Advanced usages of plac
=========================================================

:Author: Michele Simionato
:E-mail: michele.simionato@gmail.com
:Date: July 2010
:Download page: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/plac
:Project page: http://micheles.googlecode.com/hg/plac/doc/plac.html
:Installation: ``easy_install -U plac``
:License: BSD license
:Requires: Python 2.5+

*The present document discusses a few of the advanced use
cases for plac. It shows how to write interactive and non-interactive
interpreters with plac, and how to use plac for testing and scripting a generic
application. It assumes you have already read an understood the
basic documentation.*

.. contents::

Introduction
-----------------------------------------------------

One of the design goals of plac_ is to make it dead easy to write a
scriptable and testable interface for an application.  You can use
plac_ whenever you have an API with strings in input and strings in
output, and that includes a *huge* domain of applications.

A string-oriented interface is a scriptable interface by
construction. That means that you can define a command language for
your application and that it is possible to write scripts which are
interpretable by plac_ and can be run as batch scripts.

Actually, at the most general level, you can see plac_ as a generic tool to
write domain specific languages (DSL). With plac_ you
can test your application interactively as well as with batch
scripts, and even with the analogous of Python doctests for your
defined language.

You can easily replace the ``cmd`` module of the standard library and
you could easily write an application like twill_ with plac_. Or you
could use it to script your building procedure. Or any other thing,
your imagination is the only limit!

From scripts to interactive applications
------------------------------------------------------------

Command-line scripts have many advantages, but are no substitute
for interactive applications.
In particular, if you have a script with a large startup time which must be run
multiple times, it is best to turn it into an interactive application,
so that the startup is performed only once.  ``plac`` provides an
``Interpreter`` class just for this purpose. 

The ``Interpreter`` class wraps the main function of a script and
provides an ``.interact`` method to start an interactive interpreter
reading commands from the console.

For instance, you can define an interactive interpreter on top of the
``ishelve`` script introduced in the `basic documentation`_ as
follows:

.. include:: shelve_interpreter.py
   :literal:

A trick has been used here: the ishelve command-line interface has been
hidden inside an external interface. They are distinct: for instance
the external interface recognizes the ``-h/--help`` flag whereas the
internal interface only recognizes the ``.help`` command::

 $ python shelve_interpreter.py -h

.. include:: shelve_interpreter.help
   :literal:

Thanks to this ingenuous trick, the script can be run both interactively
and non-interactively::

 $ python shelve_interpreter.py .clear # non-interactive use
 cleared the shelve

Here is an usage session::

 $ python shelve_interpreter.py -i # interactive use
 A simple interface to a shelve. Use .help to see the available commands.
 i> .help
 Commands: .help, .showall, .clear, .delete
 <param> ...
 <param=value> ...
 i> a=1
 setting a=1
 i> a
 1
 i> b=2
 setting b=2
 i> a b
 1
 2
 i> .del a
 deleted a
 i> a
 a: not found
 i> .show
 b=2
 i> [CTRL-D]

The ``.interact`` method 
reads commands from the console and send them to the
underlying interpreter, until the user send a CTRL-D
command (CTRL-Z in Windows). There is a default
argument ``prompt='i> '`` which
can be used to change the prompt. The text displayed at the beginning
of the interactive session is the docstring of the main function.
``plac`` also understands command abbreviations: in this example
``del`` is an abbreviation for ``delete``. In case of ambiguous 
abbreviations plac_ raises a ``NameError``.

Finally I must notice that the ``plac.Interpreter`` is available only if you
are using a recent version of Python (>= 2.5), because it is a context
manager object which uses extended generators internally.

Testing a plac application
-----------------------------------------------------------

You can conveniently test your application in interactive mode.
However manual testing is a poor substitute for automatic testing.

In principle, one could write automatic tests for the
``ishelve`` application by using ``plac.call`` directly:

.. include:: test_ishelve.py
   :literal:

However, using ``plac.call`` is not especially nice. The big
issue is that ``plac.call`` responds to invalid input by printing an
error message on stderr and by raising a ``SystemExit``: this is
certainly not a nice thing to do in a test.

