contextlib2-0.5.1/ 0000775 0001750 0001750 00000000000 12645443301 015362 5 ustar ncoghlan ncoghlan 0000000 0000000 contextlib2-0.5.1/test_contextlib2.py 0000775 0001750 0001750 00000064315 12645160627 021253 0 ustar ncoghlan ncoghlan 0000000 0000000 """Unit tests for contextlib2.py"""
from __future__ import print_function
from __future__ import unicode_literals
import io
import sys
import unittest
import __future__ # For PEP 479 conditional test
import contextlib2
from contextlib2 import * # Tests __all__
if not hasattr(unittest.TestCase, "assertRaisesRegex"):
import unittest2 as unittest
requires_docstrings = unittest.skipIf(sys.flags.optimize >= 2,
"Test requires docstrings")
class ContextManagerTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
def test_contextmanager_plain(self):
state = []
@contextmanager
def woohoo():
state.append(1)
yield 42
state.append(999)
with woohoo() as x:
self.assertEqual(state, [1])
self.assertEqual(x, 42)
state.append(x)
self.assertEqual(state, [1, 42, 999])
def test_contextmanager_finally(self):
state = []
@contextmanager
def woohoo():
state.append(1)
try:
yield 42
finally:
state.append(999)
with self.assertRaises(ZeroDivisionError):
with woohoo() as x:
self.assertEqual(state, [1])
self.assertEqual(x, 42)
state.append(x)
raise ZeroDivisionError()
self.assertEqual(state, [1, 42, 999])
def test_contextmanager_no_reraise(self):
@contextmanager
def whee():
yield
ctx = whee()
ctx.__enter__()
# Calling __exit__ should not result in an exception
self.assertFalse(ctx.__exit__(TypeError, TypeError("foo"), None))
def test_contextmanager_trap_yield_after_throw(self):
@contextmanager
def whoo():
try:
yield
except:
yield
ctx = whoo()
ctx.__enter__()
self.assertRaises(
RuntimeError, ctx.__exit__, TypeError, TypeError("foo"), None
)
def test_contextmanager_except(self):
state = []
@contextmanager
def woohoo():
state.append(1)
try:
yield 42
except ZeroDivisionError as e:
state.append(e.args[0])
self.assertEqual(state, [1, 42, 999])
with woohoo() as x:
self.assertEqual(state, [1])
self.assertEqual(x, 42)
state.append(x)
raise ZeroDivisionError(999)
self.assertEqual(state, [1, 42, 999])
def test_contextmanager_except_stopiter(self):
stop_exc = StopIteration('spam')
@contextmanager
def woohoo():
yield
try:
with self.assertWarnsRegex(PendingDeprecationWarning,
"StopIteration"):
with woohoo():
raise stop_exc
except Exception as ex:
self.assertIs(ex, stop_exc)
else:
self.fail('StopIteration was suppressed')
@unittest.skipUnless(hasattr(__future__, "generator_stop"),
"Test only valid for versions implementing PEP 479")
def test_contextmanager_except_pep479(self):
code = """\
from __future__ import generator_stop
from contextlib import contextmanager
@contextmanager
def woohoo():
yield
"""
locals = {}
exec(code, locals, locals)
woohoo = locals['woohoo']
stop_exc = StopIteration('spam')
try:
with woohoo():
raise stop_exc
except Exception as ex:
self.assertIs(ex, stop_exc)
else:
self.fail('StopIteration was suppressed')
def _create_contextmanager_attribs(self):
def attribs(**kw):
def decorate(func):
for k,v in kw.items():
setattr(func,k,v)
return func
return decorate
@contextmanager
@attribs(foo='bar')
def baz(spam):
"""Whee!"""
return baz
def test_contextmanager_attribs(self):
baz = self._create_contextmanager_attribs()
self.assertEqual(baz.__name__,'baz')
self.assertEqual(baz.foo, 'bar')
@requires_docstrings
def test_contextmanager_doc_attrib(self):
baz = self._create_contextmanager_attribs()
self.assertEqual(baz.__doc__, "Whee!")
@requires_docstrings
def test_instance_docstring_given_cm_docstring(self):
baz = self._create_contextmanager_attribs()(None)
self.assertEqual(baz.__doc__, "Whee!")
def test_keywords(self):
# Ensure no keyword arguments are inhibited
@contextmanager
def woohoo(self, func, args, kwds):
yield (self, func, args, kwds)
with woohoo(self=11, func=22, args=33, kwds=44) as target:
self.assertEqual(target, (11, 22, 33, 44))
class ClosingTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
@requires_docstrings
def test_instance_docs(self):
# Issue 19330: ensure context manager instances have good docstrings
cm_docstring = closing.__doc__
obj = closing(None)
self.assertEqual(obj.__doc__, cm_docstring)
def test_closing(self):
state = []
class C:
def close(self):
state.append(1)
x = C()
self.assertEqual(state, [])
with closing(x) as y:
self.assertEqual(x, y)
self.assertEqual(state, [1])
def test_closing_error(self):
state = []
class C:
def close(self):
state.append(1)
x = C()
self.assertEqual(state, [])
with self.assertRaises(ZeroDivisionError):
with closing(x) as y:
self.assertEqual(x, y)
1 / 0
self.assertEqual(state, [1])
class mycontext(ContextDecorator):
"""Example decoration-compatible context manager for testing"""
started = False
exc = None
catch = False
def __enter__(self):
self.started = True
return self
def __exit__(self, *exc):
self.exc = exc
return self.catch
class TestContextDecorator(unittest.TestCase):
@requires_docstrings
def test_instance_docs(self):
# Issue 19330: ensure context manager instances have good docstrings
cm_docstring = mycontext.__doc__
obj = mycontext()
self.assertEqual(obj.__doc__, cm_docstring)
def test_contextdecorator(self):
context = mycontext()
with context as result:
self.assertIs(result, context)
self.assertTrue(context.started)
self.assertEqual(context.exc, (None, None, None))
def test_contextdecorator_with_exception(self):
context = mycontext()
with self.assertRaisesRegex(NameError, 'foo'):
with context:
raise NameError('foo')
self.assertIsNotNone(context.exc)
self.assertIs(context.exc[0], NameError)
context = mycontext()
context.catch = True
with context:
raise NameError('foo')
self.assertIsNotNone(context.exc)
self.assertIs(context.exc[0], NameError)
def test_decorator(self):
context = mycontext()
@context
def test():
self.assertIsNone(context.exc)
self.assertTrue(context.started)
test()
self.assertEqual(context.exc, (None, None, None))
def test_decorator_with_exception(self):
context = mycontext()
@context
def test():
self.assertIsNone(context.exc)
self.assertTrue(context.started)
raise NameError('foo')
with self.assertRaisesRegex(NameError, 'foo'):
test()
self.assertIsNotNone(context.exc)
self.assertIs(context.exc[0], NameError)
def test_decorating_method(self):
context = mycontext()
class Test(object):
@context
def method(self, a, b, c=None):
self.a = a
self.b = b
self.c = c
# these tests are for argument passing when used as a decorator
test = Test()
test.method(1, 2)
self.assertEqual(test.a, 1)
self.assertEqual(test.b, 2)
self.assertEqual(test.c, None)
test = Test()
test.method('a', 'b', 'c')
self.assertEqual(test.a, 'a')
self.assertEqual(test.b, 'b')
self.assertEqual(test.c, 'c')
test = Test()
test.method(a=1, b=2)
self.assertEqual(test.a, 1)
self.assertEqual(test.b, 2)
def test_typo_enter(self):
class mycontext(ContextDecorator):
def __unter__(self):
pass
def __exit__(self, *exc):
pass
with self.assertRaises(AttributeError):
with mycontext():
pass
def test_typo_exit(self):
class mycontext(ContextDecorator):
def __enter__(self):
pass
def __uxit__(self, *exc):
pass
with self.assertRaises(AttributeError):
with mycontext():
pass
def test_contextdecorator_as_mixin(self):
class somecontext(object):
started = False
exc = None
def __enter__(self):
self.started = True
return self
def __exit__(self, *exc):
self.exc = exc
class mycontext(somecontext, ContextDecorator):
pass
context = mycontext()
@context
def test():
self.assertIsNone(context.exc)
self.assertTrue(context.started)
test()
self.assertEqual(context.exc, (None, None, None))
def test_contextmanager_as_decorator(self):
@contextmanager
def woohoo(y):
state.append(y)
yield
state.append(999)
state = []
@woohoo(1)
def test(x):
self.assertEqual(state, [1])
state.append(x)
test('something')
self.assertEqual(state, [1, 'something', 999])
# Issue #11647: Ensure the decorated function is 'reusable'
state = []
test('something else')
self.assertEqual(state, [1, 'something else', 999])
# Detailed exception chaining checks only make sense on Python 3
check_exception_chaining = contextlib2._HAVE_EXCEPTION_CHAINING
class TestExitStack(unittest.TestCase):
@requires_docstrings
def test_instance_docs(self):
# Issue 19330: ensure context manager instances have good docstrings
cm_docstring = ExitStack.__doc__
obj = ExitStack()
self.assertEqual(obj.__doc__, cm_docstring)
def test_no_resources(self):
with ExitStack():
pass
def test_callback(self):
expected = [
((), {}),
((1,), {}),
((1,2), {}),
((), dict(example=1)),
((1,), dict(example=1)),
((1,2), dict(example=1)),
]
result = []
def _exit(*args, **kwds):
"""Test metadata propagation"""
result.append((args, kwds))
with ExitStack() as stack:
for args, kwds in reversed(expected):
if args and kwds:
f = stack.callback(_exit, *args, **kwds)
elif args:
f = stack.callback(_exit, *args)
elif kwds:
f = stack.callback(_exit, **kwds)
else:
f = stack.callback(_exit)
self.assertIs(f, _exit)
for wrapper in stack._exit_callbacks:
self.assertIs(wrapper.__wrapped__, _exit)
self.assertNotEqual(wrapper.__name__, _exit.__name__)
self.assertIsNone(wrapper.__doc__, _exit.__doc__)
self.assertEqual(result, expected)
def test_push(self):
exc_raised = ZeroDivisionError
def _expect_exc(exc_type, exc, exc_tb):
self.assertIs(exc_type, exc_raised)
def _suppress_exc(*exc_details):
return True
def _expect_ok(exc_type, exc, exc_tb):
self.assertIsNone(exc_type)
self.assertIsNone(exc)
self.assertIsNone(exc_tb)
class ExitCM(object):
def __init__(self, check_exc):
self.check_exc = check_exc
def __enter__(self):
self.fail("Should not be called!")
