Protocol switch from using generators to stream-like objects.
This allows the the pull side to precisely control how much data is
read so that another encapsulation layer is not needed.
An http client gets a response with a finite size. Because ssh clients
need to keep the stream open, we must not read more data than is sent
in a response. But due to the streaming nature of the changegroup
scheme, only the piece that's parsing the data knows how far it's
allowed to read.
This means the generator scheme isn't fine-grained enough. Instead we
need file-like objects with a read(x) method. This switches everything
for push/pull over to using file-like objects rather than generators.
#!/bin/sh -x
mkdir t
cd t
hg init
echo This is file a1 > a
echo This is file b1 > b
hg add a b
hg commit -t "commit #0" -d "0 0" -u user
echo This is file b22 > b
hg commit -t"comment #1" -d "0 0" -u user
hg update 0
rm b
hg commit -A -t"comment #2" -d "0 0" -u user
# in theory, we shouldn't need the "yes k" below, but it prevents
# this test from hanging when "hg update" erroneously prompts the
# user for "keep or delete"
yes k | hg update 1
# we exit with 0 to avoid the unavoidable SIGPIPE from above causing
# us to fail this test
exit 0