Linux puskom-ProLiant-DL385-Gen10 5.4.0-150-generic #167~18.04.1-Ubuntu SMP Wed May 24 00:51:42 UTC 2023 x86_64
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usr
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share
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perl5
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Lintian
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//usr/share/perl5/Lintian/Output.pm
# Copyright © 2008 Frank Lichtenheld <frank@lichtenheld.de> # # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by # the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or # (at your option) any later version. # # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the # GNU General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License # along with this program. If not, you can find it on the World Wide # Web at http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html, or write to the Free # Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, # MA 02110-1301, USA. package Lintian::Output; use strict; use warnings; use v5.8.0; # for PerlIO use parent qw(Class::Accessor::Fast); # The limit is including the "use --foo to see all tags". use constant DEFAULT_INTERACTIVE_TAG_LIMIT => 4; use Exporter qw(import); # Force export as soon as possible, since some of the modules we load also # depend on us and the sequencing can cause things not to be exported # otherwise. our (%EXPORT_TAGS, @EXPORT_OK); BEGIN { %EXPORT_TAGS = ( messages => [qw(msg v_msg warning debug_msg delimiter perf_log)], util => [qw(_global_or_object)]); @EXPORT_OK = (@{$EXPORT_TAGS{messages}},@{$EXPORT_TAGS{util}},'string'); } =head1 NAME Lintian::Output - Lintian messaging handling =head1 SYNOPSIS # non-OO use Lintian::Output qw(:messages); $Lintian::Output::GLOBAL->verbosity_level(1); msg("Something interesting"); v_msg("Something less interesting"); debug_msg(3, "Something very specific"); # OO use Lintian::Output; my $out = Lintian::Output->new; $out->verbosity_level(-1); $out->msg("Something interesting"); $out->v_msg("Something less interesting"); $out->debug_msg(3, "Something very specific"); =head1 DESCRIPTION Lintian::Output is used for all interaction between lintian and the user. It is designed to be easily extensible via subclassing. To simplify usage in the most common cases, many Lintian::Output methods can be used as class methods and will therefor automatically use the object $Lintian::Output::GLOBAL unless their first argument C<isa('Lintian::Output')>. =cut use Lintian::Tags (); # support for ANSI color output via colored() use Term::ANSIColor (); =head1 ACCESSORS The following fields define the behaviours of Lintian::Output. =over 4 =item verbosity_level Determine how verbose the output should be. "0" is the default value (tags and msg only), "-1" is quiet (tags only) and "1" is verbose (tags, msg and v_msg). =item debug If set to a positive integer, will enable all debug messages issued with a level lower or equal to its value. =item color Can take the values "never", "always", "auto" or "html". Whether to colorize tags based on their severity. The default is "never", which never uses color. "always" will always use color, "auto" will use color only if the output is going to a terminal. "html" will output HTML <span> tags with a color style attribute (instead of ANSI color escape sequences). =item stdout I/O handle to use for output of messages and tags. Defaults to C<\*STDOUT>. =item stderr I/O handle to use for warnings. Defaults to C<\*STDERR>. =item showdescription Whether to show the description of a tag when printing it. =item issuedtags Hash containing the names of tags which have been issued. =item tag_display_limit Get/Set the number of times a tag is emitted per processable. =back =cut Lintian::Output->mk_accessors( qw(verbosity_level debug color colors stdout stderr perf_log_fd perf_debug showdescription issuedtags tag_display_limit) ); # for the non-OO interface my %default_colors = ( 'E' => 'red', 'W' => 'yellow', 'I' => 'cyan', 'P' => 'green', 'C' => 'blue', ); our $GLOBAL = Lintian::Output->new; sub new { my ($class, %options) = @_; my $self = {%options}; bless($self, $class); $self->stdout(\*STDOUT); $self->stderr(\*STDERR); $self->perf_log_fd(\*STDOUT); $self->colors({%default_colors}); $self->issuedtags({}); $self->{'proc_id2tag_count'} = {}; # Set defaults to avoid "uninitialized" warnings $self->verbosity_level(0); $self->perf_debug(0); $self->color('never'); return $self; } =head1 CLASS/INSTANCE METHODS These