##// END OF EJS Templates
automation: wait for instance profiles and roles...
automation: wait for instance profiles and roles Otherwise there is a race condition between creating the resources and us attempting to use them / them becoming available. The role waiter API was recently introduced, so we had to upgrade the boto3 package to get it. Other packages were also updated to latest versions just because. Even with this change, I still run into issues with the IAM instance profile not being available when we attempt to create an EC2 instance using a just-created profile. I'm not sure what's going on. Possibly a bug on Amazon's end. But the new behavior is "more correct." Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6286

File last commit:

r16556:f9262456 stable
r42464:8dc22a20 default
Show More
9diff
42 lines | 1.0 KiB | text/plain | TextLexer
#!/bin/rc
# 9diff - Mercurial extdiff wrapper for diff(1)
rfork e
fn getfiles {
cd $1 &&
for(f in `{du -as | awk '{print $2}'})
test -f $f && echo `{cleanname $f}
}
fn usage {
echo >[1=2] usage: 9diff [diff options] parent child root
exit usage
}
opts=()
while(~ $1 -*){
opts=($opts $1)
shift
}
if(! ~ $#* 3)
usage
# extdiff will set the parent and child to a single file if there is
# only one change. If there are multiple changes, directories will be
# set. diff(1) does not cope particularly with directories; instead we
# do the recursion ourselves and diff each file individually.
if(test -f $1)
diff $opts $1 $2
if not{
# extdiff will create a snapshot of the working copy to prevent
# conflicts during the diff. We circumvent this behavior by
# diffing against the repository root to produce plumbable
# output. This is antisocial.
for(f in `{sort -u <{getfiles $1} <{getfiles $2}}){
file1=$1/$f; test -f $file1 || file1=/dev/null
file2=$3/$f; test -f $file2 || file2=/dev/null
diff $opts $file1 $file2
}
}
exit ''