1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
|
import sys
from logging import Logger, getLogger
log: Logger = getLogger(__name__)
class DatabaseEntry:
# ignoring return type as it makes the line too long, unnecessary, too
def __init__(self, entry: tuple[str, float, float, str, str | set[str]]):
self.fname: str = str(entry[0])
self.ctimestamp: float = float(entry[1])
self.mtimestamp: float = float(entry[2])
self.checksum: str = str(entry[3])
self.tags: set[str] = set()
if isinstance(entry[4], set):
self.tags = entry[4]
self.__remove_invalid()
elif isinstance(entry[4], str):
if entry[4] != '-':
self.tags = set(e.strip() for e in str(entry[4]).split(','))
self.__remove_invalid()
# this should be unreachable as the type has to be str or set[str],
# but I have just in case to evade bugs
else:
log.error('tags has to be either a set or string (comma separated)')
sys.exit(1)
log.debug('"%s" tags: %s', self.fname, self.tags)
def __str__(self) -> str:
_return_str: str = "['{}', {}, {}, '{}', {}]"\
.format(self.fname,
self.ctimestamp,
self.mtimestamp,
self.checksum,
sorted(self.tags))
return _return_str
def __remove_invalid(self) -> None:
if '-' in self.tags:
self.tags.remove('-')
# used for csv writing
def get_raw_entry(self) -> list[str]:
return [self.fname,
str(self.ctimestamp),
str(self.mtimestamp),
self.checksum,
','.join(sorted(self.tags)) if self.tags else '-']
def update_tags(self, new_tags: set[str]) -> None:
self.tags = new_tags
self.__remove_invalid()
|