openmedialibrary_platform/Shared/lib/python3.4/site-packages/stem/manual.py

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2018-12-15 00:08:54 +00:00
# Copyright 2015-2018, Damian Johnson and The Tor Project
# See LICENSE for licensing information
"""
Information available about Tor from `its manual
<https://www.torproject.org/docs/tor-manual.html.en>`_. This provides three
methods of getting this information...
* :func:`~stem.manual.Manual.from_cache` provides manual content bundled with
Stem. This is the fastest and most reliable method but only as up-to-date as
Stem's release.
* :func:`~stem.manual.Manual.from_man` reads Tor's local man page for
information about it.
* :func:`~stem.manual.Manual.from_remote` fetches the latest manual information
remotely. This is the slowest and least reliable method but provides the most
recent information about Tor.
Manual information includes arguments, signals, and probably most usefully the
torrc configuration options. For example, say we want a little script that told
us what our torrc options do...
.. literalinclude:: /_static/example/manual_config_options.py
:language: python
|
.. image:: /_static/manual_output.png
|
**Module Overview:**
::
query - performs a query on our cached sqlite manual information
is_important - Indicates if a configuration option is of particularly common importance.
download_man_page - Downloads tor's latest man page.
Manual - Information about Tor available from its manual.
| |- from_cache - Provides manual information cached with Stem.
| |- from_man - Retrieves manual information from its man page.
| +- from_remote - Retrieves manual information remotely from tor's latest manual.
|
+- save - writes the manual contents to a given location
.. versionadded:: 1.5.0
"""
import os
import shutil
import sys
import tempfile
import stem.prereq
import stem.util
import stem.util.conf
import stem.util.enum
import stem.util.log
import stem.util.system
try:
# added in python 2.7
from collections import OrderedDict
except ImportError:
from stem.util.ordereddict import OrderedDict
if stem.prereq._is_lru_cache_available():
from functools import lru_cache
else:
from stem.util.lru_cache import lru_cache
try:
# account for urllib's change between python 2.x and 3.x
import urllib.request as urllib
except ImportError:
import urllib2 as urllib
Category = stem.util.enum.Enum('GENERAL', 'CLIENT', 'RELAY', 'DIRECTORY', 'AUTHORITY', 'HIDDEN_SERVICE', 'DENIAL_OF_SERVICE', 'TESTING', 'UNKNOWN')
GITWEB_MANUAL_URL = 'https://gitweb.torproject.org/tor.git/plain/doc/tor.1.txt'
CACHE_PATH = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), 'cached_manual.sqlite')
DATABASE = None # cache database connections
HAS_ENCODING_ARG = not stem.util.system.is_mac() and not stem.util.system.is_bsd() and not stem.util.system.is_slackware()
SCHEMA_VERSION = 1 # version of our scheme, bump this if you change the following
SCHEMA = (
'CREATE TABLE schema(version INTEGER)',
'INSERT INTO schema(version) VALUES (%i)' % SCHEMA_VERSION,
'CREATE TABLE metadata(name TEXT, synopsis TEXT, description TEXT, man_commit TEXT, stem_commit TEXT)',
'CREATE TABLE commandline(name TEXT PRIMARY KEY, description TEXT)',
'CREATE TABLE signals(name TEXT PRIMARY KEY, description TEXT)',
'CREATE TABLE files(name TEXT PRIMARY KEY, description TEXT)',
'CREATE TABLE torrc(key TEXT PRIMARY KEY, name TEXT, category TEXT, usage TEXT, summary TEXT, description TEXT, position INTEGER)',
)
CATEGORY_SECTIONS = OrderedDict((
('GENERAL OPTIONS', Category.GENERAL),
('CLIENT OPTIONS', Category.CLIENT),
('SERVER OPTIONS', Category.RELAY),
('DIRECTORY SERVER OPTIONS', Category.DIRECTORY),
('DIRECTORY AUTHORITY SERVER OPTIONS', Category.AUTHORITY),
('HIDDEN SERVICE OPTIONS', Category.HIDDEN_SERVICE),
('DENIAL OF SERVICE MITIGATION OPTIONS', Category.DENIAL_OF_SERVICE),
('TESTING NETWORK OPTIONS', Category.TESTING),
))
class SchemaMismatch(IOError):
"""
Database schema doesn't match what Stem supports.
