|
Server : Apache/2.2.2 (Fedora) System : Linux App1.pathumtani.go.th 2.6.20-1.2320.fc5smp #1 SMP Tue Jun 12 19:40:16 EDT 2007 i686 User : apache ( 48) PHP Version : 5.2.9 Disable Function : NONE Directory : /proc/self/root/usr/share/doc/subversion-1.3.2/tools/dev/ |
Upload File : |
#!/usr/bin/env python
# See usage() for details, or run with --help option.
#
# .-------------------------------------------------.
# | "An ad hoc format deserves an ad hoc parser." |
# `-------------------------------------------------'
#
# Some Subversion project log messages include parseable data to help
# track who's contributing what. The exact syntax is described in
# hacking.html#crediting, but here's an example, indented by three
# spaces, i.e., the "Patch by:" starts at the beginning of a line:
#
# Patch by: David Anderson <david.anderson@calixo.net>
# <justin@erenkrantz.com>
# me
# (I wrote the regression tests.)
# Suggested by: Snosbig Q. Ptermione <sqptermione@example.com>
# Review by: Justin Erenkrantz <justin@erenkrantz.com>
# rooneg
# (They caught an off-by-one error in the main loop.)
#
# This is a pathological example, but it shows all the things we might
# need to parse. We need to:
#
# - Detect the officially-approved "WORD by: " fields.
# - Grab every name (one per line) in each field.
# - Handle names in various formats, unifying where possible.
# - Expand "me" to the committer name for this revision.
# - Associate a parenthetical aside following a field with that field.
#
# Right now we do not offer any conversion between committers'
# usernames and their real names. In the future, we could take the
# COMMITTERS file as an optional parameter and do such a transform.
#
# NOTES: You might be wondering, why not take 'svn log --xml' input?
# Well, that would be the Right Thing to do, but in practice this was
# a lot easier to whip up for straight 'svn log' output. I'd have no
# objection to it being rewritten to take XML input.
import os
import sys
import re
import shutil
import getopt
# Pretend we have true booleans on older python versions
try:
True
except:
True = 1
False = 0
# Warnings and errors start with these strings. They are typically
# followed by a colon and a space, as in "%s: " ==> "WARNING: ".
warning_prefix = 'WARNING'
error_prefix = 'ERROR'
def complain(msg, fatal=False):
"""Print MSG as a warning, or if FATAL is true, print it as an error
and exit."""
prefix = 'WARNING: '
if fatal:
prefix = 'ERROR: '
sys.stderr.write(prefix + msg + '\n')
if fatal:
sys.exit(1)
def escape_html(str):
"""Return an HTML-escaped version of STR."""
return str.replace('&', '&').replace('<', '<').replace('>', '>')
def html_header(title):
title = escape_html(title)
s = '<title>%s</title>\n' % title
s += '<html>\n\n'
s += '<head><meta http-equiv=Content-Type ' \
'content="text/html; charset=UTF-8"></head>\n\n'
s += '<body text="#000000" bgcolor="#FFFFFF">\n\n'
s += '<center><h1>%s</h1></center>\n\n' % title
s += '<hr />\n\n'
return s
def html_footer():
return '\n</body>\n</html>\n'
class Contributor:
# Map contributor names to contributor instances, so that there
# exists exactly one instance associated with a given name.
# Fold names with email addresses. That is, if we see someone
# listed first with just an email address, but later with a real
# name and that same email address together, we create only one
# instance, and store it under both the email and the real name.
all_contributors = { }
# See __hash__() for why this is necessary.
hash_value = 1
def __init__(self, username, real_name, email):
"""Instantiate a contributor. Don't use this to generate a
Contributor for an external caller, though, use .get() instead."""
self.real_name = real_name
self.username = username
self.email = email
self.is_committer = False # Assume not until hear otherwise.
self.is_full_committer = False # Assume not until hear otherwise.
# Map verbs (e.g., "Patch", "Suggested", "Review") to lists of
# LogMessage objects. For example, the log messages stored under
# "Patch" represent all the revisions for which this contributor
# contributed a patch.
self.activities = { }
# Sigh.
self.unique_hash_value = Contributor.hash_value
Contributor.hash_value += 1
def add_activity(self, field_name, log):
"""Record that this contributor was active in FIELD_NAME in LOG."""
logs = self.activities.get(field_name)
if not logs:
logs = [ ]
self.activities[field_name] = logs
if not log in logs:
logs.append(log)
def get(username, real_name, email):
"""If this contributor is already registered, just return it;
otherwise, register it then return it. Hint: use parse() to
generate the arguments."""
c = None
for key in username, real_name, email:
if key and Contributor.all_contributors.has_key(key):
c = Contributor.all_contributors[key]
break
# If we didn't get a Contributor, create one now.
if not c:
c = Contributor(username, real_name, email)
# If we know identifying information that the Contributor lacks,
# then give it to the Contributor now.
if username:
if not c.username:
c.username = username
Contributor.all_contributors[username] = c
if real_name:
if not c.real_name:
c.real_name = real_name
Contributor.all_contributors[real_name] = c
if email:
if not c.email:
c.email = email
Contributor.all_contributors[email] = c
# This Contributor has never been in better shape; return it.
return c
get = staticmethod(get)
def score(self):
"""Return a contribution score for this contributor."""
