view hgext/journal.py @ 39772:ae531f5e583c

testing: add interface unit tests for file storage Our strategy for supporting alternate storage backends is to define interfaces for everything then "code to the interface." We already have interfaces for various primitives, including file and manifest storage. What we don't have is generic unit tests for those interfaces. Up to this point we've been relying on high-level integration tests (mainly in the form of existing .t tests) to test alternate storage backends. And my experience with developing the "simple store" test extension is that such testing is very tedious: it takes several minutes to run all tests and when you find a failure, it is often non-trivial to debug. This commit starts to change that. This commit introduces the mercurial.testing.storage module. It contains testing code for storage. Currently, it defines some unittest.TestCase classes for testing the file storage interfaces. It also defines some factory functions that allow a caller to easily spawn a custom TestCase "bound" to a specific file storage backend implementation. A new .py test has been added. It simply defines a callable to produce filelog and transaction instances on demand and then "registers" the various test classes so the filelog class can be tested with the storage interface unit tests. As part of writing the tests, I identified a couple of apparent bugs in revlog.py and filelog.py! These are tracked with inline TODO comments. Writing the tests makes it more obvious where the storage interface is lacking. For example, we raise either IndexError or error.LookupError for missing revisions depending on whether we use an integer revision or a node. Also, we raise error.RevlogError in various places when we should be raising a storage-agnostic error type. The storage interfaces are currently far from perfect and there is much work to be done to improve them. But at least with this commit we finally have the start of unit tests that can be used to "qualify" the behavior of a storage backend. And when implementing and debugging new storage backends, we now have an obvious place to define new tests and have obvious places to insert breakpoints to facilitate debugging. This should be invaluable when implementing new storage backends. I added the mercurial.testing package because these interface conformance tests are generic and need to be usable by all storage backends. Having the code live in tests/ would make it difficult for storage backends implemented in extensions to test their interface conformance. First, it would require obtaining a copy of Mercurial's storage test code in order to test. Second, it would make testing against multiple Mercurial versions difficult, as you would need to import N copies of the storage testing code in order to achieve test coverage. By making the test code part of the Mercurial distribution itself, extensions can `import mercurial.testing.*` to access and run the test code. The test will run against whatever Mercurial version is active. FWIW I've always wanted to move parts of run-tests.py into the mercurial.* package to make the testing story simpler (e.g. imagine an `hg debugruntests` command that could invoke the test harness). While I have no plans to do that in the near future, establishing the mercurial.testing package does provide a natural home for that code should someone do this in the future. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D4650
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Tue, 18 Sep 2018 16:52:11 -0700
parents aa647457df14
children c303d65d2e34
line wrap: on
line source

# journal.py
#
# Copyright 2014-2016 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.
"""track previous positions of bookmarks (EXPERIMENTAL)

This extension adds a new command: `hg journal`, which shows you where
bookmarks were previously located.

"""

from __future__ import absolute_import

import collections
import errno
import os
import weakref

from mercurial.i18n import _

from mercurial import (
    bookmarks,
    cmdutil,
    dispatch,
    encoding,
    error,
    extensions,
    hg,
    localrepo,
    lock,
    logcmdutil,
    node,
    pycompat,
    registrar,
    util,
)
from mercurial.utils import (
    dateutil,
    procutil,
    stringutil,
)

cmdtable = {}
command = registrar.command(cmdtable)

# Note for extension authors: ONLY specify testedwith = 'ships-with-hg-core' for
# extensions which SHIP WITH MERCURIAL. Non-mainline extensions should
# be specifying the version(s) of Mercurial they are tested with, or
# leave the attribute unspecified.
testedwith = 'ships-with-hg-core'

# storage format version; increment when the format changes
storageversion = 0

# namespaces
bookmarktype = 'bookmark'
wdirparenttype = 'wdirparent'
# In a shared repository, what shared feature name is used
# to indicate this namespace is shared with the source?
sharednamespaces = {
    bookmarktype: hg.sharedbookmarks,
}

