This file is indexed.

/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/pexpect/spawnbase.py is in python3-pexpect 4.2.1-1.

This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.

The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.

  1
  2
  3
  4
  5
  6
  7
  8
  9
 10
 11
 12
 13
 14
 15
 16
 17
 18
 19
 20
 21
 22
 23
 24
 25
 26
 27
 28
 29
 30
 31
 32
 33
 34
 35
 36
 37
 38
 39
 40
 41
 42
 43
 44
 45
 46
 47
 48
 49
 50
 51
 52
 53
 54
 55
 56
 57
 58
 59
 60
 61
 62
 63
 64
 65
 66
 67
 68
 69
 70
 71
 72
 73
 74
 75
 76
 77
 78
 79
 80
 81
 82
 83
 84
 85
 86
 87
 88
 89
 90
 91
 92
 93
 94
 95
 96
 97
 98
 99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
import codecs
import os
import sys
import re
import errno
from .exceptions import ExceptionPexpect, EOF, TIMEOUT
from .expect import Expecter, searcher_string, searcher_re

PY3 = (sys.version_info[0] >= 3)
text_type = str if PY3 else unicode

class _NullCoder(object):
    """Pass bytes through unchanged."""
    @staticmethod
    def encode(b, final=False):
        return b

    @staticmethod
    def decode(b, final=False):
        return b

class SpawnBase(object):
    """A base class providing the backwards-compatible spawn API for Pexpect.

    This should not be instantiated directly: use :class:`pexpect.spawn` or
    :class:`pexpect.fdpexpect.fdspawn`.
    """
    encoding = None
    pid = None
    flag_eof = False

    def __init__(self, timeout=30, maxread=2000, searchwindowsize=None,
                 logfile=None, encoding=None, codec_errors='strict'):
        self.stdin = sys.stdin
        self.stdout = sys.stdout
        self.stderr = sys.stderr

        self.searcher = None
        self.ignorecase = False
        self.before = None
        self.after = None
        self.match = None
        self.match_index = None
        self.terminated = True
        self.exitstatus = None
        self.signalstatus = None
        # status returned by os.waitpid
        self.status = None
        # the child file descriptor is initially closed
        self.child_fd = -1
        self.timeout = timeout
        self.delimiter = EOF
        self.logfile = logfile
        # input from child (read_nonblocking)
        self.logfile_read = None
        # output to send (send, sendline)
        self.logfile_send = None
        # max bytes to read at one time into buffer
        self.maxread = maxread
        # This is the read buffer. See maxread.
        self.buffer = bytes() if (encoding is None) else text_type()
        # Data before searchwindowsize point is preserved, but not searched.
        self.searchwindowsize = searchwindowsize
        # Delay used before sending data to child. Time in seconds.
        # Set this to None to skip the time.sleep() call completely.
        self.delaybeforesend = 0.05
        # Used by close() to give kernel time to update process status.
        # Time in seconds.
        self.delayafterclose = 0.1
        # Used by terminate() to give kernel time to update process status.
        # Time in seconds.
        self.delayafterterminate = 0.1
        # Delay in seconds to sleep after each call to read_nonblocking().
        # Set this to None to skip the time.sleep() call completely: that
        # would restore the behavior from pexpect-2.0 (for performance
        # reasons or because you don't want to release Python's global
        # interpreter lock).
        self.delayafterread = 0.0001
        self.softspace = False
        self.name = '<' + repr(self) + '>'
        self.closed = True

        # Unicode interface
        self.encoding = encoding
        self.codec_errors = codec_errors
        if encoding is None:
            # bytes mode (accepts some unicode for backwards compatibility)
            self._encoder = self._decoder = _NullCoder()
            self.string_type = bytes
            self.crlf = b'\r\n'
            if PY3:
                self.allowed_string_types = (bytes, str)
                self.linesep = os.linesep.encode('ascii')
                def write_to_stdout(b):
                    try:
                        return sys.stdout.buffer.write(b)
                    except AttributeError:
                        # If stdout has been replaced, it may not have .buffer
                        return sys.stdout.write(b.decode('ascii', 'replace'))
                self.write_to_stdout = write_to_stdout
            else:
                self.allowed_string_types = (basestring,)  # analysis:ignore
                self.linesep = os.linesep
                self.write_to_stdout = sys.stdout.write
        else:
            # unicode mode
            self._encoder = codecs.getincrementalencoder(encoding)(codec_errors)
            self._decoder = codecs.getincrementaldecoder(encoding)(codec_errors)
            self.string_type = text_type
            self.crlf = u'\r\n'
            self.allowed_string_types = (text_type, )
            if PY3:
                self.linesep = os.linesep
            else:
                self.linesep = os.linesep.decode('ascii')
            # This can handle unicode in both Python 2 and 3
            self.write_to_stdout = sys.stdout.write

