# This file is part of beets. # Copyright 2013, Adrian Sampson. # # Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining # a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the # "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including # without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, # distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to # permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to # the following conditions: # # The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be # included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. """Miscellaneous utility functions.""" from __future__ import division import os import sys import re import shutil import fnmatch from collections import defaultdict import traceback import subprocess MAX_FILENAME_LENGTH = 200 WINDOWS_MAGIC_PREFIX = u'\\\\?\\' class HumanReadableException(Exception): """An Exception that can include a human-readable error message to be logged without a traceback. Can preserve a traceback for debugging purposes as well. Has at least two fields: `reason`, the underlying exception or a string describing the problem; and `verb`, the action being performed during the error. If `tb` is provided, it is a string containing a traceback for the associated exception. (Note that this is not necessary in Python 3.x and should be removed when we make the transition.) """ error_kind = 'Error' # Human-readable description of error type. def __init__(self, reason, verb, tb=None): self.reason = reason self.verb = verb self.tb = tb super(HumanReadableException, self).__init__(self.get_message()) def _gerund(self): """Generate a (likely) gerund form of the English verb. """ if ' ' in self.verb: return self.verb gerund = self.verb[:-1] if self.verb.endswith('e') else self.verb gerund += 'ing' return gerund def _reasonstr(self): """Get the reason as a string.""" if isinstance(self.reason, unicode): return self.reason elif isinstance(self.reason, basestring): # Byte string. return self.reason.decode('utf8', 'ignore') elif hasattr(self.reason, 'strerror'): # i.e., EnvironmentError return self.reason.strerror else: return u'"{0}"'.format(unicode(self.reason)) def get_message(self): """Create the human-readable description of the error, sans introduction. """ raise NotImplementedError def log(self, logger): """Log to the provided `logger` a human-readable message as an error and a verbose traceback as a debug message. """ if self.tb: logger.debug(self.tb) logger.error(u'{0}: {1}'.format(self.error_kind, self.args[0])) class FilesystemError(HumanReadableException): """An error that occurred while performing a filesystem manipulation via a function in this module. The `paths` field is a sequence of pathnames involved in the operation. """ def __init__(self, reason, verb, paths, tb=None): self.paths = paths super(FilesystemError, self).__init__(reason, verb, tb) def get_message(self): # Use a nicer English phrasing for some specific verbs. if self.verb in ('move', 'copy', 'rename'): clause = u'while {0} {1} to {2}'.format( self._gerund(), displayable_path(self.paths[0]), displayable_path(self.paths[1]) ) elif self.verb in ('delete', 'write', 'create', 'read'): clause = u'while {0} {1}'.format( self._gerund(), displayable_path(self.paths[0]) ) else: clause = u'during {0} of paths {1}'.format( self.verb, u', '.join(displayable_path(p) for p in self.paths) ) return u'{0} {1}'.format(self._reasonstr(), clause) def normpath(path): """Provide the canonical form of the path suitable for storing in the database. """ path = syspath(path, prefix=False) path = os.path.normpath(os.path.abspath(os.path.expanduser(path))) return bytestring_path(path) def ancestry(path): """Return a list consisting of path's parent directory, its grandparent, and so on. For instance: >>> ancestry('/a/b/c') ['/', '/a', '/a/b'] The argument should *not* be the result of a call to `syspath`. """ out = [] last_path = None while path: path = os.path.dirname(path) if path == last_path: break last_path = path if path: # don't yield '' out.insert(0, path) return out def sorted_walk(path, ignore=(), logger=None): """Like `os.walk`, but yields things in case-insensitive sorted, breadth-first order. Directory and file names matching any glob pattern in `ignore` are skipped. If `logger` is provided, then warning messages are logged there when a directory cannot be listed. """ # Make sure the path isn't a Unicode string. path = bytestring_path(path) # Get all the directories and files at this level. try: contents = os.listdir(syspath(path)) except OSError as exc: if logger: logger.warn(u'could not list directory {0}: {1}'.format( displayable_path(path), exc.strerror )) return dirs = [] files = [] for base in contents: base = bytestring_path(base) # Skip ignored filenames. skip = False for pat in ignore: if fnmatch.fnmatch(base, pat): skip = True break if skip: continue # Add to output as either a file or a directory. cur = os.path.join(path, base) if os.path.isdir(syspath(cur)): dirs.append(base) else: files.append(base) # Sort lists (case-insensitive) and yield the current level. dirs.sort(key=bytes.lower) files.sort(key=bytes.lower) yield (path, dirs, files) # Recurse into directories. for base in dirs: cur = os.path.join(path, base) # yield from sorted_walk(...) for res in sorted_walk(cur, ignore, logger): yield res def mkdirall(path): """Make all the enclosing directories of path (like mkdir -p on the parent). """ for ancestor in ancestry(path): if not os.path.isdir(syspath(ancestor)): try: os.mkdir(syspath(ancestor)) except (OSError, IOError) as exc: raise FilesystemError(exc, 'create', (ancestor,), traceback.format_exc()) def fnmatch_all(names, patterns): """Determine whether all strings in `names` match at least one of the `patterns`, which should be shell glob expressions. """ for name in names: matches = False for pattern in patterns: matches = fnmatch.fnmatch(name, pattern) if matches: break if not matches: return False return True def prune_dirs(path, root=None, clutter=('.DS_Store', 'Thumbs.db')): """If path is an empty directory, then remove it. Recursively remove path's ancestry up to root (which is never removed) where there are empty directories. If path is not contained in root, then nothing is removed. Glob patterns in clutter are ignored when determining emptiness. If root is not provided, then only path may be removed (i.e., no recursive removal). """ path = normpath(path) if root is not None: root = normpath(root) ancestors = ancestry(path) if root is None: # Only remove the top directory. ancestors = [] elif root in ancestors: # Only remove directories below the root. ancestors = ancestors[ancestors.index(root)+1:] else: # Remove nothing. return # Traverse upward from path. ancestors.append(path) ancestors.reverse() for directory in ancestors: directory = syspath(directory) if not os.path.exists(directory): # Directory gone already. continue if fnmatch_all(os.listdir(directory), clutter): # Directory contains only clutter (or nothing). try: shutil.rmtree(directory) except OSError: break else: break def components(path): """Return a list of the path components in path. For instance: >>> components('/a/b/c') ['a', 'b', 'c'] The argument should *not* be the result of a call to `syspath`. """ comps = [] ances = ancestry(path) for anc in ances: comp = os.path.basename(anc) if comp: comps.append(comp) else: # root comps.append(anc) last = os.path.basename(path) if last: comps.append(last) return comps def _fsencoding(): """Get the system's filesystem encoding. On Windows, this is always UTF-8 (not MBCS). """ encoding = sys.getfilesystemencoding() or sys.getdefaultencoding() if encoding == 'mbcs': # On Windows, a broken encoding known to Python as "MBCS" is # used for the filesystem. However, we only use the Unicode API # for Windows paths, so the encoding is actually immaterial so # we can avoid dealing with this nastiness. We arbitrarily # choose UTF-8. encoding = 'utf8' return encoding def bytestring_path(path): """Given a path, which is either a str or a unicode, returns a str path (ensuring that we never deal with Unicode pathnames). """ # Pass through bytestrings. if isinstance(path, str): return path # On Windows, remove the magic prefix added by `syspath`. This makes # ``bytestring_path(syspath(X)) == X``, i.e., we can safely # round-trip through `syspath`. if os.path.