windows: degrade to py2 behavior when reading a non-symlink as a symlink
While waiting for the push to hg-committed in WSL to complete, I ran a
`phabimport` from Windows and got this traceback:
$ hg phabimport 11313
** Unknown exception encountered with possibly-broken third-party extension "mercurial_keyring" (version N/A)
** which supports versions unknown of Mercurial.
** Please disable "mercurial_keyring" and try your action again.
** If that fixes the bug please report it to https://foss.heptapod.net/mercurial/mercurial_keyring/issues
** Python 3.9.5 (default, May 6 2021, 17:29:31) [MSC v.1928 64 bit (AMD64)]
** Mercurial Distributed SCM (version 5.9rc1+hg32.
0e2f5733563d)
** Extensions loaded: absorb, blackbox, evolve 10.3.3, extdiff, fastannotate, fix, mercurial_keyring, mq, phabblocker
20210126, phabricator, rebase, show, strip, topic 0.22.3
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "mercurial.lock", line 279, in _trylock
File "mercurial.vfs", line 202, in makelock
File "mercurial.util", line 2147, in makelock
FileExistsError: [WinError 183] Cannot create a file when that file already exists: b'hp-omen:78348' -> b'C:\\Users\\Matt\\hg/.hg/store/lock'
During handling of the above exception, another exception occurred:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<string>", line 24, in <module>
File "mercurial.dispatch", line 144, in run
File "mercurial.dispatch", line 250, in dispatch
File "mercurial.dispatch", line 294, in _rundispatch
File "mercurial.dispatch", line 470, in _runcatch
File "mercurial.dispatch", line 480, in _callcatch
File "mercurial.scmutil", line 153, in callcatch
File "mercurial.dispatch", line 460, in _runcatchfunc
File "mercurial.dispatch", line 1273, in _dispatch
File "mercurial.dispatch", line 918, in runcommand
File "mercurial.dispatch", line 1285, in _runcommand
File "mercurial.dispatch", line 1271, in <lambda>
File "mercurial.util", line 1886, in check
File "mercurial.util", line 1886, in check
File "hgext.mq", line 4239, in mqcommand
File "mercurial.util", line 1886, in check
File "mercurial.util", line 1886, in check
File "hgext.phabricator", line 314, in inner
File "hgext.phabricator", line 2222, in phabimport
File "hgext.phabricator", line 2123, in readpatch
File "hgext.phabricator", line 2199, in _write
File "mercurial.localrepo", line 2956, in lock
File "mercurial.localrepo", line 2918, in _lock
File "mercurial.lock", line 152, in trylock
File "mercurial.lock", line 283, in _trylock
File "mercurial.lock", line 314, in _readlock
File "mercurial.vfs", line 221, in readlock
File "mercurial.util", line 2163, in readlock
File "mercurial.windows", line 619, in readlink
ValueError: not a symbolic link
Both exceptions look accurate (the file exists, and the Windows side can't read
WSL side symlinks). I didn't try to reproduce this entirely within the Windows
side, but we can do better than a cryptic stacktrace. With this change, the
same scenario results in this abort:
abort: C:\Users\Matt\hg/.hg/store/lock: The file cannot be accessed by the system
When both the `push` and `phabimport` are done on the Windows side, it prints a
message about waiting for the lock, and successfully applies the patch after the
push completes.
