A bundle2 may contain multiple parts adding changegroups, in which case there
are multiple operation records for changegroups, each with its own return
value. Those multiple return values are aggregated in a single cgresult value
for the whole operation.
As can be seen in the associated test case, the situation with hooks is not
really the best, but without deeper thoughts and changes, we can't do much
better. Hopefully, things will be improved before bundle2 is enabled by default.
In the meanwhile, multiple changegroups is not expected to be in widespread
use, and even less expected to be used for pushes. Also, not many clients
cloning or pulling bundle2 with multiple changesets are not expected to have
changegroup hooks anyways.
addchangegroup creates a runhook function that is used to invoke the
changegroup and incoming hooks, but at the time the function is called,
the contents of hookargs associated with the transaction may have been
modified externally. For instance, bundle2 code affects it with
obsolescence markers and bookmarks info.
It also creates problems when a single transaction is used with multiple
changegroups added (as per an upcoming change), whereby the contents
of hookargs are that of after adding a latter changegroup when invoking
the hook for the first changegroup.
There are currently two different tests using roughly the same code to
create temporary scripts acting as HTTP servers. As there is going to
be at least one more in an upcoming change, factor those out in a
standalone dumbhttp.py script.
This effectively backs out changeset 7582042d6cce.
The API change is done so that both util.sha1 and util.md5 can be called the
same way. The function is moved in order to use it for md5 checksumming for
an upcoming bundle2 feature.
This test actually used the obs.py file as part of the test, so we need to fix
up the test a little more than usual to work with the new obsolete option flags.
The obsolete._enabled flag has become a config option. This updates all but one
of the tests to use the minimal number of flags necessary for them to pass. For
most tests this is just 'createmarkers', for a couple tests it's
'allowunstable', and for even fewer it's 'exchange'.
The basic obsolete option is allowing the creation of obsolete markers. This
does not enable other features, such as allowing unstable commits or exchanging
obsolete markers.
Previously, obstore read the obsolete._enabled flag to determine whether to
allow writes to the obstore. Since obsolete._enabled will be moving into a repo
specific config, we can't read it globally, and therefore must pass the
information into the constructor.
Previously, obsolete used the module level _enabled flag to determine whether it
was on or off. We need a bit more granular control, so we'll be introducing
toggle options. The isenabled() function is how you check if a particular option
is enabled for the given repository.
Future patches will add options such as 'createmarkers', 'allowunstable', and
'exchange' to enable various features of obsolete markers.
We also track execution of the changegroup hook. The important information here
is to make sure the information that the transaction was processing a bundle2 is passed to
hook. This will let most hooks disable themselves while waiting for the hook
concluding bundle2 processing (the one we discovered to be not called for
pull in the previous changesets).
We can notice that this transaction wide hook is only happening during push and
it is missing changegroup-related information. We'll want to fix this but this
is not what this patch is about.
The push process uses a `stepsdone` attribute instead of a `todosteps` one (with
the logic swapped). We unify the two process by picking the `stepsdone` version.
I feel like `stepsdone` better fits extensions that would want to extend the push
exchange process.
We apply the same approach as for push and make the discovery extensible. There
is only one user in core right now, but we already know we'll need something
smarter for obsmarkers. In fact the evolve extension could use this to cleanly
extend discovery.
The main motivation for this change is consistency between push and pull.
This change allows a revision log to not fail integrity checks when applying a
changegroup delta (eg from a bundle) results in a censored file tombstone. The
tombstone is inserted as-is, so future integrity verification will observe the
tombstone. Deltas based on the tombstone will also remain correct.
The new code path is encountered for *exactly* the cases where _addrevision is
importing a tombstone from a changegroup. When committing a file containing
the "magic" tombstone text, the "text" parameter will be non-empty and the
checkhash call is not executed (and when committing, the node will be computed
to match the "magic" tombstone text).
Two possible behaviors are defined for handling censored data: abort, and
ignore. When we ignore censored data we return an empty file to callers
requesting the file data.
We do modify the lists that make up the status in several places, so
it seems risky to use the same instance of a list for several
different status types. Use a separate empty list for each type
instead.
In commands.summary(), we currently zip a list of labels with a list
of statuses. This means the order of the status list has to match the
list of the labels, which in turn means the status elements have to be
inserted into specific places in the list. Let's instead group the
labels and status data we want to display in a single list of pairs.
By making checklocalchanges() return the full instance of the status
class instead of just the first 4 elements of it, we can take
advantage of the field names and not require the caller to remember
the element indices.
The various status types are currently documented on the
dirstate.status() method. Now that we have a class for the status
types, it makese sense to document the status types there
instead. Only leave the bits related to lookup/unsure in the status()
method documentation.
Callers of various status() methods (on dirstate, context, repo) get a
tuple of 7 elements, where each element is a list of files. This
results in lots of uses of indexes where names would be much more
readable. For example, "status.ignored" seems clearer than "status[4]"
[1]. So, let's introduce a simple named tuple containing the 7 status
fields: modified, added, removed, deleted, unknown, ignored, clean.
This patch introduces the class and updates the status methods to
return instances of it. Later patches will update the callers.
[1] Did you even notice that it should have been "status[5]"?
(tweaked by mpm to introduce the class in scmutil and only change one user)