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Copyright 2010 Pallets
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
met:
1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
3. Neither the name of the copyright holder nor the names of its
contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
this software without specific prior written permission.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
"AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED
TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR
PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING
NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS
SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

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Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: Flask
Version: 2.2.2
Summary: A simple framework for building complex web applications.
Home-page: https://palletsprojects.com/p/flask
Author: Armin Ronacher
Author-email: armin.ronacher@active-4.com
Maintainer: Pallets
Maintainer-email: contact@palletsprojects.com
License: BSD-3-Clause
Project-URL: Donate, https://palletsprojects.com/donate
Project-URL: Documentation, https://flask.palletsprojects.com/
Project-URL: Changes, https://flask.palletsprojects.com/changes/
Project-URL: Source Code, https://github.com/pallets/flask/
Project-URL: Issue Tracker, https://github.com/pallets/flask/issues/
Project-URL: Twitter, https://twitter.com/PalletsTeam
Project-URL: Chat, https://discord.gg/pallets
Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
Classifier: Environment :: Web Environment
Classifier: Framework :: Flask
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: BSD License
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
Classifier: Topic :: Internet :: WWW/HTTP :: Dynamic Content
Classifier: Topic :: Internet :: WWW/HTTP :: WSGI
Classifier: Topic :: Internet :: WWW/HTTP :: WSGI :: Application
Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries :: Application Frameworks
Requires-Python: >=3.7
Description-Content-Type: text/x-rst
License-File: LICENSE.rst
Requires-Dist: Werkzeug (>=2.2.2)
Requires-Dist: Jinja2 (>=3.0)
Requires-Dist: itsdangerous (>=2.0)
Requires-Dist: click (>=8.0)
Requires-Dist: importlib-metadata (>=3.6.0) ; python_version < "3.10"
Provides-Extra: async
Requires-Dist: asgiref (>=3.2) ; extra == 'async'
Provides-Extra: dotenv
Requires-Dist: python-dotenv ; extra == 'dotenv'
Flask
=====
Flask is a lightweight `WSGI`_ web application framework. It is designed
to make getting started quick and easy, with the ability to scale up to
complex applications. It began as a simple wrapper around `Werkzeug`_
and `Jinja`_ and has become one of the most popular Python web
application frameworks.
Flask offers suggestions, but doesn't enforce any dependencies or
project layout. It is up to the developer to choose the tools and
libraries they want to use. There are many extensions provided by the
community that make adding new functionality easy.
.. _WSGI: https://wsgi.readthedocs.io/
.. _Werkzeug: https://werkzeug.palletsprojects.com/
.. _Jinja: https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/
Installing
----------
Install and update using `pip`_:
.. code-block:: text
$ pip install -U Flask
.. _pip: https://pip.pypa.io/en/stable/getting-started/
A Simple Example
----------------
.. code-block:: python
# save this as app.py
from flask import Flask
app = Flask(__name__)
@app.route("/")
def hello():
return "Hello, World!"
.. code-block:: text
$ flask run
* Running on http://127.0.0.1:5000/ (Press CTRL+C to quit)
Contributing
------------
For guidance on setting up a development environment and how to make a
contribution to Flask, see the `contributing guidelines`_.
.. _contributing guidelines: https://github.com/pallets/flask/blob/main/CONTRIBUTING.rst
Donate
------
The Pallets organization develops and supports Flask and the libraries
it uses. In order to grow the community of contributors and users, and
allow the maintainers to devote more time to the projects, `please
donate today`_.
.. _please donate today: https://palletsprojects.com/donate
Links
-----
- Documentation: https://flask.palletsprojects.com/
- Changes: https://flask.palletsprojects.com/changes/
- PyPI Releases: https://pypi.org/project/Flask/
- Source Code: https://github.com/pallets/flask/
- Issue Tracker: https://github.com/pallets/flask/issues/
- Website: https://palletsprojects.com/p/flask/
- Twitter: https://twitter.com/PalletsTeam
- Chat: https://discord.gg/pallets

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Wheel-Version: 1.0
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[console_scripts]
flask = flask.cli:main

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flask

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pip

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Copyright 2007 Pallets
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
met:
1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
3. Neither the name of the copyright holder nor the names of its
contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
this software without specific prior written permission.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
"AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED
TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR
PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING
NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS
SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

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Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: Jinja2
Version: 3.1.2
Summary: A very fast and expressive template engine.
Home-page: https://palletsprojects.com/p/jinja/
Author: Armin Ronacher
Author-email: armin.ronacher@active-4.com
Maintainer: Pallets
Maintainer-email: contact@palletsprojects.com
License: BSD-3-Clause
Project-URL: Donate, https://palletsprojects.com/donate
Project-URL: Documentation, https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/
Project-URL: Changes, https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/changes/
Project-URL: Source Code, https://github.com/pallets/jinja/
Project-URL: Issue Tracker, https://github.com/pallets/jinja/issues/
Project-URL: Twitter, https://twitter.com/PalletsTeam
Project-URL: Chat, https://discord.gg/pallets
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
Classifier: Environment :: Web Environment
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: BSD License
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
Classifier: Topic :: Internet :: WWW/HTTP :: Dynamic Content
Classifier: Topic :: Text Processing :: Markup :: HTML
Requires-Python: >=3.7
Description-Content-Type: text/x-rst
License-File: LICENSE.rst
Requires-Dist: MarkupSafe (>=2.0)
Provides-Extra: i18n
Requires-Dist: Babel (>=2.7) ; extra == 'i18n'
Jinja
=====
Jinja is a fast, expressive, extensible templating engine. Special
placeholders in the template allow writing code similar to Python
syntax. Then the template is passed data to render the final document.
It includes:
- Template inheritance and inclusion.
- Define and import macros within templates.
- HTML templates can use autoescaping to prevent XSS from untrusted
user input.
- A sandboxed environment can safely render untrusted templates.
- AsyncIO support for generating templates and calling async
functions.
- I18N support with Babel.
- Templates are compiled to optimized Python code just-in-time and
cached, or can be compiled ahead-of-time.
- Exceptions point to the correct line in templates to make debugging
easier.
- Extensible filters, tests, functions, and even syntax.
Jinja's philosophy is that while application logic belongs in Python if
possible, it shouldn't make the template designer's job difficult by
restricting functionality too much.
Installing
----------
Install and update using `pip`_:
.. code-block:: text
$ pip install -U Jinja2
.. _pip: https://pip.pypa.io/en/stable/getting-started/
In A Nutshell
-------------
.. code-block:: jinja
{% extends "base.html" %}
{% block title %}Members{% endblock %}
{% block content %}
<ul>
{% for user in users %}
<li><a href="{{ user.url }}">{{ user.username }}</a></li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
{% endblock %}
Donate
------
The Pallets organization develops and supports Jinja and other popular
packages. In order to grow the community of contributors and users, and
allow the maintainers to devote more time to the projects, `please
donate today`_.
.. _please donate today: https://palletsprojects.com/donate
Links
-----
- Documentation: https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/
- Changes: https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/changes/
- PyPI Releases: https://pypi.org/project/Jinja2/
- Source Code: https://github.com/pallets/jinja/
- Issue Tracker: https://github.com/pallets/jinja/issues/
- Website: https://palletsprojects.com/p/jinja/
- Twitter: https://twitter.com/PalletsTeam
- Chat: https://discord.gg/pallets

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[babel.extractors]
jinja2 = jinja2.ext:babel_extract[i18n]

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jinja2

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Copyright 2010 Pallets
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
met:
1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
3. Neither the name of the copyright holder nor the names of its
contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
this software without specific prior written permission.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
"AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED
TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR
PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING
NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS
SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

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Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: MarkupSafe
Version: 2.1.2
Summary: Safely add untrusted strings to HTML/XML markup.
Home-page: https://palletsprojects.com/p/markupsafe/
Author: Armin Ronacher
Author-email: armin.ronacher@active-4.com
Maintainer: Pallets
Maintainer-email: contact@palletsprojects.com
License: BSD-3-Clause
Project-URL: Donate, https://palletsprojects.com/donate
Project-URL: Documentation, https://markupsafe.palletsprojects.com/
Project-URL: Changes, https://markupsafe.palletsprojects.com/changes/
Project-URL: Source Code, https://github.com/pallets/markupsafe/
Project-URL: Issue Tracker, https://github.com/pallets/markupsafe/issues/
Project-URL: Twitter, https://twitter.com/PalletsTeam
Project-URL: Chat, https://discord.gg/pallets
Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
Classifier: Environment :: Web Environment
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: BSD License
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
Classifier: Topic :: Internet :: WWW/HTTP :: Dynamic Content
Classifier: Topic :: Text Processing :: Markup :: HTML
Requires-Python: >=3.7
Description-Content-Type: text/x-rst
License-File: LICENSE.rst
MarkupSafe
==========
MarkupSafe implements a text object that escapes characters so it is
safe to use in HTML and XML. Characters that have special meanings are
replaced so that they display as the actual characters. This mitigates
injection attacks, meaning untrusted user input can safely be displayed
on a page.
Installing
----------
Install and update using `pip`_:
.. code-block:: text
pip install -U MarkupSafe
.. _pip: https://pip.pypa.io/en/stable/getting-started/
Examples
--------
.. code-block:: pycon
>>> from markupsafe import Markup, escape
>>> # escape replaces special characters and wraps in Markup
>>> escape("<script>alert(document.cookie);</script>")
Markup('&lt;script&gt;alert(document.cookie);&lt;/script&gt;')
>>> # wrap in Markup to mark text "safe" and prevent escaping
>>> Markup("<strong>Hello</strong>")
Markup('<strong>hello</strong>')
>>> escape(Markup("<strong>Hello</strong>"))
Markup('<strong>hello</strong>')
>>> # Markup is a str subclass
>>> # methods and operators escape their arguments
>>> template = Markup("Hello <em>{name}</em>")
>>> template.format(name='"World"')
Markup('Hello <em>&#34;World&#34;</em>')
Donate
------
The Pallets organization develops and supports MarkupSafe and other
popular packages. In order to grow the community of contributors and
users, and allow the maintainers to devote more time to the projects,
`please donate today`_.
.. _please donate today: https://palletsprojects.com/donate
Links
-----
- Documentation: https://markupsafe.palletsprojects.com/
- Changes: https://markupsafe.palletsprojects.com/changes/
- PyPI Releases: https://pypi.org/project/MarkupSafe/
- Source Code: https://github.com/pallets/markupsafe/
- Issue Tracker: https://github.com/pallets/markupsafe/issues/
- Website: https://palletsprojects.com/p/markupsafe/
- Twitter: https://twitter.com/PalletsTeam
- Chat: https://discord.gg/pallets

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Copyright 2007 Pallets
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
met:
1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
3. Neither the name of the copyright holder nor the names of its
contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
this software without specific prior written permission.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
"AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED
TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR
PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING
NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS
SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

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Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: Werkzeug
Version: 2.2.2
Summary: The comprehensive WSGI web application library.
Home-page: https://palletsprojects.com/p/werkzeug/
Author: Armin Ronacher
Author-email: armin.ronacher@active-4.com
Maintainer: Pallets
Maintainer-email: contact@palletsprojects.com
License: BSD-3-Clause
Project-URL: Donate, https://palletsprojects.com/donate
Project-URL: Documentation, https://werkzeug.palletsprojects.com/
Project-URL: Changes, https://werkzeug.palletsprojects.com/changes/
Project-URL: Source Code, https://github.com/pallets/werkzeug/
Project-URL: Issue Tracker, https://github.com/pallets/werkzeug/issues/
Project-URL: Twitter, https://twitter.com/PalletsTeam
Project-URL: Chat, https://discord.gg/pallets
Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
Classifier: Environment :: Web Environment
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: BSD License
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
Classifier: Topic :: Internet :: WWW/HTTP :: Dynamic Content
Classifier: Topic :: Internet :: WWW/HTTP :: WSGI
Classifier: Topic :: Internet :: WWW/HTTP :: WSGI :: Application
Classifier: Topic :: Internet :: WWW/HTTP :: WSGI :: Middleware
Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries :: Application Frameworks
Requires-Python: >=3.7
Description-Content-Type: text/x-rst
License-File: LICENSE.rst
Requires-Dist: MarkupSafe (>=2.1.1)
Provides-Extra: watchdog
Requires-Dist: watchdog ; extra == 'watchdog'
Werkzeug
========
*werkzeug* German noun: "tool". Etymology: *werk* ("work"), *zeug* ("stuff")
Werkzeug is a comprehensive `WSGI`_ web application library. It began as
a simple collection of various utilities for WSGI applications and has
become one of the most advanced WSGI utility libraries.
It includes:
- An interactive debugger that allows inspecting stack traces and
source code in the browser with an interactive interpreter for any
frame in the stack.
- A full-featured request object with objects to interact with
headers, query args, form data, files, and cookies.
- A response object that can wrap other WSGI applications and handle
streaming data.
- A routing system for matching URLs to endpoints and generating URLs
for endpoints, with an extensible system for capturing variables
from URLs.
- HTTP utilities to handle entity tags, cache control, dates, user
agents, cookies, files, and more.
- A threaded WSGI server for use while developing applications
locally.
- A test client for simulating HTTP requests during testing without
requiring running a server.
Werkzeug doesn't enforce any dependencies. It is up to the developer to
choose a template engine, database adapter, and even how to handle
requests. It can be used to build all sorts of end user applications
such as blogs, wikis, or bulletin boards.
`Flask`_ wraps Werkzeug, using it to handle the details of WSGI while
providing more structure and patterns for defining powerful
applications.
.. _WSGI: https://wsgi.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
.. _Flask: https://www.palletsprojects.com/p/flask/
Installing
----------
Install and update using `pip`_:
.. code-block:: text
pip install -U Werkzeug
.. _pip: https://pip.pypa.io/en/stable/getting-started/
A Simple Example
----------------
.. code-block:: python
from werkzeug.wrappers import Request, Response
@Request.application
def application(request):
return Response('Hello, World!')
if __name__ == '__main__':
from werkzeug.serving import run_simple
run_simple('localhost', 4000, application)
Donate
------
The Pallets organization develops and supports Werkzeug and other
popular packages. In order to grow the community of contributors and
users, and allow the maintainers to devote more time to the projects,
`please donate today`_.
.. _please donate today: https://palletsprojects.com/donate
Links
-----
- Documentation: https://werkzeug.palletsprojects.com/
- Changes: https://werkzeug.palletsprojects.com/changes/
- PyPI Releases: https://pypi.org/project/Werkzeug/
- Source Code: https://github.com/pallets/werkzeug/
- Issue Tracker: https://github.com/pallets/werkzeug/issues/
- Website: https://palletsprojects.com/p/werkzeug/
- Twitter: https://twitter.com/PalletsTeam
- Chat: https://discord.gg/pallets

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# don't import any costly modules
import sys
import os
is_pypy = '__pypy__' in sys.builtin_module_names
def warn_distutils_present():
if 'distutils' not in sys.modules:
return
if is_pypy and sys.version_info < (3, 7):
# PyPy for 3.6 unconditionally imports distutils, so bypass the warning
# https://foss.heptapod.net/pypy/pypy/-/blob/be829135bc0d758997b3566062999ee8b23872b4/lib-python/3/site.py#L250
return
import warnings
warnings.warn(
"Distutils was imported before Setuptools, but importing Setuptools "
"also replaces the `distutils` module in `sys.modules`. This may lead "
"to undesirable behaviors or errors. To avoid these issues, avoid "
"using distutils directly, ensure that setuptools is installed in the "
"traditional way (e.g. not an editable install), and/or make sure "
"that setuptools is always imported before distutils."
)
def clear_distutils():
if 'distutils' not in sys.modules:
return
import warnings
warnings.warn("Setuptools is replacing distutils.")
mods = [
name
for name in sys.modules
if name == "distutils" or name.startswith("distutils.")
]
for name in mods:
del sys.modules[name]
def enabled():
"""
Allow selection of distutils by environment variable.
"""
which = os.environ.get('SETUPTOOLS_USE_DISTUTILS', 'local')
return which == 'local'
def ensure_local_distutils():
import importlib
clear_distutils()
# With the DistutilsMetaFinder in place,
# perform an import to cause distutils to be
# loaded from setuptools._distutils. Ref #2906.
with shim():
importlib.import_module('distutils')
# check that submodules load as expected
core = importlib.import_module('distutils.core')
assert '_distutils' in core.__file__, core.__file__
assert 'setuptools._distutils.log' not in sys.modules
def do_override():
"""
Ensure that the local copy of distutils is preferred over stdlib.
See https://github.com/pypa/setuptools/issues/417#issuecomment-392298401
for more motivation.
"""
if enabled():
warn_distutils_present()
ensure_local_distutils()
class _TrivialRe:
def __init__(self, *patterns):
self._patterns = patterns
def match(self, string):
return all(pat in string for pat in self._patterns)
class DistutilsMetaFinder:
def find_spec(self, fullname, path, target=None):
# optimization: only consider top level modules and those
# found in the CPython test suite.
if path is not None and not fullname.startswith('test.'):
return
method_name = 'spec_for_{fullname}'.format(**locals())
method = getattr(self, method_name, lambda: None)
return method()
def spec_for_distutils(self):
if self.is_cpython():
return
import importlib
import importlib.abc
import importlib.util
try:
mod = importlib.import_module('setuptools._distutils')
except Exception:
# There are a couple of cases where setuptools._distutils
# may not be present:
# - An older Setuptools without a local distutils is
# taking precedence. Ref #2957.
# - Path manipulation during sitecustomize removes
# setuptools from the path but only after the hook
# has been loaded. Ref #2980.
# In either case, fall back to stdlib behavior.
return
class DistutilsLoader(importlib.abc.Loader):
def create_module(self, spec):
mod.__name__ = 'distutils'
return mod
def exec_module(self, module):
pass
return importlib.util.spec_from_loader(
'distutils', DistutilsLoader(), origin=mod.__file__
)
@staticmethod
def is_cpython():
"""
Suppress supplying distutils for CPython (build and tests).
Ref #2965 and #3007.
"""
return os.path.isfile('pybuilddir.txt')
def spec_for_pip(self):
"""
Ensure stdlib distutils when running under pip.
See pypa/pip#8761 for rationale.
"""
if self.pip_imported_during_build():
return
clear_distutils()
self.spec_for_distutils = lambda: None
@classmethod
def pip_imported_during_build(cls):
"""
Detect if pip is being imported in a build script. Ref #2355.
"""
import traceback
return any(
cls.frame_file_is_setup(frame) for frame, line in traceback.walk_stack(None)
)
@staticmethod
def frame_file_is_setup(frame):
"""
Return True if the indicated frame suggests a setup.py file.
"""
# some frames may not have __file__ (#2940)
return frame.f_globals.get('__file__', '').endswith('setup.py')
def spec_for_sensitive_tests(self):
"""
Ensure stdlib distutils when running select tests under CPython.
python/cpython#91169
"""
clear_distutils()
self.spec_for_distutils = lambda: None
sensitive_tests = (
[
'test.test_distutils',
'test.test_peg_generator',
'test.test_importlib',
]
if sys.version_info < (3, 10)
else [
'test.test_distutils',
]
)
for name in DistutilsMetaFinder.sensitive_tests:
setattr(
DistutilsMetaFinder,
f'spec_for_{name}',
DistutilsMetaFinder.spec_for_sensitive_tests,
)
DISTUTILS_FINDER = DistutilsMetaFinder()
def add_shim():
DISTUTILS_FINDER in sys.meta_path or insert_shim()
class shim:
def __enter__(self):
insert_shim()
def __exit__(self, exc, value, tb):
remove_shim()
def insert_shim():
sys.meta_path.insert(0, DISTUTILS_FINDER)
def remove_shim():
try:
sys.meta_path.remove(DISTUTILS_FINDER)
except ValueError:
pass

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__import__('_distutils_hack').do_override()

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pip

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Copyright 2014 Pallets
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
met:
1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
3. Neither the name of the copyright holder nor the names of its
contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
this software without specific prior written permission.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
"AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED
TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR
PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING
NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS
SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

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Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: click
Version: 8.1.3
Summary: Composable command line interface toolkit
Home-page: https://palletsprojects.com/p/click/
Author: Armin Ronacher
Author-email: armin.ronacher@active-4.com
Maintainer: Pallets
Maintainer-email: contact@palletsprojects.com
License: BSD-3-Clause
Project-URL: Donate, https://palletsprojects.com/donate
Project-URL: Documentation, https://click.palletsprojects.com/
Project-URL: Changes, https://click.palletsprojects.com/changes/
Project-URL: Source Code, https://github.com/pallets/click/
Project-URL: Issue Tracker, https://github.com/pallets/click/issues/
Project-URL: Twitter, https://twitter.com/PalletsTeam
Project-URL: Chat, https://discord.gg/pallets
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: BSD License
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
Requires-Python: >=3.7
Description-Content-Type: text/x-rst
License-File: LICENSE.rst
Requires-Dist: colorama ; platform_system == "Windows"
Requires-Dist: importlib-metadata ; python_version < "3.8"
\$ click\_
==========
Click is a Python package for creating beautiful command line interfaces
in a composable way with as little code as necessary. It's the "Command
Line Interface Creation Kit". It's highly configurable but comes with
sensible defaults out of the box.
It aims to make the process of writing command line tools quick and fun
while also preventing any frustration caused by the inability to
implement an intended CLI API.
Click in three points:
- Arbitrary nesting of commands
- Automatic help page generation
- Supports lazy loading of subcommands at runtime
Installing
----------
Install and update using `pip`_:
.. code-block:: text
$ pip install -U click
.. _pip: https://pip.pypa.io/en/stable/getting-started/
A Simple Example
----------------
.. code-block:: python
import click
@click.command()
@click.option("--count", default=1, help="Number of greetings.")
@click.option("--name", prompt="Your name", help="The person to greet.")
def hello(count, name):
"""Simple program that greets NAME for a total of COUNT times."""
for _ in range(count):
click.echo(f"Hello, {name}!")
if __name__ == '__main__':
hello()
.. code-block:: text
$ python hello.py --count=3
Your name: Click
Hello, Click!
Hello, Click!
Hello, Click!
Donate
------
The Pallets organization develops and supports Click and other popular
packages. In order to grow the community of contributors and users, and
allow the maintainers to devote more time to the projects, `please
donate today`_.
.. _please donate today: https://palletsprojects.com/donate
Links
-----
- Documentation: https://click.palletsprojects.com/
- Changes: https://click.palletsprojects.com/changes/
- PyPI Releases: https://pypi.org/project/click/
- Source Code: https://github.com/pallets/click
- Issue Tracker: https://github.com/pallets/click/issues
- Website: https://palletsprojects.com/p/click
- Twitter: https://twitter.com/PalletsTeam
- Chat: https://discord.gg/pallets

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click/__init__.py,sha256=rQBLutqg-z6m8nOzivIfigDn_emijB_dKv9BZ2FNi5s,3138
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Wheel-Version: 1.0
Generator: bdist_wheel (0.37.1)
Root-Is-Purelib: true
Tag: py3-none-any

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click

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"""
Click is a simple Python module inspired by the stdlib optparse to make
writing command line scripts fun. Unlike other modules, it's based
around a simple API that does not come with too much magic and is
composable.
"""
from .core import Argument as Argument
from .core import BaseCommand as BaseCommand
from .core import Command as Command
from .core import CommandCollection as CommandCollection
from .core import Context as Context
from .core import Group as Group
from .core import MultiCommand as MultiCommand
from .core import Option as Option
from .core import Parameter as Parameter
from .decorators import argument as argument
from .decorators import command as command
from .decorators import confirmation_option as confirmation_option
from .decorators import group as group
from .decorators import help_option as help_option
from .decorators import make_pass_decorator as make_pass_decorator
from .decorators import option as option
from .decorators import pass_context as pass_context
from .decorators import pass_obj as pass_obj
from .decorators import password_option as password_option
from .decorators import version_option as version_option
from .exceptions import Abort as Abort
from .exceptions import BadArgumentUsage as BadArgumentUsage
from .exceptions import BadOptionUsage as BadOptionUsage
from .exceptions import BadParameter as BadParameter
from .exceptions import ClickException as ClickException
from .exceptions import FileError as FileError
from .exceptions import MissingParameter as MissingParameter
from .exceptions import NoSuchOption as NoSuchOption
from .exceptions import UsageError as UsageError
from .formatting import HelpFormatter as HelpFormatter
from .formatting import wrap_text as wrap_text
from .globals import get_current_context as get_current_context
from .parser import OptionParser as OptionParser
from .termui import clear as clear
from .termui import confirm as confirm
from .termui import echo_via_pager as echo_via_pager
from .termui import edit as edit
from .termui import getchar as getchar
from .termui import launch as launch
from .termui import pause as pause
from .termui import progressbar as progressbar
from .termui import prompt as prompt
from .termui import secho as secho
from .termui import style as style
from .termui import unstyle as unstyle
from .types import BOOL as BOOL
from .types import Choice as Choice
from .types import DateTime as DateTime
from .types import File as File
from .types import FLOAT as FLOAT
from .types import FloatRange as FloatRange
from .types import INT as INT
from .types import IntRange as IntRange
from .types import ParamType as ParamType
from .types import Path as Path
from .types import STRING as STRING
from .types import Tuple as Tuple
from .types import UNPROCESSED as UNPROCESSED
from .types import UUID as UUID
from .utils import echo as echo
from .utils import format_filename as format_filename
from .utils import get_app_dir as get_app_dir
from .utils import get_binary_stream as get_binary_stream
from .utils import get_text_stream as get_text_stream
from .utils import open_file as open_file
__version__ = "8.1.3"

