Fixes some Python 3 regressions.
We don't use %d here because the part id is actually an
Optional[int]. It should always be initialized to a non-None value by
the time this code executes, but we shouldn't blindly depend on that
being the case.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D272
pushvars extension in fbext adds a --pushvars flag to push command using which
one send strings to server which becomes environment variables there prepended
with HG_USERVAR_. These variables can then be used to run hooks on the server.
The extension is moved directly to core and unbundling of the strings and
converting them to environment variables at server is disabled by default for
security reasons. One can turn that on by following config:
[push]
pushvars.server = true
This patch also adds the test for the extension.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D210
When a transaction is started, we must load the hookargs from the
bundleoperation object to the transaction so that they can be used in the
transaction. Also this patch makes sure no more hookargs are added to the
bundleoperation object once the transaction starts.
This is a part of porting fb extension bundle2hooks to core.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D209
There are extensions like pushrebase, pushvars which run hooks on a server
before taking the lock. Since the lock is not taken, transaction is not there,
so the hookargs can't be stored on the transaction. Adding hooksargs to bundle
operation object will help in running hooks before taking the lock.
This is a part of moving fb's extension bundle2hooks to core.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D208
Now that we records "all" changes happening in a transaction (in tr.changes)
we will be able to provide better report on various changes (phases turned
public, changeset obsoleted, branch merged or created, etc..)
This is far too late in the cycle to play with this, but having this existing
method called more widely will help extensions to play around with various
options during the 4.4 cycle.
Instead of calling registersummarycallback only for transactions we want, we
always call it and use the transaction name to decide when to report (eg: we
do not want `hg amend` to report new obsoleted changesets). Filtering on
transaction name does not seems great, but seems good enough for the moment.
We can change the API during the next cycle.
The previous manual call during unbundling of the bundle2 "obsmarkers" part is
no longer necessary and has been dropped.
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:]))
cg.apply used to returns the added nodes. Callers doesn't have a use for it
anymore, remove the added node and stops recording it in the current
operation.
This information was added in the current release cycle so no extensions
breakage should happens.
updatephases have no use of the 'addednodes' parameter since 44be3dc1fec8.
However caller are still passing it for nothing, remove the parameter and
remove computing of the added nodes in caller.
If we are bundling secret changeset and the bundle will contain phase, we
request the changegroup to be applied as secret.
It will be useful for next patch as we are now sure that secrets changesets
are applied as secret and not applied as draft then forced to secret.
By default unbundled changesets are drafts. We want to reduce the number of
phases changes during unbundling by giving the possibility to the bundle to
indicate the phase of unbundled changesets.
The longer terms goal is to add phase movement tracking in tr.changes and the
'retractboundary' call is making it more complicated than we want.
This is a first basic visible usage of the changes tracking in the transaction.
We adds a new function computing the pre-existing changesets obsoleted by a
transaction and a transaction call back displaying this information.
Example output:
added 1 changesets with 1 changes to 1 files (+1 heads)
3 new obsolescence markers
obsoleted 1 changesets
The goal is to evolve the transaction summary into something bigger, gathering
existing output there and adding new useful one. This patch is a good first step
on this road. The new output is basic but give a user to the content of
tr.changes['obsmarkers'] and give an idea of the new options we haves. I expect
to revisit the message soon.
The caller recording the transaction summary should also be moved into a more
generic location but further refactoring is needed before it can happen.
This is one step towards removing a bunch of "if isinstance(gen,
unbundle20)" by treating bundle1 and bundle2 more similarly.
The name may sounds ironic for a method in the bundle2 module, but I
didn't think it was worth it yet to create a new 'bundle' module that
depends on the 'bundle2' module. Besides, we'll inline the method
again later.
The results only need to be combined if they come from a bundle2. More
importantly, we'll change its argument to a bundleoperation soon, and
then it definitely will no longer belong in changegroup.py.
This adds an experimental.bundle-phases config option to include phase
information in bundles. As with the recently added support for
bundling obsmarkers, the support for bundling phases is hidden behind
the config option until we decide to make a bundlespec v3 that
includes phases (and obsmarkers and ...).
We could perhaps use the listkeys format for this, but that's
considered obsolete according to Pierre-Yves. Instead, we introduce a
new "phase-heads" bundle part. The new part contains the phase heads
among the set of bundled revisions. It does not include those in
secret phase; any head in the bundle that is not mentioned in the
phase-heads part is assumed to be secret. As a special case, an empty
phase-heads part thus means that any changesets should be added in
secret phase. (If we ever add a fourth phase, we'll include secret in
the part and we'll add a version number.)
For now, phases are only included by "hg bundle", and not by
e.g. strip and rebase.
