build_dir, filename)
+ for package, src_dir, build_dir, filenames in self.data_files
+ for filename in filenames
+ ]
+
+ return outputs
+
+ def build_module(self, module, module_file, package):
+ if isinstance(package, str):
+ package = package.split('.')
+ elif not isinstance(package, (list, tuple)):
+ raise TypeError(
+ "'package' must be a string (dot-separated), list, or tuple")
+
+ # Now put the module source file into the "build" area -- this is
+ # easy, we just copy it somewhere under self.build_lib (the build
+ # directory for Python source).
+ outfile = self.get_module_outfile(self.build_lib, package, module)
+ dir = os.path.dirname(outfile)
+ self.mkpath(dir)
+ return self.copy_file(module_file, outfile, preserve_mode=0)
+
+ def build_modules(self):
+ modules = self.find_modules()
+ for (package, module, module_file) in modules:
+ # Now "build" the module -- ie. copy the source file to
+ # self.build_lib (the build directory for Python source).
+ # (Actually, it gets copied to the directory for this package
+ # under self.build_lib.)
+ self.build_module(module, module_file, package)
+
+ def build_packages(self):
+ for package in self.packages:
+ # Get list of (package, module, module_file) tuples based on
+ # scanning the package directory. 'package' is only included
+ # in the tuple so that 'find_modules()' and
+ # 'find_package_tuples()' have a consistent interface; it's
+ # ignored here (apart from a sanity check). Also, 'module' is
+ # the *unqualified* module name (ie. no dots, no package -- we
+ # already know its package!), and 'module_file' is the path to
+ # the .py file, relative to the current directory
+ # (ie. including 'package_dir').
+ package_dir = self.get_package_dir(package)
+ modules = self.find_package_modules(package, package_dir)
+
+ # Now loop over the modules we found, "building" each one (just
+ # copy it to self.build_lib).
+ for (package_, module, module_file) in modules:
+ assert package == package_
+ self.build_module(module, module_file, package)
+
+ def byte_compile(self, files):
+ if sys.dont_write_bytecode:
+ self.warn('byte-compiling is disabled, skipping.')
+ return
+
+ from distutils.util import byte_compile
+ prefix = self.build_lib
+ if prefix[-1] != os.sep:
+ prefix = prefix + os.sep
+
+ # XXX this code is essentially the same as the 'byte_compile()
+ # method of the "install_lib" command, except for the determination
+ # of the 'prefix' string. Hmmm.
+ if self.compile:
+ byte_compile(files, optimize=0,
+ force=self.force, prefix=prefix, dry_run=self.dry_run)
+ if self.optimize > 0:
+ byte_compile(files, optimize=self.optimize,
+ force=self.force, prefix=prefix, dry_run=self.dry_run)
+
+class build_py_2to3(build_py, Mixin2to3):
+ def run(self):
+ self.updated_files = []
+
+ # Base class code
+ if self.py_modules:
+ self.build_modules()
+ if self.packages:
+ self.build_packages()
+ self.build_package_data()
+
+ # 2to3
+ self.run_2to3(self.updated_files)
+
+ # Remaining base class code
+ self.byte_compile(self.get_outputs(include_bytecode=0))
+
+ def build_module(self, module, module_file, package):
+ res = build_py.build_module(self, module, module_file, package)
+ if res[1]:
+ # file was copied
+ self.updated_files.append(res[0])
+ return res
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/build_scripts.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/build_scripts.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..ccc70e6465
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/build_scripts.py
@@ -0,0 +1,160 @@
+"""distutils.command.build_scripts
+
+Implements the Distutils 'build_scripts' command."""
+
+import os, re
+from stat import ST_MODE
+from distutils import sysconfig
+from distutils.core import Command
+from distutils.dep_util import newer
+from distutils.util import convert_path, Mixin2to3
+from distutils import log
+import tokenize
+
+# check if Python is called on the first line with this expression
+first_line_re = re.compile(b'^#!.*python[0-9.]*([ \t].*)?$')
+
+class build_scripts(Command):
+
+ description = "\"build\" scripts (copy and fixup #! line)"
+
+ user_options = [
+ ('build-dir=', 'd', "directory to \"build\" (copy) to"),
+ ('force', 'f', "forcibly build everything (ignore file timestamps"),
+ ('executable=', 'e', "specify final destination interpreter path"),
+ ]
+
+ boolean_options = ['force']
+
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.build_dir = None
+ self.scripts = None
+ self.force = None
+ self.executable = None
+ self.outfiles = None
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ self.set_undefined_options('build',
+ ('build_scripts', 'build_dir'),
+ ('force', 'force'),
+ ('executable', 'executable'))
+ self.scripts = self.distribution.scripts
+
+ def get_source_files(self):
+ return self.scripts
+
+ def run(self):
+ if not self.scripts:
+ return
+ self.copy_scripts()
+
+
+ def copy_scripts(self):
+ r"""Copy each script listed in 'self.scripts'; if it's marked as a
+ Python script in the Unix way (first line matches 'first_line_re',
+ ie. starts with "\#!" and contains "python"), then adjust the first
+ line to refer to the current Python interpreter as we copy.
+ """
+ self.mkpath(self.build_dir)
+ outfiles = []
+ updated_files = []
+ for script in self.scripts:
+ adjust = False
+ script = convert_path(script)
+ outfile = os.path.join(self.build_dir, os.path.basename(script))
+ outfiles.append(outfile)
+
+ if not self.force and not newer(script, outfile):
+ log.debug("not copying %s (up-to-date)", script)
+ continue
+
+ # Always open the file, but ignore failures in dry-run mode --
+ # that way, we'll get accurate feedback if we can read the
+ # script.
+ try:
+ f = open(script, "rb")
+ except OSError:
+ if not self.dry_run:
+ raise
+ f = None
+ else:
+ encoding, lines = tokenize.detect_encoding(f.readline)
+ f.seek(0)
+ first_line = f.readline()
+ if not first_line:
+ self.warn("%s is an empty file (skipping)" % script)
+ continue
+
+ match = first_line_re.match(first_line)
+ if match:
+ adjust = True
+ post_interp = match.group(1) or b''
+
+ if adjust:
+ log.info("copying and adjusting %s -> %s", script,
+ self.build_dir)
+ updated_files.append(outfile)
+ if not self.dry_run:
+ if not sysconfig.python_build:
+ executable = self.executable
+ else:
+ executable = os.path.join(
+ sysconfig.get_config_var("BINDIR"),
+ "python%s%s" % (sysconfig.get_config_var("VERSION"),
+ sysconfig.get_config_var("EXE")))
+ executable = os.fsencode(executable)
+ shebang = b"#!" + executable + post_interp + b"\n"
+ # Python parser starts to read a script using UTF-8 until
+ # it gets a #coding:xxx cookie. The shebang has to be the
+ # first line of a file, the #coding:xxx cookie cannot be
+ # written before. So the shebang has to be decodable from
+ # UTF-8.
+ try:
+ shebang.decode('utf-8')
+ except UnicodeDecodeError:
+ raise ValueError(
+ "The shebang ({!r}) is not decodable "
+ "from utf-8".format(shebang))
+ # If the script is encoded to a custom encoding (use a
+ # #coding:xxx cookie), the shebang has to be decodable from
+ # the script encoding too.
+ try:
+ shebang.decode(encoding)
+ except UnicodeDecodeError:
+ raise ValueError(
+ "The shebang ({!r}) is not decodable "
+ "from the script encoding ({})"
+ .format(shebang, encoding))
+ with open(outfile, "wb") as outf:
+ outf.write(shebang)
+ outf.writelines(f.readlines())
+ if f:
+ f.close()
+ else:
+ if f:
+ f.close()
+ updated_files.append(outfile)
+ self.copy_file(script, outfile)
+
+ if os.name == 'posix':
+ for file in outfiles:
+ if self.dry_run:
+ log.info("changing mode of %s", file)
+ else:
+ oldmode = os.stat(file)[ST_MODE] & 0o7777
+ newmode = (oldmode | 0o555) & 0o7777
+ if newmode != oldmode:
+ log.info("changing mode of %s from %o to %o",
+ file, oldmode, newmode)
+ os.chmod(file, newmode)
+ # XXX should we modify self.outfiles?
+ return outfiles, updated_files
+
+class build_scripts_2to3(build_scripts, Mixin2to3):
+
+ def copy_scripts(self):
+ outfiles, updated_files = build_scripts.copy_scripts(self)
+ if not self.dry_run:
+ self.run_2to3(updated_files)
+ return outfiles, updated_files
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/check.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/check.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..ada2500646
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/check.py
@@ -0,0 +1,148 @@
+"""distutils.command.check
+
+Implements the Distutils 'check' command.
+"""
+from distutils.core import Command
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsSetupError
+
+try:
+ # docutils is installed
+ from docutils.utils import Reporter
+ from docutils.parsers.rst import Parser
+ from docutils import frontend
+ from docutils import nodes
+
+ class SilentReporter(Reporter):
+
+ def __init__(self, source, report_level, halt_level, stream=None,
+ debug=0, encoding='ascii', error_handler='replace'):
+ self.messages = []
+ Reporter.__init__(self, source, report_level, halt_level, stream,
+ debug, encoding, error_handler)
+
+ def system_message(self, level, message, *children, **kwargs):
+ self.messages.append((level, message, children, kwargs))
+ return nodes.system_message(message, level=level,
+ type=self.levels[level],
+ *children, **kwargs)
+
+ HAS_DOCUTILS = True
+except Exception:
+ # Catch all exceptions because exceptions besides ImportError probably
+ # indicate that docutils is not ported to Py3k.
+ HAS_DOCUTILS = False
+
+class check(Command):
+ """This command checks the meta-data of the package.
+ """
+ description = ("perform some checks on the package")
+ user_options = [('metadata', 'm', 'Verify meta-data'),
+ ('restructuredtext', 'r',
+ ('Checks if long string meta-data syntax '
+ 'are reStructuredText-compliant')),
+ ('strict', 's',
+ 'Will exit with an error if a check fails')]
+
+ boolean_options = ['metadata', 'restructuredtext', 'strict']
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ """Sets default values for options."""
+ self.restructuredtext = 0
+ self.metadata = 1
+ self.strict = 0
+ self._warnings = 0
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ pass
+
+ def warn(self, msg):
+ """Counts the number of warnings that occurs."""
+ self._warnings += 1
+ return Command.warn(self, msg)
+
+ def run(self):
+ """Runs the command."""
+ # perform the various tests
+ if self.metadata:
+ self.check_metadata()
+ if self.restructuredtext:
+ if HAS_DOCUTILS:
+ self.check_restructuredtext()
+ elif self.strict:
+ raise DistutilsSetupError('The docutils package is needed.')
+
+ # let's raise an error in strict mode, if we have at least
+ # one warning
+ if self.strict and self._warnings > 0:
+ raise DistutilsSetupError('Please correct your package.')
+
+ def check_metadata(self):
+ """Ensures that all required elements of meta-data are supplied.
+
+ Required fields:
+ name, version, URL
+
+ Recommended fields:
+ (author and author_email) or (maintainer and maintainer_email))
+
+ Warns if any are missing.
+ """
+ metadata = self.distribution.metadata
+
+ missing = []
+ for attr in ('name', 'version', 'url'):
+ if not (hasattr(metadata, attr) and getattr(metadata, attr)):
+ missing.append(attr)
+
+ if missing:
+ self.warn("missing required meta-data: %s" % ', '.join(missing))
+ if metadata.author:
+ if not metadata.author_email:
+ self.warn("missing meta-data: if 'author' supplied, " +
+ "'author_email' should be supplied too")
+ elif metadata.maintainer:
+ if not metadata.maintainer_email:
+ self.warn("missing meta-data: if 'maintainer' supplied, " +
+ "'maintainer_email' should be supplied too")
+ else:
+ self.warn("missing meta-data: either (author and author_email) " +
+ "or (maintainer and maintainer_email) " +
+ "should be supplied")
+
+ def check_restructuredtext(self):
+ """Checks if the long string fields are reST-compliant."""
+ data = self.distribution.get_long_description()
+ for warning in self._check_rst_data(data):
+ line = warning[-1].get('line')
+ if line is None:
+ warning = warning[1]
+ else:
+ warning = '%s (line %s)' % (warning[1], line)
+ self.warn(warning)
+
+ def _check_rst_data(self, data):
+ """Returns warnings when the provided data doesn't compile."""
+ # the include and csv_table directives need this to be a path
+ source_path = self.distribution.script_name or 'setup.py'
+ parser = Parser()
+ settings = frontend.OptionParser(components=(Parser,)).get_default_values()
+ settings.tab_width = 4
+ settings.pep_references = None
+ settings.rfc_references = None
+ reporter = SilentReporter(source_path,
+ settings.report_level,
+ settings.halt_level,
+ stream=settings.warning_stream,
+ debug=settings.debug,
+ encoding=settings.error_encoding,
+ error_handler=settings.error_encoding_error_handler)
+
+ document = nodes.document(settings, reporter, source=source_path)
+ document.note_source(source_path, -1)
+ try:
+ parser.parse(data, document)
+ except AttributeError as e:
+ reporter.messages.append(
+ (-1, 'Could not finish the parsing: %s.' % e, '', {}))
+
+ return reporter.messages
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/clean.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/clean.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..0cb2701662
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/clean.py
@@ -0,0 +1,76 @@
+"""distutils.command.clean
+
+Implements the Distutils 'clean' command."""
+
+# contributed by Bastian Kleineidam <calvin@cs.uni-sb.de>, added 2000-03-18
+
+import os
+from distutils.core import Command
+from distutils.dir_util import remove_tree
+from distutils import log
+
+class clean(Command):
+
+ description = "clean up temporary files from 'build' command"
+ user_options = [
+ ('build-base=', 'b',
+ "base build directory (default: 'build.build-base')"),
+ ('build-lib=', None,
+ "build directory for all modules (default: 'build.build-lib')"),
+ ('build-temp=', 't',
+ "temporary build directory (default: 'build.build-temp')"),
+ ('build-scripts=', None,
+ "build directory for scripts (default: 'build.build-scripts')"),
+ ('bdist-base=', None,
+ "temporary directory for built distributions"),
+ ('all', 'a',
+ "remove all build output, not just temporary by-products")
+ ]
+
+ boolean_options = ['all']
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.build_base = None
+ self.build_lib = None
+ self.build_temp = None
+ self.build_scripts = None
+ self.bdist_base = None
+ self.all = None
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ self.set_undefined_options('build',
+ ('build_base', 'build_base'),
+ ('build_lib', 'build_lib'),
+ ('build_scripts', 'build_scripts'),
+ ('build_temp', 'build_temp'))
+ self.set_undefined_options('bdist',
+ ('bdist_base', 'bdist_base'))
+
+ def run(self):
+ # remove the build/temp.<plat> directory (unless it's already
+ # gone)
+ if os.path.exists(self.build_temp):
+ remove_tree(self.build_temp, dry_run=self.dry_run)
+ else:
+ log.debug("'%s' does not exist -- can't clean it",
+ self.build_temp)
+
+ if self.all:
+ # remove build directories
+ for directory in (self.build_lib,
+ self.bdist_base,
+ self.build_scripts):
+ if os.path.exists(directory):
+ remove_tree(directory, dry_run=self.dry_run)
+ else:
+ log.warn("'%s' does not exist -- can't clean it",
+ directory)
+
+ # just for the heck of it, try to remove the base build directory:
+ # we might have emptied it right now, but if not we don't care
+ if not self.dry_run:
+ try:
+ os.rmdir(self.build_base)
+ log.info("removing '%s'", self.build_base)
+ except OSError:
+ pass
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/config.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/config.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..aeda408e73
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/config.py
@@ -0,0 +1,344 @@
+"""distutils.command.config
+
+Implements the Distutils 'config' command, a (mostly) empty command class
+that exists mainly to be sub-classed by specific module distributions and
+applications. The idea is that while every "config" command is different,
+at least they're all named the same, and users always see "config" in the
+list of standard commands. Also, this is a good place to put common
+configure-like tasks: "try to compile this C code", or "figure out where
+this header file lives".
+"""
+
+import os, re
+
+from distutils.core import Command
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsExecError
+from distutils.sysconfig import customize_compiler
+from distutils import log
+
+LANG_EXT = {"c": ".c", "c++": ".cxx"}
+
+class config(Command):
+
+ description = "prepare to build"
+
+ user_options = [
+ ('compiler=', None,
+ "specify the compiler type"),
+ ('cc=', None,
+ "specify the compiler executable"),
+ ('include-dirs=', 'I',
+ "list of directories to search for header files"),
+ ('define=', 'D',
+ "C preprocessor macros to define"),
+ ('undef=', 'U',
+ "C preprocessor macros to undefine"),
+ ('libraries=', 'l',
+ "external C libraries to link with"),
+ ('library-dirs=', 'L',
+ "directories to search for external C libraries"),
+
+ ('noisy', None,
+ "show every action (compile, link, run, ...) taken"),
+ ('dump-source', None,
+ "dump generated source files before attempting to compile them"),
+ ]
+
+
+ # The three standard command methods: since the "config" command
+ # does nothing by default, these are empty.
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.compiler = None
+ self.cc = None
+ self.include_dirs = None
+ self.libraries = None
+ self.library_dirs = None
+
+ # maximal output for now
+ self.noisy = 1
+ self.dump_source = 1
+
+ # list of temporary files generated along-the-way that we have
+ # to clean at some point
+ self.temp_files = []
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ if self.include_dirs is None:
+ self.include_dirs = self.distribution.include_dirs or []
+ elif isinstance(self.include_dirs, str):
+ self.include_dirs = self.include_dirs.split(os.pathsep)
+
+ if self.libraries is None:
+ self.libraries = []
+ elif isinstance(self.libraries, str):
+ self.libraries = [self.libraries]
+
+ if self.library_dirs is None:
+ self.library_dirs = []
+ elif isinstance(self.library_dirs, str):
+ self.library_dirs = self.library_dirs.split(os.pathsep)
+
+ def run(self):
+ pass
+
+ # Utility methods for actual "config" commands. The interfaces are
+ # loosely based on Autoconf macros of similar names. Sub-classes
+ # may use these freely.
+
+ def _check_compiler(self):
+ """Check that 'self.compiler' really is a CCompiler object;
+ if not, make it one.
+ """
+ # We do this late, and only on-demand, because this is an expensive
+ # import.
+ from distutils.ccompiler import CCompiler, new_compiler
+ if not isinstance(self.compiler, CCompiler):
+ self.compiler = new_compiler(compiler=self.compiler,
+ dry_run=self.dry_run, force=1)
+ customize_compiler(self.compiler)
+ if self.include_dirs:
+ self.compiler.set_include_dirs(self.include_dirs)
+ if self.libraries:
+ self.compiler.set_libraries(self.libraries)
+ if self.library_dirs:
+ self.compiler.set_library_dirs(self.library_dirs)
+
+ def _gen_temp_sourcefile(self, body, headers, lang):
+ filename = "_configtest" + LANG_EXT[lang]
+ with open(filename, "w") as file:
+ if headers:
+ for header in headers:
+ file.write("#include <%s>\n" % header)
+ file.write("\n")
+ file.write(body)
+ if body[-1] != "\n":
+ file.write("\n")
+ return filename
+
+ def _preprocess(self, body, headers, include_dirs, lang):
+ src = self._gen_temp_sourcefile(body, headers, lang)
+ out = "_configtest.i"
+ self.temp_files.extend([src, out])
+ self.compiler.preprocess(src, out, include_dirs=include_dirs)
+ return (src, out)
+
+ def _compile(self, body, headers, include_dirs, lang):
+ src = self._gen_temp_sourcefile(body, headers, lang)
+ if self.dump_source:
+ dump_file(src, "compiling '%s':" % src)
+ (obj,) = self.compiler.object_filenames([src])
+ self.temp_files.extend([src, obj])
+ self.compiler.compile([src], include_dirs=include_dirs)
+ return (src, obj)
+
+ def _link(self, body, headers, include_dirs, libraries, library_dirs,
+ lang):
+ (src, obj) = self._compile(body, headers, include_dirs, lang)
+ prog = os.path.splitext(os.path.basename(src))[0]
+ self.compiler.link_executable([obj], prog,
+ libraries=libraries,
+ library_dirs=library_dirs,
+ target_lang=lang)
+
+ if self.compiler.exe_extension is not None:
+ prog = prog + self.compiler.exe_extension
+ self.temp_files.append(prog)
+
+ return (src, obj, prog)
+
+ def _clean(self, *filenames):
+ if not filenames:
+ filenames = self.temp_files
+ self.temp_files = []
+ log.info("removing: %s", ' '.join(filenames))
+ for filename in filenames:
+ try:
+ os.remove(filename)
+ except OSError:
+ pass
+
+
+ # XXX these ignore the dry-run flag: what to do, what to do? even if
+ # you want a dry-run build, you still need some sort of configuration
+ # info. My inclination is to make it up to the real config command to
+ # consult 'dry_run', and assume a default (minimal) configuration if
+ # true. The problem with trying to do it here is that you'd have to
+ # return either true or false from all the 'try' methods, neither of
+ # which is correct.
+
+ # XXX need access to the header search path and maybe default macros.
+
+ def try_cpp(self, body=None, headers=None, include_dirs=None, lang="c"):
+ """Construct a source file from 'body' (a string containing lines
+ of C/C++ code) and 'headers' (a list of header files to include)
+ and run it through the preprocessor. Return true if the
+ preprocessor succeeded, false if there were any errors.
+ ('body' probably isn't of much use, but what the heck.)
+ """
+ from distutils.ccompiler import CompileError
+ self._check_compiler()
+ ok = True
+ try:
+ self._preprocess(body, headers, include_dirs, lang)
+ except CompileError:
+ ok = False
+
+ self._clean()
+ return ok
+
+ def search_cpp(self, pattern, body=None, headers=None, include_dirs=None,
+ lang="c"):
+ """Construct a source file (just like 'try_cpp()'), run it through
+ the preprocessor, and return true if any line of the output matches
+ 'pattern'. 'pattern' should either be a compiled regex object or a
+ string containing a regex. If both 'body' and 'headers' are None,
+ preprocesses an empty file -- which can be useful to determine the
+ symbols the preprocessor and compiler set by default.
+ """
+ self._check_compiler()
+ src, out = self._preprocess(body, headers, include_dirs, lang)
+
+ if isinstance(pattern, str):
+ pattern = re.compile(pattern)
+
+ with open(out) as file:
+ match = False
+ while True:
+ line = file.readline()
+ if line == '':
+ break
+ if pattern.search(line):
+ match = True
+ break
+
+ self._clean()
+ return match
+
+ def try_compile(self, body, headers=None, include_dirs=None, lang="c"):
+ """Try to compile a source file built from 'body' and 'headers'.
+ Return true on success, false otherwise.
+ """
+ from distutils.ccompiler import CompileError
+ self._check_compiler()
+ try:
+ self._compile(body, headers, include_dirs, lang)
+ ok = True
+ except CompileError:
+ ok = False
+
+ log.info(ok and "success!" or "failure.")
+ self._clean()
+ return ok
+
+ def try_link(self, body, headers=None, include_dirs=None, libraries=None,
+ library_dirs=None, lang="c"):
+ """Try to compile and link a source file, built from 'body' and
+ 'headers', to executable form. Return true on success, false
+ otherwise.
+ """
+ from distutils.ccompiler import CompileError, LinkError
+ self._check_compiler()
+ try:
+ self._link(body, headers, include_dirs,
+ libraries, library_dirs, lang)
+ ok = True
+ except (CompileError, LinkError):
+ ok = False
+
+ log.info(ok and "success!" or "failure.")
+ self._clean()
+ return ok
+
+ def try_run(self, body, headers=None, include_dirs=None, libraries=None,
+ library_dirs=None, lang="c"):
+ """Try to compile, link to an executable, and run a program
+ built from 'body' and 'headers'. Return true on success, false
+ otherwise.
+ """
+ from distutils.ccompiler import CompileError, LinkError
+ self._check_compiler()
+ try:
+ src, obj, exe = self._link(body, headers, include_dirs,
+ libraries, library_dirs, lang)
+ self.spawn([exe])
+ ok = True
+ except (CompileError, LinkError, DistutilsExecError):
+ ok = False
+
+ log.info(ok and "success!" or "failure.")
+ self._clean()
+ return ok
+
+
+ # -- High-level methods --------------------------------------------
+ # (these are the ones that are actually likely to be useful
+ # when implementing a real-world config command!)
+
+ def check_func(self, func, headers=None, include_dirs=None,
+ libraries=None, library_dirs=None, decl=0, call=0):
+ """Determine if function 'func' is available by constructing a
+ source file that refers to 'func', and compiles and links it.
+ If everything succeeds, returns true; otherwise returns false.
+
+ The constructed source file starts out by including the header
+ files listed in 'headers'. If 'decl' is true, it then declares
+ 'func' (as "int func()"); you probably shouldn't supply 'headers'
+ and set 'decl' true in the same call, or you might get errors about
+ a conflicting declarations for 'func'. Finally, the constructed
+ 'main()' function either references 'func' or (if 'call' is true)
+ calls it. 'libraries' and 'library_dirs' are used when
+ linking.
+ """
+ self._check_compiler()
+ body = []
+ if decl:
+ body.append("int %s ();" % func)
+ body.append("int main () {")
+ if call:
+ body.append(" %s();" % func)
+ else:
+ body.append(" %s;" % func)
+ body.append("}")
+ body = "\n".join(body) + "\n"
+
+ return self.try_link(body, headers, include_dirs,
+ libraries, library_dirs)
+
+ def check_lib(self, library, library_dirs=None, headers=None,
+ include_dirs=None, other_libraries=[]):
+ """Determine if 'library' is available to be linked against,
+ without actually checking that any particular symbols are provided
+ by it. 'headers' will be used in constructing the source file to
+ be compiled, but the only effect of this is to check if all the
+ header files listed are available. Any libraries listed in
+ 'other_libraries' will be included in the link, in case 'library'
+ has symbols that depend on other libraries.
+ """
+ self._check_compiler()
+ return self.try_link("int main (void) { }", headers, include_dirs,
+ [library] + other_libraries, library_dirs)
+
+ def check_header(self, header, include_dirs=None, library_dirs=None,
+ lang="c"):
+ """Determine if the system header file named by 'header_file'
+ exists and can be found by the preprocessor; return true if so,
+ false otherwise.
+ """
+ return self.try_cpp(body="/* No body */", headers=[header],
+ include_dirs=include_dirs)
+
+def dump_file(filename, head=None):
+ """Dumps a file content into log.info.
+
+ If head is not None, will be dumped before the file content.
+ """
+ if head is None:
+ log.info('%s', filename)
+ else:
+ log.info(head)
+ file = open(filename)
+ try:
+ log.info(file.read())
+ finally:
+ file.close()
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/install.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/install.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..13feeb890f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/install.py
@@ -0,0 +1,677 @@
+"""distutils.command.install
+
+Implements the Distutils 'install' command."""
+
+import sys
+import os
+
+from distutils import log
+from distutils.core import Command
+from distutils.debug import DEBUG
+from distutils.sysconfig import get_config_vars
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsPlatformError
+from distutils.file_util import write_file
+from distutils.util import convert_path, subst_vars, change_root
+from distutils.util import get_platform
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsOptionError
+
+from site import USER_BASE
+from site import USER_SITE
+HAS_USER_SITE = True
+
+WINDOWS_SCHEME = {
+ 'purelib': '$base/Lib/site-packages',
+ 'platlib': '$base/Lib/site-packages',
+ 'headers': '$base/Include/$dist_name',
+ 'scripts': '$base/Scripts',
+ 'data' : '$base',
+}
+
+INSTALL_SCHEMES = {
+ 'unix_prefix': {
+ 'purelib': '$base/lib/python$py_version_short/site-packages',
+ 'platlib': '$platbase/$platlibdir/python$py_version_short/site-packages',
+ 'headers': '$base/include/python$py_version_short$abiflags/$dist_name',
+ 'scripts': '$base/bin',
+ 'data' : '$base',
+ },
+ 'unix_home': {
+ 'purelib': '$base/lib/python',
+ 'platlib': '$base/$platlibdir/python',
+ 'headers': '$base/include/python/$dist_name',
+ 'scripts': '$base/bin',
+ 'data' : '$base',
+ },
+ 'nt': WINDOWS_SCHEME,
+ 'pypy': {
+ 'purelib': '$base/site-packages',
+ 'platlib': '$base/site-packages',
+ 'headers': '$base/include/$dist_name',
+ 'scripts': '$base/bin',
+ 'data' : '$base',
+ },
+ 'pypy_nt': {
+ 'purelib': '$base/site-packages',
+ 'platlib': '$base/site-packages',
+ 'headers': '$base/include/$dist_name',
+ 'scripts': '$base/Scripts',
+ 'data' : '$base',
+ },
+ }
+
+# user site schemes
+if HAS_USER_SITE:
+ INSTALL_SCHEMES['nt_user'] = {
+ 'purelib': '$usersite',
+ 'platlib': '$usersite',
+ 'headers': '$userbase/Python$py_version_nodot/Include/$dist_name',
+ 'scripts': '$userbase/Python$py_version_nodot/Scripts',
+ 'data' : '$userbase',
+ }
+
+ INSTALL_SCHEMES['unix_user'] = {
+ 'purelib': '$usersite',
+ 'platlib': '$usersite',
+ 'headers':
+ '$userbase/include/python$py_version_short$abiflags/$dist_name',
+ 'scripts': '$userbase/bin',
+ 'data' : '$userbase',
+ }
+
+# The keys to an installation scheme; if any new types of files are to be
+# installed, be sure to add an entry to every installation scheme above,
+# and to SCHEME_KEYS here.
+SCHEME_KEYS = ('purelib', 'platlib', 'headers', 'scripts', 'data')
+
+
+class install(Command):
+
+ description = "install everything from build directory"
+
+ user_options = [
+ # Select installation scheme and set base director(y|ies)
+ ('prefix=', None,
+ "installation prefix"),
+ ('exec-prefix=', None,
+ "(Unix only) prefix for platform-specific files"),
+ ('home=', None,
+ "(Unix only) home directory to install under"),
+
+ # Or, just set the base director(y|ies)
+ ('install-base=', None,
+ "base installation directory (instead of --prefix or --home)"),
+ ('install-platbase=', None,
+ "base installation directory for platform-specific files " +
+ "(instead of --exec-prefix or --home)"),
+ ('root=', None,
+ "install everything relative to this alternate root directory"),
+
+ # Or, explicitly set the installation scheme
+ ('install-purelib=', None,
+ "installation directory for pure Python module distributions"),
+ ('install-platlib=', None,
+ "installation directory for non-pure module distributions"),
+ ('install-lib=', None,
+ "installation directory for all module distributions " +
+ "(overrides --install-purelib and --install-platlib)"),
+
+ ('install-headers=', None,
+ "installation directory for C/C++ headers"),
+ ('install-scripts=', None,
+ "installation directory for Python scripts"),
+ ('install-data=', None,
+ "installation directory for data files"),
+
+ # Byte-compilation options -- see install_lib.py for details, as
+ # these are duplicated from there (but only install_lib does
+ # anything with them).
+ ('compile', 'c', "compile .py to .pyc [default]"),
+ ('no-compile', None, "don't compile .py files"),
+ ('optimize=', 'O',
+ "also compile with optimization: -O1 for \"python -O\", "
+ "-O2 for \"python -OO\", and -O0 to disable [default: -O0]"),
+
+ # Miscellaneous control options
+ ('force', 'f',
+ "force installation (overwrite any existing files)"),
+ ('skip-build', None,
+ "skip rebuilding everything (for testing/debugging)"),
+
+ # Where to install documentation (eventually!)
+ #('doc-format=', None, "format of documentation to generate"),
+ #('install-man=', None, "directory for Unix man pages"),
+ #('install-html=', None, "directory for HTML documentation"),
+ #('install-info=', None, "directory for GNU info files"),
+
+ ('record=', None,
+ "filename in which to record list of installed files"),
+ ]
+
+ boolean_options = ['compile', 'force', 'skip-build']
+
+ if HAS_USER_SITE:
+ user_options.append(('user', None,
+ "install in user site-package '%s'" % USER_SITE))
+ boolean_options.append('user')
+
+ negative_opt = {'no-compile' : 'compile'}
+
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ """Initializes options."""
+ # High-level options: these select both an installation base
+ # and scheme.
+ self.prefix = None
+ self.exec_prefix = None
+ self.home = None
+ self.user = 0
+
+ # These select only the installation base; it's up to the user to
+ # specify the installation scheme (currently, that means supplying
+ # the --install-{platlib,purelib,scripts,data} options).
+ self.install_base = None
+ self.install_platbase = None
+ self.root = None
+
+ # These options are the actual installation directories; if not
+ # supplied by the user, they are filled in using the installation
+ # scheme implied by prefix/exec-prefix/home and the contents of
+ # that installation scheme.
+ self.install_purelib = None # for pure module distributions
+ self.install_platlib = None # non-pure (dists w/ extensions)
+ self.install_headers = None # for C/C++ headers
+ self.install_lib = None # set to either purelib or platlib
+ self.install_scripts = None
+ self.install_data = None
+ self.install_userbase = USER_BASE
+ self.install_usersite = USER_SITE
+
+ self.compile = None
+ self.optimize = None
+
+ # Deprecated
+ # These two are for putting non-packagized distributions into their
+ # own directory and creating a .pth file if it makes sense.
+ # 'extra_path' comes from the setup file; 'install_path_file' can
+ # be turned off if it makes no sense to install a .pth file. (But
+ # better to install it uselessly than to guess wrong and not
+ # install it when it's necessary and would be used!) Currently,
+ # 'install_path_file' is always true unless some outsider meddles
+ # with it.
+ self.extra_path = None
+ self.install_path_file = 1
+
+ # 'force' forces installation, even if target files are not
+ # out-of-date. 'skip_build' skips running the "build" command,
+ # handy if you know it's not necessary. 'warn_dir' (which is *not*
+ # a user option, it's just there so the bdist_* commands can turn
+ # it off) determines whether we warn about installing to a
+ # directory not in sys.path.
+ self.force = 0
+ self.skip_build = 0
+ self.warn_dir = 1
+
+ # These are only here as a conduit from the 'build' command to the
+ # 'install_*' commands that do the real work. ('build_base' isn't
+ # actually used anywhere, but it might be useful in future.) They
+ # are not user options, because if the user told the install
+ # command where the build directory is, that wouldn't affect the
+ # build command.
+ self.build_base = None
+ self.build_lib = None
+
+ # Not defined yet because we don't know anything about
+ # documentation yet.
+ #self.install_man = None
+ #self.install_html = None
+ #self.install_info = None
+
+ self.record = None
+
+
+ # -- Option finalizing methods -------------------------------------
+ # (This is rather more involved than for most commands,
+ # because this is where the policy for installing third-
+ # party Python modules on various platforms given a wide
+ # array of user input is decided. Yes, it's quite complex!)
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ """Finalizes options."""
+ # This method (and its helpers, like 'finalize_unix()',
+ # 'finalize_other()', and 'select_scheme()') is where the default
+ # installation directories for modules, extension modules, and
+ # anything else we care to install from a Python module
+ # distribution. Thus, this code makes a pretty important policy
+ # statement about how third-party stuff is added to a Python
+ # installation! Note that the actual work of installation is done
+ # by the relatively simple 'install_*' commands; they just take
+ # their orders from the installation directory options determined
+ # here.
+
+ # Check for errors/inconsistencies in the options; first, stuff
+ # that's wrong on any platform.
+
+ if ((self.prefix or self.exec_prefix or self.home) and
+ (self.install_base or self.install_platbase)):
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ "must supply either prefix/exec-prefix/home or " +
+ "install-base/install-platbase -- not both")
+
+ if self.home and (self.prefix or self.exec_prefix):
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ "must supply either home or prefix/exec-prefix -- not both")
+
+ if self.user and (self.prefix or self.exec_prefix or self.home or
+ self.install_base or self.install_platbase):
+ raise DistutilsOptionError("can't combine user with prefix, "
+ "exec_prefix/home, or install_(plat)base")
+
+ # Next, stuff that's wrong (or dubious) only on certain platforms.
+ if os.name != "posix":
+ if self.exec_prefix:
+ self.warn("exec-prefix option ignored on this platform")
+ self.exec_prefix = None
+
+ # Now the interesting logic -- so interesting that we farm it out
+ # to other methods. The goal of these methods is to set the final
+ # values for the install_{lib,scripts,data,...} options, using as
+ # input a heady brew of prefix, exec_prefix, home, install_base,
+ # install_platbase, user-supplied versions of
+ # install_{purelib,platlib,lib,scripts,data,...}, and the
+ # INSTALL_SCHEME dictionary above. Phew!
+
+ self.dump_dirs("pre-finalize_{unix,other}")
+
+ if os.name == 'posix':
+ self.finalize_unix()
+ else:
+ self.finalize_other()
+
+ self.dump_dirs("post-finalize_{unix,other}()")
+
+ # Expand configuration variables, tilde, etc. in self.install_base
+ # and self.install_platbase -- that way, we can use $base or
+ # $platbase in the other installation directories and not worry
+ # about needing recursive variable expansion (shudder).
+
+ py_version = sys.version.split()[0]
+ (prefix, exec_prefix) = get_config_vars('prefix', 'exec_prefix')
+ try:
+ abiflags = sys.abiflags
+ except AttributeError:
+ # sys.abiflags may not be defined on all platforms.
+ abiflags = ''
+ self.config_vars = {'dist_name': self.distribution.get_name(),
+ 'dist_version': self.distribution.get_version(),
+ 'dist_fullname': self.distribution.get_fullname(),
+ 'py_version': py_version,
+ 'py_version_short': '%d.%d' % sys.version_info[:2],
+ 'py_version_nodot': '%d%d' % sys.version_info[:2],
+ 'sys_prefix': prefix,
+ 'prefix': prefix,
+ 'sys_exec_prefix': exec_prefix,
+ 'exec_prefix': exec_prefix,
+ 'abiflags': abiflags,
+ 'platlibdir': getattr(sys, 'platlibdir', 'lib'),
+ }
+
+ if HAS_USER_SITE:
+ self.config_vars['userbase'] = self.install_userbase
+ self.config_vars['usersite'] = self.install_usersite
+
+ self.expand_basedirs()
+
+ self.dump_dirs("post-expand_basedirs()")
+
+ # Now define config vars for the base directories so we can expand
+ # everything else.
+ self.config_vars['base'] = self.install_base
+ self.config_vars['platbase'] = self.install_platbase
+
+ if DEBUG:
+ from pprint import pprint
+ print("config vars:")
+ pprint(self.config_vars)
+
+ # Expand "~" and configuration variables in the installation
+ # directories.
+ self.expand_dirs()
+
+ self.dump_dirs("post-expand_dirs()")
+
+ # Create directories in the home dir:
+ if self.user:
+ self.create_home_path()
+
+ # Pick the actual directory to install all modules to: either
+ # install_purelib or install_platlib, depending on whether this
+ # module distribution is pure or not. Of course, if the user
+ # already specified install_lib, use their selection.
+ if self.install_lib is None:
+ if self.distribution.ext_modules: # has extensions: non-pure
+ self.install_lib = self.install_platlib
+ else:
+ self.install_lib = self.install_purelib
+
+
+ # Convert directories from Unix /-separated syntax to the local
+ # convention.
+ self.convert_paths('lib', 'purelib', 'platlib',
+ 'scripts', 'data', 'headers',
+ 'userbase', 'usersite')
+
+ # Deprecated
+ # Well, we're not actually fully completely finalized yet: we still
+ # have to deal with 'extra_path', which is the hack for allowing
+ # non-packagized module distributions (hello, Numerical Python!) to
+ # get their own directories.
+ self.handle_extra_path()
+ self.install_libbase = self.install_lib # needed for .pth file
+ self.install_lib = os.path.join(self.install_lib, self.extra_dirs)
+
+ # If a new root directory was supplied, make all the installation
+ # dirs relative to it.
+ if self.root is not None:
+ self.change_roots('libbase', 'lib', 'purelib', 'platlib',
+ 'scripts', 'data', 'headers')
+
+ self.dump_dirs("after prepending root")
+
+ # Find out the build directories, ie. where to install from.
+ self.set_undefined_options('build',
+ ('build_base', 'build_base'),
+ ('build_lib', 'build_lib'))
+
+ # Punt on doc directories for now -- after all, we're punting on
+ # documentation completely!
+
+ def dump_dirs(self, msg):
+ """Dumps the list of user options."""
+ if not DEBUG:
+ return
+ from distutils.fancy_getopt import longopt_xlate
+ log.debug(msg + ":")
+ for opt in self.user_options:
+ opt_name = opt[0]
+ if opt_name[-1] == "=":
+ opt_name = opt_name[0:-1]
+ if opt_name in self.negative_opt:
+ opt_name = self.negative_opt[opt_name]
+ opt_name = opt_name.translate(longopt_xlate)
+ val = not getattr(self, opt_name)
+ else:
+ opt_name = opt_name.translate(longopt_xlate)
+ val = getattr(self, opt_name)
+ log.debug(" %s: %s", opt_name, val)
+
+ def finalize_unix(self):
+ """Finalizes options for posix platforms."""
+ if self.install_base is not None or self.install_platbase is not None:
+ if ((self.install_lib is None and
+ self.install_purelib is None and
+ self.install_platlib is None) or
+ self.install_headers is None or
+ self.install_scripts is None or
+ self.install_data is None):
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ "install-base or install-platbase supplied, but "
+ "installation scheme is incomplete")
+ return
+
+ if self.user:
+ if self.install_userbase is None:
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError(
+ "User base directory is not specified")
+ self.install_base = self.install_platbase = self.install_userbase
+ self.select_scheme("unix_user")
+ elif self.home is not None:
+ self.install_base = self.install_platbase = self.home
+ self.select_scheme("unix_home")
+ else:
+ if self.prefix is None:
+ if self.exec_prefix is not None:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ "must not supply exec-prefix without prefix")
+
+ self.prefix = os.path.normpath(sys.prefix)
+ self.exec_prefix = os.path.normpath(sys.exec_prefix)
+
+ else:
+ if self.exec_prefix is None:
+ self.exec_prefix = self.prefix
+
+ self.install_base = self.prefix
+ self.install_platbase = self.exec_prefix
+ self.select_scheme("unix_prefix")
+
+ def finalize_other(self):
+ """Finalizes options for non-posix platforms"""
+ if self.user:
+ if self.install_userbase is None:
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError(
+ "User base directory is not specified")
+ self.install_base = self.install_platbase = self.install_userbase
+ self.select_scheme(os.name + "_user")
+ elif self.home is not None:
+ self.install_base = self.install_platbase = self.home
+ self.select_scheme("unix_home")
+ else:
+ if self.prefix is None:
+ self.prefix = os.path.normpath(sys.prefix)
+
+ self.install_base = self.install_platbase = self.prefix
+ try:
+ self.select_scheme(os.name)
+ except KeyError:
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError(
+ "I don't know how to install stuff on '%s'" % os.name)
+
+ def select_scheme(self, name):
+ """Sets the install directories by applying the install schemes."""
+ # it's the caller's problem if they supply a bad name!
+ if (hasattr(sys, 'pypy_version_info') and
+ not name.endswith(('_user', '_home'))):
+ if os.name == 'nt':
+ name = 'pypy_nt'
+ else:
+ name = 'pypy'
+ scheme = INSTALL_SCHEMES[name]
+ for key in SCHEME_KEYS:
+ attrname = 'install_' + key
+ if getattr(self, attrname) is None:
+ setattr(self, attrname, scheme[key])
+
+ def _expand_attrs(self, attrs):
+ for attr in attrs:
+ val = getattr(self, attr)
+ if val is not None:
+ if os.name == 'posix' or os.name == 'nt':
+ val = os.path.expanduser(val)
+ val = subst_vars(val, self.config_vars)
+ setattr(self, attr, val)
+
+ def expand_basedirs(self):
+ """Calls `os.path.expanduser` on install_base, install_platbase and
+ root."""
+ self._expand_attrs(['install_base', 'install_platbase', 'root'])
+
+ def expand_dirs(self):
+ """Calls `os.path.expanduser` on install dirs."""
+ self._expand_attrs(['install_purelib', 'install_platlib',
+ 'install_lib', 'install_headers',
+ 'install_scripts', 'install_data',])
+
+ def convert_paths(self, *names):
+ """Call `convert_path` over `names`."""
+ for name in names:
+ attr = "install_" + name
+ setattr(self, attr, convert_path(getattr(self, attr)))
+
+ def handle_extra_path(self):
+ """Set `path_file` and `extra_dirs` using `extra_path`."""
+ if self.extra_path is None:
+ self.extra_path = self.distribution.extra_path
+
+ if self.extra_path is not None:
+ log.warn(
+ "Distribution option extra_path is deprecated. "
+ "See issue27919 for details."
+ )
+ if isinstance(self.extra_path, str):
+ self.extra_path = self.extra_path.split(',')
+
+ if len(self.extra_path) == 1:
+ path_file = extra_dirs = self.extra_path[0]
+ elif len(self.extra_path) == 2:
+ path_file, extra_dirs = self.extra_path
+ else:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ "'extra_path' option must be a list, tuple, or "
+ "comma-separated string with 1 or 2 elements")
+
+ # convert to local form in case Unix notation used (as it
+ # should be in setup scripts)
+ extra_dirs = convert_path(extra_dirs)
+ else:
+ path_file = None
+ extra_dirs = ''
+
+ # XXX should we warn if path_file and not extra_dirs? (in which
+ # case the path file would be harmless but pointless)
+ self.path_file = path_file
+ self.extra_dirs = extra_dirs
+
+ def change_roots(self, *names):
+ """Change the install directories pointed by name using root."""
+ for name in names:
+ attr = "install_" + name
+ setattr(self, attr, change_root(self.root, getattr(self, attr)))
+
+ def create_home_path(self):
+ """Create directories under ~."""
+ if not self.user:
+ return
+ home = convert_path(os.path.expanduser("~"))
+ for name, path in self.config_vars.items():
+ if path.startswith(home) and not os.path.isdir(path):
+ self.debug_print("os.makedirs('%s', 0o700)" % path)
+ os.makedirs(path, 0o700)
+
+ # -- Command execution methods -------------------------------------
+
+ def run(self):
+ """Runs the command."""
+ # Obviously have to build before we can install
+ if not self.skip_build:
+ self.run_command('build')
+ # If we built for any other platform, we can't install.
+ build_plat = self.distribution.get_command_obj('build').plat_name
+ # check warn_dir - it is a clue that the 'install' is happening
+ # internally, and not to sys.path, so we don't check the platform
+ # matches what we are running.
+ if self.warn_dir and build_plat != get_platform():
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError("Can't install when "
+ "cross-compiling")
+
+ # Run all sub-commands (at least those that need to be run)
+ for cmd_name in self.get_sub_commands():
+ self.run_command(cmd_name)
+
+ if self.path_file:
+ self.create_path_file()
+
+ # write list of installed files, if requested.
+ if self.record:
+ outputs = self.get_outputs()
+ if self.root: # strip any package prefix
+ root_len = len(self.root)
+ for counter in range(len(outputs)):
+ outputs[counter] = outputs[counter][root_len:]
+ self.execute(write_file,
+ (self.record, outputs),
+ "writing list of installed files to '%s'" %
+ self.record)
+
+ sys_path = map(os.path.normpath, sys.path)
+ sys_path = map(os.path.normcase, sys_path)
+ install_lib = os.path.normcase(os.path.normpath(self.install_lib))
+ if (self.warn_dir and
+ not (self.path_file and self.install_path_file) and
+ install_lib not in sys_path):
+ log.debug(("modules installed to '%s', which is not in "
+ "Python's module search path (sys.path) -- "
+ "you'll have to change the search path yourself"),
+ self.install_lib)
+
+ def create_path_file(self):
+ """Creates the .pth file"""
+ filename = os.path.join(self.install_libbase,
+ self.path_file + ".pth")
+ if self.install_path_file:
+ self.execute(write_file,
+ (filename, [self.extra_dirs]),
+ "creating %s" % filename)
+ else:
+ self.warn("path file '%s' not created" % filename)
+
+
+ # -- Reporting methods ---------------------------------------------
+
+ def get_outputs(self):
+ """Assembles the outputs of all the sub-commands."""
+ outputs = []
+ for cmd_name in self.get_sub_commands():
+ cmd = self.get_finalized_command(cmd_name)
+ # Add the contents of cmd.get_outputs(), ensuring
+ # that outputs doesn't contain duplicate entries
+ for filename in cmd.get_outputs():
+ if filename not in outputs:
+ outputs.append(filename)
+
+ if self.path_file and self.install_path_file:
+ outputs.append(os.path.join(self.install_libbase,
+ self.path_file + ".pth"))
+
+ return outputs
+
+ def get_inputs(self):
+ """Returns the inputs of all the sub-commands"""
+ # XXX gee, this looks familiar ;-(
+ inputs = []
+ for cmd_name in self.get_sub_commands():
+ cmd = self.get_finalized_command(cmd_name)
+ inputs.extend(cmd.get_inputs())
+
+ return inputs
+
+ # -- Predicates for sub-command list -------------------------------
+
+ def has_lib(self):
+ """Returns true if the current distribution has any Python
+ modules to install."""
+ return (self.distribution.has_pure_modules() or
+ self.distribution.has_ext_modules())
+
+ def has_headers(self):
+ """Returns true if the current distribution has any headers to
+ install."""
+ return self.distribution.has_headers()
+
+ def has_scripts(self):
+ """Returns true if the current distribution has any scripts to.
+ install."""
+ return self.distribution.has_scripts()
+
+ def has_data(self):
+ """Returns true if the current distribution has any data to.
+ install."""
+ return self.distribution.has_data_files()
+
+ # 'sub_commands': a list of commands this command might have to run to
+ # get its work done. See cmd.py for more info.
+ sub_commands = [('install_lib', has_lib),
+ ('install_headers', has_headers),
+ ('install_scripts', has_scripts),
+ ('install_data', has_data),
+ ('install_egg_info', lambda self:True),
+ ]
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/install_data.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/install_data.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..947cd76a99
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/install_data.py
@@ -0,0 +1,79 @@
+"""distutils.command.install_data
+
+Implements the Distutils 'install_data' command, for installing
+platform-independent data files."""
+
+# contributed by Bastian Kleineidam
+
+import os
+from distutils.core import Command
+from distutils.util import change_root, convert_path
+
+class install_data(Command):
+
+ description = "install data files"
+
+ user_options = [
+ ('install-dir=', 'd',
+ "base directory for installing data files "
+ "(default: installation base dir)"),
+ ('root=', None,
+ "install everything relative to this alternate root directory"),
+ ('force', 'f', "force installation (overwrite existing files)"),
+ ]
+
+ boolean_options = ['force']
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.install_dir = None
+ self.outfiles = []
+ self.root = None
+ self.force = 0
+ self.data_files = self.distribution.data_files
+ self.warn_dir = 1
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ self.set_undefined_options('install',
+ ('install_data', 'install_dir'),
+ ('root', 'root'),
+ ('force', 'force'),
+ )
+
+ def run(self):
+ self.mkpath(self.install_dir)
+ for f in self.data_files:
+ if isinstance(f, str):
+ # it's a simple file, so copy it
+ f = convert_path(f)
+ if self.warn_dir:
+ self.warn("setup script did not provide a directory for "
+ "'%s' -- installing right in '%s'" %
+ (f, self.install_dir))
+ (out, _) = self.copy_file(f, self.install_dir)
+ self.outfiles.append(out)
+ else:
+ # it's a tuple with path to install to and a list of files
+ dir = convert_path(f[0])
+ if not os.path.isabs(dir):
+ dir = os.path.join(self.install_dir, dir)
+ elif self.root:
+ dir = change_root(self.root, dir)
+ self.mkpath(dir)
+
+ if f[1] == []:
+ # If there are no files listed, the user must be
+ # trying to create an empty directory, so add the
+ # directory to the list of output files.
+ self.outfiles.append(dir)
+ else:
+ # Copy files, adding them to the list of output files.
+ for data in f[1]:
+ data = convert_path(data)
+ (out, _) = self.copy_file(data, dir)
+ self.outfiles.append(out)
+
+ def get_inputs(self):
+ return self.data_files or []
+
+ def get_outputs(self):
+ return self.outfiles
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/install_egg_info.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/install_egg_info.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..0ddc7367cc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/install_egg_info.py
@@ -0,0 +1,77 @@
+"""distutils.command.install_egg_info
+
+Implements the Distutils 'install_egg_info' command, for installing
+a package's PKG-INFO metadata."""
+
+
+from distutils.cmd import Command
+from distutils import log, dir_util
+import os, sys, re
+
+class install_egg_info(Command):
+ """Install an .egg-info file for the package"""
+
+ description = "Install package's PKG-INFO metadata as an .egg-info file"
+ user_options = [
+ ('install-dir=', 'd', "directory to install to"),
+ ]
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.install_dir = None
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ self.set_undefined_options('install_lib',('install_dir','install_dir'))
+ basename = "%s-%s-py%d.%d.egg-info" % (
+ to_filename(safe_name(self.distribution.get_name())),
+ to_filename(safe_version(self.distribution.get_version())),
+ *sys.version_info[:2]
+ )
+ self.target = os.path.join(self.install_dir, basename)
+ self.outputs = [self.target]
+
+ def run(self):
+ target = self.target
+ if os.path.isdir(target) and not os.path.islink(target):
+ dir_util.remove_tree(target, dry_run=self.dry_run)
+ elif os.path.exists(target):
+ self.execute(os.unlink,(self.target,),"Removing "+target)
+ elif not os.path.isdir(self.install_dir):
+ self.execute(os.makedirs, (self.install_dir,),
+ "Creating "+self.install_dir)
+ log.info("Writing %s", target)
+ if not self.dry_run:
+ with open(target, 'w', encoding='UTF-8') as f:
+ self.distribution.metadata.write_pkg_file(f)
+
+ def get_outputs(self):
+ return self.outputs
+
+
+# The following routines are taken from setuptools' pkg_resources module and
+# can be replaced by importing them from pkg_resources once it is included
+# in the stdlib.
+
+def safe_name(name):
+ """Convert an arbitrary string to a standard distribution name
+
+ Any runs of non-alphanumeric/. characters are replaced with a single '-'.
+ """
+ return re.sub('[^A-Za-z0-9.]+', '-', name)
+
+
+def safe_version(version):
+ """Convert an arbitrary string to a standard version string
+
+ Spaces become dots, and all other non-alphanumeric characters become
+ dashes, with runs of multiple dashes condensed to a single dash.
+ """
+ version = version.replace(' ','.')
+ return re.sub('[^A-Za-z0-9.]+', '-', version)
+
+
+def to_filename(name):
+ """Convert a project or version name to its filename-escaped form
+
+ Any '-' characters are currently replaced with '_'.
+ """
+ return name.replace('-','_')
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/install_headers.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/install_headers.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..9bb0b18dc0
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/install_headers.py
@@ -0,0 +1,47 @@
+"""distutils.command.install_headers
+
+Implements the Distutils 'install_headers' command, to install C/C++ header
+files to the Python include directory."""
+
+from distutils.core import Command
+
+
+# XXX force is never used
+class install_headers(Command):
+
+ description = "install C/C++ header files"
+
+ user_options = [('install-dir=', 'd',
+ "directory to install header files to"),
+ ('force', 'f',
+ "force installation (overwrite existing files)"),
+ ]
+
+ boolean_options = ['force']
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.install_dir = None
+ self.force = 0
+ self.outfiles = []
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ self.set_undefined_options('install',
+ ('install_headers', 'install_dir'),
+ ('force', 'force'))
+
+
+ def run(self):
+ headers = self.distribution.headers
+ if not headers:
+ return
+
+ self.mkpath(self.install_dir)
+ for header in headers:
+ (out, _) = self.copy_file(header, self.install_dir)
+ self.outfiles.append(out)
+
+ def get_inputs(self):
+ return self.distribution.headers or []
+
+ def get_outputs(self):
+ return self.outfiles
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/install_lib.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/install_lib.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..6154cf0943
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/install_lib.py
@@ -0,0 +1,217 @@
+"""distutils.command.install_lib
+
+Implements the Distutils 'install_lib' command
+(install all Python modules)."""
+
+import os
+import importlib.util
+import sys
+
+from distutils.core import Command
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsOptionError
+
+
+# Extension for Python source files.
+PYTHON_SOURCE_EXTENSION = ".py"
+
+class install_lib(Command):
+
+ description = "install all Python modules (extensions and pure Python)"
+
+ # The byte-compilation options are a tad confusing. Here are the
+ # possible scenarios:
+ # 1) no compilation at all (--no-compile --no-optimize)
+ # 2) compile .pyc only (--compile --no-optimize; default)
+ # 3) compile .pyc and "opt-1" .pyc (--compile --optimize)
+ # 4) compile "opt-1" .pyc only (--no-compile --optimize)
+ # 5) compile .pyc and "opt-2" .pyc (--compile --optimize-more)
+ # 6) compile "opt-2" .pyc only (--no-compile --optimize-more)
+ #
+ # The UI for this is two options, 'compile' and 'optimize'.
+ # 'compile' is strictly boolean, and only decides whether to
+ # generate .pyc files. 'optimize' is three-way (0, 1, or 2), and
+ # decides both whether to generate .pyc files and what level of
+ # optimization to use.
+
+ user_options = [
+ ('install-dir=', 'd', "directory to install to"),
+ ('build-dir=','b', "build directory (where to install from)"),
+ ('force', 'f', "force installation (overwrite existing files)"),
+ ('compile', 'c', "compile .py to .pyc [default]"),
+ ('no-compile', None, "don't compile .py files"),
+ ('optimize=', 'O',
+ "also compile with optimization: -O1 for \"python -O\", "
+ "-O2 for \"python -OO\", and -O0 to disable [default: -O0]"),
+ ('skip-build', None, "skip the build steps"),
+ ]
+
+ boolean_options = ['force', 'compile', 'skip-build']
+ negative_opt = {'no-compile' : 'compile'}
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ # let the 'install' command dictate our installation directory
+ self.install_dir = None
+ self.build_dir = None
+ self.force = 0
+ self.compile = None
+ self.optimize = None
+ self.skip_build = None
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ # Get all the information we need to install pure Python modules
+ # from the umbrella 'install' command -- build (source) directory,
+ # install (target) directory, and whether to compile .py files.
+ self.set_undefined_options('install',
+ ('build_lib', 'build_dir'),
+ ('install_lib', 'install_dir'),
+ ('force', 'force'),
+ ('compile', 'compile'),
+ ('optimize', 'optimize'),
+ ('skip_build', 'skip_build'),
+ )
+
+ if self.compile is None:
+ self.compile = True
+ if self.optimize is None:
+ self.optimize = False
+
+ if not isinstance(self.optimize, int):
+ try:
+ self.optimize = int(self.optimize)
+ if self.optimize not in (0, 1, 2):
+ raise AssertionError
+ except (ValueError, AssertionError):
+ raise DistutilsOptionError("optimize must be 0, 1, or 2")
+
+ def run(self):
+ # Make sure we have built everything we need first
+ self.build()
+
+ # Install everything: simply dump the entire contents of the build
+ # directory to the installation directory (that's the beauty of
+ # having a build directory!)
+ outfiles = self.install()
+
+ # (Optionally) compile .py to .pyc
+ if outfiles is not None and self.distribution.has_pure_modules():
+ self.byte_compile(outfiles)
+
+ # -- Top-level worker functions ------------------------------------
+ # (called from 'run()')
+
+ def build(self):
+ if not self.skip_build:
+ if self.distribution.has_pure_modules():
+ self.run_command('build_py')
+ if self.distribution.has_ext_modules():
+ self.run_command('build_ext')
+
+ def install(self):
+ if os.path.isdir(self.build_dir):
+ outfiles = self.copy_tree(self.build_dir, self.install_dir)
+ else:
+ self.warn("'%s' does not exist -- no Python modules to install" %
+ self.build_dir)
+ return
+ return outfiles
+
+ def byte_compile(self, files):
+ if sys.dont_write_bytecode:
+ self.warn('byte-compiling is disabled, skipping.')
+ return
+
+ from distutils.util import byte_compile
+
+ # Get the "--root" directory supplied to the "install" command,
+ # and use it as a prefix to strip off the purported filename
+ # encoded in bytecode files. This is far from complete, but it
+ # should at least generate usable bytecode in RPM distributions.
+ install_root = self.get_finalized_command('install').root
+
+ if self.compile:
+ byte_compile(files, optimize=0,
+ force=self.force, prefix=install_root,
+ dry_run=self.dry_run)
+ if self.optimize > 0:
+ byte_compile(files, optimize=self.optimize,
+ force=self.force, prefix=install_root,
+ verbose=self.verbose, dry_run=self.dry_run)
+
+
+ # -- Utility methods -----------------------------------------------
+
+ def _mutate_outputs(self, has_any, build_cmd, cmd_option, output_dir):
+ if not has_any:
+ return []
+
+ build_cmd = self.get_finalized_command(build_cmd)
+ build_files = build_cmd.get_outputs()
+ build_dir = getattr(build_cmd, cmd_option)
+
+ prefix_len = len(build_dir) + len(os.sep)
+ outputs = []
+ for file in build_files:
+ outputs.append(os.path.join(output_dir, file[prefix_len:]))
+
+ return outputs
+
+ def _bytecode_filenames(self, py_filenames):
+ bytecode_files = []
+ for py_file in py_filenames:
+ # Since build_py handles package data installation, the
+ # list of outputs can contain more than just .py files.
+ # Make sure we only report bytecode for the .py files.
+ ext = os.path.splitext(os.path.normcase(py_file))[1]
+ if ext != PYTHON_SOURCE_EXTENSION:
+ continue
+ if self.compile:
+ bytecode_files.append(importlib.util.cache_from_source(
+ py_file, optimization=''))
+ if self.optimize > 0:
+ bytecode_files.append(importlib.util.cache_from_source(
+ py_file, optimization=self.optimize))
+
+ return bytecode_files
+
+
+ # -- External interface --------------------------------------------
+ # (called by outsiders)
+
+ def get_outputs(self):
+ """Return the list of files that would be installed if this command
+ were actually run. Not affected by the "dry-run" flag or whether
+ modules have actually been built yet.
+ """
+ pure_outputs = \
+ self._mutate_outputs(self.distribution.has_pure_modules(),
+ 'build_py', 'build_lib',
+ self.install_dir)
+ if self.compile:
+ bytecode_outputs = self._bytecode_filenames(pure_outputs)
+ else:
+ bytecode_outputs = []
+
+ ext_outputs = \
+ self._mutate_outputs(self.distribution.has_ext_modules(),
+ 'build_ext', 'build_lib',
+ self.install_dir)
+
+ return pure_outputs + bytecode_outputs + ext_outputs
+
+ def get_inputs(self):
+ """Get the list of files that are input to this command, ie. the
+ files that get installed as they are named in the build tree.
+ The files in this list correspond one-to-one to the output
+ filenames returned by 'get_outputs()'.
+ """
+ inputs = []
+
+ if self.distribution.has_pure_modules():
+ build_py = self.get_finalized_command('build_py')
+ inputs.extend(build_py.get_outputs())
+
+ if self.distribution.has_ext_modules():
+ build_ext = self.get_finalized_command('build_ext')
+ inputs.extend(build_ext.get_outputs())
+
+ return inputs
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/install_scripts.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/install_scripts.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..31a1130ee5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/install_scripts.py
@@ -0,0 +1,60 @@
+"""distutils.command.install_scripts
+
+Implements the Distutils 'install_scripts' command, for installing
+Python scripts."""
+
+# contributed by Bastian Kleineidam
+
+import os
+from distutils.core import Command
+from distutils import log
+from stat import ST_MODE
+
+
+class install_scripts(Command):
+
+ description = "install scripts (Python or otherwise)"
+
+ user_options = [
+ ('install-dir=', 'd', "directory to install scripts to"),
+ ('build-dir=','b', "build directory (where to install from)"),
+ ('force', 'f', "force installation (overwrite existing files)"),
+ ('skip-build', None, "skip the build steps"),
+ ]
+
+ boolean_options = ['force', 'skip-build']
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.install_dir = None
+ self.force = 0
+ self.build_dir = None
+ self.skip_build = None
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ self.set_undefined_options('build', ('build_scripts', 'build_dir'))
+ self.set_undefined_options('install',
+ ('install_scripts', 'install_dir'),
+ ('force', 'force'),
+ ('skip_build', 'skip_build'),
+ )
+
+ def run(self):
+ if not self.skip_build:
+ self.run_command('build_scripts')
+ self.outfiles = self.copy_tree(self.build_dir, self.install_dir)
+ if os.name == 'posix':
+ # Set the executable bits (owner, group, and world) on
+ # all the scripts we just installed.
+ for file in self.get_outputs():
+ if self.dry_run:
+ log.info("changing mode of %s", file)
+ else:
+ mode = ((os.stat(file)[ST_MODE]) | 0o555) & 0o7777
+ log.info("changing mode of %s to %o", file, mode)
+ os.chmod(file, mode)
+
+ def get_inputs(self):
+ return self.distribution.scripts or []
+
+ def get_outputs(self):
+ return self.outfiles or []
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/py37compat.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/py37compat.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..754715a508
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/py37compat.py
@@ -0,0 +1,30 @@
+import sys
+
+
+def _pythonlib_compat():
+ """
+ On Python 3.7 and earlier, distutils would include the Python
+ library. See pypa/distutils#9.
+ """
+ from distutils import sysconfig
+ if not sysconfig.get_config_var('Py_ENABLED_SHARED'):
+ return
+
+ yield 'python{}.{}{}'.format(
+ sys.hexversion >> 24,
+ (sys.hexversion >> 16) & 0xff,
+ sysconfig.get_config_var('ABIFLAGS'),
+ )
+
+
+def compose(f1, f2):
+ return lambda *args, **kwargs: f1(f2(*args, **kwargs))
+
+
+pythonlib = (
+ compose(list, _pythonlib_compat)
+ if sys.version_info < (3, 8)
+ and sys.platform != 'darwin'
+ and sys.platform[:3] != 'aix'
+ else list
+)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/register.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/register.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..0fac94e9e5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/register.py
@@ -0,0 +1,304 @@
+"""distutils.command.register
+
+Implements the Distutils 'register' command (register with the repository).
+"""
+
+# created 2002/10/21, Richard Jones
+
+import getpass
+import io
+import urllib.parse, urllib.request
+from warnings import warn
+
+from distutils.core import PyPIRCCommand
+from distutils.errors import *
+from distutils import log
+
+class register(PyPIRCCommand):
+
+ description = ("register the distribution with the Python package index")
+ user_options = PyPIRCCommand.user_options + [
+ ('list-classifiers', None,
+ 'list the valid Trove classifiers'),
+ ('strict', None ,
+ 'Will stop the registering if the meta-data are not fully compliant')
+ ]
+ boolean_options = PyPIRCCommand.boolean_options + [
+ 'verify', 'list-classifiers', 'strict']
+
+ sub_commands = [('check', lambda self: True)]
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ PyPIRCCommand.initialize_options(self)
+ self.list_classifiers = 0
+ self.strict = 0
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ PyPIRCCommand.finalize_options(self)
+ # setting options for the `check` subcommand
+ check_options = {'strict': ('register', self.strict),
+ 'restructuredtext': ('register', 1)}
+ self.distribution.command_options['check'] = check_options
+
+ def run(self):
+ self.finalize_options()
+ self._set_config()
+
+ # Run sub commands
+ for cmd_name in self.get_sub_commands():
+ self.run_command(cmd_name)
+
+ if self.dry_run:
+ self.verify_metadata()
+ elif self.list_classifiers:
+ self.classifiers()
+ else:
+ self.send_metadata()
+
+ def check_metadata(self):
+ """Deprecated API."""
+ warn("distutils.command.register.check_metadata is deprecated, \
+ use the check command instead", PendingDeprecationWarning)
+ check = self.distribution.get_command_obj('check')
+ check.ensure_finalized()
+ check.strict = self.strict
+ check.restructuredtext = 1
+ check.run()
+
+ def _set_config(self):
+ ''' Reads the configuration file and set attributes.
+ '''
+ config = self._read_pypirc()
+ if config != {}:
+ self.username = config['username']
+ self.password = config['password']
+ self.repository = config['repository']
+ self.realm = config['realm']
+ self.has_config = True
+ else:
+ if self.repository not in ('pypi', self.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY):
+ raise ValueError('%s not found in .pypirc' % self.repository)
+ if self.repository == 'pypi':
+ self.repository = self.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY
+ self.has_config = False
+
+ def classifiers(self):
+ ''' Fetch the list of classifiers from the server.
+ '''
+ url = self.repository+'?:action=list_classifiers'
+ response = urllib.request.urlopen(url)
+ log.info(self._read_pypi_response(response))
+
+ def verify_metadata(self):
+ ''' Send the metadata to the package index server to be checked.
+ '''
+ # send the info to the server and report the result
+ (code, result) = self.post_to_server(self.build_post_data('verify'))
+ log.info('Server response (%s): %s', code, result)
+
+ def send_metadata(self):
+ ''' Send the metadata to the package index server.
+
+ Well, do the following:
+ 1. figure who the user is, and then
+ 2. send the data as a Basic auth'ed POST.
+
+ First we try to read the username/password from $HOME/.pypirc,
+ which is a ConfigParser-formatted file with a section
+ [distutils] containing username and password entries (both
+ in clear text). Eg:
+
+ [distutils]
+ index-servers =
+ pypi
+
+ [pypi]
+ username: fred
+ password: sekrit
+
+ Otherwise, to figure who the user is, we offer the user three
+ choices:
+
+ 1. use existing login,
+ 2. register as a new user, or
+ 3. set the password to a random string and email the user.
+
+ '''
+ # see if we can short-cut and get the username/password from the
+ # config
+ if self.has_config:
+ choice = '1'
+ username = self.username
+ password = self.password
+ else:
+ choice = 'x'
+ username = password = ''
+
+ # get the user's login info
+ choices = '1 2 3 4'.split()
+ while choice not in choices:
+ self.announce('''\
+We need to know who you are, so please choose either:
+ 1. use your existing login,
+ 2. register as a new user,
+ 3. have the server generate a new password for you (and email it to you), or
+ 4. quit
+Your selection [default 1]: ''', log.INFO)
+ choice = input()
+ if not choice:
+ choice = '1'
+ elif choice not in choices:
+ print('Please choose one of the four options!')
+
+ if choice == '1':
+ # get the username and password
+ while not username:
+ username = input('Username: ')
+ while not password:
+ password = getpass.getpass('Password: ')
+
+ # set up the authentication
+ auth = urllib.request.HTTPPasswordMgr()
+ host = urllib.parse.urlparse(self.repository)[1]
+ auth.add_password(self.realm, host, username, password)
+ # send the info to the server and report the result
+ code, result = self.post_to_server(self.build_post_data('submit'),
+ auth)
+ self.announce('Server response (%s): %s' % (code, result),
+ log.INFO)
+
+ # possibly save the login
+ if code == 200:
+ if self.has_config:
+ # sharing the password in the distribution instance
+ # so the upload command can reuse it
+ self.distribution.password = password
+ else:
+ self.announce(('I can store your PyPI login so future '
+ 'submissions will be faster.'), log.INFO)
+ self.announce('(the login will be stored in %s)' % \
+ self._get_rc_file(), log.INFO)
+ choice = 'X'
+ while choice.lower() not in 'yn':
+ choice = input('Save your login (y/N)?')
+ if not choice:
+ choice = 'n'
+ if choice.lower() == 'y':
+ self._store_pypirc(username, password)
+
+ elif choice == '2':
+ data = {':action': 'user'}
+ data['name'] = data['password'] = data['email'] = ''
+ data['confirm'] = None
+ while not data['name']:
+ data['name'] = input('Username: ')
+ while data['password'] != data['confirm']:
+ while not data['password']:
+ data['password'] = getpass.getpass('Password: ')
+ while not data['confirm']:
+ data['confirm'] = getpass.getpass(' Confirm: ')
+ if data['password'] != data['confirm']:
+ data['password'] = ''
+ data['confirm'] = None
+ print("Password and confirm don't match!")
+ while not data['email']:
+ data['email'] = input(' EMail: ')
+ code, result = self.post_to_server(data)
+ if code != 200:
+ log.info('Server response (%s): %s', code, result)
+ else:
+ log.info('You will receive an email shortly.')
+ log.info(('Follow the instructions in it to '
+ 'complete registration.'))
+ elif choice == '3':
+ data = {':action': 'password_reset'}
+ data['email'] = ''
+ while not data['email']:
+ data['email'] = input('Your email address: ')
+ code, result = self.post_to_server(data)
+ log.info('Server response (%s): %s', code, result)
+
+ def build_post_data(self, action):
+ # figure the data to send - the metadata plus some additional
+ # information used by the package server
+ meta = self.distribution.metadata
+ data = {
+ ':action': action,
+ 'metadata_version' : '1.0',
+ 'name': meta.get_name(),
+ 'version': meta.get_version(),
+ 'summary': meta.get_description(),
+ 'home_page': meta.get_url(),
+ 'author': meta.get_contact(),
+ 'author_email': meta.get_contact_email(),
+ 'license': meta.get_licence(),
+ 'description': meta.get_long_description(),
+ 'keywords': meta.get_keywords(),
+ 'platform': meta.get_platforms(),
+ 'classifiers': meta.get_classifiers(),
+ 'download_url': meta.get_download_url(),
+ # PEP 314
+ 'provides': meta.get_provides(),
+ 'requires': meta.get_requires(),
+ 'obsoletes': meta.get_obsoletes(),
+ }
+ if data['provides'] or data['requires'] or data['obsoletes']:
+ data['metadata_version'] = '1.1'
+ return data
+
+ def post_to_server(self, data, auth=None):
+ ''' Post a query to the server, and return a string response.
+ '''
+ if 'name' in data:
+ self.announce('Registering %s to %s' % (data['name'],
+ self.repository),
+ log.INFO)
+ # Build up the MIME payload for the urllib2 POST data
+ boundary = '--------------GHSKFJDLGDS7543FJKLFHRE75642756743254'
+ sep_boundary = '\n--' + boundary
+ end_boundary = sep_boundary + '--'
+ body = io.StringIO()
+ for key, value in data.items():
+ # handle multiple entries for the same name
+ if type(value) not in (type([]), type( () )):
+ value = [value]
+ for value in value:
+ value = str(value)
+ body.write(sep_boundary)
+ body.write('\nContent-Disposition: form-data; name="%s"'%key)
+ body.write("\n\n")
+ body.write(value)
+ if value and value[-1] == '\r':
+ body.write('\n') # write an extra newline (lurve Macs)
+ body.write(end_boundary)
+ body.write("\n")
+ body = body.getvalue().encode("utf-8")
+
+ # build the Request
+ headers = {
+ 'Content-type': 'multipart/form-data; boundary=%s; charset=utf-8'%boundary,
+ 'Content-length': str(len(body))
+ }
+ req = urllib.request.Request(self.repository, body, headers)
+
+ # handle HTTP and include the Basic Auth handler
+ opener = urllib.request.build_opener(
+ urllib.request.HTTPBasicAuthHandler(password_mgr=auth)
+ )
+ data = ''
+ try:
+ result = opener.open(req)
+ except urllib.error.HTTPError as e:
+ if self.show_response:
+ data = e.fp.read()
+ result = e.code, e.msg
+ except urllib.error.URLError as e:
+ result = 500, str(e)
+ else:
+ if self.show_response:
+ data = self._read_pypi_response(result)
+ result = 200, 'OK'
+ if self.show_response:
+ msg = '\n'.join(('-' * 75, data, '-' * 75))
+ self.announce(msg, log.INFO)
+ return result
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/sdist.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/sdist.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..b4996fcb1d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/sdist.py
@@ -0,0 +1,494 @@
+"""distutils.command.sdist
+
+Implements the Distutils 'sdist' command (create a source distribution)."""
+
+import os
+import sys
+from glob import glob
+from warnings import warn
+
+from distutils.core import Command
+from distutils import dir_util
+from distutils import file_util
+from distutils import archive_util
+from distutils.text_file import TextFile
+from distutils.filelist import FileList
+from distutils import log
+from distutils.util import convert_path
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsTemplateError, DistutilsOptionError
+
+
+def show_formats():
+ """Print all possible values for the 'formats' option (used by
+ the "--help-formats" command-line option).
+ """
+ from distutils.fancy_getopt import FancyGetopt
+ from distutils.archive_util import ARCHIVE_FORMATS
+ formats = []
+ for format in ARCHIVE_FORMATS.keys():
+ formats.append(("formats=" + format, None,
+ ARCHIVE_FORMATS[format][2]))
+ formats.sort()
+ FancyGetopt(formats).print_help(
+ "List of available source distribution formats:")
+
+
+class sdist(Command):
+
+ description = "create a source distribution (tarball, zip file, etc.)"
+
+ def checking_metadata(self):
+ """Callable used for the check sub-command.
+
+ Placed here so user_options can view it"""
+ return self.metadata_check
+
+ user_options = [
+ ('template=', 't',
+ "name of manifest template file [default: MANIFEST.in]"),
+ ('manifest=', 'm',
+ "name of manifest file [default: MANIFEST]"),
+ ('use-defaults', None,
+ "include the default file set in the manifest "
+ "[default; disable with --no-defaults]"),
+ ('no-defaults', None,
+ "don't include the default file set"),
+ ('prune', None,
+ "specifically exclude files/directories that should not be "
+ "distributed (build tree, RCS/CVS dirs, etc.) "
+ "[default; disable with --no-prune]"),
+ ('no-prune', None,
+ "don't automatically exclude anything"),
+ ('manifest-only', 'o',
+ "just regenerate the manifest and then stop "
+ "(implies --force-manifest)"),
+ ('force-manifest', 'f',
+ "forcibly regenerate the manifest and carry on as usual. "
+ "Deprecated: now the manifest is always regenerated."),
+ ('formats=', None,
+ "formats for source distribution (comma-separated list)"),
+ ('keep-temp', 'k',
+ "keep the distribution tree around after creating " +
+ "archive file(s)"),
+ ('dist-dir=', 'd',
+ "directory to put the source distribution archive(s) in "
+ "[default: dist]"),
+ ('metadata-check', None,
+ "Ensure that all required elements of meta-data "
+ "are supplied. Warn if any missing. [default]"),
+ ('owner=', 'u',
+ "Owner name used when creating a tar file [default: current user]"),
+ ('group=', 'g',
+ "Group name used when creating a tar file [default: current group]"),
+ ]
+
+ boolean_options = ['use-defaults', 'prune',
+ 'manifest-only', 'force-manifest',
+ 'keep-temp', 'metadata-check']
+
+ help_options = [
+ ('help-formats', None,
+ "list available distribution formats", show_formats),
+ ]
+
+ negative_opt = {'no-defaults': 'use-defaults',
+ 'no-prune': 'prune' }
+
+ sub_commands = [('check', checking_metadata)]
+
+ READMES = ('README', 'README.txt', 'README.rst')
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ # 'template' and 'manifest' are, respectively, the names of
+ # the manifest template and manifest file.
+ self.template = None
+ self.manifest = None
+
+ # 'use_defaults': if true, we will include the default file set
+ # in the manifest
+ self.use_defaults = 1
+ self.prune = 1
+
+ self.manifest_only = 0
+ self.force_manifest = 0
+
+ self.formats = ['gztar']
+ self.keep_temp = 0
+ self.dist_dir = None
+
+ self.archive_files = None
+ self.metadata_check = 1
+ self.owner = None
+ self.group = None
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ if self.manifest is None:
+ self.manifest = "MANIFEST"
+ if self.template is None:
+ self.template = "MANIFEST.in"
+
+ self.ensure_string_list('formats')
+
+ bad_format = archive_util.check_archive_formats(self.formats)
+ if bad_format:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ "unknown archive format '%s'" % bad_format)
+
+ if self.dist_dir is None:
+ self.dist_dir = "dist"
+
+ def run(self):
+ # 'filelist' contains the list of files that will make up the
+ # manifest
+ self.filelist = FileList()
+
+ # Run sub commands
+ for cmd_name in self.get_sub_commands():
+ self.run_command(cmd_name)
+
+ # Do whatever it takes to get the list of files to process
+ # (process the manifest template, read an existing manifest,
+ # whatever). File list is accumulated in 'self.filelist'.
+ self.get_file_list()
+
+ # If user just wanted us to regenerate the manifest, stop now.
+ if self.manifest_only:
+ return
+
+ # Otherwise, go ahead and create the source distribution tarball,
+ # or zipfile, or whatever.
+ self.make_distribution()
+
+ def check_metadata(self):
+ """Deprecated API."""
+ warn("distutils.command.sdist.check_metadata is deprecated, \
+ use the check command instead", PendingDeprecationWarning)
+ check = self.distribution.get_command_obj('check')
+ check.ensure_finalized()
+ check.run()
+
+ def get_file_list(self):
+ """Figure out the list of files to include in the source
+ distribution, and put it in 'self.filelist'. This might involve
+ reading the manifest template (and writing the manifest), or just
+ reading the manifest, or just using the default file set -- it all
+ depends on the user's options.
+ """
+ # new behavior when using a template:
+ # the file list is recalculated every time because
+ # even if MANIFEST.in or setup.py are not changed
+ # the user might have added some files in the tree that
+ # need to be included.
+ #
+ # This makes --force the default and only behavior with templates.
+ template_exists = os.path.isfile(self.template)
+ if not template_exists and self._manifest_is_not_generated():
+ self.read_manifest()
+ self.filelist.sort()
+ self.filelist.remove_duplicates()
+ return
+
+ if not template_exists:
+ self.warn(("manifest template '%s' does not exist " +
+ "(using default file list)") %
+ self.template)
+ self.filelist.findall()
+
+ if self.use_defaults:
+ self.add_defaults()
+
+ if template_exists:
+ self.read_template()
+
+ if self.prune:
+ self.prune_file_list()
+
+ self.filelist.sort()
+ self.filelist.remove_duplicates()
+ self.write_manifest()
+
+ def add_defaults(self):
+ """Add all the default files to self.filelist:
+ - README or README.txt
+ - setup.py
+ - test/test*.py
+ - all pure Python modules mentioned in setup script
+ - all files pointed by package_data (build_py)
+ - all files defined in data_files.
+ - all files defined as scripts.
+ - all C sources listed as part of extensions or C libraries
+ in the setup script (doesn't catch C headers!)
+ Warns if (README or README.txt) or setup.py are missing; everything
+ else is optional.
+ """
+ self._add_defaults_standards()
+ self._add_defaults_optional()
+ self._add_defaults_python()
+ self._add_defaults_data_files()
+ self._add_defaults_ext()
+ self._add_defaults_c_libs()
+ self._add_defaults_scripts()
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _cs_path_exists(fspath):
+ """
+ Case-sensitive path existence check
+
+ >>> sdist._cs_path_exists(__file__)
+ True
+ >>> sdist._cs_path_exists(__file__.upper())
+ False
+ """
+ if not os.path.exists(fspath):
+ return False
+ # make absolute so we always have a directory
+ abspath = os.path.abspath(fspath)
+ directory, filename = os.path.split(abspath)
+ return filename in os.listdir(directory)
+
+ def _add_defaults_standards(self):
+ standards = [self.READMES, self.distribution.script_name]
+ for fn in standards:
+ if isinstance(fn, tuple):
+ alts = fn
+ got_it = False
+ for fn in alts:
+ if self._cs_path_exists(fn):
+ got_it = True
+ self.filelist.append(fn)
+ break
+
+ if not got_it:
+ self.warn("standard file not found: should have one of " +
+ ', '.join(alts))
+ else:
+ if self._cs_path_exists(fn):
+ self.filelist.append(fn)
+ else:
+ self.warn("standard file '%s' not found" % fn)
+
+ def _add_defaults_optional(self):
+ optional = ['test/test*.py', 'setup.cfg']
+ for pattern in optional:
+ files = filter(os.path.isfile, glob(pattern))
+ self.filelist.extend(files)
+
+ def _add_defaults_python(self):
+ # build_py is used to get:
+ # - python modules
+ # - files defined in package_data
+ build_py = self.get_finalized_command('build_py')
+
+ # getting python files
+ if self.distribution.has_pure_modules():
+ self.filelist.extend(build_py.get_source_files())
+
+ # getting package_data files
+ # (computed in build_py.data_files by build_py.finalize_options)
+ for pkg, src_dir, build_dir, filenames in build_py.data_files:
+ for filename in filenames:
+ self.filelist.append(os.path.join(src_dir, filename))
+
+ def _add_defaults_data_files(self):
+ # getting distribution.data_files
+ if self.distribution.has_data_files():
+ for item in self.distribution.data_files:
+ if isinstance(item, str):
+ # plain file
+ item = convert_path(item)
+ if os.path.isfile(item):
+ self.filelist.append(item)
+ else:
+ # a (dirname, filenames) tuple
+ dirname, filenames = item
+ for f in filenames:
+ f = convert_path(f)
+ if os.path.isfile(f):
+ self.filelist.append(f)
+
+ def _add_defaults_ext(self):
+ if self.distribution.has_ext_modules():
+ build_ext = self.get_finalized_command('build_ext')
+ self.filelist.extend(build_ext.get_source_files())
+
+ def _add_defaults_c_libs(self):
+ if self.distribution.has_c_libraries():
+ build_clib = self.get_finalized_command('build_clib')
+ self.filelist.extend(build_clib.get_source_files())
+
+ def _add_defaults_scripts(self):
+ if self.distribution.has_scripts():
+ build_scripts = self.get_finalized_command('build_scripts')
+ self.filelist.extend(build_scripts.get_source_files())
+
+ def read_template(self):
+ """Read and parse manifest template file named by self.template.
+
+ (usually "MANIFEST.in") The parsing and processing is done by
+ 'self.filelist', which updates itself accordingly.
+ """
+ log.info("reading manifest template '%s'", self.template)
+ template = TextFile(self.template, strip_comments=1, skip_blanks=1,
+ join_lines=1, lstrip_ws=1, rstrip_ws=1,
+ collapse_join=1)
+
+ try:
+ while True:
+ line = template.readline()
+ if line is None: # end of file
+ break
+
+ try:
+ self.filelist.process_template_line(line)
+ # the call above can raise a DistutilsTemplateError for
+ # malformed lines, or a ValueError from the lower-level
+ # convert_path function
+ except (DistutilsTemplateError, ValueError) as msg:
+ self.warn("%s, line %d: %s" % (template.filename,
+ template.current_line,
+ msg))
+ finally:
+ template.close()
+
+ def prune_file_list(self):
+ """Prune off branches that might slip into the file list as created
+ by 'read_template()', but really don't belong there:
+ * the build tree (typically "build")
+ * the release tree itself (only an issue if we ran "sdist"
+ previously with --keep-temp, or it aborted)
+ * any RCS, CVS, .svn, .hg, .git, .bzr, _darcs directories
+ """
+ build = self.get_finalized_command('build')
+ base_dir = self.distribution.get_fullname()
+
+ self.filelist.exclude_pattern(None, prefix=build.build_base)
+ self.filelist.exclude_pattern(None, prefix=base_dir)
+
+ if sys.platform == 'win32':
+ seps = r'/|\\'
+ else:
+ seps = '/'
+
+ vcs_dirs = ['RCS', 'CVS', r'\.svn', r'\.hg', r'\.git', r'\.bzr',
+ '_darcs']
+ vcs_ptrn = r'(^|%s)(%s)(%s).*' % (seps, '|'.join(vcs_dirs), seps)
+ self.filelist.exclude_pattern(vcs_ptrn, is_regex=1)
+
+ def write_manifest(self):
+ """Write the file list in 'self.filelist' (presumably as filled in
+ by 'add_defaults()' and 'read_template()') to the manifest file
+ named by 'self.manifest'.
+ """
+ if self._manifest_is_not_generated():
+ log.info("not writing to manually maintained "
+ "manifest file '%s'" % self.manifest)
+ return
+
+ content = self.filelist.files[:]
+ content.insert(0, '# file GENERATED by distutils, do NOT edit')
+ self.execute(file_util.write_file, (self.manifest, content),
+ "writing manifest file '%s'" % self.manifest)
+
+ def _manifest_is_not_generated(self):
+ # check for special comment used in 3.1.3 and higher
+ if not os.path.isfile(self.manifest):
+ return False
+
+ fp = open(self.manifest)
+ try:
+ first_line = fp.readline()
+ finally:
+ fp.close()
+ return first_line != '# file GENERATED by distutils, do NOT edit\n'
+
+ def read_manifest(self):
+ """Read the manifest file (named by 'self.manifest') and use it to
+ fill in 'self.filelist', the list of files to include in the source
+ distribution.
+ """
+ log.info("reading manifest file '%s'", self.manifest)
+ with open(self.manifest) as manifest:
+ for line in manifest:
+ # ignore comments and blank lines
+ line = line.strip()
+ if line.startswith('#') or not line:
+ continue
+ self.filelist.append(line)
+
+ def make_release_tree(self, base_dir, files):
+ """Create the directory tree that will become the source
+ distribution archive. All directories implied by the filenames in
+ 'files' are created under 'base_dir', and then we hard link or copy
+ (if hard linking is unavailable) those files into place.
+ Essentially, this duplicates the developer's source tree, but in a
+ directory named after the distribution, containing only the files
+ to be distributed.
+ """
+ # Create all the directories under 'base_dir' necessary to
+ # put 'files' there; the 'mkpath()' is just so we don't die
+ # if the manifest happens to be empty.
+ self.mkpath(base_dir)
+ dir_util.create_tree(base_dir, files, dry_run=self.dry_run)
+
+ # And walk over the list of files, either making a hard link (if
+ # os.link exists) to each one that doesn't already exist in its
+ # corresponding location under 'base_dir', or copying each file
+ # that's out-of-date in 'base_dir'. (Usually, all files will be
+ # out-of-date, because by default we blow away 'base_dir' when
+ # we're done making the distribution archives.)
+
+ if hasattr(os, 'link'): # can make hard links on this system
+ link = 'hard'
+ msg = "making hard links in %s..." % base_dir
+ else: # nope, have to copy
+ link = None
+ msg = "copying files to %s..." % base_dir
+
+ if not files:
+ log.warn("no files to distribute -- empty manifest?")
+ else:
+ log.info(msg)
+ for file in files:
+ if not os.path.isfile(file):
+ log.warn("'%s' not a regular file -- skipping", file)
+ else:
+ dest = os.path.join(base_dir, file)
+ self.copy_file(file, dest, link=link)
+
+ self.distribution.metadata.write_pkg_info(base_dir)
+
+ def make_distribution(self):
+ """Create the source distribution(s). First, we create the release
+ tree with 'make_release_tree()'; then, we create all required
+ archive files (according to 'self.formats') from the release tree.
+ Finally, we clean up by blowing away the release tree (unless
+ 'self.keep_temp' is true). The list of archive files created is
+ stored so it can be retrieved later by 'get_archive_files()'.
+ """
+ # Don't warn about missing meta-data here -- should be (and is!)
+ # done elsewhere.
+ base_dir = self.distribution.get_fullname()
+ base_name = os.path.join(self.dist_dir, base_dir)
+
+ self.make_release_tree(base_dir, self.filelist.files)
+ archive_files = [] # remember names of files we create
+ # tar archive must be created last to avoid overwrite and remove
+ if 'tar' in self.formats:
+ self.formats.append(self.formats.pop(self.formats.index('tar')))
+
+ for fmt in self.formats:
+ file = self.make_archive(base_name, fmt, base_dir=base_dir,
+ owner=self.owner, group=self.group)
+ archive_files.append(file)
+ self.distribution.dist_files.append(('sdist', '', file))
+
+ self.archive_files = archive_files
+
+ if not self.keep_temp:
+ dir_util.remove_tree(base_dir, dry_run=self.dry_run)
+
+ def get_archive_files(self):
+ """Return the list of archive files created when the command
+ was run, or None if the command hasn't run yet.
+ """
+ return self.archive_files
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/upload.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/upload.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..95e9fda186
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/command/upload.py
@@ -0,0 +1,214 @@
+"""
+distutils.command.upload
+
+Implements the Distutils 'upload' subcommand (upload package to a package
+index).
+"""
+
+import os
+import io
+import hashlib
+from base64 import standard_b64encode
+from urllib.request import urlopen, Request, HTTPError
+from urllib.parse import urlparse
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsError, DistutilsOptionError
+from distutils.core import PyPIRCCommand
+from distutils.spawn import spawn
+from distutils import log
+
+
+# PyPI Warehouse supports MD5, SHA256, and Blake2 (blake2-256)
+# https://bugs.python.org/issue40698
+_FILE_CONTENT_DIGESTS = {
+ "md5_digest": getattr(hashlib, "md5", None),
+ "sha256_digest": getattr(hashlib, "sha256", None),
+ "blake2_256_digest": getattr(hashlib, "blake2b", None),
+}
+
+
+class upload(PyPIRCCommand):
+
+ description = "upload binary package to PyPI"
+
+ user_options = PyPIRCCommand.user_options + [
+ ('sign', 's',
+ 'sign files to upload using gpg'),
+ ('identity=', 'i', 'GPG identity used to sign files'),
+ ]
+
+ boolean_options = PyPIRCCommand.boolean_options + ['sign']
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ PyPIRCCommand.initialize_options(self)
+ self.username = ''
+ self.password = ''
+ self.show_response = 0
+ self.sign = False
+ self.identity = None
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ PyPIRCCommand.finalize_options(self)
+ if self.identity and not self.sign:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ "Must use --sign for --identity to have meaning"
+ )
+ config = self._read_pypirc()
+ if config != {}:
+ self.username = config['username']
+ self.password = config['password']
+ self.repository = config['repository']
+ self.realm = config['realm']
+
+ # getting the password from the distribution
+ # if previously set by the register command
+ if not self.password and self.distribution.password:
+ self.password = self.distribution.password
+
+ def run(self):
+ if not self.distribution.dist_files:
+ msg = ("Must create and upload files in one command "
+ "(e.g. setup.py sdist upload)")
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(msg)
+ for command, pyversion, filename in self.distribution.dist_files:
+ self.upload_file(command, pyversion, filename)
+
+ def upload_file(self, command, pyversion, filename):
+ # Makes sure the repository URL is compliant
+ schema, netloc, url, params, query, fragments = \
+ urlparse(self.repository)
+ if params or query or fragments:
+ raise AssertionError("Incompatible url %s" % self.repository)
+
+ if schema not in ('http', 'https'):
+ raise AssertionError("unsupported schema " + schema)
+
+ # Sign if requested
+ if self.sign:
+ gpg_args = ["gpg", "--detach-sign", "-a", filename]
+ if self.identity:
+ gpg_args[2:2] = ["--local-user", self.identity]
+ spawn(gpg_args,
+ dry_run=self.dry_run)
+
+ # Fill in the data - send all the meta-data in case we need to
+ # register a new release
+ f = open(filename,'rb')
+ try:
+ content = f.read()
+ finally:
+ f.close()
+
+ meta = self.distribution.metadata
+ data = {
+ # action
+ ':action': 'file_upload',
+ 'protocol_version': '1',
+
+ # identify release
+ 'name': meta.get_name(),
+ 'version': meta.get_version(),
+
+ # file content
+ 'content': (os.path.basename(filename),content),
+ 'filetype': command,
+ 'pyversion': pyversion,
+
+ # additional meta-data
+ 'metadata_version': '1.0',
+ 'summary': meta.get_description(),
+ 'home_page': meta.get_url(),
+ 'author': meta.get_contact(),
+ 'author_email': meta.get_contact_email(),
+ 'license': meta.get_licence(),
+ 'description': meta.get_long_description(),
+ 'keywords': meta.get_keywords(),
+ 'platform': meta.get_platforms(),
+ 'classifiers': meta.get_classifiers(),
+ 'download_url': meta.get_download_url(),
+ # PEP 314
+ 'provides': meta.get_provides(),
+ 'requires': meta.get_requires(),
+ 'obsoletes': meta.get_obsoletes(),
+ }
+
+ data['comment'] = ''
+
+ # file content digests
+ for digest_name, digest_cons in _FILE_CONTENT_DIGESTS.items():
+ if digest_cons is None:
+ continue
+ try:
+ data[digest_name] = digest_cons(content).hexdigest()
+ except ValueError:
+ # hash digest not available or blocked by security policy
+ pass
+
+ if self.sign:
+ with open(filename + ".asc", "rb") as f:
+ data['gpg_signature'] = (os.path.basename(filename) + ".asc",
+ f.read())
+
+ # set up the authentication
+ user_pass = (self.username + ":" + self.password).encode('ascii')
+ # The exact encoding of the authentication string is debated.
+ # Anyway PyPI only accepts ascii for both username or password.
+ auth = "Basic " + standard_b64encode(user_pass).decode('ascii')
+
+ # Build up the MIME payload for the POST data
+ boundary = '--------------GHSKFJDLGDS7543FJKLFHRE75642756743254'
+ sep_boundary = b'\r\n--' + boundary.encode('ascii')
+ end_boundary = sep_boundary + b'--\r\n'
+ body = io.BytesIO()
+ for key, value in data.items():
+ title = '\r\nContent-Disposition: form-data; name="%s"' % key
+ # handle multiple entries for the same name
+ if not isinstance(value, list):
+ value = [value]
+ for value in value:
+ if type(value) is tuple:
+ title += '; filename="%s"' % value[0]
+ value = value[1]
+ else:
+ value = str(value).encode('utf-8')
+ body.write(sep_boundary)
+ body.write(title.encode('utf-8'))
+ body.write(b"\r\n\r\n")
+ body.write(value)
+ body.write(end_boundary)
+ body = body.getvalue()
+
+ msg = "Submitting %s to %s" % (filename, self.repository)
+ self.announce(msg, log.INFO)
+
+ # build the Request
+ headers = {
+ 'Content-type': 'multipart/form-data; boundary=%s' % boundary,
+ 'Content-length': str(len(body)),
+ 'Authorization': auth,
+ }
+
+ request = Request(self.repository, data=body,
+ headers=headers)
+ # send the data
+ try:
+ result = urlopen(request)
+ status = result.getcode()
+ reason = result.msg
+ except HTTPError as e:
+ status = e.code
+ reason = e.msg
+ except OSError as e:
+ self.announce(str(e), log.ERROR)
+ raise
+
+ if status == 200:
+ self.announce('Server response (%s): %s' % (status, reason),
+ log.INFO)
+ if self.show_response:
+ text = self._read_pypi_response(result)
+ msg = '\n'.join(('-' * 75, text, '-' * 75))
+ self.announce(msg, log.INFO)
+ else:
+ msg = 'Upload failed (%s): %s' % (status, reason)
+ self.announce(msg, log.ERROR)
+ raise DistutilsError(msg)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/config.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/config.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..2171abd696
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/config.py
@@ -0,0 +1,130 @@
+"""distutils.pypirc
+
+Provides the PyPIRCCommand class, the base class for the command classes
+that uses .pypirc in the distutils.command package.
+"""
+import os
+from configparser import RawConfigParser
+
+from distutils.cmd import Command
+
+DEFAULT_PYPIRC = """\
+[distutils]
+index-servers =
+ pypi
+
+[pypi]
+username:%s
+password:%s
+"""
+
+class PyPIRCCommand(Command):
+ """Base command that knows how to handle the .pypirc file
+ """
+ DEFAULT_REPOSITORY = 'https://upload.pypi.org/legacy/'
+ DEFAULT_REALM = 'pypi'
+ repository = None
+ realm = None
+
+ user_options = [
+ ('repository=', 'r',
+ "url of repository [default: %s]" % \
+ DEFAULT_REPOSITORY),
+ ('show-response', None,
+ 'display full response text from server')]
+
+ boolean_options = ['show-response']
+
+ def _get_rc_file(self):
+ """Returns rc file path."""
+ return os.path.join(os.path.expanduser('~'), '.pypirc')
+
+ def _store_pypirc(self, username, password):
+ """Creates a default .pypirc file."""
+ rc = self._get_rc_file()
+ with os.fdopen(os.open(rc, os.O_CREAT | os.O_WRONLY, 0o600), 'w') as f:
+ f.write(DEFAULT_PYPIRC % (username, password))
+
+ def _read_pypirc(self):
+ """Reads the .pypirc file."""
+ rc = self._get_rc_file()
+ if os.path.exists(rc):
+ self.announce('Using PyPI login from %s' % rc)
+ repository = self.repository or self.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY
+
+ config = RawConfigParser()
+ config.read(rc)
+ sections = config.sections()
+ if 'distutils' in sections:
+ # let's get the list of servers
+ index_servers = config.get('distutils', 'index-servers')
+ _servers = [server.strip() for server in
+ index_servers.split('\n')
+ if server.strip() != '']
+ if _servers == []:
+ # nothing set, let's try to get the default pypi
+ if 'pypi' in sections:
+ _servers = ['pypi']
+ else:
+ # the file is not properly defined, returning
+ # an empty dict
+ return {}
+ for server in _servers:
+ current = {'server': server}
+ current['username'] = config.get(server, 'username')
+
+ # optional params
+ for key, default in (('repository',
+ self.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY),
+ ('realm', self.DEFAULT_REALM),
+ ('password', None)):
+ if config.has_option(server, key):
+ current[key] = config.get(server, key)
+ else:
+ current[key] = default
+
+ # work around people having "repository" for the "pypi"
+ # section of their config set to the HTTP (rather than
+ # HTTPS) URL
+ if (server == 'pypi' and
+ repository in (self.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY, 'pypi')):
+ current['repository'] = self.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY
+ return current
+
+ if (current['server'] == repository or
+ current['repository'] == repository):
+ return current
+ elif 'server-login' in sections:
+ # old format
+ server = 'server-login'
+ if config.has_option(server, 'repository'):
+ repository = config.get(server, 'repository')
+ else:
+ repository = self.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY
+ return {'username': config.get(server, 'username'),
+ 'password': config.get(server, 'password'),
+ 'repository': repository,
+ 'server': server,
+ 'realm': self.DEFAULT_REALM}
+
+ return {}
+
+ def _read_pypi_response(self, response):
+ """Read and decode a PyPI HTTP response."""
+ import cgi
+ content_type = response.getheader('content-type', 'text/plain')
+ encoding = cgi.parse_header(content_type)[1].get('charset', 'ascii')
+ return response.read().decode(encoding)
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ """Initialize options."""
+ self.repository = None
+ self.realm = None
+ self.show_response = 0
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ """Finalizes options."""
+ if self.repository is None:
+ self.repository = self.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY
+ if self.realm is None:
+ self.realm = self.DEFAULT_REALM
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/core.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/core.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..d603d4a45a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/core.py
@@ -0,0 +1,234 @@
+"""distutils.core
+
+The only module that needs to be imported to use the Distutils; provides
+the 'setup' function (which is to be called from the setup script). Also
+indirectly provides the Distribution and Command classes, although they are
+really defined in distutils.dist and distutils.cmd.
+"""
+
+import os
+import sys
+
+from distutils.debug import DEBUG
+from distutils.errors import *
+
+# Mainly import these so setup scripts can "from distutils.core import" them.
+from distutils.dist import Distribution
+from distutils.cmd import Command
+from distutils.config import PyPIRCCommand
+from distutils.extension import Extension
+
+# This is a barebones help message generated displayed when the user
+# runs the setup script with no arguments at all. More useful help
+# is generated with various --help options: global help, list commands,
+# and per-command help.
+USAGE = """\
+usage: %(script)s [global_opts] cmd1 [cmd1_opts] [cmd2 [cmd2_opts] ...]
+ or: %(script)s --help [cmd1 cmd2 ...]
+ or: %(script)s --help-commands
+ or: %(script)s cmd --help
+"""
+
+def gen_usage (script_name):
+ script = os.path.basename(script_name)
+ return USAGE % vars()
+
+
+# Some mild magic to control the behaviour of 'setup()' from 'run_setup()'.
+_setup_stop_after = None
+_setup_distribution = None
+
+# Legal keyword arguments for the setup() function
+setup_keywords = ('distclass', 'script_name', 'script_args', 'options',
+ 'name', 'version', 'author', 'author_email',
+ 'maintainer', 'maintainer_email', 'url', 'license',
+ 'description', 'long_description', 'keywords',
+ 'platforms', 'classifiers', 'download_url',
+ 'requires', 'provides', 'obsoletes',
+ )
+
+# Legal keyword arguments for the Extension constructor
+extension_keywords = ('name', 'sources', 'include_dirs',
+ 'define_macros', 'undef_macros',
+ 'library_dirs', 'libraries', 'runtime_library_dirs',
+ 'extra_objects', 'extra_compile_args', 'extra_link_args',
+ 'swig_opts', 'export_symbols', 'depends', 'language')
+
+def setup (**attrs):
+ """The gateway to the Distutils: do everything your setup script needs
+ to do, in a highly flexible and user-driven way. Briefly: create a
+ Distribution instance; find and parse config files; parse the command
+ line; run each Distutils command found there, customized by the options
+ supplied to 'setup()' (as keyword arguments), in config files, and on
+ the command line.
+
+ The Distribution instance might be an instance of a class supplied via
+ the 'distclass' keyword argument to 'setup'; if no such class is
+ supplied, then the Distribution class (in dist.py) is instantiated.
+ All other arguments to 'setup' (except for 'cmdclass') are used to set
+ attributes of the Distribution instance.
+
+ The 'cmdclass' argument, if supplied, is a dictionary mapping command
+ names to command classes. Each command encountered on the command line
+ will be turned into a command class, which is in turn instantiated; any
+ class found in 'cmdclass' is used in place of the default, which is
+ (for command 'foo_bar') class 'foo_bar' in module
+ 'distutils.command.foo_bar'. The command class must provide a
+ 'user_options' attribute which is a list of option specifiers for
+ 'distutils.fancy_getopt'. Any command-line options between the current
+ and the next command are used to set attributes of the current command
+ object.
+
+ When the entire command-line has been successfully parsed, calls the
+ 'run()' method on each command object in turn. This method will be
+ driven entirely by the Distribution object (which each command object
+ has a reference to, thanks to its constructor), and the
+ command-specific options that became attributes of each command
+ object.
+ """
+
+ global _setup_stop_after, _setup_distribution
+
+ # Determine the distribution class -- either caller-supplied or
+ # our Distribution (see below).
+ klass = attrs.get('distclass')
+ if klass:
+ del attrs['distclass']
+ else:
+ klass = Distribution
+
+ if 'script_name' not in attrs:
+ attrs['script_name'] = os.path.basename(sys.argv[0])
+ if 'script_args' not in attrs:
+ attrs['script_args'] = sys.argv[1:]
+
+ # Create the Distribution instance, using the remaining arguments
+ # (ie. everything except distclass) to initialize it
+ try:
+ _setup_distribution = dist = klass(attrs)
+ except DistutilsSetupError as msg:
+ if 'name' not in attrs:
+ raise SystemExit("error in setup command: %s" % msg)
+ else:
+ raise SystemExit("error in %s setup command: %s" % \
+ (attrs['name'], msg))
+
+ if _setup_stop_after == "init":
+ return dist
+
+ # Find and parse the config file(s): they will override options from
+ # the setup script, but be overridden by the command line.
+ dist.parse_config_files()
+
+ if DEBUG:
+ print("options (after parsing config files):")
+ dist.dump_option_dicts()
+
+ if _setup_stop_after == "config":
+ return dist
+
+ # Parse the command line and override config files; any
+ # command-line errors are the end user's fault, so turn them into
+ # SystemExit to suppress tracebacks.
+ try:
+ ok = dist.parse_command_line()
+ except DistutilsArgError as msg:
+ raise SystemExit(gen_usage(dist.script_name) + "\nerror: %s" % msg)
+
+ if DEBUG:
+ print("options (after parsing command line):")
+ dist.dump_option_dicts()
+
+ if _setup_stop_after == "commandline":
+ return dist
+
+ # And finally, run all the commands found on the command line.
+ if ok:
+ try:
+ dist.run_commands()
+ except KeyboardInterrupt:
+ raise SystemExit("interrupted")
+ except OSError as exc:
+ if DEBUG:
+ sys.stderr.write("error: %s\n" % (exc,))
+ raise
+ else:
+ raise SystemExit("error: %s" % (exc,))
+
+ except (DistutilsError,
+ CCompilerError) as msg:
+ if DEBUG:
+ raise
+ else:
+ raise SystemExit("error: " + str(msg))
+
+ return dist
+
+# setup ()
+
+
+def run_setup (script_name, script_args=None, stop_after="run"):
+ """Run a setup script in a somewhat controlled environment, and
+ return the Distribution instance that drives things. This is useful
+ if you need to find out the distribution meta-data (passed as
+ keyword args from 'script' to 'setup()', or the contents of the
+ config files or command-line.
+
+ 'script_name' is a file that will be read and run with 'exec()';
+ 'sys.argv[0]' will be replaced with 'script' for the duration of the
+ call. 'script_args' is a list of strings; if supplied,
+ 'sys.argv[1:]' will be replaced by 'script_args' for the duration of
+ the call.
+
+ 'stop_after' tells 'setup()' when to stop processing; possible
+ values:
+ init
+ stop after the Distribution instance has been created and
+ populated with the keyword arguments to 'setup()'
+ config
+ stop after config files have been parsed (and their data
+ stored in the Distribution instance)
+ commandline
+ stop after the command-line ('sys.argv[1:]' or 'script_args')
+ have been parsed (and the data stored in the Distribution)
+ run [default]
+ stop after all commands have been run (the same as if 'setup()'
+ had been called in the usual way
+
+ Returns the Distribution instance, which provides all information
+ used to drive the Distutils.
+ """
+ if stop_after not in ('init', 'config', 'commandline', 'run'):
+ raise ValueError("invalid value for 'stop_after': %r" % (stop_after,))
+
+ global _setup_stop_after, _setup_distribution
+ _setup_stop_after = stop_after
+
+ save_argv = sys.argv.copy()
+ g = {'__file__': script_name}
+ try:
+ try:
+ sys.argv[0] = script_name
+ if script_args is not None:
+ sys.argv[1:] = script_args
+ with open(script_name, 'rb') as f:
+ exec(f.read(), g)
+ finally:
+ sys.argv = save_argv
+ _setup_stop_after = None
+ except SystemExit:
+ # Hmm, should we do something if exiting with a non-zero code
+ # (ie. error)?
+ pass
+
+ if _setup_distribution is None:
+ raise RuntimeError(("'distutils.core.setup()' was never called -- "
+ "perhaps '%s' is not a Distutils setup script?") % \
+ script_name)
+
+ # I wonder if the setup script's namespace -- g and l -- would be of
+ # any interest to callers?
+ #print "_setup_distribution:", _setup_distribution
+ return _setup_distribution
+
+# run_setup ()
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/cygwinccompiler.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/cygwinccompiler.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..66c12dd358
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/cygwinccompiler.py
@@ -0,0 +1,403 @@
+"""distutils.cygwinccompiler
+
+Provides the CygwinCCompiler class, a subclass of UnixCCompiler that
+handles the Cygwin port of the GNU C compiler to Windows. It also contains
+the Mingw32CCompiler class which handles the mingw32 port of GCC (same as
+cygwin in no-cygwin mode).
+"""
+
+# problems:
+#
+# * if you use a msvc compiled python version (1.5.2)
+# 1. you have to insert a __GNUC__ section in its config.h
+# 2. you have to generate an import library for its dll
+# - create a def-file for python??.dll
+# - create an import library using
+# dlltool --dllname python15.dll --def python15.def \
+# --output-lib libpython15.a
+#
+# see also http://starship.python.net/crew/kernr/mingw32/Notes.html
+#
+# * We put export_symbols in a def-file, and don't use
+# --export-all-symbols because it doesn't worked reliable in some
+# tested configurations. And because other windows compilers also
+# need their symbols specified this no serious problem.
+#
+# tested configurations:
+#
+# * cygwin gcc 2.91.57/ld 2.9.4/dllwrap 0.2.4 works
+# (after patching python's config.h and for C++ some other include files)
+# see also http://starship.python.net/crew/kernr/mingw32/Notes.html
+# * mingw32 gcc 2.95.2/ld 2.9.4/dllwrap 0.2.4 works
+# (ld doesn't support -shared, so we use dllwrap)
+# * cygwin gcc 2.95.2/ld 2.10.90/dllwrap 2.10.90 works now
+# - its dllwrap doesn't work, there is a bug in binutils 2.10.90
+# see also http://sources.redhat.com/ml/cygwin/2000-06/msg01274.html
+# - using gcc -mdll instead dllwrap doesn't work without -static because
+# it tries to link against dlls instead their import libraries. (If
+# it finds the dll first.)
+# By specifying -static we force ld to link against the import libraries,
+# this is windows standard and there are normally not the necessary symbols
+# in the dlls.
+# *** only the version of June 2000 shows these problems
+# * cygwin gcc 3.2/ld 2.13.90 works
+# (ld supports -shared)
+# * mingw gcc 3.2/ld 2.13 works
+# (ld supports -shared)
+
+import os
+import sys
+import copy
+from subprocess import Popen, PIPE, check_output
+import re
+
+from distutils.unixccompiler import UnixCCompiler
+from distutils.file_util import write_file
+from distutils.errors import (DistutilsExecError, CCompilerError,
+ CompileError, UnknownFileError)
+from distutils.version import LooseVersion
+from distutils.spawn import find_executable
+
+def get_msvcr():
+ """Include the appropriate MSVC runtime library if Python was built
+ with MSVC 7.0 or later.
+ """
+ msc_pos = sys.version.find('MSC v.')
+ if msc_pos != -1:
+ msc_ver = sys.version[msc_pos+6:msc_pos+10]
+ if msc_ver == '1300':
+ # MSVC 7.0
+ return ['msvcr70']
+ elif msc_ver == '1310':
+ # MSVC 7.1
+ return ['msvcr71']
+ elif msc_ver == '1400':
+ # VS2005 / MSVC 8.0
+ return ['msvcr80']
+ elif msc_ver == '1500':
+ # VS2008 / MSVC 9.0
+ return ['msvcr90']
+ elif msc_ver == '1600':
+ # VS2010 / MSVC 10.0
+ return ['msvcr100']
+ else:
+ raise ValueError("Unknown MS Compiler version %s " % msc_ver)
+
+
+class CygwinCCompiler(UnixCCompiler):
+ """ Handles the Cygwin port of the GNU C compiler to Windows.
+ """
+ compiler_type = 'cygwin'
+ obj_extension = ".o"
+ static_lib_extension = ".a"
+ shared_lib_extension = ".dll"
+ static_lib_format = "lib%s%s"
+ shared_lib_format = "%s%s"
+ exe_extension = ".exe"
+
+ def __init__(self, verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0):
+
+ UnixCCompiler.__init__(self, verbose, dry_run, force)
+
+ status, details = check_config_h()
+ self.debug_print("Python's GCC status: %s (details: %s)" %
+ (status, details))
+ if status is not CONFIG_H_OK:
+ self.warn(
+ "Python's pyconfig.h doesn't seem to support your compiler. "
+ "Reason: %s. "
+ "Compiling may fail because of undefined preprocessor macros."
+ % details)
+
+ self.gcc_version, self.ld_version, self.dllwrap_version = \
+ get_versions()
+ self.debug_print(self.compiler_type + ": gcc %s, ld %s, dllwrap %s\n" %
+ (self.gcc_version,
+ self.ld_version,
+ self.dllwrap_version) )
+
+ # ld_version >= "2.10.90" and < "2.13" should also be able to use
+ # gcc -mdll instead of dllwrap
+ # Older dllwraps had own version numbers, newer ones use the
+ # same as the rest of binutils ( also ld )
+ # dllwrap 2.10.90 is buggy
+ if self.ld_version >= "2.10.90":
+ self.linker_dll = "gcc"
+ else:
+ self.linker_dll = "dllwrap"
+
+ # ld_version >= "2.13" support -shared so use it instead of
+ # -mdll -static
+ if self.ld_version >= "2.13":
+ shared_option = "-shared"
+ else:
+ shared_option = "-mdll -static"
+
+ # Hard-code GCC because that's what this is all about.
+ # XXX optimization, warnings etc. should be customizable.
+ self.set_executables(compiler='gcc -mcygwin -O -Wall',
+ compiler_so='gcc -mcygwin -mdll -O -Wall',
+ compiler_cxx='g++ -mcygwin -O -Wall',
+ linker_exe='gcc -mcygwin',
+ linker_so=('%s -mcygwin %s' %
+ (self.linker_dll, shared_option)))
+
+ # cygwin and mingw32 need different sets of libraries
+ if self.gcc_version == "2.91.57":
+ # cygwin shouldn't need msvcrt, but without the dlls will crash
+ # (gcc version 2.91.57) -- perhaps something about initialization
+ self.dll_libraries=["msvcrt"]
+ self.warn(
+ "Consider upgrading to a newer version of gcc")
+ else:
+ # Include the appropriate MSVC runtime library if Python was built
+ # with MSVC 7.0 or later.
+ self.dll_libraries = get_msvcr()
+
+ def _compile(self, obj, src, ext, cc_args, extra_postargs, pp_opts):
+ """Compiles the source by spawning GCC and windres if needed."""
+ if ext == '.rc' or ext == '.res':
+ # gcc needs '.res' and '.rc' compiled to object files !!!
+ try:
+ self.spawn(["windres", "-i", src, "-o", obj])
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise CompileError(msg)
+ else: # for other files use the C-compiler
+ try:
+ self.spawn(self.compiler_so + cc_args + [src, '-o', obj] +
+ extra_postargs)
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise CompileError(msg)
+
+ def link(self, target_desc, objects, output_filename, output_dir=None,
+ libraries=None, library_dirs=None, runtime_library_dirs=None,
+ export_symbols=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None,
+ extra_postargs=None, build_temp=None, target_lang=None):
+ """Link the objects."""
+ # use separate copies, so we can modify the lists
+ extra_preargs = copy.copy(extra_preargs or [])
+ libraries = copy.copy(libraries or [])
+ objects = copy.copy(objects or [])
+
+ # Additional libraries
+ libraries.extend(self.dll_libraries)
+
+ # handle export symbols by creating a def-file
+ # with executables this only works with gcc/ld as linker
+ if ((export_symbols is not None) and
+ (target_desc != self.EXECUTABLE or self.linker_dll == "gcc")):
+ # (The linker doesn't do anything if output is up-to-date.
+ # So it would probably better to check if we really need this,
+ # but for this we had to insert some unchanged parts of
+ # UnixCCompiler, and this is not what we want.)
+
+ # we want to put some files in the same directory as the
+ # object files are, build_temp doesn't help much
+ # where are the object files
+ temp_dir = os.path.dirname(objects[0])
+ # name of dll to give the helper files the same base name
+ (dll_name, dll_extension) = os.path.splitext(
+ os.path.basename(output_filename))
+
+ # generate the filenames for these files
+ def_file = os.path.join(temp_dir, dll_name + ".def")
+ lib_file = os.path.join(temp_dir, 'lib' + dll_name + ".a")
+
+ # Generate .def file
+ contents = [
+ "LIBRARY %s" % os.path.basename(output_filename),
+ "EXPORTS"]
+ for sym in export_symbols:
+ contents.append(sym)
+ self.execute(write_file, (def_file, contents),
+ "writing %s" % def_file)
+
+ # next add options for def-file and to creating import libraries
+
+ # dllwrap uses different options than gcc/ld
+ if self.linker_dll == "dllwrap":
+ extra_preargs.extend(["--output-lib", lib_file])
+ # for dllwrap we have to use a special option
+ extra_preargs.extend(["--def", def_file])
+ # we use gcc/ld here and can be sure ld is >= 2.9.10
+ else:
+ # doesn't work: bfd_close build\...\libfoo.a: Invalid operation
+ #extra_preargs.extend(["-Wl,--out-implib,%s" % lib_file])
+ # for gcc/ld the def-file is specified as any object files
+ objects.append(def_file)
+
+ #end: if ((export_symbols is not None) and
+ # (target_desc != self.EXECUTABLE or self.linker_dll == "gcc")):
+
+ # who wants symbols and a many times larger output file
+ # should explicitly switch the debug mode on
+ # otherwise we let dllwrap/ld strip the output file
+ # (On my machine: 10KiB < stripped_file < ??100KiB
+ # unstripped_file = stripped_file + XXX KiB
+ # ( XXX=254 for a typical python extension))
+ if not debug:
+ extra_preargs.append("-s")
+
+ UnixCCompiler.link(self, target_desc, objects, output_filename,
+ output_dir, libraries, library_dirs,
+ runtime_library_dirs,
+ None, # export_symbols, we do this in our def-file
+ debug, extra_preargs, extra_postargs, build_temp,
+ target_lang)
+
+ # -- Miscellaneous methods -----------------------------------------
+
+ def object_filenames(self, source_filenames, strip_dir=0, output_dir=''):
+ """Adds supports for rc and res files."""
+ if output_dir is None:
+ output_dir = ''
+ obj_names = []
+ for src_name in source_filenames:
+ # use normcase to make sure '.rc' is really '.rc' and not '.RC'
+ base, ext = os.path.splitext(os.path.normcase(src_name))
+ if ext not in (self.src_extensions + ['.rc','.res']):
+ raise UnknownFileError("unknown file type '%s' (from '%s')" % \
+ (ext, src_name))
+ if strip_dir:
+ base = os.path.basename (base)
+ if ext in ('.res', '.rc'):
+ # these need to be compiled to object files
+ obj_names.append (os.path.join(output_dir,
+ base + ext + self.obj_extension))
+ else:
+ obj_names.append (os.path.join(output_dir,
+ base + self.obj_extension))
+ return obj_names
+
+# the same as cygwin plus some additional parameters
+class Mingw32CCompiler(CygwinCCompiler):
+ """ Handles the Mingw32 port of the GNU C compiler to Windows.
+ """
+ compiler_type = 'mingw32'
+
+ def __init__(self, verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0):
+
+ CygwinCCompiler.__init__ (self, verbose, dry_run, force)
+
+ # ld_version >= "2.13" support -shared so use it instead of
+ # -mdll -static
+ if self.ld_version >= "2.13":
+ shared_option = "-shared"
+ else:
+ shared_option = "-mdll -static"
+
+ # A real mingw32 doesn't need to specify a different entry point,
+ # but cygwin 2.91.57 in no-cygwin-mode needs it.
+ if self.gcc_version <= "2.91.57":
+ entry_point = '--entry _DllMain@12'
+ else:
+ entry_point = ''
+
+ if is_cygwingcc():
+ raise CCompilerError(
+ 'Cygwin gcc cannot be used with --compiler=mingw32')
+
+ self.set_executables(compiler='gcc -O -Wall',
+ compiler_so='gcc -mdll -O -Wall',
+ compiler_cxx='g++ -O -Wall',
+ linker_exe='gcc',
+ linker_so='%s %s %s'
+ % (self.linker_dll, shared_option,
+ entry_point))
+ # Maybe we should also append -mthreads, but then the finished
+ # dlls need another dll (mingwm10.dll see Mingw32 docs)
+ # (-mthreads: Support thread-safe exception handling on `Mingw32')
+
+ # no additional libraries needed
+ self.dll_libraries=[]
+
+ # Include the appropriate MSVC runtime library if Python was built
+ # with MSVC 7.0 or later.
+ self.dll_libraries = get_msvcr()
+
+# Because these compilers aren't configured in Python's pyconfig.h file by
+# default, we should at least warn the user if he is using an unmodified
+# version.
+
+CONFIG_H_OK = "ok"
+CONFIG_H_NOTOK = "not ok"
+CONFIG_H_UNCERTAIN = "uncertain"
+
+def check_config_h():
+ """Check if the current Python installation appears amenable to building
+ extensions with GCC.
+
+ Returns a tuple (status, details), where 'status' is one of the following
+ constants:
+
+ - CONFIG_H_OK: all is well, go ahead and compile
+ - CONFIG_H_NOTOK: doesn't look good
+ - CONFIG_H_UNCERTAIN: not sure -- unable to read pyconfig.h
+
+ 'details' is a human-readable string explaining the situation.
+
+ Note there are two ways to conclude "OK": either 'sys.version' contains
+ the string "GCC" (implying that this Python was built with GCC), or the
+ installed "pyconfig.h" contains the string "__GNUC__".
+ """
+
+ # XXX since this function also checks sys.version, it's not strictly a
+ # "pyconfig.h" check -- should probably be renamed...
+
+ from distutils import sysconfig
+
+ # if sys.version contains GCC then python was compiled with GCC, and the
+ # pyconfig.h file should be OK
+ if "GCC" in sys.version:
+ return CONFIG_H_OK, "sys.version mentions 'GCC'"
+
+ # let's see if __GNUC__ is mentioned in python.h
+ fn = sysconfig.get_config_h_filename()
+ try:
+ config_h = open(fn)
+ try:
+ if "__GNUC__" in config_h.read():
+ return CONFIG_H_OK, "'%s' mentions '__GNUC__'" % fn
+ else:
+ return CONFIG_H_NOTOK, "'%s' does not mention '__GNUC__'" % fn
+ finally:
+ config_h.close()
+ except OSError as exc:
+ return (CONFIG_H_UNCERTAIN,
+ "couldn't read '%s': %s" % (fn, exc.strerror))
+
+RE_VERSION = re.compile(br'(\d+\.\d+(\.\d+)*)')
+
+def _find_exe_version(cmd):
+ """Find the version of an executable by running `cmd` in the shell.
+
+ If the command is not found, or the output does not match
+ `RE_VERSION`, returns None.
+ """
+ executable = cmd.split()[0]
+ if find_executable(executable) is None:
+ return None
+ out = Popen(cmd, shell=True, stdout=PIPE).stdout
+ try:
+ out_string = out.read()
+ finally:
+ out.close()
+ result = RE_VERSION.search(out_string)
+ if result is None:
+ return None
+ # LooseVersion works with strings
+ # so we need to decode our bytes
+ return LooseVersion(result.group(1).decode())
+
+def get_versions():
+ """ Try to find out the versions of gcc, ld and dllwrap.
+
+ If not possible it returns None for it.
+ """
+ commands = ['gcc -dumpversion', 'ld -v', 'dllwrap --version']
+ return tuple([_find_exe_version(cmd) for cmd in commands])
+
+def is_cygwingcc():
+ '''Try to determine if the gcc that would be used is from cygwin.'''
+ out_string = check_output(['gcc', '-dumpmachine'])
+ return out_string.strip().endswith(b'cygwin')
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/debug.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/debug.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..daf1660f0d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/debug.py
@@ -0,0 +1,5 @@
+import os
+
+# If DISTUTILS_DEBUG is anything other than the empty string, we run in
+# debug mode.
+DEBUG = os.environ.get('DISTUTILS_DEBUG')
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/dep_util.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/dep_util.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..d74f5e4e92
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/dep_util.py
@@ -0,0 +1,92 @@
+"""distutils.dep_util
+
+Utility functions for simple, timestamp-based dependency of files
+and groups of files; also, function based entirely on such
+timestamp dependency analysis."""
+
+import os
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsFileError
+
+
+def newer (source, target):
+ """Return true if 'source' exists and is more recently modified than
+ 'target', or if 'source' exists and 'target' doesn't. Return false if
+ both exist and 'target' is the same age or younger than 'source'.
+ Raise DistutilsFileError if 'source' does not exist.
+ """
+ if not os.path.exists(source):
+ raise DistutilsFileError("file '%s' does not exist" %
+ os.path.abspath(source))
+ if not os.path.exists(target):
+ return 1
+
+ from stat import ST_MTIME
+ mtime1 = os.stat(source)[ST_MTIME]
+ mtime2 = os.stat(target)[ST_MTIME]
+
+ return mtime1 > mtime2
+
+# newer ()
+
+
+def newer_pairwise (sources, targets):
+ """Walk two filename lists in parallel, testing if each source is newer
+ than its corresponding target. Return a pair of lists (sources,
+ targets) where source is newer than target, according to the semantics
+ of 'newer()'.
+ """
+ if len(sources) != len(targets):
+ raise ValueError("'sources' and 'targets' must be same length")
+
+ # build a pair of lists (sources, targets) where source is newer
+ n_sources = []
+ n_targets = []
+ for i in range(len(sources)):
+ if newer(sources[i], targets[i]):
+ n_sources.append(sources[i])
+ n_targets.append(targets[i])
+
+ return (n_sources, n_targets)
+
+# newer_pairwise ()
+
+
+def newer_group (sources, target, missing='error'):
+ """Return true if 'target' is out-of-date with respect to any file
+ listed in 'sources'. In other words, if 'target' exists and is newer
+ than every file in 'sources', return false; otherwise return true.
+ 'missing' controls what we do when a source file is missing; the
+ default ("error") is to blow up with an OSError from inside 'stat()';
+ if it is "ignore", we silently drop any missing source files; if it is
+ "newer", any missing source files make us assume that 'target' is
+ out-of-date (this is handy in "dry-run" mode: it'll make you pretend to
+ carry out commands that wouldn't work because inputs are missing, but
+ that doesn't matter because you're not actually going to run the
+ commands).
+ """
+ # If the target doesn't even exist, then it's definitely out-of-date.
+ if not os.path.exists(target):
+ return 1
+
+ # Otherwise we have to find out the hard way: if *any* source file
+ # is more recent than 'target', then 'target' is out-of-date and
+ # we can immediately return true. If we fall through to the end
+ # of the loop, then 'target' is up-to-date and we return false.
+ from stat import ST_MTIME
+ target_mtime = os.stat(target)[ST_MTIME]
+ for source in sources:
+ if not os.path.exists(source):
+ if missing == 'error': # blow up when we stat() the file
+ pass
+ elif missing == 'ignore': # missing source dropped from
+ continue # target's dependency list
+ elif missing == 'newer': # missing source means target is
+ return 1 # out-of-date
+
+ source_mtime = os.stat(source)[ST_MTIME]
+ if source_mtime > target_mtime:
+ return 1
+ else:
+ return 0
+
+# newer_group ()
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/dir_util.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/dir_util.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..d5cd8e3e24
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/dir_util.py
@@ -0,0 +1,210 @@
+"""distutils.dir_util
+
+Utility functions for manipulating directories and directory trees."""
+
+import os
+import errno
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsFileError, DistutilsInternalError
+from distutils import log
+
+# cache for by mkpath() -- in addition to cheapening redundant calls,
+# eliminates redundant "creating /foo/bar/baz" messages in dry-run mode
+_path_created = {}
+
+# I don't use os.makedirs because a) it's new to Python 1.5.2, and
+# b) it blows up if the directory already exists (I want to silently
+# succeed in that case).
+def mkpath(name, mode=0o777, verbose=1, dry_run=0):
+ """Create a directory and any missing ancestor directories.
+
+ If the directory already exists (or if 'name' is the empty string, which
+ means the current directory, which of course exists), then do nothing.
+ Raise DistutilsFileError if unable to create some directory along the way
+ (eg. some sub-path exists, but is a file rather than a directory).
+ If 'verbose' is true, print a one-line summary of each mkdir to stdout.
+ Return the list of directories actually created.
