Greg Ward | aebf706 | 2000-04-04 02:05:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame^] | 1 | """distutils.dep_util |
| 2 | |
| 3 | Utility functions for simple, timestamp-based dependency of files |
| 4 | and groups of files; also, function based entirely on such |
| 5 | timestamp dependency analysis.""" |
| 6 | |
| 7 | # created 2000/04/03, Greg Ward (extracted from util.py) |
| 8 | |
| 9 | __revision__ = "$Id$" |
| 10 | |
| 11 | import os |
| 12 | from distutils.errors import DistutilsFileError |
| 13 | |
| 14 | |
| 15 | def newer (source, target): |
| 16 | """Return true if 'source' exists and is more recently modified than |
| 17 | 'target', or if 'source' exists and 'target' doesn't. Return |
| 18 | false if both exist and 'target' is the same age or younger than |
| 19 | 'source'. Raise DistutilsFileError if 'source' does not |
| 20 | exist.""" |
| 21 | |
| 22 | if not os.path.exists (source): |
| 23 | raise DistutilsFileError, "file '%s' does not exist" % source |
| 24 | if not os.path.exists (target): |
| 25 | return 1 |
| 26 | |
| 27 | from stat import ST_MTIME |
| 28 | mtime1 = os.stat(source)[ST_MTIME] |
| 29 | mtime2 = os.stat(target)[ST_MTIME] |
| 30 | |
| 31 | return mtime1 > mtime2 |
| 32 | |
| 33 | # newer () |
| 34 | |
| 35 | |
| 36 | def newer_pairwise (sources, targets): |
| 37 | """Walk two filename lists in parallel, testing if each source is newer |
| 38 | than its corresponding target. Return a pair of lists (sources, |
| 39 | targets) where source is newer than target, according to the |
| 40 | semantics of 'newer()'.""" |
| 41 | |
| 42 | if len (sources) != len (targets): |
| 43 | raise ValueError, "'sources' and 'targets' must be same length" |
| 44 | |
| 45 | # build a pair of lists (sources, targets) where source is newer |
| 46 | n_sources = [] |
| 47 | n_targets = [] |
| 48 | for i in range (len (sources)): |
| 49 | if newer (sources[i], targets[i]): |
| 50 | n_sources.append (sources[i]) |
| 51 | n_targets.append (targets[i]) |
| 52 | |
| 53 | return (n_sources, n_targets) |
| 54 | |
| 55 | # newer_pairwise () |
| 56 | |
| 57 | |
| 58 | def newer_group (sources, target, missing='error'): |
| 59 | """Return true if 'target' is out-of-date with respect to any |
| 60 | file listed in 'sources'. In other words, if 'target' exists and |
| 61 | is newer than every file in 'sources', return false; otherwise |
| 62 | return true. 'missing' controls what we do when a source file is |
| 63 | missing; the default ("error") is to blow up with an OSError from |
| 64 | inside 'stat()'; if it is "ignore", we silently drop any missing |
| 65 | source files; if it is "newer", any missing source files make us |
| 66 | assume that 'target' is out-of-date (this is handy in "dry-run" |
| 67 | mode: it'll make you pretend to carry out commands that wouldn't |
| 68 | work because inputs are missing, but that doesn't matter because |
| 69 | you're not actually going to run the commands).""" |
| 70 | |
| 71 | # If the target doesn't even exist, then it's definitely out-of-date. |
| 72 | if not os.path.exists (target): |
| 73 | return 1 |
| 74 | |
| 75 | # Otherwise we have to find out the hard way: if *any* source file |
| 76 | # is more recent than 'target', then 'target' is out-of-date and |
| 77 | # we can immediately return true. If we fall through to the end |
| 78 | # of the loop, then 'target' is up-to-date and we return false. |
| 79 | from stat import ST_MTIME |
| 80 | target_mtime = os.stat (target)[ST_MTIME] |
| 81 | for source in sources: |
| 82 | if not os.path.exists (source): |
| 83 | if missing == 'error': # blow up when we stat() the file |
| 84 | pass |
| 85 | elif missing == 'ignore': # missing source dropped from |
| 86 | continue # target's dependency list |
| 87 | elif missing == 'newer': # missing source means target is |
| 88 | return 1 # out-of-date |
| 89 | |
| 90 | source_mtime = os.stat(source)[ST_MTIME] |
| 91 | if source_mtime > target_mtime: |
| 92 | return 1 |
| 93 | else: |
| 94 | return 0 |
| 95 | |
| 96 | # newer_group () |
| 97 | |
| 98 | |
| 99 | # XXX this isn't used anywhere, and worse, it has the same name as a method |
| 100 | # in Command with subtly different semantics. (This one just has one |
| 101 | # source -> one dest; that one has many sources -> one dest.) Nuke it? |
| 102 | def make_file (src, dst, func, args, |
| 103 | verbose=0, update_message=None, noupdate_message=None): |
| 104 | """Makes 'dst' from 'src' (both filenames) by calling 'func' with |
| 105 | 'args', but only if it needs to: i.e. if 'dst' does not exist or |
| 106 | 'src' is newer than 'dst'.""" |
| 107 | |
| 108 | if newer (src, dst): |
| 109 | if verbose and update_message: |
| 110 | print update_message |
| 111 | apply (func, args) |
| 112 | else: |
| 113 | if verbose and noupdate_message: |
| 114 | print noupdate_message |
| 115 | |
| 116 | # make_file () |