##// END OF EJS Templates
revlog: improve the robustness of the splitting process...
revlog: improve the robustness of the splitting process The previous "in-place" splitting, preserving the splitting on transaction failure had a couple of issue in case of transaction rollback: - a race windows that could still lead to a crash and data loss - it corrupted the `fncache`. So instead, we use a new approach that we summarized as "we do a backup of the inline revlog pre-split, and we restore this in case of failure". To make readers live easier, we don't overwrite the inline index file until transaction finalization. (once the transaction get into its finalization phase, it is not expected to rollback, unless some crash happens). To do so, we write the index of the split index in a temporary file that we use until transaction finalization. We also keep a backup of the initial inline file to be able to rollback the split if needed. As a result, transaction rollback cancel the split and no longer corrupt fncache. We also no longer have a small inconsistency windows where the transaction could be unrecoverable.

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_cmp.py
155 lines | 4.0 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
import functools
import types
from ._make import _make_ne
_operation_names = {"eq": "==", "lt": "<", "le": "<=", "gt": ">", "ge": ">="}
def cmp_using(
eq=None,
lt=None,
le=None,
gt=None,
ge=None,
require_same_type=True,
class_name="Comparable",
):
"""
Create a class that can be passed into `attr.ib`'s ``eq``, ``order``, and
``cmp`` arguments to customize field comparison.
The resulting class will have a full set of ordering methods if
at least one of ``{lt, le, gt, ge}`` and ``eq`` are provided.
:param Optional[callable] eq: `callable` used to evaluate equality
of two objects.
:param Optional[callable] lt: `callable` used to evaluate whether
one object is less than another object.
:param Optional[callable] le: `callable` used to evaluate whether
one object is less than or equal to another object.
:param Optional[callable] gt: `callable` used to evaluate whether
one object is greater than another object.
:param Optional[callable] ge: `callable` used to evaluate whether
one object is greater than or equal to another object.
:param bool require_same_type: When `True`, equality and ordering methods
will return `NotImplemented` if objects are not of the same type.
:param Optional[str] class_name: Name of class. Defaults to 'Comparable'.
See `comparison` for more details.
.. versionadded:: 21.1.0
"""
body = {
"__slots__": ["value"],
"__init__": _make_init(),
"_requirements": [],
"_is_comparable_to": _is_comparable_to,
}
# Add operations.
num_order_functions = 0
has_eq_function = False
if eq is not None:
has_eq_function = True
body["__eq__"] = _make_operator("eq", eq)
body["__ne__"] = _make_ne()
if lt is not None:
num_order_functions += 1
body["__lt__"] = _make_operator("lt", lt)
if le is not None:
num_order_functions += 1
body["__le__"] = _make_operator("le", le)
if gt is not None:
num_order_functions += 1
body["__gt__"] = _make_operator("gt", gt)
if ge is not None:
num_order_functions += 1
body["__ge__"] = _make_operator("ge", ge)
type_ = types.new_class(
class_name, (object,), {}, lambda ns: ns.update(body)
)
# Add same type requirement.
if require_same_type:
type_._requirements.append(_check_same_type)
# Add total ordering if at least one operation was defined.
if 0 < num_order_functions < 4:
if not has_eq_function:
# functools.total_ordering requires __eq__ to be defined,
# so raise early error here to keep a nice stack.
raise ValueError(
"eq must be define is order to complete ordering from "
"lt, le, gt, ge."
)
type_ = functools.total_ordering(type_)
return type_
def _make_init():
"""
Create __init__ method.
"""
def __init__(self, value):
"""
Initialize object with *value*.
"""
self.value = value
return __init__
def _make_operator(name, func):
"""
Create operator method.
"""
def method(self, other):
if not self._is_comparable_to(other):
return NotImplemented
result = func(self.value, other.value)
if result is NotImplemented:
return NotImplemented
return result
method.__name__ = "__%s__" % (name,)
method.__doc__ = "Return a %s b. Computed by attrs." % (
_operation_names[name],
)
return method
def _is_comparable_to(self, other):
"""
Check whether `other` is comparable to `self`.
"""
for func in self._requirements:
if not func(self, other):
return False
return True
def _check_same_type(self, other):
"""
Return True if *self* and *other* are of the same type, False otherwise.
"""
return other.value.__class__ is self.value.__class__