| """Manage shelves of pickled objects. | |
| A "shelf" is a persistent, dictionary-like object. The difference | |
| with dbm databases is that the values (not the keys!) in a shelf can | |
| be essentially arbitrary Python objects -- anything that the "pickle" | |
| module can handle. This includes most class instances, recursive data | |
| types, and objects containing lots of shared sub-objects. The keys | |
| are ordinary strings. | |
| To summarize the interface (key is a string, data is an arbitrary | |
| object): | |
| import shelve | |
| d = shelve.open(filename) # open, with (g)dbm filename -- no suffix | |
| d[key] = data # store data at key (overwrites old data if | |
| # using an existing key) | |
| data = d[key] # retrieve a COPY of the data at key (raise | |
| # KeyError if no such key) -- NOTE that this | |
| # access returns a *copy* of the entry! | |
| del d[key] # delete data stored at key (raises KeyError | |
| # if no such key) | |
| flag = d.has_key(key) # true if the key exists; same as "key in d" | |
| list = d.keys() # a list of all existing keys (slow!) | |
| d.close() # close it | |
| Dependent on the implementation, closing a persistent dictionary may | |
| or may not be necessary to flush changes to disk. | |
| Normally, d[key] returns a COPY of the entry. This needs care when | |
| mutable entries are mutated: for example, if d[key] is a list, | |
| d[key].append(anitem) | |
| does NOT modify the entry d[key] itself, as stored in the persistent | |
| mapping -- it only modifies the copy, which is then immediately | |
| discarded, so that the append has NO effect whatsoever. To append an | |
| item to d[key] in a way that will affect the persistent mapping, use: | |
| data = d[key] | |
| data.append(anitem) | |
| d[key] = data | |
| To avoid the problem with mutable entries, you may pass the keyword | |
| argument writeback=True in the call to shelve.open. When you use: | |
| d = shelve.open(filename, writeback=True) | |
| then d keeps a cache of all entries you access, and writes them all back | |
| to the persistent mapping when you call d.close(). This ensures that | |
| such usage as d[key].append(anitem) works as intended. | |
| However, using keyword argument writeback=True may consume vast amount | |
| of memory for the cache, and it may make d.close() very slow, if you | |
| access many of d's entries after opening it in this way: d has no way to | |
| check which of the entries you access are mutable and/or which ones you | |
| actually mutate, so it must cache, and write back at close, all of the | |
| entries that you access. You can call d.sync() to write back all the | |
| entries in the cache, and empty the cache (d.sync() also synchronizes | |
| the persistent dictionary on disk, if feasible). | |
| """ | |
| # Try using cPickle and cStringIO if available. | |
| try: | |
| from cPickle import Pickler, Unpickler | |
| except ImportError: | |
| from pickle import Pickler, Unpickler | |
| try: | |
| from cStringIO import StringIO | |
| except ImportError: | |
| from StringIO import StringIO | |
| import UserDict | |
| __all__ = ["Shelf","BsdDbShelf","DbfilenameShelf","open"] | |
| class _ClosedDict(UserDict.DictMixin): | |
| 'Marker for a closed dict. Access attempts raise a ValueError.' | |
| def closed(self, *args): | |
| raise ValueError('invalid operation on closed shelf') | |
| __getitem__ = __setitem__ = __delitem__ = keys = closed | |
| def __repr__(self): | |
| return '<Closed Dictionary>' | |
| class Shelf(UserDict.DictMixin): | |
| """Base class for shelf implementations. | |
| This is initialized with a dictionary-like object. | |
| See the module's __doc__ string for an overview of the interface. | |
| """ | |
| def __init__(self, dict, protocol=None, writeback=False): | |
| self.dict = dict | |
| if protocol is None: | |
| protocol = 0 | |
| self._protocol = protocol | |
| self.writeback = writeback | |
| self.cache = {} | |
| def keys(self): | |
| return self.dict.keys() | |
