| #!/usr/bin/env python | 
 | # | 
 | # Copyright (c) 2002, Google Inc. | 
 | # 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 Google Inc. 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 THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS | 
 | # "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 THE COPYRIGHT | 
 | # OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS 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. | 
 | # | 
 | # --- | 
 | # Author: Chad Lester | 
 | # Design and style contributions by: | 
 | #   Amit Patel, Bogdan Cocosel, Daniel Dulitz, Eric Tiedemann, | 
 | #   Eric Veach, Laurence Gonsalves, Matthew Springer | 
 | # Code reorganized a bit by Craig Silverstein | 
 |  | 
 | """This module is used to define and parse command line flags. | 
 |  | 
 | This module defines a *distributed* flag-definition policy: rather than | 
 | an application having to define all flags in or near main(), each python | 
 | module defines flags that are useful to it.  When one python module | 
 | imports another, it gains access to the other's flags.  (This is | 
 | implemented by having all modules share a common, global registry object | 
 | containing all the flag information.) | 
 |  | 
 | Flags are defined through the use of one of the DEFINE_xxx functions. | 
 | The specific function used determines how the flag is parsed, checked, | 
 | and optionally type-converted, when it's seen on the command line. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | IMPLEMENTATION: DEFINE_* creates a 'Flag' object and registers it with a | 
 | 'FlagValues' object (typically the global FlagValues FLAGS, defined | 
 | here).  The 'FlagValues' object can scan the command line arguments and | 
 | pass flag arguments to the corresponding 'Flag' objects for | 
 | value-checking and type conversion.  The converted flag values are | 
 | available as attributes of the 'FlagValues' object. | 
 |  | 
 | Code can access the flag through a FlagValues object, for instance | 
 | gflags.FLAGS.myflag.  Typically, the __main__ module passes the command | 
 | line arguments to gflags.FLAGS for parsing. | 
 |  | 
 | At bottom, this module calls getopt(), so getopt functionality is | 
 | supported, including short- and long-style flags, and the use of -- to | 
 | terminate flags. | 
 |  | 
 | Methods defined by the flag module will throw 'FlagsError' exceptions. | 
 | The exception argument will be a human-readable string. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | FLAG TYPES: This is a list of the DEFINE_*'s that you can do.  All flags | 
 | take a name, default value, help-string, and optional 'short' name | 
 | (one-letter name).  Some flags have other arguments, which are described | 
 | with the flag. | 
 |  | 
 | DEFINE_string: takes any input, and interprets it as a string. | 
 |  | 
 | DEFINE_bool or | 
 | DEFINE_boolean: typically does not take an argument: say --myflag to | 
 |                 set FLAGS.myflag to true, or --nomyflag to set | 
 |                 FLAGS.myflag to false.  Alternately, you can say | 
 |                    --myflag=true  or --myflag=t or --myflag=1  or | 
 |                    --myflag=false or --myflag=f or --myflag=0 | 
 |  | 
 | DEFINE_float: takes an input and interprets it as a floating point | 
 |               number.  Takes optional args lower_bound and upper_bound; | 
 |               if the number specified on the command line is out of | 
 |               range, it will raise a FlagError. | 
 |  | 
 | DEFINE_integer: takes an input and interprets it as an integer.  Takes | 
 |                 optional args lower_bound and upper_bound as for floats. | 
 |  | 
 | DEFINE_enum: takes a list of strings which represents legal values.  If | 
 |              the command-line value is not in this list, raise a flag | 
 |              error.  Otherwise, assign to FLAGS.flag as a string. | 
 |  | 
 | DEFINE_list: Takes a comma-separated list of strings on the commandline. | 
 |              Stores them in a python list object. | 
 |  | 
 | DEFINE_spaceseplist: Takes a space-separated list of strings on the | 
 |                      commandline.  Stores them in a python list object. | 
 |                      Example: --myspacesepflag "foo bar baz" | 
 |  | 
 | DEFINE_multistring: The same as DEFINE_string, except the flag can be | 
 |                     specified more than once on the commandline.  The | 
 |                     result is a python list object (list of strings), | 
 |                     even if the flag is only on the command line once. | 
 |  | 
 | DEFINE_multi_int: The same as DEFINE_integer, except the flag can be | 
 |                   specified more than once on the commandline.  The | 
 |                   result is a python list object (list of ints), even if | 
 |                   the flag is only on the command line once. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | SPECIAL FLAGS: There are a few flags that have special meaning: | 
 |    --help          prints a list of all the flags in a human-readable fashion | 
 |    --helpshort     prints a list of all key flags (see below). | 
 |    --helpxml       prints a list of all flags, in XML format.  DO NOT parse | 
 |                    the output of --help and --helpshort.  Instead, parse | 
 |                    the output of --helpxml.  For more info, see | 
 |                    "OUTPUT FOR --helpxml" below. | 
 |    --flagfile=foo  read flags from file foo. | 
 |    --undefok=f1,f2 ignore unrecognized option errors for f1,f2. | 
 |                    For boolean flags, you should use --undefok=boolflag, and | 
 |                    --boolflag and --noboolflag will be accepted.  Do not use | 
 |                    --undefok=noboolflag. | 
 |    --              as in getopt(), terminates flag-processing | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | FLAGS VALIDATORS: If your program: | 
 |   - requires flag X to be specified | 
 |   - needs flag Y to match a regular expression | 
 |   - or requires any more general constraint to be satisfied | 
 | then validators are for you! | 
 |  | 
 | Each validator represents a constraint over one flag, which is enforced | 
 | starting from the initial parsing of the flags and until the program | 
 | terminates. | 
 |  | 
 | Also, lower_bound and upper_bound for numerical flags are enforced using flag | 
 | validators. | 
 |  | 
 | Howto: | 
 | If you want to enforce a constraint over one flag, use | 
 |  | 
 | gflags.RegisterValidator(flag_name, | 
 |                         checker, | 
 |                         message='Flag validation failed', | 
 |                         flag_values=FLAGS) | 
 |  | 
 | After flag values are initially parsed, and after any change to the specified | 
 | flag, method checker(flag_value) will be executed. If constraint is not | 
 | satisfied, an IllegalFlagValue exception will be raised. See | 
 | RegisterValidator's docstring for a detailed explanation on how to construct | 
 | your own checker. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | EXAMPLE USAGE: | 
 |  | 
 | FLAGS = gflags.FLAGS | 
 |  | 
 | gflags.DEFINE_integer('my_version', 0, 'Version number.') | 
 | gflags.DEFINE_string('filename', None, 'Input file name', short_name='f') | 
 |  | 
 | gflags.RegisterValidator('my_version', | 
 |                         lambda value: value % 2 == 0, | 
 |                         message='--my_version must be divisible by 2') | 
 | gflags.MarkFlagAsRequired('filename') | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | NOTE ON --flagfile: | 
 |  | 
 | Flags may be loaded from text files in addition to being specified on | 
 | the commandline. | 
 |  | 
 | Any flags you don't feel like typing, throw them in a file, one flag per | 
 | line, for instance: | 
 |    --myflag=myvalue | 
 |    --nomyboolean_flag | 
 | You then specify your file with the special flag '--flagfile=somefile'. | 
 | You CAN recursively nest flagfile= tokens OR use multiple files on the | 
 | command line.  Lines beginning with a single hash '#' or a double slash | 
 | '//' are comments in your flagfile. | 
 |  | 
 | Any flagfile=<file> will be interpreted as having a relative path from | 
 | the current working directory rather than from the place the file was | 
 | included from: | 
 |    myPythonScript.py --flagfile=config/somefile.cfg | 
 |  | 
 | If somefile.cfg includes further --flagfile= directives, these will be | 
 | referenced relative to the original CWD, not from the directory the | 
 | including flagfile was found in! | 
 |  | 
 | The caveat applies to people who are including a series of nested files | 
 | in a different dir than they are executing out of.  Relative path names | 
 | are always from CWD, not from the directory of the parent include | 
 | flagfile. We do now support '~' expanded directory names. | 
 |  | 
 | Absolute path names ALWAYS work! | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | EXAMPLE USAGE: | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 |   FLAGS = gflags.FLAGS | 
 |  | 
 |   # Flag names are globally defined!  So in general, we need to be | 
 |   # careful to pick names that are unlikely to be used by other libraries. | 
 |   # If there is a conflict, we'll get an error at import time. | 
 |   gflags.DEFINE_string('name', 'Mr. President', 'your name') | 
 |   gflags.DEFINE_integer('age', None, 'your age in years', lower_bound=0) | 
 |   gflags.DEFINE_boolean('debug', False, 'produces debugging output') | 
 |   gflags.DEFINE_enum('gender', 'male', ['male', 'female'], 'your gender') | 
 |  | 
 |   def main(argv): | 
 |     try: | 
 |       argv = FLAGS(argv)  # parse flags | 
 |     except gflags.FlagsError, e: | 
 |       print '%s\\nUsage: %s ARGS\\n%s' % (e, sys.argv[0], FLAGS) | 
 |       sys.exit(1) | 
 |     if FLAGS.debug: print 'non-flag arguments:', argv | 
 |     print 'Happy Birthday', FLAGS.name | 
 |     if FLAGS.age is not None: | 
 |       print 'You are a %d year old %s' % (FLAGS.age, FLAGS.gender) | 
 |  | 
 |   if __name__ == '__main__': | 
 |     main(sys.argv) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | KEY FLAGS: | 
 |  | 
 | As we already explained, each module gains access to all flags defined | 
 | by all the other modules it transitively imports.  In the case of | 
 | non-trivial scripts, this means a lot of flags ...  For documentation | 
 | purposes, it is good to identify the flags that are key (i.e., really | 
 | important) to a module.  Clearly, the concept of "key flag" is a | 
 | subjective one.  When trying to determine whether a flag is key to a | 
 | module or not, assume that you are trying to explain your module to a | 
 | potential user: which flags would you really like to mention first? | 
 |  | 
 | We'll describe shortly how to declare which flags are key to a module. | 
 | For the moment, assume we know the set of key flags for each module. | 
 | Then, if you use the app.py module, you can use the --helpshort flag to | 
 | print only the help for the flags that are key to the main module, in a | 
 | human-readable format. | 
 |  | 
 | NOTE: If you need to parse the flag help, do NOT use the output of | 
 | --help / --helpshort.  That output is meant for human consumption, and | 
 | may be changed in the future.  Instead, use --helpxml; flags that are | 
 | key for the main module are marked there with a <key>yes</key> element. | 
 |  | 
 | The set of key flags for a module M is composed of: | 
 |  | 
 | 1. Flags defined by module M by calling a DEFINE_* function. | 
 |  | 
 | 2. Flags that module M explictly declares as key by using the function | 
 |  | 
 |      DECLARE_key_flag(<flag_name>) | 
 |  | 
 | 3. Key flags of other modules that M specifies by using the function | 
 |  | 
 |      ADOPT_module_key_flags(<other_module>) | 
 |  | 
 |    This is a "bulk" declaration of key flags: each flag that is key for | 
 |    <other_module> becomes key for the current module too. | 
 |  | 
 | Notice that if you do not use the functions described at points 2 and 3 | 
 | above, then --helpshort prints information only about the flags defined | 
 | by the main module of our script.  In many cases, this behavior is good | 
 | enough.  But if you move part of the main module code (together with the | 
 | related flags) into a different module, then it is nice to use | 
 | DECLARE_key_flag / ADOPT_module_key_flags and make sure --helpshort | 
 | lists all relevant flags (otherwise, your code refactoring may confuse | 
 | your users). | 
 |  | 
 | Note: each of DECLARE_key_flag / ADOPT_module_key_flags has its own | 
 | pluses and minuses: DECLARE_key_flag is more targeted and may lead a | 
 | more focused --helpshort documentation.  ADOPT_module_key_flags is good | 
 | for cases when an entire module is considered key to the current script. | 
 | Also, it does not require updates to client scripts when a new flag is | 
 | added to the module. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | EXAMPLE USAGE 2 (WITH KEY FLAGS): | 
 |  | 
 | Consider an application that contains the following three files (two | 
 | auxiliary modules and a main module) | 
 |  | 
 | File libfoo.py: | 
 |  | 
 |   import gflags | 
 |  | 
 |   gflags.DEFINE_integer('num_replicas', 3, 'Number of replicas to start') | 
 |   gflags.DEFINE_boolean('rpc2', True, 'Turn on the usage of RPC2.') | 
 |  | 
 |   ... some code ... | 
 |  | 
 | File libbar.py: | 
 |  | 
 |   import gflags | 
 |  | 
 |   gflags.DEFINE_string('bar_gfs_path', '/gfs/path', | 
 |                       'Path to the GFS files for libbar.') | 
 |   gflags.DEFINE_string('email_for_bar_errors', 'bar-team@google.com', | 
 |                       'Email address for bug reports about module libbar.') | 
 |   gflags.DEFINE_boolean('bar_risky_hack', False, | 
 |                        'Turn on an experimental and buggy optimization.') | 
 |  | 
 |   ... some code ... | 
 |  | 
 | File myscript.py: | 
 |  | 
 |   import gflags | 
 |   import libfoo | 
 |   import libbar | 
 |  | 
 |   gflags.DEFINE_integer('num_iterations', 0, 'Number of iterations.') | 
 |  | 
 |   # Declare that all flags that are key for libfoo are | 
 |   # key for this module too. | 
 |   gflags.ADOPT_module_key_flags(libfoo) | 
 |  | 
 |   # Declare that the flag --bar_gfs_path (defined in libbar) is key | 
 |   # for this module. | 
 |   gflags.DECLARE_key_flag('bar_gfs_path') | 
 |  | 
 |   ... some code ... | 
 |  | 
 | When myscript is invoked with the flag --helpshort, the resulted help | 
 | message lists information about all the key flags for myscript: | 
 | --num_iterations, --num_replicas, --rpc2, and --bar_gfs_path. | 
 |  | 
 | Of course, myscript uses all the flags declared by it (in this case, | 
 | just --num_replicas) or by any of the modules it transitively imports | 
 | (e.g., the modules libfoo, libbar).  E.g., it can access the value of | 
 | FLAGS.bar_risky_hack, even if --bar_risky_hack is not declared as a key | 
 | flag for myscript. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | OUTPUT FOR --helpxml: | 
 |  | 
 | The --helpxml flag generates output with the following structure: | 
 |  | 
 | <?xml version="1.0"?> | 
 | <AllFlags> | 
 |   <program>PROGRAM_BASENAME</program> | 
 |   <usage>MAIN_MODULE_DOCSTRING</usage> | 
 |   (<flag> | 
 |     [<key>yes</key>] | 
 |     <file>DECLARING_MODULE</file> | 
 |     <name>FLAG_NAME</name> | 
 |     <meaning>FLAG_HELP_MESSAGE</meaning> | 
 |     <default>DEFAULT_FLAG_VALUE</default> | 
 |     <current>CURRENT_FLAG_VALUE</current> | 
 |     <type>FLAG_TYPE</type> | 
 |     [OPTIONAL_ELEMENTS] | 
 |   </flag>)* | 
 | </AllFlags> | 
