From: Brian Warner Date: Thu, 1 Nov 2007 22:34:21 +0000 (-0700) Subject: trailing-whitespace eradication, no functional changes X-Git-Tag: allmydata-tahoe-0.7.0~307 X-Git-Url: https://git.rkrishnan.org/%5B/%5D%20/uri/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=f425ee36006ab8f2569c0a76a47ef06cb493d73c;p=tahoe-lafs%2Ftahoe-lafs.git trailing-whitespace eradication, no functional changes --- diff --git a/src/allmydata/util/bencode.py b/src/allmydata/util/bencode.py index 404f56aa..29bd185b 100644 --- a/src/allmydata/util/bencode.py +++ b/src/allmydata/util/bencode.py @@ -4,12 +4,12 @@ A library for streaming and unstreaming of simple objects, designed for speed, compactness, and ease of implementation. -The basic functions are bencode and bdecode. bencode takes an object +The basic functions are bencode and bdecode. bencode takes an object and returns a string, bdecode takes a string and returns an object. bdecode raises a ValueError if you give it an invalid string. -The objects passed in may be nested dicts, lists, ints, floats, strings, -and Python boolean and None types. For example, all of the following +The objects passed in may be nested dicts, lists, ints, floats, strings, +and Python boolean and None types. For example, all of the following may be bencoded - {'a': [0, 1], 'b': None} @@ -20,18 +20,18 @@ may be bencoded - {'name': 'Cronus', 'spouse': 'Rhea', 'children': ['Hades', 'Poseidon']} -In general bdecode(bencode(spam)) == spam, but tuples and lists are -encoded the same, so bdecode(bencode((0, 1))) is [0, 1] rather -than (0, 1). Longs and ints are also encoded the same way, so +In general bdecode(bencode(spam)) == spam, but tuples and lists are +encoded the same, so bdecode(bencode((0, 1))) is [0, 1] rather +than (0, 1). Longs and ints are also encoded the same way, so bdecode(bencode(4)) is a long. -Dict keys are required to be basestrings (byte strings or unicode objects), -to avoid a mess of potential implementation incompatibilities. bencode is -intended to be used for protocols which are going to be re-implemented many +Dict keys are required to be basestrings (byte strings or unicode objects), +to avoid a mess of potential implementation incompatibilities. bencode is +intended to be used for protocols which are going to be re-implemented many times, so it's very conservative in that regard. Which type is encoded is determined by the first character, 'i', 'n', 'f', -'d', 'l', 'b', 'u', and any digit. They indicate integer, null, float, +'d', 'l', 'b', 'u', and any digit. They indicate integer, null, float, dict, list, boolean, unicode string, and string, respectively. Strings are length-prefixed in base 10, followed by a colon. @@ -52,7 +52,7 @@ Integers are encoded base 10 and terminated with an 'e' - bencode(3) == 'i3e' bencode(-20) == 'i-20e' -Floats are encoded in base 10 and terminated with an 'e' - +Floats are encoded in base 10 and terminated with an 'e' - bencode(3.2) == 'f3.2e' bencode(-23.4532) == 'f-23.4532e' @@ -62,9 +62,9 @@ Lists are encoded in list order, terminated by an 'e' - bencode(['abc', 'd']) == 'l3:abc1:de' bencode([2, 'f']) == 'li2e1:fe' -Dicts are encoded by containing alternating keys and values. -The keys are encoded in sorted order, but sort order is not -enforced on the decode. Dicts are terminated by an 'e'. Dict +Dicts are encoded by containing alternating keys and values. +The keys are encoded in sorted order, but sort order is not +enforced on the decode. Dicts are terminated by an 'e'. Dict keys can be either bytestrings or unicode strings. For example - bencode({'spam': 'eggs'}) == 'd4:spam4:eggse' @@ -77,7 +77,7 @@ Truncated strings come first, so in sort order 'a' comes before 'abc'. # This file is licensed under the GNU Lesser General Public License v2.1. # # Originally written by Mojo Nation. -# Rewritten by Bram Cohen. +# Rewritten by Bram Cohen. # Further enhanced by Allmydata to support additional Python types (Boolean # None, Float, and Unicode strings.) @@ -199,7 +199,7 @@ def decode_unicode_string(s, index): ei = ci + int(s[index+1:ci]) + 1 if ei > len(s): raise ValueError('length encoding indicates premature end of string') - return (unicode(s[ci+1:ei], 'utf-8'), ei) + return (unicode(s[ci+1:ei], 'utf-8'), ei) decoders['u'] = decode_unicode_string