Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/ancestor.py @ 29847:9a9629b9416c stable
bundle2: fail faster when interrupted
Before this patch, bundle2 application attempted to consume remaining
bundle2 part data when the process is interrupted (SIGINT) or when
sys.exit is called (translated into a SystemExit exception). This
meant that if one of these occurred when applying a say 1 GB
changegroup bundle2 part being downloaded over a network, it may take
Mercurial *several minutes* to terminate after a SIGINT because the
process is waiting on the network to stream megabytes of data. This is
not a great user experience and a regression from bundle1. Furthermore,
many process supervisors tend to only give processes a finite amount of
time to exit after delivering SIGINT: if processes take too long to
self-terminate, a SIGKILL is issued and Mercurial has no opportunity to
clean up. This would mean orphaned locks and transactions. Not good.
This patch changes the bundle2 application behavior to fail faster
when an interrupt or system exit is requested. It does so by not
catching BaseException (which includes KeyboardInterrupt and
SystemExit) and by explicitly checking for these conditions in
yet another handler which would also seek to the end of the current
bundle2 part on failure.
The end result of this patch is that SIGINT is now reacted to
significantly faster: the active transaction is rolled back
immediately without waiting for incoming bundle2 data to be consumed.
This restores the pre-bundle2 behavior and makes Mercurial treat
signals with the urgency they deserve.
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 25 Aug 2016 19:53:14 -0700 |
parents | ead25aa27a43 |
children | 413b44003462 |
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# ancestor.py - generic DAG ancestor algorithm for mercurial # # Copyright 2006 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.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 collections import heapq from .node import nullrev def commonancestorsheads(pfunc, *nodes): """Returns a set with the heads of all common ancestors of all nodes, heads(::nodes[0] and ::nodes[1] and ...) . pfunc must return a list of parent vertices for a given vertex. """ if not isinstance(nodes, set): nodes = set(nodes) if nullrev in nodes: return set() if len(nodes) <= 1: return nodes allseen = (1 << len(nodes)) - 1 seen = [0] * (max(nodes) + 1) for i, n in enumerate(nodes): seen[n] = 1 << i poison = 1 << (i + 1) gca = set() interesting = len(nodes) nv = len(seen) - 1 while nv >= 0 and interesting: v = nv nv -= 1 if not seen[v]: continue sv = seen[v] if sv < poison: interesting -= 1 if sv == allseen: gca.add(v) sv |= poison if v in nodes: # history is linear return set([v]) if sv < poison: for p in pfunc(v): sp = seen[p] if p == nullrev: continue if sp == 0: seen[p] = sv interesting += 1 elif sp != sv: seen[p] |= sv else: for p in pfunc(v): if p == nullrev: continue sp = seen[p] if sp and sp < poison: interesting -= 1 seen[p] = sv return gca def ancestors(pfunc, *orignodes): """ Returns the common ancestors of a and b that are furthest from a root (as measured by longest path). pfunc must return a list of parent vertices for a given vertex. """ def deepest(nodes): interesting = {} count = max(nodes) + 1 depth = [0] * count seen = [0] * count mapping = [] for (i, n) in enumerate(sorted(nodes)): depth[n] = 1 b = 1 << i seen[n] = b interesting[b] = 1 mapping.append((b, n)) nv = count - 1 while nv >= 0 and len(interesting) > 1: v = nv nv -= 1 dv = depth[v] if dv == 0: continue sv = seen[v] for p in pfunc(v): if p == nullrev: continue dp = depth[p] nsp = sp = seen[p] if dp <= dv: depth[p] = dv + 1 if sp != sv: interesting[sv] += 1 nsp = seen[p] = sv if sp: interesting[sp] -= 1 if interesting[sp] == 0: del interesting[sp] elif dv == dp - 1: nsp = sp | sv if nsp == sp: continue seen[p] = nsp interesting.setdefault(nsp, 0) interesting[nsp] += 1 interesting[sp] -= 1 if interesting[sp] == 0: del interesting[sp] interesting[sv] -= 1 if interesting[sv] == 0: del interesting[sv] if len(interesting) != 1: return [] k = 0 for i in interesting: k |= i return set(n for (i, n) in mapping if k & i) gca = commonancestorsheads(pfunc, *orignodes) if len(gca) <= 1: return gca return deepest(gca) class incrementalmissingancestors(object): '''persistent state used to calculate missing ancestors incrementally Although similar in spirit to lazyancestors below, this is a separate class because trying to support contains and missingancestors operations with the same internal data structures adds needless complexity.''' def __init__(self, pfunc, bases): self.bases = set(bases) if not self.bases: self.bases.add(nullrev) self.pfunc = pfunc def hasbases(self): '''whether the common set has any non-trivial bases''' return self.bases and self.bases != set([nullrev]) def addbases(self, newbases): '''grow the ancestor set by adding new bases''' self.bases.update(newbases) def removeancestorsfrom(self, revs): '''remove all ancestors of bases from the set revs (in place)''' bases = self.bases pfunc = self.pfunc revs.difference_update(bases) # nullrev is always an ancestor revs.discard(nullrev) if not revs: return # anything in revs > start is definitely not an ancestor of bases # revs <= start needs to be investigated start = max(bases) keepcount = sum(1 for r in revs if r > start) if len(revs) == keepcount: # no revs to consider return for curr in xrange(start, min(revs) - 1, -1): if curr not in bases: continue revs.discard(curr) bases.update(pfunc(curr)) if len(revs) == keepcount: # no more potential revs to discard break def missingancestors(self, revs): '''return all the ancestors of revs that are not ancestors of self.bases This may include elements from revs. Equivalent to the revset (::revs - ::self.bases). Revs are returned in revision number order, which is a topological order.''' revsvisit = set(revs) basesvisit = self.bases pfunc = self.pfunc bothvisit = revsvisit.intersection(basesvisit) revsvisit.difference_update(bothvisit) if not revsvisit: return [] start = max(max(revsvisit), max(basesvisit)) # At this point, we hold the invariants that: # - revsvisit is the set of nodes we know are an ancestor of at least # one of the nodes in revs # - basesvisit is the same for bases # - bothvisit is the set of nodes we know are ancestors of at least one # of the nodes in revs and one of the nodes in bases. bothvisit and # revsvisit are mutually exclusive, but bothvisit is a subset of # basesvisit. # Now we walk down in reverse topo order, adding parents of nodes # already visited to the sets while maintaining the invariants. When a # node is found in both revsvisit and basesvisit, it is removed from # revsvisit and added to bothvisit. When revsvisit becomes empty, there # are no more ancestors of revs that aren't also ancestors of bases, so # exit. missing = [] for curr in xrange(start, nullrev, -1): if not revsvisit: break if curr in bothvisit: bothvisit.remove(curr) # curr's parents might have made it into revsvisit through # another path for p in pfunc(curr): revsvisit.discard(p) basesvisit.add(p) bothvisit.add(p) continue if curr in revsvisit: missing.append(curr) revsvisit.remove(curr) thisvisit = revsvisit othervisit = basesvisit elif curr in basesvisit: thisvisit = basesvisit othervisit = revsvisit else: # not an ancestor of revs or bases: ignore continue for p in pfunc(curr): if p == nullrev: pass elif p in othervisit or p in bothvisit: # p is implicitly in thisvisit. This means p is or should be # in bothvisit revsvisit.discard(p) basesvisit.add(p) bothvisit.add(p) else: # visit later thisvisit.add(p) missing.reverse() return missing class lazyancestors(object): def __init__(self, pfunc, revs, stoprev=0, inclusive=False): """Create a new object generating ancestors for the given revs. Does not generate revs lower than stoprev. This is computed lazily starting from revs. The object supports iteration and membership. cl should be a changelog and revs should be an iterable. inclusive is a boolean that indicates whether revs should be included. Revs lower than stoprev will not be generated. Result does not include the null revision.""" self._parentrevs = pfunc self._initrevs = revs self._stoprev = stoprev self._inclusive = inclusive # Initialize data structures for __contains__. # For __contains__, we use a heap rather than a deque because # (a) it minimizes the number of parentrevs calls made # (b) it makes the loop termination condition obvious # Python's heap is a min-heap. Multiply all values by -1 to convert it # into a max-heap. self._containsvisit = [-rev for rev in revs] heapq.heapify(self._containsvisit) if inclusive: self._containsseen = set(revs) else: self._containsseen = set() def __nonzero__(self): """False if the set is empty, True otherwise.""" try: next(iter(self)) return True except StopIteration: return False def __iter__(self): """Generate the ancestors of _initrevs in reverse topological order. If inclusive is False, yield a sequence of revision numbers starting with the parents of each revision in revs, i.e., each revision is *not* considered an ancestor of itself. Results are in breadth-first order: parents of each rev in revs, then parents of those, etc. If inclusive is True, yield all the revs first (ignoring stoprev), then yield all the ancestors of revs as when inclusive is False. If an element in revs is an ancestor of a different rev it is not yielded again.""" seen = set() revs = self._initrevs if self._inclusive: for rev in revs: yield rev seen.update(revs) parentrevs = self._parentrevs stoprev = self._stoprev visit = collections.deque(revs) see = seen.add schedule = visit.append while visit: for parent in parentrevs(visit.popleft()): if parent >= stoprev and parent not in seen: schedule(parent) see(parent) yield parent def __contains__(self, target): """Test whether target is an ancestor of self._initrevs.""" # Trying to do both __iter__ and __contains__ using the same visit # heap and seen set is complex enough that it slows down both. Keep # them separate. seen = self._containsseen if target in seen: return True parentrevs = self._parentrevs visit = self._containsvisit stoprev = self._stoprev heappop = heapq.heappop heappush = heapq.heappush see = seen.add targetseen = False while visit and -visit[0] > target and not targetseen: for parent in parentrevs(-heappop(visit)): if parent < stoprev or parent in seen: continue # We need to make sure we push all parents into the heap so # that we leave it in a consistent state for future calls. heappush(visit, -parent) see(parent) if parent == target: targetseen = True return targetseen