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-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/jaraco/__init__.py0
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/jaraco/context.py288
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/jaraco/functools.py556
-rw-r--r--third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/jaraco/text/__init__.py599
4 files changed, 1443 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/jaraco/__init__.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/jaraco/__init__.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..e69de29bb2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/jaraco/__init__.py
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/jaraco/context.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/jaraco/context.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..b0d1ef37cb
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/jaraco/context.py
@@ -0,0 +1,288 @@
+import os
+import subprocess
+import contextlib
+import functools
+import tempfile
+import shutil
+import operator
+import warnings
+
+
+@contextlib.contextmanager
+def pushd(dir):
+ """
+ >>> tmp_path = getfixture('tmp_path')
+ >>> with pushd(tmp_path):
+ ... assert os.getcwd() == os.fspath(tmp_path)
+ >>> assert os.getcwd() != os.fspath(tmp_path)
+ """
+
+ orig = os.getcwd()
+ os.chdir(dir)
+ try:
+ yield dir
+ finally:
+ os.chdir(orig)
+
+
+@contextlib.contextmanager
+def tarball_context(url, target_dir=None, runner=None, pushd=pushd):
+ """
+ Get a tarball, extract it, change to that directory, yield, then
+ clean up.
+ `runner` is the function to invoke commands.
+ `pushd` is a context manager for changing the directory.
+ """
+ if target_dir is None:
+ target_dir = os.path.basename(url).replace('.tar.gz', '').replace('.tgz', '')
+ if runner is None:
+ runner = functools.partial(subprocess.check_call, shell=True)
+ else:
+ warnings.warn("runner parameter is deprecated", DeprecationWarning)
+ # In the tar command, use --strip-components=1 to strip the first path and
+ # then
+ # use -C to cause the files to be extracted to {target_dir}. This ensures
+ # that we always know where the files were extracted.
+ runner('mkdir {target_dir}'.format(**vars()))
+ try:
+ getter = 'wget {url} -O -'
+ extract = 'tar x{compression} --strip-components=1 -C {target_dir}'
+ cmd = ' | '.join((getter, extract))
+ runner(cmd.format(compression=infer_compression(url), **vars()))
+ with pushd(target_dir):
+ yield target_dir
+ finally:
+ runner('rm -Rf {target_dir}'.format(**vars()))
+
+
+def infer_compression(url):
+ """
+ Given a URL or filename, infer the compression code for tar.
+
+ >>> infer_compression('http://foo/bar.tar.gz')
+ 'z'
+ >>> infer_compression('http://foo/bar.tgz')
+ 'z'
+ >>> infer_compression('file.bz')
+ 'j'
+ >>> infer_compression('file.xz')
+ 'J'
+ """
+ # cheat and just assume it's the last two characters
+ compression_indicator = url[-2:]
+ mapping = dict(gz='z', bz='j', xz='J')
+ # Assume 'z' (gzip) if no match
+ return mapping.get(compression_indicator, 'z')
+
+
+@contextlib.contextmanager
+def temp_dir(remover=shutil.rmtree):
+ """
+ Create a temporary directory context. Pass a custom remover
+ to override the removal behavior.
+
+ >>> import pathlib
+ >>> with temp_dir() as the_dir:
+ ... assert os.path.isdir(the_dir)
+ ... _ = pathlib.Path(the_dir).joinpath('somefile').write_text('contents')
+ >>> assert not os.path.exists(the_dir)
+ """
+ temp_dir = tempfile.mkdtemp()
+ try:
+ yield temp_dir
+ finally:
+ remover(temp_dir)
+
+
+@contextlib.contextmanager
+def repo_context(url, branch=None, quiet=True, dest_ctx=temp_dir):
+ """
+ Check out the repo indicated by url.
+
+ If dest_ctx is supplied, it should be a context manager
+ to yield the target directory for the check out.
+ """
+ exe = 'git' if 'git' in url else 'hg'
+ with dest_ctx() as repo_dir:
+ cmd = [exe, 'clone', url, repo_dir]
+ if branch:
+ cmd.extend(['--branch', branch])
+ devnull = open(os.path.devnull, 'w')
+ stdout = devnull if quiet else None
+ subprocess.check_call(cmd, stdout=stdout)
+ yield repo_dir
+
+
+@contextlib.contextmanager
+def null():
+ """
+ A null context suitable to stand in for a meaningful context.
+
+ >>> with null() as value:
+ ... assert value is None
+ """
+ yield
+
+
+class ExceptionTrap:
+ """
+ A context manager that will catch certain exceptions and provide an
+ indication they occurred.
