Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-revlog-raw.py @ 38486:4c0683655599
namespaces: let namespaces override singlenode() definition
Some namespaces have multiple nodes per name (meaning that their
namemap() returns multiple nodes). One such namespace is the "topics"
namespace (from the evolve repo). We also have our own internal
namespace at Google (for review units) that has multiple nodes per
name. These namespaces may not want to use the default "pick highest
revnum" resolution that we currently use when resolving a name to a
single node. As an example, they may decide that `hg co <name>` should
check out a commit that's last in some sense even if an earlier commit
had just been amended and thus had a higher revnum [1]. This patch
gives the namespace the option to continue to return multiple nodes
and to override how the best node is picked. Allowing namespaces to
override that may also be useful as an optimization (it may be cheaper
for the namespace to find just that node).
I have been arguing (in D3715) for using all the nodes returned from
namemap() when resolving the symbol to a revset, so e.g. `hg log -r
stable` would resolve to *all* nodes on stable, not just the one with
the highest revnum (except that I don't actually think we should
change it for the branch namespace because of BC). Most people seem
opposed to that. If we decide not to do it, I think we can deprecate
the namemap() function in favor of the new singlenode() (I find it
weird to have namespaces, like the branch namespace, where namemap()
isn't nodemap()'s inverse). I therefore think this patch makes sense
regardless of what we decide on that issue.
[1] Actually, even the branch namespace would have wanted to override
singlenode() if it had supported multiple nodes. That's because
closes branch heads are mostly ignored, so "hg co default" will
not check out the highest-revnum node if that's a closed head.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D3852
author | Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 26 Jun 2018 10:02:01 -0700 |
parents | 03a09579c854 |
children | 0a5b20c107a6 |
line wrap: on
line source
# test revlog interaction about raw data (flagprocessor) from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function import sys from mercurial import ( encoding, node, revlog, transaction, vfs, ) # TESTTMP is optional. This makes it convenient to run without run-tests.py tvfs = vfs.vfs(encoding.environ.get(b'TESTTMP', b'/tmp')) # Enable generaldelta otherwise revlog won't use delta as expected by the test tvfs.options = {b'generaldelta': True, b'revlogv1': True} # The test wants to control whether to use delta explicitly, based on # "storedeltachains". revlog.revlog._isgooddeltainfo = lambda self, d, textlen: self.storedeltachains def abort(msg): print('abort: %s' % msg) # Return 0 so run-tests.py could compare the output. sys.exit() # Register a revlog processor for flag EXTSTORED. # # It simply prepends a fixed header, and replaces '1' to 'i'. So it has # insertion and replacement, and may be interesting to test revlog's line-based # deltas. _extheader = b'E\n' def readprocessor(self, rawtext): # True: the returned text could be used to verify hash text = rawtext[len(_extheader):].replace(b'i', b'1') return text, True def writeprocessor(self, text): # False: the returned rawtext shouldn't be used to verify hash rawtext = _extheader + text.replace(b'1', b'i') return rawtext, False def rawprocessor(self, rawtext): # False: do not verify hash. Only the content returned by "readprocessor" # can be used to verify hash. return False revlog.addflagprocessor(revlog.REVIDX_EXTSTORED, (readprocessor, writeprocessor, rawprocessor)) # Utilities about reading and appending revlog def newtransaction(): # A transaction is required to write revlogs report = lambda msg: None return