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diff --git a/external_libs/python/jsonrpclib-pelix-0.2.5/jsonrpclib_pelix.egg-info/PKG-INFO b/external_libs/python/jsonrpclib-pelix-0.2.5/jsonrpclib_pelix.egg-info/PKG-INFO deleted file mode 100644 index 5dce6b1c..00000000 --- a/external_libs/python/jsonrpclib-pelix-0.2.5/jsonrpclib_pelix.egg-info/PKG-INFO +++ /dev/null @@ -1,460 +0,0 @@ -Metadata-Version: 1.1 -Name: jsonrpclib-pelix -Version: 0.2.5 -Summary: This project is an implementation of the JSON-RPC v2.0 specification (backwards-compatible) as a client library, for Python 2.6+ and Python 3.This version is a fork of jsonrpclib by Josh Marshall, usable with Pelix remote services. -Home-page: http://github.com/tcalmant/jsonrpclib/ -Author: Thomas Calmant -Author-email: thomas.calmant+github@gmail.com -License: Apache License 2.0 -Description: JSONRPClib (patched for Pelix) - ############################## - - .. image:: https://pypip.in/license/jsonrpclib-pelix/badge.svg - :target: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/jsonrpclib-pelix/ - - .. image:: https://travis-ci.org/tcalmant/jsonrpclib.svg?branch=master - :target: https://travis-ci.org/tcalmant/jsonrpclib - - .. image:: https://coveralls.io/repos/tcalmant/jsonrpclib/badge.svg?branch=master - :target: https://coveralls.io/r/tcalmant/jsonrpclib?branch=master - - - This library is an implementation of the JSON-RPC specification. - It supports both the original 1.0 specification, as well as the - new (proposed) 2.0 specification, which includes batch submission, keyword - arguments, etc. - - It is licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 - (http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0.html). - - - About this version - ****************** - - This is a patched version of the original ``jsonrpclib`` project by - Josh Marshall, available at https://github.com/joshmarshall/jsonrpclib. - - The suffix *-pelix* only indicates that this version works with Pelix Remote - Services, but it is **not** a Pelix specific implementation. - - * This version adds support for Python 3, staying compatible with Python 2. - * It is now possible to use the dispatch_method argument while extending - the SimpleJSONRPCDispatcher, to use a custom dispatcher. - This allows to use this package by Pelix Remote Services. - * It can use thread pools to control the number of threads spawned to handle - notification requests and clients connections. - * The modifications added in other forks of this project have been added: - - * From https://github.com/drdaeman/jsonrpclib: - - * Improved JSON-RPC 1.0 support - * Less strict error response handling - - * From https://github.com/tuomassalo/jsonrpclib: - - * In case of a non-pre-defined error, raise an AppError and give access to - *error.data* - - * From https://github.com/dejw/jsonrpclib: - - * Custom headers can be sent with request and associated tests - - * The support for Unix sockets has been removed, as it is not trivial to convert - to Python 3 (and I don't use them) - * This version cannot be installed with the original ``jsonrpclib``, as it uses - the same package name. - - - Summary - ******* - - This library implements the JSON-RPC 2.0 proposed specification in pure Python. - It is designed to be as compatible with the syntax of ``xmlrpclib`` as possible - (it extends where possible), so that projects using ``xmlrpclib`` could easily - be modified to use JSON and experiment with the differences. - - It is backwards-compatible with the 1.0 specification, and supports all of the - new proposed features of 2.0, including: - - * Batch submission (via MultiCall) - * Keyword arguments - * Notifications (both in a batch and 'normal') - * Class translation using the ``__jsonclass__`` key. - - I've added a "SimpleJSONRPCServer", which is intended to emulate the - "SimpleXMLRPCServer" from the default Python distribution. - - - Requirements - ************ - - It supports ``cjson`` and ``simplejson``, and looks for the parsers in that - order (searching first for ``cjson``, then for the *built-in* ``json`` in 2.6+, - and then the ``simplejson`` external library). - One of these must be installed to use this library, although if you have a - standard distribution of 2.6+, you should already have one. - Keep in mind that ``cjson`` is supposed to be the quickest, I believe, so if - you are going for full-on optimization you may want to pick it up. - - Since library uses ``contextlib`` module, you should have at least Python 2.5 - installed. - - - Installation - ************ - - You can install this from PyPI with one of the following commands (sudo - may be required): - - .. code-block:: console - - easy_install jsonrpclib-pelix - pip install jsonrpclib-pelix - - Alternatively, you can download the source from the GitHub repository - at http://github.com/tcalmant/jsonrpclib and manually install it - with the following commands: - - .. code-block:: console - - git clone git://github.com/tcalmant/jsonrpclib.git - cd jsonrpclib - python setup.py install - - - SimpleJSONRPCServer - ******************* - - This is identical in usage (or should be) to the SimpleXMLRPCServer in the - Python standard library. Some of the differences in features are that it - obviously supports notification, batch calls, class translation (if left on), - etc. - Note: The import line is slightly different from the regular SimpleXMLRPCServer, - since the SimpleJSONRPCServer is distributed within the ``jsonrpclib`` library. - - .. code-block:: python - - from jsonrpclib.SimpleJSONRPCServer import SimpleJSONRPCServer - - server = SimpleJSONRPCServer(('localhost', 8080)) - server.register_function(pow) - server.register_function(lambda x,y: x+y, 'add') - server.register_function(lambda x: x, 'ping') - server.serve_forever() - - To start protect the server with SSL, use the following snippet: - - .. code-block:: python - - from jsonrpclib.SimpleJSONRPCServer import SimpleJSONRPCServer - - # Setup the SSL socket - server = SimpleJSONRPCServer(('localhost', 8080), bind_and_activate=False) - server.socket = ssl.wrap_socket(server.socket, certfile='server.pem', - server_side=True) - server.server_bind() - server.server_activate() - - # ... register functions - # Start the server - server.serve_forever() - - - Notification Thread Pool - ======================== - - By default, notification calls are handled in the request handling thread. - It is possible to use a thread pool to handle them, by giving it to the server - using the ``set_notification_pool()`` method: - - .. code-block:: python - - from jsonrpclib.SimpleJSONRPCServer import SimpleJSONRPCServer - from jsonrpclib.threadpool import ThreadPool - - # Setup the thread pool: between 0 and 10 threads - pool = ThreadPool(max_threads=10, min_threads=0) - - # Don't forget to start it - pool.start() - - # Setup the server - server = SimpleJSONRPCServer(('localhost', 8080), config) - server.set_notification_pool(pool) - - # Register methods - server.register_function(pow) - server.register_function(lambda x,y: x+y, 'add') - server.register_function(lambda x: x, 'ping') - - try: - server.serve_forever() - finally: - # Stop the thread pool (let threads finish their current task) - pool.stop() - server.set_notification_pool(None) - - - Threaded server - =============== - - It is also possible to use a thread pool to handle clients requests, using the - ``PooledJSONRPCServer`` class. - By default, this class uses pool of 0 to 30 threads. A custom pool can be given - with the ``thread_pool`` parameter of the class constructor. - - The notification pool and the request pool are different: by default, a server - with a request pool doesn't have a notification pool. - - .. code-block:: python - - from jsonrpclib.SimpleJSONRPCServer import PooledJSONRPCServer - from jsonrpclib.threadpool import ThreadPool - - # Setup the notification and request pools - nofif_pool = ThreadPool(max_threads=10, min_threads=0) - request_pool = ThreadPool(max_threads=50, min_threads=10) - - # Don't forget to start them - nofif_pool.start() - request_pool.start() - - # Setup the server - server = PooledJSONRPCServer(('localhost', 8080), config, - thread_pool=request_pool) - server.set_notification_pool(nofif_pool) - - # Register