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1#
2# distutils/version.py
3#
4# Implements multiple version numbering conventions for the
5# Python Module Distribution Utilities.
6#
7# $Id$
8#
9
10"""Provides classes to represent module version numbers (one class for
11each style of version numbering).  There are currently two such classes
12implemented: StrictVersion and LooseVersion.
13
14Every version number class implements the following interface:
15  * the 'parse' method takes a string and parses it to some internal
16    representation; if the string is an invalid version number,
17    'parse' raises a ValueError exception
18  * the class constructor takes an optional string argument which,
19    if supplied, is passed to 'parse'
20  * __str__ reconstructs the string that was passed to 'parse' (or
21    an equivalent string -- ie. one that will generate an equivalent
22    version number instance)
23  * __repr__ generates Python code to recreate the version number instance
24  * _cmp compares the current instance with either another instance
25    of the same class or a string (which will be parsed to an instance
26    of the same class, thus must follow the same rules)
27"""
28
29import re
30
31class Version:
32    """Abstract base class for version numbering classes.  Just provides
33    constructor (__init__) and reproducer (__repr__), because those
34    seem to be the same for all version numbering classes; and route
35    rich comparisons to _cmp.
36    """
37
38    def __init__ (self, vstring=None):
39        if vstring:
40            self.parse(vstring)
41
42    def __repr__ (self):
43        return "%s ('%s')" % (self.__class__.__name__, str(self))
44
45    def __eq__(self, other):
46        c = self._cmp(other)
47        if c is NotImplemented:
48            return c
49        return c == 0
50
51    def __lt__(self, other):
52        c = self._cmp(other)
53        if c is NotImplemented:
54            return c
55        return c < 0
56
57    def __le__(self, other):
58        c = self._cmp(other)
59        if c is NotImplemented:
60            return c
61        return c <= 0
62
63    def __gt__(self, other):
64        c = self._cmp(other)
65        if c is NotImplemented:
66            return c
67        return c > 0
68
69    def __ge__(self, other):
70        c = self._cmp(other)
71        if c is NotImplemented:
72            return c
73        return c >= 0
74
75
76# Interface for version-number classes -- must be implemented
77# by the following classes (the concrete ones -- Version should
78# be treated as an abstract class).
79#    __init__ (string) - create and take same action as 'parse'
80#                        (string parameter is optional)
81#    parse (string)    - convert a string representation to whatever
82#                        internal representation is appropriate for
83#                        this style of version numbering
84#    __str__ (self)    - convert back to a string; should be very similar
85#                        (if not identical to) the string supplied to parse
86#    __repr__ (self)   - generate Python code to recreate
87#                        the instance
88#    _cmp (self, other) - compare two version numbers ('other' may
89#                        be an unparsed version string, or another
90#                        instance of your version class)
91
92
93class StrictVersion (Version):
94
95    """Version numbering for anal retentives and software idealists.
96    Implements the standard interface for version number classes as
97    described above.  A version number consists of two or three
98    dot-separated numeric components, with an optional "pre-release" tag
99    on the end.  The pre-release tag consists of the letter 'a' or 'b'
100    followed by a number.  If the numeric components of two version
101    numbers are equal, then one with a pre-release tag will always
102    be deemed earlier (lesser) than one without.
103
104    The following are valid version numbers (shown in the order that
105    would be obtained by sorting according to the supplied cmp function):
106
107        0.4       0.4.0  (these two are equivalent)
108        0.4.1
109        0.5a1
110        0.5b3
111        0.5
112        0.9.6
113        1.0
114        1.0.4a3
115        1.0.4b1
116        1.0.4
117
118    The following are examples of invalid version numbers:
119
120        1
121        2.7.2.2
122        1.3.a4
123        1.3pl1
124        1.3c4
125
126    The rationale for this version numbering system will be explained
127    in the distutils documentation.
128    """
129
130    version_re = re.compile(r'^(\d+) \. (\d+) (\. (\d+))? ([ab](\d+))?$',
131                            re.VERBOSE | re.ASCII)
132
133
134    def parse (self, vstring):
135        match = self.version_re.match(vstring)
136        if not match:
137            raise ValueError("invalid version number '%s'" % vstring)
138
139        (major, minor, patch, prerelease, prerelease_num) = \
140            match.group(1, 2, 4, 5, 6)
141
142        if patch:
143            self.version = tuple(map(int, [major, minor, patch]))
144        else:
145            self.version = tuple(map(int, [major, minor])) + (0,)
146
147        if prerelease:
148            self.prerelease = (prerelease[0], int(prerelease_num))
149        else:
150            self.prerelease = None
151
152
153    def __str__ (self):
154
155        if self.version[2] == 0:
156            vstring = '.'.join(map(str, self.version[0:2]))
157        else:
158            vstring = '.'.join(map(str, self.version))
159
160        if self.prerelease:
161            vstring = vstring + self.prerelease[0] + str(self.prerelease[1])
162
163        return vstring
164
165
166    def _cmp (self, other):
167        if isinstance(other, str):
168            other = StrictVersion(other)
169        elif not isinstance(other, StrictVersion):
170            return NotImplemented
171
172        if self.version != other.version:
173            # numeric versions don't match
174            # prerelease stuff doesn't matter
175            if self.version < other.version:
176                return -1
177            else:
178                return 1
179
180        # have to compare prerelease
181        # case 1: neither has prerelease; they're equal
182        # case 2: self has prerelease, other doesn't; other is greater
183        # case 3: self doesn't have prerelease, other does: self is greater
184        # case 4: both have prerelease: must compare them!