+
+ >>> with ExceptionTrap() as trap:
+ ... raise Exception()
+ >>> bool(trap)
+ True
+
+ >>> with ExceptionTrap() as trap:
+ ... pass
+ >>> bool(trap)
+ False
+
+ >>> with ExceptionTrap(ValueError) as trap:
+ ... raise ValueError("1 + 1 is not 3")
+ >>> bool(trap)
+ True
+ >>> trap.value
+ ValueError('1 + 1 is not 3')
+ >>> trap.tb
+ <traceback object at ...>
+
+ >>> with ExceptionTrap(ValueError) as trap:
+ ... raise Exception()
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ Exception
+
+ >>> bool(trap)
+ False
+ """
+
+ exc_info = None, None, None
+
+ def __init__(self, exceptions=(Exception,)):
+ self.exceptions = exceptions
+
+ def __enter__(self):
+ return self
+
+ @property
+ def type(self):
+ return self.exc_info[0]
+
+ @property
+ def value(self):
+ return self.exc_info[1]
+
+ @property
+ def tb(self):
+ return self.exc_info[2]
+
+ def __exit__(self, *exc_info):
+ type = exc_info[0]
+ matches = type and issubclass(type, self.exceptions)
+ if matches:
+ self.exc_info = exc_info
+ return matches
+
+ def __bool__(self):
+ return bool(self.type)
+
+ def raises(self, func, *, _test=bool):
+ """
+ Wrap func and replace the result with the truth
+ value of the trap (True if an exception occurred).
+
+ First, give the decorator an alias to support Python 3.8
+ Syntax.
+
+ >>> raises = ExceptionTrap(ValueError).raises
+
+ Now decorate a function that always fails.
+
+ >>> @raises
+ ... def fail():
+ ... raise ValueError('failed')
+ >>> fail()
+ True
+ """
+
+ @functools.wraps(func)
+ def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
+ with ExceptionTrap(self.exceptions) as trap:
+ func(*args, **kwargs)
+ return _test(trap)
+
+ return wrapper
+
+ def passes(self, func):
+ """
+ Wrap func and replace the result with the truth
+ value of the trap (True if no exception).
+
+ First, give the decorator an alias to support Python 3.8
+ Syntax.
+
+ >>> passes = ExceptionTrap(ValueError).passes
+
+ Now decorate a function that always fails.
+
+ >>> @passes
+ ... def fail():
+ ... raise ValueError('failed')
+
+ >>> fail()
+ False
+ """
+ return self.raises(func, _test=operator.not_)
+
+
+class suppress(contextlib.suppress, contextlib.ContextDecorator):
+ """
+ A version of contextlib.suppress with decorator support.
+
+ >>> @suppress(KeyError)
+ ... def key_error():
+ ... {}['']
+ >>> key_error()
+ """
+
+
+class on_interrupt(contextlib.ContextDecorator):
+ """
+ Replace a KeyboardInterrupt with SystemExit(1)
+
+ >>> def do_interrupt():
+ ... raise KeyboardInterrupt()
+ >>> on_interrupt('error')(do_interrupt)()
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ SystemExit: 1
+ >>> on_interrupt('error', code=255)(do_interrupt)()
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ SystemExit: 255
+ >>> on_interrupt('suppress')(do_interrupt)()
+ >>> with __import__('pytest').raises(KeyboardInterrupt):
+ ... on_interrupt('ignore')(do_interrupt)()
+ """
+
+ def __init__(
+ self,
+ action='error',
+ # py3.7 compat
+ # /,
+ code=1,
+ ):
+ self.action = action
+ self.code = code
+
+ def __enter__(self):
+ return self
+
+ def __exit__(self, exctype, excinst, exctb):
+ if exctype is not KeyboardInterrupt or self.action == 'ignore':
+ return
+ elif self.action == 'error':
+ raise SystemExit(self.code) from excinst
+ return self.action == 'suppress'
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/jaraco/functools.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/jaraco/functools.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..67aeadc353
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/jaraco/functools.py
@@ -0,0 +1,556 @@
+import functools
+import time
+import inspect
+import collections
+import types
+import itertools
+import warnings
+
+import pkg_resources.extern.more_itertools
+
+from typing import Callable, TypeVar
+
+
+CallableT = TypeVar("CallableT", bound=Callable[..., object])
+
+
+def compose(*funcs):
+ """
+ Compose any number of unary functions into a single unary function.
+
+ >>> import textwrap
+ >>> expected = str.strip(textwrap.dedent(compose.__doc__))
+ >>> strip_and_dedent = compose(str.strip, textwrap.dedent)
+ >>> strip_and_dedent(compose.__doc__) == expected
+ True
+
+ Compose also allows the innermost function to take arbitrary arguments.
+
+ >>> round_three = lambda x: round(x, ndigits=3)
+ >>> f = compose(round_three, int.__truediv__)
+ >>> [f(3*x, x+1) for x in range(1,10)]
+ [1.5, 2.0, 2.25, 2.4, 2.5, 2.571, 2.625, 2.667, 2.7]
+ """
+
+ def compose_two(f1, f2):
+ return lambda *args, **kwargs: f1(f2(*args, **kwargs))
+
+ return functools.reduce(compose_two, funcs)
+
+
+def method_caller(method_name, *args, **kwargs):
+ """
+ Return a function that will call a named method on the
+ target object with optional positional and keyword
+ arguments.
+
+ >>> lower = method_caller('lower')
+ >>> lower('MyString')
+ 'mystring'
+ """
+
+ def call_method(target):
+ func = getattr(target, method_name)
+ return func(*args, **kwargs)
+
+ return call_method
+
+
+def once(func):
+ """
+ Decorate func so it's only ever called the first time.
+
+ This decorator can ensure that an expensive or non-idempotent function
+ will not be expensive on subsequent calls and is idempotent.
+
+ >>> add_three = once(lambda a: a+3)
+ >>> add_three(3)
+ 6
+ >>> add_three(9)
+ 6
+ >>> add_three('12')
+ 6
+
+ To reset the stored value, simply clear the property ``saved_result``.
