view mercurial/dirs.c @ 24716:2abbf4750915

hook: forcibly flush stderr for Windows test stability There are a handful of SSH related test failures on Windows. --- c:/Users/Matt/Projects/hg/tests/test-bundle2-exchange.t +++ c:/Users/Matt/Projects/hg/tests/test-bundle2-exchange.t.err @@ -305,16 +305,16 @@ remote: added 1 changesets with 1 changes to 1 files remote: 1 new obsolescence markers updating bookmark book_5fdd + pre-close-tip:02de42196ebe draft book_02de + postclose-tip:02de42196ebe draft book_02de + txnclose hook: HG_SOURCE=push-response HG_TXNNAME=push-response + ssh://user@dummy/other HG_URL=ssh://user@dummy/other remote: pre-close-tip:5fddd98957c8 draft book_5fdd remote: pushkey: lock state after "bookmarks" remote: lock: free remote: wlock: free remote: postclose-tip:5fddd98957c8 draft book_5fdd remote: txnclose hook: (env vars truncated) - pre-close-tip:02de42196ebe draft book_02de - postclose-tip:02de42196ebe draft book_02de - txnclose hook: HG_SOURCE=push-response HG_TXNNAME=push-response - ssh://user@dummy/other HG_URL=ssh://user@dummy/other $ hg -R other log -G o 6:5fddd98957c8 draft Nicolas Dumazet <...> book_5fdd C | --- c:/Users/Matt/Projects/hg/tests/test-ssh.t +++ c:/Users/Matt/Projects/hg/tests/test-ssh.t.err @@ -438,12 +438,12 @@ $ hg push pushing to ssh://user@dummy/remote searching for changes + local stdout remote: adding changesets remote: adding manifests remote: adding file changes remote: added 1 changesets with 1 changes to 1 files - remote: KABOOM - local stdout + remote: KABOOM\r (esc) $ cd .. What is happening is that no data is available in 'sshpeer.pipee' while the command is executing. As the command completes, local output is printed, and then sshpeer.cleanup() is called. When it calls 'self.pipeo.close()', the child process is shutdown, flushing stderr. As an experiment, I printed a line to stdout and another to stderr instead this flush(). The stdout data was immediately available to the hg client, and none of the stderr data was until the child exited. At that point, pipee has all of the buffered data, and it is read out and printed before the pipe is closed in sshpeer.cleanup(). This is probably a known issue, since ui.write_err() mentions that stderr may be buffered, and also flushes stderr. It would be nice if there was a more general fix (there is one more test that fails), but I'm not sure what it is. I've seen (ancient) references [1] to setvbuf() "crashing spectacularly" on some systems if any I/O has been done already, so it seems worth avoiding. https://sourceware.org/ml/gdb-patches/2013-08/msg00422.html [1] https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/comp.lang.python/JT8LiYzYDEY/Qg9d1HwyjScJ
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
date Fri, 10 Apr 2015 22:30:19 -0400
parents 67241ee427cf
children b3a68fb8b859
line wrap: on
line source

/*
 dirs.c - dynamic directory diddling for dirstates

 Copyright 2013 Facebook

 This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of
 the GNU General Public License, incorporated herein by reference.
*/

#define PY_SSIZE_T_CLEAN
#include <Python.h>
#include <string.h>
#include "util.h"

/*
 * This is a multiset of directory names, built from the files that
 * appear in a dirstate or manifest.
 *
 * A few implementation notes:
 *
 * We modify Python integers for refcounting, but those integers are
 * never visible to Python code.
 *
 * We mutate strings in-place, but leave them immutable once they can
 * be seen by Python code.
 */
typedef struct {
	PyObject_HEAD
	PyObject *dict;
} dirsObject;

static inline Py_ssize_t _finddir(PyObject *path, Py_ssize_t pos)
{
	const char *s = PyString_AS_STRING(path);

	const char *ret = strchr(s + pos, '/');
	return (ret != NULL) ? (ret - s) : -1;
}

static int _addpath(PyObject *dirs, PyObject *path)
{
	char *cpath = PyString_AS_STRING(path);
	Py_ssize_t len = PyString_GET_SIZE(path);
	Py_ssize_t pos = -1;
	PyObject *key = NULL;
	int ret = -1;

	while ((pos = _finddir(path, pos + 1)) != -1) {
		PyObject *val;

		/* It's likely that every prefix already has an entry
		   in our dict. Try to avoid allocating and
		   deallocating a string for each prefix we check. */
		if (key != NULL)
			((PyStringObject *)key)->ob_shash = -1;
		else if (pos != 0) {
			/* pos >= 1, which means that len >= 2. This is
			   guaranteed to produce a non-interned string. */
			key = PyString_FromStringAndSize(cpath, len);
			if (key == NULL)
				goto bail;
		} else {
			/* pos == 0, which means we need to increment the dir
			   count for the empty string. We need to make sure we
			   don't muck around with interned strings, so throw it
			   away later. */
			key = PyString_FromString("");
			if (key == NULL)
				goto bail;
		}
		PyString_GET_SIZE(key) = pos;
		PyString_AS_STRING(key)[pos] = '\0';

		val = PyDict_GetItem(dirs, key);
		if (val != NULL) {
			PyInt_AS_LONG(val) += 1;
			if (pos != 0)
				PyString_AS_STRING(key)[pos] = '/';
			else
				key = NULL;
			continue;
		}

		/* Force Python to not reuse a small shared int. */
		val = PyInt_FromLong(0x1eadbeef);

		if (val == NULL)
			goto bail;

		PyInt_AS_LONG(val) = 1;
		ret = PyDict_SetItem(dirs, key, val);
		Py_DECREF(val);
		if (ret == -1)
			goto bail;

