Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/mail.py @ 29375:fcaf20175b1b
demandimport: delay loading for "from a import b" with absolute_import
Before this patch, "from a import b" doesn't delay loading module "b",
if absolute_import is enabled, even though "from . import b" does.
For example:
- it is assumed that extension X has "from P import M" for module M
under package P with absolute_import feature
- if importing module M is already delayed before loading extension
X, loading module M in extension X is delayed until actually
referring
util, cmdutil, scmutil or so of Mercurial itself should be
imported by "from . import M" style before loading extension X
- otherwise, module M is loaded immediately at loading extension X,
even if extension X itself isn't used at that "hg" command invocation
Some minor modules (e.g. filemerge or so) of Mercurial itself
aren't imported by "from . import M" style before loading
extension X. And of course, external libraries aren't, too.
This might cause startup performance problem of hg command, because
many bundled extensions already enable absolute_import feature.
To delay loading module for "from a import b" with absolute_import
feature, this patch does below in "from a (or .a) import b" with
absolute_import case:
1. import root module of "name" by system built-in __import__
(referred as _origimport)
2. recurse down the module chain for hierarchical "name"
This logic can be shared with non absolute_import
case. Therefore, this patch also centralizes it into chainmodules().
3. and fall through to process elements in "fromlist" for the leaf
module of "name"
Processing elements in "fromlist" is executed in the code path
after "if _pypy: .... else: ..." clause. Therefore, this patch
replaces "if _pypy:" with "elif _pypy:" to share it.
At 4f1144c3c72b introducing original "work around" for "from a import
b" case, elements in "fromlist" were imported with "level=level". But
"level" might be grater than 1 (e.g. level=2 in "from .. import b"
case) at demandimport() invocation, and importing direct sub-module in
"fromlist" with level grater than 1 causes unexpected result.
IMHO, this seems main reason of "errors for unknown reason" described
in 4f1144c3c72b, and we don't have to worry about it, because this
issue was already fixed by 78d05778907b.
This is reason why this patch removes "errors for unknown reasons"
comment.
author | FUJIWARA Katsunori <foozy@lares.dti.ne.jp> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 19 Jun 2016 02:17:33 +0900 |
parents | 63a3749147af |
children | 87b8e40eb812 |
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line source
# mail.py - mail sending bits for mercurial # # Copyright 2006 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> # # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function import email import os import quopri import smtplib import socket import sys import time from .i18n import _ from . import ( encoding, error, sslutil, util, ) _oldheaderinit = email.Header.Header.__init__ def _unifiedheaderinit(self, *args, **kw): """ Python 2.7 introduces a backwards incompatible change (Python issue1974, r70772) in email.Generator.Generator code: pre-2.7 code passed "continuation_ws='\t'" to the Header constructor, and 2.7 removed this parameter. Default argument is continuation_ws=' ', which means that the behavior is different in <2.7 and 2.7 We consider the 2.7 behavior to be preferable, but need to have an unified behavior for versions 2.4 to 2.7 """ # override continuation_ws kw['continuation_ws'] = ' ' _oldheaderinit(self, *args, **kw) setattr(email.header.Header, '__init__', _unifiedheaderinit) class STARTTLS(smtplib.SMTP): '''Derived class to verify the peer certificate for STARTTLS. This class allows to pass any keyword arguments to SSL socket creation. ''' def __init__(self, ui, host=None, **kwargs): smtplib.SMTP.