""" md ## Usage Once this plugin is [installed](../README.md#installation), just replace the plugin name `simple` with `semiliterate` in your `mkdocs.yml` file. It accepts all of the same parameters, so `mkdocs` will still work as before, and you will have immediate access to all of the following extensions. (Note that this documentation assumes a familiarity with the [usage](https://athackst.github.io/mkdocs-simple-plugin/mkdocs_simple_plugin/plugin/) of the `simple` plugin.) """ from mkdocs import utils from mkdocs.config import config_options from mkdocs_simple_plugin.semiliterate import ( Semiliterate, LazyFile, ExtractionPattern, StreamExtract, get_line) from mkdocs_simple_plugin.plugin import SimplePlugin import os import re import subprocess import tempfile import yaml class FlextractionPattern(ExtractionPattern): r""" Extends ExtractionPattern to add ensure_line argument to replace_line method. """ # Following must be identical to ExtractionPattern.replace_line, # except as marked: def replace_line(self, line, ensure_line=True): """Apply the specified replacements to the line and return it.""" if not self.replace: return line for item in self.replace: pattern = item[0] if isinstance(item, tuple) else item match_object = pattern.search(line) if match_object: # CHANGES HERE replaced = False replacement = '' if isinstance(item, tuple): replacement = match_object.expand(item[1]) replaced = True elif match_object.lastindex: replacement = match_object[match_object.lastindex] replaced = True if replaced and ensure_line: replacement = get_line(replacement) return replacement # END OF CHANGES # Otherwise, just return the line. return line class StreamInclusion(StreamExtract): r""" md An extension of the StreamExtract class which adds ### Inclusion syntax While extracting content from a file (because it matches one of the `semiliterate` patterns, rather than just one of the `include_extensions`), an unescaped expression of the form `{! FILENAME YAML !}` (which may span multiple lines) will trigger file inclusion. The FILENAME may be a bare word, in which case it cannot contain whitespace, or it may be enclosed in single or double quotes. Note that FILENAME is interpreted relative to the directory in which the file containing the `{! .. !}` expression resides. The YAML is interpreted exactly as the extraction options to a `semiliterate` item as [documented](https://athackst.github.io/mkdocs-simple-plugin/mkdocs_simple_plugin/plugin/index.html#semiliterate) for the `simple` extension, subject to the extensions below. The text extracted from FILENAME is interpolated at the current location in the file currently being written. Recursive inclusion is supported. The simplest example of such an inclusion directive is just `{! boilerplate.md !}`, which (because of the conventions for extraction parameters) simply interpolates the entire contents of `boilerplate.md` at the current location. For an example that uses more of the extraction parameters, the current version number of mkdocs-semiliterate is extracted into the [Overview](../README.md) of this documentation via ` {! ../README.md extract: { start: 'repo:.*(\{!.*!\})', stop: '' } terminate: Rationale !}` to take advantage of the beginning of the `setup.cfg` file: ``` {! ../setup.cfg terminate: long !}... ``` (and of course both of the code snippets just above are extracted into this page with `{! ... !}`, as you can see in the [source code](https://code.studioinfinity.org/glen/mkdocs-semiliterate/src/branch/main/mkdocs_semiliterate/plugin.py) for the plugin.) Note that a `{! ... !}` directive must be in a line that semiliterate would normally copy. That is, semiliterate does not examine lines after the `terminate` regexp, or when no mode of extraction is active. It also doesn't check any text written from lines that match these special expressions, including `start` and `stop`. Moreover, on such normally-transcribed lines, it's the text **after** the application of any semiliterate `replace`ments that is checked for `{! ... !}`. """ # noqa: E501 include_open = re.compile(r'''(?.*?)\1\s+(?P[\s\S]*?)\s?\!\}''') include_bare_file = re.compile(r'\s(?P.*?)\s+(?P[\s\S]*?)\s?\!\}') def __init__(self, input_stream, output_stream, include_root, ensurelines=True, terminate=None, patterns=None, **kwargs): if terminate and not hasattr(terminate, 'search'): terminate = re.compile(terminate) # Unfortunately, "simple" has now moved the pattern parsing into # Semiliterate, so we need to reiterate the code for that here: if patterns is None: if 'extract' in kwargs: extract = kwargs.pop('extract') if isinstance(extract, dict): extract = [extract] patterns = [FlextractionPattern(**p) for p in extract] else: patterns = [FlextractionPattern()] super().