--- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/web/lib/django/db/models/fields/files.py Wed Jan 20 00:34:04 2010 +0100
@@ -0,0 +1,399 @@
+import copy
+import datetime
+import os
+
+from django.conf import settings
+from django.db.models.fields import Field
+from django.core.files.base import File, ContentFile
+from django.core.files.storage import default_storage
+from django.core.files.images import ImageFile, get_image_dimensions
+from django.core.files.uploadedfile import UploadedFile
+from django.utils.functional import curry
+from django.db.models import signals
+from django.utils.encoding import force_unicode, smart_str
+from django.utils.translation import ugettext_lazy, ugettext as _
+from django import forms
+from django.db.models.loading import cache
+
+class FieldFile(File):
+ def __init__(self, instance, field, name):
+ super(FieldFile, self).__init__(None, name)
+ self.instance = instance
+ self.field = field
+ self.storage = field.storage
+ self._committed = True
+
+ def __eq__(self, other):
+ # Older code may be expecting FileField values to be simple strings.
+ # By overriding the == operator, it can remain backwards compatibility.
+ if hasattr(other, 'name'):
+ return self.name == other.name
+ return self.name == other
+
+ def __ne__(self, other):
+ return not self.__eq__(other)
+
+ def __hash__(self):
+ # Required because we defined a custom __eq__.
+ return hash(self.name)
+
+ # The standard File contains most of the necessary properties, but
+ # FieldFiles can be instantiated without a name, so that needs to
+ # be checked for here.
+
+ def _require_file(self):
+ if not self:
+ raise ValueError("The '%s' attribute has no file associated with it." % self.field.name)
+
+ def _get_file(self):
+ self._require_file()
+ if not hasattr(self, '_file') or self._file is None:
+ self._file = self.storage.open(self.name, 'rb')
+ return self._file
+
+ def _set_file(self, file):
+ self._file = file
+
+ def _del_file(self):
+ del self._file
+
+ file = property(_get_file, _set_file, _del_file)
+
+ def _get_path(self):
+ self._require_file()
+ return self.storage.path(self.name)
+ path = property(_get_path)
+
+ def _get_url(self):
+ self._require_file()
+ return self.storage.url(self.name)
+ url = property(_get_url)
+
+ def _get_size(self):
+ self._require_file()
+ if not self._committed:
+ return len(self.file)
+ return self.storage.size(self.name)
+ size = property(_get_size)
+
+ def open(self, mode='rb'):
+ self._require_file()
+ self.file.open(mode)
+ # open() doesn't alter the file's contents, but it does reset the pointer
+ open.alters_data = True
+
+ # In addition to the standard File API, FieldFiles have extra methods
+ # to further manipulate the underlying file, as well as update the
+ # associated model instance.
+
+ def save(self, name, content, save=True):
+ name = self.field.generate_filename(self.instance, name)
+ self.name = self.storage.save(name, content)
+ setattr(self.instance, self.field.name, self.name)
+
+ # Update the filesize cache
+ self._size = len(content)
+ self._committed = True
+
+ # Save the object because it has changed, unless save is False
+ if save:
+ self.instance.save()
+ save.alters_data = True
+
+ def delete(self, save=True):
+ # Only close the file if it's already open, which we know by the
+ # presence of self._file
+ if hasattr(self, '_file'):
+ self.close()
+ del self.file
+
+ self.storage.delete(self.name)
+
+ self.name = None
+ setattr(self.instance, self.field.name, self.name)
+
+ # Delete the filesize cache
+ if hasattr(self, '_size'):
+ del self._size
+ self._committed = False
+
+ if save:
+ self.instance.save()
+ delete.alters_data = True
+
+ def _get_closed(self):
+ file = getattr(self, '_file', None)
+ return file is None or file.closed
+ closed = property(_get_closed)
+
+ def close(self):
+ file = getattr(self, '_file', None)
+ if file is not None:
+ file.close()
+
+ def __getstate__(self):
+ # FieldFile needs access to its associated model field and an instance
+ # it's attached to in order to work properly, but the only necessary
+ # data to be pickled is the file's name itself. Everything else will
+ # be restored later, by FileDescriptor below.
+ return {'name': self.name, 'closed': False, '_committed': True, '_file': None}
+
+class FileDescriptor(object):
+ """
+ The descriptor for the file attribute on the model instance. Returns a
+ FieldFile when accessed so you can do stuff like::
+
+ >>> instance.file.size
+
+ Assigns a file object on assignment so you can do::
+
+ >>> instance.file = File(...)
+
+ """
+ def __init__(self, field):
+ self.field = field
+
+ def __get__(self, instance=None, owner=None):
+ if instance is None:
+ raise AttributeError(
+ "The '%s' attribute can only be accessed from %s instances."
+ % (self.field.name, owner.__name__))
+
+ # This is slightly complicated, so worth an explanation.
