view contrib/hgfixes/fix_leftover_imports.py @ 25591:f1d46075b13a

verify: check the subrepository references in .hgsubstate While hopefully atypical, there are reasons that a subrepository revision can be lost that aren't covered by corruption of the .hgsubstate revlog. Such things can happen when a subrepo is amended, stripped or simply isn't pulled from upstream because the parent repo revision wasn't updated yet. There's no way to know if it is an error, but this will find potential problems sooner than when some random revision is updated. Until recently, convert made no attempt at rewriting the .hgsubstate file. The impetuous for this is to verify the conversion of some repositories, and this is orders of magnitude faster than a bash script from 0..tip that does an 'hg update -C $rev'. But it is equally useful to determine if everything has been pulled down before taking a thumb drive on the go. It feels somewhat wrong to leave this out of verifymod (mostly because the file is already read in there, and the final summary is printed before the subrepos are checked). But verifymod looks very low level, so importing subrepo stuff there seems more wrong.
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
date Tue, 16 Jun 2015 16:15:15 -0400
parents 9de689d20230
children
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"Fixer that translates some APIs ignored by the default 2to3 fixers."

# FIXME: This fixer has some ugly hacks. Its main design is based on that of
# fix_imports, from lib2to3. Unfortunately, the fix_imports framework only
# changes module names "without dots", meaning it won't work for some changes
# in the email module/package. Thus this fixer was born. I believe that with a
# bit more thinking, a more generic fixer can be implemented, but I'll leave
# that as future work.

from lib2to3.fixer_util import Name
from lib2to3.fixes import fix_imports

# This maps the old names to the new names. Note that a drawback of the current
# design is that the dictionary keys MUST have EXACTLY one dot (.) in them,
# otherwise things will break. (If you don't need a module hierarchy, you're
# better of just inherit from fix_imports and overriding the MAPPING dict.)

MAPPING = {'email.Utils': 'email.utils',
           'email.Errors': 'email.errors',
           'email.Header': 'email.header',
           'email.Parser': 'email.parser',
           'email.Encoders': 'email.encoders',
           'email.MIMEText': 'email.mime.text',
           'email.MIMEBase': 'email.mime.base',
           'email.Generator': 'email.generator',
           'email.MIMEMultipart': 'email.mime.multipart',
}

def alternates(members):
    return "(" + "|".join(map(repr, members)) + ")"

def build_pattern(mapping=MAPPING):
    packages = {}
    for key in mapping:
        # What we are doing here is the following: with dotted names, we'll
        # have something like package_name <trailer '.' module>. Then, we are
        # making a dictionary to copy this structure. For example, if
        # mapping={'A.B': 'a.b', 'A.C': 'a.c'}, it will generate the dictionary
        # {'A': ['b', 'c']} to, then, generate something like "A <trailer '.'
        # ('b' | 'c')".
        name = key.split('.')
        prefix = name[0]
        if prefix in packages:
            packages[prefix].append(name[1:][0])
        else:
            packages[prefix] = name[1:]

    mod_list = ' | '.join(["'%s' '.' ('%s')" %
        (key, "' | '".join(packages[key])) for key in packages])
    mod_list = '(' + mod_list + ' )'

    yield """name_import=import_name< 'import' module_name=dotted_name< %s > >
          """ % mod_list

    yield """name_import=import_name< 'import'
            multiple_imports=dotted_as_names< any*
            module_name=dotted_name< %s >
            any* >
            >""" % mod_list

    packs = ' | '.join(["'%s' trailer<'.' ('%s')>" % (key,
               "' | '".join(packages[key])) for key in packages])

    yield "power< package=(%s) trailer<'.' any > any* >" % packs

class FixLeftoverImports(fix_imports.FixImports):
    # We want to run this fixer after fix_import has run (this shouldn't matter
    # for hg, though, as setup3k prefers to run the default fixers first)
    mapping = MAPPING

    def build_pattern(self):
        return "|".join(build_pattern(self.mapping))

    def transform(self, node, results):
        # Mostly copied from fix_imports.py
        import_mod = results.get("module_name")
        if import_mod:
            try:
                mod_name = import_mod.value
            except AttributeError:
                # XXX: A hack to remove whitespace prefixes and suffixes
                mod_name = str(import_mod).strip()
            new_name = self.mapping[mod_name]
            import_mod.replace(Name(new_name, prefix=import_mod.prefix))
            if "name_import" in results:
                # If it's not a "from x import x, y" or "import x as y" import,
                # marked its usage to be replaced.
                self.replace[mod_name] = new_name
            if "multiple_imports" in results:
                # This is a nasty hack to fix multiple imports on a line (e.g.,
                # "import StringIO, urlparse"). The problem is that I can't
                # figure out an easy way to make a pattern recognize the keys of
                # MAPPING randomly sprinkled in an import statement.
                results = self.match(node)
                if results:
                    self.transform(node, results)
        else:
            # Replace usage of the module.
            # Now this is, mostly, a hack
            bare_name = results["package"][0]
            bare_name_text = ''.join(map(str, results['package'])).strip()
            new_name = self.replace.get(bare_name_text)
            prefix = results['package'][0].prefix
            if new_name:
                bare_name.replace(Name(new_name, prefix=prefix))
                results["package"][1].replace(Name(''))