Working editions, plus some blog entries.

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A minor bug in the Hy programming language has led me down a rabbit hole
of Python's internals, and I seem to have absorbed an awful lot of
Python's
[`import`](https://docs.python.org/2.7/reference/simple_stmts.html#import)
semantics. The main problem can best be described this way: In Python,
you call the import function with a string; that string gets translated
in some way into python code. So: what are the *exact* semantics of the
python `import` command?
Over the next couple of posts, I'll try to accurately describe what it
means when you write:
```
import alpha.beta.gamma
from alpha import beta
from alpha.beta import gamma
from .delta import epsilon
```
In each case, python is attempting to resolve the collection of dotted
names into a *module object*.
**module object**: A resource that is or can be compiled into a
meaningful Python *module*. This resource could a file on a filesystem,
a cell in a database, a remote web object, a stream of bytes in an
object store, some content object in a compressed archive, or anything
that can meaningfully be described as an array of bytes (Python 2) or
characters (Python 3). It could even be dynamically generated!
**module**: The organizational unit of Python code. A namespace
containing Python objects, including classes, functions, submodules, and
immediately invoked code. Modules themselves may be collected into
*packages*.
**package**: A python module which contains submodules or even
subpackages. The most common packaging scheme is a directory folder; in
this case the folder is a module if it contains an `__init__.py` file,
and it is a *package* if it contains other modules. The name of the
package is the folder name; the name of a submodule would be
`foldername.submodule`. This is called *regular packaging*. An
alternative method, which we will address later, is known as *namespace
packaging*.
Python has a baroque but generally flexible mechanism for defining how
the dotted name is turned into a *module object*, which it calls *module
finding*, and for how that *module object* is turned into a *code
object* within the current Python session, called *module loading*.
Python also has a means for *listing* modules. *Listing* is usually
done on a list of paths, using an appropriate means for accessing the
contents at the end of a path.
The technical definition of a *package* is a module with a `__path__`, a
list of paths that contain submodules for the package. Subpackages get
their own` __path__`. A package can therefore accomodate `.` and `..`
prefixes in submodules, indicating relative paths to sibling modules. A
package can also and to its own `__path__` collection to enable access
to submodules elsewhere.
--
The problem I am trying to solve:
Python *module listing* depends upon *finder* resolving a *path* to to a
container of modules, usually (but not necessarily) a *package*. The
very last finder is the default one: after all alternatives provided by
users have been exhausted, Python reverts to the default behavior of
analyzing the filesystem, as one would expect. The default finder is
hard-coded to use the Python builtin `imp.get_suffixes()` function,
which in turn hard-codes the extensions recognized by the importer.
If one wants to supply alternative syntaxes for Python and have
heterogenous packages (for examples, packages that contain some modules
ending in `.hy`, and others `.py`, side-by-side)... well, that's just
not possible.
Yet.
In the next post, I'll discuss Python's two different *finder*
resolution mechanisms, the *meta_path* and the *path_hook*, and how they
differ, and which one we'll need to instantiate to solve the problem of
heterogenous Python syntaxes. The actual solution will eventually
involve *eclipsing* Python's default source file handler with one that
enables us to define new source file extensions at run-time, recognize
the source file extensions, and supply the appropriate compilers for
them.
My hope is that, once solved, this will further enable the development
of Python alternative syntaxes. Folks bemoan the
[explosion of Javascript precompilers](https://github.com/jashkenas/coffeescript/wiki/list-of-languages-that-compile-to-js),
but the truth is that it has in part led to a revival in industrial
programming languages and a renaissance in programming language
development in general.

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In the last post, I introduced the concepts of the **module object**,
**module**, and **package**, concrete objects that exist within the
Python runtime, as well as some basic ideas about packaging, finding,
and loading.
In this post, I'll go over the process of *finding*, what it means to
*find* something, and what happens next.
## A Clarifying point
I've been very careful to talk about *finding* vs. *loading*
vs. *listing* in this series of posts. There's a reason for that: in
Python 2, the terms "Finder" and "Importer" were used interchangeably,
leading to (at least on my part) massive confusion. In actual fact,
finders, hooks, loaders, and listers are all individual objects, each
with a single, unique method with a specific signature. The method name
is different for each stage, so it is theoretically possible to define a
single class that does all three for a given category of *module
object*, and only in that case, I believe, should we talk about an
"Importer."
