These files are a subset of the python-2.7.2.tgz distribution from python.org. Changed files from PyMod-2.7.2 have been copied into the corresponding directories of this tree, replacing the original files in the distribution. Signed-off-by: daryl.mcdaniel@intel.com git-svn-id: https://edk2.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/edk2/trunk/edk2@13197 6f19259b-4bc3-4df7-8a09-765794883524
		
			
				
	
	
		
			381 lines
		
	
	
		
			14 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Python
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			381 lines
		
	
	
		
			14 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Python
		
	
	
	
	
	
| #! /usr/bin/env python
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| 
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| """fixdiv - tool to fix division operators.
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| 
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| To use this tool, first run `python -Qwarnall yourscript.py 2>warnings'.
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| This runs the script `yourscript.py' while writing warning messages
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| about all uses of the classic division operator to the file
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| `warnings'.  The warnings look like this:
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| 
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|   <file>:<line>: DeprecationWarning: classic <type> division
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| 
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| The warnings are written to stderr, so you must use `2>' for the I/O
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| redirect.  I know of no way to redirect stderr on Windows in a DOS
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| box, so you will have to modify the script to set sys.stderr to some
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| kind of log file if you want to do this on Windows.
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| 
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| The warnings are not limited to the script; modules imported by the
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| script may also trigger warnings.  In fact a useful technique is to
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| write a test script specifically intended to exercise all code in a
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| particular module or set of modules.
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| 
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| Then run `python fixdiv.py warnings'.  This first reads the warnings,
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| looking for classic division warnings, and sorts them by file name and
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| line number.  Then, for each file that received at least one warning,
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| it parses the file and tries to match the warnings up to the division
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| operators found in the source code.  If it is successful, it writes
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| its findings to stdout, preceded by a line of dashes and a line of the
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| form:
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| 
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|   Index: <file>
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| 
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| If the only findings found are suggestions to change a / operator into
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| a // operator, the output is acceptable input for the Unix 'patch'
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| program.
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| 
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| Here are the possible messages on stdout (N stands for a line number):
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| 
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| - A plain-diff-style change ('NcN', a line marked by '<', a line
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|   containing '---', and a line marked by '>'):
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| 
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|   A / operator was found that should be changed to //.  This is the
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|   recommendation when only int and/or long arguments were seen.
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| 
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| - 'True division / operator at line N' and a line marked by '=':
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| 
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|   A / operator was found that can remain unchanged.  This is the
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|   recommendation when only float and/or complex arguments were seen.
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| 
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| - 'Ambiguous / operator (..., ...) at line N', line marked by '?':
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| 
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|   A / operator was found for which int or long as well as float or
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|   complex arguments were seen.  This is highly unlikely; if it occurs,
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|   you may have to restructure the code to keep the classic semantics,
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|   or maybe you don't care about the classic semantics.
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| 
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| - 'No conclusive evidence on line N', line marked by '*':
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| 
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|   A / operator was found for which no warnings were seen.  This could
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|   be code that was never executed, or code that was only executed
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|   with user-defined objects as arguments.  You will have to
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|   investigate further.  Note that // can be overloaded separately from
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|   /, using __floordiv__.  True division can also be separately
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|   overloaded, using __truediv__.  Classic division should be the same
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|   as either of those.  (XXX should I add a warning for division on
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|   user-defined objects, to disambiguate this case from code that was
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|   never executed?)
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| 
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| - 'Phantom ... warnings for line N', line marked by '*':
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| 
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|   A warning was seen for a line not containing a / operator.  The most
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|   likely cause is a warning about code executed by 'exec' or eval()
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|   (see note below), or an indirect invocation of the / operator, for
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|   example via the div() function in the operator module.  It could
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|   also be caused by a change to the file between the time the test
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|   script was run to collect warnings and the time fixdiv was run.
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| 
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| - 'More than one / operator in line N'; or
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|   'More than one / operator per statement in lines N-N':
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| 
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|   The scanner found more than one / operator on a single line, or in a
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|   statement split across multiple lines.  Because the warnings
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|   framework doesn't (and can't) show the offset within the line, and
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|   the code generator doesn't always give the correct line number for
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|   operations in a multi-line statement, we can't be sure whether all
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|   operators in the statement were executed.  To be on the safe side,
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|   by default a warning is issued about this case.  In practice, these
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|   cases are usually safe, and the -m option suppresses these warning.
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| 
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| - 'Can't find the / operator in line N', line marked by '*':
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| 
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|   This really shouldn't happen.  It means that the tokenize module
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|   reported a '/' operator but the line it returns didn't contain a '/'
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|   character at the indicated position.
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| 
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| - 'Bad warning for line N: XYZ', line marked by '*':
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| 
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|   This really shouldn't happen.  It means that a 'classic XYZ
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|   division' warning was read with XYZ being something other than
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|   'int', 'long', 'float', or 'complex'.
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| 
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| Notes:
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| 
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| - The augmented assignment operator /= is handled the same way as the
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|   / operator.
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| 
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| - This tool never looks at the // operator; no warnings are ever
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|   generated for use of this operator.
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| 
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| - This tool never looks at the / operator when a future division
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|   statement is in effect; no warnings are generated in this case, and
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|   because the tool only looks at files for which at least one classic
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|   division warning was seen, it will never look at files containing a
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|   future division statement.
