Mercurial > hg-stable
view tests/test-convert-clonebranches.t @ 46706:93e9f448273c
rhg: Add support for automatic fallback to Python
`rhg` is a command-line application that can do a small subset of what
`hg` can. It is written entirely in Rust, which avoids the cost of starting
a Python interpreter and importing many Python modules.
In a script that runs many `hg` commands, this cost can add up.
However making users decide when to use `rhg` instead of `hg` is
not practical as we want the subset of supported functionality
to grow over time.
Instead we introduce "fallback" behavior where, when `rhg` encounters
something (a sub-command, a repository format, …) that is not implemented
in Rust-only, it does nothing but silently start a subprocess of
Python-based `hg` running the same command.
That way `rhg` becomes a drop-in replacement for `hg` that sometimes
goes faster. Whether Python is used should be an implementation detail
not apparent to users (other than through speed).
A new `fallback` value is added to the previously introduced
`rhg.on-unsupported` configuration key. When in this mode, the new
`rhg.fallback-executable` config is determine what command to use
to run a Python-based `hg`.
The previous `rhg.on-unsupported = abort-silent` configuration was designed
to let a wrapper script call `rhg` and then fall back to `hg` based on the
exit code. This is still available, but having fallback behavior built-in
in rhg might be easier for users instead of leaving that script "as an
exercise for the reader".
Using a subprocess like this is not idea, especially when `rhg` is to be
installed in `$PATH` as `hg`, since the other `hg.py` executable needs
to still be available… somewhere. Eventually this could be replaced
by using PyOxidizer to a have a single executable that embeds a Python
interpreter, but only starts it when needed.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D10093
author | Simon Sapin <simon.sapin@octobus.net> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 01 Mar 2021 20:36:06 +0100 |
parents | 5abc47d4ca6b |
children | 42d2b31cee0b |
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$ cat <<EOF >> $HGRCPATH > [extensions] > convert = > [convert] > hg.tagsbranch = 0 > EOF $ hg init source $ cd source $ echo a > a $ hg ci -qAm adda Add a merge with one parent in the same branch $ echo a >> a $ hg ci -qAm changea $ hg up -qC 0 $ hg branch branch0 marked working directory as branch branch0 (branches are permanent and global, did you want a bookmark?) $ echo b > b $ hg ci -qAm addb $ hg up -qC $ hg merge default 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved (branch merge, don't forget to commit) $ hg ci -qm mergeab $ hg tag -ql mergeab $ cd .. Miss perl... sometimes $ cat > filter.py <<EOF > from __future__ import absolute_import > import re > import sys > > r = re.compile(r'^(?:\d+|pulling from)') > sys.stdout.writelines([l for l in sys.stdin if r.search(l)]) > EOF convert $ hg convert -v --config convert.hg.clonebranches=1 source dest | > "$PYTHON" filter.py 3 adda 2 changea 1 addb pulling from default into branch0 1 changesets found 0 mergeab pulling from default into branch0 1 changesets found Add a merge with both parents and child in different branches $ cd source $ hg branch branch1 marked working directory as branch branch1 $ echo a > file1 $ hg ci -qAm c1 $ hg up -qC mergeab $ hg branch branch2 marked working directory as branch branch2 $ echo a > file2 $ hg ci -qAm c2 $ hg merge branch1 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved (branch merge, don't forget to commit) $ hg branch branch3 marked working directory as branch branch3 $ hg ci -qAm c3 $ cd .. incremental conversion $ hg convert -v --config convert.hg.clonebranches=1 source dest | > "$PYTHON" filter.py 2 c1 pulling from branch0 into branch1 4 changesets found 1 c2 pulling from branch0 into branch2 4 changesets found 0 c3 pulling from branch1 into branch3 5 changesets found pulling from branch2 into branch3 1 changesets found