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Filename: //lib/python3//dist-packages/debian//deb822.py
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- vim: fileencoding=utf-8 : """ Dictionary-like interfaces to RFC822-like files The Python deb822 aims to provide a dict-like interface to various RFC822-like Debian data formats, like Packages/Sources, .changes/.dsc, pdiff Index files, etc. As well as the generic :class:`Deb822` class, the specialised versions of these classes (:class:`Packages`, :class:`Sources`, :class:`Changes` etc) know about special fields that contain specially formatted data such as dependency lists or whitespace separated sub-fields. This module has few external dependencies, but can use python-apt if available to parse the data, which gives a very significant performance boost when iterating over big Packages files. Whitespace separated data within fields are known as "multifields". The "Files" field in Sources files, for instance, has three subfields, while "Files" in .changes files, has five; the relevant classes here know this and correctly handle these cases. Key lookup in Deb822 objects and their multifields is case-insensitive, but the original case is always preserved, for example when printing the object. The Debian project and individual developers make extensive use of GPG signatures including in-line signatures. GPG signatures are automatically detected, verified and the payload then offered to the parser. Relevant documentation on the Deb822 file formats available here. - `deb-control(5) <https://manpages.debian.org/stretch/dpkg-dev/deb-control.5.html>`_, the `control` file in the binary package (generated from `debian/control` in the source package) - `deb-changes(5) <https://manpages.debian.org/stretch/dpkg-dev/deb-changes.5.html>`_, `changes` files that developers upload to add new packages to the archive. - `dsc(5) <https://manpages.debian.org/stretch/dpkg-dev/dsc.5.html>`_, Debian Source Control file that defines the files that are part of a source package. - `Debian mirror format <http://wiki.debian.org/RepositoryFormat>`_, including documentation for Packages, Sources files etc. Overview of deb822 Classes -------------------------- Classes that deb822 provides: * :class:`Deb822` base class with no multifields. A Deb822 object holds a single entry from a Deb822-style file, where paragraphs are separated by blank lines and there may be many paragraphs within a file. The :func:`~Deb822.iter_paragraphs` function yields paragraphs from a data source. * :class:`Packages` represents a Packages file from a Debian mirror. It extends the Deb822 class by interpreting fields that are package relationships (Depends, Recommends etc). Iteration is forced through python-apt for performance and conformance. * :class:`Dsc` represents .dsc files (Debian Source Control) that are the metadata file of the source package. Multivalued fields: * Files: md5sum, size, name * Checksums-Sha1: sha1, size, name * Checksums-Sha256: sha256, size, name * Checksums-Sha512: sha512, size, name * :class:`Sources` represents a Sources file from a Debian mirror. It extends the Dsc class by interpreting fields that are package relationships (Build-Depends, Build-Conflicts etc). Iteration is forced through python-apt for performance and conformance. * :class:`Release` represents a Release file from a Debian mirror. Multivalued fields: * MD5Sum: md5sum, size, name * SHA1: sha1, size, name * SHA256: sha256, size, name * SHA512: sha512, size, name * :class:`Changes` represents a .changes file that is uploaded to "change the archive" by including new source or binary packages. Multivalued fields: * Files: md5sum, size, section, priority, name * Checksums-Sha1: sha1, size, name * Checksums-Sha256: sha256, size, name * Checksums-Sha512: sha512, size, name * :class:`PdiffIndex` represents a pdiff Index file (`foo`.diff/Index) file from a Debian mirror. Multivalued fields: * SHA1-Current: SHA1, size * SHA1-History: SHA1, size, date * SHA1-Patches: SHA1, size, date * SHA1-Download: SHA1, size, filename * X-Unmerged-SHA1-History: SHA1, size, date * X-Unmerged-SHA1-Patches: SHA1, size, date * X-Unmerged-SHA1-Download: SHA1, size, filename * SHA256-Current: SHA256, size * SHA256-History: SHA256, size, date * SHA256-Patches: SHA256, size, date * SHA256-Download: SHA256, size, filename * X-Unmerged-SHA256-History: SHA256, size, date * X-Unmerged-SHA256-Patches: SHA256, size, date * X-Unmerged-SHA256-Download: SHA256, size, filename * :class:`Removals` represents the ftp-master removals file listing when and why source and binary packages are removed from the archive. Input ===== Deb822 objects are normally initialized from a file object (from which at most one paragraph is read) or a string. Alternatively, any sequence that returns one line of input at a time may be used, e.g a list of strings. PGP signatures, if present, will be stripped. Example:: >>> from debian.deb822 import Deb822 >>> filename = '/var/lib/apt/lists/deb.debian.org_debian_dists_sid_InRelease' >>> with open(filename) as fh: ... rel = Deb822(fh) >>> print('Origin: {Origin}\\nCodename: {Codename}\\nDate: {Date}'.format_map(rel)) Origin: Debian Codename: sid Date: Sat, 07 Apr 2018 14:41:12 UTC >>> print(list(rel.keys())) ['Origin', 'Label', 'Suite', 'Codename', 'Changelogs', 'Date', 'Valid-Until', 'Acquire-By-Hash', 'Architectures', 'Components', 'Description', 'MD5Sum', 'SHA256'] In the above, the `MD5Sum` and `SHA256` fields are just a very long string. If instead the :class:`Release` class is used, these fields are interpreted and can be addressed:: >>> from debian.deb822 import Release >>> filename = '/var/lib/apt/lists/deb.debian.org_debian_dists_sid_InRelease' >>> with open(filename) as fh: ... rel = Release(fh) >>> wanted = 'main/binary-amd64/Packages' >>> [(l['sha256'], l['size']) for l in rel['SHA256'] if l['name'] == wanted] [('c0f7aa0b92ebd6971c0b64f93f52a8b2e15b0b818413ca13438c50eb82586665', '45314424')] Iteration ========= All classes use the :func:`~Deb822.iter_paragraphs` class method to easily iterate through each paragraph in a file that contains multiple entries (e.g. a Packages.gz file). For example:: >>> with open('/mirror/debian/dists/sid/main/binary-i386/Sources') as f: ... for src in Sources.iter_paragraphs(f): ... print(src['Package'], src['Version']) The `iter_paragraphs` methods can use python-apt if available to parse the data, since it significantly boosts performance. If python-apt is not present and the file is a compressed file, it must first be decompressed manually. Note that python-apt should not be used on `debian/control` files since python-apt is designed to be strict and fast while the syntax of `debian/control` is a superset of what python-apt is designed to parse. This function is overridden to force use of the python-apt parser using `use_apt_pkg` in the :func:`~Packages.iter_paragraphs` and :func:`~Sources.iter_paragraphs` functions. Sample usage ============ Manipulating a .dsc file:: from debian import deb822 with open('foo_1.1.dsc') as f: d = deb822.Dsc(f) source = d['Source'] version = d['Version'] for f in d['Files']: print('Name:', f['name']) print('Size:', f['size']) print('MD5sum:', f['md5sum']) # If we like, we can change fields d['Standards-Version'] = '3.7.2' # And then dump the new contents with open('foo_1.1.dsc2', 'w') as new_dsc: d.dump(new_dsc) (TODO: Improve, expand) Deb822 Classes -------------- """ # Copyright (C) 2005-2006 dann frazier <dannf@dannf.org> # Copyright (C) 2006-2010 John Wright <john@johnwright.org> # Copyright (C) 2006 Adeodato Simó <dato@net.com.org.es> # Copyright (C) 2008 Stefano Zacchiroli <zack@upsilon.cc> # Copyright (C) 2014 Google, Inc. # # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or # modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License # as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 2 # of the License, or (at your option) any later version. # # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the # GNU General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License # along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software # Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function import collections try: # Python 3 import collections.abc as collections_abc except ImportError: # Python 2.7 cruft # pylint: disable=reimported import collections as collections_abc # type: ignore import datetime import email.utils import io import re import subprocess import sys import warnings import chardet import six try: # pylint: disable=unused-import from typing import ( Any, Callable, cast, Dict, FrozenSet, Generator, Iterator, Iterable, IO, List, Mapping, MutableMapping, Optional, overload, #Pattern, Protocol, Set, Text, Tuple, Type, TypeVar, Union, TYPE_CHECKING, ) IterableInputDataType = Union[ IO[Text], IO[bytes], Iterable[Text], Iterable[bytes], ] InputDataType = Union[ bytes, Text, IterableInputDataType, ] Deb822ValueType = Any # this really is Union[str, List] but that is a can of worms Deb822Mapping = Mapping[str, Deb822ValueType] Deb822MutableMapping = MutableMapping[str, Deb822ValueType] import builtins # pylint: disable=unused-import T_Deb822Dict = TypeVar('T_Deb822Dict', bound='Deb822Dict') from typing_extensions import ( Literal, TypedDict, ) except ImportError: # Lack of typing is not important at runtime TYPE_CHECKING = False # Fake some definitions if not TYPE_CHECKING: overload = lambda f: None cast = lambda t, v: v IO = { bytes: None, str: None, } Deb822Mapping = None InputDataType = None from debian.deprecation import function_deprecated_by import debian.debian_support import debian.changelog try: import apt_pkg # This module uses apt_pkg only for its TagFile interface. apt_pkg.TagFile # pylint: disable=pointless-statement _have_apt_pkg = True except (ImportError, AttributeError): _have_apt_pkg = False def _has_fileno(f): # type: (Any) -> bool """ test that a file-like object is really a filehandle Only filehandles can be given to apt_pkg.TagFile. """ try: f.fileno() return True except (AttributeError, io.UnsupportedOperation): return False GPGV_DEFAULT_KEYRINGS = frozenset(['/usr/share/keyrings/debian-keyring.gpg']) GPGV_EXECUTABLE = '/usr/bin/gpgv' class Error(Exception): """Base class for custom exceptions in this module.""" class RestrictedFieldError(Error): """Raised when modifying the raw value of a field is not allowed.""" if TYPE_CHECKING: _TagSectionWrapper_base = Deb822Mapping else: _TagSectionWrapper_base = collections_abc.Mapping class TagSectionWrapper(_TagSectionWrapper_base): """Wrap a TagSection object, using its find_raw method to get field values This allows us to pick which whitespace to strip off the beginning and end of the data, so we don't lose leading newlines. """ def __init__(self, section, # type: apt_pkg.TagSection[bytes] decoder=None, # type: Optional[_AutoDecoder] ): # type: (...) -> None self.