Clean up too long lines in profile.py. Add ReadOnlyInput widget to custom_widgets module, it can be used to display read-only form fields. Display read-only "Id" field in LookUp view if user has been found and in User Edit Developer view.
Patch by: Pawel Solyga
Review by: to-be-reviewed
#!/usr/bin/python2.5
#
# Copyright 2008 the Melange authors.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
"""Custom optparse OptionParser and functions for reading Python settings files.
Default values for trunk/scripts flags can be specified in valid Python syntax
in the ~/.soc_scripts_settings file. For example, a default value for the
--user flag can be specified with a variable assignment in the settings file
like:
user = 'joeuser'
Defaults in the ~/.soc_scripts_settings file can be explicitly overridden by
supplied the actual flag. For example, supplying:
--user=someotheruser
would override the default value present in the settings file.
Option: class derived from optparse.Option that adds a 'required' parameter
OptionParser: class derived from optparse.OptionParser for use with Option
readPythonSettings(): interprets a valid Python file as a settings file
"""
__authors__ = [
# alphabetical order by last name, please
'"Todd Larsen" <tlarsen@google.com>',
]
import os
import optparse
import sys
DEF_SETTINGS_FILE_DIR = "~"
DEF_SETTINGS_FILE_NAME = '.soc_scripts_settings'
class Error(Exception):
"""Base exception class for all exceptions in the settings module."""
pass
class Option(optparse.Option):
"""Class derived from optparse.Option that adds a 'required' parameter."""
ATTRS = optparse.Option.ATTRS + ['required']
def _check_required(self):
"""Insures that 'required' option can accept a value."""
if self.required and (not self.takes_value()):
raise optparse.OptionError(
"'required' parameter set for option that does not take a value",
self)
# Make sure _check_required() is called from the constructor!
CHECK_METHODS = optparse.Option.CHECK_METHODS + [_check_required]
def process(self, opt, value, values, parser):
optparse.Option.process(self, opt, value, values, parser)
parser.option_seen[self] = 1
class OptionParser(optparse.OptionParser):
"""Class derived from optparse.OptionParser for use with Option."""
def _init_parsing_state(self):
"""Sets up dict to track options seen so far."""
optparse.OptionParser._init_parsing_state(self)
self.option_seen = {}
def error(self, *args):
"""Convert errors reported by optparse.OptionParser to Error exceptions.
Args:
*args: passed through to the Error exception __init__() constructor,
usually a list of strings
Raises:
Error with the supplied *args
"""
raise Error(*args)
def check_values(self, values, args):
"""Checks to make sure all required=True options were supplied.
Args:
values, args: passed through unchanged (see Returns:)
Returns:
(values, args) unchanged.
Raises:
Error if an option was not supplied that had required=True; exception
positional arguments are the error message strings.
"""
errors = []
for option in self.option_list:
if (isinstance(option, Option)
and option.required
and (not self.option_seen.has_key(option))):
errors.append(
'required %s option not supplied'
' (and default settings not allowed)' % option)
if errors:
self.error(*errors)
return values, args
def printErrors(errors, exit_code=1):
"""Prints error message strings to sys.stderr and returns an exit code.
Args:
errors: error message string or list of error message strings to be printed
to sys.stderr
exit_code: exit code to return (so that this function can be used as an
expression in sys.exit() for example); default is 1
Returns:
exit_code
"""
sys.stderr.write('\nERRORS:\n')
if (not isinstance(errors, tuple)) and (not isinstance(errors, list)):
errors = [errors]
for msg in errors:
sys.stderr.write(' %s\n' % msg)
sys.stderr.write('\n')
return exit_code
def printErrorsAndUsage(errors, parser, exit_code=1):
"""Prints error messages and usage text to sys.stderr and returns exit code.
Args:
errors: error message string or list of error message strings to be printed
to sys.stderr
parser: OptionParser with a print_help() method
exit_code: exit code to return (so that this function can be used as an
expression in sys.exit() for example); default is 1
Returns:
exit_code
"""
exit_code = printErrors(errors, exit_code=exit_code)
parser.print_help(file=sys.stderr)
return exit_code
def getExpandedPath(path):
"""Returns an expanded, normalized, absolute path.
