Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-rollback.t @ 25757:4d1382fd96ff
context: write dirstate out explicitly at the end of markcommitted
To detect change of a file without redundant comparison of file
content, dirstate recognizes a file as certainly clean, if:
(1) it is already known as "normal",
(2) dirstate entry for it has valid (= not "-1") timestamp, and
(3) mode, size and timestamp of it on the filesystem are as same as
ones expected in dirstate
This works as expected in many cases, but doesn't in the corner case
that changing a file keeps mode, size and timestamp of it on the
filesystem.
The timetable below shows steps in one of typical such situations:
---- ----------------------------------- ----------------
timestamp of "f"
----------------
dirstate file-
time action mem file system
---- ----------------------------------- ---- ----- -----
* *** ***
- 'hg transplant REV1 REV2 ...'
- transplanting REV1
....
N
- change "f", but keep size N
(via 'patch.patch()')
- 'dirstate.normal("f")' N ***
(via 'repo.commit()')
- transplanting REV2
- change "f", but keep size N
(via 'patch.patch()')
- aborted while patching
N+1
- release wlock
- 'dirstate.write()' N N N
- 'hg status' shows "r1" as "clean" N N N
---- ----------------------------------- ---- ----- -----
The most important point is that 'dirstate.write()' is executed at N+1
or later. This causes writing dirstate timestamp N of "f" out
successfully. If it is executed at N, 'parsers.pack_dirstate()'
replaces timestamp N with "-1" before actual writing dirstate out.
This issue can occur when 'hg transplant' satisfies conditions below:
- multiple revisions to be transplanted change the same file
- those revisions don't change mode and size of the file, and
- the 2nd or later revision of them fails after changing the file
The root cause of this issue is that files are changed without
flushing in-memory dirstate changes via 'repo.commit()' (even though
omitting 'dirstate.normallookup()' on files changed by 'patch.patch()'
for efficiency also causes this issue).
To detect changes of files correctly, this patch writes in-memory
dirstate changes out explicitly after marking files as clean in
'committablectx.markcommitted()', which is invoked via
'repo.commit()'.
After this change, timetable is changed as below:
---- ----------------------------------- ----------------
timestamp of "f"
----------------
dirstate file-
time action mem file system
---- ----------------------------------- ---- ----- -----
* *** ***
- 'hg transplant REV1 REV2 ...'
- transplanting REV1
....
N
- change "f", but keep size N
(via 'patch.patch()')
- 'dirstate.normal("f")' N ***
(via 'repo.commit()')
----------------------------------- ---- ----- -----
- 'dirsttate.write()' -1 -1
----------------------------------- ---- ----- -----
- transplanting REV2
- change "f", but keep size N
(via 'patch.patch()')
- aborted while patching
N+1
- release wlock
- 'dirstate.write()' -1 -1 N
- 'hg status' shows "r1" as "clean" -1 -1 N
---- ----------------------------------- ---- ----- -----
To reproduce this issue in tests certainly, this patch emulates some
timing critical actions as below:
- change "f" at N
'patch.patch()' with 'fakepatchtime.py' explicitly changes mtime
of patched files to "2000-01-01 00:00" (= N).
- 'dirstate.write()' via 'repo.commit()' at N
'fakedirstatewritetime.py' forces 'pack_dirstate()' to use
"2000-01-01 00:00" as "now", only if 'pack_dirstate()' is invoked
via 'committablectx.markcommitted()'.
- 'dirstate.write()' via releasing wlock at N+1 (or "not at N")
'pack_dirstate()' via releasing wlock uses actual timestamp at
runtime as "now", and it should be different from the "2000-01-01
00:00" of "f".
BTW, this patch doesn't test cases below, even though 'patch.patch()'
is used similarly in these cases:
1. failure of 'hg import' or 'hg qpush'
2. success of 'hg import', 'hg qpush' or 'hg transplant'
Case (1) above doesn't cause this kind of issue, because:
- if patching is aborted by conflicts, changed files are committed
changed files are marked as CLEAN, even though they are partially
patched.
- otherwise, dirstate are fully restored by 'dirstateguard'
For example in timetable above, timestamp of "f" in .hg/dirstate
is restored to -1 (or less than N), and subsequent 'hg status' can
detect changes correctly.
Case (2) always causes 'repo.status()' invocation via 'repo.commit()'
just after changing files inside same wlock scope.
---- ----------------------------------- ----------------
timestamp of "f"
----------------
dirstate file-
time action mem file system
---- ----------------------------------- ---- ----- -----
N *** ***
- make file "f" clean N
- execute 'hg foobar'
....
- 'dirstate.normal("f")' N ***
(e.g. via dirty check
or previous 'repo.commit()')
- change "f", but keep size N
- 'repo.status()' (*1)
(via 'repo.commit()')
---- ----------------------------------- ---- ----- -----
At a glance, 'repo.status()' at (*1) seems to cause similar issue (=
"changed files are treated as clean"), but actually doesn't.
'dirstate._lastnormaltime' should be N at (*1) above, because
'dirstate.normal()' via dirty check is finished at N.
Therefore, "f" changed at N (= 'dirstate._lastnormaltime') is forcibly
treated as "unsure" at (*1), and changes are detected as expected (see
'dirstate.status()' for detail).
If 'hg import' is executed with '--no-commit', 'repo.status()' isn't
invoked just after changing files inside same wlock scope.
