This document describes the current stable version of Celery (5.2). For development docs, go here.

Source code for celery.utils.objects

"""Object related utilities, including introspection, etc."""
from functools import reduce

__all__ = ('Bunch', 'FallbackContext', 'getitem_property', 'mro_lookup')


[docs]class Bunch: """Object that enables you to modify attributes.""" def __init__(self, **kwargs): self.__dict__.update(kwargs)
[docs]def mro_lookup(cls, attr, stop=None, monkey_patched=None): """Return the first node by MRO order that defines an attribute. Arguments: cls (Any): Child class to traverse. attr (str): Name of attribute to find. stop (Set[Any]): A set of types that if reached will stop the search. monkey_patched (Sequence): Use one of the stop classes if the attributes module origin isn't in this list. Used to detect monkey patched attributes. Returns: Any: The attribute value, or :const:`None` if not found. """ stop = set() if not stop else stop monkey_patched = [] if not monkey_patched else monkey_patched for node in cls.mro(): if node in stop: try: value = node.__dict__[attr] module_origin = value.__module__ except (AttributeError, KeyError): pass else: if module_origin not in monkey_patched: return node return if attr in node.__dict__: return node
[docs]class FallbackContext: """Context workaround. The built-in ``@contextmanager`` utility does not work well when wrapping other contexts, as the traceback is wrong when the wrapped context raises. This solves this problem and can be used instead of ``@contextmanager`` in this example:: @contextmanager def connection_or_default_connection(connection=None): if connection: # user already has a connection, shouldn't close # after use yield connection else: # must've new connection, and also close the connection # after the block returns with create_new_connection() as connection: yield connection This wrapper can be used instead for the above like this:: def connection_or_default_connection(connection=None): return FallbackContext(connection, create_new_connection) """ def __init__(self, provided, fallback, *fb_args, **fb_kwargs): self.provided = provided self.fallback = fallback self.fb_args = fb_args self.fb_kwargs = fb_kwargs self._context = None def __enter__(self): if self.provided is not None: return self.provided context = self._context = self.fallback( *self.fb_args, **self.fb_kwargs ).__enter__() return context def __exit__(self, *exc_info): if self._context is not None: return self._context.__exit__(*exc_info)
[docs]class getitem_property: """Attribute -> dict key descriptor. The target object must support ``__getitem__``, and optionally ``__setitem__``. Example: >>> from collections import defaultdict >>> class Me(dict): ... deep = defaultdict(dict) ... ... foo = _getitem_property('foo') ... deep_thing = _getitem_property('deep.thing') >>> me = Me() >>> me.foo None >>> me.foo = 10 >>> me.foo 10 >>> me['foo'] 10 >>> me.deep_thing = 42 >>> me.deep_thing 42 >>> me.deep defaultdict(<type 'dict'>, {'thing': 42}) """ def __init__(self, keypath, doc=None): path, _, self.key = keypath.rpartition('.') self.path = path.split('.') if path else None self.__doc__ = doc def _path(self, obj): return (reduce(lambda d, k: d[k], [obj] + self.path) if self.path else obj) def __get__(self, obj, type=None): if obj is None: return type return self._path(obj).get(self.key) def __set__(self, obj, value): self._path(obj)[self.key] = value