Mercurial > hg-stable
view mercurial/policy.py @ 37849:5b831053d9b6 stable
hgweb: do not try to replace signal handlers while locking
According to the issue 5889, mod_wsgi issues a warning on signal.signal()
call, and we wouldn't want to see it in error log. The problem addressed
by d77c3b023393 could potentially occur in web session, but that would be
less likely than in user processes.
author | Yuya Nishihara <yuya@tcha.org> |
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date | Fri, 18 May 2018 21:32:05 +0900 |
parents | 2025bf60adb2 |
children | 0304f22497fa |
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# policy.py - module policy logic for Mercurial. # # Copyright 2015 Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> # # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. from __future__ import absolute_import import os import sys # Rules for how modules can be loaded. Values are: # # c - require C extensions # allow - allow pure Python implementation when C loading fails # cffi - required cffi versions (implemented within pure module) # cffi-allow - allow pure Python implementation if cffi version is missing # py - only load pure Python modules # # By default, fall back to the pure modules so the in-place build can # run without recompiling the C extensions. This will be overridden by # __modulepolicy__ generated by setup.py. policy = b'allow' _packageprefs = { # policy: (versioned package, pure package) b'c': (r'cext', None), b'allow': (r'cext', r'pure'), b'cffi': (r'cffi', None), b'cffi-allow': (r'cffi', r'pure'), b'py': (None, r'pure'), } try: from . import __modulepolicy__ policy = __modulepolicy__.modulepolicy except ImportError: pass # PyPy doesn't load C extensions. # # The canonical way to do this is to test platform.python_implementation(). # But we don't import platform and don't bloat for it here. if r'__pypy__' in sys.builtin_module_names: policy = b'cffi' # Environment variable can always force settings. if sys.version_info[0] >= 3: if r'HGMODULEPOLICY' in os.environ: policy = os.environ[r'HGMODULEPOLICY'].encode(r'utf-8') else: policy = os.environ.get(r'HGMODULEPOLICY', policy) def _importfrom(pkgname, modname): # from .<pkgname> import <modname> (where . is looked through this module) fakelocals = {} pkg = __import__(pkgname, globals(), fakelocals, [modname], level=1) try: fakelocals[modname] = mod = getattr(pkg, modname) except AttributeError: raise ImportError(r'cannot import name %s' % modname) # force import; fakelocals[modname] may be replaced with the real module getattr(mod, r'__doc__', None) return fakelocals[modname] # keep in sync with "version" in C modules _cextversions = { (r'cext', r'base85'): 1, (r'cext', r'bdiff'): 3, (r'cext', r'mpatch'): 1, (r'cext', r'osutil'): 4, (r'cext', r'parsers'): 4, } # map import request to other package or module _modredirects = { (r'cext', r'charencode'): (r'cext', r'parsers'), (r'cffi', r'base85'): (r'pure', r'base85'), (r'cffi', r'charencode'): (r'pure', r'charencode'), (r'cffi', r'parsers'): (r'pure', r'parsers'), } def _checkmod(pkgname, modname, mod): expected = _cextversions.get((pkgname, modname)) actual = getattr(mod, r'version', None) if actual != expected: raise ImportError(r'cannot import module %s.%s ' r'(expected version: %d, actual: %r)' % (pkgname, modname, expected, actual)) def importmod(modname): """Import module according to policy and check API version""" try: verpkg, purepkg = _packageprefs[policy] except KeyError: raise ImportError(r'invalid HGMODULEPOLICY %r' % policy) assert verpkg or purepkg if verpkg: pn, mn = _modredirects.get((verpkg, modname), (verpkg, modname)) try: mod = _importfrom(pn, mn) if pn == verpkg: _checkmod(pn, mn, mod) return mod except ImportError: if not purepkg: raise pn, mn = _modredirects.get((purepkg, modname), (purepkg, modname)) return _importfrom(pn, mn)