import os import sys from ._compat import _default_text_stderr from ._compat import _default_text_stdout from ._compat import _find_binary_writer from ._compat import auto_wrap_for_ansi from ._compat import binary_streams from ._compat import filename_to_ui from ._compat import get_filesystem_encoding from ._compat import get_strerror from ._compat import is_bytes from ._compat import open_stream from ._compat import should_strip_ansi from ._compat import strip_ansi from ._compat import text_streams from ._compat import WIN from .globals import resolve_color_default echo_native_types = (str, bytes, bytearray) def _posixify(name): return "-".join(name.split()).lower() def safecall(func): """Wraps a function so that it swallows exceptions.""" def wrapper(*args, **kwargs): try: return func(*args, **kwargs) except Exception: pass return wrapper def make_str(value): """Converts a value into a valid string.""" if isinstance(value, bytes): try: return value.decode(get_filesystem_encoding()) except UnicodeError: return value.decode("utf-8", "replace") return str(value) def make_default_short_help(help, max_length=45): """Return a condensed version of help string.""" words = help.split() total_length = 0 result = [] done = False for word in words: if word[-1:] == ".": done = True new_length = 1 + len(word) if result else len(word) if total_length + new_length > max_length: result.append("...") done = True else: if result: result.append(" ") result.append(word) if done: break total_length += new_length return "".join(result) class LazyFile: """A lazy file works like a regular file but it does not fully open the file but it does perform some basic checks early to see if the filename parameter does make sense. This is useful for safely opening files for writing. """ def __init__( self, filename, mode="r", encoding=None, errors="strict", atomic=False ): self.name = filename self.mode = mode self.encoding = encoding self.errors = errors self.atomic = atomic if filename == "-": self._f, self.should_close = open_stream(filename, mode, encoding, errors) else: if "r" in mode: # Open and close the file in case we're opening it for # reading so that we can catch at least some errors in # some cases early. open(filename, mode).close() self._f = None self.should_close = True def __getattr__(self, name): return getattr(self.open(), name) def __repr__(self): if self._f is not None: return repr(self._f) return f"" def open(self): """Opens the file if it's not yet open. This call might fail with a :exc:`FileError`. Not handling this error will produce an error that Click shows. """ if self._f is not None: return self._f try: rv, self.should_close = open_stream( self.name, self.mode, self.encoding, self.errors, atomic=self.atomic ) except OSError as e: # noqa: E402 from .exceptions import FileError raise FileError(self.name, hint=get_strerror(e)) self._f = rv return rv def close(self): """Closes the underlying file, no matter what.""" if self._f is not None: self._f.close() def close_intelligently(self): """This function only closes the file if it was opened by the lazy file wrapper. For instance this will never close stdin. """ if self.should_close: self.close() def __enter__(self): return self def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, tb): self.close_intelligently() def __iter__(self): self.open() return iter(self._f) class KeepOpenFile: def __init__(self, file): self._file = file def __getattr__(self, name): return getattr(self._file, name) def __enter__(self): return self def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, tb): pass def __repr__(self): return repr(self._file) def __iter__(self): return iter(self._file) def echo(message=None, file=None, nl=True, err=False, color=None): """Prints a message plus a newline to the given file or stdout. On first sight, this looks like the print function, but it has improved support for handling Unicode and binary data that does not fail no matter how badly configured the system is. Primarily it means that you can print binary data as well as Unicode data on both 2.x and 3.x to the given file in the most appropriate way possible. This is a very carefree function in that it will try its best to not fail. As of Click 6.0 this includes support for unicode output on the Windows console. In addition to that, if `colorama`_ is installed, the echo function will also support clever handling of ANSI codes. Essentially it will then do the following: - add transparent handling of ANSI color codes on Windows. - hide ANSI codes automatically if the destination file is not a terminal. .. _colorama: https://pypi.org/project/colorama/ .. versionchanged:: 6.0 As of Click 6.0 the echo function will properly support unicode output on the windows console. Not that click does not modify the interpreter in any way which means that `sys.stdout` or the print statement or function will still not provide unicode support. .. versionchanged:: 2.0 Starting with version 2.0 of Click, the echo function will work with colorama if it's installed. .. versionadded:: 3.0 The `err` parameter was added. .. versionchanged:: 4.0 Added the `color` flag. :param message: the message to print :param file: the file to write to (defaults to ``stdout``) :param err: if set to true the file defaults to ``stderr`` instead of ``stdout``. This is faster and easier than calling :func:`get_text_stderr` yourself. :param nl: if set to `True` (the default) a newline is printed afterwards. :param color: controls if the terminal supports ANSI colors or not. The default is autodetection. """ if file is None: if err: file = _default_text_stderr() else: file = _default_text_stdout() # Convert non bytes/text into the native string type. if message is not None and not isinstance(message, echo_native_types): message = str(message) if nl: message = message or "" if isinstance(message, str): message += "\n" else: message += b"\n" # If there is a message and the value looks like bytes, we manually # need to find the binary stream and write the message in there. # This is done separately so that most stream types will work as you # would expect. Eg: you can write to StringIO for other cases. if message and is_bytes(message): binary_file = _find_binary_writer(file) if binary_file is not None: file.flush() binary_file.write(message) binary_file.flush() return # ANSI-style support. If there is no message or we are dealing with # bytes nothing is happening. If we are connected to a file we want # to strip colors. If we are on windows we either wrap the stream # to strip the color or we use the colorama support to translate the # ansi codes to API calls. if message and not is_bytes(message): color = resolve_color_default(color) if should_strip_ansi(file, color): message = strip_ansi(message) elif WIN: if auto_wrap_for_ansi is not None: file = auto_wrap_for_ansi(file) elif not color: message = strip_ansi(message) if message: file.write(message) file.flush() def get_binary_stream(name): """Returns a system stream for byte processing. :param name: the name of the stream to open. Valid names are ``'stdin'``, ``'stdout'`` and ``'stderr'`` """ opener = binary_streams.get(name) if opener is None: raise TypeError(f"Unknown standard stream '{name}'") return opener() def get_text_stream(name, encoding=None, errors="strict"): """Returns a system stream for text processing. This usually returns a wrapped stream around a binary stream returned from :func:`get_binary_stream` but it also can take shortcuts for already correctly configured streams. :param name: the name of the stream to open. Valid names are ``'stdin'``, ``'stdout'`` and ``'stderr'`` :param encoding: overrides the detected default encoding. :param errors: overrides the default error mode. """ opener = text_streams.get(name) if opener is None: raise TypeError(f"Unknown standard stream '{name}'") return opener(encoding, errors) def open_file( filename, mode="r", encoding=None, errors="strict", lazy=False, atomic=False ): """This is similar to how the :class:`File` works but for manual usage. Files are opened non lazy by default. This can open regular files as well as stdin/stdout if ``'-'`` is passed. If stdin/stdout is returned the stream is wrapped so that the context manager will not close the stream accidentally. This makes it possible to always use the function like this without having to worry to accidentally close a standard stream:: with open_file(filename) as f: ... .. versionadded:: 3.0 :param filename: the name of the file to open (or ``'-'`` for stdin/stdout). :param mode: the mode in which to open the file. :param encoding: the encoding to use. :param errors: the error handling for this file. :param lazy: can be flipped to true to open the file lazily. :param atomic: in atomic mode writes go into a temporary file and it's moved on close. """ if lazy: return LazyFile(filename, mode, encoding, errors, atomic=atomic) f, should_close = open_stream(filename, mode, encoding, errors, atomic=atomic) if not should_close: f = KeepOpenFile(f) return f def get_os_args(): """Returns the argument part of ``sys.argv``, removing the first value which is the name of the script. .. deprecated:: 8.0 Will be removed in 8.1. Access ``sys.argv[1:]`` directly instead. """ import warnings warnings.warn( "'get_os_args' is deprecated and will be removed in 8.1. Access" " 'sys.argv[1:]' directly instead.", DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2, ) return sys.argv[1:] def format_filename(filename, shorten=False): """Formats a filename for user display. The main purpose of this function is to ensure that the filename can be displayed at all. This will decode the filename to unicode if necessary in a way that it will not fail. Optionally, it can shorten the filename to not include the full path to the filename. :param filename: formats a filename for UI display. This will also convert the filename into unicode without failing. :param shorten: this optionally shortens the filename to strip of the path that leads up to it. """ if shorten: filename = os.path.basename(filename) return filename_to_ui(filename) def get_app_dir(app_name, roaming=True, force_posix=False): r"""Returns the config folder for the application. The default behavior is to return whatever is most appropriate for the operating system. To give you an idea, for an app called ``"Foo Bar"``, something like the following folders could be returned: Mac OS X: ``~/Library/Application Support/Foo Bar`` Mac OS X (POSIX): ``~/.foo-bar`` Unix: ``~/.config/foo-bar`` Unix (POSIX): ``~/.foo-bar`` Win XP (roaming): ``C:\Documents and Settings\\Local Settings\Application Data\Foo Bar`` Win XP (not roaming): ``C:\Documents and Settings\\Application Data\Foo Bar`` Win 7 (roaming): ``C:\Users\\AppData\Roaming\Foo Bar`` Win 7 (not roaming): ``C:\Users\\AppData\Local\Foo Bar`` .. versionadded:: 2.0 :param app_name: the application name. This should be properly capitalized and can contain whitespace. :param roaming: controls if the folder should be roaming or not on Windows. Has no affect otherwise. :param force_posix: if this is set to `True` then on any POSIX system the folder will be stored in the home folder with a leading dot instead of the XDG config home or darwin's application support folder. """ if WIN: key = "APPDATA" if roaming else "LOCALAPPDATA" folder = os.environ.get(key) if folder is None: folder = os.path.expanduser("~") return os.path.join(folder, app_name) if force_posix: return os.path.join(os.path.expanduser(f"~/.{_posixify(app_name)}")) if sys.platform == "darwin": return os.path.join( os.path.expanduser("~/Library/Application Support"), app_name ) return os.path.join( os.environ.get("XDG_CONFIG_HOME", os.path.expanduser("~/.config")), _posixify(app_name), ) class PacifyFlushWrapper: """This wrapper is used to catch and suppress BrokenPipeErrors resulting from ``.flush()`` being called on broken pipe during the shutdown/final-GC of the Python interpreter. Notably ``.flush()`` is always called on ``sys.stdout`` and ``sys.stderr``. So as to have minimal impact on any other cleanup code, and the case where the underlying file is not a broken pipe, all calls and attributes are proxied. """ def __init__(self, wrapped): self.wrapped = wrapped def flush(self): try: self.wrapped.flush() except OSError as e: import errno if e.errno != errno.EPIPE: raise def __getattr__(self, attr): return getattr(self.wrapped, attr)