    def _log(self, s, direction):
        if self.logfile is not None:
            self.logfile.write(s)
            self.logfile.flush()
        second_log = self.logfile_send if (direction=='send') else self.logfile_read
        if second_log is not None:
            second_log.write(s)
            second_log.flush()

    # For backwards compatibility, in bytes mode (when encoding is None)
    # unicode is accepted for send and expect. Unicode mode is strictly unicode
    # only.
    def _coerce_expect_string(self, s):
        if self.encoding is None and not isinstance(s, bytes):
            return s.encode('ascii')
        return s

    def _coerce_send_string(self, s):
        if self.encoding is None and not isinstance(s, bytes):
            return s.encode('utf-8')
        return s

    def read_nonblocking(self, size=1, timeout=None):
        """This reads data from the file descriptor.

        This is a simple implementation suitable for a regular file. Subclasses using ptys or pipes should override it.

        The timeout parameter is ignored.
        """

        try:
            s = os.read(self.child_fd, size)
        except OSError as err:
            if err.args[0] == errno.EIO:
                # Linux-style EOF
                self.flag_eof = True
                raise EOF('End Of File (EOF). Exception style platform.')
            raise
        if s == b'':
            # BSD-style EOF
            self.flag_eof = True
            raise EOF('End Of File (EOF). Empty string style platform.')

        s = self._decoder.decode(s, final=False)
        self._log(s, 'read')
        return s

    def _pattern_type_err(self, pattern):
        raise TypeError('got {badtype} ({badobj!r}) as pattern, must be one'
                        ' of: {goodtypes}, pexpect.EOF, pexpect.TIMEOUT'\
                        .format(badtype=type(pattern),
                                badobj=pattern,
                                goodtypes=', '.join([str(ast)\
                                    for ast in self.allowed_string_types])
                                )
                        )

    def compile_pattern_list(self, patterns):
        '''This compiles a pattern-string or a list of pattern-strings.
        Patterns must be a StringType, EOF, TIMEOUT, SRE_Pattern, or a list of
        those. Patterns may also be None which results in an empty list (you
        might do this if waiting for an EOF or TIMEOUT condition without
        expecting any pattern).

        This is used by expect() when calling expect_list(). Thus expect() is
        nothing more than::

             cpl = self.compile_pattern_list(pl)
             return self.expect_list(cpl, timeout)

        If you are using expect() within a loop it may be more
        efficient to compile the patterns first and then call expect_list().
        This avoid calls in a loop to compile_pattern_list()::

             cpl = self.compile_pattern_list(my_pattern)
             while some_condition:
                ...
                i = self.expect_list(cpl, timeout)
                ...
        '''

        if patterns is None:
            return []
        if not isinstance(patterns, list):
            patterns = [patterns]

        # Allow dot to match \n
        compile_flags = re.DOTALL
        if self.ignorecase:
            compile_flags = compile_flags | re.IGNORECASE
        compiled_pattern_list = []
        for idx, p in enumerate(patterns):
            if isinstance(p, self.allowed_string_types):
                p = self._coerce_expect_string(p)
                compiled_pattern_list.append(re.compile(p, compile_flags))
            elif p is EOF:
                compiled_pattern_list.append(EOF)
            elif p is TIMEOUT:
                compiled_pattern_list.append(TIMEOUT)
            elif isinstance(p, type(re.compile(''))):
                compiled_pattern_list.append(p)
            else:
                self._pattern_type_err(p)
        return compiled_pattern_list

    def expect(self, pattern, timeout=-1, searchwindowsize=-1, async=False):
        '''This seeks through the stream until a pattern is matched. The
        pattern is overloaded and may take several types. The pattern can be a
        StringType, EOF, a compiled re, or a list of any of those types.
        Strings will be compiled to re types. This returns the index into the
        pattern list. If the pattern was not a list this returns index 0 on a
        successful match. This may raise exceptions for EOF or TIMEOUT. To
        avoid the EOF or TIMEOUT exceptions add EOF or TIMEOUT to the pattern
        list. That will cause expect to match an EOF or TIMEOUT condition
        instead of raising an exception.

