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       ! sָW  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       ! ˆб      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       ! Q80  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  "  distutils/command/build_scripts.pynu [        """distutils.command.build_scripts

Implements the Distutils 'build_scripts' command."""

import os, re
from stat import ST_MODE
from distutils import sysconfig
from distutils.core import Command
from distutils.dep_util import newer
from distutils.util import convert_path, Mixin2to3
from distutils import log
import tokenize

# check if Python is called on the first line with this expression
first_line_re = re.compile(b'^#!.*python[0-9.]*([ \t].*)?$')

class build_scripts(Command):

    description = "\"build\" scripts (copy and fixup #! line)"

    user_options = [
        ('build-dir=', 'd', "directory to \"build\" (copy) to"),
        ('force', 'f', "forcibly build everything (ignore file timestamps"),
        ('executable=', 'e', "specify final destination interpreter path"),
        ]

    boolean_options = ['force']


    def initialize_options(self):
        self.build_dir = None
        self.scripts = None
        self.force = None
        self.executable = None
        self.outfiles = None

    def finalize_options(self):
        self.set_undefined_options('build',
                                   ('build_scripts', 'build_dir'),
                                   ('force', 'force'),
                                   ('executable', 'executable'))
        self.scripts = self.distribution.scripts

    def get_source_files(self):
        return self.scripts

    def run(self):
        if not self.scripts:
            return
        self.copy_scripts()


    def copy_scripts(self):
        r"""Copy each script listed in 'self.scripts'; if it's marked as a
        Python script in the Unix way (first line matches 'first_line_re',
        ie. starts with "\#!" and contains "python"), then adjust the first
        line to refer to the current Python interpreter as we copy.
        """
        self.mkpath(self.build_dir)
        outfiles = []
        updated_files = []
        for script in self.scripts:
            adjust = False
            script = convert_path(script)
            outfile = os.path.join(self.build_dir, os.path.basename(script))
            outfiles.append(outfile)

            if not self.force and not newer(script, outfile):
                log.debug("not copying %s (up-to-date)", script)
                continue

            # Always open the file, but ignore failures in dry-run mode --
            # that way, we'll get accurate feedback if we can read the
            # script.
            try:
                f = open(script, "rb")
            except OSError:
                if not self.dry_run:
                    raise
                f = None
            else:
                encoding, lines = tokenize.detect_encoding(f.readline)
                f.seek(0)
                first_line = f.readline()
                if not first_line:
                    self.warn("%s is an empty file (skipping)" % script)
                    continue

                match = first_line_re.match(first_line)
                if match:
                    adjust = True
                    post_interp = match.group(1) or b''

            if adjust:
                log.info("copying and adjusting %s -> %s", script,
                         self.build_dir)
                updated_files.append(outfile)
                if not self.dry_run:
                    if not sysconfig.python_build:
                        executable = self.executable
                    else:
                        executable = os.path.join(
                            sysconfig.get_config_var("BINDIR"),
                           "python%s%s" % (sysconfig.get_config_var("VERSION"),
                                           sysconfig.get_config_var("EXE")))
                    executable = os.fsencode(executable)
                    shebang = b"#!" + executable + post_interp + b"\n"
                    # Python parser starts to read a script using UTF-8 until
                    # it gets a #coding:xxx cookie. The shebang has to be the
                    # first line of a file, the #coding:xxx cookie cannot be
                    # written before. So the shebang has to be decodable from
                    # UTF-8.
                    try:
                        shebang.decode('utf-8')
                    except UnicodeDecodeError:
                        raise ValueError(
                            "The shebang ({!r}) is not decodable "
                            "from utf-8".format(shebang))
                    # If the script is encoded to a custom encoding (use a
                    # #coding:xxx cookie), the shebang has to be decodable from
                    # the script encoding too.
                    try:
                        shebang.decode(encoding)
                    except UnicodeDecodeError:
                        raise ValueError(
                            "The shebang ({!r}) is not decodable "
                            "from the script encoding ({})"
                            .format(shebang, encoding))
                    with open(outfile, "wb") as outf:
                        outf.write(shebang)
                        outf.writelines(f.readlines())
                if f:
                    f.close()
            else:
                if f:
                    f.close()
                updated_files.append(outfile)
                self.copy_file(script, outfile)

        if os.name == 'posix':
            for file in outfiles:
                if self.dry_run:
                    log.info("changing mode of %s", file)
                else:
                    oldmode = os.stat(file)[ST_MODE] & 0o7777
                    newmode = (oldmode | 0o555) & 0o7777
                    if newmode != oldmode:
                        log.info("changing mode of %s from %o to %o",
                                 file, oldmode, newmode)
                        os.chmod(file, newmode)
        # XXX should we modify self.outfiles?
        return outfiles, updated_files

class build_scripts_2to3(build_scripts, Mixin2to3):

    def copy_scripts(self):
        outfiles, updated_files = build_scripts.copy_scripts(self)
        if not self.dry_run:
            self.run_2to3(updated_files)
        return outfiles, updated_files
PK       ! d]!T  !T    distutils/command/bdist_rpm.pynu [        """distutils.command.bdist_rpm

Implements the Distutils 'bdist_rpm' command (create RPM source and binary
distributions)."""

import subprocess, sys, os
from distutils.core import Command
from distutils.debug import DEBUG
from distutils.file_util import write_file
from distutils.errors import *
from distutils.sysconfig import get_python_version
from distutils import log

class bdist_rpm(Command):

    description = "create an RPM distribution"

    user_options = [
        ('bdist-base=', None,
         "base directory for creating built distributions"),
        ('rpm-base=', None,
         "base directory for creating RPMs (defaults to \"rpm\" under "
         "--bdist-base; must be specified for RPM 2)"),
        ('dist-dir=', 'd',
         "directory to put final RPM files in "
         "(and .spec files if --spec-only)"),
        ('python=', None,
         "path to Python interpreter to hard-code in the .spec file "
         "(default: \"python\")"),
        ('fix-python', None,
         "hard-code the exact path to the current Python interpreter in "
         "the .spec file"),
        ('spec-only', None,
         "only regenerate spec file"),
        ('source-only', None,
         "only generate source RPM"),
        ('binary-only', None,
         "only generate binary RPM"),
        ('use-bzip2', None,
         "use bzip2 instead of gzip to create source distribution"),

        # More meta-data: too RPM-specific to put in the setup script,
        # but needs to go in the .spec file -- so we make these options
        # to "bdist_rpm".  The idea is that packagers would put this
        # info in setup.cfg, although they are of course free to
        # supply it on the command line.
        ('distribution-name=', None,
         "name of the (Linux) distribution to which this "
         "RPM applies (*not* the name of the module distribution!)"),
        ('group=', None,
         "package classification [default: \"Development/Libraries\"]"),
        ('release=', None,
         "RPM release number"),
        ('serial=', None,
         "RPM serial number"),
        ('vendor=', None,
         "RPM \"vendor\" (eg. \"Joe Blow <joe@example.com>\") "
         "[default: maintainer or author from setup script]"),
        ('packager=', None,
         "RPM packager (eg. \"Jane Doe <jane@example.net>\") "
         "[default: vendor]"),
        ('doc-files=', None,
         "list of documentation files (space or comma-separated)"),
        ('changelog=', None,
         "RPM changelog"),
        ('icon=', None,
         "name of icon file"),
        ('provides=', None,
         "capabilities provided by this package"),
        ('requires=', None,
         "capabilities required by this package"),
        ('conflicts=', None,
         "capabilities which conflict with this package"),
        ('build-requires=', None,
         "capabilities required to build this package"),
        ('obsoletes=', None,
         "capabilities made obsolete by this package"),
        ('no-autoreq', None,
         "do not automatically calculate dependencies"),

        # Actions to take when building RPM
        ('keep-temp', 'k',
         "don't clean up RPM build directory"),
        ('no-keep-temp', None,
         "clean up RPM build directory [default]"),
        ('use-rpm-opt-flags', None,
         "compile with RPM_OPT_FLAGS when building from source RPM"),
        ('no-rpm-opt-flags', None,
         "do not pass any RPM CFLAGS to compiler"),
        ('rpm3-mode', None,
         "RPM 3 compatibility mode (default)"),
        ('rpm2-mode', None,
         "RPM 2 compatibility mode"),

        # Add the hooks necessary for specifying custom scripts
        ('prep-script=', None,
         "Specify a script for the PREP phase of RPM building"),
        ('build-script=', None,
         "Specify a script for the BUILD phase of RPM building"),

        ('pre-install=', None,
         "Specify a script for the pre-INSTALL phase of RPM building"),
        ('install-script=', None,
         "Specify a script for the INSTALL phase of RPM building"),
        ('post-install=', None,
         "Specify a script for the post-INSTALL phase of RPM building"),

        ('pre-uninstall=', None,
         "Specify a script for the pre-UNINSTALL phase of RPM building"),
        ('post-uninstall=', None,
         "Specify a script for the post-UNINSTALL phase of RPM building"),

        ('clean-script=', None,
         "Specify a script for the CLEAN phase of RPM building"),

        ('verify-script=', None,
         "Specify a script for the VERIFY phase of the RPM build"),

        # Allow a packager to explicitly force an architecture
        ('force-arch=', None,
         "Force an architecture onto the RPM build process"),

        ('quiet', 'q',
         "Run the INSTALL phase of RPM building in quiet mode"),
        ]

    boolean_options = ['keep-temp', 'use-rpm-opt-flags', 'rpm3-mode',
                       'no-autoreq', 'quiet']

    negative_opt = {'no-keep-temp': 'keep-temp',
                    'no-rpm-opt-flags': 'use-rpm-opt-flags',
                    'rpm2-mode': 'rpm3-mode'}


    def initialize_options(self):
        self.bdist_base = None
        self.rpm_base = None
        self.dist_dir = None
        self.python = None
        self.fix_python = None
        self.spec_only = None
        self.binary_only = None
        self.source_only = None
        self.use_bzip2 = None

        self.distribution_name = None
        self.group = None
        self.release = None
        self.serial = None
        self.vendor = None
        self.packager = None
        self.doc_files = None
        self.changelog = None
        self.icon = None

        self.prep_script = None
        self.build_script = None
        self.install_script = None
        self.clean_script = None
        self.verify_script = None
        self.pre_install = None
        self.post_install = None
        self.pre_uninstall = None
        self.post_uninstall = None
        self.prep = None
        self.provides = None
        self.requires = None
        self.conflicts = None
        self.build_requires = None
        self.obsoletes = None

        self.keep_temp = 0
        self.use_rpm_opt_flags = 1
        self.rpm3_mode = 1
        self.no_autoreq = 0

        self.force_arch = None
        self.quiet = 0

    def finalize_options(self):
        self.set_undefined_options('bdist', ('bdist_base', 'bdist_base'))
        if self.rpm_base is None:
            if not self.rpm3_mode:
                raise DistutilsOptionError(
                      "you must specify --rpm-base in RPM 2 mode")
            self.rpm_base = os.path.join(self.bdist_base, "rpm")

        if self.python is None:
            if self.fix_python:
                self.python = sys.executable
            else:
                self.python = "python3"
        elif self.fix_python:
            raise DistutilsOptionError(
                  "--python and --fix-python are mutually exclusive options")

        if os.name != 'posix':
            raise DistutilsPlatformError("don't know how to create RPM "
                   "distributions on platform %s" % os.name)
        if self.binary_only and self.source_only:
            raise DistutilsOptionError(
                  "cannot supply both '--source-only' and '--binary-only'")

        # don't pass CFLAGS to pure python distributions
        if not self.distribution.has_ext_modules():
            self.use_rpm_opt_flags = 0

        self.set_undefined_options('bdist', ('dist_dir', 'dist_dir'))
        self.finalize_package_data()

    def finalize_package_data(self):
        self.ensure_string('group', "Development/Libraries")
        self.ensure_string('vendor',
                           "%s <%s>" % (self.distribution.get_contact(),
                                        self.distribution.get_contact_email()))
        self.ensure_string('packager')
        self.ensure_string_list('doc_files')
        if isinstance(self.doc_files, list):
            for readme in ('README', 'README.txt'):
                if os.path.exists(readme) and readme not in self.doc_files:
                    self.doc_files.append(readme)

        self.ensure_string('release', "1")
        self.ensure_string('serial')   # should it be an int?

        self.ensure_string('distribution_name')

        self.ensure_string('changelog')
          # Format changelog correctly
        self.changelog = self._format_changelog(self.changelog)

        self.ensure_filename('icon')

        self.ensure_filename('prep_script')
        self.ensure_filename('build_script')
        self.ensure_filename('install_script')
        self.ensure_filename('clean_script')
        self.ensure_filename('verify_script')
        self.ensure_filename('pre_install')
        self.ensure_filename('post_install')
        self.ensure_filename('pre_uninstall')
        self.ensure_filename('post_uninstall')

        # XXX don't forget we punted on summaries and descriptions -- they
        # should be handled here eventually!

        # Now *this* is some meta-data that belongs in the setup script...
        self.ensure_string_list('provides')
        self.ensure_string_list('requires')
        self.ensure_string_list('conflicts')
        self.ensure_string_list('build_requires')
        self.ensure_string_list('obsoletes')

        self.ensure_string('force_arch')

    def run(self):
        if DEBUG:
            print("before _get_package_data():")
            print("vendor =", self.vendor)
            print("packager =", self.packager)
            print("doc_files =", self.doc_files)
            print("changelog =", self.changelog)

        # make directories
        if self.spec_only:
            spec_dir = self.dist_dir
            self.mkpath(spec_dir)
        else:
            rpm_dir = {}
            for d in ('SOURCES', 'SPECS', 'BUILD', 'RPMS', 'SRPMS'):
                rpm_dir[d] = os.path.join(self.rpm_base, d)
                self.mkpath(rpm_dir[d])
            spec_dir = rpm_dir['SPECS']

        # Spec file goes into 'dist_dir' if '--spec-only specified',
        # build/rpm.<plat> otherwise.
        spec_path = os.path.join(spec_dir,
                                 "%s.spec" % self.distribution.get_name())
        self.execute(write_file,
                     (spec_path,
                      self._make_spec_file()),
                     "writing '%s'" % spec_path)

        if self.spec_only: # stop if requested
            return

        # Make a source distribution and copy to SOURCES directory with
        # optional icon.
        saved_dist_files = self.distribution.dist_files[:]
        sdist = self.reinitialize_command('sdist')
        if self.use_bzip2:
            sdist.formats = ['bztar']
        else:
            sdist.formats = ['gztar']
        self.run_command('sdist')
        self.distribution.dist_files = saved_dist_files

        source = sdist.get_archive_files()[0]
        source_dir = rpm_dir['SOURCES']
        self.copy_file(source, source_dir)

        if self.icon:
            if os.path.exists(self.icon):
                self.copy_file(self.icon, source_dir)
            else:
                raise DistutilsFileError(
                      "icon file '%s' does not exist" % self.icon)

        # build package
        log.info("building RPMs")
        rpm_cmd = ['rpmbuild']

        if self.source_only: # what kind of RPMs?
            rpm_cmd.append('-bs')
        elif self.binary_only:
            rpm_cmd.append('-bb')
        else:
            rpm_cmd.append('-ba')
        rpm_cmd.extend(['--define', '__python %s' % self.python])
        if self.rpm3_mode:
            rpm_cmd.extend(['--define',
                             '_topdir %s' % os.path.abspath(self.rpm_base)])
        if not self.keep_temp:
            rpm_cmd.append('--clean')

        if self.quiet:
            rpm_cmd.append('--quiet')

        rpm_cmd.append(spec_path)
        # Determine the binary rpm names that should be built out of this spec
        # file
        # Note that some of these may not be really built (if the file
        # list is empty)
        nvr_string = "%{name}-%{version}-%{release}"
        src_rpm = nvr_string + ".src.rpm"
        non_src_rpm = "%{arch}/" + nvr_string + ".%{arch}.rpm"
        q_cmd = r"rpm -q --qf '%s %s\n' --specfile '%s'" % (
            src_rpm, non_src_rpm, spec_path)

        out = os.popen(q_cmd)
        try:
            binary_rpms = []
            source_rpm = None
            while True:
                line = out.readline()
                if not line:
                    break
                l = line.strip().split()
                assert(len(l) == 2)
                binary_rpms.append(l[1])
                # The source rpm is named after the first entry in the spec file
                if source_rpm is None:
                    source_rpm = l[0]

            status = out.close()
            if status:
                raise DistutilsExecError("Failed to execute: %s" % repr(q_cmd))

        finally:
            out.close()

        self.spawn(rpm_cmd)

        if not self.dry_run:
            if self.distribution.has_ext_modules():
                pyversion = get_python_version()
            else:
                pyversion = 'any'

            if not self.binary_only:
                srpm = os.path.join(rpm_dir['SRPMS'], source_rpm)
                assert(os.path.exists(srpm))
                self.move_file(srpm, self.dist_dir)
                filename = os.path.join(self.dist_dir, source_rpm)
                self.distribution.dist_files.append(
                    ('bdist_rpm', pyversion, filename))

            if not self.source_only:
                for rpm in binary_rpms:
                    rpm = os.path.join(rpm_dir['RPMS'], rpm)
                    if os.path.exists(rpm):
                        self.move_file(rpm, self.dist_dir)
                        filename = os.path.join(self.dist_dir,
                                                os.path.basename(rpm))
                        self.distribution.dist_files.append(
                            ('bdist_rpm', pyversion, filename))

    def _dist_path(self, path):
        return os.path.join(self.dist_dir, os.path.basename(path))

    def _make_spec_file(self):
        """Generate the text of an RPM spec file and return it as a
        list of strings (one per line).
        """
        # definitions and headers
        spec_file = [
            '%define name ' + self.distribution.get_name(),
            '%define version ' + self.distribution.get_version().replace('-','_'),
            '%define unmangled_version ' + self.distribution.get_version(),
            '%define release ' + self.release.replace('-','_'),
            '',
            'Summary: ' + self.distribution.get_description(),
            ]

        # Workaround for #14443 which affects some RPM based systems such as
        # RHEL6 (and probably derivatives)
        vendor_hook = subprocess.getoutput('rpm --eval %{__os_install_post}')
        # Generate a potential replacement value for __os_install_post (whilst
        # normalizing the whitespace to simplify the test for whether the
        # invocation of brp-python-bytecompile passes in __python):
        vendor_hook = '\n'.join(['  %s \\' % line.strip()
                                 for line in vendor_hook.splitlines()])
        problem = "brp-python-bytecompile \\\n"
        fixed = "brp-python-bytecompile %{__python} \\\n"
        fixed_hook = vendor_hook.replace(problem, fixed)
        if fixed_hook != vendor_hook:
            spec_file.append('# Workaround for http://bugs.python.org/issue14443')
            spec_file.append('%define __os_install_post ' + fixed_hook + '\n')

        # put locale summaries into spec file
        # XXX not supported for now (hard to put a dictionary
        # in a config file -- arg!)
        #for locale in self.summaries.keys():
        #    spec_file.append('Summary(%s): %s' % (locale,
        #                                          self.summaries[locale]))

        spec_file.extend([
            'Name: %{name}',
            'Version: %{version}',
            'Release: %{release}',])

        # XXX yuck! this filename is available from the "sdist" command,
        # but only after it has run: and we create the spec file before
        # running "sdist", in case of --spec-only.
        if self.use_bzip2:
            spec_file.append('Source0: %{name}-%{unmangled_version}.tar.bz2')
        else:
            spec_file.append('Source0: %{name}-%{unmangled_version}.tar.gz')

        spec_file.extend([
            'License: ' + self.distribution.get_license(),
            'Group: ' + self.group,
            'BuildRoot: %{_tmppath}/%{name}-%{version}-%{release}-buildroot',
            'Prefix: %{_prefix}', ])

        if not self.force_arch:
            # noarch if no extension modules
            if not self.distribution.has_ext_modules():
                spec_file.append('BuildArch: noarch')
        else:
            spec_file.append( 'BuildArch: %s' % self.force_arch )

        for field in ('Vendor',
                      'Packager',
                      'Provides',
                      'Requires',
                      'Conflicts',
                      'Obsoletes',
                      ):
            val = getattr(self, field.lower())
            if isinstance(val, list):
                spec_file.append('%s: %s' % (field, ' '.join(val)))
            elif val is not None:
                spec_file.append('%s: %s' % (field, val))


        if self.distribution.get_url() != 'UNKNOWN':
            spec_file.append('Url: ' + self.distribution.get_url())

        if self.distribution_name:
            spec_file.append('Distribution: ' + self.distribution_name)

        if self.build_requires:
            spec_file.append('BuildRequires: ' +
                             ' '.join(self.build_requires))

        if self.icon:
            spec_file.append('Icon: ' + os.path.basename(self.icon))

        if self.no_autoreq:
            spec_file.append('AutoReq: 0')

        spec_file.extend([
            '',
            '%description',
            self.distribution.get_long_description()
            ])

        # put locale descriptions into spec file
        # XXX again, suppressed because config file syntax doesn't
        # easily support this ;-(
        #for locale in self.descriptions.keys():
        #    spec_file.extend([
        #        '',
        #        '%description -l ' + locale,
        #        self.descriptions[locale],
        #        ])

        # rpm scripts
        # figure out default build script
        def_setup_call = "%s %s" % (self.python,os.path.basename(sys.argv[0]))
        def_build = "%s build" % def_setup_call
        if self.use_rpm_opt_flags:
            def_build = 'env CFLAGS="$RPM_OPT_FLAGS" ' + def_build

        # insert contents of files

        # XXX this is kind of misleading: user-supplied options are files
        # that we open and interpolate into the spec file, but the defaults
        # are just text that we drop in as-is.  Hmmm.

        install_cmd = ('%s install -O1 --root=$RPM_BUILD_ROOT '
                       '--record=INSTALLED_FILES') % def_setup_call

        script_options = [
            ('prep', 'prep_script', "%setup -n %{name}-%{unmangled_version}"),
            ('build', 'build_script', def_build),
            ('install', 'install_script', install_cmd),
            ('clean', 'clean_script', "rm -rf $RPM_BUILD_ROOT"),
            ('verifyscript', 'verify_script', None),
            ('pre', 'pre_install', None),
            ('post', 'post_install', None),
            ('preun', 'pre_uninstall', None),
            ('postun', 'post_uninstall', None),
        ]

        for (rpm_opt, attr, default) in script_options:
            # Insert contents of file referred to, if no file is referred to
            # use 'default' as contents of script
            val = getattr(self, attr)
            if val or default:
                spec_file.extend([
                    '',
                    '%' + rpm_opt,])
                if val:
                    with open(val) as f:
                        spec_file.extend(f.read().split('\n'))
                else:
                    spec_file.append(default)


        # files section
        spec_file.extend([
            '',
            '%files -f INSTALLED_FILES',
            '%defattr(-,root,root)',
            ])

        if self.doc_files:
            spec_file.append('%doc ' + ' '.join(self.doc_files))

        if self.changelog:
            spec_file.extend([
                '',
                '%changelog',])
            spec_file.extend(self.changelog)

        return spec_file

    def _format_changelog(self, changelog):
        """Format the changelog correctly and convert it to a list of strings
        """
        if not changelog:
            return changelog
        new_changelog = []
        for line in changelog.strip().split('\n'):
            line = line.strip()
            if line[0] == '*':
                new_changelog.extend(['', line])
            elif line[0] == '-':
                new_changelog.append(line)
            else:
                new_changelog.append('  ' + line)

        # strip trailing newline inserted by first changelog entry
        if not new_changelog[0]:
            del new_changelog[0]

        return new_changelog
PK       ! :    $  distutils/command/install_scripts.pynu [        """distutils.command.install_scripts

Implements the Distutils 'install_scripts' command, for installing
Python scripts."""

# contributed by Bastian Kleineidam

import os
from distutils.core import Command
from distutils import log
from stat import ST_MODE


class install_scripts(Command):

    description = "install scripts (Python or otherwise)"

    user_options = [
        ('install-dir=', 'd', "directory to install scripts to"),
        ('build-dir=','b', "build directory (where to install from)"),
        ('force', 'f', "force installation (overwrite existing files)"),
        ('skip-build', None, "skip the build steps"),
    ]

    boolean_options = ['force', 'skip-build']

    def initialize_options(self):
        self.install_dir = None
        self.force = 0
        self.build_dir = None
        self.skip_build = None

    def finalize_options(self):
        self.set_undefined_options('build', ('build_scripts', 'build_dir'))
        self.set_undefined_options('install',
                                   ('install_scripts', 'install_dir'),
                                   ('force', 'force'),
                                   ('skip_build', 'skip_build'),
                                  )

    def run(self):
        if not self.skip_build:
            self.run_command('build_scripts')
        self.outfiles = self.copy_tree(self.build_dir, self.install_dir)
        if os.name == 'posix':
            # Set the executable bits (owner, group, and world) on
            # all the scripts we just installed.
            for file in self.get_outputs():
                if self.dry_run:
                    log.info("changing mode of %s", file)
                else:
                    mode = ((os.stat(file)[ST_MODE]) | 0o555) & 0o7777
                    log.info("changing mode of %s to %o", file, mode)
                    os.chmod(file, mode)

    def get_inputs(self):
        return self.distribution.scripts or []

    def get_outputs(self):
        return self.outfiles or []
PK       ! *Rj&    $  distutils/command/install_headers.pynu [        """distutils.command.install_headers

Implements the Distutils 'install_headers' command, to install C/C++ header
files to the Python include directory."""

from distutils.core import Command


# XXX force is never used
class install_headers(Command):

    description = "install C/C++ header files"

    user_options = [('install-dir=', 'd',
                     "directory to install header files to"),
                    ('force', 'f',
                     "force installation (overwrite existing files)"),
                   ]

    boolean_options = ['force']

    def initialize_options(self):
        self.install_dir = None
        self.force = 0
        self.outfiles = []

    def finalize_options(self):
        self.set_undefined_options('install',
                                   ('install_headers', 'install_dir'),
                                   ('force', 'force'))


    def run(self):
        headers = self.distribution.headers
        if not headers:
            return

        self.mkpath(self.install_dir)
        for header in headers:
            (out, _) = self.copy_file(header, self.install_dir)
            self.outfiles.append(out)

    def get_inputs(self):
        return self.distribution.headers or []

    def get_outputs(self):
        return self.outfiles
PK       !     !  distutils/command/install_data.pynu [        """distutils.command.install_data

Implements the Distutils 'install_data' command, for installing
platform-independent data files."""

# contributed by Bastian Kleineidam

import os
from distutils.core import Command
from distutils.util import change_root, convert_path

class install_data(Command):

    description = "install data files"

    user_options = [
        ('install-dir=', 'd',
         "base directory for installing data files "
         "(default: installation base dir)"),
        ('root=', None,
         "install everything relative to this alternate root directory"),
        ('force', 'f', "force installation (overwrite existing files)"),
        ]

    boolean_options = ['force']

    def initialize_options(self):
        self.install_dir = None
        self.outfiles = []
        self.root = None
        self.force = 0
        self.data_files = self.distribution.data_files
        self.warn_dir = 1

    def finalize_options(self):
        self.set_undefined_options('install',
                                   ('install_data', 'install_dir'),
                                   ('root', 'root'),
                                   ('force', 'force'),
                                  )

    def run(self):
        self.mkpath(self.install_dir)
        for f in self.data_files:
            if isinstance(f, str):
                # it's a simple file, so copy it
                f = convert_path(f)
                if self.warn_dir:
                    self.warn("setup script did not provide a directory for "
                              "'%s' -- installing right in '%s'" %
                              (f, self.install_dir))
                (out, _) = self.copy_file(f, self.install_dir)
                self.outfiles.append(out)
            else:
                # it's a tuple with path to install to and a list of files
                dir = convert_path(f[0])
                if not os.path.isabs(dir):
                    dir = os.path.join(self.install_dir, dir)
                elif self.root:
                    dir = change_root(self.root, dir)
                self.mkpath(dir)

                if f[1] == []:
                    # If there are no files listed, the user must be
                    # trying to create an empty directory, so add the
                    # directory to the list of output files.
                    self.outfiles.append(dir)
                else:
                    # Copy files, adding them to the list of output files.
                    for data in f[1]:
                        data = convert_path(data)
                        (out, _) = self.copy_file(data, dir)
                        self.outfiles.append(out)

    def get_inputs(self):
        return self.data_files or []

    def get_outputs(self):
        return self.outfiles
PK       ! Z    %  distutils/command/install_egg_info.pynu [        """distutils.command.install_egg_info

Implements the Distutils 'install_egg_info' command, for installing
a package's PKG-INFO metadata."""


from distutils.cmd import Command
from distutils import log, dir_util
import os, sys, re

class install_egg_info(Command):
    """Install an .egg-info file for the package"""

    description = "Install package's PKG-INFO metadata as an .egg-info file"
    user_options = [
        ('install-dir=', 'd', "directory to install to"),
        ('install-layout', None, "custom installation layout"),
    ]

    def initialize_options(self):
        self.install_dir = None
        self.install_layout = None
        self.prefix_option = None

    def finalize_options(self):
        self.set_undefined_options('install_lib',('install_dir','install_dir'))
        self.set_undefined_options('install',('install_layout','install_layout'))
        self.set_undefined_options('install',('prefix_option','prefix_option'))
        if self.install_layout:
            if not self.install_layout.lower() in ['deb', 'unix']:
                raise DistutilsOptionError(
                    "unknown value for --install-layout")
            no_pyver = (self.install_layout.lower() == 'deb')
        elif self.prefix_option:
            no_pyver = False
        else:
            no_pyver = True
        if no_pyver:
            basename = "%s-%s.egg-info" % (
                to_filename(safe_name(self.distribution.get_name())),
                to_filename(safe_version(self.distribution.get_version()))
                )
        else:
            basename = "%s-%s-py%d.%d.egg-info" % (
                to_filename(safe_name(self.distribution.get_name())),
                to_filename(safe_version(self.distribution.get_version())),
                *sys.version_info[:2]
            )
        self.target = os.path.join(self.install_dir, basename)
        self.outputs = [self.target]

    def run(self):
        target = self.target
        if os.path.isdir(target) and not os.path.islink(target):
            dir_util.remove_tree(target, dry_run=self.dry_run)
        elif os.path.exists(target):
            self.execute(os.unlink,(self.target,),"Removing "+target)
        elif not os.path.isdir(self.install_dir):
            self.execute(os.makedirs, (self.install_dir,),
                         "Creating "+self.install_dir)
        log.info("Writing %s", target)
        if not self.dry_run:
            with open(target, 'w', encoding='UTF-8') as f:
                self.distribution.metadata.write_pkg_file(f)

    def get_outputs(self):
        return self.outputs


# The following routines are taken from setuptools' pkg_resources module and
# can be replaced by importing them from pkg_resources once it is included
# in the stdlib.

def safe_name(name):
    """Convert an arbitrary string to a standard distribution name

    Any runs of non-alphanumeric/. characters are replaced with a single '-'.
    """
    return re.sub('[^A-Za-z0-9.]+', '-', name)


def safe_version(version):
    """Convert an arbitrary string to a standard version string

    Spaces become dots, and all other non-alphanumeric characters become
    dashes, with runs of multiple dashes condensed to a single dash.
    """
    version = version.replace(' ','.')
    return re.sub('[^A-Za-z0-9.]+', '-', version)


def to_filename(name):
    """Convert a project or version name to its filename-escaped form

    Any '-' characters are currently replaced with '_'.
    """
    return name.replace('-','_')
PK       ! !  !     distutils/command/install_lib.pynu [        """distutils.command.install_lib

Implements the Distutils 'install_lib' command
(install all Python modules)."""

import os
import importlib.util
import sys

from distutils.core import Command
from distutils.errors import DistutilsOptionError


# Extension for Python source files.
PYTHON_SOURCE_EXTENSION = ".py"

class install_lib(Command):

    description = "install all Python modules (extensions and pure Python)"

    # The byte-compilation options are a tad confusing.  Here are the
    # possible scenarios:
    #   1) no compilation at all (--no-compile --no-optimize)
    #   2) compile .pyc only (--compile --no-optimize; default)
    #   3) compile .pyc and "opt-1" .pyc (--compile --optimize)
    #   4) compile "opt-1" .pyc only (--no-compile --optimize)
    #   5) compile .pyc and "opt-2" .pyc (--compile --optimize-more)
    #   6) compile "opt-2" .pyc only (--no-compile --optimize-more)
    #
    # The UI for this is two options, 'compile' and 'optimize'.
    # 'compile' is strictly boolean, and only decides whether to
    # generate .pyc files.  'optimize' is three-way (0, 1, or 2), and
    # decides both whether to generate .pyc files and what level of
    # optimization to use.

    user_options = [
        ('install-dir=', 'd', "directory to install to"),
        ('build-dir=','b', "build directory (where to install from)"),
        ('force', 'f', "force installation (overwrite existing files)"),
        ('compile', 'c', "compile .py to .pyc [default]"),
        ('no-compile', None, "don't compile .py files"),
        ('optimize=', 'O',
         "also compile with optimization: -O1 for \"python -O\", "
         "-O2 for \"python -OO\", and -O0 to disable [default: -O0]"),
        ('skip-build', None, "skip the build steps"),
        ]

    boolean_options = ['force', 'compile', 'skip-build']
    negative_opt = {'no-compile' : 'compile'}

    def initialize_options(self):
        # let the 'install' command dictate our installation directory
        self.install_dir = None
        self.build_dir = None
        self.force = 0
        self.compile = None
        self.optimize = None
        self.skip_build = None
        self.multiarch = None # if we should rename the extensions

    def finalize_options(self):
        # Get all the information we need to install pure Python modules
        # from the umbrella 'install' command -- build (source) directory,
        # install (target) directory, and whether to compile .py files.
        self.set_undefined_options('install',
                                   ('build_lib', 'build_dir'),
                                   ('install_lib', 'install_dir'),
                                   ('force', 'force'),
                                   ('compile', 'compile'),
                                   ('optimize', 'optimize'),
                                   ('skip_build', 'skip_build'),
                                   ('multiarch', 'multiarch'),
                                  )

        if self.compile is None:
            self.compile = True
        if self.optimize is None:
            self.optimize = False

        if not isinstance(self.optimize, int):
            try:
                self.optimize = int(self.optimize)
                if self.optimize not in (0, 1, 2):
                    raise AssertionError
            except (ValueError, AssertionError):
                raise DistutilsOptionError("optimize must be 0, 1, or 2")

    def run(self):
        # Make sure we have built everything we need first
        self.build()

        # Install everything: simply dump the entire contents of the build
        # directory to the installation directory (that's the beauty of
        # having a build directory!)
        outfiles = self.install()

        # (Optionally) compile .py to .pyc
        if outfiles is not None and self.distribution.has_pure_modules():
            self.byte_compile(outfiles)

    # -- Top-level worker functions ------------------------------------
    # (called from 'run()')

    def build(self):
        if not self.skip_build:
            if self.distribution.has_pure_modules():
                self.run_command('build_py')
            if self.distribution.has_ext_modules():
                self.run_command('build_ext')

    def install(self):
        if os.path.isdir(self.build_dir):
            import distutils.dir_util
            distutils.dir_util._multiarch = self.multiarch
            outfiles = self.copy_tree(self.build_dir, self.install_dir)
        else:
            self.warn("'%s' does not exist -- no Python modules to install" %
                      self.build_dir)
            return
        return outfiles

    def byte_compile(self, files):
        if sys.dont_write_bytecode:
            self.warn('byte-compiling is disabled, skipping.')
            return

        from distutils.util import byte_compile

        # Get the "--root" directory supplied to the "install" command,
        # and use it as a prefix to strip off the purported filename
        # encoded in bytecode files.  This is far from complete, but it
        # should at least generate usable bytecode in RPM distributions.
        install_root = self.get_finalized_command('install').root

        if self.compile:
            byte_compile(files, optimize=0,
                         force=self.force, prefix=install_root,
                         dry_run=self.dry_run)
        if self.optimize > 0:
            byte_compile(files, optimize=self.optimize,
                         force=self.force, prefix=install_root,
                         verbose=self.verbose, dry_run=self.dry_run)


    # -- Utility methods -----------------------------------------------

    def _mutate_outputs(self, has_any, build_cmd, cmd_option, output_dir):
        if not has_any:
            return []

        build_cmd = self.get_finalized_command(build_cmd)
        build_files = build_cmd.get_outputs()
        build_dir = getattr(build_cmd, cmd_option)

        prefix_len = len(build_dir) + len(os.sep)
        outputs = []
        for file in build_files:
            outputs.append(os.path.join(output_dir, file[prefix_len:]))

        return outputs

    def _bytecode_filenames(self, py_filenames):
        bytecode_files = []
        for py_file in py_filenames:
            # Since build_py handles package data installation, the
            # list of outputs can contain more than just .py files.
            # Make sure we only report bytecode for the .py files.
            ext = os.path.splitext(os.path.normcase(py_file))[1]
            if ext != PYTHON_SOURCE_EXTENSION:
                continue
            if self.compile:
                bytecode_files.append(importlib.util.cache_from_source(
                    py_file, optimization=''))
            if self.optimize > 0:
                bytecode_files.append(importlib.util.cache_from_source(
                    py_file, optimization=self.optimize))

        return bytecode_files


    # -- External interface --------------------------------------------
    # (called by outsiders)

    def get_outputs(self):
        """Return the list of files that would be installed if this command
        were actually run.  Not affected by the "dry-run" flag or whether
        modules have actually been built yet.
        """
        pure_outputs = \
            self._mutate_outputs(self.distribution.has_pure_modules(),
                                 'build_py', 'build_lib',
                                 self.install_dir)
        if self.compile:
            bytecode_outputs = self._bytecode_filenames(pure_outputs)
        else:
            bytecode_outputs = []

        ext_outputs = \
            self._mutate_outputs(self.distribution.has_ext_modules(),
                                 'build_ext', 'build_lib',
                                 self.install_dir)

        return pure_outputs + bytecode_outputs + ext_outputs

    def get_inputs(self):
        """Get the list of files that are input to this command, ie. the
        files that get installed as they are named in the build tree.
        The files in this list correspond one-to-one to the output
        filenames returned by 'get_outputs()'.
        """
        inputs = []

        if self.distribution.has_pure_modules():
            build_py = self.get_finalized_command('build_py')
            inputs.extend(build_py.get_outputs())

        if self.distribution.has_ext_modules():
            build_ext = self.get_finalized_command('build_ext')
            inputs.extend(build_ext.get_outputs())

        return inputs
PK       !       distutils/command/check.pynu [        """distutils.command.check

Implements the Distutils 'check' command.
"""
from distutils.core import Command
from distutils.errors import DistutilsSetupError

try:
    # docutils is installed
    from docutils.utils import Reporter
    from docutils.parsers.rst import Parser
    from docutils import frontend
    from docutils import nodes

    class SilentReporter(Reporter):

        def __init__(self, source, report_level, halt_level, stream=None,
                     debug=0, encoding='ascii', error_handler='replace'):
            self.messages = []
            Reporter.__init__(self, source, report_level, halt_level, stream,
                              debug, encoding, error_handler)

        def system_message(self, level, message, *children, **kwargs):
            self.messages.append((level, message, children, kwargs))
            return nodes.system_message(message, level=level,
                                        type=self.levels[level],
                                        *children, **kwargs)

    HAS_DOCUTILS = True
except Exception:
    # Catch all exceptions because exceptions besides ImportError probably
    # indicate that docutils is not ported to Py3k.
    HAS_DOCUTILS = False

class check(Command):
    """This command checks the meta-data of the package.
    """
    description = ("perform some checks on the package")
    user_options = [('metadata', 'm', 'Verify meta-data'),
                    ('restructuredtext', 'r',
                     ('Checks if long string meta-data syntax '
                      'are reStructuredText-compliant')),
                    ('strict', 's',
                     'Will exit with an error if a check fails')]

    boolean_options = ['metadata', 'restructuredtext', 'strict']

    def initialize_options(self):
        """Sets default values for options."""
        self.restructuredtext = 0
        self.metadata = 1
        self.strict = 0
        self._warnings = 0

    def finalize_options(self):
        pass

    def warn(self, msg):
        """Counts the number of warnings that occurs."""
        self._warnings += 1
        return Command.warn(self, msg)

    def run(self):
        """Runs the command."""
        # perform the various tests
        if self.metadata:
            self.check_metadata()
        if self.restructuredtext:
            if HAS_DOCUTILS:
                self.check_restructuredtext()
            elif self.strict:
                raise DistutilsSetupError('The docutils package is needed.')

        # let's raise an error in strict mode, if we have at least
        # one warning
        if self.strict and self._warnings > 0:
            raise DistutilsSetupError('Please correct your package.')

    def check_metadata(self):
        """Ensures that all required elements of meta-data are supplied.

        Required fields:
            name, version, URL

        Recommended fields:
            (author and author_email) or (maintainer and maintainer_email)

        Warns if any are missing.
        """
        metadata = self.distribution.metadata

        missing = []
        for attr in ('name', 'version', 'url'):
            if not (hasattr(metadata, attr) and getattr(metadata, attr)):
                missing.append(attr)

        if missing:
            self.warn("missing required meta-data: %s"  % ', '.join(missing))
        if metadata.author:
            if not metadata.author_email:
                self.warn("missing meta-data: if 'author' supplied, " +
                          "'author_email' should be supplied too")
        elif metadata.maintainer:
            if not metadata.maintainer_email:
                self.warn("missing meta-data: if 'maintainer' supplied, " +
                          "'maintainer_email' should be supplied too")
        else:
            self.warn("missing meta-data: either (author and author_email) " +
                      "or (maintainer and maintainer_email) " +
                      "should be supplied")

    def check_restructuredtext(self):
        """Checks if the long string fields are reST-compliant."""
        data = self.distribution.get_long_description()
        for warning in self._check_rst_data(data):
            line = warning[-1].get('line')
            if line is None:
                warning = warning[1]
            else:
                warning = '%s (line %s)' % (warning[1], line)
            self.warn(warning)

    def _check_rst_data(self, data):
        """Returns warnings when the provided data doesn't compile."""
        # the include and csv_table directives need this to be a path
        source_path = self.distribution.script_name or 'setup.py'
        parser = Parser()
        settings = frontend.OptionParser(components=(Parser,)).get_default_values()
        settings.tab_width = 4
        settings.pep_references = None
        settings.rfc_references = None
        reporter = SilentReporter(source_path,
                          settings.report_level,
                          settings.halt_level,
                          stream=settings.warning_stream,
                          debug=settings.debug,
                          encoding=settings.error_encoding,
                          error_handler=settings.error_encoding_error_handler)

        document = nodes.document(settings, reporter, source=source_path)
        document.note_source(source_path, -1)
        try:
            parser.parse(data, document)
        except AttributeError as e:
            reporter.messages.append(
                (-1, 'Could not finish the parsing: %s.' % e, '', {}))

        return reporter.messages
PK       ! 7=3  =3    distutils/command/config.pynu [        """distutils.command.config

Implements the Distutils 'config' command, a (mostly) empty command class
that exists mainly to be sub-classed by specific module distributions and
applications.  The idea is that while every "config" command is different,
at least they're all named the same, and users always see "config" in the
list of standard commands.  Also, this is a good place to put common
configure-like tasks: "try to compile this C code", or "figure out where
this header file lives".
"""

import os, re

from distutils.core import Command
from distutils.errors import DistutilsExecError
from distutils.sysconfig import customize_compiler
from distutils import log

LANG_EXT = {"c": ".c", "c++": ".cxx"}

class config(Command):

    description = "prepare to build"

    user_options = [
        ('compiler=', None,
         "specify the compiler type"),
        ('cc=', None,
         "specify the compiler executable"),
        ('include-dirs=', 'I',
         "list of directories to search for header files"),
        ('define=', 'D',
         "C preprocessor macros to define"),
        ('undef=', 'U',
         "C preprocessor macros to undefine"),
        ('libraries=', 'l',
         "external C libraries to link with"),
        ('library-dirs=', 'L',
         "directories to search for external C libraries"),

        ('noisy', None,
         "show every action (compile, link, run, ...) taken"),
        ('dump-source', None,
         "dump generated source files before attempting to compile them"),
        ]


    # The three standard command methods: since the "config" command
    # does nothing by default, these are empty.

    def initialize_options(self):
        self.compiler = None
        self.cc = None
        self.include_dirs = None
        self.libraries = None
        self.library_dirs = None

        # maximal output for now
        self.noisy = 1
        self.dump_source = 1

        # list of temporary files generated along-the-way that we have
        # to clean at some point
        self.temp_files = []

    def finalize_options(self):
        if self.include_dirs is None:
            self.include_dirs = self.distribution.include_dirs or []
        elif isinstance(self.include_dirs, str):
            self.include_dirs = self.include_dirs.split(os.pathsep)

        if self.libraries is None:
            self.libraries = []
        elif isinstance(self.libraries, str):
            self.libraries = [self.libraries]

        if self.library_dirs is None:
            self.library_dirs = []
        elif isinstance(self.library_dirs, str):
            self.library_dirs = self.library_dirs.split(os.pathsep)

    def run(self):
        pass

    # Utility methods for actual "config" commands.  The interfaces are
    # loosely based on Autoconf macros of similar names.  Sub-classes
    # may use these freely.

    def _check_compiler(self):
        """Check that 'self.compiler' really is a CCompiler object;
        if not, make it one.
        """
        # We do this late, and only on-demand, because this is an expensive
        # import.
        from distutils.ccompiler import CCompiler, new_compiler
        if not isinstance(self.compiler, CCompiler):
            self.compiler = new_compiler(compiler=self.compiler,
                                         dry_run=self.dry_run, force=1)
            customize_compiler(self.compiler)
            if self.include_dirs:
                self.compiler.set_include_dirs(self.include_dirs)
            if self.libraries:
                self.compiler.set_libraries(self.libraries)
            if self.library_dirs:
                self.compiler.set_library_dirs(self.library_dirs)

    def _gen_temp_sourcefile(self, body, headers, lang):
        filename = "_configtest" + LANG_EXT[lang]
        with open(filename, "w") as file:
            if headers:
                for header in headers:
                    file.write("#include <%s>\n" % header)
                file.write("\n")
            file.write(body)
            if body[-1] != "\n":
                file.write("\n")
        return filename

    def _preprocess(self, body, headers, include_dirs, lang):
        src = self._gen_temp_sourcefile(body, headers, lang)
        out = "_configtest.i"
        self.temp_files.extend([src, out])
        self.compiler.preprocess(src, out, include_dirs=include_dirs)
        return (src, out)

    def _compile(self, body, headers, include_dirs, lang):
        src = self._gen_temp_sourcefile(body, headers, lang)
        if self.dump_source:
            dump_file(src, "compiling '%s':" % src)
        (obj,) = self.compiler.object_filenames([src])
        self.temp_files.extend([src, obj])
        self.compiler.compile([src], include_dirs=include_dirs)
        return (src, obj)

    def _link(self, body, headers, include_dirs, libraries, library_dirs,
              lang):
        (src, obj) = self._compile(body, headers, include_dirs, lang)
        prog = os.path.splitext(os.path.basename(src))[0]
        self.compiler.link_executable([obj], prog,
                                      libraries=libraries,
                                      library_dirs=library_dirs,
                                      target_lang=lang)

        if self.compiler.exe_extension is not None:
            prog = prog + self.compiler.exe_extension
        self.temp_files.append(prog)

        return (src, obj, prog)

    def _clean(self, *filenames):
        if not filenames:
            filenames = self.temp_files
            self.temp_files = []
        log.info("removing: %s", ' '.join(filenames))
        for filename in filenames:
            try:
                os.remove(filename)
            except OSError:
                pass


    # XXX these ignore the dry-run flag: what to do, what to do? even if
    # you want a dry-run build, you still need some sort of configuration
    # info.  My inclination is to make it up to the real config command to
    # consult 'dry_run', and assume a default (minimal) configuration if
    # true.  The problem with trying to do it here is that you'd have to
    # return either true or false from all the 'try' methods, neither of
    # which is correct.

    # XXX need access to the header search path and maybe default macros.

    def try_cpp(self, body=None, headers=None, include_dirs=None, lang="c"):
        """Construct a source file from 'body' (a string containing lines
        of C/C++ code) and 'headers' (a list of header files to include)
        and run it through the preprocessor.  Return true if the
        preprocessor succeeded, false if there were any errors.
        ('body' probably isn't of much use, but what the heck.)
        """
        from distutils.ccompiler import CompileError
        self._check_compiler()
        ok = True
        try:
            self._preprocess(body, headers, include_dirs, lang)
        except CompileError:
            ok = False

        self._clean()
        return ok

    def search_cpp(self, pattern, body=None, headers=None, include_dirs=None,
                   lang="c"):
        """Construct a source file (just like 'try_cpp()'), run it through
        the preprocessor, and return true if any line of the output matches
        'pattern'.  'pattern' should either be a compiled regex object or a
        string containing a regex.  If both 'body' and 'headers' are None,
        preprocesses an empty file -- which can be useful to determine the
        symbols the preprocessor and compiler set by default.
        """
        self._check_compiler()
        src, out = self._preprocess(body, headers, include_dirs, lang)

        if isinstance(pattern, str):
            pattern = re.compile(pattern)

        with open(out) as file:
            match = False
            while True:
                line = file.readline()
                if line == '':
                    break
                if pattern.search(line):
                    match = True
                    break

        self._clean()
        return match

    def try_compile(self, body, headers=None, include_dirs=None, lang="c"):
        """Try to compile a source file built from 'body' and 'headers'.
        Return true on success, false otherwise.
        """
        from distutils.ccompiler import CompileError
        self._check_compiler()
        try:
            self._compile(body, headers, include_dirs, lang)
            ok = True
        except CompileError:
            ok = False

        log.info(ok and "success!" or "failure.")
        self._clean()
        return ok

    def try_link(self, body, headers=None, include_dirs=None, libraries=None,
                 library_dirs=None, lang="c"):
        """Try to compile and link a source file, built from 'body' and
        'headers', to executable form.  Return true on success, false
        otherwise.
        """
        from distutils.ccompiler import CompileError, LinkError
        self._check_compiler()
        try:
            self._link(body, headers, include_dirs,
                       libraries, library_dirs, lang)
            ok = True
        except (CompileError, LinkError):
            ok = False

        log.info(ok and "success!" or "failure.")
        self._clean()
        return ok

    def try_run(self, body, headers=None, include_dirs=None, libraries=None,
                library_dirs=None, lang="c"):
        """Try to compile, link to an executable, and run a program
        built from 'body' and 'headers'.  Return true on success, false
        otherwise.
        """
        from distutils.ccompiler import CompileError, LinkError
        self._check_compiler()
        try:
            src, obj, exe = self._link(body, headers, include_dirs,
                                       libraries, library_dirs, lang)
            self.spawn([exe])
            ok = True
        except (CompileError, LinkError, DistutilsExecError):
            ok = False

        log.info(ok and "success!" or "failure.")
        self._clean()
        return ok


    # -- High-level methods --------------------------------------------
    # (these are the ones that are actually likely to be useful
    # when implementing a real-world config command!)

    def check_func(self, func, headers=None, include_dirs=None,
                   libraries=None, library_dirs=None, decl=0, call=0):
        """Determine if function 'func' is available by constructing a
        source file that refers to 'func', and compiles and links it.
        If everything succeeds, returns true; otherwise returns false.

        The constructed source file starts out by including the header
        files listed in 'headers'.  If 'decl' is true, it then declares
        'func' (as "int func()"); you probably shouldn't supply 'headers'
        and set 'decl' true in the same call, or you might get errors about
        a conflicting declarations for 'func'.  Finally, the constructed
        'main()' function either references 'func' or (if 'call' is true)
        calls it.  'libraries' and 'library_dirs' are used when
        linking.
        """
        self._check_compiler()
        body = []
        if decl:
            body.append("int %s ();" % func)
        body.append("int main () {")
        if call:
            body.append("  %s();" % func)
        else:
            body.append("  %s;" % func)
        body.append("}")
        body = "\n".join(body) + "\n"

        return self.try_link(body, headers, include_dirs,
                             libraries, library_dirs)

    def check_lib(self, library, library_dirs=None, headers=None,
                  include_dirs=None, other_libraries=[]):
        """Determine if 'library' is available to be linked against,
        without actually checking that any particular symbols are provided
        by it.  'headers' will be used in constructing the source file to
        be compiled, but the only effect of this is to check if all the
        header files listed are available.  Any libraries listed in
        'other_libraries' will be included in the link, in case 'library'
        has symbols that depend on other libraries.
        """
        self._check_compiler()
        return self.try_link("int main (void) { }", headers, include_dirs,
                             [library] + other_libraries, library_dirs)

    def check_header(self, header, include_dirs=None, library_dirs=None,
                     lang="c"):
        """Determine if the system header file named by 'header_file'
        exists and can be found by the preprocessor; return true if so,
        false otherwise.
        """
        return self.try_cpp(body="/* No body */", headers=[header],
                            include_dirs=include_dirs)

def dump_file(filename, head=None):
    """Dumps a file content into log.info.

    If head is not None, will be dumped before the file content.
    """
    if head is None:
        log.info('%s', filename)
    else:
        log.info(head)
    file = open(filename)
    try:
        log.info(file.read())
    finally:
        file.close()
PK       ! H      distutils/command/upload.pynu [        """
distutils.command.upload

Implements the Distutils 'upload' subcommand (upload package to a package
index).
"""

import os
import io
import hashlib
from base64 import standard_b64encode
from urllib.error import HTTPError
from urllib.request import urlopen, Request
from urllib.parse import urlparse
from distutils.errors import DistutilsError, DistutilsOptionError
from distutils.core import PyPIRCCommand
from distutils.spawn import spawn
from distutils import log


# PyPI Warehouse supports MD5, SHA256, and Blake2 (blake2-256)
# https://bugs.python.org/issue40698
_FILE_CONTENT_DIGESTS = {
    "md5_digest": getattr(hashlib, "md5", None),
    "sha256_digest": getattr(hashlib, "sha256", None),
    "blake2_256_digest": getattr(hashlib, "blake2b", None),
}


class upload(PyPIRCCommand):

    description = "upload binary package to PyPI"

    user_options = PyPIRCCommand.user_options + [
        ('sign', 's',
         'sign files to upload using gpg'),
        ('identity=', 'i', 'GPG identity used to sign files'),
        ]

    boolean_options = PyPIRCCommand.boolean_options + ['sign']

    def initialize_options(self):
        PyPIRCCommand.initialize_options(self)
        self.username = ''
        self.password = ''
        self.show_response = 0
        self.sign = False
        self.identity = None

    def finalize_options(self):
        PyPIRCCommand.finalize_options(self)
        if self.identity and not self.sign:
            raise DistutilsOptionError(
                "Must use --sign for --identity to have meaning"
            )
        config = self._read_pypirc()
        if config != {}:
            self.username = config['username']
            self.password = config['password']
            self.repository = config['repository']
            self.realm = config['realm']

        # getting the password from the distribution
        # if previously set by the register command
        if not self.password and self.distribution.password:
            self.password = self.distribution.password

    def run(self):
        if not self.distribution.dist_files:
            msg = ("Must create and upload files in one command "
                   "(e.g. setup.py sdist upload)")
            raise DistutilsOptionError(msg)
        for command, pyversion, filename in self.distribution.dist_files:
            self.upload_file(command, pyversion, filename)

    def upload_file(self, command, pyversion, filename):
        # Makes sure the repository URL is compliant
        schema, netloc, url, params, query, fragments = \
            urlparse(self.repository)
        if params or query or fragments:
            raise AssertionError("Incompatible url %s" % self.repository)

        if schema not in ('http', 'https'):
            raise AssertionError("unsupported schema " + schema)

        # Sign if requested
        if self.sign:
            gpg_args = ["gpg", "--detach-sign", "-a", filename]
            if self.identity:
                gpg_args[2:2] = ["--local-user", self.identity]
            spawn(gpg_args,
                  dry_run=self.dry_run)

        # Fill in the data - send all the meta-data in case we need to
        # register a new release
        f = open(filename,'rb')
        try:
            content = f.read()
        finally:
            f.close()

        meta = self.distribution.metadata
        data = {
            # action
            ':action': 'file_upload',
            'protocol_version': '1',

            # identify release
            'name': meta.get_name(),
            'version': meta.get_version(),

            # file content
            'content': (os.path.basename(filename),content),
            'filetype': command,
            'pyversion': pyversion,

            # additional meta-data
            'metadata_version': '1.0',
            'summary': meta.get_description(),
            'home_page': meta.get_url(),
            'author': meta.get_contact(),
            'author_email': meta.get_contact_email(),
            'license': meta.get_licence(),
            'description': meta.get_long_description(),
            'keywords': meta.get_keywords(),
            'platform': meta.get_platforms(),
            'classifiers': meta.get_classifiers(),
            'download_url': meta.get_download_url(),
            # PEP 314
            'provides': meta.get_provides(),
            'requires': meta.get_requires(),
            'obsoletes': meta.get_obsoletes(),
            }

        data['comment'] = ''

        # file content digests
        for digest_name, digest_cons in _FILE_CONTENT_DIGESTS.items():
            if digest_cons is None:
                continue
            try:
                data[digest_name] = digest_cons(content).hexdigest()
            except ValueError:
                # hash digest not available or blocked by security policy
                pass

        if self.sign:
            with open(filename + ".asc", "rb") as f:
                data['gpg_signature'] = (os.path.basename(filename) + ".asc",
                                         f.read())

        # set up the authentication
        user_pass = (self.username + ":" + self.password).encode('ascii')
        # The exact encoding of the authentication string is debated.
        # Anyway PyPI only accepts ascii for both username or password.
        auth = "Basic " + standard_b64encode(user_pass).decode('ascii')

        # Build up the MIME payload for the POST data
        boundary = '--------------GHSKFJDLGDS7543FJKLFHRE75642756743254'
        sep_boundary = b'\r\n--' + boundary.encode('ascii')
        end_boundary = sep_boundary + b'--\r\n'
        body = io.BytesIO()
        for key, value in data.items():
            title = '\r\nContent-Disposition: form-data; name="%s"' % key
            # handle multiple entries for the same name
            if not isinstance(value, list):
                value = [value]
            for value in value:
                if type(value) is tuple:
                    title += '; filename="%s"' % value[0]
                    value = value[1]
                else:
                    value = str(value).encode('utf-8')
                body.write(sep_boundary)
                body.write(title.encode('utf-8'))
                body.write(b"\r\n\r\n")
                body.write(value)
        body.write(end_boundary)
        body = body.getvalue()

        msg = "Submitting %s to %s" % (filename, self.repository)
        self.announce(msg, log.INFO)

        # build the Request
        headers = {
            'Content-type': 'multipart/form-data; boundary=%s' % boundary,
            'Content-length': str(len(body)),
            'Authorization': auth,
        }

        request = Request(self.repository, data=body,
                          headers=headers)
        # send the data
        try:
            result = urlopen(request)
            status = result.getcode()
            reason = result.msg
        except HTTPError as e:
            status = e.code
            reason = e.msg
        except OSError as e:
            self.announce(str(e), log.ERROR)
            raise

        if status == 200:
            self.announce('Server response (%s): %s' % (status, reason),
                          log.INFO)
            if self.show_response:
                text = self._read_pypi_response(result)
                msg = '\n'.join(('-' * 75, text, '-' * 75))
                self.announce(msg, log.INFO)
        else:
            msg = 'Upload failed (%s): %s' % (status, reason)
            self.announce(msg, log.ERROR)
            raise DistutilsError(msg)
PK       ! v3;V  V    distutils/command/build_clib.pynu [        """distutils.command.build_clib

Implements the Distutils 'build_clib' command, to build a C/C++ library
that is included in the module distribution and needed by an extension
module."""


# XXX this module has *lots* of code ripped-off quite transparently from
# build_ext.py -- not surprisingly really, as the work required to build
# a static library from a collection of C source files is not really all
# that different from what's required to build a shared object file from
# a collection of C source files.  Nevertheless, I haven't done the
# necessary refactoring to account for the overlap in code between the
# two modules, mainly because a number of subtle details changed in the
# cut 'n paste.  Sigh.

import os
from distutils.core import Command
from distutils.errors import *
from distutils.sysconfig import customize_compiler
from distutils import log

def show_compilers():
    from distutils.ccompiler import show_compilers
    show_compilers()


class build_clib(Command):

    description = "build C/C++ libraries used by Python extensions"

    user_options = [
        ('build-clib=', 'b',
         "directory to build C/C++ libraries to"),
        ('build-temp=', 't',
         "directory to put temporary build by-products"),
        ('debug', 'g',
         "compile with debugging information"),
        ('force', 'f',
         "forcibly build everything (ignore file timestamps)"),
        ('compiler=', 'c',
         "specify the compiler type"),
        ]

    boolean_options = ['debug', 'force']

    help_options = [
        ('help-compiler', None,
         "list available compilers", show_compilers),
        ]

    def initialize_options(self):
        self.build_clib = None
        self.build_temp = None

        # List of libraries to build
        self.libraries = None

        # Compilation options for all libraries
        self.include_dirs = None
        self.define = None
        self.undef = None
        self.debug = None
        self.force = 0
        self.compiler = None


    def finalize_options(self):
        # This might be confusing: both build-clib and build-temp default
        # to build-temp as defined by the "build" command.  This is because
        # I think that C libraries are really just temporary build
        # by-products, at least from the point of view of building Python
        # extensions -- but I want to keep my options open.
        self.set_undefined_options('build',
                                   ('build_temp', 'build_clib'),
                                   ('build_temp', 'build_temp'),
                                   ('compiler', 'compiler'),
                                   ('debug', 'debug'),
                                   ('force', 'force'))

        self.libraries = self.distribution.libraries
        if self.libraries:
            self.check_library_list(self.libraries)

        if self.include_dirs is None:
            self.include_dirs = self.distribution.include_dirs or []
        if isinstance(self.include_dirs, str):
            self.include_dirs = self.include_dirs.split(os.pathsep)

        # XXX same as for build_ext -- what about 'self.define' and
        # 'self.undef' ?


    def run(self):
        if not self.libraries:
            return

        # Yech -- this is cut 'n pasted from build_ext.py!
        from distutils.ccompiler import new_compiler
        self.compiler = new_compiler(compiler=self.compiler,
                                     dry_run=self.dry_run,
                                     force=self.force)
        customize_compiler(self.compiler)

        if self.include_dirs is not None:
            self.compiler.set_include_dirs(self.include_dirs)
        if self.define is not None:
            # 'define' option is a list of (name,value) tuples
            for (name,value) in self.define:
                self.compiler.define_macro(name, value)
        if self.undef is not None:
            for macro in self.undef:
                self.compiler.undefine_macro(macro)

        self.build_libraries(self.libraries)


    def check_library_list(self, libraries):
        """Ensure that the list of libraries is valid.

        `library` is presumably provided as a command option 'libraries'.
        This method checks that it is a list of 2-tuples, where the tuples
        are (library_name, build_info_dict).

        Raise DistutilsSetupError if the structure is invalid anywhere;
        just returns otherwise.
        """
        if not isinstance(libraries, list):
            raise DistutilsSetupError(
                  "'libraries' option must be a list of tuples")

        for lib in libraries:
            if not isinstance(lib, tuple) and len(lib) != 2:
                raise DistutilsSetupError(
                      "each element of 'libraries' must a 2-tuple")

            name, build_info = lib

            if not isinstance(name, str):
                raise DistutilsSetupError(
                      "first element of each tuple in 'libraries' "
                      "must be a string (the library name)")

            if '/' in name or (os.sep != '/' and os.sep in name):
                raise DistutilsSetupError("bad library name '%s': "
                       "may not contain directory separators" % lib[0])

            if not isinstance(build_info, dict):
                raise DistutilsSetupError(
                      "second element of each tuple in 'libraries' "
                      "must be a dictionary (build info)")


    def get_library_names(self):
        # Assume the library list is valid -- 'check_library_list()' is
        # called from 'finalize_options()', so it should be!
        if not self.libraries:
            return None

        lib_names = []
        for (lib_name, build_info) in self.libraries:
            lib_names.append(lib_name)
        return lib_names


    def get_source_files(self):
        self.check_library_list(self.libraries)
        filenames = []
        for (lib_name, build_info) in self.libraries:
            sources = build_info.get('sources')
            if sources is None or not isinstance(sources, (list, tuple)):
                raise DistutilsSetupError(
                       "in 'libraries' option (library '%s'), "
                       "'sources' must be present and must be "
                       "a list of source filenames" % lib_name)

            filenames.extend(sources)
        return filenames


    def build_libraries(self, libraries):
        for (lib_name, build_info) in libraries:
            sources = build_info.get('sources')
            if sources is None or not isinstance(sources, (list, tuple)):
                raise DistutilsSetupError(
                       "in 'libraries' option (library '%s'), "
                       "'sources' must be present and must be "
                       "a list of source filenames" % lib_name)
            sources = list(sources)

            log.info("building '%s' library", lib_name)

            # First, compile the source code to object files in the library
            # directory.  (This should probably change to putting object
            # files in a temporary build directory.)
            macros = build_info.get('macros')
            include_dirs = build_info.get('include_dirs')
            objects = self.compiler.compile(sources,
                                            output_dir=self.build_temp,
                                            macros=macros,
                                            include_dirs=include_dirs,
                                            debug=self.debug)

            # Now "link" the object files together into a static library.
            # (On Unix at least, this isn't really linking -- it just
            # builds an archive.  Whatever.)
            self.compiler.create_static_lib(objects, lib_name,
                                            output_dir=self.build_clib,
                                            debug=self.debug)
PK       ! x      distutils/command/build.pynu [        """distutils.command.build

Implements the Distutils 'build' command."""

import sys, os
from distutils.core import Command
from distutils.errors import DistutilsOptionError
from distutils.util import get_platform


def show_compilers():
    from distutils.ccompiler import show_compilers
    show_compilers()


class build(Command):

    description = "build everything needed to install"

    user_options = [
        ('build-base=', 'b',
         "base directory for build library"),
        ('build-purelib=', None,
         "build directory for platform-neutral distributions"),
        ('build-platlib=', None,
         "build directory for platform-specific distributions"),
        ('build-lib=', None,
         "build directory for all distribution (defaults to either " +
         "build-purelib or build-platlib"),
        ('build-scripts=', None,
         "build directory for scripts"),
        ('build-temp=', 't',
         "temporary build directory"),
        ('plat-name=', 'p',
         "platform name to build for, if supported "
         "(default: %s)" % get_platform()),
        ('compiler=', 'c',
         "specify the compiler type"),
        ('parallel=', 'j',
         "number of parallel build jobs"),
        ('debug', 'g',
         "compile extensions and libraries with debugging information"),
        ('force', 'f',
         "forcibly build everything (ignore file timestamps)"),
        ('executable=', 'e',
         "specify final destination interpreter path (build.py)"),
        ]

    boolean_options = ['debug', 'force']

    help_options = [
        ('help-compiler', None,
         "list available compilers", show_compilers),
        ]

    def initialize_options(self):
        self.build_base = 'build'
        # these are decided only after 'build_base' has its final value
        # (unless overridden by the user or client)
        self.build_purelib = None
        self.build_platlib = None
        self.build_lib = None
        self.build_temp = None
        self.build_scripts = None
        self.compiler = None
        self.plat_name = None
        self.debug = None
        self.force = 0
        self.executable = None
        self.parallel = None

    def finalize_options(self):
        if self.plat_name is None:
            self.plat_name = get_platform()
        else:
            # plat-name only supported for windows (other platforms are
            # supported via ./configure flags, if at all).  Avoid misleading
            # other platforms.
            if os.name != 'nt':
                raise DistutilsOptionError(
                            "--plat-name only supported on Windows (try "
                            "using './configure --help' on your platform)")

        plat_specifier = ".%s-%d.%d" % (self.plat_name, *sys.version_info[:2])

        # Make it so Python 2.x and Python 2.x with --with-pydebug don't
        # share the same build directories. Doing so confuses the build
        # process for C modules
        if hasattr(sys, 'gettotalrefcount'):
            plat_specifier += '-pydebug'

        # 'build_purelib' and 'build_platlib' just default to 'lib' and
        # 'lib.<plat>' under the base build directory.  We only use one of
        # them for a given distribution, though --
        if self.build_purelib is None:
            self.build_purelib = os.path.join(self.build_base, 'lib')
        if self.build_platlib is None:
            self.build_platlib = os.path.join(self.build_base,
                                              'lib' + plat_specifier)

        # 'build_lib' is the actual directory that we will use for this
        # particular module distribution -- if user didn't supply it, pick
        # one of 'build_purelib' or 'build_platlib'.
        if self.build_lib is None:
            if self.distribution.ext_modules:
                self.build_lib = self.build_platlib
            else:
                self.build_lib = self.build_purelib

        # 'build_temp' -- temporary directory for compiler turds,
        # "build/temp.<plat>"
        if self.build_temp is None:
            self.build_temp = os.path.join(self.build_base,
                                           'temp' + plat_specifier)
        if self.build_scripts is None:
            self.build_scripts = os.path.join(self.build_base,
                                              'scripts-%d.%d' % sys.version_info[:2])

        if self.executable is None and sys.executable:
            self.executable = os.path.normpath(sys.executable)

        if isinstance(self.parallel, str):
            try:
                self.parallel = int(self.parallel)
            except ValueError:
                raise DistutilsOptionError("parallel should be an integer")

    def run(self):
        # Run all relevant sub-commands.  This will be some subset of:
        #  - build_py      - pure Python modules
        #  - build_clib    - standalone C libraries
        #  - build_ext     - Python extensions
        #  - build_scripts - (Python) scripts
        for cmd_name in self.get_sub_commands():
            self.run_command(cmd_name)


    # -- Predicates for the sub-command list ---------------------------

    def has_pure_modules(self):
        return self.distribution.has_pure_modules()

    def has_c_libraries(self):
        return self.distribution.has_c_libraries()

    def has_ext_modules(self):
        return self.distribution.has_ext_modules()

    def has_scripts(self):
        return self.distribution.has_scripts()


    sub_commands = [('build_py',      has_pure_modules),
                    ('build_clib',    has_c_libraries),
                    ('build_ext',     has_ext_modules),
                    ('build_scripts', has_scripts),
                   ]
PK       ! ;Rx  Rx    distutils/command/install.pynu [        """distutils.command.install

Implements the Distutils 'install' command."""

import sys
import sysconfig
import os
import re

from distutils import log
from distutils.core import Command
from distutils.debug import DEBUG
from distutils.sysconfig import get_config_vars, is_virtual_environment
from distutils.errors import DistutilsPlatformError
from distutils.file_util import write_file
from distutils.util import convert_path, subst_vars, change_root
from distutils.util import get_platform
from distutils.errors import DistutilsOptionError

from site import USER_BASE
from site import USER_SITE

HAS_USER_SITE = (USER_SITE is not None)

# The keys to an installation scheme; if any new types of files are to be
# installed, be sure to add an entry to every scheme in
# sysconfig._INSTALL_SCHEMES, and to SCHEME_KEYS here.
SCHEME_KEYS = ('purelib', 'platlib', 'headers', 'scripts', 'data')

# The following code provides backward-compatible INSTALL_SCHEMES
# while making the sysconfig module the single point of truth.
# This makes it easier for OS distributions where they need to
# alter locations for packages installations in a single place.
# Note that this module is deprecated (PEP 632); all consumers
# of this information should switch to using sysconfig directly.
INSTALL_SCHEMES = {"unix_prefix": {}, "unix_home": {}, "nt": {}}

# add the Debian install schemes here until they are added to sysconfig
INSTALL_SCHEMES['unix_local'] = {
    'stdlib': '{installed_base}/{platlibdir}/python{py_version_short}',
    'platstdlib': '{platbase}/{platlibdir}/python{py_version_short}',
    'purelib': '{base}/local/lib/python{py_version_short}/dist-packages',
    'platlib': '{platbase}/local/{platlibdir}/python{py_version_short}/dist-packages',
    'include': '{installed_base}/include/python{py_version_short}{abiflags}',
    'headers': '{base}/local/include/python{py_version_short}{abiflags}',
    'platinclude': '{installed_platbase}/include/python{py_version_short}{abiflags}',
    'scripts': '{base}/local/bin',
    'data': '{base}/local',
}
INSTALL_SCHEMES['deb_system'] = {
    'stdlib': '{installed_base}/{platlibdir}/python{py_version_short}',
    'platstdlib': '{platbase}/{platlibdir}/python{py_version_short}',
    'purelib': '{base}/lib/python3/dist-packages',
    'platlib': '{platbase}/{platlibdir}/python3/dist-packages',
    'include': '{installed_base}/include/python{py_version_short}{abiflags}',
    'headers': '{installed_base}/include/python{py_version_short}{abiflags}',
    'platinclude': '{installed_platbase}/include/python{py_version_short}{abiflags}',
    'scripts': '{base}/bin',
    'data': '{base}',
}

# Copy from sysconfig._INSTALL_SCHEMES
for key in SCHEME_KEYS:
    for distutils_scheme_name, sys_scheme_name in (
            ("unix_prefix", "posix_prefix"), ("unix_home", "posix_home"),
            ("nt", "nt")):
        sys_key = key
        sys_scheme = sysconfig._INSTALL_SCHEMES[sys_scheme_name]
        if key == "headers" and key not in sys_scheme:
            # On POSIX-y platforms, Python will:
            # - Build from .h files in 'headers' (only there when
            #   building CPython)
            # - Install .h files to 'include'
            # When 'headers' is missing, fall back to 'include'
            sys_key = 'include'
        INSTALL_SCHEMES[distutils_scheme_name][key] = sys_scheme[sys_key]

# Transformation to different template format
for main_key in INSTALL_SCHEMES:
    for key, value in INSTALL_SCHEMES[main_key].items():
        # Change all ocurences of {variable} to $variable
        value = re.sub(r"\{(.+?)\}", r"$\g<1>", value)
        value = value.replace("$installed_base", "$base")
        value = value.replace("$py_version_nodot_plat", "$py_version_nodot")
        if key == "headers":
            value += "/$dist_name"
        if sys.version_info >= (3, 9) and key == "platlib":
            # platlibdir is available since 3.9: bpo-1294959
            value = value.replace("/lib/", "/$platlibdir/")
        INSTALL_SCHEMES[main_key][key] = value

# The following part of INSTALL_SCHEMES has a different definition
# than the one in sysconfig, but because both depend on the site module,
# the outcomes should be the same.
if HAS_USER_SITE:
    INSTALL_SCHEMES['nt_user'] = {
        'purelib': '$usersite',
        'platlib': '$usersite',
        'headers': '$userbase/Python$py_version_nodot/Include/$dist_name',
        'scripts': '$userbase/Python$py_version_nodot/Scripts',
        'data'   : '$userbase',
        }

    INSTALL_SCHEMES['unix_user'] = {
        'purelib': '$usersite',
        'platlib': '$usersite',
        'headers':
            '$userbase/include/python$py_version_short$abiflags/$dist_name',
        'scripts': '$userbase/bin',
        'data'   : '$userbase',
        }


class install(Command):

    description = "install everything from build directory"

    user_options = [
        # Select installation scheme and set base director(y|ies)
        ('prefix=', None,
         "installation prefix"),
        ('exec-prefix=', None,
         "(Unix only) prefix for platform-specific files"),
        ('home=', None,
         "(Unix only) home directory to install under"),

        # Or, just set the base director(y|ies)
        ('install-base=', None,
         "base installation directory (instead of --prefix or --home)"),
        ('install-platbase=', None,
         "base installation directory for platform-specific files " +
         "(instead of --exec-prefix or --home)"),
        ('root=', None,
         "install everything relative to this alternate root directory"),

        # Or, explicitly set the installation scheme
        ('install-purelib=', None,
         "installation directory for pure Python module distributions"),
        ('install-platlib=', None,
         "installation directory for non-pure module distributions"),
        ('install-lib=', None,
         "installation directory for all module distributions " +
         "(overrides --install-purelib and --install-platlib)"),

        ('install-headers=', None,
         "installation directory for C/C++ headers"),
        ('install-scripts=', None,
         "installation directory for Python scripts"),
        ('install-data=', None,
         "installation directory for data files"),

        # Byte-compilation options -- see install_lib.py for details, as
        # these are duplicated from there (but only install_lib does
        # anything with them).
        ('compile', 'c', "compile .py to .pyc [default]"),
        ('no-compile', None, "don't compile .py files"),
        ('optimize=', 'O',
         "also compile with optimization: -O1 for \"python -O\", "
         "-O2 for \"python -OO\", and -O0 to disable [default: -O0]"),

        # Miscellaneous control options
        ('force', 'f',
         "force installation (overwrite any existing files)"),
        ('skip-build', None,
         "skip rebuilding everything (for testing/debugging)"),

        # Where to install documentation (eventually!)
        #('doc-format=', None, "format of documentation to generate"),
        #('install-man=', None, "directory for Unix man pages"),
        #('install-html=', None, "directory for HTML documentation"),
        #('install-info=', None, "directory for GNU info files"),

        ('record=', None,
         "filename in which to record list of installed files"),

        ('install-layout=', None,
         "installation layout to choose (known values: deb, unix)"),
        ]

    boolean_options = ['compile', 'force', 'skip-build']

    if HAS_USER_SITE:
        user_options.append(('user', None,
                             "install in user site-package '%s'" % USER_SITE))
        boolean_options.append('user')

    negative_opt = {'no-compile' : 'compile'}


    def initialize_options(self):
        """Initializes options."""
        # High-level options: these select both an installation base
        # and scheme.
        self.prefix = None
        self.exec_prefix = None
        self.home = None
        self.user = 0
        self.prefix_option = None

        # These select only the installation base; it's up to the user to
        # specify the installation scheme (currently, that means supplying
        # the --install-{platlib,purelib,scripts,data} options).
        self.install_base = None
        self.install_platbase = None
        self.root = None

        # These options are the actual installation directories; if not
        # supplied by the user, they are filled in using the installation
        # scheme implied by prefix/exec-prefix/home and the contents of
        # that installation scheme.
        self.install_purelib = None     # for pure module distributions
        self.install_platlib = None     # non-pure (dists w/ extensions)
        self.install_headers = None     # for C/C++ headers
        self.install_lib = None         # set to either purelib or platlib
        self.install_scripts = None
        self.install_data = None
        if HAS_USER_SITE:
            self.install_userbase = USER_BASE
            self.install_usersite = USER_SITE

        # enable custom installation, known values: deb
        self.install_layout = None
        self.multiarch = None

        self.compile = None
        self.optimize = None

        # Deprecated
        # These two are for putting non-packagized distributions into their
        # own directory and creating a .pth file if it makes sense.
        # 'extra_path' comes from the setup file; 'install_path_file' can
        # be turned off if it makes no sense to install a .pth file.  (But
        # better to install it uselessly than to guess wrong and not
        # install it when it's necessary and would be used!)  Currently,
        # 'install_path_file' is always true unless some outsider meddles
        # with it.
        self.extra_path = None
        self.install_path_file = 1

        # 'force' forces installation, even if target files are not
        # out-of-date.  'skip_build' skips running the "build" command,
        # handy if you know it's not necessary.  'warn_dir' (which is *not*
        # a user option, it's just there so the bdist_* commands can turn
        # it off) determines whether we warn about installing to a
        # directory not in sys.path.
        self.force = 0
        self.skip_build = 0
        self.warn_dir = 1

        # These are only here as a conduit from the 'build' command to the
        # 'install_*' commands that do the real work.  ('build_base' isn't
        # actually used anywhere, but it might be useful in future.)  They
        # are not user options, because if the user told the install
        # command where the build directory is, that wouldn't affect the
        # build command.
        self.build_base = None
        self.build_lib = None

        # Not defined yet because we don't know anything about
        # documentation yet.
        #self.install_man = None
        #self.install_html = None
        #self.install_info = None

        self.record = None


    # -- Option finalizing methods -------------------------------------
    # (This is rather more involved than for most commands,
    # because this is where the policy for installing third-
    # party Python modules on various platforms given a wide
    # array of user input is decided.  Yes, it's quite complex!)

    def finalize_options(self):
        """Finalizes options."""
        # This method (and its helpers, like 'finalize_unix()',
        # 'finalize_other()', and 'select_scheme()') is where the default
        # installation directories for modules, extension modules, and
        # anything else we care to install from a Python module
        # distribution.  Thus, this code makes a pretty important policy
        # statement about how third-party stuff is added to a Python
        # installation!  Note that the actual work of installation is done
        # by the relatively simple 'install_*' commands; they just take
        # their orders from the installation directory options determined
        # here.