 |  | 
 | Notes: | 
 |  | 
 | 1. The output is intentionally similar to the output generated by the | 
 | C++ command-line flag library.  The few differences are due to the | 
 | Python flags that do not have a C++ equivalent (at least not yet), | 
 | e.g., DEFINE_list. | 
 |  | 
 | 2. New XML elements may be added in the future. | 
 |  | 
 | 3. DEFAULT_FLAG_VALUE is in serialized form, i.e., the string you can | 
 | pass for this flag on the command-line.  E.g., for a flag defined | 
 | using DEFINE_list, this field may be foo,bar, not ['foo', 'bar']. | 
 |  | 
 | 4. CURRENT_FLAG_VALUE is produced using str().  This means that the | 
 | string 'false' will be represented in the same way as the boolean | 
 | False.  Using repr() would have removed this ambiguity and simplified | 
 | parsing, but would have broken the compatibility with the C++ | 
 | command-line flags. | 
 |  | 
 | 5. OPTIONAL_ELEMENTS describe elements relevant for certain kinds of | 
 | flags: lower_bound, upper_bound (for flags that specify bounds), | 
 | enum_value (for enum flags), list_separator (for flags that consist of | 
 | a list of values, separated by a special token). | 
 |  | 
 | 6. We do not provide any example here: please use --helpxml instead. | 
 |  | 
 | This module requires at least python 2.2.1 to run. | 
 | """ | 
 |  | 
 | import cgi | 
 | import getopt | 
 | import os | 
 | import re | 
 | import string | 
 | import struct | 
 | import sys | 
 | # pylint: disable-msg=C6204 | 
 | try: | 
 |   import fcntl | 
 | except ImportError: | 
 |   fcntl = None | 
 | try: | 
 |   # Importing termios will fail on non-unix platforms. | 
 |   import termios | 
 | except ImportError: | 
 |   termios = None | 
 |  | 
 | import gflags_validators | 
 | # pylint: enable-msg=C6204 | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | # Are we running under pychecker? | 
 | _RUNNING_PYCHECKER = 'pychecker.python' in sys.modules | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def _GetCallingModuleObjectAndName(): | 
 |   """Returns the module that's calling into this module. | 
 |  | 
 |   We generally use this function to get the name of the module calling a | 
 |   DEFINE_foo... function. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   # Walk down the stack to find the first globals dict that's not ours. | 
 |   for depth in range(1, sys.getrecursionlimit()): | 
 |     if not sys._getframe(depth).f_globals is globals(): | 
 |       globals_for_frame = sys._getframe(depth).f_globals | 
 |       module, module_name = _GetModuleObjectAndName(globals_for_frame) | 
 |       if module_name is not None: | 
 |         return module, module_name | 
 |   raise AssertionError("No module was found") | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def _GetCallingModule(): | 
 |   """Returns the name of the module that's calling into this module.""" | 
 |   return _GetCallingModuleObjectAndName()[1] | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def _GetThisModuleObjectAndName(): | 
 |   """Returns: (module object, module name) for this module.""" | 
 |   return _GetModuleObjectAndName(globals()) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | # module exceptions: | 
 | class FlagsError(Exception): | 
 |   """The base class for all flags errors.""" | 
 |   pass | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class DuplicateFlag(FlagsError): | 
 |   """Raised if there is a flag naming conflict.""" | 
 |   pass | 
 |  | 
 | class CantOpenFlagFileError(FlagsError): | 
 |   """Raised if flagfile fails to open: doesn't exist, wrong permissions, etc.""" | 
 |   pass | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class DuplicateFlagCannotPropagateNoneToSwig(DuplicateFlag): | 
 |   """Special case of DuplicateFlag -- SWIG flag value can't be set to None. | 
 |  | 
 |   This can be raised when a duplicate flag is created. Even if allow_override is | 
 |   True, we still abort if the new value is None, because it's currently | 
 |   impossible to pass None default value back to SWIG. See FlagValues.SetDefault | 
 |   for details. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   pass | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class DuplicateFlagError(DuplicateFlag): | 
 |   """A DuplicateFlag whose message cites the conflicting definitions. | 
 |  | 
 |   A DuplicateFlagError conveys more information than a DuplicateFlag, | 
 |   namely the modules where the conflicting definitions occur. This | 
 |   class was created to avoid breaking external modules which depend on | 
 |   the existing DuplicateFlags interface. | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   def __init__(self, flagname, flag_values, other_flag_values=None): | 
 |     """Create a DuplicateFlagError. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       flagname: Name of the flag being redefined. | 
 |       flag_values: FlagValues object containing the first definition of | 
 |           flagname. | 
 |       other_flag_values: If this argument is not None, it should be the | 
 |           FlagValues object where the second definition of flagname occurs. | 
 |           If it is None, we assume that we're being called when attempting | 
 |           to create the flag a second time, and we use the module calling | 
 |           this one as the source of the second definition. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     self.flagname = flagname | 
 |     first_module = flag_values.FindModuleDefiningFlag( | 
 |         flagname, default='<unknown>') | 
 |     if other_flag_values is None: | 
 |       second_module = _GetCallingModule() | 
 |     else: | 
 |       second_module = other_flag_values.FindModuleDefiningFlag( | 
 |           flagname, default='<unknown>') | 
 |     msg = "The flag '%s' is defined twice. First from %s, Second from %s" % ( | 
 |         self.flagname, first_module, second_module) | 
 |     DuplicateFlag.__init__(self, msg) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class IllegalFlagValue(FlagsError): | 
 |   """The flag command line argument is illegal.""" | 
 |   pass | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class UnrecognizedFlag(FlagsError): | 
 |   """Raised if a flag is unrecognized.""" | 
 |   pass | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | # An UnrecognizedFlagError conveys more information than an UnrecognizedFlag. | 
 | # Since there are external modules that create DuplicateFlags, the interface to | 
 | # DuplicateFlag shouldn't change.  The flagvalue will be assigned the full value | 
 | # of the flag and its argument, if any, allowing handling of unrecognized flags | 
 | # in an exception handler. | 
 | # If flagvalue is the empty string, then this exception is an due to a | 
 | # reference to a flag that was not already defined. | 
 | class UnrecognizedFlagError(UnrecognizedFlag): | 
 |   def __init__(self, flagname, flagvalue=''): | 
 |     self.flagname = flagname | 
 |     self.flagvalue = flagvalue | 
 |     UnrecognizedFlag.__init__( | 
 |         self, "Unknown command line flag '%s'" % flagname) | 
 |  | 
 | # Global variable used by expvar | 
 | _exported_flags = {} | 
 | _help_width = 80  # width of help output | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def GetHelpWidth(): | 
 |   """Returns: an integer, the width of help lines that is used in TextWrap.""" | 
 |   if (not sys.stdout.isatty()) or (termios is None) or (fcntl is None): | 
 |     return _help_width | 
 |   try: | 
 |     data = fcntl.ioctl(sys.stdout, termios.TIOCGWINSZ, '1234') | 
 |     columns = struct.unpack('hh', data)[1] | 
 |     # Emacs mode returns 0. | 
 |     # Here we assume that any value below 40 is unreasonable | 
 |     if columns >= 40: | 
 |       return columns | 
 |     # Returning an int as default is fine, int(int) just return the int. | 
 |     return int(os.getenv('COLUMNS', _help_width)) | 
 |  | 
 |   except (TypeError, IOError, struct.error): | 
 |     return _help_width | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def CutCommonSpacePrefix(text): | 
 |   """Removes a common space prefix from the lines of a multiline text. | 
 |  | 
 |   If the first line does not start with a space, it is left as it is and | 
 |   only in the remaining lines a common space prefix is being searched | 
 |   for. That means the first line will stay untouched. This is especially | 
 |   useful to turn doc strings into help texts. This is because some | 
 |   people prefer to have the doc comment start already after the | 
 |   apostrophe and then align the following lines while others have the | 
 |   apostrophes on a separate line. | 
 |  | 
 |   The function also drops trailing empty lines and ignores empty lines | 
 |   following the initial content line while calculating the initial | 
 |   common whitespace. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     text: text to work on | 
 |  | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     the resulting text | 
 |   """ | 
 |   text_lines = text.splitlines() | 
 |   # Drop trailing empty lines | 
 |   while text_lines and not text_lines[-1]: | 
 |     text_lines = text_lines[:-1] | 
 |   if text_lines: | 
 |     # We got some content, is the first line starting with a space? | 
 |     if text_lines[0] and text_lines[0][0].isspace(): | 
 |       text_first_line = [] | 
 |     else: | 
 |       text_first_line = [text_lines.pop(0)] | 
 |     # Calculate length of common leading whitespace (only over content lines) | 
 |     common_prefix = os.path.commonprefix([line for line in text_lines if line]) | 
 |     space_prefix_len = len(common_prefix) - len(common_prefix.lstrip()) | 
 |     # If we have a common space prefix, drop it from all lines | 
 |     if space_prefix_len: | 
 |       for index in xrange(len(text_lines)): | 
 |         if text_lines[index]: | 
 |           text_lines[index] = text_lines[index][space_prefix_len:] | 
 |     return '\n'.join(text_first_line + text_lines) | 
 |   return '' | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def TextWrap(text, length=None, indent='', firstline_indent=None, tabs='    '): | 
 |   """Wraps a given text to a maximum line length and returns it. | 
 |  | 
 |   We turn lines that only contain whitespace into empty lines.  We keep | 
 |   new lines and tabs (e.g., we do not treat tabs as spaces). | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     text:             text to wrap | 
 |     length:           maximum length of a line, includes indentation | 
 |                       if this is None then use GetHelpWidth() | 
 |     indent:           indent for all but first line | 
 |     firstline_indent: indent for first line; if None, fall back to indent | 
 |     tabs:             replacement for tabs | 
 |  | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     wrapped text | 
 |  | 
 |   Raises: | 
 |     FlagsError: if indent not shorter than length | 
 |     FlagsError: if firstline_indent not shorter than length | 
 |   """ | 
 |   # Get defaults where callee used None | 
 |   if length is None: | 
 |     length = GetHelpWidth() | 
 |   if indent is None: | 
 |     indent = '' | 
 |   if len(indent) >= length: | 
 |     raise FlagsError('Indent must be shorter than length') | 
 |   # In line we will be holding the current line which is to be started | 
 |   # with indent (or firstline_indent if available) and then appended | 
 |   # with words. | 
 |   if firstline_indent is None: | 
 |     firstline_indent = '' | 
 |     line = indent | 
 |   else: | 
 |     line = firstline_indent | 
 |     if len(firstline_indent) >= length: | 
 |       raise FlagsError('First line indent must be shorter than length') | 
 |  | 
 |   # If the callee does not care about tabs we simply convert them to | 
 |   # spaces If callee wanted tabs to be single space then we do that | 
 |   # already here. | 
 |   if not tabs or tabs == ' ': | 
 |     text = text.replace('\t', ' ') | 
 |   else: | 
 |     tabs_are_whitespace = not tabs.strip() | 
 |  | 
 |   line_regex = re.compile('([ ]*)(\t*)([^ \t]+)', re.MULTILINE) | 
 |  | 
 |   # Split the text into lines and the lines with the regex above. The | 
 |   # resulting lines are collected in result[]. For each split we get the | 
 |   # spaces, the tabs and the next non white space (e.g. next word). | 
 |   result = [] | 
 |   for text_line in text.splitlines(): | 
 |     # Store result length so we can find out whether processing the next | 
 |     # line gave any new content | 
 |     old_result_len = len(result) | 
 |     # Process next line with line_regex. For optimization we do an rstrip(). | 
 |     # - process tabs (changes either line or word, see below) | 
 |     # - process word (first try to squeeze on line, then wrap or force wrap) | 
 |     # Spaces found on the line are ignored, they get added while wrapping as | 
 |     # needed. | 
 |     for spaces, current_tabs, word in line_regex.findall(text_line.rstrip()): | 
 |       # If tabs weren't converted to spaces, handle them now | 
 |       if current_tabs: | 
 |         # If the last thing we added was a space anyway then drop | 
 |         # it. But let's not get rid of the indentation. | 
 |         if (((result and line != indent) or | 
 |              (not result and line != firstline_indent)) and line[-1] == ' '): | 
 |           line = line[:-1] | 
 |         # Add the tabs, if that means adding whitespace, just add it at | 
 |         # the line, the rstrip() code while shorten the line down if | 
 |         # necessary | 
 |         if tabs_are_whitespace: | 
 |           line += tabs * len(current_tabs) | 
 |         else: | 
 |           # if not all tab replacement is whitespace we prepend it to the word | 
 |           word = tabs * len(current_tabs) + word | 
 |       # Handle the case where word cannot be squeezed onto current last line | 
 |       if len(line) + len(word) > length and len(indent) + len(word) <= length: | 
 |         result.append(line.rstrip()) | 
 |         line = indent + word | 
 |         word = '' | 
 |         # No space left on line or can we append a space? | 
 |         if len(line) + 1 >= length: | 
 |           result.append(line.rstrip()) | 
 |           line = indent | 
 |         else: | 
 |           line += ' ' | 
 |       # Add word and shorten it up to allowed line length. Restart next | 
 |       # line with indent and repeat, or add a space if we're done (word | 
 |       # finished) This deals with words that cannot fit on one line | 
 |       # (e.g. indent + word longer than allowed line length). | 
 |       while len(line) + len(word) >= length: | 
 |         line += word | 
 |         result.append(line[:length]) | 
 |         word = line[length:] | 
 |         line = indent | 
 |       # Default case, simply append the word and a space | 
 |       if word: | 
 |         line += word + ' ' | 
 |     # End of input line. If we have content we finish the line. If the | 
 |     # current line is just the indent but we had content in during this | 
 |     # original line then we need to add an empty line. | 
 |     if (result and line != indent) or (not result and line != firstline_indent): | 
 |       result.append(line.rstrip()) | 
 |     elif len(result) == old_result_len: | 
 |       result.append('') | 
 |     line = indent | 
 |  | 
 |   return '\n'.join(result) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def DocToHelp(doc): | 
 |   """Takes a __doc__ string and reformats it as help.""" | 
 |  | 
 |   # Get rid of starting and ending white space. Using lstrip() or even | 
 |   # strip() could drop more than maximum of first line and right space | 
