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# Copyright 2012-2019 The Meson development team
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
"""A library of random helper functionality."""
from pathlib import Path
import sys
import stat
import time
import platform, subprocess, operator, os, shlex, shutil, re
import collections
from enum import Enum
from functools import lru_cache, update_wrapper
from itertools import tee, filterfalse
import typing as T
import uuid
from mesonbuild import mlog
_T = T.TypeVar('_T')
_U = T.TypeVar('_U')
have_fcntl = False
have_msvcrt = False
# {subproject: project_meson_version}
project_meson_versions = {}
try:
import fcntl
have_fcntl = True
except Exception:
pass
try:
import msvcrt
have_msvcrt = True
except Exception:
pass
from glob import glob
7 years ago
if os.path.basename(sys.executable) == 'meson.exe':
# In Windows and using the MSI installed executable.
python_command = [sys.executable, 'runpython']
else:
python_command = [sys.executable]
meson_command = None
GIT = shutil.which('git')
def git(cmd: T.List[str], workingdir: str, **kwargs) -> subprocess.CompletedProcess:
pc = subprocess.run([GIT, '-C', workingdir] + cmd,
# Redirect stdin to DEVNULL otherwise git messes up the
# console and ANSI colors stop working on Windows.
stdin=subprocess.DEVNULL, **kwargs)
# Sometimes git calls git recursively, such as `git submodule update
# --recursive` which will be without the above workaround, so set the
# console mode again just in case.
mlog.setup_console()
return pc
def set_meson_command(mainfile):
global python_command
global meson_command
# On UNIX-like systems `meson` is a Python script
# On Windows `meson` and `meson.exe` are wrapper exes
if not mainfile.endswith('.py'):
meson_command = [mainfile]
elif os.path.isabs(mainfile) and mainfile.endswith('mesonmain.py'):
# Can't actually run meson with an absolute path to mesonmain.py, it must be run as -m mesonbuild.mesonmain
meson_command = python_command + ['-m', 'mesonbuild.mesonmain']
else:
# Either run uninstalled, or full path to meson-script.py
meson_command = python_command + [mainfile]
# We print this value for unit tests.
if 'MESON_COMMAND_TESTS' in os.environ:
mlog.log('meson_command is {!r}'.format(meson_command))
def is_ascii_string(astring) -> bool:
try:
if isinstance(astring, str):
astring.encode('ascii')
elif isinstance(astring, bytes):
astring.decode('ascii')
except UnicodeDecodeError:
return False
return True
def check_direntry_issues(direntry_array):
import locale
# Warn if the locale is not UTF-8. This can cause various unfixable issues
# such as os.stat not being able to decode filenames with unicode in them.
# There is no way to reset both the preferred encoding and the filesystem
# encoding, so we can just warn about it.
e = locale.getpreferredencoding()
if e.upper() != 'UTF-8' and not is_windows():
if not isinstance(direntry_array, list):
direntry_array = [direntry_array]
for de in direntry_array:
if is_ascii_string(de):
continue
mlog.warning('''You are using {!r} which is not a Unicode-compatible '
locale but you are trying to access a file system entry called {!r} which is
not pure ASCII. This may cause problems.
'''.format(e, de), file=sys.stderr)
# Put this in objects that should not get dumped to pickle files
# by accident.
import threading
an_unpicklable_object = threading.Lock()
class MesonException(Exception):
'''Exceptions thrown by Meson'''
class EnvironmentException(MesonException):
'''Exceptions thrown while processing and creating the build environment'''
class FileMode:
# The first triad is for owner permissions, the second for group permissions,
# and the third for others (everyone else).
# For the 1st character:
# 'r' means can read
# '-' means not allowed
# For the 2nd character:
# 'w' means can write
# '-' means not allowed
# For the 3rd character:
# 'x' means can execute
# 's' means can execute and setuid/setgid is set (owner/group triads only)
# 'S' means cannot execute and setuid/setgid is set (owner/group triads only)
# 't' means can execute and sticky bit is set ("others" triads only)
# 'T' means cannot execute and sticky bit is set ("others" triads only)
# '-' means none of these are allowed
#
# The meanings of 'rwx' perms is not obvious for directories; see:
# https://www.hackinglinuxexposed.com/articles/20030424.html
#
# For information on this notation such as setuid/setgid/sticky bits, see:
# https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File_system_permissions#Symbolic_notation
symbolic_perms_regex = re.compile('[r-][w-][xsS-]' # Owner perms
'[r-][w-][xsS-]' # Group perms
'[r-][w-][xtT-]') # Others perms
def __init__(self, perms=None, owner=None, group=None):
self.perms_s = perms
self.perms = self.perms_s_to_bits(perms)
self.owner = owner
self.group = group
def __repr__(self):
ret = '<FileMode: {!r} owner={} group={}'
return ret.format(self.perms_s, self.owner, self.group)
@classmethod
def perms_s_to_bits(cls, perms_s):
'''
Does the opposite of stat.filemode(), converts strings of the form
'rwxr-xr-x' to st_mode enums which can be passed to os.chmod()
'''
if perms_s is None:
# No perms specified, we will not touch the permissions
return -1
eg = 'rwxr-xr-x'
if not isinstance(perms_s, str):
msg = 'Install perms must be a string. For example, {!r}'
raise MesonException(msg.format(eg))
if len(perms_s) != 9 or not cls.symbolic_perms_regex.match(perms_s):
msg = 'File perms {!r} must be exactly 9 chars. For example, {!r}'
raise MesonException(msg.format(perms_s, eg))
perms = 0
# Owner perms
if perms_s[0] == 'r':
perms |= stat.S_IRUSR
if perms_s[1] == 'w':
perms |= stat.S_IWUSR
if perms_s[2] == 'x':
perms |= stat.S_IXUSR
elif perms_s[2] == 'S':
perms |= stat.S_ISUID
elif perms_s[2] == 's':
perms |= stat.S_IXUSR
perms |= stat.S_ISUID
# Group perms
if perms_s[3] == 'r':
perms |= stat.S_IRGRP
if perms_s[4] == 'w':
perms |= stat.S_IWGRP
if perms_s[5] == 'x':
perms |= stat.S_IXGRP
elif perms_s[5] == 'S':
perms |= stat.S_ISGID
elif perms_s[5] == 's':
perms |= stat.S_IXGRP
perms |= stat.S_ISGID
# Others perms
if perms_s[6] == 'r':
perms |= stat.S_IROTH
if perms_s[7] == 'w':
