| #!/usr/bin/env python3 |
| # |
| # Copyright (c) 2014, 2016 ARM Limited |
| # All rights reserved |
| # |
| # The license below extends only to copyright in the software and shall |
| # not be construed as granting a license to any other intellectual |
| # property including but not limited to intellectual property relating |
| # to a hardware implementation of the functionality of the software |
| # licensed hereunder. You may use the software subject to the license |
| # terms below provided that you ensure that this notice is replicated |
| # unmodified and in its entirety in all distributions of the software, |
| # modified or unmodified, in source code or in binary form. |
| # |
| # Copyright (c) 2006 The Regents of The University of Michigan |
| # Copyright (c) 2007,2011 The Hewlett-Packard Development Company |
| # Copyright (c) 2016 Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. |
| # All rights reserved. |
| # |
| # Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without |
| # modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are |
| # met: redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright |
| # notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer; |
| # redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright |
| # notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the |
| # documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution; |
| # neither the name of the copyright holders nor the names of its |
| # contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from |
| # this software without specific prior written permission. |
| # |
| # THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS |
| # "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT |
| # LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR |
| # A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT |
| # OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, |
| # SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT |
| # LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, |
| # DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY |
| # THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT |
| # (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE |
| # OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. |
| |
| from abc import ABCMeta, abstractmethod |
| from difflib import SequenceMatcher |
| import inspect |
| import os |
| import re |
| import sys |
| |
| from . import style |
| from . import sort_includes |
| from .region import * |
| from .file_types import lang_type |
| |
| |
| def safefix(fix_func): |
| """ Decorator for the fix functions of the Verifier class. |
| This function wraps the fix function and creates a backup file |
| just in case there is an error. |
| """ |
| def safefix_wrapper(*args, **kwargs): |
| # Check to be sure that this is decorating a function we expect: |
| # a class method with filename as the first argument (after self) |
| assert(os.path.exists(args[1])) |
| self = args[0] |
| assert(is_verifier(self.__class__)) |
| filename = args[1] |
| |
| # Now, Let's make a backup file. |
| from shutil import copyfile |
| backup_name = filename+'.bak' |
| copyfile(filename, backup_name) |
| |
| # Try to apply the fix. If it fails, then we revert the file |
| # Either way, we need to clean up our backup file |
| try: |
| fix_func(*args, **kwargs) |
| except Exception as e: |
| # Restore the original file to the backup file |
| self.ui.write("Error! Restoring the original file.\n") |
| copyfile(backup_name, filename) |
| raise |
| finally: |
| # Clean up the backup file |
| os.remove(backup_name) |
| |
| return safefix_wrapper |
| |
| def _modified_regions(old, new): |
| try: |
| m = SequenceMatcher(a=old, b=new, autojunk=False) |
| except TypeError: |
| # autojunk was introduced in Python 2.7. We need a fallback |
| # mechanism to support old Python versions. |
| m = SequenceMatcher(a=old, b=new) |
| regions = Regions() |
| for tag, i1, i2, j1, j2 in m.get_opcodes(): |
| if tag != "equal": |
| regions.extend(Region(i1, i2)) |
| return regions |
| |
| |
| class Verifier(object, metaclass=ABCMeta): |
| """Base class for style verifiers |
| |
| Verifiers check for style violations and optionally fix such |
| violations. Implementations should either inherit from this class |
| (Verifier) if they need to work on entire files or LineVerifier if |
| they operate on a line-by-line basis. |
| |
| Subclasses must define these class attributes: |
| languages = set of strings identifying applicable languages |
| test_name = long descriptive name of test, will be used in |
