Mercurial > hg
view contrib/hgclient.py @ 37057:2ec1fb9de638
wireproto: add request IDs to frames
One of my primary goals with the new wire protocol is to make
operations faster and enable both client and server-side
operations to scale to multiple CPU cores.
One of the ways we make server interactions faster is by reducing
the number of round trips to that server.
With the existing wire protocol, the "batch" command facilitates
executing multiple commands from a single request payload. The way
it works is the requests for multiple commands are serialized. The
server executes those commands sequentially then serializes all
their results. As an optimization for reducing round trips, this
is very effective. The technical implementation, however, is pretty
bad and suffers from a number of deficiencies. For example, it
creates a new place where authorization to run a command must be
checked. (The lack of this checking in older Mercurial releases
was CVE-2018-1000132.)
The principles behind the "batch" command are sound. However, the
execution is not. Therefore, I want to ditch "batch" in the
new wire protocol and have protocol level support for issuing
multiple requests in a single round trip.
This commit introduces support in the frame-based wire protocol to
facilitate this. We do this by adding a "request ID" to each frame.
If a server sees frames associated with different "request IDs," it
handles them as separate requests. All of this happening possibly
as part of the same message from client to server (the same request
body in the case of HTTP).
We /could/ model the exchange the way pipelined HTTP requests do,
where the server processes requests in order they are issued and
received. But this artifically constrains scalability. A better
model is to allow multi-requests to be executed concurrently and
for responses to be sent and handled concurrently. So the
specification explicitly allows this. There is some work to be done
around specifying dependencies between multi-requests. We take
the easy road for now and punt on this problem, declaring that
if order is important, clients must not issue the request until
responses to dependent requests have been received.
This commit focuses on the boilerplate of implementing the request
ID. The server reactor still can't manage multiple, in-flight
request IDs. This will be addressed in a subsequent commit.
Because the wire semantics have changed, we bump the version of the
media type.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D2869
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 14 Mar 2018 16:51:34 -0700 |
parents | 3f45488d70df |
children | 73c2b9c9cd3c |
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# A minimal client for Mercurial's command server from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function import os import signal import socket import struct import subprocess import sys import time try: import cStringIO as io stringio = io.StringIO except ImportError: import io stringio = io.StringIO def connectpipe(path=None): cmdline = ['hg', 'serve', '--cmdserver', 'pipe'] if path: cmdline += ['-R', path] server = subprocess.Popen(cmdline, stdin=subprocess.PIPE, stdout=subprocess.PIPE) return server class unixconnection(object): def __init__(self, sockpath): self.sock = sock = socket.socket(socket.AF_UNIX) sock.connect(sockpath) self.stdin = sock.makefile('wb') self.stdout = sock.makefile('rb') def wait(self): self.stdin.close() self.stdout.close() self.sock.close() class unixserver(object): def __init__(self, sockpath, logpath=None, repopath=None): self.sockpath = sockpath cmdline = ['hg', 'serve', '--cmdserver', 'unix', '-a', sockpath] if repopath: cmdline += ['-R', repopath] if logpath: stdout = open(logpath, 'a') stderr = subprocess.STDOUT else: stdout = stderr = None self.server = subprocess.Popen(cmdline, stdout=stdout, stderr=stderr) # wait for listen() while self.server.poll() is None: if os.path.exists(sockpath): break time.sleep(0.1) def connect(self): return unixconnection(self.sockpath) def shutdown(self): os.kill(self.server.pid, signal.SIGTERM) self.server.wait() def writeblock(server, data): server.stdin.write(struct.pack('>I', len(data))) server.stdin.write(data) server.stdin.flush() def readchannel(server): data = server.stdout.read(5) if not data: raise EOFError channel, length = struct.unpack('>cI', data) if channel in 'IL': return channel, length else: return channel, server.stdout.read(length) def sep(text): return text.replace('\\', '/') def runcommand(server, args, output=sys.stdout, error=sys.stderr, input=None, outfilter=lambda x: x): print('*** runcommand', ' '.join(args)) sys.stdout.flush() server.stdin.write('runcommand\n') writeblock(server, '\0'.join(args)) if not input: input = stringio() while True: ch, data = readchannel(server) if ch == 'o': output.write(outfilter(data)) output.flush() elif ch == 'e': error.write(data) error.flush() elif ch == 'I': writeblock(server, input.read(data)) elif ch == 'L': writeblock(server, input.readline(data)) elif ch == 'r': ret, = struct.unpack('>i', data) if ret != 0: print(' [%d]' % ret) return ret else: print("unexpected channel %c: %r" % (ch, data)) if ch.isupper(): return def check(func, connect=connectpipe): sys.stdout.flush() server = connect() try: return func(server) finally: server.stdin.close() server.wait()