perms |= stat.S_IWOTH
if perms_s[8] == 'x':
perms |= stat.S_IXOTH
elif perms_s[8] == 'T':
perms |= stat.S_ISVTX
elif perms_s[8] == 't':
perms |= stat.S_IXOTH
perms |= stat.S_ISVTX
return perms
class File:
def __init__(self, is_built: bool, subdir: str, fname: str):
self.is_built = is_built
self.subdir = subdir
self.fname = fname
assert(isinstance(self.subdir, str))
assert(isinstance(self.fname, str))
def __str__(self) -> str:
return self.relative_name()
def __repr__(self) -> str:
ret = '<File: {0}'
if not self.is_built:
ret += ' (not built)'
ret += '>'
return ret.format(self.relative_name())
@staticmethod
@lru_cache(maxsize=None)
def from_source_file(source_root: str, subdir: str, fname: str):
if not os.path.isfile(os.path.join(source_root, subdir, fname)):
raise MesonException('File %s does not exist.' % fname)
return File(False, subdir, fname)
@staticmethod
def from_built_file(subdir: str, fname: str):
return File(True, subdir, fname)
@staticmethod
def from_absolute_file(fname: str):
return File(False, '', fname)
@lru_cache(maxsize=None)
def rel_to_builddir(self, build_to_src: str) -> str:
if self.is_built:
return self.relative_name()
else:
return os.path.join(build_to_src, self.subdir, self.fname)
@lru_cache(maxsize=None)
def absolute_path(self, srcdir: str, builddir: str) -> str:
absdir = srcdir
if self.is_built:
absdir = builddir
return os.path.join(absdir, self.relative_name())
def endswith(self, ending: str) -> bool:
return self.fname.endswith(ending)
def split(self, s: str) -> T.List[str]:
return self.fname.split(s)
def __eq__(self, other) -> bool:
return (self.fname, self.subdir, self.is_built) == (other.fname, other.subdir, other.is_built)
def __hash__(self) -> int:
return hash((self.fname, self.subdir, self.is_built))
@lru_cache(maxsize=None)
def relative_name(self) -> str:
return os.path.join(self.subdir, self.fname)
def get_compiler_for_source(compilers, src):
for comp in compilers:
if comp.can_compile(src):
return comp
raise MesonException('No specified compiler can handle file {!s}'.format(src))
def classify_unity_sources(compilers, sources):
compsrclist = {}
for src in sources:
comp = get_compiler_for_source(compilers, src)
if comp not in compsrclist:
compsrclist[comp] = [src]
else:
compsrclist[comp].append(src)
return compsrclist
class OrderedEnum(Enum):
"""
An Enum which additionally offers homogeneous ordered comparison.
"""
def __ge__(self, other):
if self.__class__ is other.__class__:
return self.value >= other.value
return NotImplemented
def __gt__(self, other):
if self.__class__ is other.__class__:
return self.value > other.value
return NotImplemented
def __le__(self, other):
if self.__class__ is other.__class__:
return self.value <= other.value
return NotImplemented
def __lt__(self, other):
if self.__class__ is other.__class__:
return self.value < other.value
return NotImplemented
class MachineChoice(OrderedEnum):
"""Enum class representing one of the two abstract machine names used in
most places: the build, and host, machines.
"""
BUILD = 0
HOST = 1
def get_lower_case_name(self):
return PerMachine('build', 'host')[self]
def get_prefix(self):
return PerMachine('build.', '')[self]
class PerMachine(T.Generic[_T]):
def __init__(self, build: _T, host: _T):
self.build = build
self.host = host
def __getitem__(self, machine: MachineChoice) -> _T:
return {
MachineChoice.BUILD: self.build,
MachineChoice.HOST: self.host,
}[machine]
def __setitem__(self, machine: MachineChoice, val: _T) -> None:
setattr(self, machine.get_lower_case_name(), val)
def miss_defaulting(self) -> "PerMachineDefaultable[T.Optional[_T]]":
"""Unset definition duplicated from their previous to None
This is the inverse of ''default_missing''. By removing defaulted
machines, we can elaborate the original and then redefault them and thus
avoid repeating the elaboration explicitly.
"""
unfreeze = PerMachineDefaultable() # type: PerMachineDefaultable[T.Optional[_T]]
unfreeze.build = self.build
unfreeze.host = self.host
if unfreeze.host == unfreeze.build:
unfreeze.host = None
return unfreeze
class PerThreeMachine(PerMachine[_T]):
"""Like `PerMachine` but includes `target` too.
It turns out just one thing do we need track the target machine. There's no
need to computer the `target` field so we don't bother overriding the
`__getitem__`/`__setitem__` methods.
"""
def __init__(self, build: _T, host: _T, target: _T):
super().__init__(build, host)
self.target = target
def miss_defaulting(self) -> "PerThreeMachineDefaultable[T.Optional[_T]]":
"""Unset definition duplicated from their previous to None
This is the inverse of ''default_missing''. By removing defaulted
machines, we can elaborate the original and then redefault them and thus
avoid repeating the elaboration explicitly.
"""
unfreeze = PerThreeMachineDefaultable() # type: PerThreeMachineDefaultable[T.Optional[_T]]
unfreeze.build = self.build
unfreeze.host = self.host
unfreeze.target = self.target
if unfreeze.target == unfreeze.host:
unfreeze.target = None
if unfreeze.host == unfreeze.build:
unfreeze.host = None
return unfreeze
def matches_build_machine(self, machine: MachineChoice) -> bool:
return self.build == self[machine]
class PerMachineDefaultable(PerMachine[T.Optional[_T]]):
"""Extends `PerMachine` with the ability to default from `None`s.
"""
def __init__(self):
super().__init__(None, None)
def default_missing(self) -> "PerMachine[T.Optional[_T]]":
"""Default host to build
This allows just specifying nothing in the native case, and just host in the
cross non-compiler case.
"""
freeze = PerMachine(self.build, self.host)
if freeze.host is None:
freeze.host = freeze.build
return freeze
class PerThreeMachineDefaultable(PerMachineDefaultable, PerThreeMachine[T.Optional[_T]]):
"""Extends `PerThreeMachine` with the ability to default from `None`s.
"""
def __init__(self):
PerThreeMachine.__init__(self, None, None, None)
def default_missing(self) -> "PerThreeMachine[T.Optional[_T]]":
"""Default host to build and target to host.
This allows just specifying nothing in the native case, just host in the
cross non-compiler case, and just target in the native-built
cross-compiler case.
