System-level utilities and helper functions.
Interpret a subject as a boolean.
A subject can be a boolean, a string or an integer. Boolean type value will be returned directly, otherwise the subject will be converted to a string. A case-insensitive match is performed such that strings matching ‘t’,’true’, ‘on’, ‘y’, ‘yes’, or ‘1’ are considered True and, when strict=False, anything else returns the value specified by ‘default’.
Useful for JSON-decoded stuff and config file parsing.
If strict=True, unrecognized values, including None, will raise a ValueError which is useful when parsing values passed in from an API call. Strings yielding False are ‘f’, ‘false’, ‘off’, ‘n’, ‘no’, or ‘0’.
Check the length of specified string.
value – the value of the string
name – the name of the string
min_length – the min_length of the string
max_length – the max_length of the string
TypeError, ValueError – For any invalid input.
New in version 3.7.
Interpret a string as a boolean and return either 1 or 0.
Any string value in:
(‘True’, ‘true’, ‘On’, ‘on’, ‘1’)
is interpreted as a boolean True.
Useful for JSON-decoded stuff and config file parsing
Check if a value looks like an integer with base 10.
val (string) – Value to verify
bool
New in version 1.1.
Check if the provided string is a valid bool string or not.
value (string) – value to verify
true if value is boolean string, false otherwise
New in version 3.17.
Replace password with secret in a dictionary recursively.
dictionary – The dictionary which includes secret information.
secret – value with which to replace secret information.
The dictionary with string substitutions.
A dictionary (which may contain nested dictionaries) contains information (such as passwords) which should not be revealed, and this function helps detect and replace those with the ‘secret’ provided (or *** if none is provided).
Substitution is performed in one of three situations:
If the key is something that is considered to be indicative of a secret, then the corresponding value is replaced with the secret provided (or *** if none is provided).
If a value in the dictionary is a string, then it is masked
using the mask_password()
function.
Finally, if a value is a dictionary, this function will recursively mask that dictionary as well.
For example:
>>> mask_dict_password({'password': 'd81juxmEW_',
>>> 'user': 'admin',
>>> 'home-dir': '/home/admin'},
>>> '???')
{'password': '???', 'user': 'admin', 'home-dir': '/home/admin'}
For example (the value is masked using mask_password())
>>> mask_dict_password({'password': '--password d81juxmEW_',
>>> 'user': 'admin',
>>> 'home-dir': '/home/admin'},
>>> '???')
{'password': '--password ???', 'user': 'admin',
'home-dir': '/home/admin'}
For example (a nested dictionary is masked):
>>> mask_dict_password({"nested": {'password': 'd81juxmEW_',
>>> 'user': 'admin',
>>> 'home': '/home/admin'}},
>>> '???')
{"nested": {'password': '???', 'user': 'admin', 'home': '/home/admin'}}
New in version 3.4.
Replace password with secret in message.
message – The string which includes security information.
secret – value with which to replace passwords.
The unicode value of message with the password fields masked.
For example:
>>> mask_password("'adminPass' : 'aaaaa'")
"'adminPass' : '***'"
>>> mask_password("'admin_pass' : 'aaaaa'")
"'admin_pass' : '***'"
>>> mask_password('"password" : "aaaaa"')
'"password" : "***"'
>>> mask_password("'original_password' : 'aaaaa'")
"'original_password' : '***'"
New in version 0.2.
Changed in version 1.1: Replace also 'auth_token'
, 'new_pass'
and 'auth_password'
keys.
Changed in version 1.1.1: Replace also 'secret_uuid'
key.
Changed in version 1.5: Replace also 'sys_pswd'
key.
Changed in version 2.6: Replace also 'token'
key.
Changed in version 2.7: Replace also 'secret'
key.
Changed in version 3.4: Replace also 'configdrive'
key.
Changed in version 3.8: Replace also 'CHAPPASSWORD'
key.
Split values by commas and quotes according to api-wg
value – value to be split
New in version 3.17.
Validate and split the given HTTP request path.
Examples:
['a'] = _split_path('/a')
['a', None] = _split_path('/a', 1, 2)
['a', 'c'] = _split_path('/a/c', 1, 2)
['a', 'c', 'o/r'] = _split_path('/a/c/o/r', 1, 3, True)
path – HTTP Request path to be split
minsegs – Minimum number of segments to be extracted
maxsegs – Maximum number of segments to be extracted
rest_with_last – If True, trailing data will be returned as part of last segment. If False, and there is trailing data, raises ValueError.
list of segments with a length of maxsegs (non-existent segments will return as None)
ValueError if given an invalid path
New in version 3.11.
Converts a string into an float representation of bytes.
The units supported for IEC / mixed:
Kb(it), Kib(it), Mb(it), Mib(it), Gb(it), Gib(it), Tb(it), Tib(it)
KB, KiB, MB, MiB, GB, GiB, TB, TiB
The units supported for SI
kb(it), Mb(it), Gb(it), Tb(it)
kB, MB, GB, TB
SI units are interpreted as power-of-ten (e.g. 1kb = 1000b). Note that the SI unit system does not support capital letter ‘K’
IEC units are interpreted as power-of-two (e.g. 1MiB = 1MB = 1024b)
Mixed units interpret the “i” to mean IEC, and no “i” to mean SI (e.g. 1kb = 1000b, 1kib == 1024b). Additionaly, mixed units interpret ‘K’ as power-of-ten. This mode is not particuarly useful for new code, but can help with compatability for parsers such as GNU parted.
text – String input for bytes size conversion.
unit_system – Unit system for byte size conversion.
return_int – If True, returns integer representation of text in bytes. (default: decimal)
Numerical representation of text in bytes.
ValueError – If text has an invalid value.
Normalize string.
Convert to lowercase, remove non-word characters, and convert spaces to hyphens.
Inspired by Django’s slugify filter.
value – Text to slugify
incoming – Text’s current encoding
errors – Errors handling policy. See here for valid values http://docs.python.org/2/library/codecs.html
slugified unicode representation of value
TypeError – If text is not an instance of str
Make sure that value is a valid integer, potentially within range.
value – value of the integer
name – name of the integer
min_value – min_value of the integer
max_value – max_value of the integer
integer
ValueError if value is an invalid integer
New in version 3.33.
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