# Right now we count a patch as 2, anything else as 1.
score = 0
for activity in self.activities.keys():
if activity == 'Patch':
score += len(self.activities[activity]) * 2
else:
score += len(self.activities[activity])
return score
def __cmp__(self, other):
if self.is_full_committer and not other.is_full_committer:
return 1
if other.is_full_committer and not self.is_full_committer:
return -1
result = cmp(self.score(), other.score())
if result == 0:
return cmp(self.big_name(), other.big_name())
else:
return 0 - result
def __hash__(self):
"""See LogMessage.__hash__() for why this exists."""
return self.hash_value
def parse(name):
"""Parse NAME, which can be
- A committer username, or
- A space-separated real name, or
- A space-separated real name followed by an email address in
angle brackets, or
- Just an email address in angle brackets.
Return a tuple of (committer_username, real_name, email_address)
any of which can be None if not available in NAME."""
username = None
real_name = None
email = None
name_components = name.split()
if len(name_components) == 1:
if name_components[0] != name:
complain("Python couldn't have done that, could it?", True)
if name[0] == '<' and name[-1] == '>':
email = name[1:-1]
elif name.find('@') != -1:
email = name
else:
username = name
elif name_components[-1][0] == '<' and name_components[-1][-1] == '>':
real_name = ' '.join(name_components[0:-1])
email = name_components[-1][1:-1]
else:
real_name = ' '.join(name_components)
return username, real_name, email
parse = staticmethod(parse)
def canonical_name(self):
"""Return a canonical name for this contributor, containing only
characters valid in an email address. The canonical name may or
may not be based on the contributor's actual email address, but in
any case it will be restricted to email-safe characters, because
those are also likely to be filesystem-safe and HTML-safe.
This method is guaranteed to return the same canonical name every
time only if no further contributions are recorded from this
contributor after the first call. This is because a contribution
may bring a new form of the contributor's name, one which affects
the algorithm used to construct canonical names."""
if self.username:
return self.username
if self.email:
# Take some rudimentary steps to shorten the email address, to
# make it more manageable. If this is ever discovered to result
# in collisions, we can always just use to the full address.
at_posn = self.email.find('@')
if not at_posn:
return self.email
else:
first_dot_after_at = self.email.find('.', at_posn)
return self.email[0:first_dot_after_at]
if self.real_name:
# Last resort: construct canonical name based on real name.
# ### FIXME: Need to tweak to guarantee that it's made only of
# ### characters that would be safe in an email address.
return ''.join(self.real_name.lower().split(' '))
complain('Unable to construct a canonical name for Contributor.', True)
def big_name(self):
"""Return as complete a name as possible for this contributor."""
s = ''
if self.real_name: s += ' ' + self.real_name
if self.email:
if not self.real_name and not self.username:
s += ' ' + self.email
else:
s += ' <' + self.email + '>'
if self.username:
if not self.real_name and not self.email:
s += ' ' + self.username
else:
s += ' (' + self.username + ')'
return s[1:]
def __str__(self):
s = 'CONTRIBUTOR: '
s += self.big_name()
s += "\ncanonical name: '%s'" % self.canonical_name()
if len(self.activities) > 0:
s += '\n '
for activity in self.activities.keys():
val = self.activities[activity]
s += '[%s:' % activity
for log in val:
s += ' %s' % log.revision
s += ']'
return s
def html_out(self):
"""Create an HTML file in the current directory, named
"`self.canonical_name()`.html", showing all the revisions in which
this contributor was active."""
