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# Authors:
# Martin Nagy <mnagy@redhat.com>
# Jason Gerard DeRose <jderose@redhat.com>
#
# Copyright (C) 2008 Red Hat
# see file 'COPYING' for use and warranty information
#
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
"""
Process-wide static configuration and environment.
The standard run-time instance of the `Env` class is initialized early in the
`ipalib` process and is then locked into a read-only state, after which no
further changes can be made to the environment throughout the remaining life
of the process.
For the per-request thread-local information, see `ipalib.request`.
"""
from ConfigParser import RawConfigParser, ParsingError
from types import NoneType
import os
from os import path
import sys
from socket import getfqdn
from base import check_name
from constants import CONFIG_SECTION
from constants import TYPE_ERROR, OVERRIDE_ERROR, SET_ERROR, DEL_ERROR
class Env(object):
"""
Store and retrieve environment variables.
First an foremost, the `Env` class provides a handy container for
environment variables. These variables can be both set *and* retrieved
either as attributes *or* as dictionary items.
For example, you can set a variable as an attribute:
>>> env = Env()
>>> env.attr = 'I was set as an attribute.'
>>> env.attr
u'I was set as an attribute.'
>>> env['attr'] # Also retrieve as a dictionary item
u'I was set as an attribute.'
Or you can set a variable as a dictionary item:
>>> env['item'] = 'I was set as a dictionary item.'
>>> env['item']
u'I was set as a dictionary item.'
>>> env.item # Also retrieve as an attribute
u'I was set as a dictionary item.'
The variable names must be valid lower-case Python identifiers that neither
start nor end with an underscore. If your variable name doesn't meet these
criteria, a ``ValueError`` will be raised when you try to set the variable
(compliments of the `base.check_name()` function). For example:
>>> env.BadName = 'Wont work as an attribute'
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: name must match '^[a-z][_a-z0-9]*[a-z0-9]$|^[a-z]$'; got 'BadName'
>>> env['BadName'] = 'Also wont work as a dictionary item'
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: name must match '^[a-z][_a-z0-9]*[a-z0-9]$|^[a-z]$'; got 'BadName'
The variable values can be ``str``, ``int``, or ``float`` instances, or the
``True``, ``False``, or ``None`` constants. When the value provided is an
``str`` instance, some limited automatic type conversion is performed, which
allows values of specific types to be set easily from configuration files or
command-line options.
So in addition to their actual values, the ``True``, ``False``, and ``None``
constants can be specified with an ``str`` equal to what ``repr()`` would
return. For example:
>>> env.true = True
>>> env.also_true = 'True' # Equal to repr(True)
>>> env.true
True
>>> env.also_true
True
Note that the automatic type conversion is case sensitive. For example:
>>> env.not_false = 'false' # Not equal to repr(False)!
>>> env.not_false
u'false'
If an ``str`` value looks like an integer, it's automatically converted to
the ``int`` type. Likewise, if an ``str`` value looks like a floating-point
number, it's automatically converted to the ``float`` type. For example:
>>> env.lucky = '7'
>>> env.lucky
7
>>> env.three_halves = '1.5'
>>> env.three_halves
1.5
Leading and trailing white-space is automatically stripped from ``str``
values. For example:
>>> env.message = ' Hello! ' # Surrounded by double spaces
>>> env.message
u'Hello!'
>>> env.number = ' 42 ' # Still converted to an int
>>> env.number
42
>>> env.false = ' False ' # Still equal to repr(False)
>>> env.false
False
Also, empty ``str`` instances are converted to ``None``. For example:
>>> env.empty = ''
>>> env.empty is None
True
`Env` variables are all set-once (first-one-wins). Once a variable has been
set, trying to override it will raise an ``AttributeError``. For example:
>>> env.date = 'First'
>>> env.date = 'Second'
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
AttributeError: cannot override Env.date value u'First' with 'Second'
An `Env` instance can be *locked*, after which no further variables can be
set. Trying to set variables on a locked `Env` instance will also raise
an ``AttributeError``. For example:
>>> env = Env()
>>> env.okay = 'This will work.'
>>> env.__lock__()
>>> env.nope = 'This wont work!'
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
AttributeError: locked: cannot set Env.nope to 'This wont work!'
`Env` instances also provide standard container emulation for membership
testing, counting, and iteration. For example:
>>> env = Env()
>>> 'key1' in env # Has key1 been set?
False
>>> env.key1 = 'value 1'
>>> 'key1' in env
True
>>> env.key2 = 'value 2'
>>> len(env) # How many variables have been set?
2
>>> list(env) # What variables have been set?
['key1', 'key2']
Lastly, in addition to all the handy container functionality, the `Env`
class provides high-level methods for bootstraping a fresh `Env` instance
into one containing all the run-time and configuration information needed
by the built-in freeIPA plugins.
These are the `Env` bootstraping methods, in the order they must be called:
1. `Env._bootstrap()` - initialize the run-time variables and then
merge-in variables specified on the command-line.
