/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/bson/son.py is in python3-bson 3.2-1build1.
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#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
"""Tools for creating and manipulating SON, the Serialized Ocument Notation.
Regular dictionaries can be used instead of SON objects, but not when the order
of keys is important. A SON object can be used just like a normal Python
dictionary."""
import collections
import copy
import re
from bson.py3compat import iteritems
# This sort of sucks, but seems to be as good as it gets...
# This is essentially the same as re._pattern_type
RE_TYPE = type(re.compile(""))
class SON(dict):
"""SON data.
A subclass of dict that maintains ordering of keys and provides a
few extra niceties for dealing with SON. SON objects can be
converted to and from BSON.
The mapping from Python types to BSON types is as follows:
======================================= ============= ===================
Python Type BSON Type Supported Direction
======================================= ============= ===================
None null both
bool boolean both
int [#int]_ int32 / int64 py -> bson
long int64 py -> bson
`bson.int64.Int64` int64 both
float number (real) both
string string py -> bson
unicode string both
list array both
dict / `SON` object both
datetime.datetime [#dt]_ [#dt2]_ date both
`bson.regex.Regex` regex both
compiled re [#re]_ regex py -> bson
`bson.binary.Binary` binary both
`bson.objectid.ObjectId` oid both
`bson.dbref.DBRef` dbref both
None undefined bson -> py
unicode code bson -> py
`bson.code.Code` code py -> bson
unicode symbol bson -> py
bytes (Python 3) [#bytes]_ binary both
======================================= ============= ===================
Note that to save binary data it must be wrapped as an instance of
`bson.binary.Binary`. Otherwise it will be saved as a BSON string
and retrieved as unicode.
.. [#int] A Python int will be saved as a BSON int32 or BSON int64 depending
on its size. A BSON int32 will always decode to a Python int. A BSON
int64 will always decode to a :class:`~bson.int64.Int64`.
.. [#dt] datetime.datetime instances will be rounded to the nearest
millisecond when saved
.. [#dt2] all datetime.datetime instances are treated as *naive*. clients
should always use UTC.
.. [#re] :class:`~bson.regex.Regex` instances and regular expression
objects from ``re.compile()`` are both saved as BSON regular expressions.
BSON regular expressions are decoded as :class:`~bson.regex.Regex`
instances.
.. [#bytes] The bytes type from Python 3.x is encoded as BSON binary with
subtype 0. In Python 3.x it will be decoded back to bytes. In Python 2.x
it will be decoded to an instance of :class:`~bson.binary.Binary` with
subtype 0.
"""
def __init__(self, data=None, **kwargs):
self.__keys = []
dict.__init__(self)
self.update(data)
self.update(kwargs)
def __new__(cls, *args, **kwargs):
instance = super(SON, cls).__new__(cls, *args, **kwargs)
instance.__keys = []
return instance
def __repr__(self):
result = []
for key in self.__keys:
result.append("(%r, %r)" % (key, self[key]))
return "SON([%s])" % ", ".join(result)
def __setitem__(self, key, value):
if key not in self.__keys:
self.__keys.append(key)
dict.__setitem__(self, key, value)
def __delitem__(self, key):
self.__keys.remove(key)
dict.__delitem__(self, key)
def keys(self):
return list(self.__keys)
def copy(self):
other = SON()
other.update(self)
return other
# TODO this is all from UserDict.DictMixin. it could probably be made more
# efficient.
# second level definitions support higher levels
def __iter__(self):
for k in self.__keys:
yield k
def has_key(self, key):
return key in self.__keys
# third level takes advantage of second level definitions
def iteritems(self):
for k in self:
yield (k, self[k])
def iterkeys(self):
return self.__iter__()
# fourth level uses definitions from lower levels
def itervalues(self):
for _, v in self.iteritems():
yield v
def values(self):
return [v for _, v in self.iteritems()]
def items(self):
return [(key, self[key]) for key in self]
def clear(self):
self.__keys = []
super(SON, self).clear()
def setdefault(self, key, default=None):
try:
return self[key]
except KeyError:
self[key] = default
return default
def pop(self, key, *args):
if len(args) > 1:
raise TypeError("pop expected at most 2 arguments, got "\
+ repr(1 + len(args)))
try:
value = self[key]
except KeyError:
if args:
return args[0]
raise
del self[key]
return value
def popitem(self):
try:
k, v = next(self.iteritems())
except StopIteration:
raise KeyError('container is empty')
del self[k]
return (k, v)
def update(self, other=None, **kwargs):
# Make progressively weaker assumptions about "other"
if other is None:
pass
elif hasattr(other, 'iteritems'): # iteritems saves memory and lookups
for k, v in other.iteritems():
self[k] = v
elif hasattr(other, 'keys'):
for k in other.keys():
self[k] = other[k]
else:
for k, v in other:
self[k] = v
if kwargs:
self.update(kwargs)
def get(self, key, default=None):
try:
return self[key]
except KeyError:
return default
def __eq__(self, other):
"""Comparison to another SON is order-sensitive while comparison to a
regular dictionary is order-insensitive.
"""
if isinstance(other, SON):
return len(self) == len(other) and self.items() == other.items()
return self.to_dict() == other
def __ne__(self, other):
return not self == other
def __len__(self):
return len(self.__keys)
def to_dict(self):
"""Convert a SON document to a normal Python dictionary instance.
This is trickier than just *dict(...)* because it needs to be
recursive.
"""
def transform_value(value):
if isinstance(value, list):
return [transform_value(v) for v in value]
elif isinstance(value, collections.Mapping):
return dict([
(k, transform_value(v))
for k, v in iteritems(value)])
else:
return value
return transform_value(dict(self))
def __deepcopy__(self, memo):
out = SON()
val_id = id(self)
if val_id in memo:
return memo.get(val_id)
memo[val_id] = out
for k, v in self.iteritems():
if not isinstance(v, RE_TYPE):
v = copy.deepcopy(v, memo)
out[k] = v
return out
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