node: stop converting binascii.Error to TypeError in bin()
Changeset
f574cc00831a introduced the wrapper, to make bin() behave like on
Python 2, where it raised TypeError in many cases. Another previous approach,
changing callers to catch binascii.Error in addition to TypeError, was backed
out after negative review feedback [1].
However, I think it’s worth reconsidering the approach. Now that we’re on
Python 3 only, callers have to catch only binascii.Error instead of both.
Catching binascii.Error instead of TypeError has the advantage that it’s less
likely to cover a programming error (e.g. passing an int to bin() raises
TypeError). Also, raising TypeError never made sense semantically when bin()
got an argument of valid type.
As a side-effect, this fixed an exception in test-http-bad-server.t. The TODO
was outdated: it was not an uncaught ValueError in batch.results() but uncaught
TypeError from the now removed wrapper. Now that bin() raises binascii.Error
instead of TypeError, it gets converted to a proper error in
wirepeer.heads.<locals>.decode() that catches ValueError (superclass of
binascii.Error). This is a good example of why this changeset is a good idea.
Catching TypeError instead of ValueError there would not make much sense.
[1] https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D2244
#!/usr/bin/env python3
#
# 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'
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()