| 1 | from __future__ import with_statement |
|---|
| 2 | |
|---|
| 3 | import unittest |
|---|
| 4 | from fcntl import flock, LOCK_EX, LOCK_SH, LOCK_UN |
|---|
| 5 | import contextlib as clib |
|---|
| 6 | import subprocess |
|---|
| 7 | |
|---|
| 8 | class InvirtConfigError(AttributeError): |
|---|
| 9 | pass |
|---|
| 10 | |
|---|
| 11 | class struct(object): |
|---|
| 12 | 'A simple namespace object.' |
|---|
| 13 | def __init__(self, d = {}, __prefix = None, **kwargs): |
|---|
| 14 | 'd is the dictionary or the items-iterable to update my __dict__ with.' |
|---|
| 15 | self.__dict__.update(d) |
|---|
| 16 | self.__dict__.update(kwargs) |
|---|
| 17 | self.__prefix = __prefix |
|---|
| 18 | def __getattr__(self, key): |
|---|
| 19 | # XX ideally these would point a frame higher on the stack. |
|---|
| 20 | prefix = self.__prefix |
|---|
| 21 | if prefix is not None: |
|---|
| 22 | raise InvirtConfigError('missing configuration variable %s%s' |
|---|
| 23 | % (prefix, key)) |
|---|
| 24 | else: |
|---|
| 25 | raise AttributeError("anonymous struct has no member '%s'" |
|---|
| 26 | % (key,)) |
|---|
| 27 | |
|---|
| 28 | def dicts2struct(x, prefix = None): |
|---|
| 29 | """ |
|---|
| 30 | Given a tree of lists/dicts, perform a deep traversal to transform all the |
|---|
| 31 | dicts to structs. |
|---|
| 32 | """ |
|---|
| 33 | if prefix is not None: |
|---|
| 34 | def newprefix(k): return prefix + str(k) + '.' |
|---|
| 35 | else: |
|---|
| 36 | def newprefix(k): return prefix |
|---|
| 37 | if type(x) == dict: |
|---|
| 38 | return struct(((k, dicts2struct(v, newprefix(k))) |
|---|
| 39 | for k,v in x.iteritems()), |
|---|
| 40 | prefix) |
|---|
| 41 | elif type(x) == list: |
|---|
| 42 | return [dicts2struct(v, newprefix(i)) for i, v in enumerate(x)] |
|---|
| 43 | elif x is None: |
|---|
| 44 | return struct({}, prefix) |
|---|
| 45 | else: |
|---|
| 46 | return x |
|---|
| 47 | |
|---|
| 48 | @clib.contextmanager |
|---|
| 49 | def lock_file(path, exclusive = True): |
|---|
| 50 | with clib.closing(file(path, 'w')) as f: |
|---|
| 51 | if exclusive: |
|---|
| 52 | locktype = LOCK_EX |
|---|
| 53 | else: |
|---|
| 54 | locktype = LOCK_SH |
|---|
| 55 | flock(f, locktype) |
|---|
| 56 | try: |
|---|
| 57 | yield |
|---|
| 58 | finally: |
|---|
| 59 | flock(f, LOCK_UN) |
|---|
| 60 | |
|---|
| 61 | def captureOutput(popen_args, stdin_str=None, *args, **kwargs): |
|---|
| 62 | """Capture stdout from a command. |
|---|
| 63 | |
|---|
| 64 | This method will proxy the arguments to subprocess.Popen. It |
|---|
| 65 | returns the output from the command if the call succeeded and |
|---|
| 66 | raises an exception if the process returns a non-0 value. |
|---|
| 67 | |
|---|
| 68 | This is intended to be a variant on the subprocess.check_call |
|---|
| 69 | function that also allows you access to the output from the |
|---|
| 70 | command. |
|---|
| 71 | """ |
|---|
| 72 | if 'stdin' not in kwargs: |
|---|
| 73 | kwargs['stdin'] = subprocess.PIPE |
|---|
| 74 | if 'stdout' not in kwargs: |
|---|
| 75 | kwargs['stdout'] = subprocess.PIPE |
|---|
| 76 | if 'stderr' not in kwargs: |
|---|
| 77 | kwargs['stderr'] = subprocess.STDOUT |
|---|
| 78 | p = subprocess.Popen(popen_args, *args, **kwargs) |
|---|
| 79 | out, _ = p.communicate(stdin_str) |
|---|
| 80 | if p.returncode: |
|---|
| 81 | raise subprocess.CalledProcessError(p.returncode, popen_args, out) |
|---|
| 82 | return out |
|---|
| 83 | |
|---|
| 84 | # |
|---|
| 85 | # Exceptions. |
|---|
| 86 | # |
|---|
| 87 | |
|---|
| 88 | class InvalidInput(Exception): |
|---|
| 89 | """Exception for user-provided input is invalid but maybe in good faith. |
|---|
| 90 | |
|---|
| 91 | This would include setting memory to negative (which might be a |
|---|
| 92 | typo) but not setting an invalid boot CD (which requires bypassing |
|---|
| 93 | the select box). |
|---|
| 94 | """ |
|---|
| 95 | def __init__(self, err_field, err_value, expl=None): |
|---|
| 96 | Exception.__init__(self, expl) |
|---|
| 97 | self.err_field = err_field |
|---|
| 98 | self.err_value = err_value |
|---|
| 99 | |
|---|
| 100 | class CodeError(Exception): |
|---|
| 101 | """Exception for internal errors or bad faith input.""" |
|---|
| 102 | pass |
|---|
| 103 | |
|---|
| 104 | # |
|---|
| 105 | # Tests. |
|---|
| 106 | # |
|---|
| 107 | |
|---|
| 108 | class common_tests(unittest.TestCase): |
|---|
| 109 | def test_dicts2structs(self): |
|---|
| 110 | dicts = { |
|---|
| 111 | 'atom': 0, |
|---|
| 112 | 'dict': { 'atom': 'atom', 'list': [1,2,3] }, |
|---|
| 113 | 'list': [ 'atom', {'key': 'value'} ] |
|---|
| 114 | } |
|---|
| 115 | structs = dicts2struct(dicts, '') |
|---|
| 116 | self.assertEqual(structs.atom, dicts['atom']) |
|---|
| 117 | self.assertEqual(structs.dict.atom, dicts['dict']['atom']) |
|---|
| 118 | self.assertEqual(structs.dict.list, dicts['dict']['list']) |
|---|
| 119 | self.assertEqual(structs.list[0], dicts['list'][0]) |
|---|
| 120 | self.assertEqual(structs.list[1].key, dicts['list'][1]['key']) |
|---|
| 121 | |
|---|
| 122 | if __name__ == '__main__': |
|---|
| 123 | unittest.main() |
|---|