As a consequence of this behavior it is impossible to test for invalid
commands, unless you wrap the ``SystemExit`` exception by
hand each time (a possibly you do something with the error message in
stderr too). Luckily, ``plac`` offers a better testing support through
the ``check`` method of ``Interpreter`` objects:

.. include:: test_ishelve_more.py
   :literal:

The method ``.check(given_input, expected_output)`` works on strings
and raises an ``AssertionError`` if the output produced by the
interpreter is different from the expected output for the given input.
Notice that ``AssertionError`` is catched by tools like ``py.test`` and
``nosetests`` and actually ``plac`` tests are intended to be run with
such tools.

Interpreters offer a minor syntactic advantage with respect to calling
``plac.call`` directly, but they offer a *major* semantic advantage when things
go wrong (read exceptions): an ``Interpreter`` object internally invokes
something like ``plac.call``, but it wraps all exceptions, so that ``i.check``
is guaranteed not to raise any exception except ``AssertionError``.

Even the ``SystemExit`` exception is captured and you can write your test as

    ``i.check('-cler', 'SystemExit: unrecognized arguments: -cler')``

without risk of exiting from the Python interpreter.

There is a second advantage of interpreters: if the main function contains some
initialization code and finalization code
(``__enter__`` and ``__exit__`` functions) they will be run only
once at the beginning and at the end of the interpreter loop.
``plac.call`` instead ignores the initialization/finalization code.

Plac easy tests
---------------------------------------------------------

Writing your tests in terms of ``Interpreter.check`` is certainly an
improvement over writing them in terms of ``plac.call``, but they
are still too low-level for my taste. The ``Interpreter`` class provides 
support for doctest-style tests, a.k.a. *plac easy tests*.

By using plac easy tests you can cut and paste your interactive session and
turn it into a runnable automatics test.
Consider for instance the following file ``ishelve.placet`` (the ``.placet``
extension is a mnemonic for plac easy tests):

.. include:: ishelve.placet
   :literal:

Notice the precence of the shebang line containing the name of the
plac_ tool to test (a plac_ tool is just a Python module with a
function called ``main``). The shebang is ignored by the interpreter
(it looks like a comment to it) but it is there so that external
tools (say a test runner) can infer the plac interpreter
to use to test the file.

You can test ``ishelve.placet`` file by calling the
``.doctest`` method of the interpreter, as in this example::

 $ python -c"import plac, ishelve
 plac.Interpreter(ishelve.main).doctest(open('ishelve.placet'), verbose=True)"

Internally ``Interpreter.doctests`` invokes something like ``Interpreter.check``
multiple times inside the same context and compare the output with the
expected output: if even a check fails, the whole test fail. 

You should realize tha the easy tests supported by ``plac`` are *not*
unittests: they are functional tests. They model then user interaction and the
order of the operations generally matters.  The single subtests in a
``.placet`` file are not independent and it makes sense to exit
immediately at the first failure.

The support for doctests in plac_ comes nearly for free, thanks to the
shlex_ module in the standard library, which is able to parse simple
languages as the ones you can implement with plac_. In particular,
thanks to shlex_, plac_ is able to recognize comments (the default
comment character is ``#``), escape sequences and more. Look at the
shlex_ documentation if you need to customize how the language is
interpreted. For more flexibility, it is even possible to pass to the
interpreter a custom split function with signature ``split(line,
commentchar)``.

In addition, I have implemented from scratch some support for line number
recognition, so that if a test fail you get the line number of the
failing command. This is especially useful if your tests are
stored in external files, even if plac easy tests does not need to be in
a file: you can just pass to the ``.doctest`` method a list of
strings corresponding to the lines of the file.

At the present plac_ does not use any code from the doctest
module, but the situation may change in the future (it would be nice
if plac_ could reuse doctests directives like ELLIPSIS).

