# coding=utf-8 """ Bridges calls made inside of a Python environment to the Cmd2 host app while maintaining a reasonable degree of isolation between the two. """ import sys from contextlib import redirect_stderr, redirect_stdout from typing import Optional from .utils import StdSim, namedtuple_with_defaults class CommandResult(namedtuple_with_defaults('CommandResult', ['stdout', 'stderr', 'stop', 'data'])): """Encapsulates the results from a cmd2 app command :stdout: str - output captured from stdout while this command is executing :stderr: str - output captured from stderr while this command is executing None if no error captured. :stop: bool - return value of onecmd_plus_hooks after it runs the given command line. :data: possible data populated by the command. Any combination of these fields can be used when developing a scripting API for a given command. By default stdout, stderr, and stop will be captured for you. If there is additional command specific data, then write that to cmd2's last_result member. That becomes the data member of this tuple. In some cases, the data member may contain everything needed for a command and storing stdout and stderr might just be a duplication of data that wastes memory. In that case, the StdSim can be told not to store output with its pause_storage member. While this member is True, any output sent to StdSim won't be saved in its buffer. The code would look like this:: if isinstance(self.stdout, StdSim): self.stdout.pause_storage = True if isinstance(sys.stderr, StdSim): sys.stderr.pause_storage = True See :class:`~cmd2.utils.StdSim` for more information. .. note:: Named tuples are immutable. The contents are there for access, not for modification. """ def __bool__(self) -> bool: """Returns True if the command succeeded, otherwise False""" # If data has a __bool__ method, then call it to determine success of command if self.data is not None and callable(getattr(self.data, '__bool__', None)): return bool(self.data) # Otherwise check if stderr was filled out else: return not self.stderr class PyBridge: """Provides a Python API wrapper for application commands.""" def __init__(self, cmd2_app): self._cmd2_app = cmd2_app self.cmd_echo = False # Tells if any of the commands run via __call__ returned True for stop self.stop = False def __dir__(self): """Return a custom set of attribute names""" attributes = [] attributes.insert(0, 'cmd_echo') return attributes def __call__(self, command: str, *, echo: Optional[bool] = None) -> CommandResult: """ Provide functionality to call application commands by calling PyBridge ex: app('help') :param command: command line being run :param echo: If provided, this temporarily overrides the value of self.cmd_echo while the command runs. If True, output will be echoed to stdout/stderr. (Defaults to None) """ if echo is None: echo = self.cmd_echo # This will be used to capture _cmd2_app.stdout and sys.stdout copy_cmd_stdout = StdSim(self._cmd2_app.stdout, echo=echo) # Pause the storing of stdout until onecmd_plus_hooks enables it copy_cmd_stdout.pause_storage = True # This will be used to capture sys.stderr copy_stderr = StdSim(sys.stderr, echo=echo) self._cmd2_app.last_result = None stop = False try: self._cmd2_app.stdout = copy_cmd_stdout with redirect_stdout(copy_cmd_stdout): with redirect_stderr(copy_stderr): stop = self._cmd2_app.onecmd_plus_hooks(command, py_bridge_call=True) finally: with self._cmd2_app.sigint_protection: self._cmd2_app.stdout = copy_cmd_stdout.inner_stream self.stop = stop or self.stop # Save the output. If stderr is empty, set it to None. result = CommandResult( stdout=copy_cmd_stdout.getvalue(), stderr=copy_stderr.getvalue() if copy_stderr.getvalue() else None, stop=stop, data=self._cmd2_app.last_result, ) return result