+ """
+
+ global _path_created
+
+ # Detect a common bug -- name is None
+ if not isinstance(name, str):
+ raise DistutilsInternalError(
+ "mkpath: 'name' must be a string (got %r)" % (name,))
+
+ # XXX what's the better way to handle verbosity? print as we create
+ # each directory in the path (the current behaviour), or only announce
+ # the creation of the whole path? (quite easy to do the latter since
+ # we're not using a recursive algorithm)
+
+ name = os.path.normpath(name)
+ created_dirs = []
+ if os.path.isdir(name) or name == '':
+ return created_dirs
+ if _path_created.get(os.path.abspath(name)):
+ return created_dirs
+
+ (head, tail) = os.path.split(name)
+ tails = [tail] # stack of lone dirs to create
+
+ while head and tail and not os.path.isdir(head):
+ (head, tail) = os.path.split(head)
+ tails.insert(0, tail) # push next higher dir onto stack
+
+ # now 'head' contains the deepest directory that already exists
+ # (that is, the child of 'head' in 'name' is the highest directory
+ # that does *not* exist)
+ for d in tails:
+ #print "head = %s, d = %s: " % (head, d),
+ head = os.path.join(head, d)
+ abs_head = os.path.abspath(head)
+
+ if _path_created.get(abs_head):
+ continue
+
+ if verbose >= 1:
+ log.info("creating %s", head)
+
+ if not dry_run:
+ try:
+ os.mkdir(head, mode)
+ except OSError as exc:
+ if not (exc.errno == errno.EEXIST and os.path.isdir(head)):
+ raise DistutilsFileError(
+ "could not create '%s': %s" % (head, exc.args[-1]))
+ created_dirs.append(head)
+
+ _path_created[abs_head] = 1
+ return created_dirs
+
+def create_tree(base_dir, files, mode=0o777, verbose=1, dry_run=0):
+ """Create all the empty directories under 'base_dir' needed to put 'files'
+ there.
+
+ 'base_dir' is just the name of a directory which doesn't necessarily
+ exist yet; 'files' is a list of filenames to be interpreted relative to
+ 'base_dir'. 'base_dir' + the directory portion of every file in 'files'
+ will be created if it doesn't already exist. 'mode', 'verbose' and
+ 'dry_run' flags are as for 'mkpath()'.
+ """
+ # First get the list of directories to create
+ need_dir = set()
+ for file in files:
+ need_dir.add(os.path.join(base_dir, os.path.dirname(file)))
+
+ # Now create them
+ for dir in sorted(need_dir):
+ mkpath(dir, mode, verbose=verbose, dry_run=dry_run)
+
+def copy_tree(src, dst, preserve_mode=1, preserve_times=1,
+ preserve_symlinks=0, update=0, verbose=1, dry_run=0):
+ """Copy an entire directory tree 'src' to a new location 'dst'.
+
+ Both 'src' and 'dst' must be directory names. If 'src' is not a
+ directory, raise DistutilsFileError. If 'dst' does not exist, it is
+ created with 'mkpath()'. The end result of the copy is that every
+ file in 'src' is copied to 'dst', and directories under 'src' are
+ recursively copied to 'dst'. Return the list of files that were
+ copied or might have been copied, using their output name. The
+ return value is unaffected by 'update' or 'dry_run': it is simply
+ the list of all files under 'src', with the names changed to be
+ under 'dst'.
+
+ 'preserve_mode' and 'preserve_times' are the same as for
+ 'copy_file'; note that they only apply to regular files, not to
+ directories. If 'preserve_symlinks' is true, symlinks will be
+ copied as symlinks (on platforms that support them!); otherwise
+ (the default), the destination of the symlink will be copied.
+ 'update' and 'verbose' are the same as for 'copy_file'.
+ """
+ from distutils.file_util import copy_file
+
+ if not dry_run and not os.path.isdir(src):
+ raise DistutilsFileError(
+ "cannot copy tree '%s': not a directory" % src)
+ try:
+ names = os.listdir(src)
+ except OSError as e:
+ if dry_run:
+ names = []
+ else:
+ raise DistutilsFileError(
+ "error listing files in '%s': %s" % (src, e.strerror))
+
+ if not dry_run:
+ mkpath(dst, verbose=verbose)
+
+ outputs = []
+
+ for n in names:
+ src_name = os.path.join(src, n)
+ dst_name = os.path.join(dst, n)
+
+ if n.startswith('.nfs'):
+ # skip NFS rename files
+ continue
+
+ if preserve_symlinks and os.path.islink(src_name):
+ link_dest = os.readlink(src_name)
+ if verbose >= 1:
+ log.info("linking %s -> %s", dst_name, link_dest)
+ if not dry_run:
+ os.symlink(link_dest, dst_name)
+ outputs.append(dst_name)
+
+ elif os.path.isdir(src_name):
+ outputs.extend(
+ copy_tree(src_name, dst_name, preserve_mode,
+ preserve_times, preserve_symlinks, update,
+ verbose=verbose, dry_run=dry_run))
+ else:
+ copy_file(src_name, dst_name, preserve_mode,
+ preserve_times, update, verbose=verbose,
+ dry_run=dry_run)
+ outputs.append(dst_name)
+
+ return outputs
+
+def _build_cmdtuple(path, cmdtuples):
+ """Helper for remove_tree()."""
+ for f in os.listdir(path):
+ real_f = os.path.join(path,f)
+ if os.path.isdir(real_f) and not os.path.islink(real_f):
+ _build_cmdtuple(real_f, cmdtuples)
+ else:
+ cmdtuples.append((os.remove, real_f))
+ cmdtuples.append((os.rmdir, path))
+
+def remove_tree(directory, verbose=1, dry_run=0):
+ """Recursively remove an entire directory tree.
+
+ Any errors are ignored (apart from being reported to stdout if 'verbose'
+ is true).
+ """
+ global _path_created
+
+ if verbose >= 1:
+ log.info("removing '%s' (and everything under it)", directory)
+ if dry_run:
+ return
+ cmdtuples = []
+ _build_cmdtuple(directory, cmdtuples)
+ for cmd in cmdtuples:
+ try:
+ cmd[0](cmd[1])
+ # remove dir from cache if it's already there
+ abspath = os.path.abspath(cmd[1])
+ if abspath in _path_created:
+ del _path_created[abspath]
+ except OSError as exc:
+ log.warn("error removing %s: %s", directory, exc)
+
+def ensure_relative(path):
+ """Take the full path 'path', and make it a relative path.
+
+ This is useful to make 'path' the second argument to os.path.join().
+ """
+ drive, path = os.path.splitdrive(path)
+ if path[0:1] == os.sep:
+ path = drive + path[1:]
+ return path
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/dist.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/dist.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..37db4d6cd7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/dist.py
@@ -0,0 +1,1257 @@
+"""distutils.dist
+
+Provides the Distribution class, which represents the module distribution
+being built/installed/distributed.
+"""
+
+import sys
+import os
+import re
+from email import message_from_file
+
+try:
+ import warnings
+except ImportError:
+ 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_]*)$')
+
+
+def _ensure_list(value, fieldname):
+ if isinstance(value, str):
+ # a string containing comma separated values is okay. It will
+ # be converted to a list by Distribution.finalize_options().
+ pass
+ elif not isinstance(value, list):
+ # passing a tuple or an iterator perhaps, warn and convert
+ typename = type(value).__name__
+ msg = "Warning: '{fieldname}' should be a list, got type '{typename}'"
+ msg = msg.format(**locals())
+ log.log(log.WARN, msg)
+ value = list(value)
+ return value
+
+
+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"),
+ ('no-user-cfg', None,
+ 'ignore pydistutils.cfg in your home directory'),
+ ]
+
+ # '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)
+ warnings.warn(msg)
+
+ # no-user-cfg is handled before other command line args
+ # because other args override the config files, and this
+ # one is needed before we can load the config files.
+ # If attrs['script_args'] wasn't passed, assume false.
+ #
+ # This also make sure we just look at the global options
+ self.want_user_cfg = True
+
+ if self.script_args is not None:
+ for arg in self.script_args:
+ if not arg.startswith('-'):
+ break
+ if arg == '--no-user-cfg':
+ self.want_user_cfg = False
+ break
+
+ 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.
+
+ The file in the user's home directory can be disabled with the
+ --no-user-cfg option.
+ """
+ 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
+ if self.want_user_cfg:
+ 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)
+
+ if DEBUG:
+ self.announce("using config files: %s" % ', '.join(files))
+
+ 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)):
+ msg = ("command class %s must provide "
+ "'user_options' attribute (a list of tuples)")
+ raise DistutilsClassError(msg % 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:
+ __import__(module_name)
+ module = sys.modules[module_name]
+ except ImportError:
+ 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", "classifiers", "download_url",
+ # PEP 314
+ "provides", "requires", "obsoletes",
+ )
+
+ def __init__(self, path=None):
+ if path is not None:
+ self.read_pkg_file(open(path))
+ else:
+ 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 read_pkg_file(self, file):
+ """Reads the metadata values from a file object."""
+ msg = message_from_file(file)
+
+ def _read_field(name):
+ value = msg[name]
+ if value == 'UNKNOWN':
+ return None
+ return value
+
+ def _read_list(name):
+ values = msg.get_all(name, None)
+ if values == []:
+ return None
+ return values
+
+ metadata_version = msg['metadata-version']
+ self.name = _read_field('name')
+ self.version = _read_field('version')
+ self.description = _read_field('summary')
+ # we are filling author only.
+ self.author = _read_field('author')
+ self.maintainer = None
+ self.author_email = _read_field('author-email')
+ self.maintainer_email = None
+ self.url = _read_field('home-page')
+ self.license = _read_field('license')
+
+ if 'download-url' in msg:
+ self.download_url = _read_field('download-url')
+ else:
+ self.download_url = None
+
+ self.long_description = _read_field('description')
+ self.description = _read_field('summary')
+
+ if 'keywords' in msg:
+ self.keywords = _read_field('keywords').split(',')
+
+ self.platforms = _read_list('platform')
+ self.classifiers = _read_list('classifier')
+
+ # PEP 314 - these fields only exist in 1.1
+ if metadata_version == '1.1':
+ self.requires = _read_list('requires')
+ self.provides = _read_list('provides')
+ self.obsoletes = _read_list('obsoletes')
+ else:
+ self.requires = None
+ self.provides = 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 set_keywords(self, value):
+ self.keywords = _ensure_list(value, 'keywords')
+
+ def get_platforms(self):
+ return self.platforms or ["UNKNOWN"]
+
+ def set_platforms(self, value):
+ self.platforms = _ensure_list(value, 'platforms')
+
+ def get_classifiers(self):
+ return self.classifiers or []
+
+ def set_classifiers(self, value):
+ self.classifiers = _ensure_list(value, 'classifiers')
+
+ 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 = list(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 = list(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
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/errors.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/errors.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..8b93059e19
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/errors.py
@@ -0,0 +1,97 @@
+"""distutils.errors
+
+Provides exceptions used by the Distutils modules. Note that Distutils
+modules may raise standard exceptions; in particular, SystemExit is
+usually raised for errors that are obviously the end-user's fault
+(eg. bad command-line arguments).
+
+This module is safe to use in "from ... import *" mode; it only exports
+symbols whose names start with "Distutils" and end with "Error"."""
+
+class DistutilsError (Exception):
+ """The root of all Distutils evil."""
+ pass
+
+class DistutilsModuleError (DistutilsError):
+ """Unable to load an expected module, or to find an expected class
+ within some module (in particular, command modules and classes)."""
+ pass
+
+class DistutilsClassError (DistutilsError):
+ """Some command class (or possibly distribution class, if anyone
+ feels a need to subclass Distribution) is found not to be holding
+ up its end of the bargain, ie. implementing some part of the
+ "command "interface."""
+ pass
+
+class DistutilsGetoptError (DistutilsError):
+ """The option table provided to 'fancy_getopt()' is bogus."""
+ pass
+
+class DistutilsArgError (DistutilsError):
+ """Raised by fancy_getopt in response to getopt.error -- ie. an
+ error in the command line usage."""
+ pass
+
+class DistutilsFileError (DistutilsError):
+ """Any problems in the filesystem: expected file not found, etc.
+ Typically this is for problems that we detect before OSError
+ could be raised."""
+ pass
+
+class DistutilsOptionError (DistutilsError):
+ """Syntactic/semantic errors in command options, such as use of
+ mutually conflicting options, or inconsistent options,
+ badly-spelled values, etc. No distinction is made between option
+ values originating in the setup script, the command line, config
+ files, or what-have-you -- but if we *know* something originated in
+ the setup script, we'll raise DistutilsSetupError instead."""
+ pass
+
+class DistutilsSetupError (DistutilsError):
+ """For errors that can be definitely blamed on the setup script,
+ such as invalid keyword arguments to 'setup()'."""
+ pass
+
+class DistutilsPlatformError (DistutilsError):
+ """We don't know how to do something on the current platform (but
+ we do know how to do it on some platform) -- eg. trying to compile
+ C files on a platform not supported by a CCompiler subclass."""
+ pass
+
+class DistutilsExecError (DistutilsError):
+ """Any problems executing an external program (such as the C
+ compiler, when compiling C files)."""
+ pass
+
+class DistutilsInternalError (DistutilsError):
+ """Internal inconsistencies or impossibilities (obviously, this
+ should never be seen if the code is working!)."""
+ pass
+
+class DistutilsTemplateError (DistutilsError):
+ """Syntax error in a file list template."""
+
+class DistutilsByteCompileError(DistutilsError):
+ """Byte compile error."""
+
+# Exception classes used by the CCompiler implementation classes
+class CCompilerError (Exception):
+ """Some compile/link operation failed."""
+
+class PreprocessError (CCompilerError):
+ """Failure to preprocess one or more C/C++ files."""
+
+class CompileError (CCompilerError):
+ """Failure to compile one or more C/C++ source files."""
+
+class LibError (CCompilerError):
+ """Failure to create a static library from one or more C/C++ object
+ files."""
+
+class LinkError (CCompilerError):
+ """Failure to link one or more C/C++ object files into an executable
+ or shared library file."""
+
+class UnknownFileError (CCompilerError):
+ """Attempt to process an unknown file type."""
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/extension.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/extension.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..c507da360a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/extension.py
@@ -0,0 +1,240 @@
+"""distutils.extension
+
+Provides the Extension class, used to describe C/C++ extension
+modules in setup scripts."""
+
+import os
+import warnings
+
+# This class is really only used by the "build_ext" command, so it might
+# make sense to put it in distutils.command.build_ext. However, that
+# module is already big enough, and I want to make this class a bit more
+# complex to simplify some common cases ("foo" module in "foo.c") and do
+# better error-checking ("foo.c" actually exists).
+#
+# Also, putting this in build_ext.py means every setup script would have to
+# import that large-ish module (indirectly, through distutils.core) in
+# order to do anything.
+
+class Extension:
+ """Just a collection of attributes that describes an extension
+ module and everything needed to build it (hopefully in a portable
+ way, but there are hooks that let you be as unportable as you need).
+
+ Instance attributes:
+ name : string
+ the full name of the extension, including any packages -- ie.
+ *not* a filename or pathname, but Python dotted name
+ sources : [string]
+ list of source filenames, relative to the distribution root
+ (where the setup script lives), in Unix form (slash-separated)
+ for portability. Source files may be C, C++, SWIG (.i),
+ platform-specific resource files, or whatever else is recognized
+ by the "build_ext" command as source for a Python extension.
+ include_dirs : [string]
+ list of directories to search for C/C++ header files (in Unix
+ form for portability)
+ define_macros : [(name : string, value : string|None)]
+ list of macros to define; each macro is defined using a 2-tuple,
+ where 'value' is either the string to define it to or None to
+ define it without a particular value (equivalent of "#define
+ FOO" in source or -DFOO on Unix C compiler command line)
+ undef_macros : [string]
+ list of macros to undefine explicitly
+ library_dirs : [string]
+ list of directories to search for C/C++ libraries at link time
+ libraries : [string]
+ list of library names (not filenames or paths) to link against
+ runtime_library_dirs : [string]
+ list of directories to search for C/C++ libraries at run time
+ (for shared extensions, this is when the extension is loaded)
+ extra_objects : [string]
+ list of extra files to link with (eg. object files not implied
+ by 'sources', static library that must be explicitly specified,
+ binary resource files, etc.)
+ extra_compile_args : [string]
+ any extra platform- and compiler-specific information to use
+ when compiling the source files in 'sources'. For platforms and
+ compilers where "command line" makes sense, this is typically a
+ list of command-line arguments, but for other platforms it could
+ be anything.
+ extra_link_args : [string]
+ any extra platform- and compiler-specific information to use
+ when linking object files together to create the extension (or
+ to create a new static Python interpreter). Similar
+ interpretation as for 'extra_compile_args'.
+ export_symbols : [string]
+ list of symbols to be exported from a shared extension. Not
+ used on all platforms, and not generally necessary for Python
+ extensions, which typically export exactly one symbol: "init" +
+ extension_name.
+ swig_opts : [string]
+ any extra options to pass to SWIG if a source file has the .i
+ extension.
+ depends : [string]
+ list of files that the extension depends on
+ language : string
+ extension language (i.e. "c", "c++", "objc"). Will be detected
+ from the source extensions if not provided.
+ optional : boolean
+ specifies that a build failure in the extension should not abort the
+ build process, but simply not install the failing extension.
+ """
+
+ # When adding arguments to this constructor, be sure to update
+ # setup_keywords in core.py.
+ def __init__(self, name, sources,
+ include_dirs=None,
+ define_macros=None,
+ undef_macros=None,
+ library_dirs=None,
+ libraries=None,
+ runtime_library_dirs=None,
+ extra_objects=None,
+ extra_compile_args=None,
+ extra_link_args=None,
+ export_symbols=None,
+ swig_opts = None,
+ depends=None,
+ language=None,
+ optional=None,
+ **kw # To catch unknown keywords
+ ):
+ if not isinstance(name, str):
+ raise AssertionError("'name' must be a string")
+ if not (isinstance(sources, list) and
+ all(isinstance(v, str) for v in sources)):
+ raise AssertionError("'sources' must be a list of strings")
+
+ self.name = name
+ self.sources = sources
+ self.include_dirs = include_dirs or []
+ self.define_macros = define_macros or []
+ self.undef_macros = undef_macros or []
+ self.library_dirs = library_dirs or []
+ self.libraries = libraries or []
+ self.runtime_library_dirs = runtime_library_dirs or []
+ self.extra_objects = extra_objects or []
+ self.extra_compile_args = extra_compile_args or []
+ self.extra_link_args = extra_link_args or []
+ self.export_symbols = export_symbols or []
+ self.swig_opts = swig_opts or []
+ self.depends = depends or []
+ self.language = language
+ self.optional = optional
+
+ # If there are unknown keyword options, warn about them
+ if len(kw) > 0:
+ options = [repr(option) for option in kw]
+ options = ', '.join(sorted(options))
+ msg = "Unknown Extension options: %s" % options
+ warnings.warn(msg)
+
+ def __repr__(self):
+ return '<%s.%s(%r) at %#x>' % (
+ self.__class__.__module__,
+ self.__class__.__qualname__,
+ self.name,
+ id(self))
+
+
+def read_setup_file(filename):
+ """Reads a Setup file and returns Extension instances."""
+ from distutils.sysconfig import (parse_makefile, expand_makefile_vars,
+ _variable_rx)
+
+ from distutils.text_file import TextFile
+ from distutils.util import split_quoted
+
+ # First pass over the file to gather "VAR = VALUE" assignments.
+ vars = parse_makefile(filename)
+
+ # Second pass to gobble up the real content: lines of the form
+ # <module> ... [<sourcefile> ...] [<cpparg> ...] [<library> ...]
+ file = TextFile(filename,
+ strip_comments=1, skip_blanks=1, join_lines=1,
+ lstrip_ws=1, rstrip_ws=1)
+ try:
+ extensions = []
+
+ while True:
+ line = file.readline()
+ if line is None: # eof
+ break
+ if _variable_rx.match(line): # VAR=VALUE, handled in first pass
+ continue
+
+ if line[0] == line[-1] == "*":
+ file.warn("'%s' lines not handled yet" % line)
+ continue
+
+ line = expand_makefile_vars(line, vars)
+ words = split_quoted(line)
+
+ # NB. this parses a slightly different syntax than the old
+ # makesetup script: here, there must be exactly one extension per
+ # line, and it must be the first word of the line. I have no idea
+ # why the old syntax supported multiple extensions per line, as
+ # they all wind up being the same.
+
+ module = words[0]
+ ext = Extension(module, [])
+ append_next_word = None
+
+ for word in words[1:]:
+ if append_next_word is not None:
+ append_next_word.append(word)
+ append_next_word = None
+ continue
+
+ suffix = os.path.splitext(word)[1]
+ switch = word[0:2] ; value = word[2:]
+
+ if suffix in (".c", ".cc", ".cpp", ".cxx", ".c++", ".m", ".mm"):
+ # hmm, should we do something about C vs. C++ sources?
+ # or leave it up to the CCompiler implementation to
+ # worry about?
+ ext.sources.append(word)
+ elif switch == "-I":
+ ext.include_dirs.append(value)
+ elif switch == "-D":
+ equals = value.find("=")
+ if equals == -1: # bare "-DFOO" -- no value
+ ext.define_macros.append((value, None))
+ else: # "-DFOO=blah"
+ ext.define_macros.append((value[0:equals],
+ value[equals+2:]))
+ elif switch == "-U":
+ ext.undef_macros.append(value)
+ elif switch == "-C": # only here 'cause makesetup has it!
+ ext.extra_compile_args.append(word)
+ elif switch == "-l":
+ ext.libraries.append(value)
+ elif switch == "-L":
+ ext.library_dirs.append(value)
+ elif switch == "-R":
+ ext.runtime_library_dirs.append(value)
+ elif word == "-rpath":
+ append_next_word = ext.runtime_library_dirs
+ elif word == "-Xlinker":
+ append_next_word = ext.extra_link_args
+ elif word == "-Xcompiler":
+ append_next_word = ext.extra_compile_args
+ elif switch == "-u":
+ ext.extra_link_args.append(word)
+ if not value:
+ append_next_word = ext.extra_link_args
+ elif suffix in (".a", ".so", ".sl", ".o", ".dylib"):
+ # NB. a really faithful emulation of makesetup would
+ # append a .o file to extra_objects only if it
+ # had a slash in it; otherwise, it would s/.o/.c/
+ # and append it to sources. Hmmmm.
+ ext.extra_objects.append(word)
+ else:
+ file.warn("unrecognized argument '%s'" % word)
+
+ extensions.append(ext)
+ finally:
+ file.close()
+
+ return extensions
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/fancy_getopt.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/fancy_getopt.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..7d170dd277
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/fancy_getopt.py
@@ -0,0 +1,457 @@
+"""distutils.fancy_getopt
+
+Wrapper around the standard getopt module that provides the following
+additional features:
+ * short and long options are tied together
+ * options have help strings, so fancy_getopt could potentially
+ create a complete usage summary
+ * options set attributes of a passed-in object
+"""
+
+import sys, string, re
+import getopt
+from distutils.errors import *
+
+# Much like command_re in distutils.core, this is close to but not quite
+# the same as a Python NAME -- except, in the spirit of most GNU
+# utilities, we use '-' in place of '_'. (The spirit of LISP lives on!)
+# The similarities to NAME are again not a coincidence...
+longopt_pat = r'[a-zA-Z](?:[a-zA-Z0-9-]*)'
+longopt_re = re.compile(r'^%s$' % longopt_pat)
+
+# For recognizing "negative alias" options, eg. "quiet=!verbose"
+neg_alias_re = re.compile("^(%s)=!(%s)$" % (longopt_pat, longopt_pat))
+
+# This is used to translate long options to legitimate Python identifiers
+# (for use as attributes of some object).
+longopt_xlate = str.maketrans('-', '_')
+
+class FancyGetopt:
+ """Wrapper around the standard 'getopt()' module that provides some
+ handy extra functionality:
+ * short and long options are tied together
+ * options have help strings, and help text can be assembled
+ from them
+ * options set attributes of a passed-in object
+ * boolean options can have "negative aliases" -- eg. if
+ --quiet is the "negative alias" of --verbose, then "--quiet"
+ on the command line sets 'verbose' to false
+ """
+
+ def __init__(self, option_table=None):
+ # The option table is (currently) a list of tuples. The
+ # tuples may have 3 or four values:
+ # (long_option, short_option, help_string [, repeatable])
+ # if an option takes an argument, its long_option should have '='
+ # appended; short_option should just be a single character, no ':'
+ # in any case. If a long_option doesn't have a corresponding
+ # short_option, short_option should be None. All option tuples
+ # must have long options.
+ self.option_table = option_table
+
+ # 'option_index' maps long option names to entries in the option
+ # table (ie. those 3-tuples).
+ self.option_index = {}
+ if self.option_table:
+ self._build_index()
+
+ # 'alias' records (duh) alias options; {'foo': 'bar'} means
+ # --foo is an alias for --bar
+ self.alias = {}
+
+ # 'negative_alias' keeps track of options that are the boolean
+ # opposite of some other option
+ self.negative_alias = {}
+
+ # These keep track of the information in the option table. We
+ # don't actually populate these structures until we're ready to
+ # parse the command-line, since the 'option_table' passed in here
+ # isn't necessarily the final word.
+ self.short_opts = []
+ self.long_opts = []
+ self.short2long = {}
+ self.attr_name = {}
+ self.takes_arg = {}
+
+ # And 'option_order' is filled up in 'getopt()'; it records the
+ # original order of options (and their values) on the command-line,
+ # but expands short options, converts aliases, etc.
+ self.option_order = []
+
+ def _build_index(self):
+ self.option_index.clear()
+ for option in self.option_table:
+ self.option_index[option[0]] = option
+
+ def set_option_table(self, option_table):
+ self.option_table = option_table
+ self._build_index()
+
+ def add_option(self, long_option, short_option=None, help_string=None):
+ if long_option in self.option_index:
+ raise DistutilsGetoptError(
+ "option conflict: already an option '%s'" % long_option)
+ else:
+ option = (long_option, short_option, help_string)
+ self.option_table.append(option)
+ self.option_index[long_option] = option
+
+ def has_option(self, long_option):
+ """Return true if the option table for this parser has an
+ option with long name 'long_option'."""
+ return long_option in self.option_index
+
+ def get_attr_name(self, long_option):
+ """Translate long option name 'long_option' to the form it
+ has as an attribute of some object: ie., translate hyphens
+ to underscores."""
+ return long_option.translate(longopt_xlate)
+
+ def _check_alias_dict(self, aliases, what):
+ assert isinstance(aliases, dict)
+ for (alias, opt) in aliases.items():
+ if alias not in self.option_index:
+ raise DistutilsGetoptError(("invalid %s '%s': "
+ "option '%s' not defined") % (what, alias, alias))
+ if opt not in self.option_index:
+ raise DistutilsGetoptError(("invalid %s '%s': "
+ "aliased option '%s' not defined") % (what, alias, opt))
+
+ def set_aliases(self, alias):
+ """Set the aliases for this option parser."""
+ self._check_alias_dict(alias, "alias")
+ self.alias = alias
+
+ def set_negative_aliases(self, negative_alias):
+ """Set the negative aliases for this option parser.
+ 'negative_alias' should be a dictionary mapping option names to
+ option names, both the key and value must already be defined
+ in the option table."""
+ self._check_alias_dict(negative_alias, "negative alias")
+ self.negative_alias = negative_alias
+
+ def _grok_option_table(self):
+ """Populate the various data structures that keep tabs on the
+ option table. Called by 'getopt()' before it can do anything
+ worthwhile.
+ """
+ self.long_opts = []
+ self.short_opts = []
+ self.short2long.clear()
+ self.repeat = {}
+
+ for option in self.option_table:
+ if len(option) == 3:
+ long, short, help = option
+ repeat = 0
+ elif len(option) == 4:
+ long, short, help, repeat = option
+ else:
+ # the option table is part of the code, so simply
+ # assert that it is correct
+ raise ValueError("invalid option tuple: %r" % (option,))
+
+ # Type- and value-check the option names
+ if not isinstance(long, str) or len(long) < 2:
+ raise DistutilsGetoptError(("invalid long option '%s': "
+ "must be a string of length >= 2") % long)
+
+ if (not ((short is None) or
+ (isinstance(short, str) and len(short) == 1))):
+ raise DistutilsGetoptError("invalid short option '%s': "
+ "must a single character or None" % short)
+
+ self.repeat[long] = repeat
+ self.long_opts.append(long)
+
+ if long[-1] == '=': # option takes an argument?
+ if short: short = short + ':'
+ long = long[0:-1]
+ self.takes_arg[long] = 1
+ else:
+ # Is option is a "negative alias" for some other option (eg.
+ # "quiet" == "!verbose")?
+ alias_to = self.negative_alias.get(long)
+ if alias_to is not None:
+ if self.takes_arg[alias_to]:
+ raise DistutilsGetoptError(
+ "invalid negative alias '%s': "
+ "aliased option '%s' takes a value"
+ % (long, alias_to))
+
+ self.long_opts[-1] = long # XXX redundant?!
+ self.takes_arg[long] = 0
+
+ # If this is an alias option, make sure its "takes arg" flag is
+ # the same as the option it's aliased to.
+ alias_to = self.alias.get(long)
+ if alias_to is not None:
+ if self.takes_arg[long] != self.takes_arg[alias_to]:
+ raise DistutilsGetoptError(
+ "invalid alias '%s': inconsistent with "
+ "aliased option '%s' (one of them takes a value, "
+ "the other doesn't"
+ % (long, alias_to))
+
+ # Now enforce some bondage on the long option name, so we can
+ # later translate it to an attribute name on some object. Have
+ # to do this a bit late to make sure we've removed any trailing
+ # '='.
+ if not longopt_re.match(long):
+ raise DistutilsGetoptError(
+ "invalid long option name '%s' "
+ "(must be letters, numbers, hyphens only" % long)
+
+ self.attr_name[long] = self.get_attr_name(long)
+ if short:
+ self.short_opts.append(short)
+ self.short2long[short[0]] = long
+
+ def getopt(self, args=None, object=None):
+ """Parse command-line options in args. Store as attributes on object.
+
+ If 'args' is None or not supplied, uses 'sys.argv[1:]'. If
+ 'object' is None or not supplied, creates a new OptionDummy
+ object, stores option values there, and returns a tuple (args,
+ object). If 'object' is supplied, it is modified in place and
+ 'getopt()' just returns 'args'; in both cases, the returned
+ 'args' is a modified copy of the passed-in 'args' list, which
+ is left untouched.
+ """
+ if args is None:
+ args = sys.argv[1:]
+ if object is None:
+ object = OptionDummy()
+ created_object = True
+ else:
+ created_object = False
+
+ self._grok_option_table()
+
+ short_opts = ' '.join(self.short_opts)
+ try:
+ opts, args = getopt.getopt(args, short_opts, self.long_opts)
+ except getopt.error as msg:
+ raise DistutilsArgError(msg)
+
+ for opt, val in opts:
+ if len(opt) == 2 and opt[0] == '-': # it's a short option
+ opt = self.short2long[opt[1]]
+ else:
+ assert len(opt) > 2 and opt[:2] == '--'
+ opt = opt[2:]
+
+ alias = self.alias.get(opt)
+ if alias:
+ opt = alias
+
+ if not self.takes_arg[opt]: # boolean option?
+ assert val == '', "boolean option can't have value"
+ alias = self.negative_alias.get(opt)
+ if alias:
+ opt = alias
+ val = 0
+ else:
+ val = 1
+
+ attr = self.attr_name[opt]
+ # The only repeating option at the moment is 'verbose'.
+ # It has a negative option -q quiet, which should set verbose = 0.
+ if val and self.repeat.get(attr) is not None:
+ val = getattr(object, attr, 0) + 1
+ setattr(object, attr, val)
+ self.option_order.append((opt, val))
+
+ # for opts
+ if created_object:
+ return args, object
+ else:
+ return args
+
+ def get_option_order(self):
+ """Returns the list of (option, value) tuples processed by the
+ previous run of 'getopt()'. Raises RuntimeError if
+ 'getopt()' hasn't been called yet.
+ """
+ if self.option_order is None:
+ raise RuntimeError("'getopt()' hasn't been called yet")
+ else:
+ return self.option_order
+
+ def generate_help(self, header=None):
+ """Generate help text (a list of strings, one per suggested line of
+ output) from the option table for this FancyGetopt object.
+ """
+ # Blithely assume the option table is good: probably wouldn't call
+ # 'generate_help()' unless you've already called 'getopt()'.
+
+ # First pass: determine maximum length of long option names
+ max_opt = 0
+ for option in self.option_table:
+ long = option[0]
+ short = option[1]
+ l = len(long)
+ if long[-1] == '=':
+ l = l - 1
+ if short is not None:
+ l = l + 5 # " (-x)" where short == 'x'
+ if l > max_opt:
+ max_opt = l
+
+ opt_width = max_opt + 2 + 2 + 2 # room for indent + dashes + gutter
+
+ # Typical help block looks like this:
+ # --foo controls foonabulation
+ # Help block for longest option looks like this:
+ # --flimflam set the flim-flam level
+ # and with wrapped text:
+ # --flimflam set the flim-flam level (must be between
+ # 0 and 100, except on Tuesdays)
+ # Options with short names will have the short name shown (but
+ # it doesn't contribute to max_opt):
+ # --foo (-f) controls foonabulation
+ # If adding the short option would make the left column too wide,
+ # we push the explanation off to the next line
+ # --flimflam (-l)
+ # set the flim-flam level
+ # Important parameters:
+ # - 2 spaces before option block start lines
+ # - 2 dashes for each long option name
+ # - min. 2 spaces between option and explanation (gutter)
+ # - 5 characters (incl. space) for short option name
+
+ # Now generate lines of help text. (If 80 columns were good enough
+ # for Jesus, then 78 columns are good enough for me!)
+ line_width = 78
+ text_width = line_width - opt_width
+ big_indent = ' ' * opt_width
+ if header:
+ lines = [header]
+ else:
+ lines = ['Option summary:']
+
+ for option in self.option_table:
+ long, short, help = option[:3]
+ text = wrap_text(help, text_width)
+ if long[-1] == '=':
+ long = long[0:-1]
+
+ # Case 1: no short option at all (makes life easy)
+ if short is None:
+ if text:
+ lines.append(" --%-*s %s" % (max_opt, long, text[0]))
+ else:
+ lines.append(" --%-*s " % (max_opt, long))
+
+ # Case 2: we have a short option, so we have to include it
+ # just after the long option
+ else:
+ opt_names = "%s (-%s)" % (long, short)
+ if text:
+ lines.append(" --%-*s %s" %
+ (max_opt, opt_names, text[0]))
+ else:
+ lines.append(" --%-*s" % opt_names)
+
+ for l in text[1:]:
+ lines.append(big_indent + l)
+ return lines
+
+ def print_help(self, header=None, file=None):
+ if file is None:
+ file = sys.stdout
+ for line in self.generate_help(header):
+ file.write(line + "\n")
+
+
+def fancy_getopt(options, negative_opt, object, args):
+ parser = FancyGetopt(options)
+ parser.set_negative_aliases(negative_opt)
+ return parser.getopt(args, object)
+
+
+WS_TRANS = {ord(_wschar) : ' ' for _wschar in string.whitespace}
+
+def wrap_text(text, width):
+ """wrap_text(text : string, width : int) -> [string]
+
+ Split 'text' into multiple lines of no more than 'width' characters
+ each, and return the list of strings that results.
+ """
+ if text is None:
+ return []
+ if len(text) <= width:
+ return [text]
+
+ text = text.expandtabs()
+ text = text.translate(WS_TRANS)
+ chunks = re.split(r'( +|-+)', text)
+ chunks = [ch for ch in chunks if ch] # ' - ' results in empty strings
+ lines = []
+
+ while chunks:
+ cur_line = [] # list of chunks (to-be-joined)
+ cur_len = 0 # length of current line
+
+ while chunks:
+ l = len(chunks[0])
+ if cur_len + l <= width: # can squeeze (at least) this chunk in
+ cur_line.append(chunks[0])
+ del chunks[0]
+ cur_len = cur_len + l
+ else: # this line is full
+ # drop last chunk if all space
+ if cur_line and cur_line[-1][0] == ' ':
+ del cur_line[-1]
+ break
+
+ if chunks: # any chunks left to process?
+ # if the current line is still empty, then we had a single
+ # chunk that's too big too fit on a line -- so we break
+ # down and break it up at the line width
+ if cur_len == 0:
+ cur_line.append(chunks[0][0:width])
+ chunks[0] = chunks[0][width:]
+
+ # all-whitespace chunks at the end of a line can be discarded
+ # (and we know from the re.split above that if a chunk has
+ # *any* whitespace, it is *all* whitespace)
+ if chunks[0][0] == ' ':
+ del chunks[0]
+
+ # and store this line in the list-of-all-lines -- as a single
+ # string, of course!
+ lines.append(''.join(cur_line))
+
+ return lines
+
+
+def translate_longopt(opt):
+ """Convert a long option name to a valid Python identifier by
+ changing "-" to "_".
+ """
+ return opt.translate(longopt_xlate)
+
+
+class OptionDummy:
+ """Dummy class just used as a place to hold command-line option
+ values as instance attributes."""
+
+ def __init__(self, options=[]):
+ """Create a new OptionDummy instance. The attributes listed in
+ 'options' will be initialized to None."""
+ for opt in options:
+ setattr(self, opt, None)
+
+
+if __name__ == "__main__":
+ text = """\
+Tra-la-la, supercalifragilisticexpialidocious.
+How *do* you spell that odd word, anyways?
+(Someone ask Mary -- she'll know [or she'll
+say, "How should I know?"].)"""
+
+ for w in (10, 20, 30, 40):
+ print("width: %d" % w)
+ print("\n".join(wrap_text(text, w)))
+ print()
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/file_util.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/file_util.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..b3fee35a6c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/file_util.py
@@ -0,0 +1,238 @@
+"""distutils.file_util
+
+Utility functions for operating on single files.
+"""
+
+import os
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsFileError
+from distutils import log
+
+# for generating verbose output in 'copy_file()'
+_copy_action = { None: 'copying',
+ 'hard': 'hard linking',
+ 'sym': 'symbolically linking' }
+
+
+def _copy_file_contents(src, dst, buffer_size=16*1024):
+ """Copy the file 'src' to 'dst'; both must be filenames. Any error
+ opening either file, reading from 'src', or writing to 'dst', raises
+ DistutilsFileError. Data is read/written in chunks of 'buffer_size'
+ bytes (default 16k). No attempt is made to handle anything apart from
+ regular files.
+ """
+ # Stolen from shutil module in the standard library, but with
+ # custom error-handling added.
+ fsrc = None
+ fdst = None
+ try:
+ try:
+ fsrc = open(src, 'rb')
+ except OSError as e:
+ raise DistutilsFileError("could not open '%s': %s" % (src, e.strerror))
+
+ if os.path.exists(dst):
+ try:
+ os.unlink(dst)
+ except OSError as e:
+ raise DistutilsFileError(
+ "could not delete '%s': %s" % (dst, e.strerror))
+
+ try:
+ fdst = open(dst, 'wb')
+ except OSError as e:
+ raise DistutilsFileError(
+ "could not create '%s': %s" % (dst, e.strerror))
+
+ while True:
+ try:
+ buf = fsrc.read(buffer_size)
+ except OSError as e:
+ raise DistutilsFileError(
+ "could not read from '%s': %s" % (src, e.strerror))
+
+ if not buf:
+ break
+
+ try:
+ fdst.write(buf)
+ except OSError as e:
+ raise DistutilsFileError(
+ "could not write to '%s': %s" % (dst, e.strerror))
+ finally:
+ if fdst:
+ fdst.close()
+ if fsrc:
+ fsrc.close()
+
+def copy_file(src, dst, preserve_mode=1, preserve_times=1, update=0,
+ link=None, verbose=1, dry_run=0):
+ """Copy a file 'src' to 'dst'. If 'dst' is a directory, then 'src' is
+ copied there with the same name; otherwise, it must be a filename. (If
+ the file exists, it will be ruthlessly clobbered.) If 'preserve_mode'
+ is true (the default), the file's mode (type and permission bits, or
+ whatever is analogous on the current platform) is copied. If
+ 'preserve_times' is true (the default), the last-modified and
+ last-access times are copied as well. If 'update' is true, 'src' will
+ only be copied if 'dst' does not exist, or if 'dst' does exist but is
+ older than 'src'.
+
+ 'link' allows you to make hard links (os.link) or symbolic links
+ (os.symlink) instead of copying: set it to "hard" or "sym"; if it is
+ None (the default), files are copied. Don't set 'link' on systems that
+ don't support it: 'copy_file()' doesn't check if hard or symbolic
+ linking is available. If hardlink fails, falls back to
+ _copy_file_contents().
+
+ Under Mac OS, uses the native file copy function in macostools; on
+ other systems, uses '_copy_file_contents()' to copy file contents.
+
+ Return a tuple (dest_name, copied): 'dest_name' is the actual name of
+ the output file, and 'copied' is true if the file was copied (or would
+ have been copied, if 'dry_run' true).
+ """
+ # XXX if the destination file already exists, we clobber it if
+ # copying, but blow up if linking. Hmmm. And I don't know what
+ # macostools.copyfile() does. Should definitely be consistent, and
+ # should probably blow up if destination exists and we would be
+ # changing it (ie. it's not already a hard/soft link to src OR
+ # (not update) and (src newer than dst).
+
+ from distutils.dep_util import newer
+ from stat import ST_ATIME, ST_MTIME, ST_MODE, S_IMODE
+
+ if not os.path.isfile(src):
+ raise DistutilsFileError(
+ "can't copy '%s': doesn't exist or not a regular file" % src)
+
+ if os.path.isdir(dst):
+ dir = dst
+ dst = os.path.join(dst, os.path.basename(src))
+ else:
+ dir = os.path.dirname(dst)
+
+ if update and not newer(src, dst):
+ if verbose >= 1:
+ log.debug("not copying %s (output up-to-date)", src)
+ return (dst, 0)
+
+ try:
+ action = _copy_action[link]
+ except KeyError:
+ raise ValueError("invalid value '%s' for 'link' argument" % link)
+
+ if verbose >= 1:
+ if os.path.basename(dst) == os.path.basename(src):
+ log.info("%s %s -> %s", action, src, dir)
+ else:
+ log.info("%s %s -> %s", action, src, dst)
+
+ if dry_run:
+ return (dst, 1)
+
+ # If linking (hard or symbolic), use the appropriate system call
+ # (Unix only, of course, but that's the caller's responsibility)
+ elif link == 'hard':
+ if not (os.path.exists(dst) and os.path.samefile(src, dst)):
+ try:
+ os.link(src, dst)
+ return (dst, 1)
+ except OSError:
+ # If hard linking fails, fall back on copying file
+ # (some special filesystems don't support hard linking
+ # even under Unix, see issue #8876).
+ pass
+ elif link == 'sym':
+ if not (os.path.exists(dst) and os.path.samefile(src, dst)):
+ os.symlink(src, dst)
+ return (dst, 1)
+
+ # Otherwise (non-Mac, not linking), copy the file contents and
+ # (optionally) copy the times and mode.
+ _copy_file_contents(src, dst)
+ if preserve_mode or preserve_times:
+ st = os.stat(src)
+
+ # According to David Ascher <da@ski.org>, utime() should be done
+ # before chmod() (at least under NT).
+ if preserve_times:
+ os.utime(dst, (st[ST_ATIME], st[ST_MTIME]))
+ if preserve_mode:
+ os.chmod(dst, S_IMODE(st[ST_MODE]))
+
+ return (dst, 1)
+
+
+# XXX I suspect this is Unix-specific -- need porting help!
+def move_file (src, dst,
+ verbose=1,
+ dry_run=0):
+
+ """Move a file 'src' to 'dst'. If 'dst' is a directory, the file will
+ be moved into it with the same name; otherwise, 'src' is just renamed
+ to 'dst'. Return the new full name of the file.
+
+ Handles cross-device moves on Unix using 'copy_file()'. What about
+ other systems???
+ """
+ from os.path import exists, isfile, isdir, basename, dirname
+ import errno
+
+ if verbose >= 1:
+ log.info("moving %s -> %s", src, dst)
+
+ if dry_run:
+ return dst
+
+ if not isfile(src):
+ raise DistutilsFileError("can't move '%s': not a regular file" % src)
+
+ if isdir(dst):
+ dst = os.path.join(dst, basename(src))
+ elif exists(dst):
+ raise DistutilsFileError(
+ "can't move '%s': destination '%s' already exists" %
+ (src, dst))
+
+ if not isdir(dirname(dst)):
+ raise DistutilsFileError(
+ "can't move '%s': destination '%s' not a valid path" %
+ (src, dst))
+
+ copy_it = False
+ try:
+ os.rename(src, dst)
+ except OSError as e:
+ (num, msg) = e.args
+ if num == errno.EXDEV:
+ copy_it = True
+ else:
+ raise DistutilsFileError(
+ "couldn't move '%s' to '%s': %s" % (src, dst, msg))
+
+ if copy_it:
+ copy_file(src, dst, verbose=verbose)
+ try:
+ os.unlink(src)
+ except OSError as e:
+ (num, msg) = e.args
+ try:
+ os.unlink(dst)
+ except OSError:
+ pass
+ raise DistutilsFileError(
+ "couldn't move '%s' to '%s' by copy/delete: "
+ "delete '%s' failed: %s"
+ % (src, dst, src, msg))
+ return dst
+
+
+def write_file (filename, contents):
+ """Create a file with the specified name and write 'contents' (a
+ sequence of strings without line terminators) to it.
+ """
+ f = open(filename, "w")
+ try:
+ for line in contents:
+ f.write(line + "\n")
+ finally:
+ f.close()
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/filelist.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/filelist.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..c92d5fdba3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/filelist.py
@@ -0,0 +1,327 @@
+"""distutils.filelist
+
+Provides the FileList class, used for poking about the filesystem
+and building lists of files.
+"""
+
+import os, re
+import fnmatch
+import functools
+from distutils.util import convert_path
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsTemplateError, DistutilsInternalError
+from distutils import log
+
+class FileList:
+ """A list of files built by on exploring the filesystem and filtered by
+ applying various patterns to what we find there.
+
+ Instance attributes:
+ dir
+ directory from which files will be taken -- only used if
+ 'allfiles' not supplied to constructor
+ files
+ list of filenames currently being built/filtered/manipulated
+ allfiles
+ complete list of files under consideration (ie. without any
+ filtering applied)
+ """
+
+ def __init__(self, warn=None, debug_print=None):
+ # ignore argument to FileList, but keep them for backwards
+ # compatibility
+ self.allfiles = None
+ self.files = []
+
+ def set_allfiles(self, allfiles):
+ self.allfiles = allfiles
+
+ def findall(self, dir=os.curdir):
+ self.allfiles = findall(dir)
+
+ def debug_print(self, msg):
+ """Print 'msg' to stdout if the global DEBUG (taken from the
+ DISTUTILS_DEBUG environment variable) flag is true.
+ """
+ from distutils.debug import DEBUG
+ if DEBUG:
+ print(msg)
+
+ # -- List-like methods ---------------------------------------------
+
+ def append(self, item):
+ self.files.append(item)
+
+ def extend(self, items):
+ self.files.extend(items)
+
+ def sort(self):
+ # Not a strict lexical sort!
+ sortable_files = sorted(map(os.path.split, self.files))
+ self.files = []
+ for sort_tuple in sortable_files:
+ self.files.append(os.path.join(*sort_tuple))
+
+
+ # -- Other miscellaneous utility methods ---------------------------
+
+ def remove_duplicates(self):
+ # Assumes list has been sorted!
+ for i in range(len(self.files) - 1, 0, -1):
+ if self.files[i] == self.files[i - 1]:
+ del self.files[i]
+
+
+ # -- "File template" methods ---------------------------------------
+
+ def _parse_template_line(self, line):
+ words = line.split()
+ action = words[0]
+
+ patterns = dir = dir_pattern = None
+
+ if action in ('include', 'exclude',
+ 'global-include', 'global-exclude'):
+ if len(words) < 2:
+ raise DistutilsTemplateError(
+ "'%s' expects <pattern1> <pattern2> ..." % action)
+ patterns = [convert_path(w) for w in words[1:]]
+ elif action in ('recursive-include', 'recursive-exclude'):
+ if len(words) < 3:
+ raise DistutilsTemplateError(
+ "'%s' expects <dir> <pattern1> <pattern2> ..." % action)
+ dir = convert_path(words[1])
+ patterns = [convert_path(w) for w in words[2:]]
+ elif action in ('graft', 'prune'):
+ if len(words) != 2:
+ raise DistutilsTemplateError(
+ "'%s' expects a single <dir_pattern>" % action)
+ dir_pattern = convert_path(words[1])
+ else:
+ raise DistutilsTemplateError("unknown action '%s'" % action)
+
+ return (action, patterns, dir, dir_pattern)
+
+ def process_template_line(self, line):
+ # Parse the line: split it up, make sure the right number of words
+ # is there, and return the relevant words. 'action' is always
+ # defined: it's the first word of the line. Which of the other
+ # three are defined depends on the action; it'll be either
+ # patterns, (dir and patterns), or (dir_pattern).
+ (action, patterns, dir, dir_pattern) = self._parse_template_line(line)
+
+ # OK, now we know that the action is valid and we have the
+ # right number of words on the line for that action -- so we
+ # can proceed with minimal error-checking.
+ if action == 'include':
+ self.debug_print("include " + ' '.join(patterns))
+ for pattern in patterns:
+ if not self.include_pattern(pattern, anchor=1):
+ log.warn("warning: no files found matching '%s'",
+ pattern)
+
+ elif action == 'exclude':
+ self.debug_print("exclude " + ' '.join(patterns))
+ for pattern in patterns:
+ if not self.exclude_pattern(pattern, anchor=1):
+ log.warn(("warning: no previously-included files "
+ "found matching '%s'"), pattern)
+
+ elif action == 'global-include':
+ self.debug_print("global-include " + ' '.join(patterns))
+ for pattern in patterns:
+ if not self.include_pattern(pattern, anchor=0):
+ log.warn(("warning: no files found matching '%s' "
+ "anywhere in distribution"), pattern)
+
+ elif action == 'global-exclude':
+ self.debug_print("global-exclude " + ' '.join(patterns))
+ for pattern in patterns:
+ if not self.exclude_pattern(pattern, anchor=0):
+ log.warn(("warning: no previously-included files matching "
+ "'%s' found anywhere in distribution"),
+ pattern)
+
+ elif action == 'recursive-include':
+ self.debug_print("recursive-include %s %s" %
+ (dir, ' '.join(patterns)))
+ for pattern in patterns:
+ if not self.include_pattern(pattern, prefix=dir):
+ log.warn(("warning: no files found matching '%s' "
+ "under directory '%s'"),
+ pattern, dir)
+
+ elif action == 'recursive-exclude':
+ self.debug_print("recursive-exclude %s %s" %
+ (dir, ' '.join(patterns)))
+ for pattern in patterns:
+ if not self.exclude_pattern(pattern, prefix=dir):
+ log.warn(("warning: no previously-included files matching "
+ "'%s' found under directory '%s'"),
+ pattern, dir)
+
+ elif action == 'graft':
+ self.debug_print("graft " + dir_pattern)
+ if not self.include_pattern(None, prefix=dir_pattern):
+ log.warn("warning: no directories found matching '%s'",
+ dir_pattern)
+
+ elif action == 'prune':
+ self.debug_print("prune " + dir_pattern)
+ if not self.exclude_pattern(None, prefix=dir_pattern):
+ log.warn(("no previously-included directories found "
+ "matching '%s'"), dir_pattern)
+ else:
+ raise DistutilsInternalError(
+ "this cannot happen: invalid action '%s'" % action)
+
+
+ # -- Filtering/selection methods -----------------------------------
+
+ def include_pattern(self, pattern, anchor=1, prefix=None, is_regex=0):
+ """Select strings (presumably filenames) from 'self.files' that
+ match 'pattern', a Unix-style wildcard (glob) pattern. Patterns
+ are not quite the same as implemented by the 'fnmatch' module: '*'
+ and '?' match non-special characters, where "special" is platform-
+ dependent: slash on Unix; colon, slash, and backslash on
+ DOS/Windows; and colon on Mac OS.
+
+ If 'anchor' is true (the default), then the pattern match is more
+ stringent: "*.py" will match "foo.py" but not "foo/bar.py". If
+ 'anchor' is false, both of these will match.
+
+ If 'prefix' is supplied, then only filenames starting with 'prefix'
+ (itself a pattern) and ending with 'pattern', with anything in between
+ them, will match. 'anchor' is ignored in this case.
+
+ If 'is_regex' is true, 'anchor' and 'prefix' are ignored, and
+ 'pattern' is assumed to be either a string containing a regex or a
+ regex object -- no translation is done, the regex is just compiled
+ and used as-is.
+
+ Selected strings will be added to self.files.
+
+ Return True if files are found, False otherwise.
+ """
+ # XXX docstring lying about what the special chars are?
+ files_found = False
+ pattern_re = translate_pattern(pattern, anchor, prefix, is_regex)
+ self.debug_print("include_pattern: applying regex r'%s'" %
+ pattern_re.pattern)
+
+ # delayed loading of allfiles list
+ if self.allfiles is None:
+ self.findall()
+
+ for name in self.allfiles:
+ if pattern_re.search(name):
+ self.debug_print(" adding " + name)
+ self.files.append(name)
+ files_found = True
+ return files_found
+
+
+ def exclude_pattern (self, pattern,
+ anchor=1, prefix=None, is_regex=0):
+ """Remove strings (presumably filenames) from 'files' that match
+ 'pattern'. Other parameters are the same as for
+ 'include_pattern()', above.
+ The list 'self.files' is modified in place.
+ Return True if files are found, False otherwise.
+ """
+ files_found = False
+ pattern_re = translate_pattern(pattern, anchor, prefix, is_regex)
+ self.debug_print("exclude_pattern: applying regex r'%s'" %
+ pattern_re.pattern)
+ for i in range(len(self.files)-1, -1, -1):
+ if pattern_re.search(self.files[i]):
+ self.debug_print(" removing " + self.files[i])
+ del self.files[i]
+ files_found = True
+ return files_found
+
+
+# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
+# Utility functions
+
+def _find_all_simple(path):
+ """
+ Find all files under 'path'
+ """
+ results = (
+ os.path.join(base, file)
+ for base, dirs, files in os.walk(path, followlinks=True)
+ for file in files
+ )
+ return filter(os.path.isfile, results)
+
+
+def findall(dir=os.curdir):
+ """
+ Find all files under 'dir' and return the list of full filenames.
+ Unless dir is '.', return full filenames with dir prepended.
+ """
+ files = _find_all_simple(dir)
+ if dir == os.curdir:
+ make_rel = functools.partial(os.path.relpath, start=dir)
+ files = map(make_rel, files)
+ return list(files)
+
+
+def glob_to_re(pattern):
+ """Translate a shell-like glob pattern to a regular expression; return
+ a string containing the regex. Differs from 'fnmatch.translate()' in
+ that '*' does not match "special characters" (which are
+ platform-specific).
+ """
+ pattern_re = fnmatch.translate(pattern)
+
+ # '?' and '*' in the glob pattern become '.' and '.*' in the RE, which
+ # IMHO is wrong -- '?' and '*' aren't supposed to match slash in Unix,
+ # and by extension they shouldn't match such "special characters" under
+ # any OS. So change all non-escaped dots in the RE to match any
+ # character except the special characters (currently: just os.sep).
+ sep = os.sep
+ if os.sep == '\\':
+ # we're using a regex to manipulate a regex, so we need
+ # to escape the backslash twice
+ sep = r'\\\\'
+ escaped = r'\1[^%s]' % sep
+ pattern_re = re.sub(r'((?<!\\)(\\\\)*)\.', escaped, pattern_re)
+ return pattern_re
+
+
+def translate_pattern(pattern, anchor=1, prefix=None, is_regex=0):
+ """Translate a shell-like wildcard pattern to a compiled regular
+ expression. Return the compiled regex. If 'is_regex' true,
+ then 'pattern' is directly compiled to a regex (if it's a string)
+ or just returned as-is (assumes it's a regex object).
+ """
+ if is_regex:
+ if isinstance(pattern, str):
+ return re.compile(pattern)
+ else:
+ return pattern
+
+ # ditch start and end characters
+ start, _, end = glob_to_re('_').partition('_')
+
+ if pattern:
+ pattern_re = glob_to_re(pattern)
+ assert pattern_re.startswith(start) and pattern_re.endswith(end)
+ else:
+ pattern_re = ''
+
+ if prefix is not None:
+ prefix_re = glob_to_re(prefix)
+ assert prefix_re.startswith(start) and prefix_re.endswith(end)
+ prefix_re = prefix_re[len(start): len(prefix_re) - len(end)]
+ sep = os.sep
+ if os.sep == '\\':
+ sep = r'\\'
+ pattern_re = pattern_re[len(start): len(pattern_re) - len(end)]
+ pattern_re = r'%s\A%s%s.*%s%s' % (start, prefix_re, sep, pattern_re, end)
+ else: # no prefix -- respect anchor flag
+ if anchor:
+ pattern_re = r'%s\A%s' % (start, pattern_re[len(start):])
+
+ return re.compile(pattern_re)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/log.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/log.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..8ef6b28ea2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/log.py
@@ -0,0 +1,77 @@
+"""A simple log mechanism styled after PEP 282."""
+
+# The class here is styled after PEP 282 so that it could later be
+# replaced with a standard Python logging implementation.
+
+DEBUG = 1
+INFO = 2
+WARN = 3
+ERROR = 4
+FATAL = 5
+
+import sys
+
+class Log:
+
+ def __init__(self, threshold=WARN):
+ self.threshold = threshold
+
+ def _log(self, level, msg, args):
+ if level not in (DEBUG, INFO, WARN, ERROR, FATAL):
+ raise ValueError('%s wrong log level' % str(level))
+
+ if level >= self.threshold:
+ if args:
+ msg = msg % args
+ if level in (WARN, ERROR, FATAL):
+ stream = sys.stderr
+ else:
+ stream = sys.stdout
+ try:
+ stream.write('%s\n' % msg)
+ except UnicodeEncodeError:
+ # emulate backslashreplace error handler
+ encoding = stream.encoding
+ msg = msg.encode(encoding, "backslashreplace").decode(encoding)
+ stream.write('%s\n' % msg)
+ stream.flush()
+
+ def log(self, level, msg, *args):
+ self._log(level, msg, args)
+
+ def debug(self, msg, *args):
+ self._log(DEBUG, msg, args)
+
+ def info(self, msg, *args):
+ self._log(INFO, msg, args)
+
+ def warn(self, msg, *args):
+ self._log(WARN, msg, args)
+
+ def error(self, msg, *args):
+ self._log(ERROR, msg, args)
+
+ def fatal(self, msg, *args):
+ self._log(FATAL, msg, args)
+
+_global_log = Log()
+log = _global_log.log
+debug = _global_log.debug
+info = _global_log.info
+warn = _global_log.warn
+error = _global_log.error
+fatal = _global_log.fatal
+
+def set_threshold(level):
+ # return the old threshold for use from tests
+ old = _global_log.threshold
+ _global_log.threshold = level
+ return old
+
+def set_verbosity(v):
+ if v <= 0:
+ set_threshold(WARN)
+ elif v == 1:
+ set_threshold(INFO)
+ elif v >= 2:
+ set_threshold(DEBUG)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/msvc9compiler.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/msvc9compiler.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..6934e964ab
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/msvc9compiler.py
@@ -0,0 +1,788 @@
+"""distutils.msvc9compiler
+
+Contains MSVCCompiler, an implementation of the abstract CCompiler class
+for the Microsoft Visual Studio 2008.
+
+The module is compatible with VS 2005 and VS 2008. You can find legacy support
+for older versions of VS in distutils.msvccompiler.
+"""
+
+# Written by Perry Stoll
+# hacked by Robin Becker and Thomas Heller to do a better job of
+# finding DevStudio (through the registry)
+# ported to VS2005 and VS 2008 by Christian Heimes
+
+import os
+import subprocess
+import sys
+import re
+
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsExecError, DistutilsPlatformError, \
+ CompileError, LibError, LinkError
+from distutils.ccompiler import CCompiler, gen_lib_options
+from distutils import log
+from distutils.util import get_platform
+
+import winreg
+
+RegOpenKeyEx = winreg.OpenKeyEx
+RegEnumKey = winreg.EnumKey
+RegEnumValue = winreg.EnumValue
+RegError = winreg.error
+
+HKEYS = (winreg.HKEY_USERS,
+ winreg.HKEY_CURRENT_USER,
+ winreg.HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE,
+ winreg.HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT)
+
+NATIVE_WIN64 = (sys.platform == 'win32' and sys.maxsize > 2**32)
+if NATIVE_WIN64:
+ # Visual C++ is a 32-bit application, so we need to look in
+ # the corresponding registry branch, if we're running a
+ # 64-bit Python on Win64
+ VS_BASE = r"Software\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\VisualStudio\%0.1f"
+ WINSDK_BASE = r"Software\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\Microsoft SDKs\Windows"
+ NET_BASE = r"Software\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\.NETFramework"
+else:
+ VS_BASE = r"Software\Microsoft\VisualStudio\%0.1f"
+ WINSDK_BASE = r"Software\Microsoft\Microsoft SDKs\Windows"
+ NET_BASE = r"Software\Microsoft\.NETFramework"
+
+# A map keyed by get_platform() return values to values accepted by
+# 'vcvarsall.bat'. Note a cross-compile may combine these (eg, 'x86_amd64' is
+# the param to cross-compile on x86 targeting amd64.)
+PLAT_TO_VCVARS = {
+ 'win32' : 'x86',
+ 'win-amd64' : 'amd64',
+}
+
+class Reg:
+ """Helper class to read values from the registry
+ """
+
+ def get_value(cls, path, key):
+ for base in HKEYS:
+ d = cls.read_values(base, path)
+ if d and key in d:
+ return d[key]
+ raise KeyError(key)
+ get_value = classmethod(get_value)
+
+ def read_keys(cls, base, key):
+ """Return list of registry keys."""
+ try:
+ handle = RegOpenKeyEx(base, key)
+ except RegError:
+ return None
+ L = []
+ i = 0
+ while True:
+ try:
+ k = RegEnumKey(handle, i)
+ except RegError:
+ break
+ L.append(k)
+ i += 1
+ return L
+ read_keys = classmethod(read_keys)
+
+ def read_values(cls, base, key):
+ """Return dict of registry keys and values.
+
+ All names are converted to lowercase.
+ """
+ try:
+ handle = RegOpenKeyEx(base, key)
+ except RegError:
+ return None
+ d = {}
+ i = 0
+ while True:
+ try:
+ name, value, type = RegEnumValue(handle, i)
+ except RegError:
+ break
+ name = name.lower()
+ d[cls.convert_mbcs(name)] = cls.convert_mbcs(value)
+ i += 1
+ return d
+ read_values = classmethod(read_values)
+
+ def convert_mbcs(s):
+ dec = getattr(s, "decode", None)
+ if dec is not None:
+ try:
+ s = dec("mbcs")
+ except UnicodeError:
+ pass
+ return s
+ convert_mbcs = staticmethod(convert_mbcs)
+
+class MacroExpander:
+
+ def __init__(self, version):
+ self.macros = {}
+ self.vsbase = VS_BASE % version
+ self.load_macros(version)
+
+ def set_macro(self, macro, path, key):
+ self.macros["$(%s)" % macro] = Reg.get_value(path, key)
+
+ def load_macros(self, version):
+ self.set_macro("VCInstallDir", self.vsbase + r"\Setup\VC", "productdir")
+ self.set_macro("VSInstallDir", self.vsbase + r"\Setup\VS", "productdir")
+ self.set_macro("FrameworkDir", NET_BASE, "installroot")
+ try:
+ if version >= 8.0:
+ self.set_macro("FrameworkSDKDir", NET_BASE,
+ "sdkinstallrootv2.0")
+ else:
+ raise KeyError("sdkinstallrootv2.0")
+ except KeyError:
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError(
+ """Python was built with Visual Studio 2008;
+extensions must be built with a compiler than can generate compatible binaries.
+Visual Studio 2008 was not found on this system. If you have Cygwin installed,
+you can try compiling with MingW32, by passing "-c mingw32" to setup.py.""")
+
+ if version >= 9.0:
+ self.set_macro("FrameworkVersion", self.vsbase, "clr version")
+ self.set_macro("WindowsSdkDir", WINSDK_BASE, "currentinstallfolder")
+ else:
+ p = r"Software\Microsoft\NET Framework Setup\Product"
+ for base in HKEYS:
+ try:
+ h = RegOpenKeyEx(base, p)
+ except RegError:
+ continue
+ key = RegEnumKey(h, 0)
+ d = Reg.get_value(base, r"%s\%s" % (p, key))
+ self.macros["$(FrameworkVersion)"] = d["version"]
+
+ def sub(self, s):
+ for k, v in self.macros.items():
+ s = s.replace(k, v)
+ return s
+
+def get_build_version():
+ """Return the version of MSVC that was used to build Python.
+
+ For Python 2.3 and up, the version number is included in
+ sys.version. For earlier versions, assume the compiler is MSVC 6.
+ """
+ prefix = "MSC v."
+ i = sys.version.find(prefix)
+ if i == -1:
+ return 6
+ i = i + len(prefix)
+ s, rest = sys.version[i:].split(" ", 1)
+ majorVersion = int(s[:-2]) - 6
+ if majorVersion >= 13:
+ # v13 was skipped and should be v14
+ majorVersion += 1
+ minorVersion = int(s[2:3]) / 10.0
+ # I don't think paths are affected by minor version in version 6
+ if majorVersion == 6:
+ minorVersion = 0
+ if majorVersion >= 6:
+ return majorVersion + minorVersion
+ # else we don't know what version of the compiler this is
+ return None
+
+def normalize_and_reduce_paths(paths):
+ """Return a list of normalized paths with duplicates removed.
+
+ The current order of paths is maintained.
+ """
+ # Paths are normalized so things like: /a and /a/ aren't both preserved.
+ reduced_paths = []
+ for p in paths:
+ np = os.path.normpath(p)
+ # XXX(nnorwitz): O(n**2), if reduced_paths gets long perhaps use a set.
+ if np not in reduced_paths:
+ reduced_paths.append(np)
+ return reduced_paths
+
+def removeDuplicates(variable):
+ """Remove duplicate values of an environment variable.
+ """
+ oldList = variable.split(os.pathsep)
+ newList = []
+ for i in oldList:
+ if i not in newList:
+ newList.append(i)
+ newVariable = os.pathsep.join(newList)
+ return newVariable
+
+def find_vcvarsall(version):
+ """Find the vcvarsall.bat file
+
+ At first it tries to find the productdir of VS 2008 in the registry. If
+ that fails it falls back to the VS90COMNTOOLS env var.
+ """
+ vsbase = VS_BASE % version
+ try:
+ productdir = Reg.get_value(r"%s\Setup\VC" % vsbase,
+ "productdir")
+ except KeyError:
+ log.debug("Unable to find productdir in registry")
+ productdir = None
+
+ if not productdir or not os.path.isdir(productdir):
+ toolskey = "VS%0.f0COMNTOOLS" % version
+ toolsdir = os.environ.get(toolskey, None)
+
+ if toolsdir and os.path.isdir(toolsdir):
+ productdir = os.path.join(toolsdir, os.pardir, os.pardir, "VC")
+ productdir = os.path.abspath(productdir)
+ if not os.path.isdir(productdir):
+ log.debug("%s is not a valid directory" % productdir)
+ return None
+ else:
+ log.debug("Env var %s is not set or invalid" % toolskey)
+ if not productdir:
+ log.debug("No productdir found")
+ return None
+ vcvarsall = os.path.join(productdir, "vcvarsall.bat")
+ if os.path.isfile(vcvarsall):
+ return vcvarsall
+ log.debug("Unable to find vcvarsall.bat")
+ return None
+
+def query_vcvarsall(version, arch="x86"):
+ """Launch vcvarsall.bat and read the settings from its environment
+ """
+ vcvarsall = find_vcvarsall(version)
+ interesting = {"include", "lib", "libpath", "path"}
+ result = {}
+
+ if vcvarsall is None:
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError("Unable to find vcvarsall.bat")
+ log.debug("Calling 'vcvarsall.bat %s' (version=%s)", arch, version)
+ popen = subprocess.Popen('"%s" %s & set' % (vcvarsall, arch),
+ stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
+ stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
+ try:
+ stdout, stderr = popen.communicate()
+ if popen.wait() != 0:
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError(stderr.decode("mbcs"))
+
+ stdout = stdout.decode("mbcs")
+ for line in stdout.split("\n"):
+ line = Reg.convert_mbcs(line)
+ if '=' not in line:
+ continue
+ line = line.strip()
+ key, value = line.split('=', 1)
+ key = key.lower()
+ if key in interesting:
+ if value.endswith(os.pathsep):
+ value = value[:-1]
+ result[key] = removeDuplicates(value)
+
+ finally:
+ popen.stdout.close()
+ popen.stderr.close()
+
+ if len(result) != len(interesting):
+ raise ValueError(str(list(result.keys())))
+
+ return result
+
+# More globals
+VERSION = get_build_version()
+if VERSION < 8.0:
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError("VC %0.1f is not supported by this module" % VERSION)
+# MACROS = MacroExpander(VERSION)
+
+class MSVCCompiler(CCompiler) :
+ """Concrete class that implements an interface to Microsoft Visual C++,
+ as defined by the CCompiler abstract class."""
+
+ compiler_type = 'msvc'
+
+ # Just set this so CCompiler's constructor doesn't barf. We currently
+ # don't use the 'set_executables()' bureaucracy provided by CCompiler,
+ # as it really isn't necessary for this sort of single-compiler class.
+ # Would be nice to have a consistent interface with UnixCCompiler,
+ # though, so it's worth thinking about.
+ executables = {}
+
+ # Private class data (need to distinguish C from C++ source for compiler)
+ _c_extensions = ['.c']
+ _cpp_extensions = ['.cc', '.cpp', '.cxx']
+ _rc_extensions = ['.rc']
+ _mc_extensions = ['.mc']
+
+ # Needed for the filename generation methods provided by the
+ # base class, CCompiler.
+ src_extensions = (_c_extensions + _cpp_extensions +
+ _rc_extensions + _mc_extensions)
+ res_extension = '.res'
+ obj_extension = '.obj'
+ static_lib_extension = '.lib'
+ shared_lib_extension = '.dll'
+ static_lib_format = shared_lib_format = '%s%s'
+ exe_extension = '.exe'
+
+ def __init__(self, verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0):
+ CCompiler.__init__ (self, verbose, dry_run, force)
+ self.__version = VERSION
+ self.__root = r"Software\Microsoft\VisualStudio"
+ # self.__macros = MACROS
+ self.__paths = []
+ # target platform (.plat_name is consistent with 'bdist')
+ self.plat_name = None
+ self.__arch = None # deprecated name
+ self.initialized = False
+
+ def initialize(self, plat_name=None):
+ # multi-init means we would need to check platform same each time...
+ assert not self.initialized, "don't init multiple times"
+ if plat_name is None:
+ plat_name = get_platform()
+ # sanity check for platforms to prevent obscure errors later.
+ ok_plats = 'win32', 'win-amd64'
+ if plat_name not in ok_plats:
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError("--plat-name must be one of %s" %
+ (ok_plats,))
+
+ if "DISTUTILS_USE_SDK" in os.environ and "MSSdk" in os.environ and self.find_exe("cl.exe"):
+ # Assume that the SDK set up everything alright; don't try to be
+ # smarter
+ self.cc = "cl.exe"
+ self.linker = "link.exe"
+ self.lib = "lib.exe"
+ self.rc = "rc.exe"
+ self.mc = "mc.exe"
+ else:
+ # On x86, 'vcvars32.bat amd64' creates an env that doesn't work;
+ # to cross compile, you use 'x86_amd64'.
+ # On AMD64, 'vcvars32.bat amd64' is a native build env; to cross
+ # compile use 'x86' (ie, it runs the x86 compiler directly)
+ if plat_name == get_platform() or plat_name == 'win32':
+ # native build or cross-compile to win32
+ plat_spec = PLAT_TO_VCVARS[plat_name]
+ else:
+ # cross compile from win32 -> some 64bit
+ plat_spec = PLAT_TO_VCVARS[get_platform()] + '_' + \
+ PLAT_TO_VCVARS[plat_name]
+
+ vc_env = query_vcvarsall(VERSION, plat_spec)
+
+ self.__paths = vc_env['path'].split(os.pathsep)
+ os.environ['lib'] = vc_env['lib']
+ os.environ['include'] = vc_env['include']
+
+ if len(self.__paths) == 0:
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError("Python was built with %s, "
+ "and extensions need to be built with the same "
+ "version of the compiler, but it isn't installed."
+ % self.__product)
+
+ self.cc = self.find_exe("cl.exe")
+ self.linker = self.find_exe("link.exe")
+ self.lib = self.find_exe("lib.exe")
+ self.rc = self.find_exe("rc.exe") # resource compiler
+ self.mc = self.find_exe("mc.exe") # message compiler
+ #self.set_path_env_var('lib')
+ #self.set_path_env_var('include')
+
+ # extend the MSVC path with the current path
+ try:
+ for p in os.environ['path'].split(';'):
+ self.__paths.append(p)
+ except KeyError:
+ pass
+ self.__paths = normalize_and_reduce_paths(self.__paths)
+ os.environ['path'] = ";".join(self.__paths)
+
+ self.preprocess_options = None
+ if self.__arch == "x86":
+ self.compile_options = [ '/nologo', '/Ox', '/MD', '/W3',
+ '/DNDEBUG']
+ self.compile_options_debug = ['/nologo', '/Od', '/MDd', '/W3',
+ '/Z7', '/D_DEBUG']
+ else:
+ # Win64
+ self.compile_options = [ '/nologo', '/Ox', '/MD', '/W3', '/GS-' ,
+ '/DNDEBUG']
+ self.compile_options_debug = ['/nologo', '/Od', '/MDd', '/W3', '/GS-',
+ '/Z7', '/D_DEBUG']
+
+ self.ldflags_shared = ['/DLL', '/nologo', '/INCREMENTAL:NO']
+ if self.__version >= 7:
+ self.ldflags_shared_debug = [
+ '/DLL', '/nologo', '/INCREMENTAL:no', '/DEBUG'
+ ]
+ self.ldflags_static = [ '/nologo']
+
+ self.initialized = True
+
+ # -- Worker methods ------------------------------------------------
+
+ def object_filenames(self,
+ source_filenames,
+ strip_dir=0,
+ output_dir=''):
+ # Copied from ccompiler.py, extended to return .res as 'object'-file
+ # for .rc input file
+ if output_dir is None: output_dir = ''
+ obj_names = []
+ for src_name in source_filenames:
+ (base, ext) = os.path.splitext (src_name)
+ base = os.path.splitdrive(base)[1] # Chop off the drive
+ base = base[os.path.isabs(base):] # If abs, chop off leading /
+ if ext not in self.src_extensions:
+ # Better to raise an exception instead of silently continuing
+ # and later complain about sources and targets having
+ # different lengths
+ raise CompileError ("Don't know how to compile %s" % src_name)
+ if strip_dir:
+ base = os.path.basename (base)
+ if ext in self._rc_extensions:
+ obj_names.append (os.path.join (output_dir,
+ base + self.res_extension))
+ elif ext in self._mc_extensions:
+ obj_names.append (os.path.join (output_dir,
+ base + self.res_extension))
+ else:
+ obj_names.append (os.path.join (output_dir,
+ base + self.obj_extension))
+ return obj_names
+
+
+ def compile(self, sources,
+ output_dir=None, macros=None, include_dirs=None, debug=0,
+ extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, depends=None):
+
+ if not self.initialized:
+ self.initialize()
+ compile_info = self._setup_compile(output_dir, macros, include_dirs,
+ sources, depends, extra_postargs)
+ macros, objects, extra_postargs, pp_opts, build = compile_info
+
+ compile_opts = extra_preargs or []
+ compile_opts.append ('/c')
+ if debug:
+ compile_opts.extend(self.compile_options_debug)
+ else:
+ compile_opts.extend(self.compile_options)
+
+ for obj in objects:
+ try:
+ src, ext = build[obj]
+ except KeyError:
+ continue
+ if debug:
+ # pass the full pathname to MSVC in debug mode,
+ # this allows the debugger to find the source file
+ # without asking the user to browse for it
+ src = os.path.abspath(src)
+
+ if ext in self._c_extensions:
+ input_opt = "/Tc" + src
+ elif ext in self._cpp_extensions:
+ input_opt = "/Tp" + src
+ elif ext in self._rc_extensions:
+ # compile .RC to .RES file
+ input_opt = src
+ output_opt = "/fo" + obj
+ try:
+ self.spawn([self.rc] + pp_opts +
+ [output_opt] + [input_opt])
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise CompileError(msg)
+ continue
+ elif ext in self._mc_extensions:
+ # Compile .MC to .RC file to .RES file.
+ # * '-h dir' specifies the directory for the
+ # generated include file
+ # * '-r dir' specifies the target directory of the
+ # generated RC file and the binary message resource
+ # it includes
+ #
+ # For now (since there are no options to change this),
+ # we use the source-directory for the include file and
+ # the build directory for the RC file and message
+ # resources. This works at least for win32all.
+ h_dir = os.path.dirname(src)
+ rc_dir = os.path.dirname(obj)
+ try:
+ # first compile .MC to .RC and .H file
+ self.spawn([self.mc] +
+ ['-h', h_dir, '-r', rc_dir] + [src])
+ base, _ = os.path.splitext (os.path.basename (src))
+ rc_file = os.path.join (rc_dir, base + '.rc')
+ # then compile .RC to .RES file
+ self.spawn([self.rc] +
+ ["/fo" + obj] + [rc_file])
+
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise CompileError(msg)
+ continue
+ else:
+ # how to handle this file?
+ raise CompileError("Don't know how to compile %s to %s"
+ % (src, obj))
+
+ output_opt = "/Fo" + obj
+ try:
+ self.spawn([self.cc] + compile_opts + pp_opts +
+ [input_opt, output_opt] +
+ extra_postargs)
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise CompileError(msg)
+
+ return objects
+
+
+ def create_static_lib(self,
+ objects,
+ output_libname,
+ output_dir=None,
+ debug=0,
+ target_lang=None):
+
+ if not self.initialized:
+ self.initialize()
+ (objects, output_dir) = self._fix_object_args(objects, output_dir)
+ output_filename = self.library_filename(output_libname,
+ output_dir=output_dir)
+
+ if self._need_link(objects, output_filename):
+ lib_args = objects + ['/OUT:' + output_filename]
+ if debug:
+ pass # XXX what goes here?
+ try:
+ self.spawn([self.lib] + lib_args)
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise LibError(msg)
+ else:
+ log.debug("skipping %s (up-to-date)", output_filename)
+
+
+ def link(self,
+ target_desc,
+ objects,
+ output_filename,
+ output_dir=None,
+ libraries=None,
+ library_dirs=None,
+ runtime_library_dirs=None,
+ export_symbols=None,
+ debug=0,
+ extra_preargs=None,
+ extra_postargs=None,
+ build_temp=None,
+ target_lang=None):
+
+ if not self.initialized:
+ self.initialize()
+ (objects, output_dir) = self._fix_object_args(objects, output_dir)
+ fixed_args = self._fix_lib_args(libraries, library_dirs,
+ runtime_library_dirs)
+ (libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs) = fixed_args
+
+ if runtime_library_dirs:
+ self.warn ("I don't know what to do with 'runtime_library_dirs': "
+ + str (runtime_library_dirs))
+
+ lib_opts = gen_lib_options(self,
+ library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs,
+ libraries)
+ if output_dir is not None:
+ output_filename = os.path.join(output_dir, output_filename)
+
+ if self._need_link(objects, output_filename):
+ if target_desc == CCompiler.EXECUTABLE:
+ if debug:
+ ldflags = self.ldflags_shared_debug[1:]
+ else:
+ ldflags = self.ldflags_shared[1:]
+ else:
+ if debug:
+ ldflags = self.ldflags_shared_debug
+ else:
+ ldflags = self.ldflags_shared
+
+ export_opts = []
+ for sym in (export_symbols or []):
+ export_opts.append("/EXPORT:" + sym)
+
+ ld_args = (ldflags + lib_opts + export_opts +
+ objects + ['/OUT:' + output_filename])
+
+ # The MSVC linker generates .lib and .exp files, which cannot be
+ # suppressed by any linker switches. The .lib files may even be
+ # needed! Make sure they are generated in the temporary build
+ # directory. Since they have different names for debug and release
+ # builds, they can go into the same directory.
+ build_temp = os.path.dirname(objects[0])
+ if export_symbols is not None:
+ (dll_name, dll_ext) = os.path.splitext(
+ os.path.basename(output_filename))
+ implib_file = os.path.join(
+ build_temp,
+ self.library_filename(dll_name))
+ ld_args.append ('/IMPLIB:' + implib_file)
+
+ self.manifest_setup_ldargs(output_filename, build_temp, ld_args)
+
+ if extra_preargs:
+ ld_args[:0] = extra_preargs
+ if extra_postargs:
+ ld_args.extend(extra_postargs)
+
+ self.mkpath(os.path.dirname(output_filename))
+ try:
+ self.spawn([self.linker] + ld_args)
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise LinkError(msg)
+
+ # embed the manifest
+ # XXX - this is somewhat fragile - if mt.exe fails, distutils
+ # will still consider the DLL up-to-date, but it will not have a
+ # manifest. Maybe we should link to a temp file? OTOH, that
+ # implies a build environment error that shouldn't go undetected.
+ mfinfo = self.manifest_get_embed_info(target_desc, ld_args)
+ if mfinfo is not None:
+ mffilename, mfid = mfinfo
+ out_arg = '-outputresource:%s;%s' % (output_filename, mfid)
+ try:
+ self.spawn(['mt.exe', '-nologo', '-manifest',
+ mffilename, out_arg])
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise LinkError(msg)
+ else:
+ log.debug("skipping %s (up-to-date)", output_filename)
+
+ def manifest_setup_ldargs(self, output_filename, build_temp, ld_args):
+ # If we need a manifest at all, an embedded manifest is recommended.
+ # See MSDN article titled
+ # "How to: Embed a Manifest Inside a C/C++ Application"
+ # (currently at http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms235591(VS.80).aspx)
+ # Ask the linker to generate the manifest in the temp dir, so
+ # we can check it, and possibly embed it, later.
+ temp_manifest = os.path.join(
+ build_temp,
+ os.path.basename(output_filename) + ".manifest")
+ ld_args.append('/MANIFESTFILE:' + temp_manifest)
+
+ def manifest_get_embed_info(self, target_desc, ld_args):
+ # If a manifest should be embedded, return a tuple of
+ # (manifest_filename, resource_id). Returns None if no manifest
+ # should be embedded. See http://bugs.python.org/issue7833 for why
+ # we want to avoid any manifest for extension modules if we can)
+ for arg in ld_args:
+ if arg.startswith("/MANIFESTFILE:"):
+ temp_manifest = arg.split(":", 1)[1]
+ break
+ else:
+ # no /MANIFESTFILE so nothing to do.
+ return None
+ if target_desc == CCompiler.EXECUTABLE:
+ # by default, executables always get the manifest with the
+ # CRT referenced.
+ mfid = 1
+ else:
+ # Extension modules try and avoid any manifest if possible.
+ mfid = 2
+ temp_manifest = self._remove_visual_c_ref(temp_manifest)
+ if temp_manifest is None:
+ return None
+ return temp_manifest, mfid
+
+ def _remove_visual_c_ref(self, manifest_file):
+ try:
+ # Remove references to the Visual C runtime, so they will
+ # fall through to the Visual C dependency of Python.exe.
+ # This way, when installed for a restricted user (e.g.
+ # runtimes are not in WinSxS folder, but in Python's own
+ # folder), the runtimes do not need to be in every folder
+ # with .pyd's.
+ # Returns either the filename of the modified manifest or
+ # None if no manifest should be embedded.
+ manifest_f = open(manifest_file)
+ try:
+ manifest_buf = manifest_f.read()
+ finally:
+ manifest_f.close()
+ pattern = re.compile(
+ r"""<assemblyIdentity.*?name=("|')Microsoft\."""\
+ r"""VC\d{2}\.CRT("|').*?(/>|</assemblyIdentity>)""",
+ re.DOTALL)
+ manifest_buf = re.sub(pattern, "", manifest_buf)
+ pattern = r"<dependentAssembly>\s*</dependentAssembly>"
+ manifest_buf = re.sub(pattern, "", manifest_buf)
+ # Now see if any other assemblies are referenced - if not, we
+ # don't want a manifest embedded.
+ pattern = re.compile(
+ r"""<assemblyIdentity.*?name=(?:"|')(.+?)(?:"|')"""
+ r""".*?(?:/>|</assemblyIdentity>)""", re.DOTALL)
+ if re.search(pattern, manifest_buf) is None:
+ return None
+
+ manifest_f = open(manifest_file, 'w')
+ try:
+ manifest_f.write(manifest_buf)
+ return manifest_file
+ finally:
+ manifest_f.close()
+ except OSError:
+ pass
+
+ # -- Miscellaneous methods -----------------------------------------
+ # These are all used by the 'gen_lib_options() function, in
+ # ccompiler.py.
+
+ def library_dir_option(self, dir):
+ return "/LIBPATH:" + dir
+
+ def runtime_library_dir_option(self, dir):
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError(
+ "don't know how to set runtime library search path for MSVC++")
+
+ def library_option(self, lib):
+ return self.library_filename(lib)
+
+
+ def find_library_file(self, dirs, lib, debug=0):
+ # Prefer a debugging library if found (and requested), but deal
+ # with it if we don't have one.
+ if debug:
+ try_names = [lib + "_d", lib]
+ else:
+ try_names = [lib]
+ for dir in dirs:
+ for name in try_names:
+ libfile = os.path.join(dir, self.library_filename (name))
+ if os.path.exists(libfile):
+ return libfile
+ else:
+ # Oops, didn't find it in *any* of 'dirs'
+ return None
+
+ # Helper methods for using the MSVC registry settings
+
+ def find_exe(self, exe):
+ """Return path to an MSVC executable program.
+
+ Tries to find the program in several places: first, one of the
+ MSVC program search paths from the registry; next, the directories
+ in the PATH environment variable. If any of those work, return an
+ absolute path that is known to exist. If none of them work, just
+ return the original program name, 'exe'.
+ """
+ for p in self.__paths:
+ fn = os.path.join(os.path.abspath(p), exe)
+ if os.path.isfile(fn):
+ return fn
+
+ # didn't find it; try existing path
+ for p in os.environ['Path'].split(';'):
+ fn = os.path.join(os.path.abspath(p),exe)
+ if os.path.isfile(fn):
+ return fn
+
+ return exe
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/msvccompiler.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/msvccompiler.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..d5857cb1ff
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/msvccompiler.py
@@ -0,0 +1,643 @@
+"""distutils.msvccompiler
+
+Contains MSVCCompiler, an implementation of the abstract CCompiler class
+for the Microsoft Visual Studio.
+"""
+
+# Written by Perry Stoll
+# hacked by Robin Becker and Thomas Heller to do a better job of
+# finding DevStudio (through the registry)
+
+import sys, os
+from distutils.errors import \
+ DistutilsExecError, DistutilsPlatformError, \
+ CompileError, LibError, LinkError
+from distutils.ccompiler import \
+ CCompiler, gen_lib_options
+from distutils import log
+
+_can_read_reg = False
+try:
+ import winreg
+
+ _can_read_reg = True
+ hkey_mod = winreg
+
+ RegOpenKeyEx = winreg.OpenKeyEx
+ RegEnumKey = winreg.EnumKey
+ RegEnumValue = winreg.EnumValue
+ RegError = winreg.error
+
+except ImportError:
+ try:
+ import win32api
+ import win32con
+ _can_read_reg = True
+ hkey_mod = win32con
+
+ RegOpenKeyEx = win32api.RegOpenKeyEx
+ RegEnumKey = win32api.RegEnumKey
+ RegEnumValue = win32api.RegEnumValue
+ RegError = win32api.error
+ except ImportError:
+ log.info("Warning: Can't read registry to find the "
+ "necessary compiler setting\n"
+ "Make sure that Python modules winreg, "
+ "win32api or win32con are installed.")
+ pass
+
+if _can_read_reg:
+ HKEYS = (hkey_mod.HKEY_USERS,
+ hkey_mod.HKEY_CURRENT_USER,
+ hkey_mod.HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE,
+ hkey_mod.HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT)
+
+def read_keys(base, key):
+ """Return list of registry keys."""
+ try:
+ handle = RegOpenKeyEx(base, key)
+ except RegError:
+ return None
+ L = []
+ i = 0
+ while True:
+ try:
+ k = RegEnumKey(handle, i)
+ except RegError:
+ break
+ L.append(k)
+ i += 1
+ return L
+
+def read_values(base, key):
+ """Return dict of registry keys and values.
+
+ All names are converted to lowercase.
+ """
+ try:
+ handle = RegOpenKeyEx(base, key)
+ except RegError:
+ return None
+ d = {}
+ i = 0
+ while True:
+ try:
+ name, value, type = RegEnumValue(handle, i)
+ except RegError:
+ break
+ name = name.lower()
+ d[convert_mbcs(name)] = convert_mbcs(value)
+ i += 1
+ return d
+
+def convert_mbcs(s):
+ dec = getattr(s, "decode", None)
+ if dec is not None:
+ try:
+ s = dec("mbcs")
+ except UnicodeError:
+ pass
+ return s
+
+class MacroExpander:
+ def __init__(self, version):
+ self.macros = {}
+ self.load_macros(version)
+
+ def set_macro(self, macro, path, key):
+ for base in HKEYS:
+ d = read_values(base, path)
+ if d:
+ self.macros["$(%s)" % macro] = d[key]
+ break
+
+ def load_macros(self, version):
+ vsbase = r"Software\Microsoft\VisualStudio\%0.1f" % version
+ self.set_macro("VCInstallDir", vsbase + r"\Setup\VC", "productdir")
+ self.set_macro("VSInstallDir", vsbase + r"\Setup\VS", "productdir")
+ net = r"Software\Microsoft\.NETFramework"
+ self.set_macro("FrameworkDir", net, "installroot")
+ try:
+ if version > 7.0:
+ self.set_macro("FrameworkSDKDir", net, "sdkinstallrootv1.1")
+ else:
+ self.set_macro("FrameworkSDKDir", net, "sdkinstallroot")
+ except KeyError as exc: #
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError(
+ """Python was built with Visual Studio 2003;
+extensions must be built with a compiler than can generate compatible binaries.
+Visual Studio 2003 was not found on this system. If you have Cygwin installed,
+you can try compiling with MingW32, by passing "-c mingw32" to setup.py.""")
+
+ p = r"Software\Microsoft\NET Framework Setup\Product"
+ for base in HKEYS:
+ try:
+ h = RegOpenKeyEx(base, p)
+ except RegError:
+ continue
+ key = RegEnumKey(h, 0)
+ d = read_values(base, r"%s\%s" % (p, key))
+ self.macros["$(FrameworkVersion)"] = d["version"]
+
+ def sub(self, s):
+ for k, v in self.macros.items():
+ s = s.replace(k, v)
+ return s
+
+def get_build_version():
+ """Return the version of MSVC that was used to build Python.
+
+ For Python 2.3 and up, the version number is included in
+ sys.version. For earlier versions, assume the compiler is MSVC 6.
+ """
+ prefix = "MSC v."
+ i = sys.version.find(prefix)
+ if i == -1:
+ return 6
+ i = i + len(prefix)
+ s, rest = sys.version[i:].split(" ", 1)
+ majorVersion = int(s[:-2]) - 6
+ if majorVersion >= 13:
+ # v13 was skipped and should be v14
+ majorVersion += 1
+ minorVersion = int(s[2:3]) / 10.0
+ # I don't think paths are affected by minor version in version 6
+ if majorVersion == 6:
+ minorVersion = 0
+ if majorVersion >= 6:
+ return majorVersion + minorVersion
+ # else we don't know what version of the compiler this is
+ return None
+
+def get_build_architecture():
+ """Return the processor architecture.
+
+ Possible results are "Intel" or "AMD64".
+ """
+
+ prefix = " bit ("
+ i = sys.version.find(prefix)
+ if i == -1:
+ return "Intel"
+ j = sys.version.find(")", i)
+ return sys.version[i+len(prefix):j]
+
+def normalize_and_reduce_paths(paths):
+ """Return a list of normalized paths with duplicates removed.
+
+ The current order of paths is maintained.
+ """
+ # Paths are normalized so things like: /a and /a/ aren't both preserved.
+ reduced_paths = []
+ for p in paths:
+ np = os.path.normpath(p)
+ # XXX(nnorwitz): O(n**2), if reduced_paths gets long perhaps use a set.
+ if np not in reduced_paths:
+ reduced_paths.append(np)
+ return reduced_paths
+
+
+class MSVCCompiler(CCompiler) :
+ """Concrete class that implements an interface to Microsoft Visual C++,
+ as defined by the CCompiler abstract class."""
+
+ compiler_type = 'msvc'
+
+ # Just set this so CCompiler's constructor doesn't barf. We currently
+ # don't use the 'set_executables()' bureaucracy provided by CCompiler,
+ # as it really isn't necessary for this sort of single-compiler class.
+ # Would be nice to have a consistent interface with UnixCCompiler,
+ # though, so it's worth thinking about.
+ executables = {}
+
+ # Private class data (need to distinguish C from C++ source for compiler)
+ _c_extensions = ['.c']
+ _cpp_extensions = ['.cc', '.cpp', '.cxx']
+ _rc_extensions = ['.rc']
+ _mc_extensions = ['.mc']
+
+ # Needed for the filename generation methods provided by the
+ # base class, CCompiler.
+ src_extensions = (_c_extensions + _cpp_extensions +
+ _rc_extensions + _mc_extensions)
+ res_extension = '.res'
+ obj_extension = '.obj'
+ static_lib_extension = '.lib'
+ shared_lib_extension = '.dll'
+ static_lib_format = shared_lib_format = '%s%s'
+ exe_extension = '.exe'
+
+ def __init__(self, verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0):
+ CCompiler.__init__ (self, verbose, dry_run, force)
+ self.__version = get_build_version()
+ self.__arch = get_build_architecture()
+ if self.__arch == "Intel":
+ # x86
+ if self.__version >= 7:
+ self.__root = r"Software\Microsoft\VisualStudio"
+ self.__macros = MacroExpander(self.__version)
+ else:
+ self.__root = r"Software\Microsoft\Devstudio"
+ self.__product = "Visual Studio version %s" % self.__version
+ else:
+ # Win64. Assume this was built with the platform SDK
+ self.__product = "Microsoft SDK compiler %s" % (self.__version + 6)
+
+ self.initialized = False
+
+ def initialize(self):
+ self.__paths = []
+ if "DISTUTILS_USE_SDK" in os.environ and "MSSdk" in os.environ and self.find_exe("cl.exe"):
+ # Assume that the SDK set up everything alright; don't try to be
+ # smarter
+ self.cc = "cl.exe"
+ self.linker = "link.exe"
+ self.lib = "lib.exe"
+ self.rc = "rc.exe"
+ self.mc = "mc.exe"
+ else:
+ self.__paths = self.get_msvc_paths("path")
+
+ if len(self.__paths) == 0:
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError("Python was built with %s, "
+ "and extensions need to be built with the same "
+ "version of the compiler, but it isn't installed."
+ % self.__product)
+
+ self.cc = self.find_exe("cl.exe")
+ self.linker = self.find_exe("link.exe")
+ self.lib = self.find_exe("lib.exe")
+ self.rc = self.find_exe("rc.exe") # resource compiler
+ self.mc = self.find_exe("mc.exe") # message compiler
+ self.set_path_env_var('lib')
+ self.set_path_env_var('include')
+
+ # extend the MSVC path with the current path
+ try:
+ for p in os.environ['path'].split(';'):
+ self.__paths.append(p)
+ except KeyError:
+ pass
+ self.__paths = normalize_and_reduce_paths(self.__paths)
+ os.environ['path'] = ";".join(self.__paths)
+
+ self.preprocess_options = None
+ if self.__arch == "Intel":
+ self.compile_options = [ '/nologo', '/Ox', '/MD', '/W3', '/GX' ,
+ '/DNDEBUG']
+ self.compile_options_debug = ['/nologo', '/Od', '/MDd', '/W3', '/GX',
+ '/Z7', '/D_DEBUG']
+ else:
+ # Win64
+ self.compile_options = [ '/nologo', '/Ox', '/MD', '/W3', '/GS-' ,
+ '/DNDEBUG']
+ self.compile_options_debug = ['/nologo', '/Od', '/MDd', '/W3', '/GS-',
+ '/Z7', '/D_DEBUG']
+
+ self.ldflags_shared = ['/DLL', '/nologo', '/INCREMENTAL:NO']
+ if self.__version >= 7:
+ self.ldflags_shared_debug = [
+ '/DLL', '/nologo', '/INCREMENTAL:no', '/DEBUG'
+ ]
+ else:
+ self.ldflags_shared_debug = [
+ '/DLL', '/nologo', '/INCREMENTAL:no', '/pdb:None', '/DEBUG'
+ ]
+ self.ldflags_static = [ '/nologo']
+
+ self.initialized = True
+
+ # -- Worker methods ------------------------------------------------
+
+ def object_filenames(self,
+ source_filenames,
+ strip_dir=0,
+ output_dir=''):
+ # Copied from ccompiler.py, extended to return .res as 'object'-file
+ # for .rc input file
+ if output_dir is None: output_dir = ''
+ obj_names = []
+ for src_name in source_filenames:
+ (base, ext) = os.path.splitext (src_name)
+ base = os.path.splitdrive(base)[1] # Chop off the drive
+ base = base[os.path.isabs(base):] # If abs, chop off leading /
+ if ext not in self.src_extensions:
+ # Better to raise an exception instead of silently continuing
+ # and later complain about sources and targets having
+ # different lengths
+ raise CompileError ("Don't know how to compile %s" % src_name)
+ if strip_dir:
+ base = os.path.basename (base)
+ if ext in self._rc_extensions:
+ obj_names.append (os.path.join (output_dir,
+ base + self.res_extension))
+ elif ext in self._mc_extensions:
+ obj_names.append (os.path.join (output_dir,
+ base + self.res_extension))
+ else:
+ obj_names.append (os.path.join (output_dir,
+ base + self.obj_extension))
+ return obj_names
+
+
+ def compile(self, sources,
+ output_dir=None, macros=None, include_dirs=None, debug=0,
+ extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, depends=None):
+
+ if not self.initialized:
+ self.initialize()
+ compile_info = self._setup_compile(output_dir, macros, include_dirs,
+ sources, depends, extra_postargs)
+ macros, objects, extra_postargs, pp_opts, build = compile_info
+
+ compile_opts = extra_preargs or []
+ compile_opts.append ('/c')
+ if debug:
+ compile_opts.extend(self.compile_options_debug)
+ else:
+ compile_opts.extend(self.compile_options)
+
+ for obj in objects:
+ try:
+ src, ext = build[obj]
+ except KeyError:
+ continue
+ if debug:
+ # pass the full pathname to MSVC in debug mode,
+ # this allows the debugger to find the source file
+ # without asking the user to browse for it
+ src = os.path.abspath(src)
+
+ if ext in self._c_extensions:
+ input_opt = "/Tc" + src
+ elif ext in self._cpp_extensions:
+ input_opt = "/Tp" + src
+ elif ext in self._rc_extensions:
+ # compile .RC to .RES file
+ input_opt = src
+ output_opt = "/fo" + obj
+ try:
+ self.spawn([self.rc] + pp_opts +
+ [output_opt] + [input_opt])
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise CompileError(msg)
+ continue
+ elif ext in self._mc_extensions:
+ # Compile .MC to .RC file to .RES file.
+ # * '-h dir' specifies the directory for the
+ # generated include file
+ # * '-r dir' specifies the target directory of the
+ # generated RC file and the binary message resource
+ # it includes
+ #
+ # For now (since there are no options to change this),
+ # we use the source-directory for the include file and
+ # the build directory for the RC file and message
+ # resources. This works at least for win32all.
+ h_dir = os.path.dirname(src)
+ rc_dir = os.path.dirname(obj)
+ try:
+ # first compile .MC to .RC and .H file
+ self.spawn([self.mc] +
+ ['-h', h_dir, '-r', rc_dir] + [src])
+ base, _ = os.path.splitext (os.path.basename (src))
+ rc_file = os.path.join (rc_dir, base + '.rc')
+ # then compile .RC to .RES file
+ self.spawn([self.rc] +
+ ["/fo" + obj] + [rc_file])
+
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise CompileError(msg)
+ continue
+ else:
+ # how to handle this file?
+ raise CompileError("Don't know how to compile %s to %s"
+ % (src, obj))
+
+ output_opt = "/Fo" + obj
+ try:
+ self.spawn([self.cc] + compile_opts + pp_opts +
+ [input_opt, output_opt] +
+ extra_postargs)
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise CompileError(msg)
+
+ return objects
+
+
+ def create_static_lib(self,
+ objects,
+ output_libname,
+ output_dir=None,
+ debug=0,
+ target_lang=None):
+
+ if not self.initialized:
+ self.initialize()
+ (objects, output_dir) = self._fix_object_args(objects, output_dir)
+ output_filename = self.library_filename(output_libname,
+ output_dir=output_dir)
+
+ if self._need_link(objects, output_filename):
+ lib_args = objects + ['/OUT:' + output_filename]
+ if debug:
+ pass # XXX what goes here?
+ try:
+ self.spawn([self.lib] + lib_args)
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise LibError(msg)
+ else:
+ log.debug("skipping %s (up-to-date)", output_filename)
+
+
+ def link(self,
+ target_desc,
+ objects,
+ output_filename,
+ output_dir=None,
+ libraries=None,
+ library_dirs=None,
+ runtime_library_dirs=None,
+ export_symbols=None,
+ debug=0,
+ extra_preargs=None,
+ extra_postargs=None,
+ build_temp=None,
+ target_lang=None):
+
+ if not self.initialized:
+ self.initialize()
+ (objects, output_dir) = self._fix_object_args(objects, output_dir)
+ fixed_args = self._fix_lib_args(libraries, library_dirs,
+ runtime_library_dirs)
+ (libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs) = fixed_args
+
+ if runtime_library_dirs:
+ self.warn ("I don't know what to do with 'runtime_library_dirs': "
+ + str (runtime_library_dirs))
+
+ lib_opts = gen_lib_options(self,
+ library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs,
+ libraries)
+ if output_dir is not None:
+ output_filename = os.path.join(output_dir, output_filename)
+
+ if self._need_link(objects, output_filename):
+ if target_desc == CCompiler.EXECUTABLE:
+ if debug:
+ ldflags = self.ldflags_shared_debug[1:]
+ else:
+ ldflags = self.ldflags_shared[1:]
+ else:
+ if debug:
+ ldflags = self.ldflags_shared_debug
+ else:
+ ldflags = self.ldflags_shared
+
+ export_opts = []
+ for sym in (export_symbols or []):
+ export_opts.append("/EXPORT:" + sym)
+
+ ld_args = (ldflags + lib_opts + export_opts +
+ objects + ['/OUT:' + output_filename])
+
+ # The MSVC linker generates .lib and .exp files, which cannot be
+ # suppressed by any linker switches. The .lib files may even be
+ # needed! Make sure they are generated in the temporary build
+ # directory. Since they have different names for debug and release
+ # builds, they can go into the same directory.
+ if export_symbols is not None:
+ (dll_name, dll_ext) = os.path.splitext(
+ os.path.basename(output_filename))
+ implib_file = os.path.join(
+ os.path.dirname(objects[0]),
+ self.library_filename(dll_name))
+ ld_args.append ('/IMPLIB:' + implib_file)
+
+ if extra_preargs:
+ ld_args[:0] = extra_preargs
+ if extra_postargs:
+ ld_args.extend(extra_postargs)
+
+ self.mkpath(os.path.dirname(output_filename))
+ try:
+ self.spawn([self.linker] + ld_args)
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise LinkError(msg)
+
+ else:
+ log.debug("skipping %s (up-to-date)", output_filename)
+
+
+ # -- Miscellaneous methods -----------------------------------------
+ # These are all used by the 'gen_lib_options() function, in
+ # ccompiler.py.
+
+ def library_dir_option(self, dir):
+ return "/LIBPATH:" + dir
+
+ def runtime_library_dir_option(self, dir):
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError(
+ "don't know how to set runtime library search path for MSVC++")
+
+ def library_option(self, lib):
+ return self.library_filename(lib)
+
+
+ def find_library_file(self, dirs, lib, debug=0):
+ # Prefer a debugging library if found (and requested), but deal
+ # with it if we don't have one.
+ if debug:
+ try_names = [lib + "_d", lib]
+ else:
+ try_names = [lib]
+ for dir in dirs:
+ for name in try_names:
+ libfile = os.path.join(dir, self.library_filename (name))
+ if os.path.exists(libfile):
+ return libfile
+ else:
+ # Oops, didn't find it in *any* of 'dirs'
+ return None
+
+ # Helper methods for using the MSVC registry settings
+
+ def find_exe(self, exe):
+ """Return path to an MSVC executable program.
+
+ Tries to find the program in several places: first, one of the
+ MSVC program search paths from the registry; next, the directories
+ in the PATH environment variable. If any of those work, return an
+ absolute path that is known to exist. If none of them work, just
+ return the original program name, 'exe'.
+ """
+ for p in self.__paths:
+ fn = os.path.join(os.path.abspath(p), exe)
+ if os.path.isfile(fn):
+ return fn
+
+ # didn't find it; try existing path
+ for p in os.environ['Path'].split(';'):
+ fn = os.path.join(os.path.abspath(p),exe)
+ if os.path.isfile(fn):
+ return fn
+
+ return exe
+
+ def get_msvc_paths(self, path, platform='x86'):
+ """Get a list of devstudio directories (include, lib or path).
+
+ Return a list of strings. The list will be empty if unable to
+ access the registry or appropriate registry keys not found.
+ """
+ if not _can_read_reg:
+ return []
+
+ path = path + " dirs"
+ if self.__version >= 7:
+ key = (r"%s\%0.1f\VC\VC_OBJECTS_PLATFORM_INFO\Win32\Directories"
+ % (self.__root, self.__version))
+ else:
+ key = (r"%s\6.0\Build System\Components\Platforms"
+ r"\Win32 (%s)\Directories" % (self.__root, platform))
+
+ for base in HKEYS:
+ d = read_values(base, key)
+ if d:
+ if self.__version >= 7:
+ return self.__macros.sub(d[path]).split(";")
+ else:
+ return d[path].split(";")
+ # MSVC 6 seems to create the registry entries we need only when
+ # the GUI is run.
+ if self.__version == 6:
+ for base in HKEYS:
+ if read_values(base, r"%s\6.0" % self.__root) is not None:
+ self.warn("It seems you have Visual Studio 6 installed, "
+ "but the expected registry settings are not present.\n"
+ "You must at least run the Visual Studio GUI once "
+ "so that these entries are created.")
+ break
+ return []
+
+ def set_path_env_var(self, name):
+ """Set environment variable 'name' to an MSVC path type value.
+
+ This is equivalent to a SET command prior to execution of spawned
+ commands.
+ """
+
+ if name == "lib":
+ p = self.get_msvc_paths("library")
+ else:
+ p = self.get_msvc_paths(name)
+ if p:
+ os.environ[name] = ';'.join(p)
+
+
+if get_build_version() >= 8.0:
+ log.debug("Importing new compiler from distutils.msvc9compiler")
+ OldMSVCCompiler = MSVCCompiler
+ from distutils.msvc9compiler import MSVCCompiler
+ # get_build_architecture not really relevant now we support cross-compile
+ from distutils.msvc9compiler import MacroExpander
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/py35compat.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/py35compat.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..79b2e7f38c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/py35compat.py
@@ -0,0 +1,19 @@
+import sys
+import subprocess
+
+
+def __optim_args_from_interpreter_flags():
+ """Return a list of command-line arguments reproducing the current
+ optimization settings in sys.flags."""
+ args = []
+ value = sys.flags.optimize
+ if value > 0:
+ args.append("-" + "O" * value)
+ return args
+
+
+_optim_args_from_interpreter_flags = getattr(
+ subprocess,
+ "_optim_args_from_interpreter_flags",
+ __optim_args_from_interpreter_flags,
+)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/py38compat.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/py38compat.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..7dbe8cef54
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/py38compat.py
@@ -0,0 +1,7 @@
+def aix_platform(osname, version, release):
+ try:
+ import _aix_support
+ return _aix_support.aix_platform()
+ except ImportError:
+ pass
+ return "%s-%s.%s" % (osname, version, release)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/spawn.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/spawn.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..fc592d4a91
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/spawn.py
@@ -0,0 +1,125 @@
+"""distutils.spawn
+
+Provides the 'spawn()' function, a front-end to various platform-
+specific functions for launching another program in a sub-process.
+Also provides the 'find_executable()' to search the path for a given
+executable name.
+"""
+
+import sys
+import os
+import subprocess
+
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsPlatformError, DistutilsExecError
+from distutils.debug import DEBUG
+from distutils import log
+
+
+if sys.platform == 'darwin':
+ _cfg_target = None
+ _cfg_target_split = None
+
+
+def spawn(cmd, search_path=1, verbose=0, dry_run=0, env=None):
+ """Run another program, specified as a command list 'cmd', in a new process.
+
+ 'cmd' is just the argument list for the new process, ie.
+ cmd[0] is the program to run and cmd[1:] are the rest of its arguments.
+ There is no way to run a program with a name different from that of its
+ executable.
+
+ If 'search_path' is true (the default), the system's executable
+ search path will be used to find the program; otherwise, cmd[0]
+ must be the exact path to the executable. If 'dry_run' is true,
+ the command will not actually be run.
+
+ Raise DistutilsExecError if running the program fails in any way; just
+ return on success.
+ """
+ # cmd is documented as a list, but just in case some code passes a tuple
+ # in, protect our %-formatting code against horrible death
+ cmd = list(cmd)
+
+ log.info(' '.join(cmd))
+ if dry_run:
+ return
+
+ if search_path:
+ executable = find_executable(cmd[0])
+ if executable is not None:
+ cmd[0] = executable
+
+ env = env if env is not None else dict(os.environ)
+
+ if sys.platform == 'darwin':
+ global _cfg_target, _cfg_target_split
+ if _cfg_target is None:
+ from distutils import sysconfig
+ _cfg_target = sysconfig.get_config_var(
+ 'MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET') or ''
+ if _cfg_target:
+ _cfg_target_split = [int(x) for x in _cfg_target.split('.')]
+ if _cfg_target:
+ # ensure that the deployment target of build process is not less
+ # than that used when the interpreter was built. This ensures
+ # extension modules are built with correct compatibility values
+ cur_target = os.environ.get('MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET', _cfg_target)
+ if _cfg_target_split > [int(x) for x in cur_target.split('.')]:
+ my_msg = ('$MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET mismatch: '
+ 'now "%s" but "%s" during configure'
+ % (cur_target, _cfg_target))
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError(my_msg)
+ env.update(MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET=cur_target)
+
+ try:
+ proc = subprocess.Popen(cmd, env=env)
+ proc.wait()
+ exitcode = proc.returncode
+ except OSError as exc:
+ if not DEBUG:
+ cmd = cmd[0]
+ raise DistutilsExecError(
+ "command %r failed: %s" % (cmd, exc.args[-1])) from exc
+
+ if exitcode:
+ if not DEBUG:
+ cmd = cmd[0]
+ raise DistutilsExecError(
+ "command %r failed with exit code %s" % (cmd, exitcode))
+
+
+def find_executable(executable, path=None):
+ """Tries to find 'executable' in the directories listed in 'path'.
+
+ A string listing directories separated by 'os.pathsep'; defaults to
+ os.environ['PATH']. Returns the complete filename or None if not found.
+ """
+ _, ext = os.path.splitext(executable)
+ if (sys.platform == 'win32') and (ext != '.exe'):
+ executable = executable + '.exe'
+
+ if os.path.isfile(executable):
+ return executable
+
+ if path is None:
+ path = os.environ.get('PATH', None)
+ if path is None:
+ try:
+ path = os.confstr("CS_PATH")
+ except (AttributeError, ValueError):
+ # os.confstr() or CS_PATH is not available
+ path = os.defpath
+ # bpo-35755: Don't use os.defpath if the PATH environment variable is
+ # set to an empty string
+
+ # PATH='' doesn't match, whereas PATH=':' looks in the current directory
+ if not path:
+ return None
+
+ paths = path.split(os.pathsep)
+ for p in paths:
+ f = os.path.join(p, executable)
+ if os.path.isfile(f):
+ # the file exists, we have a shot at spawn working
+ return f
+ return None
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/sysconfig.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/sysconfig.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..879b6981ed
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/sysconfig.py
@@ -0,0 +1,573 @@
+"""Provide access to Python's configuration information. The specific
+configuration variables available depend heavily on the platform and
+configuration. The values may be retrieved using
+get_config_var(name), and the list of variables is available via
+get_config_vars().keys(). Additional convenience functions are also
+available.
+
+Written by: Fred L. Drake, Jr.
+Email: <fdrake@acm.org>
+"""
+
+import _imp
+import os
+import re
+import sys
+
+from .errors import DistutilsPlatformError
+
+IS_PYPY = '__pypy__' in sys.builtin_module_names
+
+# These are needed in a couple of spots, so just compute them once.
+PREFIX = os.path.normpath(sys.prefix)
+EXEC_PREFIX = os.path.normpath(sys.exec_prefix)
+BASE_PREFIX = os.path.normpath(sys.base_prefix)
+BASE_EXEC_PREFIX = os.path.normpath(sys.base_exec_prefix)
+
+# Path to the base directory of the project. On Windows the binary may
+# live in project/PCbuild/win32 or project/PCbuild/amd64.
+# set for cross builds
+if "_PYTHON_PROJECT_BASE" in os.environ:
+ project_base = os.path.abspath(os.environ["_PYTHON_PROJECT_BASE"])
+else:
+ if sys.executable:
+ project_base = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(sys.executable))
+ else:
+ # sys.executable can be empty if argv[0] has been changed and Python is
+ # unable to retrieve the real program name
+ project_base = os.getcwd()
+
+
+# python_build: (Boolean) if true, we're either building Python or
+# building an extension with an un-installed Python, so we use
+# different (hard-wired) directories.
+def _is_python_source_dir(d):
+ for fn in ("Setup", "Setup.local"):
+ if os.path.isfile(os.path.join(d, "Modules", fn)):
+ return True
+ return False
+
+_sys_home = getattr(sys, '_home', None)
+
+if os.name == 'nt':
+ def _fix_pcbuild(d):
+ if d and os.path.normcase(d).startswith(
+ os.path.normcase(os.path.join(PREFIX, "PCbuild"))):
+ return PREFIX
+ return d
+ project_base = _fix_pcbuild(project_base)
+ _sys_home = _fix_pcbuild(_sys_home)
+
+def _python_build():
+ if _sys_home:
+ return _is_python_source_dir(_sys_home)
+ return _is_python_source_dir(project_base)
+
+python_build = _python_build()
+
+
+# Calculate the build qualifier flags if they are defined. Adding the flags
+# to the include and lib directories only makes sense for an installation, not
+# an in-source build.
+build_flags = ''
+try:
+ if not python_build:
+ build_flags = sys.abiflags
+except AttributeError:
+ # It's not a configure-based build, so the sys module doesn't have
+ # this attribute, which is fine.
+ pass
+
+def get_python_version():
+ """Return a string containing the major and minor Python version,
+ leaving off the patchlevel. Sample return values could be '1.5'
+ or '2.2'.
+ """
+ return '%d.%d' % sys.version_info[:2]
+
+
+def get_python_inc(plat_specific=0, prefix=None):
+ """Return the directory containing installed Python header files.
+
+ If 'plat_specific' is false (the default), this is the path to the
+ non-platform-specific header files, i.e. Python.h and so on;
+ otherwise, this is the path to platform-specific header files
+ (namely pyconfig.h).
+
+ If 'prefix' is supplied, use it instead of sys.base_prefix or
+ sys.base_exec_prefix -- i.e., ignore 'plat_specific'.
+ """
+ if prefix is None:
+ prefix = plat_specific and BASE_EXEC_PREFIX or BASE_PREFIX
+ if IS_PYPY:
+ return os.path.join(prefix, 'include')
+ elif os.name == "posix":
+ if python_build:
+ # Assume the executable is in the build directory. The
+ # pyconfig.h file should be in the same directory. Since
+ # the build directory may not be the source directory, we
+ # must use "srcdir" from the makefile to find the "Include"
+ # directory.
+ if plat_specific:
+ return _sys_home or project_base
+ else:
+ incdir = os.path.join(get_config_var('srcdir'), 'Include')
+ return os.path.normpath(incdir)
+ python_dir = 'python' + get_python_version() + build_flags
+ return os.path.join(prefix, "include", python_dir)
+ elif os.name == "nt":
+ if python_build:
+ # Include both the include and PC dir to ensure we can find
+ # pyconfig.h
+ return (os.path.join(prefix, "include") + os.path.pathsep +
+ os.path.join(prefix, "PC"))
+ return os.path.join(prefix, "include")
+ else:
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError(
+ "I don't know where Python installs its C header files "
+ "on platform '%s'" % os.name)
+
+
+def get_python_lib(plat_specific=0, standard_lib=0, prefix=None):
+ """Return the directory containing the Python library (standard or
+ site additions).
+
+ If 'plat_specific' is true, return the directory containing
+ platform-specific modules, i.e. any module from a non-pure-Python
+ module distribution; otherwise, return the platform-shared library
+ directory. If 'standard_lib' is true, return the directory
+ containing standard Python library modules; otherwise, return the
+ directory for site-specific modules.
+
+ If 'prefix' is supplied, use it instead of sys.base_prefix or
+ sys.base_exec_prefix -- i.e., ignore 'plat_specific'.
+ """
+ if IS_PYPY:
+ # PyPy-specific schema
+ if prefix is None:
+ prefix = PREFIX
+ if standard_lib:
+ return os.path.join(prefix, "lib-python", sys.version[0])
+ return os.path.join(prefix, 'site-packages')
+
+ if prefix is None:
+ if standard_lib:
+ prefix = plat_specific and BASE_EXEC_PREFIX or BASE_PREFIX
+ else:
+ prefix = plat_specific and EXEC_PREFIX or PREFIX
+
+ if os.name == "posix":
+ if plat_specific or standard_lib:
+ # Platform-specific modules (any module from a non-pure-Python
+ # module distribution) or standard Python library modules.
+ libdir = getattr(sys, "platlibdir", "lib")
+ else:
+ # Pure Python
+ libdir = "lib"
+ libpython = os.path.join(prefix, libdir,
+ "python" + get_python_version())
+ if standard_lib:
+ return libpython
+ else:
+ return os.path.join(libpython, "site-packages")
+ elif os.name == "nt":
+ if standard_lib:
+ return os.path.join(prefix, "Lib")
+ else:
+ return os.path.join(prefix, "Lib", "site-packages")
+ else:
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError(
+ "I don't know where Python installs its library "
+ "on platform '%s'" % os.name)
+
+
+
+def customize_compiler(compiler):
+ """Do any platform-specific customization of a CCompiler instance.
+
+ Mainly needed on Unix, so we can plug in the information that
+ varies across Unices and is stored in Python's Makefile.
+ """
+ if compiler.compiler_type == "unix":
+ if sys.platform == "darwin":
+ # Perform first-time customization of compiler-related
+ # config vars on OS X now that we know we need a compiler.
+ # This is primarily to support Pythons from binary
+ # installers. The kind and paths to build tools on
+ # the user system may vary significantly from the system
+ # that Python itself was built on. Also the user OS
+ # version and build tools may not support the same set
+ # of CPU architectures for universal builds.
+ global _config_vars
+ # Use get_config_var() to ensure _config_vars is initialized.
+ if not get_config_var('CUSTOMIZED_OSX_COMPILER'):
+ import _osx_support
+ _osx_support.customize_compiler(_config_vars)
+ _config_vars['CUSTOMIZED_OSX_COMPILER'] = 'True'
+
+ (cc, cxx, cflags, ccshared, ldshared, shlib_suffix, ar, ar_flags) = \
+ get_config_vars('CC', 'CXX', 'CFLAGS',
+ 'CCSHARED', 'LDSHARED', 'SHLIB_SUFFIX', 'AR', 'ARFLAGS')
+
+ if 'CC' in os.environ:
+ newcc = os.environ['CC']
+ if (sys.platform == 'darwin'
+ and 'LDSHARED' not in os.environ
+ and ldshared.startswith(cc)):
+ # On OS X, if CC is overridden, use that as the default
+ # command for LDSHARED as well
+ ldshared = newcc + ldshared[len(cc):]
+ cc = newcc
+ if 'CXX' in os.environ:
+ cxx = os.environ['CXX']
+ if 'LDSHARED' in os.environ:
+ ldshared = os.environ['LDSHARED']
+ if 'CPP' in os.environ:
+ cpp = os.environ['CPP']
+ else:
+ cpp = cc + " -E" # not always
+ if 'LDFLAGS' in os.environ:
+ ldshared = ldshared + ' ' + os.environ['LDFLAGS']
+ if 'CFLAGS' in os.environ:
+ cflags = cflags + ' ' + os.environ['CFLAGS']
+ ldshared = ldshared + ' ' + os.environ['CFLAGS']
+ if 'CPPFLAGS' in os.environ:
+ cpp = cpp + ' ' + os.environ['CPPFLAGS']
+ cflags = cflags + ' ' + os.environ['CPPFLAGS']
+ ldshared = ldshared + ' ' + os.environ['CPPFLAGS']
+ if 'AR' in os.environ:
+ ar = os.environ['AR']
+ if 'ARFLAGS' in os.environ:
+ archiver = ar + ' ' + os.environ['ARFLAGS']
+ else:
+ archiver = ar + ' ' + ar_flags
+
+ cc_cmd = cc + ' ' + cflags
+ compiler.set_executables(
+ preprocessor=cpp,
+ compiler=cc_cmd,
+ compiler_so=cc_cmd + ' ' + ccshared,
+ compiler_cxx=cxx,
+ linker_so=ldshared,
+ linker_exe=cc,
+ archiver=archiver)
+
+ compiler.shared_lib_extension = shlib_suffix
+
+
+def get_config_h_filename():
+ """Return full pathname of installed pyconfig.h file."""
+ if python_build:
+ if os.name == "nt":
+ inc_dir = os.path.join(_sys_home or project_base, "PC")
+ else:
+ inc_dir = _sys_home or project_base
+ else:
+ inc_dir = get_python_inc(plat_specific=1)
+
+ return os.path.join(inc_dir, 'pyconfig.h')
+
+
+def get_makefile_filename():
+ """Return full pathname of installed Makefile from the Python build."""
+ if python_build:
+ return os.path.join(_sys_home or project_base, "Makefile")
+ lib_dir = get_python_lib(plat_specific=0, standard_lib=1)
+ config_file = 'config-{}{}'.format(get_python_version(), build_flags)
+ if hasattr(sys.implementation, '_multiarch'):
+ config_file += '-%s' % sys.implementation._multiarch
+ return os.path.join(lib_dir, config_file, 'Makefile')
+
+
+def parse_config_h(fp, g=None):
+ """Parse a config.h-style file.
+
+ A dictionary containing name/value pairs is returned. If an
+ optional dictionary is passed in as the second argument, it is
+ used instead of a new dictionary.
+ """
+ if g is None:
+ g = {}
+ define_rx = re.compile("#define ([A-Z][A-Za-z0-9_]+) (.*)\n")
+ undef_rx = re.compile("/[*] #undef ([A-Z][A-Za-z0-9_]+) [*]/\n")
+ #
+ while True:
+ line = fp.readline()
+ if not line:
+ break
+ m = define_rx.match(line)
+ if m:
+ n, v = m.group(1, 2)
+ try: v = int(v)
+ except ValueError: pass
+ g[n] = v
+ else:
+ m = undef_rx.match(line)
+ if m:
+ g[m.group(1)] = 0
+ return g
+
+
+# Regexes needed for parsing Makefile (and similar syntaxes,
+# like old-style Setup files).
+_variable_rx = re.compile(r"([a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z0-9_]+)\s*=\s*(.*)")
+_findvar1_rx = re.compile(r"\$\(([A-Za-z][A-Za-z0-9_]*)\)")
+_findvar2_rx = re.compile(r"\${([A-Za-z][A-Za-z0-9_]*)}")
+
+def parse_makefile(fn, g=None):
+ """Parse a Makefile-style file.
+
+ A dictionary containing name/value pairs is returned. If an
+ optional dictionary is passed in as the second argument, it is
+ used instead of a new dictionary.
+ """
+ from distutils.text_file import TextFile
+ fp = TextFile(fn, strip_comments=1, skip_blanks=1, join_lines=1, errors="surrogateescape")
+
+ if g is None:
+ g = {}
+ done = {}
+ notdone = {}
+
+ while True:
+ line = fp.readline()
+ if line is None: # eof
+ break
+ m = _variable_rx.match(line)
+ if m:
+ n, v = m.group(1, 2)
+ v = v.strip()
+ # `$$' is a literal `$' in make
+ tmpv = v.replace('$$', '')
+
+ if "$" in tmpv:
+ notdone[n] = v
+ else:
+ try:
+ v = int(v)
+ except ValueError:
+ # insert literal `$'
+ done[n] = v.replace('$$', '$')
+ else:
+ done[n] = v
+
+ # Variables with a 'PY_' prefix in the makefile. These need to
+ # be made available without that prefix through sysconfig.
+ # Special care is needed to ensure that variable expansion works, even
+ # if the expansion uses the name without a prefix.
+ renamed_variables = ('CFLAGS', 'LDFLAGS', 'CPPFLAGS')
+
+ # do variable interpolation here
+ while notdone:
+ for name in list(notdone):
+ value = notdone[name]
+ m = _findvar1_rx.search(value) or _findvar2_rx.search(value)
+ if m:
+ n = m.group(1)
+ found = True
+ if n in done:
+ item = str(done[n])
+ elif n in notdone:
+ # get it on a subsequent round
+ found = False
+ elif n in os.environ:
+ # do it like make: fall back to environment
+ item = os.environ[n]
+
+ elif n in renamed_variables:
+ if name.startswith('PY_') and name[3:] in renamed_variables:
+ item = ""
+
+ elif 'PY_' + n in notdone:
+ found = False
+
+ else:
+ item = str(done['PY_' + n])
+ else:
+ done[n] = item = ""
+ if found:
+ after = value[m.end():]
+ value = value[:m.start()] + item + after
+ if "$" in after:
+ notdone[name] = value
+ else:
+ try: value = int(value)
+ except ValueError:
+ done[name] = value.strip()
+ else:
+ done[name] = value
+ del notdone[name]
+
+ if name.startswith('PY_') \
+ and name[3:] in renamed_variables:
+
+ name = name[3:]
+ if name not in done:
+ done[name] = value
+ else:
+ # bogus variable reference; just drop it since we can't deal
+ del notdone[name]
+
+ fp.close()
+
+ # strip spurious spaces
+ for k, v in done.items():
+ if isinstance(v, str):
+ done[k] = v.strip()
+
+ # save the results in the global dictionary
+ g.update(done)
+ return g
+
+
+def expand_makefile_vars(s, vars):
+ """Expand Makefile-style variables -- "${foo}" or "$(foo)" -- in
+ 'string' according to 'vars' (a dictionary mapping variable names to
+ values). Variables not present in 'vars' are silently expanded to the
+ empty string. The variable values in 'vars' should not contain further
+ variable expansions; if 'vars' is the output of 'parse_makefile()',
+ you're fine. Returns a variable-expanded version of 's'.
+ """
+
+ # This algorithm does multiple expansion, so if vars['foo'] contains
+ # "${bar}", it will expand ${foo} to ${bar}, and then expand
+ # ${bar}... and so forth. This is fine as long as 'vars' comes from
+ # 'parse_makefile()', which takes care of such expansions eagerly,
+ # according to make's variable expansion semantics.
+
+ while True:
+ m = _findvar1_rx.search(s) or _findvar2_rx.search(s)
+ if m:
+ (beg, end) = m.span()
+ s = s[0:beg] + vars.get(m.group(1)) + s[end:]
+ else:
+ break
+ return s
+
+
+_config_vars = None
+
+def _init_posix():
+ """Initialize the module as appropriate for POSIX systems."""
+ # _sysconfigdata is generated at build time, see the sysconfig module
+ name = os.environ.get('_PYTHON_SYSCONFIGDATA_NAME',
+ '_sysconfigdata_{abi}_{platform}_{multiarch}'.format(
+ abi=sys.abiflags,
+ platform=sys.platform,
+ multiarch=getattr(sys.implementation, '_multiarch', ''),
+ ))
+ try:
+ _temp = __import__(name, globals(), locals(), ['build_time_vars'], 0)
+ except ImportError:
+ # Python 3.5 and pypy 7.3.1
+ _temp = __import__(
+ '_sysconfigdata', globals(), locals(), ['build_time_vars'], 0)
+ build_time_vars = _temp.build_time_vars
+ global _config_vars
+ _config_vars = {}
+ _config_vars.update(build_time_vars)
+
+
+def _init_nt():
+ """Initialize the module as appropriate for NT"""
+ g = {}
+ # set basic install directories
+ g['LIBDEST'] = get_python_lib(plat_specific=0, standard_lib=1)
+ g['BINLIBDEST'] = get_python_lib(plat_specific=1, standard_lib=1)
+
+ # XXX hmmm.. a normal install puts include files here
+ g['INCLUDEPY'] = get_python_inc(plat_specific=0)
+
+ g['EXT_SUFFIX'] = _imp.extension_suffixes()[0]
+ g['EXE'] = ".exe"
+ g['VERSION'] = get_python_version().replace(".", "")
+ g['BINDIR'] = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(sys.executable))
+
+ global _config_vars
+ _config_vars = g
+
+
+def get_config_vars(*args):
+ """With no arguments, return a dictionary of all configuration
+ variables relevant for the current platform. Generally this includes
+ everything needed to build extensions and install both pure modules and
+ extensions. On Unix, this means every variable defined in Python's
+ installed Makefile; on Windows it's a much smaller set.
+
+ With arguments, return a list of values that result from looking up
+ each argument in the configuration variable dictionary.
+ """
+ global _config_vars
+ if _config_vars is None:
+ func = globals().get("_init_" + os.name)
+ if func:
+ func()
+ else:
+ _config_vars = {}
+
+ # Normalized versions of prefix and exec_prefix are handy to have;
+ # in fact, these are the standard versions used most places in the
+ # Distutils.
