mercurial/__init__.py
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
Thu, 01 Mar 2018 08:24:54 -0800
changeset 36557 72e487851a53
parent 35254 414114a7c18f
child 36646 5246f940a48e
permissions -rw-r--r--
debugcommands: add debugwireproto command We currently don't have a low-level mechanism for sending arbitrary wire protocol commands. Having a generic and robust mechanism for sending wire protocol commands, examining wire data, etc would make it vastly easier to test the wire protocol and debug server operation. This is a problem I've wanted a solution for numerous times, especially recently as I've been hacking on a new version of the wire protocol. This commit establishes a `hg debugwireproto` command for sending data to a peer. The command invents a mini language for specifying actions to take. This will enable a lot of flexibility for issuing commands and testing variations for how commands are sent. Right now, we only support low-level raw sends and receives. These are probably the least valuable commands to intended users of this command. But they are the most useful commands to implement to bootstrap the feature (I've chosen to reimplement test-ssh-proto.t using this command to prove its usefulness). My eventual goal of `hg debugwireproto` is to allow calling wire protocol commands with a human-friendly interface. Essentially, people can type in a command name and arguments and `hg debugwireproto` will figure out how to send that on the wire. I'd love to eventually be able to save the server's raw response to a file. This would allow us to e.g. call "getbundle" wire protocol commands easily. test-ssh-proto.t has been updated to use the new command in lieu of piping directly to a server process. As part of the transition, test behavior improved. Before, we piped all request data to the server at once. Now, we have explicit control over the ordering of operations. e.g. we can send one command, receive its response, then send another command. This will allow us to more robustly test race conditions, buffering behavior, etc. There were some subtle changes in test behavior. For example, previous behavior would often send trailing newlines to the server. The new mechanism doesn't treat literal newlines specially and requires newlines be escaped in the payload. Because the new logging code is very low level, it is easy to introduce race conditions in tests. For example, the number of bytes returned by a read() may vary depending on load. This is why tests make heavy use of "readline" for consuming data: the result of that operation should be deterministic and not subject to race conditions. There are still some uses of "readavailable." However, those are only for reading from stderr. I was able to reproduce timing issues with my system under load when using "readavailable" globally. But if I "readline" to grab stdout, "readavailable" appears to work deterministically for stderr. I think this is because the server writes to stderr first. As long as the OS delivers writes to pipes in the same order they were made, this should work. If there are timing issues, we can introduce a mechanism to readline from stderr. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D2392

# __init__.py - Startup and module loading 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 sys

# Allow 'from mercurial import demandimport' to keep working.
import hgdemandimport
demandimport = hgdemandimport

__all__ = []

# Python 3 uses a custom module loader that transforms source code between
# source file reading and compilation. This is done by registering a custom
# finder that changes the spec for Mercurial modules to use a custom loader.
if sys.version_info[0] >= 3:
    import importlib
    import importlib.abc
    import io
    import token
    import tokenize

    class hgpathentryfinder(importlib.abc.MetaPathFinder):
        """A sys.meta_path finder that uses a custom module loader."""
        def find_spec(self, fullname, path, target=None):
            # Only handle Mercurial-related modules.
            if not fullname.startswith(('mercurial.', 'hgext.', 'hgext3rd.')):
                return None
            # third-party packages are expected to be dual-version clean
            if fullname.startswith('mercurial.thirdparty'):
                return None
            # zstd is already dual-version clean, don't try and mangle it
            if fullname.startswith('mercurial.zstd'):
                return None
            # pywatchman is already dual-version clean, don't try and mangle it
            if fullname.startswith('hgext.fsmonitor.pywatchman'):
                return None

            # Try to find the module using other registered finders.
            spec = None
            for finder in sys.meta_path:
                if finder == self:
                    continue

                spec = finder.find_spec(fullname, path, target=target)
                if spec:
                    break

            # This is a Mercurial-related module but we couldn't find it
            # using the previously-registered finders. This likely means
            # the module doesn't exist.
            if not spec:
                return None

            # TODO need to support loaders from alternate specs, like zip
            # loaders.
            loader = hgloader(spec.name, spec.origin)
            # Can't use util.safehasattr here because that would require
            # importing util, and we're in import code.
            if hasattr(spec.loader, 'loader'): # hasattr-py3-only
                # This is a nested loader (maybe a lazy loader?)
                spec.loader.loader = loader
            else:
                spec.loader = loader
            return spec

    def replacetokens(tokens, fullname):
        """Transform a stream of tokens from raw to Python 3.

