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An alternative to mixin-based extension of classes.

Project description

Plumbing is an alternative to mixin-based extension of classes. In motivation an incomplete list of limitations and/or design choices of python’s subclassing are given along with plumber’s solutions for them. The plumbing system is described in detail with code examples. Some design choices and ongoing discussions are explained. Finally, in miscellanea you find nomenclature, coverage report, list of contributors, changes and some todos. All non-experimental features are fully test covered.

Motivation: limitations of subclassing

Plumbing is an alternative to mixin-based extension of classes, motivated by limitations and/or design choice of python’s subclassing:

Control of precedence only through order of mixins

Mixins are commonly used to extend classes with pre-defined behaviours: an attribute on the first mixin overwrites attributes with the same name on all following mixins and the base class being extended:

>>> class Mixin1(object):
...     a = 1

>>> class Mixin2(object):
...     a = 2
...     b = 2

>>> Base = dict
>>> class MixedClass(Mixin1, Mixin2, Base):
...     pass

>>> MixedClass.a
1
>>> MixedClass.b
2
>>> MixedClass.keys
<method 'keys' of 'dict' objects>

There is no way for a mixin later in the chain to take precedence over an earlier one.

Solution: plumber provides 3 decorators to enable finer control of precedence (default, extend, finalize).

Impossible to provide default values to fill gaps on a base class

A dictionary-like storage at least needs to provide __getitem__, __setitem__, __delitem__ and __iter__, all other methods of a dictionary can be build upon these. A mixin that turns storages into full dictionaries needs to be able to provide default methods, taken if the base class does not provide a (more efficient) implementation.

Solution: plumber provides the default decorator to enable such defaults.

super-chains are not verified during class creation

It is possible to build a chain of methods using super: Mixin1 turns the key lowercase before passing it on, Mixin2 multiplies the result by 2 before returning it and both are chatty about start/stop:

>>> class Mixin1(object):
...     def __getitem__(self, key):
...         print "Mixin1 start"
...         key = key.lower()
...         ret = super(Mixin1, self).__getitem__(key)
...         print "Mixin1 stop"
...         return ret

>>> class Mixin2(object):
...     def __getitem__(self, key):
...         print "Mixin2 start"
...         ret = super(Mixin2, self).__getitem__(key)
...         ret = 2 * ret
...         print "Mixin2 stop"
...         return ret

>>> Base = dict
>>> class MixedClass(Mixin1, Mixin2, Base):
...     pass

>>> mc = MixedClass()
>>> mc['abc'] = 6
>>> mc['ABC']
Mixin1 start
Mixin2 start
Mixin2 stop
Mixin1 stop
12

dict.__getitem__ forms the endpoint of the chain as it returns a value without delegating to a method later in the chain (using super). If there is no endpoint an AttributeError is raised during runtime, not during class creation:

>>> class Mixin1(object):
...     def foo(self):
...         super(Mixin1, self).foo()

>>> class MixedClass(Mixin1, Base):
...     pass

>>> mc = MixedClass()
>>> mc.foo()
Traceback (most recent call last):
  ...
AttributeError: 'super' object has no attribute 'foo'

Solution: Plumber provides the plumb decorator to build similar chains using nested closures. These are create and verified during class creation.

No conditional super-chains

A mixin with subclassing needs to fit exactly the base class, there is no way to conditionally hook into method calls depending on whether the base class provides a method.

Solution: Plumber provides the plumbifexists decorator that behaves like plumb, if there is an endpoint available.

Docstrings are not accumulated

A class’ docstring that uses mixins is not build from the docstrings of the mixins.

Solution: Plumber enables plumbing of docstrings using a special marker __plbnext__, which is replaced with the docstring of the next “mixin” Without the marker, docstrings are concatenated.

The plumbing system

The plumber metaclass creates plumbing classes according to instructions found on plumbing parts. First, all instructions are gathered, then they are applied in two stages: stage1: extension and stage2: pipelines, docstrings and optional zope.interfaces.

Plumbing parts provide instructions

Plumbing parts correspond to mixins, but are more powerful and flexible. A plumbing part needs to inherit from plumber.Part and declares attributes with instructions on how to use them, here by example of the default instruction (more later):

>>> from plumber import Part
>>> from plumber import default

>>> class Part1(Part):
...     a = default(True)
...
...     @default
...     def foo(self):
...         return 42

>>> class Part2(Part):
...     @default
...     @property
...     def bar(self):
...         return 17

The instructions are given as part of assignments (a = default(None)) or as decorators (@default).

