Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/config.py @ 19929:ab2362e1672e
merge: exit early during a no-op update (BC)
hg update . (or equivalents) are effectively no-ops in just about all
circumstances. These sorts of updates can be especially common in a
bookmark-oriented workflow. This saves us a status check and a manifest
decompression, which means that on a repo with over 210,000 files, this brings
hg update . down from 2.5 seconds to 0.15.
There is one change in behavior: a file that was added, not committed, and then
deleted but not removed used to be removed from the dirstate. With this patch
it isn't. This is what causes the change in test-mq-qpush-exact.t. This seems
like it's enough of an edge case to not be worth handling.
The output of test-empty.t changes because those files are not yet created.
author | Siddharth Agarwal <sid0@fb.com> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 01 Oct 2013 17:43:54 -0700 |
parents | 7d82ad4b3727 |
children | d19c9bdbbf35 |
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# config.py - configuration parsing for Mercurial # # Copyright 2009 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> and others # # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. from i18n import _ import error, util import os, errno class sortdict(dict): 'a simple sorted dictionary' def __init__(self, data=None): self._list = [] if data: self.update(data) def copy(self): return sortdict(self) def __setitem__(self, key, val): if key in self: self._list.remove(key) self._list.append(key) dict.__setitem__(self, key, val) def __iter__(self): return self._list.__iter__() def update(self, src): for k in src: self[k] = src[k] def clear(self): dict.clear(self) self._list = [] def items(self): return [(k, self[k]) for k in self._list] def __delitem__(self, key): dict.__delitem__(self, key) self._list.remove(key) def keys(self): return self._list def iterkeys(self): return self._list.__iter__() class config(object): def __init__(self, data=None): self._data = {} self._source = {} self._unset = [] if data: for k in data._data: self._data[k] = data[k].copy() self._source = data._source.copy() def copy(self): return config(self) def __contains__(self, section): return section in self._data def __getitem__(self, section): return self._data.get(section, {}) def __iter__(self): for d in self.sections(): yield d def update(self, src): for s, n in src._unset: if s in self and n in self._data[s]: del self._data[s][n] del self._source[(s, n)] for s in src: if s not in self: self._data[s] = sortdict() self._data[s].update(src._data[s]) self._source.update(src._source) def get(self, section, item, default=None): return self._data.get(section, {}).get(item, default) def backup(self, section, item): """return a tuple allowing restore to reinstall a previous value The main reason we need it is because it handles the "no data" case. """ try: value = self._data[section][item] source = self.source(section, item) return (section, item, value, source) except KeyError: return (section, item) def source(self, section, item): return self._source.get((section, item), "") def sections(self): return sorted(self._data.keys()) def items(self, section): return self._data.get(section, {}).items() def set(self, section, item, value, source=""): if section not in self: self._data[section] = sortdict() self._data[section][item] = value self._source[(section, item)] = source def restore(self, data): """restore data returned by self.backup""" if len(data) == 4: # restore old data section, item, value, source = data self._data[section][item] = value self._source[(section, item)] = source else: # no data before, remove everything section, item = data if section in self._data: del self._data[section][item] self._source.pop((section, item), None) def parse(self, src, data, sections=None, remap=None, include=None): sectionre = util.compilere(r'\[([^\[]+)\]') itemre = util.compilere(r'([^=\s][^=]*?)\s*=\s*(.*\S|)') contre = util.compilere(r'\s+(\S|\S.*\S)\s*$') emptyre = util.compilere(r'(;|#|\s*$)') commentre = util.compilere(r'(;|#)') unsetre = util.compilere(r'%unset\s+(\S+)') includere = util.compilere(r'%include\s+(\S|\S.*\S)\s*$') section = "" item = None line = 0 cont = False for l in data.splitlines(True): line += 1 if line == 1 and l.startswith('\xef\xbb\xbf'): # Someone set us up the BOM l = l[3:] if cont: if commentre.match(l): continue m = contre.match(l) if m: if sections and section not in sections: continue v = self.get(section, item) + "\n" + m.group(1) self.set(section, item, v, "%s:%d" % (src, line)) continue item = None cont = False m = includere.match(l) if m: inc = util.expandpath(m.group(1)) base = os.path.dirname(src) inc = os.path.normpath(os.path.join(base, inc)) if include: try: include(inc, remap=remap, sections=sections) except IOError, inst: if inst.errno != errno.ENOENT: raise error.ParseError(_("cannot include %s (%s)") % (inc, inst.strerror), "%s:%s" % (src, line)) continue if emptyre.match(l): continue m = sectionre.match(l) if m: section = m.group(1) if remap: section = remap.get(section, section) if section not in self: self._data[section] = sortdict() continue m = itemre.match(l) if m: item = m.group(1) cont = True if sections and section not in sections: continue self.set(section, item, m.group(2), "%s:%d" % (src, line)) continue m = unsetre.match(l) if m: name = m.group(1) if sections and section not in sections: continue if self.get(section, name) is not None: del self._data[section][name] self._unset.append((section, name)) continue raise error.ParseError(l.rstrip(), ("%s:%s" % (src, line))) def read(self, path, fp=None, sections=None, remap=None): if not fp: fp = util.posixfile(path) self.parse(path, fp.read(), sections, remap, self.read)