# Licensed under the Apache License: http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 # For details: https://github.com/nedbat/coveragepy/blob/master/NOTICE.txt """File wrangling.""" from __future__ import annotations import hashlib import ntpath import os import os.path import posixpath import re import sys from typing import Callable, Dict, Iterable, List, Optional, Tuple from coverage import env from coverage.exceptions import ConfigError from coverage.misc import human_sorted, isolate_module, join_regex os = isolate_module(os) RELATIVE_DIR: str = "" CANONICAL_FILENAME_CACHE: Dict[str, str] = {} def set_relative_directory() -> None: """Set the directory that `relative_filename` will be relative to.""" global RELATIVE_DIR, CANONICAL_FILENAME_CACHE # The current directory abs_curdir = abs_file(os.curdir) if not abs_curdir.endswith(os.sep): # Suffix with separator only if not at the system root abs_curdir = abs_curdir + os.sep # The absolute path to our current directory. RELATIVE_DIR = os.path.normcase(abs_curdir) # Cache of results of calling the canonical_filename() method, to # avoid duplicating work. CANONICAL_FILENAME_CACHE = {} def relative_directory() -> str: """Return the directory that `relative_filename` is relative to.""" return RELATIVE_DIR def relative_filename(filename: str) -> str: """Return the relative form of `filename`. The file name will be relative to the current directory when the `set_relative_directory` was called. """ fnorm = os.path.normcase(filename) if fnorm.startswith(RELATIVE_DIR): filename = filename[len(RELATIVE_DIR):] return filename def canonical_filename(filename: str) -> str: """Return a canonical file name for `filename`. An absolute path with no redundant components and normalized case. """ if filename not in CANONICAL_FILENAME_CACHE: cf = filename if not os.path.isabs(filename): for path in [os.curdir] + sys.path: if path is None: continue # type: ignore f = os.path.join(path, filename) try: exists = os.path.exists(f) except UnicodeError: exists = False if exists: cf = f break cf = abs_file(cf) CANONICAL_FILENAME_CACHE[filename] = cf return CANONICAL_FILENAME_CACHE[filename] MAX_FLAT = 100 def flat_rootname(filename: str) -> str: """A base for a flat file name to correspond to this file. Useful for writing files about the code where you want all the files in the same directory, but need to differentiate same-named files from different directories. For example, the file a/b/c.py will return 'd_86bbcbe134d28fd2_c_py' """ dirname, basename = ntpath.split(filename) if dirname: fp = hashlib.new("sha3_256", dirname.encode("UTF-8")).hexdigest()[:16] prefix = f"d_{fp}_" else: prefix = "" return prefix + basename.replace(".", "_") if env.WINDOWS: _ACTUAL_PATH_CACHE: Dict[str, str] = {} _ACTUAL_PATH_LIST_CACHE: Dict[str, List[str]] = {} def actual_path(path: str) -> str: """Get the actual path of `path`, including the correct case.""" if path in _ACTUAL_PATH_CACHE: return _ACTUAL_PATH_CACHE[path] head, tail = os.path.split(path) if not tail: # This means head is the drive spec: normalize it. actpath = head.upper() elif not head: actpath = tail else: head = actual_path(head) if head in _ACTUAL_PATH_LIST_CACHE: files = _ACTUAL_PATH_LIST_CACHE[head] else: try: files = os.listdir(head) except Exception: # This will raise OSError, or this bizarre TypeError: # https://bugs.python.org/issue1776160 files = [] _ACTUAL_PATH_LIST_CACHE[head] = files normtail = os.path.normcase(tail) for f in files: if os.path.normcase(f) == normtail: tail = f break actpath = os.path.join(head, tail) _ACTUAL_PATH_CACHE[path] = actpath return actpath else: def actual_path(path: str) -> str: """The actual path for non-Windows platforms.""" return path def abs_file(path: str) -> str: """Return the absolute normalized form of `path`.""" return actual_path(os.path.abspath(os.path.realpath(path))) def zip_location(filename: str) -> Optional[Tuple[str, str]]: """Split a filename into a zipfile / inner name pair. Only return a pair if the zipfile exists. No check is made if the inner name is in the zipfile. """ for ext in [".zip", ".whl", ".egg", ".pex"]: zipbase, extension, inner = filename.partition(ext + sep(filename)) if extension: zipfile = zipbase + ext if os.path.exists(zipfile): return zipfile, inner return None def source_exists(path: str) -> bool: """Determine if a source file path exists.""" if os.path.exists(path): return True if zip_location(path): # If zip_location returns anything, then it's a zipfile that # exists. That's good enough for us. return True return False def python_reported_file(filename: str) -> str: """Return the string as Python would describe this file name.""" if env.PYBEHAVIOR.report_absolute_files: filename = os.path.abspath(filename) return filename def isabs_anywhere(filename: str) -> bool: """Is `filename` an absolute path on any OS?""" return ntpath.isabs(filename) or posixpath.isabs(filename) def prep_patterns(patterns: Iterable[str]) -> List[str]: """Prepare the file patterns for use in a `GlobMatcher`. If a pattern starts with a wildcard, it is used as a pattern as-is. If it does not start with a wildcard, then it is made absolute with the current directory. If `patterns` is None, an empty list is returned. """ prepped = [] for p in patterns or []: prepped.append(p) if not p.startswith(("*", "?")): prepped.append(abs_file(p)) return prepped class TreeMatcher: """A matcher for files in a tree. Construct with a list of paths, either files or directories. Paths match with the `match` method if they are one of the files, or if they are somewhere in a subtree rooted at one of the directories. """ def __init__(self, paths: Iterable[str], name: str = "unknown") -> None: self.original_paths: List[str] = human_sorted(paths) #self.paths = list(map(os.path.normcase, paths)) self.paths = [os.path.normcase(p) for p in paths] self.name = name def __repr__(self) -> str: return f"" def info(self) -> List[str]: """A list of strings for displaying when dumping state.""" return self.original_paths def match(self, fpath: str) -> bool: """Does `fpath` indicate a file in one of our trees?""" fpath = os.path.normcase(fpath) for p in self.paths: if fpath.startswith(p): if fpath == p: # This is the same file! return True if fpath[len(p)] == os.sep: # This is a file in the directory return True return False class ModuleMatcher: """A matcher for modules in a tree.""" def __init__(self, module_names: Iterable[str], name:str = "unknown") -> None: self.modules = list(module_names) self.name = name def __repr__(self) -> str: return f"" def info(self) -> List[str]: """A list of strings for displaying when dumping state.""" return self.modules def match(self, module_name: str) -> bool: """Does `module_name` indicate a module in one of our packages?""" if not module_name: return False for m in self.modules: if module_name.startswith(m): if module_name == m: return True if module_name[len(m)] == ".": # This is a module in the package return True return False class GlobMatcher: """A matcher for files by file name pattern.""" def __init__(self, pats: Iterable[str], name: str = "unknown") -> None: self.pats = list(pats) self.re = globs_to_regex(self.pats, case_insensitive=env.WINDOWS) self.name = name def __repr__(self) -> str: return f"" def info(self) -> List[str]: """A list of strings for displaying when dumping state.""" return self.pats def match(self, fpath: str) -> bool: """Does `fpath` match one of our file name patterns?""" return self.re.match(fpath) is not None def sep(s: str) -> str: """Find the path separator used in this string, or os.sep if none.""" sep_match = re.search(r"[\\/]", s) if sep_match: the_sep = sep_match[0] else: the_sep = os.sep return the_sep # Tokenizer for _glob_to_regex. # None as a sub means disallowed. G2RX_TOKENS = [(re.compile(rx), sub) for rx, sub in [ (r"\*\*\*+", None), # Can't have *** (r"[^/]+\*\*+", None), # Can't have x** (r"\*\*+[^/]+", None), # Can't have **x (r"\*\*/\*\*", None), # Can't have **/** (r"^\*+/", r"(.