view tests/test-revlog-raw.py @ 33289:abd7dedbaa36

sparse: vendor Facebook-developed extension Facebook has developed an extension to enable "sparse" checkouts - a working directory with a subset of files. This feature is a critical component in enabling repositories to scale to infinite number of files while retaining reasonable performance. It's worth noting that sparse checkout is only one possible solution to this problem: another is virtual filesystems that realize files on first access. But given that virtual filesystems may not be accessible to all users, sparse checkout is necessary as a fallback. Per mailing list discussion at https://www.mercurial-scm.org/pipermail/mercurial-devel/2017-March/095868.html we want to add sparse checkout to the Mercurial distribution via roughly the following mechanism: 1. Vendor extension as-is with minimal modifications (this patch) 2. Refactor extension so it is more clearly experimental and inline with Mercurial practices 3. Move code from extension into core where possible 4. Drop experimental labeling and/or move feature into core after sign-off from narrow clone feature owners This commit essentially copies the sparse extension and tests from revision 71e0a2aeca92a4078fe1b8c76e32c88ff1929737 of the https://bitbucket.org/facebook/hg-experimental repository. A list of modifications made as part of vendoring is as follows: * "EXPERIMENTAL" added to module docstring * Imports were changed to match Mercurial style conventions * "testedwith" value was updated to core Mercurial special value and comment boilerplate was inserted * A "clone_sparse" function was renamed to "clonesparse" to appease the style checker * Paths to the sparse extension in tests reflect built-in location * test-sparse-extensions.t was renamed to test-sparse-fsmonitor.t and references to "simplecache" were removed. The test always skips because it isn't trivial to run it given the way we currently run fsmonitor tests * A double empty line was removed from test-sparse-profiles.t There are aspects of the added code that are obviously not ideal. The goal is to make a minimal number of modifications as part of the vendoring to make it easier to track changes from the original implementation. Refactoring will occur in subsequent patches.
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Sat, 01 Jul 2017 10:43:29 -0700
parents 15707e58fc3d
children 6788e648efcf
line wrap: on
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# test revlog interaction about raw data (flagprocessor)

from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function

import sys

from mercurial import (
    encoding,
    node,
    revlog,
    transaction,
    vfs,
)

# TESTTMP is optional. This makes it convenient to run without run-tests.py
tvfs = vfs.vfs(encoding.environ.get('TESTTMP', b'/tmp'))

# Enable generaldelta otherwise revlog won't use delta as expected by the test
tvfs.options = {'generaldelta': True, 'revlogv1': True}

# The test wants to control whether to use delta explicitly, based on
# "storedeltachains".
revlog.revlog._isgooddelta = lambda self, d, textlen: self.storedeltachains

def abort(msg):
    print('abort: %s' % msg)
    # Return 0 so run-tests.py could compare the output.
    sys.exit()

# Register a revlog processor for flag EXTSTORED.
#
# It simply prepends a fixed header, and replaces '1' to 'i'. So it has
# insertion and replacement, and may be interesting to test revlog's line-based
# deltas.
_extheader = b'E\n'

def readprocessor(self, rawtext):
    # True: the returned text could be used to verify hash
    text = rawtext[len(_extheader):].replace(b'i', b'1')
    return text, True

def writeprocessor(self, text):
    # False: the returned rawtext shouldn't be used to verify hash
    rawtext = _extheader + text.replace(b'1', b'i')
    return rawtext, False

def rawprocessor(self, rawtext):
    # False: do not verify hash. Only the content returned by "readprocessor"
    # can be used to verify hash.
    return False

revlog.addflagprocessor(revlog.REVIDX_EXTSTORED,
                        (readprocessor, writeprocessor, rawprocessor))

