mercurial/policy.py
author Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>
Mon, 18 Jul 2016 16:25:35 -0500
branchstable
changeset 29630 67b180c0e263
parent 29490 b4d117cee636
child 31308 62939e0148f1
permissions -rw-r--r--
extdiff: escape path for docstring (issue5301) The existing code (a) assumed path would be specified in encoding.encoding and (b) assumed unicode() objects wouldn't cause other parts of Mercurial to blow up. Both are dangerous assumptions. Since we don't know the encoding of path and can't pass non-ASCII through docstrings, just escape the path and drop the early _(). Will have to suffice until we can teach docstrings to handle UTF-8b escaping. This has the side-effect that the line containing the path is now variable by the time it reaches _() and thus can't be translated.

# policy.py - module policy logic for Mercurial.
#
# Copyright 2015 Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@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

import os
import sys

# Rules for how modules can be loaded. Values are:
#
#    c - require C extensions
#    allow - allow pure Python implementation when C loading fails
#    cffi - required cffi versions (implemented within pure module)
#    cffi-allow - allow pure Python implementation if cffi version is missing
#    py - only load pure Python modules
#
# By default, require the C extensions for performance reasons.
policy = 'c'
policynoc = ('cffi', 'cffi-allow', 'py')
policynocffi = ('c', 'py')

try:
    from . import __modulepolicy__
    policy = __modulepolicy__.modulepolicy
except ImportError:
    pass

# PyPy doesn't load C extensions.
#
# The canonical way to do this is to test platform.python_implementation().
# But we don't import platform and don't bloat for it here.
if '__pypy__' in sys.builtin_module_names:
    policy = 'cffi'

# Our C extensions aren't yet compatible with Python 3. So use pure Python
# on Python 3 for now.
if sys.version_info[0] >= 3:
    policy = 'py'

# Environment variable can always force settings.
policy = os.environ.get('HGMODULEPOLICY', policy)