You cannot select more than 25 topics
Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
612 lines
22 KiB
Python
612 lines
22 KiB
Python
9 years ago
|
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
werkzeug.utils
|
||
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
|
||
|
This module implements various utilities for WSGI applications. Most of
|
||
|
them are used by the request and response wrappers but especially for
|
||
|
middleware development it makes sense to use them without the wrappers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
:copyright: (c) 2013 by the Werkzeug Team, see AUTHORS for more details.
|
||
|
:license: BSD, see LICENSE for more details.
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
import re
|
||
|
import os
|
||
|
import sys
|
||
|
import pkgutil
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
from html.entities import name2codepoint
|
||
|
except ImportError:
|
||
|
from htmlentitydefs import name2codepoint
|
||
|
|
||
|
from werkzeug._compat import unichr, text_type, string_types, iteritems, \
|
||
|
reraise, PY2
|
||
|
from werkzeug._internal import _DictAccessorProperty, \
|
||
|
_parse_signature, _missing
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
_format_re = re.compile(r'\$(?:(%s)|\{(%s)\})' % (('[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z0-9_]*',) * 2))
|
||
|
_entity_re = re.compile(r'&([^;]+);')
|
||
|
_filename_ascii_strip_re = re.compile(r'[^A-Za-z0-9_.-]')
|
||
|
_windows_device_files = ('CON', 'AUX', 'COM1', 'COM2', 'COM3', 'COM4', 'LPT1',
|
||
|
'LPT2', 'LPT3', 'PRN', 'NUL')
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
class cached_property(object):
|
||
|
"""A decorator that converts a function into a lazy property. The
|
||
|
function wrapped is called the first time to retrieve the result
|
||
|
and then that calculated result is used the next time you access
|
||
|
the value::
|
||
|
|
||
|
class Foo(object):
|
||
|
|
||
|
@cached_property
|
||
|
def foo(self):
|
||
|
# calculate something important here
|
||
|
return 42
|
||
|
|
||
|
The class has to have a `__dict__` in order for this property to
|
||
|
work.
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
|
||
|
# implementation detail: this property is implemented as non-data
|
||
|
# descriptor. non-data descriptors are only invoked if there is
|
||
|
# no entry with the same name in the instance's __dict__.
|
||
|
# this allows us to completely get rid of the access function call
|
||
|
# overhead. If one choses to invoke __get__ by hand the property
|
||
|
# will still work as expected because the lookup logic is replicated
|
||
|
# in __get__ for manual invocation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
def __init__(self, func, name=None, doc=None):
|
||
|
self.__name__ = name or func.__name__
|
||
|
self.__module__ = func.__module__
|
||
|
self.__doc__ = doc or func.__doc__
|
||
|
self.func = func
|
||
|
|
||
|
def __get__(self, obj, type=None):
|
||
|
if obj is None:
|
||
|
return self
|
||
|
value = obj.__dict__.get(self.__name__, _missing)
|
||
|
if value is _missing:
|
||
|
value = self.func(obj)
|
||
|
obj.__dict__[self.__name__] = value
|
||
|
return value
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
class environ_property(_DictAccessorProperty):
|
||
|
"""Maps request attributes to environment variables. This works not only
|
||
|
for the Werzeug request object, but also any other class with an
|
||
|
environ attribute:
|
||
|
|
||
|
>>> class Test(object):
|
||
|
... environ = {'key': 'value'}
|
||
|
... test = environ_property('key')
|
||
|
>>> var = Test()
|
||
|
>>> var.test
|
||
|
'value'
|
||
|
|
||
|
If you pass it a second value it's used as default if the key does not
|
||
|
exist, the third one can be a converter that takes a value and converts
|
||
|
it. If it raises :exc:`ValueError` or :exc:`TypeError` the default value
|
||
|
is used. If no default value is provided `None` is used.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Per default the property is read only. You have to explicitly enable it
|
||
|
by passing ``read_only=False`` to the constructor.
