Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/exthelper.py @ 45095:8e04607023e5
procutil: ensure that procutil.std{out,err}.write() writes all bytes
Python 3 offers different kind of streams and it’s not guaranteed for all of
them that calling write() writes all bytes.
When Python is started in unbuffered mode, sys.std{out,err}.buffer are
instances of io.FileIO, whose write() can write less bytes for
platform-specific reasons (e.g. Linux has a 0x7ffff000 bytes maximum and could
write less if interrupted by a signal; when writing to Windows consoles, it’s
limited to 32767 bytes to avoid the "not enough space" error). This can lead to
silent loss of data, both when using sys.std{out,err}.buffer (which may in fact
not be a buffered stream) and when using the text streams sys.std{out,err}
(I’ve created a CPython bug report for that:
https://bugs.python.org/issue41221).
Python may fix the problem at some point. For now, we implement our own wrapper
for procutil.std{out,err} that calls the raw stream’s write() method until all
bytes have been written. We don’t use sys.std{out,err} for larger writes, so I
think it’s not worth the effort to patch them.
author | Manuel Jacob <me@manueljacob.de> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 10 Jul 2020 12:27:58 +0200 |
parents | 101ae8bbfa02 |
children | bd22900e26ac |
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# Copyright 2012 Logilab SA <contact@logilab.fr> # Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@ens-lyon.org> # Octobus <contact@octobus.net> # # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. ##################################################################### ### Extension helper ### ##################################################################### from __future__ import absolute_import from . import ( commands, error, extensions, pycompat, registrar, ) from hgdemandimport import tracing class exthelper(object): """Helper for modular extension setup A single helper should be instantiated for each module of an extension, where a command or function needs to be wrapped, or a command, extension hook, fileset, revset or template needs to be registered. Helper methods are then used as decorators for these various purposes. If an extension spans multiple modules, all helper instances should be merged in the main module. All decorators return the original function and may be chained. Aside from the helper functions with examples below, several registrar method aliases are available for adding commands, configitems, filesets, revsets, and templates. Simply decorate the appropriate methods, and assign the corresponding exthelper variable to a module level variable of the extension. The extension loading mechanism will handle the rest. example:: # ext.py eh = exthelper.exthelper() # As needed: cmdtable = eh.cmdtable configtable = eh.configtable filesetpredicate = eh.filesetpredicate revsetpredicate = eh.revsetpredicate templatekeyword = eh.templatekeyword @eh.command('mynewcommand', [('r', 'rev', [], _('operate on these revisions'))], _('-r REV...'), helpcategory=command.CATEGORY_XXX) def newcommand(ui, repo, *revs, **opts): # implementation goes here eh.configitem('experimental', 'foo', default=False, ) @eh.filesetpredicate('lfs()') def filesetbabar(mctx, x): return mctx.predicate(...) @eh.revsetpredicate('hidden') def revsetbabar(repo, subset, x): args = revset.getargs(x, 0, 0, 'babar accept no argument') return [r for r in subset if 'babar' in repo[r].description()] @eh.templatekeyword('babar') def kwbabar(ctx): return 'babar' """ def __init__(self): self._uipopulatecallables = [] self._uicallables = [] self._extcallables = [] self._repocallables = [] self._commandwrappers = [] self._extcommandwrappers = [] self._functionwrappers = [] self.cmdtable = {} self.command = registrar.command(self.cmdtable) self.configtable = {} self.configitem = registrar.configitem(self.configtable) self.filesetpredicate = registrar.filesetpredicate() self.revsetpredicate = registrar.revsetpredicate() self.templatekeyword = registrar.templatekeyword() def merge(self, other): self._uicallables.extend(other._uicallables) self._uipopulatecallables.extend(other._uipopulatecallables) self._extcallables.extend(other._extcallables) self._repocallables.extend(other._repocallables) self.filesetpredicate._merge(other.filesetpredicate) self.revsetpredicate._merge(other.revsetpredicate) self.templatekeyword._merge(other.templatekeyword) self._commandwrappers.extend(other._commandwrappers) self._extcommandwrappers.extend(other._extcommandwrappers) self._functionwrappers.extend(other._functionwrappers) self.cmdtable.update(other.cmdtable) for section, items in pycompat.iteritems(other.configtable): if section in self.configtable: self.configtable[section].update(items) else: self.configtable[section] = items def finaluisetup(self, ui): """Method to be used as the extension uisetup The following operations belong here: - Changes to ui.