""" Based on the python xreload. Changes ====================== 1. we don't recreate the old namespace from new classes. Rather, we keep the existing namespace, load a new version of it and update only some of the things we can inplace. That way, we don't break things such as singletons or end up with a second representation of the same class in memory. 2. If we find it to be a __metaclass__, we try to update it as a regular class. 3. We don't remove old attributes (and leave them lying around even if they're no longer used). 4. Reload hooks were changed These changes make it more stable, especially in the common case (where in a debug session only the contents of a function are changed), besides providing flexibility for users that want to extend on it. Hooks ====================== Classes/modules can be specially crafted to work with the reload (so that it can, for instance, update some constant which was changed). 1. To participate in the change of some attribute: In a module: __xreload_old_new__(namespace, name, old, new) in a class: @classmethod __xreload_old_new__(cls, name, old, new) A class or module may include a method called '__xreload_old_new__' which is called when we're unable to reload a given attribute. 2. To do something after the whole reload is finished: In a module: __xreload_after_reload_update__(namespace): In a class: @classmethod __xreload_after_reload_update__(cls): A class or module may include a method called '__xreload_after_reload_update__' which is called after the reload finishes. Important: when providing a hook, always use the namespace or cls provided and not anything in the global namespace, as the global namespace are only temporarily created during the reload and may not reflect the actual application state (while the cls and namespace passed are). Current limitations ====================== - Attributes/constants are added, but not changed (so singletons and the application state is not broken -- use provided hooks to workaround it). - Code using metaclasses may not always work. - Functions and methods using decorators (other than classmethod and staticmethod) are not handled correctly. - Renamings are not handled correctly. - Dependent modules are not reloaded. - New __slots__ can't be added to existing classes. Info ====================== Original: http://svn.python.org/projects/sandbox/trunk/xreload/xreload.py Note: it seems https://github.com/plone/plone.reload/blob/master/plone/reload/xreload.py enhances it (to check later) Interesting alternative: https://code.google.com/p/reimport/ Alternative to reload(). This works by executing the module in a scratch namespace, and then patching classes, methods and functions in place. This avoids the need to patch instances. New objects are copied into the target namespace. """ from _pydev_bundle.pydev_imports import execfile from _pydevd_bundle import pydevd_dont_trace import types from _pydev_bundle import pydev_log from _pydevd_bundle.pydevd_constants import get_global_debugger NO_DEBUG = 0 LEVEL1 = 1 LEVEL2 = 2 DEBUG = NO_DEBUG def write_err(*args): py_db = get_global_debugger() if py_db is not None: new_lst = [] for a in args: new_lst.append(str(a)) msg = ' '.join(new_lst) s = 'code reload: %s\n' % (msg,) cmd = py_db.cmd_factory.make_io_message(s, 2) if py_db.writer is not None: py_db.writer.add_command(cmd) def notify_info0(*args): write_err(*args) def notify_info(*args): if DEBUG >= LEVEL1: write_err(*args) def notify_info2(*args): if DEBUG >= LEVEL2: write_err(*args) def notify_error(*args): write_err(*args) #======================================================================================================================= # code_objects_equal #======================================================================================================================= def code_objects_equal(code0, code1): for d in dir(code0): if d.startswith('_') or 'line' in d or d == 'replace': continue if getattr(code0, d) != getattr(code1, d): return False return True #======================================================================================================================= # xreload #======================================================================================================================= def xreload(mod): """Reload a module in place, updating classes, methods and