667 lines
24 KiB
Python
667 lines
24 KiB
Python
##############################################################################
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#
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# Copyright (c) 2003 Zope Foundation and Contributors.
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# All Rights Reserved.
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#
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# This software is subject to the provisions of the Zope Public License,
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# Version 2.1 (ZPL). A copy of the ZPL should accompany this distribution.
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# THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND ANY AND ALL EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
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# WARRANTIES ARE DISCLAIMED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED
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# WARRANTIES OF TITLE, MERCHANTABILITY, AGAINST INFRINGEMENT, AND FITNESS
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# FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
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#
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##############################################################################
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"""
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Compute a resolution order for an object and its bases.
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.. versionchanged:: 5.0
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The resolution order is now based on the same C3 order that Python
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uses for classes. In complex instances of multiple inheritance, this
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may result in a different ordering.
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In older versions, the ordering wasn't required to be C3 compliant,
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and for backwards compatibility, it still isn't. If the ordering
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isn't C3 compliant (if it is *inconsistent*), zope.interface will
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make a best guess to try to produce a reasonable resolution order.
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Still (just as before), the results in such cases may be
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surprising.
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.. rubric:: Environment Variables
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Due to the change in 5.0, certain environment variables can be used to control errors
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and warnings about inconsistent resolution orders. They are listed in priority order, with
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variables at the bottom generally overriding variables above them.
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ZOPE_INTERFACE_WARN_BAD_IRO
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If this is set to "1", then if there is at least one inconsistent resolution
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order discovered, a warning (:class:`InconsistentResolutionOrderWarning`) will
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be issued. Use the usual warning mechanisms to control this behaviour. The warning
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text will contain additional information on debugging.
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ZOPE_INTERFACE_TRACK_BAD_IRO
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If this is set to "1", then zope.interface will log information about each
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inconsistent resolution order discovered, and keep those details in memory in this module
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for later inspection.
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ZOPE_INTERFACE_STRICT_IRO
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If this is set to "1", any attempt to use :func:`ro` that would produce a non-C3
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ordering will fail by raising :class:`InconsistentResolutionOrderError`.
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.. important::
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``ZOPE_INTERFACE_STRICT_IRO`` is intended to become the default in the future.
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There are two environment variables that are independent.
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ZOPE_INTERFACE_LOG_CHANGED_IRO
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If this is set to "1", then if the C3 resolution order is different from
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the legacy resolution order for any given object, a message explaining the differences
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will be logged. This is intended to be used for debugging complicated IROs.
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ZOPE_INTERFACE_USE_LEGACY_IRO
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If this is set to "1", then the C3 resolution order will *not* be used. The
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legacy IRO will be used instead. This is a temporary measure and will be removed in the
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future. It is intended to help during the transition.
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It implies ``ZOPE_INTERFACE_LOG_CHANGED_IRO``.
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.. rubric:: Debugging Behaviour Changes in zope.interface 5
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Most behaviour changes from zope.interface 4 to 5 are related to
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inconsistent resolution orders. ``ZOPE_INTERFACE_STRICT_IRO`` is the
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most effective tool to find such inconsistent resolution orders, and
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we recommend running your code with this variable set if at all
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possible. Doing so will ensure that all interface resolution orders
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are consistent, and if they're not, will immediately point the way to
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where this is violated.
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Occasionally, however, this may not be enough. This is because in some
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cases, a C3 ordering can be found (the resolution order is fully
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consistent) that is substantially different from the ad-hoc legacy
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ordering. In such cases, you may find that you get an unexpected value
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returned when adapting one or more objects to an interface. To debug
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this, *also* enable ``ZOPE_INTERFACE_LOG_CHANGED_IRO`` and examine the
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output. The main thing to look for is changes in the relative
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positions of interfaces for which there are registered adapters.