A plumbing declaration defines the plumber as metaclass and one or more plumbing parts to be processed from left to right. Further it may declare attributes like every normal class, they will be treated as implicit finalize instructions (see Stage 1: Extension):

>>> from plumber import plumber

>>> Base = dict
>>> class Plumbing(Base):
...     __metaclass__ = plumber
...     __plumbing__ = Part1, Part2
...
...     def foobar(self):
...         return 5

The result is a plumbing class created according to the plumbing declaration:

>>> plb = Plumbing()
>>> plb.a
True
>>> plb.foo()
42
>>> plb.bar
17
>>> plb.foobar()
5
>>> plb['a'] = 1
>>> plb['a']
1

A plumbing class can be subclassed like normal classes:

>>> class Sub(Plumbing):
...     a = 'Sub'

>>> Sub.a
'Sub'
>>> Sub().foo()
42
>>> Sub().bar
17
>>> Sub().foobar()
5

The plumber gathers instructions

A plumbing declaration provides a list of parts via the __plumbing__ attribute. Parts provide instructions to be applied in two stages:

stage1
  • extension via default, extend and finalize, the result of this stage is the base for stage2.

stage2
  • creation of pipelines via plumb and plumbifexists

  • plumbing of docstrings

  • implemented interfaces from zope.interface, iff available

The plumber walks the part list from left to right (part order). On its way it gathers instructions onto stacks, sorted by stage and attribute name. A history of all instructions is kept:

>>> pprint(Plumbing.__plumbing_stacks__)
{'history':
  [<_implements '__interfaces__' of None payload=()>,
   <default 'a' of <class 'Part1'> payload=True>,
   <default 'foo' of <class 'Part1'> payload=<function foo at 0x...>>,
   <_implements '__interfaces__' of None payload=()>,
   <default 'bar' of <class 'Part2'> payload=<property object at 0x...>>],
 'stages':
   {'stage1':
     {'a': [<default 'a' of <class 'Part1'> payload=True>],
      'bar': [<default 'bar' of <class 'Part2'> payload=<property ...
      'foo': [<default 'foo' of <class 'Part1'> payload=<function foo ...
    'stage2':
     {'__interfaces__': [<_implements '__interfaces__' of None payload=()...

Before putting a new instruction onto a stack, it is compared with the latest instruction on the stack. It is either taken as is, discarded, merged or a PlumbingCollision is raised. This is detailed in the following sections.

After all instructions are gathered onto the stacks, they are applied in two stages taking declarations on the plumbing class and base classes into account.

The result of the first stage is the base for the application of the second stage.

Stage 1: Extension

The extension stage creates endpoints for the pipelines created in stage 2. If no pipeline uses the endpoint, it will just live on as a normal attribute in the plumbing class’ dictionary.

The extension decorators:

finalize

finalize is the strongest extension instruction. It will override declarations on base classes and all other extension instructions (extend and default). Attributes declared as part of the plumbing declaration are implicit finalize declarations. Two finalize for one attribute name will collide and raise a PlumbingCollision during class creation.

extend

extend is weaker than finalize and overrides declarations on base classes and default declarations. Two extend instructions for the same attribute name do not collide, instead the first one will be used.

default

default is the weakest extension instruction. It will not even override declarations of base classes. The first default takes precendence over later defaults.

Interaction: finalize, plumbing declaration and base classes

In code:

>>> from plumber import finalize

>>> class Part1(Part):
...     N = finalize('Part1')
...

>>> class Part2(Part):
...     M = finalize('Part2')

>>> class Base(object):
...     K = 'Base'

>>> class Plumbing(Base):
...     __metaclass__ = plumber
...     __plumbing__ = Part1, Part2
...     L = 'Plumbing'

>>> for x in ['K', 'L', 'M', 'N']:
...     print "%s from %s" % (x, getattr(Plumbing, x))
K from Base
L from Plumbing
M from Part2
N from Part1

summary:

  • K-Q: attributes defined by parts, plumbing class and base classes

  • f: finalize declaration

  • x: declaration on plumbing class or base class

  • ?: base class declaration is irrelevant

  • Y: chosen end point

  • collision: indicates an invalid combination, that raises a PlumbingCollision

Attr

Part1

Part2

Plumbing

Base

ok?

