view mercurial/peer.py @ 36801:66de4555cefd

wireproto: formalize permissions checking as part of protocol interface Per the inline comment desiring to formalize permissions checking in the protocol interface, we do that. I'm not convinced this is the best way to go about things. I would love for there to e.g. be a better exception for denoting permissions problems. But it does feel strictly better than snipping attributes on the proto instance. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D2719
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Wed, 07 Mar 2018 16:18:52 -0800
parents 115efdd97088
children
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# peer.py - repository base classes for mercurial
#
# Copyright 2005, 2006 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>
# Copyright 2006 Vadim Gelfer <vadim.gelfer@gmail.com>
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.

from __future__ import absolute_import

from . import (
    error,
    pycompat,
    util,
)

# abstract batching support

class future(object):
    '''placeholder for a value to be set later'''
    def set(self, value):
        if util.safehasattr(self, 'value'):
            raise error.RepoError("future is already set")
        self.value = value

class batcher(object):
    '''base class for batches of commands submittable in a single request

    All methods invoked on instances of this class are simply queued and
    return a a future for the result. Once you call submit(), all the queued
    calls are performed and the results set in their respective futures.
    '''
    def __init__(self):
        self.calls = []
    def __getattr__(self, name):
        def call(*args, **opts):
            resref = future()
            # Please don't invent non-ascii method names, or you will
            # give core hg a very sad time.
            self.calls.append((name.encode('ascii'), args, opts, resref,))
            return resref
        return call
    def submit(self):
        raise NotImplementedError()

class iterbatcher(batcher):

    def submit(self):
        raise NotImplementedError()

    def results(self):
        raise NotImplementedError()

class localiterbatcher(iterbatcher):
    def __init__(self, local):
        super(iterbatcher, self).__init__()
        self.local = local

    def submit(self):
        # submit for a local iter batcher is a noop
        pass

    def results(self):
        for name, args, opts, resref in self.calls:
            resref.set(getattr(self.local, name)(*args, **opts))
            yield resref.value

def batchable(f):
    '''annotation for batchable methods

    Such methods must implement a coroutine as follows:

    @batchable
    def sample(self, one, two=None):
        # Build list of encoded arguments suitable for your wire protocol:
        encargs = [('one', encode(one),), ('two', encode(two),)]
        # Create future for injection of encoded result:
        encresref = future()
        # Return encoded arguments and future:
        yield encargs, encresref
        # Assuming the future to be filled with the result from the batched
        # request now. Decode it:
        yield decode(encresref.value)

    The decorator returns a function which wraps this coroutine as a plain
    method, but adds the original method as an attribute called "batchable",
    which is used by remotebatch to split the call into separate encoding and
    decoding phases.
    '''
    def plain(*args, **opts):
        batchable = f(*args, **opts)
        encargsorres, encresref = next(batchable)
        if not encresref:
            return encargsorres # a local result in this case
        self = args[0]
        cmd = pycompat.bytesurl(f.__name__)  # ensure cmd is ascii bytestr
        encresref.set(self._submitone(cmd, encargsorres))
        return next(batchable)
    setattr(plain, 'batchable', f)
    return plain