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|
# Copyright (C) 2005, 2006, 2007 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
"""Transport is an abstraction layer to handle file access.
The abstraction is to allow access from the local filesystem, as well
as remote (such as http or sftp).
Transports are constructed from a string, being a URL or (as a degenerate
case) a local filesystem path. This is typically the top directory of
a bzrdir, repository, or similar object we are interested in working with.
The Transport returned has methods to read, write and manipulate files within
it.
"""
from cStringIO import StringIO
import re
import sys
from bzrlib.lazy_import import lazy_import
lazy_import(globals(), """
import errno
from stat import S_ISDIR
import urllib
import urlparse
from bzrlib import (
errors,
osutils,
symbol_versioning,
urlutils,
)
""")
from bzrlib.symbol_versioning import (
deprecated_method,
deprecated_function,
DEPRECATED_PARAMETER,
one_four,
)
from bzrlib.trace import (
mutter,
)
from bzrlib import registry
# a dictionary of open file streams. Keys are absolute paths, values are
# transport defined.
_file_streams = {}
def _get_protocol_handlers():
"""Return a dictionary of {urlprefix: [factory]}"""
return transport_list_registry
def _set_protocol_handlers(new_handlers):
"""Replace the current protocol handlers dictionary.
WARNING this will remove all build in protocols. Use with care.
"""
global transport_list_registry
transport_list_registry = new_handlers
def _clear_protocol_handlers():
global transport_list_registry
transport_list_registry = TransportListRegistry()
def _get_transport_modules():
"""Return a list of the modules providing transports."""
modules = set()
for prefix, factory_list in transport_list_registry.iteritems():
for factory in factory_list:
if hasattr(factory, "_module_name"):
modules.add(factory._module_name)
else:
modules.add(factory._obj.__module__)
# Add chroot directly, because there is no handler registered for it.
modules.add('bzrlib.transport.chroot')
result = list(modules)
result.sort()
return result
class TransportListRegistry(registry.Registry):
"""A registry which simplifies tracking available Transports.
A registration of a new protocol requires two step:
1) register the prefix with the function register_transport( )
2) register the protocol provider with the function
register_transport_provider( ) ( and the "lazy" variant )
This is needed because:
a) a single provider can support multple protcol ( like the ftp
provider which supports both the ftp:// and the aftp:// protocols )
b) a single protocol can have multiple providers ( like the http://
protocol which is supported by both the urllib and pycurl provider )
"""
def register_transport_provider(self, key, obj):
self.get(key).insert(0, registry._ObjectGetter(obj))
def register_lazy_transport_provider(self, key, module_name, member_name):
self.get(key).insert(0,
registry._LazyObjectGetter(module_name, member_name))
def register_transport(self, key, help=None):
self.register(key, [], help)
def set_default_transport(self, key=None):
"""Return either 'key' or the default key if key is None"""
self._default_key = key
transport_list_registry = TransportListRegistry()
def register_transport_proto(prefix, help=None, info=None,
register_netloc=False):
transport_list_registry.register_transport(prefix, help)
if register_netloc:
if not prefix.endswith('://'):
raise ValueError(prefix)
register_urlparse_netloc_protocol(prefix[:-3])
def register_lazy_transport(prefix, module, classname):
if not prefix in transport_list_registry:
register_transport_proto(prefix)
transport_list_registry.register_lazy_transport_provider(prefix, module, classname)
def register_transport(prefix, klass, override=DEPRECATED_PARAMETER):
if not prefix in transport_list_registry:
register_transport_proto(prefix)
transport_list_registry.register_transport_provider(prefix, klass)
def register_urlparse_netloc_protocol(protocol):
"""Ensure that protocol is setup to be used with urlparse netloc parsing."""
if protocol not in urlparse.uses_netloc:
urlparse.uses_netloc.append(protocol)
def _unregister_urlparse_netloc_protocol(protocol):
"""Remove protocol from urlparse netloc parsing.
Except for tests, you should never use that function. Using it with 'http',
for example, will break all http transports.
"""
if protocol in urlparse.uses_netloc:
urlparse.uses_netloc.remove(protocol)
def unregister_transport(scheme, factory):
"""Unregister a transport."""
l = transport_list_registry.get(scheme)
for i in l:
o = i.get_obj( )
if o == factory:
transport_list_registry.get(scheme).remove(i)
break
if len(l) == 0:
transport_list_registry.remove(scheme)
class _CoalescedOffset(object):
"""A data container for keeping track of coalesced offsets."""
__slots__ = ['start', 'length', 'ranges']
def __init__(self, start, length, ranges):
self.start = start
self.length = length
self.ranges = ranges
def __cmp__(self, other):
return cmp((self.start, self.length, self.ranges),
(other.start, other.length, other.ranges))
def __repr__(self):
return '%s(%r, %r, %r)' % (self.__class__.__name__,
self.start, self.length, self.ranges)
class LateReadError(object):
"""A helper for transports which pretends to be a readable file.
When read() is called, errors.ReadError is raised.
"""
def __init__(self, path):
self._path = path
def close(self):
"""a no-op - do nothing."""
def _fail(self):
"""Raise ReadError."""
raise errors.ReadError(self._path)
def __iter__(self):
self._fail()
def read(self, count=-1):
self._fail()
def readlines(self):
self._fail()
class FileStream(object):
"""Base class for FileStreams."""
def __init__(self, transport, relpath):
"""Create a FileStream for relpath on transport."""
self.transport = transport
self.relpath = relpath
def _close(self):
"""A hook point for subclasses that need to take action on close."""
def close(self):
self._close()
del _file_streams[self.transport.abspath(self.relpath)]
class FileFileStream(FileStream):
"""A file stream object returned by open_write_stream.
This version uses a file like object to perform writes.
"""
def __init__(self, transport, relpath, file_handle):
FileStream.__init__(self, transport, relpath)
self.file_handle = file_handle
def _close(self):
self.file_handle.close()
def write(self, bytes):
osutils.pump_string_file(bytes, self.file_handle)
class AppendBasedFileStream(FileStream):
"""A file stream object returned by open_write_stream.
This version uses append on a transport to perform writes.
"""
def write(self, bytes):
self.transport.append_bytes(self.relpath, bytes)
class Transport(object):
"""This class encapsulates methods for retrieving or putting a file
from/to a storage location.
Most functions have a _multi variant, which allows you to queue up
multiple requests. They generally have a dumb base implementation
which just iterates over the arguments, but smart Transport
implementations can do pipelining.
In general implementations should support having a generator or a list
as an argument (ie always iterate, never index)
:ivar base: Base URL for the transport; should always end in a slash.
