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PK ! _�H%� � distutils/debug.pynu �[��� import os # If DISTUTILS_DEBUG is anything other than the empty string, we run in # debug mode. DEBUG = os.environ.get('DISTUTILS_DEBUG') PK ! �F9�.: .: distutils/bcppcompiler.pynu �[��� """distutils.bcppcompiler Contains BorlandCCompiler, an implementation of the abstract CCompiler class for the Borland C++ compiler. """ # This implementation by Lyle Johnson, based on the original msvccompiler.py # module and using the directions originally published by Gordon Williams. # XXX looks like there's a LOT of overlap between these two classes: # someone should sit down and factor out the common code as # WindowsCCompiler! --GPW import os from distutils.errors import \ DistutilsExecError, \ CompileError, LibError, LinkError, UnknownFileError from distutils.ccompiler import \ CCompiler, gen_preprocess_options from distutils.file_util import write_file from distutils.dep_util import newer from distutils import log class BCPPCompiler(CCompiler) : """Concrete class that implements an interface to the Borland C/C++ compiler, as defined by the CCompiler abstract class. """ compiler_type = 'bcpp' # Just set this so CCompiler's constructor doesn't barf. We currently # don't use the 'set_executables()' bureaucracy provided by CCompiler, # as it really isn't necessary for this sort of single-compiler class. # Would be nice to have a consistent interface with UnixCCompiler, # though, so it's worth thinking about. executables = {} # Private class data (need to distinguish C from C++ source for compiler) _c_extensions = ['.c'] _cpp_extensions = ['.cc', '.cpp', '.cxx'] # Needed for the filename generation methods provided by the # base class, CCompiler. src_extensions = _c_extensions + _cpp_extensions obj_extension = '.obj' static_lib_extension = '.lib' shared_lib_extension = '.dll' static_lib_format = shared_lib_format = '%s%s' exe_extension = '.exe' def __init__ (self, verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0): CCompiler.__init__ (self, verbose, dry_run, force) # These executables are assumed to all be in the path. # Borland doesn't seem to use any special registry settings to # indicate their installation locations. self.cc = "bcc32.exe" self.linker = "ilink32.exe" self.lib = "tlib.exe" self.preprocess_options = None self.compile_options = ['/tWM', '/O2', '/q', '/g0'] self.compile_options_debug = ['/tWM', '/Od', '/q', '/g0'] self.ldflags_shared = ['/Tpd', '/Gn', '/q', '/x'] self.ldflags_shared_debug = ['/Tpd', '/Gn', '/q', '/x'] self.ldflags_static = [] self.ldflags_exe = ['/Gn', '/q', '/x'] self.ldflags_exe_debug = ['/Gn', '/q', '/x','/r'] # -- Worker methods ------------------------------------------------ def compile(self, sources, output_dir=None, macros=None, include_dirs=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, depends=None): macros, objects, extra_postargs, pp_opts, build = \ self._setup_compile(output_dir, macros, include_dirs, sources, depends, extra_postargs) compile_opts = extra_preargs or [] compile_opts.append ('-c') if debug: compile_opts.extend (self.compile_options_debug) else: compile_opts.extend (self.compile_options) for obj in objects: try: src, ext = build[obj] except KeyError: continue # XXX why do the normpath here? src = os.path.normpath(src) obj = os.path.normpath(obj) # XXX _setup_compile() did a mkpath() too but before the normpath. # Is it possible to skip the normpath? self.mkpath(os.path.dirname(obj)) if ext == '.res': # This is already a binary file -- skip it. continue # the 'for' loop if ext == '.rc': # This needs to be compiled to a .res file -- do it now. try: self.spawn (["brcc32", "-fo", obj, src]) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise CompileError(msg) continue # the 'for' loop # The next two are both for the real compiler. if ext in self._c_extensions: input_opt = "" elif ext in self._cpp_extensions: input_opt = "-P" else: # Unknown file type -- no extra options. The compiler # will probably fail, but let it just in case this is a # file the compiler recognizes even if we don't. input_opt = "" output_opt = "-o" + obj # Compiler command line syntax is: "bcc32 [options] file(s)". # Note that the source file names must appear at the end of # the command line. try: self.spawn ([self.cc] + compile_opts + pp_opts + [input_opt, output_opt] + extra_postargs + [src]) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise CompileError(msg) return objects # compile () def create_static_lib (self, objects, output_libname, output_dir=None, debug=0, target_lang=None): (objects, output_dir) = self._fix_object_args (objects, output_dir) output_filename = \ self.library_filename (output_libname, output_dir=output_dir) if self._need_link (objects, output_filename): lib_args = [output_filename, '/u'] + objects if debug: pass # XXX what goes here? try: self.spawn ([self.lib] + lib_args) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise LibError(msg) else: log.debug("skipping %s (up-to-date)", output_filename) # create_static_lib () def link (self, target_desc, objects, output_filename, output_dir=None, libraries=None, library_dirs=None, runtime_library_dirs=None, export_symbols=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, build_temp=None, target_lang=None): # XXX this ignores 'build_temp'! should follow the lead of # msvccompiler.py (objects, output_dir) = self._fix_object_args (objects, output_dir) (libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs) = \ self._fix_lib_args (libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs) if runtime_library_dirs: log.warn("I don't know what to do with 'runtime_library_dirs': %s", str(runtime_library_dirs)) if output_dir is not None: output_filename = os.path.join (output_dir, output_filename) if self._need_link (objects, output_filename): # Figure out linker args based on type of target. if target_desc == CCompiler.EXECUTABLE: startup_obj = 'c0w32' if debug: ld_args = self.ldflags_exe_debug[:] else: ld_args = self.ldflags_exe[:] else: startup_obj = 'c0d32' if debug: ld_args = self.ldflags_shared_debug[:] else: ld_args = self.ldflags_shared[:] # Create a temporary exports file for use by the linker if export_symbols is None: def_file = '' else: head, tail = os.path.split (output_filename) modname, ext = os.path.splitext (tail) temp_dir = os.path.dirname(objects[0]) # preserve tree structure def_file = os.path.join (temp_dir, '%s.def' % modname) contents = ['EXPORTS'] for sym in (export_symbols or []): contents.append(' %s=_%s' % (sym, sym)) self.execute(write_file, (def_file, contents), "writing %s" % def_file) # Borland C++ has problems with '/' in paths objects2 = map(os.path.normpath, objects) # split objects in .obj and .res files # Borland C++ needs them at different positions in the command line objects = [startup_obj] resources = [] for file in objects2: (base, ext) = os.path.splitext(os.path.normcase(file)) if ext == '.res': resources.append(file) else: objects.append(file) for l in library_dirs: ld_args.append("/L%s" % os.path.normpath(l)) ld_args.append("/L.") # we sometimes use relative paths # list of object files ld_args.extend(objects) # XXX the command-line syntax for Borland C++ is a bit wonky; # certain filenames are jammed together in one big string, but # comma-delimited. This doesn't mesh too well with the # Unix-centric attitude (with a DOS/Windows quoting hack) of # 'spawn()', so constructing the argument list is a bit # awkward. Note that doing the obvious thing and jamming all # the filenames and commas into one argument would be wrong, # because 'spawn()' would quote any filenames with spaces in # them. Arghghh!. Apparently it works fine as coded... # name of dll/exe file ld_args.extend([',',output_filename]) # no map file and start libraries ld_args.append(',,') for lib in libraries: # see if we find it and if there is a bcpp specific lib # (xxx_bcpp.lib) libfile = self.find_library_file(library_dirs, lib, debug) if libfile is None: ld_args.append(lib) # probably a BCPP internal library -- don't warn else: # full name which prefers bcpp_xxx.lib over xxx.lib ld_args.append(libfile) # some default libraries ld_args.append ('import32') ld_args.append ('cw32mt') # def file for export symbols ld_args.extend([',',def_file]) # add resource files ld_args.append(',') ld_args.extend(resources) if extra_preargs: ld_args[:0] = extra_preargs if extra_postargs: ld_args.extend(extra_postargs) self.mkpath (os.path.dirname (output_filename)) try: self.spawn ([self.linker] + ld_args) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise LinkError(msg) else: log.debug("skipping %s (up-to-date)", output_filename) # link () # -- Miscellaneous methods ----------------------------------------- def find_library_file (self, dirs, lib, debug=0): # List of effective library names to try, in order of preference: # xxx_bcpp.lib is better than xxx.lib # and xxx_d.lib is better than xxx.lib if debug is set # # The "_bcpp" suffix is to handle a Python installation for people # with multiple compilers (primarily Distutils hackers, I suspect # ;-). The idea is they'd have one static library for each # compiler they care about, since (almost?) every Windows compiler # seems to have a different format for static libraries. if debug: dlib = (lib + "_d") try_names = (dlib + "_bcpp", lib + "_bcpp", dlib, lib) else: try_names = (lib + "_bcpp", lib) for dir in dirs: for name in try_names: libfile = os.path.join(dir, self.library_filename(name)) if os.path.exists(libfile): return libfile else: # Oops, didn't find it in *any* of 'dirs' return None # overwrite the one from CCompiler to support rc and res-files def object_filenames (self, source_filenames, strip_dir=0, output_dir=''): if output_dir is None: output_dir = '' obj_names = [] for src_name in source_filenames: # use normcase to make sure '.rc' is really '.rc' and not '.RC' (base, ext) = os.path.splitext (os.path.normcase(src_name)) if ext not in (self.src_extensions + ['.rc','.res']): raise UnknownFileError("unknown file type '%s' (from '%s')" % \ (ext, src_name)) if strip_dir: base = os.path.basename (base) if ext == '.res': # these can go unchanged obj_names.append (os.path.join (output_dir, base + ext)) elif ext == '.rc': # these need to be compiled to .res-files obj_names.append (os.path.join (output_dir, base + '.res')) else: obj_names.append (os.path.join (output_dir, base + self.obj_extension)) return obj_names # object_filenames () def preprocess (self, source, output_file=None, macros=None, include_dirs=None, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None): (_, macros, include_dirs) = \ self._fix_compile_args(None, macros, include_dirs) pp_opts = gen_preprocess_options(macros, include_dirs) pp_args = ['cpp32.exe'] + pp_opts if output_file is not None: pp_args.append('-o' + output_file) if extra_preargs: pp_args[:0] = extra_preargs if extra_postargs: pp_args.extend(extra_postargs) pp_args.append(source) # We need to preprocess: either we're being forced to, or the # source file is newer than the target (or the target doesn't # exist). if self.force or output_file is None or newer(source, output_file): if output_file: self.mkpath(os.path.dirname(output_file)) try: self.spawn(pp_args) except DistutilsExecError as msg: print(msg) raise CompileError(msg) # preprocess() PK ! �n��� � distutils/errors.pynu �[��� """distutils.errors Provides exceptions used by the Distutils modules. Note that Distutils modules may raise standard exceptions; in particular, SystemExit is usually raised for errors that are obviously the end-user's fault (eg. bad command-line arguments). This module is safe to use in "from ... import *" mode; it only exports symbols whose names start with "Distutils" and end with "Error".""" class DistutilsError (Exception): """The root of all Distutils evil.""" pass class DistutilsModuleError (DistutilsError): """Unable to load an expected module, or to find an expected class within some module (in particular, command modules and classes).""" pass class DistutilsClassError (DistutilsError): """Some command class (or possibly distribution class, if anyone feels a need to subclass Distribution) is found not to be holding up its end of the bargain, ie. implementing some part of the "command "interface.""" pass class DistutilsGetoptError (DistutilsError): """The option table provided to 'fancy_getopt()' is bogus.""" pass class DistutilsArgError (DistutilsError): """Raised by fancy_getopt in response to getopt.error -- ie. an error in the command line usage.""" pass class DistutilsFileError (DistutilsError): """Any problems in the filesystem: expected file not found, etc. Typically this is for problems that we detect before OSError could be raised.""" pass class DistutilsOptionError (DistutilsError): """Syntactic/semantic errors in command options, such as use of mutually conflicting options, or inconsistent options, badly-spelled values, etc. No distinction is made between option values originating in the setup script, the command line, config files, or what-have-you -- but if we *know* something originated in the setup script, we'll raise DistutilsSetupError instead.""" pass class DistutilsSetupError (DistutilsError): """For errors that can be definitely blamed on the setup script, such as invalid keyword arguments to 'setup()'.""" pass class DistutilsPlatformError (DistutilsError): """We don't know how to do something on the current platform (but we do know how to do it on some platform) -- eg. trying to compile C files on a platform not supported by a CCompiler subclass.""" pass class DistutilsExecError (DistutilsError): """Any problems executing an external program (such as the C compiler, when compiling C files).""" pass class DistutilsInternalError (DistutilsError): """Internal inconsistencies or impossibilities (obviously, this should never be seen if the code is working!).""" pass class DistutilsTemplateError (DistutilsError): """Syntax error in a file list template.""" class DistutilsByteCompileError(DistutilsError): """Byte compile error.""" # Exception classes used by the CCompiler implementation classes class CCompilerError (Exception): """Some compile/link operation failed.""" class PreprocessError (CCompilerError): """Failure to preprocess one or more C/C++ files.""" class CompileError (CCompilerError): """Failure to compile one or more C/C++ source files.""" class LibError (CCompilerError): """Failure to create a static library from one or more C/C++ object files.""" class LinkError (CCompilerError): """Failure to link one or more C/C++ object files into an executable or shared library file.""" class UnknownFileError (CCompilerError): """Attempt to process an unknown file type.""" PK ! Q���(R (R distutils/util.pynu �[��� """distutils.util Miscellaneous utility functions -- anything that doesn't fit into one of the other *util.py modules. """ import os import re import importlib.util import string import sys import distutils from distutils.errors import DistutilsPlatformError from distutils.dep_util import newer from distutils.spawn import spawn from distutils import log from distutils.errors import DistutilsByteCompileError def get_host_platform(): """Return a string that identifies the current platform. This is used mainly to distinguish platform-specific build directories and platform-specific built distributions. Typically includes the OS name and version and the architecture (as supplied by 'os.uname()'), although the exact information included depends on the OS; eg. on Linux, the kernel version isn't particularly important. Examples of returned values: linux-i586 linux-alpha (?) solaris-2.6-sun4u Windows will return one of: win-amd64 (64bit Windows on AMD64 (aka x86_64, Intel64, EM64T, etc) win32 (all others - specifically, sys.platform is returned) For other non-POSIX platforms, currently just returns 'sys.platform'. """ if os.name == 'nt': if 'amd64' in sys.version.lower(): return 'win-amd64' if '(arm)' in sys.version.lower(): return 'win-arm32' if '(arm64)' in sys.version.lower(): return 'win-arm64' return sys.platform # Set for cross builds explicitly if "_PYTHON_HOST_PLATFORM" in os.environ: return os.environ["_PYTHON_HOST_PLATFORM"] if os.name != "posix" or not hasattr(os, 'uname'): # XXX what about the architecture? NT is Intel or Alpha, # Mac OS is M68k or PPC, etc. return sys.platform # Try to distinguish various flavours of Unix (osname, host, release, version, machine) = os.uname() # Convert the OS name to lowercase, remove '/' characters, and translate # spaces (for "Power Macintosh") osname = osname.lower().replace('/', '') machine = machine.replace(' ', '_') machine = machine.replace('/', '-') if osname[:5] == "linux": # At least on Linux/Intel, 'machine' is the processor -- # i386, etc. # XXX what about Alpha, SPARC, etc? return "%s-%s" % (osname, machine) elif osname[:5] == "sunos": if release[0] >= "5": # SunOS 5 == Solaris 2 osname = "solaris" release = "%d.%s" % (int(release[0]) - 3, release[2:]) # We can't use "platform.architecture()[0]" because a # bootstrap problem. We use a dict to get an error # if some suspicious happens. bitness = {2147483647:"32bit", 9223372036854775807:"64bit"} machine += ".%s" % bitness[sys.maxsize] # fall through to standard osname-release-machine representation elif osname[:3] == "aix": from _aix_support import aix_platform return aix_platform() elif osname[:6] == "cygwin": osname = "cygwin" rel_re = re.compile (r'[\d.]+', re.ASCII) m = rel_re.match(release) if m: release = m.group() elif osname[:6] == "darwin": import _osx_support, distutils.sysconfig osname, release, machine = _osx_support.get_platform_osx( distutils.sysconfig.get_config_vars(), osname, release, machine) return "%s-%s-%s" % (osname, release, machine) def get_platform(): if os.name == 'nt': TARGET_TO_PLAT = { 'x86' : 'win32', 'x64' : 'win-amd64', 'arm' : 'win-arm32', } return TARGET_TO_PLAT.get(os.environ.get('VSCMD_ARG_TGT_ARCH')) or get_host_platform() else: return get_host_platform() def convert_path (pathname): """Return 'pathname' as a name that will work on the native filesystem, i.e. split it on '/' and put it back together again using the current directory separator. Needed because filenames in the setup script are always supplied in Unix style, and have to be converted to the local convention before we can actually use them in the filesystem. Raises ValueError on non-Unix-ish systems if 'pathname' either starts or ends with a slash. """ if os.sep == '/': return pathname if not pathname: return pathname if pathname[0] == '/': raise ValueError("path '%s' cannot be absolute" % pathname) if pathname[-1] == '/': raise ValueError("path '%s' cannot end with '/'" % pathname) paths = pathname.split('/') while '.' in paths: paths.remove('.') if not paths: return os.curdir return os.path.join(*paths) # convert_path () def change_root (new_root, pathname): """Return 'pathname' with 'new_root' prepended. If 'pathname' is relative, this is equivalent to "os.path.join(new_root,pathname)". Otherwise, it requires making 'pathname' relative and then joining the two, which is tricky on DOS/Windows and Mac OS. """ if os.name == 'posix': if not os.path.isabs(pathname): return os.path.join(new_root, pathname) else: return os.path.join(new_root, pathname[1:]) elif os.name == 'nt': (drive, path) = os.path.splitdrive(pathname) if path[0] == '\\': path = path[1:] return os.path.join(new_root, path) else: raise DistutilsPlatformError("nothing known about platform '%s'" % os.name) _environ_checked = 0 def check_environ (): """Ensure that 'os.environ' has all the environment variables we guarantee that users can use in config files, command-line options, etc. Currently this includes: HOME - user's home directory (Unix only) PLAT - description of the current platform, including hardware and OS (see 'get_platform()') """ global _environ_checked if _environ_checked: return if os.name == 'posix' and 'HOME' not in os.environ: try: import pwd os.environ['HOME'] = pwd.getpwuid(os.getuid())[5] except (ImportError, KeyError): # bpo-10496: if the current user identifier doesn't exist in the # password database, do nothing pass if 'PLAT' not in os.environ: os.environ['PLAT'] = get_platform() _environ_checked = 1 def subst_vars (s, local_vars): """Perform shell/Perl-style variable substitution on 'string'. Every occurrence of '$' followed by a name is considered a variable, and variable is substituted by the value found in the 'local_vars' dictionary, or in 'os.environ' if it's not in 'local_vars'. 'os.environ' is first checked/augmented to guarantee that it contains certain values: see 'check_environ()'. Raise ValueError for any variables not found in either 'local_vars' or 'os.environ'. """ check_environ() def _subst (match, local_vars=local_vars): var_name = match.group(1) if var_name in local_vars: return str(local_vars[var_name]) else: return os.environ[var_name] try: return re.sub(r'\$([a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z_0-9]*)', _subst, s) except KeyError as var: raise ValueError("invalid variable '$%s'" % var) # subst_vars () def grok_environment_error (exc, prefix="error: "): # Function kept for backward compatibility. # Used to try clever things with EnvironmentErrors, # but nowadays str(exception) produces good messages. return prefix + str(exc) # Needed by 'split_quoted()' _wordchars_re = _squote_re = _dquote_re = None def _init_regex(): global _wordchars_re, _squote_re, _dquote_re _wordchars_re = re.compile(r'[^\\\'\"%s ]*' % string.whitespace) _squote_re = re.compile(r"'(?:[^'\\]|\\.)