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Diffstat (limited to 'venv/lib/python3.11/site-packages/click/parser.py')
-rw-r--r-- | venv/lib/python3.11/site-packages/click/parser.py | 529 |
1 files changed, 529 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/venv/lib/python3.11/site-packages/click/parser.py b/venv/lib/python3.11/site-packages/click/parser.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5fa7adf --- /dev/null +++ b/venv/lib/python3.11/site-packages/click/parser.py @@ -0,0 +1,529 @@ +""" +This module started out as largely a copy paste from the stdlib's +optparse module with the features removed that we do not need from +optparse because we implement them in Click on a higher level (for +instance type handling, help formatting and a lot more). + +The plan is to remove more and more from here over time. + +The reason this is a different module and not optparse from the stdlib +is that there are differences in 2.x and 3.x about the error messages +generated and optparse in the stdlib uses gettext for no good reason +and might cause us issues. + +Click uses parts of optparse written by Gregory P. Ward and maintained +by the Python Software Foundation. This is limited to code in parser.py. + +Copyright 2001-2006 Gregory P. Ward. All rights reserved. +Copyright 2002-2006 Python Software Foundation. All rights reserved. +""" +# This code uses parts of optparse written by Gregory P. Ward and +# maintained by the Python Software Foundation. +# Copyright 2001-2006 Gregory P. Ward +# Copyright 2002-2006 Python Software Foundation +import typing as t +from collections import deque +from gettext import gettext as _ +from gettext import ngettext + +from .exceptions import BadArgumentUsage +from .exceptions import BadOptionUsage +from .exceptions import NoSuchOption +from .exceptions import UsageError + +if t.TYPE_CHECKING: + import typing_extensions as te + from .core import Argument as CoreArgument + from .core import Context + from .core import Option as CoreOption + from .core import Parameter as CoreParameter + +V = t.TypeVar("V") + +# Sentinel value that indicates an option was passed as a flag without a +# value but is not a flag option. Option.consume_value uses this to +# prompt or use the flag_value. +_flag_needs_value = object() + + +def _unpack_args( + args: t.Sequence[str], nargs_spec: t.Sequence[int] +) -> t.Tuple[t.Sequence[t.Union[str, t.Sequence[t.Optional[str]], None]], t.List[str]]: + """Given an iterable of arguments and an iterable of nargs specifications, + it returns a tuple with all the unpacked arguments at the first index + and all remaining arguments as the second. + + The nargs specification is the number of arguments that should be consumed + or `-1` to indicate that this position should eat up all the remainders. + + Missing items are filled with `None`. + """ + args = deque(args) + nargs_spec = deque(nargs_spec) + rv: t.List[t.Union[str, t.Tuple[t.Optional[str], ...], None]] = [] + spos: t.Optional[int] = None + + def _fetch(c: "te.Deque[V]") -> t.Optional[V]: + try: + if spos is None: + return c.popleft() + else: + return c.pop() + except IndexError: + return None + + while nargs_spec: + nargs = _fetch(nargs_spec) + + if nargs is None: + continue + + if nargs == 1: + rv.append(_fetch(args)) + elif nargs > 1: + x = [_fetch(args) for _ in range(nargs)] + + # If we're reversed, we're pulling in the arguments in reverse, + # so we need to turn them around. + if spos is not None: + x.reverse() + + rv.append(tuple(x)) + elif nargs < 0: + if spos is not None: + raise TypeError("Cannot have two nargs < 0") + + spos = len(rv) + rv.append(None) + + # spos is the position of the wildcard (star). If it's not `None`, + # we fill it with the remainder. + if spos is not None: + rv[spos] = tuple(args) + args = [] + rv[spos + 1 :] = reversed(rv[spos + 1 :]) + + return tuple(rv), list(args) + + +def split_opt(opt: str) -> t.Tuple[str, str]: + first = opt[:1] + if first.isalnum(): + return "", opt + if opt[1:2] == first: + return opt[:2], opt[2:] + return first, opt[1:] + + +def normalize_opt(opt: str, ctx: t.Optional["Context"]) -> str: + if ctx is None or