bundle2.txt
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Gregory Szorc
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r36469 | Bundle2 refers to a data format that is used for both on-disk storage | ||
and over-the-wire transfer of repository data and state. | ||||
The data format allows the capture of multiple components of | ||||
repository data. Contrast with the initial bundle format, which | ||||
only captured *changegroup* data (and couldn't store bookmarks, | ||||
phases, etc). | ||||
Bundle2 is used for: | ||||
* Transferring data from a repository (e.g. as part of an ``hg clone`` | ||||
or ``hg pull`` operation). | ||||
* Transferring data to a repository (e.g. as part of an ``hg push`` | ||||
operation). | ||||
* Storing data on disk (e.g. the result of an ``hg bundle`` | ||||
operation). | ||||
* Transferring the results of a repository operation (e.g. the | ||||
reply to an ``hg push`` operation). | ||||
At its highest level, a bundle2 payload is a stream that begins | ||||
with some metadata and consists of a series of *parts*, with each | ||||
part describing repository data or state or the result of an | ||||
operation. New bundle2 parts are introduced over time when there is | ||||
a need to capture a new form of data. A *capabilities* mechanism | ||||
exists to allow peers to understand which bundle2 parts the other | ||||
understands. | ||||
Stream Format | ||||
============= | ||||
A bundle2 payload consists of a magic string (``HG20``) followed by | ||||
stream level parameters, followed by any number of payload *parts*. | ||||
It may help to think of the stream level parameters as *headers* and the | ||||
payload parts as the *body*. | ||||
Stream Level Parameters | ||||
----------------------- | ||||
Following the magic string is data that defines parameters applicable to the | ||||
entire payload. | ||||
Stream level parameters begin with a 32-bit unsigned big-endian integer. | ||||
The value of this integer defines the number of bytes of stream level | ||||
parameters that follow. | ||||
The *N* bytes of raw data contains a space separated list of parameters. | ||||
Each parameter consists of a required name and an optional value. | ||||
Parameters have the form ``<name>`` or ``<name>=<value>``. | ||||
Both the parameter name and value are URL quoted. | ||||
Names MUST start with a letter. If the first letter is lower case, the | ||||
parameter is advisory and can safely be ignored. If the first letter | ||||
is upper case, the parameter is mandatory and the handler MUST stop if | ||||
it is unable to process it. | ||||
Stream level parameters apply to the entire bundle2 payload. Lower-level | ||||
options should go into a bundle2 part instead. | ||||
The following stream level parameters are defined: | ||||
Kim Alvefur
|
r37823 | Compression | ||
Gregory Szorc
|
r36469 | Compression format of payload data. ``GZ`` denotes zlib. ``BZ`` | ||
denotes bzip2. ``ZS`` denotes zstandard. | ||||
When defined, all bytes after the stream level parameters are | ||||
compressed using the compression format defined by this parameter. | ||||
If this parameter isn't present, data is raw/uncompressed. | ||||
This parameter MUST be mandatory because attempting to consume | ||||
streams without knowing how to decode the underlying bytes will | ||||
result in errors. | ||||
Payload Part | ||||
------------ | ||||
Following the stream level parameters are 0 or more payload parts. Each | ||||
payload part consists of a header and a body. | ||||
The payload part header consists of a 32-bit unsigned big-endian integer | ||||
defining the number of bytes in the header that follow. The special | ||||
value ``0`` indicates the end of the bundle2 stream. | ||||
The binary format of the part header is as follows: | ||||
* 8-bit unsigned size of the part name | ||||
* N-bytes alphanumeric part name | ||||
* 32-bit unsigned big-endian part ID | ||||
* N bytes part parameter data | ||||
The *part name* identifies the type of the part. A part name with an | ||||
UPPERCASE letter is mandatory. Otherwise, the part is advisory. A | ||||
consumer should abort if it encounters a mandatory part it doesn't know | ||||
how to process. See the sections below for each defined part type. | ||||
The *part ID* is a unique identifier within the bundle used to refer to a | ||||
specific part. It should be unique within the bundle2 payload. | ||||
Part parameter data consists of: | ||||
* 1 byte number of mandatory parameters | ||||
* 1 byte number of advisory parameters | ||||