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"""
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from __future__ import print_function
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__docformat__ = 'restructuredtext'
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__all__ = [
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'ro',
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'InconsistentResolutionOrderError',
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'InconsistentResolutionOrderWarning',
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]
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__logger = None
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def _logger():
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global __logger # pylint:disable=global-statement
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if __logger is None:
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import logging
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__logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
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return __logger
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def _legacy_mergeOrderings(orderings):
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"""Merge multiple orderings so that within-ordering order is preserved
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Orderings are constrained in such a way that if an object appears
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in two or more orderings, then the suffix that begins with the
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object must be in both orderings.
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For example:
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>>> _mergeOrderings([
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... ['x', 'y', 'z'],
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... ['q', 'z'],
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... [1, 3, 5],
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... ['z']
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... ])
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['x', 'y', 'q', 1, 3, 5, 'z']
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"""
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seen = set()
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result = []
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for ordering in reversed(orderings):
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for o in reversed(ordering):
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if o not in seen:
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seen.add(o)
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result.insert(0, o)
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return result
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def _legacy_flatten(begin):
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result = [begin]
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i = 0
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for ob in iter(result):
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i += 1
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# The recursive calls can be avoided by inserting the base classes
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# into the dynamically growing list directly after the currently
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# considered object; the iterator makes sure this will keep working
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# in the future, since it cannot rely on the length of the list
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# by definition.
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result[i:i] = ob.__bases__
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return result
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def _legacy_ro(ob):
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return _legacy_mergeOrderings([_legacy_flatten(ob)])
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###
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# Compare base objects using identity, not equality. This matches what
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# the CPython MRO algorithm does, and is *much* faster to boot: that,
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# plus some other small tweaks makes the difference between 25s and 6s
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# in loading 446 plone/zope interface.py modules (1925 InterfaceClass,
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# 1200 Implements, 1100 ClassProvides objects)
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###
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class InconsistentResolutionOrderWarning(PendingDeprecationWarning):
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"""
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The warning issued when an invalid IRO is requested.
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"""
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class InconsistentResolutionOrderError(TypeError):
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"""
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The error raised when an invalid IRO is requested in strict mode.
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"""
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def __init__(self, c3, base_tree_remaining):
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self.C = c3.leaf
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base_tree = c3.base_tree
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self.base_ros = {
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base: base_tree[i + 1]
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for i, base in enumerate(self.C.__bases__)
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}
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# Unfortunately, this doesn't necessarily directly match
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# up to any transformation on C.__bases__, because
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# if any were fully used up, they were removed already.
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self.base_tree_remaining = base_tree_remaining
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TypeError.__init__(self)
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def __str__(self):
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import pprint
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return "%s: For object %r.\nBase ROs:\n%s\nConflict Location:\n%s" % (
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self.__class__.__name__,
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self.C,
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pprint.pformat(self.base_ros),
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pprint.pformat(self.base_tree_remaining),
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)
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class _NamedBool(int): # cannot actually inherit bool
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def __new__(cls, val, name):
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inst = super(cls, _NamedBool).__new__(cls, val)
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inst.__name__ = name
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return inst
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class _ClassBoolFromEnv(object):
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"""
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Non-data descriptor that reads a transformed environment variable
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as a boolean, and caches the result in the class.
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"""
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def __get__(self, inst, klass):
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import os
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for cls in klass.__mro__:
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my_name = None
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for k in dir(klass):
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if k in cls.__dict__ and cls.__dict__[k] is self:
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my_name = k
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break
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if my_name is not None:
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break
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else: # pragma: no cover
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raise RuntimeError("Unable to find self")
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env_name = 'ZOPE_INTERFACE_' + my_name
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val = os.environ.get(env_name, '') == '1'
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val = _NamedBool(val, my_name)
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setattr(klass, my_name, val)
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setattr(klass, 'ORIG_' + my_name, self)
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return val
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class _StaticMRO(object):
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# A previously resolved MRO, supplied by the caller.
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# Used in place of calculating it.
