| #! /usr/bin/env python |
| |
| """fixdiv - tool to fix division operators. |
| |
| To use this tool, first run `python -Qwarnall yourscript.py 2>warnings'. |
| This runs the script `yourscript.py' while writing warning messages |
| about all uses of the classic division operator to the file |
| `warnings'. The warnings look like this: |
| |
| <file>:<line>: DeprecationWarning: classic <type> division |
| |
| The warnings are written to stderr, so you must use `2>' for the I/O |
| redirect. I know of no way to redirect stderr on Windows in a DOS |
| box, so you will have to modify the script to set sys.stderr to some |
| kind of log file if you want to do this on Windows. |
| |
| The warnings are not limited to the script; modules imported by the |
| script may also trigger warnings. In fact a useful technique is to |
| write a test script specifically intended to exercise all code in a |
| particular module or set of modules. |
| |
| Then run `python fixdiv.py warnings'. This first reads the warnings, |
| looking for classic division warnings, and sorts them by file name and |
| line number. Then, for each file that received at least one warning, |
| it parses the file and tries to match the warnings up to the division |
| operators found in the source code. If it is successful, it writes |
| its findings to stdout, preceded by a line of dashes and a line of the |
| form: |
| |
| Index: <file> |
| |
| If the only findings found are suggestions to change a / operator into |
| a // operator, the output is acceptable input for the Unix 'patch' |
| program. |
| |
| Here are the possible messages on stdout (N stands for a line number): |
| |
| - A plain-diff-style change ('NcN', a line marked by '<', a line |
| containing '---', and a line marked by '>'): |
| |
| A / operator was found that should be changed to //. This is the |
| recommendation when only int and/or long arguments were seen. |
| |
| - 'True division / operator at line N' and a line marked by '=': |
| |
| A / operator was found that can remain unchanged. This is the |
| recommendation when only float and/or complex arguments were seen. |
| |
| - 'Ambiguous / operator (..., ...) at line N', line marked by '?': |
| |
| A / operator was found for which int or long as well as float or |
| complex arguments were seen. This is highly unlikely; if it occurs, |
| you may have to restructure the code to keep the classic semantics, |
| or maybe you don't care about the classic semantics. |
| |
| - 'No conclusive evidence on line N', line marked by '*': |
| |
| A / operator was found for which no warnings were seen. This could |
| be code that was never executed, or code that was only executed with |
| with user-defined objects as arguments. You will have to |
| investigate further. Note that // can be overloaded separately from |
| /, using __floordiv__. True division can also be separately |
| overloaded, using __truediv__. Classic division should be the same |
| as either of those. (XXX should I add a warning for division on |
| user-defined objects, to disambiguate this case from code that was |
| never executed?) |
| |
| - 'Phantom ... warnings for line N', line marked by '*': |
| |
| A warning was seen for a line not containing a / operator. The most |
| likely cause is a warning about code executed by 'exec' or eval() |
| (see note below), or an indirect invocation of the / operator, for |
| example via the div() function in the operator module. It could |
| also be caused by a change to the file between the time the test |
| script was run to collect warnings and the time fixdiv was run. |
| |
| - 'More than one / operator in line N'; or |
| 'More than one / operator per statement in lines N-N': |
| |
| The scanner found more than one / operator on a single line, or in a |
| statement split across multiple lines. Because the warnings |
| framework doesn't (and can't) show the offset within the line, and |
| the code generator doesn't always give the correct line number for |
| operations in a multi-line statement, we can't be sure whether all |
| operators in the statement were executed. To be on the safe side, |
| by default a warning is issued about this case. In practice, these |
| cases are usually safe, and the -m option suppresses these warning. |
| |
