view tests/printenv.py @ 42377:0546ead39a7e stable

manifest: avoid corruption by dropping removed files with pure (issue5801) Previously, removed files would simply be marked by overwriting the first byte with NUL and dropping their entry in `self.position`. But no effort was made to ignore them when compacting the dictionary into text form. This allowed them to slip into the manifest revision, since the code seems to be trying to minimize the string operations by copying as large a chunk as possible. As part of this, compact() walks the existing text based on entries in the `positions` list, and consumed everything up to the next position entry. This typically resulted in a ValueError complaining about unsorted manifest entries. Sometimes it seems that files do get dropped in large repos- it seems to correspond to there being a new entry that would take the same slot. A much more trivial problem is that if the only changes were removals, `_compact()` didn't even run because `__delitem__` doesn't add anything to `self.extradata`. Now there's an explicit variable to flag this, both to allow `_compact()` to run, and to avoid searching the manifest in cases where there are no removals. In practice, this behavior was mostly obscured by the check in fastdelta() which takes a different path that explicitly drops removed files if there are fewer than 1000 changes. However, timeless has a repo where after rebasing tens of commits, a totally different path[1] is taken that bypasses the change count check and hits this problem. [1] https://www.mercurial-scm.org/repo/hg/file/2338bdea4474/mercurial/manifest.py#l1511
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
date Thu, 23 May 2019 21:54:24 -0400
parents 73da729ccfef
children 2372284d9457
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#!/usr/bin/env python
#
# simple script to be used in hooks
#
# put something like this in the repo .hg/hgrc:
#
#     [hooks]
#     changegroup = python "$TESTDIR/printenv.py" <hookname> [exit] [output]
#
#   - <hookname> is a mandatory argument (e.g. "changegroup")
#   - [exit] is the exit code of the hook (default: 0)
#   - [output] is the name of the output file (default: use sys.stdout)
#              the file will be opened in append mode.
#
from __future__ import absolute_import
import argparse
import os
import sys

try:
    import msvcrt
    msvcrt.setmode(sys.stdin.fileno(), os.O_BINARY)
    msvcrt.setmode(sys.stdout.fileno(), os.O_BINARY)
    msvcrt.setmode(sys.stderr.fileno(), os.O_BINARY)
except ImportError:
    pass

parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument("name", help="the hook name, used for display")
parser.add_argument(
    "exitcode",
    nargs="?",
    default=0,
    type=int,
    help="the exit code for the hook",
)
parser.add_argument(
    "out", nargs="?", default=None, help="where to write the output"
)
parser.add_argument(
    "--line",
    action="store_true",
    help="print environment variables one per line instead of on a single line",
)
args = parser.parse_args()

if args.out is None:
    out = sys.stdout
    out = getattr(out, "buffer", out)
else:
    out = open(args.out, "ab")

# variables with empty values may not exist on all platforms, filter
# them now for portability sake.
env = [(k, v) for k, v in os.environ.items()
       if k.startswith("HG_") and v]
env.sort()

out.write(b"%s hook: " % args.name.encode('ascii'))
if os.name == 'nt':
    filter = lambda x: x.replace('\\', '/')
else:
    filter = lambda x: x

vars = [b"%s=%s" % (k.encode('ascii'), filter(v).encode('ascii'))
        for k, v in env]

# Print variables on out
if not args.line:
    out.write(b" ".join(vars))
else:
    for var in vars:
        out.write(var)
        out.write(b"\n")

out.write(b"\n")
out.close()

sys.exit(args.exitcode)