#! @PYTHON@
#
# Copyright (C) 1998-2007 by the Free Software Foundation, Inc.
#
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
# modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
# as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2
# of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
# Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301,
# USA.
"""General framework for interacting with a mailing list object.
There are two ways to use this script: interactively or programmatically.
Using it interactively allows you to play with, examine and modify a MailList
object from Python's interactive interpreter. When running interactively, a
MailList object called `m' will be available in the global namespace. It also
loads the class MailList into the global namespace.
Programmatically, you can write a function to operate on a MailList object,
and this script will take care of the housekeeping (see below for examples).
In that case, the general usage syntax is:
%% bin/withlist [options] listname [args ...]
Options:
-l / --lock
Lock the list when opening. Normally the list is opened unlocked
(e.g. for read-only operations). You can always lock the file after
the fact by typing `m.Lock()'
Note that if you use this option, you should explicitly call m.Save()
before exiting, since the interpreter's clean up procedure will not
automatically save changes to the MailList object (but it will unlock
the list).
-i / --interactive
Leaves you at an interactive prompt after all other processing is
complete. This is the default unless the -r option is given.
--run [module.]callable
-r [module.]callable
This can be used to run a script with the opened MailList object.
This works by attempting to import `module' (which must be in the
directory containing withlist, or already be accessible on your
sys.path), and then calling `callable' from the module. callable can
be a class or function; it is called with the MailList object as the
first argument. If additional args are given on the command line,
they are passed as subsequent positional args to the callable.
Note that `module.' is optional; if it is omitted then a module with
the name `callable' will be imported.
The global variable `r' will be set to the results of this call.
--all / -a
This option only works with the -r option. Use this if you want to
execute the script on all mailing lists. When you use -a you should
not include a listname argument on the command line. The variable `r'
will be a list of all the results.
--quiet / -q
Suppress all status messages.
--help / -h
Print this message and exit
Here's an example of how to use the -r option. Say you have a file in the
Mailman installation directory called `listaddr.py', with the following
two functions:
def listaddr(mlist):
print mlist.GetListEmail()
def requestaddr(mlist):
print mlist.GetRequestEmail()
Now, from the command line you can print the list's posting address by running
the following from the command line:
%% bin/withlist -r listaddr mylist
Loading list: mylist (unlocked)
Importing listaddr ...
Running listaddr.listaddr() ...
mylist@myhost.com
And you can print the list's request address by running:
%% bin/withlist -r listaddr.requestaddr mylist
Loading list: mylist (unlocked)
Importing listaddr ...
Running listaddr.requestaddr() ...
mylist-request@myhost.com
As another example, say you wanted to change the password for a particular
user on a particular list. You could put the following function in a file
called `changepw.py':
from Mailman.Errors import NotAMemberError
def changepw(mlist, addr, newpasswd):
try:
mlist.setMemberPassword(addr, newpasswd)
mlist.Save()
except NotAMemberError:
print 'No address matched:', addr
and run this from the command line:
%% bin/withlist -l -r changepw mylist somebody@somewhere.org foobar
"""
import os
import sys
import code
import getopt
import paths
from Mailman import Errors
from Mailman import MailList
from Mailman import Utils
from Mailman.i18n import _
try:
True, False
except NameError:
True = 1
False = 0
# `m' will be the MailList object and `r' will be the results of the callable
m = None
r = None
VERBOSE = True
LOCK = False
# Put the bin directory on sys.path -- last
sys.path.append(os.path.dirname(sys.argv[0]))
def usage(code, msg=''):
if code:
fd = sys.stderr
else:
fd = sys.stdout
print >> fd, _(__doc__)
if msg:
print >> fd, msg
sys.exit(code)
def atexit():
"""Unlock a locked list, but do not implicitly Save() it.
This does not get run if the interpreter exits because of a signal, or if
os._exit() is called. It will get called if an exception occurs though.
"""
global m
if not m:
return
if m.Locked():
if VERBOSE:
listname = m.internal_name()
print >> sys.stderr, _(
'Unlocking (but not saving) list: %(listname)s')
m.Unlock()
if VERBOSE:
print >> sys.stderr, _('Finalizing')
del m
def do_list(listname, args, func):
global m
# first try to open mailing list
if VERBOSE:
print >> sys.stderr, _('Loading list %(listname)s'),
if LOCK:
print >> sys.stderr, _('(locked)')
else:
print >> sys.stderr, _('(unlocked)')
try:
m = MailList.MailList(listname, lock=LOCK)
except Errors.MMUnknownListError:
print >> sys.stderr, _('Unknown list: %(listname)s')
m = None
# try to import the module and run the callable
if func:
return func(m, *args)
return None
def main():
global VERBOSE
global LOCK
global r
try:
opts, args = getopt.getopt(
sys.argv[1:], 'hlr:qia',
['help', 'lock', 'run=', 'quiet', 'interactive', 'all'])
except getopt.error, msg:
usage(1, msg)
run = None
interact = None
all = False
dolist = True
for opt, arg in opts:
if opt in ('-h', '--help'):
usage(0)
elif opt in ('-l', '--lock'):
LOCK = True
elif opt in ('-r', '--run'):
run = arg
elif opt in ('-q', '--quiet'):
VERBOSE = False
elif opt in ('-i', '--interactive'):
interact = True
elif opt in ('-a', '--all'):
all = True
if len(args) < 1 and not all:
warning = _('No list name supplied.')
if interact:
# Let them keep going
print warning
dolist = False
else:
usage(1, warning)
if all and not run:
usage(1, _('--all requires --run'))
# The default for interact is 1 unless -r was given
if interact is None:
if run is None:
interact = True
else:
interact = False
# try to import the module for the callable
func = None
if run:
i = run.rfind('.')
if i < 0:
module = run
callable = run
else:
module = run[:i]
callable = run[i+1:]
if VERBOSE:
print >> sys.stderr, _('Importing %(module)s...')
__import__(module)
mod = sys.modules[module]
if VERBOSE:
print >> sys.stderr, _('Running %(module)s.%(callable)s()...')
func = getattr(mod, callable)
if all:
r = [do_list(listname, args, func) for listname in Utils.list_names()]
elif dolist:
listname = args.pop(0).lower().strip()
r = do_list(listname, args, func)
# Now go to interactive mode, perhaps
if interact:
# Attempt to import the readline module, so we emulate the interactive
# console as closely as possible. Don't worry if it doesn't import.
# readline works by side-effect.
try:
import readline
except ImportError:
pass
namespace = globals().copy()
namespace.update(locals())
if dolist:
ban = _("The variable `m' is the %(listname)s MailList instance")
else:
ban = None
code.InteractiveConsole(namespace).interact(ban)
sys.exitfunc = atexit
main()