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packaging: support building WiX installers with PyOxidizer...
packaging: support building WiX installers with PyOxidizer We initially implemented PyOxidizer support for Inno installers. That did most of the heavy work of integrating PyOxidizer into the packaging system. Implementing WiX installer support was pretty straightforward. Aspects of this patch look very similar to Inno's. The main difference is the handling of the Visual C++ Redistributable Runtime files. The WiX installer was formerly using merge modules to install the VC++ 9.0 runtime because this feature is supported by the WiX installer (it isn't easily available to Inno installers). Our strategy for the runtime files is to install the vcruntime140.dll file next to hg.exe just like any other file. While we could leverage WiX's functionality for invoking a VCRedist installer, I don't want to deal with the complexity at this juncture. So, we let run_pyoxidizer() copy vcruntime140.dll into the staging directory (like it does for Inno) and our dynamic WiX XML generator picks it up as a regular file and installs it. We did, however, have to teach mercurial.wxs how to conditionally use the merge modules. But this was rather straightforward. Comparing the file layout of the WiX installers before and after: * Various lib/*.{pyd, dll} files no longer exist * python27.dll was replaced by python37.dll * vcruntime140.dll was added All these changes are expected due to the transition to Python 3 and to PyOxidizer, which embeded the .pyd and .dll files in hg.exe. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D8477

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mod.rs
21 lines | 1.0 KiB | application/rls-services+xml | RustLexer
/// re2 module
///
/// The Python implementation of Mercurial uses the Re2 regex engine when
/// possible and if the bindings are installed, falling back to Python's `re`
/// in case of unsupported syntax (Re2 is a non-backtracking engine).
///
/// Using it from Rust is not ideal. We need C++ bindings, a C++ compiler,
/// Re2 needs to be installed... why not just use the `regex` crate?
///
/// Using Re2 from the Rust implementation guarantees backwards compatibility.
/// We know it will work out of the box without needing to figure out the
/// subtle differences in syntax. For example, `regex` currently does not
/// support empty alternations (regex like `a||b`) which happens more often
/// than we might think. Old benchmarks also showed worse performance from
/// regex than with Re2, but the methodology and results were lost, so take
/// this with a grain of salt.
///
/// The idea is to use Re2 for now as a temporary phase and then investigate
/// how much work would be needed to use `regex`.
mod re2;
pub use re2::Re2;