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# Copyright (C) 2009, 2010 Canonical Ltd
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# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
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# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
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# (at your option) any later version.
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# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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# GNU General Public License for more details.
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# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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# along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
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# Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
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from __future__ import absolute_import
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"""Helpers for managing cleanup functions and the errors they might raise.
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The usual way to run cleanup code in Python is::
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However if both `do_something` and `cleanup_something` raise an exception
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Python will forget the original exception and propagate the one from
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cleanup_something. Unfortunately, this is almost always much less useful than
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the original exception.
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If you want to be certain that the first, and only the first, error is raised,
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operation = OperationWithCleanups(do_something)
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operation.add_cleanup(cleanup_something)
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operation.run_simple()
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This is more inconvenient (because you need to make every try block a
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function), but will ensure that the first error encountered is the one raised,
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while also ensuring all cleanups are run. See OperationWithCleanups for more
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from collections import deque
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def _log_cleanup_error(exc):
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trace.mutter('Cleanup failed:')
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trace.log_exception_quietly()
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if 'cleanup' in debug.debug_flags:
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trace.warning('bzr: warning: Cleanup failed: %s', exc)
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def _run_cleanup(func, *args, **kwargs):
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"""Run func(*args, **kwargs), logging but not propagating any error it
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:returns: True if func raised no errors, else False.
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except KeyboardInterrupt:
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except Exception, exc:
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_log_cleanup_error(exc)
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def _run_cleanups(funcs):
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"""Run a series of cleanup functions."""
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for func, args, kwargs in funcs:
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_run_cleanup(func, *args, **kwargs)
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class ObjectWithCleanups(object):
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"""A mixin for objects that hold a cleanup list.
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Subclass or client code can call add_cleanup and then later `cleanup_now`.
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self.cleanups = deque()
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def add_cleanup(self, cleanup_func, *args, **kwargs):
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"""Add a cleanup to run.
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Cleanups may be added at any time.
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Cleanups will be executed in LIFO order.
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self.cleanups.appendleft((cleanup_func, args, kwargs))
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def cleanup_now(self):
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_run_cleanups(self.cleanups)
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self.cleanups.clear()
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class OperationWithCleanups(ObjectWithCleanups):
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"""A way to run some code with a dynamic cleanup list.
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This provides a way to add cleanups while the function-with-cleanups is
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operation = OperationWithCleanups(some_func)
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operation.run(args...)
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where `some_func` is::
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def some_func(operation, args, ...):
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operation.add_cleanup(something)
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Note that the first argument passed to `some_func` will be the
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OperationWithCleanups object. To invoke `some_func` without that, use
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`run_simple` instead of `run`.
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def __init__(self, func):
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super(OperationWithCleanups, self).__init__()
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def run(self, *args, **kwargs):
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return _do_with_cleanups(
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self.cleanups, self.func, self, *args, **kwargs)
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def run_simple(self, *args, **kwargs):
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return _do_with_cleanups(
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self.cleanups, self.func, *args, **kwargs)
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def _do_with_cleanups(cleanup_funcs, func, *args, **kwargs):
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"""Run `func`, then call all the cleanup_funcs.
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All the cleanup_funcs are guaranteed to be run. The first exception raised
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by func or any of the cleanup_funcs is the one that will be propagted by
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this function (subsequent errors are caught and logged).
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Conceptually similar to::
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return func(*args, **kwargs)
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for cleanup, cargs, ckwargs in cleanup_funcs:
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cleanup(*cargs, **ckwargs)
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It avoids several problems with using try/finally directly:
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* an exception from func will not be obscured by a subsequent exception
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* an exception from a cleanup will not prevent other cleanups from
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running (but the first exception encountered is still the one
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Unike `_run_cleanup`, `_do_with_cleanups` can propagate an exception from a
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cleanup, but only if there is no exception from func.
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# As correct as Python 2.4 allows.
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result = func(*args, **kwargs)
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# We have an exception from func already, so suppress cleanup errors.
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_run_cleanups(cleanup_funcs)
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# No exception from func, so allow the first exception from
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# cleanup_funcs to propagate if one occurs (but only after running all
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for cleanup, c_args, c_kwargs in cleanup_funcs:
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# XXX: Hmm, if KeyboardInterrupt arrives at exactly this line, we
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# won't run all cleanups... perhaps we should temporarily install a
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cleanup(*c_args, **c_kwargs)
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# This is the first cleanup to fail, so remember its
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exc_info = sys.exc_info()
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# We already have an exception to propagate, so log any errors
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# but don't propagate them.
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_run_cleanup(cleanup, *c_args, **kwargs)
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if exc_info is not None:
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raise exc_info[0], exc_info[1], exc_info[2]
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# No error, so we can return the result