# Journal recording, register hooks and storage object
def extsetup(ui):
    extensions.wrapfunction(dispatch, 'runcommand', runcommand)
    extensions.wrapfunction(bookmarks.bmstore, '_write', recordbookmarks)
    extensions.wrapfilecache(
        localrepo.localrepository, 'dirstate', wrapdirstate)
    extensions.wrapfunction(hg, 'postshare', wrappostshare)
    extensions.wrapfunction(hg, 'copystore', unsharejournal)

def reposetup(ui, repo):
    if repo.local():
        repo.journal = journalstorage(repo)
        repo._wlockfreeprefix.add('namejournal')

        dirstate, cached = localrepo.isfilecached(repo, 'dirstate')
        if cached:
            # already instantiated dirstate isn't yet marked as
            # "journal"-ing, even though repo.dirstate() was already
            # wrapped by own wrapdirstate()
            _setupdirstate(repo, dirstate)

def runcommand(orig, lui, repo, cmd, fullargs, *args):
    """Track the command line options for recording in the journal"""
    journalstorage.recordcommand(*fullargs)
    return orig(lui, repo, cmd, fullargs, *args)

def _setupdirstate(repo, dirstate):
    dirstate.journalstorage = repo.journal
    dirstate.addparentchangecallback('journal', recorddirstateparents)

# hooks to record dirstate changes
def wrapdirstate(orig, repo):
    """Make journal storage available to the dirstate object"""
    dirstate = orig(repo)
    if util.safehasattr(repo, 'journal'):
        _setupdirstate(repo, dirstate)
    return dirstate

def recorddirstateparents(dirstate, old, new):
    """Records all dirstate parent changes in the journal."""
    old = list(old)
    new = list(new)
    if util.safehasattr(dirstate, 'journalstorage'):
        # only record two hashes if there was a merge
        oldhashes = old[:1] if old[1] == node.nullid else old
        newhashes = new[:1] if new[1] == node.nullid else new
        dirstate.journalstorage.record(
            wdirparenttype, '.', oldhashes, newhashes)

# hooks to record bookmark changes (both local and remote)
def recordbookmarks(orig, store, fp):
    """Records all bookmark changes in the journal."""
    repo = store._repo
    if util.safehasattr(repo, 'journal'):
        oldmarks = bookmarks.bmstore(repo)
        for mark, value in store.iteritems():
            oldvalue = oldmarks.get(mark, node.nullid)
            if value != oldvalue:
                repo.journal.record(bookmarktype, mark, oldvalue, value)
    return orig(store, fp)

# shared repository support
def _readsharedfeatures(repo):
    """A set of shared features for this repository"""
    try:
        return set(repo.vfs.read('shared').splitlines())
    except IOError as inst:
        if inst.errno != errno.ENOENT:
            raise
        return set()

def _mergeentriesiter(*iterables, **kwargs):
    """Given a set of sorted iterables, yield the next entry in merged order

    Note that by default entries go from most recent to oldest.
    """
    order = kwargs.pop(r'order', max)
    iterables = [iter(it) for it in iterables]
    # this tracks still active iterables; iterables are deleted as they are
    # exhausted, which is why this is a dictionary and why each entry also
    # stores the key. Entries are mutable so we can store the next value each
    # time.
    iterable_map = {}
    for key, it in enumerate(iterables):
        try:
            iterable_map[key] = [next(it), key, it]
        except StopIteration:
            # empty entry, can be ignored
            pass

    while iterable_map:
        value, key, it = order(iterable_map.itervalues())
        yield value
        try:
            iterable_map[key][0] = next(it)
        except StopIteration:
            # this iterable is empty, remove it from consideration
            del iterable_map[key]

def wrappostshare(orig, sourcerepo, destrepo, **kwargs):
    """Mark this shared working copy as sharing journal information"""
    with destrepo.wlock():
        orig(sourcerepo, destrepo, **kwargs)
        with destrepo.vfs('shared', 'a') as fp:
            fp.write('journal\n')