2. `Env._finalize_core()` - merge-in variables from the configuration
files and then merge-in variables from the internal defaults, after
which at least all the standard variables will be set. After this
method is called, the plugins will be loaded, during which
third-party plugins can merge-in defaults for additional variables
they use (likely using the `Env._merge()` method).
3. `Env._finalize()` - one last chance to merge-in variables and then
the instance is locked. After this method is called, no more
environment variables can be set during the remaining life of the
process.
However, normally none of these three bootstraping methods are called
directly and instead only `plugable.API.bootstrap()` is called, which itself
takes care of correctly calling the `Env` bootstrapping methods.
"""
__locked = False
def __init__(self, **initialize):
object.__setattr__(self, '_Env__d', {})
object.__setattr__(self, '_Env__done', set())
if initialize:
self._merge(**initialize)
def __lock__(self):
"""
Prevent further changes to environment.
"""
if self.__locked is True:
raise StandardError(
'%s.__lock__() already called' % self.__class__.__name__
)
object.__setattr__(self, '_Env__locked', True)
def __islocked__(self):
"""
Return ``True`` if locked.
"""
return self.__locked
def __setattr__(self, name, value):
"""
Set the attribute named ``name`` to ``value``.
This just calls `Env.__setitem__()`.
"""
self[name] = value
def __setitem__(self, key, value):
"""
Set ``key`` to ``value``.
"""
if self.__locked:
raise AttributeError(
SET_ERROR % (self.__class__.__name__, key, value)
)
check_name(key)
if key in self.__d:
raise AttributeError(OVERRIDE_ERROR %
(self.__class__.__name__, key, self.__d[key], value)
)
assert not hasattr(self, key)
if isinstance(value, basestring):
value = value.strip()
if isinstance(value, str):
value = value.decode('utf-8')
m = {
'True': True,
'False': False,
'None': None,
'': None,
}
if value in m:
value = m[value]
elif value.isdigit():
value = int(value)
else:
try:
value = float(value)
except (TypeError, ValueError):
pass
assert type(value) in (unicode, int, float, bool, NoneType)
object.__setattr__(self, key, value)
self.__d[key] = value
def __getitem__(self, key):
"""
Return the value corresponding to ``key``.
"""
return self.__d[key]
def __delattr__(self, name):
"""
Raise an ``AttributeError`` (deletion is never allowed).
For example:
>>> env = Env()
>>> env.name = 'A value'
>>> del env.name
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
AttributeError: locked: cannot delete Env.name
"""
raise AttributeError(
DEL_ERROR % (self.__class__.__name__, name)
)
def __contains__(self, key):
"""
Return True if instance contains ``key``; otherwise return False.
"""
return key in self.__d
def __len__(self):
"""
Return number of variables currently set.
"""
return len(self.__d)
def __iter__(self):
"""
Iterate through keys in ascending order.
"""
for key in sorted(self.__d):
yield key
def _merge(self, **kw):
"""
Merge variables from ``kw`` into the environment.
Any variables in ``kw`` that have already been set will be ignored
(meaning this method will *not* try to override them, which would raise
an exception).
This method returns a ``(num_set, num_total)`` tuple containing first
the number of variables that were actually set, and second the total
number of variables that were provided.
For example:
>>> env = Env()
>>> env._merge(one=1, two=2)
(2, 2)
>>> env._merge(one=1, three=3)
(1, 2)
>>> env._merge(one=1, two=2, three=3)
(0, 3)
Also see `Env._merge_from_file()`.
:param kw: Variables provides as keyword arguments.
"""
i = 0
for (key, value) in kw.iteritems():
if key not in self:
self[key] = value
i += 1
return (i, len(kw))
def _merge_from_file(self, config_file):
"""
Merge variables from ``config_file`` into the environment.
Any variables in ``config_file`` that have already been set will be
ignored (meaning this method will *not* try to override them, which
would raise an exception).
If ``config_file`` does not exist or is not a regular file, or if there
is an error parsing ``config_file``, ``None`` is returned.
Otherwise this method returns a ``(num_set, num_total)`` tuple
containing first the number of variables that were actually set, and
second the total number of variables found in ``config_file``.
This method will raise a ``ValueError`` if ``config_file`` is not an
absolute path. For example:
>>> env = Env()
>>> env._merge_from_file('my/config.conf')
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: config_file must be an absolute path; got 'my/config.conf'
Also see `Env._merge()`.
:param config_file: Absolute path of the configuration file to load.
"""
if path.abspath(config_file) != config_file:
raise ValueError(
'config_file must be an absolute path; got %r' % config_file
)
if not path.isfile(config_file):
return
parser = RawConfigParser()
try:
parser.read(config_file)
except ParsingError:
return
if not parser.has_section(CONFIG_SECTION):
parser.add_section(CONFIG_SECTION)
items = parser.items(CONFIG_SECTION)
if len(items) == 0:
return (0, 0)
i = 0
for (key, value) in items:
if key not in self:
self[key] = value
i += 1
if 'config_loaded' not in self: # we loaded at least 1 file
self['config_loaded'] = True
return (i, len(items))
def _join(self, key, *parts):
"""
Append path components in ``parts`` to base path ``self[key]``.
