Mercurial > hg
view tests/get-with-headers.py @ 42943:5fadf6103790
remotefilelog: replace repack lock to solve race condition
2c74337e6483 reduced the probability of race-conditions when starting
background repack and prefetch and we saw the difference in our CI instance
with all failures disappearing except one where one call to waitonrepack seems
to returns too early.
I'm not sure what exactly goes wrong but I realized that while the prefetch
operation uses a standard Mercurial lock, the repack operation is using a
custom lock based on `fcntl.flock` on available platforms. As `extutil.flock`
fallback on traditional Mercurial locks on other platforms and the tests are
stable on my laptop, our CI environment and GCC112, I'm sending this patch to
standardize the behavior across environments.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6844
author | Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 11 Sep 2019 17:41:13 +0200 |
parents | fe11fc7e541f |
children | 2372284d9457 |
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#!/usr/bin/env python """This does HTTP GET requests given a host:port and path and returns a subset of the headers plus the body of the result.""" from __future__ import absolute_import import argparse import json import os import sys from mercurial import ( pycompat, util, ) httplib = util.httplib try: import msvcrt msvcrt.setmode(sys.stdout.fileno(), os.O_BINARY) msvcrt.setmode(sys.stderr.fileno(), os.O_BINARY) except ImportError: pass stdout = getattr(sys.stdout, 'buffer', sys.stdout) parser = argparse.ArgumentParser() parser.add_argument('--twice', action='store_true') parser.add_argument('--headeronly', action='store_true') parser.add_argument('--json', action='store_true') parser.add_argument('--hgproto') parser.add_argument('--requestheader', nargs='*', default=[], help='Send an additional HTTP request header. Argument ' 'value is <header>=<value>') parser.add_argument('--bodyfile', help='Write HTTP response body to a file') parser.add_argument('host') parser.add_argument('path') parser.add_argument('show', nargs='*') args = parser.parse_args() twice = args.twice headeronly = args.headeronly formatjson = args.json hgproto = args.hgproto requestheaders = args.requestheader tag = None def request(host, path, show): assert not path.startswith('/'), path global tag headers = {} if tag: headers['If-None-Match'] = tag if hgproto: headers['X-HgProto-1'] = hgproto for header in requestheaders: key, value = header.split('=', 1) headers[key] = value conn = httplib.HTTPConnection(host) conn.request("GET", '/' + path, None, headers) response = conn.getresponse() stdout.write(b'%d %s\n' % (response.status, response.reason.encode('ascii'))) if show[:1] == ['-']: show = sorted(h for h, v in response.getheaders() if h.lower() not in show) for h in [h.lower() for h in show]: if response.getheader(h, None) is not None: stdout.write(b"%s: %s\n" % (h.encode('ascii'), response.getheader(h).encode('ascii'))) if not headeronly: stdout.write(b'\n') data = response.read() if args.bodyfile: bodyfh = open(args.bodyfile, 'wb') else: bodyfh = stdout # Pretty print JSON. This also has the beneficial side-effect # of verifying emitted JSON is well-formed. if formatjson: # json.dumps() will print trailing newlines. Eliminate them # to make tests easier to write. data = json.loads(data) lines = json.dumps(data, sort_keys=True, indent=2).splitlines() for line in lines: bodyfh.write(pycompat.sysbytes(line.rstrip())) bodyfh.write(b'\n') else: bodyfh.write(data) if args.bodyfile: bodyfh.close() if twice and response.getheader('ETag', None): tag = response.getheader('ETag') return response.status status = request(args.host, args.path, args.show) if twice: status = request(args.host, args.path, args.show) if 200 <= status <= 305: sys.exit(0) sys.exit(1)