setup: handle removal of old MSVC compiler from setuptools 65.0 (issue6910)
It was removed a few years ago[1]. When trying to reproduce locally using a
clean py3.12 as called out in the bug report, `setuptools` wasn't installed at
all, and needed a `pip install` to fix a `ModuleNotFoundError` when building
locally. Maybe that needs to be in the requirements clause now.
It looks like this "private" module was added in setuptools 48.0.[2] I can't
find a changelog of what version was included in which version of python, and
the changelog for pip has a huge gap between when it called out 67.6.1 in `pip`
23.1 (2023-04-15), and 41.4.0 in `pip` 19.3 (2019-10-14).[3] So, we'll just add
to the existing code instead of replacing it, for safety.
[1] https://github.com/pypa/setuptools/commit/cc017c77948737d131f683e0c25cd37bc639b8fc
[2] https://github.com/pypa/setuptools/commit/d034a5ec7f707499139f90eb846b9e720923124c
[3] https://pip.pypa.io/en/stable/news/
# logtoprocess.py - send ui.log() data to a subprocess
#
# Copyright 2016 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.
"""send ui.log() data to a subprocess (EXPERIMENTAL)
This extension lets you specify a shell command per ui.log() event,
sending all remaining arguments to as environment variables to that command.
Positional arguments construct a log message, which is passed in the `MSG1`
environment variables. Each keyword argument is set as a `OPT_UPPERCASE_KEY`
variable (so the key is uppercased, and prefixed with `OPT_`). The original
event name is passed in the `EVENT` environment variable, and the process ID
of mercurial is given in `HGPID`.
So given a call `ui.log('foo', 'bar %s\n', 'baz', spam='eggs'), a script
configured for the `foo` event can expect an environment with `MSG1=bar baz`,
and `OPT_SPAM=eggs`.
Scripts are configured in the `[logtoprocess]` section, each key an event name.
For example::
[logtoprocess]
commandexception = echo "$MSG1" > /var/log/mercurial_exceptions.log
would log the warning message and traceback of any failed command dispatch.
Scripts are run asynchronously as detached daemon processes; mercurial will
not ensure that they exit cleanly.
"""
import os
from mercurial.utils import procutil
# Note for extension authors: ONLY specify testedwith = 'ships-with-hg-core' for
# extensions which SHIP WITH MERCURIAL. Non-mainline extensions should
# be specifying the version(s) of Mercurial they are tested with, or
# leave the attribute unspecified.
testedwith = b'ships-with-hg-core'
class processlogger:
"""Map log events to external commands
Arguments are passed on as environment variables.
"""
def __init__(self, ui):
self._scripts = dict(ui.configitems(b'logtoprocess'))
def tracked(self, event):
return bool(self._scripts.get(event))
def log(self, ui, event, msg, opts):
script = self._scripts[event]
maxmsg = 100000
if len(msg) > maxmsg:
# Each env var has a 128KiB limit on linux. msg can be long, in
# particular for command event, where it's the full command line.
# Prefer truncating the message than raising "Argument list too
# long" error.
msg = msg[:maxmsg] + b' (truncated)'
env = {
b'EVENT': event,
b'HGPID': os.getpid(),
b'MSG1': msg,
}
# keyword arguments get prefixed with OPT_ and uppercased
env.update(
(b'OPT_%s' % key.upper(), value) for key, value in opts.items()
)
fullenv = procutil.shellenviron(env)
procutil.runbgcommand(script, fullenv, shell=True)
def uipopulate(ui):
ui.setlogger(b'logtoprocess', processlogger(ui))