# Utilities about reading and appending revlog

def newtransaction():
    # A transaction is required to write revlogs
    report = lambda msg: None
    return transaction.transaction(report, tvfs, {'plain': tvfs}, b'journal')

def newrevlog(name=b'_testrevlog.i', recreate=False):
    if recreate:
        tvfs.tryunlink(name)
    rlog = revlog.revlog(tvfs, name)
    return rlog

def appendrev(rlog, text, tr, isext=False, isdelta=True):
    '''Append a revision. If isext is True, set the EXTSTORED flag so flag
    processor will be used (and rawtext is different from text). If isdelta is
    True, force the revision to be a delta, otherwise it's full text.
    '''
    nextrev = len(rlog)
    p1 = rlog.node(nextrev - 1)
    p2 = node.nullid
    if isext:
        flags = revlog.REVIDX_EXTSTORED
    else:
        flags = revlog.REVIDX_DEFAULT_FLAGS
    # Change storedeltachains temporarily, to override revlog's delta decision
    rlog.storedeltachains = isdelta
    try:
        rlog.addrevision(text, tr, nextrev, p1, p2, flags=flags)
        return nextrev
    except Exception as ex:
        abort('rev %d: failed to append: %s' % (nextrev, ex))
    finally:
        # Restore storedeltachains. It is always True, see revlog.__init__
        rlog.storedeltachains = True

def addgroupcopy(rlog, tr, destname=b'_destrevlog.i', optimaldelta=True):
    '''Copy revlog to destname using revlog.addgroup. Return the copied revlog.

    This emulates push or pull. They use changegroup. Changegroup requires
    repo to work. We don't have a repo, so a dummy changegroup is used.

    If optimaldelta is True, use optimized delta parent, so the destination
    revlog could probably reuse it. Otherwise it builds sub-optimal delta, and
    the destination revlog needs more work to use it.

    This exercises some revlog.addgroup (and revlog._addrevision(text=None))
    code path, which is not covered by "appendrev" alone.
    '''
    class dummychangegroup(object):
        @staticmethod
        def deltachunk(pnode):
            pnode = pnode or node.nullid
            parentrev = rlog.rev(pnode)
            r = parentrev + 1
            if r >= len(rlog):
                return {}
            if optimaldelta:
                deltaparent = parentrev
            else:
                # suboptimal deltaparent
                deltaparent = min(0, parentrev)
            return {'node': rlog.node(r), 'p1': pnode, 'p2': node.nullid,
                    'cs': rlog.node(rlog.linkrev(r)), 'flags': rlog.flags(r),
                    'deltabase': rlog.node(deltaparent),
                    'delta': rlog.revdiff(deltaparent, r)}

    def linkmap(lnode):
        return rlog.rev(lnode)

    dlog = newrevlog(destname, recreate=True)
    dlog.addgroup(dummychangegroup(), linkmap, tr)
    return dlog

def lowlevelcopy(rlog, tr, destname=b'_destrevlog.i'):
    '''Like addgroupcopy, but use the low level revlog._addrevision directly.

    It exercises some code paths that are hard to reach easily otherwise.
    '''
    dlog = newrevlog(destname, recreate=True)
    for r in rlog:
        p1 = rlog.node(r - 1)
        p2 = node.nullid
        if r == 0:
            text = rlog.revision(r, raw=True)
            cachedelta = None
        else:
            # deltaparent is more interesting if it has the EXTSTORED flag.
            deltaparent = max([0] + [p for p in range(r - 2) if rlog.flags(p)])
            text = None
            cachedelta = (deltaparent, rlog.revdiff(deltaparent, r))
        flags = rlog.flags(r)
        ifh = dlog.opener(dlog.indexfile, 'a+')
        dfh = None
        if not dlog._inline:
            dfh = dlog.opener(dlog.datafile, 'a+')
        dlog._addrevision(rlog.node(r), text, tr, r, p1, p2, flags, cachedelta,
                          ifh, dfh)
    return dlog

# Utilities to generate revisions for testing

def genbits(n):
    '''Given a number n, generate (2 ** (n * 2) + 1) numbers in range(2 ** n).
    i.e. the generated numbers have a width of n bits.

    The combination of two adjacent numbers will cover all possible cases.
    That is to say, given any x, y where both x, and y are in range(2 ** n),
    there is an x followed immediately by y in the generated sequence.
    '''
    m = 2 ** n

    # Gray Code. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gray_code
    gray = lambda x: x ^ (x >> 1)
    reversegray = dict((gray(i), i) for i in range(m))

    # Generate (n * 2) bit gray code, yield lower n bits as X, and look for
    # the next unused gray code where higher n bits equal to X.

