#! /usr/bin/env python # Copyright 2016 OpenMarket Ltd # # 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. from argparse import ArgumentParser from docutils.core import publish_file import copy import fileinput import glob import os import os.path import re import shutil import subprocess import sys import yaml script_dir = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__)) docs_dir = os.path.dirname(script_dir) spec_dir = os.path.join(docs_dir, "specification") tmp_dir = os.path.join(script_dir, "tmp") changelog_dir = os.path.join(docs_dir, "changelogs") VERBOSE = False """ Read a RST file and replace titles with a different title level if required. Args: filename: The name of the file being read (for debugging) file_stream: The open file stream to read from. title_level: The integer which determines the offset to *start* from. title_styles: An array of characters detailing the right title styles to use e.g. ["=", "-", "~", "+"] Returns: string: The file contents with titles adjusted. Example: Assume title_styles = ["=", "-", "~", "+"], title_level = 1, and the file when read line-by-line encounters the titles "===", "---", "---", "===", "---". This function will bump every title encountered down a sub-heading e.g. "=" to "-" and "-" to "~" because title_level = 1, so the output would be "---", "~~~", "~~~", "---", "~~~". There is no bumping "up" a title level. """ def load_with_adjusted_titles(filename, file_stream, title_level, title_styles): rst_lines = [] prev_line_title_level = 0 # We expect the file to start with '=' titles file_offset = None prev_non_title_line = None for i, line in enumerate(file_stream): if (prev_non_title_line is None or not is_title_line(prev_non_title_line, line, title_styles) ): rst_lines.append(line) prev_non_title_line = line continue line_title_style = line[0] line_title_level = title_styles.index(line_title_style) # Not all files will start with "===" and we should be flexible enough # to allow that. The first title we encounter sets the "file offset" # which is added to the title_level desired. if file_offset is None: file_offset = line_title_level if file_offset != 0: logv((" WARNING: %s starts with a title style of '%s' but '%s' " + "is preferable.") % (filename, line_title_style, title_styles[0])) # Sanity checks: Make sure that this file is obeying the title levels # specified and bail if it isn't. # The file is allowed to go 1 deeper or any number shallower if prev_line_title_level - line_title_level < -1: raise Exception( ("File '%s' line '%s' has a title " + "style '%s' which doesn't match one of the " + "allowed title styles of %s because the " + "title level before this line was '%s'") % (filename, (i + 1), line_title_style, title_styles, title_styles[prev_line_title_level]) ) prev_line_title_level = line_title_level adjusted_level = ( title_level + line_title_level - file_offset ) # Sanity check: Make sure we can bump down the title and we aren't at the # lowest level already if adjusted_level >= len(title_styles): raise Exception( ("Files '%s' line '%s' has a sub-title level too low and it " + "cannot be adjusted to fit. You can add another level to the " + "'title_styles' key in targets.yaml to fix this.") % (filename, (i + 1)) ) if adjusted_level == line_title_level: # no changes required rst_lines.append(line) continue # Adjusting line levels logv( "File: %s Adjusting %s to %s because file_offset=%s title_offset=%s" % (filename, line_title_style, title_styles[adjusted_level], file_offset, title_level) ) rst_lines.append(line.replace( line_title_style, title_styles[adjusted_level] )) return "".join(rst_lines) def is_title_line(prev_line, line, title_styles): # The title underline must match at a minimum the length of the title if len(prev_line) > len(line): return False line = line.rstrip() # must be at least 3 chars long if len(line) < 3: return False # must start with a title char title_char = line[0] if title_char not in title_styles: return False # all characters must be the same for char in line[1:]: if char != title_char: return False # looks like a title line return True def get_rst(file_info, title_level, title_styles, spec_dir, adjust_titles): # string are file paths to RST blobs if isinstance(file_info, str): log("%s %s" % (">" * (1 + title_level), file_info)) with open(os.path.join(spec_dir, file_info), "r", encoding="utf-8") as f: rst = None if adjust_titles: rst = load_with_adjusted_titles( file_info, f, title_level, title_styles ) else: rst = f.read() rst += "\n\n" return rst # dicts look like {0: filepath, 1: filepath} where the key is the title level elif isinstance(file_info, dict): levels = sorted(file_info.keys()) rst = [] for l in levels: rst.append(get_rst(file_info[l], l, title_styles, spec_dir, adjust_titles)) return "".join(rst) # lists are multiple file paths e.g. [filepath, filepath] elif isinstance(file_info, list): rst = [] for f in file_info: rst.append(get_rst(f, title_level, title_styles, spec_dir, adjust_titles)) return "".join(rst) raise Exception( "The following 'file' entry in this target isn't a string, list or dict. " + "It really really should be. Entry: %s" % (file_info,) ) def build_spec(target, out_filename): log("Building templated file %s" % out_filename) with open(out_filename, "w", encoding="utf-8") as outfile: for file_info in target["files"]: section = get_rst( file_info=file_info, title_level=0, title_styles=target["title_styles"], spec_dir=spec_dir, adjust_titles=True ) outfile.write(section) """ Replaces relative title styles with actual title styles. The templating system has no idea what the right title style is when it produces RST because it depends on the build target. As a result, it uses relative title styles defined in targets.yaml to say "down a level, up a level, same level". This function replaces these relative titles with actual title styles from the array in targets.yaml. """ def fix_relative_titles(target, filename, out_filename): log("Fix relative titles, %s -> %s" % (filename, out_filename)) title_styles = target["title_styles"] relative_title_chars = [ target["relative_title_styles"]["subtitle"], target["relative_title_styles"]["sametitle"], target["relative_title_styles"]["supertitle"] ] relative_title_matcher = re.compile( "^[" + re.escape("".join(relative_title_chars)) + "]{3,}$" ) title_matcher = re.compile( "^[" + re.escape("".join(title_styles)) + "]{3,}$" ) current_title_style = None with open(filename, "r", encoding="utf-8") as infile: with open(out_filename, "w", encoding="utf-8") as outfile: for line in infile.readlines(): if not relative_title_matcher.match(line): if title_matcher.match(line): current_title_style = line[0] outfile.write(line) continue line_char = line[0] replacement_char = None current_title_level = title_styles.index(current_title_style) if line_char == target["relative_title_styles"]["subtitle"]: if (current_title_level + 1) == len(title_styles): raise Exception( "Encountered sub-title line style but we can't go " + "any lower." ) replacement_char = title_styles[current_title_level + 1] elif line_char == target["relative_title_styles"]["sametitle"]: replacement_char = title_styles[current_title_level] elif line_char == target["relative_title_styles"]["supertitle"]: if (current_title_level - 1) < 0: raise Exception( "Encountered super-title line style but we can't go " + "any higher." ) replacement_char = title_styles[current_title_level - 1] else: raise Exception( "Unknown relative line char %s" % (line_char,) ) outfile.write( line.replace(line_char, replacement_char) ) def rst2html(i, o, stylesheets): log("rst2html %s -> %s" % (i, o)) with open(i, "r", encoding="utf-8") as in_file: with open(o, "w", encoding="utf-8") as out_file: publish_file( source=in_file, destination=out_file, reader_name="standalone", parser_name="restructuredtext", writer_name="html", settings_overrides={ "stylesheet_path": stylesheets, "syntax_highlight": "short", }, ) def addAnchors(path): log("add anchors %s" % path) with open(path, "r", encoding="utf-8") as f: lines = f.readlines() replacement = r'
\n\1' with open(path, "w", encoding="utf-8") as f: for line in lines: line = re.sub(r'(