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dirstate: ignore symlinks when fs cannot handle them (issue1888)...
dirstate: ignore symlinks when fs cannot handle them (issue1888) When the filesystem cannot handle the executable bit, we currently ignore it completely when looking for modified files. Similarly, it is impossible to set or clear the bit when the filesystem ignores it. This patch makes Mercurial treat symbolic links the same way. Symlinks are a little different since they manifest themselves as small files containing a filename (the symlink target). On Windows, these files show up as regular files, and on Linux and Mac they show up as real symlinks. Issue1888 presents a case where the symlink files are better ignored from the Windows side. A Linux client creates symlinks in a working copy which is shared over a network between Linux and Windows clients. The Samba server is helpful and defererences the symlink when the Windows client looks at it. This means that Mercurial on the Windows side sees file content instead of a file name in the symlink, and hence flags the link as modified. Ignoring the change would be much more helpful, similarly to how Mercurial does not report any changes when executable bits are ignored in a checkout on Windows. An initial checkout of a symbolic link on a file system that cannot handle symbolic links will still result in a regular file containing the target file name as its content. Sharing such a checkout with a Linux client will not turn the file into a symlink automatically, but 'hg revert' can fix that. After the revert, the Windows client will see the correct file content (provided by the Samba server when it follows the link on the Linux side) and otherwise ignore the change. Running 'hg perfstatus' 10 times gives these results: Before: After: min: 0.544703 min: 0.546549 med: 0.547592 med: 0.548881 avg: 0.549146 avg: 0.548549 max: 0.564112 max: 0.551504 The median time is increased about 0.24%.

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windows.py
376 lines | 12.4 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# windows.py - Windows utility function implementations for Mercurial
#
# Copyright 2005-2009 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> and others
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
from i18n import _
import osutil, error
import errno, msvcrt, os, re, sys, random, subprocess
nulldev = 'NUL:'
umask = 002
# wrap osutil.posixfile to provide friendlier exceptions
def posixfile(name, mode='r', buffering=-1):
try:
return osutil.posixfile(name, mode, buffering)
except WindowsError, err:
raise IOError(err.errno, '%s: %s' % (name, err.strerror))
posixfile.__doc__ = osutil.posixfile.__doc__
class winstdout(object):
'''stdout on windows misbehaves if sent through a pipe'''
def __init__(self, fp):
self.fp = fp
def __getattr__(self, key):
return getattr(self.fp, key)
def close(self):
try:
self.fp.close()
except: pass
def write(self, s):
try:
# This is workaround for "Not enough space" error on
# writing large size of data to console.
limit = 16000
l = len(s)
start = 0
self.softspace = 0
while start < l:
end = start + limit
self.fp.write(s[start:end])
start = end
except IOError, inst:
if inst.errno != 0:
raise
self.close()
raise IOError(errno.EPIPE, 'Broken pipe')
def flush(self):
try:
return self.fp.flush()
except IOError, inst:
if inst.errno != errno.EINVAL:
raise
self.close()
raise IOError(errno.EPIPE, 'Broken pipe')
sys.stdout = winstdout(sys.stdout)
def _is_win_9x():
'''return true if run on windows 95, 98 or me.'''
try:
return sys.getwindowsversion()[3] == 1
except AttributeError:
return 'command' in os.environ.get('comspec', '')
def openhardlinks():
return not _is_win_9x() and "win32api" in globals()
def system_rcpath():
try:
return system_rcpath_win32()
except:
return [r'c:\mercurial\mercurial.ini']
def user_rcpath():
'''return os-specific hgrc search path to the user dir'''
try:
path = user_rcpath_win32()
except:
home = os.path.expanduser('~')
path = [os.path.join(home, 'mercurial.ini'),
os.path.join(home, '.hgrc')]
userprofile = os.environ.get('USERPROFILE')
if userprofile:
path.append(os.path.join(userprofile, 'mercurial.ini'))
path.append(os.path.join(userprofile, '.hgrc'))
return path
def parse_patch_output(output_line):
"""parses the output produced by patch and returns the filename"""
pf = output_line[14:]
if pf[0] == '`':
pf = pf[1:-1] # Remove the quotes
return pf
def sshargs(sshcmd, host, user, port):
'''Build argument list for ssh or Plink'''
pflag = 'plink' in sshcmd.lower() and '-P' or '-p'
args = user and ("%s@%s" % (user, host)) or host
return port and ("%s %s %s" % (args, pflag, port)) or args
def testpid(pid):
'''return False if pid dead, True if running or not known'''
return True
def set_flags(f, l, x):
pass
def set_binary(fd):
