Mercurial > hg-stable
view tests/test-gpg.t @ 26402:05871262acd5
treemanifest: rework lazy-copying code (issue4840)
The old lazy-copy code formed a chain of copied manifests with each
copy. Under typical operation, the stack never got more than a couple
of manifests deep and was fine. Under conditions like hgsubversion or
convert, the stack could get hundreds of manifests deep, and
eventually overflow the recursion limit for Python. I was able to
consistently reproduce this by converting an hgsubversion clone of
svn's history to treemanifests.
This may result in fewer manifests staying in memory during operations
like convert when treemanifests are in use, and should make those
operations faster since there will be significantly fewer noop
function calls going on.
A previous attempt (never mailed) of mine to fix this problem tried to
simply have all treemanifests only have a loadfunc - that caused
somewhat weird problems because the gettext() callable passed into
read() wasn't idempotent, so the easy solution is to have a loadfunc
and a copyfunc.
author | Augie Fackler <augie@google.com> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 25 Sep 2015 22:54:46 -0400 |
parents | 4d2b9b304ad0 |
children | 66e038fb3c0d |
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#require gpg Test the GPG extension $ cat <<EOF >> $HGRCPATH > [extensions] > gpg= > > [gpg] > cmd=gpg --no-permission-warning --no-secmem-warning --no-auto-check-trustdb --homedir "$TESTDIR/gpg" > EOF $ hg init r $ cd r $ echo foo > foo $ hg ci -Amfoo adding foo $ hg sigs $ HGEDITOR=cat hg sign -e 0 signing 0:e63c23eaa88a Added signature for changeset e63c23eaa88a HG: Enter commit message. Lines beginning with 'HG:' are removed. HG: Leave message empty to abort commit. HG: -- HG: user: test HG: branch 'default' HG: added .hgsigs $ hg sigs hgtest 0:e63c23eaa88ae77967edcf4ea194d31167c478b0 $ hg sigcheck 0 e63c23eaa88a is signed by: hgtest verify that this test has not modified the trustdb.gpg file back in the main hg working dir $ md5sum.py "$TESTDIR/gpg/trustdb.gpg" f6b9c78c65fa9536e7512bb2ceb338ae */gpg/trustdb.gpg (glob) don't leak any state to next test run $ rm -f "$TESTDIR/gpg/random_seed" $ cd ..