laywerrobot/lib/python3.6/site-packages/absl/testing/flagsaver.py
2020-08-27 21:55:39 +02:00

185 lines
5.7 KiB
Python

# Copyright 2017 The Abseil Authors.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
"""Decorator and context manager for saving and restoring flag values.
There are many ways to save and restore. Always use the most convenient method
for a given use case.
Here are examples of each method. They all call do_stuff() while FLAGS.someflag
is temporarily set to 'foo'.
from absl.testing import flagsaver
# Use a decorator which can optionally override flags via arguments.
@flagsaver.flagsaver(someflag='foo')
def some_func():
do_stuff()
# Use a decorator which does not override flags itself.
@flagsaver.flagsaver
def some_func():
FLAGS.someflag = 'foo'
do_stuff()
# Use a context manager which can optionally override flags via arguments.
with flagsaver.flagsaver(someflag='foo'):
do_stuff()
# Save and restore the flag values yourself.
saved_flag_values = flagsaver.save_flag_values()
try:
FLAGS.someflag = 'foo'
do_stuff()
finally:
flagsaver.restore_flag_values(saved_flag_values)
We save and restore a shallow copy of each Flag object's __dict__ attribute.
This preserves all attributes of the flag, such as whether or not it was
overridden from its default value.
WARNING: Currently a flag that is saved and then deleted cannot be restored. An
exception will be raised. However if you *add* a flag after saving flag values,
and then restore flag values, the added flag will be deleted with no errors.
"""
from __future__ import absolute_import
from __future__ import division
from __future__ import print_function
import functools
import inspect
from absl import flags
import six
FLAGS = flags.FLAGS
def flagsaver(*args, **kwargs):
"""The main flagsaver interface. See module doc for usage."""
if not args:
return _FlagOverrider(**kwargs)
elif len(args) == 1:
if kwargs:
raise ValueError(
"It's invalid to specify both positional and keyword parameters.")
func = args[0]
if inspect.isclass(func):
raise TypeError('@flagsaver.flagsaver cannot be applied to a class.')
return _wrap(func, {})
else:
raise ValueError(
"It's invalid to specify more than one positional parameters.")
def save_flag_values(flag_values=FLAGS):
"""Returns copy of flag values as a dict.
Args:
flag_values: FlagValues, the FlagValues instance with which the flag will
be saved. This should almost never need to be overridden.
Returns:
Dictionary mapping keys to values. Keys are flag names, values are
corresponding __dict__ members. E.g. {'key': value_dict, ...}.
"""
return {name: _copy_flag_dict(flag_values[name]) for name in flag_values}
def restore_flag_values(saved_flag_values, flag_values=FLAGS):
"""Restores flag values based on the dictionary of flag values.
Args:
saved_flag_values: {'flag_name': value_dict, ...}
flag_values: FlagValues, the FlagValues instance from which the flag will
be restored. This should almost never need to be overridden.
"""
new_flag_names = list(flag_values)
for name in new_flag_names:
saved = saved_flag_values.get(name)
if saved is None:
# If __dict__ was not saved delete "new" flag.
delattr(flag_values, name)
else:
if flag_values[name].value != saved['_value']:
flag_values[name].value = saved['_value'] # Ensure C++ value is set.
flag_values[name].__dict__ = saved
def _wrap(func, overrides):
"""Creates a wrapper function that saves/restores flag values.
Args:
func: function object - This will be called between saving flags and
restoring flags.
overrides: {str: object} - Flag names mapped to their values. These flags
will be set after saving the original flag state.
Returns:
return value from func()
"""
@functools.wraps(func)
def _flagsaver_wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
"""Wrapper function that saves and restores flags."""
with _FlagOverrider(**overrides):
return func(*args, **kwargs)
return _flagsaver_wrapper
class _FlagOverrider(object):
"""Overrides flags for the duration of the decorated function call.
It also restores all original values of flags after decorated method
completes.
"""
def __init__(self, **overrides):
self._overrides = overrides
self._saved_flag_values = None
def __call__(self, func):
if inspect.isclass(func):
raise TypeError('flagsaver cannot be applied to a class.')
return _wrap(func, self._overrides)
def __enter__(self):
self._saved_flag_values = save_flag_values(FLAGS)
try:
for name, value in six.iteritems(self._overrides):
setattr(FLAGS, name, value)
except:
# It may fail because of flag validators.
restore_flag_values(self._saved_flag_values, FLAGS)
raise
def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, traceback):
restore_flag_values(self._saved_flag_values, FLAGS)
def _copy_flag_dict(flag):
"""Returns a copy of the flag object's __dict__.
It's mostly a shallow copy of the __dict__, except it also does a shallow
copy of the validator list.
Args:
flag: flags.Flag, the flag to copy.
Returns:
A copy of the flag object's __dict__.
"""
copy = flag.__dict__.copy()
copy['_value'] = flag.value # Ensure correct restore for C++ flags.
copy['validators'] = list(flag.validators)
return copy