Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-batching.py @ 45933:2960b7fac966
setup: copy pythonXY.dll next to the hg.exe wrapper when building
This avoids the problem of having the newly built binary complaining that it
can't find the DLL. There is an option in the python.org installer to add the
python install to PATH (which defaulted to "on" with py2, and therefore was not
an issue up to this point), but that makes switching between python versions
harder.
This shouldn't be an issue with the PyOxidizer binary, but that current has
issues running some of the tests, and took noticeably longer to build last time
I tried it.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D9362
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 21 Nov 2020 16:20:49 -0500 |
parents | 2372284d9457 |
children | 89a2afe31e82 |
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# test-batching.py - tests for transparent command batching # # Copyright 2011 Peter Arrenbrecht <peter@arrenbrecht.ch> # # 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, print_function import contextlib from mercurial import ( localrepo, pycompat, wireprotov1peer, ) def bprint(*bs): print(*[pycompat.sysstr(b) for b in bs]) # equivalent of repo.repository class thing(object): def hello(self): return b"Ready." # equivalent of localrepo.localrepository class localthing(thing): def foo(self, one, two=None): if one: return b"%s and %s" % (one, two,) return b"Nope" def bar(self, b, a): return b"%s und %s" % (b, a,) def greet(self, name=None): return b"Hello, %s" % name @contextlib.contextmanager def commandexecutor(self): e = localrepo.localcommandexecutor(self) try: yield e finally: e.close() # usage of "thing" interface def use(it): # Direct call to base method shared between client and server. bprint(it.hello()) # Direct calls to proxied methods. They cause individual roundtrips. bprint(it.foo(b"Un", two=b"Deux")) bprint(it.bar(b"Eins", b"Zwei")) # Batched call to a couple of proxied methods. with it.commandexecutor() as e: ffoo = e.callcommand(b'foo', {b'one': b'One', b'two': b'Two'}) fbar = e.callcommand(b'bar', {b'b': b'Eins', b'a': b'Zwei'}) fbar2 = e.callcommand(b'bar', {b'b': b'Uno', b'a': b'Due'}) bprint(ffoo.result()) bprint(fbar.result()) bprint(fbar2.result()) # local usage mylocal = localthing() print() bprint(b"== Local") use(mylocal) # demo remoting; mimicks what wireproto and HTTP/SSH do # shared def escapearg(plain): return ( plain.replace(b':', b'::') .replace(b',', b':,') .replace(b';', b':;') .replace(b'=', b':=') ) def unescapearg(escaped): return ( escaped.replace(b':=', b'=') .replace(b':;', b';') .replace(b':,', b',') .replace(b'::', b':') ) # server side # equivalent of wireproto's global functions class server(object): def __init__(self, local): self.local = local def _call(self, name, args): args = dict(arg.split(b'=', 1) for arg in args) return getattr(self, name)(**args) def perform(self, req): bprint(b"REQ:", req) name, args = req.split(b'?', 1) args = args.split(b'&') vals = dict(arg.split(b'=', 1) for arg in args) res = getattr(self, pycompat.sysstr(name))(**pycompat.strkwargs(vals)) bprint(b" ->", res) return res def batch(self, cmds): res = [] for pair in cmds.split(b';'): name, args = pair.split(b':', 1) vals = {} for a in args.split(b','): if a: n, v = a.split(b'=') vals[n] = unescapearg(v) res.append( escapearg( getattr(self, pycompat.sysstr(name))( **pycompat.strkwargs(vals) ) ) ) return b';'.join(res) def foo(self, one, two): return mangle(self.local.foo(unmangle(one), unmangle(two))) def bar(self, b, a): return mangle(self.local.bar(unmangle(b), unmangle(a))) def greet(self, name): return mangle(self.local.greet(unmangle(name))) myserver = server(mylocal) # local side # equivalent of wireproto.encode/decodelist, that is, type-specific marshalling # here we just transform the strings a bit to check we're properly en-/decoding def mangle(s): return b''.join(pycompat.bytechr(ord(c) + 1) for c in pycompat.bytestr(s)) def unmangle(s): return b''.join(pycompat.bytechr(ord(c) - 1) for c in pycompat.bytestr(s)) # equivalent of wireproto.wirerepository and something like http's wire format class remotething(thing): def __init__(self, server): self.server = server def _submitone(self, name, args): req = name + b'?' + b'&'.join([b'%s=%s' % (n, v) for n, v in args]) return self.server.perform(req) def _submitbatch(self, cmds): req = [] for name, args in cmds: args = b','.join(n + b'=' + escapearg(v) for n, v in args) req.append(name + b':' + args) req = b';'.join(req) res = self._submitone(b'batch', [(b'cmds', req,)]) for r in res.split(b';'): yield r @contextlib.contextmanager def commandexecutor(self): e = wireprotov1peer.peerexecutor(self) try: yield e finally: e.close() @wireprotov1peer.batchable def foo(self, one, two=None): encargs = [(b'one', mangle(one),), (b'two', mangle(two),)] encresref = wireprotov1peer.future() yield encargs, encresref yield unmangle(encresref.value) @wireprotov1peer.batchable def bar(self, b, a): encresref = wireprotov1peer.future() yield [(b'b', mangle(b),), (b'a', mangle(a),)], encresref yield unmangle(encresref.value) # greet is coded directly. It therefore does not support batching. If it # does appear in a batch, the batch is split around greet, and the call to # greet is done in its own roundtrip. def greet(self, name=None): return unmangle(self._submitone(b'greet', [(b'name', mangle(name),)])) # demo remote usage myproxy = remotething(myserver) print() bprint(b"== Remote") use(myproxy)