Skip to content
Projects
Groups
Snippets
Help
Loading...
Help
Support
Keyboard shortcuts
?
Submit feedback
Contribute to GitLab
Sign in / Register
Toggle navigation
Z
Zope
Project overview
Project overview
Details
Activity
Releases
Repository
Repository
Files
Commits
Branches
Tags
Contributors
Graph
Compare
Issues
0
Issues
0
List
Boards
Labels
Milestones
Merge Requests
0
Merge Requests
0
Analytics
Analytics
Repository
Value Stream
Wiki
Wiki
Snippets
Snippets
Members
Members
Collapse sidebar
Close sidebar
Activity
Graph
Create a new issue
Commits
Issue Boards
Open sidebar
Kirill Smelkov
Zope
Commits
0563a645
Commit
0563a645
authored
Apr 07, 2001
by
Jim Fulton
Browse files
Options
Browse Files
Download
Email Patches
Plain Diff
No need to use standard version
parent
8c88a016
Changes
2
Hide whitespace changes
Inline
Side-by-side
Showing
2 changed files
with
0 additions
and
630 deletions
+0
-630
ZServer/async1x/asynchat.py
ZServer/async1x/asynchat.py
+0
-315
lib/python/ZServer/async1x/asynchat.py
lib/python/ZServer/async1x/asynchat.py
+0
-315
No files found.
ZServer/async1x/asynchat.py
deleted
100644 → 0
View file @
8c88a016
# -*- Mode: Python; tab-width: 4 -*-
# $Id: asynchat.py,v 1.1 2001/04/05 23:38:16 jim Exp $
# Author: Sam Rushing <rushing@nightmare.com>
# ======================================================================
# Copyright 1996 by Sam Rushing
#
# All Rights Reserved
#
# Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and
# its documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby
# granted, provided that the above copyright notice appear in all
# copies and that both that copyright notice and this permission
# notice appear in supporting documentation, and that the name of Sam
# Rushing not be used in advertising or publicity pertaining to
# distribution of the software without specific, written prior
# permission.
#
# SAM RUSHING DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE,
# INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS, IN
# NO EVENT SHALL SAM RUSHING BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT OR
# CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS
# OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT,
# NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN
# CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
# ======================================================================
import
socket
import
asyncore
import
string
# This class adds support for 'chat' style protocols - where one side
# sends a 'command', and the other sends a response (examples would be
# the common internet protocols - smtp, nntp, ftp, etc..).
# The handle_read() method looks at the input stream for the current
# 'terminator' (usually '\r\n' for single-line responses, '\r\n.\r\n'
# for multi-line output), calling self.found_terminator() on its
# receipt.
# for example:
# Say you build an async nntp client using this class. At the start
# of the connection, you'll have self.terminator set to '\r\n', in
# order to process the single-line greeting. Just before issuing a
# 'LIST' command you'll set it to '\r\n.\r\n'. The output of the LIST
# command will be accumulated (using your own 'collect_incoming_data'
# method) up to the terminator, and then control will be returned to
# you - by calling your self.found_terminator() method
class
async_chat
(
asyncore
.
dispatcher
):
"""This is an abstract class. You must derive from this class, and add
the two methods collect_incoming_data() and found_terminator()"""
# these are overridable defaults
ac_in_buffer_size
=
4096
ac_out_buffer_size
=
4096
def
__init__
(
self
,
conn
=
None
):
self
.
ac_in_buffer
=
''
self
.
ac_out_buffer
=
''
self
.
producer_fifo
=
fifo
()
asyncore
.
dispatcher
.
__init__
(
self
,
conn
)
def
set_terminator
(
self
,
term
):
"Set the input delimiter. Can be a fixed string of any length, an integer, or None"
self
.
terminator
=
term
def
get_terminator
(
self
):
return
self
.
terminator
# grab some more data from the socket,
# throw it to the collector method,
# check for the terminator,
# if found, transition to the next state.
def
handle_read
(
self
):
try
:
data
=
self
.
recv
(
self
.
ac_in_buffer_size
)
except
socket
.
error
,
why
:
self
.
handle_error
()
return
self
.
ac_in_buffer
=
self
.
ac_in_buffer
+
data
# Continue to search for self.terminator in self.ac_in_buffer,
# while calling self.collect_incoming_data. The while loop
# is necessary because we might read several data+terminator
# combos with a single recv(1024).
while
self
.
ac_in_buffer
:
lb
=
len
(
self
.
ac_in_buffer
)
terminator
=
self
.
get_terminator
()
if
terminator
is
None
:
# no terminator, collect it all
self
.
collect_incoming_data
(
self
.
