##// END OF EJS Templates
templater: parse \"...\" as string for 2.9.2-3.4 compatibility (issue4733)...
templater: parse \"...\" as string for 2.9.2-3.4 compatibility (issue4733) As of Mercurial 3.4, there were several syntax rules to process nested template strings. Unfortunately, they were inconsistent and conflicted each other. a. buildmap() rule - template string is _parsed_ as string, and parsed as template - <\"> is not allowed in nested template: {xs % "{f(\"{x}\")}"} -> parse error - template escaping <\{> is handled consistently: {xs % "\{x}"} -> escaped b. _evalifliteral() rule - template string is _interpreted_ as string, and parsed as template in crafted environment to avoid double processing of escape sequences - <\"> is allowed in nested template: {if(x, "{f(\"{x}\")}")} - <\{> and escape sequences in string literal in nested template are not handled well c. pad() rule - template string is first interpreted as string, and parsed as template, which means escape sequences are processed twice - <\"> is allowed in nested template: {pad("{xs % \"{x}\"}', 10)} Because of the issue of template escaping, issue4714, 7298da81f5a9 (in stable) unified the rule (b) to (a). Then, 576d6c74784b (in default) unified the rule (c) to (b) = (a). But they disabled the following syntax that was somewhat considered valid. {if(rev, "{if(rev, \"{rev}\")}")} {pad("{files % \"{file}\"}", 10)} So, this patch introduces \"...\" literal to work around the escaped-quoted nested template strings. Because this parsing rule exists only for the backward compatibility, it is designed to copy the behavior of old _evalifliteral() as possible. Future patches will introduce a better parsing rule similar to a command substitution of POSIX shells or a string interpolation of Ruby, where extra escapes won't be necessary at all. {pad("{files % "{file}"}", 10)} ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ parsed as a template, not as a string Because <\> character wasn't allowed in a template fragment, this patch won't introduce more breakages. But the syntax of nested templates are interpreted differently by people, there might be unknown issues. So if we want, we could instead remove db7463aa080f, 890845af1ac2 and 7298da81f5a9 from the stable branch as the bug fixed by these patches existed for longer periods. 554d6fcc3c8, "strip single backslash before quotation mark in quoted template", should be superseded by this patch. I'll remove it later.

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relink.py
183 lines | 6.1 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# Mercurial extension to provide 'hg relink' command
#
# Copyright (C) 2007 Brendan Cully <brendan@kublai.com>
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
"""recreates hardlinks between repository clones"""
from mercurial import cmdutil, hg, util
from mercurial.i18n import _
import os, stat
cmdtable = {}
command = cmdutil.command(cmdtable)
testedwith = 'internal'
@command('relink', [], _('[ORIGIN]'))
def relink(ui, repo, origin=None, **opts):
"""recreate hardlinks between two repositories
When repositories are cloned locally, their data files will be
hardlinked so that they only use the space of a single repository.
Unfortunately, subsequent pulls into either repository will break
hardlinks for any files touched by the new changesets, even if
both repositories end up pulling the same changes.
Similarly, passing --rev to "hg clone" will fail to use any
hardlinks, falling back to a complete copy of the source
repository.
This command lets you recreate those hardlinks and reclaim that
wasted space.
This repository will be relinked to share space with ORIGIN, which
must be on the same local disk. If ORIGIN is omitted, looks for
"default-relink", then "default", in [paths].
Do not attempt any read operations on this repository while the
command is running. (Both repositories will be locked against
writes.)
"""
if (not util.safehasattr(util, 'samefile') or
not util.safehasattr(util, 'samedevice')):
raise util.Abort(_('hardlinks are not supported on this system'))
src = hg.repository(repo.baseui, ui.expandpath(origin or 'default-relink',
origin or 'default'))
ui.status(_('relinking %s to %s\n') % (src.store.path, repo.store.path))
if repo.root == src.root:
ui.status(_('there is nothing to relink\n'))
return
if not util.samedevice(src.store.path, repo.store.path):
# No point in continuing
raise util.Abort(_('source and destination are on different devices'))
locallock = repo.lock()
try:
remotelock = src.lock()
try:
candidates = sorted(collect(src, ui))
targets = prune(candidates, src.store.path, repo.store.path, ui)
do_relink(src.store.path, repo.store.path, targets, ui)
finally:
remotelock.release()
finally:
locallock.release()
def collect(src, ui):
seplen = len(os.path.sep)
candidates = []
live = len(src['tip'].manifest())
# Your average repository has some files which were deleted before
# the tip revision. We account for that by assuming that there are
# 3 tracked files for every 2 live files as of the tip version of
# the repository.
#
# mozilla-central as of 2010-06-10 had a ratio of just over 7:5.
total = live * 3 // 2
src = src.store.path
pos = 0
ui.status(_("tip has %d files, estimated total number of files: %s\n")
% (live, total))
for dirpath, dirnames, filenames in os.walk(src):
dirnames.sort()
relpath = dirpath[len(src) + seplen:]
for filename in sorted(filenames):
if filename[-2:] not in ('.d', '.i'):
continue
st = os.stat(os.path.join(dirpath, filename))
if not stat.S_ISREG(st.st_mode):
continue
pos += 1
candidates.append((os.path.join(relpath, filename), st))
ui.progress(_('collecting'), pos, filename, _('files'), total)
ui.progress(_('collecting'), None)
ui.status(_('collected %d candidate storage files\n') % len(candidates))
return candidates
def prune(candidates, src, dst, ui):
def linkfilter(src, dst, st):
try:
ts = os.stat(dst)
except OSError:
# Destination doesn't have this file?
return False
if util.samefile(src, dst):
return False
if not util.samedevice(src, dst):
# No point in continuing
raise util.Abort(
_('source and destination are on different devices'))
if st.st_size != ts.st_size:
return False
return st
targets = []
total = len(candidates)
pos = 0
for fn, st in candidates:
pos += 1
srcpath = os.path.join(src, fn)
tgt = os.path.join(dst, fn)
ts = linkfilter(srcpath, tgt, st)
if not ts:
ui.debug('not linkable: %s\n' % fn)
continue
targets.append((fn, ts.st_size))
ui.progress(_('pruning'), pos, fn, _('files'), total)
ui.progress(_('pruning'), None)
ui.status(_('pruned down to %d probably relinkable files\n') % len(targets))
return targets
def do_relink(src, dst, files, ui):
def relinkfile(src, dst):
bak = dst + '.bak'
os.rename(dst, bak)
try:
util.oslink(src, dst)
except OSError:
os.rename(bak, dst)
raise
os.remove(bak)
CHUNKLEN = 65536
relinked = 0
savedbytes = 0
pos = 0
total = len(files)
for f, sz in files:
pos += 1
source = os.path.join(src, f)
tgt = os.path.join(dst, f)
# Binary mode, so that read() works correctly, especially on Windows
sfp = file(source, 'rb')
dfp = file(tgt, 'rb')
sin = sfp.read(CHUNKLEN)
while sin:
din = dfp.read(CHUNKLEN)
if sin != din:
break
sin = sfp.read(CHUNKLEN)
sfp.close()
dfp.close()
if sin:
ui.debug('not linkable: %s\n' % f)
continue
try:
relinkfile(source, tgt)
ui.progress(_('relinking'), pos, f, _('files'), total)
relinked += 1
savedbytes += sz
except OSError, inst:
ui.warn('%s: %s\n' % (tgt, str(inst)))
ui.progress(_('relinking'), None)
ui.status(_('relinked %d files (%s reclaimed)\n') %
(relinked, util.bytecount(savedbytes)))