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Jython is an implementation of the high-level, dynamic, object-oriented language Python written in 100% Pure Java, and seamlessly integrated with the Java platform. It thus allows you to run Python on any Java platform.

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// Copyright (c) 2013 Jython Developers
package org.python.util;

import java.io.EOFException;
import java.io.FilterInputStream;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.nio.ByteBuffer;
import java.nio.CharBuffer;
import java.nio.charset.Charset;

/**
 * This class is intended to replace System.in for use with console libraries that
 * provide a line-oriented input mechanism. The console libraries provide a method to get the next
 * line from the console as a String. Particular sub-classes should wrap this character-oriented
 * method in a definition of {@link #getLine()}.
 * 

* The libraries JLine and Java Readline have both been used to give Jython line-recall, editing and * a line history preserved between sessions. Both deal with the console encoding internally, and * interact with the user in terms of a buffer of characters. Our need in Jython is to access a * byte-stream encoding the characters, with line-endings, since it is the text layer of the Python * io stack, whether we are using the io module or file built-in, that * should deal with encoding. */ public abstract class ConsoleInputStream extends FilterInputStream { /** * Enumeration used to specify whether an end-of-line should be added or replaced at the end of * each line read. LEAVE means process the line exactly as the library returns it; ADD means * always add an end-of-line; and REPLACE means strip any final '\n', '\r', or '\r\n' and add an * end-of-line. The end-of-line to add is specified as a String in the constructor. */ public enum EOLPolicy { LEAVE, ADD, REPLACE }; /** The {@link EOLPolicy} specified in the constructor. */ protected final EOLPolicy eolPolicy; /** The end-of-line String specified in the constructor. */ protected final String eol; /** The character encoding specified in the constructor. */ protected final Charset encoding; /** Bytes decoded from the last line read. */ private ByteBuffer buf; /** Empty buffer */ protected static final ByteBuffer EMPTY_BUF = ByteBuffer.allocate(0); /** Platform-defined end-of-line for convenience */ protected static final String LINE_SEPARATOR = System.getProperty("line.separator"); /** * Create a wrapper configured with end-of-line handling that matches the specific console * library being wrapped, and a character encoding matching the expectations of the client. * Since this is an abstract class, this constructor will be called as the first action of the * library-specific concrete class. The end-of-line policy can be chosen from LEAVE * (do not modify the line), ADD (always append eol, and * REPLACE (remove a trailing '\n', '\r', or '\r\n' provided by the library, then * add eol). * * @param in stream to wrap, normally System.in * @param encoding to use to encode the buffered characters * @param eolPolicy choice of how to treat an end-of-line marker * @param eol the end-of-line to use when eolPolicy is not LEAVE */ ConsoleInputStream(InputStream in, Charset encoding, EOLPolicy eolPolicy, String eol) { // Wrap original in so StreamIO.isatty() will find it reflectively super(in); // But our real input comes from (re-)encoding the console line this.encoding = encoding; this.eolPolicy = eolPolicy; this.eol = eol != null ? eol : LINE_SEPARATOR; // The logic is simpler if we always supply a buffer buf = EMPTY_BUF; } /** * Get one line of input from the console. Override this method with the actions specific to the * library in use. * * @return Line entered by user * @throws IOException in case of an error * @throws EOFException if the library recognises an end-of-file condition */ protected abstract CharSequence getLine() throws IOException, EOFException; /** * Get a line of text from the console and re-encode it using the console encoding to bytes that * will be returned from this InputStream in subsequent read operations. * * @throws IOException * @throws EOFException */ private void fillBuffer() throws IOException, EOFException { // In case we exit on an exception ... buf = EMPTY_BUF; // Bring in another line CharSequence line = getLine(); CharBuffer cb = CharBuffer.allocate(line.length() + eol.length()); cb.append(line); // Apply the EOL policy switch (eolPolicy) { case LEAVE: // Do nothing break; case ADD: // Always add eol cb.append(eol); break; case REPLACE: // Strip '\n', '\r', or '\r\n' and add eol int n = cb.position() - 1; if (n >= 0 && cb.charAt(n) == '\n') { n -= 1; } if (n >= 0 && cb.charAt(n) == '\r') { n -= 1; } cb.position(n + 1); cb.append(eol); break; } // Prepare to read cb.flip(); // Make this line into a new buffer of encoded bytes if (cb.hasRemaining()) { buf = encoding.encode(cb); // includes a flip() } } /** * Read the next byte of data from the buffered input line. * The byte is returned as an int in the range 0 to 255. If no byte is available because the end * of the stream has been recognised, the value -1 is returned. This method blocks until input * data are available, the end of the stream is detected, or an exception is thrown. Normally, an * empty line results in an encoded end-of-line being returned. */ @Override public int read() throws IOException { try { // Do we need to refill? while (!buf.hasRemaining()) { fillBuffer(); } return buf.get() & 0xff; } catch (EOFException e) { // End of file condition recognised (e.g. ctrl-D, ctrl-Z) return -1; } } /** * Reads up to len bytes of data from this input stream into an array of bytes. If len is not * zero, the method blocks until some input is available; otherwise, no bytes are read and 0 is * returned. This implementation calls {@link #getLine()} at most once to get a line of * characters from the console, and encodes them as bytes to be read * back from the stream. */ @Override public int read(byte[] b, int off, int len) throws IOException, EOFException { if (off < 0 || len < 0 || len > b.length - off) { throw new IndexOutOfBoundsException(); } else { try { if (len > 0) { // Do we need to refill? (Not if zero bytes demanded.) int n = buf.remaining(); if (n <= 0) { fillBuffer(); n = buf.remaining(); } // Deliver all there is, or all that's wanted, whichever is less. len = n < len ? n : len; buf.get(b, off, len); } return len; } catch (EOFException e) { // Thrown from getLine return -1; } } } /** * Skip forward n bytes within the current encoded line. A call to skip will not * result in reading a new line with {@link #getLine()}. */ @Override public long skip(long n) throws IOException { long r = buf.remaining(); if (n > r) { n = r; } buf.position(buf.position() + (int)n); return n; } /** The number of bytes left unread in the current encoded line. */ @Override public int available() throws IOException { return buf.remaining(); } /** Mark is not supported. */ @Override public synchronized void mark(int readlimit) {} /** Mark is not supported. */ @Override public synchronized void reset() throws IOException {} /** Mark is not supported. */ @Override public boolean markSupported() { return false; } }





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