SickGear/lib/feedparser/datetimes/iso8601.py

150 lines
5.3 KiB
Python

# Copyright 2010-2022 Kurt McKee <contactme@kurtmckee.org>
# Copyright 2002-2008 Mark Pilgrim
# All rights reserved.
#
# This file is a part of feedparser.
#
# Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
# modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
#
# * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice,
# this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
# * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice,
# this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation
# and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
#
# THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS 'AS IS'
# AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
# IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
# ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE
# LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
# CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
# SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS
# INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
# CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
# ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
# POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
import re
import time
# ISO-8601 date parsing routines written by Fazal Majid.
# The ISO 8601 standard is very convoluted and irregular - a full ISO 8601
# parser is beyond the scope of feedparser and would be a worthwhile addition
# to the Python library.
# A single regular expression cannot parse ISO 8601 date formats into groups
# as the standard is highly irregular (for instance is 030104 2003-01-04 or
# 0301-04-01), so we use templates instead.
# Please note the order in templates is significant because we need a
# greedy match.
_iso8601_tmpl = [
'YYYY-?MM-?DD',
'YYYY-0MM?-?DD',
'YYYY-MM',
'YYYY-?OOO',
'YY-?MM-?DD',
'YY-?OOO',
'YYYY',
'-YY-?MM',
'-OOO',
'-YY',
'--MM-?DD',
'--MM',
'---DD',
'CC',
'',
]
_iso8601_re = [
tmpl.replace(
'YYYY', r'(?P<year>\d{4})').replace(
'YY', r'(?P<year>\d\d)').replace(
'MM', r'(?P<month>[01]\d)').replace(
'DD', r'(?P<day>[0123]\d)').replace(
'OOO', r'(?P<ordinal>[0123]\d\d)').replace(
'CC', r'(?P<century>\d\d$)')
+ r'(T?(?P<hour>\d{2}):(?P<minute>\d{2})'
+ r'(:(?P<second>\d{2}))?'
+ r'(\.(?P<fracsecond>\d+))?'
+ r'(?P<tz>[+-](?P<tzhour>\d{2})(:(?P<tzmin>\d{2}))?|Z)?)?'
for tmpl in _iso8601_tmpl]
_iso8601_matches = [re.compile(regex).match for regex in _iso8601_re]
def _parse_date_iso8601(date_string):
"""Parse a variety of ISO-8601-compatible formats like 20040105"""
m = None
for _iso8601_match in _iso8601_matches:
m = _iso8601_match(date_string)
if m:
break
if not m:
return
if m.span() == (0, 0):
return
params = m.groupdict()
ordinal = params.get('ordinal', 0)
if ordinal:
ordinal = int(ordinal)
else:
ordinal = 0
year = params.get('year', '--')
if not year or year == '--':
year = time.gmtime()[0]
elif len(year) == 2:
# ISO 8601 assumes current century, i.e. 93 -> 2093, NOT 1993
year = 100 * int(time.gmtime()[0] / 100) + int(year)
else:
year = int(year)
month = params.get('month', '-')
if not month or month == '-':
# ordinals are NOT normalized by mktime, we simulate them
# by setting month=1, day=ordinal
if ordinal:
month = 1
else:
month = time.gmtime()[1]
month = int(month)
day = params.get('day', 0)
if not day:
# see above
if ordinal:
day = ordinal
elif params.get('century', 0) or \
params.get('year', 0) or params.get('month', 0):
day = 1
else:
day = time.gmtime()[2]
else:
day = int(day)
# special case of the century - is the first year of the 21st century
# 2000 or 2001 ? The debate goes on...
if 'century' in params:
year = (int(params['century']) - 1) * 100 + 1
# in ISO 8601 most fields are optional
for field in ['hour', 'minute', 'second', 'tzhour', 'tzmin']:
if not params.get(field, None):
params[field] = 0
hour = int(params.get('hour', 0))
minute = int(params.get('minute', 0))
second = int(float(params.get('second', 0)))
# weekday is normalized by mktime(), we can ignore it
weekday = 0
daylight_savings_flag = -1
tm = [year, month, day, hour, minute, second, weekday,
ordinal, daylight_savings_flag]
# ISO 8601 time zone adjustments
tz = params.get('tz')
if tz and tz != 'Z':
if tz[0] == '-':
tm[3] += int(params.get('tzhour', 0))
tm[4] += int(params.get('tzmin', 0))
elif tz[0] == '+':
tm[3] -= int(params.get('tzhour', 0))
tm[4] -= int(params.get('tzmin', 0))
else:
return None
# Python's time.mktime() is a wrapper around the ANSI C mktime(3c)
# which is guaranteed to normalize d/m/y/h/m/s.
# Many implementations have bugs, but we'll pretend they don't.
return time.localtime(time.mktime(tuple(tm)))