ac_in_buffer
)
self
.
ac_in_buffer
=
''
elif
type
(
terminator
)
==
type
(
0
):
# numeric terminator
n
=
terminator
if
lb
<
n
:
self
.
collect_incoming_data
(
self
.
ac_in_buffer
)
self
.
ac_in_buffer
=
''
self
.
terminator
=
self
.
terminator
-
lb
else
:
self
.
collect_incoming_data
(
self
.
ac_in_buffer
[:
n
])
self
.
ac_in_buffer
=
self
.
ac_in_buffer
[
n
:]
self
.
terminator
=
0
self
.
found_terminator
()
else
:
# 3 cases:
# 1) end of buffer matches terminator exactly:
# collect data, transition
# 2) end of buffer matches some prefix:
# collect data to the prefix
# 3) end of buffer does not match any prefix:
# collect data
terminator_len
=
len
(
terminator
)
index
=
string
.
find
(
self
.
ac_in_buffer
,
terminator
)
if
index
!=
-
1
:
# we found the terminator
if
index
>
0
:
# don't bother reporting the empty string (source of subtle bugs)
self
.
collect_incoming_data
(
self
.
ac_in_buffer
[:
index
])
self
.
ac_in_buffer
=
self
.
ac_in_buffer
[
index
+
terminator_len
:]
# This does the Right Thing if the terminator is changed here.
self
.
found_terminator
()
else
:
# check for a prefix of the terminator
index
=
find_prefix_at_end
(
self
.
ac_in_buffer
,
terminator
)
if
index
:
if
index
!=
lb
:
# we found a prefix, collect up to the prefix
self
.
collect_incoming_data
(
self
.
ac_in_buffer
[:
-
index
])
self
.
ac_in_buffer
=
self
.
ac_in_buffer
[
-
index
:]
break
else
:
# no prefix, collect it all
self
.
collect_incoming_data
(
self
.
ac_in_buffer
)
self
.
ac_in_buffer
=
''
def
handle_write
(
self
):
self
.
initiate_send
()
def
handle_close
(
self
):
self
.
close
()
def
push
(
self
,
data
):
self
.
producer_fifo
.
push
(
simple_producer
(
data
))
self
.
initiate_send
()
def
push_with_producer
(
self
,
producer
):
self
.
producer_fifo
.
push
(
producer
)
self
.
initiate_send
()
def
readable
(
self
):
"predicate for inclusion in the readable for select()"
return
(
len
(
self
.
ac_in_buffer
)
<=
self
.
ac_in_buffer_size
)
def
writable
(
self
):
"predicate for inclusion in the writable for select()"
# return len(self.ac_out_buffer) or len(self.producer_fifo) or (not self.connected)
# this is about twice as fast, though not as clear.
return
not
(
(
self
.
ac_out_buffer
is
''
)
and
self
.
producer_fifo
.
is_empty
()
and
self
.
connected
)
def
close_when_done
(
self
):
"automatically close this channel once the outgoing queue is empty"
self
.
producer_fifo
.
push
(
None
)
# refill the outgoing buffer by calling the more() method
# of the first producer in the queue
def
refill_buffer
(
self
):
_string_type
=
type
(
''
)
while
1
:
if
len
(
self
.
producer_fifo
):
p
=
self
.
producer_fifo
.
first
()
# a 'None' in the producer fifo is a sentinel,
# telling us to close the channel.
if
p
is
None
:
if
not
self
.
ac_out_buffer
:
self
.
producer_fifo
.
pop
()
self
.
close
()
return
elif
type
(
p
)
is
_string_type
:
self
.
producer_fifo
.
pop
()
self
.
ac_out_buffer
=
self
.
ac_out_buffer
+
p
return
data
=
p
.
more
()
if
data
:
self
.
ac_out_buffer
=
self
.
ac_out_buffer
+
data
return
else
:
self
.
producer_fifo
.
pop
()
else
:
return
def
initiate_send
(
self
):
obs
=
self
.
ac_out_buffer_size
# try to refill the buffer
if
(
len
(
self
.
ac_out_buffer
)
<
obs
):
self
.
refill_buffer
()
if
self
.
ac_out_buffer
and
self
.
connected
:
# try to send the buffer
try
:
num_sent
=
self
.
send
(
self
.
ac_out_buffer
[:
obs
])
if
num_sent
:
self
.
ac_out_buffer
=
self
.
ac_out_buffer
[
num_sent
:]
except
socket
.
error
,
why
:
self
.
handle_error
()
return
def
discard_buffers
(
self
):
# Emergencies only!
self
.
ac_in_buffer
=
''
self
.
ac_out_buffer
=
''
while
self
.
