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<H2>mxProxy - Generic Proxy Wrapper Type for Python</H2>
<HR SIZE=1 NOSHADE WIDTH="100%">
<TABLE WIDTH="100%">
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<TD>
<SMALL>
<A HREF="#AccessProtocol">Access Protocol</A> :
<A HREF="#CleanupProtocol">Cleanup Protocol</A> :
<A HREF="#ImplicitAccess">Implicit Access</A> :
<A HREF="#WeakRefs">Weak References</A> :
<A HREF="#Interface">Interface</A> :
<A HREF="#Examples">Examples</A> :
<A HREF="#Structure">Structure</A> :
<A HREF="#Support">Support</A> :
<A HREF="http://www.egenix.com/files/python/eGenix-mx-Extensions.html#Download-mxBASE"><B>Download</B></A> :
<A HREF="#Copyright">Copyright & License</A> :
<A HREF="#History">History</A> :
<A HREF="" TARGET="_top">Home</A>
</SMALL>
</TD>
<TD ALIGN=RIGHT VALIGN=TOP>
<SMALL>
<FONT COLOR="#FF0000">Version 2.0.3</FONT>
</SMALL>
</TD>
</TABLE>
<HR SIZE=1 NOSHADE WIDTH="100%">
<H3>Introduction</H3>
<UL CLASS="indent">
<P>
A while ago, I ran into a security problem within Python:
there was no apparent way to hide attributes from
unauthorized access other than running in an restricted
environment and using the standard lib's Bastion object
wrapper.
<P>
Since I couldn't run the code in restricted mode (e.g. it
does assignments to __class__ and __dict__ in a few vital
places), the only reasonable way seemed building a new type
that hides a few attributes in the C implementation. These
attributes are not accessible from within Python. Of course,
a debugger will give you access and some special extension
module that knows about the internal structure of the types
could too. But for my purpose this level security suffices.
<P>
Instead of creating a special Bastion like type I figured
that it would be a good idea to provide a more generic and
extendable version of a <B>Proxy</B> object. The object
itself doesn't provide too much funtionality. It basically
hides the wrapped object and provides controlled access to
its attributes.
<P>
Another subject that comes up every now and then in the
Python community is that of <B>weak references</B>,
i.e. references to objects that don't prevent them to be
garbage collected. Since Python uses a reference count
garbage collection scheme, circular references cause memory
leakage as soon as the reference to the cycle is dropped
(the involved objects are not garbage collected because
their reference count never drops to zero).
<P>
Proxy objects can use two flavors of references starting
with version 0.2: strong references which act just like any
other reference you use to the object in Python and weak
references. The <CODE>WeakProxy()</CODE> constructor must be
used for the latter. Details are described below.
<A NAME="AccessProtocol">
<H4>Access Protocol</H4>
<P>
To control access to the wrapped objects attributes (these also
include its methods), the Proxy provides two features:
<P>
<OL>
<LI>Access is only granted if the attributes name appears in a
special <B>interface list</B> of accessible names.
<P>
<LI>Public access can be further controlled if the object
provides the methods <CODE><B>__public_getattr__</B></CODE>
and/or <CODE><B>__public_setattr__</B></CODE>.
<P>
</OL>
<P>
The access scheme first checks the interface list. If given,
only attributes with names appearing in it can be set or
fetched. All other accesses are cancelled by raising an
<CODE>AccessError</CODE> exception (which is a subclass of the
standard <CODE>AttributeError</CODE>).
<P>
The presence of the interface list also indicates whether
methods that are to be returned to the requesting object should
be Proxy-wrapped on-the-fly or not. Wrapped methods only have
the callable slot enabled, thus inhibiting access to the
enclosed object reference.
<P>
In case an attribute it to be fetched, the Proxy checks the
availability of a <CODE>__public_getattr__</CODE> method. If
found, this method is called with the name as parameter and
whatever this method returns is returned to the requesting
object. Otherwise, the Proxy uses the standard
getattr()-functionality to fetch the attribute.
<P>
Setting attributes is done in a similar way: the Proxy checks
the availability of a <CODE>__public_setattr__</CODE> method. If
found, this method is called with parameters name and value.
Otherwise, the standard setattr() functionality is used.
<A NAME="CleanupProtocol">
<H4>Cleanup Protocol</H4>
<P>
When dealing with large object systems circular references are
sometimes introduced. Since these reference loops cannot
automatically be broken by the system, the user has to provide
means of breaking the circles at the proper places. One such place
is the object destructor of objects that explicitly contain such
references.
