1 | '''"Executable documentation" for the pickle module.
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2 |
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3 | Extensive comments about the pickle protocols and pickle-machine opcodes
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4 | can be found here. Some functions meant for external use:
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5 |
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6 | genops(pickle)
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7 | Generate all the opcodes in a pickle, as (opcode, arg, position) triples.
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8 |
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9 | dis(pickle, out=None, memo=None, indentlevel=4)
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10 | Print a symbolic disassembly of a pickle.
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11 | '''
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12 |
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13 | __all__ = ['dis', 'genops', 'optimize']
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14 |
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15 | # Other ideas:
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16 | #
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17 | # - A pickle verifier: read a pickle and check it exhaustively for
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18 | # well-formedness. dis() does a lot of this already.
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19 | #
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20 | # - A protocol identifier: examine a pickle and return its protocol number
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21 | # (== the highest .proto attr value among all the opcodes in the pickle).
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22 | # dis() already prints this info at the end.
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23 | #
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24 | # - A pickle optimizer: for example, tuple-building code is sometimes more
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25 | # elaborate than necessary, catering for the possibility that the tuple
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26 | # is recursive. Or lots of times a PUT is generated that's never accessed
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27 | # by a later GET.
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28 |
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29 |
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30 | """
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31 | "A pickle" is a program for a virtual pickle machine (PM, but more accurately
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32 | called an unpickling machine). It's a sequence of opcodes, interpreted by the
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33 | PM, building an arbitrarily complex Python object.
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34 |
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35 | For the most part, the PM is very simple: there are no looping, testing, or
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36 | conditional instructions, no arithmetic and no function calls. Opcodes are
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37 | executed once each, from first to last, until a STOP opcode is reached.
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38 |
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39 | The PM has two data areas, "the stack" and "the memo".
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40 |
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41 | Many opcodes push Python objects onto the stack; e.g., INT pushes a Python
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42 | integer object on the stack, whose value is gotten from a decimal string
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43 | literal immediately following the INT opcode in the pickle bytestream. Other
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44 | opcodes take Python objects off the stack. The result of unpickling is
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45 | whatever object is left on the stack when the final STOP opcode is executed.
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46 |
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47 | The memo is simply an array of objects, or it can be implemented as a dict
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48 | mapping little integers to objects. The memo serves as the PM's "long term
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49 | memory", and the little integers indexing the memo are akin to variable
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50 | names. Some opcodes pop a stack object into the memo at a given index,
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51 | and others push a memo object at a given index onto the stack again.
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52 |
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53 | At heart, that's all the PM has. Subtleties arise for these reasons:
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54 |
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55 | + Object identity. Objects can be arbitrarily complex, and subobjects
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56 | may be shared (for example, the list [a, a] refers to the same object a
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57 | twice). It can be vital that unpickling recreate an isomorphic object
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58 | graph, faithfully reproducing sharing.
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59 |
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60 | + Recursive objects. For example, after "L = []; L.append(L)", L is a
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61 | list, and L[0] is the same list. This is related to the object identity
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62 | point, and some sequences of pickle opcodes are subtle in order to
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63 | get the right result in all cases.
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64 |
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65 | + Things pickle doesn't know everything about. Examples of things pickle
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66 | does know everything about are Python's builtin scalar and container
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67 | types, like ints and tuples. They generally have opcodes dedicated to
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68 | them. For things like module references and instances of user-defined
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69 | classes, pickle's knowledge is limited. Historically, many enhancements
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70 | have been made to the pickle protocol in order to do a better (faster,
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71 | and/or more compact) job on those.
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72 |
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73 | + Backward compatibility and micro-optimization. As explained below,
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74 | pickle opcodes never go away, not even when better ways to do a thing
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75 | get invented. The repertoire of the PM just keeps growing over time.
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76 | For example, protocol 0 had two opcodes for building Python integers (INT
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77 | and LONG), protocol 1 added three more for more-efficient pickling of short
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78 | integers, and protocol 2 added two more for more-efficient pickling of
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79 | long integers (before protocol 2, the only ways to pickle a Python long
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80 | took time quadratic in the number of digits, for both pickling and
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81 | unpickling). "Opcode bloat" isn't so much a subtlety as a source of
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82 | wearying complication.
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83 |
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84 |
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85 | Pickle protocols:
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86 |
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87 | For compatibility, the meaning of a pickle opcode never changes. Instead new
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88 | pickle opcodes get added, and each version's unpickler can handle all the
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89 | pickle opcodes in all protocol versions to date. So old pickles continue to
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90 | be readable forever. The pickler can generally be told to restrict itself to
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91 | the subset of opcodes available under previous protocol versions too, so that
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92 | users can create pickles under the current version readable by older
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93 | versions. However, a pickle does not contain its version number embedded
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94 | within it. If an older unpickler tries to read a pickle using a later
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95 | protocol, the result is most likely an exception due to seeing an unknown (in
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96 | the older unpickler) opcode.
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97 |
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98 | The original pickle used what's now called "protocol 0", and what was called
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99 | "text mode" before Python 2.3. The entire pickle bytestream is made up of
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100 | printable 7-bit ASCII characters, plus the newline character, in protocol 0.
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101 | That's why it was called text mode. Protocol 0 is small and elegant, but
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102 | sometimes painfully inefficient.
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103 |
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104 | The second major set of additions is now called "protocol 1", and was called
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105 | "binary mode" before Python 2.3. This added many opcodes with arguments
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106 | consisting of arbitrary bytes, including NUL bytes and unprintable "high bit"
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107 | bytes. Binary mode pickles can be substantially smaller than equivalent
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108 | text mode pickles, and sometimes faster too; e.g., BININT represents a 4-byte
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109 | int as 4 bytes following the opcode, which is cheaper to unpickle than the
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110 | (perhaps) 11-character decimal string attached to INT. Protocol 1 also added
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111 | a number of opcodes that operate on many stack elements at once (like APPENDS
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112 | and SETITEMS), and "shortcut" opcodes (like EMPTY_DICT and EMPTY_TUPLE).
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113 |
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114 | The third major set of additions came in Python 2.3, and is called "protocol
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115 | 2". This added:
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116 |
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117 | - A better way to pickle instances of new-style classes (NEWOBJ).
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118 |
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119 | - A way for a pickle to identify its protocol (PROTO).
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120 |
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121 | - Time- and space- efficient pickling of long ints (LONG{1,4}).
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122 |
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123 | - Shortcuts for small tuples (TUPLE{1,2,3}}.
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124 |
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125 | - Dedicated opcodes for bools (NEWTRUE, NEWFALSE).
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126 |
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127 | - The "extension registry", a vector of popular objects that can be pushed
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128 | efficiently by index (EXT{1,2,4}). This is akin to the memo and GET, but
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129 | the registry contents are predefined (there's nothing akin to the memo's
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130 | PUT).
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131 |
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132 | Another independent change with Python 2.3 is the abandonment of any
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133 | pretense that it might be safe to load pickles received from untrusted
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134 | parties -- no sufficient security analysis has been done to guarantee
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135 | this and there isn't a use case that warrants the expense of such an
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136 | analysis.
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137 |
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138 | To this end, all tests for __safe_for_unpickling__ or for
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139 | copy_reg.safe_constructors are removed from the unpickling code.
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140 | References to these variables in the descriptions below are to be seen
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141 | as describing unpickling in Python 2.2 and before.
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142 | """
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143 |
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144 | # Meta-rule: Descriptions are stored in instances of descriptor objects,
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145 | # with plain constructors. No meta-language is defined from which
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146 | # descriptors could be constructed. If you want, e.g., XML, write a little
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147 | # program to generate XML from the objects.
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148 |
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149 | ##############################################################################
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150 | # Some pickle opcodes have an argument, following the opcode in the
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151 | # bytestream. An argument is of a specific type, described by an instance
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152 | # of ArgumentDescriptor. These are not to be confused with arguments taken
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153 | # off the stack -- ArgumentDescriptor applies only to arguments embedded in
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154 | # the opcode stream, immediately following an opcode.
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155 |
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156 | # Represents the number of bytes consumed by an argument delimited by the
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157 | # next newline character.
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158 | UP_TO_NEWLINE = -1
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159 |
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160 | # Represents the number of bytes consumed by a two-argument opcode where
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161 | # the first argument gives the number of bytes in the second argument.
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162 | TAKEN_FROM_ARGUMENT1 = -2 # num bytes is 1-byte unsigned int
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163 | TAKEN_FROM_ARGUMENT4 = -3 # num bytes is 4-byte signed little-endian int
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164 |
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165 | class ArgumentDescriptor(object):
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166 | __slots__ = (
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167 | # name of descriptor record, also a module global name; a string
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168 | 'name',
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169 |
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170 | # length of argument, in bytes; an int; UP_TO_NEWLINE and
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171 | # TAKEN_FROM_ARGUMENT{1,4} are negative values for variable-length
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172 | # cases
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173 | 'n',
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174 |
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175 | # a function taking a file-like object, reading this kind of argument
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176 | # from the object at the current position, advancing the current
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177 | # position by n bytes, and returning the value of the argument
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178 | 'reader',
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179 |
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180 | # human-readable docs for this arg descriptor; a string
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181 | 'doc',
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182 | )
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183 |
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184 | def __init__(self, name, n, reader, doc):
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185 | assert isinstance(name, str)
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186 | self.name = name
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187 |
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188 | assert isinstance(n, int) and (n >= 0 or
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189 | n in (UP_TO_NEWLINE,
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190 | TAKEN_FROM_ARGUMENT1,
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191 | TAKEN_FROM_ARGUMENT4))
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192 | self.n = n
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193 |
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194 | self.reader = reader
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195 |
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196 | assert isinstance(doc, str)
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197 | self.doc = doc
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198 |
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199 | from struct import unpack as _unpack
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200 |
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201 | def read_uint1(f):
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202 | r"""
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203 | >>> import StringIO
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204 | >>> read_uint1(StringIO.StringIO('\xff'))
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205 | 255
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206 | """
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207 |
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208 | data = f.read(1)
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209 | if data:
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210 | return ord(data)
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211 | raise ValueError("not enough data in stream to read uint1")
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212 |
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213 | uint1 = ArgumentDescriptor(
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214 | name='uint1',
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215 | n=1,
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216 | reader=read_uint1,
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217 | doc="One-byte unsigned integer.")
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218 |
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219 |
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220 | def read_uint2(f):
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221 | r"""
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222 | >>> import StringIO
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223 | >>> read_uint2(StringIO.StringIO('\xff\x00'))
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224 | 255
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225 | >>> read_uint2(StringIO.StringIO('\xff\xff'))
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226 | 65535
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227 | """
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228 |
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229 | data = f.read(2)
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230 | if len(data) == 2:
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231 | return _unpack("<H", data)[0]
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232 | raise ValueError("not enough data in stream to read uint2")
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233 |
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234 | uint2 = ArgumentDescriptor(
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235 | name='uint2',
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236 | n=2,
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237 | reader=read_uint2,
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238 | doc="Two-byte unsigned integer, little-endian.")
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239 |
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240 |
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241 | def read_int4(f):
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242 | r"""
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243 | >>> import StringIO
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244 | >>> read_int4(StringIO.StringIO('\xff\x00\x00\x00'))
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245 | 255
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246 | >>> read_int4(StringIO.StringIO('\x00\x00\x00\x80')) == -(2**31)
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247 | True
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248 | """
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249 |
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250 | data = f.read(4)
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251 | if len(data) == 4:
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252 | return _unpack("<i", data)[0]
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253 | raise ValueError("not enough data in stream to read int4")
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254 |
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255 | int4 = ArgumentDescriptor(
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256 | name='int4',
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257 | n=4,
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258 | reader=read_int4,
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259 | doc="Four-byte signed integer, little-endian, 2's complement.")
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260 |
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261 |
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262 | def read_stringnl(f, decode=True, stripquotes=True):
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263 | r"""
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264 | >>> import StringIO
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265 | >>> read_stringnl(StringIO.StringIO("'abcd'\nefg\n"))
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266 | 'abcd'
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267 |
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268 | >>> read_stringnl(StringIO.StringIO("\n"))
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269 | Traceback (most recent call last):
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270 | ...
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271 | ValueError: no string quotes around ''
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272 |
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273 | >>> read_stringnl(StringIO.StringIO("\n"), stripquotes=False)
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274 | ''
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275 |
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276 | >>> read_stringnl(StringIO.StringIO("''\n"))
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277 | ''
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278 |
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279 | >>> read_stringnl(StringIO.StringIO('"abcd"'))
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280 | Traceback (most recent call last):
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281 | ...
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282 | ValueError: no newline found when trying to read stringnl
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283 |
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284 | Embedded escapes are undone in the result.
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285 | >>> read_stringnl(StringIO.StringIO(r"'a\n\\b\x00c\td'" + "\n'e'"))
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286 | 'a\n\\b\x00c\td'
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287 | """
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288 |
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289 | data = f.readline()
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290 | if not data.endswith('\n'):
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291 | raise ValueError("no newline found when trying to read stringnl")
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292 | data = data[:-1] # lose the newline
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293 |
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294 | if stripquotes:
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295 | for q in "'\"":
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296 | if data.startswith(q):
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297 | if not data.endswith(q):
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298 | raise ValueError("strinq quote %r not found at both "
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299 | "ends of %r" % (q, data))
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300 | data = data[1:-1]
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301 | break
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302 | else:
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303 | raise ValueError("no string quotes around %r" % data)
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304 |
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305 | # I'm not sure when 'string_escape' was added to the std codecs; it's
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306 | # crazy not to use it if it's there.
