discovery-helper: use reflink copy if available
A reflink copy will copy the files "as usual" but keep using the same data block
underneath. This is only supported by "copy on write" file system like btrfs or
zfs.
This will achieve similar performance that the existing hardlink clone that
Mercurial performs with the same initial space saving. However, it will behave
better on revlogs start being touch by strip. Instead of duplicating all data in
the touched revlogs, only the block actually affected by the strip will be
duplicated. This save a lot of space when building many variants of large
repositories.
The --reflink=always flag make sure the `cp` call fails if reflink copies are
not supported. Falling back to local clone.
#!/usr/bin/env python
"""dummy SMTP server for use in tests"""
from __future__ import absolute_import
import asyncore
import optparse
import smtpd
import ssl
import sys
import traceback
from mercurial import (
pycompat,
server,
sslutil,
ui as uimod,
)
def log(msg):
sys.stdout.write(msg)
sys.stdout.flush()
class dummysmtpserver(smtpd.SMTPServer):
def __init__(self, localaddr):
smtpd.SMTPServer.__init__(self, localaddr, remoteaddr=None)
def process_message(self, peer, mailfrom, rcpttos, data, **kwargs):
log('%s from=%s to=%s\n' % (peer[0], mailfrom, ', '.join(rcpttos)))
def handle_error(self):
# On Windows, a bad SSL connection sometimes generates a WSAECONNRESET.
# The default handler will shutdown this server, and then both the
# current connection and subsequent ones fail on the client side with
# "No connection could be made because the target machine actively
# refused it". If we eat the error, then the client properly aborts in
# the expected way, and the server is available for subsequent requests.
traceback.print_exc()
class dummysmtpsecureserver(dummysmtpserver):
def __init__(self, localaddr, certfile):
dummysmtpserver.__init__(self, localaddr)
self._certfile = certfile
def handle_accept(self):
pair = self.accept()
if not pair:
return
conn, addr = pair
ui = uimod.ui.load()
try:
# wrap_socket() would block, but we don't care
conn = sslutil.wrapserversocket(conn, ui, certfile=self._certfile)
except ssl.SSLError:
log('%s ssl error\n' % addr[0])
conn.close()
return
smtpd.SMTPChannel(self, conn, addr)
def run():
try:
asyncore.loop()
except KeyboardInterrupt:
pass
def _encodestrsonly(v):
if isinstance(v, type(u'')):
return v.encode('ascii')
return v
def bytesvars(obj):
unidict = vars(obj)
bd = {k.encode('ascii'): _encodestrsonly(v) for k, v in unidict.items()}
if bd[b'daemon_postexec'] is not None:
bd[b'daemon_postexec'] = [
_encodestrsonly(v) for v in bd[b'daemon_postexec']]
return bd
def main():
op = optparse.OptionParser()
op.add_option('-d', '--daemon', action='store_true')
op.add_option('--daemon-postexec', action='append')
op.add_option('-p', '--port', type=int, default=8025)
op.add_option('-a', '--address', default='localhost')
op.add_option('--pid-file', metavar='FILE')
op.add_option('--tls', choices=['none', 'smtps'], default='none')
op.add_option('--certificate', metavar='FILE')
opts, args = op.parse_args()
if opts.tls == 'smtps' and not opts.certificate:
op.error('--certificate must be specified')
addr = (opts.address, opts.port)
def init():
if opts.tls == 'none':
dummysmtpserver(addr)
else:
dummysmtpsecureserver(addr, opts.certificate)
log('listening at %s:%d\n' % addr)
server.runservice(
bytesvars(opts), initfn=init, runfn=run,
runargs=[pycompat.sysexecutable,
pycompat.fsencode(__file__)] + pycompat.sysargv[1:])
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()