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# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- # # Copyright (c) 2011 Red Hat, Inc # # kitchen is free software; you can redistribute it and/or # modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public # License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either # version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. # # kitchen 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 # Lesser General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public # License along with kitchen; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/> # # Authors: # Toshio Kuratomi <toshio@fedoraproject.org> ''' ---------------------------- PEP-386 compliant versioning ---------------------------- :pep:`386` defines a standard format for version strings. This module contains a function for creating strings in that format. ''' __version_info__ = ((1, 0, 0),) import itertools def version_tuple_to_string(version_info): '''Return a :pep:`386` version string from a :pep:`386` style version tuple :arg version_info: Nested set of tuples that describes the version. See below for an example. :returns: a version string This function implements just enough of :pep:`386` to satisfy our needs. :pep:`386` defines a standard format for version strings and refers to a function that will be merged into the |stdlib|_ that transforms a tuple of version information into a standard version string. This function is an implementation of that function. Once that function becomes available in the |stdlib|_ we will start using it and deprecate this function. :attr:`version_info` takes the form that :pep:`386`'s :func:`NormalizedVersion.from_parts` uses:: ((Major, Minor, [Micros]), [(Alpha/Beta/rc marker, version)], [(post/dev marker, version)]) Ex: ((1, 0, 0), ('a', 2), ('dev', 3456)) It generates a :pep:`386` compliant version string:: N.N[.N]+[{a|b|c|rc}N[.N]+][.postN][.devN] Ex: 1.0.0a2.dev3456 .. warning:: This function does next to no error checking. It's up to the person defining the version tuple to make sure that the values make sense. If the :pep:`386` compliant version parser doesn't get released soon we'll look at making this function check that the version tuple makes sense before transforming it into a string. It's recommended that you use this function to keep a :data:`__version_info__` tuple and :data:`__version__` string in your modules. Why do we need both a tuple and a string? The string is often useful for putting into human readable locations like release announcements, version strings in tarballs, etc. Meanwhile the tuple is very easy for a computer to compare. For example, kitchen sets up its version information like this:: from kitchen.versioning import version_tuple_to_string __version_info__ = ((0, 2, 1),) __version__ = version_tuple_to_string(__version_info__) Other programs that depend on a kitchen version between 0.2.1 and 0.3.0 can find whether the present version is okay with code like this:: from kitchen import __version_info__, __version__ if __version_info__ < ((0, 2, 1),) or __version_info__ >= ((0, 3, 0),): print 'kitchen is present but not at the right version.' print 'We need at least version 0.2.1 and less than 0.3.0' print 'Currently found: kitchen-%s' % __version__ ''' ver_components = [] for values in version_info: if isinstance(values[0], int): ver_components.append('.'.join(itertools.imap(str, values))) else: if isinstance(values[0], unicode): modifier = values[0].encode('ascii') else: modifier = values[0] if modifier in ('a', 'b', 'c', 'rc'): ver_components.append('%s%s' % (modifier, '.'.join(itertools.imap(str, values[1:])) or '0')) else: ver_components.append('.%s%s' % (modifier, str(values[1]))) return unicode(''.join(ver_components), 'ascii') __version__ = version_tuple_to_string(__version_info__) __all__ = ('version_tuple_to_string',)