        # Check for errors/inconsistencies in the options; first, stuff
        # that's wrong on any platform.

        if ((self.prefix or self.exec_prefix or self.home) and
            (self.install_base or self.install_platbase)):
            raise DistutilsOptionError(
                   "must supply either prefix/exec-prefix/home or " +
                   "install-base/install-platbase -- not both")

        if self.home and (self.prefix or self.exec_prefix):
            raise DistutilsOptionError(
                  "must supply either home or prefix/exec-prefix -- not both")

        if self.user and (self.prefix or self.exec_prefix or self.home or
                self.install_base or self.install_platbase):
            raise DistutilsOptionError("can't combine user with prefix, "
                                       "exec_prefix/home, or install_(plat)base")

        # Next, stuff that's wrong (or dubious) only on certain platforms.
        if os.name != "posix":
            if self.exec_prefix:
                self.warn("exec-prefix option ignored on this platform")
                self.exec_prefix = None

        # Now the interesting logic -- so interesting that we farm it out
        # to other methods.  The goal of these methods is to set the final
        # values for the install_{lib,scripts,data,...}  options, using as
        # input a heady brew of prefix, exec_prefix, home, install_base,
        # install_platbase, user-supplied versions of
        # install_{purelib,platlib,lib,scripts,data,...}, and the
        # INSTALL_SCHEME dictionary above.  Phew!

        self.dump_dirs("pre-finalize_{unix,other}")

        if os.name == 'posix':
            self.finalize_unix()
        else:
            self.finalize_other()

        self.dump_dirs("post-finalize_{unix,other}()")

        # Expand configuration variables, tilde, etc. in self.install_base
        # and self.install_platbase -- that way, we can use $base or
        # $platbase in the other installation directories and not worry
        # about needing recursive variable expansion (shudder).

        py_version = sys.version.split()[0]
        (prefix, exec_prefix) = get_config_vars('prefix', 'exec_prefix')
        try:
            abiflags = sys.abiflags
        except AttributeError:
            # sys.abiflags may not be defined on all platforms.
            abiflags = ''
        self.config_vars = {'dist_name': self.distribution.get_name(),
                            'dist_version': self.distribution.get_version(),
                            'dist_fullname': self.distribution.get_fullname(),
                            'py_version': py_version,
                            'py_version_short': '%d.%d' % sys.version_info[:2],
                            'py_version_nodot': '%d%d' % sys.version_info[:2],
                            'sys_prefix': prefix,
                            'prefix': prefix,
                            'sys_exec_prefix': exec_prefix,
                            'exec_prefix': exec_prefix,
                            'abiflags': abiflags,
                            'platlibdir': sys.platlibdir,
                           }

        if HAS_USER_SITE:
            self.config_vars['userbase'] = self.install_userbase
            self.config_vars['usersite'] = self.install_usersite

        if sysconfig.is_python_build(True):
            self.config_vars['srcdir'] = sysconfig.get_config_var('srcdir')

        self.expand_basedirs()

        self.dump_dirs("post-expand_basedirs()")

        # Now define config vars for the base directories so we can expand
        # everything else.
        self.config_vars['base'] = self.install_base
        self.config_vars['platbase'] = self.install_platbase

        if DEBUG:
            from pprint import pprint
            print("config vars:")
            pprint(self.config_vars)

        # Expand "~" and configuration variables in the installation
        # directories.
        self.expand_dirs()

        self.dump_dirs("post-expand_dirs()")

        # Create directories in the home dir:
        if self.user:
            self.create_home_path()

        # Pick the actual directory to install all modules to: either
        # install_purelib or install_platlib, depending on whether this
        # module distribution is pure or not.  Of course, if the user
        # already specified install_lib, use their selection.
        if self.install_lib is None:
            if self.distribution.ext_modules: # has extensions: non-pure
                self.install_lib = self.install_platlib
            else:
                self.install_lib = self.install_purelib


        # Convert directories from Unix /-separated syntax to the local
        # convention.
        self.convert_paths('lib', 'purelib', 'platlib',
                           'scripts', 'data', 'headers')
        if HAS_USER_SITE:
            self.convert_paths('userbase', 'usersite')

        # Deprecated
        # Well, we're not actually fully completely finalized yet: we still
        # have to deal with 'extra_path', which is the hack for allowing
        # non-packagized module distributions (hello, Numerical Python!) to
        # get their own directories.
        self.handle_extra_path()
        self.install_libbase = self.install_lib # needed for .pth file
        self.install_lib = os.path.join(self.install_lib, self.extra_dirs)

        # If a new root directory was supplied, make all the installation
        # dirs relative to it.
        if self.root is not None:
            self.change_roots('libbase', 'lib', 'purelib', 'platlib',
                              'scripts', 'data', 'headers')

        self.dump_dirs("after prepending root")

        # Find out the build directories, ie. where to install from.
        self.set_undefined_options('build',
                                   ('build_base', 'build_base'),
                                   ('build_lib', 'build_lib'))

        # Punt on doc directories for now -- after all, we're punting on
        # documentation completely!

    def dump_dirs(self, msg):
        """Dumps the list of user options."""
        if not DEBUG:
            return
        from distutils.fancy_getopt import longopt_xlate
        log.debug(msg + ":")
        for opt in self.user_options:
            opt_name = opt[0]
            if opt_name[-1] == "=":
                opt_name = opt_name[0:-1]
            if opt_name in self.negative_opt:
                opt_name = self.negative_opt[opt_name]
                opt_name = opt_name.translate(longopt_xlate)
                val = not getattr(self, opt_name)
            else:
                opt_name = opt_name.translate(longopt_xlate)
                val = getattr(self, opt_name)
            log.debug("  %s: %s", opt_name, val)

    def finalize_unix(self):
        """Finalizes options for posix platforms."""
        if self.install_base is not None or self.install_platbase is not None:
            if ((self.install_lib is None and
                 self.install_purelib is None and
                 self.install_platlib is None) or
                self.install_headers is None or
                self.install_scripts is None or
                self.install_data is None):
                raise DistutilsOptionError(
                      "install-base or install-platbase supplied, but "
                      "installation scheme is incomplete")
            return

        if self.user:
            if self.install_userbase is None:
                raise DistutilsPlatformError(
                    "User base directory is not specified")
            self.install_base = self.install_platbase = self.install_userbase
            self.select_scheme("unix_user")
        elif self.home is not None:
            self.install_base = self.install_platbase = self.home
            self.select_scheme("unix_home")
        else:
            self.prefix_option = self.prefix
            if self.prefix is None:
                if self.exec_prefix is not None:
                    raise DistutilsOptionError(
                          "must not supply exec-prefix without prefix")

                self.prefix = os.path.normpath(sys.prefix)
                self.exec_prefix = os.path.normpath(sys.exec_prefix)

            else:
                if self.exec_prefix is None:
                    self.exec_prefix = self.prefix

            self.install_base = self.prefix
            self.install_platbase = self.exec_prefix
            if self.install_layout:
                if self.install_layout.lower() in ['deb']:
                    import sysconfig
                    self.multiarch = sysconfig.get_config_var('MULTIARCH')
                    self.select_scheme("deb_system")
                elif self.install_layout.lower() in ['unix']:
                    self.select_scheme("unix_prefix")
                else:
                    raise DistutilsOptionError(
                        "unknown value for --install-layout")
            elif ((self.prefix_option and
                   os.path.normpath(self.prefix) != '/usr/local')
                  or is_virtual_environment()):
                self.select_scheme("unix_prefix")
            else:
                if os.path.normpath(self.prefix) == '/usr/local':
                    self.prefix = self.exec_prefix = '/usr'
                    self.install_base = self.install_platbase = '/usr'
                self.select_scheme("unix_local")

    def finalize_other(self):
        """Finalizes options for non-posix platforms"""
        if self.user:
            if self.install_userbase is None:
                raise DistutilsPlatformError(
                    "User base directory is not specified")
            self.install_base = self.install_platbase = self.install_userbase
            self.select_scheme(os.name + "_user")
        elif self.home is not None:
            self.install_base = self.install_platbase = self.home
            self.select_scheme("unix_home")
        else:
            if self.prefix is None:
                self.prefix = os.path.normpath(sys.prefix)

            self.install_base = self.install_platbase = self.prefix
            try:
                self.select_scheme(os.name)
            except KeyError:
                raise DistutilsPlatformError(
                      "I don't know how to install stuff on '%s'" % os.name)

    def select_scheme(self, name):
        """Sets the install directories by applying the install schemes."""
        # it's the caller's problem if they supply a bad name!
        scheme = INSTALL_SCHEMES[name]
        for key in SCHEME_KEYS:
            attrname = 'install_' + key
            if getattr(self, attrname) is None:
                setattr(self, attrname, scheme[key])

    def _expand_attrs(self, attrs):
        for attr in attrs:
            val = getattr(self, attr)
            if val is not None:
                if os.name == 'posix' or os.name == 'nt':
                    val = os.path.expanduser(val)
                val = subst_vars(val, self.config_vars)
                setattr(self, attr, val)

    def expand_basedirs(self):
        """Calls `os.path.expanduser` on install_base, install_platbase and
        root."""
        self._expand_attrs(['install_base', 'install_platbase', 'root'])

    def expand_dirs(self):
        """Calls `os.path.expanduser` on install dirs."""
        self._expand_attrs(['install_purelib', 'install_platlib',
                            'install_lib', 'install_headers',
                            'install_scripts', 'install_data',])

    def convert_paths(self, *names):
        """Call `convert_path` over `names`."""
        for name in names:
            attr = "install_" + name
            setattr(self, attr, convert_path(getattr(self, attr)))

    def handle_extra_path(self):
        """Set `path_file` and `extra_dirs` using `extra_path`."""
        if self.extra_path is None:
            self.extra_path = self.distribution.extra_path

        if self.extra_path is not None:
            log.warn(
                "Distribution option extra_path is deprecated. "
                "See issue27919 for details."
            )
            if isinstance(self.extra_path, str):
                self.extra_path = self.extra_path.split(',')

            if len(self.extra_path) == 1:
                path_file = extra_dirs = self.extra_path[0]
            elif len(self.extra_path) == 2:
                path_file, extra_dirs = self.extra_path
            else:
                raise DistutilsOptionError(
                      "'extra_path' option must be a list, tuple, or "
                      "comma-separated string with 1 or 2 elements")

            # convert to local form in case Unix notation used (as it
            # should be in setup scripts)
            extra_dirs = convert_path(extra_dirs)
        else:
            path_file = None
            extra_dirs = ''

        # XXX should we warn if path_file and not extra_dirs? (in which
        # case the path file would be harmless but pointless)
        self.path_file = path_file
        self.extra_dirs = extra_dirs

    def change_roots(self, *names):
        """Change the install directories pointed by name using root."""
        for name in names:
            attr = "install_" + name
            setattr(self, attr, change_root(self.root, getattr(self, attr)))

    def create_home_path(self):
        """Create directories under ~."""
        if not self.user:
            return
        home = convert_path(os.path.expanduser("~"))
        for name, path in self.config_vars.items():
            if path.startswith(home) and not os.path.isdir(path):
                self.debug_print("os.makedirs('%s', 0o700)" % path)
                os.makedirs(path, 0o700)

    # -- Command execution methods -------------------------------------

    def run(self):
        """Runs the command."""
        # Obviously have to build before we can install
        if not self.skip_build:
            self.run_command('build')
            # If we built for any other platform, we can't install.
            build_plat = self.distribution.get_command_obj('build').plat_name
            # check warn_dir - it is a clue that the 'install' is happening
            # internally, and not to sys.path, so we don't check the platform
            # matches what we are running.
            if self.warn_dir and build_plat != get_platform():
                raise DistutilsPlatformError("Can't install when "
                                             "cross-compiling")

        # Run all sub-commands (at least those that need to be run)
        for cmd_name in self.get_sub_commands():
            self.run_command(cmd_name)

        if self.path_file:
            self.create_path_file()

        # write list of installed files, if requested.
        if self.record:
            outputs = self.get_outputs()
            if self.root:               # strip any package prefix
                root_len = len(self.root)
                for counter in range(len(outputs)):
                    outputs[counter] = outputs[counter][root_len:]
            self.execute(write_file,
                         (self.record, outputs),
                         "writing list of installed files to '%s'" %
                         self.record)

        sys_path = map(os.path.normpath, sys.path)
        sys_path = map(os.path.normcase, sys_path)
        install_lib = os.path.normcase(os.path.normpath(self.install_lib))
        if (self.warn_dir and
            not (self.path_file and self.install_path_file) and
            install_lib not in sys_path):
            log.debug(("modules installed to '%s', which is not in "
                       "Python's module search path (sys.path) -- "
                       "you'll have to change the search path yourself"),
                       self.install_lib)

    def create_path_file(self):
        """Creates the .pth file"""
        filename = os.path.join(self.install_libbase,
                                self.path_file + ".pth")
        if self.install_path_file:
            self.execute(write_file,
                         (filename, [self.extra_dirs]),
                         "creating %s" % filename)
        else:
            self.warn("path file '%s' not created" % filename)


    # -- Reporting methods ---------------------------------------------

    def get_outputs(self):
        """Assembles the outputs of all the sub-commands."""
        outputs = []
        for cmd_name in self.get_sub_commands():
            cmd = self.get_finalized_command(cmd_name)
            # Add the contents of cmd.get_outputs(), ensuring
            # that outputs doesn't contain duplicate entries
            for filename in cmd.get_outputs():
                if filename not in outputs:
                    outputs.append(filename)

        if self.path_file and self.install_path_file:
            outputs.append(os.path.join(self.install_libbase,
                                        self.path_file + ".pth"))

        return outputs

    def get_inputs(self):
        """Returns the inputs of all the sub-commands"""
        # XXX gee, this looks familiar ;-(
        inputs = []
        for cmd_name in self.get_sub_commands():
            cmd = self.get_finalized_command(cmd_name)
            inputs.extend(cmd.get_inputs())

        return inputs

    # -- Predicates for sub-command list -------------------------------

    def has_lib(self):
        """Returns true if the current distribution has any Python
        modules to install."""
        return (self.distribution.has_pure_modules() or
                self.distribution.has_ext_modules())

    def has_headers(self):
        """Returns true if the current distribution has any headers to
        install."""
        return self.distribution.has_headers()

    def has_scripts(self):
        """Returns true if the current distribution has any scripts to.
        install."""
        return self.distribution.has_scripts()

    def has_data(self):
        """Returns true if the current distribution has any data to.
        install."""
        return self.distribution.has_data_files()

    # 'sub_commands': a list of commands this command might have to run to
    # get its work done.  See cmd.py for more info.
    sub_commands = [('install_lib',     has_lib),
                    ('install_headers', has_headers),
                    ('install_scripts', has_scripts),
                    ('install_data',    has_data),
                    ('install_egg_info', lambda self:True),
                   ]
PK       ! ^      distutils/command/__init__.pynu [        """distutils.command

Package containing implementation of all the standard Distutils
commands."""

__all__ = ['build',
           'build_py',
           'build_ext',
           'build_clib',
           'build_scripts',
           'clean',
           'install',
           'install_lib',
           'install_headers',
           'install_scripts',
           'install_data',
           'sdist',
           'register',
           'bdist',
           'bdist_dumb',
           'bdist_rpm',
           'check',
           'upload',
           # These two are reserved for future use:
           #'bdist_sdux',
           #'bdist_pkgtool',
           # Note:
           # bdist_packager is not included because it only provides
           # an abstract base class
          ]
PK       ! ,
  
    distutils/command/clean.pynu [        """distutils.command.clean

Implements the Distutils 'clean' command."""

# contributed by Bastian Kleineidam <calvin@cs.uni-sb.de>, added 2000-03-18

import os
from distutils.core import Command
from distutils.dir_util import remove_tree
from distutils import log

class clean(Command):

    description = "clean up temporary files from 'build' command"
    user_options = [
        ('build-base=', 'b',
         "base build directory (default: 'build.build-base')"),
        ('build-lib=', None,
         "build directory for all modules (default: 'build.build-lib')"),
        ('build-temp=', 't',
         "temporary build directory (default: 'build.build-temp')"),
        ('build-scripts=', None,
         "build directory for scripts (default: 'build.build-scripts')"),
        ('bdist-base=', None,
         "temporary directory for built distributions"),
        ('all', 'a',
         "remove all build output, not just temporary by-products")
    ]

    boolean_options = ['all']

    def initialize_options(self):
        self.build_base = None
        self.build_lib = None
        self.build_temp = None
        self.build_scripts = None
        self.bdist_base = None
        self.all = None

    def finalize_options(self):
        self.set_undefined_options('build',
                                   ('build_base', 'build_base'),
                                   ('build_lib', 'build_lib'),
                                   ('build_scripts', 'build_scripts'),
                                   ('build_temp', 'build_temp'))
        self.set_undefined_options('bdist',
                                   ('bdist_base', 'bdist_base'))

    def run(self):
        # remove the build/temp.<plat> directory (unless it's already
        # gone)
        if os.path.exists(self.build_temp):
            remove_tree(self.build_temp, dry_run=self.dry_run)
        else:
            log.debug("'%s' does not exist -- can't clean it",
                      self.build_temp)

        if self.all:
            # remove build directories
            for directory in (self.build_lib,
                              self.bdist_base,
                              self.build_scripts):
                if os.path.exists(directory):
                    remove_tree(directory, dry_run=self.dry_run)
                else:
                    log.warn("'%s' does not exist -- can't clean it",
                             directory)

        # just for the heck of it, try to remove the base build directory:
        # we might have emptied it right now, but if not we don't care
        if not self.dry_run:
            try:
                os.rmdir(self.build_base)
                log.info("removing '%s'", self.build_base)
            except OSError:
                pass
PK       ! w1  1    distutils/command/bdist_dumb.pynu [        """distutils.command.bdist_dumb

Implements the Distutils 'bdist_dumb' command (create a "dumb" built
distribution -- i.e., just an archive to be unpacked under $prefix or
$exec_prefix)."""

import os
from distutils.core import Command
from distutils.util import get_platform
from distutils.dir_util import remove_tree, ensure_relative
from distutils.errors import *
from distutils.sysconfig import get_python_version
from distutils import log

class bdist_dumb(Command):

    description = "create a \"dumb\" built distribution"

    user_options = [('bdist-dir=', 'd',
                     "temporary directory for creating the distribution"),
                    ('plat-name=', 'p',
                     "platform name to embed in generated filenames "
                     "(default: %s)" % get_platform()),
                    ('format=', 'f',
                     "archive format to create (tar, gztar, bztar, xztar, "
                     "ztar, zip)"),
                    ('keep-temp', 'k',
                     "keep the pseudo-installation tree around after " +
                     "creating the distribution archive"),
                    ('dist-dir=', 'd',
                     "directory to put final built distributions in"),
                    ('skip-build', None,
                     "skip rebuilding everything (for testing/debugging)"),
                    ('relative', None,
                     "build the archive using relative paths "
                     "(default: false)"),
                    ('owner=', 'u',
                     "Owner name used when creating a tar file"
                     " [default: current user]"),
                    ('group=', 'g',
                     "Group name used when creating a tar file"
                     " [default: current group]"),
                   ]

    boolean_options = ['keep-temp', 'skip-build', 'relative']

    default_format = { 'posix': 'gztar',
                       'nt': 'zip' }

    def initialize_options(self):
        self.bdist_dir = None
        self.plat_name = None
        self.format = None
        self.keep_temp = 0
        self.dist_dir = None
        self.skip_build = None
        self.relative = 0
        self.owner = None
        self.group = None

    def finalize_options(self):
        if self.bdist_dir is None:
            bdist_base = self.get_finalized_command('bdist').bdist_base
            self.bdist_dir = os.path.join(bdist_base, 'dumb')

        if self.format is None:
            try:
                self.format = self.default_format[os.name]
            except KeyError:
                raise DistutilsPlatformError(
                       "don't know how to create dumb built distributions "
                       "on platform %s" % os.name)

        self.set_undefined_options('bdist',
                                   ('dist_dir', 'dist_dir'),
                                   ('plat_name', 'plat_name'),
                                   ('skip_build', 'skip_build'))

    def run(self):
        if not self.skip_build:
            self.run_command('build')

        install = self.reinitialize_command('install', reinit_subcommands=1)
        install.root = self.bdist_dir
        install.skip_build = self.skip_build
        install.warn_dir = 0

        log.info("installing to %s", self.bdist_dir)
        self.run_command('install')

        # And make an archive relative to the root of the
        # pseudo-installation tree.
        archive_basename = "%s.%s" % (self.distribution.get_fullname(),
                                      self.plat_name)

        pseudoinstall_root = os.path.join(self.dist_dir, archive_basename)
        if not self.relative:
            archive_root = self.bdist_dir
        else:
            if (self.distribution.has_ext_modules() and
                (install.install_base != install.install_platbase)):
                raise DistutilsPlatformError(
                       "can't make a dumb built distribution where "
                       "base and platbase are different (%s, %s)"
                       % (repr(install.install_base),
                          repr(install.install_platbase)))
            else:
                archive_root = os.path.join(self.bdist_dir,
                                   ensure_relative(install.install_base))

        # Make the archive
        filename = self.make_archive(pseudoinstall_root,
                                     self.format, root_dir=archive_root,
                                     owner=self.owner, group=self.group)
        if self.distribution.has_ext_modules():
            pyversion = get_python_version()
        else:
            pyversion = 'any'
        self.distribution.dist_files.append(('bdist_dumb', pyversion,
                                             filename))

        if not self.keep_temp:
            remove_tree(self.bdist_dir, dry_run=self.dry_run)
PK       ! kץ      distutils/command/bdist.pynu [        """distutils.command.bdist

Implements the Distutils 'bdist' command (create a built [binary]
distribution)."""

import os
from distutils.core import Command
from distutils.errors import *
from distutils.util import get_platform


def show_formats():
    """Print list of available formats (arguments to "--format" option).
    """
    from distutils.fancy_getopt import FancyGetopt
    formats = []
    for format in bdist.format_commands:
        formats.append(("formats=" + format, None,
                        bdist.format_command[format][1]))
    pretty_printer = FancyGetopt(formats)
    pretty_printer.print_help("List of available distribution formats:")


class bdist(Command):

    description = "create a built (binary) distribution"

    user_options = [('bdist-base=', 'b',
                     "temporary directory for creating built distributions"),
                    ('plat-name=', 'p',
                     "platform name to embed in generated filenames "
                     "(default: %s)" % get_platform()),
                    ('formats=', None,
                     "formats for distribution (comma-separated list)"),
                    ('dist-dir=', 'd',
                     "directory to put final built distributions in "
                     "[default: dist]"),
                    ('skip-build', None,
                     "skip rebuilding everything (for testing/debugging)"),
                    ('owner=', 'u',
                     "Owner name used when creating a tar file"
                     " [default: current user]"),
                    ('group=', 'g',
                     "Group name used when creating a tar file"
                     " [default: current group]"),
                   ]

    boolean_options = ['skip-build']

    help_options = [
        ('help-formats', None,
         "lists available distribution formats", show_formats),
        ]

    # The following commands do not take a format option from bdist
    no_format_option = ('bdist_rpm',)

    # This won't do in reality: will need to distinguish RPM-ish Linux,
    # Debian-ish Linux, Solaris, FreeBSD, ..., Windows, Mac OS.
    default_format = {'posix': 'gztar',
                      'nt': 'zip'}

    # Establish the preferred order (for the --help-formats option).
    format_commands = ['rpm', 'gztar', 'bztar', 'xztar', 'ztar', 'tar', 'zip']

    # And the real information.
    format_command = {'rpm':   ('bdist_rpm',  "RPM distribution"),
                      'gztar': ('bdist_dumb', "gzip'ed tar file"),
                      'bztar': ('bdist_dumb', "bzip2'ed tar file"),
                      'xztar': ('bdist_dumb', "xz'ed tar file"),
                      'ztar':  ('bdist_dumb', "compressed tar file"),
                      'tar':   ('bdist_dumb', "tar file"),
                      'zip':   ('bdist_dumb', "ZIP file"),
                      }

    def initialize_options(self):
        self.bdist_base = None
        self.plat_name = None
        self.formats = None
        self.dist_dir = None
        self.skip_build = 0
        self.group = None
        self.owner = None

    def finalize_options(self):
        # have to finalize 'plat_name' before 'bdist_base'
        if self.plat_name is None:
            if self.skip_build:
                self.plat_name = get_platform()
            else:
                self.plat_name = self.get_finalized_command('build').plat_name

        # 'bdist_base' -- parent of per-built-distribution-format
        # temporary directories (eg. we'll probably have
        # "build/bdist.<plat>/dumb", "build/bdist.<plat>/rpm", etc.)
        if self.bdist_base is None:
            build_base = self.get_finalized_command('build').build_base
            self.bdist_base = os.path.join(build_base,
                                           'bdist.' + self.plat_name)

        self.ensure_string_list('formats')
        if self.formats is None:
            try:
                self.formats = [self.default_format[os.name]]
            except KeyError:
                raise DistutilsPlatformError(
                      "don't know how to create built distributions "
                      "on platform %s" % os.name)

        if self.dist_dir is None:
            self.dist_dir = "dist"

    def run(self):
        # Figure out which sub-commands we need to run.
        commands = []
        for format in self.formats:
            try:
                commands.append(self.format_command[format][0])
            except KeyError:
                raise DistutilsOptionError("invalid format '%s'" % format)

        # Reinitialize and run each command.
        for i in range(len(self.formats)):
            cmd_name = commands[i]
            sub_cmd = self.reinitialize_command(cmd_name)
            if cmd_name not in self.no_format_option:
                sub_cmd.format = self.formats[i]

            # passing the owner and group names for tar archiving
            if cmd_name == 'bdist_dumb':
                sub_cmd.owner = self.owner
                sub_cmd.group = self.group

            # If we're going to need to run this command again, tell it to
            # keep its temporary files around so subsequent runs go faster.
            if cmd_name in commands[i+1:]:
                sub_cmd.keep_temp = 1
            self.run_command(cmd_name)
PK       ! t=J  =J    distutils/command/sdist.pynu [        """distutils.command.sdist

Implements the Distutils 'sdist' command (create a source distribution)."""

import os
import sys
from glob import glob
from warnings import warn

from distutils.core import Command
from distutils import dir_util
from distutils import file_util
from distutils import archive_util
from distutils.text_file import TextFile
from distutils.filelist import FileList
from distutils import log
from distutils.util import convert_path
from distutils.errors import DistutilsTemplateError, DistutilsOptionError


def show_formats():
    """Print all possible values for the 'formats' option (used by
    the "--help-formats" command-line option).
    """
    from distutils.fancy_getopt import FancyGetopt
    from distutils.archive_util import ARCHIVE_FORMATS
    formats = []
    for format in ARCHIVE_FORMATS.keys():
        formats.append(("formats=" + format, None,
                        ARCHIVE_FORMATS[format][2]))
    formats.sort()
    FancyGetopt(formats).print_help(
        "List of available source distribution formats:")


class sdist(Command):

    description = "create a source distribution (tarball, zip file, etc.)"

    def checking_metadata(self):
        """Callable used for the check sub-command.

        Placed here so user_options can view it"""
        return self.metadata_check

    user_options = [
        ('template=', 't',
         "name of manifest template file [default: MANIFEST.in]"),
        ('manifest=', 'm',
         "name of manifest file [default: MANIFEST]"),
        ('use-defaults', None,
         "include the default file set in the manifest "
         "[default; disable with --no-defaults]"),
        ('no-defaults', None,
         "don't include the default file set"),
        ('prune', None,
         "specifically exclude files/directories that should not be "
         "distributed (build tree, RCS/CVS dirs, etc.) "
         "[default; disable with --no-prune]"),
        ('no-prune', None,
         "don't automatically exclude anything"),
        ('manifest-only', 'o',
         "just regenerate the manifest and then stop "
         "(implies --force-manifest)"),
        ('force-manifest', 'f',
         "forcibly regenerate the manifest and carry on as usual. "
         "Deprecated: now the manifest is always regenerated."),
        ('formats=', None,
         "formats for source distribution (comma-separated list)"),
        ('keep-temp', 'k',
         "keep the distribution tree around after creating " +
         "archive file(s)"),
        ('dist-dir=', 'd',
         "directory to put the source distribution archive(s) in "
         "[default: dist]"),
        ('metadata-check', None,
         "Ensure that all required elements of meta-data "
         "are supplied. Warn if any missing. [default]"),
        ('owner=', 'u',
         "Owner name used when creating a tar file [default: current user]"),
        ('group=', 'g',
         "Group name used when creating a tar file [default: current group]"),
        ]

    boolean_options = ['use-defaults', 'prune',
                       'manifest-only', 'force-manifest',
                       'keep-temp', 'metadata-check']

    help_options = [
        ('help-formats', None,
         "list available distribution formats", show_formats),
        ]

    negative_opt = {'no-defaults': 'use-defaults',
                    'no-prune': 'prune' }

    sub_commands = [('check', checking_metadata)]

    READMES = ('README', 'README.txt', 'README.rst')

    def initialize_options(self):
        # 'template' and 'manifest' are, respectively, the names of
        # the manifest template and manifest file.
        self.template = None
        self.manifest = None

        # 'use_defaults': if true, we will include the default file set
        # in the manifest
        self.use_defaults = 1
        self.prune = 1

        self.manifest_only = 0
        self.force_manifest = 0

        self.formats = ['gztar']
        self.keep_temp = 0
        self.dist_dir = None

        self.archive_files = None
        self.metadata_check = 1
        self.owner = None
        self.group = None

    def finalize_options(self):
        if self.manifest is None:
            self.manifest = "MANIFEST"
        if self.template is None:
            self.template = "MANIFEST.in"

        self.ensure_string_list('formats')

        bad_format = archive_util.check_archive_formats(self.formats)
        if bad_format:
            raise DistutilsOptionError(
                  "unknown archive format '%s'" % bad_format)

        if self.dist_dir is None:
            self.dist_dir = "dist"

    def run(self):
        # 'filelist' contains the list of files that will make up the
        # manifest
        self.filelist = FileList()

        # Run sub commands
        for cmd_name in self.get_sub_commands():
            self.run_command(cmd_name)

        # Do whatever it takes to get the list of files to process
        # (process the manifest template, read an existing manifest,
        # whatever).  File list is accumulated in 'self.filelist'.
        self.get_file_list()

        # If user just wanted us to regenerate the manifest, stop now.
        if self.manifest_only:
            return

        # Otherwise, go ahead and create the source distribution tarball,
        # or zipfile, or whatever.
        self.make_distribution()

    def check_metadata(self):
        """Deprecated API."""
        warn("distutils.command.sdist.check_metadata is deprecated, \
              use the check command instead", PendingDeprecationWarning)
        check = self.distribution.get_command_obj('check')
        check.ensure_finalized()
        check.run()

    def get_file_list(self):
        """Figure out the list of files to include in the source
        distribution, and put it in 'self.filelist'.  This might involve
        reading the manifest template (and writing the manifest), or just
        reading the manifest, or just using the default file set -- it all
        depends on the user's options.
        """
        # new behavior when using a template:
        # the file list is recalculated every time because
        # even if MANIFEST.in or setup.py are not changed
        # the user might have added some files in the tree that
        # need to be included.
        #
        #  This makes --force the default and only behavior with templates.
        template_exists = os.path.isfile(self.template)
        if not template_exists and self._manifest_is_not_generated():
            self.read_manifest()
            self.filelist.sort()
            self.filelist.remove_duplicates()
            return

        if not template_exists:
            self.warn(("manifest template '%s' does not exist " +
                        "(using default file list)") %
                        self.template)
        self.filelist.findall()

        if self.use_defaults:
            self.add_defaults()

        if template_exists:
            self.read_template()

        if self.prune:
            self.prune_file_list()

        self.filelist.sort()
        self.filelist.remove_duplicates()
        self.write_manifest()

    def add_defaults(self):
        """Add all the default files to self.filelist:
          - README or README.txt
          - setup.py
          - test/test*.py
          - all pure Python modules mentioned in setup script
          - all files pointed by package_data (build_py)
          - all files defined in data_files.
          - all files defined as scripts.
          - all C sources listed as part of extensions or C libraries
            in the setup script (doesn't catch C headers!)
        Warns if (README or README.txt) or setup.py are missing; everything
        else is optional.
        """
        self._add_defaults_standards()
        self._add_defaults_optional()
        self._add_defaults_python()
        self._add_defaults_data_files()
        self._add_defaults_ext()
        self._add_defaults_c_libs()
        self._add_defaults_scripts()

    @staticmethod
    def _cs_path_exists(fspath):
        """
        Case-sensitive path existence check

        >>> sdist._cs_path_exists(__file__)
        True
        >>> sdist._cs_path_exists(__file__.upper())
        False
        """
        if not os.path.exists(fspath):
            return False
        # make absolute so we always have a directory
        abspath = os.path.abspath(fspath)
        directory, filename = os.path.split(abspath)
        return filename in os.listdir(directory)

    def _add_defaults_standards(self):
        standards = [self.READMES, self.distribution.script_name]
        for fn in standards:
            if isinstance(fn, tuple):
                alts = fn
                got_it = False
                for fn in alts:
                    if self._cs_path_exists(fn):
                        got_it = True
                        self.filelist.append(fn)
                        break

                if not got_it:
                    self.warn("standard file not found: should have one of " +
                              ', '.join(alts))
            else:
                if self._cs_path_exists(fn):
                    self.filelist.append(fn)
                else:
                    self.warn("standard file '%s' not found" % fn)

    def _add_defaults_optional(self):
        optional = ['test/test*.py', 'setup.cfg']
        for pattern in optional:
            files = filter(os.path.isfile, glob(pattern))
            self.filelist.extend(files)

    def _add_defaults_python(self):
        # build_py is used to get:
        #  - python modules
        #  - files defined in package_data
        build_py = self.get_finalized_command('build_py')

        # getting python files
        if self.distribution.has_pure_modules():
            self.filelist.extend(build_py.get_source_files())

        # getting package_data files
        # (computed in build_py.data_files by build_py.finalize_options)
        for pkg, src_dir, build_dir, filenames in build_py.data_files:
            for filename in filenames:
                self.filelist.append(os.path.join(src_dir, filename))

    def _add_defaults_data_files(self):
        # getting distribution.data_files
        if self.distribution.has_data_files():
            for item in self.distribution.data_files:
                if isinstance(item, str):
                    # plain file
                    item = convert_path(item)
                    if os.path.isfile(item):
                        self.filelist.append(item)
                else:
                    # a (dirname, filenames) tuple
                    dirname, filenames = item
                    for f in filenames:
                        f = convert_path(f)
                        if os.path.isfile(f):
                            self.filelist.append(f)

    def _add_defaults_ext(self):
        if self.distribution.has_ext_modules():
            build_ext = self.get_finalized_command('build_ext')
            self.filelist.extend(build_ext.get_source_files())

    def _add_defaults_c_libs(self):
        if self.distribution.has_c_libraries():
            build_clib = self.get_finalized_command('build_clib')
            self.filelist.extend(build_clib.get_source_files())

    def _add_defaults_scripts(self):
        if self.distribution.has_scripts():
            build_scripts = self.get_finalized_command('build_scripts')
            self.filelist.extend(build_scripts.get_source_files())

    def read_template(self):
        """Read and parse manifest template file named by self.template.

        (usually "MANIFEST.in") The parsing and processing is done by
        'self.filelist', which updates itself accordingly.
        """
        log.info("reading manifest template '%s'", self.template)
        template = TextFile(self.template, strip_comments=1, skip_blanks=1,
                            join_lines=1, lstrip_ws=1, rstrip_ws=1,
                            collapse_join=1)

        try:
            while True:
                line = template.readline()
                if line is None:            # end of file
                    break

                try:
                    self.filelist.process_template_line(line)
                # the call above can raise a DistutilsTemplateError for
                # malformed lines, or a ValueError from the lower-level
                # convert_path function
                except (DistutilsTemplateError, ValueError) as msg:
                    self.warn("%s, line %d: %s" % (template.filename,
                                                   template.current_line,
                                                   msg))
        finally:
            template.close()

    def prune_file_list(self):
        """Prune off branches that might slip into the file list as created
        by 'read_template()', but really don't belong there:
          * the build tree (typically "build")
          * the release tree itself (only an issue if we ran "sdist"
            previously with --keep-temp, or it aborted)
          * any RCS, CVS, .svn, .hg, .git, .bzr, _darcs directories
        """
        build = self.get_finalized_command('build')
        base_dir = self.distribution.get_fullname()

        self.filelist.exclude_pattern(None, prefix=build.build_base)
        self.filelist.exclude_pattern(None, prefix=base_dir)

        if sys.platform == 'win32':
            seps = r'/|\\'
        else:
            seps = '/'

        vcs_dirs = ['RCS', 'CVS', r'\.svn', r'\.hg', r'\.git', r'\.bzr',
                    '_darcs']
        vcs_ptrn = r'(^|%s)(%s)(%s).*' % (seps, '|'.join(vcs_dirs), seps)
        self.filelist.exclude_pattern(vcs_ptrn, is_regex=1)

    def write_manifest(self):
        """Write the file list in 'self.filelist' (presumably as filled in
        by 'add_defaults()' and 'read_template()') to the manifest file
        named by 'self.manifest'.
        """
        if self._manifest_is_not_generated():
            log.info("not writing to manually maintained "
                     "manifest file '%s'" % self.manifest)
            return

        content = self.filelist.files[:]
        content.insert(0, '# file GENERATED by distutils, do NOT edit')
        self.execute(file_util.write_file, (self.manifest, content),
                     "writing manifest file '%s'" % self.manifest)

    def _manifest_is_not_generated(self):
        # check for special comment used in 3.1.3 and higher
        if not os.path.isfile(self.manifest):
            return False

        fp = open(self.manifest)
        try:
            first_line = fp.readline()
        finally:
            fp.close()
        return first_line != '# file GENERATED by distutils, do NOT edit\n'

    def read_manifest(self):
        """Read the manifest file (named by 'self.manifest') and use it to
        fill in 'self.filelist', the list of files to include in the source
        distribution.
        """
        log.info("reading manifest file '%s'", self.manifest)
        with open(self.manifest) as manifest:
            for line in manifest:
                # ignore comments and blank lines
                line = line.strip()
                if line.startswith('#') or not line:
                    continue
                self.filelist.append(line)

    def make_release_tree(self, base_dir, files):
        """Create the directory tree that will become the source
        distribution archive.  All directories implied by the filenames in
        'files' are created under 'base_dir', and then we hard link or copy
        (if hard linking is unavailable) those files into place.
        Essentially, this duplicates the developer's source tree, but in a
        directory named after the distribution, containing only the files
        to be distributed.
        """
        # Create all the directories under 'base_dir' necessary to
        # put 'files' there; the 'mkpath()' is just so we don't die
        # if the manifest happens to be empty.
        self.mkpath(base_dir)
        dir_util.create_tree(base_dir, files, dry_run=self.dry_run)

        # And walk over the list of files, either making a hard link (if
        # os.link exists) to each one that doesn't already exist in its
        # corresponding location under 'base_dir', or copying each file
        # that's out-of-date in 'base_dir'.  (Usually, all files will be
        # out-of-date, because by default we blow away 'base_dir' when
        # we're done making the distribution archives.)

        if hasattr(os, 'link'):        # can make hard links on this system
            link = 'hard'
            msg = "making hard links in %s..." % base_dir
        else:                           # nope, have to copy
            link = None
            msg = "copying files to %s..." % base_dir

        if not files:
            log.warn("no files to distribute -- empty manifest?")
        else:
            log.info(msg)
        for file in files:
            if not os.path.isfile(file):
                log.warn("'%s' not a regular file -- skipping", file)
            else:
                dest = os.path.join(base_dir, file)
                self.copy_file(file, dest, link=link)

        self.distribution.metadata.write_pkg_info(base_dir)

    def make_distribution(self):
        """Create the source distribution(s).  First, we create the release
        tree with 'make_release_tree()'; then, we create all required
        archive files (according to 'self.formats') from the release tree.
        Finally, we clean up by blowing away the release tree (unless
        'self.keep_temp' is true).  The list of archive files created is
        stored so it can be retrieved later by 'get_archive_files()'.
        """
        # Don't warn about missing meta-data here -- should be (and is!)
        # done elsewhere.
        base_dir = self.distribution.get_fullname()
        base_name = os.path.join(self.dist_dir, base_dir)

        self.make_release_tree(base_dir, self.filelist.files)
        archive_files = []              # remember names of files we create
        # tar archive must be created last to avoid overwrite and remove
        if 'tar' in self.formats:
            self.formats.append(self.formats.pop(self.formats.index('tar')))

        for fmt in self.formats:
            file = self.make_archive(base_name, fmt, base_dir=base_dir,
                                     owner=self.owner, group=self.group)
            archive_files.append(file)
            self.distribution.dist_files.append(('sdist', '', file))

        self.archive_files = archive_files

        if not self.keep_temp:
            dir_util.remove_tree(base_dir, dry_run=self.dry_run)

    def get_archive_files(self):
        """Return the list of archive files created when the command
        was run, or None if the command hasn't run yet.
        """
        return self.archive_files
PK       ! s&C  &C    distutils/command/build_py.pynu [        """distutils.command.build_py

Implements the Distutils 'build_py' command."""

import os
import importlib.util
import sys
import glob

from distutils.core import Command
from distutils.errors import *
from distutils.util import convert_path, Mixin2to3
from distutils import log

class build_py (Command):

    description = "\"build\" pure Python modules (copy to build directory)"

    user_options = [
        ('build-lib=', 'd', "directory to \"build\" (copy) to"),
        ('compile', 'c', "compile .py to .pyc"),
        ('no-compile', None, "don't compile .py files [default]"),
        ('optimize=', 'O',
         "also compile with optimization: -O1 for \"python -O\", "
         "-O2 for \"python -OO\", and -O0 to disable [default: -O0]"),
        ('force', 'f', "forcibly build everything (ignore file timestamps)"),
        ]

    boolean_options = ['compile', 'force']
    negative_opt = {'no-compile' : 'compile'}

    def initialize_options(self):
        self.build_lib = None
        self.py_modules = None
        self.package = None
        self.package_data = None
        self.package_dir = None
        self.compile = 0
        self.optimize = 0
        self.force = None

    def finalize_options(self):
        self.set_undefined_options('build',
                                   ('build_lib', 'build_lib'),
                                   ('force', 'force'))

        # Get the distribution options that are aliases for build_py
        # options -- list of packages and list of modules.
        self.packages = self.distribution.packages
        self.py_modules = self.distribution.py_modules
        self.package_data = self.distribution.package_data
        self.package_dir = {}
        if self.distribution.package_dir:
            for name, path in self.distribution.package_dir.items():
                self.package_dir[name] = convert_path(path)
        self.data_files = self.get_data_files()

        # Ick, copied straight from install_lib.py (fancy_getopt needs a
        # type system!  Hell, *everything* needs a type system!!!)
        if not isinstance(self.optimize, int):
            try:
                self.optimize = int(self.optimize)
                assert 0 <= self.optimize <= 2
            except (ValueError, AssertionError):
                raise DistutilsOptionError("optimize must be 0, 1, or 2")

    def run(self):
        # XXX copy_file by default preserves atime and mtime.  IMHO this is
        # the right thing to do, but perhaps it should be an option -- in
        # particular, a site administrator might want installed files to
        # reflect the time of installation rather than the last
        # modification time before the installed release.

        # XXX copy_file by default preserves mode, which appears to be the
        # wrong thing to do: if a file is read-only in the working
        # directory, we want it to be installed read/write so that the next
        # installation of the same module distribution can overwrite it
        # without problems.  (This might be a Unix-specific issue.)  Thus
        # we turn off 'preserve_mode' when copying to the build directory,
        # since the build directory is supposed to be exactly what the
        # installation will look like (ie. we preserve mode when
        # installing).

        # Two options control which modules will be installed: 'packages'
        # and 'py_modules'.  The former lets us work with whole packages, not
        # specifying individual modules at all; the latter is for
        # specifying modules one-at-a-time.

        if self.py_modules:
            self.build_modules()
        if self.packages:
            self.build_packages()
            self.build_package_data()

        self.byte_compile(self.get_outputs(include_bytecode=0))

    def get_data_files(self):
        """Generate list of '(package,src_dir,build_dir,filenames)' tuples"""
        data = []
        if not self.packages:
            return data
        for package in self.packages:
            # Locate package source directory
            src_dir = self.get_package_dir(package)

            # Compute package build directory
            build_dir = os.path.join(*([self.build_lib] + package.split('.')))

            # Length of path to strip from found files
            plen = 0
            if src_dir:
                plen = len(src_dir)+1

            # Strip directory from globbed filenames
            filenames = [
                file[plen:] for file in self.find_data_files(package, src_dir)
                ]
            data.append((package, src_dir, build_dir, filenames))
        return data

    def find_data_files(self, package, src_dir):
        """Return filenames for package's data files in 'src_dir'"""
        globs = (self.package_data.get('', [])
                 + self.package_data.get(package, []))
        files = []
        for pattern in globs:
            # Each pattern has to be converted to a platform-specific path
            filelist = glob.glob(os.path.join(glob.escape(src_dir), convert_path(pattern)))
            # Files that match more than one pattern are only added once
            files.extend([fn for fn in filelist if fn not in files
                and os.path.isfile(fn)])
        return files

    def build_package_data(self):
        """Copy data files into build directory"""
        lastdir = None
        for package, src_dir, build_dir, filenames in self.data_files:
            for filename in filenames:
                target = os.path.join(build_dir, filename)
                self.mkpath(os.path.dirname(target))
                self.copy_file(os.path.join(src_dir, filename), target,
                               preserve_mode=False)

    def get_package_dir(self, package):
        """Return the directory, relative to the top of the source
           distribution, where package 'package' should be found
           (at least according to the 'package_dir' option, if any)."""
        path = package.split('.')

        if not self.package_dir:
            if path:
                return os.path.join(*path)
            else:
                return ''
        else:
            tail = []
            while path:
                try:
                    pdir = self.package_dir['.'.join(path)]
                except KeyError:
                    tail.insert(0, path[-1])
                    del path[-1]
                else:
                    tail.insert(0, pdir)
                    return os.path.join(*tail)
            else:
                # Oops, got all the way through 'path' without finding a
                # match in package_dir.  If package_dir defines a directory
                # for the root (nameless) package, then fallback on it;
                # otherwise, we might as well have not consulted
                # package_dir at all, as we just use the directory implied
                # by 'tail' (which should be the same as the original value
                # of 'path' at this point).
                pdir = self.package_dir.get('')
                if pdir is not None:
                    tail.insert(0, pdir)

                if tail:
                    return os.path.join(*tail)
                else:
                    return ''

    def check_package(self, package, package_dir):
        # Empty dir name means current directory, which we can probably
        # assume exists.  Also, os.path.exists and isdir don't know about
        # my "empty string means current dir" convention, so we have to
        # circumvent them.
        if package_dir != "":
            if not os.path.exists(package_dir):
                raise DistutilsFileError(
                      "package directory '%s' does not exist" % package_dir)
            if not os.path.isdir(package_dir):
                raise DistutilsFileError(
                       "supposed package directory '%s' exists, "
                       "but is not a directory" % package_dir)

        # Require __init__.py for all but the "root package"
        if package:
            init_py = os.path.join(package_dir, "__init__.py")
            if os.path.isfile(init_py):
                return init_py
            else:
                log.warn(("package init file '%s' not found " +
                          "(or not a regular file)"), init_py)

        # Either not in a package at all (__init__.py not expected), or
        # __init__.py doesn't exist -- so don't return the filename.
        return None

    def check_module(self, module, module_file):
        if not os.path.isfile(module_file):
            log.warn("file %s (for module %s) not found", module_file, module)
            return False
        else:
            return True

    def find_package_modules(self, package, package_dir):
        self.check_package(package, package_dir)
        module_files = glob.glob(os.path.join(glob.escape(package_dir), "*.py"))
        modules = []
        setup_script = os.path.abspath(self.distribution.script_name)

        for f in module_files:
            abs_f = os.path.abspath(f)
            if abs_f != setup_script:
                module = os.path.splitext(os.path.basename(f))[0]
                modules.append((package, module, f))
            else:
                self.debug_print("excluding %s" % setup_script)
        return modules

    def find_modules(self):
        """Finds individually-specified Python modules, ie. those listed by
        module name in 'self.py_modules'.  Returns a list of tuples (package,
        module_base, filename): 'package' is a tuple of the path through
        package-space to the module; 'module_base' is the bare (no
        packages, no dots) module name, and 'filename' is the path to the
        ".py" file (relative to the distribution root) that implements the
        module.
        """
        # Map package names to tuples of useful info about the package:
        #    (package_dir, checked)
        # package_dir - the directory where we'll find source files for
        #   this package
        # checked - true if we have checked that the package directory
        #   is valid (exists, contains __init__.py, ... ?)
        packages = {}

        # List of (package, module, filename) tuples to return
        modules = []

        # We treat modules-in-packages almost the same as toplevel modules,
        # just the "package" for a toplevel is empty (either an empty
        # string or empty list, depending on context).  Differences:
        #   - don't check for __init__.py in directory for empty package
        for module in self.py_modules:
            path = module.split('.')
            package = '.'.join(path[0:-1])
            module_base = path[-1]

            try:
                (package_dir, checked) = packages[package]
            except KeyError:
                package_dir = self.get_package_dir(package)
                checked = 0

            if not checked:
                init_py = self.check_package(package, package_dir)
                packages[package] = (package_dir, 1)
                if init_py:
                    modules.append((package, "__init__", init_py))

            # XXX perhaps we should also check for just .pyc files
            # (so greedy closed-source bastards can distribute Python
            # modules too)
            module_file = os.path.join(package_dir, module_base + ".py")
            if not self.check_module(module, module_file):
                continue

            modules.append((package, module_base, module_file))

        return modules

    def find_all_modules(self):
        """Compute the list of all modules that will be built, whether
        they are specified one-module-at-a-time ('self.py_modules') or
        by whole packages ('self.packages').  Return a list of tuples
        (package, module, module_file), just like 'find_modules()' and
        'find_package_modules()' do."""
        modules = []
        if self.py_modules:
            modules.extend(self.find_modules())
        if self.packages:
            for package in self.packages:
                package_dir = self.get_package_dir(package)
                m = self.find_package_modules(package, package_dir)
                modules.extend(m)
        return modules

    def get_source_files(self):
        return [module[-1] for module in self.find_all_modules()]

    def get_module_outfile(self, build_dir, package, module):
        outfile_path = [build_dir] + list(package) + [module + ".py"]
        return os.path.join(*outfile_path)

    def get_outputs(self, include_bytecode=1):
        modules = self.find_all_modules()
        outputs = []
        for (package, module, module_file) in modules:
            package = package.split('.')
            filename = self.get_module_outfile(self.build_lib, package, module)
            outputs.append(filename)
            if include_bytecode:
                if self.compile:
                    outputs.append(importlib.util.cache_from_source(
                        filename, optimization=''))
                if self.optimize > 0:
                    outputs.append(importlib.util.cache_from_source(
                        filename, optimization=self.optimize))

        outputs += [
            os.path.join(build_dir, filename)
            for package, src_dir, build_dir, filenames in self.data_files
            for filename in filenames
            ]

        return outputs

    def build_module(self, module, module_file, package):
        if isinstance(package, str):
            package = package.split('.')
        elif not isinstance(package, (list, tuple)):
            raise TypeError(
                  "'package' must be a string (dot-separated), list, or tuple")

        # Now put the module source file into the "build" area -- this is
        # easy, we just copy it somewhere under self.build_lib (the build
        # directory for Python source).
        outfile = self.get_module_outfile(self.build_lib, package, module)
        dir = os.path.dirname(outfile)
        self.mkpath(dir)
        return self.copy_file(module_file, outfile, preserve_mode=0)

    def build_modules(self):
        modules = self.find_modules()
        for (package, module, module_file) in modules:
            # Now "build" the module -- ie. copy the source file to
            # self.build_lib (the build directory for Python source).
            # (Actually, it gets copied to the directory for this package
            # under self.build_lib.)
            self.build_module(module, module_file, package)

    def build_packages(self):
        for package in self.packages:
            # Get list of (package, module, module_file) tuples based on
            # scanning the package directory.  'package' is only included
            # in the tuple so that 'find_modules()' and
            # 'find_package_tuples()' have a consistent interface; it's
            # ignored here (apart from a sanity check).  Also, 'module' is
            # the *unqualified* module name (ie. no dots, no package -- we
            # already know its package!), and 'module_file' is the path to
            # the .py file, relative to the current directory
            # (ie. including 'package_dir').
            package_dir = self.get_package_dir(package)
            modules = self.find_package_modules(package, package_dir)

            # Now loop over the modules we found, "building" each one (just
            # copy it to self.build_lib).
            for (package_, module, module_file) in modules:
                assert package == package_
                self.build_module(module, module_file, package)

    def byte_compile(self, files):
        if sys.dont_write_bytecode:
            self.warn('byte-compiling is disabled, skipping.')
            return

        from distutils.util import byte_compile
        prefix = self.build_lib
        if prefix[-1] != os.sep:
            prefix = prefix + os.sep

        # XXX this code is essentially the same as the 'byte_compile()
        # method of the "install_lib" command, except for the determination
        # of the 'prefix' string.  Hmmm.
        if self.compile:
            byte_compile(files, optimize=0,
                         force=self.force, prefix=prefix, dry_run=self.dry_run)
        if self.optimize > 0:
            byte_compile(files, optimize=self.optimize,
                         force=self.force, prefix=prefix, dry_run=self.dry_run)

class build_py_2to3(build_py, Mixin2to3):
    def run(self):
        self.updated_files = []

        # Base class code
        if self.py_modules:
            self.build_modules()
        if self.packages:
            self.build_packages()
            self.build_package_data()

        # 2to3
        self.run_2to3(self.updated_files)

        # Remaining base class code
        self.byte_compile(self.get_outputs(include_bytecode=0))

    def build_module(self, module, module_file, package):
        res = build_py.build_module(self, module, module_file, package)
        if res[1]:
            # file was copied
            self.updated_files.append(res[0])
        return res
PK       ! -  -    distutils/command/register.pynu [        """distutils.command.register

Implements the Distutils 'register' command (register with the repository).
"""

# created 2002/10/21, Richard Jones

import getpass
import io
import urllib.parse, urllib.request
from warnings import warn

from distutils.core import PyPIRCCommand
from distutils.errors import *
from distutils import log

class register(PyPIRCCommand):

    description = ("register the distribution with the Python package index")
    user_options = PyPIRCCommand.user_options + [
        ('list-classifiers', None,
         'list the valid Trove classifiers'),
        ('strict', None ,
         'Will stop the registering if the meta-data are not fully compliant')
        ]
    boolean_options = PyPIRCCommand.boolean_options + [
        'verify', 'list-classifiers', 'strict']

    sub_commands = [('check', lambda self: True)]

    def initialize_options(self):
        PyPIRCCommand.initialize_options(self)
        self.list_classifiers = 0
        self.strict = 0

    def finalize_options(self):
        PyPIRCCommand.finalize_options(self)
        # setting options for the `check` subcommand
        check_options = {'strict': ('register', self.strict),
                         'restructuredtext': ('register', 1)}
        self.distribution.command_options['check'] = check_options

    def run(self):
        self.finalize_options()
        self._set_config()

        # Run sub commands
        for cmd_name in self.get_sub_commands():
            self.run_command(cmd_name)

        if self.dry_run:
            self.verify_metadata()
        elif self.list_classifiers:
            self.classifiers()
        else:
            self.send_metadata()

    def check_metadata(self):
        """Deprecated API."""
        warn("distutils.command.register.check_metadata is deprecated, \
              use the check command instead", PendingDeprecationWarning)
        check = self.distribution.get_command_obj('check')
        check.ensure_finalized()
        check.strict = self.strict
        check.restructuredtext = 1
        check.run()

    def _set_config(self):
        ''' Reads the configuration file and set attributes.
        '''
        config = self._read_pypirc()
        if config != {}:
            self.username = config['username']
            self.password = config['password']
            self.repository = config['repository']
            self.realm = config['realm']
            self.has_config = True
        else:
            if self.repository not in ('pypi', self.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY):
                raise ValueError('%s not found in .pypirc' % self.repository)
            if self.repository == 'pypi':
                self.repository = self.DEFAULT_REPOSITORY
            self.has_config = False

    def classifiers(self):
        ''' Fetch the list of classifiers from the server.
        '''
        url = self.repository+'?:action=list_classifiers'
        response = urllib.request.urlopen(url)
        log.info(self._read_pypi_response(response))

    def verify_metadata(self):
        ''' Send the metadata to the package index server to be checked.
        '''
        # send the info to the server and report the result
        (code, result) = self.post_to_server(self.build_post_data('verify'))
        log.info('Server response (%s): %s', code, result)

    def send_metadata(self):
        ''' Send the metadata to the package index server.

            Well, do the following:
            1. figure who the user is, and then
            2. send the data as a Basic auth'ed POST.

            First we try to read the username/password from $HOME/.pypirc,
            which is a ConfigParser-formatted file with a section
            [distutils] containing username and password entries (both
            in clear text). Eg:

                [distutils]
                index-servers =
                    pypi

                [pypi]
                username: fred
                password: sekrit

            Otherwise, to figure who the user is, we offer the user three
            choices:

             1. use existing login,
             2. register as a new user, or
             3. set the password to a random string and email the user.

        '''
        # see if we can short-cut and get the username/password from the
        # config
        if self.has_config:
            choice = '1'
            username = self.username
            password = self.password
        else:
            choice = 'x'
            username = password = ''

        # get the user's login info
        choices = '1 2 3 4'.split()
        while choice not in choices:
            self.announce('''\
We need to know who you are, so please choose either:
 1. use your existing login,
 2. register as a new user,
 3. have the server generate a new password for you (and email it to you), or
 4. quit
Your selection [default 1]: ''', log.INFO)
            choice = input()
            if not choice:
                choice = '1'
            elif choice not in choices:
                print('Please choose one of the four options!')

        if choice == '1':
            # get the username and password
            while not username:
                username = input('Username: ')
            while not password:
                password = getpass.getpass('Password: ')

            # set up the authentication
            auth = urllib.request.HTTPPasswordMgr()
            host = urllib.parse.urlparse(self.repository)[1]
            auth.add_password(self.realm, host, username, password)
            # send the info to the server and report the result
            code, result = self.post_to_server(self.build_post_data('submit'),
                auth)
            self.announce('Server response (%s): %s' % (code, result),
                          log.INFO)

            # possibly save the login
            if code == 200:
                if self.has_config:
                    # sharing the password in the distribution instance
                    # so the upload command can reuse it
                    self.distribution.password = password
                else:
                    self.announce(('I can store your PyPI login so future '
                                   'submissions will be faster.'), log.INFO)
                    self.announce('(the login will be stored in %s)' % \
                                  self._get_rc_file(), log.INFO)
                    choice = 'X'
                    while choice.lower() not in 'yn':
                        choice = input('Save your login (y/N)?')
                        if not choice:
                            choice = 'n'
                    if choice.lower() == 'y':
                        self._store_pypirc(username, password)

        elif choice == '2':
            data = {':action': 'user'}
            data['name'] = data['password'] = data['email'] = ''
            data['confirm'] = None
            while not data['name']:
                data['name'] = input('Username: ')
            while data['password'] != data['confirm']:
                while not data['password']:
                    data['password'] = getpass.getpass('Password: ')
                while not data['confirm']:
                    data['confirm'] = getpass.getpass(' Confirm: ')
                if data['password'] != data['confirm']:
                    data['password'] = ''
                    data['confirm'] = None
                    print("Password and confirm don't match!")
            while not data['email']:
                data['email'] = input('   EMail: ')
            code, result = self.post_to_server(data)
            if code != 200:
                log.info('Server response (%s): %s', code, result)
            else:
                log.info('You will receive an email shortly.')
                log.info(('Follow the instructions in it to '
                          'complete registration.'))
        elif choice == '3':
            data = {':action': 'password_reset'}
            data['email'] = ''
            while not data['email']:
                data['email'] = input('Your email address: ')
            code, result = self.post_to_server(data)
            log.info('Server response (%s): %s', code, result)

    def build_post_data(self, action):
        # figure the data to send - the metadata plus some additional
        # information used by the package server
        meta = self.distribution.metadata
        data = {
            ':action': action,
            'metadata_version' : '1.0',
            'name': meta.get_name(),
            'version': meta.get_version(),
            'summary': meta.get_description(),
            'home_page': meta.get_url(),
            'author': meta.get_contact(),
            'author_email': meta.get_contact_email(),
            'license': meta.get_licence(),
            'description': meta.get_long_description(),
            'keywords': meta.get_keywords(),
            'platform': meta.get_platforms(),
            'classifiers': meta.get_classifiers(),
            'download_url': meta.get_download_url(),
            # PEP 314
            'provides': meta.get_provides(),
            'requires': meta.get_requires(),
            'obsoletes': meta.get_obsoletes(),
        }
        if data['provides'] or data['requires'] or data['obsoletes']:
            data['metadata_version'] = '1.1'
        return data

    def post_to_server(self, data, auth=None):
        ''' Post a query to the server, and return a string response.
        '''
        if 'name' in data:
            self.announce('Registering %s to %s' % (data['name'],
                                                    self.repository),
                                                    log.INFO)
        # Build up the MIME payload for the urllib2 POST data
        boundary = '--------------GHSKFJDLGDS7543FJKLFHRE75642756743254'
        sep_boundary = '\n--' + boundary
        end_boundary = sep_boundary + '--'
        body = io.StringIO()
        for key, value in data.items():
            # handle multiple entries for the same name
            if type(value) not in (type([]), type( () )):
                value = [value]
            for value in value:
                value = str(value)
                body.write(sep_boundary)
                body.write('\nContent-Disposition: form-data; name="%s"'%key)
                body.write("\n\n")
                body.write(value)
                if value and value[-1] == '\r':
                    body.write('\n')  # write an extra newline (lurve Macs)
        body.write(end_boundary)
        body.write("\n")
        body = body.getvalue().encode("utf-8")

        # build the Request
        headers = {
            'Content-type': 'multipart/form-data; boundary=%s; charset=utf-8'%boundary,
            'Content-length': str(len(body))
        }
        req = urllib.request.Request(self.repository, body, headers)

        # handle HTTP and include the Basic Auth handler
        opener = urllib.request.build_opener(
            urllib.request.HTTPBasicAuthHandler(password_mgr=auth)
        )
        data = ''
        try:
            result = opener.open(req)
        except urllib.error.HTTPError as e:
            if self.show_response:
                data = e.fp.read()
            result = e.code, e.msg
        except urllib.error.URLError as e:
            result = 500, str(e)
        else:
            if self.show_response:
                data = self._read_pypi_response(result)
            result = 200, 'OK'
        if self.show_response:
            msg = '\n'.join(('-' * 75, data, '-' * 75))
            self.announce(msg, log.INFO)
        return result
PK       ! r|y  y  "  distutils/command/command_templatenu [        """distutils.command.x

Implements the Distutils 'x' command.
"""

# created 2000/mm/dd, John Doe

__revision__ = "$Id$"

from distutils.core import Command


class x(Command):

    # Brief (40-50 characters) description of the command
    description = ""

    # List of option tuples: long name, short name (None if no short
    # name), and help string.
    user_options = [('', '',
                     ""),
                   ]

    def initialize_options(self):
        self. = None
        self. = None
        self. = None

    def finalize_options(self):
        if self.x is None:
            self.x = 

    def run(self):
PK       ! D?{  {    distutils/command/build_ext.pynu [        """distutils.command.build_ext

Implements the Distutils 'build_ext' command, for building extension
modules (currently limited to C extensions, should accommodate C++
extensions ASAP)."""

import contextlib
import os
import re
import sys
from distutils.core import Command
from distutils.errors import *
from distutils.sysconfig import customize_compiler, get_python_version
from distutils.sysconfig import get_config_h_filename
from distutils.dep_util import newer_group
from distutils.extension import Extension
from distutils.util import get_platform
from distutils import log

from site import USER_BASE

# An extension name is just a dot-separated list of Python NAMEs (ie.
# the same as a fully-qualified module name).
extension_name_re = re.compile \
    (r'^[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z_0-9]*(\.[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z_0-9]*)*$')


def show_compilers ():
    from distutils.ccompiler import show_compilers
    show_compilers()


class build_ext(Command):

    description = "build C/C++ extensions (compile/link to build directory)"

    # XXX thoughts on how to deal with complex command-line options like
    # these, i.e. how to make it so fancy_getopt can suck them off the
    # command line and make it look like setup.py defined the appropriate
    # lists of tuples of what-have-you.
    #   - each command needs a callback to process its command-line options
    #   - Command.__init__() needs access to its share of the whole
    #     command line (must ultimately come from
    #     Distribution.parse_command_line())
    #   - it then calls the current command class' option-parsing
    #     callback to deal with weird options like -D, which have to
    #     parse the option text and churn out some custom data
    #     structure
    #   - that data structure (in this case, a list of 2-tuples)
    #     will then be present in the command object by the time
    #     we get to finalize_options() (i.e. the constructor
    #     takes care of both command-line and client options
    #     in between initialize_options() and finalize_options())

    sep_by = " (separated by '%s')" % os.pathsep
    user_options = [
        ('build-lib=', 'b',
         "directory for compiled extension modules"),
        ('build-temp=', 't',
         "directory for temporary files (build by-products)"),
        ('plat-name=', 'p',
         "platform name to cross-compile for, if supported "
         "(default: %s)" % get_platform()),
        ('inplace', 'i',
         "ignore build-lib and put compiled extensions into the source " +
         "directory alongside your pure Python modules"),
        ('include-dirs=', 'I',
         "list of directories to search for header files" + sep_by),
        ('define=', 'D',
         "C preprocessor macros to define"),
        ('undef=', 'U',
         "C preprocessor macros to undefine"),
        ('libraries=', 'l',
         "external C libraries to link with"),
        ('library-dirs=', 'L',
         "directories to search for external C libraries" + sep_by),
        ('rpath=', 'R',
         "directories to search for shared C libraries at runtime"),
        ('link-objects=', 'O',
         "extra explicit link objects to include in the link"),
        ('debug', 'g',
         "compile/link with debugging information"),
        ('force', 'f',
         "forcibly build everything (ignore file timestamps)"),
        ('compiler=', 'c',
         "specify the compiler type"),
        ('parallel=', 'j',
         "number of parallel build jobs"),
        ('swig-cpp', None,
         "make SWIG create C++ files (default is C)"),
        ('swig-opts=', None,
         "list of SWIG command line options"),
        ('swig=', None,
         "path to the SWIG executable"),
        ('user', None,
         "add user include, library and rpath")
        ]

    boolean_options = ['inplace', 'debug', 'force', 'swig-cpp', 'user']

    help_options = [
        ('help-compiler', None,
         "list available compilers", show_compilers),
        ]

    def initialize_options(self):
        self.extensions = None
        self.build_lib = None
        self.plat_name = None
        self.build_temp = None
        self.inplace = 0
        self.package = None

        self.include_dirs = None
        self.define = None
        self.undef = None
        self.libraries = None
        self.library_dirs = None
        self.rpath = None
        self.link_objects = None
        self.debug = None
        self.force = None
        self.compiler = None
        self.swig = None
        self.swig_cpp = None
        self.swig_opts = None
        self.user = None
        self.parallel = None

    def finalize_options(self):
        from distutils import sysconfig

        self.set_undefined_options('build',
                                   ('build_lib', 'build_lib'),
                                   ('build_temp', 'build_temp'),
                                   ('compiler', 'compiler'),
                                   ('debug', 'debug'),
                                   ('force', 'force'),
                                   ('parallel', 'parallel'),
                                   ('plat_name', 'plat_name'),
                                   )

        if self.package is None:
            self.package = self.distribution.ext_package

        self.extensions = self.distribution.ext_modules

        # Make sure Python's include directories (for Python.h, pyconfig.h,
        # etc.) are in the include search path.
        py_include = sysconfig.get_python_inc()
        plat_py_include = sysconfig.get_python_inc(plat_specific=1)
        if self.include_dirs is None:
            self.include_dirs = self.distribution.include_dirs or []
        if isinstance(self.include_dirs, str):
            self.include_dirs = self.include_dirs.split(os.pathsep)

        # If in a virtualenv, add its include directory
        # Issue 16116
        if sys.exec_prefix != sys.base_exec_prefix:
            self.include_dirs.append(os.path.join(sys.exec_prefix, 'include'))

        # Put the Python "system" include dir at the end, so that
        # any local include dirs take precedence.
        self.include_dirs.extend(py_include.split(os.path.pathsep))
        if plat_py_include != py_include:
            self.include_dirs.extend(
                plat_py_include.split(os.path.pathsep))

        self.ensure_string_list('libraries')
        self.ensure_string_list('link_objects')

        # Life is easier if we're not forever checking for None, so
        # simplify these options to empty lists if unset
        if self.libraries is None:
            self.libraries = []
        if self.library_dirs is None:
            self.library_dirs = []
        elif isinstance(self.library_dirs, str):
            self.library_dirs = self.library_dirs.split(os.pathsep)

        if self.rpath is None:
            self.rpath = []
        elif isinstance(self.rpath, str):
            self.rpath = self.rpath.split(os.pathsep)

        # for extensions under windows use different directories
        # for Release and Debug builds.
        # also Python's library directory must be appended to library_dirs
        if os.name == 'nt':
            # the 'libs' directory is for binary installs - we assume that
            # must be the *native* platform.  But we don't really support
            # cross-compiling via a binary install anyway, so we let it go.
            self.library_dirs.append(os.path.join(sys.exec_prefix, 'libs'))
            if sys.base_exec_prefix != sys.prefix:  # Issue 16116
                self.library_dirs.append(os.path.join(sys.base_exec_prefix, 'libs'))
            if self.debug:
                self.build_temp = os.path.join(self.build_temp, "Debug")
            else:
                self.build_temp = os.path.join(self.build_temp, "Release")

            # Append the source distribution include and library directories,
            # this allows distutils on windows to work in the source tree
            self.include_dirs.append(os.path.dirname(get_config_h_filename()))
            _sys_home = getattr(sys, '_home', None)
            if _sys_home:
                self.library_dirs.append(_sys_home)

            # Use the .lib files for the correct architecture
            if self.plat_name == 'win32':
                suffix = 'win32'
            else:
                # win-amd64
                suffix = self.plat_name[4:]
            new_lib = os.path.join(sys.exec_prefix, 'PCbuild')
            if suffix:
                new_lib = os.path.join(new_lib, suffix)
            self.library_dirs.append(new_lib)

        # For extensions under Cygwin, Python's library directory must be
        # appended to library_dirs
        if sys.platform[:6] == 'cygwin':
            if sys.executable.startswith(os.path.join(sys.exec_prefix, "bin")):
                # building third party extensions
                self.library_dirs.append(os.path.join(sys.prefix, "lib",
                                                      "python" + get_python_version(),
                                                      "config"))
            else:
                # building python standard extensions
                self.library_dirs.append('.')