def __exit__(self, *exc_details):
self.check_exc(*exc_details)
with ExitStack() as stack:
stack.push(_expect_ok)
self.assertIs(stack._exit_callbacks[-1], _expect_ok)
cm = ExitCM(_expect_ok)
stack.push(cm)
self.assertIs(stack._exit_callbacks[-1].__self__, cm)
stack.push(_suppress_exc)
self.assertIs(stack._exit_callbacks[-1], _suppress_exc)
cm = ExitCM(_expect_exc)
stack.push(cm)
self.assertIs(stack._exit_callbacks[-1].__self__, cm)
stack.push(_expect_exc)
self.assertIs(stack._exit_callbacks[-1], _expect_exc)
stack.push(_expect_exc)
self.assertIs(stack._exit_callbacks[-1], _expect_exc)
1/0
def test_enter_context(self):
class TestCM(object):
def __enter__(self):
result.append(1)
def __exit__(self, *exc_details):
result.append(3)
result = []
cm = TestCM()
with ExitStack() as stack:
@stack.callback # Registered first => cleaned up last
def _exit():
result.append(4)
self.assertIsNotNone(_exit)
stack.enter_context(cm)
self.assertIs(stack._exit_callbacks[-1].__self__, cm)
result.append(2)
self.assertEqual(result, [1, 2, 3, 4])
def test_close(self):
result = []
with ExitStack() as stack:
@stack.callback
def _exit():
result.append(1)
self.assertIsNotNone(_exit)
stack.close()
result.append(2)
self.assertEqual(result, [1, 2])
def test_pop_all(self):
result = []
with ExitStack() as stack:
@stack.callback
def _exit():
result.append(3)
self.assertIsNotNone(_exit)
new_stack = stack.pop_all()
result.append(1)
result.append(2)
new_stack.close()
self.assertEqual(result, [1, 2, 3])
def test_exit_raise(self):
with self.assertRaises(ZeroDivisionError):
with ExitStack() as stack:
stack.push(lambda *exc: False)
1/0
def test_exit_suppress(self):
with ExitStack() as stack:
stack.push(lambda *exc: True)
1/0
def test_exit_exception_chaining_reference(self):
# Sanity check to make sure that ExitStack chaining matches
# actual nested with statements
class RaiseExc:
def __init__(self, exc):
self.exc = exc
def __enter__(self):
return self
def __exit__(self, *exc_details):
raise self.exc
class RaiseExcWithContext:
def __init__(self, outer, inner):
self.outer = outer
self.inner = inner
def __enter__(self):
return self
def __exit__(self, *exc_details):
try:
raise self.inner
except:
raise self.outer
class SuppressExc:
def __enter__(self):
return self
def __exit__(self, *exc_details):
self.__class__.saved_details = exc_details
return True
try:
with RaiseExc(IndexError):
with RaiseExcWithContext(KeyError, AttributeError):
with SuppressExc():
with RaiseExc(ValueError):
1 / 0
except IndexError as exc:
if check_exception_chaining:
self.assertIsInstance(exc.__context__, KeyError)
self.assertIsInstance(exc.__context__.__context__, AttributeError)
# Inner exceptions were suppressed
self.assertIsNone(exc.__context__.__context__.__context__)
else:
self.fail("Expected IndexError, but no exception was raised")
# Check the inner exceptions
inner_exc = SuppressExc.saved_details[1]
self.assertIsInstance(inner_exc, ValueError)
if check_exception_chaining:
self.assertIsInstance(inner_exc.__context__, ZeroDivisionError)
def test_exit_exception_chaining(self):
# Ensure exception chaining matches the reference behaviour
def raise_exc(exc):
raise exc
saved_details = [None]
def suppress_exc(*exc_details):
saved_details[0] = exc_details
return True
try:
with ExitStack() as stack:
stack.callback(raise_exc, IndexError)
stack.callback(raise_exc, KeyError)
stack.callback(raise_exc, AttributeError)
stack.push(suppress_exc)
stack.callback(raise_exc, ValueError)
1 / 0
except IndexError as exc:
if check_exception_chaining:
self.assertIsInstance(exc.__context__, KeyError)
self.assertIsInstance(exc.__context__.__context__, AttributeError)
# Inner exceptions were suppressed
self.assertIsNone(exc.__context__.__context__.__context__)
else:
self.fail("Expected IndexError, but no exception was raised")
# Check the inner exceptions
inner_exc = saved_details[0][1]
self.assertIsInstance(inner_exc, ValueError)
if check_exception_chaining:
self.assertIsInstance(inner_exc.__context__, ZeroDivisionError)
def test_exit_exception_non_suppressing(self):
# http://bugs.python.org/issue19092
def raise_exc(exc):
raise exc
def suppress_exc(*exc_details):
return True
try:
with ExitStack() as stack:
stack.callback(lambda: None)
stack.callback(raise_exc, IndexError)
except Exception as exc:
self.assertIsInstance(exc, IndexError)
else:
self.fail("Expected IndexError, but no exception was raised")
try:
with ExitStack() as stack:
stack.callback(raise_exc, KeyError)
stack.push(suppress_exc)
stack.callback(raise_exc, IndexError)
except Exception as exc:
self.assertIsInstance(exc, KeyError)
else:
self.fail("Expected KeyError, but no exception was raised")
def test_exit_exception_with_correct_context(self):
# http://bugs.python.org/issue20317
@contextmanager
def gets_the_context_right(exc):
try:
yield
finally:
raise exc
exc1 = Exception(1)
exc2 = Exception(2)
exc3 = Exception(3)
exc4 = Exception(4)
# The contextmanager already fixes the context, so prior to the
# fix, ExitStack would try to fix it *again* and get into an
# infinite self-referential loop
try:
with ExitStack() as stack:
stack.enter_context(gets_the_context_right(exc4))
stack.enter_context(gets_the_context_right(exc3))
stack.enter_context(gets_the_context_right(exc2))
raise exc1
except Exception as exc:
self.assertIs(exc, exc4)
if check_exception_chaining:
self.assertIs(exc.__context__, exc3)
self.assertIs(exc.__context__.__context__, exc2)
self.assertIs(exc.__context__.__context__.__context__, exc1)
self.assertIsNone(
exc.__context__.__context__.__context__.__context__)
def test_exit_exception_with_existing_context(self):
# Addresses a lack of test coverage discovered after checking in a
# fix for issue 20317 that still contained debugging code.
def raise_nested(inner_exc, outer_exc):
try:
raise inner_exc
finally:
raise outer_exc
exc1 = Exception(1)
exc2 = Exception(2)
exc3 = Exception(3)
exc4 = Exception(4)
exc5 = Exception(5)
try:
with ExitStack() as stack:
stack.callback(raise_nested, exc4, exc5)
stack.callback(raise_nested, exc2, exc3)
raise exc1
except Exception as exc:
self.assertIs(exc, exc5)
if check_exception_chaining:
self.assertIs(exc.__context__, exc4)
self.assertIs(exc.__context__.__context__, exc3)
self.assertIs(exc.__context__.__context__.__context__, exc2)
self.assertIs(
exc.__context__.__context__.__context__.__context__, exc1)
self.assertIsNone(
exc.__context__.__context__.__context__.__context__.__context__)
def test_body_exception_suppress(self):
def suppress_exc(*exc_details):
return True
try:
with ExitStack() as stack:
stack.push(suppress_exc)
1/0
except IndexError as exc:
self.fail("Expected no exception, got IndexError")
def test_exit_exception_chaining_suppress(self):
with ExitStack() as stack:
stack.push(lambda *exc: True)
stack.push(lambda *exc: 1/0)
stack.push(lambda *exc: {}[1])
def test_excessive_nesting(self):
# The original implementation would die with RecursionError here
with ExitStack() as stack:
for i in range(10000):
stack.callback(int)
def test_instance_bypass(self):
class Example(object): pass
cm = Example()
cm.__exit__ = object()
stack = ExitStack()
self.assertRaises(AttributeError, stack.enter_context, cm)
stack.push(cm)
self.assertIs(stack._exit_callbacks[-1], cm)
class TestRedirectStream:
redirect_stream = None
orig_stream = None
@requires_docstrings
def test_instance_docs(self):
# Issue 19330: ensure context manager instances have good docstrings
cm_docstring = self.redirect_stream.__doc__
obj = self.redirect_stream(None)
self.assertEqual(obj.__doc__, cm_docstring)
def test_no_redirect_in_init(self):
orig_stdout = getattr(sys, self.orig_stream)
self.redirect_stream(None)
self.assertIs(getattr(sys, self.orig_stream), orig_stdout)
def test_redirect_to_string_io(self):
f = io.StringIO()
msg = "Consider an API like help(), which prints directly to stdout"
orig_stdout = getattr(sys, self.orig_stream)
with self.redirect_stream(f):
print(msg, file=getattr(sys, self.orig_stream))
self.assertIs(getattr(sys, self.orig_stream), orig_stdout)
s = f.getvalue().strip()
self.assertEqual(s, msg)
def test_enter_result_is_target(self):
f = io.StringIO()
with self.redirect_stream(f) as enter_result:
self.assertIs(enter_result, f)
def test_cm_is_reusable(self):
f = io.StringIO()
write_to_f = self.redirect_stream(f)
orig_stdout = getattr(sys, self.orig_stream)
with write_to_f:
print("Hello", end=" ", file=getattr(sys, self.orig_stream))
with write_to_f:
print("World!", file=getattr(sys, self.orig_stream))
self.assertIs(getattr(sys, self.orig_stream), orig_stdout)
s = f.getvalue()
self.assertEqual(s, "Hello World!\n")
def test_cm_is_reentrant(self):
f = io.StringIO()
write_to_f = self.redirect_stream(f)
orig_stdout = getattr(sys, self.orig_stream)
with write_to_f:
print("Hello", end=" ", file=getattr(sys, self.orig_stream))
with write_to_f:
print("World!", file=getattr(sys, self.orig_stream))
self.assertIs(getattr(sys, self.orig_stream), orig_stdout)
s = f.getvalue()
self.assertEqual(s, "Hello World!\n")
class TestRedirectStdout(TestRedirectStream, unittest.TestCase):
redirect_stream = redirect_stdout
orig_stream = "stdout"
class TestRedirectStderr(TestRedirectStream, unittest.TestCase):
redirect_stream = redirect_stderr
orig_stream = "stderr"
class TestSuppress(unittest.TestCase):
@requires_docstrings
def test_instance_docs(self):
# Issue 19330: ensure context manager instances have good docstrings
cm_docstring = suppress.__doc__
obj = suppress()
self.assertEqual(obj.__doc__, cm_docstring)
def test_no_result_from_enter(self):
with suppress(ValueError) as enter_result:
self.assertIsNone(enter_result)
def test_no_exception(self):
with suppress(ValueError):
self.assertEqual(pow(2, 5), 32)
def test_exact_exception(self):
with suppress(TypeError):
len(5)
def test_exception_hierarchy(self):
with suppress(LookupError):
'Hello'[50]
def test_other_exception(self):
with self.assertRaises(ZeroDivisionError):
with suppress(TypeError):
1/0
def test_no_args(self):
with self.assertRaises(ZeroDivisionError):
with suppress():
1/0
def test_multiple_exception_args(self):
with suppress(ZeroDivisionError, TypeError):
1/0
with suppress(ZeroDivisionError, TypeError):
len(5)
def test_cm_is_reentrant(self):
ignore_exceptions = suppress(Exception)
with ignore_exceptions:
pass
with ignore_exceptions:
len(5)
with ignore_exceptions:
with ignore_exceptions: # Check nested usage
len(5)
outer_continued = True
1/0
self.assertTrue(outer_continued)
if __name__ == "__main__":
import unittest
unittest.main()
contextlib2-0.5.1/docs/ 0000775 0001750 0001750 00000000000 12645443301 016312 5 ustar ncoghlan ncoghlan 0000000 0000000 contextlib2-0.5.1/docs/index.rst 0000664 0001750 0001750 00000060255 12645160627 020172 0 ustar ncoghlan ncoghlan 0000000 0000000 .. contextlib2 documentation master file, created by
sphinx-quickstart on Tue Dec 13 20:29:56 2011.