In Python 2.6 and 2.7, the definitive Finder class is called
`pkgutil.ImpImporter`, and the Loader is called `pkgutil.ImpLoader`;
this was a source of much of my confusion. In Python 3, the term
"Importer" is deprecated and "Finder" is used throughout `importlib`. I
will be using "Finder" from now on.
## Finding
When the 'import <fullname>' command is called, a procedure is
triggered. That procedure then:
* attempts to *find* a corresponding python *module*
* attempts to *load* that corresponding module into *bytecode*
* Associates the bytecode with the name via sys.modules[fullname]
* Exposes the bytecode to the calling scope.
* Optionally: writes the bytecode to the filesystem for future use
*Finding* is the act of identifying a resource that corresponds to the
import string that can be compiled into a meaningful Python module. The
import string is typically called the *fullname*.
*Finding* typically involves scanning a collection of *resources*
against a collection of *finders*. *Finding* ends when *finder `A`*,
given *fullname `B`*, reports that a corresponding module can be found
in *resource `C`*, and that the resource can be loaded with *loader
`D`*."
### MetaFinders
*Finders* come first, and *MetaFinders* come before all other kinds of
finders.
_Most finding is done in the context of `sys.path`_; that is, Python's
primary means of organizing Python modules is to have them somewhere on
the local filesystem. This makes sense. Sometimes, however, you want
to get in front of that scan and impose your own logic: you want the
root of an import string to mean something else. Maybe instead of
`directory.file`, you want it to mean `table.row.cell`, or you want it
to mean `website.path,object`, to take
[one terrifying example](http://blog.dowski.com/2008/07/31/customizing-the-python-import-system/).
That's what you do with a MetaFinder: A MetaFinder may choose to ignore
the entire sys.path mechanism and do something that has nothing to do
with the filesystem, or it may have its own take on what to do with
`sys.path`.
A Finder is any object with the following method:
```
[Loader|None] find_module([self|cls], fullname:string, path:[string|None])
```
The find_module method returns None if it cannot find a loader resource
for fullname & path.
A MetaFinder is placed into the list `sys.meta_path` by whatever code
needs the MetaFinder, and it persists for the duration of the runtime,
unless it is later removed or replaced. Being a list, the search is
ordered; first match wins. MetaFinders may be instantiated in any way
the developer desires before being added into `sys.meta_path`.
### PathHooks and PathFinders
*PathHooks* are how `sys.path` is scanned to determine the which Finder
should be associated with a given directory path.
A PathHook is a function (or callable):
```
[Finder|None] <anonymous function>(path:string)
```
A *PathHook* takes a given directory path and, if the PathHook can
identify a corresponding FileFinder for the modules in that directory
path and return a constructed instance of that FileFinder, otherwise it
returns None.
If no `sys.meta_path` finder returns a loader, the full array of
`sys.paths sys.path_hooks` is compared until a PathHook says it can
handle the path _and_ the corresponding finder says it can handle the
fullname. If no match happens, Python's default FileFinder class is
instantiated with the path.
This means that for each path in `sys.paths`, the list of
`sys.path_hooks` is scanned; the first function to return an importer is
handed responsibility for that path; if no function returns, the default
FileFinder is returned; the default FileFinder returns only the default
SourceFileLoader which (if you read to the end of
[part one](http://elfsternberg.com)) blocks our path toward
heterogeneous packages.
PathHooks are placed into the list `sys.path_hooks`; like
`sys.meta_path`, the list is ordered and first one wins.
### The Takeaway
There's some confusion over the difference between the two objects, so
let's clarify one last time.
<em class="pointer"></em> Use a **meta_finder** (A Finder in
`sys.meta_path`) when you want to redefine the meaning of the import
string so it can search alternative paths that may have no reference to
a filesystem path found in `sys.path`; an import string could be
redefined as a location in an archive, an RDF triple of
document/tag/content, or table/row_id/cell, or be interpreted as a URL
to a remote resource.