        # For building extensions with a shared Python library,
        # Python's library directory must be appended to library_dirs
        # See Issues: #1600860, #4366
        if False and (sysconfig.get_config_var('Py_ENABLE_SHARED')):
            if not sysconfig.python_build:
                # building third party extensions
                self.library_dirs.append(sysconfig.get_config_var('LIBDIR'))
            else:
                # building python standard extensions
                self.library_dirs.append('.')

        # The argument parsing will result in self.define being a string, but
        # it has to be a list of 2-tuples.  All the preprocessor symbols
        # specified by the 'define' option will be set to '1'.  Multiple
        # symbols can be separated with commas.

        if self.define:
            defines = self.define.split(',')
            self.define = [(symbol, '1') for symbol in defines]

        # The option for macros to undefine is also a string from the
        # option parsing, but has to be a list.  Multiple symbols can also
        # be separated with commas here.
        if self.undef:
            self.undef = self.undef.split(',')

        if self.swig_opts is None:
            self.swig_opts = []
        else:
            self.swig_opts = self.swig_opts.split(' ')

        # Finally add the user include and library directories if requested
        if self.user:
            user_include = os.path.join(USER_BASE, "include")
            user_lib = os.path.join(USER_BASE, "lib")
            if os.path.isdir(user_include):
                self.include_dirs.append(user_include)
            if os.path.isdir(user_lib):
                self.library_dirs.append(user_lib)
                self.rpath.append(user_lib)

        if isinstance(self.parallel, str):
            try:
                self.parallel = int(self.parallel)
            except ValueError:
                raise DistutilsOptionError("parallel should be an integer")

    def run(self):
        from distutils.ccompiler import new_compiler

        # 'self.extensions', as supplied by setup.py, is a list of
        # Extension instances.  See the documentation for Extension (in
        # distutils.extension) for details.
        #
        # For backwards compatibility with Distutils 0.8.2 and earlier, we
        # also allow the 'extensions' list to be a list of tuples:
        #    (ext_name, build_info)
        # where build_info is a dictionary containing everything that
        # Extension instances do except the name, with a few things being
        # differently named.  We convert these 2-tuples to Extension
        # instances as needed.

        if not self.extensions:
            return

        # If we were asked to build any C/C++ libraries, make sure that the
        # directory where we put them is in the library search path for
        # linking extensions.
        if self.distribution.has_c_libraries():
            build_clib = self.get_finalized_command('build_clib')
            self.libraries.extend(build_clib.get_library_names() or [])
            self.library_dirs.append(build_clib.build_clib)

        # Setup the CCompiler object that we'll use to do all the
        # compiling and linking
        self.compiler = new_compiler(compiler=self.compiler,
                                     verbose=self.verbose,
                                     dry_run=self.dry_run,
                                     force=self.force)
        customize_compiler(self.compiler)
        # If we are cross-compiling, init the compiler now (if we are not
        # cross-compiling, init would not hurt, but people may rely on
        # late initialization of compiler even if they shouldn't...)
        if os.name == 'nt' and self.plat_name != get_platform():
            self.compiler.initialize(self.plat_name)

        # And make sure that any compile/link-related options (which might
        # come from the command-line or from the setup script) are set in
        # that CCompiler object -- that way, they automatically apply to
        # all compiling and linking done here.
        if self.include_dirs is not None:
            self.compiler.set_include_dirs(self.include_dirs)
        if self.define is not None:
            # 'define' option is a list of (name,value) tuples
            for (name, value) in self.define:
                self.compiler.define_macro(name, value)
        if self.undef is not None:
            for macro in self.undef:
                self.compiler.undefine_macro(macro)
        if self.libraries is not None:
            self.compiler.set_libraries(self.libraries)
        if self.library_dirs is not None:
            self.compiler.set_library_dirs(self.library_dirs)
        if self.rpath is not None:
            self.compiler.set_runtime_library_dirs(self.rpath)
        if self.link_objects is not None:
            self.compiler.set_link_objects(self.link_objects)

        # Now actually compile and link everything.
        self.build_extensions()

    def check_extensions_list(self, extensions):
        """Ensure that the list of extensions (presumably provided as a
        command option 'extensions') is valid, i.e. it is a list of
        Extension objects.  We also support the old-style list of 2-tuples,
        where the tuples are (ext_name, build_info), which are converted to
        Extension instances here.

        Raise DistutilsSetupError if the structure is invalid anywhere;
        just returns otherwise.
        """
        if not isinstance(extensions, list):
            raise DistutilsSetupError(
                  "'ext_modules' option must be a list of Extension instances")

        for i, ext in enumerate(extensions):
            if isinstance(ext, Extension):
                continue                # OK! (assume type-checking done
                                        # by Extension constructor)

            if not isinstance(ext, tuple) or len(ext) != 2:
                raise DistutilsSetupError(
                       "each element of 'ext_modules' option must be an "
                       "Extension instance or 2-tuple")

            ext_name, build_info = ext

            log.warn("old-style (ext_name, build_info) tuple found in "
                     "ext_modules for extension '%s' "
                     "-- please convert to Extension instance", ext_name)

            if not (isinstance(ext_name, str) and
                    extension_name_re.match(ext_name)):
                raise DistutilsSetupError(
                       "first element of each tuple in 'ext_modules' "
                       "must be the extension name (a string)")

            if not isinstance(build_info, dict):
                raise DistutilsSetupError(
                       "second element of each tuple in 'ext_modules' "
                       "must be a dictionary (build info)")

            # OK, the (ext_name, build_info) dict is type-safe: convert it
            # to an Extension instance.
            ext = Extension(ext_name, build_info['sources'])

            # Easy stuff: one-to-one mapping from dict elements to
            # instance attributes.
            for key in ('include_dirs', 'library_dirs', 'libraries',
                        'extra_objects', 'extra_compile_args',
                        'extra_link_args'):
                val = build_info.get(key)
                if val is not None:
                    setattr(ext, key, val)

            # Medium-easy stuff: same syntax/semantics, different names.
            ext.runtime_library_dirs = build_info.get('rpath')
            if 'def_file' in build_info:
                log.warn("'def_file' element of build info dict "
                         "no longer supported")

            # Non-trivial stuff: 'macros' split into 'define_macros'
            # and 'undef_macros'.
            macros = build_info.get('macros')
            if macros:
                ext.define_macros = []
                ext.undef_macros = []
                for macro in macros:
                    if not (isinstance(macro, tuple) and len(macro) in (1, 2)):
                        raise DistutilsSetupError(
                              "'macros' element of build info dict "
                              "must be 1- or 2-tuple")
                    if len(macro) == 1:
                        ext.undef_macros.append(macro[0])
                    elif len(macro) == 2:
                        ext.define_macros.append(macro)

            extensions[i] = ext

    def get_source_files(self):
        self.check_extensions_list(self.extensions)
        filenames = []

        # Wouldn't it be neat if we knew the names of header files too...
        for ext in self.extensions:
            filenames.extend(ext.sources)
        return filenames

    def get_outputs(self):
        # Sanity check the 'extensions' list -- can't assume this is being
        # done in the same run as a 'build_extensions()' call (in fact, we
        # can probably assume that it *isn't*!).
        self.check_extensions_list(self.extensions)

        # And build the list of output (built) filenames.  Note that this
        # ignores the 'inplace' flag, and assumes everything goes in the
        # "build" tree.
        outputs = []
        for ext in self.extensions:
            outputs.append(self.get_ext_fullpath(ext.name))
        return outputs

    def build_extensions(self):
        # First, sanity-check the 'extensions' list
        self.check_extensions_list(self.extensions)
        if self.parallel:
            self._build_extensions_parallel()
        else:
            self._build_extensions_serial()

    def _build_extensions_parallel(self):
        workers = self.parallel
        if self.parallel is True:
            workers = os.cpu_count()  # may return None
        try:
            from concurrent.futures import ThreadPoolExecutor
        except ImportError:
            workers = None

        if workers is None:
            self._build_extensions_serial()
            return

        with ThreadPoolExecutor(max_workers=workers) as executor:
            futures = [executor.submit(self.build_extension, ext)
                       for ext in self.extensions]
            for ext, fut in zip(self.extensions, futures):
                with self._filter_build_errors(ext):
                    fut.result()

    def _build_extensions_serial(self):
        for ext in self.extensions:
            with self._filter_build_errors(ext):
                self.build_extension(ext)

    @contextlib.contextmanager
    def _filter_build_errors(self, ext):
        try:
            yield
        except (CCompilerError, DistutilsError, CompileError) as e:
            if not ext.optional:
                raise
            self.warn('building extension "%s" failed: %s' %
                      (ext.name, e))

    def build_extension(self, ext):
        sources = ext.sources
        if sources is None or not isinstance(sources, (list, tuple)):
            raise DistutilsSetupError(
                  "in 'ext_modules' option (extension '%s'), "
                  "'sources' must be present and must be "
                  "a list of source filenames" % ext.name)
        # sort to make the resulting .so file build reproducible
        sources = sorted(sources)

        ext_path = self.get_ext_fullpath(ext.name)
        depends = sources + ext.depends
        if not (self.force or newer_group(depends, ext_path, 'newer')):
            log.debug("skipping '%s' extension (up-to-date)", ext.name)
            return
        else:
            log.info("building '%s' extension", ext.name)

        # First, scan the sources for SWIG definition files (.i), run
        # SWIG on 'em to create .c files, and modify the sources list
        # accordingly.
        sources = self.swig_sources(sources, ext)

        # Next, compile the source code to object files.

        # XXX not honouring 'define_macros' or 'undef_macros' -- the
        # CCompiler API needs to change to accommodate this, and I
        # want to do one thing at a time!

        # Two possible sources for extra compiler arguments:
        #   - 'extra_compile_args' in Extension object
        #   - CFLAGS environment variable (not particularly
        #     elegant, but people seem to expect it and I
        #     guess it's useful)
        # The environment variable should take precedence, and
        # any sensible compiler will give precedence to later
        # command line args.  Hence we combine them in order:
        extra_args = ext.extra_compile_args or []

        macros = ext.define_macros[:]
        for undef in ext.undef_macros:
            macros.append((undef,))

        objects = self.compiler.compile(sources,
                                         output_dir=self.build_temp,
                                         macros=macros,
                                         include_dirs=ext.include_dirs,
                                         debug=self.debug,
                                         extra_postargs=extra_args,
                                         depends=ext.depends)

        # XXX outdated variable, kept here in case third-part code
        # needs it.
        self._built_objects = objects[:]

        # Now link the object files together into a "shared object" --
        # of course, first we have to figure out all the other things
        # that go into the mix.
        if ext.extra_objects:
            objects.extend(ext.extra_objects)
        extra_args = ext.extra_link_args or []

        # Detect target language, if not provided
        language = ext.language or self.compiler.detect_language(sources)

        self.compiler.link_shared_object(
            objects, ext_path,
            libraries=self.get_libraries(ext),
            library_dirs=ext.library_dirs,
            runtime_library_dirs=ext.runtime_library_dirs,
            extra_postargs=extra_args,
            export_symbols=self.get_export_symbols(ext),
            debug=self.debug,
            build_temp=self.build_temp,
            target_lang=language)

    def swig_sources(self, sources, extension):
        """Walk the list of source files in 'sources', looking for SWIG
        interface (.i) files.  Run SWIG on all that are found, and
        return a modified 'sources' list with SWIG source files replaced
        by the generated C (or C++) files.
        """
        new_sources = []
        swig_sources = []
        swig_targets = {}

        # XXX this drops generated C/C++ files into the source tree, which
        # is fine for developers who want to distribute the generated
        # source -- but there should be an option to put SWIG output in
        # the temp dir.

        if self.swig_cpp:
            log.warn("--swig-cpp is deprecated - use --swig-opts=-c++")

        if self.swig_cpp or ('-c++' in self.swig_opts) or \
           ('-c++' in extension.swig_opts):
            target_ext = '.cpp'
        else:
            target_ext = '.c'

        for source in sources:
            (base, ext) = os.path.splitext(source)
            if ext == ".i":             # SWIG interface file
                new_sources.append(base + '_wrap' + target_ext)
                swig_sources.append(source)
                swig_targets[source] = new_sources[-1]
            else:
                new_sources.append(source)

        if not swig_sources:
            return new_sources

        swig = self.swig or self.find_swig()
        swig_cmd = [swig, "-python"]
        swig_cmd.extend(self.swig_opts)
        if self.swig_cpp:
            swig_cmd.append("-c++")

        # Do not override commandline arguments
        if not self.swig_opts:
            for o in extension.swig_opts:
                swig_cmd.append(o)

        for source in swig_sources:
            target = swig_targets[source]
            log.info("swigging %s to %s", source, target)
            self.spawn(swig_cmd + ["-o", target, source])

        return new_sources

    def find_swig(self):
        """Return the name of the SWIG executable.  On Unix, this is
        just "swig" -- it should be in the PATH.  Tries a bit harder on
        Windows.
        """
        if os.name == "posix":
            return "swig"
        elif os.name == "nt":
            # Look for SWIG in its standard installation directory on
            # Windows (or so I presume!).  If we find it there, great;
            # if not, act like Unix and assume it's in the PATH.
            for vers in ("1.3", "1.2", "1.1"):
                fn = os.path.join("c:\\swig%s" % vers, "swig.exe")
                if os.path.isfile(fn):
                    return fn
            else:
                return "swig.exe"
        else:
            raise DistutilsPlatformError(
                  "I don't know how to find (much less run) SWIG "
                  "on platform '%s'" % os.name)

    # -- Name generators -----------------------------------------------
    # (extension names, filenames, whatever)
    def get_ext_fullpath(self, ext_name):
        """Returns the path of the filename for a given extension.

        The file is located in `build_lib` or directly in the package
        (inplace option).
        """
        fullname = self.get_ext_fullname(ext_name)
        modpath = fullname.split('.')
        filename = self.get_ext_filename(modpath[-1])

        if not self.inplace:
            # no further work needed
            # returning :
            #   build_dir/package/path/filename
            filename = os.path.join(*modpath[:-1]+[filename])
            return os.path.join(self.build_lib, filename)

        # the inplace option requires to find the package directory
        # using the build_py command for that
        package = '.'.join(modpath[0:-1])
        build_py = self.get_finalized_command('build_py')
        package_dir = os.path.abspath(build_py.get_package_dir(package))

        # returning
        #   package_dir/filename
        return os.path.join(package_dir, filename)

    def get_ext_fullname(self, ext_name):
        """Returns the fullname of a given extension name.

        Adds the `package.` prefix"""
        if self.package is None:
            return ext_name
        else:
            return self.package + '.' + ext_name

    def get_ext_filename(self, ext_name):
        r"""Convert the name of an extension (eg. "foo.bar") into the name
        of the file from which it will be loaded (eg. "foo/bar.so", or
        "foo\bar.pyd").
        """
        from distutils.sysconfig import get_config_var
        ext_path = ext_name.split('.')
        ext_suffix = get_config_var('EXT_SUFFIX')
        return os.path.join(*ext_path) + ext_suffix

    def get_export_symbols(self, ext):
        """Return the list of symbols that a shared extension has to
        export.  This either uses 'ext.export_symbols' or, if it's not
        provided, "PyInit_" + module_name.  Only relevant on Windows, where
        the .pyd file (DLL) must export the module "PyInit_" function.
        """
        suffix = '_' + ext.name.split('.')[-1]
        try:
            # Unicode module name support as defined in PEP-489
            # https://peps.python.org/pep-0489/#export-hook-name
            suffix.encode('ascii')
        except UnicodeEncodeError:
            suffix = 'U' + suffix.encode('punycode').replace(b'-', b'_').decode('ascii')

        initfunc_name = "PyInit" + suffix
        if initfunc_name not in ext.export_symbols:
            ext.export_symbols.append(initfunc_name)
        return ext.export_symbols

    def get_libraries(self, ext):
        """Return the list of libraries to link against when building a
        shared extension.  On most platforms, this is just 'ext.libraries';
        on Windows, we add the Python library (eg. python20.dll).
        """
        # The python library is always needed on Windows.  For MSVC, this
        # is redundant, since the library is mentioned in a pragma in
        # pyconfig.h that MSVC groks.  The other Windows compilers all seem
        # to need it mentioned explicitly, though, so that's what we do.
        # Append '_d' to the python import library on debug builds.
        if sys.platform == "win32":
            from distutils._msvccompiler import MSVCCompiler
            if not isinstance(self.compiler, MSVCCompiler):
                template = "python%d%d"
                if self.debug:
                    template = template + '_d'
                pythonlib = (template %
                       (sys.hexversion >> 24, (sys.hexversion >> 16) & 0xff))
                # don't extend ext.libraries, it may be shared with other
                # extensions, it is a reference to the original list
                return ext.libraries + [pythonlib]
        else:
            # On Android only the main executable and LD_PRELOADs are considered
            # to be RTLD_GLOBAL, all the dependencies of the main executable
            # remain RTLD_LOCAL and so the shared libraries must be linked with
            # libpython when python is built with a shared python library (issue
            # bpo-21536).
            # On Cygwin (and if required, other POSIX-like platforms based on
            # Windows like MinGW) it is simply necessary that all symbols in
            # shared libraries are resolved at link time.
            from distutils.sysconfig import get_config_var
            link_libpython = False
            if False and get_config_var('Py_ENABLE_SHARED'):
                # A native build on an Android device or on Cygwin
                if hasattr(sys, 'getandroidapilevel'):
                    link_libpython = True
                elif sys.platform == 'cygwin':
                    link_libpython = True
                elif '_PYTHON_HOST_PLATFORM' in os.environ:
                    # We are cross-compiling for one of the relevant platforms
                    if get_config_var('ANDROID_API_LEVEL') != 0:
                        link_libpython = True
                    elif get_config_var('MACHDEP') == 'cygwin':
                        link_libpython = True

            if link_libpython:
                ldversion = get_config_var('LDVERSION')
                return ext.libraries + ['python' + ldversion]

        return ext.libraries
PK       ! IS^"  "    distutils/core.pynu [        """distutils.core

The only module that needs to be imported to use the Distutils; provides
the 'setup' function (which is to be called from the setup script).  Also
indirectly provides the Distribution and Command classes, although they are
really defined in distutils.dist and distutils.cmd.
"""

import os
import sys

from distutils.debug import DEBUG
from distutils.errors import *

# Mainly import these so setup scripts can "from distutils.core import" them.
from distutils.dist import Distribution
from distutils.cmd import Command
from distutils.config import PyPIRCCommand
from distutils.extension import Extension

# This is a barebones help message generated displayed when the user
# runs the setup script with no arguments at all.  More useful help
# is generated with various --help options: global help, list commands,
# and per-command help.
USAGE = """\
usage: %(script)s [global_opts] cmd1 [cmd1_opts] [cmd2 [cmd2_opts] ...]
   or: %(script)s --help [cmd1 cmd2 ...]
   or: %(script)s --help-commands
   or: %(script)s cmd --help
"""

def gen_usage (script_name):
    script = os.path.basename(script_name)
    return USAGE % vars()


# Some mild magic to control the behaviour of 'setup()' from 'run_setup()'.
_setup_stop_after = None
_setup_distribution = None

# Legal keyword arguments for the setup() function
setup_keywords = ('distclass', 'script_name', 'script_args', 'options',
                  'name', 'version', 'author', 'author_email',
                  'maintainer', 'maintainer_email', 'url', 'license',
                  'description', 'long_description', 'keywords',
                  'platforms', 'classifiers', 'download_url',
                  'requires', 'provides', 'obsoletes',
                  )

# Legal keyword arguments for the Extension constructor
extension_keywords = ('name', 'sources', 'include_dirs',
                      'define_macros', 'undef_macros',
                      'library_dirs', 'libraries', 'runtime_library_dirs',
                      'extra_objects', 'extra_compile_args', 'extra_link_args',
                      'swig_opts', 'export_symbols', 'depends', 'language')

def setup (**attrs):
    """The gateway to the Distutils: do everything your setup script needs
    to do, in a highly flexible and user-driven way.  Briefly: create a
    Distribution instance; find and parse config files; parse the command
    line; run each Distutils command found there, customized by the options
    supplied to 'setup()' (as keyword arguments), in config files, and on
    the command line.

    The Distribution instance might be an instance of a class supplied via
    the 'distclass' keyword argument to 'setup'; if no such class is
    supplied, then the Distribution class (in dist.py) is instantiated.
    All other arguments to 'setup' (except for 'cmdclass') are used to set
    attributes of the Distribution instance.

    The 'cmdclass' argument, if supplied, is a dictionary mapping command
    names to command classes.  Each command encountered on the command line
    will be turned into a command class, which is in turn instantiated; any
    class found in 'cmdclass' is used in place of the default, which is
    (for command 'foo_bar') class 'foo_bar' in module
    'distutils.command.foo_bar'.  The command class must provide a
    'user_options' attribute which is a list of option specifiers for
    'distutils.fancy_getopt'.  Any command-line options between the current
    and the next command are used to set attributes of the current command
    object.

    When the entire command-line has been successfully parsed, calls the
    'run()' method on each command object in turn.  This method will be
    driven entirely by the Distribution object (which each command object
    has a reference to, thanks to its constructor), and the
    command-specific options that became attributes of each command
    object.
    """

    global _setup_stop_after, _setup_distribution

    # Determine the distribution class -- either caller-supplied or
    # our Distribution (see below).
    klass = attrs.get('distclass')
    if klass:
        del attrs['distclass']
    else:
        klass = Distribution

    if 'script_name' not in attrs:
        attrs['script_name'] = os.path.basename(sys.argv[0])
    if 'script_args'  not in attrs:
        attrs['script_args'] = sys.argv[1:]

    # Create the Distribution instance, using the remaining arguments
    # (ie. everything except distclass) to initialize it
    try:
        _setup_distribution = dist = klass(attrs)
    except DistutilsSetupError as msg:
        if 'name' not in attrs:
            raise SystemExit("error in setup command: %s" % msg)
        else:
            raise SystemExit("error in %s setup command: %s" % \
                  (attrs['name'], msg))

    if _setup_stop_after == "init":
        return dist

    # Find and parse the config file(s): they will override options from
    # the setup script, but be overridden by the command line.
    dist.parse_config_files()

    if DEBUG:
        print("options (after parsing config files):")
        dist.dump_option_dicts()

    if _setup_stop_after == "config":
        return dist

    # Parse the command line and override config files; any
    # command-line errors are the end user's fault, so turn them into
    # SystemExit to suppress tracebacks.
    try:
        ok = dist.parse_command_line()
    except DistutilsArgError as msg:
        raise SystemExit(gen_usage(dist.script_name) + "\nerror: %s" % msg)

    if DEBUG:
        print("options (after parsing command line):")
        dist.dump_option_dicts()

    if _setup_stop_after == "commandline":
        return dist

    # And finally, run all the commands found on the command line.
    if ok:
        try:
            dist.run_commands()
        except KeyboardInterrupt:
            raise SystemExit("interrupted")
        except OSError as exc:
            if DEBUG:
                sys.stderr.write("error: %s\n" % (exc,))
                raise
            else:
                raise SystemExit("error: %s" % (exc,))

        except (DistutilsError,
                CCompilerError) as msg:
            if DEBUG:
                raise
            else:
                raise SystemExit("error: " + str(msg))

    return dist

# setup ()


def run_setup (script_name, script_args=None, stop_after="run"):
    """Run a setup script in a somewhat controlled environment, and
    return the Distribution instance that drives things.  This is useful
    if you need to find out the distribution meta-data (passed as
    keyword args from 'script' to 'setup()', or the contents of the
    config files or command-line.

    'script_name' is a file that will be read and run with 'exec()';
    'sys.argv[0]' will be replaced with 'script' for the duration of the
    call.  'script_args' is a list of strings; if supplied,
    'sys.argv[1:]' will be replaced by 'script_args' for the duration of
    the call.

    'stop_after' tells 'setup()' when to stop processing; possible
    values:
      init
        stop after the Distribution instance has been created and
        populated with the keyword arguments to 'setup()'
      config
        stop after config files have been parsed (and their data
        stored in the Distribution instance)
      commandline
        stop after the command-line ('sys.argv[1:]' or 'script_args')
        have been parsed (and the data stored in the Distribution)
      run [default]
        stop after all commands have been run (the same as if 'setup()'
        had been called in the usual way

    Returns the Distribution instance, which provides all information
    used to drive the Distutils.
    """
    if stop_after not in ('init', 'config', 'commandline', 'run'):
        raise ValueError("invalid value for 'stop_after': %r" % (stop_after,))

    global _setup_stop_after, _setup_distribution
    _setup_stop_after = stop_after

    save_argv = sys.argv.copy()
    g = {'__file__': script_name}
    try:
        try:
            sys.argv[0] = script_name
            if script_args is not None:
                sys.argv[1:] = script_args
            with open(script_name, 'rb') as f:
                exec(f.read(), g)
        finally:
            sys.argv = save_argv
            _setup_stop_after = None
    except SystemExit:
        # Hmm, should we do something if exiting with a non-zero code
        # (ie. error)?
        pass

    if _setup_distribution is None:
        raise RuntimeError(("'distutils.core.setup()' was never called -- "
               "perhaps '%s' is not a Distutils setup script?") % \
              script_name)

    # I wonder if the setup script's namespace -- g and l -- would be of
    # any interest to callers?
    #print "_setup_distribution:", _setup_distribution
    return _setup_distribution

# run_setup ()
PK       ! ]Ʃ6  6    distutils/sysconfig.pynu [        """Provide access to Python's configuration information.  The specific
configuration variables available depend heavily on the platform and
configuration.  The values may be retrieved using
get_config_var(name), and the list of variables is available via
get_config_vars().keys().  Additional convenience functions are also
available.

Written by:   Fred L. Drake, Jr.
Email:        <fdrake@acm.org>
"""

import _imp
import os
import re
import sys
import warnings
import fnmatch

from functools import partial

from .errors import DistutilsPlatformError

from sysconfig import (
    _PREFIX as PREFIX,
    _BASE_PREFIX as BASE_PREFIX,
    _EXEC_PREFIX as EXEC_PREFIX,
    _BASE_EXEC_PREFIX as BASE_EXEC_PREFIX,
    _PROJECT_BASE as project_base,
    _PYTHON_BUILD as python_build,
    _init_posix as sysconfig_init_posix,
    parse_config_h as sysconfig_parse_config_h,

    _init_non_posix,

    _variable_rx,
    _findvar1_rx,
    _findvar2_rx,

    expand_makefile_vars,
    is_python_build,
    get_config_h_filename,
    get_config_var,
    get_config_vars,
    get_makefile_filename,
    get_python_version,
)

# This is better than
# from sysconfig import _CONFIG_VARS as _config_vars
# because it makes sure that the global dictionary is initialized
# which might not be true in the time of import.
_config_vars = get_config_vars()

warnings.warn(
    'The distutils.sysconfig module is deprecated, use sysconfig instead',
    DeprecationWarning,
    stacklevel=2
)


# Following functions are the same as in sysconfig but with different API
def parse_config_h(fp, g=None):
    return sysconfig_parse_config_h(fp, vars=g)


_python_build = partial(is_python_build, check_home=True)
_init_posix = partial(sysconfig_init_posix, _config_vars)
_init_nt = partial(_init_non_posix, _config_vars)


# Similar function is also implemented in sysconfig as _parse_makefile
# but without the parsing capabilities of distutils.text_file.TextFile.
def parse_makefile(fn, g=None):
    """Parse a Makefile-style file.
    A dictionary containing name/value pairs is returned.  If an
    optional dictionary is passed in as the second argument, it is
    used instead of a new dictionary.
    """
    from distutils.text_file import TextFile
    fp = TextFile(fn, strip_comments=1, skip_blanks=1, join_lines=1, errors="surrogateescape")

    if g is None:
        g = {}
    done = {}
    notdone = {}

    while True:
        line = fp.readline()
        if line is None: # eof
            break
        m = re.match(_variable_rx, line)
        if m:
            n, v = m.group(1, 2)
            v = v.strip()
            # `$$' is a literal `$' in make
            tmpv = v.replace('$$', '')

            if "$" in tmpv:
                notdone[n] = v
            else:
                try:
                    v = int(v)
                except ValueError:
                    # insert literal `$'
                    done[n] = v.replace('$$', '$')
                else:
                    done[n] = v

    # Variables with a 'PY_' prefix in the makefile. These need to
    # be made available without that prefix through sysconfig.
    # Special care is needed to ensure that variable expansion works, even
    # if the expansion uses the name without a prefix.
    renamed_variables = ('CFLAGS', 'LDFLAGS', 'CPPFLAGS')

    # do variable interpolation here
    while notdone:
        for name in list(notdone):
            value = notdone[name]
            m = re.search(_findvar1_rx, value) or re.search(_findvar2_rx, value)
            if m:
                n = m.group(1)
                found = True
                if n in done:
                    item = str(done[n])
                elif n in notdone:
                    # get it on a subsequent round
                    found = False
                elif n in os.environ:
                    # do it like make: fall back to environment
                    item = os.environ[n]

                elif n in renamed_variables:
                    if name.startswith('PY_') and name[3:] in renamed_variables:
                        item = ""

                    elif 'PY_' + n in notdone:
                        found = False

                    else:
                        item = str(done['PY_' + n])
                else:
                    done[n] = item = ""
                if found:
                    after = value[m.end():]
                    value = value[:m.start()] + item + after
                    if "$" in after:
                        notdone[name] = value
                    else:
                        try: value = int(value)
                        except ValueError:
                            done[name] = value.strip()
                        else:
                            done[name] = value
                        del notdone[name]

                        if name.startswith('PY_') \
                            and name[3:] in renamed_variables:

                            name = name[3:]
                            if name not in done:
                                done[name] = value
            else:
                # bogus variable reference; just drop it since we can't deal
                del notdone[name]

    fp.close()

    # strip spurious spaces
    for k, v in done.items():
        if isinstance(v, str):
            done[k] = v.strip()

    # save the results in the global dictionary
    g.update(done)
    return g


# Following functions are deprecated together with this module and they
# have no direct replacement

# Calculate the build qualifier flags if they are defined.  Adding the flags
# to the include and lib directories only makes sense for an installation, not
# an in-source build.
build_flags = ''
try:
    if not python_build:
        build_flags = sys.abiflags
except AttributeError:
    # It's not a configure-based build, so the sys module doesn't have
    # this attribute, which is fine.
    pass


def customize_compiler(compiler):
    """Do any platform-specific customization of a CCompiler instance.

    Mainly needed on Unix, so we can plug in the information that
    varies across Unices and is stored in Python's Makefile.
    """
    if compiler.compiler_type == "unix":
        if sys.platform == "darwin":
            # Perform first-time customization of compiler-related
            # config vars on OS X now that we know we need a compiler.
            # This is primarily to support Pythons from binary
            # installers.  The kind and paths to build tools on
            # the user system may vary significantly from the system
            # that Python itself was built on.  Also the user OS
            # version and build tools may not support the same set
            # of CPU architectures for universal builds.
            if not _config_vars.get('CUSTOMIZED_OSX_COMPILER'):
                import _osx_support
                _osx_support.customize_compiler(_config_vars)
                _config_vars['CUSTOMIZED_OSX_COMPILER'] = 'True'

        (cc, cxx, cflags, ccshared, ldshared, shlib_suffix, ar, ar_flags,
         configure_cppflags, configure_cflags, configure_ldflags) = \
            get_config_vars('CC', 'CXX', 'CFLAGS',
                            'CCSHARED', 'LDSHARED', 'SHLIB_SUFFIX', 'AR', 'ARFLAGS',
                            'CONFIGURE_CPPFLAGS', 'CONFIGURE_CFLAGS', 'CONFIGURE_LDFLAGS')

        if 'CC' in os.environ:
            newcc = os.environ['CC']
            if (sys.platform == 'darwin'
                    and 'LDSHARED' not in os.environ
                    and ldshared.startswith(cc)):
                # On OS X, if CC is overridden, use that as the default
                #       command for LDSHARED as well
                ldshared = newcc + ldshared[len(cc):]
            cc = newcc
        if 'CXX' in os.environ:
            cxx = os.environ['CXX']
        if fnmatch.filter([cc, cxx], '*-4.[0-8]'):
            configure_cflags = configure_cflags.replace('-fstack-protector-strong', '-fstack-protector')
            ldshared = ldshared.replace('-fstack-protector-strong', '-fstack-protector')
            cflags = cflags.replace('-fstack-protector-strong', '-fstack-protector')
        if 'LDSHARED' in os.environ:
            ldshared = os.environ['LDSHARED']
        if 'CPP' in os.environ:
            cpp = os.environ['CPP']
        else:
            cpp = cc + " -E"           # not always
        if 'LDFLAGS' in os.environ:
            ldshared = ldshared + ' ' + os.environ['LDFLAGS']
        elif configure_ldflags:
            ldshared = ldshared + ' ' + configure_ldflags
        if 'CFLAGS' in os.environ:
            cflags = cflags + ' ' + os.environ['CFLAGS']
            ldshared = ldshared + ' ' + os.environ['CFLAGS']
        elif configure_cflags:
            cflags = cflags + ' ' + configure_cflags
            ldshared = ldshared + ' ' + configure_cflags
        if 'CPPFLAGS' in os.environ:
            cpp = cpp + ' ' + os.environ['CPPFLAGS']
            cflags = cflags + ' ' + os.environ['CPPFLAGS']
            ldshared = ldshared + ' ' + os.environ['CPPFLAGS']
        elif configure_cppflags:
            cpp = cpp + ' ' + configure_cppflags
            cflags = cflags + ' ' + configure_cppflags
            ldshared = ldshared + ' ' + configure_cppflags
        if 'AR' in os.environ:
            ar = os.environ['AR']
        if 'ARFLAGS' in os.environ:
            archiver = ar + ' ' + os.environ['ARFLAGS']
        else:
            archiver = ar + ' ' + ar_flags

        cc_cmd = cc + ' ' + cflags
        compiler.set_executables(
            preprocessor=cpp,
            compiler=cc_cmd,
            compiler_so=cc_cmd + ' ' + ccshared,
            compiler_cxx=cxx,
            linker_so=ldshared,
            linker_exe=cc,
            archiver=archiver)

        compiler.shared_lib_extension = shlib_suffix


def is_virtual_environment():
    return sys.base_prefix != sys.prefix or hasattr(sys, "real_prefix")


def get_python_inc(plat_specific=0, prefix=None):
    """Return the directory containing installed Python header files.

    If 'plat_specific' is false (the default), this is the path to the
    non-platform-specific header files, i.e. Python.h and so on;
    otherwise, this is the path to platform-specific header files
    (namely pyconfig.h).

    If 'prefix' is supplied, use it instead of sys.base_prefix or
    sys.base_exec_prefix -- i.e., ignore 'plat_specific'.
    """
    if prefix is None:
        prefix = plat_specific and BASE_EXEC_PREFIX or BASE_PREFIX
    if os.name == "posix":
        if python_build:
            # Assume the executable is in the build directory.  The
            # pyconfig.h file should be in the same directory.  Since
            # the build directory may not be the source directory, we
            # must use "srcdir" from the makefile to find the "Include"
            # directory.
            if plat_specific:
                return project_base
            else:
                incdir = os.path.join(get_config_var('srcdir'), 'Include')
                return os.path.normpath(incdir)
        python_dir = 'python' + get_python_version() + build_flags
        if not python_build and plat_specific:
            import sysconfig
            return sysconfig.get_path('platinclude')
        return os.path.join(prefix, "include", python_dir)
    elif os.name == "nt":
        if python_build:
            # Include both the include and PC dir to ensure we can find
            # pyconfig.h
            return (os.path.join(prefix, "include") + os.path.pathsep +
                    os.path.join(prefix, "PC"))
        return os.path.join(prefix, "include")
    else:
        raise DistutilsPlatformError(
            "I don't know where Python installs its C header files "
            "on platform '%s'" % os.name)


def get_python_lib(plat_specific=0, standard_lib=0, prefix=None):
    """Return the directory containing the Python library (standard or
    site additions).

    If 'plat_specific' is true, return the directory containing
    platform-specific modules, i.e. any module from a non-pure-Python
    module distribution; otherwise, return the platform-shared library
    directory.  If 'standard_lib' is true, return the directory
    containing standard Python library modules; otherwise, return the
    directory for site-specific modules.

    If 'prefix' is supplied, use it instead of sys.base_prefix or
    sys.base_exec_prefix -- i.e., ignore 'plat_specific'.
    """
    is_default_prefix = not prefix or os.path.normpath(prefix) in ('/usr', '/usr/local')
    if prefix is None:
        if standard_lib:
            prefix = plat_specific and BASE_EXEC_PREFIX or BASE_PREFIX
        else:
            prefix = plat_specific and EXEC_PREFIX or PREFIX

    if os.name == "posix":
        if plat_specific or standard_lib:
            # Platform-specific modules (any module from a non-pure-Python
            # module distribution) or standard Python library modules.
            libdir = sys.platlibdir
        else:
            # Pure Python
            libdir = "lib"
        libpython = os.path.join(prefix, libdir,
                                 "python" + get_python_version())
        if standard_lib:
            return libpython
        elif is_default_prefix and not is_virtual_environment():
            return os.path.join(prefix, "lib", "python3", "dist-packages")
        else:
            return os.path.join(libpython, "site-packages")
    elif os.name == "nt":
        if standard_lib:
            return os.path.join(prefix, "Lib")
        else:
            return os.path.join(prefix, "Lib", "site-packages")
    else:
        raise DistutilsPlatformError(
            "I don't know where Python installs its library "
            "on platform '%s'" % os.name)
PK       ! $P$        distutils/READMEnu [        This directory contains the Distutils package.

There's a full documentation available at:

    https://docs.python.org/distutils/

The Distutils-SIG web page is also a good starting point:

    https://www.python.org/sigs/distutils-sig/

$Id$
PK       ! 0G>      distutils/dist.pynu [        """distutils.dist

Provides the Distribution class, which represents the module distribution
being built/installed/distributed.
"""

import sys
import os
import re
from email import message_from_file

try:
    import warnings
except ImportError:
    warnings = None

from distutils.errors import *
from distutils.fancy_getopt import FancyGetopt, translate_longopt
from distutils.util import check_environ, strtobool, rfc822_escape
from distutils import log
from distutils.debug import DEBUG

# Regex to define acceptable Distutils command names.  This is not *quite*
# the same as a Python NAME -- I don't allow leading underscores.  The fact
# that they're very similar is no coincidence; the default naming scheme is
# to look for a Python module named after the command.
command_re = re.compile(r'^[a-zA-Z]([a-zA-Z0-9_]*)$')


def _ensure_list(value, fieldname):
    if isinstance(value, str):
        # a string containing comma separated values is okay.  It will
        # be converted to a list by Distribution.finalize_options().
        pass
    elif not isinstance(value, list):
        # passing a tuple or an iterator perhaps, warn and convert
        typename = type(value).__name__
        msg = f"Warning: '{fieldname}' should be a list, got type '{typename}'"
        log.log(log.WARN, msg)
        value = list(value)
    return value


class Distribution:
    """The core of the Distutils.  Most of the work hiding behind 'setup'
    is really done within a Distribution instance, which farms the work out
    to the Distutils commands specified on the command line.

    Setup scripts will almost never instantiate Distribution directly,
    unless the 'setup()' function is totally inadequate to their needs.
    However, it is conceivable that a setup script might wish to subclass
    Distribution for some specialized purpose, and then pass the subclass
    to 'setup()' as the 'distclass' keyword argument.  If so, it is
    necessary to respect the expectations that 'setup' has of Distribution.
    See the code for 'setup()', in core.py, for details.
    """

    # 'global_options' describes the command-line options that may be
    # supplied to the setup script prior to any actual commands.
    # Eg. "./setup.py -n" or "./setup.py --quiet" both take advantage of
    # these global options.  This list should be kept to a bare minimum,
    # since every global option is also valid as a command option -- and we
    # don't want to pollute the commands with too many options that they
    # have minimal control over.
    # The fourth entry for verbose means that it can be repeated.
    global_options = [
        ('verbose', 'v', "run verbosely (default)", 1),
        ('quiet', 'q', "run quietly (turns verbosity off)"),
        ('dry-run', 'n', "don't actually do anything"),
        ('help', 'h', "show detailed help message"),
        ('no-user-cfg', None,
            'ignore pydistutils.cfg in your home directory'),
    ]

    # 'common_usage' is a short (2-3 line) string describing the common
    # usage of the setup script.
    common_usage = """\
Common commands: (see '--help-commands' for more)

  setup.py build      will build the package underneath 'build/'
  setup.py install    will install the package
"""

    # options that are not propagated to the commands
    display_options = [
        ('help-commands', None,
         "list all available commands"),
        ('name', None,
         "print package name"),
        ('version', 'V',
         "print package version"),
        ('fullname', None,
         "print <package name>-<version>"),
        ('author', None,
         "print the author's name"),
        ('author-email', None,
         "print the author's email address"),
        ('maintainer', None,
         "print the maintainer's name"),
        ('maintainer-email', None,
         "print the maintainer's email address"),
        ('contact', None,
         "print the maintainer's name if known, else the author's"),
        ('contact-email', None,
         "print the maintainer's email address if known, else the author's"),
        ('url', None,
         "print the URL for this package"),
        ('license', None,
         "print the license of the package"),
        ('licence', None,
         "alias for --license"),
        ('description', None,
         "print the package description"),
        ('long-description', None,
         "print the long package description"),
        ('platforms', None,
         "print the list of platforms"),
        ('classifiers', None,
         "print the list of classifiers"),
        ('keywords', None,
         "print the list of keywords"),
        ('provides', None,
         "print the list of packages/modules provided"),
        ('requires', None,
         "print the list of packages/modules required"),
        ('obsoletes', None,
         "print the list of packages/modules made obsolete")
        ]
    display_option_names = [translate_longopt(x[0]) for x in display_options]

    # negative options are options that exclude other options
    negative_opt = {'quiet': 'verbose'}

    # -- Creation/initialization methods -------------------------------

    def __init__(self, attrs=None):
        """Construct a new Distribution instance: initialize all the
        attributes of a Distribution, and then use 'attrs' (a dictionary
        mapping attribute names to values) to assign some of those
        attributes their "real" values.  (Any attributes not mentioned in
        'attrs' will be assigned to some null value: 0, None, an empty list
        or dictionary, etc.)  Most importantly, initialize the
        'command_obj' attribute to the empty dictionary; this will be
        filled in with real command objects by 'parse_command_line()'.
        """

        # Default values for our command-line options
        self.verbose = 1
        self.dry_run = 0
        self.help = 0
        for attr in self.display_option_names:
            setattr(self, attr, 0)

        # Store the distribution meta-data (name, version, author, and so
        # forth) in a separate object -- we're getting to have enough
        # information here (and enough command-line options) that it's
        # worth it.  Also delegate 'get_XXX()' methods to the 'metadata'
        # object in a sneaky and underhanded (but efficient!) way.
        self.metadata = DistributionMetadata()
        for basename in self.metadata._METHOD_BASENAMES:
            method_name = "get_" + basename
            setattr(self, method_name, getattr(self.metadata, method_name))

        # 'cmdclass' maps command names to class objects, so we
        # can 1) quickly figure out which class to instantiate when
        # we need to create a new command object, and 2) have a way
        # for the setup script to override command classes
        self.cmdclass = {}

        # 'command_packages' is a list of packages in which commands
        # are searched for.  The factory for command 'foo' is expected
        # to be named 'foo' in the module 'foo' in one of the packages
        # named here.  This list is searched from the left; an error
        # is raised if no named package provides the command being
        # searched for.  (Always access using get_command_packages().)
        self.command_packages = None

        # 'script_name' and 'script_args' are usually set to sys.argv[0]
        # and sys.argv[1:], but they can be overridden when the caller is
        # not necessarily a setup script run from the command-line.
        self.script_name = None
        self.script_args = None

        # 'command_options' is where we store command options between
        # parsing them (from config files, the command-line, etc.) and when
        # they are actually needed -- ie. when the command in question is
        # instantiated.  It is a dictionary of dictionaries of 2-tuples:
        #   command_options = { command_name : { option : (source, value) } }
        self.command_options = {}

        # 'dist_files' is the list of (command, pyversion, file) that
        # have been created by any dist commands run so far. This is
        # filled regardless of whether the run is dry or not. pyversion
        # gives sysconfig.get_python_version() if the dist file is
        # specific to a Python version, 'any' if it is good for all
        # Python versions on the target platform, and '' for a source
        # file. pyversion should not be used to specify minimum or
        # maximum required Python versions; use the metainfo for that
        # instead.
        self.dist_files = []

        # These options are really the business of various commands, rather
        # than of the Distribution itself.  We provide aliases for them in
        # Distribution as a convenience to the developer.
        self.packages = None
        self.package_data = {}
        self.package_dir = None
        self.py_modules = None
        self.libraries = None
        self.headers = None
        self.ext_modules = None
        self.ext_package = None
        self.include_dirs = None
        self.extra_path = None
        self.scripts = None
        self.data_files = None
        self.password = ''

        # And now initialize bookkeeping stuff that can't be supplied by
        # the caller at all.  'command_obj' maps command names to
        # Command instances -- that's how we enforce that every command
        # class is a singleton.
        self.command_obj = {}

        # 'have_run' maps command names to boolean values; it keeps track
        # of whether we have actually run a particular command, to make it
        # cheap to "run" a command whenever we think we might need to -- if
        # it's already been done, no need for expensive filesystem
        # operations, we just check the 'have_run' dictionary and carry on.
        # It's only safe to query 'have_run' for a command class that has
        # been instantiated -- a false value will be inserted when the
        # command object is created, and replaced with a true value when
        # the command is successfully run.  Thus it's probably best to use
        # '.get()' rather than a straight lookup.
        self.have_run = {}

        # Now we'll use the attrs dictionary (ultimately, keyword args from
        # the setup script) to possibly override any or all of these
        # distribution options.

        if attrs:
            # Pull out the set of command options and work on them
            # specifically.  Note that this order guarantees that aliased
            # command options will override any supplied redundantly
            # through the general options dictionary.
            options = attrs.get('options')
            if options is not None:
                del attrs['options']
                for (command, cmd_options) in options.items():
                    opt_dict = self.get_option_dict(command)
                    for (opt, val) in cmd_options.items():
                        opt_dict[opt] = ("setup script", val)

            if 'licence' in attrs:
                attrs['license'] = attrs['licence']
                del attrs['licence']
                msg = "'licence' distribution option is deprecated; use 'license'"
                if warnings is not None:
                    warnings.warn(msg)
                else:
                    sys.stderr.write(msg + "\n")

            # Now work on the rest of the attributes.  Any attribute that's
            # not already defined is invalid!
            for (key, val) in attrs.items():
                if hasattr(self.metadata, "set_" + key):
                    getattr(self.metadata, "set_" + key)(val)
                elif hasattr(self.metadata, key):
                    setattr(self.metadata, key, val)
                elif hasattr(self, key):
                    setattr(self, key, val)
                else:
                    msg = "Unknown distribution option: %s" % repr(key)
                    warnings.warn(msg)

        # no-user-cfg is handled before other command line args
        # because other args override the config files, and this
        # one is needed before we can load the config files.
        # If attrs['script_args'] wasn't passed, assume false.
        #
        # This also make sure we just look at the global options
        self.want_user_cfg = True

        if self.script_args is not None:
            for arg in self.script_args:
                if not arg.startswith('-'):
                    break
                if arg == '--no-user-cfg':
                    self.want_user_cfg = False
                    break

        self.finalize_options()

    def get_option_dict(self, command):
        """Get the option dictionary for a given command.  If that
        command's option dictionary hasn't been created yet, then create it
        and return the new dictionary; otherwise, return the existing
        option dictionary.
        """
        dict = self.command_options.get(command)
        if dict is None:
            dict = self.command_options[command] = {}
        return dict

    def dump_option_dicts(self, header=None, commands=None, indent=""):
        from pprint import pformat

        if commands is None:             # dump all command option dicts
            commands = sorted(self.command_options.keys())

        if header is not None:
            self.announce(indent + header)
            indent = indent + "  "

        if not commands:
            self.announce(indent + "no commands known yet")
            return

        for cmd_name in commands:
            opt_dict = self.command_options.get(cmd_name)
            if opt_dict is None:
                self.announce(indent +
                              "no option dict for '%s' command" % cmd_name)
            else:
                self.announce(indent +
                              "option dict for '%s' command:" % cmd_name)
                out = pformat(opt_dict)
                for line in out.split('\n'):
                    self.announce(indent + "  " + line)

    # -- Config file finding/parsing methods ---------------------------

    def find_config_files(self):
        """Find as many configuration files as should be processed for this
        platform, and return a list of filenames in the order in which they
        should be parsed.  The filenames returned are guaranteed to exist
        (modulo nasty race conditions).

        There are three possible config files: distutils.cfg in the
        Distutils installation directory (ie. where the top-level
        Distutils __inst__.py file lives), a file in the user's home
        directory named .pydistutils.cfg on Unix and pydistutils.cfg
        on Windows/Mac; and setup.cfg in the current directory.

        The file in the user's home directory can be disabled with the
        --no-user-cfg option.
        """
        files = []
        check_environ()

        # Where to look for the system-wide Distutils config file
        sys_dir = os.path.dirname(sys.modules['distutils'].__file__)

        # Look for the system config file
        sys_file = os.path.join(sys_dir, "distutils.cfg")
        if os.path.isfile(sys_file):
            files.append(sys_file)

        # What to call the per-user config file
        if os.name == 'posix':
            user_filename = ".pydistutils.cfg"
        else:
            user_filename = "pydistutils.cfg"

        # And look for the user config file
        if self.want_user_cfg:
            user_file = os.path.join(os.path.expanduser('~'), user_filename)
            if os.path.isfile(user_file):
                files.append(user_file)

        # All platforms support local setup.cfg
        local_file = "setup.cfg"
        if os.path.isfile(local_file):
            files.append(local_file)

        if DEBUG:
            self.announce("using config files: %s" % ', '.join(files))

        return files

    def parse_config_files(self, filenames=None):
        from configparser import ConfigParser

        # Ignore install directory options if we have a venv
        if sys.prefix != sys.base_prefix:
            ignore_options = [
                'install-base', 'install-platbase', 'install-lib',
                'install-platlib', 'install-purelib', 'install-headers',
                'install-scripts', 'install-data', 'prefix', 'exec-prefix',
                'home', 'user', 'root']
        else:
            ignore_options = []

        ignore_options = frozenset(ignore_options)

        if filenames is None:
            filenames = self.find_config_files()

        if DEBUG:
            self.announce("Distribution.parse_config_files():")

        parser = ConfigParser()
        for filename in filenames:
            if DEBUG:
                self.announce("  reading %s" % filename)
            parser.read(filename)
            for section in parser.sections():
                options = parser.options(section)
                opt_dict = self.get_option_dict(section)

                for opt in options:
                    if opt != '__name__' and opt not in ignore_options:
                        val = parser.get(section,opt)
                        opt = opt.replace('-', '_')
                        opt_dict[opt] = (filename, val)

            # Make the ConfigParser forget everything (so we retain
            # the original filenames that options come from)
            parser.__init__()

        # If there was a "global" section in the config file, use it
        # to set Distribution options.

        if 'global' in self.command_options:
            for (opt, (src, val)) in self.command_options['global'].items():
                alias = self.negative_opt.get(opt)
                try:
                    if alias:
                        setattr(self, alias, not strtobool(val))
                    elif opt in ('verbose', 'dry_run'): # ugh!
                        setattr(self, opt, strtobool(val))
                    else:
                        setattr(self, opt, val)
                except ValueError as msg:
                    raise DistutilsOptionError(msg)

    # -- Command-line parsing methods ----------------------------------

    def parse_command_line(self):
        """Parse the setup script's command line, taken from the
        'script_args' instance attribute (which defaults to 'sys.argv[1:]'
        -- see 'setup()' in core.py).  This list is first processed for
        "global options" -- options that set attributes of the Distribution
        instance.  Then, it is alternately scanned for Distutils commands
        and options for that command.  Each new command terminates the
        options for the previous command.  The allowed options for a
        command are determined by the 'user_options' attribute of the
        command class -- thus, we have to be able to load command classes
        in order to parse the command line.  Any error in that 'options'
        attribute raises DistutilsGetoptError; any error on the
        command-line raises DistutilsArgError.  If no Distutils commands
        were found on the command line, raises DistutilsArgError.  Return
        true if command-line was successfully parsed and we should carry
        on with executing commands; false if no errors but we shouldn't
        execute commands (currently, this only happens if user asks for
        help).
        """
        #
        # We now have enough information to show the Macintosh dialog
        # that allows the user to interactively specify the "command line".
        #
        toplevel_options = self._get_toplevel_options()

        # We have to parse the command line a bit at a time -- global
        # options, then the first command, then its options, and so on --
        # because each command will be handled by a different class, and
        # the options that are valid for a particular class aren't known
        # until we have loaded the command class, which doesn't happen
        # until we know what the command is.

        self.commands = []
        parser = FancyGetopt(toplevel_options + self.display_options)
        parser.set_negative_aliases(self.negative_opt)
        parser.set_aliases({'licence': 'license'})
        args = parser.getopt(args=self.script_args, object=self)
        option_order = parser.get_option_order()
        log.set_verbosity(self.verbose)

        # for display options we return immediately
        if self.handle_display_options(option_order):
            return
        while args:
            args = self._parse_command_opts(parser, args)
            if args is None:            # user asked for help (and got it)
                return

        # Handle the cases of --help as a "global" option, ie.
        # "setup.py --help" and "setup.py --help command ...".  For the
        # former, we show global options (--verbose, --dry-run, etc.)
        # and display-only options (--name, --version, etc.); for the
        # latter, we omit the display-only options and show help for
        # each command listed on the command line.
        if self.help:
            self._show_help(parser,
                            display_options=len(self.commands) == 0,
                            commands=self.commands)
            return

        # Oops, no commands found -- an end-user error
        if not self.commands:
            raise DistutilsArgError("no commands supplied")

        # All is well: return true
        return True

    def _get_toplevel_options(self):
        """Return the non-display options recognized at the top level.

        This includes options that are recognized *only* at the top
        level as well as options recognized for commands.
        """
        return self.global_options + [
            ("command-packages=", None,
             "list of packages that provide distutils commands"),
            ]

    def _parse_command_opts(self, parser, args):
        """Parse the command-line options for a single command.
        'parser' must be a FancyGetopt instance; 'args' must be the list
        of arguments, starting with the current command (whose options
        we are about to parse).  Returns a new version of 'args' with
        the next command at the front of the list; will be the empty
        list if there are no more commands on the command line.  Returns
        None if the user asked for help on this command.
        """
        # late import because of mutual dependence between these modules
        from distutils.cmd import Command

        # Pull the current command from the head of the command line
        command = args[0]
        if not command_re.match(command):
            raise SystemExit("invalid command name '%s'" % command)
        self.commands.append(command)

        # Dig up the command class that implements this command, so we
        # 1) know that it's a valid command, and 2) know which options
        # it takes.
        try:
            cmd_class = self.get_command_class(command)
        except DistutilsModuleError as msg:
            raise DistutilsArgError(msg)

        # Require that the command class be derived from Command -- want
        # to be sure that the basic "command" interface is implemented.
        if not issubclass(cmd_class, Command):
            raise DistutilsClassError(
                "command class %s must subclass Command" % cmd_class)

        # Also make sure that the command object provides a list of its
        # known options.
        if not (hasattr(cmd_class, 'user_options') and
                isinstance(cmd_class.user_options, list)):
            msg = ("command class %s must provide "
                "'user_options' attribute (a list of tuples)")
            raise DistutilsClassError(msg % cmd_class)

        # If the command class has a list of negative alias options,
        # merge it in with the global negative aliases.
        negative_opt = self.negative_opt
        if hasattr(cmd_class, 'negative_opt'):
            negative_opt = negative_opt.copy()
            negative_opt.update(cmd_class.negative_opt)

        # Check for help_options in command class.  They have a different
        # format (tuple of four) so we need to preprocess them here.
        if (hasattr(cmd_class, 'help_options') and
                isinstance(cmd_class.help_options, list)):
            help_options = fix_help_options(cmd_class.help_options)
        else:
            help_options = []

        # All commands support the global options too, just by adding
        # in 'global_options'.
        parser.set_option_table(self.global_options +
                                cmd_class.user_options +
                                help_options)
        parser.set_negative_aliases(negative_opt)
        (args, opts) = parser.getopt(args[1:])
        if hasattr(opts, 'help') and opts.help:
            self._show_help(parser, display_options=0, commands=[cmd_class])
            return

        if (hasattr(cmd_class, 'help_options') and
                isinstance(cmd_class.help_options, list)):
            help_option_found=0
            for (help_option, short, desc, func) in cmd_class.help_options:
                if hasattr(opts, parser.get_attr_name(help_option)):
                    help_option_found=1
                    if callable(func):
                        func()
                    else:
                        raise DistutilsClassError(
                            "invalid help function %r for help option '%s': "
                            "must be a callable object (function, etc.)"
                            % (func, help_option))

            if help_option_found:
                return

        # Put the options from the command-line into their official
        # holding pen, the 'command_options' dictionary.
        opt_dict = self.get_option_dict(command)
        for (name, value) in vars(opts).items():
            opt_dict[name] = ("command line", value)

        return args

    def finalize_options(self):
        """Set final values for all the options on the Distribution
        instance, analogous to the .finalize_options() method of Command
        objects.
        """
        for attr in ('keywords', 'platforms'):
            value = getattr(self.metadata, attr)
            if value is None:
                continue
            if isinstance(value, str):
                value = [elm.strip() for elm in value.split(',')]
                setattr(self.metadata, attr, value)

    def _show_help(self, parser, global_options=1, display_options=1,
                   commands=[]):
        """Show help for the setup script command-line in the form of
        several lists of command-line options.  'parser' should be a
        FancyGetopt instance; do not expect it to be returned in the
        same state, as its option table will be reset to make it
        generate the correct help text.

        If 'global_options' is true, lists the global options:
        --verbose, --dry-run, etc.  If 'display_options' is true, lists
        the "display-only" options: --name, --version, etc.  Finally,
        lists per-command help for every command name or command class
        in 'commands'.
        """
        # late import because of mutual dependence between these modules
        from distutils.core import gen_usage
        from distutils.cmd import Command

        if global_options:
            if display_options:
                options = self._get_toplevel_options()
            else:
                options = self.global_options
            parser.set_option_table(options)
            parser.print_help(self.common_usage + "\nGlobal options:")
            print('')

        if display_options:
            parser.set_option_table(self.display_options)
            parser.print_help(
                "Information display options (just display " +
                "information, ignore any commands)")
            print('')

        for command in self.commands:
            if isinstance(command, type) and issubclass(command, Command):
                klass = command
            else:
                klass = self.get_command_class(command)
            if (hasattr(klass, 'help_options') and
                    isinstance(klass.help_options, list)):
                parser.set_option_table(klass.user_options +
                                        fix_help_options(klass.help_options))
            else:
                parser.set_option_table(klass.user_options)
            parser.print_help("Options for '%s' command:" % klass.__name__)
            print('')

        print(gen_usage(self.script_name))

    def handle_display_options(self, option_order):
        """If there were any non-global "display-only" options
        (--help-commands or the metadata display options) on the command
        line, display the requested info and return true; else return
        false.
        """
        from distutils.core import gen_usage

        # User just wants a list of commands -- we'll print it out and stop
        # processing now (ie. if they ran "setup --help-commands foo bar",
        # we ignore "foo bar").
        if self.help_commands:
            self.print_commands()
            print('')
            print(gen_usage(self.script_name))
            return 1

        # If user supplied any of the "display metadata" options, then
        # display that metadata in the order in which the user supplied the
        # metadata options.
        any_display_options = 0
        is_display_option = {}
        for option in self.display_options:
            is_display_option[option[0]] = 1

        for (opt, val) in option_order:
            if val and is_display_option.get(opt):
                opt = translate_longopt(opt)
                value = getattr(self.metadata, "get_"+opt)()
                if opt in ['keywords', 'platforms']:
                    print(','.join(value))
                elif opt in ('classifiers', 'provides', 'requires',
                             'obsoletes'):
                    print('\n'.join(value))
                else:
                    print(value)
                any_display_options = 1

        return any_display_options

    def print_command_list(self, commands, header, max_length):
        """Print a subset of the list of all commands -- used by
        'print_commands()'.
        """
        print(header + ":")

        for cmd in commands:
            klass = self.cmdclass.get(cmd)
            if not klass:
                klass = self.get_command_class(cmd)
            try:
                description = klass.description
            except AttributeError:
                description = "(no description available)"

            print("  %-*s  %s" % (max_length, cmd, description))

    def print_commands(self):
        """Print out a help message listing all available commands with a
        description of each.  The list is divided into "standard commands"
        (listed in distutils.command.__all__) and "extra commands"
        (mentioned in self.cmdclass, but not a standard command).  The
        descriptions come from the command class attribute
        'description'.
        """
        import distutils.command
        std_commands = distutils.command.__all__
        is_std = {}
        for cmd in std_commands:
            is_std[cmd] = 1

        extra_commands = []
        for cmd in self.cmdclass.keys():
            if not is_std.get(cmd):
                extra_commands.append(cmd)

        max_length = 0
        for cmd in (std_commands + extra_commands):
            if len(cmd) > max_length:
                max_length = len(cmd)

        self.print_command_list(std_commands,
                                "Standard commands",
                                max_length)
        if extra_commands:
            print()
            self.print_command_list(extra_commands,
                                    "Extra commands",
                                    max_length)

    def get_command_list(self):
        """Get a list of (command, description) tuples.
        The list is divided into "standard commands" (listed in
        distutils.command.__all__) and "extra commands" (mentioned in
        self.cmdclass, but not a standard command).  The descriptions come
        from the command class attribute 'description'.
        """
        # Currently this is only used on Mac OS, for the Mac-only GUI
        # Distutils interface (by Jack Jansen)
        import distutils.command
        std_commands = distutils.command.__all__
        is_std = {}
        for cmd in std_commands:
            is_std[cmd] = 1

        extra_commands = []
        for cmd in self.cmdclass.keys():
            if not is_std.get(cmd):
                extra_commands.append(cmd)

        rv = []
        for cmd in (std_commands + extra_commands):
            klass = self.cmdclass.get(cmd)
            if not klass:
                klass = self.get_command_class(cmd)
            try:
                description = klass.description
            except AttributeError:
                description = "(no description available)"
            rv.append((cmd, description))
        return rv

    # -- Command class/object methods ----------------------------------

    def get_command_packages(self):
        """Return a list of packages from which commands are loaded."""
        pkgs = self.command_packages
        if not isinstance(pkgs, list):
            if pkgs is None:
                pkgs = ''
            pkgs = [pkg.strip() for pkg in pkgs.split(',') if pkg != '']
            if "distutils.command" not in pkgs:
                pkgs.insert(0, "distutils.command")
            self.command_packages = pkgs
        return pkgs

    def get_command_class(self, command):
        """Return the class that implements the Distutils command named by
        'command'.  First we check the 'cmdclass' dictionary; if the
        command is mentioned there, we fetch the class object from the
        dictionary and return it.  Otherwise we load the command module
        ("distutils.command." + command) and fetch the command class from
        the module.  The loaded class is also stored in 'cmdclass'
        to speed future calls to 'get_command_class()'.

        Raises DistutilsModuleError if the expected module could not be
        found, or if that module does not define the expected class.
        """
        klass = self.cmdclass.get(command)
        if klass:
            return klass

        for pkgname in self.get_command_packages():
            module_name = "%s.%s" % (pkgname, command)
            klass_name = command

            try:
                __import__(module_name)
                module = sys.modules[module_name]
            except ImportError:
                continue

            try:
                klass = getattr(module, klass_name)
            except AttributeError:
                raise DistutilsModuleError(
                    "invalid command '%s' (no class '%s' in module '%s')"
                    % (command, klass_name, module_name))

            self.cmdclass[command] = klass
            return klass

        raise DistutilsModuleError("invalid command '%s'" % command)

    def get_command_obj(self, command, create=1):
        """Return the command object for 'command'.  Normally this object
        is cached on a previous call to 'get_command_obj()'; if no command
        object for 'command' is in the cache, then we either create and
        return it (if 'create' is true) or return None.
        """
        cmd_obj = self.command_obj.get(command)
        if not cmd_obj and create:
            if DEBUG:
                self.announce("Distribution.get_command_obj(): "
                              "creating '%s' command object" % command)

            klass = self.get_command_class(command)
            cmd_obj = self.command_obj[command] = klass(self)
            self.have_run[command] = 0

            # Set any options that were supplied in config files
            # or on the command line.  (NB. support for error
            # reporting is lame here: any errors aren't reported
            # until 'finalize_options()' is called, which means
            # we won't report the source of the error.)
            options = self.command_options.get(command)
            if options:
                self._set_command_options(cmd_obj, options)

        return cmd_obj

    def _set_command_options(self, command_obj, option_dict=None):
        """Set the options for 'command_obj' from 'option_dict'.  Basically
        this means copying elements of a dictionary ('option_dict') to
        attributes of an instance ('command').

