diff env/lib/python3.7/site-packages/setuptools/glibc.py @ 0:26e78fe6e8c4 draft

"planemo upload commit c699937486c35866861690329de38ec1a5d9f783"
author shellac
date Sat, 02 May 2020 07:14:21 -0400
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--- /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/env/lib/python3.7/site-packages/setuptools/glibc.py	Sat May 02 07:14:21 2020 -0400
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+# This file originally from pip:
+# https://github.com/pypa/pip/blob/8f4f15a5a95d7d5b511ceaee9ed261176c181970/src/pip/_internal/utils/glibc.py
+from __future__ import absolute_import
+
+import ctypes
+import re
+import warnings
+
+
+def glibc_version_string():
+    "Returns glibc version string, or None if not using glibc."
+
+    # ctypes.CDLL(None) internally calls dlopen(NULL), and as the dlopen
+    # manpage says, "If filename is NULL, then the returned handle is for the
+    # main program". This way we can let the linker do the work to figure out
+    # which libc our process is actually using.
+    process_namespace = ctypes.CDLL(None)
+    try:
+        gnu_get_libc_version = process_namespace.gnu_get_libc_version
+    except AttributeError:
+        # Symbol doesn't exist -> therefore, we are not linked to
+        # glibc.
+        return None
+
+    # Call gnu_get_libc_version, which returns a string like "2.5"
+    gnu_get_libc_version.restype = ctypes.c_char_p
+    version_str = gnu_get_libc_version()
+    # py2 / py3 compatibility:
+    if not isinstance(version_str, str):
+        version_str = version_str.decode("ascii")
+
+    return version_str
+
+
+# Separated out from have_compatible_glibc for easier unit testing
+def check_glibc_version(version_str, required_major, minimum_minor):
+    # Parse string and check against requested version.
+    #
+    # We use a regexp instead of str.split because we want to discard any
+    # random junk that might come after the minor version -- this might happen
+    # in patched/forked versions of glibc (e.g. Linaro's version of glibc
+    # uses version strings like "2.20-2014.11"). See gh-3588.
+    m = re.match(r"(?P<major>[0-9]+)\.(?P<minor>[0-9]+)", version_str)
+    if not m:
+        warnings.warn("Expected glibc version with 2 components major.minor,"
+                      " got: %s" % version_str, RuntimeWarning)
+        return False
+    return (int(m.group("major")) == required_major and
+            int(m.group("minor")) >= minimum_minor)
+
+
+def have_compatible_glibc(required_major, minimum_minor):
+    version_str = glibc_version_string()
+    if version_str is None:
+        return False
+    return check_glibc_version(version_str, required_major, minimum_minor)
+
+
+# platform.libc_ver regularly returns completely nonsensical glibc
+# versions. E.g. on my computer, platform says:
+#
+#   ~$ python2.7 -c 'import platform; print(platform.libc_ver())'
+#   ('glibc', '2.7')
+#   ~$ python3.5 -c 'import platform; print(platform.libc_ver())'
+#   ('glibc', '2.9')
+#
+# But the truth is:
+#
+#   ~$ ldd --version
+#   ldd (Debian GLIBC 2.22-11) 2.22
+#
+# This is unfortunate, because it means that the linehaul data on libc
+# versions that was generated by pip 8.1.2 and earlier is useless and
+# misleading. Solution: instead of using platform, use our code that actually
+# works.
+def libc_ver():
+    """Try to determine the glibc version
+
+    Returns a tuple of strings (lib, version) which default to empty strings
+    in case the lookup fails.
+    """
+    glibc_version = glibc_version_string()
+    if glibc_version is None:
+        return ("", "")
+    else:
+        return ("glibc", glibc_version)