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Auto merge of #21304 - lifthrasiir:htmldocck, r=alexcrichton
The script is intended as a tool for doing every sort of verifications amenable to Rustdoc's HTML output. For example, link checkers would go to this script. It already parses HTML into a document tree form (with a slight caveat), so future tests can make use of it. As an example, relevant `rustdoc-*` run-make tests have been updated to use `htmldocck.py` and got their `verify.sh` removed. In the future they may go to a dedicated directory with htmldocck running by default. The detailed explanation of test scripts is provided as a docstring of htmldocck. cc #19723
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# Copyright 2015 The Rust Project Developers. See the COPYRIGHT | ||
# file at the top-level directory of this distribution and at | ||
# http://rust-lang.org/COPYRIGHT. | ||
# | ||
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 <LICENSE-APACHE or | ||
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0> or the MIT license | ||
# <LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT>, at your | ||
# option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed | ||
# except according to those terms. | ||
|
||
r""" | ||
htmldocck.py is a custom checker script for Rustdoc HTML outputs. | ||
# How and why? | ||
The principle is simple: This script receives a path to generated HTML | ||
documentation and a "template" script, which has a series of check | ||
commands like `@has` or `@matches`. Each command can be used to check if | ||
some pattern is present or not present in the particular file or in | ||
the particular node of HTML tree. In many cases, the template script | ||
happens to be a source code given to rustdoc. | ||
While it indeed is possible to test in smaller portions, it has been | ||
hard to construct tests in this fashion and major rendering errors were | ||
discovered much later. This script is designed for making the black-box | ||
and regression testing of Rustdoc easy. This does not preclude the needs | ||
for unit testing, but can be used to complement related tests by quickly | ||
showing the expected renderings. | ||
In order to avoid one-off dependencies for this task, this script uses | ||
a reasonably working HTML parser and the existing XPath implementation | ||
from Python 2's standard library. Hopefully we won't render | ||
non-well-formed HTML. | ||
# Commands | ||
Commands start with an `@` followed by a command name (letters and | ||
hyphens), and zero or more arguments separated by one or more whitespace | ||
and optionally delimited with single or double quotes. The `@` mark | ||
cannot be preceded by a non-whitespace character. Other lines (including | ||
every text up to the first `@`) are ignored, but it is recommended to | ||
avoid the use of `@` in the template file. | ||
There are a number of supported commands: | ||
* `@has PATH` checks for the existence of given file. | ||
`PATH` is relative to the output directory. It can be given as `-` | ||
which repeats the most recently used `PATH`. | ||
* `@has PATH PATTERN` and `@matches PATH PATTERN` checks for | ||
the occurrence of given `PATTERN` in the given file. Only one | ||
occurrence of given pattern is enough. | ||
For `@has`, `PATTERN` is a whitespace-normalized (every consecutive | ||
whitespace being replaced by one single space character) string. | ||
The entire file is also whitespace-normalized including newlines. | ||
For `@matches`, `PATTERN` is a Python-supported regular expression. | ||
The file remains intact but the regexp is matched with no `MULTILINE` | ||
and `IGNORECASE` option. You can still use a prefix `(?m)` or `(?i)` | ||
to override them, and `\A` and `\Z` for definitely matching | ||
the beginning and end of the file. | ||
(The same distinction goes to other variants of these commands.) | ||
* `@has PATH XPATH PATTERN` and `@matches PATH XPATH PATTERN` checks for | ||
the presence of given `XPATH` in the given HTML file, and also | ||
the occurrence of given `PATTERN` in the matching node or attribute. | ||
Only one occurrence of given pattern in the match is enough. | ||
`PATH` should be a valid and well-formed HTML file. It does *not* | ||
accept arbitrary HTML5; it should have matching open and close tags | ||
and correct entity references at least. | ||
`XPATH` is an XPath expression to match. This is fairly limited: | ||
`tag`, `*`, `.`, `//`, `..`, `[@attr]`, `[@attr='value']`, `[tag]`, | ||
`[POS]` (element located in given `POS`), `[last()-POS]`, `text()` | ||
and `@attr` (both as the last segment) are supported. Some examples: | ||
- `//pre` or `.//pre` matches any element with a name `pre`. | ||
- `//a[@href]` matches any element with an `href` attribute. | ||
- `//*[@class="impl"]//code` matches any element with a name `code`, | ||
which is an ancestor of some element which `class` attr is `impl`. | ||
- `//h1[@class="fqn"]/span[1]/a[last()]/@class` matches a value of | ||
`class` attribute in the last `a` element (can be followed by more | ||
