tests/test-narrow-rebase.t
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
Tue, 13 Nov 2018 12:32:05 -0800
changeset 40671 e9293c5f8bb9
parent 40337 cb516a854bc7
child 42613 35ebdbb38efb
permissions -rw-r--r--
revlog: automatically read from opened file handles The revlog reading code commonly opens a new file handle for reading on demand. There is support for passing a file handle to revlog.revision(). But it is marked as an internal argument. When revlogs are written, we write() data as it is available. But we don't flush() data until all revisions are written. Putting these two traits together, it is possible for an in-process revlog reader during active writes to trigger the opening of a new file handle on a file with unflushed writes. The reader won't have access to all "available" revlog data (as it hasn't been flushed). And with the introduction of the previous patch, this can lead to the revlog raising an error due to a partial read. I witnessed this behavior when applying changegroup data (via `hg pull`) before issue6006 was fixed via different means. Having this and the previous patch in play would have helped cause errors earlier rather than manifesting as hash verification failures. While this has been a long-standing issue, I believe the relatively new delta computation code has tickled it into being more common. This is because the new delta computation code will compute deltas in more scenarios. This can lead to revlog reading. While the delta computation code is probably supposed to reuse file handles, it appears it isn't doing so in all circumstances. But the issue runs deeper than that. Theoretically, any code can access revision data during revlog writes. It appears we were just getting lucky that it wasn't. (The "add revision callback" passed to addgroup() provides an avenue to do this.) If I changed the revlog's behavior to not cache the full revision text or to clear caches after revision insertion during addgroup(), I was able to produce crashes 100% of the time when writing changelog revisions. This is because changelog's add revision callback attempts to resolve the revision data to access the changed files list. And without the revision's fulltext being cached, we performed a revlog read, which required opening a new file handle. This attempted to read unflushed data, leading to a partial read and a crash. This commit teaches the revlog to store the file handles used for writing multiple revisions during addgroup(). It also teaches the code for resolving a file handle when reading to use these handles, if available. This ensures that *any* reads (regardless of their source) use the active writing file handles, if available. These file handles have access to the unflushed data because they wrote it. This allows reads to complete without issue. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D5267


  $ . "$TESTDIR/narrow-library.sh"

create full repo

  $ hg init master
  $ cd master

  $ mkdir inside
  $ echo inside1 > inside/f1
  $ echo inside2 > inside/f2
  $ mkdir outside
  $ echo outside1 > outside/f1
  $ echo outside2 > outside/f2
  $ hg ci -Aqm 'initial'

  $ echo modified > inside/f1
  $ hg ci -qm 'modify inside/f1'

  $ hg update -q 0
  $ echo modified2 > inside/f2
  $ hg ci -qm 'modify inside/f2'

  $ hg update -q 0
  $ echo modified > outside/f1
  $ hg ci -qm 'modify outside/f1'

  $ hg update -q 0
  $ echo modified2 > outside/f1
  $ hg ci -qm 'conflicting outside/f1'

  $ cd ..

  $ hg clone --narrow ssh://user@dummy/master narrow --include inside
  requesting all changes
  adding changesets
  adding manifests
  adding file changes
  added 5 changesets with 4 changes to 2 files (+3 heads)
  new changesets *:* (glob)
  updating to branch default
  2 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
  $ cd narrow
  $ cat >> $HGRCPATH <<EOF
  > [extensions]
  > rebase=
  > EOF

  $ hg update -q 0

Can rebase onto commit where no files outside narrow spec are involved

  $ hg update -q 0
  $ echo modified > inside/f2
  $ hg ci -qm 'modify inside/f2'
  $ hg rebase -d 'desc("modify inside/f1")'
  rebasing 5:c2f36d04e05d "modify inside/f2" (tip)
  saved backup bundle to $TESTTMP/narrow/.hg/strip-backup/*-rebase.hg (glob)

Can rebase onto conflicting changes inside narrow spec

  $ hg update -q 0
  $ echo conflicting > inside/f1
  $ hg ci -qm 'conflicting inside/f1'
  $ hg rebase -d 'desc("modify inside/f1")' 2>&1 | egrep -v '(warning:|incomplete!)'
  rebasing 6:cdce97fbf653 "conflicting inside/f1" (tip)
  merging inside/f1
  unresolved conflicts (see hg resolve, then hg rebase --continue)
  $ echo modified3 > inside/f1
  $ hg resolve -m 2>&1 | grep -v continue:
  (no more unresolved files)
  $ hg rebase --continue
  rebasing 6:cdce97fbf653 "conflicting inside/f1" (tip)
  saved backup bundle to $TESTTMP/narrow/.hg/strip-backup/*-rebase.hg (glob)

Can rebase onto non-conflicting changes outside narrow spec

  $ hg update -q 0
  $ echo modified > inside/f2
  $ hg ci -qm 'modify inside/f2'
  $ hg rebase -d 'desc("modify outside/f1")'
  rebasing 7:c2f36d04e05d "modify inside/f2" (tip)
  saved backup bundle to $TESTTMP/narrow/.hg/strip-backup/*-rebase.hg (glob)

Rebase interrupts on conflicting changes outside narrow spec

  $ hg update -q 'desc("conflicting outside/f1")'
  $ hg phase -f -d .
  $ hg rebase -d 'desc("modify outside/f1")'
  rebasing 4:707c035aadb6 "conflicting outside/f1"
  abort: conflict in file 'outside/f1' is outside narrow clone
  [255]