canon = self.canonical_name()
out = open(canon + '.html', 'w')
out.write(html_header(self.big_name()))
unique_logs = { }
sorted_activities = self.activities.keys()
sorted_activities.sort()
out.write('<div class="h2" id="activities" title="activities">\n\n')
out.write('<table border="1">\n')
out.write('<tr>\n')
for activity in sorted_activities:
out.write('<td>%s</td>\n\n' % activity)
out.write('</tr>\n')
out.write('<tr>\n')
for activity in sorted_activities:
out.write('<td>\n')
first_activity = True
for log in self.activities[activity]:
s = ',\n'
if first_activity:
s = ''
first_activity = False
out.write('%s<a href="#%s">%s</a>' % (s, log.revision, log.revision))
unique_logs[log] = True
out.write('</td>\n')
out.write('</tr>\n')
out.write('</table>\n\n')
out.write('</div>\n\n')
sorted_logs = unique_logs.keys()
sorted_logs.sort()
for log in sorted_logs:
out.write('<hr />\n')
out.write('<div class="h3" id="%s" title="%s">\n' % (log.revision,
log.revision))
out.write('<pre>\n')
out.write('<b>%s | %s | %s</b>\n\n' % (log.revision,
escape_html(log.committer),
escape_html(log.date)))
out.write(escape_html(log.message))
out.write('</pre>\n')
out.write('</div>\n\n')
out.write('<hr />\n')
out.write(html_footer())
out.close()
class Field:
"""One field in one log message."""
def __init__(self, name):
# The name of this field (e.g., "Patch", "Review", etc).
self.name = name
# A list of contributor objects, in the order in which they were
# encountered in the field.
self.contributors = [ ]
# Any parenthesized asides immediately following the field. The
# parentheses and trailing newline are left on. In theory, this
# supports concatenation of consecutive asides. In practice, the
# parser only detects the first one anyway, because additional
# ones are very uncommon and furthermore by that point one should
# probably be looking at the full log message.
self.addendum = ''
def add_contributor(self, contributor):
self.contributors.append(contributor)
def add_endum(self, addendum):
self.addendum += addendum
def __str__(self):
s = 'FIELD: %s (%d contributors)\n' % (self.name, len(self.contributors))
for contributor in self.contributors:
s += str(contributor) + '\n'
s += self.addendum
return s
class LogMessage:
# Maps revision strings (e.g., "r12345") onto LogMessage instances,
# holding all the LogMessage instances ever created.
all_logs = { }
def __init__(self, revision, committer, date):
"""Instantiate a log message. All arguments are strings,
including REVISION, which should retain its leading 'r'."""
self.revision = revision
self.committer = committer
self.date = date
self.message = ''
# Map field names (e.g., "Patch", "Review", "Suggested") onto
# Field objects.
self.fields = { }
if LogMessage.all_logs.has_key(revision):
complain("Revision '%s' seen more than once" % revision, True)
LogMessage.all_logs[revision] = self
def add_field(self, field):
self.fields[field.name] = field
def accum(self, line):
"""Accumulate one more line of raw message."""
self.message += line
def __cmp__(self, other):
"""Compare two log messages by revision number, for sort().
Return -1, 0 or 1 depending on whether a > b, a == b, or a < b.
Note that this is reversed from normal sorting behavior, but it's
what we want for reverse chronological ordering of revisions."""
a = int(self.revision[1:])
b = int(other.revision[1:])
if a > b: return -1
if a < b: return 1
else: return 0
def __hash__(self):
"""I don't really understand why defining __cmp__() but not
__hash__() renders an object type unfit to be a dictionary key,
especially in light of the recommendation that if a class defines
mutable objects and implements __cmp__() or __eq__(), then it
should not implement __hash__(). See these for details:
http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2004-February/042580.html
http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-bugs-list/2003-December/021314.html
In the meantime, I think it's safe to use the revision as a hash value."""
return int(self.revision[1:])
def __str__(self):
s = '=' * 15
header = ' LOG: %s | %s ' % (self.revision, self.committer)
s += header
s += '=' * 15
s += '\n'
for field_name in self.fields.keys():
s += str(self.fields[field_name]) + '\n'
s += '-' * 15
s += '-' * len(header)
s += '-' * 15
s += '\n'
return s
### Code to parse the logs. ##
log_separator = '-' * 72 + '\n'
log_header_re = re.compile\
('^(r[0-9]+) \| ([^|]+) \| ([^|]+) \| ([0-9]+)[^0-9]')
field_re = re.compile('^(Patch|Review|Suggested) by:\s+(.*)')
parenthetical_aside_re = re.compile('^\(.*\)\s*$')
def graze(input):
just_saw_separator = False
while True:
line = input.readline()
if line == '': break
if line == log_separator:
if just_saw_separator:
sys.stderr.write('Two separators in a row.\n')
sys.exit(1)
else:
just_saw_separator = True
num_lines = None
continue
else:
if just_saw_separator:
m = log_header_re.match(line)
if not m:
sys.stderr.write('Could not match log message header.\n')
sys.stderr.write('Line was:\n')
sys.stderr.write("'%s'\n" % line)
sys.exit(1)
else:
log = LogMessage(m.group(1), m.group(2), m.group(3))
num_lines = int(m.group(4))
just_saw_separator = False
line = input.readline()
