# Copyright: (c) 2021, Ansible Project # GNU General Public License v3.0+ (see COPYING or https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.txt) from __future__ import annotations import os import pathlib import subprocess import sys import typing as t from ansible.module_utils.common.text.converters import to_bytes from ansible.module_utils._internal._ansiballz import _respawn _ANSIBLE_PARENT_PATH = pathlib.Path(__file__).parents[3] def has_respawned(): return hasattr(sys.modules['__main__'], '_respawned') def respawn_module(interpreter_path) -> t.NoReturn: """ Respawn the currently-running Ansible Python module under the specified Python interpreter. Ansible modules that require libraries that are typically available only under well-known interpreters (eg, ``apt``, ``dnf``) can use bespoke logic to determine the libraries they need are not available, then call `respawn_module` to re-execute the current module under a different interpreter and exit the current process when the new subprocess has completed. The respawned process inherits only stdout/stderr from the current process. Only a single respawn is allowed. ``respawn_module`` will fail on nested respawns. Modules are encouraged to call `has_respawned()` to defensively guide behavior before calling ``respawn_module``, and to ensure that the target interpreter exists, as ``respawn_module`` will not fail gracefully. :arg interpreter_path: path to a Python interpreter to respawn the current module """ if has_respawned(): raise Exception('module has already been respawned') # FUTURE: we need a safe way to log that a respawn has occurred for forensic/debug purposes payload = _respawn.create_payload() stdin_read, stdin_write = os.pipe() os.write(stdin_write, to_bytes(payload)) os.close(stdin_write) rc = subprocess.call([interpreter_path, '--'], stdin=stdin_read) sys.exit(rc) # pylint: disable=ansible-bad-function def probe_interpreters_for_module(interpreter_paths, module_name): """ Probes a supplied list of Python interpreters, returning the first one capable of importing the named module. This is useful when attempting to locate a "system Python" where OS-packaged utility modules are located. :arg interpreter_paths: iterable of paths to Python interpreters. The paths will be probed in order, and the first path that exists and can successfully import the named module will be returned (or ``None`` if probing fails for all supplied paths). :arg module_name: fully-qualified Python module name to probe for (for example, ``selinux``) """ PYTHONPATH = os.getenv('PYTHONPATH', '') env = os.environ.copy() env.update({ 'PYTHONPATH': f'{_ANSIBLE_PARENT_PATH}:{PYTHONPATH}'.rstrip(': ') }) for interpreter_path in interpreter_paths: if not os.path.exists(interpreter_path): continue try: rc = subprocess.call( [ interpreter_path, '-c', f'import {module_name}, ansible.module_utils.basic', ], env=env, ) if rc == 0: return interpreter_path except Exception: continue return None