mercurial/hook.py
author Mike Edgar <adgar@google.com>
Mon, 29 Jun 2015 12:35:31 -0400
changeset 25691 5cda0ce05c42
parent 25660 328739ea70c3
child 25953 d15b279ddade
permissions -rw-r--r--
wireproto: add config knob for http header length limit Well-behaved Mercurial clients will respect the httpheader capability by not sending http headers longer than the given limit in bytes. The limit is currently hard-coded at 1024 bytes, a safe value for any web server. Since parsing headers is a notable factor in web server performance, tuning header size can nontrivially improve performance for request-heavy operations (eg. obsolete marker negotiation). Exposing the maximum header length limit as a configuration setting is a simple way to enable such tuning.

# hook.py - hook support for mercurial
#
# Copyright 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.

from i18n import _
import os, sys, time
import extensions, util, demandimport, error

def _pythonhook(ui, repo, name, hname, funcname, args, throw):
    '''call python hook. hook is callable object, looked up as
    name in python module. if callable returns "true", hook
    fails, else passes. if hook raises exception, treated as
    hook failure. exception propagates if throw is "true".

    reason for "true" meaning "hook failed" is so that
    unmodified commands (e.g. mercurial.commands.update) can
    be run as hooks without wrappers to convert return values.'''

    if callable(funcname):
        obj = funcname
        funcname = obj.__module__ + "." + obj.__name__
    else:
        d = funcname.rfind('.')
        if d == -1:
            raise util.Abort(_('%s hook is invalid ("%s" not in '
                               'a module)') % (hname, funcname))
        modname = funcname[:d]
        oldpaths = sys.path
        if util.mainfrozen():
            # binary installs require sys.path manipulation
            modpath, modfile = os.path.split(modname)
            if modpath and modfile:
                sys.path = sys.path[:] + [modpath]
                modname = modfile
        with demandimport.deactivated():
            try:
                obj = __import__(modname)
            except ImportError:
                e1 = sys.exc_type, sys.exc_value, sys.exc_traceback
                try:
                    # extensions are loaded with hgext_ prefix
                    obj = __import__("hgext_%s" % modname)
                except ImportError:
                    e2 = sys.exc_type, sys.exc_value, sys.exc_traceback
                    if ui.tracebackflag:
                        ui.warn(_('exception from first failed import '
                                  'attempt:\n'))
                    ui.traceback(e1)
                    if ui.tracebackflag:
                        ui.warn(_('exception from second failed import '
                                  'attempt:\n'))
                    ui.traceback(e2)
                    raise util.Abort(_('%s hook is invalid '
                                       '(import of "%s" failed)') %
                                     (hname, modname))
        sys.path = oldpaths
        try:
            for p in funcname.split('.')[1:]:
                obj = getattr(obj, p)
        except AttributeError:
            raise util.Abort(_('%s hook is invalid '
                               '("%s" is not defined)') %
                             (hname, funcname))
        if not callable(obj):
            raise util.Abort(_('%s hook is invalid '
                               '("%s" is not callable)') %
                             (hname, funcname))

    ui.note(_("calling hook %s: %s\n") % (hname, funcname))
    starttime = time.time()

    try:
        # redirect IO descriptors to the ui descriptors so hooks
        # that write directly to these don't mess up the command
        # protocol when running through the command server
        old = sys.stdout, sys.stderr, sys.stdin
        sys.stdout, sys.stderr, sys.stdin = ui.fout, ui.ferr, ui.fin

        r = obj(ui=ui, repo=repo, hooktype=name, **args)
    except Exception as exc:
        if isinstance(exc, util.Abort):
            ui.warn(_('error: %s hook failed: %s\n') %
                         (hname, exc.args[0]))
        else:
            ui.warn(_('error: %s hook raised an exception: '
                           '%s\n') % (hname, exc))
        if throw:
            raise
        ui.traceback()
        return True
    finally:
        sys.stdout, sys.stderr, sys.stdin = old
        duration = time.time() - starttime
        ui.log('pythonhook', 'pythonhook-%s: %s finished in %0.2f seconds\n',
               name, funcname, duration)
    if r:
        if throw:
            raise error.HookAbort(_('%s hook failed') % hname)
        ui.warn(_('warning: %s hook failed\n') % hname)
    return r

def _exthook(ui, repo, name, cmd, args, throw):
    ui.note(_("running hook %s: %s\n") % (name, cmd))

    starttime = time.time()
    env = {}
    for k, v in args.iteritems():
        if callable(v):
            v = v()
        if isinstance(v, dict):
            # make the dictionary element order stable across Python
            # implementations
            v = ('{' +
                 ', '.join('%r: %r' % i for i in sorted(v.iteritems())) +
                 '}')
        env['HG_' + k.upper()] = v

    if repo:
        cwd = repo.root
    else:
        cwd = os.getcwd()
    r = ui.system(cmd, environ=env, cwd=cwd)

    duration = time.time() - starttime
    ui.log('exthook', 'exthook-%s: %s finished in %0.2f seconds\n',
           name, cmd, duration)
    if r:
        desc, r = util.explainexit(r)
        if throw:
            raise error.HookAbort(_('%s hook %s') % (name, desc))
        ui.warn(_('warning: %s hook %s\n') % (name, desc))
    return r

def _allhooks(ui):
    hooks = []
    for name, cmd in ui.configitems('hooks'):
        if not name.startswith('priority'):
            priority = ui.configint('hooks', 'priority.%s' % name, 0)
            hooks.append((-priority, len(hooks), name, cmd))
    return [(k, v) for p, o, k, v in sorted(hooks)]

_redirect = False
def redirect(state):
    global _redirect
    _redirect = state

def hook(ui, repo, name, throw=False, **args):
    if not ui.callhooks:
        return False

    r = False
    oldstdout = -1

    try:
        for hname, cmd in _allhooks(ui):
            if hname.split('.')[0] != name or not cmd:
                continue

            if oldstdout == -1 and _redirect:
                try:
                    stdoutno = sys.__stdout__.fileno()
                    stderrno = sys.__stderr__.fileno()
                    # temporarily redirect stdout to stderr, if possible
                    if stdoutno >= 0 and stderrno >= 0:
                        sys.__stdout__.flush()
                        oldstdout = os.dup(stdoutno)
                        os.dup2(stderrno, stdoutno)
                except (OSError, AttributeError):
                    # files seem to be bogus, give up on redirecting (WSGI, etc)
                    pass

            if callable(cmd):
                r = _pythonhook(ui, repo, name, hname, cmd, args, throw) or r
            elif cmd.startswith('python:'):
                if cmd.count(':') >= 2:
                    path, cmd = cmd[7:].rsplit(':', 1)
                    path = util.expandpath(path)
                    if repo:
                        path = os.path.join(repo.root, path)
                    try:
                        mod = extensions.loadpath(path, 'hghook.%s' % hname)
                    except Exception:
                        ui.write(_("loading %s hook failed:\n") % hname)
                        raise
                    hookfn = getattr(mod, cmd)
                else:
                    hookfn = cmd[7:].strip()
                r = _pythonhook(ui, repo, name, hname, hookfn, args, throw) or r
            else:
                r = _exthook(ui, repo, hname, cmd, args, throw) or r

            # The stderr is fully buffered on Windows when connected to a pipe.
            # A forcible flush is required to make small stderr data in the
            # remote side available to the client immediately.
            sys.stderr.flush()
    finally:
        if _redirect and oldstdout >= 0:
            os.dup2(oldstdout, stdoutno)
            os.close(oldstdout)

    return r