*'") _dquote_re = re.compile(r'"(?:[^"\\]|\\.)*"') def split_quoted (s): """Split a string up according to Unix shell-like rules for quotes and backslashes. In short: words are delimited by spaces, as long as those spaces are not escaped by a backslash, or inside a quoted string. Single and double quotes are equivalent, and the quote characters can be backslash-escaped. The backslash is stripped from any two-character escape sequence, leaving only the escaped character. The quote characters are stripped from any quoted string. Returns a list of words. """ # This is a nice algorithm for splitting up a single string, since it # doesn't require character-by-character examination. It was a little # bit of a brain-bender to get it working right, though... if _wordchars_re is None: _init_regex() s = s.strip() words = [] pos = 0 while s: m = _wordchars_re.match(s, pos) end = m.end() if end == len(s): words.append(s[:end]) break if s[end] in string.whitespace: # unescaped, unquoted whitespace: now words.append(s[:end]) # we definitely have a word delimiter s = s[end:].lstrip() pos = 0 elif s[end] == '\\': # preserve whatever is being escaped; # will become part of the current word s = s[:end] + s[end+1:] pos = end+1 else: if s[end] == "'": # slurp singly-quoted string m = _squote_re.match(s, end) elif s[end] == '"': # slurp doubly-quoted string m = _dquote_re.match(s, end) else: raise RuntimeError("this can't happen (bad char '%c')" % s[end]) if m is None: raise ValueError("bad string (mismatched %s quotes?)" % s[end]) (beg, end) = m.span() s = s[:beg] + s[beg+1:end-1] + s[end:] pos = m.end() - 2 if pos >= len(s): words.append(s) break return words # split_quoted () def execute (func, args, msg=None, verbose=0, dry_run=0): """Perform some action that affects the outside world (eg. by writing to the filesystem). Such actions are special because they are disabled by the 'dry_run' flag. This method takes care of all that bureaucracy for you; all you have to do is supply the function to call and an argument tuple for it (to embody the "external action" being performed), and an optional message to print. """ if msg is None: msg = "%s%r" % (func.__name__, args) if msg[-2:] == ',)': # correct for singleton tuple msg = msg[0:-2] + ')' log.info(msg) if not dry_run: func(*args) def strtobool (val): """Convert a string representation of truth to true (1) or false (0). True values are 'y', 'yes', 't', 'true', 'on', and '1'; false values are 'n', 'no', 'f', 'false', 'off', and '0'. Raises ValueError if 'val' is anything else. """ val = val.lower() if val in ('y', 'yes', 't', 'true', 'on', '1'): return 1 elif val in ('n', 'no', 'f', 'false', 'off', '0'): return 0 else: raise ValueError("invalid truth value %r" % (val,)) def byte_compile (py_files, optimize=0, force=0, prefix=None, base_dir=None, verbose=1, dry_run=0, direct=None): """Byte-compile a collection of Python source files to .pyc files in a __pycache__ subdirectory. 'py_files' is a list of files to compile; any files that don't end in ".py" are silently skipped. 'optimize' must be one of the following: 0 - don't optimize 1 - normal optimization (like "python -O") 2 - extra optimization (like "python -OO") If 'force' is true, all files are recompiled regardless of timestamps. The source filename encoded in each bytecode file defaults to the filenames listed in 'py_files'; you can modify these with 'prefix' and 'basedir'. 'prefix' is a string that will be stripped off of each source filename, and 'base_dir' is a directory name that will be prepended (after 'prefix' is stripped). You can supply either or both (or neither) of 'prefix' and 'base_dir', as you wish. If 'dry_run' is true, doesn't actually do anything that would affect the filesystem. Byte-compilation is either done directly in this interpreter process with the standard py_compile module, or indirectly by writing a temporary script and executing it. Normally, you should let 'byte_compile()' figure out to use direct compilation or not (see the source for details). The 'direct' flag is used by the script generated in indirect mode; unless you know what you're doing, leave it set to None. """ # Late import to fix a bootstrap issue: _posixsubprocess is built by # setup.py, but setup.py uses distutils. import subprocess # nothing is done if sys.dont_write_bytecode is True if sys.dont_write_bytecode: raise DistutilsByteCompileError('byte-compiling is disabled.') # First, if the caller didn't force us into direct or indirect mode, # figure out which mode we should be in. We take a conservative # approach: choose direct mode *only* if the current interpreter is # in debug mode and optimize is 0. If we're not in debug mode (-O # or -OO), we don't know which level of optimization this # interpreter is running with, so we can't do direct # byte-compilation and be certain that it's the right thing. Thus, # always compile indirectly if the current interpreter is in either # optimize mode, or if either optimization level was requested by # the caller. if direct is None: direct = (__debug__ and optimize == 0) # "Indirect" byte-compilation: write a temporary script and then # run it with the appropriate flags. if not direct: try: from tempfile import mkstemp (script_fd, script_name) = mkstemp(".py") except ImportError: from tempfile import mktemp (script_fd, script_name) = None, mktemp(".py") log.info("writing byte-compilation script '%s'", script_name) if not dry_run: if script_fd is not None: script = os.fdopen(script_fd, "w") else: script = open(script_name, "w") with script: script.write("""\ from distutils.util import byte_compile files = [ """) # XXX would be nice to write absolute filenames, just for # safety's sake (script should be more robust in the face of # chdir'ing before running it). But this requires abspath'ing # 'prefix' as well, and that breaks the hack in build_lib's # 'byte_compile()' method that carefully tacks on a trailing # slash (os.sep really) to make sure the prefix here is "just # right". This whole prefix business is rather delicate -- the # problem is that it's really a directory, but I'm treating it # as a dumb string, so trailing slashes and so forth matter. #py_files = map(os.path.abspath, py_files) #if prefix: # prefix = os.path.abspath(prefix) script.write(",\n".join(map(repr, py_files)) + "]\n") script.write(""" byte_compile(files, optimize=%r, force=%r, prefix=%r, base_dir=%r, verbose=%r, dry_run=0, direct=1) """ % (optimize, force, prefix, base_dir, verbose)) msg = distutils._DEPRECATION_MESSAGE cmd = [sys.executable] cmd.extend(subprocess._optim_args_from_interpreter_flags()) cmd.append(f'-Wignore:{msg}:DeprecationWarning') cmd.append(script_name) spawn(cmd, dry_run=dry_run) execute(os.remove, (script_name,), "removing %s" % script_name, dry_run=dry_run) # "Direct" byte-compilation: use the py_compile module to compile # right here, right now. Note that the script generated in indirect # mode simply calls 'byte_compile()' in direct mode, a weird sort of # cross-process recursion. Hey, it works! else: from py_compile import compile for file in py_files: if file[-3:] != ".py": # This lets us be lazy and not filter filenames in # the "install_lib" command. continue # Terminology from the py_compile module: # cfile - byte-compiled file # dfile - purported source filename (same as 'file' by default) if optimize >= 0: opt = '' if optimize == 0 else optimize cfile = importlib.util.cache_from_source( file, optimization=opt) else: cfile = importlib.util.cache_from_source(file) dfile = file if prefix: if file[:len(prefix)] != prefix: raise ValueError("invalid prefix: filename %r doesn't start with %r" % (file, prefix)) dfile = dfile[len(prefix):] if base_dir: dfile = os.path.join(base_dir, dfile) cfile_base = os.path.basename(cfile) if direct: if force or newer(file, cfile): log.info("byte-compiling %s to %s", file, cfile_base) if not dry_run: compile(file, cfile, dfile) else: log.debug("skipping byte-compilation of %s to %s", file, cfile_base) # byte_compile () def rfc822_escape (header): """Return a version of the string escaped for inclusion in an RFC-822 header, by ensuring there are 8 spaces space after each newline. """ lines = header.split('\n') sep = '\n' + 8 * ' ' return sep.join(lines) # 2to3 support def run_2to3(files, fixer_names=None, options=None, explicit=None): """Invoke 2to3 on a list of Python files. The files should all come from the build area, as the modification is done in-place. To reduce the build time, only files modified since the last invocation of this function should be passed in the files argument.""" if not files: return # Make this class local, to delay import of 2to3 from lib2to3.refactor import RefactoringTool, get_fixers_from_package class DistutilsRefactoringTool(RefactoringTool): def log_error(self, msg, *args, **kw): log.error(msg, *args) def log_message(self, msg, *args): log.info(msg, *args) def log_debug(self, msg, *args): log.debug(msg, *args) if fixer_names is None: fixer_names = get_fixers_from_package('lib2to3.fixes') r = DistutilsRefactoringTool(fixer_names, options=options) r.refactor(files, write=True) def copydir_run_2to3(src, dest, template=None, fixer_names=None, options=None, explicit=None): """Recursively copy a directory, only copying new and changed files, running run_2to3 over all newly copied Python modules afterward. If you give a template string, it's parsed like a MANIFEST.in. """ from distutils.dir_util import mkpath from distutils.file_util import copy_file from distutils.filelist import FileList filelist = FileList() curdir = os.getcwd() os.chdir(src) try: filelist.findall() finally: os.chdir(curdir) filelist.files[:] = filelist.allfiles if template: for line in template.splitlines(): line = line.strip() if not line: continue filelist.process_template_line(line) copied = [] for filename in filelist.files: outname = os.path.join(dest, filename) mkpath(os.path.dirname(outname)) res = copy_file(os.path.join(src, filename), outname, update=1) if res[1]: copied.append(outname) run_2to3([fn for fn in copied if fn.lower().endswith('.py')], fixer_names=fixer_names, options=options, explicit=explicit) return copied class Mixin2to3: '''Mixin class for commands that run 2to3. To configure 2to3, setup scripts may either change the class variables, or inherit from individual commands to override how 2to3 is invoked.''' # provide list of fixers to run; # defaults to all from lib2to3.fixers fixer_names = None # options dictionary options = None # list of fixers to invoke even though they are marked as explicit explicit = None def run_2to3(self, files): return run_2to3(files, self.fixer_names, self.options, self.explicit) PK ! ���۟F �F distutils/cmd.pynu �[��� """distutils.cmd Provides the Command class, the base class for the command classes in the distutils.command package. """ import sys, os, re from distutils.errors import DistutilsOptionError from distutils import util, dir_util, file_util, archive_util, dep_util from distutils import log class Command: """Abstract base class for defining command classes, the "worker bees" of the Distutils. A useful analogy for command classes is to think of them as subroutines with local variables called "options". The options are "declared" in 'initialize_options()' and "defined" (given their final values, aka "finalized") in 'finalize_options()', both of which must be defined by every command class. The distinction between the two is necessary because option values might come from the outside world (command line, config file, ...), and any options dependent on other options must be computed *after* these outside influences have been processed -- hence 'finalize_options()'. The "body" of the subroutine, where it does all its work based on the values of its options, is the 'run()' method, which must also be implemented by every command class. """ # 'sub_commands' formalizes the notion of a "family" of commands, # eg. "install" as the parent with sub-commands "install_lib", # "install_headers", etc. The parent of a family of commands # defines 'sub_commands' as a class attribute; it's a list of # (command_name : string, predicate : unbound_method | string | None) # tuples, where 'predicate' is a method of the parent command that # determines whether the corresponding command is applicable in the # current situation. (Eg. we "install_headers" is only applicable if # we have any C header files to install.) If 'predicate' is None, # that command is always applicable. # # 'sub_commands' is usually defined at the *end* of a class, because # predicates can be unbound methods, so they must already have been # defined. The canonical example is the "install" command. sub_commands = [] # -- Creation/initialization methods ------------------------------- def __init__(self, dist): """Create and initialize a new Command object. Most importantly, invokes the 'initialize_options()' method, which is the real initializer and depends on the actual command being instantiated. """ # late import because of mutual dependence between these classes from distutils.dist import Distribution if not isinstance(dist, Distribution): raise TypeError("dist must be a Distribution instance") if self.__class__ is Command: raise RuntimeError("Command is an abstract class") self.distribution = dist self.initialize_options() # Per-command versions of the global flags, so that the user can # customize Distutils' behaviour command-by-command and let some # commands fall back on the Distribution's behaviour. None means # "not defined, check self.distribution's copy", while 0 or 1 mean # false and true (duh). Note that this means figuring out the real # value of each flag is a touch complicated -- hence "self._dry_run" # will be handled by __getattr__, below. # XXX This needs to be fixed. self._dry_run = None # verbose is largely ignored, but needs to be set for # backwards compatibility (I think)? self.verbose = dist.verbose # Some commands define a 'self.force' option to ignore file # timestamps, but methods defined *here* assume that # 'self.force' exists for all commands. So define it here # just to be safe. self.force = None # The 'help' flag is just used for command-line parsing, so # none of that complicated bureaucracy is needed. self.help = 0 # 'finalized' records whether or not 'finalize_options()' has been # called. 'finalize_options()' itself should not pay attention to # this flag: it is the business of 'ensure_finalized()', which # always calls 'finalize_options()', to respect/update it. self.finalized = 0 # XXX A more explicit way to customize dry_run would be better. def __getattr__(self, attr): if attr == 'dry_run': myval = getattr(self, "_" + attr) if myval is None: return getattr(self.distribution, attr) else: return myval else: raise AttributeError(attr) def ensure_finalized(self): if not self.finalized: self.finalize_options() self.finalized = 1 # Subclasses must define: # initialize_options() # provide default values for all options; may be customized by # setup script, by options from config file(s), or by command-line # options # finalize_options() # decide on the final values for all options; this is called # after all possible intervention from the outside world # (command-line, option file, etc.) has been processed # run() # run the command: do whatever it is we're here to do, # controlled by the command's various option values def initialize_options(self): """Set default values for all the options that this command supports. Note that these defaults may be overridden by other commands, by the setup script, by config files, or by the command-line. Thus, this is not the place to code dependencies between options; generally, 'initialize_options()' implementations are just a bunch of "self.foo = None" assignments. This method must be implemented by all command classes. """ raise RuntimeError("abstract method -- subclass %s must override" % self.__class__) def finalize_options(self): """Set final values for all the options that this command supports. This is always called as late as possible, ie. after any option assignments from the command-line or from other commands have been done. Thus, this is the place to code option dependencies: if 'foo' depends on 'bar', then it is safe to set 'foo' from 'bar' as long as 'foo' still has the same value it was assigned in 'initialize_options()'. This method must be implemented by all command classes. """ raise RuntimeError("abstract method -- subclass %s must override" % self.__class__) def dump_options(self, header=None, indent=""): from distutils.fancy_getopt import longopt_xlate if header is None: header = "command options for '%s':" % self.get_command_name() self.announce(indent + header, level=log.INFO) indent = indent + " " for (option, _, _) in self.user_options: option = option.translate(longopt_xlate) if option[-1] == "=": option = option[:-1] value = getattr(self, option) self.announce(indent + "%s = %s" % (option, value), level=log.INFO) def run(self): """A command's raison d'etre: carry out the action it exists to perform, controlled by the options initialized in 'initialize_options()', customized by other commands, the setup script, the command-line, and config files, and finalized in 'finalize_options()'. All terminal output and filesystem interaction should be done by 'run()'. This method must be implemented by all command classes. """ raise RuntimeError("abstract method -- subclass %s must override" % self.__class__) def announce(self, msg, level=1): """If the current verbosity level is of greater than or equal to 'level' print 'msg' to stdout. """ log.log(level, msg) def debug_print(self, msg): """Print 'msg' to stdout if the global DEBUG (taken from the DISTUTILS_DEBUG environment variable) flag is true. """ from distutils.debug import DEBUG if DEBUG: print(msg) sys.stdout.flush() # -- Option validation methods ------------------------------------- # (these are very handy in writing the 'finalize_options()' method) # # NB. the general philosophy here is to ensure that a particular option # value meets certain type and value constraints. If not, we try to # force it into conformance (eg. if we expect a list but have a string, # split the string on comma and/or whitespace). If we can't force the # option into conformance, raise DistutilsOptionError. Thus, command # classes need do nothing more than (eg.) # self.ensure_string_list('foo') # and they can be guaranteed that thereafter, self.foo will be # a list of strings. def _ensure_stringlike(self, option, what, default=None): val = getattr(self, option) if val is None: setattr(self, option, default) return default elif not isinstance(val, str): raise DistutilsOptionError("'%s' must be a %s (got `%s`)" % (option, what, val)) return val def ensure_string(self, option, default=None): """Ensure that 'option' is a string; if not defined, set it to 'default'. """ self._ensure_stringlike(option, "string", default) def ensure_string_list(self, option): r"""Ensure that 'option' is a list of strings. If 'option' is currently a string, we split it either on /,\s*/ or /\s+/, so "foo bar baz", "foo,bar,baz", and "foo, bar baz" all become ["foo", "bar", "baz"]. """ val = getattr(self, option) if val is None: return elif isinstance(val, str): setattr(self, option, re.split(r',\s*|\s+', val)) else: if isinstance(val, list): ok = all(isinstance(v, str) for v in val) else: ok = False if not ok: raise DistutilsOptionError( "'%s' must be a list of strings (got %r)" % (option, val)) def _ensure_tested_string(self, option, tester, what, error_fmt, default=None): val = self._ensure_stringlike(option, what, default) if val is not None and not tester(val): raise DistutilsOptionError(("error in '%s' option: " + error_fmt) % (option, val)) def ensure_filename(self, option): """Ensure that 'option' is the name of an existing file.""" self._ensure_tested_string(option, os.path.isfile, "filename", "'%s' does not exist or is not a file") def ensure_dirname(self, option): self._ensure_tested_string(option, os.path.isdir, "directory name", "'%s' does not exist or is not a directory") # -- Convenience methods for commands ------------------------------ def get_command_name(self): if hasattr(self, 'command_name'): return self.command_name else: return self.__class__.__name__ def set_undefined_options(self, src_cmd, *option_pairs): """Set the values of any "undefined" options from corresponding option values in some other command object. "Undefined" here means "is None", which is the convention used to indicate that an option has not been changed between 'initialize_options()' and 'finalize_options()'. Usually called from 'finalize_options()' for options that depend on some other command rather than another option of the same command. 