"""
# implementations can override this if it is more efficient
# for them to combine larger read chunks together
_max_readv_combine = 50
# It is better to read this much more data in order, rather
# than doing another seek. Even for the local filesystem,
# there is a benefit in just reading.
# TODO: jam 20060714 Do some real benchmarking to figure out
# where the biggest benefit between combining reads and
# and seeking is. Consider a runtime auto-tune.
_bytes_to_read_before_seek = 0
def __init__(self, base):
super(Transport, self).__init__(base=base)
self.base = base
def _translate_error(self, e, path, raise_generic=True):
"""Translate an IOError or OSError into an appropriate bzr error.
This handles things like ENOENT, ENOTDIR, EEXIST, and EACCESS
"""
if getattr(e, 'errno', None) is not None:
if e.errno in (errno.ENOENT, errno.ENOTDIR, errno.EINVAL):
raise errors.NoSuchFile(path, extra=e)
# I would rather use errno.EFOO, but there doesn't seem to be
# any matching for 267
# This is the error when doing a listdir on a file:
# WindowsError: [Errno 267] The directory name is invalid
if sys.platform == 'win32' and e.errno in (errno.ESRCH, 267):
raise errors.NoSuchFile(path, extra=e)
if e.errno == errno.EEXIST:
raise errors.FileExists(path, extra=e)
if e.errno == errno.EACCES:
raise errors.PermissionDenied(path, extra=e)
if e.errno == errno.ENOTEMPTY:
raise errors.DirectoryNotEmpty(path, extra=e)
if e.errno == errno.EBUSY:
raise errors.ResourceBusy(path, extra=e)
if raise_generic:
raise errors.TransportError(orig_error=e)
def clone(self, offset=None):
"""Return a new Transport object, cloned from the current location,
using a subdirectory or parent directory. This allows connections
to be pooled, rather than a new one needed for each subdir.
"""
raise NotImplementedError(self.clone)
def ensure_base(self):
"""Ensure that the directory this transport references exists.
This will create a directory if it doesn't exist.
:return: True if the directory was created, False otherwise.
"""
# The default implementation just uses "Easier to ask for forgiveness
# than permission". We attempt to create the directory, and just
# suppress FileExists and PermissionDenied (for Windows) exceptions.
try:
self.mkdir('.')
except (errors.FileExists, errors.PermissionDenied):
return False
else:
return True
def external_url(self):
"""Return a URL for self that can be given to an external process.
There is no guarantee that the URL can be accessed from a different
machine - e.g. file:/// urls are only usable on the local machine,
sftp:/// urls when the server is only bound to localhost are only
usable from localhost etc.
NOTE: This method may remove security wrappers (e.g. on chroot
transports) and thus should *only* be used when the result will not
be used to obtain a new transport within bzrlib. Ideally chroot
transports would know enough to cause the external url to be the exact
one used that caused the chrooting in the first place, but that is not
currently the case.
:return: A URL that can be given to another process.
:raises InProcessTransport: If the transport is one that cannot be
accessed out of the current process (e.g. a MemoryTransport)
then InProcessTransport is raised.
"""
raise NotImplementedError(self.external_url)
def _pump(self, from_file, to_file):
"""Most children will need to copy from one file-like
object or string to another one.
This just gives them something easy to call.
"""
return osutils.pumpfile(from_file, to_file)
def _get_total(self, multi):
"""Try to figure out how many entries are in multi,
but if not possible, return None.
"""
try:
return len(multi)
except TypeError: # We can't tell how many, because relpaths is a generator
return None
def _update_pb(self, pb, msg, count, total):
"""Update the progress bar based on the current count
and total available, total may be None if it was
not possible to determine.
"""
if pb is None:
return
if total is None:
pb.update(msg, count, count+1)
else:
pb.update(msg, count, total)
def _iterate_over(self, multi, func, pb, msg, expand=True):
"""Iterate over all entries in multi, passing them to func,
and update the progress bar as you go along.
:param expand: If True, the entries will be passed to the function
by expanding the tuple. If False, it will be passed
as a single parameter.
"""
total = self._get_total(multi)
result = []
count = 0
for entry in multi:
self._update_pb(pb, msg, count, total)
if expand:
result.append(func(*entry))
else:
result.append(func(entry))
count += 1
return tuple(result)
def abspath(self, relpath):
"""Return the full url to the given relative path.
:param relpath: a string of a relative path
"""
# XXX: Robert Collins 20051016 - is this really needed in the public
# interface ?
raise NotImplementedError(self.abspath)
def _combine_paths(self, base_path, relpath):
"""Transform a Transport-relative path to a remote absolute path.
This does not handle substitution of ~ but does handle '..' and '.'
components.
Examples::
t._combine_paths('/home/sarah', 'project/foo')
=> '/home/sarah/project/foo'
t._combine_paths('/home/sarah', '../../etc')
=> '/etc'
t._combine_paths('/home/sarah', '/etc')
=> '/etc'
:param base_path: urlencoded path for the transport root; typically a
URL but need not contain scheme/host/etc.
:param relpath: relative url string for relative part of remote path.
:return: urlencoded string for final path.
"""
if not isinstance(relpath, str):
raise errors.InvalidURL(relpath)
if relpath.startswith('/'):
base_parts = []
else:
base_parts = base_path.split('/')
if len(base_parts) > 0 and base_parts[-1] == '':
base_parts = base_parts[:-1]
for p in relpath.split('/'):
if p == '..':
if len(base_parts) == 0:
# In most filesystems, a request for the parent
# of root, just returns root.
continue
base_parts.pop()
elif p == '.':
continue # No-op
elif p != '':
base_parts.append(p)
path = '/'.join(base_parts)
if not path.startswith('/'):
path = '/' + path
return path
def recommended_page_size(self):
"""Return the recommended page size for this transport.
This is potentially different for every path in a given namespace.
For example, local transports might use an operating system call to
get the block size for a given path, which can vary due to mount
points.
:return: The page size in bytes.
"""
return 4 * 1024
def relpath(self, abspath):
"""Return the local path portion from a given absolute path.
This default implementation is not suitable for filesystems with
aliasing, such as that given by symlinks, where a path may not
start with our base, but still be a relpath once aliasing is
resolved.
"""
# TODO: This might want to use bzrlib.osutils.relpath
# but we have to watch out because of the prefix issues
if not (abspath == self.base[:-1] or abspath.startswith(self.base)):
raise errors.PathNotChild(abspath, self.base)
pl = len(self.base)
return abspath[pl:].strip('/')
def local_abspath(self, relpath):
"""Return the absolute path on the local filesystem.
This function will only be defined for Transports which have a
physical local filesystem representation.
"""
raise errors.NotLocalUrl(self.abspath(relpath))
def has(self, relpath):
"""Does the file relpath exist?
