contrib/undumprevlog
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
Wed, 14 Mar 2018 11:52:35 -0700
changeset 36958 644a02f6b34f
parent 33872 5d9890d8ca77
child 37120 a8a902d7176e
permissions -rwxr-xr-x
util: prefer "bytesio" to "stringio" The io.BytesIO and io.StringIO types enforce the type of data being operated on. On Python 2, we use cStringIO.StringIO(), which is lax about mixing types. On Python 3, we actually use io.BytesIO. Ideally, we'd use io.BytesIO on Python 2. But I believe its performance is poor compared to cString.StringIO(). Anyway, we canonically define our pycompat type as "stringio." That name is misleading, especially on Python 3. This commit renames the canonical symbols to "bytesio." "stringio" is preserved as an alias for API compatibility. There are a lot of callers in the repo and I hesitate to take away the old name. I also don't feel like changing everything at this time. But at least new callers can use a "proper" name. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D2868

#!/usr/bin/env python
# Undump a dump from dumprevlog
# $ hg init
# $ undumprevlog < repo.dump

from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function

import sys
from mercurial import (
    node,
    revlog,
    transaction,
    util,
    vfs as vfsmod,
)

for fp in (sys.stdin, sys.stdout, sys.stderr):
    util.setbinary(fp)

opener = vfsmod.vfs('.', False)
tr = transaction.transaction(sys.stderr.write, opener, {'store': opener},
                             "undump.journal")
while True:
    l = sys.stdin.readline()
    if not l:
        break
    if l.startswith("file:"):
        f = l[6:-1]
        r = revlog.revlog(opener, f)
        print(f)
    elif l.startswith("node:"):
        n = node.bin(l[6:-1])
    elif l.startswith("linkrev:"):
        lr = int(l[9:-1])
    elif l.startswith("parents:"):
        p = l[9:-1].split()
        p1 = node.bin(p[0])
        p2 = node.bin(p[1])
    elif l.startswith("length:"):
        length = int(l[8:-1])
        sys.stdin.readline() # start marker
        d = sys.stdin.read(length)
        sys.stdin.readline() # end marker
        r.addrevision(d, tr, lr, p1, p2)

tr.close()