mercurial/policy.py
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
Tue, 01 Nov 2016 18:54:03 -0700
changeset 30267 b032a7b676c6
parent 29490 b4d117cee636
child 31317 62939e0148f1
permissions -rw-r--r--
statprof: vendor statprof.py Vendored from https://bitbucket.org/facebook/hg-experimental changeset 73f9db47ae5a1a9fa29a98dfe92d557ad51234c3 without modification. This introduces a number of code style violations. The file already has the magic words to skip test-check-code.t. I'll make additional changes to clean up the test-check-py3-compat.t warnings and to change some behavior in the code that isn't suitable for general use. test-check-commit.t also complains about numerous things. But there's nothing we can do if we're importing as-is.

# 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, require the C extensions for performance reasons.
policy = 'c'
policynoc = ('cffi', 'cffi-allow', 'py')
policynocffi = ('c', 'py')

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 '__pypy__' in sys.builtin_module_names:
    policy = 'cffi'

# Our C extensions aren't yet compatible with Python 3. So use pure Python
# on Python 3 for now.
if sys.version_info[0] >= 3:
    policy = 'py'

# Environment variable can always force settings.
policy = os.environ.get('HGMODULEPOLICY', policy)