<em class="pointer"></em> Use a **path_hook** (A function in
`sys.path_hooks` that returns a FileFinder) when you want to
re-interpret the meaning of an import string that refers to a module
object on or accessible by `sys.path`; PathHooks are important when you
want to add directories to sys.path that contain something _other than_
`.py`, `.pyc/.pyo`, and `.so` modules conforming to the Python ABI.
<em class="pointer"></em> A *MetaFinder* is typically constructed when
it is added to `sys.meta_path`; a *PathHook* instantiates a *FileFinder*
when the PathHook function lays claim to the path. The developer
instantiates a MetaFinder before adding it to `sys.meta_path`; it's the
PathHook function that instantiates a FileFinder.
## Next
Note that PathHooks are for paths containing something _other than_ the
traditional (and hard-coded) source file extensions. The purpose of a
heterogeneous source file finder and loader is to enable finding in
directories within `sys.path` that contain other source files syntaxes
_alongside_ those traditional sources. I need to *eclipse* (that is,
get in front of) the default FileFinder with one that understands more
suffixes than those listed in either `imp.get_suffixes()` (Python 2) or
`importlib._bootstrap.SOURCE_SUFFIXES` (Python 3). I need one that will
return the Python default loader if it encounters the Python default
suffixes, but will invoke *our own* source file loader when encountering
one of our suffixes.
We'll talk about loading next.

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<p>Python IMPORT</p>
<p>What is the <em>exact</em> syntax of the python <code>import</code> command?</p>
<p>Clarifying terminology</p>
<p>The language used for describing the import mechanism is confusing, often horribly so. Let's go with some clarification first.</p>
<p>When the 'import <fullname>' command is called, a procedure is triggered. That procedure then:</p>
<ul>
<li>attempts to <em>find</em> a corresponding python <em>module</em></li>
<li>attempts to <em>load</em> that corresponding module into <em>bytecode</em></li>
<li>Associates the bytecode with the name via sys.modules[fullname]</li>
<li>Exposes the bytecode to the calling scope.</li>
</ul>
<p>Only the first three matter for our purposes.</p>
<h2 id="finding">FINDING</h2>
<p><em>Finding</em> is the act of identifying the a resource that can be compiled into a meaningful Python module. This resource could a file on a filesystem, a cell in a database, a remote web object, a stream of bytes in an object store, some content object in a compressed archive, or anything that can meaningfully be said described as an array of bytes. It could even be dynamically generated in some way.</p>
<p><em>Finding</em> typically involves scanning a collection of <em>resources</em> against a collection of <em>finders</em>. <em>Finding</em> ends when &quot;<em>finder <strong>A</strong></em>, given <em>fullname <strong>B</strong></em>, reports that a corresponding module can be found in <em>resource <strong>C</strong></em>, and that the resource can be loaded with <em>loader <strong>D</strong></em>.&quot;</p>
<h3 id="metafinders">METAFINDERS</h3>
<p><em>Finders</em> come first, and <em>MetaFinders</em> come before all other kinds of finders.</p>
<p><em>Most finding is done in the context of <code>sys.path</code></em>; that is, Python's primary means of organizing Python modules is to have them somewhere on the local filesystem. Sometimes, however, you want to get in front of that scan. That's what you do with a MetaFinder: A MetaFinder may have its own take on what to do with <code>sys.path</code>; it may choose to ignore <code>sys.path</code> entirely and do something with the import <em>fullname</em> that has nothing to do with the local filesystem.</p>
<p>A Finder is any object with the following function: [Loader|None] find_module([self|cls], fullname:string, path:[string|None])</p>
<p>If find_module returns None if it cannot find a loader resource for fullname &amp; path.</p>
<p>MetaFinders are placed into the list <code>sys.meta_path</code> by whatever code needs a MetaFinder, and persist for the duration of the runtime provided they're not removed or replaced. Being a list, the search is ordered and first one wins. MetaFinders may be instantiated in any way the developer desires.</p>
<h3 id="path_hook">PATH_HOOK</h3>
<p><em>PathHooks</em> are how <code>sys.path</code> is scanned to determine the which Finder should be associated with a given directory path.</p>
<p>A <em>PathHook</em> is a function: [Finder|None] <anonymous function>(path:string)</p>
