lfs: check content length after downloading content
Adapted from the Facebook repo[1]. The intent is to distinguish between the
connection dying and getting served a corrupt blob.
The original message:
HTTP makes no provision to tell your client that you failed halfway through
producing your response and won't have the answer they're looking for. So, if a
LFS server fails while producing a response, then we'll report an OID mismatch.
We can do a little better and disambiguate between "the server sent us the
wrong blob" (very scary) and "the server crashed" (merely annoying) by looking
at the content length of the response we got back. If it's not what was
advertised, we can reasonably safely assume the server crashed.
[1] https://github.com/facebookexperimental/eden/commit/
2a4a6fab4e882ed89b948bfc1e7d56d7c3c99dd2
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D7881
$ mkdir folder
$ cd folder
$ hg init
$ mkdir x x/l x/m x/n x/l/u x/l/u/a
$ touch a b x/aa.o x/bb.o
$ hg status
? a
? b
? x/aa.o
? x/bb.o
$ hg status --terse u
? a
? b
? x/
$ hg status --terse maudric
? a
? b
? x/
$ hg status --terse madric
? a
? b
? x/aa.o
? x/bb.o
$ hg status --terse f
abort: 'f' not recognized
[255]
Add a .hgignore so that we can also have ignored files
$ echo ".*\.o" > .hgignore
$ hg status
? .hgignore
? a
? b
$ hg status -i
I x/aa.o
I x/bb.o
Tersing ignored files
$ hg status -t i --ignored
I x/
Adding more files
$ mkdir y
$ touch x/aa x/bb y/l y/m y/l.o y/m.o
$ touch x/l/aa x/m/aa x/n/aa x/l/u/bb x/l/u/a/bb
$ hg status
? .hgignore
? a
? b
? x/aa
? x/bb
? x/l/aa
? x/l/u/a/bb
? x/l/u/bb
? x/m/aa
? x/n/aa
? y/l
? y/m
$ hg status --terse u
? .hgignore
? a
? b
? x/
? y/
Run from subdirectory
$ hg status --terse u --cwd x/l
? .hgignore
? a
? b
? x/
? y/
$ relstatus() {
> hg status --terse u --config commands.status.relative=1 "$@";
> }
This should probably have {"l/", "m/", "n/"} instead of {"."}. They should
probably come after "../y/".
$ relstatus --cwd x
? ../.hgignore
? ../a
? ../b
? .
? ../y/
This should probably have {"u/", "../m/", "../n/"} instead of {"../"}.
$ relstatus --cwd x/l
? ../../.hgignore
? ../../a
? ../../b
? ../
? ../../y/
This should probably have {"a/", "bb", "../aa", "../../m/", "../../n/"}
instead of {"../../"}.
$ relstatus --cwd x/l/u
? ../../../.hgignore
? ../../../a
? ../../../b
? ../../
? ../../../y/
This should probably have {"bb", "../bb", "../../aa", "../../../m/",
"../../../n/"} instead of {"../../../"}.
$ relstatus --cwd x/l/u/a
? ../../../../.hgignore
? ../../../../a
? ../../../../b
? ../../../
? ../../../../y/
$ hg add x/aa x/bb .hgignore
$ hg status --terse au
A .hgignore
A x/aa
A x/bb
? a
? b
? x/l/
? x/m/
? x/n/
? y/
Including ignored files
$ hg status --terse aui
A .hgignore
A x/aa
A x/bb
? a
? b
? x/l/
? x/m/
? x/n/
? y/l
? y/m
$ hg status --terse au -i
I x/aa.o
I x/bb.o
I y/l.o
I y/m.o
Committing some of the files
$ hg commit x/aa x/bb .hgignore -m "First commit"
$ hg status
? a
? b
? x/l/aa
? x/l/u/a/bb
? x/l/u/bb
? x/m/aa
? x/n/aa
? y/l
? y/m
$ hg status --terse mardu
? a
? b
? x/l/
? x/m/
? x/n/
? y/
Modifying already committed files
$ echo "Hello" >> x/aa
$ echo "World" >> x/bb
$ hg status --terse maurdc
M x/aa
M x/bb
? a
? b
? x/l/
? x/m/
? x/n/
? y/
Respecting other flags
$ hg status --terse marduic --all
M x/aa
M x/bb
? a
? b
? x/l/
? x/m/
? x/n/
? y/l
? y/m
I x/aa.o
I x/bb.o
I y/l.o
I y/m.o
C .hgignore
$ hg status --terse marduic -a
$ hg status --terse marduic -c
C .hgignore
$ hg status --terse marduic -m
M x/aa
M x/bb
Passing 'i' in terse value will consider the ignored files while tersing
$ hg status --terse marduic -u
? a
? b
? x/l/
? x/m/
? x/n/
? y/l
? y/m
Omitting 'i' in terse value does not consider ignored files while tersing
$ hg status --terse marduc -u
? a
? b
? x/l/
? x/m/
? x/n/
? y/
Trying with --rev
$ hg status --terse marduic --rev 0 --rev 1
abort: cannot use --terse with --rev
[255]
Config item to set the default terseness
$ cat <<EOF >> $HGRCPATH
> [commands]
> status.terse = u
> EOF
$ hg status -mu
M x/aa
M x/bb
? a
? b
? x/l/
? x/m/
? x/n/
? y/
Command line flag overrides the default
$ hg status --terse=
M x/aa
M x/bb
? a
? b
? x/l/aa
? x/l/u/a/bb
? x/l/u/bb
? x/m/aa
? x/n/aa
? y/l
? y/m
$ hg status --terse=mardu
M x/aa
M x/bb
? a
? b
? x/l/
? x/m/
? x/n/
? y/
Specifying --rev should still work, with the terseness disabled.
$ hg status --rev 0
M x/aa
M x/bb
? a
? b
? x/l/aa
? x/l/u/a/bb
? x/l/u/bb
? x/m/aa
? x/n/aa
? y/l
? y/m