*[/\\\\])?"), # ^*/ matches any prefix-slash, or nothing. (r"/\*+$", r"[/\\\\].*"), # /*$ matches any slash-suffix. (r"\*\*/", r"(.*[/\\\\])?"), # **/ matches any subdirs, including none (r"/", r"[/\\\\]"), # / matches either slash or backslash (r"\*", r"[^/\\\\]*"), # * matches any number of non slash-likes (r"\?", r"[^/\\\\]"), # ? matches one non slash-like (r"\[.*?\]", r"\g<0>"), # [a-f] matches [a-f] (r"[a-zA-Z0-9_-]+", r"\g<0>"), # word chars match themselves (r"[\[\]]", None), # Can't have single square brackets (r".", r"\\\g<0>"), # Anything else is escaped to be safe ]] def _glob_to_regex(pattern: str) -> str: """Convert a file-path glob pattern into a regex.""" # Turn all backslashes into slashes to simplify the tokenizer. pattern = pattern.replace("\\", "/") if "/" not in pattern: pattern = "**/" + pattern path_rx = [] pos = 0 while pos < len(pattern): for rx, sub in G2RX_TOKENS: # pragma: always breaks m = rx.match(pattern, pos=pos) if m: if sub is None: raise ConfigError(f"File pattern can't include {m[0]!r}") path_rx.append(m.expand(sub)) pos = m.end() break return "".join(path_rx) def globs_to_regex( patterns: Iterable[str], case_insensitive: bool = False, partial: bool = False, ) -> re.Pattern[str]: """Convert glob patterns to a compiled regex that matches any of them. Slashes are always converted to match either slash or backslash, for Windows support, even when running elsewhere. If the pattern has no slash or backslash, then it is interpreted as matching a file name anywhere it appears in the tree. Otherwise, the glob pattern must match the whole file path. If `partial` is true, then the pattern will match if the target string starts with the pattern. Otherwise, it must match the entire string. Returns: a compiled regex object. Use the .match method to compare target strings. """ flags = 0 if case_insensitive: flags |= re.IGNORECASE rx = join_regex(map(_glob_to_regex, patterns)) if not partial: rx = rf"(?:{rx})\Z" compiled = re.compile(rx, flags=flags) return compiled class PathAliases: """A collection of aliases for paths. When combining data files from remote machines, often the paths to source code are different, for example, due to OS differences, or because of serialized checkouts on continuous integration machines. A `PathAliases` object tracks a list of pattern/result pairs, and can map a path through those aliases to produce a unified path. """ def __init__( self, debugfn: Optional[Callable[[str], None]] = None, relative: bool = False, ) -> None: # A list of (original_pattern, regex, result) self.aliases: List[Tuple[str, re.Pattern[str], str]] = [] self.debugfn = debugfn or (lambda msg: 0) self.relative = relative self.pprinted = False def pprint(self) -> None: """Dump the important parts of the PathAliases, for debugging.""" self.debugfn(f"Aliases (relative={self.relative}):") for original_pattern, regex, result in self.aliases: self.debugfn(f" Rule: {original_pattern!r} -> {result!r} using regex {regex.pattern!r}") def add(self, pattern: str, result: str) -> None: """Add the `pattern`/`result` pair to the list of aliases. `pattern` is an `glob`-style pattern. `result` is a simple string. When mapping paths, if a path starts with a match against `pattern`, then that match is replaced with `result`. This models isomorphic source trees being rooted at different places on two different machines. `pattern` can't end with a wildcard component, since that would match an entire tree, and not just its root. """ original_pattern = pattern pattern_sep = sep(pattern) if len(pattern) > 1: pattern = pattern.rstrip(r"\/") # The pattern can't end with a wildcard component. if pattern.endswith("*"): raise ConfigError("Pattern must not end with wildcards.") # The