Note that some transports MAY allow querying on directories, but this
is not part of the protocol. In other words, the results of
t.has("a_directory_name") are undefined.
:rtype: bool
"""
raise NotImplementedError(self.has)
def has_multi(self, relpaths, pb=None):
"""Return True/False for each entry in relpaths"""
total = self._get_total(relpaths)
count = 0
for relpath in relpaths:
self._update_pb(pb, 'has', count, total)
yield self.has(relpath)
count += 1
def has_any(self, relpaths):
"""Return True if any of the paths exist."""
for relpath in relpaths:
if self.has(relpath):
return True
return False
def iter_files_recursive(self):
"""Iter the relative paths of files in the transports sub-tree.
*NOTE*: This only lists *files*, not subdirectories!
As with other listing functions, only some transports implement this,.
you may check via listable() to determine if it will.
"""
raise errors.TransportNotPossible("This transport has not "
"implemented iter_files_recursive "
"(but must claim to be listable "
"to trigger this error).")
def get(self, relpath):
"""Get the file at the given relative path.
This may fail in a number of ways:
- HTTP servers may return content for a directory. (unexpected
content failure)
- FTP servers may indicate NoSuchFile for a directory.
- SFTP servers may give a file handle for a directory that will
fail on read().
For correct use of the interface, be sure to catch errors.PathError
when calling it and catch errors.ReadError when reading from the
returned object.
:param relpath: The relative path to the file
:rtype: File-like object.
"""
raise NotImplementedError(self.get)
def get_bytes(self, relpath):
"""Get a raw string of the bytes for a file at the given location.
:param relpath: The relative path to the file
"""
return self.get(relpath).read()
@deprecated_method(one_four)
def get_smart_client(self):
"""Return a smart client for this transport if possible.
A smart client doesn't imply the presence of a smart server: it implies
that the smart protocol can be tunnelled via this transport.
:raises NoSmartServer: if no smart server client is available.
"""
raise errors.NoSmartServer(self.base)
def get_smart_medium(self):
"""Return a smart client medium for this transport if possible.
A smart medium doesn't imply the presence of a smart server: it implies
that the smart protocol can be tunnelled via this transport.
:raises NoSmartMedium: if no smart server medium is available.
"""
raise errors.NoSmartMedium(self)
@deprecated_method(one_four)
def get_shared_medium(self):
"""Return a smart client shared medium for this transport if possible.
A smart medium doesn't imply the presence of a smart server: it implies
that the smart protocol can be tunnelled via this transport.
:raises NoSmartMedium: if no smart server medium is available.
"""
raise errors.NoSmartMedium(self)
def readv(self, relpath, offsets, adjust_for_latency=False,
upper_limit=None):
"""Get parts of the file at the given relative path.
:param relpath: The path to read data from.
:param offsets: A list of (offset, size) tuples.
:param adjust_for_latency: Adjust the requested offsets to accomodate
transport latency. This may re-order the offsets, expand them to
grab adjacent data when there is likely a high cost to requesting
data relative to delivering it.
:param upper_limit: When adjust_for_latency is True setting upper_limit
allows the caller to tell the transport about the length of the
file, so that requests are not issued for ranges beyond the end of
the file. This matters because some servers and/or transports error
in such a case rather than just satisfying the available ranges.
upper_limit should always be provided when adjust_for_latency is
True, and should be the size of the file in bytes.
:return: A list or generator of (offset, data) tuples
"""
if adjust_for_latency:
# Design note: We may wish to have different algorithms for the
# expansion of the offsets per-transport. E.g. for local disk to
# use page-aligned expansion. If that is the case consider the
# following structure:
# - a test that transport.readv uses self._offset_expander or some
# similar attribute, to do the expansion
# - a test for each transport that it has some known-good offset
# expander
# - unit tests for each offset expander
# - a set of tests for the offset expander interface, giving
# baseline behaviour (which the current transport
# adjust_for_latency tests could be repurposed to).
offsets = self._sort_expand_and_combine(offsets, upper_limit)
return self._readv(relpath, offsets)
def _readv(self, relpath, offsets):
"""Get parts of the file at the given relative path.
:param relpath: The path to read.
:param offsets: A list of (offset, size) tuples.
:return: A list or generator of (offset, data) tuples
"""
if not offsets:
return
fp = self.get(relpath)
return self._seek_and_read(fp, offsets, relpath)
def _seek_and_read(self, fp, offsets, relpath='<unknown>'):
"""An implementation of readv that uses fp.seek and fp.read.
This uses _coalesce_offsets to issue larger reads and fewer seeks.
:param fp: A file-like object that supports seek() and read(size)
:param offsets: A list of offsets to be read from the given file.
:return: yield (pos, data) tuples for each request
"""
# We are going to iterate multiple times, we need a list
offsets = list(offsets)
sorted_offsets = sorted(offsets)
# turn the list of offsets into a stack
offset_stack = iter(offsets)
cur_offset_and_size = offset_stack.next()
coalesced = self._coalesce_offsets(sorted_offsets,
limit=self._max_readv_combine,
fudge_factor=self._bytes_to_read_before_seek)
# Cache the results, but only until they have been fulfilled
data_map = {}
for c_offset in coalesced:
# TODO: jam 20060724 it might be faster to not issue seek if
# we are already at the right location. This should be
# benchmarked.
fp.seek(c_offset.start)
data = fp.read(c_offset.length)
if len(data) < c_offset.length:
raise errors.ShortReadvError(relpath, c_offset.start,
c_offset.length, actual=len(data))
for suboffset, subsize in c_offset.ranges:
key = (c_offset.start+suboffset, subsize)
data_map[key] = data[suboffset:suboffset+subsize]
# Now that we've read some data, see if we can yield anything back
while cur_offset_and_size in data_map:
this_data = data_map.pop(cur_offset_and_size)
yield cur_offset_and_size[0], this_data
cur_offset_and_size = offset_stack.next()
def _sort_expand_and_combine(self, offsets, upper_limit):
"""Helper for readv.
:param offsets: A readv vector - (offset, length) tuples.
:param upper_limit: The highest byte offset that may be requested.
:return: A readv vector that will read all the regions requested by
offsets, in start-to-end order, with no duplicated regions,
expanded by the transports recommended page size.
