I am using jython with a third party application. The third party application has some builtin libraries foo. To do some (unit) testing we want to run some code outside of the application. Since foo is bound to the application we decided to write our own mock implementation.
However there is one issue, we implemented our mock class in python while their class is in java. Thus to use their code one would do import foo and foo is the mock class afterwards. However if we import the python module like this we get the module attached to the name, thus one has to write foo.foo to get to the class.
For convenience reason we would love to be able to write from ourlib.thirdparty import foo to bind foo to the foo-class. However we would like to avoid to import all the classes in ourlib.thirdparty directly, since the loading time for each file takes quite a while.
Is there any way to this in python? ( I did not get far with Import hooks I tried simply returning the class from load_module or overwriting what I write to sys.modules (I think both approaches are ugly, particularly the later))
edit:
ok: here is what the files in ourlib.thirdparty look like simplified(without magic):
foo.py:
try:
import foo
except ImportError:
class foo
....
Actually they look like this:
foo.py:
class foo
....
__init__.py in ourlib.thirdparty
import sys
import os.path
import imp
#TODO: 3.0 importlib.util abstract base classes could greatly simplify this code or make it prettier.
class Importer(object):
def __init__(self, path_entry):
if not path_entry.startswith(os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), 'thirdparty')):
raise ImportError('Custom importer only for thirdparty objects')
self._importTuples = {}
def find_module(self, fullname):
module = fullname.rpartition('.')[2]
try:
if fullname not in self._importTuples:
fileObj, self._importTuples[fullname] = imp.find_module(module)
if isinstance(fileObj, file):
fileObj.close()
except:
print 'backup'
path = os.path.join(os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), 'thirdparty'), module+'.py')
if not os.path.isfile(path):
return None
raise ImportError("Could not find dummy class for %s (%s)\n(searched:%s)" % (module, fullname, path))
self._importTuples[fullname] = path, ('.py', 'r', imp.PY_SOURCE)
return self
def load_module(self, fullname):
fp = None
python = False
print fullname
if self._importTuples[fullname][1][2] in (imp.PY_SOURCE, imp.PY_COMPILED, imp.PY_FROZEN):
fp = open( self._importTuples[fullname][0], self._importTuples[fullname][1][1])
python = True
try:
imp.load_module(fullname, fp, *self._importTuples[fullname])
finally:
if python:
module = fullname.rpartition('.')[2]
#setattr(sys.modules[fullname], module, getattr(sys.modules[fullname], module))
#sys.modules[fullname] = getattr(sys.modules[fullname], module)
if isinstance(fp, file):
fp.close()
return getattr(sys.modules[fullname], module)
sys.path_hooks.append(Importer)
from ourlib.thirdparty import foo as foo? – Pierre GM Sep 10 '12 at 13:24ourlib.thirdparty? Is that mock python code you wrote, or the java code? – mgilson Sep 10 '12 at 13:25ourlib.thirdparty? Your third paragraph is a bit ambiguous. – deadly Sep 10 '12 at 13:26as foois redundant forfrom ... import foo? It's already in the namespace asfoo. – deadly Sep 10 '12 at 13:34from ourlib.thirdparty.foo import fooand we want to dofrom ourlib.thirparty import foo– ted Sep 10 '12 at 13:45