+
+ >>> del add_three.saved_result
+ >>> add_three(9)
+ 12
+ >>> add_three(8)
+ 12
+
+ Or invoke 'reset()' on it.
+
+ >>> add_three.reset()
+ >>> add_three(-3)
+ 0
+ >>> add_three(0)
+ 0
+ """
+
+ @functools.wraps(func)
+ def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
+ if not hasattr(wrapper, 'saved_result'):
+ wrapper.saved_result = func(*args, **kwargs)
+ return wrapper.saved_result
+
+ wrapper.reset = lambda: vars(wrapper).__delitem__('saved_result')
+ return wrapper
+
+
+def method_cache(
+ method: CallableT,
+ cache_wrapper: Callable[
+ [CallableT], CallableT
+ ] = functools.lru_cache(), # type: ignore[assignment]
+) -> CallableT:
+ """
+ Wrap lru_cache to support storing the cache data in the object instances.
+
+ Abstracts the common paradigm where the method explicitly saves an
+ underscore-prefixed protected property on first call and returns that
+ subsequently.
+
+ >>> class MyClass:
+ ... calls = 0
+ ...
+ ... @method_cache
+ ... def method(self, value):
+ ... self.calls += 1
+ ... return value
+
+ >>> a = MyClass()
+ >>> a.method(3)
+ 3
+ >>> for x in range(75):
+ ... res = a.method(x)
+ >>> a.calls
+ 75
+
+ Note that the apparent behavior will be exactly like that of lru_cache
+ except that the cache is stored on each instance, so values in one
+ instance will not flush values from another, and when an instance is
+ deleted, so are the cached values for that instance.
+
+ >>> b = MyClass()
+ >>> for x in range(35):
+ ... res = b.method(x)
+ >>> b.calls
+ 35
+ >>> a.method(0)
+ 0
+ >>> a.calls
+ 75
+
+ Note that if method had been decorated with ``functools.lru_cache()``,
+ a.calls would have been 76 (due to the cached value of 0 having been
+ flushed by the 'b' instance).
+
+ Clear the cache with ``.cache_clear()``
+
+ >>> a.method.cache_clear()
+
+ Same for a method that hasn't yet been called.
+
+ >>> c = MyClass()
+ >>> c.method.cache_clear()
+
+ Another cache wrapper may be supplied:
+
+ >>> cache = functools.lru_cache(maxsize=2)
+ >>> MyClass.method2 = method_cache(lambda self: 3, cache_wrapper=cache)
+ >>> a = MyClass()
+ >>> a.method2()
+ 3
+
+ Caution - do not subsequently wrap the method with another decorator, such
+ as ``@property``, which changes the semantics of the function.
+
+ See also
+ http://code.activestate.com/recipes/577452-a-memoize-decorator-for-instance-methods/
+ for another implementation and additional justification.
+ """
+
+ def wrapper(self: object, *args: object, **kwargs: object) -> object:
+ # it's the first call, replace the method with a cached, bound method
+ bound_method: CallableT = types.MethodType( # type: ignore[assignment]
+ method, self
+ )
+ cached_method = cache_wrapper(bound_method)
+ setattr(self, method.__name__, cached_method)
+ return cached_method(*args, **kwargs)
+
+ # Support cache clear even before cache has been created.
+ wrapper.cache_clear = lambda: None # type: ignore[attr-defined]
+
+ return ( # type: ignore[return-value]
+ _special_method_cache(method, cache_wrapper) or wrapper
+ )
+
+
+def _special_method_cache(method, cache_wrapper):
+ """
+ Because Python treats special methods differently, it's not
+ possible to use instance attributes to implement the cached
+ methods.
+
+ Instead, install the wrapper method under a different name
+ and return a simple proxy to that wrapper.
+
+ https://github.com/jaraco/jaraco.functools/issues/5
+ """
+ name = method.__name__
+ special_names = '__getattr__', '__getitem__'
+ if name not in special_names:
+ return
+
+ wrapper_name = '__cached' + name
+
+ def proxy(self, *args, **kwargs):
+ if wrapper_name not in vars(self):
+ bound = types.MethodType(method, self)
+ cache = cache_wrapper(bound)
+ setattr(self, wrapper_name, cache)
+ else:
+ cache = getattr(self, wrapper_name)
+ return cache(*args, **kwargs)
+
+ return proxy
+
+
+def apply(transform):
+ """
+ Decorate a function with a transform function that is
+ invoked on results returned from the decorated function.
+
+ >>> @apply(reversed)
+ ... def get_numbers(start):
+ ... "doc for get_numbers"
+ ... return range(start, start+3)
+ >>> list(get_numbers(4))
+ [6, 5, 4]
+ >>> get_numbers.__doc__
+ 'doc for get_numbers'
+ """
+
+ def wrap(func):
+ return functools.wraps(func)(compose(transform, func))
+
+ return wrap
+
+
+def result_invoke(action):
+ r"""
+ Decorate a function with an action function that is
+ invoked on the results returned from the decorated
+ function (for its side-effect), then return the original
+ result.