__class__ . The ui object that will be used to run the command has not yet been created. Changes made here will affect ui objects created after this, and in particular the ui that will be passed to runcommand - Command wraps (extensions.wrapcommand) - Changes that need to be visible to other extensions: because initialization occurs in phases (all extensions run uisetup, then all run extsetup), a change made here will be visible to other extensions during extsetup - Monkeypatch or wrap function (extensions.wrapfunction) of dispatch module members - Setup of pre-* and post-* hooks - pushkey setup """ for command, wrapper, opts in self._commandwrappers: entry = extensions.wrapcommand(commands.table, command, wrapper) if opts: for opt in opts: entry[1].append(opt) for cont, funcname, wrapper in self._functionwrappers: extensions.wrapfunction(cont, funcname, wrapper) for c in self._uicallables: with tracing.log('finaluisetup: %s', repr(c)): c(ui) def finaluipopulate(self, ui): """Method to be used as the extension uipopulate This is called once per ui instance to: - Set up additional ui members - Update configuration by ``ui.setconfig()`` - Extend the class dynamically """ for c in self._uipopulatecallables: c(ui) def finalextsetup(self, ui): """Method to be used as a the extension extsetup The following operations belong here: - Changes depending on the status of other extensions. (if extensions.find('mq')) - Add a global option to all commands """ knownexts = {} for ext, command, wrapper, opts in self._extcommandwrappers: if ext not in knownexts: try: e = extensions.find(ext) except KeyError: # Extension isn't enabled, so don't bother trying to wrap # it. continue knownexts[ext] = e.cmdtable entry = extensions.wrapcommand(knownexts[ext], command, wrapper) if opts: for opt in opts: entry[1].append(opt) for c in self._extcallables: with tracing.log('finalextsetup: %s', repr(c)): c(ui) def finalreposetup(self, ui, repo): """Method to be used as the extension reposetup The following operations belong here: - All hooks but pre-* and post-* - Modify configuration variables - Changes to repo.__class__, repo.dirstate.__class__ """ for c in self._repocallables: with tracing.log('finalreposetup: %s', repr(c)): c(ui, repo) def uisetup(self, call): """Decorated function will be executed during uisetup example:: @eh.uisetup def setupbabar(ui): print 'this is uisetup!' """ self._uicallables.append(call) return call def uipopulate(self, call): """Decorated function will be executed during uipopulate example:: @eh.uipopulate def setupfoo(ui): print 'this is uipopulate!' """ self._uipopulatecallables.append(call) return call def extsetup(self, call): """Decorated function will be executed during extsetup example:: @eh.extsetup def setupcelestine(ui): print 'this is extsetup!' """ self._extcallables.append(call) return call def reposetup(self, call): """Decorated function will be executed during reposetup example:: @eh.reposetup def setupzephir(ui, repo): print 'this is reposetup!' """ self._repocallables.append(call) return call def wrapcommand(self, command, extension=None, opts=None): """Decorated function is a command wrapper The name of the command must be given as the decorator argument. The wrapping is installed during `uisetup`. If the second option `extension` argument is provided, the wrapping will be applied in the extension commandtable. This argument must be a string that will be searched using `extension.find` if not found and Abort error is raised. If the wrapping applies to an extension, it is installed during `extsetup`. example:: @eh.wrapcommand('summary') def wrapsummary(orig, ui, repo, *args, **kwargs): ui.note('Barry!') return orig(ui, repo, *args, **kwargs) The `opts` argument allows specifying a list of tuples for additional arguments for the command. See ``mercurial.fancyopts.fancyopts()`` for the format of the tuple. """ if opts is None: opts = [] else: for opt in opts: if not isinstance(opt, tuple): raise error.ProgrammingError(b'opts must be list of tuples') if len(opt) not in (4, 5): msg = b'each opt tuple must contain 4 or 5 values' raise error.ProgrammingError(msg) def dec(wrapper): if extension is None: self._commandwrappers.append((command, wrapper, opts)) else: self._extcommandwrappers.append( (extension, command, wrapper, opts) ) return wrapper return dec def wrapfunction(self, container, funcname): """Decorated function is a function wrapper This function takes two arguments, the container and the name of the function to wrap. The wrapping is performed during `uisetup`. (there is no extension support) example:: @eh.function(discovery, 'checkheads') def wrapfunction(orig, *args, **kwargs): ui.note('His head smashed in and his heart cut out') return orig(*args, **kwargs) """ def dec(wrapper): self._functionwrappers.append((container, funcname, wrapper)) return wrapper return dec