 |   # of last line. | 
 |   doc = doc.strip() | 
 |  | 
 |   # Get rid of all empty lines | 
 |   whitespace_only_line = re.compile('^[ \t]+$', re.M) | 
 |   doc = whitespace_only_line.sub('', doc) | 
 |  | 
 |   # Cut out common space at line beginnings | 
 |   doc = CutCommonSpacePrefix(doc) | 
 |  | 
 |   # Just like this module's comment, comments tend to be aligned somehow. | 
 |   # In other words they all start with the same amount of white space | 
 |   # 1) keep double new lines | 
 |   # 2) keep ws after new lines if not empty line | 
 |   # 3) all other new lines shall be changed to a space | 
 |   # Solution: Match new lines between non white space and replace with space. | 
 |   doc = re.sub('(?<=\S)\n(?=\S)', ' ', doc, re.M) | 
 |  | 
 |   return doc | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def _GetModuleObjectAndName(globals_dict): | 
 |   """Returns the module that defines a global environment, and its name. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     globals_dict: A dictionary that should correspond to an environment | 
 |       providing the values of the globals. | 
 |  | 
 |   Returns: | 
 |     A pair consisting of (1) module object and (2) module name (a | 
 |     string).  Returns (None, None) if the module could not be | 
 |     identified. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   # The use of .items() (instead of .iteritems()) is NOT a mistake: if | 
 |   # a parallel thread imports a module while we iterate over | 
 |   # .iteritems() (not nice, but possible), we get a RuntimeError ... | 
 |   # Hence, we use the slightly slower but safer .items(). | 
 |   for name, module in sys.modules.items(): | 
 |     if getattr(module, '__dict__', None) is globals_dict: | 
 |       if name == '__main__': | 
 |         # Pick a more informative name for the main module. | 
 |         name = sys.argv[0] | 
 |       return (module, name) | 
 |   return (None, None) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def _GetMainModule(): | 
 |   """Returns: string, name of the module from which execution started.""" | 
 |   # First, try to use the same logic used by _GetCallingModuleObjectAndName(), | 
 |   # i.e., call _GetModuleObjectAndName().  For that we first need to | 
 |   # find the dictionary that the main module uses to store the | 
 |   # globals. | 
 |   # | 
 |   # That's (normally) the same dictionary object that the deepest | 
 |   # (oldest) stack frame is using for globals. | 
 |   deepest_frame = sys._getframe(0) | 
 |   while deepest_frame.f_back is not None: | 
 |     deepest_frame = deepest_frame.f_back | 
 |   globals_for_main_module = deepest_frame.f_globals | 
 |   main_module_name = _GetModuleObjectAndName(globals_for_main_module)[1] | 
 |   # The above strategy fails in some cases (e.g., tools that compute | 
 |   # code coverage by redefining, among other things, the main module). | 
 |   # If so, just use sys.argv[0].  We can probably always do this, but | 
 |   # it's safest to try to use the same logic as _GetCallingModuleObjectAndName() | 
 |   if main_module_name is None: | 
 |     main_module_name = sys.argv[0] | 
 |   return main_module_name | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class FlagValues: | 
 |   """Registry of 'Flag' objects. | 
 |  | 
 |   A 'FlagValues' can then scan command line arguments, passing flag | 
 |   arguments through to the 'Flag' objects that it owns.  It also | 
 |   provides easy access to the flag values.  Typically only one | 
 |   'FlagValues' object is needed by an application: gflags.FLAGS | 
 |  | 
 |   This class is heavily overloaded: | 
 |  | 
 |   'Flag' objects are registered via __setitem__: | 
 |        FLAGS['longname'] = x   # register a new flag | 
 |  | 
 |   The .value attribute of the registered 'Flag' objects can be accessed | 
 |   as attributes of this 'FlagValues' object, through __getattr__.  Both | 
 |   the long and short name of the original 'Flag' objects can be used to | 
 |   access its value: | 
 |        FLAGS.longname          # parsed flag value | 
 |        FLAGS.x                 # parsed flag value (short name) | 
 |  | 
 |   Command line arguments are scanned and passed to the registered 'Flag' | 
 |   objects through the __call__ method.  Unparsed arguments, including | 
 |   argv[0] (e.g. the program name) are returned. | 
 |        argv = FLAGS(sys.argv)  # scan command line arguments | 
 |  | 
 |   The original registered Flag objects can be retrieved through the use | 
 |   of the dictionary-like operator, __getitem__: | 
 |        x = FLAGS['longname']   # access the registered Flag object | 
 |  | 
 |   The str() operator of a 'FlagValues' object provides help for all of | 
 |   the registered 'Flag' objects. | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   def __init__(self): | 
 |     # Since everything in this class is so heavily overloaded, the only | 
 |     # way of defining and using fields is to access __dict__ directly. | 
 |  | 
 |     # Dictionary: flag name (string) -> Flag object. | 
 |     self.__dict__['__flags'] = {} | 
 |     # Dictionary: module name (string) -> list of Flag objects that are defined | 
 |     # by that module. | 
 |     self.__dict__['__flags_by_module'] = {} | 
 |     # Dictionary: module id (int) -> list of Flag objects that are defined by | 
 |     # that module. | 
 |     self.__dict__['__flags_by_module_id'] = {} | 
 |     # Dictionary: module name (string) -> list of Flag objects that are | 
 |     # key for that module. | 
 |     self.__dict__['__key_flags_by_module'] = {} | 
 |  | 
 |     # Set if we should use new style gnu_getopt rather than getopt when parsing | 
 |     # the args.  Only possible with Python 2.3+ | 
 |     self.UseGnuGetOpt(False) | 
 |  | 
 |   def UseGnuGetOpt(self, use_gnu_getopt=True): | 
 |     """Use GNU-style scanning. Allows mixing of flag and non-flag arguments. | 
 |  | 
 |     See http://docs.python.org/library/getopt.html#getopt.gnu_getopt | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       use_gnu_getopt: wether or not to use GNU style scanning. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     self.__dict__['__use_gnu_getopt'] = use_gnu_getopt | 
 |  | 
 |   def IsGnuGetOpt(self): | 
 |     return self.__dict__['__use_gnu_getopt'] | 
 |  | 
 |   def FlagDict(self): | 
 |     return self.__dict__['__flags'] | 
 |  | 
 |   def FlagsByModuleDict(self): | 
 |     """Returns the dictionary of module_name -> list of defined flags. | 
 |  | 
 |     Returns: | 
 |       A dictionary.  Its keys are module names (strings).  Its values | 
 |       are lists of Flag objects. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     return self.__dict__['__flags_by_module'] | 
 |  | 
 |   def FlagsByModuleIdDict(self): | 
 |     """Returns the dictionary of module_id -> list of defined flags. | 
 |  | 
 |     Returns: | 
 |       A dictionary.  Its keys are module IDs (ints).  Its values | 
 |       are lists of Flag objects. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     return self.__dict__['__flags_by_module_id'] | 
 |  | 
 |   def KeyFlagsByModuleDict(self): | 
 |     """Returns the dictionary of module_name -> list of key flags. | 
 |  | 
 |     Returns: | 
 |       A dictionary.  Its keys are module names (strings).  Its values | 
 |       are lists of Flag objects. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     return self.__dict__['__key_flags_by_module'] | 
 |  | 
 |   def _RegisterFlagByModule(self, module_name, flag): | 
 |     """Records the module that defines a specific flag. | 
 |  | 
 |     We keep track of which flag is defined by which module so that we | 
 |     can later sort the flags by module. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       module_name: A string, the name of a Python module. | 
 |       flag: A Flag object, a flag that is key to the module. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     flags_by_module = self.FlagsByModuleDict() | 
 |     flags_by_module.setdefault(module_name, []).append(flag) | 
 |  | 
 |   def _RegisterFlagByModuleId(self, module_id, flag): | 
 |     """Records the module that defines a specific flag. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       module_id: An int, the ID of the Python module. | 
 |       flag: A Flag object, a flag that is key to the module. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     flags_by_module_id = self.FlagsByModuleIdDict() | 
 |     flags_by_module_id.setdefault(module_id, []).append(flag) | 
 |  | 
 |   def _RegisterKeyFlagForModule(self, module_name, flag): | 
 |     """Specifies that a flag is a key flag for a module. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       module_name: A string, the name of a Python module. | 
 |       flag: A Flag object, a flag that is key to the module. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     key_flags_by_module = self.KeyFlagsByModuleDict() | 
 |     # The list of key flags for the module named module_name. | 
 |     key_flags = key_flags_by_module.setdefault(module_name, []) | 
 |     # Add flag, but avoid duplicates. | 
 |     if flag not in key_flags: | 
 |       key_flags.append(flag) | 
 |  | 
 |   def _GetFlagsDefinedByModule(self, module): | 
 |     """Returns the list of flags defined by a module. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       module: A module object or a module name (a string). | 
 |  | 
 |     Returns: | 
 |       A new list of Flag objects.  Caller may update this list as he | 
 |       wishes: none of those changes will affect the internals of this | 
 |       FlagValue object. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     if not isinstance(module, str): | 
 |       module = module.__name__ | 
 |  | 
 |     return list(self.FlagsByModuleDict().get(module, [])) | 
 |  | 
 |   def _GetKeyFlagsForModule(self, module): | 
 |     """Returns the list of key flags for a module. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       module: A module object or a module name (a string) | 
 |  | 
 |     Returns: | 
 |       A new list of Flag objects.  Caller may update this list as he | 
 |       wishes: none of those changes will affect the internals of this | 
 |       FlagValue object. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     if not isinstance(module, str): | 
 |       module = module.__name__ | 
 |  | 
 |     # Any flag is a key flag for the module that defined it.  NOTE: | 
 |     # key_flags is a fresh list: we can update it without affecting the | 
 |     # internals of this FlagValues object. | 
 |     key_flags = self._GetFlagsDefinedByModule(module) | 
 |  | 
 |     # Take into account flags explicitly declared as key for a module. | 
 |     for flag in self.KeyFlagsByModuleDict().get(module, []): | 
 |       if flag not in key_flags: | 
 |         key_flags.append(flag) | 
 |     return key_flags | 
 |  | 
 |   def FindModuleDefiningFlag(self, flagname, default=None): | 
 |     """Return the name of the module defining this flag, or default. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       flagname: Name of the flag to lookup. | 
 |       default: Value to return if flagname is not defined. Defaults | 
 |           to None. | 
 |  | 
 |     Returns: | 
 |       The name of the module which registered the flag with this name. | 
 |       If no such module exists (i.e. no flag with this name exists), | 
 |       we return default. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     for module, flags in self.FlagsByModuleDict().iteritems(): | 
 |       for flag in flags: | 
 |         if flag.name == flagname or flag.short_name == flagname: | 
 |           return module | 
 |     return default | 
 |  | 
 |   def FindModuleIdDefiningFlag(self, flagname, default=None): | 
 |     """Return the ID of the module defining this flag, or default. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       flagname: Name of the flag to lookup. | 
 |       default: Value to return if flagname is not defined. Defaults | 
 |           to None. | 
 |  | 
 |     Returns: | 
 |       The ID of the module which registered the flag with this name. | 
 |       If no such module exists (i.e. no flag with this name exists), | 
 |       we return default. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     for module_id, flags in self.FlagsByModuleIdDict().iteritems(): | 
 |       for flag in flags: | 
 |         if flag.name == flagname or flag.short_name == flagname: | 
 |           return module_id | 
 |     return default | 
 |  | 
 |   def AppendFlagValues(self, flag_values): | 
 |     """Appends flags registered in another FlagValues instance. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       flag_values: registry to copy from | 
 |     """ | 
 |     for flag_name, flag in flag_values.FlagDict().iteritems(): | 
 |       # Each flags with shortname appears here twice (once under its | 
 |       # normal name, and again with its short name).  To prevent | 
 |       # problems (DuplicateFlagError) with double flag registration, we | 
 |       # perform a check to make sure that the entry we're looking at is | 
 |       # for its normal name. | 
 |       if flag_name == flag.name: | 
 |         try: | 
 |           self[flag_name] = flag | 
 |         except DuplicateFlagError: | 
 |           raise DuplicateFlagError(flag_name, self, | 
 |                                    other_flag_values=flag_values) | 
 |  | 
 |   def RemoveFlagValues(self, flag_values): | 
 |     """Remove flags that were previously appended from another FlagValues. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       flag_values: registry containing flags to remove. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     for flag_name in flag_values.FlagDict(): | 
 |       self.__delattr__(flag_name) | 
 |  | 
 |   def __setitem__(self, name, flag): | 
 |     """Registers a new flag variable.""" | 
 |     fl = self.FlagDict() | 
 |     if not isinstance(flag, Flag): | 
 |       raise IllegalFlagValue(flag) | 
 |     if not isinstance(name, type("")): | 
 |       raise FlagsError("Flag name must be a string") | 
 |     if len(name) == 0: | 
 |       raise FlagsError("Flag name cannot be empty") | 
 |     # If running under pychecker, duplicate keys are likely to be | 
 |     # defined.  Disable check for duplicate keys when pycheck'ing. | 
 |     if (name in fl and not flag.allow_override and | 
 |         not fl[name].allow_override and not _RUNNING_PYCHECKER): | 
 |       module, module_name = _GetCallingModuleObjectAndName() | 
 |       if (self.FindModuleDefiningFlag(name) == module_name and | 
 |           id(module) != self.FindModuleIdDefiningFlag(name)): | 
 |         # If the flag has already been defined by a module with the same name, | 
 |         # but a different ID, we can stop here because it indicates that the | 
 |         # module is simply being imported a subsequent time. | 
 |         return | 
 |       raise DuplicateFlagError(name, self) | 
 |     short_name = flag.short_name | 
 |     if short_name is not None: | 
 |       if (short_name in fl and not flag.allow_override and | 
 |           not fl[short_name].allow_override and not _RUNNING_PYCHECKER): | 
 |         raise DuplicateFlagError(short_name, self) | 
 |       fl[short_name] = flag | 
 |     fl[name] = flag | 
 |     global _exported_flags | 
 |     _exported_flags[name] = flag | 
 |  | 
 |   def __getitem__(self, name): | 
 |     """Retrieves the Flag object for the flag --name.""" | 
 |     return self.FlagDict()[name] | 
 |  | 
 |   def __getattr__(self, name): | 
 |     """Retrieves the 'value' attribute of the flag --name.""" | 