+
+ >>> @result_invoke(print)
+ ... def add_two(a, b):
+ ... return a + b
+ >>> x = add_two(2, 3)
+ 5
+ >>> x
+ 5
+ """
+
+ def wrap(func):
+ @functools.wraps(func)
+ def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
+ result = func(*args, **kwargs)
+ action(result)
+ return result
+
+ return wrapper
+
+ return wrap
+
+
+def invoke(f, *args, **kwargs):
+ """
+ Call a function for its side effect after initialization.
+
+ The benefit of using the decorator instead of simply invoking a function
+ after defining it is that it makes explicit the author's intent for the
+ function to be called immediately. Whereas if one simply calls the
+ function immediately, it's less obvious if that was intentional or
+ incidental. It also avoids repeating the name - the two actions, defining
+ the function and calling it immediately are modeled separately, but linked
+ by the decorator construct.
+
+ The benefit of having a function construct (opposed to just invoking some
+ behavior inline) is to serve as a scope in which the behavior occurs. It
+ avoids polluting the global namespace with local variables, provides an
+ anchor on which to attach documentation (docstring), keeps the behavior
+ logically separated (instead of conceptually separated or not separated at
+ all), and provides potential to re-use the behavior for testing or other
+ purposes.
+
+ This function is named as a pithy way to communicate, "call this function
+ primarily for its side effect", or "while defining this function, also
+ take it aside and call it". It exists because there's no Python construct
+ for "define and call" (nor should there be, as decorators serve this need
+ just fine). The behavior happens immediately and synchronously.
+
+ >>> @invoke
+ ... def func(): print("called")
+ called
+ >>> func()
+ called
+
+ Use functools.partial to pass parameters to the initial call
+
+ >>> @functools.partial(invoke, name='bingo')
+ ... def func(name): print("called with", name)
+ called with bingo
+ """
+ f(*args, **kwargs)
+ return f
+
+
+def call_aside(*args, **kwargs):
+ """
+ Deprecated name for invoke.
+ """
+ warnings.warn("call_aside is deprecated, use invoke", DeprecationWarning)
+ return invoke(*args, **kwargs)
+
+
+class Throttler:
+ """
+ Rate-limit a function (or other callable)
+ """
+
+ def __init__(self, func, max_rate=float('Inf')):
+ if isinstance(func, Throttler):
+ func = func.func
+ self.func = func
+ self.max_rate = max_rate
+ self.reset()
+
+ def reset(self):
+ self.last_called = 0
+
+ def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs):
+ self._wait()
+ return self.func(*args, **kwargs)
+
+ def _wait(self):
+ "ensure at least 1/max_rate seconds from last call"
+ elapsed = time.time() - self.last_called
+ must_wait = 1 / self.max_rate - elapsed
+ time.sleep(max(0, must_wait))
+ self.last_called = time.time()
+
+ def __get__(self, obj, type=None):
+ return first_invoke(self._wait, functools.partial(self.func, obj))
+
+
+def first_invoke(func1, func2):
+ """
+ Return a function that when invoked will invoke func1 without
+ any parameters (for its side-effect) and then invoke func2
+ with whatever parameters were passed, returning its result.
+ """
+
+ def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
+ func1()
+ return func2(*args, **kwargs)
+
+ return wrapper
+
+
+def retry_call(func, cleanup=lambda: None, retries=0, trap=()):
+ """
+ Given a callable func, trap the indicated exceptions
+ for up to 'retries' times, invoking cleanup on the
+ exception. On the final attempt, allow any exceptions
+ to propagate.
+ """
+ attempts = itertools.count() if retries == float('inf') else range(retries)
+ for attempt in attempts:
+ try:
+ return func()
+ except trap:
+ cleanup()
+
+ return func()
+
+
+def retry(*r_args, **r_kwargs):
+ """
+ Decorator wrapper for retry_call. Accepts arguments to retry_call
+ except func and then returns a decorator for the decorated function.
+
+ Ex:
+
+ >>> @retry(retries=3)
+ ... def my_func(a, b):
+ ... "this is my funk"
+ ... print(a, b)
+ >>> my_func.__doc__
+ 'this is my funk'
+ """
+
+ def decorate(func):
+ @functools.wraps(func)
+ def wrapper(*f_args, **f_kwargs):
+ bound = functools.partial(func, *f_args, **f_kwargs)
+ return retry_call(bound, *r_args, **r_kwargs)
+
+ return wrapper
+
+ return decorate
+
+
+def print_yielded(func):
+ """
+ Convert a generator into a function that prints all yielded elements
+
+ >>> @print_yielded
+ ... def x():
+ ... yield 3; yield None
+ >>> x()
+ 3
+ None
+ """
+ print_all = functools.partial(map, print)
+ print_results = compose(more_itertools.consume, print_all, func)
+ return functools.wraps(func)(print_results)
+
+
+def pass_none(func):
+ """
+ Wrap func so it's not called if its first param is None
+
+ >>> print_text = pass_none(print)
+ >>> print_text('text')
+ text
+ >>> print_text(None)
+ """
+
+ @functools.wraps(func)
+ def wrapper(param, *args, **kwargs):
+ if param is not None:
+ return func(param, *args, **kwargs)
+
+ return wrapper
+
+
+def assign_params(func, namespace):
+ """
+ Assign parameters from namespace where func solicits.
