staticoso/Source/Libs/dateutil/zoneinfo/rebuild.py

76 lines
2.3 KiB
Python

import logging
import os
import tempfile
import shutil
import json
from subprocess import check_call, check_output
from tarfile import TarFile
from dateutil.zoneinfo import METADATA_FN, ZONEFILENAME
def rebuild(filename, tag=None, format="gz", zonegroups=[], metadata=None):
"""Rebuild the internal timezone info in dateutil/zoneinfo/zoneinfo*tar*
filename is the timezone tarball from ``ftp.iana.org/tz``.
"""
tmpdir = tempfile.mkdtemp()
zonedir = os.path.join(tmpdir, "zoneinfo")
moduledir = os.path.dirname(__file__)
try:
with TarFile.open(filename) as tf:
for name in zonegroups:
tf.extract(name, tmpdir)
filepaths = [os.path.join(tmpdir, n) for n in zonegroups]
_run_zic(zonedir, filepaths)
# write metadata file
with open(os.path.join(zonedir, METADATA_FN), 'w') as f:
json.dump(metadata, f, indent=4, sort_keys=True)
target = os.path.join(moduledir, ZONEFILENAME)
with TarFile.open(target, "w:%s" % format) as tf:
for entry in os.listdir(zonedir):
entrypath = os.path.join(zonedir, entry)
tf.add(entrypath, entry)
finally:
shutil.rmtree(tmpdir)
def _run_zic(zonedir, filepaths):
"""Calls the ``zic`` compiler in a compatible way to get a "fat" binary.
Recent versions of ``zic`` default to ``-b slim``, while older versions
don't even have the ``-b`` option (but default to "fat" binaries). The
current version of dateutil does not support Version 2+ TZif files, which
causes problems when used in conjunction with "slim" binaries, so this
function is used to ensure that we always get a "fat" binary.
"""
try:
help_text = check_output(["zic", "--help"])
except OSError as e:
_print_on_nosuchfile(e)
raise
if b"-b " in help_text:
bloat_args = ["-b", "fat"]
else:
bloat_args = []
check_call(["zic"] + bloat_args + ["-d", zonedir] + filepaths)
def _print_on_nosuchfile(e):
"""Print helpful troubleshooting message
e is an exception raised by subprocess.check_call()
"""
if e.errno == 2:
logging.error(
"Could not find zic. Perhaps you need to install "
"libc-bin or some other package that provides it, "
"or it's not in your PATH?")