+ _config_vars['prefix'] = PREFIX
+ _config_vars['exec_prefix'] = EXEC_PREFIX
+
+ if not IS_PYPY:
+ # For backward compatibility, see issue19555
+ SO = _config_vars.get('EXT_SUFFIX')
+ if SO is not None:
+ _config_vars['SO'] = SO
+
+ # Always convert srcdir to an absolute path
+ srcdir = _config_vars.get('srcdir', project_base)
+ if os.name == 'posix':
+ if python_build:
+ # If srcdir is a relative path (typically '.' or '..')
+ # then it should be interpreted relative to the directory
+ # containing Makefile.
+ base = os.path.dirname(get_makefile_filename())
+ srcdir = os.path.join(base, srcdir)
+ else:
+ # srcdir is not meaningful since the installation is
+ # spread about the filesystem. We choose the
+ # directory containing the Makefile since we know it
+ # exists.
+ srcdir = os.path.dirname(get_makefile_filename())
+ _config_vars['srcdir'] = os.path.abspath(os.path.normpath(srcdir))
+
+ # Convert srcdir into an absolute path if it appears necessary.
+ # Normally it is relative to the build directory. However, during
+ # testing, for example, we might be running a non-installed python
+ # from a different directory.
+ if python_build and os.name == "posix":
+ base = project_base
+ if (not os.path.isabs(_config_vars['srcdir']) and
+ base != os.getcwd()):
+ # srcdir is relative and we are not in the same directory
+ # as the executable. Assume executable is in the build
+ # directory and make srcdir absolute.
+ srcdir = os.path.join(base, _config_vars['srcdir'])
+ _config_vars['srcdir'] = os.path.normpath(srcdir)
+
+ # OS X platforms require special customization to handle
+ # multi-architecture, multi-os-version installers
+ if sys.platform == 'darwin':
+ import _osx_support
+ _osx_support.customize_config_vars(_config_vars)
+
+ if args:
+ vals = []
+ for name in args:
+ vals.append(_config_vars.get(name))
+ return vals
+ else:
+ return _config_vars
+
+def get_config_var(name):
+ """Return the value of a single variable using the dictionary
+ returned by 'get_config_vars()'. Equivalent to
+ get_config_vars().get(name)
+ """
+ if name == 'SO':
+ import warnings
+ warnings.warn('SO is deprecated, use EXT_SUFFIX', DeprecationWarning, 2)
+ return get_config_vars().get(name)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/text_file.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/text_file.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..93abad38f4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/text_file.py
@@ -0,0 +1,286 @@
+"""text_file
+
+provides the TextFile class, which gives an interface to text files
+that (optionally) takes care of stripping comments, ignoring blank
+lines, and joining lines with backslashes."""
+
+import sys, io
+
+
+class TextFile:
+ """Provides a file-like object that takes care of all the things you
+ commonly want to do when processing a text file that has some
+ line-by-line syntax: strip comments (as long as "#" is your
+ comment character), skip blank lines, join adjacent lines by
+ escaping the newline (ie. backslash at end of line), strip
+ leading and/or trailing whitespace. All of these are optional
+ and independently controllable.
+
+ Provides a 'warn()' method so you can generate warning messages that
+ report physical line number, even if the logical line in question
+ spans multiple physical lines. Also provides 'unreadline()' for
+ implementing line-at-a-time lookahead.
+
+ Constructor is called as:
+
+ TextFile (filename=None, file=None, **options)
+
+ It bombs (RuntimeError) if both 'filename' and 'file' are None;
+ 'filename' should be a string, and 'file' a file object (or
+ something that provides 'readline()' and 'close()' methods). It is
+ recommended that you supply at least 'filename', so that TextFile
+ can include it in warning messages. If 'file' is not supplied,
+ TextFile creates its own using 'io.open()'.
+
+ The options are all boolean, and affect the value returned by
+ 'readline()':
+ strip_comments [default: true]
+ strip from "#" to end-of-line, as well as any whitespace
+ leading up to the "#" -- unless it is escaped by a backslash
+ lstrip_ws [default: false]
+ strip leading whitespace from each line before returning it
+ rstrip_ws [default: true]
+ strip trailing whitespace (including line terminator!) from
+ each line before returning it
+ skip_blanks [default: true}
+ skip lines that are empty *after* stripping comments and
+ whitespace. (If both lstrip_ws and rstrip_ws are false,
+ then some lines may consist of solely whitespace: these will
+ *not* be skipped, even if 'skip_blanks' is true.)
+ join_lines [default: false]
+ if a backslash is the last non-newline character on a line
+ after stripping comments and whitespace, join the following line
+ to it to form one "logical line"; if N consecutive lines end
+ with a backslash, then N+1 physical lines will be joined to
+ form one logical line.
+ collapse_join [default: false]
+ strip leading whitespace from lines that are joined to their
+ predecessor; only matters if (join_lines and not lstrip_ws)
+ errors [default: 'strict']
+ error handler used to decode the file content
+
+ Note that since 'rstrip_ws' can strip the trailing newline, the
+ semantics of 'readline()' must differ from those of the builtin file
+ object's 'readline()' method! In particular, 'readline()' returns
+ None for end-of-file: an empty string might just be a blank line (or
+ an all-whitespace line), if 'rstrip_ws' is true but 'skip_blanks' is
+ not."""
+
+ default_options = { 'strip_comments': 1,
+ 'skip_blanks': 1,
+ 'lstrip_ws': 0,
+ 'rstrip_ws': 1,
+ 'join_lines': 0,
+ 'collapse_join': 0,
+ 'errors': 'strict',
+ }
+
+ def __init__(self, filename=None, file=None, **options):
+ """Construct a new TextFile object. At least one of 'filename'
+ (a string) and 'file' (a file-like object) must be supplied.
+ They keyword argument options are described above and affect
+ the values returned by 'readline()'."""
+ if filename is None and file is None:
+ raise RuntimeError("you must supply either or both of 'filename' and 'file'")
+
+ # set values for all options -- either from client option hash
+ # or fallback to default_options
+ for opt in self.default_options.keys():
+ if opt in options:
+ setattr(self, opt, options[opt])
+ else:
+ setattr(self, opt, self.default_options[opt])
+
+ # sanity check client option hash
+ for opt in options.keys():
+ if opt not in self.default_options:
+ raise KeyError("invalid TextFile option '%s'" % opt)
+
+ if file is None:
+ self.open(filename)
+ else:
+ self.filename = filename
+ self.file = file
+ self.current_line = 0 # assuming that file is at BOF!
+
+ # 'linebuf' is a stack of lines that will be emptied before we
+ # actually read from the file; it's only populated by an
+ # 'unreadline()' operation
+ self.linebuf = []
+
+ def open(self, filename):
+ """Open a new file named 'filename'. This overrides both the
+ 'filename' and 'file' arguments to the constructor."""
+ self.filename = filename
+ self.file = io.open(self.filename, 'r', errors=self.errors)
+ self.current_line = 0
+
+ def close(self):
+ """Close the current file and forget everything we know about it
+ (filename, current line number)."""
+ file = self.file
+ self.file = None
+ self.filename = None
+ self.current_line = None
+ file.close()
+
+ def gen_error(self, msg, line=None):
+ outmsg = []
+ if line is None:
+ line = self.current_line
+ outmsg.append(self.filename + ", ")
+ if isinstance(line, (list, tuple)):
+ outmsg.append("lines %d-%d: " % tuple(line))
+ else:
+ outmsg.append("line %d: " % line)
+ outmsg.append(str(msg))
+ return "".join(outmsg)
+
+ def error(self, msg, line=None):
+ raise ValueError("error: " + self.gen_error(msg, line))
+
+ def warn(self, msg, line=None):
+ """Print (to stderr) a warning message tied to the current logical
+ line in the current file. If the current logical line in the
+ file spans multiple physical lines, the warning refers to the
+ whole range, eg. "lines 3-5". If 'line' supplied, it overrides
+ the current line number; it may be a list or tuple to indicate a
+ range of physical lines, or an integer for a single physical
+ line."""
+ sys.stderr.write("warning: " + self.gen_error(msg, line) + "\n")
+
+ def readline(self):
+ """Read and return a single logical line from the current file (or
+ from an internal buffer if lines have previously been "unread"
+ with 'unreadline()'). If the 'join_lines' option is true, this
+ may involve reading multiple physical lines concatenated into a
+ single string. Updates the current line number, so calling
+ 'warn()' after 'readline()' emits a warning about the physical
+ line(s) just read. Returns None on end-of-file, since the empty
+ string can occur if 'rstrip_ws' is true but 'strip_blanks' is
+ not."""
+ # If any "unread" lines waiting in 'linebuf', return the top
+ # one. (We don't actually buffer read-ahead data -- lines only
+ # get put in 'linebuf' if the client explicitly does an
+ # 'unreadline()'.
+ if self.linebuf:
+ line = self.linebuf[-1]
+ del self.linebuf[-1]
+ return line
+
+ buildup_line = ''
+
+ while True:
+ # read the line, make it None if EOF
+ line = self.file.readline()
+ if line == '':
+ line = None
+
+ if self.strip_comments and line:
+
+ # Look for the first "#" in the line. If none, never
+ # mind. If we find one and it's the first character, or
+ # is not preceded by "\", then it starts a comment --
+ # strip the comment, strip whitespace before it, and
+ # carry on. Otherwise, it's just an escaped "#", so
+ # unescape it (and any other escaped "#"'s that might be
+ # lurking in there) and otherwise leave the line alone.
+
+ pos = line.find("#")
+ if pos == -1: # no "#" -- no comments
+ pass
+
+ # It's definitely a comment -- either "#" is the first
+ # character, or it's elsewhere and unescaped.
+ elif pos == 0 or line[pos-1] != "\\":
+ # Have to preserve the trailing newline, because it's
+ # the job of a later step (rstrip_ws) to remove it --
+ # and if rstrip_ws is false, we'd better preserve it!
+ # (NB. this means that if the final line is all comment
+ # and has no trailing newline, we will think that it's
+ # EOF; I think that's OK.)
+ eol = (line[-1] == '\n') and '\n' or ''
+ line = line[0:pos] + eol
+
+ # If all that's left is whitespace, then skip line
+ # *now*, before we try to join it to 'buildup_line' --
+ # that way constructs like
+ # hello \\
+ # # comment that should be ignored
+ # there
+ # result in "hello there".
+ if line.strip() == "":
+ continue
+ else: # it's an escaped "#"
+ line = line.replace("\\#", "#")
+
+ # did previous line end with a backslash? then accumulate
+ if self.join_lines and buildup_line:
+ # oops: end of file
+ if line is None:
+ self.warn("continuation line immediately precedes "
+ "end-of-file")
+ return buildup_line
+
+ if self.collapse_join:
+ line = line.lstrip()
+ line = buildup_line + line
+
+ # careful: pay attention to line number when incrementing it
+ if isinstance(self.current_line, list):
+ self.current_line[1] = self.current_line[1] + 1
+ else:
+ self.current_line = [self.current_line,
+ self.current_line + 1]
+ # just an ordinary line, read it as usual
+ else:
+ if line is None: # eof
+ return None
+
+ # still have to be careful about incrementing the line number!
+ if isinstance(self.current_line, list):
+ self.current_line = self.current_line[1] + 1
+ else:
+ self.current_line = self.current_line + 1
+
+ # strip whitespace however the client wants (leading and
+ # trailing, or one or the other, or neither)
+ if self.lstrip_ws and self.rstrip_ws:
+ line = line.strip()
+ elif self.lstrip_ws:
+ line = line.lstrip()
+ elif self.rstrip_ws:
+ line = line.rstrip()
+
+ # blank line (whether we rstrip'ed or not)? skip to next line
+ # if appropriate
+ if (line == '' or line == '\n') and self.skip_blanks:
+ continue
+
+ if self.join_lines:
+ if line[-1] == '\\':
+ buildup_line = line[:-1]
+ continue
+
+ if line[-2:] == '\\\n':
+ buildup_line = line[0:-2] + '\n'
+ continue
+
+ # well, I guess there's some actual content there: return it
+ return line
+
+ def readlines(self):
+ """Read and return the list of all logical lines remaining in the
+ current file."""
+ lines = []
+ while True:
+ line = self.readline()
+ if line is None:
+ return lines
+ lines.append(line)
+
+ def unreadline(self, line):
+ """Push 'line' (a string) onto an internal buffer that will be
+ checked by future 'readline()' calls. Handy for implementing
+ a parser with line-at-a-time lookahead."""
+ self.linebuf.append(line)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/unixccompiler.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/unixccompiler.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..4d7a6de740
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/unixccompiler.py
@@ -0,0 +1,328 @@
+"""distutils.unixccompiler
+
+Contains the UnixCCompiler class, a subclass of CCompiler that handles
+the "typical" Unix-style command-line C compiler:
+ * macros defined with -Dname[=value]
+ * macros undefined with -Uname
+ * include search directories specified with -Idir
+ * libraries specified with -lllib
+ * library search directories specified with -Ldir
+ * compile handled by 'cc' (or similar) executable with -c option:
+ compiles .c to .o
+ * link static library handled by 'ar' command (possibly with 'ranlib')
+ * link shared library handled by 'cc -shared'
+"""
+
+import os, sys, re
+
+from distutils import sysconfig
+from distutils.dep_util import newer
+from distutils.ccompiler import \
+ CCompiler, gen_preprocess_options, gen_lib_options
+from distutils.errors import \
+ DistutilsExecError, CompileError, LibError, LinkError
+from distutils import log
+
+if sys.platform == 'darwin':
+ import _osx_support
+
+# XXX Things not currently handled:
+# * optimization/debug/warning flags; we just use whatever's in Python's
+# Makefile and live with it. Is this adequate? If not, we might
+# have to have a bunch of subclasses GNUCCompiler, SGICCompiler,
+# SunCCompiler, and I suspect down that road lies madness.
+# * even if we don't know a warning flag from an optimization flag,
+# we need some way for outsiders to feed preprocessor/compiler/linker
+# flags in to us -- eg. a sysadmin might want to mandate certain flags
+# via a site config file, or a user might want to set something for
+# compiling this module distribution only via the setup.py command
+# line, whatever. As long as these options come from something on the
+# current system, they can be as system-dependent as they like, and we
+# should just happily stuff them into the preprocessor/compiler/linker
+# options and carry on.
+
+
+class UnixCCompiler(CCompiler):
+
+ compiler_type = 'unix'
+
+ # These are used by CCompiler in two places: the constructor sets
+ # instance attributes 'preprocessor', 'compiler', etc. from them, and
+ # 'set_executable()' allows any of these to be set. The defaults here
+ # are pretty generic; they will probably have to be set by an outsider
+ # (eg. using information discovered by the sysconfig about building
+ # Python extensions).
+ executables = {'preprocessor' : None,
+ 'compiler' : ["cc"],
+ 'compiler_so' : ["cc"],
+ 'compiler_cxx' : ["cc"],
+ 'linker_so' : ["cc", "-shared"],
+ 'linker_exe' : ["cc"],
+ 'archiver' : ["ar", "-cr"],
+ 'ranlib' : None,
+ }
+
+ if sys.platform[:6] == "darwin":
+ executables['ranlib'] = ["ranlib"]
+
+ # Needed for the filename generation methods provided by the base
+ # class, CCompiler. NB. whoever instantiates/uses a particular
+ # UnixCCompiler instance should set 'shared_lib_ext' -- we set a
+ # reasonable common default here, but it's not necessarily used on all
+ # Unices!
+
+ src_extensions = [".c",".C",".cc",".cxx",".cpp",".m"]
+ obj_extension = ".o"
+ static_lib_extension = ".a"
+ shared_lib_extension = ".so"
+ dylib_lib_extension = ".dylib"
+ xcode_stub_lib_extension = ".tbd"
+ static_lib_format = shared_lib_format = dylib_lib_format = "lib%s%s"
+ xcode_stub_lib_format = dylib_lib_format
+ if sys.platform == "cygwin":
+ exe_extension = ".exe"
+
+ def preprocess(self, source, output_file=None, macros=None,
+ include_dirs=None, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None):
+ fixed_args = self._fix_compile_args(None, macros, include_dirs)
+ ignore, macros, include_dirs = fixed_args
+ pp_opts = gen_preprocess_options(macros, include_dirs)
+ pp_args = self.preprocessor + pp_opts
+ if output_file:
+ pp_args.extend(['-o', output_file])
+ if extra_preargs:
+ pp_args[:0] = extra_preargs
+ if extra_postargs:
+ pp_args.extend(extra_postargs)
+ pp_args.append(source)
+
+ # We need to preprocess: either we're being forced to, or we're
+ # generating output to stdout, or there's a target output file and
+ # the source file is newer than the target (or the target doesn't
+ # exist).
+ if self.force or output_file is None or newer(source, output_file):
+ if output_file:
+ self.mkpath(os.path.dirname(output_file))
+ try:
+ self.spawn(pp_args)
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise CompileError(msg)
+
+ def _compile(self, obj, src, ext, cc_args, extra_postargs, pp_opts):
+ compiler_so = self.compiler_so
+ if sys.platform == 'darwin':
+ compiler_so = _osx_support.compiler_fixup(compiler_so,
+ cc_args + extra_postargs)
+ try:
+ self.spawn(compiler_so + cc_args + [src, '-o', obj] +
+ extra_postargs)
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise CompileError(msg)
+
+ def create_static_lib(self, objects, output_libname,
+ output_dir=None, debug=0, target_lang=None):
+ objects, output_dir = self._fix_object_args(objects, output_dir)
+
+ output_filename = \
+ self.library_filename(output_libname, output_dir=output_dir)
+
+ if self._need_link(objects, output_filename):
+ self.mkpath(os.path.dirname(output_filename))
+ self.spawn(self.archiver +
+ [output_filename] +
+ objects + self.objects)
+
+ # Not many Unices required ranlib anymore -- SunOS 4.x is, I
+ # think the only major Unix that does. Maybe we need some
+ # platform intelligence here to skip ranlib if it's not
+ # needed -- or maybe Python's configure script took care of
+ # it for us, hence the check for leading colon.
+ if self.ranlib:
+ try:
+ self.spawn(self.ranlib + [output_filename])
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise LibError(msg)
+ else:
+ log.debug("skipping %s (up-to-date)", output_filename)
+
+ def link(self, target_desc, objects,
+ output_filename, output_dir=None, libraries=None,
+ library_dirs=None, runtime_library_dirs=None,
+ export_symbols=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None,
+ extra_postargs=None, build_temp=None, target_lang=None):
+ objects, output_dir = self._fix_object_args(objects, output_dir)
+ fixed_args = self._fix_lib_args(libraries, library_dirs,
+ runtime_library_dirs)
+ libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs = fixed_args
+
+ lib_opts = gen_lib_options(self, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs,
+ libraries)
+ if not isinstance(output_dir, (str, type(None))):
+ raise TypeError("'output_dir' must be a string or None")
+ if output_dir is not None:
+ output_filename = os.path.join(output_dir, output_filename)
+
+ if self._need_link(objects, output_filename):
+ ld_args = (objects + self.objects +
+ lib_opts + ['-o', output_filename])
+ if debug:
+ ld_args[:0] = ['-g']
+ if extra_preargs:
+ ld_args[:0] = extra_preargs
+ if extra_postargs:
+ ld_args.extend(extra_postargs)
+ self.mkpath(os.path.dirname(output_filename))
+ try:
+ if target_desc == CCompiler.EXECUTABLE:
+ linker = self.linker_exe[:]
+ else:
+ linker = self.linker_so[:]
+ if target_lang == "c++" and self.compiler_cxx:
+ # skip over environment variable settings if /usr/bin/env
+ # is used to set up the linker's environment.
+ # This is needed on OSX. Note: this assumes that the
+ # normal and C++ compiler have the same environment
+ # settings.
+ i = 0
+ if os.path.basename(linker[0]) == "env":
+ i = 1
+ while '=' in linker[i]:
+ i += 1
+
+ if os.path.basename(linker[i]) == 'ld_so_aix':
+ # AIX platforms prefix the compiler with the ld_so_aix
+ # script, so we need to adjust our linker index
+ offset = 1
+ else:
+ offset = 0
+
+ linker[i+offset] = self.compiler_cxx[i]
+
+ if sys.platform == 'darwin':
+ linker = _osx_support.compiler_fixup(linker, ld_args)
+
+ self.spawn(linker + ld_args)
+ except DistutilsExecError as msg:
+ raise LinkError(msg)
+ else:
+ log.debug("skipping %s (up-to-date)", output_filename)
+
+ # -- Miscellaneous methods -----------------------------------------
+ # These are all used by the 'gen_lib_options() function, in
+ # ccompiler.py.
+
+ def library_dir_option(self, dir):
+ return "-L" + dir
+
+ def _is_gcc(self, compiler_name):
+ return "gcc" in compiler_name or "g++" in compiler_name
+
+ def runtime_library_dir_option(self, dir):
+ # XXX Hackish, at the very least. See Python bug #445902:
+ # http://sourceforge.net/tracker/index.php
+ # ?func=detail&aid=445902&group_id=5470&atid=105470
+ # Linkers on different platforms need different options to
+ # specify that directories need to be added to the list of
+ # directories searched for dependencies when a dynamic library
+ # is sought. GCC on GNU systems (Linux, FreeBSD, ...) has to
+ # be told to pass the -R option through to the linker, whereas
+ # other compilers and gcc on other systems just know this.
+ # Other compilers may need something slightly different. At
+ # this time, there's no way to determine this information from
+ # the configuration data stored in the Python installation, so
+ # we use this hack.
+ compiler = os.path.basename(sysconfig.get_config_var("CC"))
+ if sys.platform[:6] == "darwin":
+ # MacOSX's linker doesn't understand the -R flag at all
+ return "-L" + dir
+ elif sys.platform[:7] == "freebsd":
+ return "-Wl,-rpath=" + dir
+ elif sys.platform[:5] == "hp-ux":
+ if self._is_gcc(compiler):
+ return ["-Wl,+s", "-L" + dir]
+ return ["+s", "-L" + dir]
+ else:
+ if self._is_gcc(compiler):
+ # gcc on non-GNU systems does not need -Wl, but can
+ # use it anyway. Since distutils has always passed in
+ # -Wl whenever gcc was used in the past it is probably
+ # safest to keep doing so.
+ if sysconfig.get_config_var("GNULD") == "yes":
+ # GNU ld needs an extra option to get a RUNPATH
+ # instead of just an RPATH.
+ return "-Wl,--enable-new-dtags,-R" + dir
+ else:
+ return "-Wl,-R" + dir
+ else:
+ # No idea how --enable-new-dtags would be passed on to
+ # ld if this system was using GNU ld. Don't know if a
+ # system like this even exists.
+ return "-R" + dir
+
+ def library_option(self, lib):
+ return "-l" + lib
+
+ def find_library_file(self, dirs, lib, debug=0):
+ shared_f = self.library_filename(lib, lib_type='shared')
+ dylib_f = self.library_filename(lib, lib_type='dylib')
+ xcode_stub_f = self.library_filename(lib, lib_type='xcode_stub')
+ static_f = self.library_filename(lib, lib_type='static')
+
+ if sys.platform == 'darwin':
+ # On OSX users can specify an alternate SDK using
+ # '-isysroot', calculate the SDK root if it is specified
+ # (and use it further on)
+ #
+ # Note that, as of Xcode 7, Apple SDKs may contain textual stub
+ # libraries with .tbd extensions rather than the normal .dylib
+ # shared libraries installed in /. The Apple compiler tool
+ # chain handles this transparently but it can cause problems
+ # for programs that are being built with an SDK and searching
+ # for specific libraries. Callers of find_library_file need to
+ # keep in mind that the base filename of the returned SDK library
+ # file might have a different extension from that of the library
+ # file installed on the running system, for example:
+ # /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/
+ # MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.11.sdk/
+ # usr/lib/libedit.tbd
+ # vs
+ # /usr/lib/libedit.dylib
+ cflags = sysconfig.get_config_var('CFLAGS')
+ m = re.search(r'-isysroot\s*(\S+)', cflags)
+ if m is None:
+ sysroot = '/'
+ else:
+ sysroot = m.group(1)
+
+
+
+ for dir in dirs:
+ shared = os.path.join(dir, shared_f)
+ dylib = os.path.join(dir, dylib_f)
+ static = os.path.join(dir, static_f)
+ xcode_stub = os.path.join(dir, xcode_stub_f)
+
+ if sys.platform == 'darwin' and (
+ dir.startswith('/System/') or (
+ dir.startswith('/usr/') and not dir.startswith('/usr/local/'))):
+
+ shared = os.path.join(sysroot, dir[1:], shared_f)
+ dylib = os.path.join(sysroot, dir[1:], dylib_f)
+ static = os.path.join(sysroot, dir[1:], static_f)
+ xcode_stub = os.path.join(sysroot, dir[1:], xcode_stub_f)
+
+ # We're second-guessing the linker here, with not much hard
+ # data to go on: GCC seems to prefer the shared library, so I'm
+ # assuming that *all* Unix C compilers do. And of course I'm
+ # ignoring even GCC's "-static" option. So sue me.
+ if os.path.exists(dylib):
+ return dylib
+ elif os.path.exists(xcode_stub):
+ return xcode_stub
+ elif os.path.exists(shared):
+ return shared
+ elif os.path.exists(static):
+ return static
+
+ # Oops, didn't find it in *any* of 'dirs'
+ return None
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/util.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/util.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..f5aca79421
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/util.py
@@ -0,0 +1,561 @@
+"""distutils.util
+
+Miscellaneous utility functions -- anything that doesn't fit into
+one of the other *util.py modules.
+"""
+
+import os
+import re
+import importlib.util
+import string
+import sys
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsPlatformError
+from distutils.dep_util import newer
+from distutils.spawn import spawn
+from distutils import log
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsByteCompileError
+from .py35compat import _optim_args_from_interpreter_flags
+
+
+def get_host_platform():
+ """Return a string that identifies the current platform. This is used mainly to
+ distinguish platform-specific build directories and platform-specific built
+ distributions. Typically includes the OS name and version and the
+ architecture (as supplied by 'os.uname()'), although the exact information
+ included depends on the OS; eg. on Linux, the kernel version isn't
+ particularly important.
+
+ Examples of returned values:
+ linux-i586
+ linux-alpha (?)
+ solaris-2.6-sun4u
+
+ Windows will return one of:
+ win-amd64 (64bit Windows on AMD64 (aka x86_64, Intel64, EM64T, etc)
+ win32 (all others - specifically, sys.platform is returned)
+
+ For other non-POSIX platforms, currently just returns 'sys.platform'.
+
+ """
+ if os.name == 'nt':
+ if 'amd64' in sys.version.lower():
+ return 'win-amd64'
+ if '(arm)' in sys.version.lower():
+ return 'win-arm32'
+ if '(arm64)' in sys.version.lower():
+ return 'win-arm64'
+ return sys.platform
+
+ # Set for cross builds explicitly
+ if "_PYTHON_HOST_PLATFORM" in os.environ:
+ return os.environ["_PYTHON_HOST_PLATFORM"]
+
+ if os.name != "posix" or not hasattr(os, 'uname'):
+ # XXX what about the architecture? NT is Intel or Alpha,
+ # Mac OS is M68k or PPC, etc.
+ return sys.platform
+
+ # Try to distinguish various flavours of Unix
+
+ (osname, host, release, version, machine) = os.uname()
+
+ # Convert the OS name to lowercase, remove '/' characters, and translate
+ # spaces (for "Power Macintosh")
+ osname = osname.lower().replace('/', '')
+ machine = machine.replace(' ', '_')
+ machine = machine.replace('/', '-')
+
+ if osname[:5] == "linux":
+ # At least on Linux/Intel, 'machine' is the processor --
+ # i386, etc.
+ # XXX what about Alpha, SPARC, etc?
+ return "%s-%s" % (osname, machine)
+ elif osname[:5] == "sunos":
+ if release[0] >= "5": # SunOS 5 == Solaris 2
+ osname = "solaris"
+ release = "%d.%s" % (int(release[0]) - 3, release[2:])
+ # We can't use "platform.architecture()[0]" because a
+ # bootstrap problem. We use a dict to get an error
+ # if some suspicious happens.
+ bitness = {2147483647:"32bit", 9223372036854775807:"64bit"}
+ machine += ".%s" % bitness[sys.maxsize]
+ # fall through to standard osname-release-machine representation
+ elif osname[:3] == "aix":
+ from .py38compat import aix_platform
+ return aix_platform(osname, version, release)
+ elif osname[:6] == "cygwin":
+ osname = "cygwin"
+ rel_re = re.compile (r'[\d.]+', re.ASCII)
+ m = rel_re.match(release)
+ if m:
+ release = m.group()
+ elif osname[:6] == "darwin":
+ import _osx_support, distutils.sysconfig
+ osname, release, machine = _osx_support.get_platform_osx(
+ distutils.sysconfig.get_config_vars(),
+ osname, release, machine)
+
+ return "%s-%s-%s" % (osname, release, machine)
+
+def get_platform():
+ if os.name == 'nt':
+ TARGET_TO_PLAT = {
+ 'x86' : 'win32',
+ 'x64' : 'win-amd64',
+ 'arm' : 'win-arm32',
+ }
+ return TARGET_TO_PLAT.get(os.environ.get('VSCMD_ARG_TGT_ARCH')) or get_host_platform()
+ else:
+ return get_host_platform()
+
+def convert_path (pathname):
+ """Return 'pathname' as a name that will work on the native filesystem,
+ i.e. split it on '/' and put it back together again using the current
+ directory separator. Needed because filenames in the setup script are
+ always supplied in Unix style, and have to be converted to the local
+ convention before we can actually use them in the filesystem. Raises
+ ValueError on non-Unix-ish systems if 'pathname' either starts or
+ ends with a slash.
+ """
+ if os.sep == '/':
+ return pathname
+ if not pathname:
+ return pathname
+ if pathname[0] == '/':
+ raise ValueError("path '%s' cannot be absolute" % pathname)
+ if pathname[-1] == '/':
+ raise ValueError("path '%s' cannot end with '/'" % pathname)
+
+ paths = pathname.split('/')
+ while '.' in paths:
+ paths.remove('.')
+ if not paths:
+ return os.curdir
+ return os.path.join(*paths)
+
+# convert_path ()
+
+
+def change_root (new_root, pathname):
+ """Return 'pathname' with 'new_root' prepended. If 'pathname' is
+ relative, this is equivalent to "os.path.join(new_root,pathname)".
+ Otherwise, it requires making 'pathname' relative and then joining the
+ two, which is tricky on DOS/Windows and Mac OS.
+ """
+ if os.name == 'posix':
+ if not os.path.isabs(pathname):
+ return os.path.join(new_root, pathname)
+ else:
+ return os.path.join(new_root, pathname[1:])
+
+ elif os.name == 'nt':
+ (drive, path) = os.path.splitdrive(pathname)
+ if path[0] == '\\':
+ path = path[1:]
+ return os.path.join(new_root, path)
+
+ else:
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError("nothing known about platform '%s'" % os.name)
+
+
+_environ_checked = 0
+def check_environ ():
+ """Ensure that 'os.environ' has all the environment variables we
+ guarantee that users can use in config files, command-line options,
+ etc. Currently this includes:
+ HOME - user's home directory (Unix only)
+ PLAT - description of the current platform, including hardware
+ and OS (see 'get_platform()')
+ """
+ global _environ_checked
+ if _environ_checked:
+ return
+
+ if os.name == 'posix' and 'HOME' not in os.environ:
+ try:
+ import pwd
+ os.environ['HOME'] = pwd.getpwuid(os.getuid())[5]
+ except (ImportError, KeyError):
+ # bpo-10496: if the current user identifier doesn't exist in the
+ # password database, do nothing
+ pass
+
+ if 'PLAT' not in os.environ:
+ os.environ['PLAT'] = get_platform()
+
+ _environ_checked = 1
+
+
+def subst_vars (s, local_vars):
+ """Perform shell/Perl-style variable substitution on 'string'. Every
+ occurrence of '$' followed by a name is considered a variable, and
+ variable is substituted by the value found in the 'local_vars'
+ dictionary, or in 'os.environ' if it's not in 'local_vars'.
+ 'os.environ' is first checked/augmented to guarantee that it contains
+ certain values: see 'check_environ()'. Raise ValueError for any
+ variables not found in either 'local_vars' or 'os.environ'.
+ """
+ check_environ()
+ def _subst (match, local_vars=local_vars):
+ var_name = match.group(1)
+ if var_name in local_vars:
+ return str(local_vars[var_name])
+ else:
+ return os.environ[var_name]
+
+ try:
+ return re.sub(r'\$([a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z_0-9]*)', _subst, s)
+ except KeyError as var:
+ raise ValueError("invalid variable '$%s'" % var)
+
+# subst_vars ()
+
+
+def grok_environment_error (exc, prefix="error: "):
+ # Function kept for backward compatibility.
+ # Used to try clever things with EnvironmentErrors,
+ # but nowadays str(exception) produces good messages.
+ return prefix + str(exc)
+
+
+# Needed by 'split_quoted()'
+_wordchars_re = _squote_re = _dquote_re = None
+def _init_regex():
+ global _wordchars_re, _squote_re, _dquote_re
+ _wordchars_re = re.compile(r'[^\\\'\"%s ]*' % string.whitespace)
+ _squote_re = re.compile(r"'(?:[^'\\]|\\.)*'")
+ _dquote_re = re.compile(r'"(?:[^"\\]|\\.)*"')
+
+def split_quoted (s):
+ """Split a string up according to Unix shell-like rules for quotes and
+ backslashes. In short: words are delimited by spaces, as long as those
+ spaces are not escaped by a backslash, or inside a quoted string.
+ Single and double quotes are equivalent, and the quote characters can
+ be backslash-escaped. The backslash is stripped from any two-character
+ escape sequence, leaving only the escaped character. The quote
+ characters are stripped from any quoted string. Returns a list of
+ words.
+ """
+
+ # This is a nice algorithm for splitting up a single string, since it
+ # doesn't require character-by-character examination. It was a little
+ # bit of a brain-bender to get it working right, though...
+ if _wordchars_re is None: _init_regex()
+
+ s = s.strip()
+ words = []
+ pos = 0
+
+ while s:
+ m = _wordchars_re.match(s, pos)
+ end = m.end()
+ if end == len(s):
+ words.append(s[:end])
+ break
+
+ if s[end] in string.whitespace: # unescaped, unquoted whitespace: now
+ words.append(s[:end]) # we definitely have a word delimiter
+ s = s[end:].lstrip()
+ pos = 0
+
+ elif s[end] == '\\': # preserve whatever is being escaped;
+ # will become part of the current word
+ s = s[:end] + s[end+1:]
+ pos = end+1
+
+ else:
+ if s[end] == "'": # slurp singly-quoted string
+ m = _squote_re.match(s, end)
+ elif s[end] == '"': # slurp doubly-quoted string
+ m = _dquote_re.match(s, end)
+ else:
+ raise RuntimeError("this can't happen (bad char '%c')" % s[end])
+
+ if m is None:
+ raise ValueError("bad string (mismatched %s quotes?)" % s[end])
+
+ (beg, end) = m.span()
+ s = s[:beg] + s[beg+1:end-1] + s[end:]
+ pos = m.end() - 2
+
+ if pos >= len(s):
+ words.append(s)
+ break
+
+ return words
+
+# split_quoted ()
+
+
+def execute (func, args, msg=None, verbose=0, dry_run=0):
+ """Perform some action that affects the outside world (eg. by
+ writing to the filesystem). Such actions are special because they
+ are disabled by the 'dry_run' flag. This method takes care of all
+ that bureaucracy for you; all you have to do is supply the
+ function to call and an argument tuple for it (to embody the
+ "external action" being performed), and an optional message to
+ print.
+ """
+ if msg is None:
+ msg = "%s%r" % (func.__name__, args)
+ if msg[-2:] == ',)': # correct for singleton tuple
+ msg = msg[0:-2] + ')'
+
+ log.info(msg)
+ if not dry_run:
+ func(*args)
+
+
+def strtobool (val):
+ """Convert a string representation of truth to true (1) or false (0).
+
+ True values are 'y', 'yes', 't', 'true', 'on', and '1'; false values
+ are 'n', 'no', 'f', 'false', 'off', and '0'. Raises ValueError if
+ 'val' is anything else.
+ """
+ val = val.lower()
+ if val in ('y', 'yes', 't', 'true', 'on', '1'):
+ return 1
+ elif val in ('n', 'no', 'f', 'false', 'off', '0'):
+ return 0
+ else:
+ raise ValueError("invalid truth value %r" % (val,))
+
+
+def byte_compile (py_files,
+ optimize=0, force=0,
+ prefix=None, base_dir=None,
+ verbose=1, dry_run=0,
+ direct=None):
+ """Byte-compile a collection of Python source files to .pyc
+ files in a __pycache__ subdirectory. 'py_files' is a list
+ of files to compile; any files that don't end in ".py" are silently
+ skipped. 'optimize' must be one of the following:
+ 0 - don't optimize
+ 1 - normal optimization (like "python -O")
+ 2 - extra optimization (like "python -OO")
+ If 'force' is true, all files are recompiled regardless of
+ timestamps.
+
+ The source filename encoded in each bytecode file defaults to the
+ filenames listed in 'py_files'; you can modify these with 'prefix' and
+ 'basedir'. 'prefix' is a string that will be stripped off of each
+ source filename, and 'base_dir' is a directory name that will be
+ prepended (after 'prefix' is stripped). You can supply either or both
+ (or neither) of 'prefix' and 'base_dir', as you wish.
+
+ If 'dry_run' is true, doesn't actually do anything that would
+ affect the filesystem.
+
+ Byte-compilation is either done directly in this interpreter process
+ with the standard py_compile module, or indirectly by writing a
+ temporary script and executing it. Normally, you should let
+ 'byte_compile()' figure out to use direct compilation or not (see
+ the source for details). The 'direct' flag is used by the script
+ generated in indirect mode; unless you know what you're doing, leave
+ it set to None.
+ """
+
+ # Late import to fix a bootstrap issue: _posixsubprocess is built by
+ # setup.py, but setup.py uses distutils.
+ import subprocess
+
+ # nothing is done if sys.dont_write_bytecode is True
+ if sys.dont_write_bytecode:
+ raise DistutilsByteCompileError('byte-compiling is disabled.')
+
+ # First, if the caller didn't force us into direct or indirect mode,
+ # figure out which mode we should be in. We take a conservative
+ # approach: choose direct mode *only* if the current interpreter is
+ # in debug mode and optimize is 0. If we're not in debug mode (-O
+ # or -OO), we don't know which level of optimization this
+ # interpreter is running with, so we can't do direct
+ # byte-compilation and be certain that it's the right thing. Thus,
+ # always compile indirectly if the current interpreter is in either
+ # optimize mode, or if either optimization level was requested by
+ # the caller.
+ if direct is None:
+ direct = (__debug__ and optimize == 0)
+
+ # "Indirect" byte-compilation: write a temporary script and then
+ # run it with the appropriate flags.
+ if not direct:
+ try:
+ from tempfile import mkstemp
+ (script_fd, script_name) = mkstemp(".py")
+ except ImportError:
+ from tempfile import mktemp
+ (script_fd, script_name) = None, mktemp(".py")
+ log.info("writing byte-compilation script '%s'", script_name)
+ if not dry_run:
+ if script_fd is not None:
+ script = os.fdopen(script_fd, "w")
+ else:
+ script = open(script_name, "w")
+
+ with script:
+ script.write("""\
+from distutils.util import byte_compile
+files = [
+""")
+
+ # XXX would be nice to write absolute filenames, just for
+ # safety's sake (script should be more robust in the face of
+ # chdir'ing before running it). But this requires abspath'ing
+ # 'prefix' as well, and that breaks the hack in build_lib's
+ # 'byte_compile()' method that carefully tacks on a trailing
+ # slash (os.sep really) to make sure the prefix here is "just
+ # right". This whole prefix business is rather delicate -- the
+ # problem is that it's really a directory, but I'm treating it
+ # as a dumb string, so trailing slashes and so forth matter.
+
+ #py_files = map(os.path.abspath, py_files)
+ #if prefix:
+ # prefix = os.path.abspath(prefix)
+
+ script.write(",\n".join(map(repr, py_files)) + "]\n")
+ script.write("""
+byte_compile(files, optimize=%r, force=%r,
+ prefix=%r, base_dir=%r,
+ verbose=%r, dry_run=0,
+ direct=1)
+""" % (optimize, force, prefix, base_dir, verbose))
+
+ cmd = [sys.executable]
+ cmd.extend(_optim_args_from_interpreter_flags())
+ cmd.append(script_name)
+ spawn(cmd, dry_run=dry_run)
+ execute(os.remove, (script_name,), "removing %s" % script_name,
+ dry_run=dry_run)
+
+ # "Direct" byte-compilation: use the py_compile module to compile
+ # right here, right now. Note that the script generated in indirect
+ # mode simply calls 'byte_compile()' in direct mode, a weird sort of
+ # cross-process recursion. Hey, it works!
+ else:
+ from py_compile import compile
+
+ for file in py_files:
+ if file[-3:] != ".py":
+ # This lets us be lazy and not filter filenames in
+ # the "install_lib" command.
+ continue
+
+ # Terminology from the py_compile module:
+ # cfile - byte-compiled file
+ # dfile - purported source filename (same as 'file' by default)
+ if optimize >= 0:
+ opt = '' if optimize == 0 else optimize
+ cfile = importlib.util.cache_from_source(
+ file, optimization=opt)
+ else:
+ cfile = importlib.util.cache_from_source(file)
+ dfile = file
+ if prefix:
+ if file[:len(prefix)] != prefix:
+ raise ValueError("invalid prefix: filename %r doesn't start with %r"
+ % (file, prefix))
+ dfile = dfile[len(prefix):]
+ if base_dir:
+ dfile = os.path.join(base_dir, dfile)
+
+ cfile_base = os.path.basename(cfile)
+ if direct:
+ if force or newer(file, cfile):
+ log.info("byte-compiling %s to %s", file, cfile_base)
+ if not dry_run:
+ compile(file, cfile, dfile)
+ else:
+ log.debug("skipping byte-compilation of %s to %s",
+ file, cfile_base)
+
+# byte_compile ()
+
+def rfc822_escape (header):
+ """Return a version of the string escaped for inclusion in an
+ RFC-822 header, by ensuring there are 8 spaces space after each newline.
+ """
+ lines = header.split('\n')
+ sep = '\n' + 8 * ' '
+ return sep.join(lines)
+
+# 2to3 support
+
+def run_2to3(files, fixer_names=None, options=None, explicit=None):
+ """Invoke 2to3 on a list of Python files.
+ The files should all come from the build area, as the
+ modification is done in-place. To reduce the build time,
+ only files modified since the last invocation of this
+ function should be passed in the files argument."""
+
+ if not files:
+ return
+
+ # Make this class local, to delay import of 2to3
+ from lib2to3.refactor import RefactoringTool, get_fixers_from_package
+ class DistutilsRefactoringTool(RefactoringTool):
+ def log_error(self, msg, *args, **kw):
+ log.error(msg, *args)
+
+ def log_message(self, msg, *args):
+ log.info(msg, *args)
+
+ def log_debug(self, msg, *args):
+ log.debug(msg, *args)
+
+ if fixer_names is None:
+ fixer_names = get_fixers_from_package('lib2to3.fixes')
+ r = DistutilsRefactoringTool(fixer_names, options=options)
+ r.refactor(files, write=True)
+
+def copydir_run_2to3(src, dest, template=None, fixer_names=None,
+ options=None, explicit=None):
+ """Recursively copy a directory, only copying new and changed files,
+ running run_2to3 over all newly copied Python modules afterward.
+
+ If you give a template string, it's parsed like a MANIFEST.in.
+ """
+ from distutils.dir_util import mkpath
+ from distutils.file_util import copy_file
+ from distutils.filelist import FileList
+ filelist = FileList()
+ curdir = os.getcwd()
+ os.chdir(src)
+ try:
+ filelist.findall()
+ finally:
+ os.chdir(curdir)
+ filelist.files[:] = filelist.allfiles
+ if template:
+ for line in template.splitlines():
+ line = line.strip()
+ if not line: continue
+ filelist.process_template_line(line)
+ copied = []
+ for filename in filelist.files:
+ outname = os.path.join(dest, filename)
+ mkpath(os.path.dirname(outname))
+ res = copy_file(os.path.join(src, filename), outname, update=1)
+ if res[1]: copied.append(outname)
+ run_2to3([fn for fn in copied if fn.lower().endswith('.py')],
+ fixer_names=fixer_names, options=options, explicit=explicit)
+ return copied
+
+class Mixin2to3:
+ '''Mixin class for commands that run 2to3.
+ To configure 2to3, setup scripts may either change
+ the class variables, or inherit from individual commands
+ to override how 2to3 is invoked.'''
+
+ # provide list of fixers to run;
+ # defaults to all from lib2to3.fixers
+ fixer_names = None
+
+ # options dictionary
+ options = None
+
+ # list of fixers to invoke even though they are marked as explicit
+ explicit = None
+
+ def run_2to3(self, files):
+ return run_2to3(files, self.fixer_names, self.options, self.explicit)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/version.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/version.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..c33bebaed2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/version.py
@@ -0,0 +1,347 @@
+#
+# distutils/version.py
+#
+# Implements multiple version numbering conventions for the
+# Python Module Distribution Utilities.
+#
+# $Id$
+#
+
+"""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 re
+
+class Version:
+ """Abstract base class for version numbering classes. Just provides
+ constructor (__init__) and reproducer (__repr__), because those
+ seem to be the same for all version numbering classes; and route
+ rich comparisons to _cmp.
+ """
+
+ def __init__ (self, vstring=None):
+ if vstring:
+ self.parse(vstring)
+
+ def __repr__ (self):
+ return "%s ('%s')" % (self.__class__.__name__, str(self))
+
+ 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
+
+
+# Interface for version-number classes -- must be implemented
+# by the following classes (the concrete ones -- Version should
+# be treated as an abstract class).
+# __init__ (string) - create and take same action as 'parse'
+# (string parameter is optional)
+# parse (string) - convert a string representation to whatever
+# internal representation is appropriate for
+# this style of version numbering
+# __str__ (self) - convert back to a string; should be very similar
+# (if not identical to) the string supplied to parse
+# __repr__ (self) - generate Python code to recreate
+# the instance
+# _cmp (self, other) - compare two version numbers ('other' may
+# be an unparsed version string, or another
+# instance of your version class)
+
+
+class StrictVersion (Version):
+
+ """Version numbering for anal retentives and software idealists.
+ Implements the standard interface for version number classes as
+ described above. A version number consists of two or three
+ dot-separated numeric components, with an optional "pre-release" tag
+ on the end. The pre-release tag consists of the letter 'a' or 'b'
+ followed by a number. If the numeric components of two version
+ numbers are equal, then one with a pre-release tag will always
+ be deemed earlier (lesser) than one without.
+
+ The following are valid version numbers (shown in the order that
+ would be obtained by sorting according to the supplied cmp function):
+
+ 0.4 0.4.0 (these two are equivalent)
+ 0.4.1
+ 0.5a1
+ 0.5b3
+ 0.5
+ 0.9.6
+ 1.0
+ 1.0.4a3
+ 1.0.4b1
+ 1.0.4
+
+ The following are examples of invalid version numbers:
+
+ 1
+ 2.7.2.2
+ 1.3.a4
+ 1.3pl1
+ 1.3c4
+
+ The rationale for this version numbering system will be explained
+ in the distutils documentation.
+ """
+
+ version_re = re.compile(r'^(\d+) \. (\d+) (\. (\d+))? ([ab](\d+))?$',
+ re.VERBOSE | re.ASCII)
+
+
+ def parse (self, vstring):
+ match = self.version_re.match(vstring)
+ if not match:
+ raise ValueError("invalid version number '%s'" % vstring)
+
+ (major, minor, patch, prerelease, prerelease_num) = \
+ match.group(1, 2, 4, 5, 6)
+
+ if patch:
+ self.version = tuple(map(int, [major, minor, patch]))
+ else:
+ self.version = tuple(map(int, [major, minor])) + (0,)
+
+ if prerelease:
+ self.prerelease = (prerelease[0], int(prerelease_num))
+ else:
+ self.prerelease = None
+
+
+ def __str__ (self):
+
+ if self.version[2] == 0:
+ vstring = '.'.join(map(str, self.version[0:2]))
+ else:
+ vstring = '.'.join(map(str, self.version))
+
+ if self.prerelease:
+ vstring = vstring + self.prerelease[0] + str(self.prerelease[1])
+
+ return vstring
+
+
+ def _cmp (self, other):
+ if isinstance(other, str):
+ other = StrictVersion(other)
+ elif not isinstance(other, StrictVersion):
+ return NotImplemented
+
+ if self.version != other.version:
+ # numeric versions don't match
+ # prerelease stuff doesn't matter
+ if self.version < other.version:
+ return -1
+ else:
+ return 1
+
+ # have to compare prerelease
+ # case 1: neither has prerelease; they're equal
+ # case 2: self has prerelease, other doesn't; other is greater
+ # case 3: self doesn't have prerelease, other does: self is greater
+ # case 4: both have prerelease: must compare them!
+
+ if (not self.prerelease and not other.prerelease):
+ return 0
+ elif (self.prerelease and not other.prerelease):
+ return -1
+ elif (not self.prerelease and other.prerelease):
+ return 1
+ elif (self.prerelease and other.prerelease):
+ if self.prerelease == other.prerelease:
+ return 0
+ elif self.prerelease < other.prerelease:
+ return -1
+ else:
+ return 1
+ else:
+ assert False, "never get here"
+
+# end class StrictVersion
+
+
+# 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):
+
+ """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 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):
+ if isinstance(other, str):
+ other = LooseVersion(other)
+ elif not isinstance(other, LooseVersion):
+ return NotImplemented
+
+ if self.version == other.version:
+ return 0
+ if self.version < other.version:
+ return -1
+ if self.version > other.version:
+ return 1
+
+
+# end class LooseVersion
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/versionpredicate.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/versionpredicate.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..062c98f248
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_distutils/versionpredicate.py
@@ -0,0 +1,166 @@
+"""Module for parsing and testing package version predicate strings.
+"""
+import re
+import distutils.version
+import operator
+
+
+re_validPackage = re.compile(r"(?i)^\s*([a-z_]\w*(?:\.[a-z_]\w*)*)(.*)",
+ re.ASCII)
+# (package) (rest)
+
+re_paren = re.compile(r"^\s*\((.*)\)\s*$") # (list) inside of parentheses
+re_splitComparison = re.compile(r"^\s*(<=|>=|<|>|!=|==)\s*([^\s,]+)\s*$")
+# (comp) (version)
+
+
+def splitUp(pred):
+ """Parse a single version comparison.
+
+ Return (comparison string, StrictVersion)
+ """
+ res = re_splitComparison.match(pred)
+ if not res:
+ raise ValueError("bad package restriction syntax: %r" % pred)
+ comp, verStr = res.groups()
+ return (comp, distutils.version.StrictVersion(verStr))
+
+compmap = {"<": operator.lt, "<=": operator.le, "==": operator.eq,
+ ">": operator.gt, ">=": operator.ge, "!=": operator.ne}
+
+class VersionPredicate:
+ """Parse and test package version predicates.
+
+ >>> v = VersionPredicate('pyepat.abc (>1.0, <3333.3a1, !=1555.1b3)')
+
+ The `name` attribute provides the full dotted name that is given::
+
+ >>> v.name
+ 'pyepat.abc'
+
+ The str() of a `VersionPredicate` provides a normalized
+ human-readable version of the expression::
+
+ >>> print(v)
+ pyepat.abc (> 1.0, < 3333.3a1, != 1555.1b3)
+
+ The `satisfied_by()` method can be used to determine with a given
+ version number is included in the set described by the version
+ restrictions::
+
+ >>> v.satisfied_by('1.1')
+ True
+ >>> v.satisfied_by('1.4')
+ True
+ >>> v.satisfied_by('1.0')
+ False
+ >>> v.satisfied_by('4444.4')
+ False
+ >>> v.satisfied_by('1555.1b3')
+ False
+
+ `VersionPredicate` is flexible in accepting extra whitespace::
+
+ >>> v = VersionPredicate(' pat( == 0.1 ) ')
+ >>> v.name
+ 'pat'
+ >>> v.satisfied_by('0.1')
+ True
+ >>> v.satisfied_by('0.2')
+ False
+
+ If any version numbers passed in do not conform to the
+ restrictions of `StrictVersion`, a `ValueError` is raised::
+
+ >>> v = VersionPredicate('p1.p2.p3.p4(>=1.0, <=1.3a1, !=1.2zb3)')
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ ValueError: invalid version number '1.2zb3'
+
+ It the module or package name given does not conform to what's
+ allowed as a legal module or package name, `ValueError` is
+ raised::
+
+ >>> v = VersionPredicate('foo-bar')
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ ValueError: expected parenthesized list: '-bar'
+
+ >>> v = VersionPredicate('foo bar (12.21)')
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ ValueError: expected parenthesized list: 'bar (12.21)'
+
+ """
+
+ def __init__(self, versionPredicateStr):
+ """Parse a version predicate string.
+ """
+ # Fields:
+ # name: package name
+ # pred: list of (comparison string, StrictVersion)
+
+ versionPredicateStr = versionPredicateStr.strip()
+ if not versionPredicateStr:
+ raise ValueError("empty package restriction")
+ match = re_validPackage.match(versionPredicateStr)
+ if not match:
+ raise ValueError("bad package name in %r" % versionPredicateStr)
+ self.name, paren = match.groups()
+ paren = paren.strip()
+ if paren:
+ match = re_paren.match(paren)
+ if not match:
+ raise ValueError("expected parenthesized list: %r" % paren)
+ str = match.groups()[0]
+ self.pred = [splitUp(aPred) for aPred in str.split(",")]
+ if not self.pred:
+ raise ValueError("empty parenthesized list in %r"
+ % versionPredicateStr)
+ else:
+ self.pred = []
+
+ def __str__(self):
+ if self.pred:
+ seq = [cond + " " + str(ver) for cond, ver in self.pred]
+ return self.name + " (" + ", ".join(seq) + ")"
+ else:
+ return self.name
+
+ def satisfied_by(self, version):
+ """True if version is compatible with all the predicates in self.
+ The parameter version must be acceptable to the StrictVersion
+ constructor. It may be either a string or StrictVersion.
+ """
+ for cond, ver in self.pred:
+ if not compmap[cond](version, ver):
+ return False
+ return True
+
+
+_provision_rx = None
+
+def split_provision(value):
+ """Return the name and optional version number of a provision.
+
+ The version number, if given, will be returned as a `StrictVersion`
+ instance, otherwise it will be `None`.
+
+ >>> split_provision('mypkg')
+ ('mypkg', None)
+ >>> split_provision(' mypkg( 1.2 ) ')
+ ('mypkg', StrictVersion ('1.2'))
+ """
+ global _provision_rx
+ if _provision_rx is None:
+ _provision_rx = re.compile(
+ r"([a-zA-Z_]\w*(?:\.[a-zA-Z_]\w*)*)(?:\s*\(\s*([^)\s]+)\s*\))?$",
+ re.ASCII)
+ value = value.strip()
+ m = _provision_rx.match(value)
+ if not m:
+ raise ValueError("illegal provides specification: %r" % value)
+ ver = m.group(2) or None
+ if ver:
+ ver = distutils.version.StrictVersion(ver)
+ return m.group(1), ver
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_imp.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_imp.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..451e45a831
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_imp.py
@@ -0,0 +1,82 @@
+"""
+Re-implementation of find_module and get_frozen_object
+from the deprecated imp module.
+"""
+
+import os
+import importlib.util
+import importlib.machinery
+
+from .py34compat import module_from_spec
+
+
+PY_SOURCE = 1
+PY_COMPILED = 2
+C_EXTENSION = 3
+C_BUILTIN = 6
+PY_FROZEN = 7
+
+
+def find_spec(module, paths):
+ finder = (
+ importlib.machinery.PathFinder().find_spec
+ if isinstance(paths, list) else
+ importlib.util.find_spec
+ )
+ return finder(module, paths)
+
+
+def find_module(module, paths=None):
+ """Just like 'imp.find_module()', but with package support"""
+ spec = find_spec(module, paths)
+ if spec is None:
+ raise ImportError("Can't find %s" % module)
+ if not spec.has_location and hasattr(spec, 'submodule_search_locations'):
+ spec = importlib.util.spec_from_loader('__init__.py', spec.loader)
+
+ kind = -1
+ file = None
+ static = isinstance(spec.loader, type)
+ if spec.origin == 'frozen' or static and issubclass(
+ spec.loader, importlib.machinery.FrozenImporter):
+ kind = PY_FROZEN
+ path = None # imp compabilty
+ suffix = mode = '' # imp compability
+ elif spec.origin == 'built-in' or static and issubclass(
+ spec.loader, importlib.machinery.BuiltinImporter):
+ kind = C_BUILTIN
+ path = None # imp compabilty
+ suffix = mode = '' # imp compability
+ elif spec.has_location:
+ path = spec.origin
+ suffix = os.path.splitext(path)[1]
+ mode = 'r' if suffix in importlib.machinery.SOURCE_SUFFIXES else 'rb'
+
+ if suffix in importlib.machinery.SOURCE_SUFFIXES:
+ kind = PY_SOURCE
+ elif suffix in importlib.machinery.BYTECODE_SUFFIXES:
+ kind = PY_COMPILED
+ elif suffix in importlib.machinery.EXTENSION_SUFFIXES:
+ kind = C_EXTENSION
+
+ if kind in {PY_SOURCE, PY_COMPILED}:
+ file = open(path, mode)
+ else:
+ path = None
+ suffix = mode = ''
+
+ return file, path, (suffix, mode, kind)
+
+
+def get_frozen_object(module, paths=None):
+ spec = find_spec(module, paths)
+ if not spec:
+ raise ImportError("Can't find %s" % module)
+ return spec.loader.get_code(module)
+
+
+def get_module(module, paths, info):
+ spec = find_spec(module, paths)
+ if not spec:
+ raise ImportError("Can't find %s" % module)
+ return module_from_spec(spec)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/__init__.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/__init__.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..e69de29bb2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/__init__.py
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/ordered_set.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/ordered_set.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..14876000de
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/ordered_set.py
@@ -0,0 +1,488 @@
+"""
+An OrderedSet is a custom MutableSet that remembers its order, so that every
+entry has an index that can be looked up.
+
+Based on a recipe originally posted to ActiveState Recipes by Raymond Hettiger,
+and released under the MIT license.
+"""
+import itertools as it
+from collections import deque
+
+try:
+ # Python 3
+ from collections.abc import MutableSet, Sequence
+except ImportError:
+ # Python 2.7
+ from collections import MutableSet, Sequence
+
+SLICE_ALL = slice(None)
+__version__ = "3.1"
+
+
+def is_iterable(obj):
+ """
+ Are we being asked to look up a list of things, instead of a single thing?
+ We check for the `__iter__` attribute so that this can cover types that
+ don't have to be known by this module, such as NumPy arrays.
+
+ Strings, however, should be considered as atomic values to look up, not
+ iterables. The same goes for tuples, since they are immutable and therefore
+ valid entries.
+
+ We don't need to check for the Python 2 `unicode` type, because it doesn't
+ have an `__iter__` attribute anyway.
+ """
+ return (
+ hasattr(obj, "__iter__")
+ and not isinstance(obj, str)
+ and not isinstance(obj, tuple)
+ )
+
+
+class OrderedSet(MutableSet, Sequence):
+ """
+ An OrderedSet is a custom MutableSet that remembers its order, so that
+ every entry has an index that can be looked up.
+
+ Example:
+ >>> OrderedSet([1, 1, 2, 3, 2])
+ OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])
+ """
+
+ def __init__(self, iterable=None):
+ self.items = []
+ self.map = {}
+ if iterable is not None:
+ self |= iterable
+
+ def __len__(self):
+ """
+ Returns the number of unique elements in the ordered set
+
+ Example:
+ >>> len(OrderedSet([]))
+ 0
+ >>> len(OrderedSet([1, 2]))
+ 2
+ """
+ return len(self.items)
+
+ def __getitem__(self, index):
+ """
+ Get the item at a given index.
+
+ If `index` is a slice, you will get back that slice of items, as a
+ new OrderedSet.
+
+ If `index` is a list or a similar iterable, you'll get a list of
+ items corresponding to those indices. This is similar to NumPy's
+ "fancy indexing". The result is not an OrderedSet because you may ask
+ for duplicate indices, and the number of elements returned should be
+ the number of elements asked for.
+
+ Example:
+ >>> oset = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])
+ >>> oset[1]
+ 2
+ """
+ if isinstance(index, slice) and index == SLICE_ALL:
+ return self.copy()
+ elif is_iterable(index):
+ return [self.items[i] for i in index]
+ elif hasattr(index, "__index__") or isinstance(index, slice):
+ result = self.items[index]
+ if isinstance(result, list):
+ return self.__class__(result)
+ else:
+ return result
+ else:
+ raise TypeError("Don't know how to index an OrderedSet by %r" % index)
+
+ def copy(self):
+ """
+ Return a shallow copy of this object.
+
+ Example:
+ >>> this = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])
+ >>> other = this.copy()
+ >>> this == other
+ True
+ >>> this is other
+ False
+ """
+ return self.__class__(self)
+
+ def __getstate__(self):
+ if len(self) == 0:
+ # The state can't be an empty list.
+ # We need to return a truthy value, or else __setstate__ won't be run.
+ #
+ # This could have been done more gracefully by always putting the state
+ # in a tuple, but this way is backwards- and forwards- compatible with
+ # previous versions of OrderedSet.
+ return (None,)
+ else:
+ return list(self)
+
+ def __setstate__(self, state):
+ if state == (None,):
+ self.__init__([])
+ else:
+ self.__init__(state)
+
+ def __contains__(self, key):
+ """
+ Test if the item is in this ordered set
+
+ Example:
+ >>> 1 in OrderedSet([1, 3, 2])
+ True
+ >>> 5 in OrderedSet([1, 3, 2])
+ False
+ """
+ return key in self.map
+
+ def add(self, key):
+ """
+ Add `key` as an item to this OrderedSet, then return its index.
+
+ If `key` is already in the OrderedSet, return the index it already
+ had.
+
+ Example:
+ >>> oset = OrderedSet()
+ >>> oset.append(3)
+ 0
+ >>> print(oset)
+ OrderedSet([3])
+ """
+ if key not in self.map:
+ self.map[key] = len(self.items)
+ self.items.append(key)
+ return self.map[key]
+
+ append = add
+
+ def update(self, sequence):
+ """
+ Update the set with the given iterable sequence, then return the index
+ of the last element inserted.
+
+ Example:
+ >>> oset = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])
+ >>> oset.update([3, 1, 5, 1, 4])
+ 4
+ >>> print(oset)
+ OrderedSet([1, 2, 3, 5, 4])
+ """
+ item_index = None
+ try:
+ for item in sequence:
+ item_index = self.add(item)
+ except TypeError:
+ raise ValueError(
+ "Argument needs to be an iterable, got %s" % type(sequence)
+ )
+ return item_index
+
+ def index(self, key):
+ """
+ Get the index of a given entry, raising an IndexError if it's not
+ present.
+
+ `key` can be an iterable of entries that is not a string, in which case
+ this returns a list of indices.
+
+ Example:
+ >>> oset = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])
+ >>> oset.index(2)
+ 1
+ """
+ if is_iterable(key):
+ return [self.index(subkey) for subkey in key]
+ return self.map[key]
+
+ # Provide some compatibility with pd.Index
+ get_loc = index
+ get_indexer = index
+
+ def pop(self):
+ """
+ Remove and return the last element from the set.
+
+ Raises KeyError if the set is empty.
+
+ Example:
+ >>> oset = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])
+ >>> oset.pop()
+ 3
+ """
+ if not self.items:
+ raise KeyError("Set is empty")
+
+ elem = self.items[-1]
+ del self.items[-1]
+ del self.map[elem]
+ return elem
+
+ def discard(self, key):
+ """
+ Remove an element. Do not raise an exception if absent.
+
+ The MutableSet mixin uses this to implement the .remove() method, which
+ *does* raise an error when asked to remove a non-existent item.
+
+ Example:
+ >>> oset = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])
+ >>> oset.discard(2)
+ >>> print(oset)
+ OrderedSet([1, 3])
+ >>> oset.discard(2)
+ >>> print(oset)
+ OrderedSet([1, 3])
+ """
+ if key in self:
+ i = self.map[key]
+ del self.items[i]
+ del self.map[key]
+ for k, v in self.map.items():
+ if v >= i:
+ self.map[k] = v - 1
+
+ def clear(self):
+ """
+ Remove all items from this OrderedSet.
+ """
+ del self.items[:]
+ self.map.clear()
+
+ def __iter__(self):
+ """
+ Example:
+ >>> list(iter(OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])))
+ [1, 2, 3]
+ """
+ return iter(self.items)
+
+ def __reversed__(self):
+ """
+ Example:
+ >>> list(reversed(OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])))
+ [3, 2, 1]
+ """
+ return reversed(self.items)
+
+ def __repr__(self):
+ if not self:
+ return "%s()" % (self.__class__.__name__,)
+ return "%s(%r)" % (self.__class__.__name__, list(self))
+
+ def __eq__(self, other):
+ """
+ Returns true if the containers have the same items. If `other` is a
+ Sequence, then order is checked, otherwise it is ignored.
+
+ Example:
+ >>> oset = OrderedSet([1, 3, 2])
+ >>> oset == [1, 3, 2]
+ True
+ >>> oset == [1, 2, 3]
+ False
+ >>> oset == [2, 3]
+ False
+ >>> oset == OrderedSet([3, 2, 1])
+ False
+ """
+ # In Python 2 deque is not a Sequence, so treat it as one for
+ # consistent behavior with Python 3.
+ if isinstance(other, (Sequence, deque)):
+ # Check that this OrderedSet contains the same elements, in the
+ # same order, as the other object.
+ return list(self) == list(other)
+ try:
+ other_as_set = set(other)
+ except TypeError:
+ # If `other` can't be converted into a set, it's not equal.
+ return False
+ else:
+ return set(self) == other_as_set
+
+ def union(self, *sets):
+ """
+ Combines all unique items.
+ Each items order is defined by its first appearance.
+
+ Example:
+ >>> oset = OrderedSet.union(OrderedSet([3, 1, 4, 1, 5]), [1, 3], [2, 0])
+ >>> print(oset)
+ OrderedSet([3, 1, 4, 5, 2, 0])
+ >>> oset.union([8, 9])
+ OrderedSet([3, 1, 4, 5, 2, 0, 8, 9])
+ >>> oset | {10}
+ OrderedSet([3, 1, 4, 5, 2, 0, 10])
+ """
+ cls = self.__class__ if isinstance(self, OrderedSet) else OrderedSet
+ containers = map(list, it.chain([self], sets))
+ items = it.chain.from_iterable(containers)
+ return cls(items)
+
+ def __and__(self, other):
+ # the parent implementation of this is backwards
+ return self.intersection(other)
+
+ def intersection(self, *sets):
+ """
+ Returns elements in common between all sets. Order is defined only
+ by the first set.
+
+ Example:
+ >>> oset = OrderedSet.intersection(OrderedSet([0, 1, 2, 3]), [1, 2, 3])
+ >>> print(oset)
+ OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])
+ >>> oset.intersection([2, 4, 5], [1, 2, 3, 4])
+ OrderedSet([2])
+ >>> oset.intersection()
+ OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])
+ """
+ cls = self.__class__ if isinstance(self, OrderedSet) else OrderedSet
+ if sets:
+ common = set.intersection(*map(set, sets))
+ items = (item for item in self if item in common)
+ else:
+ items = self
+ return cls(items)
+
+ def difference(self, *sets):
+ """
+ Returns all elements that are in this set but not the others.
+
+ Example:
+ >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]).difference(OrderedSet([2]))
+ OrderedSet([1, 3])
+ >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]).difference(OrderedSet([2]), OrderedSet([3]))
+ OrderedSet([1])
+ >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]) - OrderedSet([2])
+ OrderedSet([1, 3])
+ >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]).difference()
+ OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])
+ """
+ cls = self.__class__
+ if sets:
+ other = set.union(*map(set, sets))
+ items = (item for item in self if item not in other)
+ else:
+ items = self
+ return cls(items)
+
+ def issubset(self, other):
+ """
+ Report whether another set contains this set.
+
+ Example:
+ >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]).issubset({1, 2})
+ False
+ >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]).issubset({1, 2, 3, 4})
+ True
+ >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3]).issubset({1, 4, 3, 5})
+ False
+ """
+ if len(self) > len(other): # Fast check for obvious cases
+ return False
+ return all(item in other for item in self)
+
+ def issuperset(self, other):
+ """
+ Report whether this set contains another set.
+
+ Example:
+ >>> OrderedSet([1, 2]).issuperset([1, 2, 3])
+ False
+ >>> OrderedSet([1, 2, 3, 4]).issuperset({1, 2, 3})
+ True
+ >>> OrderedSet([1, 4, 3, 5]).issuperset({1, 2, 3})
+ False
+ """
+ if len(self) < len(other): # Fast check for obvious cases
+ return False
+ return all(item in self for item in other)
+
+ def symmetric_difference(self, other):
+ """
+ Return the symmetric difference of two OrderedSets as a new set.
+ That is, the new set will contain all elements that are in exactly
+ one of the sets.
+
+ Their order will be preserved, with elements from `self` preceding
+ elements from `other`.
+
+ Example:
+ >>> this = OrderedSet([1, 4, 3, 5, 7])
+ >>> other = OrderedSet([9, 7, 1, 3, 2])
+ >>> this.symmetric_difference(other)
+ OrderedSet([4, 5, 9, 2])
+ """
+ cls = self.__class__ if isinstance(self, OrderedSet) else OrderedSet
+ diff1 = cls(self).difference(other)
+ diff2 = cls(other).difference(self)
+ return diff1.union(diff2)
+
+ def _update_items(self, items):
+ """
+ Replace the 'items' list of this OrderedSet with a new one, updating
+ self.map accordingly.
+ """
+ self.items = items
+ self.map = {item: idx for (idx, item) in enumerate(items)}
+
+ def difference_update(self, *sets):
+ """
+ Update this OrderedSet to remove items from one or more other sets.
+
+ Example:
+ >>> this = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3])
+ >>> this.difference_update(OrderedSet([2, 4]))
+ >>> print(this)
+ OrderedSet([1, 3])
+
+ >>> this = OrderedSet([1, 2, 3, 4, 5])
+ >>> this.difference_update(OrderedSet([2, 4]), OrderedSet([1, 4, 6]))
+ >>> print(this)
+ OrderedSet([3, 5])
+ """
+ items_to_remove = set()
+ for other in sets:
+ items_to_remove |= set(other)
+ self._update_items([item for item in self.items if item not in items_to_remove])
+
+ def intersection_update(self, other):
+ """
+ Update this OrderedSet to keep only items in another set, preserving
+ their order in this set.
+
+ Example:
+ >>> this = OrderedSet([1, 4, 3, 5, 7])
+ >>> other = OrderedSet([9, 7, 1, 3, 2])
+ >>> this.intersection_update(other)
+ >>> print(this)
+ OrderedSet([1, 3, 7])
+ """
+ other = set(other)
+ self._update_items([item for item in self.items if item in other])
+
+ def symmetric_difference_update(self, other):
+ """
+ Update this OrderedSet to remove items from another set, then
+ add items from the other set that were not present in this set.
+
+ Example:
+ >>> this = OrderedSet([1, 4, 3, 5, 7])
+ >>> other = OrderedSet([9, 7, 1, 3, 2])
+ >>> this.symmetric_difference_update(other)
+ >>> print(this)
+ OrderedSet([4, 5, 9, 2])
+ """
+ items_to_add = [item for item in other if item not in self]
+ items_to_remove = set(other)
+ self._update_items(
+ [item for item in self.items if item not in items_to_remove] + items_to_add
+ )
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/__about__.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/__about__.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..4d998578d7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/__about__.py
@@ -0,0 +1,27 @@
+# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
+# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
+# for complete details.
+from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
+
+__all__ = [
+ "__title__",
+ "__summary__",
+ "__uri__",
+ "__version__",
+ "__author__",
+ "__email__",
+ "__license__",
+ "__copyright__",
+]
+
+__title__ = "packaging"
+__summary__ = "Core utilities for Python packages"
+__uri__ = "https://github.com/pypa/packaging"
+
+__version__ = "20.4"
+
+__author__ = "Donald Stufft and individual contributors"
+__email__ = "donald@stufft.io"
+
+__license__ = "BSD-2-Clause or Apache-2.0"
+__copyright__ = "Copyright 2014-2019 %s" % __author__
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/__init__.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/__init__.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..a0cf67df52
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/__init__.py
@@ -0,0 +1,26 @@
+# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
+# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
+# for complete details.
+from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
+
+from .__about__ import (
+ __author__,
+ __copyright__,
+ __email__,
+ __license__,
+ __summary__,
+ __title__,
+ __uri__,
+ __version__,
+)
+
+__all__ = [
+ "__title__",
+ "__summary__",
+ "__uri__",
+ "__version__",
+ "__author__",
+ "__email__",
+ "__license__",
+ "__copyright__",
+]
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_compat.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_compat.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..e54bd4ede8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_compat.py
@@ -0,0 +1,38 @@
+# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
+# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
+# for complete details.
+from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
+
+import sys
+
+from ._typing import TYPE_CHECKING
+
+if TYPE_CHECKING: # pragma: no cover
+ from typing import Any, Dict, Tuple, Type
+
+
+PY2 = sys.version_info[0] == 2
+PY3 = sys.version_info[0] == 3
+
+# flake8: noqa
+
+if PY3:
+ string_types = (str,)
+else:
+ string_types = (basestring,)
+
+
+def with_metaclass(meta, *bases):
+ # type: (Type[Any], Tuple[Type[Any], ...]) -> Any
+ """
+ Create a base class with a metaclass.
+ """
+ # This requires a bit of explanation: the basic idea is to make a dummy
+ # metaclass for one level of class instantiation that replaces itself with
+ # the actual metaclass.
+ class metaclass(meta): # type: ignore
+ def __new__(cls, name, this_bases, d):
+ # type: (Type[Any], str, Tuple[Any], Dict[Any, Any]) -> Any
+ return meta(name, bases, d)
+
+ return type.__new__(metaclass, "temporary_class", (), {})
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_structures.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_structures.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..800d5c5588
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_structures.py
@@ -0,0 +1,86 @@
+# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
+# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
+# for complete details.
+from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
+
+
+class InfinityType(object):
+ def __repr__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return "Infinity"
+
+ def __hash__(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ return hash(repr(self))
+
+ def __lt__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return False
+
+ def __le__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return False
+
+ def __eq__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return isinstance(other, self.__class__)
+
+ def __ne__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return not isinstance(other, self.__class__)
+
+ def __gt__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return True
+
+ def __ge__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return True
+
+ def __neg__(self):
+ # type: (object) -> NegativeInfinityType
+ return NegativeInfinity
+
+
+Infinity = InfinityType()
+
+
+class NegativeInfinityType(object):
+ def __repr__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return "-Infinity"
+
+ def __hash__(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ return hash(repr(self))
+
+ def __lt__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return True
+
+ def __le__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return True
+
+ def __eq__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return isinstance(other, self.__class__)
+
+ def __ne__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return not isinstance(other, self.__class__)
+
+ def __gt__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return False
+
+ def __ge__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return False
+
+ def __neg__(self):
+ # type: (object) -> InfinityType
+ return Infinity
+
+
+NegativeInfinity = NegativeInfinityType()
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_typing.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_typing.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..77a8b9185a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/_typing.py
@@ -0,0 +1,48 @@
+"""For neatly implementing static typing in packaging.
+
+`mypy` - the static type analysis tool we use - uses the `typing` module, which
+provides core functionality fundamental to mypy's functioning.
+
+Generally, `typing` would be imported at runtime and used in that fashion -
+it acts as a no-op at runtime and does not have any run-time overhead by
+design.
+
+As it turns out, `typing` is not vendorable - it uses separate sources for
+Python 2/Python 3. Thus, this codebase can not expect it to be present.
+To work around this, mypy allows the typing import to be behind a False-y
+optional to prevent it from running at runtime and type-comments can be used
+to remove the need for the types to be accessible directly during runtime.
+
+This module provides the False-y guard in a nicely named fashion so that a
+curious maintainer can reach here to read this.
+
+In packaging, all static-typing related imports should be guarded as follows:
+
+ from packaging._typing import TYPE_CHECKING
+
+ if TYPE_CHECKING:
+ from typing import ...
+
+Ref: https://github.com/python/mypy/issues/3216
+"""
+
+__all__ = ["TYPE_CHECKING", "cast"]
+
+# The TYPE_CHECKING constant defined by the typing module is False at runtime
+# but True while type checking.
+if False: # pragma: no cover
+ from typing import TYPE_CHECKING
+else:
+ TYPE_CHECKING = False
+
+# typing's cast syntax requires calling typing.cast at runtime, but we don't
+# want to import typing at runtime. Here, we inform the type checkers that
+# we're importing `typing.cast` as `cast` and re-implement typing.cast's
+# runtime behavior in a block that is ignored by type checkers.
+if TYPE_CHECKING: # pragma: no cover
+ # not executed at runtime
+ from typing import cast
+else:
+ # executed at runtime
+ def cast(type_, value): # noqa
+ return value
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/markers.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/markers.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..03fbdfcc94
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/markers.py
@@ -0,0 +1,328 @@
+# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
+# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
+# for complete details.
+from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
+
+import operator
+import os
+import platform
+import sys
+
+from setuptools.extern.pyparsing import ParseException, ParseResults, stringStart, stringEnd
+from setuptools.extern.pyparsing import ZeroOrMore, Group, Forward, QuotedString
+from setuptools.extern.pyparsing import Literal as L # noqa
+
+from ._compat import string_types
+from ._typing import TYPE_CHECKING
+from .specifiers import Specifier, InvalidSpecifier
+
+if TYPE_CHECKING: # pragma: no cover
+ from typing import Any, Callable, Dict, List, Optional, Tuple, Union
+
+ Operator = Callable[[str, str], bool]
+
+
+__all__ = [
+ "InvalidMarker",
+ "UndefinedComparison",
+ "UndefinedEnvironmentName",
+ "Marker",
+ "default_environment",
+]
+
+
+class InvalidMarker(ValueError):
+ """
+ An invalid marker was found, users should refer to PEP 508.
+ """
+
+
+class UndefinedComparison(ValueError):
+ """
+ An invalid operation was attempted on a value that doesn't support it.
+ """
+
+
+class UndefinedEnvironmentName(ValueError):
+ """
+ A name was attempted to be used that does not exist inside of the
+ environment.
+ """
+
+
+class Node(object):
+ def __init__(self, value):
+ # type: (Any) -> None
+ self.value = value
+
+ def __str__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return str(self.value)
+
+ def __repr__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return "<{0}({1!r})>".format(self.__class__.__name__, str(self))
+
+ def serialize(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ raise NotImplementedError
+
+
+class Variable(Node):
+ def serialize(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return str(self)
+
+
+class Value(Node):
+ def serialize(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return '"{0}"'.format(self)
+
+
+class Op(Node):
+ def serialize(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return str(self)
+
+
+VARIABLE = (
+ L("implementation_version")
+ | L("platform_python_implementation")
+ | L("implementation_name")
+ | L("python_full_version")
+ | L("platform_release")
+ | L("platform_version")
+ | L("platform_machine")
+ | L("platform_system")
+ | L("python_version")
+ | L("sys_platform")
+ | L("os_name")
+ | L("os.name") # PEP-345
+ | L("sys.platform") # PEP-345
+ | L("platform.version") # PEP-345
+ | L("platform.machine") # PEP-345
+ | L("platform.python_implementation") # PEP-345
+ | L("python_implementation") # undocumented setuptools legacy
+ | L("extra") # PEP-508
+)
+ALIASES = {
+ "os.name": "os_name",
+ "sys.platform": "sys_platform",
+ "platform.version": "platform_version",
+ "platform.machine": "platform_machine",
+ "platform.python_implementation": "platform_python_implementation",
+ "python_implementation": "platform_python_implementation",
+}
+VARIABLE.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: Variable(ALIASES.get(t[0], t[0])))
+
+VERSION_CMP = (
+ L("===") | L("==") | L(">=") | L("<=") | L("!=") | L("~=") | L(">") | L("<")
+)
+
+MARKER_OP = VERSION_CMP | L("not in") | L("in")
+MARKER_OP.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: Op(t[0]))
+
+MARKER_VALUE = QuotedString("'") | QuotedString('"')
+MARKER_VALUE.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: Value(t[0]))
+
+BOOLOP = L("and") | L("or")
+
+MARKER_VAR = VARIABLE | MARKER_VALUE
+
+MARKER_ITEM = Group(MARKER_VAR + MARKER_OP + MARKER_VAR)
+MARKER_ITEM.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: tuple(t[0]))
+
+LPAREN = L("(").suppress()
+RPAREN = L(")").suppress()
+
+MARKER_EXPR = Forward()
+MARKER_ATOM = MARKER_ITEM | Group(LPAREN + MARKER_EXPR + RPAREN)
+MARKER_EXPR << MARKER_ATOM + ZeroOrMore(BOOLOP + MARKER_EXPR)
+
+MARKER = stringStart + MARKER_EXPR + stringEnd
+
+
+def _coerce_parse_result(results):
+ # type: (Union[ParseResults, List[Any]]) -> List[Any]
+ if isinstance(results, ParseResults):
+ return [_coerce_parse_result(i) for i in results]
+ else:
+ return results
+
+
+def _format_marker(marker, first=True):
+ # type: (Union[List[str], Tuple[Node, ...], str], Optional[bool]) -> str
+
+ assert isinstance(marker, (list, tuple, string_types))
+
+ # Sometimes we have a structure like [[...]] which is a single item list
+ # where the single item is itself it's own list. In that case we want skip
+ # the rest of this function so that we don't get extraneous () on the
+ # outside.
+ if (
+ isinstance(marker, list)
+ and len(marker) == 1
+ and isinstance(marker[0], (list, tuple))
+ ):
+ return _format_marker(marker[0])
+
+ if isinstance(marker, list):
+ inner = (_format_marker(m, first=False) for m in marker)
+ if first:
+ return " ".join(inner)
+ else:
+ return "(" + " ".join(inner) + ")"
+ elif isinstance(marker, tuple):
+ return " ".join([m.serialize() for m in marker])
+ else:
+ return marker
+
+
+_operators = {
+ "in": lambda lhs, rhs: lhs in rhs,
+ "not in": lambda lhs, rhs: lhs not in rhs,
+ "<": operator.lt,
+ "<=": operator.le,
+ "==": operator.eq,
+ "!=": operator.ne,
+ ">=": operator.ge,
+ ">": operator.gt,
+} # type: Dict[str, Operator]
+
+
+def _eval_op(lhs, op, rhs):
+ # type: (str, Op, str) -> bool
+ try:
+ spec = Specifier("".join([op.serialize(), rhs]))
+ except InvalidSpecifier:
+ pass
+ else:
+ return spec.contains(lhs)
+
+ oper = _operators.get(op.serialize()) # type: Optional[Operator]
+ if oper is None:
+ raise UndefinedComparison(
+ "Undefined {0!r} on {1!r} and {2!r}.".format(op, lhs, rhs)
+ )
+
+ return oper(lhs, rhs)
+
+
+class Undefined(object):
+ pass
+
+
+_undefined = Undefined()
+
+
+def _get_env(environment, name):
+ # type: (Dict[str, str], str) -> str
+ value = environment.get(name, _undefined) # type: Union[str, Undefined]
+
+ if isinstance(value, Undefined):
+ raise UndefinedEnvironmentName(
+ "{0!r} does not exist in evaluation environment.".format(name)
+ )
+
+ return value
+
+
+def _evaluate_markers(markers, environment):
+ # type: (List[Any], Dict[str, str]) -> bool
+ groups = [[]] # type: List[List[bool]]
+
+ for marker in markers:
+ assert isinstance(marker, (list, tuple, string_types))
+
+ if isinstance(marker, list):
+ groups[-1].append(_evaluate_markers(marker, environment))
+ elif isinstance(marker, tuple):
+ lhs, op, rhs = marker
+
+ if isinstance(lhs, Variable):
+ lhs_value = _get_env(environment, lhs.value)
+ rhs_value = rhs.value
+ else:
+ lhs_value = lhs.value
+ rhs_value = _get_env(environment, rhs.value)
+
+ groups[-1].append(_eval_op(lhs_value, op, rhs_value))
+ else:
+ assert marker in ["and", "or"]
+ if marker == "or":
+ groups.append([])
+
+ return any(all(item) for item in groups)
+
+
+def format_full_version(info):
+ # type: (sys._version_info) -> str
+ version = "{0.major}.{0.minor}.{0.micro}".format(info)
+ kind = info.releaselevel
+ if kind != "final":
+ version += kind[0] + str(info.serial)
+ return version
+
+
+def default_environment():
+ # type: () -> Dict[str, str]
+ if hasattr(sys, "implementation"):
+ # Ignoring the `sys.implementation` reference for type checking due to
+ # mypy not liking that the attribute doesn't exist in Python 2.7 when
+ # run with the `--py27` flag.
+ iver = format_full_version(sys.implementation.version) # type: ignore
+ implementation_name = sys.implementation.name # type: ignore
+ else:
+ iver = "0"
+ implementation_name = ""
+
+ return {
+ "implementation_name": implementation_name,
+ "implementation_version": iver,
+ "os_name": os.name,
+ "platform_machine": platform.machine(),
+ "platform_release": platform.release(),
+ "platform_system": platform.system(),
+ "platform_version": platform.version(),
+ "python_full_version": platform.python_version(),
+ "platform_python_implementation": platform.python_implementation(),
+ "python_version": ".".join(platform.python_version_tuple()[:2]),
+ "sys_platform": sys.platform,
+ }
+
+
+class Marker(object):
+ def __init__(self, marker):
+ # type: (str) -> None
+ try:
+ self._markers = _coerce_parse_result(MARKER.parseString(marker))
+ except ParseException as e:
+ err_str = "Invalid marker: {0!r}, parse error at {1!r}".format(
+ marker, marker[e.loc : e.loc + 8]
+ )
+ raise InvalidMarker(err_str)
+
+ def __str__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return _format_marker(self._markers)
+
+ def __repr__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return "<Marker({0!r})>".format(str(self))
+
+ def evaluate(self, environment=None):
+ # type: (Optional[Dict[str, str]]) -> bool
+ """Evaluate a marker.
+
+ Return the boolean from evaluating the given marker against the
+ environment. environment is an optional argument to override all or
+ part of the determined environment.
+
+ The environment is determined from the current Python process.
+ """
+ current_environment = default_environment()
+ if environment is not None:
+ current_environment.update(environment)
+
+ return _evaluate_markers(self._markers, current_environment)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/requirements.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/requirements.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..5d50c7d7e2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/requirements.py
@@ -0,0 +1,145 @@
+# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
+# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
+# for complete details.
+from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
+
+import string
+import re
+
+from setuptools.extern.pyparsing import stringStart, stringEnd, originalTextFor, ParseException
+from setuptools.extern.pyparsing import ZeroOrMore, Word, Optional, Regex, Combine
+from setuptools.extern.pyparsing import Literal as L # noqa
+from urllib import parse as urlparse
+
+from ._typing import TYPE_CHECKING
+from .markers import MARKER_EXPR, Marker
+from .specifiers import LegacySpecifier, Specifier, SpecifierSet
+
+if TYPE_CHECKING: # pragma: no cover
+ from typing import List
+
+
+class InvalidRequirement(ValueError):
+ """
+ An invalid requirement was found, users should refer to PEP 508.
+ """
+
+
+ALPHANUM = Word(string.ascii_letters + string.digits)
+
+LBRACKET = L("[").suppress()
+RBRACKET = L("]").suppress()
+LPAREN = L("(").suppress()
+RPAREN = L(")").suppress()
+COMMA = L(",").suppress()
+SEMICOLON = L(";").suppress()
+AT = L("@").suppress()
+
+PUNCTUATION = Word("-_.")
+IDENTIFIER_END = ALPHANUM | (ZeroOrMore(PUNCTUATION) + ALPHANUM)
+IDENTIFIER = Combine(ALPHANUM + ZeroOrMore(IDENTIFIER_END))
+
+NAME = IDENTIFIER("name")
+EXTRA = IDENTIFIER
+
+URI = Regex(r"[^ ]+")("url")
+URL = AT + URI
+
+EXTRAS_LIST = EXTRA + ZeroOrMore(COMMA + EXTRA)
+EXTRAS = (LBRACKET + Optional(EXTRAS_LIST) + RBRACKET)("extras")
+
+VERSION_PEP440 = Regex(Specifier._regex_str, re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE)
+VERSION_LEGACY = Regex(LegacySpecifier._regex_str, re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE)
+
+VERSION_ONE = VERSION_PEP440 ^ VERSION_LEGACY
+VERSION_MANY = Combine(
+ VERSION_ONE + ZeroOrMore(COMMA + VERSION_ONE), joinString=",", adjacent=False
+)("_raw_spec")
+_VERSION_SPEC = Optional(((LPAREN + VERSION_MANY + RPAREN) | VERSION_MANY))
+_VERSION_SPEC.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: t._raw_spec or "")
+
+VERSION_SPEC = originalTextFor(_VERSION_SPEC)("specifier")
+VERSION_SPEC.setParseAction(lambda s, l, t: t[1])
+
+MARKER_EXPR = originalTextFor(MARKER_EXPR())("marker")
+MARKER_EXPR.setParseAction(
+ lambda s, l, t: Marker(s[t._original_start : t._original_end])
+)
+MARKER_SEPARATOR = SEMICOLON
+MARKER = MARKER_SEPARATOR + MARKER_EXPR
+
+VERSION_AND_MARKER = VERSION_SPEC + Optional(MARKER)
+URL_AND_MARKER = URL + Optional(MARKER)
+
+NAMED_REQUIREMENT = NAME + Optional(EXTRAS) + (URL_AND_MARKER | VERSION_AND_MARKER)
+
+REQUIREMENT = stringStart + NAMED_REQUIREMENT + stringEnd
+# setuptools.extern.pyparsing isn't thread safe during initialization, so we do it eagerly, see
+# issue #104
+REQUIREMENT.parseString("x[]")
+
+
+class Requirement(object):
+ """Parse a requirement.
+
+ Parse a given requirement string into its parts, such as name, specifier,
+ URL, and extras. Raises InvalidRequirement on a badly-formed requirement
+ string.
+ """
+
+ # TODO: Can we test whether something is contained within a requirement?
+ # If so how do we do that? Do we need to test against the _name_ of
+ # the thing as well as the version? What about the markers?
+ # TODO: Can we normalize the name and extra name?
+
+ def __init__(self, requirement_string):
+ # type: (str) -> None
+ try:
+ req = REQUIREMENT.parseString(requirement_string)
+ except ParseException as e:
+ raise InvalidRequirement(
+ 'Parse error at "{0!r}": {1}'.format(
+ requirement_string[e.loc : e.loc + 8], e.msg
+ )
+ )
+
+ self.name = req.name
+ if req.url:
+ parsed_url = urlparse.urlparse(req.url)
+ if parsed_url.scheme == "file":
+ if urlparse.urlunparse(parsed_url) != req.url:
+ raise InvalidRequirement("Invalid URL given")
+ elif not (parsed_url.scheme and parsed_url.netloc) or (
+ not parsed_url.scheme and not parsed_url.netloc
+ ):
+ raise InvalidRequirement("Invalid URL: {0}".format(req.url))
+ self.url = req.url
+ else:
+ self.url = None
+ self.extras = set(req.extras.asList() if req.extras else [])
+ self.specifier = SpecifierSet(req.specifier)
+ self.marker = req.marker if req.marker else None
+
+ def __str__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ parts = [self.name] # type: List[str]
+
+ if self.extras:
+ parts.append("[{0}]".format(",".join(sorted(self.extras))))
+
+ if self.specifier:
+ parts.append(str(self.specifier))
+
+ if self.url:
+ parts.append("@ {0}".format(self.url))
+ if self.marker:
+ parts.append(" ")
+
+ if self.marker:
+ parts.append("; {0}".format(self.marker))
+
+ return "".join(parts)
+
+ def __repr__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return "<Requirement({0!r})>".format(str(self))
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/specifiers.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/specifiers.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..fe09bb1dbb
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/specifiers.py
@@ -0,0 +1,863 @@
+# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
+# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
+# for complete details.
+from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
+
+import abc
+import functools
+import itertools
+import re
+
+from ._compat import string_types, with_metaclass
+from ._typing import TYPE_CHECKING
+from .utils import canonicalize_version
+from .version import Version, LegacyVersion, parse
+
+if TYPE_CHECKING: # pragma: no cover
+ from typing import (
+ List,
+ Dict,
+ Union,
+ Iterable,
+ Iterator,
+ Optional,
+ Callable,
+ Tuple,
+ FrozenSet,
+ )
+
+ ParsedVersion = Union[Version, LegacyVersion]
+ UnparsedVersion = Union[Version, LegacyVersion, str]
+ CallableOperator = Callable[[ParsedVersion, str], bool]
+
+
+class InvalidSpecifier(ValueError):
+ """
+ An invalid specifier was found, users should refer to PEP 440.
+ """
+
+
+class BaseSpecifier(with_metaclass(abc.ABCMeta, object)): # type: ignore
+ @abc.abstractmethod
+ def __str__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ """
+ Returns the str representation of this Specifier like object. This
+ should be representative of the Specifier itself.
+ """
+
+ @abc.abstractmethod
+ def __hash__(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ """
+ Returns a hash value for this Specifier like object.
+ """
+
+ @abc.abstractmethod
+ def __eq__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ """
+ Returns a boolean representing whether or not the two Specifier like
+ objects are equal.
+ """
+
+ @abc.abstractmethod
+ def __ne__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ """
+ Returns a boolean representing whether or not the two Specifier like
+ objects are not equal.
+ """
+
+ @abc.abstractproperty
+ def prereleases(self):
+ # type: () -> Optional[bool]
+ """
+ Returns whether or not pre-releases as a whole are allowed by this
+ specifier.
+ """
+
+ @prereleases.setter
+ def prereleases(self, value):
+ # type: (bool) -> None
+ """
+ Sets whether or not pre-releases as a whole are allowed by this
+ specifier.
+ """
+
+ @abc.abstractmethod
+ def contains(self, item, prereleases=None):
+ # type: (str, Optional[bool]) -> bool
+ """
+ Determines if the given item is contained within this specifier.
+ """
+
+ @abc.abstractmethod
+ def filter(self, iterable, prereleases=None):
+ # type: (Iterable[UnparsedVersion], Optional[bool]) -> Iterable[UnparsedVersion]
+ """
+ Takes an iterable of items and filters them so that only items which
+ are contained within this specifier are allowed in it.
+ """
+
+
+class _IndividualSpecifier(BaseSpecifier):
+
+ _operators = {} # type: Dict[str, str]
+
+ def __init__(self, spec="", prereleases=None):
+ # type: (str, Optional[bool]) -> None
+ match = self._regex.search(spec)
+ if not match:
+ raise InvalidSpecifier("Invalid specifier: '{0}'".format(spec))
+
+ self._spec = (
+ match.group("operator").strip(),
+ match.group("version").strip(),
+ ) # type: Tuple[str, str]
+
+ # Store whether or not this Specifier should accept prereleases
+ self._prereleases = prereleases
+
+ def __repr__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ pre = (
+ ", prereleases={0!r}".format(self.prereleases)
+ if self._prereleases is not None
+ else ""
+ )
+
+ return "<{0}({1!r}{2})>".format(self.__class__.__name__, str(self), pre)
+
+ def __str__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return "{0}{1}".format(*self._spec)
+
+ @property
+ def _canonical_spec(self):
+ # type: () -> Tuple[str, Union[Version, str]]
+ return self._spec[0], canonicalize_version(self._spec[1])
+
+ def __hash__(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ return hash(self._canonical_spec)
+
+ def __eq__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ if isinstance(other, string_types):
+ try:
+ other = self.__class__(str(other))
+ except InvalidSpecifier:
+ return NotImplemented
+ elif not isinstance(other, self.__class__):
+ return NotImplemented
+
+ return self._canonical_spec == other._canonical_spec
+
+ def __ne__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ if isinstance(other, string_types):
+ try:
+ other = self.__class__(str(other))
+ except InvalidSpecifier:
+ return NotImplemented
+ elif not isinstance(other, self.__class__):
+ return NotImplemented
+
+ return self._spec != other._spec
+
+ def _get_operator(self, op):
+ # type: (str) -> CallableOperator
+ operator_callable = getattr(
+ self, "_compare_{0}".format(self._operators[op])
+ ) # type: CallableOperator
+ return operator_callable
+
+ def _coerce_version(self, version):
+ # type: (UnparsedVersion) -> ParsedVersion
+ if not isinstance(version, (LegacyVersion, Version)):
+ version = parse(version)
+ return version
+
+ @property
+ def operator(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return self._spec[0]
+
+ @property
+ def version(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return self._spec[1]
+
+ @property
+ def prereleases(self):
+ # type: () -> Optional[bool]
+ return self._prereleases
+
+ @prereleases.setter
+ def prereleases(self, value):
+ # type: (bool) -> None
+ self._prereleases = value
+
+ def __contains__(self, item):
+ # type: (str) -> bool
+ return self.contains(item)
+
+ def contains(self, item, prereleases=None):
+ # type: (UnparsedVersion, Optional[bool]) -> bool
+
+ # Determine if prereleases are to be allowed or not.
+ if prereleases is None:
+ prereleases = self.prereleases
+
+ # Normalize item to a Version or LegacyVersion, this allows us to have
+ # a shortcut for ``"2.0" in Specifier(">=2")
+ normalized_item = self._coerce_version(item)
+
+ # Determine if we should be supporting prereleases in this specifier
+ # or not, if we do not support prereleases than we can short circuit
+ # logic if this version is a prereleases.
+ if normalized_item.is_prerelease and not prereleases:
+ return False
+
+ # Actually do the comparison to determine if this item is contained
+ # within this Specifier or not.
+ operator_callable = self._get_operator(self.operator) # type: CallableOperator
+ return operator_callable(normalized_item, self.version)
+
+ def filter(self, iterable, prereleases=None):
+ # type: (Iterable[UnparsedVersion], Optional[bool]) -> Iterable[UnparsedVersion]
+
+ yielded = False
+ found_prereleases = []
+
+ kw = {"prereleases": prereleases if prereleases is not None else True}
+
+ # Attempt to iterate over all the values in the iterable and if any of
+ # them match, yield them.
+ for version in iterable:
+ parsed_version = self._coerce_version(version)
+
+ if self.contains(parsed_version, **kw):
+ # If our version is a prerelease, and we were not set to allow
+ # prereleases, then we'll store it for later incase nothing
+ # else matches this specifier.
+ if parsed_version.is_prerelease and not (
+ prereleases or self.prereleases
+ ):
+ found_prereleases.append(version)
+ # Either this is not a prerelease, or we should have been
+ # accepting prereleases from the beginning.
+ else:
+ yielded = True
+ yield version
+
+ # Now that we've iterated over everything, determine if we've yielded
+ # any values, and if we have not and we have any prereleases stored up
+ # then we will go ahead and yield the prereleases.
+ if not yielded and found_prereleases:
+ for version in found_prereleases:
+ yield version
+
+
+class LegacySpecifier(_IndividualSpecifier):
+
+ _regex_str = r"""
+ (?P<operator>(==|!=|<=|>=|<|>))
+ \s*
+ (?P<version>
+ [^,;\s)]* # Since this is a "legacy" specifier, and the version
+ # string can be just about anything, we match everything
+ # except for whitespace, a semi-colon for marker support,
+ # a closing paren since versions can be enclosed in
+ # them, and a comma since it's a version separator.
+ )
+ """
+
+ _regex = re.compile(r"^\s*" + _regex_str + r"\s*$", re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE)
+
+ _operators = {
+ "==": "equal",
+ "!=": "not_equal",
+ "<=": "less_than_equal",
+ ">=": "greater_than_equal",
+ "<": "less_than",
+ ">": "greater_than",
+ }
+
+ def _coerce_version(self, version):
+ # type: (Union[ParsedVersion, str]) -> LegacyVersion
+ if not isinstance(version, LegacyVersion):
+ version = LegacyVersion(str(version))
+ return version
+
+ def _compare_equal(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (LegacyVersion, str) -> bool
+ return prospective == self._coerce_version(spec)
+
+ def _compare_not_equal(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (LegacyVersion, str) -> bool
+ return prospective != self._coerce_version(spec)
+
+ def _compare_less_than_equal(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (LegacyVersion, str) -> bool
+ return prospective <= self._coerce_version(spec)
+
+ def _compare_greater_than_equal(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (LegacyVersion, str) -> bool
+ return prospective >= self._coerce_version(spec)
+
+ def _compare_less_than(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (LegacyVersion, str) -> bool
+ return prospective < self._coerce_version(spec)
+
+ def _compare_greater_than(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (LegacyVersion, str) -> bool
+ return prospective > self._coerce_version(spec)
+
+
+def _require_version_compare(
+ fn # type: (Callable[[Specifier, ParsedVersion, str], bool])
+):
+ # type: (...) -> Callable[[Specifier, ParsedVersion, str], bool]
+ @functools.wraps(fn)
+ def wrapped(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (Specifier, ParsedVersion, str) -> bool
+ if not isinstance(prospective, Version):
+ return False
+ return fn(self, prospective, spec)
+
+ return wrapped
+
+
+class Specifier(_IndividualSpecifier):
+
+ _regex_str = r"""
+ (?P<operator>(~=|==|!=|<=|>=|<|>|===))
+ (?P<version>
+ (?:
+ # The identity operators allow for an escape hatch that will
+ # do an exact string match of the version you wish to install.
+ # This will not be parsed by PEP 440 and we cannot determine
+ # any semantic meaning from it. This operator is discouraged
+ # but included entirely as an escape hatch.
+ (?<====) # Only match for the identity operator
+ \s*
+ [^\s]* # We just match everything, except for whitespace
+ # since we are only testing for strict identity.
+ )
+ |
+ (?:
+ # The (non)equality operators allow for wild card and local
+ # versions to be specified so we have to define these two
+ # operators separately to enable that.
+ (?<===|!=) # Only match for equals and not equals
+
+ \s*
+ v?
+ (?:[0-9]+!)? # epoch
+ [0-9]+(?:\.[0-9]+)* # release
+ (?: # pre release
+ [-_\.]?
+ (a|b|c|rc|alpha|beta|pre|preview)
+ [-_\.]?
+ [0-9]*
+ )?
+ (?: # post release
+ (?:-[0-9]+)|(?:[-_\.]?(post|rev|r)[-_\.]?[0-9]*)
+ )?
+
+ # You cannot use a wild card and a dev or local version
+ # together so group them with a | and make them optional.
+ (?:
+ (?:[-_\.]?dev[-_\.]?[0-9]*)? # dev release
+ (?:\+[a-z0-9]+(?:[-_\.][a-z0-9]+)*)? # local
+ |
+ \.\* # Wild card syntax of .*
+ )?
+ )
+ |
+ (?:
+ # The compatible operator requires at least two digits in the
+ # release segment.
+ (?<=~=) # Only match for the compatible operator
+
+ \s*
+ v?
+ (?:[0-9]+!)? # epoch
+ [0-9]+(?:\.[0-9]+)+ # release (We have a + instead of a *)
+ (?: # pre release
+ [-_\.]?
+ (a|b|c|rc|alpha|beta|pre|preview)
+ [-_\.]?
+ [0-9]*
+ )?
+ (?: # post release
+ (?:-[0-9]+)|(?:[-_\.]?(post|rev|r)[-_\.]?[0-9]*)
+ )?
+ (?:[-_\.]?dev[-_\.]?[0-9]*)? # dev release
+ )
+ |
+ (?:
+ # All other operators only allow a sub set of what the
+ # (non)equality operators do. Specifically they do not allow
+ # local versions to be specified nor do they allow the prefix
+ # matching wild cards.
+ (?<!==|!=|~=) # We have special cases for these
+ # operators so we want to make sure they
+ # don't match here.
+
+ \s*
+ v?
+ (?:[0-9]+!)? # epoch
+ [0-9]+(?:\.[0-9]+)* # release
+ (?: # pre release
+ [-_\.]?
+ (a|b|c|rc|alpha|beta|pre|preview)
+ [-_\.]?
+ [0-9]*
+ )?
+ (?: # post release
+ (?:-[0-9]+)|(?:[-_\.]?(post|rev|r)[-_\.]?[0-9]*)
+ )?
+ (?:[-_\.]?dev[-_\.]?[0-9]*)? # dev release
+ )
+ )
+ """
+
+ _regex = re.compile(r"^\s*" + _regex_str + r"\s*$", re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE)
+
+ _operators = {
+ "~=": "compatible",
+ "==": "equal",
+ "!=": "not_equal",
+ "<=": "less_than_equal",
+ ">=": "greater_than_equal",
+ "<": "less_than",
+ ">": "greater_than",
+ "===": "arbitrary",
+ }
+
+ @_require_version_compare
+ def _compare_compatible(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (ParsedVersion, str) -> bool
+
+ # Compatible releases have an equivalent combination of >= and ==. That
+ # is that ~=2.2 is equivalent to >=2.2,==2.*. This allows us to
+ # implement this in terms of the other specifiers instead of
+ # implementing it ourselves. The only thing we need to do is construct
+ # the other specifiers.
+
+ # We want everything but the last item in the version, but we want to
+ # ignore post and dev releases and we want to treat the pre-release as
+ # it's own separate segment.
+ prefix = ".".join(
+ list(
+ itertools.takewhile(
+ lambda x: (not x.startswith("post") and not x.startswith("dev")),
+ _version_split(spec),
+ )
+ )[:-1]
+ )
+
+ # Add the prefix notation to the end of our string
+ prefix += ".*"
+
+ return self._get_operator(">=")(prospective, spec) and self._get_operator("==")(
+ prospective, prefix
+ )
+
+ @_require_version_compare
+ def _compare_equal(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (ParsedVersion, str) -> bool
+
+ # We need special logic to handle prefix matching
+ if spec.endswith(".*"):
+ # In the case of prefix matching we want to ignore local segment.
+ prospective = Version(prospective.public)
+ # Split the spec out by dots, and pretend that there is an implicit
+ # dot in between a release segment and a pre-release segment.
+ split_spec = _version_split(spec[:-2]) # Remove the trailing .*
+
+ # Split the prospective version out by dots, and pretend that there
+ # is an implicit dot in between a release segment and a pre-release
+ # segment.
+ split_prospective = _version_split(str(prospective))
+
+ # Shorten the prospective version to be the same length as the spec
+ # so that we can determine if the specifier is a prefix of the
+ # prospective version or not.
+ shortened_prospective = split_prospective[: len(split_spec)]
+
+ # Pad out our two sides with zeros so that they both equal the same
+ # length.
+ padded_spec, padded_prospective = _pad_version(
+ split_spec, shortened_prospective
+ )
+
+ return padded_prospective == padded_spec
+ else:
+ # Convert our spec string into a Version
+ spec_version = Version(spec)
+
+ # If the specifier does not have a local segment, then we want to
+ # act as if the prospective version also does not have a local
+ # segment.
+ if not spec_version.local:
+ prospective = Version(prospective.public)
+
+ return prospective == spec_version
+
+ @_require_version_compare
+ def _compare_not_equal(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (ParsedVersion, str) -> bool
+ return not self._compare_equal(prospective, spec)
+
+ @_require_version_compare
+ def _compare_less_than_equal(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (ParsedVersion, str) -> bool
+
+ # NB: Local version identifiers are NOT permitted in the version
+ # specifier, so local version labels can be universally removed from
+ # the prospective version.
+ return Version(prospective.public) <= Version(spec)
+
+ @_require_version_compare
+ def _compare_greater_than_equal(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (ParsedVersion, str) -> bool
+
+ # NB: Local version identifiers are NOT permitted in the version
+ # specifier, so local version labels can be universally removed from
+ # the prospective version.
+ return Version(prospective.public) >= Version(spec)
+
+ @_require_version_compare
+ def _compare_less_than(self, prospective, spec_str):
+ # type: (ParsedVersion, str) -> bool
+
+ # Convert our spec to a Version instance, since we'll want to work with
+ # it as a version.
+ spec = Version(spec_str)
+
+ # Check to see if the prospective version is less than the spec
+ # version. If it's not we can short circuit and just return False now
+ # instead of doing extra unneeded work.
+ if not prospective < spec:
+ return False
+
+ # This special case is here so that, unless the specifier itself
+ # includes is a pre-release version, that we do not accept pre-release
+ # versions for the version mentioned in the specifier (e.g. <3.1 should
+ # not match 3.1.dev0, but should match 3.0.dev0).
+ if not spec.is_prerelease and prospective.is_prerelease:
+ if Version(prospective.base_version) == Version(spec.base_version):
+ return False
+
+ # If we've gotten to here, it means that prospective version is both
+ # less than the spec version *and* it's not a pre-release of the same
+ # version in the spec.
+ return True
+
+ @_require_version_compare
+ def _compare_greater_than(self, prospective, spec_str):
+ # type: (ParsedVersion, str) -> bool
+
+ # Convert our spec to a Version instance, since we'll want to work with
+ # it as a version.
+ spec = Version(spec_str)
+
+ # Check to see if the prospective version is greater than the spec
+ # version. If it's not we can short circuit and just return False now
+ # instead of doing extra unneeded work.
+ if not prospective > spec:
+ return False
+
+ # This special case is here so that, unless the specifier itself
+ # includes is a post-release version, that we do not accept
+ # post-release versions for the version mentioned in the specifier
+ # (e.g. >3.1 should not match 3.0.post0, but should match 3.2.post0).
+ if not spec.is_postrelease and prospective.is_postrelease:
+ if Version(prospective.base_version) == Version(spec.base_version):
+ return False
+
+ # Ensure that we do not allow a local version of the version mentioned
+ # in the specifier, which is technically greater than, to match.
+ if prospective.local is not None:
+ if Version(prospective.base_version) == Version(spec.base_version):
+ return False
+
+ # If we've gotten to here, it means that prospective version is both
+ # greater than the spec version *and* it's not a pre-release of the
+ # same version in the spec.
+ return True
+
+ def _compare_arbitrary(self, prospective, spec):
+ # type: (Version, str) -> bool
+ return str(prospective).lower() == str(spec).lower()
+
+ @property
+ def prereleases(self):
+ # type: () -> bool
+
+ # If there is an explicit prereleases set for this, then we'll just
+ # blindly use that.
+ if self._prereleases is not None:
+ return self._prereleases
+
+ # Look at all of our specifiers and determine if they are inclusive
+ # operators, and if they are if they are including an explicit
+ # prerelease.
+ operator, version = self._spec
+ if operator in ["==", ">=", "<=", "~=", "==="]:
+ # The == specifier can include a trailing .*, if it does we
+ # want to remove before parsing.
+ if operator == "==" and version.endswith(".*"):
+ version = version[:-2]
+
+ # Parse the version, and if it is a pre-release than this
+ # specifier allows pre-releases.
+ if parse(version).is_prerelease:
+ return True
+
+ return False
+
+ @prereleases.setter
+ def prereleases(self, value):
+ # type: (bool) -> None
+ self._prereleases = value
+
+
+_prefix_regex = re.compile(r"^([0-9]+)((?:a|b|c|rc)[0-9]+)$")
+
+
+def _version_split(version):
+ # type: (str) -> List[str]
+ result = [] # type: List[str]
+ for item in version.split("."):
+ match = _prefix_regex.search(item)
+ if match:
+ result.extend(match.groups())
+ else:
+ result.append(item)
+ return result
+
+
+def _pad_version(left, right):
+ # type: (List[str], List[str]) -> Tuple[List[str], List[str]]
+ left_split, right_split = [], []
+
+ # Get the release segment of our versions
+ left_split.append(list(itertools.takewhile(lambda x: x.isdigit(), left)))
+ right_split.append(list(itertools.takewhile(lambda x: x.isdigit(), right)))
+
+ # Get the rest of our versions
+ left_split.append(left[len(left_split[0]) :])
+ right_split.append(right[len(right_split[0]) :])
+
+ # Insert our padding
+ left_split.insert(1, ["0"] * max(0, len(right_split[0]) - len(left_split[0])))
+ right_split.insert(1, ["0"] * max(0, len(left_split[0]) - len(right_split[0])))
+
+ return (list(itertools.chain(*left_split)), list(itertools.chain(*right_split)))
+
+
+class SpecifierSet(BaseSpecifier):
+ def __init__(self, specifiers="", prereleases=None):
+ # type: (str, Optional[bool]) -> None
+
+ # Split on , to break each individual specifier into it's own item, and
+ # strip each item to remove leading/trailing whitespace.
+ split_specifiers = [s.strip() for s in specifiers.split(",") if s.strip()]
+
+ # Parsed each individual specifier, attempting first to make it a
+ # Specifier and falling back to a LegacySpecifier.
+ parsed = set()
+ for specifier in split_specifiers:
+ try:
+ parsed.add(Specifier(specifier))
+ except InvalidSpecifier:
+ parsed.add(LegacySpecifier(specifier))
+
+ # Turn our parsed specifiers into a frozen set and save them for later.
+ self._specs = frozenset(parsed)
+
+ # Store our prereleases value so we can use it later to determine if
+ # we accept prereleases or not.
+ self._prereleases = prereleases
+
+ def __repr__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ pre = (
+ ", prereleases={0!r}".format(self.prereleases)
+ if self._prereleases is not None
+ else ""
+ )
+
+ return "<SpecifierSet({0!r}{1})>".format(str(self), pre)
+
+ def __str__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return ",".join(sorted(str(s) for s in self._specs))
+
+ def __hash__(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ return hash(self._specs)
+
+ def __and__(self, other):
+ # type: (Union[SpecifierSet, str]) -> SpecifierSet
+ if isinstance(other, string_types):
+ other = SpecifierSet(other)
+ elif not isinstance(other, SpecifierSet):
+ return NotImplemented
+
+ specifier = SpecifierSet()
+ specifier._specs = frozenset(self._specs | other._specs)
+
+ if self._prereleases is None and other._prereleases is not None:
+ specifier._prereleases = other._prereleases
+ elif self._prereleases is not None and other._prereleases is None:
+ specifier._prereleases = self._prereleases
+ elif self._prereleases == other._prereleases:
+ specifier._prereleases = self._prereleases
+ else:
+ raise ValueError(
+ "Cannot combine SpecifierSets with True and False prerelease "
+ "overrides."
+ )
+
+ return specifier
+
+ def __eq__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ if isinstance(other, (string_types, _IndividualSpecifier)):
+ other = SpecifierSet(str(other))
+ elif not isinstance(other, SpecifierSet):
+ return NotImplemented
+
+ return self._specs == other._specs
+
+ def __ne__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ if isinstance(other, (string_types, _IndividualSpecifier)):
+ other = SpecifierSet(str(other))
+ elif not isinstance(other, SpecifierSet):
+ return NotImplemented
+
+ return self._specs != other._specs
+
+ def __len__(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ return len(self._specs)
+
+ def __iter__(self):
+ # type: () -> Iterator[FrozenSet[_IndividualSpecifier]]
+ return iter(self._specs)
+
+ @property
+ def prereleases(self):
+ # type: () -> Optional[bool]
+
+ # If we have been given an explicit prerelease modifier, then we'll
+ # pass that through here.
+ if self._prereleases is not None:
+ return self._prereleases
+
+ # If we don't have any specifiers, and we don't have a forced value,
+ # then we'll just return None since we don't know if this should have
+ # pre-releases or not.
+ if not self._specs:
+ return None
+
+ # Otherwise we'll see if any of the given specifiers accept
+ # prereleases, if any of them do we'll return True, otherwise False.
+ return any(s.prereleases for s in self._specs)
+
+ @prereleases.setter
+ def prereleases(self, value):
+ # type: (bool) -> None
+ self._prereleases = value
+
+ def __contains__(self, item):
+ # type: (Union[ParsedVersion, str]) -> bool
+ return self.contains(item)
+
+ def contains(self, item, prereleases=None):
+ # type: (Union[ParsedVersion, str], Optional[bool]) -> bool
+
+ # Ensure that our item is a Version or LegacyVersion instance.
+ if not isinstance(item, (LegacyVersion, Version)):
+ item = parse(item)
+
+ # Determine if we're forcing a prerelease or not, if we're not forcing
+ # one for this particular filter call, then we'll use whatever the
+ # SpecifierSet thinks for whether or not we should support prereleases.
+ if prereleases is None:
+ prereleases = self.prereleases
+
+ # We can determine if we're going to allow pre-releases by looking to
+ # see if any of the underlying items supports them. If none of them do
+ # and this item is a pre-release then we do not allow it and we can
+ # short circuit that here.
+ # Note: This means that 1.0.dev1 would not be contained in something
+ # like >=1.0.devabc however it would be in >=1.0.debabc,>0.0.dev0
+ if not prereleases and item.is_prerelease:
+ return False
+
+ # We simply dispatch to the underlying specs here to make sure that the
+ # given version is contained within all of them.
+ # Note: This use of all() here means that an empty set of specifiers
+ # will always return True, this is an explicit design decision.
+ return all(s.contains(item, prereleases=prereleases) for s in self._specs)
+
+ def filter(
+ self,
+ iterable, # type: Iterable[Union[ParsedVersion, str]]
+ prereleases=None, # type: Optional[bool]
+ ):
+ # type: (...) -> Iterable[Union[ParsedVersion, str]]
+
+ # Determine if we're forcing a prerelease or not, if we're not forcing
+ # one for this particular filter call, then we'll use whatever the
+ # SpecifierSet thinks for whether or not we should support prereleases.
+ if prereleases is None:
+ prereleases = self.prereleases
+
+ # If we have any specifiers, then we want to wrap our iterable in the
+ # filter method for each one, this will act as a logical AND amongst
+ # each specifier.
+ if self._specs:
+ for spec in self._specs:
+ iterable = spec.filter(iterable, prereleases=bool(prereleases))
+ return iterable
+ # If we do not have any specifiers, then we need to have a rough filter
+ # which will filter out any pre-releases, unless there are no final
+ # releases, and which will filter out LegacyVersion in general.
+ else:
+ filtered = [] # type: List[Union[ParsedVersion, str]]
+ found_prereleases = [] # type: List[Union[ParsedVersion, str]]
+
+ for item in iterable:
+ # Ensure that we some kind of Version class for this item.
+ if not isinstance(item, (LegacyVersion, Version)):
+ parsed_version = parse(item)
+ else:
+ parsed_version = item
+
+ # Filter out any item which is parsed as a LegacyVersion
+ if isinstance(parsed_version, LegacyVersion):
+ continue
+
+ # Store any item which is a pre-release for later unless we've
+ # already found a final version or we are accepting prereleases
+ if parsed_version.is_prerelease and not prereleases:
+ if not filtered:
+ found_prereleases.append(item)
+ else:
+ filtered.append(item)
+
+ # If we've found no items except for pre-releases, then we'll go
+ # ahead and use the pre-releases
+ if not filtered and found_prereleases and prereleases is None:
+ return found_prereleases
+
+ return filtered
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/tags.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/tags.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..9064910b8b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/tags.py
@@ -0,0 +1,751 @@
+# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
+# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
+# for complete details.
+
+from __future__ import absolute_import
+
+import distutils.util
+
+try:
+ from importlib.machinery import EXTENSION_SUFFIXES
+except ImportError: # pragma: no cover
+ import imp
+
+ EXTENSION_SUFFIXES = [x[0] for x in imp.get_suffixes()]
+ del imp
+import logging
+import os
+import platform
+import re
+import struct
+import sys
+import sysconfig
+import warnings
+
+from ._typing import TYPE_CHECKING, cast
+
+if TYPE_CHECKING: # pragma: no cover
+ from typing import (
+ Dict,
+ FrozenSet,
+ IO,
+ Iterable,
+ Iterator,
+ List,
+ Optional,
+ Sequence,
+ Tuple,
+ Union,
+ )
+
+ PythonVersion = Sequence[int]
+ MacVersion = Tuple[int, int]
+ GlibcVersion = Tuple[int, int]
+
+
+logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
+
+INTERPRETER_SHORT_NAMES = {
+ "python": "py", # Generic.
+ "cpython": "cp",
+ "pypy": "pp",
+ "ironpython": "ip",
+ "jython": "jy",
+} # type: Dict[str, str]
+
+
+_32_BIT_INTERPRETER = sys.maxsize <= 2 ** 32
+
+
+class Tag(object):
+ """
+ A representation of the tag triple for a wheel.
+
+ Instances are considered immutable and thus are hashable. Equality checking
+ is also supported.
+ """
+
+ __slots__ = ["_interpreter", "_abi", "_platform"]
+
+ def __init__(self, interpreter, abi, platform):
+ # type: (str, str, str) -> None
+ self._interpreter = interpreter.lower()
+ self._abi = abi.lower()
+ self._platform = platform.lower()
+
+ @property
+ def interpreter(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return self._interpreter
+
+ @property
+ def abi(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return self._abi
+
+ @property
+ def platform(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return self._platform
+
+ def __eq__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ if not isinstance(other, Tag):
+ return NotImplemented
+
+ return (
+ (self.platform == other.platform)
+ and (self.abi == other.abi)
+ and (self.interpreter == other.interpreter)
+ )
+
+ def __hash__(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ return hash((self._interpreter, self._abi, self._platform))
+
+ def __str__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return "{}-{}-{}".format(self._interpreter, self._abi, self._platform)
+
+ def __repr__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return "<{self} @ {self_id}>".format(self=self, self_id=id(self))
+
+
+def parse_tag(tag):
+ # type: (str) -> FrozenSet[Tag]
+ """
+ Parses the provided tag (e.g. `py3-none-any`) into a frozenset of Tag instances.
+
+ Returning a set is required due to the possibility that the tag is a
+ compressed tag set.
+ """
+ tags = set()
+ interpreters, abis, platforms = tag.split("-")
+ for interpreter in interpreters.split("."):
+ for abi in abis.split("."):
+ for platform_ in platforms.split("."):
+ tags.add(Tag(interpreter, abi, platform_))
+ return frozenset(tags)
+
+
+def _warn_keyword_parameter(func_name, kwargs):
+ # type: (str, Dict[str, bool]) -> bool
+ """
+ Backwards-compatibility with Python 2.7 to allow treating 'warn' as keyword-only.
+ """
+ if not kwargs:
+ return False
+ elif len(kwargs) > 1 or "warn" not in kwargs:
+ kwargs.pop("warn", None)
+ arg = next(iter(kwargs.keys()))
+ raise TypeError(
+ "{}() got an unexpected keyword argument {!r}".format(func_name, arg)
+ )
+ return kwargs["warn"]
+
+
+def _get_config_var(name, warn=False):
+ # type: (str, bool) -> Union[int, str, None]
+ value = sysconfig.get_config_var(name)
+ if value is None and warn:
+ logger.debug(
+ "Config variable '%s' is unset, Python ABI tag may be incorrect", name
+ )
+ return value
+
+
+def _normalize_string(string):
+ # type: (str) -> str
+ return string.replace(".", "_").replace("-", "_")
+
+
+def _abi3_applies(python_version):
+ # type: (PythonVersion) -> bool
+ """
+ Determine if the Python version supports abi3.
+
+ PEP 384 was first implemented in Python 3.2.
+ """
+ return len(python_version) > 1 and tuple(python_version) >= (3, 2)
+
+
+def _cpython_abis(py_version, warn=False):
+ # type: (PythonVersion, bool) -> List[str]
+ py_version = tuple(py_version) # To allow for version comparison.
+ abis = []
+ version = _version_nodot(py_version[:2])
+ debug = pymalloc = ucs4 = ""
+ with_debug = _get_config_var("Py_DEBUG", warn)
+ has_refcount = hasattr(sys, "gettotalrefcount")
+ # Windows doesn't set Py_DEBUG, so checking for support of debug-compiled
+ # extension modules is the best option.
+ # https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues/3383#issuecomment-173267692
+ has_ext = "_d.pyd" in EXTENSION_SUFFIXES
+ if with_debug or (with_debug is None and (has_refcount or has_ext)):
+ debug = "d"
+ if py_version < (3, 8):
+ with_pymalloc = _get_config_var("WITH_PYMALLOC", warn)
+ if with_pymalloc or with_pymalloc is None:
+ pymalloc = "m"
+ if py_version < (3, 3):
+ unicode_size = _get_config_var("Py_UNICODE_SIZE", warn)
+ if unicode_size == 4 or (
+ unicode_size is None and sys.maxunicode == 0x10FFFF
+ ):
+ ucs4 = "u"
+ elif debug:
+ # Debug builds can also load "normal" extension modules.
+ # We can also assume no UCS-4 or pymalloc requirement.
+ abis.append("cp{version}".format(version=version))
+ abis.insert(
+ 0,
+ "cp{version}{debug}{pymalloc}{ucs4}".format(
+ version=version, debug=debug, pymalloc=pymalloc, ucs4=ucs4
+ ),
+ )
+ return abis
+
+
+def cpython_tags(
+ python_version=None, # type: Optional[PythonVersion]
+ abis=None, # type: Optional[Iterable[str]]
+ platforms=None, # type: Optional[Iterable[str]]
+ **kwargs # type: bool
+):
+ # type: (...) -> Iterator[Tag]
+ """
+ Yields the tags for a CPython interpreter.
+
+ The tags consist of:
+ - cp<python_version>-<abi>-<platform>
+ - cp<python_version>-abi3-<platform>
+ - cp<python_version>-none-<platform>
+ - cp<less than python_version>-abi3-<platform> # Older Python versions down to 3.2.
+
+ If python_version only specifies a major version then user-provided ABIs and
+ the 'none' ABItag will be used.
+
+ If 'abi3' or 'none' are specified in 'abis' then they will be yielded at
+ their normal position and not at the beginning.
+ """
+ warn = _warn_keyword_parameter("cpython_tags", kwargs)
+ if not python_version:
+ python_version = sys.version_info[:2]
+
+ interpreter = "cp{}".format(_version_nodot(python_version[:2]))
+
+ if abis is None:
+ if len(python_version) > 1:
+ abis = _cpython_abis(python_version, warn)
+ else:
+ abis = []
+ abis = list(abis)
+ # 'abi3' and 'none' are explicitly handled later.
+ for explicit_abi in ("abi3", "none"):
+ try:
+ abis.remove(explicit_abi)
+ except ValueError:
+ pass
+
+ platforms = list(platforms or _platform_tags())
+ for abi in abis:
+ for platform_ in platforms:
+ yield Tag(interpreter, abi, platform_)
+ if _abi3_applies(python_version):
+ for tag in (Tag(interpreter, "abi3", platform_) for platform_ in platforms):
+ yield tag
+ for tag in (Tag(interpreter, "none", platform_) for platform_ in platforms):
+ yield tag
+
+ if _abi3_applies(python_version):
+ for minor_version in range(python_version[1] - 1, 1, -1):
+ for platform_ in platforms:
+ interpreter = "cp{version}".format(
+ version=_version_nodot((python_version[0], minor_version))
+ )
+ yield Tag(interpreter, "abi3", platform_)
+
+
+def _generic_abi():
+ # type: () -> Iterator[str]
+ abi = sysconfig.get_config_var("SOABI")
+ if abi:
+ yield _normalize_string(abi)
+
+
+def generic_tags(
+ interpreter=None, # type: Optional[str]
+ abis=None, # type: Optional[Iterable[str]]
+ platforms=None, # type: Optional[Iterable[str]]
+ **kwargs # type: bool
+):
+ # type: (...) -> Iterator[Tag]
+ """
+ Yields the tags for a generic interpreter.
+
+ The tags consist of:
+ - <interpreter>-<abi>-<platform>
+
+ The "none" ABI will be added if it was not explicitly provided.
+ """
+ warn = _warn_keyword_parameter("generic_tags", kwargs)
+ if not interpreter:
+ interp_name = interpreter_name()
+ interp_version = interpreter_version(warn=warn)
+ interpreter = "".join([interp_name, interp_version])
+ if abis is None:
+ abis = _generic_abi()
+ platforms = list(platforms or _platform_tags())
+ abis = list(abis)
+ if "none" not in abis:
+ abis.append("none")
+ for abi in abis:
+ for platform_ in platforms:
+ yield Tag(interpreter, abi, platform_)
+
+
+def _py_interpreter_range(py_version):
+ # type: (PythonVersion) -> Iterator[str]
+ """
+ Yields Python versions in descending order.
+
+ After the latest version, the major-only version will be yielded, and then
+ all previous versions of that major version.
+ """
+ if len(py_version) > 1:
+ yield "py{version}".format(version=_version_nodot(py_version[:2]))
+ yield "py{major}".format(major=py_version[0])
+ if len(py_version) > 1:
+ for minor in range(py_version[1] - 1, -1, -1):
+ yield "py{version}".format(version=_version_nodot((py_version[0], minor)))
+
+
+def compatible_tags(
+ python_version=None, # type: Optional[PythonVersion]
+ interpreter=None, # type: Optional[str]
+ platforms=None, # type: Optional[Iterable[str]]
+):
+ # type: (...) -> Iterator[Tag]
+ """
+ Yields the sequence of tags that are compatible with a specific version of Python.
+
+ The tags consist of:
+ - py*-none-<platform>
+ - <interpreter>-none-any # ... if `interpreter` is provided.
+ - py*-none-any
+ """
+ if not python_version:
+ python_version = sys.version_info[:2]
+ platforms = list(platforms or _platform_tags())
+ for version in _py_interpreter_range(python_version):
+ for platform_ in platforms:
+ yield Tag(version, "none", platform_)
+ if interpreter:
+ yield Tag(interpreter, "none", "any")
+ for version in _py_interpreter_range(python_version):
+ yield Tag(version, "none", "any")
+
+
+def _mac_arch(arch, is_32bit=_32_BIT_INTERPRETER):
+ # type: (str, bool) -> str
+ if not is_32bit:
+ return arch
+
+ if arch.startswith("ppc"):
+ return "ppc"
+
+ return "i386"
+
+
+def _mac_binary_formats(version, cpu_arch):
+ # type: (MacVersion, str) -> List[str]
+ formats = [cpu_arch]
+ if cpu_arch == "x86_64":
+ if version < (10, 4):
+ return []
+ formats.extend(["intel", "fat64", "fat32"])
+
+ elif cpu_arch == "i386":
+ if version < (10, 4):
+ return []
+ formats.extend(["intel", "fat32", "fat"])
+
+ elif cpu_arch == "ppc64":
+ # TODO: Need to care about 32-bit PPC for ppc64 through 10.2?
+ if version > (10, 5) or version < (10, 4):
+ return []
+ formats.append("fat64")
+
+ elif cpu_arch == "ppc":
+ if version > (10, 6):
+ return []
+ formats.extend(["fat32", "fat"])
+
+ formats.append("universal")
+ return formats
+
+
+def mac_platforms(version=None, arch=None):
+ # type: (Optional[MacVersion], Optional[str]) -> Iterator[str]
+ """
+ Yields the platform tags for a macOS system.