        'command_obj' must be a Command instance.  If 'option_dict' is not
        supplied, uses the standard option dictionary for this command
        (from 'self.command_options').
        """
        command_name = command_obj.get_command_name()
        if option_dict is None:
            option_dict = self.get_option_dict(command_name)

        if DEBUG:
            self.announce("  setting options for '%s' command:" % command_name)
        for (option, (source, value)) in option_dict.items():
            if DEBUG:
                self.announce("    %s = %s (from %s)" % (option, value,
                                                         source))
            try:
                bool_opts = [translate_longopt(o)
                             for o in command_obj.boolean_options]
            except AttributeError:
                bool_opts = []
            try:
                neg_opt = command_obj.negative_opt
            except AttributeError:
                neg_opt = {}

            try:
                is_string = isinstance(value, str)
                if option in neg_opt and is_string:
                    setattr(command_obj, neg_opt[option], not strtobool(value))
                elif option in bool_opts and is_string:
                    setattr(command_obj, option, strtobool(value))
                elif hasattr(command_obj, option):
                    setattr(command_obj, option, value)
                else:
                    raise DistutilsOptionError(
                        "error in %s: command '%s' has no such option '%s'"
                        % (source, command_name, option))
            except ValueError as msg:
                raise DistutilsOptionError(msg)

    def reinitialize_command(self, command, reinit_subcommands=0):
        """Reinitializes a command to the state it was in when first
        returned by 'get_command_obj()': ie., initialized but not yet
        finalized.  This provides the opportunity to sneak option
        values in programmatically, overriding or supplementing
        user-supplied values from the config files and command line.
        You'll have to re-finalize the command object (by calling
        'finalize_options()' or 'ensure_finalized()') before using it for
        real.

        'command' should be a command name (string) or command object.  If
        'reinit_subcommands' is true, also reinitializes the command's
        sub-commands, as declared by the 'sub_commands' class attribute (if
        it has one).  See the "install" command for an example.  Only
        reinitializes the sub-commands that actually matter, ie. those
        whose test predicates return true.

        Returns the reinitialized command object.
        """
        from distutils.cmd import Command
        if not isinstance(command, Command):
            command_name = command
            command = self.get_command_obj(command_name)
        else:
            command_name = command.get_command_name()

        if not command.finalized:
            return command
        command.initialize_options()
        command.finalized = 0
        self.have_run[command_name] = 0
        self._set_command_options(command)

        if reinit_subcommands:
            for sub in command.get_sub_commands():
                self.reinitialize_command(sub, reinit_subcommands)

        return command

    # -- Methods that operate on the Distribution ----------------------

    def announce(self, msg, level=log.INFO):
        log.log(level, msg)

    def run_commands(self):
        """Run each command that was seen on the setup script command line.
        Uses the list of commands found and cache of command objects
        created by 'get_command_obj()'.
        """
        for cmd in self.commands:
            self.run_command(cmd)

    # -- Methods that operate on its Commands --------------------------

    def run_command(self, command):
        """Do whatever it takes to run a command (including nothing at all,
        if the command has already been run).  Specifically: if we have
        already created and run the command named by 'command', return
        silently without doing anything.  If the command named by 'command'
        doesn't even have a command object yet, create one.  Then invoke
        'run()' on that command object (or an existing one).
        """
        # Already been here, done that? then return silently.
        if self.have_run.get(command):
            return

        log.info("running %s", command)
        cmd_obj = self.get_command_obj(command)
        cmd_obj.ensure_finalized()
        cmd_obj.run()
        self.have_run[command] = 1

    # -- Distribution query methods ------------------------------------

    def has_pure_modules(self):
        return len(self.packages or self.py_modules or []) > 0

    def has_ext_modules(self):
        return self.ext_modules and len(self.ext_modules) > 0

    def has_c_libraries(self):
        return self.libraries and len(self.libraries) > 0

    def has_modules(self):
        return self.has_pure_modules() or self.has_ext_modules()

    def has_headers(self):
        return self.headers and len(self.headers) > 0

    def has_scripts(self):
        return self.scripts and len(self.scripts) > 0

    def has_data_files(self):
        return self.data_files and len(self.data_files) > 0

    def is_pure(self):
        return (self.has_pure_modules() and
                not self.has_ext_modules() and
                not self.has_c_libraries())

    # -- Metadata query methods ----------------------------------------

    # If you're looking for 'get_name()', 'get_version()', and so forth,
    # they are defined in a sneaky way: the constructor binds self.get_XXX
    # to self.metadata.get_XXX.  The actual code is in the
    # DistributionMetadata class, below.

class DistributionMetadata:
    """Dummy class to hold the distribution meta-data: name, version,
    author, and so forth.
    """

    _METHOD_BASENAMES = ("name", "version", "author", "author_email",
                         "maintainer", "maintainer_email", "url",
                         "license", "description", "long_description",
                         "keywords", "platforms", "fullname", "contact",
                         "contact_email", "classifiers", "download_url",
                         # PEP 314
                         "provides", "requires", "obsoletes",
                         )

    def __init__(self, path=None):
        if path is not None:
            self.read_pkg_file(open(path))
        else:
            self.name = None
            self.version = None
            self.author = None
            self.author_email = None
            self.maintainer = None
            self.maintainer_email = None
            self.url = None
            self.license = None
            self.description = None
            self.long_description = None
            self.keywords = None
            self.platforms = None
            self.classifiers = None
            self.download_url = None
            # PEP 314
            self.provides = None
            self.requires = None
            self.obsoletes = None

    def read_pkg_file(self, file):
        """Reads the metadata values from a file object."""
        msg = message_from_file(file)

        def _read_field(name):
            value = msg[name]
            if value == 'UNKNOWN':
                return None
            return value

        def _read_list(name):
            values = msg.get_all(name, None)
            if values == []:
                return None
            return values

        metadata_version = msg['metadata-version']
        self.name = _read_field('name')
        self.version = _read_field('version')
        self.description = _read_field('summary')
        # we are filling author only.
        self.author = _read_field('author')
        self.maintainer = None
        self.author_email = _read_field('author-email')
        self.maintainer_email = None
        self.url = _read_field('home-page')
        self.license = _read_field('license')

        if 'download-url' in msg:
            self.download_url = _read_field('download-url')
        else:
            self.download_url = None

        self.long_description = _read_field('description')
        self.description = _read_field('summary')

        if 'keywords' in msg:
            self.keywords = _read_field('keywords').split(',')

        self.platforms = _read_list('platform')
        self.classifiers = _read_list('classifier')

        # PEP 314 - these fields only exist in 1.1
        if metadata_version == '1.1':
            self.requires = _read_list('requires')
            self.provides = _read_list('provides')
            self.obsoletes = _read_list('obsoletes')
        else:
            self.requires = None
            self.provides = None
            self.obsoletes = None

    def write_pkg_info(self, base_dir):
        """Write the PKG-INFO file into the release tree.
        """
        with open(os.path.join(base_dir, 'PKG-INFO'), 'w',
                  encoding='UTF-8') as pkg_info:
            self.write_pkg_file(pkg_info)

    def write_pkg_file(self, file):
        """Write the PKG-INFO format data to a file object.
        """
        version = '1.0'
        if (self.provides or self.requires or self.obsoletes or
                self.classifiers or self.download_url):
            version = '1.1'

        file.write('Metadata-Version: %s\n' % version)
        file.write('Name: %s\n' % self.get_name())
        file.write('Version: %s\n' % self.get_version())
        file.write('Summary: %s\n' % self.get_description())
        file.write('Home-page: %s\n' % self.get_url())
        file.write('Author: %s\n' % self.get_contact())
        file.write('Author-email: %s\n' % self.get_contact_email())
        file.write('License: %s\n' % self.get_license())
        if self.download_url:
            file.write('Download-URL: %s\n' % self.download_url)

        long_desc = rfc822_escape(self.get_long_description())
        file.write('Description: %s\n' % long_desc)

        keywords = ','.join(self.get_keywords())
        if keywords:
            file.write('Keywords: %s\n' % keywords)

        self._write_list(file, 'Platform', self.get_platforms())
        self._write_list(file, 'Classifier', self.get_classifiers())

        # PEP 314
        self._write_list(file, 'Requires', self.get_requires())
        self._write_list(file, 'Provides', self.get_provides())
        self._write_list(file, 'Obsoletes', self.get_obsoletes())

    def _write_list(self, file, name, values):
        for value in values:
            file.write('%s: %s\n' % (name, value))

    # -- Metadata query methods ----------------------------------------

    def get_name(self):
        return self.name or "UNKNOWN"

    def get_version(self):
        return self.version or "0.0.0"

    def get_fullname(self):
        return "%s-%s" % (self.get_name(), self.get_version())

    def get_author(self):
        return self.author or "UNKNOWN"

    def get_author_email(self):
        return self.author_email or "UNKNOWN"

    def get_maintainer(self):
        return self.maintainer or "UNKNOWN"

    def get_maintainer_email(self):
        return self.maintainer_email or "UNKNOWN"

    def get_contact(self):
        return self.maintainer or self.author or "UNKNOWN"

    def get_contact_email(self):
        return self.maintainer_email or self.author_email or "UNKNOWN"

    def get_url(self):
        return self.url or "UNKNOWN"

    def get_license(self):
        return self.license or "UNKNOWN"
    get_licence = get_license

    def get_description(self):
        return self.description or "UNKNOWN"

    def get_long_description(self):
        return self.long_description or "UNKNOWN"

    def get_keywords(self):
        return self.keywords or []

    def set_keywords(self, value):
        self.keywords = _ensure_list(value, 'keywords')

    def get_platforms(self):
        return self.platforms or ["UNKNOWN"]

    def set_platforms(self, value):
        self.platforms = _ensure_list(value, 'platforms')

    def get_classifiers(self):
        return self.classifiers or []

    def set_classifiers(self, value):
        self.classifiers = _ensure_list(value, 'classifiers')

    def get_download_url(self):
        return self.download_url or "UNKNOWN"

    # PEP 314
    def get_requires(self):
        return self.requires or []

    def set_requires(self, value):
        import distutils.versionpredicate
        for v in value:
            distutils.versionpredicate.VersionPredicate(v)
        self.requires = list(value)

    def get_provides(self):
        return self.provides or []

    def set_provides(self, value):
        value = [v.strip() for v in value]
        for v in value:
            import distutils.versionpredicate
            distutils.versionpredicate.split_provision(v)
        self.provides = value

    def get_obsoletes(self):
        return self.obsoletes or []

    def set_obsoletes(self, value):
        import distutils.versionpredicate
        for v in value:
            distutils.versionpredicate.VersionPredicate(v)
        self.obsoletes = list(value)

def fix_help_options(options):
    """Convert a 4-tuple 'help_options' list as found in various command
    classes to the 3-tuple form required by FancyGetopt.
    """
    new_options = []
    for help_tuple in options:
        new_options.append(help_tuple[0:3])
    return new_options
PK       ! 1xE  xE    distutils/fancy_getopt.pynu [        """distutils.fancy_getopt

Wrapper around the standard getopt module that provides the following
additional features:
  * short and long options are tied together
  * options have help strings, so fancy_getopt could potentially
    create a complete usage summary
  * options set attributes of a passed-in object
"""

import sys, string, re
import getopt
from distutils.errors import *

# Much like command_re in distutils.core, this is close to but not quite
# the same as a Python NAME -- except, in the spirit of most GNU
# utilities, we use '-' in place of '_'.  (The spirit of LISP lives on!)
# The similarities to NAME are again not a coincidence...
longopt_pat = r'[a-zA-Z](?:[a-zA-Z0-9-]*)'
longopt_re = re.compile(r'^%s$' % longopt_pat)

# For recognizing "negative alias" options, eg. "quiet=!verbose"
neg_alias_re = re.compile("^(%s)=!(%s)$" % (longopt_pat, longopt_pat))

# This is used to translate long options to legitimate Python identifiers
# (for use as attributes of some object).
longopt_xlate = str.maketrans('-', '_')

class FancyGetopt:
    """Wrapper around the standard 'getopt()' module that provides some
    handy extra functionality:
      * short and long options are tied together
      * options have help strings, and help text can be assembled
        from them
      * options set attributes of a passed-in object
      * boolean options can have "negative aliases" -- eg. if
        --quiet is the "negative alias" of --verbose, then "--quiet"
        on the command line sets 'verbose' to false
    """

    def __init__(self, option_table=None):
        # The option table is (currently) a list of tuples.  The
        # tuples may have 3 or four values:
        #   (long_option, short_option, help_string [, repeatable])
        # if an option takes an argument, its long_option should have '='
        # appended; short_option should just be a single character, no ':'
        # in any case.  If a long_option doesn't have a corresponding
        # short_option, short_option should be None.  All option tuples
        # must have long options.
        self.option_table = option_table

        # 'option_index' maps long option names to entries in the option
        # table (ie. those 3-tuples).
        self.option_index = {}
        if self.option_table:
            self._build_index()

        # 'alias' records (duh) alias options; {'foo': 'bar'} means
        # --foo is an alias for --bar
        self.alias = {}

        # 'negative_alias' keeps track of options that are the boolean
        # opposite of some other option
        self.negative_alias = {}

        # These keep track of the information in the option table.  We
        # don't actually populate these structures until we're ready to
        # parse the command-line, since the 'option_table' passed in here
        # isn't necessarily the final word.
        self.short_opts = []
        self.long_opts = []
        self.short2long = {}
        self.attr_name = {}
        self.takes_arg = {}

        # And 'option_order' is filled up in 'getopt()'; it records the
        # original order of options (and their values) on the command-line,
        # but expands short options, converts aliases, etc.
        self.option_order = []

    def _build_index(self):
        self.option_index.clear()
        for option in self.option_table:
            self.option_index[option[0]] = option

    def set_option_table(self, option_table):
        self.option_table = option_table
        self._build_index()

    def add_option(self, long_option, short_option=None, help_string=None):
        if long_option in self.option_index:
            raise DistutilsGetoptError(
                  "option conflict: already an option '%s'" % long_option)
        else:
            option = (long_option, short_option, help_string)
            self.option_table.append(option)
            self.option_index[long_option] = option

    def has_option(self, long_option):
        """Return true if the option table for this parser has an
        option with long name 'long_option'."""
        return long_option in self.option_index

    def get_attr_name(self, long_option):
        """Translate long option name 'long_option' to the form it
        has as an attribute of some object: ie., translate hyphens
        to underscores."""
        return long_option.translate(longopt_xlate)

    def _check_alias_dict(self, aliases, what):
        assert isinstance(aliases, dict)
        for (alias, opt) in aliases.items():
            if alias not in self.option_index:
                raise DistutilsGetoptError(("invalid %s '%s': "
                       "option '%s' not defined") % (what, alias, alias))
            if opt not in self.option_index:
                raise DistutilsGetoptError(("invalid %s '%s': "
                       "aliased option '%s' not defined") % (what, alias, opt))

    def set_aliases(self, alias):
        """Set the aliases for this option parser."""
        self._check_alias_dict(alias, "alias")
        self.alias = alias

    def set_negative_aliases(self, negative_alias):
        """Set the negative aliases for this option parser.
        'negative_alias' should be a dictionary mapping option names to
        option names, both the key and value must already be defined
        in the option table."""
        self._check_alias_dict(negative_alias, "negative alias")
        self.negative_alias = negative_alias

    def _grok_option_table(self):
        """Populate the various data structures that keep tabs on the
        option table.  Called by 'getopt()' before it can do anything
        worthwhile.
        """
        self.long_opts = []
        self.short_opts = []
        self.short2long.clear()
        self.repeat = {}

        for option in self.option_table:
            if len(option) == 3:
                long, short, help = option
                repeat = 0
            elif len(option) == 4:
                long, short, help, repeat = option
            else:
                # the option table is part of the code, so simply
                # assert that it is correct
                raise ValueError("invalid option tuple: %r" % (option,))

            # Type- and value-check the option names
            if not isinstance(long, str) or len(long) < 2:
                raise DistutilsGetoptError(("invalid long option '%s': "
                       "must be a string of length >= 2") % long)

            if (not ((short is None) or
                     (isinstance(short, str) and len(short) == 1))):
                raise DistutilsGetoptError("invalid short option '%s': "
                       "must a single character or None" % short)

            self.repeat[long] = repeat
            self.long_opts.append(long)

            if long[-1] == '=':             # option takes an argument?
                if short: short = short + ':'
                long = long[0:-1]
                self.takes_arg[long] = 1
            else:
                # Is option is a "negative alias" for some other option (eg.
                # "quiet" == "!verbose")?
                alias_to = self.negative_alias.get(long)
                if alias_to is not None:
                    if self.takes_arg[alias_to]:
                        raise DistutilsGetoptError(
                              "invalid negative alias '%s': "
                              "aliased option '%s' takes a value"
                              % (long, alias_to))

                    self.long_opts[-1] = long # XXX redundant?!
                self.takes_arg[long] = 0

            # If this is an alias option, make sure its "takes arg" flag is
            # the same as the option it's aliased to.
            alias_to = self.alias.get(long)
            if alias_to is not None:
                if self.takes_arg[long] != self.takes_arg[alias_to]:
                    raise DistutilsGetoptError(
                          "invalid alias '%s': inconsistent with "
                          "aliased option '%s' (one of them takes a value, "
                          "the other doesn't"
                          % (long, alias_to))

            # Now enforce some bondage on the long option name, so we can
            # later translate it to an attribute name on some object.  Have
            # to do this a bit late to make sure we've removed any trailing
            # '='.
            if not longopt_re.match(long):
                raise DistutilsGetoptError(
                       "invalid long option name '%s' "
                       "(must be letters, numbers, hyphens only" % long)

            self.attr_name[long] = self.get_attr_name(long)
            if short:
                self.short_opts.append(short)
                self.short2long[short[0]] = long

    def getopt(self, args=None, object=None):
        """Parse command-line options in args. Store as attributes on object.

        If 'args' is None or not supplied, uses 'sys.argv[1:]'.  If
        'object' is None or not supplied, creates a new OptionDummy
        object, stores option values there, and returns a tuple (args,
        object).  If 'object' is supplied, it is modified in place and
        'getopt()' just returns 'args'; in both cases, the returned
        'args' is a modified copy of the passed-in 'args' list, which
        is left untouched.
        """
        if args is None:
            args = sys.argv[1:]
        if object is None:
            object = OptionDummy()
            created_object = True
        else:
            created_object = False

        self._grok_option_table()

        short_opts = ' '.join(self.short_opts)
        try:
            opts, args = getopt.getopt(args, short_opts, self.long_opts)
        except getopt.error as msg:
            raise DistutilsArgError(msg)

        for opt, val in opts:
            if len(opt) == 2 and opt[0] == '-': # it's a short option
                opt = self.short2long[opt[1]]
            else:
                assert len(opt) > 2 and opt[:2] == '--'
                opt = opt[2:]

            alias = self.alias.get(opt)
            if alias:
                opt = alias

            if not self.takes_arg[opt]:     # boolean option?
                assert val == '', "boolean option can't have value"
                alias = self.negative_alias.get(opt)
                if alias:
                    opt = alias
                    val = 0
                else:
                    val = 1

            attr = self.attr_name[opt]
            # The only repeating option at the moment is 'verbose'.
            # It has a negative option -q quiet, which should set verbose = 0.
            if val and self.repeat.get(attr) is not None:
                val = getattr(object, attr, 0) + 1
            setattr(object, attr, val)
            self.option_order.append((opt, val))

        # for opts
        if created_object:
            return args, object
        else:
            return args

    def get_option_order(self):
        """Returns the list of (option, value) tuples processed by the
        previous run of 'getopt()'.  Raises RuntimeError if
        'getopt()' hasn't been called yet.
        """
        if self.option_order is None:
            raise RuntimeError("'getopt()' hasn't been called yet")
        else:
            return self.option_order

    def generate_help(self, header=None):
        """Generate help text (a list of strings, one per suggested line of
        output) from the option table for this FancyGetopt object.
        """
        # Blithely assume the option table is good: probably wouldn't call
        # 'generate_help()' unless you've already called 'getopt()'.

        # First pass: determine maximum length of long option names
        max_opt = 0
        for option in self.option_table:
            long = option[0]
            short = option[1]
            l = len(long)
            if long[-1] == '=':
                l = l - 1
            if short is not None:
                l = l + 5                   # " (-x)" where short == 'x'
            if l > max_opt:
                max_opt = l

        opt_width = max_opt + 2 + 2 + 2     # room for indent + dashes + gutter

        # Typical help block looks like this:
        #   --foo       controls foonabulation
        # Help block for longest option looks like this:
        #   --flimflam  set the flim-flam level
        # and with wrapped text:
        #   --flimflam  set the flim-flam level (must be between
        #               0 and 100, except on Tuesdays)
        # Options with short names will have the short name shown (but
        # it doesn't contribute to max_opt):
        #   --foo (-f)  controls foonabulation
        # If adding the short option would make the left column too wide,
        # we push the explanation off to the next line
        #   --flimflam (-l)
        #               set the flim-flam level
        # Important parameters:
        #   - 2 spaces before option block start lines
        #   - 2 dashes for each long option name
        #   - min. 2 spaces between option and explanation (gutter)
        #   - 5 characters (incl. space) for short option name

        # Now generate lines of help text.  (If 80 columns were good enough
        # for Jesus, then 78 columns are good enough for me!)
        line_width = 78
        text_width = line_width - opt_width
        big_indent = ' ' * opt_width
        if header:
            lines = [header]
        else:
            lines = ['Option summary:']

        for option in self.option_table:
            long, short, help = option[:3]
            text = wrap_text(help, text_width)
            if long[-1] == '=':
                long = long[0:-1]

            # Case 1: no short option at all (makes life easy)
            if short is None:
                if text:
                    lines.append("  --%-*s  %s" % (max_opt, long, text[0]))
                else:
                    lines.append("  --%-*s  " % (max_opt, long))

            # Case 2: we have a short option, so we have to include it
            # just after the long option
            else:
                opt_names = "%s (-%s)" % (long, short)
                if text:
                    lines.append("  --%-*s  %s" %
                                 (max_opt, opt_names, text[0]))
                else:
                    lines.append("  --%-*s" % opt_names)

            for l in text[1:]:
                lines.append(big_indent + l)
        return lines

    def print_help(self, header=None, file=None):
        if file is None:
            file = sys.stdout
        for line in self.generate_help(header):
            file.write(line + "\n")


def fancy_getopt(options, negative_opt, object, args):
    parser = FancyGetopt(options)
    parser.set_negative_aliases(negative_opt)
    return parser.getopt(args, object)


WS_TRANS = {ord(_wschar) : ' ' for _wschar in string.whitespace}

def wrap_text(text, width):
    """wrap_text(text : string, width : int) -> [string]

    Split 'text' into multiple lines of no more than 'width' characters
    each, and return the list of strings that results.
    """
    if text is None:
        return []
    if len(text) <= width:
        return [text]

    text = text.expandtabs()
    text = text.translate(WS_TRANS)
    chunks = re.split(r'( +|-+)', text)
    chunks = [ch for ch in chunks if ch] # ' - ' results in empty strings
    lines = []

    while chunks:
        cur_line = []                   # list of chunks (to-be-joined)
        cur_len = 0                     # length of current line

        while chunks:
            l = len(chunks[0])
            if cur_len + l <= width:    # can squeeze (at least) this chunk in
                cur_line.append(chunks[0])
                del chunks[0]
                cur_len = cur_len + l
            else:                       # this line is full
                # drop last chunk if all space
                if cur_line and cur_line[-1][0] == ' ':
                    del cur_line[-1]
                break

        if chunks:                      # any chunks left to process?
            # if the current line is still empty, then we had a single
            # chunk that's too big too fit on a line -- so we break
            # down and break it up at the line width
            if cur_len == 0:
                cur_line.append(chunks[0][0:width])
                chunks[0] = chunks[0][width:]

            # all-whitespace chunks at the end of a line can be discarded
            # (and we know from the re.split above that if a chunk has
            # *any* whitespace, it is *all* whitespace)
            if chunks[0][0] == ' ':
                del chunks[0]

        # and store this line in the list-of-all-lines -- as a single
        # string, of course!
        lines.append(''.join(cur_line))

    return lines


def translate_longopt(opt):
    """Convert a long option name to a valid Python identifier by
    changing "-" to "_".
    """
    return opt.translate(longopt_xlate)


class OptionDummy:
    """Dummy class just used as a place to hold command-line option
    values as instance attributes."""

    def __init__(self, options=[]):
        """Create a new OptionDummy instance.  The attributes listed in
        'options' will be initialized to None."""
        for opt in options:
            setattr(self, opt, None)


if __name__ == "__main__":
    text = """\
Tra-la-la, supercalifragilisticexpialidocious.
How *do* you spell that odd word, anyways?
(Someone ask Mary -- she'll know [or she'll
say, "How should I know?"].)"""

    for w in (10, 20, 30, 40):
        print("width: %d" % w)
        print("\n".join(wrap_text(text, w)))
        print()
PK       ! 
4  4    distutils/spawn.pynu [        """distutils.spawn

Provides the 'spawn()' function, a front-end to various platform-
specific functions for launching another program in a sub-process.
Also provides the 'find_executable()' to search the path for a given
executable name.
"""

import sys
import os
import subprocess

from distutils.errors import DistutilsPlatformError, DistutilsExecError
from distutils.debug import DEBUG
from distutils import log


if sys.platform == 'darwin':
    _cfg_target = None
    _cfg_target_split = None


def spawn(cmd, search_path=1, verbose=0, dry_run=0):
    """Run another program, specified as a command list 'cmd', in a new process.

    'cmd' is just the argument list for the new process, ie.
    cmd[0] is the program to run and cmd[1:] are the rest of its arguments.
    There is no way to run a program with a name different from that of its
    executable.

    If 'search_path' is true (the default), the system's executable
    search path will be used to find the program; otherwise, cmd[0]
    must be the exact path to the executable.  If 'dry_run' is true,
    the command will not actually be run.

    Raise DistutilsExecError if running the program fails in any way; just
    return on success.
    """
    # cmd is documented as a list, but just in case some code passes a tuple
    # in, protect our %-formatting code against horrible death
    cmd = list(cmd)

    log.info(' '.join(cmd))
    if dry_run:
        return

    if search_path:
        executable = find_executable(cmd[0])
        if executable is not None:
            cmd[0] = executable

    env = None
    if sys.platform == 'darwin':
        global _cfg_target, _cfg_target_split
        if _cfg_target is None:
            from distutils import sysconfig
            _cfg_target = sysconfig.get_config_var(
                                  'MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET') or ''
            if _cfg_target:
                _cfg_target_split = [int(x) for x in _cfg_target.split('.')]
        if _cfg_target:
            # Ensure that the deployment target of the build process is not
            # less than 10.3 if the interpreter was built for 10.3 or later.
            # This ensures extension modules are built with correct
            # compatibility values, specifically LDSHARED which can use
            # '-undefined dynamic_lookup' which only works on >= 10.3.
            cur_target = os.environ.get('MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET', _cfg_target)
            cur_target_split = [int(x) for x in cur_target.split('.')]
            if _cfg_target_split[:2] >= [10, 3] and cur_target_split[:2] < [10, 3]:
                my_msg = ('$MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET mismatch: '
                          'now "%s" but "%s" during configure;'
                          'must use 10.3 or later'
                                % (cur_target, _cfg_target))
                raise DistutilsPlatformError(my_msg)
            env = dict(os.environ,
                       MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET=cur_target)

    try:
        proc = subprocess.Popen(cmd, env=env)
        proc.wait()
        exitcode = proc.returncode
    except OSError as exc:
        if not DEBUG:
            cmd = cmd[0]
        raise DistutilsExecError(
            "command %r failed: %s" % (cmd, exc.args[-1])) from exc

    if exitcode:
        if not DEBUG:
            cmd = cmd[0]
        raise DistutilsExecError(
              "command %r failed with exit code %s" % (cmd, exitcode))


def find_executable(executable, path=None):
    """Tries to find 'executable' in the directories listed in 'path'.

    A string listing directories separated by 'os.pathsep'; defaults to
    os.environ['PATH'].  Returns the complete filename or None if not found.
    """
    _, ext = os.path.splitext(executable)
    if (sys.platform == 'win32') and (ext != '.exe'):
        executable = executable + '.exe'

    if os.path.isfile(executable):
        return executable

    if path is None:
        path = os.environ.get('PATH', None)
        if path is None:
            try:
                path = os.confstr("CS_PATH")
            except (AttributeError, ValueError):
                # os.confstr() or CS_PATH is not available
                path = os.defpath
        # bpo-35755: Don't use os.defpath if the PATH environment variable is
        # set to an empty string

    # PATH='' doesn't match, whereas PATH=':' looks in the current directory
    if not path:
        return None

    paths = path.split(os.pathsep)
    for p in paths:
        f = os.path.join(p, executable)
        if os.path.isfile(f):
            # the file exists, we have a shot at spawn working
            return f
    return None
PK       ! 5X|<  <    distutils/unixccompiler.pynu [        """distutils.unixccompiler

Contains the UnixCCompiler class, a subclass of CCompiler that handles
the "typical" Unix-style command-line C compiler:
  * macros defined with -Dname[=value]
  * macros undefined with -Uname
  * include search directories specified with -Idir
  * libraries specified with -lllib
  * library search directories specified with -Ldir
  * compile handled by 'cc' (or similar) executable with -c option:
    compiles .c to .o
  * link static library handled by 'ar' command (possibly with 'ranlib')
  * link shared library handled by 'cc -shared'
"""

import os, sys, re

from distutils import sysconfig
from distutils.dep_util import newer
from distutils.ccompiler import \
     CCompiler, gen_preprocess_options, gen_lib_options
from distutils.errors import \
     DistutilsExecError, CompileError, LibError, LinkError
from distutils import log

if sys.platform == 'darwin':
    import _osx_support

# XXX Things not currently handled:
#   * optimization/debug/warning flags; we just use whatever's in Python's
#     Makefile and live with it.  Is this adequate?  If not, we might
#     have to have a bunch of subclasses GNUCCompiler, SGICCompiler,
#     SunCCompiler, and I suspect down that road lies madness.
#   * even if we don't know a warning flag from an optimization flag,
#     we need some way for outsiders to feed preprocessor/compiler/linker
#     flags in to us -- eg. a sysadmin might want to mandate certain flags
#     via a site config file, or a user might want to set something for
#     compiling this module distribution only via the setup.py command
#     line, whatever.  As long as these options come from something on the
#     current system, they can be as system-dependent as they like, and we
#     should just happily stuff them into the preprocessor/compiler/linker
#     options and carry on.


class UnixCCompiler(CCompiler):

    compiler_type = 'unix'

    # These are used by CCompiler in two places: the constructor sets
    # instance attributes 'preprocessor', 'compiler', etc. from them, and
    # 'set_executable()' allows any of these to be set.  The defaults here
    # are pretty generic; they will probably have to be set by an outsider
    # (eg. using information discovered by the sysconfig about building
    # Python extensions).
    executables = {'preprocessor' : None,
                   'compiler'     : ["cc"],
                   'compiler_so'  : ["cc"],
                   'compiler_cxx' : ["cc"],
                   'linker_so'    : ["cc", "-shared"],
                   'linker_exe'   : ["cc"],
                   'archiver'     : ["ar", "-cr"],
                   'ranlib'       : None,
                  }

    if sys.platform[:6] == "darwin":
        executables['ranlib'] = ["ranlib"]

    # Needed for the filename generation methods provided by the base
    # class, CCompiler.  NB. whoever instantiates/uses a particular
    # UnixCCompiler instance should set 'shared_lib_ext' -- we set a
    # reasonable common default here, but it's not necessarily used on all
    # Unices!

    src_extensions = [".c",".C",".cc",".cxx",".cpp",".m"]
    obj_extension = ".o"
    static_lib_extension = ".a"
    shared_lib_extension = ".so"
    dylib_lib_extension = ".dylib"
    xcode_stub_lib_extension = ".tbd"
    static_lib_format = shared_lib_format = dylib_lib_format = "lib%s%s"
    xcode_stub_lib_format = dylib_lib_format
    if sys.platform == "cygwin":
        exe_extension = ".exe"

    def preprocess(self, source, output_file=None, macros=None,
                   include_dirs=None, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None):
        fixed_args = self._fix_compile_args(None, macros, include_dirs)
        ignore, macros, include_dirs = fixed_args
        pp_opts = gen_preprocess_options(macros, include_dirs)
        pp_args = self.preprocessor + pp_opts
        if output_file:
            pp_args.extend(['-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 we're
        # generating output to stdout, or there's a target output file and
        # 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:
                raise CompileError(msg)

    def _compile(self, obj, src, ext, cc_args, extra_postargs, pp_opts):
        compiler_so = self.compiler_so
        if sys.platform == 'darwin':
            compiler_so = _osx_support.compiler_fixup(compiler_so,
                                                    cc_args + extra_postargs)
        try:
            self.spawn(compiler_so + cc_args + [src, '-o', obj] +
                       extra_postargs)
        except DistutilsExecError as msg:
            raise CompileError(msg)

    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):
            self.mkpath(os.path.dirname(output_filename))
            self.spawn(self.archiver +
                       [output_filename] +
                       objects + self.objects)

            # Not many Unices required ranlib anymore -- SunOS 4.x is, I
            # think the only major Unix that does.  Maybe we need some
            # platform intelligence here to skip ranlib if it's not
            # needed -- or maybe Python's configure script took care of
            # it for us, hence the check for leading colon.
            if self.ranlib:
                try:
                    self.spawn(self.ranlib + [output_filename])
                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):
        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

        # filter out standard library paths, which are not explicitely needed
        # for linking
        system_libdirs = ['/lib', '/lib64', '/usr/lib', '/usr/lib64']
        multiarch = sysconfig.get_config_var("MULTIARCH")
        if multiarch:
            system_libdirs.extend(['/lib/%s' % multiarch, '/usr/lib/%s' % multiarch])
        library_dirs = [dir for dir in library_dirs
                        if not dir in system_libdirs]
        runtime_library_dirs = [dir for dir in runtime_library_dirs
                                if not dir in system_libdirs]

        lib_opts = gen_lib_options(self, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs,
                                   libraries)
        if not isinstance(output_dir, (str, type(None))):
            raise TypeError("'output_dir' must be a string or None")
        if output_dir is not None:
            output_filename = os.path.join(output_dir, output_filename)

        if self._need_link(objects, output_filename):
            ld_args = (objects + self.objects +
                       lib_opts + ['-o', output_filename])
            if debug:
                ld_args[:0] = ['-g']
            if extra_preargs:
                ld_args[:0] = extra_preargs
            if extra_postargs:
                ld_args.extend(extra_postargs)
            self.mkpath(os.path.dirname(output_filename))
            try:
                if target_desc == CCompiler.EXECUTABLE:
                    linker = self.linker_exe[:]
                else:
                    linker = self.linker_so[:]
                if target_lang == "c++" and self.compiler_cxx:
                    # skip over environment variable settings if /usr/bin/env
                    # is used to set up the linker's environment.
                    # This is needed on OSX. Note: this assumes that the
                    # normal and C++ compiler have the same environment
                    # settings.
                    i = 0
                    if os.path.basename(linker[0]) == "env":
                        i = 1
                        while '=' in linker[i]:
                            i += 1

                    if os.path.basename(linker[i]) == 'ld_so_aix':
                        # AIX platforms prefix the compiler with the ld_so_aix
                        # script, so we need to adjust our linker index
                        offset = 1
                    else:
                        offset = 0

                    linker[i+offset] = self.compiler_cxx[i]

                if sys.platform == 'darwin':
                    linker = _osx_support.compiler_fixup(linker, ld_args)

                self.spawn(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 "-L" + dir

    def _is_gcc(self, compiler_name):
        # clang uses same syntax for rpath as gcc
        return any(name in compiler_name for name in ("gcc", "g++", "clang"))

    def runtime_library_dir_option(self, dir):
        # XXX Hackish, at the very least.  See Python bug #445902:
        # http://sourceforge.net/tracker/index.php
        #   ?func=detail&aid=445902&group_id=5470&atid=105470
        # Linkers on different platforms need different options to
        # specify that directories need to be added to the list of
        # directories searched for dependencies when a dynamic library
        # is sought.  GCC on GNU systems (Linux, FreeBSD, ...) has to
        # be told to pass the -R option through to the linker, whereas
        # other compilers and gcc on other systems just know this.
        # Other compilers may need something slightly different.  At
        # this time, there's no way to determine this information from
        # the configuration data stored in the Python installation, so
        # we use this hack.
        compiler = os.path.basename(sysconfig.get_config_var("CC"))
        if sys.platform[:6] == "darwin":
            # MacOSX's linker doesn't understand the -R flag at all
            return "-L" + dir
        elif sys.platform[:7] == "freebsd":
            return "-Wl,-rpath=" + dir
        elif sys.platform[:5] == "hp-ux":
            if self._is_gcc(compiler):
                return ["-Wl,+s", "-L" + dir]
            return ["+s", "-L" + dir]
        else:
            if self._is_gcc(compiler):
                # gcc on non-GNU systems does not need -Wl, but can
                # use it anyway.  Since distutils has always passed in
                # -Wl whenever gcc was used in the past it is probably
                # safest to keep doing so.
                if sysconfig.get_config_var("GNULD") == "yes":
                    # GNU ld needs an extra option to get a RUNPATH
                    # instead of just an RPATH.
                    return "-Wl,--enable-new-dtags,-R" + dir
                else:
                    return "-Wl,-R" + dir
            else:
                # No idea how --enable-new-dtags would be passed on to
                # ld if this system was using GNU ld.  Don't know if a
                # system like this even exists.
                return "-R" + dir

    def library_option(self, lib):
        return "-l" + lib

    def find_library_file(self, dirs, lib, debug=0):
        shared_f = self.library_filename(lib, lib_type='shared')
        dylib_f = self.library_filename(lib, lib_type='dylib')
        xcode_stub_f = self.library_filename(lib, lib_type='xcode_stub')
        static_f = self.library_filename(lib, lib_type='static')

        if sys.platform == 'darwin':
            # On OSX users can specify an alternate SDK using
            # '-isysroot', calculate the SDK root if it is specified
            # (and use it further on)
            #
            # Note that, as of Xcode 7, Apple SDKs may contain textual stub
            # libraries with .tbd extensions rather than the normal .dylib
            # shared libraries installed in /.  The Apple compiler tool
            # chain handles this transparently but it can cause problems
            # for programs that are being built with an SDK and searching
            # for specific libraries.  Callers of find_library_file need to
            # keep in mind that the base filename of the returned SDK library
            # file might have a different extension from that of the library
            # file installed on the running system, for example:
            #   /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/
            #       MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.11.sdk/
            #       usr/lib/libedit.tbd
            # vs
            #   /usr/lib/libedit.dylib
            cflags = sysconfig.get_config_var('CFLAGS')
            m = re.search(r'-isysroot\s*(\S+)', cflags)
            if m is None:
                sysroot = _osx_support._default_sysroot(sysconfig.get_config_var('CC'))
            else:
                sysroot = m.group(1)



        for dir in dirs:
            shared = os.path.join(dir, shared_f)
            dylib = os.path.join(dir, dylib_f)
            static = os.path.join(dir, static_f)
            xcode_stub = os.path.join(dir, xcode_stub_f)

            if sys.platform == 'darwin' and (
                dir.startswith('/System/') or (
                dir.startswith('/usr/') and not dir.startswith('/usr/local/'))):

                shared = os.path.join(sysroot, dir[1:], shared_f)
                dylib = os.path.join(sysroot, dir[1:], dylib_f)
                static = os.path.join(sysroot, dir[1:], static_f)
                xcode_stub = os.path.join(sysroot, dir[1:], xcode_stub_f)

            # We're second-guessing the linker here, with not much hard
            # data to go on: GCC seems to prefer the shared library, so I'm
            # assuming that *all* Unix C compilers do.  And of course I'm
            # ignoring even GCC's "-static" option.  So sue me.
            if os.path.exists(dylib):
                return dylib
            elif os.path.exists(xcode_stub):
                return xcode_stub
            elif os.path.exists(shared):
                return shared
            elif os.path.exists(static):
                return static

        # Oops, didn't find it in *any* of 'dirs'
        return None
PK       ! &d_T:  :    distutils/ccompiler.pynu [        """distutils.ccompiler

Contains CCompiler, an abstract base class that defines the interface
for the Distutils compiler abstraction model."""

import sys, os, re
from distutils.errors import *
from distutils.spawn import spawn
from distutils.file_util import move_file
from distutils.dir_util import mkpath
from distutils.dep_util import newer_group
from distutils.util import split_quoted, execute
from distutils import log

class CCompiler:
    """Abstract base class to define the interface that must be implemented
    by real compiler classes.  Also has some utility methods used by
    several compiler classes.

    The basic idea behind a compiler abstraction class is that each
    instance can be used for all the compile/link steps in building a
    single project.  Thus, attributes common to all of those compile and
    link steps -- include directories, macros to define, libraries to link
    against, etc. -- are attributes of the compiler instance.  To allow for
    variability in how individual files are treated, most of those
    attributes may be varied on a per-compilation or per-link basis.
    """

    # 'compiler_type' is a class attribute that identifies this class.  It
    # keeps code that wants to know what kind of compiler it's dealing with
    # from having to import all possible compiler classes just to do an
    # 'isinstance'.  In concrete CCompiler subclasses, 'compiler_type'
    # should really, really be one of the keys of the 'compiler_class'
    # dictionary (see below -- used by the 'new_compiler()' factory
    # function) -- authors of new compiler interface classes are
    # responsible for updating 'compiler_class'!
    compiler_type = None

    # XXX things not handled by this compiler abstraction model:
    #   * client can't provide additional options for a compiler,
    #     e.g. warning, optimization, debugging flags.  Perhaps this
    #     should be the domain of concrete compiler abstraction classes
    #     (UnixCCompiler, MSVCCompiler, etc.) -- or perhaps the base
    #     class should have methods for the common ones.
    #   * can't completely override the include or library searchg
    #     path, ie. no "cc -I -Idir1 -Idir2" or "cc -L -Ldir1 -Ldir2".
    #     I'm not sure how widely supported this is even by Unix
    #     compilers, much less on other platforms.  And I'm even less
    #     sure how useful it is; maybe for cross-compiling, but
    #     support for that is a ways off.  (And anyways, cross
    #     compilers probably have a dedicated binary with the
    #     right paths compiled in.  I hope.)
    #   * can't do really freaky things with the library list/library
    #     dirs, e.g. "-Ldir1 -lfoo -Ldir2 -lfoo" to link against
    #     different versions of libfoo.a in different locations.  I
    #     think this is useless without the ability to null out the
    #     library search path anyways.


    # Subclasses that rely on the standard filename generation methods
    # implemented below should override these; see the comment near
    # those methods ('object_filenames()' et. al.) for details:
    src_extensions = None               # list of strings
    obj_extension = None                # string
    static_lib_extension = None
    shared_lib_extension = None         # string
    static_lib_format = None            # format string
    shared_lib_format = None            # prob. same as static_lib_format
    exe_extension = None                # string

    # Default language settings. language_map is used to detect a source
    # file or Extension target language, checking source filenames.
    # language_order is used to detect the language precedence, when deciding
    # what language to use when mixing source types. For example, if some
    # extension has two files with ".c" extension, and one with ".cpp", it
    # is still linked as c++.
    language_map = {".c"   : "c",
                    ".cc"  : "c++",
                    ".cpp" : "c++",
                    ".cxx" : "c++",
                    ".m"   : "objc",
                   }
    language_order = ["c++", "objc", "c"]

    def __init__(self, verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0):
        self.dry_run = dry_run
        self.force = force
        self.verbose = verbose

        # 'output_dir': a common output directory for object, library,
        # shared object, and shared library files
        self.output_dir = None

        # 'macros': a list of macro definitions (or undefinitions).  A
        # macro definition is a 2-tuple (name, value), where the value is
        # either a string or None (no explicit value).  A macro
        # undefinition is a 1-tuple (name,).
        self.macros = []

        # 'include_dirs': a list of directories to search for include files
        self.include_dirs = []

        # 'libraries': a list of libraries to include in any link
        # (library names, not filenames: eg. "foo" not "libfoo.a")
        self.libraries = []

        # 'library_dirs': a list of directories to search for libraries
        self.library_dirs = []

        # 'runtime_library_dirs': a list of directories to search for
        # shared libraries/objects at runtime
        self.runtime_library_dirs = []

        # 'objects': a list of object files (or similar, such as explicitly
        # named library files) to include on any link
        self.objects = []

        for key in self.executables.keys():
            self.set_executable(key, self.executables[key])

    def set_executables(self, **kwargs):
        """Define the executables (and options for them) that will be run
        to perform the various stages of compilation.  The exact set of
        executables that may be specified here depends on the compiler
        class (via the 'executables' class attribute), but most will have:
          compiler      the C/C++ compiler
          linker_so     linker used to create shared objects and libraries
          linker_exe    linker used to create binary executables
          archiver      static library creator

        On platforms with a command-line (Unix, DOS/Windows), each of these
        is a string that will be split into executable name and (optional)
        list of arguments.  (Splitting the string is done similarly to how
        Unix shells operate: words are delimited by spaces, but quotes and
        backslashes can override this.  See
        'distutils.util.split_quoted()'.)
        """

        # Note that some CCompiler implementation classes will define class
        # attributes 'cpp', 'cc', etc. with hard-coded executable names;
        # this is appropriate when a compiler class is for exactly one
        # compiler/OS combination (eg. MSVCCompiler).  Other compiler
        # classes (UnixCCompiler, in particular) are driven by information
        # discovered at run-time, since there are many different ways to do
        # basically the same things with Unix C compilers.

        for key in kwargs:
            if key not in self.executables:
                raise ValueError("unknown executable '%s' for class %s" %
                      (key, self.__class__.__name__))
            self.set_executable(key, kwargs[key])

    def set_executable(self, key, value):
        if isinstance(value, str):
            setattr(self, key, split_quoted(value))
        else:
            setattr(self, key, value)

    def _find_macro(self, name):
        i = 0
        for defn in self.macros:
            if defn[0] == name:
                return i
            i += 1
        return None

    def _check_macro_definitions(self, definitions):
        """Ensures that every element of 'definitions' is a valid macro
        definition, ie. either (name,value) 2-tuple or a (name,) tuple.  Do
        nothing if all definitions are OK, raise TypeError otherwise.
        """
        for defn in definitions:
            if not (isinstance(defn, tuple) and
                    (len(defn) in (1, 2) and
                      (isinstance (defn[1], str) or defn[1] is None)) and
                    isinstance (defn[0], str)):
                raise TypeError(("invalid macro definition '%s': " % defn) + \
                      "must be tuple (string,), (string, string), or " + \
                      "(string, None)")


    # -- Bookkeeping methods -------------------------------------------

    def define_macro(self, name, value=None):
        """Define a preprocessor macro for all compilations driven by this
        compiler object.  The optional parameter 'value' should be a
        string; if it is not supplied, then the macro will be defined
        without an explicit value and the exact outcome depends on the
        compiler used (XXX true? does ANSI say anything about this?)
        """
        # Delete from the list of macro definitions/undefinitions if
        # already there (so that this one will take precedence).
        i = self._find_macro (name)
        if i is not None:
            del self.macros[i]

        self.macros.append((name, value))

    def undefine_macro(self, name):
        """Undefine a preprocessor macro for all compilations driven by
        this compiler object.  If the same macro is defined by
        'define_macro()' and undefined by 'undefine_macro()' the last call
        takes precedence (including multiple redefinitions or
        undefinitions).  If the macro is redefined/undefined on a
        per-compilation basis (ie. in the call to 'compile()'), then that
        takes precedence.
        """
        # Delete from the list of macro definitions/undefinitions if
        # already there (so that this one will take precedence).
        i = self._find_macro (name)
        if i is not None:
            del self.macros[i]

        undefn = (name,)
        self.macros.append(undefn)

    def add_include_dir(self, dir):
        """Add 'dir' to the list of directories that will be searched for
        header files.  The compiler is instructed to search directories in
        the order in which they are supplied by successive calls to
        'add_include_dir()'.
        """
        self.include_dirs.append(dir)

    def set_include_dirs(self, dirs):
        """Set the list of directories that will be searched to 'dirs' (a
        list of strings).  Overrides any preceding calls to
        'add_include_dir()'; subsequence calls to 'add_include_dir()' add
        to the list passed to 'set_include_dirs()'.  This does not affect
        any list of standard include directories that the compiler may
        search by default.
        """
        self.include_dirs = dirs[:]

    def add_library(self, libname):
        """Add 'libname' to the list of libraries that will be included in
        all links driven by this compiler object.  Note that 'libname'
        should *not* be the name of a file containing a library, but the
        name of the library itself: the actual filename will be inferred by
        the linker, the compiler, or the compiler class (depending on the
        platform).

        The linker will be instructed to link against libraries in the
        order they were supplied to 'add_library()' and/or
        'set_libraries()'.  It is perfectly valid to duplicate library
        names; the linker will be instructed to link against libraries as
        many times as they are mentioned.
        """
        self.libraries.append(libname)

    def set_libraries(self, libnames):
        """Set the list of libraries to be included in all links driven by
        this compiler object to 'libnames' (a list of strings).  This does
        not affect any standard system libraries that the linker may
        include by default.
        """
        self.libraries = libnames[:]

    def add_library_dir(self, dir):
        """Add 'dir' to the list of directories that will be searched for
        libraries specified to 'add_library()' and 'set_libraries()'.  The
        linker will be instructed to search for libraries in the order they
        are supplied to 'add_library_dir()' and/or 'set_library_dirs()'.
        """
        self.library_dirs.append(dir)

    def set_library_dirs(self, dirs):
        """Set the list of library search directories to 'dirs' (a list of
        strings).  This does not affect any standard library search path
        that the linker may search by default.
        """
        self.library_dirs = dirs[:]

    def add_runtime_library_dir(self, dir):
        """Add 'dir' to the list of directories that will be searched for
        shared libraries at runtime.
        """
        self.runtime_library_dirs.append(dir)

    def set_runtime_library_dirs(self, dirs):
        """Set the list of directories to search for shared libraries at
        runtime to 'dirs' (a list of strings).  This does not affect any
        standard search path that the runtime linker may search by
        default.
        """
        self.runtime_library_dirs = dirs[:]

    def add_link_object(self, object):
        """Add 'object' to the list of object files (or analogues, such as
        explicitly named library files or the output of "resource
        compilers") to be included in every link driven by this compiler
        object.
        """
        self.objects.append(object)

    def set_link_objects(self, objects):
        """Set the list of object files (or analogues) to be included in
        every link to 'objects'.  This does not affect any standard object
        files that the linker may include by default (such as system
        libraries).
        """
        self.objects = objects[:]


    # -- Private utility methods --------------------------------------
    # (here for the convenience of subclasses)

    # Helper method to prep compiler in subclass compile() methods

    def _setup_compile(self, outdir, macros, incdirs, sources, depends,
                       extra):
        """Process arguments and decide which source files to compile."""
        if outdir is None:
            outdir = self.output_dir
        elif not isinstance(outdir, str):
            raise TypeError("'output_dir' must be a string or None")

        if macros is None:
            macros = self.macros
        elif isinstance(macros, list):
            macros = macros + (self.macros or [])
        else:
            raise TypeError("'macros' (if supplied) must be a list of tuples")

        if incdirs is None:
            incdirs = self.include_dirs
        elif isinstance(incdirs, (list, tuple)):
            incdirs = list(incdirs) + (self.include_dirs or [])
        else:
            raise TypeError(
                  "'include_dirs' (if supplied) must be a list of strings")

        if extra is None:
            extra = []

        # Get the list of expected output (object) files
        objects = self.object_filenames(sources, strip_dir=0,
                                        output_dir=outdir)
        assert len(objects) == len(sources)

        pp_opts = gen_preprocess_options(macros, incdirs)

        build = {}
        for i in range(len(sources)):
            src = sources[i]
            obj = objects[i]
            ext = os.path.splitext(src)[1]
            self.mkpath(os.path.dirname(obj))
            build[obj] = (src, ext)

        return macros, objects, extra, pp_opts, build

    def _get_cc_args(self, pp_opts, debug, before):
        # works for unixccompiler, cygwinccompiler
        cc_args = pp_opts + ['-c']
        if debug:
            cc_args[:0] = ['-g']
        if before:
            cc_args[:0] = before
        return cc_args

    def _fix_compile_args(self, output_dir, macros, include_dirs):
        """Typecheck and fix-up some of the arguments to the 'compile()'
        method, and return fixed-up values.  Specifically: if 'output_dir'
        is None, replaces it with 'self.output_dir'; ensures that 'macros'
        is a list, and augments it with 'self.macros'; ensures that
        'include_dirs' is a list, and augments it with 'self.include_dirs'.
        Guarantees that the returned values are of the correct type,
        i.e. for 'output_dir' either string or None, and for 'macros' and
        'include_dirs' either list or None.
        """
        if output_dir is None:
            output_dir = self.output_dir
        elif not isinstance(output_dir, str):
            raise TypeError("'output_dir' must be a string or None")

        if macros is None:
            macros = self.macros
        elif isinstance(macros, list):
            macros = macros + (self.macros or [])
        else:
            raise TypeError("'macros' (if supplied) must be a list of tuples")

        if include_dirs is None:
            include_dirs = self.include_dirs
        elif isinstance(include_dirs, (list, tuple)):
            include_dirs = list(include_dirs) + (self.include_dirs or [])
        else:
            raise TypeError(
                  "'include_dirs' (if supplied) must be a list of strings")

        return output_dir, macros, include_dirs

    def _prep_compile(self, sources, output_dir, depends=None):
        """Decide which source files must be recompiled.

        Determine the list of object files corresponding to 'sources',
        and figure out which ones really need to be recompiled.
        Return a list of all object files and a dictionary telling
        which source files can be skipped.
        """
        # Get the list of expected output (object) files
        objects = self.object_filenames(sources, output_dir=output_dir)
        assert len(objects) == len(sources)

        # Return an empty dict for the "which source files can be skipped"
        # return value to preserve API compatibility.
        return objects, {}

    def _fix_object_args(self, objects, output_dir):
        """Typecheck and fix up some arguments supplied to various methods.
        Specifically: ensure that 'objects' is a list; if output_dir is
        None, replace with self.output_dir.  Return fixed versions of
        'objects' and 'output_dir'.
        """
        if not isinstance(objects, (list, tuple)):
            raise TypeError("'objects' must be a list or tuple of strings")
        objects = list(objects)

        if output_dir is None:
            output_dir = self.output_dir
        elif not isinstance(output_dir, str):
            raise TypeError("'output_dir' must be a string or None")

        return (objects, output_dir)

    def _fix_lib_args(self, libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs):
        """Typecheck and fix up some of the arguments supplied to the
        'link_*' methods.  Specifically: ensure that all arguments are
        lists, and augment them with their permanent versions
        (eg. 'self.libraries' augments 'libraries').  Return a tuple with
        fixed versions of all arguments.
        """
        if libraries is None:
            libraries = self.libraries
        elif isinstance(libraries, (list, tuple)):
            libraries = list (libraries) + (self.libraries or [])
        else:
            raise TypeError(
                  "'libraries' (if supplied) must be a list of strings")

        if library_dirs is None:
            library_dirs = self.library_dirs
        elif isinstance(library_dirs, (list, tuple)):
            library_dirs = list (library_dirs) + (self.library_dirs or [])
        else:
            raise TypeError(
                  "'library_dirs' (if supplied) must be a list of strings")

        if runtime_library_dirs is None:
            runtime_library_dirs = self.runtime_library_dirs
        elif isinstance(runtime_library_dirs, (list, tuple)):
            runtime_library_dirs = (list(runtime_library_dirs) +
                                    (self.runtime_library_dirs or []))
        else:
            raise TypeError("'runtime_library_dirs' (if supplied) "
                            "must be a list of strings")

        return (libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs)

    def _need_link(self, objects, output_file):
        """Return true if we need to relink the files listed in 'objects'
        to recreate 'output_file'.
        """
        if self.force:
            return True
        else:
            if self.dry_run:
                newer = newer_group (objects, output_file, missing='newer')
            else:
                newer = newer_group (objects, output_file)
            return newer

    def detect_language(self, sources):
        """Detect the language of a given file, or list of files. Uses
        language_map, and language_order to do the job.
        """
        if not isinstance(sources, list):
            sources = [sources]
        lang = None
        index = len(self.language_order)
        for source in sources:
            base, ext = os.path.splitext(source)
            extlang = self.language_map.get(ext)
            try:
                extindex = self.language_order.index(extlang)
                if extindex < index:
                    lang = extlang
                    index = extindex
            except ValueError:
                pass
        return lang


    # -- Worker methods ------------------------------------------------
    # (must be implemented by subclasses)

    def preprocess(self, source, output_file=None, macros=None,
                   include_dirs=None, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None):
        """Preprocess a single C/C++ source file, named in 'source'.
        Output will be written to file named 'output_file', or stdout if
        'output_file' not supplied.  'macros' is a list of macro
        definitions as for 'compile()', which will augment the macros set
        with 'define_macro()' and 'undefine_macro()'.  'include_dirs' is a
        list of directory names that will be added to the default list.

        Raises PreprocessError on failure.
        """
        pass

    def compile(self, sources, output_dir=None, macros=None,
                include_dirs=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None,
                extra_postargs=None, depends=None):
        """Compile one or more source files.

        'sources' must be a list of filenames, most likely C/C++
        files, but in reality anything that can be handled by a
        particular compiler and compiler class (eg. MSVCCompiler can
        handle resource files in 'sources').  Return a list of object
        filenames, one per source filename in 'sources'.  Depending on
        the implementation, not all source files will necessarily be
        compiled, but all corresponding object filenames will be
        returned.

        If 'output_dir' is given, object files will be put under it, while
        retaining their original path component.  That is, "foo/bar.c"
        normally compiles to "foo/bar.o" (for a Unix implementation); if
        'output_dir' is "build", then it would compile to
        "build/foo/bar.o".

        'macros', if given, must be a list of macro definitions.  A macro
        definition is either a (name, value) 2-tuple or a (name,) 1-tuple.
        The former defines a macro; if the value is None, the macro is
        defined without an explicit value.  The 1-tuple case undefines a
        macro.  Later definitions/redefinitions/ undefinitions take
        precedence.

        'include_dirs', if given, must be a list of strings, the
        directories to add to the default include file search path for this
        compilation only.

        'debug' is a boolean; if true, the compiler will be instructed to
        output debug symbols in (or alongside) the object file(s).

        'extra_preargs' and 'extra_postargs' are implementation- dependent.
        On platforms that have the notion of a command-line (e.g. Unix,
        DOS/Windows), they are most likely lists of strings: extra
        command-line arguments to prepend/append to the compiler command
        line.  On other platforms, consult the implementation class
        documentation.  In any event, they are intended as an escape hatch
        for those occasions when the abstract compiler framework doesn't
        cut the mustard.

        'depends', if given, is a list of filenames that all targets
        depend on.  If a source file is older than any file in
        depends, then the source file will be recompiled.  This
        supports dependency tracking, but only at a coarse
        granularity.

        Raises CompileError on failure.
        """
        # A concrete compiler class can either override this method
        # entirely or implement _compile().
        macros, objects, extra_postargs, pp_opts, build = \
                self._setup_compile(output_dir, macros, include_dirs, sources,
                                    depends, extra_postargs)
        cc_args = self._get_cc_args(pp_opts, debug, extra_preargs)

        for obj in objects:
            try:
                src, ext = build[obj]
            except KeyError:
                continue
            self._compile(obj, src, ext, cc_args, extra_postargs, pp_opts)

        # Return *all* object filenames, not just the ones we just built.
        return objects

    def _compile(self, obj, src, ext, cc_args, extra_postargs, pp_opts):
        """Compile 'src' to product 'obj'."""
        # A concrete compiler class that does not override compile()
        # should implement _compile().
        pass

    def create_static_lib(self, objects, output_libname, output_dir=None,
                          debug=0, target_lang=None):
        """Link a bunch of stuff together to create a static library file.
        The "bunch of stuff" consists of the list of object files supplied
        as 'objects', the extra object files supplied to
        'add_link_object()' and/or 'set_link_objects()', the libraries
        supplied to 'add_library()' and/or 'set_libraries()', and the
        libraries supplied as 'libraries' (if any).

        'output_libname' should be a library name, not a filename; the
        filename will be inferred from the library name.  'output_dir' is
        the directory where the library file will be put.

        'debug' is a boolean; if true, debugging information will be
        included in the library (note that on most platforms, it is the
        compile step where this matters: the 'debug' flag is included here
        just for consistency).

        'target_lang' is the target language for which the given objects
        are being compiled. This allows specific linkage time treatment of
        certain languages.

        Raises LibError on failure.
        """
        pass


    # values for target_desc parameter in link()
    SHARED_OBJECT = "shared_object"
    SHARED_LIBRARY = "shared_library"
    EXECUTABLE = "executable"

    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 a bunch of stuff together to create an executable or
        shared library file.

        The "bunch of stuff" consists of the list of object files supplied
        as 'objects'.  'output_filename' should be a filename.  If
        'output_dir' is supplied, 'output_filename' is relative to it
        (i.e. 'output_filename' can provide directory components if
        needed).

        'libraries' is a list of libraries to link against.  These are
        library names, not filenames, since they're translated into
        filenames in a platform-specific way (eg. "foo" becomes "libfoo.a"
        on Unix and "foo.lib" on DOS/Windows).  However, they can include a
        directory component, which means the linker will look in that
        specific directory rather than searching all the normal locations.

        'library_dirs', if supplied, should be a list of directories to
        search for libraries that were specified as bare library names
        (ie. no directory component).  These are on top of the system
        default and those supplied to 'add_library_dir()' and/or
        'set_library_dirs()'.  'runtime_library_dirs' is a list of
        directories that will be embedded into the shared library and used
        to search for other shared libraries that *it* depends on at
        run-time.  (This may only be relevant on Unix.)

        'export_symbols' is a list of symbols that the shared library will
        export.  (This appears to be relevant only on Windows.)

        'debug' is as for 'compile()' and 'create_static_lib()', with the
        slight distinction that it actually matters on most platforms (as
        opposed to 'create_static_lib()', which includes a 'debug' flag
        mostly for form's sake).

        'extra_preargs' and 'extra_postargs' are as for 'compile()' (except
        of course that they supply command-line arguments for the
        particular linker being used).

        'target_lang' is the target language for which the given objects
        are being compiled. This allows specific linkage time treatment of
        certain languages.

        Raises LinkError on failure.
        """
        raise NotImplementedError


    # Old 'link_*()' methods, rewritten to use the new 'link()' method.

    def link_shared_lib(self,
                        objects,
                        output_libname,
                        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):
        self.link(CCompiler.SHARED_LIBRARY, objects,
                  self.library_filename(output_libname, lib_type='shared'),
                  output_dir,
                  libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs,
                  export_symbols, debug,
                  extra_preargs, extra_postargs, build_temp, target_lang)


    def link_shared_object(self,
                           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):
        self.link(CCompiler.SHARED_OBJECT, objects,
                  output_filename, output_dir,
                  libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs,
                  export_symbols, debug,
                  extra_preargs, extra_postargs, build_temp, target_lang)


    def link_executable(self,
                        objects,
                        output_progname,
                        output_dir=None,
                        libraries=None,
                        library_dirs=None,
                        runtime_library_dirs=None,
                        debug=0,
                        extra_preargs=None,
                        extra_postargs=None,
                        target_lang=None):
        self.link(CCompiler.EXECUTABLE, objects,
                  self.executable_filename(output_progname), output_dir,
                  libraries, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs, None,
                  debug, extra_preargs, extra_postargs, None, target_lang)


    # -- Miscellaneous methods -----------------------------------------
    # These are all used by the 'gen_lib_options() function; there is
    # no appropriate default implementation so subclasses should
    # implement all of these.

    def library_dir_option(self, dir):
        """Return the compiler option to add 'dir' to the list of
        directories searched for libraries.
        """
        raise NotImplementedError

    def runtime_library_dir_option(self, dir):
        """Return the compiler option to add 'dir' to the list of
        directories searched for runtime libraries.
        """
        raise NotImplementedError

    def library_option(self, lib):
        """Return the compiler option to add 'lib' to the list of libraries
        linked into the shared library or executable.
        """
        raise NotImplementedError

    def has_function(self, funcname, includes=None, include_dirs=None,
                     libraries=None, library_dirs=None):
        """Return a boolean indicating whether funcname is supported on
        the current platform.  The optional arguments can be used to
        augment the compilation environment.
        """
        # this can't be included at module scope because it tries to
        # import math which might not be available at that point - maybe
        # the necessary logic should just be inlined?
        import tempfile
        if includes is None:
            includes = []
        if include_dirs is None:
            include_dirs = []
        if libraries is None:
            libraries = []
        if library_dirs is None:
            library_dirs = []
        fd, fname = tempfile.mkstemp(".c", funcname, text=True)
        f = os.fdopen(fd, "w")
        try:
            for incl in includes:
                f.write("""#include "%s"\n""" % incl)
            f.write("""\
int main (int argc, char **argv) {
    %s();
    return 0;
}
""" % funcname)
        finally:
            f.close()
        try:
            objects = self.compile([fname], include_dirs=include_dirs)
        except CompileError:
            return False

        try:
            self.link_executable(objects, "a.out",
                                 libraries=libraries,
                                 library_dirs=library_dirs)
        except (LinkError, TypeError):
            return False
        return True

    def find_library_file (self, dirs, lib, debug=0):
        """Search the specified list of directories for a static or shared
        library file 'lib' and return the full path to that file.  If
        'debug' true, look for a debugging version (if that makes sense on
        the current platform).  Return None if 'lib' wasn't found in any of
        the specified directories.
        """
        raise NotImplementedError

    # -- Filename generation methods -----------------------------------

    # The default implementation of the filename generating methods are
    # prejudiced towards the Unix/DOS/Windows view of the world:
    #   * object files are named by replacing the source file extension
    #     (eg. .c/.cpp -> .o/.obj)
    #   * library files (shared or static) are named by plugging the
    #     library name and extension into a format string, eg.
    #     "lib%s.%s" % (lib_name, ".a") for Unix static libraries
    #   * executables are named by appending an extension (possibly
    #     empty) to the program name: eg. progname + ".exe" for
    #     Windows
    #
    # To reduce redundant code, these methods expect to find
    # several attributes in the current object (presumably defined
    # as class attributes):
    #   * src_extensions -
    #     list of C/C++ source file extensions, eg. ['.c', '.cpp']
    #   * obj_extension -
    #     object file extension, eg. '.o' or '.obj'
    #   * static_lib_extension -
    #     extension for static library files, eg. '.a' or '.lib'
    #   * shared_lib_extension -
    #     extension for shared library/object files, eg. '.so', '.dll'
    #   * static_lib_format -
    #     format string for generating static library filenames,
    #     eg. 'lib%s.%s' or '%s.%s'
    #   * shared_lib_format
    #     format string for generating shared library filenames
    #     (probably same as static_lib_format, since the extension
    #     is one of the intended parameters to the format string)
    #   * exe_extension -
    #     extension for executable files, eg. '' or '.exe'

    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:
            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:
                raise UnknownFileError(
                      "unknown file type '%s' (from '%s')" % (ext, src_name))
            if strip_dir:
                base = os.path.basename(base)
            obj_names.append(os.path.join(output_dir,
                                          base + self.obj_extension))
        return obj_names

    def shared_object_filename(self, basename, strip_dir=0, output_dir=''):
        assert output_dir is not None
        if strip_dir:
            basename = os.path.basename(basename)
        return os.path.join(output_dir, basename + self.shared_lib_extension)

    def executable_filename(self, basename, strip_dir=0, output_dir=''):
        assert output_dir is not None
        if strip_dir:
            basename = os.path.basename(basename)
        return os.path.join(output_dir, basename + (self.exe_extension or ''))

    def library_filename(self, libname, lib_type='static',     # or 'shared'
                         strip_dir=0, output_dir=''):
        assert output_dir is not None
        if lib_type not in ("static", "shared", "dylib", "xcode_stub"):
            raise ValueError(
                  "'lib_type' must be \"static\", \"shared\", \"dylib\", or \"xcode_stub\"")
        fmt = getattr(self, lib_type + "_lib_format")
        ext = getattr(self, lib_type + "_lib_extension")

        dir, base = os.path.split(libname)
        filename = fmt % (base, ext)
        if strip_dir:
            dir = ''

        return os.path.join(output_dir, dir, filename)


    # -- Utility methods -----------------------------------------------

    def announce(self, msg, level=1):
        log.debug(msg)

    def debug_print(self, msg):
        from distutils.debug import DEBUG
        if DEBUG:
            print(msg)

    def warn(self, msg):
        sys.stderr.write("warning: %s\n" % msg)

    def execute(self, func, args, msg=None, level=1):
        execute(func, args, msg, self.dry_run)

    def spawn(self, cmd):
        spawn(cmd, dry_run=self.dry_run)

    def move_file(self, src, dst):
        return move_file(src, dst, dry_run=self.dry_run)

    def mkpath (self, name, mode=0o777):
        mkpath(name, mode, dry_run=self.dry_run)


# Map a sys.platform/os.name ('posix', 'nt') to the default compiler
# type for that platform. Keys are interpreted as re match
# patterns. Order is important; platform mappings are preferred over
# OS names.
_default_compilers = (

    # Platform string mappings

    # on a cygwin built python we can use gcc like an ordinary UNIXish
    # compiler
    ('cygwin.*', 'unix'),

    # OS name mappings
    ('posix', 'unix'),
    ('nt', 'msvc'),

    )

def get_default_compiler(osname=None, platform=None):
    """Determine the default compiler to use for the given platform.

       osname should be one of the standard Python OS names (i.e. the
       ones returned by os.name) and platform the common value
       returned by sys.platform for the platform in question.