# Handle 'svn log -v' by waiting for the blank line.
while line != '\n':
line = input.readline()
# Parse the log message.
field = None
while num_lines > 0:
line = input.readline()
log.accum(line)
m = field_re.match(line)
if m:
# We're on the first line of a field. Parse the field.
while m:
if not field:
field = Field(m.group(1))
# Each line begins either with "WORD by:", or with whitespace.
in_field_re = re.compile('^('
+ field.name
+ ' by:\s+|\s+)(\S.*)+')
m = in_field_re.match(line)
user, real, email = Contributor.parse(m.group(2))
if user == 'me':
user = log.committer
c = Contributor.get(user, real, email)
c.add_activity(field.name, log)
field.add_contributor(c)
line = input.readline()
log.accum(line)
num_lines -= 1
m = in_field_re.match(line)
if not m:
m = field_re.match(line)
if not m:
aside_match = parenthetical_aside_re.match(line)
if aside_match:
field.add_endum(line)
log.add_field(field)
field = None
num_lines -= 1
continue
def drop():
# Output the data.
#
# The data structures are all linked up nicely to one another. You
# can get all the LogMessages, and each LogMessage contains all the
# Contributors involved with that commit; likewise, each Contributor
# points back to all the LogMessages it contributed to.
#
# However, the HTML output is pretty simple right now. It's not take
# full advantage of all that cross-linking. For each contributor, we
# just create a file listing all the revisions contributed to; and we
# build a master index of all contributors, each name being a link to
# that contributor's individual file. Much more is possible... but
# let's just get this up and running first.
for key in LogMessage.all_logs.keys():
# You could print out all log messages this way, if you wanted to.
pass
# print LogMessage.all_logs[key]
index = open('index.html', 'w')
index.write(html_header('Contributors'))
index.write('<ol>\n')
# The same contributor appears under multiple keys, so uniquify.
seen_contributors = { }
# Sorting alphabetically is acceptable, but even better would be to
# sort by number of contributions, so the most active people appear at
# the top -- that way we know whom to look at first for commit access
# proposals.
sorted_contributors = Contributor.all_contributors.values()
sorted_contributors.sort()
for c in sorted_contributors:
if not seen_contributors.has_key(c):
if c.score() > 0:
if c.is_full_committer:
# Don't even bother to print out full committers. They are
# a distraction from the purposes for which we're here.
continue
else:
committerness = ''
if c.is_committer:
committerness = ' (partial committer)'
index.write('<li><p><a href="%s.html">%s</a> [%d]%s</p></li>\n'
% (c.canonical_name(), escape_html(c.big_name()),
c.score(), committerness))
c.html_out()
seen_contributors[c] = True
index.write('</ol>\n')
index.write(html_footer())
index.close()
def process_committers(committers):
"""Read from open file handle COMMITTERS, which should be in
the same format as the Subversion 'COMMITTERS' file. Create
Contributor objects based on the contents."""
line = committers.readline()
while line != 'Blanket commit access:\n':
line = committers.readline()
in_full_committers = True
matcher = re.compile('(\S+)\s+([^\(\)]+)\s+(\([^()]+\)){0,1}')
line = committers.readline()
while line:
# Every @-sign we see after this point indicates a committer line.
if line == 'Commit access for specific areas:\n':
in_full_committers = False
elif line.find('@') >= 0:
line = line.strip()
m = matcher.match(line)
user = m.group(1)
real_and_email = m.group(2).strip()
ignored, real, email = Contributor.parse(real_and_email)
c = Contributor.get(user, real, email)
c.is_committer = True
c.is_full_committer = in_full_committers
line = committers.readline()
def usage():
print 'USAGE: %s [-C COMMITTERS_FILE] < SVN_LOG_OR_LOG-V_OUTPUT' \
% os.path.basename(sys.argv[0])
print ''
print 'Create HTML files in the current directory, rooted at index.html,'
print 'in which you can browse to see who contributed what.'
print ''
print 'The log input should use the contribution-tracking format defined'
print 'in http://subversion.tigris.org/hacking.html#crediting.'
print ''
print 'Options:'
print ''
print ' -h, -H, -?, --help Print this usage message and exit'
print ' -C FILE Use FILE as the COMMITTERS file'
print ''
def main():
try:
opts, args = getopt.getopt(sys.argv[1:], 'C:hH?', [ '--help' ])
except getopt.GetoptError, e:
complain(str(e) + '\n\n')
usage()
sys.exit(1)
# Parse options.
for opt, value in opts:
if (opt == '--help') or (opt == '-h') or (opt == '-H') or (opt == '-?'):
usage()
sys.exit(0)
elif opt == '-C':
process_committers(open(value))
# Gather the data.
graze(sys.stdin)
# Output the data.
drop()
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()