Specifically, zstd isn't available in --pure mode, and we need to glob
off the leading comma as well as the absent compression engine.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D859
Previously, `hg clone --uncompressed` would always clone from the
origin server, even if a streaming clone bundle were available.
With this change, we invoke the clone bundle mechanism before the
stream clone mechanism, giving clone bundles the opportunity to
handle --uncompressed (which is mapped to pullop.streamclonepreferred).
The clone bundle filtering code now filters out entries that aren't
stream clones when a stream clone is requested. If a stream clone
clone bundle entry is present, it will be used. Otherwise, the client
will fall back to a server-based streaming clone.
.. feature::
`hg clone --uncompressed` uses clone bundles when possible
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D833
Currently, --uncompressed will always clone from the origin server, even
if a stream clone bundle is present. Let's add tests demonstrating
this behavior.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D832
A new bundle2 capability 'phases' has been added. If 'heads' is part of the
supported value for 'phases', the server supports reading and sending 'phase-
heads' bundle2 part.
Server is now able to process a 'phases' boolean parameter to 'getbundle'. If
'True', a 'phase-heads' bundle2 part will be included in the bundle with phase
information relevant to the whole pulled set. If this method is available the
phases listkey namespace will no longer be listed.
Beside the more efficient encoding of the data, this new method will greatly
improve the phase exchange efficiency for repositories with non-served
changesets (obsolete, secret) since we'll no longer send data about the
filtered heads.
Add a new 'devel.legacy.exchange' config item to allow fallback to the old
'listkey in bundle2' method.
Reminder: the pulled set is not just the changesets bundled by the pull. It
also contains changeset selected by the "pull specification" on the client
side (eg: everything for bare pull). One of the reason why the 'pulled set' is
important is to make sure we can move -common- nodes to public.
When unquoted, MSYS sees the colon between the drive letter and path as a Unix
path separator and unhelpfully splits on it, feeding only the drive letter as
the command. Much chaos ensues.
I vaguely remember trying to get the test runner to use /letter/path/to/exe
syntax the last time this happened, without success. I doubt a check-code rule
would work, since sometimes it is quoted, and sometimes the quotes are escaped.
On some systems, e.g. Docker container, the actual error may be:
error fetching bundle: [Errno 99] Cannot assign requested address
Update the regex to handle this case.
This was the fallout from 87957da1ca0b (on stable). Now that individual lines
can be conditionalized, it seems better to be explicit, rather than mash all of
this into one regex. "getaddrinfo failed" was added in efd8ac31a7e2 to support
Windows.
Now that servers expose a capability indicating they support
application/mercurial-0.2 and compression, clients can key off
this to say they support responses that are compressed with
various compression formats.
After this commit, the HTTP wire protocol client now sends an
"X-HgProto-<N>" request header indicating its support for
"application/mercurial-0.2" media type and various compression
formats.
This commit also implements support for handling
"application/mercurial-0.2" responses. It simply reads the header
compression engine identifier then routes the remainder of the
response to the appropriate decompressor.
There were some test changes, but only to logging. That points to
an obvious gap in our test coverage. This will be addressed in a
subsequent commit once server support is in place (it is hard to
test without server support).
Revlog can now be configured to store full snapshot only. This is used on the
changelog. However, the changegroup packing was still recomputing deltas to be
sent over the wire.
We now just reuse the full snapshot directly in this case, skipping delta
computation. This provides use with a large speed up(-30%):
# perfchangegroupchangelog on mercurial
! wall 2.010326 comb 2.020000 user 2.000000 sys 0.020000 (best of 5)
! wall 1.382039 comb 1.380000 user 1.370000 sys 0.010000 (best of 8)
# perfchangegroupchangelog on pypy
! wall 5.792589 comb 5.780000 user 5.780000 sys 0.000000 (best of 3)
! wall 3.911158 comb 3.920000 user 3.900000 sys 0.020000 (best of 3)
# perfchangegroupchangelog on mozilla central
! wall 20.683727 comb 20.680000 user 20.630000 sys 0.050000 (best of 3)
! wall 14.190204 comb 14.190000 user 14.150000 sys 0.040000 (best of 3)
Many tests have to be updated because of the change in bundle content. All
theses update have been verified. Because diffing changelog was not very
valuable, the resulting bundle have similar size (often a bit smaller):
# full bundle of mozilla central
with delta: 1142740533B
without delta: 1142173300B
So this is a win all over the board.
