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documentation: better censor flag documentation
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1 1 Revision logs - or *revlogs* - are an append only data structure for
2 2 storing discrete entries, or *revisions*. They are the primary storage
3 3 mechanism of repository data.
4 4
5 5 Revlogs effectively model a directed acyclic graph (DAG). Each node
6 6 has edges to 1 or 2 *parent* nodes. Each node contains metadata and
7 7 the raw value for that node.
8 8
9 9 Revlogs consist of entries which have metadata and revision data.
10 10 Metadata includes the hash of the revision's content, sizes, and
11 11 links to its *parent* entries. The collective metadata is referred
12 12 to as the *index* and the revision data is the *data*.
13 13
14 14 Revision data is stored as a series of compressed deltas against previous
15 15 revisions.
16 16
17 17 Revlogs are written in an append-only fashion. We never need to rewrite
18 18 a file to insert nor do we need to remove data. Rolling back in-progress
19 19 writes can be performed by truncating files. Read locks can be avoided
20 20 using simple techniques. This means that references to other data in
21 21 the same revlog *always* refer to a previous entry.
22 22
23 23 Revlogs can be modeled as 0-indexed arrays. The first revision is
24 24 revision #0 and the second is revision #1. The revision -1 is typically
25 25 used to mean *does not exist* or *not defined*.
26 26
27 27 File Format
28 28 ===========
29 29
30 30 A revlog begins with a 32-bit big endian integer holding version info
31 31 and feature flags. This integer is shared with the first revision
32 32 entry.
33 33
34 34 This integer is logically divided into 2 16-bit shorts. The least
35 35 significant half of the integer is the format/version short. The other
36 36 short holds feature flags that dictate behavior of the revlog.
37 37
38 38 Only 1 bit of the format/version short is currently used. Remaining
39 39 bits are reserved for future use.
40 40
41 41 The following values for the format/version short are defined:
42 42
43 43 0
44 44 The original revlog version.
45 45 1
46 46 RevlogNG (*next generation*). It replaced version 0 when it was
47 47 implemented in 2006.
48 48
49 49 The feature flags short consists of bit flags. Where 0 is the least
50 50 significant bit, the following bit offsets define flags:
51 51
52 52 0
53 53 Store revision data inline.
54 54 1
55 55 Generaldelta encoding.
56 56
57 57 2-15
58 58 Reserved for future use.
59 59
60 60 The following header values are common:
61 61
62 62 00 00 00 01
63 63 RevlogNG
64 64 00 01 00 01
65 65 RevlogNG + inline
66 66 00 02 00 01
67 67 RevlogNG + generaldelta
68 68 00 03 00 01
69 69 RevlogNG + inline + generaldelta
70 70
71 71 Following the 32-bit header is the remainder of the first index entry.
72 72 Following that are remaining *index* data. Inlined revision data is
73 73 possibly located between index entries. More on this layout is described
74 74 below.
75 75
76 76 RevlogNG Format
77 77 ===============
78 78
79 79 RevlogNG (version 1) begins with an index describing the revisions in
80 80 the revlog. If the ``inline`` flag is set, revision data is stored inline,
81 81 or between index entries (as opposed to in a separate container).
82 82
83 83 Each index entry is 64 bytes. The byte layout of each entry is as
84 84 follows, with byte 0 being the first byte (all data stored as big endian):
85 85
86 86 0-3 (4 bytes) (rev 0 only)
87 87 Revlog header
88 88 0-5 (6 bytes)
89 89 Absolute offset of revision data from beginning of revlog.
90 90 6-7 (2 bytes)
91 91 Bit flags impacting revision behavior. The following bit offsets define:
92 0: 'censor' extension flag.
92 0: REVIDX_ISCENSORED revision has censor metadata, must be verified.
93 93 8-11 (4 bytes)
94 94 Compressed length of revision data / chunk as stored in revlog.
95 95 12-15 (4 bytes)
96 96 Uncompressed length of revision data. This is the size of the full
97 97 revision data, not the size of the chunk post decompression.
98 98 16-19 (4 bytes)
99 99 Base or previous revision this revision's delta was produced against.
100 100 -1 means this revision holds full text (as opposed to a delta).
101 101 For generaldelta repos, this is the previous revision in the delta
102 102 chain. For non-generaldelta repos, this is the base or first
103 103 revision in the delta chain.