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
|
||
|
read_only = True
|
||
|
|
||
|
def lookup(self, obj):
|
||
|
return obj.environ
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
class header_property(_DictAccessorProperty):
|
||
|
"""Like `environ_property` but for headers."""
|
||
|
|
||
|
def lookup(self, obj):
|
||
|
return obj.headers
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
class HTMLBuilder(object):
|
||
|
"""Helper object for HTML generation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Per default there are two instances of that class. The `html` one, and
|
||
|
the `xhtml` one for those two dialects. The class uses keyword parameters
|
||
|
and positional parameters to generate small snippets of HTML.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Keyword parameters are converted to XML/SGML attributes, positional
|
||
|
arguments are used as children. Because Python accepts positional
|
||
|
arguments before keyword arguments it's a good idea to use a list with the
|
||
|
star-syntax for some children:
|
||
|
|
||
|
>>> html.p(class_='foo', *[html.a('foo', href='foo.html'), ' ',
|
||
|
... html.a('bar', href='bar.html')])
|
||
|
u'<p class="foo"><a href="foo.html">foo</a> <a href="bar.html">bar</a></p>'
|
||
|
|
||
|
This class works around some browser limitations and can not be used for
|
||
|
arbitrary SGML/XML generation. For that purpose lxml and similar
|
||
|
libraries exist.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Calling the builder escapes the string passed:
|
||
|
|
||
|
>>> html.p(html("<foo>"))
|
||
|
u'<p><foo></p>'
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
|
||
|
_entity_re = re.compile(r'&([^;]+);')
|
||
|
_entities = name2codepoint.copy()
|
||
|
_entities['apos'] = 39
|
||
|
_empty_elements = set([
|
||
|
'area', 'base', 'basefont', 'br', 'col', 'command', 'embed', 'frame',
|
||
|
'hr', 'img', 'input', 'keygen', 'isindex', 'link', 'meta', 'param',
|
||
|
'source', 'wbr'
|
||
|
])
|
||
|
_boolean_attributes = set([
|
||
|
'selected', 'checked', 'compact', 'declare', 'defer', 'disabled',
|
||
|
'ismap', 'multiple', 'nohref', 'noresize', 'noshade', 'nowrap'
|
||
|
])
|
||
|
_plaintext_elements = set(['textarea'])
|
||
|
_c_like_cdata = set(['script', 'style'])
|
||
|
|
||
|
def __init__(self, dialect):
|
||
|
self._dialect = dialect
|
||
|
|
||
|
def __call__(self, s):
|
||
|
return escape(s)
|
||
|
|
||
|
def __getattr__(self, tag):
|
||
|
if tag[:2] == '__':
|
||
|
raise AttributeError(tag)
|
||
|
def proxy(*children, **arguments):
|
||
|
buffer = '<' + tag
|
||
|
for key, value in iteritems(arguments):
|
||
|
if value is None:
|
||
|
continue
|
||
|
if key[-1] == '_':
|
||
|
key = key[:-1]
|
||
|
if key in self._boolean_attributes:
|
||
|
if not value:
|
||
|
continue
|
||
|
if self._dialect == 'xhtml':
|
||
|
value = '="' + key + '"'
|
||
|
else:
|
||
|
value = ''
|
||
|
else:
|
||
|
value = '="' + escape(value) + '"'
|
||
|
buffer += ' ' + key + value
|
||
|
if not children and tag in self._empty_elements:
|
||
|
if self._dialect == 'xhtml':
|
||
|
buffer += ' />'
|
||
|
else:
|
||
|
buffer += '>'
|
||
|
return buffer
|
||
|
buffer += '>'
|
||
|
|
||
|
children_as_string = ''.join([text_type(x) for x in children
|
||
|
if x is not None])
|
||
|
|
||
|
if children_as_string:
|
||
|
if tag in self._plaintext_elements:
|
||
|
children_as_string = escape(children_as_string)
|
||
|
elif tag in self._c_like_cdata and self._dialect == 'xhtml':
|
||
|
children_as_string = '/*<![CDATA[*/' + \
|
||
|
children_as_string + '/*]]>*/'
|
||
|
buffer += children_as_string + '</' + tag + '>'
|
||
|
return buffer
|
||
|
return proxy
|
||
|
|
||
|
def __repr__(self):
|
||
|
return '<%s for %r>' % (
|
||
|
self.__class__.__name__,
|
||
|
self._dialect
|
||
|
)
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
html = HTMLBuilder('html')
|
||
|
xhtml = HTMLBuilder('xhtml')
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
def get_content_type(mimetype, charset):
|
||
|
"""Return the full content type string with charset for a mimetype.
|
||
|
|
||
|
If the mimetype represents text the charset will be appended as charset
|
||
|
parameter, otherwise the mimetype is returned unchanged.
|
||
|
|
||
|
:param mimetype: the mimetype to be used as content type.
|
||
|
:param charset: the charset to be appended in case it was a text mimetype.
|
||
|
:return: the content type.