The bundle2 changegroup part has an advisory param saying how many
changesets are in the part. Before this patch, we were setting
this part when generating bundle2 parts via the wire protocol but
not when generating local bundle2 files.
A side effect of not setting the changeset count part is that progress
bars don't work when applying changesets. As the tests show, this
impacted clone bundles, shelve, backup bundles, `hg unbundle`, and
anything touching bundle2 files.
This patch adds a backdoor to allow us to pass state from
changegroup generation into the unbundler. We store the number
of changesets in the changegroup in this state and use it to
populate the aforementioned advisory part parameter when generating
the bundle2 bundle.
I concede that I'm not thrilled by how state is being passed in
changegroup.py (it feels a bit hacky). I would love to overhaul the
rather confusing set of functions in changegroup.py with something that
passes rich objects around instead of e.g. low-level generators.
However, given the code freeze for 3.9 is imminent, I'd rather not
undertake this endeavor right now. This feels like the easiest way
to get the parameter added to the changegroup part.
getbundle was requesting the "phase" namespace instead of the "phases"
namespace, which led to the client still requesting the phases
separately after getbundle finished.
In order to give us the freedom to change the changegroup3 format,
let's hide it behind an experimental config. Since it is required by
treemanifests, that will override the cg3 config.
The clone bundles feature was introduced in Mercurial 3.6 behind an
experimental and disabled by default flag. The feature has been enabled
on hg.mozilla.org for a few months and has served many terabytes of
clones. Users have been encouraged to use the feature and reception
has been very positive (mainly due to faster clones as a result of
connecting to a CDN). I have heard no feedback about changing the
feature other than inquiries about when it will be enabled by default.
So, I think the feature is ready to be enabled by default.
This patch renames experimental.clonebundles to ui.clonebundles,
documents the option, and enables it by default. References to the
experimental state of clone bundles have been removed. The remaining
config option docs in clonebundles.py have been removed because they
are redudant with `hg help config`.
There are some oddities with behavior of clone bundles. Because clones
with clone bundles are effectively 2 `hg pull` operations, there may be
2 transactions. This could result in hooks running twice. If the
subsequent pull is aborted, it could result in partial rollback and an
incomplete clone. This behavior is a bit wonky and should probably
be documented. If this patch is accepted, I'll send a follow-up to
document it. I don't think this behavior should prevent the feature
being enabled by default. Reworking the clone mechanism to support
interrupted or multi-part clones feels like a major new feature and
something that when implemented can change the hook and rollback
semantics of clone bundles. Besides, partial clone is better than
full rollback and hooks running on initial clone are likely rare, so I
think the impact is minimal.
I screwed up.
When clone bundles is enabled on the server and a compatible client
without the feature enabled clones, the server sends down an
advertisement saying to enable the feature. The server creates the
message which is printed verbatim on the client as an "output" part.
There are 2 problems:
1) The message doesn't respect the client's localization
2) The message contains a reference to the "experimental.clonebundles"
option.
Since clone bundles is about to be marked as non-experimental and the
goal of the advertisement was to encourage clients to test the
experimental feature, let's just remove the broken advertisement since
it no longer serves a purpose.
An empty trivial delta, coded as (0, 0, 0) makes the delta application
do nothing, but still takes 12 bytes, while skipping it altogether works
as much, without taking any space at all.
I'm not entirely happy with using a trailing / on a "file" entry for
transferring a treemanifest. We've discussed putting some flags on
each file header[0], but I'm unconvinced that's actually any better:
if we were going to add another feature to the cg format we'd still be
doing a version bump anyway to cg4, so I'm inclined to not spend time
coming up with a more sophisticated format until we actually know what
the next feature we want to stuff in a changegroup will be.
Test changes outside test-treemanifest.t are only due to the new CG3
bundlecap showing up in the wire protocol.
Many thanks to adgar@google.com and martinvonz@google.com for helping
me with various odd corners of the changegroup and treemanifest API.
0: It's not hard refactoring, nor is it a lot of work. I'm just
disinclined to do speculative work when it's not clear what the
customer would actually be.