__init__(self, **kwargs) self._ui = ui self._host = host def starttls(self, keyfile=None, certfile=None): if not self.has_extn("starttls"): msg = "STARTTLS extension not supported by server" raise smtplib.SMTPException(msg) (resp, reply) = self.docmd("STARTTLS") if resp == 220: self.sock = sslutil.wrapsocket(self.sock, keyfile, certfile, ui=self._ui, serverhostname=self._host) self.file = smtplib.SSLFakeFile(self.sock) self.helo_resp = None self.ehlo_resp = None self.esmtp_features = {} self.does_esmtp = 0 return (resp, reply) class SMTPS(smtplib.SMTP): '''Derived class to verify the peer certificate for SMTPS. This class allows to pass any keyword arguments to SSL socket creation. ''' def __init__(self, ui, keyfile=None, certfile=None, host=None, **kwargs): self.keyfile = keyfile self.certfile = certfile smtplib.SMTP.__init__(self, **kwargs) self._host = host self.default_port = smtplib.SMTP_SSL_PORT self._ui = ui def _get_socket(self, host, port, timeout): if self.debuglevel > 0: print('connect:', (host, port), file=sys.stderr) new_socket = socket.create_connection((host, port), timeout) new_socket = sslutil.wrapsocket(new_socket, self.keyfile, self.certfile, ui=self._ui, serverhostname=self._host) self.file = smtplib.SSLFakeFile(new_socket) return new_socket def _smtp(ui): '''build an smtp connection and return a function to send mail''' local_hostname = ui.config('smtp', 'local_hostname') tls = ui.config('smtp', 'tls', 'none') # backward compatible: when tls = true, we use starttls. starttls = tls == 'starttls' or util.parsebool(tls) smtps = tls == 'smtps' if (starttls or smtps) and not util.safehasattr(socket, 'ssl'): raise error.Abort(_("can't use TLS: Python SSL support not installed")) mailhost = ui.config('smtp', 'host') if not mailhost: raise error.Abort(_('smtp.host not configured - cannot send mail')) if smtps: ui.note(_('(using smtps)\n')) s = SMTPS(ui, local_hostname=local_hostname, host=mailhost) elif starttls: s = STARTTLS(ui, local_hostname=local_hostname, host=mailhost) else: s = smtplib.SMTP(local_hostname=local_hostname) if smtps: defaultport = 465 else: defaultport = 25 mailport = util.getport(ui.config('smtp', 'port', defaultport)) ui.note(_('sending mail: smtp host %s, port %d\n') % (mailhost, mailport)) s.connect(host=mailhost, port=mailport) if starttls: ui.note(_('(using starttls)\n')) s.ehlo() s.starttls() s.ehlo() if starttls or smtps: ui.note(_('(verifying remote certificate)\n')) sslutil.validatesocket(s.sock) username = ui.config('smtp', 'username') password = ui.config('smtp', 'password') if username and not password: password = ui.getpass() if username and password: ui.note(_('(authenticating to mail server as %s)\n') % (username)) try: s.login(username, password) except smtplib.SMTPException as inst: raise error.Abort(inst) def send(sender, recipients, msg): try: return s.sendmail(sender, recipients, msg) except smtplib.SMTPRecipientsRefused as inst: recipients = [r[1] for r in inst.recipients.values()] raise error.Abort('\n' + '\n'.join(recipients)) except smtplib.SMTPException as inst: raise error.Abort(inst) return send def _sendmail(ui, sender, recipients, msg): '''send mail using sendmail.''' program = ui.config('email', 'method', 'smtp') cmdline = '%s -f %s %s' % (program, util.email(sender), ' '.join(map(util.email, recipients))) ui.note(_('sending mail: %s\n') % cmdline) fp = util.popen(cmdline, 'w') fp.write(msg) ret = fp.close() if ret: raise error.Abort('%s %s' % ( os.path.basename(program.split(None, 1)[0]), util.explainexit(ret)[0])) def _mbox(mbox, sender, recipients, msg): '''write mails to mbox''' fp = open(mbox, 'ab+') # Should be time.asctime(), but Windows prints 2-characters day # of month instead of one. Make them print the same thing. date = time.strftime('%a %b %d %H:%M:%S %Y', time.localtime()) fp.write('From %s %s\n' % (sender, date)) fp.write(msg) fp.write('\n\n') fp.close() def connect(ui, mbox=None): '''make a mail connection. return a function to send mail. call as sendmail(sender, list-of-recipients, msg).''' if mbox: open(mbox, 'wb').close() return lambda s, r, m: _mbox(mbox, s, r, m) if ui.config('email', 'method', 'smtp') == 'smtp': return _smtp(ui) return lambda s, r, m: _sendmail(ui, s, r, m) def sendmail(ui, sender, recipients, msg, mbox=None): send = connect(ui, mbox=mbox) return send(sender, recipients, msg) def validateconfig(ui): '''determine if we have enough config data to try sending email.''' method = ui.config('email', 'method', 'smtp') if method == 'smtp': if not ui.config('smtp', 'host'): raise error.Abort(_('smtp specified as email transport, ' 'but