<P>
The Proxy object can be used to provide an indirect pointer into
such a circle of objects that reference each other. When the
system deletes the Proxy object, its destructor tries to find a
special method <CODE><B>__cleanup__</B></CODE> in the wrapped
object and calls it before continuing the destruction. This
allows the object to break the reference circles, e.g. by
performing a <CODE>self.__dict__.clear()</CODE> or something
similar.
<P>
Errors raised in <CODE>__cleanup__</CODE> calls are
ignored. Warnings are printed to stderr in case Python is run in
verbose mode (python -v) and tracebacks printed if run in debug
mode (python -d; note that printing tracebacks can sometimes
cause core dumps e.g. during finalization of the interpreter).
<A NAME="ImplicitAccess">
<H4>Implicit Access</H4>
<P>
On many occasions object attributes are not explicitly accessed
by e.g. using <CODE>object.attribute</CODE>, but indirect
through builtin functions or the interpreter itself. This poses
a problem to the Proxy, since there are different ways to reach
an objects implementation. For Python instances all important
hooks are reachable via <CODE>getattr()</CODE>, e.g. __len__ and
__add__. This is different for extension and builtin types: they
use a system of slots for providing access to their data.
<P>
As of version 0.2, Proxy objects also allow managing the type
slot interface for most applications. This means that you can
transparently use the Proxy to wrap builtin types such as lists
or tuples and use the Proxy just like you would use the
referenced builtin object itself.
<P>
Since Proxies are about access management, you can also restrict
access to these slots. For simplicity, the names you have to use
for different slots are exactly those you would define for
Python classes, e.g. the length slot is named '__len__', the
sequence and mapping get item slot are grouped under the name
'__getitem__'. These names have to be explicitly stated in the
interface list you pass to the Proxy constructor when creating
the proxy in case you do define an interface list. If you don't
specify such a list, no direct interface restriction is applied.
<P>
These type slot names are defined:
<P>
<DL>
<DT>Generic:
<DD>__call__, __hash__, __str__, __cmp__
<DT>Mapping:
<DD>__getitem__, __setitem__, __len__
<DT>Sequence:
<DD>__add__, __repeat__, __getitem__, __getslice__
__setitem__, __getitem__
<DT>Number:
<DD>__add__, __sub__, __mul__, __div__
__mod__, __divmod__, __pow__, __neg__, __pos__, __abs__, __true__
__invert__, __lshift__, __rshift__, __and__, __str__, __or__, __int__
__long__, __float__
<BR> Note: number coercion does not yet
work, so most of these are currently useless !
</DL>
<P>
Omissions currently are: __coerce__, __hex__ and
__oct__. __repr__ is handled by the Proxy object itself since it
would otherwise possibly expose address information about the
underlying object.
<P>
Proxies also work transparently for Python instances. To achieve
this, another proxy-like object which is a real Python instance
is to be put in front of the Proxy object. Access to this
instance then gets translated into getattr-calls by the
interpreter, these calls are filtered through the Proxy and the
wrapped instance object's attribute then gets accessed in the
usual way. The result is passed back to the requesting object.
<A NAME="WeakRefs">
<H4>Weak References</H4>
<P>
Proxy objects work in two modes: keeping a strong or a weak reference
to the object. The <CODE>Proxy()</CODE> constructor returns a
Proxy object using a strong reference, the <CODE>WeakProxy()</CODE> constructor one
using a weak reference.
<P>
Weak references are called weak because they don't keep the
object alive by incrementing the reference count on the
referenced object. Since objects get garbage collected when this
reference count falls down to 0, a weak reference can become
invalid at any time. The mxProxy implementation raises a
<CODE>LostReferenceError</CODE> in case a weak reference to such
an object is used.
<P>
This may sound like a pretty flaky feature at first, but the
main pro argument for these weak references is that you can
build up circular references without having to fear about them
not being properly garbage collected. Using strong references
(which do increment the reference count and thus keep the object
alive as long as the reference is around) would produce cycles
in the referencing scheme which the Python garbage collection
(GC) mechanism cannot automatically break causing the cycle to
become unreachable from the Python namespaces: a severe memory
leak.
<P>
Weak references in mxProxy work by using a global dictionary of
all objects handled through weak reference Proxies. This
dictionary is checked prior to every action on a weak Proxy and
after its deletion. You can also force a check by calling the
<CODE>checkweakrefs()</CODE> anytime you like, e.g. at regular
intervals.