But preceding 'dirstate.normal()' is invoked inside another wlock
scope via 'cmdutil.bailifchanged()', and in-memory changes should be
flushed at the end of that scope.
Therefore, timestamp N of clean "f" should be replaced by -1, if
'dirstate.write()' is invoked at N. It means that condition of this
issue isn't satisfied.
author | FUJIWARA Katsunori <foozy@lares.dti.ne.jp> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 08 Jul 2015 17:01:09 +0900 |
parents | e78a80f8f51e |
children | 4414d500604f |
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setup repo $ hg init t $ cd t $ echo a > a $ hg commit -Am'add a' adding a $ hg verify checking changesets checking manifests crosschecking files in changesets and manifests checking files 1 files, 1 changesets, 1 total revisions $ hg parents changeset: 0:1f0dee641bb7 tag: tip user: test date: Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 summary: add a rollback to null revision $ hg status $ hg rollback repository tip rolled back to revision -1 (undo commit) working directory now based on revision -1 $ hg verify checking changesets checking manifests crosschecking files in changesets and manifests checking files 0 files, 0 changesets, 0 total revisions $ hg parents $ hg status A a Two changesets this time so we rollback to a real changeset $ hg commit -m'add a again' $ echo a >> a $ hg commit -m'modify a' Test issue 902 (current branch is preserved) $ hg branch test marked working directory as branch test (branches are permanent and global, did you want a bookmark?) $ hg rollback repository tip rolled back to revision 0 (undo commit) working directory now based on revision 0 $ hg branch default Test issue 1635 (commit message saved) $ cat .hg/last-message.txt ; echo modify a Test rollback of hg before issue 902 was fixed $ hg commit -m "test3" $ hg branch test marked working directory as branch test (branches are permanent and global, did you want a bookmark?) $ rm .hg/undo.branch $ hg rollback repository tip rolled back to revision 0 (undo commit) named branch could not be reset: current branch is still 'test' working directory now based on revision 0 $ hg branch test working dir unaffected by rollback: do not restore dirstate et. al. $ hg log --template '{rev} {branch} {desc|firstline}\n' 0 default add a again $ hg status M a $ hg bookmark foo $ hg commit -m'modify a again' $ echo b > b $ hg bookmark bar -r default #making bar active, before the transaction $ hg commit -Am'add b' adding b $ hg log --template '{rev} {branch} {desc|firstline}\n' 2 test add b 1 test modify a again 0 default add a again $ hg update bar 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 1 files removed, 0 files unresolved (activating bookmark bar) $ cat .hg/undo.branch ; echo test $ hg rollback -f repository tip rolled back to revision 1 (undo commit) $ hg id -n 0 $ hg branch default $ cat .hg/bookmarks.current ; echo bar $ hg bookmark --delete foo bar rollback by pretxncommit saves commit message (issue1635) $ echo a >> a $ hg --config hooks.pretxncommit=false commit -m"precious commit message" transaction abort! rollback completed abort: pretxncommit hook exited with status * (glob) [255] $ cat .hg/last-message.txt ; echo precious commit message same thing, but run $EDITOR $ cat > editor.sh << '__EOF__' > echo "another precious commit message" > "$1" > __EOF__ $ HGEDITOR="\"sh\" \"`pwd`/editor.sh\"" hg --config hooks.pretxncommit=false commit 2>&1 transaction abort! rollback completed note: commit message saved in .hg/last-message.txt abort: pretxncommit hook exited with status * (glob) [255] $ cat .hg/last-message.txt another precious commit message test rollback on served repository #if serve $ hg commit -m "precious commit message" $ hg serve -p $HGPORT -d --pid-file=hg.pid -A access.log -E errors.log $ cat hg.pid >> $DAEMON_PIDS $ cd .. $ hg clone http://localhost:$HGPORT u requesting all changes adding changesets adding manifests adding file changes added 3 changesets with 2 changes to 1 files (+1 heads) updating to branch default 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved $ cd u $ hg id default 068774709090 now rollback and observe that 'hg serve' reloads the repository and presents the correct tip changeset: $ hg -R ../t rollback repository tip rolled back to revision 1 (undo commit) working directory now based on revision 0 $ hg id default 791dd2169706 #endif update to older changeset and then refuse rollback, because that would lose data (issue2998) $ cd ../t $ hg -q update $ rm `hg status -un` $ template='{rev}:{node|short} [{branch}] {desc|firstline}\n' $ echo 'valuable new file' > b $ echo 'valuable modification' >> a $ hg commit -A -m'a valuable change' adding b $ hg update 0 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 1 files removed, 0 files unresolved $ hg rollback abort: rollback of last commit while not checked out may lose data (use -f to force) [255] $ hg tip -q 2:4d9cd3795eea $ hg rollback -f repository tip rolled back to revision 1 (undo commit) $ hg status $ hg log --removed b # yep, it's gone same again, but emulate an old client that doesn't write undo.desc $ hg -q update $ echo 'valuable modification redux' >> a $ hg commit -m'a valuable change redux' $ rm .hg/undo.desc $ hg update 0 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved $ hg rollback rolling back unknown transaction $ cat a a corrupt journal test $ echo "foo" > .hg/store/journal $ hg recover rolling back interrupted transaction couldn't read journal entry 'foo\n'! checking changesets checking manifests crosschecking files in changesets and manifests checking files 1 files, 2 changesets, 2 total revisions