It is straighforward to integrate your ``.placet`` tests with standard
testing tools. For instance, you can integrate your doctests with ``nose``
or ``py.test`` as follow::

 import os, shlex, plac
 
 def test_doct():
    """
    Find all the doctests in the current directory and run them with the
    corresponding plac interpreter (the shebang rules!)
    """
    placets = [f for f in os.listdir('.') if f.endswith('.placet')]
    for placet in placets:
        lines = list(open(placet))
        assert lines[0].startswith('#!'), 'Missing or incorrect shebang line!'
        firstline = lines[0][2:] # strip the shebang
        main = plac.import_main(*shlex.split(firstline))
        yield plac.Interpreter(main).doctest, lines[1:]

Here you should notice that usage of ``plac.import_main``, an utility
which is able to import the main function of the script specified in
the shebang line. You can use both the full path name of the
tool, or a relative path name. In this case the runner look at the
environment variable ``PLACPATH`` and it searches
the plac tool in the directories specified there (``PLACPATH`` is just
a string containing directory names separated by colons). If the variable
``PLACPATH`` is not defined, it just looks in the current directory.
If the plac tool is not found, an ``ImportError`` is raised.

Plac batch scripts
--------------------------------------------------

It is pretty easy to realize that an interactive interpreter can
also be used to run batch scripts: instead of reading the commands from
the console, it is enough to read the commands from a file.
plac_ interpreters provide an ``.execute`` method to perform just that.

There is just a subtle point to notice: whereas in an interactive loop
one wants to manage all exceptions, a batch script should not in the
background in case of unexpected errors. The implementation of
``Interpreter.execute`` makes sure that any error raised by
``plac.call`` internally is re-raised.  In other words, plac_
interpreters *wrap the errors, but does not eat them*: the errors are
always accessible and can be re-raised on demand.

The exception is the case of invalid commands, which are skipped.
Consider for instance the following batch file, which contains a 
mispelled command (``.dl`` instead of ``.del``):

.. include:: ishelve.plac
   :literal:

If you execute the batch file, the interpreter will print a ``.dl: not found``
at the ``.dl`` line and will continue::

 $ python -c "import plac, ishelve
 plac.Interpreter(ishelve.main).execute(open('ishelve.plac'), verbose=True)" 
 i> .clear 
 cleared the shelve
 i> a=1 b=2
 setting a=1
 setting b=2
 i> .show
 b=2
 a=1
 i> .del a
 deleted a
 i> .dl b
 2
 .dl: not found
 i> .show
 b=2

The ``verbose`` flag is there to show the lines which are being interpreted
(prefixed by ``i>``). This is done on purpose, so that you can cut and paste
the output of the batch script and turn it into a ``.placet`` test
(cool, isn't it?).

Implementing subcommands 
----------------------------------------

When I discussed the ``ishelve`` implementation in the `basic
documentation`_, I said that it looked like a poor man implementation
of an object system as a chain of elifs; I also said that plac_ was
able to do much better than that.  Here I will substantiate my claim.

plac_ is actually able to infer a set of subparsers from a
generic container of commands.  This is useful if you want to
implement *subcommands* (a familiar example of a command-line
application featuring subcommands is subversion).

Technically a container of commands is any object with a ``.commands`` attribute
listing a set of functions or methods which are valid commands. A command
container may have initialization/finalization hooks (``__enter__/__exit__``)
and dispatch hooks (``__missing__``, invoked for invalid command names).
Moreover, only when using command containers plac_ is able to provide
automatic autocompletion of commands.

Rhe shelve interface can be rewritten in an object-oriented way as follows:

.. include:: ishelve2.py
   :literal:

``plac.Interpreter`` objects wrap context manager objects
consistently.  In other words, if you wrap an object with
``__enter__`` and ``__exit__`` methods, they are invoked in the right
order (``__enter__`` before the interpreter loop starts and
``__exit__`` after the interpreter loop ends, both in the regular and
in the exceptional case). In our example, the methods ``__enter__``
and ``__exit__`` make sure the the shelve is opened and closed
correctly even in the case of exceptions. Notice that I have not
implemented any error checking in the ``show`` and ``delete`` methods
on purpose, to verify that plac_ works correctly in the presence of
exceptions.