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import codecs
import io
import os
import re
import sys
import typing as t
from weakref import WeakKeyDictionary
CYGWIN = sys.platform.startswith("cygwin")
MSYS2 = sys.platform.startswith("win") and ("GCC" in sys.version)
# Determine local App Engine environment, per Google's own suggestion
APP_ENGINE = "APPENGINE_RUNTIME" in os.environ and "Development/" in os.environ.get(
"SERVER_SOFTWARE", ""
)
WIN = sys.platform.startswith("win") and not APP_ENGINE and not MSYS2
auto_wrap_for_ansi: t.Optional[t.Callable[[t.TextIO], t.TextIO]] = None
_ansi_re = re.compile(r"\033\[[;?0-9]*[a-zA-Z]")
def get_filesystem_encoding() -> str:
return sys.getfilesystemencoding() or sys.getdefaultencoding()
def _make_text_stream(
stream: t.BinaryIO,
encoding: t.Optional[str],
errors: t.Optional[str],
force_readable: bool = False,
force_writable: bool = False,
) -> t.TextIO:
if encoding is None:
encoding = get_best_encoding(stream)
if errors is None:
errors = "replace"
return _NonClosingTextIOWrapper(
stream,
encoding,
errors,
line_buffering=True,
force_readable=force_readable,
force_writable=force_writable,
)
def is_ascii_encoding(encoding: str) -> bool:
"""Checks if a given encoding is ascii."""
try:
return codecs.lookup(encoding).name == "ascii"
except LookupError:
return False
def get_best_encoding(stream: t.IO) -> str:
"""Returns the default stream encoding if not found."""
rv = getattr(stream, "encoding", None) or sys.getdefaultencoding()
if is_ascii_encoding(rv):
return "utf-8"
return rv
class _NonClosingTextIOWrapper(io.TextIOWrapper):
def __init__(
self,
stream: t.BinaryIO,
encoding: t.Optional[str],
errors: t.Optional[str],
force_readable: bool = False,
force_writable: bool = False,
**extra: t.Any,
) -> None:
self._stream = stream = t.cast(
t.BinaryIO, _FixupStream(stream, force_readable, force_writable)
)
super().__init__(stream, encoding, errors, **extra)
def __del__(self) -> None:
try:
self.detach()
except Exception:
pass
def isatty(self) -> bool:
# https://bitbucket.org/pypy/pypy/issue/1803
return self._stream.isatty()
class _FixupStream:
"""The new io interface needs more from streams than streams
traditionally implement. As such, this fix-up code is necessary in
some circumstances.
The forcing of readable and writable flags are there because some tools
put badly patched objects on sys (one such offender are certain version
of jupyter notebook).
"""
def __init__(
self,
stream: t.BinaryIO,
force_readable: bool = False,
force_writable: bool = False,
):
self._stream = stream
self._force_readable = force_readable
self._force_writable = force_writable
def __getattr__(self, name: str) -> t.Any:
return getattr(self._stream, name)
def read1(self, size: int) -> bytes:
f = getattr(self._stream, "read1", None)
if f is not None:
return t.cast(bytes, f(size))
return self._stream.read(size)
def readable(self) -> bool:
if self._force_readable:
return True
x = getattr(self._stream, "readable", None)
if x is not None:
return t.cast(bool, x())
try:
self._stream.read(0)
except Exception:
return False
return True
def writable(self) -> bool:
if self._force_writable:
return True
x = getattr(self._stream, "writable", None)
if x is not None:
return t.cast(bool, x())
try:
self._stream.write("") # type: ignore
except Exception:
try:
self._stream.write(b"")
except Exception:
return False
return True
def seekable(self) -> bool:
x = getattr(self._stream, "seekable", None)
if x is not None:
return t.cast(bool, x())
try:
self._stream.seek(self._stream.tell())
except Exception:
return False
return True
def _is_binary_reader(stream: t.IO, default: bool = False) -> bool:
try:
return isinstance(stream.read(0), bytes)
except Exception:
return default
# This happens in some cases where the stream was already
# closed. In this case, we assume the default.
def _is_binary_writer(stream: t.IO, default: bool = False) -> bool:
try:
stream.write(b"")
except Exception:
try:
stream.write("")
return False
except Exception:
pass
return default
return True
def _find_binary_reader(stream: t.IO) -> t.Optional[t.BinaryIO]:
# We need to figure out if the given stream is already binary.
# This can happen because the official docs recommend detaching
# the streams to get binary streams. Some code might do this, so
# we need to deal with this case explicitly.
if _is_binary_reader(stream, False):
return t.cast(t.BinaryIO, stream)
buf = getattr(stream, "buffer", None)
# Same situation here; this time we assume that the buffer is
# actually binary in case it's closed.
if buf is not None and _is_binary_reader(buf, True):
return t.cast(t.BinaryIO, buf)
return None
def _find_binary_writer(stream: t.IO) -> t.Optional[t.BinaryIO]:
# We need to figure out if the given stream is already binary.
# This can happen because the official docs recommend detaching
# the streams to get binary streams. Some code might do this, so
# we need to deal with this case explicitly.
if _is_binary_writer(stream, False):
return t.cast(t.BinaryIO, stream)
buf = getattr(stream, "buffer", None)
# Same situation here; this time we assume that the buffer is
# actually binary in case it's closed.
if buf is not None and _is_binary_writer(buf, True):
return t.cast(t.BinaryIO, buf)
return None
def _stream_is_misconfigured(stream: t.TextIO) -> bool:
"""A stream is misconfigured if its encoding is ASCII."""
# If the stream does not have an encoding set, we assume it's set
# to ASCII. This appears to happen in certain unittest
# environments. It's not quite clear what the correct behavior is
# but this at least will force Click to recover somehow.
return is_ascii_encoding(getattr(stream, "encoding", None) or "ascii")
def _is_compat_stream_attr(stream: t.TextIO, attr: str, value: t.Optional[str]) -> bool:
"""A stream attribute is compatible if it is equal to the
desired value or the desired value is unset and the attribute
has a value.
"""
stream_value = getattr(stream, attr, None)
return stream_value == value or (value is None and stream_value is not None)
def _is_compatible_text_stream(
stream: t.TextIO, encoding: t.Optional[str], errors: t.Optional[str]
) -> bool:
"""Check if a stream's encoding and errors attributes are
compatible with the desired values.
"""
return _is_compat_stream_attr(
stream, "encoding", encoding
) and _is_compat_stream_attr(stream, "errors", errors)
def _force_correct_text_stream(
text_stream: t.IO,
encoding: t.Optional[str],
errors: t.Optional[str],
is_binary: t.Callable[[t.IO, bool], bool],
find_binary: t.Callable[[t.IO], t.Optional[t.BinaryIO]],
force_readable: bool = False,
force_writable: bool = False,
) -> t.TextIO:
if is_binary(text_stream, False):
binary_reader = t.cast(t.BinaryIO, text_stream)
else:
text_stream = t.cast(t.TextIO, text_stream)
# If the stream looks compatible, and won't default to a
# misconfigured ascii encoding, return it as-is.
if _is_compatible_text_stream(text_stream, encoding, errors) and not (
encoding is None and _stream_is_misconfigured(text_stream)
):
return text_stream
# Otherwise, get the underlying binary reader.
possible_binary_reader = find_binary(text_stream)
# If that's not possible, silently use the original reader
# and get mojibake instead of exceptions.
if possible_binary_reader is None:
return text_stream
binary_reader = possible_binary_reader
# Default errors to replace instead of strict in order to get
# something that works.
if errors is None:
errors = "replace"
# Wrap the binary stream in a text stream with the correct
# encoding parameters.
return _make_text_stream(
binary_reader,
encoding,
errors,
force_readable=force_readable,
force_writable=force_writable,
)
def _force_correct_text_reader(
text_reader: t.IO,
encoding: t.Optional[str],
errors: t.Optional[str],
force_readable: bool = False,
) -> t.TextIO:
return _force_correct_text_stream(
text_reader,
encoding,
errors,
_is_binary_reader,
_find_binary_reader,
force_readable=force_readable,
)
def _force_correct_text_writer(
text_writer: t.IO,
encoding: t.Optional[str],
errors: t.Optional[str],
force_writable: bool = False,
) -> t.TextIO:
return _force_correct_text_stream(
text_writer,
encoding,
errors,
_is_binary_writer,
_find_binary_writer,
force_writable=force_writable,
)
def get_binary_stdin() -> t.BinaryIO:
reader = _find_binary_reader(sys.stdin)
if reader is None:
raise RuntimeError("Was not able to determine binary stream for sys.stdin.")
return reader
def get_binary_stdout() -> t.BinaryIO:
writer = _find_binary_writer(sys.stdout)
if writer is None:
raise RuntimeError("Was not able to determine binary stream for sys.stdout.")
return writer
def get_binary_stderr() -> t.BinaryIO:
writer = _find_binary_writer(sys.stderr)
if writer is None:
raise RuntimeError("Was not able to determine binary stream for sys.stderr.")
return writer
def get_text_stdin(
encoding: t.Optional[str] = None, errors: t.Optional[str] = None
) -> t.TextIO:
rv = _get_windows_console_stream(sys.stdin, encoding, errors)
if rv is not None:
return rv
return _force_correct_text_reader(sys.stdin, encoding, errors, force_readable=True)
def get_text_stdout(
encoding: t.Optional[str] = None, errors: t.Optional[str] = None
) -> t.TextIO:
rv = _get_windows_console_stream(sys.stdout, encoding, errors)
if rv is not None:
return rv
return _force_correct_text_writer(sys.stdout, encoding, errors, force_writable=True)
def get_text_stderr(
encoding: t.Optional[str] = None, errors: t.Optional[str] = None
) -> t.TextIO:
rv = _get_windows_console_stream(sys.stderr, encoding, errors)
if rv is not None:
return rv
return _force_correct_text_writer(sys.stderr, encoding, errors, force_writable=True)
def _wrap_io_open(
file: t.Union[str, os.PathLike, int],
mode: str,
encoding: t.Optional[str],
errors: t.Optional[str],
) -> t.IO:
"""Handles not passing ``encoding`` and ``errors`` in binary mode."""
if "b" in mode:
return open(file, mode)
return open(file, mode, encoding=encoding, errors=errors)
def open_stream(
filename: str,
mode: str = "r",
encoding: t.Optional[str] = None,
errors: t.Optional[str] = "strict",
atomic: bool = False,
) -> t.Tuple[t.IO, bool]:
binary = "b" in mode
# Standard streams first. These are simple because they ignore the
# atomic flag. Use fsdecode to handle Path("-").
if os.fsdecode(filename) == "-":
if any(m in mode for m in ["w", "a", "x"]):
if binary:
return get_binary_stdout(), False
return get_text_stdout(encoding=encoding, errors=errors), False
if binary:
return get_binary_stdin(), False
return get_text_stdin(encoding=encoding, errors=errors), False
# Non-atomic writes directly go out through the regular open functions.
if not atomic:
return _wrap_io_open(filename, mode, encoding, errors), True
# Some usability stuff for atomic writes
if "a" in mode:
raise ValueError(
"Appending to an existing file is not supported, because that"
" would involve an expensive `copy`-operation to a temporary"
" file. Open the file in normal `w`-mode and copy explicitly"
" if that's what you're after."
)
if "x" in mode:
raise ValueError("Use the `overwrite`-parameter instead.")
if "w" not in mode:
raise ValueError("Atomic writes only make sense with `w`-mode.")
# Atomic writes are more complicated. They work by opening a file
# as a proxy in the same folder and then using the fdopen
# functionality to wrap it in a Python file. Then we wrap it in an
# atomic file that moves the file over on close.
import errno
import random
try:
perm: t.Optional[int] = os.stat(filename).st_mode
except OSError:
perm = None
flags = os.O_RDWR | os.O_CREAT | os.O_EXCL
if binary:
flags |= getattr(os, "O_BINARY", 0)
while True:
tmp_filename = os.path.join(
os.path.dirname(filename),
f".__atomic-write{random.randrange(1 << 32):08x}",
)
try:
fd = os.open(tmp_filename, flags, 0o666 if perm is None else perm)
break
except OSError as e:
if e.errno == errno.EEXIST or (
os.name == "nt"
and e.errno == errno.EACCES
and os.path.isdir(e.filename)
and os.access(e.filename, os.W_OK)
):
continue
raise
if perm is not None:
os.chmod(tmp_filename, perm) # in case perm includes bits in umask
f = _wrap_io_open(fd, mode, encoding, errors)
af = _AtomicFile(f, tmp_filename, os.path.realpath(filename))
return t.cast(t.IO, af), True
class _AtomicFile:
def __init__(self, f: t.IO, tmp_filename: str, real_filename: str) -> None:
self._f = f
self._tmp_filename = tmp_filename
self._real_filename = real_filename
self.closed = False
@property
def name(self) -> str:
return self._real_filename
def close(self, delete: bool = False) -> None:
if self.closed:
return
self._f.close()
os.replace(self._tmp_filename, self._real_filename)
self.closed = True
def __getattr__(self, name: str) -> t.Any:
return getattr(self._f, name)
def __enter__(self) -> "_AtomicFile":
return self
def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, tb): # type: ignore
self.close(delete=exc_type is not None)
def __repr__(self) -> str:
return repr(self._f)
def strip_ansi(value: str) -> str:
return _ansi_re.sub("", value)
def _is_jupyter_kernel_output(stream: t.IO) -> bool:
while isinstance(stream, (_FixupStream, _NonClosingTextIOWrapper)):
stream = stream._stream
return stream.__class__.__module__.startswith("ipykernel.")
def should_strip_ansi(
stream: t.Optional[t.IO] = None, color: t.Optional[bool] = None
) -> bool:
if color is None:
if stream is None:
stream = sys.stdin
return not isatty(stream) and not _is_jupyter_kernel_output(stream)
return not color
# On Windows, wrap the output streams with colorama to support ANSI
# color codes.
# NOTE: double check is needed so mypy does not analyze this on Linux
if sys.platform.startswith("win") and WIN:
from ._winconsole import _get_windows_console_stream
def _get_argv_encoding() -> str:
import locale
return locale.getpreferredencoding()
_ansi_stream_wrappers: t.MutableMapping[t.TextIO, t.TextIO] = WeakKeyDictionary()
def auto_wrap_for_ansi(
stream: t.TextIO, color: t.Optional[bool] = None
) -> t.TextIO:
"""Support ANSI color and style codes on Windows by wrapping a
stream with colorama.
"""
try:
cached = _ansi_stream_wrappers.get(stream)
except Exception:
cached = None
if cached is not None:
return cached
import colorama
strip = should_strip_ansi(stream, color)
ansi_wrapper = colorama.AnsiToWin32(stream, strip=strip)
rv = t.cast(t.TextIO, ansi_wrapper.stream)
_write = rv.write
def _safe_write(s):
try:
return _write(s)
except BaseException:
ansi_wrapper.reset_all()
raise
rv.write = _safe_write
try:
_ansi_stream_wrappers[stream] = rv
except Exception:
pass
return rv
else:
def _get_argv_encoding() -> str:
return getattr(sys.stdin, "encoding", None) or get_filesystem_encoding()
def _get_windows_console_stream(
f: t.TextIO, encoding: t.Optional[str], errors: t.Optional[str]
) -> t.Optional[t.TextIO]:
return None
def term_len(x: str) -> int:
return len(strip_ansi(x))
def isatty(stream: t.IO) -> bool:
try:
return stream.isatty()
except Exception:
return False
def _make_cached_stream_func(
src_func: t.Callable[[], t.TextIO], wrapper_func: t.Callable[[], t.TextIO]
) -> t.Callable[[], t.TextIO]:
cache: t.MutableMapping[t.TextIO, t.TextIO] = WeakKeyDictionary()
def func() -> t.TextIO:
stream = src_func()
try:
rv = cache.get(stream)
except Exception:
rv = None
if rv is not None:
return rv
rv = wrapper_func()
try:
cache[stream] = rv
except Exception:
pass
return rv
return func
_default_text_stdin = _make_cached_stream_func(lambda: sys.stdin, get_text_stdin)
_default_text_stdout = _make_cached_stream_func(lambda: sys.stdout, get_text_stdout)
_default_text_stderr = _make_cached_stream_func(lambda: sys.stderr, get_text_stderr)
binary_streams: t.Mapping[str, t.Callable[[], t.BinaryIO]] = {
"stdin": get_binary_stdin,
"stdout": get_binary_stdout,
"stderr": get_binary_stderr,
}
text_streams: t.Mapping[
str, t.Callable[[t.Optional[str], t.Optional[str]], t.TextIO]
] = {
"stdin": get_text_stdin,
"stdout": get_text_stdout,
"stderr": get_text_stderr,
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,717 @@
"""
This module contains implementations for the termui module. To keep the
import time of Click down, some infrequently used functionality is
placed in this module and only imported as needed.
"""
import contextlib
import math
import os
import sys
import time
import typing as t
from gettext import gettext as _
from ._compat import _default_text_stdout
from ._compat import CYGWIN
from ._compat import get_best_encoding
from ._compat import isatty
from ._compat import open_stream
from ._compat import strip_ansi
from ._compat import term_len
from ._compat import WIN
from .exceptions import ClickException
from .utils import echo
V = t.TypeVar("V")
if os.name == "nt":
BEFORE_BAR = "\r"
AFTER_BAR = "\n"
else:
BEFORE_BAR = "\r\033[?25l"
AFTER_BAR = "\033[?25h\n"
class ProgressBar(t.Generic[V]):
def __init__(
self,
iterable: t.Optional[t.Iterable[V]],
length: t.Optional[int] = None,
fill_char: str = "#",
empty_char: str = " ",
bar_template: str = "%(bar)s",
info_sep: str = " ",
show_eta: bool = True,
show_percent: t.Optional[bool] = None,
show_pos: bool = False,
item_show_func: t.Optional[t.Callable[[t.Optional[V]], t.Optional[str]]] = None,
label: t.Optional[str] = None,
file: t.Optional[t.TextIO] = None,
color: t.Optional[bool] = None,
update_min_steps: int = 1,
width: int = 30,
) -> None:
self.fill_char = fill_char
self.empty_char = empty_char
self.bar_template = bar_template
self.info_sep = info_sep
self.show_eta = show_eta
self.show_percent = show_percent
self.show_pos = show_pos
self.item_show_func = item_show_func
self.label = label or ""
if file is None:
file = _default_text_stdout()
self.file = file
self.color = color
self.update_min_steps = update_min_steps
self._completed_intervals = 0
self.width = width
self.autowidth = width == 0
if length is None:
from operator import length_hint
length = length_hint(iterable, -1)
if length == -1:
length = None
if iterable is None:
if length is None:
raise TypeError("iterable or length is required")
iterable = t.cast(t.Iterable[V], range(length))
self.iter = iter(iterable)
self.length = length
self.pos = 0
self.avg: t.List[float] = []
self.start = self.last_eta = time.time()
self.eta_known = False
self.finished = False
self.max_width: t.Optional[int] = None
self.entered = False
self.current_item: t.Optional[V] = None
self.is_hidden = not isatty(self.file)
self._last_line: t.Optional[str] = None
def __enter__(self) -> "ProgressBar":
self.entered = True
self.render_progress()
return self
def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, tb): # type: ignore
self.render_finish()
def __iter__(self) -> t.Iterator[V]:
if not self.entered:
raise RuntimeError("You need to use progress bars in a with block.")
self.render_progress()
return self.generator()
def __next__(self) -> V:
# Iteration is defined in terms of a generator function,
# returned by iter(self); use that to define next(). This works
# because `self.iter` is an iterable consumed by that generator,
# so it is re-entry safe. Calling `next(self.generator())`
# twice works and does "what you want".
return next(iter(self))
def render_finish(self) -> None:
if self.is_hidden:
return
self.file.write(AFTER_BAR)
self.file.flush()
@property
def pct(self) -> float:
if self.finished:
return 1.0
return min(self.pos / (float(self.length or 1) or 1), 1.0)
@property
def time_per_iteration(self) -> float:
if not self.avg:
return 0.0
return sum(self.avg) / float(len(self.avg))
@property
def eta(self) -> float:
if self.length is not None and not self.finished:
return self.time_per_iteration * (self.length - self.pos)
return 0.0
def format_eta(self) -> str:
if self.eta_known:
t = int(self.eta)
seconds = t % 60
t //= 60
minutes = t % 60
t //= 60
hours = t % 24
t //= 24
if t > 0:
return f"{t}d {hours:02}:{minutes:02}:{seconds:02}"
else:
return f"{hours:02}:{minutes:02}:{seconds:02}"
return ""
def format_pos(self) -> str:
pos = str(self.pos)
if self.length is not None:
pos += f"/{self.length}"
return pos
def format_pct(self) -> str:
return f"{int(self.pct * 100): 4}%"[1:]
def format_bar(self) -> str:
if self.length is not None:
bar_length = int(self.pct * self.width)
bar = self.fill_char * bar_length
bar += self.empty_char * (self.width - bar_length)
elif self.finished:
bar = self.fill_char * self.width
else:
chars = list(self.empty_char * (self.width or 1))
if self.time_per_iteration != 0:
chars[
int(
(math.cos(self.pos * self.time_per_iteration) / 2.0 + 0.5)
* self.width
)
] = self.fill_char
bar = "".join(chars)
return bar
def format_progress_line(self) -> str:
show_percent = self.show_percent
info_bits = []
if self.length is not None and show_percent is None:
show_percent = not self.show_pos
if self.show_pos:
info_bits.append(self.format_pos())
if show_percent:
info_bits.append(self.format_pct())
if self.show_eta and self.eta_known and not self.finished:
info_bits.append(self.format_eta())
if self.item_show_func is not None:
item_info = self.item_show_func(self.current_item)
if item_info is not None:
info_bits.append(item_info)
return (
self.bar_template
% {
"label": self.label,
"bar": self.format_bar(),
"info": self.info_sep.join(info_bits),
}
).rstrip()
def render_progress(self) -> None:
import shutil
if self.is_hidden:
# Only output the label as it changes if the output is not a
# TTY. Use file=stderr if you expect to be piping stdout.
if self._last_line != self.label:
self._last_line = self.label
echo(self.label, file=self.file, color=self.color)
return
buf = []
# Update width in case the terminal has been resized
if self.autowidth:
old_width = self.width
self.width = 0
clutter_length = term_len(self.format_progress_line())
new_width = max(0, shutil.get_terminal_size().columns - clutter_length)
if new_width < old_width:
buf.append(BEFORE_BAR)
buf.append(" " * self.max_width) # type: ignore
self.max_width = new_width
self.width = new_width
clear_width = self.width
if self.max_width is not None:
clear_width = self.max_width
buf.append(BEFORE_BAR)
line = self.format_progress_line()
line_len = term_len(line)
if self.max_width is None or self.max_width < line_len:
self.max_width = line_len
buf.append(line)
buf.append(" " * (clear_width - line_len))
line = "".join(buf)
# Render the line only if it changed.
if line != self._last_line:
self._last_line = line
echo(line, file=self.file, color=self.color, nl=False)
self.file.flush()
def make_step(self, n_steps: int) -> None:
self.pos += n_steps
if self.length is not None and self.pos >= self.length:
self.finished = True
if (time.time() - self.last_eta) < 1.0:
return
self.last_eta = time.time()
# self.avg is a rolling list of length <= 7 of steps where steps are
# defined as time elapsed divided by the total progress through
# self.length.
if self.pos:
step = (time.time() - self.start) / self.pos
else:
step = time.time() - self.start
self.avg = self.avg[-6:] + [step]
self.eta_known = self.length is not None
def update(self, n_steps: int, current_item: t.Optional[V] = None) -> None:
"""Update the progress bar by advancing a specified number of
steps, and optionally set the ``current_item`` for this new
position.
:param n_steps: Number of steps to advance.
:param current_item: Optional item to set as ``current_item``
for the updated position.
.. versionchanged:: 8.0
Added the ``current_item`` optional parameter.
.. versionchanged:: 8.0
Only render when the number of steps meets the
``update_min_steps`` threshold.
"""
if current_item is not None:
self.current_item = current_item
self._completed_intervals += n_steps
if self._completed_intervals >= self.update_min_steps:
self.make_step(self._completed_intervals)
self.render_progress()
self._completed_intervals = 0
def finish(self) -> None:
self.eta_known = False
self.current_item = None
self.finished = True
def generator(self) -> t.Iterator[V]:
"""Return a generator which yields the items added to the bar
during construction, and updates the progress bar *after* the
yielded block returns.
"""
# WARNING: the iterator interface for `ProgressBar` relies on
# this and only works because this is a simple generator which
# doesn't create or manage additional state. If this function
# changes, the impact should be evaluated both against
# `iter(bar)` and `next(bar)`. `next()` in particular may call
# `self.generator()` repeatedly, and this must remain safe in
# order for that interface to work.
if not self.entered:
raise RuntimeError("You need to use progress bars in a with block.")
if self.is_hidden:
yield from self.iter
else:
for rv in self.iter:
self.current_item = rv
# This allows show_item_func to be updated before the
# item is processed. Only trigger at the beginning of
# the update interval.
if self._completed_intervals == 0:
self.render_progress()
yield rv
self.update(1)
self.finish()
self.render_progress()
def pager(generator: t.Iterable[str], color: t.Optional[bool] = None) -> None:
"""Decide what method to use for paging through text."""
stdout = _default_text_stdout()
if not isatty(sys.stdin) or not isatty(stdout):
return _nullpager(stdout, generator, color)
pager_cmd = (os.environ.get("PAGER", None) or "").strip()
if pager_cmd:
if WIN:
return _tempfilepager(generator, pager_cmd, color)
return _pipepager(generator, pager_cmd, color)
if os.environ.get("TERM") in ("dumb", "emacs"):
return _nullpager(stdout, generator, color)
if WIN or sys.platform.startswith("os2"):
return _tempfilepager(generator, "more <", color)
if hasattr(os, "system") and os.system("(less) 2>/dev/null") == 0:
return _pipepager(generator, "less", color)
import tempfile
fd, filename = tempfile.mkstemp()
os.close(fd)
try:
if hasattr(os, "system") and os.system(f'more "{filename}"') == 0:
return _pipepager(generator, "more", color)
return _nullpager(stdout, generator, color)
finally:
os.unlink(filename)
def _pipepager(generator: t.Iterable[str], cmd: str, color: t.Optional[bool]) -> None:
"""Page through text by feeding it to another program. Invoking a
pager through this might support colors.
"""
import subprocess
env = dict(os.environ)
# If we're piping to less we might support colors under the
# condition that
cmd_detail = cmd.rsplit("/", 1)[-1].split()
if color is None and cmd_detail[0] == "less":
less_flags = f"{os.environ.get('LESS', '')}{' '.join(cmd_detail[1:])}"
if not less_flags:
env["LESS"] = "-R"
color = True
elif "r" in less_flags or "R" in less_flags:
color = True
c = subprocess.Popen(cmd, shell=True, stdin=subprocess.PIPE, env=env)
stdin = t.cast(t.BinaryIO, c.stdin)
encoding = get_best_encoding(stdin)
try:
for text in generator:
if not color:
text = strip_ansi(text)
stdin.write(text.encode(encoding, "replace"))
except (OSError, KeyboardInterrupt):
pass
else:
stdin.close()
# Less doesn't respect ^C, but catches it for its own UI purposes (aborting
# search or other commands inside less).
#
# That means when the user hits ^C, the parent process (click) terminates,
# but less is still alive, paging the output and messing up the terminal.
#
# If the user wants to make the pager exit on ^C, they should set
# `LESS='-K'`. It's not our decision to make.
while True:
try:
c.wait()
except KeyboardInterrupt:
pass
else:
break
def _tempfilepager(
generator: t.Iterable[str], cmd: str, color: t.Optional[bool]
) -> None:
"""Page through text by invoking a program on a temporary file."""
import tempfile
fd, filename = tempfile.mkstemp()
# TODO: This never terminates if the passed generator never terminates.
text = "".join(generator)
if not color:
text = strip_ansi(text)
encoding = get_best_encoding(sys.stdout)
with open_stream(filename, "wb")[0] as f:
f.write(text.encode(encoding))
try:
os.system(f'{cmd} "{filename}"')
finally:
os.close(fd)
os.unlink(filename)
def _nullpager(
stream: t.TextIO, generator: t.Iterable[str], color: t.Optional[bool]
) -> None:
"""Simply print unformatted text. This is the ultimate fallback."""
for text in generator:
if not color:
text = strip_ansi(text)
stream.write(text)
class Editor:
def __init__(
self,
editor: t.Optional[str] = None,
env: t.Optional[t.Mapping[str, str]] = None,
require_save: bool = True,
extension: str = ".txt",
) -> None:
self.editor = editor
self.env = env
self.require_save = require_save
self.extension = extension
def get_editor(self) -> str:
if self.editor is not None:
return self.editor
for key in "VISUAL", "EDITOR":
rv = os.environ.get(key)
if rv:
return rv
if WIN:
return "notepad"
for editor in "sensible-editor", "vim", "nano":
if os.system(f"which {editor} >/dev/null 2>&1") == 0:
return editor
return "vi"
def edit_file(self, filename: str) -> None:
import subprocess
editor = self.get_editor()
environ: t.Optional[t.Dict[str, str]] = None
if self.env:
environ = os.environ.copy()
environ.update(self.env)
try:
c = subprocess.Popen(f'{editor} "{filename}"', env=environ, shell=True)
exit_code = c.wait()
if exit_code != 0:
raise ClickException(
_("{editor}: Editing failed").format(editor=editor)
)
except OSError as e:
raise ClickException(
_("{editor}: Editing failed: {e}").format(editor=editor, e=e)
) from e
def edit(self, text: t.Optional[t.AnyStr]) -> t.Optional[t.AnyStr]:
import tempfile
if not text:
data = b""
elif isinstance(text, (bytes, bytearray)):
data = text
else:
if text and not text.endswith("\n"):
text += "\n"
if WIN:
data = text.replace("\n", "\r\n").encode("utf-8-sig")
else:
data = text.encode("utf-8")
fd, name = tempfile.mkstemp(prefix="editor-", suffix=self.extension)
f: t.BinaryIO
try:
with os.fdopen(fd, "wb") as f:
f.write(data)
# If the filesystem resolution is 1 second, like Mac OS
# 10.12 Extended, or 2 seconds, like FAT32, and the editor
# closes very fast, require_save can fail. Set the modified
# time to be 2 seconds in the past to work around this.
os.utime(name, (os.path.getatime(name), os.path.getmtime(name) - 2))
# Depending on the resolution, the exact value might not be
# recorded, so get the new recorded value.
timestamp = os.path.getmtime(name)
self.edit_file(name)
if self.require_save and os.path.getmtime(name) == timestamp:
return None
with open(name, "rb") as f:
rv = f.read()
if isinstance(text, (bytes, bytearray)):
return rv
return rv.decode("utf-8-sig").replace("\r\n", "\n") # type: ignore
finally:
os.unlink(name)
def open_url(url: str, wait: bool = False, locate: bool = False) -> int:
import subprocess
def _unquote_file(url: str) -> str:
from urllib.parse import unquote
if url.startswith("file://"):
url = unquote(url[7:])
return url
if sys.platform == "darwin":
args = ["open"]
if wait:
args.append("-W")
if locate:
args.append("-R")
args.append(_unquote_file(url))
null = open("/dev/null", "w")
try:
return subprocess.Popen(args, stderr=null).wait()
finally:
null.close()
elif WIN:
if locate:
url = _unquote_file(url.replace('"', ""))
args = f'explorer /select,"{url}"'
else:
url = url.replace('"', "")
wait_str = "/WAIT" if wait else ""
args = f'start {wait_str} "" "{url}"'
return os.system(args)
elif CYGWIN:
if locate:
url = os.path.dirname(_unquote_file(url).replace('"', ""))
args = f'cygstart "{url}"'
else:
url = url.replace('"', "")
wait_str = "-w" if wait else ""
args = f'cygstart {wait_str} "{url}"'
return os.system(args)
try:
if locate:
url = os.path.dirname(_unquote_file(url)) or "."
else:
url = _unquote_file(url)
c = subprocess.Popen(["xdg-open", url])
if wait:
return c.wait()
return 0
except OSError:
if url.startswith(("http://", "https://")) and not locate and not wait:
import webbrowser
webbrowser.open(url)
return 0
return 1
def _translate_ch_to_exc(ch: str) -> t.Optional[BaseException]:
if ch == "\x03":
raise KeyboardInterrupt()
if ch == "\x04" and not WIN: # Unix-like, Ctrl+D
raise EOFError()
if ch == "\x1a" and WIN: # Windows, Ctrl+Z
raise EOFError()
return None
if WIN:
import msvcrt
@contextlib.contextmanager
def raw_terminal() -> t.Iterator[int]:
yield -1
def getchar(echo: bool) -> str:
# The function `getch` will return a bytes object corresponding to
# the pressed character. Since Windows 10 build 1803, it will also
# return \x00 when called a second time after pressing a regular key.
#
# `getwch` does not share this probably-bugged behavior. Moreover, it
# returns a Unicode object by default, which is what we want.
#
# Either of these functions will return \x00 or \xe0 to indicate
# a special key, and you need to call the same function again to get
# the "rest" of the code. The fun part is that \u00e0 is
# "latin small letter a with grave", so if you type that on a French
# keyboard, you _also_ get a \xe0.
# E.g., consider the Up arrow. This returns \xe0 and then \x48. The
# resulting Unicode string reads as "a with grave" + "capital H".
# This is indistinguishable from when the user actually types
# "a with grave" and then "capital H".
#
# When \xe0 is returned, we assume it's part of a special-key sequence
# and call `getwch` again, but that means that when the user types
# the \u00e0 character, `getchar` doesn't return until a second
# character is typed.
# The alternative is returning immediately, but that would mess up
# cross-platform handling of arrow keys and others that start with
# \xe0. Another option is using `getch`, but then we can't reliably
# read non-ASCII characters, because return values of `getch` are
# limited to the current 8-bit codepage.
#
# Anyway, Click doesn't claim to do this Right(tm), and using `getwch`
# is doing the right thing in more situations than with `getch`.
func: t.Callable[[], str]
if echo:
func = msvcrt.getwche # type: ignore
else:
func = msvcrt.getwch # type: ignore
rv = func()
if rv in ("\x00", "\xe0"):
# \x00 and \xe0 are control characters that indicate special key,
# see above.
rv += func()
_translate_ch_to_exc(rv)
return rv
else:
import tty
import termios
@contextlib.contextmanager
def raw_terminal() -> t.Iterator[int]:
f: t.Optional[t.TextIO]
fd: int
if not isatty(sys.stdin):
f = open("/dev/tty")
fd = f.fileno()
else:
fd = sys.stdin.fileno()
f = None
try:
old_settings = termios.tcgetattr(fd)
try:
tty.setraw(fd)
yield fd
finally:
termios.tcsetattr(fd, termios.TCSADRAIN, old_settings)
sys.stdout.flush()
if f is not None:
f.close()
except termios.error:
pass
def getchar(echo: bool) -> str:
with raw_terminal() as fd:
ch = os.read(fd, 32).decode(get_best_encoding(sys.stdin), "replace")
if echo and isatty(sys.stdout):
sys.stdout.write(ch)
_translate_ch_to_exc(ch)
return ch

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@ -0,0 +1,49 @@
import textwrap
import typing as t
from contextlib import contextmanager
class TextWrapper(textwrap.TextWrapper):
def _handle_long_word(
self,
reversed_chunks: t.List[str],
cur_line: t.List[str],
cur_len: int,
width: int,
) -> None:
space_left = max(width - cur_len, 1)
if self.break_long_words:
last = reversed_chunks[-1]
cut = last[:space_left]
res = last[space_left:]
cur_line.append(cut)
reversed_chunks[-1] = res
elif not cur_line:
cur_line.append(reversed_chunks.pop())
@contextmanager
def extra_indent(self, indent: str) -> t.Iterator[None]:
old_initial_indent = self.initial_indent
old_subsequent_indent = self.subsequent_indent
self.initial_indent += indent
self.subsequent_indent += indent
try:
yield
finally:
self.initial_indent = old_initial_indent
self.subsequent_indent = old_subsequent_indent
def indent_only(self, text: str) -> str:
rv = []
for idx, line in enumerate(text.splitlines()):
indent = self.initial_indent
if idx > 0:
indent = self.subsequent_indent
rv.append(f"{indent}{line}")
return "\n".join(rv)