    # For gray codes whose higher bits are X, a[X] of them have been used.
    a = [0] * m

    # Iterate from 0.
    x = 0
    yield x
    for i in range(m * m):
        x = reversegray[x]
        y = gray(a[x] + x * m) & (m - 1)
        assert a[x] < m
        a[x] += 1
        x = y
        yield x

def gentext(rev):
    '''Given a revision number, generate dummy text'''
    return b''.join(b'%d\n' % j for j in range(-1, rev % 5))

def writecases(rlog, tr):
    '''Write some revisions interested to the test.

    The test is interested in 3 properties of a revision:

        - Is it a delta or a full text? (isdelta)
          This is to catch some delta application issues.
        - Does it have a flag of EXTSTORED? (isext)
          This is to catch some flag processor issues. Especially when
          interacted with revlog deltas.
        - Is its text empty? (isempty)
          This is less important. It is intended to try to catch some careless
          checks like "if text" instead of "if text is None". Note: if flag
          processor is involved, raw text may be not empty.

    Write 65 revisions. So that all combinations of the above flags for
    adjacent revisions are covered. That is to say,

        len(set(
            (r.delta, r.ext, r.empty, (r+1).delta, (r+1).ext, (r+1).empty)
            for r in range(len(rlog) - 1)
           )) is 64.

    Where "r.delta", "r.ext", and "r.empty" are booleans matching properties
    mentioned above.

    Return expected [(text, rawtext)].
    '''
    result = []
    for i, x in enumerate(genbits(3)):
        isdelta, isext, isempty = bool(x & 1), bool(x & 2), bool(x & 4)
        if isempty:
            text = b''
        else:
            text = gentext(i)
        rev = appendrev(rlog, text, tr, isext=isext, isdelta=isdelta)

        # Verify text, rawtext, and rawsize
        if isext:
            rawtext = writeprocessor(None, text)[0]
        else:
            rawtext = text
        if rlog.rawsize(rev) != len(rawtext):
            abort('rev %d: wrong rawsize' % rev)
        if rlog.revision(rev, raw=False) != text:
            abort('rev %d: wrong text' % rev)
        if rlog.revision(rev, raw=True) != rawtext:
            abort('rev %d: wrong rawtext' % rev)
        result.append((text, rawtext))

        # Verify flags like isdelta, isext work as expected
        if bool(rlog.deltaparent(rev) > -1) != isdelta:
            abort('rev %d: isdelta is ineffective' % rev)
        if bool(rlog.flags(rev)) != isext:
            abort('rev %d: isext is ineffective' % rev)
    return result

# Main test and checking

def checkrevlog(rlog, expected):
    '''Check if revlog has expected contents. expected is [(text, rawtext)]'''
    # Test using different access orders. This could expose some issues
    # depending on revlog caching (see revlog._cache).
    for r0 in range(len(rlog) - 1):
        r1 = r0 + 1
        for revorder in [[r0, r1], [r1, r0]]:
            for raworder in [[True], [False], [True, False], [False, True]]:
                nlog = newrevlog()
                for rev in revorder:
                    for raw in raworder:
                        t = nlog.revision(rev, raw=raw)
                        if t != expected[rev][int(raw)]:
                            abort('rev %d: corrupted %stext'
                                  % (rev, raw and 'raw' or ''))

def maintest():
    expected = rl = None
    with newtransaction() as tr:
        rl = newrevlog(recreate=True)
        expected = writecases(rl, tr)
        checkrevlog(rl, expected)
        print('local test passed')
        # Copy via revlog.addgroup
        rl1 = addgroupcopy(rl, tr)
        checkrevlog(rl1, expected)
        rl2 = addgroupcopy(rl, tr, optimaldelta=False)
        checkrevlog(rl2, expected)
        print('addgroupcopy test passed')
        # Copy via revlog.clone
        rl3 = newrevlog(name='_destrevlog3.i', recreate=True)
        rl.clone(tr, rl3)
        checkrevlog(rl3, expected)
        print('clone test passed')
        # Copy via low-level revlog._addrevision
        rl4 = lowlevelcopy(rl, tr)
        checkrevlog(rl4, expected)
        print('lowlevelcopy test passed')

try:
    maintest()
except Exception as ex:
    abort('crashed: %s' % ex)