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localrepo: iteratively derive local repository type...
localrepo: iteratively derive local repository type This commit implements the dynamic local repository type derivation that was explained in the recent commit bfeab472e3c0 "localrepo: create new function for instantiating a local repo object." Instead of a static localrepository class/type which must be customized after construction, we now dynamically construct a type by building up base classes/types to represent specific repository interfaces. Conceptually, the end state is similar to what was happening when various extensions would monkeypatch the __class__ of newly-constructed repo instances. However, the approach is inverted. Instead of making the instance then customizing it, we do the customization up front by influencing the behavior of the type then we instantiate that custom type. This approach gives us much more flexibility. For example, we can use completely separate classes for implementing different aspects of the repository. For example, we could have one class representing revlog-based file storage and another representing non-revlog based file storage. When then choose which implementation to use based on the presence of repo requirements. A concern with this approach is that it creates a lot more types and complexity and that complexity adds overhead. Yes, it is true that this approach will result in more types being created. Yes, this is more complicated than traditional "instantiate a static type." However, I believe the alternatives to supporting alternate storage backends are just as complicated. (Before I arrived at this solution, I had patches storing factory functions on local repo instances for e.g. constructing a file storage instance. We ended up having a handful of these. And this was logically identical to assigning custom methods. Since we were logically changing the type of the instance, I figured it would be better to just use specialized types instead of introducing levels of abstraction at run-time.) On the performance front, I don't believe that having N base classes has any significant performance overhead compared to just a single base class. Intuition says that Python will need to iterate the base classes to find an attribute. However, CPython caches method lookups: as long as the __class__ or MRO isn't changing, method attribute lookup should be constant time after first access. And non-method attributes are stored in __dict__, of which there is only 1 per object, so the number of base classes for __dict__ is irrelevant. Anyway, this commit splits up the monolithic completelocalrepository interface into sub-interfaces: 1 for file storage and 1 representing everything else. We've taught ``makelocalrepository()`` to call a series of factory functions which will produce types implementing specific interfaces. It then calls type() to create a new type from the built-up list of base types. This commit should be considered a start and not the end state. I suspect we'll hit a number of problems as we start to implement alternate storage backends: * Passing custom arguments to __init__ and setting custom attributes on __dict__. * Customizing the set of interfaces that are needed. e.g. the "readonly" intent could translate to not requesting an interface providing methods related to writing. * More ergonomic way for extensions to insert themselves so their callbacks aren't unconditionally called. * Wanting to modify vfs instances, other arguments passed to __init__. That being said, this code is usable in its current state and I'm convinced future commits will demonstrate the value in this approach. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D4642

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hook.py
287 lines | 10.1 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# hook.py - hook support for mercurial
#
# Copyright 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
import os
import sys
from .i18n import _
from . import (
demandimport,
encoding,
error,
extensions,
pycompat,
util,
)
from .utils import (
procutil,
stringutil,
)
def pythonhook(ui, repo, htype, hname, funcname, args, throw):
'''call python hook. hook is callable object, looked up as
name in python module. if callable returns "true", hook
fails, else passes. if hook raises exception, treated as
hook failure. exception propagates if throw is "true".
reason for "true" meaning "hook failed" is so that
unmodified commands (e.g. mercurial.commands.update) can
be run as hooks without wrappers to convert return values.'''
if callable(funcname):
obj = funcname
funcname = pycompat.sysbytes(obj.__module__ + r"." + obj.__name__)
else:
d = funcname.rfind('.')
if d == -1:
raise error.HookLoadError(
_('%s hook is invalid: "%s" not in a module')
% (hname, funcname))
modname = funcname[:d]
oldpaths = sys.path
if procutil.mainfrozen():
# binary installs require sys.path manipulation
modpath, modfile = os.path.split(modname)
if modpath and modfile:
sys.path = sys.path[:] + [modpath]
modname = modfile
with demandimport.deactivated():
try:
obj = __import__(pycompat.sysstr(modname))
except (ImportError, SyntaxError):
e1 = sys.exc_info()
try:
# extensions are loaded with hgext_ prefix
obj = __import__(r"hgext_%s" % pycompat.sysstr(modname))
except (ImportError, SyntaxError):
e2 = sys.exc_info()
if ui.tracebackflag:
ui.warn(_('exception from first failed import '
'attempt:\n'))
ui.traceback(e1)
if ui.tracebackflag:
ui.warn(_('exception from second failed import '
'attempt:\n'))
ui.traceback(e2)
if not ui.tracebackflag:
tracebackhint = _(
'run with --traceback for stack trace')
else:
tracebackhint = None
raise error.HookLoadError(
