##// END OF EJS Templates
rhg: Port Python’s `ui.configlist` as `Config::get_list`...
rhg: Port Python’s `ui.configlist` as `Config::get_list` This new method is not used yet outside of its own unit tests, so this changeset should make no observable change. The Rust parser implementation attempts to exactly replicate the behavior of the Python one, even in edge cases where that behavior is… surprising. New unit tests capture some of these edge cases. This started as a line-by-line port. The main changes are: * Pass around a parser mode enum instead of parser functions * Inline the whole parser into one function * Use `[u8]::get` which returns an `Option`, instead of indexing after explicitly checking the length. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D11389

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errors.rs
199 lines | 6.4 KiB | application/rls-services+xml | RustLexer
use crate::config::ConfigValueParseError;
use crate::exit_codes;
use std::fmt;
/// Common error cases that can happen in many different APIs
#[derive(Debug, derive_more::From)]
pub enum HgError {
IoError {
error: std::io::Error,
context: IoErrorContext,
},
/// A file under `.hg/` normally only written by Mercurial is not in the
/// expected format. This indicates a bug in Mercurial, filesystem
/// corruption, or hardware failure.
///
/// The given string is a short explanation for users, not intended to be
/// machine-readable.
CorruptedRepository(String),
/// The respository or requested operation involves a feature not
/// supported by the Rust implementation. Falling back to the Python
/// implementation may or may not work.
///
/// The given string is a short explanation for users, not intended to be
/// machine-readable.
UnsupportedFeature(String),
/// Operation cannot proceed for some other reason.
///
/// The message is a short explanation for users, not intended to be
/// machine-readable.
Abort {
message: String,
detailed_exit_code: exit_codes::ExitCode,
},
/// A configuration value is not in the expected syntax.
///
/// These errors can happen in many places in the code because values are
/// parsed lazily as the file-level parser does not know the expected type
/// and syntax of each value.
#[from]
ConfigValueParseError(ConfigValueParseError),
}
/// Details about where an I/O error happened
#[derive(Debug)]
pub enum IoErrorContext {
/// `std::fs::metadata`
ReadingMetadata(std::path::PathBuf),
ReadingFile(std::path::PathBuf),
WritingFile(std::path::PathBuf),
RemovingFile(std::path::PathBuf),
RenamingFile {
from: std::path::PathBuf,
to: std::path::PathBuf,
},
/// `std::fs::canonicalize`
CanonicalizingPath(std::path::PathBuf),
/// `std::env::current_dir`
CurrentDir,
/// `std::env::current_exe`
CurrentExe,
}
impl HgError {
pub fn corrupted(explanation: impl Into<String>) -> Self {
// TODO: capture a backtrace here and keep it in the error value
// to aid debugging?
// https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/backtrace/struct.Backtrace.html
HgError::CorruptedRepository(explanation.into())
}
pub fn unsupported(explanation: impl Into<String>) -> Self {
HgError::UnsupportedFeature(explanation.into())
}
pub fn abort(
explanation: impl Into<String>,
exit_code: exit_codes::ExitCode,
) -> Self {
HgError::Abort {
message: explanation.into(),
detailed_exit_code: exit_code,
}
}
}
// TODO: use `DisplayBytes` instead to show non-Unicode filenames losslessly?
impl fmt::Display for HgError {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result {
match self {
HgError::Abort { message, .. } => write!(f, "{}", message),
HgError::IoError { error, context } => {
write!(f, "abort: {}: {}", context, error)
}
HgError::CorruptedRepository(explanation) => {
write!(f, "abort: {}", explanation)
}
HgError::UnsupportedFeature(explanation) => {
write!(f, "unsupported feature: {}", explanation)
}
HgError::ConfigValueParseError(error) => error.fmt(f),
}
}
}
// TODO: use `DisplayBytes` instead to show non-Unicode filenames losslessly?
impl fmt::Display for IoErrorContext {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result {
match self {
IoErrorContext::ReadingMetadata(path) => {
write!(f, "when reading metadata of {}", path.display())
}
IoErrorContext::ReadingFile(path) => {
write!(f, "when reading {}", path.display())
}
IoErrorContext::WritingFile(path) => {
write!(f, "when writing {}", path.display())
}
IoErrorContext::RemovingFile(path) => {
write!(f, "when removing {}", path.display())
}
IoErrorContext::RenamingFile { from, to } => write!(
f,
"when renaming {} to {}",
from.display(),
to.display()
),
IoErrorContext::CanonicalizingPath(path) => {
write!(f, "when canonicalizing {}", path.display())
}
IoErrorContext::CurrentDir => {
write!(f, "error getting current working directory")
}
IoErrorContext::CurrentExe => {
write!(f, "error getting current executable")
}
}
}
}
pub trait IoResultExt<T> {
/// Annotate a possible I/O error as related to a reading a file at the
/// given path.
///
/// This allows printing something like “File not found when reading
/// example.txt” instead of just “File not found”.
///
/// Converts a `Result` with `std::io::Error` into one with `HgError`.
fn when_reading_file(self, path: &std::path::Path) -> Result<T, HgError>;
fn with_context(
self,
context: impl FnOnce() -> IoErrorContext,
) -> Result<T, HgError>;
}
impl<T> IoResultExt<T> for std::io::Result<T> {
fn when_reading_file(self, path: &std::path::Path) -> Result<T, HgError> {
self.with_context(|| IoErrorContext::ReadingFile(path.to_owned()))
}
fn with_context(
self,
context: impl FnOnce() -> IoErrorContext,
) -> Result<T, HgError> {
self.map_err(|error| HgError::IoError {
error,
context: context(),
})
}
}
pub trait HgResultExt<T> {
/// Handle missing files separately from other I/O error cases.
///
/// Wraps the `Ok` type in an `Option`:
///
/// * `Ok(x)` becomes `Ok(Some(x))`
/// * An I/O "not found" error becomes `Ok(None)`
/// * Other errors are unchanged
fn io_not_found_as_none(self) -> Result<Option<T>, HgError>;
}
impl<T> HgResultExt<T> for Result<T, HgError> {
fn io_not_found_as_none(self) -> Result<Option<T>, HgError> {
match self {
Ok(x) => Ok(Some(x)),
Err(HgError::IoError { error, .. })
if error.kind() == std::io::ErrorKind::NotFound =>
{
Ok(None)
}
Err(other_error) => Err(other_error),
}
}
}