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| 
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| - Warnings may be issued for code not read from a file, but executed
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|   using an exec statement or the eval() function.  These may have
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|   <string> in the filename position, in which case the fixdiv script
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|   will attempt and fail to open a file named '<string>' and issue a
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|   warning about this failure; or these may be reported as 'Phantom'
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|   warnings (see above).  You're on your own to deal with these.  You
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|   could make all recommended changes and add a future division
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|   statement to all affected files, and then re-run the test script; it
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|   should not issue any warnings.  If there are any, and you have a
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|   hard time tracking down where they are generated, you can use the
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|   -Werror option to force an error instead of a first warning,
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|   generating a traceback.
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| 
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| - The tool should be run from the same directory as that from which
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|   the original script was run, otherwise it won't be able to open
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|   files given by relative pathnames.
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| """
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| 
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| import sys
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| import getopt
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| import re
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| import tokenize
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| 
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| multi_ok = 0
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| 
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| def main():
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|     try:
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|         opts, args = getopt.getopt(sys.argv[1:], "hm")
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|     except getopt.error, msg:
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|         usage(msg)
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|         return 2
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|     for o, a in opts:
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|         if o == "-h":
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|             print __doc__
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|             return
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|         if o == "-m":
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|             global multi_ok
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|             multi_ok = 1
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|     if not args:
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|         usage("at least one file argument is required")
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|         return 2
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|     if args[1:]:
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|         sys.stderr.write("%s: extra file arguments ignored\n", sys.argv[0])
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|     warnings = readwarnings(args[0])
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|     if warnings is None:
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|         return 1
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|     files = warnings.keys()
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|     if not files:
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|         print "No classic division warnings read from", args[0]
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|         return
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|     files.sort()
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|     exit = None
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|     for filename in files:
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|         x = process(filename, warnings[filename])
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|         exit = exit or x
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|     return exit
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| 
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| def usage(msg):
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|     sys.stderr.write("%s: %s\n" % (sys.argv[0], msg))
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|     sys.stderr.write("Usage: %s [-m] warnings\n" % sys.argv[0])
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|     sys.stderr.write("Try `%s -h' for more information.\n" % sys.argv[0])
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| 
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| PATTERN = ("^(.+?):(\d+): DeprecationWarning: "
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|            "classic (int|long|float|complex) division$")
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| 
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| def readwarnings(warningsfile):
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|     prog = re.compile(PATTERN)
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|     try:
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|         f = open(warningsfile)
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|     except IOError, msg:
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|         sys.stderr.write("can't open: %s\n" % msg)
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|         return
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|     warnings = {}
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|     while 1:
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|         line = f.readline()
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|         if not line:
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|             break
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|         m = prog.match(line)
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|         if not m:
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|             if line.find("division") >= 0:
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|                 sys.stderr.write("Warning: ignored input " + line)
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|             continue
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|         filename, lineno, what = m.groups()
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|         list = warnings.get(filename)
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|         if list is None:
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|             warnings[filename] = list = []
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|         list.append((int(lineno), intern(what)))
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|     f.close()
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|     return warnings
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| 
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| def process(filename, list):
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|     print "-"*70
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|     assert list # if this fails, readwarnings() is broken
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|     try:
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|         fp = open(filename)
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|     except IOError, msg:
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|         sys.stderr.write("can't open: %s\n" % msg)
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|         return 1
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|     print "Index:", filename
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|     f = FileContext(fp)
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|     list.sort()
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|     index = 0 # list[:index] has been processed, list[index:] is still to do
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|     g = tokenize.generate_tokens(f.readline)
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|     while 1:
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|         startlineno, endlineno, slashes = lineinfo = scanline(g)
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|         if startlineno is None:
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|             break
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|         assert startlineno <= endlineno is not None
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|         orphans = []
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|         while index < len(list) and list[index][0] < startlineno:
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|             orphans.append(list[index])
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|             index += 1
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|         if orphans:
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|             reportphantomwarnings(orphans, f)
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|         warnings = []
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|         while index < len(list) and list[index][0] <= endlineno:
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|             warnings.append(list[index])
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|             index += 1
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|         if not slashes and not warnings:
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|             pass
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|         elif slashes and not warnings:
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|             report(slashes, "No conclusive evidence")
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|         elif warnings and not slashes:
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|             reportphantomwarnings(warnings, f)
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|         else:
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|             if len(slashes) > 1:
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|                 if not multi_ok:
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|                     rows = []
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|                     lastrow = None
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|                     for (row, col), line in slashes:
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|                         if row == lastrow:
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|                             continue
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|                         rows.append(row)