__section = section self.decoder = decoder or _AutoDecoder() super(TagSectionWrapper, self).__init__() def __iter__(self): # type: () -> Iterator[str] for key in self.__section.keys(): if not key.startswith('#'): yield key def __len__(self): # type: (...) -> int return len([key for key in self.__section.keys() if not key.startswith('#')]) def __getitem__(self, key): # type: (str) -> str # find_raw may give str or bytes depending on how it goes with decoding # and how it is set up by the TagFile iterator sraw = self.__section.find_raw(key) s = self.decoder.decode(sraw) if s is None: raise KeyError(key) # Get just the stuff after the first ':' # Could use s.partition if we only supported python >= 2.5 data = s[s.find(':')+1:] # Get rid of spaces and tabs after the ':', but not newlines, and strip # off any newline at the end of the data. return data.lstrip(' \t').rstrip('\n') class OrderedSet(object): """A set-like object that preserves order when iterating over it We use this to keep track of keys in Deb822Dict, because it's much faster to look up if a key is in a set than in a list. """ def __init__(self, iterable=None): # type: (Optional[Iterable[str]]) -> None self.__set = set() # type: Set[str] self.__order = [] # type: List[str] if iterable is None: iterable = [] for item in iterable: self.add(item) def add(self, item): # type: (str) -> None if item not in self: # set.add will raise TypeError if something's unhashable, so we # don't have to handle that ourselves self.__set.add(item) self.__order.append(item) def remove(self, item): # type: (str) -> None # set.remove will raise KeyError, so we don't need to handle that # ourselves self.__set.remove(item) self.__order.remove(item) def __iter__(self): # type: () -> Iterator[str] # Return an iterator of items in the order they were added return iter(self.__order) def __len__(self): # type: () -> int return len(self.__order) def __contains__(self, item): # type: (str) -> bool # This is what makes OrderedSet faster than using a list to keep track # of keys. Lookup in a set is O(1) instead of O(n) for a list. return item in self.__set # ### list-like methods append = add def extend(self, iterable): # type: (List[str]) -> None for item in iterable: self.add(item) # ### if TYPE_CHECKING: _Deb822Dict_base = Deb822MutableMapping else: _Deb822Dict_base = collections_abc.MutableMapping class Deb822Dict(_Deb822Dict_base): """A dictionary-like object suitable for storing RFC822-like data. Deb822Dict behaves like a normal dict, except: - key lookup is case-insensitive - key order is preserved - if initialized with a _parsed parameter, it will pull values from that dictionary-like object as needed (rather than making a copy). The _parsed dict is expected to be able to handle case-insensitive keys. If _parsed is not None, an optional _fields parameter specifies which keys in the _parsed dictionary are exposed. """ # See the end of the file for the definition of _strI def __init__(self, _dict=None, # type: Optional[Union[Deb822Mapping, Iterable[Tuple[str,str]]]] _parsed=None, # type: Optional[Union[Deb822, TagSectionWrapper]] _fields=None, # type: Optional[List[str]] encoding="utf-8", # type: str ): # type: (...) -> None self.__dict = {} # type: Dict[_CaseInsensitiveString, Deb822ValueType] self.__keys = OrderedSet() self.__parsed = None # type: Optional[Union[Deb822, TagSectionWrapper]] self.encoding = encoding self.decoder = _AutoDecoder(self.encoding) super(Deb822Dict, self).__init__() if _dict is not None: # _dict may be a dict or a list of two-sized tuples # define the type in advance and then ignore the next assignments # https://github.com/python/mypy/issues/1424 items = [] # type: List[Tuple[str,str]] if hasattr(_dict, 'items'): items = _dict.items() # type: ignore else: items = list(_dict) # type: ignore try: for k, v in items: self[k] = v except ValueError: this = len(self.__keys) len_ = len(items[this]) raise ValueError( 'dictionary update sequence element #%d has ' 'length %d; 2 is required' % (this, len_)) if _parsed is not None: self.__parsed = _parsed if _fields is None: self.__keys.extend([_strI(k) for k in self.__parsed]) else: self.__keys.extend([_strI(f) for f in _fields if f in self.__parsed]) # ### BEGIN collections.abc.MutableMapping methods def __iter__(self): # type: () -> Iterator[str] for key in self.__keys: yield str(key) def __len__(self): # type: () -> int return len(self.__keys) def __setitem__(self, key, value): # type: (str, Deb822ValueType) -> None keyi = _strI(key) self.__keys.add(keyi) self.__dict[keyi] = value def __getitem__(self, key): # type: (str) -> Deb822ValueType keyi = _strI(key) try: value = self.__dict[keyi] except KeyError: if self.__parsed is not None and keyi in self.__keys: value = self.__parsed[keyi] else: raise # TODO(jsw): Move the decoding logic into __setitem__ so that we decode # it once instead of every time somebody asks for it. Even better if # Deb822* classes dealt in pure unicode and didn't care about the # encoding of the files they came from...but I don't know how to fix # that without breaking a bunch of users. return self.decoder.decode(value) def __delitem__(self, key): # type: (str) -> None keyi = _strI(key) self.__keys.remove(keyi) try: del self.__dict[keyi] except KeyError: # If we got this far, the key was in self.__keys, so it must have # only been in the self.__parsed dict. pass def __contains__(self, key): # type: (Any) -> bool keyi = _strI(key) return keyi in self.__keys if sys.version < '3': has_key = __contains__ # ### END collections.abc.MutableMapping methods def __repr__(self): # type: () -> str return '{%s}' % ', '.join(['%r: %r' % (k, v) for k, v in self.items()]) def __eq__(self, other): # type: (Any) -> bool mykeys = sorted(self) otherkeys = sorted(other) if not mykeys == otherkeys: return False for key in mykeys: if self[key] != other[key]: return False # If we got here, everything matched return True # Overriding __eq__ blocks inheritance of __hash__ in Python 3, and # instances of this class are not sensibly hashable anyway. __hash__ = None # type: ignore def copy(self): # type: (T_Deb822Dict) -> T_Deb822Dict # Use self.__class__ so this works as expected for subclasses copy = self.__class__(self) return copy # TODO implement __str__() and make dump() use that? class Deb822(Deb822Dict): """ Generic Deb822 data :param sequence: a string, or any any object that returns a line of input each time, normally a file. Alternately, sequence can be a dict that contains the initial key-value pairs. When python-apt is present, sequence can also be a compressed object, for example a file object associated to something.gz. :param fields: if given, it is interpreted as a list of fields that should be parsed (the rest will be discarded). :param _parsed: internal parameter. :param encoding: When parsing strings, interpret them in this encoding. (All values are given back as unicode objects, so an encoding is necessary in order to properly interpret the strings.) :param strict: Dict controlling the strictness of the internal parser to permit tuning of its behaviour between "generous in what it accepts" and "strict conformance". Known keys are described below. *Internal parser tuning* - `whitespace-separates-paragraphs`: (default: `True`) Blank lines between paragraphs should not have any whitespace in them at all. However: - Policy §5.1 permits `debian/control` in source packages to separate packages with lines containing whitespace to allow human edited files to have stray whitespace. Failing to honour this breaks tools such as `wrap-and-sort <https://manpages.debian.org/wrap-and-sort>`_ (see, for example, `Debian Bug 715558 <https://bugs.debian.org/715558/>`_). - `apt_pkg.TagFile` accepts whitespace-only lines within the `Description` field; strictly matching the behaviour of apt's Deb822 parser requires setting this key to `False` (as is done by default for :class:`Sources` and :class:`Packages`. (see, for example, `Debian Bug 913274 <https://bugs.debian.org/913274/>`_). Note that these tuning parameter are only for the parser that is internal to `Deb822` and do not apply to python-apt's apt_pkg.TagFile parser which would normally be used for Packages and Sources files. """ def __init__(self, sequence=None, # type: Optional[Union[InputDataType, Deb822Mapping]] fields=None, # type: Optional[List[str]] _parsed=None, # type: Optional[Union[Deb822, TagSectionWrapper]] encoding="utf-8", # type: str strict=None, # type: Optional[Dict[str, bool]] ): # type: (...) -> None _dict = {} # type: Mapping[str, str] iterable = None # type: Optional[InputDataType] if hasattr(sequence, 'items'): _dict = cast(Deb822Mapping, sequence) else: iterable = cast(InputDataType, sequence) Deb822Dict.