##// END OF EJS Templates
wireprotov2: allow multiple fields to follow revision maps...
wireprotov2: allow multiple fields to follow revision maps The *data wire protocol commands emit a series of CBOR values. Because revision/delta data may be large, their data is emitted outside the map as a top-level bytestring value. Before this commit, we'd emit a single optional bytestring value after the revision descriptor map. This got the job done. But it was limiting in that we could only send a single field. And, it required the consumer to know that the presence of a key in the map implied the existence of a following bytestring value. This commit changes the encoding strategy so top-level bytestring values in the stream are explicitly denoted in a "fieldsfollowing" key. This key contains an array defining what fields that follow and the expected size of each field. By defining things this way, we can easily send N bytestring values without any ambiguity about their order. In addition, clients only need to know how to parse ``fieldsfollowing`` to know if extra values are present. Because this breaks backwards compatibility, we've bumped the version number of the wire protocol version 2 API endpoint. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D4620

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dirstateguard.py
75 lines | 2.6 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# dirstateguard.py - class to allow restoring dirstate after failure
#
# Copyright 2005-2007 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
from __future__ import absolute_import
from .i18n import _
from . import (
error,
narrowspec,
util,
)
class dirstateguard(util.transactional):
'''Restore dirstate at unexpected failure.
At the construction, this class does:
- write current ``repo.dirstate`` out, and
- save ``.hg/dirstate`` into the backup file
This restores ``.hg/dirstate`` from backup file, if ``release()``
is invoked before ``close()``.
This just removes the backup file at ``close()`` before ``release()``.
'''
def __init__(self, repo, name):
self._repo = repo
self._active = False
self._closed = False
self._backupname = 'dirstate.backup.%s.%d' % (name, id(self))
self._narrowspecbackupname = ('narrowspec.backup.%s.%d' %
(name, id(self)))
repo.dirstate.savebackup(repo.currenttransaction(), self._backupname)
narrowspec.savebackup(repo, self._narrowspecbackupname)
self._active = True
def __del__(self):
if self._active: # still active
# this may occur, even if this class is used correctly:
# for example, releasing other resources like transaction
# may raise exception before ``dirstateguard.release`` in
# ``release(tr, ....)``.
self._abort()
def close(self):
if not self._active: # already inactivated
msg = (_("can't close already inactivated backup: %s")
% self._backupname)
raise error.Abort(msg)
self._repo.dirstate.clearbackup(self._repo.currenttransaction(),
self._backupname)
narrowspec.clearbackup(self._repo, self._narrowspecbackupname)
self._active = False
self._closed = True
def _abort(self):
narrowspec.restorebackup(self._repo, self._narrowspecbackupname)
self._repo.dirstate.restorebackup(self._repo.currenttransaction(),
self._backupname)
self._active = False
def release(self):
if not self._closed:
if not self._active: # already inactivated
msg = (_("can't release already inactivated backup: %s")
% self._backupname)
raise error.Abort(msg)
self._abort()