collective.monkeypatcher

Support for applying monkey patches late in the startup cycle by using ZCML configuration actions
Download

collective.monkeypatcher Ranking & Summary

Advertisement

  • Rating:
  • License:
  • BSD License
  • Publisher Name:
  • Martin Aspeli

collective.monkeypatcher Tags


collective.monkeypatcher Description

Support for applying monkey patches late in the startup cycle by using ZCML configuration actions Sometimes, a monkey patch is a necessary evil.The collective.monkeypatcher package makes it easier to apply a monkey patch during Zope startup. It uses the ZCML configuration machinery to ensure that patches are loaded "late" in the startup cycle, so that the original code has had time to be fully initialised and configured. This is similar to using the initialize() method in a product's __init__.py, except it does not require that the package be a full-blown Zope 2 product with a persistent Control_Panel entry.Applying a monkey patchHere's an example:< configure xmlns="http://namespaces.zope.org/zope" xmlns:monkey="http://namespaces.plone.org/monkey" i18n_domain="collective.monkeypatcher" > < include package="collective.monkeypatcher" / > < monkey:patch description="This works around issue http://some.tracker.tld/ticket/123" class="Products.CMFPlone.CatalogTool.CatalogTool" original="searchResults" replacement=".catalog.patchedSearchResults" / >< /configure >In this example, we patch Plone's CatalogTool's searchResults() function, replacing it with our own version in catalog.py. To patch a module level function, you can use module instead of class. The original class and function/method name and the replacement symbol will be checked to ensure that they actually exist.If patching happens too soon (or too late), use the order attribute to specify a higher (later) or lower (earlier) number. The default is 1000.By default, DocFinderTab and other TTW API browsers will emphasize the monkey patched methods/functions, appending the docstring with "Monkey patched with 'my.monkeypatched.function'". If you don't want this, you could set the docstringWarning attribute to false.If you want to do more than just replace one function with another, you can provide your own patcher function via the handler attribute. This should be a callable like:def apply_patch(scope, original, replacement): ...Here, scope is the class/module that was specified. original is the string name of the function to replace, and replacement is the replacement function.Full list of options: * class The class being patched * module The module being patched * handler A function to perform the patching. Must take three parameters: class/module, original (string), and replacement * original Method or function to replace * replacement Method to function to replace with * preservedoc Preserve docstrings? * preserveOriginal Preserve the original function so that it is reachable view prefix _old_. Only works for default handler * preconditions Preconditions (multiple, separated by space) to be satisified before applying this patch. Example: Products.LinguaPlone-=1.4.3 or Products.TextIndexNG3+=3.3.0 * ignoreOriginal Ignore if the orginal function isn't present on the class/module being patched * docstringWarning Add monkey patch warning in docstring * description Some comments about your monkey patch * order Execution orderHandling monkey patches eventsApplying a monkey patch fires an event. See the interfaces.py module. If you to handle such event add this ZCML bunch:...< subscriber for="collective.monkeypatcher.interfaces.IMonkeyPatchEvent" handler="my.component.events.myHandler" / >...And add such Python:def myHandler(event): """see collective.monkeypatcher.interfaces.IMonkeyPatchEvent""" ... Requirements: · Python What's New in This Release: · Downgrade standard log message to debug level.


collective.monkeypatcher Related Software