methods - server.register_function(pow) - server.register_function(lambda x,y: x+y, 'add') - server.register_function(lambda x: x, 'ping') - - try: - server.serve_forever() - finally: - # Stop the thread pools (let threads finish their current task) - request_pool.stop() - nofif_pool.stop() - server.set_notification_pool(None) - - Client Usage - ************ - - This is (obviously) taken from a console session. - - .. code-block:: python - - >>> import jsonrpclib - >>> server = jsonrpclib.ServerProxy('http://localhost:8080') - >>> server.add(5,6) - 11 - >>> server.add(x=5, y=10) - 15 - >>> server._notify.add(5,6) - # No result returned... - >>> batch = jsonrpclib.MultiCall(server) - >>> batch.add(5, 6) - >>> batch.ping({'key':'value'}) - >>> batch._notify.add(4, 30) - >>> results = batch() - >>> for result in results: - >>> ... print(result) - 11 - {'key': 'value'} - # Note that there are only two responses -- this is according to spec. - - # Clean up - >>> server('close')() - - # Using client history - >>> history = jsonrpclib.history.History() - >>> server = jsonrpclib.ServerProxy('http://localhost:8080', history=history) - >>> server.add(5,6) - 11 - >>> print(history.request) - {"id": "f682b956-c8e1-4506-9db4-29fe8bc9fcaa", "jsonrpc": "2.0", - "method": "add", "params": [5, 6]} - >>> print(history.response) - {"id": "f682b956-c8e1-4506-9db4-29fe8bc9fcaa", "jsonrpc": "2.0", - "result": 11} - - # Clean up - >>> server('close')() - - If you need 1.0 functionality, there are a bunch of places you can pass that in, - although the best is just to give a specific configuration to - ``jsonrpclib.ServerProxy``: - - .. code-block:: python - - >>> import jsonrpclib - >>> jsonrpclib.config.DEFAULT.version - 2.0 - >>> config = jsonrpclib.config.Config(version=1.0) - >>> history = jsonrpclib.history.History() - >>> server = jsonrpclib.ServerProxy('http://localhost:8080', config=config, - history=history) - >>> server.add(7, 10) - 17 - >>> print(history.request) - {"id": "827b2923-5b37-49a5-8b36-e73920a16d32", - "method": "add", "params": [7, 10]} - >>> print(history.response) - {"id": "827b2923-5b37-49a5-8b36-e73920a16d32", "error": null, "result": 17} - >>> server('close')() - - The equivalent ``loads`` and ``dumps`` functions also exist, although with minor - modifications. The ``dumps`` arguments are almost identical, but it adds three - arguments: ``rpcid`` for the 'id' key, ``version`` to specify the JSON-RPC - compatibility, and ``notify`` if it's a request that you want to be a - notification. - - Additionally, the ``loads`` method does not return the params and method like - ``xmlrpclib``, but instead a.) parses for errors, raising ProtocolErrors, and - b.) returns the entire structure of the request / response for manual parsing. - - - Additional headers - ****************** - - If your remote service requires custom headers in request, you can pass them - as as a ``headers`` keyword argument, when creating the ``ServerProxy``: - - .. code-block:: python - - >>> import jsonrpclib - >>> server = jsonrpclib.ServerProxy("http://localhost:8080", - headers={'X-Test' : 'Test'}) - - You can also put additional request headers only for certain method invocation: - - .. code-block:: python - - >>> import jsonrpclib - >>> server = jsonrpclib.Server("http://localhost:8080") - >>> with server._additional_headers({'X-Test' : 'Test'}) as test_server: - ... test_server.ping(42) - ... - >>> # X-Test header will be no longer sent in requests - - Of course ``_additional_headers`` contexts can be nested as well. - - - Class Translation - ***************** - - I've recently added "automatic" class translation support, although it is - turned off by default. This can be devastatingly slow if improperly used, so - the following is just a short list of things to keep in mind when using it. - - * Keep It (the object) Simple Stupid. (for exceptions, keep reading.) - * Do not require init params (for exceptions, keep reading) - * Getter properties without setters could be dangerous (read: not tested) - - If any of the above are issues, use the _serialize method. (see usage