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307 | if decode:
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308 | data = data.decode('string_escape')
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309 | return data
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310 |
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311 | stringnl = ArgumentDescriptor(
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312 | name='stringnl',
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313 | n=UP_TO_NEWLINE,
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314 | reader=read_stringnl,
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315 | doc="""A newline-terminated string.
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316 |
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317 | This is a repr-style string, with embedded escapes, and
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318 | bracketing quotes.
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319 | """)
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320 |
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321 | def read_stringnl_noescape(f):
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322 | return read_stringnl(f, decode=False, stripquotes=False)
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323 |
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324 | stringnl_noescape = ArgumentDescriptor(
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325 | name='stringnl_noescape',
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326 | n=UP_TO_NEWLINE,
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327 | reader=read_stringnl_noescape,
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328 | doc="""A newline-terminated string.
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329 |
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330 | This is a str-style string, without embedded escapes,
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331 | or bracketing quotes. It should consist solely of
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332 | printable ASCII characters.
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333 | """)
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334 |
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335 | def read_stringnl_noescape_pair(f):
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336 | r"""
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337 | >>> import StringIO
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338 | >>> read_stringnl_noescape_pair(StringIO.StringIO("Queue\nEmpty\njunk"))
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339 | 'Queue Empty'
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340 | """
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341 |
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342 | return "%s %s" % (read_stringnl_noescape(f), read_stringnl_noescape(f))
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343 |
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344 | stringnl_noescape_pair = ArgumentDescriptor(
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345 | name='stringnl_noescape_pair',
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346 | n=UP_TO_NEWLINE,
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347 | reader=read_stringnl_noescape_pair,
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348 | doc="""A pair of newline-terminated strings.
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349 |
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350 | These are str-style strings, without embedded
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351 | escapes, or bracketing quotes. They should
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352 | consist solely of printable ASCII characters.
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353 | The pair is returned as a single string, with
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354 | a single blank separating the two strings.
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355 | """)
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356 |
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357 | def read_string4(f):
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358 | r"""
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359 | >>> import StringIO
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360 | >>> read_string4(StringIO.StringIO("\x00\x00\x00\x00abc"))
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361 | ''
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362 | >>> read_string4(StringIO.StringIO("\x03\x00\x00\x00abcdef"))
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363 | 'abc'
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364 | >>> read_string4(StringIO.StringIO("\x00\x00\x00\x03abcdef"))
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365 | Traceback (most recent call last):
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366 | ...
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367 | ValueError: expected 50331648 bytes in a string4, but only 6 remain
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368 | """
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369 |
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370 | n = read_int4(f)
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371 | if n < 0:
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372 | raise ValueError("string4 byte count < 0: %d" % n)
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373 | data = f.read(n)
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374 | if len(data) == n:
|
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375 | return data
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376 | raise ValueError("expected %d bytes in a string4, but only %d remain" %
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377 | (n, len(data)))
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378 |
|
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379 | string4 = ArgumentDescriptor(
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380 | name="string4",
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381 | n=TAKEN_FROM_ARGUMENT4,
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382 | reader=read_string4,
|
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383 | doc="""A counted string.
|
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384 |
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385 | The first argument is a 4-byte little-endian signed int giving
|
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386 | the number of bytes in the string, and the second argument is
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387 | that many bytes.
|
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388 | """)
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389 |
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390 |
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391 | def read_string1(f):
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392 | r"""
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393 | >>> import StringIO
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394 | >>> read_string1(StringIO.StringIO("\x00"))
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395 | ''
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396 | >>> read_string1(StringIO.StringIO("\x03abcdef"))
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397 | 'abc'
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398 | """
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399 |
|
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400 | n = read_uint1(f)
|
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401 | assert n >= 0
|
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402 | data = f.read(n)
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403 | if len(data) == n:
|
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404 | return data
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405 | raise ValueError("expected %d bytes in a string1, but only %d remain" %
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406 | (n, len(data)))
|
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407 |
|
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408 | string1 = ArgumentDescriptor(
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409 | name="string1",
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410 | n=TAKEN_FROM_ARGUMENT1,
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411 | reader=read_string1,
|
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412 | doc="""A counted string.
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413 |
|
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414 | The first argument is a 1-byte unsigned int giving the number
|
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415 | of bytes in the string, and the second argument is that many
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416 | bytes.
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417 | """)
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418 |
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419 |
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420 | def read_unicodestringnl(f):
|
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421 | r"""
|
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422 | >>> import StringIO
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423 | >>> read_unicodestringnl(StringIO.StringIO("abc\uabcd\njunk"))
|
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424 | u'abc\uabcd'
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425 | """
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426 |
|
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427 | data = f.readline()
|
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428 | if not data.endswith('\n'):
|
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429 | raise ValueError("no newline found when trying to read "
|
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430 | "unicodestringnl")
|
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431 | data = data[:-1] # lose the newline
|
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432 | return unicode(data, 'raw-unicode-escape')
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433 |
|
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434 | unicodestringnl = ArgumentDescriptor(
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435 | name='unicodestringnl',
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436 | n=UP_TO_NEWLINE,
|
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437 | reader=read_unicodestringnl,
|
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438 | doc="""A newline-terminated Unicode string.
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439 |
|
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440 | This is raw-unicode-escape encoded, so consists of
|
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441 | printable ASCII characters, and may contain embedded
|
---|
442 | escape sequences.
|
---|
443 | """)
|
---|
444 |
|
---|
445 | def read_unicodestring4(f):
|
---|
446 | r"""
|
---|
447 | >>> import StringIO
|
---|
448 | >>> s = u'abcd\uabcd'
|
---|
449 | >>> enc = s.encode('utf-8')
|
---|
450 | >>> enc
|
---|
451 | 'abcd\xea\xaf\x8d'
|
---|
452 | >>> n = chr(len(enc)) + chr(0) * 3 # little-endian 4-byte length
|
---|
453 | >>> t = read_unicodestring4(StringIO.StringIO(n + enc + 'junk'))
|
---|
454 | >>> s == t
|
---|
455 | True
|
---|
456 |
|
---|
457 | >>> read_unicodestring4(StringIO.StringIO(n + enc[:-1]))
|
---|
458 | Traceback (most recent call last):
|
---|
459 | ...
|
---|
460 | ValueError: expected 7 bytes in a unicodestring4, but only 6 remain
|
---|
461 | """
|
---|
462 |
|
---|
463 | n = read_int4(f)
|
---|
464 | if n < 0:
|
---|
465 | raise ValueError("unicodestring4 byte count < 0: %d" % n)
|
---|
466 | data = f.read(n)
|
---|
467 | if len(data) == n:
|
---|
468 | return unicode(data, 'utf-8')
|
---|
469 | raise ValueError("expected %d bytes in a unicodestring4, but only %d "
|
---|
470 | "remain" % (n, len(data)))
|
---|
471 |
|
---|
472 | unicodestring4 = ArgumentDescriptor(
|
---|
473 | name="unicodestring4",
|
---|
474 | n=TAKEN_FROM_ARGUMENT4,
|
---|
475 | reader=read_unicodestring4,
|
---|
476 | doc="""A counted Unicode string.
|
---|
477 |
|
---|
478 | The first argument is a 4-byte little-endian signed int
|
---|
479 | giving the number of bytes in the string, and the second
|
---|
480 | argument-- the UTF-8 encoding of the Unicode string --
|
---|
481 | contains that many bytes.
|
---|
482 | """)
|
---|
483 |
|
---|
484 |
|
---|
485 | def read_decimalnl_short(f):
|
---|
486 | r"""
|
---|
487 | >>> import StringIO
|
---|
488 | >>> read_decimalnl_short(StringIO.StringIO("1234\n56"))
|
---|
489 | 1234
|
---|
490 |
|
---|
491 | >>> read_decimalnl_short(StringIO.StringIO("1234L\n56"))
|
---|
492 | Traceback (most recent call last):
|
---|
493 | ...
|
---|
494 | ValueError: trailing 'L' not allowed in '1234L'
|
---|
495 | """
|
---|
496 |
|
---|
497 | s = read_stringnl(f, decode=False, stripquotes=False)
|
---|
498 | if s.endswith("L"):
|
---|
499 | raise ValueError("trailing 'L' not allowed in %r" % s)
|
---|
500 |
|
---|
501 | # It's not necessarily true that the result fits in a Python short int:
|
---|
502 | # the pickle may have been written on a 64-bit box. There's also a hack
|
---|
503 | # for True and False here.
|
---|
504 | if s == "00":
|
---|
505 | return False
|
---|
506 | elif s == "01":
|
---|
507 | return True
|
---|
508 |
|
---|
509 | try:
|
---|
510 | return int(s)
|
---|
511 | except OverflowError:
|
---|
512 | return long(s)
|
---|
513 |
|
---|
514 | def read_decimalnl_long(f):
|
---|
515 | r"""
|
---|
516 | >>> import StringIO
|
---|
517 |
|
---|
518 | >>> read_decimalnl_long(StringIO.StringIO("1234\n56"))
|
---|
519 | Traceback (most recent call last):
|
---|
520 | ...
|
---|
521 | ValueError: trailing 'L' required in '1234'
|
---|
522 |
|
---|
523 | Someday the trailing 'L' will probably go away from this output.
|
---|
524 |
|
---|
525 | >>> read_decimalnl_long(StringIO.StringIO("1234L\n56"))
|
---|
526 | 1234L
|
---|
527 |
|
---|
528 | >>> read_decimalnl_long(StringIO.StringIO("123456789012345678901234L\n6"))
|
---|
529 | 123456789012345678901234L
|
---|
530 | """
|
---|
531 |
|
---|
532 | s = read_stringnl(f, decode=False, stripquotes=False)
|
---|
533 | if not s.endswith("L"):
|
---|
534 | raise ValueError("trailing 'L' required in %r" % s)
|
---|
535 | return long(s)
|
---|
536 |
|
---|
537 |
|
---|
538 | decimalnl_short = ArgumentDescriptor(
|
---|
539 | name='decimalnl_short',
|
---|
540 | n=UP_TO_NEWLINE,
|
---|
541 | reader=read_decimalnl_short,
|
---|
542 | doc="""A newline-terminated decimal integer literal.
|
---|
543 |
|
---|
544 | This never has a trailing 'L', and the integer fit
|
---|
545 | in a short Python int on the box where the pickle
|
---|
546 | was written -- but there's no guarantee it will fit
|
---|
547 | in a short Python int on the box where the pickle
|
---|
548 | is read.
|
---|
549 | """)
|
---|
550 |
|
---|
551 | decimalnl_long = ArgumentDescriptor(
|
---|
552 | name='decimalnl_long',
|
---|
553 | n=UP_TO_NEWLINE,
|
---|
554 | reader=read_decimalnl_long,
|
---|
555 | doc="""A newline-terminated decimal integer literal.
|
---|
556 |
|
---|
557 | This has a trailing 'L', and can represent integers
|
---|
558 | of any size.
|
---|
559 | """)
|
---|
560 |
|
---|
561 |
|
---|
562 | def read_floatnl(f):
|
---|
563 | r"""
|
---|
564 | >>> import StringIO
|
---|
565 | >>> read_floatnl(StringIO.StringIO("-1.25\n6"))
|
---|
566 | -1.25
|
---|
567 | """
|
---|
568 | s = read_stringnl(f, decode=False, stripquotes=False)
|
---|
569 | return float(s)
|
---|
570 |
|
---|
571 | floatnl = ArgumentDescriptor(
|
---|
572 | name='floatnl',
|
---|
573 | n=UP_TO_NEWLINE,
|
---|
574 | reader=read_floatnl,
|
---|
575 | doc="""A newline-terminated decimal floating literal.
|
---|
576 |
|
---|
577 | In general this requires 17 significant digits for roundtrip
|
---|
578 | identity, and pickling then unpickling infinities, NaNs, and
|
---|
579 | minus zero doesn't work across boxes, or on some boxes even
|
---|
580 | on itself (e.g., Windows can't read the strings it produces
|
---|
581 | for infinities or NaNs).
|
---|
582 | """)
|
---|
583 |
|
---|
584 | def read_float8(f):
|
---|
585 | r"""
|
---|
586 | >>> import StringIO, struct
|
---|
587 | >>> raw = struct.pack(">d", -1.25)
|
---|
588 | >>> raw
|
---|
589 | '\xbf\xf4\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00'
|
---|
590 | >>> read_float8(StringIO.StringIO(raw + "\n"))
|
---|
591 | -1.25
|
---|
592 | """
|
---|
593 |
|
---|
594 | data = f.read(8)
|
---|
595 | if len(data) == 8:
|
---|
596 | return _unpack(">d", data)[0]
|
---|
597 | raise ValueError("not enough data in stream to read float8")
|
---|
598 |
|
---|
599 |
|
---|
600 | float8 = ArgumentDescriptor(
|
---|
601 | name='float8',
|
---|
602 | n=8,
|
---|
603 | reader=read_float8,
|
---|
604 | doc="""An 8-byte binary representation of a float, big-endian.
