From 46102d4be718ee6fd6c003c1387df7c940e65b2c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Claude Paroz Date: Fri, 24 Feb 2017 13:38:07 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] Replaced vendored omnijson by the standard lib version (#279) Refs #273. --- NOTICE | 33 +- docs/install.rst | 12 +- setup.py | 1 - tablib/formats/_json.py | 5 +- tablib/packages/omnijson/__init__.py | 13 - tablib/packages/omnijson/core.py | 93 ---- tablib/packages/omnijson/packages/__init__.py | 0 .../omnijson/packages/simplejson/__init__.py | 438 --------------- .../omnijson/packages/simplejson/decoder.py | 421 --------------- .../omnijson/packages/simplejson/encoder.py | 503 ------------------ .../packages/simplejson/ordered_dict.py | 119 ----- .../omnijson/packages/simplejson/scanner.py | 70 --- 12 files changed, 7 insertions(+), 1701 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 tablib/packages/omnijson/__init__.py delete mode 100644 tablib/packages/omnijson/core.py delete mode 100644 tablib/packages/omnijson/packages/__init__.py delete mode 100644 tablib/packages/omnijson/packages/simplejson/__init__.py delete mode 100644 tablib/packages/omnijson/packages/simplejson/decoder.py delete mode 100644 tablib/packages/omnijson/packages/simplejson/encoder.py delete mode 100644 tablib/packages/omnijson/packages/simplejson/ordered_dict.py delete mode 100644 tablib/packages/omnijson/packages/simplejson/scanner.py diff --git a/NOTICE b/NOTICE index c995d0d4..a6589ff9 100644 --- a/NOTICE +++ b/NOTICE @@ -1,5 +1,4 @@ -Tablib includes some vendorized python libraries: ordereddict, odfpy, -simplejson, unicodecsv. +Tablib includes some vendorized python libraries: ordereddict, odfpy. Markup License ============== @@ -239,33 +238,3 @@ subject to the following conditions: WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. - - -UnicodeCSV License -================== - -Copyright 2010 Jeremy Dunck. All rights reserved. - -Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are -permitted provided that the following conditions are met: - - 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of - conditions and the following disclaimer. - - 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list - of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials - provided with the distribution. - -THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY JEREMY DUNCK ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED -WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND -FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL JEREMY DUNCK OR -CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR -CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR -SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON -ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING -NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF -ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. - -The views and conclusions contained in the software and documentation are those of the -authors and should not be interpreted as representing official policies, either expressed -or implied, of Jeremy Dunck. diff --git a/docs/install.rst b/docs/install.rst index c72951cf..365cca89 100644 --- a/docs/install.rst +++ b/docs/install.rst @@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ Installation ============ -This part of the documentation covers the installation of Tablib. The first step to using any software package is getting it properly installed. Please read this section carefully, or you may miss out on some nice :ref:`speed enhancements `. +This part of the documentation covers the installation of Tablib. The first step to using any software package is getting it properly installed. .. _installing: @@ -44,14 +44,10 @@ To download the full source history from Git, see :ref:`Source Control `. Speed Extensions ---------------- -.. versionadded:: 0.8.5 - -Tablib is partially dependent on the **simplejson**, and **xlwt** modules. To reduce installation issues, fully integrated versions of all required libraries are included in Tablib. - -If you're using Python 2.5, you should also install the **simplejson** module (pip will do this for you). If you're using Python 2.6+, the built-in **json** module is already optimized and in use. :: - - $ pip install simplejson +You can gain some speed improvement by optionally installing the ujson_ library. +Tablib will fallback to the standard `json` module if it doesn't find ``ujson``. +.. _ujson: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/ujson .. _updates: diff --git a/setup.py b/setup.py index d798b698..5c748afa 100755 --- a/setup.py +++ b/setup.py @@ -37,7 +37,6 @@ packages = [ 'tablib', 'tablib.formats', 'tablib.packages', - 'tablib.packages.omnijson', 'tablib.packages.odf', 'tablib.packages.dbfpy', 'tablib.packages.odf3', diff --git a/tablib/formats/_json.py b/tablib/formats/_json.py index 72c3d02a..a3d6cc3d 100644 --- a/tablib/formats/_json.py +++ b/tablib/formats/_json.py @@ -7,10 +7,9 @@ import tablib try: - import json + import ujson as json except ImportError: - from tablib.packages import omnijson as json - + import json title = 'json' extensions = ('json', 'jsn') diff --git a/tablib/packages/omnijson/__init__.py b/tablib/packages/omnijson/__init__.py deleted file mode 100644 index c10c328f..00000000 --- a/tablib/packages/omnijson/__init__.py +++ /dev/null @@ -1,13 +0,0 @@ -# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- - -from __future__ import absolute_import - -from .core import loads, dumps, JSONError - - -__all__ = ('loads', 'dumps', 'JSONError') - - -__version__ = '0.1.2' -__author__ = 'Kenneth Reitz' -__license__ = 'MIT' diff --git a/tablib/packages/omnijson/core.py b/tablib/packages/omnijson/core.py deleted file mode 100644 index 8b495378..00000000 --- a/tablib/packages/omnijson/core.py +++ /dev/null @@ -1,93 +0,0 @@ -# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- - -""" -omijson.core -~~~~~~~~~~~~ - -This module provides the core omnijson functionality. - -""" - -import sys - -engine = None -_engine = None - - -options = [ - ['ujson', 'loads', 'dumps', (ValueError,)], - ['yajl', 'loads', 'dumps', (TypeError, ValueError)], - ['jsonlib2', 'read', 'write', (ValueError,)], - ['jsonlib', 'read', 'write', (ValueError,)], - ['simplejson', 'loads', 'dumps', (TypeError, ValueError)], - ['json', 'loads', 'dumps', (TypeError, ValueError)], - ['simplejson_from_packages', 'loads', 'dumps', (ValueError,)], -] - - -def _import(engine): - try: - if '_from_' in engine: - engine, package = engine.split('_from_') - m = __import__(package, globals(), locals(), [engine], -1) - return getattr(m, engine) - - return __import__(engine) - - except ImportError: - return False - - -def loads(s, **kwargs): - """Loads JSON object.""" - - try: - return _engine[0](s) - - except: - # crazy 2/3 exception hack - # http://www.voidspace.org.uk/python/weblog/arch_d7_2010_03_20.shtml - - ExceptionClass, why = sys.exc_info()[:2] - - if any([(issubclass(ExceptionClass, e)) for e in _engine[2]]): - raise JSONError(why) - else: - raise why - - -def dumps(o, **kwargs): - """Dumps JSON object.""" - - try: - return _engine[1](o) - - except: - ExceptionClass, why = sys.exc_info()[:2] - - if any([(issubclass(ExceptionClass, e)) for e in _engine[2]]): - raise JSONError(why) - else: - raise why - - -class JSONError(ValueError): - """JSON Failed.""" - - -# ------ -# Magic! -# ------ - - -for e in options: - - __engine = _import(e[0]) - - if __engine: - engine, _engine = e[0], e[1:4] - - for i in (0, 1): - _engine[i] = getattr(__engine, _engine[i]) - - break diff --git a/tablib/packages/omnijson/packages/__init__.py b/tablib/packages/omnijson/packages/__init__.py deleted file mode 100644 index e69de29b..00000000 diff --git a/tablib/packages/omnijson/packages/simplejson/__init__.py b/tablib/packages/omnijson/packages/simplejson/__init__.py deleted file mode 100644 index 210b957a..00000000 --- a/tablib/packages/omnijson/packages/simplejson/__init__.py +++ /dev/null @@ -1,438 +0,0 @@ -r"""JSON (JavaScript Object Notation) is a subset of -JavaScript syntax (ECMA-262 3rd edition) used as a lightweight data -interchange format. - -:mod:`simplejson` exposes an API familiar to users of the standard library -:mod:`marshal` and :mod:`pickle` modules. It is the externally maintained -version of the :mod:`json` library contained in Python 2.6, but maintains -compatibility with Python 2.4 and Python 2.5 and (currently) has -significant performance advantages, even without using the optional C -extension for speedups. - -Encoding basic Python object hierarchies:: - - >>> import simplejson as json - >>> json.dumps(['foo', {'bar': ('baz', None, 1.0, 2)}]) - '["foo", {"bar": ["baz", null, 1.0, 2]}]' - >>> print json.dumps("\"foo\bar") - "\"foo\bar" - >>> print json.dumps(u'\u1234') - "\u1234" - >>> print json.dumps('\\') - "\\" - >>> print json.dumps({"c": 0, "b": 0, "a": 0}, sort_keys=True) - {"a": 0, "b": 0, "c": 0} - >>> from StringIO import StringIO - >>> io = StringIO() - >>> json.dump(['streaming API'], io) - >>> io.getvalue() - '["streaming API"]' - -Compact encoding:: - - >>> import simplejson as json - >>> json.dumps([1,2,3,{'4': 5, '6': 7}], separators=(',',':')) - '[1,2,3,{"4":5,"6":7}]' - -Pretty printing:: - - >>> import simplejson as json - >>> s = json.dumps({'4': 5, '6': 7}, sort_keys=True, indent=' ') - >>> print '\n'.join([l.rstrip() for l in s.splitlines()]) - { - "4": 5, - "6": 7 - } - -Decoding JSON:: - - >>> import simplejson as json - >>> obj = [u'foo', {u'bar': [u'baz', None, 1.0, 2]}] - >>> json.loads('["foo", {"bar":["baz", null, 1.0, 2]}]') == obj - True - >>> json.loads('"\\"foo\\bar"') == u'"foo\x08ar' - True - >>> from StringIO import StringIO - >>> io = StringIO('["streaming API"]') - >>> json.load(io)[0] == 'streaming API' - True - -Specializing JSON object decoding:: - - >>> import simplejson as json - >>> def as_complex(dct): - ... if '__complex__' in dct: - ... return complex(dct['real'], dct['imag']) - ... return dct - ... - >>> json.loads('{"__complex__": true, "real": 1, "imag": 2}', - ... object_hook=as_complex) - (1+2j) - >>> from decimal import Decimal - >>> json.loads('1.1', parse_float=Decimal) == Decimal('1.1') - True - -Specializing JSON object encoding:: - - >>> import simplejson as json - >>> def encode_complex(obj): - ... if isinstance(obj, complex): - ... return [obj.real, obj.imag] - ... raise TypeError(repr(o) + " is not JSON serializable") - ... - >>> json.dumps(2 + 1j, default=encode_complex) - '[2.0, 1.0]' - >>> json.JSONEncoder(default=encode_complex).encode(2 + 1j) - '[2.0, 1.0]' - >>> ''.join(json.JSONEncoder(default=encode_complex).iterencode(2 + 1j)) - '[2.0, 1.0]' - - -Using simplejson.tool from the shell to validate and pretty-print:: - - $ echo '{"json":"obj"}' | python -m simplejson.tool - { - "json": "obj" - } - $ echo '{ 1.2:3.4}' | python -m simplejson.tool - Expecting property name: line 1 column 2 (char 2) -""" -__version__ = '2.1.6' -__all__ = [ - 'dump', 'dumps', 'load', 'loads', - 'JSONDecoder', 'JSONDecodeError', 'JSONEncoder', - 'OrderedDict', -] - -__author__ = 'Bob Ippolito ' - -from decimal import Decimal - -from decoder import JSONDecoder, JSONDecodeError -from encoder import JSONEncoder -def _import_OrderedDict(): - import collections - try: - return collections.OrderedDict - except AttributeError: - import ordered_dict - return ordered_dict.OrderedDict -OrderedDict = _import_OrderedDict() - -def _import_c_make_encoder(): - try: - from simplejson._speedups import make_encoder - return make_encoder - except ImportError: - return None - -_default_encoder = JSONEncoder( - skipkeys=False, - ensure_ascii=True, - check_circular=True, - allow_nan=True, - indent=None, - separators=None, - encoding='utf-8', - default=None, - use_decimal=False, -) - -def