You can adapt this file completely to your liking, but it should at least
contain the root `toctree` directive.
contextlib2 --- Updated utilities for context management
========================================================
.. module:: contextlib2
:synopsis: Backports and future enhancements for the contextlib module
This module provides backports of features in the latest version of the
standard library's :mod:`contextlib` module to earlier Python versions. It
also serves as a real world proving ground for potential future enhancements
to that module.
Like :mod:`contextlib`, this module provides utilities for common tasks
involving the ``with`` statement.
Additions Relative to the Standard Library
------------------------------------------
This module is primarily a backport of the Python 3.5 version of
:mod:`contextlib` to earlier releases. However, it is also a proving ground
for new features not yet part of the standard library.
There are currently no such features in the module.
Refer to the :mod:`contextlib` documentation for details of which
versions of Python 3 introduce the various APIs provided in this module.
API Reference
=============
Functions and classes provided:
.. decorator:: contextmanager
This function is a :term:`decorator` that can be used to define a factory
function for :keyword:`with` statement context managers, without needing to
create a class or separate :meth:`__enter__` and :meth:`__exit__` methods.
A simple example (this is not recommended as a real way of generating HTML!)::
from contextlib import contextmanager
@contextmanager
def tag(name):
print("<%s>" % name)
yield
print("%s>" % name)
>>> with tag("h1"):
... print("foo")
...
foo
The function being decorated must return a :term:`generator`-iterator when
called. This iterator must yield exactly one value, which will be bound to
the targets in the :keyword:`with` statement's :keyword:`as` clause, if any.
At the point where the generator yields, the block nested in the :keyword:`with`
statement is executed. The generator is then resumed after the block is exited.
If an unhandled exception occurs in the block, it is reraised inside the
generator at the point where the yield occurred. Thus, you can use a
:keyword:`try`...\ :keyword:`except`...\ :keyword:`finally` statement to trap
the error (if any), or ensure that some cleanup takes place. If an exception is
trapped merely in order to log it or to perform some action (rather than to
suppress it entirely), the generator must reraise that exception. Otherwise the
generator context manager will indicate to the :keyword:`with` statement that
the exception has been handled, and execution will resume with the statement
immediately following the :keyword:`with` statement.
:func:`contextmanager` uses :class:`ContextDecorator` so the context managers
it creates can be used as decorators as well as in :keyword:`with` statements.
When used as a decorator, a new generator instance is implicitly created on
each function call (this allows the otherwise "one-shot" context managers
created by :func:`contextmanager` to meet the requirement that context
managers support multiple invocations in order to be used as decorators).
.. function:: closing(thing)
Return a context manager that closes *thing* upon completion of the block. This
is basically equivalent to::
from contextlib import contextmanager
@contextmanager
def closing(thing):
try:
yield thing
finally:
thing.close()
And lets you write code like this::
from contextlib import closing
from urllib.request import urlopen
with closing(urlopen('http://www.python.org')) as page:
for line in page:
print(line)
without needing to explicitly close ``page``. Even if an error occurs,
``page.close()`` will be called when the :keyword:`with` block is exited.
.. function:: suppress(*exceptions)
Return a context manager that suppresses any of the specified exceptions
if they occur in the body of a with statement and then resumes execution
with the first statement following the end of the with statement.
As with any other mechanism that completely suppresses exceptions, this
context manager should be used only to cover very specific errors where
silently continuing with program execution is known to be the right
thing to do.
For example::
from contextlib import suppress
with suppress(FileNotFoundError):
os.remove('somefile.tmp')
with suppress(FileNotFoundError):
os.remove('someotherfile.tmp')
This code is equivalent to::
try:
os.remove('somefile.tmp')
except FileNotFoundError:
pass
try:
os.remove('someotherfile.tmp')
except FileNotFoundError:
pass
This context manager is :ref:`reentrant `.
.. versionadded:: 0.5
Part of the standard library in Python 3.4 and later
.. function:: redirect_stdout(new_target)
Context manager for temporarily redirecting :data:`sys.stdout` to
another file or file-like object.
This tool adds flexibility to existing functions or classes whose output
is hardwired to stdout.
For example, the output of :func:`help` normally is sent to *sys.stdout*.
You can capture that output in a string by redirecting the output to a
:class:`io.StringIO` object::
f = io.StringIO()
with redirect_stdout(f):
help(pow)
s = f.getvalue()
To send the output of :func:`help` to a file on disk, redirect the output
to a regular file::
with open('help.txt', 'w') as f:
with redirect_stdout(f):
help(pow)
To send the output of :func:`help` to *sys.stderr*::
with redirect_stdout(sys.stderr):
help(pow)
Note that the global side effect on :data:`sys.stdout` means that this
context manager is not suitable for use in library code and most threaded
applications. It also has no effect on the output of subprocesses.
However, it is still a useful approach for many utility scripts.
This context manager is :ref:`reentrant `.
.. versionadded:: 0.5
Part of the standard library in Python 3.4 and later
.. function:: redirect_stderr(new_target)
Similar to :func:`redirect_stdout`, but redirecting :data:`sys.stderr` to
another file or file-like object.
This context manager is :ref:`reentrant `.
.. versionadded:: 0.5
Part of the standard library in Python 3.5 and later
.. class:: ContextDecorator()
A base class that enables a context manager to also be used as a decorator.
Context managers inheriting from ``ContextDecorator`` have to implement
``__enter__`` and ``__exit__`` as normal. ``__exit__`` retains its optional
exception handling even when used as a decorator.
``ContextDecorator`` is used by :func:`contextmanager`, so you get this
functionality automatically.
Example of ``ContextDecorator``::
from contextlib import ContextDecorator
class mycontext(ContextDecorator):
def __enter__(self):
print('Starting')
return self
def __exit__(self, *exc):
print('Finishing')
return False
>>> @mycontext()
... def function():
... print('The bit in the middle')
...
>>> function()
Starting
The bit in the middle
Finishing
>>> with mycontext():
... print('The bit in the middle')
...
Starting
The bit in the middle
Finishing
This change is just syntactic sugar for any construct of the following form::
def f():
with cm():
# Do stuff
``ContextDecorator`` lets you instead write::
@cm()
def f():
# Do stuff
It makes it clear that the ``cm`` applies to the whole function, rather than
just a piece of it (and saving an indentation level is nice, too).
Existing context managers that already have a base class can be extended by
using ``ContextDecorator`` as a mixin class::
from contextlib import ContextDecorator
class mycontext(ContextBaseClass, ContextDecorator):
def __enter__(self):
return self
def __exit__(self, *exc):
return False
.. note::
As the decorated function must be able to be called multiple times, the
underlying context manager must support use in multiple :keyword:`with`
statements. If this is not the case, then the original construct with the
explicit :keyword:`with` statement inside the function should be used.
.. class:: ExitStack()
A context manager that is designed to make it easy to programmatically
combine other context managers and cleanup functions, especially those
that are optional or otherwise driven by input data.
For example, a set of files may easily be handled in a single with
statement as follows::
with ExitStack() as stack:
files = [stack.enter_context(open(fname)) for fname in filenames]
# All opened files will automatically be closed at the end of
# the with statement, even if attempts to open files later
# in the list raise an exception
Each instance maintains a stack of registered callbacks that are called in
reverse order when the instance is closed (either explicitly or implicitly
at the end of a :keyword:`with` statement). Note that callbacks are *not*
invoked implicitly when the context stack instance is garbage collected.
This stack model is used so that context managers that acquire their
resources in their ``__init__`` method (such as file objects) can be
handled correctly.
Since registered callbacks are invoked in the reverse order of
registration, this ends up behaving as if multiple nested :keyword:`with`
statements had been used with the registered set of callbacks. This even
extends to exception handling - if an inner callback suppresses or replaces
an exception, then outer callbacks will be passed arguments based on that
updated state.