__init__(input_stream, output_stream, terminate, patterns, **kwargs) self.include_root = include_root self.ensure_lines = ensurelines def extract_line(self, line, extraction_pattern): """Copy line to the output stream, applying all specified replacements and handling inclusion syntax. """ line = extraction_pattern.replace_line(line, self.ensure_lines) include_match = StreamInclusion.include_open.search(line) if not include_match: self.transcribe(line) return # OK, we have found (the start of) an inclusion and must process it preamble = line[:include_match.start()] remainder = line[include_match.end(1):] doublequoted = False body_pattern = StreamInclusion.include_quoted_file if include_match[2].isspace(): body_pattern = StreamInclusion.include_bare_file elif include_match[2] == '"': doublequoted = True body_match = body_pattern.search(remainder) if not body_match: for extra_line in self.input_stream: remainder += extraction_pattern.replace_line(extra_line, self.ensure_lines) body_match = body_pattern.search(remainder) if body_match: break if not body_match: errmsg = "semiliterate: End of file while scanning for `!}`" utils.log.error(errmsg) raise EOFError(errmsg) filename = body_match['fn'] gitextract = False r""" md ### Double-quoted filenames and Git extraction Standard Python escape sequences in double-quoted filenames are interpreted as usual; for example you can write ``` {! ../tests/fixtures/quoted-filename/README.md extract: start: '(.*!.*)' stop: '\s' !} ``` to include a file whose name (`snippet/Say "Don't"`, in this case) has both double and single quotes. Further, `semiliterate` supports a special escape to extract a file from the Git archive of the project (presuming it is under Git version control) and then include content from that file. For example, you could write ``` {! ../tests/fixtures/git-inclusion/README.md extract: start: '(.*!.*)' stop: '\s' !} ``` to extract content starting after the `### install` line from the `mkdocs.yml` file in the Git commit of this repository tagged `0.1.0`. This feature is primarily useful if you are documenting the development or changes to a project over time, or are documenting a feature in a specific past release of your project, and want to be sure that material included in your documentation does _not_ change as the project progresses. (This behavior is as opposed to the usual case, in which you want your documentation to incorporate the most up-to-date version of extracted content.) The precise behavior for a FILENAME argument in a `{! ... !}` inclusion of the form `"\git SPECIFIER"` is that the output of `git show SPECIFIER` is written to a temporary file, and that file is extracted from. """ if doublequoted: if filename[:5] == r'\git ': gitextract = True filename = filename[5:] filename = (filename.encode('latin-1', 'backslashreplace') .decode('unicode-escape')) include_path = self.include_root + '/' + filename if gitextract: (write_handle, include_path) = tempfile.mkstemp() utils.log.info( f"semiliterate: extracting {filename} to {include_path}") contents = subprocess.check_output(['git', 'show', filename]) os.write(write_handle, contents) os.close(write_handle) new_root = re.match(r'(.*)/', include_path)[1] try: include_parameters = yaml.safe_load(body_match['yml']) except Exception as err: newmsg = (f"While attempting to include '{include_path}', could" + f" not parse yaml '{body_match['yml']}'.") if hasattr(err, 'message'): raise SyntaxError( f"{newmsg} YAML parser reports: {err.message}") raise SyntaxError(f"{newmsg} Caught exception: {str(err)}") if not include_parameters: include_parameters = {} with open(include_path) as include_file: self.transcribe(preamble) inclusion = StreamInclusion( include_file, self.output_stream, new_root, **include_parameters) if inclusion.extract(): self.wrote_something = True self.transcribe(remainder[body_match.end():]) # ## The following has to be identical to StreamExtract.check_pattern # ## except for the marked bit handling ensure_lines def check_pattern(self, pattern, line, emit_last=True): """Check if pattern is contained in line. If _pattern_ is not false-y and is contained in _line_, returns true (and if the _emit_last_ flag is true, emits the last group of the match if any). Otherwise, check_pattern does nothing but return false. """ if not pattern: return False match_object = pattern.search(line) if not match_object: return False if match_object.lastindex and emit_last: # CHANGES HERE # self.transcribe(get_line(match_object[match_object.lastindex])) to_emit = match_object[match_object.lastindex] if self.ensure_lines: to_emit = get_line(to_emit) self.transcribe(to_emit) return True class SemiliteratePlugin(SimplePlugin): r""" md An extension of the mkdocs-simple-plugin ### Universal block-comment markdown By default, `semiliterate` scans for block-comment markdown `/** md` ... `**/` in all files with _any_ extension, as it's valid in so many disparate languages. (As opposed to `simple`, which defaults to searching for such markdown in a specific list of file types.) """ super_sdict = dict(SimplePlugin.config_scheme) super_semi_dflt = super_sdict['semiliterate'].default semi_dflt = [b if 'js' not in b['pattern'] else dict(b, pattern=r'\.') for b in super_semi_dflt] altered_config_scheme = dict( super_sdict, semiliterate=config_options.Type(list, default=semi_dflt)).items() add_param_doc = r""" md ### Additional plugin parameters `semiliterate` adds a couple of new plugin parameters to further tailor its behavior as compared to `simple`. They are described in this section, with default values in parentheses at the beginning of each entry. {! plugin.py extract: start: '[*]altered_config_scheme' replace: - ["\\('(.