__name__ == 'ntpath' and path.startswith(WINDOWS_MAGIC_PREFIX): path = path[len(WINDOWS_MAGIC_PREFIX):] # Try to encode with default encodings, but fall back to UTF8. try: return path.encode(_fsencoding()) except (UnicodeError, LookupError): return path.encode('utf8') def displayable_path(path, separator=u'; '): """Attempts to decode a bytestring path to a unicode object for the purpose of displaying it to the user. If the `path` argument is a list or a tuple, the elements are joined with `separator`. """ if isinstance(path, (list, tuple)): return separator.join(displayable_path(p) for p in path) elif isinstance(path, unicode): return path elif not isinstance(path, str): # A non-string object: just get its unicode representation. return unicode(path) try: return path.decode(_fsencoding(), 'ignore') except (UnicodeError, LookupError): return path.decode('utf8', 'ignore') def syspath(path, prefix=True): """Convert a path for use by the operating system. In particular, paths on Windows must receive a magic prefix and must be converted to Unicode before they are sent to the OS. To disable the magic prefix on Windows, set `prefix` to False---but only do this if you *really* know what you're doing. """ # Don't do anything if we're not on windows if os.path.__name__ != 'ntpath': return path if not isinstance(path, unicode): # Beets currently represents Windows paths internally with UTF-8 # arbitrarily. But earlier versions used MBCS because it is # reported as the FS encoding by Windows. Try both. try: path = path.decode('utf8') except UnicodeError: # The encoding should always be MBCS, Windows' broken # Unicode representation. encoding = sys.getfilesystemencoding() or sys.getdefaultencoding() path = path.decode(encoding, 'replace') # Add the magic prefix if it isn't already there if prefix and not path.startswith(WINDOWS_MAGIC_PREFIX): path = WINDOWS_MAGIC_PREFIX + path return path def samefile(p1, p2): """Safer equality for paths.""" return shutil._samefile(syspath(p1), syspath(p2)) def remove(path, soft=True): """Remove the file. If `soft`, then no error will be raised if the file does not exist. """ path = syspath(path) if soft and not os.path.exists(path): return try: os.remove(path) except (OSError, IOError) as exc: raise FilesystemError(exc, 'delete', (path,), traceback.format_exc()) def copy(path, dest, replace=False): """Copy a plain file. Permissions are not copied. If `dest` already exists, raises a FilesystemError unless `replace` is True. Has no effect if `path` is the same as `dest`. Paths are translated to system paths before the syscall. """ if samefile(path, dest): return path = syspath(path) dest = syspath(dest) if not replace and os.path.exists(dest): raise FilesystemError('file exists', 'copy', (path, dest)) try: shutil.copyfile(path, dest) except (OSError, IOError) as exc: raise FilesystemError(exc, 'copy', (path, dest), traceback.format_exc()) def move(path, dest, replace=False): """Rename a file. `dest` may not be a directory. If `dest` already exists, raises an OSError unless `replace` is True. Has no effect if `path` is the same as `dest`. If the paths are on different filesystems (or the rename otherwise fails), a copy is attempted instead, in which case metadata will *not* be preserved. Paths are translated to system paths. """ if samefile(path, dest): return path = syspath(path) dest = syspath(dest) if os.path.exists(dest) and not replace: raise FilesystemError('file exists', 'rename', (path, dest), traceback.format_exc()) # First, try renaming the file. try: os.rename(path, dest) except OSError: # Otherwise, copy and delete the original. try: shutil.copyfile(path, dest) os.remove(path) except (OSError, IOError) as exc: raise FilesystemError(exc, 'move', (path, dest), traceback.format_exc()) def unique_path(path): """Returns a version of ``path`` that does not exist on the filesystem. Specifically, if ``path` itself already exists, then something unique is appended to the path. """ if not os.path.exists(syspath(path)): return path base, ext = os.path.splitext(path) match = re.search(r'\.(\d)+$', base) if match: num = int(match.group(1)) base = base[:match.start()] else: num = 0 while True: num += 1 new_path = '%s.%i%s' % (base, num, ext) if not os.path.exists(new_path): return new_path # Note: The Windows "reserved characters" are, of course, allowed on # Unix. They are forbidden here because they cause problems on Samba # shares, which are sufficiently common as to cause frequent problems. # http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa365247.aspx CHAR_REPLACE = [ (re.compile(ur'[\\/]'), u'_'), # / and \ -- forbidden everywhere. (re.compile(ur'^\.'), u'_'), # Leading dot (hidden files on Unix). (re.compile(ur'[\x00-\x1f]'), u''), # Control characters. (re.compile(ur'[<>:"\?\*\|]'), u'_'), # Windows "reserved characters". (re.compile(ur'\.