+
+ The `version` parameter is a two-item tuple specifying the macOS version to
+ generate platform tags for. The `arch` parameter is the CPU architecture to
+ generate platform tags for. Both parameters default to the appropriate value
+ for the current system.
+ """
+ version_str, _, cpu_arch = platform.mac_ver() # type: ignore
+ if version is None:
+ version = cast("MacVersion", tuple(map(int, version_str.split(".")[:2])))
+ else:
+ version = version
+ if arch is None:
+ arch = _mac_arch(cpu_arch)
+ else:
+ arch = arch
+ for minor_version in range(version[1], -1, -1):
+ compat_version = version[0], minor_version
+ binary_formats = _mac_binary_formats(compat_version, arch)
+ for binary_format in binary_formats:
+ yield "macosx_{major}_{minor}_{binary_format}".format(
+ major=compat_version[0],
+ minor=compat_version[1],
+ binary_format=binary_format,
+ )
+
+
+# From PEP 513.
+def _is_manylinux_compatible(name, glibc_version):
+ # type: (str, GlibcVersion) -> bool
+ # Check for presence of _manylinux module.
+ try:
+ import _manylinux # noqa
+
+ return bool(getattr(_manylinux, name + "_compatible"))
+ except (ImportError, AttributeError):
+ # Fall through to heuristic check below.
+ pass
+
+ return _have_compatible_glibc(*glibc_version)
+
+
+def _glibc_version_string():
+ # type: () -> Optional[str]
+ # Returns glibc version string, or None if not using glibc.
+ return _glibc_version_string_confstr() or _glibc_version_string_ctypes()
+
+
+def _glibc_version_string_confstr():
+ # type: () -> Optional[str]
+ """
+ Primary implementation of glibc_version_string using os.confstr.
+ """
+ # os.confstr is quite a bit faster than ctypes.DLL. It's also less likely
+ # to be broken or missing. This strategy is used in the standard library
+ # platform module.
+ # https://github.com/python/cpython/blob/fcf1d003bf4f0100c9d0921ff3d70e1127ca1b71/Lib/platform.py#L175-L183
+ try:
+ # os.confstr("CS_GNU_LIBC_VERSION") returns a string like "glibc 2.17".
+ version_string = os.confstr( # type: ignore[attr-defined] # noqa: F821
+ "CS_GNU_LIBC_VERSION"
+ )
+ assert version_string is not None
+ _, version = version_string.split() # type: Tuple[str, str]
+ except (AssertionError, AttributeError, OSError, ValueError):
+ # os.confstr() or CS_GNU_LIBC_VERSION not available (or a bad value)...
+ return None
+ return version
+
+
+def _glibc_version_string_ctypes():
+ # type: () -> Optional[str]
+ """
+ Fallback implementation of glibc_version_string using ctypes.
+ """
+ try:
+ import ctypes
+ except ImportError:
+ return None
+
+ # ctypes.CDLL(None) internally calls dlopen(NULL), and as the dlopen
+ # manpage says, "If filename is NULL, then the returned handle is for the
+ # main program". This way we can let the linker do the work to figure out
+ # which libc our process is actually using.
+ #
+ # Note: typeshed is wrong here so we are ignoring this line.
+ process_namespace = ctypes.CDLL(None) # type: ignore
+ try:
+ gnu_get_libc_version = process_namespace.gnu_get_libc_version
+ except AttributeError:
+ # Symbol doesn't exist -> therefore, we are not linked to
+ # glibc.
+ return None
+
+ # Call gnu_get_libc_version, which returns a string like "2.5"
+ gnu_get_libc_version.restype = ctypes.c_char_p
+ version_str = gnu_get_libc_version() # type: str
+ # py2 / py3 compatibility:
+ if not isinstance(version_str, str):
+ version_str = version_str.decode("ascii")
+
+ return version_str
+
+
+# Separated out from have_compatible_glibc for easier unit testing.
+def _check_glibc_version(version_str, required_major, minimum_minor):
+ # type: (str, int, int) -> bool
+ # Parse string and check against requested version.
+ #
+ # We use a regexp instead of str.split because we want to discard any
+ # random junk that might come after the minor version -- this might happen
+ # in patched/forked versions of glibc (e.g. Linaro's version of glibc
+ # uses version strings like "2.20-2014.11"). See gh-3588.
+ m = re.match(r"(?P<major>[0-9]+)\.(?P<minor>[0-9]+)", version_str)
+ if not m:
+ warnings.warn(
+ "Expected glibc version with 2 components major.minor,"
+ " got: %s" % version_str,
+ RuntimeWarning,
+ )
+ return False
+ return (
+ int(m.group("major")) == required_major
+ and int(m.group("minor")) >= minimum_minor
+ )
+
+
+def _have_compatible_glibc(required_major, minimum_minor):
+ # type: (int, int) -> bool
+ version_str = _glibc_version_string()
+ if version_str is None:
+ return False
+ return _check_glibc_version(version_str, required_major, minimum_minor)
+
+
+# Python does not provide platform information at sufficient granularity to
+# identify the architecture of the running executable in some cases, so we
+# determine it dynamically by reading the information from the running
+# process. This only applies on Linux, which uses the ELF format.
+class _ELFFileHeader(object):
+ # https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Executable_and_Linkable_Format#File_header
+ class _InvalidELFFileHeader(ValueError):
+ """
+ An invalid ELF file header was found.
+ """
+
+ ELF_MAGIC_NUMBER = 0x7F454C46
+ ELFCLASS32 = 1
+ ELFCLASS64 = 2
+ ELFDATA2LSB = 1
+ ELFDATA2MSB = 2
+ EM_386 = 3
+ EM_S390 = 22
+ EM_ARM = 40
+ EM_X86_64 = 62
+ EF_ARM_ABIMASK = 0xFF000000
+ EF_ARM_ABI_VER5 = 0x05000000
+ EF_ARM_ABI_FLOAT_HARD = 0x00000400
+
+ def __init__(self, file):
+ # type: (IO[bytes]) -> None
+ def unpack(fmt):
+ # type: (str) -> int
+ try:
+ (result,) = struct.unpack(
+ fmt, file.read(struct.calcsize(fmt))
+ ) # type: (int, )
+ except struct.error:
+ raise _ELFFileHeader._InvalidELFFileHeader()
+ return result
+
+ self.e_ident_magic = unpack(">I")
+ if self.e_ident_magic != self.ELF_MAGIC_NUMBER:
+ raise _ELFFileHeader._InvalidELFFileHeader()
+ self.e_ident_class = unpack("B")
+ if self.e_ident_class not in {self.ELFCLASS32, self.ELFCLASS64}:
+ raise _ELFFileHeader._InvalidELFFileHeader()
+ self.e_ident_data = unpack("B")
+ if self.e_ident_data not in {self.ELFDATA2LSB, self.ELFDATA2MSB}:
+ raise _ELFFileHeader._InvalidELFFileHeader()
+ self.e_ident_version = unpack("B")
+ self.e_ident_osabi = unpack("B")
+ self.e_ident_abiversion = unpack("B")
+ self.e_ident_pad = file.read(7)
+ format_h = "<H" if self.e_ident_data == self.ELFDATA2LSB else ">H"
+ format_i = "<I" if self.e_ident_data == self.ELFDATA2LSB else ">I"
+ format_q = "<Q" if self.e_ident_data == self.ELFDATA2LSB else ">Q"
+ format_p = format_i if self.e_ident_class == self.ELFCLASS32 else format_q
+ self.e_type = unpack(format_h)
+ self.e_machine = unpack(format_h)
+ self.e_version = unpack(format_i)
+ self.e_entry = unpack(format_p)
+ self.e_phoff = unpack(format_p)
+ self.e_shoff = unpack(format_p)
+ self.e_flags = unpack(format_i)
+ self.e_ehsize = unpack(format_h)
+ self.e_phentsize = unpack(format_h)
+ self.e_phnum = unpack(format_h)
+ self.e_shentsize = unpack(format_h)
+ self.e_shnum = unpack(format_h)
+ self.e_shstrndx = unpack(format_h)
+
+
+def _get_elf_header():
+ # type: () -> Optional[_ELFFileHeader]
+ try:
+ with open(sys.executable, "rb") as f:
+ elf_header = _ELFFileHeader(f)
+ except (IOError, OSError, TypeError, _ELFFileHeader._InvalidELFFileHeader):
+ return None
+ return elf_header
+
+
+def _is_linux_armhf():
+ # type: () -> bool
+ # hard-float ABI can be detected from the ELF header of the running
+ # process
+ # https://static.docs.arm.com/ihi0044/g/aaelf32.pdf
+ elf_header = _get_elf_header()
+ if elf_header is None:
+ return False
+ result = elf_header.e_ident_class == elf_header.ELFCLASS32
+ result &= elf_header.e_ident_data == elf_header.ELFDATA2LSB
+ result &= elf_header.e_machine == elf_header.EM_ARM
+ result &= (
+ elf_header.e_flags & elf_header.EF_ARM_ABIMASK
+ ) == elf_header.EF_ARM_ABI_VER5
+ result &= (
+ elf_header.e_flags & elf_header.EF_ARM_ABI_FLOAT_HARD
+ ) == elf_header.EF_ARM_ABI_FLOAT_HARD
+ return result
+
+
+def _is_linux_i686():
+ # type: () -> bool
+ elf_header = _get_elf_header()
+ if elf_header is None:
+ return False
+ result = elf_header.e_ident_class == elf_header.ELFCLASS32
+ result &= elf_header.e_ident_data == elf_header.ELFDATA2LSB
+ result &= elf_header.e_machine == elf_header.EM_386
+ return result
+
+
+def _have_compatible_manylinux_abi(arch):
+ # type: (str) -> bool
+ if arch == "armv7l":
+ return _is_linux_armhf()
+ if arch == "i686":
+ return _is_linux_i686()
+ return True
+
+
+def _linux_platforms(is_32bit=_32_BIT_INTERPRETER):
+ # type: (bool) -> Iterator[str]
+ linux = _normalize_string(distutils.util.get_platform())
+ if is_32bit:
+ if linux == "linux_x86_64":
+ linux = "linux_i686"
+ elif linux == "linux_aarch64":
+ linux = "linux_armv7l"
+ manylinux_support = []
+ _, arch = linux.split("_", 1)
+ if _have_compatible_manylinux_abi(arch):
+ if arch in {"x86_64", "i686", "aarch64", "armv7l", "ppc64", "ppc64le", "s390x"}:
+ manylinux_support.append(
+ ("manylinux2014", (2, 17))
+ ) # CentOS 7 w/ glibc 2.17 (PEP 599)
+ if arch in {"x86_64", "i686"}:
+ manylinux_support.append(
+ ("manylinux2010", (2, 12))
+ ) # CentOS 6 w/ glibc 2.12 (PEP 571)
+ manylinux_support.append(
+ ("manylinux1", (2, 5))
+ ) # CentOS 5 w/ glibc 2.5 (PEP 513)
+ manylinux_support_iter = iter(manylinux_support)
+ for name, glibc_version in manylinux_support_iter:
+ if _is_manylinux_compatible(name, glibc_version):
+ yield linux.replace("linux", name)
+ break
+ # Support for a later manylinux implies support for an earlier version.
+ for name, _ in manylinux_support_iter:
+ yield linux.replace("linux", name)
+ yield linux
+
+
+def _generic_platforms():
+ # type: () -> Iterator[str]
+ yield _normalize_string(distutils.util.get_platform())
+
+
+def _platform_tags():
+ # type: () -> Iterator[str]
+ """
+ Provides the platform tags for this installation.
+ """
+ if platform.system() == "Darwin":
+ return mac_platforms()
+ elif platform.system() == "Linux":
+ return _linux_platforms()
+ else:
+ return _generic_platforms()
+
+
+def interpreter_name():
+ # type: () -> str
+ """
+ Returns the name of the running interpreter.
+ """
+ try:
+ name = sys.implementation.name # type: ignore
+ except AttributeError: # pragma: no cover
+ # Python 2.7 compatibility.
+ name = platform.python_implementation().lower()
+ return INTERPRETER_SHORT_NAMES.get(name) or name
+
+
+def interpreter_version(**kwargs):
+ # type: (bool) -> str
+ """
+ Returns the version of the running interpreter.
+ """
+ warn = _warn_keyword_parameter("interpreter_version", kwargs)
+ version = _get_config_var("py_version_nodot", warn=warn)
+ if version:
+ version = str(version)
+ else:
+ version = _version_nodot(sys.version_info[:2])
+ return version
+
+
+def _version_nodot(version):
+ # type: (PythonVersion) -> str
+ if any(v >= 10 for v in version):
+ sep = "_"
+ else:
+ sep = ""
+ return sep.join(map(str, version))
+
+
+def sys_tags(**kwargs):
+ # type: (bool) -> Iterator[Tag]
+ """
+ Returns the sequence of tag triples for the running interpreter.
+
+ The order of the sequence corresponds to priority order for the
+ interpreter, from most to least important.
+ """
+ warn = _warn_keyword_parameter("sys_tags", kwargs)
+
+ interp_name = interpreter_name()
+ if interp_name == "cp":
+ for tag in cpython_tags(warn=warn):
+ yield tag
+ else:
+ for tag in generic_tags():
+ yield tag
+
+ for tag in compatible_tags():
+ yield tag
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/utils.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/utils.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..19579c1a0f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/utils.py
@@ -0,0 +1,65 @@
+# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
+# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
+# for complete details.
+from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
+
+import re
+
+from ._typing import TYPE_CHECKING, cast
+from .version import InvalidVersion, Version
+
+if TYPE_CHECKING: # pragma: no cover
+ from typing import NewType, Union
+
+ NormalizedName = NewType("NormalizedName", str)
+
+_canonicalize_regex = re.compile(r"[-_.]+")
+
+
+def canonicalize_name(name):
+ # type: (str) -> NormalizedName
+ # This is taken from PEP 503.
+ value = _canonicalize_regex.sub("-", name).lower()
+ return cast("NormalizedName", value)
+
+
+def canonicalize_version(_version):
+ # type: (str) -> Union[Version, str]
+ """
+ This is very similar to Version.__str__, but has one subtle difference
+ with the way it handles the release segment.
+ """
+
+ try:
+ version = Version(_version)
+ except InvalidVersion:
+ # Legacy versions cannot be normalized
+ return _version
+
+ parts = []
+
+ # Epoch
+ if version.epoch != 0:
+ parts.append("{0}!".format(version.epoch))
+
+ # Release segment
+ # NB: This strips trailing '.0's to normalize
+ parts.append(re.sub(r"(\.0)+$", "", ".".join(str(x) for x in version.release)))
+
+ # Pre-release
+ if version.pre is not None:
+ parts.append("".join(str(x) for x in version.pre))
+
+ # Post-release
+ if version.post is not None:
+ parts.append(".post{0}".format(version.post))
+
+ # Development release
+ if version.dev is not None:
+ parts.append(".dev{0}".format(version.dev))
+
+ # Local version segment
+ if version.local is not None:
+ parts.append("+{0}".format(version.local))
+
+ return "".join(parts)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/version.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/version.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..00371e86a8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/packaging/version.py
@@ -0,0 +1,535 @@
+# This file is dual licensed under the terms of the Apache License, Version
+# 2.0, and the BSD License. See the LICENSE file in the root of this repository
+# for complete details.
+from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
+
+import collections
+import itertools
+import re
+
+from ._structures import Infinity, NegativeInfinity
+from ._typing import TYPE_CHECKING
+
+if TYPE_CHECKING: # pragma: no cover
+ from typing import Callable, Iterator, List, Optional, SupportsInt, Tuple, Union
+
+ from ._structures import InfinityType, NegativeInfinityType
+
+ InfiniteTypes = Union[InfinityType, NegativeInfinityType]
+ PrePostDevType = Union[InfiniteTypes, Tuple[str, int]]
+ SubLocalType = Union[InfiniteTypes, int, str]
+ LocalType = Union[
+ NegativeInfinityType,
+ Tuple[
+ Union[
+ SubLocalType,
+ Tuple[SubLocalType, str],
+ Tuple[NegativeInfinityType, SubLocalType],
+ ],
+ ...,
+ ],
+ ]
+ CmpKey = Tuple[
+ int, Tuple[int, ...], PrePostDevType, PrePostDevType, PrePostDevType, LocalType
+ ]
+ LegacyCmpKey = Tuple[int, Tuple[str, ...]]
+ VersionComparisonMethod = Callable[
+ [Union[CmpKey, LegacyCmpKey], Union[CmpKey, LegacyCmpKey]], bool
+ ]
+
+__all__ = ["parse", "Version", "LegacyVersion", "InvalidVersion", "VERSION_PATTERN"]
+
+
+_Version = collections.namedtuple(
+ "_Version", ["epoch", "release", "dev", "pre", "post", "local"]
+)
+
+
+def parse(version):
+ # type: (str) -> Union[LegacyVersion, Version]
+ """
+ Parse the given version string and return either a :class:`Version` object
+ or a :class:`LegacyVersion` object depending on if the given version is
+ a valid PEP 440 version or a legacy version.
+ """
+ try:
+ return Version(version)
+ except InvalidVersion:
+ return LegacyVersion(version)
+
+
+class InvalidVersion(ValueError):
+ """
+ An invalid version was found, users should refer to PEP 440.
+ """
+
+
+class _BaseVersion(object):
+ _key = None # type: Union[CmpKey, LegacyCmpKey]
+
+ def __hash__(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ return hash(self._key)
+
+ def __lt__(self, other):
+ # type: (_BaseVersion) -> bool
+ return self._compare(other, lambda s, o: s < o)
+
+ def __le__(self, other):
+ # type: (_BaseVersion) -> bool
+ return self._compare(other, lambda s, o: s <= o)
+
+ def __eq__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return self._compare(other, lambda s, o: s == o)
+
+ def __ge__(self, other):
+ # type: (_BaseVersion) -> bool
+ return self._compare(other, lambda s, o: s >= o)
+
+ def __gt__(self, other):
+ # type: (_BaseVersion) -> bool
+ return self._compare(other, lambda s, o: s > o)
+
+ def __ne__(self, other):
+ # type: (object) -> bool
+ return self._compare(other, lambda s, o: s != o)
+
+ def _compare(self, other, method):
+ # type: (object, VersionComparisonMethod) -> Union[bool, NotImplemented]
+ if not isinstance(other, _BaseVersion):
+ return NotImplemented
+
+ return method(self._key, other._key)
+
+
+class LegacyVersion(_BaseVersion):
+ def __init__(self, version):
+ # type: (str) -> None
+ self._version = str(version)
+ self._key = _legacy_cmpkey(self._version)
+
+ def __str__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return self._version
+
+ def __repr__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return "<LegacyVersion({0})>".format(repr(str(self)))
+
+ @property
+ def public(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return self._version
+
+ @property
+ def base_version(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return self._version
+
+ @property
+ def epoch(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ return -1
+
+ @property
+ def release(self):
+ # type: () -> None
+ return None
+
+ @property
+ def pre(self):
+ # type: () -> None
+ return None
+
+ @property
+ def post(self):
+ # type: () -> None
+ return None
+
+ @property
+ def dev(self):
+ # type: () -> None
+ return None
+
+ @property
+ def local(self):
+ # type: () -> None
+ return None
+
+ @property
+ def is_prerelease(self):
+ # type: () -> bool
+ return False
+
+ @property
+ def is_postrelease(self):
+ # type: () -> bool
+ return False
+
+ @property
+ def is_devrelease(self):
+ # type: () -> bool
+ return False
+
+
+_legacy_version_component_re = re.compile(r"(\d+ | [a-z]+ | \.| -)", re.VERBOSE)
+
+_legacy_version_replacement_map = {
+ "pre": "c",
+ "preview": "c",
+ "-": "final-",
+ "rc": "c",
+ "dev": "@",
+}
+
+
+def _parse_version_parts(s):
+ # type: (str) -> Iterator[str]
+ for part in _legacy_version_component_re.split(s):
+ part = _legacy_version_replacement_map.get(part, part)
+
+ if not part or part == ".":
+ continue
+
+ if part[:1] in "0123456789":
+ # pad for numeric comparison
+ yield part.zfill(8)
+ else:
+ yield "*" + part
+
+ # ensure that alpha/beta/candidate are before final
+ yield "*final"
+
+
+def _legacy_cmpkey(version):
+ # type: (str) -> LegacyCmpKey
+
+ # We hardcode an epoch of -1 here. A PEP 440 version can only have a epoch
+ # greater than or equal to 0. This will effectively put the LegacyVersion,
+ # which uses the defacto standard originally implemented by setuptools,
+ # as before all PEP 440 versions.
+ epoch = -1
+
+ # This scheme is taken from pkg_resources.parse_version setuptools prior to
+ # it's adoption of the packaging library.
+ parts = [] # type: List[str]
+ for part in _parse_version_parts(version.lower()):
+ if part.startswith("*"):
+ # remove "-" before a prerelease tag
+ if part < "*final":
+ while parts and parts[-1] == "*final-":
+ parts.pop()
+
+ # remove trailing zeros from each series of numeric parts
+ while parts and parts[-1] == "00000000":
+ parts.pop()
+
+ parts.append(part)
+
+ return epoch, tuple(parts)
+
+
+# Deliberately not anchored to the start and end of the string, to make it
+# easier for 3rd party code to reuse
+VERSION_PATTERN = r"""
+ v?
+ (?:
+ (?:(?P<epoch>[0-9]+)!)? # epoch
+ (?P<release>[0-9]+(?:\.[0-9]+)*) # release segment
+ (?P<pre> # pre-release
+ [-_\.]?
+ (?P<pre_l>(a|b|c|rc|alpha|beta|pre|preview))
+ [-_\.]?
+ (?P<pre_n>[0-9]+)?
+ )?
+ (?P<post> # post release
+ (?:-(?P<post_n1>[0-9]+))
+ |
+ (?:
+ [-_\.]?
+ (?P<post_l>post|rev|r)
+ [-_\.]?
+ (?P<post_n2>[0-9]+)?
+ )
+ )?
+ (?P<dev> # dev release
+ [-_\.]?
+ (?P<dev_l>dev)
+ [-_\.]?
+ (?P<dev_n>[0-9]+)?
+ )?
+ )
+ (?:\+(?P<local>[a-z0-9]+(?:[-_\.][a-z0-9]+)*))? # local version
+"""
+
+
+class Version(_BaseVersion):
+
+ _regex = re.compile(r"^\s*" + VERSION_PATTERN + r"\s*$", re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE)
+
+ def __init__(self, version):
+ # type: (str) -> None
+
+ # Validate the version and parse it into pieces
+ match = self._regex.search(version)
+ if not match:
+ raise InvalidVersion("Invalid version: '{0}'".format(version))
+
+ # Store the parsed out pieces of the version
+ self._version = _Version(
+ epoch=int(match.group("epoch")) if match.group("epoch") else 0,
+ release=tuple(int(i) for i in match.group("release").split(".")),
+ pre=_parse_letter_version(match.group("pre_l"), match.group("pre_n")),
+ post=_parse_letter_version(
+ match.group("post_l"), match.group("post_n1") or match.group("post_n2")
+ ),
+ dev=_parse_letter_version(match.group("dev_l"), match.group("dev_n")),
+ local=_parse_local_version(match.group("local")),
+ )
+
+ # Generate a key which will be used for sorting
+ self._key = _cmpkey(
+ self._version.epoch,
+ self._version.release,
+ self._version.pre,
+ self._version.post,
+ self._version.dev,
+ self._version.local,
+ )
+
+ def __repr__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return "<Version({0})>".format(repr(str(self)))
+
+ def __str__(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ parts = []
+
+ # Epoch
+ if self.epoch != 0:
+ parts.append("{0}!".format(self.epoch))
+
+ # Release segment
+ parts.append(".".join(str(x) for x in self.release))
+
+ # Pre-release
+ if self.pre is not None:
+ parts.append("".join(str(x) for x in self.pre))
+
+ # Post-release
+ if self.post is not None:
+ parts.append(".post{0}".format(self.post))
+
+ # Development release
+ if self.dev is not None:
+ parts.append(".dev{0}".format(self.dev))
+
+ # Local version segment
+ if self.local is not None:
+ parts.append("+{0}".format(self.local))
+
+ return "".join(parts)
+
+ @property
+ def epoch(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ _epoch = self._version.epoch # type: int
+ return _epoch
+
+ @property
+ def release(self):
+ # type: () -> Tuple[int, ...]
+ _release = self._version.release # type: Tuple[int, ...]
+ return _release
+
+ @property
+ def pre(self):
+ # type: () -> Optional[Tuple[str, int]]
+ _pre = self._version.pre # type: Optional[Tuple[str, int]]
+ return _pre
+
+ @property
+ def post(self):
+ # type: () -> Optional[Tuple[str, int]]
+ return self._version.post[1] if self._version.post else None
+
+ @property
+ def dev(self):
+ # type: () -> Optional[Tuple[str, int]]
+ return self._version.dev[1] if self._version.dev else None
+
+ @property
+ def local(self):
+ # type: () -> Optional[str]
+ if self._version.local:
+ return ".".join(str(x) for x in self._version.local)
+ else:
+ return None
+
+ @property
+ def public(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ return str(self).split("+", 1)[0]
+
+ @property
+ def base_version(self):
+ # type: () -> str
+ parts = []
+
+ # Epoch
+ if self.epoch != 0:
+ parts.append("{0}!".format(self.epoch))
+
+ # Release segment
+ parts.append(".".join(str(x) for x in self.release))
+
+ return "".join(parts)
+
+ @property
+ def is_prerelease(self):
+ # type: () -> bool
+ return self.dev is not None or self.pre is not None
+
+ @property
+ def is_postrelease(self):
+ # type: () -> bool
+ return self.post is not None
+
+ @property
+ def is_devrelease(self):
+ # type: () -> bool
+ return self.dev is not None
+
+ @property
+ def major(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ return self.release[0] if len(self.release) >= 1 else 0
+
+ @property
+ def minor(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ return self.release[1] if len(self.release) >= 2 else 0
+
+ @property
+ def micro(self):
+ # type: () -> int
+ return self.release[2] if len(self.release) >= 3 else 0
+
+
+def _parse_letter_version(
+ letter, # type: str
+ number, # type: Union[str, bytes, SupportsInt]
+):
+ # type: (...) -> Optional[Tuple[str, int]]
+
+ if letter:
+ # We consider there to be an implicit 0 in a pre-release if there is
+ # not a numeral associated with it.
+ if number is None:
+ number = 0
+
+ # We normalize any letters to their lower case form
+ letter = letter.lower()
+
+ # We consider some words to be alternate spellings of other words and
+ # in those cases we want to normalize the spellings to our preferred
+ # spelling.
+ if letter == "alpha":
+ letter = "a"
+ elif letter == "beta":
+ letter = "b"
+ elif letter in ["c", "pre", "preview"]:
+ letter = "rc"
+ elif letter in ["rev", "r"]:
+ letter = "post"
+
+ return letter, int(number)
+ if not letter and number:
+ # We assume if we are given a number, but we are not given a letter
+ # then this is using the implicit post release syntax (e.g. 1.0-1)
+ letter = "post"
+
+ return letter, int(number)
+
+ return None
+
+
+_local_version_separators = re.compile(r"[\._-]")
+
+
+def _parse_local_version(local):
+ # type: (str) -> Optional[LocalType]
+ """
+ Takes a string like abc.1.twelve and turns it into ("abc", 1, "twelve").
+ """
+ if local is not None:
+ return tuple(
+ part.lower() if not part.isdigit() else int(part)
+ for part in _local_version_separators.split(local)
+ )
+ return None
+
+
+def _cmpkey(
+ epoch, # type: int
+ release, # type: Tuple[int, ...]
+ pre, # type: Optional[Tuple[str, int]]
+ post, # type: Optional[Tuple[str, int]]
+ dev, # type: Optional[Tuple[str, int]]
+ local, # type: Optional[Tuple[SubLocalType]]
+):
+ # type: (...) -> CmpKey
+
+ # When we compare a release version, we want to compare it with all of the
+ # trailing zeros removed. So we'll use a reverse the list, drop all the now
+ # leading zeros until we come to something non zero, then take the rest
+ # re-reverse it back into the correct order and make it a tuple and use
+ # that for our sorting key.
+ _release = tuple(
+ reversed(list(itertools.dropwhile(lambda x: x == 0, reversed(release))))
+ )
+
+ # We need to "trick" the sorting algorithm to put 1.0.dev0 before 1.0a0.
+ # We'll do this by abusing the pre segment, but we _only_ want to do this
+ # if there is not a pre or a post segment. If we have one of those then
+ # the normal sorting rules will handle this case correctly.
+ if pre is None and post is None and dev is not None:
+ _pre = NegativeInfinity # type: PrePostDevType
+ # Versions without a pre-release (except as noted above) should sort after
+ # those with one.
+ elif pre is None:
+ _pre = Infinity
+ else:
+ _pre = pre
+
+ # Versions without a post segment should sort before those with one.
+ if post is None:
+ _post = NegativeInfinity # type: PrePostDevType
+
+ else:
+ _post = post
+
+ # Versions without a development segment should sort after those with one.
+ if dev is None:
+ _dev = Infinity # type: PrePostDevType
+
+ else:
+ _dev = dev
+
+ if local is None:
+ # Versions without a local segment should sort before those with one.
+ _local = NegativeInfinity # type: LocalType
+ else:
+ # Versions with a local segment need that segment parsed to implement
+ # the sorting rules in PEP440.
+ # - Alpha numeric segments sort before numeric segments
+ # - Alpha numeric segments sort lexicographically
+ # - Numeric segments sort numerically
+ # - Shorter versions sort before longer versions when the prefixes
+ # match exactly
+ _local = tuple(
+ (i, "") if isinstance(i, int) else (NegativeInfinity, i) for i in local
+ )
+
+ return epoch, _release, _pre, _post, _dev, _local
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/pyparsing.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/pyparsing.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..cf75e1e5fc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/_vendor/pyparsing.py
@@ -0,0 +1,5742 @@
+# module pyparsing.py
+#
+# Copyright (c) 2003-2018 Paul T. McGuire
+#
+# Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
+# a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
+# "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
+# without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
+# distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
+# permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
+# the following conditions:
+#
+# The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
+# included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
+#
+# THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
+# EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
+# MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT.
+# IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY
+# CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT,
+# TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE
+# SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
+#
+
+__doc__ = \
+"""
+pyparsing module - Classes and methods to define and execute parsing grammars
+=============================================================================
+
+The pyparsing module is an alternative approach to creating and executing simple grammars,
+vs. the traditional lex/yacc approach, or the use of regular expressions. With pyparsing, you
+don't need to learn a new syntax for defining grammars or matching expressions - the parsing module
+provides a library of classes that you use to construct the grammar directly in Python.
+
+Here is a program to parse "Hello, World!" (or any greeting of the form
+C{"<salutation>, <addressee>!"}), built up using L{Word}, L{Literal}, and L{And} elements
+(L{'+'<ParserElement.__add__>} operator gives L{And} expressions, strings are auto-converted to
+L{Literal} expressions)::
+
+ from pyparsing import Word, alphas
+
+ # define grammar of a greeting
+ greet = Word(alphas) + "," + Word(alphas) + "!"
+
+ hello = "Hello, World!"
+ print (hello, "->", greet.parseString(hello))
+
+The program outputs the following::
+
+ Hello, World! -> ['Hello', ',', 'World', '!']
+
+The Python representation of the grammar is quite readable, owing to the self-explanatory
+class names, and the use of '+', '|' and '^' operators.
+
+The L{ParseResults} object returned from L{ParserElement.parseString<ParserElement.parseString>} can be accessed as a nested list, a dictionary, or an
+object with named attributes.
+
+The pyparsing module handles some of the problems that are typically vexing when writing text parsers:
+ - extra or missing whitespace (the above program will also handle "Hello,World!", "Hello , World !", etc.)
+ - quoted strings
+ - embedded comments
+
+
+Getting Started -
+-----------------
+Visit the classes L{ParserElement} and L{ParseResults} to see the base classes that most other pyparsing
+classes inherit from. Use the docstrings for examples of how to:
+ - construct literal match expressions from L{Literal} and L{CaselessLiteral} classes
+ - construct character word-group expressions using the L{Word} class
+ - see how to create repetitive expressions using L{ZeroOrMore} and L{OneOrMore} classes
+ - use L{'+'<And>}, L{'|'<MatchFirst>}, L{'^'<Or>}, and L{'&'<Each>} operators to combine simple expressions into more complex ones
+ - associate names with your parsed results using L{ParserElement.setResultsName}
+ - find some helpful expression short-cuts like L{delimitedList} and L{oneOf}
+ - find more useful common expressions in the L{pyparsing_common} namespace class
+"""
+
+__version__ = "2.2.1"
+__versionTime__ = "18 Sep 2018 00:49 UTC"
+__author__ = "Paul McGuire <ptmcg@users.sourceforge.net>"
+
+import string
+from weakref import ref as wkref
+import copy
+import sys
+import warnings
+import re
+import sre_constants
+import collections
+import pprint
+import traceback
+import types
+from datetime import datetime
+
+try:
+ from _thread import RLock
+except ImportError:
+ from threading import RLock
+
+try:
+ # Python 3
+ from collections.abc import Iterable
+ from collections.abc import MutableMapping
+except ImportError:
+ # Python 2.7
+ from collections import Iterable
+ from collections import MutableMapping
+
+try:
+ from collections import OrderedDict as _OrderedDict
+except ImportError:
+ try:
+ from ordereddict import OrderedDict as _OrderedDict
+ except ImportError:
+ _OrderedDict = None
+
+#~ sys.stderr.write( "testing pyparsing module, version %s, %s\n" % (__version__,__versionTime__ ) )
+
+__all__ = [
+'And', 'CaselessKeyword', 'CaselessLiteral', 'CharsNotIn', 'Combine', 'Dict', 'Each', 'Empty',
+'FollowedBy', 'Forward', 'GoToColumn', 'Group', 'Keyword', 'LineEnd', 'LineStart', 'Literal',
+'MatchFirst', 'NoMatch', 'NotAny', 'OneOrMore', 'OnlyOnce', 'Optional', 'Or',
+'ParseBaseException', 'ParseElementEnhance', 'ParseException', 'ParseExpression', 'ParseFatalException',
+'ParseResults', 'ParseSyntaxException', 'ParserElement', 'QuotedString', 'RecursiveGrammarException',
+'Regex', 'SkipTo', 'StringEnd', 'StringStart', 'Suppress', 'Token', 'TokenConverter',
+'White', 'Word', 'WordEnd', 'WordStart', 'ZeroOrMore',
+'alphanums', 'alphas', 'alphas8bit', 'anyCloseTag', 'anyOpenTag', 'cStyleComment', 'col',
+'commaSeparatedList', 'commonHTMLEntity', 'countedArray', 'cppStyleComment', 'dblQuotedString',
+'dblSlashComment', 'delimitedList', 'dictOf', 'downcaseTokens', 'empty', 'hexnums',
+'htmlComment', 'javaStyleComment', 'line', 'lineEnd', 'lineStart', 'lineno',
+'makeHTMLTags', 'makeXMLTags', 'matchOnlyAtCol', 'matchPreviousExpr', 'matchPreviousLiteral',
+'nestedExpr', 'nullDebugAction', 'nums', 'oneOf', 'opAssoc', 'operatorPrecedence', 'printables',
+'punc8bit', 'pythonStyleComment', 'quotedString', 'removeQuotes', 'replaceHTMLEntity',
+'replaceWith', 'restOfLine', 'sglQuotedString', 'srange', 'stringEnd',
+'stringStart', 'traceParseAction', 'unicodeString', 'upcaseTokens', 'withAttribute',
+'indentedBlock', 'originalTextFor', 'ungroup', 'infixNotation','locatedExpr', 'withClass',
+'CloseMatch', 'tokenMap', 'pyparsing_common',
+]
+
+system_version = tuple(sys.version_info)[:3]
+PY_3 = system_version[0] == 3
+if PY_3:
+ _MAX_INT = sys.maxsize
+ basestring = str
+ unichr = chr
+ _ustr = str
+
+ # build list of single arg builtins, that can be used as parse actions
+ singleArgBuiltins = [sum, len, sorted, reversed, list, tuple, set, any, all, min, max]
+
+else:
+ _MAX_INT = sys.maxint
+ range = xrange
+
+ def _ustr(obj):
+ """Drop-in replacement for str(obj) that tries to be Unicode friendly. It first tries
+ str(obj). If that fails with a UnicodeEncodeError, then it tries unicode(obj). It
+ then < returns the unicode object | encodes it with the default encoding | ... >.
+ """
+ if isinstance(obj,unicode):
+ return obj
+
+ try:
+ # If this works, then _ustr(obj) has the same behaviour as str(obj), so
+ # it won't break any existing code.
+ return str(obj)
+
+ except UnicodeEncodeError:
+ # Else encode it
+ ret = unicode(obj).encode(sys.getdefaultencoding(), 'xmlcharrefreplace')
+ xmlcharref = Regex(r'&#\d+;')
+ xmlcharref.setParseAction(lambda t: '\\u' + hex(int(t[0][2:-1]))[2:])
+ return xmlcharref.transformString(ret)
+
+ # build list of single arg builtins, tolerant of Python version, that can be used as parse actions
+ singleArgBuiltins = []
+ import __builtin__
+ for fname in "sum len sorted reversed list tuple set any all min max".split():
+ try:
+ singleArgBuiltins.append(getattr(__builtin__,fname))
+ except AttributeError:
+ continue
+
+_generatorType = type((y for y in range(1)))
+
+def _xml_escape(data):
+ """Escape &, <, >, ", ', etc. in a string of data."""
+
+ # ampersand must be replaced first
+ from_symbols = '&><"\''
+ to_symbols = ('&'+s+';' for s in "amp gt lt quot apos".split())
+ for from_,to_ in zip(from_symbols, to_symbols):
+ data = data.replace(from_, to_)
+ return data
+
+class _Constants(object):
+ pass
+
+alphas = string.ascii_uppercase + string.ascii_lowercase
+nums = "0123456789"
+hexnums = nums + "ABCDEFabcdef"
+alphanums = alphas + nums
+_bslash = chr(92)
+printables = "".join(c for c in string.printable if c not in string.whitespace)
+
+class ParseBaseException(Exception):
+ """base exception class for all parsing runtime exceptions"""
+ # Performance tuning: we construct a *lot* of these, so keep this
+ # constructor as small and fast as possible
+ def __init__( self, pstr, loc=0, msg=None, elem=None ):
+ self.loc = loc
+ if msg is None:
+ self.msg = pstr
+ self.pstr = ""
+ else:
+ self.msg = msg
+ self.pstr = pstr
+ self.parserElement = elem
+ self.args = (pstr, loc, msg)
+
+ @classmethod
+ def _from_exception(cls, pe):
+ """
+ internal factory method to simplify creating one type of ParseException
+ from another - avoids having __init__ signature conflicts among subclasses
+ """
+ return cls(pe.pstr, pe.loc, pe.msg, pe.parserElement)
+
+ def __getattr__( self, aname ):
+ """supported attributes by name are:
+ - lineno - returns the line number of the exception text
+ - col - returns the column number of the exception text
+ - line - returns the line containing the exception text
+ """
+ if( aname == "lineno" ):
+ return lineno( self.loc, self.pstr )
+ elif( aname in ("col", "column") ):
+ return col( self.loc, self.pstr )
+ elif( aname == "line" ):
+ return line( self.loc, self.pstr )
+ else:
+ raise AttributeError(aname)
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ return "%s (at char %d), (line:%d, col:%d)" % \
+ ( self.msg, self.loc, self.lineno, self.column )
+ def __repr__( self ):
+ return _ustr(self)
+ def markInputline( self, markerString = ">!<" ):
+ """Extracts the exception line from the input string, and marks
+ the location of the exception with a special symbol.
+ """
+ line_str = self.line
+ line_column = self.column - 1
+ if markerString:
+ line_str = "".join((line_str[:line_column],
+ markerString, line_str[line_column:]))
+ return line_str.strip()
+ def __dir__(self):
+ return "lineno col line".split() + dir(type(self))
+
+class ParseException(ParseBaseException):
+ """
+ Exception thrown when parse expressions don't match class;
+ supported attributes by name are:
+ - lineno - returns the line number of the exception text
+ - col - returns the column number of the exception text
+ - line - returns the line containing the exception text
+
+ Example::
+ try:
+ Word(nums).setName("integer").parseString("ABC")
+ except ParseException as pe:
+ print(pe)
+ print("column: {}".format(pe.col))
+
+ prints::
+ Expected integer (at char 0), (line:1, col:1)
+ column: 1
+ """
+ pass
+
+class ParseFatalException(ParseBaseException):
+ """user-throwable exception thrown when inconsistent parse content
+ is found; stops all parsing immediately"""
+ pass
+
+class ParseSyntaxException(ParseFatalException):
+ """just like L{ParseFatalException}, but thrown internally when an
+ L{ErrorStop<And._ErrorStop>} ('-' operator) indicates that parsing is to stop
+ immediately because an unbacktrackable syntax error has been found"""
+ pass
+
+#~ class ReparseException(ParseBaseException):
+ #~ """Experimental class - parse actions can raise this exception to cause
+ #~ pyparsing to reparse the input string:
+ #~ - with a modified input string, and/or
+ #~ - with a modified start location
+ #~ Set the values of the ReparseException in the constructor, and raise the
+ #~ exception in a parse action to cause pyparsing to use the new string/location.
+ #~ Setting the values as None causes no change to be made.
+ #~ """
+ #~ def __init_( self, newstring, restartLoc ):
+ #~ self.newParseText = newstring
+ #~ self.reparseLoc = restartLoc
+
+class RecursiveGrammarException(Exception):
+ """exception thrown by L{ParserElement.validate} if the grammar could be improperly recursive"""
+ def __init__( self, parseElementList ):
+ self.parseElementTrace = parseElementList
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ return "RecursiveGrammarException: %s" % self.parseElementTrace
+
+class _ParseResultsWithOffset(object):
+ def __init__(self,p1,p2):
+ self.tup = (p1,p2)
+ def __getitem__(self,i):
+ return self.tup[i]
+ def __repr__(self):
+ return repr(self.tup[0])
+ def setOffset(self,i):
+ self.tup = (self.tup[0],i)
+
+class ParseResults(object):
+ """
+ Structured parse results, to provide multiple means of access to the parsed data:
+ - as a list (C{len(results)})
+ - by list index (C{results[0], results[1]}, etc.)
+ - by attribute (C{results.<resultsName>} - see L{ParserElement.setResultsName})
+
+ Example::
+ integer = Word(nums)
+ date_str = (integer.setResultsName("year") + '/'
+ + integer.setResultsName("month") + '/'
+ + integer.setResultsName("day"))
+ # equivalent form:
+ # date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day")
+
+ # parseString returns a ParseResults object
+ result = date_str.parseString("1999/12/31")
+
+ def test(s, fn=repr):
+ print("%s -> %s" % (s, fn(eval(s))))
+ test("list(result)")
+ test("result[0]")
+ test("result['month']")
+ test("result.day")
+ test("'month' in result")
+ test("'minutes' in result")
+ test("result.dump()", str)
+ prints::
+ list(result) -> ['1999', '/', '12', '/', '31']
+ result[0] -> '1999'
+ result['month'] -> '12'
+ result.day -> '31'
+ 'month' in result -> True
+ 'minutes' in result -> False
+ result.dump() -> ['1999', '/', '12', '/', '31']
+ - day: 31
+ - month: 12
+ - year: 1999
+ """
+ def __new__(cls, toklist=None, name=None, asList=True, modal=True ):
+ if isinstance(toklist, cls):
+ return toklist
+ retobj = object.__new__(cls)
+ retobj.__doinit = True
+ return retobj
+
+ # Performance tuning: we construct a *lot* of these, so keep this
+ # constructor as small and fast as possible
+ def __init__( self, toklist=None, name=None, asList=True, modal=True, isinstance=isinstance ):
+ if self.__doinit:
+ self.__doinit = False
+ self.__name = None
+ self.__parent = None
+ self.__accumNames = {}
+ self.__asList = asList
+ self.__modal = modal
+ if toklist is None:
+ toklist = []
+ if isinstance(toklist, list):
+ self.__toklist = toklist[:]
+ elif isinstance(toklist, _generatorType):
+ self.__toklist = list(toklist)
+ else:
+ self.__toklist = [toklist]
+ self.__tokdict = dict()
+
+ if name is not None and name:
+ if not modal:
+ self.__accumNames[name] = 0
+ if isinstance(name,int):
+ name = _ustr(name) # will always return a str, but use _ustr for consistency
+ self.__name = name
+ if not (isinstance(toklist, (type(None), basestring, list)) and toklist in (None,'',[])):
+ if isinstance(toklist,basestring):
+ toklist = [ toklist ]
+ if asList:
+ if isinstance(toklist,ParseResults):
+ self[name] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(toklist.copy(),0)
+ else:
+ self[name] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(ParseResults(toklist[0]),0)
+ self[name].__name = name
+ else:
+ try:
+ self[name] = toklist[0]
+ except (KeyError,TypeError,IndexError):
+ self[name] = toklist
+
+ def __getitem__( self, i ):
+ if isinstance( i, (int,slice) ):
+ return self.__toklist[i]
+ else:
+ if i not in self.__accumNames:
+ return self.__tokdict[i][-1][0]
+ else:
+ return ParseResults([ v[0] for v in self.__tokdict[i] ])
+
+ def __setitem__( self, k, v, isinstance=isinstance ):
+ if isinstance(v,_ParseResultsWithOffset):
+ self.__tokdict[k] = self.__tokdict.get(k,list()) + [v]
+ sub = v[0]
+ elif isinstance(k,(int,slice)):
+ self.__toklist[k] = v
+ sub = v
+ else:
+ self.__tokdict[k] = self.__tokdict.get(k,list()) + [_ParseResultsWithOffset(v,0)]
+ sub = v
+ if isinstance(sub,ParseResults):
+ sub.__parent = wkref(self)
+
+ def __delitem__( self, i ):
+ if isinstance(i,(int,slice)):
+ mylen = len( self.__toklist )
+ del self.__toklist[i]
+
+ # convert int to slice
+ if isinstance(i, int):
+ if i < 0:
+ i += mylen
+ i = slice(i, i+1)
+ # get removed indices
+ removed = list(range(*i.indices(mylen)))
+ removed.reverse()
+ # fixup indices in token dictionary
+ for name,occurrences in self.__tokdict.items():
+ for j in removed:
+ for k, (value, position) in enumerate(occurrences):
+ occurrences[k] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(value, position - (position > j))
+ else:
+ del self.__tokdict[i]
+
+ def __contains__( self, k ):
+ return k in self.__tokdict
+
+ def __len__( self ): return len( self.__toklist )
+ def __bool__(self): return ( not not self.__toklist )
+ __nonzero__ = __bool__
+ def __iter__( self ): return iter( self.__toklist )
+ def __reversed__( self ): return iter( self.__toklist[::-1] )
+ def _iterkeys( self ):
+ if hasattr(self.__tokdict, "iterkeys"):
+ return self.__tokdict.iterkeys()
+ else:
+ return iter(self.__tokdict)
+
+ def _itervalues( self ):
+ return (self[k] for k in self._iterkeys())
+
+ def _iteritems( self ):
+ return ((k, self[k]) for k in self._iterkeys())
+
+ if PY_3:
+ keys = _iterkeys
+ """Returns an iterator of all named result keys (Python 3.x only)."""
+
+ values = _itervalues
+ """Returns an iterator of all named result values (Python 3.x only)."""
+
+ items = _iteritems
+ """Returns an iterator of all named result key-value tuples (Python 3.x only)."""
+
+ else:
+ iterkeys = _iterkeys
+ """Returns an iterator of all named result keys (Python 2.x only)."""
+
+ itervalues = _itervalues
+ """Returns an iterator of all named result values (Python 2.x only)."""
+
+ iteritems = _iteritems
+ """Returns an iterator of all named result key-value tuples (Python 2.x only)."""
+
+ def keys( self ):
+ """Returns all named result keys (as a list in Python 2.x, as an iterator in Python 3.x)."""
+ return list(self.iterkeys())
+
+ def values( self ):
+ """Returns all named result values (as a list in Python 2.x, as an iterator in Python 3.x)."""
+ return list(self.itervalues())
+
+ def items( self ):
+ """Returns all named result key-values (as a list of tuples in Python 2.x, as an iterator in Python 3.x)."""
+ return list(self.iteritems())
+
+ def haskeys( self ):
+ """Since keys() returns an iterator, this method is helpful in bypassing
+ code that looks for the existence of any defined results names."""
+ return bool(self.__tokdict)
+
+ def pop( self, *args, **kwargs):
+ """
+ Removes and returns item at specified index (default=C{last}).
+ Supports both C{list} and C{dict} semantics for C{pop()}. If passed no
+ argument or an integer argument, it will use C{list} semantics
+ and pop tokens from the list of parsed tokens. If passed a
+ non-integer argument (most likely a string), it will use C{dict}
+ semantics and pop the corresponding value from any defined
+ results names. A second default return value argument is
+ supported, just as in C{dict.pop()}.
+
+ Example::
+ def remove_first(tokens):
+ tokens.pop(0)
+ print(OneOrMore(Word(nums)).parseString("0 123 321")) # -> ['0', '123', '321']
+ print(OneOrMore(Word(nums)).addParseAction(remove_first).parseString("0 123 321")) # -> ['123', '321']
+
+ label = Word(alphas)
+ patt = label("LABEL") + OneOrMore(Word(nums))
+ print(patt.parseString("AAB 123 321").dump())
+
+ # Use pop() in a parse action to remove named result (note that corresponding value is not
+ # removed from list form of results)
+ def remove_LABEL(tokens):
+ tokens.pop("LABEL")
+ return tokens
+ patt.addParseAction(remove_LABEL)
+ print(patt.parseString("AAB 123 321").dump())
+ prints::
+ ['AAB', '123', '321']
+ - LABEL: AAB
+
+ ['AAB', '123', '321']
+ """
+ if not args:
+ args = [-1]
+ for k,v in kwargs.items():
+ if k == 'default':
+ args = (args[0], v)
+ else:
+ raise TypeError("pop() got an unexpected keyword argument '%s'" % k)
+ if (isinstance(args[0], int) or
+ len(args) == 1 or
+ args[0] in self):
+ index = args[0]
+ ret = self[index]
+ del self[index]
+ return ret
+ else:
+ defaultvalue = args[1]
+ return defaultvalue
+
+ def get(self, key, defaultValue=None):
+ """
+ Returns named result matching the given key, or if there is no
+ such name, then returns the given C{defaultValue} or C{None} if no
+ C{defaultValue} is specified.
+
+ Similar to C{dict.get()}.
+
+ Example::
+ integer = Word(nums)
+ date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day")
+
+ result = date_str.parseString("1999/12/31")
+ print(result.get("year")) # -> '1999'
+ print(result.get("hour", "not specified")) # -> 'not specified'
+ print(result.get("hour")) # -> None
+ """
+ if key in self:
+ return self[key]
+ else:
+ return defaultValue
+
+ def insert( self, index, insStr ):
+ """
+ Inserts new element at location index in the list of parsed tokens.
+
+ Similar to C{list.insert()}.
+
+ Example::
+ print(OneOrMore(Word(nums)).parseString("0 123 321")) # -> ['0', '123', '321']
+
+ # use a parse action to insert the parse location in the front of the parsed results
+ def insert_locn(locn, tokens):
+ tokens.insert(0, locn)
+ print(OneOrMore(Word(nums)).addParseAction(insert_locn).parseString("0 123 321")) # -> [0, '0', '123', '321']
+ """
+ self.__toklist.insert(index, insStr)
+ # fixup indices in token dictionary
+ for name,occurrences in self.__tokdict.items():
+ for k, (value, position) in enumerate(occurrences):
+ occurrences[k] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(value, position + (position > index))
+
+ def append( self, item ):
+ """
+ Add single element to end of ParseResults list of elements.
+
+ Example::
+ print(OneOrMore(Word(nums)).parseString("0 123 321")) # -> ['0', '123', '321']
+
+ # use a parse action to compute the sum of the parsed integers, and add it to the end
+ def append_sum(tokens):
+ tokens.append(sum(map(int, tokens)))
+ print(OneOrMore(Word(nums)).addParseAction(append_sum).parseString("0 123 321")) # -> ['0', '123', '321', 444]
+ """
+ self.__toklist.append(item)
+
+ def extend( self, itemseq ):
+ """
+ Add sequence of elements to end of ParseResults list of elements.
+
+ Example::
+ patt = OneOrMore(Word(alphas))
+
+ # use a parse action to append the reverse of the matched strings, to make a palindrome
+ def make_palindrome(tokens):
+ tokens.extend(reversed([t[::-1] for t in tokens]))
+ return ''.join(tokens)
+ print(patt.addParseAction(make_palindrome).parseString("lskdj sdlkjf lksd")) # -> 'lskdjsdlkjflksddsklfjkldsjdksl'
+ """
+ if isinstance(itemseq, ParseResults):
+ self += itemseq
+ else:
+ self.__toklist.extend(itemseq)
+
+ def clear( self ):
+ """
+ Clear all elements and results names.
+ """
+ del self.__toklist[:]
+ self.__tokdict.clear()
+
+ def __getattr__( self, name ):
+ try:
+ return self[name]
+ except KeyError:
+ return ""
+
+ if name in self.__tokdict:
+ if name not in self.__accumNames:
+ return self.__tokdict[name][-1][0]
+ else:
+ return ParseResults([ v[0] for v in self.__tokdict[name] ])
+ else:
+ return ""
+
+ def __add__( self, other ):
+ ret = self.copy()
+ ret += other
+ return ret
+
+ def __iadd__( self, other ):
+ if other.__tokdict:
+ offset = len(self.__toklist)
+ addoffset = lambda a: offset if a<0 else a+offset
+ otheritems = other.__tokdict.items()
+ otherdictitems = [(k, _ParseResultsWithOffset(v[0],addoffset(v[1])) )
+ for (k,vlist) in otheritems for v in vlist]
+ for k,v in otherdictitems:
+ self[k] = v
+ if isinstance(v[0],ParseResults):
+ v[0].__parent = wkref(self)
+
+ self.__toklist += other.__toklist
+ self.__accumNames.update( other.__accumNames )
+ return self
+
+ def __radd__(self, other):
+ if isinstance(other,int) and other == 0:
+ # useful for merging many ParseResults using sum() builtin
+ return self.copy()
+ else:
+ # this may raise a TypeError - so be it
+ return other + self
+
+ def __repr__( self ):
+ return "(%s, %s)" % ( repr( self.__toklist ), repr( self.__tokdict ) )
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ return '[' + ', '.join(_ustr(i) if isinstance(i, ParseResults) else repr(i) for i in self.__toklist) + ']'
+
+ def _asStringList( self, sep='' ):
+ out = []
+ for item in self.__toklist:
+ if out and sep:
+ out.append(sep)
+ if isinstance( item, ParseResults ):
+ out += item._asStringList()
+ else:
+ out.append( _ustr(item) )
+ return out
+
+ def asList( self ):
+ """
+ Returns the parse results as a nested list of matching tokens, all converted to strings.
+
+ Example::
+ patt = OneOrMore(Word(alphas))
+ result = patt.parseString("sldkj lsdkj sldkj")
+ # even though the result prints in string-like form, it is actually a pyparsing ParseResults
+ print(type(result), result) # -> <class 'pyparsing.ParseResults'> ['sldkj', 'lsdkj', 'sldkj']
+
+ # Use asList() to create an actual list
+ result_list = result.asList()
+ print(type(result_list), result_list) # -> <class 'list'> ['sldkj', 'lsdkj', 'sldkj']
+ """
+ return [res.asList() if isinstance(res,ParseResults) else res for res in self.__toklist]
+
+ def asDict( self ):
+ """
+ Returns the named parse results as a nested dictionary.
+
+ Example::
+ integer = Word(nums)
+ date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day")
+
+ result = date_str.parseString('12/31/1999')
+ print(type(result), repr(result)) # -> <class 'pyparsing.ParseResults'> (['12', '/', '31', '/', '1999'], {'day': [('1999', 4)], 'year': [('12', 0)], 'month': [('31', 2)]})
+
+ result_dict = result.asDict()
+ print(type(result_dict), repr(result_dict)) # -> <class 'dict'> {'day': '1999', 'year': '12', 'month': '31'}
+
+ # even though a ParseResults supports dict-like access, sometime you just need to have a dict
+ import json
+ print(json.dumps(result)) # -> Exception: TypeError: ... is not JSON serializable
+ print(json.dumps(result.asDict())) # -> {"month": "31", "day": "1999", "year": "12"}
+ """
+ if PY_3:
+ item_fn = self.items
+ else:
+ item_fn = self.iteritems
+
+ def toItem(obj):
+ if isinstance(obj, ParseResults):
+ if obj.haskeys():
+ return obj.asDict()
+ else:
+ return [toItem(v) for v in obj]
+ else:
+ return obj
+
+ return dict((k,toItem(v)) for k,v in item_fn())
+
+ def copy( self ):
+ """
+ Returns a new copy of a C{ParseResults} object.
+ """
+ ret = ParseResults( self.__toklist )
+ ret.__tokdict = self.__tokdict.copy()
+ ret.__parent = self.__parent
+ ret.__accumNames.update( self.__accumNames )
+ ret.__name = self.__name
+ return ret
+
+ def asXML( self, doctag=None, namedItemsOnly=False, indent="", formatted=True ):
+ """
+ (Deprecated) Returns the parse results as XML. Tags are created for tokens and lists that have defined results names.
+ """
+ nl = "\n"
+ out = []
+ namedItems = dict((v[1],k) for (k,vlist) in self.__tokdict.items()
+ for v in vlist)
+ nextLevelIndent = indent + " "
+
+ # collapse out indents if formatting is not desired
+ if not formatted:
+ indent = ""
+ nextLevelIndent = ""
+ nl = ""
+
+ selfTag = None
+ if doctag is not None:
+ selfTag = doctag
+ else:
+ if self.__name:
+ selfTag = self.__name
+
+ if not selfTag:
+ if namedItemsOnly:
+ return ""
+ else:
+ selfTag = "ITEM"
+
+ out += [ nl, indent, "<", selfTag, ">" ]
+
+ for i,res in enumerate(self.__toklist):
+ if isinstance(res,ParseResults):
+ if i in namedItems:
+ out += [ res.asXML(namedItems[i],
+ namedItemsOnly and doctag is None,
+ nextLevelIndent,
+ formatted)]
+ else:
+ out += [ res.asXML(None,
+ namedItemsOnly and doctag is None,
+ nextLevelIndent,
+ formatted)]
+ else:
+ # individual token, see if there is a name for it
+ resTag = None
+ if i in namedItems:
+ resTag = namedItems[i]
+ if not resTag:
+ if namedItemsOnly:
+ continue
+ else:
+ resTag = "ITEM"
+ xmlBodyText = _xml_escape(_ustr(res))
+ out += [ nl, nextLevelIndent, "<", resTag, ">",
+ xmlBodyText,
+ "</", resTag, ">" ]
+
+ out += [ nl, indent, "</", selfTag, ">" ]
+ return "".join(out)
+
+ def __lookup(self,sub):
+ for k,vlist in self.__tokdict.items():
+ for v,loc in vlist:
+ if sub is v:
+ return k
+ return None
+
+ def getName(self):
+ r"""
+ Returns the results name for this token expression. Useful when several
+ different expressions might match at a particular location.
+
+ Example::
+ integer = Word(nums)
+ ssn_expr = Regex(r"\d\d\d-\d\d-\d\d\d\d")
+ house_number_expr = Suppress('#') + Word(nums, alphanums)
+ user_data = (Group(house_number_expr)("house_number")
+ | Group(ssn_expr)("ssn")
+ | Group(integer)("age"))
+ user_info = OneOrMore(user_data)
+
+ result = user_info.parseString("22 111-22-3333 #221B")
+ for item in result:
+ print(item.getName(), ':', item[0])
+ prints::
+ age : 22
+ ssn : 111-22-3333
+ house_number : 221B
+ """
+ if self.__name:
+ return self.__name
+ elif self.__parent:
+ par = self.__parent()
+ if par:
+ return par.__lookup(self)
+ else:
+ return None
+ elif (len(self) == 1 and
+ len(self.__tokdict) == 1 and
+ next(iter(self.__tokdict.values()))[0][1] in (0,-1)):
+ return next(iter(self.__tokdict.keys()))
+ else:
+ return None
+
+ def dump(self, indent='', depth=0, full=True):
+ """
+ Diagnostic method for listing out the contents of a C{ParseResults}.
+ Accepts an optional C{indent} argument so that this string can be embedded
+ in a nested display of other data.
+
+ Example::
+ integer = Word(nums)
+ date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day")
+
+ result = date_str.parseString('12/31/1999')
+ print(result.dump())
+ prints::
+ ['12', '/', '31', '/', '1999']
+ - day: 1999
+ - month: 31
+ - year: 12
+ """
+ out = []
+ NL = '\n'
+ out.append( indent+_ustr(self.asList()) )
+ if full:
+ if self.haskeys():
+ items = sorted((str(k), v) for k,v in self.items())
+ for k,v in items:
+ if out:
+ out.append(NL)
+ out.append( "%s%s- %s: " % (indent,(' '*depth), k) )
+ if isinstance(v,ParseResults):
+ if v:
+ out.append( v.dump(indent,depth+1) )
+ else:
+ out.append(_ustr(v))
+ else:
+ out.append(repr(v))
+ elif any(isinstance(vv,ParseResults) for vv in self):
+ v = self
+ for i,vv in enumerate(v):
+ if isinstance(vv,ParseResults):
+ out.append("\n%s%s[%d]:\n%s%s%s" % (indent,(' '*(depth)),i,indent,(' '*(depth+1)),vv.dump(indent,depth+1) ))
+ else:
+ out.append("\n%s%s[%d]:\n%s%s%s" % (indent,(' '*(depth)),i,indent,(' '*(depth+1)),_ustr(vv)))
+
+ return "".join(out)
+
+ def pprint(self, *args, **kwargs):
+ """
+ Pretty-printer for parsed results as a list, using the C{pprint} module.
+ Accepts additional positional or keyword args as defined for the
+ C{pprint.pprint} method. (U{http://docs.python.org/3/library/pprint.html#pprint.pprint})
+
+ Example::
+ ident = Word(alphas, alphanums)
+ num = Word(nums)
+ func = Forward()
+ term = ident | num | Group('(' + func + ')')
+ func <<= ident + Group(Optional(delimitedList(term)))
+ result = func.parseString("fna a,b,(fnb c,d,200),100")
+ result.pprint(width=40)
+ prints::
+ ['fna',
+ ['a',
+ 'b',
+ ['(', 'fnb', ['c', 'd', '200'], ')'],
+ '100']]
+ """
+ pprint.pprint(self.asList(), *args, **kwargs)
+
+ # add support for pickle protocol
+ def __getstate__(self):
+ return ( self.__toklist,
+ ( self.__tokdict.copy(),
+ self.__parent is not None and self.__parent() or None,
+ self.__accumNames,
+ self.__name ) )
+
+ def __setstate__(self,state):
+ self.__toklist = state[0]
+ (self.__tokdict,
+ par,
+ inAccumNames,
+ self.__name) = state[1]
+ self.__accumNames = {}
+ self.__accumNames.update(inAccumNames)
+ if par is not None:
+ self.__parent = wkref(par)
+ else:
+ self.__parent = None
+
+ def __getnewargs__(self):
+ return self.__toklist, self.__name, self.__asList, self.__modal
+
+ def __dir__(self):
+ return (dir(type(self)) + list(self.keys()))
+
+MutableMapping.register(ParseResults)
+
+def col (loc,strg):
+ """Returns current column within a string, counting newlines as line separators.
+ The first column is number 1.
+
+ Note: the default parsing behavior is to expand tabs in the input string
+ before starting the parsing process. See L{I{ParserElement.parseString}<ParserElement.parseString>} for more information
+ on parsing strings containing C{<TAB>}s, and suggested methods to maintain a
+ consistent view of the parsed string, the parse location, and line and column
+ positions within the parsed string.
+ """
+ s = strg
+ return 1 if 0<loc<len(s) and s[loc-1] == '\n' else loc - s.rfind("\n", 0, loc)
+
+def lineno(loc,strg):
+ """Returns current line number within a string, counting newlines as line separators.
+ The first line is number 1.
+
+ Note: the default parsing behavior is to expand tabs in the input string
+ before starting the parsing process. See L{I{ParserElement.parseString}<ParserElement.parseString>} for more information
+ on parsing strings containing C{<TAB>}s, and suggested methods to maintain a
+ consistent view of the parsed string, the parse location, and line and column
+ positions within the parsed string.
+ """
+ return strg.count("\n",0,loc) + 1
+
+def line( loc, strg ):
+ """Returns the line of text containing loc within a string, counting newlines as line separators.
+ """
+ lastCR = strg.rfind("\n", 0, loc)
+ nextCR = strg.find("\n", loc)
+ if nextCR >= 0:
+ return strg[lastCR+1:nextCR]
+ else:
+ return strg[lastCR+1:]
+
+def _defaultStartDebugAction( instring, loc, expr ):
+ print (("Match " + _ustr(expr) + " at loc " + _ustr(loc) + "(%d,%d)" % ( lineno(loc,instring), col(loc,instring) )))
+
+def _defaultSuccessDebugAction( instring, startloc, endloc, expr, toks ):
+ print ("Matched " + _ustr(expr) + " -> " + str(toks.asList()))
+
+def _defaultExceptionDebugAction( instring, loc, expr, exc ):
+ print ("Exception raised:" + _ustr(exc))
+
+def nullDebugAction(*args):
+ """'Do-nothing' debug action, to suppress debugging output during parsing."""
+ pass
+
+# Only works on Python 3.x - nonlocal is toxic to Python 2 installs
+#~ 'decorator to trim function calls to match the arity of the target'
+#~ def _trim_arity(func, maxargs=3):
+ #~ if func in singleArgBuiltins:
+ #~ return lambda s,l,t: func(t)
+ #~ limit = 0
+ #~ foundArity = False
+ #~ def wrapper(*args):
+ #~ nonlocal limit,foundArity
+ #~ while 1:
+ #~ try:
+ #~ ret = func(*args[limit:])
+ #~ foundArity = True
+ #~ return ret
+ #~ except TypeError:
+ #~ if limit == maxargs or foundArity:
+ #~ raise
+ #~ limit += 1
+ #~ continue
+ #~ return wrapper
+
+# this version is Python 2.x-3.x cross-compatible
+'decorator to trim function calls to match the arity of the target'
+def _trim_arity(func, maxargs=2):
+ if func in singleArgBuiltins:
+ return lambda s,l,t: func(t)
+ limit = [0]
+ foundArity = [False]
+
+ # traceback return data structure changed in Py3.5 - normalize back to plain tuples
+ if system_version[:2] >= (3,5):
+ def extract_stack(limit=0):
+ # special handling for Python 3.5.0 - extra deep call stack by 1
+ offset = -3 if system_version == (3,5,0) else -2
+ frame_summary = traceback.extract_stack(limit=-offset+limit-1)[offset]
+ return [frame_summary[:2]]
+ def extract_tb(tb, limit=0):
+ frames = traceback.extract_tb(tb, limit=limit)
+ frame_summary = frames[-1]
+ return [frame_summary[:2]]
+ else:
+ extract_stack = traceback.extract_stack
+ extract_tb = traceback.extract_tb
+
+ # synthesize what would be returned by traceback.extract_stack at the call to
+ # user's parse action 'func', so that we don't incur call penalty at parse time
+
+ LINE_DIFF = 6
+ # IF ANY CODE CHANGES, EVEN JUST COMMENTS OR BLANK LINES, BETWEEN THE NEXT LINE AND
+ # THE CALL TO FUNC INSIDE WRAPPER, LINE_DIFF MUST BE MODIFIED!!!!
+ this_line = extract_stack(limit=2)[-1]
+ pa_call_line_synth = (this_line[0], this_line[1]+LINE_DIFF)
+
+ def wrapper(*args):
+ while 1:
+ try:
+ ret = func(*args[limit[0]:])
+ foundArity[0] = True
+ return ret
+ except TypeError:
+ # re-raise TypeErrors if they did not come from our arity testing
+ if foundArity[0]:
+ raise
+ else:
+ try:
+ tb = sys.exc_info()[-1]
+ if not extract_tb(tb, limit=2)[-1][:2] == pa_call_line_synth:
+ raise
+ finally:
+ del tb
+
+ if limit[0] <= maxargs:
+ limit[0] += 1
+ continue
+ raise
+
+ # copy func name to wrapper for sensible debug output
+ func_name = "<parse action>"
+ try:
+ func_name = getattr(func, '__name__',
+ getattr(func, '__class__').__name__)
+ except Exception:
+ func_name = str(func)
+ wrapper.__name__ = func_name
+
+ return wrapper
+
+class ParserElement(object):
+ """Abstract base level parser element class."""
+ DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS = " \n\t\r"
+ verbose_stacktrace = False
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def setDefaultWhitespaceChars( chars ):
+ r"""
+ Overrides the default whitespace chars
+
+ Example::
+ # default whitespace chars are space, <TAB> and newline
+ OneOrMore(Word(alphas)).parseString("abc def\nghi jkl") # -> ['abc', 'def', 'ghi', 'jkl']
+
+ # change to just treat newline as significant
+ ParserElement.setDefaultWhitespaceChars(" \t")
+ OneOrMore(Word(alphas)).parseString("abc def\nghi jkl") # -> ['abc', 'def']
+ """
+ ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS = chars
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def inlineLiteralsUsing(cls):
+ """
+ Set class to be used for inclusion of string literals into a parser.
+
+ Example::
+ # default literal class used is Literal
+ integer = Word(nums)
+ date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day")
+
+ date_str.parseString("1999/12/31") # -> ['1999', '/', '12', '/', '31']
+
+
+ # change to Suppress
+ ParserElement.inlineLiteralsUsing(Suppress)
+ date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day")
+
+ date_str.parseString("1999/12/31") # -> ['1999', '12', '31']
+ """
+ ParserElement._literalStringClass = cls
+
+ def __init__( self, savelist=False ):
+ self.parseAction = list()
+ self.failAction = None
+ #~ self.name = "<unknown>" # don't define self.name, let subclasses try/except upcall
+ self.strRepr = None
+ self.resultsName = None
+ self.saveAsList = savelist
+ self.skipWhitespace = True
+ self.whiteChars = ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS
+ self.copyDefaultWhiteChars = True
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = False # used when checking for left-recursion
+ self.keepTabs = False
+ self.ignoreExprs = list()
+ self.debug = False
+ self.streamlined = False
+ self.mayIndexError = True # used to optimize exception handling for subclasses that don't advance parse index
+ self.errmsg = ""
+ self.modalResults = True # used to mark results names as modal (report only last) or cumulative (list all)
+ self.debugActions = ( None, None, None ) #custom debug actions
+ self.re = None
+ self.callPreparse = True # used to avoid redundant calls to preParse
+ self.callDuringTry = False
+
+ def copy( self ):
+ """
+ Make a copy of this C{ParserElement}. Useful for defining different parse actions
+ for the same parsing pattern, using copies of the original parse element.
+
+ Example::
+ integer = Word(nums).setParseAction(lambda toks: int(toks[0]))
+ integerK = integer.copy().addParseAction(lambda toks: toks[0]*1024) + Suppress("K")
+ integerM = integer.copy().addParseAction(lambda toks: toks[0]*1024*1024) + Suppress("M")
+
+ print(OneOrMore(integerK | integerM | integer).parseString("5K 100 640K 256M"))
+ prints::
+ [5120, 100, 655360, 268435456]
+ Equivalent form of C{expr.copy()} is just C{expr()}::
+ integerM = integer().addParseAction(lambda toks: toks[0]*1024*1024) + Suppress("M")
+ """
+ cpy = copy.copy( self )
+ cpy.parseAction = self.parseAction[:]
+ cpy.ignoreExprs = self.ignoreExprs[:]
+ if self.copyDefaultWhiteChars:
+ cpy.whiteChars = ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS
+ return cpy
+
+ def setName( self, name ):
+ """
+ Define name for this expression, makes debugging and exception messages clearer.
+
+ Example::
+ Word(nums).parseString("ABC") # -> Exception: Expected W:(0123...) (at char 0), (line:1, col:1)
+ Word(nums).setName("integer").parseString("ABC") # -> Exception: Expected integer (at char 0), (line:1, col:1)
+ """
+ self.name = name
+ self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+ if hasattr(self,"exception"):
+ self.exception.msg = self.errmsg
+ return self
+
+ def setResultsName( self, name, listAllMatches=False ):
+ """
+ Define name for referencing matching tokens as a nested attribute
+ of the returned parse results.
+ NOTE: this returns a *copy* of the original C{ParserElement} object;
+ this is so that the client can define a basic element, such as an
+ integer, and reference it in multiple places with different names.
+
+ You can also set results names using the abbreviated syntax,
+ C{expr("name")} in place of C{expr.setResultsName("name")} -
+ see L{I{__call__}<__call__>}.
+
+ Example::
+ date_str = (integer.setResultsName("year") + '/'
+ + integer.setResultsName("month") + '/'
+ + integer.setResultsName("day"))
+
+ # equivalent form:
+ date_str = integer("year") + '/' + integer("month") + '/' + integer("day")
+ """
+ newself = self.copy()
+ if name.endswith("*"):
+ name = name[:-1]
+ listAllMatches=True
+ newself.resultsName = name
+ newself.modalResults = not listAllMatches
+ return newself
+
+ def setBreak(self,breakFlag = True):
+ """Method to invoke the Python pdb debugger when this element is
+ about to be parsed. Set C{breakFlag} to True to enable, False to
+ disable.
+ """
+ if breakFlag:
+ _parseMethod = self._parse
+ def breaker(instring, loc, doActions=True, callPreParse=True):
+ import pdb
+ pdb.set_trace()
+ return _parseMethod( instring, loc, doActions, callPreParse )
+ breaker._originalParseMethod = _parseMethod
+ self._parse = breaker
+ else:
+ if hasattr(self._parse,"_originalParseMethod"):
+ self._parse = self._parse._originalParseMethod
+ return self
+
+ def setParseAction( self, *fns, **kwargs ):
+ """
+ Define one or more actions to perform when successfully matching parse element definition.
+ Parse action fn is a callable method with 0-3 arguments, called as C{fn(s,loc,toks)},
+ C{fn(loc,toks)}, C{fn(toks)}, or just C{fn()}, where:
+ - s = the original string being parsed (see note below)
+ - loc = the location of the matching substring
+ - toks = a list of the matched tokens, packaged as a C{L{ParseResults}} object
+ If the functions in fns modify the tokens, they can return them as the return
+ value from fn, and the modified list of tokens will replace the original.
+ Otherwise, fn does not need to return any value.
+
+ Optional keyword arguments:
+ - callDuringTry = (default=C{False}) indicate if parse action should be run during lookaheads and alternate testing
+
+ Note: the default parsing behavior is to expand tabs in the input string
+ before starting the parsing process. See L{I{parseString}<parseString>} for more information
+ on parsing strings containing C{<TAB>}s, and suggested methods to maintain a
+ consistent view of the parsed string, the parse location, and line and column
+ positions within the parsed string.
+
+ Example::
+ integer = Word(nums)
+ date_str = integer + '/' + integer + '/' + integer
+
+ date_str.parseString("1999/12/31") # -> ['1999', '/', '12', '/', '31']
+
+ # use parse action to convert to ints at parse time
+ integer = Word(nums).setParseAction(lambda toks: int(toks[0]))
+ date_str = integer + '/' + integer + '/' + integer
+
+ # note that integer fields are now ints, not strings
+ date_str.parseString("1999/12/31") # -> [1999, '/', 12, '/', 31]
+ """
+ self.parseAction = list(map(_trim_arity, list(fns)))
+ self.callDuringTry = kwargs.get("callDuringTry", False)
+ return self
+
+ def addParseAction( self, *fns, **kwargs ):
+ """
+ Add one or more parse actions to expression's list of parse actions. See L{I{setParseAction}<setParseAction>}.
+
+ See examples in L{I{copy}<copy>}.
+ """
+ self.parseAction += list(map(_trim_arity, list(fns)))
+ self.callDuringTry = self.callDuringTry or kwargs.get("callDuringTry", False)
+ return self
+
+ def addCondition(self, *fns, **kwargs):
+ """Add a boolean predicate function to expression's list of parse actions. See
+ L{I{setParseAction}<setParseAction>} for function call signatures. Unlike C{setParseAction},
+ functions passed to C{addCondition} need to return boolean success/fail of the condition.
+
+ Optional keyword arguments:
+ - message = define a custom message to be used in the raised exception
+ - fatal = if True, will raise ParseFatalException to stop parsing immediately; otherwise will raise ParseException
+
+ Example::
+ integer = Word(nums).setParseAction(lambda toks: int(toks[0]))
+ year_int = integer.copy()
+ year_int.addCondition(lambda toks: toks[0] >= 2000, message="Only support years 2000 and later")
+ date_str = year_int + '/' + integer + '/' + integer
+
+ result = date_str.parseString("1999/12/31") # -> Exception: Only support years 2000 and later (at char 0), (line:1, col:1)
+ """
+ msg = kwargs.get("message", "failed user-defined condition")
+ exc_type = ParseFatalException if kwargs.get("fatal", False) else ParseException
+ for fn in fns:
+ def pa(s,l,t):
+ if not bool(_trim_arity(fn)(s,l,t)):
+ raise exc_type(s,l,msg)
+ self.parseAction.append(pa)
+ self.callDuringTry = self.callDuringTry or kwargs.get("callDuringTry", False)
+ return self
+
+ def setFailAction( self, fn ):
+ """Define action to perform if parsing fails at this expression.
+ Fail acton fn is a callable function that takes the arguments
+ C{fn(s,loc,expr,err)} where:
+ - s = string being parsed
+ - loc = location where expression match was attempted and failed
+ - expr = the parse expression that failed
+ - err = the exception thrown
+ The function returns no value. It may throw C{L{ParseFatalException}}
+ if it is desired to stop parsing immediately."""
+ self.failAction = fn
+ return self
+
+ def _skipIgnorables( self, instring, loc ):
+ exprsFound = True
+ while exprsFound:
+ exprsFound = False
+ for e in self.ignoreExprs:
+ try:
+ while 1:
+ loc,dummy = e._parse( instring, loc )
+ exprsFound = True
+ except ParseException:
+ pass
+ return loc
+
+ def preParse( self, instring, loc ):
+ if self.ignoreExprs:
+ loc = self._skipIgnorables( instring, loc )
+
+ if self.skipWhitespace:
+ wt = self.whiteChars
+ instrlen = len(instring)
+ while loc < instrlen and instring[loc] in wt:
+ loc += 1
+
+ return loc
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ return loc, []
+
+ def postParse( self, instring, loc, tokenlist ):
+ return tokenlist
+
+ #~ @profile
+ def _parseNoCache( self, instring, loc, doActions=True, callPreParse=True ):
+ debugging = ( self.debug ) #and doActions )
+
+ if debugging or self.failAction:
+ #~ print ("Match",self,"at loc",loc,"(%d,%d)" % ( lineno(loc,instring), col(loc,instring) ))
+ if (self.debugActions[0] ):
+ self.debugActions[0]( instring, loc, self )
+ if callPreParse and self.callPreparse:
+ preloc = self.preParse( instring, loc )
+ else:
+ preloc = loc
+ tokensStart = preloc
+ try:
+ try:
+ loc,tokens = self.parseImpl( instring, preloc, doActions )
+ except IndexError:
+ raise ParseException( instring, len(instring), self.errmsg, self )
+ except ParseBaseException as err:
+ #~ print ("Exception raised:", err)
+ if self.debugActions[2]:
+ self.debugActions[2]( instring, tokensStart, self, err )
+ if self.failAction:
+ self.failAction( instring, tokensStart, self, err )
+ raise
+ else:
+ if callPreParse and self.callPreparse:
+ preloc = self.preParse( instring, loc )
+ else:
+ preloc = loc
+ tokensStart = preloc
+ if self.mayIndexError or preloc >= len(instring):
+ try:
+ loc,tokens = self.parseImpl( instring, preloc, doActions )
+ except IndexError:
+ raise ParseException( instring, len(instring), self.errmsg, self )
+ else:
+ loc,tokens = self.parseImpl( instring, preloc, doActions )
+
+ tokens = self.postParse( instring, loc, tokens )
+
+ retTokens = ParseResults( tokens, self.resultsName, asList=self.saveAsList, modal=self.modalResults )
+ if self.parseAction and (doActions or self.callDuringTry):
+ if debugging:
+ try:
+ for fn in self.parseAction:
+ tokens = fn( instring, tokensStart, retTokens )
+ if tokens is not None:
+ retTokens = ParseResults( tokens,
+ self.resultsName,
+ asList=self.saveAsList and isinstance(tokens,(ParseResults,list)),
+ modal=self.modalResults )
+ except ParseBaseException as err:
+ #~ print "Exception raised in user parse action:", err
+ if (self.debugActions[2] ):
+ self.debugActions[2]( instring, tokensStart, self, err )
+ raise
+ else:
+ for fn in self.parseAction:
+ tokens = fn( instring, tokensStart, retTokens )
+ if tokens is not None:
+ retTokens = ParseResults( tokens,
+ self.resultsName,
+ asList=self.saveAsList and isinstance(tokens,(ParseResults,list)),
+ modal=self.modalResults )
+ if debugging:
+ #~ print ("Matched",self,"->",retTokens.asList())
+ if (self.debugActions[1] ):
+ self.debugActions[1]( instring, tokensStart, loc, self, retTokens )
+
+ return loc, retTokens
+
+ def tryParse( self, instring, loc ):
+ try:
+ return self._parse( instring, loc, doActions=False )[0]
+ except ParseFatalException:
+ raise ParseException( instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+ def canParseNext(self, instring, loc):
+ try:
+ self.tryParse(instring, loc)
+ except (ParseException, IndexError):
+ return False
+ else:
+ return True
+
+ class _UnboundedCache(object):
+ def __init__(self):
+ cache = {}
+ self.not_in_cache = not_in_cache = object()
+
+ def get(self, key):
+ return cache.get(key, not_in_cache)
+
+ def set(self, key, value):
+ cache[key] = value
+
+ def clear(self):
+ cache.clear()
+
+ def cache_len(self):
+ return len(cache)
+
+ self.get = types.MethodType(get, self)
+ self.set = types.MethodType(set, self)
+ self.clear = types.MethodType(clear, self)
+ self.__len__ = types.MethodType(cache_len, self)
+
+ if _OrderedDict is not None:
+ class _FifoCache(object):
+ def __init__(self, size):
+ self.not_in_cache = not_in_cache = object()
+
+ cache = _OrderedDict()
+
+ def get(self, key):
+ return cache.get(key, not_in_cache)
+
+ def set(self, key, value):
+ cache[key] = value
+ while len(cache) > size:
+ try:
+ cache.popitem(False)
+ except KeyError:
+ pass
+
+ def clear(self):
+ cache.clear()
+
+ def cache_len(self):
+ return len(cache)
+
+ self.get = types.MethodType(get, self)
+ self.set = types.MethodType(set, self)
+ self.clear = types.MethodType(clear, self)
+ self.__len__ = types.MethodType(cache_len, self)
+
+ else:
+ class _FifoCache(object):
+ def __init__(self, size):
+ self.not_in_cache = not_in_cache = object()
+
+ cache = {}
+ key_fifo = collections.deque([], size)
+
+ def get(self, key):
+ return cache.get(key, not_in_cache)
+
+ def set(self, key, value):
+ cache[key] = value
+ while len(key_fifo) > size:
+ cache.pop(key_fifo.popleft(), None)
+ key_fifo.append(key)
+
+ def clear(self):
+ cache.clear()
+ key_fifo.clear()
+
+ def cache_len(self):
+ return len(cache)
+
+ self.get = types.MethodType(get, self)
+ self.set = types.MethodType(set, self)
+ self.clear = types.MethodType(clear, self)
+ self.__len__ = types.MethodType(cache_len, self)
+
+ # argument cache for optimizing repeated calls when backtracking through recursive expressions
+ packrat_cache = {} # this is set later by enabledPackrat(); this is here so that resetCache() doesn't fail
+ packrat_cache_lock = RLock()
+ packrat_cache_stats = [0, 0]
+
+ # this method gets repeatedly called during backtracking with the same arguments -
+ # we can cache these arguments and save ourselves the trouble of re-parsing the contained expression
+ def _parseCache( self, instring, loc, doActions=True, callPreParse=True ):
+ HIT, MISS = 0, 1
+ lookup = (self, instring, loc, callPreParse, doActions)
+ with ParserElement.packrat_cache_lock:
+ cache = ParserElement.packrat_cache
+ value = cache.get(lookup)
+ if value is cache.not_in_cache:
+ ParserElement.packrat_cache_stats[MISS] += 1
+ try:
+ value = self._parseNoCache(instring, loc, doActions, callPreParse)
+ except ParseBaseException as pe:
+ # cache a copy of the exception, without the traceback
+ cache.set(lookup, pe.__class__(*pe.args))
+ raise
+ else:
+ cache.set(lookup, (value[0], value[1].copy()))
+ return value
+ else:
+ ParserElement.packrat_cache_stats[HIT] += 1
+ if isinstance(value, Exception):
+ raise value
+ return (value[0], value[1].copy())
+
+ _parse = _parseNoCache
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def resetCache():
+ ParserElement.packrat_cache.clear()
+ ParserElement.packrat_cache_stats[:] = [0] * len(ParserElement.packrat_cache_stats)
+
+ _packratEnabled = False
+ @staticmethod
+ def enablePackrat(cache_size_limit=128):
+ """Enables "packrat" parsing, which adds memoizing to the parsing logic.
+ Repeated parse attempts at the same string location (which happens
+ often in many complex grammars) can immediately return a cached value,
+ instead of re-executing parsing/validating code. Memoizing is done of
+ both valid results and parsing exceptions.
+
+ Parameters:
+ - cache_size_limit - (default=C{128}) - if an integer value is provided
+ will limit the size of the packrat cache; if None is passed, then
+ the cache size will be unbounded; if 0 is passed, the cache will
+ be effectively disabled.
+
+ This speedup may break existing programs that use parse actions that
+ have side-effects. For this reason, packrat parsing is disabled when
+ you first import pyparsing. To activate the packrat feature, your
+ program must call the class method C{ParserElement.enablePackrat()}. If
+ your program uses C{psyco} to "compile as you go", you must call
+ C{enablePackrat} before calling C{psyco.full()}. If you do not do this,
+ Python will crash. For best results, call C{enablePackrat()} immediately
+ after importing pyparsing.
+
+ Example::
+ import pyparsing
+ pyparsing.ParserElement.enablePackrat()
+ """
+ if not ParserElement._packratEnabled:
+ ParserElement._packratEnabled = True
+ if cache_size_limit is None:
+ ParserElement.packrat_cache = ParserElement._UnboundedCache()
+ else:
+ ParserElement.packrat_cache = ParserElement._FifoCache(cache_size_limit)
+ ParserElement._parse = ParserElement._parseCache
+
+ def parseString( self, instring, parseAll=False ):
+ """
+ Execute the parse expression with the given string.
+ This is the main interface to the client code, once the complete
+ expression has been built.
+
+ If you want the grammar to require that the entire input string be
+ successfully parsed, then set C{parseAll} to True (equivalent to ending
+ the grammar with C{L{StringEnd()}}).
+
+ Note: C{parseString} implicitly calls C{expandtabs()} on the input string,
+ in order to report proper column numbers in parse actions.
+ If the input string contains tabs and
+ the grammar uses parse actions that use the C{loc} argument to index into the
+ string being parsed, you can ensure you have a consistent view of the input
+ string by:
+ - calling C{parseWithTabs} on your grammar before calling C{parseString}
+ (see L{I{parseWithTabs}<parseWithTabs>})
+ - define your parse action using the full C{(s,loc,toks)} signature, and
+ reference the input string using the parse action's C{s} argument
+ - explictly expand the tabs in your input string before calling
+ C{parseString}
+
+ Example::
+ Word('a').parseString('aaaaabaaa') # -> ['aaaaa']
+ Word('a').parseString('aaaaabaaa', parseAll=True) # -> Exception: Expected end of text
+ """
+ ParserElement.resetCache()
+ if not self.streamlined:
+ self.streamline()
+ #~ self.saveAsList = True
+ for e in self.ignoreExprs:
+ e.streamline()
+ if not self.keepTabs:
+ instring = instring.expandtabs()
+ try:
+ loc, tokens = self._parse( instring, 0 )
+ if parseAll:
+ loc = self.preParse( instring, loc )
+ se = Empty() + StringEnd()
+ se._parse( instring, loc )
+ except ParseBaseException as exc:
+ if ParserElement.verbose_stacktrace:
+ raise
+ else:
+ # catch and re-raise exception from here, clears out pyparsing internal stack trace
+ raise exc
+ else:
+ return tokens
+
+ def scanString( self, instring, maxMatches=_MAX_INT, overlap=False ):
+ """
+ Scan the input string for expression matches. Each match will return the
+ matching tokens, start location, and end location. May be called with optional
+ C{maxMatches} argument, to clip scanning after 'n' matches are found. If
+ C{overlap} is specified, then overlapping matches will be reported.
+
+ Note that the start and end locations are reported relative to the string
+ being parsed. See L{I{parseString}<parseString>} for more information on parsing
+ strings with embedded tabs.
+
+ Example::
+ source = "sldjf123lsdjjkf345sldkjf879lkjsfd987"
+ print(source)
+ for tokens,start,end in Word(alphas).scanString(source):
+ print(' '*start + '^'*(end-start))
+ print(' '*start + tokens[0])
+
+ prints::
+
+ sldjf123lsdjjkf345sldkjf879lkjsfd987
+ ^^^^^
+ sldjf
+ ^^^^^^^
+ lsdjjkf
+ ^^^^^^
+ sldkjf
+ ^^^^^^
+ lkjsfd
+ """
+ if not self.streamlined:
+ self.streamline()
+ for e in self.ignoreExprs:
+ e.streamline()
+
+ if not self.keepTabs:
+ instring = _ustr(instring).expandtabs()
+ instrlen = len(instring)
+ loc = 0
+ preparseFn = self.preParse
+ parseFn = self._parse
+ ParserElement.resetCache()
+ matches = 0
+ try:
+ while loc <= instrlen and matches < maxMatches:
+ try:
+ preloc = preparseFn( instring, loc )
+ nextLoc,tokens = parseFn( instring, preloc, callPreParse=False )
+ except ParseException:
+ loc = preloc+1
+ else:
+ if nextLoc > loc:
+ matches += 1
+ yield tokens, preloc, nextLoc
+ if overlap:
+ nextloc = preparseFn( instring, loc )
+ if nextloc > loc:
+ loc = nextLoc
+ else:
+ loc += 1
+ else:
+ loc = nextLoc
+ else:
+ loc = preloc+1
+ except ParseBaseException as exc:
+ if ParserElement.verbose_stacktrace:
+ raise
+ else:
+ # catch and re-raise exception from here, clears out pyparsing internal stack trace
+ raise exc
+
+ def transformString( self, instring ):
+ """
+ Extension to C{L{scanString}}, to modify matching text with modified tokens that may
+ be returned from a parse action. To use C{transformString}, define a grammar and
+ attach a parse action to it that modifies the returned token list.
+ Invoking C{transformString()} on a target string will then scan for matches,
+ and replace the matched text patterns according to the logic in the parse
+ action. C{transformString()} returns the resulting transformed string.
+
+ Example::
+ wd = Word(alphas)
+ wd.setParseAction(lambda toks: toks[0].title())
+
+ print(wd.transformString("now is the winter of our discontent made glorious summer by this sun of york."))
+ Prints::
+ Now Is The Winter Of Our Discontent Made Glorious Summer By This Sun Of York.
+ """
+ out = []
+ lastE = 0
+ # force preservation of <TAB>s, to minimize unwanted transformation of string, and to
+ # keep string locs straight between transformString and scanString
+ self.keepTabs = True
+ try:
+ for t,s,e in self.scanString( instring ):
+ out.append( instring[lastE:s] )
+ if t:
+ if isinstance(t,ParseResults):
+ out += t.asList()
+ elif isinstance(t,list):
+ out += t
+ else:
+ out.append(t)
+ lastE = e
+ out.append(instring[lastE:])
+ out = [o for o in out if o]
+ return "".join(map(_ustr,_flatten(out)))
+ except ParseBaseException as exc:
+ if ParserElement.verbose_stacktrace:
+ raise
+ else:
+ # catch and re-raise exception from here, clears out pyparsing internal stack trace
+ raise exc
+
+ def searchString( self, instring, maxMatches=_MAX_INT ):
+ """
+ Another extension to C{L{scanString}}, simplifying the access to the tokens found
+ to match the given parse expression. May be called with optional
+ C{maxMatches} argument, to clip searching after 'n' matches are found.
+
+ Example::
+ # a capitalized word starts with an uppercase letter, followed by zero or more lowercase letters
+ cap_word = Word(alphas.upper(), alphas.lower())
+
+ print(cap_word.searchString("More than Iron, more than Lead, more than Gold I need Electricity"))
+
+ # the sum() builtin can be used to merge results into a single ParseResults object
+ print(sum(cap_word.searchString("More than Iron, more than Lead, more than Gold I need Electricity")))
+ prints::
+ [['More'], ['Iron'], ['Lead'], ['Gold'], ['I'], ['Electricity']]
+ ['More', 'Iron', 'Lead', 'Gold', 'I', 'Electricity']
+ """
+ try:
+ return ParseResults([ t for t,s,e in self.scanString( instring, maxMatches ) ])
+ except ParseBaseException as exc:
+ if ParserElement.verbose_stacktrace:
+ raise
+ else:
+ # catch and re-raise exception from here, clears out pyparsing internal stack trace
+ raise exc
+
+ def split(self, instring, maxsplit=_MAX_INT, includeSeparators=False):
+ """
+ Generator method to split a string using the given expression as a separator.
+ May be called with optional C{maxsplit} argument, to limit the number of splits;
+ and the optional C{includeSeparators} argument (default=C{False}), if the separating
+ matching text should be included in the split results.
+
+ Example::
+ punc = oneOf(list(".,;:/-!?"))
+ print(list(punc.split("This, this?, this sentence, is badly punctuated!")))
+ prints::
+ ['This', ' this', '', ' this sentence', ' is badly punctuated', '']
+ """
+ splits = 0
+ last = 0
+ for t,s,e in self.scanString(instring, maxMatches=maxsplit):
+ yield instring[last:s]
+ if includeSeparators:
+ yield t[0]
+ last = e
+ yield instring[last:]
+
+ def __add__(self, other ):
+ """
+ Implementation of + operator - returns C{L{And}}. Adding strings to a ParserElement
+ converts them to L{Literal}s by default.
+
+ Example::
+ greet = Word(alphas) + "," + Word(alphas) + "!"
+ hello = "Hello, World!"
+ print (hello, "->", greet.parseString(hello))
+ Prints::
+ Hello, World! -> ['Hello', ',', 'World', '!']
+ """
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+ warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ return None
+ return And( [ self, other ] )
+
+ def __radd__(self, other ):
+ """
+ Implementation of + operator when left operand is not a C{L{ParserElement}}
+ """
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+ warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ return None
+ return other + self
+
+ def __sub__(self, other):
+ """
+ Implementation of - operator, returns C{L{And}} with error stop
+ """
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+ warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ return None
+ return self + And._ErrorStop() + other
+
+ def __rsub__(self, other ):
+ """
+ Implementation of - operator when left operand is not a C{L{ParserElement}}
+ """
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+ warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ return None
+ return other - self
+
+ def __mul__(self,other):
+ """
+ Implementation of * operator, allows use of C{expr * 3} in place of
+ C{expr + expr + expr}. Expressions may also me multiplied by a 2-integer
+ tuple, similar to C{{min,max}} multipliers in regular expressions. Tuples
+ may also include C{None} as in:
+ - C{expr*(n,None)} or C{expr*(n,)} is equivalent
+ to C{expr*n + L{ZeroOrMore}(expr)}
+ (read as "at least n instances of C{expr}")
+ - C{expr*(None,n)} is equivalent to C{expr*(0,n)}
+ (read as "0 to n instances of C{expr}")
+ - C{expr*(None,None)} is equivalent to C{L{ZeroOrMore}(expr)}
+ - C{expr*(1,None)} is equivalent to C{L{OneOrMore}(expr)}
+
+ Note that C{expr*(None,n)} does not raise an exception if
+ more than n exprs exist in the input stream; that is,
+ C{expr*(None,n)} does not enforce a maximum number of expr
+ occurrences. If this behavior is desired, then write
+ C{expr*(None,n) + ~expr}
+ """
+ if isinstance(other,int):
+ minElements, optElements = other,0
+ elif isinstance(other,tuple):
+ other = (other + (None, None))[:2]
+ if other[0] is None:
+ other = (0, other[1])
+ if isinstance(other[0],int) and other[1] is None:
+ if other[0] == 0:
+ return ZeroOrMore(self)
+ if other[0] == 1:
+ return OneOrMore(self)
+ else:
+ return self*other[0] + ZeroOrMore(self)
+ elif isinstance(other[0],int) and isinstance(other[1],int):
+ minElements, optElements = other
+ optElements -= minElements
+ else:
+ raise TypeError("cannot multiply 'ParserElement' and ('%s','%s') objects", type(other[0]),type(other[1]))
+ else:
+ raise TypeError("cannot multiply 'ParserElement' and '%s' objects", type(other))
+
+ if minElements < 0:
+ raise ValueError("cannot multiply ParserElement by negative value")
+ if optElements < 0:
+ raise ValueError("second tuple value must be greater or equal to first tuple value")
+ if minElements == optElements == 0:
+ raise ValueError("cannot multiply ParserElement by 0 or (0,0)")
+
+ if (optElements):
+ def makeOptionalList(n):
+ if n>1:
+ return Optional(self + makeOptionalList(n-1))
+ else:
+ return Optional(self)
+ if minElements:
+ if minElements == 1:
+ ret = self + makeOptionalList(optElements)
+ else:
+ ret = And([self]*minElements) + makeOptionalList(optElements)
+ else:
+ ret = makeOptionalList(optElements)
+ else:
+ if minElements == 1:
+ ret = self
+ else:
+ ret = And([self]*minElements)
+ return ret
+
+ def __rmul__(self, other):
+ return self.__mul__(other)
+
+ def __or__(self, other ):
+ """
+ Implementation of | operator - returns C{L{MatchFirst}}
+ """
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+ warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ return None
+ return MatchFirst( [ self, other ] )
+
+ def __ror__(self, other ):
+ """
+ Implementation of | operator when left operand is not a C{L{ParserElement}}
+ """
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+ warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ return None
+ return other | self
+
+ def __xor__(self, other ):
+ """
+ Implementation of ^ operator - returns C{L{Or}}
+ """
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+ warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ return None
+ return Or( [ self, other ] )
+
+ def __rxor__(self, other ):
+ """
+ Implementation of ^ operator when left operand is not a C{L{ParserElement}}
+ """
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+ warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ return None
+ return other ^ self
+
+ def __and__(self, other ):
+ """
+ Implementation of & operator - returns C{L{Each}}
+ """
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+ warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ return None
+ return Each( [ self, other ] )
+
+ def __rand__(self, other ):
+ """
+ Implementation of & operator when left operand is not a C{L{ParserElement}}
+ """
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ if not isinstance( other, ParserElement ):
+ warnings.warn("Cannot combine element of type %s with ParserElement" % type(other),
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ return None
+ return other & self
+
+ def __invert__( self ):
+ """
+ Implementation of ~ operator - returns C{L{NotAny}}
+ """
+ return NotAny( self )
+
+ def __call__(self, name=None):
+ """
+ Shortcut for C{L{setResultsName}}, with C{listAllMatches=False}.
+
+ If C{name} is given with a trailing C{'*'} character, then C{listAllMatches} will be
+ passed as C{True}.
+
+ If C{name} is omitted, same as calling C{L{copy}}.
+
+ Example::
+ # these are equivalent
+ userdata = Word(alphas).setResultsName("name") + Word(nums+"-").setResultsName("socsecno")
+ userdata = Word(alphas)("name") + Word(nums+"-")("socsecno")
+ """
+ if name is not None:
+ return self.setResultsName(name)
+ else:
+ return self.copy()
+
+ def suppress( self ):
+ """
+ Suppresses the output of this C{ParserElement}; useful to keep punctuation from
+ cluttering up returned output.
+ """
+ return Suppress( self )
+
+ def leaveWhitespace( self ):
+ """
+ Disables the skipping of whitespace before matching the characters in the
+ C{ParserElement}'s defined pattern. This is normally only used internally by
+ the pyparsing module, but may be needed in some whitespace-sensitive grammars.
+ """
+ self.skipWhitespace = False
+ return self
+
+ def setWhitespaceChars( self, chars ):
+ """
+ Overrides the default whitespace chars
+ """
+ self.skipWhitespace = True
+ self.whiteChars = chars
+ self.copyDefaultWhiteChars = False
+ return self
+
+ def parseWithTabs( self ):
+ """
+ Overrides default behavior to expand C{<TAB>}s to spaces before parsing the input string.
+ Must be called before C{parseString} when the input grammar contains elements that
+ match C{<TAB>} characters.
+ """
+ self.keepTabs = True
+ return self
+
+ def ignore( self, other ):
+ """
+ Define expression to be ignored (e.g., comments) while doing pattern
+ matching; may be called repeatedly, to define multiple comment or other
+ ignorable patterns.
+
+ Example::
+ patt = OneOrMore(Word(alphas))
+ patt.parseString('ablaj /* comment */ lskjd') # -> ['ablaj']
+
+ patt.ignore(cStyleComment)
+ patt.parseString('ablaj /* comment */ lskjd') # -> ['ablaj', 'lskjd']
+ """
+ if isinstance(other, basestring):
+ other = Suppress(other)
+
+ if isinstance( other, Suppress ):
+ if other not in self.ignoreExprs:
+ self.ignoreExprs.append(other)
+ else:
+ self.ignoreExprs.append( Suppress( other.copy() ) )
+ return self
+
+ def setDebugActions( self, startAction, successAction, exceptionAction ):
+ """
+ Enable display of debugging messages while doing pattern matching.
+ """
+ self.debugActions = (startAction or _defaultStartDebugAction,
+ successAction or _defaultSuccessDebugAction,
+ exceptionAction or _defaultExceptionDebugAction)
+ self.debug = True
+ return self
+
+ def setDebug( self, flag=True ):
+ """
+ Enable display of debugging messages while doing pattern matching.
+ Set C{flag} to True to enable, False to disable.
+
+ Example::
+ wd = Word(alphas).setName("alphaword")
+ integer = Word(nums).setName("numword")
+ term = wd | integer
+
+ # turn on debugging for wd
+ wd.setDebug()
+
+ OneOrMore(term).parseString("abc 123 xyz 890")
+
+ prints::
+ Match alphaword at loc 0(1,1)
+ Matched alphaword -> ['abc']
+ Match alphaword at loc 3(1,4)
+ Exception raised:Expected alphaword (at char 4), (line:1, col:5)
+ Match alphaword at loc 7(1,8)
+ Matched alphaword -> ['xyz']
+ Match alphaword at loc 11(1,12)
+ Exception raised:Expected alphaword (at char 12), (line:1, col:13)
+ Match alphaword at loc 15(1,16)
+ Exception raised:Expected alphaword (at char 15), (line:1, col:16)
+
+ The output shown is that produced by the default debug actions - custom debug actions can be
+ specified using L{setDebugActions}. Prior to attempting
+ to match the C{wd} expression, the debugging message C{"Match <exprname> at loc <n>(<line>,<col>)"}
+ is shown. Then if the parse succeeds, a C{"Matched"} message is shown, or an C{"Exception raised"}
+ message is shown. Also note the use of L{setName} to assign a human-readable name to the expression,
+ which makes debugging and exception messages easier to understand - for instance, the default
+ name created for the C{Word} expression without calling C{setName} is C{"W:(ABCD...)"}.
+ """
+ if flag:
+ self.setDebugActions( _defaultStartDebugAction, _defaultSuccessDebugAction, _defaultExceptionDebugAction )
+ else:
+ self.debug = False
+ return self
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ return self.name
+
+ def __repr__( self ):
+ return _ustr(self)
+
+ def streamline( self ):
+ self.streamlined = True
+ self.strRepr = None
+ return self
+
+ def checkRecursion( self, parseElementList ):
+ pass
+
+ def validate( self, validateTrace=[] ):
+ """
+ Check defined expressions for valid structure, check for infinite recursive definitions.
+ """
+ self.checkRecursion( [] )
+
+ def parseFile( self, file_or_filename, parseAll=False ):
+ """
+ Execute the parse expression on the given file or filename.
+ If a filename is specified (instead of a file object),
+ the entire file is opened, read, and closed before parsing.
+ """
+ try:
+ file_contents = file_or_filename.read()
+ except AttributeError:
+ with open(file_or_filename, "r") as f:
+ file_contents = f.read()
+ try:
+ return self.parseString(file_contents, parseAll)
+ except ParseBaseException as exc:
+ if ParserElement.verbose_stacktrace:
+ raise
+ else:
+ # catch and re-raise exception from here, clears out pyparsing internal stack trace
+ raise exc
+
+ def __eq__(self,other):
+ if isinstance(other, ParserElement):
+ return self is other or vars(self) == vars(other)
+ elif isinstance(other, basestring):
+ return self.matches(other)
+ else:
+ return super(ParserElement,self)==other
+
+ def __ne__(self,other):
+ return not (self == other)
+
+ def __hash__(self):
+ return hash(id(self))
+
+ def __req__(self,other):
+ return self == other
+
+ def __rne__(self,other):
+ return not (self == other)
+
+ def matches(self, testString, parseAll=True):
+ """
+ Method for quick testing of a parser against a test string. Good for simple
+ inline microtests of sub expressions while building up larger parser.
+
+ Parameters:
+ - testString - to test against this expression for a match
+ - parseAll - (default=C{True}) - flag to pass to C{L{parseString}} when running tests
+
+ Example::
+ expr = Word(nums)
+ assert expr.matches("100")
+ """
+ try:
+ self.parseString(_ustr(testString), parseAll=parseAll)
+ return True
+ except ParseBaseException:
+ return False
+
+ def runTests(self, tests, parseAll=True, comment='#', fullDump=True, printResults=True, failureTests=False):
+ """
+ Execute the parse expression on a series of test strings, showing each
+ test, the parsed results or where the parse failed. Quick and easy way to
+ run a parse expression against a list of sample strings.
+
+ Parameters:
+ - tests - a list of separate test strings, or a multiline string of test strings
+ - parseAll - (default=C{True}) - flag to pass to C{L{parseString}} when running tests
+ - comment - (default=C{'#'}) - expression for indicating embedded comments in the test
+ string; pass None to disable comment filtering
+ - fullDump - (default=C{True}) - dump results as list followed by results names in nested outline;
+ if False, only dump nested list
+ - printResults - (default=C{True}) prints test output to stdout
+ - failureTests - (default=C{False}) indicates if these tests are expected to fail parsing
+
+ Returns: a (success, results) tuple, where success indicates that all tests succeeded
+ (or failed if C{failureTests} is True), and the results contain a list of lines of each
+ test's output
+
+ Example::
+ number_expr = pyparsing_common.number.copy()
+
+ result = number_expr.runTests('''
+ # unsigned integer
+ 100
+ # negative integer
+ -100
+ # float with scientific notation
+ 6.02e23
+ # integer with scientific notation
+ 1e-12
+ ''')
+ print("Success" if result[0] else "Failed!")
+
+ result = number_expr.runTests('''
+ # stray character
+ 100Z
+ # missing leading digit before '.'
+ -.100
+ # too many '.'
+ 3.14.159
+ ''', failureTests=True)
+ print("Success" if result[0] else "Failed!")
+ prints::
+ # unsigned integer
+ 100
+ [100]
+
+ # negative integer
+ -100
+ [-100]
+
+ # float with scientific notation
+ 6.02e23
+ [6.02e+23]
+
+ # integer with scientific notation
+ 1e-12
+ [1e-12]
+
+ Success
+
+ # stray character
+ 100Z
+ ^
+ FAIL: Expected end of text (at char 3), (line:1, col:4)
+
+ # missing leading digit before '.'
+ -.100
+ ^
+ FAIL: Expected {real number with scientific notation | real number | signed integer} (at char 0), (line:1, col:1)
+
+ # too many '.'
+ 3.14.159
+ ^
+ FAIL: Expected end of text (at char 4), (line:1, col:5)
+
+ Success
+
+ Each test string must be on a single line. If you want to test a string that spans multiple
+ lines, create a test like this::
+
+ expr.runTest(r"this is a test\\n of strings that spans \\n 3 lines")
+
+ (Note that this is a raw string literal, you must include the leading 'r'.)
+ """
+ if isinstance(tests, basestring):
+ tests = list(map(str.strip, tests.rstrip().splitlines()))
+ if isinstance(comment, basestring):
+ comment = Literal(comment)
+ allResults = []
+ comments = []
+ success = True
+ for t in tests:
+ if comment is not None and comment.matches(t, False) or comments and not t:
+ comments.append(t)
+ continue
+ if not t:
+ continue
+ out = ['\n'.join(comments), t]
+ comments = []
+ try:
+ t = t.replace(r'\n','\n')
+ result = self.parseString(t, parseAll=parseAll)
+ out.append(result.dump(full=fullDump))
+ success = success and not failureTests
+ except ParseBaseException as pe:
+ fatal = "(FATAL)" if isinstance(pe, ParseFatalException) else ""
+ if '\n' in t:
+ out.append(line(pe.loc, t))
+ out.append(' '*(col(pe.loc,t)-1) + '^' + fatal)
+ else:
+ out.append(' '*pe.loc + '^' + fatal)
+ out.append("FAIL: " + str(pe))
+ success = success and failureTests
+ result = pe
+ except Exception as exc:
+ out.append("FAIL-EXCEPTION: " + str(exc))
+ success = success and failureTests
+ result = exc
+
+ if printResults:
+ if fullDump:
+ out.append('')
+ print('\n'.join(out))
+
+ allResults.append((t, result))
+
+ return success, allResults
+
+
+class Token(ParserElement):
+ """
+ Abstract C{ParserElement} subclass, for defining atomic matching patterns.
+ """
+ def __init__( self ):
+ super(Token,self).__init__( savelist=False )
+
+
+class Empty(Token):
+ """
+ An empty token, will always match.
+ """
+ def __init__( self ):
+ super(Empty,self).__init__()
+ self.name = "Empty"
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+ self.mayIndexError = False
+
+
+class NoMatch(Token):
+ """
+ A token that will never match.
+ """
+ def __init__( self ):
+ super(NoMatch,self).__init__()
+ self.name = "NoMatch"
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+ self.mayIndexError = False
+ self.errmsg = "Unmatchable token"
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+
+class Literal(Token):
+ """
+ Token to exactly match a specified string.
+
+ Example::
+ Literal('blah').parseString('blah') # -> ['blah']
+ Literal('blah').parseString('blahfooblah') # -> ['blah']
+ Literal('blah').parseString('bla') # -> Exception: Expected "blah"
+
+ For case-insensitive matching, use L{CaselessLiteral}.
+
+ For keyword matching (force word break before and after the matched string),
+ use L{Keyword} or L{CaselessKeyword}.
+ """
+ def __init__( self, matchString ):
+ super(Literal,self).__init__()
+ self.match = matchString
+ self.matchLen = len(matchString)
+ try:
+ self.firstMatchChar = matchString[0]
+ except IndexError:
+ warnings.warn("null string passed to Literal; use Empty() instead",
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ self.__class__ = Empty
+ self.name = '"%s"' % _ustr(self.match)
+ self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = False
+ self.mayIndexError = False
+
+ # Performance tuning: this routine gets called a *lot*
+ # if this is a single character match string and the first character matches,
+ # short-circuit as quickly as possible, and avoid calling startswith
+ #~ @profile
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if (instring[loc] == self.firstMatchChar and
+ (self.matchLen==1 or instring.startswith(self.match,loc)) ):
+ return loc+self.matchLen, self.match
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+_L = Literal
+ParserElement._literalStringClass = Literal
+
+class Keyword(Token):
+ """
+ Token to exactly match a specified string as a keyword, that is, it must be
+ immediately followed by a non-keyword character. Compare with C{L{Literal}}:
+ - C{Literal("if")} will match the leading C{'if'} in C{'ifAndOnlyIf'}.
+ - C{Keyword("if")} will not; it will only match the leading C{'if'} in C{'if x=1'}, or C{'if(y==2)'}
+ Accepts two optional constructor arguments in addition to the keyword string:
+ - C{identChars} is a string of characters that would be valid identifier characters,
+ defaulting to all alphanumerics + "_" and "$"
+ - C{caseless} allows case-insensitive matching, default is C{False}.
+
+ Example::
+ Keyword("start").parseString("start") # -> ['start']
+ Keyword("start").parseString("starting") # -> Exception
+
+ For case-insensitive matching, use L{CaselessKeyword}.
+ """
+ DEFAULT_KEYWORD_CHARS = alphanums+"_$"
+
+ def __init__( self, matchString, identChars=None, caseless=False ):
+ super(Keyword,self).__init__()
+ if identChars is None:
+ identChars = Keyword.DEFAULT_KEYWORD_CHARS
+ self.match = matchString
+ self.matchLen = len(matchString)
+ try:
+ self.firstMatchChar = matchString[0]
+ except IndexError:
+ warnings.warn("null string passed to Keyword; use Empty() instead",
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ self.name = '"%s"' % self.match
+ self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = False
+ self.mayIndexError = False
+ self.caseless = caseless
+ if caseless:
+ self.caselessmatch = matchString.upper()
+ identChars = identChars.upper()
+ self.identChars = set(identChars)
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if self.caseless:
+ if ( (instring[ loc:loc+self.matchLen ].upper() == self.caselessmatch) and
+ (loc >= len(instring)-self.matchLen or instring[loc+self.matchLen].upper() not in self.identChars) and
+ (loc == 0 or instring[loc-1].upper() not in self.identChars) ):
+ return loc+self.matchLen, self.match
+ else:
+ if (instring[loc] == self.firstMatchChar and
+ (self.matchLen==1 or instring.startswith(self.match,loc)) and
+ (loc >= len(instring)-self.matchLen or instring[loc+self.matchLen] not in self.identChars) and
+ (loc == 0 or instring[loc-1] not in self.identChars) ):
+ return loc+self.matchLen, self.match
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+ def copy(self):
+ c = super(Keyword,self).copy()
+ c.identChars = Keyword.DEFAULT_KEYWORD_CHARS
+ return c
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def setDefaultKeywordChars( chars ):
+ """Overrides the default Keyword chars
+ """
+ Keyword.DEFAULT_KEYWORD_CHARS = chars
+
+class CaselessLiteral(Literal):
+ """
+ Token to match a specified string, ignoring case of letters.
+ Note: the matched results will always be in the case of the given
+ match string, NOT the case of the input text.
+
+ Example::
+ OneOrMore(CaselessLiteral("CMD")).parseString("cmd CMD Cmd10") # -> ['CMD', 'CMD', 'CMD']
+
+ (Contrast with example for L{CaselessKeyword}.)
+ """
+ def __init__( self, matchString ):
+ super(CaselessLiteral,self).__init__( matchString.upper() )
+ # Preserve the defining literal.
+ self.returnString = matchString
+ self.name = "'%s'" % self.returnString
+ self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if instring[ loc:loc+self.matchLen ].upper() == self.match:
+ return loc+self.matchLen, self.returnString
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+class CaselessKeyword(Keyword):
+ """
+ Caseless version of L{Keyword}.
+
+ Example::
+ OneOrMore(CaselessKeyword("CMD")).parseString("cmd CMD Cmd10") # -> ['CMD', 'CMD']
+
+ (Contrast with example for L{CaselessLiteral}.)
+ """
+ def __init__( self, matchString, identChars=None ):
+ super(CaselessKeyword,self).__init__( matchString, identChars, caseless=True )
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if ( (instring[ loc:loc+self.matchLen ].upper() == self.caselessmatch) and
+ (loc >= len(instring)-self.matchLen or instring[loc+self.matchLen].upper() not in self.identChars) ):
+ return loc+self.matchLen, self.match
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+class CloseMatch(Token):
+ """
+ A variation on L{Literal} which matches "close" matches, that is,
+ strings with at most 'n' mismatching characters. C{CloseMatch} takes parameters:
+ - C{match_string} - string to be matched
+ - C{maxMismatches} - (C{default=1}) maximum number of mismatches allowed to count as a match
+
+ The results from a successful parse will contain the matched text from the input string and the following named results:
+ - C{mismatches} - a list of the positions within the match_string where mismatches were found
+ - C{original} - the original match_string used to compare against the input string
+
+ If C{mismatches} is an empty list, then the match was an exact match.
+
+ Example::
+ patt = CloseMatch("ATCATCGAATGGA")
+ patt.parseString("ATCATCGAAXGGA") # -> (['ATCATCGAAXGGA'], {'mismatches': [[9]], 'original': ['ATCATCGAATGGA']})
+ patt.parseString("ATCAXCGAAXGGA") # -> Exception: Expected 'ATCATCGAATGGA' (with up to 1 mismatches) (at char 0), (line:1, col:1)
+
+ # exact match
+ patt.parseString("ATCATCGAATGGA") # -> (['ATCATCGAATGGA'], {'mismatches': [[]], 'original': ['ATCATCGAATGGA']})
+
+ # close match allowing up to 2 mismatches
+ patt = CloseMatch("ATCATCGAATGGA", maxMismatches=2)
+ patt.parseString("ATCAXCGAAXGGA") # -> (['ATCAXCGAAXGGA'], {'mismatches': [[4, 9]], 'original': ['ATCATCGAATGGA']})
+ """
+ def __init__(self, match_string, maxMismatches=1):
+ super(CloseMatch,self).__init__()
+ self.name = match_string
+ self.match_string = match_string
+ self.maxMismatches = maxMismatches
+ self.errmsg = "Expected %r (with up to %d mismatches)" % (self.match_string, self.maxMismatches)
+ self.mayIndexError = False
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = False
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ start = loc
+ instrlen = len(instring)
+ maxloc = start + len(self.match_string)
+
+ if maxloc <= instrlen:
+ match_string = self.match_string
+ match_stringloc = 0
+ mismatches = []
+ maxMismatches = self.maxMismatches
+
+ for match_stringloc,s_m in enumerate(zip(instring[loc:maxloc], self.match_string)):
+ src,mat = s_m
+ if src != mat:
+ mismatches.append(match_stringloc)
+ if len(mismatches) > maxMismatches:
+ break
+ else:
+ loc = match_stringloc + 1
+ results = ParseResults([instring[start:loc]])
+ results['original'] = self.match_string
+ results['mismatches'] = mismatches
+ return loc, results
+
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+
+class Word(Token):
+ """
+ Token for matching words composed of allowed character sets.
+ Defined with string containing all allowed initial characters,
+ an optional string containing allowed body characters (if omitted,
+ defaults to the initial character set), and an optional minimum,
+ maximum, and/or exact length. The default value for C{min} is 1 (a
+ minimum value < 1 is not valid); the default values for C{max} and C{exact}
+ are 0, meaning no maximum or exact length restriction. An optional
+ C{excludeChars} parameter can list characters that might be found in
+ the input C{bodyChars} string; useful to define a word of all printables
+ except for one or two characters, for instance.
+
+ L{srange} is useful for defining custom character set strings for defining
+ C{Word} expressions, using range notation from regular expression character sets.
+
+ A common mistake is to use C{Word} to match a specific literal string, as in
+ C{Word("Address")}. Remember that C{Word} uses the string argument to define
+ I{sets} of matchable characters. This expression would match "Add", "AAA",
+ "dAred", or any other word made up of the characters 'A', 'd', 'r', 'e', and 's'.
+ To match an exact literal string, use L{Literal} or L{Keyword}.
+
+ pyparsing includes helper strings for building Words:
+ - L{alphas}
+ - L{nums}
+ - L{alphanums}
+ - L{hexnums}
+ - L{alphas8bit} (alphabetic characters in ASCII range 128-255 - accented, tilded, umlauted, etc.)
+ - L{punc8bit} (non-alphabetic characters in ASCII range 128-255 - currency, symbols, superscripts, diacriticals, etc.)
+ - L{printables} (any non-whitespace character)
+
+ Example::
+ # a word composed of digits
+ integer = Word(nums) # equivalent to Word("0123456789") or Word(srange("0-9"))
+
+ # a word with a leading capital, and zero or more lowercase
+ capital_word = Word(alphas.upper(), alphas.lower())
+
+ # hostnames are alphanumeric, with leading alpha, and '-'
+ hostname = Word(alphas, alphanums+'-')
+
+ # roman numeral (not a strict parser, accepts invalid mix of characters)
+ roman = Word("IVXLCDM")
+
+ # any string of non-whitespace characters, except for ','
+ csv_value = Word(printables, excludeChars=",")
+ """
+ def __init__( self, initChars, bodyChars=None, min=1, max=0, exact=0, asKeyword=False, excludeChars=None ):
+ super(Word,self).__init__()
+ if excludeChars:
+ initChars = ''.join(c for c in initChars if c not in excludeChars)
+ if bodyChars:
+ bodyChars = ''.join(c for c in bodyChars if c not in excludeChars)
+ self.initCharsOrig = initChars
+ self.initChars = set(initChars)
+ if bodyChars :
+ self.bodyCharsOrig = bodyChars
+ self.bodyChars = set(bodyChars)
+ else:
+ self.bodyCharsOrig = initChars
+ self.bodyChars = set(initChars)
+
+ self.maxSpecified = max > 0
+
+ if min < 1:
+ raise ValueError("cannot specify a minimum length < 1; use Optional(Word()) if zero-length word is permitted")
+
+ self.minLen = min
+
+ if max > 0:
+ self.maxLen = max
+ else:
+ self.maxLen = _MAX_INT
+
+ if exact > 0:
+ self.maxLen = exact
+ self.minLen = exact
+
+ self.name = _ustr(self)
+ self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+ self.mayIndexError = False
+ self.asKeyword = asKeyword
+
+ if ' ' not in self.initCharsOrig+self.bodyCharsOrig and (min==1 and max==0 and exact==0):
+ if self.bodyCharsOrig == self.initCharsOrig:
+ self.reString = "[%s]+" % _escapeRegexRangeChars(self.initCharsOrig)
+ elif len(self.initCharsOrig) == 1:
+ self.reString = "%s[%s]*" % \
+ (re.escape(self.initCharsOrig),
+ _escapeRegexRangeChars(self.bodyCharsOrig),)
+ else:
+ self.reString = "[%s][%s]*" % \
+ (_escapeRegexRangeChars(self.initCharsOrig),
+ _escapeRegexRangeChars(self.bodyCharsOrig),)
+ if self.asKeyword:
+ self.reString = r"\b"+self.reString+r"\b"
+ try:
+ self.re = re.compile( self.reString )
+ except Exception:
+ self.re = None
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if self.re:
+ result = self.re.match(instring,loc)
+ if not result:
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+ loc = result.end()
+ return loc, result.group()
+
+ if not(instring[ loc ] in self.initChars):
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+ start = loc
+ loc += 1
+ instrlen = len(instring)
+ bodychars = self.bodyChars
+ maxloc = start + self.maxLen
+ maxloc = min( maxloc, instrlen )
+ while loc < maxloc and instring[loc] in bodychars:
+ loc += 1
+
+ throwException = False
+ if loc - start < self.minLen:
+ throwException = True
+ if self.maxSpecified and loc < instrlen and instring[loc] in bodychars:
+ throwException = True
+ if self.asKeyword:
+ if (start>0 and instring[start-1] in bodychars) or (loc<instrlen and instring[loc] in bodychars):
+ throwException = True
+
+ if throwException:
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+ return loc, instring[start:loc]
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ try:
+ return super(Word,self).__str__()
+ except Exception:
+ pass
+
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+
+ def charsAsStr(s):
+ if len(s)>4:
+ return s[:4]+"..."
+ else:
+ return s
+
+ if ( self.initCharsOrig != self.bodyCharsOrig ):
+ self.strRepr = "W:(%s,%s)" % ( charsAsStr(self.initCharsOrig), charsAsStr(self.bodyCharsOrig) )
+ else:
+ self.strRepr = "W:(%s)" % charsAsStr(self.initCharsOrig)
+
+ return self.strRepr
+
+
+class Regex(Token):
+ r"""
+ Token for matching strings that match a given regular expression.
+ Defined with string specifying the regular expression in a form recognized by the inbuilt Python re module.
+ If the given regex contains named groups (defined using C{(?P<name>...)}), these will be preserved as
+ named parse results.
+
+ Example::
+ realnum = Regex(r"[+-]?\d+\.\d*")
+ date = Regex(r'(?P<year>\d{4})-(?P<month>\d\d?)-(?P<day>\d\d?)')
+ # ref: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/267399/how-do-you-match-only-valid-roman-numerals-with-a-regular-expression
+ roman = Regex(r"M{0,4}(CM|CD|D?C{0,3})(XC|XL|L?X{0,3})(IX|IV|V?I{0,3})")
+ """
+ compiledREtype = type(re.compile("[A-Z]"))
+ def __init__( self, pattern, flags=0):
+ """The parameters C{pattern} and C{flags} are passed to the C{re.compile()} function as-is. See the Python C{re} module for an explanation of the acceptable patterns and flags."""
+ super(Regex,self).__init__()
+
+ if isinstance(pattern, basestring):
+ if not pattern:
+ warnings.warn("null string passed to Regex; use Empty() instead",
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+
+ self.pattern = pattern
+ self.flags = flags
+
+ try:
+ self.re = re.compile(self.pattern, self.flags)
+ self.reString = self.pattern
+ except sre_constants.error:
+ warnings.warn("invalid pattern (%s) passed to Regex" % pattern,
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ raise
+
+ elif isinstance(pattern, Regex.compiledREtype):
+ self.re = pattern
+ self.pattern = \
+ self.reString = str(pattern)
+ self.flags = flags
+
+ else:
+ raise ValueError("Regex may only be constructed with a string or a compiled RE object")
+
+ self.name = _ustr(self)
+ self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+ self.mayIndexError = False
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ result = self.re.match(instring,loc)
+ if not result:
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+ loc = result.end()
+ d = result.groupdict()
+ ret = ParseResults(result.group())
+ if d:
+ for k in d:
+ ret[k] = d[k]
+ return loc,ret
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ try:
+ return super(Regex,self).__str__()
+ except Exception:
+ pass
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+ self.strRepr = "Re:(%s)" % repr(self.pattern)
+
+ return self.strRepr
+
+
+class QuotedString(Token):
+ r"""
+ Token for matching strings that are delimited by quoting characters.
+
+ Defined with the following parameters:
+ - quoteChar - string of one or more characters defining the quote delimiting string
+ - escChar - character to escape quotes, typically backslash (default=C{None})
+ - escQuote - special quote sequence to escape an embedded quote string (such as SQL's "" to escape an embedded ") (default=C{None})
+ - multiline - boolean indicating whether quotes can span multiple lines (default=C{False})
+ - unquoteResults - boolean indicating whether the matched text should be unquoted (default=C{True})
+ - endQuoteChar - string of one or more characters defining the end of the quote delimited string (default=C{None} => same as quoteChar)
+ - convertWhitespaceEscapes - convert escaped whitespace (C{'\t'}, C{'\n'}, etc.) to actual whitespace (default=C{True})
+
+ Example::
+ qs = QuotedString('"')
+ print(qs.searchString('lsjdf "This is the quote" sldjf'))
+ complex_qs = QuotedString('{{', endQuoteChar='}}')
+ print(complex_qs.searchString('lsjdf {{This is the "quote"}} sldjf'))
+ sql_qs = QuotedString('"', escQuote='""')
+ print(sql_qs.searchString('lsjdf "This is the quote with ""embedded"" quotes" sldjf'))
+ prints::
+ [['This is the quote']]
+ [['This is the "quote"']]
+ [['This is the quote with "embedded" quotes']]
+ """
+ def __init__( self, quoteChar, escChar=None, escQuote=None, multiline=False, unquoteResults=True, endQuoteChar=None, convertWhitespaceEscapes=True):
+ super(QuotedString,self).__init__()
+
+ # remove white space from quote chars - wont work anyway
+ quoteChar = quoteChar.strip()
+ if not quoteChar:
+ warnings.warn("quoteChar cannot be the empty string",SyntaxWarning,stacklevel=2)
+ raise SyntaxError()
+
+ if endQuoteChar is None:
+ endQuoteChar = quoteChar
+ else:
+ endQuoteChar = endQuoteChar.strip()
+ if not endQuoteChar:
+ warnings.warn("endQuoteChar cannot be the empty string",SyntaxWarning,stacklevel=2)
+ raise SyntaxError()
+
+ self.quoteChar = quoteChar
+ self.quoteCharLen = len(quoteChar)
+ self.firstQuoteChar = quoteChar[0]
+ self.endQuoteChar = endQuoteChar
+ self.endQuoteCharLen = len(endQuoteChar)
+ self.escChar = escChar
+ self.escQuote = escQuote
+ self.unquoteResults = unquoteResults
+ self.convertWhitespaceEscapes = convertWhitespaceEscapes
+
+ if multiline:
+ self.flags = re.MULTILINE | re.DOTALL
+ self.pattern = r'%s(?:[^%s%s]' % \
+ ( re.escape(self.quoteChar),
+ _escapeRegexRangeChars(self.endQuoteChar[0]),
+ (escChar is not None and _escapeRegexRangeChars(escChar) or '') )
+ else:
+ self.flags = 0
+ self.pattern = r'%s(?:[^%s\n\r%s]' % \
+ ( re.escape(self.quoteChar),
+ _escapeRegexRangeChars(self.endQuoteChar[0]),
+ (escChar is not None and _escapeRegexRangeChars(escChar) or '') )
+ if len(self.endQuoteChar) > 1:
+ self.pattern += (
+ '|(?:' + ')|(?:'.join("%s[^%s]" % (re.escape(self.endQuoteChar[:i]),
+ _escapeRegexRangeChars(self.endQuoteChar[i]))
+ for i in range(len(self.endQuoteChar)-1,0,-1)) + ')'
+ )
+ if escQuote:
+ self.pattern += (r'|(?:%s)' % re.escape(escQuote))
+ if escChar:
+ self.pattern += (r'|(?:%s.)' % re.escape(escChar))
+ self.escCharReplacePattern = re.escape(self.escChar)+"(.)"
