view tests/check-perf-code.py @ 43658:0796e266d26b

dirs: resolve fuzzer OOM situation by disallowing deep directory hierarchies It seems like 2048 directories ought to be enough for any reasonable use of Mercurial? A previous version of this patch scanned for slashes before any allocations occurred. That approach is slower than this in the happy path, but much faster than this in the case that too many slashes are encountered. We may want to revisit it in the future using memchr() so it'll be well-optimized by the libc we're using. .. bc: Mercurial will now defend against OOMs by refusing to operate on paths with 2048 or more components. This means that _extremely_ deep path hierarchies will be rejected, but we anticipate nobody is using hierarchies this deep. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D7411
author Augie Fackler <augie@google.com>
date Tue, 12 Nov 2019 10:17:59 -0500
parents 2372284d9457
children c102b704edb5
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#!/usr/bin/env python
#
# check-perf-code - (historical) portability checker for contrib/perf.py

from __future__ import absolute_import

import os
import sys

# write static check patterns here
perfpypats = [
    [
        (
            r'(branchmap|repoview|repoviewutil)\.subsettable',
            "use getbranchmapsubsettable() for early Mercurial",
        ),
        (
            r'\.(vfs|svfs|opener|sopener)',
            "use getvfs()/getsvfs() for early Mercurial",
        ),
        (
            r'ui\.configint',
            "use getint() instead of ui.configint() for early Mercurial",
        ),
    ],
    # warnings
    [],
]


def modulewhitelist(names):
    replacement = [
        ('.py', ''),
        ('.c', ''),  # trim suffix
        ('mercurial%s' % '/', ''),  # trim "mercurial/" path
    ]
    ignored = {'__init__'}
    modules = {}

    # convert from file name to module name, and count # of appearances
    for name in names:
        name = name.strip()
        for old, new in replacement:
            name = name.replace(old, new)
        if name not in ignored:
            modules[name] = modules.get(name, 0) + 1

    # list up module names, which appear multiple times
    whitelist = []
    for name, count in modules.items():
        if count > 1:
            whitelist.append(name)

    return whitelist


if __name__ == "__main__":
    # in this case, it is assumed that result of "hg files" at
    # multiple revisions is given via stdin
    whitelist = modulewhitelist(sys.stdin)
    assert whitelist, "module whitelist is empty"

    # build up module whitelist check from file names given at runtime
    perfpypats[0].append(
        # this matching pattern assumes importing modules from
        # "mercurial" package in the current style below, for simplicity
        #
        #    from mercurial import (
        #        foo,
        #        bar,
        #        baz
        #    )
        (
            (
                r'from mercurial import [(][a-z0-9, \n#]*\n(?! *%s,|^[ #]*\n|[)])'
                % ',| *'.join(whitelist)
            ),
            "import newer module separately in try clause for early Mercurial",
        )
    )

    # import contrib/check-code.py as checkcode
    assert 'RUNTESTDIR' in os.environ, "use check-perf-code.py in *.t script"
    contribpath = os.path.join(os.environ['RUNTESTDIR'], '..', 'contrib')
    sys.path.insert(0, contribpath)
    checkcode = __import__('check-code')

    # register perf.py specific entry with "checks" in check-code.py
    checkcode.checks.append(
        ('perf.py', r'contrib/perf.py$', '', checkcode.pyfilters, perfpypats)
    )

    sys.exit(checkcode.main())