 |     fl = self.FlagDict() | 
 |     if name not in fl: | 
 |       raise AttributeError(name) | 
 |     return fl[name].value | 
 |  | 
 |   def __setattr__(self, name, value): | 
 |     """Sets the 'value' attribute of the flag --name.""" | 
 |     fl = self.FlagDict() | 
 |     fl[name].value = value | 
 |     self._AssertValidators(fl[name].validators) | 
 |     return value | 
 |  | 
 |   def _AssertAllValidators(self): | 
 |     all_validators = set() | 
 |     for flag in self.FlagDict().itervalues(): | 
 |       for validator in flag.validators: | 
 |         all_validators.add(validator) | 
 |     self._AssertValidators(all_validators) | 
 |  | 
 |   def _AssertValidators(self, validators): | 
 |     """Assert if all validators in the list are satisfied. | 
 |  | 
 |     Asserts validators in the order they were created. | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       validators: Iterable(gflags_validators.Validator), validators to be | 
 |         verified | 
 |     Raises: | 
 |       AttributeError: if validators work with a non-existing flag. | 
 |       IllegalFlagValue: if validation fails for at least one validator | 
 |     """ | 
 |     for validator in sorted( | 
 |         validators, key=lambda validator: validator.insertion_index): | 
 |       try: | 
 |         validator.Verify(self) | 
 |       except gflags_validators.Error, e: | 
 |         message = validator.PrintFlagsWithValues(self) | 
 |         raise IllegalFlagValue('%s: %s' % (message, str(e))) | 
 |  | 
 |   def _FlagIsRegistered(self, flag_obj): | 
 |     """Checks whether a Flag object is registered under some name. | 
 |  | 
 |     Note: this is non trivial: in addition to its normal name, a flag | 
 |     may have a short name too.  In self.FlagDict(), both the normal and | 
 |     the short name are mapped to the same flag object.  E.g., calling | 
 |     only "del FLAGS.short_name" is not unregistering the corresponding | 
 |     Flag object (it is still registered under the longer name). | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       flag_obj: A Flag object. | 
 |  | 
 |     Returns: | 
 |       A boolean: True iff flag_obj is registered under some name. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     flag_dict = self.FlagDict() | 
 |     # Check whether flag_obj is registered under its long name. | 
 |     name = flag_obj.name | 
 |     if flag_dict.get(name, None) == flag_obj: | 
 |       return True | 
 |     # Check whether flag_obj is registered under its short name. | 
 |     short_name = flag_obj.short_name | 
 |     if (short_name is not None and | 
 |         flag_dict.get(short_name, None) == flag_obj): | 
 |       return True | 
 |     # The flag cannot be registered under any other name, so we do not | 
 |     # need to do a full search through the values of self.FlagDict(). | 
 |     return False | 
 |  | 
 |   def __delattr__(self, flag_name): | 
 |     """Deletes a previously-defined flag from a flag object. | 
 |  | 
 |     This method makes sure we can delete a flag by using | 
 |  | 
 |       del flag_values_object.<flag_name> | 
 |  | 
 |     E.g., | 
 |  | 
 |       gflags.DEFINE_integer('foo', 1, 'Integer flag.') | 
 |       del gflags.FLAGS.foo | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       flag_name: A string, the name of the flag to be deleted. | 
 |  | 
 |     Raises: | 
 |       AttributeError: When there is no registered flag named flag_name. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     fl = self.FlagDict() | 
 |     if flag_name not in fl: | 
 |       raise AttributeError(flag_name) | 
 |  | 
 |     flag_obj = fl[flag_name] | 
 |     del fl[flag_name] | 
 |  | 
 |     if not self._FlagIsRegistered(flag_obj): | 
 |       # If the Flag object indicated by flag_name is no longer | 
 |       # registered (please see the docstring of _FlagIsRegistered), then | 
 |       # we delete the occurrences of the flag object in all our internal | 
 |       # dictionaries. | 
 |       self.__RemoveFlagFromDictByModule(self.FlagsByModuleDict(), flag_obj) | 
 |       self.__RemoveFlagFromDictByModule(self.FlagsByModuleIdDict(), flag_obj) | 
 |       self.__RemoveFlagFromDictByModule(self.KeyFlagsByModuleDict(), flag_obj) | 
 |  | 
 |   def __RemoveFlagFromDictByModule(self, flags_by_module_dict, flag_obj): | 
 |     """Removes a flag object from a module -> list of flags dictionary. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       flags_by_module_dict: A dictionary that maps module names to lists of | 
 |         flags. | 
 |       flag_obj: A flag object. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     for unused_module, flags_in_module in flags_by_module_dict.iteritems(): | 
 |       # while (as opposed to if) takes care of multiple occurrences of a | 
 |       # flag in the list for the same module. | 
 |       while flag_obj in flags_in_module: | 
 |         flags_in_module.remove(flag_obj) | 
 |  | 
 |   def SetDefault(self, name, value): | 
 |     """Changes the default value of the named flag object.""" | 
 |     fl = self.FlagDict() | 
 |     if name not in fl: | 
 |       raise AttributeError(name) | 
 |     fl[name].SetDefault(value) | 
 |     self._AssertValidators(fl[name].validators) | 
 |  | 
 |   def __contains__(self, name): | 
 |     """Returns True if name is a value (flag) in the dict.""" | 
 |     return name in self.FlagDict() | 
 |  | 
 |   has_key = __contains__  # a synonym for __contains__() | 
 |  | 
 |   def __iter__(self): | 
 |     return iter(self.FlagDict()) | 
 |  | 
 |   def __call__(self, argv): | 
 |     """Parses flags from argv; stores parsed flags into this FlagValues object. | 
 |  | 
 |     All unparsed arguments are returned.  Flags are parsed using the GNU | 
 |     Program Argument Syntax Conventions, using getopt: | 
 |  | 
 |     http://www.gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_mono/libc.html#Getopt | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |        argv: argument list. Can be of any type that may be converted to a list. | 
 |  | 
 |     Returns: | 
 |        The list of arguments not parsed as options, including argv[0] | 
 |  | 
 |     Raises: | 
 |        FlagsError: on any parsing error | 
 |     """ | 
 |     # Support any sequence type that can be converted to a list | 
 |     argv = list(argv) | 
 |  | 
 |     shortopts = "" | 
 |     longopts = [] | 
 |  | 
 |     fl = self.FlagDict() | 
 |  | 
 |     # This pre parses the argv list for --flagfile=<> options. | 
 |     argv = argv[:1] + self.ReadFlagsFromFiles(argv[1:], force_gnu=False) | 
 |  | 
 |     # Correct the argv to support the google style of passing boolean | 
 |     # parameters.  Boolean parameters may be passed by using --mybool, | 
 |     # --nomybool, --mybool=(true|false|1|0).  getopt does not support | 
 |     # having options that may or may not have a parameter.  We replace | 
 |     # instances of the short form --mybool and --nomybool with their | 
 |     # full forms: --mybool=(true|false). | 
 |     original_argv = list(argv)  # list() makes a copy | 
 |     shortest_matches = None | 
 |     for name, flag in fl.items(): | 
 |       if not flag.boolean: | 
 |         continue | 
 |       if shortest_matches is None: | 
 |         # Determine the smallest allowable prefix for all flag names | 
 |         shortest_matches = self.ShortestUniquePrefixes(fl) | 
 |       no_name = 'no' + name | 
 |       prefix = shortest_matches[name] | 
 |       no_prefix = shortest_matches[no_name] | 
 |  | 
 |       # Replace all occurrences of this boolean with extended forms | 
 |       for arg_idx in range(1, len(argv)): | 
 |         arg = argv[arg_idx] | 
 |         if arg.find('=') >= 0: continue | 
 |         if arg.startswith('--'+prefix) and ('--'+name).startswith(arg): | 
 |           argv[arg_idx] = ('--%s=true' % name) | 
 |         elif arg.startswith('--'+no_prefix) and ('--'+no_name).startswith(arg): | 
 |           argv[arg_idx] = ('--%s=false' % name) | 
 |  | 
 |     # Loop over all of the flags, building up the lists of short options | 
 |     # and long options that will be passed to getopt.  Short options are | 
 |     # specified as a string of letters, each letter followed by a colon | 
 |     # if it takes an argument.  Long options are stored in an array of | 
 |     # strings.  Each string ends with an '=' if it takes an argument. | 
 |     for name, flag in fl.items(): | 
 |       longopts.append(name + "=") | 
 |       if len(name) == 1:  # one-letter option: allow short flag type also | 
 |         shortopts += name | 
 |         if not flag.boolean: | 
 |           shortopts += ":" | 
 |  | 
 |     longopts.append('undefok=') | 
 |     undefok_flags = [] | 
 |  | 
 |     # In case --undefok is specified, loop to pick up unrecognized | 
 |     # options one by one. | 
 |     unrecognized_opts = [] | 
 |     args = argv[1:] | 
 |     while True: | 
 |       try: | 
 |         if self.__dict__['__use_gnu_getopt']: | 
 |           optlist, unparsed_args = getopt.gnu_getopt(args, shortopts, longopts) | 
 |         else: | 
 |           optlist, unparsed_args = getopt.getopt(args, shortopts, longopts) | 
 |         break | 
 |       except getopt.GetoptError, e: | 
 |         if not e.opt or e.opt in fl: | 
 |           # Not an unrecognized option, re-raise the exception as a FlagsError | 
 |           raise FlagsError(e) | 
 |         # Remove offender from args and try again | 
 |         for arg_index in range(len(args)): | 
 |           if ((args[arg_index] == '--' + e.opt) or | 
 |               (args[arg_index] == '-' + e.opt) or | 
 |               (args[arg_index].startswith('--' + e.opt + '='))): | 
 |             unrecognized_opts.append((e.opt, args[arg_index])) | 
 |             args = args[0:arg_index] + args[arg_index+1:] | 
 |             break | 
 |         else: | 
 |           # We should have found the option, so we don't expect to get | 
 |           # here.  We could assert, but raising the original exception | 
 |           # might work better. | 
 |           raise FlagsError(e) | 
 |  | 
 |     for name, arg in optlist: | 
 |       if name == '--undefok': | 
 |         flag_names = arg.split(',') | 
 |         undefok_flags.extend(flag_names) | 
 |         # For boolean flags, if --undefok=boolflag is specified, then we should | 
 |         # also accept --noboolflag, in addition to --boolflag. | 
 |         # Since we don't know the type of the undefok'd flag, this will affect | 
 |         # non-boolean flags as well. | 
 |         # NOTE: You shouldn't use --undefok=noboolflag, because then we will | 
 |         # accept --nonoboolflag here.  We are choosing not to do the conversion | 
 |         # from noboolflag -> boolflag because of the ambiguity that flag names | 
 |         # can start with 'no'. | 
 |         undefok_flags.extend('no' + name for name in flag_names) | 
 |         continue | 
 |       if name.startswith('--'): | 
 |         # long option | 
 |         name = name[2:] | 
 |         short_option = 0 | 
 |       else: | 
 |         # short option | 
 |         name = name[1:] | 
 |         short_option = 1 | 
 |       if name in fl: | 
 |         flag = fl[name] | 
 |         if flag.boolean and short_option: arg = 1 | 
 |         flag.Parse(arg) | 
 |  | 
 |     # If there were unrecognized options, raise an exception unless | 
 |     # the options were named via --undefok. | 
 |     for opt, value in unrecognized_opts: | 
 |       if opt not in undefok_flags: | 
 |         raise UnrecognizedFlagError(opt, value) | 
 |  | 
 |     if unparsed_args: | 
 |       if self.__dict__['__use_gnu_getopt']: | 
 |         # if using gnu_getopt just return the program name + remainder of argv. | 
 |         ret_val = argv[:1] + unparsed_args | 
 |       else: | 
 |         # unparsed_args becomes the first non-flag detected by getopt to | 
 |         # the end of argv.  Because argv may have been modified above, | 
 |         # return original_argv for this region. | 
 |         ret_val = argv[:1] + original_argv[-len(unparsed_args):] | 
 |     else: | 
 |       ret_val = argv[:1] | 
 |  | 
 |     self._AssertAllValidators() | 
 |     return ret_val | 
 |  | 
 |   def Reset(self): | 
 |     """Resets the values to the point before FLAGS(argv) was called.""" | 
 |     for f in self.FlagDict().values(): | 
 |       f.Unparse() | 
 |  | 
 |   def RegisteredFlags(self): | 
 |     """Returns: a list of the names and short names of all registered flags.""" | 
 |     return list(self.FlagDict()) | 
 |  | 
 |   def FlagValuesDict(self): | 
 |     """Returns: a dictionary that maps flag names to flag values.""" | 
 |     flag_values = {} | 
 |  | 
 |     for flag_name in self.RegisteredFlags(): | 
 |       flag = self.FlagDict()[flag_name] | 
 |       flag_values[flag_name] = flag.value | 
 |  | 
 |     return flag_values | 
 |  | 
 |   def __str__(self): | 
 |     """Generates a help string for all known flags.""" | 
 |     return self.GetHelp() | 
 |  | 
 |   def GetHelp(self, prefix=''): | 
 |     """Generates a help string for all known flags.""" | 
 |     helplist = [] | 
 |  | 
 |     flags_by_module = self.FlagsByModuleDict() | 
 |     if flags_by_module: | 
 |  | 
 |       modules = sorted(flags_by_module) | 
 |  | 
 |       # Print the help for the main module first, if possible. | 
 |       main_module = _GetMainModule() | 
 |       if main_module in modules: | 
 |         modules.remove(main_module) | 
 |         modules = [main_module] + modules | 
 |  | 
 |       for module in modules: | 
 |         self.__RenderOurModuleFlags(module, helplist) | 
 |  | 
 |       self.__RenderModuleFlags('gflags', | 
 |                                _SPECIAL_FLAGS.FlagDict().values(), | 
 |                                helplist) | 
 |  | 
 |     else: | 
 |       # Just print one long list of flags. | 
 |       self.__RenderFlagList( | 
 |           self.FlagDict().values() + _SPECIAL_FLAGS.FlagDict().values(), | 
 |           helplist, prefix) | 
 |  | 
 |     return '\n'.join(helplist) | 
 |  | 
 |   def __RenderModuleFlags(self, module, flags, output_lines, prefix=""): | 
 |     """Generates a help string for a given module.""" | 
 |     if not isinstance(module, str): | 
 |       module = module.__name__ | 
 |     output_lines.append('\n%s%s:' % (prefix, module)) | 
 |     self.__RenderFlagList(flags, output_lines, prefix + "  ") | 
 |  | 
 |   def __RenderOurModuleFlags(self, module, output_lines, prefix=""): | 
 |     """Generates a help string for a given module.""" | 
 |     flags = self._GetFlagsDefinedByModule(module) | 
 |     if flags: | 
 |       self.__RenderModuleFlags(module, flags, output_lines, prefix) | 
 |  | 
 |   def __RenderOurModuleKeyFlags(self, module, output_lines, prefix=""): | 
 |     """Generates a help string for the key flags of a given module. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       module: A module object or a module name (a string). | 
 |       output_lines: A list of strings.  The generated help message | 
 |         lines will be appended to this list. | 
 |       prefix: A string that is prepended to each generated help line. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     key_flags = self._GetKeyFlagsForModule(module) | 
 |     if key_flags: | 
 |       self.__RenderModuleFlags(module, key_flags, output_lines, prefix) | 
 |  | 
 |   def ModuleHelp(self, module): | 
 |     """Describe the key flags of a module. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       module: A module object or a module name (a string). | 
 |  | 
 |     Returns: | 
