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require 'rubygems' require 'rubygems/dependency' require 'rubygems/exceptions' require 'uri' require 'net/http' module Gem # Raised when a DependencyConflict reaches the toplevel. # Indicates which dependencies were incompatible. # class DependencyResolutionError < Gem::Exception def initialize(conflict) @conflict = conflict a, b = conflicting_dependencies super "unable to resolve conflicting dependencies '#{a}' and '#{b}'" end attr_reader :conflict def conflicting_dependencies @conflict.conflicting_dependencies end end # Raised when a dependency requests a gem for which there is # no spec. # class UnsatisfiableDepedencyError < Gem::Exception def initialize(dep) super "unable to find any gem matching dependency '#{dep}'" @dependency = dep end attr_reader :dependency end # Raised when dependencies conflict and create the inability to # find a valid possible spec for a request. # class ImpossibleDependenciesError < Gem::Exception def initialize(request, conflicts) s = conflicts.size == 1 ? "" : "s" super "detected #{conflicts.size} conflict#{s} with dependency '#{request.dependency}'" @request = request @conflicts = conflicts end def dependency @request.dependency end attr_reader :conflicts end # Given a set of Gem::Dependency objects as +needed+ and a way # to query the set of available specs via +set+, calculates # a set of ActivationRequest objects which indicate all the specs # that should be activated to meet the all the requirements. # class DependencyResolver # Represents a specification retrieved via the rubygems.org # API. This is used to avoid having to load the full # Specification object when all we need is the name, version, # and dependencies. # class APISpecification attr_reader :set # :nodoc: def initialize(set, api_data) @set = set @name = api_data[:name] @version = Gem::Version.new api_data[:number] @dependencies = api_data[:dependencies].map do |name, ver| Gem::Dependency.new name, ver.split(/\s*,\s*/) end end attr_reader :name, :version, :dependencies def == other # :nodoc: self.class === other and @set == other.set and @name == other.name and @version == other.version and @dependencies == other.dependencies end def full_name "#{@name}-#{@version}" end end # The global rubygems pool, available via the rubygems.org API. # Returns instances of APISpecification. # class APISet def initialize @data = Hash.new { |h,k| h[k] = [] } @dep_uri = URI 'https://rubygems.org/api/v1/dependencies' end # Return data for all versions of the gem +name+. # def versions(name) if @data.key?(name) return @data[name] end uri = @dep_uri + "?gems=#{name}" str = Gem::RemoteFetcher.fetcher.fetch_path uri Marshal.load(str).each do |ver| @data[ver[:name]] << ver end @data[name] end # Return an array of APISpecification objects matching # DependencyRequest +req+. # def find_all(req) res = [] versions(req.name).each do |ver| if req.dependency.match? req.name, ver[:number] res << APISpecification.new(self, ver) end end res end # A hint run by the resolver to allow the Set to fetch # data for DependencyRequests +reqs+. # def prefetch(reqs) names = reqs.map { |r| r.dependency.name } needed = names.find_all { |d| !@data.key?(d) } return if needed.empty? uri = @dep_uri + "?gems=#{needed.sort.join ','}" str = Gem::RemoteFetcher.fetcher.fetch_path uri Marshal.load(str).each do |ver| @data[ver[:name]] << ver end end end # Represents a possible Specification object returned # from IndexSet. Used to delay needed to download full # Specification objects when only the +name+ and +version+ # are needed. # class IndexSpecification def initialize(set, name, version, source, plat) @set = set @name = name @version = version @source = source @platform = plat @spec = nil end attr_reader :name, :version, :source def full_name "#{@name}-#{@version}" end def spec @spec ||= @set.load_spec(@name, @version, @source) end def dependencies spec.dependencies end end # The global rubygems pool represented via the traditional # source index. # class IndexSet def initialize @f = Gem::SpecFetcher.fetcher @all = Hash.new { |h,k| h[k] = [] } list, _ = @f.available_specs(:released) list.each do |uri, specs| specs.each do |n| @all[n.name] << [uri, n] end end @specs = {} end # Return an array of IndexSpecification objects matching # DependencyRequest +req+. # def find_all(req) res = [] name = req.dependency.name @all[name].each do |uri, n| if req.dependency.match? n res << IndexSpecification.new(self, n.name, n.version, uri, n.platform) end end res end # No prefetching needed since we load the whole index in # initially. # def prefetch(gems) end # Called from IndexSpecification to get a true Specification # object. # def load_spec(name, ver, source) key = "#{name}-#{ver}" @specs[key] ||= source.fetch_spec(Gem::NameTuple.new(name, ver)) end end # A set which represents the installed gems. Respects # all the normal settings that control where to look # for installed gems. # class CurrentSet def find_all(req) req.dependency.matching_specs end def prefetch(gems) end end # Create DependencyResolver object which will resolve # the tree starting with +needed+ Depedency objects. # # +set+ is an object that provides where to look for # specifications to satisify the Dependencies. This # defaults to IndexSet, which will query rubygems.org. # def initialize(needed, set=IndexSet.new) @set = set || IndexSet.new # Allow nil to mean IndexSet @needed = needed @conflicts = nil end # Provide a DependencyResolver that queries only against # the already installed gems. # def self.for_current_gems(needed) new needed, CurrentSet.new end # Contains all the conflicts encountered while doing resolution # attr_reader :conflicts # Proceed with resolution! Returns an array of ActivationRequest # objects. # def resolve @conflicts = [] needed = @needed.map { |n| DependencyRequest.new(n, nil) } res = resolve_for needed, [] if res.kind_of? DependencyConflict raise DependencyResolutionError.new(res) end res end # Used internally to indicate that a dependency conflicted # with a spec that would be activated. # class DependencyConflict def initialize(dependency, activated, failed_dep=dependency) @dependency = dependency @activated = activated @failed_dep = failed_dep end attr_reader :dependency, :activated # Return the Specification that listed the dependency # def requester @failed_dep.requester end def for_spec?