<p>A <em>PathHook</em> is a function that takes a given directory path and, if the PathHook can identify a corresponding Finder for the modules in that directory path, returns the Finder, otherwise it returns None.</p>
<p>If no <code>sys.meta_path</code> finder returns a loader, the full array of <code>sys.paths sys.path_hooks</code> is compared until a path_hook says it can handle the path and the corresponding finder says it can handle the fullname. If no match happens, Python's default import behavior is triggered.</p>
<p>PathHooks are placed into the list <code>sys.path_hooks</code>; like <code>sys.meta_path</code>, the list is ordered and first one wins.</p>
<h3 id="loader">LOADER</h3>
<p><em>Loaders</em> are returned by <em>Finders</em>, and are constructed by Finders with whatever resources the developer specifies the Finder has and can provide.</p>
<p>a collection of <em>finders</em> the <em>fullname</em> (the dot-separated string passed to the <code>import</code> function).</p>
<p>to find a corresponding python module, which is then compiled into Python bytecode and incorporated into the python runtime, where it will be accessible to the importing function or modules</p>
<p>MetaFinder: A python object with a single method:</p>
<pre><code>(Loader|None) find_module(self, fullname:string, path:(string|None))</code></pre>
<p>Python 2.7</p>
<p>iter_modules (iter_importers) -&gt; calls iter_importer_modules for each importer in iter_importers</p>
<p>iter_importers (meta_path, get_importer) -&gt; returns every importer in sys.meta_path + map(get_importer, sys.path)</p>
<p>get_importer(path):</p>
<pre><code>returns a filtered list of sys.path_hooks for importers that can
handle this path; if there is no match, returns ImpImporter(),
which supplies a module iterator (ImpImporter.iter_modules) that
relies on getmodulename.
* A path_hook is a function of (path -&gt; Maybe importer)</code></pre>
<p>iter_modules(path, get_importer, prefix) -&gt; calls iter_importer_modules for each importer returned by path.map(get_importer)</p>
<p>iter_importer_modules(importer) -&gt; returns list of (filename, ispkg) for each module understood by the importer * The method called depends on the class of the importer * The default is a generic call for &quot;no specific importer&quot; * For FILES, iter_import_modules returns a list of files whose extensions match those in imp.get_suffixes(), which is hard- coded into the interpreter. * MEANING: Unless your importer can handle heterogenous module suffixes, SourceFiles.iter_importer_modules can only find homogeonous modules.</p>
<p>This relationship issue holds for Python 2.6 as well.</p>
<p>Python 3.3</p>
<pre><code>The same issue holds, although now most of the extensions have been
moved to importlib._bootstrap.</code></pre>
<p>It is the relationship between importlib.machinery.FileFinder and <em>iter</em>file_finder_modules</p>
<p>That's killing us.</p>

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# Python IMPORT
What is the *exact* syntax of the python `import` command? What does it
mean when you write:
```
import alpha.beta.gamma
from alpha import beta
from alpha.beta import gamma
from .delta import epsilon
```
In each case, python is attempting to resolve the collection of dotted
names into a *module object*.
**module object**: A resource that is or can be compiled into a
meaningful Python *module*. This resource could a file on a filesystem,
a cell in a database, a remote web object, a stream of bytes in an
object store, some content object in a compressed archive, or anything
that can meaningfully be said described as an array of bytes. It could
even be dynamically generated!
**module**: The organizational unit of Python code. A namespace
containing Python objects, including classes, functions, submodules, and
immediately invoked code. Modules themselves may be collected into
*packages*.
**package**: A python module which contains submodules or even
subpackages. The most common packaging scheme is a directory folder; in
this case the folder is a module if it contains an `__init__.py` file,
and it is a *package* if it contains other modules. The name of the
package is the folder name; the name of a submodule would be
`foldername.submodule`. This is called *regular packaging*. An
alternative method is known as *namespace packaging*.
Python has a baroque but generally flexible mechanism for defining how
the dotted name is turned into a *module object*, which it calls *module
finding*, and for how that *module object* is turned into a *code
object* within the current Python session, called *module loading*.
Python also has a means for *listing* modules. *Listing* is usually
done on a list of paths, using an appropriate means for accessing the
contents at the end of a path.