K

x

L

x

?

M

f

?

N

f

?

O

f

x

?

collision

P

f

x

?

collision

Q

f

f

?

collision

collisions:

>>> class Part1(Part):
...     O = finalize(False)

>>> class Plumbing(object):
...     __metaclass__ = plumber
...     __plumbing__ = Part1
...     O = True
Traceback (most recent call last):
  ...
PlumbingCollision:
    Plumbing class
  with:
    <finalize 'O' of <class 'Part1'> payload=False>

>>> class Part2(Part):
...     P = finalize(False)

>>> class Plumbing(object):
...     __metaclass__ = plumber
...     __plumbing__ = Part2
...     P = True
Traceback (most recent call last):
  ...
PlumbingCollision:
    Plumbing class
  with:
    <finalize 'P' of <class 'Part2'> payload=False>

>>> class Part1(Part):
...     Q = finalize(False)

>>> class Part2(Part):
...     Q = finalize(True)

>>> class Plumbing(object):
...     __metaclass__ = plumber
...     __plumbing__ = Part1, Part2
Traceback (most recent call last):
  ...
PlumbingCollision:
    <finalize 'Q' of <class 'Part1'> payload=False>
  with:
    <finalize 'Q' of <class 'Part2'> payload=True>

Interaction: extend, plumbing declaration and base classes

in code:

>>> from plumber import extend

>>> class Part1(Part):
...     K = extend('Part1')
...     M = extend('Part1')

>>> class Part2(Part):
...     K = extend('Part2')
...     L = extend('Part2')
...     M = extend('Part2')

>>> class Base(object):
...     K = 'Base'
...     L = 'Base'
...     M = 'Base'

>>> class Plumbing(Base):
...     __metaclass__ = plumber
...     __plumbing__ = Part1, Part2
...     K = 'Plumbing'

>>> for x in ['K', 'L', 'M']:
...     print "%s from %s" % (x, getattr(Plumbing, x))
K from Plumbing
L from Part2
M from Part1

summary:

  • K-M: attributes defined by parts, plumbing class and base classes

  • e: extend declaration

  • x: declaration on plumbing class or base class

  • ?: base class declaration is irrelevant

  • Y: chosen end point

Attr

Part1

Part2

Plumbing

Base

K

e

e

x

?

L

e

?

M

e

e

?

Interaction: default, plumbing declaration and base class

in code:

>>> class Part1(Part):
...     N = default('Part1')

>>> class Part2(Part):
...     K = default('Part2')
...     L = default('Part2')
...     M = default('Part2')
...     N = default('Part2')

>>> class Base(object):
...     K = 'Base'
...     L = 'Base'

>>> class Plumbing(Base):
...     __metaclass__ = plumber
...     __plumbing__ = Part1, Part2
...     L = 'Plumbing'

>>> for x in ['K', 'L', 'M', 'N']:
...     print "%s from %s" % (x, getattr(Plumbing, x))
K from Base
L from Plumbing
M from Part2
N from Part1

summary:

  • K-N: attributes defined by parts, plumbing class and base classes

  • d = default declaration

  • x = declaration on plumbing class or base class

  • ? = base class declaration is irrelevant

  • Y = chosen end point

Attr

Part1

Part2

Plumbing

Base

K

d

x

L

d

x

?

M

d

N

d

d

Interaction: finalize wins over extend

in code:

>>> class Part1(Part):
...     K = extend('Part1')
...     L = finalize('Part1')

>>> class Part2(Part):
...     K = finalize('Part2')
...     L = extend('Part2')

>>> class Base(object):
...     K = 'Base'
...     L = 'Base'

>>> class Plumbing(Base):
...     __metaclass__ = plumber
...     __plumbing__ = Part1, Part2

>>> for x in ['K', 'L']:
...     print "%s from %s" % (x, getattr(Plumbing, x))
K from Part2
L from Part1

summary:

  • K-L: attributes defined by parts, plumbing class and base classes

  • e = extend declaration

  • f = finalize declaration

  • ? = base class declaration is irrelevant

  • Y = chosen end point

Attr

Part1

Part2

Plumbing

Base

K

e

f

?

L

f

e

?

