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remotefilelog: replace repack lock to solve race condition...
remotefilelog: replace repack lock to solve race condition 2c74337e6483 reduced the probability of race-conditions when starting background repack and prefetch and we saw the difference in our CI instance with all failures disappearing except one where one call to waitonrepack seems to returns too early. I'm not sure what exactly goes wrong but I realized that while the prefetch operation uses a standard Mercurial lock, the repack operation is using a custom lock based on `fcntl.flock` on available platforms. As `extutil.flock` fallback on traditional Mercurial locks on other platforms and the tests are stable on my laptop, our CI environment and GCC112, I'm sending this patch to standardize the behavior across environments. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6844
Boris Feld -
r43213:5fadf610 default
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Requirements

Building the Inno installer requires a Windows machine.

The following system dependencies must be installed:

Building

The build.py script automates the process of producing an Inno installer. It manages fetching and configuring the non-system dependencies (such as py2exe, gettext, and various Python packages).

The script requires an activated Visual C++ 2008 command prompt. A shortcut to such a prompt was installed with Microsoft Visual C++ Compiler for Python 2.7. From your Start Menu, look for Microsoft Visual C++ Compiler Package for Python 2.7 then launch either Visual C++ 2008 32-bit Command Prompt or Visual C++ 2008 64-bit Command Prompt.

From the prompt, change to the Mercurial source directory. e.g. cd c:\src\hg.

Next, invoke build.py to produce an Inno installer. You will need to supply the path to the Python interpreter to use.:

$ python3.exe contrib\packaging\inno\build.py \
    --python c:\python27\python.exe

Note

The script validates that the Visual C++ environment is active and that the architecture of the specified Python interpreter matches the Visual C++ environment and errors if not.

If everything runs as intended, dependencies will be fetched and configured into the build sub-directory, Mercurial will be built, and an installer placed in the dist sub-directory. The final line of output should print the name of the generated installer.

Additional options may be configured. Run build.py --help to see a list of program flags.

MinGW

It is theoretically possible to generate an installer that uses MinGW. This isn't well tested and build.py and may properly support it. See old versions of this file in version control for potentially useful hints as to how to achieve this.