+ # instance.file`needs to ultimately return some instance of `File`,
+ # probably a subclass. Additionally, this returned object needs to have
+ # the FieldFile API so that users can easily do things like
+ # instance.file.path and have that delegated to the file storage engine.
+ # Easy enough if we're strict about assignment in __set__, but if you
+ # peek below you can see that we're not. So depending on the current
+ # value of the field we have to dynamically construct some sort of
+ # "thing" to return.
+
+ # The instance dict contains whatever was originally assigned
+ # in __set__.
+ file = instance.__dict__[self.field.name]
+
+ # If this value is a string (instance.file = "path/to/file") or None
+ # then we simply wrap it with the appropriate attribute class according
+ # to the file field. [This is FieldFile for FileFields and
+ # ImageFieldFile for ImageFields; it's also conceivable that user
+ # subclasses might also want to subclass the attribute class]. This
+ # object understands how to convert a path to a file, and also how to
+ # handle None.
+ if isinstance(file, basestring) or file is None:
+ attr = self.field.attr_class(instance, self.field, file)
+ instance.__dict__[self.field.name] = attr
+
+ # Other types of files may be assigned as well, but they need to have
+ # the FieldFile interface added to the. Thus, we wrap any other type of
+ # File inside a FieldFile (well, the field's attr_class, which is
+ # usually FieldFile).
+ elif isinstance(file, File) and not isinstance(file, FieldFile):
+ file_copy = self.field.attr_class(instance, self.field, file.name)
+ file_copy.file = file
+ file_copy._committed = False
+ instance.__dict__[self.field.name] = file_copy
+
+ # Finally, because of the (some would say boneheaded) way pickle works,
+ # the underlying FieldFile might not actually itself have an associated
+ # file. So we need to reset the details of the FieldFile in those cases.
+ elif isinstance(file, FieldFile) and not hasattr(file, 'field'):
+ file.instance = instance
+ file.field = self.field
+ file.storage = self.field.storage
+
+ # That was fun, wasn't it?
+ return instance.__dict__[self.field.name]
+
+ def __set__(self, instance, value):
+ instance.__dict__[self.field.name] = value
+
+class FileField(Field):
+ # The class to wrap instance attributes in. Accessing the file object off
+ # the instance will always return an instance of attr_class.
+ attr_class = FieldFile
+
+ # The descriptor to use for accessing the attribute off of the class.
+ descriptor_class = FileDescriptor
+
+ def __init__(self, verbose_name=None, name=None, upload_to='', storage=None, **kwargs):
+ for arg in ('primary_key', 'unique'):
+ if arg in kwargs:
+ raise TypeError("'%s' is not a valid argument for %s." % (arg, self.__class__))
+
+ self.storage = storage or default_storage
+ self.upload_to = upload_to
+ if callable(upload_to):
+ self.generate_filename = upload_to
+
+ kwargs['max_length'] = kwargs.get('max_length', 100)
+ super(FileField, self).__init__(verbose_name, name, **kwargs)
+
+ def get_internal_type(self):
+ return "FileField"
+
+ def get_db_prep_lookup(self, lookup_type, value):
+ if hasattr(value, 'name'):
+ value = value.name
+ return super(FileField, self).get_db_prep_lookup(lookup_type, value)
+
+ def get_db_prep_value(self, value):
+ "Returns field's value prepared for saving into a database."
+ # Need to convert File objects provided via a form to unicode for database insertion
+ if value is None:
+ return None
+ return unicode(value)
+
+ def pre_save(self, model_instance, add):
+ "Returns field's value just before saving."
+ file = super(FileField, self).pre_save(model_instance, add)
+ if file and not file._committed:
+ # Commit the file to storage prior to saving the model
+ file.save(file.name, file, save=False)
+ return file
+
+ def contribute_to_class(self, cls, name):
+ super(FileField, self).contribute_to_class(cls, name)
+ setattr(cls, self.name, self.descriptor_class(self))
+ signals.post_delete.connect(self.delete_file, sender=cls)
+
+ def delete_file(self, instance, sender, **kwargs):
+ file = getattr(instance, self.attname)
+ # If no other object of this type references the file,
+ # and it's not the default value for future objects,
+ # delete it from the backend.
+ if file and file.name != self.default and \
+ not sender._default_manager.filter(**{self.name: file.name}):
+ file.delete(save=False)
+ elif file:
+ # Otherwise, just close the file, so it doesn't tie up resources.