# When run without console, pipes may expose invalid
# fileno(), usually set to -1.
if hasattr(fd, 'fileno') and fd.fileno() >= 0:
msvcrt.setmode(fd.fileno(), os.O_BINARY)
def pconvert(path):
return '/'.join(path.split(os.sep))
def localpath(path):
return path.replace('/', '\\')
def normpath(path):
return pconvert(os.path.normpath(path))
def realpath(path):
'''
Returns the true, canonical file system path equivalent to the given
path.
'''
# TODO: There may be a more clever way to do this that also handles other,
# less common file systems.
return os.path.normpath(os.path.normcase(os.path.realpath(path)))
def samestat(s1, s2):
return False
# A sequence of backslashes is special iff it precedes a double quote:
# - if there's an even number of backslashes, the double quote is not
# quoted (i.e. it ends the quoted region)
# - if there's an odd number of backslashes, the double quote is quoted
# - in both cases, every pair of backslashes is unquoted into a single
# backslash
# (See http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/a1y7w461.aspx )
# So, to quote a string, we must surround it in double quotes, double
# the number of backslashes that preceed double quotes and add another
# backslash before every double quote (being careful with the double
# quote we've appended to the end)
_quotere = None
def shellquote(s):
global _quotere
if _quotere is None:
_quotere = re.compile(r'(\\*)("|\\$)')
return '"%s"' % _quotere.sub(r'\1\1\\\2', s)
def quotecommand(cmd):
"""Build a command string suitable for os.popen* calls."""
# The extra quotes are needed because popen* runs the command
# through the current COMSPEC. cmd.exe suppress enclosing quotes.
return '"' + cmd + '"'
def popen(command, mode='r'):
# Work around "popen spawned process may not write to stdout
# under windows"
# http://bugs.python.org/issue1366
command += " 2> %s" % nulldev
return os.popen(quotecommand(command), mode)
def explain_exit(code):
return _("exited with status %d") % code, code
# if you change this stub into a real check, please try to implement the
# username and groupname functions above, too.
def isowner(st):
return True
def find_exe(command):
'''Find executable for command searching like cmd.exe does.
If command is a basename then PATH is searched for command.
PATH isn't searched if command is an absolute or relative path.
An extension from PATHEXT is found and added if not present.
If command isn't found None is returned.'''
pathext = os.environ.get('PATHEXT', '.COM;.EXE;.BAT;.CMD')
pathexts = [ext for ext in pathext.lower().split(os.pathsep)]
if os.path.splitext(command)[1].lower() in pathexts:
pathexts = ['']
def findexisting(pathcommand):
'Will append extension (if needed) and return existing file'
for ext in pathexts:
executable = pathcommand + ext
if os.path.exists(executable):
return executable
return None
if os.sep in command:
return findexisting(command)
for path in os.environ.get('PATH', '').split(os.pathsep):
executable = findexisting(os.path.join(path, command))
if executable is not None:
return executable
return findexisting(os.path.expanduser(os.path.expandvars(command)))
def set_signal_handler():
try:
set_signal_handler_win32()
except NameError:
pass
def statfiles(files):
'''Stat each file in files and yield stat or None if file does not exist.
