##// END OF EJS Templates
inotify: server: new data structure to keep track of changes....
inotify: server: new data structure to keep track of changes. == Rationale for the new structure == Current structure was a dictionary tree. One directory was tracked as a dictionary: - keys: file/subdir name - values: - for a file, the status (a/r/m/...) - for a subdir, the directory representing the subdir It allowed efficient lookups, no matter of the type of the terminal leaf: for part in path.split('/'): tree = tree[part] However, there is no way to represent a directory and a file with the same name because keys are conflicting in the dictionary. Concrete example: Initial state: root dir |- foo (file) |- bar (file) # data state is: {'foo': 'n', 'bar': 'n'} Remove foo: root dir |- bar (file) # Data becomes {'foo': 'r'} until next commit. Add foo, as a directory, and foo/barbar file: root dir |- bar (file) |-> foo (dir) |- barbar (file) # New state should be represented as: {'foo': {'barbar': 'a'}, 'bar': 'n'} however, the key "foo" is already used and represents the old file. The dirstate: D foo A foo/barbar cannot be represented, hence the need for a new structure. == The new structure == 'directory' class. Represents one directory level. * Notable attributes: Two dictionaries: - 'files' Maps filename -> status for the current dir. - 'dirs' Maps subdir's name -> directory object representing the subdir * methods - walk(), formerly server.walk - lookup(), old server.lookup - dir(), old server.dir This new class allows embedding all the tree walks/lookups in its own class, instead of having everything mixed together in server. Incidently, since files and directories are not stored in the same dictionaries, we are solving the previous key conflict problem. The small drawback is that lookup operation is a bit more complex: for a path a/b/c/d/e we have to check twice the leaf, if e is a directory or a file.

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test-non-interactive-wsgi
68 lines | 1.4 KiB | text/plain | TextLexer
/ tests / test-non-interactive-wsgi
#!/bin/sh
# Tests if hgweb can run without touching sys.stdin, as is required
# by the WSGI standard and strictly implemented by mod_wsgi.
mkdir repo
cd repo
hg init
echo foo > bar
hg add bar
hg commit -m "test"
hg tip
cat > request.py <<EOF
from mercurial import dispatch
from mercurial.hgweb.hgweb_mod import hgweb
from mercurial.ui import ui
from mercurial import hg
from StringIO import StringIO
import os, sys
class FileLike(object):
def __init__(self, real):
self.real = real
def fileno(self):
print >> sys.__stdout__, 'FILENO'
return self.real.fileno()
def read(self):
print >> sys.__stdout__, 'READ'
return self.real.read()
def readline(self):
print >> sys.__stdout__, 'READLINE'
return self.real.readline()
sys.stdin = FileLike(sys.stdin)
errors = StringIO()
input = StringIO()
output = StringIO()
def startrsp(headers, data):
print '---- HEADERS'
print headers
print '---- DATA'
print data
return output.write
env = {
'wsgi.version': (1, 0),
'wsgi.url_scheme': 'http',
'wsgi.errors': errors,
'wsgi.input': input,
'wsgi.multithread': False,
'wsgi.multiprocess': False,
'wsgi.run_once': False,
'REQUEST_METHOD': 'GET',
'SCRIPT_NAME': '',
'PATH_INFO': '',
'QUERY_STRING': '',
'SERVER_NAME': '127.0.0.1',
'SERVER_PORT': os.environ['HGPORT'],
'SERVER_PROTOCOL': 'HTTP/1.0'
}
hgweb('.')(env, startrsp)
print '---- ERRORS'
print errors.getvalue()
EOF
python request.py