__init__(self, _dict=_dict, _parsed=_parsed, _fields=fields, encoding=encoding) if iterable is not None: try: self._internal_parser(iterable, fields, strict) except EOFError: pass self.gpg_info = None # type: Optional[GpgInfo] #self.raw_text = None # type: Optional[bytes] if TYPE_CHECKING: T_Deb822 = TypeVar('T_Deb822', bound='Deb822') @classmethod def iter_paragraphs(cls, # type: Type[T_Deb822] sequence, # type: InputDataType fields=None, # type: Optional[List[str]] use_apt_pkg=False, # type: bool shared_storage=False, # type: bool encoding="utf-8", # type: str strict=None, # type: Optional[Dict[str, bool]] ): # type: (...) -> Iterator[T_Deb822] """Generator that yields a Deb822 object for each paragraph in sequence. :param sequence: same as in __init__. :param fields: likewise. :param use_apt_pkg: if sequence is a file, apt_pkg can be used if available to parse the file, since it's much much faster. Set this parameter to True to enable use of apt_pkg. Note that the TagFile parser from apt_pkg is a much stricter parser of the Deb822 format, particularly with regards whitespace between paragraphs and comments within paragraphs. If these features are required (for example in debian/control files), ensure that this parameter is set to False. :param shared_storage: not used, here for historical reasons. Deb822 objects never use shared storage anymore. :param encoding: Interpret the paragraphs in this encoding. (All values are given back as unicode objects, so an encoding is necessary in order to properly interpret the strings.) :param strict: dict of settings to tune the internal parser if that is being used. See the documentation for :class:`Deb822` for details. """ # pylint: disable=unused-argument apt_pkg_allowed = use_apt_pkg and _has_fileno(sequence) if use_apt_pkg and not _have_apt_pkg: # warn that apt_pkg was requested but not installed msg = ( "Parsing of Deb822 data with python{pyver}-apt's apt_pkg was " "requested but this package is not importable. " "Is python{pyver}-apt installed?" ).format( pyver=('3' if sys.version_info[0] == 3 else '') ) warnings.warn(msg) elif use_apt_pkg and not apt_pkg_allowed: # warn that apt_pkg was requested but can't be used msg = ( "Parsing of Deb822 data with python-apt's apt_pkg was " "requested but this cannot be done on non-file input." ) warnings.warn(msg) if _have_apt_pkg and apt_pkg_allowed: # pylint: disable=no-member parser = apt_pkg.TagFile(sequence, bytes=True) for section in parser: paragraph = cls(fields=fields, _parsed=TagSectionWrapper(section, _AutoDecoder(encoding)), encoding=encoding) if paragraph: yield paragraph else: # Split this into multiple conditionals so that type checking # can follow the types through iterable = [] # type: IterableInputDataType if isinstance(sequence, six.string_types): iterable = iter(sequence.splitlines()) elif isinstance(sequence, six.binary_type): iterable = iter(sequence.splitlines()) else: # StringIO/list can be iterated directly iterable = iter(sequence) # type: ignore while True: x = cls(iterable, fields, encoding=encoding, strict=strict) if not x: break yield x ### @staticmethod def _skip_useless_lines(sequence): # type: (IterableInputDataType) -> Union[Iterator[bytes], Iterator[str]] """Yields only lines that do not begin with '#'. Also skips any blank lines at the beginning of the input. """ at_beginning = True for line in sequence: # The bytes/str polymorphism required here to support Python 3 # is unpleasant, but fortunately limited. We need this because # at this point we might have been given either bytes or # Unicode, and we haven't yet got to the point where we can try # to decode a whole paragraph and detect its encoding. if isinstance(line, bytes): if line.startswith(b'#'): continue else: if line.startswith('#'): continue if at_beginning: if isinstance(line, bytes): if not line.rstrip(b'\r\n'): continue else: if not line.rstrip('\r\n'): continue at_beginning = False yield line # regexps for parsing the Deb822 data # The key is non-whitespace, non-colon characters before any colon. _key_part = r"^(?P<key>[^: \t\n\r\f\v]+)\s*:\s*" _single = re.compile(_key_part + r"(?P<data>\S.*?)\s*$") _multi = re.compile(_key_part + r"$") _multidata = re.compile(r"^\s(?P<data>.+?)\s*$") def _internal_parser(self, sequence, # type: InputDataType fields=None, # type: Optional[List[str]] strict=None, # type: Optional[Dict[str, bool]] ): # type: (...) -> None def wanted_field(f): # type: (str) -> bool return fields is None or f in fields if isinstance(sequence, (six.string_types, bytes)): sequence = sequence.splitlines() curkey = None content = "" for linebytes in self.gpg_stripped_paragraph( self._skip_useless_lines(sequence), strict): line = self.decoder.decode(linebytes) m = self._single.match(line) if m: if curkey: self[curkey] = content if not wanted_field(m.group('key')): curkey = None continue curkey = m.group('key') content = m.group('data') continue m = self._multi.match(line) if m: if curkey: self[curkey] = content if not wanted_field(m.group('key')): curkey = None continue curkey = m.group('key') content = "" continue m = self._multidata.match(line) if m: content += '\n' + line # XXX not m.group('data')? continue if curkey: self[curkey] = content def __str__(self): # type: () -> str d = self.dump() return d if d is not None else "" def __unicode__(self): # type: () -> str d = self.dump() return d if d is not None else "" if sys.version_info[0] >= 3: def __bytes__(self): # type: () -> bytes d = self.dump() return d.encode(self.encoding) if d is not None else b"" # __repr__ is handled by Deb822Dict def get_as_string(self, key): # type: (str) -> str """Return the self[key] as a string (or unicode) The default implementation just returns unicode(self[key]); however, this can be overridden in subclasses (e.g. _multivalued) that can take special values. """ return six.text_type(self[key]) def _dump_format(self): # type: () -> Generator[str, None, None] for key in self: value = self.get_as_string(key) if not value or value[0] == '\n': # Avoid trailing whitespace after "Field:" if it's on its own # line or the value is empty. We don't have to worry about the # case where value == '\n', since we ensure that is not the # case in __setitem__. entry = '%s:%s\n' % (key, value) else: entry = '%s: %s\n' % (key, value) yield entry def _dump_str(self): # type: () -> str return "".join(self._dump_format()) def _dump_fd_b(self, fd, # type: IO[bytes] encoding, # type: str ): # type: (...) -> None for entry in self._dump_format(): fd.write(entry.encode(encoding)) def _dump_fd_t(self, fd, # type: IO[str] ): # type: (...) -> None for entry in self._dump_format(): fd.write(entry) @overload def dump(self): # type: () -> str pass @overload def dump(self, fd, # type: IO[bytes] encoding=None, # type: Optional[str] text_mode=False, # type: Literal[False] ): # type: (...) -> None pass @overload def dump(self, fd, # type: IO[str] encoding=None, # type: Optional[str] text_mode=True, # type: Literal[True] ): # type: (...) -> None pass @overload def dump(self, fd=None, # type: Literal[None] encoding=None, # type: Literal[None] text_mode=False, # type: bool ): # type: (...) -> str pass @overload def dump(self, fd=None, # type: Optional[Union[IO[str], IO[bytes]]] encoding=None, # type: Optional[str] text_mode=False, # type: bool ): # type: (...) -> Optional[str] pass def dump(self, fd=None, # type: Optional[Union[IO[str], IO[bytes]]] encoding=None, # type: Optional[str] text_mode=False, # type: bool ): # type: (...) -> Optional[str] """Dump the the contents in the original format :param fd: file-like object to which the data should be written (see notes below) :param encoding: str, optional (Defaults to object default). Encoding to use when writing out the data. :param text_mode: bool, optional (Defaults to ``False``). Encoding should be undertaken by this function rather than by the caller. If fd is None, returns a unicode object. Otherwise, fd is assumed to be a file-like object, and this method will write the data to it instead of returning a unicode object. If fd is not none and text_mode is False, the data will be encoded to a byte string before writing to the file. The encoding used is chosen via the encoding parameter; None means to use the encoding the object was initialized with (utf-8 by default). This will raise UnicodeEncodeError if the encoding can't support all the characters in the Deb822Dict values. """ # Ideally this would never try to encode (that should be up to the # caller when opening the file), but we may still have users who rely # on the binary mode encoding. But...might it be better to break them # than to introduce yet another parameter relating to encoding? if fd is None: return self._dump_str() if text_mode: self._dump_fd_t(cast(IO[str], fd)) else: if encoding is None: # Use the encoding we've been using to decode strings with if none # was explicitly specified encoding = self.encoding self._dump_fd_b(cast(IO[bytes], fd), encoding) return None ### @staticmethod def is_single_line(s): # type: (str) -> bool return not s.count("\n") isSingleLine = function_deprecated_by(is_single_line) @staticmethod def is_multi_line(s): # type: (str) -> bool return not Deb822.is_single_line(s) isMultiLine = function_deprecated_by(is_multi_line) def _merge_fields(self, s1, # type: str s2, # type: str ): # type: (...) -> str if not s2: return s1 if not s1: return s2 if self.is_single_line(s1) and self.is_single_line(s2): # some fields are delimited by a single space, others # a comma followed by a space. this heuristic assumes # that there are multiple items in one of the string fields # so that we can pick up on the delimiter being used delim = ' ' if (s1 + s2).count(', '): delim = ', ' L = sorted((s1 + delim + s2).split(delim)) prev = merged = L[0] for item in L[1:]: # skip duplicate entries if item == prev: continue merged = merged + delim + item prev = item return merged if self.is_multi_line(s1) and self.is_multi_line(s2): for item in s2.splitlines(True): if item not in s1.splitlines(True): s1 = s1 + "\n" + item return s1 raise ValueError _mergeFields = function_deprecated_by(_merge_fields) def merge_fields(self, key, # type: str d1, # type: Mapping[str, str] d2=None, # type: Optional[Mapping[str, str]] ): # type: (...) -> Optional[str] # this method can work in two ways - abstract that away if d2 is None: x1 = self # type: Union[Mapping[str, str], Deb822] x2 = d1 else: x1 = d1 x2 = d2 # we only have to do work if both objects contain our key # otherwise, we just take the one that does, or raise an # exception if neither does if key in x1 and key in x2: merged = self._merge_fields(x1[key], x2[key]) elif key in x1: merged = x1[key] elif key in x2: merged = x2[key] else: raise KeyError # back to the two different ways - if this method was called # upon an object, update that object in place. # return nothing in this case, to make the author notice a # problem if she assumes the object itself will not be modified if d2 is None: self[key] = merged return None return merged mergeFields = function_deprecated_by(merge_fields) # regexps for finding the gpg header around signed data _gpgre = re.compile(br'^-----(?P<action>BEGIN|END) ' br'PGP (?P<what>[^-]+)-----[\r\t ]*$') _initial_blank_line = re.compile(br'^\s*$') _blank_line_whitespace = re.compile(br'^\s*$') _blank_line_no_whitespace = re.compile(br'^$') @staticmethod def split_gpg_and_payload(sequence, # type: Union[Iterator[bytes], Iterator[str]] strict=None, # type: Optional[Dict[str, bool]] ): # type: (...) -> Tuple[List[bytes], List[bytes], List[bytes]] """Return a (gpg_pre, payload, gpg_post) tuple Each element of the returned tuple is a list of lines (with trailing whitespace stripped). :param sequence: iterable. An iterable that yields lines of data (str, unicode, bytes) to be parsed, possibly including a GPG in-line signature. :param strict: dict, optional. Control over the strictness of the parser. See the :class:`Deb822` class documentation for details. """ # pylint: disable=too-many-branches if not strict: strict = {} gpg_pre_lines = [] # type: List[bytes] lines = [] # type: List[bytes] gpg_post_lines = [] # type: List[bytes] state = b'SAFE' # Include whitespace-only lines in blank lines to split paragraphs. # (see #715558) if strict.get('whitespace-separates-paragraphs', True): blank_line = Deb822._blank_line_whitespace else: blank_line = Deb822._blank_line_no_whitespace first_line = True for line_ in sequence: # Some consumers of this method require bytes (encoding # detection and signature checking). However, we might have # been given a file opened in text mode, in which case it's # simplest to encode to bytes. if sys.version_info[0] >= 3 and isinstance(line_, str): line = line_.encode() else: line = cast(bytes, line_) line = line.strip(b'\r\n') # skip initial blank lines, if any if first_line: if Deb822._initial_blank_line.match(line): continue first_line = False m = Deb822._gpgre.match(line) if not m: if state == b'SAFE': if not blank_line.match(line): lines.append(line) else: if not gpg_pre_lines: # There's no gpg signature, so we should stop at # this blank line break elif state == b'SIGNED MESSAGE': if blank_line.match(line): state = b'SAFE' else: gpg_pre_lines.append(line) elif state == b'SIGNATURE': gpg_post_lines.append(line) else: if m.group('action') == b'BEGIN': state = m.group('what') elif m.group('action') == b'END': gpg_post_lines.append(line) break if not blank_line.match(line): if not lines: gpg_pre_lines.append(line) else: gpg_post_lines.append(line) if lines: return (gpg_pre_lines, lines, gpg_post_lines) raise EOFError('only blank lines found in input') @classmethod def gpg_stripped_paragraph(cls, sequence, strict=None): # type: (Union[Iterator[bytes], Iterator[str]], Optional[Dict[str, bool]]) -> List[bytes] return cls.split_gpg_and_payload(sequence, strict)[1] def get_gpg_info(self, keyrings=None): # type: (Optional[Iterable[str]]) -> GpgInfo """Return a GpgInfo object with GPG signature information This method will raise ValueError if the signature is not available (e.g. the original text cannot be found). :param keyrings: list of keyrings to use (see GpgInfo.from_sequence) """ # raw_text is saved (as a string) only for Changes and Dsc (see # _gpg_multivalued.__init__) which is small compared to Packages or # Sources which contain no signature if not hasattr(self, 'raw_text'): raise ValueError("original text cannot be found") if self.gpg_info is None: # pylint: disable=no-member # (raw_text is checked above) self.gpg_info = GpgInfo.from_sequence(self.raw_text, # type: ignore keyrings=keyrings) return self.gpg_info def validate_input(self, key, value): # type: (str, str) -> None # pylint: disable=no-self-use,unused-argument """Raise ValueError if value is not a valid value for key Subclasses that do interesting things for different keys may wish to override this method. """ # FIXME: key is not validated, contrary to docstring # The value cannot end in a newline (if it did, dumping the object # would result in multiple stanzas) if value.endswith('\n'): raise ValueError("value must not end in '\\n'") # Make sure there are no blank lines (actually, the first one is # allowed to be blank, but no others), and each subsequent line starts # with whitespace for line in value.splitlines()[1:]: if not line: raise ValueError("value must not have blank lines") if not line[0].isspace(): raise ValueError("each line must start with whitespace") def __setitem__(self, key, value): # type: (str, str) -> None self.validate_input(key, value) Deb822Dict.__setitem__(self, key, value) if TYPE_CHECKING: _BaseGpgInfo = Dict[str, List[str]] else: _BaseGpgInfo = dict # XXX check what happens if input contains more that one signature class GpgInfo(_BaseGpgInfo): """A wrapper around gnupg parsable output obtained via --status-fd This class is really a dictionary containing parsed output from gnupg plus some methods to make sense of the data. Keys are keywords and values are arguments suitably split. See /usr/share/doc/gnupg/DETAILS.gz""" # keys with format "key keyid uid" uidkeys = ('GOODSIG', 'EXPSIG', 'EXPKEYSIG', 'REVKEYSIG', 'BADSIG') def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): # type: (*Any, **Any) -> None super(GpgInfo, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs) self.out = None # type: Optional[List[str]] self.err = None # type: Optional[List[str]] def valid(self): # type: () -> bool """Is the signature valid?""" return 'GOODSIG' in self or 'VALIDSIG' in self # XXX implement as a property? # XXX handle utf-8 %-encoding def uid(self): # type: () -> None """Return the primary ID of the signee key, None is not available""" @classmethod def from_output(cls, out, err=None): # type: (Union[str, List[str]], Optional[Union[str, List[str]]]) -> GpgInfo """ Create a GpgInfo object based on the gpg or gpgv output Create a new GpgInfo object from gpg(v) --status-fd output (out) and optionally collect stderr as well (err). Both out and err can be lines in newline-terminated sequence or regular strings. """ n = cls() if isinstance(out, six.string_types): n.out = out.split('\n') else: n.out = out if isinstance(err, six.string_types): n.err = err.split('\n') else: n.err = err header = '[GNUPG:] ' for line in n.out: if not line.startswith(header): continue line = line[len(header):] line = line.strip('\n') # str.partition() would be better, 2.5 only though s = line.find(' ') key = line[:s] if key in cls.uidkeys: # value is "keyid UID", don't split UID value = line[s+1:].split(' ', 1) else: value = line[s+1:].split(' ') # Skip headers in the gpgv output that are not interesting # note NEWSI is actually NEWSIG but the above parsing loses the 'G' # if no keyid is included in the message. See # /usr/share/doc/gnupg/DETAILS.gz if key in ('NEWSI', 'NEWSIG', 'KEY_CONSIDERED', 'PROGRESS'): continue n[key] = value return n @classmethod def from_sequence(cls, sequence, # type: Union[bytes, Iterable[bytes]] keyrings=None, # type: Optional[Iterable[str]] executable=None # type: Optional[Iterable[str]] ): # type: (...) -> GpgInfo """Create a new GpgInfo object from the given sequence. :param sequence: sequence of lines of bytes or a single byte string :param keyrings: list of keyrings to use (default: ['/usr/share/keyrings/debian-keyring.gpg']) :param executable: list of args for subprocess.Popen, the first element being the gpgv executable (default: ['/usr/bin/gpgv']) """ keyrings = keyrings or GPGV_DEFAULT_KEYRINGS executable = executable or [GPGV_EXECUTABLE] # XXX check for gpg as well and use --verify accordingly? args = list(executable) # args.extend(["--status-fd", "1", "--no-default-keyring"]) args.extend(["--status-fd", "1"]) for k in keyrings: args.extend(["--keyring", k]) if "--keyring" not in args: raise IOError("cannot access any of the given keyrings") p = subprocess.Popen(args, stdin=subprocess.PIPE, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE, universal_newlines=False) # XXX what to do with exit code? if isinstance(sequence, bytes): inp = sequence else: inp = cls._get_full_bytes(sequence) out, err = p.communicate(inp) return cls.from_output(out.decode('utf-8'), err.decode('utf-8')) @staticmethod def _get_full_bytes(sequence): # type: (Iterable[bytes]) -> bytes """Return a byte string from a sequence of lines of bytes. This method detects if the sequence's lines are newline-terminated, and constructs the byte string appropriately. """ # Peek at the first line to see if it's newline-terminated. sequence_iter = iter(sequence) try: first_line = next(sequence_iter) except StopIteration: return b"" join_str = b'\n' if first_line.endswith(b'\n'): join_str = b'' return first_line + join_str + join_str.join(sequence_iter) @classmethod def from_file(cls, target, *args, **kwargs): # type: (str, *Any, **Any) -> GpgInfo """Create a new GpgInfo object from the given file. See GpgInfo.from_sequence. """ with open(target, 'rb') as target_file: return cls.from_sequence(target_file, *args, **kwargs) class PkgRelation(object): """Inter-package relationships Structured representation of the relationships of a package to another, i.e. of what can appear in a Deb882 field like Depends, Recommends, Suggests, ... (see Debian Policy 7.1). """ # XXX *NOT* a real dependency parser, and that is not even a goal here, we # just parse as much as we need to split the various parts composing a # dependency, checking their correctness wrt policy is out of scope __dep_RE = re.compile( r'^\s*(?P<name>[a-zA-Z0-9][a-zA-Z0-9.