<P>
The dictionary holds a strong reference to the object keeping it
alive until the next check is done. During the check all handled
objects are inspected to see if their reference count has gone
down to 1 (<I>phantom objects</I>: only the dictionary
references them). If this is the case, all weak proxies are
marked defunct and the object is removed from the dictionary
causing it to be garbage collected by the Python GC
mechanism. All subsequent actions on the weak references to this
object will then cause a <CODE>LostReferenceError</CODE>
exception to be raised.
</UL><!--CLASS="indent"-->
<A NAME="Interface">
<H3>Interface</H3>
<UL CLASS="indent">
<H4>Proxy Constructors</H4>
<UL CLASS="indent">
<P>
These constructors are available in the package:
<P><DL>
<DT><CODE><FONT COLOR="#000099">
Proxy(object,interface=None,passobj=None)</FONT></CODE></DT>
<DD>
Returns a new Proxy instance that wraps object.
<P>
interface can be given as sequence of strings and/or
objects with __name__ attribute or as dictionary with
string keys (only the keys are currently used) and tells
the Proxy to only allow access to these names. If not
given or None, no filtering is done by the Proxy (see
above on how access is managed).
<P>
passobj can be provided to retrieve the wrapped object
from the Proxy at a later point using the
<CODE>.proxy_object()</CODE> method. </DD><P>
<DT><CODE><FONT COLOR="#000099">
InstanceProxy(object,interface=None,passobj=None)</FONT></CODE></DT>
<DD>
Same as above, except that a Python instance wraps the
Proxy object.
<P>
This makes the Proxy transparent for access to wrapped
Python instances, meaning that the Proxy will act as if
it were the wrapped object itself (with the added
features mentioned above). </DD><P>
<DT><CODE><FONT COLOR="#000099">
CachingInstanceProxy(object,interface=None,passobj=None)</FONT></CODE></DT>
<DD>
Same as InstanceProxy(), except that a read cache is used
by the Proxy which caches all queried attributes in the
Proxy instance's dictionary.
<P>
Note that this may introduce circular references if not
used properly. Cached attributes are not looked up in
the wrapped instance after the first lookup -- if their
value changes, this won't be noticed by objects that
access the object through this wrapper.
</DD><P>
<DT><CODE><FONT COLOR="#000099">
SelectiveCachingInstanceProxy(object,interface=None,passobj=None)</FONT></CODE></DT>
<DD>
Same as InstanceProxy(), except that a read cache is used
by the Proxy which caches certain queried attributes in
the Proxy instance's dictionary depending on their type.
<P>
The cached types are defined by the
<CODE>.proxy_cacheable_types</CODE> attribute. It
defaults to only cache Python methods.
</DD><P>
<DT><CODE><FONT COLOR="#000099">
MethodCachingProxy(object,interface=None,passobj=None)</FONT></CODE></DT>
<DD>
Alias for SelectiveCachingInstanceProxy().
</DD><P>
<DT><CODE><FONT COLOR="#000099">
ReadonlyInstanceProxy(object,interface=None,passobj=None)</FONT></CODE></DT>
<DD>
Same as InstanceProxy, except that write access will
result in an <CODE>AccessError</CODE> being raised
</DD><P>
<DT><CODE><FONT COLOR="#000099">
ProxyFactory(Class,interface=None)</FONT></CODE></DT>
<DD>
Returns a factory object for producing Class instances
that are automatically wrapped using Proxy-instances.
<P>
interface is passed to the Proxy constructor,
pass-objects are not supported. </DD><P>
<DT><CODE><FONT COLOR="#000099">
InstanceProxyFactory(Class,interface=None)</FONT></CODE></DT>
<DD>
Returns a factory object for producing Class instances
that are automatically wrapped using
InstanceProxy-instances.</DD><P>
<DT><CODE><FONT COLOR="#000099">
WeakProxy(object,interface=None,passobj=None)</FONT></CODE></DT>
<DD>
Returns a new weak referencing Proxy instance that points
to object.
<P>
interface can be given as sequence of strings and/or
objects with __name__ attribute or as dictionary with
string keys (only the keys are currently used) and tells
the Proxy to only allow access to these names. If not
given or None, no filtering is done by the Proxy (see
above on how access is managed).
<P>
passobj can be provided to retrieve the wrapped object
from the Proxy at a later point using the
<CODE>.proxy_object()</CODE> method.
<P>
For details on weak references and how they work, see
the above discussion.
</DD><P>
</DL>
</UL><!--CLASS="indent"-->
<H4>Proxy Instance Methods</H4>
<UL CLASS="indent">
<P>
A <TT>Proxy</TT> instance <CODE>proxy</CODE> defines these
methods in addition to the ones available through restricted
access to the wrapped object:
<P><DL>
<DT><CODE><FONT COLOR="#000099">
proxy_object(passobj)</FONT></CODE></DT>
<DD>
Returns the wrapped object provided the given passobj is
identical to the one used for creating the Proxy.
