##// END OF EJS Templates
dirstate: expose a sparse matcher on dirstate (API)...
dirstate: expose a sparse matcher on dirstate (API) The sparse extension performs a lot of monkeypatching of dirstate to make it sparse aware. Essentially, various operations need to take the active sparse config into account. They do this by obtaining a matcher representing the sparse config and filtering paths through it. The monkeypatching is done by stuffing a reference to a repo on dirstate and calling sparse.matcher() (which takes a repo instance) during each function call. The reason this function takes a repo instance is because resolving the sparse config may require resolving file contents from filelogs, and that requires a repo. (If the current sparse config references "profile" files, the contents of those files from the dirstate's parent revisions is resolved.) I seem to recall people having strong opinions that the dirstate object not have a reference to a repo. So copying what the sparse extension does probably won't fly in core. Plus, the dirstate modifications shouldn't require a full repo: they only need a matcher. So there's no good reason to stuff a reference to the repo in dirstate. This commit exposes a sparse matcher to dirstate via a property that when looked up will call a function that eventually calls sparse.matcher(). The repo instance is bound in a closure, so it isn't exposed to dirstate. This approach is functionally similar to what the sparse extension does today, except it hides the repo instance from dirstate. The approach is not optimal because we have to call a proxy function and sparse.matcher() on every property lookup. There is room to cache the matcher instance in dirstate. After all, the matcher only changes if the dirstate's parents change or if the sparse config changes. It feels like we should be able to detect both events and update the matcher when this occurs. But for now we preserve the existing semantics so we can move the dirstate sparseness bits into core. Once in core, refactoring becomes a bit easier since it will be clearer how all these components interact. The sparse extension has been updated to use the new property. Because all references to the repo on dirstate have been removed, the code for setting it has been removed.

File last commit:

r33247:bbc57a7e default
r33373:fb320398 default
Show More
progress.py
280 lines | 10.0 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# progress.py progress bars related code
#
# Copyright (C) 2010 Augie Fackler <durin42@gmail.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 errno
import threading
import time
from .i18n import _
from . import encoding
def spacejoin(*args):
return ' '.join(s for s in args if s)
def shouldprint(ui):
return not (ui.quiet or ui.plain('progress')) and (
ui._isatty(ui.ferr) or ui.configbool('progress', 'assume-tty'))
def fmtremaining(seconds):
"""format a number of remaining seconds in human readable way
This will properly display seconds, minutes, hours, days if needed"""
if seconds < 60:
# i18n: format XX seconds as "XXs"
return _("%02ds") % (seconds)
minutes = seconds // 60
if minutes < 60:
seconds -= minutes * 60
# i18n: format X minutes and YY seconds as "XmYYs"
return _("%dm%02ds") % (minutes, seconds)
# we're going to ignore seconds in this case
minutes += 1
hours = minutes // 60
minutes -= hours * 60
if hours < 30:
# i18n: format X hours and YY minutes as "XhYYm"
return _("%dh%02dm") % (hours, minutes)
# we're going to ignore minutes in this case
hours += 1
days = hours // 24
hours -= days * 24
if days < 15:
# i18n: format X days and YY hours as "XdYYh"
return _("%dd%02dh") % (days, hours)
# we're going to ignore hours in this case
days += 1
weeks = days // 7
days -= weeks * 7
if weeks < 55:
# i18n: format X weeks and YY days as "XwYYd"
return _("%dw%02dd") % (weeks, days)
# we're going to ignore days and treat a year as 52 weeks
weeks += 1
years = weeks // 52
weeks -= years * 52
# i18n: format X years and YY weeks as "XyYYw"
return _("%dy%02dw") % (years, weeks)