104 104 20-23 (4 bytes)
105 105 A revision this revision is *linked* to. This allows a revision in
106 106 one revlog to be forever associated with a revision in another
107 107 revlog. For example, a file's revlog may point to the changelog
108 108 revision that introduced it.
109 109 24-27 (4 bytes)
110 110 Revision of 1st parent. -1 indicates no parent.
111 111 28-31 (4 bytes)
112 112 Revision of 2nd parent. -1 indicates no 2nd parent.
113 113 32-63 (32 bytes)
114 114 Hash of revision's full text. Currently, SHA-1 is used and only
115 115 the first 20 bytes of this field are used. The rest of the bytes
116 116 are ignored and should be stored as \0.
117 117
118 118 If inline revision data is being stored, the compressed revision data
119 119 (of length from bytes offset 8-11 from the index entry) immediately
120 120 follows the index entry. There is no header on the revision data. There
121 121 is no padding between it and the index entries before and after.
122 122
123 123 If revision data is not inline, then raw revision data is stored in a
124 124 separate byte container. The offsets from bytes 0-5 and the compressed
125 125 length from bytes 8-11 define how to access this data.
126 126
127 127 The first 4 bytes of the revlog are shared between the revlog header
128 128 and the 6 byte absolute offset field from the first revlog entry.
129 129
130 130 Delta Chains
131 131 ============
132 132
133 133 Revision data is encoded as a chain of *chunks*. Each chain begins with
134 134 the compressed original full text for that revision. Each subsequent
135 135 *chunk* is a *delta* against the previous revision. We therefore call
136 136 these chains of chunks/deltas *delta chains*.
137 137
138 138 The full text for a revision is reconstructed by loading the original
139 139 full text for the base revision of a *delta chain* and then applying
140 140 *deltas* until the target revision is reconstructed.
141 141
142 142 *Delta chains* are limited in length so lookup time is bound. They are
143 143 limited to ~2x the length of the revision's data. The linear distance
144 144 between the base chunk and the final chunk is also limited so the
145 145 amount of read I/O to load all chunks in the delta chain is bound.
146 146
147 147 Deltas and delta chains are either computed against the previous
148 148 revision in the revlog or another revision (almost certainly one of
149 149 the parents of the revision). Historically, deltas were computed against
150 150 the previous revision. The *generaldelta* revlog feature flag (enabled
151 151 by default in Mercurial 3.7) activates the mode where deltas are
152 152 computed against an arbitrary revision (almost certainly a parent revision).
153 153
154 154 File Storage
155 155 ============
156 156
157 157 Revlogs logically consist of an index (metadata of entries) and
158 158 revision data. This data may be stored together in a single file or in
159 159 separate files. The mechanism used is indicated by the ``inline`` feature
160 160 flag on the revlog.
161 161
162 162 Mercurial's behavior is to use inline storage until a revlog reaches a
163 163 certain size, at which point it will be converted to non-inline. The
164 164 reason there is a size limit on inline storage is to establish an upper
165 165 bound on how much data must be read to load the index. It would be a waste
166 166 to read tens or hundreds of extra megabytes of data just to access the
167 167 index data.
168 168
169 169 The actual layout of revlog files on disk is governed by the repository's
170 170 *store format*. Typically, a ``.i`` file represents the index revlog
171 171 (possibly containing inline data) and a ``.d`` file holds the revision data.
172 172
173 173 Revision Entries
174 174 ================
175 175
176 176 Revision entries consist of an optional 1 byte header followed by an
177 177 encoding of the revision data. The headers are as follows:
178 178
179 179 \0 (0x00)
180 180 Revision data is the entirety of the entry, including this header.
181 181 u (0x75)
182 182 Raw revision data follows.
183 183 x (0x78)
184 184 zlib (RFC 1950) data.
185 185
186 186 The 0x78 value is actually the first byte of the zlib header (CMF byte).
187 187
188 188 Hash Computation
189 189 ================
190 190
191 191 The hash of the revision is stored in the index and is used both as a primary
192 192 key and for data integrity verification.
193 193
194 194 Currently, SHA-1 is the only supported hashing algorithm. To obtain the SHA-1
195 195 hash of a revision:
196 196
197 197 1. Hash the parent nodes
198 198 2. Hash the fulltext of the revision
199 199
200 200 The 20 byte node ids of the parents are fed into the hasher in ascending order.
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