|
---|
605 |
|
---|
606 | The format is unique to Python, and shared with the struct
|
---|
607 | module (format string '>d') "in theory" (the struct and cPickle
|
---|
608 | implementations don't share the code -- they should). It's
|
---|
609 | strongly related to the IEEE-754 double format, and, in normal
|
---|
610 | cases, is in fact identical to the big-endian 754 double format.
|
---|
611 | On other boxes the dynamic range is limited to that of a 754
|
---|
612 | double, and "add a half and chop" rounding is used to reduce
|
---|
613 | the precision to 53 bits. However, even on a 754 box,
|
---|
614 | infinities, NaNs, and minus zero may not be handled correctly
|
---|
615 | (may not survive roundtrip pickling intact).
|
---|
616 | """)
|
---|
617 |
|
---|
618 | # Protocol 2 formats
|
---|
619 |
|
---|
620 | from pickle import decode_long
|
---|
621 |
|
---|
622 | def read_long1(f):
|
---|
623 | r"""
|
---|
624 | >>> import StringIO
|
---|
625 | >>> read_long1(StringIO.StringIO("\x00"))
|
---|
626 | 0L
|
---|
627 | >>> read_long1(StringIO.StringIO("\x02\xff\x00"))
|
---|
628 | 255L
|
---|
629 | >>> read_long1(StringIO.StringIO("\x02\xff\x7f"))
|
---|
630 | 32767L
|
---|
631 | >>> read_long1(StringIO.StringIO("\x02\x00\xff"))
|
---|
632 | -256L
|
---|
633 | >>> read_long1(StringIO.StringIO("\x02\x00\x80"))
|
---|
634 | -32768L
|
---|
635 | """
|
---|
636 |
|
---|
637 | n = read_uint1(f)
|
---|
638 | data = f.read(n)
|
---|
639 | if len(data) != n:
|
---|
640 | raise ValueError("not enough data in stream to read long1")
|
---|
641 | return decode_long(data)
|
---|
642 |
|
---|
643 | long1 = ArgumentDescriptor(
|
---|
644 | name="long1",
|
---|
645 | n=TAKEN_FROM_ARGUMENT1,
|
---|
646 | reader=read_long1,
|
---|
647 | doc="""A binary long, little-endian, using 1-byte size.
|
---|
648 |
|
---|
649 | This first reads one byte as an unsigned size, then reads that
|
---|
650 | many bytes and interprets them as a little-endian 2's-complement long.
|
---|
651 | If the size is 0, that's taken as a shortcut for the long 0L.
|
---|
652 | """)
|
---|
653 |
|
---|
654 | def read_long4(f):
|
---|
655 | r"""
|
---|
656 | >>> import StringIO
|
---|
657 | >>> read_long4(StringIO.StringIO("\x02\x00\x00\x00\xff\x00"))
|
---|
658 | 255L
|
---|
659 | >>> read_long4(StringIO.StringIO("\x02\x00\x00\x00\xff\x7f"))
|
---|
660 | 32767L
|
---|
661 | >>> read_long4(StringIO.StringIO("\x02\x00\x00\x00\x00\xff"))
|
---|
662 | -256L
|
---|
663 | >>> read_long4(StringIO.StringIO("\x02\x00\x00\x00\x00\x80"))
|
---|
664 | -32768L
|
---|
665 | >>> read_long1(StringIO.StringIO("\x00\x00\x00\x00"))
|
---|
666 | 0L
|
---|
667 | """
|
---|
668 |
|
---|
669 | n = read_int4(f)
|
---|
670 | if n < 0:
|
---|
671 | raise ValueError("long4 byte count < 0: %d" % n)
|
---|
672 | data = f.read(n)
|
---|
673 | if len(data) != n:
|
---|
674 | raise ValueError("not enough data in stream to read long4")
|
---|
675 | return decode_long(data)
|
---|
676 |
|
---|
677 | long4 = ArgumentDescriptor(
|
---|
678 | name="long4",
|
---|
679 | n=TAKEN_FROM_ARGUMENT4,
|
---|
680 | reader=read_long4,
|
---|
681 | doc="""A binary representation of a long, little-endian.
|
---|
682 |
|
---|
683 | This first reads four bytes as a signed size (but requires the
|
---|
684 | size to be >= 0), then reads that many bytes and interprets them
|
---|
685 | as a little-endian 2's-complement long. If the size is 0, that's taken
|
---|
686 | as a shortcut for the long 0L, although LONG1 should really be used
|
---|
687 | then instead (and in any case where # of bytes < 256).
|
---|
688 | """)
|
---|
689 |
|
---|
690 |
|
---|
691 | ##############################################################################
|
---|
692 | # Object descriptors. The stack used by the pickle machine holds objects,
|
---|
693 | # and in the stack_before and stack_after attributes of OpcodeInfo
|
---|
694 | # descriptors we need names to describe the various types of objects that can
|
---|
695 | # appear on the stack.
|
---|
696 |
|
---|
697 | class StackObject(object):
|
---|
698 | __slots__ = (
|
---|
699 | # name of descriptor record, for info only
|
---|
700 | 'name',
|
---|
701 |
|
---|
702 | # type of object, or tuple of type objects (meaning the object can
|
---|
703 | # be of any type in the tuple)
|
---|
704 | 'obtype',
|
---|
705 |
|
---|
706 | # human-readable docs for this kind of stack object; a string
|
---|
707 | 'doc',
|
---|
708 | )
|
---|
709 |
|
---|
710 | def __init__(self, name, obtype, doc):
|
---|
711 | assert isinstance(name, str)
|
---|
712 | self.name = name
|
---|
713 |
|
---|
714 | assert isinstance(obtype, type) or isinstance(obtype, tuple)
|
---|
715 | if isinstance(obtype, tuple):
|
---|
716 | for contained in obtype:
|
---|
717 | assert isinstance(contained, type)
|
---|
718 | self.obtype = obtype
|
---|
719 |
|
---|
720 | assert isinstance(doc, str)
|
---|
721 | self.doc = doc
|
---|
722 |
|
---|
723 | def __repr__(self):
|
---|
724 | return self.name
|
---|
725 |
|
---|
726 |
|
---|
727 | pyint = StackObject(
|
---|
728 | name='int',
|
---|
729 | obtype=int,
|
---|
730 | doc="A short (as opposed to long) Python integer object.")
|
---|
731 |
|
---|
732 | pylong = StackObject(
|
---|
733 | name='long',
|
---|
734 | obtype=long,
|
---|
735 | doc="A long (as opposed to short) Python integer object.")
|
---|
736 |
|
---|
737 | pyinteger_or_bool = StackObject(
|
---|
738 | name='int_or_bool',
|
---|
739 | obtype=(int, long, bool),
|
---|
740 | doc="A Python integer object (short or long), or "
|
---|
741 | "a Python bool.")
|
---|
742 |
|
---|
743 | pybool = StackObject(
|
---|
744 | name='bool',
|
---|
745 | obtype=(bool,),
|
---|
746 | doc="A Python bool object.")
|
---|
747 |
|
---|
748 | pyfloat = StackObject(
|
---|
749 | name='float',
|
---|
750 | obtype=float,
|
---|
751 | doc="A Python float object.")
|
---|
752 |
|
---|
753 | pystring = StackObject(
|
---|
754 | name='str',
|
---|
755 | obtype=str,
|
---|
756 | doc="A Python string object.")
|
---|
757 |
|
---|
758 | pyunicode = StackObject(
|
---|
759 | name='unicode',
|
---|
760 | obtype=unicode,
|
---|
761 | doc="A Python Unicode string object.")
|
---|
762 |
|
---|
763 | pynone = StackObject(
|
---|
764 | name="None",
|
---|
765 | obtype=type(None),
|
---|
766 | doc="The Python None object.")
|
---|
767 |
|
---|
768 | pytuple = StackObject(
|
---|
769 | name="tuple",
|
---|
770 | obtype=tuple,
|
---|
771 | doc="A Python tuple object.")
|
---|
772 |
|
---|
773 | pylist = StackObject(
|
---|
774 | name="list",
|
---|
775 | obtype=list,
|
---|
776 | doc="A Python list object.")
|
---|
777 |
|
---|
778 | pydict = StackObject(
|
---|
779 | name="dict",
|
---|
780 | obtype=dict,
|
---|
781 | doc="A Python dict object.")
|
---|
782 |
|
---|
783 | anyobject = StackObject(
|
---|
784 | name='any',
|
---|
785 | obtype=object,
|
---|
786 | doc="Any kind of object whatsoever.")
|
---|
787 |
|
---|
788 | markobject = StackObject(
|
---|
789 | name="mark",
|
---|
790 | obtype=StackObject,
|
---|
791 | doc="""'The mark' is a unique object.
|
---|
792 |
|
---|
793 | Opcodes that operate on a variable number of objects
|
---|
794 | generally don't embed the count of objects in the opcode,
|
---|
795 | or pull it off the stack. Instead the MARK opcode is used
|
---|
796 | to push a special marker object on the stack, and then
|
---|
797 | some other opcodes grab all the objects from the top of
|
---|
798 | the stack down to (but not including) the topmost marker
|
---|
799 | object.
|
---|
800 | """)
|
---|
801 |
|
---|
802 | stackslice = StackObject(
|
---|
803 | name="stackslice",
|
---|
804 | obtype=StackObject,
|
---|
805 | doc="""An object representing a contiguous slice of the stack.
|
---|
806 |
|
---|
807 | This is used in conjuction with markobject, to represent all
|
---|
808 | of the stack following the topmost markobject. For example,
|
---|
809 | the POP_MARK opcode changes the stack from
|
---|
810 |
|
---|
811 | [..., markobject, stackslice]
|
---|
812 | to
|
---|
813 | [...]
|
---|
814 |
|
---|
815 | No matter how many object are on the stack after the topmost
|
---|
816 | markobject, POP_MARK gets rid of all of them (including the
|
---|
817 | topmost markobject too).
|
---|
818 | """)
|
---|
819 |
|
---|
820 | ##############################################################################
|
---|
821 | # Descriptors for pickle opcodes.
|
---|
822 |
|
---|
823 | class OpcodeInfo(object):
|
---|
824 |
|
---|
825 | __slots__ = (
|
---|
826 | # symbolic name of opcode; a string
|
---|
827 | 'name',
|
---|
828 |
|
---|
829 | # the code used in a bytestream to represent the opcode; a
|
---|
830 | # one-character string
|
---|
831 | 'code',
|
---|
832 |
|
---|
833 | # If the opcode has an argument embedded in the byte string, an
|
---|
834 | # instance of ArgumentDescriptor specifying its type. Note that
|
---|
835 | # arg.reader(s) can be used to read and decode the argument from
|
---|
836 | # the bytestream s, and arg.doc documents the format of the raw
|
---|
837 | # argument bytes. If the opcode doesn't have an argument embedded
|
---|
838 | # in the bytestream, arg should be None.
|
---|
839 | 'arg',
|
---|
840 |
|
---|
841 | # what the stack looks like before this opcode runs; a list
|
---|
842 | 'stack_before',
|
---|
843 |
|
---|
844 | # what the stack looks like after this opcode runs; a list
|
---|
845 | 'stack_after',
|
---|
846 |
|
---|
847 | # the protocol number in which this opcode was introduced; an int
|
---|
848 | 'proto',
|
---|
849 |
|
---|
850 | # human-readable docs for this opcode; a string
|
---|
851 | 'doc',
|
---|
852 | )
|
---|
853 |
|
---|
854 | def __init__(self, name, code, arg,
|
---|
855 | stack_before, stack_after, proto, doc):
|
---|
856 | assert isinstance(name, str)
|
---|
857 | self.name = name
|
---|
858 |
|
---|
859 | assert isinstance(code, str)
|
---|
860 | assert len(code) == 1
|
---|
861 | self.code = code
|
---|
862 |
|
---|
863 | assert arg is None or isinstance(arg, ArgumentDescriptor)
|
---|
864 | self.arg = arg
|
---|
865 |
|
---|
866 | assert isinstance(stack_before, list)
|
---|
867 | for x in stack_before:
|
---|
868 | assert isinstance(x, StackObject)
|
---|
869 | self.stack_before = stack_before
|
---|
870 |
|
---|
871 | assert isinstance(stack_after, list)
|
---|
872 | for x in stack_after:
|
---|
873 | assert isinstance(x, StackObject)
|
---|
874 | self.stack_after = stack_after
|
---|
875 |
|
---|
876 | assert isinstance(proto, int) and 0 <= proto <= 2
|
---|
877 | self.proto = proto
|
---|
878 |
|
---|
879 | assert isinstance(doc, str)
|
---|
880 | self.doc = doc
|
---|
881 |
|
---|
882 | I = OpcodeInfo
|
---|
883 | opcodes = [
|
---|
884 |
|
---|
885 | # Ways to spell integers.
|
---|
886 |
|
---|
887 | I(name='INT',
|
---|
888 | code='I',
|
---|
889 | arg=decimalnl_short,
|
---|
890 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
891 | stack_after=[pyinteger_or_bool],
|
---|
892 | proto=0,
|
---|
893 | doc="""Push an integer or bool.
|
---|
894 |
|
---|
895 | The argument is a newline-terminated decimal literal string.
|
---|
896 |
|
---|
897 | The intent may have been that this always fit in a short Python int,
|
---|
898 | but INT can be generated in pickles written on a 64-bit box that
|
---|
899 | require a Python long on a 32-bit box. The difference between this
|
---|
900 | and LONG then is that INT skips a trailing 'L', and produces a short
|
---|
901 | int whenever possible.