pattern is meant to match a file path. Let's make it absolute # unless it already is, or is meant to match any prefix. if not self.relative: if not pattern.startswith("*") and not isabs_anywhere(pattern + pattern_sep): pattern = abs_file(pattern) if not pattern.endswith(pattern_sep): pattern += pattern_sep # Make a regex from the pattern. regex = globs_to_regex([pattern], case_insensitive=True, partial=True) # Normalize the result: it must end with a path separator. result_sep = sep(result) result = result.rstrip(r"\/") + result_sep self.aliases.append((original_pattern, regex, result)) def map(self, path: str, exists:Callable[[str], bool] = source_exists) -> str: """Map `path` through the aliases. `path` is checked against all of the patterns. The first pattern to match is used to replace the root of the path with the result root. Only one pattern is ever used. If no patterns match, `path` is returned unchanged. The separator style in the result is made to match that of the result in the alias. `exists` is a function to determine if the resulting path actually exists. Returns the mapped path. If a mapping has happened, this is a canonical path. If no mapping has happened, it is the original value of `path` unchanged. """ if not self.pprinted: self.pprint() self.pprinted = True for original_pattern, regex, result in self.aliases: m = regex.match(path) if m: new = path.replace(m[0], result) new = new.replace(sep(path), sep(result)) if not self.relative: new = canonical_filename(new) dot_start = result.startswith(("./", ".\\")) and len(result) > 2 if new.startswith(("./", ".\\")) and not dot_start: new = new[2:] if not exists(new): self.debugfn( f"Rule {original_pattern!r} changed {path!r} to {new!r} " + "which doesn't exist, continuing" ) continue self.debugfn( f"Matched path {path!r} to rule {original_pattern!r} -> {result!r}, " + f"producing {new!r}" ) return new # If we get here, no pattern matched. if self.relative and not isabs_anywhere(path): # Auto-generate a pattern to implicitly match relative files parts = re.split(r"[/\\]", path) if len(parts) > 1: dir1 = parts[0] pattern = f"*/{dir1}" regex_pat = rf"^(.*[\\/])?{re.escape(dir1)}[\\/]" result = f"{dir1}{os.sep}" # Only add a new pattern if we don't already have this pattern. if not any(p == pattern for p, _, _ in self.aliases): self.debugfn( f"Generating rule: {pattern!r} -> {result!r} using regex {regex_pat!r}" ) self.aliases.append((pattern, re.compile(regex_pat), result)) return self.map(path, exists=exists) self.debugfn(f"No rules match, path {path!r} is unchanged") return path def find_python_files(dirname: str, include_namespace_packages: bool) -> Iterable[str]: """Yield all of the importable Python files in `dirname`, recursively. To be importable, the files have to be in a directory with a __init__.py, except for `dirname` itself, which isn't required to have one. The assumption is that `dirname` was specified directly, so the user knows best, but sub-directories are checked for a __init__.py to be sure we only find the importable files. If `include_namespace_packages` is True, then the check for __init__.py files is skipped. Files with strange characters are skipped, since they couldn't have been imported, and are probably editor side-files. """ for i, (dirpath, dirnames, filenames) in enumerate(os.walk(dirname)): if not include_namespace_packages: if i > 0 and "__init__.py" not in filenames: # If a directory doesn't have __init__.py, then it isn't # importable and neither are its files del dirnames[:] continue for filename in filenames: # We're only interested in files that look like reasonable Python # files: Must end with .py or .pyw, and must not have certain funny # characters that probably mean they are editor junk. if re.match(r"^[^.#~!$@%^&*()+=,]+\.pyw?$", filename): yield os.path.join(dirpath, filename) # Globally set the relative directory. set_relative_directory()