Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/dirstateutils/timestamp.py @ 50738:2eaa883778f7 stable
heptapod-ci: (hopefully) fix the pipeline savings system
There is no easy way for me to test this outside of the actual repo since
it would require setting up `heptapod-runner` locally, making a Git repo
with the right changes, etc. It's not worth my time at this point.
If this fails, I'll try to ask for help from Georges, the maintainer
of Heptapod.
author | Raphaël Gomès <rgomes@octobus.net> |
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date | Mon, 03 Jul 2023 15:28:17 +0200 |
parents | 6000f5b25c9b |
children | f4733654f144 |
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# Copyright Mercurial Contributors # # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. import functools import os import stat from .. import error rangemask = 0x7FFFFFFF @functools.total_ordering class timestamp(tuple): """ A Unix timestamp with optional nanoseconds precision, modulo 2**31 seconds. A 3-tuple containing: `truncated_seconds`: seconds since the Unix epoch, truncated to its lower 31 bits `subsecond_nanoseconds`: number of nanoseconds since `truncated_seconds`. When this is zero, the sub-second precision is considered unknown. `second_ambiguous`: whether this timestamp is still "reliable" (see `reliable_mtime_of`) if we drop its sub-second component. """ def __new__(cls, value): truncated_seconds, subsec_nanos, second_ambiguous = value value = (truncated_seconds & rangemask, subsec_nanos, second_ambiguous) return super(timestamp, cls).__new__(cls, value) def __eq__(self, other): raise error.ProgrammingError( 'timestamp should never be compared directly' ) def __gt__(self, other): raise error.ProgrammingError( 'timestamp should never be compared directly' ) def get_fs_now(vfs): """return a timestamp for "now" in the current vfs This will raise an exception if no temporary files could be created. """ tmpfd, tmpname = vfs.mkstemp() try: return mtime_of(os.fstat(tmpfd)) finally: os.close(tmpfd) vfs.unlink(tmpname) def zero(): """ Returns the `timestamp` at the Unix epoch. """ return tuple.__new__(timestamp, (0, 0)) def mtime_of(stat_result): """ Takes an `os.stat_result`-like object and returns a `timestamp` object for its modification time. """ try: # TODO: add this attribute to `osutil.stat` objects, # see `mercurial/cext/osutil.c`. # # This attribute is also not available on Python 2. nanos = stat_result.st_mtime_ns except AttributeError: # https://docs.python.org/2/library/os.html#os.stat_float_times # "For compatibility with older Python versions, # accessing stat_result as a tuple always returns integers." secs = stat_result[stat.ST_MTIME] subsec_nanos = 0 else: billion = int(1e9) secs = nanos // billion subsec_nanos = nanos % billion return timestamp((secs, subsec_nanos, False)) def reliable_mtime_of(stat_result, present_mtime): """Same as `mtime_of`, but return `None` or a `Timestamp` with `second_ambiguous` set if the date might be ambiguous. A modification time is reliable if it is older than "present_time" (or sufficiently in the future). Otherwise a concurrent modification might happens with the same mtime. """ file_mtime = mtime_of(stat_result) file_second = file_mtime[0] file_ns = file_mtime[1] boundary_second = present_mtime[0] boundary_ns = present_mtime[1] # If the mtime of the ambiguous file is younger (or equal) to the starting # point of the `status` walk, we cannot garantee that another, racy, write # will not happen right after with the same mtime and we cannot cache the # information. # # However if the mtime is far away in the future, this is likely some # mismatch between the current clock and previous file system operation. So # mtime more than one days in the future are considered fine. if boundary_second == file_second: if file_ns and boundary_ns: if file_ns < boundary_ns: return timestamp((file_second, file_ns, True)) return None elif boundary_second < file_second < (3600 * 24 + boundary_second): return None else: return file_mtime