view mercurial/filelog.py @ 21022:52e9e63f1495

run-tests: test result shows when a failed test could not start a server Failing to start a server happens regularly, at least on windows buildbot. Such a failure often has nothing to do with the test, but with the environment. But half the test output can change because some data is missing. Therefore this is worth an extended error message. Detect the server failure in the diff output because it is most reliable there. Checking the output only does not show if the server failure was expected. Old failure message when server start failed: Failed test-serve.t: output changed New message: Failed test-serve.t: serve failed and output changed
author Simon Heimberg <simohe@besonet.ch>
date Mon, 25 Nov 2013 22:00:46 +0100
parents 3bda242bf244
children 4669e26747c3
line wrap: on
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# filelog.py - file history class for mercurial
#
# Copyright 2005-2007 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.

import revlog
import re

_mdre = re.compile('\1\n')
def _parsemeta(text):
    """return (metadatadict, keylist, metadatasize)"""
    # text can be buffer, so we can't use .startswith or .index
    if text[:2] != '\1\n':
        return None, None, None
    s = _mdre.search(text, 2).start()
    mtext = text[2:s]
    meta = {}
    keys = []
    for l in mtext.splitlines():
        k, v = l.split(": ", 1)
        meta[k] = v
        keys.append(k)
    return meta, keys, (s + 2)

def _packmeta(meta, keys=None):
    if not keys:
        keys = sorted(meta.iterkeys())
    return "".join("%s: %s\n" % (k, meta[k]) for k in keys)

class filelog(revlog.revlog):
    def __init__(self, opener, path):
        super(filelog, self).__init__(opener,
                        "/".join(("data", path + ".i")))

    def read(self, node):
        t = self.revision(node)
        if not t.startswith('\1\n'):
            return t
        s = t.index('\1\n', 2)
        return t[s + 2:]

    def add(self, text, meta, transaction, link, p1=None, p2=None):
        if meta or text.startswith('\1\n'):
            text = "\1\n%s\1\n%s" % (_packmeta(meta), text)
        return self.addrevision(text, transaction, link, p1, p2)

    def renamed(self, node):
        if self.parents(node)[0] != revlog.nullid:
            return False
        t = self.revision(node)
        m = _parsemeta(t)[0]
        if m and "copy" in m:
            return (m["copy"], revlog.bin(m["copyrev"]))
        return False

    def size(self, rev):
        """return the size of a given revision"""

        # for revisions with renames, we have to go the slow way
        node = self.node(rev)
        if self.renamed(node):
            return len(self.read(node))

        # XXX if self.read(node).startswith("\1\n"), this returns (size+4)
        return super(filelog, self).size(rev)

    def cmp(self, node, text):
        """compare text with a given file revision

        returns True if text is different than what is stored.
        """

        t = text
        if text.startswith('\1\n'):
            t = '\1\n\1\n' + text

        samehashes = not super(filelog, self).cmp(node, t)
        if samehashes:
            return False

        # renaming a file produces a different hash, even if the data
        # remains unchanged. Check if it's the case (slow):
        if self.renamed(node):
            t2 = self.read(node)
            return t2 != text

        return True

    def _file(self, f):
        return filelog(self.opener, f)