'src_cmd' is the other command from which option values will be taken (a command object will be created for it if necessary); the remaining arguments are '(src_option,dst_option)' tuples which mean "take the value of 'src_option' in the 'src_cmd' command object, and copy it to 'dst_option' in the current command object". """ # Option_pairs: list of (src_option, dst_option) tuples src_cmd_obj = self.distribution.get_command_obj(src_cmd) src_cmd_obj.ensure_finalized() for (src_option, dst_option) in option_pairs: if getattr(self, dst_option) is None: setattr(self, dst_option, getattr(src_cmd_obj, src_option)) def get_finalized_command(self, command, create=1): """Wrapper around Distribution's 'get_command_obj()' method: find (create if necessary and 'create' is true) the command object for 'command', call its 'ensure_finalized()' method, and return the finalized command object. """ cmd_obj = self.distribution.get_command_obj(command, create) cmd_obj.ensure_finalized() return cmd_obj # XXX rename to 'get_reinitialized_command()'? (should do the # same in dist.py, if so) def reinitialize_command(self, command, reinit_subcommands=0): return self.distribution.reinitialize_command(command, reinit_subcommands) def run_command(self, command): """Run some other command: uses the 'run_command()' method of Distribution, which creates and finalizes the command object if necessary and then invokes its 'run()' method. """ self.distribution.run_command(command) def get_sub_commands(self): """Determine the sub-commands that are relevant in the current distribution (ie., that need to be run). This is based on the 'sub_commands' class attribute: each tuple in that list may include a method that we call to determine if the subcommand needs to be run for the current distribution. Return a list of command names. """ commands = [] for (cmd_name, method) in self.sub_commands: if method is None or method(self): commands.append(cmd_name) return commands # -- External world manipulation ----------------------------------- def warn(self, msg): log.warn("warning: %s: %s\n", self.get_command_name(), msg) def execute(self, func, args, msg=None, level=1): util.execute(func, args, msg, dry_run=self.dry_run) def mkpath(self, name, mode=0o777): dir_util.mkpath(name, mode, dry_run=self.dry_run) def copy_file(self, infile, outfile, preserve_mode=1, preserve_times=1, link=None, level=1): """Copy a file respecting verbose, dry-run and force flags. (The former two default to whatever is in the Distribution object, and the latter defaults to false for commands that don't define it.)""" return file_util.copy_file(infile, outfile, preserve_mode, preserve_times, not self.force, link, dry_run=self.dry_run) def copy_tree(self, infile, outfile, preserve_mode=1, preserve_times=1, preserve_symlinks=0, level=1): """Copy an entire directory tree respecting verbose, dry-run, and force flags. """ return dir_util.copy_tree(infile, outfile, preserve_mode, preserve_times, preserve_symlinks, not self.force, dry_run=self.dry_run) def move_file (self, src, dst, level=1): """Move a file respecting dry-run flag.""" return file_util.move_file(src, dst, dry_run=self.dry_run) def spawn(self, cmd, search_path=1, level=1): """Spawn an external command respecting dry-run flag.""" from distutils.spawn import spawn spawn(cmd, search_path, dry_run=self.dry_run) def make_archive(self, base_name, format, root_dir=None, base_dir=None, owner=None, group=None): return archive_util.make_archive(base_name, format, root_dir, base_dir, dry_run=self.dry_run, owner=owner, group=group) def make_file(self, infiles, outfile, func, args, exec_msg=None, skip_msg=None, level=1): """Special case of 'execute()' for operations that process one or more input files and generate one output file. Works just like 'execute()', except the operation is skipped and a different message printed if 'outfile' already exists and is newer than all files listed in 'infiles'. If the command defined 'self.force', and it is true, then the command is unconditionally run -- does no timestamp checks. """ if skip_msg is None: skip_msg = "skipping %s (inputs unchanged)" % outfile # Allow 'infiles' to be a single string if isinstance(infiles, str): infiles = (infiles,) elif not isinstance(infiles, (list, tuple)): raise TypeError( "'infiles' must be a string, or a list or tuple of strings") if exec_msg is None: exec_msg = "generating %s from %s" % (outfile, ', '.join(infiles)) # If 'outfile' must be regenerated (either because it doesn't # exist, is out-of-date, or the 'force' flag is true) then # perform the action that presumably regenerates it if self.force or dep_util.newer_group(infiles, outfile): self.execute(func, args, exec_msg, level) # Otherwise, print the "skip" message else: log.debug(skip_msg) PK ! ��� � distutils/file_util.pynu �[��� """distutils.file_util Utility functions for operating on single files. """ import os from distutils.errors import DistutilsFileError from distutils import log # for generating verbose output in 'copy_file()' _copy_action = { None: 'copying', 'hard': 'hard linking', 'sym': 'symbolically linking' } def _copy_file_contents(src, dst, buffer_size=16*1024): """Copy the file 'src' to 'dst'; both must be filenames. Any error opening either file, reading from 'src', or writing to 'dst', raises DistutilsFileError. Data is read/written in chunks of 'buffer_size' bytes (default 16k). No attempt is made to handle anything apart from regular files. """ # Stolen from shutil module in the standard library, but with # custom error-handling added. fsrc = None fdst = None try: try: fsrc = open(src, 'rb') except OSError as e: raise DistutilsFileError("could not open '%s': %s" % (src, e.strerror)) if os.path.exists(dst): try: os.unlink(dst) except OSError as e: raise DistutilsFileError( "could not delete '%s': %s" % (dst, e.strerror)) try: fdst = open(dst, 'wb') except OSError as e: raise DistutilsFileError( "could not create '%s': %s" % (dst, e.strerror)) while True: try: buf = fsrc.read(buffer_size) except OSError as e: raise DistutilsFileError( "could not read from '%s': %s" % (src, e.strerror)) if not buf: break try: fdst.write(buf) except OSError as e: raise DistutilsFileError( "could not write to '%s': %s" % (dst, e.strerror)) finally: if fdst: fdst.close() if fsrc: fsrc.close() def copy_file(src, dst, preserve_mode=1, preserve_times=1, update=0, link=None, verbose=1, dry_run=0): """Copy a file 'src' to 'dst'. If 'dst' is a directory, then 'src' is copied there with the same name; otherwise, it must be a filename. (If the file exists, it will be ruthlessly clobbered.) If 'preserve_mode' is true (the default), the file's mode (type and permission bits, or whatever is analogous on the current platform) is copied. If 'preserve_times' is true (the default), the last-modified and last-access times are copied as well. If 'update' is true, 'src' will only be copied if 'dst' does not exist, or if 'dst' does exist but is older than 'src'. 'link' allows you to make hard links (os.link) or symbolic links (os.symlink) instead of copying: set it to "hard" or "sym"; if it is None (the default), files are copied. Don't set 'link' on systems that don't support it: 'copy_file()' doesn't check if hard or symbolic linking is available. If hardlink fails, falls back to _copy_file_contents(). Under Mac OS, uses the native file copy function in macostools; on other systems, uses '_copy_file_contents()' to copy file contents. Return a tuple (dest_name, copied): 'dest_name' is the actual name of the output file, and 'copied' is true if the file was copied (or would have been copied, if 'dry_run' true). """ # XXX if the destination file already exists, we clobber it if # copying, but blow up if linking. Hmmm. And I don't know what # macostools.copyfile() does. Should definitely be consistent, and # should probably blow up if destination exists and we would be # changing it (ie. it's not already a hard/soft link to src OR # (not update) and (src newer than dst). from distutils.dep_util import newer from stat import ST_ATIME, ST_MTIME, ST_MODE, S_IMODE if not os.path.isfile(src): raise DistutilsFileError( "can't copy '%s': doesn't exist or not a regular file" % src) if os.path.isdir(dst): dir = dst dst = os.path.join(dst, os.path.basename(src)) else: dir = os.path.dirname(dst) if update and not newer(src, dst): if verbose >= 1: log.debug("not copying %s (output up-to-date)", src) return (dst, 0) try: action = _copy_action[link] except KeyError: raise ValueError("invalid value '%s' for 'link' argument" % link) if verbose >= 1: if os.path.basename(dst) == os.path.basename(src): log.info("%s %s -> %s", action, src, dir) else: log.info("%s %s -> %s", action, src, dst) if dry_run: return (dst, 1) # If linking (hard or symbolic), use the appropriate system call # (Unix only, of course, but that's the caller's responsibility) elif link == 'hard': if not (os.path.exists(dst) and os.path.samefile(src, dst)): try: os.link(src, dst) return (dst, 1) except OSError: # If hard linking fails, fall back on copying file # (some special filesystems don't support hard linking # even under Unix, see issue #8876). pass elif link == 'sym': if not (os.path.exists(dst) and os.path.samefile(src, dst)): os.symlink(src, dst) return (dst, 1) # Otherwise (non-Mac, not linking), copy the file contents and # (optionally) copy the times and mode. _copy_file_contents(src, dst) if preserve_mode or preserve_times: st = os.stat(src) # According to David Ascher <da@ski.org>, utime() should be done # before chmod() (at least under NT). if preserve_times: os.utime(dst, (st[ST_ATIME], st[ST_MTIME])) if preserve_mode: os.chmod(dst, S_IMODE(st[ST_MODE])) return (dst, 1) # XXX I suspect this is Unix-specific -- need porting help! def move_file (src, dst, verbose=1, dry_run=0): """Move a file 'src' to 'dst'. If 'dst' is a directory, the file will be moved into it with the same name; otherwise, 'src' is just renamed to 'dst'. Return the new full name of the file. Handles cross-device moves on Unix using 'copy_file()'. What about other systems??? """ from os.path import exists, isfile, isdir, basename, dirname import errno if verbose >= 1: log.info("moving %s -> %s", src, dst) if dry_run: return dst if not isfile(src): raise DistutilsFileError("can't move '%s': not a regular file" % src) if isdir(dst): dst = os.path.join(dst, basename(src)) elif exists(dst): raise DistutilsFileError( "can't move '%s': destination '%s' already exists" % (src, dst)) if not isdir(dirname(dst)): raise DistutilsFileError( "can't move '%s': destination '%s' not a valid path" % (src, dst)) copy_it = False try: os.rename(src, dst) except OSError as e: (num, msg) = e.args if num == errno.EXDEV: copy_it = True else: raise DistutilsFileError( "couldn't move '%s' to '%s': %s" % (src, dst, msg)) if copy_it: copy_file(src, dst, verbose=verbose) try: os.unlink(src) except OSError as e: (num, msg) = e.args try: os.unlink(dst) except OSError: pass raise DistutilsFileError( "couldn't move '%s' to '%s' by copy/delete: " "delete '%s' failed: %s" % (src, dst, src, msg)) return dst def write_file (filename, contents): """Create a file with the specified name and write 'contents' (a sequence of strings without line terminators) to it. """ f = open(filename, "w") try: for line in contents: f.write(line + "\n") finally: f.close() PK ! �h���[ �[ distutils/msvccompiler.pynu �[��� """distutils.msvccompiler Contains MSVCCompiler, an implementation of the abstract CCompiler class for the Microsoft Visual Studio. """ # Written by Perry Stoll # hacked by Robin Becker and Thomas Heller to do a better job of # finding DevStudio (through the registry) import sys, os from distutils.errors import \ DistutilsExecError, DistutilsPlatformError, \ CompileError, LibError, LinkError from distutils.ccompiler import \ CCompiler, gen_lib_options from distutils import log _can_read_reg = False try: import winreg _can_read_reg = True hkey_mod = winreg RegOpenKeyEx = winreg.OpenKeyEx RegEnumKey = winreg.EnumKey RegEnumValue = winreg.EnumValue RegError = winreg.error except ImportError: try: import win32api import win32con _can_read_reg = True hkey_mod = win32con RegOpenKeyEx = win32api.RegOpenKeyEx RegEnumKey = win32api.RegEnumKey RegEnumValue = win32api.RegEnumValue RegError = win32api.error except ImportError: log.info("Warning: Can't read registry to find the " "necessary compiler setting\n" "Make sure that Python modules winreg, " "win32api or win32con are installed.") if _can_read_reg: HKEYS = (hkey_mod.HKEY_USERS, hkey_mod.HKEY_CURRENT_USER, hkey_mod.HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, hkey_mod.HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT) def read_keys(base, key): """Return list of registry keys.""" try: handle = RegOpenKeyEx(base, key) except RegError: return None L = [] i = 0 while True: try: k = RegEnumKey(handle, i) except RegError: break L.append(k) i += 1 return L def read_values(base, key): """Return dict of registry keys and values. All names are converted to lowercase. """ try: handle = RegOpenKeyEx(base, key) except RegError: return None d = {} i = 0 while True: try: name, value, type = RegEnumValue(handle, i) except RegError: break name = name.lower() d[convert_mbcs(name)] = convert_mbcs(value) i += 1 return d def convert_mbcs(s): dec = getattr(s, "decode", None) if dec is not None: try: s = dec("mbcs") except UnicodeError: pass return s class MacroExpander: def __init__(self, version): self.macros = {} self.load_macros(version) def set_macro(self, macro, path, key): for base in HKEYS: d = read_values(base, path) if d: self.macros["$(%s)" % macro] = d[key] break def load_macros(self, version): vsbase = r"Software\Microsoft\VisualStudio\%0.1f" % version self.set_macro("VCInstallDir", vsbase + r"\Setup\VC", "productdir") self.set_macro("VSInstallDir", vsbase + r"\Setup\VS", "productdir") net = r"Software\Microsoft\.NETFramework" self.set_macro("FrameworkDir", net, "installroot") try: if version > 7.0: self.set_macro("FrameworkSDKDir", net, "sdkinstallrootv1.1") else: self.set_macro("FrameworkSDKDir", net, "sdkinstallroot") except KeyError as exc: # raise DistutilsPlatformError( """Python was built with Visual Studio 2003; extensions must be built with a compiler than can generate compatible binaries. Visual Studio 2003 was not found on this system. If you have Cygwin installed, you can try compiling with MingW32, by passing "-c mingw32" to setup.py.""") p = r"Software\Microsoft\NET Framework Setup\Product" for base in HKEYS: try: h = RegOpenKeyEx(base, p) except RegError: continue key = RegEnumKey(h, 0) d = read_values(base, r"%s\%s" % (p, key)) self.macros["$(FrameworkVersion)"] = d["version"] def sub(self, s): for k, v in self.macros.items(): s = s.replace(k, v) return s def get_build_version(): """Return the version of MSVC that was used to build Python. For Python 2.3 and up, the version number is included in sys.version. For earlier versions, assume the compiler is MSVC 6. """ prefix = "MSC v." i = sys.version.find(prefix) if i == -1: return 6 i = i + len(prefix) s, rest = sys.version[i:].split(" ", 1) majorVersion = int(s[:-2]) - 6 if majorVersion >= 13: # v13 was skipped and should be v14 majorVersion += 1 minorVersion = int(s[2:3]) / 10.0 # I don't think paths are affected by minor version in version 6 if majorVersion == 6: minorVersion = 0 if majorVersion >= 6: return majorVersion + minorVersion # else we don't know what version of the compiler this is return None def get_build_architecture(): """Return the processor architecture. Possible results are "Intel" or "AMD64". """ prefix = " bit (" i = sys.version.find(prefix) if i == -1: return "Intel" j = sys.version.find(")", i) return sys.version[i+len(prefix):j] def normalize_and_reduce_paths(paths): """Return a list of normalized paths with duplicates removed. The current order of paths is maintained. """ # Paths are normalized so things like: /a and /a/ aren't both preserved. reduced_paths = [] for p in paths: np = os.path.normpath(p) # XXX(nnorwitz): O(n**2), if reduced_paths gets long perhaps use a set. if np not in reduced_paths: reduced_paths.append(np) return reduced_paths class MSVCCompiler(CCompiler) : """Concrete class that implements an interface to Microsoft Visual C++, as defined by the CCompiler abstract class.""" compiler_type = 'msvc' # Just set this so CCompiler's constructor doesn't barf. We currently # don't use the 'set_executables()' bureaucracy provided by CCompiler, # as it really isn't necessary for this sort of single-compiler class. # Would be nice to have a consistent interface with UnixCCompiler, # though, so it's worth thinking about. executables = {} # Private class data (need to distinguish C from C++ source for compiler) _c_extensions = ['.c'] _cpp_extensions = ['.cc', '.cpp', '.cxx'] _rc_extensions = ['.rc'] _mc_extensions = ['.mc'] # Needed for the filename generation methods provided by the # base class, CCompiler. src_extensions = (_c_extensions + _cpp_extensions + _rc_extensions + _mc_extensions) res_extension = '.res' obj_extension = '.obj' static_lib_extension = '.lib' shared_lib_extension = '.dll' static_lib_format = shared_lib_format = '%s%s' exe_extension = '.exe' def __init__(self, verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0): CCompiler.__init__ (self, verbose, dry_run, force) self.__version = get_build_version() self.__arch = get_build_architecture() if self.__arch == "Intel": # x86 if self.__version >= 7: self.__root = r"Software\Microsoft\VisualStudio" self.__macros = MacroExpander(self.__version) else: self.__root = r"Software\Microsoft\Devstudio" self.__product = "Visual Studio version %s" % self.__version else: # Win64. Assume this was built with the platform SDK self.__product = "Microsoft SDK compiler %s" % (self.__version + 6) self.initialized = False def initialize(self): self.__paths = [] if "DISTUTILS_USE_SDK" in os.environ and "MSSdk" in os.environ and self.find_exe("cl.exe"): # Assume that the SDK set up everything alright; don't try to be # smarter self.cc = "cl.exe" self.linker = "link.exe" self.lib = "lib.exe" self.rc = "rc.exe" self.mc = "mc.exe" else: self.__paths = self.get_msvc_paths("path") if len(self.__paths) == 0: raise DistutilsPlatformError("Python was built with %s, " "and extensions need to be built with the same " "version of the compiler, but it isn't installed." % self.__product) self.cc = self.find_exe("cl.exe") self.linker = self.find_exe("link.exe") self.lib = self.find_exe("lib.exe") self.rc = self.find_exe("rc.exe") # resource compiler self.mc = self.find_exe("mc.exe") # message compiler self.set_path_env_var('lib') self.set_path_env_var('include') # extend the MSVC path with the current path try: for p in os.environ['path'].split(';'): self.__paths.append(p) except KeyError: pass self.__paths = normalize_and_reduce_paths(self.__paths) os.environ['path'] = ";".join(self.__paths) self.preprocess_options = None if self.__arch == "Intel": self.compile_options = [ '/nologo', '/Ox', '/MD', '/W3', '/GX' , '/DNDEBUG'] self.compile_options_debug = ['/nologo', '/Od', '/MDd', '/W3', '/GX', '/Z7', '/D_DEBUG'] else: # Win64 self.compile_options = [ '/nologo', '/Ox', '/MD', '/W3', '/GS-' , '/DNDEBUG'] self.compile_options_debug = ['/nologo', '/Od', '/MDd', '/W3', '/GS-', '/Z7', '/D_DEBUG'] self.ldflags_shared = ['/DLL', '/nologo', '/INCREMENTAL:NO'] if self.