Files
linux-kernel-module-cheat/shell_helpers.py
2019-03-13 00:00:02 +00:00

365 lines
13 KiB
Python

#!/usr/bin/env python3
import base64
import distutils.file_util
import itertools
import os
import shlex
import shutil
import signal
import stat
import subprocess
import sys
import threading
import urllib.request
class LF:
'''
LineFeed (AKA newline).
Singleton class. Can be used in print_cmd to print out nicer command lines
with --key on the same line as "--key value".
'''
pass
class ShellHelpers:
'''
Helpers to do things which are easy from the shell,
usually filesystem, process or pipe operations.
Attempt to print shell equivalents of all commands to make things
easy to debug and understand what is going on.
'''
_print_lock = threading.Lock()
def __init__(self, dry_run=False, quiet=False):
'''
:param dry_run: don't run the commands, just potentially print them. Debug aid.
:type dry_run: Bool
:param quiet: don't print the commands
:type dry_run: Bool
'''
self.dry_run = dry_run
self.quiet = quiet
@classmethod
def _print_thread_safe(cls, string):
'''
Python sucks: a naive print adds a bunch of random spaces to stdout,
and then copy pasting the command fails.
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/3029816/how-do-i-get-a-thread-safe-print-in-python-2-6
The initial use case was test-gdb which must create a thread for GDB to run the program in parallel.
'''
cls._print_lock.acquire()
sys.stdout.write(string + '\n')
sys.stdout.flush()
cls._print_lock.release()
def add_newlines(self, cmd):
out = []
for arg in cmd:
out.extend([arg, LF])
return out
def base64_encode(self, string):
'''
TODO deal with redirection and print nicely.
'''
return base64.b64encode(string.encode()).decode()
def base64_decode(self, string):
return base64.b64decode(string.encode()).decode()
def chmod(self, path, add_rm_abs='+', mode_delta=stat.S_IXUSR):
'''
TODO extend further, shell print equivalent.
'''
old_mode = os.stat(path).st_mode
if add_rm_abs == '+':
new_mode = old_mode | mode_delta
elif add_rm_abs == '':
new_mode = mode_delta
elif add_rm_abs == '-':
new_mode = old_mode & ~mode_delta
os.chmod(path, new_mode)
@staticmethod
def cmd_to_string(cmd, cwd=None, extra_env=None, extra_paths=None):
'''
Format a command given as a list of strings so that it can
be viewed nicely and executed by bash directly and print it to stdout.
'''
last_newline = ' \\\n'
newline_separator = last_newline + ' '
out = []
if extra_env is None:
extra_env = {}
if cwd is not None:
out.append('cd {} &&'.format(shlex.quote(cwd)))
if extra_paths is not None:
out.append('PATH="{}:${{PATH}}"'.format(':'.join(extra_paths)))
for key in extra_env:
out.append('{}={}'.format(shlex.quote(key), shlex.quote(extra_env[key])))
cmd_quote = []
newline_count = 0
for arg in cmd:
if arg == LF:
cmd_quote.append(arg)
newline_count += 1
else:
cmd_quote.append(shlex.quote(arg))
if newline_count > 0:
cmd_quote = [' '.join(list(y)) for x, y in itertools.groupby(cmd_quote, lambda z: z == LF) if not x]
out.extend(cmd_quote)
if newline_count == 1 and cmd[-1] == LF:
ending = ''
else:
ending = last_newline + ';'
return newline_separator.join(out) + ending
def copy_dir_if_update_non_recursive(self, srcdir, destdir, filter_ext=None):
# TODO print rsync equivalent.
os.makedirs(destdir, exist_ok=True)
for basename in sorted(os.listdir(srcdir)):
src = os.path.join(srcdir, basename)
if os.path.isfile(src):
noext, ext = os.path.splitext(basename)
if filter_ext is not None and ext == filter_ext:
distutils.file_util.copy_file(
src,
os.path.join(destdir, basename),
update=1,
)
def copy_dir_if_update(self, srcdir, destdir, filter_ext=None):
self.copy_dir_if_update_non_recursive(srcdir, destdir, filter_ext)
srcdir_abs = os.path.abspath(srcdir)
srcdir_abs_len = len(srcdir_abs)
for path, dirnames, filenames in os.walk(srcdir_abs):
dirnames.sort()
for dirname in dirnames:
dirpath = os.path.join(path, dirname)
dirpath_relative_root = dirpath[srcdir_abs_len + 1:]
self.copy_dir_if_update_non_recursive(
dirpath,
os.path.join(destdir, dirpath_relative_root),
filter_ext
)
def cp(self, src, dest, **kwargs):
self.print_cmd(['cp', src, dest])
if not self.dry_run:
shutil.copy2(src, dest)
def print_cmd(self, cmd, cwd=None, cmd_file=None, extra_env=None, extra_paths=None):
'''
Print cmd_to_string to stdout.
Optionally save the command to cmd_file file, and add extra_env
environment variables to the command generated.
If cmd contains at least one LF, newlines are only added on LF.
Otherwise, newlines are added automatically after every word.
'''
if type(cmd) is str:
cmd_string = cmd
else:
cmd_string = self.cmd_to_string(cmd, cwd=cwd, extra_env=extra_env, extra_paths=extra_paths)
if not self.quiet:
self._print_thread_safe('+ ' + cmd_string)
if cmd_file is not None:
with open(cmd_file, 'w') as f:
f.write('#!/usr/bin/env bash\n')
f.write(cmd_string)
self.chmod(cmd_file)
def run_cmd(
self,
cmd,
cmd_file=None,
out_file=None,
show_stdout=True,
show_cmd=True,
extra_env=None,
extra_paths=None,
delete_env=None,
raise_on_failure=True,
**kwargs
):
'''
Run a command. Write the command to stdout before running it.