"""
offsets = sorted(offsets)
# short circuit empty requests
if len(offsets) == 0:
def empty_yielder():
# Quick thunk to stop this function becoming a generator
# itself, rather we return a generator that has nothing to
# yield.
if False:
yield None
return empty_yielder()
# expand by page size at either end
maximum_expansion = self.recommended_page_size()
new_offsets = []
for offset, length in offsets:
expansion = maximum_expansion - length
if expansion < 0:
# we're asking for more than the minimum read anyway.
expansion = 0
reduction = expansion / 2
new_offset = offset - reduction
new_length = length + expansion
if new_offset < 0:
# don't ask for anything < 0
new_offset = 0
if (upper_limit is not None and
new_offset + new_length > upper_limit):
new_length = upper_limit - new_offset
new_offsets.append((new_offset, new_length))
# combine the expanded offsets
offsets = []
current_offset, current_length = new_offsets[0]
current_finish = current_length + current_offset
for offset, length in new_offsets[1:]:
finish = offset + length
if offset > current_finish:
# there is a gap, output the current accumulator and start
# a new one for the region we're examining.
offsets.append((current_offset, current_length))
current_offset = offset
current_length = length
current_finish = finish
continue
if finish > current_finish:
# extend the current accumulator to the end of the region
# we're examining.
current_finish = finish
current_length = finish - current_offset
offsets.append((current_offset, current_length))
return offsets
@staticmethod
def _coalesce_offsets(offsets, limit=0, fudge_factor=0, max_size=0):
"""Yield coalesced offsets.
With a long list of neighboring requests, combine them
into a single large request, while retaining the original
offsets.
Turns [(15, 10), (25, 10)] => [(15, 20, [(0, 10), (10, 10)])]
:param offsets: A list of (start, length) pairs
:param limit: Only combine a maximum of this many pairs Some transports
penalize multiple reads more than others, and sometimes it is
better to return early.
0 means no limit
:param fudge_factor: All transports have some level of 'it is
better to read some more data and throw it away rather
than seek', so collapse if we are 'close enough'
:param max_size: Create coalesced offsets no bigger than this size.
When a single offset is bigger than 'max_size', it will keep
its size and be alone in the coalesced offset.
0 means no maximum size.
:return: yield _CoalescedOffset objects, which have members for where
to start, how much to read, and how to split those
chunks back up
"""
last_end = None
cur = _CoalescedOffset(None, None, [])
for start, size in offsets:
end = start + size
if (last_end is not None
and start <= last_end + fudge_factor
and start >= cur.start
and (limit <= 0 or len(cur.ranges) < limit)
and (max_size <= 0 or end - cur.start <= max_size)):
cur.length = end - cur.start
cur.ranges.append((start-cur.start, size))
else:
if cur.start is not None:
yield cur
cur = _CoalescedOffset(start, size, [(0, size)])
last_end = end
if cur.start is not None:
yield cur
return
def get_multi(self, relpaths, pb=None):
"""Get a list of file-like objects, one for each entry in relpaths.
:param relpaths: A list of relative paths.
:param pb: An optional ProgressBar for indicating percent done.
:return: A list or generator of file-like objects
"""
# TODO: Consider having this actually buffer the requests,
# in the default mode, it probably won't give worse performance,
# and all children wouldn't have to implement buffering
total = self._get_total(relpaths)
count = 0
for relpath in relpaths:
self._update_pb(pb, 'get', count, total)
yield self.get(relpath)
count += 1
def put_bytes(self, relpath, bytes, mode=None):
"""Atomically put the supplied bytes into the given location.
:param relpath: The location to put the contents, relative to the
transport base.
:param bytes: A bytestring of data.
:param mode: Create the file with the given mode.
:return: None
"""
if not isinstance(bytes, str):
raise AssertionError(
'bytes must be a plain string, not %s' % type(bytes))
return self.put_file(relpath, StringIO(bytes), mode=mode)
def put_bytes_non_atomic(self, relpath, bytes, mode=None,
create_parent_dir=False,
dir_mode=None):
"""Copy the string into the target location.
This function is not strictly safe to use. See
Transport.put_bytes_non_atomic for more information.
:param relpath: The remote location to put the contents.
:param bytes: A string object containing the raw bytes to write into
the target file.
:param mode: Possible access permissions for new file.
None means do not set remote permissions.
:param create_parent_dir: If we cannot create the target file because
the parent directory does not exist, go ahead and
create it, and then try again.
:param dir_mode: Possible access permissions for new directories.
"""
if not isinstance(bytes, str):
raise AssertionError(
'bytes must be a plain string, not %s' % type(bytes))
self.put_file_non_atomic(relpath, StringIO(bytes), mode=mode,
create_parent_dir=create_parent_dir,
dir_mode=dir_mode)
def put_file(self, relpath, f, mode=None):
"""Copy the file-like object into the location.
:param relpath: Location to put the contents, relative to base.
:param f: File-like object.
:param mode: The mode for the newly created file,
None means just use the default.
:return: The length of the file that was written.
"""
# We would like to mark this as NotImplemented, but most likely
# transports have defined it in terms of the old api.
symbol_versioning.warn('Transport %s should implement put_file,'
' rather than implementing put() as of'
' version 0.11.'
% (self.__class__.__name__,),
DeprecationWarning)
return self.put(relpath, f, mode=mode)
#raise NotImplementedError(self.put_file)
def put_file_non_atomic(self, relpath, f, mode=None,
create_parent_dir=False,
dir_mode=None):
"""Copy the file-like object into the target location.
This function is not strictly safe to use. It is only meant to
be used when you already know that the target does not exist.
It is not safe, because it will open and truncate the remote
file. So there may be a time when the file has invalid contents.
:param relpath: The remote location to put the contents.
:param f: File-like object.
:param mode: Possible access permissions for new file.
None means do not set remote permissions.
:param create_parent_dir: If we cannot create the target file because
the parent directory does not exist, go ahead and
create it, and then try again.
:param dir_mode: Possible access permissions for new directories.
"""
# Default implementation just does an atomic put.
try:
return self.put_file(relpath, f, mode=mode)
except errors.NoSuchFile:
if not create_parent_dir:
raise
parent_dir = osutils.dirname(relpath)
if parent_dir:
self.mkdir(parent_dir, mode=dir_mode)
return self.put_file(relpath, f, mode=mode)
def mkdir(self, relpath, mode=None):
"""Create a directory at the given path."""
raise NotImplementedError(self.mkdir)
def mkdir_multi(self, relpaths, mode=None, pb=None):
"""Create a group of directories"""
def mkdir(path):
self.mkdir(path, mode=mode)
return len(self._iterate_over(relpaths, mkdir, pb, 'mkdir', expand=False))
def open_write_stream(self, relpath, mode=None):
"""Open a writable file stream at relpath.
A file stream is a file like object with a write() method that accepts
bytes to write.. Buffering may occur internally until the stream is
closed with stream.close(). Calls to readv or the get_* methods will
be synchronised with any internal buffering that may be present.
:param relpath: The relative path to the file.
:param mode: The mode for the newly created file,
None means just use the default
:return: A FileStream. FileStream objects have two methods, write() and
close(). There is no guarantee that data is committed to the file
if close() has not been called (even if get() is called on the same
path).