def unsharejournal(orig, ui, repo, repopath):
    """Copy shared journal entries into this repo when unsharing"""
    if (repo.path == repopath and repo.shared() and
            util.safehasattr(repo, 'journal')):
        sharedrepo = hg.sharedreposource(repo)
        sharedfeatures = _readsharedfeatures(repo)
        if sharedrepo and sharedfeatures > {'journal'}:
            # there is a shared repository and there are shared journal entries
            # to copy. move shared date over from source to destination but
            # move the local file first
            if repo.vfs.exists('namejournal'):
                journalpath = repo.vfs.join('namejournal')
                util.rename(journalpath, journalpath + '.bak')
            storage = repo.journal
            local = storage._open(
                repo.vfs, filename='namejournal.bak', _newestfirst=False)
            shared = (
                e for e in storage._open(sharedrepo.vfs, _newestfirst=False)
                if sharednamespaces.get(e.namespace) in sharedfeatures)
            for entry in _mergeentriesiter(local, shared, order=min):
                storage._write(repo.vfs, entry)

    return orig(ui, repo, repopath)

class journalentry(collections.namedtuple(
        u'journalentry',
        u'timestamp user command namespace name oldhashes newhashes')):
    """Individual journal entry

    * timestamp: a mercurial (time, timezone) tuple
    * user: the username that ran the command
    * namespace: the entry namespace, an opaque string
    * name: the name of the changed item, opaque string with meaning in the
      namespace
    * command: the hg command that triggered this record
    * oldhashes: a tuple of one or more binary hashes for the old location
    * newhashes: a tuple of one or more binary hashes for the new location

    Handles serialisation from and to the storage format. Fields are
    separated by newlines, hashes are written out in hex separated by commas,
    timestamp and timezone are separated by a space.

    """
    @classmethod
    def fromstorage(cls, line):
        (time, user, command, namespace, name,
         oldhashes, newhashes) = line.split('\n')
        timestamp, tz = time.split()
        timestamp, tz = float(timestamp), int(tz)
        oldhashes = tuple(node.bin(hash) for hash in oldhashes.split(','))
        newhashes = tuple(node.bin(hash) for hash in newhashes.split(','))
        return cls(
            (timestamp, tz), user, command, namespace, name,
            oldhashes, newhashes)

    def __bytes__(self):
        """bytes representation for storage"""
        time = ' '.join(map(pycompat.bytestr, self.timestamp))
        oldhashes = ','.join([node.hex(hash) for hash in self.oldhashes])
        newhashes = ','.join([node.hex(hash) for hash in self.newhashes])
        return '\n'.join((
            time, self.user, self.command, self.namespace, self.name,
            oldhashes, newhashes))

    __str__ = encoding.strmethod(__bytes__)

class journalstorage(object):
    """Storage for journal entries

    Entries are divided over two files; one with entries that pertain to the
    local working copy *only*, and one with entries that are shared across
    multiple working copies when shared using the share extension.

    Entries are stored with NUL bytes as separators. See the journalentry
    class for the per-entry structure.

    The file format starts with an integer version, delimited by a NUL.

    This storage uses a dedicated lock; this makes it easier to avoid issues
    with adding entries that added when the regular wlock is unlocked (e.g.
    the dirstate).

    """
    _currentcommand = ()
    _lockref = None

    def __init__(self, repo):
        self.user = procutil.getuser()
        self.ui = repo.ui
        self.vfs = repo.vfs

        # is this working copy using a shared storage?
        self.sharedfeatures = self.sharedvfs = None
        if repo.shared():
            features = _readsharedfeatures(repo)
            sharedrepo = hg.sharedreposource(repo)
            if sharedrepo is not None and 'journal' in features:
                self.sharedvfs = sharedrepo.vfs
                self.sharedfeatures = features

    # track the current command for recording in journal entries
    @property
    def command(self):
        commandstr = ' '.join(
            map(procutil.shellquote, journalstorage._currentcommand))
        if '\n' in commandstr:
            # truncate multi-line commands
            commandstr = commandstr.partition('\n')[0] + ' ...'
        return commandstr

    @classmethod
    def recordcommand(cls, *fullargs):
        """Set the current hg arguments, stored with recorded entries"""
        # Set the current command on the class because we may have started
        # with a non-local repo (cloning for example).
        cls._currentcommand = fullargs

    def _currentlock(self, lockref):
        """Returns the lock if it's held, or None if it's not.

