Password_Manager_o.o/lib/python3.8/site-packages/future/backports/socket.py

455 lines
15 KiB
Python

# Wrapper module for _socket, providing some additional facilities
# implemented in Python.
"""\
This module provides socket operations and some related functions.
On Unix, it supports IP (Internet Protocol) and Unix domain sockets.
On other systems, it only supports IP. Functions specific for a
socket are available as methods of the socket object.
Functions:
socket() -- create a new socket object
socketpair() -- create a pair of new socket objects [*]
fromfd() -- create a socket object from an open file descriptor [*]
fromshare() -- create a socket object from data received from socket.share() [*]
gethostname() -- return the current hostname
gethostbyname() -- map a hostname to its IP number
gethostbyaddr() -- map an IP number or hostname to DNS info
getservbyname() -- map a service name and a protocol name to a port number
getprotobyname() -- map a protocol name (e.g. 'tcp') to a number
ntohs(), ntohl() -- convert 16, 32 bit int from network to host byte order
htons(), htonl() -- convert 16, 32 bit int from host to network byte order
inet_aton() -- convert IP addr string (123.45.67.89) to 32-bit packed format
inet_ntoa() -- convert 32-bit packed format IP to string (123.45.67.89)
socket.getdefaulttimeout() -- get the default timeout value
socket.setdefaulttimeout() -- set the default timeout value
create_connection() -- connects to an address, with an optional timeout and
optional source address.
[*] not available on all platforms!
Special objects:
SocketType -- type object for socket objects
error -- exception raised for I/O errors
has_ipv6 -- boolean value indicating if IPv6 is supported
Integer constants:
AF_INET, AF_UNIX -- socket domains (first argument to socket() call)
SOCK_STREAM, SOCK_DGRAM, SOCK_RAW -- socket types (second argument)
Many other constants may be defined; these may be used in calls to
the setsockopt() and getsockopt() methods.
"""
from __future__ import unicode_literals
from __future__ import print_function
from __future__ import division
from __future__ import absolute_import
from future.builtins import super
import _socket
from _socket import *
import os, sys, io
try:
import errno
except ImportError:
errno = None
EBADF = getattr(errno, 'EBADF', 9)
EAGAIN = getattr(errno, 'EAGAIN', 11)
EWOULDBLOCK = getattr(errno, 'EWOULDBLOCK', 11)
__all__ = ["getfqdn", "create_connection"]
__all__.extend(os._get_exports_list(_socket))
_realsocket = socket
# WSA error codes
if sys.platform.lower().startswith("win"):
errorTab = {}
errorTab[10004] = "The operation was interrupted."
errorTab[10009] = "A bad file handle was passed."
errorTab[10013] = "Permission denied."
errorTab[10014] = "A fault occurred on the network??" # WSAEFAULT
errorTab[10022] = "An invalid operation was attempted."
errorTab[10035] = "The socket operation would block"
errorTab[10036] = "A blocking operation is already in progress."
errorTab[10048] = "The network address is in use."
errorTab[10054] = "The connection has been reset."
errorTab[10058] = "The network has been shut down."
errorTab[10060] = "The operation timed out."
errorTab[10061] = "Connection refused."
errorTab[10063] = "The name is too long."
errorTab[10064] = "The host is down."
errorTab[10065] = "The host is unreachable."
__all__.append("errorTab")
class socket(_socket.socket):
"""A subclass of _socket.socket adding the makefile() method."""
__slots__ = ["__weakref__", "_io_refs", "_closed"]
def __init__(self, family=AF_INET, type=SOCK_STREAM, proto=0, fileno=None):
if fileno is None:
_socket.socket.__init__(self, family, type, proto)
else:
_socket.socket.__init__(self, family, type, proto, fileno)
self._io_refs = 0
self._closed = False
def __enter__(self):
return self
def __exit__(self, *args):
if not self._closed:
self.close()
def __repr__(self):
"""Wrap __repr__() to reveal the real class name."""
s = _socket.socket.__repr__(self)
if s.startswith("<socket object"):
s = "<%s.%s%s%s" % (self.__class__.__module__,
self.__class__.__name__,
getattr(self, '_closed', False) and " [closed] " or "",
s[7:])
return s
def __getstate__(self):
raise TypeError("Cannot serialize socket object")
def dup(self):
"""dup() -> socket object
Return a new socket object connected to the same system resource.