This is a relatively low level API that takes care of the details of
correctly unwinding the stack of exit callbacks. It provides a suitable
foundation for higher level context managers that manipulate the exit
stack in application specific ways.
.. versionadded:: 0.4
Part of the standard library in Python 3.3 and later
.. method:: enter_context(cm)
Enters a new context manager and adds its :meth:`__exit__` method to
the callback stack. The return value is the result of the context
manager's own :meth:`__enter__` method.
These context managers may suppress exceptions just as they normally
would if used directly as part of a :keyword:`with` statement.
.. method:: push(exit)
Adds a context manager's :meth:`__exit__` method to the callback stack.
As ``__enter__`` is *not* invoked, this method can be used to cover
part of an :meth:`__enter__` implementation with a context manager's own
:meth:`__exit__` method.
If passed an object that is not a context manager, this method assumes
it is a callback with the same signature as a context manager's
:meth:`__exit__` method and adds it directly to the callback stack.
By returning true values, these callbacks can suppress exceptions the
same way context manager :meth:`__exit__` methods can.
The passed in object is returned from the function, allowing this
method to be used as a function decorator.
.. method:: callback(callback, *args, **kwds)
Accepts an arbitrary callback function and arguments and adds it to
the callback stack.
Unlike the other methods, callbacks added this way cannot suppress
exceptions (as they are never passed the exception details).
The passed in callback is returned from the function, allowing this
method to be used as a function decorator.
.. method:: pop_all()
Transfers the callback stack to a fresh :class:`ExitStack` instance
and returns it. No callbacks are invoked by this operation - instead,
they will now be invoked when the new stack is closed (either
explicitly or implicitly at the end of a :keyword:`with` statement).
For example, a group of files can be opened as an "all or nothing"
operation as follows::
with ExitStack() as stack:
files = [stack.enter_context(open(fname)) for fname in filenames]
# Hold onto the close method, but don't call it yet.
close_files = stack.pop_all().close
# If opening any file fails, all previously opened files will be
# closed automatically. If all files are opened successfully,
# they will remain open even after the with statement ends.
# close_files() can then be invoked explicitly to close them all.
.. method:: close()
Immediately unwinds the callback stack, invoking callbacks in the
reverse order of registration. For any context managers and exit
callbacks registered, the arguments passed in will indicate that no
exception occurred.
Examples and Recipes
====================
This section describes some examples and recipes for making effective use of
the tools provided by :mod:`contextlib2`. Some of them may also work with
:mod:`contextlib` in sufficiently recent versions of Python. When this is the
case, it is noted at the end of the example.
Cleaning up in an ``__enter__`` implementation
----------------------------------------------
As noted in the documentation of :meth:`ExitStack.push`, this
method can be useful in cleaning up an already allocated resource if later
steps in the :meth:`__enter__` implementation fail.
Here's an example of doing this for a context manager that accepts resource
acquisition and release functions, along with an optional validation function,
and maps them to the context management protocol::
from contextlib2 import ExitStack
class ResourceManager(object):
def __init__(self, acquire_resource, release_resource, check_resource_ok=None):
self.acquire_resource = acquire_resource
self.release_resource = release_resource
self.check_resource_ok = check_resource_ok
def __enter__(self):
resource = self.acquire_resource()
if self.check_resource_ok is not None:
with ExitStack() as stack:
stack.push(self)
if not self.check_resource_ok(resource):
msg = "Failed validation for {!r}"
raise RuntimeError(msg.format(resource))
# The validation check passed and didn't raise an exception
# Accordingly, we want to keep the resource, and pass it
# back to our caller
stack.pop_all()
return resource
def __exit__(self, *exc_details):
# We don't need to duplicate any of our resource release logic
self.release_resource()
This example will also work with :mod:`contextlib` in Python 3.3 or later.
Replacing any use of ``try-finally`` and flag variables
-------------------------------------------------------
A pattern you will sometimes see is a ``try-finally`` statement with a flag
variable to indicate whether or not the body of the ``finally`` clause should
be executed. In its simplest form (that can't already be handled just by
using an ``except`` clause instead), it looks something like this::
cleanup_needed = True
try:
result = perform_operation()
if result:
cleanup_needed = False
finally:
if cleanup_needed:
cleanup_resources()
As with any ``try`` statement based code, this can cause problems for
development and review, because the setup code and the cleanup code can end
up being separated by arbitrarily long sections of code.
:class:`ExitStack` makes it possible to instead register a callback for
execution at the end of a ``with`` statement, and then later decide to skip
executing that callback::
from contextlib2 import ExitStack
with ExitStack() as stack:
stack.callback(cleanup_resources)
result = perform_operation()
if result:
stack.pop_all()
This allows the intended cleanup up behaviour to be made explicit up front,
rather than requiring a separate flag variable.
If you find yourself using this pattern a lot, it can be simplified even
further by means of a small helper class::
from contextlib2 import ExitStack
class Callback(ExitStack):
def __init__(self, callback, *args, **kwds):
super(Callback, self).__init__()
self.callback(callback, *args, **kwds)
def cancel(self):
self.pop_all()
with Callback(cleanup_resources) as cb:
result = perform_operation()
if result:
cb.cancel()
If the resource cleanup isn't already neatly bundled into a standalone
function, then it is still possible to use the decorator form of
:meth:`ExitStack.callback` to declare the resource cleanup in
advance::
from contextlib2 import ExitStack
with ExitStack() as stack:
@stack.callback
def cleanup_resources():
...
result = perform_operation()
if result:
stack.pop_all()
Due to the way the decorator protocol works, a callback function
declared this way cannot take any parameters. Instead, any resources to
be released must be accessed as closure variables.
This example will also work with :mod:`contextlib` in Python 3.3 or later.
Using a context manager as a function decorator
-----------------------------------------------
:class:`ContextDecorator` makes it possible to use a context manager in
both an ordinary ``with`` statement and also as a function decorator. The
:meth:`ContextDecorator.refresh_cm` method even makes it possible to use
otherwise single use context managers (such as those created by
:func:`contextmanager`) that way.
For example, it is sometimes useful to wrap functions or groups of statements
with a logger that can track the time of entry and time of exit. Rather than
writing both a function decorator and a context manager for the task,
:func:`contextmanager` provides both capabilities in a single
definition::
from contextlib2 import contextmanager
import logging
logging.basicConfig(level=logging.INFO)
@contextmanager
def track_entry_and_exit(name):
logging.info('Entering: {}'.format(name))
yield
logging.info('Exiting: {}'.format(name))
This can be used as both a context manager::
with track_entry_and_exit('widget loader'):
print('Some time consuming activity goes here')
load_widget()
And also as a function decorator::
@track_entry_and_exit('widget loader')
def activity():
print('Some time consuming activity goes here')
load_widget()
Note that there is one additional limitation when using context managers
as function decorators: there's no way to access the return value of
:meth:`__enter__`. If that value is needed, then it is still necessary to use
an explicit ``with`` statement.
This example will also work with :mod:`contextlib` in Python 3.2.1 or later.
Context Management Concepts
===========================
.. _single-use-reusable-and-reentrant-cms:
Single use, reusable and reentrant context managers
---------------------------------------------------
Most context managers are written in a way that means they can only be
used effectively in a :keyword:`with` statement once. These single use
context managers must be created afresh each time they're used -
attempting to use them a second time will trigger an exception or
otherwise not work correctly.
This common limitation means that it is generally advisable to create
context managers directly in the header of the :keyword:`with` statement
where they are used (as shown in all of the usage examples above).
Files are an example of effectively single use context managers, since
the first :keyword:`with` statement will close the file, preventing any
further IO operations using that file object.
Context managers created using :func:`contextmanager` are also single use
context managers, and will complain about the underlying generator failing
to yield if an attempt is made to use them a second time::
>>> from contextlib import contextmanager
>>> @contextmanager
... def singleuse():
... print("Before")
... yield
... print("After")
...
>>> cm = singleuse()
>>> with cm:
... pass
...
Before
After
>>> with cm:
... pass
...
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
RuntimeError: generator didn't yield
.. _reentrant-cms:
Reentrant context managers
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
More sophisticated context managers may be "reentrant". These context
managers can not only be used in multiple :keyword:`with` statements,
but may also be used *inside* a :keyword:`with` statement that is already
using the same context manager.
:class:`threading.RLock` is an example of a reentrant context manager, as is
:func:`suppress`. Here's a toy example of reentrant use (real world
examples of reentrancy are more likely to occur with objects like recursive
locks and are likely to be far more complicated than this example)::
>>> from contextlib import suppress
>>> ignore_raised_exception = suppress(ZeroDivisionError)
>>> with ignore_raised_exception:
... with ignore_raised_exception:
... 1/0
... print("This line runs")
... 1/0
... print("This is skipped")
...
This line runs
>>> # The second exception is also suppressed
.. _reusable-cms:
Reusable context managers
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Distinct from both single use and reentrant context managers are "reusable"
context managers (or, to be completely explicit, "reusable, but not
reentrant" context managers, since reentrant context managers are also
reusable). These context managers support being used multiple times, but
will fail (or otherwise not work correctly) if the specific context manager
instance has already been used in a containing with statement.
An example of a reusable context manager is :func:`redirect_stdout`::
>>> from contextlib import redirect_stdout
>>> from io import StringIO
>>> f = StringIO()
>>> collect_output = redirect_stdout(f)
>>> with collect_output:
... print("Collected")
...
>>> print("Not collected")
Not collected
>>> with collect_output:
... print("Also collected")
...
>>> print(f.getvalue())
Collected
Also collected
However, this context manager is not reentrant, so attempting to reuse it
within a containing with statement fails:
>>> with collect_output:
... # Nested reuse is not permitted
... with collect_output:
... pass
...
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
RuntimeError: Cannot reenter <...>
Obtaining the Module
====================
This module can be installed directly from the `Python Package Index`_ with
pip_::
pip install contextlib2
Alternatively, you can download and unpack it manually from the `contextlib2
PyPI page`_.
There are no operating system or distribution specific versions of this
module - it is a pure Python module that should work on all platforms.
Supported Python versions are currently 2.7 and 3.2+.
