Files
blender/scripts/modules/_console_python.py
Campbell Barton 1216651ca9 PyAPI: make internal modules explicitly "private"
Rename modules in `./scripts/modules/` to use an underscore prefix to
make it clear they aren't intended to be part of public API's. This
also means there is no implication that these modules should be stable,
allowing us to change them based on Blender's internal usage.

The following modules have been marked as private:

- `animsys_refactor`
- `bl_console_utils`
- `bl_i18n_utils`
- `bl_previews_utils`
- `bl_rna_utils`
- `bl_text_utils`
- `bl_ui_utils`
- `bpy_restrict_state`
- `console_python`
- `console_shell`
- `graphviz_export`
- `keyingsets_utils`
- `rna_info`
- `rna_manual_reference`
- `rna_xml`

Note that we could further re-arrange these modules
(under `_bpy_internal` in some cases), this change is mainly to mark
them as private, further changes can be handed on a case-by-case basis.

Ref !147773
2025-10-13 09:35:09 +00:00

369 lines
11 KiB
Python

# SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2009-2023 Blender Authors
#
# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later
__all__ = (
"autocomplete",
"banner",
"execute",
"language_id",
)
import sys
import bpy
language_id = "python"
class _TempModuleOverride:
__slots__ = (
"module_name",
"module",
"module_override",
)
def __init__(self, module_name, module_override):
self.module_name = module_name
self.module = None
self.module_override = module_override
def __enter__(self):
self.module = sys.modules.get(self.module_name)
sys.modules[self.module_name] = self.module_override
def __exit__(self, _type, _value, _traceback):
if self.module is None:
# Account for removal of `module_override` (albeit unlikely).
sys.modules.pop(self.module_name, None)
else:
sys.modules[self.module_name] = self.module
def add_scrollback(text, text_type):
for line in text.split("\n"):
bpy.ops.console.scrollback_append(
text=line,
type=text_type,
)
def replace_help(namespace):
def _help(*args):
# because of how the console works. we need our own help() pager func.
# replace the bold function because it adds crazy chars
import pydoc
pydoc.getpager = lambda: pydoc.plainpager
pydoc.Helper.getline = lambda self, prompt: None
pydoc.TextDoc.use_bold = lambda self, text: text
pydoc.help(*args)
namespace["help"] = _help
def get_console(console_id):
"""
helper function for console operators
currently each text data block gets its own
console - code.InteractiveConsole()
...which is stored in this function.
console_id can be any hashable type
"""
from code import InteractiveConsole
consoles = getattr(get_console, "consoles", None)
hash_next = hash(bpy.context.window_manager)
if consoles is None:
consoles = get_console.consoles = {}
get_console.consoles_namespace_hash = hash_next
else:
# check if clearing the namespace is needed to avoid a memory leak.
# the window manager is normally loaded with new blend files
# so this is a reasonable way to deal with namespace clearing.
# bpy.data hashing is reset by undo so can't be used.
hash_prev = getattr(get_console, "consoles_namespace_hash", 0)
if hash_prev != hash_next:
get_console.consoles_namespace_hash = hash_next
consoles.clear()
console_data = consoles.get(console_id)
if console_data:
console, stdout, stderr = console_data
# XXX, bug in python 3.1.2, 3.2 ? (worked in 3.1.1)
# seems there is no way to clear StringIO objects for writing, have to
# make new ones each time.
import io
stdout = io.StringIO()
stderr = io.StringIO()
else:
import types
bpy_main_mod = types.ModuleType("__main__")
namespace = bpy_main_mod.__dict__
namespace["__builtins__"] = sys.modules["builtins"]
namespace["bpy"] = bpy
# weak! - but highly convenient
namespace["C"] = bpy.context
namespace["D"] = bpy.data
replace_help(namespace)
console = InteractiveConsole(locals=namespace,
filename="<blender_console>")
console.push("from mathutils import *")
console.push("from math import *")
console._bpy_main_mod = bpy_main_mod
import io
stdout = io.StringIO()
stderr = io.StringIO()
consoles[console_id] = console, stdout, stderr
return console, stdout, stderr
# Both prompts must be the same length
PROMPT = '>>> '
PROMPT_MULTI = '... '
def execute(context, is_interactive):
sc = context.space_data
try:
line_object = sc.history[-1]
except:
return {'CANCELLED'}
console, stdout, stderr = get_console(hash(context.region))
# redirect output
from contextlib import (
redirect_stdout,
redirect_stderr,
)
# Not included with Python.
class redirect_stdin(redirect_stdout.__base__):
_stream = "stdin"
with (
redirect_stdout(stdout),
redirect_stderr(stderr),
# Don't allow the `stdin` to be used because it can lock Blender.
redirect_stdin(None),
_TempModuleOverride("__main__", console._bpy_main_mod),
):
# in case exception happens
line = "" # in case of encoding error
is_multiline = False
try:
line = line_object.body