185
186        if (not self.prerelease and not other.prerelease):
187            return 0
188        elif (self.prerelease and not other.prerelease):
189            return -1
190        elif (not self.prerelease and other.prerelease):
191            return 1
192        elif (self.prerelease and other.prerelease):
193            if self.prerelease == other.prerelease:
194                return 0
195            elif self.prerelease < other.prerelease:
196                return -1
197            else:
198                return 1
199        else:
200            assert False, "never get here"
201
202# end class StrictVersion
203
204
205# The rules according to Greg Stein:
206# 1) a version number has 1 or more numbers separated by a period or by
207#    sequences of letters. If only periods, then these are compared
208#    left-to-right to determine an ordering.
209# 2) sequences of letters are part of the tuple for comparison and are
210#    compared lexicographically
211# 3) recognize the numeric components may have leading zeroes
212#
213# The LooseVersion class below implements these rules: a version number
214# string is split up into a tuple of integer and string components, and
215# comparison is a simple tuple comparison.  This means that version
216# numbers behave in a predictable and obvious way, but a way that might
217# not necessarily be how people *want* version numbers to behave.  There
218# wouldn't be a problem if people could stick to purely numeric version
219# numbers: just split on period and compare the numbers as tuples.
220# However, people insist on putting letters into their version numbers;
221# the most common purpose seems to be:
222#   - indicating a "pre-release" version
223#     ('alpha', 'beta', 'a', 'b', 'pre', 'p')
224#   - indicating a post-release patch ('p', 'pl', 'patch')
225# but of course this can't cover all version number schemes, and there's
226# no way to know what a programmer means without asking him.
227#
228# The problem is what to do with letters (and other non-numeric
229# characters) in a version number.  The current implementation does the
230# obvious and predictable thing: keep them as strings and compare
231# lexically within a tuple comparison.  This has the desired effect if
232# an appended letter sequence implies something "post-release":
233# eg. "0.99" < "0.99pl14" < "1.0", and "5.001" < "5.001m" < "5.002".
234#
235# However, if letters in a version number imply a pre-release version,
236# the "obvious" thing isn't correct.  Eg. you would expect that
237# "1.5.1" < "1.5.2a2" < "1.5.2", but under the tuple/lexical comparison
238# implemented here, this just isn't so.
239#
240# Two possible solutions come to mind.  The first is to tie the
241# comparison algorithm to a particular set of semantic rules, as has
242# been done in the StrictVersion class above.  This works great as long
243# as everyone can go along with bondage and discipline.  Hopefully a
244# (large) subset of Python module programmers will agree that the
245# particular flavour of bondage and discipline provided by StrictVersion
246# provides enough benefit to be worth using, and will submit their
247# version numbering scheme to its domination.  The free-thinking
248# anarchists in the lot will never give in, though, and something needs
249# to be done to accommodate them.
250#
251# Perhaps a "moderately strict" version class could be implemented that
252# lets almost anything slide (syntactically), and makes some heuristic
253# assumptions about non-digits in version number strings.  This could
254# sink into special-case-hell, though; if I was as talented and
255# idiosyncratic as Larry Wall, I'd go ahead and implement a class that
256# somehow knows that "1.2.1" < "1.2.2a2" < "1.2.2" < "1.2.2pl3", and is
257# just as happy dealing with things like "2g6" and "1.13++".  I don't
258# think I'm smart enough to do it right though.
259#
260# In any case, I've coded the test suite for this module (see
261# ../test/test_version.py) specifically to fail on things like comparing
262# "1.2a2" and "1.2".  That's not because the *code* is doing anything
263# wrong, it's because the simple, obvious design doesn't match my
264# complicated, hairy expectations for real-world version numbers.  It
265# would be a snap to fix the test suite to say, "Yep, LooseVersion does
266# the Right Thing" (ie. the code matches the conception).  But I'd rather
267# have a conception that matches common notions about version numbers.
268
269class LooseVersion (Version):
270
271    """Version numbering for anarchists and software realists.
272    Implements the standard interface for version number classes as
273    described above.  A version number consists of a series of numbers,
274    separated by either periods or strings of letters.  When comparing
275    version numbers, the numeric components will be compared
276    numerically, and the alphabetic components lexically.  The following
277    are all valid version numbers, in no particular order:
278
279        1.5.1
280        1.5.2b2
281        161
282        3.10a
283        8.02
284        3.4j
285        1996.07.12
286        3.2.pl0
287        3.1.1.6
288        2g6
289        11g
290        0.960923
291        2.2beta29
292        1.13++
293        5.5.kw
294        2.0b1pl0
295
296    In fact, there is no such thing as an invalid version number under
297    this scheme; the rules for comparison are simple and predictable,
298    but may not always give the results you want (for some definition
299    of "want").
300    """
301
302    component_re = re.compile(r'(\d+ | [a-z]+ | \.)', re.VERBOSE)
303
304    def __init__ (self, vstring=None):
305        if vstring:
306            self.parse(vstring)
307
308
309    def parse (self, vstring):
310        # I've given up on thinking I can reconstruct the version string
311        # from the parsed tuple -- so I just store the string here for
312        # use by __str__
313        self.vstring = vstring
314        components = [x for x in self.component_re.split(vstring)
315                              if x and x != '.']
316        for i, obj in enumerate(components):
317            try:
318                components[i] = int(obj)
319            except ValueError:
320                pass
321
322        self.version = components
323
324
325    def __str__ (self):
326        return self.vstring
327
328
329    def __repr__ (self):
330        return "LooseVersion ('%s')" % str(self)
331
332
333    def _cmp (self, other):
334        if isinstance(other, str):
335            other = LooseVersion(other)
336        elif not isinstance(other, LooseVersion):
337            return NotImplemented
338
339        if self.version == other.version:
340            return 0
341        if self.version < other.version:
342            return -1
343        if self.version > other.version:
344            return 1
345
346
347# end class LooseVersion
348