When working with command containers, plac_ automatically adds two
special commands to the set of provided commands: ``.help``
and ``.last_tb``. The ``.help`` command is the easier to understand:
when invoked without arguments it displays the list of available commands
with the same formatting of the cmd_ module; when invoked with the name of
a command it displays the usage message for that command.
The ``.last_tb`` command is useful when debugging: in case of errors,
it allows you to display the traceback of the last executed command.

Here is a session of usage on an Unix-like operating system::

 $ python ishelve2.py
 A minimal interface over a shelve object.
 Operating on /home/micheles/conf.shelve.
 .help to see the available commands.
 i> .help

 special commands
 ================
 .help .last_tb  
 
 custom commands
 ===============
 delete  set  show  showall

 i> delete
 deleting everything
 i> set a pippo
 setting a=pippo
 i> set b lippo
 setting b=lippo
 i> showall
 b = lippo
 a = pippo
 i> show a b
 a = pippo
 b = lippo
 i> del a
 deleting a
 i> showall
 b = lippo
 i> delete a     
 deleting a
 KeyError: 'a'
 i> .last_tb 
  File "/usr/local/lib/python2.6/dist-packages/plac-0.6.0-py2.6.egg/plac_ext.py", line 190, in _wrap
     for value in genobj:
   File "./ishelve2.py", line 37, in delete
     del self.sh[name] # no error checking
   File "/usr/lib/python2.6/shelve.py", line 136, in __delitem__
     del self.dict[key]
 i> 

Notice that in interactive mode the traceback is hidden, unless
you pass the ``verbose`` flag to the ``Interpreter.interact`` method.

Readline support
---------------------------------------

Starting from release 0.6 plac_ offers full readline support. That
means that if your Python was compiled with readline support you get
autocompletion and persistent command history for free.
By default all commands are autocomplete in a case sensitive way.
If you want to add new words to the autocompletion set, or you want
to change the location of the ``.history`` file, or to change the
case sensitivirt, or you want to change the prompt, the way to do
it is to pass a ``plac.ReadlineInput`` object to the interpreter.
Here is an example, assuming you want to build a database interface
understanding SQL commands:

.. include:: sql_interface.py
   :literal:

Here is an example of usage::

 $ python sql_interface.py <some dsn>
 sql> SELECT a.* FROM TABLE1 AS a INNER JOIN TABLE2 AS b ON a.id = b.id 
 ...

You can check that entering just ``sel`` and pressing TAB the readline library
completes the ``SELECT`` keyword for you and makes it upper case; idem for 
``FROM``, ``INNER``, ``JOIN`` and even for the names of the tables. An
obvious improvement is to read the names of the tables by introspecting
the database: actually you can even read the names of the views and of
the columns, and have full autocompletion. All the entered commands
and recorded and saved in the file ``~/.sql_interface.history`` when
exiting from the command-line interface.

If the readline library is not available, my suggestion is to use the
rlwrap_ tool which provides similar features, at least on Unix-like
platforms. plac_ should also work fine on Windows with the pyreadline
library (I do not use Windows, so this part is very little tested).
For people worried about licenses, I will notice that plac_ uses the
readline library only if available, it does not include it and it does
not rely on it in any fundamental way, so that the plac_ licence does
not need to be the GPL (actually it is a BSD
do-whatever-you-want-with-it licence).

The interactive mode of ``plac`` can be used as a replacement of the
cmd_ module in the standard library. It is actually better than cmd_:
for instance, the ``.help`` command is more powerful, since it
provides information about the arguments accepted by the given command::

 i> .help set
 usage:  set name value
 
 set name value
 
 positional arguments:
   name
   value

 i> .help delete
 usage:  delete [name]
 
 delete given parameter (or everything)
 
 positional arguments:
   name

 i> .help show
 usage:  show [names [names ...]]
 
 show given parameters
 
 positional arguments:
   names

As you can imagine, the help message is provided by the underlying argparse_
subparser (there is a subparser for each command). plac_ commands accept
options, flags, varargs, keyword arguments, arguments with defaults, 
arguments with a fixed number of choices, type conversion and all the
features provided of argparse_ which should be reimplemented from scratch
using plac_.