below) - The server and client must BOTH have use_jsonclass configuration item on and - they must both have access to the same libraries used by the objects for - this to work. - - If you have excessively nested arguments, it would be better to turn off the - translation and manually invoke it on specific objects using - ``jsonrpclib.jsonclass.dump`` / ``jsonrpclib.jsonclass.load`` (since the default - behavior recursively goes through attributes and lists / dicts / tuples). - - Sample file: *test_obj.py* - - .. code-block:: python - - # This object is /very/ simple, and the system will look through the - # attributes and serialize what it can. - class TestObj(object): - foo = 'bar' - - # This object requires __init__ params, so it uses the _serialize method - # and returns a tuple of init params and attribute values (the init params - # can be a dict or a list, but the attribute values must be a dict.) - class TestSerial(object): - foo = 'bar' - def __init__(self, *args): - self.args = args - def _serialize(self): - return (self.args, {'foo':self.foo,}) - - * Sample usage - - .. code-block:: python - - >>> import jsonrpclib - >>> import test_obj - - # History is used only to print the serialized form of beans - >>> history = jsonrpclib.history.History() - >>> testobj1 = test_obj.TestObj() - >>> testobj2 = test_obj.TestSerial() - >>> server = jsonrpclib.Server('http://localhost:8080', history=history) - - # The 'ping' just returns whatever is sent - >>> ping1 = server.ping(testobj1) - >>> ping2 = server.ping(testobj2) - - >>> print(history.request) - {"id": "7805f1f9-9abd-49c6-81dc-dbd47229fe13", "jsonrpc": "2.0", - "method": "ping", "params": [{"__jsonclass__": - ["test_obj.TestSerial", []], "foo": "bar"} - ]} - >>> print(history.response) - {"id": "7805f1f9-9abd-49c6-81dc-dbd47229fe13", "jsonrpc": "2.0", - "result": {"__jsonclass__": ["test_obj.TestSerial", []], "foo": "bar"}} - - This behavior is turned by default. To deactivate it, just set the - ``use_jsonclass`` member of a server ``Config`` to False. - If you want to use a per-class serialization method, set its name in the - ``serialize_method`` member of a server ``Config``. - Finally, if you are using classes that you have defined in the implementation - (as in, not a separate library), you'll need to add those (on BOTH the server - and the client) using the ``config.classes.add()`` method. - - Feedback on this "feature" is very, VERY much appreciated. - - Why JSON-RPC? - ************* - - In my opinion, there are several reasons to choose JSON over XML for RPC: - - * Much simpler to read (I suppose this is opinion, but I know I'm right. :) - * Size / Bandwidth - Main reason, a JSON object representation is just much smaller. - * Parsing - JSON should be much quicker to parse than XML. - * Easy class passing with ``jsonclass`` (when enabled) - - In the interest of being fair, there are also a few reasons to choose XML - over JSON: - - * Your server doesn't do JSON (rather obvious) - * Wider XML-RPC support across APIs (can we change this? :)) - * Libraries are more established, i.e. more stable (Let's change this too.) - - Tests - ***** - - Tests are an almost-verbatim drop from the JSON-RPC specification 2.0 page. - They can be run using *unittest* or *nosetest*: - - .. code-block:: console - - python -m unittest discover tests - python3 -m unittest discover tests - nosetests tests - -Platform: UNKNOWN -Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable -Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers -Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: Apache Software License -Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent -Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.6 -Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7 -Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3 -Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.0 -Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.1 -Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.2 -Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.3 -Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.4 |