        It is called by the custom module loading machinery to rewrite
        source/tokens between source decoding and compilation.

        Returns a generator of possibly rewritten tokens.

        The input token list may be mutated as part of processing. However,
        its changes do not necessarily match the output token stream.

        REMEMBER TO CHANGE ``BYTECODEHEADER`` WHEN CHANGING THIS FUNCTION
        OR CACHED FILES WON'T GET INVALIDATED PROPERLY.
        """
        futureimpline = False

        # The following utility functions access the tokens list and i index of
        # the for i, t enumerate(tokens) loop below
        def _isop(j, *o):
            """Assert that tokens[j] is an OP with one of the given values"""
            try:
                return tokens[j].type == token.OP and tokens[j].string in o
            except IndexError:
                return False

        def _findargnofcall(n):
            """Find arg n of a call expression (start at 0)

            Returns index of the first token of that argument, or None if
            there is not that many arguments.

            Assumes that token[i + 1] is '('.

            """
            nested = 0
            for j in range(i + 2, len(tokens)):
                if _isop(j, ')', ']', '}'):
                    # end of call, tuple, subscription or dict / set
                    nested -= 1
                    if nested < 0:
                        return None
                elif n == 0:
                    # this is the starting position of arg
                    return j
                elif _isop(j, '(', '[', '{'):
                    nested += 1
                elif _isop(j, ',') and nested == 0:
                    n -= 1

            return None

        def _ensureunicode(j):
            """Make sure the token at j is a unicode string

            This rewrites a string token to include the unicode literal prefix
            so the string transformer won't add the byte prefix.

            Ignores tokens that are not strings. Assumes bounds checking has
            already been done.

            """
            st = tokens[j]
            if st.type == token.STRING and st.string.startswith(("'", '"')):
                tokens[j] = st._replace(string='u%s' % st.string)

        for i, t in enumerate(tokens):
            # Convert most string literals to byte literals. String literals
            # in Python 2 are bytes. String literals in Python 3 are unicode.
            # Most strings in Mercurial are bytes and unicode strings are rare.
            # Rather than rewrite all string literals to use ``b''`` to indicate
            # byte strings, we apply this token transformer to insert the ``b``
            # prefix nearly everywhere.
            if t.type == token.STRING:
                s = t.string

                # Preserve docstrings as string literals. This is inconsistent
                # with regular unprefixed strings. However, the
                # "from __future__" parsing (which allows a module docstring to
                # exist before it) doesn't properly handle the docstring if it
                # is b''' prefixed, leading to a SyntaxError. We leave all
                # docstrings as unprefixed to avoid this. This means Mercurial
                # components touching docstrings need to handle unicode,
                # unfortunately.
                if s[0:3] in ("'''", '"""'):
                    yield t
                    continue

                # If the first character isn't a quote, it is likely a string
                # prefixing character (such as 'b', 'u', or 'r'. Ignore.
                if s[0] not in ("'", '"'):
                    yield t
                    continue

                # String literal. Prefix to make a b'' string.
                yield t._replace(string='b%s' % t.string)
                continue

            # Insert compatibility imports at "from __future__ import" line.
            # No '\n' should be added to preserve line numbers.
            if (t.type == token.NAME and t.string == 'import' and
                all(u.type == token.NAME for u in tokens[i - 2:i]) and
                [u.string for u in tokens[i - 2:i]] == ['from', '__future__']):
                futureimpline = True
            if t.type == token.NEWLINE and futureimpline:
                futureimpline = False
                if fullname == 'mercurial.pycompat':
                    yield t
                    continue
                r, c = t.start
                l = (b'; from mercurial.pycompat import '
                     b'delattr, getattr, hasattr, setattr, xrange, '
                     b'open, unicode\n')
                for u in tokenize.tokenize(io.BytesIO(l).readline):
                    if u.type in (tokenize.ENCODING, token.ENDMARKER):
                        continue
                    yield u._replace(
                        start=(r, c + u.start[1]), end=(r, c + u.end[1]))
                continue