__version >= 7: self.ldflags_shared_debug = [ '/DLL', '/nologo', '/INCREMENTAL:no', '/DEBUG' ] else: self.ldflags_shared_debug = [ '/DLL', '/nologo', '/INCREMENTAL:no', '/pdb:None', '/DEBUG' ] self.ldflags_static = [ '/nologo'] self.initialized = True # -- Worker methods ------------------------------------------------ def object_filenames(self, source_filenames, strip_dir=0, output_dir=''): # Copied from ccompiler.py, extended to return .res as 'object'-file # for .rc input file if output_dir is None: output_dir = '' obj_names = [] for src_name in source_filenames: (base, ext) = os.path.splitext (src_name) base = os.path.splitdrive(base)[1] # Chop off the drive base = base[os.path.isabs(base):] # If abs, chop off leading / if ext not in self.src_extensions: # Better to raise an exception instead of silently continuing # and later complain about sources and targets having # different lengths raise CompileError ("Don't know how to compile %s" % src_name) if strip_dir: base = os.path.basename (base) if ext in self._rc_extensions: obj_names.append (os.path.join (output_dir, base + self.res_extension)) elif ext in self._mc_extensions: obj_names.append (os.path.join (output_dir, base + self.res_extension)) else: obj_names.append (os.path.join (output_dir, base + self.obj_extension)) return obj_names def compile(self, sources, output_dir=None, macros=None, include_dirs=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, depends=None): if not self.initialized: self.initialize() compile_info = self._setup_compile(output_dir, macros, include_dirs, sources, depends, extra_postargs) macros, objects, extra_postargs, pp_opts, build = compile_info compile_opts = extra_preargs or [] compile_opts.append ('/c') if debug: compile_opts.extend(self.compile_options_debug) else: compile_opts.extend(self.compile_options) for obj in objects: try: src, ext = build[obj] except KeyError: continue if debug: # pass the full pathname to MSVC in debug mode, # this allows the debugger to find the source file # without asking the user to browse for it src = os.path.abspath(src) if ext in self._c_extensions: input_opt = "/Tc" + src elif ext in self._cpp_extensions: input_opt = "/Tp" + src elif ext in self._rc_extensions: # compile .RC to .RES file input_opt = src output_opt = "/fo" + obj try: self.spawn([self.rc] + pp_opts + [output_opt] + [input_opt]) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise CompileError(msg) continue elif ext in self._mc_extensions: # Compile .MC to .RC file to .RES file. # * '-h dir' specifies the directory for the # generated include file # * '-r dir' specifies the target directory of the # generated RC file and the binary message resource # it includes # # For now (since there are no options to change this), # we use the source-directory for the include file and # the build directory for the RC file and message # resources. This works at least for win32all. h_dir = os.path.dirname(src) rc_dir = os.path.dirname(obj) try: # first compile .MC to .RC and .H file self.spawn([self.mc] + ['-h', h_dir, '-r', rc_dir] + [src]) base, _ = os.path.splitext (os.path.basename (src)) rc_file = os.path.join (rc_dir, base + '.rc') # then compile .RC to .RES file self.spawn([self.rc] + ["/fo" + obj] + [rc_file]) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise CompileError(msg) continue else: # how to handle this file? raise CompileError("Don't know how to compile %s to %s" % (src, obj)) output_opt = "/Fo" + obj try: self.spawn([self.cc] + compile_opts + pp_opts + [input_opt, output_opt] + extra_postargs) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise CompileError(msg) return objects def create_static_lib(self, objects, output_libname, output_dir=None, debug=0, target_lang=None): if not self.initialized: self.initialize() (objects, output_dir) = self._fix_object_args(objects, output_dir) output_filename = self.library_filename(output_libname, output_dir=output_dir) if self._need_link(objects, output_filename): lib_args = objects + ['/OUT:' + output_filename] if debug: pass # XXX what goes here? try: self.spawn([self.lib] + lib_args) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise LibError(msg) else: log.debug("skipping %s (up-to-date)", output_filename) def link(self, target_desc, objects, output_filename, output_dir=None, libraries=None, library_dirs=None, runtime_library_dirs=None, export_symbols=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, build_temp=None, target_lang=None): if not self.initialized: self.initialize() (objects, output_dir) = self._fix_object_args(objects, output_dir) fixed_args = self._fix_lib_args(libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs) (libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs) = fixed_args if runtime_library_dirs: self.warn ("I don't know what to do with 'runtime_library_dirs': " + str (runtime_library_dirs)) lib_opts = gen_lib_options(self, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs, libraries) if output_dir is not None: output_filename = os.path.join(output_dir, output_filename) if self._need_link(objects, output_filename): if target_desc == CCompiler.EXECUTABLE: if debug: ldflags = self.ldflags_shared_debug[1:] else: ldflags = self.ldflags_shared[1:] else: if debug: ldflags = self.ldflags_shared_debug else: ldflags = self.ldflags_shared export_opts = [] for sym in (export_symbols or []): export_opts.append("/EXPORT:" + sym) ld_args = (ldflags + lib_opts + export_opts + objects + ['/OUT:' + output_filename]) # The MSVC linker generates .lib and .exp files, which cannot be # suppressed by any linker switches. The .lib files may even be # needed! Make sure they are generated in the temporary build # directory. Since they have different names for debug and release # builds, they can go into the same directory. if export_symbols is not None: (dll_name, dll_ext) = os.path.splitext( os.path.basename(output_filename)) implib_file = os.path.join( os.path.dirname(objects[0]), self.library_filename(dll_name)) ld_args.append ('/IMPLIB:' + implib_file) if extra_preargs: ld_args[:0] = extra_preargs if extra_postargs: ld_args.extend(extra_postargs) self.mkpath(os.path.dirname(output_filename)) try: self.spawn([self.linker] + ld_args) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise LinkError(msg) else: log.debug("skipping %s (up-to-date)", output_filename) # -- Miscellaneous methods ----------------------------------------- # These are all used by the 'gen_lib_options() function, in # ccompiler.py. def library_dir_option(self, dir): return "/LIBPATH:" + dir def runtime_library_dir_option(self, dir): raise DistutilsPlatformError( "don't know how to set runtime library search path for MSVC++") def library_option(self, lib): return self.library_filename(lib) def find_library_file(self, dirs, lib, debug=0): # Prefer a debugging library if found (and requested), but deal # with it if we don't have one. if debug: try_names = [lib + "_d", lib] else: try_names = [lib] for dir in dirs: for name in try_names: libfile = os.path.join(dir, self.library_filename (name)) if os.path.exists(libfile): return libfile else: # Oops, didn't find it in *any* of 'dirs' return None # Helper methods for using the MSVC registry settings def find_exe(self, exe): """Return path to an MSVC executable program. Tries to find the program in several places: first, one of the MSVC program search paths from the registry; next, the directories in the PATH environment variable. If any of those work, return an absolute path that is known to exist. If none of them work, just return the original program name, 'exe'. """ for p in self.__paths: fn = os.path.join(os.path.abspath(p), exe) if os.path.isfile(fn): return fn # didn't find it; try existing path for p in os.environ['Path'].split(';'): fn = os.path.join(os.path.abspath(p),exe) if os.path.isfile(fn): return fn return exe def get_msvc_paths(self, path, platform='x86'): """Get a list of devstudio directories (include, lib or path). Return a list of strings. The list will be empty if unable to access the registry or appropriate registry keys not found. """ if not _can_read_reg: return [] path = path + " dirs" if self.__version >= 7: key = (r"%s\%0.1f\VC\VC_OBJECTS_PLATFORM_INFO\Win32\Directories" % (self.__root, self.__version)) else: key = (r"%s\6.0\Build System\Components\Platforms" r"\Win32 (%s)\Directories" % (self.__root, platform)) for base in HKEYS: d = read_values(base, key) if d: if self.__version >= 7: return self.__macros.sub(d[path]).split(";") else: return d[path].split(";") # MSVC 6 seems to create the registry entries we need only when # the GUI is run. if self.__version == 6: for base in HKEYS: if read_values(base, r"%s\6.0" % self.__root) is not None: self.warn("It seems you have Visual Studio 6 installed, " "but the expected registry settings are not present.\n" "You must at least run the Visual Studio GUI once " "so that these entries are created.") break return [] def set_path_env_var(self, name): """Set environment variable 'name' to an MSVC path type value. This is equivalent to a SET command prior to execution of spawned commands. """ if name == "lib": p = self.get_msvc_paths("library") else: p = self.get_msvc_paths(name) if p: os.environ[name] = ';'.join(p) if get_build_version() >= 8.0: log.debug("Importing new compiler from distutils.msvc9compiler") OldMSVCCompiler = MSVCCompiler from distutils.msvc9compiler import MSVCCompiler # get_build_architecture not really relevant now we support cross-compile from distutils.msvc9compiler import MacroExpander PK ! ��*�v �v distutils/msvc9compiler.pynu �[��� """distutils.msvc9compiler Contains MSVCCompiler, an implementation of the abstract CCompiler class for the Microsoft Visual Studio 2008. The module is compatible with VS 2005 and VS 2008. You can find legacy support for older versions of VS in distutils.msvccompiler. """ # Written by Perry Stoll # hacked by Robin Becker and Thomas Heller to do a better job of # finding DevStudio (through the registry) # ported to VS2005 and VS 2008 by Christian Heimes import os import subprocess import sys import re from distutils.errors import DistutilsExecError, DistutilsPlatformError, \ CompileError, LibError, LinkError from distutils.ccompiler import CCompiler, gen_lib_options from distutils import log from distutils.util import get_platform import winreg RegOpenKeyEx = winreg.OpenKeyEx RegEnumKey = winreg.EnumKey RegEnumValue = winreg.EnumValue RegError = winreg.error HKEYS = (winreg.HKEY_USERS, winreg.HKEY_CURRENT_USER, winreg.HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, winreg.HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT) NATIVE_WIN64 = (sys.platform == 'win32' and sys.maxsize > 2**32) if NATIVE_WIN64: # Visual C++ is a 32-bit application, so we need to look in # the corresponding registry branch, if we're running a # 64-bit Python on Win64 VS_BASE = r"Software\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\VisualStudio\%0.1f" WINSDK_BASE = r"Software\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\Microsoft SDKs\Windows" NET_BASE = r"Software\Wow6432Node\Microsoft\.NETFramework" else: VS_BASE = r"Software\Microsoft\VisualStudio\%0.1f" WINSDK_BASE = r"Software\Microsoft\Microsoft SDKs\Windows" NET_BASE = r"Software\Microsoft\.NETFramework" # A map keyed by get_platform() return values to values accepted by # 'vcvarsall.bat'. Note a cross-compile may combine these (eg, 'x86_amd64' is # the param to cross-compile on x86 targeting amd64.) PLAT_TO_VCVARS = { 'win32' : 'x86', 'win-amd64' : 'amd64', } class Reg: """Helper class to read values from the registry """ def get_value(cls, path, key): for base in HKEYS: d = cls.read_values(base, path) if d and key in d: return d[key] raise KeyError(key) get_value = classmethod(get_value) def read_keys(cls, base, key): """Return list of registry keys.""" try: handle = RegOpenKeyEx(base, key) except RegError: return None L = [] i = 0 while True: try: k = RegEnumKey(handle, i) except RegError: break L.append(k) i += 1 return L read_keys = classmethod(read_keys) def read_values(cls, base, key): """Return dict of registry keys and values. All names are converted to lowercase. """ try: handle = RegOpenKeyEx(base, key) except RegError: return None d = {} i = 0 while True: try: name, value, type = RegEnumValue(handle, i) except RegError: break name = name.lower() d[cls.convert_mbcs(name)] = cls.convert_mbcs(value) i += 1 return d read_values = classmethod(read_values) def convert_mbcs(s): dec = getattr(s, "decode", None) if dec is not None: try: s = dec("mbcs") except UnicodeError: pass return s convert_mbcs = staticmethod(convert_mbcs) class MacroExpander: def __init__(self, version): self.macros = {} self.vsbase = VS_BASE % version self.load_macros(version) def set_macro(self, macro, path, key): self.macros["$(%s)" % macro] = Reg.get_value(path, key) def load_macros(self, version): self.set_macro("VCInstallDir", self.vsbase + r"\Setup\VC", "productdir") self.set_macro("VSInstallDir", self.vsbase + r"\Setup\VS", "productdir") self.set_macro("FrameworkDir", NET_BASE, "installroot") try: if version >= 8.0: self.set_macro("FrameworkSDKDir", NET_BASE, "sdkinstallrootv2.0") else: raise KeyError("sdkinstallrootv2.0") except KeyError: raise DistutilsPlatformError( """Python was built with Visual Studio 2008; extensions must be built with a compiler than can generate compatible binaries. Visual Studio 2008 was not found on this system. If you have Cygwin installed, you can try compiling with MingW32, by passing "-c mingw32" to setup.py.""") if version >= 9.0: self.set_macro("FrameworkVersion", self.vsbase, "clr version") self.set_macro("WindowsSdkDir", WINSDK_BASE, "currentinstallfolder") else: p = r"Software\Microsoft\NET Framework Setup\Product" for base in HKEYS: try: h = RegOpenKeyEx(base, p) except RegError: continue key = RegEnumKey(h, 0) d = Reg.get_value(base, r"%s\%s" % (p, key)) self.macros["$(FrameworkVersion)"] = d["version"] def sub(self, s): for k, v in self.macros.items(): s = s.replace(k, v) return s def get_build_version(): """Return the version of MSVC that was used to build Python. For Python 2.3 and up, the version number is included in sys.version. For earlier versions, assume the compiler is MSVC 6. """ prefix = "MSC v." i = sys.version.find(prefix) if i == -1: return 6 i = i + len(prefix) s, rest = sys.version[i:].split(" ", 1) majorVersion = int(s[:-2]) - 6 if majorVersion >= 13: # v13 was skipped and should be v14 majorVersion += 1 minorVersion = int(s[2:3]) / 10.0 # I don't think paths are affected by minor version in version 6 if majorVersion == 6: minorVersion = 0 if majorVersion >= 6: return majorVersion + minorVersion # else we don't know what version of the compiler this is return None def normalize_and_reduce_paths(paths): """Return a list of normalized paths with duplicates removed. The current order of paths is maintained. """ # Paths are normalized so things like: /a and /a/ aren't both preserved. reduced_paths = [] for p in paths: np = os.path.normpath(p) # XXX(nnorwitz): O(n**2), if reduced_paths gets long perhaps use a set. if np not in reduced_paths: reduced_paths.append(np) return reduced_paths def removeDuplicates(variable): """Remove duplicate values of an environment variable. """ oldList = variable.split(os.pathsep) newList = [] for i in oldList: if i not in newList: newList.append(i) newVariable = os.pathsep.join(newList) return newVariable def find_vcvarsall(version): """Find the vcvarsall.bat file At first it tries to find the productdir of VS 2008 in the registry. If that fails it falls back to the VS90COMNTOOLS env var. """ vsbase = VS_BASE % version try: productdir = Reg.get_value(r"%s\Setup\VC" % vsbase, "productdir") except KeyError: log.debug("Unable to find productdir in registry") productdir = None if not productdir or not os.path.isdir(productdir): toolskey = "VS%0.f0COMNTOOLS" % version toolsdir = os.environ.get(toolskey, None) if toolsdir and os.path.isdir(toolsdir): productdir = os.path.join(toolsdir, os.pardir, os.pardir, "VC") productdir = os.path.abspath(productdir) if not os.path.isdir(productdir): log.debug("%s is not a valid directory" % productdir) return None else: log.debug("Env var %s is not set or invalid" % toolskey) if not productdir: log.debug("No productdir found") return None vcvarsall = os.path.join(productdir, "vcvarsall.bat") if os.path.isfile(vcvarsall): return vcvarsall log.debug("Unable to find vcvarsall.bat") return None def query_vcvarsall(version, arch="x86"): """Launch vcvarsall.bat and read the settings from its environment """ vcvarsall = find_vcvarsall(version) interesting = {"include", "lib", "libpath", "path"} result = {} if vcvarsall is None: raise DistutilsPlatformError("Unable to find vcvarsall.bat") log.debug("Calling 'vcvarsall.bat %s' (version=%s)", arch, version) popen = subprocess.Popen('"%s" %s & set' % (vcvarsall, arch), stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE) try: stdout, stderr = popen.communicate() if popen.wait() != 0: raise DistutilsPlatformError(stderr.decode("mbcs")) stdout = stdout.decode("mbcs") for line in stdout.split("\n"): line = Reg.convert_mbcs(line) if '=' not in line: continue line = line.strip() key, value = line.split('=', 1) key = key.lower() if key in interesting: if value.endswith(os.pathsep): value = value[:-1] result[key] = removeDuplicates(value) finally: popen.stdout.close() popen.stderr.close() if len(result) != len(interesting): raise ValueError(str(list(result.keys()))) return result # More globals VERSION = get_build_version() if VERSION < 8.0: raise DistutilsPlatformError("VC %0.1f is not supported by this module" % VERSION) # MACROS = MacroExpander(VERSION) class MSVCCompiler(CCompiler) : """Concrete class that implements an interface to Microsoft Visual C++, as defined by the CCompiler abstract class.""" compiler_type = 'msvc' # Just set this so CCompiler's constructor doesn't barf. We currently # don't use the 'set_executables()' bureaucracy provided by CCompiler, # as it really isn't necessary for this sort of single-compiler class. # Would be nice to have a consistent interface with UnixCCompiler, # though, so it's worth thinking about. executables = {} # Private class data (need to distinguish C from C++ source for compiler) _c_extensions = ['.c'] _cpp_extensions = ['.cc', '.cpp', '.cxx'] _rc_extensions = ['.rc'] _mc_extensions = ['.mc'] # Needed for the filename generation methods provided by the # base class, CCompiler. src_extensions = (_c_extensions + _cpp_extensions + _rc_extensions + _mc_extensions) res_extension = '.res' obj_extension = '.obj' static_lib_extension = '.lib' shared_lib_extension = '.dll' static_lib_format = shared_lib_format = '%s%s' exe_extension = '.exe' def __init__(self, verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0): CCompiler.__init__ (self, verbose, dry_run, force) self.__version = VERSION self.__root = r"Software\Microsoft\VisualStudio" # self.__macros = MACROS self.__paths = [] # target platform (.plat_name is consistent with 'bdist') self.plat_name = None self.__arch = None # deprecated name self.initialized = False def initialize(self, plat_name=None): # multi-init means we would need to check platform same each time... assert not self.initialized, "don't init multiple times" if plat_name is None: plat_name = get_platform() # sanity check for platforms to prevent obscure errors later. ok_plats = 'win32', 'win-amd64' if plat_name not in ok_plats: raise DistutilsPlatformError("--plat-name must be one of %s" % (ok_plats,)) if "DISTUTILS_USE_SDK" in os.environ and "MSSdk" in os.environ and self.find_exe("cl.exe"): # Assume that the SDK set up everything alright; don't try to be # smarter self.cc = "cl.exe" self.linker = "link.exe" self.lib = "lib.exe" self.rc = "rc.exe" self.mc = "mc.exe" else: # On x86, 'vcvars32.bat amd64' creates an env that doesn't work; # to cross compile, you use 'x86_amd64'. # On AMD64, 'vcvars32.bat amd64' is a native build env; to cross # compile use 'x86' (ie, it runs the x86 compiler directly) if plat_name == get_platform() or plat_name == 'win32': # native build or cross-compile to win32 plat_spec = PLAT_TO_VCVARS[plat_name] else: # cross compile from win32 -> some 64bit plat_spec = PLAT_TO_VCVARS[get_platform()] + '_' + \ PLAT_TO_VCVARS[plat_name] vc_env = query_vcvarsall(VERSION, plat_spec) self.__paths = vc_env['path'].split(os.pathsep) os.environ['lib'] = vc_env['lib'] os.environ['include'] = vc_env['include'] if len(self.__paths) == 0: raise DistutilsPlatformError("Python was built with %s, " "and extensions need to be built with the same " "version of the compiler, but it isn't installed." % self.__product) self.cc = self.find_exe("cl.exe") self.linker = self.find_exe("link.exe") self.lib = self.find_exe("lib.exe") self.rc = self.find_exe("rc.exe") # resource compiler self.mc = self.find_exe("mc.exe") # message compiler #self.set_path_env_var('lib') #self.set_path_env_var('include') # extend the MSVC path with the current path try: for p in os.environ['path'].split(';'): self.__paths.append(p) except KeyError: pass self.__paths = normalize_and_reduce_paths(self.__paths) os.environ['path'] = ";".join(self.__paths) self.preprocess_options = None if self.__arch == "x86": self.compile_options = [ '/nologo', '/Ox', '/MD', '/W3', '/DNDEBUG'] self.compile_options_debug = ['/nologo', '/Od', '/MDd', '/W3', '/Z7', '/D_DEBUG'] else: # Win64 self.compile_options = [ '/nologo', '/Ox', '/MD', '/W3', '/GS-' , '/DNDEBUG'] self.compile_options_debug = ['/nologo', '/Od', '/MDd', '/W3', '/GS-', '/Z7', '/D_DEBUG'] self.ldflags_shared = ['/DLL', '/nologo', '/INCREMENTAL:NO'] if self.