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
if mimetype.startswith('text/') or \
|
||
|
mimetype == 'application/xml' or \
|
||
|
(mimetype.startswith('application/') and
|
||
|
mimetype.endswith('+xml')):
|
||
|
mimetype += '; charset=' + charset
|
||
|
return mimetype
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
def format_string(string, context):
|
||
|
"""String-template format a string:
|
||
|
|
||
|
>>> format_string('$foo and ${foo}s', dict(foo=42))
|
||
|
'42 and 42s'
|
||
|
|
||
|
This does not do any attribute lookup etc. For more advanced string
|
||
|
formattings have a look at the `werkzeug.template` module.
|
||
|
|
||
|
:param string: the format string.
|
||
|
:param context: a dict with the variables to insert.
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
def lookup_arg(match):
|
||
|
x = context[match.group(1) or match.group(2)]
|
||
|
if not isinstance(x, string_types):
|
||
|
x = type(string)(x)
|
||
|
return x
|
||
|
return _format_re.sub(lookup_arg, string)
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
def secure_filename(filename):
|
||
|
r"""Pass it a filename and it will return a secure version of it. This
|
||
|
filename can then safely be stored on a regular file system and passed
|
||
|
to :func:`os.path.join`. The filename returned is an ASCII only string
|
||
|
for maximum portability.
|
||
|
|
||
|
On windows system the function also makes sure that the file is not
|
||
|
named after one of the special device files.
|
||
|
|
||
|
>>> secure_filename("My cool movie.mov")
|
||
|
'My_cool_movie.mov'
|
||
|
>>> secure_filename("../../../etc/passwd")
|
||
|
'etc_passwd'
|
||
|
>>> secure_filename(u'i contain cool \xfcml\xe4uts.txt')
|
||
|
'i_contain_cool_umlauts.txt'
|
||
|
|
||
|
The function might return an empty filename. It's your responsibility
|
||
|
to ensure that the filename is unique and that you generate random
|
||
|
filename if the function returned an empty one.
|
||
|
|
||
|
.. versionadded:: 0.5
|
||
|
|
||
|
:param filename: the filename to secure
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
if isinstance(filename, text_type):
|
||
|
from unicodedata import normalize
|
||
|
filename = normalize('NFKD', filename).encode('ascii', 'ignore')
|
||
|
if not PY2:
|
||
|
filename = filename.decode('ascii')
|
||
|
for sep in os.path.sep, os.path.altsep:
|
||
|
if sep:
|
||
|
filename = filename.replace(sep, ' ')
|
||
|
filename = str(_filename_ascii_strip_re.sub('', '_'.join(
|
||
|
filename.split()))).strip('._')
|
||
|
|
||
|
# on nt a couple of special files are present in each folder. We
|
||
|
# have to ensure that the target file is not such a filename. In
|
||
|
# this case we prepend an underline
|
||
|
if os.name == 'nt' and filename and \
|
||
|
filename.split('.')[0].upper() in _windows_device_files:
|
||
|
filename = '_' + filename
|
||
|
|
||
|
return filename
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
def escape(s, quote=None):
|
||
|
"""Replace special characters "&", "<", ">" and (") to HTML-safe sequences.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There is a special handling for `None` which escapes to an empty string.
|
||
|
|
||
|
.. versionchanged:: 0.9
|
||
|
`quote` is now implicitly on.
|
||
|
|
||
|
:param s: the string to escape.
|
||
|
:param quote: ignored.
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
if s is None:
|
||
|
return ''
|
||
|
elif hasattr(s, '__html__'):
|
||
|
return text_type(s.__html__())
|
||
|
elif not isinstance(s, string_types):
|
||
|
s = text_type(s)
|
||
|
if quote is not None:
|
||
|
from warnings import warn
|
||
|
warn(DeprecationWarning('quote parameter is implicit now'), stacklevel=2)
|
||
|
s = s.replace('&', '&').replace('<', '<') \
|
||
|
.replace('>', '>').replace('"', """)
|
||
|
return s
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
def unescape(s):
|
||
|
"""The reverse function of `escape`. This unescapes all the HTML
|
||
|
entities, not only the XML entities inserted by `escape`.
|
||
|
|
||
|
:param s: the string to unescape.