Wait until the command finishes execution.
:param cmd: command to run. LF entries are magic get skipped.
:type cmd: List[str]
:param cmd_file: if not None, write the command to be run to that file
:type cmd_file: str
:param out_file: if not None, write the stdout and stderr of the command the file
:type out_file: str
:param show_stdout: wether to show stdout and stderr on the terminal or not
:type show_stdout: bool
:param extra_env: extra environment variables to add when running the command
:type extra_env: Dict[str,str]
:return: exit status of the command
:rtype: int
'''
if out_file is not None:
stdout = subprocess.PIPE
stderr = subprocess.STDOUT
else:
if show_stdout:
stdout = None
stderr = None
else:
stdout = subprocess.DEVNULL
stderr = subprocess.DEVNULL
if extra_env is None:
extra_env = {}
if delete_env is None:
delete_env = []
if 'cwd' in kwargs:
cwd = kwargs['cwd']
else:
cwd = None
env = os.environ.copy()
env.update(extra_env)
if extra_paths is not None:
path = ':'.join(extra_paths)
if 'PATH' in os.environ:
path += ':' + os.environ['PATH']
env['PATH'] = path
for key in delete_env:
if key in env:
del env[key]
if show_cmd:
self.print_cmd(cmd, cwd=cwd, cmd_file=cmd_file, extra_env=extra_env, extra_paths=extra_paths)
# Otherwise, if called from a non-main thread:
# ValueError: signal only works in main thread
if threading.current_thread() == threading.main_thread():
# Otherwise Ctrl + C gives:
# - ugly Python stack trace for gem5 (QEMU takes over terminal and is fine).
# - kills Python, and that then kills GDB: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/19807134/does-python-always-raise-an-exception-if-you-do-ctrlc-when-a-subprocess-is-exec
sigint_old = signal.getsignal(signal.SIGINT)
signal.signal(signal.SIGINT, signal.SIG_IGN)
# Otherwise BrokenPipeError when piping through | grep
# But if I do this_module, my terminal gets broken at the end. Why, why, why.
# https://stackoverflow.com/questions/14207708/ioerror-errno-32-broken-pipe-python
# Ignoring the exception is not enough as it prints a warning anyways.
#sigpipe_old = signal.getsignal(signal.SIGPIPE)
#signal.signal(signal.SIGPIPE, signal.SIG_DFL)
cmd = self.strip_newlines(cmd)
if not self.dry_run:
# https://stackoverflow.com/questions/15535240/python-popen-write-to-stdout-and-log-file-simultaneously/52090802#52090802
with subprocess.Popen(cmd, stdout=stdout, stderr=stderr, env=env, **kwargs) as proc:
if out_file is not None:
os.makedirs(os.path.split(os.path.abspath(out_file))[0], exist_ok=True)
with open(out_file, 'bw') as logfile:
while True:
byte = proc.stdout.read(1)
if byte:
if show_stdout:
sys.stdout.buffer.write(byte)
try:
sys.stdout.flush()
except BlockingIOError:
# TODO understand. Why, Python, why.
pass
logfile.write(byte)
else:
break
if threading.current_thread() == threading.main_thread():
signal.signal(signal.SIGINT, sigint_old)
#signal.signal(signal.SIGPIPE, sigpipe_old)
returncode = proc.returncode
if returncode != 0 and raise_on_failure:
raise Exception('Command exited with status: {}'.format(returncode))
return returncode
else:
return 0
def shlex_split(self, string):
'''
shlex_split, but also add Newline after every word.
Not perfect since it does not group arguments, but I don't see a solution.
'''
return self.add_newlines(shlex.split(string))
def strip_newlines(self, cmd):
if type(cmd) is str:
return cmd
else:
return [x for x in cmd if x != LF]
def rmrf(self, path):
self.print_cmd(['rm', '-r', '-f', path, LF])
if not self.dry_run and os.path.exists(path):
if os.path.isdir(path):
shutil.rmtree(path)
else:
os.unlink(path)
def walk(self, root):
'''
Extended walk that can take files or directories.
'''
if not os.path.exists(root):
raise Exception('Path does not exist: ' + root)
if os.path.isfile(root):
dirname, basename = os.path.split(root)
yield dirname, [], [basename]
else:
for path, dirnames, filenames in os.walk(root):
yield path, dirnames, filenames
def wget(self, url, download_path):
'''
Append extra KEY=val configs into the given config file.
I wissh we could have a progress indicator, but impossible:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/51212/how-to-write-a-download-progress-indicator-in-python
'''
self.print_cmd([
'wget', LF,
'-O', download_path, LF,
url, LF,
])
urllib.request.urlretrieve(url, download_path)
def write_configs(self, config_path, configs, config_fragments=None, mode='a'):
'''
Append extra KEY=val configs into the given config file.
'''
if config_fragments is None:
config_fragments = []
for config_fragment in config_fragments:
self.print_cmd(['cat', config_fragment, '>>', config_path])
if not self.dry_run:
with open(config_path, 'a') as config_file:
for config_fragment in config_fragments:
with open(config_fragment, 'r') as config_fragment_file:
for line in config_fragment_file:
config_file.write(line)
self.write_string_to_file(config_path, '\n'.join(configs), mode=mode)
def write_string_to_file(self, path, string, mode='w'):
if mode == 'a':
redirect = '>>'
else:
redirect = '>'
self.print_cmd("cat << 'EOF' {} {}\n{}\nEOF".format(redirect, path, string))
if not self.dry_run:
with open(path, mode) as f:
f.write(string)