Moreover at the moment ``plac`` also understands command abbreviations.
However, this feature should be considered deprecated and may disappear in
future releases. It was meaningful in the past, when plac_ did not support
readline.

Notice that if an abbreviation is ambiguous, plac_ warns you::

 i> sh
 NameError: Ambiguous command 'sh': matching ['showall', 'show']

The plac runner
--------------------------------------------------------

The distribution of plac_ includes a runner script named ``plac_runner.py``,
which will be installed in a suitable directory in your system by distutils_
(say in ``\usr\local\bin\plac_runner.py`` in a Unix-like operative system).
The runner provides many facilities to run ``.plac`` scripts and
``.placet`` files, as well as Python modules containg a ``main``
object, which can be a function, a command container object or
even a command container class.

For instance, suppose you want to execute a script containing commands
defined in the ``ishelve2`` module like the following one:

.. include:: ishelve2.plac
   :literal:

The first line of the ``.plac`` script contains the name of the
python module containing the plac interpreter and the arguments
which must be passed to its main function in order to be able
to instantiate an interpreter object. The other lines contains
commands. Then you can run the script as follows::

 $ plac_runner.py --batch ishelve2.plac
 setting a=1
 deleting a
 Traceback (most recent call last):
   ...
 _bsddb.DBNotFoundError: (-30988, 'DB_NOTFOUND: No matching key/data pair found')

The last command intentionally contained an error, to show that the
plac runner does not eat the traceback.

The runner can also be used to run Python modules in interactive
mode and non-interactive mode. If you put this alias in your bashrc

  ``alias plac="plac_runner.py"``

(or you define a suitable ``plac.bat`` script in Windows) you can
run the ``ishelve2.py`` script in interactive mode as
follows::

 $ plac -i ishelve2.py
 A minimal interface over a shelve object.
 Operating on /home/micheles/conf.shelve.
 .help to see the available commands.
 
 i> del
 deleting everything
 i> set a 1
 setting a=1
 i> set b 2
 setting b=2
 i> show b
 b = 2

Now you can cut and paste the interactive session an turns into into
a ``.placet`` file like the following:

.. include:: ishelve2.placet
   :literal:

Notice that the first line specifies a test database
``~/test.shelve``, to avoid clobbering your default shelve. If you
mispell the arguments in the first line plac will give you an
argparse_ error message (just try).

You can run placets following the shebang convention directly with
the plac runner::

 $ plac --test ishelve2.placet
 run 1 plac test(s)

If you want to see the output of the tests, pass the ``-v/--verbose`` flag.
Notice that he runner ignore the extension, so you can actually use any
extension your like, but *it relies on the first line of the file to invoke
the corresponding plac tool with the given arguments*.

The plac runner does not provide any test discovery facility,
but you can use standard Unix tools to help. For instance, you can
run all the ``.placet`` files into a directory and its subdirectories
as follows::

 $ find . -name \*.placet | xargs plac_runner.py -t

The plac runner expects the main function of your script to
return a plac tool, i.e. a function or an object with a ``.commands``
attribute. It this is not the case the runner gracefully exits.

It also works in non-interactive mode, if you call it as

  ``$ plac module.py args ...``

Here is an example::

 $ plac ishelve.py a=1
 setting a=1
 $ plac ishelve.py .show
 a=1

Notice that it non-interactive mode the runner just invokes ``plac.call``
on the ``main`` object of the Python module.

A non class-based example
--------------------------------------------------------

plac_ does not force you to use classes to define command containers.
Even a simple function can be a valid command container, it is
enough to add to it a ``.commands`` attribute and possibly
``__enter__`` and/or ``__exit__`` attributes.

In particular, a Python module is a perfect container of commands. As an
example, consider the following module implementing a fake Version
Control System:

.. include:: vcs.py
   :literal:

Notice that I have defined both an ``__exit__`` hook and a ``__missing__``
hook, invoked for non-existing commands.
The real trick here is the line ``main = __import__(__name__)``, which
define ``main`` to be an alias for the current module.

