git-repo/platform_utils.py
Mike Frysinger f454512619 sync: make .git init more robust
Hitting Ctrl-C in the middle of this func will leave the .git in a
bad state that requires manual recovery.  The code tries to catch
all exceptions and recover by deleting the incomplete .git dir, but
it omits KeyboardInterrupt which Exception misses.

We could add that to the recovery path, but we can make this more
robust with a different approach: set up everything in .git.tmp/
and only move it to .git/ once we've fully initialized it.

Change-Id: I0f5b97f2e19fc39cffc3e5e23993a2da7220f4e3
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit-review.googlesource.com/c/git-repo/+/244733
Reviewed-by: David Pursehouse <dpursehouse@collab.net>
Tested-by: Mike Frysinger <vapier@google.com>
2019-11-12 03:44:33 +00:00

417 lines
12 KiB
Python

# -*- coding:utf-8 -*-
#
# Copyright (C) 2016 The Android Open Source Project
#
# 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.
import errno
import os
import platform
import select
import shutil
import stat
from pyversion import is_python3
if is_python3():
from queue import Queue
else:
from Queue import Queue
from threading import Thread
def isWindows():
""" Returns True when running with the native port of Python for Windows,
False when running on any other platform (including the Cygwin port of
Python).
"""
# Note: The cygwin port of Python returns "CYGWIN_NT_xxx"
return platform.system() == "Windows"
class FileDescriptorStreams(object):
""" Platform agnostic abstraction enabling non-blocking I/O over a
collection of file descriptors. This abstraction is required because
fctnl(os.O_NONBLOCK) is not supported on Windows.
"""
@classmethod
def create(cls):
""" Factory method: instantiates the concrete class according to the
current platform.
"""
if isWindows():
return _FileDescriptorStreamsThreads()
else:
return _FileDescriptorStreamsNonBlocking()
def __init__(self):
self.streams = []
def add(self, fd, dest, std_name):
""" Wraps an existing file descriptor as a stream.
"""
self.streams.append(self._create_stream(fd, dest, std_name))
def remove(self, stream):
""" Removes a stream, when done with it.
"""
self.streams.remove(stream)
@property
def is_done(self):
""" Returns True when all streams have been processed.
"""
return len(self.streams) == 0
def select(self):
""" Returns the set of streams that have data available to read.
The returned streams each expose a read() and a close() method.
When done with a stream, call the remove(stream) method.
"""
raise NotImplementedError
def _create_stream(fd, dest, std_name):
""" Creates a new stream wrapping an existing file descriptor.
"""
raise NotImplementedError
class _FileDescriptorStreamsNonBlocking(FileDescriptorStreams):
""" Implementation of FileDescriptorStreams for platforms that support
non blocking I/O.
"""
class Stream(object):
""" Encapsulates a file descriptor """
def __init__(self, fd, dest, std_name):
self.fd = fd
self.dest = dest
self.std_name = std_name
self.set_non_blocking()
def set_non_blocking(self):
import fcntl
flags = fcntl.fcntl(self.fd, fcntl.F_GETFL)
fcntl.fcntl(self.fd, fcntl.F_SETFL, flags | os.O_NONBLOCK)
def fileno(self):
return self.fd.fileno()
def read(self):
return self.fd.read(4096)
def close(self):
self.fd.close()
def _create_stream(self, fd, dest, std_name):
return self.Stream(fd, dest, std_name)
def select(self):
ready_streams, _, _ = select.select(self.streams, [], [])
return ready_streams
class _FileDescriptorStreamsThreads(FileDescriptorStreams):
""" Implementation of FileDescriptorStreams for platforms that don't support
non blocking I/O. This implementation requires creating threads issuing
blocking read operations on file descriptors.
"""
def __init__(self):
super(_FileDescriptorStreamsThreads, self).__init__()
# The queue is shared accross all threads so we can simulate the
# behavior of the select() function
self.queue = Queue(10) # Limit incoming data from streams
def _create_stream(self, fd, dest, std_name):
return self.Stream(fd, dest, std_name, self.queue)
def select(self):
# Return only one stream at a time, as it is the most straighforward
# thing to do and it is compatible with the select() function.
item = self.queue.get()
stream = item.stream
stream.data = item.data
return [stream]
class QueueItem(object):
""" Item put in the shared queue """
def __init__(self, stream, data):
self.stream = stream
self.data = data
class Stream(object):
""" Encapsulates a file descriptor """
def __init__(self, fd, dest, std_name, queue):
self.fd = fd
self.dest = dest
self.std_name = std_name
self.queue = queue
self.data = None
self.thread = Thread(target=self.read_to_queue)
self.thread.daemon = True
self.thread.start()
def close(self):
self.fd.close()
def read(self):
data = self.data
self.data = None
return data
def read_to_queue(self):
""" The thread function: reads everything from the file descriptor into
the shared queue and terminates when reaching EOF.
"""
for line in iter(self.fd.readline, b''):
self.queue.put(_FileDescriptorStreamsThreads.QueueItem(self, line))
self.fd.close()
self.queue.put(_FileDescriptorStreamsThreads.QueueItem(self, None))
def symlink(source, link_name):
"""Creates a symbolic link pointing to source named link_name.
Note: On Windows, source must exist on disk, as the implementation needs
to know whether to create a "File" or a "Directory" symbolic link.
"""
if isWindows():
import platform_utils_win32
source = _validate_winpath(source)
link_name = _validate_winpath(link_name)
target = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(link_name), source)
if isdir(target):