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
def handle_match(m):
|
||
|
name = m.group(1)
|
||
|
if name in HTMLBuilder._entities:
|
||
|
return unichr(HTMLBuilder._entities[name])
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
if name[:2] in ('#x', '#X'):
|
||
|
return unichr(int(name[2:], 16))
|
||
|
elif name.startswith('#'):
|
||
|
return unichr(int(name[1:]))
|
||
|
except ValueError:
|
||
|
pass
|
||
|
return u''
|
||
|
return _entity_re.sub(handle_match, s)
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
def redirect(location, code=302):
|
||
|
"""Return a response object (a WSGI application) that, if called,
|
||
|
redirects the client to the target location. Supported codes are 301,
|
||
|
302, 303, 305, and 307. 300 is not supported because it's not a real
|
||
|
redirect and 304 because it's the answer for a request with a request
|
||
|
with defined If-Modified-Since headers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
.. versionadded:: 0.6
|
||
|
The location can now be a unicode string that is encoded using
|
||
|
the :func:`iri_to_uri` function.
|
||
|
|
||
|
:param location: the location the response should redirect to.
|
||
|
:param code: the redirect status code. defaults to 302.
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
from werkzeug.wrappers import Response
|
||
|
display_location = escape(location)
|
||
|
if isinstance(location, text_type):
|
||
|
from werkzeug.urls import iri_to_uri
|
||
|
location = iri_to_uri(location)
|
||
|
response = Response(
|
||
|
'<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2 Final//EN">\n'
|
||
|
'<title>Redirecting...</title>\n'
|
||
|
'<h1>Redirecting...</h1>\n'
|
||
|
'<p>You should be redirected automatically to target URL: '
|
||
|
'<a href="%s">%s</a>. If not click the link.' %
|
||
|
(escape(location), display_location), code, mimetype='text/html')
|
||
|
response.headers['Location'] = location
|
||
|
return response
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
def append_slash_redirect(environ, code=301):
|
||
|
"""Redirect to the same URL but with a slash appended. The behavior
|
||
|
of this function is undefined if the path ends with a slash already.
|
||
|
|
||
|
:param environ: the WSGI environment for the request that triggers
|
||
|
the redirect.
|
||
|
:param code: the status code for the redirect.
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
new_path = environ['PATH_INFO'].strip('/') + '/'
|
||
|
query_string = environ.get('QUERY_STRING')
|
||
|
if query_string:
|
||
|
new_path += '?' + query_string
|
||
|
return redirect(new_path, code)
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
def import_string(import_name, silent=False):
|
||
|
"""Imports an object based on a string. This is useful if you want to
|
||
|
use import paths as endpoints or something similar. An import path can
|
||
|
be specified either in dotted notation (``xml.sax.saxutils.escape``)
|
||
|
or with a colon as object delimiter (``xml.sax.saxutils:escape``).
|
||
|
|
||
|
If `silent` is True the return value will be `None` if the import fails.
|
||
|
|
||
|
:param import_name: the dotted name for the object to import.
|
||
|
:param silent: if set to `True` import errors are ignored and
|
||
|
`None` is returned instead.
|
||
|
:return: imported object
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
#XXX: py3 review needed
|
||
|
assert isinstance(import_name, string_types)
|
||
|
# force the import name to automatically convert to strings
|
||
|
import_name = str(import_name)
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
if ':' in import_name:
|
||
|
module, obj = import_name.split(':', 1)
|
||
|
elif '.' in import_name:
|
||
|
module, obj = import_name.rsplit('.', 1)
|
||
|
else:
|
||
|
return __import__(import_name)
|
||
|
# __import__ is not able to handle unicode strings in the fromlist
|
||
|
# if the module is a package
|
||
|
if PY2 and isinstance(obj, unicode):
|
||
|
obj = obj.encode('utf-8')
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
return getattr(__import__(module, None, None, [obj]), obj)
|
||
|
except (ImportError, AttributeError):
|
||
|
# support importing modules not yet set up by the parent module
|
||
|
# (or package for that matter)
|
||
|
modname = module + '.' + obj
|
||
|
__import__(modname)
|
||
|
return sys.modules[modname]
|
||
|
except ImportError as e:
|
||
|
if not silent:
|
||
|
reraise(
|
||
|
ImportStringError,
|
||
|
ImportStringError(import_name, e),
|
||
|
sys.exc_info()[2])
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
def find_modules(import_path, include_packages=False, recursive=False):
|
||
|
"""Find all the modules below a package. This can be useful to
|
||
|
automatically import all views / controllers so that their metaclasses /
|
||
|
function decorators have a chance to register themselves on the
|
||
|
application.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Packages are not returned unless `include_packages` is `True`. This can
|
||
|
also recursively list modules but in that case it will import all the
|
||
|
packages to get the correct load path of that module.