| - 'Can't find the / operator in line N', line marked by '*': |
| |
| This really shouldn't happen. It means that the tokenize module |
| reported a '/' operator but the line it returns didn't contain a '/' |
| character at the indicated position. |
| |
| - 'Bad warning for line N: XYZ', line marked by '*': |
| |
| This really shouldn't happen. It means that a 'classic XYZ |
| division' warning was read with XYZ being something other than |
| 'int', 'long', 'float', or 'complex'. |
| |
| Notes: |
| |
| - The augmented assignment operator /= is handled the same way as the |
| / operator. |
| |
| - This tool never looks at the // operator; no warnings are ever |
| generated for use of this operator. |
| |
| - This tool never looks at the / operator when a future division |
| statement is in effect; no warnings are generated in this case, and |
| because the tool only looks at files for which at least one classic |
| division warning was seen, it will never look at files containing a |
| future division statement. |
| |
| - Warnings may be issued for code not read from a file, but executed |
| using an exec statement or the eval() function. These may have |
| <string> in the filename position, in which case the fixdiv script |
| will attempt and fail to open a file named '<string>' and issue a |
| warning about this failure; or these may be reported as 'Phantom' |
| warnings (see above). You're on your own to deal with these. You |
| could make all recommended changes and add a future division |
| statement to all affected files, and then re-run the test script; it |
| should not issue any warnings. If there are any, and you have a |
| hard time tracking down where they are generated, you can use the |
| -Werror option to force an error instead of a first warning, |
| generating a traceback. |
| |
| - The tool should be run from the same directory as that from which |
| the original script was run, otherwise it won't be able to open |
| files given by relative pathnames. |
| """ |
| |
| import sys |
| import getopt |
| import re |
| import tokenize |
| |
| multi_ok = 0 |
| |
| def main(): |
| try: |
| opts, args = getopt.getopt(sys.argv[1:], "hm") |
| except getopt.error, msg: |
| usage(msg) |
| return 2 |
| for o, a in opts: |
| if o == "-h": |
| print __doc__ |
| return |
| if o == "-m": |
| global multi_ok |
| multi_ok = 1 |
| if not args: |
| usage("at least one file argument is required") |
| return 2 |
| if args[1:]: |
| sys.stderr.write("%s: extra file arguments ignored\n", sys.argv[0]) |
| warnings = readwarnings(args[0]) |
| if warnings is None: |
| return 1 |
| files = warnings.keys() |
| if not files: |
| print "No classic division warnings read from", args[0] |
| return |
| files.sort() |
| exit = None |
| for filename in files: |
| x = process(filename, warnings[filename]) |
| exit = exit or x |
| return exit |
| |
| def usage(msg): |
| sys.stderr.write("%s: %s\n" % (sys.argv[0], msg)) |
| sys.stderr.write("Usage: %s [-m] warnings\n" % sys.argv[0]) |
| sys.stderr.write("Try `%s -h' for more information.\n" % sys.argv[0]) |
| |
| PATTERN = ("^(.+?):(\d+): DeprecationWarning: " |
| "classic (int|long|float|complex) division$") |
| |
| def readwarnings(warningsfile): |
| prog = re.compile(PATTERN) |
| try: |
| f = open(warningsfile) |
| except IOError, msg: |
| sys.stderr.write("can't open: %s\n" % msg) |
| return |
| warnings = {} |
| while 1: |
| line = f.readline() |
| if not line: |
| break |
| m = prog.match(line) |
| if not m: |
| if line.find("division") >= 0: |
| sys.stderr.write("Warning: ignored input " + line) |
| continue |
| filename, lineno, what = m.groups() |
| list = warnings.get(filename) |
| if list is None: |
| warnings[filename] = list = [] |
| list.append((int(lineno), intern(what))) |
| f.close() |
| return warnings |
| |
| def process(filename, list): |
| print "-"*70 |
| assert list # if this fails, readwarnings() is broken |
| try: |
| fp = open(filename) |
| except IOError, msg: |
| sys.stderr.write("can't open: %s\n" % msg) |
| return 1 |
| print "Index:", filename |
| f = FileContext(fp) |
| list.sort() |
| index = 0 # list[:index] has been processed, list[index:] is still to do |
| g = tokenize.generate_tokens(f.readline) |
| while 1: |
| startlineno, endlineno, slashes = lineinfo = scanline(g) |
| if startlineno is None: |
| break |