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# This module is based on the excellent work by Adam Bartoš who
# provided a lot of what went into the implementation here in
# the discussion to issue1602 in the Python bug tracker.
#
# There are some general differences in regards to how this works
# compared to the original patches as we do not need to patch
# the entire interpreter but just work in our little world of
# echo and prompt.
import io
import sys
import time
import typing as t
from ctypes import byref
from ctypes import c_char
from ctypes import c_char_p
from ctypes import c_int
from ctypes import c_ssize_t
from ctypes import c_ulong
from ctypes import c_void_p
from ctypes import POINTER
from ctypes import py_object
from ctypes import Structure
from ctypes.wintypes import DWORD
from ctypes.wintypes import HANDLE
from ctypes.wintypes import LPCWSTR
from ctypes.wintypes import LPWSTR
from ._compat import _NonClosingTextIOWrapper
assert sys.platform == "win32"
import msvcrt # noqa: E402
from ctypes import windll # noqa: E402
from ctypes import WINFUNCTYPE # noqa: E402
c_ssize_p = POINTER(c_ssize_t)
kernel32 = windll.kernel32
GetStdHandle = kernel32.GetStdHandle
ReadConsoleW = kernel32.ReadConsoleW
WriteConsoleW = kernel32.WriteConsoleW
GetConsoleMode = kernel32.GetConsoleMode
GetLastError = kernel32.GetLastError
GetCommandLineW = WINFUNCTYPE(LPWSTR)(("GetCommandLineW", windll.kernel32))
CommandLineToArgvW = WINFUNCTYPE(POINTER(LPWSTR), LPCWSTR, POINTER(c_int))(
("CommandLineToArgvW", windll.shell32)
)
LocalFree = WINFUNCTYPE(c_void_p, c_void_p)(("LocalFree", windll.kernel32))
STDIN_HANDLE = GetStdHandle(-10)
STDOUT_HANDLE = GetStdHandle(-11)
STDERR_HANDLE = GetStdHandle(-12)
PyBUF_SIMPLE = 0
PyBUF_WRITABLE = 1
ERROR_SUCCESS = 0
ERROR_NOT_ENOUGH_MEMORY = 8
ERROR_OPERATION_ABORTED = 995
STDIN_FILENO = 0
STDOUT_FILENO = 1
STDERR_FILENO = 2
EOF = b"\x1a"
MAX_BYTES_WRITTEN = 32767
try:
from ctypes import pythonapi
except ImportError:
# On PyPy we cannot get buffers so our ability to operate here is
# severely limited.
get_buffer = None
else:
class Py_buffer(Structure):
_fields_ = [
("buf", c_void_p),
("obj", py_object),
("len", c_ssize_t),
("itemsize", c_ssize_t),
("readonly", c_int),
("ndim", c_int),
("format", c_char_p),
("shape", c_ssize_p),
("strides", c_ssize_p),
("suboffsets", c_ssize_p),
("internal", c_void_p),
]
PyObject_GetBuffer = pythonapi.PyObject_GetBuffer
PyBuffer_Release = pythonapi.PyBuffer_Release
def get_buffer(obj, writable=False):
buf = Py_buffer()
flags = PyBUF_WRITABLE if writable else PyBUF_SIMPLE
PyObject_GetBuffer(py_object(obj), byref(buf), flags)
try:
buffer_type = c_char * buf.len
return buffer_type.from_address(buf.buf)
finally:
PyBuffer_Release(byref(buf))
class _WindowsConsoleRawIOBase(io.RawIOBase):
def __init__(self, handle):
self.handle = handle
def isatty(self):
super().isatty()
return True
class _WindowsConsoleReader(_WindowsConsoleRawIOBase):
def readable(self):
return True
def readinto(self, b):
bytes_to_be_read = len(b)
if not bytes_to_be_read:
return 0
elif bytes_to_be_read % 2:
raise ValueError(
"cannot read odd number of bytes from UTF-16-LE encoded console"
)
buffer = get_buffer(b, writable=True)
code_units_to_be_read = bytes_to_be_read // 2
code_units_read = c_ulong()
rv = ReadConsoleW(
HANDLE(self.handle),
buffer,
code_units_to_be_read,
byref(code_units_read),
None,
)
if GetLastError() == ERROR_OPERATION_ABORTED:
# wait for KeyboardInterrupt
time.sleep(0.1)
if not rv:
raise OSError(f"Windows error: {GetLastError()}")
if buffer[0] == EOF:
return 0
return 2 * code_units_read.value
class _WindowsConsoleWriter(_WindowsConsoleRawIOBase):
def writable(self):
return True
@staticmethod
def _get_error_message(errno):
if errno == ERROR_SUCCESS:
return "ERROR_SUCCESS"
elif errno == ERROR_NOT_ENOUGH_MEMORY:
return "ERROR_NOT_ENOUGH_MEMORY"
return f"Windows error {errno}"
def write(self, b):
bytes_to_be_written = len(b)
buf = get_buffer(b)
code_units_to_be_written = min(bytes_to_be_written, MAX_BYTES_WRITTEN) // 2
code_units_written = c_ulong()
WriteConsoleW(
HANDLE(self.handle),
buf,
code_units_to_be_written,
byref(code_units_written),
None,
)
bytes_written = 2 * code_units_written.value
if bytes_written == 0 and bytes_to_be_written > 0:
raise OSError(self._get_error_message(GetLastError()))
return bytes_written
class ConsoleStream:
def __init__(self, text_stream: t.TextIO, byte_stream: t.BinaryIO) -> None:
self._text_stream = text_stream
self.buffer = byte_stream
@property
def name(self) -> str:
return self.buffer.name
def write(self, x: t.AnyStr) -> int:
if isinstance(x, str):
return self._text_stream.write(x)
try:
self.flush()
except Exception:
pass
return self.buffer.write(x)
def writelines(self, lines: t.Iterable[t.AnyStr]) -> None:
for line in lines:
self.write(line)
def __getattr__(self, name: str) -> t.Any:
return getattr(self._text_stream, name)
def isatty(self) -> bool:
return self.buffer.isatty()
def __repr__(self):
return f"<ConsoleStream name={self.name!r} encoding={self.encoding!r}>"
def _get_text_stdin(buffer_stream: t.BinaryIO) -> t.TextIO:
text_stream = _NonClosingTextIOWrapper(
io.BufferedReader(_WindowsConsoleReader(STDIN_HANDLE)),
"utf-16-le",
"strict",
line_buffering=True,
)
return t.cast(t.TextIO, ConsoleStream(text_stream, buffer_stream))
def _get_text_stdout(buffer_stream: t.BinaryIO) -> t.TextIO:
text_stream = _NonClosingTextIOWrapper(
io.BufferedWriter(_WindowsConsoleWriter(STDOUT_HANDLE)),
"utf-16-le",
"strict",
line_buffering=True,
)
return t.cast(t.TextIO, ConsoleStream(text_stream, buffer_stream))
def _get_text_stderr(buffer_stream: t.BinaryIO) -> t.TextIO:
text_stream = _NonClosingTextIOWrapper(
io.BufferedWriter(_WindowsConsoleWriter(STDERR_HANDLE)),
"utf-16-le",
"strict",
line_buffering=True,
)
return t.cast(t.TextIO, ConsoleStream(text_stream, buffer_stream))
_stream_factories: t.Mapping[int, t.Callable[[t.BinaryIO], t.TextIO]] = {
0: _get_text_stdin,
1: _get_text_stdout,
2: _get_text_stderr,
}
def _is_console(f: t.TextIO) -> bool:
if not hasattr(f, "fileno"):
return False
try:
fileno = f.fileno()
except (OSError, io.UnsupportedOperation):
return False
handle = msvcrt.get_osfhandle(fileno)
return bool(GetConsoleMode(handle, byref(DWORD())))
def _get_windows_console_stream(
f: t.TextIO, encoding: t.Optional[str], errors: t.Optional[str]
) -> t.Optional[t.TextIO]:
if (
get_buffer is not None
and encoding in {"utf-16-le", None}
and errors in {"strict", None}
and _is_console(f)
):
func = _stream_factories.get(f.fileno())
if func is not None:
b = getattr(f, "buffer", None)
if b is None:
return None
return func(b)

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@ -0,0 +1,497 @@
import inspect
import types
import typing as t
from functools import update_wrapper
from gettext import gettext as _
from .core import Argument
from .core import Command
from .core import Context
from .core import Group
from .core import Option
from .core import Parameter
from .globals import get_current_context
from .utils import echo
F = t.TypeVar("F", bound=t.Callable[..., t.Any])
FC = t.TypeVar("FC", bound=t.Union[t.Callable[..., t.Any], Command])
def pass_context(f: F) -> F:
"""Marks a callback as wanting to receive the current context
object as first argument.
"""
def new_func(*args, **kwargs): # type: ignore
return f(get_current_context(), *args, **kwargs)
return update_wrapper(t.cast(F, new_func), f)
def pass_obj(f: F) -> F:
"""Similar to :func:`pass_context`, but only pass the object on the
context onwards (:attr:`Context.obj`). This is useful if that object
represents the state of a nested system.
"""
def new_func(*args, **kwargs): # type: ignore
return f(get_current_context().obj, *args, **kwargs)
return update_wrapper(t.cast(F, new_func), f)
def make_pass_decorator(
object_type: t.Type, ensure: bool = False
) -> "t.Callable[[F], F]":
"""Given an object type this creates a decorator that will work
similar to :func:`pass_obj` but instead of passing the object of the
current context, it will find the innermost context of type
:func:`object_type`.
This generates a decorator that works roughly like this::
from functools import update_wrapper
def decorator(f):
@pass_context
def new_func(ctx, *args, **kwargs):
obj = ctx.find_object(object_type)
return ctx.invoke(f, obj, *args, **kwargs)
return update_wrapper(new_func, f)
return decorator
:param object_type: the type of the object to pass.
:param ensure: if set to `True`, a new object will be created and
remembered on the context if it's not there yet.
"""
def decorator(f: F) -> F:
def new_func(*args, **kwargs): # type: ignore
ctx = get_current_context()
if ensure:
obj = ctx.ensure_object(object_type)
else:
obj = ctx.find_object(object_type)
if obj is None:
raise RuntimeError(
"Managed to invoke callback without a context"
f" object of type {object_type.__name__!r}"
" existing."
)
return ctx.invoke(f, obj, *args, **kwargs)
return update_wrapper(t.cast(F, new_func), f)
return decorator
def pass_meta_key(
key: str, *, doc_description: t.Optional[str] = None
) -> "t.Callable[[F], F]":
"""Create a decorator that passes a key from
:attr:`click.Context.meta` as the first argument to the decorated
function.
:param key: Key in ``Context.meta`` to pass.
:param doc_description: Description of the object being passed,
inserted into the decorator's docstring. Defaults to "the 'key'
key from Context.meta".
.. versionadded:: 8.0
"""
def decorator(f: F) -> F:
def new_func(*args, **kwargs): # type: ignore
ctx = get_current_context()
obj = ctx.meta[key]
return ctx.invoke(f, obj, *args, **kwargs)
return update_wrapper(t.cast(F, new_func), f)
if doc_description is None:
doc_description = f"the {key!r} key from :attr:`click.Context.meta`"
decorator.__doc__ = (
f"Decorator that passes {doc_description} as the first argument"
" to the decorated function."
)
return decorator
CmdType = t.TypeVar("CmdType", bound=Command)
@t.overload
def command(
__func: t.Callable[..., t.Any],
) -> Command:
...
@t.overload
def command(
name: t.Optional[str] = None,
**attrs: t.Any,
) -> t.Callable[..., Command]:
...
@t.overload
def command(
name: t.Optional[str] = None,
cls: t.Type[CmdType] = ...,
**attrs: t.Any,
) -> t.Callable[..., CmdType]:
...
def command(
name: t.Union[str, t.Callable[..., t.Any], None] = None,
cls: t.Optional[t.Type[Command]] = None,
**attrs: t.Any,
) -> t.Union[Command, t.Callable[..., Command]]:
r"""Creates a new :class:`Command` and uses the decorated function as
callback. This will also automatically attach all decorated
:func:`option`\s and :func:`argument`\s as parameters to the command.
The name of the command defaults to the name of the function with
underscores replaced by dashes. If you want to change that, you can
pass the intended name as the first argument.
All keyword arguments are forwarded to the underlying command class.
For the ``params`` argument, any decorated params are appended to
the end of the list.
Once decorated the function turns into a :class:`Command` instance
that can be invoked as a command line utility or be attached to a
command :class:`Group`.
:param name: the name of the command. This defaults to the function
name with underscores replaced by dashes.
:param cls: the command class to instantiate. This defaults to
:class:`Command`.
.. versionchanged:: 8.1
This decorator can be applied without parentheses.
.. versionchanged:: 8.1
The ``params`` argument can be used. Decorated params are
appended to the end of the list.
"""
func: t.Optional[t.Callable[..., t.Any]] = None
if callable(name):
func = name
name = None
assert cls is None, "Use 'command(cls=cls)(callable)' to specify a class."
assert not attrs, "Use 'command(**kwargs)(callable)' to provide arguments."
if cls is None:
cls = Command
def decorator(f: t.Callable[..., t.Any]) -> Command:
if isinstance(f, Command):
raise TypeError("Attempted to convert a callback into a command twice.")
attr_params = attrs.pop("params", None)
params = attr_params if attr_params is not None else []
try:
decorator_params = f.__click_params__ # type: ignore
except AttributeError:
pass
else:
del f.__click_params__ # type: ignore
params.extend(reversed(decorator_params))
if attrs.get("help") is None:
attrs["help"] = f.__doc__
cmd = cls( # type: ignore[misc]
name=name or f.__name__.lower().replace("_", "-"), # type: ignore[arg-type]
callback=f,
params=params,
**attrs,
)
cmd.__doc__ = f.__doc__
return cmd
if func is not None:
return decorator(func)
return decorator
@t.overload
def group(
__func: t.Callable[..., t.Any],
) -> Group:
...
@t.overload
def group(
name: t.Optional[str] = None,
**attrs: t.Any,
) -> t.Callable[[F], Group]:
...
def group(
name: t.Union[str, t.Callable[..., t.Any], None] = None, **attrs: t.Any
) -> t.Union[Group, t.Callable[[F], Group]]:
"""Creates a new :class:`Group` with a function as callback. This
works otherwise the same as :func:`command` just that the `cls`
parameter is set to :class:`Group`.
.. versionchanged:: 8.1
This decorator can be applied without parentheses.
"""
if attrs.get("cls") is None:
attrs["cls"] = Group
if callable(name):
grp: t.Callable[[F], Group] = t.cast(Group, command(**attrs))
return grp(name)
return t.cast(Group, command(name, **attrs))
def _param_memo(f: FC, param: Parameter) -> None:
if isinstance(f, Command):
f.params.append(param)
else:
if not hasattr(f, "__click_params__"):
f.__click_params__ = [] # type: ignore
f.__click_params__.append(param) # type: ignore
def argument(*param_decls: str, **attrs: t.Any) -> t.Callable[[FC], FC]:
"""Attaches an argument to the command. All positional arguments are
passed as parameter declarations to :class:`Argument`; all keyword
arguments are forwarded unchanged (except ``cls``).
This is equivalent to creating an :class:`Argument` instance manually
and attaching it to the :attr:`Command.params` list.
:param cls: the argument class to instantiate. This defaults to
:class:`Argument`.
"""
def decorator(f: FC) -> FC:
ArgumentClass = attrs.pop("cls", None) or Argument
_param_memo(f, ArgumentClass(param_decls, **attrs))
return f
return decorator
def option(*param_decls: str, **attrs: t.Any) -> t.Callable[[FC], FC]:
"""Attaches an option to the command. All positional arguments are
passed as parameter declarations to :class:`Option`; all keyword
arguments are forwarded unchanged (except ``cls``).
This is equivalent to creating an :class:`Option` instance manually
and attaching it to the :attr:`Command.params` list.
:param cls: the option class to instantiate. This defaults to
:class:`Option`.
"""
def decorator(f: FC) -> FC:
# Issue 926, copy attrs, so pre-defined options can re-use the same cls=
option_attrs = attrs.copy()
OptionClass = option_attrs.pop("cls", None) or Option
_param_memo(f, OptionClass(param_decls, **option_attrs))
return f
return decorator
def confirmation_option(*param_decls: str, **kwargs: t.Any) -> t.Callable[[FC], FC]:
"""Add a ``--yes`` option which shows a prompt before continuing if
not passed. If the prompt is declined, the program will exit.
:param param_decls: One or more option names. Defaults to the single
value ``"--yes"``.
:param kwargs: Extra arguments are passed to :func:`option`.
"""
def callback(ctx: Context, param: Parameter, value: bool) -> None:
if not value:
ctx.abort()
if not param_decls:
param_decls = ("--yes",)
kwargs.setdefault("is_flag", True)
kwargs.setdefault("callback", callback)
kwargs.setdefault("expose_value", False)
kwargs.setdefault("prompt", "Do you want to continue?")
kwargs.setdefault("help", "Confirm the action without prompting.")
return option(*param_decls, **kwargs)
def password_option(*param_decls: str, **kwargs: t.Any) -> t.Callable[[FC], FC]:
"""Add a ``--password`` option which prompts for a password, hiding
input and asking to enter the value again for confirmation.
:param param_decls: One or more option names. Defaults to the single
value ``"--password"``.
:param kwargs: Extra arguments are passed to :func:`option`.
"""
if not param_decls:
param_decls = ("--password",)
kwargs.setdefault("prompt", True)
kwargs.setdefault("confirmation_prompt", True)
kwargs.setdefault("hide_input", True)
return option(*param_decls, **kwargs)
def version_option(
version: t.Optional[str] = None,
*param_decls: str,
package_name: t.Optional[str] = None,
prog_name: t.Optional[str] = None,
message: t.Optional[str] = None,
**kwargs: t.Any,
) -> t.Callable[[FC], FC]:
"""Add a ``--version`` option which immediately prints the version
number and exits the program.
If ``version`` is not provided, Click will try to detect it using
:func:`importlib.metadata.version` to get the version for the
``package_name``. On Python < 3.8, the ``importlib_metadata``
backport must be installed.
If ``package_name`` is not provided, Click will try to detect it by
inspecting the stack frames. This will be used to detect the
version, so it must match the name of the installed package.
:param version: The version number to show. If not provided, Click
will try to detect it.
:param param_decls: One or more option names. Defaults to the single
value ``"--version"``.
:param package_name: The package name to detect the version from. If
not provided, Click will try to detect it.
:param prog_name: The name of the CLI to show in the message. If not
provided, it will be detected from the command.
:param message: The message to show. The values ``%(prog)s``,
``%(package)s``, and ``%(version)s`` are available. Defaults to
``"%(prog)s, version %(version)s"``.
:param kwargs: Extra arguments are passed to :func:`option`.
:raise RuntimeError: ``version`` could not be detected.
.. versionchanged:: 8.0
Add the ``package_name`` parameter, and the ``%(package)s``
value for messages.
.. versionchanged:: 8.0
Use :mod:`importlib.metadata` instead of ``pkg_resources``. The
version is detected based on the package name, not the entry
point name. The Python package name must match the installed
package name, or be passed with ``package_name=``.
"""
if message is None:
message = _("%(prog)s, version %(version)s")
if version is None and package_name is None:
frame = inspect.currentframe()
f_back = frame.f_back if frame is not None else None
f_globals = f_back.f_globals if f_back is not None else None
# break reference cycle
# https://docs.python.org/3/library/inspect.html#the-interpreter-stack
del frame
if f_globals is not None:
package_name = f_globals.get("__name__")
if package_name == "__main__":
package_name = f_globals.get("__package__")
if package_name:
package_name = package_name.partition(".")[0]
def callback(ctx: Context, param: Parameter, value: bool) -> None:
if not value or ctx.resilient_parsing:
return
nonlocal prog_name
nonlocal version
if prog_name is None:
prog_name = ctx.find_root().info_name
if version is None and package_name is not None:
metadata: t.Optional[types.ModuleType]
try:
from importlib import metadata # type: ignore
except ImportError:
# Python < 3.8
import importlib_metadata as metadata # type: ignore
try:
version = metadata.version(package_name) # type: ignore
except metadata.PackageNotFoundError: # type: ignore
raise RuntimeError(
f"{package_name!r} is not installed. Try passing"
" 'package_name' instead."
) from None
if version is None:
raise RuntimeError(
f"Could not determine the version for {package_name!r} automatically."
)
echo(
t.cast(str, message)
% {"prog": prog_name, "package": package_name, "version": version},
color=ctx.color,
)
ctx.exit()
if not param_decls:
param_decls = ("--version",)
kwargs.setdefault("is_flag", True)
kwargs.setdefault("expose_value", False)
kwargs.setdefault("is_eager", True)
kwargs.setdefault("help", _("Show the version and exit."))
kwargs["callback"] = callback
return option(*param_decls, **kwargs)
def help_option(*param_decls: str, **kwargs: t.Any) -> t.Callable[[FC], FC]:
"""Add a ``--help`` option which immediately prints the help page
and exits the program.
This is usually unnecessary, as the ``--help`` option is added to
each command automatically unless ``add_help_option=False`` is
passed.
:param param_decls: One or more option names. Defaults to the single
value ``"--help"``.
:param kwargs: Extra arguments are passed to :func:`option`.
"""
def callback(ctx: Context, param: Parameter, value: bool) -> None:
if not value or ctx.resilient_parsing:
return
echo(ctx.get_help(), color=ctx.color)
ctx.exit()
if not param_decls:
param_decls = ("--help",)
kwargs.setdefault("is_flag", True)
kwargs.setdefault("expose_value", False)
kwargs.setdefault("is_eager", True)
kwargs.setdefault("help", _("Show this message and exit."))
kwargs["callback"] = callback
return option(*param_decls, **kwargs)

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import os
import typing as t
from gettext import gettext as _
from gettext import ngettext
from ._compat import get_text_stderr
from .utils import echo
if t.TYPE_CHECKING:
from .core import Context
from .core import Parameter
def _join_param_hints(
param_hint: t.Optional[t.Union[t.Sequence[str], str]]
) -> t.Optional[str]:
if param_hint is not None and not isinstance(param_hint, str):
return " / ".join(repr(x) for x in param_hint)
return param_hint
class ClickException(Exception):
"""An exception that Click can handle and show to the user."""
#: The exit code for this exception.
exit_code = 1
def __init__(self, message: str) -> None:
super().__init__(message)
self.message = message
def format_message(self) -> str:
return self.message
def __str__(self) -> str:
return self.message
def show(self, file: t.Optional[t.IO] = None) -> None:
if file is None:
file = get_text_stderr()
echo(_("Error: {message}").format(message=self.format_message()), file=file)
class UsageError(ClickException):
"""An internal exception that signals a usage error. This typically
aborts any further handling.
:param message: the error message to display.
:param ctx: optionally the context that caused this error. Click will
fill in the context automatically in some situations.
"""
exit_code = 2
def __init__(self, message: str, ctx: t.Optional["Context"] = None) -> None:
super().__init__(message)
self.ctx = ctx
self.cmd = self.ctx.command if self.ctx else None
def show(self, file: t.Optional[t.IO] = None) -> None:
if file is None:
file = get_text_stderr()
color = None
hint = ""
if (
self.ctx is not None
and self.ctx.command.get_help_option(self.ctx) is not None
):
hint = _("Try '{command} {option}' for help.").format(
command=self.ctx.command_path, option=self.ctx.help_option_names[0]
)
hint = f"{hint}\n"
if self.ctx is not None:
color = self.ctx.color
echo(f"{self.ctx.get_usage()}\n{hint}", file=file, color=color)
echo(
_("Error: {message}").format(message=self.format_message()),
file=file,
color=color,
)
class BadParameter(UsageError):
"""An exception that formats out a standardized error message for a
bad parameter. This is useful when thrown from a callback or type as
Click will attach contextual information to it (for instance, which
parameter it is).
.. versionadded:: 2.0
:param param: the parameter object that caused this error. This can
be left out, and Click will attach this info itself
if possible.
:param param_hint: a string that shows up as parameter name. This
can be used as alternative to `param` in cases
where custom validation should happen. If it is
a string it's used as such, if it's a list then
each item is quoted and separated.
"""
def __init__(
self,
message: str,
ctx: t.Optional["Context"] = None,
param: t.Optional["Parameter"] = None,
param_hint: t.Optional[str] = None,
) -> None:
super().__init__(message, ctx)
self.param = param
self.param_hint = param_hint
def format_message(self) -> str:
if self.param_hint is not None:
param_hint = self.param_hint
elif self.param is not None:
param_hint = self.param.get_error_hint(self.ctx) # type: ignore
else:
return _("Invalid value: {message}").format(message=self.message)
return _("Invalid value for {param_hint}: {message}").format(
param_hint=_join_param_hints(param_hint), message=self.message
)
class MissingParameter(BadParameter):
"""Raised if click required an option or argument but it was not
provided when invoking the script.
.. versionadded:: 4.0
:param param_type: a string that indicates the type of the parameter.
The default is to inherit the parameter type from
the given `param`. Valid values are ``'parameter'``,
``'option'`` or ``'argument'``.
"""
def __init__(
self,
message: t.Optional[str] = None,
ctx: t.Optional["Context"] = None,
param: t.Optional["Parameter"] = None,
param_hint: t.Optional[str] = None,
param_type: t.Optional[str] = None,
) -> None:
super().__init__(message or "", ctx, param, param_hint)
self.param_type = param_type
def format_message(self) -> str:
if self.param_hint is not None:
param_hint: t.Optional[str] = self.param_hint
elif self.param is not None:
param_hint = self.param.get_error_hint(self.ctx) # type: ignore
else:
param_hint = None
param_hint = _join_param_hints(param_hint)
param_hint = f" {param_hint}" if param_hint else ""
param_type = self.param_type
if param_type is None and self.param is not None:
param_type = self.param.param_type_name
msg = self.message
if self.param is not None:
msg_extra = self.param.type.get_missing_message(self.param)
if msg_extra:
if msg:
msg += f". {msg_extra}"
else:
msg = msg_extra
msg = f" {msg}" if msg else ""
# Translate param_type for known types.
if param_type == "argument":
missing = _("Missing argument")
elif param_type == "option":
missing = _("Missing option")
elif param_type == "parameter":
missing = _("Missing parameter")
else:
missing = _("Missing {param_type}").format(param_type=param_type)
return f"{missing}{param_hint}.{msg}"
def __str__(self) -> str:
if not self.message:
param_name = self.param.name if self.param else None
return _("Missing parameter: {param_name}").format(param_name=param_name)
else:
return self.message
class NoSuchOption(UsageError):
"""Raised if click attempted to handle an option that does not
exist.
.. versionadded:: 4.0
"""
def __init__(
self,
option_name: str,
message: t.Optional[str] = None,
possibilities: t.Optional[t.Sequence[str]] = None,
ctx: t.Optional["Context"] = None,
) -> None:
if message is None:
message = _("No such option: {name}").format(name=option_name)
super().__init__(message, ctx)
self.option_name = option_name
self.possibilities = possibilities
def format_message(self) -> str:
if not self.possibilities:
return self.message
possibility_str = ", ".join(sorted(self.possibilities))
suggest = ngettext(
"Did you mean {possibility}?",
"(Possible options: {possibilities})",
len(self.possibilities),
).format(possibility=possibility_str, possibilities=possibility_str)
return f"{self.message} {suggest}"
class BadOptionUsage(UsageError):
"""Raised if an option is generally supplied but the use of the option
was incorrect. This is for instance raised if the number of arguments
for an option is not correct.
.. versionadded:: 4.0
:param option_name: the name of the option being used incorrectly.
"""
def __init__(
self, option_name: str, message: str, ctx: t.Optional["Context"] = None
) -> None:
super().__init__(message, ctx)
self.option_name = option_name
class BadArgumentUsage(UsageError):
"""Raised if an argument is generally supplied but the use of the argument
was incorrect. This is for instance raised if the number of values
for an argument is not correct.
.. versionadded:: 6.0
"""
class FileError(ClickException):
"""Raised if a file cannot be opened."""
def __init__(self, filename: str, hint: t.Optional[str] = None) -> None:
if hint is None:
hint = _("unknown error")
super().__init__(hint)
self.ui_filename = os.fsdecode(filename)
self.filename = filename
def format_message(self) -> str:
return _("Could not open file {filename!r}: {message}").format(
filename=self.ui_filename, message=self.message
)
class Abort(RuntimeError):
"""An internal signalling exception that signals Click to abort."""
class Exit(RuntimeError):
"""An exception that indicates that the application should exit with some
status code.
:param code: the status code to exit with.
"""
__slots__ = ("exit_code",)
def __init__(self, code: int = 0) -> None:
self.exit_code = code

