Metadata-Version: 1.1
Name: safer
Version: 4.1.1
Summary: A safer file opener
Home-page: https://github.com/rec/safer
Author: Tom Ritchford
Author-email: tom@swirly.com
License: MIT
Description: ✏️safer: a safer file opener ✏️
        -------------------------------
        
        |doks_0| |doks_1| |doks_2| |doks_3| |doks_4| |doks_5| |doks_6| |doks_7|
        
        .. |doks_0| image:: https://img.shields.io/travis/rec/safer
           :alt: Travis (.org)
           :target: https://img.shields.io/travis/rec/safer
        
        .. |doks_1| image:: https://img.shields.io/codecov/c/github/rec/safer
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        .. |doks_2| image:: https://img.shields.io/github/v/release/rec/safer
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           :target: https://img.shields.io/github/v/release/rec/safer
        
        .. |doks_3| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/pyversions/safer
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           :target: https://img.shields.io/pypi/pyversions/safer
        
        .. |doks_4| image:: https://img.shields.io/github/languages/top/rec/safer
           :alt: GitHub top language
           :target: https://img.shields.io/github/languages/top/rec/safer
        
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           :alt: CodeFactor Grade
           :target: https://img.shields.io/codefactor/grade/github/rec/safer
        
        .. |doks_6| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/l/safer
           :alt: PyPI - License
           :target: https://img.shields.io/pypi/l/safer
        
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           :alt: GitHub code size in bytes
           :target: https://img.shields.io/github/languages/code-size/rec/safer
        
        No more partial writes or corruption! Wraps file streams, sockets or
        any callable.
        
        Install ``safer`` from the command line with `pip
        <https://pypi.org/project/pip>`_: ``pip install safer``.
        
        Tested on Python 3.4 and 3.8 - Python 2.7 version
        is here <https://github.com/rec/safer/tree/v2.0.5>`_.
        
        See the Medium article `here. <https://medium.com/@TomSwirly/%EF%B8%8F-safer-a-safer-file-writer-%EF%B8%8F-5fe267dbe3f5>`_
        
        -------
        
        ``safer`` helps prevent programmer error from corrupting files, socket
        connections, or generalized streams
        
        It does not prevent concurrent modification of files from other threads or
        processes: if you need atomic file writing, see
        https://pypi.org/project/atomicwrites/
        
        * ``safer.writer()`` wraps an existing writer, socket or stream and writes a
          whole response or nothing
        
        * ``safer.open()`` is a drop-in replacement for built-in ``open`` that
          writes a whole file or nothing
        
        * ``safer.closer()`` returns a stream like from ``safer.write()`` that also
          closes the underlying stream or callable when it closes.
        
        * ``safer.printer()`` is ``safer.open()`` except that it yields a
          a function that prints to the stream.
        
        By default, ``safer`` buffers the written data in memory in a ``io.StringIO``
        or ``io.BytesIO``.
        
        For very large files, ``safer.open()`` has a ``temp_file`` argument which
        writes the data to a temporary file on disk, which is moved over using
        ``os.rename`` if the operation completes successfully.  This functionality
        does not work on Windows.  (In fact, it's unclear if any of this works on
        Windows, but that certainly won't.  Windows developer solicted!)
        
        --------
        
        EXAMPLES
        =========
        
        ``safer.writer()``
        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
        
        ``safer.writer()`` wraps an existing stream - a writer, socket, or callback
        in a temporary stream which is only copied to the target stream at closer() and
        only if no exception was raised
        
        EXAMPLE
        
        .. code-block:: python
        
            sock = socket.socket(*args)
        
            # dangerous
            try:
                write_header(sock)
                write_body(sock)   # Exception is thrown here
                write_footer(sock)
             except:
                write_error(sock)  # Oops, the header was already written
        
            # safer
            try:
                with safer.writer(sock) as s:
                    write_header(s)
                    write_body(s)  # Exception is thrown here
                    write_footer(s)
             except:
                write_error(sock)  # Nothing has been written
        
        ``safer.open()``
        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
        
        Writes a whole file or nothing. It's a drop-in replacement for built-in
        ``open()`` except that ``safer.open()`` leaves the original file unchanged on
        failure.
        
        EXAMPLE
        
        .. code-block:: python
        
            # dangerous
            with open(filename, 'w') as fp:
                json.dump(data, fp)
                # If an exception is raised, the file is empty or partly written
        
            # safer
            with safer.open(filename, 'w') as fp:
                json.dump(data, fp)
                # If an exception is raised, the file is unchanged.
        
        
        ``safer.open(filename)`` returns a file stream ``fp`` like ``open(filename)``
        would, except that ``fp`` writes to memory stream or a temporary file in the
        same directory.
        
        If ``fp`` is used as a context manager and an exception is raised, then the
        proerty ``fp.safer_failed`` on the stream is automatically set to ``True``. And
        when ``fp.close()`` is called, the cached data is stored in ``filename`` -
        *unless* ``fp.safer_failed`` is true.
        