+ self.pattern += (r')*%s' % re.escape(self.endQuoteChar))
+
+ try:
+ self.re = re.compile(self.pattern, self.flags)
+ self.reString = self.pattern
+ except sre_constants.error:
+ warnings.warn("invalid pattern (%s) passed to Regex" % self.pattern,
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ raise
+
+ self.name = _ustr(self)
+ self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+ self.mayIndexError = False
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ result = instring[loc] == self.firstQuoteChar and self.re.match(instring,loc) or None
+ if not result:
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+ loc = result.end()
+ ret = result.group()
+
+ if self.unquoteResults:
+
+ # strip off quotes
+ ret = ret[self.quoteCharLen:-self.endQuoteCharLen]
+
+ if isinstance(ret,basestring):
+ # replace escaped whitespace
+ if '\\' in ret and self.convertWhitespaceEscapes:
+ ws_map = {
+ r'\t' : '\t',
+ r'\n' : '\n',
+ r'\f' : '\f',
+ r'\r' : '\r',
+ }
+ for wslit,wschar in ws_map.items():
+ ret = ret.replace(wslit, wschar)
+
+ # replace escaped characters
+ if self.escChar:
+ ret = re.sub(self.escCharReplacePattern, r"\g<1>", ret)
+
+ # replace escaped quotes
+ if self.escQuote:
+ ret = ret.replace(self.escQuote, self.endQuoteChar)
+
+ return loc, ret
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ try:
+ return super(QuotedString,self).__str__()
+ except Exception:
+ pass
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+ self.strRepr = "quoted string, starting with %s ending with %s" % (self.quoteChar, self.endQuoteChar)
+
+ return self.strRepr
+
+
+class CharsNotIn(Token):
+ """
+ Token for matching words composed of characters I{not} in a given set (will
+ include whitespace in matched characters if not listed in the provided exclusion set - see example).
+ Defined with string containing all disallowed characters, and an optional
+ minimum, maximum, and/or exact length. The default value for C{min} is 1 (a
+ minimum value < 1 is not valid); the default values for C{max} and C{exact}
+ are 0, meaning no maximum or exact length restriction.
+
+ Example::
+ # define a comma-separated-value as anything that is not a ','
+ csv_value = CharsNotIn(',')
+ print(delimitedList(csv_value).parseString("dkls,lsdkjf,s12 34,@!#,213"))
+ prints::
+ ['dkls', 'lsdkjf', 's12 34', '@!#', '213']
+ """
+ def __init__( self, notChars, min=1, max=0, exact=0 ):
+ super(CharsNotIn,self).__init__()
+ self.skipWhitespace = False
+ self.notChars = notChars
+
+ if min < 1:
+ raise ValueError("cannot specify a minimum length < 1; use Optional(CharsNotIn()) if zero-length char group is permitted")
+
+ self.minLen = min
+
+ if max > 0:
+ self.maxLen = max
+ else:
+ self.maxLen = _MAX_INT
+
+ if exact > 0:
+ self.maxLen = exact
+ self.minLen = exact
+
+ self.name = _ustr(self)
+ self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = ( self.minLen == 0 )
+ self.mayIndexError = False
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if instring[loc] in self.notChars:
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+ start = loc
+ loc += 1
+ notchars = self.notChars
+ maxlen = min( start+self.maxLen, len(instring) )
+ while loc < maxlen and \
+ (instring[loc] not in notchars):
+ loc += 1
+
+ if loc - start < self.minLen:
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+ return loc, instring[start:loc]
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ try:
+ return super(CharsNotIn, self).__str__()
+ except Exception:
+ pass
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+ if len(self.notChars) > 4:
+ self.strRepr = "!W:(%s...)" % self.notChars[:4]
+ else:
+ self.strRepr = "!W:(%s)" % self.notChars
+
+ return self.strRepr
+
+class White(Token):
+ """
+ Special matching class for matching whitespace. Normally, whitespace is ignored
+ by pyparsing grammars. This class is included when some whitespace structures
+ are significant. Define with a string containing the whitespace characters to be
+ matched; default is C{" \\t\\r\\n"}. Also takes optional C{min}, C{max}, and C{exact} arguments,
+ as defined for the C{L{Word}} class.
+ """
+ whiteStrs = {
+ " " : "<SPC>",
+ "\t": "<TAB>",
+ "\n": "<LF>",
+ "\r": "<CR>",
+ "\f": "<FF>",
+ }
+ def __init__(self, ws=" \t\r\n", min=1, max=0, exact=0):
+ super(White,self).__init__()
+ self.matchWhite = ws
+ self.setWhitespaceChars( "".join(c for c in self.whiteChars if c not in self.matchWhite) )
+ #~ self.leaveWhitespace()
+ self.name = ("".join(White.whiteStrs[c] for c in self.matchWhite))
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+ self.errmsg = "Expected " + self.name
+
+ self.minLen = min
+
+ if max > 0:
+ self.maxLen = max
+ else:
+ self.maxLen = _MAX_INT
+
+ if exact > 0:
+ self.maxLen = exact
+ self.minLen = exact
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if not(instring[ loc ] in self.matchWhite):
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+ start = loc
+ loc += 1
+ maxloc = start + self.maxLen
+ maxloc = min( maxloc, len(instring) )
+ while loc < maxloc and instring[loc] in self.matchWhite:
+ loc += 1
+
+ if loc - start < self.minLen:
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+ return loc, instring[start:loc]
+
+
+class _PositionToken(Token):
+ def __init__( self ):
+ super(_PositionToken,self).__init__()
+ self.name=self.__class__.__name__
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+ self.mayIndexError = False
+
+class GoToColumn(_PositionToken):
+ """
+ Token to advance to a specific column of input text; useful for tabular report scraping.
+ """
+ def __init__( self, colno ):
+ super(GoToColumn,self).__init__()
+ self.col = colno
+
+ def preParse( self, instring, loc ):
+ if col(loc,instring) != self.col:
+ instrlen = len(instring)
+ if self.ignoreExprs:
+ loc = self._skipIgnorables( instring, loc )
+ while loc < instrlen and instring[loc].isspace() and col( loc, instring ) != self.col :
+ loc += 1
+ return loc
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ thiscol = col( loc, instring )
+ if thiscol > self.col:
+ raise ParseException( instring, loc, "Text not in expected column", self )
+ newloc = loc + self.col - thiscol
+ ret = instring[ loc: newloc ]
+ return newloc, ret
+
+
+class LineStart(_PositionToken):
+ """
+ Matches if current position is at the beginning of a line within the parse string
+
+ Example::
+
+ test = '''\
+ AAA this line
+ AAA and this line
+ AAA but not this one
+ B AAA and definitely not this one
+ '''
+
+ for t in (LineStart() + 'AAA' + restOfLine).searchString(test):
+ print(t)
+
+ Prints::
+ ['AAA', ' this line']
+ ['AAA', ' and this line']
+
+ """
+ def __init__( self ):
+ super(LineStart,self).__init__()
+ self.errmsg = "Expected start of line"
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if col(loc, instring) == 1:
+ return loc, []
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+class LineEnd(_PositionToken):
+ """
+ Matches if current position is at the end of a line within the parse string
+ """
+ def __init__( self ):
+ super(LineEnd,self).__init__()
+ self.setWhitespaceChars( ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS.replace("\n","") )
+ self.errmsg = "Expected end of line"
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if loc<len(instring):
+ if instring[loc] == "\n":
+ return loc+1, "\n"
+ else:
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+ elif loc == len(instring):
+ return loc+1, []
+ else:
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+class StringStart(_PositionToken):
+ """
+ Matches if current position is at the beginning of the parse string
+ """
+ def __init__( self ):
+ super(StringStart,self).__init__()
+ self.errmsg = "Expected start of text"
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if loc != 0:
+ # see if entire string up to here is just whitespace and ignoreables
+ if loc != self.preParse( instring, 0 ):
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+ return loc, []
+
+class StringEnd(_PositionToken):
+ """
+ Matches if current position is at the end of the parse string
+ """
+ def __init__( self ):
+ super(StringEnd,self).__init__()
+ self.errmsg = "Expected end of text"
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if loc < len(instring):
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+ elif loc == len(instring):
+ return loc+1, []
+ elif loc > len(instring):
+ return loc, []
+ else:
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+class WordStart(_PositionToken):
+ """
+ Matches if the current position is at the beginning of a Word, and
+ is not preceded by any character in a given set of C{wordChars}
+ (default=C{printables}). To emulate the C{\b} behavior of regular expressions,
+ use C{WordStart(alphanums)}. C{WordStart} will also match at the beginning of
+ the string being parsed, or at the beginning of a line.
+ """
+ def __init__(self, wordChars = printables):
+ super(WordStart,self).__init__()
+ self.wordChars = set(wordChars)
+ self.errmsg = "Not at the start of a word"
+
+ def parseImpl(self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if loc != 0:
+ if (instring[loc-1] in self.wordChars or
+ instring[loc] not in self.wordChars):
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+ return loc, []
+
+class WordEnd(_PositionToken):
+ """
+ Matches if the current position is at the end of a Word, and
+ is not followed by any character in a given set of C{wordChars}
+ (default=C{printables}). To emulate the C{\b} behavior of regular expressions,
+ use C{WordEnd(alphanums)}. C{WordEnd} will also match at the end of
+ the string being parsed, or at the end of a line.
+ """
+ def __init__(self, wordChars = printables):
+ super(WordEnd,self).__init__()
+ self.wordChars = set(wordChars)
+ self.skipWhitespace = False
+ self.errmsg = "Not at the end of a word"
+
+ def parseImpl(self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ instrlen = len(instring)
+ if instrlen>0 and loc<instrlen:
+ if (instring[loc] in self.wordChars or
+ instring[loc-1] not in self.wordChars):
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+ return loc, []
+
+
+class ParseExpression(ParserElement):
+ """
+ Abstract subclass of ParserElement, for combining and post-processing parsed tokens.
+ """
+ def __init__( self, exprs, savelist = False ):
+ super(ParseExpression,self).__init__(savelist)
+ if isinstance( exprs, _generatorType ):
+ exprs = list(exprs)
+
+ if isinstance( exprs, basestring ):
+ self.exprs = [ ParserElement._literalStringClass( exprs ) ]
+ elif isinstance( exprs, Iterable ):
+ exprs = list(exprs)
+ # if sequence of strings provided, wrap with Literal
+ if all(isinstance(expr, basestring) for expr in exprs):
+ exprs = map(ParserElement._literalStringClass, exprs)
+ self.exprs = list(exprs)
+ else:
+ try:
+ self.exprs = list( exprs )
+ except TypeError:
+ self.exprs = [ exprs ]
+ self.callPreparse = False
+
+ def __getitem__( self, i ):
+ return self.exprs[i]
+
+ def append( self, other ):
+ self.exprs.append( other )
+ self.strRepr = None
+ return self
+
+ def leaveWhitespace( self ):
+ """Extends C{leaveWhitespace} defined in base class, and also invokes C{leaveWhitespace} on
+ all contained expressions."""
+ self.skipWhitespace = False
+ self.exprs = [ e.copy() for e in self.exprs ]
+ for e in self.exprs:
+ e.leaveWhitespace()
+ return self
+
+ def ignore( self, other ):
+ if isinstance( other, Suppress ):
+ if other not in self.ignoreExprs:
+ super( ParseExpression, self).ignore( other )
+ for e in self.exprs:
+ e.ignore( self.ignoreExprs[-1] )
+ else:
+ super( ParseExpression, self).ignore( other )
+ for e in self.exprs:
+ e.ignore( self.ignoreExprs[-1] )
+ return self
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ try:
+ return super(ParseExpression,self).__str__()
+ except Exception:
+ pass
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+ self.strRepr = "%s:(%s)" % ( self.__class__.__name__, _ustr(self.exprs) )
+ return self.strRepr
+
+ def streamline( self ):
+ super(ParseExpression,self).streamline()
+
+ for e in self.exprs:
+ e.streamline()
+
+ # collapse nested And's of the form And( And( And( a,b), c), d) to And( a,b,c,d )
+ # but only if there are no parse actions or resultsNames on the nested And's
+ # (likewise for Or's and MatchFirst's)
+ if ( len(self.exprs) == 2 ):
+ other = self.exprs[0]
+ if ( isinstance( other, self.__class__ ) and
+ not(other.parseAction) and
+ other.resultsName is None and
+ not other.debug ):
+ self.exprs = other.exprs[:] + [ self.exprs[1] ]
+ self.strRepr = None
+ self.mayReturnEmpty |= other.mayReturnEmpty
+ self.mayIndexError |= other.mayIndexError
+
+ other = self.exprs[-1]
+ if ( isinstance( other, self.__class__ ) and
+ not(other.parseAction) and
+ other.resultsName is None and
+ not other.debug ):
+ self.exprs = self.exprs[:-1] + other.exprs[:]
+ self.strRepr = None
+ self.mayReturnEmpty |= other.mayReturnEmpty
+ self.mayIndexError |= other.mayIndexError
+
+ self.errmsg = "Expected " + _ustr(self)
+
+ return self
+
+ def setResultsName( self, name, listAllMatches=False ):
+ ret = super(ParseExpression,self).setResultsName(name,listAllMatches)
+ return ret
+
+ def validate( self, validateTrace=[] ):
+ tmp = validateTrace[:]+[self]
+ for e in self.exprs:
+ e.validate(tmp)
+ self.checkRecursion( [] )
+
+ def copy(self):
+ ret = super(ParseExpression,self).copy()
+ ret.exprs = [e.copy() for e in self.exprs]
+ return ret
+
+class And(ParseExpression):
+ """
+ Requires all given C{ParseExpression}s to be found in the given order.
+ Expressions may be separated by whitespace.
+ May be constructed using the C{'+'} operator.
+ May also be constructed using the C{'-'} operator, which will suppress backtracking.
+
+ Example::
+ integer = Word(nums)
+ name_expr = OneOrMore(Word(alphas))
+
+ expr = And([integer("id"),name_expr("name"),integer("age")])
+ # more easily written as:
+ expr = integer("id") + name_expr("name") + integer("age")
+ """
+
+ class _ErrorStop(Empty):
+ def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
+ super(And._ErrorStop,self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
+ self.name = '-'
+ self.leaveWhitespace()
+
+ def __init__( self, exprs, savelist = True ):
+ super(And,self).__init__(exprs, savelist)
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = all(e.mayReturnEmpty for e in self.exprs)
+ self.setWhitespaceChars( self.exprs[0].whiteChars )
+ self.skipWhitespace = self.exprs[0].skipWhitespace
+ self.callPreparse = True
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ # pass False as last arg to _parse for first element, since we already
+ # pre-parsed the string as part of our And pre-parsing
+ loc, resultlist = self.exprs[0]._parse( instring, loc, doActions, callPreParse=False )
+ errorStop = False
+ for e in self.exprs[1:]:
+ if isinstance(e, And._ErrorStop):
+ errorStop = True
+ continue
+ if errorStop:
+ try:
+ loc, exprtokens = e._parse( instring, loc, doActions )
+ except ParseSyntaxException:
+ raise
+ except ParseBaseException as pe:
+ pe.__traceback__ = None
+ raise ParseSyntaxException._from_exception(pe)
+ except IndexError:
+ raise ParseSyntaxException(instring, len(instring), self.errmsg, self)
+ else:
+ loc, exprtokens = e._parse( instring, loc, doActions )
+ if exprtokens or exprtokens.haskeys():
+ resultlist += exprtokens
+ return loc, resultlist
+
+ def __iadd__(self, other ):
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ return self.append( other ) #And( [ self, other ] )
+
+ def checkRecursion( self, parseElementList ):
+ subRecCheckList = parseElementList[:] + [ self ]
+ for e in self.exprs:
+ e.checkRecursion( subRecCheckList )
+ if not e.mayReturnEmpty:
+ break
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ if hasattr(self,"name"):
+ return self.name
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+ self.strRepr = "{" + " ".join(_ustr(e) for e in self.exprs) + "}"
+
+ return self.strRepr
+
+
+class Or(ParseExpression):
+ """
+ Requires that at least one C{ParseExpression} is found.
+ If two expressions match, the expression that matches the longest string will be used.
+ May be constructed using the C{'^'} operator.
+
+ Example::
+ # construct Or using '^' operator
+
+ number = Word(nums) ^ Combine(Word(nums) + '.' + Word(nums))
+ print(number.searchString("123 3.1416 789"))
+ prints::
+ [['123'], ['3.1416'], ['789']]
+ """
+ def __init__( self, exprs, savelist = False ):
+ super(Or,self).__init__(exprs, savelist)
+ if self.exprs:
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = any(e.mayReturnEmpty for e in self.exprs)
+ else:
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ maxExcLoc = -1
+ maxException = None
+ matches = []
+ for e in self.exprs:
+ try:
+ loc2 = e.tryParse( instring, loc )
+ except ParseException as err:
+ err.__traceback__ = None
+ if err.loc > maxExcLoc:
+ maxException = err
+ maxExcLoc = err.loc
+ except IndexError:
+ if len(instring) > maxExcLoc:
+ maxException = ParseException(instring,len(instring),e.errmsg,self)
+ maxExcLoc = len(instring)
+ else:
+ # save match among all matches, to retry longest to shortest
+ matches.append((loc2, e))
+
+ if matches:
+ matches.sort(key=lambda x: -x[0])
+ for _,e in matches:
+ try:
+ return e._parse( instring, loc, doActions )
+ except ParseException as err:
+ err.__traceback__ = None
+ if err.loc > maxExcLoc:
+ maxException = err
+ maxExcLoc = err.loc
+
+ if maxException is not None:
+ maxException.msg = self.errmsg
+ raise maxException
+ else:
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, "no defined alternatives to match", self)
+
+
+ def __ixor__(self, other ):
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ return self.append( other ) #Or( [ self, other ] )
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ if hasattr(self,"name"):
+ return self.name
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+ self.strRepr = "{" + " ^ ".join(_ustr(e) for e in self.exprs) + "}"
+
+ return self.strRepr
+
+ def checkRecursion( self, parseElementList ):
+ subRecCheckList = parseElementList[:] + [ self ]
+ for e in self.exprs:
+ e.checkRecursion( subRecCheckList )
+
+
+class MatchFirst(ParseExpression):
+ """
+ Requires that at least one C{ParseExpression} is found.
+ If two expressions match, the first one listed is the one that will match.
+ May be constructed using the C{'|'} operator.
+
+ Example::
+ # construct MatchFirst using '|' operator
+
+ # watch the order of expressions to match
+ number = Word(nums) | Combine(Word(nums) + '.' + Word(nums))
+ print(number.searchString("123 3.1416 789")) # Fail! -> [['123'], ['3'], ['1416'], ['789']]
+
+ # put more selective expression first
+ number = Combine(Word(nums) + '.' + Word(nums)) | Word(nums)
+ print(number.searchString("123 3.1416 789")) # Better -> [['123'], ['3.1416'], ['789']]
+ """
+ def __init__( self, exprs, savelist = False ):
+ super(MatchFirst,self).__init__(exprs, savelist)
+ if self.exprs:
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = any(e.mayReturnEmpty for e in self.exprs)
+ else:
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ maxExcLoc = -1
+ maxException = None
+ for e in self.exprs:
+ try:
+ ret = e._parse( instring, loc, doActions )
+ return ret
+ except ParseException as err:
+ if err.loc > maxExcLoc:
+ maxException = err
+ maxExcLoc = err.loc
+ except IndexError:
+ if len(instring) > maxExcLoc:
+ maxException = ParseException(instring,len(instring),e.errmsg,self)
+ maxExcLoc = len(instring)
+
+ # only got here if no expression matched, raise exception for match that made it the furthest
+ else:
+ if maxException is not None:
+ maxException.msg = self.errmsg
+ raise maxException
+ else:
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, "no defined alternatives to match", self)
+
+ def __ior__(self, other ):
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass( other )
+ return self.append( other ) #MatchFirst( [ self, other ] )
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ if hasattr(self,"name"):
+ return self.name
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+ self.strRepr = "{" + " | ".join(_ustr(e) for e in self.exprs) + "}"
+
+ return self.strRepr
+
+ def checkRecursion( self, parseElementList ):
+ subRecCheckList = parseElementList[:] + [ self ]
+ for e in self.exprs:
+ e.checkRecursion( subRecCheckList )
+
+
+class Each(ParseExpression):
+ """
+ Requires all given C{ParseExpression}s to be found, but in any order.
+ Expressions may be separated by whitespace.
+ May be constructed using the C{'&'} operator.
+
+ Example::
+ color = oneOf("RED ORANGE YELLOW GREEN BLUE PURPLE BLACK WHITE BROWN")
+ shape_type = oneOf("SQUARE CIRCLE TRIANGLE STAR HEXAGON OCTAGON")
+ integer = Word(nums)
+ shape_attr = "shape:" + shape_type("shape")
+ posn_attr = "posn:" + Group(integer("x") + ',' + integer("y"))("posn")
+ color_attr = "color:" + color("color")
+ size_attr = "size:" + integer("size")
+
+ # use Each (using operator '&') to accept attributes in any order
+ # (shape and posn are required, color and size are optional)
+ shape_spec = shape_attr & posn_attr & Optional(color_attr) & Optional(size_attr)
+
+ shape_spec.runTests('''
+ shape: SQUARE color: BLACK posn: 100, 120
+ shape: CIRCLE size: 50 color: BLUE posn: 50,80
+ color:GREEN size:20 shape:TRIANGLE posn:20,40
+ '''
+ )
+ prints::
+ shape: SQUARE color: BLACK posn: 100, 120
+ ['shape:', 'SQUARE', 'color:', 'BLACK', 'posn:', ['100', ',', '120']]
+ - color: BLACK
+ - posn: ['100', ',', '120']
+ - x: 100
+ - y: 120
+ - shape: SQUARE
+
+
+ shape: CIRCLE size: 50 color: BLUE posn: 50,80
+ ['shape:', 'CIRCLE', 'size:', '50', 'color:', 'BLUE', 'posn:', ['50', ',', '80']]
+ - color: BLUE
+ - posn: ['50', ',', '80']
+ - x: 50
+ - y: 80
+ - shape: CIRCLE
+ - size: 50
+
+
+ color: GREEN size: 20 shape: TRIANGLE posn: 20,40
+ ['color:', 'GREEN', 'size:', '20', 'shape:', 'TRIANGLE', 'posn:', ['20', ',', '40']]
+ - color: GREEN
+ - posn: ['20', ',', '40']
+ - x: 20
+ - y: 40
+ - shape: TRIANGLE
+ - size: 20
+ """
+ def __init__( self, exprs, savelist = True ):
+ super(Each,self).__init__(exprs, savelist)
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = all(e.mayReturnEmpty for e in self.exprs)
+ self.skipWhitespace = True
+ self.initExprGroups = True
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if self.initExprGroups:
+ self.opt1map = dict((id(e.expr),e) for e in self.exprs if isinstance(e,Optional))
+ opt1 = [ e.expr for e in self.exprs if isinstance(e,Optional) ]
+ opt2 = [ e for e in self.exprs if e.mayReturnEmpty and not isinstance(e,Optional)]
+ self.optionals = opt1 + opt2
+ self.multioptionals = [ e.expr for e in self.exprs if isinstance(e,ZeroOrMore) ]
+ self.multirequired = [ e.expr for e in self.exprs if isinstance(e,OneOrMore) ]
+ self.required = [ e for e in self.exprs if not isinstance(e,(Optional,ZeroOrMore,OneOrMore)) ]
+ self.required += self.multirequired
+ self.initExprGroups = False
+ tmpLoc = loc
+ tmpReqd = self.required[:]
+ tmpOpt = self.optionals[:]
+ matchOrder = []
+
+ keepMatching = True
+ while keepMatching:
+ tmpExprs = tmpReqd + tmpOpt + self.multioptionals + self.multirequired
+ failed = []
+ for e in tmpExprs:
+ try:
+ tmpLoc = e.tryParse( instring, tmpLoc )
+ except ParseException:
+ failed.append(e)
+ else:
+ matchOrder.append(self.opt1map.get(id(e),e))
+ if e in tmpReqd:
+ tmpReqd.remove(e)
+ elif e in tmpOpt:
+ tmpOpt.remove(e)
+ if len(failed) == len(tmpExprs):
+ keepMatching = False
+
+ if tmpReqd:
+ missing = ", ".join(_ustr(e) for e in tmpReqd)
+ raise ParseException(instring,loc,"Missing one or more required elements (%s)" % missing )
+
+ # add any unmatched Optionals, in case they have default values defined
+ matchOrder += [e for e in self.exprs if isinstance(e,Optional) and e.expr in tmpOpt]
+
+ resultlist = []
+ for e in matchOrder:
+ loc,results = e._parse(instring,loc,doActions)
+ resultlist.append(results)
+
+ finalResults = sum(resultlist, ParseResults([]))
+ return loc, finalResults
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ if hasattr(self,"name"):
+ return self.name
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+ self.strRepr = "{" + " & ".join(_ustr(e) for e in self.exprs) + "}"
+
+ return self.strRepr
+
+ def checkRecursion( self, parseElementList ):
+ subRecCheckList = parseElementList[:] + [ self ]
+ for e in self.exprs:
+ e.checkRecursion( subRecCheckList )
+
+
+class ParseElementEnhance(ParserElement):
+ """
+ Abstract subclass of C{ParserElement}, for combining and post-processing parsed tokens.
+ """
+ def __init__( self, expr, savelist=False ):
+ super(ParseElementEnhance,self).__init__(savelist)
+ if isinstance( expr, basestring ):
+ if issubclass(ParserElement._literalStringClass, Token):
+ expr = ParserElement._literalStringClass(expr)
+ else:
+ expr = ParserElement._literalStringClass(Literal(expr))
+ self.expr = expr
+ self.strRepr = None
+ if expr is not None:
+ self.mayIndexError = expr.mayIndexError
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = expr.mayReturnEmpty
+ self.setWhitespaceChars( expr.whiteChars )
+ self.skipWhitespace = expr.skipWhitespace
+ self.saveAsList = expr.saveAsList
+ self.callPreparse = expr.callPreparse
+ self.ignoreExprs.extend(expr.ignoreExprs)
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if self.expr is not None:
+ return self.expr._parse( instring, loc, doActions, callPreParse=False )
+ else:
+ raise ParseException("",loc,self.errmsg,self)
+
+ def leaveWhitespace( self ):
+ self.skipWhitespace = False
+ self.expr = self.expr.copy()
+ if self.expr is not None:
+ self.expr.leaveWhitespace()
+ return self
+
+ def ignore( self, other ):
+ if isinstance( other, Suppress ):
+ if other not in self.ignoreExprs:
+ super( ParseElementEnhance, self).ignore( other )
+ if self.expr is not None:
+ self.expr.ignore( self.ignoreExprs[-1] )
+ else:
+ super( ParseElementEnhance, self).ignore( other )
+ if self.expr is not None:
+ self.expr.ignore( self.ignoreExprs[-1] )
+ return self
+
+ def streamline( self ):
+ super(ParseElementEnhance,self).streamline()
+ if self.expr is not None:
+ self.expr.streamline()
+ return self
+
+ def checkRecursion( self, parseElementList ):
+ if self in parseElementList:
+ raise RecursiveGrammarException( parseElementList+[self] )
+ subRecCheckList = parseElementList[:] + [ self ]
+ if self.expr is not None:
+ self.expr.checkRecursion( subRecCheckList )
+
+ def validate( self, validateTrace=[] ):
+ tmp = validateTrace[:]+[self]
+ if self.expr is not None:
+ self.expr.validate(tmp)
+ self.checkRecursion( [] )
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ try:
+ return super(ParseElementEnhance,self).__str__()
+ except Exception:
+ pass
+
+ if self.strRepr is None and self.expr is not None:
+ self.strRepr = "%s:(%s)" % ( self.__class__.__name__, _ustr(self.expr) )
+ return self.strRepr
+
+
+class FollowedBy(ParseElementEnhance):
+ """
+ Lookahead matching of the given parse expression. C{FollowedBy}
+ does I{not} advance the parsing position within the input string, it only
+ verifies that the specified parse expression matches at the current
+ position. C{FollowedBy} always returns a null token list.
+
+ Example::
+ # use FollowedBy to match a label only if it is followed by a ':'
+ data_word = Word(alphas)
+ label = data_word + FollowedBy(':')
+ attr_expr = Group(label + Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word, stopOn=label).setParseAction(' '.join))
+
+ OneOrMore(attr_expr).parseString("shape: SQUARE color: BLACK posn: upper left").pprint()
+ prints::
+ [['shape', 'SQUARE'], ['color', 'BLACK'], ['posn', 'upper left']]
+ """
+ def __init__( self, expr ):
+ super(FollowedBy,self).__init__(expr)
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ self.expr.tryParse( instring, loc )
+ return loc, []
+
+
+class NotAny(ParseElementEnhance):
+ """
+ Lookahead to disallow matching with the given parse expression. C{NotAny}
+ does I{not} advance the parsing position within the input string, it only
+ verifies that the specified parse expression does I{not} match at the current
+ position. Also, C{NotAny} does I{not} skip over leading whitespace. C{NotAny}
+ always returns a null token list. May be constructed using the '~' operator.
+
+ Example::
+
+ """
+ def __init__( self, expr ):
+ super(NotAny,self).__init__(expr)
+ #~ self.leaveWhitespace()
+ self.skipWhitespace = False # do NOT use self.leaveWhitespace(), don't want to propagate to exprs
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+ self.errmsg = "Found unwanted token, "+_ustr(self.expr)
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ if self.expr.canParseNext(instring, loc):
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+ return loc, []
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ if hasattr(self,"name"):
+ return self.name
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+ self.strRepr = "~{" + _ustr(self.expr) + "}"
+
+ return self.strRepr
+
+class _MultipleMatch(ParseElementEnhance):
+ def __init__( self, expr, stopOn=None):
+ super(_MultipleMatch, self).__init__(expr)
+ self.saveAsList = True
+ ender = stopOn
+ if isinstance(ender, basestring):
+ ender = ParserElement._literalStringClass(ender)
+ self.not_ender = ~ender if ender is not None else None
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ self_expr_parse = self.expr._parse
+ self_skip_ignorables = self._skipIgnorables
+ check_ender = self.not_ender is not None
+ if check_ender:
+ try_not_ender = self.not_ender.tryParse
+
+ # must be at least one (but first see if we are the stopOn sentinel;
+ # if so, fail)
+ if check_ender:
+ try_not_ender(instring, loc)
+ loc, tokens = self_expr_parse( instring, loc, doActions, callPreParse=False )
+ try:
+ hasIgnoreExprs = (not not self.ignoreExprs)
+ while 1:
+ if check_ender:
+ try_not_ender(instring, loc)
+ if hasIgnoreExprs:
+ preloc = self_skip_ignorables( instring, loc )
+ else:
+ preloc = loc
+ loc, tmptokens = self_expr_parse( instring, preloc, doActions )
+ if tmptokens or tmptokens.haskeys():
+ tokens += tmptokens
+ except (ParseException,IndexError):
+ pass
+
+ return loc, tokens
+
+class OneOrMore(_MultipleMatch):
+ """
+ Repetition of one or more of the given expression.
+
+ Parameters:
+ - expr - expression that must match one or more times
+ - stopOn - (default=C{None}) - expression for a terminating sentinel
+ (only required if the sentinel would ordinarily match the repetition
+ expression)
+
+ Example::
+ data_word = Word(alphas)
+ label = data_word + FollowedBy(':')
+ attr_expr = Group(label + Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word).setParseAction(' '.join))
+
+ text = "shape: SQUARE posn: upper left color: BLACK"
+ OneOrMore(attr_expr).parseString(text).pprint() # Fail! read 'color' as data instead of next label -> [['shape', 'SQUARE color']]
+
+ # use stopOn attribute for OneOrMore to avoid reading label string as part of the data
+ attr_expr = Group(label + Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word, stopOn=label).setParseAction(' '.join))
+ OneOrMore(attr_expr).parseString(text).pprint() # Better -> [['shape', 'SQUARE'], ['posn', 'upper left'], ['color', 'BLACK']]
+
+ # could also be written as
+ (attr_expr * (1,)).parseString(text).pprint()
+ """
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ if hasattr(self,"name"):
+ return self.name
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+ self.strRepr = "{" + _ustr(self.expr) + "}..."
+
+ return self.strRepr
+
+class ZeroOrMore(_MultipleMatch):
+ """
+ Optional repetition of zero or more of the given expression.
+
+ Parameters:
+ - expr - expression that must match zero or more times
+ - stopOn - (default=C{None}) - expression for a terminating sentinel
+ (only required if the sentinel would ordinarily match the repetition
+ expression)
+
+ Example: similar to L{OneOrMore}
+ """
+ def __init__( self, expr, stopOn=None):
+ super(ZeroOrMore,self).__init__(expr, stopOn=stopOn)
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ try:
+ return super(ZeroOrMore, self).parseImpl(instring, loc, doActions)
+ except (ParseException,IndexError):
+ return loc, []
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ if hasattr(self,"name"):
+ return self.name
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+ self.strRepr = "[" + _ustr(self.expr) + "]..."
+
+ return self.strRepr
+
+class _NullToken(object):
+ def __bool__(self):
+ return False
+ __nonzero__ = __bool__
+ def __str__(self):
+ return ""
+
+_optionalNotMatched = _NullToken()
+class Optional(ParseElementEnhance):
+ """
+ Optional matching of the given expression.
+
+ Parameters:
+ - expr - expression that must match zero or more times
+ - default (optional) - value to be returned if the optional expression is not found.
+
+ Example::
+ # US postal code can be a 5-digit zip, plus optional 4-digit qualifier
+ zip = Combine(Word(nums, exact=5) + Optional('-' + Word(nums, exact=4)))
+ zip.runTests('''
+ # traditional ZIP code
+ 12345
+
+ # ZIP+4 form
+ 12101-0001
+
+ # invalid ZIP
+ 98765-
+ ''')
+ prints::
+ # traditional ZIP code
+ 12345
+ ['12345']
+
+ # ZIP+4 form
+ 12101-0001
+ ['12101-0001']
+
+ # invalid ZIP
+ 98765-
+ ^
+ FAIL: Expected end of text (at char 5), (line:1, col:6)
+ """
+ def __init__( self, expr, default=_optionalNotMatched ):
+ super(Optional,self).__init__( expr, savelist=False )
+ self.saveAsList = self.expr.saveAsList
+ self.defaultValue = default
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ try:
+ loc, tokens = self.expr._parse( instring, loc, doActions, callPreParse=False )
+ except (ParseException,IndexError):
+ if self.defaultValue is not _optionalNotMatched:
+ if self.expr.resultsName:
+ tokens = ParseResults([ self.defaultValue ])
+ tokens[self.expr.resultsName] = self.defaultValue
+ else:
+ tokens = [ self.defaultValue ]
+ else:
+ tokens = []
+ return loc, tokens
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ if hasattr(self,"name"):
+ return self.name
+
+ if self.strRepr is None:
+ self.strRepr = "[" + _ustr(self.expr) + "]"
+
+ return self.strRepr
+
+class SkipTo(ParseElementEnhance):
+ """
+ Token for skipping over all undefined text until the matched expression is found.
+
+ Parameters:
+ - expr - target expression marking the end of the data to be skipped
+ - include - (default=C{False}) if True, the target expression is also parsed
+ (the skipped text and target expression are returned as a 2-element list).
+ - ignore - (default=C{None}) used to define grammars (typically quoted strings and
+ comments) that might contain false matches to the target expression
+ - failOn - (default=C{None}) define expressions that are not allowed to be
+ included in the skipped test; if found before the target expression is found,
+ the SkipTo is not a match
+
+ Example::
+ report = '''
+ Outstanding Issues Report - 1 Jan 2000
+
+ # | Severity | Description | Days Open
+ -----+----------+-------------------------------------------+-----------
+ 101 | Critical | Intermittent system crash | 6
+ 94 | Cosmetic | Spelling error on Login ('log|n') | 14
+ 79 | Minor | System slow when running too many reports | 47
+ '''
+ integer = Word(nums)
+ SEP = Suppress('|')
+ # use SkipTo to simply match everything up until the next SEP
+ # - ignore quoted strings, so that a '|' character inside a quoted string does not match
+ # - parse action will call token.strip() for each matched token, i.e., the description body
+ string_data = SkipTo(SEP, ignore=quotedString)
+ string_data.setParseAction(tokenMap(str.strip))
+ ticket_expr = (integer("issue_num") + SEP
+ + string_data("sev") + SEP
+ + string_data("desc") + SEP
+ + integer("days_open"))
+
+ for tkt in ticket_expr.searchString(report):
+ print tkt.dump()
+ prints::
+ ['101', 'Critical', 'Intermittent system crash', '6']
+ - days_open: 6
+ - desc: Intermittent system crash
+ - issue_num: 101
+ - sev: Critical
+ ['94', 'Cosmetic', "Spelling error on Login ('log|n')", '14']
+ - days_open: 14
+ - desc: Spelling error on Login ('log|n')
+ - issue_num: 94
+ - sev: Cosmetic
+ ['79', 'Minor', 'System slow when running too many reports', '47']
+ - days_open: 47
+ - desc: System slow when running too many reports
+ - issue_num: 79
+ - sev: Minor
+ """
+ def __init__( self, other, include=False, ignore=None, failOn=None ):
+ super( SkipTo, self ).__init__( other )
+ self.ignoreExpr = ignore
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = True
+ self.mayIndexError = False
+ self.includeMatch = include
+ self.asList = False
+ if isinstance(failOn, basestring):
+ self.failOn = ParserElement._literalStringClass(failOn)
+ else:
+ self.failOn = failOn
+ self.errmsg = "No match found for "+_ustr(self.expr)
+
+ def parseImpl( self, instring, loc, doActions=True ):
+ startloc = loc
+ instrlen = len(instring)
+ expr = self.expr
+ expr_parse = self.expr._parse
+ self_failOn_canParseNext = self.failOn.canParseNext if self.failOn is not None else None
+ self_ignoreExpr_tryParse = self.ignoreExpr.tryParse if self.ignoreExpr is not None else None
+
+ tmploc = loc
+ while tmploc <= instrlen:
+ if self_failOn_canParseNext is not None:
+ # break if failOn expression matches
+ if self_failOn_canParseNext(instring, tmploc):
+ break
+
+ if self_ignoreExpr_tryParse is not None:
+ # advance past ignore expressions
+ while 1:
+ try:
+ tmploc = self_ignoreExpr_tryParse(instring, tmploc)
+ except ParseBaseException:
+ break
+
+ try:
+ expr_parse(instring, tmploc, doActions=False, callPreParse=False)
+ except (ParseException, IndexError):
+ # no match, advance loc in string
+ tmploc += 1
+ else:
+ # matched skipto expr, done
+ break
+
+ else:
+ # ran off the end of the input string without matching skipto expr, fail
+ raise ParseException(instring, loc, self.errmsg, self)
+
+ # build up return values
+ loc = tmploc
+ skiptext = instring[startloc:loc]
+ skipresult = ParseResults(skiptext)
+
+ if self.includeMatch:
+ loc, mat = expr_parse(instring,loc,doActions,callPreParse=False)
+ skipresult += mat
+
+ return loc, skipresult
+
+class Forward(ParseElementEnhance):
+ """
+ Forward declaration of an expression to be defined later -
+ used for recursive grammars, such as algebraic infix notation.
+ When the expression is known, it is assigned to the C{Forward} variable using the '<<' operator.
+
+ Note: take care when assigning to C{Forward} not to overlook precedence of operators.
+ Specifically, '|' has a lower precedence than '<<', so that::
+ fwdExpr << a | b | c
+ will actually be evaluated as::
+ (fwdExpr << a) | b | c
+ thereby leaving b and c out as parseable alternatives. It is recommended that you
+ explicitly group the values inserted into the C{Forward}::
+ fwdExpr << (a | b | c)
+ Converting to use the '<<=' operator instead will avoid this problem.
+
+ See L{ParseResults.pprint} for an example of a recursive parser created using
+ C{Forward}.
+ """
+ def __init__( self, other=None ):
+ super(Forward,self).__init__( other, savelist=False )
+
+ def __lshift__( self, other ):
+ if isinstance( other, basestring ):
+ other = ParserElement._literalStringClass(other)
+ self.expr = other
+ self.strRepr = None
+ self.mayIndexError = self.expr.mayIndexError
+ self.mayReturnEmpty = self.expr.mayReturnEmpty
+ self.setWhitespaceChars( self.expr.whiteChars )
+ self.skipWhitespace = self.expr.skipWhitespace
+ self.saveAsList = self.expr.saveAsList
+ self.ignoreExprs.extend(self.expr.ignoreExprs)
+ return self
+
+ def __ilshift__(self, other):
+ return self << other
+
+ def leaveWhitespace( self ):
+ self.skipWhitespace = False
+ return self
+
+ def streamline( self ):
+ if not self.streamlined:
+ self.streamlined = True
+ if self.expr is not None:
+ self.expr.streamline()
+ return self
+
+ def validate( self, validateTrace=[] ):
+ if self not in validateTrace:
+ tmp = validateTrace[:]+[self]
+ if self.expr is not None:
+ self.expr.validate(tmp)
+ self.checkRecursion([])
+
+ def __str__( self ):
+ if hasattr(self,"name"):
+ return self.name
+ return self.__class__.__name__ + ": ..."
+
+ # stubbed out for now - creates awful memory and perf issues
+ self._revertClass = self.__class__
+ self.__class__ = _ForwardNoRecurse
+ try:
+ if self.expr is not None:
+ retString = _ustr(self.expr)
+ else:
+ retString = "None"
+ finally:
+ self.__class__ = self._revertClass
+ return self.__class__.__name__ + ": " + retString
+
+ def copy(self):
+ if self.expr is not None:
+ return super(Forward,self).copy()
+ else:
+ ret = Forward()
+ ret <<= self
+ return ret
+
+class _ForwardNoRecurse(Forward):
+ def __str__( self ):
+ return "..."
+
+class TokenConverter(ParseElementEnhance):
+ """
+ Abstract subclass of C{ParseExpression}, for converting parsed results.
+ """
+ def __init__( self, expr, savelist=False ):
+ super(TokenConverter,self).__init__( expr )#, savelist )
+ self.saveAsList = False
+
+class Combine(TokenConverter):
+ """
+ Converter to concatenate all matching tokens to a single string.
+ By default, the matching patterns must also be contiguous in the input string;
+ this can be disabled by specifying C{'adjacent=False'} in the constructor.
+
+ Example::
+ real = Word(nums) + '.' + Word(nums)
+ print(real.parseString('3.1416')) # -> ['3', '.', '1416']
+ # will also erroneously match the following
+ print(real.parseString('3. 1416')) # -> ['3', '.', '1416']
+
+ real = Combine(Word(nums) + '.' + Word(nums))
+ print(real.parseString('3.1416')) # -> ['3.1416']
+ # no match when there are internal spaces
+ print(real.parseString('3. 1416')) # -> Exception: Expected W:(0123...)
+ """
+ def __init__( self, expr, joinString="", adjacent=True ):
+ super(Combine,self).__init__( expr )
+ # suppress whitespace-stripping in contained parse expressions, but re-enable it on the Combine itself
+ if adjacent:
+ self.leaveWhitespace()
+ self.adjacent = adjacent
+ self.skipWhitespace = True
+ self.joinString = joinString
+ self.callPreparse = True
+
+ def ignore( self, other ):
+ if self.adjacent:
+ ParserElement.ignore(self, other)
+ else:
+ super( Combine, self).ignore( other )
+ return self
+
+ def postParse( self, instring, loc, tokenlist ):
+ retToks = tokenlist.copy()
+ del retToks[:]
+ retToks += ParseResults([ "".join(tokenlist._asStringList(self.joinString)) ], modal=self.modalResults)
+
+ if self.resultsName and retToks.haskeys():
+ return [ retToks ]
+ else:
+ return retToks
+
+class Group(TokenConverter):
+ """
+ Converter to return the matched tokens as a list - useful for returning tokens of C{L{ZeroOrMore}} and C{L{OneOrMore}} expressions.
+
+ Example::
+ ident = Word(alphas)
+ num = Word(nums)
+ term = ident | num
+ func = ident + Optional(delimitedList(term))
+ print(func.parseString("fn a,b,100")) # -> ['fn', 'a', 'b', '100']
+
+ func = ident + Group(Optional(delimitedList(term)))
+ print(func.parseString("fn a,b,100")) # -> ['fn', ['a', 'b', '100']]
+ """
+ def __init__( self, expr ):
+ super(Group,self).__init__( expr )
+ self.saveAsList = True
+
+ def postParse( self, instring, loc, tokenlist ):
+ return [ tokenlist ]
+
+class Dict(TokenConverter):
+ """
+ Converter to return a repetitive expression as a list, but also as a dictionary.
+ Each element can also be referenced using the first token in the expression as its key.
+ Useful for tabular report scraping when the first column can be used as a item key.
+
+ Example::
+ data_word = Word(alphas)
+ label = data_word + FollowedBy(':')
+ attr_expr = Group(label + Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word).setParseAction(' '.join))
+
+ text = "shape: SQUARE posn: upper left color: light blue texture: burlap"
+ attr_expr = (label + Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word, stopOn=label).setParseAction(' '.join))
+
+ # print attributes as plain groups
+ print(OneOrMore(attr_expr).parseString(text).dump())
+
+ # instead of OneOrMore(expr), parse using Dict(OneOrMore(Group(expr))) - Dict will auto-assign names
+ result = Dict(OneOrMore(Group(attr_expr))).parseString(text)
+ print(result.dump())
+
+ # access named fields as dict entries, or output as dict
+ print(result['shape'])
+ print(result.asDict())
+ prints::
+ ['shape', 'SQUARE', 'posn', 'upper left', 'color', 'light blue', 'texture', 'burlap']
+
+ [['shape', 'SQUARE'], ['posn', 'upper left'], ['color', 'light blue'], ['texture', 'burlap']]
+ - color: light blue
+ - posn: upper left
+ - shape: SQUARE
+ - texture: burlap
+ SQUARE
+ {'color': 'light blue', 'posn': 'upper left', 'texture': 'burlap', 'shape': 'SQUARE'}
+ See more examples at L{ParseResults} of accessing fields by results name.
+ """
+ def __init__( self, expr ):
+ super(Dict,self).__init__( expr )
+ self.saveAsList = True
+
+ def postParse( self, instring, loc, tokenlist ):
+ for i,tok in enumerate(tokenlist):
+ if len(tok) == 0:
+ continue
+ ikey = tok[0]
+ if isinstance(ikey,int):
+ ikey = _ustr(tok[0]).strip()
+ if len(tok)==1:
+ tokenlist[ikey] = _ParseResultsWithOffset("",i)
+ elif len(tok)==2 and not isinstance(tok[1],ParseResults):
+ tokenlist[ikey] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(tok[1],i)
+ else:
+ dictvalue = tok.copy() #ParseResults(i)
+ del dictvalue[0]
+ if len(dictvalue)!= 1 or (isinstance(dictvalue,ParseResults) and dictvalue.haskeys()):
+ tokenlist[ikey] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(dictvalue,i)
+ else:
+ tokenlist[ikey] = _ParseResultsWithOffset(dictvalue[0],i)
+
+ if self.resultsName:
+ return [ tokenlist ]
+ else:
+ return tokenlist
+
+
+class Suppress(TokenConverter):
+ """
+ Converter for ignoring the results of a parsed expression.
+
+ Example::
+ source = "a, b, c,d"
+ wd = Word(alphas)
+ wd_list1 = wd + ZeroOrMore(',' + wd)
+ print(wd_list1.parseString(source))
+
+ # often, delimiters that are useful during parsing are just in the
+ # way afterward - use Suppress to keep them out of the parsed output
+ wd_list2 = wd + ZeroOrMore(Suppress(',') + wd)
+ print(wd_list2.parseString(source))
+ prints::
+ ['a', ',', 'b', ',', 'c', ',', 'd']
+ ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd']
+ (See also L{delimitedList}.)
+ """
+ def postParse( self, instring, loc, tokenlist ):
+ return []
+
+ def suppress( self ):
+ return self
+
+
+class OnlyOnce(object):
+ """
+ Wrapper for parse actions, to ensure they are only called once.
+ """
+ def __init__(self, methodCall):
+ self.callable = _trim_arity(methodCall)
+ self.called = False
+ def __call__(self,s,l,t):
+ if not self.called:
+ results = self.callable(s,l,t)
+ self.called = True
+ return results
+ raise ParseException(s,l,"")
+ def reset(self):
+ self.called = False
+
+def traceParseAction(f):
+ """
+ Decorator for debugging parse actions.
+
+ When the parse action is called, this decorator will print C{">> entering I{method-name}(line:I{current_source_line}, I{parse_location}, I{matched_tokens})".}
+ When the parse action completes, the decorator will print C{"<<"} followed by the returned value, or any exception that the parse action raised.
+
+ Example::
+ wd = Word(alphas)
+
+ @traceParseAction
+ def remove_duplicate_chars(tokens):
+ return ''.join(sorted(set(''.join(tokens))))
+
+ wds = OneOrMore(wd).setParseAction(remove_duplicate_chars)
+ print(wds.parseString("slkdjs sld sldd sdlf sdljf"))
+ prints::
+ >>entering remove_duplicate_chars(line: 'slkdjs sld sldd sdlf sdljf', 0, (['slkdjs', 'sld', 'sldd', 'sdlf', 'sdljf'], {}))
+ <<leaving remove_duplicate_chars (ret: 'dfjkls')
+ ['dfjkls']
+ """
+ f = _trim_arity(f)
+ def z(*paArgs):
+ thisFunc = f.__name__
+ s,l,t = paArgs[-3:]
+ if len(paArgs)>3:
+ thisFunc = paArgs[0].__class__.__name__ + '.' + thisFunc
+ sys.stderr.write( ">>entering %s(line: '%s', %d, %r)\n" % (thisFunc,line(l,s),l,t) )
+ try:
+ ret = f(*paArgs)
+ except Exception as exc:
+ sys.stderr.write( "<<leaving %s (exception: %s)\n" % (thisFunc,exc) )
+ raise
+ sys.stderr.write( "<<leaving %s (ret: %r)\n" % (thisFunc,ret) )
+ return ret
+ try:
+ z.__name__ = f.__name__
+ except AttributeError:
+ pass
+ return z
+
+#
+# global helpers
+#
+def delimitedList( expr, delim=",", combine=False ):
+ """
+ Helper to define a delimited list of expressions - the delimiter defaults to ','.
+ By default, the list elements and delimiters can have intervening whitespace, and
+ comments, but this can be overridden by passing C{combine=True} in the constructor.
+ If C{combine} is set to C{True}, the matching tokens are returned as a single token
+ string, with the delimiters included; otherwise, the matching tokens are returned
+ as a list of tokens, with the delimiters suppressed.
+
+ Example::
+ delimitedList(Word(alphas)).parseString("aa,bb,cc") # -> ['aa', 'bb', 'cc']
+ delimitedList(Word(hexnums), delim=':', combine=True).parseString("AA:BB:CC:DD:EE") # -> ['AA:BB:CC:DD:EE']
+ """
+ dlName = _ustr(expr)+" ["+_ustr(delim)+" "+_ustr(expr)+"]..."
+ if combine:
+ return Combine( expr + ZeroOrMore( delim + expr ) ).setName(dlName)
+ else:
+ return ( expr + ZeroOrMore( Suppress( delim ) + expr ) ).setName(dlName)
+
+def countedArray( expr, intExpr=None ):
+ """
+ Helper to define a counted list of expressions.
+ This helper defines a pattern of the form::
+ integer expr expr expr...
+ where the leading integer tells how many expr expressions follow.
+ The matched tokens returns the array of expr tokens as a list - the leading count token is suppressed.
+
+ If C{intExpr} is specified, it should be a pyparsing expression that produces an integer value.
+
+ Example::
+ countedArray(Word(alphas)).parseString('2 ab cd ef') # -> ['ab', 'cd']
+
+ # in this parser, the leading integer value is given in binary,
+ # '10' indicating that 2 values are in the array
+ binaryConstant = Word('01').setParseAction(lambda t: int(t[0], 2))
+ countedArray(Word(alphas), intExpr=binaryConstant).parseString('10 ab cd ef') # -> ['ab', 'cd']
+ """
+ arrayExpr = Forward()
+ def countFieldParseAction(s,l,t):
+ n = t[0]
+ arrayExpr << (n and Group(And([expr]*n)) or Group(empty))
+ return []
+ if intExpr is None:
+ intExpr = Word(nums).setParseAction(lambda t:int(t[0]))
+ else:
+ intExpr = intExpr.copy()
+ intExpr.setName("arrayLen")
+ intExpr.addParseAction(countFieldParseAction, callDuringTry=True)
+ return ( intExpr + arrayExpr ).setName('(len) ' + _ustr(expr) + '...')
+
+def _flatten(L):
+ ret = []
+ for i in L:
+ if isinstance(i,list):
+ ret.extend(_flatten(i))
+ else:
+ ret.append(i)
+ return ret
+
+def matchPreviousLiteral(expr):
+ """
+ Helper to define an expression that is indirectly defined from
+ the tokens matched in a previous expression, that is, it looks
+ for a 'repeat' of a previous expression. For example::
+ first = Word(nums)
+ second = matchPreviousLiteral(first)
+ matchExpr = first + ":" + second
+ will match C{"1:1"}, but not C{"1:2"}. Because this matches a
+ previous literal, will also match the leading C{"1:1"} in C{"1:10"}.
+ If this is not desired, use C{matchPreviousExpr}.
+ Do I{not} use with packrat parsing enabled.
+ """
+ rep = Forward()
+ def copyTokenToRepeater(s,l,t):
+ if t:
+ if len(t) == 1:
+ rep << t[0]
+ else:
+ # flatten t tokens
+ tflat = _flatten(t.asList())
+ rep << And(Literal(tt) for tt in tflat)
+ else:
+ rep << Empty()
+ expr.addParseAction(copyTokenToRepeater, callDuringTry=True)
+ rep.setName('(prev) ' + _ustr(expr))
+ return rep
+
+def matchPreviousExpr(expr):
+ """
+ Helper to define an expression that is indirectly defined from
+ the tokens matched in a previous expression, that is, it looks
+ for a 'repeat' of a previous expression. For example::
+ first = Word(nums)
+ second = matchPreviousExpr(first)
+ matchExpr = first + ":" + second
+ will match C{"1:1"}, but not C{"1:2"}. Because this matches by
+ expressions, will I{not} match the leading C{"1:1"} in C{"1:10"};
+ the expressions are evaluated first, and then compared, so
+ C{"1"} is compared with C{"10"}.
+ Do I{not} use with packrat parsing enabled.
+ """
+ rep = Forward()
+ e2 = expr.copy()
+ rep <<= e2
+ def copyTokenToRepeater(s,l,t):
+ matchTokens = _flatten(t.asList())
+ def mustMatchTheseTokens(s,l,t):
+ theseTokens = _flatten(t.asList())
+ if theseTokens != matchTokens:
+ raise ParseException("",0,"")
+ rep.setParseAction( mustMatchTheseTokens, callDuringTry=True )
+ expr.addParseAction(copyTokenToRepeater, callDuringTry=True)
+ rep.setName('(prev) ' + _ustr(expr))
+ return rep
+
+def _escapeRegexRangeChars(s):
+ #~ escape these chars: ^-]
+ for c in r"\^-]":
+ s = s.replace(c,_bslash+c)
+ s = s.replace("\n",r"\n")
+ s = s.replace("\t",r"\t")
+ return _ustr(s)
+
+def oneOf( strs, caseless=False, useRegex=True ):
+ """
+ Helper to quickly define a set of alternative Literals, and makes sure to do
+ longest-first testing when there is a conflict, regardless of the input order,
+ but returns a C{L{MatchFirst}} for best performance.
+
+ Parameters:
+ - strs - a string of space-delimited literals, or a collection of string literals
+ - caseless - (default=C{False}) - treat all literals as caseless
+ - useRegex - (default=C{True}) - as an optimization, will generate a Regex
+ object; otherwise, will generate a C{MatchFirst} object (if C{caseless=True}, or
+ if creating a C{Regex} raises an exception)
+
+ Example::
+ comp_oper = oneOf("< = > <= >= !=")
+ var = Word(alphas)
+ number = Word(nums)
+ term = var | number
+ comparison_expr = term + comp_oper + term
+ print(comparison_expr.searchString("B = 12 AA=23 B<=AA AA>12"))
+ prints::
+ [['B', '=', '12'], ['AA', '=', '23'], ['B', '<=', 'AA'], ['AA', '>', '12']]
+ """
+ if caseless:
+ isequal = ( lambda a,b: a.upper() == b.upper() )
+ masks = ( lambda a,b: b.upper().startswith(a.upper()) )
+ parseElementClass = CaselessLiteral
+ else:
+ isequal = ( lambda a,b: a == b )
+ masks = ( lambda a,b: b.startswith(a) )
+ parseElementClass = Literal
+
+ symbols = []
+ if isinstance(strs,basestring):
+ symbols = strs.split()
+ elif isinstance(strs, Iterable):
+ symbols = list(strs)
+ else:
+ warnings.warn("Invalid argument to oneOf, expected string or iterable",
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ if not symbols:
+ return NoMatch()
+
+ i = 0
+ while i < len(symbols)-1:
+ cur = symbols[i]
+ for j,other in enumerate(symbols[i+1:]):
+ if ( isequal(other, cur) ):
+ del symbols[i+j+1]
+ break
+ elif ( masks(cur, other) ):
+ del symbols[i+j+1]
+ symbols.insert(i,other)
+ cur = other
+ break
+ else:
+ i += 1
+
+ if not caseless and useRegex:
+ #~ print (strs,"->", "|".join( [ _escapeRegexChars(sym) for sym in symbols] ))
+ try:
+ if len(symbols)==len("".join(symbols)):
+ return Regex( "[%s]" % "".join(_escapeRegexRangeChars(sym) for sym in symbols) ).setName(' | '.join(symbols))
+ else:
+ return Regex( "|".join(re.escape(sym) for sym in symbols) ).setName(' | '.join(symbols))
+ except Exception:
+ warnings.warn("Exception creating Regex for oneOf, building MatchFirst",
+ SyntaxWarning, stacklevel=2)
+
+
+ # last resort, just use MatchFirst
+ return MatchFirst(parseElementClass(sym) for sym in symbols).setName(' | '.join(symbols))
+
+def dictOf( key, value ):
+ """
+ Helper to easily and clearly define a dictionary by specifying the respective patterns
+ for the key and value. Takes care of defining the C{L{Dict}}, C{L{ZeroOrMore}}, and C{L{Group}} tokens
+ in the proper order. The key pattern can include delimiting markers or punctuation,
+ as long as they are suppressed, thereby leaving the significant key text. The value
+ pattern can include named results, so that the C{Dict} results can include named token
+ fields.
+
+ Example::
+ text = "shape: SQUARE posn: upper left color: light blue texture: burlap"
+ attr_expr = (label + Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word, stopOn=label).setParseAction(' '.join))
+ print(OneOrMore(attr_expr).parseString(text).dump())
+
+ attr_label = label
+ attr_value = Suppress(':') + OneOrMore(data_word, stopOn=label).setParseAction(' '.join)
+
+ # similar to Dict, but simpler call format
+ result = dictOf(attr_label, attr_value).parseString(text)
+ print(result.dump())
+ print(result['shape'])
+ print(result.shape) # object attribute access works too
+ print(result.asDict())
+ prints::
+ [['shape', 'SQUARE'], ['posn', 'upper left'], ['color', 'light blue'], ['texture', 'burlap']]
+ - color: light blue
+ - posn: upper left
+ - shape: SQUARE
+ - texture: burlap
+ SQUARE
+ SQUARE
+ {'color': 'light blue', 'shape': 'SQUARE', 'posn': 'upper left', 'texture': 'burlap'}
+ """
+ return Dict( ZeroOrMore( Group ( key + value ) ) )
+
+def originalTextFor(expr, asString=True):
+ """
+ Helper to return the original, untokenized text for a given expression. Useful to
+ restore the parsed fields of an HTML start tag into the raw tag text itself, or to
+ revert separate tokens with intervening whitespace back to the original matching
+ input text. By default, returns astring containing the original parsed text.
+
+ If the optional C{asString} argument is passed as C{False}, then the return value is a
+ C{L{ParseResults}} containing any results names that were originally matched, and a
+ single token containing the original matched text from the input string. So if
+ the expression passed to C{L{originalTextFor}} contains expressions with defined
+ results names, you must set C{asString} to C{False} if you want to preserve those
+ results name values.
+
+ Example::
+ src = "this is test <b> bold <i>text</i> </b> normal text "
+ for tag in ("b","i"):
+ opener,closer = makeHTMLTags(tag)
+ patt = originalTextFor(opener + SkipTo(closer) + closer)
+ print(patt.searchString(src)[0])
+ prints::
+ ['<b> bold <i>text</i> </b>']
+ ['<i>text</i>']
+ """
+ locMarker = Empty().setParseAction(lambda s,loc,t: loc)
+ endlocMarker = locMarker.copy()
+ endlocMarker.callPreparse = False
+ matchExpr = locMarker("_original_start") + expr + endlocMarker("_original_end")
+ if asString:
+ extractText = lambda s,l,t: s[t._original_start:t._original_end]
+ else:
+ def extractText(s,l,t):
+ t[:] = [s[t.pop('_original_start'):t.pop('_original_end')]]
+ matchExpr.setParseAction(extractText)
+ matchExpr.ignoreExprs = expr.ignoreExprs
+ return matchExpr
+
+def ungroup(expr):
+ """
+ Helper to undo pyparsing's default grouping of And expressions, even
+ if all but one are non-empty.
+ """
+ return TokenConverter(expr).setParseAction(lambda t:t[0])
+
+def locatedExpr(expr):
+ """
+ Helper to decorate a returned token with its starting and ending locations in the input string.
+ This helper adds the following results names:
+ - locn_start = location where matched expression begins
+ - locn_end = location where matched expression ends
+ - value = the actual parsed results
+
+ Be careful if the input text contains C{<TAB>} characters, you may want to call
+ C{L{ParserElement.parseWithTabs}}
+
+ Example::
+ wd = Word(alphas)
+ for match in locatedExpr(wd).searchString("ljsdf123lksdjjf123lkkjj1222"):
+ print(match)
+ prints::
+ [[0, 'ljsdf', 5]]
+ [[8, 'lksdjjf', 15]]
+ [[18, 'lkkjj', 23]]
+ """
+ locator = Empty().setParseAction(lambda s,l,t: l)
+ return Group(locator("locn_start") + expr("value") + locator.copy().leaveWhitespace()("locn_end"))
+
+
+# convenience constants for positional expressions
+empty = Empty().setName("empty")
+lineStart = LineStart().setName("lineStart")
+lineEnd = LineEnd().setName("lineEnd")
+stringStart = StringStart().setName("stringStart")
+stringEnd = StringEnd().setName("stringEnd")
+
+_escapedPunc = Word( _bslash, r"\[]-*.$+^?()~ ", exact=2 ).setParseAction(lambda s,l,t:t[0][1])
+_escapedHexChar = Regex(r"\\0?[xX][0-9a-fA-F]+").setParseAction(lambda s,l,t:unichr(int(t[0].lstrip(r'\0x'),16)))
+_escapedOctChar = Regex(r"\\0[0-7]+").setParseAction(lambda s,l,t:unichr(int(t[0][1:],8)))
+_singleChar = _escapedPunc | _escapedHexChar | _escapedOctChar | CharsNotIn(r'\]', exact=1)
+_charRange = Group(_singleChar + Suppress("-") + _singleChar)
+_reBracketExpr = Literal("[") + Optional("^").setResultsName("negate") + Group( OneOrMore( _charRange | _singleChar ) ).setResultsName("body") + "]"
+
+def srange(s):
+ r"""
+ Helper to easily define string ranges for use in Word construction. Borrows
+ syntax from regexp '[]' string range definitions::
+ srange("[0-9]") -> "0123456789"
+ srange("[a-z]") -> "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"
+ srange("[a-z$_]") -> "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz$_"
+ The input string must be enclosed in []'s, and the returned string is the expanded
+ character set joined into a single string.
+ The values enclosed in the []'s may be:
+ - a single character
+ - an escaped character with a leading backslash (such as C{\-} or C{\]})
+ - an escaped hex character with a leading C{'\x'} (C{\x21}, which is a C{'!'} character)
+ (C{\0x##} is also supported for backwards compatibility)
+ - an escaped octal character with a leading C{'\0'} (C{\041}, which is a C{'!'} character)
+ - a range of any of the above, separated by a dash (C{'a-z'}, etc.)
+ - any combination of the above (C{'aeiouy'}, C{'a-zA-Z0-9_$'}, etc.)
+ """
+ _expanded = lambda p: p if not isinstance(p,ParseResults) else ''.join(unichr(c) for c in range(ord(p[0]),ord(p[1])+1))
+ try:
+ return "".join(_expanded(part) for part in _reBracketExpr.parseString(s).body)
+ except Exception:
+ return ""
+
+def matchOnlyAtCol(n):
+ """
+ Helper method for defining parse actions that require matching at a specific
+ column in the input text.
+ """
+ def verifyCol(strg,locn,toks):
+ if col(locn,strg) != n:
+ raise ParseException(strg,locn,"matched token not at column %d" % n)
+ return verifyCol
+
+def replaceWith(replStr):
+ """
+ Helper method for common parse actions that simply return a literal value. Especially
+ useful when used with C{L{transformString<ParserElement.transformString>}()}.
+
+ Example::
+ num = Word(nums).setParseAction(lambda toks: int(toks[0]))
+ na = oneOf("N/A NA").setParseAction(replaceWith(math.nan))
+ term = na | num
+
+ OneOrMore(term).parseString("324 234 N/A 234") # -> [324, 234, nan, 234]
+ """
+ return lambda s,l,t: [replStr]
+
+def removeQuotes(s,l,t):
+ """
+ Helper parse action for removing quotation marks from parsed quoted strings.
+
+ Example::
+ # by default, quotation marks are included in parsed results
+ quotedString.parseString("'Now is the Winter of our Discontent'") # -> ["'Now is the Winter of our Discontent'"]
+
+ # use removeQuotes to strip quotation marks from parsed results
+ quotedString.setParseAction(removeQuotes)
+ quotedString.parseString("'Now is the Winter of our Discontent'") # -> ["Now is the Winter of our Discontent"]
+ """
+ return t[0][1:-1]
+
+def tokenMap(func, *args):
+ """
+ Helper to define a parse action by mapping a function to all elements of a ParseResults list.If any additional
+ args are passed, they are forwarded to the given function as additional arguments after
+ the token, as in C{hex_integer = Word(hexnums).setParseAction(tokenMap(int, 16))}, which will convert the
+ parsed data to an integer using base 16.
+
+ Example (compare the last to example in L{ParserElement.transformString}::
+ hex_ints = OneOrMore(Word(hexnums)).setParseAction(tokenMap(int, 16))
+ hex_ints.runTests('''
+ 00 11 22 aa FF 0a 0d 1a
+ ''')
+
+ upperword = Word(alphas).setParseAction(tokenMap(str.upper))
+ OneOrMore(upperword).runTests('''
+ my kingdom for a horse
+ ''')
+
+ wd = Word(alphas).setParseAction(tokenMap(str.title))
+ OneOrMore(wd).setParseAction(' '.join).runTests('''
+ now is the winter of our discontent made glorious summer by this sun of york
+ ''')
+ prints::
+ 00 11 22 aa FF 0a 0d 1a
+ [0, 17, 34, 170, 255, 10, 13, 26]
+
+ my kingdom for a horse
+ ['MY', 'KINGDOM', 'FOR', 'A', 'HORSE']
+
+ now is the winter of our discontent made glorious summer by this sun of york
+ ['Now Is The Winter Of Our Discontent Made Glorious Summer By This Sun Of York']
+ """
+ def pa(s,l,t):
+ return [func(tokn, *args) for tokn in t]
+
+ try:
+ func_name = getattr(func, '__name__',
+ getattr(func, '__class__').__name__)
+ except Exception:
+ func_name = str(func)
+ pa.__name__ = func_name
+
+ return pa
+
+upcaseTokens = tokenMap(lambda t: _ustr(t).upper())
+"""(Deprecated) Helper parse action to convert tokens to upper case. Deprecated in favor of L{pyparsing_common.upcaseTokens}"""
+
+downcaseTokens = tokenMap(lambda t: _ustr(t).lower())
+"""(Deprecated) Helper parse action to convert tokens to lower case. Deprecated in favor of L{pyparsing_common.downcaseTokens}"""
+
+def _makeTags(tagStr, xml):
+ """Internal helper to construct opening and closing tag expressions, given a tag name"""
+ if isinstance(tagStr,basestring):
+ resname = tagStr
+ tagStr = Keyword(tagStr, caseless=not xml)
+ else:
+ resname = tagStr.name
+
+ tagAttrName = Word(alphas,alphanums+"_-:")
+ if (xml):
+ tagAttrValue = dblQuotedString.copy().setParseAction( removeQuotes )
+ openTag = Suppress("<") + tagStr("tag") + \
+ Dict(ZeroOrMore(Group( tagAttrName + Suppress("=") + tagAttrValue ))) + \
+ Optional("/",default=[False]).setResultsName("empty").setParseAction(lambda s,l,t:t[0]=='/') + Suppress(">")
+ else:
+ printablesLessRAbrack = "".join(c for c in printables if c not in ">")
+ tagAttrValue = quotedString.copy().setParseAction( removeQuotes ) | Word(printablesLessRAbrack)
+ openTag = Suppress("<") + tagStr("tag") + \
+ Dict(ZeroOrMore(Group( tagAttrName.setParseAction(downcaseTokens) + \
+ Optional( Suppress("=") + tagAttrValue ) ))) + \
+ Optional("/",default=[False]).setResultsName("empty").setParseAction(lambda s,l,t:t[0]=='/') + Suppress(">")
+ closeTag = Combine(_L("</") + tagStr + ">")
+
+ openTag = openTag.setResultsName("start"+"".join(resname.replace(":"," ").title().split())).setName("<%s>" % resname)
+ closeTag = closeTag.setResultsName("end"+"".join(resname.replace(":"," ").title().split())).setName("</%s>" % resname)
+ openTag.tag = resname
+ closeTag.tag = resname
+ return openTag, closeTag
+
+def makeHTMLTags(tagStr):
+ """
+ Helper to construct opening and closing tag expressions for HTML, given a tag name. Matches
+ tags in either upper or lower case, attributes with namespaces and with quoted or unquoted values.
+
+ Example::
+ text = '<td>More info at the <a href="http://pyparsing.wikispaces.com">pyparsing</a> wiki page</td>'
+ # makeHTMLTags returns pyparsing expressions for the opening and closing tags as a 2-tuple
+ a,a_end = makeHTMLTags("A")
+ link_expr = a + SkipTo(a_end)("link_text") + a_end
+
+ for link in link_expr.searchString(text):
+ # attributes in the <A> tag (like "href" shown here) are also accessible as named results
+ print(link.link_text, '->', link.href)
+ prints::
+ pyparsing -> http://pyparsing.wikispaces.com
+ """
+ return _makeTags( tagStr, False )
+
+def makeXMLTags(tagStr):
+ """
+ Helper to construct opening and closing tag expressions for XML, given a tag name. Matches
+ tags only in the given upper/lower case.
+
+ Example: similar to L{makeHTMLTags}
+ """
+ return _makeTags( tagStr, True )
+
+def withAttribute(*args,**attrDict):
+ """
+ Helper to create a validating parse action to be used with start tags created
+ with C{L{makeXMLTags}} or C{L{makeHTMLTags}}. Use C{withAttribute} to qualify a starting tag
+ with a required attribute value, to avoid false matches on common tags such as
+ C{<TD>} or C{<DIV>}.
+
+ Call C{withAttribute} with a series of attribute names and values. Specify the list
+ of filter attributes names and values as:
+ - keyword arguments, as in C{(align="right")}, or
+ - as an explicit dict with C{**} operator, when an attribute name is also a Python
+ reserved word, as in C{**{"class":"Customer", "align":"right"}}
+ - a list of name-value tuples, as in ( ("ns1:class", "Customer"), ("ns2:align","right") )
+ For attribute names with a namespace prefix, you must use the second form. Attribute
+ names are matched insensitive to upper/lower case.
+
+ If just testing for C{class} (with or without a namespace), use C{L{withClass}}.
+
+ To verify that the attribute exists, but without specifying a value, pass
+ C{withAttribute.ANY_VALUE} as the value.
+
+ Example::
+ html = '''
+ <div>
+ Some text
+ <div type="grid">1 4 0 1 0</div>
+ <div type="graph">1,3 2,3 1,1</div>
+ <div>this has no type</div>
+ </div>
+
+ '''
+ div,div_end = makeHTMLTags("div")
+
+ # only match div tag having a type attribute with value "grid"
+ div_grid = div().setParseAction(withAttribute(type="grid"))
+ grid_expr = div_grid + SkipTo(div | div_end)("body")
+ for grid_header in grid_expr.searchString(html):
+ print(grid_header.body)
+
+ # construct a match with any div tag having a type attribute, regardless of the value
+ div_any_type = div().setParseAction(withAttribute(type=withAttribute.ANY_VALUE))
+ div_expr = div_any_type + SkipTo(div | div_end)("body")
+ for div_header in div_expr.searchString(html):
+ print(div_header.body)
+ prints::
+ 1 4 0 1 0
+
+ 1 4 0 1 0
+ 1,3 2,3 1,1
+ """
+ if args:
+ attrs = args[:]
+ else:
+ attrs = attrDict.items()
+ attrs = [(k,v) for k,v in attrs]
+ def pa(s,l,tokens):
+ for attrName,attrValue in attrs:
+ if attrName not in tokens:
+ raise ParseException(s,l,"no matching attribute " + attrName)
+ if attrValue != withAttribute.ANY_VALUE and tokens[attrName] != attrValue:
+ raise ParseException(s,l,"attribute '%s' has value '%s', must be '%s'" %
+ (attrName, tokens[attrName], attrValue))
+ return pa
+withAttribute.ANY_VALUE = object()
+
+def withClass(classname, namespace=''):
+ """
+ Simplified version of C{L{withAttribute}} when matching on a div class - made
+ difficult because C{class} is a reserved word in Python.
+
+ Example::
+ html = '''
+ <div>
+ Some text
+ <div class="grid">1 4 0 1 0</div>
+ <div class="graph">1,3 2,3 1,1</div>
+ <div>this &lt;div&gt; has no class</div>
+ </div>
+
+ '''
+ div,div_end = makeHTMLTags("div")
+ div_grid = div().setParseAction(withClass("grid"))
+
+ grid_expr = div_grid + SkipTo(div | div_end)("body")
+ for grid_header in grid_expr.searchString(html):
+ print(grid_header.body)
+
+ div_any_type = div().setParseAction(withClass(withAttribute.ANY_VALUE))
+ div_expr = div_any_type + SkipTo(div | div_end)("body")
+ for div_header in div_expr.searchString(html):
+ print(div_header.body)
+ prints::
+ 1 4 0 1 0
+
+ 1 4 0 1 0
+ 1,3 2,3 1,1
+ """
+ classattr = "%s:class" % namespace if namespace else "class"
+ return withAttribute(**{classattr : classname})
+
+opAssoc = _Constants()
+opAssoc.LEFT = object()
+opAssoc.RIGHT = object()
+
+def infixNotation( baseExpr, opList, lpar=Suppress('('), rpar=Suppress(')') ):
+ """
+ Helper method for constructing grammars of expressions made up of
+ operators working in a precedence hierarchy. Operators may be unary or
+ binary, left- or right-associative. Parse actions can also be attached
+ to operator expressions. The generated parser will also recognize the use
+ of parentheses to override operator precedences (see example below).
+
+ Note: if you define a deep operator list, you may see performance issues
+ when using infixNotation. See L{ParserElement.enablePackrat} for a
+ mechanism to potentially improve your parser performance.
+
+ Parameters:
+ - baseExpr - expression representing the most basic element for the nested
+ - opList - list of tuples, one for each operator precedence level in the
+ expression grammar; each tuple is of the form
+ (opExpr, numTerms, rightLeftAssoc, parseAction), where:
+ - opExpr is the pyparsing expression for the operator;
+ may also be a string, which will be converted to a Literal;
+ if numTerms is 3, opExpr is a tuple of two expressions, for the
+ two operators separating the 3 terms
+ - numTerms is the number of terms for this operator (must
+ be 1, 2, or 3)
+ - rightLeftAssoc is the indicator whether the operator is
+ right or left associative, using the pyparsing-defined
+ constants C{opAssoc.RIGHT} and C{opAssoc.LEFT}.
+ - parseAction is the parse action to be associated with
+ expressions matching this operator expression (the
+ parse action tuple member may be omitted); if the parse action
+ is passed a tuple or list of functions, this is equivalent to
+ calling C{setParseAction(*fn)} (L{ParserElement.setParseAction})
+ - lpar - expression for matching left-parentheses (default=C{Suppress('(')})
+ - rpar - expression for matching right-parentheses (default=C{Suppress(')')})
+
+ Example::
+ # simple example of four-function arithmetic with ints and variable names
+ integer = pyparsing_common.signed_integer
+ varname = pyparsing_common.identifier
+
+ arith_expr = infixNotation(integer | varname,
+ [
+ ('-', 1, opAssoc.RIGHT),
+ (oneOf('* /'), 2, opAssoc.LEFT),
+ (oneOf('+ -'), 2, opAssoc.LEFT),
+ ])
+
+ arith_expr.runTests('''
+ 5+3*6
+ (5+3)*6
+ -2--11
+ ''', fullDump=False)
+ prints::
+ 5+3*6
+ [[5, '+', [3, '*', 6]]]
+
+ (5+3)*6
+ [[[5, '+', 3], '*', 6]]
+
+ -2--11
+ [[['-', 2], '-', ['-', 11]]]
+ """
+ ret = Forward()
+ lastExpr = baseExpr | ( lpar + ret + rpar )
+ for i,operDef in enumerate(opList):
+ opExpr,arity,rightLeftAssoc,pa = (operDef + (None,))[:4]
+ termName = "%s term" % opExpr if arity < 3 else "%s%s term" % opExpr
+ if arity == 3:
+ if opExpr is None or len(opExpr) != 2:
+ raise ValueError("if numterms=3, opExpr must be a tuple or list of two expressions")
+ opExpr1, opExpr2 = opExpr
+ thisExpr = Forward().setName(termName)
+ if rightLeftAssoc == opAssoc.LEFT:
+ if arity == 1:
+ matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr + opExpr) + Group( lastExpr + OneOrMore( opExpr ) )
+ elif arity == 2:
+ if opExpr is not None:
+ matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr + opExpr + lastExpr) + Group( lastExpr + OneOrMore( opExpr + lastExpr ) )
+ else:
+ matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr+lastExpr) + Group( lastExpr + OneOrMore(lastExpr) )
+ elif arity == 3:
+ matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr + opExpr1 + lastExpr + opExpr2 + lastExpr) + \
+ Group( lastExpr + opExpr1 + lastExpr + opExpr2 + lastExpr )
+ else:
+ raise ValueError("operator must be unary (1), binary (2), or ternary (3)")
+ elif rightLeftAssoc == opAssoc.RIGHT:
+ if arity == 1:
+ # try to avoid LR with this extra test
+ if not isinstance(opExpr, Optional):
+ opExpr = Optional(opExpr)
+ matchExpr = FollowedBy(opExpr.expr + thisExpr) + Group( opExpr + thisExpr )
+ elif arity == 2:
+ if opExpr is not None:
+ matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr + opExpr + thisExpr) + Group( lastExpr + OneOrMore( opExpr + thisExpr ) )
+ else:
+ matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr + thisExpr) + Group( lastExpr + OneOrMore( thisExpr ) )
+ elif arity == 3:
+ matchExpr = FollowedBy(lastExpr + opExpr1 + thisExpr + opExpr2 + thisExpr) + \
+ Group( lastExpr + opExpr1 + thisExpr + opExpr2 + thisExpr )
+ else:
+ raise ValueError("operator must be unary (1), binary (2), or ternary (3)")
+ else:
+ raise ValueError("operator must indicate right or left associativity")
+ if pa:
+ if isinstance(pa, (tuple, list)):
+ matchExpr.setParseAction(*pa)
+ else:
+ matchExpr.setParseAction(pa)
+ thisExpr <<= ( matchExpr.setName(termName) | lastExpr )
+ lastExpr = thisExpr
+ ret <<= lastExpr
+ return ret
+
+operatorPrecedence = infixNotation
+"""(Deprecated) Former name of C{L{infixNotation}}, will be dropped in a future release."""
+
+dblQuotedString = Combine(Regex(r'"(?:[^"\n\r\\]|(?:"")|(?:\\(?:[^x]|x[0-9a-fA-F]+)))*')+'"').setName("string enclosed in double quotes")
+sglQuotedString = Combine(Regex(r"'(?:[^'\n\r\\]|(?:'')|(?:\\(?:[^x]|x[0-9a-fA-F]+)))*")+"'").setName("string enclosed in single quotes")
+quotedString = Combine(Regex(r'"(?:[^"\n\r\\]|(?:"")|(?:\\(?:[^x]|x[0-9a-fA-F]+)))*')+'"'|
+ Regex(r"'(?:[^'\n\r\\]|(?:'')|(?:\\(?:[^x]|x[0-9a-fA-F]+)))*")+"'").setName("quotedString using single or double quotes")
+unicodeString = Combine(_L('u') + quotedString.copy()).setName("unicode string literal")
+
+def nestedExpr(opener="(", closer=")", content=None, ignoreExpr=quotedString.copy()):
+ """
+ Helper method for defining nested lists enclosed in opening and closing
+ delimiters ("(" and ")" are the default).
+
+ Parameters:
+ - opener - opening character for a nested list (default=C{"("}); can also be a pyparsing expression
+ - closer - closing character for a nested list (default=C{")"}); can also be a pyparsing expression
+ - content - expression for items within the nested lists (default=C{None})
+ - ignoreExpr - expression for ignoring opening and closing delimiters (default=C{quotedString})
+
+ If an expression is not provided for the content argument, the nested
+ expression will capture all whitespace-delimited content between delimiters
+ as a list of separate values.
+
+ Use the C{ignoreExpr} argument to define expressions that may contain
+ opening or closing characters that should not be treated as opening
+ or closing characters for nesting, such as quotedString or a comment
+ expression. Specify multiple expressions using an C{L{Or}} or C{L{MatchFirst}}.
+ The default is L{quotedString}, but if no expressions are to be ignored,
+ then pass C{None} for this argument.
+
+ Example::
+ data_type = oneOf("void int short long char float double")
+ decl_data_type = Combine(data_type + Optional(Word('*')))
+ ident = Word(alphas+'_', alphanums+'_')
+ number = pyparsing_common.number
+ arg = Group(decl_data_type + ident)
+ LPAR,RPAR = map(Suppress, "()")
+
+ code_body = nestedExpr('{', '}', ignoreExpr=(quotedString | cStyleComment))
+
+ c_function = (decl_data_type("type")
+ + ident("name")
+ + LPAR + Optional(delimitedList(arg), [])("args") + RPAR
+ + code_body("body"))
+ c_function.ignore(cStyleComment)
+
+ source_code = '''
+ int is_odd(int x) {
+ return (x%2);
+ }
+
+ int dec_to_hex(char hchar) {
+ if (hchar >= '0' && hchar <= '9') {
+ return (ord(hchar)-ord('0'));
+ } else {
+ return (10+ord(hchar)-ord('A'));
+ }
+ }
+ '''
+ for func in c_function.searchString(source_code):
+ print("%(name)s (%(type)s) args: %(args)s" % func)
+
+ prints::
+ is_odd (int) args: [['int', 'x']]
+ dec_to_hex (int) args: [['char', 'hchar']]
+ """
+ if opener == closer:
+ raise ValueError("opening and closing strings cannot be the same")
+ if content is None:
+ if isinstance(opener,basestring) and isinstance(closer,basestring):
+ if len(opener) == 1 and len(closer)==1:
+ if ignoreExpr is not None:
+ content = (Combine(OneOrMore(~ignoreExpr +
+ CharsNotIn(opener+closer+ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS,exact=1))
+ ).setParseAction(lambda t:t[0].strip()))
+ else:
+ content = (empty.copy()+CharsNotIn(opener+closer+ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS
+ ).setParseAction(lambda t:t[0].strip()))
+ else:
+ if ignoreExpr is not None:
+ content = (Combine(OneOrMore(~ignoreExpr +
+ ~Literal(opener) + ~Literal(closer) +
+ CharsNotIn(ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS,exact=1))
+ ).setParseAction(lambda t:t[0].strip()))
+ else:
+ content = (Combine(OneOrMore(~Literal(opener) + ~Literal(closer) +
+ CharsNotIn(ParserElement.DEFAULT_WHITE_CHARS,exact=1))
+ ).setParseAction(lambda t:t[0].strip()))
+ else:
+ raise ValueError("opening and closing arguments must be strings if no content expression is given")
+ ret = Forward()
+ if ignoreExpr is not None:
+ ret <<= Group( Suppress(opener) + ZeroOrMore( ignoreExpr | ret | content ) + Suppress(closer) )
+ else:
+ ret <<= Group( Suppress(opener) + ZeroOrMore( ret | content ) + Suppress(closer) )
+ ret.setName('nested %s%s expression' % (opener,closer))
+ return ret
+
+def indentedBlock(blockStatementExpr, indentStack, indent=True):
+ """
+ Helper method for defining space-delimited indentation blocks, such as
+ those used to define block statements in Python source code.
+
+ Parameters:
+ - blockStatementExpr - expression defining syntax of statement that
+ is repeated within the indented block
+ - indentStack - list created by caller to manage indentation stack
+ (multiple statementWithIndentedBlock expressions within a single grammar
+ should share a common indentStack)
+ - indent - boolean indicating whether block must be indented beyond the
+ the current level; set to False for block of left-most statements
+ (default=C{True})
+
+ A valid block must contain at least one C{blockStatement}.
+
+ Example::
+ data = '''
+ def A(z):
+ A1
+ B = 100
+ G = A2
+ A2
+ A3
+ B
+ def BB(a,b,c):
+ BB1
+ def BBA():
+ bba1
+ bba2
+ bba3
+ C
+ D
+ def spam(x,y):
+ def eggs(z):
+ pass
+ '''
+
+
+ indentStack = [1]
+ stmt = Forward()
+
+ identifier = Word(alphas, alphanums)
+ funcDecl = ("def" + identifier + Group( "(" + Optional( delimitedList(identifier) ) + ")" ) + ":")
+ func_body = indentedBlock(stmt, indentStack)
+ funcDef = Group( funcDecl + func_body )
+
+ rvalue = Forward()
+ funcCall = Group(identifier + "(" + Optional(delimitedList(rvalue)) + ")")
+ rvalue << (funcCall | identifier | Word(nums))
+ assignment = Group(identifier + "=" + rvalue)
+ stmt << ( funcDef | assignment | identifier )
+
+ module_body = OneOrMore(stmt)
+
+ parseTree = module_body.parseString(data)
+ parseTree.pprint()
+ prints::
+ [['def',
+ 'A',
+ ['(', 'z', ')'],
+ ':',
+ [['A1'], [['B', '=', '100']], [['G', '=', 'A2']], ['A2'], ['A3']]],
+ 'B',
+ ['def',
+ 'BB',
+ ['(', 'a', 'b', 'c', ')'],
+ ':',
+ [['BB1'], [['def', 'BBA', ['(', ')'], ':', [['bba1'], ['bba2'], ['bba3']]]]]],
+ 'C',
+ 'D',
+ ['def',
+ 'spam',
+ ['(', 'x', 'y', ')'],
+ ':',
+ [[['def', 'eggs', ['(', 'z', ')'], ':', [['pass']]]]]]]
+ """
+ def checkPeerIndent(s,l,t):
+ if l >= len(s): return
+ curCol = col(l,s)
+ if curCol != indentStack[-1]:
+ if curCol > indentStack[-1]:
+ raise ParseFatalException(s,l,"illegal nesting")
+ raise ParseException(s,l,"not a peer entry")
+
+ def checkSubIndent(s,l,t):
+ curCol = col(l,s)
+ if curCol > indentStack[-1]:
+ indentStack.append( curCol )
+ else:
+ raise ParseException(s,l,"not a subentry")
+
+ def checkUnindent(s,l,t):
+ if l >= len(s): return
+ curCol = col(l,s)
+ if not(indentStack and curCol < indentStack[-1] and curCol <= indentStack[-2]):
+ raise ParseException(s,l,"not an unindent")
+ indentStack.pop()
+
+ NL = OneOrMore(LineEnd().setWhitespaceChars("\t ").suppress())
+ INDENT = (Empty() + Empty().setParseAction(checkSubIndent)).setName('INDENT')
+ PEER = Empty().setParseAction(checkPeerIndent).setName('')
+ UNDENT = Empty().setParseAction(checkUnindent).setName('UNINDENT')
+ if indent:
+ smExpr = Group( Optional(NL) +
+ #~ FollowedBy(blockStatementExpr) +
+ INDENT + (OneOrMore( PEER + Group(blockStatementExpr) + Optional(NL) )) + UNDENT)
+ else:
+ smExpr = Group( Optional(NL) +
+ (OneOrMore( PEER + Group(blockStatementExpr) + Optional(NL) )) )
+ blockStatementExpr.ignore(_bslash + LineEnd())
+ return smExpr.setName('indented block')
+
+alphas8bit = srange(r"[\0xc0-\0xd6\0xd8-\0xf6\0xf8-\0xff]")
+punc8bit = srange(r"[\0xa1-\0xbf\0xd7\0xf7]")
+
+anyOpenTag,anyCloseTag = makeHTMLTags(Word(alphas,alphanums+"_:").setName('any tag'))
+_htmlEntityMap = dict(zip("gt lt amp nbsp quot apos".split(),'><& "\''))
+commonHTMLEntity = Regex('&(?P<entity>' + '|'.join(_htmlEntityMap.keys()) +");").setName("common HTML entity")
+def replaceHTMLEntity(t):
+ """Helper parser action to replace common HTML entities with their special characters"""
+ return _htmlEntityMap.get(t.entity)
+
+# it's easy to get these comment structures wrong - they're very common, so may as well make them available
+cStyleComment = Combine(Regex(r"/\*(?:[^*]|\*(?!/))*") + '*/').setName("C style comment")
+"Comment of the form C{/* ... */}"
+
+htmlComment = Regex(r"<!--[\s\S]*?-->").setName("HTML comment")
+"Comment of the form C{<!-- ... -->}"
+
+restOfLine = Regex(r".*").leaveWhitespace().setName("rest of line")
+dblSlashComment = Regex(r"//(?:\\\n|[^\n])*").setName("// comment")
+"Comment of the form C{// ... (to end of line)}"
+
+cppStyleComment = Combine(Regex(r"/\*(?:[^*]|\*(?!/))*") + '*/'| dblSlashComment).setName("C++ style comment")
+"Comment of either form C{L{cStyleComment}} or C{L{dblSlashComment}}"
+
+javaStyleComment = cppStyleComment
+"Same as C{L{cppStyleComment}}"
+
+pythonStyleComment = Regex(r"#.*").setName("Python style comment")
+"Comment of the form C{# ... (to end of line)}"
+
+_commasepitem = Combine(OneOrMore(Word(printables, excludeChars=',') +
+ Optional( Word(" \t") +
+ ~Literal(",") + ~LineEnd() ) ) ).streamline().setName("commaItem")
+commaSeparatedList = delimitedList( Optional( quotedString.copy() | _commasepitem, default="") ).setName("commaSeparatedList")
+"""(Deprecated) Predefined expression of 1 or more printable words or quoted strings, separated by commas.
+ This expression is deprecated in favor of L{pyparsing_common.comma_separated_list}."""
+
+# some other useful expressions - using lower-case class name since we are really using this as a namespace
+class pyparsing_common:
+ """
+ Here are some common low-level expressions that may be useful in jump-starting parser development:
+ - numeric forms (L{integers<integer>}, L{reals<real>}, L{scientific notation<sci_real>})
+ - common L{programming identifiers<identifier>}
+ - network addresses (L{MAC<mac_address>}, L{IPv4<ipv4_address>}, L{IPv6<ipv6_address>})
+ - ISO8601 L{dates<iso8601_date>} and L{datetime<iso8601_datetime>}
+ - L{UUID<uuid>}
+ - L{comma-separated list<comma_separated_list>}
+ Parse actions:
+ - C{L{convertToInteger}}
+ - C{L{convertToFloat}}
+ - C{L{convertToDate}}
+ - C{L{convertToDatetime}}
+ - C{L{stripHTMLTags}}
+ - C{L{upcaseTokens}}
+ - C{L{downcaseTokens}}
+
+ Example::
+ pyparsing_common.number.runTests('''
+ # any int or real number, returned as the appropriate type
+ 100
+ -100
+ +100
+ 3.14159
+ 6.02e23
+ 1e-12
+ ''')
+
+ pyparsing_common.fnumber.runTests('''
+ # any int or real number, returned as float
+ 100
+ -100
+ +100
+ 3.14159
+ 6.02e23
+ 1e-12
+ ''')
+
+ pyparsing_common.hex_integer.runTests('''
+ # hex numbers
+ 100
+ FF
+ ''')
+
+ pyparsing_common.fraction.runTests('''
+ # fractions
+ 1/2
+ -3/4
+ ''')
+
+ pyparsing_common.mixed_integer.runTests('''
+ # mixed fractions
+ 1
+ 1/2
+ -3/4
+ 1-3/4
+ ''')
+
+ import uuid
+ pyparsing_common.uuid.setParseAction(tokenMap(uuid.UUID))
+ pyparsing_common.uuid.runTests('''
+ # uuid
+ 12345678-1234-5678-1234-567812345678
+ ''')
+ prints::
+ # any int or real number, returned as the appropriate type
+ 100
+ [100]
+
+ -100
+ [-100]
+
+ +100
+ [100]
+
+ 3.14159
+ [3.14159]
+
+ 6.02e23
+ [6.02e+23]
+
+ 1e-12
+ [1e-12]
+
+ # any int or real number, returned as float
+ 100
+ [100.0]
+
+ -100
+ [-100.0]
+
+ +100
+ [100.0]
+
+ 3.14159
+ [3.14159]
+
+ 6.02e23
+ [6.02e+23]
+
+ 1e-12
+ [1e-12]
+
+ # hex numbers
+ 100
+ [256]
+
+ FF
+ [255]
+
+ # fractions
+ 1/2
+ [0.5]
+
+ -3/4
+ [-0.75]
+
+ # mixed fractions
+ 1
+ [1]
+
+ 1/2
+ [0.5]
+
+ -3/4
+ [-0.75]
+
+ 1-3/4
+ [1.75]
+
+ # uuid
+ 12345678-1234-5678-1234-567812345678
+ [UUID('12345678-1234-5678-1234-567812345678')]
+ """
+
+ convertToInteger = tokenMap(int)
+ """
+ Parse action for converting parsed integers to Python int
+ """
+
+ convertToFloat = tokenMap(float)
+ """
+ Parse action for converting parsed numbers to Python float
+ """
+
+ integer = Word(nums).setName("integer").setParseAction(convertToInteger)
+ """expression that parses an unsigned integer, returns an int"""
+
+ hex_integer = Word(hexnums).setName("hex integer").setParseAction(tokenMap(int,16))
+ """expression that parses a hexadecimal integer, returns an int"""
+
+ signed_integer = Regex(r'[+-]?\d+').setName("signed integer").setParseAction(convertToInteger)
+ """expression that parses an integer with optional leading sign, returns an int"""
+
+ fraction = (signed_integer().setParseAction(convertToFloat) + '/' + signed_integer().setParseAction(convertToFloat)).setName("fraction")
+ """fractional expression of an integer divided by an integer, returns a float"""
+ fraction.addParseAction(lambda t: t[0]/t[-1])
+
+ mixed_integer = (fraction | signed_integer + Optional(Optional('-').suppress() + fraction)).setName("fraction or mixed integer-fraction")
+ """mixed integer of the form 'integer - fraction', with optional leading integer, returns float"""
+ mixed_integer.addParseAction(sum)
+
+ real = Regex(r'[+-]?\d+\.\d*').setName("real number").setParseAction(convertToFloat)
+ """expression that parses a floating point number and returns a float"""
+
+ sci_real = Regex(r'[+-]?\d+([eE][+-]?\d+|\.\d*([eE][+-]?\d+)?)').setName("real number with scientific notation").setParseAction(convertToFloat)
+ """expression that parses a floating point number with optional scientific notation and returns a float"""
+
+ # streamlining this expression makes the docs nicer-looking
+ number = (sci_real | real | signed_integer).streamline()
+ """any numeric expression, returns the corresponding Python type"""
+
+ fnumber = Regex(r'[+-]?\d+\.?\d*([eE][+-]?\d+)?').setName("fnumber").setParseAction(convertToFloat)
+ """any int or real number, returned as float"""
+
+ identifier = Word(alphas+'_', alphanums+'_').setName("identifier")
+ """typical code identifier (leading alpha or '_', followed by 0 or more alphas, nums, or '_')"""
+
+ ipv4_address = Regex(r'(25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|1?[0-9]{1,2})(\.(25[0-5]|2[0-4][0-9]|1?[0-9]{1,2})){3}').setName("IPv4 address")
+ "IPv4 address (C{0.0.0.0 - 255.255.255.255})"
+
+ _ipv6_part = Regex(r'[0-9a-fA-F]{1,4}').setName("hex_integer")
+ _full_ipv6_address = (_ipv6_part + (':' + _ipv6_part)*7).setName("full IPv6 address")
+ _short_ipv6_address = (Optional(_ipv6_part + (':' + _ipv6_part)*(0,6)) + "::" + Optional(_ipv6_part + (':' + _ipv6_part)*(0,6))).setName("short IPv6 address")
+ _short_ipv6_address.addCondition(lambda t: sum(1 for tt in t if pyparsing_common._ipv6_part.matches(tt)) < 8)
+ _mixed_ipv6_address = ("::ffff:" + ipv4_address).setName("mixed IPv6 address")
+ ipv6_address = Combine((_full_ipv6_address | _mixed_ipv6_address | _short_ipv6_address).setName("IPv6 address")).setName("IPv6 address")
+ "IPv6 address (long, short, or mixed form)"
+
+ mac_address = Regex(r'[0-9a-fA-F]{2}([:.-])[0-9a-fA-F]{2}(?:\1[0-9a-fA-F]{2}){4}').setName("MAC address")
+ "MAC address xx:xx:xx:xx:xx (may also have '-' or '.' delimiters)"
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def convertToDate(fmt="%Y-%m-%d"):
+ """
+ Helper to create a parse action for converting parsed date string to Python datetime.date
+
+ Params -
+ - fmt - format to be passed to datetime.strptime (default=C{"%Y-%m-%d"})
+
+ Example::
+ date_expr = pyparsing_common.iso8601_date.copy()
+ date_expr.setParseAction(pyparsing_common.convertToDate())
+ print(date_expr.parseString("1999-12-31"))
+ prints::
+ [datetime.date(1999, 12, 31)]
+ """
+ def cvt_fn(s,l,t):
+ try:
+ return datetime.strptime(t[0], fmt).date()
+ except ValueError as ve:
+ raise ParseException(s, l, str(ve))
+ return cvt_fn
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def convertToDatetime(fmt="%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%f"):
+ """
+ Helper to create a parse action for converting parsed datetime string to Python datetime.datetime
+
+ Params -
+ - fmt - format to be passed to datetime.strptime (default=C{"%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%f"})
+
+ Example::
+ dt_expr = pyparsing_common.iso8601_datetime.copy()
+ dt_expr.setParseAction(pyparsing_common.convertToDatetime())
+ print(dt_expr.parseString("1999-12-31T23:59:59.999"))
+ prints::
+ [datetime.datetime(1999, 12, 31, 23, 59, 59, 999000)]
+ """
+ def cvt_fn(s,l,t):
+ try:
+ return datetime.strptime(t[0], fmt)
+ except ValueError as ve:
+ raise ParseException(s, l, str(ve))
+ return cvt_fn
+
+ iso8601_date = Regex(r'(?P<year>\d{4})(?:-(?P<month>\d\d)(?:-(?P<day>\d\d))?)?').setName("ISO8601 date")
+ "ISO8601 date (C{yyyy-mm-dd})"
+
+ iso8601_datetime = Regex(r'(?P<year>\d{4})-(?P<month>\d\d)-(?P<day>\d\d)[T ](?P<hour>\d\d):(?P<minute>\d\d)(:(?P<second>\d\d(\.\d*)?)?)?(?P<tz>Z|[+-]\d\d:?\d\d)?').setName("ISO8601 datetime")
+ "ISO8601 datetime (C{yyyy-mm-ddThh:mm:ss.s(Z|+-00:00)}) - trailing seconds, milliseconds, and timezone optional; accepts separating C{'T'} or C{' '}"
+
+ uuid = Regex(r'[0-9a-fA-F]{8}(-[0-9a-fA-F]{4}){3}-[0-9a-fA-F]{12}').setName("UUID")
+ "UUID (C{xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx})"
+
+ _html_stripper = anyOpenTag.suppress() | anyCloseTag.suppress()
+ @staticmethod
+ def stripHTMLTags(s, l, tokens):
+ """
+ Parse action to remove HTML tags from web page HTML source
+
+ Example::
+ # strip HTML links from normal text
+ text = '<td>More info at the <a href="http://pyparsing.wikispaces.com">pyparsing</a> wiki page</td>'
+ td,td_end = makeHTMLTags("TD")
+ table_text = td + SkipTo(td_end).setParseAction(pyparsing_common.stripHTMLTags)("body") + td_end
+
+ print(table_text.parseString(text).body) # -> 'More info at the pyparsing wiki page'
+ """
+ return pyparsing_common._html_stripper.transformString(tokens[0])
+
+ _commasepitem = Combine(OneOrMore(~Literal(",") + ~LineEnd() + Word(printables, excludeChars=',')
+ + Optional( White(" \t") ) ) ).streamline().setName("commaItem")
+ comma_separated_list = delimitedList( Optional( quotedString.copy() | _commasepitem, default="") ).setName("comma separated list")
+ """Predefined expression of 1 or more printable words or quoted strings, separated by commas."""
+
+ upcaseTokens = staticmethod(tokenMap(lambda t: _ustr(t).upper()))
+ """Parse action to convert tokens to upper case."""
+
+ downcaseTokens = staticmethod(tokenMap(lambda t: _ustr(t).lower()))
+ """Parse action to convert tokens to lower case."""
+
+
+if __name__ == "__main__":
+
+ selectToken = CaselessLiteral("select")
+ fromToken = CaselessLiteral("from")
+
+ ident = Word(alphas, alphanums + "_$")
+
+ columnName = delimitedList(ident, ".", combine=True).setParseAction(upcaseTokens)
+ columnNameList = Group(delimitedList(columnName)).setName("columns")
+ columnSpec = ('*' | columnNameList)
+
+ tableName = delimitedList(ident, ".", combine=True).setParseAction(upcaseTokens)
+ tableNameList = Group(delimitedList(tableName)).setName("tables")
+
+ simpleSQL = selectToken("command") + columnSpec("columns") + fromToken + tableNameList("tables")
+
+ # demo runTests method, including embedded comments in test string
+ simpleSQL.runTests("""
+ # '*' as column list and dotted table name
+ select * from SYS.XYZZY
+
+ # caseless match on "SELECT", and casts back to "select"
+ SELECT * from XYZZY, ABC
+
+ # list of column names, and mixed case SELECT keyword
+ Select AA,BB,CC from Sys.dual
+
+ # multiple tables
+ Select A, B, C from Sys.dual, Table2
+
+ # invalid SELECT keyword - should fail
+ Xelect A, B, C from Sys.dual
+
+ # incomplete command - should fail
+ Select
+
+ # invalid column name - should fail
+ Select ^^^ frox Sys.dual
+
+ """)
+
+ pyparsing_common.number.runTests("""
+ 100
+ -100
+ +100
+ 3.14159
+ 6.02e23
+ 1e-12
+ """)
+
+ # any int or real number, returned as float
+ pyparsing_common.fnumber.runTests("""
+ 100
+ -100
+ +100
+ 3.14159
+ 6.02e23
+ 1e-12
+ """)
+
+ pyparsing_common.hex_integer.runTests("""
+ 100
+ FF
+ """)
+
+ import uuid
+ pyparsing_common.uuid.setParseAction(tokenMap(uuid.UUID))
+ pyparsing_common.uuid.runTests("""
+ 12345678-1234-5678-1234-567812345678
+ """)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/archive_util.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/archive_util.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..0ce190b8cf
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/archive_util.py
@@ -0,0 +1,175 @@
+"""Utilities for extracting common archive formats"""
+
+import zipfile
+import tarfile
+import os
+import shutil
+import posixpath
+import contextlib
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsError
+
+from pkg_resources import ensure_directory
+
+__all__ = [
+ "unpack_archive", "unpack_zipfile", "unpack_tarfile", "default_filter",
+ "UnrecognizedFormat", "extraction_drivers", "unpack_directory",
+]
+
+
+class UnrecognizedFormat(DistutilsError):
+ """Couldn't recognize the archive type"""
+
+
+def default_filter(src, dst):
+ """The default progress/filter callback; returns True for all files"""
+ return dst
+
+
+def unpack_archive(
+ filename, extract_dir, progress_filter=default_filter,
+ drivers=None):
+ """Unpack `filename` to `extract_dir`, or raise ``UnrecognizedFormat``
+
+ `progress_filter` is a function taking two arguments: a source path
+ internal to the archive ('/'-separated), and a filesystem path where it
+ will be extracted. The callback must return the desired extract path
+ (which may be the same as the one passed in), or else ``None`` to skip
+ that file or directory. The callback can thus be used to report on the
+ progress of the extraction, as well as to filter the items extracted or
+ alter their extraction paths.
+
+ `drivers`, if supplied, must be a non-empty sequence of functions with the
+ same signature as this function (minus the `drivers` argument), that raise
+ ``UnrecognizedFormat`` if they do not support extracting the designated
+ archive type. The `drivers` are tried in sequence until one is found that
+ does not raise an error, or until all are exhausted (in which case
+ ``UnrecognizedFormat`` is raised). If you do not supply a sequence of
+ drivers, the module's ``extraction_drivers`` constant will be used, which
+ means that ``unpack_zipfile`` and ``unpack_tarfile`` will be tried, in that
+ order.
+ """
+ for driver in drivers or extraction_drivers:
+ try:
+ driver(filename, extract_dir, progress_filter)
+ except UnrecognizedFormat:
+ continue
+ else:
+ return
+ else:
+ raise UnrecognizedFormat(
+ "Not a recognized archive type: %s" % filename
+ )
+
+
+def unpack_directory(filename, extract_dir, progress_filter=default_filter):
+ """"Unpack" a directory, using the same interface as for archives
+
+ Raises ``UnrecognizedFormat`` if `filename` is not a directory
+ """
+ if not os.path.isdir(filename):
+ raise UnrecognizedFormat("%s is not a directory" % filename)
+
+ paths = {
+ filename: ('', extract_dir),
+ }
+ for base, dirs, files in os.walk(filename):
+ src, dst = paths[base]
+ for d in dirs:
+ paths[os.path.join(base, d)] = src + d + '/', os.path.join(dst, d)
+ for f in files:
+ target = os.path.join(dst, f)
+ target = progress_filter(src + f, target)
+ if not target:
+ # skip non-files
+ continue
+ ensure_directory(target)
+ f = os.path.join(base, f)
+ shutil.copyfile(f, target)
+ shutil.copystat(f, target)
+
+
+def unpack_zipfile(filename, extract_dir, progress_filter=default_filter):
+ """Unpack zip `filename` to `extract_dir`
+
+ Raises ``UnrecognizedFormat`` if `filename` is not a zipfile (as determined
+ by ``zipfile.is_zipfile()``). See ``unpack_archive()`` for an explanation
+ of the `progress_filter` argument.
+ """
+
+ if not zipfile.is_zipfile(filename):
+ raise UnrecognizedFormat("%s is not a zip file" % (filename,))
+
+ with zipfile.ZipFile(filename) as z:
+ for info in z.infolist():
+ name = info.filename
+
+ # don't extract absolute paths or ones with .. in them
+ if name.startswith('/') or '..' in name.split('/'):
+ continue
+
+ target = os.path.join(extract_dir, *name.split('/'))
+ target = progress_filter(name, target)
+ if not target:
+ continue
+ if name.endswith('/'):
+ # directory
+ ensure_directory(target)
+ else:
+ # file
+ ensure_directory(target)
+ data = z.read(info.filename)
+ with open(target, 'wb') as f:
+ f.write(data)
+ unix_attributes = info.external_attr >> 16
+ if unix_attributes:
+ os.chmod(target, unix_attributes)
+
+
+def unpack_tarfile(filename, extract_dir, progress_filter=default_filter):
+ """Unpack tar/tar.gz/tar.bz2 `filename` to `extract_dir`
+
+ Raises ``UnrecognizedFormat`` if `filename` is not a tarfile (as determined
+ by ``tarfile.open()``). See ``unpack_archive()`` for an explanation
+ of the `progress_filter` argument.
+ """
+ try:
+ tarobj = tarfile.open(filename)
+ except tarfile.TarError as e:
+ raise UnrecognizedFormat(
+ "%s is not a compressed or uncompressed tar file" % (filename,)
+ ) from e
+ with contextlib.closing(tarobj):
+ # don't do any chowning!
+ tarobj.chown = lambda *args: None
+ for member in tarobj:
+ name = member.name
+ # don't extract absolute paths or ones with .. in them
+ if not name.startswith('/') and '..' not in name.split('/'):
+ prelim_dst = os.path.join(extract_dir, *name.split('/'))
+
+ # resolve any links and to extract the link targets as normal
+ # files
+ while member is not None and (
+ member.islnk() or member.issym()):
+ linkpath = member.linkname
+ if member.issym():
+ base = posixpath.dirname(member.name)
+ linkpath = posixpath.join(base, linkpath)
+ linkpath = posixpath.normpath(linkpath)
+ member = tarobj._getmember(linkpath)
+
+ if member is not None and (member.isfile() or member.isdir()):
+ final_dst = progress_filter(name, prelim_dst)
+ if final_dst:
+ if final_dst.endswith(os.sep):
+ final_dst = final_dst[:-1]
+ try:
+ # XXX Ugh
+ tarobj._extract_member(member, final_dst)
+ except tarfile.ExtractError:
+ # chown/chmod/mkfifo/mknode/makedev failed
+ pass
+ return True
+
+
+extraction_drivers = unpack_directory, unpack_zipfile, unpack_tarfile
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/build_meta.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/build_meta.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..b9e8a2b3fa
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/build_meta.py
@@ -0,0 +1,276 @@
+"""A PEP 517 interface to setuptools
+
+Previously, when a user or a command line tool (let's call it a "frontend")
+needed to make a request of setuptools to take a certain action, for
+example, generating a list of installation requirements, the frontend would
+would call "setup.py egg_info" or "setup.py bdist_wheel" on the command line.
+
+PEP 517 defines a different method of interfacing with setuptools. Rather
+than calling "setup.py" directly, the frontend should:
+
+ 1. Set the current directory to the directory with a setup.py file
+ 2. Import this module into a safe python interpreter (one in which
+ setuptools can potentially set global variables or crash hard).
+ 3. Call one of the functions defined in PEP 517.
+
+What each function does is defined in PEP 517. However, here is a "casual"
+definition of the functions (this definition should not be relied on for
+bug reports or API stability):
+
+ - `build_wheel`: build a wheel in the folder and return the basename
+ - `get_requires_for_build_wheel`: get the `setup_requires` to build
+ - `prepare_metadata_for_build_wheel`: get the `install_requires`
+ - `build_sdist`: build an sdist in the folder and return the basename
+ - `get_requires_for_build_sdist`: get the `setup_requires` to build
+
+Again, this is not a formal definition! Just a "taste" of the module.
+"""
+
+import io
+import os
+import sys
+import tokenize
+import shutil
+import contextlib
+import tempfile
+
+import setuptools
+import distutils
+
+from pkg_resources import parse_requirements
+
+__all__ = ['get_requires_for_build_sdist',
+ 'get_requires_for_build_wheel',
+ 'prepare_metadata_for_build_wheel',
+ 'build_wheel',
+ 'build_sdist',
+ '__legacy__',
+ 'SetupRequirementsError']
+
+
+class SetupRequirementsError(BaseException):
+ def __init__(self, specifiers):
+ self.specifiers = specifiers
+
+
+class Distribution(setuptools.dist.Distribution):
+ def fetch_build_eggs(self, specifiers):
+ specifier_list = list(map(str, parse_requirements(specifiers)))
+
+ raise SetupRequirementsError(specifier_list)
+
+ @classmethod
+ @contextlib.contextmanager
+ def patch(cls):
+ """
+ Replace
+ distutils.dist.Distribution with this class
+ for the duration of this context.
+ """
+ orig = distutils.core.Distribution
+ distutils.core.Distribution = cls
+ try:
+ yield
+ finally:
+ distutils.core.Distribution = orig
+
+
+@contextlib.contextmanager
+def no_install_setup_requires():
+ """Temporarily disable installing setup_requires
+
+ Under PEP 517, the backend reports build dependencies to the frontend,
+ and the frontend is responsible for ensuring they're installed.
+ So setuptools (acting as a backend) should not try to install them.
+ """
+ orig = setuptools._install_setup_requires
+ setuptools._install_setup_requires = lambda attrs: None
+ try:
+ yield
+ finally:
+ setuptools._install_setup_requires = orig
+
+
+def _get_immediate_subdirectories(a_dir):
+ return [name for name in os.listdir(a_dir)
+ if os.path.isdir(os.path.join(a_dir, name))]
+
+
+def _file_with_extension(directory, extension):
+ matching = (
+ f for f in os.listdir(directory)
+ if f.endswith(extension)
+ )
+ file, = matching
+ return file
+
+
+def _open_setup_script(setup_script):
+ if not os.path.exists(setup_script):
+ # Supply a default setup.py
+ return io.StringIO(u"from setuptools import setup; setup()")
+
+ return getattr(tokenize, 'open', open)(setup_script)
+
+
+class _BuildMetaBackend(object):
+
+ def _fix_config(self, config_settings):
+ config_settings = config_settings or {}
+ config_settings.setdefault('--global-option', [])
+ return config_settings
+
+ def _get_build_requires(self, config_settings, requirements):
+ config_settings = self._fix_config(config_settings)
+
+ sys.argv = sys.argv[:1] + ['egg_info'] + \
+ config_settings["--global-option"]
+ try:
+ with Distribution.patch():
+ self.run_setup()
+ except SetupRequirementsError as e:
+ requirements += e.specifiers
+
+ return requirements
+
+ def run_setup(self, setup_script='setup.py'):
+ # Note that we can reuse our build directory between calls
+ # Correctness comes first, then optimization later
+ __file__ = setup_script
+ __name__ = '__main__'
+
+ with _open_setup_script(__file__) as f:
+ code = f.read().replace(r'\r\n', r'\n')
+
+ exec(compile(code, __file__, 'exec'), locals())
+
+ def get_requires_for_build_wheel(self, config_settings=None):
+ config_settings = self._fix_config(config_settings)
+ return self._get_build_requires(
+ config_settings, requirements=['wheel'])
+
+ def get_requires_for_build_sdist(self, config_settings=None):
+ config_settings = self._fix_config(config_settings)
+ return self._get_build_requires(config_settings, requirements=[])
+
+ def prepare_metadata_for_build_wheel(self, metadata_directory,
+ config_settings=None):
+ sys.argv = sys.argv[:1] + [
+ 'dist_info', '--egg-base', metadata_directory]
+ with no_install_setup_requires():
+ self.run_setup()
+
+ dist_info_directory = metadata_directory
+ while True:
+ dist_infos = [f for f in os.listdir(dist_info_directory)
+ if f.endswith('.dist-info')]
+
+ if (
+ len(dist_infos) == 0 and
+ len(_get_immediate_subdirectories(dist_info_directory)) == 1
+ ):
+
+ dist_info_directory = os.path.join(
+ dist_info_directory, os.listdir(dist_info_directory)[0])
+ continue
+
+ assert len(dist_infos) == 1
+ break
+
+ # PEP 517 requires that the .dist-info directory be placed in the
+ # metadata_directory. To comply, we MUST copy the directory to the root
+ if dist_info_directory != metadata_directory:
+ shutil.move(
+ os.path.join(dist_info_directory, dist_infos[0]),
+ metadata_directory)
+ shutil.rmtree(dist_info_directory, ignore_errors=True)
+
+ return dist_infos[0]
+
+ def _build_with_temp_dir(self, setup_command, result_extension,
+ result_directory, config_settings):
+ config_settings = self._fix_config(config_settings)
+ result_directory = os.path.abspath(result_directory)
+
+ # Build in a temporary directory, then copy to the target.
+ os.makedirs(result_directory, exist_ok=True)
+ with tempfile.TemporaryDirectory(dir=result_directory) as tmp_dist_dir:
+ sys.argv = (sys.argv[:1] + setup_command +
+ ['--dist-dir', tmp_dist_dir] +
+ config_settings["--global-option"])
+ with no_install_setup_requires():
+ self.run_setup()
+
+ result_basename = _file_with_extension(
+ tmp_dist_dir, result_extension)
+ result_path = os.path.join(result_directory, result_basename)
+ if os.path.exists(result_path):
+ # os.rename will fail overwriting on non-Unix.
+ os.remove(result_path)
+ os.rename(os.path.join(tmp_dist_dir, result_basename), result_path)
+
+ return result_basename
+
+ def build_wheel(self, wheel_directory, config_settings=None,
+ metadata_directory=None):
+ return self._build_with_temp_dir(['bdist_wheel'], '.whl',
+ wheel_directory, config_settings)
+
+ def build_sdist(self, sdist_directory, config_settings=None):
+ return self._build_with_temp_dir(['sdist', '--formats', 'gztar'],
+ '.tar.gz', sdist_directory,
+ config_settings)
+
+
+class _BuildMetaLegacyBackend(_BuildMetaBackend):
+ """Compatibility backend for setuptools
+
+ This is a version of setuptools.build_meta that endeavors
+ to maintain backwards
+ compatibility with pre-PEP 517 modes of invocation. It
+ exists as a temporary
+ bridge between the old packaging mechanism and the new
+ packaging mechanism,
+ and will eventually be removed.
+ """
+ def run_setup(self, setup_script='setup.py'):
+ # In order to maintain compatibility with scripts assuming that
+ # the setup.py script is in a directory on the PYTHONPATH, inject
+ # '' into sys.path. (pypa/setuptools#1642)
+ sys_path = list(sys.path) # Save the original path
+
+ script_dir = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(setup_script))
+ if script_dir not in sys.path:
+ sys.path.insert(0, script_dir)
+
+ # Some setup.py scripts (e.g. in pygame and numpy) use sys.argv[0] to
+ # get the directory of the source code. They expect it to refer to the
+ # setup.py script.
+ sys_argv_0 = sys.argv[0]
+ sys.argv[0] = setup_script
+
+ try:
+ super(_BuildMetaLegacyBackend,
+ self).run_setup(setup_script=setup_script)
+ finally:
+ # While PEP 517 frontends should be calling each hook in a fresh
+ # subprocess according to the standard (and thus it should not be
+ # strictly necessary to restore the old sys.path), we'll restore
+ # the original path so that the path manipulation does not persist
+ # within the hook after run_setup is called.
+ sys.path[:] = sys_path
+ sys.argv[0] = sys_argv_0
+
+
+# The primary backend
+_BACKEND = _BuildMetaBackend()
+
+get_requires_for_build_wheel = _BACKEND.get_requires_for_build_wheel
+get_requires_for_build_sdist = _BACKEND.get_requires_for_build_sdist
+prepare_metadata_for_build_wheel = _BACKEND.prepare_metadata_for_build_wheel
+build_wheel = _BACKEND.build_wheel
+build_sdist = _BACKEND.build_sdist
+
+
+# The legacy backend
+__legacy__ = _BuildMetaLegacyBackend()
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/cli-32.exe b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/cli-32.exe
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..b1487b7819
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/cli-32.exe
Binary files differ
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/cli-64.exe b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/cli-64.exe
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..675e6bf374
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/cli-64.exe
Binary files differ
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/cli.exe b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/cli.exe
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..b1487b7819
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/cli.exe
Binary files differ
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/__init__.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/__init__.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..743f5588fa
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/__init__.py
@@ -0,0 +1,17 @@
+__all__ = [
+ 'alias', 'bdist_egg', 'bdist_rpm', 'build_ext', 'build_py', 'develop',
+ 'easy_install', 'egg_info', 'install', 'install_lib', 'rotate', 'saveopts',
+ 'sdist', 'setopt', 'test', 'install_egg_info', 'install_scripts',
+ 'bdist_wininst', 'upload_docs', 'build_clib', 'dist_info',
+]
+
+from distutils.command.bdist import bdist
+import sys
+
+from setuptools.command import install_scripts
+
+if 'egg' not in bdist.format_commands:
+ bdist.format_command['egg'] = ('bdist_egg', "Python .egg file")
+ bdist.format_commands.append('egg')
+
+del bdist, sys
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/alias.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/alias.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..452a9244ea
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/alias.py
@@ -0,0 +1,78 @@
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsOptionError
+
+from setuptools.command.setopt import edit_config, option_base, config_file
+
+
+def shquote(arg):
+ """Quote an argument for later parsing by shlex.split()"""
+ for c in '"', "'", "\\", "#":
+ if c in arg:
+ return repr(arg)
+ if arg.split() != [arg]:
+ return repr(arg)
+ return arg
+
+
+class alias(option_base):
+ """Define a shortcut that invokes one or more commands"""
+
+ description = "define a shortcut to invoke one or more commands"
+ command_consumes_arguments = True
+
+ user_options = [
+ ('remove', 'r', 'remove (unset) the alias'),
+ ] + option_base.user_options
+
+ boolean_options = option_base.boolean_options + ['remove']
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ option_base.initialize_options(self)
+ self.args = None
+ self.remove = None
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ option_base.finalize_options(self)
+ if self.remove and len(self.args) != 1:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ "Must specify exactly one argument (the alias name) when "
+ "using --remove"
+ )
+
+ def run(self):
+ aliases = self.distribution.get_option_dict('aliases')
+
+ if not self.args:
+ print("Command Aliases")
+ print("---------------")
+ for alias in aliases:
+ print("setup.py alias", format_alias(alias, aliases))
+ return
+
+ elif len(self.args) == 1:
+ alias, = self.args
+ if self.remove:
+ command = None
+ elif alias in aliases:
+ print("setup.py alias", format_alias(alias, aliases))
+ return
+ else:
+ print("No alias definition found for %r" % alias)
+ return
+ else:
+ alias = self.args[0]
+ command = ' '.join(map(shquote, self.args[1:]))
+
+ edit_config(self.filename, {'aliases': {alias: command}}, self.dry_run)
+
+
+def format_alias(name, aliases):
+ source, command = aliases[name]
+ if source == config_file('global'):
+ source = '--global-config '
+ elif source == config_file('user'):
+ source = '--user-config '
+ elif source == config_file('local'):
+ source = ''
+ else:
+ source = '--filename=%r' % source
+ return source + name + ' ' + command
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/bdist_egg.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/bdist_egg.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..a88efb45b8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/bdist_egg.py
@@ -0,0 +1,501 @@
+"""setuptools.command.bdist_egg
+
+Build .egg distributions"""
+
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsSetupError
+from distutils.dir_util import remove_tree, mkpath
+from distutils import log
+from types import CodeType
+import sys
+import os
+import re
+import textwrap
+import marshal
+import warnings
+
+from pkg_resources import get_build_platform, Distribution, ensure_directory
+from pkg_resources import EntryPoint
+from setuptools.extension import Library
+from setuptools import Command, SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning
+
+from sysconfig import get_path, get_python_version
+
+
+def _get_purelib():
+ return get_path("purelib")
+
+
+def strip_module(filename):
+ if '.' in filename:
+ filename = os.path.splitext(filename)[0]
+ if filename.endswith('module'):
+ filename = filename[:-6]
+ return filename
+
+
+def sorted_walk(dir):
+ """Do os.walk in a reproducible way,
+ independent of indeterministic filesystem readdir order
+ """
+ for base, dirs, files in os.walk(dir):
+ dirs.sort()
+ files.sort()
+ yield base, dirs, files
+
+
+def write_stub(resource, pyfile):
+ _stub_template = textwrap.dedent("""
+ def __bootstrap__():
+ global __bootstrap__, __loader__, __file__
+ import sys, pkg_resources, importlib.util
+ __file__ = pkg_resources.resource_filename(__name__, %r)
+ __loader__ = None; del __bootstrap__, __loader__
+ spec = importlib.util.spec_from_file_location(__name__,__file__)
+ mod = importlib.util.module_from_spec(spec)
+ spec.loader.exec_module(mod)
+ __bootstrap__()
+ """).lstrip()
+ with open(pyfile, 'w') as f:
+ f.write(_stub_template % resource)
+
+
+class bdist_egg(Command):
+ description = "create an \"egg\" distribution"
+
+ user_options = [
+ ('bdist-dir=', 'b',
+ "temporary directory for creating the distribution"),
+ ('plat-name=', 'p', "platform name to embed in generated filenames "
+ "(default: %s)" % get_build_platform()),
+ ('exclude-source-files', None,
+ "remove all .py files from the generated egg"),
+ ('keep-temp', 'k',
+ "keep the pseudo-installation tree around after " +
+ "creating the distribution archive"),
+ ('dist-dir=', 'd',
+ "directory to put final built distributions in"),
+ ('skip-build', None,
+ "skip rebuilding everything (for testing/debugging)"),
+ ]
+
+ boolean_options = [
+ 'keep-temp', 'skip-build', 'exclude-source-files'
+ ]
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.bdist_dir = None
+ self.plat_name = None
+ self.keep_temp = 0
+ self.dist_dir = None
+ self.skip_build = 0
+ self.egg_output = None
+ self.exclude_source_files = None
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ ei_cmd = self.ei_cmd = self.get_finalized_command("egg_info")
+ self.egg_info = ei_cmd.egg_info
+
+ if self.bdist_dir is None:
+ bdist_base = self.get_finalized_command('bdist').bdist_base
+ self.bdist_dir = os.path.join(bdist_base, 'egg')
+
+ if self.plat_name is None:
+ self.plat_name = get_build_platform()
+
+ self.set_undefined_options('bdist', ('dist_dir', 'dist_dir'))
+
+ if self.egg_output is None:
+
+ # Compute filename of the output egg
+ basename = Distribution(
+ None, None, ei_cmd.egg_name, ei_cmd.egg_version,
+ get_python_version(),
+ self.distribution.has_ext_modules() and self.plat_name
+ ).egg_name()
+
+ self.egg_output = os.path.join(self.dist_dir, basename + '.egg')
+
+ def do_install_data(self):
+ # Hack for packages that install data to install's --install-lib
+ self.get_finalized_command('install').install_lib = self.bdist_dir
+
+ site_packages = os.path.normcase(os.path.realpath(_get_purelib()))
+ old, self.distribution.data_files = self.distribution.data_files, []
+
+ for item in old:
+ if isinstance(item, tuple) and len(item) == 2:
+ if os.path.isabs(item[0]):
+ realpath = os.path.realpath(item[0])
+ normalized = os.path.normcase(realpath)
+ if normalized == site_packages or normalized.startswith(
+ site_packages + os.sep
+ ):
+ item = realpath[len(site_packages) + 1:], item[1]
+ # XXX else: raise ???
+ self.distribution.data_files.append(item)
+
+ try:
+ log.info("installing package data to %s", self.bdist_dir)
+ self.call_command('install_data', force=0, root=None)
+ finally:
+ self.distribution.data_files = old
+
+ def get_outputs(self):
+ return [self.egg_output]
+
+ def call_command(self, cmdname, **kw):
+ """Invoke reinitialized command `cmdname` with keyword args"""
+ for dirname in INSTALL_DIRECTORY_ATTRS:
+ kw.setdefault(dirname, self.bdist_dir)
+ kw.setdefault('skip_build', self.skip_build)
+ kw.setdefault('dry_run', self.dry_run)
+ cmd = self.reinitialize_command(cmdname, **kw)
+ self.run_command(cmdname)
+ return cmd
+
+ def run(self):
+ # Generate metadata first
+ self.run_command("egg_info")
+ # We run install_lib before install_data, because some data hacks
+ # pull their data path from the install_lib command.
+ log.info("installing library code to %s", self.bdist_dir)
+ instcmd = self.get_finalized_command('install')
+ old_root = instcmd.root
+ instcmd.root = None
+ if self.distribution.has_c_libraries() and not self.skip_build:
+ self.run_command('build_clib')
+ cmd = self.call_command('install_lib', warn_dir=0)
+ instcmd.root = old_root
+
+ all_outputs, ext_outputs = self.get_ext_outputs()
+ self.stubs = []
+ to_compile = []
+ for (p, ext_name) in enumerate(ext_outputs):
+ filename, ext = os.path.splitext(ext_name)
+ pyfile = os.path.join(self.bdist_dir, strip_module(filename) +
+ '.py')
+ self.stubs.append(pyfile)
+ log.info("creating stub loader for %s", ext_name)
+ if not self.dry_run:
+ write_stub(os.path.basename(ext_name), pyfile)
+ to_compile.append(pyfile)
+ ext_outputs[p] = ext_name.replace(os.sep, '/')
+
+ if to_compile:
+ cmd.byte_compile(to_compile)
+ if self.distribution.data_files:
+ self.do_install_data()
+
+ # Make the EGG-INFO directory
+ archive_root = self.bdist_dir
+ egg_info = os.path.join(archive_root, 'EGG-INFO')
+ self.mkpath(egg_info)
+ if self.distribution.scripts:
+ script_dir = os.path.join(egg_info, 'scripts')
+ log.info("installing scripts to %s", script_dir)
+ self.call_command('install_scripts', install_dir=script_dir,
+ no_ep=1)
+
+ self.copy_metadata_to(egg_info)
+ native_libs = os.path.join(egg_info, "native_libs.txt")
+ if all_outputs:
+ log.info("writing %s", native_libs)
+ if not self.dry_run:
+ ensure_directory(native_libs)
+ libs_file = open(native_libs, 'wt')
+ libs_file.write('\n'.join(all_outputs))
+ libs_file.write('\n')
+ libs_file.close()
+ elif os.path.isfile(native_libs):
+ log.info("removing %s", native_libs)
+ if not self.dry_run:
+ os.unlink(native_libs)
+
+ write_safety_flag(
+ os.path.join(archive_root, 'EGG-INFO'), self.zip_safe()
+ )
+
+ if os.path.exists(os.path.join(self.egg_info, 'depends.txt')):
+ log.warn(
+ "WARNING: 'depends.txt' will not be used by setuptools 0.6!\n"
+ "Use the install_requires/extras_require setup() args instead."
