"""Python backwards-compat., date/time routines, seekable file object wrapper. Copyright 2002-2006 John J Lee This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the BSD or ZPL 2.1 licenses (see the file COPYING.txt included with the distribution). """ import re, string, time, copy, urllib, mimetools from types import TupleType from cStringIO import StringIO def startswith(string, initial): if len(initial) > len(string): return False return string[:len(initial)] == initial def endswith(string, final): if len(final) > len(string): return False return string[-len(final):] == final def isstringlike(x): try: x+"" except: return False else: return True SPACE_DICT = {} for c in string.whitespace: SPACE_DICT[c] = None del c def isspace(string): for c in string: if not SPACE_DICT.has_key(c): return False return True ## def caller(): ## try: ## raise SyntaxError ## except: ## import sys ## return sys.exc_traceback.tb_frame.f_back.f_back.f_code.co_name # this is here rather than in _HeadersUtil as it's just for # compatibility with old Python versions, rather than entirely new code def getheaders(msg, name): """Get all values for a header. This returns a list of values for headers given more than once; each value in the result list is stripped in the same way as the result of getheader(). If the header is not given, return an empty list. """ result = [] current = '' have_header = 0 for s in msg.getallmatchingheaders(name): if isspace(s[0]): if current: current = "%s\n %s" % (current, string.strip(s)) else: current = string.strip(s) else: if have_header: result.append(current) current = string.strip(s[string.find(s, ":") + 1:]) have_header = 1 if have_header: result.append(current) return result from calendar import timegm # Date/time conversion routines for formats used by the HTTP protocol. EPOCH = 1970 def my_timegm(tt): year, month, mday, hour, min, sec = tt[:6] if ((year >= EPOCH) and (1 <= month <= 12) and (1 <= mday <= 31) and (0 <= hour <= 24) and (0 <= min <= 59) and (0 <= sec <= 61)): return timegm(tt) else: return None days = ["Mon", "Tue", "Wed", "Thu", "Fri", "Sat", "Sun"] months = ["Jan", "Feb", "Mar", "Apr", "May", "Jun", "Jul", "Aug", "Sep", "Oct", "Nov", "Dec"] months_lower = [] for month in months: months_lower.append(string.lower(month)) def time2isoz(t=None): """Return a string representing time in seconds since epoch, t. If the function is called without an argument, it will use the current time. The format of the returned string is like "YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ssZ", representing Universal Time (UTC, aka GMT). An example of this format is: 1994-11-24 08:49:37Z """ if t is None: t = time.time() year, mon, mday, hour, min, sec = time.gmtime(t)[:6] return "%04d-%02d-%02d %02d:%02d:%02dZ" % ( year, mon, mday, hour, min, sec) def time2netscape(t=None): """Return a string representing time in seconds since epoch, t. If the function is called without an argument, it will use the current time. The format of the returned string is like this: Wed, DD-Mon-YYYY HH:MM:SS GMT """ if t is None: t = time.time() year, mon, mday, hour, min, sec, wday = time.gmtime(t)[:7] return "%s %02d-%s-%04d %02d:%02d:%02d GMT" % ( days[wday], mday, months[mon-1], year, hour, min, sec) UTC_ZONES = {"GMT": None, "UTC": None, "UT": None, "Z": None} timezone_re = re.compile(r"^([-+])?(\d\d?):?(\d\d)?$") def offset_from_tz_string(tz): offset = None if UTC_ZONES.has_key(tz): offset = 0 else: m = timezone_re.search(tz) if m: offset = 3600 * int(m.group(2)) if m.group(3): offset = offset + 60 * int(m.group(3)) if m.group(1) == '-': offset = -offset return offset def _str2time(day, mon, yr, hr, min, sec, tz): # translate month name to number # month numbers start with 1 (January) try: mon = months_lower.index(string.lower(mon))+1 except ValueError: # maybe it's already a number try: imon = int(mon) except ValueError: return None if 1 <= imon <= 12: mon = imon else: return None # make sure clock elements are defined if hr is None: hr = 0 if min is None: min = 0 if sec is None: sec = 0 yr = int(yr) day = int(day) hr = int(hr) min = int(min) sec = int(sec) if yr < 1000: # find "obvious" year cur_yr = time.localtime(time.time())[0] m = cur_yr % 100 tmp = yr yr = yr + cur_yr - m m = m - tmp if abs(m) > 50: if m > 0: yr = yr + 100 else: yr = yr - 100 # convert UTC time tuple to seconds since epoch (not timezone-adjusted) t = my_timegm((yr, mon, day, hr, min, sec, tz)) if t is not None: # adjust time using timezone string, to get absolute time since epoch if tz is None: tz = "UTC" tz = string.upper(tz) offset = offset_from_tz_string(tz) if offset is None: return None t = t - offset return t strict_re = re.compile(r"^[SMTWF][a-z][a-z], (\d\d) ([JFMASOND][a-z][a-z]) (\d\d\d\d) (\d\d):(\d\d):(\d\d) GMT$") wkday_re = re.compile( r"^(?:Sun|Mon|Tue|Wed|Thu|Fri|Sat)[a-z]*,?