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view CONTRIBUTORS @ 36367:043e77f3be09
sshpeer: return framed file object when needed
Currently, wireproto.wirepeer has a default implementation of
_submitbatch() and sshv1peer has a very similar implementation.
The main difference is that sshv1peer is aware of the total amount
of bytes it can read whereas the default implementation reads the
stream until no more data is returned. The default implementation
works for HTTP, since there is a known end to HTTP responses (either
Content-Length or 0 sized chunk).
This commit teaches sshv1peer to use our just-introduced "cappedreader"
class for wrapping a file object to limit the number of bytes that
can be read. We do this by introducing an argument to specify whether
the response is framed. If set, we returned a cappedreader instance
instead of the raw pipe.
_call() always has framed responses. So we set this argument
unconditionally and then .read() the entirety of the result.
Strictly speaking, we don't need to use cappedreader in this case
and can inline frame decoding/read logic. But I like when things
are consistent. The overhead should be negligible.
_callstream() and _callcompressable() are special: whether framing
is used depends on the specific command. So, we define a set
of commands that have framed response. It currently only
contains "batch."
As a result of this change, the one-off implementation of
_submitbatch() in sshv1peer can be removed since it is now
safe to .read() the response's file object until end of stream.
cappedreader takes care of not overrunning the frame.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D2380
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
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date | Wed, 21 Feb 2018 08:35:48 -0800 |
parents | c29efd272395 |
children |
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[This file is here for historical purposes, all recent contributors should appear in the changelog directly] Andrea Arcangeli <andrea at suse.de> Thomas Arendsen Hein <thomas at intevation.de> Goffredo Baroncelli <kreijack at libero.it> Muli Ben-Yehuda <mulix at mulix.org> Mikael Berthe <mikael at lilotux.net> Benoit Boissinot <bboissin at gmail.com> Brendan Cully <brendan at kublai.com> Vincent Danjean <vdanjean.ml at free.fr> Jake Edge <jake at edge2.net> Michael Fetterman <michael.fetterman at intel.com> Edouard Gomez <ed.gomez at free.fr> Eric Hopper <hopper at omnifarious.org> Alecs King <alecsk at gmail.com> Volker Kleinfeld <Volker.Kleinfeld at gmx.de> Vadim Lebedev <vadim at mbdsys.com> Christopher Li <hg at chrisli.org> Chris Mason <mason at suse.com> Colin McMillen <mcmillen at cs.cmu.edu> Wojciech Milkowski <wmilkowski at interia.pl> Chad Netzer <chad.netzer at gmail.com> Bryan O'Sullivan <bos at serpentine.com> Vicent SeguĂ Pascual <vseguip at gmail.com> Sean Perry <shaleh at speakeasy.net> Nguyen Anh Quynh <aquynh at gmail.com> Ollivier Robert <roberto at keltia.freenix.fr> Alexander Schremmer <alex at alexanderweb.de> Arun Sharma <arun at sharma-home.net> Josef "Jeff" Sipek <jeffpc at optonline.net> Kevin Smith <yarcs at qualitycode.com> TK Soh <teekaysoh at yahoo.com> Radoslaw Szkodzinski <astralstorm at gorzow.mm.pl> Samuel Tardieu <sam at rfc1149.net> K Thananchayan <thananck at yahoo.com> Andrew Thompson <andrewkt at aktzero.com> Michael S. Tsirkin <mst at mellanox.co.il> Rafael Villar Burke <pachi at mmn-arquitectos.com> Tristan Wibberley <tristan at wibberley.org> Mark Williamson <mark.williamson at cl.cam.ac.uk>