| \section{Standard Module \sectcode{Bastion}} |
| \label{module-Bastion} |
| \stmodindex{Bastion} |
| \renewcommand{\indexsubitem}{(in module Bastion)} |
| |
| % I'm concerned that the word 'bastion' won't be understood by people |
| % for whom English is a second language, making the module name |
| % somewhat mysterious. Thus, the brief definition... --amk |
| |
| According to the dictionary, a bastion is ``a fortified area or |
| position'', or ``something that is considered a stronghold.'' It's a |
| suitable name for this module, which provides a way to forbid access |
| to certain attributes of an object. It must always be used with the |
| \code{rexec} module, in order to allow restricted-mode programs access |
| to certain safe attributes of an object, while denying access to |
| other, unsafe attributes. |
| |
| % I've punted on the issue of documenting keyword arguments for now. |
| |
| \begin{funcdesc}{Bastion}{object\optional{\, filter\, name\, class}} |
| Protect the class instance \var{object}, returning a bastion for the |
| object. Any attempt to access one of the object's attributes will |
| have to be approved by the \var{filter} function; if the access is |
| denied an AttributeError exception will be raised. |
| |
| If present, \var{filter} must be a function that accepts a string |
| containing an attribute name, and returns true if access to that |
| attribute will be permitted; if \var{filter} returns false, the access |
| is denied. The default filter denies access to any function beginning |
| with an underscore (\code{_}). The bastion's string representation |
| will be \code{<Bastion for \var{name}>} if a value for |
| \var{name} is provided; otherwise, \code{repr(\var{object})} will be used. |
| |
| \var{class}, if present, would be a subclass of \code{BastionClass}; |
| see the code in \file{bastion.py} for the details. Overriding the |
| default \code{BastionClass} will rarely be required. |
| |
| \end{funcdesc} |