Previously the fncache was written at lock.release time. This meant it was not
tracked by a transaction, and if an error occurred during the fncache write it
would fail to update the fncache, but would not rollback the transaction,
resulting in an fncache that was not in sync with the files on disk (which
causes verify to fail, and causes streaming clones to not copy all the revlogs).
This uses the new transaction backup mechanism to make the fncache transacted.
It also moves the fncache from being written at lock.release time, to being
written at transaction.close time.
Now that changelog filtering is in place, it's become evident that
naming the filters according to the set of revs _not_ included in the
filtered changelog is confusing. This is especially evident in the
collaborative branch cache scheme.
This changes the names of the filters to reflect the revs that _are_
included:
hidden -> visible
unserved -> served
mutable -> immutable
impactable -> base
repoview.filteredrevs is renamed to filterrevs, so that callers read a
bit more sensibly, e.g.:
filterrevs('visible') # filter revs according to what's visible
Filtered repository are *subset* of unfiltered repository. This means that a
filtered branchmap could be use to compute the unfiltered version.
And filtered version happen to be subset of each other:
- "all() - unserved()" is a subset of "all() - hidden()"
- "all() - hidden()" is a subset of "all()"
This means that branchmap with "unfiltered" filter can be used as a base for
"hidden" branchmap that itself could be used as a base for unfiltered
branchmap.
unserved < hidden < None
This changeset implements this mechanism. If the on disk branchcache is not valid
we use the branchcache of the nearest subset as base instead of computing it from
scratch. Such fallback can be cascaded multiple time is necessary.
Note that both "hidden" and "unserved" set are a bit volatile. We will add more
stable filtering in next changesets.
This changeset enables collaboration between no filtering and "unserved"
filtering. Fixing performance regression introduced by 7bff5f37cb97
test-mq-cache.t did apparently look at stale cache content.
Testing with different locking mechanism happened to update the cache more
frequently and thus caused a test failure.
Globbing is usually used for filenames, so on windows it is reasonable and very
convenient that glob patterns accepts '\' or '/' when the pattern specifies
'/'.
Before this patch undo.bookmarks was created on bookmarks write and
not with other transaction-related files. There were two issues: first
is that if you have changed bookmarks few times after a transaction
happened, rollback will give you a state which can point to
non-existing revision. Second is that if you have not changed
bookmarks after a transaction, rollback will touch your state anyway.
This change also adds `localrepo._writejournal` method, which can be
used by other extensions to save their transaction-related backup in
right time.