view mercurial/config.py @ 27015:341cb90ffd18

util: disable floating point stat times (issue4836) Alternate fix for this issue which avoids putting extra function calls and exception handling in the fast path. For almost all purposes, integer timestamps are preferable to Mercurial. It stores integer timestamps in the dirstate and would thus like to avoid doing any float/int comparisons or conversions. We will continue to have to deal with 1-second granularity on filesystems for quite some time, so this won't significantly hinder our capabilities. This has some impact on our file cache validation code in that it lowers timestamp resolution. But as we still have to deal with low-resolution filesystems, we're not relying on this anyway. An alternate approach is to use stat[ST_MTIME], which is guaranteed to be an integer. But since this support isn't already in our extension, we can't depend on it being available without adding a hard Python->C API dependency that's painful for people like yours truly who have bisect regularly and people without compilers.
author Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>
date Thu, 19 Nov 2015 13:21:24 -0600
parents a027a0813b44
children e70c97cc9243
line wrap: on
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# config.py - configuration parsing for Mercurial
#
#  Copyright 2009 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> and others
#
# 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

import errno
import os

from .i18n import _
from . import (
    error,
    util,
)

class config(object):
    def __init__(self, data=None, includepaths=[]):
        self._data = {}
        self._source = {}
        self._unset = []
        self._includepaths = includepaths
        if data:
            for k in data._data:
                self._data[k] = data[k].copy()
            self._source = data._source.copy()
    def copy(self):
        return config(self)
    def __contains__(self, section):
        return section in self._data
    def __getitem__(self, section):
        return self._data.get(section, {})
    def __iter__(self):
        for d in self.sections():
            yield d
    def update(self, src):
        for s, n in src._unset:
            if s in self and n in self._data[s]:
                del self._data[s][n]
                del self._source[(s, n)]
        for s in src:
            if s not in self:
                self._data[s] = util.sortdict()
            self._data[s].update(src._data[s])
        self._source.update(src._source)
    def get(self, section, item, default=None):
        return self._data.get(section, {}).get(item, default)

    def backup(self, section, item):
        """return a tuple allowing restore to reinstall a previous value

        The main reason we need it is because it handles the "no data" case.
        """
        try:
            value = self._data[section][item]
            source = self.source(section, item)
            return (section, item, value, source)
        except KeyError:
            return (section, item)

    def source(self, section, item):
        return self._source.get((section, item), "")
    def sections(self):
        return sorted(self._data.keys())
    def items(self, section):
        return self._data.get(section, {}).items()
    def set(self, section, item, value, source=""):
        if section not in self:
            self._data[section] = util.sortdict()
        self._data[section][item] = value
        if source:
            self._source[(section, item)] = source

    def restore(self, data):
        """restore data returned by self.backup"""
        if len(data) == 4:
            # restore old data
            section, item, value, source = data
            self._data[section][item] = value
            self._source[(section, item)] = source
        else:
            # no data before, remove everything
            section, item = data
            if section in self._data:
                self._data[section].pop(item, None)
            self._source.pop((section, item), None)

    def parse(self, src, data, sections=None, remap=None, include=None):
        sectionre = util.re.compile(r'\[([^\[]+)\]')
        itemre = util.re.compile(r'([^=\s][^=]*?)\s*=\s*(.*\S|)')
        contre = util.re.compile(r'\s+(\S|\S.*\S)\s*$')
        emptyre = util.re.compile(r'(;|#|\s*$)')
        commentre = util.re.compile(r'(;|#)')
        unsetre = util.re.compile(r'%unset\s+(\S+)')
        includere = util.re.compile(r'%include\s+(\S|\S.*\S)\s*$')
        section = ""
        item = None
        line = 0
        cont = False

        for l in data.splitlines(True):
            line += 1
            if line == 1 and l.startswith('\xef\xbb\xbf'):
                # Someone set us up the BOM
                l = l[3:]
            if cont:
                if commentre.match(l):
                    continue
                m = contre.match(l)
                if m:
                    if sections and section not in sections:
                        continue
                    v = self.get(section, item) + "\n" + m.group(1)
                    self.set(section, item, v, "%s:%d" % (src, line))
                    continue
                item = None
                cont = False
            m = includere.match(l)

            if m and include:
                expanded = util.expandpath(m.group(1))
                includepaths = [os.path.dirname(src)] + self._includepaths

                for base in includepaths:
                    inc = os.path.normpath(os.path.join(base, expanded))

                    try:
                        include(inc, remap=remap, sections=sections)
                        break
                    except IOError as inst:
                        if inst.errno != errno.ENOENT:
                            raise error.ParseError(_("cannot include %s (%s)")
                                                   % (inc, inst.strerror),
                                                   "%s:%s" % (src, line))
                continue
            if emptyre.match(l):
                continue
            m = sectionre.match(l)
            if m:
                section = m.group(1)
                if remap:
                    section = remap.get(section, section)
                if section not in self:
                    self._data[section] = util.sortdict()
                continue
            m = itemre.match(l)
            if m:
                item = m.group(1)
                cont = True
                if sections and section not in sections:
                    continue
                self.set(section, item, m.group(2), "%s:%d" % (src, line))
                continue
            m = unsetre.match(l)
            if m:
                name = m.group(1)
                if sections and section not in sections:
                    continue
                if self.get(section, name) is not None:
                    del self._data[section][name]
                self._unset.append((section, name))
                continue

            raise error.ParseError(l.rstrip(), ("%s:%s" % (src, line)))

    def read(self, path, fp=None, sections=None, remap=None):
        if not fp:
            fp = util.posixfile(path)
        self.parse(path, fp.read(), sections, remap, self.read)