##// END OF EJS Templates
wireproto: define and implement protocol for issuing requests...
wireproto: define and implement protocol for issuing requests The existing HTTP and SSH wire protocols suffer from a host of flaws and shortcomings. I've been wanting to rewrite the protocol for a while now. Supporting partial clone - which will require new wire protocol commands and capabilities - and other advanced server functionality will be much easier if we start from a clean slate and don't have to be constrained by limitations of the existing wire protocol. This commit starts to introduce a new data exchange format for use over the wire protocol. The new protocol is built on top of "frames," which are atomic units of metadata + data. Frames will make it easier to implement proxies and other mechanisms that want to inspect data without having to maintain state. The existing frame metadata is very minimal and it will evolve heavily. (We will eventually support things like concurrent requests, out-of-order responses, compression, side-channels for status updates, etc. Some of these will require additions to the frame header.) Another benefit of frames is that all reads are of a fixed size. A reader works by consuming a frame header, extracting the payload length, then reading that many bytes. No lookahead, buffering, or memory reallocations are needed. The new protocol attempts to be transport agnostic. I want all that's required to use the new protocol to be a pair of unidirectional, half-duplex pipes. (Yes, we will eventually make use of full-duplex pipes, but that's for another commit.) Notably, when the SSH transport switches to this new protocol, stderr will be unused. This is by design: the lack of stderr on HTTP harms protocol behavior there. By shoehorning everything into a pair of pipes, we can have more consistent behavior across transports. We currently only define the client side parts of the new protocol, specifically the bits for requesting that a command run. This keeps the new code and feature small and somewhat easy to review. We add support to `hg debugwireproto` for writing frames into HTTP request bodies. Our tests that issue commands to the new HTTP endpoint have been updated to transmit frames. The server bits haven't been touched to consume the frames yet. This will occur in the next commit... Astute readers may notice that the command name is transmitted in both the HTTP request URL and the command request frame. This is partially a kludge from me initially implementing the frame-based protocol for SSH first. But it is also a feature: I intend to eventually support issuing multiple commands per HTTP request. This will allow us to replace the abomination that is the "batch" wire protocol command with a protocol-level mechanism for performing multi-dispatch. Because I want the frame-based protocol to be as similar as possible across transports, I'd rather we (redundantly) include the command name in the frame than differ behavior between transports that have out-of-band routing information (like HTTP) readily available. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D2851

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lock.py
389 lines | 12.8 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# lock.py - simple advisory locking scheme for mercurial
#
# Copyright 2005, 2006 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>
#
# 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 contextlib
import errno
import os
import signal
import socket
import time
import warnings
from .i18n import _
from . import (
encoding,
error,
pycompat,
util,
)
def _getlockprefix():
"""Return a string which is used to differentiate pid namespaces
It's useful to detect "dead" processes and remove stale locks with
confidence. Typically it's just hostname. On modern linux, we include an
extra Linux-specific pid namespace identifier.
"""
result = encoding.strtolocal(socket.gethostname())
if pycompat.sysplatform.startswith('linux'):
try:
result += '/%x' % os.stat('/proc/self/ns/pid').st_ino
except OSError as ex:
if ex.errno not in (errno.ENOENT, errno.EACCES, errno.ENOTDIR):
raise
return result
@contextlib.contextmanager
def _delayedinterrupt():
"""Block signal interrupt while doing something critical
This makes sure that the code block wrapped by this context manager won't
be interrupted.
For Windows developers: It appears not possible to guard time.sleep()
from CTRL_C_EVENT, so please don't use time.sleep() to test if this is
working.