For example:
>>> env = Env()
>>> env.home = '/people/joe'
>>> env._join('home', 'Music', 'favourites')
u'/people/joe/Music/favourites'
"""
if key in self and self[key] is not None:
return path.join(self[key], *parts)
def __doing(self, name):
if name in self.__done:
raise StandardError(
'%s.%s() already called' % (self.__class__.__name__, name)
)
self.__done.add(name)
def __do_if_not_done(self, name):
if name not in self.__done:
getattr(self, name)()
def _isdone(self, name):
return name in self.__done
def _bootstrap(self, **overrides):
"""
Initialize basic environment.
This method will perform the following steps:
1. Initialize certain run-time variables. These run-time variables
are strictly determined by the external environment the process
is running in; they cannot be specified on the command-line nor
in the configuration files.
2. Merge-in the variables in ``overrides`` by calling
`Env._merge()`. The intended use of ``overrides`` is to merge-in
variables specified on the command-line.
3. Intelligently fill-in the *in_tree*, *context*, *conf*, and
*conf_default* variables if they haven't been set already.
Also see `Env._finalize_core()`, the next method in the bootstrap
sequence.
:param overrides: Variables specified via command-line options.
"""
self.__doing('_bootstrap')
# Set run-time variables (cannot be overridden):
self.host = getfqdn()
self.ipalib = path.dirname(path.abspath(__file__))
self.site_packages = path.dirname(self.ipalib)
self.script = path.abspath(sys.argv[0])
self.bin = path.dirname(self.script)
self.home = os.environ.get('HOME', None)
# Merge in overrides:
self._merge(**overrides)
# Determine if running in source tree:
if 'in_tree' not in self:
if (
self.bin == self.site_packages
and path.isfile(path.join(self.bin, 'setup.py'))
):
self.in_tree = True
else:
self.in_tree = False
# Set dot_ipa:
if 'dot_ipa' not in self:
self.dot_ipa = self._join('home', '.ipa')
# Set context
if 'context' not in self:
self.context = 'default'
# Set confdir:
if 'confdir' not in self:
if self.in_tree:
self.confdir = self.dot_ipa
else:
self.confdir = path.join('/', 'etc', 'ipa')
# Set conf (config file for this context):
if 'conf' not in self:
self.conf = self._join('confdir', '%s.conf' % self.context)
# Set conf_default (default base config used in all contexts):
if 'conf_default' not in self:
self.conf_default = self._join('confdir', 'default.conf')
def _finalize_core(self, **defaults):
"""
Complete initialization of standard IPA environment.
This method will perform the following steps:
1. Call `Env._bootstrap()` if it hasn't already been called.
2. Merge-in variables from the configuration file ``self.conf``
(if it exists) by calling `Env._merge_from_file()`.
3. Merge-in variables from the defaults configuration file
``self.conf_default`` (if it exists) by calling
`Env._merge_from_file()`.
4. Intelligently fill-in the *in_server* , *logdir*, and *log*
variables if they haven't already been set.
5. Merge-in the variables in ``defaults`` by calling `Env._merge()`.
In normal circumstances ``defaults`` will simply be those
specified in `constants.DEFAULT_CONFIG`.
After this method is called, all the environment variables used by all
the built-in plugins will be available. As such, this method should be
called *before* any plugins are loaded.
After this method has finished, the `Env` instance is still writable
so that 3rd-party plugins can set variables they may require as the
plugins are registered.
Also see `Env._finalize()`, the final method in the bootstrap sequence.
:param defaults: Internal defaults for all built-in variables.
"""
self.__doing('_finalize_core')
self.__do_if_not_done('_bootstrap')
# Merge in context config file and then default config file:
if self.__d.get('mode', None) != 'dummy':
self._merge_from_file(self.conf)
self._merge_from_file(self.conf_default)
# Determine if in_server:
if 'in_server' not in self:
self.in_server = (self.context == 'server')
# Set logdir:
if 'logdir' not in self:
if self.in_tree or not self.in_server:
self.logdir = self._join('dot_ipa', 'log')
else:
self.logdir = path.join('/', 'var', 'log', 'ipa')
# Set log file:
if 'log' not in self:
self.log = self._join('logdir', '%s.log' % self.context)
# FIXME: move into ca plugin
if 'ca_host' not in self:
self.ca_host = self.host
self._merge(**defaults)
def _finalize(self, **lastchance):
"""
Finalize and lock environment.
This method will perform the following steps:
1. Call `Env._finalize_core()` if it hasn't already been called.
2. Merge-in the variables in ``lastchance`` by calling
`Env._merge()`.
3. Lock this `Env` instance, after which no more environment
variables can be set on this instance. Aside from unit-tests
and example code, normally only one `Env` instance is created,
which means that after this step, no more variables can be set
during the remaining life of the process.
This method should be called after all plugins have been loaded and
after `plugable.API.finalize()` has been called.
:param lastchance: Any final variables to merge-in before locking.
"""
self.__doing('_finalize')
self.__do_if_not_done('_finalize_core')
self._merge(**lastchance)
self.__lock__()
|