Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/pushkey.py @ 31622:2243ba216f66
statfs: change Linux feature detection
Previously we check three things: "statfs" function, "linux/magic.h" and
"sys/vfs.h" headers. But we didn't check "struct statfs" or the "f_type"
field. That means if a system has "statfs" but "struct statfs" is not
defined in the two header files we check, or defined without the "f_type"
field, the compilation will fail.
This patch combines the checks (2 headers + 1 function + 1 field) together
and sets "HAVE_LINUX_STATFS". It makes setup.py faster (less checks), and
more reliable (immutable to the issue above).
author | Jun Wu <quark@fb.com> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 24 Mar 2017 14:59:19 -0700 |
parents | 7b200566e474 |
children | 57875cf423c9 |
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# pushkey.py - dispatching for pushing and pulling keys # # 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 from . import ( bookmarks, encoding, obsolete, phases, ) def _nslist(repo): n = {} for k in _namespaces: n[k] = "" if not obsolete.isenabled(repo, obsolete.exchangeopt): n.pop('obsolete') return n _namespaces = {"namespaces": (lambda *x: False, _nslist), "bookmarks": (bookmarks.pushbookmark, bookmarks.listbookmarks), "phases": (phases.pushphase, phases.listphases), "obsolete": (obsolete.pushmarker, obsolete.listmarkers), } def register(namespace, pushkey, listkeys): _namespaces[namespace] = (pushkey, listkeys) def _get(namespace): return _namespaces.get(namespace, (lambda *x: False, lambda *x: {})) def push(repo, namespace, key, old, new): '''should succeed iff value was old''' pk = _get(namespace)[0] return pk(repo, key, old, new) def list(repo, namespace): '''return a dict''' lk = _get(namespace)[1] return lk(repo) encode = encoding.fromlocal decode = encoding.tolocal def encodekeys(keys): """encode the content of a pushkey namespace for exchange over the wire""" return '\n'.join(['%s\t%s' % (encode(k), encode(v)) for k, v in keys]) def decodekeys(data): """decode the content of a pushkey namespace from exchange over the wire""" result = {} for l in data.splitlines(): k, v = l.split('\t') result[decode(k)] = decode(v) return result