 |       string describing the key flags of a module. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     helplist = [] | 
 |     self.__RenderOurModuleKeyFlags(module, helplist) | 
 |     return '\n'.join(helplist) | 
 |  | 
 |   def MainModuleHelp(self): | 
 |     """Describe the key flags of the main module. | 
 |  | 
 |     Returns: | 
 |       string describing the key flags of a module. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     return self.ModuleHelp(_GetMainModule()) | 
 |  | 
 |   def __RenderFlagList(self, flaglist, output_lines, prefix="  "): | 
 |     fl = self.FlagDict() | 
 |     special_fl = _SPECIAL_FLAGS.FlagDict() | 
 |     flaglist = [(flag.name, flag) for flag in flaglist] | 
 |     flaglist.sort() | 
 |     flagset = {} | 
 |     for (name, flag) in flaglist: | 
 |       # It's possible this flag got deleted or overridden since being | 
 |       # registered in the per-module flaglist.  Check now against the | 
 |       # canonical source of current flag information, the FlagDict. | 
 |       if fl.get(name, None) != flag and special_fl.get(name, None) != flag: | 
 |         # a different flag is using this name now | 
 |         continue | 
 |       # only print help once | 
 |       if flag in flagset: continue | 
 |       flagset[flag] = 1 | 
 |       flaghelp = "" | 
 |       if flag.short_name: flaghelp += "-%s," % flag.short_name | 
 |       if flag.boolean: | 
 |         flaghelp += "--[no]%s" % flag.name + ":" | 
 |       else: | 
 |         flaghelp += "--%s" % flag.name + ":" | 
 |       flaghelp += "  " | 
 |       if flag.help: | 
 |         flaghelp += flag.help | 
 |       flaghelp = TextWrap(flaghelp, indent=prefix+"  ", | 
 |                           firstline_indent=prefix) | 
 |       if flag.default_as_str: | 
 |         flaghelp += "\n" | 
 |         flaghelp += TextWrap("(default: %s)" % flag.default_as_str, | 
 |                              indent=prefix+"  ") | 
 |       if flag.parser.syntactic_help: | 
 |         flaghelp += "\n" | 
 |         flaghelp += TextWrap("(%s)" % flag.parser.syntactic_help, | 
 |                              indent=prefix+"  ") | 
 |       output_lines.append(flaghelp) | 
 |  | 
 |   def get(self, name, default): | 
 |     """Returns the value of a flag (if not None) or a default value. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       name: A string, the name of a flag. | 
 |       default: Default value to use if the flag value is None. | 
 |     """ | 
 |  | 
 |     value = self.__getattr__(name) | 
 |     if value is not None:  # Can't do if not value, b/c value might be '0' or "" | 
 |       return value | 
 |     else: | 
 |       return default | 
 |  | 
 |   def ShortestUniquePrefixes(self, fl): | 
 |     """Returns: dictionary; maps flag names to their shortest unique prefix.""" | 
 |     # Sort the list of flag names | 
 |     sorted_flags = [] | 
 |     for name, flag in fl.items(): | 
 |       sorted_flags.append(name) | 
 |       if flag.boolean: | 
 |         sorted_flags.append('no%s' % name) | 
 |     sorted_flags.sort() | 
 |  | 
 |     # For each name in the sorted list, determine the shortest unique | 
 |     # prefix by comparing itself to the next name and to the previous | 
 |     # name (the latter check uses cached info from the previous loop). | 
 |     shortest_matches = {} | 
 |     prev_idx = 0 | 
 |     for flag_idx in range(len(sorted_flags)): | 
 |       curr = sorted_flags[flag_idx] | 
 |       if flag_idx == (len(sorted_flags) - 1): | 
 |         next = None | 
 |       else: | 
 |         next = sorted_flags[flag_idx+1] | 
 |         next_len = len(next) | 
 |       for curr_idx in range(len(curr)): | 
 |         if (next is None | 
 |             or curr_idx >= next_len | 
 |             or curr[curr_idx] != next[curr_idx]): | 
 |           # curr longer than next or no more chars in common | 
 |           shortest_matches[curr] = curr[:max(prev_idx, curr_idx) + 1] | 
 |           prev_idx = curr_idx | 
 |           break | 
 |       else: | 
 |         # curr shorter than (or equal to) next | 
 |         shortest_matches[curr] = curr | 
 |         prev_idx = curr_idx + 1  # next will need at least one more char | 
 |     return shortest_matches | 
 |  | 
 |   def __IsFlagFileDirective(self, flag_string): | 
 |     """Checks whether flag_string contain a --flagfile=<foo> directive.""" | 
 |     if isinstance(flag_string, type("")): | 
 |       if flag_string.startswith('--flagfile='): | 
 |         return 1 | 
 |       elif flag_string == '--flagfile': | 
 |         return 1 | 
 |       elif flag_string.startswith('-flagfile='): | 
 |         return 1 | 
 |       elif flag_string == '-flagfile': | 
 |         return 1 | 
 |       else: | 
 |         return 0 | 
 |     return 0 | 
 |  | 
 |   def ExtractFilename(self, flagfile_str): | 
 |     """Returns filename from a flagfile_str of form -[-]flagfile=filename. | 
 |  | 
 |     The cases of --flagfile foo and -flagfile foo shouldn't be hitting | 
 |     this function, as they are dealt with in the level above this | 
 |     function. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     if flagfile_str.startswith('--flagfile='): | 
 |       return os.path.expanduser((flagfile_str[(len('--flagfile=')):]).strip()) | 
 |     elif flagfile_str.startswith('-flagfile='): | 
 |       return os.path.expanduser((flagfile_str[(len('-flagfile=')):]).strip()) | 
 |     else: | 
 |       raise FlagsError('Hit illegal --flagfile type: %s' % flagfile_str) | 
 |  | 
 |   def __GetFlagFileLines(self, filename, parsed_file_list): | 
 |     """Returns the useful (!=comments, etc) lines from a file with flags. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       filename: A string, the name of the flag file. | 
 |       parsed_file_list: A list of the names of the files we have | 
 |         already read.  MUTATED BY THIS FUNCTION. | 
 |  | 
 |     Returns: | 
 |       List of strings. See the note below. | 
 |  | 
 |     NOTE(springer): This function checks for a nested --flagfile=<foo> | 
 |     tag and handles the lower file recursively. It returns a list of | 
 |     all the lines that _could_ contain command flags. This is | 
 |     EVERYTHING except whitespace lines and comments (lines starting | 
 |     with '#' or '//'). | 
 |     """ | 
 |     line_list = []  # All line from flagfile. | 
 |     flag_line_list = []  # Subset of lines w/o comments, blanks, flagfile= tags. | 
 |     try: | 
 |       file_obj = open(filename, 'r') | 
 |     except IOError, e_msg: | 
 |       raise CantOpenFlagFileError('ERROR:: Unable to open flagfile: %s' % e_msg) | 
 |  | 
 |     line_list = file_obj.readlines() | 
 |     file_obj.close() | 
 |     parsed_file_list.append(filename) | 
 |  | 
 |     # This is where we check each line in the file we just read. | 
 |     for line in line_list: | 
 |       if line.isspace(): | 
 |         pass | 
 |       # Checks for comment (a line that starts with '#'). | 
 |       elif line.startswith('#') or line.startswith('//'): | 
 |         pass | 
 |       # Checks for a nested "--flagfile=<bar>" flag in the current file. | 
 |       # If we find one, recursively parse down into that file. | 
 |       elif self.__IsFlagFileDirective(line): | 
 |         sub_filename = self.ExtractFilename(line) | 
 |         # We do a little safety check for reparsing a file we've already done. | 
 |         if not sub_filename in parsed_file_list: | 
 |           included_flags = self.__GetFlagFileLines(sub_filename, | 
 |                                                    parsed_file_list) | 
 |           flag_line_list.extend(included_flags) | 
 |         else:  # Case of hitting a circularly included file. | 
 |           sys.stderr.write('Warning: Hit circular flagfile dependency: %s\n' % | 
 |                            (sub_filename,)) | 
 |       else: | 
 |         # Any line that's not a comment or a nested flagfile should get | 
 |         # copied into 2nd position.  This leaves earlier arguments | 
 |         # further back in the list, thus giving them higher priority. | 
 |         flag_line_list.append(line.strip()) | 
 |     return flag_line_list | 
 |  | 
 |   def ReadFlagsFromFiles(self, argv, force_gnu=True): | 
 |     """Processes command line args, but also allow args to be read from file. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       argv: A list of strings, usually sys.argv[1:], which may contain one or | 
 |         more flagfile directives of the form --flagfile="./filename". | 
 |         Note that the name of the program (sys.argv[0]) should be omitted. | 
 |       force_gnu: If False, --flagfile parsing obeys normal flag semantics. | 
 |         If True, --flagfile parsing instead follows gnu_getopt semantics. | 
 |         *** WARNING *** force_gnu=False may become the future default! | 
 |  | 
 |     Returns: | 
 |  | 
 |       A new list which has the original list combined with what we read | 
 |       from any flagfile(s). | 
 |  | 
 |     References: Global gflags.FLAG class instance. | 
 |  | 
 |     This function should be called before the normal FLAGS(argv) call. | 
 |     This function scans the input list for a flag that looks like: | 
 |     --flagfile=<somefile>. Then it opens <somefile>, reads all valid key | 
 |     and value pairs and inserts them into the input list between the | 
 |     first item of the list and any subsequent items in the list. | 
 |  | 
 |     Note that your application's flags are still defined the usual way | 
 |     using gflags DEFINE_flag() type functions. | 
 |  | 
 |     Notes (assuming we're getting a commandline of some sort as our input): | 
 |     --> Flags from the command line argv _should_ always take precedence! | 
 |     --> A further "--flagfile=<otherfile.cfg>" CAN be nested in a flagfile. | 
 |         It will be processed after the parent flag file is done. | 
 |     --> For duplicate flags, first one we hit should "win". | 
 |     --> In a flagfile, a line beginning with # or // is a comment. | 
 |     --> Entirely blank lines _should_ be ignored. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     parsed_file_list = [] | 
 |     rest_of_args = argv | 
 |     new_argv = [] | 
 |     while rest_of_args: | 
 |       current_arg = rest_of_args[0] | 
 |       rest_of_args = rest_of_args[1:] | 
 |       if self.__IsFlagFileDirective(current_arg): | 
 |         # This handles the case of -(-)flagfile foo.  In this case the | 
 |         # next arg really is part of this one. | 
 |         if current_arg == '--flagfile' or current_arg == '-flagfile': | 
 |           if not rest_of_args: | 
 |             raise IllegalFlagValue('--flagfile with no argument') | 
 |           flag_filename = os.path.expanduser(rest_of_args[0]) | 
 |           rest_of_args = rest_of_args[1:] | 
 |         else: | 
 |           # This handles the case of (-)-flagfile=foo. | 
 |           flag_filename = self.ExtractFilename(current_arg) | 
 |         new_argv.extend( | 
 |             self.__GetFlagFileLines(flag_filename, parsed_file_list)) | 
 |       else: | 
 |         new_argv.append(current_arg) | 
 |         # Stop parsing after '--', like getopt and gnu_getopt. | 
 |         if current_arg == '--': | 
 |           break | 
 |         # Stop parsing after a non-flag, like getopt. | 
 |         if not current_arg.startswith('-'): | 
 |           if not force_gnu and not self.__dict__['__use_gnu_getopt']: | 
 |             break | 
 |  | 
 |     if rest_of_args: | 
 |       new_argv.extend(rest_of_args) | 
 |  | 
 |     return new_argv | 
 |  | 
 |   def FlagsIntoString(self): | 
 |     """Returns a string with the flags assignments from this FlagValues object. | 
 |  | 
 |     This function ignores flags whose value is None.  Each flag | 
 |     assignment is separated by a newline. | 
 |  | 
 |     NOTE: MUST mirror the behavior of the C++ CommandlineFlagsIntoString | 
 |     from http://code.google.com/p/google-gflags | 
 |     """ | 
 |     s = '' | 
 |     for flag in self.FlagDict().values(): | 
 |       if flag.value is not None: | 
 |         s += flag.Serialize() + '\n' | 
 |     return s | 
 |  | 
 |   def AppendFlagsIntoFile(self, filename): | 
 |     """Appends all flags assignments from this FlagInfo object to a file. | 
 |  | 
 |     Output will be in the format of a flagfile. | 
 |  | 
 |     NOTE: MUST mirror the behavior of the C++ AppendFlagsIntoFile | 
 |     from http://code.google.com/p/google-gflags | 
 |     """ | 
 |     out_file = open(filename, 'a') | 
 |     out_file.write(self.FlagsIntoString()) | 
 |     out_file.close() | 
 |  | 
 |   def WriteHelpInXMLFormat(self, outfile=None): | 
 |     """Outputs flag documentation in XML format. | 
 |  | 
 |     NOTE: We use element names that are consistent with those used by | 
 |     the C++ command-line flag library, from | 
 |     http://code.google.com/p/google-gflags | 
 |     We also use a few new elements (e.g., <key>), but we do not | 
 |     interfere / overlap with existing XML elements used by the C++ | 
 |     library.  Please maintain this consistency. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       outfile: File object we write to.  Default None means sys.stdout. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     outfile = outfile or sys.stdout | 
 |  | 
 |     outfile.write('<?xml version=\"1.0\"?>\n') | 
 |     outfile.write('<AllFlags>\n') | 
 |     indent = '  ' | 
 |     _WriteSimpleXMLElement(outfile, 'program', os.path.basename(sys.argv[0]), | 
 |                            indent) | 
 |  | 
 |     usage_doc = sys.modules['__main__'].__doc__ | 
 |     if not usage_doc: | 
 |       usage_doc = '\nUSAGE: %s [flags]\n' % sys.argv[0] | 
 |     else: | 
 |       usage_doc = usage_doc.replace('%s', sys.argv[0]) | 
 |     _WriteSimpleXMLElement(outfile, 'usage', usage_doc, indent) | 
 |  | 
 |     # Get list of key flags for the main module. | 
 |     key_flags = self._GetKeyFlagsForModule(_GetMainModule()) | 
 |  | 
 |     # Sort flags by declaring module name and next by flag name. | 
 |     flags_by_module = self.FlagsByModuleDict() | 
 |     all_module_names = list(flags_by_module.keys()) | 
 |     all_module_names.sort() | 
 |     for module_name in all_module_names: | 
 |       flag_list = [(f.name, f) for f in flags_by_module[module_name]] | 
 |       flag_list.sort() | 
 |       for unused_flag_name, flag in flag_list: | 
 |         is_key = flag in key_flags | 
 |         flag.WriteInfoInXMLFormat(outfile, module_name, | 
 |                                   is_key=is_key, indent=indent) | 
 |  | 
 |     outfile.write('</AllFlags>\n') | 
 |     outfile.flush() | 
 |  | 
 |   def AddValidator(self, validator): | 
 |     """Register new flags validator to be checked. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       validator: gflags_validators.Validator | 
 |     Raises: | 
 |       AttributeError: if validators work with a non-existing flag. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     for flag_name in validator.GetFlagsNames(): | 
 |       flag = self.FlagDict()[flag_name] | 
 |       flag.validators.append(validator) | 
 |  | 
 | # end of FlagValues definition | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | # The global FlagValues instance | 
 | FLAGS = FlagValues() | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def _StrOrUnicode(value): | 
 |   """Converts value to a python string or, if necessary, unicode-string.""" | 
 |   try: | 
 |     return str(value) | 
 |   except UnicodeEncodeError: | 
 |     return unicode(value) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def _MakeXMLSafe(s): | 