platform_utils_win32.create_dirsymlink(_makelongpath(source), link_name)
else:
platform_utils_win32.create_filesymlink(_makelongpath(source), link_name)
else:
return os.symlink(source, link_name)
def _validate_winpath(path):
path = os.path.normpath(path)
if _winpath_is_valid(path):
return path
raise ValueError("Path \"%s\" must be a relative path or an absolute "
"path starting with a drive letter".format(path))
def _winpath_is_valid(path):
"""Windows only: returns True if path is relative (e.g. ".\\foo") or is
absolute including a drive letter (e.g. "c:\\foo"). Returns False if path
is ambiguous (e.g. "x:foo" or "\\foo").
"""
assert isWindows()
path = os.path.normpath(path)
drive, tail = os.path.splitdrive(path)
if tail:
if not drive:
return tail[0] != os.sep # "\\foo" is invalid
else:
return tail[0] == os.sep # "x:foo" is invalid
else:
return not drive # "x:" is invalid
def _makelongpath(path):
"""Return the input path normalized to support the Windows long path syntax
("\\\\?\\" prefix) if needed, i.e. if the input path is longer than the
MAX_PATH limit.
"""
if isWindows():
# Note: MAX_PATH is 260, but, for directories, the maximum value is actually 246.
if len(path) < 246:
return path
if path.startswith(u"\\\\?\\"):
return path
if not os.path.isabs(path):
return path
# Append prefix and ensure unicode so that the special longpath syntax
# is supported by underlying Win32 API calls
return u"\\\\?\\" + os.path.normpath(path)
else:
return path
def rmtree(path, ignore_errors=False):
"""shutil.rmtree(path) wrapper with support for long paths on Windows.
Availability: Unix, Windows."""
onerror = None
if isWindows():
path = _makelongpath(path)
onerror = handle_rmtree_error
shutil.rmtree(path, ignore_errors=ignore_errors, onerror=onerror)
def handle_rmtree_error(function, path, excinfo):
# Allow deleting read-only files
os.chmod(path, stat.S_IWRITE)
function(path)
def rename(src, dst):
"""os.rename(src, dst) wrapper with support for long paths on Windows.
Availability: Unix, Windows."""
if isWindows():
# On Windows, rename fails if destination exists, see
# https://docs.python.org/2/library/os.html#os.rename
try:
os.rename(_makelongpath(src), _makelongpath(dst))
except OSError as e:
if e.errno == errno.EEXIST:
os.remove(_makelongpath(dst))
os.rename(_makelongpath(src), _makelongpath(dst))
else:
raise
else:
os.rename(src, dst)
def remove(path):
"""Remove (delete) the file path. This is a replacement for os.remove that
allows deleting read-only files on Windows, with support for long paths and
for deleting directory symbolic links.
Availability: Unix, Windows."""
if isWindows():
longpath = _makelongpath(path)
try:
os.remove(longpath)
except OSError as e:
if e.errno == errno.EACCES:
os.chmod(longpath, stat.S_IWRITE)
# Directory symbolic links must be deleted with 'rmdir'.
if islink(longpath) and isdir(longpath):
os.rmdir(longpath)
else:
os.remove(longpath)
else:
raise
else:
os.remove(path)
def walk(top, topdown=True, onerror=None, followlinks=False):
"""os.walk(path) wrapper with support for long paths on Windows.
Availability: Windows, Unix.
"""
if isWindows():
return _walk_windows_impl(top, topdown, onerror, followlinks)
else:
return os.walk(top, topdown, onerror, followlinks)
def _walk_windows_impl(top, topdown, onerror, followlinks):
try:
names = listdir(top)
except Exception as err:
if onerror is not None:
onerror(err)
return
dirs, nondirs = [], []
for name in names:
if isdir(os.path.join(top, name)):
dirs.append(name)
else:
nondirs.append(name)
if topdown:
yield top, dirs, nondirs
for name in dirs:
new_path = os.path.join(top, name)
if followlinks or not islink(new_path):
for x in _walk_windows_impl(new_path, topdown, onerror, followlinks):
yield x
if not topdown:
yield top, dirs, nondirs
def listdir(path):
"""os.listdir(path) wrapper with support for long paths on Windows.
Availability: Windows, Unix.
"""
return os.listdir(_makelongpath(path))
def rmdir(path):
"""os.rmdir(path) wrapper with support for long paths on Windows.
Availability: Windows, Unix.
"""
os.rmdir(_makelongpath(path))
def isdir(path):
"""os.path.isdir(path) wrapper with support for long paths on Windows.
Availability: Windows, Unix.
"""
return os.path.isdir(_makelongpath(path))
def islink(path):
"""os.path.islink(path) wrapper with support for long paths on Windows.
Availability: Windows, Unix.
"""
if isWindows():
import platform_utils_win32
return platform_utils_win32.islink(_makelongpath(path))
else:
return os.path.islink(path)
def readlink(path):
"""Return a string representing the path to which the symbolic link
points. The result may be either an absolute or relative pathname;
if it is relative, it may be converted to an absolute pathname using
os.path.join(os.path.dirname(path), result).
Availability: Windows, Unix.
"""
if isWindows():
import platform_utils_win32
return platform_utils_win32.readlink(_makelongpath(path))
else:
return os.readlink(path)
def realpath(path):
"""Return the canonical path of the specified filename, eliminating
any symbolic links encountered in the path.
Availability: Windows, Unix.
"""
if isWindows():
current_path = os.path.abspath(path)
path_tail = []
for c in range(0, 100): # Avoid cycles
if islink(current_path):
target = readlink(current_path)
current_path = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(current_path), target)
else:
basename = os.path.basename(current_path)
if basename == '':
path_tail.append(current_path)
break
path_tail.append(basename)
current_path = os.path.dirname(current_path)
path_tail.reverse()
result = os.path.normpath(os.path.join(*path_tail))
return result
else:
return os.path.realpath(path)