Interaction: finalize wins over default:

in code:

>>> class Part1(Part):
...     K = default('Part1')
...     L = finalize('Part1')

>>> class Part2(Part):
...     K = finalize('Part2')
...     L = default('Part2')

>>> class Base(object):
...     K = 'Base'
...     L = 'Base'

>>> class Plumbing(Base):
...     __metaclass__ = plumber
...     __plumbing__ = Part1, Part2

>>> for x in ['K', 'L']:
...     print "%s from %s" % (x, getattr(Plumbing, x))
K from Part2
L from Part1

summary:

  • K-L: attributes defined by parts, plumbing class and base classes

  • d = default declaration

  • f = finalize declaration

  • ? = base class declaration is irrelevant

  • Y = chosen end point

Attr

Part1

Part2

Plumbing

Base

K

d

f

?

L

f

d

?

Interaction: extend wins over default

in code:

>>> class Part1(Part):
...     K = default('Part1')
...     L = extend('Part1')

>>> class Part2(Part):
...     K = extend('Part2')
...     L = default('Part2')

>>> class Base(object):
...     K = 'Base'
...     L = 'Base'

>>> class Plumbing(Base):
...     __metaclass__ = plumber
...     __plumbing__ = Part1, Part2

>>> for x in ['K', 'L']:
...     print "%s from %s" % (x, getattr(Plumbing, x))
K from Part2
L from Part1

summary:

  • K-L: attributes defined by parts, plumbing class and base classes

  • d = default declaration

  • e = extend declaration

  • ? = base class declaration is irrelevant

  • Y = chosen end point

Attr

Part1

Part2

Plumbing

Base

K

d

e

?

L

e

d

?

Stage 2: Pipeline, docstring and zope.interface instructions

In stage1 plumbing class attributes were set, which can serve as endpoints for plumbing pipelines that are build in stage2. Plumbing pipelines correspond to super-chains. Docstrings of parts, methods in a pipeline and properties in a pipeline are accumulated. Plumber is zope.interface aware and takes implemeneted interfaces from parts, if it can be imported.

Plumbing Pipelines in general

Elements for plumbing pipelines are declared with the plumb and plumbifexists decorators:

plumb

Marks a method to be used as part of a plumbing pipeline. The signature of such a plumbing method is def foo(_next, self, *args, **kw). Via _next it is passed the next plumbing method to be called. self is an instance of the plumbing class, not the part.

plumbifexists

Like plumb, but only used if an endpoint exists.

The user of a plumbing class does not know which _next to pass. Therefore, after the pipelines are built, an entrance method is generated for each pipe, that wraps the first plumbing method passing it the correct _next. Each _next method is an entrance to the rest of the pipeline.

The pipelines are build in part order, skipping parts that do not define a pipeline element with the same attribute name:

+---+-------+-------+-------+----------+
|   | Part1 | Part2 | Part3 | ENDPOINT |
+---+-------+-------+-------+----------+
|   |    ----------------------->      |
| E |   x   |       |       |    x     |
| N |    <-----------------------      |
+ T +-------+-------+-------+----------+
| R |    ------> --------------->      |
| A |   y   |   y   |       |    y     |
| N |    <------ <---------------      |
+ C +-------+-------+-------+----------+
| E |       |       |    ------->      |
| S |       |       |   z   |    z     |
|   |       |       |    <-------      |
+---+-------+-------+-------+----------+

Method pipelines

Two plumbing parts and a dict as base class. Part1 lowercases keys before passing them on, Part2 multiplies results before returning them:

>>> from plumber import plumb

>>> class Part1(Part):
...     @plumb
...     def __getitem__(_next, self, key):
...         print "Part1 start"
...         key = key.lower()
...         ret = _next(self, key)
...         print "Part1 stop"
...         return ret

>>> class Part2(Part):
...     @plumb
...     def __getitem__(_next, self, key):
...         print "Part2 start"
...         ret = 2 * _next(self, key)
...         print "Part2 stop"
...         return ret

>>> Base = dict
>>> class Plumbing(Base):
...     __metaclass__ = plumber
...     __plumbing__ = Part1, Part2

>>> plb = Plumbing()
>>> plb['abc'] = 6
>>> plb['AbC']
Part1 start
Part2 start
Part2 stop
Part1 stop
12

Plumbing pipelines need endpoints. If no endpoint is available an AttributeError is raised:

>>> class Part1(Part):
...     @plumb
...     def foo(_next, self):
...         pass

>>> class Plumbing(object):
...     __metaclass__ = plumber
...     __plumbing__ = Part1
Traceback (most recent call last):
  ...
AttributeError: type object 'Plumbing' has no attribute 'foo'

If no endpoint is available and a part does not care about that, plumbifexists can be used to only plumb if an endpoint is available:

>>> from plumber import plumbifexists

>>> class Part1(Part):
...     @plumbifexists
...     def foo(_next, self):
...         pass
...
...     @plumbifexists
...     def bar(_next, self):
...         return 2 * _next(self)

>>> class Plumbing(object):
...     __metaclass__ = plumber
...     __plumbing__ = Part1
...
...     def bar(self):
...         return 6

>>> hasattr(Plumbing, 'foo')
False
>>> Plumbing().bar()
12

This enables one implementation of a certain behaviour, e.g. sending events for dictionaries, to be used for readwrite dictionaries that implement __getitem__ and __setitem__ and readonly dictionaries, that only implement __getitem__ but no __setitem__.

Property pipelines

Plumbing of properties is experimental and might or might not do what you expect:

>>> class Part1(Part):
...     @plumb
...     @property
...     def foo(_next, self):
...         return 2 * _next(self)

>>> class Plumbing(object):
...     __metaclass__ = plumber
...     __plumbing__ = Part1
...
...     @property
...     def foo(self):
...         return 3

>>> plb = Plumbing()
>>> plb.foo
6

It is possible to extend a property with so far unset getter/setter/deleter. The feature is experimental, might not fit the expected behavior and probably about to change:

>>> class Part1(Part):
...     @plumb
...     @property
...     def foo(_next, self):
...         return 2 * _next(self)

>>> class Part2(Part):
...     def set_foo(self, value):
...         self._foo = value
...     foo = plumb(property(
...         None,
...         extend(set_foo),
...         ))

>>> class Plumbing(object):
...     __metaclass__ = plumber
...     __plumbing__ = Part1, Part2
...
...     @property
...     def foo(self):
...         return self._foo

>>> plb = Plumbing()
>>> plb.foo = 4
>>> plb.foo
8

Mixing methods and properties within the same pipeline is not possible

Within a pipeline all elements need to be of the same type, it is not possible to mix properties with methods:

>>> from plumber import plumb

>>> class Part1(Part):
...     @plumb
...     def foo(_next, self):
...         return _next(self)

>>> class Plumbing(object):
...     __metaclass__ = plumber
...     __plumbing__ = Part1
...
...     @property
...     def foo(self):
...         return 5
Traceback (most recent call last):
  ...
PlumbingCollision:
    <plumb 'foo' of <class 'Part1'> payload=<function foo at 0x...>>
  with:
    <class 'Plumbing'>

docstrings of classes, methods and properties

Normal docstrings of the plumbing declaration and the part classes, plumbed methods and plumbed properties are joined by newlines starting with the plumbing declaration and followed by the parts in reverse order:

>>> class P1(Part):
...     """P1
...     """
...     @plumb
...     def foo(self):
...         """P1.foo
...         """
...     bar = plumb(property(None, None, None, "P1.bar"))

>>> class P2(Part):
...     @extend
...     def foo(self):
...         """P2.foo
...         """
...     bar = plumb(property(None, None, None, "P2.bar"))

>>> class Plumbing(object):
...     """Plumbing
...     """
...     __metaclass__ = plumber
...     __plumbing__ = P1, P2
...     bar = property(None, None, None, "Plumbing.bar")

>>> print Plumbing.__doc__
Plumbing
<BLANKLINE>
P1
<BLANKLINE>

>>> print Plumbing.foo.__doc__
P2.foo
<BLANKLINE>
P1.foo
<BLANKLINE>

>>> print Plumbing.bar.__doc__
Plumbing.bar
<BLANKLINE>
P2.bar
<BLANKLINE>
P1.bar

The accumulation of docstrings is an experimental feature and will probably change.

zope.interface (if available)

The plumber does not depend on zope.interface but is aware of it. That means it will try to import it and if available will check plumbing parts for implemented interfaces and will make the plumbing implement them, too:

>>> from zope.interface import Interface
>>> from zope.interface import implements