dump(obj, fp, skipkeys=False, ensure_ascii=True, check_circular=True, - allow_nan=True, cls=None, indent=None, separators=None, - encoding='utf-8', default=None, use_decimal=False, **kw): - """Serialize ``obj`` as a JSON formatted stream to ``fp`` (a - ``.write()``-supporting file-like object). - - If ``skipkeys`` is true then ``dict`` keys that are not basic types - (``str``, ``unicode``, ``int``, ``long``, ``float``, ``bool``, ``None``) - will be skipped instead of raising a ``TypeError``. - - If ``ensure_ascii`` is false, then the some chunks written to ``fp`` - may be ``unicode`` instances, subject to normal Python ``str`` to - ``unicode`` coercion rules. Unless ``fp.write()`` explicitly - understands ``unicode`` (as in ``codecs.getwriter()``) this is likely - to cause an error. - - If ``check_circular`` is false, then the circular reference check - for container types will be skipped and a circular reference will - result in an ``OverflowError`` (or worse). - - If ``allow_nan`` is false, then it will be a ``ValueError`` to - serialize out of range ``float`` values (``nan``, ``inf``, ``-inf``) - in strict compliance of the JSON specification, instead of using the - JavaScript equivalents (``NaN``, ``Infinity``, ``-Infinity``). - - If *indent* is a string, then JSON array elements and object members - will be pretty-printed with a newline followed by that string repeated - for each level of nesting. ``None`` (the default) selects the most compact - representation without any newlines. For backwards compatibility with - versions of simplejson earlier than 2.1.0, an integer is also accepted - and is converted to a string with that many spaces. - - If ``separators`` is an ``(item_separator, dict_separator)`` tuple - then it will be used instead of the default ``(', ', ': ')`` separators. - ``(',', ':')`` is the most compact JSON representation. - - ``encoding`` is the character encoding for str instances, default is UTF-8. - - ``default(obj)`` is a function that should return a serializable version - of obj or raise TypeError. The default simply raises TypeError. - - If *use_decimal* is true (default: ``False``) then decimal.Decimal - will be natively serialized to JSON with full precision. - - To use a custom ``JSONEncoder`` subclass (e.g. one that overrides the - ``.default()`` method to serialize additional types), specify it with - the ``cls`` kwarg. - - """ - # cached encoder - if (not skipkeys and ensure_ascii and - check_circular and allow_nan and - cls is None and indent is None and separators is None and - encoding == 'utf-8' and default is None and not use_decimal - and not kw): - iterable = _default_encoder.iterencode(obj) - else: - if cls is None: - cls = JSONEncoder - iterable = cls(skipkeys=skipkeys, ensure_ascii=ensure_ascii, - check_circular=check_circular, allow_nan=allow_nan, indent=indent, - separators=separators, encoding=encoding, - default=default, use_decimal=use_decimal, **kw).iterencode(obj) - # could accelerate with writelines in some versions of Python, at - # a debuggability cost - for chunk in iterable: - fp.write(chunk) - - -def dumps(obj, skipkeys=False, ensure_ascii=True, check_circular=True, - allow_nan=True, cls=None, indent=None, separators=None, - encoding='utf-8', default=None, use_decimal=False, **kw): - """Serialize ``obj`` to a JSON formatted ``str``. - - If ``skipkeys`` is false then ``dict`` keys that are not basic types - (``str``, ``unicode``, ``int``, ``long``, ``float``, ``bool``, ``None``) - will be skipped instead of raising a ``TypeError``. - - If ``ensure_ascii`` is false, then the return value will be a - ``unicode`` instance subject to normal Python ``str`` to ``unicode`` - coercion rules instead of being escaped to an ASCII ``str``. - - If ``check_circular`` is false, then the circular reference check - for container types will be skipped and a circular reference will - result in an ``OverflowError`` (or worse). - - If ``allow_nan`` is false, then it will be a ``ValueError`` to - serialize out of range ``float`` values (``nan``, ``inf``, ``-inf``) in - strict compliance of the JSON specification, instead of using the - JavaScript equivalents (``NaN``, ``Infinity``, ``-Infinity``). - - If ``indent`` is a string, then JSON array elements and object members - will be pretty-printed with a newline followed by that string repeated - for each level of nesting. ``None`` (the default) selects the most compact - representation without any newlines. For backwards compatibility with - versions of simplejson earlier than 2.1.0, an integer is also accepted - and is converted to a string with that many spaces. - - If ``separators`` is an ``(item_separator, dict_separator)`` tuple - then it will be used instead of the default ``(', ', ': ')`` separators. - ``(',', ':')`` is the most compact JSON representation. - - ``encoding`` is the character encoding for str instances, default is UTF-8. - - ``default(obj)`` is a function that should return a serializable version - of obj or raise TypeError. The default simply raises TypeError. - - If *use_decimal* is true (default: ``False``) then decimal.Decimal - will be natively serialized to JSON with full precision. - - To use a custom ``JSONEncoder`` subclass (e.g. one that overrides the - ``.default()`` method to serialize additional types), specify it with - the ``cls`` kwarg. - - """ - # cached encoder - if (not skipkeys and ensure_ascii and - check_circular and allow_nan and - cls is None and indent is None and separators is None and - encoding == 'utf-8' and default is None and not use_decimal - and not kw): - return _default_encoder.encode(obj) - if cls is None: - cls = JSONEncoder - return cls( - skipkeys=skipkeys, ensure_ascii=ensure_ascii, - check_circular=check_circular, allow_nan=allow_nan, indent=indent, - separators=separators, encoding=encoding, default=default, - use_decimal=use_decimal, **kw).encode(obj) - - -_default_decoder = JSONDecoder(encoding=None, object_hook=None, - object_pairs_hook=None) - - -def load(fp, encoding=None, cls=None, object_hook=None, parse_float=None, - parse_int=None, parse_constant=None, object_pairs_hook=None, - use_decimal=False, **kw): - """Deserialize ``fp`` (a ``.read()``-supporting file-like object containing - a JSON document) to a Python object. - - *encoding* determines the encoding used to interpret any - :class:`str` objects decoded by this instance (``'utf-8'`` by - default). It has no effect when decoding :class:`unicode` objects. - - Note that currently only encodings that are a superset of ASCII work, - strings of other encodings should be passed in as :class:`unicode`. - - *object_hook*, if specified, will be called with the result of every - JSON object decoded and its return value will be used in place of the - given :class:`dict`. This can be used to provide custom - deserializations (e.g. to support JSON-RPC class hinting). - - *object_pairs_hook* is an optional function that will be called with - the result of any object literal decode with an ordered list of pairs. - The return value of *object_pairs_hook* will be used instead of the - :class:`dict`. This feature can be used to implement custom decoders - that rely on the order that the key and value pairs are decoded (for - example, :func:`collections.OrderedDict` will remember the order of - insertion). If *object_hook* is also defined, the *object_pairs_hook* - takes priority. - - *parse_float*, if specified, will be called with the string of every - JSON float to be decoded. By default, this is equivalent to - ``float(num_str)``. This can be used to use another datatype or parser - for JSON floats (e.g. :class:`decimal.Decimal`). - - *parse_int*, if specified, will be called with the string of every - JSON int to be decoded. By default, this is equivalent to - ``int(num_str)``. This can be used to use another datatype or parser - for JSON integers (e.g. :class:`float`). - - *parse_constant*, if specified, will be called with one of the - following strings: ``'-Infinity'``, ``'Infinity'``, ``'NaN'``. This - can be used to raise an exception if invalid JSON numbers are - encountered. - - If *use_decimal* is true (default: ``False``) then it implies - parse_float=decimal.Decimal for parity with ``dump``. - - To use a custom ``JSONDecoder`` subclass, specify it with the ``cls`` - kwarg. - - """ - return loads(fp.read(), - encoding=encoding, cls=cls, object_hook=object_hook, - parse_float=parse_float, parse_int=parse_int, - parse_constant=parse_constant, object_pairs_hook=object_pairs_hook, - use_decimal=use_decimal, **kw) - - -def loads(s, encoding=None, cls=None, object_hook=None, parse_float=None, - parse_int=None, parse_constant=None, object_pairs_hook=None, - use_decimal=False, **kw): - """Deserialize ``s`` (a ``str`` or ``unicode`` instance containing a JSON - document) to a Python object. - - *encoding* determines the encoding used to interpret any - :class:`str` objects decoded by this instance (``'utf-8'`` by - default). It has no effect when decoding :class:`unicode` objects. - - Note that currently only encodings that are a superset of ASCII work, - strings of other encodings should be passed in as :class:`unicode`. - - *object_hook*, if specified, will be called with the result of every - JSON object decoded and its return value will be used in place of the - given :class:`dict`. This can be used to provide custom - deserializations (e.g. to support JSON-RPC class hinting). - - *object_pairs_hook* is an optional function that will be called with - the result of any object literal decode with an ordered list of pairs. - The return value of *object_pairs_hook* will be used instead of the - :class:`dict`. This feature can be used to implement custom decoders - that rely on the order that the key and value pairs are decoded (for - example, :func:`collections.OrderedDict` will remember the order of - insertion). If *object_hook* is also defined, the *object_pairs_hook* - takes priority. - - *parse_float*, if specified, will be called with the string of every - JSON float to be decoded. By default, this is equivalent to - ``float(num_str)``. This can be used to use another datatype or parser - for JSON floats (e.g. :class:`decimal.Decimal`). - - *parse_int*, if specified, will be called with the string of every - JSON int to be decoded. By default, this is equivalent to - ``int(num_str)``. This can be used to use another datatype or parser - for JSON integers (e.g. :class:`float`). - - *parse_constant*, if specified, will be called with one of the - following strings: ``'-Infinity'``, ``'Infinity'``, ``'NaN'``. This - can be used to raise an exception if invalid JSON numbers are - encountered. - - If *use_decimal* is true (default: ``False``) then it implies - parse_float=decimal.Decimal for parity with ``dump``. - - To use a custom ``JSONDecoder`` subclass, specify it with the ``cls`` - kwarg. - - """ - if (cls is None and encoding is None and object_hook is None and - parse_int is None and parse_float is None and - parse_constant is None and object_pairs_hook is None - and not use_decimal and not kw): - return _default_decoder.decode(s) - if cls is None: - cls = JSONDecoder - if object_hook is not None: - kw['object_hook'] = object_hook - if object_pairs_hook is not None: - kw['object_pairs_hook'] = object_pairs_hook - if parse_float is not None: - kw['parse_float'] = parse_float - if parse_int is not None: - kw['parse_int'] = parse_int - if parse_constant is not None: - kw['parse_constant'] = parse_constant - if use_decimal: - if parse_float is not None: - raise TypeError("use_decimal=True implies parse_float=Decimal") - kw['parse_float'] = Decimal - return cls(encoding=encoding, **kw).decode(s) - - -def _toggle_speedups(enabled): - import simplejson.decoder as dec - import simplejson.encoder as enc - import simplejson.scanner as scan - c_make_encoder = _import_c_make_encoder() - if enabled: - dec.scanstring = dec.c_scanstring or dec.py_scanstring - enc.c_make_encoder = c_make_encoder - enc.encode_basestring_ascii = (enc.c_encode_basestring_ascii or - enc.py_encode_basestring_ascii) - scan.make_scanner = scan.c_make_scanner or scan.py_make_scanner - else: - dec.scanstring = dec.py_scanstring - enc.c_make_encoder = None - enc.encode_basestring_ascii = enc.py_encode_basestring_ascii - scan.make_scanner = scan.py_make_scanner - dec.make_scanner = scan.make_scanner - global _default_decoder - _default_decoder = JSONDecoder( - encoding=None, - object_hook=None, - object_pairs_hook=None, - ) - global _default_encoder - _default_encoder = JSONEncoder( - skipkeys=False, - ensure_ascii=True, - check_circular=True, - allow_nan=True, - indent=None, - separators=None, - encoding='utf-8', - default=None, - ) diff --git a/tablib/packages/omnijson/packages/simplejson/decoder.py b/tablib/packages/omnijson/packages/simplejson/decoder.py deleted file mode 100644 index 3e36e567..00000000 --- a/tablib/packages/omnijson/packages/simplejson/decoder.py +++ /dev/null @@ -1,421 +0,0 @@ -"""Implementation of JSONDecoder -""" -import re -import sys -import struct - -from .scanner import make_scanner -def _import_c_scanstring(): - try: - from simplejson._speedups import scanstring - return scanstring - except ImportError: - return None -c_scanstring = _import_c_scanstring() - -__all__ = ['JSONDecoder'] - -FLAGS = re.VERBOSE | re.MULTILINE | re.DOTALL - -def _floatconstants(): - _BYTES = '7FF80000000000007FF0000000000000'.decode('hex') - # The struct module in Python 2.4 would get frexp() out of range here - # when an endian is specified in the format string. Fixed in Python 2.5+ - if sys.byteorder != 'big': - _BYTES = _BYTES[:8][::-1] + _BYTES[8:][::-1] - nan, inf = struct.unpack('dd', _BYTES) - return nan, inf, -inf - -NaN, PosInf, NegInf = _floatconstants() - - -class JSONDecodeError(ValueError): - """Subclass of ValueError with the following additional properties: - - msg: The unformatted error message - doc: The JSON document being parsed - pos: The start index of doc where parsing failed - end: The end index of doc where parsing failed (may be None) - lineno: The line corresponding to pos - colno: The column corresponding to pos - endlineno: The line corresponding to end (may be None) - endcolno: The column corresponding to end (may be None) - - """ - def __init__(self, msg, doc, pos, end=None): - ValueError.__init__(self, errmsg(msg, doc, pos, end=end)) - self.msg = msg - self.doc = doc - self.pos = pos - self.end = end - self.lineno, self.colno = linecol(doc, pos) - if end is not None: - self.endlineno, self.endcolno = linecol(doc, end) - else: - self.endlineno, self.endcolno = None, None - - -def linecol(doc, pos): - lineno = doc.count('\n', 0, pos) + 1 - if lineno == 1: - colno = pos - else: - colno = pos - doc.rindex('\n', 0, pos) - return lineno, colno - - -def errmsg(msg, doc, pos, end=None): - # Note that this function is called from _speedups - lineno, colno = linecol(doc, pos) - if end is None: - #fmt = '{0}: line {1} column {2} (char {3})' - #return fmt.format(msg, lineno, colno, pos) - fmt = '%s: line %d column %d (char %d)' - return fmt % (msg, lineno, colno, pos) - endlineno, endcolno = linecol(doc, end) - #fmt = '{0}: line {1} column {2} - line {3} column {4} (char {5} - {6})' - #return fmt.format(msg, lineno, colno, endlineno, endcolno, pos, end) - fmt = '%s: line %d column %d - line %d column %d (char %d - %d)' - return fmt % (msg, lineno, colno, endlineno, endcolno, pos, end) - - -_CONSTANTS = { - '-Infinity': NegInf, - 'Infinity': PosInf, - 'NaN': NaN, -} - -STRINGCHUNK = re.compile(r'(.*?)(["\\\x00-\x1f])', FLAGS) -BACKSLASH = { - '"': u'"', '\\': u'\\', '/': u'/', - 'b': u'\b', 'f': u'\f', 'n': u'\n', 'r': u'\r', 't': u'\t', -} - -DEFAULT_ENCODING = "utf-8" - -def py_scanstring(s, end, encoding=None, strict=True, - _b=BACKSLASH, _m=STRINGCHUNK.match): - """Scan the string s for a JSON string. End is the index of the - character in s after the quote that started the JSON string. - Unescapes all valid JSON string escape sequences and raises ValueError - on attempt to decode an invalid string. If strict is False then literal - control characters are allowed in the string. - - Returns a tuple of the decoded string and the index of the character in s - after the end quote.""" - if encoding is None: - encoding = DEFAULT_ENCODING - chunks = [] - _append = chunks.append - begin = end - 1 - while 1: - chunk = _m(s, end) - if chunk is None: - raise JSONDecodeError( - "Unterminated string starting at", s, begin) - end = chunk.end() - content, terminator = chunk.groups() - # Content is contains zero or more unescaped string characters - if content: - if not isinstance(content, unicode): - content = unicode(content, encoding) - _append(content) - # Terminator is the end of string, a literal control character, - # or a backslash denoting that an escape sequence follows - if terminator == '"': - break - elif terminator != '\\': - if strict: - msg = "Invalid control character %r at" % (terminator,) - #msg = "Invalid control character {0!r} at".format(terminator) - raise JSONDecodeError(msg, s, end) - else: - _append(terminator) - continue - try: - esc = s[end] - except IndexError: - raise JSONDecodeError( - "Unterminated string starting at", s, begin) - # If not a unicode escape sequence, must be in the lookup table - if esc != 'u': - try: - char = _b[esc] - except KeyError: - msg = "Invalid \\escape: " + repr(esc) - raise JSONDecodeError(msg, s, end) - end += 1 - else: - # Unicode escape sequence - esc = s[end + 1:end + 5] - next_end = end + 5 - if len(esc) != 4: - msg = "Invalid \\uXXXX escape" - raise JSONDecodeError(msg, s, end) - uni = int(esc, 16) - # Check for surrogate pair on UCS-4 systems - if 0xd800 <= uni <= 0xdbff and sys.maxunicode > 65535: - msg = "Invalid \\uXXXX\\uXXXX surrogate pair" - if not s[end + 5:end + 7] == '\\u': - raise JSONDecodeError(msg, s, end) - esc2 = s[end + 7:end + 11] - if len(esc2) != 4: - raise JSONDecodeError(msg, s, end) - uni2 = int(esc2, 16) - uni = 0x10000 + (((uni - 0xd800) << 10) | (uni2 - 0xdc00)) - next_end += 6 - char = unichr(uni) - end = next_end - # Append the unescaped character - _append(char) - return u''.join(chunks), end - - -# Use speedup if available -scanstring = c_scanstring or py_scanstring - -WHITESPACE = re.compile(r'[ \t\n\r]*', FLAGS) -WHITESPACE_STR = ' \t\n\r' - -def JSONObject((s, end), encoding, strict, scan_once, object_hook, - object_pairs_hook, memo=None, - _w=WHITESPACE.match, _ws=WHITESPACE_STR): - # Backwards compatibility - if memo is None: - memo = {} - memo_get = memo.setdefault - pairs = [] - # Use a slice to prevent IndexError from being raised, the following - # check will raise a more specific ValueError if the string is empty - nextchar = s[end:end + 1] - # Normally we expect nextchar == '"' - if nextchar != '"': - if nextchar in _ws: - end = _w(s, end).end() - nextchar = s[end:end + 1] - # Trivial empty object - if nextchar == '}': - if object_pairs_hook is not None: - result = object_pairs_hook(pairs) - return result, end + 1 - pairs = {} - if object_hook is not None: - pairs = object_hook(pairs) - return pairs, end + 1 - elif nextchar != '"': - raise JSONDecodeError("Expecting property name", s, end) - end += 1 - while True: - key, end = scanstring(s, end, encoding, strict) - key = memo_get(key, key) - - # To skip some function call overhead we optimize the fast paths where - # the JSON key separator is ": " or just ":". - if s[end:end + 1] != ':': - end = _w(s, end).end() - if s[end:end + 1] != ':': - raise JSONDecodeError("Expecting : delimiter", s, end) - - end += 1 - - try: - if s[end] in _ws: - end += 1 - if s[end] in _ws: - end = _w(s, end + 1).end() - except IndexError: - pass - - try: - value, end = scan_once(s, end) - except StopIteration: - raise JSONDecodeError("Expecting object", s, end) - pairs.append((key, value)) - - try: - nextchar = s[end] - if nextchar in _ws: - end = _w(s, end + 1).end() - nextchar = s[end] - except IndexError: - nextchar = '' - end += 1 - - if nextchar == '}': - break - elif nextchar != ',': - raise JSONDecodeError("Expecting , delimiter", s, end - 1) - - try: - nextchar = s[end] - if nextchar in _ws: - end += 1 - nextchar = s[end] - if nextchar in _ws: - end = _w(s, end + 1).end() - nextchar = s[end] - except IndexError: - nextchar = '' - - end += 1 - if nextchar != '"': - raise JSONDecodeError("Expecting property name", s, end - 1) - - if object_pairs_hook is not None: - result = object_pairs_hook(pairs) - return result, end - pairs = dict(pairs) - if object_hook is not None: - pairs = object_hook(pairs) - return pairs, end - -def JSONArray((s, end), scan_once, _w=WHITESPACE.match, _ws=WHITESPACE_STR): - values = [] - nextchar = s[end:end + 1] - if nextchar in _ws: - end = _w(s, end + 1).end() - nextchar = s[end:end + 1] - # Look-ahead for trivial empty array - if nextchar == ']': - return values, end + 1 - _append = values.append - while True: - try: - value, end = scan_once(s, end) - except StopIteration: - raise JSONDecodeError("Expecting object", s, end) - _append(value) - nextchar = s[end:end + 1] - if nextchar in _ws: - end = _w(s, end + 1).end() - nextchar = s[end:end + 1] - end += 1 - if nextchar == ']': - break - elif nextchar != ',': - raise JSONDecodeError("Expecting , delimiter", s, end) - - try: - if s[end] in _ws: - end += 1 - if s[end] in _ws: - end = _w(s, end + 1).end() - except IndexError: - pass - - return values, end - -class JSONDecoder(object): - """Simple JSON decoder - - Performs the following translations in decoding by default: - - +---------------+-------------------+ - | JSON | Python | - +===============+===================+ - | object | dict | - +---------------+-------------------+ - | array | list | - +---------------+-------------------+ - | string | unicode | - +---------------+-------------------+ - | number (int) | int, long | - +---------------+-------------------+ - | number (real) | float | - +---------------+-------------------+ - | true | True | - +---------------+-------------------+ - | false | False | - +---------------+-------------------+ - | null | None | - +---------------+-------------------+ - - It also understands ``NaN``, ``Infinity``, and ``-Infinity`` as - their corresponding ``float`` values, which is outside the JSON spec. - - """ - - def __init__(self, encoding=None, object_hook=None, parse_float=None, - parse_int=None, parse_constant=None, strict=True, - object_pairs_hook=None): - """ - *encoding* determines the encoding used to interpret any - :class:`str` objects decoded by this instance (``'utf-8'`` by - default). It has no effect when decoding :class:`unicode` objects. - - Note that currently only encodings that are a superset of ASCII work, - strings of other encodings should be passed in as :class:`unicode`. - - *object_hook*, if specified, will be called with the result of every - JSON object decoded and its return value will be used in place of the - given :class:`dict`. This can be used to provide custom - deserializations (e.g. to support JSON-RPC class hinting). - - *object_pairs_hook* is an optional function that will be called with - the result of any object literal decode with an ordered list of pairs. - The return value of *object_pairs_hook* will be used instead of the - :class:`dict`. This feature can be used to implement custom decoders - that rely on the order that the key and value pairs are decoded (for - example, :func:`collections.OrderedDict` will