The technical definition of a *package* is a module with a `__path__`, a
list of paths that contain submodules for the package. Subpackages get
their own` __path__`. A package can therefore accomodate `.` and `..`
prefixes in submodules, indicating relative paths to sibling modules. A
package can also and to its own `__path__` collection to enable access
to submodules elsewhere.
# Clarifying terminology
The language used for describing the import mechanism is confusing,
often horribly so. Let's go with some clarification first.
When the 'import <fullname>' command is called, a procedure is
triggered. That procedure then:
* attempts to *find* a corresponding python *module*
* attempts to *load* that corresponding module into *bytecode*
* Associates the bytecode with the name via sys.modules[fullname]
* Exposes the bytecode to the calling scope.
Only the first three matter for our purposes.
## FINDING
*Finding* is the act of identifying a resource that corresponds to the
import string and can be compiled into a meaningful Python module. The
import string is typically called the *fullname*.
*Finding* typically involves scanning a collection of *resources*
against a collection of *finders*. *Finding* ends when *finder `A`*,
given *fullname `B`*, reports that a corresponding module can be found
in *resource `C`*, and that the resource can be loaded with *loader
`D`*."
### METAFINDERS
*Finders* come first, and *MetaFinders* come before all other kinds of
finders.
_Most finding is done in the context of `sys.path`_; that is, Python's
primary means of organizing Python modules is to have them somewhere on
the local filesystem, which makes sense. Sometimes, however, you want
to get in front of that scan. That's what you do with a MetaFinder: A
MetaFinder may have its own take on what to do with `sys.path`; it may
choose to ignore `sys.path` entirely and do something with the import
*fullname* that has nothing to do with the local filesystem.
A Finder is any object with the following function:
[Loader|None] find_module([self|cls], fullname:string, path:[string|None])
If find_module returns None if it cannot find a loader resource for
fullname & path.
A MetaFinder is placed into the list `sys.meta_path` by whatever code
needs the MetaFinder, and it persists for the duration of the runtime,
unless it is later removed or replaced. Being a list, the search is
ordered; first match wins. MetaFinders may be instantiated in any way
the developer desires before being added into `sys.meta_path`.
### PATH_HOOK
*PathHooks* are how `sys.path` is scanned to determine the which Finder
should be associated with a given directory path.
A *PathHook* is a function:
[Finder|None] <anonymous function>(path:string)
A *PathHook* is a function that takes a given directory path and, if the
PathHook can identify a corresponding Finder for the modules in that
directory path, returns the Finder, otherwise it returns None.
If no `sys.meta_path` finder returns a loader, the full array of
`sys.paths sys.path_hooks` is compared until a PathHook says it can
handle the path and the corresponding finder says it can handle the
fullname. If no match happens, Python's default import behavior is
triggered.
PathHooks are placed into the list `sys.path_hooks`; like
`sys.meta_path`, the list is ordered and first one wins.
### LOADER
*Loaders* are returned by *Finders*, and are constructed by Finders with
whatever resources the developer specifies the Finder has and can
provide. The Loader is responsible for pulling the content of the
*module object* into Python's memory and processing it into a *module*,
whether by calling Python's `eval()/compile()` functions on standard
Python code, or by some other means.
a collection of *finders* the *fullname* (the dot-separated string passed to the `import`
function).
to find a
corresponding python module, which is then compiled into Python bytecode
and incorporated into the python runtime, where it will be accessible to
the importing function or modules
MetaFinder: A python object with a single method:
(Loader|None) find_module(self, fullname:string, path:(string|None))
Python 2.7
iter_modules (iter_importers) ->
calls iter_importer_modules for each importer in iter_importers
iter_importers (meta_path, get_importer) ->
returns every importer in sys.meta_path + map(get_importer, sys.path)
get_importer(path):
returns a filtered list of sys.path_hooks for importers that can
handle this path; if there is no match, returns ImpImporter(),
which supplies a module iterator (ImpImporter.iter_modules) that
relies on getmodulename.