|
---|
902 |
|
---|
903 | Another difference is due to that, when bool was introduced as a
|
---|
904 | distinct type in 2.3, builtin names True and False were also added to
|
---|
905 | 2.2.2, mapping to ints 1 and 0. For compatibility in both directions,
|
---|
906 | True gets pickled as INT + "I01\\n", and False as INT + "I00\\n".
|
---|
907 | Leading zeroes are never produced for a genuine integer. The 2.3
|
---|
908 | (and later) unpicklers special-case these and return bool instead;
|
---|
909 | earlier unpicklers ignore the leading "0" and return the int.
|
---|
910 | """),
|
---|
911 |
|
---|
912 | I(name='BININT',
|
---|
913 | code='J',
|
---|
914 | arg=int4,
|
---|
915 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
916 | stack_after=[pyint],
|
---|
917 | proto=1,
|
---|
918 | doc="""Push a four-byte signed integer.
|
---|
919 |
|
---|
920 | This handles the full range of Python (short) integers on a 32-bit
|
---|
921 | box, directly as binary bytes (1 for the opcode and 4 for the integer).
|
---|
922 | If the integer is non-negative and fits in 1 or 2 bytes, pickling via
|
---|
923 | BININT1 or BININT2 saves space.
|
---|
924 | """),
|
---|
925 |
|
---|
926 | I(name='BININT1',
|
---|
927 | code='K',
|
---|
928 | arg=uint1,
|
---|
929 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
930 | stack_after=[pyint],
|
---|
931 | proto=1,
|
---|
932 | doc="""Push a one-byte unsigned integer.
|
---|
933 |
|
---|
934 | This is a space optimization for pickling very small non-negative ints,
|
---|
935 | in range(256).
|
---|
936 | """),
|
---|
937 |
|
---|
938 | I(name='BININT2',
|
---|
939 | code='M',
|
---|
940 | arg=uint2,
|
---|
941 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
942 | stack_after=[pyint],
|
---|
943 | proto=1,
|
---|
944 | doc="""Push a two-byte unsigned integer.
|
---|
945 |
|
---|
946 | This is a space optimization for pickling small positive ints, in
|
---|
947 | range(256, 2**16). Integers in range(256) can also be pickled via
|
---|
948 | BININT2, but BININT1 instead saves a byte.
|
---|
949 | """),
|
---|
950 |
|
---|
951 | I(name='LONG',
|
---|
952 | code='L',
|
---|
953 | arg=decimalnl_long,
|
---|
954 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
955 | stack_after=[pylong],
|
---|
956 | proto=0,
|
---|
957 | doc="""Push a long integer.
|
---|
958 |
|
---|
959 | The same as INT, except that the literal ends with 'L', and always
|
---|
960 | unpickles to a Python long. There doesn't seem a real purpose to the
|
---|
961 | trailing 'L'.
|
---|
962 |
|
---|
963 | Note that LONG takes time quadratic in the number of digits when
|
---|
964 | unpickling (this is simply due to the nature of decimal->binary
|
---|
965 | conversion). Proto 2 added linear-time (in C; still quadratic-time
|
---|
966 | in Python) LONG1 and LONG4 opcodes.
|
---|
967 | """),
|
---|
968 |
|
---|
969 | I(name="LONG1",
|
---|
970 | code='\x8a',
|
---|
971 | arg=long1,
|
---|
972 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
973 | stack_after=[pylong],
|
---|
974 | proto=2,
|
---|
975 | doc="""Long integer using one-byte length.
|
---|
976 |
|
---|
977 | A more efficient encoding of a Python long; the long1 encoding
|
---|
978 | says it all."""),
|
---|
979 |
|
---|
980 | I(name="LONG4",
|
---|
981 | code='\x8b',
|
---|
982 | arg=long4,
|
---|
983 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
984 | stack_after=[pylong],
|
---|
985 | proto=2,
|
---|
986 | doc="""Long integer using found-byte length.
|
---|
987 |
|
---|
988 | A more efficient encoding of a Python long; the long4 encoding
|
---|
989 | says it all."""),
|
---|
990 |
|
---|
991 | # Ways to spell strings (8-bit, not Unicode).
|
---|
992 |
|
---|
993 | I(name='STRING',
|
---|
994 | code='S',
|
---|
995 | arg=stringnl,
|
---|
996 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
997 | stack_after=[pystring],
|
---|
998 | proto=0,
|
---|
999 | doc="""Push a Python string object.
|
---|
1000 |
|
---|
1001 | The argument is a repr-style string, with bracketing quote characters,
|
---|
1002 | and perhaps embedded escapes. The argument extends until the next
|
---|
1003 | newline character.
|
---|
1004 | """),
|
---|
1005 |
|
---|
1006 | I(name='BINSTRING',
|
---|
1007 | code='T',
|
---|
1008 | arg=string4,
|
---|
1009 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
1010 | stack_after=[pystring],
|
---|
1011 | proto=1,
|
---|
1012 | doc="""Push a Python string object.
|
---|
1013 |
|
---|
1014 | There are two arguments: the first is a 4-byte little-endian signed int
|
---|
1015 | giving the number of bytes in the string, and the second is that many
|
---|
1016 | bytes, which are taken literally as the string content.
|
---|
1017 | """),
|
---|
1018 |
|
---|
1019 | I(name='SHORT_BINSTRING',
|
---|
1020 | code='U',
|
---|
1021 | arg=string1,
|
---|
1022 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
1023 | stack_after=[pystring],
|
---|
1024 | proto=1,
|
---|
1025 | doc="""Push a Python string object.
|
---|
1026 |
|
---|
1027 | There are two arguments: the first is a 1-byte unsigned int giving
|
---|
1028 | the number of bytes in the string, and the second is that many bytes,
|
---|
1029 | which are taken literally as the string content.
|
---|
1030 | """),
|
---|
1031 |
|
---|
1032 | # Ways to spell None.
|
---|
1033 |
|
---|
1034 | I(name='NONE',
|
---|
1035 | code='N',
|
---|
1036 | arg=None,
|
---|
1037 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
1038 | stack_after=[pynone],
|
---|
1039 | proto=0,
|
---|
1040 | doc="Push None on the stack."),
|
---|
1041 |
|
---|
1042 | # Ways to spell bools, starting with proto 2. See INT for how this was
|
---|
1043 | # done before proto 2.
|
---|
1044 |
|
---|
1045 | I(name='NEWTRUE',
|
---|
1046 | code='\x88',
|
---|
1047 | arg=None,
|
---|
1048 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
1049 | stack_after=[pybool],
|
---|
1050 | proto=2,
|
---|
1051 | doc="""True.
|
---|
1052 |
|
---|
1053 | Push True onto the stack."""),
|
---|
1054 |
|
---|
1055 | I(name='NEWFALSE',
|
---|
1056 | code='\x89',
|
---|
1057 | arg=None,
|
---|
1058 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
1059 | stack_after=[pybool],
|
---|
1060 | proto=2,
|
---|
1061 | doc="""True.
|
---|
1062 |
|
---|
1063 | Push False onto the stack."""),
|
---|
1064 |
|
---|
1065 | # Ways to spell Unicode strings.
|
---|
1066 |
|
---|
1067 | I(name='UNICODE',
|
---|
1068 | code='V',
|
---|
1069 | arg=unicodestringnl,
|
---|
1070 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
1071 | stack_after=[pyunicode],
|
---|
1072 | proto=0, # this may be pure-text, but it's a later addition
|
---|
1073 | doc="""Push a Python Unicode string object.
|
---|
1074 |
|
---|
1075 | The argument is a raw-unicode-escape encoding of a Unicode string,
|
---|
1076 | and so may contain embedded escape sequences. The argument extends
|
---|
1077 | until the next newline character.
|
---|
1078 | """),
|
---|
1079 |
|
---|
1080 | I(name='BINUNICODE',
|
---|
1081 | code='X',
|
---|
1082 | arg=unicodestring4,
|
---|
1083 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
1084 | stack_after=[pyunicode],
|
---|
1085 | proto=1,
|
---|
1086 | doc="""Push a Python Unicode string object.
|
---|
1087 |
|
---|
1088 | There are two arguments: the first is a 4-byte little-endian signed int
|
---|
1089 | giving the number of bytes in the string. The second is that many
|
---|
1090 | bytes, and is the UTF-8 encoding of the Unicode string.
|
---|
1091 | """),
|
---|
1092 |
|
---|
1093 | # Ways to spell floats.
|
---|
1094 |
|
---|
1095 | I(name='FLOAT',
|
---|
1096 | code='F',
|
---|
1097 | arg=floatnl,
|
---|
1098 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
1099 | stack_after=[pyfloat],
|
---|
1100 | proto=0,
|
---|
1101 | doc="""Newline-terminated decimal float literal.
|
---|
1102 |
|
---|
1103 | The argument is repr(a_float), and in general requires 17 significant
|
---|
1104 | digits for roundtrip conversion to be an identity (this is so for
|
---|
1105 | IEEE-754 double precision values, which is what Python float maps to
|
---|
1106 | on most boxes).
|
---|
1107 |
|
---|
1108 | In general, FLOAT cannot be used to transport infinities, NaNs, or
|
---|
1109 | minus zero across boxes (or even on a single box, if the platform C
|
---|
1110 | library can't read the strings it produces for such things -- Windows
|
---|
1111 | is like that), but may do less damage than BINFLOAT on boxes with
|
---|
1112 | greater precision or dynamic range than IEEE-754 double.
|
---|
1113 | """),
|
---|
1114 |
|
---|
1115 | I(name='BINFLOAT',
|
---|
1116 | code='G',
|
---|
1117 | arg=float8,
|
---|
1118 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
1119 | stack_after=[pyfloat],
|
---|
1120 | proto=1,
|
---|
1121 | doc="""Float stored in binary form, with 8 bytes of data.
|
---|
1122 |
|
---|
1123 | This generally requires less than half the space of FLOAT encoding.
|
---|
1124 | In general, BINFLOAT cannot be used to transport infinities, NaNs, or
|
---|
1125 | minus zero, raises an exception if the exponent exceeds the range of
|
---|
1126 | an IEEE-754 double, and retains no more than 53 bits of precision (if
|
---|
1127 | there are more than that, "add a half and chop" rounding is used to
|
---|
1128 | cut it back to 53 significant bits).
|
---|
1129 | """),
|
---|
1130 |
|
---|
1131 | # Ways to build lists.
|
---|
1132 |
|
---|
1133 | I(name='EMPTY_LIST',
|
---|
1134 | code=']',
|
---|
1135 | arg=None,
|
---|
1136 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
1137 | stack_after=[pylist],
|
---|
1138 | proto=1,
|
---|
1139 | doc="Push an empty list."),
|
---|
1140 |
|
---|
1141 | I(name='APPEND',
|
---|
1142 | code='a',
|
---|
1143 | arg=None,
|
---|
1144 | stack_before=[pylist, anyobject],
|
---|
1145 | stack_after=[pylist],
|
---|
1146 | proto=0,
|
---|
1147 | doc="""Append an object to a list.
|
---|
1148 |
|
---|
1149 | Stack before: ... pylist anyobject
|
---|
1150 | Stack after: ... pylist+[anyobject]
|
---|
1151 |
|
---|
1152 | although pylist is really extended in-place.
|
---|
1153 | """),
|
---|
1154 |
|
---|
1155 | I(name='APPENDS',
|
---|
1156 | code='e',
|
---|
1157 | arg=None,
|
---|
1158 | stack_before=[pylist, markobject, stackslice],
|
---|
1159 | stack_after=[pylist],
|
---|
1160 | proto=1,
|
---|
1161 | doc="""Extend a list by a slice of stack objects.
|
---|
1162 |
|
---|
1163 | Stack before: ... pylist markobject stackslice
|
---|
1164 | Stack after: ... pylist+stackslice
|
---|
1165 |
|
---|
1166 | although pylist is really extended in-place.
|
---|
1167 | """),
|
---|
1168 |
|
---|
1169 | I(name='LIST',
|
---|
1170 | code='l',
|
---|
1171 | arg=None,
|
---|
1172 | stack_before=[markobject, stackslice],
|
---|
1173 | stack_after=[pylist],
|
---|
1174 | proto=0,
|
---|
1175 | doc="""Build a list out of the topmost stack slice, after markobject.
|
---|
1176 |
|
---|
1177 | All the stack entries following the topmost markobject are placed into
|
---|
1178 | a single Python list, which single list object replaces all of the
|
---|
1179 | stack from the topmost markobject onward. For example,
|
---|
1180 |
|
---|
1181 | Stack before: ... markobject 1 2 3 'abc'
|
---|
1182 | Stack after: ... [1, 2, 3, 'abc']
|
---|
1183 | """),
|
---|
1184 |
|
---|
1185 | # Ways to build tuples.
|
---|
1186 |
|
---|
1187 | I(name='EMPTY_TUPLE',
|
---|
1188 | code=')',
|
---|
1189 | arg=None,
|
---|
1190 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
1191 | stack_after=[pytuple],
|
---|
1192 | proto=1,
|
---|
1193 | doc="Push an empty tuple."),
|
---|
1194 |
|
---|
1195 | I(name='TUPLE',
|
---|
1196 | code='t',
|
---|
1197 | arg=None,
|
---|
1198 | stack_before=[markobject, stackslice],
|
---|
1199 | stack_after=[pytuple],
|
---|
1200 | proto=0,
|
---|
1201 | doc="""Build a tuple out of the topmost stack slice, after markobject.
