Mercurial > hg-stable
view contrib/import-checker.py @ 27739:d6d3cf5fda6f
hooks: add HG_NODE_LAST to txnclose and changegroup hook environments
Sometimes a txnclose or changegroup hook wants to iterate through all
the changesets in transaction: in that situation usually the revset
`$HG_NODE:` is used to select the revisions. Unfortunately this revset
sometimes may contain too many changesets because we don't have the
write lock while the hook runs newer changes may be added to
repository in the meantime.
That's why there is a need for extra variable carrying the information about
the last change in the transaction.
author | Mateusz Kwapich <mitrandir@fb.com> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 05 Jan 2016 17:37:59 -0800 |
parents | 39845b064041 |
children | f3fb24e36d61 |
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#!/usr/bin/env python import ast import collections import os import sys # Import a minimal set of stdlib modules needed for list_stdlib_modules() # to work when run from a virtualenv. The modules were chosen empirically # so that the return value matches the return value without virtualenv. import BaseHTTPServer import zlib # Whitelist of modules that symbols can be directly imported from. allowsymbolimports = ( '__future__', 'mercurial.hgweb.common', 'mercurial.hgweb.request', 'mercurial.i18n', 'mercurial.node', ) # Modules that must be aliased because they are commonly confused with # common variables and can create aliasing and readability issues. requirealias = { 'ui': 'uimod', } def usingabsolute(root): """Whether absolute imports are being used.""" if sys.version_info[0] >= 3: return True for node in ast.walk(root): if isinstance(node, ast.ImportFrom): if node.module == '__future__': for n in node.names: if n.name == 'absolute_import': return True return False def walklocal(root): """Recursively yield all descendant nodes but not in a different scope""" todo = collections.deque(ast.iter_child_nodes(root)) yield root, False while todo: node = todo.popleft() newscope = isinstance(node, ast.FunctionDef) if not newscope: todo.extend(ast.iter_child_nodes(node)) yield node, newscope def dotted_name_of_path(path, trimpure=False): """Given a relative path to a source file, return its dotted module name. >>> dotted_name_of_path('mercurial/error.py') 'mercurial.error' >>> dotted_name_of_path('mercurial/pure/parsers.py', trimpure=True) 'mercurial.parsers' >>> dotted_name_of_path('zlibmodule.so') 'zlib' """ parts = path.replace(os.sep, '/').split('/') parts[-1] = parts[-1].split('.', 1)[0] # remove .py and .so and .ARCH.so if parts[-1].endswith('module'): parts[-1] = parts[-1][:-6] if trimpure: return '.'.join(p for p in parts if p != 'pure') return '.'.join(parts) def fromlocalfunc(modulename, localmods): """Get a function to examine which locally defined module the target source imports via a specified name. `modulename` is an `dotted_name_of_path()`-ed source file path, which may have `.__init__` at the end of it, of the target source. `localmods` is a dict (or set), of which key is an absolute `dotted_name_of_path()`-ed source file path of locally defined (= Mercurial specific) modules. This function assumes that module names not existing in `localmods` are from the Python standard library. This function returns the function, which takes `name` argument, and returns `(absname, dottedpath, hassubmod)` tuple if `name` matches against locally defined module. Otherwise, it returns False. It is assumed that `name` doesn't have `.__init__`. `absname` is an absolute module name of specified `name` (e.g. "hgext.convert"). This can be used to compose prefix for sub modules or so. `dottedpath` is a `dotted_name_of_path()`-ed source file path (e.g. "hgext.convert.__init__") of `name`. This is used to look module up in `localmods` again. `hassubmod` is whether it may have sub modules under it (for convenient, even though this is also equivalent to "absname != dottednpath") >>> localmods = {'foo.__init__': True, 'foo.foo1': True, ... 'foo.bar.__init__': True, 'foo.bar.bar1': True, ... 'baz.__init__': True, 'baz.baz1': True } >>> fromlocal = fromlocalfunc('foo.xxx', localmods) >>> # relative >>> fromlocal('foo1') ('foo.foo1', 'foo.foo1', False) >>> fromlocal('bar') ('foo.bar', 'foo.bar.__init__', True) >>> fromlocal('bar.bar1') ('foo.bar.bar1', 'foo.bar.bar1', False) >>> # absolute >>> fromlocal('baz') ('baz', 'baz.__init__', True) >>> fromlocal('baz.baz1') ('baz.baz1', 'baz.baz1', False) >>> # unknown = maybe standard library >>> fromlocal('os') False >>> fromlocal(None, 1) ('foo', 'foo.__init__', True) >>> fromlocal2 = fromlocalfunc('foo.xxx.yyy', localmods) >>> fromlocal2(None, 2) ('foo', 'foo.