"""
raise NotImplementedError(self.open_write_stream)
def append_file(self, relpath, f, mode=None):
"""Append bytes from a file-like object to a file at relpath.
The file is created if it does not already exist.
:param f: a file-like object of the bytes to append.
:param mode: Unix mode for newly created files. This is not used for
existing files.
:returns: the length of relpath before the content was written to it.
"""
symbol_versioning.warn('Transport %s should implement append_file,'
' rather than implementing append() as of'
' version 0.11.'
% (self.__class__.__name__,),
DeprecationWarning)
return self.append(relpath, f, mode=mode)
def append_bytes(self, relpath, bytes, mode=None):
"""Append bytes to a file at relpath.
The file is created if it does not already exist.
:type f: str
:param f: a string of the bytes to append.
:param mode: Unix mode for newly created files. This is not used for
existing files.
:returns: the length of relpath before the content was written to it.
"""
if not isinstance(bytes, str):
raise TypeError(
'bytes must be a plain string, not %s' % type(bytes))
return self.append_file(relpath, StringIO(bytes), mode=mode)
def append_multi(self, files, pb=None):
"""Append the text in each file-like or string object to
the supplied location.
:param files: A set of (path, f) entries
:param pb: An optional ProgressBar for indicating percent done.
"""
return self._iterate_over(files, self.append_file, pb, 'append', expand=True)
def copy(self, rel_from, rel_to):
"""Copy the item at rel_from to the location at rel_to.
Override this for efficiency if a specific transport can do it
faster than this default implementation.
"""
self.put_file(rel_to, self.get(rel_from))
def copy_multi(self, relpaths, pb=None):
"""Copy a bunch of entries.
:param relpaths: A list of tuples of the form [(from, to), (from, to),...]
"""
# This is the non-pipelined implementation, so that
# implementors don't have to implement everything.
return self._iterate_over(relpaths, self.copy, pb, 'copy', expand=True)
def copy_to(self, relpaths, other, mode=None, pb=None):
"""Copy a set of entries from self into another Transport.
:param relpaths: A list/generator of entries to be copied.
:param mode: This is the target mode for the newly created files
TODO: This interface needs to be updated so that the target location
can be different from the source location.
"""
# The dummy implementation just does a simple get + put
def copy_entry(path):
other.put_file(path, self.get(path), mode=mode)
return len(self._iterate_over(relpaths, copy_entry, pb, 'copy_to', expand=False))
def copy_tree(self, from_relpath, to_relpath):
"""Copy a subtree from one relpath to another.
If a faster implementation is available, specific transports should
implement it.
"""
source = self.clone(from_relpath)
self.mkdir(to_relpath)
target = self.clone(to_relpath)
files = []
directories = ['.']
while directories:
dir = directories.pop()
if dir != '.':
target.mkdir(dir)
for path in source.list_dir(dir):
path = dir + '/' + path
stat = source.stat(path)
if S_ISDIR(stat.st_mode):
directories.append(path)
else:
files.append(path)
source.copy_to(files, target)
def rename(self, rel_from, rel_to):
"""Rename a file or directory.
This *must* fail if the destination is a nonempty directory - it must
not automatically remove it. It should raise DirectoryNotEmpty, or
some other PathError if the case can't be specifically detected.
If the destination is an empty directory or a file this function may
either fail or succeed, depending on the underlying transport. It
should not attempt to remove the destination if overwriting is not the
native transport behaviour. If at all possible the transport should
ensure that the rename either completes or not, without leaving the
destination deleted and the new file not moved in place.
This is intended mainly for use in implementing LockDir.
"""
# transports may need to override this
raise NotImplementedError(self.rename)
def move(self, rel_from, rel_to):
"""Move the item at rel_from to the location at rel_to.
The destination is deleted if possible, even if it's a non-empty
directory tree.
If a transport can directly implement this it is suggested that
it do so for efficiency.
"""
if S_ISDIR(self.stat(rel_from).st_mode):
self.copy_tree(rel_from, rel_to)
self.delete_tree(rel_from)
else:
self.copy(rel_from, rel_to)
self.delete(rel_from)
def move_multi(self, relpaths, pb=None):
"""Move a bunch of entries.
:param relpaths: A list of tuples of the form [(from1, to1), (from2, to2),...]
"""
return self._iterate_over(relpaths, self.move, pb, 'move', expand=True)
def move_multi_to(self, relpaths, rel_to):
"""Move a bunch of entries to a single location.
This differs from move_multi in that you give a list of from, and
a single destination, rather than multiple destinations.
:param relpaths: A list of relative paths [from1, from2, from3, ...]
:param rel_to: A directory where each entry should be placed.
"""
# This is not implemented, because you need to do special tricks to
# extract the basename, and add it to rel_to
raise NotImplementedError(self.move_multi_to)
def delete(self, relpath):
"""Delete the item at relpath"""
raise NotImplementedError(self.delete)
def delete_multi(self, relpaths, pb=None):
"""Queue up a bunch of deletes to be done.
"""
return self._iterate_over(relpaths, self.delete, pb, 'delete', expand=False)
def delete_tree(self, relpath):
"""Delete an entire tree. This may require a listable transport."""
subtree = self.clone(relpath)
files = []
directories = ['.']
pending_rmdirs = []
while directories:
dir = directories.pop()
if dir != '.':
pending_rmdirs.append(dir)
for path in subtree.list_dir(dir):
path = dir + '/' + path
stat = subtree.stat(path)
if S_ISDIR(stat.st_mode):
directories.append(path)
else:
files.append(path)
subtree.delete_multi(files)
pending_rmdirs.reverse()
for dir in pending_rmdirs:
subtree.rmdir(dir)
self.rmdir(relpath)
def __repr__(self):
return "<%s.%s url=%s>" % (self.__module__, self.__class__.__name__, self.base)
def stat(self, relpath):
"""Return the stat information for a file.
WARNING: This may not be implementable for all protocols, so use
sparingly.
NOTE: This returns an object with fields such as 'st_size'. It MAY
or MAY NOT return the literal result of an os.stat() call, so all
access should be via named fields.
ALSO NOTE: Stats of directories may not be supported on some
transports.
"""
raise NotImplementedError(self.stat)
def rmdir(self, relpath):
"""Remove a directory at the given path."""
raise NotImplementedError
def stat_multi(self, relpaths, pb=None):
"""Stat multiple files and return the information.
"""
#TODO: Is it worth making this a generator instead of a
# returning a list?
stats = []
def gather(path):
stats.append(self.stat(path))
count = self._iterate_over(relpaths, gather, pb, 'stat', expand=False)
return stats
def listable(self):
"""Return True if this store supports listing."""
raise NotImplementedError(self.listable)
def list_dir(self, relpath):
"""Return a list of all files at the given location.
