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# Copyright (C) 2006 Canonical Ltd
#
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.
#
# This program 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 General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
# Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
# TODO: probably should say which arguments are candidates for glob
# expansion on windows and do that at the command level.
# TODO: Define arguments by objects, rather than just using names.
# Those objects can specify the expected type of the argument, which
# would help with validation and shell completion. They could also provide
# help/explanation for that argument in a structured way.
# TODO: Specific "examples" property on commands for consistent formatting.
# TODO: "--profile=cum", to change sort order. Is there any value in leaving
# the profile output behind so it can be interactively examined?
import os
import sys
from bzrlib.lazy_import import lazy_import
lazy_import(globals(), """
import codecs
import errno
from warnings import warn
import bzrlib
from bzrlib import (
debug,
errors,
option,
osutils,
trace,
)
""")
from bzrlib.symbol_versioning import (
deprecated_function,
deprecated_method,
zero_eight,
zero_eleven,
)
# Compatibility
from bzrlib.option import Option
plugin_cmds = {}
def register_command(cmd, decorate=False):
"""Utility function to help register a command
:param cmd: Command subclass to register
:param decorate: If true, allow overriding an existing command
of the same name; the old command is returned by this function.
Otherwise it is an error to try to override an existing command.
"""
global plugin_cmds
k = cmd.__name__
if k.startswith("cmd_"):
k_unsquished = _unsquish_command_name(k)
else:
k_unsquished = k
if k_unsquished not in plugin_cmds:
plugin_cmds[k_unsquished] = cmd
## trace.mutter('registered plugin command %s', k_unsquished)
if decorate and k_unsquished in builtin_command_names():
return _builtin_commands()[k_unsquished]
elif decorate:
result = plugin_cmds[k_unsquished]
plugin_cmds[k_unsquished] = cmd
return result
else:
trace.log_error('Two plugins defined the same command: %r' % k)
trace.log_error('Not loading the one in %r' % sys.modules[cmd.__module__])
def _squish_command_name(cmd):
return 'cmd_' + cmd.replace('-', '_')
def _unsquish_command_name(cmd):
assert cmd.startswith("cmd_")
return cmd[4:].replace('_','-')
def _builtin_commands():
import bzrlib.builtins
r = {}
builtins = bzrlib.builtins.__dict__
for name in builtins:
if name.startswith("cmd_"):
real_name = _unsquish_command_name(name)
r[real_name] = builtins[name]
return r
def builtin_command_names():
"""Return list of builtin command names."""
return _builtin_commands().keys()
def plugin_command_names():
return plugin_cmds.keys()
def _get_cmd_dict(plugins_override=True):
"""Return name->class mapping for all commands."""
d = _builtin_commands()
if plugins_override:
d.update(plugin_cmds)
return d
def get_all_cmds(plugins_override=True):
"""Return canonical name and class for all registered commands."""
for k, v in _get_cmd_dict(plugins_override=plugins_override).iteritems():
yield k,v
def get_cmd_object(cmd_name, plugins_override=True):
"""Return the canonical name and command class for a command.
plugins_override
If true, plugin commands can override builtins.
"""
from bzrlib.externalcommand import ExternalCommand
# We want only 'ascii' command names, but the user may have typed
# in a Unicode name. In that case, they should just get a
# 'command not found' error later.
# In the future, we may actually support Unicode command names.
# first look up this command under the specified name
cmds = _get_cmd_dict(plugins_override=plugins_override)
try:
return cmds[cmd_name]()
except KeyError:
pass
# look for any command which claims this as an alias
for real_cmd_name, cmd_class in cmds.iteritems():
if cmd_name in cmd_class.aliases:
return cmd_class()
cmd_obj = ExternalCommand.find_command(cmd_name)
if cmd_obj:
return cmd_obj
raise errors.BzrCommandError('unknown command "%s"' % cmd_name)
class Command(object):
"""Base class for commands.
Commands are the heart of the command-line bzr interface.
The command object mostly handles the mapping of command-line
parameters into one or more bzrlib operations, and of the results
into textual output.
Commands normally don't have any state. All their arguments are
passed in to the run method. (Subclasses may take a different
policy if the behaviour of the instance needs to depend on e.g. a
shell plugin and not just its Python class.)
The docstring for an actual command should give a single-line
summary, then a complete description of the command. A grammar
description will be inserted.
aliases
Other accepted names for this command.
takes_args
List of argument forms, marked with whether they are optional,
repeated, etc.