__init__', True) """ prefix = '.'.join(modulename.split('.')[:-1]) if prefix: prefix += '.' def fromlocal(name, level=0): # name is None when relative imports are used. if name is None: # If relative imports are used, level must not be absolute. assert level > 0 candidates = ['.'.join(modulename.split('.')[:-level])] else: # Check relative name first. candidates = [prefix + name, name] for n in candidates: if n in localmods: return (n, n, False) dottedpath = n + '.__init__' if dottedpath in localmods: return (n, dottedpath, True) return False return fromlocal def list_stdlib_modules(): """List the modules present in the stdlib. >>> mods = set(list_stdlib_modules()) >>> 'BaseHTTPServer' in mods True os.path isn't really a module, so it's missing: >>> 'os.path' in mods False sys requires special treatment, because it's baked into the interpreter, but it should still appear: >>> 'sys' in mods True >>> 'collections' in mods True >>> 'cStringIO' in mods True """ for m in sys.builtin_module_names: yield m # These modules only exist on windows, but we should always # consider them stdlib. for m in ['msvcrt', '_winreg']: yield m yield 'builtins' # python3 only for m in 'fcntl', 'grp', 'pwd', 'termios': # Unix only yield m stdlib_prefixes = set([sys.prefix, sys.exec_prefix]) # We need to supplement the list of prefixes for the search to work # when run from within a virtualenv. for mod in (BaseHTTPServer, zlib): try: # Not all module objects have a __file__ attribute. filename = mod.__file__ except AttributeError: continue dirname = os.path.dirname(filename) for prefix in stdlib_prefixes: if dirname.startswith(prefix): # Then this directory is redundant. break else: stdlib_prefixes.add(dirname) for libpath in sys.path: # We want to walk everything in sys.path that starts with # something in stdlib_prefixes. check-code suppressed because # the ast module used by this script implies the availability # of any(). if not any(libpath.startswith(p) for p in stdlib_prefixes): # no-py24 continue for top, dirs, files in os.walk(libpath): for i, d in reversed(list(enumerate(dirs))): if (not os.path.exists(os.path.join(top, d, '__init__.py')) or top == libpath and d in ('hgext', 'mercurial')): del dirs[i] for name in files: if not name.endswith(('.py', '.so', '.pyc', '.pyo', '.pyd')): continue if name.startswith('__init__.py'): full_path = top else: full_path = os.path.join(top, name) rel_path = full_path[len(libpath) + 1:] mod = dotted_name_of_path(rel_path) yield mod stdlib_modules = set(list_stdlib_modules()) def imported_modules(source, modulename, localmods, ignore_nested=False): """Given the source of a file as a string, yield the names imported by that file. Args: source: The python source to examine as a string. modulename: of specified python source (may have `__init__`) localmods: dict of locally defined module names (may have `__init__`) ignore_nested: If true, import statements that do not start in column zero will be ignored. Returns: A list of absolute module names imported by the given source. >>> modulename = 'foo.xxx' >>> localmods = {'foo.__init__': True, ... 'foo.foo1': True, 'foo.foo2': True, ... 'foo.bar.__init__': True, 'foo.bar.bar1': True, ... 'baz.__init__': True, 'baz.baz1': True } >>> # standard library (= not locally defined ones) >>> sorted(imported_modules( ... 'from stdlib1 import foo, bar; import stdlib2', ... modulename, localmods)) [] >>> # relative importing >>> sorted(imported_modules( ... 'import foo1; from bar import bar1', ... modulename, localmods)) ['foo.bar.bar1', 'foo.foo1'] >>> sorted(imported_modules( ... 'from bar.bar1 import name1, name2, name3', ... modulename, localmods)) ['foo.bar.bar1'] >>> # absolute importing >>> sorted(imported_modules( ... 'from baz import baz1, name1', ... modulename, localmods)) ['baz.__init__', 'baz.baz1'] >>> # mixed importing, even though it shouldn't be recommended >>> sorted(imported_modules( ... 'import stdlib, foo1, baz', ... modulename, localmods)) ['baz.__init__', 'foo.foo1'] >>> # ignore_nested >>> sorted(imported_modules( ... '''import foo ... def wat(): ... import bar ... ''', modulename, localmods)) ['foo.__init__', 'foo.bar.__init__'] >>> sorted(imported_modules( ... '''import foo ... def wat(): ... import bar ... ''', modulename, localmods, ignore_nested=True)) ['foo.