"""
fd = dup(self.fileno())
sock = self.__class__(self.family, self.type, self.proto, fileno=fd)
sock.settimeout(self.gettimeout())
return sock
def accept(self):
"""accept() -> (socket object, address info)
Wait for an incoming connection. Return a new socket
representing the connection, and the address of the client.
For IP sockets, the address info is a pair (hostaddr, port).
"""
fd, addr = self._accept()
sock = socket(self.family, self.type, self.proto, fileno=fd)
# Issue #7995: if no default timeout is set and the listening
# socket had a (non-zero) timeout, force the new socket in blocking
# mode to override platform-specific socket flags inheritance.
if getdefaulttimeout() is None and self.gettimeout():
sock.setblocking(True)
return sock, addr
def makefile(self, mode="r", buffering=None, **_3to2kwargs):
"""makefile(...) -> an I/O stream connected to the socket
The arguments are as for io.open() after the filename,
except the only mode characters supported are 'r', 'w' and 'b'.
The semantics are similar too. (XXX refactor to share code?)
"""
if 'newline' in _3to2kwargs: newline = _3to2kwargs['newline']; del _3to2kwargs['newline']
else: newline = None
if 'errors' in _3to2kwargs: errors = _3to2kwargs['errors']; del _3to2kwargs['errors']
else: errors = None
if 'encoding' in _3to2kwargs: encoding = _3to2kwargs['encoding']; del _3to2kwargs['encoding']
else: encoding = None
for c in mode:
if c not in ("r", "w", "b"):
raise ValueError("invalid mode %r (only r, w, b allowed)")
writing = "w" in mode
reading = "r" in mode or not writing
assert reading or writing
binary = "b" in mode
rawmode = ""
if reading:
rawmode += "r"
if writing:
rawmode += "w"
raw = SocketIO(self, rawmode)
self._io_refs += 1
if buffering is None:
buffering = -1
if buffering < 0:
buffering = io.DEFAULT_BUFFER_SIZE
if buffering == 0:
if not binary:
raise ValueError("unbuffered streams must be binary")
return raw
if reading and writing:
buffer = io.BufferedRWPair(raw, raw, buffering)
elif reading:
buffer = io.BufferedReader(raw, buffering)
else:
assert writing
buffer = io.BufferedWriter(raw, buffering)
if binary:
return buffer
text = io.TextIOWrapper(buffer, encoding, errors, newline)
text.mode = mode
return text
def _decref_socketios(self):
if self._io_refs > 0:
self._io_refs -= 1
if self._closed:
self.close()
def _real_close(self, _ss=_socket.socket):
# This function should not reference any globals. See issue #808164.
_ss.close(self)
def close(self):
# This function should not reference any globals. See issue #808164.
self._closed = True
if self._io_refs <= 0:
self._real_close()
def detach(self):
"""detach() -> file descriptor
Close the socket object without closing the underlying file descriptor.
The object cannot be used after this call, but the file descriptor
can be reused for other purposes. The file descriptor is returned.
"""
self._closed = True
return super().detach()
def fromfd(fd, family, type, proto=0):
""" fromfd(fd, family, type[, proto]) -> socket object
Create a socket object from a duplicate of the given file
descriptor. The remaining arguments are the same as for socket().
"""
nfd = dup(fd)
return socket(family, type, proto, nfd)
if hasattr(_socket.socket, "share"):
def fromshare(info):
""" fromshare(info) -> socket object
Create a socket object from a the bytes object returned by
socket.share(pid).
"""
return socket(0, 0, 0, info)
if hasattr(_socket, "socketpair"):
def socketpair(family=None, type=SOCK_STREAM, proto=0):
"""socketpair([family[, type[, proto]]]) -> (socket object, socket object)
Create a pair of socket objects from the sockets returned by the platform
socketpair() function.
The arguments are the same as for socket() except the default family is
AF_UNIX if defined on the platform; otherwise, the default is AF_INET.
"""
if family is None:
try:
family = AF_UNIX
except NameError:
family = AF_INET
a, b = _socket.socketpair(family, type, proto)
a = socket(family, type, proto, a.detach())
b = socket(family, type, proto, b.detach())
return a, b
_blocking_errnos = set([EAGAIN, EWOULDBLOCK])
class SocketIO(io.RawIOBase):
"""Raw I/O implementation for stream sockets.
This class supports the makefile() method on sockets. It provides
the raw I/O interface on top of a socket object.