__version >= 7: self.ldflags_shared_debug = [ '/DLL', '/nologo', '/INCREMENTAL:no', '/DEBUG' ] self.ldflags_static = [ '/nologo'] self.initialized = True # -- Worker methods ------------------------------------------------ def object_filenames(self, source_filenames, strip_dir=0, output_dir=''): # Copied from ccompiler.py, extended to return .res as 'object'-file # for .rc input file if output_dir is None: output_dir = '' obj_names = [] for src_name in source_filenames: (base, ext) = os.path.splitext (src_name) base = os.path.splitdrive(base)[1] # Chop off the drive base = base[os.path.isabs(base):] # If abs, chop off leading / if ext not in self.src_extensions: # Better to raise an exception instead of silently continuing # and later complain about sources and targets having # different lengths raise CompileError ("Don't know how to compile %s" % src_name) if strip_dir: base = os.path.basename (base) if ext in self._rc_extensions: obj_names.append (os.path.join (output_dir, base + self.res_extension)) elif ext in self._mc_extensions: obj_names.append (os.path.join (output_dir, base + self.res_extension)) else: obj_names.append (os.path.join (output_dir, base + self.obj_extension)) return obj_names def compile(self, sources, output_dir=None, macros=None, include_dirs=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, depends=None): if not self.initialized: self.initialize() compile_info = self._setup_compile(output_dir, macros, include_dirs, sources, depends, extra_postargs) macros, objects, extra_postargs, pp_opts, build = compile_info compile_opts = extra_preargs or [] compile_opts.append ('/c') if debug: compile_opts.extend(self.compile_options_debug) else: compile_opts.extend(self.compile_options) for obj in objects: try: src, ext = build[obj] except KeyError: continue if debug: # pass the full pathname to MSVC in debug mode, # this allows the debugger to find the source file # without asking the user to browse for it src = os.path.abspath(src) if ext in self._c_extensions: input_opt = "/Tc" + src elif ext in self._cpp_extensions: input_opt = "/Tp" + src elif ext in self._rc_extensions: # compile .RC to .RES file input_opt = src output_opt = "/fo" + obj try: self.spawn([self.rc] + pp_opts + [output_opt] + [input_opt]) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise CompileError(msg) continue elif ext in self._mc_extensions: # Compile .MC to .RC file to .RES file. # * '-h dir' specifies the directory for the # generated include file # * '-r dir' specifies the target directory of the # generated RC file and the binary message resource # it includes # # For now (since there are no options to change this), # we use the source-directory for the include file and # the build directory for the RC file and message # resources. This works at least for win32all. h_dir = os.path.dirname(src) rc_dir = os.path.dirname(obj) try: # first compile .MC to .RC and .H file self.spawn([self.mc] + ['-h', h_dir, '-r', rc_dir] + [src]) base, _ = os.path.splitext (os.path.basename (src)) rc_file = os.path.join (rc_dir, base + '.rc') # then compile .RC to .RES file self.spawn([self.rc] + ["/fo" + obj] + [rc_file]) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise CompileError(msg) continue else: # how to handle this file? raise CompileError("Don't know how to compile %s to %s" % (src, obj)) output_opt = "/Fo" + obj try: self.spawn([self.cc] + compile_opts + pp_opts + [input_opt, output_opt] + extra_postargs) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise CompileError(msg) return objects def create_static_lib(self, objects, output_libname, output_dir=None, debug=0, target_lang=None): if not self.initialized: self.initialize() (objects, output_dir) = self._fix_object_args(objects, output_dir) output_filename = self.library_filename(output_libname, output_dir=output_dir) if self._need_link(objects, output_filename): lib_args = objects + ['/OUT:' + output_filename] if debug: pass # XXX what goes here? try: self.spawn([self.lib] + lib_args) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise LibError(msg) else: log.debug("skipping %s (up-to-date)", output_filename) def link(self, target_desc, objects, output_filename, output_dir=None, libraries=None, library_dirs=None, runtime_library_dirs=None, export_symbols=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, build_temp=None, target_lang=None): if not self.initialized: self.initialize() (objects, output_dir) = self._fix_object_args(objects, output_dir) fixed_args = self._fix_lib_args(libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs) (libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs) = fixed_args if runtime_library_dirs: self.warn ("I don't know what to do with 'runtime_library_dirs': " + str (runtime_library_dirs)) lib_opts = gen_lib_options(self, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs, libraries) if output_dir is not None: output_filename = os.path.join(output_dir, output_filename) if self._need_link(objects, output_filename): if target_desc == CCompiler.EXECUTABLE: if debug: ldflags = self.ldflags_shared_debug[1:] else: ldflags = self.ldflags_shared[1:] else: if debug: ldflags = self.ldflags_shared_debug else: ldflags = self.ldflags_shared export_opts = [] for sym in (export_symbols or []): export_opts.append("/EXPORT:" + sym) ld_args = (ldflags + lib_opts + export_opts + objects + ['/OUT:' + output_filename]) # The MSVC linker generates .lib and .exp files, which cannot be # suppressed by any linker switches. The .lib files may even be # needed! Make sure they are generated in the temporary build # directory. Since they have different names for debug and release # builds, they can go into the same directory. build_temp = os.path.dirname(objects[0]) if export_symbols is not None: (dll_name, dll_ext) = os.path.splitext( os.path.basename(output_filename)) implib_file = os.path.join( build_temp, self.library_filename(dll_name)) ld_args.append ('/IMPLIB:' + implib_file) self.manifest_setup_ldargs(output_filename, build_temp, ld_args) if extra_preargs: ld_args[:0] = extra_preargs if extra_postargs: ld_args.extend(extra_postargs) self.mkpath(os.path.dirname(output_filename)) try: self.spawn([self.linker] + ld_args) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise LinkError(msg) # embed the manifest # XXX - this is somewhat fragile - if mt.exe fails, distutils # will still consider the DLL up-to-date, but it will not have a # manifest. Maybe we should link to a temp file? OTOH, that # implies a build environment error that shouldn't go undetected. mfinfo = self.manifest_get_embed_info(target_desc, ld_args) if mfinfo is not None: mffilename, mfid = mfinfo out_arg = '-outputresource:%s;%s' % (output_filename, mfid) try: self.spawn(['mt.exe', '-nologo', '-manifest', mffilename, out_arg]) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise LinkError(msg) else: log.debug("skipping %s (up-to-date)", output_filename) def manifest_setup_ldargs(self, output_filename, build_temp, ld_args): # If we need a manifest at all, an embedded manifest is recommended. # See MSDN article titled # "How to: Embed a Manifest Inside a C/C++ Application" # (currently at http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms235591(VS.80).aspx) # Ask the linker to generate the manifest in the temp dir, so # we can check it, and possibly embed it, later. temp_manifest = os.path.join( build_temp, os.path.basename(output_filename) + ".manifest") ld_args.append('/MANIFESTFILE:' + temp_manifest) def manifest_get_embed_info(self, target_desc, ld_args): # If a manifest should be embedded, return a tuple of # (manifest_filename, resource_id). Returns None if no manifest # should be embedded. See http://bugs.python.org/issue7833 for why # we want to avoid any manifest for extension modules if we can. for arg in ld_args: if arg.startswith("/MANIFESTFILE:"): temp_manifest = arg.split(":", 1)[1] break else: # no /MANIFESTFILE so nothing to do. return None if target_desc == CCompiler.EXECUTABLE: # by default, executables always get the manifest with the # CRT referenced. mfid = 1 else: # Extension modules try and avoid any manifest if possible. mfid = 2 temp_manifest = self._remove_visual_c_ref(temp_manifest) if temp_manifest is None: return None return temp_manifest, mfid def _remove_visual_c_ref(self, manifest_file): try: # Remove references to the Visual C runtime, so they will # fall through to the Visual C dependency of Python.exe. # This way, when installed for a restricted user (e.g. # runtimes are not in WinSxS folder, but in Python's own # folder), the runtimes do not need to be in every folder # with .pyd's. # Returns either the filename of the modified manifest or # None if no manifest should be embedded. manifest_f = open(manifest_file) try: manifest_buf = manifest_f.read() finally: manifest_f.close() pattern = re.compile( r"""<assemblyIdentity.*?name=("|')Microsoft\."""\ r"""VC\d{2}\.CRT("|').*?(/>|</assemblyIdentity>)""", re.DOTALL) manifest_buf = re.sub(pattern, "", manifest_buf) pattern = r"<dependentAssembly>\s*</dependentAssembly>" manifest_buf = re.sub(pattern, "", manifest_buf) # Now see if any other assemblies are referenced - if not, we # don't want a manifest embedded. pattern = re.compile( r"""<assemblyIdentity.*?name=(?:"|')(.+?)(?:"|')""" r""".*?(?:/>|</assemblyIdentity>)""", re.DOTALL) if re.search(pattern, manifest_buf) is None: return None manifest_f = open(manifest_file, 'w') try: manifest_f.write(manifest_buf) return manifest_file finally: manifest_f.close() except OSError: pass # -- Miscellaneous methods ----------------------------------------- # These are all used by the 'gen_lib_options() function, in # ccompiler.py. def library_dir_option(self, dir): return "/LIBPATH:" + dir def runtime_library_dir_option(self, dir): raise DistutilsPlatformError( "don't know how to set runtime library search path for MSVC++") def library_option(self, lib): return self.library_filename(lib) def find_library_file(self, dirs, lib, debug=0): # Prefer a debugging library if found (and requested), but deal # with it if we don't have one. if debug: try_names = [lib + "_d", lib] else: try_names = [lib] for dir in dirs: for name in try_names: libfile = os.path.join(dir, self.library_filename (name)) if os.path.exists(libfile): return libfile else: # Oops, didn't find it in *any* of 'dirs' return None # Helper methods for using the MSVC registry settings def find_exe(self, exe): """Return path to an MSVC executable program. Tries to find the program in several places: first, one of the MSVC program search paths from the registry; next, the directories in the PATH environment variable. If any of those work, return an absolute path that is known to exist. If none of them work, just return the original program name, 'exe'. """ for p in self.__paths: fn = os.path.join(os.path.abspath(p), exe) if os.path.isfile(fn): return fn # didn't find it; try existing path for p in os.environ['Path'].split(';'): fn = os.path.join(os.path.abspath(p),exe) if os.path.isfile(fn): return fn return exe PK ! 2� distutils/versionpredicate.pynu �[��� """Module for parsing and testing package version predicate strings. """ import re import distutils.version import operator re_validPackage = re.compile(r"(?i)^\s*([a-z_]\w*(?:\.[a-z_]\w*)*)(.*)", re.ASCII) # (package) (rest) re_paren = re.compile(r"^\s*\((.*)\)\s*$") # (list) inside of parentheses re_splitComparison = re.compile(r"^\s*(<=|>=|<|>|!=|==)\s*([^\s,]+)\s*$") # (comp) (version) def splitUp(pred): """Parse a single version comparison. Return (comparison string, StrictVersion) """ res = re_splitComparison.match(pred) if not res: raise ValueError("bad package restriction syntax: %r" % pred) comp, verStr = res.groups() return (comp, distutils.version.StrictVersion(verStr)) compmap = {"<": operator.lt, "<=": operator.le, "==": operator.eq, ">": operator.gt, ">=": operator.ge, "!=": operator.ne} class VersionPredicate: """Parse and test package version predicates. >>> v = VersionPredicate('pyepat.abc (>1.0, <3333.3a1, !=1555.1b3)') The `name` attribute provides the full dotted name that is given:: >>> v.name 'pyepat.abc' The str() of a `VersionPredicate` provides a normalized human-readable version of the expression:: >>> print(v) pyepat.abc (> 1.0, < 3333.3a1, != 1555.1b3) The `satisfied_by()` method can be used to determine with a given version number is included in the set described by the version restrictions:: >>> v.satisfied_by('1.1') True >>> v.satisfied_by('1.4') True >>> v.satisfied_by('1.0') False >>> v.satisfied_by('4444.4') False >>> v.satisfied_by('1555.1b3') False `VersionPredicate` is flexible in accepting extra whitespace:: >>> v = VersionPredicate(' pat( == 0.1 ) ') >>> v.name 'pat' >>> v.satisfied_by('0.1') True >>> v.satisfied_by('0.2') False If any version numbers passed in do not conform to the restrictions of `StrictVersion`, a `ValueError` is raised:: >>> v = VersionPredicate('p1.p2.p3.p4(>=1.0, <=1.3a1, !=1.2zb3)') Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: invalid version number '1.2zb3' It the module or package name given does not conform to what's allowed as a legal module or package name, `ValueError` is raised:: >>> v = VersionPredicate('foo-bar') Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: expected parenthesized list: '-bar' >>> v = VersionPredicate('foo bar (12.21)') Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: expected parenthesized list: 'bar (12.21)' """ def __init__(self, versionPredicateStr): """Parse a version predicate string. """ # Fields: # name: package name # pred: list of (comparison string, StrictVersion) versionPredicateStr = versionPredicateStr.strip() if not versionPredicateStr: raise ValueError("empty package restriction") match = re_validPackage.match(versionPredicateStr) if not match: raise ValueError("bad package name in %r" % versionPredicateStr) self.name, paren = match.groups() paren = paren.strip() if paren: match = re_paren.match(paren) if not match: raise ValueError("expected parenthesized list: %r" % paren) str = match.groups()[0] self.pred = [splitUp(aPred) for aPred in str.split(",")] if not self.pred: raise ValueError("empty parenthesized list in %r" % versionPredicateStr) else: self.pred = [] def __str__(self): if self.pred: seq = [cond + " " + str(ver) for cond, ver in self.pred] return self.name + " (" + ", ".join(seq) + ")" else: return self.name def satisfied_by(self, version): """True if version is compatible with all the predicates in self. The parameter version must be acceptable to the StrictVersion constructor. It may be either a string or StrictVersion. """ for cond, ver in self.pred: if not compmap[cond](version, ver): return False return True _provision_rx = None def split_provision(value): """Return the name and optional version number of a provision. The version number, if given, will be returned as a `StrictVersion` instance, otherwise it will be `None`. >>> split_provision('mypkg') ('mypkg', None) >>> split_provision(' mypkg( 1.2 ) ') ('mypkg', StrictVersion ('1.2')) """ global _provision_rx if _provision_rx is None: _provision_rx = re.compile( r"([a-zA-Z_]\w*(?:\.[a-zA-Z_]\w*)*)(?:\s*\(\s*([^)\s]+)\s*\))?$", re.ASCII) value = value.strip() m = _provision_rx.match(value) if not m: raise ValueError("illegal provides specification: %r" % value) ver = m.group(2) or None if ver: ver = distutils.version.StrictVersion(ver) return m.group(1), ver PK ! ����!) !) distutils/extension.pynu �[��� """distutils.extension Provides the Extension class, used to describe C/C++ extension modules in setup scripts.""" import os import re import warnings # This class is really only used by the "build_ext" command, so it might # make sense to put it in distutils.command.build_ext. However, that # module is already big enough, and I want to make this class a bit more # complex to simplify some common cases ("foo" module in "foo.c") and do # better error-checking ("foo.c" actually exists). # # Also, putting this in build_ext.py means every setup script would have to # import that large-ish module (indirectly, through distutils.core) in # order to do anything. class Extension: """Just a collection of attributes that describes an extension module and everything needed to build it (hopefully in a portable way, but there are hooks that let you be as unportable as you need). Instance attributes: name : string the full name of the extension, including any packages -- ie. *not* a filename or pathname, but Python dotted name sources : [string] list of source filenames, relative to the distribution root (where the setup script lives), in Unix form (slash-separated) for portability. Source files may be C, C++, SWIG (.i), platform-specific resource files, or whatever else is recognized by the "build_ext" command as source for a Python extension. include_dirs : [string] list of directories to search for C/C++ header files (in Unix form for portability) define_macros : [(name : string, value : string|None)] list of macros to define; each macro is defined using a 2-tuple, where 'value' is either the string to define it to or None to define it without a particular value (equivalent of "#define FOO" in source or -DFOO on Unix C compiler command line) undef_macros : [string] list of macros to undefine explicitly library_dirs : [string] list of directories to search for C/C++ libraries at link time libraries : [string] list of library names (not filenames or paths) to link against runtime_library_dirs : [string] list of directories to search for C/C++ libraries at run time (for shared extensions, this is when the extension is loaded) extra_objects : [string] list of extra files to link with (eg. object files not implied by 'sources', static library that must be explicitly specified, binary resource files, etc.) extra_compile_args : [string] any extra platform- and compiler-specific information to use when compiling the source files in 'sources'. For platforms and compilers where "command line" makes sense, this is typically a list of command-line arguments, but for other platforms it could be anything. extra_link_args : [string] any extra platform- and compiler-specific information to use when linking object files together to create the extension (or to create a new static Python interpreter). Similar interpretation as for 'extra_compile_args'. export_symbols : [string] list of symbols to be exported from a shared extension. Not used on all platforms, and not generally necessary for Python extensions, which typically export exactly one symbol: "init" + extension_name. swig_opts : [string] any extra options to pass to SWIG if a source file has the .i extension. depends : [string] list of files that the extension depends on language : string extension language (i.e. "c", "c++", "objc"). Will be detected from the source extensions if not provided. optional : boolean specifies that a build failure in the extension should not abort the build process, but simply not install the failing extension. """ # When adding arguments to this constructor, be sure to update # setup_keywords in core.py. def __init__(self, name, sources, include_dirs=None, define_macros=None, undef_macros=None, library_dirs=None, libraries=None, runtime_library_dirs=None, extra_objects=None, extra_compile_args=None, extra_link_args=None, export_symbols=None, swig_opts = None, depends=None, language=None, optional=None, **kw # To catch unknown keywords ): if not isinstance(name, str): raise AssertionError("'name' must be a string") if not (isinstance(sources, list) and all(isinstance(v, str) for v in sources)): raise AssertionError("'sources' must be a list of strings") self.name = name self.sources = sources self.include_dirs = include_dirs or [] self.define_macros = define_macros or [] self.undef_macros = undef_macros or [] self.library_dirs = library_dirs or [] self.libraries = libraries or [] self.runtime_library_dirs = runtime_library_dirs or [] self.extra_objects = extra_objects or [] self.extra_compile_args = extra_compile_args or [] self.extra_link_args = extra_link_args or [] self.export_symbols = export_symbols or [] self.swig_opts = swig_opts or [] self.depends = depends or [] self.language = language self.optional = optional # If there are unknown keyword options, warn about them if len(kw) > 0: options = [repr(option) for option in kw] options = ', '.join(sorted(options)) msg = "Unknown Extension options: %s" % options warnings.warn(msg) def __repr__(self): return '<%s.%s(%r) at %#x>' % ( self.__class__.__module__, self.__class__.