These are related to differences in how missing files and network connection
failures are displayed. I opted to combine the strings in one line instead of
using '#if windows' blocks around entire commands in order to avoid future
changes being accidentally missed in the Windows sections. Globbing away the
entire output seemed wrong, as it could mask other failures.
The raw messages involved are:
Linux Windows
"* not known" <-> "getaddrinfo failed"
"Connection refused" <-> "No connection could be made because the
target machine actively refused it"
"No such file or directory" <-> "The system cannot find the file specified"
Issue 4941 indicates that NetBSD has yet another string for "* not known".
Also, the histedit test shows that the missing file is printed first on Windows,
last on Linux. That is controlled in windows.py:posixfile if we care to change
it.
The SSH peer class accesses wireproto.commands[cmd] as part of encoding
command arguments. Previously, the wire protocol command was defined in
the clonebundles extension. If the client didn't have this extension
enabled (which it likely doesn't since it is meant as a server-side
extension), then clients attempting to clone via ssh:// would get a
crash due to a KeyError accessing wireproto.commands['clonebundles']
when cloning from a server that is advertising clone bundles.
Moving the definition of the wire protocol command to wireproto.py makes
this problem go away.
A side effect of this code move is servers will always respond to
"clonebundles" wire protocol command requests. This should be fine: the
server will return an empty response unless a clone bundles manifest
file is present and clients shouldn't call the command unless the server
is advertising the capability, which only happens if the clonebundles
extension is enabled and the manifest file exists.
Now that we have support for detecting compatible stream clone bundles
in bundle specifications, we can safely add support for applying stream
clone bundles to the clone bundles feature.
We don't appear to print error codes elsewhere. The error codes are
inconsistent between at least Linux and OS X and are more trouble than
they are worth. Humans care about the error string more than the code
anyway.
A glob was also added to pave over differences in error strings between
Linux and OS X.
Server operators that have enabled clone bundles probably want clients
to use it. This patch introduces a feature that will insert a bundle2
"output" part that advertises the existence of the clone bundles
feature to clients that aren't using it.
The server uses the "cbattempted" argument to "getbundle" to determine
whether a client supports clone bundles and to avoid sending the message
to clients that failed the clone bundle for whatever reason.
If a clone bundle persistently fails to apply, users need a way to
disable it so they have a hope of the clone working. Change the hint for
the abort scenario to advertise the config option to disable clone
bundles.
Not all bundles are appropriate for all clients. For example, someone
with a slow Internet connection may want to prefer bz2 bundles over gzip
bundles because they are smaller and don't take as long to transfer.
This is information that a server cannot know on its own. So, we invent
a mechanism for "preferring" server-advertised URLs based on their
attributes.
We could invent a negotiation between client and server where the client
sends its preferences and the sorting/filtering is done server-side.
However, this feels complex. We can avoid complicating the wire protocol
and exposing ourselves to backwards compatible concerns by performing
the sorting locally.
This patch defines a new config option for expressing preferred
attributes in server-advertised bundles.
At Mozilla, we leverage this feature so clients in fast data centers
prefer uncompressed bundles. (We advertise gzip bundles first because
that is a reasonable default.)
I consider this an advanced feature. I'm on the fence as to whether it
should be documented in `hg help config`.
Server Name Indication (SNI) is commonly used in CDNs and other hosted
environments. Unfortunately, Python <2.7.9 does not support SNI and when
these older Python versions attempt to negotiate TLS to an SNI server,
they raise an opaque error like
"_ssl.c:507: error:14094410:SSL routines:SSL3_READ_BYTES:sslv3 alert
handshake failure."
We introduce a manifest attribute to denote the URL requires SNI and
have clients without SNI support filter these entries.
Not all clients are capable of reading every bundle. Currently, content
negotiation to ensure a server sends a client a compatible bundle
format is performed at request time. The response bundle is dynamically
generated at request time, so this works fine.
Clone bundles are statically generated *before* the request. This means
that a modern server could produce bundles that a legacy client isn't
capable of reading. Without some kind of "type hint" in the clone
bundles manifest, a client may attempt to download an incompatible
bundle. Furthermore, a client may not realize a bundle is incompatible
until it has processed part of the bundle (imagine consuming a 1 GB
changegroup bundle2 part only to discover the bundle2 part afterwards is
incompatibl). This would waste time and resources. And it isn't very
user friendly.