        ------------------------------------
        
        ``safer.printer()``
        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
        
        ``safer.printer()`` is similar to ``safer.open()`` except it yields a function
        that prints to the open file - it's very convenient for printing text.
        
        Like ``safer.open()``, if an exception is raised within its context manager,
        the original file is left unchanged.
        
        EXAMPLE
        
        .. code-block:: python
        
            # dangerous
            with open(file, 'w') as fp:
                for item in items:
                    print(item, file=fp)
                # Prints lines until the first exception
        
            # safer
            with safer.printer(file) as print:
                for item in items:
                    print(item)
                # Either the whole file is written, or nothing
        
        API
        ===
        
        ``safer.writer(stream=None, is_binary=None, close_on_exit=False, temp_file=False, chunk_size=1048576, delete_failures=True)``
        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
        
        (`safer.py, 159-258 <https://github.com/rec/safer/blob/master/safer.py#L159-L258>`_)
        
        Write safely to file streams, sockets and callables.
        
        ``safer.writer`` yields an in-memory stream that you can write
        to, but which is only written to the original stream if the
        context finishes without raising an exception.
        
        Because the actual writing happens when the context exits, it's possible
        to block indefinitely if the underlying socket, stream or callable does.
        
        ARGUMENTS
          stream:
            A file stream, a socket, or a callable that will receive data.
            If stream is None, output is written to stdout
            If stream is a string, this file is opened for writing.
        
          is_binary:
            Is ``stream`` a binary stream?
        
            If ``is_binary`` is ``None``, deduce whether it's a binary file from
            the stream, or assume it's text otherwise.
        
          close_on_exit: If True, the underlying stream is closed when the writer
            closes
        
          temp_file:
            If not false, use a disk file and os.rename() at the end, otherwise
            cache the writes in memory.  If it's a string, use this as the
            name of the temporary file, otherwise select one in the same
            directory as the target file, or in the system tempfile for streams
            that aren't files.
        
          chunk_size:
            Transfer data from the temporary file to the underlying stream in
            chunks of this byte size
        
          delete_failures:
            If set to false, any temporary files created are not deleted
            if there is an exception
        
        ``safer.open(name, mode='r', buffering=-1, encoding=None, errors=None, newline=None, closefd=True, opener=None, make_parents=False, delete_failures=True, temp_file=False)``
        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
        
        (`safer.py, 260-379 <https://github.com/rec/safer/blob/master/safer.py#L260-L379>`_)
        
        A drop-in replacement for ``open()`` which returns a stream which only
        overwrites the original file when close() is called, and only if there was
        no failure.
        
        If a stream ``fp`` return from ``safer.open()`` is used as a context
        manager and an exception is raised, the property ``fp.safer_failed`` is
        set to ``True``.
        
        In the method ``fp.close()``, if ``fp.safer_failed`` is *not* set, then the
        cached results replace the original file, successfully completing the
        write.
        
        If ``fp.safer_failed`` is true, then if ``delete_failures`` is true, the
        temporary file is deleted.
        
        If the ``mode`` argument contains either ``'a'`` (append), or ``'+'``
        (update), then the original file will be copied to the temporary file
        before writing starts.
        
        Note that if the ``temp_file`` argument is set, ``safer`` uses an extra
        temporary file which is renamed over the file only after the stream closes
        without failing. This uses as much disk space as the old and new files put
        together.
        
        ARGUMENTS
          make_parents:
            If true, create the parent directory of the file if it doesn't exist
        
          delete_failures:
            If set to false, any temporary files created are not deleted
            if there is an exception
        
          temp_file:
            If true, use a disk file and os.rename() at the end, otherwise
            cache the writes in memory.  If it's a string, use this as the
            name of the temporary file, otherwise select one in the same
            directory as the target file, or in the system tempfile for streams
            that aren't files.
        
        The remaining arguments are the same as for built-in ``open()``.
        
        ``safer.closer(stream, is_binary=None, close_on_exit=True, **kwds)``
        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
        
        (`safer.py, 381-389 <https://github.com/rec/safer/blob/master/safer.py#L381-L389>`_)
        
        Like ``safer.writer()`` but with ``close_on_exit=True`` by default
        
        ARGUMENTS
          Same as for ``safer.writer()``
        
        ``safer.printer(name, mode='w', *args, **kwargs)``
        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
        
        (`safer.py, 391-409 <https://github.com/rec/safer/blob/master/safer.py#L391-L409>`_)
        
        A context manager that yields a function that prints to the opened file,
        only writing to the original file at the exit of the context,
        and only if there was no exception thrown
        
        ARGUMENTS
          Same as for ``safer.open()``
        
        (automatically generated by `doks <https://github.com/rec/doks/>`_ on 2020-06-19T17:53:40.054999)
        
Keywords: testing,modules
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.4
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.7
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.8
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries
Classifier: Topic :: Utilities
