관리-도구
편집 파일: ansitowin32.py
# Copyright Jonathan Hartley 2013. BSD 3-Clause license, see LICENSE file. import re import sys from .ansi import AnsiFore, AnsiBack, AnsiStyle, Style from .winterm import WinTerm, WinColor, WinStyle from .win32 import windll winterm = None if windll is not None: winterm = WinTerm() def is_a_tty(stream): return hasattr(stream, 'isatty') and stream.isatty() class StreamWrapper(object): ''' Wraps a stream (such as stdout), acting as a transparent proxy for all attribute access apart from method 'write()', which is delegated to our Converter instance. ''' def __init__(self, wrapped, converter): # double-underscore everything to prevent clashes with names of # attributes on the wrapped stream object. self.__wrapped = wrapped self.__convertor = converter def __getattr__(self, name): return getattr(self.__wrapped, name) def write(self, text): self.__convertor.write(text) class AnsiToWin32(object): ''' Implements a 'write()' method which, on Windows, will strip ANSI character sequences from the text, and if outputting to a tty, will convert them into win32 function calls. ''' ANSI_RE = re.compile('\033\[((?:\d|;)*)([a-zA-Z])') def __init__(self, wrapped, convert=None, strip=None, autoreset=False): # The wrapped stream (normally sys.stdout or sys.stderr) self.wrapped = wrapped # should we reset colors to defaults after every .write() self.autoreset = autoreset # create the proxy wrapping our output stream self.stream = StreamWrapper(wrapped, self) on_windows = sys.platform.startswith('win') # should we strip ANSI sequences from our output? if strip is None: strip = on_windows self.strip = strip # should we should convert ANSI sequences into win32 calls? if convert is None: convert = on_windows and is_a_tty(wrapped) self.convert = convert # dict of ansi codes to win32 functions and parameters self.win32_calls = self.get_win32_calls() # are we wrapping stderr? self.on_stderr = self.wrapped is sys.stderr def should_wrap(self): ''' True if this class is actually needed. If false, then the output stream will not be affected, nor will win32 calls be issued, so wrapping stdout is not actually required. This will generally be False on non-Windows platforms, unless optional functionality like autoreset has been requested using kwargs to init() ''' return self.convert or self.strip or self.autoreset def get_win32_calls(self): if self.convert and winterm: return { AnsiStyle.RESET_ALL: (winterm.reset_all, ), AnsiStyle.BRIGHT: (winterm.style, WinStyle.BRIGHT), AnsiStyle.DIM: (winterm.style, WinStyle.NORMAL), AnsiStyle.NORMAL: (winterm.style, WinStyle.NORMAL), AnsiFore.BLACK: (winterm.fore, WinColor.BLACK), AnsiFore.RED: (winterm.fore, WinColor.RED), AnsiFore.GREEN: (winterm.fore, WinColor.GREEN), AnsiFore.YELLOW: (winterm.fore, WinColor.YELLOW), AnsiFore.BLUE: (winterm.fore, WinColor.BLUE), AnsiFore.MAGENTA: (winterm.fore, WinColor.MAGENTA), AnsiFore.CYAN: (winterm.fore, WinColor.CYAN), AnsiFore.WHITE: (winterm.fore, WinColor.GREY), AnsiFore.RESET: (winterm.fore, ), AnsiBack.BLACK: (winterm.back, WinColor.BLACK), AnsiBack.RED: (winterm.back, WinColor.RED), AnsiBack.GREEN: (winterm.back, WinColor.GREEN), AnsiBack.YELLOW: (winterm.back, WinColor.YELLOW), AnsiBack.BLUE: (winterm.back, WinColor.BLUE), AnsiBack.MAGENTA: (winterm.back, WinColor.MAGENTA), AnsiBack.CYAN: (winterm.back, WinColor.CYAN), AnsiBack.WHITE: (winterm.back, WinColor.GREY), AnsiBack.RESET: (winterm.back, ), } def write(self, text): if self.strip or self.convert: self.write_and_convert(text) else: self.wrapped.write(text) self.wrapped.flush() if self.autoreset: self.reset_all() def reset_all(self): if self.convert: self.call_win32('m', (0,)) elif not self.wrapped.closed and is_a_tty(self.wrapped): self.wrapped.write(Style.RESET_ALL) def write_and_convert(self, text): ''' Write the given text to our wrapped stream, stripping any ANSI sequences from the text, and optionally converting them into win32 calls. ''' cursor = 0 for match in self.ANSI_RE.finditer(text): start, end = match.span() self.write_plain_text(text, cursor, start) self.convert_ansi(*match.groups()) cursor = end self.write_plain_text(text, cursor, len(text)) def write_plain_text(self, text, start, end): if start < end: self.wrapped.write(text[start:end]) self.wrapped.flush() def convert_ansi(self, paramstring, command): if self.convert: params = self.extract_params(paramstring) self.call_win32(command, params) def extract_params(self, paramstring): def split(paramstring): for p in paramstring.split(';'): if p != '': yield int(p) return tuple(split(paramstring)) def call_win32(self, command, params): if params == []: params = [0] if command == 'm': for param in params: if param in self.win32_calls: func_args = self.win32_calls[param] func = func_args[0] args = func_args[1:] kwargs = dict(on_stderr=self.on_stderr) func(*args, **kwargs) elif command in ('H', 'f'): # set cursor position func = winterm.set_cursor_position func(params, on_stderr=self.on_stderr) elif command in ('J'): func = winterm.erase_data func(params, on_stderr=self.on_stderr) elif command == 'A': if params == () or params == None: num_rows = 1 else: num_rows = params[0] func = winterm.cursor_up func(num_rows, on_stderr=self.on_stderr)