functions. mod: a module object Returns a boolean indicating whether a change was done. """ r = Reload(mod) r.apply() found_change = r.found_change r = None pydevd_dont_trace.clear_trace_filter_cache() return found_change # This isn't actually used... Initially I planned to reload variables which are immutable on the # namespace, but this can destroy places where we're saving state, which may not be what we want, # so, we're being conservative and giving the user hooks if he wants to do a reload. # # immutable_types = [int, str, float, tuple] #That should be common to all Python versions # # for name in 'long basestr unicode frozenset'.split(): # try: # immutable_types.append(__builtins__[name]) # except: # pass #Just ignore: not all python versions are created equal. # immutable_types = tuple(immutable_types) #======================================================================================================================= # Reload #======================================================================================================================= class Reload: def __init__(self, mod, mod_name=None, mod_filename=None): self.mod = mod if mod_name: self.mod_name = mod_name else: self.mod_name = mod.__name__ if mod is not None else None if mod_filename: self.mod_filename = mod_filename else: self.mod_filename = mod.__file__ if mod is not None else None self.found_change = False def apply(self): mod = self.mod self._on_finish_callbacks = [] try: # Get the module namespace (dict) early; this is part of the type check modns = mod.__dict__ # Execute the code. We copy the module dict to a temporary; then # clear the module dict; then execute the new code in the module # dict; then swap things back and around. This trick (due to # Glyph Lefkowitz) ensures that the (readonly) __globals__ # attribute of methods and functions is set to the correct dict # object. new_namespace = modns.copy() new_namespace.clear() if self.mod_filename: new_namespace["__file__"] = self.mod_filename try: new_namespace["__builtins__"] = __builtins__ except NameError: raise # Ok if not there. if self.mod_name: new_namespace["__name__"] = self.mod_name if new_namespace["__name__"] == '__main__': # We do this because usually the __main__ starts-up the program, guarded by # the if __name__ == '__main__', but we don't want to start the program again # on a reload. new_namespace["__name__"] = '__main_reloaded__' execfile(self.mod_filename, new_namespace, new_namespace) # Now we get to the hard part oldnames = set(modns) newnames = set(new_namespace) # Create new tokens (note: not deleting existing) for name in newnames - oldnames: notify_info0('Added:', name, 'to namespace') self.found_change = True modns[name] = new_namespace[name] # Update in-place what we can for name in oldnames & newnames: self._update(modns, name, modns[name], new_namespace[name]) self._handle_namespace(modns) for c in self._on_finish_callbacks: c() del self._on_finish_callbacks[:] except: pydev_log.exception() def _handle_namespace(self, namespace, is_class_namespace=False): on_finish = None if is_class_namespace: xreload_after_update = getattr(namespace, '__xreload_after_reload_update__', None) if xreload_after_update is not None: self.found_change = True on_finish = lambda: xreload_after_update() elif '__xreload_after_reload_update__' in namespace: xreload_after_update = namespace['__xreload_after_reload_update__'] self.found_change = True on_finish = lambda: xreload_after_update(namespace) if on_finish is not None: # If a client wants to know about it, give him a chance. self._on_finish_callbacks.append(on_finish) def _update(self, namespace, name, oldobj, newobj, is_class_namespace=False): """Update oldobj, if possible in place, with newobj. If oldobj is immutable, this simply returns newobj. Args: oldobj: the object to be updated newobj: the object used as the source for the update """ try: notify_info2('Updating: ', oldobj) if oldobj is newobj: # Probably something imported return if type(oldobj) is not type(newobj): # Cop-out: if the type changed, give up if name not in ('__builtins__',): notify_error('Type of: %s (old: %s != new: %s) changed... Skipping.' % (name, type(oldobj), type(newobj))) return if isinstance(newobj, types.FunctionType): self._update_function(oldobj, newobj) return if isinstance(newobj, types.MethodType): self._update_method(oldobj, newobj) return if isinstance(newobj, classmethod): self._update_classmethod(oldobj, newobj) return if isinstance(newobj, staticmethod): self._update_staticmethod(oldobj, newobj) return if hasattr(types, 'ClassType'): classtype = (types.ClassType, type) # object is not instance of types.ClassType. else: classtype = type if isinstance(newobj, classtype): self._update_class(oldobj, newobj) return # New: dealing with metaclasses. if hasattr(newobj, '__metaclass__') and hasattr(newobj, '__class__') and newobj.