+
+ >>> def func(x, y=3):
+ ... print(x, y)
+ >>> assigned = assign_params(func, dict(x=2, z=4))
+ >>> assigned()
+ 2 3
+
+ The usual errors are raised if a function doesn't receive
+ its required parameters:
+
+ >>> assigned = assign_params(func, dict(y=3, z=4))
+ >>> assigned()
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ TypeError: func() ...argument...
+
+ It even works on methods:
+
+ >>> class Handler:
+ ... def meth(self, arg):
+ ... print(arg)
+ >>> assign_params(Handler().meth, dict(arg='crystal', foo='clear'))()
+ crystal
+ """
+ sig = inspect.signature(func)
+ params = sig.parameters.keys()
+ call_ns = {k: namespace[k] for k in params if k in namespace}
+ return functools.partial(func, **call_ns)
+
+
+def save_method_args(method):
+ """
+ Wrap a method such that when it is called, the args and kwargs are
+ saved on the method.
+
+ >>> class MyClass:
+ ... @save_method_args
+ ... def method(self, a, b):
+ ... print(a, b)
+ >>> my_ob = MyClass()
+ >>> my_ob.method(1, 2)
+ 1 2
+ >>> my_ob._saved_method.args
+ (1, 2)
+ >>> my_ob._saved_method.kwargs
+ {}
+ >>> my_ob.method(a=3, b='foo')
+ 3 foo
+ >>> my_ob._saved_method.args
+ ()
+ >>> my_ob._saved_method.kwargs == dict(a=3, b='foo')
+ True
+
+ The arguments are stored on the instance, allowing for
+ different instance to save different args.
+
+ >>> your_ob = MyClass()
+ >>> your_ob.method({str('x'): 3}, b=[4])
+ {'x': 3} [4]
+ >>> your_ob._saved_method.args
+ ({'x': 3},)
+ >>> my_ob._saved_method.args
+ ()
+ """
+ args_and_kwargs = collections.namedtuple('args_and_kwargs', 'args kwargs')
+
+ @functools.wraps(method)
+ def wrapper(self, *args, **kwargs):
+ attr_name = '_saved_' + method.__name__
+ attr = args_and_kwargs(args, kwargs)
+ setattr(self, attr_name, attr)
+ return method(self, *args, **kwargs)
+
+ return wrapper
+
+
+def except_(*exceptions, replace=None, use=None):
+ """
+ Replace the indicated exceptions, if raised, with the indicated
+ literal replacement or evaluated expression (if present).
+
+ >>> safe_int = except_(ValueError)(int)
+ >>> safe_int('five')
+ >>> safe_int('5')
+ 5
+
+ Specify a literal replacement with ``replace``.
+
+ >>> safe_int_r = except_(ValueError, replace=0)(int)
+ >>> safe_int_r('five')
+ 0
+
+ Provide an expression to ``use`` to pass through particular parameters.
+
+ >>> safe_int_pt = except_(ValueError, use='args[0]')(int)
+ >>> safe_int_pt('five')
+ 'five'
+
+ """
+
+ def decorate(func):
+ @functools.wraps(func)
+ def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
+ try:
+ return func(*args, **kwargs)
+ except exceptions:
+ try:
+ return eval(use)
+ except TypeError:
+ return replace
+
+ return wrapper
+
+ return decorate
diff --git a/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/jaraco/text/__init__.py b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/jaraco/text/__init__.py
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..c466378ceb
--- /dev/null
+++ b/third_party/python/setuptools/pkg_resources/_vendor/jaraco/text/__init__.py
@@ -0,0 +1,599 @@
+import re
+import itertools
+import textwrap
+import functools
+
+try:
+ from importlib.resources import files # type: ignore
+except ImportError: # pragma: nocover
+ from pkg_resources.extern.importlib_resources import files # type: ignore
+
+from pkg_resources.extern.jaraco.functools import compose, method_cache
+from pkg_resources.extern.jaraco.context import ExceptionTrap
+
+
+def substitution(old, new):
+ """
+ Return a function that will perform a substitution on a string
+ """
+ return lambda s: s.replace(old, new)
+
+
+def multi_substitution(*substitutions):
+ """
+ Take a sequence of pairs specifying substitutions, and create
+ a function that performs those substitutions.
+
+ >>> multi_substitution(('foo', 'bar'), ('bar', 'baz'))('foo')
+ 'baz'
+ """
+ substitutions = itertools.starmap(substitution, substitutions)
+ # compose function applies last function first, so reverse the
+ # substitutions to get the expected order.
+ substitutions = reversed(tuple(substitutions))
+ return compose(*substitutions)
+
+
+class FoldedCase(str):
+ """
+ A case insensitive string class; behaves just like str
+ except compares equal when the only variation is case.
+
+ >>> s = FoldedCase('hello world')
+
+ >>> s == 'Hello World'
+ True
+
+ >>> 'Hello World' == s
+ True
+
+ >>> s != 'Hello World'
+ False
+
+ >>> s.index('O')
+ 4
+
+ >>> s.split('O')
+ ['hell', ' w', 'rld']
+
+ >>> sorted(map(FoldedCase, ['GAMMA', 'alpha', 'Beta']))
+ ['alpha', 'Beta', 'GAMMA']
+
+ Sequence membership is straightforward.
+
+ >>> "Hello World" in [s]
+ True
+ >>> s in ["Hello World"]
+ True
+
+ You may test for set inclusion, but candidate and elements
+ must both be folded.
