import re from zlib import crc32 class TLObject: """.tl core types IDs (such as vector, booleans, etc.)""" CORE_TYPES = ( 0xbc799737, # boolFalse#bc799737 = Bool; 0x997275b5, # boolTrue#997275b5 = Bool; 0x3fedd339, # true#3fedd339 = True; 0x1cb5c415, # vector#1cb5c415 {t:Type} # [ t ] = Vector t; ) def __init__(self, fullname, object_id, args, result, is_function): """ Initializes a new TLObject, given its properties. Usually, this will be called from `from_tl` instead :param fullname: The fullname of the TL object (namespace.name) The namespace can be omitted :param object_id: The hexadecimal string representing the object ID :param args: The arguments, if any, of the TL object :param result: The result type of the TL object :param is_function: Is the object a function or a type? """ # The name can or not have a namespace if '.' in fullname: self.namespace = fullname.split('.')[0] self.name = fullname.split('.')[1] else: self.namespace = None self.name = fullname self.args = args self.result = result self.is_function = is_function # The ID should be an hexadecimal string or None to be inferred if object_id is None: self.id = self.infer_id() else: self.id = int(object_id, base=16) assert self.id == self.infer_id(),\ 'Invalid inferred ID for ' + repr(self) @staticmethod def from_tl(tl, is_function): """Returns a TL object from the given TL scheme line""" # Regex to match the whole line match = re.match(r''' ^ # We want to match from the beginning to the end ([\w.]+) # The .tl object can contain alpha_name or namespace.alpha_name (?: \# # After the name, comes the ID of the object ([0-9a-f]+) # The constructor ID is in hexadecimal form )? # If no constructor ID was given, CRC32 the 'tl' to determine it (?:\s # After that, we want to match its arguments (name:type) {? # For handling the start of the '{X:Type}' case \w+ # The argument name will always be an alpha-only name : # Then comes the separator between name:type [\w\d<>#.?!]+ # The type is slightly more complex, since it's alphanumeric and it can # also have Vector, flags:# and flags.0?default, plus :!X as type }? # For handling the end of the '{X:Type}' case )* # Match 0 or more arguments \s # Leave a space between the arguments and the equal = \s # Leave another space between the equal and the result ([\w\d<>#.?]+) # The result can again be as complex as any argument type ;$ # Finally, the line should always end with ; ''', tl, re.IGNORECASE | re.VERBOSE) if match is None: # Probably "vector#1cb5c415 {t:Type} # [ t ] = Vector t;" raise ValueError('Cannot parse TLObject', tl) # Sub-regex to match the arguments (sadly, it cannot be embedded in the first regex) args_match = re.findall(r''' ({)? # We may or may not capture the opening brace (\w+) # First we capture any alpha name with length 1 or more : # Which is separated from its type by a colon ([\w\d<>#.?!]+) # The type is slightly more complex, since it's alphanumeric and it can # also have Vector, flags:# and flags.0?default, plus :!X as type (})? # We may or not capture the closing brace ''', tl, re.IGNORECASE | re.VERBOSE) # Retrieve the matched arguments args = [TLArg(name, arg_type, brace != '') for brace, name, arg_type, _ in args_match] # And initialize the TLObject return TLObject( fullname=match.group(1), object_id=match.group(2), args=args, result=match.group(3), is_function=is_function) def class_name(self): """Gets the class name following the Python style guidelines""" return self.class_name_for(self.name, self.is_function) @staticmethod def class_name_for(typename, is_function=False): """Gets the class name following the Python style guidelines""" # Courtesy of http://stackoverflow.com/a/31531797/4759433 result = re.sub(r'_([a-z])', lambda m: m.group(1).upper(), typename) result = result[:1].upper() + result[1:].replace('_', '') # If it's a function, let it end with "Request" to identify them if is_function: result += 'Request' return result def sorted_args(self): """Returns the arguments properly sorted and ready to plug-in into a Python's method header (i.e., flags and those which can be inferred will go last so they can default =None) """ return sorted(self.args, key=lambda x: x.is_flag or x.can_be_inferred) def is_core_type(self): """Determines whether the TLObject is a "core type" (and thus should be embedded in the generated code) or not""" return self.id in TLObject.CORE_TYPES def __repr__(self, ignore_id=False): fullname = ('{}.{}'.format(self.namespace, self.name) if self.namespace is not None else self.name) if getattr(self, 'id', None) is None or ignore_id: hex_id = '' else: # Skip 0x and add 0's for padding hex_id = '#' + hex(self.id)[2:].rjust(8, '0') if self.args: args = ' ' + ' '.join([repr(arg) for arg in self.args]) else: args = '' return '{}{}{} = {}'.format(fullname, hex_id, args, self.result) def infer_id(self): representation = self.