WARNING: many transports do not support this, so trying avoid using
it if at all possible.
"""
raise errors.TransportNotPossible("Transport %r has not "
"implemented list_dir "
"(but must claim to be listable "
"to trigger this error)."
% (self))
def lock_read(self, relpath):
"""Lock the given file for shared (read) access.
WARNING: many transports do not support this, so trying avoid using it.
These methods may be removed in the future.
Transports may raise TransportNotPossible if OS-level locks cannot be
taken over this transport.
:return: A lock object, which should contain an unlock() function.
"""
raise errors.TransportNotPossible("transport locks not supported on %s" % self)
def lock_write(self, relpath):
"""Lock the given file for exclusive (write) access.
WARNING: many transports do not support this, so trying avoid using it.
These methods may be removed in the future.
Transports may raise TransportNotPossible if OS-level locks cannot be
taken over this transport.
:return: A lock object, which should contain an unlock() function.
"""
raise errors.TransportNotPossible("transport locks not supported on %s" % self)
def is_readonly(self):
"""Return true if this connection cannot be written to."""
return False
def _can_roundtrip_unix_modebits(self):
"""Return true if this transport can store and retrieve unix modebits.
(For example, 0700 to make a directory owner-private.)
Note: most callers will not want to switch on this, but should rather
just try and set permissions and let them be either stored or not.
This is intended mainly for the use of the test suite.
Warning: this is not guaranteed to be accurate as sometimes we can't
be sure: for example with vfat mounted on unix, or a windows sftp
server."""
# TODO: Perhaps return a e.g. TransportCharacteristics that can answer
# several questions about the transport.
return False
def _reuse_for(self, other_base):
# This is really needed for ConnectedTransport only, but it's easier to
# have Transport refuses to be reused than testing that the reuse
# should be asked to ConnectedTransport only.
return None
class _SharedConnection(object):
"""A connection shared between several transports."""
def __init__(self, connection=None, credentials=None, base=None):
"""Constructor.
:param connection: An opaque object specific to each transport.
:param credentials: An opaque object containing the credentials used to
create the connection.
"""
self.connection = connection
self.credentials = credentials
self.base = base
class ConnectedTransport(Transport):
"""A transport connected to a remote server.
This class provide the basis to implement transports that need to connect
to a remote server.
Host and credentials are available as private attributes, cloning preserves
them and share the underlying, protocol specific, connection.
"""
def __init__(self, base, _from_transport=None):
"""Constructor.
The caller should ensure that _from_transport points at the same host
as the new base.
:param base: transport root URL
:param _from_transport: optional transport to build from. The built
transport will share the connection with this transport.
"""
if not base.endswith('/'):
base += '/'
(self._scheme,
self._user, self._password,
self._host, self._port,
self._path) = self._split_url(base)
if _from_transport is not None:
# Copy the password as it does not appear in base and will be lost
# otherwise. It can appear in the _split_url above if the user
# provided it on the command line. Otherwise, daughter classes will
# prompt the user for one when appropriate.
self._password = _from_transport._password
base = self._unsplit_url(self._scheme,
self._user, self._password,
self._host, self._port,
self._path)
super(ConnectedTransport, self).__init__(base)
if _from_transport is None:
self._shared_connection = _SharedConnection()
else:
self._shared_connection = _from_transport._shared_connection
def clone(self, offset=None):
"""Return a new transport with root at self.base + offset
We leave the daughter classes take advantage of the hint
that it's a cloning not a raw creation.
"""
if offset is None:
return self.__class__(self.base, _from_transport=self)
else:
return self.__class__(self.abspath(offset), _from_transport=self)
@staticmethod
def _split_url(url):
"""
Extract the server address, the credentials and the path from the url.
user, password, host and path should be quoted if they contain reserved
chars.
:param url: an quoted url
:return: (scheme, user, password, host, port, path) tuple, all fields
are unquoted.
"""
if isinstance(url, unicode):
raise errors.InvalidURL('should be ascii:\n%r' % url)
url = url.encode('utf-8')
(scheme, netloc, path, params,
query, fragment) = urlparse.urlparse(url, allow_fragments=False)
user = password = host = port = None
if '@' in netloc:
user, host = netloc.rsplit('@', 1)
if ':' in user:
user, password = user.split(':', 1)
password = urllib.unquote(password)
user = urllib.unquote(user)
else:
host = netloc
if ':' in host:
host, port = host.rsplit(':', 1)
try:
port = int(port)
except ValueError:
raise errors.InvalidURL('invalid port number %s in url:\n%s' %
(port, url))
if host == '':
raise errors.InvalidURL('Host empty in: %s' % url)
host = urllib.unquote(host)
path = urllib.unquote(path)
return (scheme, user, password, host, port, path)
@staticmethod
def _unsplit_url(scheme, user, password, host, port, path):
"""
Build the full URL for the given already URL encoded path.
user, password, host and path will be quoted if they contain reserved
chars.
:param scheme: protocol
:param user: login
:param password: associated password
:param host: the server address
:param port: the associated port
:param path: the absolute path on the server
:return: The corresponding URL.
"""
netloc = urllib.quote(host)
if user is not None:
# Note that we don't put the password back even if we
# have one so that it doesn't get accidentally
# exposed.
netloc = '%s@%s' % (urllib.quote(user), netloc)
if port is not None:
netloc = '%s:%d' % (netloc, port)
path = urllib.quote(path)
return urlparse.urlunparse((scheme, netloc, path, None, None, None))
def relpath(self, abspath):
"""Return the local path portion from a given absolute path"""
scheme, user, password, host, port, path = self._split_url(abspath)
error = []
if (scheme != self._scheme):
error.append('scheme mismatch')
if (user != self._user):
error.append('user name mismatch')
if (host != self._host):
error.append('host mismatch')
if (port != self._port):
error.append('port mismatch')
if not (path == self._path[:-1] or path.startswith(self._path)):
error.append('path mismatch')
if error:
extra = ', '.join(error)
raise errors.PathNotChild(abspath, self.base, extra=extra)
pl = len(self._path)
return path[pl:].strip('/')
def abspath(self, relpath):
"""Return the full url to the given relative path.
:param relpath: the relative path urlencoded
:returns: the Unicode version of the absolute path for relpath.
"""
relative = urlutils.unescape(relpath).encode('utf-8')
path = self._combine_paths(self._path, relative)
return self._unsplit_url(self._scheme, self._user, self._password,
self._host, self._port,
path)
def _remote_path(self, relpath):
"""Return the absolute path part of the url to the given relative path.
This is the path that the remote server expect to receive in the
requests, daughter classes should redefine this method if needed and
use the result to build their requests.
:param relpath: the path relative to the transport base urlencoded.