<P>
Simple equality is not enough -- it has to be the same
object. </DD><P>
<DT><CODE><FONT COLOR="#000099">
proxy_getattr(name)</FONT></CODE></DT>
<DD>
Same as getattr(proxy,name). </DD><P>
<DT><CODE><FONT COLOR="#000099">
proxy_setattr(name,value)</FONT></CODE></DT>
<DD>
Same as setattr(proxy,name,value). </DD><P>
<DT><CODE><FONT COLOR="#000099">
proxy_defunct()</FONT></CODE></DT>
<DD>
Return 1 iff the referenced object has already been
garbage collected. </DD><P>
</DL>
<P>
Note that all attribute names starting with
'<CODE>proxy_</CODE>' are interpreted as being Proxy
attributes and are not passed to the wrapped object. Access
to these attributes is <I>not</I> subject to the
restrictions explained above.
</UL><!--CLASS="indent"-->
<H4>Proxy Instance Variables</H4>
<UL CLASS="indent">
<P>
<TT>Proxy</TT> instances do not provide any instance
variables themselves. They do provide restricted access to
the variables of the wrapped object though.
<P>
Note that all attribute names starting with
'<CODE>proxy_</CODE>' are interpreted as being Proxy
attributes and are not passed to the wrapped object. Also,
access to these attributes is <I>not</I> subject to the
restrictions explained above.
</UL><!--CLASS="indent"-->
<H4>Functions</H4>
<UL CLASS="indent">
<P>
These functions are available:
<P><DL>
<DT><CODE><FONT COLOR="#000099">
checkweakrefs()</FONT></CODE></DT>
<DD>
Calling this function causes the global dictionary used
for managing weak references to be checked for phantom
objects. If such objects are found, they are garbage
collected during the call and weak referencing Proxies
pointing to them are defunct.
<P>
Weak references cause the objects to stay alive until
either a proxy is used on them (causing an exception), a
proxy referencing them is deleted or this function is
called. To ensure the timely garbage collection of the
objects, call this function at regular intervals.
</DD><P>
<DT><CODE><FONT COLOR="#000099">
initweakrefs()</FONT></CODE></DT>
<DD>
For internal use only:<BR> Initializes or reinitializes
the weak reference implementation. This first forces a
finalization of the previous state if the implementation
has already been used and then starts again with a clean
weak reference dictionary.
</DD><P>
<DT><CODE><FONT COLOR="#000099">
finalizeweakrefs()</FONT></CODE></DT>
<DD>
For internal use only:<BR> Forces finalization of the weak
reference implementation. Subsequent usage of weak
references will cause errors to be raised.
<P>
Calling this function after finalization is not an
error.
</DD><P>
</DL>
</UL><!--CLASS="indent"-->
<H4>Constants</H4>
<UL CLASS="indent">
<P>
These constants are available:
<P><DL>
<DT><CODE><FONT COLOR="#000099">
AccessError</FONT></CODE></DT>
<DD>
Exception object used for access specific errors that the
module raises. It is a subclass of
exceptions.AttributeError. </DD><P>
</DL>
</UL><!--CLASS="indent"-->
</UL><!--CLASS="indent"-->
<A NAME="Examples">
<H3>Examples of Use</H3>
<UL CLASS="indent">
<P>
Here is a very simple one:
<PRE><FONT COLOR="#000066">import Proxy
class DataRecord:
a = 2
b = 3
# Make read-only:
def __public_setattr__(self,what,to):
raise Proxy.AccessError,'read-only'
# Cleanup protocol
def __cleanup__(self):
print 'cleaning up',self
o = DataRecord()
# Wrap the instance:
p = Proxy.InstanceProxy(o,('a',))
# Remove o from the accessible system:
del o
print 'Read p.a through Proxy:',p.a
# This will cause an exception, because the object is read-only
p.a = 3
# This will cause an exception, because no access is given to .b
print p.b
# Clear all traces of the provious exceptions (they might contain
# references to p) by issuing another one. Note that not doing
# so will cause the following 'del p' to not destroy the final
# reference to p... (don't ask me why).
1/0
# Deleting the Proxy will also delete the wrapped object, if there
# is no other reference to it in the system. It will invoke
# the __cleanup__ method in that case.
del p
# If you want to have the wrapping done automatically, you can use
# the InstanceProxyFactory:
DataRecord = Proxy.InstanceProxyFactory(DataRecord,('a',))
# This gives the same behaviour...
p = DataRecord()
print p.a
p.a = 3
print p.b
</FONT></PRE>
<P>
More examples will eventually appear in the Examples
subdirectory of the package.
