symbian-qemu-0.9.1-12/python-2.6.1/Lib/plat-riscos/riscospath.py
changeset 1 2fb8b9db1c86
--- /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/symbian-qemu-0.9.1-12/python-2.6.1/Lib/plat-riscos/riscospath.py	Fri Jul 31 15:01:17 2009 +0100
@@ -0,0 +1,378 @@
+# Module 'riscospath' -- common operations on RISC OS pathnames.
+
+# contributed by Andrew Clover  ( andrew@oaktree.co.uk )
+
+# The "os.path" name is an alias for this module on RISC OS systems;
+# on other systems (e.g. Mac, Windows), os.path provides the same
+# operations in a manner specific to that platform, and is an alias
+# to another module (e.g. macpath, ntpath).
+
+"""
+Instead of importing this module directly, import os and refer to this module
+as os.path.
+"""
+
+# strings representing various path-related bits and pieces
+curdir = '@'
+pardir = '^'
+extsep = '/'
+sep = '.'
+pathsep = ','
+defpath = '<Run$Dir>'
+altsep = None
+
+# Imports - make an error-generating swi object if the swi module is not
+# available (ie. we are not running on RISC OS Python)
+
+import os, stat, string
+
+try:
+    import swi
+except ImportError:
+    class _swi:
+        def swi(*a):
+            raise AttributeError, 'This function only available under RISC OS'
+        block= swi
+    swi= _swi()
+
+[_false, _true]= range(2)
+
+_roots= ['$', '&', '%', '@', '\\']
+
+
+# _allowMOSFSNames
+# After importing riscospath, set _allowMOSFSNames true if you want the module
+# to understand the "-SomeFS-" notation left over from the old BBC Master MOS,
+# as well as the standard "SomeFS:" notation. Set this to be fully backwards
+# compatible but remember that "-SomeFS-" can also be a perfectly valid file
+# name so care must be taken when splitting and joining paths.
+
+_allowMOSFSNames= _false
+
+
+## Path manipulation, RISC OS stylee.
+
+def _split(p):
+    """
+  split filing system name (including special field) and drive specifier from rest
+  of path. This is needed by many riscospath functions.
+  """
+    dash= _allowMOSFSNames and p[:1]=='-'
+    if dash:
+        q= string.find(p, '-', 1)+1
+    else:
+        if p[:1]==':':
+            q= 0
+        else:
+            q= string.find(p, ':')+1 # q= index of start of non-FS portion of path
+    s= string.find(p, '#')
+    if s==-1 or s>q:
+        s= q # find end of main FS name, not including special field
+    else:
+        for c in p[dash:s]:
+            if c not in string.ascii_letters:
+                q= 0
+                break # disallow invalid non-special-field characters in FS name
+    r= q
+    if p[q:q+1]==':':
+        r= string.find(p, '.', q+1)+1
+        if r==0:
+            r= len(p) # find end of drive name (if any) following FS name (if any)
+    return (p[:q], p[q:r], p[r:])
+
+
+def normcase(p):
+    """
+  Normalize the case of a pathname. This converts to lowercase as the native RISC
+  OS filesystems are case-insensitive. However, not all filesystems have to be,
+  and there's no simple way to find out what type an FS is argh.
+  """
+    return string.lower(p)
+
+
+def isabs(p):
+    """
+  Return whether a path is absolute. Under RISC OS, a file system specifier does
+  not make a path absolute, but a drive name or number does, and so does using the
+  symbol for root, URD, library, CSD or PSD. This means it is perfectly possible
+  to have an "absolute" URL dependent on the current working directory, and
+  equally you can have a "relative" URL that's on a completely different device to
+  the current one argh.
+  """
+    (fs, drive, path)= _split(p)
+    return drive!='' or path[:1] in _roots
+
+
+def join(a, *p):
+    """
+  Join path elements with the directory separator, replacing the entire path when
+  an absolute or FS-changing path part is found.
+  """
+    j= a
+    for b in p:
+        (fs, drive, path)= _split(b)
+        if j=='' or fs!='' or drive!='' or path[:1] in _roots:
+            j= b
+        elif j[-1]==':':
+            j= j+b
+        else:
+            j= j+'.'+b
+    return j
+
+
+def split(p):
+    """
+  Split a path in head (everything up to the last '.') and tail (the rest). FS
+  name must still be dealt with separately since special field may contain '.'.
+  """
+    (fs, drive, path)= _split(p)
+    q= string.rfind(path, '.')
+    if q!=-1:
+        return (fs+drive+path[:q], path[q+1:])
+    return ('', p)
+
+
+def splitext(p):
+    """
+  Split a path in root and extension. This assumes the 'using slash for dot and
+  dot for slash with foreign files' convention common in RISC OS is in force.
+  """
+    (tail, head)= split(p)
+    if '/' in head:
+        q= len(head)-string.rfind(head, '/')
+        return (p[:-q], p[-q:])
+    return (p, '')
+
+
+def splitdrive(p):
+    """
+  Split a pathname into a drive specification (including FS name) and the rest of
+  the path. The terminating dot of the drive name is included in the drive
+  specification.
+  """
+    (fs, drive, path)= _split(p)
+    return (fs+drive, p)
+
+
+def basename(p):
+    """
+  Return the tail (basename) part of a path.
+  """
+    return split(p)[1]
+
+
+def dirname(p):
+    """
+  Return the head (dirname) part of a path.
+  """
+    return split(p)[0]
+
+
+def commonprefix(m):
+    "Given a list of pathnames, returns the longest common leading component"
+    if not m: return ''
+    s1 = min(m)
+    s2 = max(m)
+    n = min(len(s1), len(s2))
+    for i in xrange(n):
+        if s1[i] != s2[i]:
+            return s1[:i]
+    return s1[:n]
+
+
+## File access functions. Why are we in os.path?