__qualname__, self.name, id(self)) def read_setup_file(filename): """Reads a Setup file and returns Extension instances.""" from distutils.sysconfig import (parse_makefile, expand_makefile_vars, _variable_rx) from distutils.text_file import TextFile from distutils.util import split_quoted # First pass over the file to gather "VAR = VALUE" assignments. vars = parse_makefile(filename) # Second pass to gobble up the real content: lines of the form # <module> ... [<sourcefile> ...] [<cpparg> ...] [<library> ...] file = TextFile(filename, strip_comments=1, skip_blanks=1, join_lines=1, lstrip_ws=1, rstrip_ws=1) try: extensions = [] while True: line = file.readline() if line is None: # eof break if re.match(_variable_rx, line): # VAR=VALUE, handled in first pass continue if line[0] == line[-1] == "*": file.warn("'%s' lines not handled yet" % line) continue line = expand_makefile_vars(line, vars) words = split_quoted(line) # NB. this parses a slightly different syntax than the old # makesetup script: here, there must be exactly one extension per # line, and it must be the first word of the line. I have no idea # why the old syntax supported multiple extensions per line, as # they all wind up being the same. module = words[0] ext = Extension(module, []) append_next_word = None for word in words[1:]: if append_next_word is not None: append_next_word.append(word) append_next_word = None continue suffix = os.path.splitext(word)[1] switch = word[0:2] ; value = word[2:] if suffix in (".c", ".cc", ".cpp", ".cxx", ".c++", ".m", ".mm"): # hmm, should we do something about C vs. C++ sources? # or leave it up to the CCompiler implementation to # worry about? ext.sources.append(word) elif switch == "-I": ext.include_dirs.append(value) elif switch == "-D": equals = value.find("=") if equals == -1: # bare "-DFOO" -- no value ext.define_macros.append((value, None)) else: # "-DFOO=blah" ext.define_macros.append((value[0:equals], value[equals+2:])) elif switch == "-U": ext.undef_macros.append(value) elif switch == "-C": # only here 'cause makesetup has it! ext.extra_compile_args.append(word) elif switch == "-l": ext.libraries.append(value) elif switch == "-L": ext.library_dirs.append(value) elif switch == "-R": ext.runtime_library_dirs.append(value) elif word == "-rpath": append_next_word = ext.runtime_library_dirs elif word == "-Xlinker": append_next_word = ext.extra_link_args elif word == "-Xcompiler": append_next_word = ext.extra_compile_args elif switch == "-u": ext.extra_link_args.append(word) if not value: append_next_word = ext.extra_link_args elif suffix in (".a", ".so", ".sl", ".o", ".dylib"): # NB. a really faithful emulation of makesetup would # append a .o file to extra_objects only if it # had a slash in it; otherwise, it would s/.o/.c/ # and append it to sources. Hmmmm. ext.extra_objects.append(word) else: file.warn("unrecognized argument '%s'" % word) extensions.append(ext) finally: file.close() return extensions PK ! �'N 'N distutils/_msvccompiler.pynu �[��� """distutils._msvccompiler Contains MSVCCompiler, an implementation of the abstract CCompiler class for Microsoft Visual Studio 2015. The module is compatible with VS 2015 and later. You can find legacy support for older versions in distutils.msvc9compiler and distutils.msvccompiler. """ # Written by Perry Stoll # hacked by Robin Becker and Thomas Heller to do a better job of # finding DevStudio (through the registry) # ported to VS 2005 and VS 2008 by Christian Heimes # ported to VS 2015 by Steve Dower import os import subprocess import winreg from distutils.errors import DistutilsExecError, DistutilsPlatformError, \ CompileError, LibError, LinkError from distutils.ccompiler import CCompiler, gen_lib_options from distutils import log from distutils.util import get_platform from itertools import count def _find_vc2015(): try: key = winreg.OpenKeyEx( winreg.HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, r"Software\Microsoft\VisualStudio\SxS\VC7", access=winreg.KEY_READ | winreg.KEY_WOW64_32KEY ) except OSError: log.debug("Visual C++ is not registered") return None, None best_version = 0 best_dir = None with key: for i in count(): try: v, vc_dir, vt = winreg.EnumValue(key, i) except OSError: break if v and vt == winreg.REG_SZ and os.path.isdir(vc_dir): try: version = int(float(v)) except (ValueError, TypeError): continue if version >= 14 and version > best_version: best_version, best_dir = version, vc_dir return best_version, best_dir def _find_vc2017(): """Returns "15, path" based on the result of invoking vswhere.exe If no install is found, returns "None, None" The version is returned to avoid unnecessarily changing the function result. It may be ignored when the path is not None. If vswhere.exe is not available, by definition, VS 2017 is not installed. """ root = os.environ.get("ProgramFiles(x86)") or os.environ.get("ProgramFiles") if not root: return None, None try: path = subprocess.check_output([ os.path.join(root, "Microsoft Visual Studio", "Installer", "vswhere.exe"), "-latest", "-prerelease", "-requires", "Microsoft.VisualStudio.Component.VC.Tools.x86.x64", "-property", "installationPath", "-products", "*", ], encoding="mbcs", errors="strict").strip() except (subprocess.CalledProcessError, OSError, UnicodeDecodeError): return None, None path = os.path.join(path, "VC", "Auxiliary", "Build") if os.path.isdir(path): return 15, path return None, None PLAT_SPEC_TO_RUNTIME = { 'x86' : 'x86', 'x86_amd64' : 'x64', 'x86_arm' : 'arm', 'x86_arm64' : 'arm64' } def _find_vcvarsall(plat_spec): # bpo-38597: Removed vcruntime return value _, best_dir = _find_vc2017() if not best_dir: best_version, best_dir = _find_vc2015() if not best_dir: log.debug("No suitable Visual C++ version found") return None, None vcvarsall = os.path.join(best_dir, "vcvarsall.bat") if not os.path.isfile(vcvarsall): log.debug("%s cannot be found", vcvarsall) return None, None return vcvarsall, None def _get_vc_env(plat_spec): if os.getenv("DISTUTILS_USE_SDK"): return { key.lower(): value for key, value in os.environ.items() } vcvarsall, _ = _find_vcvarsall(plat_spec) if not vcvarsall: raise DistutilsPlatformError("Unable to find vcvarsall.bat") try: out = subprocess.check_output( 'cmd /u /c "{}" {} && set'.format(vcvarsall, plat_spec), stderr=subprocess.STDOUT, ).decode('utf-16le', errors='replace') except subprocess.CalledProcessError as exc: log.error(exc.output) raise DistutilsPlatformError("Error executing {}" .format(exc.cmd)) env = { key.lower(): value for key, _, value in (line.partition('=') for line in out.splitlines()) if key and value } return env def _find_exe(exe, paths=None): """Return path to an MSVC executable program. Tries to find the program in several places: first, one of the MSVC program search paths from the registry; next, the directories in the PATH environment variable. If any of those work, return an absolute path that is known to exist. If none of them work, just return the original program name, 'exe'. """ if not paths: paths = os.getenv('path').split(os.pathsep) for p in paths: fn = os.path.join(os.path.abspath(p), exe) if os.path.isfile(fn): return fn return exe # A map keyed by get_platform() return values to values accepted by # 'vcvarsall.bat'. Always cross-compile from x86 to work with the # lighter-weight MSVC installs that do not include native 64-bit tools. PLAT_TO_VCVARS = { 'win32' : 'x86', 'win-amd64' : 'x86_amd64', 'win-arm32' : 'x86_arm', 'win-arm64' : 'x86_arm64' } class MSVCCompiler(CCompiler) : """Concrete class that implements an interface to Microsoft Visual C++, as defined by the CCompiler abstract class.""" compiler_type = 'msvc' # Just set this so CCompiler's constructor doesn't barf. We currently # don't use the 'set_executables()' bureaucracy provided by CCompiler, # as it really isn't necessary for this sort of single-compiler class. # Would be nice to have a consistent interface with UnixCCompiler, # though, so it's worth thinking about. executables = {} # Private class data (need to distinguish C from C++ source for compiler) _c_extensions = ['.c'] _cpp_extensions = ['.cc', '.cpp', '.cxx'] _rc_extensions = ['.rc'] _mc_extensions = ['.mc'] # Needed for the filename generation methods provided by the # base class, CCompiler. src_extensions = (_c_extensions + _cpp_extensions + _rc_extensions + _mc_extensions) res_extension = '.res' obj_extension = '.obj' static_lib_extension = '.lib' shared_lib_extension = '.dll' static_lib_format = shared_lib_format = '%s%s' exe_extension = '.exe' def __init__(self, verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0): CCompiler.__init__ (self, verbose, dry_run, force) # target platform (.plat_name is consistent with 'bdist') self.plat_name = None self.initialized = False def initialize(self, plat_name=None): # multi-init means we would need to check platform same each time... assert not self.initialized, "don't init multiple times" if plat_name is None: plat_name = get_platform() # sanity check for platforms to prevent obscure errors later. if plat_name not in PLAT_TO_VCVARS: raise DistutilsPlatformError("--plat-name must be one of {}" .format(tuple(PLAT_TO_VCVARS))) # Get the vcvarsall.bat spec for the requested platform. plat_spec = PLAT_TO_VCVARS[plat_name] vc_env = _get_vc_env(plat_spec) if not vc_env: raise DistutilsPlatformError("Unable to find a compatible " "Visual Studio installation.") self._paths = vc_env.get('path', '') paths = self._paths.split(os.pathsep) self.cc = _find_exe("cl.exe", paths) self.linker = _find_exe("link.exe", paths) self.lib = _find_exe("lib.exe", paths) self.rc = _find_exe("rc.exe", paths) # resource compiler self.mc = _find_exe("mc.exe", paths) # message compiler self.mt = _find_exe("mt.exe", paths) # message compiler for dir in vc_env.get('include', '').split(os.pathsep): if dir: self.add_include_dir(dir.rstrip(os.sep)) for dir in vc_env.get('lib', '').split(os.pathsep): if dir: self.add_library_dir(dir.rstrip(os.sep)) self.preprocess_options = None # bpo-38597: Always compile with dynamic linking # Future releases of Python 3.x will include all past # versions of vcruntime*.dll for compatibility. self.compile_options = [ '/nologo', '/Ox', '/W3', '/GL', '/DNDEBUG', '/MD' ] self.compile_options_debug = [ '/nologo', '/Od', '/MDd', '/Zi', '/W3', '/D_DEBUG' ] ldflags = [ '/nologo', '/INCREMENTAL:NO', '/LTCG' ] ldflags_debug = [ '/nologo', '/INCREMENTAL:NO', '/LTCG', '/DEBUG:FULL' ] self.ldflags_exe = [*ldflags, '/MANIFEST:EMBED,ID=1'] self.ldflags_exe_debug = [*ldflags_debug, '/MANIFEST:EMBED,ID=1'] self.ldflags_shared = [*ldflags, '/DLL', '/MANIFEST:EMBED,ID=2', '/MANIFESTUAC:NO'] self.ldflags_shared_debug = [*ldflags_debug, '/DLL', '/MANIFEST:EMBED,ID=2', '/MANIFESTUAC:NO'] self.ldflags_static = [*ldflags] self.ldflags_static_debug = [*ldflags_debug] self._ldflags = { (CCompiler.EXECUTABLE, None): self.ldflags_exe, (CCompiler.EXECUTABLE, False): self.ldflags_exe, (CCompiler.EXECUTABLE, True): self.ldflags_exe_debug, (CCompiler.SHARED_OBJECT, None): self.ldflags_shared, (CCompiler.SHARED_OBJECT, False): self.ldflags_shared, (CCompiler.SHARED_OBJECT, True): self.ldflags_shared_debug, (CCompiler.SHARED_LIBRARY, None): self.ldflags_static, (CCompiler.SHARED_LIBRARY, False): self.ldflags_static, (CCompiler.SHARED_LIBRARY, True): self.ldflags_static_debug, } self.initialized = True # -- Worker methods ------------------------------------------------ def object_filenames(self, source_filenames, strip_dir=0, output_dir=''): ext_map = { **{ext: self.obj_extension for ext in self.src_extensions}, **{ext: self.res_extension for ext in self._rc_extensions + self._mc_extensions}, } output_dir = output_dir or '' def make_out_path(p): base, ext = os.path.splitext(p) if strip_dir: base = os.path.basename(base) else: _, base = os.path.splitdrive(base) if base.startswith((os.path.sep, os.path.altsep)): base = base[1:] try: # XXX: This may produce absurdly long paths. We should check # the length of the result and trim base until we fit within # 260 characters. return os.path.join(output_dir, base + ext_map[ext]) except LookupError: # Better to raise an exception instead of silently continuing # and later complain about sources and targets having # different lengths raise CompileError("Don't know how to compile {}".format(p)) return list(map(make_out_path, source_filenames)) def compile(self, sources, output_dir=None, macros=None, include_dirs=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, depends=None): if not self.initialized: self.initialize() compile_info = self._setup_compile(output_dir, macros, include_dirs, sources, depends, extra_postargs) macros, objects, extra_postargs, pp_opts, build = compile_info compile_opts = extra_preargs or [] compile_opts.append('/c') if debug: compile_opts.extend(self.compile_options_debug) else: compile_opts.extend(self.compile_options) add_cpp_opts = False for obj in objects: try: src, ext = build[obj] except KeyError: continue if debug: # pass the full pathname to MSVC in debug mode, # this allows the debugger to find the source file # without asking the user to browse for it src = os.path.abspath(src) if ext in self._c_extensions: input_opt = "/Tc" + src elif ext in self._cpp_extensions: input_opt = "/Tp" + src add_cpp_opts = True elif ext in self._rc_extensions: # compile .RC to .RES file input_opt = src output_opt = "/fo" + obj try: self.spawn([self.rc] + pp_opts + [output_opt, input_opt]) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise CompileError(msg) continue elif ext in self._mc_extensions: # Compile .MC to .RC file to .RES file. # * '-h dir' specifies the directory for the # generated include file # * '-r dir' specifies the target directory of the # generated RC file and the binary message resource # it includes # # For now (since there are no options to change this), # we use the source-directory for the include file and # the build directory for the RC file and message # resources. This works at least for win32all. h_dir = os.path.dirname(src) rc_dir = os.path.dirname(obj) try: # first compile .MC to .RC and .H file self.spawn([self.mc, '-h', h_dir, '-r', rc_dir, src]) base, _ = os.path.splitext(os.path.basename (src)) rc_file = os.path.join(rc_dir, base + '.rc') # then compile .RC to .RES file self.spawn([self.rc, "/fo" + obj, rc_file]) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise CompileError(msg) continue else: # how to handle this file? raise CompileError("Don't know how to compile {} to {}" .format(src, obj)) args = [self.cc] + compile_opts + pp_opts if add_cpp_opts: args.append('/EHsc') args.append(input_opt) args.append("/Fo" + obj) args.extend(extra_postargs) try: self.spawn(args) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise CompileError(msg) return objects def create_static_lib(self, objects, output_libname, output_dir=None, debug=0, target_lang=None): if not self.initialized: self.initialize() objects, output_dir = self._fix_object_args(objects, output_dir) output_filename = self.library_filename(output_libname, output_dir=output_dir) if self._need_link(objects, output_filename): lib_args = objects + ['/OUT:' + output_filename] if debug: pass # XXX what goes here? try: log.debug('Executing "%s" %s', self.lib, ' '.join(lib_args)) self.spawn([self.lib] + lib_args) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise LibError(msg) else: log.debug("skipping %s (up-to-date)", output_filename) def link(self, target_desc, objects, output_filename, output_dir=None, libraries=None, library_dirs=None, runtime_library_dirs=None, export_symbols=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, build_temp=None, target_lang=None): if not self.initialized: self.initialize() objects, output_dir = self._fix_object_args(objects, output_dir) fixed_args = self._fix_lib_args(libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs) libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs = fixed_args if runtime_library_dirs: self.warn("I don't know what to do with 'runtime_library_dirs': " + str(runtime_library_dirs)) lib_opts = gen_lib_options(self, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs, libraries) if output_dir is not None: output_filename = os.path.join(output_dir, output_filename) if self._need_link(objects, output_filename): ldflags = self._ldflags[target_desc, debug] export_opts = ["/EXPORT:" + sym for sym in (export_symbols or [])] ld_args = (ldflags + lib_opts + export_opts + objects + ['/OUT:' + output_filename]) # The MSVC linker generates .lib and .exp files, which cannot be # suppressed by any linker switches. The .lib files may even be # needed! Make sure they are generated in the temporary build # directory. Since they have different names for debug and release # builds, they can go into the same directory. build_temp = os.path.dirname(objects[0]) if export_symbols is not None: (dll_name, dll_ext) = os.path.splitext( os.path.basename(output_filename)) implib_file = os.path.join( build_temp, self.library_filename(dll_name)) ld_args.append ('/IMPLIB:' + implib_file) if extra_preargs: ld_args[:0] = extra_preargs if extra_postargs: ld_args.extend(extra_postargs) output_dir = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(output_filename)) self.mkpath(output_dir) try: log.debug('Executing "%s" %s', self.linker, ' '.join(ld_args)) self.spawn([self.linker] + ld_args) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise LinkError(msg) else: log.debug("skipping %s (up-to-date)", output_filename) def spawn(self, cmd): old_path = os.getenv('path') try: os.environ['path'] = self._paths return super().spawn(cmd) finally: os.environ['path'] = old_path # -- Miscellaneous methods ----------------------------------------- # These are all used by the 'gen_lib_options() function, in # ccompiler.py. def library_dir_option(self, dir): return "/LIBPATH:" + dir def runtime_library_dir_option(self, dir): raise DistutilsPlatformError( "don't know how to set runtime library search path for MSVC") def library_option(self, lib): return self.library_filename(lib) def find_library_file(self, dirs, lib, debug=0): # Prefer a debugging library if found (and requested), but deal # with it if we don't have one. if debug: try_names = [lib + "_d", lib] else: try_names = [lib] for dir in dirs: for name in try_names: libfile = os.path.join(dir, self.library_filename(name)) if os.path.isfile(libfile): return libfile else: # Oops, didn't find it in *any* of 'dirs' return None PK ! sָ�W W distutils/config.pynu �[��� """distutils.pypirc Provides the PyPIRCCommand class, the base class for the command classes that uses .pypirc in the distutils.command package. """ import os from configparser import RawConfigParser import warnings from distutils.cmd import Command DEFAULT_PYPIRC = """\ [distutils] index-servers = pypi [pypi] username:%s password:%s """ class PyPIRCCommand(Command): """Base command that knows how to handle the .pypirc file """ DEFAULT_REPOSITORY = 'https://upload.pypi.org/legacy/' DEFAULT_REALM = 'pypi' repository = None realm = None user_options = [ ('repository=', 'r', "url of repository [default: %s]" % \ DEFAULT_REPOSITORY), ('show-response', None, 'display full response text from server')] boolean_options = ['show-response'] def _get_rc_file(self): """Returns rc file path.""" return os.path.join(os.path.expanduser('~'), '.pypirc') def _store_pypirc(self, username, password): """Creates a default .pypirc file.""" rc = self._get_rc_file() with os.fdopen(os.open(rc, os.O_CREAT | os.O_WRONLY, 0o600), 'w') as f: f.write(DEFAULT_PYPIRC % (username, password)) def _read_pypirc(self): """Reads the .pypirc file.""" rc = self._get_rc_file() if os.path.exists(rc): self.announce('Using PyPI login from %s' % rc) repository = self.repository or self.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY config = RawConfigParser() config.read(rc) sections = config.sections() if 'distutils' in sections: # let's get the list of servers index_servers = config.get('distutils', 'index-servers') _servers = [server.strip() for server in index_servers.split('\n') if server.strip() != ''] if _servers == []: # nothing set, let's try to get the default pypi if 'pypi' in sections: _servers = ['pypi'] else: # the file is not properly defined, returning # an empty dict return {} for server in _servers: current = {'server': server} current['username'] = config.get(server, 'username') # optional params for key, default in (('repository', self.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY), ('realm', self.DEFAULT_REALM), ('password', None)): if config.has_option(server, key): current[key] = config.get(server, key) else: current[key] = default # work around people having "repository" for the "pypi" # section of their config set to the HTTP (rather than # HTTPS) URL if (server == 'pypi' and repository in (self.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY, 'pypi')): current['repository'] = self.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY return current if (current['server'] == repository or current['repository'] == repository): return current elif 'server-login' in sections: # old format server = 'server-login' if config.has_option(server, 'repository'): repository = config.get(server, 'repository') else: repository = self.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY return {'username': config.get(server, 'username'), 'password': config.get(server, 'password'), 'repository': repository, 'server': server, 'realm': self.DEFAULT_REALM} return {} def _read_pypi_response(self, response): """Read and decode a PyPI HTTP response.""" with warnings.catch_warnings(): warnings.simplefilter("ignore", DeprecationWarning) import cgi content_type = response.getheader('content-type', 'text/plain') encoding = cgi.parse_header(content_type)[1].get('charset', 'ascii') return response.read().decode(encoding) def initialize_options(self): """Initialize options.""" self.repository = None self.realm = None self.show_response = 0 def finalize_options(self): """Finalizes options.""" if self.repository is None: self.repository = self.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY if self.realm is None: self.realm = self.DEFAULT_REALM PK ! ��5|! |! distutils/archive_util.pynu �[��� """distutils.archive_util Utility functions for creating archive files (tarballs, zip files, that sort of thing).""" import os from warnings import warn import sys try: import zipfile except ImportError: zipfile = None from distutils.errors import DistutilsExecError from distutils.spawn import spawn from distutils.dir_util import mkpath from distutils import log try: from pwd import getpwnam except ImportError: getpwnam = None try: from grp import getgrnam except ImportError: getgrnam = None def _get_gid(name): """Returns a gid, given a group name.""" if getgrnam is None or name is None: return None try: result = getgrnam(name) except KeyError: result = None if result is not None: return result[2] return None def _get_uid(name): """Returns an uid, given a user name.""" if getpwnam is None or name is None: return None try: result = getpwnam(name) except KeyError: result = None if result is not None: return result[2] return None def make_tarball(base_name, base_dir, compress="gzip", verbose=0, dry_run=0, owner=None, group=None): """Create a (possibly compressed) tar file from all the files under 'base_dir'. 