The ``vcs`` module does not contain an ``if __name__ == '__main__'``
block, but you can still run it through the plac runner
(try ``plac vcs.py -h``):

.. include:: vcs.help
   :literal:

You can get help for the subcommands by postponing ``-h`` after the
name of the command::
 
 $ plac vcs.py status -h
 usage: vcs.py status [-h] [-q]
 
 A fake status command
 
 optional arguments:
   -h, --help   show this help message and exit
   -q, --quiet  summary information

Notice how the docstring of the command is automatically shown in
usage message, as well as the documentation for the sub flag ``-q``.

Here is an example of a non-interactive session::

 $ plac vcs.py check url
 checkout 
 url
 $ plac vcs.py st -q
 status 
 True
 $ plac vcs.py co
 commit 
 None

and here is an interactive session::

 $ plac -i vcs.py
 usage: plac_runner.py vcs.py [-h] {status,commit,checkout} ...
 i> check url
 checkout 
 url
 i> st -q
 status 
 True
 i> co
 commit 
 None
 i> sto
 Command 'sto' does not exist
 i> [CTRL-D]
 ok

Notice the invocation of the ``__missing__`` hook for non-existing commands.
Notice also that the ``__exit__`` hook gets called only in interactive
mode.

If the commands are completely independent, a module is a good fit for
a method container. In other situations, it is best to use a custom
class. 

Writing your own plac runner
----------------------------------------------------------

The runner included in the plac_ distribution is intentionally kept
small (around 50 lines of code) so that you can study it and write
your own runner if want to. If you need to go to such level
of detail, you should know that the most important method of
the ``Interpreter`` class is the ``.send`` method, which takes
strings in input and returns a four-tuple with attributes
``.str``, ``.etype``, ``.exc`` and ``.tb``:

- ``.str`` is the output of the command, if successful (a string);
- ``.etype`` is the class of the exception, if the command fail;
- ``.exc`` is the exception instance;
- ``.tb`` is the traceback.

Moreover the ``__str__`` representation of the output object is redefined
to return the output string if the command was successful or the error
message if the command failed (actually it returns the error message
preceded by the name of the exception class).

For instance, if you send a mispelled option to
the interpreter a ``SystemExit`` will be trapped:

>>> import plac
>>> from ishelve import ishelve
>>> with plac.Interpreter(ishelve) as i:
...     print(i.send('.cler'))
... 
SystemExit: unrecognized arguments: .cler

It is important to invoke the ``.send`` method inside the context manager,
otherwise you will get a ``RuntimeError``.

For instance, suppose you want to implement a graphical runner for a
plac-based interpreter with two text widgets: one to enter the commands
and one to display the results. Suppose you want to display the errors
with tracebacks in red. You will need to code something like that
(pseudocode follows)::

  input_widget = WidgetReadingInput()
  output_widget = WidgetDisplayingOutput()

  def send(interpreter, line):
      out = interpreter.send(line)
      if out.tb: # there was an error
          output_widget.display(out.tb, color='red')
      else:
          output_widget.display(out.str)

  main = plac.import_main(tool_path) # get the main object

  with plac.Interpreter(main) as i:
     def callback(event):
        if event.user_pressed_ENTER():
             send(i, input_widget.last_line)
     input_widget.addcallback(callback)
     gui_mainloop.start()

You can adapt the pseudocode to your GUI toolkit of choice and you can
also change the file associations in such a way that clicking on a
plac tool file the graphical user interface starts.

There is a final *caveat*: since the plac interpreter loop is
implemented via extended generators, plac interpreters are single threaded: you
will get an error if you ``.send`` commands from separated threads. 
You can circumvent the problem by using a queue. If EXIT is a sentinel
value to signal exiting from the interpreter look, you can write code
like this::

    with interpreter:
        for input_value in iter(input_queue.get, EXIT):
            output_queue.put(interpreter.send(input_value))

The same trick also work for processes; you could run the interpreter
loop in a separate process and send commands to it via the Queue
class provided by the multiprocessing_ module.