"""
freeze = PerThreeMachine(self.build, self.host, self.target)
if freeze.host is None:
freeze.host = freeze.build
if freeze.target is None:
freeze.target = freeze.host
return freeze
def is_sunos() -> bool:
return platform.system().lower() == 'sunos'
def is_osx() -> bool:
return platform.system().lower() == 'darwin'
def is_linux() -> bool:
return platform.system().lower() == 'linux'
def is_android() -> bool:
return platform.system().lower() == 'android'
def is_haiku() -> bool:
return platform.system().lower() == 'haiku'
def is_openbsd() -> bool:
return platform.system().lower() == 'openbsd'
def is_windows() -> bool:
platname = platform.system().lower()
return platname == 'windows' or 'mingw' in platname
def is_cygwin() -> bool:
return platform.system().lower().startswith('cygwin')
def is_debianlike() -> bool:
return os.path.isfile('/etc/debian_version')
def is_dragonflybsd() -> bool:
return platform.system().lower() == 'dragonfly'
def is_netbsd() -> bool:
return platform.system().lower() == 'netbsd'
def is_freebsd() -> bool:
return platform.system().lower() == 'freebsd'
def exe_exists(arglist: T.List[str]) -> bool:
try:
if subprocess.run(arglist, timeout=10).returncode == 0:
return True
except (FileNotFoundError, subprocess.TimeoutExpired):
pass
return False
@lru_cache(maxsize=None)
def darwin_get_object_archs(objpath):
'''
For a specific object (executable, static library, dylib, etc), run `lipo`
to fetch the list of archs supported by it. Supports both thin objects and
'fat' objects.
'''
_, stdo, stderr = Popen_safe(['lipo', '-info', objpath])
if not stdo:
mlog.debug('lipo {}: {}'.format(objpath, stderr))
return None
stdo = stdo.rsplit(': ', 1)[1]
# Convert from lipo-style archs to meson-style CPUs
stdo = stdo.replace('i386', 'x86')
stdo = stdo.replace('arm64', 'aarch64')
# Add generic name for armv7 and armv7s
if 'armv7' in stdo:
stdo += ' arm'
return stdo.split()
def detect_vcs(source_dir):
vcs_systems = [
dict(name = 'git', cmd = 'git', repo_dir = '.git', get_rev = 'git describe --dirty=+', rev_regex = '(.*)', dep = '.git/logs/HEAD'),
dict(name = 'mercurial', cmd = 'hg', repo_dir = '.hg', get_rev = 'hg id -i', rev_regex = '(.*)', dep = '.hg/dirstate'),
dict(name = 'subversion', cmd = 'svn', repo_dir = '.svn', get_rev = 'svn info', rev_regex = 'Revision: (.*)', dep = '.svn/wc.db'),
dict(name = 'bazaar', cmd = 'bzr', repo_dir = '.bzr', get_rev = 'bzr revno', rev_regex = '(.*)', dep = '.bzr'),
]
# FIXME: this is much cleaner with pathlib.Path
segs = source_dir.replace('\\', '/').split('/')
for i in range(len(segs), -1, -1):
curdir = '/'.join(segs[:i])
for vcs in vcs_systems:
if os.path.isdir(os.path.join(curdir, vcs['repo_dir'])) and shutil.which(vcs['cmd']):
vcs['wc_dir'] = curdir
return vcs
return None
# a helper class which implements the same version ordering as RPM
class Version:
def __init__(self, s):
self._s = s
# split into numeric, alphabetic and non-alphanumeric sequences
sequences = re.finditer(r'(\d+|[a-zA-Z]+|[^a-zA-Z\d]+)', s)
# non-alphanumeric separators are discarded
sequences = [m for m in sequences if not re.match(r'[^a-zA-Z\d]+', m.group(1))]
# numeric sequences are converted from strings to ints
sequences = [int(m.group(1)) if m.group(1).isdigit() else m.group(1) for m in sequences]
self._v = sequences
def __str__(self):
return '%s (V=%s)' % (self._s, str(self._v))
def __repr__(self):
return '<Version: {}>'.format(self._s)
def __lt__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Version):
return self.__cmp(other, operator.lt)
return NotImplemented
def __gt__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Version):
return self.__cmp(other, operator.gt)
return NotImplemented
def __le__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Version):
return self.__cmp(other, operator.le)
return NotImplemented
def __ge__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Version):
return self.__cmp(other, operator.ge)
return NotImplemented
def __eq__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Version):
return self._v == other._v
return NotImplemented
def __ne__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, Version):
return self._v != other._v
return NotImplemented
def __cmp(self, other, comparator):
# compare each sequence in order
for ours, theirs in zip(self._v, other._v):
# sort a non-digit sequence before a digit sequence
ours_is_int = isinstance(ours, int)
theirs_is_int = isinstance(theirs, int)
if ours_is_int != theirs_is_int:
return comparator(ours_is_int, theirs_is_int)
if ours != theirs:
return comparator(ours, theirs)
# if equal length, all components have matched, so equal
# otherwise, the version with a suffix remaining is greater
return comparator(len(self._v), len(other._v))
def _version_extract_cmpop(vstr2: str) -> T.Tuple[T.Callable[[T.Any, T.Any], bool], str]:
if vstr2.startswith('>='):
cmpop = operator.ge
vstr2 = vstr2[2:]
elif vstr2.startswith('<='):
cmpop = operator.le
vstr2 = vstr2[2:]
elif vstr2.startswith('!='):
cmpop = operator.ne
vstr2 = vstr2[2:]
elif vstr2.startswith('=='):
cmpop = operator.eq
vstr2 = vstr2[2:]
elif vstr2.startswith('='):
cmpop = operator.eq
vstr2 = vstr2[1:]
elif vstr2.startswith('>'):
cmpop = operator.gt
vstr2 = vstr2[1:]
elif vstr2.startswith('<'):
cmpop = operator.lt
vstr2 = vstr2[1:]
else:
cmpop = operator.eq
return (cmpop, vstr2)
def version_compare(vstr1: str, vstr2: str) -> bool:
(cmpop, vstr2) = _version_extract_cmpop(vstr2)
return cmpop(Version(vstr1), Version(vstr2))
def version_compare_many(vstr1, conditions):
if not isinstance(conditions, (list, tuple, frozenset)):
conditions = [conditions]
found = []
not_found = []
for req in conditions:
if not version_compare(vstr1, req):
not_found.append(req)
else:
found.append(req)
return not_found == [], not_found, found
# determine if the minimum version satisfying the condition |condition| exceeds
# the minimum version for a feature |minimum|
def version_compare_condition_with_min(condition: str, minimum: str) -> bool:
if condition.startswith('>='):
cmpop = operator.le
condition = condition[2:]
elif condition.startswith('<='):
return False
elif condition.startswith('!='):
return False
elif condition.startswith('=='):
cmpop = operator.le
condition = condition[2:]
elif condition.startswith('='):
cmpop = operator.le
condition = condition[1:]
elif condition.startswith('>'):
cmpop = operator.lt
condition = condition[1:]
elif condition.startswith('<'):
return False
else:
cmpop = operator.le
# Declaring a project(meson_version: '>=0.46') and then using features in
# 0.46.0 is valid, because (knowing the meson versioning scheme) '0.46.0' is
# the lowest version which satisfies the constraint '>=0.46'.
#
# But this will fail here, because the minimum version required by the
# version constraint ('0.46') is strictly less (in our version comparison)
# than the minimum version needed for the feature ('0.46.0').
#
# Map versions in the constraint of the form '0.46' to '0.46.0', to embed
# this knowledge of the meson versioning scheme.
condition = condition.strip()
6 years ago
if re.match(r'^\d+.\d+$', condition):
condition += '.0'
return cmpop(Version(minimum), Version(condition))
def default_libdir():
if is_debianlike():
try:
pc = subprocess.Popen(['dpkg-architecture', '-qDEB_HOST_MULTIARCH'],
stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
stderr=subprocess.DEVNULL)
(stdo, _) = pc.communicate()
if pc.returncode == 0:
archpath = stdo.decode().strip()
return 'lib/' + archpath
except Exception:
pass
if is_freebsd():
return 'lib'
if os.path.isdir('/usr/lib64') and not os.path.islink('/usr/lib64'):
return 'lib64'
return 'lib'
def default_libexecdir():
# There is no way to auto-detect this, so it must be set at build time
return 'libexec'
def default_prefix():
return 'c:/' if is_windows() else '/usr/local'
def get_library_dirs() -> T.List[str]:
if is_windows():
return ['C:/mingw/lib'] # TODO: get programmatically
if is_osx():
return ['/usr/lib'] # TODO: get programmatically
# The following is probably Debian/Ubuntu specific.
# /usr/local/lib is first because it contains stuff
# installed by the sysadmin and is probably more up-to-date
# than /usr/lib. If you feel that this search order is
# problematic, please raise the issue on the mailing list.
unixdirs = ['/usr/local/lib', '/usr/lib', '/lib']
if is_freebsd():
return unixdirs
# FIXME: this needs to be further genericized for aarch64 etc.
machine = platform.machine()
if machine in ('i386', 'i486', 'i586', 'i686'):
plat = 'i386'
elif machine.startswith('arm'):
plat = 'arm'
else:
plat = ''
# Solaris puts 32-bit libraries in the main /lib & /usr/lib directories
# and 64-bit libraries in platform specific subdirectories.
if is_sunos():
if machine == 'i86pc':
plat = 'amd64'
elif machine.startswith('sun4'):
plat = 'sparcv9'
usr_platdir = Path('/usr/lib/') / plat
if usr_platdir.is_dir():
unixdirs += [str(x) for x in (usr_platdir).iterdir() if x.is_dir()]
if os.path.exists('/usr/lib64'):
unixdirs.append('/usr/lib64')
lib_platdir = Path('/lib/') / plat
if lib_platdir.is_dir():
unixdirs += [str(x) for x in (lib_platdir).iterdir() if x.is_dir()]
if os.path.exists('/lib64'):
unixdirs.append('/lib64')
return unixdirs
def has_path_sep(name, sep='/\\'):
'Checks if any of the specified @sep path separators are in @name'
for each in sep:
if each in name:
return True
return False
if is_windows():
# shlex.split is not suitable for splitting command line on Window (https://bugs.python.org/issue1724822);
# shlex.quote is similarly problematic. Below are "proper" implementations of these functions according to
# https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/c-language/parsing-c-command-line-arguments and
# https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/twistylittlepassagesallalike/2011/04/23/everyone-quotes-command-line-arguments-the-wrong-way/
_whitespace = ' \t\n\r'
_find_unsafe_char = re.compile(r'[{}"]'.format(_whitespace)).search
def quote_arg(arg):
if arg and not _find_unsafe_char(arg):
return arg
result = '"'
num_backslashes = 0
for c in arg:
if c == '\\':
num_backslashes += 1
else:
if c == '"':
# Escape all backslashes and the following double quotation mark
num_backslashes = num_backslashes * 2 + 1
result += num_backslashes * '\\' + c
num_backslashes = 0
# Escape all backslashes, but let the terminating double quotation
# mark we add below be interpreted as a metacharacter
result += (num_backslashes * 2) * '\\' + '"'
return result
def split_args(cmd: T.Sequence[str]) -> T.List[str]:
result = []
arg = ''
num_backslashes = 0
num_quotes = 0
in_quotes = False
for c in cmd:
if c == '\\':
num_backslashes += 1
else:
if c == '"' and not (num_backslashes % 2):
# unescaped quote, eat it
arg += (num_backslashes // 2) * '\\'
num_quotes += 1
in_quotes = not in_quotes
elif c in _whitespace and not in_quotes:
if arg or num_quotes:
# reached the end of the argument
result.append(arg)
arg = ''
num_quotes = 0
else:
if c == '"':
# escaped quote
num_backslashes = (num_backslashes - 1) // 2
arg += num_backslashes * '\\' + c
num_backslashes = 0
if arg or num_quotes:
result.append(arg)
return result
else:
def quote_arg(arg):
return shlex.quote(arg)
def split_args(cmd):
return shlex.split(cmd)
def join_args(args):
return ' '.join([quote_arg(x) for x in args])
def do_replacement(regex, line, variable_format, confdata):
missing_variables = set()
start_tag = '@'
backslash_tag = '\\@'
if variable_format == 'cmake':
start_tag = '${'
backslash_tag = '\\${'
def variable_replace(match):
# Pairs of escape characters before '@' or '\@'
if match.group(0).endswith('\\'):
num_escapes = match.end(0) - match.start(0)
return '\\' * (num_escapes // 2)
# Single escape character and '@'
elif match.group(0) == backslash_tag:
return start_tag
# Template variable to be replaced
else:
varname = match.group(1)
if varname in confdata:
(var, desc) = confdata.get(varname)
if isinstance(var, str):
pass
elif isinstance(var, int):
var = str(var)
else:
msg = 'Tried to replace variable {!r} value with ' \
'something other than a string or int: {!r}'
raise MesonException(msg.format(varname, var))
else:
missing_variables.add(varname)
var = ''
return var
return re.sub(regex, variable_replace, line), missing_variables
def do_mesondefine(line, confdata):
arr = line.split()
if len(arr) != 2:
raise MesonException('#mesondefine does not contain exactly two tokens: %s' % line.strip())
varname = arr[1]
try:
(v, desc) = confdata.get(varname)
except KeyError:
return '/* #undef %s */\n' % varname
if isinstance(v, bool):
if v:
return '#define %s\n' % varname
else:
return '#undef %s\n' % varname
elif isinstance(v, int):
return '#define %s %d\n' % (varname, v)
elif isinstance(v, str):
return '#define %s %s\n' % (varname, v)
else:
raise MesonException('#mesondefine argument "%s" is of unknown type.' % varname)
def do_conf_file(src, dst, confdata, variable_format, encoding='utf-8'):
try:
with open(src, encoding=encoding, newline='') as f:
data = f.readlines()
except Exception as e:
raise MesonException('Could not read input file %s: %s' % (src, str(e)))
# Only allow (a-z, A-Z, 0-9, _, -) as valid characters for a define
# Also allow escaping '@' with '\@'
if variable_format in ['meson', 'cmake@']:
regex = re.compile(r'(?:\\\\)+(?=\\?@)|\\@|@([-a-zA-Z0-9_]+)@')
elif variable_format == 'cmake':
regex = re.compile(r'(?:\\\\)+(?=\\?\$)|\\\${|\${([-a-zA-Z0-9_]+)}')
else:
raise MesonException('Format "{}" not handled'.format(variable_format))
search_token = '#mesondefine'
if variable_format != 'meson':
search_token = '#cmakedefine'
result = []
missing_variables = set()
