Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/dagparser.py @ 37051:40206e227412
wireproto: define and implement protocol for issuing requests
The existing HTTP and SSH wire protocols suffer from a host of flaws
and shortcomings. I've been wanting to rewrite the protocol for a while
now. Supporting partial clone - which will require new wire protocol
commands and capabilities - and other advanced server functionality
will be much easier if we start from a clean slate and don't have
to be constrained by limitations of the existing wire protocol.
This commit starts to introduce a new data exchange format for
use over the wire protocol.
The new protocol is built on top of "frames," which are atomic
units of metadata + data. Frames will make it easier to implement
proxies and other mechanisms that want to inspect data without
having to maintain state. The existing frame metadata is very
minimal and it will evolve heavily. (We will eventually support
things like concurrent requests, out-of-order responses,
compression, side-channels for status updates, etc. Some of
these will require additions to the frame header.)
Another benefit of frames is that all reads are of a fixed size.
A reader works by consuming a frame header, extracting the payload
length, then reading that many bytes. No lookahead, buffering, or
memory reallocations are needed.
The new protocol attempts to be transport agnostic. I want all that's
required to use the new protocol to be a pair of unidirectional,
half-duplex pipes. (Yes, we will eventually make use of full-duplex
pipes, but that's for another commit.) Notably, when the SSH
transport switches to this new protocol, stderr will be unused.
This is by design: the lack of stderr on HTTP harms protocol
behavior there. By shoehorning everything into a pair of pipes,
we can have more consistent behavior across transports.
We currently only define the client side parts of the new protocol,
specifically the bits for requesting that a command run. This keeps
the new code and feature small and somewhat easy to review.
We add support to `hg debugwireproto` for writing frames into
HTTP request bodies. Our tests that issue commands to the new
HTTP endpoint have been updated to transmit frames. The server
bits haven't been touched to consume the frames yet. This will
occur in the next commit...
Astute readers may notice that the command name is transmitted in
both the HTTP request URL and the command request frame. This is
partially a kludge from me initially implementing the frame-based
protocol for SSH first. But it is also a feature: I intend to
eventually support issuing multiple commands per HTTP request. This
will allow us to replace the abomination that is the "batch" wire
protocol command with a protocol-level mechanism for performing
multi-dispatch. Because I want the frame-based protocol to be
as similar as possible across transports, I'd rather we (redundantly)
include the command name in the frame than differ behavior between
transports that have out-of-band routing information (like HTTP)
readily available.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D2851
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 19 Mar 2018 16:49:53 -0700 |
parents | dfd009e5f9f2 |
children | f0b6fbea00cf |
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line source
# dagparser.py - parser and generator for concise description of DAGs # # Copyright 2010 Peter Arrenbrecht <peter@arrenbrecht.ch> # # 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 re import string from .i18n import _ from . import ( error, pycompat, util, ) def parsedag(desc): '''parses a DAG from a concise textual description; generates events "+n" is a linear run of n nodes based on the current default parent "." is a single node based on the current default parent "$" resets the default parent to -1 (implied at the start); otherwise the default parent is always the last node created "<p" sets the default parent to the backref p "*p" is a fork at parent p, where p is a backref "*p1/p2/.../pn" is a merge of parents p1..pn, where the pi are backrefs "/p2/.../pn" is a merge of the preceding node and p2..pn ":name" defines a label for the preceding node; labels can be redefined "@text" emits an annotation event for text "!command" emits an action event for the current node "!!my command\n" is like "!", but to the end of the line "#...