Sun, 04 Oct 2015 22:37:56 +0200
Updated coverage to 4.0 (breaks with Python 3.2 support).
# Licensed under the Apache License: http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 # For details: https://bitbucket.org/ned/coveragepy/src/default/NOTICE.txt """Better tokenizing for coverage.py.""" import codecs import keyword import re import token import tokenize from coverage import env from coverage.backward import iternext from coverage.misc import contract def phys_tokens(toks): """Return all physical tokens, even line continuations. tokenize.generate_tokens() doesn't return a token for the backslash that continues lines. This wrapper provides those tokens so that we can re-create a faithful representation of the original source. Returns the same values as generate_tokens() """ last_line = None last_lineno = -1 last_ttype = None for ttype, ttext, (slineno, scol), (elineno, ecol), ltext in toks: if last_lineno != elineno: if last_line and last_line.endswith("\\\n"): # We are at the beginning of a new line, and the last line # ended with a backslash. We probably have to inject a # backslash token into the stream. Unfortunately, there's more # to figure out. This code:: # # usage = """\ # HEY THERE # """ # # triggers this condition, but the token text is:: # # '"""\\\nHEY THERE\n"""' # # so we need to figure out if the backslash is already in the # string token or not. inject_backslash = True if last_ttype == tokenize.COMMENT: # Comments like this \ # should never result in a new token. inject_backslash = False elif ttype == token.STRING: if "\n" in ttext and ttext.split('\n', 1)[0][-1] == '\\': # It's a multi-line string and the first line ends with # a backslash, so we don't need to inject another. inject_backslash = False if inject_backslash: # Figure out what column the backslash is in. ccol = len(last_line.split("\n")[-2]) - 1 # Yield the token, with a fake token type. yield ( 99999, "\\\n", (slineno, ccol), (slineno, ccol+2), last_line ) last_line = ltext last_ttype = ttype yield ttype, ttext, (slineno, scol), (elineno, ecol), ltext last_lineno = elineno @contract(source='unicode') def source_token_lines(source): """Generate a series of lines, one for each line in `source`. Each line is a list of pairs, each pair is a token:: [('key', 'def'), ('ws', ' '), ('nam', 'hello'), ('op', '('), ... ] Each pair has a token class, and the token text. If you concatenate all the token texts, and then join them with newlines, you should have your original `source` back, with two differences: trailing whitespace is not preserved, and a final line with no newline is indistinguishable from a final line with a newline. """ ws_tokens = set([token.INDENT, token.DEDENT, token.NEWLINE, tokenize.NL]) line = [] col = 0 # The \f is because of http://bugs.python.org/issue19035 source = source.expandtabs(8).replace('\r\n', '\n').replace('\f', ' ') tokgen = generate_tokens(source) for ttype, ttext, (_, scol), (_, ecol), _ in phys_tokens(tokgen): mark_start = True for part in re.split('(\n)', ttext): if part == '\n': yield line line = [] col = 0 mark_end = False elif part == '': mark_end = False elif ttype in ws_tokens: mark_end = False else: if mark_start and scol > col: line.append(("ws", u" " * (scol - col))) mark_start = False tok_class = tokenize.tok_name.get(ttype, 'xx').lower()[:3] if ttype == token.NAME and keyword.iskeyword(ttext): tok_class = "key" line.append((tok_class, part)) mark_end = True scol = 0 if mark_end: col = ecol if line: yield line class CachedTokenizer(object): """A one-element cache around tokenize.generate_tokens. When reporting, coverage.py tokenizes files twice, once to find the structure of the file, and once to syntax-color it. Tokenizing is expensive, and easily cached. This is a one-element cache so that our twice-in-a-row tokenizing doesn't actually tokenize twice. """ def __init__(self): self.last_text = None self.last_tokens = None @contract(text='unicode') def generate_tokens(self, text): """A stand-in for `tokenize.generate_tokens`.""" if text != self.last_text: self.last_text = text readline = iternext(text.splitlines(True)) self.last_tokens = list(tokenize.generate_tokens(readline)) return self.last_tokens # Create our generate_tokens cache as a callable replacement function. generate_tokens = CachedTokenizer().generate_tokens COOKIE_RE = re.compile(r"^\s*#.