+ )
+
+ if self.exclude_source_files:
+ self.zap_pyfiles()
+
+ # Make the archive
+ make_zipfile(self.egg_output, archive_root, verbose=self.verbose,
+ dry_run=self.dry_run, mode=self.gen_header())
+ if not self.keep_temp:
+ remove_tree(self.bdist_dir, dry_run=self.dry_run)
+
+ # Add to 'Distribution.dist_files' so that the "upload" command works
+ getattr(self.distribution, 'dist_files', []).append(
+ ('bdist_egg', get_python_version(), self.egg_output))
+
+ def zap_pyfiles(self):
+ log.info("Removing .py files from temporary directory")
+ for base, dirs, files in walk_egg(self.bdist_dir):
+ for name in files:
+ path = os.path.join(base, name)
+
+ if name.endswith('.py'):
+ log.debug("Deleting %s", path)
+ os.unlink(path)
+
+ if base.endswith('__pycache__'):
+ path_old = path
+
+ pattern = r'(?P<name>.+)\.(?P<magic>[^.]+)\.pyc'
+ m = re.match(pattern, name)
+ path_new = os.path.join(
+ base, os.pardir, m.group('name') + '.pyc')
+ log.info(
+ "Renaming file from [%s] to [%s]"
+ % (path_old, path_new))
+ try:
+ os.remove(path_new)
+ except OSError:
+ pass
+ os.rename(path_old, path_new)
+
+ def zip_safe(self):
+ safe = getattr(self.distribution, 'zip_safe', None)
+ if safe is not None:
+ return safe
+ log.warn("zip_safe flag not set; analyzing archive contents...")
+ return analyze_egg(self.bdist_dir, self.stubs)
+
+ def gen_header(self):
+ epm = EntryPoint.parse_map(self.distribution.entry_points or '')
+ ep = epm.get('setuptools.installation', {}).get('eggsecutable')
+ if ep is None:
+ return 'w' # not an eggsecutable, do it the usual way.
+
+ warnings.warn(
+ "Eggsecutables are deprecated and will be removed in a future "
+ "version.",
+ SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning
+ )
+
+ if not ep.attrs or ep.extras:
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "eggsecutable entry point (%r) cannot have 'extras' "
+ "or refer to a module" % (ep,)
+ )
+
+ pyver = '{}.{}'.format(*sys.version_info)
+ pkg = ep.module_name
+ full = '.'.join(ep.attrs)
+ base = ep.attrs[0]
+ basename = os.path.basename(self.egg_output)
+
+ header = (
+ "#!/bin/sh\n"
+ 'if [ `basename $0` = "%(basename)s" ]\n'
+ 'then exec python%(pyver)s -c "'
+ "import sys, os; sys.path.insert(0, os.path.abspath('$0')); "
+ "from %(pkg)s import %(base)s; sys.exit(%(full)s())"
+ '" "$@"\n'
+ 'else\n'
+ ' echo $0 is not the correct name for this egg file.\n'
+ ' echo Please rename it back to %(basename)s and try again.\n'
+ ' exec false\n'
+ 'fi\n'
+ ) % locals()
+
+ if not self.dry_run:
+ mkpath(os.path.dirname(self.egg_output), dry_run=self.dry_run)
+ f = open(self.egg_output, 'w')
+ f.write(header)
+ f.close()
+ return 'a'
+
+ def copy_metadata_to(self, target_dir):
+ "Copy metadata (egg info) to the target_dir"
+ # normalize the path (so that a forward-slash in egg_info will
+ # match using startswith below)
+ norm_egg_info = os.path.normpath(self.egg_info)
+ prefix = os.path.join(norm_egg_info, '')
+ for path in self.ei_cmd.filelist.files:
+ if path.startswith(prefix):
+ target = os.path.join(target_dir, path[len(prefix):])
+ ensure_directory(target)
+ self.copy_file(path, target)
+
+ def get_ext_outputs(self):
+ """Get a list of relative paths to C extensions in the output distro"""
+
+ all_outputs = []
+ ext_outputs = []
+
+ paths = {self.bdist_dir: ''}
+ for base, dirs, files in sorted_walk(self.bdist_dir):
+ for filename in files:
+ if os.path.splitext(filename)[1].lower() in NATIVE_EXTENSIONS:
+ all_outputs.append(paths[base] + filename)
+ for filename in dirs:
+ paths[os.path.join(base, filename)] = (paths[base] +
+ filename + '/')
+
+ if self.distribution.has_ext_modules():
+ build_cmd = self.get_finalized_command('build_ext')
+ for ext in build_cmd.extensions:
+ if isinstance(ext, Library):
+ continue
+ fullname = build_cmd.get_ext_fullname(ext.name)
+ filename = build_cmd.get_ext_filename(fullname)
+ if not os.path.basename(filename).startswith('dl-'):
+ if os.path.exists(os.path.join(self.bdist_dir, filename)):
+ ext_outputs.append(filename)
+
+ return all_outputs, ext_outputs
+
+
+NATIVE_EXTENSIONS = dict.fromkeys('.dll .so .dylib .pyd'.split())
+
+
+def walk_egg(egg_dir):
+ """Walk an unpacked egg's contents, skipping the metadata directory"""
+ walker = sorted_walk(egg_dir)
+ base, dirs, files = next(walker)
+ if 'EGG-INFO' in dirs:
+ dirs.remove('EGG-INFO')
+ yield base, dirs, files
+ for bdf in walker:
+ yield bdf
+
+
+def analyze_egg(egg_dir, stubs):
+ # check for existing flag in EGG-INFO
+ for flag, fn in safety_flags.items():
+ if os.path.exists(os.path.join(egg_dir, 'EGG-INFO', fn)):
+ return flag
+ if not can_scan():
+ return False
+ safe = True
+ for base, dirs, files in walk_egg(egg_dir):
+ for name in files:
+ if name.endswith('.py') or name.endswith('.pyw'):
+ continue
+ elif name.endswith('.pyc') or name.endswith('.pyo'):
+ # always scan, even if we already know we're not safe
+ safe = scan_module(egg_dir, base, name, stubs) and safe
+ return safe
+
+
+def write_safety_flag(egg_dir, safe):
+ # Write or remove zip safety flag file(s)
+ for flag, fn in safety_flags.items():
+ fn = os.path.join(egg_dir, fn)
+ if os.path.exists(fn):
+ if safe is None or bool(safe) != flag:
+ os.unlink(fn)
+ elif safe is not None and bool(safe) == flag:
+ f = open(fn, 'wt')
+ f.write('\n')
+ f.close()
+
+
+safety_flags = {
+ True: 'zip-safe',
+ False: 'not-zip-safe',
+}
+
+
+def scan_module(egg_dir, base, name, stubs):
+ """Check whether module possibly uses unsafe-for-zipfile stuff"""
+
+ filename = os.path.join(base, name)
+ if filename[:-1] in stubs:
+ return True # Extension module
+ pkg = base[len(egg_dir) + 1:].replace(os.sep, '.')
+ module = pkg + (pkg and '.' or '') + os.path.splitext(name)[0]
+ if sys.version_info < (3, 7):
+ skip = 12 # skip magic & date & file size
+ else:
+ skip = 16 # skip magic & reserved? & date & file size
+ f = open(filename, 'rb')
+ f.read(skip)
+ code = marshal.load(f)
+ f.close()
+ safe = True
+ symbols = dict.fromkeys(iter_symbols(code))
+ for bad in ['__file__', '__path__']:
+ if bad in symbols:
+ log.warn("%s: module references %s", module, bad)
+ safe = False
+ if 'inspect' in symbols:
+ for bad in [
+ 'getsource', 'getabsfile', 'getsourcefile', 'getfile'
+ 'getsourcelines', 'findsource', 'getcomments', 'getframeinfo',
+ 'getinnerframes', 'getouterframes', 'stack', 'trace'
+ ]:
+ if bad in symbols:
+ log.warn("%s: module MAY be using inspect.%s", module, bad)
+ safe = False
+ return safe
+
+
+def iter_symbols(code):
+ """Yield names and strings used by `code` and its nested code objects"""
+ for name in code.co_names:
+ yield name
+ for const in code.co_consts:
+ if isinstance(const, str):
+ yield const
+ elif isinstance(const, CodeType):
+ for name in iter_symbols(const):
+ yield name
+
+
+def can_scan():
+ if not sys.platform.startswith('java') and sys.platform != 'cli':
+ # CPython, PyPy, etc.
+ return True
+ log.warn("Unable to analyze compiled code on this platform.")
+ log.warn("Please ask the author to include a 'zip_safe'"
+ " setting (either True or False) in the package's setup.py")
+
+
+# Attribute names of options for commands that might need to be convinced to
+# install to the egg build directory
+
+INSTALL_DIRECTORY_ATTRS = [
+ 'install_lib', 'install_dir', 'install_data', 'install_base'
+]
+
+
+def make_zipfile(zip_filename, base_dir, verbose=0, dry_run=0, compress=True,
+ mode='w'):
+ """Create a zip file from all the files under 'base_dir'. The output
+ zip file will be named 'base_dir' + ".zip". Uses either the "zipfile"
+ Python module (if available) or the InfoZIP "zip" utility (if installed
+ and found on the default search path). If neither tool is available,
+ raises DistutilsExecError. Returns the name of the output zip file.
+ """
+ import zipfile
+
+ mkpath(os.path.dirname(zip_filename), dry_run=dry_run)
+ log.info("creating '%s' and adding '%s' to it", zip_filename, base_dir)
+
+ def visit(z, dirname, names):
+ for name in names:
+ path = os.path.normpath(os.path.join(dirname, name))
+ if os.path.isfile(path):
+ p = path[len(base_dir) + 1:]
+ if not dry_run:
+ z.write(path, p)
+ log.debug("adding '%s'", p)
+
+ compression = zipfile.ZIP_DEFLATED if compress else zipfile.ZIP_STORED
+ if not dry_run:
+ z = zipfile.ZipFile(zip_filename, mode, compression=compression)
+ for dirname, dirs, files in sorted_walk(base_dir):
+ visit(z, dirname, files)
+ z.close()
+ else:
+ for dirname, dirs, files in sorted_walk(base_dir):
+ visit(None, dirname, files)
+ return zip_filename
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/bdist_rpm.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/bdist_rpm.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..0eb1b9c254
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/bdist_rpm.py
@@ -0,0 +1,31 @@
+import distutils.command.bdist_rpm as orig
+
+
+class bdist_rpm(orig.bdist_rpm):
+ """
+ Override the default bdist_rpm behavior to do the following:
+
+ 1. Run egg_info to ensure the name and version are properly calculated.
+ 2. Always run 'install' using --single-version-externally-managed to
+ disable eggs in RPM distributions.
+ """
+
+ def run(self):
+ # ensure distro name is up-to-date
+ self.run_command('egg_info')
+
+ orig.bdist_rpm.run(self)
+
+ def _make_spec_file(self):
+ spec = orig.bdist_rpm._make_spec_file(self)
+ spec = [
+ line.replace(
+ "setup.py install ",
+ "setup.py install --single-version-externally-managed "
+ ).replace(
+ "%setup",
+ "%setup -n %{name}-%{unmangled_version}"
+ )
+ for line in spec
+ ]
+ return spec
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/bdist_wininst.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/bdist_wininst.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..ff4b634592
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/bdist_wininst.py
@@ -0,0 +1,30 @@
+import distutils.command.bdist_wininst as orig
+import warnings
+
+from setuptools import SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning
+
+
+class bdist_wininst(orig.bdist_wininst):
+ def reinitialize_command(self, command, reinit_subcommands=0):
+ """
+ Supplement reinitialize_command to work around
+ http://bugs.python.org/issue20819
+ """
+ cmd = self.distribution.reinitialize_command(
+ command, reinit_subcommands)
+ if command in ('install', 'install_lib'):
+ cmd.install_lib = None
+ return cmd
+
+ def run(self):
+ warnings.warn(
+ "bdist_wininst is deprecated and will be removed in a future "
+ "version. Use bdist_wheel (wheel packages) instead.",
+ SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning
+ )
+
+ self._is_running = True
+ try:
+ orig.bdist_wininst.run(self)
+ finally:
+ self._is_running = False
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/build_clib.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/build_clib.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..67ce2444ea
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/build_clib.py
@@ -0,0 +1,101 @@
+import distutils.command.build_clib as orig
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsSetupError
+from distutils import log
+from setuptools.dep_util import newer_pairwise_group
+
+
+class build_clib(orig.build_clib):
+ """
+ Override the default build_clib behaviour to do the following:
+
+ 1. Implement a rudimentary timestamp-based dependency system
+ so 'compile()' doesn't run every time.
+ 2. Add more keys to the 'build_info' dictionary:
+ * obj_deps - specify dependencies for each object compiled.
+ this should be a dictionary mapping a key
+ with the source filename to a list of
+ dependencies. Use an empty string for global
+ dependencies.
+ * cflags - specify a list of additional flags to pass to
+ the compiler.
+ """
+
+ def build_libraries(self, libraries):
+ for (lib_name, build_info) in libraries:
+ sources = build_info.get('sources')
+ if sources is None or not isinstance(sources, (list, tuple)):
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "in 'libraries' option (library '%s'), "
+ "'sources' must be present and must be "
+ "a list of source filenames" % lib_name)
+ sources = list(sources)
+
+ log.info("building '%s' library", lib_name)
+
+ # Make sure everything is the correct type.
+ # obj_deps should be a dictionary of keys as sources
+ # and a list/tuple of files that are its dependencies.
+ obj_deps = build_info.get('obj_deps', dict())
+ if not isinstance(obj_deps, dict):
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "in 'libraries' option (library '%s'), "
+ "'obj_deps' must be a dictionary of "
+ "type 'source: list'" % lib_name)
+ dependencies = []
+
+ # Get the global dependencies that are specified by the '' key.
+ # These will go into every source's dependency list.
+ global_deps = obj_deps.get('', list())
+ if not isinstance(global_deps, (list, tuple)):
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "in 'libraries' option (library '%s'), "
+ "'obj_deps' must be a dictionary of "
+ "type 'source: list'" % lib_name)
+
+ # Build the list to be used by newer_pairwise_group
+ # each source will be auto-added to its dependencies.
+ for source in sources:
+ src_deps = [source]
+ src_deps.extend(global_deps)
+ extra_deps = obj_deps.get(source, list())
+ if not isinstance(extra_deps, (list, tuple)):
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "in 'libraries' option (library '%s'), "
+ "'obj_deps' must be a dictionary of "
+ "type 'source: list'" % lib_name)
+ src_deps.extend(extra_deps)
+ dependencies.append(src_deps)
+
+ expected_objects = self.compiler.object_filenames(
+ sources,
+ output_dir=self.build_temp,
+ )
+
+ if (
+ newer_pairwise_group(dependencies, expected_objects)
+ != ([], [])
+ ):
+ # First, compile the source code to object files in the library
+ # directory. (This should probably change to putting object
+ # files in a temporary build directory.)
+ macros = build_info.get('macros')
+ include_dirs = build_info.get('include_dirs')
+ cflags = build_info.get('cflags')
+ self.compiler.compile(
+ sources,
+ output_dir=self.build_temp,
+ macros=macros,
+ include_dirs=include_dirs,
+ extra_postargs=cflags,
+ debug=self.debug
+ )
+
+ # Now "link" the object files together into a static library.
+ # (On Unix at least, this isn't really linking -- it just
+ # builds an archive. Whatever.)
+ self.compiler.create_static_lib(
+ expected_objects,
+ lib_name,
+ output_dir=self.build_clib,
+ debug=self.debug
+ )
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/build_ext.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/build_ext.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..03a72b4fce
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/build_ext.py
@@ -0,0 +1,322 @@
+import os
+import sys
+import itertools
+from importlib.machinery import EXTENSION_SUFFIXES
+from distutils.command.build_ext import build_ext as _du_build_ext
+from distutils.file_util import copy_file
+from distutils.ccompiler import new_compiler
+from distutils.sysconfig import customize_compiler, get_config_var
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsError
+from distutils import log
+
+from setuptools.extension import Library
+
+try:
+ # Attempt to use Cython for building extensions, if available
+ from Cython.Distutils.build_ext import build_ext as _build_ext
+ # Additionally, assert that the compiler module will load
+ # also. Ref #1229.
+ __import__('Cython.Compiler.Main')
+except ImportError:
+ _build_ext = _du_build_ext
+
+# make sure _config_vars is initialized
+get_config_var("LDSHARED")
+from distutils.sysconfig import _config_vars as _CONFIG_VARS # noqa
+
+
+def _customize_compiler_for_shlib(compiler):
+ if sys.platform == "darwin":
+ # building .dylib requires additional compiler flags on OSX; here we
+ # temporarily substitute the pyconfig.h variables so that distutils'
+ # 'customize_compiler' uses them before we build the shared libraries.
+ tmp = _CONFIG_VARS.copy()
+ try:
+ # XXX Help! I don't have any idea whether these are right...
+ _CONFIG_VARS['LDSHARED'] = (
+ "gcc -Wl,-x -dynamiclib -undefined dynamic_lookup")
+ _CONFIG_VARS['CCSHARED'] = " -dynamiclib"
+ _CONFIG_VARS['SO'] = ".dylib"
+ customize_compiler(compiler)
+ finally:
+ _CONFIG_VARS.clear()
+ _CONFIG_VARS.update(tmp)
+ else:
+ customize_compiler(compiler)
+
+
+have_rtld = False
+use_stubs = False
+libtype = 'shared'
+
+if sys.platform == "darwin":
+ use_stubs = True
+elif os.name != 'nt':
+ try:
+ import dl
+ use_stubs = have_rtld = hasattr(dl, 'RTLD_NOW')
+ except ImportError:
+ pass
+
+
+def if_dl(s):
+ return s if have_rtld else ''
+
+
+def get_abi3_suffix():
+ """Return the file extension for an abi3-compliant Extension()"""
+ for suffix in EXTENSION_SUFFIXES:
+ if '.abi3' in suffix: # Unix
+ return suffix
+ elif suffix == '.pyd': # Windows
+ return suffix
+
+
+class build_ext(_build_ext):
+ def run(self):
+ """Build extensions in build directory, then copy if --inplace"""
+ old_inplace, self.inplace = self.inplace, 0
+ _build_ext.run(self)
+ self.inplace = old_inplace
+ if old_inplace:
+ self.copy_extensions_to_source()
+
+ def copy_extensions_to_source(self):
+ build_py = self.get_finalized_command('build_py')
+ for ext in self.extensions:
+ fullname = self.get_ext_fullname(ext.name)
+ filename = self.get_ext_filename(fullname)
+ modpath = fullname.split('.')
+ package = '.'.join(modpath[:-1])
+ package_dir = build_py.get_package_dir(package)
+ dest_filename = os.path.join(package_dir,
+ os.path.basename(filename))
+ src_filename = os.path.join(self.build_lib, filename)
+
+ # Always copy, even if source is older than destination, to ensure
+ # that the right extensions for the current Python/platform are
+ # used.
+ copy_file(
+ src_filename, dest_filename, verbose=self.verbose,
+ dry_run=self.dry_run
+ )
+ if ext._needs_stub:
+ self.write_stub(package_dir or os.curdir, ext, True)
+
+ def get_ext_filename(self, fullname):
+ filename = _build_ext.get_ext_filename(self, fullname)
+ if fullname in self.ext_map:
+ ext = self.ext_map[fullname]
+ use_abi3 = getattr(ext, 'py_limited_api') and get_abi3_suffix()
+ if use_abi3:
+ so_ext = get_config_var('EXT_SUFFIX')
+ filename = filename[:-len(so_ext)]
+ filename = filename + get_abi3_suffix()
+ if isinstance(ext, Library):
+ fn, ext = os.path.splitext(filename)
+ return self.shlib_compiler.library_filename(fn, libtype)
+ elif use_stubs and ext._links_to_dynamic:
+ d, fn = os.path.split(filename)
+ return os.path.join(d, 'dl-' + fn)
+ return filename
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ _build_ext.initialize_options(self)
+ self.shlib_compiler = None
+ self.shlibs = []
+ self.ext_map = {}
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ _build_ext.finalize_options(self)
+ self.extensions = self.extensions or []
+ self.check_extensions_list(self.extensions)
+ self.shlibs = [ext for ext in self.extensions
+ if isinstance(ext, Library)]
+ if self.shlibs:
+ self.setup_shlib_compiler()
+ for ext in self.extensions:
+ ext._full_name = self.get_ext_fullname(ext.name)
+ for ext in self.extensions:
+ fullname = ext._full_name
+ self.ext_map[fullname] = ext
+
+ # distutils 3.1 will also ask for module names
+ # XXX what to do with conflicts?
+ self.ext_map[fullname.split('.')[-1]] = ext
+
+ ltd = self.shlibs and self.links_to_dynamic(ext) or False
+ ns = ltd and use_stubs and not isinstance(ext, Library)
+ ext._links_to_dynamic = ltd
+ ext._needs_stub = ns
+ filename = ext._file_name = self.get_ext_filename(fullname)
+ libdir = os.path.dirname(os.path.join(self.build_lib, filename))
+ if ltd and libdir not in ext.library_dirs:
+ ext.library_dirs.append(libdir)
+ if ltd and use_stubs and os.curdir not in ext.runtime_library_dirs:
+ ext.runtime_library_dirs.append(os.curdir)
+
+ def setup_shlib_compiler(self):
+ compiler = self.shlib_compiler = new_compiler(
+ compiler=self.compiler, dry_run=self.dry_run, force=self.force
+ )
+ _customize_compiler_for_shlib(compiler)
+
+ if self.include_dirs is not None:
+ compiler.set_include_dirs(self.include_dirs)
+ if self.define is not None:
+ # 'define' option is a list of (name,value) tuples
+ for (name, value) in self.define:
+ compiler.define_macro(name, value)
+ if self.undef is not None:
+ for macro in self.undef:
+ compiler.undefine_macro(macro)
+ if self.libraries is not None:
+ compiler.set_libraries(self.libraries)
+ if self.library_dirs is not None:
+ compiler.set_library_dirs(self.library_dirs)
+ if self.rpath is not None:
+ compiler.set_runtime_library_dirs(self.rpath)
+ if self.link_objects is not None:
+ compiler.set_link_objects(self.link_objects)
+
+ # hack so distutils' build_extension() builds a library instead
+ compiler.link_shared_object = link_shared_object.__get__(compiler)
+
+ def get_export_symbols(self, ext):
+ if isinstance(ext, Library):
+ return ext.export_symbols
+ return _build_ext.get_export_symbols(self, ext)
+
+ def build_extension(self, ext):
+ ext._convert_pyx_sources_to_lang()
+ _compiler = self.compiler
+ try:
+ if isinstance(ext, Library):
+ self.compiler = self.shlib_compiler
+ _build_ext.build_extension(self, ext)
+ if ext._needs_stub:
+ cmd = self.get_finalized_command('build_py').build_lib
+ self.write_stub(cmd, ext)
+ finally:
+ self.compiler = _compiler
+
+ def links_to_dynamic(self, ext):
+ """Return true if 'ext' links to a dynamic lib in the same package"""
+ # XXX this should check to ensure the lib is actually being built
+ # XXX as dynamic, and not just using a locally-found version or a
+ # XXX static-compiled version
+ libnames = dict.fromkeys([lib._full_name for lib in self.shlibs])
+ pkg = '.'.join(ext._full_name.split('.')[:-1] + [''])
+ return any(pkg + libname in libnames for libname in ext.libraries)
+
+ def get_outputs(self):
+ return _build_ext.get_outputs(self) + self.__get_stubs_outputs()
+
+ def __get_stubs_outputs(self):
+ # assemble the base name for each extension that needs a stub
+ ns_ext_bases = (
+ os.path.join(self.build_lib, *ext._full_name.split('.'))
+ for ext in self.extensions
+ if ext._needs_stub
+ )
+ # pair each base with the extension
+ pairs = itertools.product(ns_ext_bases, self.__get_output_extensions())
+ return list(base + fnext for base, fnext in pairs)
+
+ def __get_output_extensions(self):
+ yield '.py'
+ yield '.pyc'
+ if self.get_finalized_command('build_py').optimize:
+ yield '.pyo'
+
+ def write_stub(self, output_dir, ext, compile=False):
+ log.info("writing stub loader for %s to %s", ext._full_name,
+ output_dir)
+ stub_file = (os.path.join(output_dir, *ext._full_name.split('.')) +
+ '.py')
+ if compile and os.path.exists(stub_file):
+ raise DistutilsError(stub_file + " already exists! Please delete.")
+ if not self.dry_run:
+ f = open(stub_file, 'w')
+ f.write(
+ '\n'.join([
+ "def __bootstrap__():",
+ " global __bootstrap__, __file__, __loader__",
+ " import sys, os, pkg_resources, importlib.util" +
+ if_dl(", dl"),
+ " __file__ = pkg_resources.resource_filename"
+ "(__name__,%r)"
+ % os.path.basename(ext._file_name),
+ " del __bootstrap__",
+ " if '__loader__' in globals():",
+ " del __loader__",
+ if_dl(" old_flags = sys.getdlopenflags()"),
+ " old_dir = os.getcwd()",
+ " try:",
+ " os.chdir(os.path.dirname(__file__))",
+ if_dl(" sys.setdlopenflags(dl.RTLD_NOW)"),
+ " spec = importlib.util.spec_from_file_location(",
+ " __name__, __file__)",
+ " mod = importlib.util.module_from_spec(spec)",
+ " spec.loader.exec_module(mod)",
+ " finally:",
+ if_dl(" sys.setdlopenflags(old_flags)"),
+ " os.chdir(old_dir)",
+ "__bootstrap__()",
+ "" # terminal \n
+ ])
+ )
+ f.close()
+ if compile:
+ from distutils.util import byte_compile
+
+ byte_compile([stub_file], optimize=0,
+ force=True, dry_run=self.dry_run)
+ optimize = self.get_finalized_command('install_lib').optimize
+ if optimize > 0:
+ byte_compile([stub_file], optimize=optimize,
+ force=True, dry_run=self.dry_run)
+ if os.path.exists(stub_file) and not self.dry_run:
+ os.unlink(stub_file)
+
+
+if use_stubs or os.name == 'nt':
+ # Build shared libraries
+ #
+ def link_shared_object(
+ self, objects, output_libname, output_dir=None, libraries=None,
+ library_dirs=None, runtime_library_dirs=None, export_symbols=None,
+ debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, build_temp=None,
+ target_lang=None):
+ self.link(
+ self.SHARED_LIBRARY, objects, output_libname,
+ output_dir, libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs,
+ export_symbols, debug, extra_preargs, extra_postargs,
+ build_temp, target_lang
+ )
+else:
+ # Build static libraries everywhere else
+ libtype = 'static'
+
+ def link_shared_object(
+ self, objects, output_libname, output_dir=None, libraries=None,
+ library_dirs=None, runtime_library_dirs=None, export_symbols=None,
+ debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, build_temp=None,
+ target_lang=None):
+ # XXX we need to either disallow these attrs on Library instances,
+ # or warn/abort here if set, or something...
+ # libraries=None, library_dirs=None, runtime_library_dirs=None,
+ # export_symbols=None, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None,
+ # build_temp=None
+
+ assert output_dir is None # distutils build_ext doesn't pass this
+ output_dir, filename = os.path.split(output_libname)
+ basename, ext = os.path.splitext(filename)
+ if self.library_filename("x").startswith('lib'):
+ # strip 'lib' prefix; this is kludgy if some platform uses
+ # a different prefix
+ basename = basename[3:]
+
+ self.create_static_lib(
+ objects, basename, output_dir, debug, target_lang
+ )
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/build_py.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/build_py.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..b30aa1290a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/build_py.py
@@ -0,0 +1,270 @@
+from glob import glob
+from distutils.util import convert_path
+import distutils.command.build_py as orig
+import os
+import fnmatch
+import textwrap
+import io
+import distutils.errors
+import itertools
+import stat
+
+try:
+ from setuptools.lib2to3_ex import Mixin2to3
+except Exception:
+
+ class Mixin2to3:
+ def run_2to3(self, files, doctests=True):
+ "do nothing"
+
+
+def make_writable(target):
+ os.chmod(target, os.stat(target).st_mode | stat.S_IWRITE)
+
+
+class build_py(orig.build_py, Mixin2to3):
+ """Enhanced 'build_py' command that includes data files with packages
+
+ The data files are specified via a 'package_data' argument to 'setup()'.
+ See 'setuptools.dist.Distribution' for more details.
+
+ Also, this version of the 'build_py' command allows you to specify both
+ 'py_modules' and 'packages' in the same setup operation.
+ """
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ orig.build_py.finalize_options(self)
+ self.package_data = self.distribution.package_data
+ self.exclude_package_data = (self.distribution.exclude_package_data or
+ {})
+ if 'data_files' in self.__dict__:
+ del self.__dict__['data_files']
+ self.__updated_files = []
+ self.__doctests_2to3 = []
+
+ def run(self):
+ """Build modules, packages, and copy data files to build directory"""
+ if not self.py_modules and not self.packages:
+ return
+
+ if self.py_modules:
+ self.build_modules()
+
+ if self.packages:
+ self.build_packages()
+ self.build_package_data()
+
+ self.run_2to3(self.__updated_files, False)
+ self.run_2to3(self.__updated_files, True)
+ self.run_2to3(self.__doctests_2to3, True)
+
+ # Only compile actual .py files, using our base class' idea of what our
+ # output files are.
+ self.byte_compile(orig.build_py.get_outputs(self, include_bytecode=0))
+
+ def __getattr__(self, attr):
+ "lazily compute data files"
+ if attr == 'data_files':
+ self.data_files = self._get_data_files()
+ return self.data_files
+ return orig.build_py.__getattr__(self, attr)
+
+ def build_module(self, module, module_file, package):
+ outfile, copied = orig.build_py.build_module(self, module, module_file,
+ package)
+ if copied:
+ self.__updated_files.append(outfile)
+ return outfile, copied
+
+ def _get_data_files(self):
+ """Generate list of '(package,src_dir,build_dir,filenames)' tuples"""
+ self.analyze_manifest()
+ return list(map(self._get_pkg_data_files, self.packages or ()))
+
+ def _get_pkg_data_files(self, package):
+ # Locate package source directory
+ src_dir = self.get_package_dir(package)
+
+ # Compute package build directory
+ build_dir = os.path.join(*([self.build_lib] + package.split('.')))
+
+ # Strip directory from globbed filenames
+ filenames = [
+ os.path.relpath(file, src_dir)
+ for file in self.find_data_files(package, src_dir)
+ ]
+ return package, src_dir, build_dir, filenames
+
+ def find_data_files(self, package, src_dir):
+ """Return filenames for package's data files in 'src_dir'"""
+ patterns = self._get_platform_patterns(
+ self.package_data,
+ package,
+ src_dir,
+ )
+ globs_expanded = map(glob, patterns)
+ # flatten the expanded globs into an iterable of matches
+ globs_matches = itertools.chain.from_iterable(globs_expanded)
+ glob_files = filter(os.path.isfile, globs_matches)
+ files = itertools.chain(
+ self.manifest_files.get(package, []),
+ glob_files,
+ )
+ return self.exclude_data_files(package, src_dir, files)
+
+ def build_package_data(self):
+ """Copy data files into build directory"""
+ for package, src_dir, build_dir, filenames in self.data_files:
+ for filename in filenames:
+ target = os.path.join(build_dir, filename)
+ self.mkpath(os.path.dirname(target))
+ srcfile = os.path.join(src_dir, filename)
+ outf, copied = self.copy_file(srcfile, target)
+ make_writable(target)
+ srcfile = os.path.abspath(srcfile)
+ if (copied and
+ srcfile in self.distribution.convert_2to3_doctests):
+ self.__doctests_2to3.append(outf)
+
+ def analyze_manifest(self):
+ self.manifest_files = mf = {}
+ if not self.distribution.include_package_data:
+ return
+ src_dirs = {}
+ for package in self.packages or ():
+ # Locate package source directory
+ src_dirs[assert_relative(self.get_package_dir(package))] = package
+
+ self.run_command('egg_info')
+ ei_cmd = self.get_finalized_command('egg_info')
+ for path in ei_cmd.filelist.files:
+ d, f = os.path.split(assert_relative(path))
+ prev = None
+ oldf = f
+ while d and d != prev and d not in src_dirs:
+ prev = d
+ d, df = os.path.split(d)
+ f = os.path.join(df, f)
+ if d in src_dirs:
+ if path.endswith('.py') and f == oldf:
+ continue # it's a module, not data
+ mf.setdefault(src_dirs[d], []).append(path)
+
+ def get_data_files(self):
+ pass # Lazily compute data files in _get_data_files() function.
+
+ def check_package(self, package, package_dir):
+ """Check namespace packages' __init__ for declare_namespace"""
+ try:
+ return self.packages_checked[package]
+ except KeyError:
+ pass
+
+ init_py = orig.build_py.check_package(self, package, package_dir)
+ self.packages_checked[package] = init_py
+
+ if not init_py or not self.distribution.namespace_packages:
+ return init_py
+
+ for pkg in self.distribution.namespace_packages:
+ if pkg == package or pkg.startswith(package + '.'):
+ break
+ else:
+ return init_py
+
+ with io.open(init_py, 'rb') as f:
+ contents = f.read()
+ if b'declare_namespace' not in contents:
+ raise distutils.errors.DistutilsError(
+ "Namespace package problem: %s is a namespace package, but "
+ "its\n__init__.py does not call declare_namespace()! Please "
+ 'fix it.\n(See the setuptools manual under '
+ '"Namespace Packages" for details.)\n"' % (package,)
+ )
+ return init_py
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.packages_checked = {}
+ orig.build_py.initialize_options(self)
+
+ def get_package_dir(self, package):
+ res = orig.build_py.get_package_dir(self, package)
+ if self.distribution.src_root is not None:
+ return os.path.join(self.distribution.src_root, res)
+ return res
+
+ def exclude_data_files(self, package, src_dir, files):
+ """Filter filenames for package's data files in 'src_dir'"""
+ files = list(files)
+ patterns = self._get_platform_patterns(
+ self.exclude_package_data,
+ package,
+ src_dir,
+ )
+ match_groups = (
+ fnmatch.filter(files, pattern)
+ for pattern in patterns
+ )
+ # flatten the groups of matches into an iterable of matches
+ matches = itertools.chain.from_iterable(match_groups)
+ bad = set(matches)
+ keepers = (
+ fn
+ for fn in files
+ if fn not in bad
+ )
+ # ditch dupes
+ return list(_unique_everseen(keepers))
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _get_platform_patterns(spec, package, src_dir):
+ """
+ yield platform-specific path patterns (suitable for glob
+ or fn_match) from a glob-based spec (such as
+ self.package_data or self.exclude_package_data)
+ matching package in src_dir.
+ """
+ raw_patterns = itertools.chain(
+ spec.get('', []),
+ spec.get(package, []),
+ )
+ return (
+ # Each pattern has to be converted to a platform-specific path
+ os.path.join(src_dir, convert_path(pattern))
+ for pattern in raw_patterns
+ )
+
+
+# from Python docs
+def _unique_everseen(iterable, key=None):
+ "List unique elements, preserving order. Remember all elements ever seen."
+ # unique_everseen('AAAABBBCCDAABBB') --> A B C D
+ # unique_everseen('ABBCcAD', str.lower) --> A B C D
+ seen = set()
+ seen_add = seen.add
+ if key is None:
+ for element in itertools.filterfalse(seen.__contains__, iterable):
+ seen_add(element)
+ yield element
+ else:
+ for element in iterable:
+ k = key(element)
+ if k not in seen:
+ seen_add(k)
+ yield element
+
+
+def assert_relative(path):
+ if not os.path.isabs(path):
+ return path
+ from distutils.errors import DistutilsSetupError
+
+ msg = textwrap.dedent("""
+ Error: setup script specifies an absolute path:
+
+ %s
+
+ setup() arguments must *always* be /-separated paths relative to the
+ setup.py directory, *never* absolute paths.
+ """).lstrip() % path
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(msg)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/develop.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/develop.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..faf8c988e2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/develop.py
@@ -0,0 +1,216 @@
+from distutils.util import convert_path
+from distutils import log
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsError, DistutilsOptionError
+import os
+import glob
+import io
+
+import pkg_resources
+from setuptools.command.easy_install import easy_install
+from setuptools import namespaces
+import setuptools
+
+
+class develop(namespaces.DevelopInstaller, easy_install):
+ """Set up package for development"""
+
+ description = "install package in 'development mode'"
+
+ user_options = easy_install.user_options + [
+ ("uninstall", "u", "Uninstall this source package"),
+ ("egg-path=", None, "Set the path to be used in the .egg-link file"),
+ ]
+
+ boolean_options = easy_install.boolean_options + ['uninstall']
+
+ command_consumes_arguments = False # override base
+
+ def run(self):
+ if self.uninstall:
+ self.multi_version = True
+ self.uninstall_link()
+ self.uninstall_namespaces()
+ else:
+ self.install_for_development()
+ self.warn_deprecated_options()
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.uninstall = None
+ self.egg_path = None
+ easy_install.initialize_options(self)
+ self.setup_path = None
+ self.always_copy_from = '.' # always copy eggs installed in curdir
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ ei = self.get_finalized_command("egg_info")
+ if ei.broken_egg_info:
+ template = "Please rename %r to %r before using 'develop'"
+ args = ei.egg_info, ei.broken_egg_info
+ raise DistutilsError(template % args)
+ self.args = [ei.egg_name]
+
+ easy_install.finalize_options(self)
+ self.expand_basedirs()
+ self.expand_dirs()
+ # pick up setup-dir .egg files only: no .egg-info
+ self.package_index.scan(glob.glob('*.egg'))
+
+ egg_link_fn = ei.egg_name + '.egg-link'
+ self.egg_link = os.path.join(self.install_dir, egg_link_fn)
+ self.egg_base = ei.egg_base
+ if self.egg_path is None:
+ self.egg_path = os.path.abspath(ei.egg_base)
+
+ target = pkg_resources.normalize_path(self.egg_base)
+ egg_path = pkg_resources.normalize_path(
+ os.path.join(self.install_dir, self.egg_path))
+ if egg_path != target:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ "--egg-path must be a relative path from the install"
+ " directory to " + target
+ )
+
+ # Make a distribution for the package's source
+ self.dist = pkg_resources.Distribution(
+ target,
+ pkg_resources.PathMetadata(target, os.path.abspath(ei.egg_info)),
+ project_name=ei.egg_name
+ )
+
+ self.setup_path = self._resolve_setup_path(
+ self.egg_base,
+ self.install_dir,
+ self.egg_path,
+ )
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _resolve_setup_path(egg_base, install_dir, egg_path):
+ """
+ Generate a path from egg_base back to '.' where the
+ setup script resides and ensure that path points to the
+ setup path from $install_dir/$egg_path.
+ """
+ path_to_setup = egg_base.replace(os.sep, '/').rstrip('/')
+ if path_to_setup != os.curdir:
+ path_to_setup = '../' * (path_to_setup.count('/') + 1)
+ resolved = pkg_resources.normalize_path(
+ os.path.join(install_dir, egg_path, path_to_setup)
+ )
+ if resolved != pkg_resources.normalize_path(os.curdir):
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ "Can't get a consistent path to setup script from"
+ " installation directory", resolved,
+ pkg_resources.normalize_path(os.curdir))
+ return path_to_setup
+
+ def install_for_development(self):
+ if getattr(self.distribution, 'use_2to3', False):
+ # If we run 2to3 we can not do this inplace:
+
+ # Ensure metadata is up-to-date
+ self.reinitialize_command('build_py', inplace=0)
+ self.run_command('build_py')
+ bpy_cmd = self.get_finalized_command("build_py")
+ build_path = pkg_resources.normalize_path(bpy_cmd.build_lib)
+
+ # Build extensions
+ self.reinitialize_command('egg_info', egg_base=build_path)
+ self.run_command('egg_info')
+
+ self.reinitialize_command('build_ext', inplace=0)
+ self.run_command('build_ext')
+
+ # Fixup egg-link and easy-install.pth
+ ei_cmd = self.get_finalized_command("egg_info")
+ self.egg_path = build_path
+ self.dist.location = build_path
+ # XXX
+ self.dist._provider = pkg_resources.PathMetadata(
+ build_path, ei_cmd.egg_info)
+ else:
+ # Without 2to3 inplace works fine:
+ self.run_command('egg_info')
+
+ # Build extensions in-place
+ self.reinitialize_command('build_ext', inplace=1)
+ self.run_command('build_ext')
+
+ if setuptools.bootstrap_install_from:
+ self.easy_install(setuptools.bootstrap_install_from)
+ setuptools.bootstrap_install_from = None
+
+ self.install_namespaces()
+
+ # create an .egg-link in the installation dir, pointing to our egg
+ log.info("Creating %s (link to %s)", self.egg_link, self.egg_base)
+ if not self.dry_run:
+ with open(self.egg_link, "w") as f:
+ f.write(self.egg_path + "\n" + self.setup_path)
+ # postprocess the installed distro, fixing up .pth, installing scripts,
+ # and handling requirements
+ self.process_distribution(None, self.dist, not self.no_deps)
+
+ def uninstall_link(self):
+ if os.path.exists(self.egg_link):
+ log.info("Removing %s (link to %s)", self.egg_link, self.egg_base)
+ egg_link_file = open(self.egg_link)
+ contents = [line.rstrip() for line in egg_link_file]
+ egg_link_file.close()
+ if contents not in ([self.egg_path],
+ [self.egg_path, self.setup_path]):
+ log.warn("Link points to %s: uninstall aborted", contents)
+ return
+ if not self.dry_run:
+ os.unlink(self.egg_link)
+ if not self.dry_run:
+ self.update_pth(self.dist) # remove any .pth link to us
+ if self.distribution.scripts:
+ # XXX should also check for entry point scripts!
+ log.warn("Note: you must uninstall or replace scripts manually!")
+
+ def install_egg_scripts(self, dist):
+ if dist is not self.dist:
+ # Installing a dependency, so fall back to normal behavior
+ return easy_install.install_egg_scripts(self, dist)
+
+ # create wrapper scripts in the script dir, pointing to dist.scripts
+
+ # new-style...
+ self.install_wrapper_scripts(dist)
+
+ # ...and old-style
+ for script_name in self.distribution.scripts or []:
+ script_path = os.path.abspath(convert_path(script_name))
+ script_name = os.path.basename(script_path)
+ with io.open(script_path) as strm:
+ script_text = strm.read()
+ self.install_script(dist, script_name, script_text, script_path)
+
+ def install_wrapper_scripts(self, dist):
+ dist = VersionlessRequirement(dist)
+ return easy_install.install_wrapper_scripts(self, dist)
+
+
+class VersionlessRequirement:
+ """
+ Adapt a pkg_resources.Distribution to simply return the project
+ name as the 'requirement' so that scripts will work across
+ multiple versions.
+
+ >>> from pkg_resources import Distribution
+ >>> dist = Distribution(project_name='foo', version='1.0')
+ >>> str(dist.as_requirement())
+ 'foo==1.0'
+ >>> adapted_dist = VersionlessRequirement(dist)
+ >>> str(adapted_dist.as_requirement())
+ 'foo'
+ """
+
+ def __init__(self, dist):
+ self.__dist = dist
+
+ def __getattr__(self, name):
+ return getattr(self.__dist, name)
+
+ def as_requirement(self):
+ return self.project_name
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/dist_info.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/dist_info.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..c45258fa03
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/dist_info.py
@@ -0,0 +1,36 @@
+"""
+Create a dist_info directory
+As defined in the wheel specification
+"""
+
+import os
+
+from distutils.core import Command
+from distutils import log
+
+
+class dist_info(Command):
+
+ description = 'create a .dist-info directory'
+
+ user_options = [
+ ('egg-base=', 'e', "directory containing .egg-info directories"
+ " (default: top of the source tree)"),
+ ]
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.egg_base = None
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ pass
+
+ def run(self):
+ egg_info = self.get_finalized_command('egg_info')
+ egg_info.egg_base = self.egg_base
+ egg_info.finalize_options()
+ egg_info.run()
+ dist_info_dir = egg_info.egg_info[:-len('.egg-info')] + '.dist-info'
+ log.info("creating '{}'".format(os.path.abspath(dist_info_dir)))
+
+ bdist_wheel = self.get_finalized_command('bdist_wheel')
+ bdist_wheel.egg2dist(egg_info.egg_info, dist_info_dir)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/easy_install.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/easy_install.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..9ec83b7d8b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/easy_install.py
@@ -0,0 +1,2318 @@
+"""
+Easy Install
+------------
+
+A tool for doing automatic download/extract/build of distutils-based Python
+packages. For detailed documentation, see the accompanying EasyInstall.txt
+file, or visit the `EasyInstall home page`__.
+
+__ https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/easy_install.html
+
+"""
+
+from glob import glob
+from distutils.util import get_platform
+from distutils.util import convert_path, subst_vars
+from distutils.errors import (
+ DistutilsArgError, DistutilsOptionError,
+ DistutilsError, DistutilsPlatformError,
+)
+from distutils.command.install import INSTALL_SCHEMES, SCHEME_KEYS
+from distutils import log, dir_util
+from distutils.command.build_scripts import first_line_re
+from distutils.spawn import find_executable
+import sys
+import os
+import zipimport
+import shutil
+import tempfile
+import zipfile
+import re
+import stat
+import random
+import textwrap
+import warnings
+import site
+import struct
+import contextlib
+import subprocess
+import shlex
+import io
+import configparser
+
+
+from sysconfig import get_config_vars, get_path
+
+from setuptools import SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning
+
+from setuptools import Command
+from setuptools.sandbox import run_setup
+from setuptools.command import setopt
+from setuptools.archive_util import unpack_archive
+from setuptools.package_index import (
+ PackageIndex, parse_requirement_arg, URL_SCHEME,
+)
+from setuptools.command import bdist_egg, egg_info
+from setuptools.wheel import Wheel
+from pkg_resources import (
+ yield_lines, normalize_path, resource_string, ensure_directory,
+ get_distribution, find_distributions, Environment, Requirement,
+ Distribution, PathMetadata, EggMetadata, WorkingSet, DistributionNotFound,
+ VersionConflict, DEVELOP_DIST,
+)
+import pkg_resources
+
+# Turn on PEP440Warnings
+warnings.filterwarnings("default", category=pkg_resources.PEP440Warning)
+
+__all__ = [
+ 'samefile', 'easy_install', 'PthDistributions', 'extract_wininst_cfg',
+ 'main', 'get_exe_prefixes',
+]
+
+
+def is_64bit():
+ return struct.calcsize("P") == 8
+
+
+def samefile(p1, p2):
+ """
+ Determine if two paths reference the same file.
+
+ Augments os.path.samefile to work on Windows and
+ suppresses errors if the path doesn't exist.
+ """
+ both_exist = os.path.exists(p1) and os.path.exists(p2)
+ use_samefile = hasattr(os.path, 'samefile') and both_exist
+ if use_samefile:
+ return os.path.samefile(p1, p2)
+ norm_p1 = os.path.normpath(os.path.normcase(p1))
+ norm_p2 = os.path.normpath(os.path.normcase(p2))
+ return norm_p1 == norm_p2
+
+
+def _to_bytes(s):
+ return s.encode('utf8')
+
+
+def isascii(s):
+ try:
+ s.encode('ascii')
+ return True
+ except UnicodeError:
+ return False
+
+
+def _one_liner(text):
+ return textwrap.dedent(text).strip().replace('\n', '; ')
+
+
+class easy_install(Command):
+ """Manage a download/build/install process"""
+ description = "Find/get/install Python packages"
+ command_consumes_arguments = True
+
+ user_options = [
+ ('prefix=', None, "installation prefix"),
+ ("zip-ok", "z", "install package as a zipfile"),
+ ("multi-version", "m", "make apps have to require() a version"),
+ ("upgrade", "U", "force upgrade (searches PyPI for latest versions)"),
+ ("install-dir=", "d", "install package to DIR"),
+ ("script-dir=", "s", "install scripts to DIR"),
+ ("exclude-scripts", "x", "Don't install scripts"),
+ ("always-copy", "a", "Copy all needed packages to install dir"),
+ ("index-url=", "i", "base URL of Python Package Index"),
+ ("find-links=", "f", "additional URL(s) to search for packages"),
+ ("build-directory=", "b",
+ "download/extract/build in DIR; keep the results"),
+ ('optimize=', 'O',
+ "also compile with optimization: -O1 for \"python -O\", "
+ "-O2 for \"python -OO\", and -O0 to disable [default: -O0]"),
+ ('record=', None,
+ "filename in which to record list of installed files"),
+ ('always-unzip', 'Z', "don't install as a zipfile, no matter what"),
+ ('site-dirs=', 'S', "list of directories where .pth files work"),
+ ('editable', 'e', "Install specified packages in editable form"),
+ ('no-deps', 'N', "don't install dependencies"),
+ ('allow-hosts=', 'H', "pattern(s) that hostnames must match"),
+ ('local-snapshots-ok', 'l',
+ "allow building eggs from local checkouts"),
+ ('version', None, "print version information and exit"),
+ ('no-find-links', None,
+ "Don't load find-links defined in packages being installed"),
+ ('user', None, "install in user site-package '%s'" % site.USER_SITE)
+ ]
+ boolean_options = [
+ 'zip-ok', 'multi-version', 'exclude-scripts', 'upgrade', 'always-copy',
+ 'editable',
+ 'no-deps', 'local-snapshots-ok', 'version',
+ 'user'
+ ]
+
+ negative_opt = {'always-unzip': 'zip-ok'}
+ create_index = PackageIndex
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ # the --user option seems to be an opt-in one,
+ # so the default should be False.
+ self.user = 0
+ self.zip_ok = self.local_snapshots_ok = None
+ self.install_dir = self.script_dir = self.exclude_scripts = None
+ self.index_url = None
+ self.find_links = None
+ self.build_directory = None
+ self.args = None
+ self.optimize = self.record = None
+ self.upgrade = self.always_copy = self.multi_version = None
+ self.editable = self.no_deps = self.allow_hosts = None
+ self.root = self.prefix = self.no_report = None
+ self.version = None
+ self.install_purelib = None # for pure module distributions
+ self.install_platlib = None # non-pure (dists w/ extensions)
+ self.install_headers = None # for C/C++ headers
+ self.install_lib = None # set to either purelib or platlib
+ self.install_scripts = None
+ self.install_data = None
+ self.install_base = None
+ self.install_platbase = None
+ if site.ENABLE_USER_SITE:
+ self.install_userbase = site.USER_BASE
+ self.install_usersite = site.USER_SITE
+ else:
+ self.install_userbase = None
+ self.install_usersite = None
+ self.no_find_links = None
+
+ # Options not specifiable via command line
+ self.package_index = None
+ self.pth_file = self.always_copy_from = None
+ self.site_dirs = None
+ self.installed_projects = {}
+ # Always read easy_install options, even if we are subclassed, or have
+ # an independent instance created. This ensures that defaults will
+ # always come from the standard configuration file(s)' "easy_install"
+ # section, even if this is a "develop" or "install" command, or some
+ # other embedding.
+ self._dry_run = None
+ self.verbose = self.distribution.verbose
+ self.distribution._set_command_options(
+ self, self.distribution.get_option_dict('easy_install')
+ )
+
+ def delete_blockers(self, blockers):
+ extant_blockers = (
+ filename for filename in blockers
+ if os.path.exists(filename) or os.path.islink(filename)
+ )
+ list(map(self._delete_path, extant_blockers))
+
+ def _delete_path(self, path):
+ log.info("Deleting %s", path)
+ if self.dry_run:
+ return
+
+ is_tree = os.path.isdir(path) and not os.path.islink(path)
+ remover = rmtree if is_tree else os.unlink
+ remover(path)
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _render_version():
+ """
+ Render the Setuptools version and installation details, then exit.
+ """
+ ver = '{}.{}'.format(*sys.version_info)
+ dist = get_distribution('setuptools')
+ tmpl = 'setuptools {dist.version} from {dist.location} (Python {ver})'
+ print(tmpl.format(**locals()))
+ raise SystemExit()
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ self.version and self._render_version()
+
+ py_version = sys.version.split()[0]
+ prefix, exec_prefix = get_config_vars('prefix', 'exec_prefix')
+
+ self.config_vars = {
+ 'dist_name': self.distribution.get_name(),
+ 'dist_version': self.distribution.get_version(),
+ 'dist_fullname': self.distribution.get_fullname(),
+ 'py_version': py_version,
+ 'py_version_short': py_version[0:3],
+ 'py_version_nodot': py_version[0] + py_version[2],
+ 'sys_prefix': prefix,
+ 'prefix': prefix,
+ 'sys_exec_prefix': exec_prefix,
+ 'exec_prefix': exec_prefix,
+ # Only python 3.2+ has abiflags
+ 'abiflags': getattr(sys, 'abiflags', ''),
+ }
+
+ if site.ENABLE_USER_SITE:
+ self.config_vars['userbase'] = self.install_userbase
+ self.config_vars['usersite'] = self.install_usersite
+
+ elif self.user:
+ log.warn("WARNING: The user site-packages directory is disabled.")
+
+ self._fix_install_dir_for_user_site()
+
+ self.expand_basedirs()
+ self.expand_dirs()
+
+ self._expand(
+ 'install_dir', 'script_dir', 'build_directory',
+ 'site_dirs',
+ )
+ # If a non-default installation directory was specified, default the
+ # script directory to match it.
+ if self.script_dir is None:
+ self.script_dir = self.install_dir
+
+ if self.no_find_links is None:
+ self.no_find_links = False
+
+ # Let install_dir get set by install_lib command, which in turn
+ # gets its info from the install command, and takes into account
+ # --prefix and --home and all that other crud.
+ self.set_undefined_options(
+ 'install_lib', ('install_dir', 'install_dir')
+ )
+ # Likewise, set default script_dir from 'install_scripts.install_dir'
+ self.set_undefined_options(
+ 'install_scripts', ('install_dir', 'script_dir')
+ )
+
+ if self.user and self.install_purelib:
+ self.install_dir = self.install_purelib
+ self.script_dir = self.install_scripts
+ # default --record from the install command
+ self.set_undefined_options('install', ('record', 'record'))
+ # Should this be moved to the if statement below? It's not used
+ # elsewhere
+ normpath = map(normalize_path, sys.path)
+ self.all_site_dirs = get_site_dirs()
+ if self.site_dirs is not None:
+ site_dirs = [
+ os.path.expanduser(s.strip()) for s in
+ self.site_dirs.split(',')
+ ]
+ for d in site_dirs:
+ if not os.path.isdir(d):
+ log.warn("%s (in --site-dirs) does not exist", d)
+ elif normalize_path(d) not in normpath:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ d + " (in --site-dirs) is not on sys.path"
+ )
+ else:
+ self.all_site_dirs.append(normalize_path(d))
+ if not self.editable:
+ self.check_site_dir()
+ self.index_url = self.index_url or "https://pypi.org/simple/"
+ self.shadow_path = self.all_site_dirs[:]
+ for path_item in self.install_dir, normalize_path(self.script_dir):
+ if path_item not in self.shadow_path:
+ self.shadow_path.insert(0, path_item)
+
+ if self.allow_hosts is not None:
+ hosts = [s.strip() for s in self.allow_hosts.split(',')]
+ else:
+ hosts = ['*']
+ if self.package_index is None:
+ self.package_index = self.create_index(
+ self.index_url, search_path=self.shadow_path, hosts=hosts,
+ )
+ self.local_index = Environment(self.shadow_path + sys.path)
+
+ if self.find_links is not None:
+ if isinstance(self.find_links, str):
+ self.find_links = self.find_links.split()
+ else:
+ self.find_links = []
+ if self.local_snapshots_ok:
+ self.package_index.scan_egg_links(self.shadow_path + sys.path)
+ if not self.no_find_links:
+ self.package_index.add_find_links(self.find_links)
+ self.set_undefined_options('install_lib', ('optimize', 'optimize'))
+ if not isinstance(self.optimize, int):
+ try:
+ self.optimize = int(self.optimize)
+ if not (0 <= self.optimize <= 2):
+ raise ValueError
+ except ValueError as e:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ "--optimize must be 0, 1, or 2"
+ ) from e
+
+ if self.editable and not self.build_directory:
+ raise DistutilsArgError(
+ "Must specify a build directory (-b) when using --editable"
+ )
+ if not self.args:
+ raise DistutilsArgError(
+ "No urls, filenames, or requirements specified (see --help)")
+
+ self.outputs = []
+
+ def _fix_install_dir_for_user_site(self):
+ """
+ Fix the install_dir if "--user" was used.
+ """
+ if not self.user or not site.ENABLE_USER_SITE:
+ return
+
+ self.create_home_path()
+ if self.install_userbase is None:
+ msg = "User base directory is not specified"
+ raise DistutilsPlatformError(msg)
+ self.install_base = self.install_platbase = self.install_userbase
+ scheme_name = os.name.replace('posix', 'unix') + '_user'
+ self.select_scheme(scheme_name)
+
+ def _expand_attrs(self, attrs):
+ for attr in attrs:
+ val = getattr(self, attr)
+ if val is not None:
+ if os.name == 'posix' or os.name == 'nt':
+ val = os.path.expanduser(val)
+ val = subst_vars(val, self.config_vars)
+ setattr(self, attr, val)
+
+ def expand_basedirs(self):
+ """Calls `os.path.expanduser` on install_base, install_platbase and
+ root."""
+ self._expand_attrs(['install_base', 'install_platbase', 'root'])
+
+ def expand_dirs(self):
+ """Calls `os.path.expanduser` on install dirs."""
+ dirs = [
+ 'install_purelib',
+ 'install_platlib',
+ 'install_lib',
+ 'install_headers',
+ 'install_scripts',
+ 'install_data',
+ ]
+ self._expand_attrs(dirs)
+
+ def run(self, show_deprecation=True):
+ if show_deprecation:
+ self.announce(
+ "WARNING: The easy_install command is deprecated "
+ "and will be removed in a future version.",
+ log.WARN,
+ )
+ if self.verbose != self.distribution.verbose:
+ log.set_verbosity(self.verbose)
+ try:
+ for spec in self.args:
+ self.easy_install(spec, not self.no_deps)
+ if self.record:
+ outputs = self.outputs
+ if self.root: # strip any package prefix
+ root_len = len(self.root)
+ for counter in range(len(outputs)):
+ outputs[counter] = outputs[counter][root_len:]
+ from distutils import file_util
+
+ self.execute(
+ file_util.write_file, (self.record, outputs),
+ "writing list of installed files to '%s'" %
+ self.record
+ )
+ self.warn_deprecated_options()
+ finally:
+ log.set_verbosity(self.distribution.verbose)
+
+ def pseudo_tempname(self):
+ """Return a pseudo-tempname base in the install directory.
+ This code is intentionally naive; if a malicious party can write to
+ the target directory you're already in deep doodoo.
+ """
+ try:
+ pid = os.getpid()
+ except Exception:
+ pid = random.randint(0, sys.maxsize)
+ return os.path.join(self.install_dir, "test-easy-install-%s" % pid)
+
+ def warn_deprecated_options(self):
+ pass
+
+ def check_site_dir(self):
+ """Verify that self.install_dir is .pth-capable dir, if needed"""
+
+ instdir = normalize_path(self.install_dir)
+ pth_file = os.path.join(instdir, 'easy-install.pth')
+
+ if not os.path.exists(instdir):
+ try:
+ os.makedirs(instdir)
+ except (OSError, IOError):
+ self.cant_write_to_target()
+
+ # Is it a configured, PYTHONPATH, implicit, or explicit site dir?
+ is_site_dir = instdir in self.all_site_dirs
+
+ if not is_site_dir and not self.multi_version:
+ # No? Then directly test whether it does .pth file processing
+ is_site_dir = self.check_pth_processing()
+ else:
+ # make sure we can write to target dir
+ testfile = self.pseudo_tempname() + '.write-test'
+ test_exists = os.path.exists(testfile)
+ try:
+ if test_exists:
+ os.unlink(testfile)
+ open(testfile, 'w').close()
+ os.unlink(testfile)
+ except (OSError, IOError):
+ self.cant_write_to_target()
+
+ if not is_site_dir and not self.multi_version:
+ # Can't install non-multi to non-site dir with easy_install
+ pythonpath = os.environ.get('PYTHONPATH', '')
+ log.warn(self.__no_default_msg, self.install_dir, pythonpath)
+
+ if is_site_dir:
+ if self.pth_file is None:
+ self.pth_file = PthDistributions(pth_file, self.all_site_dirs)
+ else:
+ self.pth_file = None
+
+ if self.multi_version and not os.path.exists(pth_file):
+ self.pth_file = None # don't create a .pth file
+ self.install_dir = instdir
+
+ __cant_write_msg = textwrap.dedent("""
+ can't create or remove files in install directory
+
+ The following error occurred while trying to add or remove files in the
+ installation directory:
+
+ %s
+
+ The installation directory you specified (via --install-dir, --prefix, or
+ the distutils default setting) was:
+
+ %s
+ """).lstrip() # noqa
+
+ __not_exists_id = textwrap.dedent("""
+ This directory does not currently exist. Please create it and try again, or
+ choose a different installation directory (using the -d or --install-dir
+ option).
+ """).lstrip() # noqa
+
+ __access_msg = textwrap.dedent("""
+ Perhaps your account does not have write access to this directory? If the
+ installation directory is a system-owned directory, you may need to sign in
+ as the administrator or "root" account. If you do not have administrative
+ access to this machine, you may wish to choose a different installation
+ directory, preferably one that is listed in your PYTHONPATH environment
+ variable.
+
+ For information on other options, you may wish to consult the
+ documentation at:
+
+ https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/easy_install.html
+
+ Please make the appropriate changes for your system and try again.
+ """).lstrip() # noqa
+
+ def cant_write_to_target(self):
+ msg = self.__cant_write_msg % (sys.exc_info()[1], self.install_dir,)
+
+ if not os.path.exists(self.install_dir):
+ msg += '\n' + self.__not_exists_id
+ else:
+ msg += '\n' + self.__access_msg
+ raise DistutilsError(msg)
+
+ def check_pth_processing(self):
+ """Empirically verify whether .pth files are supported in inst. dir"""
+ instdir = self.install_dir
+ log.info("Checking .pth file support in %s", instdir)
+ pth_file = self.pseudo_tempname() + ".pth"
+ ok_file = pth_file + '.ok'
+ ok_exists = os.path.exists(ok_file)
+ tmpl = _one_liner("""
+ import os
+ f = open({ok_file!r}, 'w')
+ f.write('OK')
+ f.close()
+ """) + '\n'
+ try:
+ if ok_exists:
+ os.unlink(ok_file)
+ dirname = os.path.dirname(ok_file)
+ os.makedirs(dirname, exist_ok=True)
+ f = open(pth_file, 'w')
+ except (OSError, IOError):
+ self.cant_write_to_target()
+ else:
+ try:
+ f.write(tmpl.format(**locals()))
+ f.close()
+ f = None
+ executable = sys.executable
+ if os.name == 'nt':
+ dirname, basename = os.path.split(executable)
+ alt = os.path.join(dirname, 'pythonw.exe')
+ use_alt = (
+ basename.lower() == 'python.exe' and
+ os.path.exists(alt)
+ )
+ if use_alt:
+ # use pythonw.exe to avoid opening a console window
+ executable = alt
+
+ from distutils.spawn import spawn
+
+ spawn([executable, '-E', '-c', 'pass'], 0)
+
+ if os.path.exists(ok_file):
+ log.info(
+ "TEST PASSED: %s appears to support .pth files",
+ instdir
+ )
+ return True
+ finally:
+ if f:
+ f.close()
+ if os.path.exists(ok_file):
+ os.unlink(ok_file)
+ if os.path.exists(pth_file):
+ os.unlink(pth_file)
+ if not self.multi_version:
+ log.warn("TEST FAILED: %s does NOT support .pth files", instdir)
+ return False
+
+ def install_egg_scripts(self, dist):
+ """Write all the scripts for `dist`, unless scripts are excluded"""
+ if not self.exclude_scripts and dist.metadata_isdir('scripts'):
+ for script_name in dist.metadata_listdir('scripts'):
+ if dist.metadata_isdir('scripts/' + script_name):
+ # The "script" is a directory, likely a Python 3
+ # __pycache__ directory, so skip it.
+ continue
+ self.install_script(
+ dist, script_name,
+ dist.get_metadata('scripts/' + script_name)
+ )
+ self.install_wrapper_scripts(dist)
+
+ def add_output(self, path):
+ if os.path.isdir(path):
+ for base, dirs, files in os.walk(path):
+ for filename in files:
+ self.outputs.append(os.path.join(base, filename))
+ else:
+ self.outputs.append(path)
+
+ def not_editable(self, spec):
+ if self.editable:
+ raise DistutilsArgError(
+ "Invalid argument %r: you can't use filenames or URLs "
+ "with --editable (except via the --find-links option)."
+ % (spec,)
+ )
+
+ def check_editable(self, spec):
+ if not self.editable:
+ return
+
+ if os.path.exists(os.path.join(self.build_directory, spec.key)):
+ raise DistutilsArgError(
+ "%r already exists in %s; can't do a checkout there" %
+ (spec.key, self.build_directory)
+ )
+
+ @contextlib.contextmanager
+ def _tmpdir(self):
+ tmpdir = tempfile.mkdtemp(prefix=u"easy_install-")
+ try:
+ # cast to str as workaround for #709 and #710 and #712
+ yield str(tmpdir)
+ finally:
+ os.path.exists(tmpdir) and rmtree(tmpdir)
+
+ def easy_install(self, spec, deps=False):
+ with self._tmpdir() as tmpdir:
+ if not isinstance(spec, Requirement):
+ if URL_SCHEME(spec):
+ # It's a url, download it to tmpdir and process
+ self.not_editable(spec)
+ dl = self.package_index.download(spec, tmpdir)
+ return self.install_item(None, dl, tmpdir, deps, True)
+
+ elif os.path.exists(spec):
+ # Existing file or directory, just process it directly
+ self.not_editable(spec)
+ return self.install_item(None, spec, tmpdir, deps, True)
+ else:
+ spec = parse_requirement_arg(spec)
+
+ self.check_editable(spec)
+ dist = self.package_index.fetch_distribution(
+ spec, tmpdir, self.upgrade, self.editable,
+ not self.always_copy, self.local_index
+ )
+ if dist is None:
+ msg = "Could not find suitable distribution for %r" % spec
+ if self.always_copy:
+ msg += " (--always-copy skips system and development eggs)"
+ raise DistutilsError(msg)
+ elif dist.precedence == DEVELOP_DIST:
+ # .egg-info dists don't need installing, just process deps
+ self.process_distribution(spec, dist, deps, "Using")
+ return dist
+ else:
+ return self.install_item(spec, dist.location, tmpdir, deps)
+
+ def install_item(self, spec, download, tmpdir, deps, install_needed=False):
+
+ # Installation is also needed if file in tmpdir or is not an egg
+ install_needed = install_needed or self.always_copy
+ install_needed = install_needed or os.path.dirname(download) == tmpdir
+ install_needed = install_needed or not download.endswith('.egg')
+ install_needed = install_needed or (
+ self.always_copy_from is not None and
+ os.path.dirname(normalize_path(download)) ==
+ normalize_path(self.always_copy_from)
+ )
+
+ if spec and not install_needed:
+ # at this point, we know it's a local .egg, we just don't know if
+ # it's already installed.
+ for dist in self.local_index[spec.project_name]:
+ if dist.location == download:
+ break
+ else:
+ install_needed = True # it's not in the local index
+
+ log.info("Processing %s", os.path.basename(download))
+
+ if install_needed:
+ dists = self.install_eggs(spec, download, tmpdir)
+ for dist in dists:
+ self.process_distribution(spec, dist, deps)
+ else:
+ dists = [self.egg_distribution(download)]
+ self.process_distribution(spec, dists[0], deps, "Using")
+
+ if spec is not None:
+ for dist in dists:
+ if dist in spec:
+ return dist
+
+ def select_scheme(self, name):
+ """Sets the install directories by applying the install schemes."""
+ # it's the caller's problem if they supply a bad name!
+ scheme = INSTALL_SCHEMES[name]
+ for key in SCHEME_KEYS:
+ attrname = 'install_' + key
+ if getattr(self, attrname) is None:
+ setattr(self, attrname, scheme[key])
+
+ def process_distribution(self, requirement, dist, deps=True, *info):
+ self.update_pth(dist)
+ self.package_index.add(dist)
+ if dist in self.local_index[dist.key]:
+ self.local_index.remove(dist)
+ self.local_index.add(dist)
+ self.install_egg_scripts(dist)
+ self.installed_projects[dist.key] = dist
+ log.info(self.installation_report(requirement, dist, *info))
+ if (dist.has_metadata('dependency_links.txt') and
+ not self.no_find_links):
+ self.package_index.add_find_links(
+ dist.get_metadata_lines('dependency_links.txt')
+ )
+ if not deps and not self.always_copy:
+ return
+ elif requirement is not None and dist.key != requirement.key:
+ log.warn("Skipping dependencies for %s", dist)
+ return # XXX this is not the distribution we were looking for
+ elif requirement is None or dist not in requirement:
+ # if we wound up with a different version, resolve what we've got
+ distreq = dist.as_requirement()
+ requirement = Requirement(str(distreq))
+ log.info("Processing dependencies for %s", requirement)
+ try:
+ distros = WorkingSet([]).resolve(
+ [requirement], self.local_index, self.easy_install
+ )
+ except DistributionNotFound as e:
+ raise DistutilsError(str(e)) from e
+ except VersionConflict as e:
+ raise DistutilsError(e.report()) from e
+ if self.always_copy or self.always_copy_from:
+ # Force all the relevant distros to be copied or activated
+ for dist in distros:
+ if dist.key not in self.installed_projects:
+ self.easy_install(dist.as_requirement())
+ log.info("Finished processing dependencies for %s", requirement)
+
+ def should_unzip(self, dist):
+ if self.zip_ok is not None:
+ return not self.zip_ok
+ if dist.has_metadata('not-zip-safe'):
+ return True
+ if not dist.has_metadata('zip-safe'):
+ return True
+ return False
+
+ def maybe_move(self, spec, dist_filename, setup_base):
+ dst = os.path.join(self.build_directory, spec.key)
+ if os.path.exists(dst):
+ msg = (
+ "%r already exists in %s; build directory %s will not be kept"
+ )
+ log.warn(msg, spec.key, self.build_directory, setup_base)
+ return setup_base
+ if os.path.isdir(dist_filename):
+ setup_base = dist_filename
+ else:
+ if os.path.dirname(dist_filename) == setup_base:
+ os.unlink(dist_filename) # get it out of the tmp dir
+ contents = os.listdir(setup_base)
+ if len(contents) == 1:
+ dist_filename = os.path.join(setup_base, contents[0])
+ if os.path.isdir(dist_filename):
+ # if the only thing there is a directory, move it instead
+ setup_base = dist_filename
+ ensure_directory(dst)
+ shutil.move(setup_base, dst)
+ return dst
+
+ def install_wrapper_scripts(self, dist):
+ if self.exclude_scripts:
+ return
+ for args in ScriptWriter.best().get_args(dist):
+ self.write_script(*args)
+
+ def install_script(self, dist, script_name, script_text, dev_path=None):
+ """Generate a legacy script wrapper and install it"""
+ spec = str(dist.as_requirement())
+ is_script = is_python_script(script_text, script_name)
+
+ if is_script:
+ body = self._load_template(dev_path) % locals()
+ script_text = ScriptWriter.get_header(script_text) + body
+ self.write_script(script_name, _to_bytes(script_text), 'b')
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _load_template(dev_path):
+ """
+ There are a couple of template scripts in the package. This
+ function loads one of them and prepares it for use.
+ """
+ # See https://github.com/pypa/setuptools/issues/134 for info
+ # on script file naming and downstream issues with SVR4
+ name = 'script.tmpl'
+ if dev_path:
+ name = name.replace('.tmpl', ' (dev).tmpl')
+
+ raw_bytes = resource_string('setuptools', name)
+ return raw_bytes.decode('utf-8')
+
+ def write_script(self, script_name, contents, mode="t", blockers=()):
+ """Write an executable file to the scripts directory"""
+ self.delete_blockers( # clean up old .py/.pyw w/o a script
+ [os.path.join(self.script_dir, x) for x in blockers]
+ )
+ log.info("Installing %s script to %s", script_name, self.script_dir)
+ target = os.path.join(self.script_dir, script_name)
+ self.add_output(target)
+
+ if self.dry_run:
+ return
+
+ mask = current_umask()
+ ensure_directory(target)
+ if os.path.exists(target):
+ os.unlink(target)
+ with open(target, "w" + mode) as f:
+ f.write(contents)
+ chmod(target, 0o777 - mask)
+
+ def install_eggs(self, spec, dist_filename, tmpdir):
+ # .egg dirs or files are already built, so just return them
+ if dist_filename.lower().endswith('.egg'):
+ return [self.install_egg(dist_filename, tmpdir)]
+ elif dist_filename.lower().endswith('.exe'):
+ return [self.install_exe(dist_filename, tmpdir)]
+ elif dist_filename.lower().endswith('.whl'):
+ return [self.install_wheel(dist_filename, tmpdir)]
+
+ # Anything else, try to extract and build
+ setup_base = tmpdir
+ if os.path.isfile(dist_filename) and not dist_filename.endswith('.py'):
+ unpack_archive(dist_filename, tmpdir, self.unpack_progress)
+ elif os.path.isdir(dist_filename):
+ setup_base = os.path.abspath(dist_filename)
+
+ if (setup_base.startswith(tmpdir) # something we downloaded
+ and self.build_directory and spec is not None):
+ setup_base = self.maybe_move(spec, dist_filename, setup_base)
+
+ # Find the setup.py file
+ setup_script = os.path.join(setup_base, 'setup.py')
+
+ if not os.path.exists(setup_script):
+ setups = glob(os.path.join(setup_base, '*', 'setup.py'))
+ if not setups:
+ raise DistutilsError(
+ "Couldn't find a setup script in %s" %
+ os.path.abspath(dist_filename)
+ )
+ if len(setups) > 1:
+ raise DistutilsError(
+ "Multiple setup scripts in %s" %
+ os.path.abspath(dist_filename)
+ )
+ setup_script = setups[0]
+
+ # Now run it, and return the result
+ if self.editable:
+ log.info(self.report_editable(spec, setup_script))
+ return []
+ else:
+ return self.build_and_install(setup_script, setup_base)
+
+ def egg_distribution(self, egg_path):
+ if os.path.isdir(egg_path):
+ metadata = PathMetadata(egg_path, os.path.join(egg_path,
+ 'EGG-INFO'))
+ else:
+ metadata = EggMetadata(zipimport.zipimporter(egg_path))
+ return Distribution.from_filename(egg_path, metadata=metadata)
+
+ def install_egg(self, egg_path, tmpdir):
+ destination = os.path.join(
+ self.install_dir,
+ os.path.basename(egg_path),
+ )
+ destination = os.path.abspath(destination)
+ if not self.dry_run:
+ ensure_directory(destination)
+
+ dist = self.egg_distribution(egg_path)
+ if not samefile(egg_path, destination):
+ if os.path.isdir(destination) and not os.path.islink(destination):
+ dir_util.remove_tree(destination, dry_run=self.dry_run)
+ elif os.path.exists(destination):
+ self.execute(
+ os.unlink,
+ (destination,),
+ "Removing " + destination,
+ )
+ try:
+ new_dist_is_zipped = False
+ if os.path.isdir(egg_path):
+ if egg_path.startswith(tmpdir):
+ f, m = shutil.move, "Moving"
+ else:
+ f, m = shutil.copytree, "Copying"
+ elif self.should_unzip(dist):
+ self.mkpath(destination)
+ f, m = self.unpack_and_compile, "Extracting"
+ else:
+ new_dist_is_zipped = True
+ if egg_path.startswith(tmpdir):
+ f, m = shutil.move, "Moving"
+ else:
+ f, m = shutil.copy2, "Copying"
+ self.execute(
+ f,
+ (egg_path, destination),
+ (m + " %s to %s") % (
+ os.path.basename(egg_path),
+ os.path.dirname(destination)
+ ),
+ )
+ update_dist_caches(
+ destination,
+ fix_zipimporter_caches=new_dist_is_zipped,
+ )
+ except Exception:
+ update_dist_caches(destination, fix_zipimporter_caches=False)
+ raise
+
+ self.add_output(destination)
+ return self.egg_distribution(destination)
+
+ def install_exe(self, dist_filename, tmpdir):
+ # See if it's valid, get data
+ cfg = extract_wininst_cfg(dist_filename)
+ if cfg is None:
+ raise DistutilsError(
+ "%s is not a valid distutils Windows .exe" % dist_filename
+ )
+ # Create a dummy distribution object until we build the real distro
+ dist = Distribution(
+ None,
+ project_name=cfg.get('metadata', 'name'),
+ version=cfg.get('metadata', 'version'), platform=get_platform(),
+ )
+
+ # Convert the .exe to an unpacked egg
+ egg_path = os.path.join(tmpdir, dist.egg_name() + '.egg')
+ dist.location = egg_path
+ egg_tmp = egg_path + '.tmp'
+ _egg_info = os.path.join(egg_tmp, 'EGG-INFO')
+ pkg_inf = os.path.join(_egg_info, 'PKG-INFO')
+ ensure_directory(pkg_inf) # make sure EGG-INFO dir exists
+ dist._provider = PathMetadata(egg_tmp, _egg_info) # XXX
+ self.exe_to_egg(dist_filename, egg_tmp)
+
+ # Write EGG-INFO/PKG-INFO
+ if not os.path.exists(pkg_inf):
+ f = open(pkg_inf, 'w')
+ f.write('Metadata-Version: 1.0\n')
+ for k, v in cfg.items('metadata'):
+ if k != 'target_version':
+ f.write('%s: %s\n' % (k.replace('_', '-').title(), v))
+ f.close()
+ script_dir = os.path.join(_egg_info, 'scripts')
+ # delete entry-point scripts to avoid duping
+ self.delete_blockers([
+ os.path.join(script_dir, args[0])
+ for args in ScriptWriter.get_args(dist)
+ ])
+ # Build .egg file from tmpdir
+ bdist_egg.make_zipfile(
+ egg_path, egg_tmp, verbose=self.verbose, dry_run=self.dry_run,
+ )
+ # install the .egg
+ return self.install_egg(egg_path, tmpdir)
+
+ def exe_to_egg(self, dist_filename, egg_tmp):
+ """Extract a bdist_wininst to the directories an egg would use"""
+ # Check for .pth file and set up prefix translations
+ prefixes = get_exe_prefixes(dist_filename)
+ to_compile = []
+ native_libs = []
+ top_level = {}
+
+ def process(src, dst):
+ s = src.lower()
+ for old, new in prefixes:
+ if s.startswith(old):
+ src = new + src[len(old):]
+ parts = src.split('/')
+ dst = os.path.join(egg_tmp, *parts)
+ dl = dst.lower()
+ if dl.endswith('.pyd') or dl.endswith('.dll'):
+ parts[-1] = bdist_egg.strip_module(parts[-1])
+ top_level[os.path.splitext(parts[0])[0]] = 1
+ native_libs.append(src)
+ elif dl.endswith('.py') and old != 'SCRIPTS/':
+ top_level[os.path.splitext(parts[0])[0]] = 1
+ to_compile.append(dst)
+ return dst
+ if not src.endswith('.pth'):
+ log.warn("WARNING: can't process %s", src)
+ return None
+
+ # extract, tracking .pyd/.dll->native_libs and .py -> to_compile
+ unpack_archive(dist_filename, egg_tmp, process)
+ stubs = []
+ for res in native_libs:
+ if res.lower().endswith('.pyd'): # create stubs for .pyd's
+ parts = res.split('/')
+ resource = parts[-1]
+ parts[-1] = bdist_egg.strip_module(parts[-1]) + '.py'
+ pyfile = os.path.join(egg_tmp, *parts)
+ to_compile.append(pyfile)
+ stubs.append(pyfile)
+ bdist_egg.write_stub(resource, pyfile)
+ self.byte_compile(to_compile) # compile .py's
+ bdist_egg.write_safety_flag(
+ os.path.join(egg_tmp, 'EGG-INFO'),
+ bdist_egg.analyze_egg(egg_tmp, stubs)) # write zip-safety flag
+
+ for name in 'top_level', 'native_libs':
+ if locals()[name]:
+ txt = os.path.join(egg_tmp, 'EGG-INFO', name + '.txt')
+ if not os.path.exists(txt):
+ f = open(txt, 'w')
+ f.write('\n'.join(locals()[name]) + '\n')
+ f.close()
+
+ def install_wheel(self, wheel_path, tmpdir):
+ wheel = Wheel(wheel_path)
+ assert wheel.is_compatible()
+ destination = os.path.join(self.install_dir, wheel.egg_name())
+ destination = os.path.abspath(destination)
+ if not self.dry_run:
+ ensure_directory(destination)
+ if os.path.isdir(destination) and not os.path.islink(destination):
+ dir_util.remove_tree(destination, dry_run=self.dry_run)
+ elif os.path.exists(destination):
+ self.execute(
+ os.unlink,
+ (destination,),
+ "Removing " + destination,
+ )
+ try:
+ self.execute(
+ wheel.install_as_egg,
+ (destination,),
+ ("Installing %s to %s") % (
+ os.path.basename(wheel_path),
+ os.path.dirname(destination)
+ ),
+ )
+ finally:
+ update_dist_caches(destination, fix_zipimporter_caches=False)
+ self.add_output(destination)
+ return self.egg_distribution(destination)
+
+ __mv_warning = textwrap.dedent("""
+ Because this distribution was installed --multi-version, before you can
+ import modules from this package in an application, you will need to
+ 'import pkg_resources' and then use a 'require()' call similar to one of
+ these examples, in order to select the desired version:
+
+ pkg_resources.require("%(name)s") # latest installed version
+ pkg_resources.require("%(name)s==%(version)s") # this exact version
+ pkg_resources.require("%(name)s>=%(version)s") # this version or higher
+ """).lstrip() # noqa
+
+ __id_warning = textwrap.dedent("""
+ Note also that the installation directory must be on sys.path at runtime for
+ this to work. (e.g. by being the application's script directory, by being on
+ PYTHONPATH, or by being added to sys.path by your code.)
+ """) # noqa
+
+ def installation_report(self, req, dist, what="Installed"):
+ """Helpful installation message for display to package users"""
+ msg = "\n%(what)s %(eggloc)s%(extras)s"
+ if self.multi_version and not self.no_report:
+ msg += '\n' + self.__mv_warning
+ if self.install_dir not in map(normalize_path, sys.path):
+ msg += '\n' + self.__id_warning
+
+ eggloc = dist.location
+ name = dist.project_name
+ version = dist.version
+ extras = '' # TODO: self.report_extras(req, dist)
+ return msg % locals()
+
+ __editable_msg = textwrap.dedent("""
+ Extracted editable version of %(spec)s to %(dirname)s
+
+ If it uses setuptools in its setup script, you can activate it in
+ "development" mode by going to that directory and running::
+
+ %(python)s setup.py develop
+
+ See the setuptools documentation for the "develop" command for more info.
+ """).lstrip() # noqa
+
+ def report_editable(self, spec, setup_script):
+ dirname = os.path.dirname(setup_script)
+ python = sys.executable
+ return '\n' + self.__editable_msg % locals()
+
+ def run_setup(self, setup_script, setup_base, args):
+ sys.modules.setdefault('distutils.command.bdist_egg', bdist_egg)
+ sys.modules.setdefault('distutils.command.egg_info', egg_info)
+
+ args = list(args)
+ if self.verbose > 2:
+ v = 'v' * (self.verbose - 1)
+ args.insert(0, '-' + v)
+ elif self.verbose < 2:
+ args.insert(0, '-q')
+ if self.dry_run:
+ args.insert(0, '-n')
+ log.info(
+ "Running %s %s", setup_script[len(setup_base) + 1:], ' '.join(args)
+ )
+ try:
+ run_setup(setup_script, args)
+ except SystemExit as v:
+ raise DistutilsError(
+ "Setup script exited with %s" % (v.args[0],)
+ ) from v
+
+ def build_and_install(self, setup_script, setup_base):
+ args = ['bdist_egg', '--dist-dir']
+
+ dist_dir = tempfile.mkdtemp(
+ prefix='egg-dist-tmp-', dir=os.path.dirname(setup_script)
+ )
+ try:
+ self._set_fetcher_options(os.path.dirname(setup_script))
+ args.append(dist_dir)
+
+ self.run_setup(setup_script, setup_base, args)
+ all_eggs = Environment([dist_dir])
+ eggs = []
+ for key in all_eggs:
+ for dist in all_eggs[key]:
+ eggs.append(self.install_egg(dist.location, setup_base))
+ if not eggs and not self.dry_run:
+ log.warn("No eggs found in %s (setup script problem?)",
+ dist_dir)
+ return eggs
+ finally:
+ rmtree(dist_dir)
+ log.set_verbosity(self.verbose) # restore our log verbosity
+
+ def _set_fetcher_options(self, base):
+ """
+ When easy_install is about to run bdist_egg on a source dist, that
+ source dist might have 'setup_requires' directives, requiring
+ additional fetching. Ensure the fetcher options given to easy_install
+ are available to that command as well.
+ """
+ # find the fetch options from easy_install and write them out
+ # to the setup.cfg file.
+ ei_opts = self.distribution.get_option_dict('easy_install').copy()
+ fetch_directives = (
+ 'find_links', 'site_dirs', 'index_url', 'optimize', 'allow_hosts',
+ )
+ fetch_options = {}
+ for key, val in ei_opts.items():
+ if key not in fetch_directives:
+ continue
+ fetch_options[key.replace('_', '-')] = val[1]
+ # create a settings dictionary suitable for `edit_config`
+ settings = dict(easy_install=fetch_options)
+ cfg_filename = os.path.join(base, 'setup.cfg')
+ setopt.edit_config(cfg_filename, settings)
+
+ def update_pth(self, dist):
+ if self.pth_file is None:
+ return
+
+ for d in self.pth_file[dist.key]: # drop old entries
+ if self.multi_version or d.location != dist.location:
+ log.info("Removing %s from easy-install.pth file", d)
+ self.pth_file.remove(d)
+ if d.location in self.shadow_path:
+ self.shadow_path.remove(d.location)
+
+ if not self.multi_version:
+ if dist.location in self.pth_file.paths:
+ log.info(
+ "%s is already the active version in easy-install.pth",
+ dist,
+ )
+ else:
+ log.info("Adding %s to easy-install.pth file", dist)
+ self.pth_file.add(dist) # add new entry
+ if dist.location not in self.shadow_path:
+ self.shadow_path.append(dist.location)
+
+ if not self.dry_run:
+
+ self.pth_file.save()
+
+ if dist.key == 'setuptools':
+ # Ensure that setuptools itself never becomes unavailable!
+ # XXX should this check for latest version?
+ filename = os.path.join(self.install_dir, 'setuptools.pth')
+ if os.path.islink(filename):
+ os.unlink(filename)
+ f = open(filename, 'wt')
+ f.write(self.pth_file.make_relative(dist.location) + '\n')
+ f.close()
+
+ def unpack_progress(self, src, dst):
+ # Progress filter for unpacking
+ log.debug("Unpacking %s to %s", src, dst)
+ return dst # only unpack-and-compile skips files for dry run
+
+ def unpack_and_compile(self, egg_path, destination):
+ to_compile = []
+ to_chmod = []
+
+ def pf(src, dst):
+ if dst.endswith('.py') and not src.startswith('EGG-INFO/'):
+ to_compile.append(dst)
+ elif dst.endswith('.dll') or dst.endswith('.so'):
+ to_chmod.append(dst)
+ self.unpack_progress(src, dst)
+ return not self.dry_run and dst or None
+
+ unpack_archive(egg_path, destination, pf)
+ self.byte_compile(to_compile)
+ if not self.dry_run:
+ for f in to_chmod:
+ mode = ((os.stat(f)[stat.ST_MODE]) | 0o555) & 0o7755
+ chmod(f, mode)
+
+ def byte_compile(self, to_compile):
+ if sys.dont_write_bytecode:
+ return
+
+ from distutils.util import byte_compile
+
+ try:
+ # try to make the byte compile messages quieter
+ log.set_verbosity(self.verbose - 1)
+
+ byte_compile(to_compile, optimize=0, force=1, dry_run=self.dry_run)
+ if self.optimize:
+ byte_compile(
+ to_compile, optimize=self.optimize, force=1,
+ dry_run=self.dry_run,
+ )
+ finally:
+ log.set_verbosity(self.verbose) # restore original verbosity
+
+ __no_default_msg = textwrap.dedent("""
+ bad install directory or PYTHONPATH
+
+ You are attempting to install a package to a directory that is not
+ on PYTHONPATH and which Python does not read ".pth" files from. The
+ installation directory you specified (via --install-dir, --prefix, or
+ the distutils default setting) was:
+
+ %s
+
+ and your PYTHONPATH environment variable currently contains:
+
+ %r
+
+ Here are some of your options for correcting the problem:
+
+ * You can choose a different installation directory, i.e., one that is
+ on PYTHONPATH or supports .pth files
+
+ * You can add the installation directory to the PYTHONPATH environment
+ variable. (It must then also be on PYTHONPATH whenever you run
+ Python and want to use the package(s) you are installing.)
+
+ * You can set up the installation directory to support ".pth" files by
+ using one of the approaches described here:
+
+ https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/easy_install.html#custom-installation-locations
+
+
+ Please make the appropriate changes for your system and try again.
+ """).strip()
+
+ def create_home_path(self):
+ """Create directories under ~."""
+ if not self.user:
+ return
+ home = convert_path(os.path.expanduser("~"))
+ for name, path in self.config_vars.items():
+ if path.startswith(home) and not os.path.isdir(path):
+ self.debug_print("os.makedirs('%s', 0o700)" % path)
+ os.makedirs(path, 0o700)
+
+ INSTALL_SCHEMES = dict(
+ posix=dict(
+ install_dir='$base/lib/python$py_version_short/site-packages',
+ script_dir='$base/bin',
+ ),
+ )
+
+ DEFAULT_SCHEME = dict(
+ install_dir='$base/Lib/site-packages',
+ script_dir='$base/Scripts',
+ )
+
+ def _expand(self, *attrs):
+ config_vars = self.get_finalized_command('install').config_vars
+
+ if self.prefix:
+ # Set default install_dir/scripts from --prefix
+ config_vars = config_vars.copy()
+ config_vars['base'] = self.prefix
+ scheme = self.INSTALL_SCHEMES.get(os.name, self.DEFAULT_SCHEME)
+ for attr, val in scheme.items():
+ if getattr(self, attr, None) is None:
+ setattr(self, attr, val)
+
+ from distutils.util import subst_vars
+
+ for attr in attrs:
+ val = getattr(self, attr)
+ if val is not None:
+ val = subst_vars(val, config_vars)
+ if os.name == 'posix':
+ val = os.path.expanduser(val)
+ setattr(self, attr, val)
+
+
+def _pythonpath():
+ items = os.environ.get('PYTHONPATH', '').split(os.pathsep)
+ return filter(None, items)
+
+
+def get_site_dirs():
+ """
+ Return a list of 'site' dirs
+ """
+
+ sitedirs = []
+
+ # start with PYTHONPATH
+ sitedirs.extend(_pythonpath())
+
+ prefixes = [sys.prefix]
+ if sys.exec_prefix != sys.prefix:
+ prefixes.append(sys.exec_prefix)
+ for prefix in prefixes:
+ if prefix:
+ if sys.platform in ('os2emx', 'riscos'):
+ sitedirs.append(os.path.join(prefix, "Lib", "site-packages"))
+ elif os.sep == '/':
+ sitedirs.extend([
+ os.path.join(
+ prefix,
+ "lib",
+ "python{}.{}".format(*sys.version_info),
+ "site-packages",
+ ),
+ os.path.join(prefix, "lib", "site-python"),
+ ])
+ else:
+ sitedirs.extend([
+ prefix,
+ os.path.join(prefix, "lib", "site-packages"),
+ ])
+ if sys.platform == 'darwin':
+ # for framework builds *only* we add the standard Apple
+ # locations. Currently only per-user, but /Library and
+ # /Network/Library could be added too
+ if 'Python.framework' in prefix:
+ home = os.environ.get('HOME')
+ if home:
+ home_sp = os.path.join(
+ home,
+ 'Library',
+ 'Python',
+ '{}.{}'.format(*sys.version_info),
+ 'site-packages',
+ )
+ sitedirs.append(home_sp)
+ lib_paths = get_path('purelib'), get_path('platlib')
+ for site_lib in lib_paths:
+ if site_lib not in sitedirs:
+ sitedirs.append(site_lib)
+
+ if site.ENABLE_USER_SITE:
+ sitedirs.append(site.USER_SITE)
+
+ try:
+ sitedirs.extend(site.getsitepackages())
+ except AttributeError:
+ pass
+
+ sitedirs = list(map(normalize_path, sitedirs))
+
+ return sitedirs
+
+
+def expand_paths(inputs):
+ """Yield sys.path directories that might contain "old-style" packages"""
+
+ seen = {}
+
+ for dirname in inputs:
+ dirname = normalize_path(dirname)
+ if dirname in seen:
+ continue
+
+ seen[dirname] = 1
+ if not os.path.isdir(dirname):
+ continue
+
+ files = os.listdir(dirname)
+ yield dirname, files
+
+ for name in files:
+ if not name.endswith('.pth'):
+ # We only care about the .pth files
+ continue
+ if name in ('easy-install.pth', 'setuptools.pth'):
+ # Ignore .pth files that we control
+ continue
+
+ # Read the .pth file
+ f = open(os.path.join(dirname, name))
+ lines = list(yield_lines(f))
+ f.close()
+
+ # Yield existing non-dupe, non-import directory lines from it
+ for line in lines:
+ if not line.startswith("import"):
+ line = normalize_path(line.rstrip())
+ if line not in seen:
+ seen[line] = 1
+ if not os.path.isdir(line):
+ continue
+ yield line, os.listdir(line)
+
+
+def extract_wininst_cfg(dist_filename):
+ """Extract configuration data from a bdist_wininst .exe
+
+ Returns a configparser.RawConfigParser, or None
+ """
+ f = open(dist_filename, 'rb')
+ try:
+ endrec = zipfile._EndRecData(f)
+ if endrec is None:
+ return None
+
+ prepended = (endrec[9] - endrec[5]) - endrec[6]
+ if prepended < 12: # no wininst data here
+ return None
+ f.seek(prepended - 12)
+
+ tag, cfglen, bmlen = struct.unpack("<iii", f.read(12))
+ if tag not in (0x1234567A, 0x1234567B):
+ return None # not a valid tag
+
+ f.seek(prepended - (12 + cfglen))
+ init = {'version': '', 'target_version': ''}
+ cfg = configparser.RawConfigParser(init)
+ try:
+ part = f.read(cfglen)
+ # Read up to the first null byte.
+ config = part.split(b'\0', 1)[0]
+ # Now the config is in bytes, but for RawConfigParser, it should
+ # be text, so decode it.
+ config = config.decode(sys.getfilesystemencoding())
+ cfg.readfp(io.StringIO(config))
+ except configparser.Error:
+ return None
+ if not cfg.has_section('metadata') or not cfg.has_section('Setup'):
+ return None
+ return cfg
+
+ finally:
+ f.close()
+
+
+def get_exe_prefixes(exe_filename):
+ """Get exe->egg path translations for a given .exe file"""
+
+ prefixes = [
+ ('PURELIB/', ''),
+ ('PLATLIB/pywin32_system32', ''),
+ ('PLATLIB/', ''),
+ ('SCRIPTS/', 'EGG-INFO/scripts/'),
+ ('DATA/lib/site-packages', ''),
+ ]
+ z = zipfile.ZipFile(exe_filename)
+ try:
+ for info in z.infolist():
+ name = info.filename
+ parts = name.split('/')
+ if len(parts) == 3 and parts[2] == 'PKG-INFO':
+ if parts[1].endswith('.egg-info'):
+ prefixes.insert(0, ('/'.join(parts[:2]), 'EGG-INFO/'))
+ break
+ if len(parts) != 2 or not name.endswith('.pth'):
+ continue
+ if name.endswith('-nspkg.pth'):
+ continue
+ if parts[0].upper() in ('PURELIB', 'PLATLIB'):
+ contents = z.read(name).decode()
+ for pth in yield_lines(contents):
+ pth = pth.strip().replace('\\', '/')
+ if not pth.startswith('import'):
+ prefixes.append((('%s/%s/' % (parts[0], pth)), ''))
+ finally:
+ z.close()
+ prefixes = [(x.lower(), y) for x, y in prefixes]
+ prefixes.sort()
+ prefixes.reverse()
+ return prefixes
+
+
+class PthDistributions(Environment):
+ """A .pth file with Distribution paths in it"""
+
+ dirty = False
+
+ def __init__(self, filename, sitedirs=()):
+ self.filename = filename
+ self.sitedirs = list(map(normalize_path, sitedirs))
+ self.basedir = normalize_path(os.path.dirname(self.filename))
+ self._load()
+ Environment.__init__(self, [], None, None)
+ for path in yield_lines(self.paths):
+ list(map(self.add, find_distributions(path, True)))
+
+ def _load(self):
+ self.paths = []
+ saw_import = False
+ seen = dict.fromkeys(self.sitedirs)
+ if os.path.isfile(self.filename):
+ f = open(self.filename, 'rt')
+ for line in f:
+ if line.startswith('import'):
+ saw_import = True
+ continue
+ path = line.rstrip()
+ self.paths.append(path)
+ if not path.strip() or path.strip().startswith('#'):
+ continue
+ # skip non-existent paths, in case somebody deleted a package
+ # manually, and duplicate paths as well
+ path = self.paths[-1] = normalize_path(
+ os.path.join(self.basedir, path)
+ )
+ if not os.path.exists(path) or path in seen:
+ self.paths.pop() # skip it
+ self.dirty = True # we cleaned up, so we're dirty now :)
+ continue
+ seen[path] = 1
+ f.close()
+
+ if self.paths and not saw_import:
+ self.dirty = True # ensure anything we touch has import wrappers
+ while self.paths and not self.paths[-1].strip():
+ self.paths.pop()
+
+ def save(self):
+ """Write changed .pth file back to disk"""
+ if not self.dirty:
+ return
+
+ rel_paths = list(map(self.make_relative, self.paths))
+ if rel_paths:
+ log.debug("Saving %s", self.filename)
+ lines = self._wrap_lines(rel_paths)
+ data = '\n'.join(lines) + '\n'
+
+ if os.path.islink(self.filename):
+ os.unlink(self.filename)
+ with open(self.filename, 'wt') as f:
+ f.write(data)
+
+ elif os.path.exists(self.filename):
+ log.debug("Deleting empty %s", self.filename)
+ os.unlink(self.filename)
+
+ self.dirty = False
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _wrap_lines(lines):
+ return lines
+
+ def add(self, dist):
+ """Add `dist` to the distribution map"""
+ new_path = (
+ dist.location not in self.paths and (
+ dist.location not in self.sitedirs or
+ # account for '.' being in PYTHONPATH
+ dist.location == os.getcwd()
+ )
+ )
+ if new_path:
+ self.paths.append(dist.location)
+ self.dirty = True
+ Environment.add(self, dist)
+
+ def remove(self, dist):
+ """Remove `dist` from the distribution map"""
+ while dist.location in self.paths:
+ self.paths.remove(dist.location)
+ self.dirty = True
+ Environment.remove(self, dist)
+
+ def make_relative(self, path):
+ npath, last = os.path.split(normalize_path(path))
+ baselen = len(self.basedir)
+ parts = [last]
+ sep = os.altsep == '/' and '/' or os.sep
+ while len(npath) >= baselen:
+ if npath == self.basedir:
+ parts.append(os.curdir)
+ parts.reverse()
+ return sep.join(parts)
+ npath, last = os.path.split(npath)
+ parts.append(last)
+ else:
+ return path
+
+
+class RewritePthDistributions(PthDistributions):
+ @classmethod
+ def _wrap_lines(cls, lines):
+ yield cls.prelude
+ for line in lines:
+ yield line
+ yield cls.postlude
+
+ prelude = _one_liner("""
+ import sys
+ sys.__plen = len(sys.path)
+ """)
+ postlude = _one_liner("""
+ import sys
+ new = sys.path[sys.__plen:]
+ del sys.path[sys.__plen:]
+ p = getattr(sys, '__egginsert', 0)
+ sys.path[p:p] = new
+ sys.__egginsert = p + len(new)
+ """)
+
+
+if os.environ.get('SETUPTOOLS_SYS_PATH_TECHNIQUE', 'raw') == 'rewrite':
+ PthDistributions = RewritePthDistributions
+
+
+def _first_line_re():
+ """
+ Return a regular expression based on first_line_re suitable for matching
+ strings.
+ """
+ if isinstance(first_line_re.pattern, str):
+ return first_line_re
+
+ # first_line_re in Python >=3.1.4 and >=3.2.1 is a bytes pattern.
+ return re.compile(first_line_re.pattern.decode())
+
+
+def auto_chmod(func, arg, exc):
+ if func in [os.unlink, os.remove] and os.name == 'nt':
+ chmod(arg, stat.S_IWRITE)
+ return func(arg)
+ et, ev, _ = sys.exc_info()
+ # TODO: This code doesn't make sense. What is it trying to do?
+ raise (ev[0], ev[1] + (" %s %s" % (func, arg)))
+
+
+def update_dist_caches(dist_path, fix_zipimporter_caches):
+ """
+ Fix any globally cached `dist_path` related data
+
+ `dist_path` should be a path of a newly installed egg distribution (zipped
+ or unzipped).
+
+ sys.path_importer_cache contains finder objects that have been cached when
+ importing data from the original distribution. Any such finders need to be
+ cleared since the replacement distribution might be packaged differently,
+ e.g. a zipped egg distribution might get replaced with an unzipped egg
+ folder or vice versa. Having the old finders cached may then cause Python
+ to attempt loading modules from the replacement distribution using an
+ incorrect loader.
+
+ zipimport.zipimporter objects are Python loaders charged with importing
+ data packaged inside zip archives. If stale loaders referencing the
+ original distribution, are left behind, they can fail to load modules from
+ the replacement distribution. E.g. if an old zipimport.zipimporter instance
+ is used to load data from a new zipped egg archive, it may cause the
+ operation to attempt to locate the requested data in the wrong location -
+ one indicated by the original distribution's zip archive directory
+ information. Such an operation may then fail outright, e.g. report having
+ read a 'bad local file header', or even worse, it may fail silently &
+ return invalid data.
+
+ zipimport._zip_directory_cache contains cached zip archive directory
+ information for all existing zipimport.zipimporter instances and all such
+ instances connected to the same archive share the same cached directory
+ information.
+
+ If asked, and the underlying Python implementation allows it, we can fix
+ all existing zipimport.zipimporter instances instead of having to track
+ them down and remove them one by one, by updating their shared cached zip
+ archive directory information. This, of course, assumes that the
+ replacement distribution is packaged as a zipped egg.
+
+ If not asked to fix existing zipimport.zipimporter instances, we still do
+ our best to clear any remaining zipimport.zipimporter related cached data
+ that might somehow later get used when attempting to load data from the new
+ distribution and thus cause such load operations to fail. Note that when
+ tracking down such remaining stale data, we can not catch every conceivable
+ usage from here, and we clear only those that we know of and have found to
+ cause problems if left alive. Any remaining caches should be updated by
+ whomever is in charge of maintaining them, i.e. they should be ready to
+ handle us replacing their zip archives with new distributions at runtime.
+
+ """
+ # There are several other known sources of stale zipimport.zipimporter
+ # instances that we do not clear here, but might if ever given a reason to
+ # do so:
+ # * Global setuptools pkg_resources.working_set (a.k.a. 'master working
+ # set') may contain distributions which may in turn contain their
+ # zipimport.zipimporter loaders.
+ # * Several zipimport.zipimporter loaders held by local variables further
+ # up the function call stack when running the setuptools installation.
+ # * Already loaded modules may have their __loader__ attribute set to the
+ # exact loader instance used when importing them. Python 3.4 docs state
+ # that this information is intended mostly for introspection and so is
+ # not expected to cause us problems.
+ normalized_path = normalize_path(dist_path)
+ _uncache(normalized_path, sys.path_importer_cache)
+ if fix_zipimporter_caches:
+ _replace_zip_directory_cache_data(normalized_path)
+ else:
+ # Here, even though we do not want to fix existing and now stale
+ # zipimporter cache information, we still want to remove it. Related to
+ # Python's zip archive directory information cache, we clear each of
+ # its stale entries in two phases:
+ # 1. Clear the entry so attempting to access zip archive information
+ # via any existing stale zipimport.zipimporter instances fails.
+ # 2. Remove the entry from the cache so any newly constructed
+ # zipimport.zipimporter instances do not end up using old stale
+ # zip archive directory information.
+ # This whole stale data removal step does not seem strictly necessary,
+ # but has been left in because it was done before we started replacing
+ # the zip archive directory information cache content if possible, and
+ # there are no relevant unit tests that we can depend on to tell us if
+ # this is really needed.
+ _remove_and_clear_zip_directory_cache_data(normalized_path)
+
+
+def _collect_zipimporter_cache_entries(normalized_path, cache):
+ """
+ Return zipimporter cache entry keys related to a given normalized path.
+
+ Alternative path spellings (e.g. those using different character case or
+ those using alternative path separators) related to the same path are
+ included. Any sub-path entries are included as well, i.e. those
+ corresponding to zip archives embedded in other zip archives.
+
+ """
+ result = []
+ prefix_len = len(normalized_path)
+ for p in cache:
+ np = normalize_path(p)
+ if (np.startswith(normalized_path) and
+ np[prefix_len:prefix_len + 1] in (os.sep, '')):
+ result.append(p)
+ return result
+
+
+def _update_zipimporter_cache(normalized_path, cache, updater=None):
+ """
+ Update zipimporter cache data for a given normalized path.
+
+ Any sub-path entries are processed as well, i.e. those corresponding to zip
+ archives embedded in other zip archives.
+
+ Given updater is a callable taking a cache entry key and the original entry
+ (after already removing the entry from the cache), and expected to update
+ the entry and possibly return a new one to be inserted in its place.
+ Returning None indicates that the entry should not be replaced with a new
+ one. If no updater is given, the cache entries are simply removed without
+ any additional processing, the same as if the updater simply returned None.
+
+ """
+ for p in _collect_zipimporter_cache_entries(normalized_path, cache):
+ # N.B. pypy's custom zipimport._zip_directory_cache implementation does
+ # not support the complete dict interface:
+ # * Does not support item assignment, thus not allowing this function
+ # to be used only for removing existing cache entries.
+ # * Does not support the dict.pop() method, forcing us to use the
+ # get/del patterns instead. For more detailed information see the
+ # following links:
+ # https://github.com/pypa/setuptools/issues/202#issuecomment-202913420
+ # http://bit.ly/2h9itJX
+ old_entry = cache[p]
+ del cache[p]
+ new_entry = updater and updater(p, old_entry)
+ if new_entry is not None:
+ cache[p] = new_entry
+
+
+def _uncache(normalized_path, cache):
+ _update_zipimporter_cache(normalized_path, cache)
+
+
+def _remove_and_clear_zip_directory_cache_data(normalized_path):
+ def clear_and_remove_cached_zip_archive_directory_data(path, old_entry):
+ old_entry.clear()
+
+ _update_zipimporter_cache(
+ normalized_path, zipimport._zip_directory_cache,
+ updater=clear_and_remove_cached_zip_archive_directory_data)
+
+
+# PyPy Python implementation does not allow directly writing to the
+# zipimport._zip_directory_cache and so prevents us from attempting to correct
+# its content. The best we can do there is clear the problematic cache content
+# and have PyPy repopulate it as needed. The downside is that if there are any
+# stale zipimport.zipimporter instances laying around, attempting to use them
+# will fail due to not having its zip archive directory information available
+# instead of being automatically corrected to use the new correct zip archive
+# directory information.
+if '__pypy__' in sys.builtin_module_names:
+ _replace_zip_directory_cache_data = \
+ _remove_and_clear_zip_directory_cache_data
+else:
+
+ def _replace_zip_directory_cache_data(normalized_path):
+ def replace_cached_zip_archive_directory_data(path, old_entry):
+ # N.B. In theory, we could load the zip directory information just
+ # once for all updated path spellings, and then copy it locally and
+ # update its contained path strings to contain the correct
+ # spelling, but that seems like a way too invasive move (this cache
+ # structure is not officially documented anywhere and could in
+ # theory change with new Python releases) for no significant
+ # benefit.
+ old_entry.clear()
+ zipimport.zipimporter(path)
+ old_entry.update(zipimport._zip_directory_cache[path])
+ return old_entry
+
+ _update_zipimporter_cache(
+ normalized_path, zipimport._zip_directory_cache,
+ updater=replace_cached_zip_archive_directory_data)
+
+
+def is_python(text, filename='<string>'):
+ "Is this string a valid Python script?"
+ try:
+ compile(text, filename, 'exec')
+ except (SyntaxError, TypeError):
+ return False
+ else:
+ return True
+
+
+def is_sh(executable):
+ """Determine if the specified executable is a .sh (contains a #! line)"""
+ try:
+ with io.open(executable, encoding='latin-1') as fp:
+ magic = fp.read(2)
+ except (OSError, IOError):
+ return executable
+ return magic == '#!'
+
+
+def nt_quote_arg(arg):
+ """Quote a command line argument according to Windows parsing rules"""
+ return subprocess.list2cmdline([arg])
+
+
+def is_python_script(script_text, filename):
+ """Is this text, as a whole, a Python script? (as opposed to shell/bat/etc.
+ """
+ if filename.endswith('.py') or filename.endswith('.pyw'):
+ return True # extension says it's Python
+ if is_python(script_text, filename):
+ return True # it's syntactically valid Python
+ if script_text.startswith('#!'):
+ # It begins with a '#!' line, so check if 'python' is in it somewhere
+ return 'python' in script_text.splitlines()[0].lower()
+
+ return False # Not any Python I can recognize
+
+
+try:
+ from os import chmod as _chmod
+except ImportError:
+ # Jython compatibility
+ def _chmod(*args):
+ pass
+
+
+def chmod(path, mode):
+ log.debug("changing mode of %s to %o", path, mode)
+ try:
+ _chmod(path, mode)
+ except os.error as e:
+ log.debug("chmod failed: %s", e)
+
+
+class CommandSpec(list):
+ """
+ A command spec for a #! header, specified as a list of arguments akin to
+ those passed to Popen.
+ """
+
+ options = []
+ split_args = dict()
+
+ @classmethod
+ def best(cls):
+ """
+ Choose the best CommandSpec class based on environmental conditions.
+ """
+ return cls
+
+ @classmethod
+ def _sys_executable(cls):
+ _default = os.path.normpath(sys.executable)
+ return os.environ.get('__PYVENV_LAUNCHER__', _default)
+
+ @classmethod
+ def from_param(cls, param):
+ """
+ Construct a CommandSpec from a parameter to build_scripts, which may
+ be None.
+ """
+ if isinstance(param, cls):
+ return param
+ if isinstance(param, list):
+ return cls(param)
+ if param is None:
+ return cls.from_environment()
+ # otherwise, assume it's a string.
+ return cls.from_string(param)
+
+ @classmethod
+ def from_environment(cls):
+ return cls([cls._sys_executable()])
+
+ @classmethod
+ def from_string(cls, string):
+ """
+ Construct a command spec from a simple string representing a command
+ line parseable by shlex.split.
+ """
+ items = shlex.split(string, **cls.split_args)
+ return cls(items)
+
+ def install_options(self, script_text):
+ self.options = shlex.split(self._extract_options(script_text))
+ cmdline = subprocess.list2cmdline(self)
+ if not isascii(cmdline):
+ self.options[:0] = ['-x']
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _extract_options(orig_script):
+ """
+ Extract any options from the first line of the script.
+ """
+ first = (orig_script + '\n').splitlines()[0]
+ match = _first_line_re().match(first)
+ options = match.group(1) or '' if match else ''
+ return options.strip()
+
+ def as_header(self):
+ return self._render(self + list(self.options))
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _strip_quotes(item):
+ _QUOTES = '"\''
+ for q in _QUOTES:
+ if item.startswith(q) and item.endswith(q):
+ return item[1:-1]
+ return item
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _render(items):
+ cmdline = subprocess.list2cmdline(
+ CommandSpec._strip_quotes(item.strip()) for item in items)
+ return '#!' + cmdline + '\n'
+
+
+# For pbr compat; will be removed in a future version.
+sys_executable = CommandSpec._sys_executable()
+
+
+class WindowsCommandSpec(CommandSpec):
+ split_args = dict(posix=False)
+
+
+class ScriptWriter:
+ """
+ Encapsulates behavior around writing entry point scripts for console and
+ gui apps.
+ """
+
+ template = textwrap.dedent(r"""
+ # EASY-INSTALL-ENTRY-SCRIPT: %(spec)r,%(group)r,%(name)r
+ import re
+ import sys
+
+ # for compatibility with easy_install; see #2198
+ __requires__ = %(spec)r
+
+ try:
+ from importlib.metadata import distribution
+ except ImportError:
+ try:
+ from importlib_metadata import distribution
+ except ImportError:
+ from pkg_resources import load_entry_point
+
+
+ def importlib_load_entry_point(spec, group, name):
+ dist_name, _, _ = spec.partition('==')
+ matches = (
+ entry_point
+ for entry_point in distribution(dist_name).entry_points
+ if entry_point.group == group and entry_point.name == name
+ )
+ return next(matches).load()
+
+
+ globals().setdefault('load_entry_point', importlib_load_entry_point)
+
+
+ if __name__ == '__main__':
+ sys.argv[0] = re.sub(r'(-script\.pyw?|\.exe)?$', '', sys.argv[0])
+ sys.exit(load_entry_point(%(spec)r, %(group)r, %(name)r)())
+ """).lstrip()
+
+ command_spec_class = CommandSpec
+
+ @classmethod
+ def get_script_args(cls, dist, executable=None, wininst=False):
+ # for backward compatibility
+ warnings.warn("Use get_args", EasyInstallDeprecationWarning)
+ writer = (WindowsScriptWriter if wininst else ScriptWriter).best()
+ header = cls.get_script_header("", executable, wininst)
+ return writer.get_args(dist, header)
+
+ @classmethod
+ def get_script_header(cls, script_text, executable=None, wininst=False):
+ # for backward compatibility
+ warnings.warn(
+ "Use get_header", EasyInstallDeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2)
+ if wininst:
+ executable = "python.exe"
+ return cls.get_header(script_text, executable)
+
+ @classmethod
+ def get_args(cls, dist, header=None):
+ """
+ Yield write_script() argument tuples for a distribution's
+ console_scripts and gui_scripts entry points.
+ """
+ if header is None:
+ header = cls.get_header()
+ spec = str(dist.as_requirement())
+ for type_ in 'console', 'gui':
+ group = type_ + '_scripts'
+ for name, ep in dist.get_entry_map(group).items():
+ cls._ensure_safe_name(name)
+ script_text = cls.template % locals()
+ args = cls._get_script_args(type_, name, header, script_text)
+ for res in args:
+ yield res
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _ensure_safe_name(name):
+ """
+ Prevent paths in *_scripts entry point names.
+ """
+ has_path_sep = re.search(r'[\\/]', name)
+ if has_path_sep:
+ raise ValueError("Path separators not allowed in script names")
+
+ @classmethod
+ def get_writer(cls, force_windows):
+ # for backward compatibility
+ warnings.warn("Use best", EasyInstallDeprecationWarning)
+ return WindowsScriptWriter.best() if force_windows else cls.best()
+
+ @classmethod
+ def best(cls):
+ """
+ Select the best ScriptWriter for this environment.
+ """
+ if sys.platform == 'win32' or (os.name == 'java' and os._name == 'nt'):
+ return WindowsScriptWriter.best()
+ else:
+ return cls
+
+ @classmethod
+ def _get_script_args(cls, type_, name, header, script_text):
+ # Simply write the stub with no extension.
+ yield (name, header + script_text)
+
+ @classmethod
+ def get_header(cls, script_text="", executable=None):
+ """Create a #! line, getting options (if any) from script_text"""
+ cmd = cls.command_spec_class.best().from_param(executable)
+ cmd.install_options(script_text)
+ return cmd.as_header()
+
+
+class WindowsScriptWriter(ScriptWriter):
+ command_spec_class = WindowsCommandSpec
+
+ @classmethod
+ def get_writer(cls):
+ # for backward compatibility
+ warnings.warn("Use best", EasyInstallDeprecationWarning)
+ return cls.best()
+
+ @classmethod
+ def best(cls):
+ """
+ Select the best ScriptWriter suitable for Windows
+ """
+ writer_lookup = dict(
+ executable=WindowsExecutableLauncherWriter,
+ natural=cls,
+ )
+ # for compatibility, use the executable launcher by default
+ launcher = os.environ.get('SETUPTOOLS_LAUNCHER', 'executable')
+ return writer_lookup[launcher]
+
+ @classmethod
+ def _get_script_args(cls, type_, name, header, script_text):
+ "For Windows, add a .py extension"
+ ext = dict(console='.pya', gui='.pyw')[type_]
+ if ext not in os.environ['PATHEXT'].lower().split(';'):
+ msg = (
+ "{ext} not listed in PATHEXT; scripts will not be "
+ "recognized as executables."
+ ).format(**locals())
+ warnings.warn(msg, UserWarning)
+ old = ['.pya', '.py', '-script.py', '.pyc', '.pyo', '.pyw', '.exe']
+ old.remove(ext)
+ header = cls._adjust_header(type_, header)
+ blockers = [name + x for x in old]
+ yield name + ext, header + script_text, 't', blockers
+
+ @classmethod
+ def _adjust_header(cls, type_, orig_header):
+ """
+ Make sure 'pythonw' is used for gui and and 'python' is used for
+ console (regardless of what sys.executable is).
+ """
+ pattern = 'pythonw.exe'
+ repl = 'python.exe'
+ if type_ == 'gui':
+ pattern, repl = repl, pattern
+ pattern_ob = re.compile(re.escape(pattern), re.IGNORECASE)
+ new_header = pattern_ob.sub(string=orig_header, repl=repl)
+ return new_header if cls._use_header(new_header) else orig_header
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _use_header(new_header):
+ """
+ Should _adjust_header use the replaced header?
+
+ On non-windows systems, always use. On
+ Windows systems, only use the replaced header if it resolves
+ to an executable on the system.
+ """
+ clean_header = new_header[2:-1].strip('"')
+ return sys.platform != 'win32' or find_executable(clean_header)
+
+
+class WindowsExecutableLauncherWriter(WindowsScriptWriter):
+ @classmethod
+ def _get_script_args(cls, type_, name, header, script_text):
+ """
+ For Windows, add a .py extension and an .exe launcher
+ """
+ if type_ == 'gui':
+ launcher_type = 'gui'
+ ext = '-script.pyw'
+ old = ['.pyw']
+ else:
+ launcher_type = 'cli'
+ ext = '-script.py'
+ old = ['.py', '.pyc', '.pyo']
+ hdr = cls._adjust_header(type_, header)
+ blockers = [name + x for x in old]
+ yield (name + ext, hdr + script_text, 't', blockers)
+ yield (
+ name + '.exe', get_win_launcher(launcher_type),
+ 'b' # write in binary mode
+ )
+ if not is_64bit():
+ # install a manifest for the launcher to prevent Windows
+ # from detecting it as an installer (which it will for
+ # launchers like easy_install.exe). Consider only
+ # adding a manifest for launchers detected as installers.
+ # See Distribute #143 for details.
+ m_name = name + '.exe.manifest'
+ yield (m_name, load_launcher_manifest(name), 't')
+
+
+# for backward-compatibility
+get_script_args = ScriptWriter.get_script_args
+get_script_header = ScriptWriter.get_script_header
+
+
+def get_win_launcher(type):
+ """
+ Load the Windows launcher (executable) suitable for launching a script.
+
+ `type` should be either 'cli' or 'gui'
+
+ Returns the executable as a byte string.
+ """
+ launcher_fn = '%s.exe' % type
+ if is_64bit():
+ launcher_fn = launcher_fn.replace(".", "-64.")
+ else:
+ launcher_fn = launcher_fn.replace(".", "-32.")
+ return resource_string('setuptools', launcher_fn)
+
+
+def load_launcher_manifest(name):
+ manifest = pkg_resources.resource_string(__name__, 'launcher manifest.xml')
+ return manifest.decode('utf-8') % vars()
+
+
+def rmtree(path, ignore_errors=False, onerror=auto_chmod):
+ return shutil.rmtree(path, ignore_errors, onerror)
+
+
+def current_umask():
+ tmp = os.umask(0o022)
+ os.umask(tmp)
+ return tmp
+
+
+def bootstrap():
+ # This function is called when setuptools*.egg is run using /bin/sh
+ import setuptools
+
+ argv0 = os.path.dirname(setuptools.__path__[0])
+ sys.argv[0] = argv0
+ sys.argv.append(argv0)
+ main()
+
+
+def main(argv=None, **kw):
+ from setuptools import setup
+ from setuptools.dist import Distribution
+
+ class DistributionWithoutHelpCommands(Distribution):
+ common_usage = ""
+
+ def _show_help(self, *args, **kw):
+ with _patch_usage():
+ Distribution._show_help(self, *args, **kw)
+
+ if argv is None:
+ argv = sys.argv[1:]
+
+ with _patch_usage():
+ setup(
+ script_args=['-q', 'easy_install', '-v'] + argv,
+ script_name=sys.argv[0] or 'easy_install',
+ distclass=DistributionWithoutHelpCommands,
+ **kw
+ )
+
+
+@contextlib.contextmanager
+def _patch_usage():
+ import distutils.core
+ USAGE = textwrap.dedent("""
+ usage: %(script)s [options] requirement_or_url ...
+ or: %(script)s --help
+ """).lstrip()
+
+ def gen_usage(script_name):
+ return USAGE % dict(
+ script=os.path.basename(script_name),
+ )
+
+ saved = distutils.core.gen_usage
+ distutils.core.gen_usage = gen_usage
+ try:
+ yield
+ finally:
+ distutils.core.gen_usage = saved
+
+
+class EasyInstallDeprecationWarning(SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning):
+ """
+ Warning for EasyInstall deprecations, bypassing suppression.
+ """
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/egg_info.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/egg_info.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..0b7ad677f2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/egg_info.py
@@ -0,0 +1,722 @@
+"""setuptools.command.egg_info
+
+Create a distribution's .egg-info directory and contents"""
+
+from distutils.filelist import FileList as _FileList
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsInternalError
+from distutils.util import convert_path
+from distutils import log
+import distutils.errors
+import distutils.filelist
+import os
+import re
+import sys
+import io
+import warnings
+import time
+import collections
+
+from setuptools import Command
+from setuptools.command.sdist import sdist
+from setuptools.command.sdist import walk_revctrl
+from setuptools.command.setopt import edit_config
+from setuptools.command import bdist_egg
+from pkg_resources import (
+ parse_requirements, safe_name, parse_version,
+ safe_version, yield_lines, EntryPoint, iter_entry_points, to_filename)
+import setuptools.unicode_utils as unicode_utils
+from setuptools.glob import glob
+
+from setuptools.extern import packaging
+from setuptools import SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning
+
+
+def translate_pattern(glob):
+ """
+ Translate a file path glob like '*.txt' in to a regular expression.
+ This differs from fnmatch.translate which allows wildcards to match
+ directory separators. It also knows about '**/' which matches any number of
+ directories.
+ """
+ pat = ''
+
+ # This will split on '/' within [character classes]. This is deliberate.
+ chunks = glob.split(os.path.sep)
+
+ sep = re.escape(os.sep)
+ valid_char = '[^%s]' % (sep,)
+
+ for c, chunk in enumerate(chunks):
+ last_chunk = c == len(chunks) - 1
+
+ # Chunks that are a literal ** are globstars. They match anything.
+ if chunk == '**':
+ if last_chunk:
+ # Match anything if this is the last component
+ pat += '.*'
+ else:
+ # Match '(name/)*'
+ pat += '(?:%s+%s)*' % (valid_char, sep)
+ continue # Break here as the whole path component has been handled
+
+ # Find any special characters in the remainder
+ i = 0
+ chunk_len = len(chunk)
+ while i < chunk_len:
+ char = chunk[i]
+ if char == '*':
+ # Match any number of name characters
+ pat += valid_char + '*'
+ elif char == '?':
+ # Match a name character
+ pat += valid_char
+ elif char == '[':
+ # Character class
+ inner_i = i + 1
+ # Skip initial !/] chars
+ if inner_i < chunk_len and chunk[inner_i] == '!':
+ inner_i = inner_i + 1
+ if inner_i < chunk_len and chunk[inner_i] == ']':
+ inner_i = inner_i + 1
+
+ # Loop till the closing ] is found
+ while inner_i < chunk_len and chunk[inner_i] != ']':
+ inner_i = inner_i + 1
+
+ if inner_i >= chunk_len:
+ # Got to the end of the string without finding a closing ]
+ # Do not treat this as a matching group, but as a literal [
+ pat += re.escape(char)
+ else:
+ # Grab the insides of the [brackets]
+ inner = chunk[i + 1:inner_i]
+ char_class = ''
+
+ # Class negation
+ if inner[0] == '!':
+ char_class = '^'
+ inner = inner[1:]
+
+ char_class += re.escape(inner)
+ pat += '[%s]' % (char_class,)
+
+ # Skip to the end ]
+ i = inner_i
+ else:
+ pat += re.escape(char)
+ i += 1
+
+ # Join each chunk with the dir separator
+ if not last_chunk:
+ pat += sep
+
+ pat += r'\Z'
+ return re.compile(pat, flags=re.MULTILINE | re.DOTALL)
+
+
+class InfoCommon:
+ tag_build = None
+ tag_date = None
+
+ @property
+ def name(self):
+ return safe_name(self.distribution.get_name())
+
+ def tagged_version(self):
+ return safe_version(self._maybe_tag(self.distribution.get_version()))
+
+ def _maybe_tag(self, version):
+ """
+ egg_info may be called more than once for a distribution,
+ in which case the version string already contains all tags.
+ """
+ return (
+ version if self.vtags and version.endswith(self.vtags)
+ else version + self.vtags
+ )
+
+ def tags(self):
+ version = ''
+ if self.tag_build:
+ version += self.tag_build
+ if self.tag_date:
+ version += time.strftime("-%Y%m%d")
+ return version
+ vtags = property(tags)
+
+
+class egg_info(InfoCommon, Command):
+ description = "create a distribution's .egg-info directory"
+
+ user_options = [
+ ('egg-base=', 'e', "directory containing .egg-info directories"
+ " (default: top of the source tree)"),
+ ('tag-date', 'd', "Add date stamp (e.g. 20050528) to version number"),
+ ('tag-build=', 'b', "Specify explicit tag to add to version number"),
+ ('no-date', 'D', "Don't include date stamp [default]"),
+ ]
+
+ boolean_options = ['tag-date']
+ negative_opt = {
+ 'no-date': 'tag-date',
+ }
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.egg_base = None
+ self.egg_name = None
+ self.egg_info = None
+ self.egg_version = None
+ self.broken_egg_info = False
+
+ ####################################
+ # allow the 'tag_svn_revision' to be detected and
+ # set, supporting sdists built on older Setuptools.
+ @property
+ def tag_svn_revision(self):
+ pass
+
+ @tag_svn_revision.setter
+ def tag_svn_revision(self, value):
+ pass
+ ####################################
+
+ def save_version_info(self, filename):
+ """
+ Materialize the value of date into the
+ build tag. Install build keys in a deterministic order
+ to avoid arbitrary reordering on subsequent builds.
+ """
+ egg_info = collections.OrderedDict()
+ # follow the order these keys would have been added
+ # when PYTHONHASHSEED=0
+ egg_info['tag_build'] = self.tags()
+ egg_info['tag_date'] = 0
+ edit_config(filename, dict(egg_info=egg_info))
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ # Note: we need to capture the current value returned
+ # by `self.tagged_version()`, so we can later update
+ # `self.distribution.metadata.version` without
+ # repercussions.
+ self.egg_name = self.name
+ self.egg_version = self.tagged_version()
+ parsed_version = parse_version(self.egg_version)
+
+ try:
+ is_version = isinstance(parsed_version, packaging.version.Version)
+ spec = (
+ "%s==%s" if is_version else "%s===%s"
+ )
+ list(
+ parse_requirements(spec % (self.egg_name, self.egg_version))
+ )
+ except ValueError as e:
+ raise distutils.errors.DistutilsOptionError(
+ "Invalid distribution name or version syntax: %s-%s" %
+ (self.egg_name, self.egg_version)
+ ) from e
+
+ if self.egg_base is None:
+ dirs = self.distribution.package_dir
+ self.egg_base = (dirs or {}).get('', os.curdir)
+
+ self.ensure_dirname('egg_base')
+ self.egg_info = to_filename(self.egg_name) + '.egg-info'
+ if self.egg_base != os.curdir:
+ self.egg_info = os.path.join(self.egg_base, self.egg_info)
+ if '-' in self.egg_name:
+ self.check_broken_egg_info()
+
+ # Set package version for the benefit of dumber commands
+ # (e.g. sdist, bdist_wininst, etc.)
+ #
+ self.distribution.metadata.version = self.egg_version
+
+ # If we bootstrapped around the lack of a PKG-INFO, as might be the
+ # case in a fresh checkout, make sure that any special tags get added
+ # to the version info
+ #
+ pd = self.distribution._patched_dist
+ if pd is not None and pd.key == self.egg_name.lower():
+ pd._version = self.egg_version
+ pd._parsed_version = parse_version(self.egg_version)
+ self.distribution._patched_dist = None
+
+ def write_or_delete_file(self, what, filename, data, force=False):
+ """Write `data` to `filename` or delete if empty
+
+ If `data` is non-empty, this routine is the same as ``write_file()``.
+ If `data` is empty but not ``None``, this is the same as calling
+ ``delete_file(filename)`. If `data` is ``None``, then this is a no-op
+ unless `filename` exists, in which case a warning is issued about the
+ orphaned file (if `force` is false), or deleted (if `force` is true).
+ """
+ if data:
+ self.write_file(what, filename, data)
+ elif os.path.exists(filename):
+ if data is None and not force:
+ log.warn(
+ "%s not set in setup(), but %s exists", what, filename
+ )
+ return
+ else:
+ self.delete_file(filename)
+
+ def write_file(self, what, filename, data):
+ """Write `data` to `filename` (if not a dry run) after announcing it
+
+ `what` is used in a log message to identify what is being written
+ to the file.
