view mercurial/py3kcompat.py @ 28240:1ac8ce137377

changegroup: fix treemanifests on merges The current code for generating treemanifest revisions takes the list of files in the changeset and finds the directories from them. This does not work for merges, since a merge may pick file A from one side and file B from another and neither of them would appear in the changeset's "files" list, but the manifest would still change. Fix this by instead walking the root manifest log for all needed revisions, storing all needed file and subdirectory revisions, then recursively visiting the subdirectories. This also turns out to be faster: cloning a version of hg core converted to treemanifests went from ~28s to ~19s (timing somewhat unfair: before this patch, timed until crash; after this patch, timed until manifests complete). The new algorithm is used only on treemanifest repos. Although it works equally well on flat manifests, we leave the iteration over files in the changeset for flat manifests for now.
author Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com>
date Fri, 12 Feb 2016 23:09:09 -0800
parents 5bfd01a3c2a9
children
line wrap: on
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# py3kcompat.py - compatibility definitions for running hg in py3k
#
# Copyright 2010 Renato Cunha <renatoc@gmail.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 builtins
import numbers

Number = numbers.Number

def bytesformatter(format, args):
    '''Custom implementation of a formatter for bytestrings.

    This function currently relies on the string formatter to do the
    formatting and always returns bytes objects.

    >>> bytesformatter(20, 10)
    0
    >>> bytesformatter('unicode %s, %s!', ('string', 'foo'))
    b'unicode string, foo!'
    >>> bytesformatter(b'test %s', 'me')
    b'test me'
    >>> bytesformatter('test %s', 'me')
    b'test me'
    >>> bytesformatter(b'test %s', b'me')
    b'test me'
    >>> bytesformatter('test %s', b'me')
    b'test me'
    >>> bytesformatter('test %d: %s', (1, b'result'))
    b'test 1: result'
    '''
    # The current implementation just converts from bytes to unicode, do
    # what's needed and then convert the results back to bytes.
    # Another alternative is to use the Python C API implementation.
    if isinstance(format, Number):
        # If the fixer erroneously passes a number remainder operation to
        # bytesformatter, we just return the correct operation
        return format % args
    if isinstance(format, bytes):
        format = format.decode('utf-8', 'surrogateescape')
    if isinstance(args, bytes):
        args = args.decode('utf-8', 'surrogateescape')
    if isinstance(args, tuple):
        newargs = []
        for arg in args:
            if isinstance(arg, bytes):
                arg = arg.decode('utf-8', 'surrogateescape')
            newargs.append(arg)
        args = tuple(newargs)
    ret = format % args
    return ret.encode('utf-8', 'surrogateescape')
builtins.bytesformatter = bytesformatter

origord = builtins.ord
def fakeord(char):
    if isinstance(char, int):
        return char
    return origord(char)
builtins.ord = fakeord

if __name__ == '__main__':
    import doctest
    doctest.testmod()