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cext: implement osutil.getfstype() on Windows...
cext: implement osutil.getfstype() on Windows This will allow NTFS to be added to the hardlink whitelist, and resume creating hardlinks in transactions (which was disabled globally in 07a92bbd02e5; see also e5ce49a30146). I'll wait until this is accepted before implementing the pure version. It isn't clear to me if the API version should be bumped, but it's new to Windows, so I assume the answer is "yes". I opted to report "cifs" for remote volumes because this shows in `hg debugfs`, which also reports that hardlinks are supported for these volumes. So being able to distinguish it from "unknown" seems useful. The documentation [1] seems to indicate that SMB isn't supported by these functions, but experimenting shows that mapped drives are reported as "NTFS" on Windows 7. I don't have a second Windows machine, but instead shared a temp directory on C:\. In this setup, both of the following were detected as 'cifs' with the explicit GetDriveType() check: Z:\repo>hg ci -A C:\>hg -R \\hostname\temp\repo ci -A # (without Z:\ being mapped) It looks like this is called 6 times to add and commit a single new file, so I'm a little surprised this isn't cached. [1] https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa364993(v=vs.85).aspx

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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))