Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-filecache.py @ 35098:66c5a8cf2868
lfs: import the Facebook git-lfs client extension
The purpose of this is the same as the built-in largefiles extension- to handle
huge files outside of the normal storage system, generally to keep the amount of
data cloned to a lower amount. There are several benefits of implementing the
git-lfs protocol, instead of using the largefiles extension:
- Bitbucket and Github support (and probably wider support in 3rd party
hosting sites in general). [1][2]
- The number of hg internals monkey patched are several orders of magnitude
lower, so it will be easier to reason about and maintain. Future commands
will likely just work, without requiring various wrappers.
- The "standin" files are only written to the filelog, not the disk. That
should avoid weird edge cases where the largefile and standin files get out
of sync. [3] It also avoids the occasional printing of the "hidden" standin
file in various messages.
- Filesets like size() will work, even if the file isn't present. (It always
says 41 bytes for largefiles, whether present or not.)
The only place that I see where largefiles comes out on top is that it works
with `hg serve` for simple sharing, without external infrastructure. Getting
lfs-test-server working was a hassle, and took awhile to figure out. Maybe we
can do something to make it work in the future.
Long term, I expect that this will be highly preferred over largefiles. But if
we are to recommend this to largefile users, there are some UI issues to
bikeshed. Until they are resolved, I've marked this experimental, and am not
putting a pointer to this in the largefiles help. The (non exhaustive) list of
issues I've seen so far are:
- It isn't sufficient to just enable the largefiles extension- you have to
explicitly add a file with --large before it will pay attention to the
configured sizes and patterns on future adds. The justification being that
once you use it, you're stuck with it. I've seen people confused by this,
and haven't liked it myself. But it's also saved me a few times. Should we
do something like have a specific enabling config setting that must be set
in the local repo config, so that enabling this extension in the user or
system hgrc doesn't silently start storing lfs files?
- The largefiles extension adds a repo requirement when the first largefile is
committed, so that the extension must always be enabled in the future. This
extension is not doing that, and since I only enabled it locally to avoid
infecting other repos, I got a cryptic error about missing flag processors
when I cloned. Is there no repo requirement due to shallow/narrow clone
considerations (or other future advanced things)?
- In the (small amount of) reading I've done about the git implementation, it
seems that the files and sizes are stored in a tracked .gitattributes file.
I think a tracked file for this would be extremely useful for consistency
across developers, but this kind of touches on the tracked hgrc file
proposal a few months back.
- The git client can specify file patterns, not just sizes.
- The largefiles extension has a cache directory in the local repo, but also a
system wide one. We should probably implement a system wide cache too, so
that multiple clones don't have to refetch the files from the server.
- Jun mentioned other missing features, like SSH authentication, gc, etc.
The code corresponds to c0492b73c7ef in hg-experimental. [4] The only tweaks
are to load the extension in the tests with 'lfs=' instead of
'lfs=$TESTDIR/../hgext3rd/lfs', change the import in the *.py test to hgext
(from hgext3rd), add the 'testedwith' declaration, and mark it experimental for
now. The infinite-push, p4fastimport, and remotefilelog tests were left behind.
The devel-warnings for unregistered config options are not corrected yet, nor
are the import check warnings.