		/* Clear the key out since we've already exposed it to Python
		   and can't mutate it further. */
		Py_CLEAR(key);
	}
	ret = 0;

bail:
	Py_XDECREF(key);

	return ret;
}

static int _delpath(PyObject *dirs, PyObject *path)
{
	Py_ssize_t pos = -1;
	PyObject *key = NULL;
	int ret = -1;

	while ((pos = _finddir(path, pos + 1)) != -1) {
		PyObject *val;

		key = PyString_FromStringAndSize(PyString_AS_STRING(path), pos);

		if (key == NULL)
			goto bail;

		val = PyDict_GetItem(dirs, key);
		if (val == NULL) {
			PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError,
					"expected a value, found none");
			goto bail;
		}

		if (--PyInt_AS_LONG(val) <= 0 &&
		    PyDict_DelItem(dirs, key) == -1)
			goto bail;
		Py_CLEAR(key);
	}
	ret = 0;

bail:
	Py_XDECREF(key);

	return ret;
}

static int dirs_fromdict(PyObject *dirs, PyObject *source, char skipchar)
{
	PyObject *key, *value;
	Py_ssize_t pos = 0;

	while (PyDict_Next(source, &pos, &key, &value)) {
		if (!PyString_Check(key)) {
			PyErr_SetString(PyExc_TypeError, "expected string key");
			return -1;
		}
		if (skipchar) {
			if (!dirstate_tuple_check(value)) {
				PyErr_SetString(PyExc_TypeError,
						"expected a dirstate tuple");
				return -1;
			}
			if (((dirstateTupleObject *)value)->state == skipchar)
				continue;
		}

		if (_addpath(dirs, key) == -1)
			return -1;
	}

	return 0;
}

static int dirs_fromiter(PyObject *dirs, PyObject *source)
{
	PyObject *iter, *item = NULL;
	int ret;

	iter = PyObject_GetIter(source);
	if (iter == NULL)
		return -1;

	while ((item = PyIter_Next(iter)) != NULL) {
		if (!PyString_Check(item)) {
			PyErr_SetString(PyExc_TypeError, "expected string");
			break;
		}

		if (_addpath(dirs, item) == -1)
			break;
		Py_CLEAR(item);
	}

	ret = PyErr_Occurred() ? -1 : 0;
	Py_DECREF(iter);
	Py_XDECREF(item);
	return ret;
}

/*
 * Calculate a refcounted set of directory names for the files in a
 * dirstate.
 */
static int dirs_init(dirsObject *self, PyObject *args)
{
	PyObject *dirs = NULL, *source = NULL;
	char skipchar = 0;
	int ret = -1;

	self->dict = NULL;

	if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "|Oc:__init__", &source, &skipchar))
		return -1;

	dirs = PyDict_New();

	if (dirs == NULL)
		return -1;

	if (source == NULL)
		ret = 0;
	else if (PyDict_Check(source))
		ret = dirs_fromdict(dirs, source, skipchar);
	else if (skipchar)
		PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError,
				"skip character is only supported "
				"with a dict source");
	else
		ret = dirs_fromiter(dirs, source);

	if (ret == -1)
		Py_XDECREF(dirs);
	else
		self->dict = dirs;

	return ret;
}

PyObject *dirs_addpath(dirsObject *self, PyObject *args)
{
	PyObject *path;

	if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "O!:addpath", &PyString_Type, &path))
		return NULL;

	if (_addpath(self->dict, path) == -1)
		return NULL;

	Py_RETURN_NONE;
}

static PyObject *dirs_delpath(dirsObject *self, PyObject *args)
{
	PyObject *path;

	if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "O!:delpath", &PyString_Type, &path))
		return NULL;

	if (_delpath(self->dict, path) == -1)
		return NULL;

	Py_RETURN_NONE;
}

static int dirs_contains(dirsObject *self, PyObject *value)
{
	return PyString_Check(value) ? PyDict_Contains(self->dict, value) : 0;
}

static void dirs_dealloc(dirsObject *self)
{
	Py_XDECREF(self->dict);
	PyObject_Del(self);
}

static PyObject *dirs_iter(dirsObject *self)
{
	return PyObject_GetIter(self->dict);
}

static PySequenceMethods dirs_sequence_methods;

static PyMethodDef dirs_methods[] = {
	{"addpath", (PyCFunction)dirs_addpath, METH_VARARGS, "add a path"},
	{"delpath", (PyCFunction)dirs_delpath, METH_VARARGS, "remove a path"},
	{NULL} /* Sentinel */
};

static PyTypeObject dirsType = { PyObject_HEAD_INIT(NULL) };

void dirs_module_init(PyObject *mod)
{
	dirs_sequence_methods.sq_contains = (objobjproc)dirs_contains;
	dirsType.tp_name = "parsers.dirs";
	dirsType.tp_new = PyType_GenericNew;
	dirsType.tp_basicsize = sizeof(dirsObject);
	dirsType.tp_dealloc = (destructor)dirs_dealloc;
	dirsType.tp_as_sequence = &dirs_sequence_methods;
	dirsType.tp_flags = Py_TPFLAGS_DEFAULT;
	dirsType.tp_doc = "dirs";
	dirsType.tp_iter = (getiterfunc)dirs_iter;
	dirsType.tp_methods = dirs_methods;
	dirsType.tp_init = (initproc)dirs_init;

	if (PyType_Ready(&dirsType) < 0)
		return;
	Py_INCREF(&dirsType);

	PyModule_AddObject(mod, "dirs", (PyObject *)&dirsType);
}