Injectively, deterministically maps objects to hashable, immutable objects
Project description
Injectively, deterministically maps objects to hashable, immutable objects
frozenset is to set as freeze is to Any.
That is, type(a) is type(b) and a != b implies freeze(a) != freeze(b).
Moreover, this function is deterministic, so it can be used to compare states across subsequent process invocations (with the same interpreter major and minor version).
>>> obj = [1, 2, 3, {4, 5, 6}, object()] >>> hash(obj) Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> TypeError: unhashable type: 'list'
>>> from charmonium.freeze import freeze >>> frozen_obj = freeze(obj) >>> frozen_obj (1, 2, 3, frozenset({4, 5, 6}), ('args', 'object'))
It even works on custom types.
>>> # Make a custom type >>> class Struct: ... def frobnicate(self): ... print(123) >>> s = Struct() >>> s.attr = 4 >>> freeze(s) ('args', 'Struct', 'state', (('attr', 4),))
And methods, functions, lambdas, etc.
>>> freeze(lambda x: x + 123) (('code', (('name', '<lambda>'), ('varnames', ('x',)), ('constants', (None, 123)), ('bytecode', b'|\x00d\x01\x17\x00S\x00'))),) >>> import functools >>> freeze(functools.partial(print, 123)) ('constructor', 'partial', 'args', 'print', 'state', ('print', (123,), (), None)) >>> freeze(Struct.frobnicate) (('code', (('name', 'frobnicate'), ('varnames', ('self',)), ('constants', (None, 123)), ('bytecode', b't\x00d\x01\x83\x01\x01\x00d\x00S\x00'))),)
If the source code of Struct.frobnicate changes between successive invocations, then the freeze value will change. This is useful for caching unchanged functions.
Special cases
freeze on functions returns their bytecode, constants, and closure-vars. This means that freeze_state(f) == freeze_state(g) implies f(x) == g(x). The remarkable thing is that this is true across subsequent invocations of the same process. If the user edits the script and changes the function, then it’s freeze_state will change too.
freeze on objects returns the objects that would be used by pickle from __reduce__, __reduce_ex__, __getnewargs__, __getnewargs_ex__, and __getstate__. The simplest of these to customize your object __gestate__. See the pickle documentation for details.
In the cases where __getstate__ is already defined for pickle, and this definition is not suitable for freeze_state, one may override this with __getfrozenstate__ which takes precedence.
Although, this function is not infallible for user-defined types; I will do my best, but sometimes these laws will be violated. These cases include:
Cases where __eq__ makes objects equal despite differing attributes or inversely make objects inequal despite equal attributes.
This can be mitigated if __getstate__ or __getfrozenstate__
Installing
If you don’t have pip installed, see the pip install guide.
$ pip install charmonium.freeze
See CONTRIBUTING.md for instructions on setting up a development environment.
Debugging
Use the following lines to see how freeze decomposes an object. It shows the object tree that freeze walks until it reaches primitive values on the leaves
import logging
import os
logger = logging.getLogger("charmonium.freeze")
logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
fh = logging.FileHandler("freeze.log")
fh.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
fh.setFormatter(logging.Formatter("%(message)s"))
logger.addHandler(fh)
logger.debug("Program %d", os.getpid())
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