.. versionadded:: 1.6.0
:var int database_schema: schema of the database
:var tuple supported_schemas: schemas library supports
"""
def __init__(self, message, database_schema, library_schema):
super(SchemaMismatch, self).__init__(message)
self.database_schema = database_schema
self.library_schema = library_schema
def query(query, *param):
"""
Performs the given query on our sqlite manual cache. This database should
be treated as being read-only. File permissions generally enforce this, and
in the future will be enforced by this function as well.
::
>>> import stem.manual
>>> print(stem.manual.query('SELECT description FROM torrc WHERE key=?', 'CONTROLSOCKET').fetchone()[0])
Like ControlPort, but listens on a Unix domain socket, rather than a TCP socket. 0 disables ControlSocket. (Unix and Unix-like systems only.) (Default: 0)
.. versionadded:: 1.6.0
:param str query: query to run on the cache
:param list param: query parameters
:returns: :class:`sqlite3.Cursor` with the query results
:raises:
* **ImportError** if the sqlite3 module is unavailable
* **sqlite3.OperationalError** if query fails
"""
if not stem.prereq.is_sqlite_available():
raise ImportError('Querying requires the sqlite3 module')
import sqlite3
# The only reason to explicitly close the sqlite connection is to ensure
# transactions are committed. Since we're only using read-only access this
# doesn't matter, and can allow interpreter shutdown to do the needful.
#
# TODO: When we only support python 3.4+ we can use sqlite's uri argument
# to enforce a read-only connection...
#
# https://docs.python.org/3/library/sqlite3.html#sqlite3.connect
global DATABASE
if DATABASE is None:
DATABASE = sqlite3.connect(CACHE_PATH)
return DATABASE.execute(query, param)
class ConfigOption(object):
"""
Tor configuration attribute found in its torrc.
:var str name: name of the configuration option
:var stem.manual.Category category: category the config option was listed
under, this is Category.UNKNOWN if we didn't recognize the category
:var str usage: arguments accepted by the option
:var str summary: brief description of what the option does
:var str description: longer manual description with details
"""
def __init__(self, name, category = Category.UNKNOWN, usage = '', summary = '', description = ''):
self.name = name
self.category = category
self.usage = usage
self.summary = summary
self.description = description
def __hash__(self):
return stem.util._hash_attr(self, 'name', 'category', 'usage', 'summary', 'description', cache = True)
def __eq__(self, other):
return hash(self) == hash(other) if isinstance(other, ConfigOption) else False
def __ne__(self, other):
return not self == other
@lru_cache()
def _config(lowercase = True):
"""
Provides a dictionary for our settings.cfg. This has a couple categories...
* manual.important (list) - configuration options considered to be important
* manual.summary.* (str) - summary descriptions of config options
:param bool lowercase: uses lowercase keys if **True** to allow for case
insensitive lookups
"""
config = stem.util.conf.Config()
config_path = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), 'settings.cfg')
try:
config.load(config_path)
config_dict = dict([(key.lower() if lowercase else key, config.get_value(key)) for key in config.keys() if key.startswith('manual.summary.')])
config_dict['manual.important'] = [name.lower() if lowercase else name for name in config.get_value('manual.important', [], multiple = True)]
return config_dict
except Exception as exc:
stem.util.log.warn("BUG: stem failed to load its internal manual information from '%s': %s" % (config_path, exc))
return {}
def _manual_differences(previous_manual, new_manual):
"""
Provides a description of how two manuals differ.
"""
lines = []
for attr in ('name', 'synopsis', 'description', 'commandline_options', 'signals', 'files', 'config_options'):
previous_attr = getattr(previous_manual, attr)
new_attr = getattr(new_manual, attr)
if previous_attr != new_attr:
lines.append("* Manual's %s attribute changed\n" % attr)
if attr in ('name', 'synopsis', 'description'):
lines.append(' Previously...\n\n%s\n' % previous_attr)
lines.append(' Updating to...\n\n%s' % new_attr)
elif attr == 'config_options':
for config_name, config_attr in new_attr.items():
previous = previous_attr.get(config_name)
if previous is None:
lines.append(' adding new config option => %s' % config_name)
elif config_attr != previous:
for attr in ('name', 'category', 'usage', 'summary', 'description'):
if getattr(config_attr, attr) != getattr(previous, attr):
lines.append(' modified %s (%s) => %s' % (config_name, attr, getattr(config_attr, attr)))
for config_name in set(previous_attr.keys()).difference(new_attr.keys()):
lines.append(' removing config option => %s' % config_name)
else:
added_items = set(new_attr.items()).difference(previous_attr.items())
removed_items = set(previous_attr.items()).difference(new_attr.items())
for added_item in added_items:
lines.append(' adding %s => %s' % added_item)
for removed_item in removed_items:
lines.append(' removing %s => %s' % removed_item)
lines.append('\n')
return '\n'.join(lines)
def is_important(option):
"""
Indicates if a configuration option of particularly common importance or not.