# Detect when the configuration data is empty and no tokens were found
# during substitution so we can warn the user to use the `copy:` kwarg.
confdata_useless = not confdata.keys()
for line in data:
if line.startswith(search_token):
confdata_useless = False
line = do_mesondefine(line, confdata)
else:
line, missing = do_replacement(regex, line, variable_format, confdata)
missing_variables.update(missing)
if missing:
confdata_useless = False
result.append(line)
dst_tmp = dst + '~'
try:
with open(dst_tmp, 'w', encoding=encoding, newline='') as f:
f.writelines(result)
except Exception as e:
raise MesonException('Could not write output file %s: %s' % (dst, str(e)))
shutil.copymode(src, dst_tmp)
replace_if_different(dst, dst_tmp)
return missing_variables, confdata_useless
CONF_C_PRELUDE = '''/*
* Autogenerated by the Meson build system.
* Do not edit, your changes will be lost.
*/
#pragma once
'''
CONF_NASM_PRELUDE = '''; Autogenerated by the Meson build system.
; Do not edit, your changes will be lost.
'''
def dump_conf_header(ofilename, cdata, output_format):
if output_format == 'c':
prelude = CONF_C_PRELUDE
prefix = '#'
elif output_format == 'nasm':
prelude = CONF_NASM_PRELUDE
prefix = '%'
ofilename_tmp = ofilename + '~'
with open(ofilename_tmp, 'w', encoding='utf-8') as ofile:
ofile.write(prelude)
for k in sorted(cdata.keys()):
(v, desc) = cdata.get(k)
if desc:
if output_format == 'c':
ofile.write('/* %s */\n' % desc)
elif output_format == 'nasm':
for line in desc.split('\n'):
ofile.write('; %s\n' % line)
if isinstance(v, bool):
if v:
ofile.write('%sdefine %s\n\n' % (prefix, k))
else:
ofile.write('%sundef %s\n\n' % (prefix, k))
elif isinstance(v, (int, str)):
ofile.write('%sdefine %s %s\n\n' % (prefix, k, v))
else:
raise MesonException('Unknown data type in configuration file entry: ' + k)
replace_if_different(ofilename, ofilename_tmp)
def replace_if_different(dst, dst_tmp):
# If contents are identical, don't touch the file to prevent
# unnecessary rebuilds.
different = True
try:
with open(dst, 'rb') as f1, open(dst_tmp, 'rb') as f2:
if f1.read() == f2.read():
different = False
except FileNotFoundError:
pass
if different:
os.replace(dst_tmp, dst)
else:
os.unlink(dst_tmp)
def listify(item: T.Any,
flatten: bool = True,
unholder: bool = False) -> T.List[T.Any]:
'''
Returns a list with all args embedded in a list if they are not a list.
This function preserves order.
@flatten: Convert lists of lists to a flat list
@unholder: Replace each item with the object it holds, if required
Note: unholding only works recursively when flattening
'''
if not isinstance(item, list):
if unholder and hasattr(item, 'held_object'):
item = item.held_object
return [item]
result = []
for i in item:
if unholder and hasattr(i, 'held_object'):
i = i.held_object
if flatten and isinstance(i, list):
result += listify(i, flatten=True, unholder=unholder)
else:
result.append(i)
return result
def extract_as_list(dict_object, *keys, pop=False, **kwargs):
'''
Extracts all values from given dict_object and listifies them.
'''
result = []
fetch = dict_object.get
if pop:
fetch = dict_object.pop
# If there's only one key, we don't return a list with one element
if len(keys) == 1:
return listify(fetch(keys[0], []), **kwargs)
# Return a list of values corresponding to *keys
for key in keys:
result.append(listify(fetch(key, []), **kwargs))
return result
def typeslistify(item: 'T.Union[_T, T.List[_T]]',
types: 'T.Union[T.Type[_T], T.Tuple[T.Type[_T]]]') -> T.List[_T]:
Support multiple install dirs for built/custom targets You can now pass a list of strings to the install_dir: kwarg to build_target and custom_target. Custom Targets: =============== Allows you to specify the installation directory for each corresponding output. For example: custom_target('different-install-dirs', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : ['somedir', 'otherdir]) This would install first.file to somedir and second.file to otherdir. If only one install_dir is provided, all outputs are installed there (same behaviour as before). To only install some outputs, pass `false` for the outputs that you don't want installed. For example: custom_target('only-install-second', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'otherdir]) This would install second.file to otherdir and not install first.file. Build Targets: ============== With build_target() (which includes executable(), library(), etc), usually there is only one primary output. However some types of targets have multiple outputs. For example, while generating Vala libraries, valac also generates a header and a .vapi file both of which often need to be installed. This allows you to specify installation directories for those too. # This will only install the library (same as before) shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true) # This will install the library, the header, and the vapi into the # respective directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : ['libdir', 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will install the library into the default libdir and # everything else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [true, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will NOT install the library, and will install everything # else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) true/false can also be used for secondary outputs in the same way. Valac can also generate a GIR file for libraries when the `vala_gir:` keyword argument is passed to library(). In that case, `install_dir:` must be given a list with four elements, one for each output. Includes tests for all these. Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/705 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/891 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/892 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1178 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1193
8 years ago
'''
Ensure that type(@item) is one of @types or a
list of items all of which are of type @types
'''
if isinstance(item, types):
item = T.cast(T.List[_T], [item])
if not isinstance(item, list):
Support multiple install dirs for built/custom targets You can now pass a list of strings to the install_dir: kwarg to build_target and custom_target. Custom Targets: =============== Allows you to specify the installation directory for each corresponding output. For example: custom_target('different-install-dirs', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : ['somedir', 'otherdir]) This would install first.file to somedir and second.file to otherdir. If only one install_dir is provided, all outputs are installed there (same behaviour as before). To only install some outputs, pass `false` for the outputs that you don't want installed. For example: custom_target('only-install-second', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'otherdir]) This would install second.file to otherdir and not install first.file. Build Targets: ============== With build_target() (which includes executable(), library(), etc), usually there is only one primary output. However some types of targets have multiple outputs. For example, while generating Vala libraries, valac also generates a header and a .vapi file both of which often need to be installed. This allows you to specify installation directories for those too. # This will only install the library (same as before) shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true) # This will install the library, the header, and the vapi into the # respective directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : ['libdir', 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will install the library into the default libdir and # everything else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [true, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will NOT install the library, and will install everything # else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) true/false can also be used for secondary outputs in the same way. Valac can also generate a GIR file for libraries when the `vala_gir:` keyword argument is passed to library(). In that case, `install_dir:` must be given a list with four elements, one for each output. Includes tests for all these. Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/705 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/891 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/892 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1178 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1193