.. _Python Package Index: http://pypi.python.org
.. _pip: http://www.pip-installer.org
.. _contextlib2 pypi page: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/contextlib2
Development and Support
-----------------------
contextlib2 is developed and maintained on BitBucket_. Problems and suggested
improvements can be posted to the `issue tracker`_.
.. _BitBucket: https://bitbucket.org/ncoghlan/contextlib2/overview
.. _issue tracker: https://bitbucket.org/ncoghlan/contextlib2/issues?status=new&status=open
.. include:: ../NEWS.rst
Indices and tables
==================
* :ref:`genindex`
* :ref:`search`
contextlib2-0.5.1/docs/Makefile 0000664 0001750 0001750 00000011002 12645116022 017741 0 ustar ncoghlan ncoghlan 0000000 0000000 # Makefile for Sphinx documentation
#
# You can set these variables from the command line.
SPHINXOPTS =
SPHINXBUILD = sphinx-build
PAPER =
BUILDDIR = _build
# Internal variables.
PAPEROPT_a4 = -D latex_paper_size=a4
PAPEROPT_letter = -D latex_paper_size=letter
ALLSPHINXOPTS = -d $(BUILDDIR)/doctrees $(PAPEROPT_$(PAPER)) $(SPHINXOPTS) .
.PHONY: help clean html dirhtml singlehtml pickle json htmlhelp qthelp devhelp epub latex latexpdf text man changes linkcheck doctest
help:
@echo "Please use \`make ' where is one of"
@echo " html to make standalone HTML files"
@echo " dirhtml to make HTML files named index.html in directories"
@echo " singlehtml to make a single large HTML file"
@echo " pickle to make pickle files"
@echo " json to make JSON files"
@echo " htmlhelp to make HTML files and a HTML help project"
@echo " qthelp to make HTML files and a qthelp project"
@echo " devhelp to make HTML files and a Devhelp project"
@echo " epub to make an epub"
@echo " latex to make LaTeX files, you can set PAPER=a4 or PAPER=letter"
@echo " latexpdf to make LaTeX files and run them through pdflatex"
@echo " text to make text files"
@echo " man to make manual pages"
@echo " changes to make an overview of all changed/added/deprecated items"
@echo " linkcheck to check all external links for integrity"
@echo " doctest to run all doctests embedded in the documentation (if enabled)"
clean:
-rm -rf $(BUILDDIR)/*
html:
$(SPHINXBUILD) -b html $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/html
@echo
@echo "Build finished. The HTML pages are in $(BUILDDIR)/html."
dirhtml:
$(SPHINXBUILD) -b dirhtml $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/dirhtml
@echo
@echo "Build finished. The HTML pages are in $(BUILDDIR)/dirhtml."
singlehtml:
$(SPHINXBUILD) -b singlehtml $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/singlehtml
@echo
@echo "Build finished. The HTML page is in $(BUILDDIR)/singlehtml."
pickle:
$(SPHINXBUILD) -b pickle $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/pickle
@echo
@echo "Build finished; now you can process the pickle files."
json:
$(SPHINXBUILD) -b json $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/json
@echo
@echo "Build finished; now you can process the JSON files."
htmlhelp:
$(SPHINXBUILD) -b htmlhelp $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/htmlhelp
@echo
@echo "Build finished; now you can run HTML Help Workshop with the" \
".hhp project file in $(BUILDDIR)/htmlhelp."
qthelp:
$(SPHINXBUILD) -b qthelp $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/qthelp
@echo
@echo "Build finished; now you can run "qcollectiongenerator" with the" \
".qhcp project file in $(BUILDDIR)/qthelp, like this:"
@echo "# qcollectiongenerator $(BUILDDIR)/qthelp/contextlib2.qhcp"
@echo "To view the help file:"
@echo "# assistant -collectionFile $(BUILDDIR)/qthelp/contextlib2.qhc"
devhelp:
$(SPHINXBUILD) -b devhelp $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/devhelp
@echo
@echo "Build finished."
@echo "To view the help file:"
@echo "# mkdir -p $$HOME/.local/share/devhelp/contextlib2"
@echo "# ln -s $(BUILDDIR)/devhelp $$HOME/.local/share/devhelp/contextlib2"
@echo "# devhelp"
epub:
$(SPHINXBUILD) -b epub $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/epub
@echo
@echo "Build finished. The epub file is in $(BUILDDIR)/epub."
latex:
$(SPHINXBUILD) -b latex $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/latex
@echo
@echo "Build finished; the LaTeX files are in $(BUILDDIR)/latex."
@echo "Run \`make' in that directory to run these through (pdf)latex" \
"(use \`make latexpdf' here to do that automatically)."
latexpdf:
$(SPHINXBUILD) -b latex $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/latex
@echo "Running LaTeX files through pdflatex..."
make -C $(BUILDDIR)/latex all-pdf
@echo "pdflatex finished; the PDF files are in $(BUILDDIR)/latex."
text:
$(SPHINXBUILD) -b text $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/text
@echo
@echo "Build finished. The text files are in $(BUILDDIR)/text."
man:
$(SPHINXBUILD) -b man $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/man
@echo
@echo "Build finished. The manual pages are in $(BUILDDIR)/man."
changes:
$(SPHINXBUILD) -b changes $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/changes
@echo
@echo "The overview file is in $(BUILDDIR)/changes."
linkcheck:
$(SPHINXBUILD) -b linkcheck $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/linkcheck
@echo
@echo "Link check complete; look for any errors in the above output " \
"or in $(BUILDDIR)/linkcheck/output.txt."
doctest:
$(SPHINXBUILD) -b doctest $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/doctest
@echo "Testing of doctests in the sources finished, look at the " \
"results in $(BUILDDIR)/doctest/output.txt."
contextlib2-0.5.1/docs/make.bat 0000664 0001750 0001750 00000010651 12645116022 017717 0 ustar ncoghlan ncoghlan 0000000 0000000 @ECHO OFF
REM Command file for Sphinx documentation
if "%SPHINXBUILD%" == "" (
set SPHINXBUILD=sphinx-build
)
set BUILDDIR=_build
set ALLSPHINXOPTS=-d %BUILDDIR%/doctrees %SPHINXOPTS% .
if NOT "%PAPER%" == "" (
set ALLSPHINXOPTS=-D latex_paper_size=%PAPER% %ALLSPHINXOPTS%
)
if "%1" == "" goto help
if "%1" == "help" (
:help
echo.Please use `make ^` where ^ is one of
echo. html to make standalone HTML files
echo. dirhtml to make HTML files named index.html in directories
echo. singlehtml to make a single large HTML file
echo. pickle to make pickle files
echo. json to make JSON files
echo. htmlhelp to make HTML files and a HTML help project
echo. qthelp to make HTML files and a qthelp project
echo. devhelp to make HTML files and a Devhelp project
echo. epub to make an epub
echo. latex to make LaTeX files, you can set PAPER=a4 or PAPER=letter
echo. text to make text files
echo. man to make manual pages
echo. changes to make an overview over all changed/added/deprecated items
echo. linkcheck to check all external links for integrity
echo. doctest to run all doctests embedded in the documentation if enabled
goto end
)
if "%1" == "clean" (
for /d %%i in (%BUILDDIR%\*) do rmdir /q /s %%i
del /q /s %BUILDDIR%\*
goto end
)
if "%1" == "html" (
%SPHINXBUILD% -b html %ALLSPHINXOPTS% %BUILDDIR%/html
if errorlevel 1 exit /b 1
echo.
echo.Build finished. The HTML pages are in %BUILDDIR%/html.
goto end
)
if "%1" == "dirhtml" (
%SPHINXBUILD% -b dirhtml %ALLSPHINXOPTS% %BUILDDIR%/dirhtml
if errorlevel 1 exit /b 1
echo.
echo.Build finished. The HTML pages are in %BUILDDIR%/dirhtml.
goto end
)
if "%1" == "singlehtml" (
%SPHINXBUILD% -b singlehtml %ALLSPHINXOPTS% %BUILDDIR%/singlehtml
if errorlevel 1 exit /b 1
echo.
echo.Build finished. The HTML pages are in %BUILDDIR%/singlehtml.
goto end
)
if "%1" == "pickle" (
%SPHINXBUILD% -b pickle %ALLSPHINXOPTS% %BUILDDIR%/pickle
if errorlevel 1 exit /b 1
echo.
echo.Build finished; now you can process the pickle files.
goto end
)
if "%1" == "json" (
%SPHINXBUILD% -b json %ALLSPHINXOPTS% %BUILDDIR%/json
if errorlevel 1 exit /b 1
echo.
echo.Build finished; now you can process the JSON files.
goto end
)
if "%1" == "htmlhelp" (
%SPHINXBUILD% -b htmlhelp %ALLSPHINXOPTS% %BUILDDIR%/htmlhelp
if errorlevel 1 exit /b 1
echo.
echo.Build finished; now you can run HTML Help Workshop with the ^
.hhp project file in %BUILDDIR%/htmlhelp.
goto end
)
if "%1" == "qthelp" (
%SPHINXBUILD% -b qthelp %ALLSPHINXOPTS% %BUILDDIR%/qthelp
if errorlevel 1 exit /b 1
echo.
echo.Build finished; now you can run "qcollectiongenerator" with the ^
.qhcp project file in %BUILDDIR%/qthelp, like this:
echo.^> qcollectiongenerator %BUILDDIR%\qthelp\contextlib2.qhcp
echo.To view the help file:
echo.^> assistant -collectionFile %BUILDDIR%\qthelp\contextlib2.ghc
goto end
)
if "%1" == "devhelp" (
%SPHINXBUILD% -b devhelp %ALLSPHINXOPTS% %BUILDDIR%/devhelp
if errorlevel 1 exit /b 1
echo.
echo.Build finished.
goto end
)
if "%1" == "epub" (
%SPHINXBUILD% -b epub %ALLSPHINXOPTS% %BUILDDIR%/epub
if errorlevel 1 exit /b 1
echo.
echo.Build finished. The epub file is in %BUILDDIR%/epub.
goto end
)
if "%1" == "latex" (
%SPHINXBUILD% -b latex %ALLSPHINXOPTS% %BUILDDIR%/latex
if errorlevel 1 exit /b 1
echo.