+\-]*)' r'(:(?P<archqual>([a-zA-Z0-9][a-zA-Z0-9-]*)))?' r'(\s*\(\s*(?P<relop>[>=<]+)\s*' r'(?P<version>[0-9a-zA-Z:\-+~.]+)\s*\))?' r'(\s*\[(?P<archs>[\s!\w\-]+)\])?\s*' r'((?P<restrictions><.+>))?\s*' r'$') __comma_sep_RE = re.compile(r'\s*,\s*') __pipe_sep_RE = re.compile(r'\s*\|\s*') __blank_sep_RE = re.compile(r'\s+') __restriction_sep_RE = re.compile(r'>\s*<') __restriction_RE = re.compile( r'(?P<enabled>\!)?' r'(?P<profile>[^\s]+)') ArchRestriction = collections.namedtuple('ArchRestriction', ['enabled', 'arch']) BuildRestriction = collections.namedtuple('BuildRestriction', ['enabled', 'profile']) if TYPE_CHECKING: ParsedRelation = TypedDict( 'ParsedRelation', { 'name': str, 'archqual': Optional[str], 'version': Optional[Tuple[str, str]], 'arch': Optional[List['PkgRelation.ArchRestriction']], 'restrictions': Optional[List[List['PkgRelation.BuildRestriction']]], } ) @classmethod def parse_relations(cls, raw): # type: (str) -> List[List[PkgRelation.ParsedRelation]] """Parse a package relationship string (i.e. the value of a field like Depends, Recommends, Build-Depends ...) """ def parse_archs(raw): # type: (str) -> List[PkgRelation.ArchRestriction] # assumption: no space between '!' and architecture name archs = [] for arch in cls.__blank_sep_RE.split(raw.strip()): disabled = arch[0] == '!' if disabled: arch = arch[1:] archs.append(cls.ArchRestriction(not disabled, arch)) return archs def parse_restrictions(raw): # type: (str) -> List[List[PkgRelation.BuildRestriction]] """ split a restriction formula into a list of restriction lists Each term in the restriction list is a namedtuple of form: (enabled, label) where enabled: bool: whether the restriction is positive or negative profile: the profile name of the term e.g. 'stage1' """ restrictions = [] groups = cls.__restriction_sep_RE.split(raw.lower().strip('<> ')) for rgrp in groups: group = [] for restriction in cls.__blank_sep_RE.split(rgrp): match = cls.__restriction_RE.match(restriction) if match: parts = match.groupdict() group.append( cls.BuildRestriction( parts['enabled'] != '!', parts['profile'], )) restrictions.append(group) return restrictions def parse_rel(raw): # type: (str) -> PkgRelation.ParsedRelation match = cls.__dep_RE.match(raw) if match: parts = match.groupdict() d = { 'name': parts['name'], 'archqual': parts['archqual'], 'version': None, 'arch': None, 'restrictions': None, } # type: PkgRelation.ParsedRelation if parts['relop'] or parts['version']: d['version'] = (parts['relop'], parts['version']) if parts['archs']: d['arch'] = parse_archs(parts['archs']) if parts['restrictions']: d['restrictions'] = parse_restrictions( parts['restrictions']) return d warnings.warn( 'cannot parse package' ' relationship "%s", returning it raw' % raw) return { 'name': raw, 'archqual': None, 'version': None, 'arch': None, 'restrictions': None, } tl_deps = cls.__comma_sep_RE.split(raw.strip()) # top-level deps cnf = map(cls.__pipe_sep_RE.split, tl_deps) return [[parse_rel(or_dep) for or_dep in or_deps] for or_deps in cnf] @staticmethod def str(rels): # type: (List[List[PkgRelation.ParsedRelation]]) -> builtins.str """Format to string structured inter-package relationships Perform the inverse operation of parse_relations, returning a string suitable to be written in a package stanza. """ def pp_arch(arch_spec): # type: (PkgRelation.ArchRestriction) -> str return '%s%s' % ( '' if arch_spec.enabled else '!', arch_spec.arch, ) def pp_restrictions(restrictions): # type: (List[PkgRelation.BuildRestriction]) -> str s = [] for term in restrictions: s.append( '%s%s' % ( '' if term.enabled else '!', term.profile ) ) return '<%s>' % ' '.join(s) def pp_atomic_dep(dep): # type: (PkgRelation.ParsedRelation) -> str s = dep['name'] # type: str if dep.get('archqual') is not None: s += ':%s' % dep['archqual'] v = dep.get('version') if v is not None: s += ' (%s %s)' % v a = dep.get('arch') if a is not None: s += ' [%s]' % ' '.join(map(pp_arch, a)) r = dep.get('restrictions') if r is not None: s += ' %s' % ' '.join(map(pp_restrictions, r)) return s return ', '.join( map(lambda deps: ' | '.join(map(pp_atomic_dep, deps)), rels)) if TYPE_CHECKING: _lowercase_dict_base = Dict[str, Any] else: _lowercase_dict_base = dict class _lowercase_dict(_lowercase_dict_base): """Dictionary wrapper which lowercase keys upon lookup.""" def __getitem__(self, key): # type: (str) -> Optional[Any] return dict.__getitem__(self, key.lower()) if TYPE_CHECKING: class _HasVersionFieldProtocol(Protocol): def __getitem__(self, s): # type: (str) -> str pass def __setitem__(self, s, v): # type: (str, str) -> None pass class _VersionAccessorMixin(object): """Give access to Version keys as debian_support.Version objects.""" def get_version(self): # type: (_HasVersionFieldProtocol) -> debian.debian_support.Version return debian.debian_support.Version(self['Version']) def set_version(self, version): # type: (_HasVersionFieldProtocol, debian.debian_support.Version) -> None self['Version'] = str(version) class _PkgRelationMixin(object): """Package relationship mixin Inheriting from this mixin you can extend a :class:`Deb822` object with attributes letting you access inter-package relationship in a structured way, rather than as strings. For example, while you can usually use ``pkg['depends']`` to obtain the Depends string of package pkg, mixing in with this class you gain pkg.depends to access Depends as a Pkgrel instance To use, subclass _PkgRelationMixin from a class with a _relationship_fields attribute. It should be a list of field names for which structured access is desired; for each of them a method wild be added to the inherited class. The method name will be the lowercase version of field name; '-' will be mangled as '_'. The method would return relationships in the same format of the PkgRelation' relations property. See Packages and Sources as examples. """ _relationship_fields = [] # type: List[str] def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): # type: (*Any, **Any) -> None # pylint: disable=unused-argument # (accept anything via constructors) self.__relations = _lowercase_dict({}) self.__parsed_relations = False for name in self._relationship_fields: # To avoid reimplementing Deb822 key lookup logic we use a really # simple dict subclass which just lowercase keys upon lookup. Since # dictionary building happens only here, we ensure that all keys # are in fact lowercase. # With this trick we enable users to use the same key (i.e. field # name) of Deb822 objects on the dictionary returned by the # relations property. keyname = name.lower() if name in self: # type: ignore # Mixin is used with Deb822Dict self.__relations[keyname] = None # lazy value # all lazy values will be expanded before setting # __parsed_relations to True else: self.__relations[keyname] = [] @property def relations(self): # type: () -> _lowercase_dict """Return a dictionary of inter-package relationships among the current and other packages. Dictionary keys depend on the package kind. Binary packages have keys like 'depends', 'recommends', ... while source packages have keys like 'build-depends', 'build-depends-indep' and so on. See the Debian policy for the comprehensive field list. Dictionary values are package relationships returned as lists of lists of dictionaries (see below for some examples). The encoding of package relationships is as follows: - the top-level lists corresponds to the comma-separated list of :class:`Deb822`, their components form a conjunction, i.e. they have to be AND-ed together - the inner lists corresponds to the pipe-separated list of :class:`Deb822`, their components form a disjunction, i.e. they have to be OR-ed together - member of the inner lists are dictionaries with the following keys: ``name`` package (or virtual package) name ``version`` A pair <`operator`, `version`> if the relationship is versioned, None otherwise. operator is one of ``<<``, ``<=``, ``=``, ``>=``, ``>>``; version is the given version as a string. ``arch`` A list of pairs <`enabled`, `arch`> if the relationship is architecture specific, None otherwise. Enabled is a boolean (``False`` if the architecture is negated with ``!``, ``True`` otherwise), arch the Debian architecture name as a string. ``restrictions`` A list of lists of tuples <`enabled`, `profile`> if there is a restriction formula defined, ``None`` otherwise. Each list of tuples represents a restriction list while each tuple represents an individual term within the restriction list. Enabled is a boolean (``False`` if the restriction is negated with ``!