+ """
+ log.info("writing %s to %s", what, filename)
+ data = data.encode("utf-8")
+ if not self.dry_run:
+ f = open(filename, 'wb')
+ f.write(data)
+ f.close()
+
+ def delete_file(self, filename):
+ """Delete `filename` (if not a dry run) after announcing it"""
+ log.info("deleting %s", filename)
+ if not self.dry_run:
+ os.unlink(filename)
+
+ def run(self):
+ self.mkpath(self.egg_info)
+ os.utime(self.egg_info, None)
+ installer = self.distribution.fetch_build_egg
+ for ep in iter_entry_points('egg_info.writers'):
+ ep.require(installer=installer)
+ writer = ep.resolve()
+ writer(self, ep.name, os.path.join(self.egg_info, ep.name))
+
+ # Get rid of native_libs.txt if it was put there by older bdist_egg
+ nl = os.path.join(self.egg_info, "native_libs.txt")
+ if os.path.exists(nl):
+ self.delete_file(nl)
+
+ self.find_sources()
+
+ def find_sources(self):
+ """Generate SOURCES.txt manifest file"""
+ manifest_filename = os.path.join(self.egg_info, "SOURCES.txt")
+ mm = manifest_maker(self.distribution)
+ mm.manifest = manifest_filename
+ mm.run()
+ self.filelist = mm.filelist
+
+ def check_broken_egg_info(self):
+ bei = self.egg_name + '.egg-info'
+ if self.egg_base != os.curdir:
+ bei = os.path.join(self.egg_base, bei)
+ if os.path.exists(bei):
+ log.warn(
+ "-" * 78 + '\n'
+ "Note: Your current .egg-info directory has a '-' in its name;"
+ '\nthis will not work correctly with "setup.py develop".\n\n'
+ 'Please rename %s to %s to correct this problem.\n' + '-' * 78,
+ bei, self.egg_info
+ )
+ self.broken_egg_info = self.egg_info
+ self.egg_info = bei # make it work for now
+
+
+class FileList(_FileList):
+ # Implementations of the various MANIFEST.in commands
+
+ def process_template_line(self, line):
+ # Parse the line: split it up, make sure the right number of words
+ # is there, and return the relevant words. 'action' is always
+ # defined: it's the first word of the line. Which of the other
+ # three are defined depends on the action; it'll be either
+ # patterns, (dir and patterns), or (dir_pattern).
+ (action, patterns, dir, dir_pattern) = self._parse_template_line(line)
+
+ # OK, now we know that the action is valid and we have the
+ # right number of words on the line for that action -- so we
+ # can proceed with minimal error-checking.
+ if action == 'include':
+ self.debug_print("include " + ' '.join(patterns))
+ for pattern in patterns:
+ if not self.include(pattern):
+ log.warn("warning: no files found matching '%s'", pattern)
+
+ elif action == 'exclude':
+ self.debug_print("exclude " + ' '.join(patterns))
+ for pattern in patterns:
+ if not self.exclude(pattern):
+ log.warn(("warning: no previously-included files "
+ "found matching '%s'"), pattern)
+
+ elif action == 'global-include':
+ self.debug_print("global-include " + ' '.join(patterns))
+ for pattern in patterns:
+ if not self.global_include(pattern):
+ log.warn(("warning: no files found matching '%s' "
+ "anywhere in distribution"), pattern)
+
+ elif action == 'global-exclude':
+ self.debug_print("global-exclude " + ' '.join(patterns))
+ for pattern in patterns:
+ if not self.global_exclude(pattern):
+ log.warn(("warning: no previously-included files matching "
+ "'%s' found anywhere in distribution"),
+ pattern)
+
+ elif action == 'recursive-include':
+ self.debug_print("recursive-include %s %s" %
+ (dir, ' '.join(patterns)))
+ for pattern in patterns:
+ if not self.recursive_include(dir, pattern):
+ log.warn(("warning: no files found matching '%s' "
+ "under directory '%s'"),
+ pattern, dir)
+
+ elif action == 'recursive-exclude':
+ self.debug_print("recursive-exclude %s %s" %
+ (dir, ' '.join(patterns)))
+ for pattern in patterns:
+ if not self.recursive_exclude(dir, pattern):
+ log.warn(("warning: no previously-included files matching "
+ "'%s' found under directory '%s'"),
+ pattern, dir)
+
+ elif action == 'graft':
+ self.debug_print("graft " + dir_pattern)
+ if not self.graft(dir_pattern):
+ log.warn("warning: no directories found matching '%s'",
+ dir_pattern)
+
+ elif action == 'prune':
+ self.debug_print("prune " + dir_pattern)
+ if not self.prune(dir_pattern):
+ log.warn(("no previously-included directories found "
+ "matching '%s'"), dir_pattern)
+
+ else:
+ raise DistutilsInternalError(
+ "this cannot happen: invalid action '%s'" % action)
+
+ def _remove_files(self, predicate):
+ """
+ Remove all files from the file list that match the predicate.
+ Return True if any matching files were removed
+ """
+ found = False
+ for i in range(len(self.files) - 1, -1, -1):
+ if predicate(self.files[i]):
+ self.debug_print(" removing " + self.files[i])
+ del self.files[i]
+ found = True
+ return found
+
+ def include(self, pattern):
+ """Include files that match 'pattern'."""
+ found = [f for f in glob(pattern) if not os.path.isdir(f)]
+ self.extend(found)
+ return bool(found)
+
+ def exclude(self, pattern):
+ """Exclude files that match 'pattern'."""
+ match = translate_pattern(pattern)
+ return self._remove_files(match.match)
+
+ def recursive_include(self, dir, pattern):
+ """
+ Include all files anywhere in 'dir/' that match the pattern.
+ """
+ full_pattern = os.path.join(dir, '**', pattern)
+ found = [f for f in glob(full_pattern, recursive=True)
+ if not os.path.isdir(f)]
+ self.extend(found)
+ return bool(found)
+
+ def recursive_exclude(self, dir, pattern):
+ """
+ Exclude any file anywhere in 'dir/' that match the pattern.
+ """
+ match = translate_pattern(os.path.join(dir, '**', pattern))
+ return self._remove_files(match.match)
+
+ def graft(self, dir):
+ """Include all files from 'dir/'."""
+ found = [
+ item
+ for match_dir in glob(dir)
+ for item in distutils.filelist.findall(match_dir)
+ ]
+ self.extend(found)
+ return bool(found)
+
+ def prune(self, dir):
+ """Filter out files from 'dir/'."""
+ match = translate_pattern(os.path.join(dir, '**'))
+ return self._remove_files(match.match)
+
+ def global_include(self, pattern):
+ """
+ Include all files anywhere in the current directory that match the
+ pattern. This is very inefficient on large file trees.
+ """
+ if self.allfiles is None:
+ self.findall()
+ match = translate_pattern(os.path.join('**', pattern))
+ found = [f for f in self.allfiles if match.match(f)]
+ self.extend(found)
+ return bool(found)
+
+ def global_exclude(self, pattern):
+ """
+ Exclude all files anywhere that match the pattern.
+ """
+ match = translate_pattern(os.path.join('**', pattern))
+ return self._remove_files(match.match)
+
+ def append(self, item):
+ if item.endswith('\r'): # Fix older sdists built on Windows
+ item = item[:-1]
+ path = convert_path(item)
+
+ if self._safe_path(path):
+ self.files.append(path)
+
+ def extend(self, paths):
+ self.files.extend(filter(self._safe_path, paths))
+
+ def _repair(self):
+ """
+ Replace self.files with only safe paths
+
+ Because some owners of FileList manipulate the underlying
+ ``files`` attribute directly, this method must be called to
+ repair those paths.
+ """
+ self.files = list(filter(self._safe_path, self.files))
+
+ def _safe_path(self, path):
+ enc_warn = "'%s' not %s encodable -- skipping"
+
+ # To avoid accidental trans-codings errors, first to unicode
+ u_path = unicode_utils.filesys_decode(path)
+ if u_path is None:
+ log.warn("'%s' in unexpected encoding -- skipping" % path)
+ return False
+
+ # Must ensure utf-8 encodability
+ utf8_path = unicode_utils.try_encode(u_path, "utf-8")
+ if utf8_path is None:
+ log.warn(enc_warn, path, 'utf-8')
+ return False
+
+ try:
+ # accept is either way checks out
+ if os.path.exists(u_path) or os.path.exists(utf8_path):
+ return True
+ # this will catch any encode errors decoding u_path
+ except UnicodeEncodeError:
+ log.warn(enc_warn, path, sys.getfilesystemencoding())
+
+
+class manifest_maker(sdist):
+ template = "MANIFEST.in"
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.use_defaults = 1
+ self.prune = 1
+ self.manifest_only = 1
+ self.force_manifest = 1
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ pass
+
+ def run(self):
+ self.filelist = FileList()
+ if not os.path.exists(self.manifest):
+ self.write_manifest() # it must exist so it'll get in the list
+ self.add_defaults()
+ if os.path.exists(self.template):
+ self.read_template()
+ self.prune_file_list()
+ self.filelist.sort()
+ self.filelist.remove_duplicates()
+ self.write_manifest()
+
+ def _manifest_normalize(self, path):
+ path = unicode_utils.filesys_decode(path)
+ return path.replace(os.sep, '/')
+
+ def write_manifest(self):
+ """
+ Write the file list in 'self.filelist' to the manifest file
+ named by 'self.manifest'.
+ """
+ self.filelist._repair()
+
+ # Now _repairs should encodability, but not unicode
+ files = [self._manifest_normalize(f) for f in self.filelist.files]
+ msg = "writing manifest file '%s'" % self.manifest
+ self.execute(write_file, (self.manifest, files), msg)
+
+ def warn(self, msg):
+ if not self._should_suppress_warning(msg):
+ sdist.warn(self, msg)
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _should_suppress_warning(msg):
+ """
+ suppress missing-file warnings from sdist
+ """
+ return re.match(r"standard file .*not found", msg)
+
+ def add_defaults(self):
+ sdist.add_defaults(self)
+ self.check_license()
+ self.filelist.append(self.template)
+ self.filelist.append(self.manifest)
+ rcfiles = list(walk_revctrl())
+ if rcfiles:
+ self.filelist.extend(rcfiles)
+ elif os.path.exists(self.manifest):
+ self.read_manifest()
+
+ if os.path.exists("setup.py"):
+ # setup.py should be included by default, even if it's not
+ # the script called to create the sdist
+ self.filelist.append("setup.py")
+
+ ei_cmd = self.get_finalized_command('egg_info')
+ self.filelist.graft(ei_cmd.egg_info)
+
+ def prune_file_list(self):
+ build = self.get_finalized_command('build')
+ base_dir = self.distribution.get_fullname()
+ self.filelist.prune(build.build_base)
+ self.filelist.prune(base_dir)
+ sep = re.escape(os.sep)
+ self.filelist.exclude_pattern(r'(^|' + sep + r')(RCS|CVS|\.svn)' + sep,
+ is_regex=1)
+
+
+def write_file(filename, contents):
+ """Create a file with the specified name and write 'contents' (a
+ sequence of strings without line terminators) to it.
+ """
+ contents = "\n".join(contents)
+
+ # assuming the contents has been vetted for utf-8 encoding
+ contents = contents.encode("utf-8")
+
+ with open(filename, "wb") as f: # always write POSIX-style manifest
+ f.write(contents)
+
+
+def write_pkg_info(cmd, basename, filename):
+ log.info("writing %s", filename)
+ if not cmd.dry_run:
+ metadata = cmd.distribution.metadata
+ metadata.version, oldver = cmd.egg_version, metadata.version
+ metadata.name, oldname = cmd.egg_name, metadata.name
+
+ try:
+ # write unescaped data to PKG-INFO, so older pkg_resources
+ # can still parse it
+ metadata.write_pkg_info(cmd.egg_info)
+ finally:
+ metadata.name, metadata.version = oldname, oldver
+
+ safe = getattr(cmd.distribution, 'zip_safe', None)
+
+ bdist_egg.write_safety_flag(cmd.egg_info, safe)
+
+
+def warn_depends_obsolete(cmd, basename, filename):
+ if os.path.exists(filename):
+ log.warn(
+ "WARNING: 'depends.txt' is not used by setuptools 0.6!\n"
+ "Use the install_requires/extras_require setup() args instead."
+ )
+
+
+def _write_requirements(stream, reqs):
+ lines = yield_lines(reqs or ())
+
+ def append_cr(line):
+ return line + '\n'
+ lines = map(append_cr, lines)
+ stream.writelines(lines)
+
+
+def write_requirements(cmd, basename, filename):
+ dist = cmd.distribution
+ data = io.StringIO()
+ _write_requirements(data, dist.install_requires)
+ extras_require = dist.extras_require or {}
+ for extra in sorted(extras_require):
+ data.write('\n[{extra}]\n'.format(**vars()))
+ _write_requirements(data, extras_require[extra])
+ cmd.write_or_delete_file("requirements", filename, data.getvalue())
+
+
+def write_setup_requirements(cmd, basename, filename):
+ data = io.StringIO()
+ _write_requirements(data, cmd.distribution.setup_requires)
+ cmd.write_or_delete_file("setup-requirements", filename, data.getvalue())
+
+
+def write_toplevel_names(cmd, basename, filename):
+ pkgs = dict.fromkeys(
+ [
+ k.split('.', 1)[0]
+ for k in cmd.distribution.iter_distribution_names()
+ ]
+ )
+ cmd.write_file("top-level names", filename, '\n'.join(sorted(pkgs)) + '\n')
+
+
+def overwrite_arg(cmd, basename, filename):
+ write_arg(cmd, basename, filename, True)
+
+
+def write_arg(cmd, basename, filename, force=False):
+ argname = os.path.splitext(basename)[0]
+ value = getattr(cmd.distribution, argname, None)
+ if value is not None:
+ value = '\n'.join(value) + '\n'
+ cmd.write_or_delete_file(argname, filename, value, force)
+
+
+def write_entries(cmd, basename, filename):
+ ep = cmd.distribution.entry_points
+
+ if isinstance(ep, str) or ep is None:
+ data = ep
+ elif ep is not None:
+ data = []
+ for section, contents in sorted(ep.items()):
+ if not isinstance(contents, str):
+ contents = EntryPoint.parse_group(section, contents)
+ contents = '\n'.join(sorted(map(str, contents.values())))
+ data.append('[%s]\n%s\n\n' % (section, contents))
+ data = ''.join(data)
+
+ cmd.write_or_delete_file('entry points', filename, data, True)
+
+
+def get_pkg_info_revision():
+ """
+ Get a -r### off of PKG-INFO Version in case this is an sdist of
+ a subversion revision.
+ """
+ warnings.warn(
+ "get_pkg_info_revision is deprecated.", EggInfoDeprecationWarning)
+ if os.path.exists('PKG-INFO'):
+ with io.open('PKG-INFO') as f:
+ for line in f:
+ match = re.match(r"Version:.*-r(\d+)\s*$", line)
+ if match:
+ return int(match.group(1))
+ return 0
+
+
+class EggInfoDeprecationWarning(SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning):
+ """Deprecated behavior warning for EggInfo, bypassing suppression."""
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/install.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/install.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..72b9a3e424
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/install.py
@@ -0,0 +1,125 @@
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsArgError
+import inspect
+import glob
+import warnings
+import platform
+import distutils.command.install as orig
+
+import setuptools
+
+# Prior to numpy 1.9, NumPy relies on the '_install' name, so provide it for
+# now. See https://github.com/pypa/setuptools/issues/199/
+_install = orig.install
+
+
+class install(orig.install):
+ """Use easy_install to install the package, w/dependencies"""
+
+ user_options = orig.install.user_options + [
+ ('old-and-unmanageable', None, "Try not to use this!"),
+ ('single-version-externally-managed', None,
+ "used by system package builders to create 'flat' eggs"),
+ ]
+ boolean_options = orig.install.boolean_options + [
+ 'old-and-unmanageable', 'single-version-externally-managed',
+ ]
+ new_commands = [
+ ('install_egg_info', lambda self: True),
+ ('install_scripts', lambda self: True),
+ ]
+ _nc = dict(new_commands)
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ orig.install.initialize_options(self)
+ self.old_and_unmanageable = None
+ self.single_version_externally_managed = None
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ orig.install.finalize_options(self)
+ if self.root:
+ self.single_version_externally_managed = True
+ elif self.single_version_externally_managed:
+ if not self.root and not self.record:
+ raise DistutilsArgError(
+ "You must specify --record or --root when building system"
+ " packages"
+ )
+
+ def handle_extra_path(self):
+ if self.root or self.single_version_externally_managed:
+ # explicit backward-compatibility mode, allow extra_path to work
+ return orig.install.handle_extra_path(self)
+
+ # Ignore extra_path when installing an egg (or being run by another
+ # command without --root or --single-version-externally-managed
+ self.path_file = None
+ self.extra_dirs = ''
+
+ def run(self):
+ # Explicit request for old-style install? Just do it
+ if self.old_and_unmanageable or self.single_version_externally_managed:
+ return orig.install.run(self)
+
+ if not self._called_from_setup(inspect.currentframe()):
+ # Run in backward-compatibility mode to support bdist_* commands.
+ orig.install.run(self)
+ else:
+ self.do_egg_install()
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _called_from_setup(run_frame):
+ """
+ Attempt to detect whether run() was called from setup() or by another
+ command. If called by setup(), the parent caller will be the
+ 'run_command' method in 'distutils.dist', and *its* caller will be
+ the 'run_commands' method. If called any other way, the
+ immediate caller *might* be 'run_command', but it won't have been
+ called by 'run_commands'. Return True in that case or if a call stack
+ is unavailable. Return False otherwise.
+ """
+ if run_frame is None:
+ msg = "Call stack not available. bdist_* commands may fail."
+ warnings.warn(msg)
+ if platform.python_implementation() == 'IronPython':
+ msg = "For best results, pass -X:Frames to enable call stack."
+ warnings.warn(msg)
+ return True
+ res = inspect.getouterframes(run_frame)[2]
+ caller, = res[:1]
+ info = inspect.getframeinfo(caller)
+ caller_module = caller.f_globals.get('__name__', '')
+ return (
+ caller_module == 'distutils.dist'
+ and info.function == 'run_commands'
+ )
+
+ def do_egg_install(self):
+
+ easy_install = self.distribution.get_command_class('easy_install')
+
+ cmd = easy_install(
+ self.distribution, args="x", root=self.root, record=self.record,
+ )
+ cmd.ensure_finalized() # finalize before bdist_egg munges install cmd
+ cmd.always_copy_from = '.' # make sure local-dir eggs get installed
+
+ # pick up setup-dir .egg files only: no .egg-info
+ cmd.package_index.scan(glob.glob('*.egg'))
+
+ self.run_command('bdist_egg')
+ args = [self.distribution.get_command_obj('bdist_egg').egg_output]
+
+ if setuptools.bootstrap_install_from:
+ # Bootstrap self-installation of setuptools
+ args.insert(0, setuptools.bootstrap_install_from)
+
+ cmd.args = args
+ cmd.run(show_deprecation=False)
+ setuptools.bootstrap_install_from = None
+
+
+# XXX Python 3.1 doesn't see _nc if this is inside the class
+install.sub_commands = (
+ [cmd for cmd in orig.install.sub_commands if cmd[0] not in install._nc] +
+ install.new_commands
+)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/install_egg_info.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/install_egg_info.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..edc4718b68
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/install_egg_info.py
@@ -0,0 +1,62 @@
+from distutils import log, dir_util
+import os
+
+from setuptools import Command
+from setuptools import namespaces
+from setuptools.archive_util import unpack_archive
+import pkg_resources
+
+
+class install_egg_info(namespaces.Installer, Command):
+ """Install an .egg-info directory for the package"""
+
+ description = "Install an .egg-info directory for the package"
+
+ user_options = [
+ ('install-dir=', 'd', "directory to install to"),
+ ]
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.install_dir = None
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ self.set_undefined_options('install_lib',
+ ('install_dir', 'install_dir'))
+ ei_cmd = self.get_finalized_command("egg_info")
+ basename = pkg_resources.Distribution(
+ None, None, ei_cmd.egg_name, ei_cmd.egg_version
+ ).egg_name() + '.egg-info'
+ self.source = ei_cmd.egg_info
+ self.target = os.path.join(self.install_dir, basename)
+ self.outputs = []
+
+ def run(self):
+ self.run_command('egg_info')
+ if os.path.isdir(self.target) and not os.path.islink(self.target):
+ dir_util.remove_tree(self.target, dry_run=self.dry_run)
+ elif os.path.exists(self.target):
+ self.execute(os.unlink, (self.target,), "Removing " + self.target)
+ if not self.dry_run:
+ pkg_resources.ensure_directory(self.target)
+ self.execute(
+ self.copytree, (), "Copying %s to %s" % (self.source, self.target)
+ )
+ self.install_namespaces()
+
+ def get_outputs(self):
+ return self.outputs
+
+ def copytree(self):
+ # Copy the .egg-info tree to site-packages
+ def skimmer(src, dst):
+ # filter out source-control directories; note that 'src' is always
+ # a '/'-separated path, regardless of platform. 'dst' is a
+ # platform-specific path.
+ for skip in '.svn/', 'CVS/':
+ if src.startswith(skip) or '/' + skip in src:
+ return None
+ self.outputs.append(dst)
+ log.debug("Copying %s to %s", src, dst)
+ return dst
+
+ unpack_archive(self.source, self.target, skimmer)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/install_lib.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/install_lib.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..2e9d8757a5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/install_lib.py
@@ -0,0 +1,122 @@
+import os
+import sys
+from itertools import product, starmap
+import distutils.command.install_lib as orig
+
+
+class install_lib(orig.install_lib):
+ """Don't add compiled flags to filenames of non-Python files"""
+
+ def run(self):
+ self.build()
+ outfiles = self.install()
+ if outfiles is not None:
+ # always compile, in case we have any extension stubs to deal with
+ self.byte_compile(outfiles)
+
+ def get_exclusions(self):
+ """
+ Return a collections.Sized collections.Container of paths to be
+ excluded for single_version_externally_managed installations.
+ """
+ all_packages = (
+ pkg
+ for ns_pkg in self._get_SVEM_NSPs()
+ for pkg in self._all_packages(ns_pkg)
+ )
+
+ excl_specs = product(all_packages, self._gen_exclusion_paths())
+ return set(starmap(self._exclude_pkg_path, excl_specs))
+
+ def _exclude_pkg_path(self, pkg, exclusion_path):
+ """
+ Given a package name and exclusion path within that package,
+ compute the full exclusion path.
+ """
+ parts = pkg.split('.') + [exclusion_path]
+ return os.path.join(self.install_dir, *parts)
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _all_packages(pkg_name):
+ """
+ >>> list(install_lib._all_packages('foo.bar.baz'))
+ ['foo.bar.baz', 'foo.bar', 'foo']
+ """
+ while pkg_name:
+ yield pkg_name
+ pkg_name, sep, child = pkg_name.rpartition('.')
+
+ def _get_SVEM_NSPs(self):
+ """
+ Get namespace packages (list) but only for
+ single_version_externally_managed installations and empty otherwise.
+ """
+ # TODO: is it necessary to short-circuit here? i.e. what's the cost
+ # if get_finalized_command is called even when namespace_packages is
+ # False?
+ if not self.distribution.namespace_packages:
+ return []
+
+ install_cmd = self.get_finalized_command('install')
+ svem = install_cmd.single_version_externally_managed
+
+ return self.distribution.namespace_packages if svem else []
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _gen_exclusion_paths():
+ """
+ Generate file paths to be excluded for namespace packages (bytecode
+ cache files).
+ """
+ # always exclude the package module itself
+ yield '__init__.py'
+
+ yield '__init__.pyc'
+ yield '__init__.pyo'
+
+ if not hasattr(sys, 'implementation'):
+ return
+
+ base = os.path.join(
+ '__pycache__', '__init__.' + sys.implementation.cache_tag)
+ yield base + '.pyc'
+ yield base + '.pyo'
+ yield base + '.opt-1.pyc'
+ yield base + '.opt-2.pyc'
+
+ def copy_tree(
+ self, infile, outfile,
+ preserve_mode=1, preserve_times=1, preserve_symlinks=0, level=1
+ ):
+ assert preserve_mode and preserve_times and not preserve_symlinks
+ exclude = self.get_exclusions()
+
+ if not exclude:
+ return orig.install_lib.copy_tree(self, infile, outfile)
+
+ # Exclude namespace package __init__.py* files from the output
+
+ from setuptools.archive_util import unpack_directory
+ from distutils import log
+
+ outfiles = []
+
+ def pf(src, dst):
+ if dst in exclude:
+ log.warn("Skipping installation of %s (namespace package)",
+ dst)
+ return False
+
+ log.info("copying %s -> %s", src, os.path.dirname(dst))
+ outfiles.append(dst)
+ return dst
+
+ unpack_directory(infile, outfile, pf)
+ return outfiles
+
+ def get_outputs(self):
+ outputs = orig.install_lib.get_outputs(self)
+ exclude = self.get_exclusions()
+ if exclude:
+ return [f for f in outputs if f not in exclude]
+ return outputs
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/install_scripts.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/install_scripts.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..8c9a15e2bb
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/install_scripts.py
@@ -0,0 +1,68 @@
+from distutils import log
+import distutils.command.install_scripts as orig
+import os
+import sys
+
+from pkg_resources import Distribution, PathMetadata, ensure_directory
+
+
+class install_scripts(orig.install_scripts):
+ """Do normal script install, plus any egg_info wrapper scripts"""
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ orig.install_scripts.initialize_options(self)
+ self.no_ep = False
+
+ def run(self):
+ import setuptools.command.easy_install as ei
+
+ self.run_command("egg_info")
+ if self.distribution.scripts:
+ orig.install_scripts.run(self) # run first to set up self.outfiles
+ else:
+ self.outfiles = []
+ if self.no_ep:
+ # don't install entry point scripts into .egg file!
+ return
+
+ ei_cmd = self.get_finalized_command("egg_info")
+ dist = Distribution(
+ ei_cmd.egg_base, PathMetadata(ei_cmd.egg_base, ei_cmd.egg_info),
+ ei_cmd.egg_name, ei_cmd.egg_version,
+ )
+ bs_cmd = self.get_finalized_command('build_scripts')
+ exec_param = getattr(bs_cmd, 'executable', None)
+ try:
+ bw_cmd = self.get_finalized_command("bdist_wininst")
+ is_wininst = getattr(bw_cmd, '_is_running', False)
+ except ImportError:
+ is_wininst = False
+ writer = ei.ScriptWriter
+ if is_wininst:
+ exec_param = "python.exe"
+ writer = ei.WindowsScriptWriter
+ if exec_param == sys.executable:
+ # In case the path to the Python executable contains a space, wrap
+ # it so it's not split up.
+ exec_param = [exec_param]
+ # resolve the writer to the environment
+ writer = writer.best()
+ cmd = writer.command_spec_class.best().from_param(exec_param)
+ for args in writer.get_args(dist, cmd.as_header()):
+ self.write_script(*args)
+
+ def write_script(self, script_name, contents, mode="t", *ignored):
+ """Write an executable file to the scripts directory"""
+ from setuptools.command.easy_install import chmod, current_umask
+
+ log.info("Installing %s script to %s", script_name, self.install_dir)
+ target = os.path.join(self.install_dir, script_name)
+ self.outfiles.append(target)
+
+ mask = current_umask()
+ if not self.dry_run:
+ ensure_directory(target)
+ f = open(target, "w" + mode)
+ f.write(contents)
+ f.close()
+ chmod(target, 0o777 - mask)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/launcher manifest.xml b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/launcher manifest.xml
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..5972a96d8d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/launcher manifest.xml
@@ -0,0 +1,15 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?>
+<assembly xmlns="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:asm.v1" manifestVersion="1.0">
+ <assemblyIdentity version="1.0.0.0"
+ processorArchitecture="X86"
+ name="%(name)s"
+ type="win32"/>
+ <!-- Identify the application security requirements. -->
+ <trustInfo xmlns="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:asm.v3">
+ <security>
+ <requestedPrivileges>
+ <requestedExecutionLevel level="asInvoker" uiAccess="false"/>
+ </requestedPrivileges>
+ </security>
+ </trustInfo>
+</assembly>
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/py36compat.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/py36compat.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..343547a4d3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/py36compat.py
@@ -0,0 +1,134 @@
+import os
+from glob import glob
+from distutils.util import convert_path
+from distutils.command import sdist
+
+
+class sdist_add_defaults:
+ """
+ Mix-in providing forward-compatibility for functionality as found in
+ distutils on Python 3.7.
+
+ Do not edit the code in this class except to update functionality
+ as implemented in distutils. Instead, override in the subclass.
+ """
+
+ def add_defaults(self):
+ """Add all the default files to self.filelist:
+ - README or README.txt
+ - setup.py
+ - test/test*.py
+ - all pure Python modules mentioned in setup script
+ - all files pointed by package_data (build_py)
+ - all files defined in data_files.
+ - all files defined as scripts.
+ - all C sources listed as part of extensions or C libraries
+ in the setup script (doesn't catch C headers!)
+ Warns if (README or README.txt) or setup.py are missing; everything
+ else is optional.
+ """
+ self._add_defaults_standards()
+ self._add_defaults_optional()
+ self._add_defaults_python()
+ self._add_defaults_data_files()
+ self._add_defaults_ext()
+ self._add_defaults_c_libs()
+ self._add_defaults_scripts()
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _cs_path_exists(fspath):
+ """
+ Case-sensitive path existence check
+
+ >>> sdist_add_defaults._cs_path_exists(__file__)
+ True
+ >>> sdist_add_defaults._cs_path_exists(__file__.upper())
+ False
+ """
+ if not os.path.exists(fspath):
+ return False
+ # make absolute so we always have a directory
+ abspath = os.path.abspath(fspath)
+ directory, filename = os.path.split(abspath)
+ return filename in os.listdir(directory)
+
+ def _add_defaults_standards(self):
+ standards = [self.READMES, self.distribution.script_name]
+ for fn in standards:
+ if isinstance(fn, tuple):
+ alts = fn
+ got_it = False
+ for fn in alts:
+ if self._cs_path_exists(fn):
+ got_it = True
+ self.filelist.append(fn)
+ break
+
+ if not got_it:
+ self.warn("standard file not found: should have one of " +
+ ', '.join(alts))
+ else:
+ if self._cs_path_exists(fn):
+ self.filelist.append(fn)
+ else:
+ self.warn("standard file '%s' not found" % fn)
+
+ def _add_defaults_optional(self):
+ optional = ['test/test*.py', 'setup.cfg']
+ for pattern in optional:
+ files = filter(os.path.isfile, glob(pattern))
+ self.filelist.extend(files)
+
+ def _add_defaults_python(self):
+ # build_py is used to get:
+ # - python modules
+ # - files defined in package_data
+ build_py = self.get_finalized_command('build_py')
+
+ # getting python files
+ if self.distribution.has_pure_modules():
+ self.filelist.extend(build_py.get_source_files())
+
+ # getting package_data files
+ # (computed in build_py.data_files by build_py.finalize_options)
+ for pkg, src_dir, build_dir, filenames in build_py.data_files:
+ for filename in filenames:
+ self.filelist.append(os.path.join(src_dir, filename))
+
+ def _add_defaults_data_files(self):
+ # getting distribution.data_files
+ if self.distribution.has_data_files():
+ for item in self.distribution.data_files:
+ if isinstance(item, str):
+ # plain file
+ item = convert_path(item)
+ if os.path.isfile(item):
+ self.filelist.append(item)
+ else:
+ # a (dirname, filenames) tuple
+ dirname, filenames = item
+ for f in filenames:
+ f = convert_path(f)
+ if os.path.isfile(f):
+ self.filelist.append(f)
+
+ def _add_defaults_ext(self):
+ if self.distribution.has_ext_modules():
+ build_ext = self.get_finalized_command('build_ext')
+ self.filelist.extend(build_ext.get_source_files())
+
+ def _add_defaults_c_libs(self):
+ if self.distribution.has_c_libraries():
+ build_clib = self.get_finalized_command('build_clib')
+ self.filelist.extend(build_clib.get_source_files())
+
+ def _add_defaults_scripts(self):
+ if self.distribution.has_scripts():
+ build_scripts = self.get_finalized_command('build_scripts')
+ self.filelist.extend(build_scripts.get_source_files())
+
+
+if hasattr(sdist.sdist, '_add_defaults_standards'):
+ # disable the functionality already available upstream
+ class sdist_add_defaults: # noqa
+ pass
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/register.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/register.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..b8266b9a60
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/register.py
@@ -0,0 +1,18 @@
+from distutils import log
+import distutils.command.register as orig
+
+from setuptools.errors import RemovedCommandError
+
+
+class register(orig.register):
+ """Formerly used to register packages on PyPI."""
+
+ def run(self):
+ msg = (
+ "The register command has been removed, use twine to upload "
+ + "instead (https://pypi.org/p/twine)"
+ )
+
+ self.announce("ERROR: " + msg, log.ERROR)
+
+ raise RemovedCommandError(msg)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/rotate.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/rotate.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..74795ba922
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/rotate.py
@@ -0,0 +1,64 @@
+from distutils.util import convert_path
+from distutils import log
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsOptionError
+import os
+import shutil
+
+from setuptools import Command
+
+
+class rotate(Command):
+ """Delete older distributions"""
+
+ description = "delete older distributions, keeping N newest files"
+ user_options = [
+ ('match=', 'm', "patterns to match (required)"),
+ ('dist-dir=', 'd', "directory where the distributions are"),
+ ('keep=', 'k', "number of matching distributions to keep"),
+ ]
+
+ boolean_options = []
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.match = None
+ self.dist_dir = None
+ self.keep = None
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ if self.match is None:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ "Must specify one or more (comma-separated) match patterns "
+ "(e.g. '.zip' or '.egg')"
+ )
+ if self.keep is None:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError("Must specify number of files to keep")
+ try:
+ self.keep = int(self.keep)
+ except ValueError as e:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError("--keep must be an integer") from e
+ if isinstance(self.match, str):
+ self.match = [
+ convert_path(p.strip()) for p in self.match.split(',')
+ ]
+ self.set_undefined_options('bdist', ('dist_dir', 'dist_dir'))
+
+ def run(self):
+ self.run_command("egg_info")
+ from glob import glob
+
+ for pattern in self.match:
+ pattern = self.distribution.get_name() + '*' + pattern
+ files = glob(os.path.join(self.dist_dir, pattern))
+ files = [(os.path.getmtime(f), f) for f in files]
+ files.sort()
+ files.reverse()
+
+ log.info("%d file(s) matching %s", len(files), pattern)
+ files = files[self.keep:]
+ for (t, f) in files:
+ log.info("Deleting %s", f)
+ if not self.dry_run:
+ if os.path.isdir(f):
+ shutil.rmtree(f)
+ else:
+ os.unlink(f)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/saveopts.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/saveopts.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..611cec5528
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/saveopts.py
@@ -0,0 +1,22 @@
+from setuptools.command.setopt import edit_config, option_base
+
+
+class saveopts(option_base):
+ """Save command-line options to a file"""
+
+ description = "save supplied options to setup.cfg or other config file"
+
+ def run(self):
+ dist = self.distribution
+ settings = {}
+
+ for cmd in dist.command_options:
+
+ if cmd == 'saveopts':
+ continue # don't save our own options!
+
+ for opt, (src, val) in dist.get_option_dict(cmd).items():
+ if src == "command line":
+ settings.setdefault(cmd, {})[opt] = val
+
+ edit_config(self.filename, settings, self.dry_run)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/sdist.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/sdist.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..887b7efa05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/sdist.py
@@ -0,0 +1,222 @@
+from distutils import log
+import distutils.command.sdist as orig
+import os
+import sys
+import io
+import contextlib
+
+from setuptools.extern import ordered_set
+
+from .py36compat import sdist_add_defaults
+
+import pkg_resources
+
+_default_revctrl = list
+
+
+def walk_revctrl(dirname=''):
+ """Find all files under revision control"""
+ for ep in pkg_resources.iter_entry_points('setuptools.file_finders'):
+ for item in ep.load()(dirname):
+ yield item
+
+
+class sdist(sdist_add_defaults, orig.sdist):
+ """Smart sdist that finds anything supported by revision control"""
+
+ user_options = [
+ ('formats=', None,
+ "formats for source distribution (comma-separated list)"),
+ ('keep-temp', 'k',
+ "keep the distribution tree around after creating " +
+ "archive file(s)"),
+ ('dist-dir=', 'd',
+ "directory to put the source distribution archive(s) in "
+ "[default: dist]"),
+ ]
+
+ negative_opt = {}
+
+ README_EXTENSIONS = ['', '.rst', '.txt', '.md']
+ READMES = tuple('README{0}'.format(ext) for ext in README_EXTENSIONS)
+
+ def run(self):
+ self.run_command('egg_info')
+ ei_cmd = self.get_finalized_command('egg_info')
+ self.filelist = ei_cmd.filelist
+ self.filelist.append(os.path.join(ei_cmd.egg_info, 'SOURCES.txt'))
+ self.check_readme()
+
+ # Run sub commands
+ for cmd_name in self.get_sub_commands():
+ self.run_command(cmd_name)
+
+ self.make_distribution()
+
+ dist_files = getattr(self.distribution, 'dist_files', [])
+ for file in self.archive_files:
+ data = ('sdist', '', file)
+ if data not in dist_files:
+ dist_files.append(data)
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ orig.sdist.initialize_options(self)
+
+ self._default_to_gztar()
+
+ def _default_to_gztar(self):
+ # only needed on Python prior to 3.6.
+ if sys.version_info >= (3, 6, 0, 'beta', 1):
+ return
+ self.formats = ['gztar']
+
+ def make_distribution(self):
+ """
+ Workaround for #516
+ """
+ with self._remove_os_link():
+ orig.sdist.make_distribution(self)
+
+ @staticmethod
+ @contextlib.contextmanager
+ def _remove_os_link():
+ """
+ In a context, remove and restore os.link if it exists
+ """
+
+ class NoValue:
+ pass
+
+ orig_val = getattr(os, 'link', NoValue)
+ try:
+ del os.link
+ except Exception:
+ pass
+ try:
+ yield
+ finally:
+ if orig_val is not NoValue:
+ setattr(os, 'link', orig_val)
+
+ def _add_defaults_optional(self):
+ super()._add_defaults_optional()
+ if os.path.isfile('pyproject.toml'):
+ self.filelist.append('pyproject.toml')
+
+ def _add_defaults_python(self):
+ """getting python files"""
+ if self.distribution.has_pure_modules():
+ build_py = self.get_finalized_command('build_py')
+ self.filelist.extend(build_py.get_source_files())
+ self._add_data_files(self._safe_data_files(build_py))
+
+ def _safe_data_files(self, build_py):
+ """
+ Extracting data_files from build_py is known to cause
+ infinite recursion errors when `include_package_data`
+ is enabled, so suppress it in that case.
+ """
+ if self.distribution.include_package_data:
+ return ()
+ return build_py.data_files
+
+ def _add_data_files(self, data_files):
+ """
+ Add data files as found in build_py.data_files.
+ """
+ self.filelist.extend(
+ os.path.join(src_dir, name)
+ for _, src_dir, _, filenames in data_files
+ for name in filenames
+ )
+
+ def _add_defaults_data_files(self):
+ try:
+ super()._add_defaults_data_files()
+ except TypeError:
+ log.warn("data_files contains unexpected objects")
+
+ def check_readme(self):
+ for f in self.READMES:
+ if os.path.exists(f):
+ return
+ else:
+ self.warn(
+ "standard file not found: should have one of " +
+ ', '.join(self.READMES)
+ )
+
+ def make_release_tree(self, base_dir, files):
+ orig.sdist.make_release_tree(self, base_dir, files)
+
+ # Save any egg_info command line options used to create this sdist
+ dest = os.path.join(base_dir, 'setup.cfg')
+ if hasattr(os, 'link') and os.path.exists(dest):
+ # unlink and re-copy, since it might be hard-linked, and
+ # we don't want to change the source version
+ os.unlink(dest)
+ self.copy_file('setup.cfg', dest)
+
+ self.get_finalized_command('egg_info').save_version_info(dest)
+
+ def _manifest_is_not_generated(self):
+ # check for special comment used in 2.7.1 and higher
+ if not os.path.isfile(self.manifest):
+ return False
+
+ with io.open(self.manifest, 'rb') as fp:
+ first_line = fp.readline()
+ return (first_line !=
+ '# file GENERATED by distutils, do NOT edit\n'.encode())
+
+ def read_manifest(self):
+ """Read the manifest file (named by 'self.manifest') and use it to
+ fill in 'self.filelist', the list of files to include in the source
+ distribution.
+ """
+ log.info("reading manifest file '%s'", self.manifest)
+ manifest = open(self.manifest, 'rb')
+ for line in manifest:
+ # The manifest must contain UTF-8. See #303.
+ try:
+ line = line.decode('UTF-8')
+ except UnicodeDecodeError:
+ log.warn("%r not UTF-8 decodable -- skipping" % line)
+ continue
+ # ignore comments and blank lines
+ line = line.strip()
+ if line.startswith('#') or not line:
+ continue
+ self.filelist.append(line)
+ manifest.close()
+
+ def check_license(self):
+ """Checks if license_file' or 'license_files' is configured and adds any
+ valid paths to 'self.filelist'.
+ """
+
+ files = ordered_set.OrderedSet()
+
+ opts = self.distribution.get_option_dict('metadata')
+
+ # ignore the source of the value
+ _, license_file = opts.get('license_file', (None, None))
+
+ if license_file is None:
+ log.debug("'license_file' option was not specified")
+ else:
+ files.add(license_file)
+
+ try:
+ files.update(self.distribution.metadata.license_files)
+ except TypeError:
+ log.warn("warning: 'license_files' option is malformed")
+
+ for f in files:
+ if not os.path.exists(f):
+ log.warn(
+ "warning: Failed to find the configured license file '%s'",
+ f)
+ files.remove(f)
+
+ self.filelist.extend(files)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/setopt.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/setopt.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..e18057c81e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/setopt.py
@@ -0,0 +1,148 @@
+from distutils.util import convert_path
+from distutils import log
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsOptionError
+import distutils
+import os
+import configparser
+
+from setuptools import Command
+
+__all__ = ['config_file', 'edit_config', 'option_base', 'setopt']
+
+
+def config_file(kind="local"):
+ """Get the filename of the distutils, local, global, or per-user config
+
+ `kind` must be one of "local", "global", or "user"
+ """
+ if kind == 'local':
+ return 'setup.cfg'
+ if kind == 'global':
+ return os.path.join(
+ os.path.dirname(distutils.__file__), 'distutils.cfg'
+ )
+ if kind == 'user':
+ dot = os.name == 'posix' and '.' or ''
+ return os.path.expanduser(convert_path("~/%spydistutils.cfg" % dot))
+ raise ValueError(
+ "config_file() type must be 'local', 'global', or 'user'", kind
+ )
+
+
+def edit_config(filename, settings, dry_run=False):
+ """Edit a configuration file to include `settings`
+
+ `settings` is a dictionary of dictionaries or ``None`` values, keyed by
+ command/section name. A ``None`` value means to delete the entire section,
+ while a dictionary lists settings to be changed or deleted in that section.
+ A setting of ``None`` means to delete that setting.
+ """
+ log.debug("Reading configuration from %s", filename)
+ opts = configparser.RawConfigParser()
+ opts.read([filename])
+ for section, options in settings.items():
+ if options is None:
+ log.info("Deleting section [%s] from %s", section, filename)
+ opts.remove_section(section)
+ else:
+ if not opts.has_section(section):
+ log.debug("Adding new section [%s] to %s", section, filename)
+ opts.add_section(section)
+ for option, value in options.items():
+ if value is None:
+ log.debug(
+ "Deleting %s.%s from %s",
+ section, option, filename
+ )
+ opts.remove_option(section, option)
+ if not opts.options(section):
+ log.info("Deleting empty [%s] section from %s",
+ section, filename)
+ opts.remove_section(section)
+ else:
+ log.debug(
+ "Setting %s.%s to %r in %s",
+ section, option, value, filename
+ )
+ opts.set(section, option, value)
+
+ log.info("Writing %s", filename)
+ if not dry_run:
+ with open(filename, 'w') as f:
+ opts.write(f)
+
+
+class option_base(Command):
+ """Abstract base class for commands that mess with config files"""
+
+ user_options = [
+ ('global-config', 'g',
+ "save options to the site-wide distutils.cfg file"),
+ ('user-config', 'u',
+ "save options to the current user's pydistutils.cfg file"),
+ ('filename=', 'f',
+ "configuration file to use (default=setup.cfg)"),
+ ]
+
+ boolean_options = [
+ 'global-config', 'user-config',
+ ]
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.global_config = None
+ self.user_config = None
+ self.filename = None
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ filenames = []
+ if self.global_config:
+ filenames.append(config_file('global'))
+ if self.user_config:
+ filenames.append(config_file('user'))
+ if self.filename is not None:
+ filenames.append(self.filename)
+ if not filenames:
+ filenames.append(config_file('local'))
+ if len(filenames) > 1:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ "Must specify only one configuration file option",
+ filenames
+ )
+ self.filename, = filenames
+
+
+class setopt(option_base):
+ """Save command-line options to a file"""
+
+ description = "set an option in setup.cfg or another config file"
+
+ user_options = [
+ ('command=', 'c', 'command to set an option for'),
+ ('option=', 'o', 'option to set'),
+ ('set-value=', 's', 'value of the option'),
+ ('remove', 'r', 'remove (unset) the value'),
+ ] + option_base.user_options
+
+ boolean_options = option_base.boolean_options + ['remove']
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ option_base.initialize_options(self)
+ self.command = None
+ self.option = None
+ self.set_value = None
+ self.remove = None
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ option_base.finalize_options(self)
+ if self.command is None or self.option is None:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError("Must specify --command *and* --option")
+ if self.set_value is None and not self.remove:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError("Must specify --set-value or --remove")
+
+ def run(self):
+ edit_config(
+ self.filename, {
+ self.command: {self.option.replace('-', '_'): self.set_value}
+ },
+ self.dry_run
+ )
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/test.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/test.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..cf71ad015d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/test.py
@@ -0,0 +1,274 @@
+import os
+import operator
+import sys
+import contextlib
+import itertools
+import unittest
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsError, DistutilsOptionError
+from distutils import log
+from unittest import TestLoader
+
+from pkg_resources import (resource_listdir, resource_exists, normalize_path,
+ working_set, _namespace_packages, evaluate_marker,
+ add_activation_listener, require, EntryPoint)
+from setuptools import Command
+from .build_py import _unique_everseen
+
+
+class ScanningLoader(TestLoader):
+
+ def __init__(self):
+ TestLoader.__init__(self)
+ self._visited = set()
+
+ def loadTestsFromModule(self, module, pattern=None):
+ """Return a suite of all tests cases contained in the given module
+
+ If the module is a package, load tests from all the modules in it.
+ If the module has an ``additional_tests`` function, call it and add
+ the return value to the tests.
+ """
+ if module in self._visited:
+ return None
+ self._visited.add(module)
+
+ tests = []
+ tests.append(TestLoader.loadTestsFromModule(self, module))
+
+ if hasattr(module, "additional_tests"):
+ tests.append(module.additional_tests())
+
+ if hasattr(module, '__path__'):
+ for file in resource_listdir(module.__name__, ''):
+ if file.endswith('.py') and file != '__init__.py':
+ submodule = module.__name__ + '.' + file[:-3]
+ else:
+ if resource_exists(module.__name__, file + '/__init__.py'):
+ submodule = module.__name__ + '.' + file
+ else:
+ continue
+ tests.append(self.loadTestsFromName(submodule))
+
+ if len(tests) != 1:
+ return self.suiteClass(tests)
+ else:
+ return tests[0] # don't create a nested suite for only one return
+
+
+# adapted from jaraco.classes.properties:NonDataProperty
+class NonDataProperty:
+ def __init__(self, fget):
+ self.fget = fget
+
+ def __get__(self, obj, objtype=None):
+ if obj is None:
+ return self
+ return self.fget(obj)
+
+
+class test(Command):
+ """Command to run unit tests after in-place build"""
+
+ description = "run unit tests after in-place build (deprecated)"
+
+ user_options = [
+ ('test-module=', 'm', "Run 'test_suite' in specified module"),
+ ('test-suite=', 's',
+ "Run single test, case or suite (e.g. 'module.test_suite')"),
+ ('test-runner=', 'r', "Test runner to use"),
+ ]
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ self.test_suite = None
+ self.test_module = None
+ self.test_loader = None
+ self.test_runner = None
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+
+ if self.test_suite and self.test_module:
+ msg = "You may specify a module or a suite, but not both"
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(msg)
+
+ if self.test_suite is None:
+ if self.test_module is None:
+ self.test_suite = self.distribution.test_suite
+ else:
+ self.test_suite = self.test_module + ".test_suite"
+
+ if self.test_loader is None:
+ self.test_loader = getattr(self.distribution, 'test_loader', None)
+ if self.test_loader is None:
+ self.test_loader = "setuptools.command.test:ScanningLoader"
+ if self.test_runner is None:
+ self.test_runner = getattr(self.distribution, 'test_runner', None)
+
+ @NonDataProperty
+ def test_args(self):
+ return list(self._test_args())
+
+ def _test_args(self):
+ if not self.test_suite and sys.version_info >= (2, 7):
+ yield 'discover'
+ if self.verbose:
+ yield '--verbose'
+ if self.test_suite:
+ yield self.test_suite
+
+ def with_project_on_sys_path(self, func):
+ """
+ Backward compatibility for project_on_sys_path context.
+ """
+ with self.project_on_sys_path():
+ func()
+
+ @contextlib.contextmanager
+ def project_on_sys_path(self, include_dists=[]):
+ with_2to3 = getattr(self.distribution, 'use_2to3', False)
+
+ if with_2to3:
+ # If we run 2to3 we can not do this inplace:
+
+ # Ensure metadata is up-to-date
+ self.reinitialize_command('build_py', inplace=0)
+ self.run_command('build_py')
+ bpy_cmd = self.get_finalized_command("build_py")
+ build_path = normalize_path(bpy_cmd.build_lib)
+
+ # Build extensions
+ self.reinitialize_command('egg_info', egg_base=build_path)
+ self.run_command('egg_info')
+
+ self.reinitialize_command('build_ext', inplace=0)
+ self.run_command('build_ext')
+ else:
+ # Without 2to3 inplace works fine:
+ self.run_command('egg_info')
+
+ # Build extensions in-place
+ self.reinitialize_command('build_ext', inplace=1)
+ self.run_command('build_ext')
+
+ ei_cmd = self.get_finalized_command("egg_info")
+
+ old_path = sys.path[:]
+ old_modules = sys.modules.copy()
+
+ try:
+ project_path = normalize_path(ei_cmd.egg_base)
+ sys.path.insert(0, project_path)
+ working_set.__init__()
+ add_activation_listener(lambda dist: dist.activate())
+ require('%s==%s' % (ei_cmd.egg_name, ei_cmd.egg_version))
+ with self.paths_on_pythonpath([project_path]):
+ yield
+ finally:
+ sys.path[:] = old_path
+ sys.modules.clear()
+ sys.modules.update(old_modules)
+ working_set.__init__()
+
+ @staticmethod
+ @contextlib.contextmanager
+ def paths_on_pythonpath(paths):
+ """
+ Add the indicated paths to the head of the PYTHONPATH environment
+ variable so that subprocesses will also see the packages at
+ these paths.
+
+ Do this in a context that restores the value on exit.
+ """
+ nothing = object()
+ orig_pythonpath = os.environ.get('PYTHONPATH', nothing)
+ current_pythonpath = os.environ.get('PYTHONPATH', '')
+ try:
+ prefix = os.pathsep.join(_unique_everseen(paths))
+ to_join = filter(None, [prefix, current_pythonpath])
+ new_path = os.pathsep.join(to_join)
+ if new_path:
+ os.environ['PYTHONPATH'] = new_path
+ yield
+ finally:
+ if orig_pythonpath is nothing:
+ os.environ.pop('PYTHONPATH', None)
+ else:
+ os.environ['PYTHONPATH'] = orig_pythonpath
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def install_dists(dist):
+ """
+ Install the requirements indicated by self.distribution and
+ return an iterable of the dists that were built.
+ """
+ ir_d = dist.fetch_build_eggs(dist.install_requires)
+ tr_d = dist.fetch_build_eggs(dist.tests_require or [])
+ er_d = dist.fetch_build_eggs(
+ v for k, v in dist.extras_require.items()
+ if k.startswith(':') and evaluate_marker(k[1:])
+ )
+ return itertools.chain(ir_d, tr_d, er_d)
+
+ def run(self):
+ self.announce(
+ "WARNING: Testing via this command is deprecated and will be "
+ "removed in a future version. Users looking for a generic test "
+ "entry point independent of test runner are encouraged to use "
+ "tox.",
+ log.WARN,
+ )
+
+ installed_dists = self.install_dists(self.distribution)
+
+ cmd = ' '.join(self._argv)
+ if self.dry_run:
+ self.announce('skipping "%s" (dry run)' % cmd)
+ return
+
+ self.announce('running "%s"' % cmd)
+
+ paths = map(operator.attrgetter('location'), installed_dists)
+ with self.paths_on_pythonpath(paths):
+ with self.project_on_sys_path():
+ self.run_tests()
+
+ def run_tests(self):
+ # Purge modules under test from sys.modules. The test loader will
+ # re-import them from the build location. Required when 2to3 is used
+ # with namespace packages.
+ if getattr(self.distribution, 'use_2to3', False):
+ module = self.test_suite.split('.')[0]
+ if module in _namespace_packages:
+ del_modules = []
+ if module in sys.modules:
+ del_modules.append(module)
+ module += '.'
+ for name in sys.modules:
+ if name.startswith(module):
+ del_modules.append(name)
+ list(map(sys.modules.__delitem__, del_modules))
+
+ test = unittest.main(
+ None, None, self._argv,
+ testLoader=self._resolve_as_ep(self.test_loader),
+ testRunner=self._resolve_as_ep(self.test_runner),
+ exit=False,
+ )
+ if not test.result.wasSuccessful():
+ msg = 'Test failed: %s' % test.result
+ self.announce(msg, log.ERROR)
+ raise DistutilsError(msg)
+
+ @property
+ def _argv(self):
+ return ['unittest'] + self.test_args
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _resolve_as_ep(val):
+ """
+ Load the indicated attribute value, called, as a as if it were
+ specified as an entry point.
+ """
+ if val is None:
+ return
+ parsed = EntryPoint.parse("x=" + val)
+ return parsed.resolve()()
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/upload.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/upload.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..ec7f81e227
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/upload.py
@@ -0,0 +1,17 @@
+from distutils import log
+from distutils.command import upload as orig
+
+from setuptools.errors import RemovedCommandError
+
+
+class upload(orig.upload):
+ """Formerly used to upload packages to PyPI."""
+
+ def run(self):
+ msg = (
+ "The upload command has been removed, use twine to upload "
+ + "instead (https://pypi.org/p/twine)"
+ )
+
+ self.announce("ERROR: " + msg, log.ERROR)
+ raise RemovedCommandError(msg)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/upload_docs.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/upload_docs.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..2559458a1d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/command/upload_docs.py
@@ -0,0 +1,202 @@
+# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
+"""upload_docs
+
+Implements a Distutils 'upload_docs' subcommand (upload documentation to
+PyPI's pythonhosted.org).
+"""
+
+from base64 import standard_b64encode
+from distutils import log
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsOptionError
+import os
+import socket
+import zipfile
+import tempfile
+import shutil
+import itertools
+import functools
+import http.client
+import urllib.parse
+
+from pkg_resources import iter_entry_points
+from .upload import upload
+
+
+def _encode(s):
+ return s.encode('utf-8', 'surrogateescape')
+
+
+class upload_docs(upload):
+ # override the default repository as upload_docs isn't
+ # supported by Warehouse (and won't be).
+ DEFAULT_REPOSITORY = 'https://pypi.python.org/pypi/'
+
+ description = 'Upload documentation to PyPI'
+
+ user_options = [
+ ('repository=', 'r',
+ "url of repository [default: %s]" % upload.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY),
+ ('show-response', None,
+ 'display full response text from server'),
+ ('upload-dir=', None, 'directory to upload'),
+ ]
+ boolean_options = upload.boolean_options
+
+ def has_sphinx(self):
+ if self.upload_dir is None:
+ for ep in iter_entry_points('distutils.commands', 'build_sphinx'):
+ return True
+
+ sub_commands = [('build_sphinx', has_sphinx)]
+
+ def initialize_options(self):
+ upload.initialize_options(self)
+ self.upload_dir = None
+ self.target_dir = None
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ upload.finalize_options(self)
+ if self.upload_dir is None:
+ if self.has_sphinx():
+ build_sphinx = self.get_finalized_command('build_sphinx')
+ self.target_dir = build_sphinx.builder_target_dir
+ else:
+ build = self.get_finalized_command('build')
+ self.target_dir = os.path.join(build.build_base, 'docs')
+ else:
+ self.ensure_dirname('upload_dir')
+ self.target_dir = self.upload_dir
+ if 'pypi.python.org' in self.repository:
+ log.warn("Upload_docs command is deprecated. Use RTD instead.")
+ self.announce('Using upload directory %s' % self.target_dir)
+
+ def create_zipfile(self, filename):
+ zip_file = zipfile.ZipFile(filename, "w")
+ try:
+ self.mkpath(self.target_dir) # just in case
+ for root, dirs, files in os.walk(self.target_dir):
+ if root == self.target_dir and not files:
+ tmpl = "no files found in upload directory '%s'"
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(tmpl % self.target_dir)
+ for name in files:
+ full = os.path.join(root, name)
+ relative = root[len(self.target_dir):].lstrip(os.path.sep)
+ dest = os.path.join(relative, name)
+ zip_file.write(full, dest)
+ finally:
+ zip_file.close()
+
+ def run(self):
+ # Run sub commands
+ for cmd_name in self.get_sub_commands():
+ self.run_command(cmd_name)
+
+ tmp_dir = tempfile.mkdtemp()
+ name = self.distribution.metadata.get_name()
+ zip_file = os.path.join(tmp_dir, "%s.zip" % name)
+ try:
+ self.create_zipfile(zip_file)
+ self.upload_file(zip_file)
+ finally:
+ shutil.rmtree(tmp_dir)
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _build_part(item, sep_boundary):
+ key, values = item
+ title = '\nContent-Disposition: form-data; name="%s"' % key
+ # handle multiple entries for the same name
+ if not isinstance(values, list):
+ values = [values]
+ for value in values:
+ if isinstance(value, tuple):
+ title += '; filename="%s"' % value[0]
+ value = value[1]
+ else:
+ value = _encode(value)
+ yield sep_boundary
+ yield _encode(title)
+ yield b"\n\n"
+ yield value
+ if value and value[-1:] == b'\r':
+ yield b'\n' # write an extra newline (lurve Macs)
+
+ @classmethod
+ def _build_multipart(cls, data):
+ """
+ Build up the MIME payload for the POST data
+ """
+ boundary = '--------------GHSKFJDLGDS7543FJKLFHRE75642756743254'
+ sep_boundary = b'\n--' + boundary.encode('ascii')
+ end_boundary = sep_boundary + b'--'
+ end_items = end_boundary, b"\n",
+ builder = functools.partial(
+ cls._build_part,
+ sep_boundary=sep_boundary,
+ )
+ part_groups = map(builder, data.items())
+ parts = itertools.chain.from_iterable(part_groups)
+ body_items = itertools.chain(parts, end_items)
+ content_type = 'multipart/form-data; boundary=%s' % boundary
+ return b''.join(body_items), content_type
+
+ def upload_file(self, filename):
+ with open(filename, 'rb') as f:
+ content = f.read()
+ meta = self.distribution.metadata
+ data = {
+ ':action': 'doc_upload',
+ 'name': meta.get_name(),
+ 'content': (os.path.basename(filename), content),
+ }
+ # set up the authentication
+ credentials = _encode(self.username + ':' + self.password)
+ credentials = standard_b64encode(credentials).decode('ascii')
+ auth = "Basic " + credentials
+
+ body, ct = self._build_multipart(data)
+
+ msg = "Submitting documentation to %s" % (self.repository)
+ self.announce(msg, log.INFO)
+
+ # build the Request
+ # We can't use urllib2 since we need to send the Basic
+ # auth right with the first request
+ schema, netloc, url, params, query, fragments = \
+ urllib.parse.urlparse(self.repository)
+ assert not params and not query and not fragments
+ if schema == 'http':
+ conn = http.client.HTTPConnection(netloc)
+ elif schema == 'https':
+ conn = http.client.HTTPSConnection(netloc)
+ else:
+ raise AssertionError("unsupported schema " + schema)
+
+ data = ''
+ try:
+ conn.connect()
+ conn.putrequest("POST", url)
+ content_type = ct
+ conn.putheader('Content-type', content_type)
+ conn.putheader('Content-length', str(len(body)))
+ conn.putheader('Authorization', auth)
+ conn.endheaders()
+ conn.send(body)
+ except socket.error as e:
+ self.announce(str(e), log.ERROR)
+ return
+
+ r = conn.getresponse()
+ if r.status == 200:
+ msg = 'Server response (%s): %s' % (r.status, r.reason)
+ self.announce(msg, log.INFO)
+ elif r.status == 301:
+ location = r.getheader('Location')
+ if location is None:
+ location = 'https://pythonhosted.org/%s/' % meta.get_name()
+ msg = 'Upload successful. Visit %s' % location
+ self.announce(msg, log.INFO)
+ else:
+ msg = 'Upload failed (%s): %s' % (r.status, r.reason)
+ self.announce(msg, log.ERROR)
+ if self.show_response:
+ print('-' * 75, r.read(), '-' * 75)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/config.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/config.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..af3a3bcbd5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/config.py
@@ -0,0 +1,693 @@
+import ast
+import io
+import os
+import sys
+
+import warnings
+import functools
+import importlib
+from collections import defaultdict
+from functools import partial
+from functools import wraps
+import contextlib
+
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsOptionError, DistutilsFileError
+from setuptools.extern.packaging.version import LegacyVersion, parse
+from setuptools.extern.packaging.specifiers import SpecifierSet
+
+
+class StaticModule:
+ """
+ Attempt to load the module by the name
+ """
+ def __init__(self, name):
+ spec = importlib.util.find_spec(name)
+ with open(spec.origin) as strm:
+ src = strm.read()
+ module = ast.parse(src)
+ vars(self).update(locals())
+ del self.self
+
+ def __getattr__(self, attr):
+ try:
+ return next(
+ ast.literal_eval(statement.value)
+ for statement in self.module.body
+ if isinstance(statement, ast.Assign)
+ for target in statement.targets
+ if isinstance(target, ast.Name) and target.id == attr
+ )
+ except Exception as e:
+ raise AttributeError(
+ "{self.name} has no attribute {attr}".format(**locals())
+ ) from e
+
+
+@contextlib.contextmanager
+def patch_path(path):
+ """
+ Add path to front of sys.path for the duration of the context.
+ """
+ try:
+ sys.path.insert(0, path)
+ yield
+ finally:
+ sys.path.remove(path)
+
+
+def read_configuration(
+ filepath, find_others=False, ignore_option_errors=False):
+ """Read given configuration file and returns options from it as a dict.
+
+ :param str|unicode filepath: Path to configuration file
+ to get options from.
+
+ :param bool find_others: Whether to search for other configuration files
+ which could be on in various places.
+
+ :param bool ignore_option_errors: Whether to silently ignore
+ options, values of which could not be resolved (e.g. due to exceptions
+ in directives such as file:, attr:, etc.).
+ If False exceptions are propagated as expected.
+
+ :rtype: dict
+ """
+ from setuptools.dist import Distribution, _Distribution
+
+ filepath = os.path.abspath(filepath)
+
+ if not os.path.isfile(filepath):
+ raise DistutilsFileError(
+ 'Configuration file %s does not exist.' % filepath)
+
+ current_directory = os.getcwd()
+ os.chdir(os.path.dirname(filepath))
+
+ try:
+ dist = Distribution()
+
+ filenames = dist.find_config_files() if find_others else []
+ if filepath not in filenames:
+ filenames.append(filepath)
+
+ _Distribution.parse_config_files(dist, filenames=filenames)
+
+ handlers = parse_configuration(
+ dist, dist.command_options,
+ ignore_option_errors=ignore_option_errors)
+
+ finally:
+ os.chdir(current_directory)
+
+ return configuration_to_dict(handlers)
+
+
+def _get_option(target_obj, key):
+ """
+ Given a target object and option key, get that option from
+ the target object, either through a get_{key} method or
+ from an attribute directly.
+ """
+ getter_name = 'get_{key}'.format(**locals())
+ by_attribute = functools.partial(getattr, target_obj, key)
+ getter = getattr(target_obj, getter_name, by_attribute)
+ return getter()
+
+
+def configuration_to_dict(handlers):
+ """Returns configuration data gathered by given handlers as a dict.
+
+ :param list[ConfigHandler] handlers: Handlers list,
+ usually from parse_configuration()
+
+ :rtype: dict
+ """
+ config_dict = defaultdict(dict)
+
+ for handler in handlers:
+ for option in handler.set_options:
+ value = _get_option(handler.target_obj, option)
+ config_dict[handler.section_prefix][option] = value
+
+ return config_dict
+
+
+def parse_configuration(
+ distribution, command_options, ignore_option_errors=False):
+ """Performs additional parsing of configuration options
+ for a distribution.
+
+ Returns a list of used option handlers.
+
+ :param Distribution distribution:
+ :param dict command_options:
+ :param bool ignore_option_errors: Whether to silently ignore
+ options, values of which could not be resolved (e.g. due to exceptions
+ in directives such as file:, attr:, etc.).
+ If False exceptions are propagated as expected.
+ :rtype: list
+ """
+ options = ConfigOptionsHandler(
+ distribution, command_options, ignore_option_errors)
+ options.parse()
+
+ meta = ConfigMetadataHandler(
+ distribution.metadata, command_options, ignore_option_errors,
+ distribution.package_dir)
+ meta.parse()
+
+ return meta, options
+
+
+class ConfigHandler:
+ """Handles metadata supplied in configuration files."""
+
+ section_prefix = None
+ """Prefix for config sections handled by this handler.
+ Must be provided by class heirs.
+
+ """
+
+ aliases = {}
+ """Options aliases.
+ For compatibility with various packages. E.g.: d2to1 and pbr.
+ Note: `-` in keys is replaced with `_` by config parser.
+
+ """
+
+ def __init__(self, target_obj, options, ignore_option_errors=False):
+ sections = {}
+
+ section_prefix = self.section_prefix
+ for section_name, section_options in options.items():
+ if not section_name.startswith(section_prefix):
+ continue
+
+ section_name = section_name.replace(section_prefix, '').strip('.')
+ sections[section_name] = section_options
+
+ self.ignore_option_errors = ignore_option_errors
+ self.target_obj = target_obj
+ self.sections = sections
+ self.set_options = []
+
+ @property
+ def parsers(self):
+ """Metadata item name to parser function mapping."""
+ raise NotImplementedError(
+ '%s must provide .parsers property' % self.__class__.__name__)
+
+ def __setitem__(self, option_name, value):
+ unknown = tuple()
+ target_obj = self.target_obj
+
+ # Translate alias into real name.
+ option_name = self.aliases.get(option_name, option_name)
+
+ current_value = getattr(target_obj, option_name, unknown)
+
+ if current_value is unknown:
+ raise KeyError(option_name)
+
+ if current_value:
+ # Already inhabited. Skipping.
+ return
+
+ skip_option = False
+ parser = self.parsers.get(option_name)
+ if parser:
+ try:
+ value = parser(value)
+
+ except Exception:
+ skip_option = True
+ if not self.ignore_option_errors:
+ raise
+
+ if skip_option:
+ return
+
+ setter = getattr(target_obj, 'set_%s' % option_name, None)
+ if setter is None:
+ setattr(target_obj, option_name, value)
+ else:
+ setter(value)
+
+ self.set_options.append(option_name)
+
+ @classmethod
+ def _parse_list(cls, value, separator=','):
+ """Represents value as a list.
+
+ Value is split either by separator (defaults to comma) or by lines.
+
+ :param value:
+ :param separator: List items separator character.
+ :rtype: list
+ """
+ if isinstance(value, list): # _get_parser_compound case
+ return value
+
+ if '\n' in value:
+ value = value.splitlines()
+ else:
+ value = value.split(separator)
+
+ return [chunk.strip() for chunk in value if chunk.strip()]
+
+ @classmethod
+ def _parse_dict(cls, value):
+ """Represents value as a dict.
+
+ :param value:
+ :rtype: dict
+ """
+ separator = '='
+ result = {}
+ for line in cls._parse_list(value):
+ key, sep, val = line.partition(separator)
+ if sep != separator:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ 'Unable to parse option value to dict: %s' % value)
+ result[key.strip()] = val.strip()
+
+ return result
+
+ @classmethod
+ def _parse_bool(cls, value):
+ """Represents value as boolean.
+
+ :param value:
+ :rtype: bool
+ """
+ value = value.lower()
+ return value in ('1', 'true', 'yes')
+
+ @classmethod
+ def _exclude_files_parser(cls, key):
+ """Returns a parser function to make sure field inputs
+ are not files.
+
+ Parses a value after getting the key so error messages are
+ more informative.
+
+ :param key:
+ :rtype: callable
+ """
+ def parser(value):
+ exclude_directive = 'file:'
+ if value.startswith(exclude_directive):
+ raise ValueError(
+ 'Only strings are accepted for the {0} field, '
+ 'files are not accepted'.format(key))
+ return value
+ return parser
+
+ @classmethod
+ def _parse_file(cls, value):
+ """Represents value as a string, allowing including text
+ from nearest files using `file:` directive.
+
+ Directive is sandboxed and won't reach anything outside
+ directory with setup.py.
+
+ Examples:
+ file: README.rst, CHANGELOG.md, src/file.txt
+
+ :param str value:
+ :rtype: str
+ """
+ include_directive = 'file:'
+
+ if not isinstance(value, str):
+ return value
+
+ if not value.startswith(include_directive):
+ return value
+
+ spec = value[len(include_directive):]
+ filepaths = (os.path.abspath(path.strip()) for path in spec.split(','))
+ return '\n'.join(
+ cls._read_file(path)
+ for path in filepaths
+ if (cls._assert_local(path) or True)
+ and os.path.isfile(path)
+ )
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _assert_local(filepath):
+ if not filepath.startswith(os.getcwd()):
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ '`file:` directive can not access %s' % filepath)
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _read_file(filepath):
+ with io.open(filepath, encoding='utf-8') as f:
+ return f.read()
+
+ @classmethod
+ def _parse_attr(cls, value, package_dir=None):
+ """Represents value as a module attribute.
+
+ Examples:
+ attr: package.attr
+ attr: package.module.attr
+
+ :param str value:
+ :rtype: str
+ """
+ attr_directive = 'attr:'
+ if not value.startswith(attr_directive):
+ return value
+
+ attrs_path = value.replace(attr_directive, '').strip().split('.')
+ attr_name = attrs_path.pop()
+
+ module_name = '.'.join(attrs_path)
+ module_name = module_name or '__init__'
+
+ parent_path = os.getcwd()
+ if package_dir:
+ if attrs_path[0] in package_dir:
+ # A custom path was specified for the module we want to import
+ custom_path = package_dir[attrs_path[0]]
+ parts = custom_path.rsplit('/', 1)
+ if len(parts) > 1:
+ parent_path = os.path.join(os.getcwd(), parts[0])
+ module_name = parts[1]
+ else:
+ module_name = custom_path
+ elif '' in package_dir:
+ # A custom parent directory was specified for all root modules
+ parent_path = os.path.join(os.getcwd(), package_dir[''])
+
+ with patch_path(parent_path):
+ try:
+ # attempt to load value statically
+ return getattr(StaticModule(module_name), attr_name)
+ except Exception:
+ # fallback to simple import
+ module = importlib.import_module(module_name)
+
+ return getattr(module, attr_name)
+
+ @classmethod
+ def _get_parser_compound(cls, *parse_methods):
+ """Returns parser function to represents value as a list.
+
+ Parses a value applying given methods one after another.
+
+ :param parse_methods:
+ :rtype: callable
+ """
+ def parse(value):
+ parsed = value
+
+ for method in parse_methods:
+ parsed = method(parsed)
+
+ return parsed
+
+ return parse
+
+ @classmethod
+ def _parse_section_to_dict(cls, section_options, values_parser=None):
+ """Parses section options into a dictionary.
+
+ Optionally applies a given parser to values.
+
+ :param dict section_options:
+ :param callable values_parser:
+ :rtype: dict
+ """
+ value = {}
+ values_parser = values_parser or (lambda val: val)
+ for key, (_, val) in section_options.items():
+ value[key] = values_parser(val)
+ return value
+
+ def parse_section(self, section_options):
+ """Parses configuration file section.
+
+ :param dict section_options:
+ """
+ for (name, (_, value)) in section_options.items():
+ try:
+ self[name] = value
+
+ except KeyError:
+ pass # Keep silent for a new option may appear anytime.
+
+ def parse(self):
+ """Parses configuration file items from one
+ or more related sections.
+
+ """
+ for section_name, section_options in self.sections.items():
+
+ method_postfix = ''
+ if section_name: # [section.option] variant
+ method_postfix = '_%s' % section_name
+
+ section_parser_method = getattr(
+ self,
+ # Dots in section names are translated into dunderscores.
+ ('parse_section%s' % method_postfix).replace('.', '__'),
+ None)
+
+ if section_parser_method is None:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(
+ 'Unsupported distribution option section: [%s.%s]' % (
+ self.section_prefix, section_name))
+
+ section_parser_method(section_options)
+
+ def _deprecated_config_handler(self, func, msg, warning_class):
+ """ this function will wrap around parameters that are deprecated
+
+ :param msg: deprecation message
+ :param warning_class: class of warning exception to be raised
+ :param func: function to be wrapped around
+ """
+ @wraps(func)
+ def config_handler(*args, **kwargs):
+ warnings.warn(msg, warning_class)
+ return func(*args, **kwargs)
+
+ return config_handler
+
+
+class ConfigMetadataHandler(ConfigHandler):
+
+ section_prefix = 'metadata'
+
+ aliases = {
+ 'home_page': 'url',
+ 'summary': 'description',
+ 'classifier': 'classifiers',
+ 'platform': 'platforms',
+ }
+
+ strict_mode = False
+ """We need to keep it loose, to be partially compatible with
+ `pbr` and `d2to1` packages which also uses `metadata` section.
+
+ """
+
+ def __init__(self, target_obj, options, ignore_option_errors=False,
+ package_dir=None):
+ super(ConfigMetadataHandler, self).__init__(target_obj, options,
+ ignore_option_errors)
+ self.package_dir = package_dir
+
+ @property
+ def parsers(self):
+ """Metadata item name to parser function mapping."""
+ parse_list = self._parse_list
+ parse_file = self._parse_file
+ parse_dict = self._parse_dict
+ exclude_files_parser = self._exclude_files_parser
+
+ return {
+ 'platforms': parse_list,
+ 'keywords': parse_list,
+ 'provides': parse_list,
+ 'requires': self._deprecated_config_handler(
+ parse_list,
+ "The requires parameter is deprecated, please use "
+ "install_requires for runtime dependencies.",
+ DeprecationWarning),
+ 'obsoletes': parse_list,
+ 'classifiers': self._get_parser_compound(parse_file, parse_list),
+ 'license': exclude_files_parser('license'),
+ 'license_files': parse_list,
+ 'description': parse_file,
+ 'long_description': parse_file,
+ 'version': self._parse_version,
+ 'project_urls': parse_dict,
+ }
+
+ def _parse_version(self, value):
+ """Parses `version` option value.
+
+ :param value:
+ :rtype: str
+
+ """
+ version = self._parse_file(value)
+
+ if version != value:
+ version = version.strip()
+ # Be strict about versions loaded from file because it's easy to
+ # accidentally include newlines and other unintended content
+ if isinstance(parse(version), LegacyVersion):
+ tmpl = (
+ 'Version loaded from {value} does not '
+ 'comply with PEP 440: {version}'
+ )
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(tmpl.format(**locals()))
+
+ return version
+
+ version = self._parse_attr(value, self.package_dir)
+
+ if callable(version):
+ version = version()
+
+ if not isinstance(version, str):
+ if hasattr(version, '__iter__'):
+ version = '.'.join(map(str, version))
+ else:
+ version = '%s' % version
+
+ return version
+
+
+class ConfigOptionsHandler(ConfigHandler):
+
+ section_prefix = 'options'
+
+ @property
+ def parsers(self):
+ """Metadata item name to parser function mapping."""
+ parse_list = self._parse_list
+ parse_list_semicolon = partial(self._parse_list, separator=';')
+ parse_bool = self._parse_bool
+ parse_dict = self._parse_dict
+
+ return {
+ 'zip_safe': parse_bool,
+ 'use_2to3': parse_bool,
+ 'include_package_data': parse_bool,
+ 'package_dir': parse_dict,
+ 'use_2to3_fixers': parse_list,
+ 'use_2to3_exclude_fixers': parse_list,
+ 'convert_2to3_doctests': parse_list,
+ 'scripts': parse_list,
+ 'eager_resources': parse_list,
+ 'dependency_links': parse_list,
+ 'namespace_packages': parse_list,
+ 'install_requires': parse_list_semicolon,
+ 'setup_requires': parse_list_semicolon,
+ 'tests_require': parse_list_semicolon,
+ 'packages': self._parse_packages,
+ 'entry_points': self._parse_file,
+ 'py_modules': parse_list,
+ 'python_requires': SpecifierSet,
+ }
+
+ def _parse_packages(self, value):
+ """Parses `packages` option value.
+
+ :param value:
+ :rtype: list
+ """
+ find_directives = ['find:', 'find_namespace:']
+ trimmed_value = value.strip()
+
+ if trimmed_value not in find_directives:
+ return self._parse_list(value)
+
+ findns = trimmed_value == find_directives[1]
+
+ # Read function arguments from a dedicated section.
+ find_kwargs = self.parse_section_packages__find(
+ self.sections.get('packages.find', {}))
+
+ if findns:
+ from setuptools import find_namespace_packages as find_packages
+ else:
+ from setuptools import find_packages
+
+ return find_packages(**find_kwargs)
+
+ def parse_section_packages__find(self, section_options):
+ """Parses `packages.find` configuration file section.
+
+ To be used in conjunction with _parse_packages().
+
+ :param dict section_options:
+ """
+ section_data = self._parse_section_to_dict(
+ section_options, self._parse_list)
+
+ valid_keys = ['where', 'include', 'exclude']
+
+ find_kwargs = dict(
+ [(k, v) for k, v in section_data.items() if k in valid_keys and v])
+
+ where = find_kwargs.get('where')
+ if where is not None:
+ find_kwargs['where'] = where[0] # cast list to single val
+
+ return find_kwargs
+
+ def parse_section_entry_points(self, section_options):
+ """Parses `entry_points` configuration file section.
+
+ :param dict section_options:
+ """
+ parsed = self._parse_section_to_dict(section_options, self._parse_list)
+ self['entry_points'] = parsed
+
+ def _parse_package_data(self, section_options):
+ parsed = self._parse_section_to_dict(section_options, self._parse_list)
+
+ root = parsed.get('*')
+ if root:
+ parsed[''] = root
+ del parsed['*']
+
+ return parsed
+
+ def parse_section_package_data(self, section_options):
+ """Parses `package_data` configuration file section.
+
+ :param dict section_options:
+ """
+ self['package_data'] = self._parse_package_data(section_options)
+
+ def parse_section_exclude_package_data(self, section_options):
+ """Parses `exclude_package_data` configuration file section.
+
+ :param dict section_options:
+ """
+ self['exclude_package_data'] = self._parse_package_data(
+ section_options)
+
+ def parse_section_extras_require(self, section_options):
+ """Parses `extras_require` configuration file section.
+
+ :param dict section_options:
+ """
+ parse_list = partial(self._parse_list, separator=';')
+ self['extras_require'] = self._parse_section_to_dict(
+ section_options, parse_list)
+
+ def parse_section_data_files(self, section_options):
+ """Parses `data_files` configuration file section.
+
+ :param dict section_options:
+ """
+ parsed = self._parse_section_to_dict(section_options, self._parse_list)
+ self['data_files'] = [(k, v) for k, v in parsed.items()]
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/dep_util.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/dep_util.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..521eb716a5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/dep_util.py
@@ -0,0 +1,25 @@
+from distutils.dep_util import newer_group
+
+
+# yes, this is was almost entirely copy-pasted from
+# 'newer_pairwise()', this is just another convenience
+# function.
+def newer_pairwise_group(sources_groups, targets):
+ """Walk both arguments in parallel, testing if each source group is newer
+ than its corresponding target. Returns a pair of lists (sources_groups,
+ targets) where sources is newer than target, according to the semantics
+ of 'newer_group()'.
+ """
+ if len(sources_groups) != len(targets):
+ raise ValueError(
+ "'sources_group' and 'targets' must be the same length")
+
+ # build a pair of lists (sources_groups, targets) where source is newer
+ n_sources = []
+ n_targets = []
+ for i in range(len(sources_groups)):
+ if newer_group(sources_groups[i], targets[i]):
+ n_sources.append(sources_groups[i])
+ n_targets.append(targets[i])
+
+ return n_sources, n_targets
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/depends.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/depends.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..8be6928a31
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/depends.py
@@ -0,0 +1,175 @@
+import sys
+import marshal
+import contextlib
+import dis
+from distutils.version import StrictVersion
+
+from ._imp import find_module, PY_COMPILED, PY_FROZEN, PY_SOURCE
+from . import _imp
+
+
+__all__ = [
+ 'Require', 'find_module', 'get_module_constant', 'extract_constant'
+]
+
+
+class Require:
+ """A prerequisite to building or installing a distribution"""
+
+ def __init__(
+ self, name, requested_version, module, homepage='',
+ attribute=None, format=None):
+
+ if format is None and requested_version is not None:
+ format = StrictVersion
+
+ if format is not None:
+ requested_version = format(requested_version)
+ if attribute is None:
+ attribute = '__version__'
+
+ self.__dict__.update(locals())
+ del self.self
+
+ def full_name(self):
+ """Return full package/distribution name, w/version"""
+ if self.requested_version is not None:
+ return '%s-%s' % (self.name, self.requested_version)
+ return self.name
+
+ def version_ok(self, version):
+ """Is 'version' sufficiently up-to-date?"""
+ return self.attribute is None or self.format is None or \
+ str(version) != "unknown" and version >= self.requested_version
+
+ def get_version(self, paths=None, default="unknown"):
+ """Get version number of installed module, 'None', or 'default'
+
+ Search 'paths' for module. If not found, return 'None'. If found,
+ return the extracted version attribute, or 'default' if no version
+ attribute was specified, or the value cannot be determined without
+ importing the module. The version is formatted according to the
+ requirement's version format (if any), unless it is 'None' or the
+ supplied 'default'.
+ """
+
+ if self.attribute is None:
+ try:
+ f, p, i = find_module(self.module, paths)
+ if f:
+ f.close()
+ return default
+ except ImportError:
+ return None
+
+ v = get_module_constant(self.module, self.attribute, default, paths)
+
+ if v is not None and v is not default and self.format is not None:
+ return self.format(v)
+
+ return v
+
+ def is_present(self, paths=None):
+ """Return true if dependency is present on 'paths'"""
+ return self.get_version(paths) is not None
+
+ def is_current(self, paths=None):
+ """Return true if dependency is present and up-to-date on 'paths'"""
+ version = self.get_version(paths)
+ if version is None:
+ return False
+ return self.version_ok(version)
+
+
+def maybe_close(f):
+ @contextlib.contextmanager
+ def empty():
+ yield
+ return
+ if not f:
+ return empty()
+
+ return contextlib.closing(f)
+
+
+def get_module_constant(module, symbol, default=-1, paths=None):
+ """Find 'module' by searching 'paths', and extract 'symbol'
+
+ Return 'None' if 'module' does not exist on 'paths', or it does not define
+ 'symbol'. If the module defines 'symbol' as a constant, return the
+ constant. Otherwise, return 'default'."""
+
+ try:
+ f, path, (suffix, mode, kind) = info = find_module(module, paths)
+ except ImportError:
+ # Module doesn't exist
+ return None
+
+ with maybe_close(f):
+ if kind == PY_COMPILED:
+ f.read(8) # skip magic & date
+ code = marshal.load(f)
+ elif kind == PY_FROZEN:
+ code = _imp.get_frozen_object(module, paths)
+ elif kind == PY_SOURCE:
+ code = compile(f.read(), path, 'exec')
+ else:
+ # Not something we can parse; we'll have to import it. :(
+ imported = _imp.get_module(module, paths, info)
+ return getattr(imported, symbol, None)
+
+ return extract_constant(code, symbol, default)
+
+
+def extract_constant(code, symbol, default=-1):
+ """Extract the constant value of 'symbol' from 'code'
+
+ If the name 'symbol' is bound to a constant value by the Python code
+ object 'code', return that value. If 'symbol' is bound to an expression,
+ return 'default'. Otherwise, return 'None'.
+
+ Return value is based on the first assignment to 'symbol'. 'symbol' must
+ be a global, or at least a non-"fast" local in the code block. That is,
+ only 'STORE_NAME' and 'STORE_GLOBAL' opcodes are checked, and 'symbol'
+ must be present in 'code.co_names'.
+ """
+ if symbol not in code.co_names:
+ # name's not there, can't possibly be an assignment
+ return None
+
+ name_idx = list(code.co_names).index(symbol)
+
+ STORE_NAME = 90
+ STORE_GLOBAL = 97
+ LOAD_CONST = 100
+
+ const = default
+
+ for byte_code in dis.Bytecode(code):
+ op = byte_code.opcode
+ arg = byte_code.arg
+
+ if op == LOAD_CONST:
+ const = code.co_consts[arg]
+ elif arg == name_idx and (op == STORE_NAME or op == STORE_GLOBAL):
+ return const
+ else:
+ const = default
+
+
+def _update_globals():
+ """
+ Patch the globals to remove the objects not available on some platforms.
+
+ XXX it'd be better to test assertions about bytecode instead.
+ """
+
+ if not sys.platform.startswith('java') and sys.platform != 'cli':
+ return
+ incompatible = 'extract_constant', 'get_module_constant'
+ for name in incompatible:
+ del globals()[name]
+ __all__.remove(name)
+
+
+_update_globals()
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/dist.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/dist.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..2c088ef8cb
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/dist.py
@@ -0,0 +1,1009 @@
+# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
+__all__ = ['Distribution']
+
+import io
+import sys
+import re
+import os
+import warnings
+import numbers
+import distutils.log
+import distutils.core
+import distutils.cmd
+import distutils.dist
+from distutils.util import strtobool
+from distutils.debug import DEBUG
+from distutils.fancy_getopt import translate_longopt
+import itertools
+
+from collections import defaultdict
+from email import message_from_file
+
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsOptionError, DistutilsSetupError
+from distutils.util import rfc822_escape
+from distutils.version import StrictVersion
+
+from setuptools.extern import packaging
+from setuptools.extern import ordered_set
+
+from . import SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning
+
+import setuptools
+from setuptools import windows_support
+from setuptools.monkey import get_unpatched
+from setuptools.config import parse_configuration
+import pkg_resources
+
+__import__('setuptools.extern.packaging.specifiers')
+__import__('setuptools.extern.packaging.version')
+
+
+def _get_unpatched(cls):
+ warnings.warn("Do not call this function", DistDeprecationWarning)
+ return get_unpatched(cls)
+
+
+def get_metadata_version(self):
+ mv = getattr(self, 'metadata_version', None)
+
+ if mv is None:
+ if self.long_description_content_type or self.provides_extras:
+ mv = StrictVersion('2.1')
+ elif (self.maintainer is not None or
+ self.maintainer_email is not None or
+ getattr(self, 'python_requires', None) is not None or
+ self.project_urls):
+ mv = StrictVersion('1.2')
+ elif (self.provides or self.requires or self.obsoletes or
+ self.classifiers or self.download_url):
+ mv = StrictVersion('1.1')
+ else:
+ mv = StrictVersion('1.0')
+
+ self.metadata_version = mv
+
+ return mv
+
+
+def read_pkg_file(self, file):
+ """Reads the metadata values from a file object."""
+ msg = message_from_file(file)
+
+ def _read_field(name):
+ value = msg[name]
+ if value == 'UNKNOWN':
+ return None
+ return value
+
+ def _read_list(name):
+ values = msg.get_all(name, None)
+ if values == []:
+ return None
+ return values
+
+ self.metadata_version = StrictVersion(msg['metadata-version'])
+ self.name = _read_field('name')
+ self.version = _read_field('version')
+ self.description = _read_field('summary')
+ # we are filling author only.
+ self.author = _read_field('author')
+ self.maintainer = None
+ self.author_email = _read_field('author-email')
+ self.maintainer_email = None
+ self.url = _read_field('home-page')
+ self.license = _read_field('license')
+
+ if 'download-url' in msg:
+ self.download_url = _read_field('download-url')
+ else:
+ self.download_url = None
+
+ self.long_description = _read_field('description')
+ self.description = _read_field('summary')
+
+ if 'keywords' in msg:
+ self.keywords = _read_field('keywords').split(',')
+
+ self.platforms = _read_list('platform')
+ self.classifiers = _read_list('classifier')
+
+ # PEP 314 - these fields only exist in 1.1
+ if self.metadata_version == StrictVersion('1.1'):
+ self.requires = _read_list('requires')
+ self.provides = _read_list('provides')
+ self.obsoletes = _read_list('obsoletes')
+ else:
+ self.requires = None
+ self.provides = None
+ self.obsoletes = None
+
+
+# Based on Python 3.5 version
+def write_pkg_file(self, file):
+ """Write the PKG-INFO format data to a file object.
+ """
+ version = self.get_metadata_version()
+
+ def write_field(key, value):
+ file.write("%s: %s\n" % (key, value))
+
+ write_field('Metadata-Version', str(version))
+ write_field('Name', self.get_name())
+ write_field('Version', self.get_version())
+ write_field('Summary', self.get_description())
+ write_field('Home-page', self.get_url())
+
+ if version < StrictVersion('1.2'):
+ write_field('Author', self.get_contact())
+ write_field('Author-email', self.get_contact_email())
+ else:
+ optional_fields = (
+ ('Author', 'author'),
+ ('Author-email', 'author_email'),
+ ('Maintainer', 'maintainer'),
+ ('Maintainer-email', 'maintainer_email'),
+ )
+
+ for field, attr in optional_fields:
+ attr_val = getattr(self, attr)
+
+ if attr_val is not None:
+ write_field(field, attr_val)
+
+ write_field('License', self.get_license())
+ if self.download_url:
+ write_field('Download-URL', self.download_url)
+ for project_url in self.project_urls.items():
+ write_field('Project-URL', '%s, %s' % project_url)
+
+ long_desc = rfc822_escape(self.get_long_description())
+ write_field('Description', long_desc)
+
+ keywords = ','.join(self.get_keywords())
+ if keywords:
+ write_field('Keywords', keywords)
+
+ if version >= StrictVersion('1.2'):
+ for platform in self.get_platforms():
+ write_field('Platform', platform)
+ else:
+ 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())
+
+ # Setuptools specific for PEP 345
+ if hasattr(self, 'python_requires'):
+ write_field('Requires-Python', self.python_requires)
+
+ # PEP 566
+ if self.long_description_content_type:
+ write_field(
+ 'Description-Content-Type',
+ self.long_description_content_type
+ )
+ if self.provides_extras:
+ for extra in self.provides_extras:
+ write_field('Provides-Extra', extra)
+
+
+sequence = tuple, list
+
+
+def check_importable(dist, attr, value):
+ try:
+ ep = pkg_resources.EntryPoint.parse('x=' + value)
+ assert not ep.extras
+ except (TypeError, ValueError, AttributeError, AssertionError) as e:
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "%r must be importable 'module:attrs' string (got %r)"
+ % (attr, value)
+ ) from e
+
+
+def assert_string_list(dist, attr, value):
+ """Verify that value is a string list"""
+ try:
+ # verify that value is a list or tuple to exclude unordered
+ # or single-use iterables
+ assert isinstance(value, (list, tuple))
+ # verify that elements of value are strings
+ assert ''.join(value) != value
+ except (TypeError, ValueError, AttributeError, AssertionError) as e:
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "%r must be a list of strings (got %r)" % (attr, value)
+ ) from e
+
+
+def check_nsp(dist, attr, value):
+ """Verify that namespace packages are valid"""
+ ns_packages = value
+ assert_string_list(dist, attr, ns_packages)
+ for nsp in ns_packages:
+ if not dist.has_contents_for(nsp):
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "Distribution contains no modules or packages for " +
+ "namespace package %r" % nsp
+ )
+ parent, sep, child = nsp.rpartition('.')
+ if parent and parent not in ns_packages:
+ distutils.log.warn(
+ "WARNING: %r is declared as a package namespace, but %r"
+ " is not: please correct this in setup.py", nsp, parent
+ )
+
+
+def check_extras(dist, attr, value):
+ """Verify that extras_require mapping is valid"""
+ try:
+ list(itertools.starmap(_check_extra, value.items()))
+ except (TypeError, ValueError, AttributeError) as e:
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "'extras_require' must be a dictionary whose values are "
+ "strings or lists of strings containing valid project/version "
+ "requirement specifiers."
+ ) from e
+
+
+def _check_extra(extra, reqs):
+ name, sep, marker = extra.partition(':')
+ if marker and pkg_resources.invalid_marker(marker):
+ raise DistutilsSetupError("Invalid environment marker: " + marker)
+ list(pkg_resources.parse_requirements(reqs))
+
+
+def assert_bool(dist, attr, value):
+ """Verify that value is True, False, 0, or 1"""
+ if bool(value) != value:
+ tmpl = "{attr!r} must be a boolean value (got {value!r})"
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(tmpl.format(attr=attr, value=value))
+
+
+def check_requirements(dist, attr, value):
+ """Verify that install_requires is a valid requirements list"""
+ try:
+ list(pkg_resources.parse_requirements(value))
+ if isinstance(value, (dict, set)):
+ raise TypeError("Unordered types are not allowed")
+ except (TypeError, ValueError) as error:
+ tmpl = (
+ "{attr!r} must be a string or list of strings "
+ "containing valid project/version requirement specifiers; {error}"
+ )
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ tmpl.format(attr=attr, error=error)
+ ) from error
+
+
+def check_specifier(dist, attr, value):
+ """Verify that value is a valid version specifier"""
+ try:
+ packaging.specifiers.SpecifierSet(value)
+ except packaging.specifiers.InvalidSpecifier as error:
+ tmpl = (
+ "{attr!r} must be a string "
+ "containing valid version specifiers; {error}"
+ )
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ tmpl.format(attr=attr, error=error)
+ ) from error
+
+
+def check_entry_points(dist, attr, value):
+ """Verify that entry_points map is parseable"""
+ try:
+ pkg_resources.EntryPoint.parse_map(value)
+ except ValueError as e:
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(e) from e
+
+
+def check_test_suite(dist, attr, value):
+ if not isinstance(value, str):
+ raise DistutilsSetupError("test_suite must be a string")
+
+
+def check_package_data(dist, attr, value):
+ """Verify that value is a dictionary of package names to glob lists"""
+ if not isinstance(value, dict):
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "{!r} must be a dictionary mapping package names to lists of "
+ "string wildcard patterns".format(attr))
+ for k, v in value.items():
+ if not isinstance(k, str):
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "keys of {!r} dict must be strings (got {!r})"
+ .format(attr, k)
+ )
+ assert_string_list(dist, 'values of {!r} dict'.format(attr), v)
+
+
+def check_packages(dist, attr, value):
+ for pkgname in value:
+ if not re.match(r'\w+(\.\w+)*', pkgname):
+ distutils.log.warn(
+ "WARNING: %r not a valid package name; please use only "
+ ".-separated package names in setup.py", pkgname
+ )
+
+
+_Distribution = get_unpatched(distutils.core.Distribution)
+
+
+class Distribution(_Distribution):
+ """Distribution with support for tests and package data
+
+ This is an enhanced version of 'distutils.dist.Distribution' that
+ effectively adds the following new optional keyword arguments to 'setup()':
+
+ 'install_requires' -- a string or sequence of strings specifying project
+ versions that the distribution requires when installed, in the format
+ used by 'pkg_resources.require()'. They will be installed
+ automatically when the package is installed. If you wish to use
+ packages that are not available in PyPI, or want to give your users an
+ alternate download location, you can add a 'find_links' option to the
+ '[easy_install]' section of your project's 'setup.cfg' file, and then
+ setuptools will scan the listed web pages for links that satisfy the
+ requirements.
+
+ 'extras_require' -- a dictionary mapping names of optional "extras" to the
+ additional requirement(s) that using those extras incurs. For example,
+ this::
+
+ extras_require = dict(reST = ["docutils>=0.3", "reSTedit"])
+
+ indicates that the distribution can optionally provide an extra
+ capability called "reST", but it can only be used if docutils and
+ reSTedit are installed. If the user installs your package using
+ EasyInstall and requests one of your extras, the corresponding
+ additional requirements will be installed if needed.
+
+ 'test_suite' -- the name of a test suite to run for the 'test' command.
+ If the user runs 'python setup.py test', the package will be installed,
+ and the named test suite will be run. The format is the same as
+ would be used on a 'unittest.py' command line. That is, it is the
+ dotted name of an object to import and call to generate a test suite.
+
+ 'package_data' -- a dictionary mapping package names to lists of filenames
+ or globs to use to find data files contained in the named packages.
+ If the dictionary has filenames or globs listed under '""' (the empty
+ string), those names will be searched for in every package, in addition
+ to any names for the specific package. Data files found using these
+ names/globs will be installed along with the package, in the same
+ location as the package. Note that globs are allowed to reference
+ the contents of non-package subdirectories, as long as you use '/' as
+ a path separator. (Globs are automatically converted to
+ platform-specific paths at runtime.)
+
+ In addition to these new keywords, this class also has several new methods
+ for manipulating the distribution's contents. For example, the 'include()'
+ and 'exclude()' methods can be thought of as in-place add and subtract
+ commands that add or remove packages, modules, extensions, and so on from
+ the distribution.
+ """
+
+ _DISTUTILS_UNSUPPORTED_METADATA = {
+ 'long_description_content_type': None,
+ 'project_urls': dict,
+ 'provides_extras': ordered_set.OrderedSet,
+ 'license_files': ordered_set.OrderedSet,
+ }
+
+ _patched_dist = None
+
+ def patch_missing_pkg_info(self, attrs):
+ # Fake up a replacement for the data that would normally come from
+ # PKG-INFO, but which might not yet be built if this is a fresh
+ # checkout.
+ #
+ if not attrs or 'name' not in attrs or 'version' not in attrs:
+ return
+ key = pkg_resources.safe_name(str(attrs['name'])).lower()
+ dist = pkg_resources.working_set.by_key.get(key)
+ if dist is not None and not dist.has_metadata('PKG-INFO'):
+ dist._version = pkg_resources.safe_version(str(attrs['version']))
+ self._patched_dist = dist
+
+ def __init__(self, attrs=None):
+ have_package_data = hasattr(self, "package_data")
+ if not have_package_data:
+ self.package_data = {}
+ attrs = attrs or {}
+ self.dist_files = []
+ # Filter-out setuptools' specific options.
+ self.src_root = attrs.pop("src_root", None)
+ self.patch_missing_pkg_info(attrs)
+ self.dependency_links = attrs.pop('dependency_links', [])
+ self.setup_requires = attrs.pop('setup_requires', [])
+ for ep in pkg_resources.iter_entry_points('distutils.setup_keywords'):
+ vars(self).setdefault(ep.name, None)
+ _Distribution.__init__(self, {
+ k: v for k, v in attrs.items()
+ if k not in self._DISTUTILS_UNSUPPORTED_METADATA
+ })
+
+ # Fill-in missing metadata fields not supported by distutils.
+ # Note some fields may have been set by other tools (e.g. pbr)
+ # above; they are taken preferrentially to setup() arguments
+ for option, default in self._DISTUTILS_UNSUPPORTED_METADATA.items():
+ for source in self.metadata.__dict__, attrs:
+ if option in source:
+ value = source[option]
+ break
+ else:
+ value = default() if default else None
+ setattr(self.metadata, option, value)
+
+ self.metadata.version = self._normalize_version(
+ self._validate_version(self.metadata.version))
+ self._finalize_requires()
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _normalize_version(version):
+ if isinstance(version, setuptools.sic) or version is None:
+ return version
+
+ normalized = str(packaging.version.Version(version))
+ if version != normalized:
+ tmpl = "Normalizing '{version}' to '{normalized}'"
+ warnings.warn(tmpl.format(**locals()))
+ return normalized
+ return version
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _validate_version(version):
+ if isinstance(version, numbers.Number):
+ # Some people apparently take "version number" too literally :)
+ version = str(version)
+
+ if version is not None:
+ try:
+ packaging.version.Version(version)
+ except (packaging.version.InvalidVersion, TypeError):
+ warnings.warn(
+ "The version specified (%r) is an invalid version, this "
+ "may not work as expected with newer versions of "
+ "setuptools, pip, and PyPI. Please see PEP 440 for more "
+ "details." % version
+ )
+ return setuptools.sic(version)
+ return version
+
+ def _finalize_requires(self):
+ """
+ Set `metadata.python_requires` and fix environment markers
+ in `install_requires` and `extras_require`.
+ """
+ if getattr(self, 'python_requires', None):
+ self.metadata.python_requires = self.python_requires
+
+ if getattr(self, 'extras_require', None):
+ for extra in self.extras_require.keys():
+ # Since this gets called multiple times at points where the
+ # keys have become 'converted' extras, ensure that we are only
+ # truly adding extras we haven't seen before here.
+ extra = extra.split(':')[0]
+ if extra:
+ self.metadata.provides_extras.add(extra)
+
+ self._convert_extras_requirements()
+ self._move_install_requirements_markers()
+
+ def _convert_extras_requirements(self):
+ """
+ Convert requirements in `extras_require` of the form
+ `"extra": ["barbazquux; {marker}"]` to
+ `"extra:{marker}": ["barbazquux"]`.
+ """
+ spec_ext_reqs = getattr(self, 'extras_require', None) or {}
+ self._tmp_extras_require = defaultdict(list)
+ for section, v in spec_ext_reqs.items():
+ # Do not strip empty sections.
+ self._tmp_extras_require[section]
+ for r in pkg_resources.parse_requirements(v):
+ suffix = self._suffix_for(r)
+ self._tmp_extras_require[section + suffix].append(r)
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _suffix_for(req):
+ """
+ For a requirement, return the 'extras_require' suffix for
+ that requirement.
+ """
+ return ':' + str(req.marker) if req.marker else ''
+
+ def _move_install_requirements_markers(self):
+ """
+ Move requirements in `install_requires` that are using environment
+ markers `extras_require`.
+ """
+
+ # divide the install_requires into two sets, simple ones still
+ # handled by install_requires and more complex ones handled
+ # by extras_require.
+
+ def is_simple_req(req):
+ return not req.marker
+
+ spec_inst_reqs = getattr(self, 'install_requires', None) or ()
+ inst_reqs = list(pkg_resources.parse_requirements(spec_inst_reqs))
+ simple_reqs = filter(is_simple_req, inst_reqs)
+ complex_reqs = itertools.filterfalse(is_simple_req, inst_reqs)
+ self.install_requires = list(map(str, simple_reqs))
+
+ for r in complex_reqs:
+ self._tmp_extras_require[':' + str(r.marker)].append(r)
+ self.extras_require = dict(
+ (k, [str(r) for r in map(self._clean_req, v)])
+ for k, v in self._tmp_extras_require.items()
+ )
+
+ def _clean_req(self, req):
+ """
+ Given a Requirement, remove environment markers and return it.
+ """
+ req.marker = None
+ return req
+
+ def _parse_config_files(self, filenames=None):
+ """
+ Adapted from distutils.dist.Distribution.parse_config_files,
+ this method provides the same functionality in subtly-improved
+ ways.
+ """
+ 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:
+ with io.open(filename, encoding='utf-8') as reader:
+ if DEBUG:
+ self.announce(" reading {filename}".format(**locals()))
+ parser.read_file(reader)
+ 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 e:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(e) from e
+
+ 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').
+
+ (Adopted from distutils.dist.Distribution._set_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 e:
+ raise DistutilsOptionError(e) from e
+
+ def parse_config_files(self, filenames=None, ignore_option_errors=False):
+ """Parses configuration files from various levels
+ and loads configuration.
+
+ """
+ self._parse_config_files(filenames=filenames)
+
+ parse_configuration(self, self.command_options,
+ ignore_option_errors=ignore_option_errors)
+ self._finalize_requires()
+
+ def fetch_build_eggs(self, requires):
+ """Resolve pre-setup requirements"""
+ resolved_dists = pkg_resources.working_set.resolve(
+ pkg_resources.parse_requirements(requires),
+ installer=self.fetch_build_egg,
+ replace_conflicting=True,
+ )
+ for dist in resolved_dists:
+ pkg_resources.working_set.add(dist, replace=True)
+ return resolved_dists
+
+ def finalize_options(self):
+ """
+ Allow plugins to apply arbitrary operations to the
+ distribution. Each hook may optionally define a 'order'
+ to influence the order of execution. Smaller numbers
+ go first and the default is 0.
+ """
+ group = 'setuptools.finalize_distribution_options'
+
+ def by_order(hook):
+ return getattr(hook, 'order', 0)
+ eps = map(lambda e: e.load(), pkg_resources.iter_entry_points(group))
+ for ep in sorted(eps, key=by_order):
+ ep(self)
+
+ def _finalize_setup_keywords(self):
+ for ep in pkg_resources.iter_entry_points('distutils.setup_keywords'):
+ value = getattr(self, ep.name, None)
+ if value is not None:
+ ep.require(installer=self.fetch_build_egg)
+ ep.load()(self, ep.name, value)
+
+ def _finalize_2to3_doctests(self):
+ if getattr(self, 'convert_2to3_doctests', None):
+ # XXX may convert to set here when we can rely on set being builtin
+ self.convert_2to3_doctests = [
+ os.path.abspath(p)
+ for p in self.convert_2to3_doctests
+ ]
+ else:
+ self.convert_2to3_doctests = []
+
+ def get_egg_cache_dir(self):
+ egg_cache_dir = os.path.join(os.curdir, '.eggs')
+ if not os.path.exists(egg_cache_dir):
+ os.mkdir(egg_cache_dir)
+ windows_support.hide_file(egg_cache_dir)
+ readme_txt_filename = os.path.join(egg_cache_dir, 'README.txt')
+ with open(readme_txt_filename, 'w') as f:
+ f.write('This directory contains eggs that were downloaded '
+ 'by setuptools to build, test, and run plug-ins.\n\n')
+ f.write('This directory caches those eggs to prevent '
+ 'repeated downloads.\n\n')
+ f.write('However, it is safe to delete this directory.\n\n')
+
+ return egg_cache_dir
+
+ def fetch_build_egg(self, req):
+ """Fetch an egg needed for building"""
+ from setuptools.installer import fetch_build_egg
+ return fetch_build_egg(self, req)
+
+ def get_command_class(self, command):
+ """Pluggable version of get_command_class()"""
+ if command in self.cmdclass:
+ return self.cmdclass[command]
+
+ eps = pkg_resources.iter_entry_points('distutils.commands', command)
+ for ep in eps:
+ ep.require(installer=self.fetch_build_egg)
+ self.cmdclass[command] = cmdclass = ep.load()
+ return cmdclass
+ else:
+ return _Distribution.get_command_class(self, command)
+
+ def print_commands(self):
+ for ep in pkg_resources.iter_entry_points('distutils.commands'):
+ if ep.name not in self.cmdclass:
+ # don't require extras as the commands won't be invoked
+ cmdclass = ep.resolve()
+ self.cmdclass[ep.name] = cmdclass
+ return _Distribution.print_commands(self)
+
+ def get_command_list(self):
+ for ep in pkg_resources.iter_entry_points('distutils.commands'):
+ if ep.name not in self.cmdclass:
+ # don't require extras as the commands won't be invoked
+ cmdclass = ep.resolve()
+ self.cmdclass[ep.name] = cmdclass
+ return _Distribution.get_command_list(self)
+
+ def include(self, **attrs):
+ """Add items to distribution that are named in keyword arguments
+
+ For example, 'dist.include(py_modules=["x"])' would add 'x' to
+ the distribution's 'py_modules' attribute, if it was not already
+ there.
+
+ Currently, this method only supports inclusion for attributes that are
+ lists or tuples. If you need to add support for adding to other
+ attributes in this or a subclass, you can add an '_include_X' method,
+ where 'X' is the name of the attribute. The method will be called with
+ the value passed to 'include()'. So, 'dist.include(foo={"bar":"baz"})'
+ will try to call 'dist._include_foo({"bar":"baz"})', which can then
+ handle whatever special inclusion logic is needed.
+ """
+ for k, v in attrs.items():
+ include = getattr(self, '_include_' + k, None)
+ if include:
+ include(v)
+ else:
+ self._include_misc(k, v)
+
+ def exclude_package(self, package):
+ """Remove packages, modules, and extensions in named package"""
+
+ pfx = package + '.'
+ if self.packages:
+ self.packages = [
+ p for p in self.packages
+ if p != package and not p.startswith(pfx)
+ ]
+
+ if self.py_modules:
+ self.py_modules = [
+ p for p in self.py_modules
+ if p != package and not p.startswith(pfx)
+ ]
+
+ if self.ext_modules:
+ self.ext_modules = [
+ p for p in self.ext_modules
+ if p.name != package and not p.name.startswith(pfx)
+ ]
+
+ def has_contents_for(self, package):
+ """Return true if 'exclude_package(package)' would do something"""
+
+ pfx = package + '.'
+
+ for p in self.iter_distribution_names():
+ if p == package or p.startswith(pfx):
+ return True
+
+ def _exclude_misc(self, name, value):
+ """Handle 'exclude()' for list/tuple attrs without a special handler"""
+ if not isinstance(value, sequence):
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "%s: setting must be a list or tuple (%r)" % (name, value)
+ )
+ try:
+ old = getattr(self, name)
+ except AttributeError as e:
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "%s: No such distribution setting" % name
+ ) from e
+ if old is not None and not isinstance(old, sequence):
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ name + ": this setting cannot be changed via include/exclude"
+ )
+ elif old:
+ setattr(self, name, [item for item in old if item not in value])
+
+ def _include_misc(self, name, value):
+ """Handle 'include()' for list/tuple attrs without a special handler"""
+
+ if not isinstance(value, sequence):
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "%s: setting must be a list (%r)" % (name, value)
+ )
+ try:
+ old = getattr(self, name)
+ except AttributeError as e:
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "%s: No such distribution setting" % name
+ ) from e
+ if old is None:
+ setattr(self, name, value)
+ elif not isinstance(old, sequence):
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ name + ": this setting cannot be changed via include/exclude"
+ )
+ else:
+ new = [item for item in value if item not in old]
+ setattr(self, name, old + new)
+
+ def exclude(self, **attrs):
+ """Remove items from distribution that are named in keyword arguments
+
+ For example, 'dist.exclude(py_modules=["x"])' would remove 'x' from
+ the distribution's 'py_modules' attribute. Excluding packages uses
+ the 'exclude_package()' method, so all of the package's contained
+ packages, modules, and extensions are also excluded.
+
+ Currently, this method only supports exclusion from attributes that are
+ lists or tuples. If you need to add support for excluding from other
+ attributes in this or a subclass, you can add an '_exclude_X' method,
+ where 'X' is the name of the attribute. The method will be called with
+ the value passed to 'exclude()'. So, 'dist.exclude(foo={"bar":"baz"})'
+ will try to call 'dist._exclude_foo({"bar":"baz"})', which can then
+ handle whatever special exclusion logic is needed.
+ """
+ for k, v in attrs.items():
+ exclude = getattr(self, '_exclude_' + k, None)
+ if exclude:
+ exclude(v)
+ else:
+ self._exclude_misc(k, v)
+
+ def _exclude_packages(self, packages):
+ if not isinstance(packages, sequence):
+ raise DistutilsSetupError(
+ "packages: setting must be a list or tuple (%r)" % (packages,)
+ )
+ list(map(self.exclude_package, packages))
+
+ def _parse_command_opts(self, parser, args):
+ # Remove --with-X/--without-X options when processing command args
+ self.global_options = self.__class__.global_options
+ self.negative_opt = self.__class__.negative_opt
+
+ # First, expand any aliases
+ command = args[0]
+ aliases = self.get_option_dict('aliases')
+ while command in aliases:
+ src, alias = aliases[command]
+ del aliases[command] # ensure each alias can expand only once!
+ import shlex
+ args[:1] = shlex.split(alias, True)
+ command = args[0]
+
+ nargs = _Distribution._parse_command_opts(self, parser, args)
+
+ # Handle commands that want to consume all remaining arguments
+ cmd_class = self.get_command_class(command)
+ if getattr(cmd_class, 'command_consumes_arguments', None):
+ self.get_option_dict(command)['args'] = ("command line", nargs)
+ if nargs is not None:
+ return []
+
+ return nargs
+
+ def get_cmdline_options(self):
+ """Return a '{cmd: {opt:val}}' map of all command-line options
+
+ Option names are all long, but do not include the leading '--', and
+ contain dashes rather than underscores. If the option doesn't take
+ an argument (e.g. '--quiet'), the 'val' is 'None'.
+
+ Note that options provided by config files are intentionally excluded.
+ """
+
+ d = {}
+
+ for cmd, opts in self.command_options.items():
+
+ for opt, (src, val) in opts.items():
+
+ if src != "command line":
+ continue
+
+ opt = opt.replace('_', '-')
+
+ if val == 0:
+ cmdobj = self.get_command_obj(cmd)
+ neg_opt = self.negative_opt.copy()
+ neg_opt.update(getattr(cmdobj, 'negative_opt', {}))
+ for neg, pos in neg_opt.items():
+ if pos == opt:
+ opt = neg
+ val = None
+ break
+ else:
+ raise AssertionError("Shouldn't be able to get here")
+
+ elif val == 1:
+ val = None
+
+ d.setdefault(cmd, {})[opt] = val
+
+ return d
+
+ def iter_distribution_names(self):
+ """Yield all packages, modules, and extension names in distribution"""
+
+ for pkg in self.packages or ():
+ yield pkg
+
+ for module in self.py_modules or ():
+ yield module
+
+ for ext in self.ext_modules or ():
+ if isinstance(ext, tuple):
+ name, buildinfo = ext
+ else:
+ name = ext.name
+ if name.endswith('module'):
+ name = name[:-6]
+ yield 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.
+ """
+ import sys
+
+ if self.help_commands:
+ return _Distribution.handle_display_options(self, option_order)
+
+ # Stdout may be StringIO (e.g. in tests)
+ if not isinstance(sys.stdout, io.TextIOWrapper):
+ return _Distribution.handle_display_options(self, option_order)
+
+ # Don't wrap stdout if utf-8 is already the encoding. Provides
+ # workaround for #334.
+ if sys.stdout.encoding.lower() in ('utf-8', 'utf8'):
+ return _Distribution.handle_display_options(self, option_order)
+
+ # Print metadata in UTF-8 no matter the platform
+ encoding = sys.stdout.encoding
+ errors = sys.stdout.errors
+ newline = sys.platform != 'win32' and '\n' or None
+ line_buffering = sys.stdout.line_buffering
+
+ sys.stdout = io.TextIOWrapper(
+ sys.stdout.detach(), 'utf-8', errors, newline, line_buffering)
+ try:
+ return _Distribution.handle_display_options(self, option_order)
+ finally:
+ sys.stdout = io.TextIOWrapper(
+ sys.stdout.detach(), encoding, errors, newline, line_buffering)
+
+
+class DistDeprecationWarning(SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning):
+ """Class for warning about deprecations in dist in
+ setuptools. Not ignored by default, unlike DeprecationWarning."""
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/errors.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/errors.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..2701747f56
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/errors.py
@@ -0,0 +1,16 @@
+"""setuptools.errors
+
+Provides exceptions used by setuptools modules.
+"""
+
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsError
+
+
+class RemovedCommandError(DistutilsError, RuntimeError):
+ """Error used for commands that have been removed in setuptools.
+
+ Since ``setuptools`` is built on ``distutils``, simply removing a command
+ from ``setuptools`` will make the behavior fall back to ``distutils``; this
+ error is raised if a command exists in ``distutils`` but has been actively
+ removed in ``setuptools``.
+ """
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/extension.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/extension.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..1820722a49
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/extension.py
@@ -0,0 +1,55 @@
+import re
+import functools
+import distutils.core
+import distutils.errors
+import distutils.extension
+
+from .monkey import get_unpatched
+
+
+def _have_cython():
+ """
+ Return True if Cython can be imported.
+ """
+ cython_impl = 'Cython.Distutils.build_ext'
+ try:
+ # from (cython_impl) import build_ext
+ __import__(cython_impl, fromlist=['build_ext']).build_ext
+ return True
+ except Exception:
+ pass
+ return False
+
+
+# for compatibility
+have_pyrex = _have_cython
+
+_Extension = get_unpatched(distutils.core.Extension)
+
+
+class Extension(_Extension):
+ """Extension that uses '.c' files in place of '.pyx' files"""
+
+ def __init__(self, name, sources, *args, **kw):
+ # The *args is needed for compatibility as calls may use positional
+ # arguments. py_limited_api may be set only via keyword.
+ self.py_limited_api = kw.pop("py_limited_api", False)
+ _Extension.__init__(self, name, sources, *args, **kw)
+
+ def _convert_pyx_sources_to_lang(self):
+ """
+ Replace sources with .pyx extensions to sources with the target
+ language extension. This mechanism allows language authors to supply
+ pre-converted sources but to prefer the .pyx sources.
+ """
+ if _have_cython():
+ # the build has Cython, so allow it to compile the .pyx files
+ return
+ lang = self.language or ''
+ target_ext = '.cpp' if lang.lower() == 'c++' else '.c'
+ sub = functools.partial(re.sub, '.pyx$', target_ext)
+ self.sources = list(map(sub, self.sources))
+
+
+class Library(Extension):
+ """Just like a regular Extension, but built as a library instead"""
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/extern/__init__.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/extern/__init__.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..b7f30dc2e3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/extern/__init__.py
@@ -0,0 +1,66 @@
+import sys
+
+
+class VendorImporter:
+ """
+ A PEP 302 meta path importer for finding optionally-vendored
+ or otherwise naturally-installed packages from root_name.
+ """
+
+ def __init__(self, root_name, vendored_names=(), vendor_pkg=None):
+ self.root_name = root_name
+ self.vendored_names = set(vendored_names)
+ self.vendor_pkg = vendor_pkg or root_name.replace('extern', '_vendor')
+
+ @property
+ def search_path(self):
+ """
+ Search first the vendor package then as a natural package.
+ """
+ yield self.vendor_pkg + '.'
+ yield ''
+
+ def find_module(self, fullname, path=None):
+ """
+ Return self when fullname starts with root_name and the
+ target module is one vendored through this importer.
+ """
+ root, base, target = fullname.partition(self.root_name + '.')
+ if root:
+ return
+ if not any(map(target.startswith, self.vendored_names)):
+ return
+ return self
+
+ def load_module(self, fullname):
+ """
+ Iterate over the search path to locate and load fullname.
+ """
+ root, base, target = fullname.partition(self.root_name + '.')
+ for prefix in self.search_path:
+ try:
+ extant = prefix + target
+ __import__(extant)
+ mod = sys.modules[extant]
+ sys.modules[fullname] = mod
+ return mod
+ except ImportError:
+ pass
+ else:
+ raise ImportError(
+ "The '{target}' package is required; "
+ "normally this is bundled with this package so if you get "
+ "this warning, consult the packager of your "
+ "distribution.".format(**locals())
+ )
+
+ def install(self):
+ """
+ Install this importer into sys.meta_path if not already present.
+ """
+ if self not in sys.meta_path:
+ sys.meta_path.append(self)
+
+
+names = 'packaging', 'pyparsing', 'ordered_set',
+VendorImporter(__name__, names, 'setuptools._vendor').install()
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/glob.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/glob.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..9d7cbc5da6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/glob.py
@@ -0,0 +1,174 @@
+"""
+Filename globbing utility. Mostly a copy of `glob` from Python 3.5.
+
+Changes include:
+ * `yield from` and PEP3102 `*` removed.
+ * Hidden files are not ignored.
+"""
+
+import os
+import re
+import fnmatch
+
+__all__ = ["glob", "iglob", "escape"]
+
+
+def glob(pathname, recursive=False):
+ """Return a list of paths matching a pathname pattern.
+
+ The pattern may contain simple shell-style wildcards a la
+ fnmatch. However, unlike fnmatch, filenames starting with a
+ dot are special cases that are not matched by '*' and '?'
+ patterns.
+
+ If recursive is true, the pattern '**' will match any files and
+ zero or more directories and subdirectories.
+ """
+ return list(iglob(pathname, recursive=recursive))
+
+
+def iglob(pathname, recursive=False):
+ """Return an iterator which yields the paths matching a pathname pattern.
+
+ The pattern may contain simple shell-style wildcards a la
+ fnmatch. However, unlike fnmatch, filenames starting with a
+ dot are special cases that are not matched by '*' and '?'
+ patterns.
+
+ If recursive is true, the pattern '**' will match any files and
+ zero or more directories and subdirectories.
+ """
+ it = _iglob(pathname, recursive)
+ if recursive and _isrecursive(pathname):
+ s = next(it) # skip empty string
+ assert not s
+ return it
+
+
+def _iglob(pathname, recursive):
+ dirname, basename = os.path.split(pathname)
+ if not has_magic(pathname):
+ if basename:
+ if os.path.lexists(pathname):
+ yield pathname
+ else:
+ # Patterns ending with a slash should match only directories
+ if os.path.isdir(dirname):
+ yield pathname
+ return
+ if not dirname:
+ if recursive and _isrecursive(basename):
+ for x in glob2(dirname, basename):
+ yield x
+ else:
+ for x in glob1(dirname, basename):
+ yield x
+ return
+ # `os.path.split()` returns the argument itself as a dirname if it is a
+ # drive or UNC path. Prevent an infinite recursion if a drive or UNC path
+ # contains magic characters (i.e. r'\\?\C:').
+ if dirname != pathname and has_magic(dirname):
+ dirs = _iglob(dirname, recursive)
+ else:
+ dirs = [dirname]
+ if has_magic(basename):
+ if recursive and _isrecursive(basename):
+ glob_in_dir = glob2
+ else:
+ glob_in_dir = glob1
+ else:
+ glob_in_dir = glob0
+ for dirname in dirs:
+ for name in glob_in_dir(dirname, basename):
+ yield os.path.join(dirname, name)
+
+
+# These 2 helper functions non-recursively glob inside a literal directory.
+# They return a list of basenames. `glob1` accepts a pattern while `glob0`
+# takes a literal basename (so it only has to check for its existence).
+
+
+def glob1(dirname, pattern):
+ if not dirname:
+ if isinstance(pattern, bytes):
+ dirname = os.curdir.encode('ASCII')
+ else:
+ dirname = os.curdir
+ try:
+ names = os.listdir(dirname)
+ except OSError:
+ return []
+ return fnmatch.filter(names, pattern)
+
+
+def glob0(dirname, basename):
+ if not basename:
+ # `os.path.split()` returns an empty basename for paths ending with a
+ # directory separator. 'q*x/' should match only directories.
+ if os.path.isdir(dirname):
+ return [basename]
+ else:
+ if os.path.lexists(os.path.join(dirname, basename)):
+ return [basename]
+ return []
+
+
+# This helper function recursively yields relative pathnames inside a literal
+# directory.
+
+
+def glob2(dirname, pattern):
+ assert _isrecursive(pattern)
+ yield pattern[:0]
+ for x in _rlistdir(dirname):
+ yield x
+
+
+# Recursively yields relative pathnames inside a literal directory.
+def _rlistdir(dirname):
+ if not dirname:
+ if isinstance(dirname, bytes):
+ dirname = os.curdir.encode('ASCII')
+ else:
+ dirname = os.curdir
+ try:
+ names = os.listdir(dirname)
+ except os.error:
+ return
+ for x in names:
+ yield x
+ path = os.path.join(dirname, x) if dirname else x
+ for y in _rlistdir(path):
+ yield os.path.join(x, y)
+
+
+magic_check = re.compile('([*?[])')
+magic_check_bytes = re.compile(b'([*?[])')
+
+
+def has_magic(s):
+ if isinstance(s, bytes):
+ match = magic_check_bytes.search(s)
+ else:
+ match = magic_check.search(s)
+ return match is not None
+
+
+def _isrecursive(pattern):
+ if isinstance(pattern, bytes):
+ return pattern == b'**'
+ else:
+ return pattern == '**'
+
+
+def escape(pathname):
+ """Escape all special characters.
+ """
+ # Escaping is done by wrapping any of "*?[" between square brackets.
+ # Metacharacters do not work in the drive part and shouldn't be escaped.
+ drive, pathname = os.path.splitdrive(pathname)
+ if isinstance(pathname, bytes):
+ pathname = magic_check_bytes.sub(br'[\1]', pathname)
+ else:
+ pathname = magic_check.sub(r'[\1]', pathname)
+ return drive + pathname
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/gui-32.exe b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/gui-32.exe
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..f8d3509653
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/gui-32.exe
Binary files differ
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/gui-64.exe b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/gui-64.exe
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..330c51a5dd
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/gui-64.exe
Binary files differ
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/gui.exe b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/gui.exe
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..f8d3509653
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/gui.exe
Binary files differ
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/installer.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/installer.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..e630b87479
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/installer.py
@@ -0,0 +1,148 @@
+import glob
+import os
+import subprocess
+import sys
+import tempfile
+from distutils import log
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsError
+
+import pkg_resources
+from setuptools.command.easy_install import easy_install
+from setuptools.wheel import Wheel
+
+
+def _fixup_find_links(find_links):
+ """Ensure find-links option end-up being a list of strings."""
+ if isinstance(find_links, str):
+ return find_links.split()
+ assert isinstance(find_links, (tuple, list))
+ return find_links
+
+
+def _legacy_fetch_build_egg(dist, req):
+ """Fetch an egg needed for building.
+
+ Legacy path using EasyInstall.
+ """
+ tmp_dist = dist.__class__({'script_args': ['easy_install']})
+ opts = tmp_dist.get_option_dict('easy_install')
+ opts.clear()
+ opts.update(
+ (k, v)
+ for k, v in dist.get_option_dict('easy_install').items()
+ if k in (
+ # don't use any other settings
+ 'find_links', 'site_dirs', 'index_url',
+ 'optimize', 'site_dirs', 'allow_hosts',
+ ))
+ if dist.dependency_links:
+ links = dist.dependency_links[:]
+ if 'find_links' in opts:
+ links = _fixup_find_links(opts['find_links'][1]) + links
+ opts['find_links'] = ('setup', links)
+ install_dir = dist.get_egg_cache_dir()
+ cmd = easy_install(
+ tmp_dist, args=["x"], install_dir=install_dir,
+ exclude_scripts=True,
+ always_copy=False, build_directory=None, editable=False,
+ upgrade=False, multi_version=True, no_report=True, user=False
+ )
+ cmd.ensure_finalized()
+ return cmd.easy_install(req)
+
+
+def fetch_build_egg(dist, req):
+ """Fetch an egg needed for building.
+
+ Use pip/wheel to fetch/build a wheel."""
+ # Check pip is available.
+ try:
+ pkg_resources.get_distribution('pip')
+ except pkg_resources.DistributionNotFound:
+ dist.announce(
+ 'WARNING: The pip package is not available, falling back '
+ 'to EasyInstall for handling setup_requires/test_requires; '
+ 'this is deprecated and will be removed in a future version.',
+ log.WARN
+ )
+ return _legacy_fetch_build_egg(dist, req)
+ # Warn if wheel is not.
+ try:
+ pkg_resources.get_distribution('wheel')
+ except pkg_resources.DistributionNotFound:
+ dist.announce('WARNING: The wheel package is not available.', log.WARN)
+ # Ignore environment markers; if supplied, it is required.
+ req = strip_marker(req)
+ # Take easy_install options into account, but do not override relevant
+ # pip environment variables (like PIP_INDEX_URL or PIP_QUIET); they'll
+ # take precedence.
+ opts = dist.get_option_dict('easy_install')
+ if 'allow_hosts' in opts:
+ raise DistutilsError('the `allow-hosts` option is not supported '
+ 'when using pip to install requirements.')
+ if 'PIP_QUIET' in os.environ or 'PIP_VERBOSE' in os.environ:
+ quiet = False
+ else:
+ quiet = True
+ if 'PIP_INDEX_URL' in os.environ:
+ index_url = None
+ elif 'index_url' in opts:
+ index_url = opts['index_url'][1]
+ else:
+ index_url = None
+ if 'find_links' in opts:
+ find_links = _fixup_find_links(opts['find_links'][1])[:]
+ else:
+ find_links = []
+ if dist.dependency_links:
+ find_links.extend(dist.dependency_links)
+ eggs_dir = os.path.realpath(dist.get_egg_cache_dir())
+ environment = pkg_resources.Environment()
+ for egg_dist in pkg_resources.find_distributions(eggs_dir):
+ if egg_dist in req and environment.can_add(egg_dist):
+ return egg_dist
+ with tempfile.TemporaryDirectory() as tmpdir:
+ cmd = [
+ sys.executable, '-m', 'pip',
+ '--disable-pip-version-check',
+ 'wheel', '--no-deps',
+ '-w', tmpdir,
+ ]
+ if quiet:
+ cmd.append('--quiet')
+ if index_url is not None:
+ cmd.extend(('--index-url', index_url))
+ if find_links is not None:
+ for link in find_links:
+ cmd.extend(('--find-links', link))
+ # If requirement is a PEP 508 direct URL, directly pass
+ # the URL to pip, as `req @ url` does not work on the
+ # command line.
+ if req.url:
+ cmd.append(req.url)
+ else:
+ cmd.append(str(req))
+ try:
+ subprocess.check_call(cmd)
+ except subprocess.CalledProcessError as e:
+ raise DistutilsError(str(e)) from e
+ wheel = Wheel(glob.glob(os.path.join(tmpdir, '*.whl'))[0])
+ dist_location = os.path.join(eggs_dir, wheel.egg_name())
+ wheel.install_as_egg(dist_location)
+ dist_metadata = pkg_resources.PathMetadata(
+ dist_location, os.path.join(dist_location, 'EGG-INFO'))
+ dist = pkg_resources.Distribution.from_filename(
+ dist_location, metadata=dist_metadata)
+ return dist
+
+
+def strip_marker(req):
+ """
+ Return a new requirement without the environment marker to avoid
+ calling pip with something like `babel; extra == "i18n"`, which
+ would always be ignored.
+ """
+ # create a copy to avoid mutating the input
+ req = pkg_resources.Requirement.parse(str(req))
+ req.marker = None
+ return req
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/launch.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/launch.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..0208fdf33b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/launch.py
@@ -0,0 +1,36 @@
+"""
+Launch the Python script on the command line after
+setuptools is bootstrapped via import.
+"""
+
+# Note that setuptools gets imported implicitly by the
+# invocation of this script using python -m setuptools.launch
+
+import tokenize
+import sys
+
+
+def run():
+ """
+ Run the script in sys.argv[1] as if it had
+ been invoked naturally.