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|                         lastrow = row
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|                     assert rows
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|                     if len(rows) == 1:
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|                         print "*** More than one / operator in line", rows[0]
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|                     else:
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|                         print "*** More than one / operator per statement",
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|                         print "in lines %d-%d" % (rows[0], rows[-1])
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|             intlong = []
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|             floatcomplex = []
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|             bad = []
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|             for lineno, what in warnings:
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|                 if what in ("int", "long"):
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|                     intlong.append(what)
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|                 elif what in ("float", "complex"):
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|                     floatcomplex.append(what)
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|                 else:
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|                     bad.append(what)
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|             lastrow = None
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|             for (row, col), line in slashes:
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|                 if row == lastrow:
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|                     continue
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|                 lastrow = row
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|                 line = chop(line)
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|                 if line[col:col+1] != "/":
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|                     print "*** Can't find the / operator in line %d:" % row
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|                     print "*", line
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|                     continue
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|                 if bad:
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|                     print "*** Bad warning for line %d:" % row, bad
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|                     print "*", line
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|                 elif intlong and not floatcomplex:
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|                     print "%dc%d" % (row, row)
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|                     print "<", line
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|                     print "---"
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|                     print ">", line[:col] + "/" + line[col:]
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|                 elif floatcomplex and not intlong:
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|                     print "True division / operator at line %d:" % row
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|                     print "=", line
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|                 elif intlong and floatcomplex:
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|                     print "*** Ambiguous / operator (%s, %s) at line %d:" % (
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|                         "|".join(intlong), "|".join(floatcomplex), row)
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|                     print "?", line
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|     fp.close()
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| 
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| def reportphantomwarnings(warnings, f):
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|     blocks = []
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|     lastrow = None
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|     lastblock = None
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|     for row, what in warnings:
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|         if row != lastrow:
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|             lastblock = [row]
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|             blocks.append(lastblock)
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|         lastblock.append(what)
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|     for block in blocks:
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|         row = block[0]
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|         whats = "/".join(block[1:])
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|         print "*** Phantom %s warnings for line %d:" % (whats, row)
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|         f.report(row, mark="*")
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| 
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| def report(slashes, message):
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|     lastrow = None
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|     for (row, col), line in slashes:
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|         if row != lastrow:
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|             print "*** %s on line %d:" % (message, row)
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|             print "*", chop(line)
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|             lastrow = row
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| 
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| class FileContext:
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|     def __init__(self, fp, window=5, lineno=1):
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|         self.fp = fp
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|         self.window = 5
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|         self.lineno = 1
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|         self.eoflookahead = 0
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|         self.lookahead = []
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|         self.buffer = []
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|     def fill(self):
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|         while len(self.lookahead) < self.window and not self.eoflookahead:
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|             line = self.fp.readline()
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|             if not line:
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|                 self.eoflookahead = 1
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|                 break
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|             self.lookahead.append(line)
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|     def readline(self):
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|         self.fill()
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|         if not self.lookahead:
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|             return ""
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|         line = self.lookahead.pop(0)
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|         self.buffer.append(line)
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|         self.lineno += 1
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|         return line
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|     def truncate(self):
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|         del self.buffer[-window:]
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|     def __getitem__(self, index):
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|         self.fill()
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|         bufstart = self.lineno - len(self.buffer)
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|         lookend = self.lineno + len(self.lookahead)
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|         if bufstart <= index < self.lineno:
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|             return self.buffer[index - bufstart]
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|         if self.lineno <= index < lookend:
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|             return self.lookahead[index - self.lineno]
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|         raise KeyError
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|     def report(self, first, last=None, mark="*"):
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|         if last is None:
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|             last = first
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|         for i in range(first, last+1):
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|             try:
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|                 line = self[first]
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|             except KeyError:
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|                 line = "<missing line>"
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|             print mark, chop(line)
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| 
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| def scanline(g):
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|     slashes = []
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|     startlineno = None
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|     endlineno = None
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|     for type, token, start, end, line in g:
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|         endlineno = end[0]
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|         if startlineno is None:
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|             startlineno = endlineno
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|         if token in ("/", "/="):
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|             slashes.append((start, line))
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|         if type == tokenize.NEWLINE:
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|             break
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|     return startlineno, endlineno, slashes
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| 
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| def chop(line):
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|     if line.endswith("\n"):
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|         return line[:-1]
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|     else:
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|         return line
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| 
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| if __name__ == "__main__":
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|     sys.exit(main())
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