require "thread" require "log4r" require "vagrant/util/platform" require "vagrant/util/safe_puts" module Vagrant module UI # Vagrant UIs handle communication with the outside world (typically # through a shell). They must respond to the following methods: # # * `info` # * `warn` # * `error` # * `success` class Interface def initialize @logger = Log4r::Logger.new("vagrant::ui::interface") end [:ask, :warn, :error, :info, :success].each do |method| define_method(method) do |message, *opts| # Log normal console messages @logger.info { "#{method}: #{message}" } end end [:clear_line, :report_progress].each do |method| # By default do nothing, these aren't logged define_method(method) { |*args| } end # Returns a new UI class that is scoped to the given resource name. # Subclasses can then use this scope name to do whatever they please. # # @param [String] scope_name # @return [Interface] def scope(scope_name) self end end # This is a UI implementation that does nothing. class Silent < Interface def ask(*args) super # Silent can't do this, obviously. raise Errors::UIExpectsTTY end end # This is a UI implementation that outputs the text as is. It # doesn't add any color. class Basic < Interface include Util::SafePuts def initialize super @lock = Mutex.new end # Use some light meta-programming to create the various methods to # output text to the UI. These all delegate the real functionality # to `say`. [:info, :warn, :error, :success].each do |method| class_eval <<-CODE def #{method}(message, *args) super(message) say(#{method.inspect}, message, *args) end CODE end def ask(message, opts=nil) super(message) # We can't ask questions when the output isn't a TTY. raise Errors::UIExpectsTTY if !$stdin.tty? && !Vagrant::Util::Platform.cygwin? # Setup the options so that the new line is suppressed opts ||= {} opts[:new_line] = false if !opts.has_key?(:new_line) opts[:prefix] = false if !opts.has_key?(:prefix) # Output the data say(:info, message, opts) # Get the results and chomp off the newline. We do a logical OR # here because `gets` can return a nil, for example in the case # that ctrl-D is pressed on the input. input = $stdin.gets || "" input.chomp end # This is used to output progress reports to the UI. # Send this method progress/total and it will output it # to the UI. Send `clear_line` to clear the line to show # a continuous progress meter. def report_progress(progress, total, show_parts=true) if total && total > 0 percent = (progress.to_f / total.to_f) * 100 line = "Progress: #{percent.to_i}%" line << " (#{progress} / #{total})" if show_parts else line = "Progress: #{progress}" end info(line, :new_line => false) end def clear_line reset = "\r" reset += "\e[0K" if Util::Platform.windows? && !Util::Platform.cygwin? info(reset, :new_line => false) end # This method handles actually outputting a message of a given type # to the console. def say(type, message, opts=nil) defaults = { :new_line => true, :prefix => true } opts = defaults.merge(opts || {}) # Determine whether we're expecting to output our # own new line or not. printer = opts[:new_line] ? :puts : :print # Determine the proper IO channel to send this message # to based on the type of the message channel = type == :error || opts[:channel] == :error ? $stderr : $stdout # Output! We wrap this in a lock so that it safely outputs only # one line at a time. @lock.synchronize do safe_puts(format_message(type, message, opts), :io => channel, :printer => printer) end end def scope(scope_name) BasicScope.new(self, scope_name) end # This is called by `say` to format the message for output. def format_message(type, message, opts=nil) opts ||= {} message = "[#{opts[:scope]}] #{message}" if opts[:scope] && opts[:prefix] message end end # This implements a scope for the {Basic} UI. class BasicScope < Interface def initialize(ui, scope) super() @ui = ui @scope = scope end [:ask, :warn, :error, :info, :success].each do |method| define_method(method) do |message, opts=nil| opts ||= {} opts[:scope] = @scope @ui.send(method, message, opts) end end [:clear_line, :report_progress].each do |method| # By default do nothing, these aren't logged define_method(method) { |*args| @ui.send(method, *args) } end end # This is a UI implementation that outputs color for various types # of messages. This should only be used with a TTY that supports color, # but is up to the user of the class to verify this is the case. class Colored < Basic # Terminal colors COLORS = { :clear => "\e[0m", :red => "\e[31m", :green => "\e[32m", :yellow => "\e[33m" } # Mapping between type of message and the color to output COLOR_MAP = { :warn => COLORS[:yellow], :error => COLORS[:red], :success => COLORS[:green] } # This is called by `say` to format the message for output. def format_message(type, message, opts=nil) # Get the format of the message before adding color. message = super # Colorize the message if there is a color for this type of message, # either specified by the options or via the default color map. if opts.has_key?(:color) color = COLORS[opts[:color]] message = "#{color}#{message}#{COLORS[:clear]}" else message = "#{COLOR_MAP[type]}#{message}#{COLORS[:clear]}" if COLOR_MAP[type] end message end end end end