|
---|
1202 |
|
---|
1203 | All the stack entries following the topmost markobject are placed into
|
---|
1204 | a single Python tuple, which single tuple object replaces all of the
|
---|
1205 | stack from the topmost markobject onward. For example,
|
---|
1206 |
|
---|
1207 | Stack before: ... markobject 1 2 3 'abc'
|
---|
1208 | Stack after: ... (1, 2, 3, 'abc')
|
---|
1209 | """),
|
---|
1210 |
|
---|
1211 | I(name='TUPLE1',
|
---|
1212 | code='\x85',
|
---|
1213 | arg=None,
|
---|
1214 | stack_before=[anyobject],
|
---|
1215 | stack_after=[pytuple],
|
---|
1216 | proto=2,
|
---|
1217 | doc="""One-tuple.
|
---|
1218 |
|
---|
1219 | This code pops one value off the stack and pushes a tuple of
|
---|
1220 | length 1 whose one item is that value back onto it. IOW:
|
---|
1221 |
|
---|
1222 | stack[-1] = tuple(stack[-1:])
|
---|
1223 | """),
|
---|
1224 |
|
---|
1225 | I(name='TUPLE2',
|
---|
1226 | code='\x86',
|
---|
1227 | arg=None,
|
---|
1228 | stack_before=[anyobject, anyobject],
|
---|
1229 | stack_after=[pytuple],
|
---|
1230 | proto=2,
|
---|
1231 | doc="""One-tuple.
|
---|
1232 |
|
---|
1233 | This code pops two values off the stack and pushes a tuple
|
---|
1234 | of length 2 whose items are those values back onto it. IOW:
|
---|
1235 |
|
---|
1236 | stack[-2:] = [tuple(stack[-2:])]
|
---|
1237 | """),
|
---|
1238 |
|
---|
1239 | I(name='TUPLE3',
|
---|
1240 | code='\x87',
|
---|
1241 | arg=None,
|
---|
1242 | stack_before=[anyobject, anyobject, anyobject],
|
---|
1243 | stack_after=[pytuple],
|
---|
1244 | proto=2,
|
---|
1245 | doc="""One-tuple.
|
---|
1246 |
|
---|
1247 | This code pops three values off the stack and pushes a tuple
|
---|
1248 | of length 3 whose items are those values back onto it. IOW:
|
---|
1249 |
|
---|
1250 | stack[-3:] = [tuple(stack[-3:])]
|
---|
1251 | """),
|
---|
1252 |
|
---|
1253 | # Ways to build dicts.
|
---|
1254 |
|
---|
1255 | I(name='EMPTY_DICT',
|
---|
1256 | code='}',
|
---|
1257 | arg=None,
|
---|
1258 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
1259 | stack_after=[pydict],
|
---|
1260 | proto=1,
|
---|
1261 | doc="Push an empty dict."),
|
---|
1262 |
|
---|
1263 | I(name='DICT',
|
---|
1264 | code='d',
|
---|
1265 | arg=None,
|
---|
1266 | stack_before=[markobject, stackslice],
|
---|
1267 | stack_after=[pydict],
|
---|
1268 | proto=0,
|
---|
1269 | doc="""Build a dict out of the topmost stack slice, after markobject.
|
---|
1270 |
|
---|
1271 | All the stack entries following the topmost markobject are placed into
|
---|
1272 | a single Python dict, which single dict object replaces all of the
|
---|
1273 | stack from the topmost markobject onward. The stack slice alternates
|
---|
1274 | key, value, key, value, .... For example,
|
---|
1275 |
|
---|
1276 | Stack before: ... markobject 1 2 3 'abc'
|
---|
1277 | Stack after: ... {1: 2, 3: 'abc'}
|
---|
1278 | """),
|
---|
1279 |
|
---|
1280 | I(name='SETITEM',
|
---|
1281 | code='s',
|
---|
1282 | arg=None,
|
---|
1283 | stack_before=[pydict, anyobject, anyobject],
|
---|
1284 | stack_after=[pydict],
|
---|
1285 | proto=0,
|
---|
1286 | doc="""Add a key+value pair to an existing dict.
|
---|
1287 |
|
---|
1288 | Stack before: ... pydict key value
|
---|
1289 | Stack after: ... pydict
|
---|
1290 |
|
---|
1291 | where pydict has been modified via pydict[key] = value.
|
---|
1292 | """),
|
---|
1293 |
|
---|
1294 | I(name='SETITEMS',
|
---|
1295 | code='u',
|
---|
1296 | arg=None,
|
---|
1297 | stack_before=[pydict, markobject, stackslice],
|
---|
1298 | stack_after=[pydict],
|
---|
1299 | proto=1,
|
---|
1300 | doc="""Add an arbitrary number of key+value pairs to an existing dict.
|
---|
1301 |
|
---|
1302 | The slice of the stack following the topmost markobject is taken as
|
---|
1303 | an alternating sequence of keys and values, added to the dict
|
---|
1304 | immediately under the topmost markobject. Everything at and after the
|
---|
1305 | topmost markobject is popped, leaving the mutated dict at the top
|
---|
1306 | of the stack.
|
---|
1307 |
|
---|
1308 | Stack before: ... pydict markobject key_1 value_1 ... key_n value_n
|
---|
1309 | Stack after: ... pydict
|
---|
1310 |
|
---|
1311 | where pydict has been modified via pydict[key_i] = value_i for i in
|
---|
1312 | 1, 2, ..., n, and in that order.
|
---|
1313 | """),
|
---|
1314 |
|
---|
1315 | # Stack manipulation.
|
---|
1316 |
|
---|
1317 | I(name='POP',
|
---|
1318 | code='0',
|
---|
1319 | arg=None,
|
---|
1320 | stack_before=[anyobject],
|
---|
1321 | stack_after=[],
|
---|
1322 | proto=0,
|
---|
1323 | doc="Discard the top stack item, shrinking the stack by one item."),
|
---|
1324 |
|
---|
1325 | I(name='DUP',
|
---|
1326 | code='2',
|
---|
1327 | arg=None,
|
---|
1328 | stack_before=[anyobject],
|
---|
1329 | stack_after=[anyobject, anyobject],
|
---|
1330 | proto=0,
|
---|
1331 | doc="Push the top stack item onto the stack again, duplicating it."),
|
---|
1332 |
|
---|
1333 | I(name='MARK',
|
---|
1334 | code='(',
|
---|
1335 | arg=None,
|
---|
1336 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
1337 | stack_after=[markobject],
|
---|
1338 | proto=0,
|
---|
1339 | doc="""Push markobject onto the stack.
|
---|
1340 |
|
---|
1341 | markobject is a unique object, used by other opcodes to identify a
|
---|
1342 | region of the stack containing a variable number of objects for them
|
---|
1343 | to work on. See markobject.doc for more detail.
|
---|
1344 | """),
|
---|
1345 |
|
---|
1346 | I(name='POP_MARK',
|
---|
1347 | code='1',
|
---|
1348 | arg=None,
|
---|
1349 | stack_before=[markobject, stackslice],
|
---|
1350 | stack_after=[],
|
---|
1351 | proto=1,
|
---|
1352 | doc="""Pop all the stack objects at and above the topmost markobject.
|
---|
1353 |
|
---|
1354 | When an opcode using a variable number of stack objects is done,
|
---|
1355 | POP_MARK is used to remove those objects, and to remove the markobject
|
---|
1356 | that delimited their starting position on the stack.
|
---|
1357 | """),
|
---|
1358 |
|
---|
1359 | # Memo manipulation. There are really only two operations (get and put),
|
---|
1360 | # each in all-text, "short binary", and "long binary" flavors.
|
---|
1361 |
|
---|
1362 | I(name='GET',
|
---|
1363 | code='g',
|
---|
1364 | arg=decimalnl_short,
|
---|
1365 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
1366 | stack_after=[anyobject],
|
---|
1367 | proto=0,
|
---|
1368 | doc="""Read an object from the memo and push it on the stack.
|
---|
1369 |
|
---|
1370 | The index of the memo object to push is given by the newline-teriminated
|
---|
1371 | decimal string following. BINGET and LONG_BINGET are space-optimized
|
---|
1372 | versions.
|
---|
1373 | """),
|
---|
1374 |
|
---|
1375 | I(name='BINGET',
|
---|
1376 | code='h',
|
---|
1377 | arg=uint1,
|
---|
1378 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
1379 | stack_after=[anyobject],
|
---|
1380 | proto=1,
|
---|
1381 | doc="""Read an object from the memo and push it on the stack.
|
---|
1382 |
|
---|
1383 | The index of the memo object to push is given by the 1-byte unsigned
|
---|
1384 | integer following.
|
---|
1385 | """),
|
---|
1386 |
|
---|
1387 | I(name='LONG_BINGET',
|
---|
1388 | code='j',
|
---|
1389 | arg=int4,
|
---|
1390 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
1391 | stack_after=[anyobject],
|
---|
1392 | proto=1,
|
---|
1393 | doc="""Read an object from the memo and push it on the stack.
|
---|
1394 |
|
---|
1395 | The index of the memo object to push is given by the 4-byte signed
|
---|
1396 | little-endian integer following.
|
---|
1397 | """),
|
---|
1398 |
|
---|
1399 | I(name='PUT',
|
---|
1400 | code='p',
|
---|
1401 | arg=decimalnl_short,
|
---|
1402 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
1403 | stack_after=[],
|
---|
1404 | proto=0,
|
---|
1405 | doc="""Store the stack top into the memo. The stack is not popped.
|
---|
1406 |
|
---|
1407 | The index of the memo location to write into is given by the newline-
|
---|
1408 | terminated decimal string following. BINPUT and LONG_BINPUT are
|
---|
1409 | space-optimized versions.
|
---|
1410 | """),
|
---|
1411 |
|
---|
1412 | I(name='BINPUT',
|
---|
1413 | code='q',
|
---|
1414 | arg=uint1,
|
---|
1415 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
1416 | stack_after=[],
|
---|
1417 | proto=1,
|
---|
1418 | doc="""Store the stack top into the memo. The stack is not popped.
|
---|
1419 |
|
---|
1420 | The index of the memo location to write into is given by the 1-byte
|
---|
1421 | unsigned integer following.
|
---|
1422 | """),
|
---|
1423 |
|
---|
1424 | I(name='LONG_BINPUT',
|
---|
1425 | code='r',
|
---|
1426 | arg=int4,
|
---|
1427 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
1428 | stack_after=[],
|
---|
1429 | proto=1,
|
---|
1430 | doc="""Store the stack top into the memo. The stack is not popped.
|
---|
1431 |
|
---|
1432 | The index of the memo location to write into is given by the 4-byte
|
---|
1433 | signed little-endian integer following.
|
---|
1434 | """),
|
---|
1435 |
|
---|
1436 | # Access the extension registry (predefined objects). Akin to the GET
|
---|
1437 | # family.
|
---|
1438 |
|
---|
1439 | I(name='EXT1',
|
---|
1440 | code='\x82',
|
---|
1441 | arg=uint1,
|
---|
1442 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
1443 | stack_after=[anyobject],
|
---|
1444 | proto=2,
|
---|
1445 | doc="""Extension code.
|
---|
1446 |
|
---|
1447 | This code and the similar EXT2 and EXT4 allow using a registry
|
---|
1448 | of popular objects that are pickled by name, typically classes.
|
---|
1449 | It is envisioned that through a global negotiation and
|
---|
1450 | registration process, third parties can set up a mapping between
|
---|
1451 | ints and object names.
|
---|
1452 |
|
---|
1453 | In order to guarantee pickle interchangeability, the extension
|
---|
1454 | code registry ought to be global, although a range of codes may
|
---|
1455 | be reserved for private use.
|
---|
1456 |
|
---|
1457 | EXT1 has a 1-byte integer argument. This is used to index into the
|
---|
1458 | extension registry, and the object at that index is pushed on the stack.
|
---|
1459 | """),
|
---|
1460 |
|
---|
1461 | I(name='EXT2',
|
---|
1462 | code='\x83',
|
---|
1463 | arg=uint2,
|
---|
1464 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
1465 | stack_after=[anyobject],
|
---|
1466 | proto=2,
|
---|
1467 | doc="""Extension code.
|
---|
1468 |
|
---|
1469 | See EXT1. EXT2 has a two-byte integer argument.
|
---|
1470 | """),
|
---|
1471 |
|
---|
1472 | I(name='EXT4',
|
---|
1473 | code='\x84',
|
---|
1474 | arg=int4,
|
---|
1475 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
1476 | stack_after=[anyobject],
|
---|
1477 | proto=2,
|
---|
1478 | doc="""Extension code.
|
---|
1479 |
|
---|
1480 | See EXT1. EXT4 has a four-byte integer argument.
|
---|
1481 | """),
|
---|
1482 |
|
---|
1483 | # Push a class object, or module function, on the stack, via its module
|
---|
1484 | # and name.
|
---|
1485 |
|
---|
1486 | I(name='GLOBAL',
|
---|
1487 | code='c',
|
---|
1488 | arg=stringnl_noescape_pair,
|
---|
1489 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
1490 | stack_after=[anyobject],
|
---|
1491 | proto=0,
|
---|
1492 | doc="""Push a global object (module.attr) on the stack.