+
+ >>> FoldedCase("Hello World") in {s}
+ True
+ >>> s in {FoldedCase("Hello World")}
+ True
+
+ String inclusion works as long as the FoldedCase object
+ is on the right.
+
+ >>> "hello" in FoldedCase("Hello World")
+ True
+
+ But not if the FoldedCase object is on the left:
+
+ >>> FoldedCase('hello') in 'Hello World'
+ False
+
+ In that case, use ``in_``:
+
+ >>> FoldedCase('hello').in_('Hello World')
+ True
+
+ >>> FoldedCase('hello') > FoldedCase('Hello')
+ False
+ """
+
+ def __lt__(self, other):
+ return self.lower() < other.lower()
+
+ def __gt__(self, other):
+ return self.lower() > other.lower()
+
+ def __eq__(self, other):
+ return self.lower() == other.lower()
+
+ def __ne__(self, other):
+ return self.lower() != other.lower()
+
+ def __hash__(self):
+ return hash(self.lower())
+
+ def __contains__(self, other):
+ return super().lower().__contains__(other.lower())
+
+ def in_(self, other):
+ "Does self appear in other?"
+ return self in FoldedCase(other)
+
+ # cache lower since it's likely to be called frequently.
+ @method_cache
+ def lower(self):
+ return super().lower()
+
+ def index(self, sub):
+ return self.lower().index(sub.lower())
+
+ def split(self, splitter=' ', maxsplit=0):
+ pattern = re.compile(re.escape(splitter), re.I)
+ return pattern.split(self, maxsplit)
+
+
+# Python 3.8 compatibility
+_unicode_trap = ExceptionTrap(UnicodeDecodeError)
+
+
+@_unicode_trap.passes
+def is_decodable(value):
+ r"""
+ Return True if the supplied value is decodable (using the default
+ encoding).
+
+ >>> is_decodable(b'\xff')
+ False
+ >>> is_decodable(b'\x32')
+ True
+ """
+ value.decode()
+
+
+def is_binary(value):
+ r"""
+ Return True if the value appears to be binary (that is, it's a byte
+ string and isn't decodable).
+
+ >>> is_binary(b'\xff')
+ True
+ >>> is_binary('\xff')
+ False
+ """
+ return isinstance(value, bytes) and not is_decodable(value)
+
+
+def trim(s):
+ r"""
+ Trim something like a docstring to remove the whitespace that
+ is common due to indentation and formatting.
+
+ >>> trim("\n\tfoo = bar\n\t\tbar = baz\n")
+ 'foo = bar\n\tbar = baz'
+ """
+ return textwrap.dedent(s).strip()
+
+
+def wrap(s):
+ """
+ Wrap lines of text, retaining existing newlines as
+ paragraph markers.
+
+ >>> print(wrap(lorem_ipsum))
+ Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do
+ eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad
+ minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut
+ aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in
+ reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla
+ pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in
+ culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.
+ <BLANKLINE>
+ Curabitur pretium tincidunt lacus. Nulla gravida orci a odio. Nullam
+ varius, turpis et commodo pharetra, est eros bibendum elit, nec luctus
+ magna felis sollicitudin mauris. Integer in mauris eu nibh euismod
+ gravida. Duis ac tellus et risus vulputate vehicula. Donec lobortis
+ risus a elit. Etiam tempor. Ut ullamcorper, ligula eu tempor congue,
+ eros est euismod turpis, id tincidunt sapien risus a quam. Maecenas
+ fermentum consequat mi. Donec fermentum. Pellentesque malesuada nulla
+ a mi. Duis sapien sem, aliquet nec, commodo eget, consequat quis,
+ neque. Aliquam faucibus, elit ut dictum aliquet, felis nisl adipiscing
+ sapien, sed malesuada diam lacus eget erat. Cras mollis scelerisque
+ nunc. Nullam arcu. Aliquam consequat. Curabitur augue lorem, dapibus
+ quis, laoreet et, pretium ac, nisi. Aenean magna nisl, mollis quis,
+ molestie eu, feugiat in, orci. In hac habitasse platea dictumst.
+ """
+ paragraphs = s.splitlines()
+ wrapped = ('\n'.join(textwrap.wrap(para)) for para in paragraphs)
+ return '\n\n'.join(wrapped)
+
+
+def unwrap(s):
+ r"""
+ Given a multi-line string, return an unwrapped version.
+
+ >>> wrapped = wrap(lorem_ipsum)
+ >>> wrapped.count('\n')
+ 20
+ >>> unwrapped = unwrap(wrapped)
+ >>> unwrapped.count('\n')
+ 1
+ >>> print(unwrapped)
+ Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing ...
+ Curabitur pretium tincidunt lacus. Nulla gravida orci ...
+
+ """
+ paragraphs = re.split(r'\n\n+', s)
+ cleaned = (para.replace('\n', ' ') for para in paragraphs)
+ return '\n'.join(cleaned)
+
+
+
+
+class Splitter(object):
+ """object that will split a string with the given arguments for each call
+
+ >>> s = Splitter(',')
+ >>> s('hello, world, this is your, master calling')
+ ['hello', ' world', ' this is your', ' master calling']
+ """
+
+ def __init__(self, *args):
+ self.args = args
+
+ def __call__(self, s):
+ return s.split(*self.args)
+
+
+def indent(string, prefix=' ' * 4):
+ """
+ >>> indent('foo')
+ ' foo'
+ """
+ return prefix + string
+
+
+class WordSet(tuple):
+ """
+ Given an identifier, return the words that identifier represents,
+ whether in camel case, underscore-separated, etc.