Args:
path: path (possibly relative, possibly containing environment variables,
etc.) to be expanded, normalized and made absolute
Returns:
absolute path, after expanding any environment variables and "~", then
removing excess . and .. path elements
"""
return os.path.abspath(
os.path.normpath(
os.path.expanduser(
os.path.expandvars(path))))
def readPythonSettings(defaults={}, # {} OK since defaults is always copied
settings_dir=DEF_SETTINGS_FILE_DIR,
settings_file=DEF_SETTINGS_FILE_NAME):
"""Executes a Python-syntax settings file and returns the local variables.
Args:
defaults: dict of default values to use when settings are not present
in the settings file (or if no settings file is present at all); this
dict is *copied* and is not altered at all
settings_dir: optional directory containing settings_file
settings_file: optional settings file name found in settings_dir
Returns:
dict of setting name/value pairs (possibly including some values from the
defaults parameter). Since the settings file is full-fledged Python
source, the values could be any valid Python object.
Raises:
Error if some error occurred parsing the present settings file; exception
positional arguments are the error message strings.
"""
# do not let the original defaults be altered
defaults = defaults.copy()
# form absolute path to the settings file, expanding any environment
# variables and "~", then removing excess . and .. path elements
path = getExpandedPath(os.path.join(settings_dir, settings_file))
# empty dict to capture the local variables in the settings file
settings_locals = {}
try:
# execute the Python source file and recover the local variables as settings
execfile(path, {}, settings_locals)
except IOError:
# If the settings file is not present, there are no defaults.
pass
except Exception, error:
# Other exceptions usually mean a faulty settings file.
raise Error(
'faulty settings file:',
(' %s: %s' % (error.__class__.__name__, str(error))),
(' %s' % path))
# overwrite defaults copy with values from the (possibly empty) settings file
defaults.update(settings_locals)
return defaults
def readPythonSettingsOrDie(parser=None, **kwargs):
"""Calls readPythonSettings(), calling sys.exit() on any errors.
Args:
parser: if supplied, an OptionParser instance used to call print_help()
to print usage information if errors occur
**kwargs: see readPythonSettings()
Returns:
On success, returns results of readPythonSettings().
Exits:
On any error from readPythonSettings(), prints error messages to stderr,
possibly prints usage information, and calls sys.exit(1).
"""
try:
return readPythonSettings(**kwargs)
except Error, error:
if parser:
sys.exit(printErrorsAndUsage(error.args, parser))
else:
sys.exit(printErrors(error.args))
def makeOptionParserOrDie(*args, **kwargs):
"""Creates and returns an OptionParser, calling sys.exit() on any errors.
Args:
*args, **kwargs: supplied directly to OptionParser constructor
Returns:
On success, returns an OptionParser instance.
Exits:
On any error, prints error messages to stderr and calls sys.exit(1).
"""
try:
return OptionParser(*args, **kwargs)
except Error, error:
sys.exit(printErrors(error.args))
def parseOptionsOrDie(parser, args):
"""Parses command-line options, calling sys.exit() on any errors.
Args:
parser: an OptionParser instance
args: list of command-line arguments to supply to parser
Returns:
On success, returns (options, args) returned by parser.parse_args(args).
Exits:
On any error, prints error messages and usage information to stderr and
calls sys.exit(1).
"""
try:
return parser.parse_args(args)
except Error, error:
sys.exit(printErrorsAndUsage(error.args, parser))
def checkCommonSvnOptions(options):
"""Checks a common subset of command-line options.
Multiple scripts accept a subset of common command-line options. This
function does some sanity checks on these flags. These checks are collected
here because they were being duplicated in multiple scripts.
Args:
options: OptionParser.parse_args() options instance to check
Returns:
list of error message strings, or an empty list if no errors
"""
errors = []
if not options.repo:
errors.extend(
['--repo must be supplied or have a settings file default'])
if not options.wc:
errors.extend(
['--wc must be supplied or have a settings file default'])
if not options.branch:
if not options.user:
errors.extend(
['at least one of --branch or --user must be supplied'])
return errors
def checkCommonSvnOptionsOrDie(options, parser):
"""Checks subset of command-line options, calling sys.exit() on any errors.
Args:
options: see checkCommonSvnOptions()
parser: an OptionParser instance used to call print_help() to print
usage information if errors occur
Exits:
On any error messages returned by checkCommonSvnOptions(), prints error
messages and usage information to stderr and calls sys.exit(1).
"""
errors = checkCommonSvnOptions(options)
if errors:
sys.exit(printErrorsAndUsage(errors, parser))