I am looking for a way to intercept instance method calls in class MyWrapper
below:
class SomeClass1:
def a1(self):
self.internal_z()
return "a1"
def a2(self):
return "a2"
def internal_z(self):
return "z"
class SomeClass2(SomeClass1):
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class MyWrapper(SomeClass2):
# def INTERCEPT_ALL_FUNCTION_CALLS():
# result = Call_Original_Function()
# self.str += result
# return result
def __init__(self):
self.str = ''
def getFinalResult(self):
return self.str
x = MyWrapper()
x.a1()
x.a2()
I want to intercept all function calls make through my wrapper class. In my wrapper class I want to keep track of all the result strings.
result = x.getFinalResult()
print result == 'a1a2'
Some quick and dirty code:
class Wrapper:
def __init__(self, obj):
self.obj = obj
self.callable_results = []
def __getattr__(self, attr):
print("Getting {0}.{1}".format(type(self.obj).__name__, attr))
ret = getattr(self.obj, attr)
if hasattr(ret, "__call__"):
return self.FunctionWrapper(self, ret)
return ret
class FunctionWrapper:
def __init__(self, parent, callable):
self.parent = parent
self.callable = callable
def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs):
print("Calling {0}.{1}".format(
type(self.parent.obj).__name__, self.callable.__name__))
ret = self.callable(*args, **kwargs)
self.parent.callable_results.append(ret)
return ret
class A:
def __init__(self, val): self.val = val
def getval(self): return self.val
w = Wrapper(A(10))
print(w.val)
w.getval()
print(w.callable_results)
Might not be thorough, but could be a decent starting point, I guess.
You could wrap your methods with decorators a instanciation time:
#!/usr/bin/env python
import inspect
def log(func):
def _logged(*args, **kw):
print "[LD] func", func.__name__, "called with:", args, kw
result = func(*args, **kw)
print "[LD] func", func.__name__, "returned:", result
return result
return _logged
class A(object):
def __init__(self):
for x in inspect.getmembers(self, (inspect.ismethod)):
if not x[0].startswith('__'):
setattr(self, x[0], log(getattr(self, x[0])))
def hello(self):
print "Hello"
def bye(self):
print "Bye"
return 0
Now if you call hello
or bye
, the call goes through log
first:
a = A()
a.hello()
a.bye()
# [LD] func hello called with: () {}
# Hello
# [LD] func hello returned: None
# [LD] func bye called with: () {}
# Bye
# [LD] func bye returned: 0
What you want to do is quite similar to this question. You should take your example code in the reverse order, i mean creating a class to record return values of method calls, and make the classes you want to watch inherit from it. Which would give something like this
class RetValWatcher(object):
def __init__(self):
self.retvals = []
def __getattribute__(self, name):
attr = super(RetValWatcher, self).__getattribute__(name)
if callable(attr):
def wrapped(*args, **kwargs):
retval = attr(*args, **kwargs)
self.retvals.append(retval)
return retval
return wrapped
else:
return attr
def getFinalResult(self):
return ''.join(self.retvals)
class MyClass(RetValWatcher):
def a(self):
self.internal_z()
return 'a1'
def b(self):
return 'b1'
def internal_z(self):
return 'z'
x = MyClass()
x.a()
x.b()
print x.getFinalResult()
#'za1b1'
With some minor changes, this method would also allow you to record return values across all RetValWatcher instances.
Edit: added changes suggested by singularity's comment
Edit2: forgot to handle the case where attr is not a method (thx singularity again)
Edit3: fixed typo
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