########################################################################## # # Copyright (c) 2005 Imaginary Landscape LLC and Contributors. # # Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining # a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the # "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including # without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, # distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to # permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to # the following conditions: # # The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be # included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. # # THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, # EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF # MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND # NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE # LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, 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. ########################################################################## ## This file is from ZPTKit """ templatetools.py Tools for using ZopePageTemplates, primarily intended for use with Webware. Typically you will use TemplatePool, storing an instance of the pool. To get a template, use aPool.getTemplate(filename) -- this reuse a template if possible (but no two threads will use the same template). When you are finished with the template you should call aPool.returnTemplate(templateObject). In Webware this is typically done as part of SitePage, with templates returned in .sleep(). The other interesting tool is ContextWrapper. This is a thin wrapper that give you access to the template's namespace. Any object can define the method ``__render_with_namespace__`` and if the object is rendered in a template then that method will be called with a single argument -- a dictionary-like object containing the namespace. This is awkward when you have a method (rather than a full blown object) that you want to render using the namespace. ContextWrapper takes a function argument, and when it is render, it in turn calls the function it was given with the namespace argument. A small example is in that class. """ import os from zope.pagetemplate.pagetemplate import PageTemplate from zope.pagetemplate.pagetemplate import PTRuntimeError import types class TemplatePool: """ A manager class to pool templates. Templates are created on demand (using getTemplate), and can be returned -- if a template from the same filename has been already been created and returned, then it can be reused. To ensure threadsafety, two threads will not have access to the same template. """ def __init__(self, ptClass=None, classArgs=(), classKW=None): self._pool = {} if not ptClass: ptClass = FilePageTemplate self.ptClass = ptClass self.classArgs = classArgs self.classKW = classKW or {} def getTemplate(self, filename): try: inst = self._pool[filename].pop() except (KeyError, IndexError): kw = self.classKW.copy() kw['factory'] = self inst = self.ptClass(filename, *self.classArgs, **kw) if inst._v_errors: raise PTRuntimeError( 'Template %s has errors:\n%s\n%s' % (filename, inst._v_errors[0], inst._v_errors[1])) return inst def __call__(self, filename): return self.getTemplate(filename) def returnTemplate(self, template): self._pool.setdefault(template.filename, []).append(template) def __repr__(self): start = '' class FilenameSpace: """ This implements 'here' for page templates, where 'here' is a space that supports fetching other templates. I.e., when you do:: this is the 'here' that finds 'standard_template.pt'. You must also provide it with a subclass of PageTemplate that can accept a filename as its only constructor argument. (Or potentially it can be some other factory function that creates PageTemplate instances) """ def __init__(self, dirs, ptClass): if isinstance(dirs, (str, unicode)): dirs = [dirs] self.dirs = dirs self.ptClass = ptClass def __getitem__(self, key): assert '/' not in key, "Keys cannot have '/'s: %r" % key for dir in self.dirs: filename = os.path.join(dir, key) if os.path.exists(filename): break else: raise KeyError( "The filename %s could not be found (in %s)" % (key, ', '.join(self.dirs))) if os.path.isdir(filename): return self.__class__(filename, self.ptClass) else: return self.ptClass(filename) def __repr__(self): return ('<%s %s dirs=(%s) ptClass=%s>' % (self.__class__.__name__, hex(id(self)), ', '.join(self.dirs), self.ptClass)) class FilePageTemplate(PageTemplate): """ This is a page template that is based on a file. Each template is passed a filename argument, and the template is read from that file. The template may be reread (if it has changed) anytime you call .refresh(). You may wish to do this at the beginning of a request. It adds 'here' to the context, which is a namespace for the directory in which it is contained (using FileNamespace). Specifically this makes this work:: You can pass in here_dir if you want to use a separate directory. Sometimes this will be a fixed directory, since there is currently no way to traverse from 'here' to a parent directory. """ def __init__(self, filename, here_dirs=None, factory=None): self.filename = filename self.mtime = 0 if factory is None: self.factory = self.__class__ else: self.factory = factory self.refresh() if here_dirs is None: here_dirs = [os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(filename))] self.here_dirs = here_dirs self.here = FilenameSpace( here_dirs, self.factory) def refresh(self): mtime = os.stat(self.filename).st_mtime if mtime > self.mtime: self.mtime = mtime self.read_file(self.filename) def read_file(self, filename): f = open(self.filename, 'rb') self.write(f.read()) f.close() def __call__(self, context=None, *args, **kw): if context is None: context = {} if not kw.has_key('args'): kw['args'] = args elif args: assert 0, "You cannot both pass in a keyword argument 'args', and positional arguments" extra_context = {'options': kw, 'here': self.here, 'test': test} context.update(extra_context) return self.pt_render(extra_context=context) def __repr__(self): return ('<%s %s %s>' % (self.__class__, hex(id(self)), self.filename)) class ContextWrapper: """ This is used when you don't want to create a new object just to render a small bit of content in a way that is aware of the PageTemplate context. You use it like:: class MyClass: def getLink(self, ns): do stuff with ns... link = ContextWrapper(getLink) Then when someone does they will be calling the getLink function. """ def __init__(self, callback, *args, **kw): self.callback = callback self.args = args self.kw = kw def __render_with_namespace__(self, ns): return self.callback(ns, *self.args, **self.kw) def test(conditional, trueValue, falseValue=None): if conditional: return trueValue else: return falseValue __all__ = ['TemplatePool', 'FilePageTemplate', 'StandardContext']