* 2 * N bytes of sizes of parameter key and values | ||||
* N * M blobs of values for parameter key and values | ||||
Following the 2 bytes of mandatory and advisory parameter counts are | ||||
2-tuples of bytes of the sizes of each parameter. e.g. | ||||
(<key size>, <value size>). | ||||
Following that are the raw values, without padding. Mandatory parameters | ||||
come first, followed by advisory parameters. | ||||
Each parameter's key MUST be unique within the part. | ||||
Following the part parameter data is the part payload. The part payload | ||||
consists of a series of framed chunks. The frame header is a 32-bit | ||||
big-endian integer defining the size of the chunk. The N bytes of raw | ||||
payload data follows. | ||||
The part payload consists of 0 or more chunks. | ||||
A chunk with size ``0`` denotes the end of the part payload. Therefore, | ||||
there will always be at least 1 32-bit integer following the payload | ||||
part header. | ||||
A chunk size of ``-1`` is used to signal an *interrupt*. If such a chunk | ||||
size is seen, the stream processor should process the next bytes as a new | ||||
payload part. After this payload part, processing of the original, | ||||
interrupted part should resume. | ||||
Capabilities | ||||
============ | ||||
Bundle2 is a dynamic format that can evolve over time. For example, | ||||
when a new repository data concept is invented, a new bundle2 part | ||||
is typically invented to hold that data. In addition, parts performing | ||||
similar functionality may come into existence if there is a better | ||||
mechanism for performing certain functionality. | ||||
Because the bundle2 format evolves over time, peers need to understand | ||||
what bundle2 features the other can understand. The *capabilities* | ||||
mechanism is how those features are expressed. | ||||
Bundle2 capabilities are logically expressed as a dictionary of | ||||
string key-value pairs where the keys are strings and the values | ||||
are lists of strings. | ||||
Capabilities are encoded for exchange between peers. The encoded | ||||
capabilities blob consists of a newline (``\n``) delimited list of | ||||
entries. Each entry has the form ``<key>`` or ``<key>=<value>``, | ||||
depending if the capability has a value. | ||||
The capability name is URL quoted (``%XX`` encoding of URL unsafe | ||||
characters). | ||||
The value, if present, is formed by URL quoting each value in | ||||
the capability list and concatenating the result with a comma (``,``). | ||||
For example, the capabilities ``novaluekey`` and ``listvaluekey`` | ||||
with values ``value 1`` and ``value 2``. This would be encoded as: | ||||
listvaluekey=value%201,value%202\nnovaluekey | ||||
The sections below detail the defined bundle2 capabilities. | ||||
HG20 | ||||
---- | ||||
Denotes that the peer supports the bundle2 data format. | ||||
bookmarks | ||||
--------- | ||||
Denotes that the peer supports the ``bookmarks`` part. | ||||
Peers should not issue mandatory ``bookmarks`` parts unless this | ||||
capability is present. | ||||
changegroup | ||||
----------- | ||||
Denotes which versions of the *changegroup* format the peer can | ||||
receive. Values include ``01``, ``02``, and ``03``. | ||||
The peer should not generate changegroup data for a version not | ||||
specified by this capability. | ||||
checkheads | ||||
---------- | ||||
Denotes which forms of heads checking the peer supports. | ||||
If ``related`` is in the value, then the peer supports the ``check:heads`` | ||||
part and the peer is capable of detecting race conditions when applying | ||||
changelog data. | ||||
digests | ||||
------- | ||||
Denotes which hashing formats the peer supports. | ||||
Values are names of hashing function. Values include ``md5``, ``sha1``, | ||||
and ``sha512``. | ||||
error | ||||
----- | ||||
Denotes which ``error:`` parts the peer supports. | ||||
Value is a list of strings of ``error:`` part names. Valid values | ||||
include ``abort``, ``unsupportecontent``, ``pushraced``, and ``pushkey``. | ||||
Peers should not issue an ``error:`` part unless the type of that | ||||
part is listed as supported by this capability. | ||||
listkeys | ||||
-------- | ||||
Denotes that the peer supports the ``listkeys`` part. | ||||
hgtagsfnodes | ||||
------------ | ||||
Denotes that the peer supports the ``hgtagsfnodes`` part. | ||||
obsmarkers | ||||
---------- | ||||
Denotes that the peer supports the ``obsmarker`` part and which versions | ||||