echo.Build finished; the LaTeX files are in %BUILDDIR%/latex.
goto end
)
if "%1" == "text" (
%SPHINXBUILD% -b text %ALLSPHINXOPTS% %BUILDDIR%/text
if errorlevel 1 exit /b 1
echo.
echo.Build finished. The text files are in %BUILDDIR%/text.
goto end
)
if "%1" == "man" (
%SPHINXBUILD% -b man %ALLSPHINXOPTS% %BUILDDIR%/man
if errorlevel 1 exit /b 1
echo.
echo.Build finished. The manual pages are in %BUILDDIR%/man.
goto end
)
if "%1" == "changes" (
%SPHINXBUILD% -b changes %ALLSPHINXOPTS% %BUILDDIR%/changes
if errorlevel 1 exit /b 1
echo.
echo.The overview file is in %BUILDDIR%/changes.
goto end
)
if "%1" == "linkcheck" (
%SPHINXBUILD% -b linkcheck %ALLSPHINXOPTS% %BUILDDIR%/linkcheck
if errorlevel 1 exit /b 1
echo.
echo.Link check complete; look for any errors in the above output ^
or in %BUILDDIR%/linkcheck/output.txt.
goto end
)
if "%1" == "doctest" (
%SPHINXBUILD% -b doctest %ALLSPHINXOPTS% %BUILDDIR%/doctest
if errorlevel 1 exit /b 1
echo.
echo.Testing of doctests in the sources finished, look at the ^
results in %BUILDDIR%/doctest/output.txt.
goto end
)
:end
contextlib2-0.5.1/docs/conf.py 0000664 0001750 0001750 00000016065 12645116022 017616 0 ustar ncoghlan ncoghlan 0000000 0000000 # -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
#
# contextlib2 documentation build configuration file, created by
# sphinx-quickstart on Tue Dec 13 20:29:56 2011.
#
# This file is execfile()d with the current directory set to its containing dir.
#
# Note that not all possible configuration values are present in this
# autogenerated file.
#
# All configuration values have a default; values that are commented out
# serve to show the default.
import sys, os
# If extensions (or modules to document with autodoc) are in another directory,
# add these directories to sys.path here. If the directory is relative to the
# documentation root, use os.path.abspath to make it absolute, like shown here.
# sys.path.insert(0, os.path.abspath('..'))
# -- General configuration -----------------------------------------------------
# If your documentation needs a minimal Sphinx version, state it here.
#needs_sphinx = '1.0'
# Add any Sphinx extension module names here, as strings. They can be extensions
# coming with Sphinx (named 'sphinx.ext.*') or your custom ones.
extensions = ['sphinx.ext.intersphinx']
# Add any paths that contain templates here, relative to this directory.
templates_path = ['_templates']
# The suffix of source filenames.
source_suffix = '.rst'
# The encoding of source files.
#source_encoding = 'utf-8-sig'
# The master toctree document.
master_doc = 'index'
# General information about the project.
project = u'contextlib2'
copyright = u'2011, Nick Coghlan'
# The version info for the project you're documenting, acts as replacement for
# |version| and |release|, also used in various other places throughout the
# built documents.
#
# The short X.Y version.
with open('../VERSION.txt') as f:
version = f.read().strip()
# The full version, including alpha/beta/rc tags.
release = version
# The language for content autogenerated by Sphinx. Refer to documentation
# for a list of supported languages.
#language = None
# There are two options for replacing |today|: either, you set today to some
# non-false value, then it is used:
#today = ''
# Else, today_fmt is used as the format for a strftime call.
#today_fmt = '%B %d, %Y'
# List of patterns, relative to source directory, that match files and
# directories to ignore when looking for source files.
exclude_patterns = ['_build']
# The reST default role (used for this markup: `text`) to use for all documents.
#default_role = None
# If true, '()' will be appended to :func: etc. cross-reference text.
#add_function_parentheses = True
# If true, the current module name will be prepended to all description
# unit titles (such as .. function::).
add_module_names = False
# If true, sectionauthor and moduleauthor directives will be shown in the
# output. They are ignored by default.
#show_authors = False
# The name of the Pygments (syntax highlighting) style to use.
pygments_style = 'sphinx'
# A list of ignored prefixes for module index sorting.
#modindex_common_prefix = []
# -- Options for HTML output ---------------------------------------------------
# The theme to use for HTML and HTML Help pages. See the documentation for
# a list of builtin themes.
html_theme = 'default'
# Theme options are theme-specific and customize the look and feel of a theme
# further. For a list of options available for each theme, see the
# documentation.
#html_theme_options = {}
# Add any paths that contain custom themes here, relative to this directory.
#html_theme_path = []
# The name for this set of Sphinx documents. If None, it defaults to
# " v documentation".
#html_title = None
# A shorter title for the navigation bar. Default is the same as html_title.
#html_short_title = None
# The name of an image file (relative to this directory) to place at the top
# of the sidebar.
#html_logo = None
# The name of an image file (within the static path) to use as favicon of the
# docs. This file should be a Windows icon file (.ico) being 16x16 or 32x32
# pixels large.
#html_favicon = None
# Add any paths that contain custom static files (such as style sheets) here,
# relative to this directory. They are copied after the builtin static files,
# so a file named "default.css" will overwrite the builtin "default.css".
html_static_path = ['_static']
# If not '', a 'Last updated on:' timestamp is inserted at every page bottom,
# using the given strftime format.
#html_last_updated_fmt = '%b %d, %Y'
# If true, SmartyPants will be used to convert quotes and dashes to
# typographically correct entities.
#html_use_smartypants = True
# Custom sidebar templates, maps document names to template names.
#html_sidebars = {}
# Additional templates that should be rendered to pages, maps page names to
# template names.
#html_additional_pages = {}
# If false, no module index is generated.
#html_domain_indices = True
# If false, no index is generated.
#html_use_index = True
# If true, the index is split into individual pages for each letter.
#html_split_index = False
# If true, links to the reST sources are added to the pages.
#html_show_sourcelink = True
# If true, "Created using Sphinx" is shown in the HTML footer. Default is True.
#html_show_sphinx = True
# If true, "(C) Copyright ..." is shown in the HTML footer. Default is True.
#html_show_copyright = True
# If true, an OpenSearch description file will be output, and all pages will
# contain a tag referring to it. The value of this option must be the
# base URL from which the finished HTML is served.
#html_use_opensearch = ''
# This is the file name suffix for HTML files (e.g. ".xhtml").
#html_file_suffix = None
# Output file base name for HTML help builder.
htmlhelp_basename = 'contextlib2doc'
# -- Options for LaTeX output --------------------------------------------------
# The paper size ('letter' or 'a4').
#latex_paper_size = 'letter'
# The font size ('10pt', '11pt' or '12pt').
#latex_font_size = '10pt'
# Grouping the document tree into LaTeX files. List of tuples
# (source start file, target name, title, author, documentclass [howto/manual]).
latex_documents = [
('index', 'contextlib2.tex', u'contextlib2 Documentation',
u'Nick Coghlan', 'manual'),
]
# The name of an image file (relative to this directory) to place at the top of
# the title page.
#latex_logo = None
# For "manual" documents, if this is true, then toplevel headings are parts,
# not chapters.
#latex_use_parts = False
# If true, show page references after internal links.
#latex_show_pagerefs = False
# If true, show URL addresses after external links.
#latex_show_urls = False
# Additional stuff for the LaTeX preamble.
#latex_preamble = ''
# Documents to append as an appendix to all manuals.
#latex_appendices = []
# If false, no module index is generated.
#latex_domain_indices = True
# -- Options for manual page output --------------------------------------------
# One entry per manual page. List of tuples
# (source start file, name, description, authors, manual section).
man_pages = [
('index', 'contextlib2', u'contextlib2 Documentation',
[u'Nick Coghlan'], 1)
]
# Example configuration for intersphinx: refer to the Python 3 standard library.
intersphinx_mapping = {'http://docs.python.org/py3k': None}
contextlib2-0.5.1/NEWS.rst 0000664 0001750 0001750 00000004312 12645442733 016700 0 ustar ncoghlan ncoghlan 0000000 0000000 Release History
---------------
0.5.1 (2016-01-13)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* Python 2.6 compatilibity restored (although 2.6 is still missing from the
current CI configuration)
* README converted back to reStructured Text formatting
0.5.0 (2016-01-12)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* Updated to include all features from the Python 3.4 and 3.5 releases of
contextlib (also includes some ``ExitStack`` enhancements made following
the integration into the standard library for Python 3.3)
* The legacy ``ContextStack`` and ``ContextDecorator.refresh_cm`` APIs are
no longer documented and emit ``DeprecationWarning`` when used
* Python 2.6, 3.2 and 3.3 have been dropped from compatibility testing
0.4.0 (2012-05-05)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* Issue #8: Replace ContextStack with ExitStack (old ContextStack API
retained for backwards compatibility)
* Fall back to unittest2 if unittest is missing required functionality
0.3.1 (2012-01-17)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* Issue #7: Add MANIFEST.in so PyPI package contains all relevant files
0.3 (2012-01-04)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* Issue #5: ContextStack.register no longer pointlessly returns the wrapped
function
* Issue #2: Add examples and recipes section to docs
* Issue #3: ContextStack.register_exit() now accepts objects with __exit__
attributes in addition to accepting exit callbacks directly
* Issue #1: Add ContextStack.preserve() to move all registered callbacks to
a new ContextStack object
* Wrapped callbacks now expose __wrapped__ (for direct callbacks) or __self__
(for context manager methods) attributes to aid in introspection
* Moved version number to a VERSION.txt file (read by both docs and setup.py)
* Added NEWS.rst (and incorporated into documentation)
0.2 (2011-12-15)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* Renamed CleanupManager to ContextStack (hopefully before anyone started
using the module for anything, since I didn't alias the old name at all)
0.1 (2011-12-13)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* Initial release as a backport module
* Added CleanupManager (based on a `Python feature request`_)
* Added ContextDecorator.refresh_cm() (based on a `Python tracker issue`_)
.. _Python feature request: http://bugs.python.org/issue13585
.. _Python tracker issue: http://bugs.python.org/issue11647
contextlib2-0.5.1/contextlib2.py 0000664 0001750 0001750 00000033665 12645441753 020217 0 ustar ncoghlan ncoghlan 0000000 0000000 """contextlib2 - backports and enhancements to the contextlib module"""
import sys
import warnings
from collections import deque
from functools import wraps
__all__ = ["contextmanager", "closing", "ContextDecorator", "ExitStack",
"redirect_stdout", "redirect_stderr", "suppress"]
# Backwards compatibility
__all__ += ["ContextStack"]
class ContextDecorator(object):
"A base class or mixin that enables context managers to work as decorators."
def refresh_cm(self):
"""Returns the context manager used to actually wrap the call to the
decorated function.