:param str option: tor configuration option to check
:returns: **bool** that's **True** if this is an important option and
**False** otherwise
"""
return option.lower() in _config()['manual.important']
def download_man_page(path = None, file_handle = None, url = GITWEB_MANUAL_URL, timeout = 20):
"""
Downloads tor's latest man page from `gitweb.torproject.org
<https://gitweb.torproject.org/tor.git/plain/doc/tor.1.txt>`_. This method is
both slow and unreliable - please see the warnings on
:func:`~stem.manual.Manual.from_remote`.
:param str path: path to save tor's man page to
:param file file_handle: file handler to save tor's man page to
:param str url: url to download tor's asciidoc manual from
:param int timeout: seconds to wait before timing out the request
:raises: **IOError** if unable to retrieve the manual
"""
if not path and not file_handle:
raise ValueError("Either the path or file_handle we're saving to must be provided")
elif not stem.util.system.is_available('a2x'):
raise IOError('We require a2x from asciidoc to provide a man page')
dirpath = tempfile.mkdtemp()
asciidoc_path = os.path.join(dirpath, 'tor.1.txt')
manual_path = os.path.join(dirpath, 'tor.1')
try:
try:
with open(asciidoc_path, 'wb') as asciidoc_file:
request = urllib.urlopen(url, timeout = timeout)
shutil.copyfileobj(request, asciidoc_file)
except:
exc = sys.exc_info()[1]
raise IOError("Unable to download tor's manual from %s to %s: %s" % (url, asciidoc_path, exc))
try:
stem.util.system.call('a2x -f manpage %s' % asciidoc_path)
if not os.path.exists(manual_path):
raise OSError('no man page was generated')
except stem.util.system.CallError as exc:
raise IOError("Unable to run '%s': %s" % (exc.command, exc.stderr))
if path:
try:
path_dir = os.path.dirname(path)
if not os.path.exists(path_dir):
os.makedirs(path_dir)
shutil.copyfile(manual_path, path)
except OSError as exc:
raise IOError(exc)
if file_handle:
with open(manual_path, 'rb') as manual_file:
shutil.copyfileobj(manual_file, file_handle)
file_handle.flush()
finally:
shutil.rmtree(dirpath)
class Manual(object):
"""
Parsed tor man page. Tor makes no guarantees about its man page format so
this may not always be compatible. If not you can use the cached manual
information stored with Stem.
This does not include every bit of information from the tor manual. For
instance, I've excluded the 'THE CONFIGURATION FILE FORMAT' section. If
there's a part you'd find useful then `file an issue
<https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/wiki/doc/stem/bugs>`_ and we can
add it.
:var str name: brief description of the tor command
:var str synopsis: brief tor command usage
:var str description: general description of what tor does
:var collections.OrderedDict commandline_options: mapping of commandline arguments to their descripton
:var collections.OrderedDict signals: mapping of signals tor accepts to their description
:var collections.OrderedDict files: mapping of file paths to their description
:var collections.OrderedDict config_options: :class:`~stem.manual.ConfigOption` tuples for tor configuration options
:var str man_commit: latest tor commit editing the man page when this
information was cached
:var str stem_commit: stem commit to cache this manual information
"""
def __init__(self, name, synopsis, description, commandline_options, signals, files, config_options):
self.name = name
self.synopsis = synopsis
self.description = description
self.commandline_options = OrderedDict(commandline_options)
self.signals = OrderedDict(signals)
self.files = OrderedDict(files)
self.config_options = OrderedDict(config_options)
self.man_commit = None
self.stem_commit = None
self.schema = None
@staticmethod
def from_cache(path = None):
"""
Provides manual information cached with Stem. Unlike
:func:`~stem.manual.Manual.from_man` and
:func:`~stem.manual.Manual.from_remote` this doesn't have any system
requirements, and is faster too. Only drawback is that this manual
content is only as up to date as the Stem release we're using.
