view contrib/buildrpm @ 36528:72e487851a53

debugcommands: add debugwireproto command We currently don't have a low-level mechanism for sending arbitrary wire protocol commands. Having a generic and robust mechanism for sending wire protocol commands, examining wire data, etc would make it vastly easier to test the wire protocol and debug server operation. This is a problem I've wanted a solution for numerous times, especially recently as I've been hacking on a new version of the wire protocol. This commit establishes a `hg debugwireproto` command for sending data to a peer. The command invents a mini language for specifying actions to take. This will enable a lot of flexibility for issuing commands and testing variations for how commands are sent. Right now, we only support low-level raw sends and receives. These are probably the least valuable commands to intended users of this command. But they are the most useful commands to implement to bootstrap the feature (I've chosen to reimplement test-ssh-proto.t using this command to prove its usefulness). My eventual goal of `hg debugwireproto` is to allow calling wire protocol commands with a human-friendly interface. Essentially, people can type in a command name and arguments and `hg debugwireproto` will figure out how to send that on the wire. I'd love to eventually be able to save the server's raw response to a file. This would allow us to e.g. call "getbundle" wire protocol commands easily. test-ssh-proto.t has been updated to use the new command in lieu of piping directly to a server process. As part of the transition, test behavior improved. Before, we piped all request data to the server at once. Now, we have explicit control over the ordering of operations. e.g. we can send one command, receive its response, then send another command. This will allow us to more robustly test race conditions, buffering behavior, etc. There were some subtle changes in test behavior. For example, previous behavior would often send trailing newlines to the server. The new mechanism doesn't treat literal newlines specially and requires newlines be escaped in the payload. Because the new logging code is very low level, it is easy to introduce race conditions in tests. For example, the number of bytes returned by a read() may vary depending on load. This is why tests make heavy use of "readline" for consuming data: the result of that operation should be deterministic and not subject to race conditions. There are still some uses of "readavailable." However, those are only for reading from stderr. I was able to reproduce timing issues with my system under load when using "readavailable" globally. But if I "readline" to grab stdout, "readavailable" appears to work deterministically for stderr. I think this is because the server writes to stderr first. As long as the OS delivers writes to pipes in the same order they were made, this should work. If there are timing issues, we can introduce a mechanism to readline from stderr. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D2392
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Thu, 01 Mar 2018 08:24:54 -0800
parents 5e947367606c
children ea70512b1ad6
line wrap: on
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#!/bin/bash -e
#
# Build a Mercurial RPM from the current repo
#
# Tested on
# - Fedora 20
# - CentOS 5
# - centOS 6

. $(dirname $0)/packagelib.sh

BUILD=1
RPMBUILDDIR="$PWD/rpmbuild"

while [ "$1" ]; do
    case "$1" in
    --prepare )
        shift
        BUILD=
        ;;
    --withpython | --with-python)
        shift
        PYTHONVER=2.7.14
        PYTHONMD5=cee2e4b33ad3750da77b2e85f2f8b724
        ;;
    --rpmbuilddir )
        shift
        RPMBUILDDIR="$1"
        shift
        ;;
    * )
        echo "Invalid parameter $1!" 1>&2
        exit 1
        ;;
    esac
done

cd "`dirname $0`/.."

specfile=$PWD/contrib/mercurial.spec
if [ ! -f $specfile ]; then
    echo "Cannot find $specfile!" 1>&2
    exit 1
fi

if [ ! -d .hg ]; then
    echo 'You are not inside a Mercurial repository!' 1>&2
    exit 1
fi

gethgversion

# TODO: handle distance/node set, and type set

if [ -z "$type" ] ; then
   release=1
else
    release=0.9_$type
fi

if [ -n "$distance" ] ; then
    release=$release+$distance_$node
fi

if [ "$PYTHONVER" ]; then
    release=$release+$PYTHONVER
    RPMPYTHONVER=$PYTHONVER
else
    RPMPYTHONVER=%{nil}
fi