``, ``True`` otherwise). The profile is the name of the build restriction. https://wiki.debian.org/BuildProfileSpec The arch and restrictions tuples are available as named tuples so elements are available as `term[0]` or alternatively as `term.enabled` (and so forth). Examples: ``"emacs | emacsen, make, debianutils (>= 1.7)"`` becomes:: [ [ {'name': 'emacs'}, {'name': 'emacsen'} ], [ {'name': 'make'} ], [ {'name': 'debianutils', 'version': ('>=', '1.7')} ] ] ``"tcl8.4-dev, procps [!hurd-i386]"`` becomes:: [ [ {'name': 'tcl8.4-dev'} ], [ {'name': 'procps', 'arch': (false, 'hurd-i386')} ] ] ``"texlive <!cross>"`` becomes:: [ [ {'name': 'texlive', 'restriction': [[(false, 'cross')]]} ] ] """ if not self.__parsed_relations: lazy_rels = filter(lambda n: self.__relations[n] is None, self.__relations.keys()) for n in lazy_rels: # Mixin is used with Deb822Dict so self becomes indexable self.__relations[n] = PkgRelation.parse_relations(self[n]) # type: ignore self.__parsed_relations = True return self.__relations class _multivalued(Deb822): """A class with (R/W) support for multivalued fields. To use, create a subclass with a _multivalued_fields attribute. It should be a dictionary with *lower-case* keys, with lists of human-readable identifiers of the fields as the values. Please see :class:`Dsc`, :class:`Changes`, and :class:`PdiffIndex` as examples. """ _multivalued_fields = {} # type: Dict[str, List[str]] def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): # type: (*Any, **Any) -> None Deb822.__init__(self, *args, **kwargs) for field, fields in self._multivalued_fields.items(): try: contents = self[field] except KeyError: continue if self.is_multi_line(contents): self[field] = [] # type: ignore updater_method = self[field].append else: self[field] = Deb822Dict() # type: ignore updater_method = self[field].update for line in filter(None, contents.splitlines()): # type: str updater_method(Deb822Dict(zip(fields, line.split()))) def validate_input(self, key, value): # type: (str, Union[List[Dict[str, str]], str]) -> None if key.lower() in self._multivalued_fields: # It's difficult to write a validator for multivalued fields, and # basically futile, since we allow mutable lists. In any case, # with sanity checking in get_as_string, we shouldn't ever output # unparseable data. pass else: super(_multivalued, self).validate_input(key, value) # type: ignore def get_as_string(self, key): # type: (str) -> str keyl = key.lower() if keyl in self._multivalued_fields: fd = io.StringIO() if hasattr(self[key], 'keys'): # single-line array = [self[key]] else: # multi-line fd.write(six.u("\n")) array = self[key] order = self._multivalued_fields[keyl] field_lengths = {} # type: Mapping[str, Mapping[str, int]] try: field_lengths = self._fixed_field_lengths # type: ignore # lazy added member except AttributeError: pass for item in array: for x in order: raw_value = six.text_type(item[x]) try: length = field_lengths[keyl][x] except KeyError: value = raw_value else: value = (length - len(raw_value)) * " " + raw_value if "\n" in value: raise ValueError("'\\n' not allowed in component of " "multivalued field %s" % key) fd.write(six.u(" %s") % value) fd.write(six.u("\n")) return fd.getvalue().rstrip("\n") return Deb822.get_as_string(self, key) class _gpg_multivalued(_multivalued): """A _multivalued class that can support gpg signed objects This class's feature is that it stores the raw text before parsing so that gpg can verify the signature. Use it just like you would use the _multivalued class. This class only stores raw text if it is given a raw string, or if it detects a gpg signature when given a file or sequence of lines (see Deb822.split_gpg_and_payload for details). """ def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): # type: (*Any, **Any) -> None self.raw_text = None # type: Optional[bytes] try: sequence = args[0] except IndexError: sequence = kwargs.get("sequence", None) strict = kwargs.get("strict", None) if sequence is not None: # If the input is a unicode object or a file opened in text mode, # we'll need to encode it back to bytes for gpg. If it's not # actually in the encoding that we guess, then this probably won't # verify correctly, but this is the best we can reasonably manage. # For accurate verification, the file should be opened in binary # mode. encoding = (getattr(sequence, 'encoding', None) or kwargs.get('encoding', 'utf-8') or 'utf-8') if isinstance(sequence, bytes): self.raw_text = sequence elif isinstance(sequence, six.string_types): self.raw_text = sequence.encode(encoding) elif hasattr(sequence, "items"): # sequence is actually a dict(-like) object, so we don't have # the raw text. pass else: try: gpg_pre_lines, lines, gpg_post_lines = \ self.split_gpg_and_payload( (self._bytes(s, encoding) for s in sequence), strict) except EOFError: # Empty input gpg_pre_lines = lines = gpg_post_lines = [] if gpg_pre_lines and gpg_post_lines: raw_text = io.BytesIO() raw_text.write(b"\n".join(gpg_pre_lines)) raw_text.write(b"\n\n") raw_text.write(b"\n".join(lines)) raw_text.write(b"\n\n") raw_text.write(b"\n".join(gpg_post_lines)) self.raw_text = raw_text.getvalue() try: argsl = list(args) argsl[0] = lines args = tuple(argsl) except IndexError: kwargs["sequence"] = lines _multivalued.__init__(self, *args, **kwargs) @staticmethod def _bytes(s, encoding): # type: (Union[bytes, str], str) -> bytes """Converts s to bytes if necessary, using encoding. If s is already bytes type, returns it directly. """ if isinstance(s, bytes): return s if isinstance(s, six.string_types): return s.encode(encoding) raise TypeError('bytes or unicode/string required, not %s' % type(s)) class Dsc(_gpg_multivalued, _VersionAccessorMixin): """ Representation of a .dsc (Debian Source Control) file This class is a thin wrapper around the transparent GPG handling of :class:`_gpg_multivalued` and the parsing of :class:`Deb822`. """ _multivalued_fields = { "files": ["md5sum", "size", "name"], "checksums-sha1": ["sha1", "size", "name"], "checksums-sha256": ["sha256", "size", "name"], "checksums-sha512": ["sha512", "size", "name"], } class Changes(_gpg_multivalued, _VersionAccessorMixin): """ Representation of a .changes (archive changes) file This class is a thin wrapper around the transparent GPG handling of :class:`_gpg_multivalued` and the parsing of :class:`Deb822`. """ _multivalued_fields = { "files": ["md5sum", "size", "section", "priority", "name"], "checksums-sha1": ["sha1", "size", "name"], "checksums-sha256": ["sha256", "size", "name"], "checksums-sha512": ["sha512", "size", "name"], } def get_pool_path(self): # type: () -> str """Return the path in the pool where the files would be installed""" # This is based on the section listed for the first file. While # it is possible, I think, for a package to provide files in multiple # sections, I haven't seen it in practice. In any case, this should # probably detect such a situation and complain, or return a list... s = self['files'][0]['section'] try: section, _ = s.split('/') except ValueError: # main is implicit section = 'main' if self['source'].startswith('lib'): subdir = self['source'][:4] else: subdir = self['source'][0] return 'pool/%s/%s/%s' % (section, subdir, self['source']) class BuildInfo(_gpg_multivalued, _PkgRelationMixin, _VersionAccessorMixin): """ Representation of a .buildinfo (build environment description) file This class is a thin wrapper around the transparent GPG handling of :class:`_gpg_multivalued`, the field parsing of :class:`_PkgRelationMixin`, and the format parsing of :class:`Deb822`. Note that the 'relations' structure returned by the `relations` method is identical to that produced by other classes in this module. Consequently, existing code to consume this structure can be used here, although it means that there are redundant lists and tuples within the structure. Example:: >>> from debian.deb822 import BuildInfo >>> filename = 'package.buildinfo' >>> with open(filename) as fh: ... info = BuildInfo(fh) >>> print(info.get_environment()) {'DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS': 'parallel=4', 'LANG': 'en_AU.UTF-8', 'LC_ALL': 'C.UTF-8', 'LC_TIME': 'en_GB.UTF-8', 'LD_LIBRARY_PATH': '/usr/lib/libeatmydata', 'SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH': '1601784586'} >>> installed = info.relations['installed-build-depends'] >>> for dep in installed: ... print("Installed %s/%s" % (dep[0]['name'], dep[0]['version'][1])) Installed autoconf/2.69-11.1 Installed automake/1:1.16.2-4 Installed autopoint/0.19.8.1-10 Installed autotools-dev/20180224.1 ... etc ... >>> changelog = info.get_changelog() >>> print(changelog.author) 'xyz Build Daemon (xyz-01) <buildd_xyz-01@buildd.debian.org>' >>> print(changlog[0].changes()) ['', ' * Binary-only non-maintainer upload for amd64; no source changes.', ' * Add Python 3.9 as supported version', ''] """ _multivalued_fields = { "files": ["md5sum", "size", "section", "priority", "name"], "checksums-sha1": ["sha1", "size", "name"], "checksums-sha256": ["sha256", "size", "name"], "checksums-sha512": ["sha512", "size", "name"], } _relationship_fields = [ 'installed-build-depends', ] def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): # type: (*Any, **Any) -> None _gpg_multivalued.__init__(self, *args, **kwargs) _PkgRelationMixin.