        (This is copied from the localrepo class)
        """
        if lockref is None:
            return None
        l = lockref()
        if l is None or not l.held:
            return None
        return l

    def jlock(self, vfs):
        """Create a lock for the journal file"""
        if self._currentlock(self._lockref) is not None:
            raise error.Abort(_('journal lock does not support nesting'))
        desc = _('journal of %s') % vfs.base
        try:
            l = lock.lock(vfs, 'namejournal.lock', 0, desc=desc)
        except error.LockHeld as inst:
            self.ui.warn(
                _("waiting for lock on %s held by %r\n") % (desc, inst.locker))
            # default to 600 seconds timeout
            l = lock.lock(
                vfs, 'namejournal.lock',
                self.ui.configint("ui", "timeout"), desc=desc)
            self.ui.warn(_("got lock after %s seconds\n") % l.delay)
        self._lockref = weakref.ref(l)
        return l

    def record(self, namespace, name, oldhashes, newhashes):
        """Record a new journal entry

        * namespace: an opaque string; this can be used to filter on the type
          of recorded entries.
        * name: the name defining this entry; for bookmarks, this is the
          bookmark name. Can be filtered on when retrieving entries.
        * oldhashes and newhashes: each a single binary hash, or a list of
          binary hashes. These represent the old and new position of the named
          item.

        """
        if not isinstance(oldhashes, list):
            oldhashes = [oldhashes]
        if not isinstance(newhashes, list):
            newhashes = [newhashes]

        entry = journalentry(
            dateutil.makedate(), self.user, self.command, namespace, name,
            oldhashes, newhashes)

        vfs = self.vfs
        if self.sharedvfs is not None:
            # write to the shared repository if this feature is being
            # shared between working copies.
            if sharednamespaces.get(namespace) in self.sharedfeatures:
                vfs = self.sharedvfs

        self._write(vfs, entry)

    def _write(self, vfs, entry):
        with self.jlock(vfs):
            version = None
            # open file in amend mode to ensure it is created if missing
            with vfs('namejournal', mode='a+b') as f:
                f.seek(0, os.SEEK_SET)
                # Read just enough bytes to get a version number (up to 2
                # digits plus separator)
                version = f.read(3).partition('\0')[0]
                if version and version != "%d" % storageversion:
                    # different version of the storage. Exit early (and not
                    # write anything) if this is not a version we can handle or
                    # the file is corrupt. In future, perhaps rotate the file
                    # instead?
                    self.ui.warn(
                        _("unsupported journal file version '%s'\n") % version)
                    return
                if not version:
                    # empty file, write version first
                    f.write(("%d" % storageversion) + '\0')
                f.seek(0, os.SEEK_END)
                f.write(bytes(entry) + '\0')

    def filtered(self, namespace=None, name=None):
        """Yield all journal entries with the given namespace or name

        Both the namespace and the name are optional; if neither is given all
        entries in the journal are produced.

        Matching supports regular expressions by using the `re:` prefix
        (use `literal:` to match names or namespaces that start with `re:`)

        """
        if namespace is not None:
            namespace = stringutil.stringmatcher(namespace)[-1]
        if name is not None:
            name = stringutil.stringmatcher(name)[-1]
        for entry in self:
            if namespace is not None and not namespace(entry.namespace):
                continue
            if name is not None and not name(entry.name):
                continue
            yield entry

    def __iter__(self):
        """Iterate over the storage

        Yields journalentry instances for each contained journal record.