.. versionchanged:: 1.6.0
Added support for sqlite cache. Support for
:class:`~stem.util.conf.Config` caches will be dropped in Stem 2.x.
:param str path: cached manual content to read, if not provided this uses
the bundled manual information
:returns: :class:`~stem.manual.Manual` with our bundled manual information
:raises:
* **ImportError** if cache is sqlite and the sqlite3 module is
unavailable
* **IOError** if a **path** was provided and we were unable to read
it or the schema is out of date
"""
# TODO: drop _from_config_cache() with stem 2.x
if path is None:
path = CACHE_PATH
if path is not None and path.endswith('.sqlite'):
return Manual._from_sqlite_cache(path)
else:
return Manual._from_config_cache(path)
@staticmethod
def _from_sqlite_cache(path):
if not stem.prereq.is_sqlite_available():
raise ImportError('Reading a sqlite cache requires the sqlite3 module')
import sqlite3
if not os.path.exists(path):
raise IOError("%s doesn't exist" % path)
with sqlite3.connect(path) as conn:
try:
schema = conn.execute('SELECT version FROM schema').fetchone()[0]
if schema != SCHEMA_VERSION:
raise SchemaMismatch("Stem's current manual schema version is %s, but %s was version %s" % (SCHEMA_VERSION, path, schema), schema, (SCHEMA_VERSION,))
name, synopsis, description, man_commit, stem_commit = conn.execute('SELECT name, synopsis, description, man_commit, stem_commit FROM metadata').fetchone()
except sqlite3.OperationalError as exc:
raise IOError('Failed to read database metadata from %s: %s' % (path, exc))
commandline = dict(conn.execute('SELECT name, description FROM commandline').fetchall())
signals = dict(conn.execute('SELECT name, description FROM signals').fetchall())
files = dict(conn.execute('SELECT name, description FROM files').fetchall())
config_options = OrderedDict()
for entry in conn.execute('SELECT name, category, usage, summary, description FROM torrc ORDER BY position').fetchall():
option, category, usage, summary, option_description = entry
config_options[option] = ConfigOption(option, category, usage, summary, option_description)
manual = Manual(name, synopsis, description, commandline, signals, files, config_options)
manual.man_commit = man_commit
manual.stem_commit = stem_commit
manual.schema = schema
return manual
@staticmethod
def _from_config_cache(path):
conf = stem.util.conf.Config()
conf.load(path, commenting = False)
config_options = OrderedDict()
for key in conf.keys():
if key.startswith('config_options.'):
key = key.split('.')[1]
if key not in config_options:
config_options[key] = ConfigOption(
conf.get('config_options.%s.name' % key, ''),
conf.get('config_options.%s.category' % key, ''),
conf.get('config_options.%s.usage' % key, ''),
conf.get('config_options.%s.summary' % key, ''),
conf.get('config_options.%s.description' % key, '')
)
manual = Manual(
conf.get('name', ''),
conf.get('synopsis', ''),
conf.get('description', ''),
conf.get('commandline_options', OrderedDict()),
conf.get('signals', OrderedDict()),
conf.get('files', OrderedDict()),
config_options,
)
manual.man_commit = conf.get('man_commit', None)
manual.stem_commit = conf.get('stem_commit', None)
return manual
@staticmethod
def from_man(man_path = 'tor'):
"""
Reads and parses a given man page.
On OSX the man command doesn't have an '--encoding' argument so its results
may not quite match other platforms. For instance, it normalizes long
dashes into '--'.
