view doc/runrst @ 25561:50a6c3c55db1 stable

parsers: do not cache RevlogError type (issue4451) Index lookups raise RevlogError when the lookup fails. The previous implementation was caching a reference to the RevlogError type in a static variable. This assumed that the "mercurial.error" module was only loaded once and there was only a single copy of it floating around in memory. Unfortunately, in some situations - including certain mod_wsgi configurations - this was not the case: the "mercurial.error" module could be reloaded. It was possible for a "RevlogError" reference from the first interpreter to be used by a second interpreter. While the underlying thing was a "mercurial.error.RevlogError," the object IDs were different, so the Python code in revlog.py was failing to catch the exception! This error has existed since the C index lookup code was implemented in changeset e8d37b78acfb, which was first released in Mercurial 2.2 in 2012. http://emptysqua.re/blog/python-c-extensions-and-mod-wsgi/#static-variables-are-shared contains more details. This patch removes the caching of the RevlogError type from the function. Since pretty much the entire function was refactored and the return value of the function wasn't used, I changed the function signature to not return anything. For reasons unknown to me, we were calling PyErr_SetObject() with the type of RevlogError and an instance of RevlogError. This was equivalent to the Python code "raise RevlogError(RevlogError)". This seemed wonky and completely unnecessary. The Python code only cares about the type of the exception, not its contents. So I got rid of this complexity. This is my first Python C extension patch. Please give extra scrutiny to it during review.
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Fri, 12 Jun 2015 14:43:59 -0700
parents 1ae824142c01
children 63eae465095e
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#!/usr/bin/env python
#
# runrst - register custom roles and run correct writer
#
# Copyright 2010 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.

"""usage: %s WRITER args...

where WRITER is the name of a Docutils writer such as 'html' or 'manpage'
"""

import sys
try:
    from docutils.parsers.rst import roles
    from docutils.core import publish_cmdline
    from docutils import nodes, utils
except ImportError:
    sys.stderr.write("abort: couldn't generate documentation: docutils "
                     "module is missing\n")
    sys.stderr.write("please install python-docutils or see "
                     "http://docutils.sourceforge.net/\n")
    sys.exit(-1)

def role_hg(name, rawtext, text, lineno, inliner,
            options={}, content=[]):
    text = "hg " + utils.unescape(text)
    linktext = nodes.literal(rawtext, text)
    parts = text.split()
    cmd, args = parts[1], parts[2:]
    if cmd == 'help' and args:
        cmd = args[0] # link to 'dates' for 'hg help dates'
    node = nodes.reference(rawtext, '', linktext,
                           refuri="hg.1.html#%s" % cmd)
    return [node], []

roles.register_local_role("hg", role_hg)

if __name__ == "__main__":
    if len(sys.argv) < 2:
        sys.stderr.write(__doc__ % sys.argv[0])
        sys.exit(1)

    writer = sys.argv[1]
    del sys.argv[1]

    publish_cmdline(writer_name=writer)