Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/mpatch.c @ 35112:073eec083e25
bundle2: extract logic for seeking bundle2 part into own class
Currently, unbundlepart classes support bi-directional seeking.
Most consumers of unbundlepart only ever seek forward - typically
as part of moving to the end of the bundle part so they can move
on to the next one. But regardless of the actual usage of the
part, instances maintain an index mapping offsets within the
underlying raw payload to offsets within the decoded payload.
Maintaining the mapping of offset data can be expensive in terms of
memory use. Furthermore, many bundle2 consumers don't have access
to an underlying seekable stream. This includes all compressed
bundles. So maintaining offset data when the underlying stream
can't be seeked anyway is wasteful. And since many bundle2 streams
can't be seeked, it seems like a bad idea to expose a seek API
in bundle2 parts by default. If you provide them, people will
attempt to use them.
Seekable bundle2 parts should be the exception, not the rule. This
commit starts the process dividing unbundlepart into 2 classes: a
base class that supports linear, one-time reads and a child class
that supports bi-directional seeking. In this first commit, we
split various methods and attributes out into a new
"seekableunbundlepart" class. Previous instantiators of "unbundlepart"
now instantiate "seekableunbundlepart." This preserves backwards
compatibility. The coupling between the classes is still tight:
"unbundlepart" cannot be used on its own. This will be addressed
in subsequent commits.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1386
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 13 Nov 2017 19:22:11 -0800 |
parents | 1f4249c764f1 |
children | 90a274965de7 |
line wrap: on
line source
/* mpatch.c - efficient binary patching for Mercurial This implements a patch algorithm that's O(m + nlog n) where m is the size of the output and n is the number of patches. Given a list of binary patches, it unpacks each into a hunk list, then combines the hunk lists with a treewise recursion to form a single hunk list. This hunk list is then applied to the original text. The text (or binary) fragments are copied directly from their source Python objects into a preallocated output string to avoid the allocation of intermediate Python objects. Working memory is about 2x the total number of hunks. Copyright 2005, 2006 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the GNU General Public License, incorporated herein by reference. */ #include <stdlib.h> #include <string.h> #include "bitmanipulation.h" #include "compat.h" #include "mpatch.h" static struct mpatch_flist *lalloc(ssize_t size) { struct mpatch_flist *a = NULL; if (size < 1) size = 1; a = (struct mpatch_flist *)malloc(sizeof(struct mpatch_flist)); if (a) { a->base = (struct mpatch_frag *)malloc( sizeof(struct mpatch_frag) * size); if (a->base) { a->head = a->tail = a->base; return a; } free(a); } return NULL; } void mpatch_lfree(struct mpatch_flist *a) { if (a) { free(a->base); free(a); } } static ssize_t lsize(struct mpatch_flist *a) { return a->tail - a->head; } /* move hunks in source that are less cut to dest, compensating for changes in offset. the last hunk may be split if necessary. */ static int gather(struct mpatch_flist *dest, struct mpatch_flist *src, int cut, int offset) { struct mpatch_frag *d = dest->tail, *s = src->head; int postend, c, l; while (s != src->tail) { if (s->start + offset >= cut) break; /* we've gone far enough */ postend = offset + s->start + s->len; if (postend <= cut) { /* save this hunk */ offset += s->start + s->len - s->end; *d++ = *s++; } else { /* break up this hunk */ c = cut - offset; if (s->end < c) c = s->end; l = cut - offset - s->start; if (s->len < l) l = s->len; offset += s->start + l - c; d->start = s->start; d->end = c; d->len = l; d->data = s->data; d++; s->start = c; s->len = s->len - l; s->data = s->data + l; break; } } dest->tail = d; src->head = s; return offset; } /* like gather, but with no output list */ static int discard(struct mpatch_flist *src, int cut, int offset) { struct mpatch_frag *s = src->head; int postend, c, l; while (s != src->tail) { if (s->start + offset >= cut) break; postend = offset + s->start + s->len; if (postend <= cut) { offset += s->start + s->len - s->end; s++; } else { c = cut - offset; if (s->end < c) c = s->end; l = cut - offset - s->start; if (s->len < l) l = s->len; offset += s->start + l - c; s->start = c; s->len = s->len - l; s->data = s->data + l; break; } } src->head = s; return offset; } /* combine hunk lists a and b, while adjusting b for offset changes in a/ this deletes a and b and returns the resultant list. */ static struct mpatch_flist *combine(struct mpatch_flist *a, struct mpatch_flist *b) { struct mpatch_flist *c = NULL; struct mpatch_frag *bh, *ct; int offset = 0, post; if (a && b) c = lalloc((lsize(a) + lsize(b)) * 2); if (c) { for (bh = b->head; bh != b->tail; bh++) { /* save old hunks */ offset = gather(c, a, bh->start, offset); /* discard replaced hunks */ post = discard(a, bh->end, offset); /* insert new hunk */ ct = c->tail; ct->start = bh->start - offset; ct->end = bh->end - post; ct->len = bh->len; ct->data = bh->data; c->tail++; offset = post; } /* hold on to tail from a */ memcpy(c->tail, a->head, sizeof(struct mpatch_frag) * lsize(a)); c->tail += lsize(a); } mpatch_lfree(a); mpatch_lfree(b); return c; } /* decode a binary patch into a hunk list */ int mpatch_decode(const char *bin, ssize_t len, struct mpatch_flist **res) { struct mpatch_flist *l; struct mpatch_frag *lt; int pos = 0; /* assume worst case size, we won't have many of these lists */ l = lalloc(len / 12 + 1); if (!l) return MPATCH_ERR_NO_MEM; lt = l->tail; while (pos >= 0 && pos < len) { lt->start = getbe32(bin + pos); lt->end = getbe32(bin + pos + 4); lt->len = getbe32(bin + pos + 8); lt->data = bin + pos + 12; pos += 12 + lt->len; if (lt->start > lt->end || lt->len < 0) break; /* sanity check */ lt++; } if (pos != len) { mpatch_lfree(l); return MPATCH_ERR_CANNOT_BE_DECODED; } l->tail = lt; *res = l; return 0; } /* calculate the size of resultant text */ ssize_t mpatch_calcsize(ssize_t len, struct mpatch_flist *l) { ssize_t outlen = 0, last = 0; struct mpatch_frag *f = l->head; while (f != l->tail) { if (f->start < last || f->end > len) { return MPATCH_ERR_INVALID_PATCH; } outlen += f->start - last; last = f->end; outlen += f->len; f++; } outlen += len - last; return outlen; } int mpatch_apply(char *buf, const char *orig, ssize_t len, struct mpatch_flist *l) { struct mpatch_frag *f = l->head; int last = 0; char *p = buf; while (f != l->tail) { if (f->start < last || f->end > len) { return MPATCH_ERR_INVALID_PATCH; } memcpy(p, orig + last, f->start - last); p += f->start - last; memcpy(p, f->data, f->len); last = f->end; p += f->len; f++; } memcpy(p, orig + last, len - last); return 0; } /* recursively generate a patch of all bins between start and end */ struct mpatch_flist * mpatch_fold(void *bins, struct mpatch_flist *(*get_next_item)(void *, ssize_t), ssize_t start, ssize_t end) { ssize_t len; if (start + 1 == end) { /* trivial case, output a decoded list */ return get_next_item(bins, start); } /* divide and conquer, memory management is elsewhere */ len = (end - start) / 2; return combine(mpatch_fold(bins, get_next_item, start, start + len), mpatch_fold(bins, get_next_item, start + len, end)); }