123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156 |
- #!/usr/bin/python2 -O
- '''Qubes events.
- Events are fired when something happens, like VM start or stop, property change
- etc.
- '''
- import collections
- def handler(event):
- '''Event handler decorator factory.
- To hook an event, decorate a method in your plugin class with this
- decorator.
- It probably makes no sense to specify more than one handler for specific
- event in one class, because handlers are not run concurrently and there is
- no guarantee of the order of execution.
- .. note::
- For hooking events from extensions, see :py:func:`qubes.ext.handler`.
- :param str event: event type
- '''
- def decorator(f):
- f.ha_event = event
- f.ha_bound = True
- return f
- return decorator
- def ishandler(o):
- '''Test if a method is hooked to an event.
- :param object o: suspected hook
- :return: :py:obj:`True` when function is a hook, :py:obj:`False` otherwise
- :rtype: bool
- '''
- return callable(o) \
- and hasattr(o, 'ha_event')
- class EmitterMeta(type):
- '''Metaclass for :py:class:`Emitter`'''
- def __init__(cls, name, bases, dict_):
- super(type, cls).__init__(name, bases, dict_)
- cls.__handlers__ = collections.defaultdict(set)
- class Emitter(object):
- '''Subject that can emit events
- '''
- __metaclass__ = EmitterMeta
- def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
- super(Emitter, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
- self.events_enabled = True
- try:
- propnames = set(prop.__name__ for prop in self.get_props_list())
- except AttributeError:
- propnames = set()
- for attr in dir(self):
- if attr in propnames:
- # we have to be careful, not to getattr() on properties which
- # may be unset
- continue
- attr = getattr(self, attr)
- if not ishandler(attr):
- continue
- self.add_handler(attr.ha_event, attr)
- @classmethod
- def add_handler(cls, event, handler):
- '''Add event handler to subject's class
- :param str event: event identificator
- :param collections.Callable handler: handler callable
- '''
- cls.__handlers__[event].add(handler)
- def _fire_event_in_order(self, order, event, *args, **kwargs):
- '''Fire event for classes in given order.
- Do not use this method. Use :py:meth:`fire_event` or
- :py:meth:`fire_event_pre`.
- '''
- if not self.events_enabled:
- return
- for cls in order:
- # first fire bound (= our own) handlers, then handlers from extensions
- if not hasattr(cls, '__handlers__'):
- continue
- for handler in sorted(cls.__handlers__[event],
- key=(lambda handler: hasattr(handler, 'ha_bound')), reverse=True):
- if hasattr(handler, 'ha_bound'):
- # this is our (bound) method, self is implicit
- handler(event, *args, **kwargs)
- else:
- # this is from extension or hand-added, so we see method as
- # unbound, therefore we need to pass self
- handler(self, event, *args, **kwargs)
- def fire_event(self, event, *args, **kwargs):
- '''Call all handlers for an event.
- Handlers are called for class and all parent classess, in **reversed**
- method resolution order. For each class first are called bound handlers
- (specified in class definition), then handlers from extensions. Aside
- from above, remaining order is undefined.
- .. seealso::
- :py:meth:`fire_event_pre`
- :param str event: event identificator
- All *args* and *kwargs* are passed verbatim. They are different for
- different events.
- '''
- self._fire_event_in_order(reversed(self.__class__.__mro__), event, *args, **kwargs)
- def fire_event_pre(self, event, *args, **kwargs):
- '''Call all handlers for an event.
- Handlers are called for class and all parent classess, in **true**
- method resolution order. This is intended for ``-pre-`` events, where
- order of invocation should be reversed.
- .. seealso::
- :py:meth:`fire_event`
- :param str event: event identificator
- All *args* and *kwargs* are passed verbatim. They are different for
- different events.
- '''
- self._fire_event_in_order(self.__class__.__mro__, event, *args, **kwargs)
|