*coding[:=]\s*([-\w.]+)", flags=re.MULTILINE) @contract(source='bytes') def _source_encoding_py2(source): """Determine the encoding for `source`, according to PEP 263. `source` is a byte string, the text of the program. Returns a string, the name of the encoding. """ assert isinstance(source, bytes) # Do this so the detect_encode code we copied will work. readline = iternext(source.splitlines(True)) # This is mostly code adapted from Py3.2's tokenize module. def _get_normal_name(orig_enc): """Imitates get_normal_name in tokenizer.c.""" # Only care about the first 12 characters. enc = orig_enc[:12].lower().replace("_", "-") if re.match(r"^utf-8($|-)", enc): return "utf-8" if re.match(r"^(latin-1|iso-8859-1|iso-latin-1)($|-)", enc): return "iso-8859-1" return orig_enc # From detect_encode(): # It detects the encoding from the presence of a UTF-8 BOM or an encoding # cookie as specified in PEP-0263. If both a BOM and a cookie are present, # but disagree, a SyntaxError will be raised. If the encoding cookie is an # invalid charset, raise a SyntaxError. Note that if a UTF-8 BOM is found, # 'utf-8-sig' is returned. # If no encoding is specified, then the default will be returned. default = 'ascii' bom_found = False encoding = None def read_or_stop(): """Get the next source line, or ''.""" try: return readline() except StopIteration: return '' def find_cookie(line): """Find an encoding cookie in `line`.""" try: line_string = line.decode('ascii') except UnicodeDecodeError: return None matches = COOKIE_RE.findall(line_string) if not matches: return None encoding = _get_normal_name(matches[0]) try: codec = codecs.lookup(encoding) except LookupError: # This behavior mimics the Python interpreter raise SyntaxError("unknown encoding: " + encoding) if bom_found: # codecs in 2.3 were raw tuples of functions, assume the best. codec_name = getattr(codec, 'name', encoding) if codec_name != 'utf-8': # This behavior mimics the Python interpreter raise SyntaxError('encoding problem: utf-8') encoding += '-sig' return encoding first = read_or_stop() if first.startswith(codecs.BOM_UTF8): bom_found = True first = first[3:] default = 'utf-8-sig' if not first: return default encoding = find_cookie(first) if encoding: return encoding second = read_or_stop() if not second: return default encoding = find_cookie(second) if encoding: return encoding return default @contract(source='bytes') def _source_encoding_py3(source): """Determine the encoding for `source`, according to PEP 263. `source` is a byte string: the text of the program. Returns a string, the name of the encoding. """ readline = iternext(source.splitlines(True)) return tokenize.detect_encoding(readline)[0] if env.PY3: source_encoding = _source_encoding_py3 else: source_encoding = _source_encoding_py2 @contract(source='unicode') def compile_unicode(source, filename, mode): """Just like the `compile` builtin, but works on any Unicode string. Python 2's compile() builtin has a stupid restriction: if the source string is Unicode, then it may not have a encoding declaration in it. Why not? Who knows! This function catches that exception, neuters the coding declaration, and compiles it anyway. """ try: code = compile(source, filename, mode) except SyntaxError as synerr: if "coding declaration in unicode string" not in synerr.args[0].lower(): raise source = neuter_encoding_declaration(source) code = compile(source, filename, mode) return code @contract(source='unicode', returns='unicode') def neuter_encoding_declaration(source): """Return `source`, with any encoding declaration neutered. This function will only ever be called on `source` that has an encoding declaration, so some edge cases can be ignored. """ source = COOKIE_RE.sub("# (deleted declaration)", source) return source