view mercurial/lock.py @ 23575:a2f139d25845

subrepo: drop the 'ui' parameter to archive() The current state of subrepo methods is to pass a 'ui' object to some methods, which has the effect of overriding the subrepo configuration since it is the root repo's 'ui' that is passed along as deep as there are subrepos. Other subrepo method are *not* passed the root 'ui', and instead delegate to their repo object's 'ui'. Even in the former case where the root 'ui' is available, some methods are inconsistent in their use of both the root 'ui' and the local repo's 'ui'. (Consider hg._incoming() uses the root 'ui' for path expansion and some status messages, but also calls bundlerepo.getremotechanges(), which eventually calls discovery.findcommonincoming(), which calls setdiscovery.findcommonheads(), which calls status() on the local repo 'ui'.) This inconsistency with respect to the configured output level is probably always hidden, because --verbose, --debug and --quiet, along with their 'ui.xxx' equivalents in the global and user level hgrc files are propagated from the parent repo to the subrepo via 'baseui'. The 'ui.xxx' settings in the parent repo hgrc file are not propagated, but that seems like an unusual thing to set on a per repo config file. Any 'ui.xxx' options changed by --config are also not propagated, because they are set on repo.ui by dispatch.py, not repo.baseui. The goal here is to cleanup the subrepo methods by dropping the 'ui' parameter, which in turn prevents mixing subtly different 'ui' instances on a given subrepo level. Some methods use more than just the output level settings in 'ui' (add for example ends up calling scmutil.checkportabilityalert() with both the root and local repo's 'ui' at different points). This series just goes for the low hanging fruit and switches methods that only use the output level. If we really care about not letting a subrepo config override the root repo's output level, we can propagate the verbose, debug and quiet settings to the subrepo in the same way 'ui.commitsubrepos' is in hgsubrepo.__init__. Archive only uses the 'ui' object to call its progress() method, and gitsubrepo calls status().
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
date Sat, 13 Dec 2014 14:53:46 -0500
parents f484be02bd35
children 328739ea70c3
line wrap: on
line source

# lock.py - simple advisory locking scheme for mercurial
#
# Copyright 2005, 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.

import util, error
import errno, os, socket, time
import warnings

class lock(object):
    '''An advisory lock held by one process to control access to a set
    of files.  Non-cooperating processes or incorrectly written scripts
    can ignore Mercurial's locking scheme and stomp all over the
    repository, so don't do that.

    Typically used via localrepository.lock() to lock the repository
    store (.hg/store/) or localrepository.wlock() to lock everything
    else under .hg/.'''

    # lock is symlink on platforms that support it, file on others.

    # symlink is used because create of directory entry and contents
    # are atomic even over nfs.

    # old-style lock: symlink to pid
    # new-style lock: symlink to hostname:pid

    _host = None

    def __init__(self, vfs, file, timeout=-1, releasefn=None, desc=None):
        self.vfs = vfs
        self.f = file
        self.held = 0
        self.timeout = timeout
        self.releasefn = releasefn
        self.desc = desc
        self.postrelease  = []
        self.pid = os.getpid()
        self.delay = self.lock()

    def __del__(self):
        if self.held:
            warnings.warn("use lock.release instead of del lock",
                    category=DeprecationWarning,
                    stacklevel=2)

            # ensure the lock will be removed
            # even if recursive locking did occur
            self.held = 1

        self.release()

    def lock(self):
        timeout = self.timeout
        while True:
            try:
                self.trylock()
                return self.timeout - timeout
            except error.LockHeld, inst:
                if timeout != 0:
                    time.sleep(1)
                    if timeout > 0:
                        timeout -= 1
                    continue
                raise error.LockHeld(errno.ETIMEDOUT, inst.filename, self.desc,
                                     inst.locker)

    def trylock(self):
        if self.held:
            self.held += 1
            return
        if lock._host is None:
            lock._host = socket.gethostname()
        lockname = '%s:%s' % (lock._host, self.pid)
        while not self.held:
            try:
                self.vfs.makelock(lockname, self.f)
                self.held = 1
            except (OSError, IOError), why:
                if why.errno == errno.EEXIST:
                    locker = self.testlock()
                    if locker is not None:
                        raise error.LockHeld(errno.EAGAIN,
                                             self.vfs.join(self.f), self.desc,
                                             locker)
                else:
                    raise error.LockUnavailable(why.errno, why.strerror,
                                                why.filename, self.desc)

    def testlock(self):
        """return id of locker if lock is valid, else None.

        If old-style lock, we cannot tell what machine locker is on.
        with new-style lock, if locker is on this machine, we can
        see if locker is alive.  If locker is on this machine but
        not alive, we can safely break lock.

        The lock file is only deleted when None is returned.

        """
        try:
            locker = self.vfs.readlock(self.f)
        except (OSError, IOError), why:
            if why.errno == errno.ENOENT:
                return None
            raise
        try:
            host, pid = locker.split(":", 1)
        except ValueError:
            return locker
        if host != lock._host:
            return locker
        try:
            pid = int(pid)
        except ValueError:
            return locker
        if util.testpid(pid):
            return locker
        # if locker dead, break lock.  must do this with another lock
        # held, or can race and break valid lock.
        try:
            l = lock(self.vfs, self.f + '.break', timeout=0)
            self.vfs.unlink(self.f)
            l.release()
        except error.LockError:
            return locker

    def release(self):
        """release the lock and execute callback function if any

        If the lock has been acquired multiple times, the actual release is
        delayed to the last release call."""
        if self.held > 1:
            self.held -= 1
        elif self.held == 1:
            self.held = 0
            if os.getpid() != self.pid:
                # we forked, and are not the parent
                return
            try:
                if self.releasefn:
                    self.releasefn()
            finally:
                try:
                    self.vfs.unlink(self.f)
                except OSError:
                    pass
            for callback in self.postrelease:
                callback()

def release(*locks):
    for lock in locks:
        if lock is not None:
            lock.release()