methods can be used both with and without an object. If no object is given, they will fall back to the $Lintian::Output::GLOBAL object. =over 4 =item C<msg(@args)> Will output the strings given in @args, one per line, each line prefixed with 'N: '. Will do nothing if verbosity_level is less than 0. =item C<v_msg(@args)> Will output the strings given in @args, one per line, each line prefixed with 'N: '. Will do nothing unless verbosity_level is greater than 0. =item C<debug_msg($level, @args)> $level should be a positive integer. Will output the strings given in @args, one per line, each line prefixed with 'N: '. Will do nothing unless debug is set to a positive integer >= $level. =cut sub msg { my ($self, @args) = _global_or_object(@_); return if $self->verbosity_level < 0; $self->_message(@args); return; } sub v_msg { my ($self, @args) = _global_or_object(@_); return unless $self->verbosity_level > 0; $self->_message(@args); return; } sub debug_msg { my ($self, $level, @args) = _global_or_object(@_); return unless $self->debug && ($self->debug >= $level); $self->_message(@args); return; } =item C<warning(@args)> Will output the strings given in @args on stderr, one per line, each line prefixed with 'warning: '. =cut sub warning { my ($self, @args) = _global_or_object(@_); return if $self->verbosity_level < 0; $self->_warning(@args); return; } =item C<perf_log(@args)> Like "v_msg", except output is possibly sent to a dedicated log file. Will output the strings given in @args, one per line. The lines will not be prefixed. Will do nothing unless perf_debug is set to a positive integer. =cut sub perf_log { my ($self, @args) = _global_or_object(@_); return unless $self->perf_debug; $self->_print($self->perf_log_fd, '', @args); return; } =item C<delimiter()> Gives back a string that is usable for separating messages in the output. Note: This does not print anything, it just gives back the string, use with one of the methods above, e.g. v_msg('foo', delimiter(), 'bar'); =cut sub delimiter { my ($self) = _global_or_object(@_); return $self->_delimiter; } =item C<issued_tag($tag_name)> Indicate that the named tag has been issued. Returns a boolean value indicating whether the tag had previously been issued by the object. =cut sub issued_tag { my ($self, $tag_name) = _global_or_object(@_); return $self->issuedtags->{$tag_name}++ ? 1 : 0; } =item C<string($lead, @args)> TODO: Is this part of the public interface? =cut sub string { my ($self, $lead, @args) = _global_or_object(@_); my $output = ''; if (@args) { my $prefix = ''; $prefix = "$lead: " if $lead; foreach (@args) { $output .= "${prefix}${_}\n"; } } elsif ($lead) { $output .= $lead.".\n"; } return $output; } =back =head1 INSTANCE METHODS FOR CONTEXT-AWARE OUTPUT The following methods are designed to be called at specific points during program execution and require very specific arguments. They can only be called as instance methods. =over 4 =item C<print_tag($pkg_info, $tag_info, $extra, $override)> Print a tag. The first two arguments are hash reference with the information about the package and the tag, $extra is the extra information for the tag (if any) as an array reference, and $override is either undef if the tag is not overridden or the L<override|Lintian::Tag::Override> for this tag. Called from Lintian::Tags::tag(). =cut sub print_tag { my ($self, $pkg_info, $tag_info, $information, $override) = @_; $information = ' ' . $self->_quote_print($information) if $information ne ''; my $code = $tag_info->code; my $tag_color = $self->{colors}{$code}; my $fpkg_info = $self->_format_pkg_info($pkg_info, $tag_info, $override); my $tag_name = $tag_info->tag; my $limit = $self->tag_display_limit; my $tag; # Limit the output so people do not drown in tags. Some tags are # insanely noisy (hi static-library-has-unneeded-section) if ($limit) { my $proc_id = $pkg_info->{'processable'}->identifier; my $emitted_count = $self->{'proc_id2tag_count'}{$proc_id}{$tag_name}++; return if $emitted_count >= $limit; my $msg = ' ... use --no-tag-display-limit to see all (or pipe to a file/program)'; $information = $self->_quote_print($msg) if $emitted_count >= $limit-1; } if ($self->_do_color) { if ($self->color eq 'html') { my $escaped = $tag_name; $escaped =~ s/&/&/g; $escaped =~ s/</</g; $escaped =~ s/>/>/g; $tag .= qq(<span style="color: $tag_color">$escaped</span>); } else { $tag .= Term::ANSIColor::colored($tag_name, $tag_color); } } else { $tag .