 |   """Escapes <, >, and & from s, and removes XML 1.0-illegal chars.""" | 
 |   s = cgi.escape(s)  # Escape <, >, and & | 
 |   # Remove characters that cannot appear in an XML 1.0 document | 
 |   # (http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml/#charsets). | 
 |   # | 
 |   # NOTE: if there are problems with current solution, one may move to | 
 |   # XML 1.1, which allows such chars, if they're entity-escaped (&#xHH;). | 
 |   s = re.sub(r'[\x00-\x08\x0b\x0c\x0e-\x1f]', '', s) | 
 |   # Convert non-ascii characters to entities.  Note: requires python >=2.3 | 
 |   s = s.encode('ascii', 'xmlcharrefreplace')   # u'\xce\x88' -> 'uΈ' | 
 |   return s | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def _WriteSimpleXMLElement(outfile, name, value, indent): | 
 |   """Writes a simple XML element. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     outfile: File object we write the XML element to. | 
 |     name: A string, the name of XML element. | 
 |     value: A Python object, whose string representation will be used | 
 |       as the value of the XML element. | 
 |     indent: A string, prepended to each line of generated output. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   value_str = _StrOrUnicode(value) | 
 |   if isinstance(value, bool): | 
 |     # Display boolean values as the C++ flag library does: no caps. | 
 |     value_str = value_str.lower() | 
 |   safe_value_str = _MakeXMLSafe(value_str) | 
 |   outfile.write('%s<%s>%s</%s>\n' % (indent, name, safe_value_str, name)) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class Flag: | 
 |   """Information about a command-line flag. | 
 |  | 
 |   'Flag' objects define the following fields: | 
 |     .name  - the name for this flag | 
 |     .default - the default value for this flag | 
 |     .default_as_str - default value as repr'd string, e.g., "'true'" (or None) | 
 |     .value  - the most recent parsed value of this flag; set by Parse() | 
 |     .help  - a help string or None if no help is available | 
 |     .short_name  - the single letter alias for this flag (or None) | 
 |     .boolean  - if 'true', this flag does not accept arguments | 
 |     .present  - true if this flag was parsed from command line flags. | 
 |     .parser  - an ArgumentParser object | 
 |     .serializer - an ArgumentSerializer object | 
 |     .allow_override - the flag may be redefined without raising an error | 
 |  | 
 |   The only public method of a 'Flag' object is Parse(), but it is | 
 |   typically only called by a 'FlagValues' object.  The Parse() method is | 
 |   a thin wrapper around the 'ArgumentParser' Parse() method.  The parsed | 
 |   value is saved in .value, and the .present attribute is updated.  If | 
 |   this flag was already present, a FlagsError is raised. | 
 |  | 
 |   Parse() is also called during __init__ to parse the default value and | 
 |   initialize the .value attribute.  This enables other python modules to | 
 |   safely use flags even if the __main__ module neglects to parse the | 
 |   command line arguments.  The .present attribute is cleared after | 
 |   __init__ parsing.  If the default value is set to None, then the | 
 |   __init__ parsing step is skipped and the .value attribute is | 
 |   initialized to None. | 
 |  | 
 |   Note: The default value is also presented to the user in the help | 
 |   string, so it is important that it be a legal value for this flag. | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   def __init__(self, parser, serializer, name, default, help_string, | 
 |                short_name=None, boolean=0, allow_override=0): | 
 |     self.name = name | 
 |  | 
 |     if not help_string: | 
 |       help_string = '(no help available)' | 
 |  | 
 |     self.help = help_string | 
 |     self.short_name = short_name | 
 |     self.boolean = boolean | 
 |     self.present = 0 | 
 |     self.parser = parser | 
 |     self.serializer = serializer | 
 |     self.allow_override = allow_override | 
 |     self.value = None | 
 |     self.validators = [] | 
 |  | 
 |     self.SetDefault(default) | 
 |  | 
 |   def __hash__(self): | 
 |     return hash(id(self)) | 
 |  | 
 |   def __eq__(self, other): | 
 |     return self is other | 
 |  | 
 |   def __lt__(self, other): | 
 |     if isinstance(other, Flag): | 
 |       return id(self) < id(other) | 
 |     return NotImplemented | 
 |  | 
 |   def __GetParsedValueAsString(self, value): | 
 |     if value is None: | 
 |       return None | 
 |     if self.serializer: | 
 |       return repr(self.serializer.Serialize(value)) | 
 |     if self.boolean: | 
 |       if value: | 
 |         return repr('true') | 
 |       else: | 
 |         return repr('false') | 
 |     return repr(_StrOrUnicode(value)) | 
 |  | 
 |   def Parse(self, argument): | 
 |     try: | 
 |       self.value = self.parser.Parse(argument) | 
 |     except ValueError, e:  # recast ValueError as IllegalFlagValue | 
 |       raise IllegalFlagValue("flag --%s=%s: %s" % (self.name, argument, e)) | 
 |     self.present += 1 | 
 |  | 
 |   def Unparse(self): | 
 |     if self.default is None: | 
 |       self.value = None | 
 |     else: | 
 |       self.Parse(self.default) | 
 |     self.present = 0 | 
 |  | 
 |   def Serialize(self): | 
 |     if self.value is None: | 
 |       return '' | 
 |     if self.boolean: | 
 |       if self.value: | 
 |         return "--%s" % self.name | 
 |       else: | 
 |         return "--no%s" % self.name | 
 |     else: | 
 |       if not self.serializer: | 
 |         raise FlagsError("Serializer not present for flag %s" % self.name) | 
 |       return "--%s=%s" % (self.name, self.serializer.Serialize(self.value)) | 
 |  | 
 |   def SetDefault(self, value): | 
 |     """Changes the default value (and current value too) for this Flag.""" | 
 |     # We can't allow a None override because it may end up not being | 
 |     # passed to C++ code when we're overriding C++ flags.  So we | 
 |     # cowardly bail out until someone fixes the semantics of trying to | 
 |     # pass None to a C++ flag.  See swig_flags.Init() for details on | 
 |     # this behavior. | 
 |     # TODO(olexiy): Users can directly call this method, bypassing all flags | 
 |     # validators (we don't have FlagValues here, so we can not check | 
 |     # validators). | 
 |     # The simplest solution I see is to make this method private. | 
 |     # Another approach would be to store reference to the corresponding | 
 |     # FlagValues with each flag, but this seems to be an overkill. | 
 |     if value is None and self.allow_override: | 
 |       raise DuplicateFlagCannotPropagateNoneToSwig(self.name) | 
 |  | 
 |     self.default = value | 
 |     self.Unparse() | 
 |     self.default_as_str = self.__GetParsedValueAsString(self.value) | 
 |  | 
 |   def Type(self): | 
 |     """Returns: a string that describes the type of this Flag.""" | 
 |     # NOTE: we use strings, and not the types.*Type constants because | 
 |     # our flags can have more exotic types, e.g., 'comma separated list | 
 |     # of strings', 'whitespace separated list of strings', etc. | 
 |     return self.parser.Type() | 
 |  | 
 |   def WriteInfoInXMLFormat(self, outfile, module_name, is_key=False, indent=''): | 
 |     """Writes common info about this flag, in XML format. | 
 |  | 
 |     This is information that is relevant to all flags (e.g., name, | 
 |     meaning, etc.).  If you defined a flag that has some other pieces of | 
 |     info, then please override _WriteCustomInfoInXMLFormat. | 
 |  | 
 |     Please do NOT override this method. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       outfile: File object we write to. | 
 |       module_name: A string, the name of the module that defines this flag. | 
 |       is_key: A boolean, True iff this flag is key for main module. | 
 |       indent: A string that is prepended to each generated line. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     outfile.write(indent + '<flag>\n') | 
 |     inner_indent = indent + '  ' | 
 |     if is_key: | 
 |       _WriteSimpleXMLElement(outfile, 'key', 'yes', inner_indent) | 
 |     _WriteSimpleXMLElement(outfile, 'file', module_name, inner_indent) | 
 |     # Print flag features that are relevant for all flags. | 
 |     _WriteSimpleXMLElement(outfile, 'name', self.name, inner_indent) | 
 |     if self.short_name: | 
 |       _WriteSimpleXMLElement(outfile, 'short_name', self.short_name, | 
 |                              inner_indent) | 
 |     if self.help: | 
 |       _WriteSimpleXMLElement(outfile, 'meaning', self.help, inner_indent) | 
 |     # The default flag value can either be represented as a string like on the | 
 |     # command line, or as a Python object.  We serialize this value in the | 
 |     # latter case in order to remain consistent. | 
 |     if self.serializer and not isinstance(self.default, str): | 
 |       default_serialized = self.serializer.Serialize(self.default) | 
 |     else: | 
 |       default_serialized = self.default | 
 |     _WriteSimpleXMLElement(outfile, 'default', default_serialized, inner_indent) | 
 |     _WriteSimpleXMLElement(outfile, 'current', self.value, inner_indent) | 
 |     _WriteSimpleXMLElement(outfile, 'type', self.Type(), inner_indent) | 
 |     # Print extra flag features this flag may have. | 
 |     self._WriteCustomInfoInXMLFormat(outfile, inner_indent) | 
 |     outfile.write(indent + '</flag>\n') | 
 |  | 
 |   def _WriteCustomInfoInXMLFormat(self, outfile, indent): | 
 |     """Writes extra info about this flag, in XML format. | 
 |  | 
 |     "Extra" means "not already printed by WriteInfoInXMLFormat above." | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       outfile: File object we write to. | 
 |       indent: A string that is prepended to each generated line. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     # Usually, the parser knows the extra details about the flag, so | 
 |     # we just forward the call to it. | 
 |     self.parser.WriteCustomInfoInXMLFormat(outfile, indent) | 
 | # End of Flag definition | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class _ArgumentParserCache(type): | 
 |   """Metaclass used to cache and share argument parsers among flags.""" | 
 |  | 
 |   _instances = {} | 
 |  | 
 |   def __call__(mcs, *args, **kwargs): | 
 |     """Returns an instance of the argument parser cls. | 
 |  | 
 |     This method overrides behavior of the __new__ methods in | 
 |     all subclasses of ArgumentParser (inclusive). If an instance | 
 |     for mcs with the same set of arguments exists, this instance is | 
 |     returned, otherwise a new instance is created. | 
 |  | 
 |     If any keyword arguments are defined, or the values in args | 
 |     are not hashable, this method always returns a new instance of | 
 |     cls. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       args: Positional initializer arguments. | 
 |       kwargs: Initializer keyword arguments. | 
 |  | 
 |     Returns: | 
 |       An instance of cls, shared or new. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     if kwargs: | 
 |       return type.__call__(mcs, *args, **kwargs) | 
 |     else: | 
 |       instances = mcs._instances | 
 |       key = (mcs,) + tuple(args) | 
 |       try: | 
 |         return instances[key] | 
 |       except KeyError: | 
 |         # No cache entry for key exists, create a new one. | 
 |         return instances.setdefault(key, type.__call__(mcs, *args)) | 
 |       except TypeError: | 
 |         # An object in args cannot be hashed, always return | 
 |         # a new instance. | 
 |         return type.__call__(mcs, *args) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class ArgumentParser(object): | 
 |   """Base class used to parse and convert arguments. | 
 |  | 
 |   The Parse() method checks to make sure that the string argument is a | 
 |   legal value and convert it to a native type.  If the value cannot be | 
 |   converted, it should throw a 'ValueError' exception with a human | 
 |   readable explanation of why the value is illegal. | 
 |  | 
 |   Subclasses should also define a syntactic_help string which may be | 
 |   presented to the user to describe the form of the legal values. | 
 |  | 
 |   Argument parser classes must be stateless, since instances are cached | 
 |   and shared between flags. Initializer arguments are allowed, but all | 
 |   member variables must be derived from initializer arguments only. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   __metaclass__ = _ArgumentParserCache | 
 |  | 
 |   syntactic_help = "" | 
 |  | 
 |   def Parse(self, argument): | 
 |     """Default implementation: always returns its argument unmodified.""" | 
 |     return argument | 
 |  | 
 |   def Type(self): | 
 |     return 'string' | 
 |  | 
 |   def WriteCustomInfoInXMLFormat(self, outfile, indent): | 
 |     pass | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class ArgumentSerializer: | 
 |   """Base class for generating string representations of a flag value.""" | 
 |  | 
 |   def Serialize(self, value): | 
 |     return _StrOrUnicode(value) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class ListSerializer(ArgumentSerializer): | 
 |  | 
 |   def __init__(self, list_sep): | 
 |     self.list_sep = list_sep | 
 |  | 
 |   def Serialize(self, value): | 
 |     return self.list_sep.join([_StrOrUnicode(x) for x in value]) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | # Flags validators | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def RegisterValidator(flag_name, | 
 |                       checker, | 
 |                       message='Flag validation failed', | 
 |                       flag_values=FLAGS): | 
 |   """Adds a constraint, which will be enforced during program execution. | 
 |  | 
 |   The constraint is validated when flags are initially parsed, and after each | 
 |   change of the corresponding flag's value. | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     flag_name: string, name of the flag to be checked. | 
 |     checker: method to validate the flag. | 
 |       input  - value of the corresponding flag (string, boolean, etc. | 
 |         This value will be passed to checker by the library). See file's | 
 |         docstring for examples. | 
 |       output - Boolean. | 
 |         Must return True if validator constraint is satisfied. | 
 |         If constraint is not satisfied, it should either return False or | 
 |           raise gflags_validators.Error(desired_error_message). | 
 |     message: error text to be shown to the user if checker returns False. | 
 |       If checker raises gflags_validators.Error, message from the raised | 
 |         Error will be shown. | 
 |     flag_values: FlagValues | 
 |   Raises: | 
 |     AttributeError: if flag_name is not registered as a valid flag name. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   flag_values.AddValidator(gflags_validators.SimpleValidator(flag_name, | 
 |                                                             checker, | 
 |                                                             message)) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def MarkFlagAsRequired(flag_name, flag_values=FLAGS): | 
 |   """Ensure that flag is not None during program execution. | 
 |  | 
 |   Registers a flag validator, which will follow usual validator | 
 |   rules. | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     flag_name: string, name of the flag | 
 |     flag_values: FlagValues | 
 |   Raises: | 
 |     AttributeError: if flag_name is not registered as a valid flag name. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   RegisterValidator(flag_name, | 