'compress' must be "gzip" (the default), "bzip2", "xz", "compress", or None. ("compress" will be deprecated in Python 3.2) 'owner' and 'group' can be used to define an owner and a group for the archive that is being built. If not provided, the current owner and group will be used. The output tar file will be named 'base_dir' + ".tar", possibly plus the appropriate compression extension (".gz", ".bz2", ".xz" or ".Z"). Returns the output filename. """ tar_compression = {'gzip': 'gz', 'bzip2': 'bz2', 'xz': 'xz', None: '', 'compress': ''} compress_ext = {'gzip': '.gz', 'bzip2': '.bz2', 'xz': '.xz', 'compress': '.Z'} # flags for compression program, each element of list will be an argument if compress is not None and compress not in compress_ext.keys(): raise ValueError( "bad value for 'compress': must be None, 'gzip', 'bzip2', " "'xz' or 'compress'") archive_name = base_name + '.tar' if compress != 'compress': archive_name += compress_ext.get(compress, '') mkpath(os.path.dirname(archive_name), dry_run=dry_run) # creating the tarball import tarfile # late import so Python build itself doesn't break log.info('Creating tar archive') uid = _get_uid(owner) gid = _get_gid(group) def _set_uid_gid(tarinfo): if gid is not None: tarinfo.gid = gid tarinfo.gname = group if uid is not None: tarinfo.uid = uid tarinfo.uname = owner return tarinfo if not dry_run: tar = tarfile.open(archive_name, 'w|%s' % tar_compression[compress]) try: tar.add(base_dir, filter=_set_uid_gid) finally: tar.close() # compression using `compress` if compress == 'compress': warn("'compress' will be deprecated.", PendingDeprecationWarning) # the option varies depending on the platform compressed_name = archive_name + compress_ext[compress] if sys.platform == 'win32': cmd = [compress, archive_name, compressed_name] else: cmd = [compress, '-f', archive_name] spawn(cmd, dry_run=dry_run) return compressed_name return archive_name def make_zipfile(base_name, base_dir, verbose=0, dry_run=0): """Create a zip file from all the files under 'base_dir'. The output zip file will be named 'base_name' + ".zip". Uses either the "zipfile" Python module (if available) or the InfoZIP "zip" utility (if installed and found on the default search path). If neither tool is available, raises DistutilsExecError. Returns the name of the output zip file. """ zip_filename = base_name + ".zip" mkpath(os.path.dirname(zip_filename), dry_run=dry_run) # If zipfile module is not available, try spawning an external # 'zip' command. if zipfile is None: if verbose: zipoptions = "-r" else: zipoptions = "-rq" try: spawn(["zip", zipoptions, zip_filename, base_dir], dry_run=dry_run) except DistutilsExecError: # XXX really should distinguish between "couldn't find # external 'zip' command" and "zip failed". raise DistutilsExecError(("unable to create zip file '%s': " "could neither import the 'zipfile' module nor " "find a standalone zip utility") % zip_filename) else: log.info("creating '%s' and adding '%s' to it", zip_filename, base_dir) if not dry_run: try: zip = zipfile.ZipFile(zip_filename, "w", compression=zipfile.ZIP_DEFLATED) except RuntimeError: zip = zipfile.ZipFile(zip_filename, "w", compression=zipfile.ZIP_STORED) with zip: if base_dir != os.curdir: path = os.path.normpath(os.path.join(base_dir, '')) zip.write(path, path) log.info("adding '%s'", path) for dirpath, dirnames, filenames in os.walk(base_dir): for name in dirnames: path = os.path.normpath(os.path.join(dirpath, name, '')) zip.write(path, path) log.info("adding '%s'", path) for name in filenames: path = os.path.normpath(os.path.join(dirpath, name)) if os.path.isfile(path): zip.write(path, path) log.info("adding '%s'", path) return zip_filename ARCHIVE_FORMATS = { 'gztar': (make_tarball, [('compress', 'gzip')], "gzip'ed tar-file"), 'bztar': (make_tarball, [('compress', 'bzip2')], "bzip2'ed tar-file"), 'xztar': (make_tarball, [('compress', 'xz')], "xz'ed tar-file"), 'ztar': (make_tarball, [('compress', 'compress')], "compressed tar file"), 'tar': (make_tarball, [('compress', None)], "uncompressed tar file"), 'zip': (make_zipfile, [],"ZIP file") } def check_archive_formats(formats): """Returns the first format from the 'format' list that is unknown. If all formats are known, returns None """ for format in formats: if format not in ARCHIVE_FORMATS: return format return None def make_archive(base_name, format, root_dir=None, base_dir=None, verbose=0, dry_run=0, owner=None, group=None): """Create an archive file (eg. zip or tar). 'base_name' is the name of the file to create, minus any format-specific extension; 'format' is the archive format: one of "zip", "tar", "gztar", "bztar", "xztar", or "ztar". 'root_dir' is a directory that will be the root directory of the archive; ie. we typically chdir into 'root_dir' before creating the archive. 'base_dir' is the directory where we start archiving from; ie. 'base_dir' will be the common prefix of all files and directories in the archive. 'root_dir' and 'base_dir' both default to the current directory. Returns the name of the archive file. 'owner' and 'group' are used when creating a tar archive. By default, uses the current owner and group. """ save_cwd = os.getcwd() if root_dir is not None: log.debug("changing into '%s'", root_dir) base_name = os.path.abspath(base_name) if not dry_run: os.chdir(root_dir) if base_dir is None: base_dir = os.curdir kwargs = {'dry_run': dry_run} try: format_info = ARCHIVE_FORMATS[format] except KeyError: raise ValueError("unknown archive format '%s'" % format) func = format_info[0] for arg, val in format_info[1]: kwargs[arg] = val if format != 'zip': kwargs['owner'] = owner kwargs['group'] = group try: filename = func(base_name, base_dir, **kwargs) finally: if root_dir is not None: log.debug("changing back to '%s'", save_cwd) os.chdir(save_cwd) return filename PK ! k"#�� � distutils/dep_util.pynu �[��� """distutils.dep_util Utility functions for simple, timestamp-based dependency of files and groups of files; also, function based entirely on such timestamp dependency analysis.""" import os from distutils.errors import DistutilsFileError def newer (source, target): """Return true if 'source' exists and is more recently modified than 'target', or if 'source' exists and 'target' doesn't. Return false if both exist and 'target' is the same age or younger than 'source'. Raise DistutilsFileError if 'source' does not exist. """ if not os.path.exists(source): raise DistutilsFileError("file '%s' does not exist" % os.path.abspath(source)) if not os.path.exists(target): return 1 from stat import ST_MTIME mtime1 = os.stat(source)[ST_MTIME] mtime2 = os.stat(target)[ST_MTIME] return mtime1 > mtime2 # newer () def newer_pairwise (sources, targets): """Walk two filename lists in parallel, testing if each source is newer than its corresponding target. Return a pair of lists (sources, targets) where source is newer than target, according to the semantics of 'newer()'. """ if len(sources) != len(targets): raise ValueError("'sources' and 'targets' must be same length") # build a pair of lists (sources, targets) where source is newer n_sources = [] n_targets = [] for i in range(len(sources)): if newer(sources[i], targets[i]): n_sources.append(sources[i]) n_targets.append(targets[i]) return (n_sources, n_targets) # newer_pairwise () def newer_group (sources, target, missing='error'): """Return true if 'target' is out-of-date with respect to any file listed in 'sources'. In other words, if 'target' exists and is newer than every file in 'sources', return false; otherwise return true. 'missing' controls what we do when a source file is missing; the default ("error") is to blow up with an OSError from inside 'stat()'; if it is "ignore", we silently drop any missing source files; if it is "newer", any missing source files make us assume that 'target' is out-of-date (this is handy in "dry-run" mode: it'll make you pretend to carry out commands that wouldn't work because inputs are missing, but that doesn't matter because you're not actually going to run the commands). """ # If the target doesn't even exist, then it's definitely out-of-date. if not os.path.exists(target): return 1 # Otherwise we have to find out the hard way: if *any* source file # is more recent than 'target', then 'target' is out-of-date and # we can immediately return true. If we fall through to the end # of the loop, then 'target' is up-to-date and we return false. from stat import ST_MTIME target_mtime = os.stat(target)[ST_MTIME] for source in sources: if not os.path.exists(source): if missing == 'error': # blow up when we stat() the file pass elif missing == 'ignore': # missing source dropped from continue # target's dependency list elif missing == 'newer': # missing source means target is return 1 # out-of-date source_mtime = os.stat(source)[ST_MTIME] if source_mtime > target_mtime: return 1 else: return 0 # newer_group () PK ! ˆ�б � distutils/log.pynu �[��� """A simple log mechanism styled after PEP 282.""" # The class here is styled after PEP 282 so that it could later be # replaced with a standard Python logging implementation. DEBUG = 1 INFO = 2 WARN = 3 ERROR = 4 FATAL = 5 import sys class Log: def __init__(self, threshold=WARN): self.threshold = threshold def _log(self, level, msg, args): if level not in (DEBUG, INFO, WARN, ERROR, FATAL): raise ValueError('%s wrong log level' % str(level)) if level >= self.threshold: if args: msg = msg % args if level in (WARN, ERROR, FATAL): stream = sys.stderr else: stream = sys.stdout try: stream.write('%s\n' % msg) except UnicodeEncodeError: # emulate backslashreplace error handler encoding = stream.encoding msg = msg.encode(encoding, "backslashreplace").decode(encoding) stream.write('%s\n' % msg) stream.flush() def log(self, level, msg, *args): self._log(level, msg, args) def debug(self, msg, *args): self._log(DEBUG, msg, args) def info(self, msg, *args): self._log(INFO, msg, args) def warn(self, msg, *args): self._log(WARN, msg, args) def error(self, msg, *args): self._log(ERROR, msg, args) def fatal(self, msg, *args): self._log(FATAL, msg, args) _global_log = Log() log = _global_log.log debug = _global_log.debug info = _global_log.info warn = _global_log.warn error = _global_log.error fatal = _global_log.fatal def set_threshold(level): # return the old threshold for use from tests old = _global_log.threshold _global_log.threshold = level return old def set_verbosity(v): if v <= 0: set_threshold(WARN) elif v == 1: set_threshold(INFO) elif v >= 2: set_threshold(DEBUG) PK ! fP[5 2 2 distutils/filelist.pynu �[��� """distutils.filelist Provides the FileList class, used for poking about the filesystem and building lists of files. """ import os, re import fnmatch import functools from distutils.util import convert_path from distutils.errors import DistutilsTemplateError, DistutilsInternalError from distutils import log class FileList: """A list of files built by on exploring the filesystem and filtered by applying various patterns to what we find there. Instance attributes: dir directory from which files will be taken -- only used if 'allfiles' not supplied to constructor files list of filenames currently being built/filtered/manipulated allfiles complete list of files under consideration (ie. without any filtering applied) """ def __init__(self, warn=None, debug_print=None): # ignore argument to FileList, but keep them for backwards # compatibility self.allfiles = None self.files = [] def set_allfiles(self, allfiles): self.allfiles = allfiles def findall(self, dir=os.curdir): self.allfiles = findall(dir) def debug_print(self, msg): """Print 'msg' to stdout if the global DEBUG (taken from the DISTUTILS_DEBUG environment variable) flag is true. """ from distutils.debug import DEBUG if DEBUG: print(msg) # -- List-like methods --------------------------------------------- def append(self, item): self.files.append(item) def extend(self, items): self.files.extend(items) def sort(self): # Not a strict lexical sort! sortable_files = sorted(map(os.path.split, self.files)) self.files = [] for sort_tuple in sortable_files: self.files.append(os.path.join(*sort_tuple)) # -- Other miscellaneous utility methods --------------------------- def remove_duplicates(self): # Assumes list has been sorted! for i in range(len(self.files) - 1, 0, -1): if self.files[i] == self.files[i - 1]: del self.files[i] # -- "File template" methods --------------------------------------- def _parse_template_line(self, line): words = line.split() action = words[0] patterns = dir = dir_pattern = None if action in ('include', 'exclude', 'global-include', 'global-exclude'): if len(words) < 2: raise DistutilsTemplateError( "'%s' expects <pattern1> <pattern2> ..." % action) patterns = [convert_path(w) for w in words[1:]] elif action in ('recursive-include', 'recursive-exclude'): if len(words) < 3: raise DistutilsTemplateError( "'%s' expects <dir> <pattern1> <pattern2> ..." % action) dir = convert_path(words[1]) patterns = [convert_path(w) for w in words[2:]] elif action in ('graft', 'prune'): if len(words) != 2: raise DistutilsTemplateError( "'%s' expects a single <dir_pattern>" % action) dir_pattern = convert_path(words[1]) else: raise DistutilsTemplateError("unknown action '%s'" % action) return (action, patterns, dir, dir_pattern) def process_template_line(self, line): # Parse the line: split it up, make sure the right number of words # is there, and return the relevant words. 'action' is always # defined: it's the first word of the line. Which of the other # three are defined depends on the action; it'll be either # patterns, (dir and patterns), or (dir_pattern). (action, patterns, dir, dir_pattern) = self._parse_template_line(line) # OK, now we know that the action is valid and we have the # right number of words on the line for that action -- so we # can proceed with minimal error-checking. if action == 'include': self.debug_print("include " + ' '.join(patterns)) for pattern in patterns: if not self.include_pattern(pattern, anchor=1): log.warn("warning: no files found matching '%s'", pattern) elif action == 'exclude': self.debug_print("exclude " + ' '.join(patterns)) for pattern in patterns: if not self.exclude_pattern(pattern, anchor=1): log.warn(("warning: no previously-included files " "found matching '%s'"), pattern) elif action == 'global-include': self.debug_print("global-include " + ' '.join(patterns)) for pattern in patterns: if not self.include_pattern(pattern, anchor=0): log.warn(("warning: no files found matching '%s' " "anywhere in distribution"), pattern) elif action == 'global-exclude': self.debug_print("global-exclude " + ' '.join(patterns)) for pattern in patterns: if not self.exclude_pattern(pattern, anchor=0): log.warn(("warning: no previously-included files matching " "'%s' found anywhere in distribution"), pattern) elif action == 'recursive-include': self.debug_print("recursive-include %s %s" % (dir, ' '.join(patterns))) for pattern in patterns: if not self.include_pattern(pattern, prefix=dir): log.warn(("warning: no files found matching '%s' " "under directory '%s'"), pattern, dir) elif action == 'recursive-exclude': self.debug_print("recursive-exclude %s %s" % (dir, ' '.join(patterns))) for pattern in patterns: if not self.exclude_pattern(pattern, prefix=dir): log.warn(("warning: no previously-included files matching " "'%s' found under directory '%s'"), pattern, dir) elif action == 'graft': self.debug_print("graft " + dir_pattern) if not self.include_pattern(None, prefix=dir_pattern): log.warn("warning: no directories found matching '%s'", dir_pattern) elif action == 'prune': self.debug_print("prune " + dir_pattern) if not self.exclude_pattern(None, prefix=dir_pattern): log.warn(("no previously-included directories found " "matching '%s'"), dir_pattern) else: raise DistutilsInternalError( "this cannot happen: invalid action '%s'" % action) # -- Filtering/selection methods ----------------------------------- def include_pattern(self, pattern, anchor=1, prefix=None, is_regex=0): """Select strings (presumably filenames) from 'self.files' that match 'pattern', a Unix-style wildcard (glob) pattern. Patterns are not quite the same as implemented by the 'fnmatch' module: '*' and '?' match non-special characters, where "special" is platform- dependent: slash on Unix; colon, slash, and backslash on DOS/Windows; and colon on Mac OS. If 'anchor' is true (the default), then the pattern match is more stringent: "*.py" will match "foo.py" but not "foo/bar.py". If 'anchor' is false, both of these will match. If 'prefix' is supplied, then only filenames starting with 'prefix' (itself a pattern) and ending with 'pattern', with anything in between them, will match. 'anchor' is ignored in this case. If 'is_regex' is true, 'anchor' and 'prefix' are ignored, and 'pattern' is assumed to be either a string containing a regex or a regex object -- no translation is done, the regex is just compiled and used as-is. Selected strings will be added to self.files. Return True if files are found, False otherwise. """ # XXX docstring lying about what the special chars are? files_found = False pattern_re = translate_pattern(pattern, anchor, prefix, is_regex) self.debug_print("include_pattern: applying regex r'%s'" % pattern_re.pattern) # delayed loading of allfiles list if self.allfiles is None: self.findall() for name in self.allfiles: if pattern_re.search(name): self.debug_print(" adding " + name) self.files.append(name) files_found = True return files_found def exclude_pattern (self, pattern, anchor=1, prefix=None, is_regex=0): """Remove strings (presumably filenames) from 'files' that match 'pattern'. Other parameters are the same as for 'include_pattern()', above. The list 'self.files' is modified in place. Return True if files are found, False otherwise. """ files_found = False pattern_re = translate_pattern(pattern, anchor, prefix, is_regex) self.debug_print("exclude_pattern: applying regex r'%s'" % pattern_re.pattern) for i in range(len(self.files)-1, -1, -1): if pattern_re.search(self.files[i]): self.debug_print(" removing " + self.files[i]) del self.files[i] files_found = True return files_found # ---------------------------------------------------------------------- # Utility functions def _find_all_simple(path): """ Find all files under 'path' """ results = ( os.path.join(base, file) for base, dirs, files in os.walk(path, followlinks=True) for file in files ) return filter(os.path.isfile, results) def findall(dir=os.curdir): """ Find all files under 'dir' and return the list of full filenames. Unless dir is '.', return full filenames with dir prepended. """ files = _find_all_simple(dir) if dir == os.curdir: make_rel = functools.partial(os.path.relpath, start=dir) files = map(make_rel, files) return list(files) def glob_to_re(pattern): """Translate a shell-like glob pattern to a regular expression; return a string containing the regex. Differs from 'fnmatch.translate()' in that '*' does not match "special characters" (which are platform-specific). """ pattern_re = fnmatch.translate(pattern) # '?' and '*' in the glob pattern become '.' and '.*' in the RE, which # IMHO is wrong -- '?' and '*' aren't supposed to match slash in Unix, # and by extension they shouldn't match such "special characters" under # any OS. So change all non-escaped dots in the RE to match any # character except the special characters (currently: just os.sep). sep = os.sep if os.sep == '\\': # we're using a regex to manipulate a regex, so we need # to escape the backslash twice sep = r'\\\\' escaped = r'\1[^%s]' % sep pattern_re = re.sub(r'((?<!\\)(\\\\)*)\.', escaped, pattern_re) return pattern_re def translate_pattern(pattern, anchor=1, prefix=None, is_regex=0): """Translate a shell-like wildcard pattern to a compiled regular expression. Return the compiled regex. If 'is_regex' true, then 'pattern' is directly compiled to a regex (if it's a string) or just returned as-is (assumes it's a regex object). """ if is_regex: if isinstance(pattern, str): return re.compile(pattern) else: return pattern # ditch start and end characters start, _, end = glob_to_re('_').partition('_') if pattern: pattern_re = glob_to_re(pattern) assert pattern_re.startswith(start) and pattern_re.endswith(end) else: pattern_re = '' if prefix is not None: prefix_re = glob_to_re(prefix) assert prefix_re.startswith(start) and prefix_re.endswith(end) prefix_re = prefix_re[len(start): len(prefix_re) - len(end)] sep = os.sep if os.sep == '\\': sep = r'\\' pattern_re = pattern_re[len(start): len(pattern_re) - len(end)] pattern_re = r'%s\A%s%s.