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had_inconsistency = None # We don't know...
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def __init__(self, C, mro):
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self.leaf = C
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self.__mro = tuple(mro)
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def mro(self):
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return list(self.__mro)
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class C3(object):
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# Holds the shared state during computation of an MRO.
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@staticmethod
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def resolver(C, strict, base_mros):
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strict = strict if strict is not None else C3.STRICT_IRO
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factory = C3
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if strict:
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factory = _StrictC3
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elif C3.TRACK_BAD_IRO:
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factory = _TrackingC3
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memo = {}
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base_mros = base_mros or {}
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for base, mro in base_mros.items():
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assert base in C.__bases__
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memo[base] = _StaticMRO(base, mro)
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return factory(C, memo)
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__mro = None
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__legacy_ro = None
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direct_inconsistency = False
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def __init__(self, C, memo):
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self.leaf = C
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self.memo = memo
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kind = self.__class__
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base_resolvers = []
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for base in C.__bases__:
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if base not in memo:
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resolver = kind(base, memo)
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memo[base] = resolver
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base_resolvers.append(memo[base])
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self.base_tree = [
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[C]
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] + [
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memo[base].mro() for base in C.__bases__
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] + [
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list(C.__bases__)
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]
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self.bases_had_inconsistency = any(base.had_inconsistency for base in base_resolvers)
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if len(C.__bases__) == 1:
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self.__mro = [C] + memo[C.__bases__[0]].mro()
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@property
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def had_inconsistency(self):
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return self.direct_inconsistency or self.bases_had_inconsistency
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@property
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def legacy_ro(self):
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if self.__legacy_ro is None:
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self.__legacy_ro = tuple(_legacy_ro(self.leaf))
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return list(self.__legacy_ro)
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TRACK_BAD_IRO = _ClassBoolFromEnv()
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STRICT_IRO = _ClassBoolFromEnv()
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WARN_BAD_IRO = _ClassBoolFromEnv()
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LOG_CHANGED_IRO = _ClassBoolFromEnv()
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USE_LEGACY_IRO = _ClassBoolFromEnv()
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BAD_IROS = ()
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def _warn_iro(self):
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if not self.WARN_BAD_IRO:
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# For the initial release, one must opt-in to see the warning.
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# In the future (2021?) seeing at least the first warning will
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# be the default
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return
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import warnings
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warnings.warn(
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"An inconsistent resolution order is being requested. "
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"(Interfaces should follow the Python class rules known as C3.) "
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"For backwards compatibility, zope.interface will allow this, "
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"making the best guess it can to produce as meaningful an order as possible. "
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"In the future this might be an error. Set the warning filter to error, or set "
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"the environment variable 'ZOPE_INTERFACE_TRACK_BAD_IRO' to '1' and examine "
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"ro.C3.BAD_IROS to debug, or set 'ZOPE_INTERFACE_STRICT_IRO' to raise exceptions.",
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InconsistentResolutionOrderWarning,
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)
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@staticmethod
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def _can_choose_base(base, base_tree_remaining):
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# From C3:
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# nothead = [s for s in nonemptyseqs if cand in s[1:]]
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for bases in base_tree_remaining:
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if not bases or bases[0] is base:
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continue
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for b in bases:
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if b is base:
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return False
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return True
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@staticmethod
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def _nonempty_bases_ignoring(base_tree, ignoring):
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return list(filter(None, [
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[b for b in bases if b is not ignoring]
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for bases
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in base_tree
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]))
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def _choose_next_base(self, base_tree_remaining):
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"""
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Return the next base.
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The return value will either fit the C3 constraints or be our best
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guess about what to do. If we cannot guess, this may raise an exception.
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"""
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base = self._find_next_C3_base(base_tree_remaining)
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if base is not None:
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return base
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return self._guess_next_base(base_tree_remaining)
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def _find_next_C3_base(self, base_tree_remaining):
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"""
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Return the next base that fits the constraints, or ``None`` if there isn't one.