        If you pass a list of patterns and more than one matches, the first
        match in the stream is chosen. If more than one pattern matches at that
        point, the leftmost in the pattern list is chosen. For example::

            # the input is 'foobar'
            index = p.expect(['bar', 'foo', 'foobar'])
            # returns 1('foo') even though 'foobar' is a "better" match

        Please note, however, that buffering can affect this behavior, since
        input arrives in unpredictable chunks. For example::

            # the input is 'foobar'
            index = p.expect(['foobar', 'foo'])
            # returns 0('foobar') if all input is available at once,
            # but returs 1('foo') if parts of the final 'bar' arrive late

        When a match is found for the given pattern, the class instance
        attribute *match* becomes an re.MatchObject result.  Should an EOF
        or TIMEOUT pattern match, then the match attribute will be an instance
        of that exception class.  The pairing before and after class
        instance attributes are views of the data preceding and following
        the matching pattern.  On general exception, class attribute
        *before* is all data received up to the exception, while *match* and
        *after* attributes are value None.

        When the keyword argument timeout is -1 (default), then TIMEOUT will
        raise after the default value specified by the class timeout
        attribute. When None, TIMEOUT will not be raised and may block
        indefinitely until match.

        When the keyword argument searchwindowsize is -1 (default), then the
        value specified by the class maxread attribute is used.

        A list entry may be EOF or TIMEOUT instead of a string. This will
        catch these exceptions and return the index of the list entry instead
        of raising the exception. The attribute 'after' will be set to the
        exception type. The attribute 'match' will be None. This allows you to
        write code like this::

                index = p.expect(['good', 'bad', pexpect.EOF, pexpect.TIMEOUT])
                if index == 0:
                    do_something()
                elif index == 1:
                    do_something_else()
                elif index == 2:
                    do_some_other_thing()
                elif index == 3:
                    do_something_completely_different()

        instead of code like this::

                try:
                    index = p.expect(['good', 'bad'])
                    if index == 0:
                        do_something()
                    elif index == 1:
                        do_something_else()
                except EOF:
                    do_some_other_thing()
                except TIMEOUT:
                    do_something_completely_different()

        These two forms are equivalent. It all depends on what you want. You
        can also just expect the EOF if you are waiting for all output of a
        child to finish. For example::

                p = pexpect.spawn('/bin/ls')
                p.expect(pexpect.EOF)
                print p.before

        If you are trying to optimize for speed then see expect_list().

        On Python 3.4, or Python 3.3 with asyncio installed, passing
        ``async=True``  will make this return an :mod:`asyncio` coroutine,
        which you can yield from to get the same result that this method would
        normally give directly. So, inside a coroutine, you can replace this code::

            index = p.expect(patterns)

        With this non-blocking form::

            index = yield from p.expect(patterns, async=True)
        '''

        compiled_pattern_list = self.compile_pattern_list(pattern)
        return self.expect_list(compiled_pattern_list,
                timeout, searchwindowsize, async)

    def expect_list(self, pattern_list, timeout=-1, searchwindowsize=-1,
                    async=False):
        '''This takes a list of compiled regular expressions and returns the
        index into the pattern_list that matched the child output. The list may
        also contain EOF or TIMEOUT(which are not compiled regular
        expressions). This method is similar to the expect() method except that
        expect_list() does not recompile the pattern list on every call. This
        may help if you are trying to optimize for speed, otherwise just use
        the expect() method.  This is called by expect().


        Like :meth:`expect`, passing ``async=True`` will make this return an
        asyncio coroutine.
        '''
        if timeout == -1:
            timeout = self.timeout

        exp = Expecter(self, searcher_re(pattern_list), searchwindowsize)
        if async:
            from .async import expect_async
            return expect_async(exp, timeout)
        else:
            return exp.expect_loop(timeout)

    def expect_exact(self, pattern_list, timeout=-1, searchwindowsize=-1,
                     async=False):

        '''This is similar to expect(), but uses plain string matching instead
        of compiled regular expressions in 'pattern_list'. The 'pattern_list'
        may be a string; a list or other sequence of strings; or TIMEOUT and
        EOF.

        This call might be faster than expect() for two reasons: string
        searching is faster than RE matching and it is possible to limit the
        search to just the end of the input buffer.