[1] https://www.mercurial-scm.org/pipermail/mercurial/2017-November/050699.html
[2] https://bitbucket.org/site/master/issues/3843/largefiles-support-bb-3903
[3] https://bz.mercurial-scm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=5738
[4] https://bitbucket.org/facebook/hg-experimental
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 14 Nov 2017 00:06:23 -0500 |
parents | 74cbbd5420ba |
children | daa5f47558cf |
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from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function import os import subprocess import sys if subprocess.call(['python', '%s/hghave' % os.environ['TESTDIR'], 'cacheable']): sys.exit(80) from mercurial import ( extensions, hg, localrepo, ui as uimod, util, vfs as vfsmod, ) class fakerepo(object): def __init__(self): self._filecache = {} class fakevfs(object): def join(self, p): return p vfs = fakevfs() def unfiltered(self): return self def sjoin(self, p): return p @localrepo.repofilecache('x', 'y') def cached(self): print('creating') return 'string from function' def invalidate(self): for k in self._filecache: try: delattr(self, k) except AttributeError: pass def basic(repo): print("* neither file exists") # calls function repo.cached repo.invalidate() print("* neither file still exists") # uses cache repo.cached # create empty file f = open('x', 'w') f.close() repo.invalidate() print("* empty file x created") # should recreate the object repo.cached f = open('x', 'w') f.write('a') f.close() repo.invalidate() print("* file x changed size") # should recreate the object repo.cached repo.invalidate() print("* nothing changed with either file") # stats file again, reuses object repo.cached # atomic replace file, size doesn't change # hopefully st_mtime doesn't change as well so this doesn't use the cache # because of inode change f = vfsmod.vfs('.')('x', 'w', atomictemp=True) f.write('b') f.close() repo.invalidate() print("* file x changed inode") repo.cached # create empty file y f = open('y', 'w') f.close() repo.invalidate() print("* empty file y created") # should recreate the object repo.cached f = open('y', 'w') f.write('A') f.close() repo.invalidate() print("* file y changed size") # should recreate the object repo.cached f = vfsmod.vfs('.')('y', 'w', atomictemp=True) f.write('B') f.close() repo.invalidate() print("* file y changed inode") repo.cached f = vfsmod.vfs('.')('x', 'w', atomictemp=True) f.write('c') f.close() f = vfsmod.vfs('.')('y', 'w', atomictemp=True) f.write('C') f.close() repo.invalidate() print("* both files changed inode") repo.cached def fakeuncacheable(): def wrapcacheable(orig, *args, **kwargs): return False def wrapinit(orig, *args, **kwargs): pass originit = extensions.wrapfunction(util.cachestat, '__init__', wrapinit) origcacheable = extensions.wrapfunction(util.cachestat, 'cacheable', wrapcacheable) for fn in ['x', 'y']: try: os.remove(fn) except OSError: pass basic(fakerepo()) util.cachestat.cacheable = origcacheable util.cachestat.__init__ = originit def test_filecache_synced(): # test old behavior that caused filecached properties to go out of sync os.system('hg init && echo a >> a && hg ci -qAm.') repo = hg.repository(uimod.ui.load()) # first rollback clears the filecache, but changelog to stays in __dict__ repo.rollback() repo.commit('.') # second rollback comes along and touches the changelog externally # (file is moved) repo.rollback() # but since changelog isn't under the filecache control anymore, we don't # see that it changed, and return the old changelog without reconstructing # it repo.commit('.') def setbeforeget(repo): os.remove('x') os.remove('y') repo.cached = 'string set externally' repo.invalidate() print("* neither file exists") print(repo.cached) repo.invalidate() f = open('x', 'w') f.write('a') f.close() print("* file x created") print(repo.cached) repo.cached = 'string 2 set externally' repo.invalidate() print("* string set externally again") print(repo.cached) repo.invalidate() f = open('y', 'w') f.write('b') f.close() print("* file y created") print(repo.cached) def antiambiguity(): filename = 'ambigcheck' # try some times, because reproduction of ambiguity depends on # "filesystem time" for i in xrange(5): fp = open(filename, 'w') fp.write('FOO') fp.close() oldstat = os.stat(filename) if oldstat.st_ctime != oldstat.st_mtime: # subsequent changing never causes ambiguity continue repetition = 3 # repeat changing via checkambigatclosing, to examine whether # st_mtime is advanced multiple times as expected for i in xrange(repetition): # explicit closing fp = vfsmod.checkambigatclosing(open(filename, 'a')) fp.write('FOO') fp.close() # implicit closing by "with" statement with vfsmod.checkambigatclosing(open(filename, 'a')) as fp: fp.write('BAR') newstat = os.stat(filename) if oldstat.st_ctime != newstat.st_ctime: # timestamp ambiguity was naturally avoided while repetition continue # st_mtime should be advanced "repetition * 2" times, because # all changes occurred at same time (in sec) expected = (oldstat.st_mtime + repetition * 2) & 0x7fffffff if newstat.st_mtime != expected: print("'newstat.st_mtime %s is not %s (as %s + %s * 2)" % (newstat.st_mtime, expected, oldstat.st_mtime, repetition)) # no more examination is needed regardless of result break else: # This platform seems too slow to examine anti-ambiguity # of file timestamp (or test happened to be executed at # bad timing). Exit silently in this case, because running # on other faster platforms can detect problems pass print('basic:') print() basic(fakerepo()) print() print('fakeuncacheable:') print() fakeuncacheable() test_filecache_synced() print() print('setbeforeget:') print() setbeforeget(fakerepo()) print() print('antiambiguity:') print() antiambiguity()