transaction.transaction(report, tvfs, {'plain': tvfs}, b'journal') def newrevlog(name=b'_testrevlog.i', recreate=False): if recreate: tvfs.tryunlink(name) rlog = revlog.revlog(tvfs, name) return rlog def appendrev(rlog, text, tr, isext=False, isdelta=True): '''Append a revision. If isext is True, set the EXTSTORED flag so flag processor will be used (and rawtext is different from text). If isdelta is True, force the revision to be a delta, otherwise it's full text. ''' nextrev = len(rlog) p1 = rlog.node(nextrev - 1) p2 = node.nullid if isext: flags = revlog.REVIDX_EXTSTORED else: flags = revlog.REVIDX_DEFAULT_FLAGS # Change storedeltachains temporarily, to override revlog's delta decision rlog.storedeltachains = isdelta try: rlog.addrevision(text, tr, nextrev, p1, p2, flags=flags) return nextrev except Exception as ex: abort('rev %d: failed to append: %s' % (nextrev, ex)) finally: # Restore storedeltachains. It is always True, see revlog.__init__ rlog.storedeltachains = True def addgroupcopy(rlog, tr, destname=b'_destrevlog.i', optimaldelta=True): '''Copy revlog to destname using revlog.addgroup. Return the copied revlog. This emulates push or pull. They use changegroup. Changegroup requires repo to work. We don't have a repo, so a dummy changegroup is used. If optimaldelta is True, use optimized delta parent, so the destination revlog could probably reuse it. Otherwise it builds sub-optimal delta, and the destination revlog needs more work to use it. This exercises some revlog.addgroup (and revlog._addrevision(text=None)) code path, which is not covered by "appendrev" alone. ''' class dummychangegroup(object): @staticmethod def deltachunk(pnode): pnode = pnode or node.nullid parentrev = rlog.rev(pnode) r = parentrev + 1 if r >= len(rlog): return {} if optimaldelta: deltaparent = parentrev else: # suboptimal deltaparent deltaparent = min(0, parentrev) if not rlog.candelta(deltaparent, r): deltaparent = -1 return {b'node': rlog.node(r), b'p1': pnode, b'p2': node.nullid, b'cs': rlog.node(rlog.linkrev(r)), b'flags': rlog.flags(r), b'deltabase': rlog.node(deltaparent), b'delta': rlog.revdiff(deltaparent, r)} def deltaiter(self): chain = None for chunkdata in iter(lambda: self.deltachunk(chain), {}): node = chunkdata[b'node'] p1 = chunkdata[b'p1'] p2 = chunkdata[b'p2'] cs = chunkdata[b'cs'] deltabase = chunkdata[b'deltabase'] delta = chunkdata[b'delta'] flags = chunkdata[b'flags'] chain = node yield (node, p1, p2, cs, deltabase, delta, flags) def linkmap(lnode): return rlog.rev(lnode) dlog = newrevlog(destname, recreate=True) dummydeltas = dummychangegroup().deltaiter() dlog.addgroup(dummydeltas, linkmap, tr) return dlog def lowlevelcopy(rlog, tr, destname=b'_destrevlog.i'): '''Like addgroupcopy, but use the low level revlog._addrevision directly. It exercises some code paths that are hard to reach easily otherwise. ''' dlog = newrevlog(destname, recreate=True) for r in rlog: p1 = rlog.node(r - 1) p2 = node.nullid if r == 0 or (rlog.flags(r) & revlog.REVIDX_EXTSTORED): text = rlog.revision(r, raw=True) cachedelta = None else: # deltaparent cannot have EXTSTORED flag. deltaparent = max([-1] + [p for p in range(r) if rlog.flags(p) & revlog.REVIDX_EXTSTORED == 0]) text = None cachedelta = (deltaparent, rlog.revdiff(deltaparent, r)) flags = rlog.flags(r) ifh = dfh = None try: ifh = dlog.opener(dlog.indexfile, b'a+') if not dlog._inline: dfh = dlog.opener(dlog.datafile, b'a+') dlog._addrevision(rlog.node(r), text, tr, r, p1, p2, flags, cachedelta, ifh, dfh) finally: if dfh is not None: dfh.close() if ifh is not None: ifh.close() return dlog # Utilities to generate revisions for testing def genbits(n): '''Given a number n, generate (2 ** (n * 2) + 1) numbers in range(2 ** n). i.e. the generated numbers have a width of n bits. The combination of two adjacent numbers will cover all possible cases. That is to say, given any x, y where both x, and y are in range(2 ** n), there is an x followed immediately by y in the generated sequence. ''' m = 2 ** n # Gray Code. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gray_code gray = lambda x: x ^ (x >> 1) reversegray = dict((gray(i), i) for i in range(m)) # Generate (n * 2) bit gray code, yield lower n bits as X, and look for # the next unused gray code where higher n bits equal to X. # For gray codes whose higher bits are X, a[X] of them have been used. a = [0] * m # Iterate from 0. x = 0 yield x for i in range(m * m): x = reversegray[x] y = gray(a[x] + x * m) & (m - 1) assert a[x] < m a[x] += 1 x = y yield x def gentext(rev): '''Given a revision number, generate dummy text''' return b''.join(b'%d\n' % j for j in range(-1, rev % 5)) def writecases(rlog, tr): '''Write some revisions interested to the test. The test is interested in 3 properties of a revision: - Is it a delta or a full text? (isdelta) This is to catch some delta application issues. - Does it have a flag of EXTSTORED? (isext) This is to catch some flag processor issues. Especially when interacted with revlog deltas. - Is its text empty? (isempty) This is less important. It is intended to try to catch some careless checks like "if text" instead of "if text is None". Note: if flag processor is involved, raw text may be not empty. Write 65 revisions. So that all combinations of the above flags for adjacent revisions are covered. That is to say, len(set( (r.delta, r.ext, r.empty, (r+1).delta, (r+1).ext, (r+1).empty) for r in range(len(rlog) - 1) )) is 64. Where "r.delta", "r.ext", and "r.empty" are booleans matching properties mentioned above. Return expected [(text, rawtext)]. ''' result = [] for i, x in enumerate(genbits(3)): isdelta, isext, isempty = bool(x & 1), bool(x & 2), bool(x & 4) if isempty: text = b'' else: text = gentext(i) rev = appendrev(rlog, text, tr, isext=isext, isdelta=isdelta) # Verify text, rawtext, and rawsize if isext: rawtext = writeprocessor(None, text)[0] else: rawtext = text if rlog.rawsize(rev) != len(rawtext): abort('rev %d: wrong rawsize' % rev) if rlog.revision(rev, raw=False) != text: abort('rev %d: wrong text' % rev) if rlog.revision(rev, raw=True) != rawtext: abort('rev %d: wrong rawtext' % rev) result.append((text, rawtext)) # Verify flags like isdelta, isext work as expected # isdelta can be overridden to False if this or p1 has isext set if bool(rlog.deltaparent(rev) > -1) and not isdelta: abort('rev %d: isdelta is unexpected' % rev) if bool(rlog.flags(rev)) != isext: abort('rev %d: isext is ineffective' % rev) return result # Main test and checking def checkrevlog(rlog, expected): '''Check if revlog has expected contents. expected is [(text, rawtext)]''' # Test using different access orders. This could expose some issues # depending on revlog caching (see revlog._cache). for r0 in range(len(rlog) - 1): r1 = r0 + 1 for revorder in [[r0, r1], [r1, r0]]: for raworder in [[True], [False], [True, False], [False, True]]: nlog = newrevlog() for rev in revorder: for raw in raworder: t = nlog.revision(rev, raw=raw) if t != expected[rev][int(raw)]: abort('rev %d: corrupted %stext' % (rev, raw and 'raw' or '')) def maintest(): expected = rl = None with newtransaction() as tr: rl = newrevlog(recreate=True) expected = writecases(rl, tr) checkrevlog(rl, expected) print('local test passed') # Copy via revlog.addgroup rl1 = addgroupcopy(rl, tr) checkrevlog(rl1, expected) rl2 = addgroupcopy(rl, tr, optimaldelta=False) checkrevlog(rl2, expected) print('addgroupcopy test passed') # Copy via revlog.clone rl3 = newrevlog(name=b'_destrevlog3.i', recreate=True) rl.clone(tr, rl3) checkrevlog(rl3, expected) print('clone test passed') # Copy via low-level revlog._addrevision rl4 = lowlevelcopy(rl, tr) checkrevlog(rl4, expected) print('lowlevelcopy test passed') try: maintest() except Exception as ex: abort('crashed: %s' % ex)