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"""
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for bases in base_tree_remaining:
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base = bases[0]
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if self._can_choose_base(base, base_tree_remaining):
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return base
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return None
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class _UseLegacyRO(Exception):
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pass
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def _guess_next_base(self, base_tree_remaining):
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# Narf. We may have an inconsistent order (we won't know for
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# sure until we check all the bases). Python cannot create
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# classes like this:
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#
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# class B1:
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# pass
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# class B2(B1):
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# pass
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# class C(B1, B2): # -> TypeError; this is like saying C(B1, B2, B1).
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# pass
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#
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# However, older versions of zope.interface were fine with this order.
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# A good example is ``providedBy(IOError())``. Because of the way
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# ``classImplements`` works, it winds up with ``__bases__`` ==
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# ``[IEnvironmentError, IIOError, IOSError, <implementedBy Exception>]``
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# (on Python 3). But ``IEnvironmentError`` is a base of both ``IIOError``
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# and ``IOSError``. Previously, we would get a resolution order of
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# ``[IIOError, IOSError, IEnvironmentError, IStandardError, IException, Interface]``
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# but the standard Python algorithm would forbid creating that order entirely.
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# Unlike Python's MRO, we attempt to resolve the issue. A few
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# heuristics have been tried. One was:
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#
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# Strip off the first (highest priority) base of each direct
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# base one at a time and seeing if we can come to an agreement
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# with the other bases. (We're trying for a partial ordering
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# here.) This often resolves cases (such as the IOSError case
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# above), and frequently produces the same ordering as the
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# legacy MRO did. If we looked at all the highest priority
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# bases and couldn't find any partial ordering, then we strip
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# them *all* out and begin the C3 step again. We take care not
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# to promote a common root over all others.
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#
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# If we only did the first part, stripped off the first
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# element of the first item, we could resolve simple cases.
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# But it tended to fail badly. If we did the whole thing, it
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# could be extremely painful from a performance perspective
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# for deep/wide things like Zope's OFS.SimpleItem.Item. Plus,
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# anytime you get ExtensionClass.Base into the mix, you're
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# likely to wind up in trouble, because it messes with the MRO
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# of classes. Sigh.
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#
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# So now, we fall back to the old linearization (fast to compute).
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self._warn_iro()
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self.direct_inconsistency = InconsistentResolutionOrderError(self, base_tree_remaining)
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raise self._UseLegacyRO
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def _merge(self):
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# Returns a merged *list*.
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result = self.__mro = []
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base_tree_remaining = self.base_tree
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base = None
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while 1:
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# Take last picked base out of the base tree wherever it is.
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# This differs slightly from the standard Python MRO and is needed
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# because we have no other step that prevents duplicates
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# from coming in (e.g., in the inconsistent fallback path)
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base_tree_remaining = self._nonempty_bases_ignoring(base_tree_remaining, base)
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if not base_tree_remaining:
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return result
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try:
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base = self._choose_next_base(base_tree_remaining)
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except self._UseLegacyRO:
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self.__mro = self.legacy_ro
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return self.legacy_ro
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result.append(base)
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def mro(self):
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if self.__mro is None:
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self.__mro = tuple(self._merge())
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return list(self.__mro)
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class _StrictC3(C3):
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__slots__ = ()
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def _guess_next_base(self, base_tree_remaining):
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raise InconsistentResolutionOrderError(self, base_tree_remaining)
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class _TrackingC3(C3):
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__slots__ = ()
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def _guess_next_base(self, base_tree_remaining):
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import traceback
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bad_iros = C3.BAD_IROS
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if self.leaf not in bad_iros:
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if bad_iros == ():
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import weakref
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# This is a race condition, but it doesn't matter much.