(spec) @dependency.name == spec.name end # Return the 2 dependency objects that conflicted # def conflicting_dependencies [@failed_dep.dependency, @activated.request.dependency] end end # Used Internally. Wraps a Depedency object to also track # which spec contained the Dependency. # class DependencyRequest def initialize(dep, act) @dependency = dep @requester = act end attr_reader :dependency, :requester def name @dependency.name end def matches_spec?(spec) @dependency.matches_spec? spec end def to_s @dependency.to_s end def ==(other) case other when Dependency @dependency == other when DependencyRequest @dependency == other.dependency && @requester == other.requester else false end end end # Specifies a Specification object that should be activated. # Also contains a dependency that was used to introduce this # activation. # class ActivationRequest def initialize(spec, req, others_possible=true) @spec = spec @request = req @others_possible = others_possible end attr_reader :spec, :request # Indicate if this activation is one of a set of possible # requests for the same Dependency request. # def others_possible? @others_possible end # Return the ActivationRequest that contained the dependency # that we were activated for. # def parent @request.requester end def name @spec.name end def full_name @spec.full_name end def version @spec.version end def full_spec Gem::Specification === @spec ? @spec : @spec.spec end def download(path) if @spec.respond_to? :source source = @spec.source else source = Gem.sources.first end Gem.ensure_gem_subdirectories path source.download full_spec, path end def ==(other) case other when Gem::Specification @spec == other when ActivationRequest @spec == other.spec && @request == other.request else false end end ## # Indicates if the requested gem has already been installed. def installed? this_spec = full_spec Gem::Specification.any? do |s| s == this_spec end end end def requests(s, act) reqs = [] s.dependencies.each do |d| next unless d.type == :runtime reqs << DependencyRequest.new(d, act) end @set.prefetch(reqs) reqs end # The meat of the algorithm. Given +needed+ DependencyRequest objects # and +specs+ being a list to ActivationRequest, calculate a new list # of ActivationRequest objects. # def resolve_for(needed, specs) until needed.empty? dep = needed.shift # If there is already a spec activated for the requested name... if existing = specs.find { |s| dep.name == s.name } # then we're done since this new dep matches the # existing spec. next if dep.matches_spec? existing # There is a conflict! We return the conflict # object which will be seen by the caller and be # handled at the right level. # If the existing activation indicates that there # are other possibles for it, then issue the conflict # on the dep for the activation itself. Otherwise, issue # it on the requester's request itself. # if existing.others_possible? conflict = DependencyConflict.new(dep, existing) else depreq = existing.request.requester.request conflict = DependencyConflict.new(depreq, existing, dep) end @conflicts << conflict return conflict end # Get a list of all specs that satisfy dep possible = @set.find_all(dep) case possible.size when 0 # If there are none, then our work here is done. raise UnsatisfiableDepedencyError.new(dep) when 1 # If there is one, then we just add it to specs # and process the specs dependencies by adding # them to needed. spec = possible.first act = ActivationRequest.new(spec, dep, false) specs << act # Put the deps for at the beginning of needed # rather than the end to match the depth first # searching done by the multiple case code below. # # This keeps the error messages consistent. needed = requests(spec, act) + needed else # There are multiple specs for this dep. This is # the case that this class is built to handle. # Sort them so that we try the highest versions # first. possible = possible.sort_by { |s| s.version } # We track the conflicts seen so that we can report them # to help the user figure out how to fix the situation. conflicts = [] # To figure out which to pick, we keep resolving # given each one being activated and if there isn't # a conflict, we know we've found a full set. # # We use an until loop rather than #reverse_each # to keep the stack short since we're using a recursive # algorithm. # until possible.empty? s = possible.pop # Recursively call #resolve_for with this spec # and add it's dependencies into the picture... act = ActivationRequest.new(s, dep) try = requests(s, act) + needed res = resolve_for(try, specs + [act]) # While trying to resolve these dependencies, there may # be a conflict! if res.kind_of? DependencyConflict # The conflict might be created not by this invocation # but rather one up the stack, so if we can't attempt # to resolve this conflict (conflict isn't with the spec +s+) # then just return it so the caller can try to sort it out. return res unless res.for_spec? s # Otherwise, this is a conflict that we can attempt to fix conflicts << [s, res] # Optimization: # # Because the conflict indicates the dependency that trigger # it, we can prune possible based on this new information. # # This cuts down on the number of iterations needed. possible.delete_if { |x| !res.dependency.matches_spec? x } else # No conflict, return the specs return res end end # We tried all possibles and nothing worked, so we let the user # know and include as much information about the problem since # the user is going to have to take action to fix this. raise ImpossibleDependenciesError.new(dep, conflicts) end end specs end end end