 |                     lambda value: value is not None, | 
 |                     message='Flag --%s must be specified.' % flag_name, | 
 |                     flag_values=flag_values) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def _RegisterBoundsValidatorIfNeeded(parser, name, flag_values): | 
 |   """Enforce lower and upper bounds for numeric flags. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     parser: NumericParser (either FloatParser or IntegerParser). Provides lower | 
 |       and upper bounds, and help text to display. | 
 |     name: string, name of the flag | 
 |     flag_values: FlagValues | 
 |   """ | 
 |   if parser.lower_bound is not None or parser.upper_bound is not None: | 
 |  | 
 |     def Checker(value): | 
 |       if value is not None and parser.IsOutsideBounds(value): | 
 |         message = '%s is not %s' % (value, parser.syntactic_help) | 
 |         raise gflags_validators.Error(message) | 
 |       return True | 
 |  | 
 |     RegisterValidator(name, | 
 |                       Checker, | 
 |                       flag_values=flag_values) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | # The DEFINE functions are explained in mode details in the module doc string. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def DEFINE(parser, name, default, help, flag_values=FLAGS, serializer=None, | 
 |            **args): | 
 |   """Registers a generic Flag object. | 
 |  | 
 |   NOTE: in the docstrings of all DEFINE* functions, "registers" is short | 
 |   for "creates a new flag and registers it". | 
 |  | 
 |   Auxiliary function: clients should use the specialized DEFINE_<type> | 
 |   function instead. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     parser: ArgumentParser that is used to parse the flag arguments. | 
 |     name: A string, the flag name. | 
 |     default: The default value of the flag. | 
 |     help: A help string. | 
 |     flag_values: FlagValues object the flag will be registered with. | 
 |     serializer: ArgumentSerializer that serializes the flag value. | 
 |     args: Dictionary with extra keyword args that are passes to the | 
 |       Flag __init__. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   DEFINE_flag(Flag(parser, serializer, name, default, help, **args), | 
 |               flag_values) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def DEFINE_flag(flag, flag_values=FLAGS): | 
 |   """Registers a 'Flag' object with a 'FlagValues' object. | 
 |  | 
 |   By default, the global FLAGS 'FlagValue' object is used. | 
 |  | 
 |   Typical users will use one of the more specialized DEFINE_xxx | 
 |   functions, such as DEFINE_string or DEFINE_integer.  But developers | 
 |   who need to create Flag objects themselves should use this function | 
 |   to register their flags. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   # copying the reference to flag_values prevents pychecker warnings | 
 |   fv = flag_values | 
 |   fv[flag.name] = flag | 
 |   # Tell flag_values who's defining the flag. | 
 |   if isinstance(flag_values, FlagValues): | 
 |     # Regarding the above isinstance test: some users pass funny | 
 |     # values of flag_values (e.g., {}) in order to avoid the flag | 
 |     # registration (in the past, there used to be a flag_values == | 
 |     # FLAGS test here) and redefine flags with the same name (e.g., | 
 |     # debug).  To avoid breaking their code, we perform the | 
 |     # registration only if flag_values is a real FlagValues object. | 
 |     module, module_name = _GetCallingModuleObjectAndName() | 
 |     flag_values._RegisterFlagByModule(module_name, flag) | 
 |     flag_values._RegisterFlagByModuleId(id(module), flag) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def _InternalDeclareKeyFlags(flag_names, | 
 |                              flag_values=FLAGS, key_flag_values=None): | 
 |   """Declares a flag as key for the calling module. | 
 |  | 
 |   Internal function.  User code should call DECLARE_key_flag or | 
 |   ADOPT_module_key_flags instead. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     flag_names: A list of strings that are names of already-registered | 
 |       Flag objects. | 
 |     flag_values: A FlagValues object that the flags listed in | 
 |       flag_names have registered with (the value of the flag_values | 
 |       argument from the DEFINE_* calls that defined those flags). | 
 |       This should almost never need to be overridden. | 
 |     key_flag_values: A FlagValues object that (among possibly many | 
 |       other things) keeps track of the key flags for each module. | 
 |       Default None means "same as flag_values".  This should almost | 
 |       never need to be overridden. | 
 |  | 
 |   Raises: | 
 |     UnrecognizedFlagError: when we refer to a flag that was not | 
 |       defined yet. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   key_flag_values = key_flag_values or flag_values | 
 |  | 
 |   module = _GetCallingModule() | 
 |  | 
 |   for flag_name in flag_names: | 
 |     if flag_name not in flag_values: | 
 |       raise UnrecognizedFlagError(flag_name) | 
 |     flag = flag_values.FlagDict()[flag_name] | 
 |     key_flag_values._RegisterKeyFlagForModule(module, flag) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def DECLARE_key_flag(flag_name, flag_values=FLAGS): | 
 |   """Declares one flag as key to the current module. | 
 |  | 
 |   Key flags are flags that are deemed really important for a module. | 
 |   They are important when listing help messages; e.g., if the | 
 |   --helpshort command-line flag is used, then only the key flags of the | 
 |   main module are listed (instead of all flags, as in the case of | 
 |   --help). | 
 |  | 
 |   Sample usage: | 
 |  | 
 |     gflags.DECLARED_key_flag('flag_1') | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     flag_name: A string, the name of an already declared flag. | 
 |       (Redeclaring flags as key, including flags implicitly key | 
 |       because they were declared in this module, is a no-op.) | 
 |     flag_values: A FlagValues object.  This should almost never | 
 |       need to be overridden. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   if flag_name in _SPECIAL_FLAGS: | 
 |     # Take care of the special flags, e.g., --flagfile, --undefok. | 
 |     # These flags are defined in _SPECIAL_FLAGS, and are treated | 
 |     # specially during flag parsing, taking precedence over the | 
 |     # user-defined flags. | 
 |     _InternalDeclareKeyFlags([flag_name], | 
 |                              flag_values=_SPECIAL_FLAGS, | 
 |                              key_flag_values=flag_values) | 
 |     return | 
 |   _InternalDeclareKeyFlags([flag_name], flag_values=flag_values) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def ADOPT_module_key_flags(module, flag_values=FLAGS): | 
 |   """Declares that all flags key to a module are key to the current module. | 
 |  | 
 |   Args: | 
 |     module: A module object. | 
 |     flag_values: A FlagValues object.  This should almost never need | 
 |       to be overridden. | 
 |  | 
 |   Raises: | 
 |     FlagsError: When given an argument that is a module name (a | 
 |     string), instead of a module object. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   # NOTE(salcianu): an even better test would be if not | 
 |   # isinstance(module, types.ModuleType) but I didn't want to import | 
 |   # types for such a tiny use. | 
 |   if isinstance(module, str): | 
 |     raise FlagsError('Received module name %s; expected a module object.' | 
 |                      % module) | 
 |   _InternalDeclareKeyFlags( | 
 |       [f.name for f in flag_values._GetKeyFlagsForModule(module.__name__)], | 
 |       flag_values=flag_values) | 
 |   # If module is this flag module, take _SPECIAL_FLAGS into account. | 
 |   if module == _GetThisModuleObjectAndName()[0]: | 
 |     _InternalDeclareKeyFlags( | 
 |         # As we associate flags with _GetCallingModuleObjectAndName(), the | 
 |         # special flags defined in this module are incorrectly registered with | 
 |         # a different module.  So, we can't use _GetKeyFlagsForModule. | 
 |         # Instead, we take all flags from _SPECIAL_FLAGS (a private | 
 |         # FlagValues, where no other module should register flags). | 
 |         [f.name for f in _SPECIAL_FLAGS.FlagDict().values()], | 
 |         flag_values=_SPECIAL_FLAGS, | 
 |         key_flag_values=flag_values) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | # | 
 | # STRING FLAGS | 
 | # | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def DEFINE_string(name, default, help, flag_values=FLAGS, **args): | 
 |   """Registers a flag whose value can be any string.""" | 
 |   parser = ArgumentParser() | 
 |   serializer = ArgumentSerializer() | 
 |   DEFINE(parser, name, default, help, flag_values, serializer, **args) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | # | 
 | # BOOLEAN FLAGS | 
 | # | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class BooleanParser(ArgumentParser): | 
 |   """Parser of boolean values.""" | 
 |  | 
 |   def Convert(self, argument): | 
 |     """Converts the argument to a boolean; raise ValueError on errors.""" | 
 |     if type(argument) == str: | 
 |       if argument.lower() in ['true', 't', '1']: | 
 |         return True | 
 |       elif argument.lower() in ['false', 'f', '0']: | 
 |         return False | 
 |  | 
 |     bool_argument = bool(argument) | 
 |     if argument == bool_argument: | 
 |       # The argument is a valid boolean (True, False, 0, or 1), and not just | 
 |       # something that always converts to bool (list, string, int, etc.). | 
 |       return bool_argument | 
 |  | 
 |     raise ValueError('Non-boolean argument to boolean flag', argument) | 
 |  | 
 |   def Parse(self, argument): | 
 |     val = self.Convert(argument) | 
 |     return val | 
 |  | 
 |   def Type(self): | 
 |     return 'bool' | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class BooleanFlag(Flag): | 
 |   """Basic boolean flag. | 
 |  | 
 |   Boolean flags do not take any arguments, and their value is either | 
 |   True (1) or False (0).  The false value is specified on the command | 
 |   line by prepending the word 'no' to either the long or the short flag | 
 |   name. | 
 |  | 
 |   For example, if a Boolean flag was created whose long name was | 
 |   'update' and whose short name was 'x', then this flag could be | 
 |   explicitly unset through either --noupdate or --nox. | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   def __init__(self, name, default, help, short_name=None, **args): | 
 |     p = BooleanParser() | 
 |     Flag.__init__(self, p, None, name, default, help, short_name, 1, **args) | 
 |     if not self.help: self.help = "a boolean value" | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def DEFINE_boolean(name, default, help, flag_values=FLAGS, **args): | 
 |   """Registers a boolean flag. | 
 |  | 
 |   Such a boolean flag does not take an argument.  If a user wants to | 
 |   specify a false value explicitly, the long option beginning with 'no' | 
 |   must be used: i.e. --noflag | 
 |  | 
 |   This flag will have a value of None, True or False.  None is possible | 
 |   if default=None and the user does not specify the flag on the command | 
 |   line. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   DEFINE_flag(BooleanFlag(name, default, help, **args), flag_values) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | # Match C++ API to unconfuse C++ people. | 
 | DEFINE_bool = DEFINE_boolean | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class HelpFlag(BooleanFlag): | 
 |   """ | 
 |   HelpFlag is a special boolean flag that prints usage information and | 
 |   raises a SystemExit exception if it is ever found in the command | 
 |   line arguments.  Note this is called with allow_override=1, so other | 
 |   apps can define their own --help flag, replacing this one, if they want. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   def __init__(self): | 
 |     BooleanFlag.__init__(self, "help", 0, "show this help", | 
 |                          short_name="?", allow_override=1) | 
 |   def Parse(self, arg): | 
 |     if arg: | 
 |       doc = sys.modules["__main__"].__doc__ | 
 |       flags = str(FLAGS) | 
 |       print doc or ("\nUSAGE: %s [flags]\n" % sys.argv[0]) | 
 |       if flags: | 
 |         print "flags:" | 
 |         print flags | 
 |       sys.exit(1) | 
 | class HelpXMLFlag(BooleanFlag): | 
 |   """Similar to HelpFlag, but generates output in XML format.""" | 
 |   def __init__(self): | 
 |     BooleanFlag.__init__(self, 'helpxml', False, | 
 |                          'like --help, but generates XML output', | 
 |                          allow_override=1) | 
 |   def Parse(self, arg): | 
 |     if arg: | 
 |       FLAGS.WriteHelpInXMLFormat(sys.stdout) | 
 |       sys.exit(1) | 
 | class HelpshortFlag(BooleanFlag): | 
 |   """ | 
 |   HelpshortFlag is a special boolean flag that prints usage | 
 |   information for the "main" module, and rasies a SystemExit exception | 
 |   if it is ever found in the command line arguments.  Note this is | 
 |   called with allow_override=1, so other apps can define their own | 
 |   --helpshort flag, replacing this one, if they want. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   def __init__(self): | 
 |     BooleanFlag.__init__(self, "helpshort", 0, | 
 |                          "show usage only for this module", allow_override=1) | 
 |   def Parse(self, arg): | 
 |     if arg: | 
 |       doc = sys.modules["__main__"].__doc__ | 
 |       flags = FLAGS.MainModuleHelp() | 
 |       print doc or ("\nUSAGE: %s [flags]\n" % sys.argv[0]) | 
 |       if flags: | 
 |         print "flags:" | 
 |         print flags | 
 |       sys.exit(1) | 
 |  | 
 | # | 
 | # Numeric parser - base class for Integer and Float parsers | 
 | # | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class NumericParser(ArgumentParser): | 
 |   """Parser of numeric values. | 
 |  | 
 |   Parsed value may be bounded to a given upper and lower bound. | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   def IsOutsideBounds(self, val): | 
 |     return ((self.lower_bound is not None and val < self.lower_bound) or | 
 |             (self.upper_bound is not None and val > self.upper_bound)) | 
 |  | 
 |   def Parse(self, argument): | 
 |     val = self.Convert(argument) | 
 |     if self.IsOutsideBounds(val): | 
 |       raise ValueError("%s is not %s" % (val, self.syntactic_help)) | 
 |     return val | 
 |  | 
 |   def WriteCustomInfoInXMLFormat(self, outfile, indent): | 
 |     if self.lower_bound is not None: | 
 |       _WriteSimpleXMLElement(outfile, 'lower_bound', self.lower_bound, indent) | 
 |     if self.upper_bound is not None: | 
 |       _WriteSimpleXMLElement(outfile, 'upper_bound', self.upper_bound, indent) | 
 |  | 
 |   def Convert(self, argument): | 
 |     """Default implementation: always returns its argument unmodified.""" | 
 |     return argument | 
 |  | 
 | # End of Numeric Parser | 
 |  | 
 | # | 
 | # FLOAT FLAGS | 
 | # | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class FloatParser(NumericParser): | 
 |   """Parser of floating point values. | 
 |  | 
 |   Parsed value may be bounded to a given upper and lower bound. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   number_article = "a" | 
 |   number_name = "number" | 
 |   syntactic_help = " ".join((number_article, number_name)) | 
 |  | 
 |   def __init__(self, lower_bound=None, upper_bound=None): | 
