This patch limits the estimate time interval to roughly the last minute
(configurable by `estimateinterval`) to be more practical. See the test
change for why this is better.
.. feature:: Estimated time is more accurate with non-linear progress
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D820
It was introduced by 98e4d39 ("progress: add speed format" 2011-5-9) and was
intended to hide ETA information for the first few seconds.
Later 5d261fd ("progress: add a changedelay to prevent parallel topics from
flapping (issue2698)" 2011-6-23) introduced `changedelay` config which hides
the entire progress bar for the first few seconds. So `progress.estimate` seems
somehow duplicated feature-wise. Since it's experimental and duplicated, let's
just remove it. This makes the next patch simpler - it no longer needs to make
sure `starttimes` is the real start time.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D828
This is done by a script [2] using RedBaron [1], a tool designed for doing
code refactoring. All "default" values are decided by the script and are
strongly consistent with the existing code.
There are 2 changes done manually to fix tests:
[warn] mercurial/exchange.py: experimental.bundle2-output-capture: default needs manual removal
[warn] mercurial/localrepo.py: experimental.hook-track-tags: default needs manual removal
Since RedBaron is not confident about how to indent things [2].
[1]: https://github.com/PyCQA/redbaron
[2]: https://github.com/PyCQA/redbaron/issues/100
[3]:
#!/usr/bin/env python
# codemod_configitems.py - codemod tool to fill configitems
#
# Copyright 2017 Facebook, Inc.
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function
import os
import sys
import redbaron
def readpath(path):
with open(path) as f:
return f.read()
def writepath(path, content):
with open(path, 'w') as f:
f.write(content)
_configmethods = {'config', 'configbool', 'configint', 'configbytes',
'configlist', 'configdate'}
def extractstring(rnode):
"""get the string from a RedBaron string or call_argument node"""
while rnode.type != 'string':
rnode = rnode.value
return rnode.value[1:-1] # unquote, "'str'" -> "str"
def uiconfigitems(red):
"""match *.ui.config* pattern, yield (node, method, args, section, name)"""
for node in red.find_all('atomtrailers'):
entry = None
try:
obj = node[-3].value
method = node[-2].value
args = node[-1]
section = args[0].value
name = args[1].value
if (obj in ('ui', 'self') and method in _configmethods
and section.type == 'string' and name.type == 'string'):
entry = (node, method, args, extractstring(section),
extractstring(name))
except Exception:
pass
else:
if entry:
yield entry
def coreconfigitems(red):
"""match coreconfigitem(...) pattern, yield (node, args, section, name)"""
for node in red.find_all('atomtrailers'):
entry = None
try:
args = node[1]
section = args[0].value
name = args[1].value
if (node[0].value == 'coreconfigitem' and section.type == 'string'
and name.type == 'string'):
entry = (node, args, extractstring(section),
extractstring(name))
except Exception:
pass
else:
if entry:
yield entry
def registercoreconfig(cfgred, section, name, defaultrepr):
"""insert coreconfigitem to cfgred AST
section and name are plain string, defaultrepr is a string
"""
# find a place to insert the "coreconfigitem" item
entries = list(coreconfigitems(cfgred))
for node, args, nodesection, nodename in reversed(entries):
if (nodesection, nodename) < (section, name):
# insert after this entry
node.insert_after(
'coreconfigitem(%r, %r,\n'
' default=%s,\n'
')' % (section, name, defaultrepr))
return
def main(argv):
if not argv:
print('Usage: codemod_configitems.py FILES\n'
'For example, FILES could be "{hgext,mercurial}/*/**.py"')
dirname = os.path.dirname
reporoot = dirname(dirname(dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__))))
# register configitems to this destination
cfgpath = os.path.join(reporoot, 'mercurial', 'configitems.py')
cfgred = redbaron.RedBaron(readpath(cfgpath))
# state about what to do
registered = set((s, n) for n, a, s, n in coreconfigitems(cfgred))
toregister = {} # {(section, name): defaultrepr}
coreconfigs = set() # {(section, name)}, whether it's used in core
# first loop: scan all files before taking any action
for i, path in enumerate(argv):
print('(%d/%d) scanning %s' % (i + 1, len(argv), path))
iscore = ('mercurial' in path) and ('hgext' not in path)
red = redbaron.RedBaron(readpath(path))