|
||
|
|
||
|
:param import_name: the dotted name for the package to find child modules.
|
||
|
:param include_packages: set to `True` if packages should be returned, too.
|
||
|
:param recursive: set to `True` if recursion should happen.
|
||
|
:return: generator
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
module = import_string(import_path)
|
||
|
path = getattr(module, '__path__', None)
|
||
|
if path is None:
|
||
|
raise ValueError('%r is not a package' % import_path)
|
||
|
basename = module.__name__ + '.'
|
||
|
for importer, modname, ispkg in pkgutil.iter_modules(path):
|
||
|
modname = basename + modname
|
||
|
if ispkg:
|
||
|
if include_packages:
|
||
|
yield modname
|
||
|
if recursive:
|
||
|
for item in find_modules(modname, include_packages, True):
|
||
|
yield item
|
||
|
else:
|
||
|
yield modname
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
def validate_arguments(func, args, kwargs, drop_extra=True):
|
||
|
"""Check if the function accepts the arguments and keyword arguments.
|
||
|
Returns a new ``(args, kwargs)`` tuple that can safely be passed to
|
||
|
the function without causing a `TypeError` because the function signature
|
||
|
is incompatible. If `drop_extra` is set to `True` (which is the default)
|
||
|
any extra positional or keyword arguments are dropped automatically.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The exception raised provides three attributes:
|
||
|
|
||
|
`missing`
|
||
|
A set of argument names that the function expected but where
|
||
|
missing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
`extra`
|
||
|
A dict of keyword arguments that the function can not handle but
|
||
|
where provided.
|
||
|
|
||
|
`extra_positional`
|
||
|
A list of values that where given by positional argument but the
|
||
|
function cannot accept.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This can be useful for decorators that forward user submitted data to
|
||
|
a view function::
|
||
|
|
||
|
from werkzeug.utils import ArgumentValidationError, validate_arguments
|
||
|
|
||
|
def sanitize(f):
|
||
|
def proxy(request):
|
||
|
data = request.values.to_dict()
|
||
|
try:
|
||
|
args, kwargs = validate_arguments(f, (request,), data)
|
||
|
except ArgumentValidationError:
|
||
|
raise BadRequest('The browser failed to transmit all '
|
||
|
'the data expected.')
|
||
|
return f(*args, **kwargs)
|
||
|
return proxy
|
||
|
|
||
|
:param func: the function the validation is performed against.
|
||
|
:param args: a tuple of positional arguments.
|
||
|
:param kwargs: a dict of keyword arguments.
|
||
|
:param drop_extra: set to `False` if you don't want extra arguments
|
||
|
to be silently dropped.
|
||
|
:return: tuple in the form ``(args, kwargs)``.
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
parser = _parse_signature(func)
|
||
|
args, kwargs, missing, extra, extra_positional = parser(args, kwargs)[:5]
|
||
|
if missing:
|
||
|
raise ArgumentValidationError(tuple(missing))
|
||
|
elif (extra or extra_positional) and not drop_extra:
|
||
|
raise ArgumentValidationError(None, extra, extra_positional)
|
||
|
return tuple(args), kwargs
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
def bind_arguments(func, args, kwargs):
|
||
|
"""Bind the arguments provided into a dict. When passed a function,
|
||
|
a tuple of arguments and a dict of keyword arguments `bind_arguments`
|
||
|
returns a dict of names as the function would see it. This can be useful
|
||
|
to implement a cache decorator that uses the function arguments to build
|
||
|
the cache key based on the values of the arguments.