__init__'] """ fromlocal = fromlocalfunc(modulename, localmods) for node in ast.walk(ast.parse(source)): if ignore_nested and getattr(node, 'col_offset', 0) > 0: continue if isinstance(node, ast.Import): for n in node.names: found = fromlocal(n.name) if not found: # this should import standard library continue yield found[1] elif isinstance(node, ast.ImportFrom): found = fromlocal(node.module, node.level) if not found: # this should import standard library continue absname, dottedpath, hassubmod = found if not hassubmod: # "dottedpath" is not a package; must be imported yield dottedpath # examination of "node.names" should be redundant # e.g.: from mercurial.node import nullid, nullrev continue modnotfound = False prefix = absname + '.' for n in node.names: found = fromlocal(prefix + n.name) if not found: # this should be a function or a property of "node.module" modnotfound = True continue yield found[1] if modnotfound: # "dottedpath" is a package, but imported because of non-module # lookup yield dottedpath def verify_import_convention(module, source, localmods): """Verify imports match our established coding convention. We have 2 conventions: legacy and modern. The modern convention is in effect when using absolute imports. The legacy convention only looks for mixed imports. The modern convention is much more thorough. """ root = ast.parse(source) absolute = usingabsolute(root) if absolute: return verify_modern_convention(module, root, localmods) else: return verify_stdlib_on_own_line(root) def verify_modern_convention(module, root, localmods, root_col_offset=0): """Verify a file conforms to the modern import convention rules. The rules of the modern convention are: * Ordering is stdlib followed by local imports. Each group is lexically sorted. * Importing multiple modules via "import X, Y" is not allowed: use separate import statements. * Importing multiple modules via "from X import ..." is allowed if using parenthesis and one entry per line. * Only 1 relative import statement per import level ("from .", "from ..") is allowed. * Relative imports from higher levels must occur before lower levels. e.g. "from .." must be before "from .". * Imports from peer packages should use relative import (e.g. do not "import mercurial.foo" from a "mercurial.*" module). * Symbols can only be imported from specific modules (see `allowsymbolimports`). For other modules, first import the module then assign the symbol to a module-level variable. In addition, these imports must be performed before other relative imports. This rule only applies to import statements outside of any blocks. * Relative imports from the standard library are not allowed. * Certain modules must be aliased to alternate names to avoid aliasing and readability problems. See `requirealias`. """ topmodule = module.split('.')[0] fromlocal = fromlocalfunc(module, localmods) # Whether a local/non-stdlib import has been performed. seenlocal = False # Whether a relative, non-symbol import has been seen. seennonsymbolrelative = False # The last name to be imported (for sorting). lastname = None # Relative import levels encountered so far. seenlevels = set() for node, newscope in walklocal(root): def msg(fmt, *args): return (fmt % args, node.lineno) if newscope: # Check for local imports in function for r in verify_modern_convention(module, node, localmods, node.col_offset + 4): yield r elif isinstance(node, ast.Import): # Disallow "import foo, bar" and require separate imports # for each module. if len(node.names) > 1: yield msg('multiple imported names: %s', ', '.join(n.name for n in node.names)) name = node.names[0].name asname = node.names[0].asname # Ignore sorting rules on imports inside blocks. if node.col_offset == root_col_offset: if lastname and name < lastname: yield msg('imports not lexically sorted: %s < %s', name, lastname) lastname = name # stdlib imports should be before local imports. stdlib = name in stdlib_modules if stdlib and seenlocal and node.col_offset == root_col_offset: yield msg('stdlib import follows local import: %s', name) if not stdlib: seenlocal = True # Import of sibling modules should use relative imports. topname = name.split('.')[0] if topname == topmodule: yield msg('import should be relative: %s', name) if name in requirealias and asname != requirealias[name]: yield msg('%s module must be "as" aliased to %s', name, requirealias[name]) elif isinstance(node, ast.ImportFrom): # Resolve the full imported module name. if node.level > 0: fullname = '.'.join(module.split('.')[:-node.level]) if node.module: fullname += '.%s' % node.module else: assert node.module fullname = node.module topname = fullname.split('.')