8 years ago
raise MesonException('Item must be a list or one of {!r}'.format(types))
for i in item:
Support multiple install dirs for built/custom targets You can now pass a list of strings to the install_dir: kwarg to build_target and custom_target. Custom Targets: =============== Allows you to specify the installation directory for each corresponding output. For example: custom_target('different-install-dirs', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : ['somedir', 'otherdir]) This would install first.file to somedir and second.file to otherdir. If only one install_dir is provided, all outputs are installed there (same behaviour as before). To only install some outputs, pass `false` for the outputs that you don't want installed. For example: custom_target('only-install-second', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'otherdir]) This would install second.file to otherdir and not install first.file. Build Targets: ============== With build_target() (which includes executable(), library(), etc), usually there is only one primary output. However some types of targets have multiple outputs. For example, while generating Vala libraries, valac also generates a header and a .vapi file both of which often need to be installed. This allows you to specify installation directories for those too. # This will only install the library (same as before) shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true) # This will install the library, the header, and the vapi into the # respective directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : ['libdir', 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will install the library into the default libdir and # everything else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [true, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will NOT install the library, and will install everything # else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) true/false can also be used for secondary outputs in the same way. Valac can also generate a GIR file for libraries when the `vala_gir:` keyword argument is passed to library(). In that case, `install_dir:` must be given a list with four elements, one for each output. Includes tests for all these. Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/705 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/891 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/892 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1178 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1193
8 years ago
if i is not None and not isinstance(i, types):
raise MesonException('List item must be one of {!r}'.format(types))
return item
def stringlistify(item: T.Union[str, T.List[str]]) -> T.List[str]:
Support multiple install dirs for built/custom targets You can now pass a list of strings to the install_dir: kwarg to build_target and custom_target. Custom Targets: =============== Allows you to specify the installation directory for each corresponding output. For example: custom_target('different-install-dirs', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : ['somedir', 'otherdir]) This would install first.file to somedir and second.file to otherdir. If only one install_dir is provided, all outputs are installed there (same behaviour as before). To only install some outputs, pass `false` for the outputs that you don't want installed. For example: custom_target('only-install-second', output : ['first.file', 'second.file'], ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'otherdir]) This would install second.file to otherdir and not install first.file. Build Targets: ============== With build_target() (which includes executable(), library(), etc), usually there is only one primary output. However some types of targets have multiple outputs. For example, while generating Vala libraries, valac also generates a header and a .vapi file both of which often need to be installed. This allows you to specify installation directories for those too. # This will only install the library (same as before) shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true) # This will install the library, the header, and the vapi into the # respective directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : ['libdir', 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will install the library into the default libdir and # everything else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [true, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) # This will NOT install the library, and will install everything # else into the specified directories shared_library('somevalalib', 'somesource.vala', ... install : true, install_dir : [false, 'incdir', 'vapidir']) true/false can also be used for secondary outputs in the same way. Valac can also generate a GIR file for libraries when the `vala_gir:` keyword argument is passed to library(). In that case, `install_dir:` must be given a list with four elements, one for each output. Includes tests for all these. Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/705 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/891 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/892 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1178 Closes https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1193
8 years ago
return typeslistify(item, str)
def expand_arguments(args):
expended_args = []
for arg in args:
if not arg.startswith('@'):
expended_args.append(arg)
continue
args_file = arg[1:]
try:
with open(args_file) as f:
extended_args = f.read().split()
expended_args += extended_args
except Exception as e:
print('Error expanding command line arguments, %s not found' % args_file)
print(e)
return None
return expended_args
def partition(pred, iterable):
'Use a predicate to partition entries into false entries and true entries'
# partition(is_odd, range(10)) --> 0 2 4 6 8 and 1 3 5 7 9
t1, t2 = tee(iterable)
return filterfalse(pred, t1), filter(pred, t2)
def Popen_safe(args: T.List[str], write: T.Optional[str] = None,
stdout: T.Union[T.BinaryIO, int] = subprocess.PIPE,
stderr: T.Union[T.BinaryIO, int] = subprocess.PIPE,
**kwargs: T.Any) -> T.Tuple[subprocess.Popen, str, str]:
import locale
encoding = locale.getpreferredencoding()
# Redirect stdin to DEVNULL otherwise the command run by us here might mess
# up the console and ANSI colors will stop working on Windows.
if 'stdin' not in kwargs:
kwargs['stdin'] = subprocess.DEVNULL
if sys.version_info < (3, 6) or not sys.stdout.encoding or encoding.upper() != 'UTF-8':
p, o, e = Popen_safe_legacy(args, write=write, stdout=stdout, stderr=stderr, **kwargs)
else:
p = subprocess.Popen(args, universal_newlines=True, close_fds=False,
stdout=stdout, stderr=stderr, **kwargs)
o, e = p.communicate(write)
# Sometimes the command that we run will call another command which will be
# without the above stdin workaround, so set the console mode again just in
# case.
mlog.setup_console()
return p, o, e
def Popen_safe_legacy(args: T.List[str], write: T.Optional[str] = None,
stdout: T.Union[T.BinaryIO, int] = subprocess.PIPE,
stderr: T.Union[T.BinaryIO, int] = subprocess.PIPE,
**kwargs: T.Any) -> T.Tuple[subprocess.Popen, str, str]:
p = subprocess.Popen(args, universal_newlines=False, close_fds=False,
stdout=stdout, stderr=stderr, **kwargs)
input_ = None # type: T.Optional[bytes]
if write is not None:
input_ = write.encode('utf-8')
o, e = p.communicate(input_)
if o is not None:
if sys.stdout.encoding:
o = o.decode(encoding=sys.stdout.encoding, errors='replace').replace('\r\n', '\n')
else:
o = o.decode(errors='replace').replace('\r\n', '\n')
if e is not None:
if sys.stderr.encoding:
e = e.decode(encoding=sys.stderr.encoding, errors='replace').replace('\r\n', '\n')
else:
e = e.decode(errors='replace').replace('\r\n', '\n')
return p, o, e
def iter_regexin_iter(regexiter, initer):
'''
Takes each regular expression in @regexiter and tries to search for it in
every item in @initer. If there is a match, returns that match.
