# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- """ internal gevent utilities, not for external use. """ from __future__ import print_function, absolute_import, division from gevent._compat import iteritems class _NONE(object): """ A special object you must never pass to any gevent API. Used as a marker object for keyword arguments that cannot have the builtin None (because that might be a valid value). """ __slots__ = () def __repr__(self): return '' _NONE = _NONE() def copy_globals(source, globs, only_names=None, ignore_missing_names=False, names_to_ignore=(), dunder_names_to_keep=('__implements__', '__all__', '__imports__'), cleanup_globs=True): """ Copy attributes defined in `source.__dict__` to the dictionary in globs (which should be the caller's globals()). Names that start with `__` are ignored (unless they are in *dunder_names_to_keep*). Anything found in *names_to_ignore* is also ignored. If *only_names* is given, only those attributes will be considered. In this case, *ignore_missing_names* says whether or not to raise an AttributeError if one of those names can't be found. If cleanup_globs has a true value, then common things imported but not used at runtime are removed, including this function. Returns a list of the names copied """ if only_names: if ignore_missing_names: items = ((k, getattr(source, k, _NONE)) for k in only_names) else: items = ((k, getattr(source, k)) for k in only_names) else: items = iteritems(source.__dict__) copied = [] for key, value in items: if value is _NONE: continue if key in names_to_ignore: continue if key.startswith("__") and key not in dunder_names_to_keep: continue globs[key] = value copied.append(key) if cleanup_globs: if 'copy_globals' in globs: del globs['copy_globals'] return copied class Lazy(object): """ A non-data descriptor used just like @property. The difference is the function value is assigned to the instance dict the first time it is accessed and then the function is never called agoin. """ def __init__(self, func): self.data = (func, func.__name__) def __get__(self, inst, class_): if inst is None: return self func, name = self.data value = func(inst) inst.__dict__[name] = value return value class readproperty(object): """ A non-data descriptor like @property. The difference is that when the property is assigned to, it is cached in the instance and the function is not called on that instance again. """ def __init__(self, func): self.func = func def __get__(self, inst, class_): if inst is None: return self return self.func(inst)