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bad_iros = C3.BAD_IROS = weakref.WeakKeyDictionary()
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bad_iros[self.leaf] = t = (
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InconsistentResolutionOrderError(self, base_tree_remaining),
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traceback.format_stack()
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)
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_logger().warning("Tracking inconsistent IRO: %s", t[0])
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return C3._guess_next_base(self, base_tree_remaining)
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class _ROComparison(object):
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# Exists to compute and print a pretty string comparison
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# for differing ROs.
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# Since we're used in a logging context, and may actually never be printed,
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# this is a class so we can defer computing the diff until asked.
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# Components we use to build up the comparison report
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class Item(object):
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prefix = ' '
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def __init__(self, item):
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self.item = item
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def __str__(self):
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return "%s%s" % (
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self.prefix,
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self.item,
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)
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class Deleted(Item):
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prefix = '- '
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class Inserted(Item):
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prefix = '+ '
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Empty = str
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class ReplacedBy(object): # pragma: no cover
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prefix = '- '
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suffix = ''
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def __init__(self, chunk, total_count):
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self.chunk = chunk
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self.total_count = total_count
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def __iter__(self):
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lines = [
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self.prefix + str(item) + self.suffix
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for item in self.chunk
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]
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while len(lines) < self.total_count:
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lines.append('')
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return iter(lines)
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class Replacing(ReplacedBy):
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prefix = "+ "
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suffix = ''
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_c3_report = None
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_legacy_report = None
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def __init__(self, c3, c3_ro, legacy_ro):
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self.c3 = c3
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self.c3_ro = c3_ro
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self.legacy_ro = legacy_ro
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def __move(self, from_, to_, chunk, operation):
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for x in chunk:
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to_.append(operation(x))
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from_.append(self.Empty())
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def _generate_report(self):
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if self._c3_report is None:
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import difflib
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# The opcodes we get describe how to turn 'a' into 'b'. So
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# the old one (legacy) needs to be first ('a')
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matcher = difflib.SequenceMatcher(None, self.legacy_ro, self.c3_ro)
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# The reports are equal length sequences. We're going for a
|
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# side-by-side diff.
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self._c3_report = c3_report = []
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self._legacy_report = legacy_report = []
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for opcode, leg1, leg2, c31, c32 in matcher.get_opcodes():
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c3_chunk = self.c3_ro[c31:c32]
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legacy_chunk = self.legacy_ro[leg1:leg2]
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|
|
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if opcode == 'equal':
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# Guaranteed same length
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c3_report.extend((self.Item(x) for x in c3_chunk))
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legacy_report.extend(self.Item(x) for x in legacy_chunk)
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if opcode == 'delete':
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|
# Guaranteed same length
|
|
assert not c3_chunk
|
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self.__move(c3_report, legacy_report, legacy_chunk, self.Deleted)
|
|
if opcode == 'insert':
|
|
# Guaranteed same length
|
|
assert not legacy_chunk
|
|
self.__move(legacy_report, c3_report, c3_chunk, self.Inserted)
|
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if opcode == 'replace': # pragma: no cover (How do you make it output this?)
|
|
# Either side could be longer.
|
|
chunk_size = max(len(c3_chunk), len(legacy_chunk))
|
|
c3_report.extend(self.Replacing(c3_chunk, chunk_size))
|
|
legacy_report.extend(self.ReplacedBy(legacy_chunk, chunk_size))
|
|
|
|
return self._c3_report, self._legacy_report
|
|
|
|
@property
|
|
def _inconsistent_label(self):
|
|
inconsistent = []
|
|
if self.c3.direct_inconsistency:
|
|
inconsistent.append('direct')
|
|
if self.c3.bases_had_inconsistency:
|
|
inconsistent.append('bases')
|
|
return '+'.join(inconsistent) if inconsistent else 'no'
|
|
|
|
def __str__(self):
|
|
c3_report, legacy_report = self._generate_report()
|
|
assert len(c3_report) == len(legacy_report)
|
|
|
|
left_lines = [str(x) for x in legacy_report]
|
|
right_lines = [str(x) for x in c3_report]
