view contrib/debugcmdserver.py @ 39224:5e52b6da9c0c

tests: demonstrate a problem with renames on the p2 side of a conversion I think this is related to the octopus merge being sloppy, and that's having a cascading affect on the fixup merge. If this change is made on p1 (specifically with the 'Added parent file' commit), the failure doesn't occur. The file modification with the rename doesn't seem to be necessary, but it's what's happening in a production repo where I first noticed, so I left it. This is an example of the manifest divergence I'd been seeing, which wasn't fixed by Yuya's recent changes. This is separate from the changelog divergence I was also seeing[1]. Probably nobody cares about bzr anymore, but this will also affect git, since the octopus fixup code is in the hg sink. [1] https://www.mercurial-scm.org/pipermail/mercurial-devel/2018-August/120473.html
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
date Mon, 20 Aug 2018 16:19:36 -0400
parents cd03fbd5ab57
children 2372284d9457
line wrap: on
line source

#!/usr/bin/env python
#
# Dumps output generated by Mercurial's command server in a formatted style to a
# given file or stderr if '-' is specified. Output is also written in its raw
# format to stdout.
#
# $ ./hg serve --cmds pipe | ./contrib/debugcmdserver.py -
# o, 52   -> 'capabilities: getencoding runcommand\nencoding: UTF-8'

from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function
import struct
import sys

if len(sys.argv) != 2:
    print('usage: debugcmdserver.py FILE')
    sys.exit(1)

outputfmt = '>cI'
outputfmtsize = struct.calcsize(outputfmt)

if sys.argv[1] == '-':
    log = sys.stderr
else:
    log = open(sys.argv[1], 'a')

def read(size):
    data = sys.stdin.read(size)
    if not data:
        raise EOFError
    sys.stdout.write(data)
    sys.stdout.flush()
    return data

try:
    while True:
        header = read(outputfmtsize)
        channel, length = struct.unpack(outputfmt, header)
        log.write('%s, %-4d' % (channel, length))
        if channel in 'IL':
            log.write(' -> waiting for input\n')
        else:
            data = read(length)
            log.write(' -> %r\n' % data)
        log.flush()
except EOFError:
    pass
finally:
    if log != sys.stderr:
        log.close()