|
---|
1493 |
|
---|
1494 | Two newline-terminated strings follow the GLOBAL opcode. The first is
|
---|
1495 | taken as a module name, and the second as a class name. The class
|
---|
1496 | object module.class is pushed on the stack. More accurately, the
|
---|
1497 | object returned by self.find_class(module, class) is pushed on the
|
---|
1498 | stack, so unpickling subclasses can override this form of lookup.
|
---|
1499 | """),
|
---|
1500 |
|
---|
1501 | # Ways to build objects of classes pickle doesn't know about directly
|
---|
1502 | # (user-defined classes). I despair of documenting this accurately
|
---|
1503 | # and comprehensibly -- you really have to read the pickle code to
|
---|
1504 | # find all the special cases.
|
---|
1505 |
|
---|
1506 | I(name='REDUCE',
|
---|
1507 | code='R',
|
---|
1508 | arg=None,
|
---|
1509 | stack_before=[anyobject, anyobject],
|
---|
1510 | stack_after=[anyobject],
|
---|
1511 | proto=0,
|
---|
1512 | doc="""Push an object built from a callable and an argument tuple.
|
---|
1513 |
|
---|
1514 | The opcode is named to remind of the __reduce__() method.
|
---|
1515 |
|
---|
1516 | Stack before: ... callable pytuple
|
---|
1517 | Stack after: ... callable(*pytuple)
|
---|
1518 |
|
---|
1519 | The callable and the argument tuple are the first two items returned
|
---|
1520 | by a __reduce__ method. Applying the callable to the argtuple is
|
---|
1521 | supposed to reproduce the original object, or at least get it started.
|
---|
1522 | If the __reduce__ method returns a 3-tuple, the last component is an
|
---|
1523 | argument to be passed to the object's __setstate__, and then the REDUCE
|
---|
1524 | opcode is followed by code to create setstate's argument, and then a
|
---|
1525 | BUILD opcode to apply __setstate__ to that argument.
|
---|
1526 |
|
---|
1527 | If type(callable) is not ClassType, REDUCE complains unless the
|
---|
1528 | callable has been registered with the copy_reg module's
|
---|
1529 | safe_constructors dict, or the callable has a magic
|
---|
1530 | '__safe_for_unpickling__' attribute with a true value. I'm not sure
|
---|
1531 | why it does this, but I've sure seen this complaint often enough when
|
---|
1532 | I didn't want to <wink>.
|
---|
1533 | """),
|
---|
1534 |
|
---|
1535 | I(name='BUILD',
|
---|
1536 | code='b',
|
---|
1537 | arg=None,
|
---|
1538 | stack_before=[anyobject, anyobject],
|
---|
1539 | stack_after=[anyobject],
|
---|
1540 | proto=0,
|
---|
1541 | doc="""Finish building an object, via __setstate__ or dict update.
|
---|
1542 |
|
---|
1543 | Stack before: ... anyobject argument
|
---|
1544 | Stack after: ... anyobject
|
---|
1545 |
|
---|
1546 | where anyobject may have been mutated, as follows:
|
---|
1547 |
|
---|
1548 | If the object has a __setstate__ method,
|
---|
1549 |
|
---|
1550 | anyobject.__setstate__(argument)
|
---|
1551 |
|
---|
1552 | is called.
|
---|
1553 |
|
---|
1554 | Else the argument must be a dict, the object must have a __dict__, and
|
---|
1555 | the object is updated via
|
---|
1556 |
|
---|
1557 | anyobject.__dict__.update(argument)
|
---|
1558 |
|
---|
1559 | This may raise RuntimeError in restricted execution mode (which
|
---|
1560 | disallows access to __dict__ directly); in that case, the object
|
---|
1561 | is updated instead via
|
---|
1562 |
|
---|
1563 | for k, v in argument.items():
|
---|
1564 | anyobject[k] = v
|
---|
1565 | """),
|
---|
1566 |
|
---|
1567 | I(name='INST',
|
---|
1568 | code='i',
|
---|
1569 | arg=stringnl_noescape_pair,
|
---|
1570 | stack_before=[markobject, stackslice],
|
---|
1571 | stack_after=[anyobject],
|
---|
1572 | proto=0,
|
---|
1573 | doc="""Build a class instance.
|
---|
1574 |
|
---|
1575 | This is the protocol 0 version of protocol 1's OBJ opcode.
|
---|
1576 | INST is followed by two newline-terminated strings, giving a
|
---|
1577 | module and class name, just as for the GLOBAL opcode (and see
|
---|
1578 | GLOBAL for more details about that). self.find_class(module, name)
|
---|
1579 | is used to get a class object.
|
---|
1580 |
|
---|
1581 | In addition, all the objects on the stack following the topmost
|
---|
1582 | markobject are gathered into a tuple and popped (along with the
|
---|
1583 | topmost markobject), just as for the TUPLE opcode.
|
---|
1584 |
|
---|
1585 | Now it gets complicated. If all of these are true:
|
---|
1586 |
|
---|
1587 | + The argtuple is empty (markobject was at the top of the stack
|
---|
1588 | at the start).
|
---|
1589 |
|
---|
1590 | + It's an old-style class object (the type of the class object is
|
---|
1591 | ClassType).
|
---|
1592 |
|
---|
1593 | + The class object does not have a __getinitargs__ attribute.
|
---|
1594 |
|
---|
1595 | then we want to create an old-style class instance without invoking
|
---|
1596 | its __init__() method (pickle has waffled on this over the years; not
|
---|
1597 | calling __init__() is current wisdom). In this case, an instance of
|
---|
1598 | an old-style dummy class is created, and then we try to rebind its
|
---|
1599 | __class__ attribute to the desired class object. If this succeeds,
|
---|
1600 | the new instance object is pushed on the stack, and we're done. In
|
---|
1601 | restricted execution mode it can fail (assignment to __class__ is
|
---|
1602 | disallowed), and I'm not really sure what happens then -- it looks
|
---|
1603 | like the code ends up calling the class object's __init__ anyway,
|
---|
1604 | via falling into the next case.
|
---|
1605 |
|
---|
1606 | Else (the argtuple is not empty, it's not an old-style class object,
|
---|
1607 | or the class object does have a __getinitargs__ attribute), the code
|
---|
1608 | first insists that the class object have a __safe_for_unpickling__
|
---|
1609 | attribute. Unlike as for the __safe_for_unpickling__ check in REDUCE,
|
---|
1610 | it doesn't matter whether this attribute has a true or false value, it
|
---|
1611 | only matters whether it exists (XXX this is a bug; cPickle
|
---|
1612 | requires the attribute to be true). If __safe_for_unpickling__
|
---|
1613 | doesn't exist, UnpicklingError is raised.
|
---|
1614 |
|
---|
1615 | Else (the class object does have a __safe_for_unpickling__ attr),
|
---|
1616 | the class object obtained from INST's arguments is applied to the
|
---|
1617 | argtuple obtained from the stack, and the resulting instance object
|
---|
1618 | is pushed on the stack.
|
---|
1619 |
|
---|
1620 | NOTE: checks for __safe_for_unpickling__ went away in Python 2.3.
|
---|
1621 | """),
|
---|
1622 |
|
---|
1623 | I(name='OBJ',
|
---|
1624 | code='o',
|
---|
1625 | arg=None,
|
---|
1626 | stack_before=[markobject, anyobject, stackslice],
|
---|
1627 | stack_after=[anyobject],
|
---|
1628 | proto=1,
|
---|
1629 | doc="""Build a class instance.
|
---|
1630 |
|
---|
1631 | This is the protocol 1 version of protocol 0's INST opcode, and is
|
---|
1632 | very much like it. The major difference is that the class object
|
---|
1633 | is taken off the stack, allowing it to be retrieved from the memo
|
---|
1634 | repeatedly if several instances of the same class are created. This
|
---|
1635 | can be much more efficient (in both time and space) than repeatedly
|
---|
1636 | embedding the module and class names in INST opcodes.
|
---|
1637 |
|
---|
1638 | Unlike INST, OBJ takes no arguments from the opcode stream. Instead
|
---|
1639 | the class object is taken off the stack, immediately above the
|
---|
1640 | topmost markobject:
|
---|
1641 |
|
---|
1642 | Stack before: ... markobject classobject stackslice
|
---|
1643 | Stack after: ... new_instance_object
|
---|
1644 |
|
---|
1645 | As for INST, the remainder of the stack above the markobject is
|
---|
1646 | gathered into an argument tuple, and then the logic seems identical,
|
---|
1647 | except that no __safe_for_unpickling__ check is done (XXX this is
|
---|
1648 | a bug; cPickle does test __safe_for_unpickling__). See INST for
|
---|
1649 | the gory details.
|
---|
1650 |
|
---|
1651 | NOTE: In Python 2.3, INST and OBJ are identical except for how they
|
---|
1652 | get the class object. That was always the intent; the implementations
|
---|
1653 | had diverged for accidental reasons.
|
---|
1654 | """),
|
---|
1655 |
|
---|
1656 | I(name='NEWOBJ',
|
---|
1657 | code='\x81',
|
---|
1658 | arg=None,
|
---|
1659 | stack_before=[anyobject, anyobject],
|
---|
1660 | stack_after=[anyobject],
|
---|
1661 | proto=2,
|
---|
1662 | doc="""Build an object instance.
|
---|
1663 |
|
---|
1664 | The stack before should be thought of as containing a class
|
---|
1665 | object followed by an argument tuple (the tuple being the stack
|
---|
1666 | top). Call these cls and args. They are popped off the stack,
|
---|
1667 | and the value returned by cls.__new__(cls, *args) is pushed back
|
---|
1668 | onto the stack.
|
---|
1669 | """),
|
---|
1670 |
|
---|
1671 | # Machine control.
|
---|
1672 |
|
---|
1673 | I(name='PROTO',
|
---|
1674 | code='\x80',
|
---|
1675 | arg=uint1,
|
---|
1676 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
1677 | stack_after=[],
|
---|
1678 | proto=2,
|
---|
1679 | doc="""Protocol version indicator.
|
---|
1680 |
|
---|
1681 | For protocol 2 and above, a pickle must start with this opcode.
|
---|
1682 | The argument is the protocol version, an int in range(2, 256).
|
---|
1683 | """),
|
---|
1684 |
|
---|
1685 | I(name='STOP',
|
---|
1686 | code='.',
|
---|
1687 | arg=None,
|
---|
1688 | stack_before=[anyobject],
|
---|
1689 | stack_after=[],
|
---|
1690 | proto=0,
|
---|
1691 | doc="""Stop the unpickling machine.
|
---|
1692 |
|
---|
1693 | Every pickle ends with this opcode. The object at the top of the stack
|
---|
1694 | is popped, and that's the result of unpickling. The stack should be
|
---|
1695 | empty then.
|
---|
1696 | """),
|
---|
1697 |
|
---|
1698 | # Ways to deal with persistent IDs.
|
---|
1699 |
|
---|
1700 | I(name='PERSID',
|
---|
1701 | code='P',
|
---|
1702 | arg=stringnl_noescape,
|
---|
1703 | stack_before=[],
|
---|
1704 | stack_after=[anyobject],
|
---|
1705 | proto=0,
|
---|
1706 | doc="""Push an object identified by a persistent ID.
|
---|
1707 |
|
---|
1708 | The pickle module doesn't define what a persistent ID means. PERSID's
|
---|
1709 | argument is a newline-terminated str-style (no embedded escapes, no
|
---|
1710 | bracketing quote characters) string, which *is* "the persistent ID".
|
---|
1711 | The unpickler passes this string to self.persistent_load(). Whatever
|
---|
1712 | object that returns is pushed on the stack. There is no implementation
|
---|
1713 | of persistent_load() in Python's unpickler: it must be supplied by an
|
---|
1714 | unpickler subclass.
|
---|
1715 | """),
|
---|
1716 |
|
---|
1717 | I(name='BINPERSID',
|
---|
1718 | code='Q',
|
---|
1719 | arg=None,
|
---|
1720 | stack_before=[anyobject],
|
---|
1721 | stack_after=[anyobject],
|
---|
1722 | proto=1,
|
---|
1723 | doc="""Push an object identified by a persistent ID.
|
---|
1724 |
|
---|
1725 | Like PERSID, except the persistent ID is popped off the stack (instead
|
---|
1726 | of being a string embedded in the opcode bytestream). The persistent
|
---|
1727 | ID is passed to self.persistent_load(), and whatever object that
|
---|
1728 | returns is pushed on the stack. See PERSID for more detail.
|
---|
1729 | """),
|
---|
1730 | ]
|
---|
1731 | del I
|
---|
1732 |
|
---|
1733 | # Verify uniqueness of .name and .code members.
|
---|
1734 | name2i = {}
|
---|
1735 | code2i = {}
|
---|
1736 |
|
---|
1737 | for i, d in enumerate(opcodes):
|
---|
1738 | if d.name in name2i:
|
---|
1739 | raise ValueError("repeated name %r at indices %d and %d" %
|
---|
1740 | (d.name, name2i[d.name], i))
|
---|
1741 | if d.code in code2i:
|
---|
1742 | raise ValueError("repeated code %r at indices %d and %d" %
|
---|
1743 | (d.code, code2i[d.code], i))
|
---|
1744 |
|
---|
1745 | name2i[d.name] = i
|
---|
1746 | code2i[d.code] = i
|
---|
1747 |
|
---|
1748 | del name2i, code2i, i, d
|
---|
1749 |
|
---|
1750 | ##############################################################################
|
---|
1751 | # Build a code2op dict, mapping opcode characters to OpcodeInfo records.