__repr__(ignore_id=True) # Clean the representation representation = representation\ .replace(':bytes ', ':string ')\ .replace('?bytes ', '?string ')\ .replace('<', ' ').replace('>', '')\ .replace('{', '').replace('}', '') representation = re.sub( r' \w+:flags\.\d+\?true', r'', representation ) return crc32(representation.encode('ascii')) def __str__(self): fullname = ('{}.{}'.format(self.namespace, self.name) if self.namespace is not None else self.name) # Some arguments are not valid for being represented, such as the flag indicator or generic definition # (these have no explicit values until used) valid_args = [arg for arg in self.args if not arg.flag_indicator and not arg.generic_definition] args = ', '.join(['{}={{}}'.format(arg.name) for arg in valid_args]) # Since Python's default representation for lists is using repr(), we need to str() manually on every item args_format = ', '.join( ['str(self.{})'.format(arg.name) if not arg.is_vector else 'None if not self.{0} else [str(_) for _ in self.{0}]'.format( arg.name) for arg in valid_args]) return ("'({} (ID: {}) = ({}))'.format({})" .format(fullname, hex(self.id), args, args_format)) class TLArg: def __init__(self, name, arg_type, generic_definition): """ Initializes a new .tl argument :param name: The name of the .tl argument :param arg_type: The type of the .tl argument :param generic_definition: Is the argument a generic definition? (i.e. {X:Type}) """ if name == 'self': # This very only name is restricted self.name = 'is_self' else: self.name = name # Default values self.is_vector = False self.is_flag = False self.skip_constructor_id = False self.flag_index = -1 # Special case: some types can be inferred, which makes it # less annoying to type. Currently the only type that can # be inferred is if the name is 'random_id', to which a # random ID will be assigned if left as None (the default) self.can_be_inferred = name == 'random_id' # The type can be an indicator that other arguments will be flags if arg_type == '#': self.flag_indicator = True self.type = None self.is_generic = False else: self.flag_indicator = False self.is_generic = arg_type.startswith('!') # Strip the exclamation mark always to have only the name self.type = arg_type.lstrip('!') # The type may be a flag (flags.IDX?REAL_TYPE) # Note that 'flags' is NOT the flags name; this is determined by a previous argument # However, we assume that the argument will always be called 'flags' flag_match = re.match(r'flags.(\d+)\?([\w<>.]+)', self.type) if flag_match: self.is_flag = True self.flag_index = int(flag_match.group(1)) # Update the type to match the exact type, not the "flagged" one self.type = flag_match.group(2) # Then check if the type is a Vector vector_match = re.match(r'[Vv]ector<([\w\d.]+)>', self.type) if vector_match: self.is_vector = True # If the type's first letter is not uppercase, then # it is a constructor and we use (read/write) its ID # as pinpointed on issue #81. self.use_vector_id = self.type[0] == 'V' # Update the type to match the one inside the vector self.type = vector_match.group(1) # See use_vector_id. An example of such case is ipPort in # help.configSpecial if self.type.split('.')[-1][0].islower(): self.skip_constructor_id = True # The name may contain "date" in it, if this is the case and the type is "int", # we can safely assume that this should be treated as a "date" object. # Note that this is not a valid Telegram object, but it's easier to work with if self.type == 'int' and ( re.search(r'(\b|_)date\b', name) or name in ('expires', 'expires_at', 'was_online')): self.type = 'date' self.generic_definition = generic_definition def type_hint(self): result = { 'int': 'int', 'long': 'int', 'int128': 'int', 'int256': 'int', 'string': 'str', 'date': 'datetime.datetime | None', # None date = 0 timestamp 'bytes': 'bytes', 'true': 'bool', }.get(self.type, self.type) if self.is_vector: result = 'list[{}]'.format(result) if self.is_flag and self.type != 'date': result += ' | None' return result def __str__(self): # Find the real type representation by updating it as required real_type = self.type if self.flag_indicator: real_type = '#' if self.is_vector: if self.use_vector_id: real_type = 'Vector<{}>'.format(real_type) else: real_type = 'vector<{}>'.format(real_type) if self.is_generic: real_type = '!{}'.format(real_type) if self.is_flag: real_type = 'flags.{}?{}'.format(self.flag_index, real_type) if self.generic_definition: return '{{{}:{}}}'.format(self.name, real_type) else: return '{}:{}'.format(self.name, real_type) def __repr__(self): # Get rid of our special type return str(self)\ .replace(':date', ':int')\ .replace('?date', '?int')