Examples:
['to_location', 'from_branch?', 'file*']
'to_location' is required
'from_branch' is optional
'file' can be specified 0 or more times
takes_options
List of options that may be given for this command. These can
be either strings, referring to globally-defined options,
or option objects. Retrieve through options().
hidden
If true, this command isn't advertised. This is typically
for commands intended for expert users.
encoding_type
Command objects will get a 'outf' attribute, which has been
setup to properly handle encoding of unicode strings.
encoding_type determines what will happen when characters cannot
be encoded
strict - abort if we cannot decode
replace - put in a bogus character (typically '?')
exact - do not encode sys.stdout
NOTE: by default on Windows, sys.stdout is opened as a text
stream, therefore LF line-endings are converted to CRLF.
When a command uses encoding_type = 'exact', then
sys.stdout is forced to be a binary stream, and line-endings
will not mangled.
"""
aliases = []
takes_args = []
takes_options = []
encoding_type = 'strict'
hidden = False
def __init__(self):
"""Construct an instance of this command."""
if self.__doc__ == Command.__doc__:
warn("No help message set for %r" % self)
def options(self):
"""Return dict of valid options for this command.
Maps from long option name to option object."""
r = dict()
r['help'] = option.Option.OPTIONS['help']
for o in self.takes_options:
if isinstance(o, basestring):
o = option.Option.OPTIONS[o]
r[o.name] = o
return r
def _setup_outf(self):
"""Return a file linked to stdout, which has proper encoding."""
assert self.encoding_type in ['strict', 'exact', 'replace']
# Originally I was using self.stdout, but that looks
# *way* too much like sys.stdout
if self.encoding_type == 'exact':
# force sys.stdout to be binary stream on win32
if sys.platform == 'win32':
fileno = getattr(sys.stdout, 'fileno', None)
if fileno:
import msvcrt
msvcrt.setmode(fileno(), os.O_BINARY)
self.outf = sys.stdout
return
output_encoding = osutils.get_terminal_encoding()
# use 'replace' so that we don't abort if trying to write out
# in e.g. the default C locale.
self.outf = codecs.getwriter(output_encoding)(sys.stdout, errors=self.encoding_type)
# For whatever reason codecs.getwriter() does not advertise its encoding
# it just returns the encoding of the wrapped file, which is completely
# bogus. So set the attribute, so we can find the correct encoding later.
self.outf.encoding = output_encoding
@deprecated_method(zero_eight)
def run_argv(self, argv):
"""Parse command line and run.
See run_argv_aliases for the 0.8 and beyond api.
"""
return self.run_argv_aliases(argv)
def run_argv_aliases(self, argv, alias_argv=None):
"""Parse the command line and run with extra aliases in alias_argv."""
if argv is None:
warn("Passing None for [] is deprecated from bzrlib 0.10",
DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2)
argv = []
args, opts = parse_args(self, argv, alias_argv)
if 'help' in opts: # e.g. bzr add --help
from bzrlib.help import help_on_command
help_on_command(self.name())
return 0
# mix arguments and options into one dictionary
cmdargs = _match_argform(self.name(), self.takes_args, args)
cmdopts = {}
for k, v in opts.items():
cmdopts[k.replace('-', '_')] = v
all_cmd_args = cmdargs.copy()
all_cmd_args.update(cmdopts)
self._setup_outf()
return self.run(**all_cmd_args)
def run(self):
"""Actually run the command.
This is invoked with the options and arguments bound to
keyword parameters.
Return 0 or None if the command was successful, or a non-zero
shell error code if not. It's OK for this method to allow
an exception to raise up.
"""
raise NotImplementedError('no implementation of command %r'
% self.name())
def help(self):
"""Return help message for this class."""
from inspect import getdoc
if self.__doc__ is Command.__doc__:
return None
return getdoc(self)
def name(self):
return _unsquish_command_name(self.__class__.__name__)
def plugin_name(self):
"""Get the name of the plugin that provides this command.
:return: The name of the plugin or None if the command is builtin.