elements that are not `a`) inside the first `span` in the `h1` with | ||
a class of `fqn`. Note that there cannot be no additional elements | ||
between them due to the use of `/` instead of `//`. | ||
Do not try to use non-absolute paths, it won't work due to the flawed | ||
ElementTree implementation. The script rejects them. | ||
For the text matches (i.e. paths not ending with `@attr`), any | ||
subelements are flattened into one string; this is handy for ignoring | ||
highlights for example. If you want to simply check the presence of | ||
given node or attribute, use an empty string (`""`) as a `PATTERN`. | ||
All conditions can be negated with `!`. `@!has foo/type.NoSuch.html` | ||
checks if the given file does not exist, for example. | ||
""" | ||
|
||
import sys | ||
import os.path | ||
import re | ||
import shlex | ||
from collections import namedtuple | ||
from HTMLParser import HTMLParser | ||
from xml.etree import cElementTree as ET | ||
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# ⇤/⇥ are not in HTML 4 but are in HTML 5 | ||
from htmlentitydefs import entitydefs | ||
entitydefs['larrb'] = u'\u21e4' | ||
entitydefs['rarrb'] = u'\u21e5' | ||
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# "void elements" (no closing tag) from the HTML Standard section 12.1.2 | ||
VOID_ELEMENTS = set(['area', 'base', 'br', 'col', 'embed', 'hr', 'img', 'input', 'keygen', | ||
'link', 'menuitem', 'meta', 'param', 'source', 'track', 'wbr']) | ||
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# simplified HTML parser. | ||
# this is possible because we are dealing with very regular HTML from rustdoc; | ||
# we only have to deal with i) void elements and ii) empty attributes. | ||
class CustomHTMLParser(HTMLParser): | ||
def __init__(self, target=None): | ||
HTMLParser.__init__(self) | ||
self.__builder = target or ET.TreeBuilder() | ||
def handle_starttag(self, tag, attrs): | ||
attrs = dict((k, v or '') for k, v in attrs) | ||
self.__builder.start(tag, attrs) | ||
if tag in VOID_ELEMENTS: self.__builder.end(tag) | ||
def handle_endtag(self, tag): | ||
self.__builder.end(tag) | ||
def handle_startendtag(self, tag, attrs): | ||
attrs = dict((k, v or '') for k, v in attrs) | ||
self.__builder.start(tag, attrs) | ||
self.__builder.end(tag) | ||
def handle_data(self, data): | ||
self.__builder.data(data) | ||
def handle_entityref(self, name): | ||
self.__builder.data(entitydefs[name]) | ||
def handle_charref(self, name): | ||
code = int(name[1:], 16) if name.startswith(('x', 'X')) else int(name, 10) | ||
self.__builder.data(unichr(code).encode('utf-8')) | ||
def close(self): | ||
HTMLParser.close(self) | ||
return self.__builder.close() | ||
|
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Command = namedtuple('Command', 'negated cmd args lineno') | ||
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# returns a generator out of the file object, which | ||
# - removes `\\` then `\n` then a shared prefix with the previous line then optional whitespace; | ||
# - keeps a line number (starting from 0) of the first line being concatenated. | ||
def concat_multi_lines(f): | ||
lastline = None # set to the last line when the last line has a backslash | ||
firstlineno = None | ||
catenated = '' | ||
for lineno, line in enumerate(f): | ||
line = line.rstrip('\r\n') | ||
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# strip the common prefix from the current line if needed | ||
if lastline is not None: | ||
maxprefix = 0 | ||
for i in xrange(min(len(line), len(lastline))): | ||
if line[i] != lastline[i]: break | ||
maxprefix += 1 | ||
line = line[maxprefix:].lstrip() | ||
|
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firstlineno = firstlineno or lineno | ||
if line.endswith('\\'): | ||
lastline = line[:-1] | ||
catenated += line[:-1] | ||
else: | ||
yield firstlineno, catenated + line | ||
lastline = None | ||
firstlineno = None | ||
catenated = '' | ||
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if lastline is not None: | ||
raise RuntimeError('Trailing backslash in the end of file') | ||
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LINE_PATTERN = re.compile(r''' | ||
(?<=(?<!\S)@)(?P<negated>!?) | ||
(?P<cmd>[A-Za-z]+(?:-[A-Za-z]+)*) | ||
(?P<args>.*)$ | ||
''', re.X) | ||
def get_commands(template): | ||
with open(template, 'rUb') as f: | ||
for lineno, line in concat_multi_lines(f): | ||
m = LINE_PATTERN.search(line) | ||
if not m: continue | ||
|
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negated = (m.group('negated') == '!') | ||
cmd = m.group('cmd') | ||
args = m.group('args') | ||
if args and not args[:1].isspace(): | ||
raise RuntimeError('Invalid template syntax at line {}'.format(lineno+1)) | ||
args = shlex.split(args) | ||
yield Command(negated=negated, cmd=cmd, args=args, lineno=lineno+1) | ||
|
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def _flatten(node, acc): | ||
if node.text: acc.append(node.text) | ||
for e in node: | ||
_flatten(e, acc) | ||
if e.tail: acc.append(e.tail) | ||
|
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def flatten(node): | ||
