clonebundles: filter on bundle specification
Not all clients are capable of reading every bundle. Currently, content
negotiation to ensure a server sends a client a compatible bundle
format is performed at request time. The response bundle is dynamically
generated at request time, so this works fine.
Clone bundles are statically generated *before* the request. This means
that a modern server could produce bundles that a legacy client isn't
capable of reading. Without some kind of "type hint" in the clone
bundles manifest, a client may attempt to download an incompatible
bundle. Furthermore, a client may not realize a bundle is incompatible
until it has processed part of the bundle (imagine consuming a 1 GB
changegroup bundle2 part only to discover the bundle2 part afterwards is
incompatibl). This would waste time and resources. And it isn't very
user friendly.
Clone bundle manifests thus need to advertise the *exact* format of the
hosted bundles so clients may filter out entries that they don't know
how to read. This patch introduces that mechanism.
We introduce the BUNDLESPEC attribute to declare the "bundle
specification" of the entry. Bundle specifications are parsed using
exchange.parsebundlespecification, which uses the same strings as the
"--type" argument to `hg bundle`. The supported bundle specifications
are well defined and backwards compatible.
When a client encounters a BUNDLESPEC that is invalid or unsupported, it
silently ignores the entry.
$ hg init
$ echo 0 > a
$ echo 0 > b
$ hg ci -A -m m
adding a
adding b
$ hg rm a
$ hg cat a
0
$ hg cat --decode a # more tests in test-encode
0
$ echo 1 > b
$ hg ci -m m
$ echo 2 > b
$ hg cat -r 0 a
0
$ hg cat -r 0 b
0
$ hg cat -r 1 a
a: no such file in rev 7040230c159c
[1]
$ hg cat -r 1 b
1
Test multiple files
$ echo 3 > c
$ hg ci -Am addmore c
$ hg cat b c
1
3
$ hg cat .
1
3
$ hg cat . c
1
3
Test fileset
$ hg cat 'set:not(b) or a'
3
$ hg cat 'set:c or b'
1
3
$ mkdir tmp
$ hg cat --output tmp/HH_%H c
$ hg cat --output tmp/RR_%R c
$ hg cat --output tmp/h_%h c
$ hg cat --output tmp/r_%r c
$ hg cat --output tmp/%s_s c
$ hg cat --output tmp/%d%%_d c
$ hg cat --output tmp/%p_p c
$ hg log -r . --template "{rev}: {node|short}\n"
2: 45116003780e
$ find tmp -type f | sort
tmp/.%_d
tmp/HH_45116003780e3678b333fb2c99fa7d559c8457e9
tmp/RR_2
tmp/c_p
tmp/c_s
tmp/h_45116003780e
tmp/r_2
Test working directory
$ echo b-wdir > b
$ hg cat -r 'wdir()' b
b-wdir