##// END OF EJS Templates
scmutil: add a simple key-value file helper...
scmutil: add a simple key-value file helper The purpose of the added class is to serve purposes like save files of shelve or state files of shelve, rebase and histedit. Keys of these files can be alphanumeric and start with letters, while values must not contain newlines. In light of Mercurial's reluctancy to use Python's json module, this tries to provide a reasonable alternative for a non-nested named data. Comparing to current approach of storing state in plain text files, where semantic meaning of lines of text is only determined by their oreder, simple key-value file allows for reordering lines and thus helps handle optional values. Initial use-case I see for this is obs-shelve's shelve files. Later we can possibly migrate state files to this approach. The test is in a new file beause I did not figure out where to put it within existing test suite. If you give me a better idea, I will gladly follow it.

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state.py
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# state.py - fsmonitor persistent state
#
# Copyright 2013-2016 Facebook, Inc.
#
# 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 errno
import os
import socket
import struct
from mercurial.i18n import _
from mercurial import pathutil
_version = 4
_versionformat = ">I"
class state(object):
def __init__(self, repo):
self._vfs = repo.vfs
self._ui = repo.ui
self._rootdir = pathutil.normasprefix(repo.root)
self._lastclock = None
self.mode = self._ui.config('fsmonitor', 'mode', default='on')
self.walk_on_invalidate = self._ui.configbool(
'fsmonitor', 'walk_on_invalidate', False)
self.timeout = float(self._ui.config(
'fsmonitor', 'timeout', default='2'))
def get(self):
try:
file = self._vfs('fsmonitor.state', 'rb')
except IOError as inst:
if inst.errno != errno.ENOENT:
raise
return None, None, None
versionbytes = file.read(4)
if len(versionbytes) < 4:
self._ui.log(
'fsmonitor', 'fsmonitor: state file only has %d bytes, '
'nuking state\n' % len(versionbytes))
self.invalidate()
return None, None, None
try:
diskversion = struct.unpack(_versionformat, versionbytes)[0]
if diskversion != _version:
# different version, nuke state and start over
self._ui.log(
'fsmonitor', 'fsmonitor: version switch from %d to '
'%d, nuking state\n' % (diskversion, _version))
self.invalidate()
return None, None, None
state = file.read().split('\0')
# state = hostname\0clock\0ignorehash\0 + list of files, each
# followed by a \0
if len(state) < 3:
self._ui.log(
'fsmonitor', 'fsmonitor: state file truncated (expected '
'3 chunks, found %d), nuking state\n', len(state))
self.invalidate()
return None, None, None
diskhostname = state[0]
hostname = socket.gethostname()
if diskhostname != hostname:
# file got moved to a different host
self._ui.log('fsmonitor', 'fsmonitor: stored hostname "%s" '
'different from current "%s", nuking state\n' %
(diskhostname, hostname))
self.invalidate()
return None, None, None
clock = state[1]
ignorehash = state[2]
# discard the value after the last \0
notefiles = state[3:-1]
finally:
file.close()
return clock, ignorehash, notefiles
def set(self, clock, ignorehash, notefiles):
if clock is None:
self.invalidate()
return
try:
file = self._vfs('fsmonitor.state', 'wb', atomictemp=True)
except (IOError, OSError):
self._ui.warn(_("warning: unable to write out fsmonitor state\n"))
return
with file:
file.write(struct.pack(_versionformat, _version))
file.write(socket.gethostname() + '\0')
file.write(clock + '\0')
file.write(ignorehash + '\0')
if notefiles:
file.write('\0'.join(notefiles))
file.write('\0')
def invalidate(self):
try:
os.unlink(os.path.join(self._rootdir, '.hg', 'fsmonitor.state'))
except OSError as inst:
if inst.errno != errno.ENOENT:
raise
def setlastclock(self, clock):
self._lastclock = clock
def getlastclock(self):
return self._lastclock