view mercurial/peer.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 e6b56b2c1f26
children d549cbb5503d
line wrap: on
line source

# peer.py - repository base classes for mercurial
#
# Copyright 2005, 2006 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>
# Copyright 2006 Vadim Gelfer <vadim.gelfer@gmail.com>
#
# 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

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

# abstract batching support

class future(object):
    '''placeholder for a value to be set later'''
    def set(self, value):
        if util.safehasattr(self, 'value'):
            raise error.RepoError("future is already set")
        self.value = value

class batcher(object):
    '''base class for batches of commands submittable in a single request

    All methods invoked on instances of this class are simply queued and
    return a a future for the result. Once you call submit(), all the queued
    calls are performed and the results set in their respective futures.
    '''
    def __init__(self):
        self.calls = []
    def __getattr__(self, name):
        def call(*args, **opts):
            resref = future()
            self.calls.append((name, args, opts, resref,))
            return resref
        return call
    def submit(self):
        pass

class localbatch(batcher):
    '''performs the queued calls directly'''
    def __init__(self, local):
        batcher.__init__(self)
        self.local = local
    def submit(self):
        for name, args, opts, resref in self.calls:
            resref.set(getattr(self.local, name)(*args, **opts))

def batchable(f):
    '''annotation for batchable methods

    Such methods must implement a coroutine as follows:

    @batchable
    def sample(self, one, two=None):
        # Handle locally computable results first:
        if not one:
            yield "a local result", None
        # Build list of encoded arguments suitable for your wire protocol:
        encargs = [('one', encode(one),), ('two', encode(two),)]
        # Create future for injection of encoded result:
        encresref = future()
        # Return encoded arguments and future:
        yield encargs, encresref
        # Assuming the future to be filled with the result from the batched
        # request now. Decode it:
        yield decode(encresref.value)

    The decorator returns a function which wraps this coroutine as a plain
    method, but adds the original method as an attribute called "batchable",
    which is used by remotebatch to split the call into separate encoding and
    decoding phases.
    '''
    def plain(*args, **opts):
        batchable = f(*args, **opts)
        encargsorres, encresref = batchable.next()
        if not encresref:
            return encargsorres # a local result in this case
        self = args[0]
        encresref.set(self._submitone(f.func_name, encargsorres))
        return batchable.next()
    setattr(plain, 'batchable', f)
    return plain

class peerrepository(object):

    def batch(self):
        return localbatch(self)

    def capable(self, name):
        '''tell whether repo supports named capability.
        return False if not supported.
        if boolean capability, return True.
        if string capability, return string.'''
        caps = self._capabilities()
        if name in caps:
            return True
        name_eq = name + '='
        for cap in caps:
            if cap.startswith(name_eq):
                return cap[len(name_eq):]
        return False

    def requirecap(self, name, purpose):
        '''raise an exception if the given capability is not present'''
        if not self.capable(name):
            raise error.CapabilityError(
                _('cannot %s; remote repository does not '
                  'support the %r capability') % (purpose, name))

    def local(self):
        '''return peer as a localrepo, or None'''
        return None

    def peer(self):
        return self

    def canpush(self):
        return True

    def close(self):
        pass