blob: f6ebdf79bb9e8a1fb9268af492cdbea4a09ab522 [file] [log] [blame]
"""Execute files of Python code."""
import imp, marshal, os, sys
from coverage.backward import exec_code_object, open_source
from coverage.misc import ExceptionDuringRun, NoCode, NoSource
try:
# In Py 2.x, the builtins were in __builtin__
BUILTINS = sys.modules['__builtin__']
except KeyError:
# In Py 3.x, they're in builtins
BUILTINS = sys.modules['builtins']
def rsplit1(s, sep):
"""The same as s.rsplit(sep, 1), but works in 2.3"""
parts = s.split(sep)
return sep.join(parts[:-1]), parts[-1]
def run_python_module(modulename, args):
"""Run a python module, as though with ``python -m name args...``.
`modulename` is the name of the module, possibly a dot-separated name.
`args` is the argument array to present as sys.argv, including the first
element naming the module being executed.
"""
openfile = None
glo, loc = globals(), locals()
try:
try:
# Search for the module - inside its parent package, if any - using
# standard import mechanics.
if '.' in modulename:
packagename, name = rsplit1(modulename, '.')
package = __import__(packagename, glo, loc, ['__path__'])
searchpath = package.__path__
else:
packagename, name = None, modulename
searchpath = None # "top-level search" in imp.find_module()
openfile, pathname, _ = imp.find_module(name, searchpath)
# Complain if this is a magic non-file module.
if openfile is None and pathname is None:
raise NoSource(
"module does not live in a file: %r" % modulename
)
# If `modulename` is actually a package, not a mere module, then we
# pretend to be Python 2.7 and try running its __main__.py script.
if openfile is None:
packagename = modulename
name = '__main__'
package = __import__(packagename, glo, loc, ['__path__'])
searchpath = package.__path__
openfile, pathname, _ = imp.find_module(name, searchpath)
except ImportError:
_, err, _ = sys.exc_info()
raise NoSource(str(err))
finally:
if openfile:
openfile.close()
# Finally, hand the file off to run_python_file for execution.
pathname = os.path.abspath(pathname)
args[0] = pathname
run_python_file(pathname, args, package=packagename)
def run_python_file(filename, args, package=None):
"""Run a python file as if it were the main program on the command line.
`filename` is the path to the file to execute, it need not be a .py file.
`args` is the argument array to present as sys.argv, including the first
element naming the file being executed. `package` is the name of the
enclosing package, if any.
"""
# Create a module to serve as __main__
old_main_mod = sys.modules['__main__']
main_mod = imp.new_module('__main__')
sys.modules['__main__'] = main_mod
main_mod.__file__ = filename
if package:
main_mod.__package__ = package
main_mod.__builtins__ = BUILTINS
# Set sys.argv properly.
old_argv = sys.argv
sys.argv = args
try:
# Make a code object somehow.
if filename.endswith(".pyc") or filename.endswith(".pyo"):
code = make_code_from_pyc(filename)
else:
code = make_code_from_py(filename)
# Execute the code object.
try:
exec_code_object(code, main_mod.__dict__)
except SystemExit:
# The user called sys.exit(). Just pass it along to the upper
# layers, where it will be handled.
raise
except:
# Something went wrong while executing the user code.
# Get the exc_info, and pack them into an exception that we can
# throw up to the outer loop. We peel two layers off the traceback
# so that the coverage.py code doesn't appear in the final printed
# traceback.
typ, err, tb = sys.exc_info()
raise ExceptionDuringRun(typ, err, tb.tb_next.tb_next)
finally:
# Restore the old __main__
sys.modules['__main__'] = old_main_mod
# Restore the old argv and path
sys.argv = old_argv
def make_code_from_py(filename):
"""Get source from `filename` and make a code object of it."""
# Open the source file.
try:
source_file = open_source(filename)
except IOError:
raise NoSource("No file to run: %r" % filename)
try:
source = source_file.read()
finally:
source_file.close()
# We have the source. `compile` still needs the last line to be clean,
# so make sure it is, then compile a code object from it.
if not source or source[-1] != '\n':
source += '\n'
code = compile(source, filename, "exec")
return code
def make_code_from_pyc(filename):
"""Get a code object from a .pyc file."""
try:
fpyc = open(filename, "rb")
except IOError:
raise NoCode("No file to run: %r" % filename)
try:
# First four bytes are a version-specific magic number. It has to
# match or we won't run the file.
magic = fpyc.read(4)
if magic != imp.get_magic():
raise NoCode("Bad magic number in .pyc file")
# Skip the junk in the header that we don't need.
fpyc.read(4) # Skip the moddate.
if sys.version_info >= (3, 3):
# 3.3 added another long to the header (size), skip it.
fpyc.read(4)
# The rest of the file is the code object we want.
code = marshal.load(fpyc)
finally:
fpyc.close()
return code