| def __len__(self): | |
| return len(self.dict) | |
| def has_key(self, key): | |
| return key in self.dict | |
| def __contains__(self, key): | |
| return key in self.dict | |
| def get(self, key, default=None): | |
| if key in self.dict: | |
| return self[key] | |
| return default | |
| def __getitem__(self, key): | |
| try: | |
| value = self.cache[key] | |
| except KeyError: | |
| f = StringIO(self.dict[key]) | |
| value = Unpickler(f).load() | |
| if self.writeback: | |
| self.cache[key] = value | |
| return value | |
| def __setitem__(self, key, value): | |
| if self.writeback: | |
| self.cache[key] = value | |
| f = StringIO() | |
| p = Pickler(f, self._protocol) | |
| p.dump(value) | |
| self.dict[key] = f.getvalue() | |
| def __delitem__(self, key): | |
| del self.dict[key] | |
| try: | |
| del self.cache[key] | |
| except KeyError: | |
| pass | |
| def close(self): | |
| self.sync() | |
| try: | |
| self.dict.close() | |
| except AttributeError: | |
| pass | |
| # Catch errors that may happen when close is called from __del__ | |
| # because CPython is in interpreter shutdown. | |
| try: | |
| self.dict = _ClosedDict() | |
| except (NameError, TypeError): | |
| self.dict = None | |
| def __del__(self): | |
| if not hasattr(self, 'writeback'): | |
| # __init__ didn't succeed, so don't bother closing | |
| return | |
| self.close() | |
| def sync(self): | |
| if self.writeback and self.cache: | |
| self.writeback = False | |
| for key, entry in self.cache.iteritems(): | |
| self[key] = entry | |
| self.writeback = True | |
| self.cache = {} | |
| if hasattr(self.dict, 'sync'): | |
| self.dict.sync() | |
| class BsdDbShelf(Shelf): | |
| """Shelf implementation using the "BSD" db interface. | |
| This adds methods first(), next(), previous(), last() and | |
| set_location() that have no counterpart in [g]dbm databases. | |
| The actual database must be opened using one of the "bsddb" | |
| modules "open" routines (i.e. bsddb.hashopen, bsddb.btopen or | |
| bsddb.rnopen) and passed to the constructor. | |
| See the module's __doc__ string for an overview of the interface. | |
| """ | |
| def __init__(self, dict, protocol=None, writeback=False): | |
| Shelf.__init__(self, dict, protocol, writeback) | |
| def set_location(self, key): | |
| (key, value) = self.dict.set_location(key) | |
| f = StringIO(value) | |
| return (key, Unpickler(f).load()) | |
| def next(self): | |
| (key, value) = self.dict.next() | |
| f = StringIO(value) | |
| return (key, Unpickler(f).load()) | |
| def previous(self): | |
| (key, value) = self.dict.previous() | |
| f = StringIO(value) | |
| return (key, Unpickler(f).load()) | |
| def first(self): | |
| (key, value) = self.dict.first() | |
| f = StringIO(value) | |
| return (key, Unpickler(f).load()) | |
| def last(self): | |
| (key, value) = self.dict.last() | |
| f = StringIO(value) | |
| return (key, Unpickler(f).load()) | |
| class DbfilenameShelf(Shelf): | |
| """Shelf implementation using the "anydbm" generic dbm interface. | |
| This is initialized with the filename for the dbm database. | |
| See the module's __doc__ string for an overview of the interface. | |
| """ | |
| def __init__(self, filename, flag='c', protocol=None, writeback=False): | |
| import anydbm | |
| Shelf.__init__(self, anydbm.open(filename, flag), protocol, writeback) | |
| def open(filename, flag='c', protocol=None, writeback=False): | |
| """Open a persistent dictionary for reading and writing. | |
| The filename parameter is the base filename for the underlying | |
| database. As a side-effect, an extension may be added to the | |
| filename and more than one file may be created. The optional flag | |
| parameter has the same interpretation as the flag parameter of | |
| anydbm.open(). The optional protocol parameter specifies the | |
| version of the pickle protocol (0, 1, or 2). | |
| See the module's __doc__ string for an overview of the interface. | |
| """ | |
| return DbfilenameShelf(filename, flag, protocol, writeback) |