##// END OF EJS Templates
phabricator: use .arcconfig for the callsign if not set locally (issue6243)...
phabricator: use .arcconfig for the callsign if not set locally (issue6243) This makes things easier for people working with more than one repository because this file can be committed to each repository. The bug report asks to read <repo>/.arcrc, but AFAICT, that file lives in ~/ and holds the credentials. And we already track an .arcconfig file. Any callsign set globally is still used if that is all that is present, but .arcconfig will override it if available. The idea behind letting the local hgrc override .arcconfig is that the developer may need to do testing against another server, and not dirty the working directory. Originally I was going to just try to read the callsign in `getrepophid()` if it wasn't present in the hg config. That works fine, but I think it also makes sense to read the URL from this file too. That would have worked less well because `readurltoken()` doesn't have access to the repo object to know where to find the file. Supplimenting the config mechanism is less magical because it reports the source and value of the properties used, and it doesn't need to read the file twice. Invalid hgrc files generally cause the program to abort. I only flagged it as a warning here because it's not our config file, not crucial to the whole program operating, and really shouldn't be corrupt in the typical case where it is checked into the repo. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D7934

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attachio.rs
114 lines | 3.7 KiB | application/rls-services+xml | RustLexer
// Copyright 2018 Yuya Nishihara <yuya@tcha.org>
//
// This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
// GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
//! Functions to send client-side fds over the command server channel.
use futures::{Async, Future, Poll};
use std::io;
use std::os::unix::io::AsRawFd;
use tokio_hglib::codec::ChannelMessage;
use tokio_hglib::protocol::MessageLoop;
use tokio_hglib::{Client, Connection};
use super::message;
use super::procutil;
/// Future to send client-side fds over the command server channel.
///
/// This works as follows:
/// 1. Client sends "attachio" request.
/// 2. Server sends back 1-byte input request.
/// 3. Client sends fds with 1-byte dummy payload in response.
/// 4. Server returns the number of the fds received.
///
/// If the stderr is omitted, it will be redirected to the stdout. This
/// allows us to attach the pager stdin to both stdout and stderr, and
/// dispose of the client-side handle once attached.
#[must_use = "futures do nothing unless polled"]
pub struct AttachIo<C, I, O, E>
where
C: Connection,
{
msg_loop: MessageLoop<C>,
stdin: I,
stdout: O,
stderr: Option<E>,
}
impl<C, I, O, E> AttachIo<C, I, O, E>
where
C: Connection + AsRawFd,
I: AsRawFd,
O: AsRawFd,
E: AsRawFd,
{
pub fn with_client(
client: Client<C>,
stdin: I,
stdout: O,
stderr: Option<E>,
) -> AttachIo<C, I, O, E> {
let msg_loop = MessageLoop::start(client, b"attachio");
AttachIo {
msg_loop,
stdin,
stdout,
stderr,
}
}
}
impl<C, I, O, E> Future for AttachIo<C, I, O, E>
where
C: Connection + AsRawFd,
I: AsRawFd,
O: AsRawFd,
E: AsRawFd,
{
type Item = Client<C>;
type Error = io::Error;
fn poll(&mut self) -> Poll<Self::Item, Self::Error> {
loop {
let (client, msg) = try_ready!(self.msg_loop.poll());
match msg {
ChannelMessage::Data(b'r', data) => {
let fd_cnt = message::parse_result_code(data)?;
if fd_cnt == 3 {
return Ok(Async::Ready(client));
} else {
return Err(io::Error::new(
io::ErrorKind::InvalidData,
"unexpected attachio result",
));
}
}
ChannelMessage::Data(..) => {
// just ignore data sent to uninteresting (optional) channel
self.msg_loop = MessageLoop::resume(client);
}
ChannelMessage::InputRequest(1) => {
// this may fail with EWOULDBLOCK in theory, but the
// payload is quite small, and the send buffer should
// be empty so the operation will complete immediately
let sock_fd = client.as_raw_fd();
let ifd = self.stdin.as_raw_fd();
let ofd = self.stdout.as_raw_fd();
let efd = self.stderr.as_ref().map_or(ofd, |f| f.as_raw_fd());
procutil::send_raw_fds(sock_fd, &[ifd, ofd, efd])?;
self.msg_loop = MessageLoop::resume(client);
}
ChannelMessage::InputRequest(..)
| ChannelMessage::LineRequest(..)
| ChannelMessage::SystemRequest(..) => {
return Err(io::Error::new(
io::ErrorKind::InvalidData,
"unsupported request while attaching io",
));
}
}
}
}
}