producer_fifo
:
self
.
producer_fifo
.
pop
()
class
simple_producer
:
def
__init__
(
self
,
data
,
buffer_size
=
512
):
self
.
data
=
data
self
.
buffer_size
=
buffer_size
def
more
(
self
):
if
len
(
self
.
data
)
>
self
.
buffer_size
:
result
=
self
.
data
[:
self
.
buffer_size
]
self
.
data
=
self
.
data
[
self
.
buffer_size
:]
return
result
else
:
result
=
self
.
data
self
.
data
=
''
return
result
class
fifo
:
def
__init__
(
self
,
list
=
None
):
if
not
list
:
self
.
list
=
[]
else
:
self
.
list
=
list
def
__len__
(
self
):
return
len
(
self
.
list
)
def
is_empty
(
self
):
return
self
.
list
==
[]
def
first
(
self
):
return
self
.
list
[
0
]
def
push
(
self
,
data
):
self
.
list
.
append
(
data
)
def
pop
(
self
):
if
self
.
list
:
result
=
self
.
list
[
0
]
del
self
.
list
[
0
]
return
(
1
,
result
)
else
:
return
(
0
,
None
)
# Given 'haystack', see if any prefix of 'needle' is at its end. This
# assumes an exact match has already been checked. Return the number of
# characters matched.
# for example:
# f_p_a_e ("qwerty\r", "\r\n") => 1
# f_p_a_e ("qwerty\r\n", "\r\n") => 2
# f_p_a_e ("qwertydkjf", "\r\n") => 0
# this could maybe be made faster with a computed regex?
##def find_prefix_at_end (haystack, needle):
## nl = len(needle)
## result = 0
## for i in range (1,nl):
## if haystack[-(nl-i):] == needle[:(nl-i)]:
## result = nl-i
## break
## return result
# yes, this is about twice as fast, but still seems
# to be neglible CPU. The previous could do about 290
# searches/sec. the new one about 555/sec.
import
regex
prefix_cache
=
{}
def
prefix_regex
(
needle
):
if
prefix_cache
.
has_key
(
needle
):
return
prefix_cache
[
needle
]
else
:
reg
=
needle
[
-
1
]
for
i
in
range
(
1
,
len
(
needle
)):
reg
=
'%c
\
(%s
\
)?'
%
(
needle
[
-
(
i
+
1
)],
reg
)
reg
=
regex
.
compile
(
reg
+
'$'
)
prefix_cache
[
needle
]
=
reg
,
len
(
needle
)
return
reg
,
len
(
needle
)
def
find_prefix_at_end
(
haystack
,
needle
):
reg
,
length
=
prefix_regex
(
needle
)
lh
=
len
(
haystack
)
result
=
reg
.
search
(
haystack
,
max
(
0
,
lh
-
length
))
if
result
>=
0
:
return
(
lh
-
result
)
else
:
return
0
lib/python/ZServer/async1x/asynchat.py
deleted
100644 → 0
View file @
8c88a016
# -*- Mode: Python; tab-width: 4 -*-
# $Id: asynchat.py,v 1.1 2001/04/05 23:38:16 jim Exp $
# Author: Sam Rushing <rushing@nightmare.com>
# ======================================================================
# Copyright 1996 by Sam Rushing
#
# All Rights Reserved
#
# Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and
# its documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby
# granted, provided that the above copyright notice appear in all
# copies and that both that copyright notice and this permission
# notice appear in supporting documentation, and that the name of Sam
# Rushing not be used in advertising or publicity pertaining to
# distribution of the software without specific, written prior
# permission.
#
# SAM RUSHING DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE,
# INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS, IN
# NO EVENT SHALL SAM RUSHING BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT OR
# CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS
# OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT,
# NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN
# CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
# ======================================================================
import
socket
import
asyncore
import
string
# This class adds support for 'chat' style protocols - where one side
# sends a 'command', and the other sends a response (examples would be
# the common internet protocols - smtp, nntp, ftp, etc..).
# The handle_read() method looks at the input stream for the current
# 'terminator' (usually '\r\n' for single-line responses, '\r\n.\r\n'
# for multi-line output), calling self.found_terminator() on its
# receipt.
# for example:
# Say you build an async nntp client using this class. At the start
# of the connection, you'll have self.terminator set to '\r\n', in
# order to process the single-line greeting. Just before issuing a
# 'LIST' command you'll set it to '\r\n.\r\n'. The output of the LIST
# command will be accumulated (using your own 'collect_incoming_data'
# method) up to the terminator, and then control will be returned to
# you - by calling your self.found_terminator() method
class
async_chat
(
asyncore
.
dispatcher
):
"""This is an abstract class. You must derive from this class, and add
the two methods collect_incoming_data() and found_terminator()"""
# these are overridable defaults
ac_in_buffer_size
=
4096
ac_out_buffer_size
=
4096
def
__init__
(
self
,
conn
=
None
):
self
.
ac_in_buffer
=
''
self
.
ac_out_buffer
=
''
self
.
producer_fifo
=
fifo
()
asyncore
.
dispatcher
.