__init__(self, *args, **kwargs) def get_environment(self): # type: () -> Dict[str, str] """Return the build environment that was recorded The environment is returned as a dict in the style of `os.environ`. The backslash quoting of values described in deb-buildinfo(5) is removed. """ #if 'Environment' not in self: #return {} return dict(BuildInfo._env_deserialise(self.get('Environment', ''))) def get_changelog(self): # type: () -> Optional[debian.changelog.Changelog] """Return the changelog entry from the buildinfo (for binNMUs) If no "Binary-Only-Changes" field is present in the buildinfo file then `None` is returned. """ if 'Binary-Only-Changes' not in self: return None # remove the indentation and . that is applied to the changelog chlines = self['Binary-Only-Changes'].splitlines() chlines = ['' if s == ' .' else s[1:] for s in chlines] return debian.changelog.Changelog(chlines) class _EnvParserState(): # trivial enum for the deserialiser IGNORE_WHITESPACE = 0 VAR_NAME = 1 START_VALUE_QUOTE = 2 VALUE = 3 VALUE_BACKSLASH_ESCAPE = 4 @staticmethod def _env_deserialise(serialised): # type: (str) -> Generator[Tuple[str, str], None, None] """ extract the environment variables and values from the text Format is: VAR_NAME="value" with ignorable whitespace around the construct (and separating each item). Quote characters within the value are backslash escaped. When producing the buildinfo file, dpkg only includes specifically allowed environment variables and thus there is no defined quoting rules for the variable names. The format is described by deb-buildinfo(5) and implemented in dpkg source scripts/dpkg-genbuildinfo.pl:cleansed_environment(), while the environment variables that are included in the output are listed in dpkg source scripts/Dpkg/Build/Info.pm """ # The deserialiser is implemented as a state machine with the # states listed in _EnvParserState. state = BuildInfo._EnvParserState.IGNORE_WHITESPACE name = "" value = None # type: Optional[str] for ch in serialised: if state == BuildInfo._EnvParserState.IGNORE_WHITESPACE: if not ch.isspace(): state = BuildInfo._EnvParserState.VAR_NAME name = ch continue if state == BuildInfo._EnvParserState.VAR_NAME: if ch != "=": name += ch else: state = BuildInfo._EnvParserState.START_VALUE_QUOTE value = "" continue if state == BuildInfo._EnvParserState.START_VALUE_QUOTE: if ch == '"': state = BuildInfo._EnvParserState.VALUE else: raise ValueError( "Improper quoting in Environment: " "begin quote not found" ) continue if state == BuildInfo._EnvParserState.VALUE: if ch == "\\": state = BuildInfo._EnvParserState.VALUE_BACKSLASH_ESCAPE elif ch == '"': if name == "": raise ValueError( "Improper formatting in Environment: " "variable name not found" ) if value is None: raise ValueError( "Improper formatting in Environment: " "variable value not found" ) yield name, value state = BuildInfo._EnvParserState.IGNORE_WHITESPACE name = "" value = None else: assert value is not None value += ch continue if state == BuildInfo._EnvParserState.VALUE_BACKSLASH_ESCAPE: if ch == '"': assert value is not None value += ch state = BuildInfo._EnvParserState.VALUE else: raise ValueError( "Improper formatting in Environment: " "couldn't interpret backslash sequence" ) continue if state != BuildInfo._EnvParserState.IGNORE_WHITESPACE: ValueError( "Improper quoting in Environment: " "end quote not found" ) class PdiffIndex(_multivalued): """ Representation of a foo.diff/Index file from a Debian mirror This class is a thin wrapper around the transparent GPG handling of :class:`_gpg_multivalued` and the parsing of :class:`Deb822`. """ _multivalued_fields = { "sha1-current": ["SHA1", "size"], "sha1-history": ["SHA1", "size", "date"], "sha1-patches": ["SHA1", "size", "date"], "sha1-download": ["SHA1", "size", "filename"], "x-unmerged-sha1-history": ["SHA1", "size", "date"], "x-unmerged-sha1-patches": ["SHA1", "size", "date"], "x-unmerged-sha1-download": ["SHA1", "size", "filename"], "sha256-current": ["SHA256", "size"], "sha256-history": ["SHA256", "size", "date"], "sha256-patches": ["SHA256", "size", "date"], "sha256-download": ["SHA256", "size", "filename"], "x-unmerged-sha256-history": ["SHA256", "size", "date"], "x-unmerged-sha256-patches": ["SHA256", "size", "date"], "x-unmerged-sha256-download": ["SHA256", "size", "filename"], } @property def _fixed_field_lengths(self): # type: () -> Dict[str, Dict[str, int]] fixed_field_lengths = {} # type: Dict[str, Dict[str, int]] for key in self._multivalued_fields: if hasattr(self[key], 'keys'): # Not multi-line -- don't need to compute the field length for # this one continue length = self._get_size_field_length(key) fixed_field_lengths[key] = {"size": length} return fixed_field_lengths def _get_size_field_length(self, key): # type: (str) -> int lengths = [len(str(item['size'])) for item in self[key]] return max(lengths) class Release(_multivalued): """Represents a Release file Set the size_field_behavior attribute to "dak" to make the size field length only as long as the longest actual value. The default, "apt-ftparchive" makes the field 16 characters long regardless. This class is a thin wrapper around the parsing of :class:`Deb822`. """ # FIXME: Add support for detecting the behavior of the input, if # constructed from actual 822 text. _multivalued_fields = { "md5sum": ["md5sum", "size", "name"], "sha1": ["sha1", "size", "name"], "sha256": ["sha256", "size", "name"], "sha512": ["sha512", "size", "name"], } __size_field_behavior = "apt-ftparchive" def set_size_field_behavior(self, value): # type: (str) -> None if value not in ["apt-ftparchive", "dak"]: raise ValueError("size_field_behavior must be either " "'apt-ftparchive' or 'dak'") self.__size_field_behavior = value size_field_behavior = property(lambda self: self.__size_field_behavior, set_size_field_behavior) @property def _fixed_field_lengths(self): # type: () -> Dict[str, Dict[str, int]] fixed_field_lengths = {} # type: Dict[str, Dict[str, int]] for key in self._multivalued_fields: length = self._get_size_field_length(key) fixed_field_lengths[key] = {"size": length} return fixed_field_lengths def _get_size_field_length(self, key): # type: (str) -> int if self.size_field_behavior == "apt-ftparchive": return 16 if self.size_field_behavior == "dak": lengths = [len(str(item['size'])) for item in self[key]] return max(lengths) raise ValueError("Illegal value for size_field_behavior") class Sources(Dsc, _PkgRelationMixin): """Represent an APT source package list This class is a thin wrapper around the parsing of :class:`Deb822`, using the field parsing of :class:`_PkgRelationMixin`. """ _relationship_fields = [ 'build-depends', 'build-depends-indep', 'build-conflicts', 'build-conflicts-indep', 'binary', ] def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): # type: (*Any, **Any) -> None Dsc.__init__(self, *args, **kwargs) _PkgRelationMixin.__init__(self, *args, **kwargs) @classmethod def iter_paragraphs(cls, sequence, # type: InputDataType fields=None, # type: Optional[List[str]] use_apt_pkg=True, # type: bool shared_storage=False, # type: bool encoding="utf-8", # type: str strict=None, # type: Optional[Dict[str, bool]] ): # type: (...) -> Iterator[Sources] """Generator that yields a Deb822 object for each paragraph in Sources. Note that this overloaded form of the generator uses apt_pkg (a strict but fast parser) by default. See the :func:`~Deb822.iter_paragraphs` function for details. """ if not strict: strict = { 'whitespace-separates-paragraphs': False, } return super(Sources, cls).iter_paragraphs( sequence, fields, use_apt_pkg, shared_storage, encoding, strict) class Packages(Deb822, _PkgRelationMixin, _VersionAccessorMixin): """Represent an APT binary package list This class is a thin wrapper around the parsing of :class:`Deb822`, using the field parsing of :class:`_PkgRelationMixin`. """ _relationship_fields = [ 'depends', 'pre-depends', 'recommends', 'suggests', 'breaks', 'conflicts', 'provides', 'replaces', 'enhances', 'built-using', ] def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): # type: (*Any, **Any) -> None Deb822.__init__(self, *args, **kwargs) _PkgRelationMixin.__init__(self, *args, **kwargs) @classmethod def iter_paragraphs(cls, sequence, # type: InputDataType fields=None, # type: Optional[List[str]] use_apt_pkg=True, # type: bool shared_storage=False, # type: bool encoding="utf-8", # type: str strict=None, # type: Optional[Dict[str, bool]] ): # type: (...) -> Iterator[Packages] """Generator that yields a Deb822 object for each paragraph in Packages. Note that this overloaded form of the generator uses apt_pkg (a strict but fast parser) by default. See the :func:`~Deb822.iter_paragraphs` function for details. """ if not strict: strict = { 'whitespace-separates-paragraphs': False, } return super(Packages, cls).iter_paragraphs( sequence, fields, use_apt_pkg, shared_storage, encoding, strict) # Explicit source entries in the file can be either: # Source: source_package # Source: source_package (1.2.3-1) _explicit_source_re = re.compile( r"(?P<source>[^ ]+)" r"( \((?P<version>.+)\))?" ) @property def source(self): # type: () -> Optional[str] """ source package that generates the binary package If the source package and source package version are the same as the binary package, an explicit "Source" field will not be within the paragraph. """ if 'source' not in self: return self['package'] # type: ignore matches = self._explicit_source_re.match(self['source']) if matches: return matches.group('source') return None @property def source_version(self): # type: () -> debian.debian_support.Version """ source package that generates the binary package If the source package and source package version are the same as the binary package, an explicit "Source" field will not be within the paragraph. """ if 'source' not in self: return self.get_version() matches = self._explicit_source_re.match(self['source']) if matches and matches.group('version'): version = matches.group('version') else: version = self['Version'] return debian.debian_support.Version(version) class _ClassInitMeta(type): """Metaclass for classes that can be initialized at creation time. Implement the method:: @classmethod def _class_init(cls, new_attrs): pass on a class, and apply this metaclass to it. The _class_init method will be called right after the class is created. The 'new_attrs' param is a dict containing the attributes added in the definition of the class. """ def __init__(cls, # type: Any name, # type: Any bases, # type: Any attrs, # type: Any ): # type (...) -> None super(_ClassInitMeta, cls).