+
+def getsize(p):
+    """
+  Return the size of a file, reported by os.stat().
+  """
+    st= os.stat(p)
+    return st[stat.ST_SIZE]
+
+
+def getmtime(p):
+    """
+  Return the last modification time of a file, reported by os.stat().
+  """
+    st = os.stat(p)
+    return st[stat.ST_MTIME]
+
+getatime= getmtime
+
+
+# RISC OS-specific file access functions
+
+def exists(p):
+    """
+  Test whether a path exists.
+  """
+    try:
+        return swi.swi('OS_File', '5s;i', p)!=0
+    except swi.error:
+        return 0
+
+lexists = exists
+
+
+def isdir(p):
+    """
+  Is a path a directory? Includes image files.
+  """
+    try:
+        return swi.swi('OS_File', '5s;i', p) in [2, 3]
+    except swi.error:
+        return 0
+
+
+def isfile(p):
+    """
+  Test whether a path is a file, including image files.
+  """
+    try:
+        return swi.swi('OS_File', '5s;i', p) in [1, 3]
+    except swi.error:
+        return 0
+
+
+def islink(p):
+    """
+  RISC OS has no links or mounts.
+  """
+    return _false
+
+ismount= islink
+
+
+# Same-file testing.
+
+# samefile works on filename comparison since there is no ST_DEV and ST_INO is
+# not reliably unique (esp. directories). First it has to normalise the
+# pathnames, which it can do 'properly' using OS_FSControl since samefile can
+# assume it's running on RISC OS (unlike normpath).
+
+def samefile(fa, fb):
+    """
+  Test whether two pathnames reference the same actual file.
+  """
+    l= 512
+    b= swi.block(l)
+    swi.swi('OS_FSControl', 'isb..i', 37, fa, b, l)
+    fa= b.ctrlstring()
+    swi.swi('OS_FSControl', 'isb..i', 37, fb, b, l)
+    fb= b.ctrlstring()
+    return fa==fb
+
+
+def sameopenfile(a, b):
+    """
+  Test whether two open file objects reference the same file.
+  """
+    return os.fstat(a)[stat.ST_INO]==os.fstat(b)[stat.ST_INO]
+
+
+## Path canonicalisation
+
+# 'user directory' is taken as meaning the User Root Directory, which is in
+# practice never used, for anything.
+
+def expanduser(p):
+    (fs, drive, path)= _split(p)
+    l= 512
+    b= swi.block(l)
+
+    if path[:1]!='@':
+        return p
+    if fs=='':
+        fsno= swi.swi('OS_Args', '00;i')
+        swi.swi('OS_FSControl', 'iibi', 33, fsno, b, l)
+        fsname= b.ctrlstring()
+    else:
+        if fs[:1]=='-':
+            fsname= fs[1:-1]
+        else:
+            fsname= fs[:-1]
+        fsname= string.split(fsname, '#', 1)[0] # remove special field from fs
+    x= swi.swi('OS_FSControl', 'ib2s.i;.....i', 54, b, fsname, l)
+    if x<l:
+        urd= b.tostring(0, l-x-1)
+    else: # no URD! try CSD
+        x= swi.swi('OS_FSControl', 'ib0s.i;.....i', 54, b, fsname, l)
+        if x<l:
+            urd= b.tostring(0, l-x-1)
+        else: # no CSD! use root
+            urd= '$'
+    return fsname+':'+urd+path[1:]
+
+# Environment variables are in angle brackets.
+
+def expandvars(p):
+    """
+  Expand environment variables using OS_GSTrans.
+  """
+    l= 512
+    b= swi.block(l)
+    return b.tostring(0, swi.swi('OS_GSTrans', 'sbi;..i', p, b, l))
+
+
+# Return an absolute path. RISC OS' osfscontrol_canonicalise_path does this among others
+abspath = os.expand
+
+
+# realpath is a no-op on systems without islink support
+realpath = abspath
+
+
+# Normalize a path. Only special path element under RISC OS is "^" for "..".
+
+def normpath(p):
+    """
+  Normalize path, eliminating up-directory ^s.
+  """
+    (fs, drive, path)= _split(p)
+    rhs= ''
+    ups= 0
+    while path!='':
+        (path, el)= split(path)
+        if el=='^':
+            ups= ups+1
+        else:
+            if ups>0:
+                ups= ups-1
+            else:
+                if rhs=='':
+                    rhs= el
+                else:
+                    rhs= el+'.'+rhs
+    while ups>0:
+        ups= ups-1
+        rhs= '^.'+rhs
+    return fs+drive+rhs
+
+
+# Directory tree walk.
+# Independent of host system. Why am I in os.path?
+
+def walk(top, func, arg):
+    """Directory tree walk with callback function.
+
+    For each directory in the directory tree rooted at top (including top
+    itself, but excluding '.' and '..'), call func(arg, dirname, fnames).
+    dirname is the name of the directory, and fnames a list of the names of
+    the files and subdirectories in dirname (excluding '.' and '..').  func
+    may modify the fnames list in-place (e.g. via del or slice assignment),
+    and walk will only recurse into the subdirectories whose names remain in
+    fnames; this can be used to implement a filter, or to impose a specific
+    order of visiting.  No semantics are defined for, or required of, arg,
+    beyond that arg is always passed to func.  It can be used, e.g., to pass
+    a filename pattern, or a mutable object designed to accumulate
+    statistics.  Passing None for arg is common."""
+
+    try:
+        names= os.listdir(top)
+    except os.error:
+        return
+    func(arg, top, names)
+    for name in names:
+        name= join(top, name)
+        if isdir(name) and not islink(name):
+            walk(name, func, arg)