of the obsolescence data format it can receive. Values are strings like | ||||
``V<N>``. e.g. ``V1``. | ||||
phases | ||||
------ | ||||
Denotes that the peer supports the ``phases`` part. | ||||
pushback | ||||
-------- | ||||
Denotes that the peer supports sending/receiving bundle2 data in response | ||||
to a bundle2 request. | ||||
This capability is typically used by servers that employ server-side | ||||
rewriting of pushed repository data. For example, a server may wish to | ||||
automatically rebase pushed changesets. When this capability is present, | ||||
the server can send a bundle2 response containing the rewritten changeset | ||||
data and the client will apply it. | ||||
pushkey | ||||
------- | ||||
Denotes that the peer supports the ``puskey`` part. | ||||
remote-changegroup | ||||
------------------ | ||||
Denotes that the peer supports the ``remote-changegroup`` part and | ||||
which protocols it can use to fetch remote changegroup data. | ||||
Values are protocol names. e.g. ``http`` and ``https``. | ||||
stream | ||||
------ | ||||
Denotes that the peer supports ``stream*`` parts in order to support | ||||
*stream clone*. | ||||
Values are which ``stream*`` parts the peer supports. ``v2`` denotes | ||||
support for the ``stream2`` part. | ||||
Bundle2 Part Types | ||||
================== | ||||
The sections below detail the various bundle2 part types. | ||||
bookmarks | ||||
--------- | ||||
The ``bookmarks`` part holds bookmarks information. | ||||
This part has no parameters. | ||||
The payload consists of entries defining bookmarks. Each entry consists of: | ||||
* 20 bytes binary changeset node. | ||||
* 2 bytes big endian short defining bookmark name length. | ||||
* N bytes defining bookmark name. | ||||
Receivers typically update bookmarks to match the state specified in | ||||
this part. | ||||
changegroup | ||||
----------- | ||||
The ``changegroup`` part contains *changegroup* data (changelog, manifestlog, | ||||
and filelog revision data). | ||||
The following part parameters are defined for this part. | ||||
version | ||||
Changegroup version string. e.g. ``01``, ``02``, and ``03``. This parameter | ||||
determines how to interpret the changegroup data within the part. | ||||
nbchanges | ||||
The number of changesets in this changegroup. This parameter can be used | ||||
to aid in the display of progress bars, etc during part application. | ||||
treemanifest | ||||
Whether the changegroup contains tree manifests. | ||||
targetphase | ||||
The target phase of changesets in this part. Value is an integer of | ||||
the target phase. | ||||
The payload of this part is raw changegroup data. See | ||||
:hg:`help internals.changegroups` for the format of changegroup data. | ||||
check:bookmarks | ||||
--------------- | ||||
The ``check:bookmarks`` part is inserted into a bundle as a means for the | ||||
receiver to validate that the sender's known state of bookmarks matches | ||||
the receiver's. | ||||
This part has no parameters. | ||||
The payload is a binary stream of bookmark data. Each entry in the stream | ||||
consists of: | ||||
* 20 bytes binary node that bookmark is associated with | ||||
* 2 bytes unsigned short defining length of bookmark name | ||||
* N bytes containing the bookmark name | ||||
If all bits in the node value are ``1``, then this signifies a missing | ||||
bookmark. | ||||
When the receiver encounters this part, for each bookmark in the part | ||||
payload, it should validate that the current bookmark state matches | ||||
the specified state. If it doesn't, then the receiver should take | ||||
appropriate action. (In the case of pushes, this mismatch signifies | ||||
a race condition and the receiver should consider rejecting the push.) | ||||
check:heads | ||||
----------- | ||||
The ``check:heads`` part is a means to validate that the sender's state | ||||
of DAG heads matches the receiver's. | ||||
This part has no parameters. | ||||
The body of this part is an array of 20 byte binary nodes representing | ||||
changeset heads. | ||||
Receivers should compare the set of heads defined in this part to the | ||||
current set of repo heads and take action if there is a mismatch in that | ||||
set. | ||||
Note that this part applies to *all* heads in the repo. | ||||
check:phases | ||||
------------ | ||||
The ``check:phases`` part validates that the sender's state of phase | ||||
boundaries matches the receiver's. | ||||
This part has no parameters. | ||||
The payload consists of an array of 24 byte entries. Each entry is | ||||
