##// END OF EJS Templates
setup: compile zstd C extension...
setup: compile zstd C extension Now that zstd and python-zstandard are vendored, we can start compiling them as part of the install. python-zstandard provides a self-contained Python function that returns a distutils.extension.Extension, so it is really easy to add zstd to our setup.py without having to worry about defining source files, include paths, etc. The function even allows specifying the module name the extension should be compiled as. This conveniently allows us to compile the module into the "mercurial" package so "our" version won't collide with a version installed under the canonical "zstd" module name.

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debugshell.py
59 lines | 1.4 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# debugshell extension
"""a python shell with repo, changelog & manifest objects"""
from __future__ import absolute_import
import code
import mercurial
import sys
from mercurial import (
cmdutil,
demandimport,
)
cmdtable = {}
command = cmdutil.command(cmdtable)
def pdb(ui, repo, msg, **opts):
objects = {
'mercurial': mercurial,
'repo': repo,
'cl': repo.changelog,
'mf': repo.manifestlog,
}
code.interact(msg, local=objects)
def ipdb(ui, repo, msg, **opts):
import IPython
cl = repo.changelog
mf = repo.manifestlog
cl, mf # use variables to appease pyflakes
IPython.embed()
@command('debugshell|dbsh', [])
def debugshell(ui, repo, **opts):
bannermsg = "loaded repo : %s\n" \
"using source: %s" % (repo.root,
mercurial.__path__[0])
pdbmap = {
'pdb' : 'code',
'ipdb' : 'IPython'
}
debugger = ui.config("ui", "debugger")
if not debugger:
debugger = 'pdb'
# if IPython doesn't exist, fallback to code.interact
try:
with demandimport.deactivated():
__import__(pdbmap[debugger])
except ImportError:
ui.warn(("%s debugger specified but %s module was not found\n")
% (debugger, pdbmap[debugger]))
debugger = 'pdb'
getattr(sys.modules[__name__], debugger)(ui, repo, bannermsg, **opts)