Your IP : 18.223.108.134
a
R�f�F � @ sb d Z ddlZddlZddlZddlmZ ddlmZmZm Z m
Z
mZ ddlmZ G dd� d�Z
dS )ztdistutils.cmd
Provides the Command class, the base class for the command classes
in the distutils.command package.
� N)�DistutilsOptionError)�util�dir_util� file_util�archive_util�dep_util��logc @ s" e Zd ZdZg Zdd� Zdd� Zdd� Zdd � Zd
d� Z dCdd�Z
dd� ZdDdd�Zdd� Z
dEdd�ZdFdd�Zdd� ZdGdd�Zdd � Zd!d"� Zd#d$� Zd%d&� ZdHd'd(�ZdId*d+�Zd,d-� Zd.d/� Zd0d1� ZdJd2d3�ZdKd5d6�ZdLd7d8�ZdMd9d:�ZdNd;d<�ZdOd=d>�Z dPd?d@�Z!dQdAdB�Z"dS )R�Commanda} Abstract base class for defining command classes, the "worker bees"
of the Distutils. A useful analogy for command classes is to think of
them as subroutines with local variables called "options". The options
are "declared" in 'initialize_options()' and "defined" (given their
final values, aka "finalized") in 'finalize_options()', both of which
must be defined by every command class. The distinction between the
two is necessary because option values might come from the outside
world (command line, config file, ...), and any options dependent on
other options must be computed *after* these outside influences have
been processed -- hence 'finalize_options()'. The "body" of the
subroutine, where it does all its work based on the values of its
options, is the 'run()' method, which must also be implemented by every
command class.
c C sb ddl m} t||�std��| jtu r0td��|| _| �� d| _ |j
| _
d| _d| _d| _
dS )z�Create and initialize a new Command object. Most importantly,
invokes the 'initialize_options()' method, which is the real
initializer and depends on the actual command being
instantiated.
r )�Distributionz$dist must be a Distribution instancezCommand is an abstract classN)Zdistutils.distr �
isinstance� TypeError� __class__r
�RuntimeError�distribution�initialize_optionsZ_dry_run�verbose�force�help� finalized)�selfZdistr � r �2/opt/alt/python39/lib64/python3.9/distutils/cmd.py�__init__/ s
zCommand.__init__c C s<