|
||
|
|
||
|
:param func: the function the arguments should be bound for.
|
||
|
:param args: tuple of positional arguments.
|
||
|
:param kwargs: a dict of keyword arguments.
|
||
|
:return: a :class:`dict` of bound keyword arguments.
|
||
|
"""
|
||
|
args, kwargs, missing, extra, extra_positional, \
|
||
|
arg_spec, vararg_var, kwarg_var = _parse_signature(func)(args, kwargs)
|
||
|
values = {}
|
||
|
for (name, has_default, default), value in zip(arg_spec, args):
|
||
|
values[name] = value
|
||
|
if vararg_var is not None:
|
||
|
values[vararg_var] = tuple(extra_positional)
|
||
|
elif extra_positional:
|
||
|
raise TypeError('too many positional arguments')
|
||
|
if kwarg_var is not None:
|
||
|
multikw = set(extra) & set([x[0] for x in arg_spec])
|
||
|
if multikw:
|
||
|
raise TypeError('got multiple values for keyword argument ' +
|
||
|
repr(next(iter(multikw))))
|
||
|
values[kwarg_var] = extra
|
||
|
elif extra:
|
||
|
raise TypeError('got unexpected keyword argument ' +
|
||
|
repr(next(iter(extra))))
|
||
|
return values
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
class ArgumentValidationError(ValueError):
|
||
|
"""Raised if :func:`validate_arguments` fails to validate"""
|
||
|
|
||
|
def __init__(self, missing=None, extra=None, extra_positional=None):
|
||
|
self.missing = set(missing or ())
|
||
|
self.extra = extra or {}
|
||
|
self.extra_positional = extra_positional or []
|
||
|
ValueError.__init__(self, 'function arguments invalid. ('
|
||
|
'%d missing, %d additional)' % (
|
||
|
len(self.missing),
|
||
|
len(self.extra) + len(self.extra_positional)
|
||
|
))
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
class ImportStringError(ImportError):
|
||
|
"""Provides information about a failed :func:`import_string` attempt."""
|
||
|
|
||
|
#: String in dotted notation that failed to be imported.
|
||
|
import_name = None
|
||
|
#: Wrapped exception.
|
||
|
exception = None
|
||
|
|
||
|
def __init__(self, import_name, exception):
|
||
|
self.import_name = import_name
|
||
|
self.exception = exception
|
||
|
|
||
|
msg = (
|
||
|
'import_string() failed for %r. Possible reasons are:\n\n'
|
||
|
'- missing __init__.py in a package;\n'
|
||
|
'- package or module path not included in sys.path;\n'
|
||
|
'- duplicated package or module name taking precedence in '
|
||
|
'sys.path;\n'
|
||
|
'- missing module, class, function or variable;\n\n'
|
||
|
'Debugged import:\n\n%s\n\n'
|
||
|
'Original exception:\n\n%s: %s')
|
||
|
|
||
|
name = ''
|
||
|
tracked = []
|
||
|
for part in import_name.replace(':', '.').split('.'):
|
||
|
name += (name and '.') + part
|
||
|
imported = import_string(name, silent=True)
|
||
|
if imported:
|
||
|
tracked.append((name, getattr(imported, '__file__', None)))
|
||
|
else:
|
||
|
track = ['- %r found in %r.' % (n, i) for n, i in tracked]
|
||
|
track.append('- %r not found.' % name)
|
||
|
msg = msg % (import_name, '\n'.join(track),
|
||
|
exception.__class__.__name__, str(exception))
|
||
|
break
|
||
|
|
||
|
ImportError.__init__(self, msg)
|
||
|
|
||
|
def __repr__(self):
|
||
|
return '<%s(%r, %r)>' % (self.__class__.__name__, self.import_name,
|
||
|
self.exception)
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
# circular dependencies
|
||
|
from werkzeug.http import quote_header_value, unquote_header_value, \
|
||
|
cookie_date
|
||
|
|
||
|
# DEPRECATED
|
||
|
# these objects were previously in this module as well. we import
|
||
|
# them here for backwards compatibility with old pickles.
|
||
|
from werkzeug.datastructures import MultiDict, CombinedMultiDict, \
|
||
|
Headers, EnvironHeaders
|
||
|
from werkzeug.http import parse_cookie, dump_cookie
|