Else returns False.
'''
for regex in regexiter:
for ii in initer:
if not isinstance(ii, str):
continue
match = re.search(regex, ii)
if match:
return match.group()
return False
def _substitute_values_check_errors(command, values):
# Error checking
inregex = ('@INPUT([0-9]+)?@', '@PLAINNAME@', '@BASENAME@')
outregex = ('@OUTPUT([0-9]+)?@', '@OUTDIR@')
if '@INPUT@' not in values:
# Error out if any input-derived templates are present in the command
match = iter_regexin_iter(inregex, command)
if match:
m = 'Command cannot have {!r}, since no input files were specified'
raise MesonException(m.format(match))
else:
if len(values['@INPUT@']) > 1:
# Error out if @PLAINNAME@ or @BASENAME@ is present in the command
match = iter_regexin_iter(inregex[1:], command)
if match:
raise MesonException('Command cannot have {!r} when there is '
'more than one input file'.format(match))
# Error out if an invalid @INPUTnn@ template was specified
for each in command:
if not isinstance(each, str):
continue
match = re.search(inregex[0], each)
if match and match.group() not in values:
m = 'Command cannot have {!r} since there are only {!r} inputs'
raise MesonException(m.format(match.group(), len(values['@INPUT@'])))
if '@OUTPUT@' not in values:
# Error out if any output-derived templates are present in the command
match = iter_regexin_iter(outregex, command)
if match:
m = 'Command cannot have {!r} since there are no outputs'
raise MesonException(m.format(match))
else:
# Error out if an invalid @OUTPUTnn@ template was specified
for each in command:
if not isinstance(each, str):
continue
match = re.search(outregex[0], each)
if match and match.group() not in values:
m = 'Command cannot have {!r} since there are only {!r} outputs'
raise MesonException(m.format(match.group(), len(values['@OUTPUT@'])))
def substitute_values(command, values):
'''
Substitute the template strings in the @values dict into the list of
strings @command and return a new list. For a full list of the templates,
see get_filenames_templates_dict()
If multiple inputs/outputs are given in the @values dictionary, we
substitute @INPUT@ and @OUTPUT@ only if they are the entire string, not
just a part of it, and in that case we substitute *all* of them.
'''
# Error checking
_substitute_values_check_errors(command, values)
# Substitution
outcmd = []
rx_keys = [re.escape(key) for key in values if key not in ('@INPUT@', '@OUTPUT@')]
value_rx = re.compile('|'.join(rx_keys)) if rx_keys else None
for vv in command:
if not isinstance(vv, str):
outcmd.append(vv)
elif '@INPUT@' in vv:
inputs = values['@INPUT@']
if vv == '@INPUT@':
outcmd += inputs
elif len(inputs) == 1:
outcmd.append(vv.replace('@INPUT@', inputs[0]))
else:
raise MesonException("Command has '@INPUT@' as part of a "
"string and more than one input file")
elif '@OUTPUT@' in vv:
outputs = values['@OUTPUT@']
if vv == '@OUTPUT@':
outcmd += outputs
elif len(outputs) == 1:
outcmd.append(vv.replace('@OUTPUT@', outputs[0]))
else:
raise MesonException("Command has '@OUTPUT@' as part of a "
"string and more than one output file")
# Append values that are exactly a template string.
# This is faster than a string replace.
elif vv in values:
outcmd.append(values[vv])
# Substitute everything else with replacement
elif value_rx:
outcmd.append(value_rx.sub(lambda m: values[m.group(0)], vv))
else:
outcmd.append(vv)
return outcmd
def get_filenames_templates_dict(inputs, outputs):
'''
Create a dictionary with template strings as keys and values as values for
the following templates:
@INPUT@ - the full path to one or more input files, from @inputs
@OUTPUT@ - the full path to one or more output files, from @outputs
@OUTDIR@ - the full path to the directory containing the output files
If there is only one input file, the following keys are also created:
@PLAINNAME@ - the filename of the input file
@BASENAME@ - the filename of the input file with the extension removed
If there is more than one input file, the following keys are also created:
@INPUT0@, @INPUT1@, ... one for each input file
If there is more than one output file, the following keys are also created:
@OUTPUT0@, @OUTPUT1@, ... one for each output file
'''
values = {}
# Gather values derived from the input
if inputs:
# We want to substitute all the inputs.
values['@INPUT@'] = inputs
for (ii, vv) in enumerate(inputs):
# Write out @INPUT0@, @INPUT1@, ...
values['@INPUT{}@'.format(ii)] = vv
if len(inputs) == 1:
# Just one value, substitute @PLAINNAME@ and @BASENAME@
values['@PLAINNAME@'] = plain = os.path.basename(inputs[0])
values['@BASENAME@'] = os.path.splitext(plain)[0]
if outputs:
# Gather values derived from the outputs, similar to above.
values['@OUTPUT@'] = outputs
for (ii, vv) in enumerate(outputs):
values['@OUTPUT{}@'.format(ii)] = vv
# Outdir should be the same for all outputs
values['@OUTDIR@'] = os.path.dirname(outputs[0])
# Many external programs fail on empty arguments.
if values['@OUTDIR@'] == '':
values['@OUTDIR@'] = '.'
return values
def _make_tree_writable(topdir):
# Ensure all files and directories under topdir are writable
# (and readable) by owner.
for d, _, files in os.walk(topdir):
os.chmod(d, os.stat(d).st_mode | stat.S_IWRITE | stat.S_IREAD)
for fname in files:
fpath = os.path.join(d, fname)
if os.path.isfile(fpath):
os.chmod(fpath, os.stat(fpath).st_mode | stat.S_IWRITE | stat.S_IREAD)
def windows_proof_rmtree(f):
# On Windows if anyone is holding a file open you can't
# delete it. As an example an anti virus scanner might
# be scanning files you are trying to delete. The only
# way to fix this is to try again and again.
delays = [0.1, 0.1, 0.2, 0.2, 0.2, 0.5, 0.5, 1, 1, 1, 1, 2]
# Start by making the tree wriable.
_make_tree_writable(f)
for d in delays:
try:
shutil.rmtree(f)
return
except FileNotFoundError:
return
except OSError:
time.sleep(d)
# Try one last time and throw if it fails.
shutil.rmtree(f)
def windows_proof_rm(fpath):
"""Like windows_proof_rmtree, but for a single file."""