:return: the absolute Unicode path on the server,
"""
relative = urlutils.unescape(relpath).encode('utf-8')
remote_path = self._combine_paths(self._path, relative)
return remote_path
def _get_shared_connection(self):
"""Get the object shared amongst cloned transports.
This should be used only by classes that needs to extend the sharing
with objects other than transports.
Use _get_connection to get the connection itself.
"""
return self._shared_connection
def _set_connection(self, connection, credentials=None):
"""Record a newly created connection with its associated credentials.
Note: To ensure that connection is still shared after a temporary
failure and a new one needs to be created, daughter classes should
always call this method to set the connection and do so each time a new
connection is created.
:param connection: An opaque object representing the connection used by
the daughter class.
:param credentials: An opaque object representing the credentials
needed to create the connection.
"""
self._shared_connection.connection = connection
self._shared_connection.credentials = credentials
def _get_connection(self):
"""Returns the transport specific connection object."""
return self._shared_connection.connection
def _get_credentials(self):
"""Returns the credentials used to establish the connection."""
return self._shared_connection.credentials
def _update_credentials(self, credentials):
"""Update the credentials of the current connection.
Some protocols can renegociate the credentials within a connection,
this method allows daughter classes to share updated credentials.
:param credentials: the updated credentials.
"""
# We don't want to call _set_connection here as we are only updating
# the credentials not creating a new connection.
self._shared_connection.credentials = credentials
def _reuse_for(self, other_base):
"""Returns a transport sharing the same connection if possible.
Note: we share the connection if the expected credentials are the
same: (host, port, user). Some protocols may disagree and redefine the
criteria in daughter classes.
Note: we don't compare the passwords here because other_base may have
been obtained from an existing transport.base which do not mention the
password.
:param other_base: the URL we want to share the connection with.
:return: A new transport or None if the connection cannot be shared.
"""
try:
(scheme, user, password,
host, port, path) = self._split_url(other_base)
except errors.InvalidURL:
# No hope in trying to reuse an existing transport for an invalid
# URL
return None
transport = None
# Don't compare passwords, they may be absent from other_base or from
# self and they don't carry more information than user anyway.
if (scheme == self._scheme
and user == self._user
and host == self._host
and port == self._port):
if not path.endswith('/'):
# This normally occurs at __init__ time, but it's easier to do
# it now to avoid creating two transports for the same base.
path += '/'
if self._path == path:
# shortcut, it's really the same transport
return self
# We don't call clone here because the intent is different: we
# build a new transport on a different base (which may be totally
# unrelated) but we share the connection.
transport = self.__class__(other_base, _from_transport=self)
return transport
# We try to recognize an url lazily (ignoring user, password, etc)
_urlRE = re.compile(r'^(?P<proto>[^:/\\]+)://(?P<rest>.*)$')
def get_transport(base, possible_transports=None):
"""Open a transport to access a URL or directory.
:param base: either a URL or a directory name.
:param transports: optional reusable transports list. If not None, created
transports will be added to the list.
:return: A new transport optionally sharing its connection with one of
possible_transports.
"""
if base is None:
base = '.'
last_err = None
from bzrlib.directory_service import directories
base = directories.dereference(base)
def convert_path_to_url(base, error_str):
m = _urlRE.match(base)
if m:
# This looks like a URL, but we weren't able to
# instantiate it as such raise an appropriate error
# FIXME: we have a 'error_str' unused and we use last_err below
raise errors.UnsupportedProtocol(base, last_err)
# This doesn't look like a protocol, consider it a local path
new_base = urlutils.local_path_to_url(base)
# mutter('converting os path %r => url %s', base, new_base)
return new_base
# Catch any URLs which are passing Unicode rather than ASCII
try:
base = base.encode('ascii')
except UnicodeError:
# Only local paths can be Unicode
base = convert_path_to_url(base,
'URLs must be properly escaped (protocol: %s)')
transport = None
if possible_transports is not None:
for t in possible_transports:
t_same_connection = t._reuse_for(base)
if t_same_connection is not None:
# Add only new transports
if t_same_connection not in possible_transports:
possible_transports.append(t_same_connection)
return t_same_connection
for proto, factory_list in transport_list_registry.iteritems():
if proto is not None and base.startswith(proto):
transport, last_err = _try_transport_factories(base, factory_list)
if transport:
if possible_transports is not None:
if transport in possible_transports:
raise AssertionError()
possible_transports.append(transport)
return transport
# We tried all the different protocols, now try one last time
# as a local protocol
base = convert_path_to_url(base, 'Unsupported protocol: %s')
# The default handler is the filesystem handler, stored as protocol None
factory_list = transport_list_registry.get(None)
transport, last_err = _try_transport_factories(base, factory_list)
return transport
def _try_transport_factories(base, factory_list):
last_err = None
for factory in factory_list:
try:
return factory.get_obj()(base), None
except errors.DependencyNotPresent, e:
mutter("failed to instantiate transport %r for %r: %r" %
(factory, base, e))
last_err = e
continue
return None, last_err
def do_catching_redirections(action, transport, redirected):
"""Execute an action with given transport catching redirections.
This is a facility provided for callers needing to follow redirections
silently. The silence is relative: it is the caller responsability to
inform the user about each redirection or only inform the user of a user
via the exception parameter.
:param action: A callable, what the caller want to do while catching
redirections.
:param transport: The initial transport used.
:param redirected: A callable receiving the redirected transport and the
RedirectRequested exception.
:return: Whatever 'action' returns
"""
MAX_REDIRECTIONS = 8
# If a loop occurs, there is little we can do. So we don't try to detect
# them, just getting out if too much redirections occurs. The solution
# is outside: where the loop is defined.
for redirections in range(MAX_REDIRECTIONS):
try:
return action(transport)
except errors.RedirectRequested, e:
redirection_notice = '%s is%s redirected to %s' % (
e.source, e.permanently, e.target)
transport = redirected(transport, e, redirection_notice)
else:
# Loop exited without resolving redirect ? Either the
# user has kept a very very very old reference or a loop
# occurred in the redirections. Nothing we can cure here:
# tell the user. Note that as the user has been informed
# about each redirection (it is the caller responsibility
# to do that in redirected via the provided
# redirection_notice). The caller may provide more
# information if needed (like what file or directory we
# were trying to act upon when the redirection loop
# occurred).
raise errors.TooManyRedirections
class Server(object):
"""A Transport Server.
The Server interface provides a server for a given transport. We use
these servers as loopback testing tools. For any given transport the
Servers it provides must either allow writing, or serve the contents
of os.getcwdu() at the time setUp is called.
Note that these are real servers - they must implement all the things
that we want bzr transports to take advantage of.