* A path_hook is a function of (path -> Maybe importer)
iter_modules(path, get_importer, prefix) ->
calls iter_importer_modules for each importer returned by path.map(get_importer)
iter_importer_modules(importer) ->
returns list of (filename, ispkg) for each module understood by the importer
* The method called depends on the class of the importer
* The default is a generic call for "no specific importer"
* For FILES, iter_import_modules returns a list of files whose
extensions match those in imp.get_suffixes(), which is hard-
coded into the interpreter.
* MEANING: Unless your importer can handle heterogenous module
suffixes, SourceFiles.iter_importer_modules can only find
homogeonous modules.
This relationship issue holds for Python 2.6 as well.
Python 3.3
The same issue holds, although now most of the extensions have been
moved to importlib._bootstrap.
It is the relationship between
importlib.machinery.FileFinder
and
_iter_file_finder_modules
That's killing us.
---
So the ONLY thing I have to do, according to Python, is assert that
there's a dir/__init__.suff and attempt to load it! If I do that, I can
make it work?
No: The search for __init__.suff is only the first
---
test_import: test_with_extension "py" and "my"
test_execute_bit_not_set (on Posix system, .pyc files got their
executable bit set if the .py file had it set; it looks as if Python
just copied the permissions, if it had permission to do so. We should
follow the example of 2.7 & 3.4, and NOT set +x if we can help it).
test_rewrite_pyc_with_read_only_source (on Posix systems, if the .py
file had read-only set, the .pyc file would too, making updates
problematic).
test_import_name_binding
test_bug7732 (attempt to import a '.my' file that's not a file)
These are more Hy-related:
test_module_with_large_stack (see python example)
test_failing_import_sticks
test_failing_reload

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Clarifying terminology
The language used for describing the import mechanism is confusing,
often horribly so. Let's go with some clarification first.
When the 'import <fullname>' command is called, a procedure is
triggered. That procedure then:
* attempts to *find* a corresponding python *module*
* attempts to *load* that corresponding module into *bytecode*
* Associates the bytecode with the name via sys.modules[fullname]
* Exposes the bytecode to the calling scope.
Only the first three matter for our purposes.
## FINDING
*Finding* is the act of identifying the a resource that can be compiled
into a meaningful Python module. This resource could a file on a
filesystem, a cell in a database, a remote web object, a stream of bytes
in an object store, some content object in a compressed archive, or
anything that can meaningfully be said described as an array of bytes.
It could even be dynamically generated in some way.
*Finding* typically involves scanning a collection of *resources*
against a collection of *finders*. *Finding* ends when "*finder __A__*,
given *fullname __B__*, reports that a corresponding module can be found
in *resource __C__*, and that the resource can be loaded with *loader
__D__*."
### METAFINDERS
*Finders* come first, and *MetaFinders* come before all other kinds of
finders.
_Most finding is done in the context of `sys.path`_; that is, Python's
primary means of organizing Python modules is to have them somewhere on
the local filesystem. Sometimes, however, you want to get in front of
that scan. That's what you do with a MetaFinder: A MetaFinder may have
its own take on what to do with `sys.path`; it may choose to ignore
`sys.path` entirely and do something with the import *fullname* that has
nothing to do with the local filesystem.
A Finder is any object with the following function:
[Loader|None] find_module([self|cls], fullname:string, path:[string|None])
If find_module returns None if it cannot find a loader resource for
fullname & path.
MetaFinders are placed into the list `sys.meta_path` by whatever code
needs a MetaFinder, and persist for the duration of the runtime provided
they're not removed or replaced. Being a list, the search is ordered
and first one wins. MetaFinders may be instantiated in any way the
developer desires.
### PATH_HOOK
*PathHooks* are how `sys.path` is scanned to determine the
which Finder should be associated with a given directory path.
A *PathHook* is a function:
[Finder|None] <anonymous function>(path:string)
A *PathHook* is a function that takes a given directory path and, if the
PathHook can identify a corresponding Finder for the modules in that
directory path, returns the Finder, otherwise it returns None.
If no `sys.meta_path` finder returns a loader, the full array of
`sys.paths sys.path_hooks` is compared until a path_hook says it can
handle the path and the corresponding finder says it can handle the
fullname. If no match happens, Python's default import behavior is
triggered.
