##// END OF EJS Templates
registrar: replace "cmdtype" with an intent-based mechanism (API)...
registrar: replace "cmdtype" with an intent-based mechanism (API) Commands perform varied actions and repositories vary in their capabilities. Historically, the .hg/requires file has been used to lock out clients lacking a requirement. But this is a very heavy-handed approach and is typically reserved for cases where the on-disk storage format changes and we want to prevent incompatible clients from operating on a repo. Outside of the .hg/requires file, we tend to deal with things like optional, extension-provided features via checking at call sites. We'll either have checks in core or extensions will monkeypatch functions in core disabling incompatible features, enabling new features, etc. Things are somewhat tolerable today. But once we introduce alternate storage backends with varying support for repository features and vastly different modes of behavior, the current model will quickly grow unwieldy. For example, the implementation of the "simple store" required a lot of hacks to deal with stripping and verify because various parts of core assume things are implemented a certain way. Partial clone will require new ways of modeling file data retrieval, because we can no longer assume that all file data is already local. In this new world, some commands might not make any sense for certain types of repositories. What we need is a mechanism to affect the construction of repository (and eventually peer) instances so the requirements/capabilities needed for the current operation can be taken into account. "Current operation" can almost certainly be defined by a command. So it makes sense for commands to declare their intended actions. This commit introduces the "intents" concept on the command registrar. "intents" captures a set of strings that declare actions that are anticipated to be taken, requirements the repository must possess, etc. These intents will be passed into hg.repo(), which will pass them into localrepository, where they can be used to influence the object being created. Some use cases for this include: * For read-only intents, constructing a repository object that doesn't expose methods that can mutate the repository. Its VFS instances don't even allow opening a file with write access. * For read-only intents, constructing a repository object without cache invalidation logic. If the repo never changes during its lifetime, nothing ever needs to be invalidated and we don't need to do expensive things like verify the changelog's hidden revisions state is accurate every time we access repo.changelog. * We can automatically hide commands from `hg help` when the current repository doesn't provide that command. For example, an alternate storage backend may not support `hg commit`, so we can hide that command or anything else that would perform local commits. We already kind of had an "intents" mechanism on the registrar in the form of "cmdtype." However, it was never used. And it was limited to a single value. We really need something that supports multiple intents. And because intents may be defined by extensions and at this point are advisory, I think it is best to define them in a set rather than as separate arguments/attributes on the command. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D3376

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bdiff.c
320 lines | 6.9 KiB | text/x-c | CLexer
/*
bdiff.c - efficient binary diff extension for Mercurial
Copyright 2005, 2006 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>
This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of
the GNU General Public License, incorporated herein by reference.
Based roughly on Python difflib
*/
#include <limits.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include "bdiff.h"
#include "bitmanipulation.h"
#include "compat.h"
/* Hash implementation from diffutils */
#define ROL(v, n) ((v) << (n) | (v) >> (sizeof(v) * CHAR_BIT - (n)))
#define HASH(h, c) ((c) + ROL(h, 7))
struct pos {
int pos, len;
};
int bdiff_splitlines(const char *a, ssize_t len, struct bdiff_line **lr)
{
unsigned hash;
int i;
const char *p, *b = a;
const char *const plast = a + len - 1;
struct bdiff_line *l;
/* count the lines */
i = 1; /* extra line for sentinel */
for (p = a; p < plast; p++)
if (*p == '\n')
i++;
if (p == plast)
i++;
*lr = l = (struct bdiff_line *)calloc(i, sizeof(struct bdiff_line));
if (!l)
return -1;
/* build the line array and calculate hashes */
hash = 0;
for (p = a; p < plast; p++) {
hash = HASH(hash, *p);
if (*p == '\n') {
l->hash = hash;
hash = 0;
l->len = p - b + 1;
l->l = b;
l->n = INT_MAX;
l++;
b = p + 1;
}
}
if (p == plast) {
hash = HASH(hash, *p);
l->hash = hash;
l->len = p - b + 1;
l->l = b;
l->n = INT_MAX;
l++;
}
/* set up a sentinel */
l->hash = 0;
l->len = 0;
l->l = a + len;
return i - 1;
}