       The default values are os.name and sys.platform in case the
       parameters are not given.
    """
    if osname is None:
        osname = os.name
    if platform is None:
        platform = sys.platform
    for pattern, compiler in _default_compilers:
        if re.match(pattern, platform) is not None or \
           re.match(pattern, osname) is not None:
            return compiler
    # Default to Unix compiler
    return 'unix'

# Map compiler types to (module_name, class_name) pairs -- ie. where to
# find the code that implements an interface to this compiler.  (The module
# is assumed to be in the 'distutils' package.)
compiler_class = { 'unix':    ('unixccompiler', 'UnixCCompiler',
                               "standard UNIX-style compiler"),
                   'msvc':    ('_msvccompiler', 'MSVCCompiler',
                               "Microsoft Visual C++"),
                   'cygwin':  ('cygwinccompiler', 'CygwinCCompiler',
                               "Cygwin port of GNU C Compiler for Win32"),
                   'mingw32': ('cygwinccompiler', 'Mingw32CCompiler',
                               "Mingw32 port of GNU C Compiler for Win32"),
                   'bcpp':    ('bcppcompiler', 'BCPPCompiler',
                               "Borland C++ Compiler"),
                 }

def show_compilers():
    """Print list of available compilers (used by the "--help-compiler"
    options to "build", "build_ext", "build_clib").
    """
    # XXX this "knows" that the compiler option it's describing is
    # "--compiler", which just happens to be the case for the three
    # commands that use it.
    from distutils.fancy_getopt import FancyGetopt
    compilers = []
    for compiler in compiler_class.keys():
        compilers.append(("compiler="+compiler, None,
                          compiler_class[compiler][2]))
    compilers.sort()
    pretty_printer = FancyGetopt(compilers)
    pretty_printer.print_help("List of available compilers:")


def new_compiler(plat=None, compiler=None, verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0):
    """Generate an instance of some CCompiler subclass for the supplied
    platform/compiler combination.  'plat' defaults to 'os.name'
    (eg. 'posix', 'nt'), and 'compiler' defaults to the default compiler
    for that platform.  Currently only 'posix' and 'nt' are supported, and
    the default compilers are "traditional Unix interface" (UnixCCompiler
    class) and Visual C++ (MSVCCompiler class).  Note that it's perfectly
    possible to ask for a Unix compiler object under Windows, and a
    Microsoft compiler object under Unix -- if you supply a value for
    'compiler', 'plat' is ignored.
    """
    if plat is None:
        plat = os.name

    try:
        if compiler is None:
            compiler = get_default_compiler(plat)

        (module_name, class_name, long_description) = compiler_class[compiler]
    except KeyError:
        msg = "don't know how to compile C/C++ code on platform '%s'" % plat
        if compiler is not None:
            msg = msg + " with '%s' compiler" % compiler
        raise DistutilsPlatformError(msg)

    try:
        module_name = "distutils." + module_name
        __import__ (module_name)
        module = sys.modules[module_name]
        klass = vars(module)[class_name]
    except ImportError:
        raise DistutilsModuleError(
              "can't compile C/C++ code: unable to load module '%s'" % \
              module_name)
    except KeyError:
        raise DistutilsModuleError(
               "can't compile C/C++ code: unable to find class '%s' "
               "in module '%s'" % (class_name, module_name))

    # XXX The None is necessary to preserve backwards compatibility
    # with classes that expect verbose to be the first positional
    # argument.
    return klass(None, dry_run, force)


def gen_preprocess_options(macros, include_dirs):
    """Generate C pre-processor options (-D, -U, -I) as used by at least
    two types of compilers: the typical Unix compiler and Visual C++.
    'macros' is the usual thing, a list of 1- or 2-tuples, where (name,)
    means undefine (-U) macro 'name', and (name,value) means define (-D)
    macro 'name' to 'value'.  'include_dirs' is just a list of directory
    names to be added to the header file search path (-I).  Returns a list
    of command-line options suitable for either Unix compilers or Visual
    C++.
    """
    # XXX it would be nice (mainly aesthetic, and so we don't generate
    # stupid-looking command lines) to go over 'macros' and eliminate
    # redundant definitions/undefinitions (ie. ensure that only the
    # latest mention of a particular macro winds up on the command
    # line).  I don't think it's essential, though, since most (all?)
    # Unix C compilers only pay attention to the latest -D or -U
    # mention of a macro on their command line.  Similar situation for
    # 'include_dirs'.  I'm punting on both for now.  Anyways, weeding out
    # redundancies like this should probably be the province of
    # CCompiler, since the data structures used are inherited from it
    # and therefore common to all CCompiler classes.
    pp_opts = []
    for macro in macros:
        if not (isinstance(macro, tuple) and 1 <= len(macro) <= 2):
            raise TypeError(
                  "bad macro definition '%s': "
                  "each element of 'macros' list must be a 1- or 2-tuple"
                  % macro)

        if len(macro) == 1:        # undefine this macro
            pp_opts.append("-U%s" % macro[0])
        elif len(macro) == 2:
            if macro[1] is None:    # define with no explicit value
                pp_opts.append("-D%s" % macro[0])
            else:
                # XXX *don't* need to be clever about quoting the
                # macro value here, because we're going to avoid the
                # shell at all costs when we spawn the command!
                pp_opts.append("-D%s=%s" % macro)

    for dir in include_dirs:
        pp_opts.append("-I%s" % dir)
    return pp_opts


def gen_lib_options (compiler, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs, libraries):
    """Generate linker options for searching library directories and
    linking with specific libraries.  'libraries' and 'library_dirs' are,
    respectively, lists of library names (not filenames!) and search
    directories.  Returns a list of command-line options suitable for use
    with some compiler (depending on the two format strings passed in).
    """
    lib_opts = []

    for dir in library_dirs:
        lib_opts.append(compiler.library_dir_option(dir))

    for dir in runtime_library_dirs:
        opt = compiler.runtime_library_dir_option(dir)
        if isinstance(opt, list):
            lib_opts = lib_opts + opt
        else:
            lib_opts.append(opt)

    # XXX it's important that we *not* remove redundant library mentions!
    # sometimes you really do have to say "-lfoo -lbar -lfoo" in order to
    # resolve all symbols.  I just hope we never have to say "-lfoo obj.o
    # -lbar" to get things to work -- that's certainly a possibility, but a
    # pretty nasty way to arrange your C code.

    for lib in libraries:
        (lib_dir, lib_name) = os.path.split(lib)
        if lib_dir:
            lib_file = compiler.find_library_file([lib_dir], lib_name)
            if lib_file:
                lib_opts.append(lib_file)
            else:
                compiler.warn("no library file corresponding to "
                              "'%s' found (skipping)" % lib)
        else:
            lib_opts.append(compiler.library_option (lib))
    return lib_opts
PK       ! 	ɬ        distutils/dir_util.pynu [        """distutils.dir_util

Utility functions for manipulating directories and directory trees."""

import os
import errno
from distutils.errors import DistutilsFileError, DistutilsInternalError
from distutils import log

# cache for by mkpath() -- in addition to cheapening redundant calls,
# eliminates redundant "creating /foo/bar/baz" messages in dry-run mode
_path_created = {}

# I don't use os.makedirs because a) it's new to Python 1.5.2, and
# b) it blows up if the directory already exists (I want to silently
# succeed in that case).
def mkpath(name, mode=0o777, verbose=1, dry_run=0):
    """Create a directory and any missing ancestor directories.

    If the directory already exists (or if 'name' is the empty string, which
    means the current directory, which of course exists), then do nothing.
    Raise DistutilsFileError if unable to create some directory along the way
    (eg. some sub-path exists, but is a file rather than a directory).
    If 'verbose' is true, print a one-line summary of each mkdir to stdout.
    Return the list of directories actually created.
    """

    global _path_created

    # Detect a common bug -- name is None
    if not isinstance(name, str):
        raise DistutilsInternalError(
              "mkpath: 'name' must be a string (got %r)" % (name,))

    # XXX what's the better way to handle verbosity? print as we create
    # each directory in the path (the current behaviour), or only announce
    # the creation of the whole path? (quite easy to do the latter since
    # we're not using a recursive algorithm)

    name = os.path.normpath(name)
    created_dirs = []
    if os.path.isdir(name) or name == '':
        return created_dirs
    if _path_created.get(os.path.abspath(name)):
        return created_dirs

    (head, tail) = os.path.split(name)
    tails = [tail]                      # stack of lone dirs to create

    while head and tail and not os.path.isdir(head):
        (head, tail) = os.path.split(head)
        tails.insert(0, tail)          # push next higher dir onto stack

    # now 'head' contains the deepest directory that already exists
    # (that is, the child of 'head' in 'name' is the highest directory
    # that does *not* exist)
    for d in tails:
        #print "head = %s, d = %s: " % (head, d),
        head = os.path.join(head, d)
        abs_head = os.path.abspath(head)

        if _path_created.get(abs_head):
            continue

        if verbose >= 1:
            log.info("creating %s", head)

        if not dry_run:
            try:
                os.mkdir(head, mode)
            except OSError as exc:
                if not (exc.errno == errno.EEXIST and os.path.isdir(head)):
                    raise DistutilsFileError(
                          "could not create '%s': %s" % (head, exc.args[-1]))
            created_dirs.append(head)

        _path_created[abs_head] = 1
    return created_dirs

def create_tree(base_dir, files, mode=0o777, verbose=1, dry_run=0):
    """Create all the empty directories under 'base_dir' needed to put 'files'
    there.

    'base_dir' is just the name of a directory which doesn't necessarily
    exist yet; 'files' is a list of filenames to be interpreted relative to
    'base_dir'.  'base_dir' + the directory portion of every file in 'files'
    will be created if it doesn't already exist.  'mode', 'verbose' and
    'dry_run' flags are as for 'mkpath()'.
    """
    # First get the list of directories to create
    need_dir = set()
    for file in files:
        need_dir.add(os.path.join(base_dir, os.path.dirname(file)))

    # Now create them
    for dir in sorted(need_dir):
        mkpath(dir, mode, verbose=verbose, dry_run=dry_run)

import sysconfig
_multiarch = None

def copy_tree(src, dst, preserve_mode=1, preserve_times=1,
              preserve_symlinks=0, update=0, verbose=1, dry_run=0):
    """Copy an entire directory tree 'src' to a new location 'dst'.

    Both 'src' and 'dst' must be directory names.  If 'src' is not a
    directory, raise DistutilsFileError.  If 'dst' does not exist, it is
    created with 'mkpath()'.  The end result of the copy is that every
    file in 'src' is copied to 'dst', and directories under 'src' are
    recursively copied to 'dst'.  Return the list of files that were
    copied or might have been copied, using their output name.  The
    return value is unaffected by 'update' or 'dry_run': it is simply
    the list of all files under 'src', with the names changed to be
    under 'dst'.

    'preserve_mode' and 'preserve_times' are the same as for
    'copy_file'; note that they only apply to regular files, not to
    directories.  If 'preserve_symlinks' is true, symlinks will be
    copied as symlinks (on platforms that support them!); otherwise
    (the default), the destination of the symlink will be copied.
    'update' and 'verbose' are the same as for 'copy_file'.
    """
    from distutils.file_util import copy_file

    if not dry_run and not os.path.isdir(src):
        raise DistutilsFileError(
              "cannot copy tree '%s': not a directory" % src)
    try:
        names = os.listdir(src)
    except OSError as e:
        if dry_run:
            names = []
        else:
            raise DistutilsFileError(
                  "error listing files in '%s': %s" % (src, e.strerror))

    ext_suffix = sysconfig.get_config_var ('EXT_SUFFIX')
    _multiarch = sysconfig.get_config_var ('MULTIARCH')
    if ext_suffix.endswith(_multiarch + ext_suffix[-3:]):
        new_suffix = None
    else:
        new_suffix = "%s-%s%s" % (ext_suffix[:-3], _multiarch, ext_suffix[-3:])

    if not dry_run:
        mkpath(dst, verbose=verbose)

    outputs = []

    for n in names:
        src_name = os.path.join(src, n)
        dst_name = os.path.join(dst, n)
        if new_suffix and _multiarch and n.endswith(ext_suffix) and not n.endswith(new_suffix):
            dst_name = os.path.join(dst, n.replace(ext_suffix, new_suffix))
            log.info("renaming extension %s -> %s", n, n.replace(ext_suffix, new_suffix))

        if n.startswith('.nfs'):
            # skip NFS rename files
            continue

        if preserve_symlinks and os.path.islink(src_name):
            link_dest = os.readlink(src_name)
            if verbose >= 1:
                log.info("linking %s -> %s", dst_name, link_dest)
            if not dry_run:
                os.symlink(link_dest, dst_name)
            outputs.append(dst_name)

        elif os.path.isdir(src_name):
            outputs.extend(
                copy_tree(src_name, dst_name, preserve_mode,
                          preserve_times, preserve_symlinks, update,
                          verbose=verbose, dry_run=dry_run))
        else:
            copy_file(src_name, dst_name, preserve_mode,
                      preserve_times, update, verbose=verbose,
                      dry_run=dry_run)
            outputs.append(dst_name)

    return outputs

def _build_cmdtuple(path, cmdtuples):
    """Helper for remove_tree()."""
    for f in os.listdir(path):
        real_f = os.path.join(path,f)
        if os.path.isdir(real_f) and not os.path.islink(real_f):
            _build_cmdtuple(real_f, cmdtuples)
        else:
            cmdtuples.append((os.remove, real_f))
    cmdtuples.append((os.rmdir, path))

def remove_tree(directory, verbose=1, dry_run=0):
    """Recursively remove an entire directory tree.

    Any errors are ignored (apart from being reported to stdout if 'verbose'
    is true).
    """
    global _path_created

    if verbose >= 1:
        log.info("removing '%s' (and everything under it)", directory)
    if dry_run:
        return
    cmdtuples = []
    _build_cmdtuple(directory, cmdtuples)
    for cmd in cmdtuples:
        try:
            cmd[0](cmd[1])
            # remove dir from cache if it's already there
            abspath = os.path.abspath(cmd[1])
            if abspath in _path_created:
                del _path_created[abspath]
        except OSError as exc:
            log.warn("error removing %s: %s", directory, exc)

def ensure_relative(path):
    """Take the full path 'path', and make it a relative path.

    This is useful to make 'path' the second argument to os.path.join().
    """
    drive, path = os.path.splitdrive(path)
    if path[0:1] == os.sep:
        path = drive + path[1:]
    return path
PK       ! Zcm  m  1  lib-dynload/_gdbm.cpython-311-x86_64-linux-gnu.sonu [        ELF          >            @       hf          @ 8  @                                                                                                            @       @       @                               ]      m      m      `      h                   ]      m      m                                                                                                $       $              Std                                            Ptd   P      P      P                           Qtd                                                  Rtd   ]      m      m      @      @                      GNU                      GNU G~iƨM`2z       =               =       ;                                                                      }                                                                      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                                        F   "                   >                                                                   8              __gmon_start__ _ITM_deregisterTMCloneTable _ITM_registerTMCloneTable __cxa_finalize PyModule_GetState PyType_GetModuleState __errno_location gdbm_count PyErr_SetString PyErr_SetFromErrno PyExc_OverflowError gdbm_errno_location gdbm_strerror __stack_chk_fail gdbm_exists PyUnicode_AsUTF8AndSize PyExc_TypeError PyErr_Format _PyArg_ParseStackAndKeywords_SizeT gdbm_nextkey PyBytes_FromStringAndSize free _Py_NoneStruct _PyArg_Parse_SizeT gdbm_store gdbm_delete PyExc_KeyError PyErr_SetObject gdbm_sync gdbm_reorganize gdbm_firstkey gdbm_close PyObject_GC_UnTrack _Py_Dealloc gdbm_fetch _PyArg_CheckPositional PyErr_ExceptionMatches PyErr_Clear PyList_New PyList_Append _PyErr_BadInternalCall strlen _PyLong_AsInt PyOS_snprintf PyUnicode_FSConverter _PyObject_GC_New PyObject_GC_Track gdbm_open PyExc_ValueError _PyArg_BadArgument PyErr_Occurred PyErr_SetFromErrnoWithFilename PyType_FromModuleAndSpec PyExc_OSError PyErr_NewException PyModule_AddType PyModule_AddStringConstant _Py_BuildValue_SizeT PyModule_AddObject PyInit__gdbm PyModuleDef_Init libgdbm.so.6 libc.so.6 GLIBC_2.4 GLIBC_2.2.5                                                                  $         ii   .     ui	   8      m             0'      m             &      m             @      q             q      q             A      q             m      Hr             B      Pr             N      `r             r      hr             r      pr             p'      xr             P/      r             P2      r             7      r             A      r             @4      r              D       s             B      s              s      (s              /      8s             @'      Hs             s      Xs             (      hs             '      xs             /      s             0+      s             B      s             B      s             .      s             M      s             B      s             2      s             `M       t             "B      t             -      t             @L       t             A      (t             )      8t              K      @t             +B      Ht              -      Xt             I      `t             6B      ht             ,      xt             H      t             VA      t             1      t             `N      t             KA      t             0      t             M      t             ;B      t             `'      t             EB      t             .      o                    o                    o                    o         !           o         "           o         #           o         %           o         )           o         7           o         9           p                     p                    (p                    0p                    8p                    @p                    Hp                    Pp         	           Xp         
           `p                    hp                    pp                    xp                    p                    p                    p                    p                    p                    p                    p                    p                    p                    p                    p                    p                    p                    p                    p                    p                      q         $           q         &           q         '           q         (            q         *           (q         +           0q         ,           8q         -           @q         .           Hq         /           Pq         0           Xq         1           `q         2           hq         3           pq         4           xq         5           q         6           q         8           q         :           q         ;           q         <                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           HHO  HtH     5O  %O   h    h   h   h   h   h   h   h   qh   ah	   Qh
   Ah   1h   !h   h   h   h   h   h   h   h   h   h   h   qh   ah   Qh   Ah   1h   !h   h   h   h    h!   h"   h#   h$   h%   h&   h'   qh(   ah)   Qh*   Ah+   1h,   !h-   h.   h/   h0   h1   %L  D  %L  D  %L  D  %L  D  %L  D  %L  D  %L  D  %}L  D  %uL  D  %mL  D  %eL  D  %]L  D  %UL  D  %ML  D  %EL  D  %=L  D  %5L  D  %-L  D  %%L  D  %L  D  %L  D  %L  D  %L  D  %K  D  %K  D  %K  D  %K  D  %K  D  %K  D  %K  D  %K  D  %K  D  %K  D  %K  D  %K  D  %K  D  %K  D  %K  D  %K  D  %}K  D  %uK  D  %mK  D  %eK  D  %]K  D  %UK  D  %MK  D  %EK  D  %=K  D  %5K  D  %-K  D  %%K  D  H=N  HN  H9tHI  Ht	        H=iN  H5bN  H)HH?HHHtHI  HtfD      =%N   u+UH=H   HtH=J  9dM  ]     w    HHHHt 1D  HH@ ATIUHSHxHHt	LՅuH;1Ht[LH]A\f[]A\ff.     AUATUSHHHdH%(   HD$1LcHMtWHCHx!HT$dH+%(      H[]A\A]f[HL     Igt(H$Hx<HCHxH5  HAE t-H}IH|HVG  H5F  H889H}HfD  UHSHHHdH%(   HD$1H{Ht}HUH      u,   tAUHu IHT$dH+%(   ufH[]fHH$HHt@H{HmF  HRH5  H81HxH5  둸ff.      AUATE1UHHH'H  SHHLH(dH%(   HD$1LL$LD$tGLd$HLl$DLcMtXLL]HHt5HHcHI?HD$dH+%(   u1H(L[]A\A]ÐL%E  I$fHxH5  f     UHHSHH5b  H(dH%(   HD$1HL$ t,HD$H=GC   HT$dH+%(   uIH([]HtHD  HD$H:UD$    HD  H5  H821f     AVL5  AUATIUHSHH0HdH%(   HD$(1HLLI   H{H   HCHttHt$LH   H{HL$A        LD$HH4$HT$xg1HT$(dH+%(      H0[]A\A]A^D  H4$HT$ryi8tT_8I}H@ 뛋E tI}aI}H5  jHAC  LH8nPSHHu2HHHHCHt;HHC  H H[fHB  H5%  H8ZH1[fHzH5  HD$;HD$@ ATUSHuKIHHMd$HMts6L     HxAL%B  I$L[]A\D  HAB  E1H5  H8L[]A\    t*H}E1@ HxH5=  fD  E18H}He{ATUHHu`HHuLeMttLTHHt$HHcHI6HL]A\ L%A  I$HL]A\ÐHYA  H5  E1H8HL]A\@ HxH5m  fD  SHHHtH+A  HC    H [D  SHHHtH@  HC    H [D  ATUHH]H}HtLeHA$@  I,$t	H]A\ÐHL]A\S&HxHHtH@    H/t,H;HtH    H/t1[ [1[    Kf     AUIATIUH0HdH%(   HD$(1HL$HT$LHH5  1   HD$H=aMd$D$MtsHt$HT$L!HHtqHHcHI#HD$(dH+%(   ubH0L]A\A]fD  Hi?  H5y  H8E1D  H}H5e  fD  H?  LE1H8C|ff.     HBAVAUATIUHSHHw1Lm H~WLLLuHtZ[]A\A]A^f.           HH=  u[1]A\A]A^     LLL5>  NHuHZ>  H8:tLLLx[L]LA\A]A^ff.     HBATIUHSHHw%Hu H~CLH]HtF[]A\D        HH=R  'u[1]A\@ LH=  HuH=  H8utHH S&HxHHtH@    H/t,H;HtH    H/t[D  [Zf.     Kf     AWAVAUATUSHH5  IHM   INH9   MnM'  1`IH   I~[HIĉHuI   f     Eu{H    I~LH!H	LIHӉMtZMHcLjHt5HLHD$LD$AI(uLOEtf.     LIm t1E1HL[]A\A]A^A_@ Y  H=  E1fLE1 H;  H5L  E1H87D  HxH5   ff.      AWAVIAUIATUSHHHdH%(   HD$81HBH  Me H  I}HG     HlHH  HhH;$  H$  I}kAŃw  LHE <n     A   <c   MHE   s   uR  f9  Hl$(   1E1Hi  HkH{HHD$8dH+%(   <  HHL[]A\A]A^A_f     <r  A   <wfH{H5
  E1D  A HHHHt$L/   Hl$L} L&H;E   H;TIHm  H@[L     HE1DD1LID$H  H|$H/AK    A@;          HH=
  E1    Hm u	H!H8  H5
  E1H8gsfA  D  A   D  LA  E1_H    HHU
  H5R
  E1H=?
   H{FE tH{LI,$t"E18GH{HLAE1NfATUHS1H5';  HHHH   H7  1H=	  H0HCHHt|H$xpH9
  H5	  HxV1ɺ      1H=	  IHt4HH5	  Hbx1[]A\I,$uLh     f     H=u9   HH                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   GDBM object has already been closed     gdbm key must be bytes or string, not %.100s    gdbm mappings have bytes or string indices only reorganize() takes no arguments First flag must be one of 'r', 'w', 'c' or 'n' count exceeds PY_SSIZE_T_MAX s# size does not fit in an int sync() takes no arguments firstkey() takes no arguments setdefault get keys() takes no arguments Modules/_gdbmmodule.c open str argument 2 embedded null character Flag '%c' is not supported. _gdbm.error open_flags iii _GDBM_VERSION s#:nextkey _gdbm _gdbm.gdbm close keys firstkey reorganize sync __enter__ __exit__                   rwcnfsu                         This object represents a GDBM database.
GDBM objects behave like mappings (dictionaries), except that keys and
values are always immutable bytes-like objects or strings.  Printing
a GDBM object doesn't print the keys and values, and the items() and
values() methods are not supported.

GDBM objects also support additional operations such as firstkey,
nextkey, reorganize, and sync.  open($module, filename, flags='r', mode=0o666, /)
--

Open a dbm database and return a dbm object.

The filename argument is the name of the database file.

The optional flags argument can be 'r' (to open an existing database
for reading only -- default), 'w' (to open an existing database for
reading and writing), 'c' (which creates the database if it doesn't
exist), or 'n' (which always creates a new empty database).

Some versions of gdbm support additional flags which must be
appended to one of the flags described above.  The module constant
'open_flags' is a string of valid additional flags.  The 'f' flag
opens the database in fast mode; altered data will not automatically
be written to the disk after every change.  This results in faster
writes to the database, but may result in an inconsistent database
if the program crashes while the database is still open.  Use the
sync() method to force any unwritten data to be written to the disk.
The 's' flag causes all database operations to be synchronized to
disk.  The 'u' flag disables locking of the database file.

The optional mode argument is the Unix mode of the file, used only
when the database has to be created.  It defaults to octal 0o666.   sync($self, /)
--

Flush the database to the disk file.

When the database has been opened in fast mode, this method forces
any unwritten data to be written to the disk.                       reorganize($self, /)
--

Reorganize the database.

If you have carried out a lot of deletions and would like to shrink
the space used by the GDBM file, this routine will reorganize the
database.  GDBM will not shorten the length of a database file except
by using this reorganization; otherwise, deleted file space will be
kept and reused as new (key,value) pairs are added.          nextkey($self, key, /)
--

Returns the key that follows key in the traversal.

The following code prints every key in the database db, without having
to create a list in memory that contains them all:

      k = db.firstkey()
      while k is not None:
          print(k)
          k = db.nextkey(k)                     firstkey($self, /)
--

Return the starting key for the traversal.

It's possible to loop over every key in the database using this method
and the nextkey() method.  The traversal is ordered by GDBM's internal
hash values, and won't be sorted by the key values.                            keys($self, /)
--

Get a list of all keys in the database.      close($self, /)
--

Close the database.                         setdefault($self, key, default=None, /)
--

Get value for key, or set it to default and return default if not present.          get($self, key, default=None, /)
--

Get the value for key, or default if not present.          This module provides an interface to the GNU DBM (GDBM) library.

This module is quite similar to the dbm module, but uses GDBM instead to
provide some additional functionality.  Please note that the file formats
created by GDBM and dbm are incompatible.

GDBM objects behave like mappings (dictionaries), except that keys and
values are always immutable bytes-like objects or strings.  Printing
a GDBM object doesn't print the keys and values, and the items() and
values() methods are not supported.    ;      h      8  P  d  x        T  x    h  8,  p    H       4        <                 zR x  $      h0   FJw ?:*3$"       D   p              \   h              t   0             <       4      8E    FDD e
GBDAAB   8      P    FBA A(G@F
(A ABBC (         EDG0[
AAC 8   <      FBD N(MP~
(D ABBB (   x  l    AGN@G
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0A(A BBBF (     |    ED s
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DBE      p+    Ee        +    Ee   0     O    FAG m
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DH
H  0   $     FED DP
 DBBG \   X      JBB D(D0h
(A BBBK^
(C BBBIB(D EBB  4     \    JDD e
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CBE      W    Eu
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O  H         FBB B(A0A8DP
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8D0A(B BBBJ   ,     t    FAD 
ABA        $                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               0'      &      @                                  $                            8             m                           m                    o                                    
       D                            p                                                                        	              o          o           o    ,      o    7                                                                                                                                                                       m                      0       @       P       `       p                                                                !      !       !      0!      @!      P!      `!      p!      !      !      !      !      !      !      !      !       "      "       "      0"      @"      P"      `"      p"      "      "      "      "      "      "      "      "       #      #       #      0#      @#                              q                              A      m                                                                                             B      N             r      r      p'      P/      P2                                     7                      A      @4              D                                      B              A       s      4        /      G       @'      @       s      )       (             '             /             0+      8       B                                      B      .             M      B      2            `M      "B      -            @L      A      )             K      +B       -            I      6B      ,            H      VA      1             `N      KA      0             M      ;B      `'                     EB      .                                                     aa10ea7eb569c6a84ddee1ca60b5198b32e77a.debug    O  .shstrtab .note.gnu.property .note.gnu.build-id .gnu.hash .dynsym .dynstr .gnu.version .gnu.version_r .rela.dyn .rela.plt .init .plt.got .plt.sec .text .fini .rodata .eh_frame_hdr .eh_frame .init_array .fini_array .data.rel.ro .dynamic .got.plt .data .bss .gnu_debuglink                                                                                                                                                      $                              1   o                   $                             ;                                                   C                         D                             K   o       ,      ,      |                            X   o                   0                            g                                                    q      B                                             {                                                           v                             0                                         P#      P#                                                `#      `#                                                &      &      0                                          8      8                                                  @       @                                                 P      P                                                 Q      Q                                                m      ]                                                m      ]                                                m      ]                                                 m      ]                                              o      _      P                                           p       `                                               q      a      `                                            u       e                                                          e      4                                                    Te                                   PK       ! fP`      lib2to3/btm_matcher.pynu [        """A bottom-up tree matching algorithm implementation meant to speed
up 2to3's matching process. After the tree patterns are reduced to
their rarest linear path, a linear Aho-Corasick automaton is
created. The linear automaton traverses the linear paths from the
leaves to the root of the AST and returns a set of nodes for further
matching. This reduces significantly the number of candidate nodes."""

__author__ = "George Boutsioukis <gboutsioukis@gmail.com>"

import logging
import itertools
from collections import defaultdict

from . import pytree
from .btm_utils import reduce_tree

class BMNode(object):
    """Class for a node of the Aho-Corasick automaton used in matching"""
    count = itertools.count()
    def __init__(self):
        self.transition_table = {}
        self.fixers = []
        self.id = next(BMNode.count)
        self.content = ''

class BottomMatcher(object):
    """The main matcher class. After instantiating the patterns should
    be added using the add_fixer method"""

    def __init__(self):
        self.match = set()
        self.root = BMNode()
        self.nodes = [self.root]
        self.fixers = []
        self.logger = logging.getLogger("RefactoringTool")

    def add_fixer(self, fixer):
        """Reduces a fixer's pattern tree to a linear path and adds it
        to the matcher(a common Aho-Corasick automaton). The fixer is
        appended on the matching states and called when they are
        reached"""
        self.fixers.append(fixer)
        tree = reduce_tree(fixer.pattern_tree)
        linear = tree.get_linear_subpattern()
        match_nodes = self.add(linear, start=self.root)
        for match_node in match_nodes:
            match_node.fixers.append(fixer)

    def add(self, pattern, start):
        "Recursively adds a linear pattern to the AC automaton"
        #print("adding pattern", pattern, "to", start)
        if not pattern:
            #print("empty pattern")
            return [start]
        if isinstance(pattern[0], tuple):
            #alternatives
            #print("alternatives")
            match_nodes = []
            for alternative in pattern[0]:
                #add all alternatives, and add the rest of the pattern
                #to each end node
                end_nodes = self.add(alternative, start=start)
                for end in end_nodes:
                    match_nodes.extend(self.add(pattern[1:], end))
            return match_nodes
        else:
            #single token
            #not last
            if pattern[0] not in start.transition_table:
                #transition did not exist, create new
                next_node = BMNode()
                start.transition_table[pattern[0]] = next_node
            else:
                #transition exists already, follow
                next_node = start.transition_table[pattern[0]]

            if pattern[1:]:
                end_nodes = self.add(pattern[1:], start=next_node)
            else:
                end_nodes = [next_node]
            return end_nodes

    def run(self, leaves):
        """The main interface with the bottom matcher. The tree is
        traversed from the bottom using the constructed
        automaton. Nodes are only checked once as the tree is
        retraversed. When the automaton fails, we give it one more
        shot(in case the above tree matches as a whole with the
        rejected leaf), then we break for the next leaf. There is the
        special case of multiple arguments(see code comments) where we
        recheck the nodes

        Args:
           The leaves of the AST tree to be matched

        Returns:
           A dictionary of node matches with fixers as the keys
        """
        current_ac_node = self.root
        results = defaultdict(list)
        for leaf in leaves:
            current_ast_node = leaf
            while current_ast_node:
                current_ast_node.was_checked = True
                for child in current_ast_node.children:
                    # multiple statements, recheck
                    if isinstance(child, pytree.Leaf) and child.value == ";":
                        current_ast_node.was_checked = False
                        break
                if current_ast_node.type == 1:
                    #name
                    node_token = current_ast_node.value
                else:
                    node_token = current_ast_node.type

                if node_token in current_ac_node.transition_table:
                    #token matches
                    current_ac_node = current_ac_node.transition_table[node_token]
                    for fixer in current_ac_node.fixers:
                        results[fixer].append(current_ast_node)
                else:
                    #matching failed, reset automaton
                    current_ac_node = self.root
                    if (current_ast_node.parent is not None
                        and current_ast_node.parent.was_checked):
                        #the rest of the tree upwards has been checked, next leaf
                        break

                    #recheck the rejected node once from the root
                    if node_token in current_ac_node.transition_table:
                        #token matches
                        current_ac_node = current_ac_node.transition_table[node_token]
                        for fixer in current_ac_node.fixers:
                            results[fixer].append(current_ast_node)

                current_ast_node = current_ast_node.parent
        return results

    def print_ac(self):
        "Prints a graphviz diagram of the BM automaton(for debugging)"
        print("digraph g{")
        def print_node(node):
            for subnode_key in node.transition_table.keys():
                subnode = node.transition_table[subnode_key]
                print("%d -> %d [label=%s] //%s" %
                      (node.id, subnode.id, type_repr(subnode_key), str(subnode.fixers)))
                if subnode_key == 1:
                    print(subnode.content)
                print_node(subnode)
        print_node(self.root)
        print("}")

# taken from pytree.py for debugging; only used by print_ac
_type_reprs = {}
def type_repr(type_num):
    global _type_reprs
    if not _type_reprs:
        from .pygram import python_symbols
        # printing tokens is possible but not as useful
        # from .pgen2 import token // token.__dict__.items():
        for name, val in python_symbols.__dict__.items():
            if type(val) == int: _type_reprs[val] = name
    return _type_reprs.setdefault(type_num, type_num)
PK       !       lib2to3/PatternGrammar.txtnu [        # Copyright 2006 Google, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

# A grammar to describe tree matching patterns.
# Not shown here:
# - 'TOKEN' stands for any token (leaf node)
# - 'any' stands for any node (leaf or interior)
# With 'any' we can still specify the sub-structure.

# The start symbol is 'Matcher'.

Matcher: Alternatives ENDMARKER

Alternatives: Alternative ('|' Alternative)*

Alternative: (Unit | NegatedUnit)+

Unit: [NAME '='] ( STRING [Repeater]
                 | NAME [Details] [Repeater]
                 | '(' Alternatives ')' [Repeater]
                 | '[' Alternatives ']'
		 )

NegatedUnit: 'not' (STRING | NAME [Details] | '(' Alternatives ')')

Repeater: '*' | '+' | '{' NUMBER [',' NUMBER] '}'

Details: '<' Alternatives '>'
PK       ! y      lib2to3/patcomp.pynu [        # Copyright 2006 Google, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Pattern compiler.

The grammar is taken from PatternGrammar.txt.

The compiler compiles a pattern to a pytree.*Pattern instance.
"""

__author__ = "Guido van Rossum <guido@python.org>"

# Python imports
import io

# Fairly local imports
from .pgen2 import driver, literals, token, tokenize, parse, grammar

# Really local imports
from . import pytree
from . import pygram


class PatternSyntaxError(Exception):
    pass


def tokenize_wrapper(input):
    """Tokenizes a string suppressing significant whitespace."""
    skip = {token.NEWLINE, token.INDENT, token.DEDENT}
    tokens = tokenize.generate_tokens(io.StringIO(input).readline)
    for quintuple in tokens:
        type, value, start, end, line_text = quintuple
        if type not in skip:
            yield quintuple


class PatternCompiler(object):

    def __init__(self, grammar_file=None):
        """Initializer.

        Takes an optional alternative filename for the pattern grammar.
        """
        if grammar_file is None:
            self.grammar = pygram.pattern_grammar
            self.syms = pygram.pattern_symbols
        else:
            self.grammar = driver.load_grammar(grammar_file)
            self.syms = pygram.Symbols(self.grammar)
        self.pygrammar = pygram.python_grammar
        self.pysyms = pygram.python_symbols
        self.driver = driver.Driver(self.grammar, convert=pattern_convert)

    def compile_pattern(self, input, debug=False, with_tree=False):
        """Compiles a pattern string to a nested pytree.*Pattern object."""
        tokens = tokenize_wrapper(input)
        try:
            root = self.driver.parse_tokens(tokens, debug=debug)
        except parse.ParseError as e:
            raise PatternSyntaxError(str(e)) from None
        if with_tree:
            return self.compile_node(root), root
        else:
            return self.compile_node(root)

    def compile_node(self, node):
        """Compiles a node, recursively.

        This is one big switch on the node type.
        """
        # XXX Optimize certain Wildcard-containing-Wildcard patterns
        # that can be merged
        if node.type == self.syms.Matcher:
            node = node.children[0] # Avoid unneeded recursion

        if node.type == self.syms.Alternatives:
            # Skip the odd children since they are just '|' tokens
            alts = [self.compile_node(ch) for ch in node.children[::2]]
            if len(alts) == 1:
                return alts[0]
            p = pytree.WildcardPattern([[a] for a in alts], min=1, max=1)
            return p.optimize()

        if node.type == self.syms.Alternative:
            units = [self.compile_node(ch) for ch in node.children]
            if len(units) == 1:
                return units[0]
            p = pytree.WildcardPattern([units], min=1, max=1)
            return p.optimize()

        if node.type == self.syms.NegatedUnit:
            pattern = self.compile_basic(node.children[1:])
            p = pytree.NegatedPattern(pattern)
            return p.optimize()

        assert node.type == self.syms.Unit

        name = None
        nodes = node.children
        if len(nodes) >= 3 and nodes[1].type == token.EQUAL:
            name = nodes[0].value
            nodes = nodes[2:]
        repeat = None
        if len(nodes) >= 2 and nodes[-1].type == self.syms.Repeater:
            repeat = nodes[-1]
            nodes = nodes[:-1]

        # Now we've reduced it to: STRING | NAME [Details] | (...) | [...]
        pattern = self.compile_basic(nodes, repeat)

        if repeat is not None:
            assert repeat.type == self.syms.Repeater
            children = repeat.children
            child = children[0]
            if child.type == token.STAR:
                min = 0
                max = pytree.HUGE
            elif child.type == token.PLUS:
                min = 1
                max = pytree.HUGE
            elif child.type == token.LBRACE:
                assert children[-1].type == token.RBRACE
                assert  len(children) in (3, 5)
                min = max = self.get_int(children[1])
                if len(children) == 5:
                    max = self.get_int(children[3])
            else:
                assert False
            if min != 1 or max != 1:
                pattern = pattern.optimize()
                pattern = pytree.WildcardPattern([[pattern]], min=min, max=max)

        if name is not None:
            pattern.name = name
        return pattern.optimize()

    def compile_basic(self, nodes, repeat=None):
        # Compile STRING | NAME [Details] | (...) | [...]
        assert len(nodes) >= 1
        node = nodes[0]
        if node.type == token.STRING:
            value = str(literals.evalString(node.value))
            return pytree.LeafPattern(_type_of_literal(value), value)
        elif node.type == token.NAME:
            value = node.value
            if value.isupper():
                if value not in TOKEN_MAP:
                    raise PatternSyntaxError("Invalid token: %r" % value)
                if nodes[1:]:
                    raise PatternSyntaxError("Can't have details for token")
                return pytree.LeafPattern(TOKEN_MAP[value])
            else:
                if value == "any":
                    type = None
                elif not value.startswith("_"):
                    type = getattr(self.pysyms, value, None)
                    if type is None:
                        raise PatternSyntaxError("Invalid symbol: %r" % value)
                if nodes[1:]: # Details present
                    content = [self.compile_node(nodes[1].children[1])]
                else:
                    content = None
                return pytree.NodePattern(type, content)
        elif node.value == "(":
            return self.compile_node(nodes[1])
        elif node.value == "[":
            assert repeat is None
            subpattern = self.compile_node(nodes[1])
            return pytree.WildcardPattern([[subpattern]], min=0, max=1)
        assert False, node

    def get_int(self, node):
        assert node.type == token.NUMBER
        return int(node.value)


# Map named tokens to the type value for a LeafPattern
TOKEN_MAP = {"NAME": token.NAME,
             "STRING": token.STRING,
             "NUMBER": token.NUMBER,
             "TOKEN": None}


def _type_of_literal(value):
    if value[0].isalpha():
        return token.NAME
    elif value in grammar.opmap:
        return grammar.opmap[value]
    else:
        return None


def pattern_convert(grammar, raw_node_info):
    """Converts raw node information to a Node or Leaf instance."""
    type, value, context, children = raw_node_info
    if children or type in grammar.number2symbol:
        return pytree.Node(type, children, context=context)
    else:
        return pytree.Leaf(type, value, context=context)


def compile_pattern(pattern):
    return PatternCompiler().compile_pattern(pattern)
PK       ! B!  !    lib2to3/Grammar.txtnu [        # Grammar for 2to3. This grammar supports Python 2.x and 3.x.

# NOTE WELL: You should also follow all the steps listed at
# https://devguide.python.org/grammar/

# Start symbols for the grammar:
#	file_input is a module or sequence of commands read from an input file;
#	single_input is a single interactive statement;
#	eval_input is the input for the eval() and input() functions.
# NB: compound_stmt in single_input is followed by extra NEWLINE!
file_input: (NEWLINE | stmt)* ENDMARKER
single_input: NEWLINE | simple_stmt | compound_stmt NEWLINE
eval_input: testlist NEWLINE* ENDMARKER

decorator: '@' dotted_name [ '(' [arglist] ')' ] NEWLINE
decorators: decorator+
decorated: decorators (classdef | funcdef | async_funcdef)
async_funcdef: ASYNC funcdef
funcdef: 'def' NAME parameters ['->' test] ':' suite
parameters: '(' [typedargslist] ')'

# The following definition for typedarglist is equivalent to this set of rules:
#
#     arguments = argument (',' argument)*
#     argument = tfpdef ['=' test]
#     kwargs = '**' tname [',']
#     args = '*' [tname]
#     kwonly_kwargs = (',' argument)* [',' [kwargs]]
#     args_kwonly_kwargs = args kwonly_kwargs | kwargs
#     poskeyword_args_kwonly_kwargs = arguments [',' [args_kwonly_kwargs]]
#     typedargslist_no_posonly  = poskeyword_args_kwonly_kwargs | args_kwonly_kwargs
#     typedarglist = arguments ',' '/' [',' [typedargslist_no_posonly]])|(typedargslist_no_posonly)"
#
# It needs to be fully expanded to allow our LL(1) parser to work on it.

typedargslist: tfpdef ['=' test] (',' tfpdef ['=' test])* ',' '/' [
                     ',' [((tfpdef ['=' test] ',')* ('*' [tname] (',' tname ['=' test])*
                            [',' ['**' tname [',']]] | '**' tname [','])
                     | tfpdef ['=' test] (',' tfpdef ['=' test])* [','])]
                ] | ((tfpdef ['=' test] ',')* ('*' [tname] (',' tname ['=' test])*
                     [',' ['**' tname [',']]] | '**' tname [','])
                     | tfpdef ['=' test] (',' tfpdef ['=' test])* [','])

tname: NAME [':' test]
tfpdef: tname | '(' tfplist ')'
tfplist: tfpdef (',' tfpdef)* [',']

# The following definition for varargslist is equivalent to this set of rules:
#
#     arguments = argument (',' argument )*
#     argument = vfpdef ['=' test]
#     kwargs = '**' vname [',']
#     args = '*' [vname]
#     kwonly_kwargs = (',' argument )* [',' [kwargs]]
#     args_kwonly_kwargs = args kwonly_kwargs | kwargs
#     poskeyword_args_kwonly_kwargs = arguments [',' [args_kwonly_kwargs]]
#     vararglist_no_posonly = poskeyword_args_kwonly_kwargs | args_kwonly_kwargs
#     varargslist = arguments ',' '/' [','[(vararglist_no_posonly)]] | (vararglist_no_posonly)
#
# It needs to be fully expanded to allow our LL(1) parser to work on it.

varargslist: vfpdef ['=' test ](',' vfpdef ['=' test])* ',' '/' [',' [
                     ((vfpdef ['=' test] ',')* ('*' [vname] (',' vname ['=' test])*
                            [',' ['**' vname [',']]] | '**' vname [','])
                            | vfpdef ['=' test] (',' vfpdef ['=' test])* [','])
                     ]] | ((vfpdef ['=' test] ',')*
                     ('*' [vname] (',' vname ['=' test])*  [',' ['**' vname [',']]]| '**' vname [','])
                     | vfpdef ['=' test] (',' vfpdef ['=' test])* [','])

vname: NAME
vfpdef: vname | '(' vfplist ')'
vfplist: vfpdef (',' vfpdef)* [',']

stmt: simple_stmt | compound_stmt
simple_stmt: small_stmt (';' small_stmt)* [';'] NEWLINE
small_stmt: (expr_stmt | print_stmt  | del_stmt | pass_stmt | flow_stmt |
             import_stmt | global_stmt | exec_stmt | assert_stmt)
expr_stmt: testlist_star_expr (annassign | augassign (yield_expr|testlist) |
                     ('=' (yield_expr|testlist_star_expr))*)
annassign: ':' test ['=' test]
testlist_star_expr: (test|star_expr) (',' (test|star_expr))* [',']
augassign: ('+=' | '-=' | '*=' | '@=' | '/=' | '%=' | '&=' | '|=' | '^=' |
            '<<=' | '>>=' | '**=' | '//=')
# For normal and annotated assignments, additional restrictions enforced by the interpreter
print_stmt: 'print' ( [ test (',' test)* [','] ] |
                      '>>' test [ (',' test)+ [','] ] )
del_stmt: 'del' exprlist
pass_stmt: 'pass'
flow_stmt: break_stmt | continue_stmt | return_stmt | raise_stmt | yield_stmt
break_stmt: 'break'
continue_stmt: 'continue'
return_stmt: 'return' [testlist_star_expr]
yield_stmt: yield_expr
raise_stmt: 'raise' [test ['from' test | ',' test [',' test]]]
import_stmt: import_name | import_from
import_name: 'import' dotted_as_names
import_from: ('from' ('.'* dotted_name | '.'+)
              'import' ('*' | '(' import_as_names ')' | import_as_names))
import_as_name: NAME ['as' NAME]
dotted_as_name: dotted_name ['as' NAME]
import_as_names: import_as_name (',' import_as_name)* [',']
dotted_as_names: dotted_as_name (',' dotted_as_name)*
dotted_name: NAME ('.' NAME)*
global_stmt: ('global' | 'nonlocal') NAME (',' NAME)*
exec_stmt: 'exec' expr ['in' test [',' test]]
assert_stmt: 'assert' test [',' test]

compound_stmt: if_stmt | while_stmt | for_stmt | try_stmt | with_stmt | funcdef | classdef | decorated | async_stmt
async_stmt: ASYNC (funcdef | with_stmt | for_stmt)
if_stmt: 'if' namedexpr_test ':' suite ('elif' namedexpr_test ':' suite)* ['else' ':' suite]
while_stmt: 'while' namedexpr_test ':' suite ['else' ':' suite]
for_stmt: 'for' exprlist 'in' testlist ':' suite ['else' ':' suite]
try_stmt: ('try' ':' suite
           ((except_clause ':' suite)+
	    ['else' ':' suite]
	    ['finally' ':' suite] |
	   'finally' ':' suite))
with_stmt: 'with' with_item (',' with_item)*  ':' suite
with_item: test ['as' expr]
with_var: 'as' expr
# NB compile.c makes sure that the default except clause is last
except_clause: 'except' [test [(',' | 'as') test]]
suite: simple_stmt | NEWLINE INDENT stmt+ DEDENT

# Backward compatibility cruft to support:
# [ x for x in lambda: True, lambda: False if x() ]
# even while also allowing:
# lambda x: 5 if x else 2
# (But not a mix of the two)
testlist_safe: old_test [(',' old_test)+ [',']]
old_test: or_test | old_lambdef
old_lambdef: 'lambda' [varargslist] ':' old_test

namedexpr_test: test [':=' test]
test: or_test ['if' or_test 'else' test] | lambdef
or_test: and_test ('or' and_test)*
and_test: not_test ('and' not_test)*
not_test: 'not' not_test | comparison
comparison: expr (comp_op expr)*
comp_op: '<'|'>'|'=='|'>='|'<='|'<>'|'!='|'in'|'not' 'in'|'is'|'is' 'not'
star_expr: '*' expr
expr: xor_expr ('|' xor_expr)*
xor_expr: and_expr ('^' and_expr)*
and_expr: shift_expr ('&' shift_expr)*
shift_expr: arith_expr (('<<'|'>>') arith_expr)*
arith_expr: term (('+'|'-') term)*
term: factor (('*'|'@'|'/'|'%'|'//') factor)*
factor: ('+'|'-'|'~') factor | power
power: [AWAIT] atom trailer* ['**' factor]
atom: ('(' [yield_expr|testlist_gexp] ')' |
       '[' [listmaker] ']' |
       '{' [dictsetmaker] '}' |
       '`' testlist1 '`' |
       NAME | NUMBER | STRING+ | '.' '.' '.')
listmaker: (namedexpr_test|star_expr) ( comp_for | (',' (namedexpr_test|star_expr))* [','] )
testlist_gexp: (namedexpr_test|star_expr) ( comp_for | (',' (namedexpr_test|star_expr))* [','] )
lambdef: 'lambda' [varargslist] ':' test
trailer: '(' [arglist] ')' | '[' subscriptlist ']' | '.' NAME
subscriptlist: subscript (',' subscript)* [',']
subscript: test | [test] ':' [test] [sliceop]
sliceop: ':' [test]
exprlist: (expr|star_expr) (',' (expr|star_expr))* [',']
testlist: test (',' test)* [',']
dictsetmaker: ( ((test ':' test | '**' expr)
                 (comp_for | (',' (test ':' test | '**' expr))* [','])) |
                ((test | star_expr)
		 (comp_for | (',' (test | star_expr))* [','])) )

classdef: 'class' NAME ['(' [arglist] ')'] ':' suite

arglist: argument (',' argument)* [',']

# "test '=' test" is really "keyword '=' test", but we have no such token.
# These need to be in a single rule to avoid grammar that is ambiguous
# to our LL(1) parser. Even though 'test' includes '*expr' in star_expr,
# we explicitly match '*' here, too, to give it proper precedence.
# Illegal combinations and orderings are blocked in ast.c:
# multiple (test comp_for) arguments are blocked; keyword unpackings
# that precede iterable unpackings are blocked; etc.
argument: ( test [comp_for] |
            test ':=' test |
            test '=' test |
            '**' test |
	        '*' test )

comp_iter: comp_for | comp_if
comp_for: [ASYNC] 'for' exprlist 'in' testlist_safe [comp_iter]
comp_if: 'if' old_test [comp_iter]

testlist1: test (',' test)*

# not used in grammar, but may appear in "node" passed from Parser to Compiler
encoding_decl: NAME

yield_expr: 'yield' [yield_arg]
yield_arg: 'from' test | testlist_star_expr
PK       ! -~      lib2to3/pygram.pynu [        # Copyright 2006 Google, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Export the Python grammar and symbols."""

# Python imports
import os

# Local imports
from .pgen2 import token
from .pgen2 import driver
from . import pytree

# The grammar file
_GRAMMAR_FILE = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), "Grammar.txt")
_PATTERN_GRAMMAR_FILE = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__),
                                     "PatternGrammar.txt")


class Symbols(object):

    def __init__(self, grammar):
        """Initializer.

        Creates an attribute for each grammar symbol (nonterminal),
        whose value is the symbol's type (an int >= 256).
        """
        for name, symbol in grammar.symbol2number.items():
            setattr(self, name, symbol)


python_grammar = driver.load_packaged_grammar("lib2to3", _GRAMMAR_FILE)

python_symbols = Symbols(python_grammar)

python_grammar_no_print_statement = python_grammar.copy()
del python_grammar_no_print_statement.keywords["print"]

python_grammar_no_print_and_exec_statement = python_grammar_no_print_statement.copy()
del python_grammar_no_print_and_exec_statement.keywords["exec"]

pattern_grammar = driver.load_packaged_grammar("lib2to3", _PATTERN_GRAMMAR_FILE)
pattern_symbols = Symbols(pattern_grammar)
PK       ! azC   C     lib2to3/__main__.pynu [        import sys
from .main import main

sys.exit(main("lib2to3.fixes"))
PK       !         lib2to3/__init__.pynu [        import warnings


warnings.warn(
    "lib2to3 package is deprecated and may not be able to parse Python 3.10+",
    DeprecationWarning,
    stacklevel=2,
)
PK       ! k3      lib2to3/pgen2/grammar.pynu [        # Copyright 2004-2005 Elemental Security, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""This module defines the data structures used to represent a grammar.

These are a bit arcane because they are derived from the data
structures used by Python's 'pgen' parser generator.

There's also a table here mapping operators to their names in the
token module; the Python tokenize module reports all operators as the
fallback token code OP, but the parser needs the actual token code.

"""

# Python imports
import pickle

# Local imports
from . import token


class Grammar(object):
    """Pgen parsing tables conversion class.

    Once initialized, this class supplies the grammar tables for the
    parsing engine implemented by parse.py.  The parsing engine
    accesses the instance variables directly.  The class here does not
    provide initialization of the tables; several subclasses exist to
    do this (see the conv and pgen modules).

    The load() method reads the tables from a pickle file, which is
    much faster than the other ways offered by subclasses.  The pickle
    file is written by calling dump() (after loading the grammar
    tables using a subclass).  The report() method prints a readable
    representation of the tables to stdout, for debugging.

    The instance variables are as follows:

    symbol2number -- a dict mapping symbol names to numbers.  Symbol
                     numbers are always 256 or higher, to distinguish
                     them from token numbers, which are between 0 and
                     255 (inclusive).

    number2symbol -- a dict mapping numbers to symbol names;
                     these two are each other's inverse.

    states        -- a list of DFAs, where each DFA is a list of
                     states, each state is a list of arcs, and each
                     arc is a (i, j) pair where i is a label and j is
                     a state number.  The DFA number is the index into
                     this list.  (This name is slightly confusing.)
                     Final states are represented by a special arc of
                     the form (0, j) where j is its own state number.

    dfas          -- a dict mapping symbol numbers to (DFA, first)
                     pairs, where DFA is an item from the states list
                     above, and first is a set of tokens that can
                     begin this grammar rule (represented by a dict
                     whose values are always 1).

    labels        -- a list of (x, y) pairs where x is either a token
                     number or a symbol number, and y is either None
                     or a string; the strings are keywords.  The label
                     number is the index in this list; label numbers
                     are used to mark state transitions (arcs) in the
                     DFAs.

    start         -- the number of the grammar's start symbol.

    keywords      -- a dict mapping keyword strings to arc labels.

    tokens        -- a dict mapping token numbers to arc labels.

    """

    def __init__(self):
        self.symbol2number = {}
        self.number2symbol = {}
        self.states = []
        self.dfas = {}
        self.labels = [(0, "EMPTY")]
        self.keywords = {}
        self.tokens = {}
        self.symbol2label = {}
        self.start = 256

    def dump(self, filename):
        """Dump the grammar tables to a pickle file."""
        with open(filename, "wb") as f:
            pickle.dump(self.__dict__, f, pickle.HIGHEST_PROTOCOL)

    def load(self, filename):
        """Load the grammar tables from a pickle file."""
        with open(filename, "rb") as f:
            d = pickle.load(f)
        self.__dict__.update(d)

    def loads(self, pkl):
        """Load the grammar tables from a pickle bytes object."""
        self.__dict__.update(pickle.loads(pkl))

    def copy(self):
        """
        Copy the grammar.
        """
        new = self.__class__()
        for dict_attr in ("symbol2number", "number2symbol", "dfas", "keywords",
                          "tokens", "symbol2label"):
            setattr(new, dict_attr, getattr(self, dict_attr).copy())
        new.labels = self.labels[:]
        new.states = self.states[:]
        new.start = self.start
        return new

    def report(self):
        """Dump the grammar tables to standard output, for debugging."""
        from pprint import pprint
        print("s2n")
        pprint(self.symbol2number)
        print("n2s")
        pprint(self.number2symbol)
        print("states")
        pprint(self.states)
        print("dfas")
        pprint(self.dfas)
        print("labels")
        pprint(self.labels)
        print("start", self.start)


# Map from operator to number (since tokenize doesn't do this)

opmap_raw = """
( LPAR
) RPAR
[ LSQB
] RSQB
: COLON
, COMMA
; SEMI
+ PLUS
- MINUS
* STAR
/ SLASH
| VBAR
& AMPER
< LESS
> GREATER
= EQUAL
. DOT
% PERCENT
` BACKQUOTE
{ LBRACE
} RBRACE
@ AT
@= ATEQUAL
== EQEQUAL
!= NOTEQUAL
<> NOTEQUAL
<= LESSEQUAL
>= GREATEREQUAL
~ TILDE
^ CIRCUMFLEX
<< LEFTSHIFT
>> RIGHTSHIFT
** DOUBLESTAR
+= PLUSEQUAL
-= MINEQUAL
*= STAREQUAL
/= SLASHEQUAL
%= PERCENTEQUAL
&= AMPEREQUAL
|= VBAREQUAL
^= CIRCUMFLEXEQUAL
<<= LEFTSHIFTEQUAL
>>= RIGHTSHIFTEQUAL
**= DOUBLESTAREQUAL
// DOUBLESLASH
//= DOUBLESLASHEQUAL
-> RARROW
:= COLONEQUAL
"""

opmap = {}
for line in opmap_raw.splitlines():
    if line:
        op, name = line.split()
        opmap[op] = getattr(token, name)
del line, op, name
PK       ! %  %    lib2to3/pgen2/conv.pynu [        # Copyright 2004-2005 Elemental Security, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Convert graminit.[ch] spit out by pgen to Python code.

Pgen is the Python parser generator.  It is useful to quickly create a
parser from a grammar file in Python's grammar notation.  But I don't
want my parsers to be written in C (yet), so I'm translating the
parsing tables to Python data structures and writing a Python parse
engine.

Note that the token numbers are constants determined by the standard
Python tokenizer.  The standard token module defines these numbers and
their names (the names are not used much).  The token numbers are
hardcoded into the Python tokenizer and into pgen.  A Python
implementation of the Python tokenizer is also available, in the
standard tokenize module.

On the other hand, symbol numbers (representing the grammar's
non-terminals) are assigned by pgen based on the actual grammar
input.

Note: this module is pretty much obsolete; the pgen module generates
equivalent grammar tables directly from the Grammar.txt input file
without having to invoke the Python pgen C program.

"""

# Python imports
import re

# Local imports
from pgen2 import grammar, token


class Converter(grammar.Grammar):
    """Grammar subclass that reads classic pgen output files.

    The run() method reads the tables as produced by the pgen parser
    generator, typically contained in two C files, graminit.h and
    graminit.c.  The other methods are for internal use only.

    See the base class for more documentation.

    """

    def run(self, graminit_h, graminit_c):
        """Load the grammar tables from the text files written by pgen."""
        self.parse_graminit_h(graminit_h)
        self.parse_graminit_c(graminit_c)
        self.finish_off()

    def parse_graminit_h(self, filename):
        """Parse the .h file written by pgen.  (Internal)

        This file is a sequence of #define statements defining the
        nonterminals of the grammar as numbers.  We build two tables
        mapping the numbers to names and back.

        """
        try:
            f = open(filename)
        except OSError as err:
            print("Can't open %s: %s" % (filename, err))
            return False
        self.symbol2number = {}
        self.number2symbol = {}
        lineno = 0
        for line in f:
            lineno += 1
            mo = re.match(r"^#define\s+(\w+)\s+(\d+)$", line)
            if not mo and line.strip():
                print("%s(%s): can't parse %s" % (filename, lineno,
                                                  line.strip()))
            else:
                symbol, number = mo.groups()
                number = int(number)
                assert symbol not in self.symbol2number
                assert number not in self.number2symbol
                self.symbol2number[symbol] = number
                self.number2symbol[number] = symbol
        return True

    def parse_graminit_c(self, filename):
        """Parse the .c file written by pgen.  (Internal)

        The file looks as follows.  The first two lines are always this:

        #include "pgenheaders.h"
        #include "grammar.h"

        After that come four blocks:

        1) one or more state definitions
        2) a table defining dfas
        3) a table defining labels
        4) a struct defining the grammar

        A state definition has the following form:
        - one or more arc arrays, each of the form:
          static arc arcs_<n>_<m>[<k>] = {
                  {<i>, <j>},
                  ...
          };
        - followed by a state array, of the form:
          static state states_<s>[<t>] = {
                  {<k>, arcs_<n>_<m>},
                  ...
          };

        """
        try:
            f = open(filename)
        except OSError as err:
            print("Can't open %s: %s" % (filename, err))
            return False
        # The code below essentially uses f's iterator-ness!
        lineno = 0

        # Expect the two #include lines
        lineno, line = lineno+1, next(f)
        assert line == '#include "pgenheaders.h"\n', (lineno, line)
        lineno, line = lineno+1, next(f)
        assert line == '#include "grammar.h"\n', (lineno, line)

        # Parse the state definitions
        lineno, line = lineno+1, next(f)
        allarcs = {}
        states = []
        while line.startswith("static arc "):
            while line.startswith("static arc "):
                mo = re.match(r"static arc arcs_(\d+)_(\d+)\[(\d+)\] = {$",
                              line)
                assert mo, (lineno, line)
                n, m, k = list(map(int, mo.groups()))
                arcs = []
                for _ in range(k):
                    lineno, line = lineno+1, next(f)
                    mo = re.match(r"\s+{(\d+), (\d+)},$", line)
                    assert mo, (lineno, line)
                    i, j = list(map(int, mo.groups()))
                    arcs.append((i, j))
                lineno, line = lineno+1, next(f)
                assert line == "};\n", (lineno, line)
                allarcs[(n, m)] = arcs
                lineno, line = lineno+1, next(f)
            mo = re.match(r"static state states_(\d+)\[(\d+)\] = {$", line)
            assert mo, (lineno, line)
            s, t = list(map(int, mo.groups()))
            assert s == len(states), (lineno, line)
            state = []
            for _ in range(t):
                lineno, line = lineno+1, next(f)
                mo = re.match(r"\s+{(\d+), arcs_(\d+)_(\d+)},$", line)
                assert mo, (lineno, line)
                k, n, m = list(map(int, mo.groups()))
                arcs = allarcs[n, m]
                assert k == len(arcs), (lineno, line)
                state.append(arcs)
            states.append(state)
            lineno, line = lineno+1, next(f)
            assert line == "};\n", (lineno, line)
            lineno, line = lineno+1, next(f)
        self.states = states

        # Parse the dfas
        dfas = {}
        mo = re.match(r"static dfa dfas\[(\d+)\] = {$", line)
        assert mo, (lineno, line)
        ndfas = int(mo.group(1))
        for i in range(ndfas):
            lineno, line = lineno+1, next(f)
            mo = re.match(r'\s+{(\d+), "(\w+)", (\d+), (\d+), states_(\d+),$',
                          line)
            assert mo, (lineno, line)
            symbol = mo.group(2)
            number, x, y, z = list(map(int, mo.group(1, 3, 4, 5)))
            assert self.symbol2number[symbol] == number, (lineno, line)
            assert self.number2symbol[number] == symbol, (lineno, line)
            assert x == 0, (lineno, line)
            state = states[z]
            assert y == len(state), (lineno, line)
            lineno, line = lineno+1, next(f)
            mo = re.match(r'\s+("(?:\\\d\d\d)*")},$', line)
            assert mo, (lineno, line)
            first = {}
            rawbitset = eval(mo.group(1))
            for i, c in enumerate(rawbitset):
                byte = ord(c)
                for j in range(8):
                    if byte & (1<<j):
                        first[i*8 + j] = 1
            dfas[number] = (state, first)
        lineno, line = lineno+1, next(f)
        assert line == "};\n", (lineno, line)
        self.dfas = dfas

        # Parse the labels
        labels = []
        lineno, line = lineno+1, next(f)
        mo = re.match(r"static label labels\[(\d+)\] = {$", line)
        assert mo, (lineno, line)
        nlabels = int(mo.group(1))
        for i in range(nlabels):
            lineno, line = lineno+1, next(f)
            mo = re.match(r'\s+{(\d+), (0|"\w+")},$', line)
            assert mo, (lineno, line)
            x, y = mo.groups()
            x = int(x)
            if y == "0":
                y = None
            else:
                y = eval(y)
            labels.append((x, y))
        lineno, line = lineno+1, next(f)
        assert line == "};\n", (lineno, line)
        self.labels = labels

        # Parse the grammar struct
        lineno, line = lineno+1, next(f)
        assert line == "grammar _PyParser_Grammar = {\n", (lineno, line)
        lineno, line = lineno+1, next(f)
        mo = re.match(r"\s+(\d+),$", line)
        assert mo, (lineno, line)
        ndfas = int(mo.group(1))
        assert ndfas == len(self.dfas)
        lineno, line = lineno+1, next(f)
        assert line == "\tdfas,\n", (lineno, line)
        lineno, line = lineno+1, next(f)
        mo = re.match(r"\s+{(\d+), labels},$", line)
        assert mo, (lineno, line)
        nlabels = int(mo.group(1))
        assert nlabels == len(self.labels), (lineno, line)
        lineno, line = lineno+1, next(f)
        mo = re.match(r"\s+(\d+)$", line)
        assert mo, (lineno, line)
        start = int(mo.group(1))
        assert start in self.number2symbol, (lineno, line)
        self.start = start
        lineno, line = lineno+1, next(f)
        assert line == "};\n", (lineno, line)
        try:
            lineno, line = lineno+1, next(f)
        except StopIteration:
            pass
        else:
            assert 0, (lineno, line)

    def finish_off(self):
        """Create additional useful structures.  (Internal)."""
        self.keywords = {} # map from keyword strings to arc labels
        self.tokens = {}   # map from numeric token values to arc labels
        for ilabel, (type, value) in enumerate(self.labels):
            if type == token.NAME and value is not None:
                self.keywords[value] = ilabel
            elif value is None:
                self.tokens[type] = ilabel
PK       ! Y      lib2to3/pgen2/token.pynu ȯ        #! /usr/bin/env python3

"""Token constants (from "token.h")."""

#  Taken from Python (r53757) and modified to include some tokens
#   originally monkeypatched in by pgen2.tokenize

#--start constants--
ENDMARKER = 0
NAME = 1
NUMBER = 2
STRING = 3
NEWLINE = 4
INDENT = 5
DEDENT = 6
LPAR = 7
RPAR = 8
LSQB = 9
RSQB = 10
COLON = 11
COMMA = 12
SEMI = 13
PLUS = 14
MINUS = 15
STAR = 16
SLASH = 17
VBAR = 18
AMPER = 19
LESS = 20
GREATER = 21
EQUAL = 22
DOT = 23
PERCENT = 24
BACKQUOTE = 25
LBRACE = 26
RBRACE = 27
EQEQUAL = 28
NOTEQUAL = 29
LESSEQUAL = 30
GREATEREQUAL = 31
TILDE = 32
CIRCUMFLEX = 33
LEFTSHIFT = 34
RIGHTSHIFT = 35
DOUBLESTAR = 36
PLUSEQUAL = 37
MINEQUAL = 38
STAREQUAL = 39
SLASHEQUAL = 40
PERCENTEQUAL = 41
AMPEREQUAL = 42
VBAREQUAL = 43
CIRCUMFLEXEQUAL = 44
LEFTSHIFTEQUAL = 45
RIGHTSHIFTEQUAL = 46
DOUBLESTAREQUAL = 47
DOUBLESLASH = 48
DOUBLESLASHEQUAL = 49
AT = 50
ATEQUAL = 51
OP = 52
COMMENT = 53
NL = 54
RARROW = 55
AWAIT = 56
ASYNC = 57
ERRORTOKEN = 58
COLONEQUAL = 59
N_TOKENS = 60
NT_OFFSET = 256
#--end constants--

tok_name = {}
for _name, _value in list(globals().items()):
    if type(_value) is type(0):
        tok_name[_value] = _name


def ISTERMINAL(x):
    return x < NT_OFFSET

def ISNONTERMINAL(x):
    return x >= NT_OFFSET

def ISEOF(x):
    return x == ENDMARKER
PK       ! lp6  6    lib2to3/pgen2/pgen.pynu [        # Copyright 2004-2005 Elemental Security, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

# Pgen imports
from . import grammar, token, tokenize

class PgenGrammar(grammar.Grammar):
    pass

class ParserGenerator(object):

    def __init__(self, filename, stream=None):
        close_stream = None
        if stream is None:
            stream = open(filename, encoding="utf-8")
            close_stream = stream.close
        self.filename = filename
        self.stream = stream
        self.generator = tokenize.generate_tokens(stream.readline)
        self.gettoken() # Initialize lookahead
        self.dfas, self.startsymbol = self.parse()
        if close_stream is not None:
            close_stream()
        self.first = {} # map from symbol name to set of tokens
        self.addfirstsets()

    def make_grammar(self):
        c = PgenGrammar()
        names = list(self.dfas.keys())
        names.sort()
        names.remove(self.startsymbol)
        names.insert(0, self.startsymbol)
        for name in names:
            i = 256 + len(c.symbol2number)
            c.symbol2number[name] = i
            c.number2symbol[i] = name
        for name in names:
            dfa = self.dfas[name]
            states = []
            for state in dfa:
                arcs = []
                for label, next in sorted(state.arcs.items()):
                    arcs.append((self.make_label(c, label), dfa.index(next)))
                if state.isfinal:
                    arcs.append((0, dfa.index(state)))
                states.append(arcs)
            c.states.append(states)
            c.dfas[c.symbol2number[name]] = (states, self.make_first(c, name))
        c.start = c.symbol2number[self.startsymbol]
        return c

    def make_first(self, c, name):
        rawfirst = self.first[name]
        first = {}
        for label in sorted(rawfirst):
            ilabel = self.make_label(c, label)
            ##assert ilabel not in first # XXX failed on <> ... !=
            first[ilabel] = 1
        return first

    def make_label(self, c, label):
        # XXX Maybe this should be a method on a subclass of converter?
        ilabel = len(c.labels)
        if label[0].isalpha():
            # Either a symbol name or a named token
            if label in c.symbol2number:
                # A symbol name (a non-terminal)
                if label in c.symbol2label:
                    return c.symbol2label[label]
                else:
                    c.labels.append((c.symbol2number[label], None))
                    c.symbol2label[label] = ilabel
                    return ilabel
            else:
                # A named token (NAME, NUMBER, STRING)
                itoken = getattr(token, label, None)
                assert isinstance(itoken, int), label
                assert itoken in token.tok_name, label
                if itoken in c.tokens:
                    return c.tokens[itoken]
                else:
                    c.labels.append((itoken, None))
                    c.tokens[itoken] = ilabel
                    return ilabel
        else:
            # Either a keyword or an operator
            assert label[0] in ('"', "'"), label
            value = eval(label)
            if value[0].isalpha():
                # A keyword
                if value in c.keywords:
                    return c.keywords[value]
                else:
                    c.labels.append((token.NAME, value))
                    c.keywords[value] = ilabel
                    return ilabel
            else:
                # An operator (any non-numeric token)
                itoken = grammar.opmap[value] # Fails if unknown token
                if itoken in c.tokens:
                    return c.tokens[itoken]
                else:
                    c.labels.append((itoken, None))
                    c.tokens[itoken] = ilabel
                    return ilabel

    def addfirstsets(self):
        names = list(self.dfas.keys())
        names.sort()
        for name in names:
            if name not in self.first:
                self.calcfirst(name)
            #print name, self.first[name].keys()

    def calcfirst(self, name):
        dfa = self.dfas[name]
        self.first[name] = None # dummy to detect left recursion
        state = dfa[0]
        totalset = {}
        overlapcheck = {}
        for label, next in state.arcs.items():
            if label in self.dfas:
                if label in self.first:
                    fset = self.first[label]
                    if fset is None:
                        raise ValueError("recursion for rule %r" % name)
                else:
                    self.calcfirst(label)
                    fset = self.first[label]
                totalset.update(fset)
                overlapcheck[label] = fset
            else:
                totalset[label] = 1
                overlapcheck[label] = {label: 1}
        inverse = {}
        for label, itsfirst in overlapcheck.items():
            for symbol in itsfirst:
                if symbol in inverse:
                    raise ValueError("rule %s is ambiguous; %s is in the"
                                     " first sets of %s as well as %s" %
                                     (name, symbol, label, inverse[symbol]))
                inverse[symbol] = label
        self.first[name] = totalset

    def parse(self):
        dfas = {}
        startsymbol = None
        # MSTART: (NEWLINE | RULE)* ENDMARKER
        while self.type != token.ENDMARKER:
            while self.type == token.NEWLINE:
                self.gettoken()
            # RULE: NAME ':' RHS NEWLINE
            name = self.expect(token.NAME)
            self.expect(token.OP, ":")
            a, z = self.parse_rhs()
            self.expect(token.NEWLINE)
            #self.dump_nfa(name, a, z)
            dfa = self.make_dfa(a, z)
            #self.dump_dfa(name, dfa)
            oldlen = len(dfa)
            self.simplify_dfa(dfa)
            newlen = len(dfa)
            dfas[name] = dfa
            #print name, oldlen, newlen
            if startsymbol is None:
                startsymbol = name
        return dfas, startsymbol

    def make_dfa(self, start, finish):
        # To turn an NFA into a DFA, we define the states of the DFA
        # to correspond to *sets* of states of the NFA.  Then do some
        # state reduction.  Let's represent sets as dicts with 1 for
        # values.
        assert isinstance(start, NFAState)
        assert isinstance(finish, NFAState)
        def closure(state):
            base = {}
            addclosure(state, base)
            return base
        def addclosure(state, base):
            assert isinstance(state, NFAState)
            if state in base:
                return
            base[state] = 1
            for label, next in state.arcs:
                if label is None:
                    addclosure(next, base)
        states = [DFAState(closure(start), finish)]
        for state in states: # NB states grows while we're iterating
            arcs = {}
            for nfastate in state.nfaset:
                for label, next in nfastate.arcs:
                    if label is not None:
                        addclosure(next, arcs.setdefault(label, {}))
            for label, nfaset in sorted(arcs.items()):
                for st in states:
                    if st.nfaset == nfaset:
                        break
                else:
                    st = DFAState(nfaset, finish)
                    states.append(st)
                state.addarc(st, label)
        return states # List of DFAState instances; first one is start

    def dump_nfa(self, name, start, finish):
        print("Dump of NFA for", name)
        todo = [start]
        for i, state in enumerate(todo):
            print("  State", i, state is finish and "(final)" or "")
            for label, next in state.arcs:
                if next in todo:
                    j = todo.index(next)
                else:
                    j = len(todo)
                    todo.append(next)
                if label is None:
                    print("    -> %d" % j)
                else:
                    print("    %s -> %d" % (label, j))

    def dump_dfa(self, name, dfa):
        print("Dump of DFA for", name)
        for i, state in enumerate(dfa):
            print("  State", i, state.isfinal and "(final)" or "")
            for label, next in sorted(state.arcs.items()):
                print("    %s -> %d" % (label, dfa.index(next)))

    def simplify_dfa(self, dfa):
        # This is not theoretically optimal, but works well enough.
        # Algorithm: repeatedly look for two states that have the same
        # set of arcs (same labels pointing to the same nodes) and
        # unify them, until things stop changing.

