view tests/test-histedit-bookmark-motion.t @ 37631:2f626233859b

wireproto: implement batching on peer executor interface This is a bit more complicated than non-batch requests because we need to buffer sends until the last request arrives *and* we need to support resolving futures as data arrives from the remote. In a classical concurrent.futures executor model, the future "starts" as soon as it is submitted. However, we have nothing to start until the last command is submitted. If we did nothing, calling result() would deadlock, since the future hasn't "started." So in the case where we queue the command, we return a special future type whose result() will trigger sendcommands(). This eliminates the deadlock potential. It also serves as a check against callers who may be calling result() prematurely, as it will prevent any subsequent callcommands() from working. This behavior is slightly annoying and a bit restrictive. But it's the world that half duplex connections forces on us. In order to support streaming responses, we were previously using a generator. But with a futures-based API, we're using futures and not generators. So in order to get streaming, we need a background thread to read data from the server. The approach taken in this patch is to leverage the ThreadPoolExecutor from concurrent.futures for managing a background thread. We create an executor and future that resolves when all response data is processed (or an error occurs). When exiting the context manager, we wait on that background reading before returning. I was hoping we could manually spin up a threading.Thread and this would be simple. But I ran into a few deadlocks when implementing. After looking at the source code to concurrent.futures, I figured it would just be easier to use a ThreadPoolExecutor than implement all the code needed to manually manage a thread. To prove this works, a use of the batch API in discovery has been updated. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D3269
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Fri, 13 Apr 2018 11:02:34 -0700
parents 4441705b7111
children 6f8a94bbfba1
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  $ . "$TESTDIR/histedit-helpers.sh"

  $ cat >> $HGRCPATH <<EOF
  > [extensions]
  > histedit=
  > EOF

  $ hg init r
  $ cd r

  $ for x in a b c d e f ; do
  >     echo $x > $x
  >     hg add $x
  >     hg ci -m $x
  > done

  $ hg book -r 1 will-move-backwards
  $ hg book -r 2 two
  $ hg book -r 2 also-two
  $ hg book -r 3 three
  $ hg book -r 4 four
  $ hg book -r tip five
  $ hg log --graph
  @  changeset:   5:652413bf663e
  |  bookmark:    five
  |  tag:         tip
  |  user:        test
  |  date:        Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
  |  summary:     f
  |
  o  changeset:   4:e860deea161a
  |  bookmark:    four
  |  user:        test
  |  date:        Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
  |  summary:     e
  |
  o  changeset:   3:055a42cdd887
  |  bookmark:    three
  |  user:        test
  |  date:        Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
  |  summary:     d
  |
  o  changeset:   2:177f92b77385
  |  bookmark:    also-two
  |  bookmark:    two
  |  user:        test
  |  date:        Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
  |  summary:     c
  |
  o  changeset:   1:d2ae7f538514
  |  bookmark:    will-move-backwards
  |  user:        test
  |  date:        Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
  |  summary:     b
  |
  o  changeset:   0:cb9a9f314b8b
     user:        test
     date:        Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
     summary:     a
  
  $ HGEDITOR=cat hg histedit 1
  pick d2ae7f538514 1 b
  pick 177f92b77385 2 c
  pick 055a42cdd887 3 d
  pick e860deea161a 4 e
  pick 652413bf663e 5 f
  
  # Edit history between d2ae7f538514 and 652413bf663e
  #
  # Commits are listed from least to most recent
  #
  # You can reorder changesets by reordering the lines
  #
  # Commands:
  #
  #  e, edit = use commit, but stop for amending
  #  m, mess = edit commit message without changing commit content
  #  p, pick = use commit
  #  b, base = checkout changeset and apply further changesets from there
  #  d, drop = remove commit from history
  #  f, fold = use commit, but combine it with the one above
  #  r, roll = like fold, but discard this commit's description and date
  #
  $ hg histedit 1 --commands - --verbose << EOF | grep histedit
  > pick 177f92b77385 2 c
  > drop d2ae7f538514 1 b
  > pick 055a42cdd887 3 d
  > fold e860deea161a 4 e
  > pick 652413bf663e 5 f
  > EOF
  saved backup bundle to $TESTTMP/r/.hg/strip-backup/96e494a2d553-45c027ab-histedit.hg
  $ hg log --graph
  @  changeset:   3:cacdfd884a93
  |  bookmark:    five
  |  tag:         tip
  |  user:        test
  |  date:        Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
  |  summary:     f
  |
  o  changeset:   2:59d9f330561f
  |  bookmark:    four
  |  bookmark:    three
  |  user:        test
  |  date:        Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
  |  summary:     d
  |
  o  changeset:   1:b346ab9a313d
  |  bookmark:    also-two
  |  bookmark:    two
  |  user:        test
  |  date:        Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
  |  summary:     c
  |
  o  changeset:   0:cb9a9f314b8b
     bookmark:    will-move-backwards
     user:        test
     date:        Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
     summary:     a
  
  $ HGEDITOR=cat hg histedit 1
  pick b346ab9a313d 1 c
  pick 59d9f330561f 2 d
  pick cacdfd884a93 3 f
  
  # Edit history between b346ab9a313d and cacdfd884a93
  #
  # Commits are listed from least to most recent
  #
  # You can reorder changesets by reordering the lines
  #
  # Commands:
  #
  #  e, edit = use commit, but stop for amending
  #  m, mess = edit commit message without changing commit content
  #  p, pick = use commit
  #  b, base = checkout changeset and apply further changesets from there
  #  d, drop = remove commit from history
  #  f, fold = use commit, but combine it with the one above
  #  r, roll = like fold, but discard this commit's description and date
  #
  $ hg histedit 1 --commands - --verbose << EOF | grep histedit
  > pick b346ab9a313d 1 c
  > pick cacdfd884a93 3 f
  > pick 59d9f330561f 2 d
  > EOF
  saved backup bundle to $TESTTMP/r/.hg/strip-backup/59d9f330561f-073008af-histedit.hg

We expect 'five' to stay at tip, since the tipmost bookmark is most
likely the useful signal.

  $ hg log --graph
  @  changeset:   3:c04e50810e4b
  |  bookmark:    five
  |  bookmark:    four
  |  bookmark:    three
  |  tag:         tip
  |  user:        test
  |  date:        Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
  |  summary:     d
  |
  o  changeset:   2:c13eb81022ca
  |  user:        test
  |  date:        Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
  |  summary:     f
  |
  o  changeset:   1:b346ab9a313d
  |  bookmark:    also-two
  |  bookmark:    two
  |  user:        test
  |  date:        Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
  |  summary:     c
  |
  o  changeset:   0:cb9a9f314b8b
     bookmark:    will-move-backwards
     user:        test
     date:        Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
     summary:     a