Server IP : 66.29.132.122 / Your IP : 3.17.79.169 Web Server : LiteSpeed System : Linux business142.web-hosting.com 4.18.0-553.lve.el8.x86_64 #1 SMP Mon May 27 15:27:34 UTC 2024 x86_64 User : admazpex ( 531) PHP Version : 7.2.34 Disable Function : NONE MySQL : OFF | cURL : ON | WGET : ON | Perl : ON | Python : ON | Sudo : OFF | Pkexec : OFF Directory : /proc/self/root/opt/cloudlinux/venv/lib/python3.11/site-packages/coverage/ |
Upload File : |
# Licensed under the Apache License: http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 # For details: https://github.com/nedbat/coveragepy/blob/master/NOTICE.txt """Better tokenizing for coverage.py.""" from __future__ import annotations import ast import io import keyword import re import sys import token import tokenize from typing import Iterable, List, Optional, Set, Tuple from coverage import env from coverage.types import TLineNo, TSourceTokenLines TokenInfos = Iterable[tokenize.TokenInfo] def _phys_tokens(toks: TokenInfos) -> TokenInfos: """Return all physical tokens, even line continuations. tokenize.generate_tokens() doesn't return a token for the backslash that continues lines. This wrapper provides those tokens so that we can re-create a faithful representation of the original source. Returns the same values as generate_tokens() """ last_line: Optional[str] = None last_lineno = -1 last_ttext: str = "" for ttype, ttext, (slineno, scol), (elineno, ecol), ltext in toks: if last_lineno != elineno: if last_line and last_line.endswith("\\\n"): # We are at the beginning of a new line, and the last line # ended with a backslash. We probably have to inject a # backslash token into the stream. Unfortunately, there's more # to figure out. This code:: # # usage = """\ # HEY THERE # """ # # triggers this condition, but the token text is:: # # '"""\\\nHEY THERE\n"""' # # so we need to figure out if the backslash is already in the # string token or not. inject_backslash = True if last_ttext.endswith("\\"): inject_backslash = False elif ttype == token.STRING: if "\n" in ttext and ttext.split("\n", 1)[0][-1] == "\\": # It's a multi-line string and the first line ends with # a backslash, so we don't need to inject another. inject_backslash = False if inject_backslash: # Figure out what column the backslash is in. ccol = len(last_line.split("\n")[-2]) - 1 # Yield the token, with a fake token type. yield tokenize.TokenInfo( 99999, "\\\n", (slineno, ccol), (slineno, ccol+2), last_line ) last_line = ltext if ttype not in (tokenize.NEWLINE, tokenize.NL): last_ttext = ttext yield tokenize.TokenInfo(ttype, ttext, (slineno, scol), (elineno, ecol), ltext) last_lineno = elineno class MatchCaseFinder(ast.NodeVisitor): """Helper for finding match/case lines.""" def __init__(self, source: str) -> None: # This will be the set of line numbers that start match or case statements. self.match_case_lines: Set[TLineNo] = set() self.visit(ast.parse(source)) if sys.version_info >= (3, 10): def visit_Match(self, node: ast.Match) -> None: """Invoked by ast.NodeVisitor.visit""" self.match_case_lines.add(node.lineno) for case in node.cases: self.match_case_lines.add(case.pattern.lineno) self.generic_visit(node) def source_token_lines(source: str) -> TSourceTokenLines: """Generate a series of lines, one for each line in `source`. Each line is a list of pairs, each pair is a token:: [('key', 'def'), ('ws', ' '), ('nam', 'hello'), ('op', '('), ... ] Each pair has a token class, and the token text. If you concatenate all the token texts, and then join them with newlines, you should have your original `source` back, with two differences: trailing white space is not preserved, and a final line with no newline is indistinguishable from a final line with a newline. """ ws_tokens = {token.INDENT, token.DEDENT, token.NEWLINE, tokenize.NL} line: List[Tuple[str, str]] = [] col = 0 source = source.expandtabs(8).replace("\r\n", "\n") tokgen = generate_tokens(source) if env.PYBEHAVIOR.soft_keywords: match_case_lines = MatchCaseFinder(source).match_case_lines for ttype, ttext, (sline, scol), (_, ecol), _ in _phys_tokens(tokgen): mark_start = True for part in re.split("(\n)", ttext): if part == "\n": yield line line = [] col = 0 mark_end = False elif part == "": mark_end = False elif ttype in ws_tokens: mark_end = False else: if mark_start and scol > col: line.append(("ws", " " * (scol - col))) mark_start = False tok_class = tokenize.tok_name.get(ttype, "xx").lower()[:3] if ttype == token.NAME: if keyword.iskeyword(ttext): # Hard keywords are always keywords. tok_class = "key" elif sys.version_info >= (3, 10): # PYVERSIONS # Need the version_info check to keep mypy from borking # on issoftkeyword here. if env.PYBEHAVIOR.soft_keywords and keyword.issoftkeyword(ttext): # Soft keywords appear at the start of the line, # on lines that start match or case statements. if len(line) == 0: is_start_of_line = True elif (len(line) == 1) and line[0][0] == "ws": is_start_of_line = True else: is_start_of_line = False if is_start_of_line and sline in match_case_lines: tok_class = "key" line.append((tok_class, part)) mark_end = True scol = 0 if mark_end: col = ecol if line: yield line class CachedTokenizer: """A one-element cache around tokenize.generate_tokens. When reporting, coverage.py tokenizes files twice, once to find the structure of the file, and once to syntax-color it. Tokenizing is expensive, and easily cached. This is a one-element cache so that our twice-in-a-row tokenizing doesn't actually tokenize twice. """ def __init__(self) -> None: self.last_text: Optional[str] = None self.last_tokens: List[tokenize.TokenInfo] = [] def generate_tokens(self, text: str) -> TokenInfos: """A stand-in for `tokenize.generate_tokens`.""" if text != self.last_text: self.last_text = text readline = io.StringIO(text).readline try: self.last_tokens = list(tokenize.generate_tokens(readline)) except: self.last_text = None raise return self.last_tokens # Create our generate_tokens cache as a callable replacement function. generate_tokens = CachedTokenizer().generate_tokens def source_encoding(source: bytes) -> str: """Determine the encoding for `source`, according to PEP 263. `source` is a byte string: the text of the program. Returns a string, the name of the encoding. """ readline = iter(source.splitlines(True)).__next__ return tokenize.detect_encoding(readline)[0]