I'm not sure if there's enough info to be able to convert the abort into the
wait scenario. As it stands now, we don't support symlinks on Windows, which
requires either a UAC Administrator level process or an opt-in in developer
mode, and there are several places where the new symlink on Windows support in
py3 was explicitly disabled in order to get tests to pass quicker.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D11333
# reproduce issue2264, issue2516
create test repo
$ cat <<EOF >> $HGRCPATH
> [extensions]
> transplant =
> EOF
$ hg init repo
$ cd repo
$ template="{rev} {desc|firstline} [{branch}]\n"
# we need to start out with two changesets on the default branch
# in order to avoid the cute little optimization where transplant
# pulls rather than transplants
add initial changesets
$ echo feature1 > file1
$ hg ci -Am"feature 1"
adding file1
$ echo feature2 >> file2
$ hg ci -Am"feature 2"
adding file2
# The changes to 'bugfix' are enough to show the bug: in fact, with only
# those changes, it's a very noisy crash ("RuntimeError: nothing
# committed after transplant"). But if we modify a second file in the
# transplanted changesets, the bug is much more subtle: transplant
# silently drops the second change to 'bugfix' on the floor, and we only
# see it when we run 'hg status' after transplanting. Subtle data loss
# bugs are worse than crashes, so reproduce the subtle case here.
commit bug fixes on bug fix branch
$ hg branch fixes
marked working directory as branch fixes
(branches are permanent and global, did you want a bookmark?)
$ echo fix1 > bugfix
$ echo fix1 >> file1
$ hg ci -Am"fix 1"
adding bugfix
$ echo fix2 > bugfix
$ echo fix2 >> file1
$ hg ci -Am"fix 2"
$ hg log -G --template="$template"
@ 3 fix 2 [fixes]
|
o 2 fix 1 [fixes]
|
o 1 feature 2 [default]
|
o 0 feature 1 [default]
transplant bug fixes onto release branch
$ hg update 0
1 files updated, 0 files merged, 2 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ hg branch release
marked working directory as branch release
$ hg transplant 2 3
applying [0-9a-f]{12} (re)
[0-9a-f]{12} transplanted to [0-9a-f]{12} (re)
applying [0-9a-f]{12} (re)
[0-9a-f]{12} transplanted to [0-9a-f]{12} (re)
$ hg log -G --template="$template"
@ 5 fix 2 [release]
|
o 4 fix 1 [release]
|
| o 3 fix 2 [fixes]
| |
| o 2 fix 1 [fixes]
| |
| o 1 feature 2 [default]
|/
o 0 feature 1 [default]
$ hg status
$ hg status --rev 0:4
M file1
A bugfix
$ hg status --rev 4:5
M bugfix
M file1
now test that we fixed the bug for all scripts/extensions
$ cat > $TESTTMP/committwice.py <<__EOF__
> import time
> from mercurial import hg, match, node, ui as uimod
>
> def replacebyte(fn, b):
> f = open(fn, "rb+")
> f.seek(0, 0)
> f.write(b)
> f.close()
>
> def printfiles(repo, rev):
> repo.ui.status(b"revision %d files: [%s]\n"
> % (rev, b', '.join(b"'%s'" % f
> for f in repo[rev].files())))
>
> repo = hg.repository(uimod.ui.load(), b'.')
> assert len(repo) == 6, "initial: len(repo): %d, expected: 6" % len(repo)
>
> replacebyte(b"bugfix", b"u")
> time.sleep(2)
> try:
> repo.ui.status(b"PRE: len(repo): %d\n" % len(repo))
> wlock = repo.wlock()
> lock = repo.lock()
> replacebyte(b"file1", b"x")
> repo.commit(text=b"x", user=b"test", date=(0, 0))
> replacebyte(b"file1", b"y")
> repo.commit(text=b"y", user=b"test", date=(0, 0))
> repo.ui.status(b"POST: len(repo): %d\n" % len(repo))
> finally:
> lock.release()
> wlock.release()
> printfiles(repo, 6)
> printfiles(repo, 7)
> __EOF__
$ "$PYTHON" $TESTTMP/committwice.py
PRE: len(repo): 6
POST: len(repo): 8
revision 6 files: ['bugfix', 'file1']
revision 7 files: ['file1']
Do a size-preserving modification outside of that process
$ echo abcd > bugfix
$ hg status
M bugfix
$ hg log --template "{rev} {desc} {files}\n" -r5:
5 fix 2 bugfix file1
6 x bugfix file1
7 y file1
$ cd ..