*%s%s' % (start, prefix_re, sep, pattern_re, end) else: # no prefix -- respect anchor flag if anchor: pattern_re = r'%s\A%s' % (start, pattern_re[len(start):]) return re.compile(pattern_re) PK ! }/[�? �? distutils/cygwinccompiler.pynu �[��� """distutils.cygwinccompiler Provides the CygwinCCompiler class, a subclass of UnixCCompiler that handles the Cygwin port of the GNU C compiler to Windows. It also contains the Mingw32CCompiler class which handles the mingw32 port of GCC (same as cygwin in no-cygwin mode). """ # problems: # # * if you use a msvc compiled python version (1.5.2) # 1. you have to insert a __GNUC__ section in its config.h # 2. you have to generate an import library for its dll # - create a def-file for python??.dll # - create an import library using # dlltool --dllname python15.dll --def python15.def \ # --output-lib libpython15.a # # see also http://starship.python.net/crew/kernr/mingw32/Notes.html # # * We put export_symbols in a def-file, and don't use # --export-all-symbols because it doesn't worked reliable in some # tested configurations. And because other windows compilers also # need their symbols specified this no serious problem. # # tested configurations: # # * cygwin gcc 2.91.57/ld 2.9.4/dllwrap 0.2.4 works # (after patching python's config.h and for C++ some other include files) # see also http://starship.python.net/crew/kernr/mingw32/Notes.html # * mingw32 gcc 2.95.2/ld 2.9.4/dllwrap 0.2.4 works # (ld doesn't support -shared, so we use dllwrap) # * cygwin gcc 2.95.2/ld 2.10.90/dllwrap 2.10.90 works now # - its dllwrap doesn't work, there is a bug in binutils 2.10.90 # see also http://sources.redhat.com/ml/cygwin/2000-06/msg01274.html # - using gcc -mdll instead dllwrap doesn't work without -static because # it tries to link against dlls instead their import libraries. (If # it finds the dll first.) # By specifying -static we force ld to link against the import libraries, # this is windows standard and there are normally not the necessary symbols # in the dlls. # *** only the version of June 2000 shows these problems # * cygwin gcc 3.2/ld 2.13.90 works # (ld supports -shared) # * mingw gcc 3.2/ld 2.13 works # (ld supports -shared) import os import sys import copy from subprocess import Popen, PIPE, check_output import re from distutils.unixccompiler import UnixCCompiler from distutils.file_util import write_file from distutils.errors import (DistutilsExecError, CCompilerError, CompileError, UnknownFileError) from distutils.version import LooseVersion from distutils.spawn import find_executable def get_msvcr(): """Include the appropriate MSVC runtime library if Python was built with MSVC 7.0 or later. """ msc_pos = sys.version.find('MSC v.') if msc_pos != -1: msc_ver = sys.version[msc_pos+6:msc_pos+10] if msc_ver == '1300': # MSVC 7.0 return ['msvcr70'] elif msc_ver == '1310': # MSVC 7.1 return ['msvcr71'] elif msc_ver == '1400': # VS2005 / MSVC 8.0 return ['msvcr80'] elif msc_ver == '1500': # VS2008 / MSVC 9.0 return ['msvcr90'] elif msc_ver == '1600': # VS2010 / MSVC 10.0 return ['msvcr100'] else: raise ValueError("Unknown MS Compiler version %s " % msc_ver) class CygwinCCompiler(UnixCCompiler): """ Handles the Cygwin port of the GNU C compiler to Windows. """ compiler_type = 'cygwin' obj_extension = ".o" static_lib_extension = ".a" shared_lib_extension = ".dll" static_lib_format = "lib%s%s" shared_lib_format = "%s%s" exe_extension = ".exe" def __init__(self, verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0): UnixCCompiler.__init__(self, verbose, dry_run, force) status, details = check_config_h() self.debug_print("Python's GCC status: %s (details: %s)" % (status, details)) if status is not CONFIG_H_OK: self.warn( "Python's pyconfig.h doesn't seem to support your compiler. " "Reason: %s. " "Compiling may fail because of undefined preprocessor macros." % details) self.gcc_version, self.ld_version, self.dllwrap_version = \ get_versions() self.debug_print(self.compiler_type + ": gcc %s, ld %s, dllwrap %s\n" % (self.gcc_version, self.ld_version, self.dllwrap_version) ) # ld_version >= "2.10.90" and < "2.13" should also be able to use # gcc -mdll instead of dllwrap # Older dllwraps had own version numbers, newer ones use the # same as the rest of binutils ( also ld ) # dllwrap 2.10.90 is buggy if self.ld_version >= "2.10.90": self.linker_dll = "gcc" else: self.linker_dll = "dllwrap" # ld_version >= "2.13" support -shared so use it instead of # -mdll -static if self.ld_version >= "2.13": shared_option = "-shared" else: shared_option = "-mdll -static" # Hard-code GCC because that's what this is all about. # XXX optimization, warnings etc. should be customizable. self.set_executables(compiler='gcc -mcygwin -O -Wall', compiler_so='gcc -mcygwin -mdll -O -Wall', compiler_cxx='g++ -mcygwin -O -Wall', linker_exe='gcc -mcygwin', linker_so=('%s -mcygwin %s' % (self.linker_dll, shared_option))) # cygwin and mingw32 need different sets of libraries if self.gcc_version == "2.91.57": # cygwin shouldn't need msvcrt, but without the dlls will crash # (gcc version 2.91.57) -- perhaps something about initialization self.dll_libraries=["msvcrt"] self.warn( "Consider upgrading to a newer version of gcc") else: # Include the appropriate MSVC runtime library if Python was built # with MSVC 7.0 or later. self.dll_libraries = get_msvcr() def _compile(self, obj, src, ext, cc_args, extra_postargs, pp_opts): """Compiles the source by spawning GCC and windres if needed.""" if ext == '.rc' or ext == '.res': # gcc needs '.res' and '.rc' compiled to object files !!! try: self.spawn(["windres", "-i", src, "-o", obj]) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise CompileError(msg) else: # for other files use the C-compiler try: self.spawn(self.compiler_so + cc_args + [src, '-o', obj] + extra_postargs) except DistutilsExecError as msg: raise CompileError(msg) def link(self, target_desc, objects, output_filename, output_dir=None, libraries=None, library_dirs=None, runtime_library_dirs=None, export_symbols=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, build_temp=None, target_lang=None): """Link the objects.""" # use separate copies, so we can modify the lists extra_preargs = copy.copy(extra_preargs or []) libraries = copy.copy(libraries or []) objects = copy.copy(objects or []) # Additional libraries libraries.extend(self.dll_libraries) # handle export symbols by creating a def-file # with executables this only works with gcc/ld as linker if ((export_symbols is not None) and (target_desc != self.EXECUTABLE or self.linker_dll == "gcc")): # (The linker doesn't do anything if output is up-to-date. # So it would probably better to check if we really need this, # but for this we had to insert some unchanged parts of # UnixCCompiler, and this is not what we want.) # we want to put some files in the same directory as the # object files are, build_temp doesn't help much # where are the object files temp_dir = os.path.dirname(objects[0]) # name of dll to give the helper files the same base name (dll_name, dll_extension) = os.path.splitext( os.path.basename(output_filename)) # generate the filenames for these files def_file = os.path.join(temp_dir, dll_name + ".def") lib_file = os.path.join(temp_dir, 'lib' + dll_name + ".a") # Generate .def file contents = [ "LIBRARY %s" % os.path.basename(output_filename), "EXPORTS"] for sym in export_symbols: contents.append(sym) self.execute(write_file, (def_file, contents), "writing %s" % def_file) # next add options for def-file and to creating import libraries # dllwrap uses different options than gcc/ld if self.linker_dll == "dllwrap": extra_preargs.extend(["--output-lib", lib_file]) # for dllwrap we have to use a special option extra_preargs.extend(["--def", def_file]) # we use gcc/ld here and can be sure ld is >= 2.9.10 else: # doesn't work: bfd_close build\...\libfoo.a: Invalid operation #extra_preargs.extend(["-Wl,--out-implib,%s" % lib_file]) # for gcc/ld the def-file is specified as any object files objects.append(def_file) #end: if ((export_symbols is not None) and # (target_desc != self.EXECUTABLE or self.linker_dll == "gcc")): # who wants symbols and a many times larger output file # should explicitly switch the debug mode on # otherwise we let dllwrap/ld strip the output file # (On my machine: 10KiB < stripped_file < ??100KiB # unstripped_file = stripped_file + XXX KiB # ( XXX=254 for a typical python extension)) if not debug: extra_preargs.append("-s") UnixCCompiler.link(self, target_desc, objects, output_filename, output_dir, libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs, None, # export_symbols, we do this in our def-file debug, extra_preargs, extra_postargs, build_temp, target_lang) # -- Miscellaneous methods ----------------------------------------- def object_filenames(self, source_filenames, strip_dir=0, output_dir=''): """Adds supports for rc and res files.""" if output_dir is None: output_dir = '' obj_names = [] for src_name in source_filenames: # use normcase to make sure '.rc' is really '.rc' and not '.RC' base, ext = os.path.splitext(os.path.normcase(src_name)) if ext not in (self.src_extensions + ['.rc','.res']): raise UnknownFileError("unknown file type '%s' (from '%s')" % \ (ext, src_name)) if strip_dir: base = os.path.basename (base) if ext in ('.res', '.rc'): # these need to be compiled to object files obj_names.append (os.path.join(output_dir, base + ext + self.obj_extension)) else: obj_names.append (os.path.join(output_dir, base + self.obj_extension)) return obj_names # the same as cygwin plus some additional parameters class Mingw32CCompiler(CygwinCCompiler): """ Handles the Mingw32 port of the GNU C compiler to Windows. """ compiler_type = 'mingw32' def __init__(self, verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0): CygwinCCompiler.__init__ (self, verbose, dry_run, force) # ld_version >= "2.13" support -shared so use it instead of # -mdll -static if self.ld_version >= "2.13": shared_option = "-shared" else: shared_option = "-mdll -static" # A real mingw32 doesn't need to specify a different entry point, # but cygwin 2.91.57 in no-cygwin-mode needs it. if self.gcc_version <= "2.91.57": entry_point = '--entry _DllMain@12' else: entry_point = '' if is_cygwingcc(): raise CCompilerError( 'Cygwin gcc cannot be used with --compiler=mingw32') self.set_executables(compiler='gcc -O -Wall', compiler_so='gcc -mdll -O -Wall', compiler_cxx='g++ -O -Wall', linker_exe='gcc', linker_so='%s %s %s' % (self.linker_dll, shared_option, entry_point)) # Maybe we should also append -mthreads, but then the finished # dlls need another dll (mingwm10.dll see Mingw32 docs) # (-mthreads: Support thread-safe exception handling on `Mingw32') # no additional libraries needed self.dll_libraries=[] # Include the appropriate MSVC runtime library if Python was built # with MSVC 7.0 or later. self.dll_libraries = get_msvcr() # Because these compilers aren't configured in Python's pyconfig.h file by # default, we should at least warn the user if he is using an unmodified # version. CONFIG_H_OK = "ok" CONFIG_H_NOTOK = "not ok" CONFIG_H_UNCERTAIN = "uncertain" def check_config_h(): """Check if the current Python installation appears amenable to building extensions with GCC. Returns a tuple (status, details), where 'status' is one of the following constants: - CONFIG_H_OK: all is well, go ahead and compile - CONFIG_H_NOTOK: doesn't look good - CONFIG_H_UNCERTAIN: not sure -- unable to read pyconfig.h 'details' is a human-readable string explaining the situation. Note there are two ways to conclude "OK": either 'sys.version' contains the string "GCC" (implying that this Python was built with GCC), or the installed "pyconfig.h" contains the string "__GNUC__". """ # XXX since this function also checks sys.version, it's not strictly a # "pyconfig.h" check -- should probably be renamed... from distutils import sysconfig # if sys.version contains GCC then python was compiled with GCC, and the # pyconfig.h file should be OK if "GCC" in sys.version: return CONFIG_H_OK, "sys.version mentions 'GCC'" # let's see if __GNUC__ is mentioned in python.h fn = sysconfig.get_config_h_filename() try: config_h = open(fn) try: if "__GNUC__" in config_h.read(): return CONFIG_H_OK, "'%s' mentions '__GNUC__'" % fn else: return CONFIG_H_NOTOK, "'%s' does not mention '__GNUC__'" % fn finally: config_h.close() except OSError as exc: return (CONFIG_H_UNCERTAIN, "couldn't read '%s': %s" % (fn, exc.strerror)) RE_VERSION = re.compile(br'(\d+\.\d+(\.\d+)*)') def _find_exe_version(cmd): """Find the version of an executable by running `cmd` in the shell. If the command is not found, or the output does not match `RE_VERSION`, returns None. """ executable = cmd.split()[0] if find_executable(executable) is None: return None out = Popen(cmd, shell=True, stdout=PIPE).stdout try: out_string = out.read() finally: out.close() result = RE_VERSION.search(out_string) if result is None: return None # LooseVersion works with strings # so we need to decode our bytes return LooseVersion(result.group(1).decode()) def get_versions(): """ Try to find out the versions of gcc, ld and dllwrap. If not possible it returns None for it. """ commands = ['gcc -dumpversion', 'ld -v', 'dllwrap --version'] return tuple([_find_exe_version(cmd) for cmd in commands]) def is_cygwingcc(): '''Try to determine if the gcc that would be used is from cygwin.''' out_string = check_output(['gcc', '-dumpmachine']) return out_string.strip().endswith(b'cygwin') PK ! Q8���0 �0 distutils/text_file.pynu �[��� """text_file provides the TextFile class, which gives an interface to text files that (optionally) takes care of stripping comments, ignoring blank lines, and joining lines with backslashes.""" import sys, io class TextFile: """Provides a file-like object that takes care of all the things you commonly want to do when processing a text file that has some line-by-line syntax: strip comments (as long as "#" is your comment character), skip blank lines, join adjacent lines by escaping the newline (ie. backslash at end of line), strip leading and/or trailing whitespace. All of these are optional and independently controllable. Provides a 'warn()' method so you can generate warning messages that report physical line number, even if the logical line in question spans multiple physical lines. Also provides 'unreadline()' for implementing line-at-a-time lookahead. Constructor is called as: TextFile (filename=None, file=None, **options) It bombs (RuntimeError) if both 'filename' and 'file' are None; 'filename' should be a string, and 'file' a file object (or something that provides 'readline()' and 'close()' methods). It is recommended that you supply at least 'filename', so that TextFile can include it in warning messages. If 'file' is not supplied, TextFile creates its own using 'io.open()'. The options are all boolean, and affect the value returned by 'readline()': strip_comments [default: true] strip from "#" to end-of-line, as well as any whitespace leading up to the "#" -- unless it is escaped by a backslash lstrip_ws [default: false] strip leading whitespace from each line before returning it rstrip_ws [default: true] strip trailing whitespace (including line terminator!) from each line before returning it skip_blanks [default: true} skip lines that are empty *after* stripping comments and whitespace. (If both lstrip_ws and rstrip_ws are false, then some lines may consist of solely whitespace: these will *not* be skipped, even if 'skip_blanks' is true.) join_lines [default: false] if a backslash is the last non-newline character on a line after stripping comments and whitespace, join the following line to it to form one "logical line"; if N consecutive lines end with a backslash, then N+1 physical lines will be joined to form one logical line. collapse_join [default: false] strip leading whitespace from lines that are joined to their predecessor; only matters if (join_lines and not lstrip_ws) errors [default: 'strict'] error handler used to decode the file content Note that since 'rstrip_ws' can strip the trailing newline, the semantics of 'readline()' must differ from those of the builtin file object's 'readline()' method! In particular, 'readline()' returns None for end-of-file: an empty string might just be a blank line (or an all-whitespace line), if 'rstrip_ws' is true but 'skip_blanks' is not.""" default_options = { 'strip_comments': 1, 'skip_blanks': 1, 'lstrip_ws': 0, 'rstrip_ws': 1, 'join_lines': 0, 'collapse_join': 0, 'errors': 'strict', } def __init__(self, filename=None, file=None, **options): """Construct a new TextFile object. At least one of 'filename' (a string) and 'file' (a file-like object) must be supplied. They keyword argument options are described above and affect the values returned by 'readline()'.""" if filename is None and file is None: raise RuntimeError("you must supply either or both of 'filename' and 'file'") # set values for all options -- either from client option hash # or fallback to default_options for opt in self.default_options.keys(): if opt in options: setattr(self, opt, options[opt]) else: setattr(self, opt, self.default_options[opt]) # sanity check client option hash for opt in options.keys(): if opt not in self.default_options: raise KeyError("invalid TextFile option '%s'" % opt) if file is None: self.open(filename) else: self.filename = filename self.file = file self.current_line = 0 # assuming that file is at BOF! # 'linebuf' is a stack of lines that will be emptied before we # actually read from the file; it's only populated by an # 'unreadline()' operation self.linebuf = [] def open(self, filename): """Open a new file named 'filename'. This overrides both the 'filename' and 'file' arguments to the constructor.""" self.filename = filename self.file = io.open(self.filename, 'r', errors=self.errors) self.current_line = 0 def close(self): """Close the current file and forget everything we know about it (filename, current line number).""" file = self.file self.file = None self.filename = None self.current_line = None file.close() def gen_error(self, msg, line=None): outmsg = [] if line is None: line = self.current_line outmsg.append(self.filename + ", ") if isinstance(line, (list, tuple)): outmsg.append("lines %d-%d: " % tuple(line)) else: outmsg.append("line %d: " % line) outmsg.append(str(msg)) return "".join(outmsg) def error(self, msg, line=None): raise ValueError("error: " + self.gen_error(msg, line)) def warn(self, msg, line=None): """Print (to stderr) a warning message tied to the current logical line in the current file. If the current logical line in the file spans multiple physical lines, the warning refers to the whole range, eg. "lines 3-5". If 'line' supplied, it overrides the current line number; it may be a list or tuple to indicate a range of physical lines, or an integer for a single physical line.""" sys.stderr.write("warning: " + self.gen_error(msg, line) + "\n") def readline(self): """Read and return a single logical line from the current file (or from an internal buffer if lines have previously been "unread" with 'unreadline()'). If the 'join_lines' option is true, this may involve reading multiple physical lines concatenated into a single string. Updates the current line number, so calling 'warn()' after 'readline()' emits a warning about the physical line(s) just read. Returns None on end-of-file, since the empty string can occur if 'rstrip_ws' is true but 'strip_blanks' is not.""" # If any "unread" lines waiting in 'linebuf', return the top # one. (We don't actually buffer read-ahead data -- lines only # get put in 'linebuf' if the client explicitly does an # 'unreadline()'. if self.linebuf: line = self.linebuf[-1] del self.linebuf[-1] return line buildup_line = '' while True: # read the line, make it None if EOF line = self.file.readline() if line == '': line = None if self.strip_comments and line: # Look for the first "#" in the line. If none, never # mind. If we find one and it's the first character, or # is not preceded by "\", then it starts a comment -- # strip the comment, strip whitespace before it, and # carry on. Otherwise, it's just an escaped "#", so # unescape it (and any other escaped "#"'s that might be # lurking in there) and otherwise leave the line alone. pos = line.find("#") if pos == -1: # no "#" -- no comments pass # It's definitely a comment -- either "#" is the first # character, or it's elsewhere and unescaped. elif pos == 0 or line[pos-1] != "\\": # Have to preserve the trailing newline, because it's # the job of a later step (rstrip_ws) to remove it -- # and if rstrip_ws is false, we'd better preserve it! # (NB. this means that if the final line is all comment # and has no trailing newline, we will think that it's # EOF; I think that's OK.) eol = (line[-1] == '\n') and '\n' or '' line = line[0:pos] + eol # If all that's left is whitespace, then skip line # *now*, before we try to join it to 'buildup_line' -- # that way constructs like # hello \\ # # comment that should be ignored # there # result in "hello there". if line.strip() == "": continue else: # it's an escaped "#" line = line.replace("\\#", "#") # did previous line end with a backslash? then accumulate if self.join_lines and buildup_line: # oops: end of file if line is None: self.warn("continuation line immediately precedes " "end-of-file") return buildup_line if self.collapse_join: line = line.lstrip() line = buildup_line + line # careful: pay attention to line number when incrementing it if isinstance(self.current_line, list): self.current_line[1] = self.current_line[1] + 1 else: self.current_line = [self.current_line, self.current_line + 1] # just an ordinary line, read it as usual else: if line is None: # eof return None # still have to be careful about incrementing the line number! if isinstance(self.current_line, list): self.current_line = self.current_line[1] + 1 else: self.current_line = self.current_line + 1 # strip whitespace however the client wants (leading and # trailing, or one or the other, or neither) if self.lstrip_ws and self.rstrip_ws: line = line.strip() elif self.lstrip_ws: line = line.lstrip() elif self.rstrip_ws: line = line.rstrip() # blank line (whether we rstrip'ed or not)? skip to next line # if appropriate if (line == '' or line == '\n') and self.skip_blanks: continue if self.join_lines: if line[-1] == '\\': buildup_line = line[:-1] continue if line[-2:] == '\\\n': buildup_line = line[0:-2] + '\n' continue # well, I guess there's some actual content there: return it return line def readlines(self): """Read and return the list of all logical lines remaining in the current file.""" lines = [] while True: line = self.readline() if line is None: return lines lines.append(line) def unreadline(self, line): """Push 'line' (a string) onto an internal buffer that will be checked by future 'readline()' calls. Handy for implementing a parser with line-at-a-time lookahead.""" self.linebuf.append(line) PK ! �d+�X X "