acc = [] | ||
_flatten(node, acc) | ||
return ''.join(acc) | ||
|
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def normalize_xpath(path): | ||
if path.startswith('//'): | ||
return '.' + path # avoid warnings | ||
elif path.startswith('.//'): | ||
return path | ||
else: | ||
raise RuntimeError('Non-absolute XPath is not supported due to \ | ||
the implementation issue.') | ||
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class CachedFiles(object): | ||
def __init__(self, root): | ||
self.root = root | ||
self.files = {} | ||
self.trees = {} | ||
self.last_path = None | ||
|
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def resolve_path(self, path): | ||
if path != '-': | ||
path = os.path.normpath(path) | ||
self.last_path = path | ||
return path | ||
elif self.last_path is None: | ||
raise RuntimeError('Tried to use the previous path in the first command') | ||
else: | ||
return self.last_path | ||
|
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def get_file(self, path): | ||
path = self.resolve_path(path) | ||
try: | ||
return self.files[path] | ||
except KeyError: | ||
try: | ||
with open(os.path.join(self.root, path)) as f: | ||
data = f.read() | ||
except Exception as e: | ||
raise RuntimeError('Cannot open file {!r}: {}'.format(path, e)) | ||
else: | ||
self.files[path] = data | ||
return data | ||
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def get_tree(self, path): | ||
path = self.resolve_path(path) | ||
try: | ||
return self.trees[path] | ||
except KeyError: | ||
try: | ||
f = open(os.path.join(self.root, path)) | ||
except Exception as e: | ||
raise RuntimeError('Cannot open file {!r}: {}'.format(path, e)) | ||
try: | ||
with f: | ||
tree = ET.parse(f, CustomHTMLParser()) | ||
except Exception as e: | ||
raise RuntimeError('Cannot parse an HTML file {!r}: {}'.format(path, e)) | ||
else: | ||
self.trees[path] = tree | ||
return self.trees[path] | ||
|
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def check_string(data, pat, regexp): | ||
if not pat: | ||
return True # special case a presence testing | ||
elif regexp: | ||
return re.search(pat, data) is not None | ||
else: | ||
data = ' '.join(data.split()) | ||
pat = ' '.join(pat.split()) | ||
return pat in data | ||
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def check_tree_attr(tree, path, attr, pat, regexp): | ||
path = normalize_xpath(path) | ||
ret = False | ||
for e in tree.findall(path): | ||
try: | ||
value = e.attrib[attr] | ||
except KeyError: | ||
continue | ||
else: | ||
ret = check_string(value, pat, regexp) | ||
if ret: break | ||
return ret | ||
|
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def check_tree_text(tree, path, pat, regexp): | ||
path = normalize_xpath(path) | ||
ret = False | ||
for e in tree.findall(path): | ||
try: | ||
value = flatten(e) | ||
except KeyError: | ||
continue | ||
else: | ||
ret = check_string(value, pat, regexp) | ||
if ret: break | ||
return ret | ||
|
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def check(target, commands): | ||
cache = CachedFiles(target) | ||
for c in commands: | ||
if c.cmd == 'has' or c.cmd == 'matches': # string test | ||
regexp = (c.cmd == 'matches') | ||
if len(c.args) == 1 and not regexp: # @has <path> = file existence | ||
try: | ||
cache.get_file(c.args[0]) | ||
ret = True | ||
except RuntimeError: | ||
ret = False | ||
elif len(c.args) == 2: # @has/matches <path> <pat> = string test | ||
ret = check_string(cache.get_file(c.args[0]), c.args[1], regexp) | ||
elif len(c.args) == 3: # @has/matches <path> <pat> <match> = XML tree test | ||
tree = cache.get_tree(c.args[0]) | ||
pat, sep, attr = c.args[1].partition('/@') | ||
if sep: # attribute | ||
ret = check_tree_attr(cache.get_tree(c.args[0]), pat, attr, c.args[2], regexp) | ||
else: # normalized text | ||
pat = c.args[1] | ||
if pat.endswith('/text()'): pat = pat[:-7] | ||
ret = check_tree_text(cache.get_tree(c.args[0]), pat, c.args[2], regexp) | ||
else: | ||
raise RuntimeError('Invalid number of @{} arguments \ | ||
at line {}'.format(c.cmd, c.lineno)) | ||
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elif c.cmd == 'valid-html': | ||
raise RuntimeError('Unimplemented @valid-html at line {}'.format(c.lineno)) | ||
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elif c.cmd == 'valid-links': | ||
raise RuntimeError('Unimplemented @valid-links at line {}'.format(c.lineno)) | ||
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else: | ||
raise RuntimeError('Unrecognized @{} at line {}'.format(c.cmd, c.lineno)) | ||
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if ret == c.negated: | ||
raise RuntimeError('@{}{} check failed at line {}'.format('!' if c.negated else '', | ||
c.cmd, c.lineno)) | ||
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if __name__ == '__main__': | ||
if len(sys.argv) < 3: | ||
print >>sys.stderr, 'Usage: {} <doc dir> <template>'.format(sys.argv[0]) | ||
raise SystemExit(1) | ||
else: | ||
check(sys.argv[1], get_commands(sys.argv[2])) | ||
|
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