*)',\\s*$", '\1\n'] - ['config_options.Type.*?default=([^\)]*)', ': (\1)'] - '^\s*#(.*\s*)$' terminate: '^\s*\)' !} """ config_scheme = ( # Note documentation of each new parameter **follows** the parameter. *altered_config_scheme, ('exclude_extensions', config_options.Type(list, default=['.o'])), # Files whose name contains a string in this list will not be # processed by `semiliterate`, regardless of whether they might # match `include_extensions`, the `semiliterate` patterns, or # standard Markdown. ('copy_standard_markdown', config_options.Type(bool, default=False)), # Whether to add MkDocs' list of standard Markdown extensions to # the `include_extensions` parameter so that Markdown files will be # directly copied to the docsite. Note that the `simple` behavior # corresponds to a _true_ value for `copy_standard_markdown`, but # `semiliterate` still incorporates all standard Markdown files # because of the following `extract_standard_markdown` parameter. ('extract_standard_markdown', config_options.Type(dict, default={})) # If the `enable` key of this dict parameter is true # (it defaults to the opposite of `copy_standard_markdown`), # it adds a semiliterate block causing extraction (and hence # include-directive processing) from all standard Markdown files # (as defined by MkDocs). The remaining keys of this parameter are # included as parameters of that semiliterate block. Thus, the # default values of the parameters arrange for Markdown files to be # copied "as-is", except possibly for embedded inclusions. # On the other hand, setting this parameter to `{enable: false}` # (which is also the default when `copy_standard_markdown` is true) # will prevent automatic extraction (and hence disable # inclusion-directive processing) from standard Markdown files. ) def on_config(self, config, **kwargs): # Since we have extensions in Demiliterate, suppress the semiliterate # configuration until we handle it ourselves: semi = self.config['semiliterate'] self.config['semiliterate'] = [] new_config = super().on_config(config, **kwargs) self.config['semiliterate'] = semi self.semiliterate = [Demiliterate(**item) for item in semi] self.exclude_extensions = self.config['exclude_extensions'] dflt_enable = False if not self.config['copy_standard_markdown']: self.include_extensions = self.config['include_extensions'] dflt_enable = True if self.config['extract_standard_markdown'].get('enable', dflt_enable): ext_pat = '|'.join(re.escape(s) for s in utils.markdown_extensions) self.semiliterate.append( Demiliterate( pattern=re.compile(f"^(.*(?:{ext_pat}))$"), destination=r'\1', **self.config['extract_standard_markdown'])) return new_config def in_extensions(self, file): if any(ext in file for ext in self.exclude_extensions): return False return super().in_extensions(file) def extract_from(self, from_directory, name, to_directory): if any(ext in name for ext in self.exclude_extensions): return False return super().extract_from(from_directory, name, to_directory) class Demiliterate(Semiliterate): r""" md Extends Semiliterate to use StreamInclusion, not StreamExtract semiliterate.ensurelines : (true) Guarantees that a newline is trancribed for each line of the input, even if a start, stop, terminate, or replacement pattern would have suppressed the newline. Note this can be set separately for each block (i.e. filename pattern) within the semiliterate parameter. The default setting corresponds to the `simple` behavior, so setting this to "false" allows you to suppress newlines with judicious use of these patterns. """ def __init__( self, pattern, destination=None, terminate=None, ensurelines=True, extract=[]): super().__init__(pattern, destination, terminate) self.ensure_lines = ensurelines if isinstance(extract, dict): extract = [extract] self.patterns = [FlextractionPattern(**p) for p in extract] if len(self.patterns) == 0: self.patterns = [FlextractionPattern()] # Note this needs to be identical to Semiliterate.try_extraction # except with StreamInclusion in place of StreamExtract in the # `extraction =` line, and a couple of options as noted below: def try_extraction( self, from_directory, from_file, destination_directory, **kwargs): """Try to extract documentation from file with name. Returns True if extraction was successful. """ to_file = self.filenname_match(from_file) if not to_file: return False from_file_path = os.path.join(from_directory, from_file) try: with open(from_file_path) as original_file: utils.log.debug( "mkdocs-simple-plugin: Scanning {}...".format(from_file)) # extraction = StreamExtract( extraction = StreamInclusion( input_stream=original_file, output_stream=LazyFile(destination_directory, to_file), include_root=from_directory, # ## ADDED ensurelines=self.ensure_lines, # ## ADDED terminate=self.terminate, patterns=self.patterns, **kwargs) return extraction.extract() except BaseException: utils.log.error("mkdocs-simple-plugin: could not build {}".format( from_file_path)) return False