Clone bundle manifests thus need to advertise the *exact* format of the
hosted bundles so clients may filter out entries that they don't know
how to read. This patch introduces that mechanism.
We introduce the BUNDLESPEC attribute to declare the "bundle
specification" of the entry. Bundle specifications are parsed using
exchange.parsebundlespecification, which uses the same strings as the
"--type" argument to `hg bundle`. The supported bundle specifications
are well defined and backwards compatible.
When a client encounters a BUNDLESPEC that is invalid or unsupported, it
silently ignores the entry.
exchange.readbundle() can return 2 different types. We weren't handling
the bundle2 case. Handle it.
At some point we'll likely want a generic API for applying a bundle from
a file handle. For now, create another one-off until we figure out what
the unified bundle API should look like (addressing this is a can of
worms I don't want to open right now).
Cloning can be an expensive operation for servers because the server
generates a bundle from existing repository data at request time. For
a large repository like mozilla-central, this consumes 4+ minutes
of CPU time on the server. It also results in significant network
utilization. Multiplied by hundreds or even thousands of clients and
the ensuing load can result in difficulties scaling the Mercurial server.
Despite generation of bundles being deterministic until the next
changeset is added, the generation of bundles to service a clone request
is not cached. Each clone thus performs redundant work. This is
wasteful.
This patch introduces the "clonebundles" extension and related
client-side functionality to help alleviate this deficiency. The
client-side feature is behind an experimental flag and is not enabled by
default.
It works as follows:
1) Server operator generates a bundle and makes it available on a
server (likely HTTP).
2) Server operator defines the URL of a bundle file in a
.hg/clonebundles.manifest file.
3) Client `hg clone`ing sees the server is advertising bundle URLs.
4) Client fetches and applies the advertised bundle.
5) Client performs equivalent of `hg pull` to fetch changes made since
the bundle was created.
Essentially, the server performs the expensive work of generating a
bundle once and all subsequent clones fetch a static file from
somewhere. Scaling static file serving is a much more manageable
problem than scaling a Python application like Mercurial. Assuming your
repository grows less than 1% per day, the end result is 99+% of CPU
and network load from clones is eliminated, allowing Mercurial servers
to scale more easily. Serving static files also means data can be
transferred to clients as fast as they can consume it, rather than as
fast as servers can generate it. This makes clones faster.
Mozilla has implemented similar functionality of this patch on
hg.mozilla.org using a custom extension. We are hosting bundle files in
Amazon S3 and CloudFront (a CDN) and have successfully offloaded
>1 TB/day in data transfer from hg.mozilla.org, freeing up significant
bandwidth and CPU resources. The positive impact has been stellar and
I believe it has proved its value to be included in Mercurial core. I
feel it is important for the client-side support to be enabled in core
by default because it means that clients will get faster, more reliable
clones and will enable server operators to reduce load without
requiring any client-side configuration changes (assuming clients are
up to date, of course).
The scope of this feature is narrowly and specifically tailored to
cloning, despite "serve pulls from pre-generated bundles" being a valid
and useful feature. I would eventually like for Mercurial servers to
support transferring *all* repository data via statically hosted files.
You could imagine a server that siphons all pushed data to bundle files
and instructs clients to apply a stream of bundles to reconstruct all
repository data. This feature, while useful and powerful, is
significantly more work to implement because it requires the server
component have awareness of discovery and a mapping of which changesets
are in which files. Full, clone bundles, by contrast, are much simpler.
The wire protocol command is named "clonebundles" instead of something
more generic like "staticbundles" to leave the door open for a new, more
powerful and more generic server-side component with minimal backwards
compatibility implications. The name "bundleclone" is used by Mozilla's
extension and would cause problems since there are subtle differences
in Mozilla's extension.
Mozilla's experience with this idea has taught us that some form of
"content negotiation" is required. Not all clients will support all
bundle formats or even URLs (advanced TLS requirements, etc). To ensure
the highest uptake possible, a server needs to advertise multiple
versions of bundles and clients need to be able to choose the most
appropriate from that list one. The "attributes" in each
server-advertised entry facilitate this filtering and sorting. Their
use will become apparent in subsequent patches.
Initial inspiration and credit for the idea of cloning from static files
belongs to Augie Fackler and his "lookaside clone" extension proof of
concept.