            # This looks like a function call.
            if t.type == token.NAME and _isop(i + 1, '('):
                fn = t.string

                # *attr() builtins don't accept byte strings to 2nd argument.
                if (fn in ('getattr', 'setattr', 'hasattr', 'safehasattr') and
                        not _isop(i - 1, '.')):
                    arg1idx = _findargnofcall(1)
                    if arg1idx is not None:
                        _ensureunicode(arg1idx)

                # .encode() and .decode() on str/bytes/unicode don't accept
                # byte strings on Python 3.
                elif fn in ('encode', 'decode') and _isop(i - 1, '.'):
                    for argn in range(2):
                        argidx = _findargnofcall(argn)
                        if argidx is not None:
                            _ensureunicode(argidx)

                # It changes iteritems/values to items/values as they are not
                # present in Python 3 world.
                elif fn in ('iteritems', 'itervalues'):
                    yield t._replace(string=fn[4:])
                    continue

            # Emit unmodified token.
            yield t

    # Header to add to bytecode files. This MUST be changed when
    # ``replacetoken`` or any mechanism that changes semantics of module
    # loading is changed. Otherwise cached bytecode may get loaded without
    # the new transformation mechanisms applied.
    BYTECODEHEADER = b'HG\x00\x0a'

    class hgloader(importlib.machinery.SourceFileLoader):
        """Custom module loader that transforms source code.

        When the source code is converted to a code object, we transform
        certain patterns to be Python 3 compatible. This allows us to write code
        that is natively Python 2 and compatible with Python 3 without
        making the code excessively ugly.

        We do this by transforming the token stream between parse and compile.

        Implementing transformations invalidates caching assumptions made
        by the built-in importer. The built-in importer stores a header on
        saved bytecode files indicating the Python/bytecode version. If the
        version changes, the cached bytecode is ignored. The Mercurial
        transformations could change at any time. This means we need to check
        that cached bytecode was generated with the current transformation
        code or there could be a mismatch between cached bytecode and what
        would be generated from this class.

        We supplement the bytecode caching layer by wrapping ``get_data``
        and ``set_data``. These functions are called when the
        ``SourceFileLoader`` retrieves and saves bytecode cache files,
        respectively. We simply add an additional header on the file. As
        long as the version in this file is changed when semantics change,
        cached bytecode should be invalidated when transformations change.

        The added header has the form ``HG<VERSION>``. That is a literal
        ``HG`` with 2 binary bytes indicating the transformation version.
        """
        def get_data(self, path):
            data = super(hgloader, self).get_data(path)

            if not path.endswith(tuple(importlib.machinery.BYTECODE_SUFFIXES)):
                return data

            # There should be a header indicating the Mercurial transformation
            # version. If it doesn't exist or doesn't match the current version,
            # we raise an OSError because that is what
            # ``SourceFileLoader.get_code()`` expects when loading bytecode
            # paths to indicate the cached file is "bad."
            if data[0:2] != b'HG':
                raise OSError('no hg header')
            if data[0:4] != BYTECODEHEADER:
                raise OSError('hg header version mismatch')

            return data[4:]

        def set_data(self, path, data, *args, **kwargs):
            if path.endswith(tuple(importlib.machinery.BYTECODE_SUFFIXES)):
                data = BYTECODEHEADER + data

            return super(hgloader, self).set_data(path, data, *args, **kwargs)

        def source_to_code(self, data, path):
            """Perform token transformation before compilation."""
            buf = io.BytesIO(data)
            tokens = tokenize.tokenize(buf.readline)
            data = tokenize.untokenize(replacetokens(list(tokens), self.name))
            # Python's built-in importer strips frames from exceptions raised
            # for this code. Unfortunately, that mechanism isn't extensible
            # and our frame will be blamed for the import failure. There
            # are extremely hacky ways to do frame stripping. We haven't
            # implemented them because they are very ugly.
            return super(hgloader, self).source_to_code(data, path)

    # We automagically register our custom importer as a side-effect of
    # loading. This is necessary to ensure that any entry points are able
    # to import mercurial.* modules without having to perform this
    # registration themselves.
    if not any(isinstance(x, hgpathentryfinder) for x in sys.meta_path):
        # meta_path is used before any implicit finders and before sys.path.
        sys.meta_path.insert(0, hgpathentryfinder())