"""
# One might wonder why not let FileIO do the job instead. There are two
# main reasons why FileIO is not adapted:
# - it wouldn't work under Windows (where you can't used read() and
# write() on a socket handle)
# - it wouldn't work with socket timeouts (FileIO would ignore the
# timeout and consider the socket non-blocking)
# XXX More docs
def __init__(self, sock, mode):
if mode not in ("r", "w", "rw", "rb", "wb", "rwb"):
raise ValueError("invalid mode: %r" % mode)
io.RawIOBase.__init__(self)
self._sock = sock
if "b" not in mode:
mode += "b"
self._mode = mode
self._reading = "r" in mode
self._writing = "w" in mode
self._timeout_occurred = False
def readinto(self, b):
"""Read up to len(b) bytes into the writable buffer *b* and return
the number of bytes read. If the socket is non-blocking and no bytes
are available, None is returned.
If *b* is non-empty, a 0 return value indicates that the connection
was shutdown at the other end.
"""
self._checkClosed()
self._checkReadable()
if self._timeout_occurred:
raise IOError("cannot read from timed out object")
while True:
try:
return self._sock.recv_into(b)
except timeout:
self._timeout_occurred = True
raise
# except InterruptedError:
# continue
except error as e:
if e.args[0] in _blocking_errnos:
return None
raise
def write(self, b):
"""Write the given bytes or bytearray object *b* to the socket
and return the number of bytes written. This can be less than
len(b) if not all data could be written. If the socket is
non-blocking and no bytes could be written None is returned.
"""
self._checkClosed()
self._checkWritable()
try:
return self._sock.send(b)
except error as e:
# XXX what about EINTR?
if e.args[0] in _blocking_errnos:
return None
raise
def readable(self):
"""True if the SocketIO is open for reading.
"""
if self.closed:
raise ValueError("I/O operation on closed socket.")
return self._reading
def writable(self):
"""True if the SocketIO is open for writing.
"""
if self.closed:
raise ValueError("I/O operation on closed socket.")
return self._writing
def seekable(self):
"""True if the SocketIO is open for seeking.
"""
if self.closed:
raise ValueError("I/O operation on closed socket.")
return super().seekable()
def fileno(self):
"""Return the file descriptor of the underlying socket.
"""
self._checkClosed()
return self._sock.fileno()
@property
def name(self):
if not self.closed:
return self.fileno()
else:
return -1
@property
def mode(self):
return self._mode
def close(self):
"""Close the SocketIO object. This doesn't close the underlying
socket, except if all references to it have disappeared.
"""
if self.closed:
return
io.RawIOBase.close(self)
self._sock._decref_socketios()
self._sock = None
def getfqdn(name=''):
"""Get fully qualified domain name from name.
An empty argument is interpreted as meaning the local host.
First the hostname returned by gethostbyaddr() is checked, then
possibly existing aliases. In case no FQDN is available, hostname
from gethostname() is returned.
"""
name = name.strip()
if not name or name == '0.0.0.0':
name = gethostname()
try:
hostname, aliases, ipaddrs = gethostbyaddr(name)
except error:
pass
else:
aliases.insert(0, hostname)
for name in aliases:
if '.' in name:
break
else:
name = hostname
return name
# Re-use the same sentinel as in the Python stdlib socket module:
from socket import _GLOBAL_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT
# Was: _GLOBAL_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT = object()
def create_connection(address, timeout=_GLOBAL_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT,
source_address=None):
"""Connect to *address* and return the socket object.
Convenience function. Connect to *address* (a 2-tuple ``(host,
port)``) and return the socket object. Passing the optional
*timeout* parameter will set the timeout on the socket instance
before attempting to connect. If no *timeout* is supplied, the
global default timeout setting returned by :func:`getdefaulttimeout`
is used. If *source_address* is set it must be a tuple of (host, port)
for the socket to bind as a source address before making the connection.
An host of '' or port 0 tells the OS to use the default.
"""
host, port = address
err = None
for res in getaddrinfo(host, port, 0, SOCK_STREAM):
af, socktype, proto, canonname, sa = res
sock = None
try:
sock = socket(af, socktype, proto)
if timeout is not _GLOBAL_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT:
sock.settimeout(timeout)
if source_address:
sock.bind(source_address)
sock.connect(sa)
return sock
except error as _:
err = _
if sock is not None:
sock.close()
if err is not None:
raise err
else:
raise error("getaddrinfo returns an empty list")