\n" is a comment up to the end of the line Whitespace between the above elements is ignored. A backref is either * a number n, which references the node curr-n, where curr is the current node, or * the name of a label you placed earlier using ":name", or * empty to denote the default parent. All string valued-elements are either strictly alphanumeric, or must be enclosed in double quotes ("..."), with "\" as escape character. Generates sequence of ('n', (id, [parentids])) for node creation ('l', (id, labelname)) for labels on nodes ('a', text) for annotations ('c', command) for actions (!) ('C', command) for line actions (!!) Examples -------- Example of a complex graph (output not shown for brevity): >>> len(list(parsedag(b""" ... ... +3 # 3 nodes in linear run ... :forkhere # a label for the last of the 3 nodes from above ... +5 # 5 more nodes on one branch ... :mergethis # label again ... <forkhere # set default parent to labeled fork node ... +10 # 10 more nodes on a parallel branch ... @stable # following nodes will be annotated as "stable" ... +5 # 5 nodes in stable ... !addfile # custom command; could trigger new file in next node ... +2 # two more nodes ... /mergethis # merge last node with labeled node ... +4 # 4 more nodes descending from merge node ... ... """))) 34 Empty list: >>> list(parsedag(b"")) [] A simple linear run: >>> list(parsedag(b"+3")) [('n', (0, [-1])), ('n', (1, [0])), ('n', (2, [1]))] Some non-standard ways to define such runs: >>> list(parsedag(b"+1+2")) [('n', (0, [-1])), ('n', (1, [0])), ('n', (2, [1]))] >>> list(parsedag(b"+1*1*")) [('n', (0, [-1])), ('n', (1, [0])), ('n', (2, [1]))] >>> list(parsedag(b"*")) [('n', (0, [-1]))] >>> list(parsedag(b"...")) [('n', (0, [-1])), ('n', (1, [0])), ('n', (2, [1]))] A fork and a join, using numeric back references: >>> list(parsedag(b"+2*2*/2")) [('n', (0, [-1])), ('n', (1, [0])), ('n', (2, [0])), ('n', (3, [2, 1]))] >>> list(parsedag(b"+2<2+1/2")) [('n', (0, [-1])), ('n', (1, [0])), ('n', (2, [0])), ('n', (3, [2, 1]))] Placing a label: >>> list(parsedag(b"+1 :mylabel +1")) [('n', (0, [-1])), ('l', (0, 'mylabel')), ('n', (1, [0]))] An empty label (silly, really): >>> list(parsedag(b"+1:+1")) [('n', (0, [-1])), ('l', (0, '')), ('n', (1, [0]))] Fork and join, but with labels instead of numeric back references: >>> list(parsedag(b"+1:f +1:p2 *f */p2")) [('n', (0, [-1])), ('l', (0, 'f')), ('n', (1, [0])), ('l', (1, 'p2')), ('n', (2, [0])), ('n', (3, [2, 1]))] >>> list(parsedag(b"+1:f +1:p2 <f +1 /p2")) [('n', (0, [-1])), ('l', (0, 'f')), ('n', (1, [0])), ('l', (1, 'p2')), ('n', (2, [0])), ('n', (3, [2, 1]))] Restarting from the root: >>> list(parsedag(b"+1 $ +1")) [('n', (0, [-1])), ('n', (1, [-1]))] Annotations, which are meant to introduce sticky state for subsequent nodes: >>> list(parsedag(b"+1 @ann +1")) [('n', (0, [-1])), ('a', 'ann'), ('n', (1, [0]))] >>> list(parsedag(b'+1 @"my annotation" +1')) [('n', (0, [-1])), ('a', 'my annotation'), ('n', (1, [0]))] Commands, which are meant to operate on the most recently created node: >>> list(parsedag(b"+1 !cmd +1")) [('n', (0, [-1])), ('c', 'cmd'), ('n', (1, [0]))] >>> list(parsedag(b'+1 !"my command" +1')) [('n', (0, [-1])), ('c', 'my command'), ('n', (1, [0]))] >>> list(parsedag(b'+1 !!my command line\\n +1')) [('n', (0, [-1])), ('C', 'my command line'), ('n', (1, [0]))] Comments, which extend to the end of the line: >>> list(parsedag(b'+1 # comment\\n+1')) [('n', (0, [-1])), ('n', (1, [0]))] Error: >>> try: list(parsedag(b'+1 bad')) ... except Exception as e: print(pycompat.sysstr(bytes(e))) invalid character in dag description: bad... ''' if not desc: return wordchars = pycompat.bytestr(string.ascii_letters + string.digits) labels = {} p1 = -1 r = 0 def resolve(ref): if not ref: return p1 elif ref[0] in pycompat.bytestr(string.digits): return r - int(ref) else: return labels[ref] chiter = pycompat.iterbytestr(desc) def nextch(): return next(chiter, '\0') def nextrun(c, allow): s = '' while c in allow: s += c c = nextch() return c, s def nextdelimited(c, limit, escape): s = '' while c != limit: if c == escape: c = nextch() s += c c = nextch() return nextch(), s def nextstring(c): if c == '"': return nextdelimited(nextch(), '"', '\\') else: return nextrun(c, wordchars) c = nextch() while c != '\0': while c in pycompat.bytestr(string.whitespace): c = nextch() if c == '.': yield 'n', (r, [p1]) p1 = r r += 1 c = nextch() elif c == '+': c, digs = nextrun(nextch(), pycompat.bytestr(string.digits)) n = int(digs) for i in xrange(0, n): yield 'n', (r, [p1]) p1 = r r += 1 elif c in '*/': if c == '*': c = nextch() c, pref = nextstring(c) prefs = [pref] while c == '/': c, pref = nextstring(nextch()) prefs.append(pref) ps = [resolve(ref) for ref in prefs] yield 'n', (r, ps) p1 = r r += 1 elif c == '<': c, ref = nextstring(nextch()) p1 = resolve(ref) elif c == ':': c, name = nextstring(nextch()) labels[name] = p1 yield 'l', (p1, name) elif c == '@': c, text = nextstring(nextch()) yield 'a', text elif c == '!': c = nextch() if c == '!': cmd = '' c = nextch() while c not in '\n\r\0': cmd += c c = nextch() yield 'C', cmd else: c, cmd = nextstring(c) yield 'c', cmd elif c == '#': while c not in '\n\r\0': c = nextch() elif c == '$': p1 = -1 c = nextch() elif c == '\0': return # in case it was preceded by whitespace else: s = '' i = 0 while c != '\0' and i < 10: s += c i += 1 c = nextch() raise error.Abort(_('invalid character in dag description: ' '%s...') % s) def dagtextlines(events, addspaces=True, wraplabels=False, wrapannotations=False, wrapcommands=False, wrapnonlinear=False, usedots=False, maxlinewidth=70): '''generates single lines for dagtext()''' def wrapstring(text): if re.match("^[0-9a-z]*$", text): return text return '"' + text.replace('\\', '\\\\').replace('"', '\"') + '"' def gen(): labels = {} run = 0 wantr = 0 needroot = False for kind, data in events: if kind == 'n': r, ps = data # sanity check if r != wantr: raise error.Abort(_("expected id %i, got %i") % (wantr, r)) if not ps: ps = [-1] else: for p in ps: if p >= r: raise error.Abort(_("parent id %i is larger than " "current id %i") % (p, r)) wantr += 1 # new root? p1 = r - 1 if len(ps) == 1 and ps[0] == -1: if needroot: if run: yield '+%d' % run run = 0 if wrapnonlinear: yield '\n' yield '$' p1 = -1 else: needroot = True if len(ps) == 1 and ps[0] == p1: if usedots: yield "." else: run += 1 else: if run: yield '+%d' % run run = 0 if wrapnonlinear: yield '\n' prefs = [] for p in ps: if p == p1: prefs.append('') elif p in labels: prefs.append(labels[p]) else: prefs.append('%d' % (r - p)) yield '*' + '/'.join(prefs) else: if run: yield '+%d' % run run = 0 if kind == 'l': rid, name = data labels[rid] = name yield ':' + name if wraplabels: yield '\n' elif kind == 'c': yield '!' + wrapstring(data) if wrapcommands: yield '\n' elif kind == 'C': yield '!!' + data yield '\n' elif kind == 'a': if wrapannotations: yield '\n' yield '@' + wrapstring(data) elif kind == '#': yield '#' + data yield '\n' else: raise error.Abort(_("invalid event type in dag: " "('%s', '%s')") % (util.escapestr(kind), util.escapestr(data))) if run: yield '+%d' % run line = '' for part in gen(): if part == '\n': if line: yield line line = '' else: if len(line) + len(part) >= maxlinewidth: yield line line = '' elif addspaces and line and part != '.': line += ' ' line += part if line: yield line def dagtext(dag, addspaces=True, wraplabels=False, wrapannotations=False, wrapcommands=False, wrapnonlinear=False, usedots=False, maxlinewidth=70): '''generates lines of a textual representation for a dag event stream events should generate what parsedag() does, so: ('n', (id, [parentids])) for node creation ('l', (id, labelname)) for labels on nodes ('a', text) for annotations ('c', text) for commands ('C', text) for line commands ('!!') ('#', text) for comment lines Parent nodes must come before child nodes. Examples -------- Linear run: >>> dagtext([(b'n', (0, [-1])), (b'n', (1, [0]))]) '+2' Two roots: >>> dagtext([(b'n', (0, [-1])), (b'n', (1, [-1]))]) '+1 $ +1' Fork and join: >>> dagtext([(b'n', (0, [-1])), (b'n', (1, [0])), (b'n', (2, [0])), ... (b'n', (3, [2, 1]))]) '+2 *2 */2' Fork and join with labels: >>> dagtext([(b'n', (0, [-1])), (b'l', (0, b'f')), (b'n', (1, [0])), ... (b'l', (1, b'p2')), (b'n', (2, [0])), (b'n', (3, [2, 1]))]) '+1 :f +1 :p2 *f */p2' Annotations: >>> dagtext([(b'n', (0, [-1])), (b'a', b'ann'), (b'n', (1, [0]))]) '+1 @ann +1' >>> dagtext([(b'n', (0, [-1])), ... (b'a', b'my annotation'), ... (b'n', (1, [0]))]) '+1 @"my annotation" +1' Commands: >>> dagtext([(b'n', (0, [-1])), (b'c', b'cmd'), (b'n', (1, [0]))]) '+1 !cmd +1' >>> dagtext([(b'n', (0, [-1])), ... (b'c', b'my command'), ... (b'n', (1, [0]))]) '+1 !"my command" +1' >>> dagtext([(b'n', (0, [-1])), ... (b'C', b'my command line'), ... (b'n', (1, [0]))]) '+1 !!my command line\\n+1' Comments: >>> dagtext([(b'n', (0, [-1])), (b'#', b' comment'), (b'n', (1, [0]))]) '+1 # comment\\n+1' >>> dagtext([]) '' Combining parsedag and dagtext: >>> dagtext(parsedag(b'+1 :f +1 :p2 *f */p2')) '+1 :f +1 :p2 *f */p2' ''' return "\n".join(dagtextlines(dag, addspaces, wraplabels, wrapannotations, wrapcommands, wrapnonlinear, usedots, maxlinewidth))