a big endian 32-bit integer defining the phase integer and 20 byte | ||||
binary node value. | ||||
For each changeset defined in this part, the receiver should validate | ||||
that its current phase matches the phase defined in this part. The | ||||
receiver should take appropriate action if a mismatch occurs. | ||||
check:updated-heads | ||||
------------------- | ||||
The ``check:updated-heads`` part validates that the sender's state of | ||||
DAG heads updated by this bundle matches the receiver's. | ||||
This type is nearly identical to ``check:heads`` except the heads | ||||
in the payload are only a subset of heads in the repository. The | ||||
receiver should validate that all nodes specified by the sender are | ||||
branch heads and take appropriate action if not. | ||||
error:abort | ||||
----------- | ||||
The ``error:abort`` part conveys a fatal error. | ||||
The following part parameters are defined: | ||||
message | ||||
The string content of the error message. | ||||
hint | ||||
Supplemental string giving a hint on how to fix the problem. | ||||
error:pushkey | ||||
------------- | ||||
The ``error:pushkey`` part conveys an error in the *pushkey* protocol. | ||||
The following part parameters are defined: | ||||
namespace | ||||
The pushkey domain that exhibited the error. | ||||
key | ||||
The key whose update failed. | ||||
new | ||||
The value we tried to set the key to. | ||||
old | ||||
The old value of the key (as supplied by the client). | ||||
ret | ||||
The integer result code for the pushkey request. | ||||
in-reply-to | ||||
Part ID that triggered this error. | ||||
This part is generated if there was an error applying *pushkey* data. | ||||
Pushkey data includes bookmarks, phases, and obsolescence markers. | ||||
error:pushraced | ||||
--------------- | ||||
The ``error:pushraced`` part conveys that an error occurred and | ||||
the likely cause is losing a race with another pusher. | ||||
The following part parameters are defined: | ||||
message | ||||
String error message. | ||||
This part is typically emitted when a receiver examining ``check:*`` | ||||
parts encountered inconsistency between incoming state and local state. | ||||
The likely cause of that inconsistency is another repository change | ||||
operation (often another client performing an ``hg push``). | ||||
error:unsupportedcontent | ||||
------------------------ | ||||
The ``error:unsupportedcontent`` part conveys that a bundle2 receiver | ||||
encountered a part or content it was not able to handle. | ||||
The following part parameters are defined: | ||||
parttype | ||||
The name of the part that triggered this error. | ||||
params | ||||
``\0`` delimited list of parameters. | ||||
hgtagsfnodes | ||||
------------ | ||||
The ``hgtagsfnodes`` type defines file nodes for the ``.hgtags`` file | ||||
for various changesets. | ||||
This part has no parameters. | ||||
The payload is an array of pairs of 20 byte binary nodes. The first node | ||||
is a changeset node. The second node is the ``.hgtags`` file node. | ||||
Resolving tags requires resolving the ``.hgtags`` file node for changesets. | ||||
On large repositories, this can be expensive. Repositories cache the | ||||
mapping of changeset to ``.hgtags`` file node on disk as a performance | ||||
optimization. This part allows that cached data to be transferred alongside | ||||
changeset data. | ||||
Receivers should update their ``.hgtags`` cache file node mappings with | ||||
the incoming data. | ||||
listkeys | ||||
-------- | ||||
The ``listkeys`` part holds content for a *pushkey* namespace. | ||||
The following part parameters are defined: | ||||
namespace | ||||
The pushkey domain this data belongs to. | ||||
The part payload contains a newline (``\n``) delimited list of | ||||
tab (``\t``) delimited key-value pairs defining entries in this pushkey | ||||
namespace. | ||||
obsmarkers | ||||
---------- | ||||
The ``obsmarkers`` part defines obsolescence markers. | ||||
This part has no parameters. | ||||
The payload consists of obsolescence markers using the on-disk markers | ||||
format. The first byte defines the version format. | ||||
The receiver should apply the obsolescence markers defined in this | ||||
part. A ``reply:obsmarkers`` part should be sent to the sender, if possible. | ||||
output | ||||
------ | ||||
The ``output`` part is used to display output on the receiver. | ||||
This part has no parameters. | ||||
The payload consists of raw data to be printed on the receiver. | ||||