The default implementation just returns *self*.
Overriding this method allows otherwise one-shot context managers
like _GeneratorContextManager to support use as decorators via
implicit recreation.
DEPRECATED: refresh_cm was never added to the standard library's
ContextDecorator API
"""
warnings.warn("refresh_cm was never added to the standard library",
DeprecationWarning)
return self._recreate_cm()
def _recreate_cm(self):
"""Return a recreated instance of self.
Allows an otherwise one-shot context manager like
_GeneratorContextManager to support use as
a decorator via implicit recreation.
This is a private interface just for _GeneratorContextManager.
See issue #11647 for details.
"""
return self
def __call__(self, func):
@wraps(func)
def inner(*args, **kwds):
with self._recreate_cm():
return func(*args, **kwds)
return inner
class _GeneratorContextManager(ContextDecorator):
"""Helper for @contextmanager decorator."""
def __init__(self, func, args, kwds):
self.gen = func(*args, **kwds)
self.func, self.args, self.kwds = func, args, kwds
# Issue 19330: ensure context manager instances have good docstrings
doc = getattr(func, "__doc__", None)
if doc is None:
doc = type(self).__doc__
self.__doc__ = doc
# Unfortunately, this still doesn't provide good help output when
# inspecting the created context manager instances, since pydoc
# currently bypasses the instance docstring and shows the docstring
# for the class instead.
# See http://bugs.python.org/issue19404 for more details.
def _recreate_cm(self):
# _GCM instances are one-shot context managers, so the
# CM must be recreated each time a decorated function is
# called
return self.__class__(self.func, self.args, self.kwds)
def __enter__(self):
try:
return next(self.gen)
except StopIteration:
raise RuntimeError("generator didn't yield")
def __exit__(self, type, value, traceback):
if type is None:
try:
next(self.gen)
except StopIteration:
return
else:
raise RuntimeError("generator didn't stop")
else:
if value is None:
# Need to force instantiation so we can reliably
# tell if we get the same exception back
value = type()
try:
self.gen.throw(type, value, traceback)
raise RuntimeError("generator didn't stop after throw()")
except StopIteration as exc:
# Suppress StopIteration *unless* it's the same exception that
# was passed to throw(). This prevents a StopIteration
# raised inside the "with" statement from being suppressed.
return exc is not value
except RuntimeError as exc:
# Likewise, avoid suppressing if a StopIteration exception
# was passed to throw() and later wrapped into a RuntimeError
# (see PEP 479).
if _HAVE_EXCEPTION_CHAINING and exc.__cause__ is value:
return False
raise
except:
# only re-raise if it's *not* the exception that was
# passed to throw(), because __exit__() must not raise
# an exception unless __exit__() itself failed. But throw()
# has to raise the exception to signal propagation, so this
# fixes the impedance mismatch between the throw() protocol
# and the __exit__() protocol.
#
if sys.exc_info()[1] is not value:
raise
def contextmanager(func):
"""@contextmanager decorator.
Typical usage:
@contextmanager
def some_generator():
try:
yield
finally:
This makes this:
with some_generator() as :
equivalent to this:
try:
=
finally:
"""
@wraps(func)
def helper(*args, **kwds):
return _GeneratorContextManager(func, args, kwds)
return helper
class closing(object):
"""Context to automatically close something at the end of a block.
Code like this:
with closing(.open()) as f:
is equivalent to this:
f = .open()
try:
finally:
f.close()
"""
def __init__(self, thing):
self.thing = thing
def __enter__(self):
return self.thing
def __exit__(self, *exc_info):
self.thing.close()
class _RedirectStream:
_stream = None
def __init__(self, new_target):
self._new_target = new_target
# We use a list of old targets to make this CM re-entrant
self._old_targets = []
def __enter__(self):
self._old_targets.append(getattr(sys, self._stream))
setattr(sys, self._stream, self._new_target)
return self._new_target
def __exit__(self, exctype, excinst, exctb):
setattr(sys, self._stream, self._old_targets.pop())
class redirect_stdout(_RedirectStream):
"""Context manager for temporarily redirecting stdout to another file.
# How to send help() to stderr
with redirect_stdout(sys.stderr):
help(dir)
# How to write help() to a file
with open('help.txt', 'w') as f:
with redirect_stdout(f):
help(pow)
"""
_stream = "stdout"
class redirect_stderr(_RedirectStream):
"""Context manager for temporarily redirecting stderr to another file."""
_stream = "stderr"
class suppress:
"""Context manager to suppress specified exceptions
After the exception is suppressed, execution proceeds with the next
statement following the with statement.
with suppress(FileNotFoundError):
os.remove(somefile)
# Execution still resumes here if the file was already removed
"""
def __init__(self, *exceptions):
self._exceptions = exceptions
def __enter__(self):
pass
def __exit__(self, exctype, excinst, exctb):
# Unlike isinstance and issubclass, CPython exception handling
# currently only looks at the concrete type hierarchy (ignoring
# the instance and subclass checking hooks). While Guido considers
# that a bug rather than a feature, it's a fairly hard one to fix
# due to various internal implementation details. suppress provides
# the simpler issubclass based semantics, rather than trying to
# exactly reproduce the limitations of the CPython interpreter.
#
# See http://bugs.python.org/issue12029 for more details
return exctype is not None and issubclass(exctype, self._exceptions)
# Context manipulation is Python 3 only
_HAVE_EXCEPTION_CHAINING = sys.version_info[0] >= 3
if _HAVE_EXCEPTION_CHAINING:
def _make_context_fixer(frame_exc):
def _fix_exception_context(new_exc, old_exc):
# Context may not be correct, so find the end of the chain
while 1:
exc_context = new_exc.__context__
if exc_context is old_exc:
# Context is already set correctly (see issue 20317)
return
if exc_context is None or exc_context is frame_exc:
break
new_exc = exc_context
# Change the end of the chain to point to the exception
# we expect it to reference
new_exc.__context__ = old_exc
return _fix_exception_context
def _reraise_with_existing_context(exc_details):
try:
# bare "raise exc_details[1]" replaces our carefully
# set-up context
fixed_ctx = exc_details[1].__context__
raise exc_details[1]
except BaseException:
exc_details[1].__context__ = fixed_ctx
raise
else:
# No exception context in Python 2
def _make_context_fixer(frame_exc):
return lambda new_exc, old_exc: None
# Use 3 argument raise in Python 2,
# but use exec to avoid SyntaxError in Python 3
def _reraise_with_existing_context(exc_details):
exc_type, exc_value, exc_tb = exc_details
exec ("raise exc_type, exc_value, exc_tb")
# Inspired by discussions on http://bugs.python.org/issue13585
class ExitStack(object):
"""Context manager for dynamic management of a stack of exit callbacks
For example:
with ExitStack() as stack:
files = [stack.enter_context(open(fname)) for fname in filenames]
# All opened files will automatically be closed at the end of
# the with statement, even if attempts to open files later
# in the list raise an exception
"""
def __init__(self):
self._exit_callbacks = deque()
def pop_all(self):
"""Preserve the context stack by transferring it to a new instance"""
new_stack = type(self)()
new_stack._exit_callbacks = self._exit_callbacks
self._exit_callbacks = deque()
return new_stack
def _push_cm_exit(self, cm, cm_exit):
"""Helper to correctly register callbacks to __exit__ methods"""
def _exit_wrapper(*exc_details):
return cm_exit(cm, *exc_details)
_exit_wrapper.__self__ = cm
self.push(_exit_wrapper)
def push(self, exit):
"""Registers a callback with the standard __exit__ method signature
Can suppress exceptions the same way __exit__ methods can.
Also accepts any object with an __exit__ method (registering a call
to the method instead of the object itself)
"""
# We use an unbound method rather than a bound method to follow
# the standard lookup behaviour for special methods
_cb_type = type(exit)
try:
exit_method = _cb_type.__exit__
except AttributeError:
# Not a context manager, so assume its a callable
self._exit_callbacks.append(exit)
else:
self._push_cm_exit(exit, exit_method)
return exit # Allow use as a decorator
def callback(self, callback, *args, **kwds):
"""Registers an arbitrary callback and arguments.
Cannot suppress exceptions.
"""
def _exit_wrapper(exc_type, exc, tb):
callback(*args, **kwds)
# We changed the signature, so using @wraps is not appropriate, but
# setting __wrapped__ may still help with introspection
_exit_wrapper.__wrapped__ = callback
self.push(_exit_wrapper)
return callback # Allow use as a decorator
def enter_context(self, cm):
"""Enters the supplied context manager
If successful, also pushes its __exit__ method as a callback and
returns the result of the __enter__ method.