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import typing as t
from contextlib import contextmanager
from gettext import gettext as _
from ._compat import term_len
from .parser import split_opt
# Can force a width. This is used by the test system
FORCED_WIDTH: t.Optional[int] = None
def measure_table(rows: t.Iterable[t.Tuple[str, str]]) -> t.Tuple[int, ...]:
widths: t.Dict[int, int] = {}
for row in rows:
for idx, col in enumerate(row):
widths[idx] = max(widths.get(idx, 0), term_len(col))
return tuple(y for x, y in sorted(widths.items()))
def iter_rows(
rows: t.Iterable[t.Tuple[str, str]], col_count: int
) -> t.Iterator[t.Tuple[str, ...]]:
for row in rows:
yield row + ("",) * (col_count - len(row))
def wrap_text(
text: str,
width: int = 78,
initial_indent: str = "",
subsequent_indent: str = "",
preserve_paragraphs: bool = False,
) -> str:
"""A helper function that intelligently wraps text. By default, it
assumes that it operates on a single paragraph of text but if the
`preserve_paragraphs` parameter is provided it will intelligently
handle paragraphs (defined by two empty lines).
If paragraphs are handled, a paragraph can be prefixed with an empty
line containing the ``\\b`` character (``\\x08``) to indicate that
no rewrapping should happen in that block.
:param text: the text that should be rewrapped.
:param width: the maximum width for the text.
:param initial_indent: the initial indent that should be placed on the
first line as a string.
:param subsequent_indent: the indent string that should be placed on
each consecutive line.
:param preserve_paragraphs: if this flag is set then the wrapping will
intelligently handle paragraphs.
"""
from ._textwrap import TextWrapper
text = text.expandtabs()
wrapper = TextWrapper(
width,
initial_indent=initial_indent,
subsequent_indent=subsequent_indent,
replace_whitespace=False,
)
if not preserve_paragraphs:
return wrapper.fill(text)
p: t.List[t.Tuple[int, bool, str]] = []
buf: t.List[str] = []
indent = None
def _flush_par() -> None:
if not buf:
return
if buf[0].strip() == "\b":
p.append((indent or 0, True, "\n".join(buf[1:])))
else:
p.append((indent or 0, False, " ".join(buf)))
del buf[:]
for line in text.splitlines():
if not line:
_flush_par()
indent = None
else:
if indent is None:
orig_len = term_len(line)
line = line.lstrip()
indent = orig_len - term_len(line)
buf.append(line)
_flush_par()
rv = []
for indent, raw, text in p:
with wrapper.extra_indent(" " * indent):
if raw:
rv.append(wrapper.indent_only(text))
else:
rv.append(wrapper.fill(text))
return "\n\n".join(rv)
class HelpFormatter:
"""This class helps with formatting text-based help pages. It's
usually just needed for very special internal cases, but it's also
exposed so that developers can write their own fancy outputs.
At present, it always writes into memory.
:param indent_increment: the additional increment for each level.
:param width: the width for the text. This defaults to the terminal
width clamped to a maximum of 78.
"""
def __init__(
self,
indent_increment: int = 2,
width: t.Optional[int] = None,
max_width: t.Optional[int] = None,
) -> None:
import shutil
self.indent_increment = indent_increment
if max_width is None:
max_width = 80
if width is None:
width = FORCED_WIDTH
if width is None:
width = max(min(shutil.get_terminal_size().columns, max_width) - 2, 50)
self.width = width
self.current_indent = 0
self.buffer: t.List[str] = []
def write(self, string: str) -> None:
"""Writes a unicode string into the internal buffer."""
self.buffer.append(string)
def indent(self) -> None:
"""Increases the indentation."""
self.current_indent += self.indent_increment
def dedent(self) -> None:
"""Decreases the indentation."""
self.current_indent -= self.indent_increment
def write_usage(
self, prog: str, args: str = "", prefix: t.Optional[str] = None
) -> None:
"""Writes a usage line into the buffer.
:param prog: the program name.
:param args: whitespace separated list of arguments.
:param prefix: The prefix for the first line. Defaults to
``"Usage: "``.
"""
if prefix is None:
prefix = f"{_('Usage:')} "
usage_prefix = f"{prefix:>{self.current_indent}}{prog} "
text_width = self.width - self.current_indent
if text_width >= (term_len(usage_prefix) + 20):
# The arguments will fit to the right of the prefix.
indent = " " * term_len(usage_prefix)
self.write(
wrap_text(
args,
text_width,
initial_indent=usage_prefix,
subsequent_indent=indent,
)
)
else:
# The prefix is too long, put the arguments on the next line.
self.write(usage_prefix)
self.write("\n")
indent = " " * (max(self.current_indent, term_len(prefix)) + 4)
self.write(
wrap_text(
args, text_width, initial_indent=indent, subsequent_indent=indent
)
)
self.write("\n")
def write_heading(self, heading: str) -> None:
"""Writes a heading into the buffer."""
self.write(f"{'':>{self.current_indent}}{heading}:\n")
def write_paragraph(self) -> None:
"""Writes a paragraph into the buffer."""
if self.buffer:
self.write("\n")
def write_text(self, text: str) -> None:
"""Writes re-indented text into the buffer. This rewraps and
preserves paragraphs.
"""
indent = " " * self.current_indent
self.write(
wrap_text(
text,
self.width,
initial_indent=indent,
subsequent_indent=indent,
preserve_paragraphs=True,
)
)
self.write("\n")
def write_dl(
self,
rows: t.Sequence[t.Tuple[str, str]],
col_max: int = 30,
col_spacing: int = 2,
) -> None:
"""Writes a definition list into the buffer. This is how options
and commands are usually formatted.
:param rows: a list of two item tuples for the terms and values.
:param col_max: the maximum width of the first column.
:param col_spacing: the number of spaces between the first and
second column.
"""
rows = list(rows)
widths = measure_table(rows)
if len(widths) != 2:
raise TypeError("Expected two columns for definition list")
first_col = min(widths[0], col_max) + col_spacing
for first, second in iter_rows(rows, len(widths)):
self.write(f"{'':>{self.current_indent}}{first}")
if not second:
self.write("\n")
continue
if term_len(first) <= first_col - col_spacing:
self.write(" " * (first_col - term_len(first)))
else:
self.write("\n")
self.write(" " * (first_col + self.current_indent))
text_width = max(self.width - first_col - 2, 10)
wrapped_text = wrap_text(second, text_width, preserve_paragraphs=True)
lines = wrapped_text.splitlines()
if lines:
self.write(f"{lines[0]}\n")
for line in lines[1:]:
self.write(f"{'':>{first_col + self.current_indent}}{line}\n")
else:
self.write("\n")
@contextmanager
def section(self, name: str) -> t.Iterator[None]:
"""Helpful context manager that writes a paragraph, a heading,
and the indents.
:param name: the section name that is written as heading.
"""
self.write_paragraph()
self.write_heading(name)
self.indent()
try:
yield
finally:
self.dedent()
@contextmanager
def indentation(self) -> t.Iterator[None]:
"""A context manager that increases the indentation."""
self.indent()
try:
yield
finally:
self.dedent()
def getvalue(self) -> str:
"""Returns the buffer contents."""
return "".join(self.buffer)
def join_options(options: t.Sequence[str]) -> t.Tuple[str, bool]:
"""Given a list of option strings this joins them in the most appropriate
way and returns them in the form ``(formatted_string,
any_prefix_is_slash)`` where the second item in the tuple is a flag that
indicates if any of the option prefixes was a slash.
"""
rv = []
any_prefix_is_slash = False
for opt in options:
prefix = split_opt(opt)[0]
if prefix == "/":
any_prefix_is_slash = True
rv.append((len(prefix), opt))
rv.sort(key=lambda x: x[0])
return ", ".join(x[1] for x in rv), any_prefix_is_slash

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import typing as t
from threading import local
if t.TYPE_CHECKING:
import typing_extensions as te
from .core import Context
_local = local()
@t.overload
def get_current_context(silent: "te.Literal[False]" = False) -> "Context":
...
@t.overload
def get_current_context(silent: bool = ...) -> t.Optional["Context"]:
...
def get_current_context(silent: bool = False) -> t.Optional["Context"]:
"""Returns the current click context. This can be used as a way to
access the current context object from anywhere. This is a more implicit
alternative to the :func:`pass_context` decorator. This function is
primarily useful for helpers such as :func:`echo` which might be
interested in changing its behavior based on the current context.
To push the current context, :meth:`Context.scope` can be used.
.. versionadded:: 5.0
:param silent: if set to `True` the return value is `None` if no context
is available. The default behavior is to raise a
:exc:`RuntimeError`.
"""
try:
return t.cast("Context", _local.stack[-1])
except (AttributeError, IndexError) as e:
if not silent:
raise RuntimeError("There is no active click context.") from e
return None
def push_context(ctx: "Context") -> None:
"""Pushes a new context to the current stack."""
_local.__dict__.setdefault("stack", []).append(ctx)
def pop_context() -> None:
"""Removes the top level from the stack."""
_local.stack.pop()
def resolve_color_default(color: t.Optional[bool] = None) -> t.Optional[bool]:
"""Internal helper to get the default value of the color flag. If a
value is passed it's returned unchanged, otherwise it's looked up from
the current context.
"""
if color is not None:
return color
ctx = get_current_context(silent=True)
if ctx is not None:
return ctx.color
return None

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@ -0,0 +1,529 @@
"""
This module started out as largely a copy paste from the stdlib's
optparse module with the features removed that we do not need from
optparse because we implement them in Click on a higher level (for
instance type handling, help formatting and a lot more).
The plan is to remove more and more from here over time.
The reason this is a different module and not optparse from the stdlib
is that there are differences in 2.x and 3.x about the error messages
generated and optparse in the stdlib uses gettext for no good reason
and might cause us issues.
Click uses parts of optparse written by Gregory P. Ward and maintained
by the Python Software Foundation. This is limited to code in parser.py.
Copyright 2001-2006 Gregory P. Ward. All rights reserved.
Copyright 2002-2006 Python Software Foundation. All rights reserved.
"""
# This code uses parts of optparse written by Gregory P. Ward and
# maintained by the Python Software Foundation.
# Copyright 2001-2006 Gregory P. Ward
# Copyright 2002-2006 Python Software Foundation
import typing as t
from collections import deque
from gettext import gettext as _
from gettext import ngettext
from .exceptions import BadArgumentUsage
from .exceptions import BadOptionUsage
from .exceptions import NoSuchOption
from .exceptions import UsageError
if t.TYPE_CHECKING:
import typing_extensions as te
from .core import Argument as CoreArgument
from .core import Context
from .core import Option as CoreOption
from .core import Parameter as CoreParameter
V = t.TypeVar("V")
# Sentinel value that indicates an option was passed as a flag without a
# value but is not a flag option. Option.consume_value uses this to
# prompt or use the flag_value.
_flag_needs_value = object()
def _unpack_args(
args: t.Sequence[str], nargs_spec: t.Sequence[int]
) -> t.Tuple[t.Sequence[t.Union[str, t.Sequence[t.Optional[str]], None]], t.List[str]]:
"""Given an iterable of arguments and an iterable of nargs specifications,
it returns a tuple with all the unpacked arguments at the first index
and all remaining arguments as the second.
The nargs specification is the number of arguments that should be consumed
or `-1` to indicate that this position should eat up all the remainders.
Missing items are filled with `None`.
"""
args = deque(args)
nargs_spec = deque(nargs_spec)
rv: t.List[t.Union[str, t.Tuple[t.Optional[str], ...], None]] = []
spos: t.Optional[int] = None
def _fetch(c: "te.Deque[V]") -> t.Optional[V]:
try:
if spos is None:
return c.popleft()
else:
return c.pop()
except IndexError:
return None
while nargs_spec:
nargs = _fetch(nargs_spec)
if nargs is None:
continue
if nargs == 1:
rv.append(_fetch(args))
elif nargs > 1:
x = [_fetch(args) for _ in range(nargs)]
# If we're reversed, we're pulling in the arguments in reverse,
# so we need to turn them around.
if spos is not None:
x.reverse()
rv.append(tuple(x))
elif nargs < 0:
if spos is not None:
raise TypeError("Cannot have two nargs < 0")
spos = len(rv)
rv.append(None)
# spos is the position of the wildcard (star). If it's not `None`,
# we fill it with the remainder.
if spos is not None:
rv[spos] = tuple(args)
args = []
rv[spos + 1 :] = reversed(rv[spos + 1 :])
return tuple(rv), list(args)
def split_opt(opt: str) -> t.Tuple[str, str]:
first = opt[:1]
if first.isalnum():
return "", opt
if opt[1:2] == first:
return opt[:2], opt[2:]
return first, opt[1:]
def normalize_opt(opt: str, ctx: t.Optional["Context"]) -> str:
if ctx is None or ctx.token_normalize_func is None:
return opt
prefix, opt = split_opt(opt)
return f"{prefix}{ctx.token_normalize_func(opt)}"
def split_arg_string(string: str) -> t.List[str]:
"""Split an argument string as with :func:`shlex.split`, but don't
fail if the string is incomplete. Ignores a missing closing quote or
incomplete escape sequence and uses the partial token as-is.
.. code-block:: python
split_arg_string("example 'my file")
["example", "my file"]
split_arg_string("example my\\")
["example", "my"]
:param string: String to split.
"""
import shlex
lex = shlex.shlex(string, posix=True)
lex.whitespace_split = True
lex.commenters = ""
out = []
try:
for token in lex:
out.append(token)
except ValueError:
# Raised when end-of-string is reached in an invalid state. Use
# the partial token as-is. The quote or escape character is in
# lex.state, not lex.token.
out.append(lex.token)
return out
class Option:
def __init__(
self,
obj: "CoreOption",
opts: t.Sequence[str],
dest: t.Optional[str],
action: t.Optional[str] = None,
nargs: int = 1,
const: t.Optional[t.Any] = None,
):
self._short_opts = []
self._long_opts = []
self.prefixes = set()
for opt in opts:
prefix, value = split_opt(opt)
if not prefix:
raise ValueError(f"Invalid start character for option ({opt})")
self.prefixes.add(prefix[0])
if len(prefix) == 1 and len(value) == 1:
self._short_opts.append(opt)
else:
self._long_opts.append(opt)
self.prefixes.add(prefix)
if action is None:
action = "store"
self.dest = dest
self.action = action
self.nargs = nargs
self.const = const
self.obj = obj
@property
def takes_value(self) -> bool:
return self.action in ("store", "append")
def process(self, value: str, state: "ParsingState") -> None:
if self.action == "store":
state.opts[self.dest] = value # type: ignore
elif self.action == "store_const":
state.opts[self.dest] = self.const # type: ignore
elif self.action == "append":
state.opts.setdefault(self.dest, []).append(value) # type: ignore
elif self.action == "append_const":
state.opts.setdefault(self.dest, []).append(self.const) # type: ignore
elif self.action == "count":
state.opts[self.dest] = state.opts.get(self.dest, 0) + 1 # type: ignore
else:
raise ValueError(f"unknown action '{self.action}'")
state.order.append(self.obj)
class Argument:
def __init__(self, obj: "CoreArgument", dest: t.Optional[str], nargs: int = 1):
self.dest = dest
self.nargs = nargs
self.obj = obj
def process(
self,
value: t.Union[t.Optional[str], t.Sequence[t.Optional[str]]],
state: "ParsingState",
) -> None:
if self.nargs > 1:
assert value is not None
holes = sum(1 for x in value if x is None)
if holes == len(value):
value = None
elif holes != 0:
raise BadArgumentUsage(
_("Argument {name!r} takes {nargs} values.").format(
name=self.dest, nargs=self.nargs
)
)
if self.nargs == -1 and self.obj.envvar is not None and value == ():
# Replace empty tuple with None so that a value from the
# environment may be tried.
value = None
state.opts[self.dest] = value # type: ignore
state.order.append(self.obj)
class ParsingState:
def __init__(self, rargs: t.List[str]) -> None:
self.opts: t.Dict[str, t.Any] = {}
self.largs: t.List[str] = []
self.rargs = rargs
self.order: t.List["CoreParameter"] = []
class OptionParser:
"""The option parser is an internal class that is ultimately used to
parse options and arguments. It's modelled after optparse and brings
a similar but vastly simplified API. It should generally not be used
directly as the high level Click classes wrap it for you.
It's not nearly as extensible as optparse or argparse as it does not
implement features that are implemented on a higher level (such as
types or defaults).
:param ctx: optionally the :class:`~click.Context` where this parser
should go with.
"""
def __init__(self, ctx: t.Optional["Context"] = None) -> None:
#: The :class:`~click.Context` for this parser. This might be
#: `None` for some advanced use cases.
self.ctx = ctx
#: This controls how the parser deals with interspersed arguments.
#: If this is set to `False`, the parser will stop on the first
#: non-option. Click uses this to implement nested subcommands
#: safely.
self.allow_interspersed_args = True
#: This tells the parser how to deal with unknown options. By
#: default it will error out (which is sensible), but there is a
#: second mode where it will ignore it and continue processing
#: after shifting all the unknown options into the resulting args.
self.ignore_unknown_options = False
if ctx is not None:
self.allow_interspersed_args = ctx.allow_interspersed_args
self.ignore_unknown_options = ctx.ignore_unknown_options
self._short_opt: t.Dict[str, Option] = {}
self._long_opt: t.Dict[str, Option] = {}
self._opt_prefixes = {"-", "--"}
self._args: t.List[Argument] = []
def add_option(
self,
obj: "CoreOption",
opts: t.Sequence[str],
dest: t.Optional[str],
action: t.Optional[str] = None,
nargs: int = 1,
const: t.Optional[t.Any] = None,
) -> None:
"""Adds a new option named `dest` to the parser. The destination
is not inferred (unlike with optparse) and needs to be explicitly
provided. Action can be any of ``store``, ``store_const``,
``append``, ``append_const`` or ``count``.
The `obj` can be used to identify the option in the order list
that is returned from the parser.
"""
opts = [normalize_opt(opt, self.ctx) for opt in opts]
option = Option(obj, opts, dest, action=action, nargs=nargs, const=const)
self._opt_prefixes.update(option.prefixes)
for opt in option._short_opts:
self._short_opt[opt] = option
for opt in option._long_opts:
self._long_opt[opt] = option
def add_argument(
self, obj: "CoreArgument", dest: t.Optional[str], nargs: int = 1
) -> None:
"""Adds a positional argument named `dest` to the parser.
The `obj` can be used to identify the option in the order list
that is returned from the parser.
"""
self._args.append(Argument(obj, dest=dest, nargs=nargs))
def parse_args(
self, args: t.List[str]
) -> t.Tuple[t.Dict[str, t.Any], t.List[str], t.List["CoreParameter"]]:
"""Parses positional arguments and returns ``(values, args, order)``
for the parsed options and arguments as well as the leftover
arguments if there are any. The order is a list of objects as they
appear on the command line. If arguments appear multiple times they
will be memorized multiple times as well.
"""
state = ParsingState(args)
try:
self._process_args_for_options(state)
self._process_args_for_args(state)
except UsageError:
if self.ctx is None or not self.ctx.resilient_parsing:
raise
return state.opts, state.largs, state.order
def _process_args_for_args(self, state: ParsingState) -> None:
pargs, args = _unpack_args(
state.largs + state.rargs, [x.nargs for x in self._args]
)
for idx, arg in enumerate(self._args):
arg.process(pargs[idx], state)
state.largs = args
state.rargs = []
def _process_args_for_options(self, state: ParsingState) -> None:
while state.rargs:
arg = state.rargs.pop(0)
arglen = len(arg)
# Double dashes always handled explicitly regardless of what
# prefixes are valid.
if arg == "--":
return
elif arg[:1] in self._opt_prefixes and arglen > 1:
self._process_opts(arg, state)
elif self.allow_interspersed_args:
state.largs.append(arg)
else:
state.rargs.insert(0, arg)
return
# Say this is the original argument list:
# [arg0, arg1, ..., arg(i-1), arg(i), arg(i+1), ..., arg(N-1)]
# ^
# (we are about to process arg(i)).
#
# Then rargs is [arg(i), ..., arg(N-1)] and largs is a *subset* of
# [arg0, ..., arg(i-1)] (any options and their arguments will have
# been removed from largs).
#
# The while loop will usually consume 1 or more arguments per pass.
# If it consumes 1 (eg. arg is an option that takes no arguments),
# then after _process_arg() is done the situation is:
#
# largs = subset of [arg0, ..., arg(i)]
# rargs = [arg(i+1), ..., arg(N-1)]
#
# If allow_interspersed_args is false, largs will always be
# *empty* -- still a subset of [arg0, ..., arg(i-1)], but
# not a very interesting subset!
def _match_long_opt(
self, opt: str, explicit_value: t.Optional[str], state: ParsingState
) -> None:
if opt not in self._long_opt:
from difflib import get_close_matches
possibilities = get_close_matches(opt, self._long_opt)
raise NoSuchOption(opt, possibilities=possibilities, ctx=self.ctx)
option = self._long_opt[opt]
if option.takes_value:
# At this point it's safe to modify rargs by injecting the
# explicit value, because no exception is raised in this
# branch. This means that the inserted value will be fully
# consumed.
if explicit_value is not None:
state.rargs.insert(0, explicit_value)
value = self._get_value_from_state(opt, option, state)
elif explicit_value is not None:
raise BadOptionUsage(
opt, _("Option {name!r} does not take a value.").format(name=opt)
)
else:
value = None
option.process(value, state)
def _match_short_opt(self, arg: str, state: ParsingState) -> None:
stop = False
i = 1
prefix = arg[0]
unknown_options = []
for ch in arg[1:]:
opt = normalize_opt(f"{prefix}{ch}", self.ctx)
option = self._short_opt.get(opt)
i += 1
if not option:
if self.ignore_unknown_options:
unknown_options.append(ch)
continue
raise NoSuchOption(opt, ctx=self.ctx)
if option.takes_value:
# Any characters left in arg? Pretend they're the
# next arg, and stop consuming characters of arg.
if i < len(arg):
state.rargs.insert(0, arg[i:])
stop = True
value = self._get_value_from_state(opt, option, state)
else:
value = None
option.process(value, state)
if stop:
break
# If we got any unknown options we re-combinate the string of the
# remaining options and re-attach the prefix, then report that
# to the state as new larg. This way there is basic combinatorics
# that can be achieved while still ignoring unknown arguments.
if self.ignore_unknown_options and unknown_options:
state.largs.append(f"{prefix}{''.join(unknown_options)}")
def _get_value_from_state(
self, option_name: str, option: Option, state: ParsingState
) -> t.Any:
nargs = option.nargs
if len(state.rargs) < nargs:
if option.obj._flag_needs_value:
# Option allows omitting the value.
value = _flag_needs_value
else:
raise BadOptionUsage(
option_name,
ngettext(
"Option {name!r} requires an argument.",
"Option {name!r} requires {nargs} arguments.",
nargs,
).format(name=option_name, nargs=nargs),
)
elif nargs == 1:
next_rarg = state.rargs[0]
if (
option.obj._flag_needs_value
and isinstance(next_rarg, str)
and next_rarg[:1] in self._opt_prefixes
and len(next_rarg) > 1
):
# The next arg looks like the start of an option, don't
# use it as the value if omitting the value is allowed.
value = _flag_needs_value
else:
value = state.rargs.pop(0)
else:
value = tuple(state.rargs[:nargs])
del state.rargs[:nargs]
return value
def _process_opts(self, arg: str, state: ParsingState) -> None:
explicit_value = None
# Long option handling happens in two parts. The first part is
# supporting explicitly attached values. In any case, we will try
# to long match the option first.
if "=" in arg:
long_opt, explicit_value = arg.split("=", 1)
else:
long_opt = arg
norm_long_opt = normalize_opt(long_opt, self.ctx)
# At this point we will match the (assumed) long option through
# the long option matching code. Note that this allows options
# like "-foo" to be matched as long options.
try:
self._match_long_opt(norm_long_opt, explicit_value, state)
except NoSuchOption:
# At this point the long option matching failed, and we need
# to try with short options. However there is a special rule
# which says, that if we have a two character options prefix
# (applies to "--foo" for instance), we do not dispatch to the
# short option code and will instead raise the no option
# error.
if arg[:2] not in self._opt_prefixes:
self._match_short_opt(arg, state)
return
if not self.ignore_unknown_options:
raise
state.largs.append(arg)

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@ -0,0 +1,580 @@
import os
import re
import typing as t
from gettext import gettext as _
from .core import Argument
from .core import BaseCommand
from .core import Context
from .core import MultiCommand
from .core import Option
from .core import Parameter
from .core import ParameterSource
from .parser import split_arg_string
from .utils import echo
def shell_complete(
cli: BaseCommand,
ctx_args: t.Dict[str, t.Any],
prog_name: str,
complete_var: str,
instruction: str,
) -> int:
"""Perform shell completion for the given CLI program.
:param cli: Command being called.
:param ctx_args: Extra arguments to pass to
``cli.make_context``.
:param prog_name: Name of the executable in the shell.
:param complete_var: Name of the environment variable that holds
the completion instruction.
:param instruction: Value of ``complete_var`` with the completion
instruction and shell, in the form ``instruction_shell``.
:return: Status code to exit with.
"""
shell, _, instruction = instruction.partition("_")
comp_cls = get_completion_class(shell)
if comp_cls is None:
return 1
comp = comp_cls(cli, ctx_args, prog_name, complete_var)
if instruction == "source":
echo(comp.source())
return 0
if instruction == "complete":
echo(comp.complete())
return 0
return 1
class CompletionItem:
"""Represents a completion value and metadata about the value. The
default metadata is ``type`` to indicate special shell handling,
and ``help`` if a shell supports showing a help string next to the
value.
Arbitrary parameters can be passed when creating the object, and
accessed using ``item.attr``. If an attribute wasn't passed,
accessing it returns ``None``.
:param value: The completion suggestion.
:param type: Tells the shell script to provide special completion
support for the type. Click uses ``"dir"`` and ``"file"``.
:param help: String shown next to the value if supported.
:param kwargs: Arbitrary metadata. The built-in implementations
don't use this, but custom type completions paired with custom
shell support could use it.
"""
__slots__ = ("value", "type", "help", "_info")
def __init__(
self,
value: t.Any,
type: str = "plain",
help: t.Optional[str] = None,
**kwargs: t.Any,
) -> None:
self.value = value
self.type = type
self.help = help
self._info = kwargs
def __getattr__(self, name: str) -> t.Any:
return self._info.get(name)
# Only Bash >= 4.4 has the nosort option.
_SOURCE_BASH = """\
%(complete_func)s() {
local IFS=$'\\n'
local response
response=$(env COMP_WORDS="${COMP_WORDS[*]}" COMP_CWORD=$COMP_CWORD \
%(complete_var)s=bash_complete $1)
for completion in $response; do
IFS=',' read type value <<< "$completion"
if [[ $type == 'dir' ]]; then
COMPREPLY=()
compopt -o dirnames
elif [[ $type == 'file' ]]; then
COMPREPLY=()
compopt -o default
elif [[ $type == 'plain' ]]; then
COMPREPLY+=($value)
fi
done
return 0
}
%(complete_func)s_setup() {
complete -o nosort -F %(complete_func)s %(prog_name)s
}
%(complete_func)s_setup;
"""
_SOURCE_ZSH = """\
#compdef %(prog_name)s
%(complete_func)s() {
local -a completions
local -a completions_with_descriptions
local -a response
(( ! $+commands[%(prog_name)s] )) && return 1
response=("${(@f)$(env COMP_WORDS="${words[*]}" COMP_CWORD=$((CURRENT-1)) \
%(complete_var)s=zsh_complete %(prog_name)s)}")
for type key descr in ${response}; do
if [[ "$type" == "plain" ]]; then
if [[ "$descr" == "_" ]]; then
completions+=("$key")
else
completions_with_descriptions+=("$key":"$descr")
fi
elif [[ "$type" == "dir" ]]; then
_path_files -/
elif [[ "$type" == "file" ]]; then
_path_files -f
fi
done
if [ -n "$completions_with_descriptions" ]; then
_describe -V unsorted completions_with_descriptions -U
fi
if [ -n "$completions" ]; then
compadd -U -V unsorted -a completions
fi
}
compdef %(complete_func)s %(prog_name)s;
"""
_SOURCE_FISH = """\
function %(complete_func)s;
set -l response;
for value in (env %(complete_var)s=fish_complete COMP_WORDS=(commandline -cp) \
COMP_CWORD=(commandline -t) %(prog_name)s);
set response $response $value;
end;
for completion in $response;
set -l metadata (string split "," $completion);
if test $metadata[1] = "dir";
__fish_complete_directories $metadata[2];
else if test $metadata[1] = "file";
__fish_complete_path $metadata[2];
else if test $metadata[1] = "plain";
echo $metadata[2];
end;
end;
end;
complete --no-files --command %(prog_name)s --arguments \
"(%(complete_func)s)";
"""
class ShellComplete:
"""Base class for providing shell completion support. A subclass for
a given shell will override attributes and methods to implement the
completion instructions (``source`` and ``complete``).
:param cli: Command being called.
:param prog_name: Name of the executable in the shell.
:param complete_var: Name of the environment variable that holds
the completion instruction.
.. versionadded:: 8.0
"""
name: t.ClassVar[str]
"""Name to register the shell as with :func:`add_completion_class`.
This is used in completion instructions (``{name}_source`` and
``{name}_complete``).
"""
source_template: t.ClassVar[str]
"""Completion script template formatted by :meth:`source`. This must
be provided by subclasses.
"""
def __init__(
self,
cli: BaseCommand,
ctx_args: t.Dict[str, t.Any],
prog_name: str,
complete_var: str,
) -> None:
self.cli = cli
self.ctx_args = ctx_args
self.prog_name = prog_name
self.complete_var = complete_var
@property
def func_name(self) -> str:
"""The name of the shell function defined by the completion
script.
"""
safe_name = re.sub(r"\W*", "", self.prog_name.replace("-", "_"), re.ASCII)
return f"_{safe_name}_completion"
def source_vars(self) -> t.Dict[str, t.Any]:
"""Vars for formatting :attr:`source_template`.
By default this provides ``complete_func``, ``complete_var``,
and ``prog_name``.
"""
return {
"complete_func": self.func_name,
"complete_var": self.complete_var,
"prog_name": self.prog_name,
}
def source(self) -> str:
"""Produce the shell script that defines the completion
function. By default this ``%``-style formats
:attr:`source_template` with the dict returned by
:meth:`source_vars`.
"""
return self.source_template % self.source_vars()
def get_completion_args(self) -> t.Tuple[t.List[str], str]:
"""Use the env vars defined by the shell script to return a
tuple of ``args, incomplete``. This must be implemented by
subclasses.
"""
raise NotImplementedError
def get_completions(
self, args: t.List[str], incomplete: str
) -> t.List[CompletionItem]:
"""Determine the context and last complete command or parameter
from the complete args. Call that object's ``shell_complete``
method to get the completions for the incomplete value.
:param args: List of complete args before the incomplete value.
:param incomplete: Value being completed. May be empty.
"""
ctx = _resolve_context(self.cli, self.ctx_args, self.prog_name, args)
obj, incomplete = _resolve_incomplete(ctx, args, incomplete)
return obj.shell_complete(ctx, incomplete)
def format_completion(self, item: CompletionItem) -> str:
"""Format a completion item into the form recognized by the
shell script. This must be implemented by subclasses.
:param item: Completion item to format.
"""
raise NotImplementedError
def complete(self) -> str:
"""Produce the completion data to send back to the shell.
By default this calls :meth:`get_completion_args`, gets the
completions, then calls :meth:`format_completion` for each
completion.
"""
args, incomplete = self.get_completion_args()
completions = self.get_completions(args, incomplete)
out = [self.format_completion(item) for item in completions]
return "\n".join(out)
class BashComplete(ShellComplete):
"""Shell completion for Bash."""
name = "bash"
source_template = _SOURCE_BASH
def _check_version(self) -> None:
import subprocess
output = subprocess.run(
["bash", "-c", "echo ${BASH_VERSION}"], stdout=subprocess.PIPE
)
match = re.search(r"^(\d+)\.(\d+)\.\d+", output.stdout.decode())
if match is not None:
major, minor = match.groups()
if major < "4" or major == "4" and minor < "4":
raise RuntimeError(
_(
"Shell completion is not supported for Bash"
" versions older than 4.4."
)
)
else:
raise RuntimeError(
_("Couldn't detect Bash version, shell completion is not supported.")
)
def source(self) -> str:
self._check_version()
return super().source()
def get_completion_args(self) -> t.Tuple[t.List[str], str]:
cwords = split_arg_string(os.environ["COMP_WORDS"])
cword = int(os.environ["COMP_CWORD"])
args = cwords[1:cword]
try:
incomplete = cwords[cword]
except IndexError:
incomplete = ""
return args, incomplete
def format_completion(self, item: CompletionItem) -> str:
return f"{item.type},{item.value}"
class ZshComplete(ShellComplete):
"""Shell completion for Zsh."""
name = "zsh"
source_template = _SOURCE_ZSH
def get_completion_args(self) -> t.Tuple[t.List[str], str]:
cwords = split_arg_string(os.environ["COMP_WORDS"])
cword = int(os.environ["COMP_CWORD"])
args = cwords[1:cword]
try:
incomplete = cwords[cword]
except IndexError:
incomplete = ""
return args, incomplete
def format_completion(self, item: CompletionItem) -> str:
return f"{item.type}\n{item.value}\n{item.help if item.help else '_'}"
class FishComplete(ShellComplete):
"""Shell completion for Fish."""
name = "fish"
source_template = _SOURCE_FISH
def get_completion_args(self) -> t.Tuple[t.List[str], str]:
cwords = split_arg_string(os.environ["COMP_WORDS"])
incomplete = os.environ["COMP_CWORD"]
args = cwords[1:]
# Fish stores the partial word in both COMP_WORDS and
# COMP_CWORD, remove it from complete args.
if incomplete and args and args[-1] == incomplete:
args.pop()
return args, incomplete
def format_completion(self, item: CompletionItem) -> str:
if item.help:
return f"{item.type},{item.value}\t{item.help}"
return f"{item.type},{item.value}"
_available_shells: t.Dict[str, t.Type[ShellComplete]] = {
"bash": BashComplete,
"fish": FishComplete,
"zsh": ZshComplete,
}
def add_completion_class(
cls: t.Type[ShellComplete], name: t.Optional[str] = None
) -> None:
"""Register a :class:`ShellComplete` subclass under the given name.
The name will be provided by the completion instruction environment
variable during completion.
:param cls: The completion class that will handle completion for the
shell.
:param name: Name to register the class under. Defaults to the
class's ``name`` attribute.
"""
if name is None:
name = cls.name
_available_shells[name] = cls
def get_completion_class(shell: str) -> t.Optional[t.Type[ShellComplete]]:
"""Look up a registered :class:`ShellComplete` subclass by the name
provided by the completion instruction environment variable. If the
name isn't registered, returns ``None``.
:param shell: Name the class is registered under.
"""
return _available_shells.get(shell)
def _is_incomplete_argument(ctx: Context, param: Parameter) -> bool:
"""Determine if the given parameter is an argument that can still
accept values.
:param ctx: Invocation context for the command represented by the
parsed complete args.
:param param: Argument object being checked.
"""
if not isinstance(param, Argument):
return False
assert param.name is not None
value = ctx.params[param.name]
return (
param.nargs == -1
or ctx.get_parameter_source(param.name) is not ParameterSource.COMMANDLINE
or (
param.nargs > 1
and isinstance(value, (tuple, list))
and len(value) < param.nargs
)
)
def _start_of_option(ctx: Context, value: str) -> bool:
"""Check if the value looks like the start of an option."""
if not value:
return False
c = value[0]
return c in ctx._opt_prefixes
def _is_incomplete_option(ctx: Context, args: t.List[str], param: Parameter) -> bool:
"""Determine if the given parameter is an option that needs a value.
:param args: List of complete args before the incomplete value.
:param param: Option object being checked.
"""
if not isinstance(param, Option):
return False
if param.is_flag or param.count:
return False
last_option = None
for index, arg in enumerate(reversed(args)):
if index + 1 > param.nargs:
break
if _start_of_option(ctx, arg):
last_option = arg
return last_option is not None and last_option in param.opts
def _resolve_context(
cli: BaseCommand, ctx_args: t.Dict[str, t.Any], prog_name: str, args: t.List[str]
) -> Context:
"""Produce the context hierarchy starting with the command and
traversing the complete arguments. This only follows the commands,
it doesn't trigger input prompts or callbacks.
:param cli: Command being called.
:param prog_name: Name of the executable in the shell.
:param args: List of complete args before the incomplete value.
"""
ctx_args["resilient_parsing"] = True
ctx = cli.make_context(prog_name, args.copy(), **ctx_args)
args = ctx.protected_args + ctx.args
while args:
command = ctx.command
if isinstance(command, MultiCommand):
if not command.chain:
name, cmd, args = command.resolve_command(ctx, args)
if cmd is None:
return ctx
ctx = cmd.make_context(name, args, parent=ctx, resilient_parsing=True)
args = ctx.protected_args + ctx.args
else:
while args:
name, cmd, args = command.resolve_command(ctx, args)
if cmd is None:
return ctx
sub_ctx = cmd.make_context(
name,
args,
parent=ctx,
allow_extra_args=True,
allow_interspersed_args=False,
resilient_parsing=True,
)
args = sub_ctx.args
ctx = sub_ctx
args = [*sub_ctx.protected_args, *sub_ctx.args]
else:
break
return ctx
def _resolve_incomplete(
ctx: Context, args: t.List[str], incomplete: str
) -> t.Tuple[t.Union[BaseCommand, Parameter], str]:
"""Find the Click object that will handle the completion of the
incomplete value. Return the object and the incomplete value.
:param ctx: Invocation context for the command represented by
the parsed complete args.
:param args: List of complete args before the incomplete value.
:param incomplete: Value being completed. May be empty.
"""
# Different shells treat an "=" between a long option name and
# value differently. Might keep the value joined, return the "="
# as a separate item, or return the split name and value. Always
# split and discard the "=" to make completion easier.
if incomplete == "=":
incomplete = ""
elif "=" in incomplete and _start_of_option(ctx, incomplete):
name, _, incomplete = incomplete.partition("=")
args.append(name)
# The "--" marker tells Click to stop treating values as options
# even if they start with the option character. If it hasn't been
# given and the incomplete arg looks like an option, the current
# command will provide option name completions.
if "--" not in args and _start_of_option(ctx, incomplete):
return ctx.command, incomplete
params = ctx.command.get_params(ctx)
# If the last complete arg is an option name with an incomplete
# value, the option will provide value completions.
for param in params:
if _is_incomplete_option(ctx, args, param):
return param, incomplete
# It's not an option name or value. The first argument without a
# parsed value will provide value completions.
for param in params:
if _is_incomplete_argument(ctx, param):
return param, incomplete
# There were no unparsed arguments, the command may be a group that
# will provide command name completions.
return ctx.command, incomplete