\s*", re.I) loose_http_re = re.compile( r"""^ (\d\d?) # day (?:\s+|[-\/]) (\w+) # month (?:\s+|[-\/]) (\d+) # year (?: (?:\s+|:) # separator before clock (\d\d?):(\d\d) # hour:min (?::(\d\d))? # optional seconds )? # optional clock \s* ([-+]?\d{2,4}|(?![APap][Mm]\b)[A-Za-z]+)? # timezone \s* (?:\(\w+\))? # ASCII representation of timezone in parens. \s*$""", re.X) def http2time(text): """Returns time in seconds since epoch of time represented by a string. Return value is an integer. None is returned if the format of str is unrecognized, the time is outside the representable range, or the timezone string is not recognized. If the string contains no timezone, UTC is assumed. The timezone in the string may be numerical (like "-0800" or "+0100") or a string timezone (like "UTC", "GMT", "BST" or "EST"). Currently, only the timezone strings equivalent to UTC (zero offset) are known to the function. The function loosely parses the following formats: Wed, 09 Feb 1994 22:23:32 GMT -- HTTP format Tuesday, 08-Feb-94 14:15:29 GMT -- old rfc850 HTTP format Tuesday, 08-Feb-1994 14:15:29 GMT -- broken rfc850 HTTP format 09 Feb 1994 22:23:32 GMT -- HTTP format (no weekday) 08-Feb-94 14:15:29 GMT -- rfc850 format (no weekday) 08-Feb-1994 14:15:29 GMT -- broken rfc850 format (no weekday) The parser ignores leading and trailing whitespace. The time may be absent. If the year is given with only 2 digits, the function will select the century that makes the year closest to the current date. """ # fast exit for strictly conforming string m = strict_re.search(text) if m: g = m.groups() mon = months_lower.index(string.lower(g[1])) + 1 tt = (int(g[2]), mon, int(g[0]), int(g[3]), int(g[4]), float(g[5])) return my_timegm(tt) # No, we need some messy parsing... # clean up text = string.lstrip(text) text = wkday_re.sub("", text, 1) # Useless weekday # tz is time zone specifier string day, mon, yr, hr, min, sec, tz = [None]*7 # loose regexp parse m = loose_http_re.search(text) if m is not None: day, mon, yr, hr, min, sec, tz = m.groups() else: return None # bad format return _str2time(day, mon, yr, hr, min, sec, tz) iso_re = re.compile( """^ (\d{4}) # year [-\/]? (\d\d?) # numerical month [-\/]? (\d\d?) # day (?: (?:\s+|[-:Tt]) # separator before clock (\d\d?):?(\d\d) # hour:min (?::?(\d\d(?:\.\d*)?))? # optional seconds (and fractional) )? # optional clock \s* ([-+]?\d\d?:?(:?\d\d)? |Z|z)? # timezone (Z is "zero meridian", i.e. GMT) \s*$""", re.X) def iso2time(text): """ As for http2time, but parses the ISO 8601 formats: 1994-02-03 14:15:29 -0100 -- ISO 8601 format 1994-02-03 14:15:29 -- zone is optional 1994-02-03 -- only date 1994-02-03T14:15:29 -- Use T as separator 19940203T141529Z -- ISO 8601 compact format 19940203 -- only date """ # clean up text = string.lstrip(text) # tz is time zone specifier string day, mon, yr, hr, min, sec, tz = [None]*7 # loose regexp parse m = iso_re.search(text) if m is not None: # XXX there's an extra bit of the timezone I'm ignoring here: is # this the right thing to do? yr, mon, day, hr, min, sec, tz, _ = m.groups() else: return None # bad format return _str2time(day, mon, yr, hr, min, sec, tz) # XXX Andrew Dalke kindly sent me a similar class in response to my request on # comp.lang.python, which I then proceeded to lose. I wrote this class # instead, but I think he's released his code publicly since, could pinch the # tests from it, at least... # For testing seek_wrapper invariant (note that # test_urllib2.HandlerTest.test_seekable is expected to fail when this # invariant checking is turned on). The invariant checking is