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Current File : //usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/jeepney/fds.py

import array
import os
import socket
from warnings import warn


class NoFDError(RuntimeError):
    """Raised by :class:`FileDescriptor` methods if it was already closed/converted
    """
    pass


class FileDescriptor:
    """A file descriptor received in a D-Bus message

    This wrapper helps ensure that the file descriptor is closed exactly once.
    If you don't explicitly convert or close the FileDescriptor object, it will
    close its file descriptor when it goes out of scope, and emit a
    ResourceWarning.
    """
    __slots__ = ('_fd',)
    _CLOSED = -1
    _CONVERTED = -2

    def __init__(self, fd):
        self._fd = fd

    def __repr__(self):
        detail = self._fd
        if self._fd == self._CLOSED:
            detail = 'closed'
        elif self._fd == self._CONVERTED:
            detail = 'converted'
        return f"<FileDescriptor ({detail})>"

    def close(self):
        """Close the file descriptor

        This can safely be called multiple times, but will raise RuntimeError
        if called after converting it with one of the ``to_*`` methods.

        This object can also be used in a ``with`` block, to close it on
        leaving the block.
        """
        if self._fd == self._CLOSED:
            pass
        elif self._fd == self._CONVERTED:
            raise NoFDError("Can't close FileDescriptor after converting it")
        else:
            self._fd, fd = self._CLOSED, self._fd
            os.close(fd)

    def __enter__(self):
        return self

    def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_val, exc_tb):
        self.close()

    def __del__(self):
        if self._fd >= 0:
            warn(
                f'FileDescriptor ({self._fd}) was neither closed nor converted',
                ResourceWarning, stacklevel=2, source=self
            )
            self.close()

    def _check(self):
        if self._fd < 0:
            detail = 'closed' if self._fd == self._CLOSED else 'converted'
            raise NoFDError(f'FileDescriptor object was already {detail}')

    def fileno(self):
        """Get the integer file descriptor

        This does not change the state of the :class:`FileDescriptor` object,
        unlike the ``to_*`` methods.
        """
        self._check()
        return self._fd

    def to_raw_fd(self):
        """Convert to the low-level integer file descriptor::

            raw_fd = fd.to_raw_fd()
            os.write(raw_fd, b'xyz')
            os.close(raw_fd)

        The :class:`FileDescriptor` can't be used after calling this. The caller
        is responsible for closing the file descriptor.
        """
        self._check()
        self._fd, fd = self._CONVERTED, self._fd
        return fd

    def to_file(self, mode, buffering=-1, encoding=None, errors=None, newline=None):
        """Convert to a Python file object::

            with fd.to_file('w') as f:
                f.write('xyz')

        The arguments are the same as for the builtin :func:`open` function.

        The :class:`FileDescriptor` can't be used after calling this. Closing
        the file object will also close the file descriptor.
        """
        self._check()
        f = open(
            self._fd, mode, buffering=buffering,
            encoding=encoding, errors=errors, newline=newline
        )
        self._fd = self._CONVERTED
        return f

    def to_socket(self):
        """Convert to a socket object

        This returns a standard library :func:`socket.socket` object::

            with fd.to_socket() as sock:
                b = sock.sendall(b'xyz')

        The wrapper object can't be used after calling this. Closing the socket
        object will also close the file descriptor.
        """
        from socket import socket

        self._check()
        s = socket(fileno=self._fd)
        self._fd = self._CONVERTED
        return s

    @classmethod
    def from_ancdata(cls, ancdata) -> ['FileDescriptor']:
        """Make a list of FileDescriptor from received file descriptors

        ancdata is a list of ancillary data tuples as returned by socket.recvmsg()
        """
        fds = array.array("i")  # Array of ints
        for cmsg_level, cmsg_type, data in ancdata:
            if cmsg_level == socket.SOL_SOCKET and cmsg_type == socket.SCM_RIGHTS:
                # Append data, ignoring any truncated integers at the end.
                fds.frombytes(data[:len(data) - (len(data) % fds.itemsize)])
        return [cls(i) for i in fds]


_fds_buf_size_cache = None

def fds_buf_size():
    # If there may be file descriptors, we try to read 1 message at a time.
    # The reference implementation of D-Bus defaults to allowing 16 FDs per
    # message, and the Linux kernel currently allows 253 FDs per sendmsg()
    # call. So hopefully allowing 256 FDs per recvmsg() will always suffice.
    global _fds_buf_size_cache
    if _fds_buf_size_cache is None:
        maxfds = 256
        fd_size = array.array('i').itemsize
        _fds_buf_size_cache = socket.CMSG_SPACE(maxfds * fd_size)
    return _fds_buf_size_cache

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