+
+ >>> WordSet.parse("camelCase")
+ ('camel', 'Case')
+
+ >>> WordSet.parse("under_sep")
+ ('under', 'sep')
+
+ Acronyms should be retained
+
+ >>> WordSet.parse("firstSNL")
+ ('first', 'SNL')
+
+ >>> WordSet.parse("you_and_I")
+ ('you', 'and', 'I')
+
+ >>> WordSet.parse("A simple test")
+ ('A', 'simple', 'test')
+
+ Multiple caps should not interfere with the first cap of another word.
+
+ >>> WordSet.parse("myABCClass")
+ ('my', 'ABC', 'Class')
+
+ The result is a WordSet, so you can get the form you need.
+
+ >>> WordSet.parse("myABCClass").underscore_separated()
+ 'my_ABC_Class'
+
+ >>> WordSet.parse('a-command').camel_case()
+ 'ACommand'
+
+ >>> WordSet.parse('someIdentifier').lowered().space_separated()
+ 'some identifier'
+
+ Slices of the result should return another WordSet.
+
+ >>> WordSet.parse('taken-out-of-context')[1:].underscore_separated()
+ 'out_of_context'
+
+ >>> WordSet.from_class_name(WordSet()).lowered().space_separated()
+ 'word set'
+
+ >>> example = WordSet.parse('figured it out')
+ >>> example.headless_camel_case()
+ 'figuredItOut'
+ >>> example.dash_separated()
+ 'figured-it-out'
+
+ """
+
+ _pattern = re.compile('([A-Z]?[a-z]+)|([A-Z]+(?![a-z]))')
+
+ def capitalized(self):
+ return WordSet(word.capitalize() for word in self)
+
+ def lowered(self):
+ return WordSet(word.lower() for word in self)
+
+ def camel_case(self):
+ return ''.join(self.capitalized())
+
+ def headless_camel_case(self):
+ words = iter(self)
+ first = next(words).lower()
+ new_words = itertools.chain((first,), WordSet(words).camel_case())
+ return ''.join(new_words)
+
+ def underscore_separated(self):
+ return '_'.join(self)
+
+ def dash_separated(self):
+ return '-'.join(self)
+
+ def space_separated(self):
+ return ' '.join(self)
+
+ def trim_right(self, item):
+ """
+ Remove the item from the end of the set.
+
+ >>> WordSet.parse('foo bar').trim_right('foo')
+ ('foo', 'bar')
+ >>> WordSet.parse('foo bar').trim_right('bar')
+ ('foo',)
+ >>> WordSet.parse('').trim_right('bar')
+ ()
+ """
+ return self[:-1] if self and self[-1] == item else self
+
+ def trim_left(self, item):
+ """
+ Remove the item from the beginning of the set.
+
+ >>> WordSet.parse('foo bar').trim_left('foo')
+ ('bar',)
+ >>> WordSet.parse('foo bar').trim_left('bar')
+ ('foo', 'bar')
+ >>> WordSet.parse('').trim_left('bar')
+ ()
+ """
+ return self[1:] if self and self[0] == item else self
+
+ def trim(self, item):
+ """
+ >>> WordSet.parse('foo bar').trim('foo')
+ ('bar',)
+ """
+ return self.trim_left(item).trim_right(item)
+
+ def __getitem__(self, item):
+ result = super(WordSet, self).__getitem__(item)
+ if isinstance(item, slice):
+ result = WordSet(result)
+ return result
+
+ @classmethod
+ def parse(cls, identifier):
+ matches = cls._pattern.finditer(identifier)
+ return WordSet(match.group(0) for match in matches)
+
+ @classmethod
+ def from_class_name(cls, subject):
+ return cls.parse(subject.__class__.__name__)
+
+
+# for backward compatibility
+words = WordSet.parse
+
+
+def simple_html_strip(s):
+ r"""
+ Remove HTML from the string `s`.
+
+ >>> str(simple_html_strip(''))
+ ''
+
+ >>> print(simple_html_strip('A <bold>stormy</bold> day in paradise'))
+ A stormy day in paradise
+
+ >>> print(simple_html_strip('Somebody <!-- do not --> tell the truth.'))
+ Somebody tell the truth.
+
+ >>> print(simple_html_strip('What about<br/>\nmultiple lines?'))
+ What about
+ multiple lines?
+ """
+ html_stripper = re.compile('(<!--.*?-->)|(<[^>]*>)|([^<]+)', re.DOTALL)
+ texts = (match.group(3) or '' for match in html_stripper.finditer(s))
+ return ''.join(texts)
+
+
+class SeparatedValues(str):
+ """
+ A string separated by a separator. Overrides __iter__ for getting
+ the values.
+
+ >>> list(SeparatedValues('a,b,c'))
+ ['a', 'b', 'c']
+
+ Whitespace is stripped and empty values are discarded.