|
---|
1752 | # Also ensure we've got the same stuff as pickle.py, although the
|
---|
1753 | # introspection here is dicey.
|
---|
1754 |
|
---|
1755 | code2op = {}
|
---|
1756 | for d in opcodes:
|
---|
1757 | code2op[d.code] = d
|
---|
1758 | del d
|
---|
1759 |
|
---|
1760 | def assure_pickle_consistency(verbose=False):
|
---|
1761 | import pickle, re
|
---|
1762 |
|
---|
1763 | copy = code2op.copy()
|
---|
1764 | for name in pickle.__all__:
|
---|
1765 | if not re.match("[A-Z][A-Z0-9_]+$", name):
|
---|
1766 | if verbose:
|
---|
1767 | print "skipping %r: it doesn't look like an opcode name" % name
|
---|
1768 | continue
|
---|
1769 | picklecode = getattr(pickle, name)
|
---|
1770 | if not isinstance(picklecode, str) or len(picklecode) != 1:
|
---|
1771 | if verbose:
|
---|
1772 | print ("skipping %r: value %r doesn't look like a pickle "
|
---|
1773 | "code" % (name, picklecode))
|
---|
1774 | continue
|
---|
1775 | if picklecode in copy:
|
---|
1776 | if verbose:
|
---|
1777 | print "checking name %r w/ code %r for consistency" % (
|
---|
1778 | name, picklecode)
|
---|
1779 | d = copy[picklecode]
|
---|
1780 | if d.name != name:
|
---|
1781 | raise ValueError("for pickle code %r, pickle.py uses name %r "
|
---|
1782 | "but we're using name %r" % (picklecode,
|
---|
1783 | name,
|
---|
1784 | d.name))
|
---|
1785 | # Forget this one. Any left over in copy at the end are a problem
|
---|
1786 | # of a different kind.
|
---|
1787 | del copy[picklecode]
|
---|
1788 | else:
|
---|
1789 | raise ValueError("pickle.py appears to have a pickle opcode with "
|
---|
1790 | "name %r and code %r, but we don't" %
|
---|
1791 | (name, picklecode))
|
---|
1792 | if copy:
|
---|
1793 | msg = ["we appear to have pickle opcodes that pickle.py doesn't have:"]
|
---|
1794 | for code, d in copy.items():
|
---|
1795 | msg.append(" name %r with code %r" % (d.name, code))
|
---|
1796 | raise ValueError("\n".join(msg))
|
---|
1797 |
|
---|
1798 | assure_pickle_consistency()
|
---|
1799 | del assure_pickle_consistency
|
---|
1800 |
|
---|
1801 | ##############################################################################
|
---|
1802 | # A pickle opcode generator.
|
---|
1803 |
|
---|
1804 | def genops(pickle):
|
---|
1805 | """Generate all the opcodes in a pickle.
|
---|
1806 |
|
---|
1807 | 'pickle' is a file-like object, or string, containing the pickle.
|
---|
1808 |
|
---|
1809 | Each opcode in the pickle is generated, from the current pickle position,
|
---|
1810 | stopping after a STOP opcode is delivered. A triple is generated for
|
---|
1811 | each opcode:
|
---|
1812 |
|
---|
1813 | opcode, arg, pos
|
---|
1814 |
|
---|
1815 | opcode is an OpcodeInfo record, describing the current opcode.
|
---|
1816 |
|
---|
1817 | If the opcode has an argument embedded in the pickle, arg is its decoded
|
---|
1818 | value, as a Python object. If the opcode doesn't have an argument, arg
|
---|
1819 | is None.
|
---|
1820 |
|
---|
1821 | If the pickle has a tell() method, pos was the value of pickle.tell()
|
---|
1822 | before reading the current opcode. If the pickle is a string object,
|
---|
1823 | it's wrapped in a StringIO object, and the latter's tell() result is
|
---|
1824 | used. Else (the pickle doesn't have a tell(), and it's not obvious how
|
---|
1825 | to query its current position) pos is None.
|
---|
1826 | """
|
---|
1827 |
|
---|
1828 | import cStringIO as StringIO
|
---|
1829 |
|
---|
1830 | if isinstance(pickle, str):
|
---|
1831 | pickle = StringIO.StringIO(pickle)
|
---|
1832 |
|
---|
1833 | if hasattr(pickle, "tell"):
|
---|
1834 | getpos = pickle.tell
|
---|
1835 | else:
|
---|
1836 | getpos = lambda: None
|
---|
1837 |
|
---|
1838 | while True:
|
---|
1839 | pos = getpos()
|
---|
1840 | code = pickle.read(1)
|
---|
1841 | opcode = code2op.get(code)
|
---|
1842 | if opcode is None:
|
---|
1843 | if code == "":
|
---|
1844 | raise ValueError("pickle exhausted before seeing STOP")
|
---|
1845 | else:
|
---|
1846 | raise ValueError("at position %s, opcode %r unknown" % (
|
---|
1847 | pos is None and "<unknown>" or pos,
|
---|
1848 | code))
|
---|
1849 | if opcode.arg is None:
|
---|
1850 | arg = None
|
---|
1851 | else:
|
---|
1852 | arg = opcode.arg.reader(pickle)
|
---|
1853 | yield opcode, arg, pos
|
---|
1854 | if code == '.':
|
---|
1855 | assert opcode.name == 'STOP'
|
---|
1856 | break
|
---|
1857 |
|
---|
1858 | ##############################################################################
|
---|
1859 | # A pickle optimizer.
|
---|
1860 |
|
---|
1861 | def optimize(p):
|
---|
1862 | 'Optimize a pickle string by removing unused PUT opcodes'
|
---|
1863 | gets = set() # set of args used by a GET opcode
|
---|
1864 | puts = [] # (arg, startpos, stoppos) for the PUT opcodes
|
---|
1865 | prevpos = None # set to pos if previous opcode was a PUT
|
---|
1866 | for opcode, arg, pos in genops(p):
|
---|
1867 | if prevpos is not None:
|
---|
1868 | puts.append((prevarg, prevpos, pos))
|
---|
1869 | prevpos = None
|
---|
1870 | if 'PUT' in opcode.name:
|
---|
1871 | prevarg, prevpos = arg, pos
|
---|
1872 | elif 'GET' in opcode.name:
|
---|
1873 | gets.add(arg)
|
---|
1874 |
|
---|
1875 | # Copy the pickle string except for PUTS without a corresponding GET
|
---|
1876 | s = []
|
---|
1877 | i = 0
|
---|
1878 | for arg, start, stop in puts:
|
---|
1879 | j = stop if (arg in gets) else start
|
---|
1880 | s.append(p[i:j])
|
---|
1881 | i = stop
|
---|
1882 | s.append(p[i:])
|
---|
1883 | return ''.join(s)
|
---|
1884 |
|
---|
1885 | ##############################################################################
|
---|
1886 | # A symbolic pickle disassembler.
|
---|
1887 |
|
---|
1888 | def dis(pickle, out=None, memo=None, indentlevel=4):
|
---|
1889 | """Produce a symbolic disassembly of a pickle.
|
---|
1890 |
|
---|
1891 | 'pickle' is a file-like object, or string, containing a (at least one)
|
---|
1892 | pickle. The pickle is disassembled from the current position, through
|
---|
1893 | the first STOP opcode encountered.
|
---|
1894 |
|
---|
1895 | Optional arg 'out' is a file-like object to which the disassembly is
|
---|
1896 | printed. It defaults to sys.stdout.
|
---|
1897 |
|
---|
1898 | Optional arg 'memo' is a Python dict, used as the pickle's memo. It
|
---|
1899 | may be mutated by dis(), if the pickle contains PUT or BINPUT opcodes.
|
---|
1900 | Passing the same memo object to another dis() call then allows disassembly
|
---|
1901 | to proceed across multiple pickles that were all created by the same
|
---|
1902 | pickler with the same memo. Ordinarily you don't need to worry about this.
|
---|
1903 |
|
---|
1904 | Optional arg indentlevel is the number of blanks by which to indent
|
---|
1905 | a new MARK level. It defaults to 4.
|
---|
1906 |
|
---|
1907 | In addition to printing the disassembly, some sanity checks are made:
|
---|
1908 |
|
---|
1909 | + All embedded opcode arguments "make sense".
|
---|
1910 |
|
---|
1911 | + Explicit and implicit pop operations have enough items on the stack.
|
---|
1912 |
|
---|
1913 | + When an opcode implicitly refers to a markobject, a markobject is
|
---|
1914 | actually on the stack.
|
---|
1915 |
|
---|
1916 | + A memo entry isn't referenced before it's defined.
|
---|
1917 |
|
---|
1918 | + The markobject isn't stored in the memo.
|
---|
1919 |
|
---|
1920 | + A memo entry isn't redefined.
|
---|
1921 | """
|
---|
1922 |
|
---|
1923 | # Most of the hair here is for sanity checks, but most of it is needed
|
---|
1924 | # anyway to detect when a protocol 0 POP takes a MARK off the stack
|
---|
1925 | # (which in turn is needed to indent MARK blocks correctly).
|
---|
1926 |
|
---|
1927 | stack = [] # crude emulation of unpickler stack
|
---|
1928 | if memo is None:
|
---|
1929 | memo = {} # crude emulation of unpicker memo
|
---|
1930 | maxproto = -1 # max protocol number seen
|
---|
1931 | markstack = [] # bytecode positions of MARK opcodes
|
---|
1932 | indentchunk = ' ' * indentlevel
|
---|
1933 | errormsg = None
|
---|
1934 | for opcode, arg, pos in genops(pickle):
|
---|
1935 | if pos is not None:
|
---|
1936 | print >> out, "%5d:" % pos,
|
---|
1937 |
|
---|
1938 | line = "%-4s %s%s" % (repr(opcode.code)[1:-1],
|
---|
1939 | indentchunk * len(markstack),
|
---|
1940 | opcode.name)
|
---|
1941 |
|
---|
1942 | maxproto = max(maxproto, opcode.proto)
|
---|
1943 | before = opcode.stack_before # don't mutate
|
---|
1944 | after = opcode.stack_after # don't mutate
|
---|
1945 | numtopop = len(before)
|
---|
1946 |
|
---|
1947 | # See whether a MARK should be popped.
|
---|
1948 | markmsg = None
|
---|
1949 | if markobject in before or (opcode.name == "POP" and
|
---|
1950 | stack and
|
---|
1951 | stack[-1] is markobject):
|
---|
1952 | assert markobject not in after
|
---|
1953 | if __debug__:
|
---|
1954 | if markobject in before:
|
---|
1955 | assert before[-1] is stackslice
|
---|
1956 | if markstack:
|
---|
1957 | markpos = markstack.pop()
|
---|
1958 | if markpos is None:
|
---|
1959 | markmsg = "(MARK at unknown opcode offset)"
|
---|
1960 | else:
|
---|
1961 | markmsg = "(MARK at %d)" % markpos
|
---|
1962 | # Pop everything at and after the topmost markobject.
|
---|
1963 | while stack[-1] is not markobject:
|
---|
1964 | stack.pop()
|
---|
1965 | stack.pop()
|
---|
1966 | # Stop later code from popping too much.
|
---|
1967 | try:
|
---|
1968 | numtopop = before.index(markobject)
|
---|
1969 | except ValueError:
|
---|
1970 | assert opcode.name == "POP"
|
---|
1971 | numtopop = 0
|
---|
1972 | else:
|
---|
1973 | errormsg = markmsg = "no MARK exists on stack"
|
---|
1974 |
|
---|
1975 | # Check for correct memo usage.
|
---|
1976 | if opcode.name in ("PUT", "BINPUT", "LONG_BINPUT"):
|
---|
1977 | assert arg is not None
|
---|
1978 | if arg in memo:
|
---|
1979 | errormsg = "memo key %r already defined" % arg
|
---|
1980 | elif not stack:
|
---|
1981 | errormsg = "stack is empty -- can't store into memo"
|
---|
1982 | elif stack[-1] is markobject:
|
---|
1983 | errormsg = "can't store markobject in the memo"
|
---|
1984 | else:
|
---|
1985 | memo[arg] = stack[-1]
|
---|
1986 |
|
---|
1987 | elif opcode.name in ("GET", "BINGET", "LONG_BINGET"):
|
---|
1988 | if arg in memo:
|
---|
1989 | assert len(after) == 1
|
---|
1990 | after = [memo[arg]] # for better stack emulation
|
---|
1991 | else:
|
---|
1992 | errormsg = "memo key %r has never been stored into" % arg
|
---|
1993 |
|
---|
1994 | if arg is not None or markmsg:
|
---|
1995 | # make a mild effort to align arguments
|
---|
1996 | line += ' ' * (10 - len(opcode.name))
|
---|
1997 | if arg is not None:
|
---|
1998 | line += ' ' + repr(arg)
|
---|
1999 | if markmsg:
|
---|
2000 | line += ' ' + markmsg
|
---|
2001 | print >> out, line
|
---|
2002 |
|
---|
2003 | if errormsg:
|
---|
2004 | # Note that we delayed complaining until the offending opcode
|
---|
2005 | # was printed.