:param str man_path: path argument for 'man', for example you might want
'/path/to/tor/doc/tor.1' to read from tor's git repository
:returns: :class:`~stem.manual.Manual` for the system's man page
:raises: **IOError** if unable to retrieve the manual
"""
man_cmd = 'man %s -P cat %s' % ('--encoding=ascii' if HAS_ENCODING_ARG else '', man_path)
try:
man_output = stem.util.system.call(man_cmd, env = {'MANWIDTH': '10000000'})
except OSError as exc:
raise IOError("Unable to run '%s': %s" % (man_cmd, exc))
categories, config_options = _get_categories(man_output), OrderedDict()
for category_header, category_enum in CATEGORY_SECTIONS.items():
_add_config_options(config_options, category_enum, categories.get(category_header, []))
for category in categories:
if category.endswith(' OPTIONS') and category not in CATEGORY_SECTIONS and category not in ('COMMAND-LINE OPTIONS', 'NON-PERSISTENT OPTIONS'):
_add_config_options(config_options, Category.UNKNOWN, categories.get(category, []))
return Manual(
_join_lines(categories.get('NAME', [])),
_join_lines(categories.get('SYNOPSIS', [])),
_join_lines(categories.get('DESCRIPTION', [])),
_get_indented_descriptions(categories.get('COMMAND-LINE OPTIONS', [])),
_get_indented_descriptions(categories.get('SIGNALS', [])),
_get_indented_descriptions(categories.get('FILES', [])),
config_options,
)
@staticmethod
def from_remote(timeout = 60):
"""
Reads and parses the latest tor man page `from gitweb.torproject.org
<https://gitweb.torproject.org/tor.git/plain/doc/tor.1.txt>`_. Note that
while convenient, this reliance on GitWeb means you should alway call with
a fallback, such as...
::
try:
manual = stem.manual.from_remote()
except IOError:
manual = stem.manual.from_cache()
In addition to our GitWeb dependency this requires 'a2x' which is part of
`asciidoc <http://asciidoc.org/INSTALL.html>`_ and... isn't quick.
Personally this takes ~7.41s, breaking down for me as follows...
* 1.67s to download tor.1.txt
* 5.57s to convert the asciidoc to a man page
* 0.17s for stem to read and parse the manual
:param int timeout: seconds to wait before timing out the request
:returns: latest :class:`~stem.manual.Manual` available for tor
:raises: **IOError** if unable to retrieve the manual
"""
with tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile() as tmp:
download_man_page(file_handle = tmp, timeout = timeout)
return Manual.from_man(tmp.name)
def save(self, path):
"""
Persists the manual content to a given location.
.. versionchanged:: 1.6.0
Added support for sqlite cache. Support for
:class:`~stem.util.conf.Config` caches will be dropped in Stem 2.x.
:param str path: path to save our manual content to
:raises:
* **ImportError** if saving as sqlite and the sqlite3 module is
unavailable
* **IOError** if unsuccessful
"""
# TODO: drop _save_as_config() with stem 2.x
if path.endswith('.sqlite'):
return self._save_as_sqlite(path)
else:
return self._save_as_config(path)
def _save_as_sqlite(self, path):
if not stem.prereq.is_sqlite_available():
raise ImportError('Saving a sqlite cache requires the sqlite3 module')
import sqlite3
tmp_path = path + '.new'
if os.path.exists(tmp_path):
os.remove(tmp_path)
with sqlite3.connect(tmp_path) as conn:
for cmd in SCHEMA:
conn.execute(cmd)
conn.execute('INSERT INTO metadata(name, synopsis, description, man_commit, stem_commit) VALUES (?,?,?,?,?)', (self.name, self.synopsis, self.description, self.man_commit, self.stem_commit))
for k, v in self.commandline_options.items():
conn.execute('INSERT INTO commandline(name, description) VALUES (?,?)', (k, v))
for k, v in self.signals.items():
conn.execute('INSERT INTO signals(name, description) VALUES (?,?)', (k, v))
for k, v in self.files.items():
conn.execute('INSERT INTO files(name, description) VALUES (?,?)', (k, v))
for i, v in enumerate(self.config_options.values()):
conn.execute('INSERT INTO torrc(key, name, category, usage, summary, description, position) VALUES (?,?,?,?,?,?,?)', (v.name.upper(), v.name, v.category, v.usage, v.summary, v.description, i))
if os.path.exists(path):
os.remove(path)
os.rename(tmp_path, path)
def _save_as_config(self, path):
conf = stem.util.conf.Config()
conf.set('name', self.name)
conf.set('synopsis', self.synopsis)
conf.set('description', self.description)
if self.man_commit:
conf.set('man_commit', self.man_commit)
if self.stem_commit:
conf.set('stem_commit', self.stem_commit)
for k, v in self.commandline_options.items():
conf.set('commandline_options', '%s => %s' % (k, v), overwrite = False)
for k, v in self.signals.items():
conf.set('signals', '%s => %s' % (k, v), overwrite = False)
for k, v in self.files.items():
conf.set('files', '%s => %s' % (k, v), overwrite = False)
for k, v in self.config_options.items():
conf.set('config_options.%s.category' % k, v.category)
conf.set('config_options.%s.name' % k, v.name)
conf.set('config_options.%s.usage' % k, v.usage)
conf.set('config_options.%s.summary' % k, v.summary)
conf.set('config_options.%s.description' % k, v.description)
conf.save(path)
def __hash__(self):
return stem.util._hash_attr(self, 'name', 'synopsis', 'description', 'commandline_options', 'signals', 'files', 'config_options', cache = True)
def __eq__(self, other):
return hash(self) == hash(other) if isinstance(other, Manual) else False
def __ne__(self, other):
return not self == other
def _get_categories(content):
"""
The man page is headers followed by an indented section. First pass gets
the mapping of category titles to their lines.