        # dfa is a list of DFAState instances
        changes = True
        while changes:
            changes = False
            for i, state_i in enumerate(dfa):
                for j in range(i+1, len(dfa)):
                    state_j = dfa[j]
                    if state_i == state_j:
                        #print "  unify", i, j
                        del dfa[j]
                        for state in dfa:
                            state.unifystate(state_j, state_i)
                        changes = True
                        break

    def parse_rhs(self):
        # RHS: ALT ('|' ALT)*
        a, z = self.parse_alt()
        if self.value != "|":
            return a, z
        else:
            aa = NFAState()
            zz = NFAState()
            aa.addarc(a)
            z.addarc(zz)
            while self.value == "|":
                self.gettoken()
                a, z = self.parse_alt()
                aa.addarc(a)
                z.addarc(zz)
            return aa, zz

    def parse_alt(self):
        # ALT: ITEM+
        a, b = self.parse_item()
        while (self.value in ("(", "[") or
               self.type in (token.NAME, token.STRING)):
            c, d = self.parse_item()
            b.addarc(c)
            b = d
        return a, b

    def parse_item(self):
        # ITEM: '[' RHS ']' | ATOM ['+' | '*']
        if self.value == "[":
            self.gettoken()
            a, z = self.parse_rhs()
            self.expect(token.OP, "]")
            a.addarc(z)
            return a, z
        else:
            a, z = self.parse_atom()
            value = self.value
            if value not in ("+", "*"):
                return a, z
            self.gettoken()
            z.addarc(a)
            if value == "+":
                return a, z
            else:
                return a, a

    def parse_atom(self):
        # ATOM: '(' RHS ')' | NAME | STRING
        if self.value == "(":
            self.gettoken()
            a, z = self.parse_rhs()
            self.expect(token.OP, ")")
            return a, z
        elif self.type in (token.NAME, token.STRING):
            a = NFAState()
            z = NFAState()
            a.addarc(z, self.value)
            self.gettoken()
            return a, z
        else:
            self.raise_error("expected (...) or NAME or STRING, got %s/%s",
                             self.type, self.value)

    def expect(self, type, value=None):
        if self.type != type or (value is not None and self.value != value):
            self.raise_error("expected %s/%s, got %s/%s",
                             type, value, self.type, self.value)
        value = self.value
        self.gettoken()
        return value

    def gettoken(self):
        tup = next(self.generator)
        while tup[0] in (tokenize.COMMENT, tokenize.NL):
            tup = next(self.generator)
        self.type, self.value, self.begin, self.end, self.line = tup
        #print token.tok_name[self.type], repr(self.value)

    def raise_error(self, msg, *args):
        if args:
            try:
                msg = msg % args
            except:
                msg = " ".join([msg] + list(map(str, args)))
        raise SyntaxError(msg, (self.filename, self.end[0],
                                self.end[1], self.line))

class NFAState(object):

    def __init__(self):
        self.arcs = [] # list of (label, NFAState) pairs

    def addarc(self, next, label=None):
        assert label is None or isinstance(label, str)
        assert isinstance(next, NFAState)
        self.arcs.append((label, next))

class DFAState(object):

    def __init__(self, nfaset, final):
        assert isinstance(nfaset, dict)
        assert isinstance(next(iter(nfaset)), NFAState)
        assert isinstance(final, NFAState)
        self.nfaset = nfaset
        self.isfinal = final in nfaset
        self.arcs = {} # map from label to DFAState

    def addarc(self, next, label):
        assert isinstance(label, str)
        assert label not in self.arcs
        assert isinstance(next, DFAState)
        self.arcs[label] = next

    def unifystate(self, old, new):
        for label, next in self.arcs.items():
            if next is old:
                self.arcs[label] = new

    def __eq__(self, other):
        # Equality test -- ignore the nfaset instance variable
        assert isinstance(other, DFAState)
        if self.isfinal != other.isfinal:
            return False
        # Can't just return self.arcs == other.arcs, because that
        # would invoke this method recursively, with cycles...
        if len(self.arcs) != len(other.arcs):
            return False
        for label, next in self.arcs.items():
            if next is not other.arcs.get(label):
                return False
        return True

    __hash__ = None # For Py3 compatibility.

def generate_grammar(filename="Grammar.txt"):
    p = ParserGenerator(filename)
    return p.make_grammar()
PK       ! 2      lib2to3/pgen2/parse.pynu [        # Copyright 2004-2005 Elemental Security, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Parser engine for the grammar tables generated by pgen.

The grammar table must be loaded first.

See Parser/parser.c in the Python distribution for additional info on
how this parsing engine works.

"""

# Local imports
from . import token

class ParseError(Exception):
    """Exception to signal the parser is stuck."""

    def __init__(self, msg, type, value, context):
        Exception.__init__(self, "%s: type=%r, value=%r, context=%r" %
                           (msg, type, value, context))
        self.msg = msg
        self.type = type
        self.value = value
        self.context = context

    def __reduce__(self):
        return type(self), (self.msg, self.type, self.value, self.context)

class Parser(object):
    """Parser engine.

    The proper usage sequence is:

    p = Parser(grammar, [converter])  # create instance
    p.setup([start])                  # prepare for parsing
    <for each input token>:
        if p.addtoken(...):           # parse a token; may raise ParseError
            break
    root = p.rootnode                 # root of abstract syntax tree

    A Parser instance may be reused by calling setup() repeatedly.

    A Parser instance contains state pertaining to the current token
    sequence, and should not be used concurrently by different threads
    to parse separate token sequences.

    See driver.py for how to get input tokens by tokenizing a file or
    string.

    Parsing is complete when addtoken() returns True; the root of the
    abstract syntax tree can then be retrieved from the rootnode
    instance variable.  When a syntax error occurs, addtoken() raises
    the ParseError exception.  There is no error recovery; the parser
    cannot be used after a syntax error was reported (but it can be
    reinitialized by calling setup()).

    """

    def __init__(self, grammar, convert=None):
        """Constructor.

        The grammar argument is a grammar.Grammar instance; see the
        grammar module for more information.

        The parser is not ready yet for parsing; you must call the
        setup() method to get it started.

        The optional convert argument is a function mapping concrete
        syntax tree nodes to abstract syntax tree nodes.  If not
        given, no conversion is done and the syntax tree produced is
        the concrete syntax tree.  If given, it must be a function of
        two arguments, the first being the grammar (a grammar.Grammar
        instance), and the second being the concrete syntax tree node
        to be converted.  The syntax tree is converted from the bottom
        up.

        A concrete syntax tree node is a (type, value, context, nodes)
        tuple, where type is the node type (a token or symbol number),
        value is None for symbols and a string for tokens, context is
        None or an opaque value used for error reporting (typically a
        (lineno, offset) pair), and nodes is a list of children for
        symbols, and None for tokens.

        An abstract syntax tree node may be anything; this is entirely
        up to the converter function.

        """
        self.grammar = grammar
        self.convert = convert or (lambda grammar, node: node)

    def setup(self, start=None):
        """Prepare for parsing.

        This *must* be called before starting to parse.

        The optional argument is an alternative start symbol; it
        defaults to the grammar's start symbol.

        You can use a Parser instance to parse any number of programs;
        each time you call setup() the parser is reset to an initial
        state determined by the (implicit or explicit) start symbol.

        """
        if start is None:
            start = self.grammar.start
        # Each stack entry is a tuple: (dfa, state, node).
        # A node is a tuple: (type, value, context, children),
        # where children is a list of nodes or None, and context may be None.
        newnode = (start, None, None, [])
        stackentry = (self.grammar.dfas[start], 0, newnode)
        self.stack = [stackentry]
        self.rootnode = None
        self.used_names = set() # Aliased to self.rootnode.used_names in pop()

    def addtoken(self, type, value, context):
        """Add a token; return True iff this is the end of the program."""
        # Map from token to label
        ilabel = self.classify(type, value, context)
        # Loop until the token is shifted; may raise exceptions
        while True:
            dfa, state, node = self.stack[-1]
            states, first = dfa
            arcs = states[state]
            # Look for a state with this label
            for i, newstate in arcs:
                t, v = self.grammar.labels[i]
                if ilabel == i:
                    # Look it up in the list of labels
                    assert t < 256
                    # Shift a token; we're done with it
                    self.shift(type, value, newstate, context)
                    # Pop while we are in an accept-only state
                    state = newstate
                    while states[state] == [(0, state)]:
                        self.pop()
                        if not self.stack:
                            # Done parsing!
                            return True
                        dfa, state, node = self.stack[-1]
                        states, first = dfa
                    # Done with this token
                    return False
                elif t >= 256:
                    # See if it's a symbol and if we're in its first set
                    itsdfa = self.grammar.dfas[t]
                    itsstates, itsfirst = itsdfa
                    if ilabel in itsfirst:
                        # Push a symbol
                        self.push(t, self.grammar.dfas[t], newstate, context)
                        break # To continue the outer while loop
            else:
                if (0, state) in arcs:
                    # An accepting state, pop it and try something else
                    self.pop()
                    if not self.stack:
                        # Done parsing, but another token is input
                        raise ParseError("too much input",
                                         type, value, context)
                else:
                    # No success finding a transition
                    raise ParseError("bad input", type, value, context)

    def classify(self, type, value, context):
        """Turn a token into a label.  (Internal)"""
        if type == token.NAME:
            # Keep a listing of all used names
            self.used_names.add(value)
            # Check for reserved words
            ilabel = self.grammar.keywords.get(value)
            if ilabel is not None:
                return ilabel
        ilabel = self.grammar.tokens.get(type)
        if ilabel is None:
            raise ParseError("bad token", type, value, context)
        return ilabel

    def shift(self, type, value, newstate, context):
        """Shift a token.  (Internal)"""
        dfa, state, node = self.stack[-1]
        newnode = (type, value, context, None)
        newnode = self.convert(self.grammar, newnode)
        if newnode is not None:
            node[-1].append(newnode)
        self.stack[-1] = (dfa, newstate, node)

    def push(self, type, newdfa, newstate, context):
        """Push a nonterminal.  (Internal)"""
        dfa, state, node = self.stack[-1]
        newnode = (type, None, context, [])
        self.stack[-1] = (dfa, newstate, node)
        self.stack.append((newdfa, 0, newnode))

    def pop(self):
        """Pop a nonterminal.  (Internal)"""
        popdfa, popstate, popnode = self.stack.pop()
        newnode = self.convert(self.grammar, popnode)
        if newnode is not None:
            if self.stack:
                dfa, state, node = self.stack[-1]
                node[-1].append(newnode)
            else:
                self.rootnode = newnode
                self.rootnode.used_names = self.used_names
PK       ! >|!  !    lib2to3/pgen2/driver.pynu [        # Copyright 2004-2005 Elemental Security, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

# Modifications:
# Copyright 2006 Google, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Parser driver.

This provides a high-level interface to parse a file into a syntax tree.

"""

__author__ = "Guido van Rossum <guido@python.org>"

__all__ = ["Driver", "load_grammar"]

# Python imports
import io
import os
import logging
import pkgutil
import sys

# Pgen imports
from . import grammar, parse, token, tokenize, pgen


class Driver(object):

    def __init__(self, grammar, convert=None, logger=None):
        self.grammar = grammar
        if logger is None:
            logger = logging.getLogger()
        self.logger = logger
        self.convert = convert

    def parse_tokens(self, tokens, debug=False):
        """Parse a series of tokens and return the syntax tree."""
        # XXX Move the prefix computation into a wrapper around tokenize.
        p = parse.Parser(self.grammar, self.convert)
        p.setup()
        lineno = 1
        column = 0
        type = value = start = end = line_text = None
        prefix = ""
        for quintuple in tokens:
            type, value, start, end, line_text = quintuple
            if start != (lineno, column):
                assert (lineno, column) <= start, ((lineno, column), start)
                s_lineno, s_column = start
                if lineno < s_lineno:
                    prefix += "\n" * (s_lineno - lineno)
                    lineno = s_lineno
                    column = 0
                if column < s_column:
                    prefix += line_text[column:s_column]
                    column = s_column
            if type in (tokenize.COMMENT, tokenize.NL):
                prefix += value
                lineno, column = end
                if value.endswith("\n"):
                    lineno += 1
                    column = 0
                continue
            if type == token.OP:
                type = grammar.opmap[value]
            if debug:
                self.logger.debug("%s %r (prefix=%r)",
                                  token.tok_name[type], value, prefix)
            if p.addtoken(type, value, (prefix, start)):
                if debug:
                    self.logger.debug("Stop.")
                break
            prefix = ""
            lineno, column = end
            if value.endswith("\n"):
                lineno += 1
                column = 0
        else:
            # We never broke out -- EOF is too soon (how can this happen???)
            raise parse.ParseError("incomplete input",
                                   type, value, (prefix, start))
        return p.rootnode

    def parse_stream_raw(self, stream, debug=False):
        """Parse a stream and return the syntax tree."""
        tokens = tokenize.generate_tokens(stream.readline)
        return self.parse_tokens(tokens, debug)

    def parse_stream(self, stream, debug=False):
        """Parse a stream and return the syntax tree."""
        return self.parse_stream_raw(stream, debug)

    def parse_file(self, filename, encoding=None, debug=False):
        """Parse a file and return the syntax tree."""
        with io.open(filename, "r", encoding=encoding) as stream:
            return self.parse_stream(stream, debug)

    def parse_string(self, text, debug=False):
        """Parse a string and return the syntax tree."""
        tokens = tokenize.generate_tokens(io.StringIO(text).readline)
        return self.parse_tokens(tokens, debug)


def _generate_pickle_name(gt):
    head, tail = os.path.splitext(gt)
    if tail == ".txt":
        tail = ""
    return head + tail + ".".join(map(str, sys.version_info)) + ".pickle"


def load_grammar(gt="Grammar.txt", gp=None,
                 save=True, force=False, logger=None):
    """Load the grammar (maybe from a pickle)."""
    if logger is None:
        logger = logging.getLogger()
    gp = _generate_pickle_name(gt) if gp is None else gp
    if force or not _newer(gp, gt):
        logger.info("Generating grammar tables from %s", gt)
        g = pgen.generate_grammar(gt)
        # the pickle files mismatch, when built on different architectures.
        # don't save these for now. An alternative solution might be to
        # include the multiarch triplet into the file name
        if False:
            logger.info("Writing grammar tables to %s", gp)
            try:
                g.dump(gp)
            except OSError as e:
                logger.info("Writing failed: %s", e)
    else:
        g = grammar.Grammar()
        g.load(gp)
    return g


def _newer(a, b):
    """Inquire whether file a was written since file b."""
    if not os.path.exists(a):
        return False
    if not os.path.exists(b):
        return True
    return os.path.getmtime(a) >= os.path.getmtime(b)


def load_packaged_grammar(package, grammar_source):
    """Normally, loads a pickled grammar by doing
        pkgutil.get_data(package, pickled_grammar)
    where *pickled_grammar* is computed from *grammar_source* by adding the
    Python version and using a ``.pickle`` extension.

    However, if *grammar_source* is an extant file, load_grammar(grammar_source)
    is called instead. This facilitates using a packaged grammar file when needed
    but preserves load_grammar's automatic regeneration behavior when possible.

    """
    if os.path.isfile(grammar_source):
        return load_grammar(grammar_source)
    pickled_name = _generate_pickle_name(os.path.basename(grammar_source))
    data = pkgutil.get_data(package, pickled_name)
    g = grammar.Grammar()
    g.loads(data)
    return g


def main(*args):
    """Main program, when run as a script: produce grammar pickle files.

    Calls load_grammar for each argument, a path to a grammar text file.
    """
    if not args:
        args = sys.argv[1:]
    logging.basicConfig(level=logging.INFO, stream=sys.stdout,
                        format='%(message)s')
    for gt in args:
        load_grammar(gt, save=True, force=True)
    return True

if __name__ == "__main__":
    sys.exit(int(not main()))
PK       ! r        lib2to3/pgen2/__init__.pynu [        # Copyright 2004-2005 Elemental Security, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""The pgen2 package."""
PK       ! rR  R    lib2to3/pgen2/tokenize.pynu [        # Copyright (c) 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 Python Software Foundation.
# All rights reserved.

"""Tokenization help for Python programs.

generate_tokens(readline) is a generator that breaks a stream of
text into Python tokens.  It accepts a readline-like method which is called
repeatedly to get the next line of input (or "" for EOF).  It generates
5-tuples with these members:

    the token type (see token.py)
    the token (a string)
    the starting (row, column) indices of the token (a 2-tuple of ints)
    the ending (row, column) indices of the token (a 2-tuple of ints)
    the original line (string)

It is designed to match the working of the Python tokenizer exactly, except
that it produces COMMENT tokens for comments and gives type OP for all
operators

Older entry points
    tokenize_loop(readline, tokeneater)
    tokenize(readline, tokeneater=printtoken)
are the same, except instead of generating tokens, tokeneater is a callback
function to which the 5 fields described above are passed as 5 arguments,
each time a new token is found."""

__author__ = 'Ka-Ping Yee <ping@lfw.org>'
__credits__ = \
    'GvR, ESR, Tim Peters, Thomas Wouters, Fred Drake, Skip Montanaro'

import string, re
from codecs import BOM_UTF8, lookup
from lib2to3.pgen2.token import *

from . import token
__all__ = [x for x in dir(token) if x[0] != '_'] + ["tokenize",
           "generate_tokens", "untokenize"]
del token

try:
    bytes
except NameError:
    # Support bytes type in Python <= 2.5, so 2to3 turns itself into
    # valid Python 3 code.
    bytes = str

def group(*choices): return '(' + '|'.join(choices) + ')'
def any(*choices): return group(*choices) + '*'
def maybe(*choices): return group(*choices) + '?'
def _combinations(*l):
    return set(
        x + y for x in l for y in l + ("",) if x.casefold() != y.casefold()
    )

Whitespace = r'[ \f\t]*'
Comment = r'#[^\r\n]*'
Ignore = Whitespace + any(r'\\\r?\n' + Whitespace) + maybe(Comment)
Name = r'\w+'

Binnumber = r'0[bB]_?[01]+(?:_[01]+)*'
Hexnumber = r'0[xX]_?[\da-fA-F]+(?:_[\da-fA-F]+)*[lL]?'
Octnumber = r'0[oO]?_?[0-7]+(?:_[0-7]+)*[lL]?'
Decnumber = group(r'[1-9]\d*(?:_\d+)*[lL]?', '0[lL]?')
Intnumber = group(Binnumber, Hexnumber, Octnumber, Decnumber)
Exponent = r'[eE][-+]?\d+(?:_\d+)*'
Pointfloat = group(r'\d+(?:_\d+)*\.(?:\d+(?:_\d+)*)?', r'\.\d+(?:_\d+)*') + maybe(Exponent)
Expfloat = r'\d+(?:_\d+)*' + Exponent
Floatnumber = group(Pointfloat, Expfloat)
Imagnumber = group(r'\d+(?:_\d+)*[jJ]', Floatnumber + r'[jJ]')
Number = group(Imagnumber, Floatnumber, Intnumber)

# Tail end of ' string.
Single = r"[^'\\]*(?:\\.[^'\\]*)*'"
# Tail end of " string.
Double = r'[^"\\]*(?:\\.[^"\\]*)*"'
# Tail end of ''' string.
Single3 = r"[^'\\]*(?:(?:\\.|'(?!''))[^'\\]*)*'''"
# Tail end of """ string.
Double3 = r'[^"\\]*(?:(?:\\.|"(?!""))[^"\\]*)*"""'
_litprefix = r"(?:[uUrRbBfF]|[rR][fFbB]|[fFbBuU][rR])?"
Triple = group(_litprefix + "'''", _litprefix + '"""')
# Single-line ' or " string.
String = group(_litprefix + r"'[^\n'\\]*(?:\\.[^\n'\\]*)*'",
               _litprefix + r'"[^\n"\\]*(?:\\.[^\n"\\]*)*"')

# Because of leftmost-then-longest match semantics, be sure to put the
# longest operators first (e.g., if = came before ==, == would get
# recognized as two instances of =).
Operator = group(r"\*\*=?", r">>=?", r"<<=?", r"<>", r"!=",
                 r"//=?", r"->",
                 r"[+\-*/%&@|^=<>]=?",
                 r"~")

Bracket = '[][(){}]'
Special = group(r'\r?\n', r':=', r'[:;.,`@]')
Funny = group(Operator, Bracket, Special)

PlainToken = group(Number, Funny, String, Name)
Token = Ignore + PlainToken

# First (or only) line of ' or " string.
ContStr = group(_litprefix + r"'[^\n'\\]*(?:\\.[^\n'\\]*)*" +
                group("'", r'\\\r?\n'),
                _litprefix + r'"[^\n"\\]*(?:\\.[^\n"\\]*)*' +
                group('"', r'\\\r?\n'))
PseudoExtras = group(r'\\\r?\n', Comment, Triple)
PseudoToken = Whitespace + group(PseudoExtras, Number, Funny, ContStr, Name)

tokenprog, pseudoprog, single3prog, double3prog = map(
    re.compile, (Token, PseudoToken, Single3, Double3))

_strprefixes = (
    _combinations('r', 'R', 'f', 'F') |
    _combinations('r', 'R', 'b', 'B') |
    {'u', 'U', 'ur', 'uR', 'Ur', 'UR'}
)

endprogs = {"'": re.compile(Single), '"': re.compile(Double),
            "'''": single3prog, '"""': double3prog,
            **{f"{prefix}'''": single3prog for prefix in _strprefixes},
            **{f'{prefix}"""': double3prog for prefix in _strprefixes},
            **{prefix: None for prefix in _strprefixes}}

triple_quoted = (
    {"'''", '"""'} |
    {f"{prefix}'''" for prefix in _strprefixes} |
    {f'{prefix}"""' for prefix in _strprefixes}
)
single_quoted = (
    {"'", '"'} |
    {f"{prefix}'" for prefix in _strprefixes} |
    {f'{prefix}"' for prefix in _strprefixes}
)

tabsize = 8

class TokenError(Exception): pass

class StopTokenizing(Exception): pass

def printtoken(type, token, xxx_todo_changeme, xxx_todo_changeme1, line): # for testing
    (srow, scol) = xxx_todo_changeme
    (erow, ecol) = xxx_todo_changeme1
    print("%d,%d-%d,%d:\t%s\t%s" % \
        (srow, scol, erow, ecol, tok_name[type], repr(token)))

def tokenize(readline, tokeneater=printtoken):
    """
    The tokenize() function accepts two parameters: one representing the
    input stream, and one providing an output mechanism for tokenize().

    The first parameter, readline, must be a callable object which provides
    the same interface as the readline() method of built-in file objects.
    Each call to the function should return one line of input as a string.

    The second parameter, tokeneater, must also be a callable object. It is
    called once for each token, with five arguments, corresponding to the
    tuples generated by generate_tokens().
    """
    try:
        tokenize_loop(readline, tokeneater)
    except StopTokenizing:
        pass

# backwards compatible interface
def tokenize_loop(readline, tokeneater):
    for token_info in generate_tokens(readline):
        tokeneater(*token_info)

class Untokenizer:

    def __init__(self):
        self.tokens = []
        self.prev_row = 1
        self.prev_col = 0

    def add_whitespace(self, start):
        row, col = start
        assert row <= self.prev_row
        col_offset = col - self.prev_col
        if col_offset:
            self.tokens.append(" " * col_offset)

    def untokenize(self, iterable):
        for t in iterable:
            if len(t) == 2:
                self.compat(t, iterable)
                break
            tok_type, token, start, end, line = t
            self.add_whitespace(start)
            self.tokens.append(token)
            self.prev_row, self.prev_col = end
            if tok_type in (NEWLINE, NL):
                self.prev_row += 1
                self.prev_col = 0
        return "".join(self.tokens)

    def compat(self, token, iterable):
        startline = False
        indents = []
        toks_append = self.tokens.append
        toknum, tokval = token
        if toknum in (NAME, NUMBER):
            tokval += ' '
        if toknum in (NEWLINE, NL):
            startline = True
        for tok in iterable:
            toknum, tokval = tok[:2]

            if toknum in (NAME, NUMBER, ASYNC, AWAIT):
                tokval += ' '

            if toknum == INDENT:
                indents.append(tokval)
                continue
            elif toknum == DEDENT:
                indents.pop()
                continue
            elif toknum in (NEWLINE, NL):
                startline = True
            elif startline and indents:
                toks_append(indents[-1])
                startline = False
            toks_append(tokval)

cookie_re = re.compile(r'^[ \t\f]*#.*?coding[:=][ \t]*([-\w.]+)', re.ASCII)
blank_re = re.compile(br'^[ \t\f]*(?:[#\r\n]|$)', re.ASCII)

def _get_normal_name(orig_enc):
    """Imitates get_normal_name in tokenizer.c."""
    # Only care about the first 12 characters.
    enc = orig_enc[:12].lower().replace("_", "-")
    if enc == "utf-8" or enc.startswith("utf-8-"):
        return "utf-8"
    if enc in ("latin-1", "iso-8859-1", "iso-latin-1") or \
       enc.startswith(("latin-1-", "iso-8859-1-", "iso-latin-1-")):
        return "iso-8859-1"
    return orig_enc

def detect_encoding(readline):
    """
    The detect_encoding() function is used to detect the encoding that should
    be used to decode a Python source file. It requires one argument, readline,
    in the same way as the tokenize() generator.

    It will call readline a maximum of twice, and return the encoding used
    (as a string) and a list of any lines (left as bytes) it has read
    in.

    It detects the encoding from the presence of a utf-8 bom or an encoding
    cookie as specified in pep-0263. If both a bom and a cookie are present, but
    disagree, a SyntaxError will be raised. If the encoding cookie is an invalid
    charset, raise a SyntaxError.  Note that if a utf-8 bom is found,
    'utf-8-sig' is returned.

    If no encoding is specified, then the default of 'utf-8' will be returned.
    """
    bom_found = False
    encoding = None
    default = 'utf-8'
    def read_or_stop():
        try:
            return readline()
        except StopIteration:
            return bytes()

    def find_cookie(line):
        try:
            line_string = line.decode('ascii')
        except UnicodeDecodeError:
            return None
        match = cookie_re.match(line_string)
        if not match:
            return None
        encoding = _get_normal_name(match.group(1))
        try:
            codec = lookup(encoding)
        except LookupError:
            # This behaviour mimics the Python interpreter
            raise SyntaxError("unknown encoding: " + encoding)

        if bom_found:
            if codec.name != 'utf-8':
                # This behaviour mimics the Python interpreter
                raise SyntaxError('encoding problem: utf-8')
            encoding += '-sig'
        return encoding

    first = read_or_stop()
    if first.startswith(BOM_UTF8):
        bom_found = True
        first = first[3:]
        default = 'utf-8-sig'
    if not first:
        return default, []

    encoding = find_cookie(first)
    if encoding:
        return encoding, [first]
    if not blank_re.match(first):
        return default, [first]

    second = read_or_stop()
    if not second:
        return default, [first]

    encoding = find_cookie(second)
    if encoding:
        return encoding, [first, second]

    return default, [first, second]

def untokenize(iterable):
    """Transform tokens back into Python source code.

    Each element returned by the iterable must be a token sequence
    with at least two elements, a token number and token value.  If
    only two tokens are passed, the resulting output is poor.

    Round-trip invariant for full input:
        Untokenized source will match input source exactly

    Round-trip invariant for limited input:
        # Output text will tokenize the back to the input
        t1 = [tok[:2] for tok in generate_tokens(f.readline)]
        newcode = untokenize(t1)
        readline = iter(newcode.splitlines(1)).next
        t2 = [tok[:2] for tokin generate_tokens(readline)]
        assert t1 == t2
    """
    ut = Untokenizer()
    return ut.untokenize(iterable)

def generate_tokens(readline):
    """
    The generate_tokens() generator requires one argument, readline, which
    must be a callable object which provides the same interface as the
    readline() method of built-in file objects. Each call to the function
    should return one line of input as a string.  Alternately, readline
    can be a callable function terminating with StopIteration:
        readline = open(myfile).next    # Example of alternate readline

    The generator produces 5-tuples with these members: the token type; the
    token string; a 2-tuple (srow, scol) of ints specifying the row and
    column where the token begins in the source; a 2-tuple (erow, ecol) of
    ints specifying the row and column where the token ends in the source;
    and the line on which the token was found. The line passed is the
    physical line.
    """
    lnum = parenlev = continued = 0
    contstr, needcont = '', 0
    contline = None
    indents = [0]

    # 'stashed' and 'async_*' are used for async/await parsing
    stashed = None
    async_def = False
    async_def_indent = 0
    async_def_nl = False

    while 1:                                   # loop over lines in stream
        try:
            line = readline()
        except StopIteration:
            line = ''
        lnum = lnum + 1
        pos, max = 0, len(line)

        if contstr:                            # continued string
            if not line:
                raise TokenError("EOF in multi-line string", strstart)
            endmatch = endprog.match(line)
            if endmatch:
                pos = end = endmatch.end(0)
                yield (STRING, contstr + line[:end],
                       strstart, (lnum, end), contline + line)
                contstr, needcont = '', 0
                contline = None
            elif needcont and line[-2:] != '\\\n' and line[-3:] != '\\\r\n':
                yield (ERRORTOKEN, contstr + line,
                           strstart, (lnum, len(line)), contline)
                contstr = ''
                contline = None
                continue
            else:
                contstr = contstr + line
                contline = contline + line
                continue

        elif parenlev == 0 and not continued:  # new statement
            if not line: break
            column = 0
            while pos < max:                   # measure leading whitespace
                if line[pos] == ' ': column = column + 1
                elif line[pos] == '\t': column = (column//tabsize + 1)*tabsize
                elif line[pos] == '\f': column = 0
                else: break
                pos = pos + 1
            if pos == max: break

            if stashed:
                yield stashed
                stashed = None

            if line[pos] in '#\r\n':           # skip comments or blank lines
                if line[pos] == '#':
                    comment_token = line[pos:].rstrip('\r\n')
                    nl_pos = pos + len(comment_token)
                    yield (COMMENT, comment_token,
                           (lnum, pos), (lnum, pos + len(comment_token)), line)
                    yield (NL, line[nl_pos:],
                           (lnum, nl_pos), (lnum, len(line)), line)
                else:
                    yield ((NL, COMMENT)[line[pos] == '#'], line[pos:],
                           (lnum, pos), (lnum, len(line)), line)
                continue

            if column > indents[-1]:           # count indents or dedents
                indents.append(column)
                yield (INDENT, line[:pos], (lnum, 0), (lnum, pos), line)
            while column < indents[-1]:
                if column not in indents:
                    raise IndentationError(
                        "unindent does not match any outer indentation level",
                        ("<tokenize>", lnum, pos, line))
                indents = indents[:-1]

                if async_def and async_def_indent >= indents[-1]:
                    async_def = False
                    async_def_nl = False
                    async_def_indent = 0

                yield (DEDENT, '', (lnum, pos), (lnum, pos), line)

            if async_def and async_def_nl and async_def_indent >= indents[-1]:
                async_def = False
                async_def_nl = False
                async_def_indent = 0

        else:                                  # continued statement
            if not line:
                raise TokenError("EOF in multi-line statement", (lnum, 0))
            continued = 0

        while pos < max:
            pseudomatch = pseudoprog.match(line, pos)
            if pseudomatch:                                # scan for tokens
                start, end = pseudomatch.span(1)
                spos, epos, pos = (lnum, start), (lnum, end), end
                token, initial = line[start:end], line[start]

                if initial in string.digits or \
                   (initial == '.' and token != '.'):      # ordinary number
                    yield (NUMBER, token, spos, epos, line)
                elif initial in '\r\n':
                    newline = NEWLINE
                    if parenlev > 0:
                        newline = NL
                    elif async_def:
                        async_def_nl = True
                    if stashed:
                        yield stashed
                        stashed = None
                    yield (newline, token, spos, epos, line)

                elif initial == '#':
                    assert not token.endswith("\n")
                    if stashed:
                        yield stashed
                        stashed = None
                    yield (COMMENT, token, spos, epos, line)
                elif token in triple_quoted:
                    endprog = endprogs[token]
                    endmatch = endprog.match(line, pos)
                    if endmatch:                           # all on one line
                        pos = endmatch.end(0)
                        token = line[start:pos]
                        if stashed:
                            yield stashed
                            stashed = None
                        yield (STRING, token, spos, (lnum, pos), line)
                    else:
                        strstart = (lnum, start)           # multiple lines
                        contstr = line[start:]
                        contline = line
                        break
                elif initial in single_quoted or \
                    token[:2] in single_quoted or \
                    token[:3] in single_quoted:
                    if token[-1] == '\n':                  # continued string
                        strstart = (lnum, start)
                        endprog = (endprogs[initial] or endprogs[token[1]] or
                                   endprogs[token[2]])
                        contstr, needcont = line[start:], 1
                        contline = line
                        break
                    else:                                  # ordinary string
                        if stashed:
                            yield stashed
                            stashed = None
                        yield (STRING, token, spos, epos, line)
                elif initial.isidentifier():               # ordinary name
                    if token in ('async', 'await'):
                        if async_def:
                            yield (ASYNC if token == 'async' else AWAIT,
                                   token, spos, epos, line)
                            continue

                    tok = (NAME, token, spos, epos, line)
                    if token == 'async' and not stashed:
                        stashed = tok
                        continue

                    if token in ('def', 'for'):
                        if (stashed
                                and stashed[0] == NAME
                                and stashed[1] == 'async'):

                            if token == 'def':
                                async_def = True
                                async_def_indent = indents[-1]

                            yield (ASYNC, stashed[1],
                                   stashed[2], stashed[3],
                                   stashed[4])
                            stashed = None

                    if stashed:
                        yield stashed
                        stashed = None

                    yield tok
                elif initial == '\\':                      # continued stmt
                    # This yield is new; needed for better idempotency:
                    if stashed:
                        yield stashed
                        stashed = None
                    yield (NL, token, spos, (lnum, pos), line)
                    continued = 1
                else:
                    if initial in '([{': parenlev = parenlev + 1
                    elif initial in ')]}': parenlev = parenlev - 1
                    if stashed:
                        yield stashed
                        stashed = None
                    yield (OP, token, spos, epos, line)
            else:
                yield (ERRORTOKEN, line[pos],
                           (lnum, pos), (lnum, pos+1), line)
                pos = pos + 1

    if stashed:
        yield stashed
        stashed = None

    for indent in indents[1:]:                 # pop remaining indent levels
        yield (DEDENT, '', (lnum, 0), (lnum, 0), '')
    yield (ENDMARKER, '', (lnum, 0), (lnum, 0), '')

if __name__ == '__main__':                     # testing
    import sys
    if len(sys.argv) > 1: tokenize(open(sys.argv[1]).readline)
    else: tokenize(sys.stdin.readline)
PK       ! mqc  c    lib2to3/pgen2/literals.pynu [        # Copyright 2004-2005 Elemental Security, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Safely evaluate Python string literals without using eval()."""

import re

simple_escapes = {"a": "\a",
                  "b": "\b",
                  "f": "\f",
                  "n": "\n",
                  "r": "\r",
                  "t": "\t",
                  "v": "\v",
                  "'": "'",
                  '"': '"',
                  "\\": "\\"}

def escape(m):
    all, tail = m.group(0, 1)
    assert all.startswith("\\")
    esc = simple_escapes.get(tail)
    if esc is not None:
        return esc
    if tail.startswith("x"):
        hexes = tail[1:]
        if len(hexes) < 2:
            raise ValueError("invalid hex string escape ('\\%s')" % tail)
        try:
            i = int(hexes, 16)
        except ValueError:
            raise ValueError("invalid hex string escape ('\\%s')" % tail) from None
    else:
        try:
            i = int(tail, 8)
        except ValueError:
            raise ValueError("invalid octal string escape ('\\%s')" % tail) from None
    return chr(i)

def evalString(s):
    assert s.startswith("'") or s.startswith('"'), repr(s[:1])
    q = s[0]
    if s[:3] == q*3:
        q = q*3
    assert s.endswith(q), repr(s[-len(q):])
    assert len(s) >= 2*len(q)
    s = s[len(q):-len(q)]
    return re.sub(r"\\(\'|\"|\\|[abfnrtv]|x.{0,2}|[0-7]{1,3})", escape, s)

def test():
    for i in range(256):
        c = chr(i)
        s = repr(c)
        e = evalString(s)
        if e != c:
            print(i, c, s, e)


if __name__ == "__main__":
    test()
PK       ! Fm  Fm    lib2to3/pytree.pynu [        # Copyright 2006 Google, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""
Python parse tree definitions.

This is a very concrete parse tree; we need to keep every token and
even the comments and whitespace between tokens.

There's also a pattern matching implementation here.
"""

__author__ = "Guido van Rossum <guido@python.org>"

import sys
from io import StringIO

HUGE = 0x7FFFFFFF  # maximum repeat count, default max

_type_reprs = {}
def type_repr(type_num):
    global _type_reprs
    if not _type_reprs:
        from .pygram import python_symbols
        # printing tokens is possible but not as useful
        # from .pgen2 import token // token.__dict__.items():
        for name, val in python_symbols.__dict__.items():
            if type(val) == int: _type_reprs[val] = name
    return _type_reprs.setdefault(type_num, type_num)

class Base(object):

    """
    Abstract base class for Node and Leaf.

    This provides some default functionality and boilerplate using the
    template pattern.

    A node may be a subnode of at most one parent.
    """

    # Default values for instance variables
    type = None    # int: token number (< 256) or symbol number (>= 256)
    parent = None  # Parent node pointer, or None
    children = ()  # Tuple of subnodes
    was_changed = False
    was_checked = False

    def __new__(cls, *args, **kwds):
        """Constructor that prevents Base from being instantiated."""
        assert cls is not Base, "Cannot instantiate Base"
        return object.__new__(cls)

    def __eq__(self, other):
        """
        Compare two nodes for equality.

        This calls the method _eq().
        """
        if self.__class__ is not other.__class__:
            return NotImplemented
        return self._eq(other)

    __hash__ = None # For Py3 compatibility.

    def _eq(self, other):
        """
        Compare two nodes for equality.

        This is called by __eq__ and __ne__.  It is only called if the two nodes
        have the same type.  This must be implemented by the concrete subclass.
        Nodes should be considered equal if they have the same structure,
        ignoring the prefix string and other context information.
        """
        raise NotImplementedError

    def clone(self):
        """
        Return a cloned (deep) copy of self.

        This must be implemented by the concrete subclass.
        """
        raise NotImplementedError

    def post_order(self):
        """
        Return a post-order iterator for the tree.

        This must be implemented by the concrete subclass.
        """
        raise NotImplementedError

    def pre_order(self):
        """
        Return a pre-order iterator for the tree.

        This must be implemented by the concrete subclass.
        """
        raise NotImplementedError

    def replace(self, new):
        """Replace this node with a new one in the parent."""
        assert self.parent is not None, str(self)
        assert new is not None
        if not isinstance(new, list):
            new = [new]
        l_children = []
        found = False
        for ch in self.parent.children:
            if ch is self:
                assert not found, (self.parent.children, self, new)
                if new is not None:
                    l_children.extend(new)
                found = True
            else:
                l_children.append(ch)
        assert found, (self.children, self, new)
        self.parent.changed()
        self.parent.children = l_children
        for x in new:
            x.parent = self.parent
        self.parent = None

    def get_lineno(self):
        """Return the line number which generated the invocant node."""
        node = self
        while not isinstance(node, Leaf):
            if not node.children:
                return
            node = node.children[0]
        return node.lineno

    def changed(self):
        if self.parent:
            self.parent.changed()
        self.was_changed = True

    def remove(self):
        """
        Remove the node from the tree. Returns the position of the node in its
        parent's children before it was removed.
        """
        if self.parent:
            for i, node in enumerate(self.parent.children):
                if node is self:
                    self.parent.changed()
                    del self.parent.children[i]
                    self.parent = None
                    return i

    @property
    def next_sibling(self):
        """
        The node immediately following the invocant in their parent's children
        list. If the invocant does not have a next sibling, it is None
        """
        if self.parent is None:
            return None

        # Can't use index(); we need to test by identity
        for i, child in enumerate(self.parent.children):
            if child is self:
                try:
                    return self.parent.children[i+1]
                except IndexError:
                    return None

    @property
    def prev_sibling(self):
        """
        The node immediately preceding the invocant in their parent's children
        list. If the invocant does not have a previous sibling, it is None.
        """
        if self.parent is None:
            return None

        # Can't use index(); we need to test by identity
        for i, child in enumerate(self.parent.children):
            if child is self:
                if i == 0:
                    return None
                return self.parent.children[i-1]

    def leaves(self):
        for child in self.children:
            yield from child.leaves()

    def depth(self):
        if self.parent is None:
            return 0
        return 1 + self.parent.depth()

    def get_suffix(self):
        """
        Return the string immediately following the invocant node. This is
        effectively equivalent to node.next_sibling.prefix
        """
        next_sib = self.next_sibling
        if next_sib is None:
            return ""
        return next_sib.prefix

    if sys.version_info < (3, 0):
        def __str__(self):
            return str(self).encode("ascii")

class Node(Base):

    """Concrete implementation for interior nodes."""

    def __init__(self,type, children,
                 context=None,
                 prefix=None,
                 fixers_applied=None):
        """
        Initializer.

        Takes a type constant (a symbol number >= 256), a sequence of
        child nodes, and an optional context keyword argument.

        As a side effect, the parent pointers of the children are updated.
        """
        assert type >= 256, type
        self.type = type
        self.children = list(children)
        for ch in self.children:
            assert ch.parent is None, repr(ch)
            ch.parent = self
        if prefix is not None:
            self.prefix = prefix
        if fixers_applied:
            self.fixers_applied = fixers_applied[:]
        else:
            self.fixers_applied = None

    def __repr__(self):
        """Return a canonical string representation."""
        return "%s(%s, %r)" % (self.__class__.__name__,
                               type_repr(self.type),
                               self.children)

    def __unicode__(self):
        """
        Return a pretty string representation.

        This reproduces the input source exactly.
        """
        return "".join(map(str, self.children))

    if sys.version_info > (3, 0):
        __str__ = __unicode__

    def _eq(self, other):
        """Compare two nodes for equality."""
        return (self.type, self.children) == (other.type, other.children)

    def clone(self):
        """Return a cloned (deep) copy of self."""
        return Node(self.type, [ch.clone() for ch in self.children],
                    fixers_applied=self.fixers_applied)

    def post_order(self):
        """Return a post-order iterator for the tree."""
        for child in self.children:
            yield from child.post_order()
        yield self

    def pre_order(self):
        """Return a pre-order iterator for the tree."""
        yield self
        for child in self.children:
            yield from child.pre_order()

    @property
    def prefix(self):
        """
        The whitespace and comments preceding this node in the input.
        """
        if not self.children:
            return ""
        return self.children[0].prefix

    @prefix.setter
    def prefix(self, prefix):
        if self.children:
            self.children[0].prefix = prefix

    def set_child(self, i, child):
        """
        Equivalent to 'node.children[i] = child'. This method also sets the
        child's parent attribute appropriately.
        """
        child.parent = self
        self.children[i].parent = None
        self.children[i] = child
        self.changed()

    def insert_child(self, i, child):
        """
        Equivalent to 'node.children.insert(i, child)'. This method also sets
        the child's parent attribute appropriately.
        """
        child.parent = self
        self.children.insert(i, child)
        self.changed()

    def append_child(self, child):
        """
        Equivalent to 'node.children.append(child)'. This method also sets the
        child's parent attribute appropriately.
        """
        child.parent = self
        self.children.append(child)
        self.changed()


class Leaf(Base):

    """Concrete implementation for leaf nodes."""

    # Default values for instance variables
    _prefix = ""  # Whitespace and comments preceding this token in the input
    lineno = 0    # Line where this token starts in the input
    column = 0    # Column where this token tarts in the input

    def __init__(self, type, value,
                 context=None,
                 prefix=None,
                 fixers_applied=[]):
        """
        Initializer.

        Takes a type constant (a token number < 256), a string value, and an
        optional context keyword argument.
        """
        assert 0 <= type < 256, type
        if context is not None:
            self._prefix, (self.lineno, self.column) = context
        self.type = type
        self.value = value
        if prefix is not None:
            self._prefix = prefix
        self.fixers_applied = fixers_applied[:]

    def __repr__(self):
        """Return a canonical string representation."""
        return "%s(%r, %r)" % (self.__class__.__name__,
                               self.type,
                               self.value)

    def __unicode__(self):
        """
        Return a pretty string representation.

        This reproduces the input source exactly.
        """
        return self.prefix + str(self.value)

    if sys.version_info > (3, 0):
        __str__ = __unicode__

    def _eq(self, other):
        """Compare two nodes for equality."""
        return (self.type, self.value) == (other.type, other.value)

    def clone(self):
        """Return a cloned (deep) copy of self."""
        return Leaf(self.type, self.value,
                    (self.prefix, (self.lineno, self.column)),
                    fixers_applied=self.fixers_applied)

    def leaves(self):
        yield self

    def post_order(self):
        """Return a post-order iterator for the tree."""
        yield self

    def pre_order(self):
        """Return a pre-order iterator for the tree."""
        yield self

    @property
    def prefix(self):
        """
        The whitespace and comments preceding this token in the input.
        """
        return self._prefix

    @prefix.setter
    def prefix(self, prefix):
        self.changed()
        self._prefix = prefix

def convert(gr, raw_node):
    """
    Convert raw node information to a Node or Leaf instance.

    This is passed to the parser driver which calls it whenever a reduction of a
    grammar rule produces a new complete node, so that the tree is build
    strictly bottom-up.
    """
    type, value, context, children = raw_node
    if children or type in gr.number2symbol:
        # If there's exactly one child, return that child instead of
        # creating a new node.
        if len(children) == 1:
            return children[0]
        return Node(type, children, context=context)
    else:
        return Leaf(type, value, context=context)


class BasePattern(object):

    """
    A pattern is a tree matching pattern.

    It looks for a specific node type (token or symbol), and
    optionally for a specific content.

    This is an abstract base class.  There are three concrete
    subclasses:

    - LeafPattern matches a single leaf node;
    - NodePattern matches a single node (usually non-leaf);
    - WildcardPattern matches a sequence of nodes of variable length.
    """

    # Defaults for instance variables
    type = None     # Node type (token if < 256, symbol if >= 256)
    content = None  # Optional content matching pattern
    name = None     # Optional name used to store match in results dict

    def __new__(cls, *args, **kwds):
        """Constructor that prevents BasePattern from being instantiated."""
        assert cls is not BasePattern, "Cannot instantiate BasePattern"
        return object.__new__(cls)

    def __repr__(self):
        args = [type_repr(self.type), self.content, self.name]
        while args and args[-1] is None:
            del args[-1]
        return "%s(%s)" % (self.__class__.__name__, ", ".join(map(repr, args)))

    def optimize(self):
        """
        A subclass can define this as a hook for optimizations.

        Returns either self or another node with the same effect.
        """
        return self

    def match(self, node, results=None):
        """
        Does this pattern exactly match a node?

        Returns True if it matches, False if not.

        If results is not None, it must be a dict which will be
        updated with the nodes matching named subpatterns.

        Default implementation for non-wildcard patterns.
        """
        if self.type is not None and node.type != self.type:
            return False
        if self.content is not None:
            r = None
            if results is not None:
                r = {}
            if not self._submatch(node, r):
                return False
            if r:
                results.update(r)
        if results is not None and self.name:
            results[self.name] = node
        return True

    def match_seq(self, nodes, results=None):
        """
        Does this pattern exactly match a sequence of nodes?

        Default implementation for non-wildcard patterns.
        """
        if len(nodes) != 1:
            return False
        return self.match(nodes[0], results)

    def generate_matches(self, nodes):
        """
        Generator yielding all matches for this pattern.

        Default implementation for non-wildcard patterns.
        """
        r = {}
        if nodes and self.match(nodes[0], r):
            yield 1, r


class LeafPattern(BasePattern):

    def __init__(self, type=None, content=None, name=None):
        """
        Initializer.  Takes optional type, content, and name.

        The type, if given must be a token type (< 256).  If not given,
        this matches any *leaf* node; the content may still be required.

        The content, if given, must be a string.

        If a name is given, the matching node is stored in the results
        dict under that key.
        """
        if type is not None:
            assert 0 <= type < 256, type
        if content is not None:
            assert isinstance(content, str), repr(content)
        self.type = type
        self.content = content
        self.name = name

    def match(self, node, results=None):
        """Override match() to insist on a leaf node."""
        if not isinstance(node, Leaf):
            return False
        return BasePattern.match(self, node, results)

    def _submatch(self, node, results=None):
        """
        Match the pattern's content to the node's children.

        This assumes the node type matches and self.content is not None.

        Returns True if it matches, False if not.

        If results is not None, it must be a dict which will be
        updated with the nodes matching named subpatterns.

        When returning False, the results dict may still be updated.
        """
        return self.content == node.value


class NodePattern(BasePattern):

    wildcards = False

    def __init__(self, type=None, content=None, name=None):
        """
        Initializer.  Takes optional type, content, and name.

        The type, if given, must be a symbol type (>= 256).  If the
        type is None this matches *any* single node (leaf or not),
        except if content is not None, in which it only matches
        non-leaf nodes that also match the content pattern.

        The content, if not None, must be a sequence of Patterns that
        must match the node's children exactly.  If the content is
        given, the type must not be None.

        If a name is given, the matching node is stored in the results
        dict under that key.
        """
        if type is not None:
            assert type >= 256, type
        if content is not None:
            assert not isinstance(content, str), repr(content)
            content = list(content)
            for i, item in enumerate(content):
                assert isinstance(item, BasePattern), (i, item)
                if isinstance(item, WildcardPattern):
                    self.wildcards = True
        self.type = type
        self.content = content
        self.name = name

    def _submatch(self, node, results=None):
        """
        Match the pattern's content to the node's children.

        This assumes the node type matches and self.content is not None.

        Returns True if it matches, False if not.

        If results is not None, it must be a dict which will be
        updated with the nodes matching named subpatterns.

        When returning False, the results dict may still be updated.
        """
        if self.wildcards:
            for c, r in generate_matches(self.content, node.children):
                if c == len(node.children):
                    if results is not None:
                        results.update(r)
                    return True
            return False
        if len(self.content) != len(node.children):
            return False
        for subpattern, child in zip(self.content, node.children):
            if not subpattern.match(child, results):
                return False
        return True


class WildcardPattern(BasePattern):

    """
    A wildcard pattern can match zero or more nodes.

    This has all the flexibility needed to implement patterns like:

    .*      .+      .?      .{m,n}
    (a b c | d e | f)
    (...)*  (...)+  (...)?  (...){m,n}

    except it always uses non-greedy matching.
    """

    def __init__(self, content=None, min=0, max=HUGE, name=None):
        """
        Initializer.

        Args:
            content: optional sequence of subsequences of patterns;
                     if absent, matches one node;
                     if present, each subsequence is an alternative [*]
            min: optional minimum number of times to match, default 0
            max: optional maximum number of times to match, default HUGE
            name: optional name assigned to this match

        [*] Thus, if content is [[a, b, c], [d, e], [f, g, h]] this is
            equivalent to (a b c | d e | f g h); if content is None,
            this is equivalent to '.' in regular expression terms.
            The min and max parameters work as follows:
                min=0, max=maxint: .*
                min=1, max=maxint: .+
                min=0, max=1: .?
                min=1, max=1: .
            If content is not None, replace the dot with the parenthesized
            list of alternatives, e.g. (a b c | d e | f g h)*
        """
        assert 0 <= min <= max <= HUGE, (min, max)
        if content is not None:
            content = tuple(map(tuple, content))  # Protect against alterations
            # Check sanity of alternatives
            assert len(content), repr(content)  # Can't have zero alternatives
            for alt in content:
                assert len(alt), repr(alt) # Can have empty alternatives
        self.content = content
        self.min = min
        self.max = max
        self.name = name

    def optimize(self):
        """Optimize certain stacked wildcard patterns."""
        subpattern = None
        if (self.content is not None and
            len(self.content) == 1 and len(self.content[0]) == 1):
            subpattern = self.content[0][0]
        if self.min == 1 and self.max == 1:
            if self.content is None:
                return NodePattern(name=self.name)
            if subpattern is not None and  self.name == subpattern.name:
                return subpattern.optimize()
        if (self.min <= 1 and isinstance(subpattern, WildcardPattern) and
            subpattern.min <= 1 and self.name == subpattern.name):
            return WildcardPattern(subpattern.content,
                                   self.min*subpattern.min,
                                   self.max*subpattern.max,
                                   subpattern.name)
        return self

    def match(self, node, results=None):
        """Does this pattern exactly match a node?"""
        return self.match_seq([node], results)

    def match_seq(self, nodes, results=None):
        """Does this pattern exactly match a sequence of nodes?"""
        for c, r in self.generate_matches(nodes):
            if c == len(nodes):
                if results is not None:
                    results.update(r)
                    if self.name:
                        results[self.name] = list(nodes)
                return True
        return False

    def generate_matches(self, nodes):
        """
        Generator yielding matches for a sequence of nodes.

        Args:
            nodes: sequence of nodes

        Yields:
            (count, results) tuples where:
            count: the match comprises nodes[:count];
            results: dict containing named submatches.
        """
        if self.content is None:
            # Shortcut for special case (see __init__.__doc__)
            for count in range(self.min, 1 + min(len(nodes), self.max)):
                r = {}
                if self.name:
                    r[self.name] = nodes[:count]
                yield count, r
        elif self.name == "bare_name":
            yield self._bare_name_matches(nodes)
        else:
            # The reason for this is that hitting the recursion limit usually
            # results in some ugly messages about how RuntimeErrors are being
            # ignored. We only have to do this on CPython, though, because other
            # implementations don't have this nasty bug in the first place.
            if hasattr(sys, "getrefcount"):
                save_stderr = sys.stderr
                sys.stderr = StringIO()
            try:
                for count, r in self._recursive_matches(nodes, 0):
                    if self.name:
                        r[self.name] = nodes[:count]
                    yield count, r
            except RuntimeError:
                # Fall back to the iterative pattern matching scheme if the
                # recursive scheme hits the recursion limit (RecursionError).
                for count, r in self._iterative_matches(nodes):
                    if self.name:
                        r[self.name] = nodes[:count]
                    yield count, r
            finally:
                if hasattr(sys, "getrefcount"):
                    sys.stderr = save_stderr

    def _iterative_matches(self, nodes):
        """Helper to iteratively yield the matches."""
        nodelen = len(nodes)
        if 0 >= self.min:
            yield 0, {}

        results = []
        # generate matches that use just one alt from self.content
        for alt in self.content:
            for c, r in generate_matches(alt, nodes):
                yield c, r
                results.append((c, r))

        # for each match, iterate down the nodes
        while results:
            new_results = []
            for c0, r0 in results:
                # stop if the entire set of nodes has been matched
                if c0 < nodelen and c0 <= self.max:
                    for alt in self.content:
                        for c1, r1 in generate_matches(alt, nodes[c0:]):
                            if c1 > 0:
                                r = {}
                                r.update(r0)
                                r.update(r1)
                                yield c0 + c1, r
                                new_results.append((c0 + c1, r))
            results = new_results

    def _bare_name_matches(self, nodes):
        """Special optimized matcher for bare_name."""
        count = 0
        r = {}
        done = False
        max = len(nodes)
        while not done and count < max:
            done = True
            for leaf in self.content:
                if leaf[0].match(nodes[count], r):
                    count += 1
                    done = False
                    break
        r[self.name] = nodes[:count]
        return count, r

    def _recursive_matches(self, nodes, count):
        """Helper to recursively yield the matches."""
        assert self.content is not None
        if count >= self.min:
            yield 0, {}
        if count < self.max:
            for alt in self.content:
                for c0, r0 in generate_matches(alt, nodes):
                    for c1, r1 in self._recursive_matches(nodes[c0:], count+1):
                        r = {}
                        r.update(r0)
                        r.update(r1)
                        yield c0 + c1, r


class NegatedPattern(BasePattern):

    def __init__(self, content=None):
        """
        Initializer.

        The argument is either a pattern or None.  If it is None, this
        only matches an empty sequence (effectively '$' in regex
        lingo).  If it is not None, this matches whenever the argument
        pattern doesn't have any matches.
        """
        if content is not None:
            assert isinstance(content, BasePattern), repr(content)
        self.content = content

    def match(self, node):
        # We never match a node in its entirety
        return False

    def match_seq(self, nodes):
        # We only match an empty sequence of nodes in its entirety
        return len(nodes) == 0

    def generate_matches(self, nodes):
        if self.content is None:
            # Return a match if there is an empty sequence
            if len(nodes) == 0:
                yield 0, {}
        else:
            # Return a match if the argument pattern has no matches
            for c, r in self.content.generate_matches(nodes):
                return
            yield 0, {}


def generate_matches(patterns, nodes):
    """
    Generator yielding matches for a sequence of patterns and nodes.

    Args:
        patterns: a sequence of patterns
        nodes: a sequence of nodes

    Yields:
        (count, results) tuples where:
        count: the entire sequence of patterns matches nodes[:count];
        results: dict containing named submatches.
        """
    if not patterns:
        yield 0, {}
    else:
        p, rest = patterns[0], patterns[1:]
        for c0, r0 in p.generate_matches(nodes):
            if not rest:
                yield c0, r0
            else:
                for c1, r1 in generate_matches(rest, nodes[c0:]):
                    r = {}
                    r.update(r0)
                    r.update(r1)
                    yield c0 + c1, r
PK       ! .?&  &    lib2to3/btm_utils.pynu [        "Utility functions used by the btm_matcher module"

from . import pytree
from .pgen2 import grammar, token
from .pygram import pattern_symbols, python_symbols

syms = pattern_symbols
pysyms = python_symbols
tokens = grammar.opmap
token_labels = token

TYPE_ANY = -1
TYPE_ALTERNATIVES = -2
TYPE_GROUP = -3

class MinNode(object):
    """This class serves as an intermediate representation of the
    pattern tree during the conversion to sets of leaf-to-root
    subpatterns"""

    def __init__(self, type=None, name=None):
        self.type = type
        self.name = name
        self.children = []
        self.leaf = False
        self.parent = None
        self.alternatives = []
        self.group = []

    def __repr__(self):
        return str(self.type) + ' ' + str(self.name)

    def leaf_to_root(self):
        """Internal method. Returns a characteristic path of the
        pattern tree. This method must be run for all leaves until the
        linear subpatterns are merged into a single"""
        node = self
        subp = []
        while node:
            if node.type == TYPE_ALTERNATIVES:
                node.alternatives.append(subp)
                if len(node.alternatives) == len(node.children):
                    #last alternative
                    subp = [tuple(node.alternatives)]
                    node.alternatives = []
                    node = node.parent
                    continue
                else:
                    node = node.parent
                    subp = None
                    break

            if node.type == TYPE_GROUP:
                node.group.append(subp)
                #probably should check the number of leaves
                if len(node.group) == len(node.children):
                    subp = get_characteristic_subpattern(node.group)
                    node.group = []
                    node = node.parent
                    continue
                else:
                    node = node.parent
                    subp = None
                    break

            if node.type == token_labels.NAME and node.name:
                #in case of type=name, use the name instead
                subp.append(node.name)
            else:
                subp.append(node.type)

            node = node.parent
        return subp

    def get_linear_subpattern(self):
        """Drives the leaf_to_root method. The reason that
        leaf_to_root must be run multiple times is because we need to
        reject 'group' matches; for example the alternative form
        (a | b c) creates a group [b c] that needs to be matched. Since
        matching multiple linear patterns overcomes the automaton's
        capabilities, leaf_to_root merges each group into a single
        choice based on 'characteristic'ity,

        i.e. (a|b c) -> (a|b) if b more characteristic than c

        Returns: The most 'characteristic'(as defined by
          get_characteristic_subpattern) path for the compiled pattern
          tree.
        """

        for l in self.leaves():
            subp = l.leaf_to_root()
            if subp:
                return subp

    def leaves(self):
        "Generator that returns the leaves of the tree"
        for child in self.children:
            yield from child.leaves()
        if not self.children:
            yield self

def reduce_tree(node, parent=None):
    """
    Internal function. Reduces a compiled pattern tree to an
    intermediate representation suitable for feeding the
    automaton. This also trims off any optional pattern elements(like
    [a], a*).
    """

    new_node = None
    #switch on the node type
    if node.type == syms.Matcher:
        #skip
        node = node.children[0]

    if node.type == syms.Alternatives  :
        #2 cases
        if len(node.children) <= 2:
            #just a single 'Alternative', skip this node
            new_node = reduce_tree(node.children[0], parent)
        else:
            #real alternatives
            new_node = MinNode(type=TYPE_ALTERNATIVES)
            #skip odd children('|' tokens)
            for child in node.children:
                if node.children.index(child)%2:
                    continue
                reduced = reduce_tree(child, new_node)
                if reduced is not None:
                    new_node.children.append(reduced)
    elif node.type == syms.Alternative:
        if len(node.children) > 1:

            new_node = MinNode(type=TYPE_GROUP)
            for child in node.children:
                reduced = reduce_tree(child, new_node)
                if reduced:
                    new_node.children.append(reduced)
            if not new_node.children:
                # delete the group if all of the children were reduced to None
                new_node = None

        else:
            new_node = reduce_tree(node.children[0], parent)

    elif node.type == syms.Unit:
        if (isinstance(node.children[0], pytree.Leaf) and
            node.children[0].value == '('):
            #skip parentheses
            return reduce_tree(node.children[1], parent)
        if ((isinstance(node.children[0], pytree.Leaf) and
               node.children[0].value == '[')
               or
               (len(node.children)>1 and
               hasattr(node.children[1], "value") and
               node.children[1].value == '[')):
            #skip whole unit if its optional
            return None

        leaf = True
        details_node = None
        alternatives_node = None
        has_repeater = False
        repeater_node = None
        has_variable_name = False

        for child in node.children:
            if child.type == syms.Details:
                leaf = False
                details_node = child
            elif child.type == syms.Repeater:
                has_repeater = True
                repeater_node = child
            elif child.type == syms.Alternatives:
                alternatives_node = child
            if hasattr(child, 'value') and child.value == '=': # variable name
                has_variable_name = True

        #skip variable name
        if has_variable_name:
            #skip variable name, '='
            name_leaf = node.children[2]
            if hasattr(name_leaf, 'value') and name_leaf.value == '(':
                # skip parenthesis
                name_leaf = node.children[3]
        else:
            name_leaf = node.children[0]

        #set node type
        if name_leaf.type == token_labels.NAME:
            #(python) non-name or wildcard
            if name_leaf.value == 'any':
                new_node = MinNode(type=TYPE_ANY)
            else:
                if hasattr(token_labels, name_leaf.value):
                    new_node = MinNode(type=getattr(token_labels, name_leaf.value))
                else:
                    new_node = MinNode(type=getattr(pysyms, name_leaf.value))

        elif name_leaf.type == token_labels.STRING:
            #(python) name or character; remove the apostrophes from
            #the string value
            name = name_leaf.value.strip("'")
            if name in tokens:
                new_node = MinNode(type=tokens[name])
            else:
                new_node = MinNode(type=token_labels.NAME, name=name)
        elif name_leaf.type == syms.Alternatives:
            new_node = reduce_tree(alternatives_node, parent)

        #handle repeaters
        if has_repeater:
            if repeater_node.children[0].value == '*':
                #reduce to None
                new_node = None
            elif repeater_node.children[0].value == '+':
                #reduce to a single occurrence i.e. do nothing
                pass
            else:
                #TODO: handle {min, max} repeaters
                raise NotImplementedError

        #add children
        if details_node and new_node is not None:
            for child in details_node.children[1:-1]:
                #skip '<', '>' markers
                reduced = reduce_tree(child, new_node)
                if reduced is not None:
                    new_node.children.append(reduced)
    if new_node:
        new_node.parent = parent
    return new_node


def get_characteristic_subpattern(subpatterns):
    """Picks the most characteristic from a list of linear patterns
    Current order used is:
    names > common_names > common_chars
    """
    if not isinstance(subpatterns, list):
        return subpatterns
    if len(subpatterns)==1:
        return subpatterns[0]

    # first pick out the ones containing variable names
    subpatterns_with_names = []
    subpatterns_with_common_names = []
    common_names = ['in', 'for', 'if' , 'not', 'None']
    subpatterns_with_common_chars = []
    common_chars = "[]().,:"
    for subpattern in subpatterns:
        if any(rec_test(subpattern, lambda x: type(x) is str)):
            if any(rec_test(subpattern,
                            lambda x: isinstance(x, str) and x in common_chars)):
                subpatterns_with_common_chars.append(subpattern)
            elif any(rec_test(subpattern,
                              lambda x: isinstance(x, str) and x in common_names)):
                subpatterns_with_common_names.append(subpattern)

            else:
                subpatterns_with_names.append(subpattern)

    if subpatterns_with_names:
        subpatterns = subpatterns_with_names
    elif subpatterns_with_common_names:
        subpatterns = subpatterns_with_common_names
    elif subpatterns_with_common_chars:
        subpatterns = subpatterns_with_common_chars
    # of the remaining subpatterns pick out the longest one
    return max(subpatterns, key=len)

def rec_test(sequence, test_func):
    """Tests test_func on all items of sequence and items of included
    sub-iterables"""
    for x in sequence:
        if isinstance(x, (list, tuple)):
            yield from rec_test(x, test_func)
        else:
            yield test_func(x)
PK       ! kkIf;  f;    lib2to3/fixer_util.pynu [        """Utility functions, node construction macros, etc."""
# Author: Collin Winter

# Local imports
from .pgen2 import token
from .pytree import Leaf, Node
from .pygram import python_symbols as syms
from . import patcomp


###########################################################
### Common node-construction "macros"
###########################################################

def KeywordArg(keyword, value):
    return Node(syms.argument,
                [keyword, Leaf(token.EQUAL, "="), value])

def LParen():
    return Leaf(token.LPAR, "(")

def RParen():
    return Leaf(token.RPAR, ")")

def Assign(target, source):
    """Build an assignment statement"""
    if not isinstance(target, list):
        target = [target]
    if not isinstance(source, list):
        source.prefix = " "
        source = [source]

    return Node(syms.atom,
                target + [Leaf(token.EQUAL, "=", prefix=" ")] + source)

def Name(name, prefix=None):
    """Return a NAME leaf"""
    return Leaf(token.NAME, name, prefix=prefix)

def Attr(obj, attr):
    """A node tuple for obj.attr"""
    return [obj, Node(syms.trailer, [Dot(), attr])]

def Comma():
    """A comma leaf"""
    return Leaf(token.COMMA, ",")

def Dot():
    """A period (.) leaf"""
    return Leaf(token.DOT, ".")

def ArgList(args, lparen=LParen(), rparen=RParen()):
    """A parenthesised argument list, used by Call()"""
    node = Node(syms.trailer, [lparen.clone(), rparen.clone()])
    if args:
        node.insert_child(1, Node(syms.arglist, args))
    return node

def Call(func_name, args=None, prefix=None):
    """A function call"""
    node = Node(syms.power, [func_name, ArgList(args)])
    if prefix is not None:
        node.prefix = prefix
    return node

def Newline():
    """A newline literal"""
    return Leaf(token.NEWLINE, "\n")

def BlankLine():
    """A blank line"""
    return Leaf(token.NEWLINE, "")

def Number(n, prefix=None):
    return Leaf(token.NUMBER, n, prefix=prefix)

def Subscript(index_node):
    """A numeric or string subscript"""
    return Node(syms.trailer, [Leaf(token.LBRACE, "["),
                               index_node,
                               Leaf(token.RBRACE, "]")])

def String(string, prefix=None):
    """A string leaf"""
    return Leaf(token.STRING, string, prefix=prefix)

def ListComp(xp, fp, it, test=None):
    """A list comprehension of the form [xp for fp in it if test].

    If test is None, the "if test" part is omitted.
    """
    xp.prefix = ""
    fp.prefix = " "
    it.prefix = " "
    for_leaf = Leaf(token.NAME, "for")
    for_leaf.prefix = " "
    in_leaf = Leaf(token.NAME, "in")
    in_leaf.prefix = " "
    inner_args = [for_leaf, fp, in_leaf, it]
    if test:
        test.prefix = " "
        if_leaf = Leaf(token.NAME, "if")
        if_leaf.prefix = " "
        inner_args.append(Node(syms.comp_if, [if_leaf, test]))
    inner = Node(syms.listmaker, [xp, Node(syms.comp_for, inner_args)])
    return Node(syms.atom,
                       [Leaf(token.LBRACE, "["),
                        inner,
                        Leaf(token.RBRACE, "]")])

def FromImport(package_name, name_leafs):
    """ Return an import statement in the form:
        from package import name_leafs"""
    # XXX: May not handle dotted imports properly (eg, package_name='foo.bar')
    #assert package_name == '.' or '.' not in package_name, "FromImport has "\
    #       "not been tested with dotted package names -- use at your own "\
    #       "peril!"

    for leaf in name_leafs:
        # Pull the leaves out of their old tree
        leaf.remove()

    children = [Leaf(token.NAME, "from"),
                Leaf(token.NAME, package_name, prefix=" "),
                Leaf(token.NAME, "import", prefix=" "),
                Node(syms.import_as_names, name_leafs)]
    imp = Node(syms.import_from, children)
    return imp

def ImportAndCall(node, results, names):
    """Returns an import statement and calls a method
    of the module:

    import module
    module.name()"""
    obj = results["obj"].clone()
    if obj.type == syms.arglist:
        newarglist = obj.clone()
    else:
        newarglist = Node(syms.arglist, [obj.clone()])
    after = results["after"]
    if after:
        after = [n.clone() for n in after]
    new = Node(syms.power,
               Attr(Name(names[0]), Name(names[1])) +
               [Node(syms.trailer,
                     [results["lpar"].clone(),
                      newarglist,
                      results["rpar"].clone()])] + after)
    new.prefix = node.prefix
    return new


###########################################################
### Determine whether a node represents a given literal
###########################################################

def is_tuple(node):
    """Does the node represent a tuple literal?"""
    if isinstance(node, Node) and node.children == [LParen(), RParen()]:
        return True
    return (isinstance(node, Node)
            and len(node.children) == 3
            and isinstance(node.children[0], Leaf)
            and isinstance(node.children[1], Node)
            and isinstance(node.children[2], Leaf)
            and node.children[0].value == "("
            and node.children[2].value == ")")

def is_list(node):
    """Does the node represent a list literal?"""
    return (isinstance(node, Node)
            and len(node.children) > 1
            and isinstance(node.children[0], Leaf)
            and isinstance(node.children[-1], Leaf)
            and node.children[0].value == "["
            and node.children[-1].value == "]")


###########################################################
### Misc
###########################################################

def parenthesize(node):
    return Node(syms.atom, [LParen(), node, RParen()])


consuming_calls = {"sorted", "list", "set", "any", "all", "tuple", "sum",
                   "min", "max", "enumerate"}

def attr_chain(obj, attr):
    """Follow an attribute chain.

    If you have a chain of objects where a.foo -> b, b.foo-> c, etc,
    use this to iterate over all objects in the chain. Iteration is
    terminated by getattr(x, attr) is None.

