"Fixer that translates some APIs ignored by the default 2to3 fixers." # FIXME: This fixer has some ugly hacks. Its main design is based on that of # fix_imports, from lib2to3. Unfortunately, the fix_imports framework only # changes module names "without dots", meaning it won't work for some changes # in the email module/package. Thus this fixer was born. I believe that with a # bit more thinking, a more generic fixer can be implemented, but I'll leave # that as future work. from lib2to3.fixer_util import Name from lib2to3.fixes import fix_imports # This maps the old names to the new names. Note that a drawback of the current # design is that the dictionary keys MUST have EXACTLY one dot (.) in them, # otherwise things will break. (If you don't need a module hierarchy, you're # better of just inherit from fix_imports and overriding the MAPPING dict.) MAPPING = {'email.Utils': 'email.utils', 'email.Errors': 'email.errors', 'email.Header': 'email.header', 'email.Parser': 'email.parser', 'email.Encoders': 'email.encoders', 'email.MIMEText': 'email.mime.text', 'email.MIMEBase': 'email.mime.base', 'email.Generator': 'email.generator', 'email.MIMEMultipart': 'email.mime.multipart', } def alternates(members): return "(" + "|".join(map(repr, members)) + ")" def build_pattern(mapping=MAPPING): packages = {} for key in mapping: # What we are doing here is the following: with dotted names, we'll # have something like package_name . Then, we are # making a dictionary to copy this structure. For example, if # mapping={'A.B': 'a.b', 'A.C': 'a.c'}, it will generate the dictionary # {'A': ['b', 'c']} to, then, generate something like "A > """ % mod_list yield """name_import=import_name< 'import' multiple_imports=dotted_as_names< any* module_name=dotted_name< %s > any* > >""" % mod_list packs = ' | '.join(["'%s' trailer<'.' ('%s')>" % (key, "' | '".join(packages[key])) for key in packages]) yield "power< package=(%s) trailer<'.' any > any* >" % packs class FixLeftoverImports(fix_imports.FixImports): # We want to run this fixer after fix_import has run (this shouldn't matter # for hg, though, as setup3k prefers to run the default fixers first) mapping = MAPPING def build_pattern(self): return "|".join(build_pattern(self.mapping)) def transform(self, node, results): # Mostly copied from fix_imports.py import_mod = results.get("module_name") if import_mod: try: mod_name = import_mod.value except AttributeError: # XXX: A hack to remove whitespace prefixes and suffixes mod_name = str(import_mod).strip() new_name = self.mapping[mod_name] import_mod.replace(Name(new_name, prefix=import_mod.prefix)) if "name_import" in results: # If it's not a "from x import x, y" or "import x as y" import, # marked its usage to be replaced. self.replace[mod_name] = new_name if "multiple_imports" in results: # This is a nasty hack to fix multiple imports on a line (e.g., # "import StringIO, urlparse"). The problem is that I can't # figure out an easy way to make a pattern recognize the keys of # MAPPING randomly sprinkled in an import statement. results = self.match(node) if results: self.transform(node, results) else: # Replace usage of the module. # Now this is, mostly, a hack bare_name = results["package"][0] bare_name_text = ''.join(map(str, results['package'])).strip() new_name = self.replace.get(bare_name_text) prefix = results['package'][0].prefix if new_name: bare_name.replace(Name(new_name, prefix=prefix)) results["package"][1].replace(Name(''))