"""
mod_parts = self.__module__.split('.')
if len(mod_parts) >= 3 and mod_parts[1] == 'plugins':
return mod_parts[2]
else:
return None
# Technically, this function hasn't been use in a *really* long time
# but we are only deprecating it now.
@deprecated_function(zero_eleven)
def parse_spec(spec):
"""
>>> parse_spec(None)
[None, None]
>>> parse_spec("./")
['./', None]
>>> parse_spec("../@")
['..', -1]
>>> parse_spec("../f/@35")
['../f', 35]
>>> parse_spec('./@revid:john@arbash-meinel.com-20050711044610-3ca0327c6a222f67')
['.', 'revid:john@arbash-meinel.com-20050711044610-3ca0327c6a222f67']
"""
if spec is None:
return [None, None]
if '/@' in spec:
parsed = spec.split('/@')
assert len(parsed) == 2
if parsed[1] == "":
parsed[1] = -1
else:
try:
parsed[1] = int(parsed[1])
except ValueError:
pass # We can allow stuff like ./@revid:blahblahblah
else:
assert parsed[1] >=0
else:
parsed = [spec, None]
return parsed
def parse_args(command, argv, alias_argv=None):
"""Parse command line.
Arguments and options are parsed at this level before being passed
down to specific command handlers. This routine knows, from a
lookup table, something about the available options, what optargs
they take, and which commands will accept them.
"""
# TODO: make it a method of the Command?
parser = option.get_optparser(command.options())
if alias_argv is not None:
args = alias_argv + argv
else:
args = argv
options, args = parser.parse_args(args)
opts = dict([(k, v) for k, v in options.__dict__.iteritems() if
v is not option.OptionParser.DEFAULT_VALUE])
return args, opts
def _match_argform(cmd, takes_args, args):
argdict = {}
# step through args and takes_args, allowing appropriate 0-many matches
for ap in takes_args:
argname = ap[:-1]
if ap[-1] == '?':
if args:
argdict[argname] = args.pop(0)
elif ap[-1] == '*': # all remaining arguments
if args:
argdict[argname + '_list'] = args[:]
args = []
else:
argdict[argname + '_list'] = None
elif ap[-1] == '+':
if not args:
raise errors.BzrCommandError("command %r needs one or more %s"
% (cmd, argname.upper()))
else:
argdict[argname + '_list'] = args[:]
args = []
elif ap[-1] == '$': # all but one
if len(args) < 2:
raise errors.BzrCommandError("command %r needs one or more %s"
% (cmd, argname.upper()))
argdict[argname + '_list'] = args[:-1]
args[:-1] = []
else:
# just a plain arg
argname = ap
if not args:
raise errors.BzrCommandError("command %r requires argument %s"
% (cmd, argname.upper()))
else:
argdict[argname] = args.pop(0)
if args:
raise errors.BzrCommandError("extra argument to command %s: %s"
% (cmd, args[0]))
return argdict
def apply_profiled(the_callable, *args, **kwargs):
import hotshot
import tempfile
import hotshot.stats
pffileno, pfname = tempfile.mkstemp()
try:
prof = hotshot.Profile(pfname)
try:
ret = prof.runcall(the_callable, *args, **kwargs) or 0
finally:
prof.close()
stats = hotshot.stats.load(pfname)
stats.strip_dirs()
stats.sort_stats('cum') # 'time'
## XXX: Might like to write to stderr or the trace file instead but
## print_stats seems hardcoded to stdout
stats.print_stats(20)
return ret
finally:
os.close(pffileno)
os.remove(pfname)
def apply_lsprofiled(filename, the_callable, *args, **kwargs):
from bzrlib.lsprof import profile
import cPickle
ret, stats = profile(the_callable, *args, **kwargs)
stats.sort()
if filename is None:
stats.pprint()
else:
stats.freeze()
cPickle.dump(stats, open(filename, 'w'), 2)
print 'Profile data written to %r.' % filename
return ret
def get_alias(cmd, config=None):
"""Return an expanded alias, or None if no alias exists.
cmd
Command to be checked for an alias.
config
Used to specify an alternative config to use,
which is especially useful for testing.
If it is unspecified, the global config will be used.
"""
if config is None:
import bzrlib.config
config = bzrlib.config.GlobalConfig()
alias = config.get_alias(cmd)
if (alias):
import shlex
return [a.decode('utf-8') for a in shlex.split(alias.encode('utf-8'))]
return None
def run_bzr(argv):
"""Execute a command.
This is similar to main(), but without all the trappings for
logging and error handling.
argv
The command-line arguments, without the program name from argv[0]
These should already be decoded. All library/test code calling
run_bzr should be passing valid strings (don't need decoding).