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@ -0,0 +1,787 @@
import inspect
import io
import itertools
import os
import sys
import typing as t
from gettext import gettext as _
from ._compat import isatty
from ._compat import strip_ansi
from ._compat import WIN
from .exceptions import Abort
from .exceptions import UsageError
from .globals import resolve_color_default
from .types import Choice
from .types import convert_type
from .types import ParamType
from .utils import echo
from .utils import LazyFile
if t.TYPE_CHECKING:
from ._termui_impl import ProgressBar
V = t.TypeVar("V")
# The prompt functions to use. The doc tools currently override these
# functions to customize how they work.
visible_prompt_func: t.Callable[[str], str] = input
_ansi_colors = {
"black": 30,
"red": 31,
"green": 32,
"yellow": 33,
"blue": 34,
"magenta": 35,
"cyan": 36,
"white": 37,
"reset": 39,
"bright_black": 90,
"bright_red": 91,
"bright_green": 92,
"bright_yellow": 93,
"bright_blue": 94,
"bright_magenta": 95,
"bright_cyan": 96,
"bright_white": 97,
}
_ansi_reset_all = "\033[0m"
def hidden_prompt_func(prompt: str) -> str:
import getpass
return getpass.getpass(prompt)
def _build_prompt(
text: str,
suffix: str,
show_default: bool = False,
default: t.Optional[t.Any] = None,
show_choices: bool = True,
type: t.Optional[ParamType] = None,
) -> str:
prompt = text
if type is not None and show_choices and isinstance(type, Choice):
prompt += f" ({', '.join(map(str, type.choices))})"
if default is not None and show_default:
prompt = f"{prompt} [{_format_default(default)}]"
return f"{prompt}{suffix}"
def _format_default(default: t.Any) -> t.Any:
if isinstance(default, (io.IOBase, LazyFile)) and hasattr(default, "name"):
return default.name # type: ignore
return default
def prompt(
text: str,
default: t.Optional[t.Any] = None,
hide_input: bool = False,
confirmation_prompt: t.Union[bool, str] = False,
type: t.Optional[t.Union[ParamType, t.Any]] = None,
value_proc: t.Optional[t.Callable[[str], t.Any]] = None,
prompt_suffix: str = ": ",
show_default: bool = True,
err: bool = False,
show_choices: bool = True,
) -> t.Any:
"""Prompts a user for input. This is a convenience function that can
be used to prompt a user for input later.
If the user aborts the input by sending an interrupt signal, this
function will catch it and raise a :exc:`Abort` exception.
:param text: the text to show for the prompt.
:param default: the default value to use if no input happens. If this
is not given it will prompt until it's aborted.
:param hide_input: if this is set to true then the input value will
be hidden.
:param confirmation_prompt: Prompt a second time to confirm the
value. Can be set to a string instead of ``True`` to customize
the message.
:param type: the type to use to check the value against.
:param value_proc: if this parameter is provided it's a function that
is invoked instead of the type conversion to
convert a value.
:param prompt_suffix: a suffix that should be added to the prompt.
:param show_default: shows or hides the default value in the prompt.
:param err: if set to true the file defaults to ``stderr`` instead of
``stdout``, the same as with echo.
:param show_choices: Show or hide choices if the passed type is a Choice.
For example if type is a Choice of either day or week,
show_choices is true and text is "Group by" then the
prompt will be "Group by (day, week): ".
.. versionadded:: 8.0
``confirmation_prompt`` can be a custom string.
.. versionadded:: 7.0
Added the ``show_choices`` parameter.
.. versionadded:: 6.0
Added unicode support for cmd.exe on Windows.
.. versionadded:: 4.0
Added the `err` parameter.
"""
def prompt_func(text: str) -> str:
f = hidden_prompt_func if hide_input else visible_prompt_func
try:
# Write the prompt separately so that we get nice
# coloring through colorama on Windows
echo(text.rstrip(" "), nl=False, err=err)
# Echo a space to stdout to work around an issue where
# readline causes backspace to clear the whole line.
return f(" ")
except (KeyboardInterrupt, EOFError):
# getpass doesn't print a newline if the user aborts input with ^C.
# Allegedly this behavior is inherited from getpass(3).
# A doc bug has been filed at https://bugs.python.org/issue24711
if hide_input:
echo(None, err=err)
raise Abort() from None
if value_proc is None:
value_proc = convert_type(type, default)
prompt = _build_prompt(
text, prompt_suffix, show_default, default, show_choices, type
)
if confirmation_prompt:
if confirmation_prompt is True:
confirmation_prompt = _("Repeat for confirmation")
confirmation_prompt = _build_prompt(confirmation_prompt, prompt_suffix)
while True:
while True:
value = prompt_func(prompt)
if value:
break
elif default is not None:
value = default
break
try:
result = value_proc(value)
except UsageError as e:
if hide_input:
echo(_("Error: The value you entered was invalid."), err=err)
else:
echo(_("Error: {e.message}").format(e=e), err=err) # noqa: B306
continue
if not confirmation_prompt:
return result
while True:
value2 = prompt_func(confirmation_prompt)
is_empty = not value and not value2
if value2 or is_empty:
break
if value == value2:
return result
echo(_("Error: The two entered values do not match."), err=err)
def confirm(
text: str,
default: t.Optional[bool] = False,
abort: bool = False,
prompt_suffix: str = ": ",
show_default: bool = True,
err: bool = False,
) -> bool:
"""Prompts for confirmation (yes/no question).
If the user aborts the input by sending a interrupt signal this
function will catch it and raise a :exc:`Abort` exception.
:param text: the question to ask.
:param default: The default value to use when no input is given. If
``None``, repeat until input is given.
:param abort: if this is set to `True` a negative answer aborts the
exception by raising :exc:`Abort`.
:param prompt_suffix: a suffix that should be added to the prompt.
:param show_default: shows or hides the default value in the prompt.
:param err: if set to true the file defaults to ``stderr`` instead of
``stdout``, the same as with echo.
.. versionchanged:: 8.0
Repeat until input is given if ``default`` is ``None``.
.. versionadded:: 4.0
Added the ``err`` parameter.
"""
prompt = _build_prompt(
text,
prompt_suffix,
show_default,
"y/n" if default is None else ("Y/n" if default else "y/N"),
)
while True:
try:
# Write the prompt separately so that we get nice
# coloring through colorama on Windows
echo(prompt.rstrip(" "), nl=False, err=err)
# Echo a space to stdout to work around an issue where
# readline causes backspace to clear the whole line.
value = visible_prompt_func(" ").lower().strip()
except (KeyboardInterrupt, EOFError):
raise Abort() from None
if value in ("y", "yes"):
rv = True
elif value in ("n", "no"):
rv = False
elif default is not None and value == "":
rv = default
else:
echo(_("Error: invalid input"), err=err)
continue
break
if abort and not rv:
raise Abort()
return rv
def echo_via_pager(
text_or_generator: t.Union[t.Iterable[str], t.Callable[[], t.Iterable[str]], str],
color: t.Optional[bool] = None,
) -> None:
"""This function takes a text and shows it via an environment specific
pager on stdout.
.. versionchanged:: 3.0
Added the `color` flag.
:param text_or_generator: the text to page, or alternatively, a
generator emitting the text to page.
:param color: controls if the pager supports ANSI colors or not. The
default is autodetection.
"""
color = resolve_color_default(color)
if inspect.isgeneratorfunction(text_or_generator):
i = t.cast(t.Callable[[], t.Iterable[str]], text_or_generator)()
elif isinstance(text_or_generator, str):
i = [text_or_generator]
else:
i = iter(t.cast(t.Iterable[str], text_or_generator))
# convert every element of i to a text type if necessary
text_generator = (el if isinstance(el, str) else str(el) for el in i)
from ._termui_impl import pager
return pager(itertools.chain(text_generator, "\n"), color)
def progressbar(
iterable: t.Optional[t.Iterable[V]] = None,
length: t.Optional[int] = None,
label: t.Optional[str] = None,
show_eta: bool = True,
show_percent: t.Optional[bool] = None,
show_pos: bool = False,
item_show_func: t.Optional[t.Callable[[t.Optional[V]], t.Optional[str]]] = None,
fill_char: str = "#",
empty_char: str = "-",
bar_template: str = "%(label)s [%(bar)s] %(info)s",
info_sep: str = " ",
width: int = 36,
file: t.Optional[t.TextIO] = None,
color: t.Optional[bool] = None,
update_min_steps: int = 1,
) -> "ProgressBar[V]":
"""This function creates an iterable context manager that can be used
to iterate over something while showing a progress bar. It will
either iterate over the `iterable` or `length` items (that are counted
up). While iteration happens, this function will print a rendered
progress bar to the given `file` (defaults to stdout) and will attempt
to calculate remaining time and more. By default, this progress bar
will not be rendered if the file is not a terminal.
The context manager creates the progress bar. When the context
manager is entered the progress bar is already created. With every
iteration over the progress bar, the iterable passed to the bar is
advanced and the bar is updated. When the context manager exits,
a newline is printed and the progress bar is finalized on screen.
Note: The progress bar is currently designed for use cases where the
total progress can be expected to take at least several seconds.
Because of this, the ProgressBar class object won't display
progress that is considered too fast, and progress where the time
between steps is less than a second.
No printing must happen or the progress bar will be unintentionally
destroyed.
Example usage::
with progressbar(items) as bar:
for item in bar:
do_something_with(item)
Alternatively, if no iterable is specified, one can manually update the
progress bar through the `update()` method instead of directly
iterating over the progress bar. The update method accepts the number
of steps to increment the bar with::
with progressbar(length=chunks.total_bytes) as bar:
for chunk in chunks:
process_chunk(chunk)
bar.update(chunks.bytes)
The ``update()`` method also takes an optional value specifying the
``current_item`` at the new position. This is useful when used
together with ``item_show_func`` to customize the output for each
manual step::
with click.progressbar(
length=total_size,
label='Unzipping archive',
item_show_func=lambda a: a.filename
) as bar:
for archive in zip_file:
archive.extract()
bar.update(archive.size, archive)
:param iterable: an iterable to iterate over. If not provided the length
is required.
:param length: the number of items to iterate over. By default the
progressbar will attempt to ask the iterator about its
length, which might or might not work. If an iterable is
also provided this parameter can be used to override the
length. If an iterable is not provided the progress bar
will iterate over a range of that length.
:param label: the label to show next to the progress bar.
:param show_eta: enables or disables the estimated time display. This is
automatically disabled if the length cannot be
determined.
:param show_percent: enables or disables the percentage display. The
default is `True` if the iterable has a length or
`False` if not.
:param show_pos: enables or disables the absolute position display. The
default is `False`.
:param item_show_func: A function called with the current item which
can return a string to show next to the progress bar. If the
function returns ``None`` nothing is shown. The current item can
be ``None``, such as when entering and exiting the bar.
:param fill_char: the character to use to show the filled part of the
progress bar.
:param empty_char: the character to use to show the non-filled part of
the progress bar.
:param bar_template: the format string to use as template for the bar.
The parameters in it are ``label`` for the label,
``bar`` for the progress bar and ``info`` for the
info section.
:param info_sep: the separator between multiple info items (eta etc.)
:param width: the width of the progress bar in characters, 0 means full
terminal width
:param file: The file to write to. If this is not a terminal then
only the label is printed.
:param color: controls if the terminal supports ANSI colors or not. The
default is autodetection. This is only needed if ANSI
codes are included anywhere in the progress bar output
which is not the case by default.
:param update_min_steps: Render only when this many updates have
completed. This allows tuning for very fast iterators.
.. versionchanged:: 8.0
Output is shown even if execution time is less than 0.5 seconds.
.. versionchanged:: 8.0
``item_show_func`` shows the current item, not the previous one.
.. versionchanged:: 8.0
Labels are echoed if the output is not a TTY. Reverts a change
in 7.0 that removed all output.
.. versionadded:: 8.0
Added the ``update_min_steps`` parameter.
.. versionchanged:: 4.0
Added the ``color`` parameter. Added the ``update`` method to
the object.
.. versionadded:: 2.0
"""
from ._termui_impl import ProgressBar
color = resolve_color_default(color)
return ProgressBar(
iterable=iterable,
length=length,
show_eta=show_eta,
show_percent=show_percent,
show_pos=show_pos,
item_show_func=item_show_func,
fill_char=fill_char,
empty_char=empty_char,
bar_template=bar_template,
info_sep=info_sep,
file=file,
label=label,
width=width,
color=color,
update_min_steps=update_min_steps,
)
def clear() -> None:
"""Clears the terminal screen. This will have the effect of clearing
the whole visible space of the terminal and moving the cursor to the
top left. This does not do anything if not connected to a terminal.
.. versionadded:: 2.0
"""
if not isatty(sys.stdout):
return
if WIN:
os.system("cls")
else:
sys.stdout.write("\033[2J\033[1;1H")
def _interpret_color(
color: t.Union[int, t.Tuple[int, int, int], str], offset: int = 0
) -> str:
if isinstance(color, int):
return f"{38 + offset};5;{color:d}"
if isinstance(color, (tuple, list)):
r, g, b = color
return f"{38 + offset};2;{r:d};{g:d};{b:d}"
return str(_ansi_colors[color] + offset)
def style(
text: t.Any,
fg: t.Optional[t.Union[int, t.Tuple[int, int, int], str]] = None,
bg: t.Optional[t.Union[int, t.Tuple[int, int, int], str]] = None,
bold: t.Optional[bool] = None,
dim: t.Optional[bool] = None,
underline: t.Optional[bool] = None,
overline: t.Optional[bool] = None,
italic: t.Optional[bool] = None,
blink: t.Optional[bool] = None,
reverse: t.Optional[bool] = None,
strikethrough: t.Optional[bool] = None,
reset: bool = True,
) -> str:
"""Styles a text with ANSI styles and returns the new string. By
default the styling is self contained which means that at the end
of the string a reset code is issued. This can be prevented by
passing ``reset=False``.
Examples::
click.echo(click.style('Hello World!', fg='green'))
click.echo(click.style('ATTENTION!', blink=True))
click.echo(click.style('Some things', reverse=True, fg='cyan'))
click.echo(click.style('More colors', fg=(255, 12, 128), bg=117))
Supported color names:
* ``black`` (might be a gray)
* ``red``
* ``green``
* ``yellow`` (might be an orange)
* ``blue``
* ``magenta``
* ``cyan``
* ``white`` (might be light gray)
* ``bright_black``
* ``bright_red``
* ``bright_green``
* ``bright_yellow``
* ``bright_blue``
* ``bright_magenta``
* ``bright_cyan``
* ``bright_white``
* ``reset`` (reset the color code only)
If the terminal supports it, color may also be specified as:
- An integer in the interval [0, 255]. The terminal must support
8-bit/256-color mode.
- An RGB tuple of three integers in [0, 255]. The terminal must
support 24-bit/true-color mode.
See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_color and
https://gist.github.com/XVilka/8346728 for more information.
:param text: the string to style with ansi codes.
:param fg: if provided this will become the foreground color.
:param bg: if provided this will become the background color.
:param bold: if provided this will enable or disable bold mode.
:param dim: if provided this will enable or disable dim mode. This is
badly supported.
:param underline: if provided this will enable or disable underline.
:param overline: if provided this will enable or disable overline.
:param italic: if provided this will enable or disable italic.
:param blink: if provided this will enable or disable blinking.
:param reverse: if provided this will enable or disable inverse
rendering (foreground becomes background and the
other way round).
:param strikethrough: if provided this will enable or disable
striking through text.
:param reset: by default a reset-all code is added at the end of the
string which means that styles do not carry over. This
can be disabled to compose styles.
.. versionchanged:: 8.0
A non-string ``message`` is converted to a string.
.. versionchanged:: 8.0
Added support for 256 and RGB color codes.
.. versionchanged:: 8.0
Added the ``strikethrough``, ``italic``, and ``overline``
parameters.
.. versionchanged:: 7.0
Added support for bright colors.
.. versionadded:: 2.0
"""
if not isinstance(text, str):
text = str(text)
bits = []
if fg:
try:
bits.append(f"\033[{_interpret_color(fg)}m")
except KeyError:
raise TypeError(f"Unknown color {fg!r}") from None
if bg:
try:
bits.append(f"\033[{_interpret_color(bg, 10)}m")
except KeyError:
raise TypeError(f"Unknown color {bg!r}") from None
if bold is not None:
bits.append(f"\033[{1 if bold else 22}m")
if dim is not None:
bits.append(f"\033[{2 if dim else 22}m")
if underline is not None:
bits.append(f"\033[{4 if underline else 24}m")
if overline is not None:
bits.append(f"\033[{53 if overline else 55}m")
if italic is not None:
bits.append(f"\033[{3 if italic else 23}m")
if blink is not None:
bits.append(f"\033[{5 if blink else 25}m")
if reverse is not None:
bits.append(f"\033[{7 if reverse else 27}m")
if strikethrough is not None:
bits.append(f"\033[{9 if strikethrough else 29}m")
bits.append(text)
if reset:
bits.append(_ansi_reset_all)
return "".join(bits)
def unstyle(text: str) -> str:
"""Removes ANSI styling information from a string. Usually it's not
necessary to use this function as Click's echo function will
automatically remove styling if necessary.
.. versionadded:: 2.0
:param text: the text to remove style information from.
"""
return strip_ansi(text)
def secho(
message: t.Optional[t.Any] = None,
file: t.Optional[t.IO[t.AnyStr]] = None,
nl: bool = True,
err: bool = False,
color: t.Optional[bool] = None,
**styles: t.Any,
) -> None:
"""This function combines :func:`echo` and :func:`style` into one
call. As such the following two calls are the same::
click.secho('Hello World!', fg='green')
click.echo(click.style('Hello World!', fg='green'))
All keyword arguments are forwarded to the underlying functions
depending on which one they go with.
Non-string types will be converted to :class:`str`. However,
:class:`bytes` are passed directly to :meth:`echo` without applying
style. If you want to style bytes that represent text, call
:meth:`bytes.decode` first.
.. versionchanged:: 8.0
A non-string ``message`` is converted to a string. Bytes are
passed through without style applied.
.. versionadded:: 2.0
"""
if message is not None and not isinstance(message, (bytes, bytearray)):
message = style(message, **styles)
return echo(message, file=file, nl=nl, err=err, color=color)
def edit(
text: t.Optional[t.AnyStr] = None,
editor: t.Optional[str] = None,
env: t.Optional[t.Mapping[str, str]] = None,
require_save: bool = True,
extension: str = ".txt",
filename: t.Optional[str] = None,
) -> t.Optional[t.AnyStr]:
r"""Edits the given text in the defined editor. If an editor is given
(should be the full path to the executable but the regular operating
system search path is used for finding the executable) it overrides
the detected editor. Optionally, some environment variables can be
used. If the editor is closed without changes, `None` is returned. In
case a file is edited directly the return value is always `None` and
`require_save` and `extension` are ignored.
If the editor cannot be opened a :exc:`UsageError` is raised.
Note for Windows: to simplify cross-platform usage, the newlines are
automatically converted from POSIX to Windows and vice versa. As such,
the message here will have ``\n`` as newline markers.
:param text: the text to edit.
:param editor: optionally the editor to use. Defaults to automatic
detection.
:param env: environment variables to forward to the editor.
:param require_save: if this is true, then not saving in the editor
will make the return value become `None`.
:param extension: the extension to tell the editor about. This defaults
to `.txt` but changing this might change syntax
highlighting.
:param filename: if provided it will edit this file instead of the
provided text contents. It will not use a temporary
file as an indirection in that case.
"""
from ._termui_impl import Editor
ed = Editor(editor=editor, env=env, require_save=require_save, extension=extension)
if filename is None:
return ed.edit(text)
ed.edit_file(filename)
return None
def launch(url: str, wait: bool = False, locate: bool = False) -> int:
"""This function launches the given URL (or filename) in the default
viewer application for this file type. If this is an executable, it
might launch the executable in a new session. The return value is
the exit code of the launched application. Usually, ``0`` indicates
success.
Examples::
click.launch('https://click.palletsprojects.com/')
click.launch('/my/downloaded/file', locate=True)
.. versionadded:: 2.0
:param url: URL or filename of the thing to launch.
:param wait: Wait for the program to exit before returning. This
only works if the launched program blocks. In particular,
``xdg-open`` on Linux does not block.
:param locate: if this is set to `True` then instead of launching the
application associated with the URL it will attempt to
launch a file manager with the file located. This
might have weird effects if the URL does not point to
the filesystem.
"""
from ._termui_impl import open_url
return open_url(url, wait=wait, locate=locate)
# If this is provided, getchar() calls into this instead. This is used
# for unittesting purposes.
_getchar: t.Optional[t.Callable[[bool], str]] = None
def getchar(echo: bool = False) -> str:
"""Fetches a single character from the terminal and returns it. This
will always return a unicode character and under certain rare
circumstances this might return more than one character. The
situations which more than one character is returned is when for
whatever reason multiple characters end up in the terminal buffer or
standard input was not actually a terminal.
Note that this will always read from the terminal, even if something
is piped into the standard input.
Note for Windows: in rare cases when typing non-ASCII characters, this
function might wait for a second character and then return both at once.
This is because certain Unicode characters look like special-key markers.
.. versionadded:: 2.0
:param echo: if set to `True`, the character read will also show up on
the terminal. The default is to not show it.
"""
global _getchar
if _getchar is None:
from ._termui_impl import getchar as f
_getchar = f
return _getchar(echo)
def raw_terminal() -> t.ContextManager[int]:
from ._termui_impl import raw_terminal as f
return f()
def pause(info: t.Optional[str] = None, err: bool = False) -> None:
"""This command stops execution and waits for the user to press any
key to continue. This is similar to the Windows batch "pause"
command. If the program is not run through a terminal, this command
will instead do nothing.
.. versionadded:: 2.0
.. versionadded:: 4.0
Added the `err` parameter.
:param info: The message to print before pausing. Defaults to
``"Press any key to continue..."``.
:param err: if set to message goes to ``stderr`` instead of
``stdout``, the same as with echo.
"""
if not isatty(sys.stdin) or not isatty(sys.stdout):
return
if info is None:
info = _("Press any key to continue...")
try:
if info:
echo(info, nl=False, err=err)
try:
getchar()
except (KeyboardInterrupt, EOFError):
pass
finally:
if info:
echo(err=err)