    Args:
        obj: the starting object
        attr: the name of the chaining attribute

    Yields:
        Each successive object in the chain.
    """
    next = getattr(obj, attr)
    while next:
        yield next
        next = getattr(next, attr)

p0 = """for_stmt< 'for' any 'in' node=any ':' any* >
        | comp_for< 'for' any 'in' node=any any* >
     """
p1 = """
power<
    ( 'iter' | 'list' | 'tuple' | 'sorted' | 'set' | 'sum' |
      'any' | 'all' | 'enumerate' | (any* trailer< '.' 'join' >) )
    trailer< '(' node=any ')' >
    any*
>
"""
p2 = """
power<
    ( 'sorted' | 'enumerate' )
    trailer< '(' arglist<node=any any*> ')' >
    any*
>
"""
pats_built = False
def in_special_context(node):
    """ Returns true if node is in an environment where all that is required
        of it is being iterable (ie, it doesn't matter if it returns a list
        or an iterator).
        See test_map_nochange in test_fixers.py for some examples and tests.
        """
    global p0, p1, p2, pats_built
    if not pats_built:
        p0 = patcomp.compile_pattern(p0)
        p1 = patcomp.compile_pattern(p1)
        p2 = patcomp.compile_pattern(p2)
        pats_built = True
    patterns = [p0, p1, p2]
    for pattern, parent in zip(patterns, attr_chain(node, "parent")):
        results = {}
        if pattern.match(parent, results) and results["node"] is node:
            return True
    return False

def is_probably_builtin(node):
    """
    Check that something isn't an attribute or function name etc.
    """
    prev = node.prev_sibling
    if prev is not None and prev.type == token.DOT:
        # Attribute lookup.
        return False
    parent = node.parent
    if parent.type in (syms.funcdef, syms.classdef):
        return False
    if parent.type == syms.expr_stmt and parent.children[0] is node:
        # Assignment.
        return False
    if parent.type == syms.parameters or \
            (parent.type == syms.typedargslist and (
            (prev is not None and prev.type == token.COMMA) or
            parent.children[0] is node
            )):
        # The name of an argument.
        return False
    return True

def find_indentation(node):
    """Find the indentation of *node*."""
    while node is not None:
        if node.type == syms.suite and len(node.children) > 2:
            indent = node.children[1]
            if indent.type == token.INDENT:
                return indent.value
        node = node.parent
    return ""

###########################################################
### The following functions are to find bindings in a suite
###########################################################

def make_suite(node):
    if node.type == syms.suite:
        return node
    node = node.clone()
    parent, node.parent = node.parent, None
    suite = Node(syms.suite, [node])
    suite.parent = parent
    return suite

def find_root(node):
    """Find the top level namespace."""
    # Scamper up to the top level namespace
    while node.type != syms.file_input:
        node = node.parent
        if not node:
            raise ValueError("root found before file_input node was found.")
    return node

def does_tree_import(package, name, node):
    """ Returns true if name is imported from package at the
        top level of the tree which node belongs to.
        To cover the case of an import like 'import foo', use
        None for the package and 'foo' for the name. """
    binding = find_binding(name, find_root(node), package)
    return bool(binding)

def is_import(node):
    """Returns true if the node is an import statement."""
    return node.type in (syms.import_name, syms.import_from)

def touch_import(package, name, node):
    """ Works like `does_tree_import` but adds an import statement
        if it was not imported. """
    def is_import_stmt(node):
        return (node.type == syms.simple_stmt and node.children and
                is_import(node.children[0]))

    root = find_root(node)

    if does_tree_import(package, name, root):
        return

    # figure out where to insert the new import.  First try to find
    # the first import and then skip to the last one.
    insert_pos = offset = 0
    for idx, node in enumerate(root.children):
        if not is_import_stmt(node):
            continue
        for offset, node2 in enumerate(root.children[idx:]):
            if not is_import_stmt(node2):
                break
        insert_pos = idx + offset
        break

    # if there are no imports where we can insert, find the docstring.
    # if that also fails, we stick to the beginning of the file
    if insert_pos == 0:
        for idx, node in enumerate(root.children):
            if (node.type == syms.simple_stmt and node.children and
               node.children[0].type == token.STRING):
                insert_pos = idx + 1
                break

    if package is None:
        import_ = Node(syms.import_name, [
            Leaf(token.NAME, "import"),
            Leaf(token.NAME, name, prefix=" ")
        ])
    else:
        import_ = FromImport(package, [Leaf(token.NAME, name, prefix=" ")])

    children = [import_, Newline()]
    root.insert_child(insert_pos, Node(syms.simple_stmt, children))


_def_syms = {syms.classdef, syms.funcdef}
def find_binding(name, node, package=None):
    """ Returns the node which binds variable name, otherwise None.
        If optional argument package is supplied, only imports will
        be returned.
        See test cases for examples."""
    for child in node.children:
        ret = None
        if child.type == syms.for_stmt:
            if _find(name, child.children[1]):
                return child
            n = find_binding(name, make_suite(child.children[-1]), package)
            if n: ret = n
        elif child.type in (syms.if_stmt, syms.while_stmt):
            n = find_binding(name, make_suite(child.children[-1]), package)
            if n: ret = n
        elif child.type == syms.try_stmt:
            n = find_binding(name, make_suite(child.children[2]), package)
            if n:
                ret = n
            else:
                for i, kid in enumerate(child.children[3:]):
                    if kid.type == token.COLON and kid.value == ":":
                        # i+3 is the colon, i+4 is the suite
                        n = find_binding(name, make_suite(child.children[i+4]), package)
                        if n: ret = n
        elif child.type in _def_syms and child.children[1].value == name:
            ret = child
        elif _is_import_binding(child, name, package):
            ret = child
        elif child.type == syms.simple_stmt:
            ret = find_binding(name, child, package)
        elif child.type == syms.expr_stmt:
            if _find(name, child.children[0]):
                ret = child

        if ret:
            if not package:
                return ret
            if is_import(ret):
                return ret
    return None

_block_syms = {syms.funcdef, syms.classdef, syms.trailer}
def _find(name, node):
    nodes = [node]
    while nodes:
        node = nodes.pop()
        if node.type > 256 and node.type not in _block_syms:
            nodes.extend(node.children)
        elif node.type == token.NAME and node.value == name:
            return node
    return None

def _is_import_binding(node, name, package=None):
    """ Will return node if node will import name, or node
        will import * from package.  None is returned otherwise.
        See test cases for examples. """

    if node.type == syms.import_name and not package:
        imp = node.children[1]
        if imp.type == syms.dotted_as_names:
            for child in imp.children:
                if child.type == syms.dotted_as_name:
                    if child.children[2].value == name:
                        return node
                elif child.type == token.NAME and child.value == name:
                    return node
        elif imp.type == syms.dotted_as_name:
            last = imp.children[-1]
            if last.type == token.NAME and last.value == name:
                return node
        elif imp.type == token.NAME and imp.value == name:
            return node
    elif node.type == syms.import_from:
        # str(...) is used to make life easier here, because
        # from a.b import parses to ['import', ['a', '.', 'b'], ...]
        if package and str(node.children[1]).strip() != package:
            return None
        n = node.children[3]
        if package and _find("as", n):
            # See test_from_import_as for explanation
            return None
        elif n.type == syms.import_as_names and _find(name, n):
            return node
        elif n.type == syms.import_as_name:
            child = n.children[2]
            if child.type == token.NAME and child.value == name:
                return node
        elif n.type == token.NAME and n.value == name:
            return node
        elif package and n.type == token.STAR:
            return node
    return None
PK       ! R,N.  N.    lib2to3/main.pynu [        """
Main program for 2to3.
"""

from __future__ import with_statement, print_function

import sys
import os
import difflib
import logging
import shutil
import optparse

from . import refactor


def diff_texts(a, b, filename):
    """Return a unified diff of two strings."""
    a = a.splitlines()
    b = b.splitlines()
    return difflib.unified_diff(a, b, filename, filename,
                                "(original)", "(refactored)",
                                lineterm="")


class StdoutRefactoringTool(refactor.MultiprocessRefactoringTool):
    """
    A refactoring tool that can avoid overwriting its input files.
    Prints output to stdout.

    Output files can optionally be written to a different directory and or
    have an extra file suffix appended to their name for use in situations
    where you do not want to replace the input files.
    """

    def __init__(self, fixers, options, explicit, nobackups, show_diffs,
                 input_base_dir='', output_dir='', append_suffix=''):
        """
        Args:
            fixers: A list of fixers to import.
            options: A dict with RefactoringTool configuration.
            explicit: A list of fixers to run even if they are explicit.
            nobackups: If true no backup '.bak' files will be created for those
                files that are being refactored.
            show_diffs: Should diffs of the refactoring be printed to stdout?
            input_base_dir: The base directory for all input files.  This class
                will strip this path prefix off of filenames before substituting
                it with output_dir.  Only meaningful if output_dir is supplied.
                All files processed by refactor() must start with this path.
            output_dir: If supplied, all converted files will be written into
                this directory tree instead of input_base_dir.
            append_suffix: If supplied, all files output by this tool will have
                this appended to their filename.  Useful for changing .py to
                .py3 for example by passing append_suffix='3'.
        """
        self.nobackups = nobackups
        self.show_diffs = show_diffs
        if input_base_dir and not input_base_dir.endswith(os.sep):
            input_base_dir += os.sep
        self._input_base_dir = input_base_dir
        self._output_dir = output_dir
        self._append_suffix = append_suffix
        super(StdoutRefactoringTool, self).__init__(fixers, options, explicit)

    def log_error(self, msg, *args, **kwargs):
        self.errors.append((msg, args, kwargs))
        self.logger.error(msg, *args, **kwargs)

    def write_file(self, new_text, filename, old_text, encoding):
        orig_filename = filename
        if self._output_dir:
            if filename.startswith(self._input_base_dir):
                filename = os.path.join(self._output_dir,
                                        filename[len(self._input_base_dir):])
            else:
                raise ValueError('filename %s does not start with the '
                                 'input_base_dir %s' % (
                                         filename, self._input_base_dir))
        if self._append_suffix:
            filename += self._append_suffix
        if orig_filename != filename:
            output_dir = os.path.dirname(filename)
            if not os.path.isdir(output_dir) and output_dir:
                os.makedirs(output_dir)
            self.log_message('Writing converted %s to %s.', orig_filename,
                             filename)
        if not self.nobackups:
            # Make backup
            backup = filename + ".bak"
            if os.path.lexists(backup):
                try:
                    os.remove(backup)
                except OSError:
                    self.log_message("Can't remove backup %s", backup)
            try:
                os.rename(filename, backup)
            except OSError:
                self.log_message("Can't rename %s to %s", filename, backup)
        # Actually write the new file
        write = super(StdoutRefactoringTool, self).write_file
        write(new_text, filename, old_text, encoding)
        if not self.nobackups:
            shutil.copymode(backup, filename)
        if orig_filename != filename:
            # Preserve the file mode in the new output directory.
            shutil.copymode(orig_filename, filename)

    def print_output(self, old, new, filename, equal):
        if equal:
            self.log_message("No changes to %s", filename)
        else:
            self.log_message("Refactored %s", filename)
            if self.show_diffs:
                diff_lines = diff_texts(old, new, filename)
                try:
                    if self.output_lock is not None:
                        with self.output_lock:
                            for line in diff_lines:
                                print(line)
                            sys.stdout.flush()
                    else:
                        for line in diff_lines:
                            print(line)
                except UnicodeEncodeError:
                    warn("couldn't encode %s's diff for your terminal" %
                         (filename,))
                    return

def warn(msg):
    print("WARNING: %s" % (msg,), file=sys.stderr)


def main(fixer_pkg, args=None):
    """Main program.

    Args:
        fixer_pkg: the name of a package where the fixers are located.
        args: optional; a list of command line arguments. If omitted,
              sys.argv[1:] is used.

    Returns a suggested exit status (0, 1, 2).
    """
    # Set up option parser
    parser = optparse.OptionParser(usage="2to3 [options] file|dir ...")
    parser.add_option("-d", "--doctests_only", action="store_true",
                      help="Fix up doctests only")
    parser.add_option("-f", "--fix", action="append", default=[],
                      help="Each FIX specifies a transformation; default: all")
    parser.add_option("-j", "--processes", action="store", default=1,
                      type="int", help="Run 2to3 concurrently")
    parser.add_option("-x", "--nofix", action="append", default=[],
                      help="Prevent a transformation from being run")
    parser.add_option("-l", "--list-fixes", action="store_true",
                      help="List available transformations")
    parser.add_option("-p", "--print-function", action="store_true",
                      help="Modify the grammar so that print() is a function")
    parser.add_option("-e", "--exec-function", action="store_true",
                      help="Modify the grammar so that exec() is a function")
    parser.add_option("-v", "--verbose", action="store_true",
                      help="More verbose logging")
    parser.add_option("--no-diffs", action="store_true",
                      help="Don't show diffs of the refactoring")
    parser.add_option("-w", "--write", action="store_true",
                      help="Write back modified files")
    parser.add_option("-n", "--nobackups", action="store_true", default=False,
                      help="Don't write backups for modified files")
    parser.add_option("-o", "--output-dir", action="store", type="str",
                      default="", help="Put output files in this directory "
                      "instead of overwriting the input files.  Requires -n.")
    parser.add_option("-W", "--write-unchanged-files", action="store_true",
                      help="Also write files even if no changes were required"
                      " (useful with --output-dir); implies -w.")
    parser.add_option("--add-suffix", action="store", type="str", default="",
                      help="Append this string to all output filenames."
                      " Requires -n if non-empty.  "
                      "ex: --add-suffix='3' will generate .py3 files.")

    # Parse command line arguments
    refactor_stdin = False
    flags = {}
    options, args = parser.parse_args(args)
    if options.write_unchanged_files:
        flags["write_unchanged_files"] = True
        if not options.write:
            warn("--write-unchanged-files/-W implies -w.")
        options.write = True
    # If we allowed these, the original files would be renamed to backup names
    # but not replaced.
    if options.output_dir and not options.nobackups:
        parser.error("Can't use --output-dir/-o without -n.")
    if options.add_suffix and not options.nobackups:
        parser.error("Can't use --add-suffix without -n.")

    if not options.write and options.no_diffs:
        warn("not writing files and not printing diffs; that's not very useful")
    if not options.write and options.nobackups:
        parser.error("Can't use -n without -w")
    if options.list_fixes:
        print("Available transformations for the -f/--fix option:")
        for fixname in refactor.get_all_fix_names(fixer_pkg):
            print(fixname)
        if not args:
            return 0
    if not args:
        print("At least one file or directory argument required.", file=sys.stderr)
        print("Use --help to show usage.", file=sys.stderr)
        return 2
    if "-" in args:
        refactor_stdin = True
        if options.write:
            print("Can't write to stdin.", file=sys.stderr)
            return 2
    if options.print_function:
        flags["print_function"] = True

    if options.exec_function:
        flags["exec_function"] = True

    # Set up logging handler
    level = logging.DEBUG if options.verbose else logging.INFO
    logging.basicConfig(format='%(name)s: %(message)s', level=level)
    logger = logging.getLogger('lib2to3.main')

    # Initialize the refactoring tool
    avail_fixes = set(refactor.get_fixers_from_package(fixer_pkg))
    unwanted_fixes = set(fixer_pkg + ".fix_" + fix for fix in options.nofix)
    explicit = set()
    if options.fix:
        all_present = False
        for fix in options.fix:
            if fix == "all":
                all_present = True
            else:
                explicit.add(fixer_pkg + ".fix_" + fix)
        requested = avail_fixes.union(explicit) if all_present else explicit
    else:
        requested = avail_fixes.union(explicit)
    fixer_names = requested.difference(unwanted_fixes)
    input_base_dir = os.path.commonprefix(args)
    if (input_base_dir and not input_base_dir.endswith(os.sep)
        and not os.path.isdir(input_base_dir)):
        # One or more similar names were passed, their directory is the base.
        # os.path.commonprefix() is ignorant of path elements, this corrects
        # for that weird API.
        input_base_dir = os.path.dirname(input_base_dir)
    if options.output_dir:
        input_base_dir = input_base_dir.rstrip(os.sep)
        logger.info('Output in %r will mirror the input directory %r layout.',
                    options.output_dir, input_base_dir)
    rt = StdoutRefactoringTool(
            sorted(fixer_names), flags, sorted(explicit),
            options.nobackups, not options.no_diffs,
            input_base_dir=input_base_dir,
            output_dir=options.output_dir,
            append_suffix=options.add_suffix)

    # Refactor all files and directories passed as arguments
    if not rt.errors:
        if refactor_stdin:
            rt.refactor_stdin()
        else:
            try:
                rt.refactor(args, options.write, options.doctests_only,
                            options.processes)
            except refactor.MultiprocessingUnsupported:
                assert options.processes > 1
                print("Sorry, -j isn't supported on this platform.",
                      file=sys.stderr)
                return 1
        rt.summarize()

    # Return error status (0 if rt.errors is zero)
    return int(bool(rt.errors))
PK       ! =n  n    lib2to3/fixes/fix_raise.pynu [        """Fixer for 'raise E, V, T'

raise         -> raise
raise E       -> raise E
raise E, V    -> raise E(V)
raise E, V, T -> raise E(V).with_traceback(T)
raise E, None, T -> raise E.with_traceback(T)

raise (((E, E'), E''), E'''), V -> raise E(V)
raise "foo", V, T               -> warns about string exceptions


CAVEATS:
1) "raise E, V" will be incorrectly translated if V is an exception
   instance. The correct Python 3 idiom is

        raise E from V

   but since we can't detect instance-hood by syntax alone and since
   any client code would have to be changed as well, we don't automate
   this.
"""
# Author: Collin Winter

# Local imports
from .. import pytree
from ..pgen2 import token
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Name, Call, Attr, ArgList, is_tuple

class FixRaise(fixer_base.BaseFix):

    BM_compatible = True
    PATTERN = """
    raise_stmt< 'raise' exc=any [',' val=any [',' tb=any]] >
    """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        syms = self.syms

        exc = results["exc"].clone()
        if exc.type == token.STRING:
            msg = "Python 3 does not support string exceptions"
            self.cannot_convert(node, msg)
            return

        # Python 2 supports
        #  raise ((((E1, E2), E3), E4), E5), V
        # as a synonym for
        #  raise E1, V
        # Since Python 3 will not support this, we recurse down any tuple
        # literals, always taking the first element.
        if is_tuple(exc):
            while is_tuple(exc):
                # exc.children[1:-1] is the unparenthesized tuple
                # exc.children[1].children[0] is the first element of the tuple
                exc = exc.children[1].children[0].clone()
            exc.prefix = " "

        if "val" not in results:
            # One-argument raise
            new = pytree.Node(syms.raise_stmt, [Name("raise"), exc])
            new.prefix = node.prefix
            return new

        val = results["val"].clone()
        if is_tuple(val):
            args = [c.clone() for c in val.children[1:-1]]
        else:
            val.prefix = ""
            args = [val]

        if "tb" in results:
            tb = results["tb"].clone()
            tb.prefix = ""

            e = exc
            # If there's a traceback and None is passed as the value, then don't
            # add a call, since the user probably just wants to add a
            # traceback. See issue #9661.
            if val.type != token.NAME or val.value != "None":
                e = Call(exc, args)
            with_tb = Attr(e, Name('with_traceback')) + [ArgList([tb])]
            new = pytree.Node(syms.simple_stmt, [Name("raise")] + with_tb)
            new.prefix = node.prefix
            return new
        else:
            return pytree.Node(syms.raise_stmt,
                               [Name("raise"), Call(exc, args)],
                               prefix=node.prefix)
PK       ! 5Y
  
    lib2to3/fixes/fix_filter.pynu [        # Copyright 2007 Google, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Fixer that changes filter(F, X) into list(filter(F, X)).

We avoid the transformation if the filter() call is directly contained
in iter(<>), list(<>), tuple(<>), sorted(<>), ...join(<>), or
for V in <>:.

NOTE: This is still not correct if the original code was depending on
filter(F, X) to return a string if X is a string and a tuple if X is a
tuple.  That would require type inference, which we don't do.  Let
Python 2.6 figure it out.
"""

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..pytree import Node
from ..pygram import python_symbols as syms
from ..fixer_util import Name, ArgList, ListComp, in_special_context, parenthesize


class FixFilter(fixer_base.ConditionalFix):
    BM_compatible = True

    PATTERN = """
    filter_lambda=power<
        'filter'
        trailer<
            '('
            arglist<
                lambdef< 'lambda'
                         (fp=NAME | vfpdef< '(' fp=NAME ')'> ) ':' xp=any
                >
                ','
                it=any
            >
            ')'
        >
        [extra_trailers=trailer*]
    >
    |
    power<
        'filter'
        trailer< '(' arglist< none='None' ',' seq=any > ')' >
        [extra_trailers=trailer*]
    >
    |
    power<
        'filter'
        args=trailer< '(' [any] ')' >
        [extra_trailers=trailer*]
    >
    """

    skip_on = "future_builtins.filter"

    def transform(self, node, results):
        if self.should_skip(node):
            return

        trailers = []
        if 'extra_trailers' in results:
            for t in results['extra_trailers']:
                trailers.append(t.clone())

        if "filter_lambda" in results:
            xp = results.get("xp").clone()
            if xp.type == syms.test:
                xp.prefix = ""
                xp = parenthesize(xp)

            new = ListComp(results.get("fp").clone(),
                           results.get("fp").clone(),
                           results.get("it").clone(), xp)
            new = Node(syms.power, [new] + trailers, prefix="")

        elif "none" in results:
            new = ListComp(Name("_f"),
                           Name("_f"),
                           results["seq"].clone(),
                           Name("_f"))
            new = Node(syms.power, [new] + trailers, prefix="")

        else:
            if in_special_context(node):
                return None

            args = results['args'].clone()
            new = Node(syms.power, [Name("filter"), args], prefix="")
            new = Node(syms.power, [Name("list"), ArgList([new])] + trailers)
            new.prefix = ""
        new.prefix = node.prefix
        return new
PK       ! 誔*	  *	    lib2to3/fixes/fix_apply.pynu [        # Copyright 2006 Google, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Fixer for apply().

This converts apply(func, v, k) into (func)(*v, **k)."""

# Local imports
from .. import pytree
from ..pgen2 import token
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Call, Comma, parenthesize

class FixApply(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True

    PATTERN = """
    power< 'apply'
        trailer<
            '('
            arglist<
                (not argument<NAME '=' any>) func=any ','
                (not argument<NAME '=' any>) args=any [','
                (not argument<NAME '=' any>) kwds=any] [',']
            >
            ')'
        >
    >
    """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        syms = self.syms
        assert results
        func = results["func"]
        args = results["args"]
        kwds = results.get("kwds")
        # I feel like we should be able to express this logic in the
        # PATTERN above but I don't know how to do it so...
        if args:
            if (args.type == self.syms.argument and
                args.children[0].value in {'**', '*'}):
                return  # Make no change.
        if kwds and (kwds.type == self.syms.argument and
                     kwds.children[0].value == '**'):
            return  # Make no change.
        prefix = node.prefix
        func = func.clone()
        if (func.type not in (token.NAME, syms.atom) and
            (func.type != syms.power or
             func.children[-2].type == token.DOUBLESTAR)):
            # Need to parenthesize
            func = parenthesize(func)
        func.prefix = ""
        args = args.clone()
        args.prefix = ""
        if kwds is not None:
            kwds = kwds.clone()
            kwds.prefix = ""
        l_newargs = [pytree.Leaf(token.STAR, "*"), args]
        if kwds is not None:
            l_newargs.extend([Comma(),
                              pytree.Leaf(token.DOUBLESTAR, "**"),
                              kwds])
            l_newargs[-2].prefix = " " # that's the ** token
        # XXX Sometimes we could be cleverer, e.g. apply(f, (x, y) + t)
        # can be translated into f(x, y, *t) instead of f(*(x, y) + t)
        #new = pytree.Node(syms.power, (func, ArgList(l_newargs)))
        return Call(func, l_newargs, prefix=prefix)
PK       ! %TW68  8    lib2to3/fixes/fix_map.pynu [        # Copyright 2007 Google, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Fixer that changes map(F, ...) into list(map(F, ...)) unless there
exists a 'from future_builtins import map' statement in the top-level
namespace.

As a special case, map(None, X) is changed into list(X).  (This is
necessary because the semantics are changed in this case -- the new
map(None, X) is equivalent to [(x,) for x in X].)

We avoid the transformation (except for the special case mentioned
above) if the map() call is directly contained in iter(<>), list(<>),
tuple(<>), sorted(<>), ...join(<>), or for V in <>:.

NOTE: This is still not correct if the original code was depending on
map(F, X, Y, ...) to go on until the longest argument is exhausted,
substituting None for missing values -- like zip(), it now stops as
soon as the shortest argument is exhausted.
"""

# Local imports
from ..pgen2 import token
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Name, ArgList, Call, ListComp, in_special_context
from ..pygram import python_symbols as syms
from ..pytree import Node


class FixMap(fixer_base.ConditionalFix):
    BM_compatible = True

    PATTERN = """
    map_none=power<
        'map'
        trailer< '(' arglist< 'None' ',' arg=any [','] > ')' >
        [extra_trailers=trailer*]
    >
    |
    map_lambda=power<
        'map'
        trailer<
            '('
            arglist<
                lambdef< 'lambda'
                         (fp=NAME | vfpdef< '(' fp=NAME ')'> ) ':' xp=any
                >
                ','
                it=any
            >
            ')'
        >
        [extra_trailers=trailer*]
    >
    |
    power<
        'map' args=trailer< '(' [any] ')' >
        [extra_trailers=trailer*]
    >
    """

    skip_on = 'future_builtins.map'

    def transform(self, node, results):
        if self.should_skip(node):
            return

        trailers = []
        if 'extra_trailers' in results:
            for t in results['extra_trailers']:
                trailers.append(t.clone())

        if node.parent.type == syms.simple_stmt:
            self.warning(node, "You should use a for loop here")
            new = node.clone()
            new.prefix = ""
            new = Call(Name("list"), [new])
        elif "map_lambda" in results:
            new = ListComp(results["xp"].clone(),
                           results["fp"].clone(),
                           results["it"].clone())
            new = Node(syms.power, [new] + trailers, prefix="")

        else:
            if "map_none" in results:
                new = results["arg"].clone()
                new.prefix = ""
            else:
                if "args" in results:
                    args = results["args"]
                    if args.type == syms.trailer and \
                       args.children[1].type == syms.arglist and \
                       args.children[1].children[0].type == token.NAME and \
                       args.children[1].children[0].value == "None":
                        self.warning(node, "cannot convert map(None, ...) "
                                     "with multiple arguments because map() "
                                     "now truncates to the shortest sequence")
                        return

                    new = Node(syms.power, [Name("map"), args.clone()])
                    new.prefix = ""

                if in_special_context(node):
                    return None

            new = Node(syms.power, [Name("list"), ArgList([new])] + trailers)
            new.prefix = ""

        new.prefix = node.prefix
        return new
PK       ! iG      lib2to3/fixes/fix_long.pynu [        # Copyright 2006 Google, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Fixer that turns 'long' into 'int' everywhere.
"""

# Local imports
from lib2to3 import fixer_base
from lib2to3.fixer_util import is_probably_builtin


class FixLong(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True
    PATTERN = "'long'"

    def transform(self, node, results):
        if is_probably_builtin(node):
            node.value = "int"
            node.changed()
PK       ! ʿ>1      lib2to3/fixes/fix_paren.pynu [        """Fixer that adds parentheses where they are required

This converts ``[x for x in 1, 2]`` to ``[x for x in (1, 2)]``."""

# By Taek Joo Kim and Benjamin Peterson

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import LParen, RParen

# XXX This doesn't support nested for loops like [x for x in 1, 2 for x in 1, 2]
class FixParen(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True

    PATTERN = """
        atom< ('[' | '(')
            (listmaker< any
                comp_for<
                    'for' NAME 'in'
                    target=testlist_safe< any (',' any)+ [',']
                     >
                    [any]
                >
            >
            |
            testlist_gexp< any
                comp_for<
                    'for' NAME 'in'
                    target=testlist_safe< any (',' any)+ [',']
                     >
                    [any]
                >
            >)
        (']' | ')') >
    """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        target = results["target"]

        lparen = LParen()
        lparen.prefix = target.prefix
        target.prefix = "" # Make it hug the parentheses
        target.insert_child(0, lparen)
        target.append_child(RParen())
PK       ! Z6      lib2to3/fixes/fix_print.pynu [        # Copyright 2006 Google, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Fixer for print.

Change:
    'print'          into 'print()'
    'print ...'      into 'print(...)'
    'print ... ,'    into 'print(..., end=" ")'
    'print >>x, ...' into 'print(..., file=x)'

No changes are applied if print_function is imported from __future__

"""

# Local imports
from .. import patcomp
from .. import pytree
from ..pgen2 import token
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Name, Call, Comma, String


parend_expr = patcomp.compile_pattern(
              """atom< '(' [atom|STRING|NAME] ')' >"""
              )


class FixPrint(fixer_base.BaseFix):

    BM_compatible = True

    PATTERN = """
              simple_stmt< any* bare='print' any* > | print_stmt
              """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        assert results

        bare_print = results.get("bare")

        if bare_print:
            # Special-case print all by itself
            bare_print.replace(Call(Name("print"), [],
                               prefix=bare_print.prefix))
            return
        assert node.children[0] == Name("print")
        args = node.children[1:]
        if len(args) == 1 and parend_expr.match(args[0]):
            # We don't want to keep sticking parens around an
            # already-parenthesised expression.
            return

        sep = end = file = None
        if args and args[-1] == Comma():
            args = args[:-1]
            end = " "
        if args and args[0] == pytree.Leaf(token.RIGHTSHIFT, ">>"):
            assert len(args) >= 2
            file = args[1].clone()
            args = args[3:] # Strip a possible comma after the file expression
        # Now synthesize a print(args, sep=..., end=..., file=...) node.
        l_args = [arg.clone() for arg in args]
        if l_args:
            l_args[0].prefix = ""
        if sep is not None or end is not None or file is not None:
            if sep is not None:
                self.add_kwarg(l_args, "sep", String(repr(sep)))
            if end is not None:
                self.add_kwarg(l_args, "end", String(repr(end)))
            if file is not None:
                self.add_kwarg(l_args, "file", file)
        n_stmt = Call(Name("print"), l_args)
        n_stmt.prefix = node.prefix
        return n_stmt

    def add_kwarg(self, l_nodes, s_kwd, n_expr):
        # XXX All this prefix-setting may lose comments (though rarely)
        n_expr.prefix = ""
        n_argument = pytree.Node(self.syms.argument,
                                 (Name(s_kwd),
                                  pytree.Leaf(token.EQUAL, "="),
                                  n_expr))
        if l_nodes:
            l_nodes.append(Comma())
            n_argument.prefix = " "
        l_nodes.append(n_argument)
PK       ! ޽    "  lib2to3/fixes/fix_standarderror.pynu [        # Copyright 2007 Google, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Fixer for StandardError -> Exception."""

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Name


class FixStandarderror(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True
    PATTERN = """
              'StandardError'
              """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        return Name("Exception", prefix=node.prefix)
PK       ! N2E      lib2to3/fixes/fix_xreadlines.pynu [        """Fix "for x in f.xreadlines()" -> "for x in f".

This fixer will also convert g(f.xreadlines) into g(f.__iter__)."""
# Author: Collin Winter

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Name


class FixXreadlines(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True
    PATTERN = """
    power< call=any+ trailer< '.' 'xreadlines' > trailer< '(' ')' > >
    |
    power< any+ trailer< '.' no_call='xreadlines' > >
    """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        no_call = results.get("no_call")

        if no_call:
            no_call.replace(Name("__iter__", prefix=no_call.prefix))
        else:
            node.replace([x.clone() for x in results["call"]])
PK       ! HgH  H    lib2to3/fixes/fix_isinstance.pynu [        # Copyright 2008 Armin Ronacher.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Fixer that cleans up a tuple argument to isinstance after the tokens
in it were fixed.  This is mainly used to remove double occurrences of
tokens as a leftover of the long -> int / unicode -> str conversion.

eg.  isinstance(x, (int, long)) -> isinstance(x, (int, int))
       -> isinstance(x, int)
"""

from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import token


class FixIsinstance(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True
    PATTERN = """
    power<
        'isinstance'
        trailer< '(' arglist< any ',' atom< '('
            args=testlist_gexp< any+ >
        ')' > > ')' >
    >
    """

    run_order = 6

    def transform(self, node, results):
        names_inserted = set()
        testlist = results["args"]
        args = testlist.children
        new_args = []
        iterator = enumerate(args)
        for idx, arg in iterator:
            if arg.type == token.NAME and arg.value in names_inserted:
                if idx < len(args) - 1 and args[idx + 1].type == token.COMMA:
                    next(iterator)
                    continue
            else:
                new_args.append(arg)
                if arg.type == token.NAME:
                    names_inserted.add(arg.value)
        if new_args and new_args[-1].type == token.COMMA:
            del new_args[-1]
        if len(new_args) == 1:
            atom = testlist.parent
            new_args[0].prefix = atom.prefix
            atom.replace(new_args[0])
        else:
            args[:] = new_args
            node.changed()
PK       ! I
  
    lib2to3/fixes/fix_sys_exc.pynu [        """Fixer for sys.exc_{type, value, traceback}

sys.exc_type -> sys.exc_info()[0]
sys.exc_value -> sys.exc_info()[1]
sys.exc_traceback -> sys.exc_info()[2]
"""

# By Jeff Balogh and Benjamin Peterson

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Attr, Call, Name, Number, Subscript, Node, syms

class FixSysExc(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    # This order matches the ordering of sys.exc_info().
    exc_info = ["exc_type", "exc_value", "exc_traceback"]
    BM_compatible = True
    PATTERN = """
              power< 'sys' trailer< dot='.' attribute=(%s) > >
              """ % '|'.join("'%s'" % e for e in exc_info)

    def transform(self, node, results):
        sys_attr = results["attribute"][0]
        index = Number(self.exc_info.index(sys_attr.value))

        call = Call(Name("exc_info"), prefix=sys_attr.prefix)
        attr = Attr(Name("sys"), call)
        attr[1].children[0].prefix = results["dot"].prefix
        attr.append(Subscript(index))
        return Node(syms.power, attr, prefix=node.prefix)
PK       ! ?O  O    lib2to3/fixes/fix_nonzero.pynu [        """Fixer for __nonzero__ -> __bool__ methods."""
# Author: Collin Winter

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Name

class FixNonzero(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True
    PATTERN = """
    classdef< 'class' any+ ':'
              suite< any*
                     funcdef< 'def' name='__nonzero__'
                              parameters< '(' NAME ')' > any+ >
                     any* > >
    """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        name = results["name"]
        new = Name("__bool__", prefix=name.prefix)
        name.replace(new)
PK       ! )x  x    lib2to3/fixes/fix_intern.pynu [        # Copyright 2006 Georg Brandl.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Fixer for intern().

intern(s) -> sys.intern(s)"""

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import ImportAndCall, touch_import


class FixIntern(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True
    order = "pre"

    PATTERN = """
    power< 'intern'
           trailer< lpar='('
                    ( not(arglist | argument<any '=' any>) obj=any
                      | obj=arglist<(not argument<any '=' any>) any ','> )
                    rpar=')' >
           after=any*
    >
    """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        if results:
            # I feel like we should be able to express this logic in the
            # PATTERN above but I don't know how to do it so...
            obj = results['obj']
            if obj:
                if (obj.type == self.syms.argument and
                    obj.children[0].value in {'**', '*'}):
                    return  # Make no change.
        names = ('sys', 'intern')
        new = ImportAndCall(node, results, names)
        touch_import(None, 'sys', node)
        return new
PK       ! ds      lib2to3/fixes/fix_dict.pynu [        # Copyright 2007 Google, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Fixer for dict methods.

d.keys() -> list(d.keys())
d.items() -> list(d.items())
d.values() -> list(d.values())

d.iterkeys() -> iter(d.keys())
d.iteritems() -> iter(d.items())
d.itervalues() -> iter(d.values())

d.viewkeys() -> d.keys()
d.viewitems() -> d.items()
d.viewvalues() -> d.values()

Except in certain very specific contexts: the iter() can be dropped
when the context is list(), sorted(), iter() or for...in; the list()
can be dropped when the context is list() or sorted() (but not iter()
or for...in!). Special contexts that apply to both: list(), sorted(), tuple()
set(), any(), all(), sum().

Note: iter(d.keys()) could be written as iter(d) but since the
original d.iterkeys() was also redundant we don't fix this.  And there
are (rare) contexts where it makes a difference (e.g. when passing it
as an argument to a function that introspects the argument).
"""

# Local imports
from .. import pytree
from .. import patcomp
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Name, Call, Dot
from .. import fixer_util


iter_exempt = fixer_util.consuming_calls | {"iter"}


class FixDict(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True

    PATTERN = """
    power< head=any+
         trailer< '.' method=('keys'|'items'|'values'|
                              'iterkeys'|'iteritems'|'itervalues'|
                              'viewkeys'|'viewitems'|'viewvalues') >
         parens=trailer< '(' ')' >
         tail=any*
    >
    """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        head = results["head"]
        method = results["method"][0] # Extract node for method name
        tail = results["tail"]
        syms = self.syms
        method_name = method.value
        isiter = method_name.startswith("iter")
        isview = method_name.startswith("view")
        if isiter or isview:
            method_name = method_name[4:]
        assert method_name in ("keys", "items", "values"), repr(method)
        head = [n.clone() for n in head]
        tail = [n.clone() for n in tail]
        special = not tail and self.in_special_context(node, isiter)
        args = head + [pytree.Node(syms.trailer,
                                   [Dot(),
                                    Name(method_name,
                                         prefix=method.prefix)]),
                       results["parens"].clone()]
        new = pytree.Node(syms.power, args)
        if not (special or isview):
            new.prefix = ""
            new = Call(Name("iter" if isiter else "list"), [new])
        if tail:
            new = pytree.Node(syms.power, [new] + tail)
        new.prefix = node.prefix
        return new

    P1 = "power< func=NAME trailer< '(' node=any ')' > any* >"
    p1 = patcomp.compile_pattern(P1)

    P2 = """for_stmt< 'for' any 'in' node=any ':' any* >
            | comp_for< 'for' any 'in' node=any any* >
         """
    p2 = patcomp.compile_pattern(P2)

    def in_special_context(self, node, isiter):
        if node.parent is None:
            return False
        results = {}
        if (node.parent.parent is not None and
               self.p1.match(node.parent.parent, results) and
               results["node"] is node):
            if isiter:
                # iter(d.iterkeys()) -> iter(d.keys()), etc.
                return results["func"].value in iter_exempt
            else:
                # list(d.keys()) -> list(d.keys()), etc.
                return results["func"].value in fixer_util.consuming_calls
        if not isiter:
            return False
        # for ... in d.iterkeys() -> for ... in d.keys(), etc.
        return self.p2.match(node.parent, results) and results["node"] is node
PK       ! 2ۭ      lib2to3/fixes/fix_renames.pynu [        """Fix incompatible renames

Fixes:
  * sys.maxint -> sys.maxsize
"""
# Author: Christian Heimes
# based on Collin Winter's fix_import

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Name, attr_chain

MAPPING = {"sys":  {"maxint" : "maxsize"},
          }
LOOKUP = {}

def alternates(members):
    return "(" + "|".join(map(repr, members)) + ")"


def build_pattern():
    #bare = set()
    for module, replace in list(MAPPING.items()):
        for old_attr, new_attr in list(replace.items()):
            LOOKUP[(module, old_attr)] = new_attr
            #bare.add(module)
            #bare.add(old_attr)
            #yield """
            #      import_name< 'import' (module=%r
            #          | dotted_as_names< any* module=%r any* >) >
            #      """ % (module, module)
            yield """
                  import_from< 'from' module_name=%r 'import'
                      ( attr_name=%r | import_as_name< attr_name=%r 'as' any >) >
                  """ % (module, old_attr, old_attr)
            yield """
                  power< module_name=%r trailer< '.' attr_name=%r > any* >
                  """ % (module, old_attr)
    #yield """bare_name=%s""" % alternates(bare)


class FixRenames(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True
    PATTERN = "|".join(build_pattern())

    order = "pre" # Pre-order tree traversal

    # Don't match the node if it's within another match
    def match(self, node):
        match = super(FixRenames, self).match
        results = match(node)
        if results:
            if any(match(obj) for obj in attr_chain(node, "parent")):
                return False
            return results
        return False

    #def start_tree(self, tree, filename):
    #    super(FixRenames, self).start_tree(tree, filename)
    #    self.replace = {}

    def transform(self, node, results):
        mod_name = results.get("module_name")
        attr_name = results.get("attr_name")
        #bare_name = results.get("bare_name")
        #import_mod = results.get("module")

        if mod_name and attr_name:
            new_attr = LOOKUP[(mod_name.value, attr_name.value)]
            attr_name.replace(Name(new_attr, prefix=attr_name.prefix))
PK       ! :      lib2to3/fixes/fix_exec.pynu [        # Copyright 2006 Google, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Fixer for exec.

This converts usages of the exec statement into calls to a built-in
exec() function.

exec code in ns1, ns2 -> exec(code, ns1, ns2)
"""

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Comma, Name, Call


class FixExec(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True

    PATTERN = """
    exec_stmt< 'exec' a=any 'in' b=any [',' c=any] >
    |
    exec_stmt< 'exec' (not atom<'(' [any] ')'>) a=any >
    """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        assert results
        syms = self.syms
        a = results["a"]
        b = results.get("b")
        c = results.get("c")
        args = [a.clone()]
        args[0].prefix = ""
        if b is not None:
            args.extend([Comma(), b.clone()])
        if c is not None:
            args.extend([Comma(), c.clone()])

        return Call(Name("exec"), args, prefix=node.prefix)
PK       ! )E  E    lib2to3/fixes/fix_reduce.pynu [        # Copyright 2008 Armin Ronacher.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Fixer for reduce().

Makes sure reduce() is imported from the functools module if reduce is
used in that module.
"""

from lib2to3 import fixer_base
from lib2to3.fixer_util import touch_import



class FixReduce(fixer_base.BaseFix):

    BM_compatible = True
    order = "pre"

    PATTERN = """
    power< 'reduce'
        trailer< '('
            arglist< (
                (not(argument<any '=' any>) any ','
                 not(argument<any '=' any>) any) |
                (not(argument<any '=' any>) any ','
                 not(argument<any '=' any>) any ','
                 not(argument<any '=' any>) any)
            ) >
        ')' >
    >
    """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        touch_import('functools', 'reduce', node)
PK       ! _ \      lib2to3/fixes/fix_idioms.pynu [        """Adjust some old Python 2 idioms to their modern counterparts.

* Change some type comparisons to isinstance() calls:
    type(x) == T -> isinstance(x, T)
    type(x) is T -> isinstance(x, T)
    type(x) != T -> not isinstance(x, T)
    type(x) is not T -> not isinstance(x, T)

* Change "while 1:" into "while True:".

* Change both

    v = list(EXPR)
    v.sort()
    foo(v)

and the more general

    v = EXPR
    v.sort()
    foo(v)

into

    v = sorted(EXPR)
    foo(v)
"""
# Author: Jacques Frechet, Collin Winter

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Call, Comma, Name, Node, BlankLine, syms

CMP = "(n='!=' | '==' | 'is' | n=comp_op< 'is' 'not' >)"
TYPE = "power< 'type' trailer< '(' x=any ')' > >"

class FixIdioms(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    explicit = True # The user must ask for this fixer

    PATTERN = r"""
        isinstance=comparison< %s %s T=any >
        |
        isinstance=comparison< T=any %s %s >
        |
        while_stmt< 'while' while='1' ':' any+ >
        |
        sorted=any<
            any*
            simple_stmt<
              expr_stmt< id1=any '='
                         power< list='list' trailer< '(' (not arglist<any+>) any ')' > >
              >
              '\n'
            >
            sort=
            simple_stmt<
              power< id2=any
                     trailer< '.' 'sort' > trailer< '(' ')' >
              >
              '\n'
            >
            next=any*
        >
        |
        sorted=any<
            any*
            simple_stmt< expr_stmt< id1=any '=' expr=any > '\n' >
            sort=
            simple_stmt<
              power< id2=any
                     trailer< '.' 'sort' > trailer< '(' ')' >
              >
              '\n'
            >
            next=any*
        >
    """ % (TYPE, CMP, CMP, TYPE)

    def match(self, node):
        r = super(FixIdioms, self).match(node)
        # If we've matched one of the sort/sorted subpatterns above, we
        # want to reject matches where the initial assignment and the
        # subsequent .sort() call involve different identifiers.
        if r and "sorted" in r:
            if r["id1"] == r["id2"]:
                return r
            return None
        return r

    def transform(self, node, results):
        if "isinstance" in results:
            return self.transform_isinstance(node, results)
        elif "while" in results:
            return self.transform_while(node, results)
        elif "sorted" in results:
            return self.transform_sort(node, results)
        else:
            raise RuntimeError("Invalid match")

    def transform_isinstance(self, node, results):
        x = results["x"].clone() # The thing inside of type()
        T = results["T"].clone() # The type being compared against
        x.prefix = ""
        T.prefix = " "
        test = Call(Name("isinstance"), [x, Comma(), T])
        if "n" in results:
            test.prefix = " "
            test = Node(syms.not_test, [Name("not"), test])
        test.prefix = node.prefix
        return test

    def transform_while(self, node, results):
        one = results["while"]
        one.replace(Name("True", prefix=one.prefix))

    def transform_sort(self, node, results):
        sort_stmt = results["sort"]
        next_stmt = results["next"]
        list_call = results.get("list")
        simple_expr = results.get("expr")

        if list_call:
            list_call.replace(Name("sorted", prefix=list_call.prefix))
        elif simple_expr:
            new = simple_expr.clone()
            new.prefix = ""
            simple_expr.replace(Call(Name("sorted"), [new],
                                     prefix=simple_expr.prefix))
        else:
            raise RuntimeError("should not have reached here")
        sort_stmt.remove()

        btwn = sort_stmt.prefix
        # Keep any prefix lines between the sort_stmt and the list_call and
        # shove them right after the sorted() call.
        if "\n" in btwn:
            if next_stmt:
                # The new prefix should be everything from the sort_stmt's
                # prefix up to the last newline, then the old prefix after a new
                # line.
                prefix_lines = (btwn.rpartition("\n")[0], next_stmt[0].prefix)
                next_stmt[0].prefix = "\n".join(prefix_lines)
            else:
                assert list_call.parent
                assert list_call.next_sibling is None
                # Put a blank line after list_call and set its prefix.
                end_line = BlankLine()
                list_call.parent.append_child(end_line)
                assert list_call.next_sibling is end_line
                # The new prefix should be everything up to the first new line
                # of sort_stmt's prefix.
                end_line.prefix = btwn.rpartition("\n")[0]
PK       ! &      lib2to3/fixes/fix_unicode.pynu [        r"""Fixer for unicode.

* Changes unicode to str and unichr to chr.

* If "...\u..." is not unicode literal change it into "...\\u...".

* Change u"..." into "...".

"""

from ..pgen2 import token
from .. import fixer_base

_mapping = {"unichr" : "chr", "unicode" : "str"}

class FixUnicode(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True
    PATTERN = "STRING | 'unicode' | 'unichr'"

    def start_tree(self, tree, filename):
        super(FixUnicode, self).start_tree(tree, filename)
        self.unicode_literals = 'unicode_literals' in tree.future_features

    def transform(self, node, results):
        if node.type == token.NAME:
            new = node.clone()
            new.value = _mapping[node.value]
            return new
        elif node.type == token.STRING:
            val = node.value
            if not self.unicode_literals and val[0] in '\'"' and '\\' in val:
                val = r'\\'.join([
                    v.replace('\\u', r'\\u').replace('\\U', r'\\U')
                    for v in val.split(r'\\')
                ])
            if val[0] in 'uU':
                val = val[1:]
            if val == node.value:
                return node
            new = node.clone()
            new.value = val
            return new
PK       ! IkNf  f    lib2to3/fixes/fix_next.pynu [        """Fixer for it.next() -> next(it), per PEP 3114."""
# Author: Collin Winter

# Things that currently aren't covered:
#   - listcomp "next" names aren't warned
#   - "with" statement targets aren't checked

# Local imports
from ..pgen2 import token
from ..pygram import python_symbols as syms
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Name, Call, find_binding

bind_warning = "Calls to builtin next() possibly shadowed by global binding"


class FixNext(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True
    PATTERN = """
    power< base=any+ trailer< '.' attr='next' > trailer< '(' ')' > >
    |
    power< head=any+ trailer< '.' attr='next' > not trailer< '(' ')' > >
    |
    classdef< 'class' any+ ':'
              suite< any*
                     funcdef< 'def'
                              name='next'
                              parameters< '(' NAME ')' > any+ >
                     any* > >
    |
    global=global_stmt< 'global' any* 'next' any* >
    """

    order = "pre" # Pre-order tree traversal

    def start_tree(self, tree, filename):
        super(FixNext, self).start_tree(tree, filename)

        n = find_binding('next', tree)
        if n:
            self.warning(n, bind_warning)
            self.shadowed_next = True
        else:
            self.shadowed_next = False

    def transform(self, node, results):
        assert results

        base = results.get("base")
        attr = results.get("attr")
        name = results.get("name")

        if base:
            if self.shadowed_next:
                attr.replace(Name("__next__", prefix=attr.prefix))
            else:
                base = [n.clone() for n in base]
                base[0].prefix = ""
                node.replace(Call(Name("next", prefix=node.prefix), base))
        elif name:
            n = Name("__next__", prefix=name.prefix)
            name.replace(n)
        elif attr:
            # We don't do this transformation if we're assigning to "x.next".
            # Unfortunately, it doesn't seem possible to do this in PATTERN,
            #  so it's being done here.
            if is_assign_target(node):
                head = results["head"]
                if "".join([str(n) for n in head]).strip() == '__builtin__':
                    self.warning(node, bind_warning)
                return
            attr.replace(Name("__next__"))
        elif "global" in results:
            self.warning(node, bind_warning)
            self.shadowed_next = True


### The following functions help test if node is part of an assignment
###  target.

def is_assign_target(node):
    assign = find_assign(node)
    if assign is None:
        return False

    for child in assign.children:
        if child.type == token.EQUAL:
            return False
        elif is_subtree(child, node):
            return True
    return False

def find_assign(node):
    if node.type == syms.expr_stmt:
        return node
    if node.type == syms.simple_stmt or node.parent is None:
        return None
    return find_assign(node.parent)

def is_subtree(root, node):
    if root == node:
        return True
    return any(is_subtree(c, node) for c in root.children)
PK       ! >ӵ;&  &  &  lib2to3/fixes/fix_itertools_imports.pynu [        """ Fixer for imports of itertools.(imap|ifilter|izip|ifilterfalse) """

# Local imports
from lib2to3 import fixer_base
from lib2to3.fixer_util import BlankLine, syms, token


class FixItertoolsImports(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True
    PATTERN = """
              import_from< 'from' 'itertools' 'import' imports=any >
              """ %(locals())

    def transform(self, node, results):
        imports = results['imports']
        if imports.type == syms.import_as_name or not imports.children:
            children = [imports]
        else:
            children = imports.children
        for child in children[::2]:
            if child.type == token.NAME:
                member = child.value
                name_node = child
            elif child.type == token.STAR:
                # Just leave the import as is.
                return
            else:
                assert child.type == syms.import_as_name
                name_node = child.children[0]
            member_name = name_node.value
            if member_name in ('imap', 'izip', 'ifilter'):
                child.value = None
                child.remove()
            elif member_name in ('ifilterfalse', 'izip_longest'):
                node.changed()
                name_node.value = ('filterfalse' if member_name[1] == 'f'
                                   else 'zip_longest')

        # Make sure the import statement is still sane
        children = imports.children[:] or [imports]
        remove_comma = True
        for child in children:
            if remove_comma and child.type == token.COMMA:
                child.remove()
            else:
                remove_comma ^= True

        while children and children[-1].type == token.COMMA:
            children.pop().remove()

        # If there are no imports left, just get rid of the entire statement
        if (not (imports.children or getattr(imports, 'value', None)) or
            imports.parent is None):
            p = node.prefix
            node = BlankLine()
            node.prefix = p
            return node
PK       ! +&^  ^     lib2to3/fixes/fix_methodattrs.pynu [        """Fix bound method attributes (method.im_? -> method.__?__).
"""
# Author: Christian Heimes

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Name

MAP = {
    "im_func" : "__func__",
    "im_self" : "__self__",
    "im_class" : "__self__.__class__"
    }

class FixMethodattrs(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True
    PATTERN = """
    power< any+ trailer< '.' attr=('im_func' | 'im_self' | 'im_class') > any* >
    """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        attr = results["attr"][0]
        new = MAP[attr.value]
        attr.replace(Name(new, prefix=attr.prefix))
PK       ! Gg      lib2to3/fixes/fix_itertools.pynu [        """ Fixer for itertools.(imap|ifilter|izip) --> (map|filter|zip) and
    itertools.ifilterfalse --> itertools.filterfalse (bugs 2360-2363)

    imports from itertools are fixed in fix_itertools_import.py

    If itertools is imported as something else (ie: import itertools as it;
    it.izip(spam, eggs)) method calls will not get fixed.
    """

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Name

class FixItertools(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True
    it_funcs = "('imap'|'ifilter'|'izip'|'izip_longest'|'ifilterfalse')"
    PATTERN = """
              power< it='itertools'
                  trailer<
                     dot='.' func=%(it_funcs)s > trailer< '(' [any] ')' > >
              |
              power< func=%(it_funcs)s trailer< '(' [any] ')' > >
              """ %(locals())

    # Needs to be run after fix_(map|zip|filter)
    run_order = 6

    def transform(self, node, results):
        prefix = None
        func = results['func'][0]
        if ('it' in results and
            func.value not in ('ifilterfalse', 'izip_longest')):
            dot, it = (results['dot'], results['it'])
            # Remove the 'itertools'
            prefix = it.prefix
            it.remove()
            # Replace the node which contains ('.', 'function') with the
            # function (to be consistent with the second part of the pattern)
            dot.remove()
            func.parent.replace(func)

        prefix = prefix or func.prefix
        func.replace(Name(func.value[1:], prefix=prefix))
PK       ! 6u      lib2to3/fixes/fix_raw_input.pynu [        """Fixer that changes raw_input(...) into input(...)."""
# Author: Andre Roberge

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Name

class FixRawInput(fixer_base.BaseFix):

    BM_compatible = True
    PATTERN = """
              power< name='raw_input' trailer< '(' [any] ')' > any* >
              """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        name = results["name"]
        name.replace(Name("input", prefix=name.prefix))
PK       ! Y        lib2to3/fixes/fix_metaclass.pynu [        """Fixer for __metaclass__ = X -> (metaclass=X) methods.

   The various forms of classef (inherits nothing, inherits once, inherits
   many) don't parse the same in the CST so we look at ALL classes for
   a __metaclass__ and if we find one normalize the inherits to all be
   an arglist.

   For one-liner classes ('class X: pass') there is no indent/dedent so
   we normalize those into having a suite.

   Moving the __metaclass__ into the classdef can also cause the class
   body to be empty so there is some special casing for that as well.

   This fixer also tries very hard to keep original indenting and spacing
   in all those corner cases.

"""
# Author: Jack Diederich

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..pygram import token
from ..fixer_util import syms, Node, Leaf


def has_metaclass(parent):
    """ we have to check the cls_node without changing it.
        There are two possibilities:
          1)  clsdef => suite => simple_stmt => expr_stmt => Leaf('__meta')
          2)  clsdef => simple_stmt => expr_stmt => Leaf('__meta')
    """
    for node in parent.children:
        if node.type == syms.suite:
            return has_metaclass(node)
        elif node.type == syms.simple_stmt and node.children:
            expr_node = node.children[0]
            if expr_node.type == syms.expr_stmt and expr_node.children:
                left_side = expr_node.children[0]
                if isinstance(left_side, Leaf) and \
                        left_side.value == '__metaclass__':
                    return True
    return False


def fixup_parse_tree(cls_node):
    """ one-line classes don't get a suite in the parse tree so we add
        one to normalize the tree
    """
    for node in cls_node.children:
        if node.type == syms.suite:
            # already in the preferred format, do nothing
            return

    # !%@#! one-liners have no suite node, we have to fake one up
    for i, node in enumerate(cls_node.children):
        if node.type == token.COLON:
            break
    else:
        raise ValueError("No class suite and no ':'!")

    # move everything into a suite node
    suite = Node(syms.suite, [])
    while cls_node.children[i+1:]:
        move_node = cls_node.children[i+1]
        suite.append_child(move_node.clone())
        move_node.remove()
    cls_node.append_child(suite)
    node = suite


def fixup_simple_stmt(parent, i, stmt_node):
    """ if there is a semi-colon all the parts count as part of the same
        simple_stmt.  We just want the __metaclass__ part so we move
        everything after the semi-colon into its own simple_stmt node
    """
    for semi_ind, node in enumerate(stmt_node.children):
        if node.type == token.SEMI: # *sigh*
            break
    else:
        return

    node.remove() # kill the semicolon
    new_expr = Node(syms.expr_stmt, [])
    new_stmt = Node(syms.simple_stmt, [new_expr])
    while stmt_node.children[semi_ind:]:
        move_node = stmt_node.children[semi_ind]
        new_expr.append_child(move_node.clone())
        move_node.remove()
    parent.insert_child(i, new_stmt)
    new_leaf1 = new_stmt.children[0].children[0]
    old_leaf1 = stmt_node.children[0].children[0]
    new_leaf1.prefix = old_leaf1.prefix


def remove_trailing_newline(node):
    if node.children and node.children[-1].type == token.NEWLINE:
        node.children[-1].remove()


def find_metas(cls_node):
    # find the suite node (Mmm, sweet nodes)
    for node in cls_node.children:
        if node.type == syms.suite:
            break
    else:
        raise ValueError("No class suite!")

    # look for simple_stmt[ expr_stmt[ Leaf('__metaclass__') ] ]
    for i, simple_node in list(enumerate(node.children)):
        if simple_node.type == syms.simple_stmt and simple_node.children:
            expr_node = simple_node.children[0]
            if expr_node.type == syms.expr_stmt and expr_node.children:
                # Check if the expr_node is a simple assignment.
                left_node = expr_node.children[0]
                if isinstance(left_node, Leaf) and \
                        left_node.value == '__metaclass__':
                    # We found an assignment to __metaclass__.
                    fixup_simple_stmt(node, i, simple_node)
                    remove_trailing_newline(simple_node)
                    yield (node, i, simple_node)


def fixup_indent(suite):
    """ If an INDENT is followed by a thing with a prefix then nuke the prefix
        Otherwise we get in trouble when removing __metaclass__ at suite start
    """
    kids = suite.children[::-1]
    # find the first indent
    while kids:
        node = kids.pop()
        if node.type == token.INDENT:
            break

    # find the first Leaf
    while kids:
        node = kids.pop()
        if isinstance(node, Leaf) and node.type != token.DEDENT:
            if node.prefix:
                node.prefix = ''
            return
        else:
            kids.extend(node.children[::-1])


class FixMetaclass(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True

    PATTERN = """
    classdef<any*>
    """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        if not has_metaclass(node):
            return

        fixup_parse_tree(node)

        # find metaclasses, keep the last one
        last_metaclass = None
        for suite, i, stmt in find_metas(node):
            last_metaclass = stmt
            stmt.remove()

        text_type = node.children[0].type # always Leaf(nnn, 'class')

        # figure out what kind of classdef we have
        if len(node.children) == 7:
            # Node(classdef, ['class', 'name', '(', arglist, ')', ':', suite])
            #                 0        1       2    3        4    5    6
            if node.children[3].type == syms.arglist:
                arglist = node.children[3]
            # Node(classdef, ['class', 'name', '(', 'Parent', ')', ':', suite])
            else:
                parent = node.children[3].clone()
                arglist = Node(syms.arglist, [parent])
                node.set_child(3, arglist)
        elif len(node.children) == 6:
            # Node(classdef, ['class', 'name', '(',  ')', ':', suite])
            #                 0        1       2     3    4    5
            arglist = Node(syms.arglist, [])
            node.insert_child(3, arglist)
        elif len(node.children) == 4:
            # Node(classdef, ['class', 'name', ':', suite])
            #                 0        1       2    3
            arglist = Node(syms.arglist, [])
            node.insert_child(2, Leaf(token.RPAR, ')'))
            node.insert_child(2, arglist)
            node.insert_child(2, Leaf(token.LPAR, '('))
        else:
            raise ValueError("Unexpected class definition")

        # now stick the metaclass in the arglist
        meta_txt = last_metaclass.children[0].children[0]
        meta_txt.value = 'metaclass'
        orig_meta_prefix = meta_txt.prefix

        if arglist.children:
            arglist.append_child(Leaf(token.COMMA, ','))
            meta_txt.prefix = ' '
        else:
            meta_txt.prefix = ''

        # compact the expression "metaclass = Meta" -> "metaclass=Meta"
        expr_stmt = last_metaclass.children[0]
        assert expr_stmt.type == syms.expr_stmt
        expr_stmt.children[1].prefix = ''
        expr_stmt.children[2].prefix = ''

        arglist.append_child(last_metaclass)

        fixup_indent(suite)

        # check for empty suite
        if not suite.children:
            # one-liner that was just __metaclass_
            suite.remove()
            pass_leaf = Leaf(text_type, 'pass')
            pass_leaf.prefix = orig_meta_prefix
            node.append_child(pass_leaf)
            node.append_child(Leaf(token.NEWLINE, '\n'))

        elif len(suite.children) > 1 and \
                 (suite.children[-2].type == token.INDENT and
                  suite.children[-1].type == token.DEDENT):
            # there was only one line in the class body and it was __metaclass__
            pass_leaf = Leaf(text_type, 'pass')
            suite.insert_child(-1, pass_leaf)
            suite.insert_child(-1, Leaf(token.NEWLINE, '\n'))
PK       ! F      lib2to3/fixes/fix_funcattrs.pynu [        """Fix function attribute names (f.func_x -> f.__x__)."""
# Author: Collin Winter

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Name


class FixFuncattrs(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True

    PATTERN = """
    power< any+ trailer< '.' attr=('func_closure' | 'func_doc' | 'func_globals'
                                  | 'func_name' | 'func_defaults' | 'func_code'
                                  | 'func_dict') > any* >
    """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        attr = results["attr"][0]
        attr.replace(Name(("__%s__" % attr.value[5:]),
                          prefix=attr.prefix))
PK       ! p2I      lib2to3/fixes/fix_except.pynu [        """Fixer for except statements with named exceptions.

The following cases will be converted:

- "except E, T:" where T is a name:

    except E as T:

- "except E, T:" where T is not a name, tuple or list:

        except E as t:
            T = t

    This is done because the target of an "except" clause must be a
    name.

- "except E, T:" where T is a tuple or list literal:

        except E as t:
            T = t.args
"""
# Author: Collin Winter

# Local imports
from .. import pytree
from ..pgen2 import token
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Assign, Attr, Name, is_tuple, is_list, syms

def find_excepts(nodes):
    for i, n in enumerate(nodes):
        if n.type == syms.except_clause:
            if n.children[0].value == 'except':
                yield (n, nodes[i+2])

class FixExcept(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True

    PATTERN = """
    try_stmt< 'try' ':' (simple_stmt | suite)
                  cleanup=(except_clause ':' (simple_stmt | suite))+
                  tail=(['except' ':' (simple_stmt | suite)]
                        ['else' ':' (simple_stmt | suite)]
                        ['finally' ':' (simple_stmt | suite)]) >
    """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        syms = self.syms

        tail = [n.clone() for n in results["tail"]]

        try_cleanup = [ch.clone() for ch in results["cleanup"]]
        for except_clause, e_suite in find_excepts(try_cleanup):
            if len(except_clause.children) == 4:
                (E, comma, N) = except_clause.children[1:4]
                comma.replace(Name("as", prefix=" "))

                if N.type != token.NAME:
                    # Generate a new N for the except clause
                    new_N = Name(self.new_name(), prefix=" ")
                    target = N.clone()
                    target.prefix = ""
                    N.replace(new_N)
                    new_N = new_N.clone()

                    # Insert "old_N = new_N" as the first statement in
                    #  the except body. This loop skips leading whitespace
                    #  and indents
                    #TODO(cwinter) suite-cleanup
                    suite_stmts = e_suite.children
                    for i, stmt in enumerate(suite_stmts):
                        if isinstance(stmt, pytree.Node):
                            break

                    # The assignment is different if old_N is a tuple or list
                    # In that case, the assignment is old_N = new_N.args
                    if is_tuple(N) or is_list(N):
                        assign = Assign(target, Attr(new_N, Name('args')))
                    else:
                        assign = Assign(target, new_N)

                    #TODO(cwinter) stopgap until children becomes a smart list
                    for child in reversed(suite_stmts[:i]):
                        e_suite.insert_child(0, child)
                    e_suite.insert_child(i, assign)
                elif N.prefix == "":
                    # No space after a comma is legal; no space after "as",
                    # not so much.
                    N.prefix = " "

        #TODO(cwinter) fix this when children becomes a smart list
        children = [c.clone() for c in node.children[:3]] + try_cleanup + tail
        return pytree.Node(node.type, children)
PK       ! 7h#  #    lib2to3/fixes/fix_future.pynu [        """Remove __future__ imports

from __future__ import foo is replaced with an empty line.
"""
# Author: Christian Heimes

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import BlankLine

class FixFuture(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True

    PATTERN = """import_from< 'from' module_name="__future__" 'import' any >"""

    # This should be run last -- some things check for the import
    run_order = 10

    def transform(self, node, results):
        new = BlankLine()
        new.prefix = node.prefix
        return new
PK       ! |4  4    lib2to3/fixes/fix_imports.pynu [        """Fix incompatible imports and module references."""
# Authors: Collin Winter, Nick Edds

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Name, attr_chain

MAPPING = {'StringIO':  'io',
           'cStringIO': 'io',
           'cPickle': 'pickle',
           '__builtin__' : 'builtins',
           'copy_reg': 'copyreg',
           'Queue': 'queue',
           'SocketServer': 'socketserver',
           'ConfigParser': 'configparser',
           'repr': 'reprlib',
           'FileDialog': 'tkinter.filedialog',
           'tkFileDialog': 'tkinter.filedialog',
           'SimpleDialog': 'tkinter.simpledialog',
           'tkSimpleDialog': 'tkinter.simpledialog',
           'tkColorChooser': 'tkinter.colorchooser',
           'tkCommonDialog': 'tkinter.commondialog',
           'Dialog': 'tkinter.dialog',
           'Tkdnd': 'tkinter.dnd',
           'tkFont': 'tkinter.font',
           'tkMessageBox': 'tkinter.messagebox',
           'ScrolledText': 'tkinter.scrolledtext',
           'Tkconstants': 'tkinter.constants',
           'Tix': 'tkinter.tix',
           'ttk': 'tkinter.ttk',
           'Tkinter': 'tkinter',
           'markupbase': '_markupbase',
           '_winreg': 'winreg',
           'thread': '_thread',
           'dummy_thread': '_dummy_thread',
           # anydbm and whichdb are handled by fix_imports2
           'dbhash': 'dbm.bsd',
           'dumbdbm': 'dbm.dumb',
           'dbm': 'dbm.ndbm',
           'gdbm': 'dbm.gnu',
           'xmlrpclib': 'xmlrpc.client',
           'DocXMLRPCServer': 'xmlrpc.server',
           'SimpleXMLRPCServer': 'xmlrpc.server',
           'httplib': 'http.client',
           'htmlentitydefs' : 'html.entities',
           'HTMLParser' : 'html.parser',
           'Cookie': 'http.cookies',
           'cookielib': 'http.cookiejar',
           'BaseHTTPServer': 'http.server',
           'SimpleHTTPServer': 'http.server',
           'CGIHTTPServer': 'http.server',
           #'test.test_support': 'test.support',
           'commands': 'subprocess',
           'UserString' : 'collections',
           'UserList' : 'collections',
           'urlparse' : 'urllib.parse',
           'robotparser' : 'urllib.robotparser',
}


def alternates(members):
    return "(" + "|".join(map(repr, members)) + ")"


def build_pattern(mapping=MAPPING):
    mod_list = ' | '.join(["module_name='%s'" % key for key in mapping])
    bare_names = alternates(mapping.keys())

    yield """name_import=import_name< 'import' ((%s) |
               multiple_imports=dotted_as_names< any* (%s) any* >) >
          """ % (mod_list, mod_list)
    yield """import_from< 'from' (%s) 'import' ['(']
              ( any | import_as_name< any 'as' any > |
                import_as_names< any* >)  [')'] >
          """ % mod_list
    yield """import_name< 'import' (dotted_as_name< (%s) 'as' any > |
               multiple_imports=dotted_as_names<
                 any* dotted_as_name< (%s) 'as' any > any* >) >
          """ % (mod_list, mod_list)

    # Find usages of module members in code e.g. thread.foo(bar)
    yield "power< bare_with_attr=(%s) trailer<'.' any > any* >" % bare_names


class FixImports(fixer_base.BaseFix):

    BM_compatible = True
    keep_line_order = True
    # This is overridden in fix_imports2.
    mapping = MAPPING

    # We want to run this fixer late, so fix_import doesn't try to make stdlib
    # renames into relative imports.
    run_order = 6

    def build_pattern(self):
        return "|".join(build_pattern(self.mapping))

    def compile_pattern(self):
        # We override this, so MAPPING can be pragmatically altered and the
        # changes will be reflected in PATTERN.
        self.PATTERN = self.build_pattern()
        super(FixImports, self).compile_pattern()

    # Don't match the node if it's within another match.
    def match(self, node):
        match = super(FixImports, self).match
        results = match(node)
        if results:
            # Module usage could be in the trailer of an attribute lookup, so we
            # might have nested matches when "bare_with_attr" is present.
            if "bare_with_attr" not in results and \
                    any(match(obj) for obj in attr_chain(node, "parent")):
                return False
            return results
        return False

    def start_tree(self, tree, filename):
        super(FixImports, self).start_tree(tree, filename)
        self.replace = {}

    def transform(self, node, results):
        import_mod = results.get("module_name")
        if import_mod:
            mod_name = import_mod.value
            new_name = self.mapping[mod_name]
            import_mod.replace(Name(new_name, prefix=import_mod.prefix))
            if "name_import" in results:
                # If it's not a "from x import x, y" or "import x as y" import,
                # marked its usage to be replaced.
                self.replace[mod_name] = new_name
            if "multiple_imports" in results:
                # This is a nasty hack to fix multiple imports on a line (e.g.,
                # "import StringIO, urlparse"). The problem is that I can't
                # figure out an easy way to make a pattern recognize the keys of
                # MAPPING randomly sprinkled in an import statement.
                results = self.match(node)
                if results:
                    self.transform(node, results)
        else:
            # Replace usage of the module.
            bare_name = results["bare_with_attr"][0]
            new_name = self.replace.get(bare_name.value)
            if new_name:
                bare_name.replace(Name(new_name, prefix=bare_name.prefix))
PK       !  2Ϳ	  	    lib2to3/fixes/fix_exitfunc.pynu [        """
Convert use of sys.exitfunc to use the atexit module.
"""

# Author: Benjamin Peterson

from lib2to3 import pytree, fixer_base
from lib2to3.fixer_util import Name, Attr, Call, Comma, Newline, syms


class FixExitfunc(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    keep_line_order = True
    BM_compatible = True

    PATTERN = """
              (
                  sys_import=import_name<'import'
                      ('sys'
                      |
                      dotted_as_names< (any ',')* 'sys' (',' any)* >
                      )
                  >
              |
                  expr_stmt<
                      power< 'sys' trailer< '.' 'exitfunc' > >
                  '=' func=any >
              )
              """

    def __init__(self, *args):
        super(FixExitfunc, self).__init__(*args)

    def start_tree(self, tree, filename):
        super(FixExitfunc, self).start_tree(tree, filename)
        self.sys_import = None

    def transform(self, node, results):
        # First, find the sys import. We'll just hope it's global scope.
        if "sys_import" in results:
            if self.sys_import is None:
                self.sys_import = results["sys_import"]
            return

        func = results["func"].clone()
        func.prefix = ""
        register = pytree.Node(syms.power,
                               Attr(Name("atexit"), Name("register"))
                               )
        call = Call(register, [func], node.prefix)
        node.replace(call)

        if self.sys_import is None:
            # That's interesting.
            self.warning(node, "Can't find sys import; Please add an atexit "
                             "import at the top of your file.")
            return

        # Now add an atexit import after the sys import.
        names = self.sys_import.children[1]
        if names.type == syms.dotted_as_names:
            names.append_child(Comma())
            names.append_child(Name("atexit", " "))
        else:
            containing_stmt = self.sys_import.parent
            position = containing_stmt.children.index(self.sys_import)
            stmt_container = containing_stmt.parent
            new_import = pytree.Node(syms.import_name,
                              [Name("import"), Name("atexit", " ")]
                              )
            new = pytree.Node(syms.simple_stmt, [new_import])
            containing_stmt.insert_child(position + 1, Newline())
            containing_stmt.insert_child(position + 2, new)
PK       ! JbB  B    lib2to3/fixes/fix_ws_comma.pynu [        """Fixer that changes 'a ,b' into 'a, b'.

This also changes '{a :b}' into '{a: b}', but does not touch other
uses of colons.  It does not touch other uses of whitespace.