| messages such as "error in <foo>" or "invalid <foo>" |
| opt_name = short name used to generate command-line options to |
| control the test (--fix-<foo>, --ignore-<foo>, etc.) |
| |
| """ |
| |
| |
| def __init__(self, ui, opts, base=None): |
| self.ui = ui |
| self.base = base |
| |
| # opt_name must be defined as a class attribute of derived classes. |
| # Check test-specific opts first as these have precedence. |
| self.opt_fix = opts.get('fix_' + self.opt_name, False) |
| self.opt_ignore = opts.get('ignore_' + self.opt_name, False) |
| self.opt_skip = opts.get('skip_' + self.opt_name, False) |
| # If no test-specific opts were set, then set based on "-all" opts. |
| if not (self.opt_fix or self.opt_ignore or self.opt_skip): |
| self.opt_fix = opts.get('fix_all', False) |
| self.opt_ignore = opts.get('ignore_all', False) |
| self.opt_skip = opts.get('skip_all', False) |
| |
| def normalize_filename(self, name): |
| abs_name = os.path.abspath(name) |
| if self.base is None: |
| return abs_name |
| |
| abs_base = os.path.abspath(self.base) |
| return os.path.relpath(abs_name, start=abs_base) |
| |
| def open(self, filename, mode): |
| try: |
| f = open(filename, mode) |
| except OSError as msg: |
| print('could not open file {}: {}'.format(filename, msg)) |
| return None |
| |
| return f |
| |
| def skip(self, filename): |
| # We never want to handle symlinks, so always skip them: If the |
| # location pointed to is a directory, skip it. If the location is a |
| # file inside the gem5 directory, it will be checked as a file, so |
| # symlink can be skipped. If the location is a file outside gem5, we |
| # don't want to check it anyway. |
| if os.path.islink(filename): |
| return True |
| return lang_type(filename) not in self.languages |
| |
| def apply(self, filename, regions=all_regions): |
| """Possibly apply to specified regions of file 'filename'. |
| |
| Verifier is skipped if --skip-<test> option was provided or if |
| file is not of an applicable type. Otherwise file is checked |
| and error messages printed. Errors are fixed or ignored if |
| the corresponding --fix-<test> or --ignore-<test> options were |
| provided. If neither, the user is prompted for an action. |
| |
| Returns True to abort, False otherwise. |
| """ |
| if not (self.opt_skip or self.skip(filename)): |
| errors = self.check(filename, regions) |
| if errors and not self.opt_ignore: |
| if self.opt_fix: |
| self.fix(filename, regions) |
| else: |
| result = self.ui.prompt("(a)bort, (i)gnore, or (f)ix?", |
| 'aif', 'a') |
| if result == 'f': |
| self.fix(filename, regions) |
| elif result == 'a': |
| return True # abort |
| |
| return False |
| |
| @abstractmethod |
| def check(self, filename, regions=all_regions, fobj=None, silent=False): |
| """Check specified regions of file 'filename'. |
| |
| Given that it is possible that the current contents of the file |
| differ from the file as 'staged to commit', for those cases, and |
| maybe others, the argument fobj should be a file object open and reset |
| with the contents matching what the file would look like after the |
| commit. This is needed keep the messages using 'filename' meaningful. |
| |
| The argument silent is useful to prevent output when we run check in |
| the staged file vs the actual file to detect if the user forgot |
| staging fixes to the commit. This way, we prevent reporting errors |
| twice in stderr. |
| |
| Line-by-line checks can simply provide a check_line() method |
| that returns True if the line is OK and False if it has an |
| error. Verifiers that need a multi-line view (like |
| SortedIncludes) must override this entire function. |
| |
| Returns a count of errors (0 if none), though actual non-zero |
| count value is not currently used anywhere. |
| """ |
| pass |
| |
| @abstractmethod |
| def fix(self, filename, regions=all_regions): |
| """Fix specified regions of file 'filename'. |
| |
| Line-by-line fixes can simply provide a fix_line() method that |
| returns the fixed line. Verifiers that need a multi-line view |
| (like SortedIncludes) must override this entire function. |
| """ |
| pass |
| |
| class LineVerifier(Verifier): |
| def check(self, filename, regions=all_regions, fobj=None, silent=False): |
| close = False |
| if fobj is None: |
| fobj = self.open(filename, 'rb') |
| close = True |
| |
| lang = lang_type(filename) |
| assert lang in self.languages |
| |
| errors = 0 |
| for num,line in enumerate(fobj): |
| if num not in regions: |
| continue |
| s_line = line.decode('utf-8').rstrip('\n') |
| if not self.check_line(s_line, language=lang): |