PathHooks are placed into the list `sys.path_hooks`; like
`sys.meta_path`, the list is ordered and first one wins.
### LOADER
*Loaders* are returned by *Finders*, and are constructed by Finders with
whatever resources the developer specifies the Finder has and can
provide.
a collection of *finders* the *fullname* (the dot-separated string passed to the `import`
function).
to find a
corresponding python module, which is then compiled into Python bytecode
and incorporated into the python runtime, where it will be accessible to
the importing function or modules
MetaFinder: A python object with a single method:
(Loader|None) find_module(self, fullname:string, path:(string|None))
Python 2.7
iter_modules (iter_importers) ->

View File

@ -1,104 +1,167 @@
import io
import os
import os.path
import stat
import sys
import imp
import pkgutil
class PolyLoader(pkgutil.ImpLoader):
class PolyLoader():
_loader_handlers = []
_installed = False
def is_package(self, fullname):
dirpath = "/".join(fullname.split("."))
for pth in sys.path:
pth = os.path.abspath(pth)
for (compiler, suffix) in self._loader_handlers:
composed_path = "%s/%s/__init__.%s" % (pth, dirpath, suffix)
if os.path.exists(composed_path):
return True
return False
def __init__(self, fullname, path, is_pkg):
self.fullname = fullname
self.path = path
self.is_package = is_pkg
@classmethod
def _install(cls, compiler, suffixes):
if isinstance(suffixes, basestring):
suffixes = [suffixes]
suffixes = set(suffixes)
overlap = suffixes.intersection(set([suf[0] for suf in imp.get_suffixes()]))
if overlap:
raise RuntimeError("Override of native Python extensions is not permitted.")
overlap = suffixes.intersection(
set([suffix for (compiler, suffix) in cls._loader_handlers]))
if overlap:
raise RuntimeWarning(
"Insertion of %s overrides already installed compiler." %
', '.join(list(overlap)))
cls._loader_handlers += [(compiler, suf) for suf in suffixes]
def load_module(self, fullname):
if fullname in sys.modules:
return sys.modules[fullname]
if fullname != self.fullname:
raise ImportError("Load confusion: %s vs %s." % (fullname, self.fullname))
matches = [(compiler, suffix) for (compiler, suffix) in self._loader_handlers
if path.endswith(suffix)]
if self.path.endswith(suffix)]
if matches.length == 0:
raise ImportError("%s is not a recognized module?" % name)
raise ImportError("%s is not a recognized module?" % fullname)
if matches.length > 1:
raise ImportError("Multiple possible resolutions for %s: %s" % (
name, ', '.join([suffix for (compiler, suffix) in matches])))
fullname, ', '.join([suffix for (compiler, suffix) in matches])))
compiler = matches[0]
module = compiler(name, path)
module.__file__ = self.filename
module.__name__ = self.fullname
with io.FileIO(self.path, 'r') as file:
source_text = file.read()
if self.is_package(fullname):
module.__path__ = self.path_entry
module = compiler(source_text, fullname, self.path)
module.__file__ = self.path
module.__name__ = self.fullname
module.__package__ = '.'.join(fullname.split('.')[:-1])
if self.is_package:
module.__path__ = [os.path.dirname(self.path)]
module.__package__ = fullname
else:
module.__package__ = '.'.join(fullname.split('.')[:-1])
sys.modules[fullname] = module
return module
# Problem to be solved: pkgutil.iter_modules depends upon
# get_importer, which requires that we uses path_hooks, not meta_path.
# This is acceptable (see: https://pymotw.com/2/sys/imports.html), but
# then it depends upon the inspect get_modulename, which in turn is
# dependent upon the __builtin__.imp.get_suffixes(), which excludes
# anything other than the builtin-recognizes suffixes. The
# arrangement, as of Python 2.7, excludes heterogenous packages from
# being locatable by pkgutil.iter_modules.
#
# iter_modules use of the simplegeneric protocol makes things even
# harder, as the order in which finders are loaded is not available at
# runtime.
#
# Possible solutions: We provide our own pkgutils, which in turn hacks
# the iter_modules; or we provide our own finder and ensure it gets
# found before the native one.
# PolyFinder is an implementation of the Finder class from Python 2.7,
# with embellishments gleefully copied from Python 3.4. It supports
# all the same functionality for non-.py sourcefiles with the added
# benefit of falling back to Python's default behavior.
# Why the heck python 2.6 insists on calling finders "importers" is
# beyond me. At least in calls loaders "loaders".
# Polyfinder is instantiated by _polyloader_pathhook()
class PolyFinder(object):
def __init__(self, path = None):
self.path = path
def __init__(self, path=None):
self.path = path or '.'
