import contextlib
import errno
import logging
import logging.handlers
import os
import sys
from logging import Filter, getLogger
from typing import IO, Any, Callable, Iterator, Optional, TextIO, Type, cast

from pip._internal.utils.compat import WINDOWS
from pip._internal.utils.deprecation import DEPRECATION_MSG_PREFIX
from pip._internal.utils.misc import ensure_dir

try:
    import threading
except ImportError:
    import dummy_threading as threading  # type: ignore


try:
    from pip._vendor import colorama
# Lots of different errors can come from this, including SystemError and
# ImportError.
except Exception:
    colorama = None


_log_state = threading.local()
subprocess_logger = getLogger("pip.subprocessor")


class BrokenStdoutLoggingError(Exception):
    """
    Raised if BrokenPipeError occurs for the stdout stream while logging.
    """

    pass


# BrokenPipeError manifests differently in Windows and non-Windows.
if WINDOWS:
    # In Windows, a broken pipe can show up as EINVAL rather than EPIPE:
    # https://bugs.python.org/issue19612
    # https://bugs.python.org/issue30418
    def _is_broken_pipe_error(exc_class, exc):
        # type: (Type[BaseException], BaseException) -> bool
        """See the docstring for non-Windows below."""
        return (exc_class is BrokenPipeError) or (
            isinstance(exc, OSError) and exc.errno in (errno.EINVAL, errno.EPIPE)
        )


else:
    # Then we are in the non-Windows case.
    def _is_broken_pipe_error(exc_class, exc):
        # type: (Type[BaseException], BaseException) -> bool
        """
        Return whether an exception is a broken pipe error.

        Args:
          exc_class: an exception class.
          exc: an exception instance.
        """
        return exc_class is BrokenPipeError


@contextlib.contextmanager
def indent_log(num=2):
    # type: (int) -> Iterator[None]
    """
    A context manager which will cause the log output to be indented for any
    log messages emitted inside it.
    """
    # For thread-safety
    _log_state.indentation = get_indentation()
    _log_state.indentation += num
    try:
        yield
    finally:
        _log_state.indentation -= num


def get_indentation():
    # type: () -> int
    return getattr(_log_state, "indentation", 0)


class IndentingFormatter(logging.Formatter):
    default_time_format = "%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S"

    def __init__(
        self,
        *args,  # type: Any
        add_timestamp=False,  # type: bool
        **kwargs,  # type: Any
    ):
        # type: (...) -> None
        """
        A logging.Formatter that obeys the indent_log() context manager.

        :param add_timestamp: A bool indicating output lines should be prefixed
            with their record's timestamp.
        """
        self.add_timestamp = add_timestamp
        super().__init__(*args, **kwargs)

    def get_message_start(self, formatted, levelno):
        # type: (str, int) -> str
        """
        Return the start of the formatted log message (not counting the
        prefix to add to each line).
        """
        if levelno < logging.WARNING:
            return ""
        if formatted.startswith(DEPRECATION_MSG_PREFIX):
            # Then the message already has a prefix.  We don't want it to
            # look like "WARNING: DEPRECATION: ...."
            return ""
        if levelno < logging.ERROR:
            return "WARNING: "

        return "ERROR: "

    def format(self, record):
        # type: (logging.LogRecord) -> str
        """
        Calls the standard formatter, but will indent all of the log message
        lines by our current indentation level.
        """
        formatted = super().format(record)
        message_start = self.get_message_start(formatted, record.levelno)
        formatted = message_start + formatted

        prefix = ""
        if self.add_timestamp:
            prefix = f"{self.formatTime(record)} "
        prefix += " " * get_indentation()
        formatted = "".join([prefix + line for line in formatted.splitlines(True)])
        return formatted


def _color_wrap(*colors):
    # type: (*str) -> Callable[[str], str]
    def wrapped(inp):
        # type: (str) -> str
        return "".join(list(colors) + [inp, colorama.Style.RESET_ALL])

    return wrapped


class ColorizedStreamHandler(logging.StreamHandler):

    # Don't build up a list of colors if we don't have colorama
    if colorama:
        COLORS = [
            # This needs to be in order from highest logging level to lowest.
            (logging.ERROR, _color_wrap(colorama.Fore.RED)),
            (logging.WARNING, _color_wrap(colorama.Fore.YELLOW)),
        ]
    else:
        COLORS = []

    def __init__(self, stream=None, no_color=None):
        # type: (Optional[TextIO], bool) -> None
        super().__init__(stream)
        self._no_color = no_color

        if WINDOWS and colorama:
            self.stream = colorama.AnsiToWin32(self.stream)

    def _using_stdout(self):
        # type: () -> bool
        """
        Return whether the handler is using sys.stdout.
        """
        if WINDOWS and colorama:
            # Then self.stream is an AnsiToWin32 object.
            stream = cast(colorama.AnsiToWin32, self.stream)
            return stream.wrapped is sys.stdout

        return self.stream is sys.stdout

    def should_color(self):
        # type: () -> bool
        # Don't colorize things if we do not have colorama or if told not to
        if not colorama or self._no_color:
            return False

        real_stream = (
            self.stream
            if not isinstance(self.stream, colorama.AnsiToWin32)
            else self.stream.wrapped
        )