Returns a command status or raises an exception.
Special master options: these must come before the command because
they control how the command is interpreted.
--no-plugins
Do not load plugin modules at all
--no-aliases
Do not allow aliases
--builtin
Only use builtin commands. (Plugins are still allowed to change
other behaviour.)
--profile
Run under the Python hotshot profiler.
--lsprof
Run under the Python lsprof profiler.
"""
argv = list(argv)
trace.mutter("bzr arguments: %r", argv)
opt_lsprof = opt_profile = opt_no_plugins = opt_builtin = \
opt_no_aliases = False
opt_lsprof_file = None
# --no-plugins is handled specially at a very early stage. We need
# to load plugins before doing other command parsing so that they
# can override commands, but this needs to happen first.
argv_copy = []
i = 0
while i < len(argv):
a = argv[i]
if a == '--profile':
opt_profile = True
elif a == '--lsprof':
opt_lsprof = True
elif a == '--lsprof-file':
opt_lsprof = True
opt_lsprof_file = argv[i + 1]
i += 1
elif a == '--no-plugins':
opt_no_plugins = True
elif a == '--no-aliases':
opt_no_aliases = True
elif a == '--builtin':
opt_builtin = True
elif a in ('--quiet', '-q'):
trace.be_quiet()
elif a.startswith('-D'):
debug.debug_flags.add(a[2:])
else:
argv_copy.append(a)
i += 1
argv = argv_copy
if (not argv):
from bzrlib.builtins import cmd_help
cmd_help().run_argv_aliases([])
return 0
if argv[0] == '--version':
from bzrlib.version import show_version
show_version()
return 0
if not opt_no_plugins:
from bzrlib.plugin import load_plugins
load_plugins()
else:
from bzrlib.plugin import disable_plugins
disable_plugins()
alias_argv = None
if not opt_no_aliases:
alias_argv = get_alias(argv[0])
if alias_argv:
alias_argv = [a.decode(bzrlib.user_encoding) for a in alias_argv]
argv[0] = alias_argv.pop(0)
cmd = argv.pop(0)
# We want only 'ascii' command names, but the user may have typed
# in a Unicode name. In that case, they should just get a
# 'command not found' error later.
cmd_obj = get_cmd_object(cmd, plugins_override=not opt_builtin)
if not getattr(cmd_obj.run_argv, 'is_deprecated', False):
run = cmd_obj.run_argv
run_argv = [argv]
else:
run = cmd_obj.run_argv_aliases
run_argv = [argv, alias_argv]
try:
if opt_lsprof:
ret = apply_lsprofiled(opt_lsprof_file, run, *run_argv)
elif opt_profile:
ret = apply_profiled(run, *run_argv)
else:
ret = run(*run_argv)
return ret or 0
finally:
# reset, in case we may do other commands later within the same process
trace.be_quiet(False)
def display_command(func):
"""Decorator that suppresses pipe/interrupt errors."""
def ignore_pipe(*args, **kwargs):
try:
result = func(*args, **kwargs)
sys.stdout.flush()
return result
except IOError, e:
if getattr(e, 'errno', None) is None:
raise
if e.errno != errno.EPIPE:
# Win32 raises IOError with errno=0 on a broken pipe
if sys.platform != 'win32' or (e.errno not in (0, errno.EINVAL)):
raise
pass
except KeyboardInterrupt:
pass
return ignore_pipe
def main(argv):
import bzrlib.ui
from bzrlib.ui.text import TextUIFactory
bzrlib.ui.ui_factory = TextUIFactory()
argv = [a.decode(bzrlib.user_encoding) for a in argv[1:]]
ret = run_bzr_catch_errors(argv)
trace.mutter("return code %d", ret)
return ret
def run_bzr_catch_errors(argv):
try:
return run_bzr(argv)
# do this here inside the exception wrappers to catch EPIPE
sys.stdout.flush()
except (KeyboardInterrupt, Exception), e:
# used to handle AssertionError and KeyboardInterrupt
# specially here, but hopefully they're handled ok by the logger now
trace.report_exception(sys.exc_info(), sys.stderr)
if os.environ.get('BZR_PDB'):
print '**** entering debugger'
import pdb
pdb.post_mortem(sys.exc_traceback)
return 3
if __name__ == '__main__':
sys.exit(main(sys.argv))
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