Since a33895509ccb changed the signature of ui.system(), chgui.system()
should have been updated. This patch factors out the util.system() call
so that chg can override how a shell command is executed.
os.fdopen() does not accepts bytes as its second argument which represent the
mode in which the file is to be opened. This patch makes sure unicodes are
passed in py3 by using pycompat.sysstr().
We have enough bits to switch to the new chg pager code path in runcommand.
So just remove the legacy getpager support.
This is a red-only patch, and will break chg's pager support temporarily.
This patch implements chgui._runpager in a relatively simple way. A more
clean way is to move the core logic of "attachio" to "ui", which will be
done later after chg runs uisetup per request.
This patch adds the "pager" support for the S channel. The pager API allows
running some subcommands, namely attachio, and waiting for the client to be
properly synchronized.
Previously S channel is only used to send system commands. It will also be
used to send pager commands. So add a type parameter.
This breaks older chg clients. But chg and hg should always come from a
single commit and be packed into a single package. Supporting running
inconsistent versions of chg and hg seems to be unnecessarily complicated
with little benefit. So just make the change and assume people won't use
inconsistent chg with hg.
On Wed, 21 Dec 2016 15:39:05 +0000, Jun Wu wrote:
> Actually, patch 1 is unnecessary if we go with the "ui._runpager" approach.
> Maybe someone can drop it without adding too many markers.
Previously, the "system" channel is inside the ui object. In the future, chg
will let dispatch to create a new ui object from scratch, to maximize
compatibility. And chgserver will use a "uisetup" like an extension to wrap
ui.system. To be able to do that cleanly, the system channel needs to be
accessed directly.
Previously, the hash address is just appending "-$HASH" to base address.
This patch makes it truncate the basename address at "." before appending
"-$HASH".
This makes it possible to spawn new servers in a racy situation and the
client could be sure the server it connects is the new server just spawned.
This is a step towards removing the lock.
One of the functionalities of the lock is to make sure the connect will
connect to a server it just created:
1. start server --address foo
2. connect to foo # wish "foo" is the server just started
With this change, the client could do:
1. start server --address foo.tmp$PID
2. connect to foo.tmp$PID # is the server just started
(note: if it is not, it does not affect correctness - linux pid
namespace is not a concern here)
3. rename foo.tmp$PID to foo
Another functionality of the lock is to avoid starting multiple servers with
a same confighash in parallel. But that also prevents starting multiple
servers with different confighashes in parallel.
The environment variables `HG_*` are usually used by hooks. Unlike `HGPLAIN`
etc, they do not actually affect hg's behavior. So do not include them in
confighash.
This would avoid spawning an unbound number of chg server processes if
commit hook calls hg frequently.
It was an extension just because there were several dependency cycles I
needed to address.
I don't add 'chgserver' to extensions._builtin since chgserver is considered
an internal extension so nobody should enable it by their config.