revlog: seek to end of file before writing (issue4943)
Revlogs were recently refactored to open file handles in "a+" and use a
persistent file handle for reading and writing. This drastically
reduced the number of file handles being opened.
Unfortunately, it appears that some versions of Solaris lose the file
offset when performing a write after the handle has been seeked.
The simplest workaround is to seek to EOF on files opened in a+ mode
before writing to them, which is what this patch does.
Ideally, this code would exist in the vfs layer. However, this would
require creating a proxy class for file objects in order to provide a
custom implementation of write(). This would add overhead. Since
revlogs are the only files we open in a+ mode, the one-off workaround
in revlog.py should be sufficient.
This patch appears to have little to no impact on performance on my
Linux machine.
--- a/mercurial/revlog.py Mon Nov 30 13:47:29 2015 -0600
+++ b/mercurial/revlog.py Thu Dec 17 17:16:02 2015 -0800
@@ -13,6 +13,7 @@
# import stuff from node for others to import from revlog
import collections
+import os
from node import bin, hex, nullid, nullrev
from i18n import _
import ancestor, mdiff, parsers, error, util, templatefilters
@@ -1426,6 +1427,20 @@
return node
def _writeentry(self, transaction, ifh, dfh, entry, data, link, offset):
+ # Files opened in a+ mode have inconsistent behavior on various
+ # platforms. Windows requires that a file positioning call be made
+ # when the file handle transitions between reads and writes. See
+ # 3686fa2b8eee and the mixedfilemodewrapper in windows.py. On other
+ # platforms, Python or the platform itself can be buggy. Some versions
+ # of Solaris have been observed to not append at the end of the file
+ # if the file was seeked to before the end. See issue4943 for more.
+ #
+ # We work around this issue by inserting a seek() before writing.
+ # Note: This is likely not necessary on Python 3.
+ ifh.seek(0, os.SEEK_END)
+ if dfh:
+ dfh.seek(0, os.SEEK_END)
+
curr = len(self) - 1
if not self._inline:
transaction.add(self.datafile, offset)