# find all repo.ui.config* and ui.config* calls, and collect their
# section, name and default value information.
for node, method, args, section, name in uiconfigitems(red):
if section == 'web':
# [web] section has some weirdness, ignore them for now
continue
defaultrepr = None
key = (section, name)
if len(args) == 2:
if key in registered:
continue
if method == 'configlist':
defaultrepr = 'list'
elif method == 'configbool':
defaultrepr = 'False'
else:
defaultrepr = 'None'
elif len(args) >= 3 and (args[2].target is None or
args[2].target.value == 'default'):
# try to understand the "default" value
dnode = args[2].value
if dnode.type == 'name':
if dnode.value in {'None', 'True', 'False'}:
defaultrepr = dnode.value
elif dnode.type == 'string':
defaultrepr = repr(dnode.value[1:-1])
elif dnode.type in ('int', 'float'):
defaultrepr = dnode.value
# inconsistent default
if key in toregister and toregister[key] != defaultrepr:
defaultrepr = None
# interesting to rewrite
if key not in registered:
if defaultrepr is None:
print('[note] %s: %s.%s: unsupported default'
% (path, section, name))
registered.add(key) # skip checking it again
else:
toregister[key] = defaultrepr
if iscore:
coreconfigs.add(key)
# second loop: rewrite files given "toregister" result
for path in argv:
# reconstruct redbaron - trade CPU for memory
red = redbaron.RedBaron(readpath(path))
changed = False
for node, method, args, section, name in uiconfigitems(red):
key = (section, name)
defaultrepr = toregister.get(key)
if defaultrepr is None or key not in coreconfigs:
continue
if len(args) >= 3 and (args[2].target is None or
args[2].target.value == 'default'):
try:
del args[2]
changed = True
except Exception:
# redbaron fails to do the rewrite due to indentation
# see https://github.com/PyCQA/redbaron/issues/100
print('[warn] %s: %s.%s: default needs manual removal'
% (path, section, name))
if key not in registered:
print('registering %s.%s' % (section, name))
registercoreconfig(cfgred, section, name, defaultrepr)
registered.add(key)
if changed:
print('updating %s' % path)
writepath(path, red.dumps())
if toregister:
print('updating configitems.py')
writepath(cfgpath, cfgred.dumps())
if __name__ == "__main__":
sys.exit(main(sys.argv[1:]))
See the inline comment how this could mitigate the issue.
I couldn't reproduce the exact problem on my Linux machine, but there are
at least two people who got EINTR in progress.py, and it seems file_write()
of Python 2 is fundamentally broken [1]. Let's make something in on 4.2.
[1]: https://hg.python.org/cpython/file/v2.7.13/Objects/fileobject.c#l1850
The progress bar was being cleared on every write(), regardless of
whether it was currently displayed. This could foul up the display of
any writes that didn't include a linebreak.
In particular, the win32 mode of the color extension was turning
single prompt string writes into two writes, and the resulting
clear/write/clear/write pattern was making the prompt invisible.
We fix this by insisting that we have shown a progress bar and haven't
just cleared it (setting lastprint to 0).
Conveniently, the test suite already had instances of duplicate
clears.. that are now cleared up.
This patch changes "progress.shouldprint()" so a feature name is provided to
"ui.plain()" to determine if there is an exception specificed in HGPLAINEXCEPT
for the progress extension.
This will allow user-facing scripts to provide progress output while HGPLAIN
is enabled.
This avoids some visual flickering of the progress bar in convert and
probably some other operations. Previously, a line of output would
erase the progress bar, and then it would wait `progress.refresh`
seconds (default of 0.1) before redrawing the progress bar. Now if
we've ever painted a progress bar, we schedule the progress bar for
immediate repainting on the next progress call, which helps lend the
illusion that the progress bar is "always" there. In practice, it's
merely there more of the time, but it ends up being a lot easier to
read during convert.