# file_write() and file_flush() of Python 2 do not restart on EINTR if
# the file is attached to a "slow" device (e.g. a terminal) and raise
# IOError. We cannot know how many bytes would be written by file_write(),
# but a progress text is known to be short enough to be written by a
# single write() syscall, so we can just retry file_write() with the whole
# text. (issue5532)
#
# This should be a short-term workaround. We'll need to fix every occurrence
# of write() to a terminal or pipe.
def _eintrretry(func, *args):
while True:
try:
return func(*args)
except IOError as err:
if err.errno == errno.EINTR:
continue
raise
class progbar(object):
def __init__(self, ui):
self.ui = ui
self._refreshlock = threading.Lock()
self.resetstate()
def resetstate(self):
self.topics = []
self.topicstates = {}
self.starttimes = {}
self.startvals = {}
self.printed = False
self.lastprint = time.time() + float(self.ui.config(
'progress', 'delay', default=3))
self.curtopic = None
self.lasttopic = None
self.indetcount = 0
self.refresh = float(self.ui.config(
'progress', 'refresh', default=0.1))
self.changedelay = max(3 * self.refresh,
float(self.ui.config(
'progress', 'changedelay', default=1)))
self.order = self.ui.configlist(
'progress', 'format',
default=['topic', 'bar', 'number', 'estimate'])
def show(self, now, topic, pos, item, unit, total):
if not shouldprint(self.ui):
return
termwidth = self.width()
self.printed = True
head = ''
needprogress = False
tail = ''
for indicator in self.order:
add = ''
if indicator == 'topic':
add = topic
elif indicator == 'number':
if total:
add = ('% ' + str(len(str(total))) +
's/%s') % (pos, total)
else:
add = str(pos)
elif indicator.startswith('item') and item:
slice = 'end'
if '-' in indicator:
wid = int(indicator.split('-')[1])
elif '+' in indicator:
slice = 'beginning'
wid = int(indicator.split('+')[1])
else:
wid = 20
if slice == 'end':
add = encoding.trim(item, wid, leftside=True)
else:
add = encoding.trim(item, wid)
add += (wid - encoding.colwidth(add)) * ' '
elif indicator == 'bar':
add = ''
needprogress = True
elif indicator == 'unit' and unit:
add = unit
elif indicator == 'estimate':
add = self.estimate(topic, pos, total, now)
elif indicator == 'speed':
add = self.speed(topic, pos, unit, now)
if not needprogress:
head = spacejoin(head, add)
else:
tail = spacejoin(tail, add)
if needprogress:
used = 0
if head:
used += encoding.colwidth(head) + 1
if tail:
used += encoding.colwidth(tail) + 1
progwidth = termwidth - used - 3
if total and pos <= total:
amt = pos * progwidth // total
bar = '=' * (amt - 1)
if amt > 0:
bar += '>'
bar += ' ' * (progwidth - amt)
else:
progwidth -= 3
self.indetcount += 1
# mod the count by twice the width so we can make the
# cursor bounce between the right and left sides
amt = self.indetcount % (2 * progwidth)
amt -= progwidth
bar = (' ' * int(progwidth - abs(amt)) + '<=>' +
' ' * int(abs(amt)))
prog = ''.join(('[', bar , ']'))
out = spacejoin(head, prog, tail)
else:
out = spacejoin(head, tail)
self._writeerr('\r' + encoding.trim(out, termwidth))
self.lasttopic = topic
self._flusherr()
def clear(self):
if not self.printed or not self.lastprint or not shouldprint(self.ui):
return
self._writeerr('\r%s\r' % (' ' * self.width()))
if self.printed:
# force immediate re-paint of progress bar
self.lastprint = 0
def complete(self):
if not shouldprint(self.ui):
return
if self.ui.configbool('progress', 'clear-complete'):
self.clear()
else:
self._writeerr('\n')
self._flusherr()
def _flusherr(self):
_eintrretry(self.ui.ferr.flush)
def _writeerr(self, msg):
_eintrretry(self.ui.ferr.write, msg)
def width(self):
tw = self.ui.termwidth()
return min(int(self.ui.config('progress', 'width', default=tw)), tw)
def estimate(self, topic, pos, total, now):
if total is None:
return ''
initialpos = self.startvals[topic]
target = total - initialpos
delta = pos - initialpos
if delta > 0:
elapsed = now - self.starttimes[topic]
# experimental config: progress.estimate
if elapsed > float(
self.ui.config('progress', 'estimate')):
seconds = (elapsed * (target - delta)) // delta + 1
return fmtremaining(seconds)
return ''
def speed(self, topic, pos, unit, now):
initialpos = self.startvals[topic]
delta = pos - initialpos
elapsed = now - self.starttimes[topic]
if elapsed > float(
self.ui.config('progress', 'estimate')):
return _('%d %s/sec') % (delta / elapsed, unit)
return ''
def _oktoprint(self, now):
'''Check if conditions are met to print - e.g. changedelay elapsed'''
if (self.lasttopic is None # first time we printed
# not a topic change
or self.curtopic == self.lasttopic
# it's been long enough we should print anyway
or now - self.lastprint >= self.changedelay):
return True
else:
return False
def progress(self, topic, pos, item='', unit='', total=None):
now = time.time()
self._refreshlock.acquire()
try:
if pos is None:
self.starttimes.pop(topic, None)
self.startvals.pop(topic, None)
self.topicstates.pop(topic, None)
# reset the progress bar if this is the outermost topic
if self.topics and self.topics[0] == topic and self.printed:
self.complete()
self.resetstate()
# truncate the list of topics assuming all topics within
# this one are also closed
if topic in self.topics:
self.topics = self.topics[:self.topics.index(topic)]
# reset the last topic to the one we just unwound to,
# so that higher-level topics will be stickier than
# lower-level topics
if self.topics:
self.lasttopic = self.topics[-1]
else:
self.lasttopic = None
else:
if topic not in self.topics:
self.starttimes[topic] = now
self.startvals[topic] = pos
self.topics.append(topic)
self.topicstates[topic] = pos, item, unit, total
self.curtopic = topic
if now - self.lastprint >= self.refresh and self.topics:
if self._oktoprint(now):
self.lastprint = now
self.show(now, topic, *self.topicstates[topic])
finally:
self._refreshlock.release()