Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/pure/osutil.py @ 41591:4d4842445afc
revert: always show relative path to .orig backup
This helps make some future patches easier when I replace origpath()
by another function that works with repo-relative paths (origpath()
works with cwd-relative paths).
Always showing a relative path seems a little more user-friendly and
is more consistent between configured ui.origbackuppath and not. OTOH,
it's annoying if ui.origbackuppath is far outside the repo. This is
just --verbose output, so I don't think it's worth spending much time
on (I've already wasted too many hours on it).
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D5871
author | Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 06 Feb 2019 14:57:08 -0800 |
parents | 120ecb17242b |
children | f3fa10a5877d |
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# osutil.py - pure Python version of osutil.c # # Copyright 2009 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> and others # # 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 ctypes import ctypes.util import os import socket import stat as statmod from .. import ( encoding, pycompat, ) def _mode_to_kind(mode): if statmod.S_ISREG(mode): return statmod.S_IFREG if statmod.S_ISDIR(mode): return statmod.S_IFDIR if statmod.S_ISLNK(mode): return statmod.S_IFLNK if statmod.S_ISBLK(mode): return statmod.S_IFBLK if statmod.S_ISCHR(mode): return statmod.S_IFCHR if statmod.S_ISFIFO(mode): return statmod.S_IFIFO if statmod.S_ISSOCK(mode): return statmod.S_IFSOCK return mode def listdir(path, stat=False, skip=None): '''listdir(path, stat=False) -> list_of_tuples Return a sorted list containing information about the entries in the directory. If stat is True, each element is a 3-tuple: (name, type, stat object) Otherwise, each element is a 2-tuple: (name, type) ''' result = [] prefix = path if not prefix.endswith(pycompat.ossep): prefix += pycompat.ossep names = os.listdir(path) names.sort() for fn in names: st = os.lstat(prefix + fn) if fn == skip and statmod.S_ISDIR(st.st_mode): return [] if stat: result.append((fn, _mode_to_kind(st.st_mode), st)) else: result.append((fn, _mode_to_kind(st.st_mode))) return result if not pycompat.iswindows: posixfile = open _SCM_RIGHTS = 0x01 _socklen_t = ctypes.c_uint if pycompat.sysplatform.startswith('linux'): # socket.h says "the type should be socklen_t but the definition of # the kernel is incompatible with this." _cmsg_len_t = ctypes.c_size_t _msg_controllen_t = ctypes.c_size_t _msg_iovlen_t = ctypes.c_size_t else: _cmsg_len_t = _socklen_t _msg_controllen_t = _socklen_t _msg_iovlen_t = ctypes.c_int class _iovec(ctypes.Structure): _fields_ = [ (u'iov_base', ctypes.c_void_p), (u'iov_len', ctypes.c_size_t), ] class _msghdr(ctypes.Structure): _fields_ = [ (u'msg_name', ctypes.c_void_p), (u'msg_namelen', _socklen_t), (u'msg_iov', ctypes.POINTER(_iovec)), (u'msg_iovlen', _msg_iovlen_t), (u'msg_control', ctypes.c_void_p), (u'msg_controllen', _msg_controllen_t), (u'msg_flags', ctypes.c_int), ] class _cmsghdr(ctypes.Structure): _fields_ = [ (u'cmsg_len', _cmsg_len_t), (u'cmsg_level', ctypes.c_int), (u'cmsg_type', ctypes.c_int), (u'cmsg_data', ctypes.c_ubyte * 0), ] _libc = ctypes.CDLL(ctypes.util.find_library(u'c'), use_errno=True) _recvmsg = getattr(_libc, 'recvmsg', None) if _recvmsg: _recvmsg.restype = getattr(ctypes, 'c_ssize_t', ctypes.c_long) _recvmsg.argtypes = (ctypes.c_int, ctypes.POINTER(_msghdr), ctypes.c_int) else: # recvmsg isn't always provided by libc; such systems are unsupported def _recvmsg(sockfd, msg, flags): raise NotImplementedError('unsupported platform') def _CMSG_FIRSTHDR(msgh): if msgh.msg_controllen < ctypes.sizeof(_cmsghdr): return cmsgptr = ctypes.cast(msgh.msg_control, ctypes.POINTER(_cmsghdr)) return cmsgptr.contents # The pure version is less portable than the native version because the # handling of socket ancillary data heavily depends on C preprocessor. # Also, some length fields are wrongly typed in Linux kernel. def recvfds(sockfd): """receive list of file descriptors via socket""" dummy = (ctypes.c_ubyte * 1)() iov = _iovec(ctypes.cast(dummy, ctypes.c_void_p), ctypes.sizeof(dummy)) cbuf = ctypes.create_string_buffer(256) msgh = _msghdr(None, 0, ctypes.pointer(iov), 1, ctypes.cast(cbuf, ctypes.c_void_p), ctypes.sizeof(cbuf), 0) r = _recvmsg(sockfd, ctypes.byref(msgh), 0) if r < 0: e = ctypes.get_errno() raise OSError(e, os.strerror(e)) # assumes that the first cmsg has fds because it isn't easy to write # portable CMSG_NXTHDR() with ctypes. cmsg = _CMSG_FIRSTHDR(msgh) if not cmsg: return [] if (cmsg.cmsg_level != socket.SOL_SOCKET or cmsg.cmsg_type != _SCM_RIGHTS): return [] rfds = ctypes.cast(cmsg.cmsg_data, ctypes.POINTER(ctypes.c_int)) rfdscount = ((cmsg.cmsg_len - _cmsghdr.cmsg_data.offset) / ctypes.sizeof(ctypes.c_int)) return [rfds[i] for i in pycompat.xrange(rfdscount)] else: import msvcrt _kernel32 = ctypes.windll.kernel32 _DWORD = ctypes.c_ulong _LPCSTR = _LPSTR = ctypes.c_char_p _HANDLE = ctypes.c_void_p _INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE = _HANDLE(-1).value # CreateFile _FILE_SHARE_READ = 0x00000001 _FILE_SHARE_WRITE = 0x00000002 _FILE_SHARE_DELETE = 0x00000004 _CREATE_ALWAYS = 2 _OPEN_EXISTING = 3 _OPEN_ALWAYS = 4 _GENERIC_READ = 0x80000000 _GENERIC_WRITE = 0x40000000 _FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL = 0x80 # open_osfhandle flags _O_RDONLY = 0x0000 _O_RDWR = 0x0002 _O_APPEND = 0x0008 _O_TEXT = 0x4000 _O_BINARY = 0x8000 # types of parameters of C functions used (required by pypy) _kernel32.CreateFileA.argtypes = [_LPCSTR, _DWORD, _DWORD, ctypes.c_void_p, _DWORD, _DWORD, _HANDLE] _kernel32.CreateFileA.restype = _HANDLE def _raiseioerror(name): err = ctypes.WinError() raise IOError(err.errno, r'%s: %s' % (encoding.strfromlocal(name), err.strerror)) class posixfile(object): '''a file object aiming for POSIX-like semantics CPython's open() returns a file that was opened *without* setting the _FILE_SHARE_DELETE flag, which causes rename and unlink to abort. This even happens if any hardlinked copy of the file is in open state. We set _FILE_SHARE_DELETE here, so files opened with posixfile can be renamed and deleted while they are held open. Note that if a file opened with posixfile is unlinked, the file remains but cannot be opened again or be recreated under the same name, until all reading processes have closed the file.''' def __init__(self, name, mode=b'r', bufsize=-1): if b'b' in mode: flags = _O_BINARY else: flags = _O_TEXT m0 = mode[0:1] if m0 == b'r' and b'+' not in mode: flags |= _O_RDONLY access = _GENERIC_READ else: # work around http://support.microsoft.com/kb/899149 and # set _O_RDWR for 'w' and 'a', even if mode has no '+' flags |= _O_RDWR access = _GENERIC_READ | _GENERIC_WRITE if m0 == b'r': creation = _OPEN_EXISTING elif m0 == b'w': creation = _CREATE_ALWAYS elif m0 == b'a': creation = _OPEN_ALWAYS flags |= _O_APPEND else: raise ValueError(r"invalid mode: %s" % pycompat.sysstr(mode)) fh = _kernel32.CreateFileA(name, access, _FILE_SHARE_READ | _FILE_SHARE_WRITE | _FILE_SHARE_DELETE, None, creation, _FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL, None) if fh == _INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE: _raiseioerror(name) fd = msvcrt.open_osfhandle(fh, flags) if fd == -1: _kernel32.CloseHandle(fh) _raiseioerror(name) f = os.fdopen(fd, pycompat.sysstr(mode), bufsize) # unfortunately, f.name is '<fdopen>' at this point -- so we store # the name on this wrapper. We cannot just assign to f.name, # because that attribute is read-only. object.__setattr__(self, r'name', name) object.__setattr__(self, r'_file', f) def __iter__(self): return self._file def __getattr__(self, name): return getattr(self._file, name) def __setattr__(self, name, value): '''mimics the read-only attributes of Python file objects by raising 'TypeError: readonly attribute' if someone tries: f = posixfile('foo.txt') f.name = 'bla' ''' return self._file.__setattr__(name, value) def __enter__(self): self._file.__enter__() return self def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, exc_tb): return self._file.__exit__(exc_type, exc_value, exc_tb)