+ file.close()
+
+ def get_directory_name(self):
+ return os.path.normpath(force_unicode(datetime.datetime.now().strftime(smart_str(self.upload_to))))
+
+ def get_filename(self, filename):
+ return os.path.normpath(self.storage.get_valid_name(os.path.basename(filename)))
+
+ def generate_filename(self, instance, filename):
+ return os.path.join(self.get_directory_name(), self.get_filename(filename))
+
+ def save_form_data(self, instance, data):
+ if data:
+ setattr(instance, self.name, data)
+
+ def formfield(self, **kwargs):
+ defaults = {'form_class': forms.FileField, 'max_length': self.max_length}
+ # If a file has been provided previously, then the form doesn't require
+ # that a new file is provided this time.
+ # The code to mark the form field as not required is used by
+ # form_for_instance, but can probably be removed once form_for_instance
+ # is gone. ModelForm uses a different method to check for an existing file.
+ if 'initial' in kwargs:
+ defaults['required'] = False
+ defaults.update(kwargs)
+ return super(FileField, self).formfield(**defaults)
+
+class ImageFileDescriptor(FileDescriptor):
+ """
+ Just like the FileDescriptor, but for ImageFields. The only difference is
+ assigning the width/height to the width_field/height_field, if appropriate.
+ """
+ def __set__(self, instance, value):
+ previous_file = instance.__dict__.get(self.field.name)
+ super(ImageFileDescriptor, self).__set__(instance, value)
+
+ # To prevent recalculating image dimensions when we are instantiating
+ # an object from the database (bug #11084), only update dimensions if
+ # the field had a value before this assignment. Since the default
+ # value for FileField subclasses is an instance of field.attr_class,
+ # previous_file will only be None when we are called from
+ # Model.__init__(). The ImageField.update_dimension_fields method
+ # hooked up to the post_init signal handles the Model.__init__() cases.
+ # Assignment happening outside of Model.__init__() will trigger the
+ # update right here.
+ if previous_file is not None:
+ self.field.update_dimension_fields(instance, force=True)
+
+class ImageFieldFile(ImageFile, FieldFile):
+ def delete(self, save=True):
+ # Clear the image dimensions cache
+ if hasattr(self, '_dimensions_cache'):
+ del self._dimensions_cache
+ super(ImageFieldFile, self).delete(save)
+
+class ImageField(FileField):
+ attr_class = ImageFieldFile
+ descriptor_class = ImageFileDescriptor
+
+ def __init__(self, verbose_name=None, name=None, width_field=None, height_field=None, **kwargs):
+ self.width_field, self.height_field = width_field, height_field
+ FileField.__init__(self, verbose_name, name, **kwargs)
+
+ def contribute_to_class(self, cls, name):
+ super(ImageField, self).contribute_to_class(cls, name)
+ # Attach update_dimension_fields so that dimension fields declared
+ # after their corresponding image field don't stay cleared by
+ # Model.__init__, see bug #11196.
+ signals.post_init.connect(self.update_dimension_fields, sender=cls)
+
+ def update_dimension_fields(self, instance, force=False, *args, **kwargs):
+ """
+ Updates field's width and height fields, if defined.
+
+ This method is hooked up to model's post_init signal to update
+ dimensions after instantiating a model instance. However, dimensions
+ won't be updated if the dimensions fields are already populated. This
+ avoids unnecessary recalculation when loading an object from the
+ database.
+
+ Dimensions can be forced to update with force=True, which is how
+ ImageFileDescriptor.__set__ calls this method.
+ """
+ # Nothing to update if the field doesn't have have dimension fields.
+ has_dimension_fields = self.width_field or self.height_field
+ if not has_dimension_fields:
+ return
+
+ # getattr will call the ImageFileDescriptor's __get__ method, which
+ # coerces the assigned value into an instance of self.attr_class
+ # (ImageFieldFile in this case).
+ file = getattr(instance, self.attname)
+
+ # Nothing to update if we have no file and not being forced to update.
+ if not file and not force:
+ return
+
+ dimension_fields_filled = not(
+ (self.width_field and not getattr(instance, self.width_field))
+ or (self.height_field and not getattr(instance, self.height_field))
+ )
+ # When both dimension fields have values, we are most likely loading
+ # data from the database or updating an image field that already had
+ # an image stored. In the first case, we don't want to update the
+ # dimension fields because we are already getting their values from the
+ # database. In the second case, we do want to update the dimensions
+ # fields and will skip this return because force will be True since we
+ # were called from ImageFileDescriptor.__set__.
+ if dimension_fields_filled and not force:
+ return
+
+ # file should be an instance of ImageFieldFile or should be None.
+ if file:
+ width = file.width
+ height = file.height
+ else:
+ # No file, so clear dimensions fields.
+ width = None
+ height = None
+
+ # Update the width and height fields.
+ if self.width_field:
+ setattr(instance, self.width_field, width)
+ if self.height_field:
+ setattr(instance, self.height_field, height)
+
+ def formfield(self, **kwargs):
+ defaults = {'form_class': forms.ImageField}
+ defaults.update(kwargs)
+ return super(ImageField, self).formfield(**defaults)