__init__
(
self
,
conn
)
def
set_terminator
(
self
,
term
):
"Set the input delimiter. Can be a fixed string of any length, an integer, or None"
self
.
terminator
=
term
def
get_terminator
(
self
):
return
self
.
terminator
# grab some more data from the socket,
# throw it to the collector method,
# check for the terminator,
# if found, transition to the next state.
def
handle_read
(
self
):
try
:
data
=
self
.
recv
(
self
.
ac_in_buffer_size
)
except
socket
.
error
,
why
:
self
.
handle_error
()
return
self
.
ac_in_buffer
=
self
.
ac_in_buffer
+
data
# Continue to search for self.terminator in self.ac_in_buffer,
# while calling self.collect_incoming_data. The while loop
# is necessary because we might read several data+terminator
# combos with a single recv(1024).
while
self
.
ac_in_buffer
:
lb
=
len
(
self
.
ac_in_buffer
)
terminator
=
self
.
get_terminator
()
if
terminator
is
None
:
# no terminator, collect it all
self
.
collect_incoming_data
(
self
.
ac_in_buffer
)
self
.
ac_in_buffer
=
''
elif
type
(
terminator
)
==
type
(
0
):
# numeric terminator
n
=
terminator
if
lb
<
n
:
self
.
collect_incoming_data
(
self
.
ac_in_buffer
)
self
.
ac_in_buffer
=
''
self
.
terminator
=
self
.
terminator
-
lb
else
:
self
.
collect_incoming_data
(
self
.
ac_in_buffer
[:
n
])
self
.
ac_in_buffer
=
self
.
ac_in_buffer
[
n
:]
self
.
terminator
=
0
self
.
found_terminator
()
else
:
# 3 cases:
# 1) end of buffer matches terminator exactly:
# collect data, transition
# 2) end of buffer matches some prefix:
# collect data to the prefix
# 3) end of buffer does not match any prefix:
# collect data
terminator_len
=
len
(
terminator
)
index
=
string
.
find
(
self
.
ac_in_buffer
,
terminator
)
if
index
!=
-
1
:
# we found the terminator
if
index
>
0
:
# don't bother reporting the empty string (source of subtle bugs)
self
.
collect_incoming_data
(
self
.
ac_in_buffer
[:
index
])
self
.
ac_in_buffer
=
self
.
ac_in_buffer
[
index
+
terminator_len
:]
# This does the Right Thing if the terminator is changed here.
self
.
found_terminator
()
else
:
# check for a prefix of the terminator
index
=
find_prefix_at_end
(
self
.
ac_in_buffer
,
terminator
)
if
index
:
if
index
!=
lb
:
# we found a prefix, collect up to the prefix
self
.
collect_incoming_data
(
self
.
ac_in_buffer
[:
-
index
])
self
.
ac_in_buffer
=
self
.
ac_in_buffer
[
-
index
:]
break
else
:
# no prefix, collect it all
self
.
collect_incoming_data
(
self
.
ac_in_buffer
)
self
.
ac_in_buffer
=
''
def
handle_write
(
self
):
self
.
initiate_send
()
def
handle_close
(
self
):
self
.
close
()
def
push
(
self
,
data
):
self
.
producer_fifo
.
push
(
simple_producer
(
data
))
self
.
initiate_send
()
def
push_with_producer
(
self
,
producer
):
self
.
producer_fifo
.
push
(
producer
)
self
.
initiate_send
()
def
readable
(
self
):
"predicate for inclusion in the readable for select()"
return
(
len
(
self
.
ac_in_buffer
)
<=
self
.
ac_in_buffer_size
)
def
writable
(
self
):
"predicate for inclusion in the writable for select()"
# return len(self.ac_out_buffer) or len(self.producer_fifo) or (not self.connected)
# this is about twice as fast, though not as clear.
return
not
(
(
self
.
ac_out_buffer
is
''
)
and
self
.
producer_fifo
.
is_empty
()
and
self
.
connected
)
def
close_when_done
(
self
):
"automatically close this channel once the outgoing queue is empty"
self
.
producer_fifo
.
push
(
None
)
# refill the outgoing buffer by calling the more() method
# of the first producer in the queue
def
refill_buffer
(
self
):
_string_type
=
type
(
''
)
while
1
:
if
len
(
self
.
