view mercurial/dicthelpers.py @ 20966:63659b809021

phase: apply publishing enforcement for "serve" source When a changegroup is added by a push on a publishing server, we ensure they are added as public. This is used to enforce publishing on server when the client is not aware of phases. It also prevents race conditions where a reader could see the changesets as draft before they get turned public by the client. Finally, this save rounds trip as the client does not need additional request to turn them public. However, this logic was only enforced when the changegroup was from a "push" source. And "push" is used for local pushes only. Wireprotocol push uses "serve" as source since Mercurial 1.9. We now enforce this logic for both "push" and "serve" sources. One could note that this logic was mainly useful during wireprotocol exchanges. So this code is finally put into good use, 9 versions after its introduction.
author Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@fb.com>
date Mon, 07 Apr 2014 18:10:50 -0700
parents ed46c2b98b0d
children
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# dicthelpers.py - helper routines for Python dicts
#
# Copyright 2013 Facebook
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.

def diff(d1, d2, default=None):
    '''Return all key-value pairs that are different between d1 and d2.

    This includes keys that are present in one dict but not the other, and
    keys whose values are different. The return value is a dict with values
    being pairs of values from d1 and d2 respectively, and missing values
    treated as default, so if a value is missing from one dict and the same as
    default in the other, it will not be returned.'''
    res = {}
    if d1 is d2:
        # same dict, so diff is empty
        return res

    for k1, v1 in d1.iteritems():
        v2 = d2.get(k1, default)
        if v1 != v2:
            res[k1] = (v1, v2)

    for k2 in d2:
        if k2 not in d1:
            v2 = d2[k2]
            if v2 != default:
                res[k2] = (default, v2)

    return res

def join(d1, d2, default=None):
    '''Return all key-value pairs from both d1 and d2.

    This is akin to an outer join in relational algebra. The return value is a
    dict with values being pairs of values from d1 and d2 respectively, and
    missing values represented as default.'''
    res = {}

    for k1, v1 in d1.iteritems():
        if k1 in d2:
            res[k1] = (v1, d2[k1])
        else:
            res[k1] = (v1, default)

    if d1 is d2:
        return res

    for k2 in d2:
        if k2 not in d1:
            res[k2] = (default, d2[k2])

    return res