Summary: It's a no-op already. Drop it.
Reviewed By: singhsrb
Differential Revision: D14180595
fbshipit-source-id: 9f904b818bcf56b9d12405ca9894baa9c786801b
Summary:
D13853115 adds `edenscm/` to `sys.path` and code still uses `import mercurial`.
That has nasty problems if both `import mercurial` and
`import edenscm.mercurial` are used, because Python would think `mercurial.foo`
and `edenscm.mercurial.foo` are different modules so code like
`try: ... except mercurial.error.Foo: ...`, or `isinstance(x, mercurial.foo.Bar)`
would fail to handle the `edenscm.mercurial` version. There are also some
module-level states (ex. `extensions._extensions`) that would cause trouble if
they have multiple versions in a single process.
Change imports to use the `edenscm` so ideally the `mercurial` is no longer
imported at all. Add checks in extensions.py to catch unexpected extensions
importing modules from the old (wrong) locations when running tests.
Reviewed By: phillco
Differential Revision: D13868981
fbshipit-source-id: f4e2513766957fd81d85407994f7521a08e4de48
Summary:
We want to allow blocking full repo streaming clones in certain
repositories (since they can take the lock and take a very long time) unless the
client has explicitly asked for it. The existing stream_out wire protocol has no
way of passing an option, so let's create a new endpoint.
Reviewed By: quark-zju
Differential Revision: D7763717
fbshipit-source-id: eace47143f8fdcc4c6e302b5c26678ccf56ca5d4
Summary:
When running with a Python runtime with a slightly different zlib module,
some `zlib.compress` outputs are different. Some tests are testing the
length, or the content of `zlib.compress` output, directly or indirectly.
That's causing issues.
This patch adds a `common-zlib` hghave test so it can be used to gate tests
checking zlib output. Some lengths are also changed to glob patterns to be
compatible.
Reviewed By: ryanmce
Differential Revision: D6937735
fbshipit-source-id: 2328a39d7f2022f16d51f61b6178568b26dfe2fb
Summary:
Previously `hg server` uses `HGPORT` that might be in use. This patch uses
`-p 0 --port-file ...` so `hg server` always gets assigned a free port.
The change was first made by the following Ruby script:
```
re = /^ \$ hg serve(.*) -p \$(HGPORT[12]?) (.*[^\\])$\n \$/
Dir['*.t'].each do |path|
old = File.read(path)
new = old.lines.map do |l|
next l if l[/\(glob\)/] or not l['$HGPORT'] or l[/^ [$>]/]
"#{l.chomp} (glob)\n"
end.join.gsub re, <<-'EOS'.chomp
$ hg serve\1 -p 0 --port-file $TESTTMP/.port \3
$ \2=`cat $TESTTMP/.port`
$
EOS
File.write(path, new) if old != new
end
```
Then there are some manual changes:
run-tests.py: It now treats `$HGPORT` in output as glob pattern `*`, since
it does not know the assigned value in tests.
test-bookmarks-pushpull.t, test-https.t: Some `hg pull`s were changed to use
explicit paths instead of relying on `.hgrc` since the test restarts the
server and `.hg/hgrc` having an outdated URL.
test-schemes.t: The test writes `$HGPORT` to `.hgrc` before assigning it.
Changed the order so the correct `$HGPORT` is written.
test-patchbomb-tls.t: Changed `(?) (glob)` to `(glob) (?)`.
Reviewed By: DurhamG
Differential Revision: D6925398
fbshipit-source-id: d5c10476f43ce23f9e99618807580cf8ba92595c
Upon pull or unbundle, we display a message with the range of new revisions
fetched. This revision range could readily be used after a pull to look out
what's new with 'hg log'. The algorithm takes care of filtering "obsolete"
revisions that might be present in transaction's "changes" but should not be
displayed to the end user.
chg only supports 'hg serve' when the options to the serve command
follow the 'hg serve'. For example, 'hg -R <repo> serve ..' is unsupported.
This leads to issues with chg running for the following tests:
- test-bundle2-exchange.t
- test-clone-uncompressed.t
- test-hgweb-csp.t
- test-http-bad-server.t
- test-http-bundle1.t
- test-http-protocol.t
- test-http.t
There was an effort made earlier to fix this issue for chg and the tests were
fixed to confirm to the compatible pattern. But the new tests did not take care
of the same and hence, fail. Hopefully, there will be continuous build setup
for chg after all tests are made compatible with chg so that we can avoid such
issues.
Test Plan:
Ran the aforementioned tests with and without '--chg' option.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D946
--uncompressed isn't a very good name and its description in the
help documentation isn't very useful. We refer to this concept as
"stream clones" in a number of places. I think it makes sense to
change the user-facing argument to use the mode --stream. So this
commit does that.
We keep --uncompressed around for backwards compatibility.
While we're here, we overhaul the help docs for streaming clones
to be somewhat useful.
All tests have been updated to reflect the new preferred --stream
argument. A test for backwards compatibility of --uncompressed has
been added.
.. bc::
`hg clone --stream` should now be used instead of --uncompressed.
--uncompressed is marked as deprecated and is an alias for --stream.
There is no schedule for elimination of --uncompressed.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D864
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.
Previously, a repo containing secret changesets would be served via
stream clone, transferring those secret changesets. While secret
changesets aren't meant to imply strong security (if you really
want to keep them secret, others shouldn't have read access to the
repo), we should at least make an effort to protect secret changesets
when possible.
After this commit, we no longer serve stream clones for repos
containing secret changesets by default. This is backwards
incompatible behavior. In case anyone is relying on the behavior,
we provide a config option to opt into the old behavior.
Note that this defense is only beneficial for remote repos
accessed via the wire protocol: if a client has access to the
files backing a repo, they can get to the raw data and see secret
revisions.
Now that the 'vfs' classes moved in their own module, lets use the new module
directly. We update code iteratively to help with possible bisect needs in the
future.
getbundle was requesting the "phase" namespace instead of the "phases"
namespace, which led to the client still requesting the phases
separately after getbundle finished.
Closing files that have been appended to is slow on Windows/NTFS.
CloseHandle() calls on this platform often take 1-10ms - and that's
on my i7-6700K Skylake processor with a modern and fast SSD. Contrast
with other I/O operations, such as writing data, which take <100us.
This means that creating/appending thousands of files can add
significant overhead. For example, cloning mozilla-central creates
~232,000 revlog files. Assuming 1ms per CloseHandle(), that yields
232s (3:52) of wall time waiting for file closes!
The impact of this overhead can be measured most directly when applying
stream clone bundles. Applying these files is effectively uncompressing
a tar archive (read: it's very fast).
Using a RAM disk (read: no I/O wait), the difference in wall time for a
`hg debugapplystreamclonebundle` for a ~1731 MB mozilla-central bundle
between Windows and Linux from the same machine is drastic:
Linux: ~12.8s (128MB/s)
Windows: ~352.0s (4.7MB/s)
Windows is ~27.5x slower. Yikes!
After this patch:
Linux: ~12.8s (128MB/s)
Windows: ~102.1s (16.1MB/s)
Windows is now ~3.4x faster. Unfortunately, it is still ~8x slower than
Linux. Profiling reveals a few hot code paths that could likely be
improved. But those are for other patches.
This patch introduces test-clone-uncompressed.t because existing tests
of `clone --uncompressed` are scattered about and adding a variation for
background thread closing to e.g. test-http.t doesn't feel correct.