A class with an interface that will serve as base class of a plumbing:

>>> class IBase(Interface):
...     pass

>>> class Base(object):
...     implements(IBase)

>>> IBase.implementedBy(Base)
True

Two parts with corresponding interfaces, one with a base class that also implements an interface:

>>> class IPart1(Interface):
...     pass

>>> class Part1(Part):
...     blub = 1
...     implements(IPart1)

>>> class IPart2Base(Interface):
...     pass

>>> class Part2Base(Part):
...     implements(IPart2Base)

>>> class IPart2(Interface):
...     pass

>>> class Part2(Part2Base):
...     implements(IPart2)

>>> IPart1.implementedBy(Part1)
True
>>> IPart2Base.implementedBy(Part2Base)
True
>>> IPart2Base.implementedBy(Part2)
True
>>> IPart2.implementedBy(Part2)
True

A plumbing based on Base using Part1 and Part2 and implementing IPlumbingClass:

>>> class IPlumbingClass(Interface):
...     pass

>>> class PlumbingClass(Base):
...     __metaclass__ = plumber
...     __plumbing__ = Part1, Part2
...     implements(IPlumbingClass)

The directly declared and inherited interfaces are implemented:

>>> IPlumbingClass.implementedBy(PlumbingClass)
True
>>> IBase.implementedBy(PlumbingClass)
True

The interfaces implemented by the parts are also implemented:

>>> IPart1.implementedBy(PlumbingClass)
True
>>> IPart2.implementedBy(PlumbingClass)
True
>>> IPart2Base.implementedBy(PlumbingClass)
True

An instance of the class provides the interfaces:

>>> plumbing = PlumbingClass()

>>> IPlumbingClass.providedBy(plumbing)
True
>>> IBase.providedBy(plumbing)
True
>>> IPart1.providedBy(plumbing)
True
>>> IPart2.providedBy(plumbing)
True
>>> IPart2Base.providedBy(plumbing)
True

Design choices and ongoing discussions

Stage1 left of stage2

Currently instructions of stage1 may be left of stage2 instructions. We consider to forbid this:

#    >>> class Part1(Part):
#    ...     @extend
#    ...     def foo(self):
#    ...         return 5
#
#    >>> class Part2(Part):
#    ...     @plumb
#    ...     def foo(_next, self):
#    ...         return 2 * _next(self)
#
#    >>> class Plumbing(object):
#    ...     __metaclass__ = plumber
#    ...     __plumbing__ = Part1, Part2
#
#    >>> Plumbing().foo()
#    BANG

Instance based plumbing system

At various points it felt tempting to be able to instantiate plumbing elements to configure them. For that we need __init__, which woul mean that plumbing __init__ would need a different name, eg. prt_-prefix. Consequently this would then be done for all plumbing methods.

Reasoning why currently the methods are not prefixed: Plumbing elements are simply not meant to be normal classes. Their methods have the single purpose to be called as part of some other class’ method calls, never directly. Configuration of plumbing elements can either be achieved by subclassing them or by putting the configuration on the objects/class they are used for.

An instance based plumbing system would be far more complex. It could be implemented to exist alongside the current system. But it won’t be implemented by us, without seeing a real use case first.

Different zope.interface.Interfaces for plumbing and created class

A different approach to the currently implemented system is having different interfaces for the parts and the class that is created:

#    >>> class IPart1Behaviour(Interface):
#    ...     pass
#
#    >>> class Part1(Part):
#    ...     implements(IPart1)
#    ...     interfaces = (IPart1Behaviour,)
#
#    >>> class IPart2(Interface):
#    ...     pass
#
#    >>> class Part2(Part):
#    ...     implements(IPart2)
#    ...     interfaces = (IPart2Behaviour,)
#
#    >>> IUs.implementedBy(Us)
#    True
#    >>> IBase.implementedBy(Us)
#    True
#    >>> IPart1.implementedBy(Us)
#    False
#    >>> IPart2.implementedBy(Us)
#    False
#    >>> IPart1Behaviour.implementedBy(Us)
#    False
#    >>> IPart2Behaviour.implementedBy(Us)
#    False

Same reasoning as before: up to now unnecessary complexity. It could make sense in combination with an instance based plumbing system and could be implemented as part of it alongside the current class based system.