        """
        local = self._open(self.vfs)

        if self.sharedvfs is None:
            return local

        # iterate over both local and shared entries, but only those
        # shared entries that are among the currently shared features
        shared = (
            e for e in self._open(self.sharedvfs)
            if sharednamespaces.get(e.namespace) in self.sharedfeatures)
        return _mergeentriesiter(local, shared)

    def _open(self, vfs, filename='namejournal', _newestfirst=True):
        if not vfs.exists(filename):
            return

        with vfs(filename) as f:
            raw = f.read()

        lines = raw.split('\0')
        version = lines and lines[0]
        if version != "%d" % storageversion:
            version = version or _('not available')
            raise error.Abort(_("unknown journal file version '%s'") % version)

        # Skip the first line, it's a version number. Normally we iterate over
        # these in reverse order to list newest first; only when copying across
        # a shared storage do we forgo reversing.
        lines = lines[1:]
        if _newestfirst:
            lines = reversed(lines)
        for line in lines:
            if not line:
                continue
            yield journalentry.fromstorage(line)

# journal reading
# log options that don't make sense for journal
_ignoreopts = ('no-merges', 'graph')
@command(
    'journal', [
        ('', 'all', None, 'show history for all names'),
        ('c', 'commits', None, 'show commit metadata'),
    ] + [opt for opt in cmdutil.logopts if opt[1] not in _ignoreopts],
    '[OPTION]... [BOOKMARKNAME]')
def journal(ui, repo, *args, **opts):
    """show the previous position of bookmarks and the working copy

    The journal is used to see the previous commits that bookmarks and the
    working copy pointed to. By default the previous locations for the working
    copy.  Passing a bookmark name will show all the previous positions of
    that bookmark. Use the --all switch to show previous locations for all
    bookmarks and the working copy; each line will then include the bookmark
    name, or '.' for the working copy, as well.

    If `name` starts with `re:`, the remainder of the name is treated as
    a regular expression. To match a name that actually starts with `re:`,
    use the prefix `literal:`.

    By default hg journal only shows the commit hash and the command that was
    running at that time. -v/--verbose will show the prior hash, the user, and
    the time at which it happened.

    Use -c/--commits to output log information on each commit hash; at this
    point you can use the usual `--patch`, `--git`, `--stat` and `--template`
    switches to alter the log output for these.

    `hg journal -T json` can be used to produce machine readable output.

    """
    opts = pycompat.byteskwargs(opts)
    name = '.'
    if opts.get('all'):
        if args:
            raise error.Abort(
                _("You can't combine --all and filtering on a name"))
        name = None
    if args:
        name = args[0]

    fm = ui.formatter('journal', opts)
    def formatnodes(nodes):
        return fm.formatlist(map(fm.hexfunc, nodes), name='node', sep=',')

    if opts.get("template") != "json":
        if name is None:
            displayname = _('the working copy and bookmarks')
        else:
            displayname = "'%s'" % name
        ui.status(_("previous locations of %s:\n") % displayname)

    limit = logcmdutil.getlimit(opts)
    entry = None
    ui.pager('journal')
    for count, entry in enumerate(repo.journal.filtered(name=name)):
        if count == limit:
            break

        fm.startitem()
        fm.condwrite(ui.verbose, 'oldnodes', '%s -> ',
                     formatnodes(entry.oldhashes))
        fm.write('newnodes', '%s', formatnodes(entry.newhashes))
        fm.condwrite(ui.verbose, 'user', ' %-8s', entry.user)
        fm.condwrite(
            opts.get('all') or name.startswith('re:'),
            'name', '  %-8s', entry.name)

        fm.condwrite(ui.verbose, 'date', ' %s',
                     fm.formatdate(entry.timestamp, '%Y-%m-%d %H:%M %1%2'))
        fm.write('command', '  %s\n', entry.command)

        if opts.get("commits"):
            if fm.isplain():
                displayer = logcmdutil.changesetdisplayer(ui, repo, opts)
            else:
                displayer = logcmdutil.changesetformatter(
                    ui, repo, fm.nested('changesets'), diffopts=opts)
            for hash in entry.newhashes:
                try:
                    ctx = repo[hash]
                    displayer.show(ctx)
                except error.RepoLookupError as e:
                    fm.plain("%s\n\n" % pycompat.bytestr(e))
            displayer.close()

    fm.end()

    if entry is None:
        ui.status(_("no recorded locations\n"))