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# Copyright 2014-2015 Nathan West # # This file is part of autocommand. # # autocommand is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify # it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by # the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or # (at your option) any later version. # # autocommand is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the # GNU Lesser General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License # along with autocommand. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. import sys from re import compile as compile_regex from inspect import signature, getdoc, Parameter from argparse import ArgumentParser from contextlib import contextmanager from functools import wraps from io import IOBase from autocommand.errors import AutocommandError _empty = Parameter.empty class AnnotationError(AutocommandError): '''Annotation error: annotation must be a string, type, or tuple of both''' class PositionalArgError(AutocommandError): ''' Postional Arg Error: autocommand can't handle postional-only parameters ''' class KWArgError(AutocommandError): '''kwarg Error: autocommand can't handle a **kwargs parameter''' class DocstringError(AutocommandError): '''Docstring error''' class TooManySplitsError(DocstringError): ''' The docstring had too many ---- section splits. Currently we only support using up to a single split, to split the docstring into description and epilog parts. ''' def _get_type_description(annotation): ''' Given an annotation, return the (type, description) for the parameter. If you provide an annotation that is somehow both a string and a callable, the behavior is undefined. ''' if annotation is _empty: return None, None elif callable(annotation): return annotation, None elif isinstance(annotation, str): return None, annotation elif isinstance(annotation, tuple): try: arg1, arg2 = annotation except ValueError as e: raise AnnotationError(annotation) from e else: if callable(arg1) and isinstance(arg2, str): return arg1, arg2 elif isinstance(arg1, str) and callable(arg2): return arg2, arg1 raise AnnotationError(annotation) def _add_arguments(param, parser, used_char_args, add_nos): ''' Add the argument(s) to an ArgumentParser (using add_argument) for a given parameter. used_char_args is the set of -short options currently already in use, and is updated (if necessary) by this function. If add_nos is True, this will also add an inverse switch for all boolean options. For instance, for the boolean parameter "verbose", this will create --verbose and --no-verbose. ''' # Impl note: This function is kept separate from make_parser because it's # already very long and I wanted to separate out as much as possible into # its own call scope, to prevent even the possibility of suble mutation # bugs. if param.kind is param.POSITIONAL_ONLY: raise PositionalArgError(param) elif param.kind is param.VAR_KEYWORD: raise KWArgError(param) # These are the kwargs for the add_argument function. arg_spec = {} is_option = False # Get the type and default from the annotation. arg_type, description = _get_type_description(param.annotation) # Get the default value default = param.default # If there is no explicit type, and the default is present and not None, # infer the type from the default. if arg_type is None and default not in {_empty, None}: arg_type = type(default) # Add default. The presence of a default means this is an option, not an # argument. if default is not _empty: arg_spec['default'] = default is_option = True # Add the type if arg_type is not None: # Special case for bool: make it just a --switch if arg_type is bool: if not default or default is _empty: arg_spec['action'] = 'store_true' else: arg_spec['action'] = 'store_false' # Switches are always options is_option = True # Special case for file types: make it a string type, for filename elif isinstance(default, IOBase): arg_spec['type'] = str # TODO: special case for list type. # - How to specificy type of list members? # - param: [int] # - param: int =[] # - action='append' vs nargs='*' else: arg_spec['type'] = arg_type # nargs: if the signature includes *args, collect them as trailing CLI # arguments in a list. *args can't have a default value, so it can never be # an option. if param.kind is param.VAR_POSITIONAL: # TODO: consider depluralizing metavar/name here. arg_spec['nargs'] = '*' # Add description. if description is not None: arg_spec['help'] = description # Get the --flags flags = [] name = param.name if is_option: # Add the first letter as a -short option. for letter in name[0], name[0].swapcase(): if letter not in used_char_args: used_char_args.add(letter) flags.append('-{}'.format(letter)) break # If the parameter is a --long option, or is a -short option that # somehow failed to get a flag, add it. if len(name) > 1 or not flags: flags.append('--{}'.format(name)) arg_spec['dest'] = name else: flags.append(name) parser.add_argument(*flags, **arg_spec) # Create the --no- version for boolean switches if add_nos and arg_type is bool: parser.add_argument( '--no-{}'.format(name), action='store_const', dest=name, const=default if default is not _empty else False) def make_parser(func_sig, description, epilog, add_nos): ''' Given the signature of a function, create an ArgumentParser ''' parser = ArgumentParser(description=description, epilog=epilog) used_char_args = {'h'} # Arange the params so that single-character arguments are first. This # esnures they don't have to get --long versions. sorted is stable, so the # parameters will otherwise still be in relative order. params = sorted( func_sig.parameters.values(), key=lambda param: len(param.name) > 1) for param in params: _add_arguments(param, parser, used_char_args, add_nos) return parser _DOCSTRING_SPLIT = compile_regex(r'\n\s*-{4,}\s*\n') def parse_docstring(docstring): ''' Given a docstring, parse it into a description and epilog part ''' if docstring is None: return '', '' parts = _DOCSTRING_SPLIT.split(docstring) if len(parts) == 1: return docstring, '' elif len(parts) == 2: return parts[0], parts[1] else: raise TooManySplitsError() def autoparse( func=None, *, description=None, epilog=None, add_nos=False, parser=None): ''' This decorator converts a function that takes normal arguments into a function which takes a single optional argument, argv, parses it using an argparse.ArgumentParser, and calls the underlying function with the parsed arguments. If it is not given, sys.argv[1:] is used. This is so that the function can be used as a setuptools entry point, as well as a normal main function. sys.argv[1:] is not evaluated until the function is called, to allow injecting different arguments for testing. It uses the argument signature of the function to create an ArgumentParser. Parameters without defaults become positional parameters, while parameters *with* defaults become --options. Use annotations to set the type of the parameter. The `desctiption` and `epilog` parameters corrospond to the same respective argparse parameters. If no description is given, it defaults to the decorated functions's docstring, if present. If add_nos is True, every boolean option (that is, every parameter with a default of True/False or a type of bool) will have a --no- version created as well, which inverts the option. For instance, the --verbose option will have a --no-verbose counterpart. These are not mutually exclusive- whichever one appears last in the argument list will have precedence. If a parser is given, it is used instead of one generated from the function signature. In this case, no parser is created; instead, the given parser is used to parse the argv argument. The parser's results' argument names must match up with the parameter names of the decorated function. The decorated function is attached to the result as the `func` attribute, and the parser is attached as the `parser` attribute. ''' # If @autoparse(...) is used instead of @autoparse if func is None: return lambda f: autoparse( f, description=description, epilog=epilog, add_nos=add_nos, parser=parser) func_sig = signature(func) docstr_description, docstr_epilog = parse_docstring(getdoc(func)) if parser is None: parser = make_parser( func_sig, description or docstr_description, epilog or docstr_epilog, add_nos) @wraps(func) def autoparse_wrapper(argv=None): if argv is None: argv = sys.argv[1:] # Get empty argument binding, to fill with parsed arguments. This # object does all the heavy lifting of turning named arguments into # into correctly bound *args and **kwargs. parsed_args = func_sig.bind_partial() parsed_args.arguments.update(vars(parser.parse_args(argv))) return func(*parsed_args.args, **parsed_args.kwargs) # TODO: attach an updated __signature__ to autoparse_wrapper, just in case. # Attach the wrapped function and parser, and return the wrapper. autoparse_wrapper.func = func autoparse_wrapper.parser = parser return autoparse_wrapper @contextmanager def smart_open(filename_or_file, *args, **kwargs): ''' This context manager allows you to open a filename, if you want to default some already-existing file object, like sys.stdout, which shouldn't be closed at the end of the context. If the filename argument is a str, bytes, or int, the file object is created via a call to open with the given *args and **kwargs, sent to the context, and closed at the end of the context, just like "with open(filename) as f:". If it isn't one of the openable types, the object simply sent to the context unchanged, and left unclosed at the end of the context. Example: def work_with_file(name=sys.stdout): with smart_open(name) as f: # Works correctly if name is a str filename or sys.stdout print("Some stuff", file=f) # If it was a filename, f is closed at the end here. ''' if isinstance(filename_or_file, (str, bytes, int)): with open(filename_or_file, *args, **kwargs) as file: yield file else: yield filename_or_file