| if not silent: |
| self.ui.write("invalid %s in %s:%d\n" % \ |
| (self.test_name, filename, num + 1)) |
| if self.ui.verbose: |
| self.ui.write(">>%s<<\n" % s_line[:-1]) |
| errors += 1 |
| if close: |
| fobj.close() |
| return errors |
| |
| @safefix |
| def fix(self, filename, regions=all_regions): |
| f = self.open(filename, 'r+') |
| |
| lang = lang_type(filename) |
| assert lang in self.languages |
| |
| lines = list(f) |
| |
| f.seek(0) |
| f.truncate() |
| |
| for i,line in enumerate(lines): |
| line = line.rstrip('\n') |
| if i in regions: |
| line = self.fix_line(line, language=lang) |
| |
| f.write(line) |
| f.write("\n") |
| f.close() |
| self.current_language = None |
| |
| @abstractmethod |
| def check_line(self, line, **kwargs): |
| pass |
| |
| @abstractmethod |
| def fix_line(self, line, **kwargs): |
| pass |
| |
| class Whitespace(LineVerifier): |
| """Check whitespace. |
| |
| Specifically: |
| - No tabs used for indent |
| - No trailing whitespace |
| """ |
| |
| languages = set(('C', 'C++', 'swig', 'python', 'asm', 'isa', 'scons', |
| 'make', 'dts')) |
| trail_only = set(('make', 'dts')) |
| |
| test_name = 'whitespace' |
| opt_name = 'white' |
| |
| _lead = re.compile(r'^([ \t]+)') |
| _trail = re.compile(r'([ \t]+)$') |
| |
| |
| def skip_lead(self, language): |
| return language in Whitespace.trail_only |
| |
| def check_line(self, line, language): |
| if not self.skip_lead(language): |
| match = Whitespace._lead.search(line) |
| if match and match.group(1).find('\t') != -1: |
| return False |
| |
| match = Whitespace._trail.search(line) |
| if match: |
| return False |
| |
| return True |
| |
| def fix_line(self, line, language): |
| if not self.skip_lead(language) and Whitespace._lead.search(line): |
| newline = '' |
| for i,c in enumerate(line): |
| if c == ' ': |
| newline += ' ' |
| elif c == '\t': |
| newline += ' ' * (style.tabsize - \ |
| len(newline) % style.tabsize) |
| else: |
| newline += line[i:] |
| break |
| |
| line = newline |
| |
| return line.rstrip() |
| |
| |
| class SortedIncludes(Verifier): |
| """Check for proper sorting of include statements""" |
| |
| languages = sort_includes.default_languages |
| test_name = 'include file order' |
| opt_name = 'include' |
| |
| def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): |
| super(SortedIncludes, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs) |
| self.sort_includes = sort_includes.SortIncludes() |
| |
| def check(self, filename, regions=all_regions, fobj=None, silent=False): |
| close = False |
| if fobj is None: |
| fobj = self.open(filename, 'rb') |
| close = True |
| norm_fname = self.normalize_filename(filename) |
| |
| old = [ l.decode('utf-8').rstrip('\n') for l in fobj ] |
| if close: |
| fobj.close() |
| |
| if len(old) == 0: |
| return 0 |
| |
| language = lang_type(filename, old[0]) |
| new = list(self.sort_includes(old, norm_fname, language)) |
| |
| modified = _modified_regions(old, new) & regions |
| |
| if modified: |
| if not silent: |
| self.ui.write("invalid sorting of includes in %s. Note: If " |
| "there is more than one empty line under the " |
| "#include region, please reduce it to one.\n" |
| % (filename)) |
| if self.ui.verbose: |
| for start, end in modified.regions: |
| self.ui.write("bad region [%d, %d)\n" % (start, end)) |
| return 1 |
| |
| return 0 |
| |
| @safefix |
| def fix(self, filename, regions=all_regions): |
| f = self.open(filename, 'r+') |
| norm_fname = self.normalize_filename(filename) |
| |
| old = f.readlines() |
| lines = [ l.rstrip('\n') for l in old ] |
| language = lang_type(filename, lines[0]) |
| sort_lines = list(self.sort_includes(lines, norm_fname, language)) |
| new = ''.join(line + '\n' for line in sort_lines) |
| |
| f.seek(0) |
| f.truncate() |
| |
| for i,line in enumerate(sort_lines): |
| f.write(line) |
| f.write('\n') |
| f.close() |
| |
| |
| class ControlSpace(LineVerifier): |
| """Check for exactly one space after if/while/for""" |
| |
| languages = set(('C', 'C++')) |
| test_name = 'spacing after if/while/for' |
| opt_name = 'control' |
| |
| _any_control = re.compile(r'\b(if|while|for)([ \t]*)\(') |
| |
| def check_line(self, line, **kwargs): |
| match = ControlSpace._any_control.search(line) |
| return not (match and match.group(2) != " ") |
| |
| def fix_line(self, line, **kwargs): |
| new_line = ControlSpace._any_control.sub(r'\1 (', line) |
| return new_line |
| |
| |
| class LineLength(LineVerifier): |
| languages = set(('C', 'C++', 'swig', 'python', 'asm', 'isa', 'scons')) |
| test_name = 'line length' |
| opt_name = 'length' |
| |