ctx.token_normalize_func is None: + return opt + prefix, opt = split_opt(opt) + return f"{prefix}{ctx.token_normalize_func(opt)}" + + +def split_arg_string(string: str) -> t.List[str]: + """Split an argument string as with :func:`shlex.split`, but don't + fail if the string is incomplete. Ignores a missing closing quote or + incomplete escape sequence and uses the partial token as-is. + + .. code-block:: python + + split_arg_string("example 'my file") + ["example", "my file"] + + split_arg_string("example my\\") + ["example", "my"] + + :param string: String to split. + """ + import shlex + + lex = shlex.shlex(string, posix=True) + lex.whitespace_split = True + lex.commenters = "" + out = [] + + try: + for token in lex: + out.append(token) + except ValueError: + # Raised when end-of-string is reached in an invalid state. Use + # the partial token as-is. The quote or escape character is in + # lex.state, not lex.token. + out.append(lex.token) + + return out + + +class Option: + def __init__( + self, + obj: "CoreOption", + opts: t.Sequence[str], + dest: t.Optional[str], + action: t.Optional[str] = None, + nargs: int = 1, + const: t.Optional[t.Any] = None, + ): + self._short_opts = [] + self._long_opts = [] + self.prefixes: t.Set[str] = set() + + for opt in opts: + prefix, value = split_opt(opt) + if not prefix: + raise ValueError(f"Invalid start character for option ({opt})") + self.prefixes.add(prefix[0]) + if len(prefix) == 1 and len(value) == 1: + self._short_opts.append(opt) + else: + self._long_opts.append(opt) + self.prefixes.add(prefix) + + if action is None: + action = "store" + + self.dest = dest + self.action = action + self.nargs = nargs + self.const = const + self.obj = obj + + @property + def takes_value(self) -> bool: + return self.action in ("store", "append") + + def process(self, value: t.Any, state: "ParsingState") -> None: + if self.action == "store": + state.opts[self.dest] = value # type: ignore + elif self.action == "store_const": + state.opts[self.dest] = self.const # type: ignore + elif self.action == "append": + state.opts.setdefault(self.dest, []).append(value) # type: ignore + elif self.action == "append_const": + state.opts.setdefault(self.dest, []).append(self.const) # type: ignore + elif self.action == "count": + state.opts[self.dest] = state.opts.get(self.dest, 0) + 1 # type: ignore + else: + raise ValueError(f"unknown action '{self.action}'") + state.order.append(self.obj) + + +class Argument: + def __init__(self, obj: "CoreArgument", dest: t.Optional[str], nargs: int = 1): + self.dest = dest + self.nargs = nargs + self.obj = obj + + def process( + self, + value: t.Union[t.Optional[str], t.Sequence[t.Optional[str]]], + state: "ParsingState", + ) -> None: + if self.nargs > 1: + assert value is not None + holes = sum(1 for x in value if x is None) + if holes == len(value): + value = None + elif holes != 0: + raise BadArgumentUsage( + _("Argument {name!r} takes {nargs} values.").format( + name=self.dest, nargs=self.nargs + ) + ) + + if self.nargs == -1 and self.obj.envvar is not None and value == (): + # Replace empty tuple with None so that a value from the + # environment may be tried. + value = None + + state.opts[self.dest] = value # type: ignore + state.order.append(self.obj) + + +class ParsingState: + def __init__(self, rargs: t.List[str]) -> None: + self.opts: t.Dict[str, t.Any] = {} + self.largs: t.List[str] = [] + self.rargs = rargs + self.order: t.List["CoreParameter"] = [] + + +class OptionParser: + """The option parser is an internal class that is ultimately used to + parse options and arguments. It's modelled after optparse and brings + a similar but vastly simplified API. It should generally not be used + directly as the high level Click classes wrap it for you. + + It's not nearly as extensible as optparse or argparse as it does not + implement features that are implemented on a higher level (such as + types or defaults). + + :param ctx: optionally the :class:`~click.Context` where this parser + should go with. + """ + + def __init__(self, ctx: t.Optional["Context"] = None) -> None: + #: The :class:`~click.Context` for this parser. This might be + #: `None` for some