##// END OF EJS Templates
interfaces: mark a few dirstate methods abstract...
interfaces: mark a few dirstate methods abstract I'm not sure what's going on here, but when enabling pytype checking on this package, it spits out the following errors: File "/mnt/c/Users/Matt/hg/mercurial/interfaces/dirstate.py", line 136, in changing_parents: bad return type [bad-return-type] Expected: Iterator Actually returned: None Attributes of protocol Iterator are not implemented on None: __next__ File "/mnt/c/Users/Matt/hg/mercurial/interfaces/dirstate.py", line 145, in changing_files: bad return type [bad-return-type] Expected: Iterator Actually returned: None Attributes of protocol Iterator are not implemented on None: __next__ I guess technically that's true, because these methods only have a doc comment, and don't explicitly return something or unconditionally raise an error. The strange thing is that both before and after this change, the *.pyi file that is generated is unchanged, and contains: def changing_files(self, repo) -> contextlib._GeneratorContextManager: ... def changing_parents(self, repo) -> contextlib._GeneratorContextManager: ... I'm not sure if the `@abstractmethod` should be the most inner or most outer decoration. We'll roll the dice with being the innermost, because that's how `@abstractproperty` says it should be used in conjunction with `@property`. We should probably make all of the methods without an actual body abstract, like was done for some `mercurial.wireprototypes` classes in fd200f5bcaea. But let's hold off for now and do that enmass later.

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bitmanipulation.h
77 lines | 1.7 KiB | text/x-c | CLexer
#ifndef HG_BITMANIPULATION_H
#define HG_BITMANIPULATION_H
#include <string.h>
#include "compat.h"
/* Reads a 64 bit integer from big-endian bytes. Assumes that the data is long
enough */
static inline uint64_t getbe64(const char *c)
{
const unsigned char *d = (const unsigned char *)c;
return ((((uint64_t)d[0]) << 56) | (((uint64_t)d[1]) << 48) |
(((uint64_t)d[2]) << 40) | (((uint64_t)d[3]) << 32) |
(((uint64_t)d[4]) << 24) | (((uint64_t)d[5]) << 16) |
(((uint64_t)d[6]) << 8) | (d[7]));
}
static inline uint32_t getbe32(const char *c)
{
const unsigned char *d = (const unsigned char *)c;
return ((((uint32_t)d[0]) << 24) | (((uint32_t)d[1]) << 16) |
(((uint32_t)d[2]) << 8) | (d[3]));
}
static inline int16_t getbeint16(const char *c)
{
const unsigned char *d = (const unsigned char *)c;
return ((d[0] << 8) | (d[1]));
}
static inline uint16_t getbeuint16(const char *c)
{
const unsigned char *d = (const unsigned char *)c;
return ((d[0] << 8) | (d[1]));
}
/* Writes a 64 bit integer to bytes in a big-endian format.
Assumes that the buffer is long enough */
static inline void putbe64(uint64_t x, char *c)
{
c[0] = (x >> 56) & 0xff;
c[1] = (x >> 48) & 0xff;
c[2] = (x >> 40) & 0xff;
c[3] = (x >> 32) & 0xff;
c[4] = (x >> 24) & 0xff;
c[5] = (x >> 16) & 0xff;
c[6] = (x >> 8) & 0xff;
c[7] = (x)&0xff;
}
static inline void putbe32(uint32_t x, char *c)
{
c[0] = (x >> 24) & 0xff;
c[1] = (x >> 16) & 0xff;
c[2] = (x >> 8) & 0xff;
c[3] = (x)&0xff;
}
static inline double getbefloat64(const char *c)
{
const unsigned char *d = (const unsigned char *)c;
double ret;
int i;
uint64_t t = 0;
for (i = 0; i < 8; i++) {
t = (t << 8) + d[i];
}
memcpy(&ret, &t, sizeof(t));
return ret;
}
#endif