git: show the version of `pygit2` with verbose version output
This seems like useful info to have when debugging. I followed the precedent of
hg-git, which prints something like:
hggit external 0.9.0a1 (dulwich 0.19.15)
We don't have a version number assigned (because it's internal), so it's just
the parenthetical.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D9436
# Copyright (c) 2016-present, Gregory Szorc
# All rights reserved.
#
# This software may be modified and distributed under the terms
# of the BSD license. See the LICENSE file for details.
from __future__ import absolute_import
import cffi
import distutils.ccompiler
import os
import re
import subprocess
import tempfile
HERE = os.path.abspath(os.path.dirname(__file__))
SOURCES = [
"zstd/%s" % p
for p in (
"common/debug.c",
"common/entropy_common.c",
"common/error_private.c",
"common/fse_decompress.c",
"common/pool.c",
"common/threading.c",
"common/xxhash.c",
"common/zstd_common.c",
"compress/fse_compress.c",
"compress/hist.c",
"compress/huf_compress.c",
"compress/zstd_compress.c",
"compress/zstd_compress_literals.c",
"compress/zstd_compress_sequences.c",
"compress/zstd_double_fast.c",
"compress/zstd_fast.c",
"compress/zstd_lazy.c",
"compress/zstd_ldm.c",
"compress/zstd_opt.c",
"compress/zstdmt_compress.c",
"decompress/huf_decompress.c",
"decompress/zstd_ddict.c",
"decompress/zstd_decompress.c",
"decompress/zstd_decompress_block.c",
"dictBuilder/cover.c",
"dictBuilder/fastcover.c",
"dictBuilder/divsufsort.c",
"dictBuilder/zdict.c",
)
]
# Headers whose preprocessed output will be fed into cdef().
HEADERS = [
os.path.join(HERE, "zstd", *p)
for p in (
("zstd.h",),
("dictBuilder", "zdict.h"),
)
]
INCLUDE_DIRS = [
os.path.join(HERE, d)
for d in (
"zstd",
"zstd/common",
"zstd/compress",
"zstd/decompress",
"zstd/dictBuilder",
)
]
# cffi can't parse some of the primitives in zstd.h. So we invoke the
# preprocessor and feed its output into cffi.
compiler = distutils.ccompiler.new_compiler()
# Needed for MSVC.
if hasattr(compiler, "initialize"):
compiler.initialize()
# Distutils doesn't set compiler.preprocessor, so invoke the preprocessor
# manually.
if compiler.compiler_type == "unix":
args = list(compiler.executables["compiler"])
args.extend(
[
"-E",
"-DZSTD_STATIC_LINKING_ONLY",
"-DZDICT_STATIC_LINKING_ONLY",
]
)
elif compiler.compiler_type == "msvc":
args = [compiler.cc]
args.extend(
[
"/EP",
"/DZSTD_STATIC_LINKING_ONLY",
"/DZDICT_STATIC_LINKING_ONLY",
]
)
else:
raise Exception("unsupported compiler type: %s" % compiler.compiler_type)
def preprocess(path):
with open(path, "rb") as fh:
lines = []
it = iter(fh)
for l in it:
# zstd.h includes <stddef.h>, which is also included by cffi's
# boilerplate. This can lead to duplicate declarations. So we strip
# this include from the preprocessor invocation.
#
# The same things happens for including zstd.h, so give it the same
# treatment.
#
# We define ZSTD_STATIC_LINKING_ONLY, which is redundant with the inline
# #define in zstdmt_compress.h and results in a compiler warning. So drop
# the inline #define.
if l.startswith(
(
b"#include <stddef.h>",
b'#include "zstd.h"',
b"#define ZSTD_STATIC_LINKING_ONLY",
)
):
continue
# The preprocessor environment on Windows doesn't define include
# paths, so the #include of limits.h fails. We work around this
# by removing that import and defining INT_MAX ourselves. This is
# a bit hacky. But it gets the job done.
# TODO make limits.h work on Windows so we ensure INT_MAX is
# correct.
if l.startswith(b"#include <limits.h>"):
l = b"#define INT_MAX 2147483647\n"
# ZSTDLIB_API may not be defined if we dropped zstd.h. It isn't
# important so just filter it out.
if l.startswith(b"ZSTDLIB_API"):
l = l[len(b"ZSTDLIB_API ") :]
lines.append(l)
fd, input_file = tempfile.mkstemp(suffix=".h")
os.write(fd, b"".join(lines))
os.close(fd)
try:
env = dict(os.environ)
if getattr(compiler, "_paths", None):
env["PATH"] = compiler._paths
process = subprocess.Popen(
args + [input_file], stdout=subprocess.PIPE, env=env
)
output = process.communicate()[0]
ret = process.poll()
if ret:
raise Exception("preprocessor exited with error")
return output
finally:
os.unlink(input_file)
def normalize_output(output):
lines = []
for line in output.splitlines():
# CFFI's parser doesn't like __attribute__ on UNIX compilers.
if line.startswith(b'__attribute__ ((visibility ("default"))) '):
line = line[len(b'__attribute__ ((visibility ("default"))) ') :]
if line.startswith(b"__attribute__((deprecated("):
continue
elif b"__declspec(deprecated(" in line:
continue
lines.append(line)
return b"\n".join(lines)
ffi = cffi.FFI()
# zstd.h uses a possible undefined MIN(). Define it until
# https://github.com/facebook/zstd/issues/976 is fixed.
# *_DISABLE_DEPRECATE_WARNINGS prevents the compiler from emitting a warning
# when cffi uses the function. Since we statically link against zstd, even
# if we use the deprecated functions it shouldn't be a huge problem.
ffi.set_source(
"_zstd_cffi",
"""
#define MIN(a,b) ((a)<(b) ? (a) : (b))
#define ZSTD_STATIC_LINKING_ONLY
#include <zstd.h>
#define ZDICT_STATIC_LINKING_ONLY
#define ZDICT_DISABLE_DEPRECATE_WARNINGS
#include <zdict.h>
""",
sources=SOURCES,
include_dirs=INCLUDE_DIRS,
extra_compile_args=["-DZSTD_MULTITHREAD"],
)
DEFINE = re.compile(b"^\\#define ([a-zA-Z0-9_]+) ")
sources = []
# Feed normalized preprocessor output for headers into the cdef parser.
for header in HEADERS:
preprocessed = preprocess(header)
sources.append(normalize_output(preprocessed))
# #define's are effectively erased as part of going through preprocessor.
# So perform a manual pass to re-add those to the cdef source.
with open(header, "rb") as fh:
for line in fh:
line = line.strip()
m = DEFINE.match(line)
if not m:
continue
if m.group(1) == b"ZSTD_STATIC_LINKING_ONLY":
continue
# The parser doesn't like some constants with complex values.
if m.group(1) in (b"ZSTD_LIB_VERSION", b"ZSTD_VERSION_STRING"):
continue
# The ... is magic syntax by the cdef parser to resolve the
# value at compile time.
sources.append(m.group(0) + b" ...")
cdeflines = b"\n".join(sources).splitlines()
cdeflines = [l for l in cdeflines if l.strip()]
ffi.cdef(b"\n".join(cdeflines).decode("latin1"))
if __name__ == "__main__":
ffi.compile()