When adding support for bundling and unbundling phases, it will be
useful to have the list of added changesets. To do that, we return the
list from changegroup.apply().
We move the feature to a proper configuration and document it. The config goes
in the 'server' section because it feels like something the server owner would
want to decide. We pick and open field because it seems likely that other
checking levels will emerge in the future. (eg: server like the mozilla-try
server will likely wants a "none" value)
The option name contains 'push' since this affects 'push' only. The option value
'check-related' is preferred over one explicitly containing 'allow' or 'deny'
because the client still have a strong decision power here. Here, the server is
just advising the client on the check mode to use.
Client has a mechanism for the server to check that nothing changed server side
since the client prepared a push. That check is wide and any head changed on
the server will lead to an aborted push. We introduce a way for the client to
send a less strict checking. That logic will check that no heads impacted by
the push have been affected. If other unrelated heads (including named branches
heads) have been affected, the push will proceed.
This is very helpful for repositories with high developers traffic on different
heads, a common setup.
That behavior is currently controlled by an experimental option. The config
should live in the "server" section but bike-shedding of the name will happen
in the next changesets. Servers advertise this capability through a new bundle2
capability 'checkeads', using the value 'related'.
The 'test-push-race.t' is updated to check that new capabilities on the
documented cases.
The "hg bundle" command is a good place to test if the inclusion of obsmarkers
within a bundle is working well (part exists, content is correct etc). So we
add a way to have them included.
Ideally, this would be controlled by a change around bundlespec (bundlespec
"v3" + arguments). However, my main goal is to have obsmarkers included in
bundle created by the 'hg strip' command, not the 'hg bundle' so for now I'm
avoiding the detour through bundlespec rework territory.
Better debug output for obsmarkers in 'debugbundle' will be added in later
changesets. The 'test-obsolete-bundle-strip.t' test will also get updated in a
later changeset to keep the current changeset smaller.
We move it next to similar part building functions. We will need it for the
"writenewbundle" logic. This will allow us to easily include obsmarkers in
on-disk bundle, a necessary step before having `hg strip` also operate on
markers.
(Yes, the bundle2 module was already too large, but there any many
interdependencies between its components so it is non-trivial to split, this is
a quest for another adventure.)
Adding markers to the repository might affect the set of obsolete changesets. So we
most remove the "volatile" set who rely in that data. We add two missing
invalidations after merging markers. This was caught by code change in the evolve
extensions tests.
This issues highlight that the current way to do things is a bit fragile,
however we keep things simple for stable.
Many have seen a "stream ended unexpectedly" error. This message is
raised from changegroup.readexactly() when a read(n) operation fails
to return exactly N bytes.
I believe most occurrences of this error in the wild stem from
the code changed in this patch. Before, if bundle2's part applicator
raised an Exception when processing/applying parts, the exception
handler would attempt to iterate the remaining parts. If I/O
during this iteration failed, it would likely raise the
"stream ended unexpectedly" exception.
The problem with this approach is that if we already encountered
an I/O error iterating the bundle2 data during application, then
any further I/O would almost certainly fail. If the original stream
were closed, changegroup.readexactly() would obtain an empty
string, triggering "stream ended unexpectedly" with "got 0." This is
the error message that users would see. What's worse is that the
original I/O related exception would be lost since a new exception
would be raised. This made debugging the actual I/O failure
effectively impossible.
This patch changes the exception handler for bundle2 application to
ignore errors when seeking the underlying stream. When the underlying
error is I/O related, the seek should fail fast and the original
exception will be re-raised. The output changes in
test-http-bad-server.t demonstrate this.
When the underlying error is not I/O related and the stream can be
seeked, the old behavior is preserved.
These methods are unrelated to unpacking. They are used internally by the
'unbundlepart' class only. So me move them there as private methods.
In the same go, we clarify their internal role in the their docstring.
The unpackermixin is a utility used to implement the bundle2 protocol. It should
not be used when writing part handlers. We update the docstring to clarify this.
There are some non-obvious limitations on the parameters of this method.
Add some documentation where people will likely look to understand how
to use this API.
The current function ('writebundle') is focussing on getting an existing
changegroup to disk. It is no easy ways to includes more part in the generated
bundle2. So we introduce a slightly higher level function that is fed the
'outgoing' object (that defines the bundled spec) and the bundlespec parameters
(to control the changegroup generation and inclusion of other parts).
This is creating the third logic dedicated to create a consistent bundle2 (the
other 2 are the push code and the getbundle code). We should probably reconcile
them at some points but they all takes different types of input. So we need to
introduce an intermediate "object" that each different input could be converted
to. Such unified "bundle2 specification" could be fed to some unified code.
We start by having the `hg bundle` related code on its own to helps defines its
specific needs first. Once the common and specific parts of each logic will be
known we can start unification.