def _pl_find_on_path(self, fullname, path=None):
subname = fullname.split(".")[-1]
if subname != fullname and self.path is None:
splitname = fullname.split(".")
if self.path is None and splitname[-1] != fullname:
return None
# As in the original, we ignore the 'path' argument
path = None
if self.path is not None:
path = [os.path.realpath(self.path)]
fls = ["%s/__init__.%s", "%s.%s"]
for fp in fls:
dirpath = "/".join(splitname)
path = [os.path.realpath(self.path)]
fls = [("%s/__init__.%s", True), ("%s.%s", False)]
for (fp, ispkg) in fls:
for (compiler, suffix) in PolyLoader._loader_handlers:
composed_path = fp % ("%s/%s" % (pth, dirpath), suffix)
if os.path.exists(composed_path):
return PolyLoader(composed_path)
composed_path = fp % ("%s/%s" % (path, dirpath), suffix)
if os.path.isfile(composed_path):
return PolyLoader(fullname, composed_path, ispkg)
# Fall back onto Python's own methods.
try:
file, filename, etc = imp.find_module(subname, path)
file, filename, etc = imp.find_module(fullname, path)
except ImportError:
return None
return ImpLoader(fullname, file, filename, etc)
return pkgutil.ImpLoader(fullname, file, filename, etc)
def find_module(self, fullname, path=None):
path = self._pl_find_on_path(fullname)
if path:
return PolyLoader(path)
return None
return self._pl_find_on_path(fullname)
def _install(compiler, suffixes):
@staticmethod
def getmodulename(path):
filename = os.path.basename(path)
suffixes = ([(-len(suf[0]), suf[0]) for suf in imp.get_suffixes()] +
[(-len(suf[1]), suf[1]) for suf in PolyLoader.loader_handlers])
suffixes.sort()
for neglen, suffix in suffixes:
if filename[neglen:] == suffix:
return (filename[:neglen], suffix)
def iter_modules(self, prefix=''):
if self.path is None or not os.path.isdir(self.path):
return
yielded = {}
try:
filenames = os.listdir(self.path)
except OSError:
# ignore unreadable directories like import does
filenames = []
filenames.sort()
for fn in filenames:
modname = self.getmodulename(fn)
if modname=='__init__' or modname in yielded:
continue
path = os.path.join(self.path, fn)
ispkg = False
if not modname and os.path.isdir(path) and '.' not in fn:
modname = fn
try:
dircontents = os.listdir(path)
except OSError:
# ignore unreadable directories like import does
dircontents = []
for fn in dircontents:
subname = self.getmodulename(fn)
if subname=='__init__':
ispkg = True
break
else:
continue # not a package
if modname and '.' not in modname:
yielded[modname] = 1
yield prefix + modname, ispkg
def _polyloader_pathhook(path):
if not os.path.isdir(path):
raise ImportError('Only directories are supported', path = path)
return PolyFinder(path)
def install(compiler, suffixes):
if not PolyLoader._installed:
sys.path_hooks.append(_polyloader_pathhook)
PolyLoader._installed = True
PolyLoader._install(compiler, suffixes)
sys.meta_path.insert(0, MetaImporter())
iter_importer_modules.register(MetaImporter, meta_iterate_modules)

View File

@ -17,9 +17,8 @@ from polyloader import polyloader
# correct compiler has been found for a given extension.
def compiler(pt):
def _compiler(source_path, modulename):
with open(source_path, "r") as file:
return compile("result='Success for %s: %s'" % (pt, file.readline().rstrip()), modulename, "exec")
def _compiler(source_text, modulename):
return compile("result='Success for %s: %s'" % (pt, source_text.rstrip()), modulename, "exec")
return _compiler
class Test_Polymorph_1(object):