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Diffstat (limited to 'python/qemu/aqmp/util.py')
-rw-r--r-- | python/qemu/aqmp/util.py | 217 |
1 files changed, 217 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/python/qemu/aqmp/util.py b/python/qemu/aqmp/util.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..eaa5fc7d5f --- /dev/null +++ b/python/qemu/aqmp/util.py @@ -0,0 +1,217 @@ +""" +Miscellaneous Utilities + +This module provides asyncio utilities and compatibility wrappers for +Python 3.6 to provide some features that otherwise become available in +Python 3.7+. + +Various logging and debugging utilities are also provided, such as +`exception_summary()` and `pretty_traceback()`, used primarily for +adding information into the logging stream. +""" + +import asyncio +import sys +import traceback +from typing import ( + Any, + Coroutine, + Optional, + TypeVar, + cast, +) + + +T = TypeVar('T') + + +# -------------------------- +# Section: Utility Functions +# -------------------------- + + +async def flush(writer: asyncio.StreamWriter) -> None: + """ + Utility function to ensure a StreamWriter is *fully* drained. + + `asyncio.StreamWriter.drain` only promises we will return to below + the "high-water mark". This function ensures we flush the entire + buffer -- by setting the high water mark to 0 and then calling + drain. The flow control limits are restored after the call is + completed. + """ + transport = cast(asyncio.WriteTransport, writer.transport) + + # https://github.com/python/typeshed/issues/5779 + low, high = transport.get_write_buffer_limits() # type: ignore + transport.set_write_buffer_limits(0, 0) + try: + await writer.drain() + finally: + transport.set_write_buffer_limits(high, low) + + +def upper_half(func: T) -> T: + """ + Do-nothing decorator that annotates a method as an "upper-half" method. + + These methods must not call bottom-half functions directly, but can + schedule them to run. + """ + return func + + +def bottom_half(func: T) -> T: + """ + Do-nothing decorator that annotates a method as a "bottom-half" method. + + These methods must take great care to handle their own exceptions whenever + possible. If they go unhandled, they will cause termination of the loop. + + These methods do not, in general, have the ability to directly + report information to a caller’s context and will usually be + collected as a Task result instead. + + They must not call upper-half functions directly. + """ + return func + + +# ------------------------------- +# Section: Compatibility Wrappers +# ------------------------------- + + +def create_task(coro: Coroutine[Any, Any, T], + loop: Optional[asyncio.AbstractEventLoop] = None + ) -> 'asyncio.Future[T]': + """ + Python 3.6-compatible `asyncio.create_task` wrapper. + + :param coro: The coroutine to execute in a task. + :param loop: Optionally, the loop to create the task in. + + :return: An `asyncio.Future` object. + """ + if sys.version_info >= (3, 7): + if loop is not None: + return loop.create_task(coro) + return asyncio.create_task(coro) # pylint: disable=no-member + + # Python 3.6: + return asyncio.ensure_future(coro, loop=loop) + + +def is_closing(writer: asyncio.StreamWriter) -> bool: + """ + Python 3.6-compatible `asyncio.StreamWriter.is_closing` wrapper. + + :param writer: The `asyncio.StreamWriter` object. + :return: `True` if the writer is closing, or closed. + """ + if sys.version_info >= (3, 7): + return writer.is_closing() + + # Python 3.6: + transport = writer.transport + assert isinstance(transport, asyncio.WriteTransport) + return transport.is_closing() + + +async def wait_closed(writer: asyncio.StreamWriter) -> None: + """ + Python 3.6-compatible `asyncio.StreamWriter.wait_closed` wrapper. + + :param writer: The `asyncio.StreamWriter` to wait on. + """ + if sys.version_info >= (3, 7): + await writer.wait_closed() + return + + # Python 3.6 + transport = writer.transport + assert isinstance(transport, asyncio.WriteTransport) + + while not transport.is_closing(): + await asyncio.sleep(0) + + # This is an ugly workaround, but it's the best I can come up with. + sock = transport.get_extra_info('socket') + + if sock is None: + # Our transport doesn't have a socket? ... + # Nothing we can reasonably do. + return + + while sock.fileno() != -1: + await asyncio.sleep(0) + + +def asyncio_run(coro: Coroutine[Any, Any, T], *, debug: bool = False) -> T: + """ + Python 3.6-compatible `asyncio.run` wrapper. + + :param coro: A coroutine to execute now. + :return: The return value from the coroutine. + """ + if sys.version_info >= (3, 7): + return asyncio.run(coro, debug=debug) + + # Python 3.6 + loop = asyncio.get_event_loop() + loop.set_debug(debug) + ret = loop.run_until_complete(coro) + loop.close() + + return ret + + +# ---------------------------- +# Section: Logging & Debugging +# ---------------------------- + + +def exception_summary(exc: BaseException) -> str: + """ + Return a summary string of an arbitrary exception. + + It will be of the form "ExceptionType: Error Message", if the error + string is non-empty, and just "ExceptionType" otherwise. + """ + name = type(exc).__qualname__ + smod = type(exc).__module__ + if smod not in ("__main__", "builtins"): + name = smod + '.' + name + + error = str(exc) + if error: + return f"{name}: {error}" + return name + + +def pretty_traceback(prefix: str = " | ") -> str: + """ + Formats the current traceback, indented to provide visual distinction. + + This is useful for printing a traceback within a traceback for + debugging purposes when encapsulating errors to deliver them up the + stack; when those errors are printed, this helps provide a nice + visual grouping to quickly identify the parts of the error that + belong to the inner exception. + + :param prefix: The prefix to append to each line of the traceback. + :return: A string, formatted something like the following:: + + | Traceback (most recent call last): + | File "foobar.py", line 42, in arbitrary_example + | foo.baz() + | ArbitraryError: [Errno 42] Something bad happened! + """ + output = "".join(traceback.format_exception(*sys.exc_info())) + + exc_lines = [] + for line in output.split('\n'): + exc_lines.append(prefix + line) + + # The last line is always empty, omit it + return "\n".join(exc_lines[:-1]) |