$'), u'_'), # Trailing dots. (re.compile(ur'\s+$'), u''), # Trailing whitespace. ] def sanitize_path(path, replacements=None): """Takes a path (as a Unicode string) and makes sure that it is legal. Returns a new path. Only works with fragments; won't work reliably on Windows when a path begins with a drive letter. Path separators (including altsep!) should already be cleaned from the path components. If replacements is specified, it is used *instead* of the default set of replacements; it must be a list of (compiled regex, replacement string) pairs. """ replacements = replacements or CHAR_REPLACE comps = components(path) if not comps: return '' for i, comp in enumerate(comps): for regex, repl in replacements: comp = regex.sub(repl, comp) comps[i] = comp return os.path.join(*comps) def truncate_path(path, length=MAX_FILENAME_LENGTH): """Given a bytestring path or a Unicode path fragment, truncate the components to a legal length. In the last component, the extension is preserved. """ comps = components(path) out = [c[:length] for c in comps] base, ext = os.path.splitext(comps[-1]) if ext: # Last component has an extension. base = base[:length - len(ext)] out[-1] = base + ext return os.path.join(*out) def str2bool(value): """Returns a boolean reflecting a human-entered string.""" if value.lower() in ('yes', '1', 'true', 't', 'y'): return True else: return False def as_string(value): """Convert a value to a Unicode object for matching with a query. None becomes the empty string. Bytestrings are silently decoded. """ if value is None: return u'' elif isinstance(value, buffer): return str(value).decode('utf8', 'ignore') elif isinstance(value, str): return value.decode('utf8', 'ignore') else: return unicode(value) def levenshtein(s1, s2): """A nice DP edit distance implementation from Wikibooks: http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Algorithm_implementation/Strings/ Levenshtein_distance#Python """ if len(s1) < len(s2): return levenshtein(s2, s1) if not s1: return len(s2) previous_row = xrange(len(s2) + 1) for i, c1 in enumerate(s1): current_row = [i + 1] for j, c2 in enumerate(s2): insertions = previous_row[j + 1] + 1 deletions = current_row[j] + 1 substitutions = previous_row[j] + (c1 != c2) current_row.append(min(insertions, deletions, substitutions)) previous_row = current_row return previous_row[-1] def plurality(objs): """Given a sequence of comparable objects, returns the object that is most common in the set and the frequency of that object. The sequence must contain at least one object. """ # Calculate frequencies. freqs = defaultdict(int) for obj in objs: freqs[obj] += 1 if not freqs: raise ValueError('sequence must be non-empty') # Find object with maximum frequency. max_freq = 0 res = None for obj, freq in freqs.items(): if freq > max_freq: max_freq = freq res = obj return res, max_freq def cpu_count(): """Return the number of hardware thread contexts (cores or SMT threads) in the system. """ # Adapted from the soundconverter project: # https://github.com/kassoulet/soundconverter if sys.platform == 'win32': try: num = int(os.environ['NUMBER_OF_PROCESSORS']) except (ValueError, KeyError): num = 0 elif sys.platform == 'darwin': try: num = int(os.popen('sysctl -n hw.ncpu').read()) except ValueError: num = 0 else: try: num = os.sysconf('SC_NPROCESSORS_ONLN') except (ValueError, OSError, AttributeError): num = 0 if num >= 1: return num else: return 1 def command_output(cmd): """Wraps the `subprocess` module to invoke a command (given as a list of arguments starting with the command name) and collect stdout. The stderr stream is ignored. May raise `subprocess.CalledProcessError` or an `OSError`. This replaces `subprocess.check_output`, which isn't available in Python 2.6 and which can have problems if lots of output is sent to stderr. """ with open(os.devnull, 'w') as devnull: proc = subprocess.Popen(cmd, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=devnull) stdout, _ = proc.communicate() if proc.returncode: raise subprocess.CalledProcessError(proc.returncode, cmd) return stdout def max_filename_length(path, limit=MAX_FILENAME_LENGTH): """Attempt to determine the maximum filename length for the filesystem containing `path`. If the value is greater than `limit`, then `limit` is used instead (to prevent errors when a filesystem misreports its capacity). If it cannot be determined (e.g., on Windows), return `limit`. """ if hasattr(os, 'statvfs'): try: res = os.statvfs(path) except OSError: return limit return min(res[9], limit) else: return limit