"""
def setUp(self):
"""Setup the server to service requests."""
def tearDown(self):
"""Remove the server and cleanup any resources it owns."""
def get_url(self):
"""Return a url for this server.
If the transport does not represent a disk directory (i.e. it is
a database like svn, or a memory only transport, it should return
a connection to a newly established resource for this Server.
Otherwise it should return a url that will provide access to the path
that was os.getcwdu() when setUp() was called.
Subsequent calls will return the same resource.
"""
raise NotImplementedError
def get_bogus_url(self):
"""Return a url for this protocol, that will fail to connect.
This may raise NotImplementedError to indicate that this server cannot
provide bogus urls.
"""
raise NotImplementedError
# None is the default transport, for things with no url scheme
register_transport_proto('file://',
help="Access using the standard filesystem (default)")
register_lazy_transport('file://', 'bzrlib.transport.local', 'LocalTransport')
transport_list_registry.set_default_transport("file://")
register_transport_proto('sftp://',
help="Access using SFTP (most SSH servers provide SFTP).",
register_netloc=True)
register_lazy_transport('sftp://', 'bzrlib.transport.sftp', 'SFTPTransport')
# Decorated http transport
register_transport_proto('http+urllib://',
# help="Read-only access of branches exported on the web."
register_netloc=True)
register_lazy_transport('http+urllib://', 'bzrlib.transport.http._urllib',
'HttpTransport_urllib')
register_transport_proto('https+urllib://',
# help="Read-only access of branches exported on the web using SSL."
register_netloc=True)
register_lazy_transport('https+urllib://', 'bzrlib.transport.http._urllib',
'HttpTransport_urllib')
register_transport_proto('http+pycurl://',
# help="Read-only access of branches exported on the web."
register_netloc=True)
register_lazy_transport('http+pycurl://', 'bzrlib.transport.http._pycurl',
'PyCurlTransport')
register_transport_proto('https+pycurl://',
# help="Read-only access of branches exported on the web using SSL."
register_netloc=True)
register_lazy_transport('https+pycurl://', 'bzrlib.transport.http._pycurl',
'PyCurlTransport')
# Default http transports (last declared wins (if it can be imported))
register_transport_proto('http://',
help="Read-only access of branches exported on the web.")
register_transport_proto('https://',
help="Read-only access of branches exported on the web using SSL.")
register_lazy_transport('http://', 'bzrlib.transport.http._urllib',
'HttpTransport_urllib')
register_lazy_transport('https://', 'bzrlib.transport.http._urllib',
'HttpTransport_urllib')
register_lazy_transport('http://', 'bzrlib.transport.http._pycurl',
'PyCurlTransport')
register_lazy_transport('https://', 'bzrlib.transport.http._pycurl',
'PyCurlTransport')
register_transport_proto('ftp://', help="Access using passive FTP.")
register_lazy_transport('ftp://', 'bzrlib.transport.ftp', 'FtpTransport')
register_transport_proto('aftp://', help="Access using active FTP.")
register_lazy_transport('aftp://', 'bzrlib.transport.ftp', 'FtpTransport')
# Default to trying GSSAPI authentication (if the kerberos module is available)
register_transport_proto('ftp+gssapi://', register_netloc=True)
register_lazy_transport('ftp+gssapi://', 'bzrlib.transport.ftp._gssapi',
'GSSAPIFtpTransport')
register_transport_proto('aftp+gssapi://', register_netloc=True)
register_lazy_transport('aftp+gssapi://', 'bzrlib.transport.ftp._gssapi',
'GSSAPIFtpTransport')
register_transport_proto('ftp+nogssapi://', register_netloc=True)
register_transport_proto('aftp+nogssapi://', register_netloc=True)
register_lazy_transport('ftp://', 'bzrlib.transport.ftp._gssapi',
'GSSAPIFtpTransport')
register_lazy_transport('aftp://', 'bzrlib.transport.ftp._gssapi',
'GSSAPIFtpTransport')
register_lazy_transport('ftp+nogssapi://', 'bzrlib.transport.ftp',
'FtpTransport')
register_lazy_transport('aftp+nogssapi://', 'bzrlib.transport.ftp',
'FtpTransport')
register_transport_proto('memory://')
register_lazy_transport('memory://', 'bzrlib.transport.memory',
'MemoryTransport')
# chroots cannot be implicitly accessed, they must be explicitly created:
register_transport_proto('chroot+')
register_transport_proto('readonly+',
# help="This modifier converts any transport to be readonly."
)
register_lazy_transport('readonly+', 'bzrlib.transport.readonly',
'ReadonlyTransportDecorator')
register_transport_proto('fakenfs+')
register_lazy_transport('fakenfs+', 'bzrlib.transport.fakenfs',
'FakeNFSTransportDecorator')
register_transport_proto('trace+')
register_lazy_transport('trace+', 'bzrlib.transport.trace',
'TransportTraceDecorator')
register_transport_proto('unlistable+')
register_lazy_transport('unlistable+', 'bzrlib.transport.unlistable',
'UnlistableTransportDecorator')
register_transport_proto('brokenrename+')
register_lazy_transport('brokenrename+', 'bzrlib.transport.brokenrename',
'BrokenRenameTransportDecorator')
register_transport_proto('vfat+')
register_lazy_transport('vfat+',
'bzrlib.transport.fakevfat',
'FakeVFATTransportDecorator')
register_transport_proto('nosmart+')
register_lazy_transport('nosmart+', 'bzrlib.transport.nosmart',
'NoSmartTransportDecorator')
# These two schemes were registered, but don't seem to have an actual transport
# protocol registered
for scheme in ['ssh', 'bzr+loopback']:
register_urlparse_netloc_protocol(scheme)
del scheme
register_transport_proto('bzr://',
help="Fast access using the Bazaar smart server.",
register_netloc=True)
register_lazy_transport('bzr://', 'bzrlib.transport.remote',
'RemoteTCPTransport')
register_transport_proto('bzr-v2://', register_netloc=True)
register_lazy_transport('bzr-v2://', 'bzrlib.transport.remote',
'RemoteTCPTransportV2Only')
register_transport_proto('bzr+http://',
# help="Fast access using the Bazaar smart server over HTTP."
register_netloc=True)
register_lazy_transport('bzr+http://', 'bzrlib.transport.remote',
'RemoteHTTPTransport')
register_transport_proto('bzr+https://',
# help="Fast access using the Bazaar smart server over HTTPS."
register_netloc=True)
register_lazy_transport('bzr+https://',
'bzrlib.transport.remote',
'RemoteHTTPTransport')
register_transport_proto('bzr+ssh://',
help="Fast access using the Bazaar smart server over SSH.",
register_netloc=True)
register_lazy_transport('bzr+ssh://', 'bzrlib.transport.remote',
'RemoteSSHTransport')
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