scmutil: move construction of instability count message to separate fn
When the commad we are running, introduces new instabilities, we show a message
like `5 new orphan changesets`, `2 new content-divergent changesets`, `1 new
phase-divergent changesets` etc which is very nice.
Now taking a step ahead, we want users to show how to fix them too. Something
like:
`5 new orphan changesets (run 'hg evolve' to resolve/stabilize them)`
`2 new content-divergent changesets (run 'hg evolve --content-divergent' to
resolve them)`
and maybe telling user a way to understand more about those new instabilities
like `hg evolve --list` or `hg log -r 'orphan()'` something like that.
The idea came from issue5855 which I want to fix because fixing that will result
in a nice UI.
Taking the construction logic out will allow extensions like evolve (maybe
rebase too) to wrap that and add information about how to resolve and how to
understand the instability more.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D3734
# demandimportpy3 - global demand-loading of modules for Mercurial
#
# Copyright 2017 Facebook Inc.
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
"""Lazy loading for Python 3.6 and above.
This uses the new importlib finder/loader functionality available in Python 3.5
and up. The code reuses most of the mechanics implemented inside importlib.util,
but with a few additions:
* Allow excluding certain modules from lazy imports.
* Expose an interface that's substantially the same as demandimport for
Python 2.
This also has some limitations compared to the Python 2 implementation:
* Much of the logic is per-package, not per-module, so any packages loaded
before demandimport is enabled will not be lazily imported in the future. In
practice, we only expect builtins to be loaded before demandimport is
enabled.
"""
# This line is unnecessary, but it satisfies test-check-py3-compat.t.
from __future__ import absolute_import
import contextlib
import importlib.abc
import importlib.machinery
import importlib.util
import sys
_deactivated = False
class _lazyloaderex(importlib.util.LazyLoader):
"""This is a LazyLoader except it also follows the _deactivated global and
the ignore list.
"""
def exec_module(self, module):
"""Make the module load lazily."""
if _deactivated or module.__name__ in ignores:
self.loader.exec_module(module)
else:
super().exec_module(module)
# This is 3.6+ because with Python 3.5 it isn't possible to lazily load
# extensions. See the discussion in https://bugs.python.org/issue26186 for more.
_extensions_loader = _lazyloaderex.factory(
importlib.machinery.ExtensionFileLoader)
_bytecode_loader = _lazyloaderex.factory(
importlib.machinery.SourcelessFileLoader)
_source_loader = _lazyloaderex.factory(importlib.machinery.SourceFileLoader)
def _makefinder(path):
return importlib.machinery.FileFinder(
path,
# This is the order in which loaders are passed in in core Python.
(_extensions_loader, importlib.machinery.EXTENSION_SUFFIXES),
(_source_loader, importlib.machinery.SOURCE_SUFFIXES),
(_bytecode_loader, importlib.machinery.BYTECODE_SUFFIXES),
)
ignores = set()
def init(ignoreset):
global ignores
ignores = ignoreset
def isenabled():
return _makefinder in sys.path_hooks and not _deactivated
def disable():
try:
while True:
sys.path_hooks.remove(_makefinder)
except ValueError:
pass
def enable():
sys.path_hooks.insert(0, _makefinder)
@contextlib.contextmanager
def deactivated():
# This implementation is a bit different from Python 2's. Python 3
# maintains a per-package finder cache in sys.path_importer_cache (see
# PEP 302). This means that we can't just call disable + enable.
# If we do that, in situations like:
#
# demandimport.enable()
# ...
# from foo.bar import mod1
# with demandimport.deactivated():
# from foo.bar import mod2
#
# mod2 will be imported lazily. (The converse also holds -- whatever finder
# first gets cached will be used.)
#
# Instead, have a global flag the LazyLoader can use.
global _deactivated
demandenabled = isenabled()
if demandenabled:
_deactivated = True
try:
yield
finally:
if demandenabled:
_deactivated = False