i18n/hggettext
author Durham Goode <durham@fb.com>
Fri, 12 Sep 2014 14:21:18 -0700
changeset 22451 186fd06283b4
parent 12823 80deae3bc5ea
child 29170 2516bba643e7
permissions -rwxr-xr-x
revset: lower weight for _intlist function The histedit command uses a revset like: (_intlist('1234\x001235')) and merge() Previously the optimizer gave a weight of 1.5 to the _intlist side (1 for the function, 0.5 for the string) which caused it to process the merge() side first. This caused it to evaluate merge against every commit in the repo, which took 2.5 seconds on a large repo. I changed the weight of _intlist to 0, since it's a trivial calculation, which makes it process intlist first, which makes merge apply only to the revs in the list. Which makes the revset take 0.15 seconds now. Cutting off 2.4 seconds off our histedit performance. >From the revset benchmark: revset #25: (_intlist('20000\x0020001')) and merge() 0) obsolete feature not enabled but 54243 markers found! ! wall 0.036767 comb 0.040000 user 0.040000 sys 0.000000 (best of 100) 1) obsolete feature not enabled but 54243 markers found! ! wall 0.000198 comb 0.000000 user 0.000000 sys 0.000000 (best of 9084)

#!/usr/bin/env python
#
# hggettext - carefully extract docstrings for Mercurial
#
# Copyright 2009 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> and others
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.

# The normalize function is taken from pygettext which is distributed
# with Python under the Python License, which is GPL compatible.

"""Extract docstrings from Mercurial commands.

Compared to pygettext, this script knows about the cmdtable and table
dictionaries used by Mercurial, and will only extract docstrings from
functions mentioned therein.

Use xgettext like normal to extract strings marked as translatable and
join the message cataloges to get the final catalog.
"""

import os, sys, inspect


def escape(s):
    # The order is important, the backslash must be escaped first
    # since the other replacements introduce new backslashes
    # themselves.
    s = s.replace('\\', '\\\\')
    s = s.replace('\n', '\\n')
    s = s.replace('\r', '\\r')
    s = s.replace('\t', '\\t')
    s = s.replace('"', '\\"')
    return s


def normalize(s):
    # This converts the various Python string types into a format that
    # is appropriate for .po files, namely much closer to C style.
    lines = s.split('\n')
    if len(lines) == 1:
        s = '"' + escape(s) + '"'
    else:
        if not lines[-1]:
            del lines[-1]
            lines[-1] = lines[-1] + '\n'
        lines = map(escape, lines)
        lineterm = '\\n"\n"'
        s = '""\n"' + lineterm.join(lines) + '"'
    return s


def poentry(path, lineno, s):
    return ('#: %s:%d\n' % (path, lineno) +
            'msgid %s\n' % normalize(s) +
            'msgstr ""\n')


def offset(src, doc, name, default):
    """Compute offset or issue a warning on stdout."""
    # Backslashes in doc appear doubled in src.
    end = src.find(doc.replace('\\', '\\\\'))
    if end == -1:
        # This can happen if the docstring contains unnecessary escape
        # sequences such as \" in a triple-quoted string. The problem
        # is that \" is turned into " and so doc wont appear in src.
        sys.stderr.write("warning: unknown offset in %s, assuming %d lines\n"
                         % (name, default))
        return default
    else:
        return src.count('\n', 0, end)


def importpath(path):
    """Import a path like foo/bar/baz.py and return the baz module."""
    if path.endswith('.py'):
        path = path[:-3]
    if path.endswith('/__init__'):
        path = path[:-9]
    path = path.replace('/', '.')
    mod = __import__(path)
    for comp in path.split('.')[1:]:
        mod = getattr(mod, comp)
    return mod


def docstrings(path):
    """Extract docstrings from path.

    This respects the Mercurial cmdtable/table convention and will
    only extract docstrings from functions mentioned in these tables.
    """
    mod = importpath(path)
    if mod.__doc__:
        src = open(path).read()
        lineno = 1 + offset(src, mod.__doc__, path, 7)
        print poentry(path, lineno, mod.__doc__)

    functions = list(getattr(mod, 'i18nfunctions', []))
    functions = [(f, True) for f in functions]

    cmdtable = getattr(mod, 'cmdtable', {})
    if not cmdtable:
        # Maybe we are processing mercurial.commands?
        cmdtable = getattr(mod, 'table', {})
    functions.extend((c[0], False) for c in cmdtable.itervalues())

    for func, rstrip in functions:
        if func.__doc__:
            src = inspect.getsource(func)
            name = "%s.%s" % (path, func.__name__)
            lineno = func.func_code.co_firstlineno
            doc = func.__doc__
            if rstrip:
                doc = doc.rstrip()
            lineno += offset(src, doc, name, 1)
            print poentry(path, lineno, doc)


def rawtext(path):
    src = open(path).read()
    print poentry(path, 1, src)


if __name__ == "__main__":
    # It is very important that we import the Mercurial modules from
    # the source tree where hggettext is executed. Otherwise we might
    # accidentally import and extract strings from a Mercurial
    # installation mentioned in PYTHONPATH.
    sys.path.insert(0, os.getcwd())
    from mercurial import demandimport; demandimport.enable()
    for path in sys.argv[1:]:
        if path.endswith('.txt'):
            rawtext(path)
        else:
            docstrings(path)