Dynamic Plumbing

The plumber could replace the __plumbing__ attribute with a property of the same name. Changing the attribute during runtime would result in a plumbing specific to the object. A plumbing cache could further be used to reduce the number of plumbing chains in case of many dynamic plumbings. Realised eg by a descriptor.

During discussion on the artssprint we agreed on not changing a plumbing class pipelines during runtime, but instead enable plumbing further parts during runtime per instance in front of the class’ pipeline.

Miscellanea

Nomenclature

plumber

Metaclass that creates a plumbing according to the instructions declared on plumbing parts. Instructions are given by decorators: default, extend, finalize, plumb and plumbifexists.

plumbing

A plumber is called by a class that declares __metaclass__ = plumber and a list of parts to be used for the plumbing __plumbing__ = Part1, Part2. Apart from the parts, declarations on base classes and the class asking for the plumber are taken into account. Once created, a plumbing looks like any other class and can be subclassed as usual.

plumbing part

A plumbing part provides attributes (functions, properties and plain values) along with instructions for how to use them. Instructions are given via decorators: default, extend, finalize, plumb and plumbifexists (see Stage 1:… and Stage 2:…).

plumbing pipeline

Plumbing methods/properties with the same name form a pipeline. The entrance and end-point have the signature of normal methods: def foo(self, *args, **kw). The plumbing pipelines is a series of nested closures (see _next).

entrance (method)

A method with a normal signature. i.e. expecting self as first argument, that is used to enter a pipeline. It is a _next function. A method declared on the class with the same name, will be overwritten, but referenced in the pipelines as the innermost method, the endpoint.

_next function

The _next function is used to call the next method in a pipelines: in case of a plumbing method, it is a wrapper of it that passes the correct next _next as first argument and in case of an end-point, just the end-point method itself.

end-point (method)

Method retrieved from the plumbing class with getattr(), before setting the entrance method on the class.

If you feel something is missing, please let us now or write a short corresponding text.

Test Coverage

Summary of the test coverage report:

lines   cov%   module   (path)
    7   100%   plumber.__init__
  187   100%   plumber._instructions
   49    91%   plumber._part
   58   100%   plumber._plumber
    9   100%   plumber.exceptions
   18   100%   plumber.tests._globalmetaclasstest
   18   100%   plumber.tests.test_

Contributors

  • Florian Friesdorf <flo@chaoflow.net>

  • Robert Niederreiter <rnix@squarewave.at>

  • Jens W. Klein <jens@bluedynamics.com>

  • Marco Lempen

  • Attila Oláh

  • thanks to WSGI for the initial concept

  • thanks to #python (for trying) to block stupid ideas, if there are any left, please let us know

Changes

  • .. plbnext:: instead of .. plb_next:: [chaoflow 2011-02-02]

  • stage1 in __new__, stage2 in __init__, setting of __name__ now works [chaoflow 2011-01-25]

  • instructions recognize equal instructions [chaoflow 2011-01-24]

  • instructions from base classes now like subclass inheritance [chaoflow 2011 [chaoflow 2011-01-24]

  • doctest order now plumbing order: P1, P2, PlumbingClass, was PlumbingClass, P1, P2 [chaoflow 2011-01-24]

  • merged docstring instruction into plumb [chaoflow 2011-01-24]

  • plumber instead of Plumber [chaoflow 2011-01-24]

  • plumbing methods are not classmethods of part anymore [chaoflow 2011-01-24]

  • complete rewrite [chaoflow 2011-01-22]

  • prt instead of cls [chaoflow, rnix 2011-01-19

  • default, extend, plumb [chaoflow, rnix 2011-01-19]

  • initial [chaoflow, 2011-01-04]

TODO

  • traceback should show in which plumbing class we are, not something inside the plumber. yafowil is doing it. jensens: would you be so kind.

  • verify behaviour with pickling in tests within plumber

  • verify behaviour with ZODB persistence in tests within plumber

  • subclassing for plumbing parts

  • mature plumbing of properties

  • py26 @foo.setter support in all decorators

License / Disclaimer

Copyright (c) 2011, BlueDynamics Alliance, Austria, Germany, Switzerland All rights reserved.

Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:

  • Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.

  • Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.

  • Neither the name of the BlueDynamics Alliance nor the names of its contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without specific prior written permission.

THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY BlueDynamics Alliance AS IS AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL BlueDynamics Alliance BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

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