done by module # ipdc, which is available here: # http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/436834 ## from ipdbc import ContractBase ## class seek_wrapper(ContractBase): class seek_wrapper: """Adds a seek method to a file object. This is only designed for seeking on readonly file-like objects. Wrapped file-like object must have a read method. The readline method is only supported if that method is present on the wrapped object. The readlines method is always supported. xreadlines and iteration are supported only for Python 2.2 and above. Public attribute: wrapped (the wrapped file object). WARNING: All other attributes of the wrapped object (ie. those that are not one of wrapped, read, readline, readlines, xreadlines, __iter__ and next) are passed through unaltered, which may or may not make sense for your particular file object. """ # General strategy is to check that cache is full enough, then delegate to # the cache (self.__cache, which is a cStringIO.StringIO instance). A seek # position (self.__pos) is maintained independently of the cache, in order # that a single cache may be shared between multiple seek_wrapper objects. # Copying using module copy shares the cache in this way. def __init__(self, wrapped): self.wrapped = wrapped self.__have_readline = hasattr(self.wrapped, "readline") self.__cache = StringIO() self.__pos = 0 # seek position def invariant(self): # The end of the cache is always at the same place as the end of the # wrapped file. return self.wrapped.tell() == len(self.__cache.getvalue()) def __getattr__(self, name): wrapped = self.__dict__.get("wrapped") if wrapped: return getattr(wrapped, name) return getattr(self.__class__, name) def seek(self, offset, whence=0): assert whence in [0,1,2] # how much data, if any, do we need to read? if whence == 2: # 2: relative to end of *wrapped* file if offset < 0: raise ValueError("negative seek offset") # since we don't know yet where the end of that file is, we must # read everything to_read = None else: if whence == 0: # 0: absolute if offset < 0: raise ValueError("negative seek offset") dest = offset else: # 1: relative to current position pos = self.__pos if pos < offset: raise ValueError("seek to before start of file") dest = pos + offset end = len(self.__cache.getvalue()) to_read = dest - end if to_read < 0: to_read = 0 if to_read != 0: self.__cache.seek(0, 2) if to_read is None: assert whence == 2 self.__cache.write(self.wrapped.read()) self.__pos = self.__cache.tell() - offset else: self.__cache.write(self.wrapped.read(to_read)) # Don't raise an exception even if we've seek()ed past the end # of .wrapped, since fseek() doesn't complain in that case. # Also like fseek(), pretend we have seek()ed past the end, # i.e. not: #self.__pos = self.__cache.tell() # but rather: self.__pos = dest else: self.__pos = dest def tell(self): return self.__pos def __copy__(self): cpy = self.__class__(self.wrapped) cpy.__cache = self.__cache return cpy def get_data(self): pos = self.__pos try: self.seek(0) return self.read(-1) finally: self.__pos = pos def read(self, size=-1): pos = self.__pos end = len(self.__cache.getvalue()) available = end - pos # enough data already cached? if size <= available and size != -1: self.__cache.seek(pos) self.__pos = pos+size return self.__cache.read(size) # no, so read sufficient data from wrapped file and cache it if self.wrapped.read is None: # XXX oops, wrapped file-like-object isn't valid, ignore it return '' self.__cache.seek(0, 2) if size == -1: self.__cache.write(self.wrapped.read()) else: to_read = size - available assert to_read > 0 self.__cache.write(self.wrapped.read(to_read)) self.__cache.seek(pos) data = self.__cache.read(size) self.__pos = self.__cache.tell() assert self.__pos == pos + len(data) return data def readline(self, size=-1): if not self.__have_readline: raise NotImplementedError("no readline method on wrapped object") # line we're about to read might not be complete in the cache, so # read another line first pos = self.__pos self.__cache.seek(0, 2) self.__cache.write(self.wrapped.readline()) self.__cache.seek(pos) data = self.__cache.readline() if size != -1: r = data[:size] self.__pos = pos+size else: r = data self.