| assert startlineno <= endlineno is not None |
| orphans = [] |
| while index < len(list) and list[index][0] < startlineno: |
| orphans.append(list[index]) |
| index += 1 |
| if orphans: |
| reportphantomwarnings(orphans, f) |
| warnings = [] |
| while index < len(list) and list[index][0] <= endlineno: |
| warnings.append(list[index]) |
| index += 1 |
| if not slashes and not warnings: |
| pass |
| elif slashes and not warnings: |
| report(slashes, "No conclusive evidence") |
| elif warnings and not slashes: |
| reportphantomwarnings(warnings, f) |
| else: |
| if len(slashes) > 1: |
| if not multi_ok: |
| rows = [] |
| lastrow = None |
| for (row, col), line in slashes: |
| if row == lastrow: |
| continue |
| rows.append(row) |
| lastrow = row |
| assert rows |
| if len(rows) == 1: |
| print "*** More than one / operator in line", rows[0] |
| else: |
| print "*** More than one / operator per statement", |
| print "in lines %d-%d" % (rows[0], rows[-1]) |
| intlong = [] |
| floatcomplex = [] |
| bad = [] |
| for lineno, what in warnings: |
| if what in ("int", "long"): |
| intlong.append(what) |
| elif what in ("float", "complex"): |
| floatcomplex.append(what) |
| else: |
| bad.append(what) |
| lastrow = None |
| for (row, col), line in slashes: |
| if row == lastrow: |
| continue |
| lastrow = row |
| line = chop(line) |
| if line[col:col+1] != "/": |
| print "*** Can't find the / operator in line %d:" % row |
| print "*", line |
| continue |
| if bad: |
| print "*** Bad warning for line %d:" % row, bad |
| print "*", line |
| elif intlong and not floatcomplex: |
| print "%dc%d" % (row, row) |
| print "<", line |
| print "---" |
| print ">", line[:col] + "/" + line[col:] |
| elif floatcomplex and not intlong: |
| print "True division / operator at line %d:" % row |
| print "=", line |
| elif intlong and floatcomplex: |
| print "*** Ambiguous / operator (%s, %s) at line %d:" % ( |
| "|".join(intlong), "|".join(floatcomplex), row) |
| print "?", line |
| fp.close() |
| |
| def reportphantomwarnings(warnings, f): |
| blocks = [] |
| lastrow = None |
| lastblock = None |
| for row, what in warnings: |
| if row != lastrow: |
| lastblock = [row] |
| blocks.append(lastblock) |
| lastblock.append(what) |
| for block in blocks: |
| row = block[0] |
| whats = "/".join(block[1:]) |
| print "*** Phantom %s warnings for line %d:" % (whats, row) |
| f.report(row, mark="*") |
| |
| def report(slashes, message): |
| lastrow = None |
| for (row, col), line in slashes: |
| if row != lastrow: |
| print "*** %s on line %d:" % (message, row) |
| print "*", chop(line) |
| lastrow = row |
| |
| class FileContext: |
| def __init__(self, fp, window=5, lineno=1): |
| self.fp = fp |
| self.window = 5 |
| self.lineno = 1 |
| self.eoflookahead = 0 |
| self.lookahead = [] |
| self.buffer = [] |
| def fill(self): |
| while len(self.lookahead) < self.window and not self.eoflookahead: |
| line = self.fp.readline() |
| if not line: |
| self.eoflookahead = 1 |
| break |
| self.lookahead.append(line) |
| def readline(self): |
| self.fill() |
| if not self.lookahead: |
| return "" |
| line = self.lookahead.pop(0) |
| self.buffer.append(line) |
| self.lineno += 1 |
| return line |
| def truncate(self): |
| del self.buffer[-window:] |
| def __getitem__(self, index): |
| self.fill() |
| bufstart = self.lineno - len(self.buffer) |
| lookend = self.lineno + len(self.lookahead) |
| if bufstart <= index < self.lineno: |
| return self.buffer[index - bufstart] |
| if self.lineno <= index < lookend: |
| return self.lookahead[index - self.lineno] |
| raise KeyError |
| def report(self, first, last=None, mark="*"): |
| if last is None: |
| last = first |
| for i in range(first, last+1): |
| try: |
| line = self[first] |
| except KeyError: |
| line = "<missing line>" |
| print mark, chop(line) |
| |
| def scanline(g): |
| slashes = [] |
| startlineno = None |
| endlineno = None |
| for type, token, start, end, line in g: |
| endlineno = end[0] |
| if startlineno is None: |
| startlineno = endlineno |
| if token in ("/", "/="): |
| slashes.append((start, line)) |
| if type == tokenize.NEWLINE: |
| break |
| return startlineno, endlineno, slashes |
| |
| def chop(line): |
| if line.endswith("\n"): |
| return line[:-1] |
| else: |
| return line |
| |
| if __name__ == "__main__": |
| sys.exit(main()) |