wireproto: separate commands tables for version 1 and 2 commands
We can't easily reuse existing command handlers for version 2
commands because the response types will be different. e.g. many
commands return nodes encoded as hex. Our new wire protocol is
binary safe, so we'll wish to encode nodes as binary.
We /could/ teach each command handler to look at the protocol
handler and change behavior based on the version in use. However,
this would make logic a bit unwieldy over time and would make
it harder to design a unified protocol handler interface. I think
it's better to create a clean break between version 1 and version 2
of commands on the server.
What I imagine happening is we will have separate @wireprotocommand
functions for each protocol generation. Those functions will parse the
request, dispatch to a common function to process it, then generate
the response in its own, transport-specific manner.
This commit establishes a separate table for tracking version 1
commands from version 2 commands. The HTTP server pieces have been
updated to use this new table.
Most commands are marked as both version 1 and version 2, so there is
little practical impact to this change.
A side-effect of this change is we now rely on transport registration
in wireprototypes.TRANSPORTS and certain properties of the protocol
interface. So a test had to be updated to conform.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D2982
$ cat > makepatch.py <<EOF
> f = open('eol.diff', 'wb')
> w = f.write
> w(b'test message\n')
> w(b'diff --git a/a b/a\n')
> w(b'--- a/a\n')
> w(b'+++ b/a\n')
> w(b'@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@\n')
> w(b' a\n')
> w(b'-bbb\r\n')
> w(b'+yyyy\r\n')
> w(b' cc\r\n')
> w(b' \n')
> w(b' d\n')
> w(b'-e\n')
> w(b'\ No newline at end of file\n')
> w(b'+z\r\n')
> w(b'\ No newline at end of file\r\n')
> EOF
$ hg init repo
$ cd repo
$ echo '\.diff' > .hgignore
Test different --eol values
$ $PYTHON -c 'open("a", "wb").write(b"a\nbbb\ncc\n\nd\ne")'
$ hg ci -Am adda
adding .hgignore
adding a
$ $PYTHON ../makepatch.py
invalid eol
$ hg --config patch.eol='LFCR' import eol.diff
applying eol.diff
abort: unsupported line endings type: LFCR
[255]
$ hg revert -a
force LF
$ hg --traceback --config patch.eol='LF' import eol.diff
applying eol.diff
$ cat a
a
yyyy
cc
d
e (no-eol)
$ hg st
force CRLF
$ hg up -C 0
1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ hg --traceback --config patch.eol='CRLF' import eol.diff
applying eol.diff
$ cat a
a\r (esc)
yyyy\r (esc)
cc\r (esc)
\r (esc)
d\r (esc)
e (no-eol)
$ hg st
auto EOL on LF file
$ hg up -C 0
1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ hg --traceback --config patch.eol='auto' import eol.diff
applying eol.diff
$ cat a
a
yyyy
cc
d
e (no-eol)
$ hg st
auto EOL on CRLF file
$ $PYTHON -c 'open("a", "wb").write(b"a\r\nbbb\r\ncc\r\n\r\nd\r\ne")'
$ hg commit -m 'switch EOLs in a'
$ hg --traceback --config patch.eol='auto' import eol.diff
applying eol.diff
$ cat a
a\r (esc)
yyyy\r (esc)
cc\r (esc)
\r (esc)
d\r (esc)
e (no-eol)
$ hg st
auto EOL on new file or source without any EOL
$ $PYTHON -c 'open("noeol", "wb").write(b"noeol")'
$ hg add noeol
$ hg commit -m 'add noeol'
$ $PYTHON -c 'open("noeol", "wb").write(b"noeol\r\nnoeol\n")'
$ $PYTHON -c 'open("neweol", "wb").write(b"neweol\nneweol\r\n")'
$ hg add neweol
$ hg diff --git > noeol.diff
$ hg revert --no-backup noeol neweol
$ rm neweol
$ hg --traceback --config patch.eol='auto' import -m noeol noeol.diff
applying noeol.diff
$ cat noeol
noeol\r (esc)
noeol
$ cat neweol
neweol
neweol\r (esc)
$ hg st
Test --eol and binary patches
$ $PYTHON -c 'open("b", "wb").write(b"a\x00\nb\r\nd")'
$ hg ci -Am addb
adding b
$ $PYTHON -c 'open("b", "wb").write(b"a\x00\nc\r\nd")'
$ hg diff --git > bin.diff
$ hg revert --no-backup b
binary patch with --eol
$ hg import --config patch.eol='CRLF' -m changeb bin.diff
applying bin.diff
$ cat b
a\x00 (esc)
c\r (esc)
d (no-eol)
$ hg st
$ cd ..