windows: allow readpipe() to actually read data out of the pipe
It appears that the read() in readpipe() never actually ran before (in
test-ssh.t anyway). A print of the size returned from os.fstat() is 0 for every
single print output in test-ssh.t, so the data in the pipe ends up being read
later instead of when it is available. This is the same problem as Linux, as
mentioned in
331cbf088c4c.
There are several places in the Windows SSH tests where the order of local
output vs remote output differ from the other platforms. This only fixes one of
those cases (and interstingly, not the one added in order to test
331cbf088c4c),
so there is more investigation needed. However, without this patch, test-ssh.t
also has this diff:
--- c:/Users/Matt/Projects/hg/tests/test-ssh.t
+++ c:/Users/Matt/Projects/hg/tests/test-ssh.t.err
@@ -397,11 +397,11 @@
$ hg push --ssh "sh ../ssh.sh"
pushing to ssh://user@dummy/*/remote (glob)
searching for changes
- remote: Permission denied
- remote: abort: prechangegroup.hg-ssh hook failed
- remote: Permission denied
- remote: pushkey-abort: prepushkey.hg-ssh hook failed
updating
6c0482d977a3 to public failed!
+ remote: Permission denied
+ remote: abort: prechangegroup.hg-ssh hook failed
+ remote: Permission denied
+ remote: pushkey-abort: prepushkey.hg-ssh hook failed
[1]
$ cd ..
Output with this change was stable over 600+ runs of test-ssh.t. I initially
tried a background thread to read the pipe[1], but this was simpler and the test
results were exactly the same. I also tried SetNamedPipeHandleState(), but the
PIPE_NOWAIT is for compatibility with LANMAN 2.0, not for async I/O (the results
were identical though).
[1] http://eyalarubas.com/python-subproc-nonblock.html
# memory.py - track memory usage
#
# Copyright 2009 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> and others
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
'''helper extension to measure memory usage
Reads current and peak memory usage from ``/proc/self/status`` and
prints it to ``stderr`` on exit.
'''
import atexit
def memusage(ui):
"""Report memory usage of the current process."""
status = None
result = {'peak': 0, 'rss': 0}
try:
# This will only work on systems with a /proc file system
# (like Linux).
status = open('/proc/self/status', 'r')
for line in status:
parts = line.split()
key = parts[0][2:-1].lower()
if key in result:
result[key] = int(parts[1])
finally:
if status is not None:
status.close()
ui.write_err(", ".join(["%s: %.1f MiB" % (key, value / 1024.0)
for key, value in result.iteritems()]) + "\n")
def extsetup(ui):
atexit.register(memusage, ui)