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279 lines
12 KiB
Python
279 lines
12 KiB
Python
# This code is part of Ansible, but is an independent component.
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# This particular file snippet, and this file snippet only, is BSD licensed.
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# Modules you write using this snippet, which is embedded dynamically by Ansible
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# still belong to the author of the module, and may assign their own license
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# to the complete work.
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#
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# Copyright (c), Toshio Kuratomi <a.badger@gmail.com>, 2016
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#
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# Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification,
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# are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
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#
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# * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
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# notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
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# * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice,
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# this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation
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# and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
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#
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# THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND
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# ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED
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# WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
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# IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
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# INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
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# PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS
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# INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
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# LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE
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# USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
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#
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"""
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.. warn:: This module_util is currently internal implementation.
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We want to evaluate this code for stability and API suitability before
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making backwards compatibility guarantees. The API may change between
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releases. Do not use this unless you are willing to port your module code.
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"""
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import codecs
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from ansible.module_utils.six import PY3, text_type, binary_type
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try:
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codecs.lookup_error('surrogateescape')
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HAS_SURROGATEESCAPE = True
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except LookupError:
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HAS_SURROGATEESCAPE = False
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_COMPOSED_ERROR_HANDLERS = frozenset((None, 'surrogate_or_replace',
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'surrogate_or_strict',
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'surrogate_then_replace'))
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def to_bytes(obj, encoding='utf-8', errors=None, nonstring='simplerepr'):
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"""Make sure that a string is a byte string
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:arg obj: An object to make sure is a byte string. In most cases this
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will be either a text string or a byte string. However, with
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``nonstring='simplerepr'``, this can be used as a traceback-free
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version of ``str(obj)``.
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:kwarg encoding: The encoding to use to transform from a text string to
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a byte string. Defaults to using 'utf-8'.
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:kwarg errors: The error handler to use if the text string is not
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encodable using the specified encoding. Any valid `codecs error
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handler <https://docs.python.org/2/library/codecs.html#codec-base-classes>`_
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may be specified. There are three additional error strategies
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specifically aimed at helping people to port code. The first two are:
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:surrogate_or_strict: Will use ``surrogateescape`` if it is a valid
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handler, otherwise it will use ``strict``
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:surrogate_or_replace: Will use ``surrogateescape`` if it is a valid
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handler, otherwise it will use ``replace``.
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Because ``surrogateescape`` was added in Python3 this usually means that
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Python3 will use ``surrogateescape`` and Python2 will use the fallback
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error handler. Note that the code checks for ``surrogateescape`` when the
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module is imported. If you have a backport of ``surrogateescape`` for
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Python2, be sure to register the error handler prior to importing this
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module.
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The last error handler is:
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:surrogate_then_replace: Will use ``surrogateescape`` if it is a valid
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handler. If encoding with ``surrogateescape`` would traceback,
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surrogates are first replaced with a replacement characters
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and then the string is encoded using ``replace`` (which replaces
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the rest of the nonencodable bytes). If ``surrogateescape`` is
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not present it will simply use ``replace``. (Added in Ansible 2.3)
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This strategy is designed to never traceback when it attempts
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to encode a string.
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The default until Ansible-2.2 was ``surrogate_or_replace``
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From Ansible-2.3 onwards, the default is ``surrogate_then_replace``.
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:kwarg nonstring: The strategy to use if a nonstring is specified in
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``obj``. Default is 'simplerepr'. Valid values are:
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:simplerepr: The default. This takes the ``str`` of the object and
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then returns the bytes version of that string.
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:empty: Return an empty byte string
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:passthru: Return the object passed in
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:strict: Raise a :exc:`TypeError`
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:returns: Typically this returns a byte string. If a nonstring object is
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passed in this may be a different type depending on the strategy
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specified by nonstring. This will never return a text string.
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.. note:: If passed a byte string, this function does not check that the
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string is valid in the specified encoding. If it's important that the
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byte string is in the specified encoding do::
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encoded_string = to_bytes(to_text(input_string, 'latin-1'), 'utf-8')
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.. version_changed:: 2.3
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Added the ``surrogate_then_replace`` error handler and made it the default error handler.
