Vehicle-Anti-Theft-Face-Rec.../venv/Lib/site-packages/jedi/inference/sys_path.py

271 lines
10 KiB
Python

import os
import re
from jedi._compatibility import unicode, force_unicode, all_suffixes
from jedi.inference.cache import inference_state_method_cache
from jedi.inference.base_value import ContextualizedNode
from jedi.inference.helpers import is_string, get_str_or_none
from jedi.common import traverse_parents
from jedi.parser_utils import get_cached_code_lines
from jedi.file_io import FileIO
from jedi import settings
from jedi import debug
_BUILDOUT_PATH_INSERTION_LIMIT = 10
def _abs_path(module_context, path):
if os.path.isabs(path):
return path
module_path = module_context.py__file__()
if module_path is None:
# In this case we have no idea where we actually are in the file
# system.
return None
base_dir = os.path.dirname(module_path)
path = force_unicode(path)
return os.path.abspath(os.path.join(base_dir, path))
def _paths_from_assignment(module_context, expr_stmt):
"""
Extracts the assigned strings from an assignment that looks as follows::
sys.path[0:0] = ['module/path', 'another/module/path']
This function is in general pretty tolerant (and therefore 'buggy').
However, it's not a big issue usually to add more paths to Jedi's sys_path,
because it will only affect Jedi in very random situations and by adding
more paths than necessary, it usually benefits the general user.
"""
for assignee, operator in zip(expr_stmt.children[::2], expr_stmt.children[1::2]):
try:
assert operator in ['=', '+=']
assert assignee.type in ('power', 'atom_expr') and \
len(assignee.children) > 1
c = assignee.children
assert c[0].type == 'name' and c[0].value == 'sys'
trailer = c[1]
assert trailer.children[0] == '.' and trailer.children[1].value == 'path'
# TODO Essentially we're not checking details on sys.path
# manipulation. Both assigment of the sys.path and changing/adding
# parts of the sys.path are the same: They get added to the end of
# the current sys.path.
"""
execution = c[2]
assert execution.children[0] == '['
subscript = execution.children[1]
assert subscript.type == 'subscript'
assert ':' in subscript.children
"""
except AssertionError:
continue
cn = ContextualizedNode(module_context.create_context(expr_stmt), expr_stmt)
for lazy_value in cn.infer().iterate(cn):
for value in lazy_value.infer():
if is_string(value):
abs_path = _abs_path(module_context, value.get_safe_value())
if abs_path is not None:
yield abs_path
def _paths_from_list_modifications(module_context, trailer1, trailer2):
""" extract the path from either "sys.path.append" or "sys.path.insert" """
# Guarantee that both are trailers, the first one a name and the second one
# a function execution with at least one param.
if not (trailer1.type == 'trailer' and trailer1.children[0] == '.'
and trailer2.type == 'trailer' and trailer2.children[0] == '('
and len(trailer2.children) == 3):
return
name = trailer1.children[1].value
if name not in ['insert', 'append']:
return
arg = trailer2.children[1]
if name == 'insert' and len(arg.children) in (3, 4): # Possible trailing comma.
arg = arg.children[2]
for value in module_context.create_context(arg).infer_node(arg):
p = get_str_or_none(value)
if p is None:
continue
abs_path = _abs_path(module_context, p)
if abs_path is not None:
yield abs_path
@inference_state_method_cache(default=[])
def check_sys_path_modifications(module_context):
"""
Detect sys.path modifications within module.