phase-heads | ||||
----------- | ||||
The ``phase-heads`` part defines phase boundaries. | ||||
This part has no parameters. | ||||
The payload consists of an array of 24 byte entries. Each entry is | ||||
a big endian 32-bit integer defining the phase integer and 20 byte | ||||
binary node value. | ||||
pushkey | ||||
------- | ||||
The ``pushkey`` part communicates an intent to perform a ``pushkey`` | ||||
request. | ||||
The following part parameters are defined: | ||||
namespace | ||||
The pushkey domain to operate on. | ||||
key | ||||
The key within the pushkey namespace that is being changed. | ||||
old | ||||
The old value for the key being changed. | ||||
new | ||||
The new value for the key being changed. | ||||
This part has no payload. | ||||
The receiver should perform a pushkey operation as described by this | ||||
part's parameters. | ||||
If the pushey operation fails, a ``reply:pushkey`` part should be sent | ||||
back to the sender, if possible. The ``in-reply-to`` part parameter | ||||
should reference the source part. | ||||
pushvars | ||||
-------- | ||||
The ``pushvars`` part defines environment variables that should be | ||||
set when processing this bundle2 payload. | ||||
The part's advisory parameters define environment variables. | ||||
There is no part payload. | ||||
When received, part parameters are prefixed with ``USERVAR_`` and the | ||||
resulting variables are defined in the hooks context for the current | ||||
bundle2 application. This part provides a mechanism for senders to | ||||
inject extra state into the hook execution environment on the receiver. | ||||
remote-changegroup | ||||
------------------ | ||||
The ``remote-changegroup`` part defines an external location of a bundle | ||||
to apply. This part can be used by servers to serve pre-generated bundles | ||||
hosted at arbitrary URLs. | ||||
The following part parameters are defined: | ||||
url | ||||
The URL of the remote bundle. | ||||
size | ||||
The size in bytes of the remote bundle. | ||||
digests | ||||
A space separated list of the digest types provided in additional | ||||
part parameters. | ||||
digest:<type> | ||||
The hexadecimal representation of the digest (hash) of the remote bundle. | ||||
There is no payload for this part type. | ||||
When encountered, clients should attempt to fetch the URL being advertised | ||||
and read and apply it as a bundle. | ||||
The ``size`` and ``digest:<type>`` parameters should be used to validate | ||||
that the downloaded bundle matches what was advertised. If a mismatch occurs, | ||||
the client should abort. | ||||
reply:changegroup | ||||
----------------- | ||||
The ``reply:changegroup`` part conveys the results of application of a | ||||
``changegroup`` part. | ||||
The following part parameters are defined: | ||||
return | ||||
Integer return code from changegroup application. | ||||
in-reply-to | ||||
Part ID of part this reply is in response to. | ||||
reply:obsmarkers | ||||
---------------- | ||||
The ``reply:obsmarkers`` part conveys the results of applying an | ||||
``obsmarkers`` part. | ||||
The following part parameters are defined: | ||||
new | ||||
The integer number of new markers that were applied. | ||||
in-reply-to | ||||
The part ID that this part is in reply to. | ||||
reply:pushkey | ||||
------------- | ||||
The ``reply:pushkey`` part conveys the result of a *pushkey* operation. | ||||
The following part parameters are defined: | ||||
return | ||||
Integer result code from pushkey operation. | ||||
in-reply-to | ||||
Part ID that triggered this pushkey operation. | ||||
This part has no payload. | ||||
replycaps | ||||
--------- | ||||
The ``replycaps`` part notifies the receiver that a reply bundle should | ||||
be created. | ||||
This part has no parameters. | ||||
The payload consists of a bundle2 capabilities blob. | ||||
stream2 | ||||
------- | ||||
The ``stream2`` part contains *streaming clone* version 2 data. | ||||
The following part parameters are defined: | ||||
requirements | ||||
URL quoted repository requirements string. Requirements are delimited by a | ||||
command (``,``). | ||||
filecount | ||||
The total number of files being transferred in the payload. | ||||
bytecount | ||||
The total size of file content being transferred in the payload. | ||||
The payload consists of raw stream clone version 2 data. | ||||
The ``filecount`` and ``bytecount`` parameters can be used for progress and | ||||
reporting purposes. The values may not be exact. | ||||