__pos = pos+len(data) return r def readlines(self, sizehint=-1): pos = self.__pos self.__cache.seek(0, 2) self.__cache.write(self.wrapped.read()) self.__cache.seek(pos) data = self.__cache.readlines(sizehint) self.__pos = self.__cache.tell() return data def __iter__(self): return self def next(self): line = self.readline() if line == "": raise StopIteration return line xreadlines = __iter__ def __repr__(self): return ("<%s at %s whose wrapped object = %r>" % (self.__class__.__name__, hex(id(self)), self.wrapped)) class response_seek_wrapper(seek_wrapper): """ Supports copying response objects and setting response body data. """ def __init__(self, wrapped): seek_wrapper.__init__(self, wrapped) self._headers = self.wrapped.info() def __copy__(self): cpy = seek_wrapper.__copy__(self) # copy headers from delegate cpy._headers = copy.copy(self.info()) return cpy def info(self): return self._headers def set_data(self, data): self.seek(0) self.read() self.close() cache = self._seek_wrapper__cache = StringIO() cache.write(data) self.seek(0) class eoffile: # file-like object that always claims to be at end-of-file... def read(self, size=-1): return "" def readline(self, size=-1): return "" def __iter__(self): return self def next(self): return "" def close(self): pass class eofresponse(eoffile): def __init__(self, url, headers, code, msg): self._url = url self._headers = headers self.code = code self.msg = msg def geturl(self): return self._url def info(self): return self._headers class closeable_response: """Avoids unnecessarily clobbering urllib.addinfourl methods on .close(). Only supports responses returned by mechanize.HTTPHandler. After .close(), the following methods are supported: .read() .readline() .readlines() .seek() .tell() .info() .geturl() .__iter__() .next() .close() and the following attributes are supported: .code .msg Also supports pickling (but the stdlib currently does something to prevent it: http://python.org/sf/1144636). """ # presence of this attr indicates is useable after .close() closeable_response = None def __init__(self, fp, headers, url, code, msg): self._set_fp(fp) self._headers = headers self._url = url self.code = code self.msg = msg def _set_fp(self, fp): self.fp = fp self.read = self.fp.read self.readline = self.fp.readline if hasattr(self.fp, "readlines"): self.readlines = self.fp.readlines if hasattr(self.fp, "fileno"): self.fileno = self.fp.fileno else: self.fileno = lambda: None if hasattr(self.fp, "__iter__"): self.__iter__ = self.fp.__iter__ if hasattr(self.fp, "next"): self.next = self.fp.next def __repr__(self): return '<%s at %s whose fp = %r>' % ( self.__class__.__name__, hex(id(self)), self.fp) def info(self): return self._headers def geturl(self): return self._url def close(self): wrapped = self.fp wrapped.close() new_wrapped = eofresponse( self._url, self._headers, self.code, self.msg) self._set_fp(new_wrapped) def __getstate__(self): # There are three obvious options here: # 1. truncate # 2. read to end # 3. close socket, pickle state including read position, then open # again on unpickle and use Range header # XXXX um, 4. refuse to pickle unless .close()d. This is better, # actually ("errors should never pass silently"). Pickling doesn't # work anyway ATM, because of http://python.org/sf/1144636 so fix # this later # 2 breaks pickle protocol, because one expects the original object # to be left unscathed by pickling. 3 is too complicated and # surprising (and too much work ;-) to happen in a sane __getstate__. # So we do 1. state = self.__dict__.copy() new_wrapped = eofresponse( self._url, self._headers, self.code, self.msg) state["wrapped"] = new_wrapped return state def make_response(data, headers, url, code, msg): """Convenient factory for objects implementing response interface. data: string containing response body data headers: sequence of (name, value) pairs url: URL of response code: integer response code (e.g. 200) msg: string response code message (e.g. "OK") """ hdr_text = [] for name_value in headers: hdr_text.append("%s: %s" % name_value) mime_headers = mimetools.Message(StringIO("\n".join(hdr_text))) r = closeable_response(StringIO(data), mime_headers, url, code, msg) return response_seek_wrapper(r)