advanced use cases. + self.ctx = ctx + #: This controls how the parser deals with interspersed arguments. + #: If this is set to `False`, the parser will stop on the first + #: non-option. Click uses this to implement nested subcommands + #: safely. + self.allow_interspersed_args: bool = True + #: This tells the parser how to deal with unknown options. By + #: default it will error out (which is sensible), but there is a + #: second mode where it will ignore it and continue processing + #: after shifting all the unknown options into the resulting args. + self.ignore_unknown_options: bool = False + + if ctx is not None: + self.allow_interspersed_args = ctx.allow_interspersed_args + self.ignore_unknown_options = ctx.ignore_unknown_options + + self._short_opt: t.Dict[str, Option] = {} + self._long_opt: t.Dict[str, Option] = {} + self._opt_prefixes = {"-", "--"} + self._args: t.List[Argument] = [] + + def add_option( + self, + obj: "CoreOption", + opts: t.Sequence[str], + dest: t.Optional[str], + action: t.Optional[str] = None, + nargs: int = 1, + const: t.Optional[t.Any] = None, + ) -> None: + """Adds a new option named `dest` to the parser. The destination + is not inferred (unlike with optparse) and needs to be explicitly + provided. Action can be any of ``store``, ``store_const``, + ``append``, ``append_const`` or ``count``. + + The `obj` can be used to identify the option in the order list + that is returned from the parser. + """ + opts = [normalize_opt(opt, self.ctx) for opt in opts] + option = Option(obj, opts, dest, action=action, nargs=nargs, const=const) + self._opt_prefixes.update(option.prefixes) + for opt in option._short_opts: + self._short_opt[opt] = option + for opt in option._long_opts: + self._long_opt[opt] = option + + def add_argument( + self, obj: "CoreArgument", dest: t.Optional[str], nargs: int = 1 + ) -> None: + """Adds a positional argument named `dest` to the parser. + + The `obj` can be used to identify the option in the order list + that is returned from the parser. + """ + self._args.append(Argument(obj, dest=dest, nargs=nargs)) + + def parse_args( + self, args: t.List[str] + ) -> t.Tuple[t.Dict[str, t.Any], t.List[str], t.List["CoreParameter"]]: + """Parses positional arguments and returns ``(values, args, order)`` + for the parsed options and arguments as well as the leftover + arguments if there are any. The order is a list of objects as they + appear on the command line. If arguments appear multiple times they + will be memorized multiple times as well. + """ + state = ParsingState(args) + try: + self._process_args_for_options(state) + self._process_args_for_args(state) + except UsageError: + if self.ctx is None or not self.ctx.resilient_parsing: + raise + return state.opts, state.largs, state.order + + def _process_args_for_args(self, state: ParsingState) -> None: + pargs, args = _unpack_args( + state.largs + state.rargs, [x.nargs for x in self._args] + ) + + for idx, arg in enumerate(self._args): + arg.process(pargs[idx], state) + + state.largs = args + state.rargs = [] + + def _process_args_for_options(self, state: ParsingState) -> None: + while state.rargs: + arg = state.rargs.pop(0) + arglen = len(arg) + # Double dashes always handled explicitly regardless of what + # prefixes are valid. + if arg == "--": + return + elif arg[:1] in self._opt_prefixes and arglen > 1: + self._process_opts(arg, state) + elif self.allow_interspersed_args: + state.largs.append(arg) + else: + state.rargs.insert(0, arg) + return + + # Say this is the original argument list: + # [arg0, arg1, ..., arg(i-1), arg(i), arg(i+1), ..., arg(N-1)] + # ^ + # (we are about to process arg(i)). + # + # Then rargs is [arg(i), ..., arg(N-1)] and largs is a *subset* of + # [arg0, ..., arg(i-1)] (any options and their arguments will have + # been removed from largs). + # + # The while loop will usually consume 1 or more arguments per pass. + # If it consumes 1 (eg. arg is an option that takes no arguments), + # then after _process_arg() is done the situation is: + # + # largs = subset of [arg0, ..., arg(i)] + # rargs = [arg(i+1), ..., arg(N-1)] + # + # If allow_interspersed_args is false, largs will always