Long running commands
---------------------------------------

As we saw, by default a plac_ interpreter blocks until 
the command terminates. This is an issue, in the sense that it makes
the interactive experience quite painful for long running commands. An
example is better than a thousand words, so consider the following
fake importer:

.. include:: importer1.py
   :literal:

If you run the ``import_file`` command, you will have to wait for 200 seconds
before entering a new command::

 $ python importer1.py dsn
 A fake importer with an import_file command
 i> import_file file1
 Imported 100 lines
 Imported 200 lines
 Imported 300 lines
 ... <wait 3+ minutes>
 Imported 10000 lines
 closing the file

Being unable to enter any other command is quite annoying: in such situation one
would like to run the long running commands in the background, to keep
the interface responsive. plac_ provides two ways to reach this goal: threads
and processes.

Threaded commands
-----------------------------------------

The most familiar way to execute a task in the background (even if not
necessarily the best way) is to run it into a separated thread. In our
example it is sufficient to replace the line

   ``commands = ['import_file']``

with

   ``thcommands = ['import_file']``

to tell to the plac_ interpreter that the command ``import_file`` should be
run into a separated thread. Here is an example session::

 i> import_file file1
 <ThreadedTask 1 [import_file file1] RUNNING>

The import task started in a separated thread. You can see the
progress of the task by using the special command ``.output``::

 i> .output 1
 <ThreadedTask 1 [import_file file1] RUNNING>
 Imported 100 lines
 Imported 200 lines

If you look after a while, you will get more lines of output::

 i> .output 1
 <ThreadedTask 1 [import_file file1] RUNNING>
 Imported 100 lines
 Imported 200 lines
 Imported 300 lines
 Imported 400 lines

If you look after a time long enough, the task will be finished::

 i> .output 1
 <ThreadedTask 1 [import_file file1] FINISHED>

You can launch many tasks one after the other::

 i> import_file file2
 <ThreadedTask 5 [import_file file2] RUNNING>
 i> import_file file3
 <ThreadedTask 6 [import_file file3] RUNNING>

The ``.list`` command displays all the running tasks::

 i> .list
 <ThreadedTask 5 [import_file file2] RUNNING>
 <ThreadedTask 6 [import_file file3] RUNNING>

It is even possible to kill a task::

 i> .kill 5
 <ThreadedTask 5 [import_file file2] TOBEKILLED>
 # wait a bit ...
 closing the file
 i> .output 5
 <ThreadedTask 5 [import_file file2] KILLED>

You should notice that since at the Python level it is impossible to kill 
a thread, the ``.kill`` commands works by setting the status of the task to
``TOBEKILLED``. Internally the generator corresponding to the command
is executed in the thread and the status is checked at each iteration:
when the status become ``TOBEKILLED`` a ``GeneratorExit`` exception is
raised and the thread terminates (softly, so that the ``finally`` clause
is honored). In our example the generator is yielding
back control once every 100 iterations, i.e. every two seconds (not much).
In order to get a responsive interface it is a good idea to yield more
often, for instance every 10 iterations (i.e. 5 times per second),
as in the following code:

.. include:: importer2.py
   :literal:

Running commands as external processes
-----------------------------------------

Threads are not loved much in the Python world and actually most people
prefer to use processes instead. For this reason plac_ provides the
option to execute long running commands as external processes. Unfortunately
the current implementation only works in Unix-like operating systems
(including Mac OS X) because it relies on fork via the multiprocessing_
module. 

In our example, to enable the feature it is sufficient to replace the line

   ``thcommands = ['import_file']``

with

   ``mpcommands = ['import_file']``.