+ """
+ __builtins__
+ script_name = sys.argv[1]
+ namespace = dict(
+ __file__=script_name,
+ __name__='__main__',
+ __doc__=None,
+ )
+ sys.argv[:] = sys.argv[1:]
+
+ open_ = getattr(tokenize, 'open', open)
+ with open_(script_name) as fid:
+ script = fid.read()
+ norm_script = script.replace('\\r\\n', '\\n')
+ code = compile(norm_script, script_name, 'exec')
+ exec(code, namespace)
+
+
+if __name__ == '__main__':
+ run()
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/lib2to3_ex.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/lib2to3_ex.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..c176abf633
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/lib2to3_ex.py
@@ -0,0 +1,68 @@
+"""
+Customized Mixin2to3 support:
+
+ - adds support for converting doctests
+"""
+
+import warnings
+from distutils.util import Mixin2to3 as _Mixin2to3
+from distutils import log
+from lib2to3.refactor import RefactoringTool, get_fixers_from_package
+
+import setuptools
+from ._deprecation_warning import SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning
+
+
+class DistutilsRefactoringTool(RefactoringTool):
+ def log_error(self, msg, *args, **kw):
+ log.error(msg, *args)
+
+ def log_message(self, msg, *args):
+ log.info(msg, *args)
+
+ def log_debug(self, msg, *args):
+ log.debug(msg, *args)
+
+
+class Mixin2to3(_Mixin2to3):
+ def run_2to3(self, files, doctests=False):
+ # See of the distribution option has been set, otherwise check the
+ # setuptools default.
+ if self.distribution.use_2to3 is not True:
+ return
+ if not files:
+ return
+
+ warnings.warn(
+ "2to3 support is deprecated. If the project still "
+ "requires Python 2 support, please migrate to "
+ "a single-codebase solution or employ an "
+ "independent conversion process.",
+ SetuptoolsDeprecationWarning)
+ log.info("Fixing " + " ".join(files))
+ self.__build_fixer_names()
+ self.__exclude_fixers()
+ if doctests:
+ if setuptools.run_2to3_on_doctests:
+ r = DistutilsRefactoringTool(self.fixer_names)
+ r.refactor(files, write=True, doctests_only=True)
+ else:
+ _Mixin2to3.run_2to3(self, files)
+
+ def __build_fixer_names(self):
+ if self.fixer_names:
+ return
+ self.fixer_names = []
+ for p in setuptools.lib2to3_fixer_packages:
+ self.fixer_names.extend(get_fixers_from_package(p))
+ if self.distribution.use_2to3_fixers is not None:
+ for p in self.distribution.use_2to3_fixers:
+ self.fixer_names.extend(get_fixers_from_package(p))
+
+ def __exclude_fixers(self):
+ excluded_fixers = getattr(self, 'exclude_fixers', [])
+ if self.distribution.use_2to3_exclude_fixers is not None:
+ excluded_fixers.extend(self.distribution.use_2to3_exclude_fixers)
+ for fixer_name in excluded_fixers:
+ if fixer_name in self.fixer_names:
+ self.fixer_names.remove(fixer_name)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/monkey.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/monkey.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..fb36dc1a97
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/monkey.py
@@ -0,0 +1,177 @@
+"""
+Monkey patching of distutils.
+"""
+
+import sys
+import distutils.filelist
+import platform
+import types
+import functools
+from importlib import import_module
+import inspect
+
+import setuptools
+
+__all__ = []
+"""
+Everything is private. Contact the project team
+if you think you need this functionality.
+"""
+
+
+def _get_mro(cls):
+ """
+ Returns the bases classes for cls sorted by the MRO.
+
+ Works around an issue on Jython where inspect.getmro will not return all
+ base classes if multiple classes share the same name. Instead, this
+ function will return a tuple containing the class itself, and the contents
+ of cls.__bases__. See https://github.com/pypa/setuptools/issues/1024.
+ """
+ if platform.python_implementation() == "Jython":
+ return (cls,) + cls.__bases__
+ return inspect.getmro(cls)
+
+
+def get_unpatched(item):
+ lookup = (
+ get_unpatched_class if isinstance(item, type) else
+ get_unpatched_function if isinstance(item, types.FunctionType) else
+ lambda item: None
+ )
+ return lookup(item)
+
+
+def get_unpatched_class(cls):
+ """Protect against re-patching the distutils if reloaded
+
+ Also ensures that no other distutils extension monkeypatched the distutils
+ first.
+ """
+ external_bases = (
+ cls
+ for cls in _get_mro(cls)
+ if not cls.__module__.startswith('setuptools')
+ )
+ base = next(external_bases)
+ if not base.__module__.startswith('distutils'):
+ msg = "distutils has already been patched by %r" % cls
+ raise AssertionError(msg)
+ return base
+
+
+def patch_all():
+ # we can't patch distutils.cmd, alas
+ distutils.core.Command = setuptools.Command
+
+ has_issue_12885 = sys.version_info <= (3, 5, 3)
+
+ if has_issue_12885:
+ # fix findall bug in distutils (http://bugs.python.org/issue12885)
+ distutils.filelist.findall = setuptools.findall
+
+ needs_warehouse = (
+ sys.version_info < (2, 7, 13)
+ or
+ (3, 4) < sys.version_info < (3, 4, 6)
+ or
+ (3, 5) < sys.version_info <= (3, 5, 3)
+ )
+
+ if needs_warehouse:
+ warehouse = 'https://upload.pypi.org/legacy/'
+ distutils.config.PyPIRCCommand.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY = warehouse
+
+ _patch_distribution_metadata()
+
+ # Install Distribution throughout the distutils
+ for module in distutils.dist, distutils.core, distutils.cmd:
+ module.Distribution = setuptools.dist.Distribution
+
+ # Install the patched Extension
+ distutils.core.Extension = setuptools.extension.Extension
+ distutils.extension.Extension = setuptools.extension.Extension
+ if 'distutils.command.build_ext' in sys.modules:
+ sys.modules['distutils.command.build_ext'].Extension = (
+ setuptools.extension.Extension
+ )
+
+ patch_for_msvc_specialized_compiler()
+
+
+def _patch_distribution_metadata():
+ """Patch write_pkg_file and read_pkg_file for higher metadata standards"""
+ for attr in ('write_pkg_file', 'read_pkg_file', 'get_metadata_version'):
+ new_val = getattr(setuptools.dist, attr)
+ setattr(distutils.dist.DistributionMetadata, attr, new_val)
+
+
+def patch_func(replacement, target_mod, func_name):
+ """
+ Patch func_name in target_mod with replacement
+
+ Important - original must be resolved by name to avoid
+ patching an already patched function.
+ """
+ original = getattr(target_mod, func_name)
+
+ # set the 'unpatched' attribute on the replacement to
+ # point to the original.
+ vars(replacement).setdefault('unpatched', original)
+
+ # replace the function in the original module
+ setattr(target_mod, func_name, replacement)
+
+
+def get_unpatched_function(candidate):
+ return getattr(candidate, 'unpatched')
+
+
+def patch_for_msvc_specialized_compiler():
+ """
+ Patch functions in distutils to use standalone Microsoft Visual C++
+ compilers.
+ """
+ # import late to avoid circular imports on Python < 3.5
+ msvc = import_module('setuptools.msvc')
+
+ if platform.system() != 'Windows':
+ # Compilers only available on Microsoft Windows
+ return
+
+ def patch_params(mod_name, func_name):
+ """
+ Prepare the parameters for patch_func to patch indicated function.
+ """
+ repl_prefix = 'msvc9_' if 'msvc9' in mod_name else 'msvc14_'
+ repl_name = repl_prefix + func_name.lstrip('_')
+ repl = getattr(msvc, repl_name)
+ mod = import_module(mod_name)
+ if not hasattr(mod, func_name):
+ raise ImportError(func_name)
+ return repl, mod, func_name
+
+ # Python 2.7 to 3.4
+ msvc9 = functools.partial(patch_params, 'distutils.msvc9compiler')
+
+ # Python 3.5+
+ msvc14 = functools.partial(patch_params, 'distutils._msvccompiler')
+
+ try:
+ # Patch distutils.msvc9compiler
+ patch_func(*msvc9('find_vcvarsall'))
+ patch_func(*msvc9('query_vcvarsall'))
+ except ImportError:
+ pass
+
+ try:
+ # Patch distutils._msvccompiler._get_vc_env
+ patch_func(*msvc14('_get_vc_env'))
+ except ImportError:
+ pass
+
+ try:
+ # Patch distutils._msvccompiler.gen_lib_options for Numpy
+ patch_func(*msvc14('gen_lib_options'))
+ except ImportError:
+ pass
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/msvc.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/msvc.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..1ead72b421
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/msvc.py
@@ -0,0 +1,1830 @@
+"""
+Improved support for Microsoft Visual C++ compilers.
+
+Known supported compilers:
+--------------------------
+Microsoft Visual C++ 9.0:
+ Microsoft Visual C++ Compiler for Python 2.7 (x86, amd64)
+ Microsoft Windows SDK 6.1 (x86, x64, ia64)
+ Microsoft Windows SDK 7.0 (x86, x64, ia64)
+
+Microsoft Visual C++ 10.0:
+ Microsoft Windows SDK 7.1 (x86, x64, ia64)
+
+Microsoft Visual C++ 14.X:
+ Microsoft Visual C++ Build Tools 2015 (x86, x64, arm)
+ Microsoft Visual Studio Build Tools 2017 (x86, x64, arm, arm64)
+ Microsoft Visual Studio Build Tools 2019 (x86, x64, arm, arm64)
+
+This may also support compilers shipped with compatible Visual Studio versions.
+"""
+
+import json
+from io import open
+from os import listdir, pathsep
+from os.path import join, isfile, isdir, dirname
+import sys
+import platform
+import itertools
+import subprocess
+import distutils.errors
+from setuptools.extern.packaging.version import LegacyVersion
+
+from .monkey import get_unpatched
+
+if platform.system() == 'Windows':
+ import winreg
+ from os import environ
+else:
+ # Mock winreg and environ so the module can be imported on this platform.
+
+ class winreg:
+ HKEY_USERS = None
+ HKEY_CURRENT_USER = None
+ HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE = None
+ HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT = None
+
+ environ = dict()
+
+_msvc9_suppress_errors = (
+ # msvc9compiler isn't available on some platforms
+ ImportError,
+
+ # msvc9compiler raises DistutilsPlatformError in some
+ # environments. See #1118.
+ distutils.errors.DistutilsPlatformError,
+)
+
+try:
+ from distutils.msvc9compiler import Reg
+except _msvc9_suppress_errors:
+ pass
+
+
+def msvc9_find_vcvarsall(version):
+ """
+ Patched "distutils.msvc9compiler.find_vcvarsall" to use the standalone
+ compiler build for Python
+ (VCForPython / Microsoft Visual C++ Compiler for Python 2.7).
+
+ Fall back to original behavior when the standalone compiler is not
+ available.
+
+ Redirect the path of "vcvarsall.bat".
+
+ Parameters
+ ----------
+ version: float
+ Required Microsoft Visual C++ version.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ vcvarsall.bat path
+ """
+ vc_base = r'Software\%sMicrosoft\DevDiv\VCForPython\%0.1f'
+ key = vc_base % ('', version)
+ try:
+ # Per-user installs register the compiler path here
+ productdir = Reg.get_value(key, "installdir")
+ except KeyError:
+ try:
+ # All-user installs on a 64-bit system register here
+ key = vc_base % ('Wow6432Node\\', version)
+ productdir = Reg.get_value(key, "installdir")
+ except KeyError:
+ productdir = None
+
+ if productdir:
+ vcvarsall = join(productdir, "vcvarsall.bat")
+ if isfile(vcvarsall):
+ return vcvarsall
+
+ return get_unpatched(msvc9_find_vcvarsall)(version)
+
+
+def msvc9_query_vcvarsall(ver, arch='x86', *args, **kwargs):
+ """
+ Patched "distutils.msvc9compiler.query_vcvarsall" for support extra
+ Microsoft Visual C++ 9.0 and 10.0 compilers.
+
+ Set environment without use of "vcvarsall.bat".
+
+ Parameters
+ ----------
+ ver: float
+ Required Microsoft Visual C++ version.
+ arch: str
+ Target architecture.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ dict
+ environment
+ """
+ # Try to get environment from vcvarsall.bat (Classical way)
+ try:
+ orig = get_unpatched(msvc9_query_vcvarsall)
+ return orig(ver, arch, *args, **kwargs)
+ except distutils.errors.DistutilsPlatformError:
+ # Pass error if Vcvarsall.bat is missing
+ pass
+ except ValueError:
+ # Pass error if environment not set after executing vcvarsall.bat
+ pass
+
+ # If error, try to set environment directly
+ try:
+ return EnvironmentInfo(arch, ver).return_env()
+ except distutils.errors.DistutilsPlatformError as exc:
+ _augment_exception(exc, ver, arch)
+ raise
+
+
+def _msvc14_find_vc2015():
+ """Python 3.8 "distutils/_msvccompiler.py" backport"""
+ try:
+ key = winreg.OpenKey(
+ winreg.HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE,
+ r"Software\Microsoft\VisualStudio\SxS\VC7",
+ 0,
+ winreg.KEY_READ | winreg.KEY_WOW64_32KEY
+ )
+ except OSError:
+ return None, None
+
+ best_version = 0
+ best_dir = None
+ with key:
+ for i in itertools.count():
+ try:
+ v, vc_dir, vt = winreg.EnumValue(key, i)
+ except OSError:
+ break
+ if v and vt == winreg.REG_SZ and isdir(vc_dir):
+ try:
+ version = int(float(v))
+ except (ValueError, TypeError):
+ continue
+ if version >= 14 and version > best_version:
+ best_version, best_dir = version, vc_dir
+ return best_version, best_dir
+
+
+def _msvc14_find_vc2017():
+ """Python 3.8 "distutils/_msvccompiler.py" backport
+
+ Returns "15, path" based on the result of invoking vswhere.exe
+ If no install is found, returns "None, None"
+
+ The version is returned to avoid unnecessarily changing the function
+ result. It may be ignored when the path is not None.
+
+ If vswhere.exe is not available, by definition, VS 2017 is not
+ installed.
+ """
+ root = environ.get("ProgramFiles(x86)") or environ.get("ProgramFiles")
+ if not root:
+ return None, None
+
+ try:
+ path = subprocess.check_output([
+ join(root, "Microsoft Visual Studio", "Installer", "vswhere.exe"),
+ "-latest",
+ "-prerelease",
+ "-requires", "Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.VC.Tools.x86.x64",
+ "-property", "installationPath",
+ "-products", "*",
+ ]).decode(encoding="mbcs", errors="strict").strip()
+ except (subprocess.CalledProcessError, OSError, UnicodeDecodeError):
+ return None, None
+
+ path = join(path, "VC", "Auxiliary", "Build")
+ if isdir(path):
+ return 15, path
+
+ return None, None
+
+
+PLAT_SPEC_TO_RUNTIME = {
+ 'x86': 'x86',
+ 'x86_amd64': 'x64',
+ 'x86_arm': 'arm',
+ 'x86_arm64': 'arm64'
+}
+
+
+def _msvc14_find_vcvarsall(plat_spec):
+ """Python 3.8 "distutils/_msvccompiler.py" backport"""
+ _, best_dir = _msvc14_find_vc2017()
+ vcruntime = None
+
+ if plat_spec in PLAT_SPEC_TO_RUNTIME:
+ vcruntime_plat = PLAT_SPEC_TO_RUNTIME[plat_spec]
+ else:
+ vcruntime_plat = 'x64' if 'amd64' in plat_spec else 'x86'
+
+ if best_dir:
+ vcredist = join(best_dir, "..", "..", "redist", "MSVC", "**",
+ vcruntime_plat, "Microsoft.VC14*.CRT",
+ "vcruntime140.dll")
+ try:
+ import glob
+ vcruntime = glob.glob(vcredist, recursive=True)[-1]
+ except (ImportError, OSError, LookupError):
+ vcruntime = None
+
+ if not best_dir:
+ best_version, best_dir = _msvc14_find_vc2015()
+ if best_version:
+ vcruntime = join(best_dir, 'redist', vcruntime_plat,
+ "Microsoft.VC140.CRT", "vcruntime140.dll")
+
+ if not best_dir:
+ return None, None
+
+ vcvarsall = join(best_dir, "vcvarsall.bat")
+ if not isfile(vcvarsall):
+ return None, None
+
+ if not vcruntime or not isfile(vcruntime):
+ vcruntime = None
+
+ return vcvarsall, vcruntime
+
+
+def _msvc14_get_vc_env(plat_spec):
+ """Python 3.8 "distutils/_msvccompiler.py" backport"""
+ if "DISTUTILS_USE_SDK" in environ:
+ return {
+ key.lower(): value
+ for key, value in environ.items()
+ }
+
+ vcvarsall, vcruntime = _msvc14_find_vcvarsall(plat_spec)
+ if not vcvarsall:
+ raise distutils.errors.DistutilsPlatformError(
+ "Unable to find vcvarsall.bat"
+ )
+
+ try:
+ out = subprocess.check_output(
+ 'cmd /u /c "{}" {} && set'.format(vcvarsall, plat_spec),
+ stderr=subprocess.STDOUT,
+ ).decode('utf-16le', errors='replace')
+ except subprocess.CalledProcessError as exc:
+ raise distutils.errors.DistutilsPlatformError(
+ "Error executing {}".format(exc.cmd)
+ ) from exc
+
+ env = {
+ key.lower(): value
+ for key, _, value in
+ (line.partition('=') for line in out.splitlines())
+ if key and value
+ }
+
+ if vcruntime:
+ env['py_vcruntime_redist'] = vcruntime
+ return env
+
+
+def msvc14_get_vc_env(plat_spec):
+ """
+ Patched "distutils._msvccompiler._get_vc_env" for support extra
+ Microsoft Visual C++ 14.X compilers.
+
+ Set environment without use of "vcvarsall.bat".
+
+ Parameters
+ ----------
+ plat_spec: str
+ Target architecture.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ dict
+ environment
+ """
+
+ # Always use backport from CPython 3.8
+ try:
+ return _msvc14_get_vc_env(plat_spec)
+ except distutils.errors.DistutilsPlatformError as exc:
+ _augment_exception(exc, 14.0)
+ raise
+
+
+def msvc14_gen_lib_options(*args, **kwargs):
+ """
+ Patched "distutils._msvccompiler.gen_lib_options" for fix
+ compatibility between "numpy.distutils" and "distutils._msvccompiler"
+ (for Numpy < 1.11.2)
+ """
+ if "numpy.distutils" in sys.modules:
+ import numpy as np
+ if LegacyVersion(np.__version__) < LegacyVersion('1.11.2'):
+ return np.distutils.ccompiler.gen_lib_options(*args, **kwargs)
+ return get_unpatched(msvc14_gen_lib_options)(*args, **kwargs)
+
+
+def _augment_exception(exc, version, arch=''):
+ """
+ Add details to the exception message to help guide the user
+ as to what action will resolve it.
+ """
+ # Error if MSVC++ directory not found or environment not set
+ message = exc.args[0]
+
+ if "vcvarsall" in message.lower() or "visual c" in message.lower():
+ # Special error message if MSVC++ not installed
+ tmpl = 'Microsoft Visual C++ {version:0.1f} or greater is required.'
+ message = tmpl.format(**locals())
+ msdownload = 'www.microsoft.com/download/details.aspx?id=%d'
+ if version == 9.0:
+ if arch.lower().find('ia64') > -1:
+ # For VC++ 9.0, if IA64 support is needed, redirect user
+ # to Windows SDK 7.0.
+ # Note: No download link available from Microsoft.
+ message += ' Get it with "Microsoft Windows SDK 7.0"'
+ else:
+ # For VC++ 9.0 redirect user to Vc++ for Python 2.7 :
+ # This redirection link is maintained by Microsoft.
+ # Contact vspython@microsoft.com if it needs updating.
+ message += ' Get it from http://aka.ms/vcpython27'
+ elif version == 10.0:
+ # For VC++ 10.0 Redirect user to Windows SDK 7.1
+ message += ' Get it with "Microsoft Windows SDK 7.1": '
+ message += msdownload % 8279
+ elif version >= 14.0:
+ # For VC++ 14.X Redirect user to latest Visual C++ Build Tools
+ message += (' Get it with "Microsoft C++ Build Tools": '
+ r'https://visualstudio.microsoft.com'
+ r'/visual-cpp-build-tools/')
+
+ exc.args = (message, )
+
+
+class PlatformInfo:
+ """
+ Current and Target Architectures information.
+
+ Parameters
+ ----------
+ arch: str
+ Target architecture.
+ """
+ current_cpu = environ.get('processor_architecture', '').lower()
+
+ def __init__(self, arch):
+ self.arch = arch.lower().replace('x64', 'amd64')
+
+ @property
+ def target_cpu(self):
+ """
+ Return Target CPU architecture.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ Target CPU
+ """
+ return self.arch[self.arch.find('_') + 1:]
+
+ def target_is_x86(self):
+ """
+ Return True if target CPU is x86 32 bits..
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ bool
+ CPU is x86 32 bits
+ """
+ return self.target_cpu == 'x86'
+
+ def current_is_x86(self):
+ """
+ Return True if current CPU is x86 32 bits..
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ bool
+ CPU is x86 32 bits
+ """
+ return self.current_cpu == 'x86'
+
+ def current_dir(self, hidex86=False, x64=False):
+ """
+ Current platform specific subfolder.
+
+ Parameters
+ ----------
+ hidex86: bool
+ return '' and not '\x86' if architecture is x86.
+ x64: bool
+ return '\x64' and not '\amd64' if architecture is amd64.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ subfolder: '\target', or '' (see hidex86 parameter)
+ """
+ return (
+ '' if (self.current_cpu == 'x86' and hidex86) else
+ r'\x64' if (self.current_cpu == 'amd64' and x64) else
+ r'\%s' % self.current_cpu
+ )
+
+ def target_dir(self, hidex86=False, x64=False):
+ r"""
+ Target platform specific subfolder.
+
+ Parameters
+ ----------
+ hidex86: bool
+ return '' and not '\x86' if architecture is x86.
+ x64: bool
+ return '\x64' and not '\amd64' if architecture is amd64.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ subfolder: '\current', or '' (see hidex86 parameter)
+ """
+ return (
+ '' if (self.target_cpu == 'x86' and hidex86) else
+ r'\x64' if (self.target_cpu == 'amd64' and x64) else
+ r'\%s' % self.target_cpu
+ )
+
+ def cross_dir(self, forcex86=False):
+ r"""
+ Cross platform specific subfolder.
+
+ Parameters
+ ----------
+ forcex86: bool
+ Use 'x86' as current architecture even if current architecture is
+ not x86.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ subfolder: '' if target architecture is current architecture,
+ '\current_target' if not.
+ """
+ current = 'x86' if forcex86 else self.current_cpu
+ return (
+ '' if self.target_cpu == current else
+ self.target_dir().replace('\\', '\\%s_' % current)
+ )
+
+
+class RegistryInfo:
+ """
+ Microsoft Visual Studio related registry information.
+
+ Parameters
+ ----------
+ platform_info: PlatformInfo
+ "PlatformInfo" instance.
+ """
+ HKEYS = (winreg.HKEY_USERS,
+ winreg.HKEY_CURRENT_USER,
+ winreg.HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE,
+ winreg.HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT)
+
+ def __init__(self, platform_info):
+ self.pi = platform_info
+
+ @property
+ def visualstudio(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Visual Studio root registry key.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ Registry key
+ """
+ return 'VisualStudio'
+
+ @property
+ def sxs(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Visual Studio SxS registry key.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ Registry key
+ """
+ return join(self.visualstudio, 'SxS')
+
+ @property
+ def vc(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Visual C++ VC7 registry key.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ Registry key
+ """
+ return join(self.sxs, 'VC7')
+
+ @property
+ def vs(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Visual Studio VS7 registry key.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ Registry key
+ """
+ return join(self.sxs, 'VS7')
+
+ @property
+ def vc_for_python(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Visual C++ for Python registry key.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ Registry key
+ """
+ return r'DevDiv\VCForPython'
+
+ @property
+ def microsoft_sdk(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft SDK registry key.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ Registry key
+ """
+ return 'Microsoft SDKs'
+
+ @property
+ def windows_sdk(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Windows/Platform SDK registry key.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ Registry key
+ """
+ return join(self.microsoft_sdk, 'Windows')
+
+ @property
+ def netfx_sdk(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft .NET Framework SDK registry key.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ Registry key
+ """
+ return join(self.microsoft_sdk, 'NETFXSDK')
+
+ @property
+ def windows_kits_roots(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Windows Kits Roots registry key.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ Registry key
+ """
+ return r'Windows Kits\Installed Roots'
+
+ def microsoft(self, key, x86=False):
+ """
+ Return key in Microsoft software registry.
+
+ Parameters
+ ----------
+ key: str
+ Registry key path where look.
+ x86: str
+ Force x86 software registry.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ Registry key
+ """
+ node64 = '' if self.pi.current_is_x86() or x86 else 'Wow6432Node'
+ return join('Software', node64, 'Microsoft', key)
+
+ def lookup(self, key, name):
+ """
+ Look for values in registry in Microsoft software registry.
+
+ Parameters
+ ----------
+ key: str
+ Registry key path where look.
+ name: str
+ Value name to find.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ value
+ """
+ key_read = winreg.KEY_READ
+ openkey = winreg.OpenKey
+ closekey = winreg.CloseKey
+ ms = self.microsoft
+ for hkey in self.HKEYS:
+ bkey = None
+ try:
+ bkey = openkey(hkey, ms(key), 0, key_read)
+ except (OSError, IOError):
+ if not self.pi.current_is_x86():
+ try:
+ bkey = openkey(hkey, ms(key, True), 0, key_read)
+ except (OSError, IOError):
+ continue
+ else:
+ continue
+ try:
+ return winreg.QueryValueEx(bkey, name)[0]
+ except (OSError, IOError):
+ pass
+ finally:
+ if bkey:
+ closekey(bkey)
+
+
+class SystemInfo:
+ """
+ Microsoft Windows and Visual Studio related system information.
+
+ Parameters
+ ----------
+ registry_info: RegistryInfo
+ "RegistryInfo" instance.
+ vc_ver: float
+ Required Microsoft Visual C++ version.
+ """
+
+ # Variables and properties in this class use originals CamelCase variables
+ # names from Microsoft source files for more easy comparison.
+ WinDir = environ.get('WinDir', '')
+ ProgramFiles = environ.get('ProgramFiles', '')
+ ProgramFilesx86 = environ.get('ProgramFiles(x86)', ProgramFiles)
+
+ def __init__(self, registry_info, vc_ver=None):
+ self.ri = registry_info
+ self.pi = self.ri.pi
+
+ self.known_vs_paths = self.find_programdata_vs_vers()
+
+ # Except for VS15+, VC version is aligned with VS version
+ self.vs_ver = self.vc_ver = (
+ vc_ver or self._find_latest_available_vs_ver())
+
+ def _find_latest_available_vs_ver(self):
+ """
+ Find the latest VC version
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ float
+ version
+ """
+ reg_vc_vers = self.find_reg_vs_vers()
+
+ if not (reg_vc_vers or self.known_vs_paths):
+ raise distutils.errors.DistutilsPlatformError(
+ 'No Microsoft Visual C++ version found')
+
+ vc_vers = set(reg_vc_vers)
+ vc_vers.update(self.known_vs_paths)
+ return sorted(vc_vers)[-1]
+
+ def find_reg_vs_vers(self):
+ """
+ Find Microsoft Visual Studio versions available in registry.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ list of float
+ Versions
+ """
+ ms = self.ri.microsoft
+ vckeys = (self.ri.vc, self.ri.vc_for_python, self.ri.vs)
+ vs_vers = []
+ for hkey in self.ri.HKEYS:
+ for key in vckeys:
+ try:
+ bkey = winreg.OpenKey(hkey, ms(key), 0, winreg.KEY_READ)
+ except (OSError, IOError):
+ continue
+ with bkey:
+ subkeys, values, _ = winreg.QueryInfoKey(bkey)
+ for i in range(values):
+ try:
+ ver = float(winreg.EnumValue(bkey, i)[0])
+ if ver not in vs_vers:
+ vs_vers.append(ver)
+ except ValueError:
+ pass
+ for i in range(subkeys):
+ try:
+ ver = float(winreg.EnumKey(bkey, i))
+ if ver not in vs_vers:
+ vs_vers.append(ver)
+ except ValueError:
+ pass
+ return sorted(vs_vers)
+
+ def find_programdata_vs_vers(self):
+ r"""
+ Find Visual studio 2017+ versions from information in
+ "C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\VisualStudio\Packages\_Instances".
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ dict
+ float version as key, path as value.
+ """
+ vs_versions = {}
+ instances_dir = \
+ r'C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\VisualStudio\Packages\_Instances'
+
+ try:
+ hashed_names = listdir(instances_dir)
+
+ except (OSError, IOError):
+ # Directory not exists with all Visual Studio versions
+ return vs_versions
+
+ for name in hashed_names:
+ try:
+ # Get VS installation path from "state.json" file
+ state_path = join(instances_dir, name, 'state.json')
+ with open(state_path, 'rt', encoding='utf-8') as state_file:
+ state = json.load(state_file)
+ vs_path = state['installationPath']
+
+ # Raises OSError if this VS installation does not contain VC
+ listdir(join(vs_path, r'VC\Tools\MSVC'))
+
+ # Store version and path
+ vs_versions[self._as_float_version(
+ state['installationVersion'])] = vs_path
+
+ except (OSError, IOError, KeyError):
+ # Skip if "state.json" file is missing or bad format
+ continue
+
+ return vs_versions
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _as_float_version(version):
+ """
+ Return a string version as a simplified float version (major.minor)
+
+ Parameters
+ ----------
+ version: str
+ Version.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ float
+ version
+ """
+ return float('.'.join(version.split('.')[:2]))
+
+ @property
+ def VSInstallDir(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Visual Studio directory.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ path
+ """
+ # Default path
+ default = join(self.ProgramFilesx86,
+ 'Microsoft Visual Studio %0.1f' % self.vs_ver)
+
+ # Try to get path from registry, if fail use default path
+ return self.ri.lookup(self.ri.vs, '%0.1f' % self.vs_ver) or default
+
+ @property
+ def VCInstallDir(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Visual C++ directory.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ path
+ """
+ path = self._guess_vc() or self._guess_vc_legacy()
+
+ if not isdir(path):
+ msg = 'Microsoft Visual C++ directory not found'
+ raise distutils.errors.DistutilsPlatformError(msg)
+
+ return path
+
+ def _guess_vc(self):
+ """
+ Locate Visual C++ for VS2017+.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ path
+ """
+ if self.vs_ver <= 14.0:
+ return ''
+
+ try:
+ # First search in known VS paths
+ vs_dir = self.known_vs_paths[self.vs_ver]
+ except KeyError:
+ # Else, search with path from registry
+ vs_dir = self.VSInstallDir
+
+ guess_vc = join(vs_dir, r'VC\Tools\MSVC')
+
+ # Subdir with VC exact version as name
+ try:
+ # Update the VC version with real one instead of VS version
+ vc_ver = listdir(guess_vc)[-1]
+ self.vc_ver = self._as_float_version(vc_ver)
+ return join(guess_vc, vc_ver)
+ except (OSError, IOError, IndexError):
+ return ''
+
+ def _guess_vc_legacy(self):
+ """
+ Locate Visual C++ for versions prior to 2017.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ path
+ """
+ default = join(self.ProgramFilesx86,
+ r'Microsoft Visual Studio %0.1f\VC' % self.vs_ver)
+
+ # Try to get "VC++ for Python" path from registry as default path
+ reg_path = join(self.ri.vc_for_python, '%0.1f' % self.vs_ver)
+ python_vc = self.ri.lookup(reg_path, 'installdir')
+ default_vc = join(python_vc, 'VC') if python_vc else default
+
+ # Try to get path from registry, if fail use default path
+ return self.ri.lookup(self.ri.vc, '%0.1f' % self.vs_ver) or default_vc
+
+ @property
+ def WindowsSdkVersion(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Windows SDK versions for specified MSVC++ version.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ tuple of str
+ versions
+ """
+ if self.vs_ver <= 9.0:
+ return '7.0', '6.1', '6.0a'
+ elif self.vs_ver == 10.0:
+ return '7.1', '7.0a'
+ elif self.vs_ver == 11.0:
+ return '8.0', '8.0a'
+ elif self.vs_ver == 12.0:
+ return '8.1', '8.1a'
+ elif self.vs_ver >= 14.0:
+ return '10.0', '8.1'
+
+ @property
+ def WindowsSdkLastVersion(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Windows SDK last version.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ version
+ """
+ return self._use_last_dir_name(join(self.WindowsSdkDir, 'lib'))
+
+ @property
+ def WindowsSdkDir(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Windows SDK directory.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ path
+ """
+ sdkdir = ''
+ for ver in self.WindowsSdkVersion:
+ # Try to get it from registry
+ loc = join(self.ri.windows_sdk, 'v%s' % ver)
+ sdkdir = self.ri.lookup(loc, 'installationfolder')
+ if sdkdir:
+ break
+ if not sdkdir or not isdir(sdkdir):
+ # Try to get "VC++ for Python" version from registry
+ path = join(self.ri.vc_for_python, '%0.1f' % self.vc_ver)
+ install_base = self.ri.lookup(path, 'installdir')
+ if install_base:
+ sdkdir = join(install_base, 'WinSDK')
+ if not sdkdir or not isdir(sdkdir):
+ # If fail, use default new path
+ for ver in self.WindowsSdkVersion:
+ intver = ver[:ver.rfind('.')]
+ path = r'Microsoft SDKs\Windows Kits\%s' % intver
+ d = join(self.ProgramFiles, path)
+ if isdir(d):
+ sdkdir = d
+ if not sdkdir or not isdir(sdkdir):
+ # If fail, use default old path
+ for ver in self.WindowsSdkVersion:
+ path = r'Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v%s' % ver
+ d = join(self.ProgramFiles, path)
+ if isdir(d):
+ sdkdir = d
+ if not sdkdir:
+ # If fail, use Platform SDK
+ sdkdir = join(self.VCInstallDir, 'PlatformSDK')
+ return sdkdir
+
+ @property
+ def WindowsSDKExecutablePath(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Windows SDK executable directory.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ path
+ """
+ # Find WinSDK NetFx Tools registry dir name
+ if self.vs_ver <= 11.0:
+ netfxver = 35
+ arch = ''
+ else:
+ netfxver = 40
+ hidex86 = True if self.vs_ver <= 12.0 else False
+ arch = self.pi.current_dir(x64=True, hidex86=hidex86)
+ fx = 'WinSDK-NetFx%dTools%s' % (netfxver, arch.replace('\\', '-'))
+
+ # list all possibles registry paths
+ regpaths = []
+ if self.vs_ver >= 14.0:
+ for ver in self.NetFxSdkVersion:
+ regpaths += [join(self.ri.netfx_sdk, ver, fx)]
+
+ for ver in self.WindowsSdkVersion:
+ regpaths += [join(self.ri.windows_sdk, 'v%sA' % ver, fx)]
+
+ # Return installation folder from the more recent path
+ for path in regpaths:
+ execpath = self.ri.lookup(path, 'installationfolder')
+ if execpath:
+ return execpath
+
+ @property
+ def FSharpInstallDir(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Visual F# directory.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ path
+ """
+ path = join(self.ri.visualstudio, r'%0.1f\Setup\F#' % self.vs_ver)
+ return self.ri.lookup(path, 'productdir') or ''
+
+ @property
+ def UniversalCRTSdkDir(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Universal CRT SDK directory.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ path
+ """
+ # Set Kit Roots versions for specified MSVC++ version
+ vers = ('10', '81') if self.vs_ver >= 14.0 else ()
+
+ # Find path of the more recent Kit
+ for ver in vers:
+ sdkdir = self.ri.lookup(self.ri.windows_kits_roots,
+ 'kitsroot%s' % ver)
+ if sdkdir:
+ return sdkdir or ''
+
+ @property
+ def UniversalCRTSdkLastVersion(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Universal C Runtime SDK last version.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ version
+ """
+ return self._use_last_dir_name(join(self.UniversalCRTSdkDir, 'lib'))
+
+ @property
+ def NetFxSdkVersion(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft .NET Framework SDK versions.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ tuple of str
+ versions
+ """
+ # Set FxSdk versions for specified VS version
+ return (('4.7.2', '4.7.1', '4.7',
+ '4.6.2', '4.6.1', '4.6',
+ '4.5.2', '4.5.1', '4.5')
+ if self.vs_ver >= 14.0 else ())
+
+ @property
+ def NetFxSdkDir(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft .NET Framework SDK directory.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ path
+ """
+ sdkdir = ''
+ for ver in self.NetFxSdkVersion:
+ loc = join(self.ri.netfx_sdk, ver)
+ sdkdir = self.ri.lookup(loc, 'kitsinstallationfolder')
+ if sdkdir:
+ break
+ return sdkdir
+
+ @property
+ def FrameworkDir32(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft .NET Framework 32bit directory.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ path
+ """
+ # Default path
+ guess_fw = join(self.WinDir, r'Microsoft.NET\Framework')
+
+ # Try to get path from registry, if fail use default path
+ return self.ri.lookup(self.ri.vc, 'frameworkdir32') or guess_fw
+
+ @property
+ def FrameworkDir64(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft .NET Framework 64bit directory.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ path
+ """
+ # Default path
+ guess_fw = join(self.WinDir, r'Microsoft.NET\Framework64')
+
+ # Try to get path from registry, if fail use default path
+ return self.ri.lookup(self.ri.vc, 'frameworkdir64') or guess_fw
+
+ @property
+ def FrameworkVersion32(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft .NET Framework 32bit versions.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ tuple of str
+ versions
+ """
+ return self._find_dot_net_versions(32)
+
+ @property
+ def FrameworkVersion64(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft .NET Framework 64bit versions.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ tuple of str
+ versions
+ """
+ return self._find_dot_net_versions(64)
+
+ def _find_dot_net_versions(self, bits):
+ """
+ Find Microsoft .NET Framework versions.
+
+ Parameters
+ ----------
+ bits: int
+ Platform number of bits: 32 or 64.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ tuple of str
+ versions
+ """
+ # Find actual .NET version in registry
+ reg_ver = self.ri.lookup(self.ri.vc, 'frameworkver%d' % bits)
+ dot_net_dir = getattr(self, 'FrameworkDir%d' % bits)
+ ver = reg_ver or self._use_last_dir_name(dot_net_dir, 'v') or ''
+
+ # Set .NET versions for specified MSVC++ version
+ if self.vs_ver >= 12.0:
+ return ver, 'v4.0'
+ elif self.vs_ver >= 10.0:
+ return 'v4.0.30319' if ver.lower()[:2] != 'v4' else ver, 'v3.5'
+ elif self.vs_ver == 9.0:
+ return 'v3.5', 'v2.0.50727'
+ elif self.vs_ver == 8.0:
+ return 'v3.0', 'v2.0.50727'
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _use_last_dir_name(path, prefix=''):
+ """
+ Return name of the last dir in path or '' if no dir found.
+
+ Parameters
+ ----------
+ path: str
+ Use dirs in this path
+ prefix: str
+ Use only dirs starting by this prefix
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ name
+ """
+ matching_dirs = (
+ dir_name
+ for dir_name in reversed(listdir(path))
+ if isdir(join(path, dir_name)) and
+ dir_name.startswith(prefix)
+ )
+ return next(matching_dirs, None) or ''
+
+
+class EnvironmentInfo:
+ """
+ Return environment variables for specified Microsoft Visual C++ version
+ and platform : Lib, Include, Path and libpath.
+
+ This function is compatible with Microsoft Visual C++ 9.0 to 14.X.
+
+ Script created by analysing Microsoft environment configuration files like
+ "vcvars[...].bat", "SetEnv.Cmd", "vcbuildtools.bat", ...
+
+ Parameters
+ ----------
+ arch: str
+ Target architecture.
+ vc_ver: float
+ Required Microsoft Visual C++ version. If not set, autodetect the last
+ version.
+ vc_min_ver: float
+ Minimum Microsoft Visual C++ version.
+ """
+
+ # Variables and properties in this class use originals CamelCase variables
+ # names from Microsoft source files for more easy comparison.
+
+ def __init__(self, arch, vc_ver=None, vc_min_ver=0):
+ self.pi = PlatformInfo(arch)
+ self.ri = RegistryInfo(self.pi)
+ self.si = SystemInfo(self.ri, vc_ver)
+
+ if self.vc_ver < vc_min_ver:
+ err = 'No suitable Microsoft Visual C++ version found'
+ raise distutils.errors.DistutilsPlatformError(err)
+
+ @property
+ def vs_ver(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Visual Studio.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ float
+ version
+ """
+ return self.si.vs_ver
+
+ @property
+ def vc_ver(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Visual C++ version.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ float
+ version
+ """
+ return self.si.vc_ver
+
+ @property
+ def VSTools(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Visual Studio Tools.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ list of str
+ paths
+ """
+ paths = [r'Common7\IDE', r'Common7\Tools']
+
+ if self.vs_ver >= 14.0:
+ arch_subdir = self.pi.current_dir(hidex86=True, x64=True)
+ paths += [r'Common7\IDE\CommonExtensions\Microsoft\TestWindow']
+ paths += [r'Team Tools\Performance Tools']
+ paths += [r'Team Tools\Performance Tools%s' % arch_subdir]
+
+ return [join(self.si.VSInstallDir, path) for path in paths]
+
+ @property
+ def VCIncludes(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Visual C++ & Microsoft Foundation Class Includes.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ list of str
+ paths
+ """
+ return [join(self.si.VCInstallDir, 'Include'),
+ join(self.si.VCInstallDir, r'ATLMFC\Include')]
+
+ @property
+ def VCLibraries(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Visual C++ & Microsoft Foundation Class Libraries.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ list of str
+ paths
+ """
+ if self.vs_ver >= 15.0:
+ arch_subdir = self.pi.target_dir(x64=True)
+ else:
+ arch_subdir = self.pi.target_dir(hidex86=True)
+ paths = ['Lib%s' % arch_subdir, r'ATLMFC\Lib%s' % arch_subdir]
+
+ if self.vs_ver >= 14.0:
+ paths += [r'Lib\store%s' % arch_subdir]
+
+ return [join(self.si.VCInstallDir, path) for path in paths]
+
+ @property
+ def VCStoreRefs(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Visual C++ store references Libraries.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ list of str
+ paths
+ """
+ if self.vs_ver < 14.0:
+ return []
+ return [join(self.si.VCInstallDir, r'Lib\store\references')]
+
+ @property
+ def VCTools(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Visual C++ Tools.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ list of str
+ paths
+ """
+ si = self.si
+ tools = [join(si.VCInstallDir, 'VCPackages')]
+
+ forcex86 = True if self.vs_ver <= 10.0 else False
+ arch_subdir = self.pi.cross_dir(forcex86)
+ if arch_subdir:
+ tools += [join(si.VCInstallDir, 'Bin%s' % arch_subdir)]
+
+ if self.vs_ver == 14.0:
+ path = 'Bin%s' % self.pi.current_dir(hidex86=True)
+ tools += [join(si.VCInstallDir, path)]
+
+ elif self.vs_ver >= 15.0:
+ host_dir = (r'bin\HostX86%s' if self.pi.current_is_x86() else
+ r'bin\HostX64%s')
+ tools += [join(
+ si.VCInstallDir, host_dir % self.pi.target_dir(x64=True))]
+
+ if self.pi.current_cpu != self.pi.target_cpu:
+ tools += [join(
+ si.VCInstallDir, host_dir % self.pi.current_dir(x64=True))]
+
+ else:
+ tools += [join(si.VCInstallDir, 'Bin')]
+
+ return tools
+
+ @property
+ def OSLibraries(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Windows SDK Libraries.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ list of str
+ paths
+ """
+ if self.vs_ver <= 10.0:
+ arch_subdir = self.pi.target_dir(hidex86=True, x64=True)
+ return [join(self.si.WindowsSdkDir, 'Lib%s' % arch_subdir)]
+
+ else:
+ arch_subdir = self.pi.target_dir(x64=True)
+ lib = join(self.si.WindowsSdkDir, 'lib')
+ libver = self._sdk_subdir
+ return [join(lib, '%sum%s' % (libver, arch_subdir))]
+
+ @property
+ def OSIncludes(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Windows SDK Include.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ list of str
+ paths
+ """
+ include = join(self.si.WindowsSdkDir, 'include')
+
+ if self.vs_ver <= 10.0:
+ return [include, join(include, 'gl')]
+
+ else:
+ if self.vs_ver >= 14.0:
+ sdkver = self._sdk_subdir
+ else:
+ sdkver = ''
+ return [join(include, '%sshared' % sdkver),
+ join(include, '%sum' % sdkver),
+ join(include, '%swinrt' % sdkver)]
+
+ @property
+ def OSLibpath(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Windows SDK Libraries Paths.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ list of str
+ paths
+ """
+ ref = join(self.si.WindowsSdkDir, 'References')
+ libpath = []
+
+ if self.vs_ver <= 9.0:
+ libpath += self.OSLibraries
+
+ if self.vs_ver >= 11.0:
+ libpath += [join(ref, r'CommonConfiguration\Neutral')]
+
+ if self.vs_ver >= 14.0:
+ libpath += [
+ ref,
+ join(self.si.WindowsSdkDir, 'UnionMetadata'),
+ join(
+ ref, 'Windows.Foundation.UniversalApiContract', '1.0.0.0'),
+ join(ref, 'Windows.Foundation.FoundationContract', '1.0.0.0'),
+ join(
+ ref, 'Windows.Networking.Connectivity.WwanContract',
+ '1.0.0.0'),
+ join(
+ self.si.WindowsSdkDir, 'ExtensionSDKs', 'Microsoft.VCLibs',
+ '%0.1f' % self.vs_ver, 'References', 'CommonConfiguration',
+ 'neutral'),
+ ]
+ return libpath
+
+ @property
+ def SdkTools(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Windows SDK Tools.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ list of str
+ paths
+ """
+ return list(self._sdk_tools())
+
+ def _sdk_tools(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Windows SDK Tools paths generator.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ generator of str
+ paths
+ """
+ if self.vs_ver < 15.0:
+ bin_dir = 'Bin' if self.vs_ver <= 11.0 else r'Bin\x86'
+ yield join(self.si.WindowsSdkDir, bin_dir)
+
+ if not self.pi.current_is_x86():
+ arch_subdir = self.pi.current_dir(x64=True)
+ path = 'Bin%s' % arch_subdir
+ yield join(self.si.WindowsSdkDir, path)
+
+ if self.vs_ver in (10.0, 11.0):
+ if self.pi.target_is_x86():
+ arch_subdir = ''
+ else:
+ arch_subdir = self.pi.current_dir(hidex86=True, x64=True)
+ path = r'Bin\NETFX 4.0 Tools%s' % arch_subdir
+ yield join(self.si.WindowsSdkDir, path)
+
+ elif self.vs_ver >= 15.0:
+ path = join(self.si.WindowsSdkDir, 'Bin')
+ arch_subdir = self.pi.current_dir(x64=True)
+ sdkver = self.si.WindowsSdkLastVersion
+ yield join(path, '%s%s' % (sdkver, arch_subdir))
+
+ if self.si.WindowsSDKExecutablePath:
+ yield self.si.WindowsSDKExecutablePath
+
+ @property
+ def _sdk_subdir(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Windows SDK version subdir.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ subdir
+ """
+ ucrtver = self.si.WindowsSdkLastVersion
+ return ('%s\\' % ucrtver) if ucrtver else ''
+
+ @property
+ def SdkSetup(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Windows SDK Setup.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ list of str
+ paths
+ """
+ if self.vs_ver > 9.0:
+ return []
+
+ return [join(self.si.WindowsSdkDir, 'Setup')]
+
+ @property
+ def FxTools(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft .NET Framework Tools.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ list of str
+ paths
+ """
+ pi = self.pi
+ si = self.si
+
+ if self.vs_ver <= 10.0:
+ include32 = True
+ include64 = not pi.target_is_x86() and not pi.current_is_x86()
+ else:
+ include32 = pi.target_is_x86() or pi.current_is_x86()
+ include64 = pi.current_cpu == 'amd64' or pi.target_cpu == 'amd64'
+
+ tools = []
+ if include32:
+ tools += [join(si.FrameworkDir32, ver)
+ for ver in si.FrameworkVersion32]
+ if include64:
+ tools += [join(si.FrameworkDir64, ver)
+ for ver in si.FrameworkVersion64]
+ return tools
+
+ @property
+ def NetFxSDKLibraries(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft .Net Framework SDK Libraries.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ list of str
+ paths
+ """
+ if self.vs_ver < 14.0 or not self.si.NetFxSdkDir:
+ return []
+
+ arch_subdir = self.pi.target_dir(x64=True)
+ return [join(self.si.NetFxSdkDir, r'lib\um%s' % arch_subdir)]
+
+ @property
+ def NetFxSDKIncludes(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft .Net Framework SDK Includes.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ list of str
+ paths
+ """
+ if self.vs_ver < 14.0 or not self.si.NetFxSdkDir:
+ return []
+
+ return [join(self.si.NetFxSdkDir, r'include\um')]
+
+ @property
+ def VsTDb(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Visual Studio Team System Database.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ list of str
+ paths
+ """
+ return [join(self.si.VSInstallDir, r'VSTSDB\Deploy')]
+
+ @property
+ def MSBuild(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Build Engine.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ list of str
+ paths
+ """
+ if self.vs_ver < 12.0:
+ return []
+ elif self.vs_ver < 15.0:
+ base_path = self.si.ProgramFilesx86
+ arch_subdir = self.pi.current_dir(hidex86=True)
+ else:
+ base_path = self.si.VSInstallDir
+ arch_subdir = ''
+
+ path = r'MSBuild\%0.1f\bin%s' % (self.vs_ver, arch_subdir)
+ build = [join(base_path, path)]
+
+ if self.vs_ver >= 15.0:
+ # Add Roslyn C# & Visual Basic Compiler
+ build += [join(base_path, path, 'Roslyn')]
+
+ return build
+
+ @property
+ def HTMLHelpWorkshop(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft HTML Help Workshop.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ list of str
+ paths
+ """
+ if self.vs_ver < 11.0:
+ return []
+
+ return [join(self.si.ProgramFilesx86, 'HTML Help Workshop')]
+
+ @property
+ def UCRTLibraries(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Universal C Runtime SDK Libraries.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ list of str
+ paths
+ """
+ if self.vs_ver < 14.0:
+ return []
+
+ arch_subdir = self.pi.target_dir(x64=True)
+ lib = join(self.si.UniversalCRTSdkDir, 'lib')
+ ucrtver = self._ucrt_subdir
+ return [join(lib, '%sucrt%s' % (ucrtver, arch_subdir))]
+
+ @property
+ def UCRTIncludes(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Universal C Runtime SDK Include.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ list of str
+ paths
+ """
+ if self.vs_ver < 14.0:
+ return []
+
+ include = join(self.si.UniversalCRTSdkDir, 'include')
+ return [join(include, '%sucrt' % self._ucrt_subdir)]
+
+ @property
+ def _ucrt_subdir(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Universal C Runtime SDK version subdir.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ subdir
+ """
+ ucrtver = self.si.UniversalCRTSdkLastVersion
+ return ('%s\\' % ucrtver) if ucrtver else ''
+
+ @property
+ def FSharp(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Visual F#.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ list of str
+ paths
+ """
+ if 11.0 > self.vs_ver > 12.0:
+ return []
+
+ return [self.si.FSharpInstallDir]
+
+ @property
+ def VCRuntimeRedist(self):
+ """
+ Microsoft Visual C++ runtime redistributable dll.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ path
+ """
+ vcruntime = 'vcruntime%d0.dll' % self.vc_ver
+ arch_subdir = self.pi.target_dir(x64=True).strip('\\')
+
+ # Installation prefixes candidates
+ prefixes = []
+ tools_path = self.si.VCInstallDir
+ redist_path = dirname(tools_path.replace(r'\Tools', r'\Redist'))
+ if isdir(redist_path):
+ # Redist version may not be exactly the same as tools
+ redist_path = join(redist_path, listdir(redist_path)[-1])
+ prefixes += [redist_path, join(redist_path, 'onecore')]
+
+ prefixes += [join(tools_path, 'redist')] # VS14 legacy path
+
+ # CRT directory
+ crt_dirs = ('Microsoft.VC%d.CRT' % (self.vc_ver * 10),
+ # Sometime store in directory with VS version instead of VC
+ 'Microsoft.VC%d.CRT' % (int(self.vs_ver) * 10))
+
+ # vcruntime path
+ for prefix, crt_dir in itertools.product(prefixes, crt_dirs):
+ path = join(prefix, arch_subdir, crt_dir, vcruntime)
+ if isfile(path):
+ return path
+
+ def return_env(self, exists=True):
+ """
+ Return environment dict.
+
+ Parameters
+ ----------
+ exists: bool
+ It True, only return existing paths.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ dict
+ environment
+ """
+ env = dict(
+ include=self._build_paths('include',
+ [self.VCIncludes,
+ self.OSIncludes,
+ self.UCRTIncludes,
+ self.NetFxSDKIncludes],
+ exists),
+ lib=self._build_paths('lib',
+ [self.VCLibraries,
+ self.OSLibraries,
+ self.FxTools,
+ self.UCRTLibraries,
+ self.NetFxSDKLibraries],
+ exists),
+ libpath=self._build_paths('libpath',
+ [self.VCLibraries,
+ self.FxTools,
+ self.VCStoreRefs,
+ self.OSLibpath],
+ exists),
+ path=self._build_paths('path',
+ [self.VCTools,
+ self.VSTools,
+ self.VsTDb,
+ self.SdkTools,
+ self.SdkSetup,
+ self.FxTools,
+ self.MSBuild,
+ self.HTMLHelpWorkshop,
+ self.FSharp],
+ exists),
+ )
+ if self.vs_ver >= 14 and isfile(self.VCRuntimeRedist):
+ env['py_vcruntime_redist'] = self.VCRuntimeRedist
+ return env
+
+ def _build_paths(self, name, spec_path_lists, exists):
+ """
+ Given an environment variable name and specified paths,
+ return a pathsep-separated string of paths containing
+ unique, extant, directories from those paths and from
+ the environment variable. Raise an error if no paths
+ are resolved.
+
+ Parameters
+ ----------
+ name: str
+ Environment variable name
+ spec_path_lists: list of str
+ Paths
+ exists: bool
+ It True, only return existing paths.
+
+ Return
+ ------
+ str
+ Pathsep-separated paths
+ """
+ # flatten spec_path_lists
+ spec_paths = itertools.chain.from_iterable(spec_path_lists)
+ env_paths = environ.get(name, '').split(pathsep)
+ paths = itertools.chain(spec_paths, env_paths)
+ extant_paths = list(filter(isdir, paths)) if exists else paths
+ if not extant_paths:
+ msg = "%s environment variable is empty" % name.upper()
+ raise distutils.errors.DistutilsPlatformError(msg)
+ unique_paths = self._unique_everseen(extant_paths)
+ return pathsep.join(unique_paths)
+
+ # from Python docs
+ @staticmethod
+ def _unique_everseen(iterable, key=None):
+ """
+ List unique elements, preserving order.
+ Remember all elements ever seen.
+
+ _unique_everseen('AAAABBBCCDAABBB') --> A B C D
+
+ _unique_everseen('ABBCcAD', str.lower) --> A B C D
+ """
+ seen = set()
+ seen_add = seen.add
+ if key is None:
+ for element in itertools.filterfalse(seen.__contains__, iterable):
+ seen_add(element)
+ yield element
+ else:
+ for element in iterable:
+ k = key(element)
+ if k not in seen:
+ seen_add(k)
+ yield element
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/namespaces.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/namespaces.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..44939e1c6d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/namespaces.py
@@ -0,0 +1,107 @@
+import os
+from distutils import log
+import itertools
+
+
+flatten = itertools.chain.from_iterable
+
+
+class Installer:
+
+ nspkg_ext = '-nspkg.pth'
+
+ def install_namespaces(self):
+ nsp = self._get_all_ns_packages()
+ if not nsp:
+ return
+ filename, ext = os.path.splitext(self._get_target())
+ filename += self.nspkg_ext
+ self.outputs.append(filename)
+ log.info("Installing %s", filename)
+ lines = map(self._gen_nspkg_line, nsp)
+
+ if self.dry_run:
+ # always generate the lines, even in dry run
+ list(lines)
+ return
+
+ with open(filename, 'wt') as f:
+ f.writelines(lines)
+
+ def uninstall_namespaces(self):
+ filename, ext = os.path.splitext(self._get_target())
+ filename += self.nspkg_ext
+ if not os.path.exists(filename):
+ return
+ log.info("Removing %s", filename)
+ os.remove(filename)
+
+ def _get_target(self):
+ return self.target
+
+ _nspkg_tmpl = (
+ "import sys, types, os",
+ "has_mfs = sys.version_info > (3, 5)",
+ "p = os.path.join(%(root)s, *%(pth)r)",
+ "importlib = has_mfs and __import__('importlib.util')",
+ "has_mfs and __import__('importlib.machinery')",
+ (
+ "m = has_mfs and "
+ "sys.modules.setdefault(%(pkg)r, "
+ "importlib.util.module_from_spec("
+ "importlib.machinery.PathFinder.find_spec(%(pkg)r, "
+ "[os.path.dirname(p)])))"
+ ),
+ (
+ "m = m or "
+ "sys.modules.setdefault(%(pkg)r, types.ModuleType(%(pkg)r))"
+ ),
+ "mp = (m or []) and m.__dict__.setdefault('__path__',[])",
+ "(p not in mp) and mp.append(p)",
+ )
+ "lines for the namespace installer"
+
+ _nspkg_tmpl_multi = (
+ 'm and setattr(sys.modules[%(parent)r], %(child)r, m)',
+ )
+ "additional line(s) when a parent package is indicated"
+
+ def _get_root(self):
+ return "sys._getframe(1).f_locals['sitedir']"
+
+ def _gen_nspkg_line(self, pkg):
+ pth = tuple(pkg.split('.'))
+ root = self._get_root()
+ tmpl_lines = self._nspkg_tmpl
+ parent, sep, child = pkg.rpartition('.')
+ if parent:
+ tmpl_lines += self._nspkg_tmpl_multi
+ return ';'.join(tmpl_lines) % locals() + '\n'
+
+ def _get_all_ns_packages(self):
+ """Return sorted list of all package namespaces"""
+ pkgs = self.distribution.namespace_packages or []
+ return sorted(flatten(map(self._pkg_names, pkgs)))
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _pkg_names(pkg):
+ """
+ Given a namespace package, yield the components of that
+ package.
+
+ >>> names = Installer._pkg_names('a.b.c')
+ >>> set(names) == set(['a', 'a.b', 'a.b.c'])
+ True
+ """
+ parts = pkg.split('.')
+ while parts:
+ yield '.'.join(parts)
+ parts.pop()
+
+
+class DevelopInstaller(Installer):
+ def _get_root(self):
+ return repr(str(self.egg_path))
+
+ def _get_target(self):
+ return self.egg_link
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/package_index.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/package_index.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..3979b131b5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/package_index.py
@@ -0,0 +1,1139 @@
+"""PyPI and direct package downloading"""
+import sys
+import os
+import re
+import io
+import shutil
+import socket
+import base64
+import hashlib
+import itertools
+import warnings
+import configparser
+import html
+import http.client
+import urllib.parse
+import urllib.request
+import urllib.error
+from functools import wraps
+
+import setuptools
+from pkg_resources import (
+ CHECKOUT_DIST, Distribution, BINARY_DIST, normalize_path, SOURCE_DIST,
+ Environment, find_distributions, safe_name, safe_version,
+ to_filename, Requirement, DEVELOP_DIST, EGG_DIST,
+)
+from setuptools import ssl_support
+from distutils import log
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsError
+from fnmatch import translate
+from setuptools.wheel import Wheel
+
+EGG_FRAGMENT = re.compile(r'^egg=([-A-Za-z0-9_.+!]+)$')
+HREF = re.compile(r"""href\s*=\s*['"]?([^'"> ]+)""", re.I)
+PYPI_MD5 = re.compile(
+ r'<a href="([^"#]+)">([^<]+)</a>\n\s+\(<a (?:title="MD5 hash"\n\s+)'
+ r'href="[^?]+\?:action=show_md5&amp;digest=([0-9a-f]{32})">md5</a>\)'
+)
+URL_SCHEME = re.compile('([-+.a-z0-9]{2,}):', re.I).match
+EXTENSIONS = ".tar.gz .tar.bz2 .tar .zip .tgz".split()
+
+__all__ = [
+ 'PackageIndex', 'distros_for_url', 'parse_bdist_wininst',
+ 'interpret_distro_name',
+]
+
+_SOCKET_TIMEOUT = 15
+
+_tmpl = "setuptools/{setuptools.__version__} Python-urllib/{py_major}"
+user_agent = _tmpl.format(
+ py_major='{}.{}'.format(*sys.version_info), setuptools=setuptools)
+
+
+def parse_requirement_arg(spec):
+ try:
+ return Requirement.parse(spec)
+ except ValueError as e:
+ raise DistutilsError(
+ "Not a URL, existing file, or requirement spec: %r" % (spec,)
+ ) from e
+
+
+def parse_bdist_wininst(name):
+ """Return (base,pyversion) or (None,None) for possible .exe name"""
+
+ lower = name.lower()
+ base, py_ver, plat = None, None, None
+
+ if lower.endswith('.exe'):
+ if lower.endswith('.win32.exe'):
+ base = name[:-10]
+ plat = 'win32'
+ elif lower.startswith('.win32-py', -16):
+ py_ver = name[-7:-4]
+ base = name[:-16]
+ plat = 'win32'
+ elif lower.endswith('.win-amd64.exe'):
+ base = name[:-14]
+ plat = 'win-amd64'
+ elif lower.startswith('.win-amd64-py', -20):
+ py_ver = name[-7:-4]
+ base = name[:-20]
+ plat = 'win-amd64'
+ return base, py_ver, plat
+
+
+def egg_info_for_url(url):
+ parts = urllib.parse.urlparse(url)
+ scheme, server, path, parameters, query, fragment = parts
+ base = urllib.parse.unquote(path.split('/')[-1])
+ if server == 'sourceforge.net' and base == 'download': # XXX Yuck
+ base = urllib.parse.unquote(path.split('/')[-2])
+ if '#' in base:
+ base, fragment = base.split('#', 1)
+ return base, fragment
+
+
+def distros_for_url(url, metadata=None):
+ """Yield egg or source distribution objects that might be found at a URL"""
+ base, fragment = egg_info_for_url(url)
+ for dist in distros_for_location(url, base, metadata):
+ yield dist
+ if fragment:
+ match = EGG_FRAGMENT.match(fragment)
+ if match:
+ for dist in interpret_distro_name(
+ url, match.group(1), metadata, precedence=CHECKOUT_DIST
+ ):
+ yield dist
+
+
+def distros_for_location(location, basename, metadata=None):
+ """Yield egg or source distribution objects based on basename"""
+ if basename.endswith('.egg.zip'):
+ basename = basename[:-4] # strip the .zip
+ if basename.endswith('.egg') and '-' in basename:
+ # only one, unambiguous interpretation
+ return [Distribution.from_location(location, basename, metadata)]
+ if basename.endswith('.whl') and '-' in basename:
+ wheel = Wheel(basename)
+ if not wheel.is_compatible():
+ return []
+ return [Distribution(
+ location=location,
+ project_name=wheel.project_name,
+ version=wheel.version,
+ # Increase priority over eggs.
+ precedence=EGG_DIST + 1,
+ )]
+ if basename.endswith('.exe'):
+ win_base, py_ver, platform = parse_bdist_wininst(basename)
+ if win_base is not None:
+ return interpret_distro_name(
+ location, win_base, metadata, py_ver, BINARY_DIST, platform
+ )
+ # Try source distro extensions (.zip, .tgz, etc.)
+ #
+ for ext in EXTENSIONS:
+ if basename.endswith(ext):
+ basename = basename[:-len(ext)]
+ return interpret_distro_name(location, basename, metadata)
+ return [] # no extension matched
+
+
+def distros_for_filename(filename, metadata=None):
+ """Yield possible egg or source distribution objects based on a filename"""
+ return distros_for_location(
+ normalize_path(filename), os.path.basename(filename), metadata
+ )
+
+
+def interpret_distro_name(
+ location, basename, metadata, py_version=None, precedence=SOURCE_DIST,
+ platform=None
+):
+ """Generate alternative interpretations of a source distro name
+
+ Note: if `location` is a filesystem filename, you should call
+ ``pkg_resources.normalize_path()`` on it before passing it to this
+ routine!
+ """
+ # Generate alternative interpretations of a source distro name
+ # Because some packages are ambiguous as to name/versions split
+ # e.g. "adns-python-1.1.0", "egenix-mx-commercial", etc.
+ # So, we generate each possible interepretation (e.g. "adns, python-1.1.0"
+ # "adns-python, 1.1.0", and "adns-python-1.1.0, no version"). In practice,
+ # the spurious interpretations should be ignored, because in the event
+ # there's also an "adns" package, the spurious "python-1.1.0" version will
+ # compare lower than any numeric version number, and is therefore unlikely
+ # to match a request for it. It's still a potential problem, though, and
+ # in the long run PyPI and the distutils should go for "safe" names and
+ # versions in distribution archive names (sdist and bdist).
+
+ parts = basename.split('-')
+ if not py_version and any(re.match(r'py\d\.\d$', p) for p in parts[2:]):
+ # it is a bdist_dumb, not an sdist -- bail out
+ return
+
+ for p in range(1, len(parts) + 1):
+ yield Distribution(
+ location, metadata, '-'.join(parts[:p]), '-'.join(parts[p:]),
+ py_version=py_version, precedence=precedence,
+ platform=platform
+ )
+
+
+# From Python 2.7 docs
+def unique_everseen(iterable, key=None):
+ "List unique elements, preserving order. Remember all elements ever seen."
+ # unique_everseen('AAAABBBCCDAABBB') --> A B C D
+ # unique_everseen('ABBCcAD', str.lower) --> A B C D
+ seen = set()
+ seen_add = seen.add
+ if key is None:
+ for element in itertools.filterfalse(seen.__contains__, iterable):
+ seen_add(element)
+ yield element
+ else:
+ for element in iterable:
+ k = key(element)
+ if k not in seen:
+ seen_add(k)
+ yield element
+
+
+def unique_values(func):
+ """
+ Wrap a function returning an iterable such that the resulting iterable
+ only ever yields unique items.
+ """
+
+ @wraps(func)
+ def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
+ return unique_everseen(func(*args, **kwargs))
+
+ return wrapper
+
+
+REL = re.compile(r"""<([^>]*\srel\s*=\s*['"]?([^'">]+)[^>]*)>""", re.I)
+# this line is here to fix emacs' cruddy broken syntax highlighting
+
+
+@unique_values
+def find_external_links(url, page):
+ """Find rel="homepage" and rel="download" links in `page`, yielding URLs"""
+
+ for match in REL.finditer(page):
+ tag, rel = match.groups()
+ rels = set(map(str.strip, rel.lower().split(',')))
+ if 'homepage' in rels or 'download' in rels:
+ for match in HREF.finditer(tag):
+ yield urllib.parse.urljoin(url, htmldecode(match.group(1)))
+
+ for tag in ("<th>Home Page", "<th>Download URL"):
+ pos = page.find(tag)
+ if pos != -1:
+ match = HREF.search(page, pos)
+ if match:
+ yield urllib.parse.urljoin(url, htmldecode(match.group(1)))
+
+
+class ContentChecker:
+ """
+ A null content checker that defines the interface for checking content
+ """
+
+ def feed(self, block):
+ """
+ Feed a block of data to the hash.
+ """
+ return
+
+ def is_valid(self):
+ """
+ Check the hash. Return False if validation fails.
+ """
+ return True
+
+ def report(self, reporter, template):
+ """
+ Call reporter with information about the checker (hash name)
+ substituted into the template.
+ """
+ return
+
+
+class HashChecker(ContentChecker):
+ pattern = re.compile(
+ r'(?P<hash_name>sha1|sha224|sha384|sha256|sha512|md5)='
+ r'(?P<expected>[a-f0-9]+)'
+ )
+
+ def __init__(self, hash_name, expected):
+ self.hash_name = hash_name
+ self.hash = hashlib.new(hash_name)
+ self.expected = expected
+
+ @classmethod
+ def from_url(cls, url):
+ "Construct a (possibly null) ContentChecker from a URL"
+ fragment = urllib.parse.urlparse(url)[-1]
+ if not fragment:
+ return ContentChecker()
+ match = cls.pattern.search(fragment)
+ if not match:
+ return ContentChecker()
+ return cls(**match.groupdict())
+
+ def feed(self, block):
+ self.hash.update(block)
+
+ def is_valid(self):
+ return self.hash.hexdigest() == self.expected
+
+ def report(self, reporter, template):
+ msg = template % self.hash_name
+ return reporter(msg)
+
+
+class PackageIndex(Environment):
+ """A distribution index that scans web pages for download URLs"""
+
+ def __init__(
+ self, index_url="https://pypi.org/simple/", hosts=('*',),
+ ca_bundle=None, verify_ssl=True, *args, **kw
+ ):
+ Environment.__init__(self, *args, **kw)
+ self.index_url = index_url + "/" [:not index_url.endswith('/')]
+ self.scanned_urls = {}
+ self.fetched_urls = {}
+ self.package_pages = {}
+ self.allows = re.compile('|'.join(map(translate, hosts))).match
+ self.to_scan = []
+ use_ssl = (
+ verify_ssl
+ and ssl_support.is_available
+ and (ca_bundle or ssl_support.find_ca_bundle())
+ )
+ if use_ssl:
+ self.opener = ssl_support.opener_for(ca_bundle)
+ else:
+ self.opener = urllib.request.urlopen
+
+ def process_url(self, url, retrieve=False):
+ """Evaluate a URL as a possible download, and maybe retrieve it"""
+ if url in self.scanned_urls and not retrieve:
+ return
+ self.scanned_urls[url] = True
+ if not URL_SCHEME(url):
+ self.process_filename(url)
+ return
+ else:
+ dists = list(distros_for_url(url))
+ if dists:
+ if not self.url_ok(url):
+ return
+ self.debug("Found link: %s", url)
+
+ if dists or not retrieve or url in self.fetched_urls:
+ list(map(self.add, dists))
+ return # don't need the actual page
+
+ if not self.url_ok(url):
+ self.fetched_urls[url] = True
+ return
+
+ self.info("Reading %s", url)
+ self.fetched_urls[url] = True # prevent multiple fetch attempts
+ tmpl = "Download error on %s: %%s -- Some packages may not be found!"
+ f = self.open_url(url, tmpl % url)
+ if f is None:
+ return
+ if isinstance(f, urllib.error.HTTPError) and f.code == 401:
+ self.info("Authentication error: %s" % f.msg)
+ self.fetched_urls[f.url] = True
+ if 'html' not in f.headers.get('content-type', '').lower():
+ f.close() # not html, we can't process it
+ return
+
+ base = f.url # handle redirects
+ page = f.read()
+ if not isinstance(page, str):
+ # In Python 3 and got bytes but want str.
+ if isinstance(f, urllib.error.HTTPError):
+ # Errors have no charset, assume latin1:
+ charset = 'latin-1'
+ else:
+ charset = f.headers.get_param('charset') or 'latin-1'
+ page = page.decode(charset, "ignore")
+ f.close()
+ for match in HREF.finditer(page):
+ link = urllib.parse.urljoin(base, htmldecode(match.group(1)))
+ self.process_url(link)
+ if url.startswith(self.index_url) and getattr(f, 'code', None) != 404:
+ page = self.process_index(url, page)
+
+ def process_filename(self, fn, nested=False):
+ # process filenames or directories
+ if not os.path.exists(fn):
+ self.warn("Not found: %s", fn)
+ return
+
+ if os.path.isdir(fn) and not nested:
+ path = os.path.realpath(fn)
+ for item in os.listdir(path):
+ self.process_filename(os.path.join(path, item), True)
+
+ dists = distros_for_filename(fn)
+ if dists:
+ self.debug("Found: %s", fn)
+ list(map(self.add, dists))
+
+ def url_ok(self, url, fatal=False):
+ s = URL_SCHEME(url)
+ is_file = s and s.group(1).lower() == 'file'
+ if is_file or self.allows(urllib.parse.urlparse(url)[1]):
+ return True
+ msg = (
+ "\nNote: Bypassing %s (disallowed host; see "
+ "http://bit.ly/2hrImnY for details).\n")
+ if fatal:
+ raise DistutilsError(msg % url)
+ else:
+ self.warn(msg, url)
+
+ def scan_egg_links(self, search_path):
+ dirs = filter(os.path.isdir, search_path)
+ egg_links = (
+ (path, entry)
+ for path in dirs
+ for entry in os.listdir(path)
+ if entry.endswith('.egg-link')
+ )
+ list(itertools.starmap(self.scan_egg_link, egg_links))
+
+ def scan_egg_link(self, path, entry):
+ with open(os.path.join(path, entry)) as raw_lines:
+ # filter non-empty lines
+ lines = list(filter(None, map(str.strip, raw_lines)))
+
+ if len(lines) != 2:
+ # format is not recognized; punt
+ return
+
+ egg_path, setup_path = lines
+
+ for dist in find_distributions(os.path.join(path, egg_path)):
+ dist.location = os.path.join(path, *lines)
+ dist.precedence = SOURCE_DIST
+ self.add(dist)
+
+ def process_index(self, url, page):
+ """Process the contents of a PyPI page"""
+
+ def scan(link):
+ # Process a URL to see if it's for a package page
+ if link.startswith(self.index_url):
+ parts = list(map(
+ urllib.parse.unquote, link[len(self.index_url):].split('/')
+ ))
+ if len(parts) == 2 and '#' not in parts[1]:
+ # it's a package page, sanitize and index it
+ pkg = safe_name(parts[0])
+ ver = safe_version(parts[1])
+ self.package_pages.setdefault(pkg.lower(), {})[link] = True
+ return to_filename(pkg), to_filename(ver)
+ return None, None
+
+ # process an index page into the package-page index
+ for match in HREF.finditer(page):
+ try:
+ scan(urllib.parse.urljoin(url, htmldecode(match.group(1))))
+ except ValueError:
+ pass
+
+ pkg, ver = scan(url) # ensure this page is in the page index
+ if pkg:
+ # process individual package page
+ for new_url in find_external_links(url, page):
+ # Process the found URL
+ base, frag = egg_info_for_url(new_url)
+ if base.endswith('.py') and not frag:
+ if ver:
+ new_url += '#egg=%s-%s' % (pkg, ver)
+ else:
+ self.need_version_info(url)
+ self.scan_url(new_url)
+
+ return PYPI_MD5.sub(
+ lambda m: '<a href="%s#md5=%s">%s</a>' % m.group(1, 3, 2), page
+ )
+ else:
+ return "" # no sense double-scanning non-package pages
+
+ def need_version_info(self, url):
+ self.scan_all(
+ "Page at %s links to .py file(s) without version info; an index "
+ "scan is required.", url
+ )
+
+ def scan_all(self, msg=None, *args):
+ if self.index_url not in self.fetched_urls:
+ if msg:
+ self.warn(msg, *args)
+ self.info(
+ "Scanning index of all packages (this may take a while)"
+ )
+ self.scan_url(self.index_url)
+
+ def find_packages(self, requirement):
+ self.scan_url(self.index_url + requirement.unsafe_name + '/')
+
+ if not self.package_pages.get(requirement.key):
+ # Fall back to safe version of the name
+ self.scan_url(self.index_url + requirement.project_name + '/')
+
+ if not self.package_pages.get(requirement.key):
+ # We couldn't find the target package, so search the index page too
+ self.not_found_in_index(requirement)
+
+ for url in list(self.package_pages.get(requirement.key, ())):
+ # scan each page that might be related to the desired package
+ self.scan_url(url)
+
+ def obtain(self, requirement, installer=None):
+ self.prescan()
+ self.find_packages(requirement)
+ for dist in self[requirement.key]:
+ if dist in requirement:
+ return dist
+ self.debug("%s does not match %s", requirement, dist)
+ return super(PackageIndex, self).obtain(requirement, installer)
+
+ def check_hash(self, checker, filename, tfp):
+ """
+ checker is a ContentChecker
+ """
+ checker.report(
+ self.debug,
+ "Validating %%s checksum for %s" % filename)
+ if not checker.is_valid():
+ tfp.close()
+ os.unlink(filename)
+ raise DistutilsError(
+ "%s validation failed for %s; "
+ "possible download problem?"
+ % (checker.hash.name, os.path.basename(filename))
+ )
+
+ def add_find_links(self, urls):
+ """Add `urls` to the list that will be prescanned for searches"""
+ for url in urls:
+ if (
+ self.to_scan is None # if we have already "gone online"
+ or not URL_SCHEME(url) # or it's a local file/directory
+ or url.startswith('file:')
+ or list(distros_for_url(url)) # or a direct package link
+ ):
+ # then go ahead and process it now
+ self.scan_url(url)
+ else:
+ # otherwise, defer retrieval till later
+ self.to_scan.append(url)
+
+ def prescan(self):
+ """Scan urls scheduled for prescanning (e.g. --find-links)"""
+ if self.to_scan:
+ list(map(self.scan_url, self.to_scan))
+ self.to_scan = None # from now on, go ahead and process immediately
+
+ def not_found_in_index(self, requirement):
+ if self[requirement.key]: # we've seen at least one distro
+ meth, msg = self.info, "Couldn't retrieve index page for %r"
+ else: # no distros seen for this name, might be misspelled
+ meth, msg = (
+ self.warn,
+ "Couldn't find index page for %r (maybe misspelled?)")
+ meth(msg, requirement.unsafe_name)
+ self.scan_all()
+
+ def download(self, spec, tmpdir):
+ """Locate and/or download `spec` to `tmpdir`, returning a local path
+
+ `spec` may be a ``Requirement`` object, or a string containing a URL,
+ an existing local filename, or a project/version requirement spec
+ (i.e. the string form of a ``Requirement`` object). If it is the URL
+ of a .py file with an unambiguous ``#egg=name-version`` tag (i.e., one
+ that escapes ``-`` as ``_`` throughout), a trivial ``setup.py`` is
+ automatically created alongside the downloaded file.
+
+ If `spec` is a ``Requirement`` object or a string containing a
+ project/version requirement spec, this method returns the location of
+ a matching distribution (possibly after downloading it to `tmpdir`).
+ If `spec` is a locally existing file or directory name, it is simply
+ returned unchanged. If `spec` is a URL, it is downloaded to a subpath
+ of `tmpdir`, and the local filename is returned. Various errors may be
+ raised if a problem occurs during downloading.
+ """
+ if not isinstance(spec, Requirement):
+ scheme = URL_SCHEME(spec)
+ if scheme:
+ # It's a url, download it to tmpdir
+ found = self._download_url(scheme.group(1), spec, tmpdir)
+ base, fragment = egg_info_for_url(spec)
+ if base.endswith('.py'):
+ found = self.gen_setup(found, fragment, tmpdir)
+ return found
+ elif os.path.exists(spec):
+ # Existing file or directory, just return it
+ return spec
+ else:
+ spec = parse_requirement_arg(spec)
+ return getattr(self.fetch_distribution(spec, tmpdir), 'location', None)
+
+ def fetch_distribution(
+ self, requirement, tmpdir, force_scan=False, source=False,
+ develop_ok=False, local_index=None):
+ """Obtain a distribution suitable for fulfilling `requirement`
+
+ `requirement` must be a ``pkg_resources.Requirement`` instance.
+ If necessary, or if the `force_scan` flag is set, the requirement is
+ searched for in the (online) package index as well as the locally
+ installed packages. If a distribution matching `requirement` is found,
+ the returned distribution's ``location`` is the value you would have
+ gotten from calling the ``download()`` method with the matching
+ distribution's URL or filename. If no matching distribution is found,
+ ``None`` is returned.
+
+ If the `source` flag is set, only source distributions and source
+ checkout links will be considered. Unless the `develop_ok` flag is
+ set, development and system eggs (i.e., those using the ``.egg-info``
+ format) will be ignored.
+ """
+ # process a Requirement
+ self.info("Searching for %s", requirement)
+ skipped = {}
+ dist = None
+
+ def find(req, env=None):
+ if env is None:
+ env = self
+ # Find a matching distribution; may be called more than once
+
+ for dist in env[req.key]:
+
+ if dist.precedence == DEVELOP_DIST and not develop_ok:
+ if dist not in skipped:
+ self.warn(
+ "Skipping development or system egg: %s", dist,
+ )
+ skipped[dist] = 1
+ continue
+
+ test = (
+ dist in req
+ and (dist.precedence <= SOURCE_DIST or not source)
+ )
+ if test:
+ loc = self.download(dist.location, tmpdir)
+ dist.download_location = loc
+ if os.path.exists(dist.download_location):
+ return dist
+
+ if force_scan:
+ self.prescan()
+ self.find_packages(requirement)
+ dist = find(requirement)
+
+ if not dist and local_index is not None:
+ dist = find(requirement, local_index)
+
+ if dist is None:
+ if self.to_scan is not None:
+ self.prescan()
+ dist = find(requirement)
+
+ if dist is None and not force_scan:
+ self.find_packages(requirement)
+ dist = find(requirement)
+
+ if dist is None:
+ self.warn(
+ "No local packages or working download links found for %s%s",
+ (source and "a source distribution of " or ""),
+ requirement,
+ )
+ else:
+ self.info("Best match: %s", dist)
+ return dist.clone(location=dist.download_location)
+
+ def fetch(self, requirement, tmpdir, force_scan=False, source=False):
+ """Obtain a file suitable for fulfilling `requirement`
+
+ DEPRECATED; use the ``fetch_distribution()`` method now instead. For
+ backward compatibility, this routine is identical but returns the
+ ``location`` of the downloaded distribution instead of a distribution
+ object.
+ """
+ dist = self.fetch_distribution(requirement, tmpdir, force_scan, source)
+ if dist is not None:
+ return dist.location
+ return None
+
+ def gen_setup(self, filename, fragment, tmpdir):
+ match = EGG_FRAGMENT.match(fragment)
+ dists = match and [
+ d for d in
+ interpret_distro_name(filename, match.group(1), None) if d.version
+ ] or []
+
+ if len(dists) == 1: # unambiguous ``#egg`` fragment
+ basename = os.path.basename(filename)
+
+ # Make sure the file has been downloaded to the temp dir.
+ if os.path.dirname(filename) != tmpdir:
+ dst = os.path.join(tmpdir, basename)
+ from setuptools.command.easy_install import samefile
+ if not samefile(filename, dst):
+ shutil.copy2(filename, dst)
+ filename = dst
+
+ with open(os.path.join(tmpdir, 'setup.py'), 'w') as file:
+ file.write(
+ "from setuptools import setup\n"
+ "setup(name=%r, version=%r, py_modules=[%r])\n"
+ % (
+ dists[0].project_name, dists[0].version,
+ os.path.splitext(basename)[0]
+ )
+ )
+ return filename
+
+ elif match:
+ raise DistutilsError(
+ "Can't unambiguously interpret project/version identifier %r; "
+ "any dashes in the name or version should be escaped using "
+ "underscores. %r" % (fragment, dists)
+ )
+ else:
+ raise DistutilsError(
+ "Can't process plain .py files without an '#egg=name-version'"
+ " suffix to enable automatic setup script generation."
+ )
+
+ dl_blocksize = 8192
+
+ def _download_to(self, url, filename):
+ self.info("Downloading %s", url)
+ # Download the file
+ fp = None
+ try:
+ checker = HashChecker.from_url(url)
+ fp = self.open_url(url)
+ if isinstance(fp, urllib.error.HTTPError):
+ raise DistutilsError(
+ "Can't download %s: %s %s" % (url, fp.code, fp.msg)
+ )
+ headers = fp.info()
+ blocknum = 0
+ bs = self.dl_blocksize
+ size = -1
+ if "content-length" in headers:
+ # Some servers return multiple Content-Length headers :(
+ sizes = headers.get_all('Content-Length')
+ size = max(map(int, sizes))
+ self.reporthook(url, filename, blocknum, bs, size)
+ with open(filename, 'wb') as tfp:
+ while True:
+ block = fp.read(bs)
+ if block:
+ checker.feed(block)
+ tfp.write(block)
+ blocknum += 1
+ self.reporthook(url, filename, blocknum, bs, size)
+ else:
+ break
+ self.check_hash(checker, filename, tfp)
+ return headers
+ finally:
+ if fp:
+ fp.close()
+
+ def reporthook(self, url, filename, blocknum, blksize, size):
+ pass # no-op
+
+ def open_url(self, url, warning=None):
+ if url.startswith('file:'):
+ return local_open(url)
+ try:
+ return open_with_auth(url, self.opener)
+ except (ValueError, http.client.InvalidURL) as v:
+ msg = ' '.join([str(arg) for arg in v.args])
+ if warning:
+ self.warn(warning, msg)
+ else:
+ raise DistutilsError('%s %s' % (url, msg)) from v
+ except urllib.error.HTTPError as v:
+ return v
+ except urllib.error.URLError as v:
+ if warning:
+ self.warn(warning, v.reason)
+ else:
+ raise DistutilsError("Download error for %s: %s"
+ % (url, v.reason)) from v
+ except http.client.BadStatusLine as v:
+ if warning:
+ self.warn(warning, v.line)
+ else:
+ raise DistutilsError(
+ '%s returned a bad status line. The server might be '
+ 'down, %s' %
+ (url, v.line)
+ ) from v
+ except (http.client.HTTPException, socket.error) as v:
+ if warning:
+ self.warn(warning, v)
+ else:
+ raise DistutilsError("Download error for %s: %s"
+ % (url, v)) from v
+
+ def _download_url(self, scheme, url, tmpdir):
+ # Determine download filename
+ #
+ name, fragment = egg_info_for_url(url)
+ if name:
+ while '..' in name:
+ name = name.replace('..', '.').replace('\\', '_')
+ else:
+ name = "__downloaded__" # default if URL has no path contents
+
+ if name.endswith('.egg.zip'):
+ name = name[:-4] # strip the extra .zip before download
+
+ filename = os.path.join(tmpdir, name)
+
+ # Download the file
+ #
+ if scheme == 'svn' or scheme.startswith('svn+'):
+ return self._download_svn(url, filename)
+ elif scheme == 'git' or scheme.startswith('git+'):
+ return self._download_git(url, filename)
+ elif scheme.startswith('hg+'):
+ return self._download_hg(url, filename)
+ elif scheme == 'file':
+ return urllib.request.url2pathname(urllib.parse.urlparse(url)[2])
+ else:
+ self.url_ok(url, True) # raises error if not allowed
+ return self._attempt_download(url, filename)
+
+ def scan_url(self, url):
+ self.process_url(url, True)
+
+ def _attempt_download(self, url, filename):
+ headers = self._download_to(url, filename)
+ if 'html' in headers.get('content-type', '').lower():
+ return self._download_html(url, headers, filename)
+ else:
+ return filename
+
+ def _download_html(self, url, headers, filename):
+ file = open(filename)
+ for line in file:
+ if line.strip():
+ # Check for a subversion index page
+ if re.search(r'<title>([^- ]+ - )?Revision \d+:', line):
+ # it's a subversion index page:
+ file.close()
+ os.unlink(filename)
+ return self._download_svn(url, filename)
+ break # not an index page
+ file.close()
+ os.unlink(filename)
+ raise DistutilsError("Unexpected HTML page found at " + url)
+
+ def _download_svn(self, url, filename):
+ warnings.warn("SVN download support is deprecated", UserWarning)
+ url = url.split('#', 1)[0] # remove any fragment for svn's sake
+ creds = ''
+ if url.lower().startswith('svn:') and '@' in url:
+ scheme, netloc, path, p, q, f = urllib.parse.urlparse(url)
+ if not netloc and path.startswith('//') and '/' in path[2:]:
+ netloc, path = path[2:].split('/', 1)
+ auth, host = _splituser(netloc)
+ if auth:
+ if ':' in auth:
+ user, pw = auth.split(':', 1)
+ creds = " --username=%s --password=%s" % (user, pw)
+ else:
+ creds = " --username=" + auth
+ netloc = host
+ parts = scheme, netloc, url, p, q, f
+ url = urllib.parse.urlunparse(parts)
+ self.info("Doing subversion checkout from %s to %s", url, filename)
+ os.system("svn checkout%s -q %s %s" % (creds, url, filename))
+ return filename
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _vcs_split_rev_from_url(url, pop_prefix=False):
+ scheme, netloc, path, query, frag = urllib.parse.urlsplit(url)
+
+ scheme = scheme.split('+', 1)[-1]
+
+ # Some fragment identification fails
+ path = path.split('#', 1)[0]
+
+ rev = None
+ if '@' in path:
+ path, rev = path.rsplit('@', 1)
+
+ # Also, discard fragment
+ url = urllib.parse.urlunsplit((scheme, netloc, path, query, ''))
+
+ return url, rev
+
+ def _download_git(self, url, filename):
+ filename = filename.split('#', 1)[0]
+ url, rev = self._vcs_split_rev_from_url(url, pop_prefix=True)
+
+ self.info("Doing git clone from %s to %s", url, filename)
+ os.system("git clone --quiet %s %s" % (url, filename))
+
+ if rev is not None:
+ self.info("Checking out %s", rev)
+ os.system("git -C %s checkout --quiet %s" % (
+ filename,
+ rev,
+ ))
+
+ return filename
+
+ def _download_hg(self, url, filename):
+ filename = filename.split('#', 1)[0]
+ url, rev = self._vcs_split_rev_from_url(url, pop_prefix=True)
+
+ self.info("Doing hg clone from %s to %s", url, filename)
+ os.system("hg clone --quiet %s %s" % (url, filename))
+
+ if rev is not None:
+ self.info("Updating to %s", rev)
+ os.system("hg --cwd %s up -C -r %s -q" % (
+ filename,
+ rev,
+ ))
+
+ return filename
+
+ def debug(self, msg, *args):
+ log.debug(msg, *args)
+
+ def info(self, msg, *args):
+ log.info(msg, *args)
+
+ def warn(self, msg, *args):
+ log.warn(msg, *args)
+
+
+# This pattern matches a character entity reference (a decimal numeric
+# references, a hexadecimal numeric reference, or a named reference).
+entity_sub = re.compile(r'&(#(\d+|x[\da-fA-F]+)|[\w.:-]+);?').sub
+
+
+def decode_entity(match):
+ what = match.group(0)
+ return html.unescape(what)
+
+
+def htmldecode(text):
+ """
+ Decode HTML entities in the given text.
+
+ >>> htmldecode(
+ ... 'https://../package_name-0.1.2.tar.gz'
+ ... '?tokena=A&amp;tokenb=B">package_name-0.1.2.tar.gz')
+ 'https://../package_name-0.1.2.tar.gz?tokena=A&tokenb=B">package_name-0.1.2.tar.gz'
+ """
+ return entity_sub(decode_entity, text)
+
+
+def socket_timeout(timeout=15):
+ def _socket_timeout(func):
+ def _socket_timeout(*args, **kwargs):
+ old_timeout = socket.getdefaulttimeout()
+ socket.setdefaulttimeout(timeout)
+ try:
+ return func(*args, **kwargs)
+ finally:
+ socket.setdefaulttimeout(old_timeout)
+
+ return _socket_timeout
+
+ return _socket_timeout
+
+
+def _encode_auth(auth):
+ """
+ Encode auth from a URL suitable for an HTTP header.
+ >>> str(_encode_auth('username%3Apassword'))
+ 'dXNlcm5hbWU6cGFzc3dvcmQ='
+
+ Long auth strings should not cause a newline to be inserted.
+ >>> long_auth = 'username:' + 'password'*10
+ >>> chr(10) in str(_encode_auth(long_auth))
+ False
+ """
+ auth_s = urllib.parse.unquote(auth)
+ # convert to bytes
+ auth_bytes = auth_s.encode()
+ encoded_bytes = base64.b64encode(auth_bytes)
+ # convert back to a string
+ encoded = encoded_bytes.decode()
+ # strip the trailing carriage return
+ return encoded.replace('\n', '')
+
+
+class Credential:
+ """
+ A username/password pair. Use like a namedtuple.
+ """
+
+ def __init__(self, username, password):
+ self.username = username
+ self.password = password
+
+ def __iter__(self):
+ yield self.username
+ yield self.password
+
+ def __str__(self):
+ return '%(username)s:%(password)s' % vars(self)
+
+
+class PyPIConfig(configparser.RawConfigParser):
+ def __init__(self):
+ """
+ Load from ~/.pypirc
+ """
+ defaults = dict.fromkeys(['username', 'password', 'repository'], '')
+ configparser.RawConfigParser.__init__(self, defaults)
+
+ rc = os.path.join(os.path.expanduser('~'), '.pypirc')
+ if os.path.exists(rc):
+ self.read(rc)
+
+ @property
+ def creds_by_repository(self):
+ sections_with_repositories = [
+ section for section in self.sections()
+ if self.get(section, 'repository').strip()
+ ]
+
+ return dict(map(self._get_repo_cred, sections_with_repositories))
+
+ def _get_repo_cred(self, section):
+ repo = self.get(section, 'repository').strip()
+ return repo, Credential(
+ self.get(section, 'username').strip(),
+ self.get(section, 'password').strip(),
+ )
+
+ def find_credential(self, url):
+ """
+ If the URL indicated appears to be a repository defined in this
+ config, return the credential for that repository.
+ """
+ for repository, cred in self.creds_by_repository.items():
+ if url.startswith(repository):
+ return cred
+
+
+def open_with_auth(url, opener=urllib.request.urlopen):
+ """Open a urllib2 request, handling HTTP authentication"""
+
+ parsed = urllib.parse.urlparse(url)
+ scheme, netloc, path, params, query, frag = parsed
+
+ # Double scheme does not raise on macOS as revealed by a
+ # failing test. We would expect "nonnumeric port". Refs #20.
+ if netloc.endswith(':'):
+ raise http.client.InvalidURL("nonnumeric port: ''")
+
+ if scheme in ('http', 'https'):
+ auth, address = _splituser(netloc)
+ else:
+ auth = None
+
+ if not auth:
+ cred = PyPIConfig().find_credential(url)
+ if cred:
+ auth = str(cred)
+ info = cred.username, url
+ log.info('Authenticating as %s for %s (from .pypirc)', *info)
+
+ if auth:
+ auth = "Basic " + _encode_auth(auth)
+ parts = scheme, address, path, params, query, frag
+ new_url = urllib.parse.urlunparse(parts)
+ request = urllib.request.Request(new_url)
+ request.add_header("Authorization", auth)
+ else:
+ request = urllib.request.Request(url)
+
+ request.add_header('User-Agent', user_agent)
+ fp = opener(request)
+
+ if auth:
+ # Put authentication info back into request URL if same host,
+ # so that links found on the page will work
+ s2, h2, path2, param2, query2, frag2 = urllib.parse.urlparse(fp.url)
+ if s2 == scheme and h2 == address:
+ parts = s2, netloc, path2, param2, query2, frag2
+ fp.url = urllib.parse.urlunparse(parts)
+
+ return fp
+
+
+# copy of urllib.parse._splituser from Python 3.8
+def _splituser(host):
+ """splituser('user[:passwd]@host[:port]')
+ --> 'user[:passwd]', 'host[:port]'."""
+ user, delim, host = host.rpartition('@')
+ return (user if delim else None), host
+
+
+# adding a timeout to avoid freezing package_index
+open_with_auth = socket_timeout(_SOCKET_TIMEOUT)(open_with_auth)
+
+
+def fix_sf_url(url):
+ return url # backward compatibility
+
+
+def local_open(url):
+ """Read a local path, with special support for directories"""
+ scheme, server, path, param, query, frag = urllib.parse.urlparse(url)
+ filename = urllib.request.url2pathname(path)
+ if os.path.isfile(filename):
+ return urllib.request.urlopen(url)
+ elif path.endswith('/') and os.path.isdir(filename):
+ files = []
+ for f in os.listdir(filename):
+ filepath = os.path.join(filename, f)
+ if f == 'index.html':
+ with open(filepath, 'r') as fp:
+ body = fp.read()
+ break
+ elif os.path.isdir(filepath):
+ f += '/'
+ files.append('<a href="{name}">{name}</a>'.format(name=f))
+ else:
+ tmpl = (
+ "<html><head><title>{url}</title>"
+ "</head><body>{files}</body></html>")
+ body = tmpl.format(url=url, files='\n'.join(files))
+ status, message = 200, "OK"
+ else:
+ status, message, body = 404, "Path not found", "Not found"
+
+ headers = {'content-type': 'text/html'}
+ body_stream = io.StringIO(body)
+ return urllib.error.HTTPError(url, status, message, headers, body_stream)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/py34compat.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/py34compat.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..3ad917222a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/py34compat.py
@@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
+import importlib
+
+try:
+ import importlib.util
+except ImportError:
+ pass
+
+
+try:
+ module_from_spec = importlib.util.module_from_spec
+except AttributeError:
+ def module_from_spec(spec):
+ return spec.loader.load_module(spec.name)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/sandbox.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/sandbox.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..91b960d899
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/sandbox.py
@@ -0,0 +1,496 @@
+import os
+import sys
+import tempfile
+import operator
+import functools
+import itertools
+import re
+import contextlib
+import pickle
+import textwrap
+import builtins
+
+import pkg_resources
+from distutils.errors import DistutilsError
+from pkg_resources import working_set
+
+if sys.platform.startswith('java'):
+ import org.python.modules.posix.PosixModule as _os
+else:
+ _os = sys.modules[os.name]
+try:
+ _file = file
+except NameError:
+ _file = None
+_open = open
+
+
+__all__ = [
+ "AbstractSandbox", "DirectorySandbox", "SandboxViolation", "run_setup",
+]
+
+
+def _execfile(filename, globals, locals=None):
+ """
+ Python 3 implementation of execfile.
+ """
+ mode = 'rb'
+ with open(filename, mode) as stream:
+ script = stream.read()
+ if locals is None:
+ locals = globals
+ code = compile(script, filename, 'exec')
+ exec(code, globals, locals)
+
+
+@contextlib.contextmanager
+def save_argv(repl=None):
+ saved = sys.argv[:]
+ if repl is not None:
+ sys.argv[:] = repl
+ try:
+ yield saved
+ finally:
+ sys.argv[:] = saved
+
+
+@contextlib.contextmanager
+def save_path():
+ saved = sys.path[:]
+ try:
+ yield saved
+ finally:
+ sys.path[:] = saved
+
+
+@contextlib.contextmanager
+def override_temp(replacement):
+ """
+ Monkey-patch tempfile.tempdir with replacement, ensuring it exists
+ """
+ os.makedirs(replacement, exist_ok=True)
+
+ saved = tempfile.tempdir
+
+ tempfile.tempdir = replacement
+
+ try:
+ yield
+ finally:
+ tempfile.tempdir = saved
+
+
+@contextlib.contextmanager
+def pushd(target):
+ saved = os.getcwd()
+ os.chdir(target)
+ try:
+ yield saved
+ finally:
+ os.chdir(saved)
+
+
+class UnpickleableException(Exception):
+ """
+ An exception representing another Exception that could not be pickled.
+ """
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def dump(type, exc):
+ """
+ Always return a dumped (pickled) type and exc. If exc can't be pickled,
+ wrap it in UnpickleableException first.
+ """
+ try:
+ return pickle.dumps(type), pickle.dumps(exc)
+ except Exception:
+ # get UnpickleableException inside the sandbox
+ from setuptools.sandbox import UnpickleableException as cls
+ return cls.dump(cls, cls(repr(exc)))
+
+
+class ExceptionSaver:
+ """
+ A Context Manager that will save an exception, serialized, and restore it
+ later.
+ """
+
+ def __enter__(self):
+ return self
+
+ def __exit__(self, type, exc, tb):
+ if not exc:
+ return
+
+ # dump the exception
+ self._saved = UnpickleableException.dump(type, exc)
+ self._tb = tb
+
+ # suppress the exception
+ return True
+
+ def resume(self):
+ "restore and re-raise any exception"
+
+ if '_saved' not in vars(self):
+ return
+
+ type, exc = map(pickle.loads, self._saved)
+ raise exc.with_traceback(self._tb)
+
+
+@contextlib.contextmanager
+def save_modules():
+ """
+ Context in which imported modules are saved.
+
+ Translates exceptions internal to the context into the equivalent exception
+ outside the context.
+ """
+ saved = sys.modules.copy()
+ with ExceptionSaver() as saved_exc:
+ yield saved
+
+ sys.modules.update(saved)
+ # remove any modules imported since
+ del_modules = (
+ mod_name for mod_name in sys.modules
+ if mod_name not in saved
+ # exclude any encodings modules. See #285
+ and not mod_name.startswith('encodings.')
+ )
+ _clear_modules(del_modules)
+
+ saved_exc.resume()
+
+
+def _clear_modules(module_names):
+ for mod_name in list(module_names):
+ del sys.modules[mod_name]
+
+
+@contextlib.contextmanager
+def save_pkg_resources_state():
+ saved = pkg_resources.__getstate__()
+ try:
+ yield saved
+ finally:
+ pkg_resources.__setstate__(saved)
+
+
+@contextlib.contextmanager
+def setup_context(setup_dir):
+ temp_dir = os.path.join(setup_dir, 'temp')
+ with save_pkg_resources_state():
+ with save_modules():
+ with save_path():
+ hide_setuptools()
+ with save_argv():
+ with override_temp(temp_dir):
+ with pushd(setup_dir):
+ # ensure setuptools commands are available
+ __import__('setuptools')
+ yield
+
+
+_MODULES_TO_HIDE = {
+ 'setuptools',
+ 'distutils',
+ 'pkg_resources',
+ 'Cython',
+ '_distutils_hack',
+}
+
+
+def _needs_hiding(mod_name):
+ """
+ >>> _needs_hiding('setuptools')
+ True
+ >>> _needs_hiding('pkg_resources')
+ True
+ >>> _needs_hiding('setuptools_plugin')
+ False
+ >>> _needs_hiding('setuptools.__init__')
+ True
+ >>> _needs_hiding('distutils')
+ True
+ >>> _needs_hiding('os')
+ False
+ >>> _needs_hiding('Cython')
+ True
+ """
+ base_module = mod_name.split('.', 1)[0]
+ return base_module in _MODULES_TO_HIDE
+
+
+def hide_setuptools():
+ """
+ Remove references to setuptools' modules from sys.modules to allow the
+ invocation to import the most appropriate setuptools. This technique is
+ necessary to avoid issues such as #315 where setuptools upgrading itself
+ would fail to find a function declared in the metadata.
+ """
+ _distutils_hack = sys.modules.get('_distutils_hack', None)
+ if _distutils_hack is not None:
+ _distutils_hack.remove_shim()
+
+ modules = filter(_needs_hiding, sys.modules)
+ _clear_modules(modules)
+
+
+def run_setup(setup_script, args):
+ """Run a distutils setup script, sandboxed in its directory"""
+ setup_dir = os.path.abspath(os.path.dirname(setup_script))
+ with setup_context(setup_dir):
+ try:
+ sys.argv[:] = [setup_script] + list(args)
+ sys.path.insert(0, setup_dir)
+ # reset to include setup dir, w/clean callback list
+ working_set.__init__()
+ working_set.callbacks.append(lambda dist: dist.activate())
+
+ with DirectorySandbox(setup_dir):
+ ns = dict(__file__=setup_script, __name__='__main__')
+ _execfile(setup_script, ns)
+ except SystemExit as v:
+ if v.args and v.args[0]:
+ raise
+ # Normal exit, just return
+
+
+class AbstractSandbox:
+ """Wrap 'os' module and 'open()' builtin for virtualizing setup scripts"""
+
+ _active = False
+
+ def __init__(self):
+ self._attrs = [
+ name for name in dir(_os)
+ if not name.startswith('_') and hasattr(self, name)
+ ]
+
+ def _copy(self, source):
+ for name in self._attrs:
+ setattr(os, name, getattr(source, name))
+
+ def __enter__(self):
+ self._copy(self)
+ if _file:
+ builtins.file = self._file
+ builtins.open = self._open
+ self._active = True
+
+ def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, traceback):
+ self._active = False
+ if _file:
+ builtins.file = _file
+ builtins.open = _open
+ self._copy(_os)
+
+ def run(self, func):
+ """Run 'func' under os sandboxing"""
+ with self:
+ return func()
+
+ def _mk_dual_path_wrapper(name):
+ original = getattr(_os, name)
+
+ def wrap(self, src, dst, *args, **kw):
+ if self._active:
+ src, dst = self._remap_pair(name, src, dst, *args, **kw)
+ return original(src, dst, *args, **kw)
+
+ return wrap
+
+ for name in ["rename", "link", "symlink"]:
+ if hasattr(_os, name):
+ locals()[name] = _mk_dual_path_wrapper(name)
+
+ def _mk_single_path_wrapper(name, original=None):
+ original = original or getattr(_os, name)
+
+ def wrap(self, path, *args, **kw):
+ if self._active:
+ path = self._remap_input(name, path, *args, **kw)
+ return original(path, *args, **kw)
+
+ return wrap
+
+ if _file:
+ _file = _mk_single_path_wrapper('file', _file)
+ _open = _mk_single_path_wrapper('open', _open)
+ for name in [
+ "stat", "listdir", "chdir", "open", "chmod", "chown", "mkdir",
+ "remove", "unlink", "rmdir", "utime", "lchown", "chroot", "lstat",
+ "startfile", "mkfifo", "mknod", "pathconf", "access"
+ ]:
+ if hasattr(_os, name):
+ locals()[name] = _mk_single_path_wrapper(name)
+
+ def _mk_single_with_return(name):
+ original = getattr(_os, name)
+
+ def wrap(self, path, *args, **kw):
+ if self._active:
+ path = self._remap_input(name, path, *args, **kw)
+ return self._remap_output(name, original(path, *args, **kw))
+ return original(path, *args, **kw)
+
+ return wrap
+
+ for name in ['readlink', 'tempnam']:
+ if hasattr(_os, name):
+ locals()[name] = _mk_single_with_return(name)
+
+ def _mk_query(name):
+ original = getattr(_os, name)
+
+ def wrap(self, *args, **kw):
+ retval = original(*args, **kw)
+ if self._active:
+ return self._remap_output(name, retval)
+ return retval
+
+ return wrap
+
+ for name in ['getcwd', 'tmpnam']:
+ if hasattr(_os, name):
+ locals()[name] = _mk_query(name)
+
+ def _validate_path(self, path):
+ """Called to remap or validate any path, whether input or output"""
+ return path
+
+ def _remap_input(self, operation, path, *args, **kw):
+ """Called for path inputs"""
+ return self._validate_path(path)
+
+ def _remap_output(self, operation, path):
+ """Called for path outputs"""
+ return self._validate_path(path)
+
+ def _remap_pair(self, operation, src, dst, *args, **kw):
+ """Called for path pairs like rename, link, and symlink operations"""
+ return (
+ self._remap_input(operation + '-from', src, *args, **kw),
+ self._remap_input(operation + '-to', dst, *args, **kw)
+ )
+
+
+if hasattr(os, 'devnull'):
+ _EXCEPTIONS = [os.devnull]
+else:
+ _EXCEPTIONS = []
+
+
+class DirectorySandbox(AbstractSandbox):
+ """Restrict operations to a single subdirectory - pseudo-chroot"""
+
+ write_ops = dict.fromkeys([
+ "open", "chmod", "chown", "mkdir", "remove", "unlink", "rmdir",
+ "utime", "lchown", "chroot", "mkfifo", "mknod", "tempnam",
+ ])
+
+ _exception_patterns = [
+ # Allow lib2to3 to attempt to save a pickled grammar object (#121)
+ r'.*lib2to3.*\.pickle$',
+ ]
+ "exempt writing to paths that match the pattern"
+
+ def __init__(self, sandbox, exceptions=_EXCEPTIONS):
+ self._sandbox = os.path.normcase(os.path.realpath(sandbox))
+ self._prefix = os.path.join(self._sandbox, '')
+ self._exceptions = [
+ os.path.normcase(os.path.realpath(path))
+ for path in exceptions
+ ]
+ AbstractSandbox.__init__(self)
+
+ def _violation(self, operation, *args, **kw):
+ from setuptools.sandbox import SandboxViolation
+ raise SandboxViolation(operation, args, kw)
+
+ if _file:
+
+ def _file(self, path, mode='r', *args, **kw):
+ if mode not in ('r', 'rt', 'rb', 'rU', 'U') and not self._ok(path):
+ self._violation("file", path, mode, *args, **kw)
+ return _file(path, mode, *args, **kw)
+
+ def _open(self, path, mode='r', *args, **kw):
+ if mode not in ('r', 'rt', 'rb', 'rU', 'U') and not self._ok(path):
+ self._violation("open", path, mode, *args, **kw)
+ return _open(path, mode, *args, **kw)
+
+ def tmpnam(self):
+ self._violation("tmpnam")
+
+ def _ok(self, path):
+ active = self._active
+ try:
+ self._active = False
+ realpath = os.path.normcase(os.path.realpath(path))
+ return (
+ self._exempted(realpath)
+ or realpath == self._sandbox
+ or realpath.startswith(self._prefix)
+ )
+ finally:
+ self._active = active
+
+ def _exempted(self, filepath):
+ start_matches = (
+ filepath.startswith(exception)
+ for exception in self._exceptions
+ )
+ pattern_matches = (
+ re.match(pattern, filepath)
+ for pattern in self._exception_patterns
+ )
+ candidates = itertools.chain(start_matches, pattern_matches)
+ return any(candidates)
+
+ def _remap_input(self, operation, path, *args, **kw):
+ """Called for path inputs"""
+ if operation in self.write_ops and not self._ok(path):
+ self._violation(operation, os.path.realpath(path), *args, **kw)
+ return path
+
+ def _remap_pair(self, operation, src, dst, *args, **kw):
+ """Called for path pairs like rename, link, and symlink operations"""
+ if not self._ok(src) or not self._ok(dst):
+ self._violation(operation, src, dst, *args, **kw)
+ return (src, dst)
+
+ def open(self, file, flags, mode=0o777, *args, **kw):
+ """Called for low-level os.open()"""
+ if flags & WRITE_FLAGS and not self._ok(file):
+ self._violation("os.open", file, flags, mode, *args, **kw)
+ return _os.open(file, flags, mode, *args, **kw)
+
+
+WRITE_FLAGS = functools.reduce(
+ operator.or_, [
+ getattr(_os, a, 0) for a in
+ "O_WRONLY O_RDWR O_APPEND O_CREAT O_TRUNC O_TEMPORARY".split()]
+)
+
+
+class SandboxViolation(DistutilsError):
+ """A setup script attempted to modify the filesystem outside the sandbox"""
+
+ tmpl = textwrap.dedent("""
+ SandboxViolation: {cmd}{args!r} {kwargs}
+
+ The package setup script has attempted to modify files on your system
+ that are not within the EasyInstall build area, and has been aborted.
+
+ This package cannot be safely installed by EasyInstall, and may not
+ support alternate installation locations even if you run its setup
+ script by hand. Please inform the package's author and the EasyInstall
+ maintainers to find out if a fix or workaround is available.
+ """).lstrip()
+
+ def __str__(self):
+ cmd, args, kwargs = self.args
+ return self.tmpl.format(**locals())
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/script (dev).tmpl b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/script (dev).tmpl
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..39a24b0488
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/script (dev).tmpl
@@ -0,0 +1,6 @@
+# EASY-INSTALL-DEV-SCRIPT: %(spec)r,%(script_name)r
+__requires__ = %(spec)r
+__import__('pkg_resources').require(%(spec)r)
+__file__ = %(dev_path)r
+with open(__file__) as f:
+ exec(compile(f.read(), __file__, 'exec'))
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/script.tmpl b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/script.tmpl
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..ff5efbcab3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/script.tmpl
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+# EASY-INSTALL-SCRIPT: %(spec)r,%(script_name)r
+__requires__ = %(spec)r
+__import__('pkg_resources').run_script(%(spec)r, %(script_name)r)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/ssl_support.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/ssl_support.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..eac5e65608
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/ssl_support.py
@@ -0,0 +1,266 @@
+import os
+import socket
+import atexit
+import re
+import functools
+import urllib.request
+import http.client
+
+
+from pkg_resources import ResolutionError, ExtractionError
+
+try:
+ import ssl
+except ImportError:
+ ssl = None
+
+__all__ = [
+ 'VerifyingHTTPSHandler', 'find_ca_bundle', 'is_available', 'cert_paths',
+ 'opener_for'
+]
+
+cert_paths = """
+/etc/pki/tls/certs/ca-bundle.crt
+/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt
+/usr/share/ssl/certs/ca-bundle.crt
+/usr/local/share/certs/ca-root.crt
+/etc/ssl/cert.pem
+/System/Library/OpenSSL/certs/cert.pem
+/usr/local/share/certs/ca-root-nss.crt
+/etc/ssl/ca-bundle.pem
+""".strip().split()
+
+try:
+ HTTPSHandler = urllib.request.HTTPSHandler
+ HTTPSConnection = http.client.HTTPSConnection
+except AttributeError:
+ HTTPSHandler = HTTPSConnection = object
+
+is_available = ssl is not None and object not in (
+ HTTPSHandler, HTTPSConnection)
+
+
+try:
+ from ssl import CertificateError, match_hostname
+except ImportError:
+ try:
+ from backports.ssl_match_hostname import CertificateError
+ from backports.ssl_match_hostname import match_hostname
+ except ImportError:
+ CertificateError = None
+ match_hostname = None
+
+if not CertificateError:
+
+ class CertificateError(ValueError):
+ pass
+
+
+if not match_hostname:
+
+ def _dnsname_match(dn, hostname, max_wildcards=1):
+ """Matching according to RFC 6125, section 6.4.3
+
+ https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6125#section-6.4.3
+ """
+ pats = []
+ if not dn:
+ return False
+
+ # Ported from python3-syntax:
+ # leftmost, *remainder = dn.split(r'.')
+ parts = dn.split(r'.')
+ leftmost = parts[0]
+ remainder = parts[1:]
+
+ wildcards = leftmost.count('*')
+ if wildcards > max_wildcards:
+ # Issue #17980: avoid denials of service by refusing more
+ # than one wildcard per fragment. A survey of established
+ # policy among SSL implementations showed it to be a
+ # reasonable choice.
+ raise CertificateError(
+ "too many wildcards in certificate DNS name: " + repr(dn))
+
+ # speed up common case w/o wildcards
+ if not wildcards:
+ return dn.lower() == hostname.lower()
+
+ # RFC 6125, section 6.4.3, subitem 1.
+ # The client SHOULD NOT attempt to match a
+ # presented identifier in which the wildcard
+ # character comprises a label other than the
+ # left-most label.
+ if leftmost == '*':
+ # When '*' is a fragment by itself, it matches a non-empty dotless
+ # fragment.
+ pats.append('[^.]+')
+ elif leftmost.startswith('xn--') or hostname.startswith('xn--'):
+ # RFC 6125, section 6.4.3, subitem 3.
+ # The client SHOULD NOT attempt to match a presented identifier
+ # where the wildcard character is embedded within an A-label or
+ # U-label of an internationalized domain name.
+ pats.append(re.escape(leftmost))
+ else:
+ # Otherwise, '*' matches any dotless string, e.g. www*
+ pats.append(re.escape(leftmost).replace(r'\*', '[^.]*'))
+
+ # add the remaining fragments, ignore any wildcards
+ for frag in remainder:
+ pats.append(re.escape(frag))
+
+ pat = re.compile(r'\A' + r'\.'.join(pats) + r'\Z', re.IGNORECASE)
+ return pat.match(hostname)
+
+ def match_hostname(cert, hostname):
+ """Verify that *cert* (in decoded format as returned by
+ SSLSocket.getpeercert()) matches the *hostname*. RFC 2818 and RFC 6125
+ rules are followed, but IP addresses are not accepted for *hostname*.
+
+ CertificateError is raised on failure. On success, the function
+ returns nothing.
+ """
+ if not cert:
+ raise ValueError("empty or no certificate")
+ dnsnames = []
+ san = cert.get('subjectAltName', ())
+ for key, value in san:
+ if key == 'DNS':
+ if _dnsname_match(value, hostname):
+ return
+ dnsnames.append(value)
+ if not dnsnames:
+ # The subject is only checked when there is no dNSName entry
+ # in subjectAltName
+ for sub in cert.get('subject', ()):
+ for key, value in sub:
+ # XXX according to RFC 2818, the most specific Common Name
+ # must be used.
+ if key == 'commonName':
+ if _dnsname_match(value, hostname):
+ return
+ dnsnames.append(value)
+ if len(dnsnames) > 1:
+ raise CertificateError(
+ "hostname %r doesn't match either of %s"
+ % (hostname, ', '.join(map(repr, dnsnames))))
+ elif len(dnsnames) == 1:
+ raise CertificateError(
+ "hostname %r doesn't match %r"
+ % (hostname, dnsnames[0]))
+ else:
+ raise CertificateError(
+ "no appropriate commonName or "
+ "subjectAltName fields were found")
+
+
+class VerifyingHTTPSHandler(HTTPSHandler):
+ """Simple verifying handler: no auth, subclasses, timeouts, etc."""
+
+ def __init__(self, ca_bundle):
+ self.ca_bundle = ca_bundle
+ HTTPSHandler.__init__(self)
+
+ def https_open(self, req):
+ return self.do_open(
+ lambda host, **kw: VerifyingHTTPSConn(host, self.ca_bundle, **kw),
+ req
+ )
+
+
+class VerifyingHTTPSConn(HTTPSConnection):
+ """Simple verifying connection: no auth, subclasses, timeouts, etc."""
+
+ def __init__(self, host, ca_bundle, **kw):
+ HTTPSConnection.__init__(self, host, **kw)
+ self.ca_bundle = ca_bundle
+
+ def connect(self):
+ sock = socket.create_connection(
+ (self.host, self.port), getattr(self, 'source_address', None)
+ )
+
+ # Handle the socket if a (proxy) tunnel is present
+ if hasattr(self, '_tunnel') and getattr(self, '_tunnel_host', None):
+ self.sock = sock
+ self._tunnel()
+ # http://bugs.python.org/issue7776: Python>=3.4.1 and >=2.7.7
+ # change self.host to mean the proxy server host when tunneling is
+ # being used. Adapt, since we are interested in the destination
+ # host for the match_hostname() comparison.
+ actual_host = self._tunnel_host
+ else:
+ actual_host = self.host
+
+ if hasattr(ssl, 'create_default_context'):
+ ctx = ssl.create_default_context(cafile=self.ca_bundle)
+ self.sock = ctx.wrap_socket(sock, server_hostname=actual_host)
+ else:
+ # This is for python < 2.7.9 and < 3.4?
+ self.sock = ssl.wrap_socket(
+ sock, cert_reqs=ssl.CERT_REQUIRED, ca_certs=self.ca_bundle
+ )
+ try:
+ match_hostname(self.sock.getpeercert(), actual_host)
+ except CertificateError:
+ self.sock.shutdown(socket.SHUT_RDWR)
+ self.sock.close()
+ raise
+
+
+def opener_for(ca_bundle=None):
+ """Get a urlopen() replacement that uses ca_bundle for verification"""
+ return urllib.request.build_opener(
+ VerifyingHTTPSHandler(ca_bundle or find_ca_bundle())
+ ).open
+
+
+# from jaraco.functools
+def once(func):
+ @functools.wraps(func)
+ def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
+ if not hasattr(func, 'always_returns'):
+ func.always_returns = func(*args, **kwargs)
+ return func.always_returns
+ return wrapper
+
+
+@once
+def get_win_certfile():
+ try:
+ import wincertstore
+ except ImportError:
+ return None
+
+ class CertFile(wincertstore.CertFile):
+ def __init__(self):
+ super(CertFile, self).__init__()
+ atexit.register(self.close)
+
+ def close(self):
+ try:
+ super(CertFile, self).close()
+ except OSError:
+ pass
+
+ _wincerts = CertFile()
+ _wincerts.addstore('CA')
+ _wincerts.addstore('ROOT')
+ return _wincerts.name
+
+
+def find_ca_bundle():
+ """Return an existing CA bundle path, or None"""
+ extant_cert_paths = filter(os.path.isfile, cert_paths)
+ return (
+ get_win_certfile()
+ or next(extant_cert_paths, None)
+ or _certifi_where()
+ )
+
+
+def _certifi_where():
+ try:
+ return __import__('certifi').where()
+ except (ImportError, ResolutionError, ExtractionError):
+ pass
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/unicode_utils.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/unicode_utils.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..e84e65e3e1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/unicode_utils.py
@@ -0,0 +1,42 @@
+import unicodedata
+import sys
+
+
+# HFS Plus uses decomposed UTF-8
+def decompose(path):
+ if isinstance(path, str):
+ return unicodedata.normalize('NFD', path)
+ try:
+ path = path.decode('utf-8')
+ path = unicodedata.normalize('NFD', path)
+ path = path.encode('utf-8')
+ except UnicodeError:
+ pass # Not UTF-8
+ return path
+
+
+def filesys_decode(path):
+ """
+ Ensure that the given path is decoded,
+ NONE when no expected encoding works
+ """
+
+ if isinstance(path, str):
+ return path
+
+ fs_enc = sys.getfilesystemencoding() or 'utf-8'
+ candidates = fs_enc, 'utf-8'
+
+ for enc in candidates:
+ try:
+ return path.decode(enc)
+ except UnicodeDecodeError:
+ continue
+
+
+def try_encode(string, enc):
+ "turn unicode encoding into a functional routine"
+ try:
+ return string.encode(enc)
+ except UnicodeEncodeError:
+ return None
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/version.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/version.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..95e1869658
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/version.py
@@ -0,0 +1,6 @@
+import pkg_resources
+
+try:
+ __version__ = pkg_resources.get_distribution('setuptools').version
+except Exception:
+ __version__ = 'unknown'
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/wheel.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/wheel.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..0be811af2c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/wheel.py
@@ -0,0 +1,213 @@
+"""Wheels support."""
+
+from distutils.util import get_platform
+from distutils import log
+import email
+import itertools
+import os
+import posixpath
+import re
+import zipfile
+
+import pkg_resources
+import setuptools
+from pkg_resources import parse_version
+from setuptools.extern.packaging.tags import sys_tags
+from setuptools.extern.packaging.utils import canonicalize_name
+from setuptools.command.egg_info import write_requirements
+
+
+WHEEL_NAME = re.compile(
+ r"""^(?P<project_name>.+?)-(?P<version>\d.*?)
+ ((-(?P<build>\d.*?))?-(?P<py_version>.+?)-(?P<abi>.+?)-(?P<platform>.+?)
+ )\.whl$""",
+ re.VERBOSE).match
+
+NAMESPACE_PACKAGE_INIT = \
+ "__import__('pkg_resources').declare_namespace(__name__)\n"
+
+
+def unpack(src_dir, dst_dir):
+ '''Move everything under `src_dir` to `dst_dir`, and delete the former.'''
+ for dirpath, dirnames, filenames in os.walk(src_dir):
+ subdir = os.path.relpath(dirpath, src_dir)
+ for f in filenames:
+ src = os.path.join(dirpath, f)
+ dst = os.path.join(dst_dir, subdir, f)
+ os.renames(src, dst)
+ for n, d in reversed(list(enumerate(dirnames))):
+ src = os.path.join(dirpath, d)
+ dst = os.path.join(dst_dir, subdir, d)
+ if not os.path.exists(dst):
+ # Directory does not exist in destination,
+ # rename it and prune it from os.walk list.
+ os.renames(src, dst)
+ del dirnames[n]
+ # Cleanup.
+ for dirpath, dirnames, filenames in os.walk(src_dir, topdown=True):
+ assert not filenames
+ os.rmdir(dirpath)
+
+
+class Wheel:
+
+ def __init__(self, filename):
+ match = WHEEL_NAME(os.path.basename(filename))
+ if match is None:
+ raise ValueError('invalid wheel name: %r' % filename)
+ self.filename = filename
+ for k, v in match.groupdict().items():
+ setattr(self, k, v)
+
+ def tags(self):
+ '''List tags (py_version, abi, platform) supported by this wheel.'''
+ return itertools.product(
+ self.py_version.split('.'),
+ self.abi.split('.'),
+ self.platform.split('.'),
+ )
+
+ def is_compatible(self):
+ '''Is the wheel is compatible with the current platform?'''
+ supported_tags = set(
+ (t.interpreter, t.abi, t.platform) for t in sys_tags())
+ return next((True for t in self.tags() if t in supported_tags), False)
+
+ def egg_name(self):
+ return pkg_resources.Distribution(
+ project_name=self.project_name, version=self.version,
+ platform=(None if self.platform == 'any' else get_platform()),
+ ).egg_name() + '.egg'
+
+ def get_dist_info(self, zf):
+ # find the correct name of the .dist-info dir in the wheel file
+ for member in zf.namelist():
+ dirname = posixpath.dirname(member)
+ if (dirname.endswith('.dist-info') and
+ canonicalize_name(dirname).startswith(
+ canonicalize_name(self.project_name))):
+ return dirname
+ raise ValueError("unsupported wheel format. .dist-info not found")
+
+ def install_as_egg(self, destination_eggdir):
+ '''Install wheel as an egg directory.'''
+ with zipfile.ZipFile(self.filename) as zf:
+ self._install_as_egg(destination_eggdir, zf)
+
+ def _install_as_egg(self, destination_eggdir, zf):
+ dist_basename = '%s-%s' % (self.project_name, self.version)
+ dist_info = self.get_dist_info(zf)
+ dist_data = '%s.data' % dist_basename
+ egg_info = os.path.join(destination_eggdir, 'EGG-INFO')
+
+ self._convert_metadata(zf, destination_eggdir, dist_info, egg_info)
+ self._move_data_entries(destination_eggdir, dist_data)
+ self._fix_namespace_packages(egg_info, destination_eggdir)
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _convert_metadata(zf, destination_eggdir, dist_info, egg_info):
+ def get_metadata(name):
+ with zf.open(posixpath.join(dist_info, name)) as fp:
+ value = fp.read().decode('utf-8')
+ return email.parser.Parser().parsestr(value)
+
+ wheel_metadata = get_metadata('WHEEL')
+ # Check wheel format version is supported.
+ wheel_version = parse_version(wheel_metadata.get('Wheel-Version'))
+ wheel_v1 = (
+ parse_version('1.0') <= wheel_version < parse_version('2.0dev0')
+ )
+ if not wheel_v1:
+ raise ValueError(
+ 'unsupported wheel format version: %s' % wheel_version)
+ # Extract to target directory.
+ os.mkdir(destination_eggdir)
+ zf.extractall(destination_eggdir)
+ # Convert metadata.
+ dist_info = os.path.join(destination_eggdir, dist_info)
+ dist = pkg_resources.Distribution.from_location(
+ destination_eggdir, dist_info,
+ metadata=pkg_resources.PathMetadata(destination_eggdir, dist_info),
+ )
+
+ # Note: Evaluate and strip markers now,
+ # as it's difficult to convert back from the syntax:
+ # foobar; "linux" in sys_platform and extra == 'test'
+ def raw_req(req):
+ req.marker = None
+ return str(req)
+ install_requires = list(sorted(map(raw_req, dist.requires())))
+ extras_require = {
+ extra: sorted(
+ req
+ for req in map(raw_req, dist.requires((extra,)))
+ if req not in install_requires
+ )
+ for extra in dist.extras
+ }
+ os.rename(dist_info, egg_info)
+ os.rename(
+ os.path.join(egg_info, 'METADATA'),
+ os.path.join(egg_info, 'PKG-INFO'),
+ )
+ setup_dist = setuptools.Distribution(
+ attrs=dict(
+ install_requires=install_requires,
+ extras_require=extras_require,
+ ),
+ )
+ # Temporarily disable info traces.
+ log_threshold = log._global_log.threshold
+ log.set_threshold(log.WARN)
+ try:
+ write_requirements(
+ setup_dist.get_command_obj('egg_info'),
+ None,
+ os.path.join(egg_info, 'requires.txt'),
+ )
+ finally:
+ log.set_threshold(log_threshold)
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _move_data_entries(destination_eggdir, dist_data):
+ """Move data entries to their correct location."""
+ dist_data = os.path.join(destination_eggdir, dist_data)
+ dist_data_scripts = os.path.join(dist_data, 'scripts')
+ if os.path.exists(dist_data_scripts):
+ egg_info_scripts = os.path.join(
+ destination_eggdir, 'EGG-INFO', 'scripts')
+ os.mkdir(egg_info_scripts)
+ for entry in os.listdir(dist_data_scripts):
+ # Remove bytecode, as it's not properly handled
+ # during easy_install scripts install phase.
+ if entry.endswith('.pyc'):
+ os.unlink(os.path.join(dist_data_scripts, entry))
+ else:
+ os.rename(
+ os.path.join(dist_data_scripts, entry),
+ os.path.join(egg_info_scripts, entry),
+ )
+ os.rmdir(dist_data_scripts)
+ for subdir in filter(os.path.exists, (
+ os.path.join(dist_data, d)
+ for d in ('data', 'headers', 'purelib', 'platlib')
+ )):
+ unpack(subdir, destination_eggdir)
+ if os.path.exists(dist_data):
+ os.rmdir(dist_data)
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def _fix_namespace_packages(egg_info, destination_eggdir):
+ namespace_packages = os.path.join(
+ egg_info, 'namespace_packages.txt')
+ if os.path.exists(namespace_packages):
+ with open(namespace_packages) as fp:
+ namespace_packages = fp.read().split()
+ for mod in namespace_packages:
+ mod_dir = os.path.join(destination_eggdir, *mod.split('.'))
+ mod_init = os.path.join(mod_dir, '__init__.py')
+ if not os.path.exists(mod_dir):
+ os.mkdir(mod_dir)
+ if not os.path.exists(mod_init):
+ with open(mod_init, 'w') as fp:
+ fp.write(NAMESPACE_PACKAGE_INIT)
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/windows_support.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/windows_support.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..cb977cff95
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/setuptools/windows_support.py
@@ -0,0 +1,29 @@
+import platform
+import ctypes
+
+
+def windows_only(func):
+ if platform.system() != 'Windows':
+ return lambda *args, **kwargs: None
+ return func
+
+
+@windows_only
+def hide_file(path):
+ """
+ Set the hidden attribute on a file or directory.
+
+ From http://stackoverflow.com/questions/19622133/
+
+ `path` must be text.
+ """
+ __import__('ctypes.wintypes')
+ SetFileAttributes = ctypes.windll.kernel32.SetFileAttributesW
+ SetFileAttributes.argtypes = ctypes.wintypes.LPWSTR, ctypes.wintypes.DWORD
+ SetFileAttributes.restype = ctypes.wintypes.BOOL
+
+ FILE_ATTRIBUTE_HIDDEN = 0x02
+
+ ret = SetFileAttributes(path, FILE_ATTRIBUTE_HIDDEN)
+ if not ret:
+ raise ctypes.WinError()