__init__(name, bases, attrs) cls._class_init(attrs) class RestrictedField(collections.namedtuple( 'RestrictedField', 'name from_str to_str allow_none')): """Placeholder for a property providing access to a restricted field. Use this as an attribute when defining a subclass of RestrictedWrapper. It will be replaced with a property. See the RestrictedWrapper documentation for an example. """ def __new__(cls, name, # type: str from_str=None, # type: Optional[Callable[[str], Any]] to_str=None, # type: Optional[Callable[[Any], Optional[str]]] allow_none=True, # type: Optional[bool] ): # type: (...) -> RestrictedField """Create a new RestrictedField placeholder. The getter that will replace this returns (or applies the given to_str function to) None for fields that do not exist in the underlying data object. :param name: The name of the deb822 field. :param from_str: The function to apply for getters (default is to return the string directly). :param to_str: The function to apply for setters (default is to use the value directly). If allow_none is True, this function may return None, in which case the underlying key is deleted. :param allow_none: Whether it is allowed to set the value to None (which results in the underlying key being deleted). """ return super(RestrictedField, cls).__new__( cls, name, from_str=from_str, to_str=to_str, allow_none=allow_none) @six.add_metaclass(_ClassInitMeta) class RestrictedWrapper(object): """Base class to wrap a Deb822 object, restricting write access to some keys. The underlying data is hidden internally. Subclasses may keep a reference to the data before giving it to this class's constructor, if necessary, but RestrictedField should cover most use-cases. The dump method from Deb822 is directly proxied. Typical usage:: class Foo(object): def __init__(self, ...): # ... @staticmethod def from_str(self, s): # Parse s... return Foo(...) def to_str(self): # Return in string format. return ... class MyClass(deb822.RestrictedWrapper): def __init__(self): data = deb822.Deb822() data['Bar'] = 'baz' super(MyClass, self).__init__(data) foo = deb822.RestrictedField( 'Foo', from_str=Foo.from_str, to_str=Foo.to_str) bar = deb822.RestrictedField('Bar', allow_none=False) d = MyClass() d['Bar'] # returns 'baz' d['Bar'] = 'quux' # raises RestrictedFieldError d.bar = 'quux' d.bar # returns 'quux' d['Bar'] # returns 'quux' d.foo = Foo(...) d['Foo'] # returns string representation of foo """ __restricted_fields = frozenset() # type: FrozenSet[str] @classmethod def _class_init(cls, new_attrs): # type: ignore restricted_fields = [] for attr_name, val in new_attrs.items(): if isinstance(val, RestrictedField): restricted_fields.append(val.name.lower()) cls.__init_restricted_field(attr_name, val) # type: ignore cls.__restricted_fields = frozenset(restricted_fields) @classmethod def __init_restricted_field(cls, attr_name, field): # type: ignore def getter(self): # type: (RestrictedWrapper) -> Deb822ValueType val = self.__data.get(field.name) if field.from_str is not None: return field.from_str(val) return val def setter(self, val): # type: (RestrictedWrapper, Deb822ValueType) -> None if val is not None and field.to_str is not None: val = field.to_str(val) if val is None: if field.allow_none: if field.name in self.__data: del self.__data[field.name] else: raise TypeError('value must not be None') else: self.__data[field.name] = val setattr(cls, attr_name, property(getter, setter, None, field.name)) def __init__(self, data): # type: (Deb822) -> None """Initializes the wrapper over 'data', a Deb822 object.""" super(RestrictedWrapper, self).__init__() self.__data = data # type: Deb822 def __getitem__(self, key): # type: (str) -> Deb822ValueType return self.__data[key] def __setitem__(self, key, value): # type: (str, Deb822ValueType) -> None if key.lower() in self.__restricted_fields: raise RestrictedFieldError( '%s may not be modified directly; use the associated' ' property' % key) self.__data[key] = value def __delitem__(self, key): # type: (str) -> None if key.lower() in self.__restricted_fields: raise RestrictedFieldError( '%s may not be modified directly; use the associated' ' property' % key) del self.__data[key] def __iter__(self): # type: () -> Iterable[str] return iter(self.__data) def __len__(self): # type: () -> int return len(self.__data) def dump(self, fd=None, # type: Optional[Union[IO[str], IO[bytes]]] encoding=None, # type: Optional[str] text_mode=False, # type: bool ): # type: (...) -> Optional[str] """Calls dump() on the underlying data object. See Deb822.dump for more information. """ return self.__data.dump(fd, encoding, text_mode) class Removals(Deb822): """Represent an ftp-master removals.822 file Removal of packages from the archive are recorded by ftp-masters. See https://ftp-master.debian.org/#removed Note: this API is experimental and backwards-incompatible changes might be required in the future. Please use it and help us improve it! """ __sources_line_re = re.compile( r'\s*' r'(?P<package>.+?)' r'_' r'(?P<version>[^\s]+)' r'\s*' ) __binaries_line_re = re.compile( r'\s*' r'(?P<package>.+?)' r'_' r'(?P<version>[^\s]+)' r'\s+' r'\[(?P<archs>.+)\]' ) def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): # type: (*Any, **Any) -> None super(Removals, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs) self._sources = None # type: Optional[List[Dict[str, str]]] self._binaries = None # type: Optional[List[Dict[str, Union[str, Iterable[str]]]]] @property def date(self): # type: () -> datetime.datetime """ a datetime object for the removal action """ timearray = email.utils.parsedate_tz(self['date']) if timearray is None: raise ValueError("No date specified") ts = email.utils.mktime_tz(timearray) return datetime.datetime.fromtimestamp(ts) @property def bug(self): # type: () -> List[int] """ list of bug numbers that had requested the package removal The bug numbers are returned as integers. Note: there is normally only one entry in this list but there may be more than one. """ if 'bug' not in self: return [] return [int(b) for b in self['bug'].split(",")] @property def also_wnpp(self): # type: () -> List[int] """ list of WNPP bug numbers closed by the removal The bug numbers are returned as integers. """ if 'also-wnpp' not in self: return [] return [int(b) for b in self['also-wnpp'].split(" ")] @property def also_bugs(self): # type: () -> List[int] """ list of bug numbers in the package closed by the removal The bug numbers are returned as integers. Removal of a package implicitly also closes all bugs associated with the package. """ if 'also-bugs' not in self: return [] return [int(b) for b in self['also-bugs'].split(" ")] @property def sources(self): # type: () -> List[Dict[str, str]] """ list of source packages that were removed A list of dicts is returned, each dict has the form:: { 'source': 'some-package-name', 'version': '1.2.3-1' } Note: There may be no source packages removed at all if the removal is only of a binary package. An empty list is returned in that case. """ if self._sources is not None: return self._sources s = [] # type: List[Dict[str, str]] if 'sources' in self: for line in self['sources'].splitlines(): matches = self.__sources_line_re.match(line) if matches: s.append( { 'source': matches.group('package'), 'version': matches.group('version'), }) self._sources = s return s @property def binaries(self): # type: () -> List[Dict[str, Union[str, Iterable[str]]]] """ list of binary packages that were removed A list of dicts is returned, each dict has the form:: { 'package': 'some-package-name', 'version': '1.2.3-1', 'architectures': set(['i386', 'amd64']) } """ if self._binaries is not None: return self._binaries b = [] # type: List[Dict[str, Union[str, Iterable[str]]]] if 'binaries' in self: for line in self['binaries'].splitlines(): matches = self.__binaries_line_re.match(line) if matches: b.append({ 'package': matches.group('package'), 'version': matches.group('version'), 'architectures': set(matches.group('archs').split(', ')), }) self._binaries = b return b class _CaseInsensitiveString(str): """Case insensitive string. """ if six.PY3: # CRUFT: can't use __slots__ with str type in py2.7 __slots__ = ['str_lower'] if TYPE_CHECKING: # neither pylint nor mypy cope with str_lower being defined in __new__ def __init__(self, s): # type: (str) -> None super(_CaseInsensitiveString, self).__init__(s) self.str_lower = '' def __new__(cls, str_): # type: ignore s = str.__new__(cls, str_) # type: ignore s.str_lower = str_.lower() return s def __hash__(self): # type: () -> int return hash(self.str_lower) def __eq__(self, other): # type: (Any) -> Any try: return self.str_lower == other.lower() except AttributeError: return False def lower(self): # type: () -> str return self.str_lower _strI = _CaseInsensitiveString class _AutoDecoder(object): def __init__(self, encoding=None): # type: (Optional[str]) -> None self.encoding = encoding or 'UTF-8' def decode(self, value): # type: (Union[str, bytes]) -> str """If value is not already Unicode, decode it intelligently.""" if isinstance(value, bytes): try: return value.decode(self.encoding) except UnicodeDecodeError as e: # Evidently, the value wasn't encoded with the encoding the # user specified. Try detecting it. warnings.warn('decoding from %s failed; attempting to detect ' 'the true encoding' % self.encoding, UnicodeWarning) result = chardet.detect(value) try: return value.decode(result['encoding']) except UnicodeDecodeError: raise e else: # Assume the rest of the paragraph is in this encoding as # well (there's no sense in repeating this exercise for # every field). self.encoding = result['encoding'] else: return value
./Ninja\.