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@ -0,0 +1,479 @@
import contextlib
import io
import os
import shlex
import shutil
import sys
import tempfile
import typing as t
from types import TracebackType
from . import formatting
from . import termui
from . import utils
from ._compat import _find_binary_reader
if t.TYPE_CHECKING:
from .core import BaseCommand
class EchoingStdin:
def __init__(self, input: t.BinaryIO, output: t.BinaryIO) -> None:
self._input = input
self._output = output
self._paused = False
def __getattr__(self, x: str) -> t.Any:
return getattr(self._input, x)
def _echo(self, rv: bytes) -> bytes:
if not self._paused:
self._output.write(rv)
return rv
def read(self, n: int = -1) -> bytes:
return self._echo(self._input.read(n))
def read1(self, n: int = -1) -> bytes:
return self._echo(self._input.read1(n)) # type: ignore
def readline(self, n: int = -1) -> bytes:
return self._echo(self._input.readline(n))
def readlines(self) -> t.List[bytes]:
return [self._echo(x) for x in self._input.readlines()]
def __iter__(self) -> t.Iterator[bytes]:
return iter(self._echo(x) for x in self._input)
def __repr__(self) -> str:
return repr(self._input)
@contextlib.contextmanager
def _pause_echo(stream: t.Optional[EchoingStdin]) -> t.Iterator[None]:
if stream is None:
yield
else:
stream._paused = True
yield
stream._paused = False
class _NamedTextIOWrapper(io.TextIOWrapper):
def __init__(
self, buffer: t.BinaryIO, name: str, mode: str, **kwargs: t.Any
) -> None:
super().__init__(buffer, **kwargs)
self._name = name
self._mode = mode
@property
def name(self) -> str:
return self._name
@property
def mode(self) -> str:
return self._mode
def make_input_stream(
input: t.Optional[t.Union[str, bytes, t.IO]], charset: str
) -> t.BinaryIO:
# Is already an input stream.
if hasattr(input, "read"):
rv = _find_binary_reader(t.cast(t.IO, input))
if rv is not None:
return rv
raise TypeError("Could not find binary reader for input stream.")
if input is None:
input = b""
elif isinstance(input, str):
input = input.encode(charset)
return io.BytesIO(t.cast(bytes, input))
class Result:
"""Holds the captured result of an invoked CLI script."""
def __init__(
self,
runner: "CliRunner",
stdout_bytes: bytes,
stderr_bytes: t.Optional[bytes],
return_value: t.Any,
exit_code: int,
exception: t.Optional[BaseException],
exc_info: t.Optional[
t.Tuple[t.Type[BaseException], BaseException, TracebackType]
] = None,
):
#: The runner that created the result
self.runner = runner
#: The standard output as bytes.
self.stdout_bytes = stdout_bytes
#: The standard error as bytes, or None if not available
self.stderr_bytes = stderr_bytes
#: The value returned from the invoked command.
#:
#: .. versionadded:: 8.0
self.return_value = return_value
#: The exit code as integer.
self.exit_code = exit_code
#: The exception that happened if one did.
self.exception = exception
#: The traceback
self.exc_info = exc_info
@property
def output(self) -> str:
"""The (standard) output as unicode string."""
return self.stdout
@property
def stdout(self) -> str:
"""The standard output as unicode string."""
return self.stdout_bytes.decode(self.runner.charset, "replace").replace(
"\r\n", "\n"
)
@property
def stderr(self) -> str:
"""The standard error as unicode string."""
if self.stderr_bytes is None:
raise ValueError("stderr not separately captured")
return self.stderr_bytes.decode(self.runner.charset, "replace").replace(
"\r\n", "\n"
)
def __repr__(self) -> str:
exc_str = repr(self.exception) if self.exception else "okay"
return f"<{type(self).__name__} {exc_str}>"
class CliRunner:
"""The CLI runner provides functionality to invoke a Click command line
script for unittesting purposes in a isolated environment. This only
works in single-threaded systems without any concurrency as it changes the
global interpreter state.
:param charset: the character set for the input and output data.
:param env: a dictionary with environment variables for overriding.
:param echo_stdin: if this is set to `True`, then reading from stdin writes
to stdout. This is useful for showing examples in
some circumstances. Note that regular prompts
will automatically echo the input.
:param mix_stderr: if this is set to `False`, then stdout and stderr are
preserved as independent streams. This is useful for
Unix-philosophy apps that have predictable stdout and
noisy stderr, such that each may be measured
independently
"""
def __init__(
self,
charset: str = "utf-8",
env: t.Optional[t.Mapping[str, t.Optional[str]]] = None,
echo_stdin: bool = False,
mix_stderr: bool = True,
) -> None:
self.charset = charset
self.env = env or {}
self.echo_stdin = echo_stdin
self.mix_stderr = mix_stderr
def get_default_prog_name(self, cli: "BaseCommand") -> str:
"""Given a command object it will return the default program name
for it. The default is the `name` attribute or ``"root"`` if not
set.
"""
return cli.name or "root"
def make_env(
self, overrides: t.Optional[t.Mapping[str, t.Optional[str]]] = None
) -> t.Mapping[str, t.Optional[str]]:
"""Returns the environment overrides for invoking a script."""
rv = dict(self.env)
if overrides:
rv.update(overrides)
return rv
@contextlib.contextmanager
def isolation(
self,
input: t.Optional[t.Union[str, bytes, t.IO]] = None,
env: t.Optional[t.Mapping[str, t.Optional[str]]] = None,
color: bool = False,
) -> t.Iterator[t.Tuple[io.BytesIO, t.Optional[io.BytesIO]]]:
"""A context manager that sets up the isolation for invoking of a
command line tool. This sets up stdin with the given input data
and `os.environ` with the overrides from the given dictionary.
This also rebinds some internals in Click to be mocked (like the
prompt functionality).
This is automatically done in the :meth:`invoke` method.
:param input: the input stream to put into sys.stdin.
:param env: the environment overrides as dictionary.
:param color: whether the output should contain color codes. The
application can still override this explicitly.
.. versionchanged:: 8.0
``stderr`` is opened with ``errors="backslashreplace"``
instead of the default ``"strict"``.
.. versionchanged:: 4.0
Added the ``color`` parameter.
"""
bytes_input = make_input_stream(input, self.charset)
echo_input = None
old_stdin = sys.stdin
old_stdout = sys.stdout
old_stderr = sys.stderr
old_forced_width = formatting.FORCED_WIDTH
formatting.FORCED_WIDTH = 80
env = self.make_env(env)
bytes_output = io.BytesIO()
if self.echo_stdin:
bytes_input = echo_input = t.cast(
t.BinaryIO, EchoingStdin(bytes_input, bytes_output)
)
sys.stdin = text_input = _NamedTextIOWrapper(
bytes_input, encoding=self.charset, name="<stdin>", mode="r"
)
if self.echo_stdin:
# Force unbuffered reads, otherwise TextIOWrapper reads a
# large chunk which is echoed early.
text_input._CHUNK_SIZE = 1 # type: ignore
sys.stdout = _NamedTextIOWrapper(
bytes_output, encoding=self.charset, name="<stdout>", mode="w"
)
bytes_error = None
if self.mix_stderr:
sys.stderr = sys.stdout
else:
bytes_error = io.BytesIO()
sys.stderr = _NamedTextIOWrapper(
bytes_error,
encoding=self.charset,
name="<stderr>",
mode="w",
errors="backslashreplace",
)
@_pause_echo(echo_input) # type: ignore
def visible_input(prompt: t.Optional[str] = None) -> str:
sys.stdout.write(prompt or "")
val = text_input.readline().rstrip("\r\n")
sys.stdout.write(f"{val}\n")
sys.stdout.flush()
return val
@_pause_echo(echo_input) # type: ignore
def hidden_input(prompt: t.Optional[str] = None) -> str:
sys.stdout.write(f"{prompt or ''}\n")
sys.stdout.flush()
return text_input.readline().rstrip("\r\n")
@_pause_echo(echo_input) # type: ignore
def _getchar(echo: bool) -> str:
char = sys.stdin.read(1)
if echo:
sys.stdout.write(char)
sys.stdout.flush()
return char
default_color = color
def should_strip_ansi(
stream: t.Optional[t.IO] = None, color: t.Optional[bool] = None
) -> bool:
if color is None:
return not default_color
return not color
old_visible_prompt_func = termui.visible_prompt_func
old_hidden_prompt_func = termui.hidden_prompt_func
old__getchar_func = termui._getchar
old_should_strip_ansi = utils.should_strip_ansi # type: ignore
termui.visible_prompt_func = visible_input
termui.hidden_prompt_func = hidden_input
termui._getchar = _getchar
utils.should_strip_ansi = should_strip_ansi # type: ignore
old_env = {}
try:
for key, value in env.items():
old_env[key] = os.environ.get(key)
if value is None:
try:
del os.environ[key]
except Exception:
pass
else:
os.environ[key] = value
yield (bytes_output, bytes_error)
finally:
for key, value in old_env.items():
if value is None:
try:
del os.environ[key]
except Exception:
pass
else:
os.environ[key] = value
sys.stdout = old_stdout
sys.stderr = old_stderr
sys.stdin = old_stdin
termui.visible_prompt_func = old_visible_prompt_func
termui.hidden_prompt_func = old_hidden_prompt_func
termui._getchar = old__getchar_func
utils.should_strip_ansi = old_should_strip_ansi # type: ignore
formatting.FORCED_WIDTH = old_forced_width
def invoke(
self,
cli: "BaseCommand",
args: t.Optional[t.Union[str, t.Sequence[str]]] = None,
input: t.Optional[t.Union[str, bytes, t.IO]] = None,
env: t.Optional[t.Mapping[str, t.Optional[str]]] = None,
catch_exceptions: bool = True,
color: bool = False,
**extra: t.Any,
) -> Result:
"""Invokes a command in an isolated environment. The arguments are
forwarded directly to the command line script, the `extra` keyword
arguments are passed to the :meth:`~clickpkg.Command.main` function of
the command.
This returns a :class:`Result` object.
:param cli: the command to invoke
:param args: the arguments to invoke. It may be given as an iterable
or a string. When given as string it will be interpreted
as a Unix shell command. More details at
:func:`shlex.split`.
:param input: the input data for `sys.stdin`.
:param env: the environment overrides.
:param catch_exceptions: Whether to catch any other exceptions than
``SystemExit``.
:param extra: the keyword arguments to pass to :meth:`main`.
:param color: whether the output should contain color codes. The
application can still override this explicitly.
.. versionchanged:: 8.0
The result object has the ``return_value`` attribute with
the value returned from the invoked command.
.. versionchanged:: 4.0
Added the ``color`` parameter.
.. versionchanged:: 3.0
Added the ``catch_exceptions`` parameter.
.. versionchanged:: 3.0
The result object has the ``exc_info`` attribute with the
traceback if available.
"""
exc_info = None
with self.isolation(input=input, env=env, color=color) as outstreams:
return_value = None
exception: t.Optional[BaseException] = None
exit_code = 0
if isinstance(args, str):
args = shlex.split(args)
try:
prog_name = extra.pop("prog_name")
except KeyError:
prog_name = self.get_default_prog_name(cli)
try:
return_value = cli.main(args=args or (), prog_name=prog_name, **extra)
except SystemExit as e:
exc_info = sys.exc_info()
e_code = t.cast(t.Optional[t.Union[int, t.Any]], e.code)
if e_code is None:
e_code = 0
if e_code != 0:
exception = e
if not isinstance(e_code, int):
sys.stdout.write(str(e_code))
sys.stdout.write("\n")
e_code = 1
exit_code = e_code
except Exception as e:
if not catch_exceptions:
raise
exception = e
exit_code = 1
exc_info = sys.exc_info()
finally:
sys.stdout.flush()
stdout = outstreams[0].getvalue()
if self.mix_stderr:
stderr = None
else:
stderr = outstreams[1].getvalue() # type: ignore
return Result(
runner=self,
stdout_bytes=stdout,
stderr_bytes=stderr,
return_value=return_value,
exit_code=exit_code,
exception=exception,
exc_info=exc_info, # type: ignore
)
@contextlib.contextmanager
def isolated_filesystem(
self, temp_dir: t.Optional[t.Union[str, os.PathLike]] = None
) -> t.Iterator[str]:
"""A context manager that creates a temporary directory and
changes the current working directory to it. This isolates tests
that affect the contents of the CWD to prevent them from
interfering with each other.
:param temp_dir: Create the temporary directory under this
directory. If given, the created directory is not removed
when exiting.
.. versionchanged:: 8.0
Added the ``temp_dir`` parameter.
"""
cwd = os.getcwd()
dt = tempfile.mkdtemp(dir=temp_dir) # type: ignore[type-var]
os.chdir(dt)
try:
yield t.cast(str, dt)
finally:
os.chdir(cwd)
if temp_dir is None:
try:
shutil.rmtree(dt)
except OSError: # noqa: B014
pass

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@ -0,0 +1,580 @@
import os
import re
import sys
import typing as t
from functools import update_wrapper
from types import ModuleType
from ._compat import _default_text_stderr
from ._compat import _default_text_stdout
from ._compat import _find_binary_writer
from ._compat import auto_wrap_for_ansi
from ._compat import binary_streams
from ._compat import get_filesystem_encoding
from ._compat import open_stream
from ._compat import should_strip_ansi
from ._compat import strip_ansi
from ._compat import text_streams
from ._compat import WIN
from .globals import resolve_color_default
if t.TYPE_CHECKING:
import typing_extensions as te
F = t.TypeVar("F", bound=t.Callable[..., t.Any])
def _posixify(name: str) -> str:
return "-".join(name.split()).lower()
def safecall(func: F) -> F:
"""Wraps a function so that it swallows exceptions."""
def wrapper(*args, **kwargs): # type: ignore
try:
return func(*args, **kwargs)
except Exception:
pass
return update_wrapper(t.cast(F, wrapper), func)
def make_str(value: t.Any) -> str:
"""Converts a value into a valid string."""
if isinstance(value, bytes):
try:
return value.decode(get_filesystem_encoding())
except UnicodeError:
return value.decode("utf-8", "replace")
return str(value)
def make_default_short_help(help: str, max_length: int = 45) -> str:
"""Returns a condensed version of help string."""
# Consider only the first paragraph.
paragraph_end = help.find("\n\n")
if paragraph_end != -1:
help = help[:paragraph_end]
# Collapse newlines, tabs, and spaces.
words = help.split()
if not words:
return ""
# The first paragraph started with a "no rewrap" marker, ignore it.
if words[0] == "\b":
words = words[1:]
total_length = 0
last_index = len(words) - 1
for i, word in enumerate(words):
total_length += len(word) + (i > 0)
if total_length > max_length: # too long, truncate
break
if word[-1] == ".": # sentence end, truncate without "..."
return " ".join(words[: i + 1])
if total_length == max_length and i != last_index:
break # not at sentence end, truncate with "..."
else:
return " ".join(words) # no truncation needed
# Account for the length of the suffix.
total_length += len("...")
# remove words until the length is short enough
while i > 0:
total_length -= len(words[i]) + (i > 0)
if total_length <= max_length:
break
i -= 1
return " ".join(words[:i]) + "..."
class LazyFile:
"""A lazy file works like a regular file but it does not fully open
the file but it does perform some basic checks early to see if the
filename parameter does make sense. This is useful for safely opening
files for writing.
"""
def __init__(
self,
filename: str,
mode: str = "r",
encoding: t.Optional[str] = None,
errors: t.Optional[str] = "strict",
atomic: bool = False,
):
self.name = filename
self.mode = mode
self.encoding = encoding
self.errors = errors
self.atomic = atomic
self._f: t.Optional[t.IO]
if filename == "-":
self._f, self.should_close = open_stream(filename, mode, encoding, errors)
else:
if "r" in mode:
# Open and close the file in case we're opening it for
# reading so that we can catch at least some errors in
# some cases early.
open(filename, mode).close()
self._f = None
self.should_close = True
def __getattr__(self, name: str) -> t.Any:
return getattr(self.open(), name)
def __repr__(self) -> str:
if self._f is not None:
return repr(self._f)
return f"<unopened file '{self.name}' {self.mode}>"
def open(self) -> t.IO:
"""Opens the file if it's not yet open. This call might fail with
a :exc:`FileError`. Not handling this error will produce an error
that Click shows.
"""
if self._f is not None:
return self._f
try:
rv, self.should_close = open_stream(
self.name, self.mode, self.encoding, self.errors, atomic=self.atomic
)
except OSError as e: # noqa: E402
from .exceptions import FileError
raise FileError(self.name, hint=e.strerror) from e
self._f = rv
return rv
def close(self) -> None:
"""Closes the underlying file, no matter what."""
if self._f is not None:
self._f.close()
def close_intelligently(self) -> None:
"""This function only closes the file if it was opened by the lazy
file wrapper. For instance this will never close stdin.
"""
if self.should_close:
self.close()
def __enter__(self) -> "LazyFile":
return self
def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, tb): # type: ignore
self.close_intelligently()
def __iter__(self) -> t.Iterator[t.AnyStr]:
self.open()
return iter(self._f) # type: ignore
class KeepOpenFile:
def __init__(self, file: t.IO) -> None:
self._file = file
def __getattr__(self, name: str) -> t.Any:
return getattr(self._file, name)
def __enter__(self) -> "KeepOpenFile":
return self
def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, tb): # type: ignore
pass
def __repr__(self) -> str:
return repr(self._file)
def __iter__(self) -> t.Iterator[t.AnyStr]:
return iter(self._file)
def echo(
message: t.Optional[t.Any] = None,
file: t.Optional[t.IO[t.Any]] = None,
nl: bool = True,
err: bool = False,
color: t.Optional[bool] = None,
) -> None:
"""Print a message and newline to stdout or a file. This should be
used instead of :func:`print` because it provides better support
for different data, files, and environments.
Compared to :func:`print`, this does the following:
- Ensures that the output encoding is not misconfigured on Linux.
- Supports Unicode in the Windows console.
- Supports writing to binary outputs, and supports writing bytes
to text outputs.
- Supports colors and styles on Windows.
- Removes ANSI color and style codes if the output does not look
like an interactive terminal.
- Always flushes the output.
:param message: The string or bytes to output. Other objects are
converted to strings.
:param file: The file to write to. Defaults to ``stdout``.
:param err: Write to ``stderr`` instead of ``stdout``.
:param nl: Print a newline after the message. Enabled by default.
:param color: Force showing or hiding colors and other styles. By
default Click will remove color if the output does not look like
an interactive terminal.
.. versionchanged:: 6.0
Support Unicode output on the Windows console. Click does not
modify ``sys.stdout``, so ``sys.stdout.write()`` and ``print()``
will still not support Unicode.
.. versionchanged:: 4.0
Added the ``color`` parameter.
.. versionadded:: 3.0
Added the ``err`` parameter.
.. versionchanged:: 2.0
Support colors on Windows if colorama is installed.
"""
if file is None:
if err:
file = _default_text_stderr()
else:
file = _default_text_stdout()
# Convert non bytes/text into the native string type.
if message is not None and not isinstance(message, (str, bytes, bytearray)):
out: t.Optional[t.Union[str, bytes]] = str(message)
else:
out = message
if nl:
out = out or ""
if isinstance(out, str):
out += "\n"
else:
out += b"\n"
if not out:
file.flush()
return
# If there is a message and the value looks like bytes, we manually
# need to find the binary stream and write the message in there.
# This is done separately so that most stream types will work as you
# would expect. Eg: you can write to StringIO for other cases.
if isinstance(out, (bytes, bytearray)):
binary_file = _find_binary_writer(file)
if binary_file is not None:
file.flush()
binary_file.write(out)
binary_file.flush()
return
# ANSI style code support. For no message or bytes, nothing happens.
# When outputting to a file instead of a terminal, strip codes.
else:
color = resolve_color_default(color)
if should_strip_ansi(file, color):
out = strip_ansi(out)
elif WIN:
if auto_wrap_for_ansi is not None:
file = auto_wrap_for_ansi(file) # type: ignore
elif not color:
out = strip_ansi(out)
file.write(out) # type: ignore
file.flush()
def get_binary_stream(name: "te.Literal['stdin', 'stdout', 'stderr']") -> t.BinaryIO:
"""Returns a system stream for byte processing.
:param name: the name of the stream to open. Valid names are ``'stdin'``,
``'stdout'`` and ``'stderr'``
"""
opener = binary_streams.get(name)
if opener is None:
raise TypeError(f"Unknown standard stream '{name}'")
return opener()
def get_text_stream(
name: "te.Literal['stdin', 'stdout', 'stderr']",
encoding: t.Optional[str] = None,
errors: t.Optional[str] = "strict",
) -> t.TextIO:
"""Returns a system stream for text processing. This usually returns
a wrapped stream around a binary stream returned from
:func:`get_binary_stream` but it also can take shortcuts for already
correctly configured streams.
:param name: the name of the stream to open. Valid names are ``'stdin'``,
``'stdout'`` and ``'stderr'``
:param encoding: overrides the detected default encoding.
:param errors: overrides the default error mode.
"""
opener = text_streams.get(name)
if opener is None:
raise TypeError(f"Unknown standard stream '{name}'")
return opener(encoding, errors)
def open_file(
filename: str,
mode: str = "r",
encoding: t.Optional[str] = None,
errors: t.Optional[str] = "strict",
lazy: bool = False,
atomic: bool = False,
) -> t.IO:
"""Open a file, with extra behavior to handle ``'-'`` to indicate
a standard stream, lazy open on write, and atomic write. Similar to
the behavior of the :class:`~click.File` param type.
If ``'-'`` is given to open ``stdout`` or ``stdin``, the stream is
wrapped so that using it in a context manager will not close it.
This makes it possible to use the function without accidentally
closing a standard stream:
.. code-block:: python
with open_file(filename) as f:
...
:param filename: The name of the file to open, or ``'-'`` for
``stdin``/``stdout``.
:param mode: The mode in which to open the file.
:param encoding: The encoding to decode or encode a file opened in
text mode.
:param errors: The error handling mode.
:param lazy: Wait to open the file until it is accessed. For read
mode, the file is temporarily opened to raise access errors
early, then closed until it is read again.
:param atomic: Write to a temporary file and replace the given file
on close.
.. versionadded:: 3.0
"""
if lazy:
return t.cast(t.IO, LazyFile(filename, mode, encoding, errors, atomic=atomic))
f, should_close = open_stream(filename, mode, encoding, errors, atomic=atomic)
if not should_close:
f = t.cast(t.IO, KeepOpenFile(f))
return f
def format_filename(
filename: t.Union[str, bytes, os.PathLike], shorten: bool = False
) -> str:
"""Formats a filename for user display. The main purpose of this
function is to ensure that the filename can be displayed at all. This
will decode the filename to unicode if necessary in a way that it will
not fail. Optionally, it can shorten the filename to not include the
full path to the filename.
:param filename: formats a filename for UI display. This will also convert
the filename into unicode without failing.
:param shorten: this optionally shortens the filename to strip of the
path that leads up to it.
"""
if shorten:
filename = os.path.basename(filename)
return os.fsdecode(filename)
def get_app_dir(app_name: str, roaming: bool = True, force_posix: bool = False) -> str:
r"""Returns the config folder for the application. The default behavior
is to return whatever is most appropriate for the operating system.
To give you an idea, for an app called ``"Foo Bar"``, something like
the following folders could be returned:
Mac OS X:
``~/Library/Application Support/Foo Bar``
Mac OS X (POSIX):
``~/.foo-bar``
Unix:
``~/.config/foo-bar``
Unix (POSIX):
``~/.foo-bar``
Windows (roaming):
``C:\Users\<user>\AppData\Roaming\Foo Bar``
Windows (not roaming):
``C:\Users\<user>\AppData\Local\Foo Bar``
.. versionadded:: 2.0
:param app_name: the application name. This should be properly capitalized
and can contain whitespace.
:param roaming: controls if the folder should be roaming or not on Windows.
Has no affect otherwise.
:param force_posix: if this is set to `True` then on any POSIX system the
folder will be stored in the home folder with a leading
dot instead of the XDG config home or darwin's
application support folder.
"""
if WIN:
key = "APPDATA" if roaming else "LOCALAPPDATA"
folder = os.environ.get(key)
if folder is None:
folder = os.path.expanduser("~")
return os.path.join(folder, app_name)
if force_posix:
return os.path.join(os.path.expanduser(f"~/.{_posixify(app_name)}"))
if sys.platform == "darwin":
return os.path.join(
os.path.expanduser("~/Library/Application Support"), app_name
)
return os.path.join(
os.environ.get("XDG_CONFIG_HOME", os.path.expanduser("~/.config")),
_posixify(app_name),
)
class PacifyFlushWrapper:
"""This wrapper is used to catch and suppress BrokenPipeErrors resulting
from ``.flush()`` being called on broken pipe during the shutdown/final-GC
of the Python interpreter. Notably ``.flush()`` is always called on
``sys.stdout`` and ``sys.stderr``. So as to have minimal impact on any
other cleanup code, and the case where the underlying file is not a broken
pipe, all calls and attributes are proxied.
"""
def __init__(self, wrapped: t.IO) -> None:
self.wrapped = wrapped
def flush(self) -> None:
try:
self.wrapped.flush()
except OSError as e:
import errno
if e.errno != errno.EPIPE:
raise
def __getattr__(self, attr: str) -> t.Any:
return getattr(self.wrapped, attr)
def _detect_program_name(
path: t.Optional[str] = None, _main: t.Optional[ModuleType] = None
) -> str:
"""Determine the command used to run the program, for use in help
text. If a file or entry point was executed, the file name is
returned. If ``python -m`` was used to execute a module or package,
``python -m name`` is returned.
This doesn't try to be too precise, the goal is to give a concise
name for help text. Files are only shown as their name without the
path. ``python`` is only shown for modules, and the full path to
``sys.executable`` is not shown.
:param path: The Python file being executed. Python puts this in
``sys.argv[0]``, which is used by default.
:param _main: The ``__main__`` module. This should only be passed
during internal testing.
.. versionadded:: 8.0
Based on command args detection in the Werkzeug reloader.
:meta private:
"""
if _main is None:
_main = sys.modules["__main__"]
if not path:
path = sys.argv[0]
# The value of __package__ indicates how Python was called. It may
# not exist if a setuptools script is installed as an egg. It may be
# set incorrectly for entry points created with pip on Windows.
if getattr(_main, "__package__", None) is None or (
os.name == "nt"
and _main.__package__ == ""
and not os.path.exists(path)
and os.path.exists(f"{path}.exe")
):
# Executed a file, like "python app.py".
return os.path.basename(path)
# Executed a module, like "python -m example".
# Rewritten by Python from "-m script" to "/path/to/script.py".
# Need to look at main module to determine how it was executed.
py_module = t.cast(str, _main.__package__)
name = os.path.splitext(os.path.basename(path))[0]
# A submodule like "example.cli".
if name != "__main__":
py_module = f"{py_module}.{name}"
return f"python -m {py_module.lstrip('.')}"
def _expand_args(
args: t.Iterable[str],
*,
user: bool = True,
env: bool = True,
glob_recursive: bool = True,
) -> t.List[str]:
"""Simulate Unix shell expansion with Python functions.
See :func:`glob.glob`, :func:`os.path.expanduser`, and
:func:`os.path.expandvars`.
This is intended for use on Windows, where the shell does not do any
expansion. It may not exactly match what a Unix shell would do.
:param args: List of command line arguments to expand.
:param user: Expand user home directory.
:param env: Expand environment variables.
:param glob_recursive: ``**`` matches directories recursively.
.. versionchanged:: 8.1
Invalid glob patterns are treated as empty expansions rather
than raising an error.
.. versionadded:: 8.0
:meta private:
"""
from glob import glob
out = []
for arg in args:
if user:
arg = os.path.expanduser(arg)
if env:
arg = os.path.expandvars(arg)
try:
matches = glob(arg, recursive=glob_recursive)
except re.error:
matches = []
if not matches:
out.append(arg)
else:
out.extend(matches)
return out

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import os; var = 'SETUPTOOLS_USE_DISTUTILS'; enabled = os.environ.get(var, 'local') == 'local'; enabled and __import__('_distutils_hack').add_shim();

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from markupsafe import escape
from markupsafe import Markup
from . import json as json
from .app import Flask as Flask
from .app import Request as Request
from .app import Response as Response
from .blueprints import Blueprint as Blueprint
from .config import Config as Config
from .ctx import after_this_request as after_this_request
from .ctx import copy_current_request_context as copy_current_request_context
from .ctx import has_app_context as has_app_context
from .ctx import has_request_context as has_request_context
from .globals import current_app as current_app
from .globals import g as g
from .globals import request as request
from .globals import session as session
from .helpers import abort as abort
from .helpers import flash as flash
from .helpers import get_flashed_messages as get_flashed_messages
from .helpers import get_template_attribute as get_template_attribute
from .helpers import make_response as make_response
from .helpers import redirect as redirect
from .helpers import send_file as send_file
from .helpers import send_from_directory as send_from_directory
from .helpers import stream_with_context as stream_with_context
from .helpers import url_for as url_for
from .json import jsonify as jsonify
from .signals import appcontext_popped as appcontext_popped
from .signals import appcontext_pushed as appcontext_pushed
from .signals import appcontext_tearing_down as appcontext_tearing_down
from .signals import before_render_template as before_render_template
from .signals import got_request_exception as got_request_exception
from .signals import message_flashed as message_flashed
from .signals import request_finished as request_finished
from .signals import request_started as request_started
from .signals import request_tearing_down as request_tearing_down
from .signals import signals_available as signals_available
from .signals import template_rendered as template_rendered
from .templating import render_template as render_template
from .templating import render_template_string as render_template_string
from .templating import stream_template as stream_template
from .templating import stream_template_string as stream_template_string
__version__ = "2.2.2"
def __getattr__(name):
if name == "_app_ctx_stack":
import warnings
from .globals import __app_ctx_stack
warnings.warn(
"'_app_ctx_stack' is deprecated and will be removed in Flask 2.3.",
DeprecationWarning,
stacklevel=2,
)
return __app_ctx_stack
if name == "_request_ctx_stack":
import warnings
from .globals import __request_ctx_stack
warnings.warn(
"'_request_ctx_stack' is deprecated and will be removed in Flask 2.3.",
DeprecationWarning,
stacklevel=2,
)
return __request_ctx_stack
raise AttributeError(name)

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from .cli import main
main()

