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wireprotov2: define and implement "manifestdata" command...
wireprotov2: define and implement "manifestdata" command The added command can be used for obtaining manifest data. Given a manifest path and set of manifest nodes, data about manifests can be retrieved. Unlike changeset data, we wish to emit deltas to describe manifest revisions. So the command uses the relatively new API for building delta requests and emitting them. The code calls into deltaparent(), which I'm not very keen of. There's still work to be done in delta generation land so implementation details of storage (e.g. exactly one delta is stored/available) don't creep into higher levels. But we can worry about this later (there is already a TODO on imanifestorage tracking this). On the subject of parent deltas, the server assumes parent revisions exist on the receiving end. This is obviously wrong for shallow clone. I've added TODOs to add a mechanism to the command to allow clients to specify desired behavior. This shouldn't be too difficult to implement. Another big change is that the client must explicitly request manifest nodes to retrieve. This is a major departure from "getbundle," where the server derives relevant manifests as it iterates changesets and sends them automatically. As implemented, the client must transmit each requested node to the server. At 20 bytes per node, we're looking at 2 MB per 100,000 nodes. Plus wire encoding overhead. This isn't ideal for clients with limited upload bandwidth. I plan to address this in the future by allowing alternate mechanisms for defining the revisions to retrieve. One idea is to define a range of changeset revisions whose manifest revisions to retrieve (similar to how "changesetdata" works). We almost certainly want an API to look up an individual manifest by node. And that's where I've chosen to start with the implementation. Again, a theme of this early exchangev2 work is I want to start by building primitives for accessing raw repository data first and see how far we can get with those before we need more complexity. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D4488

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config.txt
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All config options used within Mercurial should be registered.
Config Option in Core
=====================
Config options used by Mercurial core are registered in the
``mercurial.configitems`` module.
Simple entry
------------
A registration entry typically looks like::
coreconfigitem('section', 'option',
default=MyDefaultValue,
)
Once registered, Mercurial will know that ``section.option`` is a legitimate
config option and that ``MyDefaultValue`` should be used if no other values are
defined in configuration files.
Complex default value
---------------------
If the default provided is a callable, it is called to retrieve the default
value when accessing the config option. This is useful for default values that
are mutable like the empty list::
coreconfigitem('pager', 'ignore',
default=list,
)
In addition, there are cases where the default is not fixed, but computed from
other properties. In this case, use the ``dynamicdefault`` object as the value
for the ``default`` parameter. A default value is then explicitly required when
reading the option::
# registration
coreconfigitem('web', 'name',
default=dynamicdefault,
)
# usage
ui.config('web', 'name', dirname)
Free form options
-----------------
Some config sections use free form options (e.g. ``paths``). You can register
them using the ``generic`` parameters::
coreconfigitem('paths', '.*',
default=None,
generic=True,
)
When ``generic=True`` is set, the option name is matched as a regular expression
(rooted to string start). It can be used to select specific sub parameters::
coreconfigitem('merge-tools', br'.*\.args$',
default="$local $base $other",
generic=True,
priority=-1,
)
The ``priority`` parameter controls the order used to match the generic pattern
(lower first).
Config Option in Extensions
===========================
General case
------------
Extensions should register config items through the ``registrar`` API (also used
for commands and others)::
configtable = {}
configitem = registrar.configitem(configtable)
configitem('blackbox', 'dirty',
default=False,
)
The ``dynamicdefault`` object is then available as
``configitem.dynamicdefault``.
Supporting older versions
-------------------------
The registrar was introduced in Mercurial 4.3, and the ``generic`` parameter was
introduced in 4.4. Starting with Mercurial 4.4, all core options were registered
and developer warnings are emitted when accessing unregistered option.
Extensions supporting versions older than Mercurial 4.3 cannot rely on the
default value being registered. The simplest way to register an option while
still supporting an older version is to use ``dynamicdefault`` for options
requiring a default value. The existing code passing an explicit default can
then stay in use until compatibility with Mercurial 4.2 is dropped.
As reminder, here are the default values for each config type:
- config: None
- configbool: False
- configbytes: 0
- configdate: None
- configint: None
- configlist: []
- configpath: None