filelog: wrap revlog instead of inheriting it (API)
The revlog base class exposes a ton of methods. Inheriting the
revlog class for filelog will make it difficult to expose a
clean interface. There will be abstraction violations.
This commit breaks the inheritance of revlog by the filelog
class. Filelog instances now contain a reference to a revlog
instance. Various properties and methods are now proxied to
that instance.
There is precedence for doing this: manifestlog does something
similar. Although, manifestlog has a cleaner interface than
filelog. We'll get there with filelog...
The new filelog class exposes a handful of extra properties and
methods that aren't part of the declared filelog interface.
Every extra item was added in order to get a test to pass. The
set of tests that failed without these extra proxies has
significant overlap with the set of tests that don't work with
the simple store repo. There should be no surprise there.
Hopefully the hardest part about this commit to review are the
changes to bundlerepo and unionrepo. Both repository types
define a custom revlog or revlog-like class and then have a
custom filelog that inherits from both filelog and their custom
revlog. This code has been changed so the filelog types don't
inherit from revlog. Instead, they replace the revlog instance
on the created filelog. This is super hacky. I plan to fix this
in a future commit by parameterizing filelog.__init__.
Because Python function call overhead is a thing, this change
could impact performance by introducing a nearly empty proxy
function for various methods and properties. I would gladly
measure the performance impact of it, but I'm not sure what
operations have tight loops over filelog attribute lookups
or function calls. I know some of the DAG traversal code can
be sensitive about the performance of e.g. parentrevs(). However,
many of these functions are implemented on the revlog class and
therefore have direct access to self.parentrevs() and aren't
going through a proxy.
.. api::
filelog.filelog is now a standalone class and doesn't inherit
from revlog. Instead, it wraps a revlog instance at self._revlog.
This change was made in an attempt to formalize storage APIs and
prevent revlog implementation details leaking through to callers.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D3154
# discovery.py - protocol changeset discovery functions
#
# Copyright 2010 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
from __future__ import absolute_import
import collections
from .i18n import _
from .node import (
nullid,
short,
)
from . import (
error,
)
def findcommonincoming(repo, remote, heads=None, force=False):
"""Return a tuple (common, fetch, heads) used to identify the common
subset of nodes between repo and remote.
"common" is a list of (at least) the heads of the common subset.
"fetch" is a list of roots of the nodes that would be incoming, to be
supplied to changegroupsubset.
"heads" is either the supplied heads, or else the remote's heads.
"""
knownnode = repo.changelog.hasnode
search = []
fetch = set()
seen = set()
seenbranch = set()
base = set()
if not heads:
heads = remote.heads()
if repo.changelog.tip() == nullid:
base.add(nullid)
if heads != [nullid]:
return [nullid], [nullid], list(heads)
return [nullid], [], heads
# assume we're closer to the tip than the root
# and start by examining the heads
repo.ui.status(_("searching for changes\n"))
unknown = []
for h in heads:
if not knownnode(h):
unknown.append(h)
else:
base.add(h)
if not unknown:
return list(base), [], list(heads)
req = set(unknown)
reqcnt = 0
# search through remote branches
# a 'branch' here is a linear segment of history, with four parts:
# head, root, first parent, second parent
# (a branch always has two parents (or none) by definition)
unknown = collections.deque(remote.branches(unknown))
while unknown:
r = []
while unknown:
n = unknown.popleft()
if n[0] in seen:
continue
repo.ui.debug("examining %s:%s\n"
% (short(n[0]), short(n[1])))
if n[0] == nullid: # found the end of the branch
pass
elif n in seenbranch:
repo.ui.debug("branch already found\n")
continue
elif n[1] and knownnode(n[1]): # do we know the base?
repo.ui.debug("found incomplete branch %s:%s\n"
% (short(n[0]), short(n[1])))
search.append(n[0:2]) # schedule branch range for scanning
seenbranch.add(n)
else:
if n[1] not in seen and n[1] not in fetch:
if knownnode(n[2]) and knownnode(n[3]):
repo.ui.debug("found new changeset %s\n" %
short(n[1]))
fetch.add(n[1]) # earliest unknown
for p in n[2:4]:
if knownnode(p):
base.add(p) # latest known
for p in n[2:4]:
if p not in req and not knownnode(p):
r.append(p)
req.add(p)
seen.add(n[0])
if r:
reqcnt += 1
repo.ui.progress(_('searching'), reqcnt, unit=_('queries'))
repo.ui.debug("request %d: %s\n" %
(reqcnt, " ".join(map(short, r))))
for p in xrange(0, len(r), 10):
for b in remote.branches(r[p:p + 10]):
repo.ui.debug("received %s:%s\n" %
(short(b[0]), short(b[1])))
unknown.append(b)
# do binary search on the branches we found
while search:
newsearch = []
reqcnt += 1
repo.ui.progress(_('searching'), reqcnt, unit=_('queries'))
for n, l in zip(search, remote.between(search)):
l.append(n[1])
p = n[0]
f = 1
for i in l:
repo.ui.debug("narrowing %d:%d %s\n" % (f, len(l), short(i)))
if knownnode(i):
if f <= 2:
repo.ui.debug("found new branch changeset %s\n" %
short(p))
fetch.add(p)
base.add(i)
else:
repo.ui.debug("narrowed branch search to %s:%s\n"
% (short(p), short(i)))
newsearch.append((p, i))
break
p, f = i, f * 2
search = newsearch
# sanity check our fetch list
for f in fetch:
if knownnode(f):
raise error.RepoError(_("already have changeset ")
+ short(f[:4]))
base = list(base)
if base == [nullid]:
if force:
repo.ui.warn(_("warning: repository is unrelated\n"))
else:
raise error.Abort(_("repository is unrelated"))
repo.ui.debug("found new changesets starting at " +
" ".join([short(f) for f in fetch]) + "\n")
repo.ui.progress(_('searching'), None)
repo.ui.debug("%d total queries\n" % reqcnt)
return base, list(fetch), heads