if os.path.isfile(fpath):
os.chmod(fpath, os.stat(fpath).st_mode | stat.S_IWRITE | stat.S_IREAD)
delays = [0.1, 0.1, 0.2, 0.2, 0.2, 0.5, 0.5, 1, 1, 1, 1, 2]
for d in delays:
try:
os.unlink(fpath)
return
except FileNotFoundError:
return
except OSError:
time.sleep(d)
os.unlink(fpath)
def detect_subprojects(spdir_name, current_dir='', result=None):
if result is None:
result = {}
spdir = os.path.join(current_dir, spdir_name)
if not os.path.exists(spdir):
return result
for trial in glob(os.path.join(spdir, '*')):
basename = os.path.basename(trial)
if trial == 'packagecache':
continue
append_this = True
if os.path.isdir(trial):
detect_subprojects(spdir_name, trial, result)
elif trial.endswith('.wrap') and os.path.isfile(trial):
basename = os.path.splitext(basename)[0]
else:
append_this = False
if append_this:
if basename in result:
result[basename].append(trial)
else:
result[basename] = [trial]
return result
def substring_is_in_list(substr: str, strlist: T.List[str]) -> bool:
for s in strlist:
if substr in s:
return True
return False
class OrderedSet(collections.abc.MutableSet):
"""A set that preserves the order in which items are added, by first
insertion.
"""
def __init__(self, iterable=None):
self.__container = collections.OrderedDict()
if iterable:
self.update(iterable)
def __contains__(self, value):
return value in self.__container
def __iter__(self):
return iter(self.__container.keys())
def __len__(self):
return len(self.__container)
def __repr__(self):
# Don't print 'OrderedSet("")' for an empty set.
if self.__container:
return 'OrderedSet("{}")'.format(
'", "'.join(repr(e) for e in self.__container.keys()))
return 'OrderedSet()'
def __reversed__(self):
return reversed(self.__container)
def add(self, value):
self.__container[value] = None
def discard(self, value):
if value in self.__container:
del self.__container[value]
def update(self, iterable):
for item in iterable:
self.__container[item] = None
def difference(self, set_):
return type(self)(e for e in self if e not in set_)
class BuildDirLock:
def __init__(self, builddir):
self.lockfilename = os.path.join(builddir, 'meson-private/meson.lock')
def __enter__(self):
self.lockfile = open(self.lockfilename, 'w')
try:
if have_fcntl:
fcntl.flock(self.lockfile, fcntl.LOCK_EX | fcntl.LOCK_NB)
elif have_msvcrt:
msvcrt.locking(self.lockfile.fileno(), msvcrt.LK_NBLCK, 1)
except (BlockingIOError, PermissionError):
self.lockfile.close()
raise MesonException('Some other Meson process is already using this build directory. Exiting.')
def __exit__(self, *args):
if have_fcntl:
fcntl.flock(self.lockfile, fcntl.LOCK_UN)
elif have_msvcrt:
msvcrt.locking(self.lockfile.fileno(), msvcrt.LK_UNLCK, 1)
self.lockfile.close()
def relpath(path: str, start: str) -> str:
# On Windows a relative path can't be evaluated for paths on two different
# drives (i.e. c:\foo and f:\bar). The only thing left to do is to use the
# original absolute path.
try:
return os.path.relpath(path, start)
except (TypeError, ValueError):
return path
class LibType(Enum):
"""Enumeration for library types."""
SHARED = 0
STATIC = 1
PREFER_SHARED = 2
PREFER_STATIC = 3
class ProgressBarFallback: # lgtm [py/iter-returns-non-self]
'''
Fallback progress bar implementation when tqdm is not found
Since this class is not an actual iterator, but only provides a minimal
fallback, it is safe to ignore the 'Iterator does not return self from
__iter__ method' warning.
'''
def __init__(self, iterable=None, total=None, bar_type=None, desc=None):
if iterable is not None:
self.iterable = iter(iterable)
return
self.total = total
self.done = 0
self.printed_dots = 0
if self.total and bar_type == 'download':
print('Download size:', self.total)
if desc:
print('{}: '.format(desc), end='')
# Pretend to be an iterator when called as one and don't print any
# progress
def __iter__(self):
return self.iterable
def __next__(self):
return next(self.iterable)
def print_dot(self):
print('.', end='')
sys.stdout.flush()
self.printed_dots += 1
def update(self, progress):
self.done += progress
if not self.total:
# Just print one dot per call if we don't have a total length
self.print_dot()
return
ratio = int(self.done / self.total * 10)
while self.printed_dots < ratio:
self.print_dot()
def close(self):
print('')
try:
from tqdm import tqdm
class ProgressBar(tqdm):
def __init__(self, *args, bar_type=None, **kwargs):
if bar_type == 'download':
kwargs.update({'unit': 'bytes', 'leave': True})
else:
kwargs.update({'leave': False})
kwargs['ncols'] = 100
super().__init__(*args, **kwargs)
except ImportError:
ProgressBar = ProgressBarFallback
def get_wine_shortpath(winecmd, wine_paths):
""" Get A short version of @wine_paths to avoid
reaching WINEPATH number of char limit.
"""
seen = set()
wine_paths = [p for p in wine_paths if not (p in seen or seen.add(p))]
getShortPathScript = '%s.bat' % str(uuid.uuid4()).lower()[:5]
with open(getShortPathScript, mode='w') as f:
f.write("@ECHO OFF\nfor %%x in (%*) do (\n echo|set /p=;%~sx\n)\n")
f.flush()
try:
with open(os.devnull, 'w') as stderr:
wine_path = subprocess.check_output(
winecmd +
['cmd', '/C', getShortPathScript] + wine_paths,
stderr=stderr).decode('utf-8')
except subprocess.CalledProcessError as e:
print("Could not get short paths: %s" % e)
wine_path = ';'.join(wine_paths)
finally:
os.remove(getShortPathScript)
if len(wine_path) > 2048:
raise MesonException(
'WINEPATH size {} > 2048'
' this will cause random failure.'.format(
len(wine_path)))
return wine_path.strip(';')
def run_once(func):
ret = []
def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
if ret:
return ret[0]
val = func(*args, **kwargs)
ret.append(val)
return val
return update_wrapper(wrapper, func)
class OptionProxy:
def __init__(self, value):
self.value = value
class OptionOverrideProxy:
'''Mimic an option list but transparently override
selected option values.'''
def __init__(self, overrides, *options):
self.overrides = overrides
self.options = options
def __getitem__(self, option_name):
for opts in self.options:
if option_name in opts:
return self._get_override(option_name, opts[option_name])
raise KeyError('Option not found', option_name)
def _get_override(self, option_name, base_opt):
if option_name in self.overrides:
return OptionProxy(base_opt.validate_value(self.overrides[option_name]))
return base_opt
def copy(self):
result = {}
for opts in self.options:
for option_name in opts:
result[option_name] = self._get_override(option_name, opts[option_name])
return result