        This method is also useful when you don't want to have to worry about
        escaping regular expression characters that you want to match.

        Like :meth:`expect`, passing ``async=True`` will make this return an
        asyncio coroutine.
        '''
        if timeout == -1:
            timeout = self.timeout

        if (isinstance(pattern_list, self.allowed_string_types) or
                pattern_list in (TIMEOUT, EOF)):
            pattern_list = [pattern_list]

        def prepare_pattern(pattern):
            if pattern in (TIMEOUT, EOF):
                return pattern
            if isinstance(pattern, self.allowed_string_types):
                return self._coerce_expect_string(pattern)
            self._pattern_type_err(pattern)

        try:
            pattern_list = iter(pattern_list)
        except TypeError:
            self._pattern_type_err(pattern_list)
        pattern_list = [prepare_pattern(p) for p in pattern_list]

        exp = Expecter(self, searcher_string(pattern_list), searchwindowsize)
        if async:
            from .async import expect_async
            return expect_async(exp, timeout)
        else:
            return exp.expect_loop(timeout)

    def expect_loop(self, searcher, timeout=-1, searchwindowsize=-1):
        '''This is the common loop used inside expect. The 'searcher' should be
        an instance of searcher_re or searcher_string, which describes how and
        what to search for in the input.

        See expect() for other arguments, return value and exceptions. '''

        exp = Expecter(self, searcher, searchwindowsize)
        return exp.expect_loop(timeout)

    def read(self, size=-1):
        '''This reads at most "size" bytes from the file (less if the read hits
        EOF before obtaining size bytes). If the size argument is negative or
        omitted, read all data until EOF is reached. The bytes are returned as
        a string object. An empty string is returned when EOF is encountered
        immediately. '''

        if size == 0:
            return self.string_type()
        if size < 0:
            # delimiter default is EOF
            self.expect(self.delimiter)
            return self.before

        # I could have done this more directly by not using expect(), but
        # I deliberately decided to couple read() to expect() so that
        # I would catch any bugs early and ensure consistant behavior.
        # It's a little less efficient, but there is less for me to
        # worry about if I have to later modify read() or expect().
        # Note, it's OK if size==-1 in the regex. That just means it
        # will never match anything in which case we stop only on EOF.
        cre = re.compile(self._coerce_expect_string('.{%d}' % size), re.DOTALL)
        # delimiter default is EOF
        index = self.expect([cre, self.delimiter])
        if index == 0:
            ### FIXME self.before should be ''. Should I assert this?
            return self.after
        return self.before

    def readline(self, size=-1):
        '''This reads and returns one entire line. The newline at the end of
        line is returned as part of the string, unless the file ends without a
        newline. An empty string is returned if EOF is encountered immediately.
        This looks for a newline as a CR/LF pair (\\r\\n) even on UNIX because
        this is what the pseudotty device returns. So contrary to what you may
        expect you will receive newlines as \\r\\n.

        If the size argument is 0 then an empty string is returned. In all
        other cases the size argument is ignored, which is not standard
        behavior for a file-like object. '''

        if size == 0:
            return self.string_type()
        # delimiter default is EOF
        index = self.expect([self.crlf, self.delimiter])
        if index == 0:
            return self.before + self.crlf
        else:
            return self.before

    def __iter__(self):
        '''This is to support iterators over a file-like object.
        '''
        return iter(self.readline, self.string_type())

    def readlines(self, sizehint=-1):
        '''This reads until EOF using readline() and returns a list containing
        the lines thus read. The optional 'sizehint' argument is ignored.
        Remember, because this reads until EOF that means the child
        process should have closed its stdout. If you run this method on
        a child that is still running with its stdout open then this
        method will block until it timesout.'''

        lines = []
        while True:
            line = self.readline()
            if not line:
                break
            lines.append(line)
        return lines

    def fileno(self):
        '''Expose file descriptor for a file-like interface
        '''
        return self.child_fd

    def flush(self):
        '''This does nothing. It is here to support the interface for a
        File-like object. '''
        pass

    def isatty(self):
        """Overridden in subclass using tty"""
        return False

    # For 'with spawn(...) as child:'
    def __enter__(self):
        return self
    
    def __exit__(self, etype, evalue, tb):
        # We rely on subclasses to implement close(). If they don't, it's not
        # clear what a context manager should do.
        self.close()