##// END OF EJS Templates
stdio: raise StdioError if something goes wrong in ui.flush...
stdio: raise StdioError if something goes wrong in ui.flush The prior code used to ignore all errors, which was intended to deal with a decade-old problem with writing to broken pipes on Windows. However, that code inadvertantly went a lot further, making it impossible to detect *all* I/O errors on stdio ... but only sometimes. What actually happened was that if Mercurial wrote less than a stdio buffer's worth of output (the overwhelmingly common case for most commands), any error that occurred would get swallowed here. But if the buffering strategy changed, an unhandled IOError could be raised from any number of other locations. Because we now have a top-level StdioError handler, and ui._write and ui._write_err (and now flush!) will raise that exception, we have one rational place to detect and handle these errors.

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txnutil.py
36 lines | 1.0 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# txnutil.py - transaction related utilities
#
# Copyright FUJIWARA Katsunori <foozy@lares.dti.ne.jp> and others
#
# 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
import errno
from . import (
encoding,
)
def mayhavepending(root):
'''return whether 'root' may have pending changes, which are
visible to this process.
'''
return root == encoding.environ.get('HG_PENDING')
def trypending(root, vfs, filename, **kwargs):
'''Open file to be read according to HG_PENDING environment variable
This opens '.pending' of specified 'filename' only when HG_PENDING
is equal to 'root'.
This returns '(fp, is_pending_opened)' tuple.
'''
if mayhavepending(root):
try:
return (vfs('%s.pending' % filename, **kwargs), True)
except IOError as inst:
if inst.errno != errno.ENOENT:
raise
return (vfs(filename, **kwargs), False)