static inline int cmp(struct bdiff_line *a, struct bdiff_line *b)
{
return a->hash != b->hash || a->len != b->len ||
memcmp(a->l, b->l, a->len);
}
static int equatelines(struct bdiff_line *a, int an, struct bdiff_line *b,
int bn)
{
int i, j, buckets = 1, t, scale;
struct pos *h = NULL;
/* build a hash table of the next highest power of 2 */
while (buckets < bn + 1)
buckets *= 2;
/* try to allocate a large hash table to avoid collisions */
for (scale = 4; scale; scale /= 2) {
h = (struct pos *)calloc(buckets, scale * sizeof(struct pos));
if (h)
break;
}
if (!h)
return 0;
buckets = buckets * scale - 1;
/* clear the hash table */
for (i = 0; i <= buckets; i++) {
h[i].pos = -1;
h[i].len = 0;
}
/* add lines to the hash table chains */
for (i = 0; i < bn; i++) {
/* find the equivalence class */
for (j = b[i].hash & buckets; h[j].pos != -1;
j = (j + 1) & buckets)
if (!cmp(b + i, b + h[j].pos))
break;
/* add to the head of the equivalence class */
b[i].n = h[j].pos;
b[i].e = j;
h[j].pos = i;
h[j].len++; /* keep track of popularity */
}
/* compute popularity threshold */
t = (bn >= 31000) ? bn / 1000 : 1000000 / (bn + 1);
/* match items in a to their equivalence class in b */
for (i = 0; i < an; i++) {
/* find the equivalence class */
for (j = a[i].hash & buckets; h[j].pos != -1;
j = (j + 1) & buckets)
if (!cmp(a + i, b + h[j].pos))
break;
a[i].e = j; /* use equivalence class for quick compare */
if (h[j].len <= t)
a[i].n = h[j].pos; /* point to head of match list */
else
a[i].n = -1; /* too popular */
}
/* discard hash tables */
free(h);
return 1;
}
static int longest_match(struct bdiff_line *a, struct bdiff_line *b,
struct pos *pos, int a1, int a2, int b1, int b2,
int *omi, int *omj)
{
int mi = a1, mj = b1, mk = 0, i, j, k, half, bhalf;
/* window our search on large regions to better bound
worst-case performance. by choosing a window at the end, we
reduce skipping overhead on the b chains. */
if (a2 - a1 > 30000)
a1 = a2 - 30000;
half = (a1 + a2 - 1) / 2;
bhalf = (b1 + b2 - 1) / 2;
for (i = a1; i < a2; i++) {
/* skip all lines in b after the current block */
for (j = a[i].n; j >= b2; j = b[j].n)
;
/* loop through all lines match a[i] in b */
for (; j >= b1; j = b[j].n) {
/* does this extend an earlier match? */
for (k = 1; j - k >= b1 && i - k >= a1; k++) {
/* reached an earlier match? */
if (pos[j - k].pos == i - k) {
k += pos[j - k].len;
break;
}
/* previous line mismatch? */
if (a[i - k].e != b[j - k].e)
break;
}
pos[j].pos = i;
pos[j].len = k;
/* best match so far? we prefer matches closer
to the middle to balance recursion */
if (k > mk) {
/* a longer match */
mi = i;
mj = j;
mk = k;
} else if (k == mk) {
if (i > mi && i <= half && j > b1) {
/* same match but closer to half */
mi = i;
mj = j;
} else if (i == mi && (mj > bhalf || i == a1)) {
/* same i but best earlier j */
mj = j;
}
}
}
}
if (mk) {
mi = mi - mk + 1;
mj = mj - mk + 1;
}
/* expand match to include subsequent popular lines */
while (mi + mk < a2 && mj + mk < b2 && a[mi + mk].e == b[mj + mk].e)
mk++;
*omi = mi;
*omj = mj;
return mk;
}
static struct bdiff_hunk *recurse(struct bdiff_line *a, struct bdiff_line *b,
struct pos *pos, int a1, int a2, int b1,
int b2, struct bdiff_hunk *l)
{
int i, j, k;
while (1) {
/* find the longest match in this chunk */
k = longest_match(a, b, pos, a1, a2, b1, b2, &i, &j);
if (!k)
return l;
/* and recurse on the remaining chunks on either side */
l = recurse(a, b, pos, a1, i, b1, j, l);
if (!l)
return NULL;
l->next =
(struct bdiff_hunk *)malloc(sizeof(struct bdiff_hunk));
if (!l->next)
return NULL;
l = l->next;
l->a1 = i;
l->a2 = i + k;
l->b1 = j;
l->b2 = j + k;
l->next = NULL;
/* tail-recursion didn't happen, so do equivalent iteration */
a1 = i + k;
b1 = j + k;
}
}
int bdiff_diff(struct bdiff_line *a, int an, struct bdiff_line *b, int bn,
struct bdiff_hunk *base)
{
struct bdiff_hunk *curr;
struct pos *pos;
int t, count = 0;
/* allocate and fill arrays */
t = equatelines(a, an, b, bn);
pos = (struct pos *)calloc(bn ? bn : 1, sizeof(struct pos));
if (pos && t) {
/* generate the matching block list */
curr = recurse(a, b, pos, 0, an, 0, bn, base);
if (!curr)
return -1;
/* sentinel end hunk */
curr->next =
(struct bdiff_hunk *)malloc(sizeof(struct bdiff_hunk));
if (!curr->next)
return -1;
curr = curr->next;
curr->a1 = curr->a2 = an;
curr->b1 = curr->b2 = bn;
curr->next = NULL;
}
free(pos);
/* normalize the hunk list, try to push each hunk towards the end */
for (curr = base->next; curr; curr = curr->next) {
struct bdiff_hunk *next = curr->next;
if (!next)
break;
if (curr->a2 == next->a1 || curr->b2 == next->b1)
while (curr->a2 < an && curr->b2 < bn &&
next->a1 < next->a2 && next->b1 < next->b2 &&
!cmp(a + curr->a2, b + curr->b2)) {
curr->a2++;
next->a1++;
curr->b2++;
next->b1++;
}
}
for (curr = base->next; curr; curr = curr->next)
count++;
return count;
}
void bdiff_freehunks(struct bdiff_hunk *l)
{
struct bdiff_hunk *n;
for (; l; l = n) {
n = l->next;
free(l);
}
}