= $tag_name; } if ($override && @{ $override->comments }) { foreach my $c (@{ $override->comments }) { $self->msg($self->_quote_print($c)); } } $self->_print('', $fpkg_info, "$tag$information"); if (not $self->issued_tag($tag_info->tag) and $self->showdescription) { my $description; if ($self->_do_color && $self->color eq 'html') { $description = $tag_info->description('html', ' '); } else { $description = $tag_info->description('text', ' '); } $self->_print('', 'N', ''); $self->_print('', 'N', split("\n", $description)); $self->_print('', 'N', ''); } return; } # Helper function to "print_tag" to decide the output format of the tag line. Used by # the "FullEWI" subclass. # sub _format_pkg_info { my ($self, $pkg_info, $tag_info, $override) = @_; my $code = $tag_info->code; $code = 'X' if $tag_info->experimental; $code = 'O' if defined $override; my $type = ''; $type = " $pkg_info->{type}" if $pkg_info->{type} ne 'binary'; return "$code: $pkg_info->{package}$type"; } =item C<print_start_pkg($pkg_info)> Called before lintian starts to handle each package. The version in Lintian::Output uses v_msg() for output. Called from Tags::select_pkg(). =cut sub print_start_pkg { my ($self, $pkg_info) = @_; my $object = 'package'; if ($pkg_info->{type} eq 'changes') { $object = 'file'; } $self->v_msg( $self->delimiter, join(q{ }, "Processing $pkg_info->{type} $object $pkg_info->{package}", "(version $pkg_info->{version}, arch $pkg_info->{arch}) ...")); return; } =item C<print_start_pkg($pkg_info)> Called after lintian is finished with a package. The version in Lintian::Output does nothing. Called from Lintian::Tags::file_start() and Lintian::Tags::file_end(). =cut sub print_end_pkg { return; } =back =head1 INSTANCE METHODS FOR SUBCLASSING The following methods are only intended for subclassing and are only available as instance methods. The methods mentioned in L</CLASS/INSTANCE METHODS> usually only check whether they should do anything at all (according to the values of verbosity_level and debug) and then call one of the following methods to do the actual printing. Almost all of them finally call _print() to do that. This convoluted scheme is necessary to be able to use the methods above as class methods and still make the behaviour overridable in subclasses. =over 4 =item C<_message(@args)> Called by msg(), v_msg(), and debug_msg() to print the message. =cut sub _message { my ($self, @args) = @_; $self->_print('', 'N', @args); return; } =item C<_warning(@args)> Called by warning() to print the warning. =cut sub _warning { my ($self, @args) = @_; $self->_print($self->stderr, 'warning', @args); return; } =item C<_print($stream, $lead, @args)> Called by _message(), _warning(), and print_tag() to do the actual printing. If you override these three methods, you can change the calling convention for this method to pretty much whatever you want. The version in Lintian::Output prints the strings in @args, one per line, each line preceded by $lead to the I/O handle given in $stream. =cut sub _print { my ($self, $stream, $lead, @args) = @_; $stream ||= $self->stdout; my $output = $self->string($lead, @args); print {$stream} $output; return; } =item C<_delimiter()> Called by delimiter(). =cut sub _delimiter { return '----'; } =item C<_do_color()> Called by print_tag() to determine whether to produce colored output. =cut sub _do_color { my ($self) = @_; return ( $self->color eq 'always' || $self->color eq 'html' || ($self->color eq 'auto' && -t $self->stdout)); } =item C<_quote_print($string)> Called to quote a string. By default it will replace all non-printables with "?". Sub-classes can override it if they allow non-ascii printables etc. =cut sub _quote_print { my ($self, $string) = @_; $string =~ s/[^[:print:]]/?/go; return $string; } =back =head1 CLASS METHODS =over 4 =item C<_global_or_object(@args)> If $args[0] is an object which satisfies C<isa('Lintian::Output')> returns @args, otherwise returns C<($Lintian::Output::GLOBAL, @_)>. =back =cut sub _global_or_object { if (ref($_[0]) and $_[0]->isa('Lintian::Output')) { return @_; } else { return ($Lintian::Output::GLOBAL, @_); } } 1; __END__ =head1 EXPORTS Lintian::Output exports nothing by default, but the following export tags are available: =over 4 =item :messages Exports all the methods in L</CLASS/INSTANCE METHODS> =item :util Exports all the methods in L<CLASS METHODS> =back =head1 AUTHOR Originally written by Frank Lichtenheld <djpig@debian.org> for Lintian. =head1 SEE ALSO lintian(1) =cut # Local Variables: # indent-tabs-mode: nil # cperl-indent-level: 4 # End: # vim: syntax=perl sw=4 sts=4 sr et