view tests/ls-l.py @ 40636:054d0fcba2c4

commandserver: add experimental option to use separate message channel This is loosely based on the idea of the TortoiseHg's pipeui extension, which attaches ui.label to message text so the command-server client can capture prompt text, for example. https://bitbucket.org/tortoisehg/thg/src/4.7.2/tortoisehg/util/pipeui.py I was thinking that this functionality could be generalized to templating, but changed mind as doing template stuff would be unnecessarily complex. It's merely a status message, a simple serialization option should suffice. Since this slightly changes the command-server protocol, it's gated by a config knob. If the config is enabled, and if it's supported by the server, "message-encoding: <name>" is advertised so the client can stop parsing 'o'/'e' channel data and read encoded messages from the 'm' channel. As we might add new message encodings in future releases, client can specify a list of encoding names in preferred order. This patch includes 'cbor' encoding as example. Perhaps, 'json' should be supported as well.
author Yuya Nishihara <yuya@tcha.org>
date Sun, 18 Jan 2015 18:49:59 +0900
parents 3a333a582d7b
children 2372284d9457
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#!/usr/bin/env python

# like ls -l, but do not print date, user, or non-common mode bit, to avoid
# using globs in tests.
from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function

import os
import stat
import sys

def modestr(st):
    mode = st.st_mode
    result = ''
    if mode & stat.S_IFDIR:
        result += 'd'
    else:
        result += '-'
    for owner in ['USR', 'GRP', 'OTH']:
        for action in ['R', 'W', 'X']:
            if mode & getattr(stat, 'S_I%s%s' % (action, owner)):
                result += action.lower()
            else:
                result += '-'
    return result

def sizestr(st):
    if st.st_mode & stat.S_IFREG:
        return '%7d' % st.st_size
    else:
        # do not show size for non regular files
        return ' ' * 7

os.chdir((sys.argv[1:] + ['.'])[0])

for name in sorted(os.listdir('.')):
    st = os.stat(name)
    print('%s %s %s' % (modestr(st), sizestr(st), name))