ok
Direktori : /opt/imunify360/venv/lib64/python3.11/site-packages/pip/_internal/models/ |
Current File : //opt/imunify360/venv/lib64/python3.11/site-packages/pip/_internal/models/search_scope.py |
import itertools import logging import os import posixpath import urllib.parse from dataclasses import dataclass from typing import List from pip._vendor.packaging.utils import canonicalize_name from pip._internal.models.index import PyPI from pip._internal.utils.compat import has_tls from pip._internal.utils.misc import normalize_path, redact_auth_from_url logger = logging.getLogger(__name__) @dataclass(frozen=True) class SearchScope: """ Encapsulates the locations that pip is configured to search. """ __slots__ = ["find_links", "index_urls", "no_index"] find_links: List[str] index_urls: List[str] no_index: bool @classmethod def create( cls, find_links: List[str], index_urls: List[str], no_index: bool, ) -> "SearchScope": """ Create a SearchScope object after normalizing the `find_links`. """ # Build find_links. If an argument starts with ~, it may be # a local file relative to a home directory. So try normalizing # it and if it exists, use the normalized version. # This is deliberately conservative - it might be fine just to # blindly normalize anything starting with a ~... built_find_links: List[str] = [] for link in find_links: if link.startswith("~"): new_link = normalize_path(link) if os.path.exists(new_link): link = new_link built_find_links.append(link) # If we don't have TLS enabled, then WARN if anyplace we're looking # relies on TLS. if not has_tls(): for link in itertools.chain(index_urls, built_find_links): parsed = urllib.parse.urlparse(link) if parsed.scheme == "https": logger.warning( "pip is configured with locations that require " "TLS/SSL, however the ssl module in Python is not " "available." ) break return cls( find_links=built_find_links, index_urls=index_urls, no_index=no_index, ) def get_formatted_locations(self) -> str: lines = [] redacted_index_urls = [] if self.index_urls and self.index_urls != [PyPI.simple_url]: for url in self.index_urls: redacted_index_url = redact_auth_from_url(url) # Parse the URL purl = urllib.parse.urlsplit(redacted_index_url) # URL is generally invalid if scheme and netloc is missing # there are issues with Python and URL parsing, so this test # is a bit crude. See bpo-20271, bpo-23505. Python doesn't # always parse invalid URLs correctly - it should raise # exceptions for malformed URLs if not purl.scheme and not purl.netloc: logger.warning( 'The index url "%s" seems invalid, please provide a scheme.', redacted_index_url, ) redacted_index_urls.append(redacted_index_url) lines.append( "Looking in indexes: {}".format(", ".join(redacted_index_urls)) ) if self.find_links: lines.append( "Looking in links: {}".format( ", ".join(redact_auth_from_url(url) for url in self.find_links) ) ) return "\n".join(lines) def get_index_urls_locations(self, project_name: str) -> List[str]: """Returns the locations found via self.index_urls Checks the url_name on the main (first in the list) index and use this url_name to produce all locations """ def mkurl_pypi_url(url: str) -> str: loc = posixpath.join( url, urllib.parse.quote(canonicalize_name(project_name)) ) # For maximum compatibility with easy_install, ensure the path # ends in a trailing slash. Although this isn't in the spec # (and PyPI can handle it without the slash) some other index # implementations might break if they relied on easy_install's # behavior. if not loc.endswith("/"): loc = loc + "/" return loc return [mkurl_pypi_url(url) for url in self.index_urls]