remember the order of - insertion). If *object_hook* is also defined, the *object_pairs_hook* - takes priority. - - *parse_float*, if specified, will be called with the string of every - JSON float to be decoded. By default, this is equivalent to - ``float(num_str)``. This can be used to use another datatype or parser - for JSON floats (e.g. :class:`decimal.Decimal`). - - *parse_int*, if specified, will be called with the string of every - JSON int to be decoded. By default, this is equivalent to - ``int(num_str)``. This can be used to use another datatype or parser - for JSON integers (e.g. :class:`float`). - - *parse_constant*, if specified, will be called with one of the - following strings: ``'-Infinity'``, ``'Infinity'``, ``'NaN'``. This - can be used to raise an exception if invalid JSON numbers are - encountered. - - *strict* controls the parser's behavior when it encounters an - invalid control character in a string. The default setting of - ``True`` means that unescaped control characters are parse errors, if - ``False`` then control characters will be allowed in strings. - - """ - self.encoding = encoding - self.object_hook = object_hook - self.object_pairs_hook = object_pairs_hook - self.parse_float = parse_float or float - self.parse_int = parse_int or int - self.parse_constant = parse_constant or _CONSTANTS.__getitem__ - self.strict = strict - self.parse_object = JSONObject - self.parse_array = JSONArray - self.parse_string = scanstring - self.memo = {} - self.scan_once = make_scanner(self) - - def decode(self, s, _w=WHITESPACE.match): - """Return the Python representation of ``s`` (a ``str`` or ``unicode`` - instance containing a JSON document) - - """ - obj, end = self.raw_decode(s, idx=_w(s, 0).end()) - end = _w(s, end).end() - if end != len(s): - raise JSONDecodeError("Extra data", s, end, len(s)) - return obj - - def raw_decode(self, s, idx=0): - """Decode a JSON document from ``s`` (a ``str`` or ``unicode`` - beginning with a JSON document) and return a 2-tuple of the Python - representation and the index in ``s`` where the document ended. - - This can be used to decode a JSON document from a string that may - have extraneous data at the end. - - """ - try: - obj, end = self.scan_once(s, idx) - except StopIteration: - raise JSONDecodeError("No JSON object could be decoded", s, idx) - return obj, end diff --git a/tablib/packages/omnijson/packages/simplejson/encoder.py b/tablib/packages/omnijson/packages/simplejson/encoder.py deleted file mode 100644 index f1269f3f..00000000 --- a/tablib/packages/omnijson/packages/simplejson/encoder.py +++ /dev/null @@ -1,503 +0,0 @@ -"""Implementation of JSONEncoder -""" -import re -from decimal import Decimal - -def _import_speedups(): - try: - from simplejson import _speedups - return _speedups.encode_basestring_ascii, _speedups.make_encoder - except ImportError: - return None, None -c_encode_basestring_ascii, c_make_encoder = _import_speedups() - -from .decoder import PosInf - -ESCAPE = re.compile(r'[\x00-\x1f\\"\b\f\n\r\t]') -ESCAPE_ASCII = re.compile(r'([\\"]|[^\ -~])') -HAS_UTF8 = re.compile(r'[\x80-\xff]') -ESCAPE_DCT = { - '\\': '\\\\', - '"': '\\"', - '\b': '\\b', - '\f': '\\f', - '\n': '\\n', - '\r': '\\r', - '\t': '\\t', -} -for i in range(0x20): - #ESCAPE_DCT.setdefault(chr(i), '\\u{0:04x}'.format(i)) - ESCAPE_DCT.setdefault(chr(i), '\\u%04x' % (i,)) - -FLOAT_REPR = repr - -def encode_basestring(s): - """Return a JSON representation of a Python string - - """ - if isinstance(s, str) and HAS_UTF8.search(s) is not None: - s = s.decode('utf-8') - def replace(match): - return ESCAPE_DCT[match.group(0)] - return u'"' + ESCAPE.sub(replace, s) + u'"' - - -def py_encode_basestring_ascii(s): - """Return an ASCII-only JSON representation of a Python string - - """ - if isinstance(s, str) and HAS_UTF8.search(s) is not None: - s = s.decode('utf-8') - def replace(match): - s = match.group(0) - try: - return ESCAPE_DCT[s] - except KeyError: - n = ord(s) - if n < 0x10000: - #return '\\u{0:04x}'.format(n) - return '\\u%04x' % (n,) - else: - # surrogate pair - n -= 0x10000 - s1 = 0xd800 | ((n >> 10) & 0x3ff) - s2 = 0xdc00 | (n & 0x3ff) - #return '\\u{0:04x}\\u{1:04x}'.format(s1, s2) - return '\\u%04x\\u%04x' % (s1, s2) - return '"' + str(ESCAPE_ASCII.sub(replace, s)) + '"' - - -encode_basestring_ascii = ( - c_encode_basestring_ascii or py_encode_basestring_ascii) - -class JSONEncoder(object): - """Extensible JSON encoder for Python data structures. - - Supports the following objects and types by default: - - +-------------------+---------------+ - | Python | JSON | - +===================+===============+ - | dict | object | - +-------------------+---------------+ - | list, tuple | array | - +-------------------+---------------+ - | str, unicode | string | - +-------------------+---------------+ - | int, long, float | number | - +-------------------+---------------+ - | True | true | - +-------------------+---------------+ - | False | false | - +-------------------+---------------+ - | None | null | - +-------------------+---------------+ - - To extend this to recognize other objects, subclass and implement a - ``.default()`` method with another method that returns a serializable - object for ``o`` if possible, otherwise it should call the superclass - implementation (to raise ``TypeError``). - - """ - item_separator = ', ' - key_separator = ': ' - def __init__(self, skipkeys=False, ensure_ascii=True, - check_circular=True, allow_nan=True, sort_keys=False, - indent=None, separators=None, encoding='utf-8', default=None, - use_decimal=False): - """Constructor for JSONEncoder, with sensible defaults. - - If skipkeys is false, then it is a TypeError to attempt - encoding of keys that are not str, int, long, float or None. If - skipkeys is True, such items are simply skipped. - - If ensure_ascii is true, the output is guaranteed to be