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"""
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if isinstance(obj, binary_type):
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return obj
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# We're given a text string
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# If it has surrogates, we know because it will decode
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original_errors = errors
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if errors in _COMPOSED_ERROR_HANDLERS:
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if HAS_SURROGATEESCAPE:
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errors = 'surrogateescape'
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elif errors == 'surrogate_or_strict':
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errors = 'strict'
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else:
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errors = 'replace'
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if isinstance(obj, text_type):
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try:
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# Try this first as it's the fastest
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return obj.encode(encoding, errors)
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except UnicodeEncodeError:
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if original_errors in (None, 'surrogate_then_replace'):
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# We should only reach this if encoding was non-utf8 original_errors was
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# surrogate_then_escape and errors was surrogateescape
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# Slow but works
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return_string = obj.encode('utf-8', 'surrogateescape')
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return_string = return_string.decode('utf-8', 'replace')
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return return_string.encode(encoding, 'replace')
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raise
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# Note: We do these last even though we have to call to_bytes again on the
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# value because we're optimizing the common case
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if nonstring == 'simplerepr':
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try:
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value = str(obj)
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except UnicodeError:
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try:
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value = repr(obj)
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except UnicodeError:
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# Giving up
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return to_bytes('')
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elif nonstring == 'passthru':
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return obj
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elif nonstring == 'empty':
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# python2.4 doesn't have b''
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return to_bytes('')
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elif nonstring == 'strict':
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raise TypeError('obj must be a string type')
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else:
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raise TypeError('Invalid value %s for to_bytes\' nonstring parameter' % nonstring)
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return to_bytes(value, encoding, errors)
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def to_text(obj, encoding='utf-8', errors=None, nonstring='simplerepr'):
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"""Make sure that a string is a text string
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:arg obj: An object to make sure is a text string. In most cases this
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will be either a text string or a byte string. However, with
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``nonstring='simplerepr'``, this can be used as a traceback-free
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version of ``str(obj)``.
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:kwarg encoding: The encoding to use to transform from a byte string to
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a text string. Defaults to using 'utf-8'.
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:kwarg errors: The error handler to use if the byte string is not
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decodable using the specified encoding. Any valid `codecs error
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handler <https://docs.python.org/2/library/codecs.html#codec-base-classes>`_
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may be specified. We support three additional error strategies
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specifically aimed at helping people to port code:
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:surrogate_or_strict: Will use surrogateescape if it is a valid
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handler, otherwise it will use strict
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:surrogate_or_replace: Will use surrogateescape if it is a valid
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handler, otherwise it will use replace.
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:surrogate_then_replace: Does the same as surrogate_or_replace but
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`was added for symmetry with the error handlers in
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:func:`ansible.module_utils._text.to_bytes` (Added in Ansible 2.3)
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Because surrogateescape was added in Python3 this usually means that
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Python3 will use `surrogateescape` and Python2 will use the fallback
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error handler. Note that the code checks for surrogateescape when the
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module is imported. If you have a backport of `surrogateescape` for
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python2, be sure to register the error handler prior to importing this
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module.
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The default until Ansible-2.2 was `surrogate_or_replace`
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In Ansible-2.3 this defaults to `surrogate_then_replace` for symmetry
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with :func:`ansible.module_utils._text.to_bytes` .
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:kwarg nonstring: The strategy to use if a nonstring is specified in
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``obj``. Default is 'simplerepr'. Valid values are:
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:simplerepr: The default. This takes the ``str`` of the object and
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then returns the text version of that string.
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:empty: Return an empty text string
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:passthru: Return the object passed in
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:strict: Raise a :exc:`TypeError`
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:returns: Typically this returns a text string. If a nonstring object is
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passed in this may be a different type depending on the strategy
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specified by nonstring. This will never return a byte string.
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From Ansible-2.3 onwards, the default is `surrogate_then_replace`.
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.. version_changed:: 2.3
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Added the surrogate_then_replace error handler and made it the default error handler.
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"""
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if isinstance(obj, text_type):
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return obj
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if errors in _COMPOSED_ERROR_HANDLERS:
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if HAS_SURROGATEESCAPE:
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errors = 'surrogateescape'
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elif errors == 'surrogate_or_strict':
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errors = 'strict'
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else:
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errors = 'replace'
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if isinstance(obj, binary_type):
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# Note: We don't need special handling for surrogate_then_replace
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# because all bytes will either be made into surrogates or are valid
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# to decode.
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return obj.decode(encoding, errors)
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# Note: We do these last even though we have to call to_text again on the
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# value because we're optimizing the common case
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if nonstring == 'simplerepr':
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try:
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value = str(obj)
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except UnicodeError:
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try:
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value = repr(obj)
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except UnicodeError:
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# Giving up
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return u''
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elif nonstring == 'passthru':
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return obj
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elif nonstring == 'empty':
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return u''
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elif nonstring == 'strict':
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raise TypeError('obj must be a string type')
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else:
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raise TypeError('Invalid value %s for to_text\'s nonstring parameter' % nonstring)
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return to_text(value, encoding, errors)
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#: :py:func:`to_native`
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#: Transform a variable into the native str type for the python version
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#:
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#: On Python2, this is an alias for
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#: :func:`~ansible.module_utils.to_bytes`. On Python3 it is an alias for
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#: :func:`~ansible.module_utils.to_text`. It makes it easier to
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#: transform a variable into the native str type for the python version
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#: the code is running on. Use this when constructing the message to
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#: send to exceptions or when dealing with an API that needs to take
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#: a native string. Example::
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#:
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#: try:
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#: 1//0
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#: except ZeroDivisionError as e:
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#: raise MyException('Encountered and error: %s' % to_native(e))
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if PY3:
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to_native = to_text
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else:
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to_native = to_bytes
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