Background
I've grown tired of the issue with pylint not being able to import files when you use namespace packages and divide your code-base into separate folders. As such I started digging into the astNG source-code which has been identified as the source of the trouble (see bugreport 8796 on astng). At the heart of the issue seems to be the use of pythons own imp.find_module
in the process of finding imports.
What happens is that the import's first (sub)package - a
in import a.b.c
- is fed to find_module
with a None
path. Whatever path comes back is then fed into find_module
the next pass in the look up loop where you try to find b
in the previous example.
Pseudo-code from logilab.common.modutils:
path = None
while import_as_list:
try:
_, found_path, etc = find_module(import_as_list[0], path)
#exception handling and checking for a better version in the .egg files
path = [found_path]
import_as_list.pop(0)
The Problem
This is what's broken: you only get the first best hit from find_module
, which may or may not have your subpackages in it. If you DON'T find the subpackages, you have no way to back out and try the next one.
I tried explicitly using sys.path instead of None, so that the result could be removed from the path list and a second attempt be made, but python's module finder is clever enough that there doesn't have to be an exact match in the paths, making this approach unusable - to the best of my knowledge anyway.
Teary-eyed Plea
Is there an alternative to find_modules which will return ALL possible matches or take an exclude list? I'm also open to completely different solutions. Preferably not patching python by hand, but it wouldn't be impossible - at least for a local solution.
(Caveat emptor: I'm running python 2.6 and for reasons of current company policy can't upgrade, suggestions for p3k etc won't get marked as accepted unless it's the only answer.)