producer_fifo
):
p
=
self
.
producer_fifo
.
first
()
# a 'None' in the producer fifo is a sentinel,
# telling us to close the channel.
if
p
is
None
:
if
not
self
.
ac_out_buffer
:
self
.
producer_fifo
.
pop
()
self
.
close
()
return
elif
type
(
p
)
is
_string_type
:
self
.
producer_fifo
.
pop
()
self
.
ac_out_buffer
=
self
.
ac_out_buffer
+
p
return
data
=
p
.
more
()
if
data
:
self
.
ac_out_buffer
=
self
.
ac_out_buffer
+
data
return
else
:
self
.
producer_fifo
.
pop
()
else
:
return
def
initiate_send
(
self
):
obs
=
self
.
ac_out_buffer_size
# try to refill the buffer
if
(
len
(
self
.
ac_out_buffer
)
<
obs
):
self
.
refill_buffer
()
if
self
.
ac_out_buffer
and
self
.
connected
:
# try to send the buffer
try
:
num_sent
=
self
.
send
(
self
.
ac_out_buffer
[:
obs
])
if
num_sent
:
self
.
ac_out_buffer
=
self
.
ac_out_buffer
[
num_sent
:]
except
socket
.
error
,
why
:
self
.
handle_error
()
return
def
discard_buffers
(
self
):
# Emergencies only!
self
.
ac_in_buffer
=
''
self
.
ac_out_buffer
=
''
while
self
.
producer_fifo
:
self
.
producer_fifo
.
pop
()
class
simple_producer
:
def
__init__
(
self
,
data
,
buffer_size
=
512
):
self
.
data
=
data
self
.
buffer_size
=
buffer_size
def
more
(
self
):
if
len
(
self
.
data
)
>
self
.
buffer_size
:
result
=
self
.
data
[:
self
.
buffer_size
]
self
.
data
=
self
.
data
[
self
.
buffer_size
:]
return
result
else
:
result
=
self
.
data
self
.
data
=
''
return
result
class
fifo
:
def
__init__
(
self
,
list
=
None
):
if
not
list
:
self
.
list
=
[]
else
:
self
.
list
=
list
def
__len__
(
self
):
return
len
(
self
.
list
)
def
is_empty
(
self
):
return
self
.
list
==
[]
def
first
(
self
):
return
self
.
list
[
0
]
def
push
(
self
,
data
):
self
.
list
.
append
(
data
)
def
pop
(
self
):
if
self
.
list
:
result
=
self
.
list
[
0
]
del
self
.
list
[
0
]
return
(
1
,
result
)
else
:
return
(
0
,
None
)
# Given 'haystack', see if any prefix of 'needle' is at its end. This
# assumes an exact match has already been checked. Return the number of
# characters matched.
# for example:
# f_p_a_e ("qwerty\r", "\r\n") => 1
# f_p_a_e ("qwerty\r\n", "\r\n") => 2
# f_p_a_e ("qwertydkjf", "\r\n") => 0
# this could maybe be made faster with a computed regex?
##def find_prefix_at_end (haystack, needle):
## nl = len(needle)
## result = 0
## for i in range (1,nl):
## if haystack[-(nl-i):] == needle[:(nl-i)]:
## result = nl-i
## break
## return result
# yes, this is about twice as fast, but still seems
# to be neglible CPU. The previous could do about 290
# searches/sec. the new one about 555/sec.
import
regex
prefix_cache
=
{}
def
prefix_regex
(
needle
):
if
prefix_cache
.
has_key
(
needle
):
return
prefix_cache
[
needle
]
else
:
reg
=
needle
[
-
1
]
for
i
in
range
(
1
,
len
(
needle
)):
reg
=
'%c
\
(%s
\
)?'
%
(
needle
[
-
(
i
+
1
)],
reg
)
reg
=
regex
.
compile
(
reg
+
'$'
)
prefix_cache
[
needle
]
=
reg
,
len
(
needle
)
return
reg
,
len
(
needle
)
def
find_prefix_at_end
(
haystack
,
needle
):
reg
,
length
=
prefix_regex
(
needle
)
lh
=
len
(
haystack
)
result
=
reg
.
search
(
haystack
,
max
(
0
,
lh
-
length
))
if
result
>=
0
:
return
(
lh
-
result
)
else
:
return
0
Write
Preview
Markdown
is supported
0%
Try again
or
attach a new file
Attach a file
Cancel
You are about to add
0
people
to the discussion. Proceed with caution.
Finish editing this message first!
Cancel
Please
register
or
sign in
to comment