__metaclass__ == newobj.__class__: self._update_class(oldobj, newobj) return if namespace is not None: # Check for the `__xreload_old_new__` protocol (don't even compare things # as even doing a comparison may break things -- see: https://github.com/microsoft/debugpy/issues/615). xreload_old_new = None if is_class_namespace: xreload_old_new = getattr(namespace, '__xreload_old_new__', None) if xreload_old_new is not None: self.found_change = True xreload_old_new(name, oldobj, newobj) elif '__xreload_old_new__' in namespace: xreload_old_new = namespace['__xreload_old_new__'] xreload_old_new(namespace, name, oldobj, newobj) self.found_change = True # Too much information to the user... # else: # notify_info0('%s NOT updated. Create __xreload_old_new__(name, old, new) for custom reload' % (name,)) except: notify_error('Exception found when updating %s. Proceeding for other items.' % (name,)) pydev_log.exception() # All of the following functions have the same signature as _update() def _update_function(self, oldfunc, newfunc): """Update a function object.""" oldfunc.__doc__ = newfunc.__doc__ oldfunc.__dict__.update(newfunc.__dict__) try: newfunc.__code__ attr_name = '__code__' except AttributeError: newfunc.func_code attr_name = 'func_code' old_code = getattr(oldfunc, attr_name) new_code = getattr(newfunc, attr_name) if not code_objects_equal(old_code, new_code): notify_info0('Updated function code:', oldfunc) setattr(oldfunc, attr_name, new_code) self.found_change = True try: oldfunc.__defaults__ = newfunc.__defaults__ except AttributeError: oldfunc.func_defaults = newfunc.func_defaults return oldfunc def _update_method(self, oldmeth, newmeth): """Update a method object.""" # XXX What if im_func is not a function? if hasattr(oldmeth, 'im_func') and hasattr(newmeth, 'im_func'): self._update(None, None, oldmeth.im_func, newmeth.im_func) elif hasattr(oldmeth, '__func__') and hasattr(newmeth, '__func__'): self._update(None, None, oldmeth.__func__, newmeth.__func__) return oldmeth def _update_class(self, oldclass, newclass): """Update a class object.""" olddict = oldclass.__dict__ newdict = newclass.__dict__ oldnames = set(olddict) newnames = set(newdict) for name in newnames - oldnames: setattr(oldclass, name, newdict[name]) notify_info0('Added:', name, 'to', oldclass) self.found_change = True # Note: not removing old things... # for name in oldnames - newnames: # notify_info('Removed:', name, 'from', oldclass) # delattr(oldclass, name) for name in (oldnames & newnames) - set(['__dict__', '__doc__']): self._update(oldclass, name, olddict[name], newdict[name], is_class_namespace=True) old_bases = getattr(oldclass, '__bases__', None) new_bases = getattr(newclass, '__bases__', None) if str(old_bases) != str(new_bases): notify_error('Changing the hierarchy of a class is not supported. %s may be inconsistent.' % (oldclass,)) self._handle_namespace(oldclass, is_class_namespace=True) def _update_classmethod(self, oldcm, newcm): """Update a classmethod update.""" # While we can't modify the classmethod object itself (it has no # mutable attributes), we *can* extract the underlying function # (by calling __get__(), which returns a method object) and update # it in-place. We don't have the class available to pass to # __get__() but any object except None will do. self._update(None, None, oldcm.__get__(0), newcm.__get__(0)) def _update_staticmethod(self, oldsm, newsm): """Update a staticmethod update.""" # While we can't modify the staticmethod object itself (it has no # mutable attributes), we *can* extract the underlying function # (by calling __get__(), which returns it) and update it in-place. # We don't have the class available to pass to __get__() but any # object except None will do. self._update(None, None, oldsm.__get__(0), newsm.__get__(0))