str - objects with all incoming unicode characters escaped. If - ensure_ascii is false, the output will be unicode object. - - If check_circular is true, then lists, dicts, and custom encoded - objects will be checked for circular references during encoding to - prevent an infinite recursion (which would cause an OverflowError). - Otherwise, no such check takes place. - - If allow_nan is true, then NaN, Infinity, and -Infinity will be - encoded as such. This behavior is not JSON specification compliant, - but is consistent with most JavaScript based encoders and decoders. - Otherwise, it will be a ValueError to encode such floats. - - If sort_keys is true, then the output of dictionaries will be - sorted by key; this is useful for regression tests to ensure - that JSON serializations can be compared on a day-to-day basis. - - If indent is a string, then JSON array elements and object members - will be pretty-printed with a newline followed by that string repeated - for each level of nesting. ``None`` (the default) selects the most compact - representation without any newlines. For backwards compatibility with - versions of simplejson earlier than 2.1.0, an integer is also accepted - and is converted to a string with that many spaces. - - If specified, separators should be a (item_separator, key_separator) - tuple. The default is (', ', ': '). To get the most compact JSON - representation you should specify (',', ':') to eliminate whitespace. - - If specified, default is a function that gets called for objects - that can't otherwise be serialized. It should return a JSON encodable - version of the object or raise a ``TypeError``. - - If encoding is not None, then all input strings will be - transformed into unicode using that encoding prior to JSON-encoding. - The default is UTF-8. - - If use_decimal is true (not the default), ``decimal.Decimal`` will - be supported directly by the encoder. For the inverse, decode JSON - with ``parse_float=decimal.Decimal``. - - """ - - self.skipkeys = skipkeys - self.ensure_ascii = ensure_ascii - self.check_circular = check_circular - self.allow_nan = allow_nan - self.sort_keys = sort_keys - self.use_decimal = use_decimal - if isinstance(indent, (int, long)): - indent = ' ' * indent - self.indent = indent - if separators is not None: - self.item_separator, self.key_separator = separators - elif indent is not None: - self.item_separator = ',' - if default is not None: - self.default = default - self.encoding = encoding - - def default(self, o): - """Implement this method in a subclass such that it returns - a serializable object for ``o``, or calls the base implementation - (to raise a ``TypeError``). - - For example, to support arbitrary iterators, you could - implement default like this:: - - def default(self, o): - try: - iterable = iter(o) - except TypeError: - pass - else: - return list(iterable) - return JSONEncoder.default(self, o) - - """ - raise TypeError(repr(o) + " is not JSON serializable") - - def encode(self, o): - """Return a JSON string representation of a Python data structure. - - >>> from simplejson import JSONEncoder - >>> JSONEncoder().encode({"foo": ["bar", "baz"]}) - '{"foo": ["bar", "baz"]}' - - """ - # This is for extremely simple cases and benchmarks. - if isinstance(o, basestring): - if isinstance(o, str): - _encoding = self.encoding - if (_encoding is not None - and not (_encoding == 'utf-8')): - o = o.decode(_encoding) - if self.ensure_ascii: - return encode_basestring_ascii(o) - else: - return encode_basestring(o) - # This doesn't pass the iterator directly to ''.join() because the - # exceptions aren't as detailed. The list call should be roughly - # equivalent to the PySequence_Fast that ''.join() would do. - chunks = self.iterencode(o, _one_shot=True) - if not isinstance(chunks, (list, tuple)): - chunks = list(chunks) - if self.ensure_ascii: - return ''.join(chunks) - else: - return u''.join(chunks) - - def iterencode(self, o, _one_shot=False): - """Encode the given object and yield each string - representation as available. - - For example:: - - for chunk in JSONEncoder().iterencode(bigobject): - mysocket.write(chunk) - - """ - if self.check_circular: - markers = {} - else: - markers = None - if self.ensure_ascii: - _encoder = encode_basestring_ascii - else: - _encoder = encode_basestring - if self.encoding != 'utf-8': - def _encoder(o, _orig_encoder=_encoder, _encoding=self.encoding): - if isinstance(o, str): - o = o.decode(_encoding) - return _orig_encoder(o) - - def floatstr(o, allow_nan=self.allow_nan, - _repr=FLOAT_REPR, _inf=PosInf, _neginf=-PosInf): - # Check for specials. Note that this type of test is processor - # and/or platform-specific, so do tests which don't depend on - # the internals. - - if o != o: - text = 'NaN' - elif o == _inf: - text = 'Infinity' - elif o == _neginf: - text = '-Infinity' - else: - return _repr(o) - - if not allow_nan: - raise ValueError( - "Out of range float values are not JSON compliant: " + - repr(o)) - - return text - - - key_memo = {} - if (_one_shot and c_make_encoder is not None - and self.indent is None): - _iterencode = c_make_encoder( - markers, self.default, _encoder, self.indent, - self.key_separator, self.item_separator, self.sort_keys, - self.skipkeys, self.allow_nan, key_memo, self.use_decimal) - else: - _iterencode = _make_iterencode( - markers, self.default, _encoder, self.indent, floatstr, - self.key_separator, self.item_separator, self.sort_keys, - self.skipkeys, _one_shot, self.use_decimal) - try: - return _iterencode(o, 0) - finally: - key_memo.clear() - - -class JSONEncoderForHTML(JSONEncoder): - """An encoder that produces JSON safe to embed in HTML. - - To embed JSON content in, say, a script tag on a web page, the - characters &, < and > should be escaped. They cannot be escaped - with the usual entities (e.g. &) because they are not expanded - within