The user experience is exactly the same as with threads and you will not see any
difference at the user interface level::

 i> import_file file3
 <MPTask 1 [import_file file3] SUBMITTED>
 i> .kill 1
 <MPTask 1 [import_file file3] RUNNING>
 closing the file
 i> .o 1
 <MPTask 1 [import_file file3] KILLED>
 Imported 100 lines
 Imported 200 lines
 i> 

Still, using processes is quite different than using threads: in
particular, when using processes you can only yield pickleable values
and you cannot re-raise an exception first raised in a different
process, because traceback objects are not pickleable. Moreover,
you cannot rely on automatic sharing of your objects.

On the plus side, when using processes you do not need to worry about
killing a command: they are killed immediately using a SIGTERM signal,
and there is not a ``TOBEKILLED`` mechanism. Moreover, the killing is
guaranteed to be soft: internally a command receiving a SIGTERM raises
a ``TerminatedProcess`` exception which is trapped in the generator
loop, so that the command is closed properly.

Using processes allows to take full advantage of multicore machines
and it is safer than using threads, so it is the recommended approach
unless you are working on Windows.

Summary
-------------------------------------------------------

Once plac_ claimed to be the easiest command-line arguments parser
in the world. Having read this document you may think that it is not
so easy after all. But it is a false impression. Actually the
rules are quite simple:

1. 
   if you want to implement a command-line script, use ``plac.call``;

2. 
   if you want to implement a command interpreter, use ``plac.Interpreter``:

   - for an interactive interpreter, call the ``.interact`` method;
   - for an batch interpreter, call the ``.execute`` method;

3. for testing call the ``Interpreter.check`` method in the appropriate context
   or use the ``Interpreter.doctest`` feature;

4. if you need to go at a lower level, you may need to call the
   ``Interpreter.send`` method which returns a (finished) ``Task`` object.

5. long running command can be executed in the background as threads or
   processes: just declare them in the lists ``thcommands`` and ``mpcommands``
   respectively.

Moreover, remember that ``plac_runner.py`` is your friend.

Appendix: custom annotation objects
--------------------------------------------------------

Internally plac_ uses an ``Annotation`` class to convert the tuples
in the function signature into annotation objects, i.e. objects with
six attributes ``help, kind, short, type, choices, metavar``.

Advanced users can implement their own annotation objects.
For instance, here is an example of how you could implement annotations for
positional arguments:

.. include:: annotations.py
   :literal:

You can use such annotations objects as follows:

.. include:: example11.py
   :literal:

Here is the usage message you get:

.. include:: example11.help
   :literal:

You can go on and define ``Option`` and ``Flag`` classes, if you like.
Using custom annotation objects you could do advanced things like extracting the
annotations from a configuration file or from a database, but I expect such
use cases to be quite rare: the default mechanism should work 
pretty well for most users.

.. _argparse: http://argparse.googlecode.com
.. _optparse: http://docs.python.org/library/optparse.html
.. _getopt: http://docs.python.org/library/getopt.html
.. _optionparse: http://code.activestate.com/recipes/278844-parsing-the-command-line/
.. _plac: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/plac
.. _scaling down: http://www.welton.it/articles/scalable_systems
.. _ArgumentParser: http://argparse.googlecode.com/svn/tags/r11/doc/ArgumentParser.html
.. _argparse.FileType: http://argparse.googlecode.com/svn/tags/r11/doc/other-utilities.html?highlight=filetype#FileType
.. _Clap: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/Clap/0.7
.. _OptionParser: http://docs.python.org/library/optparse.html?highlight=optionparser#optparse.OptionParser
.. _SQLAlchemy: http://www.sqlalchemy.org/
.. _SqlSoup: http://www.sqlalchemy.org/docs/reference/ext/sqlsoup.html
.. _CLIArgs: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/CLIArgs
.. _opterator: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/opterator
.. _advanced usage document: in-writing
.. _twill: http://twill.idyll.org/
.. _basic documentation: http://micheles.googlecode.com/hg/plac/doc/plac.html
.. _shlex: http://docs.python.org/library/shlex.html
.. _multiprocessing: http://docs.python.org/library/multiprocessing.html
.. _distutils: http://docs.python.org/distutils/
.. _cmd: http://docs.python.org/library/cmd.html
.. _rlwrap: http://freshmeat.net/projects/rlwrap/
