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calibre-web/vendor/sqlalchemy/util/compat.py
2016-04-27 17:47:31 +02:00

201 lines
4.9 KiB
Python

# util/compat.py
# Copyright (C) 2005-2013 the SQLAlchemy authors and contributors <see AUTHORS file>
#
# This module is part of SQLAlchemy and is released under
# the MIT License: http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php
"""Handle Python version/platform incompatibilities."""
import sys
try:
import threading
except ImportError:
import dummy_threading as threading
py33 = sys.version_info >= (3, 3)
py32 = sys.version_info >= (3, 2)
py26 = sys.version_info >= (2, 6)
py3k_warning = getattr(sys, 'py3kwarning', False) or sys.version_info >= (3, 0)
py3k = sys.version_info >= (3, 0)
py2k = sys.version_info < (3, 0)
jython = sys.platform.startswith('java')
pypy = hasattr(sys, 'pypy_version_info')
win32 = sys.platform.startswith('win')
cpython = not pypy and not jython # TODO: something better for this ?
if py3k_warning:
set_types = set
elif sys.version_info < (2, 6):
import sets
set_types = set, sets.Set
else:
# 2.6 deprecates sets.Set, but we still need to be able to detect them
# in user code and as return values from DB-APIs
ignore = ('ignore', None, DeprecationWarning, None, 0)
import warnings
try:
warnings.filters.insert(0, ignore)
except Exception:
import sets
else:
import sets
warnings.filters.remove(ignore)
set_types = set, sets.Set
if sys.version_info < (2, 6):
def next(iter):
return iter.next()
else:
next = next
if py3k_warning:
import pickle
else:
try:
import cPickle as pickle
except ImportError:
import pickle
if sys.version_info < (2, 6):
# emits a nasty deprecation warning
# in newer pythons
from cgi import parse_qsl
else:
from urlparse import parse_qsl
# Py3K
#from inspect import getfullargspec as inspect_getfullargspec
# Py2K
from inspect import getargspec as inspect_getfullargspec
# end Py2K
if py3k_warning:
# they're bringing it back in 3.2. brilliant !
def callable(fn):
return hasattr(fn, '__call__')
def cmp(a, b):
return (a > b) - (a < b)
from functools import reduce
else:
callable = callable
cmp = cmp
reduce = reduce
try:
from collections import namedtuple
except ImportError:
def namedtuple(typename, fieldnames):
def __new__(cls, *values):
tup = tuple.__new__(cls, values)
for i, fname in enumerate(fieldnames):
setattr(tup, fname, tup[i])
return tup
tuptype = type(typename, (tuple, ), {'__new__': __new__})
return tuptype
try:
from weakref import WeakSet
except:
import weakref
class WeakSet(object):
"""Implement the small subset of set() which SQLAlchemy needs
here. """
def __init__(self, values=None):
self._storage = weakref.WeakKeyDictionary()
if values is not None:
self._storage.update((value, None) for value in values)
def __iter__(self):
return iter(self._storage)
def union(self, other):
return WeakSet(set(self).union(other))
def add(self, other):
self._storage[other] = True
import time
if win32 or jython:
time_func = time.clock
else:
time_func = time.time
if sys.version_info >= (2, 6):
from operator import attrgetter as dottedgetter
else:
def dottedgetter(attr):
def g(obj):
for name in attr.split("."):
obj = getattr(obj, name)
return obj
return g
if py3k:
string_types = str,
binary_type = bytes
text_type = str
int_types = int,
def u(s):
return s
def ue(s):
return s
def b(s):
return s.encode("latin-1")
else:
string_types = basestring,
binary_type = str
text_type = unicode
int_types = int, long
def b(s):
return s
def u(s):
# this differs from what six does, which doesn't support non-ASCII
# strings - we only use u() with
# literal source strings, and all our source files with non-ascii
# in them (all are tests) are utf-8 encoded.
return unicode(s, "utf-8")
def ue(s):
return unicode(s, "unicode_escape")
def b(s):
return s
if py3k:
def reraise(tp, value, tb=None, cause=None):
if cause is not None:
value.__cause__ = cause
if value.__traceback__ is not tb:
raise value.with_traceback(tb)
raise value
def raise_from_cause(exception, exc_info):
exc_type, exc_value, exc_tb = exc_info
reraise(type(exception), exception, tb=exc_tb, cause=exc_value)
else:
exec("def reraise(tp, value, tb=None, cause=None):\n"
" raise tp, value, tb\n")
def raise_from_cause(exception, exc_info):
# not as nice as that of Py3K, but at least preserves
# the code line where the issue occurred
exc_type, exc_value, exc_tb = exc_info
reraise(type(exception), exception, tb=exc_tb)