|
|
|
|
# We have the same number of lines in the report; this is not
|
|
# necessarily the same as the number of items in either RO.
|
|
assert len(left_lines) == len(right_lines)
|
|
|
|
padding = ' ' * 2
|
|
max_left = max(len(x) for x in left_lines)
|
|
max_right = max(len(x) for x in right_lines)
|
|
|
|
left_title = 'Legacy RO (len=%s)' % (len(self.legacy_ro),)
|
|
|
|
right_title = 'C3 RO (len=%s; inconsistent=%s)' % (
|
|
len(self.c3_ro),
|
|
self._inconsistent_label,
|
|
)
|
|
lines = [
|
|
(padding + left_title.ljust(max_left) + padding + right_title.ljust(max_right)),
|
|
padding + '=' * (max_left + len(padding) + max_right)
|
|
]
|
|
lines += [
|
|
padding + left.ljust(max_left) + padding + right
|
|
for left, right in zip(left_lines, right_lines)
|
|
]
|
|
|
|
return '\n'.join(lines)
|
|
|
|
|
|
# Set to `Interface` once it is defined. This is used to
|
|
# avoid logging false positives about changed ROs.
|
|
_ROOT = None
|
|
|
|
def ro(C, strict=None, base_mros=None, log_changed_ro=None, use_legacy_ro=None):
|
|
"""
|
|
ro(C) -> list
|
|
|
|
Compute the precedence list (mro) according to C3.
|
|
|
|
:return: A fresh `list` object.
|
|
|
|
.. versionchanged:: 5.0.0
|
|
Add the *strict*, *log_changed_ro* and *use_legacy_ro*
|
|
keyword arguments. These are provisional and likely to be
|
|
removed in the future. They are most useful for testing.
|
|
"""
|
|
# The ``base_mros`` argument is for internal optimization and
|
|
# not documented.
|
|
resolver = C3.resolver(C, strict, base_mros)
|
|
mro = resolver.mro()
|
|
|
|
log_changed = log_changed_ro if log_changed_ro is not None else resolver.LOG_CHANGED_IRO
|
|
use_legacy = use_legacy_ro if use_legacy_ro is not None else resolver.USE_LEGACY_IRO
|
|
|
|
if log_changed or use_legacy:
|
|
legacy_ro = resolver.legacy_ro
|
|
assert isinstance(legacy_ro, list)
|
|
assert isinstance(mro, list)
|
|
changed = legacy_ro != mro
|
|
if changed:
|
|
# Did only Interface move? The fix for issue #8 made that
|
|
# somewhat common. It's almost certainly not a problem, though,
|
|
# so allow ignoring it.
|
|
legacy_without_root = [x for x in legacy_ro if x is not _ROOT]
|
|
mro_without_root = [x for x in mro if x is not _ROOT]
|
|
changed = legacy_without_root != mro_without_root
|
|
|
|
if changed:
|
|
comparison = _ROComparison(resolver, mro, legacy_ro)
|
|
_logger().warning(
|
|
"Object %r has different legacy and C3 MROs:\n%s",
|
|
C, comparison
|
|
)
|
|
if resolver.had_inconsistency and legacy_ro == mro:
|
|
comparison = _ROComparison(resolver, mro, legacy_ro)
|
|
_logger().warning(
|
|
"Object %r had inconsistent IRO and used the legacy RO:\n%s"
|
|
"\nInconsistency entered at:\n%s",
|
|
C, comparison, resolver.direct_inconsistency
|
|
)
|
|
if use_legacy:
|
|
return legacy_ro
|
|
|
|
return mro
|
|
|
|
|
|
def is_consistent(C):
|
|
"""
|
|
Check if the resolution order for *C*, as computed by :func:`ro`, is consistent
|
|
according to C3.
|
|
"""
|
|
return not C3.resolver(C, False, None).had_inconsistency
|