windows: seek to the end of posixfile when opening in append mode
The position is implementation defined when opening in append mode,
and it seems like Linux sets it to EOF while Windows keeps it at zero.
This has caused problems in the past when a file is opened and tell()
is immediately called, such as
48c232873a54 and
6bf93440a717.
Since the only caller of osutil.posixfile is this windows module, this seems
like a better place to fix the issue than in osutil.c and pure.osutil.
#!/usr/bin/env python
# Filter output by pyflakes to control which warnings we check
import sys, re, os
def makekey(typeandline):
"""
for sorting lines by: msgtype, path/to/file, lineno, message
typeandline is a sequence of a message type and the entire message line
the message line format is path/to/file:line: message
>>> makekey((3, 'example.py:36: any message'))
(3, 'example.py', 36, ' any message')
>>> makekey((7, 'path/to/file.py:68: dummy message'))
(7, 'path/to/file.py', 68, ' dummy message')
>>> makekey((2, 'fn:88: m')) > makekey((2, 'fn:9: m'))
True
"""
msgtype, line = typeandline
fname, line, message = line.split(":", 2)
# line as int for ordering 9 before 88
return msgtype, fname, int(line), message
lines = []
for line in sys.stdin:
# We whitelist tests (see more messages in pyflakes.messages)
pats = [
(r"imported but unused", None),
(r"local variable '.*' is assigned to but never used", None),
(r"unable to detect undefined names", None),
(r"undefined name '.*'",
r"undefined name '(WindowsError|memoryview)'")
]
for msgtype, (pat, excl) in enumerate(pats):
if re.search(pat, line) and (not excl or not re.search(excl, line)):
break # pattern matches
else:
continue # no pattern matched, next line
fn = line.split(':', 1)[0]
f = open(os.path.join(os.path.dirname(os.path.dirname(__file__)), fn))
data = f.read()
f.close()
if 'no-' 'check-code' in data:
continue
lines.append((msgtype, line))
for msgtype, line in sorted(lines, key=makekey):
sys.stdout.write(line)
print
# self test of "undefined name" detection for other than 'memoryview'
if False:
print undefinedname