"""
assertedsigs = []
blocked = False
orighandlers = {}
def raiseinterrupt(num):
if (num == getattr(signal, 'SIGINT', None) or
num == getattr(signal, 'CTRL_C_EVENT', None)):
raise KeyboardInterrupt
else:
raise error.SignalInterrupt
def catchterm(num, frame):
if blocked:
assertedsigs.append(num)
else:
raiseinterrupt(num)
try:
# save handlers first so they can be restored even if a setup is
# interrupted between signal.signal() and orighandlers[] =.
for name in ['CTRL_C_EVENT', 'SIGINT', 'SIGBREAK', 'SIGHUP', 'SIGTERM']:
num = getattr(signal, name, None)
if num and num not in orighandlers:
orighandlers[num] = signal.getsignal(num)
try:
for num in orighandlers:
signal.signal(num, catchterm)
except ValueError:
pass # in a thread? no luck
blocked = True
yield
finally:
# no simple way to reliably restore all signal handlers because
# any loops, recursive function calls, except blocks, etc. can be
# interrupted. so instead, make catchterm() raise interrupt.
blocked = False
try:
for num, handler in orighandlers.items():
signal.signal(num, handler)
except ValueError:
pass # in a thread?
# re-raise interrupt exception if any, which may be shadowed by a new
# interrupt occurred while re-raising the first one
if assertedsigs:
raiseinterrupt(assertedsigs[0])
def trylock(ui, vfs, lockname, timeout, warntimeout, *args, **kwargs):
"""return an acquired lock or raise an a LockHeld exception
This function is responsible to issue warnings and or debug messages about
the held lock while trying to acquires it."""
def printwarning(printer, locker):
"""issue the usual "waiting on lock" message through any channel"""
# show more details for new-style locks
if ':' in locker:
host, pid = locker.split(":", 1)
msg = (_("waiting for lock on %s held by process %r on host %r\n")
% (pycompat.bytestr(l.desc), pycompat.bytestr(pid),
pycompat.bytestr(host)))
else:
msg = (_("waiting for lock on %s held by %r\n")
% (l.desc, pycompat.bytestr(locker)))
printer(msg)
l = lock(vfs, lockname, 0, *args, dolock=False, **kwargs)
debugidx = 0 if (warntimeout and timeout) else -1
warningidx = 0
if not timeout:
warningidx = -1
elif warntimeout:
warningidx = warntimeout
delay = 0
while True:
try:
l._trylock()
break
except error.LockHeld as inst:
if delay == debugidx:
printwarning(ui.debug, inst.locker)
if delay == warningidx:
printwarning(ui.warn, inst.locker)
if timeout <= delay:
raise error.LockHeld(errno.ETIMEDOUT, inst.filename,
l.desc, inst.locker)
time.sleep(1)
delay += 1
l.delay = delay
if l.delay:
if 0 <= warningidx <= l.delay:
ui.warn(_("got lock after %d seconds\n") % l.delay)
else:
ui.debug("got lock after %d seconds\n" % l.delay)
if l.acquirefn:
l.acquirefn()
return l
class lock(object):
'''An advisory lock held by one process to control access to a set
of files. Non-cooperating processes or incorrectly written scripts
can ignore Mercurial's locking scheme and stomp all over the
repository, so don't do that.
Typically used via localrepository.lock() to lock the repository
store (.hg/store/) or localrepository.wlock() to lock everything
else under .hg/.'''
# lock is symlink on platforms that support it, file on others.
# symlink is used because create of directory entry and contents
# are atomic even over nfs.
# old-style lock: symlink to pid
# new-style lock: symlink to hostname:pid
_host = None
def __init__(self, vfs, file, timeout=-1, releasefn=None, acquirefn=None,
desc=None, inheritchecker=None, parentlock=None,
dolock=True):
self.vfs = vfs
self.f = file
self.held = 0
self.timeout = timeout
self.releasefn = releasefn
self.acquirefn = acquirefn
self.desc = desc
self._inheritchecker = inheritchecker
self.parentlock = parentlock
self._parentheld = False
self._inherited = False
self.postrelease = []
self.pid = self._getpid()
if dolock:
self.delay = self.lock()
if self.acquirefn:
self.acquirefn()
def __enter__(self):
return self
def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, exc_tb):
self.release()
def __del__(self):
if self.held:
warnings.warn("use lock.release instead of del lock",
category=DeprecationWarning,
stacklevel=2)
# ensure the lock will be removed
# even if recursive locking did occur
self.held = 1
self.release()
def _getpid(self):
# wrapper around util.getpid() to make testing easier
return util.getpid()
def lock(self):
timeout = self.timeout
while True:
try:
self._trylock()
return self.timeout - timeout
except error.LockHeld as inst:
if timeout != 0:
time.sleep(1)
if timeout > 0:
timeout -= 1
continue
raise error.LockHeld(errno.ETIMEDOUT, inst.filename, self.desc,
inst.locker)
def _trylock(self):
if self.held:
self.held += 1
return
if lock._host is None:
lock._host = _getlockprefix()
lockname = '%s:%d' % (lock._host, self.pid)
retry = 5
while not self.held and retry:
retry -= 1
try:
with _delayedinterrupt():
self.vfs.makelock(lockname, self.f)
self.held = 1
except (OSError, IOError) as why:
if why.errno == errno.EEXIST:
locker = self._readlock()
if locker is None:
continue
# special case where a parent process holds the lock -- this
# is different from the pid being different because we do
# want the unlock and postrelease functions to be called,
# but the lockfile to not be removed.
if locker == self.parentlock:
self._parentheld = True
self.held = 1
return
locker = self._testlock(locker)
if locker is not None:
raise error.LockHeld(errno.EAGAIN,
self.vfs.join(self.f), self.desc,
locker)
else:
raise error.LockUnavailable(why.errno, why.strerror,
why.filename, self.desc)
if not self.held:
# use empty locker to mean "busy for frequent lock/unlock
# by many processes"
raise error.LockHeld(errno.EAGAIN,
self.vfs.join(self.f), self.desc, "")
def _readlock(self):
"""read lock and return its value
Returns None if no lock exists, pid for old-style locks, and host:pid
for new-style locks.
"""
try:
return self.vfs.readlock(self.f)
except (OSError, IOError) as why:
if why.errno == errno.ENOENT:
return None
raise
def _testlock(self, locker):
if locker is None:
return None
try:
host, pid = locker.split(":", 1)
except ValueError:
return locker
if host != lock._host:
return locker
try:
pid = int(pid)
except ValueError:
return locker
if util.testpid(pid):
return locker
# if locker dead, break lock. must do this with another lock
# held, or can race and break valid lock.
try:
l = lock(self.vfs, self.f + '.break', timeout=0)
self.vfs.unlink(self.f)
l.release()
except error.LockError:
return locker
def testlock(self):
"""return id of locker if lock is valid, else None.
If old-style lock, we cannot tell what machine locker is on.
with new-style lock, if locker is on this machine, we can
see if locker is alive. If locker is on this machine but
not alive, we can safely break lock.
The lock file is only deleted when None is returned.
"""
locker = self._readlock()
return self._testlock(locker)
@contextlib.contextmanager
def inherit(self):
"""context for the lock to be inherited by a Mercurial subprocess.
Yields a string that will be recognized by the lock in the subprocess.
Communicating this string to the subprocess needs to be done separately
-- typically by an environment variable.
"""
if not self.held:
raise error.LockInheritanceContractViolation(
'inherit can only be called while lock is held')
if self._inherited:
raise error.LockInheritanceContractViolation(
'inherit cannot be called while lock is already inherited')
if self._inheritchecker is not None:
self._inheritchecker()
if self.releasefn:
self.releasefn()
if self._parentheld:
lockname = self.parentlock
else:
lockname = '%s:%s' % (lock._host, self.pid)
self._inherited = True
try:
yield lockname
finally:
if self.acquirefn:
self.acquirefn()
self._inherited = False
def release(self):
"""release the lock and execute callback function if any
If the lock has been acquired multiple times, the actual release is
delayed to the last release call."""
if self.held > 1:
self.held -= 1
elif self.held == 1:
self.held = 0
if self._getpid() != self.pid:
# we forked, and are not the parent
return
try:
if self.releasefn:
self.releasefn()
finally:
if not self._parentheld:
try:
self.vfs.unlink(self.f)
except OSError:
pass
# The postrelease functions typically assume the lock is not held
# at all.
if not self._parentheld:
for callback in self.postrelease:
callback()
# Prevent double usage and help clear cycles.
self.postrelease = None
def release(*locks):
for lock in locks:
if lock is not None:
lock.release()