no smtp host configured')) else: if not util.findexe(method): raise error.Abort(_('%r specified as email transport, ' 'but not in PATH') % method) def mimetextpatch(s, subtype='plain', display=False): '''Return MIME message suitable for a patch. Charset will be detected as utf-8 or (possibly fake) us-ascii. Transfer encodings will be used if necessary.''' cs = 'us-ascii' if not display: try: s.decode('us-ascii') except UnicodeDecodeError: try: s.decode('utf-8') cs = 'utf-8' except UnicodeDecodeError: # We'll go with us-ascii as a fallback. pass return mimetextqp(s, subtype, cs) def mimetextqp(body, subtype, charset): '''Return MIME message. Quoted-printable transfer encoding will be used if necessary. ''' enc = None for line in body.splitlines(): if len(line) > 950: body = quopri.encodestring(body) enc = "quoted-printable" break msg = email.MIMEText.MIMEText(body, subtype, charset) if enc: del msg['Content-Transfer-Encoding'] msg['Content-Transfer-Encoding'] = enc return msg def _charsets(ui): '''Obtains charsets to send mail parts not containing patches.''' charsets = [cs.lower() for cs in ui.configlist('email', 'charsets')] fallbacks = [encoding.fallbackencoding.lower(), encoding.encoding.lower(), 'utf-8'] for cs in fallbacks: # find unique charsets while keeping order if cs not in charsets: charsets.append(cs) return [cs for cs in charsets if not cs.endswith('ascii')] def _encode(ui, s, charsets): '''Returns (converted) string, charset tuple. Finds out best charset by cycling through sendcharsets in descending order. Tries both encoding and fallbackencoding for input. Only as last resort send as is in fake ascii. Caveat: Do not use for mail parts containing patches!''' try: s.decode('ascii') except UnicodeDecodeError: sendcharsets = charsets or _charsets(ui) for ics in (encoding.encoding, encoding.fallbackencoding): try: u = s.decode(ics) except UnicodeDecodeError: continue for ocs in sendcharsets: try: return u.encode(ocs), ocs except UnicodeEncodeError: pass except LookupError: ui.warn(_('ignoring invalid sendcharset: %s\n') % ocs) # if ascii, or all conversion attempts fail, send (broken) ascii return s, 'us-ascii' def headencode(ui, s, charsets=None, display=False): '''Returns RFC-2047 compliant header from given string.''' if not display: # split into words? s, cs = _encode(ui, s, charsets) return str(email.Header.Header(s, cs)) return s def _addressencode(ui, name, addr, charsets=None): name = headencode(ui, name, charsets) try: acc, dom = addr.split('@') acc = acc.encode('ascii') dom = dom.decode(encoding.encoding).encode('idna') addr = '%s@%s' % (acc, dom) except UnicodeDecodeError: raise error.Abort(_('invalid email address: %s') % addr) except ValueError: try: # too strict? addr = addr.encode('ascii') except UnicodeDecodeError: raise error.Abort(_('invalid local address: %s') % addr) return email.Utils.formataddr((name, addr)) def addressencode(ui, address, charsets=None, display=False): '''Turns address into RFC-2047 compliant header.''' if display or not address: return address or '' name, addr = email.Utils.parseaddr(address) return _addressencode(ui, name, addr, charsets) def addrlistencode(ui, addrs, charsets=None, display=False): '''Turns a list of addresses into a list of RFC-2047 compliant headers. A single element of input list may contain multiple addresses, but output always has one address per item''' if display: return [a.strip() for a in addrs if a.strip()] result = [] for name, addr in email.Utils.getaddresses(addrs): if name or addr: result.append(_addressencode(ui, name, addr, charsets)) return result def mimeencode(ui, s, charsets=None, display=False): '''creates mime text object, encodes it if needed, and sets charset and transfer-encoding accordingly.''' cs = 'us-ascii' if not display: s, cs = _encode(ui, s, charsets) return mimetextqp(s, 'plain', cs) def headdecode(s): '''Decodes RFC-2047 header''' uparts = [] for part, charset in email.Header.decode_header(s): if charset is not None: try: uparts.append(part.decode(charset)) continue except UnicodeDecodeError: pass try: uparts.append(part.decode('UTF-8')) continue except UnicodeDecodeError: pass uparts.append(part.decode('ISO-8859-1')) return encoding.tolocal(u' '.join(uparts).encode('UTF-8'))