"""
# We look up the special methods on the type to match the with statement
_cm_type = type(cm)
_exit = _cm_type.__exit__
result = _cm_type.__enter__(cm)
self._push_cm_exit(cm, _exit)
return result
def close(self):
"""Immediately unwind the context stack"""
self.__exit__(None, None, None)
def __enter__(self):
return self
def __exit__(self, *exc_details):
received_exc = exc_details[0] is not None
# We manipulate the exception state so it behaves as though
# we were actually nesting multiple with statements
frame_exc = sys.exc_info()[1]
_fix_exception_context = _make_context_fixer(frame_exc)
# Callbacks are invoked in LIFO order to match the behaviour of
# nested context managers
suppressed_exc = False
pending_raise = False
while self._exit_callbacks:
cb = self._exit_callbacks.pop()
try:
if cb(*exc_details):
suppressed_exc = True
pending_raise = False
exc_details = (None, None, None)
except:
new_exc_details = sys.exc_info()
# simulate the stack of exceptions by setting the context
_fix_exception_context(new_exc_details[1], exc_details[1])
pending_raise = True
exc_details = new_exc_details
if pending_raise:
_reraise_with_existing_context(exc_details)
return received_exc and suppressed_exc
# Preserve backwards compatibility
class ContextStack(ExitStack):
"""Backwards compatibility alias for ExitStack"""
def __init__(self):
warnings.warn("ContextStack has been renamed to ExitStack",
DeprecationWarning)
super(ContextStack, self).__init__()
def register_exit(self, callback):
return self.push(callback)
def register(self, callback, *args, **kwds):
return self.callback(callback, *args, **kwds)
def preserve(self):
return self.pop_all()
contextlib2-0.5.1/README.rst 0000664 0001750 0001750 00000002501 12645442733 017057 0 ustar ncoghlan ncoghlan 0000000 0000000 .. image:: https://readthedocs.org/projects/contextlib2/badge/?version=latest
:target: https://contextlib2.readthedocs.org/
:alt: Latest Docs
.. image:: https://codeship.com/projects/884e9500-3d1a-0133-3eb0-1abe7f570a4c/status?branch=default
:target: https://codeship.com/projects/102388
.. image:: https://codecov.io/bitbucket/ncoghlan/contextlib2/coverage.svg?branch=default
:target: https://codecov.io/bitbucket/ncoghlan/contextlib2?branch=default
contextlib2 is a backport of the `standard library's contextlib
module `_ to
earlier Python versions.
It also serves as a real world proving ground for possible future
enhancements to the standard library version.
Development
-----------
contextlib2 currently has no dependencies.
Local testing is currently just a matter of running ``python test_contextlib2.py``.
You can test against multiple versions of Python with `tox `_::
pip install tox
tox
Versions currently tested in tox are:
* CPython 2.7 (also tested in Codeship)
* CPython 3.4 (also tested in Codeship)
* CPython 3.5
* PyPy
* PyPy3
To install all the relevant runtimes on Fedora 23::
sudo dnf install python python3 pypy pypy3
sudo dnf copr enable -y mstuchli/Python3.5
sudo dnf install python35-python3 contextlib2-0.5.1/PKG-INFO 0000664 0001750 0001750 00000004417 12645443301 016465 0 ustar ncoghlan ncoghlan 0000000 0000000 Metadata-Version: 1.1
Name: contextlib2
Version: 0.5.1
Summary: Backports and enhancements for the contextlib module
Home-page: http://contextlib2.readthedocs.org
Author: Nick Coghlan
Author-email: ncoghlan@gmail.com
License: PSF License
Description: .. image:: https://readthedocs.org/projects/contextlib2/badge/?version=latest
:target: https://contextlib2.readthedocs.org/
:alt: Latest Docs
.. image:: https://codeship.com/projects/884e9500-3d1a-0133-3eb0-1abe7f570a4c/status?branch=default
:target: https://codeship.com/projects/102388
.. image:: https://codecov.io/bitbucket/ncoghlan/contextlib2/coverage.svg?branch=default
:target: https://codecov.io/bitbucket/ncoghlan/contextlib2?branch=default
contextlib2 is a backport of the `standard library's contextlib
module `_ to
earlier Python versions.
It also serves as a real world proving ground for possible future
enhancements to the standard library version.
Development
-----------
contextlib2 currently has no dependencies.
Local testing is currently just a matter of running ``python test_contextlib2.py``.
You can test against multiple versions of Python with `tox `_::
pip install tox
tox
Versions currently tested in tox are:
* CPython 2.7 (also tested in Codeship)
* CPython 3.4 (also tested in Codeship)
* CPython 3.5
* PyPy
* PyPy3
To install all the relevant runtimes on Fedora 23::
sudo dnf install python python3 pypy pypy3
sudo dnf copr enable -y mstuchli/Python3.5
sudo dnf install python35-python3
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: Python Software Foundation License
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.4
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5
contextlib2-0.5.1/VERSION.txt 0000664 0001750 0001750 00000000006 12645442461 017252 0 ustar ncoghlan ncoghlan 0000000 0000000 0.5.1
contextlib2-0.5.1/setup.py 0000775 0001750 0001750 00000002051 12645442733 017105 0 ustar ncoghlan ncoghlan 0000000 0000000 #!/usr/bin/env python
from distutils.core import setup
# Technically, unittest2 is a dependency to run the tests on 2.7
# This file ignores that, since I don't want to depend on
# setuptools just to get "tests_require" support
setup(
name='contextlib2',
version=open('VERSION.txt').read().strip(),
py_modules=['contextlib2'],
license='PSF License',
description='Backports and enhancements for the contextlib module',
long_description=open('README.rst').read(),
author='Nick Coghlan',
author_email='ncoghlan@gmail.com',
url='http://contextlib2.readthedocs.org',
classifiers=[
'Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable',
'License :: OSI Approved :: Python Software Foundation License',
# These are the Python versions tested, it may work on others
'Programming Language :: Python :: 2',
'Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7',
'Programming Language :: Python :: 3',
'Programming Language :: Python :: 3.4',
'Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5',
],
) contextlib2-0.5.1/LICENSE.txt 0000664 0001750 0001750 00000013646 12645116022 017214 0 ustar ncoghlan ncoghlan 0000000 0000000
A. HISTORY OF THE SOFTWARE
==========================
contextlib2 is a derivative of the contextlib module distributed by the PSF
as part of the Python standard library. According, it is itself redistributed
under the PSF license (reproduced in full below). As the contextlib module
was added only in Python 2.5, the licenses for earlier Python versions are
not applicable and have not been included.
Python was created in the early 1990s by Guido van Rossum at Stichting
Mathematisch Centrum (CWI, see http://www.cwi.nl) in the Netherlands
as a successor of a language called ABC. Guido remains Python's
principal author, although it includes many contributions from others.
In 1995, Guido continued his work on Python at the Corporation for
National Research Initiatives (CNRI, see http://www.cnri.reston.va.us)
in Reston, Virginia where he released several versions of the
software.
In May 2000, Guido and the Python core development team moved to
BeOpen.com to form the BeOpen PythonLabs team. In October of the same
year, the PythonLabs team moved to Digital Creations (now Zope
Corporation, see http://www.zope.com). In 2001, the Python Software
Foundation (PSF, see http://www.python.org/psf/) was formed, a
non-profit organization created specifically to own Python-related
Intellectual Property. Zope Corporation is a sponsoring member of
the PSF.
All Python releases are Open Source (see http://www.opensource.org for
the Open Source Definition). Historically, most, but not all, Python
releases have also been GPL-compatible; the table below summarizes
the various releases that included the contextlib module.
Release Derived Year Owner GPL-
from compatible? (1)
2.5 2.4 2006 PSF yes
2.5.1 2.5 2007 PSF yes
2.5.2 2.5.1 2008 PSF yes
2.5.3 2.5.2 2008 PSF yes
2.6 2.5 2008 PSF yes
2.6.1 2.6 2008 PSF yes
2.6.2 2.6.1 2009 PSF yes
2.6.3 2.6.2 2009 PSF yes
2.6.4 2.6.3 2009 PSF yes
2.6.5 2.6.4 2010 PSF yes
3.0 2.6 2008 PSF yes
3.0.1 3.0 2009 PSF yes
3.1 3.0.1 2009 PSF yes
3.1.1 3.1 2009 PSF yes
3.1.2 3.1.1 2010 PSF yes
3.1.3 3.1.2 2010 PSF yes
3.1.4 3.1.3 2011 PSF yes
3.2 3.1 2011 PSF yes
3.2.1 3.2 2011 PSF yes
3.2.2 3.2.1 2011 PSF yes
3.3 3.2 2012 PSF yes
Footnotes:
(1) GPL-compatible doesn't mean that we're distributing Python under
the GPL. All Python licenses, unlike the GPL, let you distribute
a modified version without making your changes open source. The
GPL-compatible licenses make it possible to combine Python with
other software that is released under the GPL; the others don't.
Thanks to the many outside volunteers who have worked under Guido's
direction to make these releases possible.
B. TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR ACCESSING OR OTHERWISE USING PYTHON
===============================================================
PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2
--------------------------------------------
1. This LICENSE AGREEMENT is between the Python Software Foundation
("PSF"), and the Individual or Organization ("Licensee") accessing and
otherwise using this software ("Python") in source or binary form and
its associated documentation.
2. Subject to the terms and conditions of this License Agreement, PSF hereby
grants Licensee a nonexclusive, royalty-free, world-wide license to reproduce,
analyze, test, perform and/or display publicly, prepare derivative works,
distribute, and otherwise use Python alone or in any derivative version,
provided, however, that PSF's License Agreement and PSF's notice of copyright,
i.e., "Copyright (c) 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010,
2011 Python Software Foundation; All Rights Reserved" are retained in Python
alone or in any derivative version prepared by Licensee.
3. In the event Licensee prepares a derivative work that is based on
or incorporates Python or any part thereof, and wants to make
the derivative work available to others as provided herein, then
Licensee hereby agrees to include in any such work a brief summary of
the changes made to Python.
4. PSF is making Python available to Licensee on an "AS IS"
basis. PSF MAKES NO REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED. BY WAY OF EXAMPLE, BUT NOT LIMITATION, PSF MAKES NO AND
DISCLAIMS ANY REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS
FOR ANY PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR THAT THE USE OF PYTHON WILL NOT
INFRINGE ANY THIRD PARTY RIGHTS.
5. PSF SHALL NOT BE LIABLE TO LICENSEE OR ANY OTHER USERS OF PYTHON
FOR ANY INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR LOSS AS
A RESULT OF MODIFYING, DISTRIBUTING, OR OTHERWISE USING PYTHON,
OR ANY DERIVATIVE THEREOF, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY THEREOF.
6. This License Agreement will automatically terminate upon a material
breach of its terms and conditions.
7. Nothing in this License Agreement shall be deemed to create any
relationship of agency, partnership, or joint venture between PSF and
Licensee. This License Agreement does not grant permission to use PSF
trademarks or trade name in a trademark sense to endorse or promote
products or services of Licensee, or any third party.
8. By copying, installing or otherwise using Python, Licensee
agrees to be bound by the terms and conditions of this License
Agreement.