# run the console, "\n" executes a multi line statement
line_exec = line if line.strip() else "\n"
is_multiline = console.push(line_exec)
except SystemExit as ex:
# Occurs when `exit(..)` is called, this raises an exception instead of exiting.
# The trace-back isn't helpful in this case, just print the exception.
stderr.write("{!r}\n".format(ex))
# Without this, entering new commands may include the previous command, see: #109435.
console.resetbuffer()
except:
# Unlikely, but this can happen with unicode errors accessing `line_object.body`.
import traceback
stderr.write(traceback.format_exc())
output = stdout.getvalue()
output_err = stderr.getvalue()
# cleanup
sys.last_traceback = None
# So we can reuse, clear all data
stdout.truncate(0)
stderr.truncate(0)
# special exception. its possible the command loaded a new user interface
if hash(sc) != hash(context.space_data):
return {'FINISHED'}
bpy.ops.console.scrollback_append(text=sc.prompt + line, type='INPUT')
if is_multiline:
sc.prompt = PROMPT_MULTI
if is_interactive:
indent = line[:len(line) - len(line.lstrip())]
if line.rstrip().endswith(":"):
indent += " "
else:
indent = ""
else:
sc.prompt = PROMPT
indent = ""
# insert a new blank line
bpy.ops.console.history_append(text=indent, current_character=0,
remove_duplicates=True)
sc.history[-1].current_character = len(indent)
# Insert the output into the editor
# not quite correct because the order might have changed,
# but ok 99% of the time.
if output:
add_scrollback(output, 'OUTPUT')
if output_err:
add_scrollback(output_err, 'ERROR')
# execute any hooks
for func, args in execute.hooks:
func(*args)
return {'FINISHED'}
execute.hooks = []
def autocomplete(context):
from _bl_console_utils.autocomplete import intellisense
sc = context.space_data
console = get_console(hash(context.region))[0]
if not console:
return {'CANCELLED'}
scrollback = ""
scrollback_error = ""
# Don't allow the `stdin` to be used, can lock blender.
# note: unlikely `stdin` would be used for auto-complete - but it's possible.
from contextlib import redirect_stdout
# Not included with Python.
class redirect_stdin(redirect_stdout.__base__):
_stream = "stdin"
with (
# Don't allow the `stdin` to be used because it can lock Blender.
redirect_stdin(None),
_TempModuleOverride("__main__", console._bpy_main_mod),
):
try:
current_line = sc.history[-1]
line = current_line.body
# This function isn't aware of the text editor or being an operator
# just does the autocomplete then copy its results back
result = intellisense.expand(
line=line,
cursor=current_line.current_character,
namespace=console.locals,
private=bpy.app.debug_python)
line_new = result[0]
current_line.body, current_line.current_character, scrollback = result
del result
# update selection. setting body should really do this!
ofs = len(line_new) - len(line)
sc.select_start += ofs
sc.select_end += ofs
except:
# unlikely, but this can happen with unicode errors for example.
# or if the API attribute access itself causes an error.
import traceback
scrollback_error = traceback.format_exc()
# Separate autocomplete output by command prompts
if scrollback != '':
bpy.ops.console.scrollback_append(text=sc.prompt + current_line.body,
type='INPUT')
# Now we need to copy back the line from blender back into the
# text editor. This will change when we don't use the text editor
# anymore
if scrollback:
add_scrollback(scrollback, 'INFO')
if scrollback_error:
add_scrollback(scrollback_error, 'ERROR')
context.area.tag_redraw()
return {'FINISHED'}
def copy_as_script(context):
sc = context.space_data
lines = [
"import bpy",
"from bpy import data as D",
"from bpy import context as C",
"from mathutils import *",
"from math import *",
"",
]
for line in sc.scrollback:
text = line.body
type = line.type
if type == 'INFO': # Ignore auto-completion.
continue
if type == 'INPUT':
if text.startswith(PROMPT):
text = text[len(PROMPT):]
elif text.startswith(PROMPT_MULTI):
text = text[len(PROMPT_MULTI):]
elif type == 'OUTPUT':
text = "#~ " + text
elif type == 'ERROR':
text = "#! " + text
lines.append(text)
context.window_manager.clipboard = "\n".join(lines)
return {'FINISHED'}
def banner(context):
sc = context.space_data
version_string = sys.version.strip().replace('\n', ' ')
message = (
"PYTHON INTERACTIVE CONSOLE {:s}".format(version_string),
"",
"Builtin Modules: "
"bpy, bpy.data, bpy.ops, bpy.props, bpy.types, bpy.context, bpy.utils, gpu, blf, mathutils",
"Convenience Imports: from mathutils import *; from math import *",
"Convenience Variables: C = bpy.context, D = bpy.data",
"",
)
# NOTE: Using `OUTPUT` style (intended for the `stdout` is also valid).
# Using `INFO` has a slight advantage that it's excluded by the "Copy as Script" operator.
# As the banner isn't useful to include in a script - leave it out.
for line in message:
add_scrollback(line, 'INFO')
sc.prompt = PROMPT
return {'FINISHED'}