+
+ >>> list(SeparatedValues(' a, b , c, '))
+ ['a', 'b', 'c']
+ """
+
+ separator = ','
+
+ def __iter__(self):
+ parts = self.split(self.separator)
+ return filter(None, (part.strip() for part in parts))
+
+
+class Stripper:
+ r"""
+ Given a series of lines, find the common prefix and strip it from them.
+
+ >>> lines = [
+ ... 'abcdefg\n',
+ ... 'abc\n',
+ ... 'abcde\n',
+ ... ]
+ >>> res = Stripper.strip_prefix(lines)
+ >>> res.prefix
+ 'abc'
+ >>> list(res.lines)
+ ['defg\n', '\n', 'de\n']
+
+ If no prefix is common, nothing should be stripped.
+
+ >>> lines = [
+ ... 'abcd\n',
+ ... '1234\n',
+ ... ]
+ >>> res = Stripper.strip_prefix(lines)
+ >>> res.prefix = ''
+ >>> list(res.lines)
+ ['abcd\n', '1234\n']
+ """
+
+ def __init__(self, prefix, lines):
+ self.prefix = prefix
+ self.lines = map(self, lines)
+
+ @classmethod
+ def strip_prefix(cls, lines):
+ prefix_lines, lines = itertools.tee(lines)
+ prefix = functools.reduce(cls.common_prefix, prefix_lines)
+ return cls(prefix, lines)
+
+ def __call__(self, line):
+ if not self.prefix:
+ return line
+ null, prefix, rest = line.partition(self.prefix)
+ return rest
+
+ @staticmethod
+ def common_prefix(s1, s2):
+ """
+ Return the common prefix of two lines.
+ """
+ index = min(len(s1), len(s2))
+ while s1[:index] != s2[:index]:
+ index -= 1
+ return s1[:index]
+
+
+def remove_prefix(text, prefix):
+ """
+ Remove the prefix from the text if it exists.
+
+ >>> remove_prefix('underwhelming performance', 'underwhelming ')
+ 'performance'
+
+ >>> remove_prefix('something special', 'sample')
+ 'something special'
+ """
+ null, prefix, rest = text.rpartition(prefix)
+ return rest
+
+
+def remove_suffix(text, suffix):
+ """
+ Remove the suffix from the text if it exists.
+
+ >>> remove_suffix('name.git', '.git')
+ 'name'
+
+ >>> remove_suffix('something special', 'sample')
+ 'something special'
+ """
+ rest, suffix, null = text.partition(suffix)
+ return rest
+
+
+def normalize_newlines(text):
+ r"""
+ Replace alternate newlines with the canonical newline.
+
+ >>> normalize_newlines('Lorem Ipsum\u2029')
+ 'Lorem Ipsum\n'
+ >>> normalize_newlines('Lorem Ipsum\r\n')
+ 'Lorem Ipsum\n'
+ >>> normalize_newlines('Lorem Ipsum\x85')
+ 'Lorem Ipsum\n'
+ """
+ newlines = ['\r\n', '\r', '\n', '\u0085', '\u2028', '\u2029']
+ pattern = '|'.join(newlines)
+ return re.sub(pattern, '\n', text)
+
+
+def _nonblank(str):
+ return str and not str.startswith('#')
+
+
+@functools.singledispatch
+def yield_lines(iterable):
+ r"""
+ Yield valid lines of a string or iterable.
+
+ >>> list(yield_lines(''))
+ []
+ >>> list(yield_lines(['foo', 'bar']))
+ ['foo', 'bar']
+ >>> list(yield_lines('foo\nbar'))
+ ['foo', 'bar']
+ >>> list(yield_lines('\nfoo\n#bar\nbaz #comment'))
+ ['foo', 'baz #comment']
+ >>> list(yield_lines(['foo\nbar', 'baz', 'bing\n\n\n']))
+ ['foo', 'bar', 'baz', 'bing']
+ """
+ return itertools.chain.from_iterable(map(yield_lines, iterable))
+
+
+@yield_lines.register(str)
+def _(text):
+ return filter(_nonblank, map(str.strip, text.splitlines()))
+
+
+def drop_comment(line):
+ """
+ Drop comments.
+
+ >>> drop_comment('foo # bar')
+ 'foo'
+
+ A hash without a space may be in a URL.
+
+ >>> drop_comment('http://example.com/foo#bar')
+ 'http://example.com/foo#bar'
+ """
+ return line.partition(' #')[0]
+
+
+def join_continuation(lines):
+ r"""
+ Join lines continued by a trailing backslash.
+
+ >>> list(join_continuation(['foo \\', 'bar', 'baz']))
+ ['foobar', 'baz']
+ >>> list(join_continuation(['foo \\', 'bar', 'baz']))
+ ['foobar', 'baz']
+ >>> list(join_continuation(['foo \\', 'bar \\', 'baz']))
+ ['foobarbaz']
+
+ Not sure why, but...
+ The character preceeding the backslash is also elided.
+
+ >>> list(join_continuation(['goo\\', 'dly']))
+ ['godly']
+
+ A terrible idea, but...
+ If no line is available to continue, suppress the lines.
+
+ >>> list(join_continuation(['foo', 'bar\\', 'baz\\']))
+ ['foo']
+ """
+ lines = iter(lines)
+ for item in lines:
+ while item.endswith('\\'):
+ try:
+ item = item[:-2].strip() + next(lines)
+ except StopIteration:
+ return
+ yield item