Files @ 6b01e99bdb2b
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Location: kallithea/scripts/i18n

mads
inifile: make it possible for expand() to comment out settings without assigning new value

For completeness, when we already can create and update values, also make it
possible to delete. This fits nicely into the implementation. Potentiallly
"nice to have" but not used yet.

The ini file is a text file and it only really makes sense to set string
values. Intuitively, it makes sense that setting something to None means that
the old value should be commented out but no new value should be set. If we
want to set a value of "None", then specify "None" - not None.
#!/usr/bin/env python3

# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
# This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program.  If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.

import os
import shutil
import sys

import click

import i18n_utils


"""
Tool for maintenance of .po and .pot files

Normally, the i18n-related files contain for each translatable string a
reference to all the source code locations where this string is found. This
meta data is useful for translators to assess how strings are used, but is not
relevant for normal development nor for running Kallithea. Such meta data, or
derived data like kallithea.pot, will inherently be outdated, and create
unnecessary churn and repository growth, making it harder to spot actual and
important changes.
"""

@click.group()
@click.option('--debug/--no-debug', default=False)
def cli(debug):
    if (debug):
        i18n_utils.do_debug = True
    pass

@cli.command()
@click.argument('po_files', nargs=-1)
@click.option('--merge-pot-file', default=None)
@click.option('--strip/--no-strip', default=False)
def normalize_po_files(po_files, merge_pot_file, strip):
    """Normalize the specified .po and .pot files.

    By default, only actual translations and essential headers will be
    preserved, just as we want it in the main branches with minimal noise.

    If a .pot file is specified, the po files will instead be updated by
    running GNU msgmerge with this .pot file, thus updating source code
    references and preserving comments and outdated translations.
    """
    for po_file in po_files:
        i18n_utils._normalize_po_file(po_file, merge_pot_file=merge_pot_file, strip=strip)

@cli.command()
@click.argument('local')
@click.argument('base')
@click.argument('other')
@click.argument('output')
@click.option('--merge-pot-file', default=None)
@click.option('--strip/--no-strip', default=False)
def normalized_merge(local, base, other, output, merge_pot_file, strip):
    """Merge tool for use with 'hg merge/rebase/graft --tool'

    i18n files are partially manually editored original source of content, and
    partially automatically generated and updated. That create a lot of churn
    and often cause a lot of merge conflicts.

    To avoid that, this merge tool wrapper will normalize .po content before
    running the merge tool.

    By default, only actual translations and essential headers will be
    preserved, just as we want it in the main branches with minimal noise.

    If a .pot file is specified, the po files will instead be updated by
    running GNU msgmerge with this .pot file, thus updating source code
    references and preserving comments and outdated translations.

    Add the following to your user or repository-specific .hgrc file to use it:
        [merge-tools]
        i18n.executable = /path/to/scripts/i18n
        i18n.args = normalized-merge $local $base $other $output

    and then invoke merge/rebase/graft with the additional argument '--tool i18n'.
    """
    from mercurial import (
        context,
        simplemerge,
        ui as uimod,
    )

    print('i18n normalized-merge: normalizing and merging %s' % output)

    i18n_utils._normalize_po_file(local, merge_pot_file=merge_pot_file, strip=strip)
    i18n_utils._normalize_po_file(base, merge_pot_file=merge_pot_file, strip=strip)
    i18n_utils._normalize_po_file(other, merge_pot_file=merge_pot_file, strip=strip)
    i18n_utils._normalize_po_file(output, merge_pot_file=merge_pot_file, strip=strip)

    # simplemerge will write markers to 'local' if it fails, keep a copy without markers
    localkeep = local + '.keep'
    shutil.copyfile(local, localkeep)

    ret = simplemerge.simplemerge(uimod.ui.load(),
         context.arbitraryfilectx(local.encode('utf-8')),
         context.arbitraryfilectx(base.encode('utf-8')),
         context.arbitraryfilectx(other.encode('utf-8')),
         label=[b'local', b'other', b'base'],
         mode='merge',
    )
    shutil.copyfile(local, output)  # simplemerge wrote to local - either resolved or with conflict markers
    if ret:
        shutil.copyfile(localkeep, local)
        basekeep = base + '.keep'
        otherkeep = other + '.keep'
        shutil.copyfile(base, basekeep)
        shutil.copyfile(other, otherkeep)
        sys.stderr.write("Error: simple merge failed and %s is left with conflict markers. Resolve the conflicts, then use 'hg resolve -m'.\n" % output)
        sys.stderr.write('Resolve with e.g.: kdiff3 %s %s %s -o %s\n' % (basekeep, localkeep, otherkeep, output))
        sys.exit(ret)

    os.remove(localkeep)

@cli.command()
@click.argument('file1')
@click.argument('file2')
@click.option('--merge-pot-file', default=None)
@click.option('--strip/--no-strip', default=False)
def normalized_diff(file1, file2, merge_pot_file, strip):
    """Compare two files while transparently normalizing them."""
    sys.exit(i18n_utils._normalized_diff(file1, file2, merge_pot_file=merge_pot_file, strip=strip))

if __name__ == '__main__':
    cli()