##// END OF EJS Templates
util: raise ParseError when parsing dates (BC)...
util: raise ParseError when parsing dates (BC) a7dce526c462 refactored util.parsedate in order to raise ValueError instead of Abort for using with ui.configwith. It causes several problems, putting arbitrary bytes in ValueError can cause issues with Python 3. Moreover, we added a function to convert ValueError exceptions back to Abort. A better approach would be to make parsedate raises ParseError, removing the convert function and update configwith to also catch ParseError. The side-effect is that error message when giving an invalid date in CLI change from: abort: invalid date: 'foo bar' to: hg: parse error: invalid date: 'foo bar' I'm not sure if it's an acceptable change, I found personally the error message more clear but more verbose too.

File last commit:

r28836:3f45488d default
r32462:bb18728e default
Show More
hgclient.py
123 lines | 3.3 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# A minimal client for Mercurial's command server
from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function
import os
import signal
import socket
import struct
import subprocess
import sys
import time
try:
import cStringIO as io
stringio = io.StringIO
except ImportError:
import io
stringio = io.StringIO
def connectpipe(path=None):
cmdline = ['hg', 'serve', '--cmdserver', 'pipe']
if path:
cmdline += ['-R', path]
server = subprocess.Popen(cmdline, stdin=subprocess.PIPE,
stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
return server
class unixconnection(object):
def __init__(self, sockpath):
self.sock = sock = socket.socket(socket.AF_UNIX)
sock.connect(sockpath)
self.stdin = sock.makefile('wb')
self.stdout = sock.makefile('rb')
def wait(self):
self.stdin.close()
self.stdout.close()
self.sock.close()
class unixserver(object):
def __init__(self, sockpath, logpath=None, repopath=None):
self.sockpath = sockpath
cmdline = ['hg', 'serve', '--cmdserver', 'unix', '-a', sockpath]
if repopath:
cmdline += ['-R', repopath]
if logpath:
stdout = open(logpath, 'a')
stderr = subprocess.STDOUT
else:
stdout = stderr = None
self.server = subprocess.Popen(cmdline, stdout=stdout, stderr=stderr)
# wait for listen()
while self.server.poll() is None:
if os.path.exists(sockpath):
break
time.sleep(0.1)
def connect(self):
return unixconnection(self.sockpath)
def shutdown(self):
os.kill(self.server.pid, signal.SIGTERM)
self.server.wait()
def writeblock(server, data):
server.stdin.write(struct.pack('>I', len(data)))
server.stdin.write(data)
server.stdin.flush()
def readchannel(server):
data = server.stdout.read(5)
if not data:
raise EOFError
channel, length = struct.unpack('>cI', data)
if channel in 'IL':
return channel, length
else:
return channel, server.stdout.read(length)
def sep(text):
return text.replace('\\', '/')
def runcommand(server, args, output=sys.stdout, error=sys.stderr, input=None,
outfilter=lambda x: x):
print('*** runcommand', ' '.join(args))
sys.stdout.flush()
server.stdin.write('runcommand\n')
writeblock(server, '\0'.join(args))
if not input:
input = stringio()
while True:
ch, data = readchannel(server)
if ch == 'o':
output.write(outfilter(data))
output.flush()
elif ch == 'e':
error.write(data)
error.flush()
elif ch == 'I':
writeblock(server, input.read(data))
elif ch == 'L':
writeblock(server, input.readline(data))
elif ch == 'r':
ret, = struct.unpack('>i', data)
if ret != 0:
print(' [%d]' % ret)
return ret
else:
print("unexpected channel %c: %r" % (ch, data))
if ch.isupper():
return
def check(func, connect=connectpipe):
sys.stdout.flush()
server = connect()
try:
return func(server)
finally:
server.stdin.close()
server.wait()