| def check_line(self, line, **kwargs): |
| return style.normalized_len(line) <= 79 |
| |
| def fix(self, filename, regions=all_regions, **kwargs): |
| self.ui.write("Warning: cannot automatically fix overly long lines.\n") |
| |
| def fix_line(self, line): |
| pass |
| |
| class ControlCharacters(LineVerifier): |
| languages = set(('C', 'C++', 'swig', 'python', 'asm', 'isa', 'scons')) |
| test_name = 'control character' |
| opt_name = 'ascii' |
| |
| invalid = "".join([chr(i) for i in range(0, 0x20) \ |
| if chr(i) not in ('\n', '\t')]) |
| |
| def check_line(self, line, **kwargs): |
| return self.fix_line(line) == line |
| |
| def fix_line(self, line, **kwargs): |
| return ''.join(c for c in line if c not in ControlCharacters.invalid) |
| |
| class BoolCompare(LineVerifier): |
| languages = set(('C', 'C++', 'python')) |
| test_name = 'boolean comparison' |
| opt_name = 'boolcomp' |
| |
| regex = re.compile(r'\s*==\s*([Tt]rue|[Ff]alse)\b') |
| |
| def check_line(self, line, **kwargs): |
| return self.regex.search(line) == None |
| |
| def fix_line(self, line, **kwargs): |
| match = self.regex.search(line) |
| if match: |
| if match.group(1) in ('true', 'True'): |
| line = self.regex.sub('', line) |
| else: |
| self.ui.write("Warning: cannot automatically fix " |
| "comparisons with false/False.\n") |
| return line |
| |
| class StructureBraces(LineVerifier): |
| """ Check if the opening braces of structures are not on the same line of |
| the structure name. This includes classes, structs, enums and unions. |
| |
| This verifier matches lines starting in optional indent, followed by |
| an optional typedef and the structure's keyword, followed by any |
| character until the first opening brace is seen. Any extra characters |
| after the opening brace are saved for a recursive check, if needed. |
| |
| This fixes, for example: |
| 1) "struct A {" |
| 2) "enum{" |
| 3) " class B { // This is a class" |
| 4) "union { struct C {" |
| to: |
| 1) "struct A\n{" |
| 2) "enum\n{" |
| 3) " class B\n {\n // This is a class" |
| 4) "union\n{\n struct C\n {" |
| |
| @todo Make this work for multi-line structure declarations. e.g., |
| |
| class MultiLineClass |
| : public BaseClass { |
| """ |
| |
| languages = set(('C', 'C++')) |
| test_name = 'structure opening brace position' |
| opt_name = 'structurebrace' |
| |
| # Matches the indentation of the line |
| regex_indentation = '(?P<indentation>\s*)' |
| # Matches an optional "typedef" before the keyword |
| regex_typedef = '(?P<typedef>(typedef\s+)?)' |
| # Matches the structure's keyword |
| regex_keyword = '(?P<keyword>class|struct|enum|union)' |
| # A negative lookahead to avoid incorrect matches with variable's names |
| # e.g., "classifications = {" should not be fixed here. |
| regex_avoid = '(?![^\{\s])' |
| # Matches anything after the keyword and before the opening brace. |
| # e.g., structure name, base type, type of inheritance, etc |
| regex_name = '(?P<name>[^\{]*)' |
| # Matches anything after the opening brace, which should be |
| # parsed recursively |
| regex_extra = '(?P<extra>.*)$' |
| regex = re.compile(r'^' + regex_indentation + regex_typedef + |
| regex_keyword + regex_avoid + regex_name + '\{' + regex_extra) |
| |
| def check_line(self, line, **kwargs): |
| return (self.regex.search(line) == None) or \ |
| (line.count('{') == line.count('};')) |
| |
| def fix_line(self, line, **kwargs): |
| match = self.regex.search(line) |
| |
| if match: |
| # Move the opening brace to the next line |
| match_indentation = match.group('indentation') |
| match_typedef = match.group('typedef') |
| match_keyword = match.group('keyword') |
| match_name = match.group('name').rstrip() |
| match_extra = match.group('extra').lstrip() |
| line = match_indentation + match_typedef + match_keyword + \ |
| match_name + "\n" + match_indentation + "{" |
| |
| # The opening brace should be alone in its own line, so move any |
| # extra contents to the next line |
| if match_extra != '': |
| # Check if the extra line obeys the opening brace rule |
| # (in case there are nested declarations) |
| line_extra = match_indentation + " " + match_extra |
| if not self.check_line(line_extra): |
| line_extra = self.fix_line(line_extra) |
| line += "\n" + line_extra |
| |
| return line |
| |
| def is_verifier(cls): |
| """Determine if a class is a Verifier that can be instantiated""" |
| |
| return inspect.isclass(cls) and issubclass(cls, Verifier) and \ |
| not inspect.isabstract(cls) |
| |
| # list of all verifier classes |
| all_verifiers = [ v for n, v in \ |
| inspect.getmembers(sys.modules[__name__], is_verifier) ] |