|
---|
2006 | raise ValueError(errormsg)
|
---|
2007 |
|
---|
2008 | # Emulate the stack effects.
|
---|
2009 | if len(stack) < numtopop:
|
---|
2010 | raise ValueError("tries to pop %d items from stack with "
|
---|
2011 | "only %d items" % (numtopop, len(stack)))
|
---|
2012 | if numtopop:
|
---|
2013 | del stack[-numtopop:]
|
---|
2014 | if markobject in after:
|
---|
2015 | assert markobject not in before
|
---|
2016 | markstack.append(pos)
|
---|
2017 |
|
---|
2018 | stack.extend(after)
|
---|
2019 |
|
---|
2020 | print >> out, "highest protocol among opcodes =", maxproto
|
---|
2021 | if stack:
|
---|
2022 | raise ValueError("stack not empty after STOP: %r" % stack)
|
---|
2023 |
|
---|
2024 | # For use in the doctest, simply as an example of a class to pickle.
|
---|
2025 | class _Example:
|
---|
2026 | def __init__(self, value):
|
---|
2027 | self.value = value
|
---|
2028 |
|
---|
2029 | _dis_test = r"""
|
---|
2030 | >>> import pickle
|
---|
2031 | >>> x = [1, 2, (3, 4), {'abc': u"def"}]
|
---|
2032 | >>> pkl = pickle.dumps(x, 0)
|
---|
2033 | >>> dis(pkl)
|
---|
2034 | 0: ( MARK
|
---|
2035 | 1: l LIST (MARK at 0)
|
---|
2036 | 2: p PUT 0
|
---|
2037 | 5: I INT 1
|
---|
2038 | 8: a APPEND
|
---|
2039 | 9: I INT 2
|
---|
2040 | 12: a APPEND
|
---|
2041 | 13: ( MARK
|
---|
2042 | 14: I INT 3
|
---|
2043 | 17: I INT 4
|
---|
2044 | 20: t TUPLE (MARK at 13)
|
---|
2045 | 21: p PUT 1
|
---|
2046 | 24: a APPEND
|
---|
2047 | 25: ( MARK
|
---|
2048 | 26: d DICT (MARK at 25)
|
---|
2049 | 27: p PUT 2
|
---|
2050 | 30: S STRING 'abc'
|
---|
2051 | 37: p PUT 3
|
---|
2052 | 40: V UNICODE u'def'
|
---|
2053 | 45: p PUT 4
|
---|
2054 | 48: s SETITEM
|
---|
2055 | 49: a APPEND
|
---|
2056 | 50: . STOP
|
---|
2057 | highest protocol among opcodes = 0
|
---|
2058 |
|
---|
2059 | Try again with a "binary" pickle.
|
---|
2060 |
|
---|
2061 | >>> pkl = pickle.dumps(x, 1)
|
---|
2062 | >>> dis(pkl)
|
---|
2063 | 0: ] EMPTY_LIST
|
---|
2064 | 1: q BINPUT 0
|
---|
2065 | 3: ( MARK
|
---|
2066 | 4: K BININT1 1
|
---|
2067 | 6: K BININT1 2
|
---|
2068 | 8: ( MARK
|
---|
2069 | 9: K BININT1 3
|
---|
2070 | 11: K BININT1 4
|
---|
2071 | 13: t TUPLE (MARK at 8)
|
---|
2072 | 14: q BINPUT 1
|
---|
2073 | 16: } EMPTY_DICT
|
---|
2074 | 17: q BINPUT 2
|
---|
2075 | 19: U SHORT_BINSTRING 'abc'
|
---|
2076 | 24: q BINPUT 3
|
---|
2077 | 26: X BINUNICODE u'def'
|
---|
2078 | 34: q BINPUT 4
|
---|
2079 | 36: s SETITEM
|
---|
2080 | 37: e APPENDS (MARK at 3)
|
---|
2081 | 38: . STOP
|
---|
2082 | highest protocol among opcodes = 1
|
---|
2083 |
|
---|
2084 | Exercise the INST/OBJ/BUILD family.
|
---|
2085 |
|
---|
2086 | >>> import pickletools
|
---|
2087 | >>> dis(pickle.dumps(pickletools.dis, 0))
|
---|
2088 | 0: c GLOBAL 'pickletools dis'
|
---|
2089 | 17: p PUT 0
|
---|
2090 | 20: . STOP
|
---|
2091 | highest protocol among opcodes = 0
|
---|
2092 |
|
---|
2093 | >>> from pickletools import _Example
|
---|
2094 | >>> x = [_Example(42)] * 2
|
---|
2095 | >>> dis(pickle.dumps(x, 0))
|
---|
2096 | 0: ( MARK
|
---|
2097 | 1: l LIST (MARK at 0)
|
---|
2098 | 2: p PUT 0
|
---|
2099 | 5: ( MARK
|
---|
2100 | 6: i INST 'pickletools _Example' (MARK at 5)
|
---|
2101 | 28: p PUT 1
|
---|
2102 | 31: ( MARK
|
---|
2103 | 32: d DICT (MARK at 31)
|
---|
2104 | 33: p PUT 2
|
---|
2105 | 36: S STRING 'value'
|
---|
2106 | 45: p PUT 3
|
---|
2107 | 48: I INT 42
|
---|
2108 | 52: s SETITEM
|
---|
2109 | 53: b BUILD
|
---|
2110 | 54: a APPEND
|
---|
2111 | 55: g GET 1
|
---|
2112 | 58: a APPEND
|
---|
2113 | 59: . STOP
|
---|
2114 | highest protocol among opcodes = 0
|
---|
2115 |
|
---|
2116 | >>> dis(pickle.dumps(x, 1))
|
---|
2117 | 0: ] EMPTY_LIST
|
---|
2118 | 1: q BINPUT 0
|
---|
2119 | 3: ( MARK
|
---|
2120 | 4: ( MARK
|
---|
2121 | 5: c GLOBAL 'pickletools _Example'
|
---|
2122 | 27: q BINPUT 1
|
---|
2123 | 29: o OBJ (MARK at 4)
|
---|
2124 | 30: q BINPUT 2
|
---|
2125 | 32: } EMPTY_DICT
|
---|
2126 | 33: q BINPUT 3
|
---|
2127 | 35: U SHORT_BINSTRING 'value'
|
---|
2128 | 42: q BINPUT 4
|
---|
2129 | 44: K BININT1 42
|
---|
2130 | 46: s SETITEM
|
---|
2131 | 47: b BUILD
|
---|
2132 | 48: h BINGET 2
|
---|
2133 | 50: e APPENDS (MARK at 3)
|
---|
2134 | 51: . STOP
|
---|
2135 | highest protocol among opcodes = 1
|
---|
2136 |
|
---|
2137 | Try "the canonical" recursive-object test.
|
---|
2138 |
|
---|
2139 | >>> L = []
|
---|
2140 | >>> T = L,
|
---|
2141 | >>> L.append(T)
|
---|
2142 | >>> L[0] is T
|
---|
2143 | True
|
---|
2144 | >>> T[0] is L
|
---|
2145 | True
|
---|
2146 | >>> L[0][0] is L
|
---|
2147 | True
|
---|
2148 | >>> T[0][0] is T
|
---|
2149 | True
|
---|
2150 | >>> dis(pickle.dumps(L, 0))
|
---|
2151 | 0: ( MARK
|
---|
2152 | 1: l LIST (MARK at 0)
|
---|
2153 | 2: p PUT 0
|
---|
2154 | 5: ( MARK
|
---|
2155 | 6: g GET 0
|
---|
2156 | 9: t TUPLE (MARK at 5)
|
---|
2157 | 10: p PUT 1
|
---|
2158 | 13: a APPEND
|
---|
2159 | 14: . STOP
|
---|
2160 | highest protocol among opcodes = 0
|
---|
2161 |
|
---|
2162 | >>> dis(pickle.dumps(L, 1))
|
---|
2163 | 0: ] EMPTY_LIST
|
---|
2164 | 1: q BINPUT 0
|
---|
2165 | 3: ( MARK
|
---|
2166 | 4: h BINGET 0
|
---|
2167 | 6: t TUPLE (MARK at 3)
|
---|
2168 | 7: q BINPUT 1
|
---|
2169 | 9: a APPEND
|
---|
2170 | 10: . STOP
|
---|
2171 | highest protocol among opcodes = 1
|
---|
2172 |
|
---|
2173 | Note that, in the protocol 0 pickle of the recursive tuple, the disassembler
|
---|
2174 | has to emulate the stack in order to realize that the POP opcode at 16 gets
|
---|
2175 | rid of the MARK at 0.
|
---|
2176 |
|
---|
2177 | >>> dis(pickle.dumps(T, 0))
|
---|
2178 | 0: ( MARK
|
---|
2179 | 1: ( MARK
|
---|
2180 | 2: l LIST (MARK at 1)
|
---|
2181 | 3: p PUT 0
|
---|
2182 | 6: ( MARK
|
---|
2183 | 7: g GET 0
|
---|
2184 | 10: t TUPLE (MARK at 6)
|
---|
2185 | 11: p PUT 1
|
---|
2186 | 14: a APPEND
|
---|
2187 | 15: 0 POP
|
---|
2188 | 16: 0 POP (MARK at 0)
|
---|
2189 | 17: g GET 1
|
---|
2190 | 20: . STOP
|
---|
2191 | highest protocol among opcodes = 0
|
---|
2192 |
|
---|
2193 | >>> dis(pickle.dumps(T, 1))
|
---|
2194 | 0: ( MARK
|
---|
2195 | 1: ] EMPTY_LIST
|
---|
2196 | 2: q BINPUT 0
|
---|
2197 | 4: ( MARK
|
---|
2198 | 5: h BINGET 0
|
---|
2199 | 7: t TUPLE (MARK at 4)
|
---|
2200 | 8: q BINPUT 1
|
---|
2201 | 10: a APPEND
|
---|
2202 | 11: 1 POP_MARK (MARK at 0)
|
---|
2203 | 12: h BINGET 1
|
---|
2204 | 14: . STOP
|
---|
2205 | highest protocol among opcodes = 1
|
---|
2206 |
|
---|
2207 | Try protocol 2.
|
---|
2208 |
|
---|
2209 | >>> dis(pickle.dumps(L, 2))
|
---|
2210 | 0: \x80 PROTO 2
|
---|
2211 | 2: ] EMPTY_LIST
|
---|
2212 | 3: q BINPUT 0
|
---|
2213 | 5: h BINGET 0
|
---|
2214 | 7: \x85 TUPLE1
|
---|
2215 | 8: q BINPUT 1
|
---|
2216 | 10: a APPEND
|
---|
2217 | 11: . STOP
|
---|
2218 | highest protocol among opcodes = 2
|
---|
2219 |
|
---|
2220 | >>> dis(pickle.dumps(T, 2))
|
---|
2221 | 0: \x80 PROTO 2
|
---|
2222 | 2: ] EMPTY_LIST
|
---|
2223 | 3: q BINPUT 0
|
---|
2224 | 5: h BINGET 0
|
---|
2225 | 7: \x85 TUPLE1
|
---|
2226 | 8: q BINPUT 1
|
---|
2227 | 10: a APPEND
|
---|
2228 | 11: 0 POP
|
---|
2229 | 12: h BINGET 1
|
---|
2230 | 14: . STOP
|
---|
2231 | highest protocol among opcodes = 2
|
---|
2232 | """
|
---|
2233 |
|
---|
2234 | _memo_test = r"""
|
---|
2235 | >>> import pickle
|
---|
2236 | >>> from StringIO import StringIO
|
---|
2237 | >>> f = StringIO()
|
---|
2238 | >>> p = pickle.Pickler(f, 2)
|
---|
2239 | >>> x = [1, 2, 3]
|
---|
2240 | >>> p.dump(x)
|
---|
2241 | >>> p.dump(x)
|
---|
2242 | >>> f.seek(0)
|
---|
2243 | >>> memo = {}
|
---|
2244 | >>> dis(f, memo=memo)
|
---|
2245 | 0: \x80 PROTO 2
|
---|
2246 | 2: ] EMPTY_LIST
|
---|
2247 | 3: q BINPUT 0
|
---|
2248 | 5: ( MARK
|
---|
2249 | 6: K BININT1 1
|
---|
2250 | 8: K BININT1 2
|
---|
2251 | 10: K BININT1 3
|
---|
2252 | 12: e APPENDS (MARK at 5)
|
---|
2253 | 13: . STOP
|
---|
2254 | highest protocol among opcodes = 2
|
---|
2255 | >>> dis(f, memo=memo)
|
---|
2256 | 14: \x80 PROTO 2
|
---|
2257 | 16: h BINGET 0
|
---|
2258 | 18: . STOP
|
---|
2259 | highest protocol among opcodes = 2
|
---|
2260 | """
|
---|
2261 |
|
---|
2262 | __test__ = {'disassembler_test': _dis_test,
|
---|
2263 | 'disassembler_memo_test': _memo_test,
|
---|
2264 | }
|
---|
2265 |
|
---|
2266 | def _test():
|
---|
2267 | import doctest
|
---|
2268 | return doctest.testmod()
|
---|
2269 |
|
---|
2270 | if __name__ == "__main__":
|
---|
2271 | _test()
|
---|