_('%s hook is invalid: import of "%s" failed') %
(hname, modname), hint=tracebackhint)
sys.path = oldpaths
try:
for p in funcname.split('.')[1:]:
obj = getattr(obj, p)
except AttributeError:
raise error.HookLoadError(
_('%s hook is invalid: "%s" is not defined')
% (hname, funcname))
if not callable(obj):
raise error.HookLoadError(
_('%s hook is invalid: "%s" is not callable')
% (hname, funcname))
ui.note(_("calling hook %s: %s\n") % (hname, funcname))
starttime = util.timer()
try:
r = obj(ui=ui, repo=repo, hooktype=htype, **pycompat.strkwargs(args))
except Exception as exc:
if isinstance(exc, error.Abort):
ui.warn(_('error: %s hook failed: %s\n') %
(hname, exc.args[0]))
else:
ui.warn(_('error: %s hook raised an exception: '
'%s\n') % (hname, encoding.strtolocal(str(exc))))
if throw:
raise
if not ui.tracebackflag:
ui.warn(_('(run with --traceback for stack trace)\n'))
ui.traceback()
return True, True
finally:
duration = util.timer() - starttime
ui.log('pythonhook', 'pythonhook-%s: %s finished in %0.2f seconds\n',
htype, funcname, duration)
if r:
if throw:
raise error.HookAbort(_('%s hook failed') % hname)
ui.warn(_('warning: %s hook failed\n') % hname)
return r, False
def _exthook(ui, repo, htype, name, cmd, args, throw):
starttime = util.timer()
env = {}
# make in-memory changes visible to external process
if repo is not None:
tr = repo.currenttransaction()
repo.dirstate.write(tr)
if tr and tr.writepending():
env['HG_PENDING'] = repo.root
env['HG_HOOKTYPE'] = htype
env['HG_HOOKNAME'] = name
for k, v in args.iteritems():
if callable(v):
v = v()
if isinstance(v, (dict, list)):
v = stringutil.pprint(v)
env['HG_' + k.upper()] = v
if ui.configbool('hooks', 'tonative.%s' % name, False):
oldcmd = cmd
cmd = procutil.shelltonative(cmd, env)
if cmd != oldcmd:
ui.note(_('converting hook "%s" to native\n') % name)
ui.note(_("running hook %s: %s\n") % (name, cmd))
if repo:
cwd = repo.root
else:
cwd = pycompat.getcwd()
r = ui.system(cmd, environ=env, cwd=cwd, blockedtag='exthook-%s' % (name,))
duration = util.timer() - starttime
ui.log('exthook', 'exthook-%s: %s finished in %0.2f seconds\n',
name, cmd, duration)
if r:
desc = procutil.explainexit(r)
if throw:
raise error.HookAbort(_('%s hook %s') % (name, desc))
ui.warn(_('warning: %s hook %s\n') % (name, desc))
return r
# represent an untrusted hook command
_fromuntrusted = object()
def _allhooks(ui):
"""return a list of (hook-id, cmd) pairs sorted by priority"""
hooks = _hookitems(ui)
# Be careful in this section, propagating the real commands from untrusted
# sources would create a security vulnerability, make sure anything altered
# in that section uses "_fromuntrusted" as its command.
untrustedhooks = _hookitems(ui, _untrusted=True)
for name, value in untrustedhooks.items():
trustedvalue = hooks.get(name, (None, None, name, _fromuntrusted))
if value != trustedvalue:
(lp, lo, lk, lv) = trustedvalue
hooks[name] = (lp, lo, lk, _fromuntrusted)
# (end of the security sensitive section)
return [(k, v) for p, o, k, v in sorted(hooks.values())]
def _hookitems(ui, _untrusted=False):
"""return all hooks items ready to be sorted"""
hooks = {}
for name, cmd in ui.configitems('hooks', untrusted=_untrusted):
if name.startswith('priority.') or name.startswith('tonative.'):
continue
priority = ui.configint('hooks', 'priority.%s' % name, 0)
hooks[name] = (-priority, len(hooks), name, cmd)
return hooks
_redirect = False
def redirect(state):
global _redirect
_redirect = state
def hashook(ui, htype):
"""return True if a hook is configured for 'htype'"""
if not ui.callhooks:
return False
for hname, cmd in _allhooks(ui):
if hname.split('.')[0] == htype and cmd:
return True
return False
def hook(ui, repo, htype, throw=False, **args):
if not ui.callhooks:
return False
hooks = []
for hname, cmd in _allhooks(ui):
if hname.split('.')[0] == htype and cmd:
hooks.append((hname, cmd))
res = runhooks(ui, repo, htype, hooks, throw=throw, **args)
r = False
for hname, cmd in hooks:
r = res[hname][0] or r
return r
def runhooks(ui, repo, htype, hooks, throw=False, **args):
args = pycompat.byteskwargs(args)
res = {}
oldstdout = -1
try:
for hname, cmd in hooks:
if oldstdout == -1 and _redirect:
try:
stdoutno = procutil.stdout.fileno()
stderrno = procutil.stderr.fileno()
# temporarily redirect stdout to stderr, if possible
if stdoutno >= 0 and stderrno >= 0:
procutil.stdout.flush()
oldstdout = os.dup(stdoutno)
os.dup2(stderrno, stdoutno)
except (OSError, AttributeError):
# files seem to be bogus, give up on redirecting (WSGI, etc)
pass
if cmd is _fromuntrusted:
if throw:
raise error.HookAbort(
_('untrusted hook %s not executed') % hname,
hint = _("see 'hg help config.trusted'"))
ui.warn(_('warning: untrusted hook %s not executed\n') % hname)
r = 1
raised = False
elif callable(cmd):
r, raised = pythonhook(ui, repo, htype, hname, cmd, args,
throw)
elif cmd.startswith('python:'):
if cmd.count(':') >= 2:
path, cmd = cmd[7:].rsplit(':', 1)
path = util.expandpath(path)
if repo:
path = os.path.join(repo.root, path)
try:
mod = extensions.loadpath(path, 'hghook.%s' % hname)
except Exception:
ui.write(_("loading %s hook failed:\n") % hname)
raise
hookfn = getattr(mod, cmd)
else:
hookfn = cmd[7:].strip()
r, raised = pythonhook(ui, repo, htype, hname, hookfn, args,
throw)
else:
r = _exthook(ui, repo, htype, hname, cmd, args, throw)
raised = False
res[hname] = r, raised
finally:
# The stderr is fully buffered on Windows when connected to a pipe.
# A forcible flush is required to make small stderr data in the
# remote side available to the client immediately.
procutil.stderr.flush()
if _redirect and oldstdout >= 0:
procutil.stdout.flush() # write hook output to stderr fd
os.dup2(oldstdout, stdoutno)
os.close(oldstdout)
return res