Cluster and cache stat per directory to minimize number of OS stat calls.'''
ncase = os.path.normcase
dircache = {} # dirname -> filename -> status | None if file does not exist
for nf in files:
nf = ncase(nf)
dir, base = os.path.split(nf)
if not dir:
dir = '.'
cache = dircache.get(dir, None)
if cache is None:
try:
dmap = dict([(ncase(n), s)
for n, k, s in osutil.listdir(dir, True)])
except OSError, err:
# handle directory not found in Python version prior to 2.5
# Python <= 2.4 returns native Windows code 3 in errno
# Python >= 2.5 returns ENOENT and adds winerror field
# EINVAL is raised if dir is not a directory.
if err.errno not in (3, errno.ENOENT, errno.EINVAL,
errno.ENOTDIR):
raise
dmap = {}
cache = dircache.setdefault(dir, dmap)
yield cache.get(base, None)
def getuser():
'''return name of current user'''
raise error.Abort(_('user name not available - set USERNAME '
'environment variable'))
def username(uid=None):
"""Return the name of the user with the given uid.
If uid is None, return the name of the current user."""
return None
def groupname(gid=None):
"""Return the name of the group with the given gid.
If gid is None, return the name of the current group."""
return None
def _removedirs(name):
"""special version of os.removedirs that does not remove symlinked
directories or junction points if they actually contain files"""
if osutil.listdir(name):
return
os.rmdir(name)
head, tail = os.path.split(name)
if not tail:
head, tail = os.path.split(head)
while head and tail:
try:
if osutil.listdir(head):
return
os.rmdir(head)
except:
break
head, tail = os.path.split(head)
def unlink(f):
"""unlink and remove the directory if it is empty"""
os.unlink(f)
# try removing directories that might now be empty
try:
_removedirs(os.path.dirname(f))
except OSError:
pass
def rename(src, dst):
'''atomically rename file src to dst, replacing dst if it exists'''
try:
os.rename(src, dst)
except OSError, err: # FIXME: check err (EEXIST ?)
# On windows, rename to existing file is not allowed, so we
# must delete destination first. But if a file is open, unlink
# schedules it for delete but does not delete it. Rename
# happens immediately even for open files, so we rename
# destination to a temporary name, then delete that. Then
# rename is safe to do.
# The temporary name is chosen at random to avoid the situation
# where a file is left lying around from a previous aborted run.
# The usual race condition this introduces can't be avoided as
# we need the name to rename into, and not the file itself. Due
# to the nature of the operation however, any races will at worst
# lead to the rename failing and the current operation aborting.
def tempname(prefix):
for tries in xrange(10):
temp = '%s-%08x' % (prefix, random.randint(0, 0xffffffff))
if not os.path.exists(temp):
return temp
raise IOError, (errno.EEXIST, "No usable temporary filename found")
temp = tempname(dst)
os.rename(dst, temp)
try:
os.unlink(temp)
except:
# Some rude AV-scanners on Windows may cause the unlink to
# fail. Not aborting here just leaks the temp file, whereas
# aborting at this point may leave serious inconsistencies.
# Ideally, we would notify the user here.
pass
os.rename(src, dst)
def spawndetached(args):
# No standard library function really spawns a fully detached
# process under win32 because they allocate pipes or other objects
# to handle standard streams communications. Passing these objects
# to the child process requires handle inheritance to be enabled
# which makes really detached processes impossible.
class STARTUPINFO:
dwFlags = subprocess.STARTF_USESHOWWINDOW
hStdInput = None
hStdOutput = None
hStdError = None
wShowWindow = subprocess.SW_HIDE
args = subprocess.list2cmdline(args)
# Not running the command in shell mode makes python26 hang when
# writing to hgweb output socket.
comspec = os.environ.get("COMSPEC", "cmd.exe")
args = comspec + " /c " + args
hp, ht, pid, tid = subprocess.CreateProcess(
None, args,
# no special security
None, None,
# Do not inherit handles
0,
# DETACHED_PROCESS
0x00000008,
os.environ,
os.getcwd(),
STARTUPINFO())
return pid
def gethgcmd():
return [sys.executable] + sys.argv[:1]
def termwidth_():
# cmd.exe does not handle CR like a unix console, the CR is
# counted in the line length. On 80 columns consoles, if 80
# characters are written, the following CR won't apply on the
# current line but on the new one. Keep room for it.
return 79
def groupmembers(name):
# Don't support groups on Windows for now
raise KeyError()
try:
# override functions with win32 versions if possible
from win32 import *
except ImportError:
pass
expandglobs = True