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Diffstat (limited to 'env/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/file_util.py')
-rw-r--r-- | env/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/file_util.py | 245 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 245 deletions
diff --git a/env/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/file_util.py b/env/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/file_util.py deleted file mode 100644 index 4ff2230..0000000 --- a/env/lib/python3.10/site-packages/setuptools/_distutils/file_util.py +++ /dev/null @@ -1,245 +0,0 @@ -"""distutils.file_util - -Utility functions for operating on single files. -""" - -import os -from distutils.errors import DistutilsFileError -from distutils import log - -# for generating verbose output in 'copy_file()' -_copy_action = {None: 'copying', 'hard': 'hard linking', 'sym': 'symbolically linking'} - - -def _copy_file_contents(src, dst, buffer_size=16 * 1024): - """Copy the file 'src' to 'dst'; both must be filenames. Any error - opening either file, reading from 'src', or writing to 'dst', raises - DistutilsFileError. Data is read/written in chunks of 'buffer_size' - bytes (default 16k). No attempt is made to handle anything apart from - regular files. - """ - # Stolen from shutil module in the standard library, but with - # custom error-handling added. - fsrc = None - fdst = None - try: - try: - fsrc = open(src, 'rb') - except OSError as e: - raise DistutilsFileError("could not open '%s': %s" % (src, e.strerror)) - - if os.path.exists(dst): - try: - os.unlink(dst) - except OSError as e: - raise DistutilsFileError( - "could not delete '%s': %s" % (dst, e.strerror) - ) - - try: - fdst = open(dst, 'wb') - except OSError as e: - raise DistutilsFileError("could not create '%s': %s" % (dst, e.strerror)) - - while True: - try: - buf = fsrc.read(buffer_size) - except OSError as e: - raise DistutilsFileError( - "could not read from '%s': %s" % (src, e.strerror) - ) - - if not buf: - break - - try: - fdst.write(buf) - except OSError as e: - raise DistutilsFileError( - "could not write to '%s': %s" % (dst, e.strerror) - ) - finally: - if fdst: - fdst.close() - if fsrc: - fsrc.close() - - -def copy_file( - src, - dst, - preserve_mode=1, - preserve_times=1, - update=0, - link=None, - verbose=1, - dry_run=0, -): - """Copy a file 'src' to 'dst'. If 'dst' is a directory, then 'src' is - copied there with the same name; otherwise, it must be a filename. (If - the file exists, it will be ruthlessly clobbered.) If 'preserve_mode' - is true (the default), the file's mode (type and permission bits, or - whatever is analogous on the current platform) is copied. If - 'preserve_times' is true (the default), the last-modified and - last-access times are copied as well. If 'update' is true, 'src' will - only be copied if 'dst' does not exist, or if 'dst' does exist but is - older than 'src'. - - 'link' allows you to make hard links (os.link) or symbolic links - (os.symlink) instead of copying: set it to "hard" or "sym"; if it is - None (the default), files are copied. Don't set 'link' on systems that - don't support it: 'copy_file()' doesn't check if hard or symbolic - linking is available. If hardlink fails, falls back to - _copy_file_contents(). - - Under Mac OS, uses the native file copy function in macostools; on - other systems, uses '_copy_file_contents()' to copy file contents. - - Return a tuple (dest_name, copied): 'dest_name' is the actual name of - the output file, and 'copied' is true if the file was copied (or would - have been copied, if 'dry_run' true). - """ - # XXX if the destination file already exists, we clobber it if - # copying, but blow up if linking. Hmmm. And I don't know what - # macostools.copyfile() does. Should definitely be consistent, and - # should probably blow up if destination exists and we would be - # changing it (ie. it's not already a hard/soft link to src OR - # (not update) and (src newer than dst). - - from distutils.dep_util import newer - from stat import ST_ATIME, ST_MTIME, ST_MODE, S_IMODE - - if not os.path.isfile(src): - raise DistutilsFileError( - "can't copy '%s': doesn't exist or not a regular file" % src - ) - - if os.path.isdir(dst): - dir = dst - dst = os.path.join(dst, os.path.basename(src)) - else: - dir = os.path.dirname(dst) - - if update and not newer(src, dst): - if verbose >= 1: - log.debug("not copying %s (output up-to-date)", src) - return (dst, 0) - - try: - action = _copy_action[link] - except KeyError: - raise ValueError("invalid value '%s' for 'link' argument" % link) - - if verbose >= 1: - if os.path.basename(dst) == os.path.basename(src): - log.info("%s %s -> %s", action, src, dir) - else: - log.info("%s %s -> %s", action, src, dst) - - if dry_run: - return (dst, 1) - - # If linking (hard or symbolic), use the appropriate system call - # (Unix only, of course, but that's the caller's responsibility) - elif link == 'hard': - if not (os.path.exists(dst) and os.path.samefile(src, dst)): - try: - os.link(src, dst) - return (dst, 1) - except OSError: - # If hard linking fails, fall back on copying file - # (some special filesystems don't support hard linking - # even under Unix, see issue #8876). - pass - elif link == 'sym': - if not (os.path.exists(dst) and os.path.samefile(src, dst)): - os.symlink(src, dst) - return (dst, 1) - - # Otherwise (non-Mac, not linking), copy the file contents and - # (optionally) copy the times and mode. - _copy_file_contents(src, dst) - if preserve_mode or preserve_times: - st = os.stat(src) - - # According to David Ascher <da@ski.org>, utime() should be done - # before chmod() (at least under NT). - if preserve_times: - os.utime(dst, (st[ST_ATIME], st[ST_MTIME])) - if preserve_mode: - os.chmod(dst, S_IMODE(st[ST_MODE])) - - return (dst, 1) - - -# XXX I suspect this is Unix-specific -- need porting help! -def move_file(src, dst, verbose=1, dry_run=0): - - """Move a file 'src' to 'dst'. If 'dst' is a directory, the file will - be moved into it with the same name; otherwise, 'src' is just renamed - to 'dst'. Return the new full name of the file. - - Handles cross-device moves on Unix using 'copy_file()'. What about - other systems??? - """ - from os.path import exists, isfile, isdir, basename, dirname - import errno - - if verbose >= 1: - log.info("moving %s -> %s", src, dst) - - if dry_run: - return dst - - if not isfile(src): - raise DistutilsFileError("can't move '%s': not a regular file" % src) - - if isdir(dst): - dst = os.path.join(dst, basename(src)) - elif exists(dst): - raise DistutilsFileError( - "can't move '%s': destination '%s' already exists" % (src, dst) - ) - - if not isdir(dirname(dst)): - raise DistutilsFileError( - "can't move '%s': destination '%s' not a valid path" % (src, dst) - ) - - copy_it = False - try: - os.rename(src, dst) - except OSError as e: - (num, msg) = e.args - if num == errno.EXDEV: - copy_it = True - else: - raise DistutilsFileError("couldn't move '%s' to '%s': %s" % (src, dst, msg)) - - if copy_it: - copy_file(src, dst, verbose=verbose) - try: - os.unlink(src) - except OSError as e: - (num, msg) = e.args - try: - os.unlink(dst) - except OSError: - pass - raise DistutilsFileError( - "couldn't move '%s' to '%s' by copy/delete: " - "delete '%s' failed: %s" % (src, dst, src, msg) - ) - return dst - - -def write_file(filename, contents): - """Create a file with the specified name and write 'contents' (a - sequence of strings without line terminators) to it. - """ - f = open(filename, "w") - try: - for line in contents: - f.write(line + "\n") - finally: - f.close() |