"""

from .. import pytree
from ..pgen2 import token
from .. import fixer_base

class FixWsComma(fixer_base.BaseFix):

    explicit = True # The user must ask for this fixers

    PATTERN = """
    any<(not(',') any)+ ',' ((not(',') any)+ ',')* [not(',') any]>
    """

    COMMA = pytree.Leaf(token.COMMA, ",")
    COLON = pytree.Leaf(token.COLON, ":")
    SEPS = (COMMA, COLON)

    def transform(self, node, results):
        new = node.clone()
        comma = False
        for child in new.children:
            if child in self.SEPS:
                prefix = child.prefix
                if prefix.isspace() and "\n" not in prefix:
                    child.prefix = ""
                comma = True
            else:
                if comma:
                    prefix = child.prefix
                    if not prefix:
                        child.prefix = " "
                comma = False
        return new
PK       ! M1	  	    lib2to3/fixes/fix_zip.pynu [        """
Fixer that changes zip(seq0, seq1, ...) into list(zip(seq0, seq1, ...)
unless there exists a 'from future_builtins import zip' statement in the
top-level namespace.

We avoid the transformation if the zip() call is directly contained in
iter(<>), list(<>), tuple(<>), sorted(<>), ...join(<>), or for V in <>:.
"""

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..pytree import Node
from ..pygram import python_symbols as syms
from ..fixer_util import Name, ArgList, in_special_context


class FixZip(fixer_base.ConditionalFix):

    BM_compatible = True
    PATTERN = """
    power< 'zip' args=trailer< '(' [any] ')' > [trailers=trailer*]
    >
    """

    skip_on = "future_builtins.zip"

    def transform(self, node, results):
        if self.should_skip(node):
            return

        if in_special_context(node):
            return None

        args = results['args'].clone()
        args.prefix = ""

        trailers = []
        if 'trailers' in results:
            trailers = [n.clone() for n in results['trailers']]
            for n in trailers:
                n.prefix = ""

        new = Node(syms.power, [Name("zip"), args], prefix="")
        new = Node(syms.power, [Name("list"), ArgList([new])] + trailers)
        new.prefix = node.prefix
        return new
PK       ! E[/   /     lib2to3/fixes/__init__.pynu [        # Dummy file to make this directory a package.
PK       ! DIu|  |    lib2to3/fixes/fix_has_key.pynu [        # Copyright 2006 Google, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Fixer for has_key().

Calls to .has_key() methods are expressed in terms of the 'in'
operator:

    d.has_key(k) -> k in d

CAVEATS:
1) While the primary target of this fixer is dict.has_key(), the
   fixer will change any has_key() method call, regardless of its
   class.

2) Cases like this will not be converted:

    m = d.has_key
    if m(k):
        ...

   Only *calls* to has_key() are converted. While it is possible to
   convert the above to something like

    m = d.__contains__
    if m(k):
        ...

   this is currently not done.
"""

# Local imports
from .. import pytree
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Name, parenthesize


class FixHasKey(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True

    PATTERN = """
    anchor=power<
        before=any+
        trailer< '.' 'has_key' >
        trailer<
            '('
            ( not(arglist | argument<any '=' any>) arg=any
            | arglist<(not argument<any '=' any>) arg=any ','>
            )
            ')'
        >
        after=any*
    >
    |
    negation=not_test<
        'not'
        anchor=power<
            before=any+
            trailer< '.' 'has_key' >
            trailer<
                '('
                ( not(arglist | argument<any '=' any>) arg=any
                | arglist<(not argument<any '=' any>) arg=any ','>
                )
                ')'
            >
        >
    >
    """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        assert results
        syms = self.syms
        if (node.parent.type == syms.not_test and
            self.pattern.match(node.parent)):
            # Don't transform a node matching the first alternative of the
            # pattern when its parent matches the second alternative
            return None
        negation = results.get("negation")
        anchor = results["anchor"]
        prefix = node.prefix
        before = [n.clone() for n in results["before"]]
        arg = results["arg"].clone()
        after = results.get("after")
        if after:
            after = [n.clone() for n in after]
        if arg.type in (syms.comparison, syms.not_test, syms.and_test,
                        syms.or_test, syms.test, syms.lambdef, syms.argument):
            arg = parenthesize(arg)
        if len(before) == 1:
            before = before[0]
        else:
            before = pytree.Node(syms.power, before)
        before.prefix = " "
        n_op = Name("in", prefix=" ")
        if negation:
            n_not = Name("not", prefix=" ")
            n_op = pytree.Node(syms.comp_op, (n_not, n_op))
        new = pytree.Node(syms.comparison, (arg, n_op, before))
        if after:
            new = parenthesize(new)
            new = pytree.Node(syms.power, (new,) + tuple(after))
        if node.parent.type in (syms.comparison, syms.expr, syms.xor_expr,
                                syms.and_expr, syms.shift_expr,
                                syms.arith_expr, syms.term,
                                syms.factor, syms.power):
            new = parenthesize(new)
        new.prefix = prefix
        return new
PK       ! r39  9    lib2to3/fixes/fix_reload.pynu [        """Fixer for reload().

reload(s) -> importlib.reload(s)"""

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import ImportAndCall, touch_import


class FixReload(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True
    order = "pre"

    PATTERN = """
    power< 'reload'
           trailer< lpar='('
                    ( not(arglist | argument<any '=' any>) obj=any
                      | obj=arglist<(not argument<any '=' any>) any ','> )
                    rpar=')' >
           after=any*
    >
    """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        if results:
            # I feel like we should be able to express this logic in the
            # PATTERN above but I don't know how to do it so...
            obj = results['obj']
            if obj:
                if (obj.type == self.syms.argument and
                    obj.children[0].value in {'**', '*'}):
                    return  # Make no change.
        names = ('importlib', 'reload')
        new = ImportAndCall(node, results, names)
        touch_import(None, 'importlib', node)
        return new
PK       ! fϡ       lib2to3/fixes/fix_set_literal.pynu [        """
Optional fixer to transform set() calls to set literals.
"""

# Author: Benjamin Peterson

from lib2to3 import fixer_base, pytree
from lib2to3.fixer_util import token, syms



class FixSetLiteral(fixer_base.BaseFix):

    BM_compatible = True
    explicit = True

    PATTERN = """power< 'set' trailer< '('
                     (atom=atom< '[' (items=listmaker< any ((',' any)* [',']) >
                                |
                                single=any) ']' >
                     |
                     atom< '(' items=testlist_gexp< any ((',' any)* [',']) > ')' >
                     )
                     ')' > >
              """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        single = results.get("single")
        if single:
            # Make a fake listmaker
            fake = pytree.Node(syms.listmaker, [single.clone()])
            single.replace(fake)
            items = fake
        else:
            items = results["items"]

        # Build the contents of the literal
        literal = [pytree.Leaf(token.LBRACE, "{")]
        literal.extend(n.clone() for n in items.children)
        literal.append(pytree.Leaf(token.RBRACE, "}"))
        # Set the prefix of the right brace to that of the ')' or ']'
        literal[-1].prefix = items.next_sibling.prefix
        maker = pytree.Node(syms.dictsetmaker, literal)
        maker.prefix = node.prefix

        # If the original was a one tuple, we need to remove the extra comma.
        if len(maker.children) == 4:
            n = maker.children[2]
            n.remove()
            maker.children[-1].prefix = n.prefix

        # Finally, replace the set call with our shiny new literal.
        return maker
PK       ! S      lib2to3/fixes/fix_types.pynu [        # Copyright 2007 Google, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Fixer for removing uses of the types module.

These work for only the known names in the types module.  The forms above
can include types. or not.  ie, It is assumed the module is imported either as:

    import types
    from types import ... # either * or specific types

The import statements are not modified.

There should be another fixer that handles at least the following constants:

   type([]) -> list
   type(()) -> tuple
   type('') -> str

"""

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Name

_TYPE_MAPPING = {
        'BooleanType' : 'bool',
        'BufferType' : 'memoryview',
        'ClassType' : 'type',
        'ComplexType' : 'complex',
        'DictType': 'dict',
        'DictionaryType' : 'dict',
        'EllipsisType' : 'type(Ellipsis)',
        #'FileType' : 'io.IOBase',
        'FloatType': 'float',
        'IntType': 'int',
        'ListType': 'list',
        'LongType': 'int',
        'ObjectType' : 'object',
        'NoneType': 'type(None)',
        'NotImplementedType' : 'type(NotImplemented)',
        'SliceType' : 'slice',
        'StringType': 'bytes', # XXX ?
        'StringTypes' : '(str,)', # XXX ?
        'TupleType': 'tuple',
        'TypeType' : 'type',
        'UnicodeType': 'str',
        'XRangeType' : 'range',
    }

_pats = ["power< 'types' trailer< '.' name='%s' > >" % t for t in _TYPE_MAPPING]

class FixTypes(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True
    PATTERN = '|'.join(_pats)

    def transform(self, node, results):
        new_value = _TYPE_MAPPING.get(results["name"].value)
        if new_value:
            return Name(new_value, prefix=node.prefix)
        return None
PK       ! ?k      lib2to3/fixes/fix_getcwdu.pynu [        """
Fixer that changes os.getcwdu() to os.getcwd().
"""
# Author: Victor Stinner

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Name

class FixGetcwdu(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True

    PATTERN = """
              power< 'os' trailer< dot='.' name='getcwdu' > any* >
              """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        name = results["name"]
        name.replace(Name("getcwd", prefix=name.prefix))
PK       ! lH         lib2to3/fixes/fix_numliterals.pynu [        """Fixer that turns 1L into 1, 0755 into 0o755.
"""
# Copyright 2007 Georg Brandl.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

# Local imports
from ..pgen2 import token
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Number


class FixNumliterals(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    # This is so simple that we don't need the pattern compiler.

    _accept_type = token.NUMBER

    def match(self, node):
        # Override
        return (node.value.startswith("0") or node.value[-1] in "Ll")

    def transform(self, node, results):
        val = node.value
        if val[-1] in 'Ll':
            val = val[:-1]
        elif val.startswith('0') and val.isdigit() and len(set(val)) > 1:
            val = "0o" + val[1:]

        return Number(val, prefix=node.prefix)
PK       ! {Wk        lib2to3/fixes/fix_execfile.pynu [        # Copyright 2006 Google, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Fixer for execfile.

This converts usages of the execfile function into calls to the built-in
exec() function.
"""

from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import (Comma, Name, Call, LParen, RParen, Dot, Node,
                          ArgList, String, syms)


class FixExecfile(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True

    PATTERN = """
    power< 'execfile' trailer< '(' arglist< filename=any [',' globals=any [',' locals=any ] ] > ')' > >
    |
    power< 'execfile' trailer< '(' filename=any ')' > >
    """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        assert results
        filename = results["filename"]
        globals = results.get("globals")
        locals = results.get("locals")

        # Copy over the prefix from the right parentheses end of the execfile
        # call.
        execfile_paren = node.children[-1].children[-1].clone()
        # Construct open().read().
        open_args = ArgList([filename.clone(), Comma(), String('"rb"', ' ')],
                            rparen=execfile_paren)
        open_call = Node(syms.power, [Name("open"), open_args])
        read = [Node(syms.trailer, [Dot(), Name('read')]),
                Node(syms.trailer, [LParen(), RParen()])]
        open_expr = [open_call] + read
        # Wrap the open call in a compile call. This is so the filename will be
        # preserved in the execed code.
        filename_arg = filename.clone()
        filename_arg.prefix = " "
        exec_str = String("'exec'", " ")
        compile_args = open_expr + [Comma(), filename_arg, Comma(), exec_str]
        compile_call = Call(Name("compile"), compile_args, "")
        # Finally, replace the execfile call with an exec call.
        args = [compile_call]
        if globals is not None:
            args.extend([Comma(), globals.clone()])
        if locals is not None:
            args.extend([Comma(), locals.clone()])
        return Call(Name("exec"), args, prefix=node.prefix)
PK       ! N  N    lib2to3/fixes/fix_buffer.pynu [        # Copyright 2007 Google, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Fixer that changes buffer(...) into memoryview(...)."""

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Name


class FixBuffer(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True

    explicit = True # The user must ask for this fixer

    PATTERN = """
              power< name='buffer' trailer< '(' [any] ')' > any* >
              """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        name = results["name"]
        name.replace(Name("memoryview", prefix=name.prefix))
PK       ! a.e  e    lib2to3/fixes/fix_repr.pynu [        # Copyright 2006 Google, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Fixer that transforms `xyzzy` into repr(xyzzy)."""

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Call, Name, parenthesize


class FixRepr(fixer_base.BaseFix):

    BM_compatible = True
    PATTERN = """
              atom < '`' expr=any '`' >
              """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        expr = results["expr"].clone()

        if expr.type == self.syms.testlist1:
            expr = parenthesize(expr)
        return Call(Name("repr"), [expr], prefix=node.prefix)
PK       ! M@  @    lib2to3/fixes/fix_basestring.pynu [        """Fixer for basestring -> str."""
# Author: Christian Heimes

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Name

class FixBasestring(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True

    PATTERN = "'basestring'"

    def transform(self, node, results):
        return Name("str", prefix=node.prefix)
PK       ! =      lib2to3/fixes/fix_asserts.pynu [        """Fixer that replaces deprecated unittest method names."""

# Author: Ezio Melotti

from ..fixer_base import BaseFix
from ..fixer_util import Name

NAMES = dict(
    assert_="assertTrue",
    assertEquals="assertEqual",
    assertNotEquals="assertNotEqual",
    assertAlmostEquals="assertAlmostEqual",
    assertNotAlmostEquals="assertNotAlmostEqual",
    assertRegexpMatches="assertRegex",
    assertRaisesRegexp="assertRaisesRegex",
    failUnlessEqual="assertEqual",
    failIfEqual="assertNotEqual",
    failUnlessAlmostEqual="assertAlmostEqual",
    failIfAlmostEqual="assertNotAlmostEqual",
    failUnless="assertTrue",
    failUnlessRaises="assertRaises",
    failIf="assertFalse",
)


class FixAsserts(BaseFix):

    PATTERN = """
              power< any+ trailer< '.' meth=(%s)> any* >
              """ % '|'.join(map(repr, NAMES))

    def transform(self, node, results):
        name = results["meth"][0]
        name.replace(Name(NAMES[str(name)], prefix=name.prefix))
PK       ! 6ng      lib2to3/fixes/fix_import.pynu [        """Fixer for import statements.
If spam is being imported from the local directory, this import:
    from spam import eggs
Becomes:
    from .spam import eggs

And this import:
    import spam
Becomes:
    from . import spam
"""

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from os.path import dirname, join, exists, sep
from ..fixer_util import FromImport, syms, token


def traverse_imports(names):
    """
    Walks over all the names imported in a dotted_as_names node.
    """
    pending = [names]
    while pending:
        node = pending.pop()
        if node.type == token.NAME:
            yield node.value
        elif node.type == syms.dotted_name:
            yield "".join([ch.value for ch in node.children])
        elif node.type == syms.dotted_as_name:
            pending.append(node.children[0])
        elif node.type == syms.dotted_as_names:
            pending.extend(node.children[::-2])
        else:
            raise AssertionError("unknown node type")


class FixImport(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True

    PATTERN = """
    import_from< 'from' imp=any 'import' ['('] any [')'] >
    |
    import_name< 'import' imp=any >
    """

    def start_tree(self, tree, name):
        super(FixImport, self).start_tree(tree, name)
        self.skip = "absolute_import" in tree.future_features

    def transform(self, node, results):
        if self.skip:
            return
        imp = results['imp']

        if node.type == syms.import_from:
            # Some imps are top-level (eg: 'import ham')
            # some are first level (eg: 'import ham.eggs')
            # some are third level (eg: 'import ham.eggs as spam')
            # Hence, the loop
            while not hasattr(imp, 'value'):
                imp = imp.children[0]
            if self.probably_a_local_import(imp.value):
                imp.value = "." + imp.value
                imp.changed()
        else:
            have_local = False
            have_absolute = False
            for mod_name in traverse_imports(imp):
                if self.probably_a_local_import(mod_name):
                    have_local = True
                else:
                    have_absolute = True
            if have_absolute:
                if have_local:
                    # We won't handle both sibling and absolute imports in the
                    # same statement at the moment.
                    self.warning(node, "absolute and local imports together")
                return

            new = FromImport(".", [imp])
            new.prefix = node.prefix
            return new

    def probably_a_local_import(self, imp_name):
        if imp_name.startswith("."):
            # Relative imports are certainly not local imports.
            return False
        imp_name = imp_name.split(".", 1)[0]
        base_path = dirname(self.filename)
        base_path = join(base_path, imp_name)
        # If there is no __init__.py next to the file its not in a package
        # so can't be a relative import.
        if not exists(join(dirname(base_path), "__init__.py")):
            return False
        for ext in [".py", sep, ".pyc", ".so", ".sl", ".pyd"]:
            if exists(base_path + ext):
                return True
        return False
PK       !         lib2to3/fixes/fix_urllib.pynu [        """Fix changes imports of urllib which are now incompatible.
   This is rather similar to fix_imports, but because of the more
   complex nature of the fixing for urllib, it has its own fixer.
"""
# Author: Nick Edds

# Local imports
from lib2to3.fixes.fix_imports import alternates, FixImports
from lib2to3.fixer_util import (Name, Comma, FromImport, Newline,
                                find_indentation, Node, syms)

MAPPING = {"urllib":  [
                ("urllib.request",
                    ["URLopener", "FancyURLopener", "urlretrieve",
                     "_urlopener", "urlopen", "urlcleanup",
                     "pathname2url", "url2pathname", "getproxies"]),
                ("urllib.parse",
                    ["quote", "quote_plus", "unquote", "unquote_plus",
                     "urlencode", "splitattr", "splithost", "splitnport",
                     "splitpasswd", "splitport", "splitquery", "splittag",
                     "splittype", "splituser", "splitvalue", ]),
                ("urllib.error",
                    ["ContentTooShortError"])],
           "urllib2" : [
                ("urllib.request",
                    ["urlopen", "install_opener", "build_opener",
                     "Request", "OpenerDirector", "BaseHandler",
                     "HTTPDefaultErrorHandler", "HTTPRedirectHandler",
                     "HTTPCookieProcessor", "ProxyHandler",
                     "HTTPPasswordMgr",
                     "HTTPPasswordMgrWithDefaultRealm",
                     "AbstractBasicAuthHandler",
                     "HTTPBasicAuthHandler", "ProxyBasicAuthHandler",
                     "AbstractDigestAuthHandler",
                     "HTTPDigestAuthHandler", "ProxyDigestAuthHandler",
                     "HTTPHandler", "HTTPSHandler", "FileHandler",
                     "FTPHandler", "CacheFTPHandler",
                     "UnknownHandler"]),
                ("urllib.error",
                    ["URLError", "HTTPError"]),
           ]
}

# Duplicate the url parsing functions for urllib2.
MAPPING["urllib2"].append(MAPPING["urllib"][1])


def build_pattern():
    bare = set()
    for old_module, changes in MAPPING.items():
        for change in changes:
            new_module, members = change
            members = alternates(members)
            yield """import_name< 'import' (module=%r
                                  | dotted_as_names< any* module=%r any* >) >
                  """ % (old_module, old_module)
            yield """import_from< 'from' mod_member=%r 'import'
                       ( member=%s | import_as_name< member=%s 'as' any > |
                         import_as_names< members=any*  >) >
                  """ % (old_module, members, members)
            yield """import_from< 'from' module_star=%r 'import' star='*' >
                  """ % old_module
            yield """import_name< 'import'
                                  dotted_as_name< module_as=%r 'as' any > >
                  """ % old_module
            # bare_with_attr has a special significance for FixImports.match().
            yield """power< bare_with_attr=%r trailer< '.' member=%s > any* >
                  """ % (old_module, members)


class FixUrllib(FixImports):

    def build_pattern(self):
        return "|".join(build_pattern())

    def transform_import(self, node, results):
        """Transform for the basic import case. Replaces the old
           import name with a comma separated list of its
           replacements.
        """
        import_mod = results.get("module")
        pref = import_mod.prefix

        names = []

        # create a Node list of the replacement modules
        for name in MAPPING[import_mod.value][:-1]:
            names.extend([Name(name[0], prefix=pref), Comma()])
        names.append(Name(MAPPING[import_mod.value][-1][0], prefix=pref))
        import_mod.replace(names)

    def transform_member(self, node, results):
        """Transform for imports of specific module elements. Replaces
           the module to be imported from with the appropriate new
           module.
        """
        mod_member = results.get("mod_member")
        pref = mod_member.prefix
        member = results.get("member")

        # Simple case with only a single member being imported
        if member:
            # this may be a list of length one, or just a node
            if isinstance(member, list):
                member = member[0]
            new_name = None
            for change in MAPPING[mod_member.value]:
                if member.value in change[1]:
                    new_name = change[0]
                    break
            if new_name:
                mod_member.replace(Name(new_name, prefix=pref))
            else:
                self.cannot_convert(node, "This is an invalid module element")

        # Multiple members being imported
        else:
            # a dictionary for replacements, order matters
            modules = []
            mod_dict = {}
            members = results["members"]
            for member in members:
                # we only care about the actual members
                if member.type == syms.import_as_name:
                    as_name = member.children[2].value
                    member_name = member.children[0].value
                else:
                    member_name = member.value
                    as_name = None
                if member_name != ",":
                    for change in MAPPING[mod_member.value]:
                        if member_name in change[1]:
                            if change[0] not in mod_dict:
                                modules.append(change[0])
                            mod_dict.setdefault(change[0], []).append(member)

            new_nodes = []
            indentation = find_indentation(node)
            first = True
            def handle_name(name, prefix):
                if name.type == syms.import_as_name:
                    kids = [Name(name.children[0].value, prefix=prefix),
                            name.children[1].clone(),
                            name.children[2].clone()]
                    return [Node(syms.import_as_name, kids)]
                return [Name(name.value, prefix=prefix)]
            for module in modules:
                elts = mod_dict[module]
                names = []
                for elt in elts[:-1]:
                    names.extend(handle_name(elt, pref))
                    names.append(Comma())
                names.extend(handle_name(elts[-1], pref))
                new = FromImport(module, names)
                if not first or node.parent.prefix.endswith(indentation):
                    new.prefix = indentation
                new_nodes.append(new)
                first = False
            if new_nodes:
                nodes = []
                for new_node in new_nodes[:-1]:
                    nodes.extend([new_node, Newline()])
                nodes.append(new_nodes[-1])
                node.replace(nodes)
            else:
                self.cannot_convert(node, "All module elements are invalid")

    def transform_dot(self, node, results):
        """Transform for calls to module members in code."""
        module_dot = results.get("bare_with_attr")
        member = results.get("member")
        new_name = None
        if isinstance(member, list):
            member = member[0]
        for change in MAPPING[module_dot.value]:
            if member.value in change[1]:
                new_name = change[0]
                break
        if new_name:
            module_dot.replace(Name(new_name,
                                    prefix=module_dot.prefix))
        else:
            self.cannot_convert(node, "This is an invalid module element")

    def transform(self, node, results):
        if results.get("module"):
            self.transform_import(node, results)
        elif results.get("mod_member"):
            self.transform_member(node, results)
        elif results.get("bare_with_attr"):
            self.transform_dot(node, results)
        # Renaming and star imports are not supported for these modules.
        elif results.get("module_star"):
            self.cannot_convert(node, "Cannot handle star imports.")
        elif results.get("module_as"):
            self.cannot_convert(node, "This module is now multiple modules")
PK       ! C
  
    lib2to3/fixes/fix_xrange.pynu [        # Copyright 2007 Google, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Fixer that changes xrange(...) into range(...)."""

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Name, Call, consuming_calls
from .. import patcomp


class FixXrange(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True
    PATTERN = """
              power<
                 (name='range'|name='xrange') trailer< '(' args=any ')' >
              rest=any* >
              """

    def start_tree(self, tree, filename):
        super(FixXrange, self).start_tree(tree, filename)
        self.transformed_xranges = set()

    def finish_tree(self, tree, filename):
        self.transformed_xranges = None

    def transform(self, node, results):
        name = results["name"]
        if name.value == "xrange":
            return self.transform_xrange(node, results)
        elif name.value == "range":
            return self.transform_range(node, results)
        else:
            raise ValueError(repr(name))

    def transform_xrange(self, node, results):
        name = results["name"]
        name.replace(Name("range", prefix=name.prefix))
        # This prevents the new range call from being wrapped in a list later.
        self.transformed_xranges.add(id(node))

    def transform_range(self, node, results):
        if (id(node) not in self.transformed_xranges and
            not self.in_special_context(node)):
            range_call = Call(Name("range"), [results["args"].clone()])
            # Encase the range call in list().
            list_call = Call(Name("list"), [range_call],
                             prefix=node.prefix)
            # Put things that were after the range() call after the list call.
            for n in results["rest"]:
                list_call.append_child(n)
            return list_call

    P1 = "power< func=NAME trailer< '(' node=any ')' > any* >"
    p1 = patcomp.compile_pattern(P1)

    P2 = """for_stmt< 'for' any 'in' node=any ':' any* >
            | comp_for< 'for' any 'in' node=any any* >
            | comparison< any 'in' node=any any*>
         """
    p2 = patcomp.compile_pattern(P2)

    def in_special_context(self, node):
        if node.parent is None:
            return False
        results = {}
        if (node.parent.parent is not None and
               self.p1.match(node.parent.parent, results) and
               results["node"] is node):
            # list(d.keys()) -> list(d.keys()), etc.
            return results["func"].value in consuming_calls
        # for ... in d.iterkeys() -> for ... in d.keys(), etc.
        return self.p2.match(node.parent, results) and results["node"] is node
PK       ! xu.  .    lib2to3/fixes/fix_throw.pynu [        """Fixer for generator.throw(E, V, T).

g.throw(E)       -> g.throw(E)
g.throw(E, V)    -> g.throw(E(V))
g.throw(E, V, T) -> g.throw(E(V).with_traceback(T))

g.throw("foo"[, V[, T]]) will warn about string exceptions."""
# Author: Collin Winter

# Local imports
from .. import pytree
from ..pgen2 import token
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Name, Call, ArgList, Attr, is_tuple

class FixThrow(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True
    PATTERN = """
    power< any trailer< '.' 'throw' >
           trailer< '(' args=arglist< exc=any ',' val=any [',' tb=any] > ')' >
    >
    |
    power< any trailer< '.' 'throw' > trailer< '(' exc=any ')' > >
    """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        syms = self.syms

        exc = results["exc"].clone()
        if exc.type is token.STRING:
            self.cannot_convert(node, "Python 3 does not support string exceptions")
            return

        # Leave "g.throw(E)" alone
        val = results.get("val")
        if val is None:
            return

        val = val.clone()
        if is_tuple(val):
            args = [c.clone() for c in val.children[1:-1]]
        else:
            val.prefix = ""
            args = [val]

        throw_args = results["args"]

        if "tb" in results:
            tb = results["tb"].clone()
            tb.prefix = ""

            e = Call(exc, args)
            with_tb = Attr(e, Name('with_traceback')) + [ArgList([tb])]
            throw_args.replace(pytree.Node(syms.power, with_tb))
        else:
            throw_args.replace(Call(exc, args))
PK       ! ܬ'!  !    lib2to3/fixes/fix_imports2.pynu [        """Fix incompatible imports and module references that must be fixed after
fix_imports."""
from . import fix_imports


MAPPING = {
            'whichdb': 'dbm',
            'anydbm': 'dbm',
          }


class FixImports2(fix_imports.FixImports):

    run_order = 7

    mapping = MAPPING
PK       ! q|      lib2to3/fixes/fix_input.pynu [        """Fixer that changes input(...) into eval(input(...))."""
# Author: Andre Roberge

# Local imports
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Call, Name
from .. import patcomp


context = patcomp.compile_pattern("power< 'eval' trailer< '(' any ')' > >")


class FixInput(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True
    PATTERN = """
              power< 'input' args=trailer< '(' [any] ')' > >
              """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        # If we're already wrapped in an eval() call, we're done.
        if context.match(node.parent.parent):
            return

        new = node.clone()
        new.prefix = ""
        return Call(Name("eval"), [new], prefix=node.prefix)
PK       ! |b  b    lib2to3/fixes/fix_operator.pynu [        """Fixer for operator functions.

operator.isCallable(obj)       -> callable(obj)
operator.sequenceIncludes(obj) -> operator.contains(obj)
operator.isSequenceType(obj)   -> isinstance(obj, collections.abc.Sequence)
operator.isMappingType(obj)    -> isinstance(obj, collections.abc.Mapping)
operator.isNumberType(obj)     -> isinstance(obj, numbers.Number)
operator.repeat(obj, n)        -> operator.mul(obj, n)
operator.irepeat(obj, n)       -> operator.imul(obj, n)
"""

import collections.abc

# Local imports
from lib2to3 import fixer_base
from lib2to3.fixer_util import Call, Name, String, touch_import


def invocation(s):
    def dec(f):
        f.invocation = s
        return f
    return dec


class FixOperator(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    BM_compatible = True
    order = "pre"

    methods = """
              method=('isCallable'|'sequenceIncludes'
                     |'isSequenceType'|'isMappingType'|'isNumberType'
                     |'repeat'|'irepeat')
              """
    obj = "'(' obj=any ')'"
    PATTERN = """
              power< module='operator'
                trailer< '.' %(methods)s > trailer< %(obj)s > >
              |
              power< %(methods)s trailer< %(obj)s > >
              """ % dict(methods=methods, obj=obj)

    def transform(self, node, results):
        method = self._check_method(node, results)
        if method is not None:
            return method(node, results)

    @invocation("operator.contains(%s)")
    def _sequenceIncludes(self, node, results):
        return self._handle_rename(node, results, "contains")

    @invocation("callable(%s)")
    def _isCallable(self, node, results):
        obj = results["obj"]
        return Call(Name("callable"), [obj.clone()], prefix=node.prefix)

    @invocation("operator.mul(%s)")
    def _repeat(self, node, results):
        return self._handle_rename(node, results, "mul")

    @invocation("operator.imul(%s)")
    def _irepeat(self, node, results):
        return self._handle_rename(node, results, "imul")

    @invocation("isinstance(%s, collections.abc.Sequence)")
    def _isSequenceType(self, node, results):
        return self._handle_type2abc(node, results, "collections.abc", "Sequence")

    @invocation("isinstance(%s, collections.abc.Mapping)")
    def _isMappingType(self, node, results):
        return self._handle_type2abc(node, results, "collections.abc", "Mapping")

    @invocation("isinstance(%s, numbers.Number)")
    def _isNumberType(self, node, results):
        return self._handle_type2abc(node, results, "numbers", "Number")

    def _handle_rename(self, node, results, name):
        method = results["method"][0]
        method.value = name
        method.changed()

    def _handle_type2abc(self, node, results, module, abc):
        touch_import(None, module, node)
        obj = results["obj"]
        args = [obj.clone(), String(", " + ".".join([module, abc]))]
        return Call(Name("isinstance"), args, prefix=node.prefix)

    def _check_method(self, node, results):
        method = getattr(self, "_" + results["method"][0].value)
        if isinstance(method, collections.abc.Callable):
            if "module" in results:
                return method
            else:
                sub = (str(results["obj"]),)
                invocation_str = method.invocation % sub
                self.warning(node, "You should use '%s' here." % invocation_str)
        return None
PK       ! O+    !  lib2to3/fixes/fix_tuple_params.pynu [        """Fixer for function definitions with tuple parameters.

def func(((a, b), c), d):
    ...

    ->

def func(x, d):
    ((a, b), c) = x
    ...

It will also support lambdas:

    lambda (x, y): x + y -> lambda t: t[0] + t[1]

    # The parens are a syntax error in Python 3
    lambda (x): x + y -> lambda x: x + y
"""
# Author: Collin Winter

# Local imports
from .. import pytree
from ..pgen2 import token
from .. import fixer_base
from ..fixer_util import Assign, Name, Newline, Number, Subscript, syms

def is_docstring(stmt):
    return isinstance(stmt, pytree.Node) and \
           stmt.children[0].type == token.STRING

class FixTupleParams(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    run_order = 4 #use a lower order since lambda is part of other
                  #patterns
    BM_compatible = True

    PATTERN = """
              funcdef< 'def' any parameters< '(' args=any ')' >
                       ['->' any] ':' suite=any+ >
              |
              lambda=
              lambdef< 'lambda' args=vfpdef< '(' inner=any ')' >
                       ':' body=any
              >
              """

    def transform(self, node, results):
        if "lambda" in results:
            return self.transform_lambda(node, results)

        new_lines = []
        suite = results["suite"]
        args = results["args"]
        # This crap is so "def foo(...): x = 5; y = 7" is handled correctly.
        # TODO(cwinter): suite-cleanup
        if suite[0].children[1].type == token.INDENT:
            start = 2
            indent = suite[0].children[1].value
            end = Newline()
        else:
            start = 0
            indent = "; "
            end = pytree.Leaf(token.INDENT, "")

        # We need access to self for new_name(), and making this a method
        #  doesn't feel right. Closing over self and new_lines makes the
        #  code below cleaner.
        def handle_tuple(tuple_arg, add_prefix=False):
            n = Name(self.new_name())
            arg = tuple_arg.clone()
            arg.prefix = ""
            stmt = Assign(arg, n.clone())
            if add_prefix:
                n.prefix = " "
            tuple_arg.replace(n)
            new_lines.append(pytree.Node(syms.simple_stmt,
                                         [stmt, end.clone()]))

        if args.type == syms.tfpdef:
            handle_tuple(args)
        elif args.type == syms.typedargslist:
            for i, arg in enumerate(args.children):
                if arg.type == syms.tfpdef:
                    # Without add_prefix, the emitted code is correct,
                    #  just ugly.
                    handle_tuple(arg, add_prefix=(i > 0))

        if not new_lines:
            return

        # This isn't strictly necessary, but it plays nicely with other fixers.
        # TODO(cwinter) get rid of this when children becomes a smart list
        for line in new_lines:
            line.parent = suite[0]

        # TODO(cwinter) suite-cleanup
        after = start
        if start == 0:
            new_lines[0].prefix = " "
        elif is_docstring(suite[0].children[start]):
            new_lines[0].prefix = indent
            after = start + 1

        for line in new_lines:
            line.parent = suite[0]
        suite[0].children[after:after] = new_lines
        for i in range(after+1, after+len(new_lines)+1):
            suite[0].children[i].prefix = indent
        suite[0].changed()

    def transform_lambda(self, node, results):
        args = results["args"]
        body = results["body"]
        inner = simplify_args(results["inner"])

        # Replace lambda ((((x)))): x  with lambda x: x
        if inner.type == token.NAME:
            inner = inner.clone()
            inner.prefix = " "
            args.replace(inner)
            return

        params = find_params(args)
        to_index = map_to_index(params)
        tup_name = self.new_name(tuple_name(params))

        new_param = Name(tup_name, prefix=" ")
        args.replace(new_param.clone())
        for n in body.post_order():
            if n.type == token.NAME and n.value in to_index:
                subscripts = [c.clone() for c in to_index[n.value]]
                new = pytree.Node(syms.power,
                                  [new_param.clone()] + subscripts)
                new.prefix = n.prefix
                n.replace(new)


### Helper functions for transform_lambda()

def simplify_args(node):
    if node.type in (syms.vfplist, token.NAME):
        return node
    elif node.type == syms.vfpdef:
        # These look like vfpdef< '(' x ')' > where x is NAME
        # or another vfpdef instance (leading to recursion).
        while node.type == syms.vfpdef:
            node = node.children[1]
        return node
    raise RuntimeError("Received unexpected node %s" % node)

def find_params(node):
    if node.type == syms.vfpdef:
        return find_params(node.children[1])
    elif node.type == token.NAME:
        return node.value
    return [find_params(c) for c in node.children if c.type != token.COMMA]

def map_to_index(param_list, prefix=[], d=None):
    if d is None:
        d = {}
    for i, obj in enumerate(param_list):
        trailer = [Subscript(Number(str(i)))]
        if isinstance(obj, list):
            map_to_index(obj, trailer, d=d)
        else:
            d[obj] = prefix + trailer
    return d

def tuple_name(param_list):
    l = []
    for obj in param_list:
        if isinstance(obj, list):
            l.append(tuple_name(obj))
        else:
            l.append(obj)
    return "_".join(l)
PK       ! <;  ;    lib2to3/fixes/fix_ne.pynu [        # Copyright 2006 Google, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Fixer that turns <> into !=."""

# Local imports
from .. import pytree
from ..pgen2 import token
from .. import fixer_base


class FixNe(fixer_base.BaseFix):
    # This is so simple that we don't need the pattern compiler.

    _accept_type = token.NOTEQUAL

    def match(self, node):
        # Override
        return node.value == "<>"

    def transform(self, node, results):
        new = pytree.Leaf(token.NOTEQUAL, "!=", prefix=node.prefix)
        return new
PK       ! +P"  "    lib2to3/fixer_base.pynu [        # Copyright 2006 Google, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Base class for fixers (optional, but recommended)."""

# Python imports
import itertools

# Local imports
from .patcomp import PatternCompiler
from . import pygram
from .fixer_util import does_tree_import

class BaseFix(object):

    """Optional base class for fixers.

    The subclass name must be FixFooBar where FooBar is the result of
    removing underscores and capitalizing the words of the fix name.
    For example, the class name for a fixer named 'has_key' should be
    FixHasKey.
    """

    PATTERN = None  # Most subclasses should override with a string literal
    pattern = None  # Compiled pattern, set by compile_pattern()
    pattern_tree = None # Tree representation of the pattern
    options = None  # Options object passed to initializer
    filename = None # The filename (set by set_filename)
    numbers = itertools.count(1) # For new_name()
    used_names = set() # A set of all used NAMEs
    order = "post" # Does the fixer prefer pre- or post-order traversal
    explicit = False # Is this ignored by refactor.py -f all?
    run_order = 5   # Fixers will be sorted by run order before execution
                    # Lower numbers will be run first.
    _accept_type = None # [Advanced and not public] This tells RefactoringTool
                        # which node type to accept when there's not a pattern.

    keep_line_order = False # For the bottom matcher: match with the
                            # original line order
    BM_compatible = False # Compatibility with the bottom matching
                          # module; every fixer should set this
                          # manually

    # Shortcut for access to Python grammar symbols
    syms = pygram.python_symbols

    def __init__(self, options, log):
        """Initializer.  Subclass may override.

        Args:
            options: a dict containing the options passed to RefactoringTool
            that could be used to customize the fixer through the command line.
            log: a list to append warnings and other messages to.
        """
        self.options = options
        self.log = log
        self.compile_pattern()

    def compile_pattern(self):
        """Compiles self.PATTERN into self.pattern.

        Subclass may override if it doesn't want to use
        self.{pattern,PATTERN} in .match().
        """
        if self.PATTERN is not None:
            PC = PatternCompiler()
            self.pattern, self.pattern_tree = PC.compile_pattern(self.PATTERN,
                                                                 with_tree=True)

    def set_filename(self, filename):
        """Set the filename.

        The main refactoring tool should call this.
        """
        self.filename = filename

    def match(self, node):
        """Returns match for a given parse tree node.

        Should return a true or false object (not necessarily a bool).
        It may return a non-empty dict of matching sub-nodes as
        returned by a matching pattern.

        Subclass may override.
        """
        results = {"node": node}
        return self.pattern.match(node, results) and results

    def transform(self, node, results):
        """Returns the transformation for a given parse tree node.

        Args:
          node: the root of the parse tree that matched the fixer.
          results: a dict mapping symbolic names to part of the match.

        Returns:
          None, or a node that is a modified copy of the
          argument node.  The node argument may also be modified in-place to
          effect the same change.

        Subclass *must* override.
        """
        raise NotImplementedError()

    def new_name(self, template="xxx_todo_changeme"):
        """Return a string suitable for use as an identifier

        The new name is guaranteed not to conflict with other identifiers.
        """
        name = template
        while name in self.used_names:
            name = template + str(next(self.numbers))
        self.used_names.add(name)
        return name

    def log_message(self, message):
        if self.first_log:
            self.first_log = False
            self.log.append("### In file %s ###" % self.filename)
        self.log.append(message)

    def cannot_convert(self, node, reason=None):
        """Warn the user that a given chunk of code is not valid Python 3,
        but that it cannot be converted automatically.

        First argument is the top-level node for the code in question.
        Optional second argument is why it can't be converted.
        """
        lineno = node.get_lineno()
        for_output = node.clone()
        for_output.prefix = ""
        msg = "Line %d: could not convert: %s"
        self.log_message(msg % (lineno, for_output))
        if reason:
            self.log_message(reason)

    def warning(self, node, reason):
        """Used for warning the user about possible uncertainty in the
        translation.

        First argument is the top-level node for the code in question.
        Optional second argument is why it can't be converted.
        """
        lineno = node.get_lineno()
        self.log_message("Line %d: %s" % (lineno, reason))

    def start_tree(self, tree, filename):
        """Some fixers need to maintain tree-wide state.
        This method is called once, at the start of tree fix-up.

        tree - the root node of the tree to be processed.
        filename - the name of the file the tree came from.
        """
        self.used_names = tree.used_names
        self.set_filename(filename)
        self.numbers = itertools.count(1)
        self.first_log = True

    def finish_tree(self, tree, filename):
        """Some fixers need to maintain tree-wide state.
        This method is called once, at the conclusion of tree fix-up.

        tree - the root node of the tree to be processed.
        filename - the name of the file the tree came from.
        """
        pass


class ConditionalFix(BaseFix):
    """ Base class for fixers which not execute if an import is found. """

    # This is the name of the import which, if found, will cause the test to be skipped
    skip_on = None

    def start_tree(self, *args):
        super(ConditionalFix, self).start_tree(*args)
        self._should_skip = None

    def should_skip(self, node):
        if self._should_skip is not None:
            return self._should_skip
        pkg = self.skip_on.split(".")
        name = pkg[-1]
        pkg = ".".join(pkg[:-1])
        self._should_skip = does_tree_import(pkg, name, node)
        return self._should_skip
PK       ! %ask  sk    lib2to3/refactor.pynu [        # Copyright 2006 Google, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
# Licensed to PSF under a Contributor Agreement.

"""Refactoring framework.

Used as a main program, this can refactor any number of files and/or
recursively descend down directories.  Imported as a module, this
provides infrastructure to write your own refactoring tool.
"""

__author__ = "Guido van Rossum <guido@python.org>"


# Python imports
import io
import os
import pkgutil
import sys
import logging
import operator
import collections
from itertools import chain

# Local imports
from .pgen2 import driver, tokenize, token
from .fixer_util import find_root
from . import pytree, pygram
from . import btm_matcher as bm


def get_all_fix_names(fixer_pkg, remove_prefix=True):
    """Return a sorted list of all available fix names in the given package."""
    pkg = __import__(fixer_pkg, [], [], ["*"])
    fix_names = []
    for finder, name, ispkg in pkgutil.iter_modules(pkg.__path__):
        if name.startswith("fix_"):
            if remove_prefix:
                name = name[4:]
            fix_names.append(name)
    return fix_names


class _EveryNode(Exception):
    pass


def _get_head_types(pat):
    """ Accepts a pytree Pattern Node and returns a set
        of the pattern types which will match first. """

    if isinstance(pat, (pytree.NodePattern, pytree.LeafPattern)):
        # NodePatters must either have no type and no content
        #   or a type and content -- so they don't get any farther
        # Always return leafs
        if pat.type is None:
            raise _EveryNode
        return {pat.type}

    if isinstance(pat, pytree.NegatedPattern):
        if pat.content:
            return _get_head_types(pat.content)
        raise _EveryNode # Negated Patterns don't have a type

    if isinstance(pat, pytree.WildcardPattern):
        # Recurse on each node in content
        r = set()
        for p in pat.content:
            for x in p:
                r.update(_get_head_types(x))
        return r

    raise Exception("Oh no! I don't understand pattern %s" %(pat))


def _get_headnode_dict(fixer_list):
    """ Accepts a list of fixers and returns a dictionary
        of head node type --> fixer list.  """
    head_nodes = collections.defaultdict(list)
    every = []
    for fixer in fixer_list:
        if fixer.pattern:
            try:
                heads = _get_head_types(fixer.pattern)
            except _EveryNode:
                every.append(fixer)
            else:
                for node_type in heads:
                    head_nodes[node_type].append(fixer)
        else:
            if fixer._accept_type is not None:
                head_nodes[fixer._accept_type].append(fixer)
            else:
                every.append(fixer)
    for node_type in chain(pygram.python_grammar.symbol2number.values(),
                           pygram.python_grammar.tokens):
        head_nodes[node_type].extend(every)
    return dict(head_nodes)


def get_fixers_from_package(pkg_name):
    """
    Return the fully qualified names for fixers in the package pkg_name.
    """
    return [pkg_name + "." + fix_name
            for fix_name in get_all_fix_names(pkg_name, False)]

def _identity(obj):
    return obj


def _detect_future_features(source):
    have_docstring = False
    gen = tokenize.generate_tokens(io.StringIO(source).readline)
    def advance():
        tok = next(gen)
        return tok[0], tok[1]
    ignore = frozenset({token.NEWLINE, tokenize.NL, token.COMMENT})
    features = set()
    try:
        while True:
            tp, value = advance()
            if tp in ignore:
                continue
            elif tp == token.STRING:
                if have_docstring:
                    break
                have_docstring = True
            elif tp == token.NAME and value == "from":
                tp, value = advance()
                if tp != token.NAME or value != "__future__":
                    break
                tp, value = advance()
                if tp != token.NAME or value != "import":
                    break
                tp, value = advance()
                if tp == token.OP and value == "(":
                    tp, value = advance()
                while tp == token.NAME:
                    features.add(value)
                    tp, value = advance()
                    if tp != token.OP or value != ",":
                        break
                    tp, value = advance()
            else:
                break
    except StopIteration:
        pass
    return frozenset(features)


class FixerError(Exception):
    """A fixer could not be loaded."""


class RefactoringTool(object):

    _default_options = {"print_function" : False,
                        "exec_function": False,
                        "write_unchanged_files" : False}

    CLASS_PREFIX = "Fix" # The prefix for fixer classes
    FILE_PREFIX = "fix_" # The prefix for modules with a fixer within

    def __init__(self, fixer_names, options=None, explicit=None):
        """Initializer.

        Args:
            fixer_names: a list of fixers to import
            options: a dict with configuration.
            explicit: a list of fixers to run even if they are explicit.
        """
        self.fixers = fixer_names
        self.explicit = explicit or []
        self.options = self._default_options.copy()
        if options is not None:
            self.options.update(options)
        self.grammar = pygram.python_grammar.copy()

        if self.options['print_function']:
            del self.grammar.keywords["print"]
        elif self.options['exec_function']:
            del self.grammar.keywords["exec"]

        # When this is True, the refactor*() methods will call write_file() for
        # files processed even if they were not changed during refactoring. If
        # and only if the refactor method's write parameter was True.
        self.write_unchanged_files = self.options.get("write_unchanged_files")
        self.errors = []
        self.logger = logging.getLogger("RefactoringTool")
        self.fixer_log = []
        self.wrote = False
        self.driver = driver.Driver(self.grammar,
                                    convert=pytree.convert,
                                    logger=self.logger)
        self.pre_order, self.post_order = self.get_fixers()


        self.files = []  # List of files that were or should be modified

        self.BM = bm.BottomMatcher()
        self.bmi_pre_order = [] # Bottom Matcher incompatible fixers
        self.bmi_post_order = []

        for fixer in chain(self.post_order, self.pre_order):
            if fixer.BM_compatible:
                self.BM.add_fixer(fixer)
                # remove fixers that will be handled by the bottom-up
                # matcher
            elif fixer in self.pre_order:
                self.bmi_pre_order.append(fixer)
            elif fixer in self.post_order:
                self.bmi_post_order.append(fixer)

        self.bmi_pre_order_heads = _get_headnode_dict(self.bmi_pre_order)
        self.bmi_post_order_heads = _get_headnode_dict(self.bmi_post_order)



    def get_fixers(self):
        """Inspects the options to load the requested patterns and handlers.

        Returns:
          (pre_order, post_order), where pre_order is the list of fixers that
          want a pre-order AST traversal, and post_order is the list that want
          post-order traversal.
        """
        pre_order_fixers = []
        post_order_fixers = []
        for fix_mod_path in self.fixers:
            mod = __import__(fix_mod_path, {}, {}, ["*"])
            fix_name = fix_mod_path.rsplit(".", 1)[-1]
            if fix_name.startswith(self.FILE_PREFIX):
                fix_name = fix_name[len(self.FILE_PREFIX):]
            parts = fix_name.split("_")
            class_name = self.CLASS_PREFIX + "".join([p.title() for p in parts])
            try:
                fix_class = getattr(mod, class_name)
            except AttributeError:
                raise FixerError("Can't find %s.%s" % (fix_name, class_name)) from None
            fixer = fix_class(self.options, self.fixer_log)
            if fixer.explicit and self.explicit is not True and \
                    fix_mod_path not in self.explicit:
                self.log_message("Skipping optional fixer: %s", fix_name)
                continue

            self.log_debug("Adding transformation: %s", fix_name)
            if fixer.order == "pre":
                pre_order_fixers.append(fixer)
            elif fixer.order == "post":
                post_order_fixers.append(fixer)
            else:
                raise FixerError("Illegal fixer order: %r" % fixer.order)

        key_func = operator.attrgetter("run_order")
        pre_order_fixers.sort(key=key_func)
        post_order_fixers.sort(key=key_func)
        return (pre_order_fixers, post_order_fixers)

    def log_error(self, msg, *args, **kwds):
        """Called when an error occurs."""
        raise

    def log_message(self, msg, *args):
        """Hook to log a message."""
        if args:
            msg = msg % args
        self.logger.info(msg)

    def log_debug(self, msg, *args):
        if args:
            msg = msg % args
        self.logger.debug(msg)

    def print_output(self, old_text, new_text, filename, equal):
        """Called with the old version, new version, and filename of a
        refactored file."""
        pass

    def refactor(self, items, write=False, doctests_only=False):
        """Refactor a list of files and directories."""

        for dir_or_file in items:
            if os.path.isdir(dir_or_file):
                self.refactor_dir(dir_or_file, write, doctests_only)
            else:
                self.refactor_file(dir_or_file, write, doctests_only)

    def refactor_dir(self, dir_name, write=False, doctests_only=False):
        """Descends down a directory and refactor every Python file found.

        Python files are assumed to have a .py extension.

        Files and subdirectories starting with '.' are skipped.
        """
        py_ext = os.extsep + "py"
        for dirpath, dirnames, filenames in os.walk(dir_name):
            self.log_debug("Descending into %s", dirpath)
            dirnames.sort()
            filenames.sort()
            for name in filenames:
                if (not name.startswith(".") and
                    os.path.splitext(name)[1] == py_ext):
                    fullname = os.path.join(dirpath, name)
                    self.refactor_file(fullname, write, doctests_only)
            # Modify dirnames in-place to remove subdirs with leading dots
            dirnames[:] = [dn for dn in dirnames if not dn.startswith(".")]

    def _read_python_source(self, filename):
        """
        Do our best to decode a Python source file correctly.
        """
        try:
            f = open(filename, "rb")
        except OSError as err:
            self.log_error("Can't open %s: %s", filename, err)
            return None, None
        try:
            encoding = tokenize.detect_encoding(f.readline)[0]
        finally:
            f.close()
        with io.open(filename, "r", encoding=encoding, newline='') as f:
            return f.read(), encoding

    def refactor_file(self, filename, write=False, doctests_only=False):
        """Refactors a file."""
        input, encoding = self._read_python_source(filename)
        if input is None:
            # Reading the file failed.
            return
        input += "\n" # Silence certain parse errors
        if doctests_only:
            self.log_debug("Refactoring doctests in %s", filename)
            output = self.refactor_docstring(input, filename)
            if self.write_unchanged_files or output != input:
                self.processed_file(output, filename, input, write, encoding)
            else:
                self.log_debug("No doctest changes in %s", filename)
        else:
            tree = self.refactor_string(input, filename)
            if self.write_unchanged_files or (tree and tree.was_changed):
                # The [:-1] is to take off the \n we added earlier
                self.processed_file(str(tree)[:-1], filename,
                                    write=write, encoding=encoding)
            else:
                self.log_debug("No changes in %s", filename)

    def refactor_string(self, data, name):
        """Refactor a given input string.

        Args:
            data: a string holding the code to be refactored.
            name: a human-readable name for use in error/log messages.

        Returns:
            An AST corresponding to the refactored input stream; None if
            there were errors during the parse.
        """
        features = _detect_future_features(data)
        if "print_function" in features:
            self.driver.grammar = pygram.python_grammar_no_print_statement
        try:
            tree = self.driver.parse_string(data)
        except Exception as err:
            self.log_error("Can't parse %s: %s: %s",
                           name, err.__class__.__name__, err)
            return
        finally:
            self.driver.grammar = self.grammar
        tree.future_features = features
        self.log_debug("Refactoring %s", name)
        self.refactor_tree(tree, name)
        return tree

    def refactor_stdin(self, doctests_only=False):
        input = sys.stdin.read()
        if doctests_only:
            self.log_debug("Refactoring doctests in stdin")
            output = self.refactor_docstring(input, "<stdin>")
            if self.write_unchanged_files or output != input:
                self.processed_file(output, "<stdin>", input)
            else:
                self.log_debug("No doctest changes in stdin")
        else:
            tree = self.refactor_string(input, "<stdin>")
            if self.write_unchanged_files or (tree and tree.was_changed):
                self.processed_file(str(tree), "<stdin>", input)
            else:
                self.log_debug("No changes in stdin")

    def refactor_tree(self, tree, name):
        """Refactors a parse tree (modifying the tree in place).

        For compatible patterns the bottom matcher module is
        used. Otherwise the tree is traversed node-to-node for
        matches.

        Args:
            tree: a pytree.Node instance representing the root of the tree
                  to be refactored.
            name: a human-readable name for this tree.

        Returns:
            True if the tree was modified, False otherwise.
        """

        for fixer in chain(self.pre_order, self.post_order):
            fixer.start_tree(tree, name)

        #use traditional matching for the incompatible fixers
        self.traverse_by(self.bmi_pre_order_heads, tree.pre_order())
        self.traverse_by(self.bmi_post_order_heads, tree.post_order())

        # obtain a set of candidate nodes
        match_set = self.BM.run(tree.leaves())

        while any(match_set.values()):
            for fixer in self.BM.fixers:
                if fixer in match_set and match_set[fixer]:
                    #sort by depth; apply fixers from bottom(of the AST) to top
                    match_set[fixer].sort(key=pytree.Base.depth, reverse=True)

                    if fixer.keep_line_order:
                        #some fixers(eg fix_imports) must be applied
                        #with the original file's line order
                        match_set[fixer].sort(key=pytree.Base.get_lineno)

                    for node in list(match_set[fixer]):
                        if node in match_set[fixer]:
                            match_set[fixer].remove(node)

                        try:
                            find_root(node)
                        except ValueError:
                            # this node has been cut off from a
                            # previous transformation ; skip
                            continue

                        if node.fixers_applied and fixer in node.fixers_applied:
                            # do not apply the same fixer again
                            continue

                        results = fixer.match(node)

                        if results:
                            new = fixer.transform(node, results)
                            if new is not None:
                                node.replace(new)
                                #new.fixers_applied.append(fixer)
                                for node in new.post_order():
                                    # do not apply the fixer again to
                                    # this or any subnode
                                    if not node.fixers_applied:
                                        node.fixers_applied = []
                                    node.fixers_applied.append(fixer)

                                # update the original match set for
                                # the added code
                                new_matches = self.BM.run(new.leaves())
                                for fxr in new_matches:
                                    if not fxr in match_set:
                                        match_set[fxr]=[]

                                    match_set[fxr].extend(new_matches[fxr])

        for fixer in chain(self.pre_order, self.post_order):
            fixer.finish_tree(tree, name)
        return tree.was_changed

    def traverse_by(self, fixers, traversal):
        """Traverse an AST, applying a set of fixers to each node.

        This is a helper method for refactor_tree().

        Args:
            fixers: a list of fixer instances.
            traversal: a generator that yields AST nodes.

        Returns:
            None
        """
        if not fixers:
            return
        for node in traversal:
            for fixer in fixers[node.type]:
                results = fixer.match(node)
                if results:
                    new = fixer.transform(node, results)
                    if new is not None:
                        node.replace(new)
                        node = new

    def processed_file(self, new_text, filename, old_text=None, write=False,
                       encoding=None):
        """
        Called when a file has been refactored and there may be changes.
        """
        self.files.append(filename)
        if old_text is None:
            old_text = self._read_python_source(filename)[0]
            if old_text is None:
                return
        equal = old_text == new_text
        self.print_output(old_text, new_text, filename, equal)
        if equal:
            self.log_debug("No changes to %s", filename)
            if not self.write_unchanged_files:
                return
        if write:
            self.write_file(new_text, filename, old_text, encoding)
        else:
            self.log_debug("Not writing changes to %s", filename)

    def write_file(self, new_text, filename, old_text, encoding=None):
        """Writes a string to a file.

        It first shows a unified diff between the old text and the new text, and
        then rewrites the file; the latter is only done if the write option is
        set.
        """
        try:
            fp = io.open(filename, "w", encoding=encoding, newline='')
        except OSError as err:
            self.log_error("Can't create %s: %s", filename, err)
            return

        with fp:
            try:
                fp.write(new_text)
            except OSError as err:
                self.log_error("Can't write %s: %s", filename, err)
        self.log_debug("Wrote changes to %s", filename)
        self.wrote = True

    PS1 = ">>> "
    PS2 = "... "

    def refactor_docstring(self, input, filename):
        """Refactors a docstring, looking for doctests.

        This returns a modified version of the input string.  It looks
        for doctests, which start with a ">>>" prompt, and may be
        continued with "..." prompts, as long as the "..." is indented
        the same as the ">>>".

        (Unfortunately we can't use the doctest module's parser,
        since, like most parsers, it is not geared towards preserving
        the original source.)
        """
        result = []
        block = None
        block_lineno = None
        indent = None
        lineno = 0
        for line in input.splitlines(keepends=True):
            lineno += 1
            if line.lstrip().startswith(self.PS1):
                if block is not None:
                    result.extend(self.refactor_doctest(block, block_lineno,
                                                        indent, filename))
                block_lineno = lineno
                block = [line]
                i = line.find(self.PS1)
                indent = line[:i]
            elif (indent is not None and
                  (line.startswith(indent + self.PS2) or
                   line == indent + self.PS2.rstrip() + "\n")):
                block.append(line)
            else:
                if block is not None:
                    result.extend(self.refactor_doctest(block, block_lineno,
                                                        indent, filename))
                block = None
                indent = None
                result.append(line)
        if block is not None:
            result.extend(self.refactor_doctest(block, block_lineno,
                                                indent, filename))
        return "".join(result)

    def refactor_doctest(self, block, lineno, indent, filename):
        """Refactors one doctest.

        A doctest is given as a block of lines, the first of which starts
        with ">>>" (possibly indented), while the remaining lines start
        with "..." (identically indented).

        """
        try:
            tree = self.parse_block(block, lineno, indent)
        except Exception as err:
            if self.logger.isEnabledFor(logging.DEBUG):
                for line in block:
                    self.log_debug("Source: %s", line.rstrip("\n"))
            self.log_error("Can't parse docstring in %s line %s: %s: %s",
                           filename, lineno, err.__class__.__name__, err)
            return block
        if self.refactor_tree(tree, filename):
            new = str(tree).splitlines(keepends=True)
            # Undo the adjustment of the line numbers in wrap_toks() below.
            clipped, new = new[:lineno-1], new[lineno-1:]
            assert clipped == ["\n"] * (lineno-1), clipped
            if not new[-1].endswith("\n"):
                new[-1] += "\n"
            block = [indent + self.PS1 + new.pop(0)]
            if new:
                block += [indent + self.PS2 + line for line in new]
        return block

    def summarize(self):
        if self.wrote:
            were = "were"
        else:
            were = "need to be"
        if not self.files:
            self.log_message("No files %s modified.", were)
        else:
            self.log_message("Files that %s modified:", were)
            for file in self.files:
                self.log_message(file)
        if self.fixer_log:
            self.log_message("Warnings/messages while refactoring:")
            for message in self.fixer_log:
                self.log_message(message)
        if self.errors:
            if len(self.errors) == 1:
                self.log_message("There was 1 error:")
            else:
                self.log_message("There were %d errors:", len(self.errors))
            for msg, args, kwds in self.errors:
                self.log_message(msg, *args, **kwds)

    def parse_block(self, block, lineno, indent):
        """Parses a block into a tree.

        This is necessary to get correct line number / offset information
        in the parser diagnostics and embedded into the parse tree.
        """
        tree = self.driver.parse_tokens(self.wrap_toks(block, lineno, indent))
        tree.future_features = frozenset()
        return tree

    def wrap_toks(self, block, lineno, indent):
        """Wraps a tokenize stream to systematically modify start/end."""
        tokens = tokenize.generate_tokens(self.gen_lines(block, indent).__next__)
        for type, value, (line0, col0), (line1, col1), line_text in tokens:
            line0 += lineno - 1
            line1 += lineno - 1
            # Don't bother updating the columns; this is too complicated
            # since line_text would also have to be updated and it would
            # still break for tokens spanning lines.  Let the user guess
            # that the column numbers for doctests are relative to the
            # end of the prompt string (PS1 or PS2).
            yield type, value, (line0, col0), (line1, col1), line_text


    def gen_lines(self, block, indent):
        """Generates lines as expected by tokenize from a list of lines.

        This strips the first len(indent + self.PS1) characters off each line.
        """
        prefix1 = indent + self.PS1
        prefix2 = indent + self.PS2
        prefix = prefix1
        for line in block:
            if line.startswith(prefix):
                yield line[len(prefix):]
            elif line == prefix.rstrip() + "\n":
                yield "\n"
            else:
                raise AssertionError("line=%r, prefix=%r" % (line, prefix))
            prefix = prefix2
        while True:
            yield ""


class MultiprocessingUnsupported(Exception):
    pass


class MultiprocessRefactoringTool(RefactoringTool):

    def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
        super(MultiprocessRefactoringTool, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
        self.queue = None
        self.output_lock = None

    def refactor(self, items, write=False, doctests_only=False,
                 num_processes=1):
        if num_processes == 1:
            return super(MultiprocessRefactoringTool, self).refactor(
                items, write, doctests_only)
        try:
            import multiprocessing
        except ImportError:
            raise MultiprocessingUnsupported
        if self.queue is not None:
            raise RuntimeError("already doing multiple processes")
        self.queue = multiprocessing.JoinableQueue()
        self.output_lock = multiprocessing.Lock()
        processes = [multiprocessing.Process(target=self._child)
                     for i in range(num_processes)]
        try:
            for p in processes:
                p.start()
            super(MultiprocessRefactoringTool, self).refactor(items, write,
                                                              doctests_only)
        finally:
            self.queue.join()
            for i in range(num_processes):
                self.queue.put(None)
            for p in processes:
                if p.is_alive():
                    p.join()
            self.queue = None

    def _child(self):
        task = self.queue.get()
        while task is not None:
            args, kwargs = task
            try:
                super(MultiprocessRefactoringTool, self).refactor_file(
                    *args, **kwargs)
            finally:
                self.queue.task_done()
            task = self.queue.get()

    def refactor_file(self, *args, **kwargs):
        if self.queue is not None:
            self.queue.put((args, kwargs))
        else:
            return super(MultiprocessRefactoringTool, self).refactor_file(
                *args, **kwargs)
PK         ! _H%                      distutils/debug.pynu [        PK         ! F9.:  .:                 distutils/bcppcompiler.pynu [        PK         ! n                D;  distutils/errors.pynu [        PK         ! Q(R  (R              I  distutils/util.pynu [        PK         ! ۟F  F                distutils/cmd.pynu [        PK         !                   distutils/file_util.pynu [        PK         ! h[  [               distutils/msvccompiler.pynu [        PK         ! *v  v              _ distutils/msvc9compiler.pynu [        PK         ! 2                Q distutils/versionpredicate.pynu [        PK         ! !)  !)               distutils/extension.pynu [        PK         ! 'N  'N               distutils/_msvccompiler.pynu [        PK         ! sָW  W              b distutils/config.pynu [        PK         ! 5|!  |!              v distutils/archive_util.pynu [        PK         ! k"#                 distutils/dep_util.pynu [        PK         ! ˆб                ʥ distutils/log.pynu [        PK         ! fP[5 2   2               distutils/filelist.pynu [        PK         ! }/[?  ?                distutils/cygwinccompiler.pynu [        PK         ! Q80  0              h  distutils/text_file.pynu [        PK         ! d+X  X  "            qQ distutils/command/build_scripts.pynu [        PK         ! d]!T  !T              j distutils/command/bdist_rpm.pynu [        PK         ! :    $             distutils/command/install_scripts.pynu [        PK         ! *Rj&    $             distutils/command/install_headers.pynu [        PK         !     !            % distutils/command/install_data.pynu [        PK         ! Z    %            | distutils/command/install_egg_info.pynu [        PK         ! !  !                distutils/command/install_lib.pynu [        PK         !                  distutils/command/check.pynu [        PK         ! 7=3  =3               distutils/command/config.pynu [        PK         ! H                nQ distutils/command/upload.pynu [        PK         ! v3;V  V              ~o distutils/command/build_clib.pynu [        PK         ! x                # distutils/command/build.pynu [        PK         ! ;Rx  Rx               distutils/command/install.pynu [        PK         ! ^                 distutils/command/__init__.pynu [        PK         ! ,
  
              ! distutils/command/clean.pynu [        PK         ! w1  1              - distutils/command/bdist_dumb.pynu [        PK         ! kץ                @ distutils/command/bdist.pynu [        PK         ! t=J  =J              U distutils/command/sdist.pynu [        PK         ! s&C  &C              * distutils/command/build_py.pynu [        PK         ! -  -               distutils/command/register.pynu [        PK         ! r|y  y  "             distutils/command/command_templatenu [        PK         ! D?{  {              u distutils/command/build_ext.pynu [        PK         ! IS^"  "              b distutils/core.pynu [        PK         ! ]Ʃ6  6              O distutils/sysconfig.pynu [        PK         ! $P$                   distutils/READMEnu [        PK         ! 0G>                 distutils/dist.pynu [        PK         ! 1xE  xE              ݯ distutils/fancy_getopt.pynu [        PK         ! 
4  4               distutils/spawn.pynu [        PK         ! 5X|<  <               distutils/unixccompiler.pynu [        PK         ! &d_T:  :              }D distutils/ccompiler.pynu [        PK         ! 	ɬ                   distutils/dir_util.pynu [        PK         ! Zcm  m  1            	 lib-dynload/_gdbm.cpython-311-x86_64-linux-gnu.sonu [        PK         ! fP`                	 lib2to3/btm_matcher.pynu [        PK         !                 	 lib2to3/PatternGrammar.txtnu [        PK         ! y                	 lib2to3/patcomp.pynu [        PK         ! B!  !              O	 lib2to3/Grammar.txtnu [        PK         ! -~                	 lib2to3/pygram.pynu [        PK         ! azC   C               	 lib2to3/__main__.pynu [        PK         !                   j	 lib2to3/__init__.pynu [        PK         ! k3                I	 lib2to3/pgen2/grammar.pynu [        PK         ! %  %              A
 lib2to3/pgen2/conv.pynu [        PK         ! Y                0+
 lib2to3/pgen2/token.pynu ȯ        PK         ! lp6  6              0
 lib2to3/pgen2/pgen.pynu [        PK         ! 2                f
 lib2to3/pgen2/parse.pynu [        PK         ! >|!  !              
 lib2to3/pgen2/driver.pynu [        PK         ! r                  `
 lib2to3/pgen2/__init__.pynu [        PK         ! rR  R              8
 lib2to3/pgen2/tokenize.pynu [        PK         ! mqc  c               
 lib2to3/pgen2/literals.pynu [        PK         ! Fm  Fm              
 lib2to3/pytree.pynu [        PK         ! .?&  &              3g lib2to3/btm_utils.pynu [        PK         ! kkIf;  f;              P lib2to3/fixer_util.pynu [        PK         ! R,N.  N.               lib2to3/main.pynu [        PK         ! =n  n               lib2to3/fixes/fix_raise.pynu [        PK         ! 5Y
  
              @ lib2to3/fixes/fix_filter.pynu [        PK         ! 誔*	  *	              X lib2to3/fixes/fix_apply.pynu [        PK         ! %TW68  8               lib2to3/fixes/fix_map.pynu [        PK         ! iG                L' lib2to3/fixes/fix_long.pynu [        PK         ! ʿ>1                q) lib2to3/fixes/fix_paren.pynu [        PK         ! Z6                . lib2to3/fixes/fix_print.pynu [        PK         ! ޽    "            9 lib2to3/fixes/fix_standarderror.pynu [        PK         ! N2E                ; lib2to3/fixes/fix_xreadlines.pynu [        PK         ! HgH  H              > lib2to3/fixes/fix_isinstance.pynu [        PK         ! I
  
              E lib2to3/fixes/fix_sys_exc.pynu [        PK         ! ?O  O              I lib2to3/fixes/fix_nonzero.pynu [        PK         ! )x  x              L lib2to3/fixes/fix_intern.pynu [        PK         ! ds                IQ lib2to3/fixes/fix_dict.pynu [        PK         ! 2ۭ                B` lib2to3/fixes/fix_renames.pynu [        PK         ! :                ;i lib2to3/fixes/fix_exec.pynu [        PK         ! )E  E              Wm lib2to3/fixes/fix_reduce.pynu [        PK         ! _ \                p lib2to3/fixes/fix_idioms.pynu [        PK         ! &                > lib2to3/fixes/fix_unicode.pynu [        PK         ! IkNf  f              r lib2to3/fixes/fix_next.pynu [        PK         ! >ӵ;&  &  &            ! lib2to3/fixes/fix_itertools_imports.pynu [        PK         ! +&^  ^                lib2to3/fixes/fix_methodattrs.pynu [        PK         ! Gg                K lib2to3/fixes/fix_itertools.pynu [        PK         ! 6u                 lib2to3/fixes/fix_raw_input.pynu [        PK         ! Y                   lib2to3/fixes/fix_metaclass.pynu [        PK         ! F                 lib2to3/fixes/fix_funcattrs.pynu [        PK         ! p2I                 lib2to3/fixes/fix_except.pynu [        PK         ! 7h#  #              9 lib2to3/fixes/fix_future.pynu [        PK         ! |4  4               lib2to3/fixes/fix_imports.pynu [        PK         !  2Ϳ	  	              ' lib2to3/fixes/fix_exitfunc.pynu [        PK         ! JbB  B              3 lib2to3/fixes/fix_ws_comma.pynu [        PK         ! M1	  	               lib2to3/fixes/fix_zip.pynu [        PK         ! E[/   /                lib2to3/fixes/__init__.pynu [        PK         ! DIu|  |               lib2to3/fixes/fix_has_key.pynu [        PK         ! r39  9              S lib2to3/fixes/fix_reload.pynu [        PK         ! fϡ                  lib2to3/fixes/fix_set_literal.pynu [        PK         ! S                 lib2to3/fixes/fix_types.pynu [        PK         ! ?k                 ' lib2to3/fixes/fix_getcwdu.pynu [        PK         ! lH                   ) lib2to3/fixes/fix_numliterals.pynu [        PK         ! {Wk                  _, lib2to3/fixes/fix_execfile.pynu [        PK         ! N  N              4 lib2to3/fixes/fix_buffer.pynu [        PK         ! a.e  e              E7 lib2to3/fixes/fix_repr.pynu [        PK         ! M@  @              9 lib2to3/fixes/fix_basestring.pynu [        PK         ! =                ; lib2to3/fixes/fix_asserts.pynu [        PK         ! 6ng                ? lib2to3/fixes/fix_import.pynu [        PK         !                   L lib2to3/fixes/fix_urllib.pynu [        PK         ! C
  
              m lib2to3/fixes/fix_xrange.pynu [        PK         ! xu.  .              tx lib2to3/fixes/fix_throw.pynu [        PK         ! ܬ'!  !              ~ lib2to3/fixes/fix_imports2.pynu [        PK         ! q|                Z lib2to3/fixes/fix_input.pynu [        PK         ! |b  b              h lib2to3/fixes/fix_operator.pynu [        PK         ! O+    !             lib2to3/fixes/fix_tuple_params.pynu [        PK         ! <;  ;              % lib2to3/fixes/fix_ne.pynu [        PK         ! +P"  "               lib2to3/fixer_base.pynu [        PK         ! %ask  sk               lib2to3/refactor.pynu [        PK    } } +  /