 |     super(FloatParser, self).__init__() | 
 |     self.lower_bound = lower_bound | 
 |     self.upper_bound = upper_bound | 
 |     sh = self.syntactic_help | 
 |     if lower_bound is not None and upper_bound is not None: | 
 |       sh = ("%s in the range [%s, %s]" % (sh, lower_bound, upper_bound)) | 
 |     elif lower_bound == 0: | 
 |       sh = "a non-negative %s" % self.number_name | 
 |     elif upper_bound == 0: | 
 |       sh = "a non-positive %s" % self.number_name | 
 |     elif upper_bound is not None: | 
 |       sh = "%s <= %s" % (self.number_name, upper_bound) | 
 |     elif lower_bound is not None: | 
 |       sh = "%s >= %s" % (self.number_name, lower_bound) | 
 |     self.syntactic_help = sh | 
 |  | 
 |   def Convert(self, argument): | 
 |     """Converts argument to a float; raises ValueError on errors.""" | 
 |     return float(argument) | 
 |  | 
 |   def Type(self): | 
 |     return 'float' | 
 | # End of FloatParser | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def DEFINE_float(name, default, help, lower_bound=None, upper_bound=None, | 
 |                  flag_values=FLAGS, **args): | 
 |   """Registers a flag whose value must be a float. | 
 |  | 
 |   If lower_bound or upper_bound are set, then this flag must be | 
 |   within the given range. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   parser = FloatParser(lower_bound, upper_bound) | 
 |   serializer = ArgumentSerializer() | 
 |   DEFINE(parser, name, default, help, flag_values, serializer, **args) | 
 |   _RegisterBoundsValidatorIfNeeded(parser, name, flag_values=flag_values) | 
 |  | 
 | # | 
 | # INTEGER FLAGS | 
 | # | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class IntegerParser(NumericParser): | 
 |   """Parser of an integer value. | 
 |  | 
 |   Parsed value may be bounded to a given upper and lower bound. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   number_article = "an" | 
 |   number_name = "integer" | 
 |   syntactic_help = " ".join((number_article, number_name)) | 
 |  | 
 |   def __init__(self, lower_bound=None, upper_bound=None): | 
 |     super(IntegerParser, self).__init__() | 
 |     self.lower_bound = lower_bound | 
 |     self.upper_bound = upper_bound | 
 |     sh = self.syntactic_help | 
 |     if lower_bound is not None and upper_bound is not None: | 
 |       sh = ("%s in the range [%s, %s]" % (sh, lower_bound, upper_bound)) | 
 |     elif lower_bound == 1: | 
 |       sh = "a positive %s" % self.number_name | 
 |     elif upper_bound == -1: | 
 |       sh = "a negative %s" % self.number_name | 
 |     elif lower_bound == 0: | 
 |       sh = "a non-negative %s" % self.number_name | 
 |     elif upper_bound == 0: | 
 |       sh = "a non-positive %s" % self.number_name | 
 |     elif upper_bound is not None: | 
 |       sh = "%s <= %s" % (self.number_name, upper_bound) | 
 |     elif lower_bound is not None: | 
 |       sh = "%s >= %s" % (self.number_name, lower_bound) | 
 |     self.syntactic_help = sh | 
 |  | 
 |   def Convert(self, argument): | 
 |     __pychecker__ = 'no-returnvalues' | 
 |     if type(argument) == str: | 
 |       base = 10 | 
 |       if len(argument) > 2 and argument[0] == "0" and argument[1] == "x": | 
 |         base = 16 | 
 |       return int(argument, base) | 
 |     else: | 
 |       return int(argument) | 
 |  | 
 |   def Type(self): | 
 |     return 'int' | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def DEFINE_integer(name, default, help, lower_bound=None, upper_bound=None, | 
 |                    flag_values=FLAGS, **args): | 
 |   """Registers a flag whose value must be an integer. | 
 |  | 
 |   If lower_bound, or upper_bound are set, then this flag must be | 
 |   within the given range. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   parser = IntegerParser(lower_bound, upper_bound) | 
 |   serializer = ArgumentSerializer() | 
 |   DEFINE(parser, name, default, help, flag_values, serializer, **args) | 
 |   _RegisterBoundsValidatorIfNeeded(parser, name, flag_values=flag_values) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | # | 
 | # ENUM FLAGS | 
 | # | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class EnumParser(ArgumentParser): | 
 |   """Parser of a string enum value (a string value from a given set). | 
 |  | 
 |   If enum_values (see below) is not specified, any string is allowed. | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   def __init__(self, enum_values=None): | 
 |     super(EnumParser, self).__init__() | 
 |     self.enum_values = enum_values | 
 |  | 
 |   def Parse(self, argument): | 
 |     if self.enum_values and argument not in self.enum_values: | 
 |       raise ValueError("value should be one of <%s>" % | 
 |                        "|".join(self.enum_values)) | 
 |     return argument | 
 |  | 
 |   def Type(self): | 
 |     return 'string enum' | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class EnumFlag(Flag): | 
 |   """Basic enum flag; its value can be any string from list of enum_values.""" | 
 |  | 
 |   def __init__(self, name, default, help, enum_values=None, | 
 |                short_name=None, **args): | 
 |     enum_values = enum_values or [] | 
 |     p = EnumParser(enum_values) | 
 |     g = ArgumentSerializer() | 
 |     Flag.__init__(self, p, g, name, default, help, short_name, **args) | 
 |     if not self.help: self.help = "an enum string" | 
 |     self.help = "<%s>: %s" % ("|".join(enum_values), self.help) | 
 |  | 
 |   def _WriteCustomInfoInXMLFormat(self, outfile, indent): | 
 |     for enum_value in self.parser.enum_values: | 
 |       _WriteSimpleXMLElement(outfile, 'enum_value', enum_value, indent) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def DEFINE_enum(name, default, enum_values, help, flag_values=FLAGS, | 
 |                 **args): | 
 |   """Registers a flag whose value can be any string from enum_values.""" | 
 |   DEFINE_flag(EnumFlag(name, default, help, enum_values, ** args), | 
 |               flag_values) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | # | 
 | # LIST FLAGS | 
 | # | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class BaseListParser(ArgumentParser): | 
 |   """Base class for a parser of lists of strings. | 
 |  | 
 |   To extend, inherit from this class; from the subclass __init__, call | 
 |  | 
 |     BaseListParser.__init__(self, token, name) | 
 |  | 
 |   where token is a character used to tokenize, and name is a description | 
 |   of the separator. | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   def __init__(self, token=None, name=None): | 
 |     assert name | 
 |     super(BaseListParser, self).__init__() | 
 |     self._token = token | 
 |     self._name = name | 
 |     self.syntactic_help = "a %s separated list" % self._name | 
 |  | 
 |   def Parse(self, argument): | 
 |     if isinstance(argument, list): | 
 |       return argument | 
 |     elif argument == '': | 
 |       return [] | 
 |     else: | 
 |       return [s.strip() for s in argument.split(self._token)] | 
 |  | 
 |   def Type(self): | 
 |     return '%s separated list of strings' % self._name | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class ListParser(BaseListParser): | 
 |   """Parser for a comma-separated list of strings.""" | 
 |  | 
 |   def __init__(self): | 
 |     BaseListParser.__init__(self, ',', 'comma') | 
 |  | 
 |   def WriteCustomInfoInXMLFormat(self, outfile, indent): | 
 |     BaseListParser.WriteCustomInfoInXMLFormat(self, outfile, indent) | 
 |     _WriteSimpleXMLElement(outfile, 'list_separator', repr(','), indent) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class WhitespaceSeparatedListParser(BaseListParser): | 
 |   """Parser for a whitespace-separated list of strings.""" | 
 |  | 
 |   def __init__(self): | 
 |     BaseListParser.__init__(self, None, 'whitespace') | 
 |  | 
 |   def WriteCustomInfoInXMLFormat(self, outfile, indent): | 
 |     BaseListParser.WriteCustomInfoInXMLFormat(self, outfile, indent) | 
 |     separators = list(string.whitespace) | 
 |     separators.sort() | 
 |     for ws_char in string.whitespace: | 
 |       _WriteSimpleXMLElement(outfile, 'list_separator', repr(ws_char), indent) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def DEFINE_list(name, default, help, flag_values=FLAGS, **args): | 
 |   """Registers a flag whose value is a comma-separated list of strings.""" | 
 |   parser = ListParser() | 
 |   serializer = ListSerializer(',') | 
 |   DEFINE(parser, name, default, help, flag_values, serializer, **args) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def DEFINE_spaceseplist(name, default, help, flag_values=FLAGS, **args): | 
 |   """Registers a flag whose value is a whitespace-separated list of strings. | 
 |  | 
 |   Any whitespace can be used as a separator. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   parser = WhitespaceSeparatedListParser() | 
 |   serializer = ListSerializer(' ') | 
 |   DEFINE(parser, name, default, help, flag_values, serializer, **args) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | # | 
 | # MULTI FLAGS | 
 | # | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | class MultiFlag(Flag): | 
 |   """A flag that can appear multiple time on the command-line. | 
 |  | 
 |   The value of such a flag is a list that contains the individual values | 
 |   from all the appearances of that flag on the command-line. | 
 |  | 
 |   See the __doc__ for Flag for most behavior of this class.  Only | 
 |   differences in behavior are described here: | 
 |  | 
 |     * The default value may be either a single value or a list of values. | 
 |       A single value is interpreted as the [value] singleton list. | 
 |  | 
 |     * The value of the flag is always a list, even if the option was | 
 |       only supplied once, and even if the default value is a single | 
 |       value | 
 |   """ | 
 |  | 
 |   def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): | 
 |     Flag.__init__(self, *args, **kwargs) | 
 |     self.help += ';\n    repeat this option to specify a list of values' | 
 |  | 
 |   def Parse(self, arguments): | 
 |     """Parses one or more arguments with the installed parser. | 
 |  | 
 |     Args: | 
 |       arguments: a single argument or a list of arguments (typically a | 
 |         list of default values); a single argument is converted | 
 |         internally into a list containing one item. | 
 |     """ | 
 |     if not isinstance(arguments, list): | 
 |       # Default value may be a list of values.  Most other arguments | 
 |       # will not be, so convert them into a single-item list to make | 
 |       # processing simpler below. | 
 |       arguments = [arguments] | 
 |  | 
 |     if self.present: | 
 |       # keep a backup reference to list of previously supplied option values | 
 |       values = self.value | 
 |     else: | 
 |       # "erase" the defaults with an empty list | 
 |       values = [] | 
 |  | 
 |     for item in arguments: | 
 |       # have Flag superclass parse argument, overwriting self.value reference | 
 |       Flag.Parse(self, item)  # also increments self.present | 
 |       values.append(self.value) | 
 |  | 
 |     # put list of option values back in the 'value' attribute | 
 |     self.value = values | 
 |  | 
 |   def Serialize(self): | 
 |     if not self.serializer: | 
 |       raise FlagsError("Serializer not present for flag %s" % self.name) | 
 |     if self.value is None: | 
 |       return '' | 
 |  | 
 |     s = '' | 
 |  | 
 |     multi_value = self.value | 
 |  | 
 |     for self.value in multi_value: | 
 |       if s: s += ' ' | 
 |       s += Flag.Serialize(self) | 
 |  | 
 |     self.value = multi_value | 
 |  | 
 |     return s | 
 |  | 
 |   def Type(self): | 
 |     return 'multi ' + self.parser.Type() | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def DEFINE_multi(parser, serializer, name, default, help, flag_values=FLAGS, | 
 |                  **args): | 
 |   """Registers a generic MultiFlag that parses its args with a given parser. | 
 |  | 
 |   Auxiliary function.  Normal users should NOT use it directly. | 
 |  | 
 |   Developers who need to create their own 'Parser' classes for options | 
 |   which can appear multiple times can call this module function to | 
 |   register their flags. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   DEFINE_flag(MultiFlag(parser, serializer, name, default, help, **args), | 
 |               flag_values) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def DEFINE_multistring(name, default, help, flag_values=FLAGS, **args): | 
 |   """Registers a flag whose value can be a list of any strings. | 
 |  | 
 |   Use the flag on the command line multiple times to place multiple | 
 |   string values into the list.  The 'default' may be a single string | 
 |   (which will be converted into a single-element list) or a list of | 
 |   strings. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   parser = ArgumentParser() | 
 |   serializer = ArgumentSerializer() | 
 |   DEFINE_multi(parser, serializer, name, default, help, flag_values, **args) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def DEFINE_multi_int(name, default, help, lower_bound=None, upper_bound=None, | 
 |                      flag_values=FLAGS, **args): | 
 |   """Registers a flag whose value can be a list of arbitrary integers. | 
 |  | 
 |   Use the flag on the command line multiple times to place multiple | 
 |   integer values into the list.  The 'default' may be a single integer | 
 |   (which will be converted into a single-element list) or a list of | 
 |   integers. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   parser = IntegerParser(lower_bound, upper_bound) | 
 |   serializer = ArgumentSerializer() | 
 |   DEFINE_multi(parser, serializer, name, default, help, flag_values, **args) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | def DEFINE_multi_float(name, default, help, lower_bound=None, upper_bound=None, | 
 |                        flag_values=FLAGS, **args): | 
 |   """Registers a flag whose value can be a list of arbitrary floats. | 
 |  | 
 |   Use the flag on the command line multiple times to place multiple | 
 |   float values into the list.  The 'default' may be a single float | 
 |   (which will be converted into a single-element list) or a list of | 
 |   floats. | 
 |   """ | 
 |   parser = FloatParser(lower_bound, upper_bound) | 
 |   serializer = ArgumentSerializer() | 
 |   DEFINE_multi(parser, serializer, name, default, help, flag_values, **args) | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | # Now register the flags that we want to exist in all applications. | 
 | # These are all defined with allow_override=1, so user-apps can use | 
 | # these flagnames for their own purposes, if they want. | 
 | DEFINE_flag(HelpFlag()) | 
 | DEFINE_flag(HelpshortFlag()) | 
 | DEFINE_flag(HelpXMLFlag()) | 
 |  | 
 | # Define special flags here so that help may be generated for them. | 
 | # NOTE: Please do NOT use _SPECIAL_FLAGS from outside this module. | 
 | _SPECIAL_FLAGS = FlagValues() | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | DEFINE_string( | 
 |     'flagfile', "", | 
 |     "Insert flag definitions from the given file into the command line.", | 
 |     _SPECIAL_FLAGS) | 
 |  | 
 | DEFINE_string( | 
 |     'undefok', "", | 
 |     "comma-separated list of flag names that it is okay to specify " | 
 |     "on the command line even if the program does not define a flag " | 
 |     "with that name.  IMPORTANT: flags in this list that have " | 
 |     "arguments MUST use the --flag=value format.", _SPECIAL_FLAGS) |