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import json
import os
import typing as t
from collections import defaultdict
from functools import update_wrapper
from . import typing as ft
from .scaffold import _endpoint_from_view_func
from .scaffold import _sentinel
from .scaffold import Scaffold
from .scaffold import setupmethod
if t.TYPE_CHECKING: # pragma: no cover
from .app import Flask
DeferredSetupFunction = t.Callable[["BlueprintSetupState"], t.Callable]
T_after_request = t.TypeVar("T_after_request", bound=ft.AfterRequestCallable)
T_before_first_request = t.TypeVar(
"T_before_first_request", bound=ft.BeforeFirstRequestCallable
)
T_before_request = t.TypeVar("T_before_request", bound=ft.BeforeRequestCallable)
T_error_handler = t.TypeVar("T_error_handler", bound=ft.ErrorHandlerCallable)
T_teardown = t.TypeVar("T_teardown", bound=ft.TeardownCallable)
T_template_context_processor = t.TypeVar(
"T_template_context_processor", bound=ft.TemplateContextProcessorCallable
)
T_template_filter = t.TypeVar("T_template_filter", bound=ft.TemplateFilterCallable)
T_template_global = t.TypeVar("T_template_global", bound=ft.TemplateGlobalCallable)
T_template_test = t.TypeVar("T_template_test", bound=ft.TemplateTestCallable)
T_url_defaults = t.TypeVar("T_url_defaults", bound=ft.URLDefaultCallable)
T_url_value_preprocessor = t.TypeVar(
"T_url_value_preprocessor", bound=ft.URLValuePreprocessorCallable
)
class BlueprintSetupState:
"""Temporary holder object for registering a blueprint with the
application. An instance of this class is created by the
:meth:`~flask.Blueprint.make_setup_state` method and later passed
to all register callback functions.
"""
def __init__(
self,
blueprint: "Blueprint",
app: "Flask",
options: t.Any,
first_registration: bool,
) -> None:
#: a reference to the current application
self.app = app
#: a reference to the blueprint that created this setup state.
self.blueprint = blueprint
#: a dictionary with all options that were passed to the
#: :meth:`~flask.Flask.register_blueprint` method.
self.options = options
#: as blueprints can be registered multiple times with the
#: application and not everything wants to be registered
#: multiple times on it, this attribute can be used to figure
#: out if the blueprint was registered in the past already.
self.first_registration = first_registration
subdomain = self.options.get("subdomain")
if subdomain is None:
subdomain = self.blueprint.subdomain
#: The subdomain that the blueprint should be active for, ``None``
#: otherwise.
self.subdomain = subdomain
url_prefix = self.options.get("url_prefix")
if url_prefix is None:
url_prefix = self.blueprint.url_prefix
#: The prefix that should be used for all URLs defined on the
#: blueprint.
self.url_prefix = url_prefix
self.name = self.options.get("name", blueprint.name)
self.name_prefix = self.options.get("name_prefix", "")
#: A dictionary with URL defaults that is added to each and every
#: URL that was defined with the blueprint.
self.url_defaults = dict(self.blueprint.url_values_defaults)
self.url_defaults.update(self.options.get("url_defaults", ()))
def add_url_rule(
self,
rule: str,
endpoint: t.Optional[str] = None,
view_func: t.Optional[t.Callable] = None,
**options: t.Any,
) -> None:
"""A helper method to register a rule (and optionally a view function)
to the application. The endpoint is automatically prefixed with the
blueprint's name.
"""
if self.url_prefix is not None:
if rule:
rule = "/".join((self.url_prefix.rstrip("/"), rule.lstrip("/")))
else:
rule = self.url_prefix
options.setdefault("subdomain", self.subdomain)
if endpoint is None:
endpoint = _endpoint_from_view_func(view_func) # type: ignore
defaults = self.url_defaults
if "defaults" in options:
defaults = dict(defaults, **options.pop("defaults"))
self.app.add_url_rule(
rule,
f"{self.name_prefix}.{self.name}.{endpoint}".lstrip("."),
view_func,
defaults=defaults,
**options,
)
class Blueprint(Scaffold):
"""Represents a blueprint, a collection of routes and other
app-related functions that can be registered on a real application
later.
A blueprint is an object that allows defining application functions
without requiring an application object ahead of time. It uses the
same decorators as :class:`~flask.Flask`, but defers the need for an
application by recording them for later registration.
Decorating a function with a blueprint creates a deferred function
that is called with :class:`~flask.blueprints.BlueprintSetupState`
when the blueprint is registered on an application.
See :doc:`/blueprints` for more information.
:param name: The name of the blueprint. Will be prepended to each
endpoint name.
:param import_name: The name of the blueprint package, usually
``__name__``. This helps locate the ``root_path`` for the
blueprint.
:param static_folder: A folder with static files that should be
served by the blueprint's static route. The path is relative to
the blueprint's root path. Blueprint static files are disabled
by default.
:param static_url_path: The url to serve static files from.
Defaults to ``static_folder``. If the blueprint does not have
a ``url_prefix``, the app's static route will take precedence,
and the blueprint's static files won't be accessible.
:param template_folder: A folder with templates that should be added
to the app's template search path. The path is relative to the
blueprint's root path. Blueprint templates are disabled by
default. Blueprint templates have a lower precedence than those
in the app's templates folder.
:param url_prefix: A path to prepend to all of the blueprint's URLs,
to make them distinct from the rest of the app's routes.
:param subdomain: A subdomain that blueprint routes will match on by
default.
:param url_defaults: A dict of default values that blueprint routes
will receive by default.
:param root_path: By default, the blueprint will automatically set
this based on ``import_name``. In certain situations this
automatic detection can fail, so the path can be specified
manually instead.
.. versionchanged:: 1.1.0
Blueprints have a ``cli`` group to register nested CLI commands.
The ``cli_group`` parameter controls the name of the group under
the ``flask`` command.
.. versionadded:: 0.7
"""
_got_registered_once = False
_json_encoder: t.Union[t.Type[json.JSONEncoder], None] = None
_json_decoder: t.Union[t.Type[json.JSONDecoder], None] = None
@property # type: ignore[override]
def json_encoder( # type: ignore[override]
self,
) -> t.Union[t.Type[json.JSONEncoder], None]:
"""Blueprint-local JSON encoder class to use. Set to ``None`` to use the app's.
.. deprecated:: 2.2
Will be removed in Flask 2.3. Customize
:attr:`json_provider_class` instead.
.. versionadded:: 0.10
"""
import warnings
warnings.warn(
"'bp.json_encoder' is deprecated and will be removed in Flask 2.3."
" Customize 'app.json_provider_class' or 'app.json' instead.",
DeprecationWarning,
stacklevel=2,
)
return self._json_encoder
@json_encoder.setter
def json_encoder(self, value: t.Union[t.Type[json.JSONEncoder], None]) -> None:
import warnings
warnings.warn(
"'bp.json_encoder' is deprecated and will be removed in Flask 2.3."
" Customize 'app.json_provider_class' or 'app.json' instead.",
DeprecationWarning,
stacklevel=2,
)
self._json_encoder = value
@property # type: ignore[override]
def json_decoder( # type: ignore[override]
self,
) -> t.Union[t.Type[json.JSONDecoder], None]:
"""Blueprint-local JSON decoder class to use. Set to ``None`` to use the app's.
.. deprecated:: 2.2
Will be removed in Flask 2.3. Customize
:attr:`json_provider_class` instead.
.. versionadded:: 0.10
"""
import warnings
warnings.warn(
"'bp.json_decoder' is deprecated and will be removed in Flask 2.3."
" Customize 'app.json_provider_class' or 'app.json' instead.",
DeprecationWarning,
stacklevel=2,
)
return self._json_decoder
@json_decoder.setter
def json_decoder(self, value: t.Union[t.Type[json.JSONDecoder], None]) -> None:
import warnings
warnings.warn(
"'bp.json_decoder' is deprecated and will be removed in Flask 2.3."
" Customize 'app.json_provider_class' or 'app.json' instead.",
DeprecationWarning,
stacklevel=2,
)
self._json_decoder = value
def __init__(
self,
name: str,
import_name: str,
static_folder: t.Optional[t.Union[str, os.PathLike]] = None,
static_url_path: t.Optional[str] = None,
template_folder: t.Optional[str] = None,
url_prefix: t.Optional[str] = None,
subdomain: t.Optional[str] = None,
url_defaults: t.Optional[dict] = None,
root_path: t.Optional[str] = None,
cli_group: t.Optional[str] = _sentinel, # type: ignore
):
super().__init__(
import_name=import_name,
static_folder=static_folder,
static_url_path=static_url_path,
template_folder=template_folder,
root_path=root_path,
)
if "." in name:
raise ValueError("'name' may not contain a dot '.' character.")
self.name = name
self.url_prefix = url_prefix
self.subdomain = subdomain
self.deferred_functions: t.List[DeferredSetupFunction] = []
if url_defaults is None:
url_defaults = {}
self.url_values_defaults = url_defaults
self.cli_group = cli_group
self._blueprints: t.List[t.Tuple["Blueprint", dict]] = []
def _check_setup_finished(self, f_name: str) -> None:
if self._got_registered_once:
import warnings
warnings.warn(
f"The setup method '{f_name}' can no longer be called on"
f" the blueprint '{self.name}'. It has already been"
" registered at least once, any changes will not be"
" applied consistently.\n"
"Make sure all imports, decorators, functions, etc."
" needed to set up the blueprint are done before"
" registering it.\n"
"This warning will become an exception in Flask 2.3.",
UserWarning,
stacklevel=3,
)
@setupmethod
def record(self, func: t.Callable) -> None:
"""Registers a function that is called when the blueprint is
registered on the application. This function is called with the
state as argument as returned by the :meth:`make_setup_state`
method.
"""
self.deferred_functions.append(func)
@setupmethod
def record_once(self, func: t.Callable) -> None:
"""Works like :meth:`record` but wraps the function in another
function that will ensure the function is only called once. If the
blueprint is registered a second time on the application, the
function passed is not called.
"""
def wrapper(state: BlueprintSetupState) -> None:
if state.first_registration:
func(state)
self.record(update_wrapper(wrapper, func))
def make_setup_state(
self, app: "Flask", options: dict, first_registration: bool = False
) -> BlueprintSetupState:
"""Creates an instance of :meth:`~flask.blueprints.BlueprintSetupState`
object that is later passed to the register callback functions.
Subclasses can override this to return a subclass of the setup state.
"""
return BlueprintSetupState(self, app, options, first_registration)
@setupmethod
def register_blueprint(self, blueprint: "Blueprint", **options: t.Any) -> None:
"""Register a :class:`~flask.Blueprint` on this blueprint. Keyword
arguments passed to this method will override the defaults set
on the blueprint.
.. versionchanged:: 2.0.1
The ``name`` option can be used to change the (pre-dotted)
name the blueprint is registered with. This allows the same
blueprint to be registered multiple times with unique names
for ``url_for``.
.. versionadded:: 2.0
"""
if blueprint is self:
raise ValueError("Cannot register a blueprint on itself")
self._blueprints.append((blueprint, options))
def register(self, app: "Flask", options: dict) -> None:
"""Called by :meth:`Flask.register_blueprint` to register all
views and callbacks registered on the blueprint with the
application. Creates a :class:`.BlueprintSetupState` and calls
each :meth:`record` callback with it.
:param app: The application this blueprint is being registered
with.
:param options: Keyword arguments forwarded from
:meth:`~Flask.register_blueprint`.
.. versionchanged:: 2.0.1
Nested blueprints are registered with their dotted name.
This allows different blueprints with the same name to be
nested at different locations.
.. versionchanged:: 2.0.1
The ``name`` option can be used to change the (pre-dotted)
name the blueprint is registered with. This allows the same
blueprint to be registered multiple times with unique names
for ``url_for``.
.. versionchanged:: 2.0.1
Registering the same blueprint with the same name multiple
times is deprecated and will become an error in Flask 2.1.
"""
name_prefix = options.get("name_prefix", "")
self_name = options.get("name", self.name)
name = f"{name_prefix}.{self_name}".lstrip(".")
if name in app.blueprints:
bp_desc = "this" if app.blueprints[name] is self else "a different"
existing_at = f" '{name}'" if self_name != name else ""
raise ValueError(
f"The name '{self_name}' is already registered for"
f" {bp_desc} blueprint{existing_at}. Use 'name=' to"
f" provide a unique name."
)
first_bp_registration = not any(bp is self for bp in app.blueprints.values())
first_name_registration = name not in app.blueprints
app.blueprints[name] = self
self._got_registered_once = True
state = self.make_setup_state(app, options, first_bp_registration)
if self.has_static_folder:
state.add_url_rule(
f"{self.static_url_path}/<path:filename>",
view_func=self.send_static_file,
endpoint="static",
)
# Merge blueprint data into parent.
if first_bp_registration or first_name_registration:
def extend(bp_dict, parent_dict):
for key, values in bp_dict.items():
key = name if key is None else f"{name}.{key}"
parent_dict[key].extend(values)
for key, value in self.error_handler_spec.items():
key = name if key is None else f"{name}.{key}"
value = defaultdict(
dict,
{
code: {
exc_class: func for exc_class, func in code_values.items()
}
for code, code_values in value.items()
},
)
app.error_handler_spec[key] = value
for endpoint, func in self.view_functions.items():
app.view_functions[endpoint] = func
extend(self.before_request_funcs, app.before_request_funcs)
extend(self.after_request_funcs, app.after_request_funcs)
extend(
self.teardown_request_funcs,
app.teardown_request_funcs,
)
extend(self.url_default_functions, app.url_default_functions)
extend(self.url_value_preprocessors, app.url_value_preprocessors)
extend(self.template_context_processors, app.template_context_processors)
for deferred in self.deferred_functions:
deferred(state)
cli_resolved_group = options.get("cli_group", self.cli_group)
if self.cli.commands:
if cli_resolved_group is None:
app.cli.commands.update(self.cli.commands)
elif cli_resolved_group is _sentinel:
self.cli.name = name
app.cli.add_command(self.cli)
else:
self.cli.name = cli_resolved_group
app.cli.add_command(self.cli)
for blueprint, bp_options in self._blueprints:
bp_options = bp_options.copy()
bp_url_prefix = bp_options.get("url_prefix")
if bp_url_prefix is None:
bp_url_prefix = blueprint.url_prefix
if state.url_prefix is not None and bp_url_prefix is not None:
bp_options["url_prefix"] = (
state.url_prefix.rstrip("/") + "/" + bp_url_prefix.lstrip("/")
)
elif bp_url_prefix is not None:
bp_options["url_prefix"] = bp_url_prefix
elif state.url_prefix is not None:
bp_options["url_prefix"] = state.url_prefix
bp_options["name_prefix"] = name
blueprint.register(app, bp_options)
@setupmethod
def add_url_rule(
self,
rule: str,
endpoint: t.Optional[str] = None,
view_func: t.Optional[ft.RouteCallable] = None,
provide_automatic_options: t.Optional[bool] = None,
**options: t.Any,
) -> None:
"""Like :meth:`Flask.add_url_rule` but for a blueprint. The endpoint for
the :func:`url_for` function is prefixed with the name of the blueprint.
"""
if endpoint and "." in endpoint:
raise ValueError("'endpoint' may not contain a dot '.' character.")
if view_func and hasattr(view_func, "__name__") and "." in view_func.__name__:
raise ValueError("'view_func' name may not contain a dot '.' character.")
self.record(
lambda s: s.add_url_rule(
rule,
endpoint,
view_func,
provide_automatic_options=provide_automatic_options,
**options,
)
)
@setupmethod
def app_template_filter(
self, name: t.Optional[str] = None
) -> t.Callable[[T_template_filter], T_template_filter]:
"""Register a custom template filter, available application wide. Like
:meth:`Flask.template_filter` but for a blueprint.
:param name: the optional name of the filter, otherwise the
function name will be used.
"""
def decorator(f: T_template_filter) -> T_template_filter:
self.add_app_template_filter(f, name=name)
return f
return decorator
@setupmethod
def add_app_template_filter(
self, f: ft.TemplateFilterCallable, name: t.Optional[str] = None
) -> None:
"""Register a custom template filter, available application wide. Like
:meth:`Flask.add_template_filter` but for a blueprint. Works exactly
like the :meth:`app_template_filter` decorator.
:param name: the optional name of the filter, otherwise the
function name will be used.
"""
def register_template(state: BlueprintSetupState) -> None:
state.app.jinja_env.filters[name or f.__name__] = f
self.record_once(register_template)
@setupmethod
def app_template_test(
self, name: t.Optional[str] = None
) -> t.Callable[[T_template_test], T_template_test]:
"""Register a custom template test, available application wide. Like
:meth:`Flask.template_test` but for a blueprint.
.. versionadded:: 0.10
:param name: the optional name of the test, otherwise the
function name will be used.
"""
def decorator(f: T_template_test) -> T_template_test:
self.add_app_template_test(f, name=name)
return f
return decorator
@setupmethod
def add_app_template_test(
self, f: ft.TemplateTestCallable, name: t.Optional[str] = None
) -> None:
"""Register a custom template test, available application wide. Like
:meth:`Flask.add_template_test` but for a blueprint. Works exactly
like the :meth:`app_template_test` decorator.
.. versionadded:: 0.10
:param name: the optional name of the test, otherwise the
function name will be used.
"""
def register_template(state: BlueprintSetupState) -> None:
state.app.jinja_env.tests[name or f.__name__] = f
self.record_once(register_template)
@setupmethod
def app_template_global(
self, name: t.Optional[str] = None
) -> t.Callable[[T_template_global], T_template_global]:
"""Register a custom template global, available application wide. Like
:meth:`Flask.template_global` but for a blueprint.
.. versionadded:: 0.10
:param name: the optional name of the global, otherwise the
function name will be used.
"""
def decorator(f: T_template_global) -> T_template_global:
self.add_app_template_global(f, name=name)
return f
return decorator
@setupmethod
def add_app_template_global(
self, f: ft.TemplateGlobalCallable, name: t.Optional[str] = None
) -> None:
"""Register a custom template global, available application wide. Like
:meth:`Flask.add_template_global` but for a blueprint. Works exactly
like the :meth:`app_template_global` decorator.
.. versionadded:: 0.10
:param name: the optional name of the global, otherwise the
function name will be used.
"""
def register_template(state: BlueprintSetupState) -> None:
state.app.jinja_env.globals[name or f.__name__] = f
self.record_once(register_template)
@setupmethod
def before_app_request(self, f: T_before_request) -> T_before_request:
"""Like :meth:`Flask.before_request`. Such a function is executed
before each request, even if outside of a blueprint.
"""
self.record_once(
lambda s: s.app.before_request_funcs.setdefault(None, []).append(f)
)
return f
@setupmethod
def before_app_first_request(
self, f: T_before_first_request
) -> T_before_first_request:
"""Like :meth:`Flask.before_first_request`. Such a function is
executed before the first request to the application.
.. deprecated:: 2.2
Will be removed in Flask 2.3. Run setup code when creating
the application instead.
"""
import warnings
warnings.warn(
"'before_app_first_request' is deprecated and will be"
" removed in Flask 2.3. Use 'record_once' instead to run"
" setup code when registering the blueprint.",
DeprecationWarning,
stacklevel=2,
)
self.record_once(lambda s: s.app.before_first_request_funcs.append(f))
return f
@setupmethod
def after_app_request(self, f: T_after_request) -> T_after_request:
"""Like :meth:`Flask.after_request` but for a blueprint. Such a function
is executed after each request, even if outside of the blueprint.
"""
self.record_once(
lambda s: s.app.after_request_funcs.setdefault(None, []).append(f)
)
return f
@setupmethod
def teardown_app_request(self, f: T_teardown) -> T_teardown:
"""Like :meth:`Flask.teardown_request` but for a blueprint. Such a
function is executed when tearing down each request, even if outside of
the blueprint.
"""
self.record_once(
lambda s: s.app.teardown_request_funcs.setdefault(None, []).append(f)
)
return f
@setupmethod
def app_context_processor(
self, f: T_template_context_processor
) -> T_template_context_processor:
"""Like :meth:`Flask.context_processor` but for a blueprint. Such a
function is executed each request, even if outside of the blueprint.
"""
self.record_once(
lambda s: s.app.template_context_processors.setdefault(None, []).append(f)
)
return f
@setupmethod
def app_errorhandler(
self, code: t.Union[t.Type[Exception], int]
) -> t.Callable[[T_error_handler], T_error_handler]:
"""Like :meth:`Flask.errorhandler` but for a blueprint. This
handler is used for all requests, even if outside of the blueprint.
"""
def decorator(f: T_error_handler) -> T_error_handler:
self.record_once(lambda s: s.app.errorhandler(code)(f))
return f
return decorator
@setupmethod
def app_url_value_preprocessor(
self, f: T_url_value_preprocessor
) -> T_url_value_preprocessor:
"""Same as :meth:`url_value_preprocessor` but application wide."""
self.record_once(
lambda s: s.app.url_value_preprocessors.setdefault(None, []).append(f)
)
return f
@setupmethod
def app_url_defaults(self, f: T_url_defaults) -> T_url_defaults:
"""Same as :meth:`url_defaults` but application wide."""
self.record_once(
lambda s: s.app.url_default_functions.setdefault(None, []).append(f)
)
return f

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import errno
import json
import os
import types
import typing as t
from werkzeug.utils import import_string
class ConfigAttribute:
"""Makes an attribute forward to the config"""
def __init__(self, name: str, get_converter: t.Optional[t.Callable] = None) -> None:
self.__name__ = name
self.get_converter = get_converter
def __get__(self, obj: t.Any, owner: t.Any = None) -> t.Any:
if obj is None:
return self
rv = obj.config[self.__name__]
if self.get_converter is not None:
rv = self.get_converter(rv)
return rv
def __set__(self, obj: t.Any, value: t.Any) -> None:
obj.config[self.__name__] = value
class Config(dict):
"""Works exactly like a dict but provides ways to fill it from files
or special dictionaries. There are two common patterns to populate the
config.
Either you can fill the config from a config file::
app.config.from_pyfile('yourconfig.cfg')
Or alternatively you can define the configuration options in the
module that calls :meth:`from_object` or provide an import path to
a module that should be loaded. It is also possible to tell it to
use the same module and with that provide the configuration values
just before the call::
DEBUG = True
SECRET_KEY = 'development key'
app.config.from_object(__name__)
In both cases (loading from any Python file or loading from modules),
only uppercase keys are added to the config. This makes it possible to use
lowercase values in the config file for temporary values that are not added
to the config or to define the config keys in the same file that implements
the application.
Probably the most interesting way to load configurations is from an
environment variable pointing to a file::
app.config.from_envvar('YOURAPPLICATION_SETTINGS')
In this case before launching the application you have to set this
environment variable to the file you want to use. On Linux and OS X
use the export statement::
export YOURAPPLICATION_SETTINGS='/path/to/config/file'
On windows use `set` instead.
:param root_path: path to which files are read relative from. When the
config object is created by the application, this is
the application's :attr:`~flask.Flask.root_path`.
:param defaults: an optional dictionary of default values
"""
def __init__(self, root_path: str, defaults: t.Optional[dict] = None) -> None:
super().__init__(defaults or {})
self.root_path = root_path
def from_envvar(self, variable_name: str, silent: bool = False) -> bool:
"""Loads a configuration from an environment variable pointing to
a configuration file. This is basically just a shortcut with nicer
error messages for this line of code::
app.config.from_pyfile(os.environ['YOURAPPLICATION_SETTINGS'])
:param variable_name: name of the environment variable
:param silent: set to ``True`` if you want silent failure for missing
files.
:return: ``True`` if the file was loaded successfully.
"""
rv = os.environ.get(variable_name)
if not rv:
if silent:
return False
raise RuntimeError(
f"The environment variable {variable_name!r} is not set"
" and as such configuration could not be loaded. Set"
" this variable and make it point to a configuration"
" file"
)
return self.from_pyfile(rv, silent=silent)
def from_prefixed_env(
self, prefix: str = "FLASK", *, loads: t.Callable[[str], t.Any] = json.loads
) -> bool:
"""Load any environment variables that start with ``FLASK_``,
dropping the prefix from the env key for the config key. Values
are passed through a loading function to attempt to convert them
to more specific types than strings.
Keys are loaded in :func:`sorted` order.
The default loading function attempts to parse values as any
valid JSON type, including dicts and lists.
Specific items in nested dicts can be set by separating the
keys with double underscores (``__``). If an intermediate key
doesn't exist, it will be initialized to an empty dict.
:param prefix: Load env vars that start with this prefix,
separated with an underscore (``_``).
:param loads: Pass each string value to this function and use
the returned value as the config value. If any error is
raised it is ignored and the value remains a string. The
default is :func:`json.loads`.
.. versionadded:: 2.1
"""
prefix = f"{prefix}_"
len_prefix = len(prefix)
for key in sorted(os.environ):
if not key.startswith(prefix):
continue
value = os.environ[key]
try:
value = loads(value)
except Exception:
# Keep the value as a string if loading failed.
pass
# Change to key.removeprefix(prefix) on Python >= 3.9.
key = key[len_prefix:]
if "__" not in key:
# A non-nested key, set directly.
self[key] = value
continue
# Traverse nested dictionaries with keys separated by "__".
current = self
*parts, tail = key.split("__")
for part in parts:
# If an intermediate dict does not exist, create it.
if part not in current:
current[part] = {}
current = current[part]
current[tail] = value
return True
def from_pyfile(self, filename: str, silent: bool = False) -> bool:
"""Updates the values in the config from a Python file. This function
behaves as if the file was imported as module with the
:meth:`from_object` function.
:param filename: the filename of the config. This can either be an
absolute filename or a filename relative to the
root path.
:param silent: set to ``True`` if you want silent failure for missing
files.
:return: ``True`` if the file was loaded successfully.
.. versionadded:: 0.7
`silent` parameter.
"""
filename = os.path.join(self.root_path, filename)
d = types.ModuleType("config")
d.__file__ = filename
try:
with open(filename, mode="rb") as config_file:
exec(compile(config_file.read(), filename, "exec"), d.__dict__)
except OSError as e:
if silent and e.errno in (errno.ENOENT, errno.EISDIR, errno.ENOTDIR):
return False
e.strerror = f"Unable to load configuration file ({e.strerror})"
raise
self.from_object(d)
return True
def from_object(self, obj: t.Union[object, str]) -> None:
"""Updates the values from the given object. An object can be of one
of the following two types:
- a string: in this case the object with that name will be imported
- an actual object reference: that object is used directly
Objects are usually either modules or classes. :meth:`from_object`
loads only the uppercase attributes of the module/class. A ``dict``
object will not work with :meth:`from_object` because the keys of a
``dict`` are not attributes of the ``dict`` class.
Example of module-based configuration::
app.config.from_object('yourapplication.default_config')
from yourapplication import default_config
app.config.from_object(default_config)
Nothing is done to the object before loading. If the object is a
class and has ``@property`` attributes, it needs to be
instantiated before being passed to this method.
You should not use this function to load the actual configuration but
rather configuration defaults. The actual config should be loaded
with :meth:`from_pyfile` and ideally from a location not within the
package because the package might be installed system wide.
See :ref:`config-dev-prod` for an example of class-based configuration
using :meth:`from_object`.
:param obj: an import name or object
"""
if isinstance(obj, str):
obj = import_string(obj)
for key in dir(obj):
if key.isupper():
self[key] = getattr(obj, key)
def from_file(
self,
filename: str,
load: t.Callable[[t.IO[t.Any]], t.Mapping],
silent: bool = False,
) -> bool:
"""Update the values in the config from a file that is loaded
using the ``load`` parameter. The loaded data is passed to the
:meth:`from_mapping` method.
.. code-block:: python
import json
app.config.from_file("config.json", load=json.load)
import toml
app.config.from_file("config.toml", load=toml.load)
:param filename: The path to the data file. This can be an
absolute path or relative to the config root path.
:param load: A callable that takes a file handle and returns a
mapping of loaded data from the file.
:type load: ``Callable[[Reader], Mapping]`` where ``Reader``
implements a ``read`` method.
:param silent: Ignore the file if it doesn't exist.
:return: ``True`` if the file was loaded successfully.
.. versionadded:: 2.0
"""
filename = os.path.join(self.root_path, filename)
try:
with open(filename) as f:
obj = load(f)
except OSError as e:
if silent and e.errno in (errno.ENOENT, errno.EISDIR):
return False
e.strerror = f"Unable to load configuration file ({e.strerror})"
raise
return self.from_mapping(obj)
def from_mapping(
self, mapping: t.Optional[t.Mapping[str, t.Any]] = None, **kwargs: t.Any
) -> bool:
"""Updates the config like :meth:`update` ignoring items with non-upper
keys.
:return: Always returns ``True``.
.. versionadded:: 0.11
"""
mappings: t.Dict[str, t.Any] = {}
if mapping is not None:
mappings.update(mapping)
mappings.update(kwargs)
for key, value in mappings.items():
if key.isupper():
self[key] = value
return True
def get_namespace(
self, namespace: str, lowercase: bool = True, trim_namespace: bool = True
) -> t.Dict[str, t.Any]:
"""Returns a dictionary containing a subset of configuration options
that match the specified namespace/prefix. Example usage::
app.config['IMAGE_STORE_TYPE'] = 'fs'
app.config['IMAGE_STORE_PATH'] = '/var/app/images'
app.config['IMAGE_STORE_BASE_URL'] = 'http://img.website.com'
image_store_config = app.config.get_namespace('IMAGE_STORE_')
The resulting dictionary `image_store_config` would look like::
{
'type': 'fs',
'path': '/var/app/images',
'base_url': 'http://img.website.com'
}
This is often useful when configuration options map directly to
keyword arguments in functions or class constructors.
:param namespace: a configuration namespace
:param lowercase: a flag indicating if the keys of the resulting
dictionary should be lowercase
:param trim_namespace: a flag indicating if the keys of the resulting
dictionary should not include the namespace
.. versionadded:: 0.11
"""
rv = {}
for k, v in self.items():
if not k.startswith(namespace):
continue
if trim_namespace:
key = k[len(namespace) :]
else:
key = k
if lowercase:
key = key.lower()
rv[key] = v
return rv
def __repr__(self) -> str:
return f"<{type(self).__name__} {dict.__repr__(self)}>"

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@ -0,0 +1,438 @@
import contextvars
import sys
import typing as t
from functools import update_wrapper
from types import TracebackType
from werkzeug.exceptions import HTTPException
from . import typing as ft
from .globals import _cv_app
from .globals import _cv_request
from .signals import appcontext_popped
from .signals import appcontext_pushed
if t.TYPE_CHECKING: # pragma: no cover
from .app import Flask
from .sessions import SessionMixin
from .wrappers import Request
# a singleton sentinel value for parameter defaults
_sentinel = object()
class _AppCtxGlobals:
"""A plain object. Used as a namespace for storing data during an
application context.
Creating an app context automatically creates this object, which is
made available as the :data:`g` proxy.
.. describe:: 'key' in g
Check whether an attribute is present.
.. versionadded:: 0.10
.. describe:: iter(g)
Return an iterator over the attribute names.
.. versionadded:: 0.10
"""
# Define attr methods to let mypy know this is a namespace object
# that has arbitrary attributes.
def __getattr__(self, name: str) -> t.Any:
try:
return self.__dict__[name]
except KeyError:
raise AttributeError(name) from None
def __setattr__(self, name: str, value: t.Any) -> None:
self.__dict__[name] = value
def __delattr__(self, name: str) -> None:
try:
del self.__dict__[name]
except KeyError:
raise AttributeError(name) from None
def get(self, name: str, default: t.Optional[t.Any] = None) -> t.Any:
"""Get an attribute by name, or a default value. Like
:meth:`dict.get`.
:param name: Name of attribute to get.
:param default: Value to return if the attribute is not present.
.. versionadded:: 0.10
"""
return self.__dict__.get(name, default)
def pop(self, name: str, default: t.Any = _sentinel) -> t.Any:
"""Get and remove an attribute by name. Like :meth:`dict.pop`.
:param name: Name of attribute to pop.
:param default: Value to return if the attribute is not present,
instead of raising a ``KeyError``.
.. versionadded:: 0.11
"""
if default is _sentinel:
return self.__dict__.pop(name)
else:
return self.__dict__.pop(name, default)
def setdefault(self, name: str, default: t.Any = None) -> t.Any:
"""Get the value of an attribute if it is present, otherwise
set and return a default value. Like :meth:`dict.setdefault`.
:param name: Name of attribute to get.
:param default: Value to set and return if the attribute is not
present.
.. versionadded:: 0.11
"""
return self.__dict__.setdefault(name, default)
def __contains__(self, item: str) -> bool:
return item in self.__dict__
def __iter__(self) -> t.Iterator[str]:
return iter(self.__dict__)
def __repr__(self) -> str:
ctx = _cv_app.get(None)
if ctx is not None:
return f"<flask.g of '{ctx.app.name}'>"
return object.__repr__(self)
def after_this_request(f: ft.AfterRequestCallable) -> ft.AfterRequestCallable:
"""Executes a function after this request. This is useful to modify
response objects. The function is passed the response object and has
to return the same or a new one.
Example::
@app.route('/')
def index():
@after_this_request
def add_header(response):
response.headers['X-Foo'] = 'Parachute'
return response
return 'Hello World!'
This is more useful if a function other than the view function wants to
modify a response. For instance think of a decorator that wants to add
some headers without converting the return value into a response object.
.. versionadded:: 0.9
"""
ctx = _cv_request.get(None)
if ctx is None:
raise RuntimeError(
"'after_this_request' can only be used when a request"
" context is active, such as in a view function."
)
ctx._after_request_functions.append(f)
return f
def copy_current_request_context(f: t.Callable) -> t.Callable:
"""A helper function that decorates a function to retain the current
request context. This is useful when working with greenlets. The moment
the function is decorated a copy of the request context is created and
then pushed when the function is called. The current session is also
included in the copied request context.
Example::
import gevent
from flask import copy_current_request_context
@app.route('/')
def index():
@copy_current_request_context
def do_some_work():
# do some work here, it can access flask.request or
# flask.session like you would otherwise in the view function.
...
gevent.spawn(do_some_work)
return 'Regular response'
.. versionadded:: 0.10
"""
ctx = _cv_request.get(None)
if ctx is None:
raise RuntimeError(
"'copy_current_request_context' can only be used when a"
" request context is active, such as in a view function."
)
ctx = ctx.copy()
def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
with ctx:
return ctx.app.ensure_sync(f)(*args, **kwargs)
return update_wrapper(wrapper, f)
def has_request_context() -> bool:
"""If you have code that wants to test if a request context is there or
not this function can be used. For instance, you may want to take advantage
of request information if the request object is available, but fail
silently if it is unavailable.
::
class User(db.Model):
def __init__(self, username, remote_addr=None):
self.username = username
if remote_addr is None and has_request_context():
remote_addr = request.remote_addr
self.remote_addr = remote_addr
Alternatively you can also just test any of the context bound objects
(such as :class:`request` or :class:`g`) for truthness::
class User(db.Model):
def __init__(self, username, remote_addr=None):
self.username = username
if remote_addr is None and request:
remote_addr = request.remote_addr
self.remote_addr = remote_addr
.. versionadded:: 0.7
"""
return _cv_request.get(None) is not None
def has_app_context() -> bool:
"""Works like :func:`has_request_context` but for the application
context. You can also just do a boolean check on the
:data:`current_app` object instead.
.. versionadded:: 0.9
"""
return _cv_app.get(None) is not None
class AppContext:
"""The app context contains application-specific information. An app
context is created and pushed at the beginning of each request if
one is not already active. An app context is also pushed when
running CLI commands.
"""
def __init__(self, app: "Flask") -> None:
self.app = app
self.url_adapter = app.create_url_adapter(None)
self.g: _AppCtxGlobals = app.app_ctx_globals_class()
self._cv_tokens: t.List[contextvars.Token] = []
def push(self) -> None:
"""Binds the app context to the current context."""
self._cv_tokens.append(_cv_app.set(self))
appcontext_pushed.send(self.app)
def pop(self, exc: t.Optional[BaseException] = _sentinel) -> None: # type: ignore
"""Pops the app context."""
try:
if len(self._cv_tokens) == 1:
if exc is _sentinel:
exc = sys.exc_info()[1]
self.app.do_teardown_appcontext(exc)
finally:
ctx = _cv_app.get()
_cv_app.reset(self._cv_tokens.pop())
if ctx is not self:
raise AssertionError(
f"Popped wrong app context. ({ctx!r} instead of {self!r})"
)
appcontext_popped.send(self.app)
def __enter__(self) -> "AppContext":
self.push()
return self
def __exit__(
self,
exc_type: t.Optional[type],
exc_value: t.Optional[BaseException],
tb: t.Optional[TracebackType],
) -> None:
self.pop(exc_value)
class RequestContext:
"""The request context contains per-request information. The Flask
app creates and pushes it at the beginning of the request, then pops
it at the end of the request. It will create the URL adapter and
request object for the WSGI environment provided.
Do not attempt to use this class directly, instead use
:meth:`~flask.Flask.test_request_context` and
:meth:`~flask.Flask.request_context` to create this object.
When the request context is popped, it will evaluate all the
functions registered on the application for teardown execution
(:meth:`~flask.Flask.teardown_request`).
The request context is automatically popped at the end of the
request. When using the interactive debugger, the context will be
restored so ``request`` is still accessible. Similarly, the test
client can preserve the context after the request ends. However,
teardown functions may already have closed some resources such as
database connections.
"""
def __init__(
self,
app: "Flask",
environ: dict,
request: t.Optional["Request"] = None,
session: t.Optional["SessionMixin"] = None,
) -> None:
self.app = app
if request is None:
request = app.request_class(environ)
request.json_module = app.json # type: ignore[misc]
self.request: Request = request
self.url_adapter = None
try:
self.url_adapter = app.create_url_adapter(self.request)
except HTTPException as e:
self.request.routing_exception = e
self.flashes: t.Optional[t.List[t.Tuple[str, str]]] = None
self.session: t.Optional["SessionMixin"] = session
# Functions that should be executed after the request on the response
# object. These will be called before the regular "after_request"
# functions.
self._after_request_functions: t.List[ft.AfterRequestCallable] = []
self._cv_tokens: t.List[t.Tuple[contextvars.Token, t.Optional[AppContext]]] = []
def copy(self) -> "RequestContext":
"""Creates a copy of this request context with the same request object.
This can be used to move a request context to a different greenlet.
Because the actual request object is the same this cannot be used to
move a request context to a different thread unless access to the
request object is locked.
.. versionadded:: 0.10
.. versionchanged:: 1.1
The current session object is used instead of reloading the original
data. This prevents `flask.session` pointing to an out-of-date object.
"""
return self.__class__(
self.app,
environ=self.request.environ,
request=self.request,
session=self.session,
)
def match_request(self) -> None:
"""Can be overridden by a subclass to hook into the matching
of the request.
"""
try:
result = self.url_adapter.match(return_rule=True) # type: ignore
self.request.url_rule, self.request.view_args = result # type: ignore
except HTTPException as e:
self.request.routing_exception = e
def push(self) -> None:
# Before we push the request context we have to ensure that there
# is an application context.
app_ctx = _cv_app.get(None)
if app_ctx is None or app_ctx.app is not self.app:
app_ctx = self.app.app_context()
app_ctx.push()
else:
app_ctx = None
self._cv_tokens.append((_cv_request.set(self), app_ctx))
# Open the session at the moment that the request context is available.
# This allows a custom open_session method to use the request context.
# Only open a new session if this is the first time the request was
# pushed, otherwise stream_with_context loses the session.
if self.session is None:
session_interface = self.app.session_interface
self.session = session_interface.open_session(self.app, self.request)
if self.session is None:
self.session = session_interface.make_null_session(self.app)
# Match the request URL after loading the session, so that the
# session is available in custom URL converters.
if self.url_adapter is not None:
self.match_request()
def pop(self, exc: t.Optional[BaseException] = _sentinel) -> None: # type: ignore
"""Pops the request context and unbinds it by doing that. This will
also trigger the execution of functions registered by the
:meth:`~flask.Flask.teardown_request` decorator.
.. versionchanged:: 0.9
Added the `exc` argument.
"""
clear_request = len(self._cv_tokens) == 1
try:
if clear_request:
if exc is _sentinel:
exc = sys.exc_info()[1]
self.app.do_teardown_request(exc)
request_close = getattr(self.request, "close", None)
if request_close is not None:
request_close()
finally:
ctx = _cv_request.get()
token, app_ctx = self._cv_tokens.pop()
_cv_request.reset(token)
# get rid of circular dependencies at the end of the request
# so that we don't require the GC to be active.
if clear_request:
ctx.request.environ["werkzeug.request"] = None
if app_ctx is not None:
app_ctx.pop(exc)
if ctx is not self:
raise AssertionError(
f"Popped wrong request context. ({ctx!r} instead of {self!r})"
)
def __enter__(self) -> "RequestContext":
self.push()
return self
def __exit__(
self,
exc_type: t.Optional[type],
exc_value: t.Optional[BaseException],
tb: t.Optional[TracebackType],
) -> None:
self.pop(exc_value)
def __repr__(self) -> str:
return (
f"<{type(self).__name__} {self.request.url!r}"
f" [{self.request.method}] of {self.app.name}>"
)