</UL><!--CLASS="indent"-->
<A NAME="Structure">
<H3>Package Structure</H3>
<UL CLASS="indent">
<PRE>
[Proxy]
Doc/
Examples/
[mxProxy]
Proxy.py
</PRE>
<P>
Entries enclosed in brackets are packages (i.e. they are
directories that include a <TT>__init__.py</TT> file). Ones
without brackets are just simple subdirectories that are not
accessible via <CODE>import</CODE>.
<P>
The package imports all symbols from the Proxy sub module
which in turn imports the extension module, so you only need
to '<CODE>import Proxy</CODE>' to start working.
<P>
</UL><!--CLASS="indent"-->
<A NAME="Support">
<H3>Support</H3>
<UL CLASS="indent">
<P>
eGenix.com is providing commercial support for this
package. If you are interested in receiving information
about this service please see the <A
HREF="http://www.egenix.com/files/python/eGenix-mx-Extensions.html#Support">eGenix.com
Support Conditions</A>.
</UL><!--CLASS="indent"-->
<A NAME="Copyright">
<H3>Copyright & License</H3>
<UL CLASS="indent">
<P>
© 1998-2000, Copyright by Marc-André Lemburg;
All Rights Reserved. mailto: <A
HREF="mailto:mal@lemburg.com">mal@lemburg.com</A>
<P>
© 2000-2001, Copyright by eGenix.com Software GmbH,
Langenfeld, Germany; All Rights Reserved. mailto: <A
HREF="mailto:info@egenix.com">info@egenix.com</A>
<P>
This software is covered by the <A
HREF="mxLicense.html#Public"><B>eGenix.com Public
License Agreement</B></A>. The text of the license is also
included as file "LICENSE" in the package's main directory.
<P>
<B> By downloading, copying, installing or otherwise using
the software, you agree to be bound by the terms and
conditions of the eGenix.com Public License
Agreement. </B>
</UL><!--CLASS="indent"-->
<A NAME="History">
<H3>History & Future</H3>
<UL CLASS="indent">
<P>Things that still need to be done:
<P><UL>
<LI> Get number coercion to work. This may not be possible
in general due to deficiencies in Python internal coercion
mechanism.
<P><LI> Provide a callback hook for weak referencing
proxies which gets called when the referenced object dies.
<P><LI> Implement getattr-translators that map __XXX__
style names to type slot calls.
<P><LI> Make automatic method and function wrapping (and
proxy object hiding) optional.
</UL>
<P>There were no significant changes between 2.0.0 and 2.0.3.
<P>Changes from <A HREF="mxProxy-0.2.0.zip">0.2.0</A> to 2.0.0:
<UL>
<LI> Fixed a bug in the finalization of the weak
reference implemenation. Thanks to Michael Muller for
pointing me to this quirk. Finalization of the weak ref
dict previously occurred in an atexit() function, but at
this time, the Python interpreter is already gone, so
__del__ hooks would cause a fatal error due to a missing
thread state. The implementation now uses explicit
function APIs to handle finalization at module cleanup
time.
<P><LI> Removed __weakref reference to the weak ref dict
from the module interface.
<P><LI> Added initweakrefs() and finalizeweakrefs().
<P><LI> AccessError is now a subclass of
exceptions.AttributeError to enhance integration with the
getattr() protocol.
<P><LI> Exceptions raised during .__cleanup__() are only
reported in debug or verbose mode (python -v or -d).
<P><LI> AccessErrors now contain the name of the attribute
to which access was denied (in case the name is a string).
<P><LI> <B>Moved</B> the package under a new top-level
package 'mx'. It is part of the <I>eGenix.com mx BASE
distribution</I>.
</UL>
<P>Changes from <A HREF="mxProxy-0.1.0.zip">0.1.0</A> to 0.2.0:
<UL>
<LI>AccessError is a subclass of
exceptions.StandardError.
<P><LI>Fixed a bug where a proxy without interface would
not wrap bound and unbound methods.
<P><LI>Added CachingInstanceProxy.
<P><LI>Added weak referencing mechanism.
<P><LI>Added support for nearly all low level type slots.
</UL>
<P>
<P>
Version 0.1.0 was the intial release.
<P>
</UL><!--CLASS="indent"-->
<HR WIDTH="100%">
<CENTER><FONT SIZE=-1>© 1999, Copyright by Marc-André
Lemburg; All Rights Reserved. mailto: <A
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