"""
def get_sys_path_powers(names):
for name in names:
power = name.parent.parent
if power is not None and power.type in ('power', 'atom_expr'):
c = power.children
if c[0].type == 'name' and c[0].value == 'sys' \
and c[1].type == 'trailer':
n = c[1].children[1]
if n.type == 'name' and n.value == 'path':
yield name, power
if module_context.tree_node is None:
return []
added = []
try:
possible_names = module_context.tree_node.get_used_names()['path']
except KeyError:
pass
else:
for name, power in get_sys_path_powers(possible_names):
expr_stmt = power.parent
if len(power.children) >= 4:
added.extend(
_paths_from_list_modifications(
module_context, *power.children[2:4]
)
)
elif expr_stmt is not None and expr_stmt.type == 'expr_stmt':
added.extend(_paths_from_assignment(module_context, expr_stmt))
return added
def discover_buildout_paths(inference_state, script_path):
buildout_script_paths = set()
for buildout_script_path in _get_buildout_script_paths(script_path):
for path in _get_paths_from_buildout_script(inference_state, buildout_script_path):
buildout_script_paths.add(path)
if len(buildout_script_paths) >= _BUILDOUT_PATH_INSERTION_LIMIT:
break
return buildout_script_paths
def _get_paths_from_buildout_script(inference_state, buildout_script_path):
file_io = FileIO(buildout_script_path)
try:
module_node = inference_state.parse(
file_io=file_io,
cache=True,
cache_path=settings.cache_directory
)
except IOError:
debug.warning('Error trying to read buildout_script: %s', buildout_script_path)
return
from jedi.inference.value import ModuleValue
module_context = ModuleValue(
inference_state, module_node,
file_io=file_io,
string_names=None,
code_lines=get_cached_code_lines(inference_state.grammar, buildout_script_path),
).as_context()
for path in check_sys_path_modifications(module_context):
yield path
def _get_parent_dir_with_file(path, filename):
for parent in traverse_parents(path):
if os.path.isfile(os.path.join(parent, filename)):
return parent
return None
def _get_buildout_script_paths(search_path):
"""
if there is a 'buildout.cfg' file in one of the parent directories of the
given module it will return a list of all files in the buildout bin
directory that look like python files.
:param search_path: absolute path to the module.
:type search_path: str
"""
project_root = _get_parent_dir_with_file(search_path, 'buildout.cfg')
if not project_root:
return
bin_path = os.path.join(project_root, 'bin')
if not os.path.exists(bin_path):
return
for filename in os.listdir(bin_path):
try:
filepath = os.path.join(bin_path, filename)
with open(filepath, 'r') as f:
firstline = f.readline()
if firstline.startswith('#!') and 'python' in firstline:
yield filepath
except (UnicodeDecodeError, IOError) as e:
# Probably a binary file; permission error or race cond. because
# file got deleted. Ignore it.
debug.warning(unicode(e))
continue
def remove_python_path_suffix(path):
for suffix in all_suffixes() + ['.pyi']:
if path.endswith(suffix):
path = path[:-len(suffix)]
break
return path
def transform_path_to_dotted(sys_path, module_path):
"""
Returns the dotted path inside a sys.path as a list of names. e.g.
>>> from os.path import abspath
>>> transform_path_to_dotted([abspath("/foo")], abspath('/foo/bar/baz.py'))
(('bar', 'baz'), False)
Returns (None, False) if the path doesn't really resolve to anything.
The second return part is if it is a package.
"""
# First remove the suffix.
module_path = remove_python_path_suffix(module_path)
# Once the suffix was removed we are using the files as we know them. This
# means that if someone uses an ending like .vim for a Python file, .vim
# will be part of the returned dotted part.
is_package = module_path.endswith(os.path.sep + '__init__')
if is_package:
# -1 to remove the separator
module_path = module_path[:-len('__init__') - 1]
def iter_potential_solutions():
for p in sys_path:
if module_path.startswith(p):
# Strip the trailing slash/backslash
rest = module_path[len(p):]
# On Windows a path can also use a slash.
if rest.startswith(os.path.sep) or rest.startswith('/'):
# Remove a slash in cases it's still there.
rest = rest[1:]
if rest:
split = rest.split(os.path.sep)
if not all(split):
# This means that part of the file path was empty, this
# is very strange and is probably a file that is called
# `.py`.
return
# Stub folders for foo can end with foo-stubs. Just remove
# it.
yield tuple(re.sub(r'-stubs$', '', s) for s in split)
potential_solutions = tuple(iter_potential_solutions())
if not potential_solutions:
return None, False
# Try to find the shortest path, this makes more sense usually, because the
# user usually has venvs somewhere. This means that a path like
# .tox/py37/lib/python3.7/os.py can be normal for a file. However in that
# case we definitely want to return ['os'] as a path and not a crazy
# ['.tox', 'py37', 'lib', 'python3.7', 'os']. Keep in mind that this is a
# heuristic and there's now ay to "always" do it right.
return sorted(potential_solutions, key=lambda p: len(p))[0], is_package