be + # *empty* -- still a subset of [arg0, ..., arg(i-1)], but + # not a very interesting subset! + + def _match_long_opt( + self, opt: str, explicit_value: t.Optional[str], state: ParsingState + ) -> None: + if opt not in self._long_opt: + from difflib import get_close_matches + + possibilities = get_close_matches(opt, self._long_opt) + raise NoSuchOption(opt, possibilities=possibilities, ctx=self.ctx) + + option = self._long_opt[opt] + if option.takes_value: + # At this point it's safe to modify rargs by injecting the + # explicit value, because no exception is raised in this + # branch. This means that the inserted value will be fully + # consumed. + if explicit_value is not None: + state.rargs.insert(0, explicit_value) + + value = self._get_value_from_state(opt, option, state) + + elif explicit_value is not None: + raise BadOptionUsage( + opt, _("Option {name!r} does not take a value.").format(name=opt) + ) + + else: + value = None + + option.process(value, state) + + def _match_short_opt(self, arg: str, state: ParsingState) -> None: + stop = False + i = 1 + prefix = arg[0] + unknown_options = [] + + for ch in arg[1:]: + opt = normalize_opt(f"{prefix}{ch}", self.ctx) + option = self._short_opt.get(opt) + i += 1 + + if not option: + if self.ignore_unknown_options: + unknown_options.append(ch) + continue + raise NoSuchOption(opt, ctx=self.ctx) + if option.takes_value: + # Any characters left in arg? Pretend they're the + # next arg, and stop consuming characters of arg. + if i < len(arg): + state.rargs.insert(0, arg[i:]) + stop = True + + value = self._get_value_from_state(opt, option, state) + + else: + value = None + + option.process(value, state) + + if stop: + break + + # If we got any unknown options we recombine the string of the + # remaining options and re-attach the prefix, then report that + # to the state as new larg. This way there is basic combinatorics + # that can be achieved while still ignoring unknown arguments. + if self.ignore_unknown_options and unknown_options: + state.largs.append(f"{prefix}{''.join(unknown_options)}") + + def _get_value_from_state( + self, option_name: str, option: Option, state: ParsingState + ) -> t.Any: + nargs = option.nargs + + if len(state.rargs) < nargs: + if option.obj._flag_needs_value: + # Option allows omitting the value. + value = _flag_needs_value + else: + raise BadOptionUsage( + option_name, + ngettext( + "Option {name!r} requires an argument.", + "Option {name!r} requires {nargs} arguments.", + nargs, + ).format(name=option_name, nargs=nargs), + ) + elif nargs == 1: + next_rarg = state.rargs[0] + + if ( + option.obj._flag_needs_value + and isinstance(next_rarg, str) + and next_rarg[:1] in self._opt_prefixes + and len(next_rarg) > 1 + ): + # The next arg looks like the start of an option, don't + # use it as the value if omitting the value is allowed. + value = _flag_needs_value + else: + value = state.rargs.pop(0) + else: + value = tuple(state.rargs[:nargs]) + del state.rargs[:nargs] + + return value + + def _process_opts(self, arg: str, state: ParsingState) -> None: + explicit_value = None + # Long option handling happens in two parts. The first part is + # supporting explicitly attached values. In any case, we will try + # to long match the option first. + if "=" in arg: + long_opt, explicit_value = arg.split("=", 1) + else: + long_opt = arg + norm_long_opt = normalize_opt(long_opt, self.ctx) + + # At this point we will match the (assumed) long option through + # the long option matching code. Note that this allows options + # like "-foo" to be matched as long options. + try: + self._match_long_opt(norm_long_opt, explicit_value, state) + except NoSuchOption: + # At this point the long option matching failed, and we need + # to try with short options. However there is a special rule + # which says, that if we have a two character options prefix + # (applies to "--foo" for instance), we do not dispatch to the + # short option code and will instead raise the no option + # error. + if arg[:2] not in self._opt_prefixes: + self._match_short_opt(arg, state) + return + + if not self.ignore_unknown_options: + raise + + state.largs.append(arg) |