Mercurial > p > roundup > code
view roundup/support.py @ 6803:db437dd13ed5
set method doesn't include user set timestamp if update
set() is supposed to update the record with the key if it already
exists.
It does update the value marshalled data blob. However it doesn't
update the timestamp column for rdbms tables if provided.
This change updates the x_time column with the provided __timestamp or
preserves the original timestamp.
| author | John Rouillard <rouilj@ieee.org> |
|---|---|
| date | Mon, 25 Jul 2022 15:07:32 -0400 |
| parents | 01643d37785f |
| children | 33eb82ad26ba |
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"""Implements various support classes and functions used in a number of places in Roundup code. """ from __future__ import print_function __docformat__ = 'restructuredtext' import os, time, sys class TruthDict: '''Returns True for valid keys, False for others. ''' def __init__(self, keys): if keys: self.keys = {} for col in keys: self.keys[col] = 1 def __getitem__(self, name): if hasattr(self, 'keys'): return name in self.keys else: return True def ensureParentsExist(dest): if not os.path.exists(os.path.dirname(dest)): os.makedirs(os.path.dirname(dest)) class PrioList: '''Manages a sorted list. Currently only implements method 'append' and iteration from a full list interface. Implementation: We manage a "sorted" status and sort on demand. Appending to the list will require re-sorting before use. >>> p = PrioList() >>> for i in 5,7,1,-1: ... p.append(i) ... >>> for k in p: ... print k ... -1 1 5 7 ''' def __init__(self): self.list = [] self.sorted = True def append(self, item): self.list.append(item) self.sorted = False def __iter__(self): if not self.sorted: self.list.sort() self.sorted = True return iter(self.list) class Progress: '''Progress display for console applications. See __main__ block at end of file for sample usage. ''' def __init__(self, info, sequence): self.info = info self.sequence = iter(sequence) self.total = len(sequence) self.start = self.now = time.time() self.num = 0 self.stepsize = self.total // 100 or 1 self.steptimes = [] self.display() def __iter__(self): return self def __next__(self): self.num += 1 if self.num > self.total: print(self.info, 'done', ' '*(75-len(self.info)-6)) sys.stdout.flush() return next(self.sequence) if self.num % self.stepsize: return next(self.sequence) self.display() return next(self.sequence) # Python 2 compatibility: next = __next__ def display(self): # figure how long we've spent - guess how long to go now = time.time() steptime = now - self.now self.steptimes.insert(0, steptime) if len(self.steptimes) > 5: self.steptimes.pop() steptime = sum(self.steptimes) / len(self.steptimes) self.now = now eta = steptime * ((self.total - self.num)/self.stepsize) # tell it like it is (or might be) if now - self.start > 3: M = eta / 60 H = M / 60 M = M % 60 S = eta % 60 if self.total: s = '%s %2d%% (ETA %02d:%02d:%02d)' % (self.info, self.num * 100. / self.total, H, M, S) else: s = '%s 0%% (ETA %02d:%02d:%02d)' % (self.info, H, M, S) elif self.total: s = '%s %2d%%' % (self.info, self.num * 100. / self.total) else: s = '%s %d done' % (self.info, self.num) sys.stdout.write(s + ' '*(75-len(s)) + '\r') sys.stdout.flush() # vim: set et sts=4 sw=4 :
