Síle Ekaterin Liszka e6205a4242 | ||
---|---|---|
src/xbc | ||
tests | ||
.gitignore | ||
LICENSE.txt | ||
README.md | ||
pyproject.toml | ||
setup.py |
README.md
py-xbc
py-xbc
is a pure-Python library for reading and writing files in the
eXtra BootConfig (XBC) file format specified by the Linux kernel. This
is not a strictly-conforming implementation: in particular, this
implementation does not enforce the 32,767-byte ceiling on XBC files,
nor does it enforce the 16-level cap on keys and blocks.
Requirements
py-xbc
currently requires pyparsing
and Python 3.7+.
Usage
py-xbc
exports four functions:
loads_xbc
parses a string.load_xbc
opens a file and then parses a string.saves_xbc
renders to a string.save_xbc
renders to a string and writes the string to a file.
Format
XBC files consist of a series of statements, of which there are three kinds:
-
A key is a sequence of one or more bytes in the range
a-zA-Z0-9_-
. They are namespaced with periods (.
) and may be followed by an equals sign (=
). Key statements are terminated by a semicolon (;
), a linefeed, or a semicolon followed by a linefeed. -
A key/value statement is a key followed by an operator, followed in turn by one or more values. There are three operators:
- Assignment (
=
) specifies an initial value. - Updates (
:=
) overwrites whatever value was previously there. - Appends (
+=
) appends one or more values.
There are two kinds of values: strings and arrays. Strings can be either 'bare' or quoted.
- Bare strings are a sequence of one or more bytes that are not in the
range
{}#=+:;,\n'"
. - Quoted strings are a sequence of bytes that begins with a single
quote (
'
) or a double quote ("
) and ends only with the same quote. Quotes cannot be escaped. - Arrays are a sequence of one or more values delimited by a comma
(
,
).
- Assignment (
-
A block is a key followed by a pair of curly braces, inside which is one or more key or key/value statements.
Keys are composable. The following examples are equivalent:
foo {
bar {
fluff = 1
}
}
# is equivalent to
foo.bar.fluff = 1
# is equivalent to
foo.bar { fluff = 1 }
# is equivalent to
foo { bar.fluff = 1 }
Licence
py-xbc
is published under the MIT license. See LICENSE.txt
for more
information.