contrib: don't hardcode path to bash interpreter
Use the env binary to figure out the correct bash to use.
Certain systems ships with an ancient version of bash, but the
user might have installed a newer one that is earlier in $PATH.
For example the current version of Mac OS X ships version 3.2.51
of bash, which does not understand new fancy builtins such as
readarray. A user might install a newer version of bash, use that
as their shell and add that path before bin.
#!/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",
r"local variable '.*' is assigned to but never used",
r"unable to detect undefined names",
]
for msgtype, pat in enumerate(pats):
if re.search(pat, 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