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revlog: rewrite censoring logic...
revlog: rewrite censoring logic I was able to corrupt a revlog relatively easily with the existing censoring code. The underlying problem is that the existing code doesn't fully take delta chains into account. When copying revisions that occur after the censored revision, the delta base can refer to a censored revision. Then at read time, things blow up due to the revision data not being a compressed delta. This commit rewrites the revlog censoring code to take a higher-level approach. We now create a new revlog instance pointing at temp files. We iterate through each revision in the source revlog and insert those revisions into the new revlog, replacing the censored revision's data along the way. The new implementation isn't as efficient as the old one. This is because it will fully engage delta computation on insertion. But I don't think it matters. The new implementation is a bit hacky because it attempts to reload the revlog instance with a new revlog index/data file. This is fragile. But this is needed because the index (which could be backed by C) would have a cached copy of the old, possibly changed data and that could lead to problems accessing index or revision data later. One benefit of the new approach is that we integrate with the transaction. The old revlog is backed up and if the transaction is rolled back, the original revlog is restored. As part of this, we had to teach the transaction about the store vfs. I'm not super keen about this. But this was the easiest way to hook things up to the transaction. We /could/ just ignore the transaction like we were doing before. But any file mutation should be governed by transaction semantics, including undo during rollback. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D4869

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_compat.py
90 lines | 2.8 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
import sys
import types
PY2 = sys.version_info[0] == 2
if PY2:
from UserDict import IterableUserDict
# We 'bundle' isclass instead of using inspect as importing inspect is
# fairly expensive (order of 10-15 ms for a modern machine in 2016)
def isclass(klass):
return isinstance(klass, (type, types.ClassType))
# TYPE is used in exceptions, repr(int) is different on Python 2 and 3.
TYPE = "type"
def iteritems(d):
return d.iteritems()
def iterkeys(d):
return d.iterkeys()
# Python 2 is bereft of a read-only dict proxy, so we make one!
class ReadOnlyDict(IterableUserDict):
"""
Best-effort read-only dict wrapper.
"""
def __setitem__(self, key, val):
# We gently pretend we're a Python 3 mappingproxy.
raise TypeError("'mappingproxy' object does not support item "
"assignment")
def update(self, _):
# We gently pretend we're a Python 3 mappingproxy.
raise AttributeError("'mappingproxy' object has no attribute "
"'update'")
def __delitem__(self, _):
# We gently pretend we're a Python 3 mappingproxy.
raise TypeError("'mappingproxy' object does not support item "
"deletion")
def clear(self):
# We gently pretend we're a Python 3 mappingproxy.
raise AttributeError("'mappingproxy' object has no attribute "
"'clear'")
def pop(self, key, default=None):
# We gently pretend we're a Python 3 mappingproxy.
raise AttributeError("'mappingproxy' object has no attribute "
"'pop'")
def popitem(self):
# We gently pretend we're a Python 3 mappingproxy.
raise AttributeError("'mappingproxy' object has no attribute "
"'popitem'")
def setdefault(self, key, default=None):
# We gently pretend we're a Python 3 mappingproxy.
raise AttributeError("'mappingproxy' object has no attribute "
"'setdefault'")
def __repr__(self):
# Override to be identical to the Python 3 version.
return "mappingproxy(" + repr(self.data) + ")"
def metadata_proxy(d):
res = ReadOnlyDict()
res.data.update(d) # We blocked update, so we have to do it like this.
return res
else:
def isclass(klass):
return isinstance(klass, type)
TYPE = "class"
def iteritems(d):
return d.items()
def iterkeys(d):
return d.keys()
def metadata_proxy(d):
return types.MappingProxyType(dict(d))