View File

@ -0,0 +1,158 @@
import typing as t
from .app import Flask
from .blueprints import Blueprint
from .globals import request_ctx
class UnexpectedUnicodeError(AssertionError, UnicodeError):
"""Raised in places where we want some better error reporting for
unexpected unicode or binary data.
"""
class DebugFilesKeyError(KeyError, AssertionError):
"""Raised from request.files during debugging. The idea is that it can
provide a better error message than just a generic KeyError/BadRequest.
"""
def __init__(self, request, key):
form_matches = request.form.getlist(key)
buf = [
f"You tried to access the file {key!r} in the request.files"
" dictionary but it does not exist. The mimetype for the"
f" request is {request.mimetype!r} instead of"
" 'multipart/form-data' which means that no file contents"
" were transmitted. To fix this error you should provide"
' enctype="multipart/form-data" in your form.'
]
if form_matches:
names = ", ".join(repr(x) for x in form_matches)
buf.append(
"\n\nThe browser instead transmitted some file names. "
f"This was submitted: {names}"
)
self.msg = "".join(buf)
def __str__(self):
return self.msg
class FormDataRoutingRedirect(AssertionError):
"""This exception is raised in debug mode if a routing redirect
would cause the browser to drop the method or body. This happens
when method is not GET, HEAD or OPTIONS and the status code is not
307 or 308.
"""
def __init__(self, request):
exc = request.routing_exception
buf = [
f"A request was sent to '{request.url}', but routing issued"
f" a redirect to the canonical URL '{exc.new_url}'."
]
if f"{request.base_url}/" == exc.new_url.partition("?")[0]:
buf.append(
" The URL was defined with a trailing slash. Flask"
" will redirect to the URL with a trailing slash if it"
" was accessed without one."
)
buf.append(
" Send requests to the canonical URL, or use 307 or 308 for"
" routing redirects. Otherwise, browsers will drop form"
" data.\n\n"
"This exception is only raised in debug mode."
)
super().__init__("".join(buf))
def attach_enctype_error_multidict(request):
"""Patch ``request.files.__getitem__`` to raise a descriptive error
about ``enctype=multipart/form-data``.
:param request: The request to patch.
:meta private:
"""
oldcls = request.files.__class__
class newcls(oldcls):
def __getitem__(self, key):
try:
return super().__getitem__(key)
except KeyError as e:
if key not in request.form:
raise
raise DebugFilesKeyError(request, key).with_traceback(
e.__traceback__
) from None
newcls.__name__ = oldcls.__name__
newcls.__module__ = oldcls.__module__
request.files.__class__ = newcls
def _dump_loader_info(loader) -> t.Generator:
yield f"class: {type(loader).__module__}.{type(loader).__name__}"
for key, value in sorted(loader.__dict__.items()):
if key.startswith("_"):
continue
if isinstance(value, (tuple, list)):
if not all(isinstance(x, str) for x in value):
continue
yield f"{key}:"
for item in value:
yield f" - {item}"
continue
elif not isinstance(value, (str, int, float, bool)):
continue
yield f"{key}: {value!r}"
def explain_template_loading_attempts(app: Flask, template, attempts) -> None:
"""This should help developers understand what failed"""
info = [f"Locating template {template!r}:"]
total_found = 0
blueprint = None
if request_ctx and request_ctx.request.blueprint is not None:
blueprint = request_ctx.request.blueprint
for idx, (loader, srcobj, triple) in enumerate(attempts):
if isinstance(srcobj, Flask):
src_info = f"application {srcobj.import_name!r}"
elif isinstance(srcobj, Blueprint):
src_info = f"blueprint {srcobj.name!r} ({srcobj.import_name})"
else:
src_info = repr(srcobj)
info.append(f"{idx + 1:5}: trying loader of {src_info}")
for line in _dump_loader_info(loader):
info.append(f" {line}")
if triple is None:
detail = "no match"
else:
detail = f"found ({triple[1] or '<string>'!r})"
total_found += 1
info.append(f" -> {detail}")
seems_fishy = False
if total_found == 0:
info.append("Error: the template could not be found.")
seems_fishy = True
elif total_found > 1:
info.append("Warning: multiple loaders returned a match for the template.")
seems_fishy = True
if blueprint is not None and seems_fishy:
info.append(
" The template was looked up from an endpoint that belongs"
f" to the blueprint {blueprint!r}."
)
info.append(" Maybe you did not place a template in the right folder?")
info.append(" See https://flask.palletsprojects.com/blueprints/#templates")
app.logger.info("\n".join(info))

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import typing as t
from contextvars import ContextVar
from werkzeug.local import LocalProxy
if t.TYPE_CHECKING: # pragma: no cover
from .app import Flask
from .ctx import _AppCtxGlobals
from .ctx import AppContext
from .ctx import RequestContext
from .sessions import SessionMixin
from .wrappers import Request
class _FakeStack:
def __init__(self, name: str, cv: ContextVar[t.Any]) -> None:
self.name = name
self.cv = cv
def _warn(self):
import warnings
warnings.warn(
f"'_{self.name}_ctx_stack' is deprecated and will be"
" removed in Flask 2.3. Use 'g' to store data, or"
f" '{self.name}_ctx' to access the current context.",
DeprecationWarning,
stacklevel=3,
)
def push(self, obj: t.Any) -> None:
self._warn()
self.cv.set(obj)
def pop(self) -> t.Any:
self._warn()
ctx = self.cv.get(None)
self.cv.set(None)
return ctx
@property
def top(self) -> t.Optional[t.Any]:
self._warn()
return self.cv.get(None)
_no_app_msg = """\
Working outside of application context.
This typically means that you attempted to use functionality that needed
the current application. To solve this, set up an application context
with app.app_context(). See the documentation for more information.\
"""
_cv_app: ContextVar["AppContext"] = ContextVar("flask.app_ctx")
__app_ctx_stack = _FakeStack("app", _cv_app)
app_ctx: "AppContext" = LocalProxy( # type: ignore[assignment]
_cv_app, unbound_message=_no_app_msg
)
current_app: "Flask" = LocalProxy( # type: ignore[assignment]
_cv_app, "app", unbound_message=_no_app_msg
)
g: "_AppCtxGlobals" = LocalProxy( # type: ignore[assignment]
_cv_app, "g", unbound_message=_no_app_msg
)
_no_req_msg = """\
Working outside of request context.
This typically means that you attempted to use functionality that needed
an active HTTP request. Consult the documentation on testing for
information about how to avoid this problem.\
"""
_cv_request: ContextVar["RequestContext"] = ContextVar("flask.request_ctx")
__request_ctx_stack = _FakeStack("request", _cv_request)
request_ctx: "RequestContext" = LocalProxy( # type: ignore[assignment]
_cv_request, unbound_message=_no_req_msg
)
request: "Request" = LocalProxy( # type: ignore[assignment]
_cv_request, "request", unbound_message=_no_req_msg
)
session: "SessionMixin" = LocalProxy( # type: ignore[assignment]
_cv_request, "session", unbound_message=_no_req_msg
)
def __getattr__(name: str) -> t.Any:
if name == "_app_ctx_stack":
import warnings
warnings.warn(
"'_app_ctx_stack' is deprecated and will be remoevd in Flask 2.3.",
DeprecationWarning,
stacklevel=2,
)
return __app_ctx_stack
if name == "_request_ctx_stack":
import warnings
warnings.warn(
"'_request_ctx_stack' is deprecated and will be remoevd in Flask 2.3.",
DeprecationWarning,
stacklevel=2,
)
return __request_ctx_stack
raise AttributeError(name)

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@ -0,0 +1,705 @@
import os
import pkgutil
import socket
import sys
import typing as t
from datetime import datetime
from functools import lru_cache
from functools import update_wrapper
from threading import RLock
import werkzeug.utils
from werkzeug.exceptions import abort as _wz_abort
from werkzeug.utils import redirect as _wz_redirect
from .globals import _cv_request
from .globals import current_app
from .globals import request
from .globals import request_ctx
from .globals import session
from .signals import message_flashed
if t.TYPE_CHECKING: # pragma: no cover
from werkzeug.wrappers import Response as BaseResponse
from .wrappers import Response
import typing_extensions as te
def get_env() -> str:
"""Get the environment the app is running in, indicated by the
:envvar:`FLASK_ENV` environment variable. The default is
``'production'``.
.. deprecated:: 2.2
Will be removed in Flask 2.3.
"""
import warnings
warnings.warn(
"'FLASK_ENV' and 'get_env' are deprecated and will be removed"
" in Flask 2.3. Use 'FLASK_DEBUG' instead.",
DeprecationWarning,
stacklevel=2,
)
return os.environ.get("FLASK_ENV") or "production"
def get_debug_flag() -> bool:
"""Get whether debug mode should be enabled for the app, indicated by the
:envvar:`FLASK_DEBUG` environment variable. The default is ``False``.
"""
val = os.environ.get("FLASK_DEBUG")
if not val:
env = os.environ.get("FLASK_ENV")
if env is not None:
print(
"'FLASK_ENV' is deprecated and will not be used in"
" Flask 2.3. Use 'FLASK_DEBUG' instead.",
file=sys.stderr,
)
return env == "development"
return False
return val.lower() not in {"0", "false", "no"}
def get_load_dotenv(default: bool = True) -> bool:
"""Get whether the user has disabled loading default dotenv files by
setting :envvar:`FLASK_SKIP_DOTENV`. The default is ``True``, load
the files.
:param default: What to return if the env var isn't set.
"""
val = os.environ.get("FLASK_SKIP_DOTENV")
if not val:
return default
return val.lower() in ("0", "false", "no")
def stream_with_context(
generator_or_function: t.Union[
t.Iterator[t.AnyStr], t.Callable[..., t.Iterator[t.AnyStr]]
]
) -> t.Iterator[t.AnyStr]:
"""Request contexts disappear when the response is started on the server.
This is done for efficiency reasons and to make it less likely to encounter
memory leaks with badly written WSGI middlewares. The downside is that if
you are using streamed responses, the generator cannot access request bound
information any more.
This function however can help you keep the context around for longer::
from flask import stream_with_context, request, Response
@app.route('/stream')
def streamed_response():
@stream_with_context
def generate():
yield 'Hello '
yield request.args['name']
yield '!'
return Response(generate())
Alternatively it can also be used around a specific generator::
from flask import stream_with_context, request, Response
@app.route('/stream')
def streamed_response():
def generate():
yield 'Hello '
yield request.args['name']
yield '!'
return Response(stream_with_context(generate()))
.. versionadded:: 0.9
"""
try:
gen = iter(generator_or_function) # type: ignore
except TypeError:
def decorator(*args: t.Any, **kwargs: t.Any) -> t.Any:
gen = generator_or_function(*args, **kwargs) # type: ignore
return stream_with_context(gen)
return update_wrapper(decorator, generator_or_function) # type: ignore
def generator() -> t.Generator:
ctx = _cv_request.get(None)
if ctx is None:
raise RuntimeError(
"'stream_with_context' can only be used when a request"
" context is active, such as in a view function."
)
with ctx:
# Dummy sentinel. Has to be inside the context block or we're
# not actually keeping the context around.
yield None
# The try/finally is here so that if someone passes a WSGI level
# iterator in we're still running the cleanup logic. Generators
# don't need that because they are closed on their destruction
# automatically.
try:
yield from gen
finally:
if hasattr(gen, "close"):
gen.close() # type: ignore
# The trick is to start the generator. Then the code execution runs until
# the first dummy None is yielded at which point the context was already
# pushed. This item is discarded. Then when the iteration continues the
# real generator is executed.
wrapped_g = generator()
next(wrapped_g)
return wrapped_g
def make_response(*args: t.Any) -> "Response":
"""Sometimes it is necessary to set additional headers in a view. Because
views do not have to return response objects but can return a value that
is converted into a response object by Flask itself, it becomes tricky to
add headers to it. This function can be called instead of using a return
and you will get a response object which you can use to attach headers.
If view looked like this and you want to add a new header::
def index():
return render_template('index.html', foo=42)
You can now do something like this::
def index():
response = make_response(render_template('index.html', foo=42))
response.headers['X-Parachutes'] = 'parachutes are cool'
return response
This function accepts the very same arguments you can return from a
view function. This for example creates a response with a 404 error
code::
response = make_response(render_template('not_found.html'), 404)
The other use case of this function is to force the return value of a
view function into a response which is helpful with view
decorators::
response = make_response(view_function())
response.headers['X-Parachutes'] = 'parachutes are cool'
Internally this function does the following things:
- if no arguments are passed, it creates a new response argument
- if one argument is passed, :meth:`flask.Flask.make_response`
is invoked with it.
- if more than one argument is passed, the arguments are passed
to the :meth:`flask.Flask.make_response` function as tuple.
.. versionadded:: 0.6
"""
if not args:
return current_app.response_class()
if len(args) == 1:
args = args[0]
return current_app.make_response(args) # type: ignore
def url_for(
endpoint: str,
*,
_anchor: t.Optional[str] = None,
_method: t.Optional[str] = None,
_scheme: t.Optional[str] = None,
_external: t.Optional[bool] = None,
**values: t.Any,
) -> str:
"""Generate a URL to the given endpoint with the given values.
This requires an active request or application context, and calls
:meth:`current_app.url_for() <flask.Flask.url_for>`. See that method
for full documentation.
:param endpoint: The endpoint name associated with the URL to
generate. If this starts with a ``.``, the current blueprint
name (if any) will be used.
:param _anchor: If given, append this as ``#anchor`` to the URL.
:param _method: If given, generate the URL associated with this
method for the endpoint.
:param _scheme: If given, the URL will have this scheme if it is
external.
:param _external: If given, prefer the URL to be internal (False) or
require it to be external (True). External URLs include the
scheme and domain. When not in an active request, URLs are
external by default.
:param values: Values to use for the variable parts of the URL rule.
Unknown keys are appended as query string arguments, like
``?a=b&c=d``.
.. versionchanged:: 2.2
Calls ``current_app.url_for``, allowing an app to override the
behavior.
.. versionchanged:: 0.10
The ``_scheme`` parameter was added.
.. versionchanged:: 0.9
The ``_anchor`` and ``_method`` parameters were added.
.. versionchanged:: 0.9
Calls ``app.handle_url_build_error`` on build errors.
"""
return current_app.url_for(
endpoint,
_anchor=_anchor,
_method=_method,
_scheme=_scheme,
_external=_external,
**values,
)
def redirect(
location: str, code: int = 302, Response: t.Optional[t.Type["BaseResponse"]] = None
) -> "BaseResponse":
"""Create a redirect response object.
If :data:`~flask.current_app` is available, it will use its
:meth:`~flask.Flask.redirect` method, otherwise it will use
:func:`werkzeug.utils.redirect`.
:param location: The URL to redirect to.
:param code: The status code for the redirect.
:param Response: The response class to use. Not used when
``current_app`` is active, which uses ``app.response_class``.
.. versionadded:: 2.2
Calls ``current_app.redirect`` if available instead of always
using Werkzeug's default ``redirect``.
"""
if current_app:
return current_app.redirect(location, code=code)
return _wz_redirect(location, code=code, Response=Response)
def abort( # type: ignore[misc]
code: t.Union[int, "BaseResponse"], *args: t.Any, **kwargs: t.Any
) -> "te.NoReturn":
"""Raise an :exc:`~werkzeug.exceptions.HTTPException` for the given
status code.
If :data:`~flask.current_app` is available, it will call its
:attr:`~flask.Flask.aborter` object, otherwise it will use
:func:`werkzeug.exceptions.abort`.
:param code: The status code for the exception, which must be
registered in ``app.aborter``.
:param args: Passed to the exception.
:param kwargs: Passed to the exception.
.. versionadded:: 2.2
Calls ``current_app.aborter`` if available instead of always
using Werkzeug's default ``abort``.
"""
if current_app:
current_app.aborter(code, *args, **kwargs)
_wz_abort(code, *args, **kwargs)
def get_template_attribute(template_name: str, attribute: str) -> t.Any:
"""Loads a macro (or variable) a template exports. This can be used to
invoke a macro from within Python code. If you for example have a
template named :file:`_cider.html` with the following contents:
.. sourcecode:: html+jinja
{% macro hello(name) %}Hello {{ name }}!{% endmacro %}
You can access this from Python code like this::
hello = get_template_attribute('_cider.html', 'hello')
return hello('World')
.. versionadded:: 0.2
:param template_name: the name of the template
:param attribute: the name of the variable of macro to access
"""
return getattr(current_app.jinja_env.get_template(template_name).module, attribute)
def flash(message: str, category: str = "message") -> None:
"""Flashes a message to the next request. In order to remove the
flashed message from the session and to display it to the user,
the template has to call :func:`get_flashed_messages`.
.. versionchanged:: 0.3
`category` parameter added.
:param message: the message to be flashed.
:param category: the category for the message. The following values
are recommended: ``'message'`` for any kind of message,
``'error'`` for errors, ``'info'`` for information
messages and ``'warning'`` for warnings. However any
kind of string can be used as category.
"""
# Original implementation:
#
# session.setdefault('_flashes', []).append((category, message))
#
# This assumed that changes made to mutable structures in the session are
# always in sync with the session object, which is not true for session
# implementations that use external storage for keeping their keys/values.
flashes = session.get("_flashes", [])
flashes.append((category, message))
session["_flashes"] = flashes
message_flashed.send(
current_app._get_current_object(), # type: ignore
message=message,
category=category,
)
def get_flashed_messages(
with_categories: bool = False, category_filter: t.Iterable[str] = ()
) -> t.Union[t.List[str], t.List[t.Tuple[str, str]]]:
"""Pulls all flashed messages from the session and returns them.
Further calls in the same request to the function will return
the same messages. By default just the messages are returned,
but when `with_categories` is set to ``True``, the return value will
be a list of tuples in the form ``(category, message)`` instead.
Filter the flashed messages to one or more categories by providing those
categories in `category_filter`. This allows rendering categories in
separate html blocks. The `with_categories` and `category_filter`
arguments are distinct:
* `with_categories` controls whether categories are returned with message
text (``True`` gives a tuple, where ``False`` gives just the message text).
* `category_filter` filters the messages down to only those matching the
provided categories.
See :doc:`/patterns/flashing` for examples.
.. versionchanged:: 0.3
`with_categories` parameter added.
.. versionchanged:: 0.9
`category_filter` parameter added.
:param with_categories: set to ``True`` to also receive categories.
:param category_filter: filter of categories to limit return values. Only
categories in the list will be returned.
"""
flashes = request_ctx.flashes
if flashes is None:
flashes = session.pop("_flashes") if "_flashes" in session else []
request_ctx.flashes = flashes
if category_filter:
flashes = list(filter(lambda f: f[0] in category_filter, flashes))
if not with_categories:
return [x[1] for x in flashes]
return flashes
def _prepare_send_file_kwargs(**kwargs: t.Any) -> t.Dict[str, t.Any]:
if kwargs.get("max_age") is None:
kwargs["max_age"] = current_app.get_send_file_max_age
kwargs.update(
environ=request.environ,
use_x_sendfile=current_app.config["USE_X_SENDFILE"],
response_class=current_app.response_class,
_root_path=current_app.root_path, # type: ignore
)
return kwargs
def send_file(
path_or_file: t.Union[os.PathLike, str, t.BinaryIO],
mimetype: t.Optional[str] = None,
as_attachment: bool = False,
download_name: t.Optional[str] = None,
conditional: bool = True,
etag: t.Union[bool, str] = True,
last_modified: t.Optional[t.Union[datetime, int, float]] = None,
max_age: t.Optional[
t.Union[int, t.Callable[[t.Optional[str]], t.Optional[int]]]
] = None,
) -> "Response":
"""Send the contents of a file to the client.
The first argument can be a file path or a file-like object. Paths
are preferred in most cases because Werkzeug can manage the file and
get extra information from the path. Passing a file-like object
requires that the file is opened in binary mode, and is mostly
useful when building a file in memory with :class:`io.BytesIO`.
Never pass file paths provided by a user. The path is assumed to be
trusted, so a user could craft a path to access a file you didn't
intend. Use :func:`send_from_directory` to safely serve
user-requested paths from within a directory.
If the WSGI server sets a ``file_wrapper`` in ``environ``, it is
used, otherwise Werkzeug's built-in wrapper is used. Alternatively,
if the HTTP server supports ``X-Sendfile``, configuring Flask with
``USE_X_SENDFILE = True`` will tell the server to send the given
path, which is much more efficient than reading it in Python.
:param path_or_file: The path to the file to send, relative to the
current working directory if a relative path is given.
Alternatively, a file-like object opened in binary mode. Make
sure the file pointer is seeked to the start of the data.
:param mimetype: The MIME type to send for the file. If not
provided, it will try to detect it from the file name.
:param as_attachment: Indicate to a browser that it should offer to
save the file instead of displaying it.
:param download_name: The default name browsers will use when saving
the file. Defaults to the passed file name.
:param conditional: Enable conditional and range responses based on
request headers. Requires passing a file path and ``environ``.
:param etag: Calculate an ETag for the file, which requires passing
a file path. Can also be a string to use instead.
:param last_modified: The last modified time to send for the file,
in seconds. If not provided, it will try to detect it from the
file path.
:param max_age: How long the client should cache the file, in
seconds. If set, ``Cache-Control`` will be ``public``, otherwise
it will be ``no-cache`` to prefer conditional caching.
.. versionchanged:: 2.0
``download_name`` replaces the ``attachment_filename``
parameter. If ``as_attachment=False``, it is passed with
``Content-Disposition: inline`` instead.
.. versionchanged:: 2.0
``max_age`` replaces the ``cache_timeout`` parameter.
``conditional`` is enabled and ``max_age`` is not set by
default.
.. versionchanged:: 2.0
``etag`` replaces the ``add_etags`` parameter. It can be a
string to use instead of generating one.
.. versionchanged:: 2.0
Passing a file-like object that inherits from
:class:`~io.TextIOBase` will raise a :exc:`ValueError` rather
than sending an empty file.
.. versionadded:: 2.0
Moved the implementation to Werkzeug. This is now a wrapper to
pass some Flask-specific arguments.
.. versionchanged:: 1.1
``filename`` may be a :class:`~os.PathLike` object.
.. versionchanged:: 1.1
Passing a :class:`~io.BytesIO` object supports range requests.
.. versionchanged:: 1.0.3
Filenames are encoded with ASCII instead of Latin-1 for broader
compatibility with WSGI servers.
.. versionchanged:: 1.0
UTF-8 filenames as specified in :rfc:`2231` are supported.
.. versionchanged:: 0.12
The filename is no longer automatically inferred from file
objects. If you want to use automatic MIME and etag support,
pass a filename via ``filename_or_fp`` or
``attachment_filename``.
.. versionchanged:: 0.12
``attachment_filename`` is preferred over ``filename`` for MIME
detection.
.. versionchanged:: 0.9
``cache_timeout`` defaults to
:meth:`Flask.get_send_file_max_age`.
.. versionchanged:: 0.7
MIME guessing and etag support for file-like objects was
deprecated because it was unreliable. Pass a filename if you are
able to, otherwise attach an etag yourself.
.. versionchanged:: 0.5
The ``add_etags``, ``cache_timeout`` and ``conditional``
parameters were added. The default behavior is to add etags.
.. versionadded:: 0.2
"""
return werkzeug.utils.send_file( # type: ignore[return-value]
**_prepare_send_file_kwargs(
path_or_file=path_or_file,
environ=request.environ,
mimetype=mimetype,
as_attachment=as_attachment,
download_name=download_name,
conditional=conditional,
etag=etag,
last_modified=last_modified,
max_age=max_age,
)
)
def send_from_directory(
directory: t.Union[os.PathLike, str],
path: t.Union[os.PathLike, str],
**kwargs: t.Any,
) -> "Response":
"""Send a file from within a directory using :func:`send_file`.
.. code-block:: python
@app.route("/uploads/<path:name>")
def download_file(name):
return send_from_directory(
app.config['UPLOAD_FOLDER'], name, as_attachment=True
)
This is a secure way to serve files from a folder, such as static
files or uploads. Uses :func:`~werkzeug.security.safe_join` to
ensure the path coming from the client is not maliciously crafted to
point outside the specified directory.
If the final path does not point to an existing regular file,
raises a 404 :exc:`~werkzeug.exceptions.NotFound` error.
:param directory: The directory that ``path`` must be located under,
relative to the current application's root path.
:param path: The path to the file to send, relative to
``directory``.
:param kwargs: Arguments to pass to :func:`send_file`.
.. versionchanged:: 2.0
``path`` replaces the ``filename`` parameter.
.. versionadded:: 2.0
Moved the implementation to Werkzeug. This is now a wrapper to
pass some Flask-specific arguments.
.. versionadded:: 0.5
"""
return werkzeug.utils.send_from_directory( # type: ignore[return-value]
directory, path, **_prepare_send_file_kwargs(**kwargs)
)
def get_root_path(import_name: str) -> str:
"""Find the root path of a package, or the path that contains a
module. If it cannot be found, returns the current working
directory.
Not to be confused with the value returned by :func:`find_package`.
:meta private:
"""
# Module already imported and has a file attribute. Use that first.
mod = sys.modules.get(import_name)
if mod is not None and hasattr(mod, "__file__") and mod.__file__ is not None:
return os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(mod.__file__))
# Next attempt: check the loader.
loader = pkgutil.get_loader(import_name)
# Loader does not exist or we're referring to an unloaded main
# module or a main module without path (interactive sessions), go
# with the current working directory.
if loader is None or import_name == "__main__":
return os.getcwd()
if hasattr(loader, "get_filename"):
filepath = loader.get_filename(import_name) # type: ignore
else:
# Fall back to imports.
__import__(import_name)
mod = sys.modules[import_name]
filepath = getattr(mod, "__file__", None)
# If we don't have a file path it might be because it is a
# namespace package. In this case pick the root path from the
# first module that is contained in the package.
if filepath is None:
raise RuntimeError(
"No root path can be found for the provided module"
f" {import_name!r}. This can happen because the module"
" came from an import hook that does not provide file"
" name information or because it's a namespace package."
" In this case the root path needs to be explicitly"
" provided."
)
# filepath is import_name.py for a module, or __init__.py for a package.
return os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(filepath))
class locked_cached_property(werkzeug.utils.cached_property):
"""A :func:`property` that is only evaluated once. Like
:class:`werkzeug.utils.cached_property` except access uses a lock
for thread safety.
.. versionchanged:: 2.0
Inherits from Werkzeug's ``cached_property`` (and ``property``).
"""
def __init__(
self,
fget: t.Callable[[t.Any], t.Any],
name: t.Optional[str] = None,
doc: t.Optional[str] = None,
) -> None:
super().__init__(fget, name=name, doc=doc)
self.lock = RLock()
def __get__(self, obj: object, type: type = None) -> t.Any: # type: ignore
if obj is None:
return self
with self.lock:
return super().__get__(obj, type=type)
def __set__(self, obj: object, value: t.Any) -> None:
with self.lock:
super().__set__(obj, value)
def __delete__(self, obj: object) -> None:
with self.lock:
super().__delete__(obj)
def is_ip(value: str) -> bool:
"""Determine if the given string is an IP address.
:param value: value to check
:type value: str
:return: True if string is an IP address
:rtype: bool
"""
for family in (socket.AF_INET, socket.AF_INET6):
try:
socket.inet_pton(family, value)
except OSError:
pass
else:
return True
return False
@lru_cache(maxsize=None)
def _split_blueprint_path(name: str) -> t.List[str]:
out: t.List[str] = [name]
if "." in name:
out.extend(_split_blueprint_path(name.rpartition(".")[0]))
return out

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