"""
# skip header and footer lines
if content and 'TOR(1)' in content[0]:
content = content[1:]
if content and content[-1].startswith('Tor'):
content = content[:-1]
categories = OrderedDict()
category, lines = None, []
for line in content:
# replace non-ascii characters
#
# \u2019 - smart single quote
# \u2014 - extra long dash
# \xb7 - centered dot
char_for = chr if stem.prereq.is_python_3() else unichr
line = line.replace(char_for(0x2019), "'").replace(char_for(0x2014), '-').replace(char_for(0xb7), '*')
if line and not line.startswith(' '):
if category:
if lines and lines[-1] == '':
lines = lines[:-1] # sections end with an extra empty line
categories[category] = lines
category, lines = line.strip(), []
else:
if line.startswith(' '):
line = line[7:] # contents of a section have a seven space indentation
lines.append(line)
if category:
categories[category] = lines
return categories
def _get_indented_descriptions(lines):
"""
Parses the commandline argument and signal sections. These are options
followed by an indented description. For example...
::
-f FILE
Specify a new configuration file to contain further Tor configuration
options OR pass - to make Tor read its configuration from standard
input. (Default: /usr/local/etc/tor/torrc, or $HOME/.torrc if that file
is not found)
There can be additional paragraphs not related to any particular argument but
ignoring those.
"""
options, last_arg = OrderedDict(), None
for line in lines:
if line and not line.startswith(' '):
options[line], last_arg = [], line
elif last_arg and line.startswith(' '):
options[last_arg].append(line[4:])
return dict([(arg, ' '.join(desc_lines)) for arg, desc_lines in options.items() if desc_lines])
def _add_config_options(config_options, category, lines):
"""
Parses a section of tor configuration options. These have usage information,
followed by an indented description. For instance...
::
ConnLimit NUM
The minimum number of file descriptors that must be available to the
Tor process before it will start. Tor will ask the OS for as many file
descriptors as the OS will allow (you can find this by "ulimit -H -n").
If this number is less than ConnLimit, then Tor will refuse to start.
You probably don't need to adjust this. It has no effect on Windows
since that platform lacks getrlimit(). (Default: 1000)
"""
last_option, usage, description = None, None, []
# Drop the section description. Each ends with a paragraph saying 'The
# following options...'.
desc_paragraph_index = None
for i, line in enumerate(lines):
if 'The following options' in line:
desc_paragraph_index = i
break
if desc_paragraph_index is not None:
lines = lines[desc_paragraph_index:] # trim to the description paragrah
lines = lines[lines.index(''):] # drop the paragraph
for line in lines:
if line and not line.startswith(' '):
if last_option:
summary = _config().get('manual.summary.%s' % last_option.lower(), '')
config_options[last_option] = ConfigOption(last_option, category, usage, summary, _join_lines(description).strip())
if ' ' in line:
last_option, usage = line.split(' ', 1)
else:
last_option, usage = line, ''
description = []
else:
if line.startswith(' '):
line = line[4:]
description.append(line)
if last_option:
summary = _config().get('manual.summary.%s' % last_option.lower(), '')
config_options[last_option] = ConfigOption(last_option, category, usage, summary, _join_lines(description).strip())
def _join_lines(lines):
"""
Simple join, except we want empty lines to still provide a newline.
"""
result = []
for line in lines:
if not line:
if result and result[-1] != '\n':
result.append('\n')
else:
result.append(line + '\n')
return ''.join(result).strip()