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errors: add config that lets user get more detailed exit codes...
errors: add config that lets user get more detailed exit codes This adds an experimental config that lets the user get more detailed exit codes. For example, there will be a specific error code for input/user errors. This is part of https://www.mercurial-scm.org/wiki/ErrorCategoriesPlan. I've made the config part of tweakdefaults. I've made the config enabled by default in tests. My reasoning is that we want to see that each specific error case gives the right exit code and we don't want to duplicate all error cases in the entire test suite. It also makes it easy to grep the `.t` files for `[255]` to find which cases we have left to fix. The logic for the current exit codes is quite simple, so I'm not too worried about regressions there. I've added a test case specifically for the "legacy" exit codes. I've set the detailed exit status only for the case of `InterventionRequired` and `SystemExit` for now (the cases where we currently return something other than 255), just to show that it works. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D9238

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cindex.rs
176 lines | 5.6 KiB | application/rls-services+xml | RustLexer
// cindex.rs
//
// Copyright 2018 Georges Racinet <gracinet@anybox.fr>
//
// This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
// GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
//! Bindings to use the Index defined by the parsers C extension
//!
//! Ideally, we should use an Index entirely implemented in Rust,
//! but this will take some time to get there.
use cpython::{
exc::ImportError, ObjectProtocol, PyClone, PyErr, PyObject, PyResult,
PyTuple, Python, PythonObject,
};
use hg::revlog::{Node, RevlogIndex};
use hg::{Graph, GraphError, Revision, WORKING_DIRECTORY_REVISION};
use libc::c_int;
const REVLOG_CABI_VERSION: c_int = 2;
#[repr(C)]
pub struct Revlog_CAPI {
abi_version: c_int,
index_length:
unsafe extern "C" fn(index: *mut revlog_capi::RawPyObject) -> c_int,
index_node: unsafe extern "C" fn(
index: *mut revlog_capi::RawPyObject,
rev: c_int,
) -> *const Node,
index_parents: unsafe extern "C" fn(
index: *mut revlog_capi::RawPyObject,
rev: c_int,
ps: *mut [c_int; 2],
) -> c_int,
}
py_capsule!(
from mercurial.cext.parsers import revlog_CAPI
as revlog_capi for Revlog_CAPI);
/// A `Graph` backed up by objects and functions from revlog.c
///
/// This implementation of the `Graph` trait, relies on (pointers to)
/// - the C index object (`index` member)
/// - the `index_get_parents()` function (`parents` member)
///
/// # Safety
///
/// The C index itself is mutable, and this Rust exposition is **not
/// protected by the GIL**, meaning that this construct isn't safe with respect
/// to Python threads.
///
/// All callers of this `Index` must acquire the GIL and must not release it
/// while working.
///
/// # TODO find a solution to make it GIL safe again.
///
/// This is non trivial, and can wait until we have a clearer picture with
/// more Rust Mercurial constructs.
///
/// One possibility would be to a `GILProtectedIndex` wrapper enclosing
/// a `Python<'p>` marker and have it be the one implementing the
/// `Graph` trait, but this would mean the `Graph` implementor would become
/// likely to change between subsequent method invocations of the `hg-core`
/// objects (a serious change of the `hg-core` API):
/// either exposing ways to mutate the `Graph`, or making it a non persistent
/// parameter in the relevant methods that need one.
///
/// Another possibility would be to introduce an abstract lock handle into
/// the core API, that would be tied to `GILGuard` / `Python<'p>`
/// in the case of the `cpython` crate bindings yet could leave room for other
/// mechanisms in other contexts.
pub struct Index {
index: PyObject,
capi: &'static Revlog_CAPI,
}
impl Index {
pub fn new(py: Python, index: PyObject) -> PyResult<Self> {
let capi = unsafe { revlog_capi::retrieve(py)? };
if capi.abi_version != REVLOG_CABI_VERSION {
return Err(PyErr::new::<ImportError, _>(
py,
format!(
"ABI version mismatch: the C ABI revlog version {} \
does not match the {} expected by Rust hg-cpython",
capi.abi_version, REVLOG_CABI_VERSION
),
));
}
Ok(Index { index, capi })
}
/// return a reference to the CPython Index object in this Struct
pub fn inner(&self) -> &PyObject {
&self.index
}
pub fn append(&mut self, py: Python, tup: PyTuple) -> PyResult<PyObject> {
self.index.call_method(
py,
"append",
PyTuple::new(py, &[tup.into_object()]),
None,
)
}
}
impl Clone for Index {
fn clone(&self) -> Self {
let guard = Python::acquire_gil();
Index {
index: self.index.clone_ref(guard.python()),
capi: self.capi,
}
}
}
impl PyClone for Index {
fn clone_ref(&self, py: Python) -> Self {
Index {
index: self.index.clone_ref(py),
capi: self.capi,
}
}
}
impl Graph for Index {
/// wrap a call to the C extern parents function
fn parents(&self, rev: Revision) -> Result<[Revision; 2], GraphError> {
if rev == WORKING_DIRECTORY_REVISION {
return Err(GraphError::WorkingDirectoryUnsupported);
}
let mut res: [c_int; 2] = [0; 2];
let code = unsafe {
(self.capi.index_parents)(
self.index.as_ptr(),
rev as c_int,
&mut res as *mut [c_int; 2],
)
};
match code {
0 => Ok(res),
_ => Err(GraphError::ParentOutOfRange(rev)),
}
}
}
impl RevlogIndex for Index {
/// Note C return type is Py_ssize_t (hence signed), but we shall
/// force it to unsigned, because it's a length
fn len(&self) -> usize {
unsafe { (self.capi.index_length)(self.index.as_ptr()) as usize }
}
fn node(&self, rev: Revision) -> Option<&Node> {
let raw = unsafe {
(self.capi.index_node)(self.index.as_ptr(), rev as c_int)
};
if raw.is_null() {
None
} else {
// TODO it would be much better for the C layer to give us
// a length, since the hash length will change in the near
// future, but that's probably out of scope for the nodemap
// patch series.
//
// The root of that unsafety relies in the signature of
// `capi.index_node()` itself: returning a `Node` pointer
// whereas it's a `char *` in the C counterpart.
Some(unsafe { &*raw })
}
}
}