        # If the stream is a tty we should color it
        if hasattr(real_stream, "isatty") and real_stream.isatty():
            return True

        # If we have an ANSI term we should color it
        if os.environ.get("TERM") == "ANSI":
            return True

        # If anything else we should not color it
        return False

    def format(self, record):
        # type: (logging.LogRecord) -> str
        msg = super().format(record)

        if self.should_color():
            for level, color in self.COLORS:
                if record.levelno >= level:
                    msg = color(msg)
                    break

        return msg

    # The logging module says handleError() can be customized.
    def handleError(self, record):
        # type: (logging.LogRecord) -> None
        exc_class, exc = sys.exc_info()[:2]
        # If a broken pipe occurred while calling write() or flush() on the
        # stdout stream in logging's Handler.emit(), then raise our special
        # exception so we can handle it in main() instead of logging the
        # broken pipe error and continuing.
        if (
            exc_class
            and exc
            and self._using_stdout()
            and _is_broken_pipe_error(exc_class, exc)
        ):
            raise BrokenStdoutLoggingError()

        return super().handleError(record)


class BetterRotatingFileHandler(logging.handlers.RotatingFileHandler):
    def _open(self):
        # type: () -> IO[Any]
        ensure_dir(os.path.dirname(self.baseFilename))
        return super()._open()


class MaxLevelFilter(Filter):
    def __init__(self, level):
        # type: (int) -> None
        self.level = level

    def filter(self, record):
        # type: (logging.LogRecord) -> bool
        return record.levelno < self.level


class ExcludeLoggerFilter(Filter):

    """
    A logging Filter that excludes records from a logger (or its children).
    """

    def filter(self, record):
        # type: (logging.LogRecord) -> bool
        # The base Filter class allows only records from a logger (or its
        # children).
        return not super().filter(record)


def setup_logging(verbosity, no_color, user_log_file):
    # type: (int, bool, Optional[str]) -> int
    """Configures and sets up all of the logging

    Returns the requested logging level, as its integer value.
    """

    # Determine the level to be logging at.
    if verbosity >= 1:
        level = "DEBUG"
    elif verbosity == -1:
        level = "WARNING"
    elif verbosity == -2:
        level = "ERROR"
    elif verbosity <= -3:
        level = "CRITICAL"
    else:
        level = "INFO"

    level_number = getattr(logging, level)

    # The "root" logger should match the "console" level *unless* we also need
    # to log to a user log file.
    include_user_log = user_log_file is not None
    if include_user_log:
        additional_log_file = user_log_file
        root_level = "DEBUG"
    else:
        additional_log_file = "/dev/null"
        root_level = level

    # Disable any logging besides WARNING unless we have DEBUG level logging
    # enabled for vendored libraries.
    vendored_log_level = "WARNING" if level in ["INFO", "ERROR"] else "DEBUG"

    # Shorthands for clarity
    log_streams = {
        "stdout": "ext://sys.stdout",
        "stderr": "ext://sys.stderr",
    }
    handler_classes = {
        "stream": "pip._internal.utils.logging.ColorizedStreamHandler",
        "file": "pip._internal.utils.logging.BetterRotatingFileHandler",
    }
    handlers = ["console", "console_errors", "console_subprocess"] + (
        ["user_log"] if include_user_log else []
    )

    logging.config.dictConfig(
        {
            "version": 1,
            "disable_existing_loggers": False,
            "filters": {
                "exclude_warnings": {
                    "()": "pip._internal.utils.logging.MaxLevelFilter",
                    "level": logging.WARNING,
                },
                "restrict_to_subprocess": {
                    "()": "logging.Filter",
                    "name": subprocess_logger.name,
                },
                "exclude_subprocess": {
                    "()": "pip._internal.utils.logging.ExcludeLoggerFilter",
                    "name": subprocess_logger.name,
                },
            },
            "formatters": {
                "indent": {
                    "()": IndentingFormatter,
                    "format": "%(message)s",
                },
                "indent_with_timestamp": {
                    "()": IndentingFormatter,
                    "format": "%(message)s",
                    "add_timestamp": True,
                },
            },
            "handlers": {
                "console": {
                    "level": level,
                    "class": handler_classes["stream"],
                    "no_color": no_color,
                    "stream": log_streams["stdout"],
                    "filters": ["exclude_subprocess", "exclude_warnings"],
                    "formatter": "indent",
                },
                "console_errors": {
                    "level": "WARNING",
                    "class": handler_classes["stream"],
                    "no_color": no_color,
                    "stream": log_streams["stderr"],
                    "filters": ["exclude_subprocess"],
                    "formatter": "indent",
                },
                # A handler responsible for logging to the console messages
                # from the "subprocessor" logger.
                "console_subprocess": {
                    "level": level,
                    "class": handler_classes["stream"],
                    "no_color": no_color,
                    "stream": log_streams["stderr"],
                    "filters": ["restrict_to_subprocess"],
                    "formatter": "indent",
                },
                "user_log": {
                    "level": "DEBUG",
                    "class": handler_classes["file"],
                    "filename": additional_log_file,
                    "delay": True,
                    "formatter": "indent_with_timestamp",
                },
            },
            "root": {
                "level": root_level,
                "handlers": handlers,
            },
            "loggers": {"pip._vendor": {"level": vendored_log_level}},
        }
    )

    return level_number