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164 lines
8.4 KiB
164 lines
8.4 KiB
Metadata-Version: 2.1
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Name: executing
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Version: 0.10.0
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Summary: Get the currently executing AST node of a frame, and other information
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Home-page: https://github.com/alexmojaki/executing
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Author: Alex Hall
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Author-email: alex.mojaki@gmail.com
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License: MIT
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Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.4
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.7
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.8
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9
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Description-Content-Type: text/markdown
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License-File: LICENSE.txt
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# executing
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[![Build Status](https://github.com/alexmojaki/executing/workflows/Tests/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://github.com/alexmojaki/executing/actions) [![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/github/alexmojaki/executing/badge.svg?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/github/alexmojaki/executing?branch=master) [![Supports Python versions 2.7 and 3.4+, including PyPy](https://img.shields.io/pypi/pyversions/executing.svg)](https://pypi.python.org/pypi/executing)
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This mini-package lets you get information about what a frame is currently doing, particularly the AST node being executed.
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* [Usage](#usage)
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* [Getting the AST node](#getting-the-ast-node)
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* [Getting the source code of the node](#getting-the-source-code-of-the-node)
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* [Getting the `__qualname__` of the current function](#getting-the-__qualname__-of-the-current-function)
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* [The Source class](#the-source-class)
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* [Installation](#installation)
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* [How does it work?](#how-does-it-work)
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* [Is it reliable?](#is-it-reliable)
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* [Which nodes can it identify?](#which-nodes-can-it-identify)
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* [Libraries that use this](#libraries-that-use-this)
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## Usage
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### Getting the AST node
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```python
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import executing
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node = executing.Source.executing(frame).node
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```
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Then `node` will be an AST node (from the `ast` standard library module) or None if the node couldn't be identified (which may happen often and should always be checked).
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`node` will always be the same instance for multiple calls with frames at the same point of execution.
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If you have a traceback object, pass it directly to `Source.executing()` rather than the `tb_frame` attribute to get the correct node.
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### Getting the source code of the node
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For this you will need to separately install the [`asttokens`](https://github.com/gristlabs/asttokens) library, then obtain an `ASTTokens` object:
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```python
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executing.Source.executing(frame).source.asttokens()
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```
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or:
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```python
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executing.Source.for_frame(frame).asttokens()
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```
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or use one of the convenience methods:
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```python
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executing.Source.executing(frame).text()
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executing.Source.executing(frame).text_range()
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```
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### Getting the `__qualname__` of the current function
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```python
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executing.Source.executing(frame).code_qualname()
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```
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or:
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```python
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executing.Source.for_frame(frame).code_qualname(frame.f_code)
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```
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### The `Source` class
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Everything goes through the `Source` class. Only one instance of the class is created for each filename. Subclassing it to add more attributes on creation or methods is recommended. The classmethods such as `executing` will respect this. See the source code and docstrings for more detail.
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## Installation
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pip install executing
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If you don't like that you can just copy the file `executing.py`, there are no dependencies (but of course you won't get updates).
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## How does it work?
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Suppose the frame is executing this line:
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```python
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self.foo(bar.x)
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```
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and in particular it's currently obtaining the attribute `self.foo`. Looking at the bytecode, specifically `frame.f_code.co_code[frame.f_lasti]`, we can tell that it's loading an attribute, but it's not obvious which one. We can narrow down the statement being executed using `frame.f_lineno` and find the two `ast.Attribute` nodes representing `self.foo` and `bar.x`. How do we find out which one it is, without recreating the entire compiler in Python?
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The trick is to modify the AST slightly for each candidate expression and observe the changes in the bytecode instructions. We change the AST to this:
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```python
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(self.foo ** 'longuniqueconstant')(bar.x)
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```
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and compile it, and the bytecode will be almost the same but there will be two new instructions:
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LOAD_CONST 'longuniqueconstant'
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BINARY_POWER
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and just before that will be a `LOAD_ATTR` instruction corresponding to `self.foo`. Seeing that it's in the same position as the original instruction lets us know we've found our match.
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## Is it reliable?
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Yes - if it identifies a node, you can trust that it's identified the correct one. The tests are very thorough - in addition to unit tests which check various situations directly, there are property tests against a large number of files (see the filenames printed in [this build](https://travis-ci.org/alexmojaki/executing/jobs/557970457)) with real code. Specifically, for each file, the tests:
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1. Identify as many nodes as possible from all the bytecode instructions in the file, and assert that they are all distinct
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2. Find all the nodes that should be identifiable, and assert that they were indeed identified somewhere
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In other words, it shows that there is a one-to-one mapping between the nodes and the instructions that can be handled. This leaves very little room for a bug to creep in.
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Furthermore, `executing` checks that the instructions compiled from the modified AST exactly match the original code save for a few small known exceptions. This accounts for all the quirks and optimisations in the interpreter.
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## Which nodes can it identify?
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Currently it works in almost all cases for the following `ast` nodes:
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- `Call`, e.g. `self.foo(bar)`
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- `Attribute`, e.g. `point.x`
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- `Subscript`, e.g. `lst[1]`
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- `BinOp`, e.g. `x + y` (doesn't include `and` and `or`)
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- `UnaryOp`, e.g. `-n` (includes `not` but only works sometimes)
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- `Compare` e.g. `a < b` (not for chains such as `0 < p < 1`)
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The plan is to extend to more operations in the future.
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## Projects that use this
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### My Projects
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- **[`stack_data`](https://github.com/alexmojaki/stack_data)**: Extracts data from stack frames and tracebacks, particularly to display more useful tracebacks than the default. Also uses another related library of mine: **[`pure_eval`](https://github.com/alexmojaki/pure_eval)**.
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- **[`futurecoder`](https://futurecoder.io/)**: Highlights the executing node in tracebacks using `executing` via `stack_data`, and provides debugging with `snoop`.
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- **[`snoop`](https://github.com/alexmojaki/snoop)**: A feature-rich and convenient debugging library. Uses `executing` to show the operation which caused an exception and to allow the `pp` function to display the source of its arguments.
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- **[`heartrate`](https://github.com/alexmojaki/heartrate)**: A simple real time visualisation of the execution of a Python program. Uses `executing` to highlight currently executing operations, particularly in each frame of the stack trace.
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- **[`sorcery`](https://github.com/alexmojaki/sorcery)**: Dark magic delights in Python. Uses `executing` to let special callables called spells know where they're being called from.
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### Projects I've contributed to
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- **[`IPython`](https://github.com/ipython/ipython/pull/12150)**: Highlights the executing node in tracebacks using `executing` via [`stack_data`](https://github.com/alexmojaki/stack_data).
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- **[`icecream`](https://github.com/gruns/icecream)**: 🍦 Sweet and creamy print debugging. Uses `executing` to identify where `ic` is called and print its arguments.
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- **[`friendly_traceback`](https://github.com/friendly-traceback/friendly-traceback)**: Uses `stack_data` and `executing` to pinpoint the cause of errors and provide helpful explanations.
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- **[`python-devtools`](https://github.com/samuelcolvin/python-devtools)**: Uses `executing` for print debugging similar to `icecream`.
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- **[`sentry_sdk`](https://github.com/getsentry/sentry-python)**: Add the integration `sentry_sdk.integrations.executingExecutingIntegration()` to show the function `__qualname__` in each frame in sentry events.
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- **[`varname`](https://github.com/pwwang/python-varname)**: Dark magics about variable names in python. Uses `executing` to find where its various magical functions like `varname` and `nameof` are called from.
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