Mercurial > hg
view hgdemandimport/demandimportpy3.py @ 37147:a2566597acb5
lfs: add basic routing for the server side wire protocol processing
The recent hgweb refactoring yielded a clean point to wrap a function that could
handle this, so I moved the routing for this out of the core. While not an hg
wire protocol, this seems logically close enough. For now, these handlers do
nothing other than check permissions.
The protocol requires support for PUT requests, so that has been added to the
core, and funnels into the same handler as GET and POST. The permission
checking code was assuming that anything not checking 'pull' or None ops should
be using POST. But that breaks the upload check if it checks 'push'. So I
invented a new 'upload' permission, and used it to avoid the mandate to POST. A
function wrap point could be added, but security code should probably stay
grouped together. Given that anything not 'pull' or None was requiring POST,
the comment on hgweb.common.permhooks is probably wrong- there is no 'read'.
The rationale for the URIs is that the spec for the Batch API[1] defines the URL
as the LFS server url + '/objects/batch'. The default git URLs are:
Git remote: https://git-server.com/foo/bar
LFS server: https://git-server.com/foo/bar.git/info/lfs
Batch API: https://git-server.com/foo/bar.git/info/lfs/objects/batch
'.git/' seems like it's not something a user would normally track. If we adhere
to how git defines the URLs, then the hg-git extension should be able to talk to
a git based server without any additional work.
The URI for the transfer requests starts with '.hg/' to ensure that there are no
conflicts with tracked files. Since these are handed out by the Batch API, we
can change this at any point in the future. (Specifically, it might be a good
idea to use something under the proposed /api/ namespace.) In any case, no
files are stored at these locations in the repository directory.
I started a new module for this because it seems like a good idea to keep all of
the security sensitive server side code together. There's also an issue with
`hg verify` in that it will want to download *all* blobs in order to run.
Sadly, there's no way in the protocol to ask the server to verify the content of
a blob it may have. (The verify action is for storing files on a 3rd party
server, and then informing the LFS server when that completes.) So we may end
up implementing a custom transfer adapter that simply indicates if the blobs are
valid, and fall back to basic transfers for non-hg servers. In other words,
this code is likely to get bigger before this is made non-experimental.
[1] https://github.com/git-lfs/git-lfs/blob/master/docs/api/batch.md
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 17 Mar 2018 01:23:01 -0400 |
parents | fcb1ecf2bef7 |
children | 670eb4fa1b86 |
line wrap: on
line source
# demandimportpy3 - global demand-loading of modules for Mercurial # # Copyright 2017 Facebook Inc. # # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. """Lazy loading for Python 3.6 and above. This uses the new importlib finder/loader functionality available in Python 3.5 and up. The code reuses most of the mechanics implemented inside importlib.util, but with a few additions: * Allow excluding certain modules from lazy imports. * Expose an interface that's substantially the same as demandimport for Python 2. This also has some limitations compared to the Python 2 implementation: * Much of the logic is per-package, not per-module, so any packages loaded before demandimport is enabled will not be lazily imported in the future. In practice, we only expect builtins to be loaded before demandimport is enabled. """ # This line is unnecessary, but it satisfies test-check-py3-compat.t. from __future__ import absolute_import import contextlib import importlib.abc import importlib.machinery import importlib.util import sys _deactivated = False class _lazyloaderex(importlib.util.LazyLoader): """This is a LazyLoader except it also follows the _deactivated global and the ignore list. """ def exec_module(self, module): """Make the module load lazily.""" if _deactivated or module.__name__ in ignore: self.loader.exec_module(module) else: super().exec_module(module) # This is 3.6+ because with Python 3.5 it isn't possible to lazily load # extensions. See the discussion in https://bugs.python.org/issue26186 for more. _extensions_loader = _lazyloaderex.factory( importlib.machinery.ExtensionFileLoader) _bytecode_loader = _lazyloaderex.factory( importlib.machinery.SourcelessFileLoader) _source_loader = _lazyloaderex.factory(importlib.machinery.SourceFileLoader) def _makefinder(path): return importlib.machinery.FileFinder( path, # This is the order in which loaders are passed in in core Python. (_extensions_loader, importlib.machinery.EXTENSION_SUFFIXES), (_source_loader, importlib.machinery.SOURCE_SUFFIXES), (_bytecode_loader, importlib.machinery.BYTECODE_SUFFIXES), ) ignore = [] def init(ignorelist): global ignore ignore = ignorelist def isenabled(): return _makefinder in sys.path_hooks and not _deactivated def disable(): try: while True: sys.path_hooks.remove(_makefinder) except ValueError: pass def enable(): sys.path_hooks.insert(0, _makefinder) @contextlib.contextmanager def deactivated(): # This implementation is a bit different from Python 2's. Python 3 # maintains a per-package finder cache in sys.path_importer_cache (see # PEP 302). This means that we can't just call disable + enable. # If we do that, in situations like: # # demandimport.enable() # ... # from foo.bar import mod1 # with demandimport.deactivated(): # from foo.bar import mod2 # # mod2 will be imported lazily. (The converse also holds -- whatever finder # first gets cached will be used.) # # Instead, have a global flag the LazyLoader can use. global _deactivated demandenabled = isenabled() if demandenabled: _deactivated = True try: yield finally: if demandenabled: _deactivated = False