mkdir -p $RPMBUILDDIR/{SOURCES,BUILD,SRPMS,RPMS}
$HG archive -t tgz $RPMBUILDDIR/SOURCES/mercurial-$version-$release.tar.gz
if [ "$PYTHONVER" ]; then
(
    mkdir -p build
    cd build
    PYTHON_SRCFILE=Python-$PYTHONVER.tgz
    [ -f $PYTHON_SRCFILE ] || curl -Lo $PYTHON_SRCFILE http://www.python.org/ftp/python/$PYTHONVER/$PYTHON_SRCFILE
    if [ "$PYTHONMD5" ]; then
        echo "$PYTHONMD5 $PYTHON_SRCFILE" | md5sum -w -c
    fi
    ln -f $PYTHON_SRCFILE $RPMBUILDDIR/SOURCES/$PYTHON_SRCFILE

    DOCUTILSVER=`sed -ne "s/^%global docutilsname docutils-//p" $specfile`
    DOCUTILS_SRCFILE=docutils-$DOCUTILSVER.tar.gz
    [ -f $DOCUTILS_SRCFILE ] || curl -Lo $DOCUTILS_SRCFILE http://downloads.sourceforge.net/project/docutils/docutils/$DOCUTILSVER/$DOCUTILS_SRCFILE
    DOCUTILSMD5=`sed -ne "s/^%global docutilsmd5 //p" $specfile`
    if [ "$DOCUTILSMD5" ]; then
        echo "$DOCUTILSMD5 $DOCUTILS_SRCFILE" | md5sum -w -c
    fi
    ln -f $DOCUTILS_SRCFILE $RPMBUILDDIR/SOURCES/$DOCUTILS_SRCFILE
)
fi

mkdir -p $RPMBUILDDIR/SPECS
rpmspec=$RPMBUILDDIR/SPECS/mercurial.spec

sed -e "s,^Version:.*,Version: $version," \
    -e "s,^Release:.*,Release: $release," \
    $specfile > $rpmspec

echo >> $rpmspec
echo "%changelog" >> $rpmspec

if echo $version | grep '+' > /dev/null 2>&1; then
    latesttag="`echo $version | sed -e 's/+.*//'`"
    $HG log -r .:"$latesttag" -fM \
        --template '{date|hgdate}\t{author}\t{desc|firstline}\n' | python -c '
import sys, time

def datestr(date, format):
    return time.strftime(format, time.gmtime(float(date[0]) - date[1]))

changelog = []
for l in sys.stdin.readlines():
    tok = l.split("\t")
    hgdate = tuple(int(v) for v in tok[0].split())
    changelog.append((datestr(hgdate, "%F"), tok[1], hgdate, tok[2]))
prevtitle = ""
for l in sorted(changelog, reverse=True):
    title = "* %s %s" % (datestr(l[2], "%a %b %d %Y"), l[1])
    if prevtitle != title:
        prevtitle = title
        print
        print title
    print "- %s" % l[3].strip()
' >> $rpmspec

else

    $HG log \
         --template '{date|hgdate}\t{author}\t{desc|firstline}\n' \
         .hgtags | python -c '
import sys, time

def datestr(date, format):
    return time.strftime(format, time.gmtime(float(date[0]) - date[1]))

for l in sys.stdin.readlines():
    tok = l.split("\t")
    hgdate = tuple(int(v) for v in tok[0].split())
    print "* %s %s\n- %s" % (datestr(hgdate, "%a %b %d %Y"), tok[1], tok[2])
' >> $rpmspec

fi

sed -i \
    -e "s/^%define withpython.*$/%define withpython $RPMPYTHONVER/" \
    $rpmspec

if [ "$BUILD" ]; then
    rpmbuild --define "_topdir $RPMBUILDDIR" -ba $rpmspec --clean
    if [ $? = 0 ]; then
        echo
        echo "Built packages for $version-$release:"
        find $RPMBUILDDIR/*RPMS/ -type f -newer $rpmspec
    fi
else
    echo "Prepared sources for $version-$release $rpmspec are in $RPMBUILDDIR/SOURCES/ - use like:"
    echo "rpmbuild --define '_topdir $RPMBUILDDIR' -ba $rpmspec --clean"
fi