[0] if topname == topmodule: yield msg('import should be relative: %s', fullname) # __future__ is special since it needs to come first and use # symbol import. if fullname != '__future__': if not fullname or fullname in stdlib_modules: yield msg('relative import of stdlib module') else: seenlocal = True # Direct symbol import is only allowed from certain modules and # must occur before non-symbol imports. if node.module and node.col_offset == root_col_offset: found = fromlocal(node.module, node.level) if found and found[2]: # node.module is a package prefix = found[0] + '.' symbols = [n.name for n in node.names if not fromlocal(prefix + n.name)] else: symbols = [n.name for n in node.names] if symbols and fullname not in allowsymbolimports: yield msg('direct symbol import %s from %s', ', '.join(symbols), fullname) if symbols and seennonsymbolrelative: yield msg('symbol import follows non-symbol import: %s', fullname) if not node.module: assert node.level seennonsymbolrelative = True # Only allow 1 group per level. if (node.level in seenlevels and node.col_offset == root_col_offset): yield msg('multiple "from %s import" statements', '.' * node.level) # Higher-level groups come before lower-level groups. if any(node.level > l for l in seenlevels): yield msg('higher-level import should come first: %s', fullname) seenlevels.add(node.level) # Entries in "from .X import ( ... )" lists must be lexically # sorted. lastentryname = None for n in node.names: if lastentryname and n.name < lastentryname: yield msg('imports from %s not lexically sorted: %s < %s', fullname, n.name, lastentryname) lastentryname = n.name if n.name in requirealias and n.asname != requirealias[n.name]: yield msg('%s from %s must be "as" aliased to %s', n.name, fullname, requirealias[n.name]) def verify_stdlib_on_own_line(root): """Given some python source, verify that stdlib imports are done in separate statements from relative local module imports. Observing this limitation is important as it works around an annoying lib2to3 bug in relative import rewrites: http://bugs.python.org/issue19510. >>> list(verify_stdlib_on_own_line(ast.parse('import sys, foo'))) [('mixed imports\\n stdlib: sys\\n relative: foo', 1)] >>> list(verify_stdlib_on_own_line(ast.parse('import sys, os'))) [] >>> list(verify_stdlib_on_own_line(ast.parse('import foo, bar'))) [] """ for node in ast.walk(root): if isinstance(node, ast.Import): from_stdlib = {False: [], True: []} for n in node.names: from_stdlib[n.name in stdlib_modules].append(n.name) if from_stdlib[True] and from_stdlib[False]: yield ('mixed imports\n stdlib: %s\n relative: %s' % (', '.join(sorted(from_stdlib[True])), ', '.join(sorted(from_stdlib[False]))), node.lineno) class CircularImport(Exception): pass def checkmod(mod, imports): shortest = {} visit = [[mod]] while visit: path = visit.pop(0) for i in sorted(imports.get(path[-1], [])): if len(path) < shortest.get(i, 1000): shortest[i] = len(path) if i in path: if i == path[0]: raise CircularImport(path) continue visit.append(path + [i]) def rotatecycle(cycle): """arrange a cycle so that the lexicographically first module listed first >>> rotatecycle(['foo', 'bar']) ['bar', 'foo', 'bar'] """ lowest = min(cycle) idx = cycle.index(lowest) return cycle[idx:] + cycle[:idx] + [lowest] def find_cycles(imports): """Find cycles in an already-loaded import graph. All module names recorded in `imports` should be absolute one. >>> imports = {'top.foo': ['top.bar', 'os.path', 'top.qux'], ... 'top.bar': ['top.baz', 'sys'], ... 'top.baz': ['top.foo'], ... 'top.qux': ['top.foo']} >>> print '\\n'.join(sorted(find_cycles(imports))) top.bar -> top.baz -> top.foo -> top.bar top.foo -> top.qux -> top.foo """ cycles = set() for mod in sorted(imports.iterkeys()): try: checkmod(mod, imports) except CircularImport as e: cycle = e.args[0] cycles.add(" -> ".join(rotatecycle(cycle))) return cycles def _cycle_sortkey(c): return len(c), c def main(argv): if len(argv) < 2 or (argv[1] == '-' and len(argv) > 2): print 'Usage: %s {-|file [file] [file] ...}' return 1 if argv[1] == '-': argv = argv[:1] argv.extend(l.rstrip() for l in sys.stdin.readlines()) localmods = {} used_imports = {} any_errors = False for source_path in argv[1:]: modname = dotted_name_of_path(source_path, trimpure=True) localmods[modname] = source_path for modname, source_path in sorted(localmods.iteritems()): f = open(source_path) src = f.read() used_imports[modname] = sorted( imported_modules(src, modname, localmods, ignore_nested=True)) for error, lineno in verify_import_convention(modname, src, localmods): any_errors = True print '%s:%d: %s' % (source_path, lineno, error) f.close() cycles = find_cycles(used_imports) if cycles: firstmods = set() for c in sorted(cycles, key=_cycle_sortkey): first = c.split()[0] # As a rough cut, ignore any cycle that starts with the # same module as some other cycle. Otherwise we see lots # of cycles that are effectively duplicates. if first in firstmods: continue print 'Import cycle:', c firstmods.add(first) any_errors = True return any_errors != 0 if __name__ == '__main__': sys.exit(int(main(sys.argv)))