Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/tags.py @ 24632:b2fb1403994e
merge with stable
author | Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> |
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date | Mon, 06 Apr 2015 17:16:55 -0500 |
parents | f5de208a635c |
children | 07200e3332a1 |
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# tags.py - read tag info from local repository # # Copyright 2009 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> # Copyright 2009 Greg Ward <greg@gerg.ca> # # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. # Currently this module only deals with reading and caching tags. # Eventually, it could take care of updating (adding/removing/moving) # tags too. from node import nullid, bin, hex, short from i18n import _ import util import encoding import error import errno import time # The tags cache stores information about heads and the history of tags. # # The cache file consists of two parts. The first part maps head nodes # to .hgtags filenodes. The second part is a history of tags. The two # parts are separated by an empty line. # # The first part consists of lines of the form: # # <headrev> <headnode> [<hgtagsnode>] # # <headrev> is an integer revision and <headnode> is a 40 character hex # node for that changeset. These redundantly identify a repository # head from the time the cache was written. # # <tagnode> is the filenode of .hgtags on that head. Heads with no .hgtags # file will have no <hgtagsnode> (just 2 values per line). # # The filenode cache is ordered from tip to oldest (which is part of why # <headrev> is there: a quick check of the tip from when the cache was # written against the current tip is all that is needed to check whether # the cache is up to date). # # The purpose of the filenode cache is to avoid the most expensive part # of finding global tags, which is looking up the .hgtags filenode in the # manifest for each head. This can take over a minute on repositories # that have large manifests and many heads. # # The second part of the tags cache consists of lines of the form: # # <node> <tag> # # (This format is identical to that of .hgtags files.) # # <tag> is the tag name and <node> is the 40 character hex changeset # the tag is associated with. # # Tags are written sorted by tag name. # # Tags associated with multiple changesets have an entry for each changeset. # The most recent changeset (in terms of revlog ordering for the head # setting it) for each tag is last. def findglobaltags(ui, repo, alltags, tagtypes): '''Find global tags in a repo. "alltags" maps tag name to (node, hist) 2-tuples. "tagtypes" maps tag name to tag type. Global tags always have the "global" tag type. The "alltags" and "tagtypes" dicts are updated in place. Empty dicts should be passed in. The tags cache is read and updated as a side-effect of calling. ''' # This is so we can be lazy and assume alltags contains only global # tags when we pass it to _writetagcache(). assert len(alltags) == len(tagtypes) == 0, \ "findglobaltags() should be called first" (heads, tagfnode, cachetags, shouldwrite) = _readtagcache(ui, repo) if cachetags is not None: assert not shouldwrite # XXX is this really 100% correct? are there oddball special # cases where a global tag should outrank a local tag but won't, # because cachetags does not contain rank info? _updatetags(cachetags, 'global', alltags, tagtypes) return seen = set() # set of fnode fctx = None for head in reversed(heads): # oldest to newest assert head in repo.changelog.nodemap, \ "tag cache returned bogus head %s" % short(head) fnode = tagfnode.get(head) if fnode and fnode not in seen: seen.add(fnode) if not fctx: fctx = repo.filectx('.hgtags', fileid=fnode) else: fctx = fctx.filectx(fnode) filetags = _readtags(ui, repo, fctx.data().splitlines(), fctx) _updatetags(filetags, 'global', alltags, tagtypes) # and update the cache (if necessary) if shouldwrite: _writetagcache(ui, repo, heads, tagfnode, alltags) def readlocaltags(ui, repo, alltags, tagtypes): '''Read local tags in repo. Update alltags and tagtypes.''' try: data = repo.vfs.read("localtags") except IOError, inst: if inst.errno != errno.ENOENT: raise return # localtags is in the local encoding; re-encode to UTF-8 on # input for consistency with the rest of this module. filetags = _readtags( ui, repo, data.splitlines(), "localtags", recode=encoding.fromlocal) # remove tags pointing to invalid nodes cl = repo.changelog for t in filetags.keys(): try: cl.rev(filetags[t][0]) except (LookupError, ValueError): del filetags[t] _updatetags(filetags, "local", alltags, tagtypes) def _readtaghist(ui, repo, lines, fn, recode=None, calcnodelines=False): '''Read tag definitions from a file (or any source of lines). This function returns two sortdicts with similar information: - the first dict, bintaghist, contains the tag information as expected by the _readtags function, i.e. a mapping from tag name to (node, hist): - node is the node id from the last line read for that name, - hist is the list of node ids previously associated with it (in file order). All node ids are binary, not hex. - the second dict, hextaglines, is a mapping from tag name to a list of [hexnode, line number] pairs, ordered from the oldest to the newest node. When calcnodelines is False the hextaglines dict is not calculated (an empty dict is returned). This is done to improve this function's performance in cases where the line numbers are not needed. ''' bintaghist = util.sortdict() hextaglines = util.sortdict() count = 0 def warn(msg): ui.warn(_("%s, line %s: %s\n") % (fn, count, msg)) for nline, line in enumerate(lines): count += 1 if not line: continue try: (nodehex, name) = line.split(" ", 1) except ValueError: warn(_("cannot parse entry")) continue name = name.strip() if recode: name = recode(name) try: nodebin = bin(nodehex) except TypeError: warn(_("node '%s' is not well formed") % nodehex) continue # update filetags if calcnodelines: # map tag name to a list of line numbers if name not in hextaglines: hextaglines[name] = [] hextaglines[name].append([nodehex, nline]) continue # map tag name to (node, hist) if name not in bintaghist: bintaghist[name] = [] bintaghist[name].append(nodebin) return bintaghist, hextaglines def _readtags(ui, repo, lines, fn, recode=None, calcnodelines=False): '''Read tag definitions from a file (or any source of lines). Returns a mapping from tag name to (node, hist). "node" is the node id from the last line read for that name. "hist" is the list of node ids previously associated with it (in file order). All node ids are binary, not hex. ''' filetags, nodelines = _readtaghist(ui, repo, lines, fn, recode=recode, calcnodelines=calcnodelines) for tag, taghist in filetags.items(): filetags[tag] = (taghist[-1], taghist[:-1]) return filetags def _updatetags(filetags, tagtype, alltags, tagtypes): '''Incorporate the tag info read from one file into the two dictionaries, alltags and tagtypes, that contain all tag info (global across all heads plus local).''' for name, nodehist in filetags.iteritems(): if name not in alltags: alltags[name] = nodehist tagtypes[name] = tagtype continue # we prefer alltags[name] if: # it supersedes us OR # mutual supersedes and it has a higher rank # otherwise we win because we're tip-most anode, ahist = nodehist bnode, bhist = alltags[name] if (bnode != anode and anode in bhist and (bnode not in ahist or len(bhist) > len(ahist))): anode = bnode else: tagtypes[name] = tagtype ahist.extend([n for n in bhist if n not in ahist]) alltags[name] = anode, ahist def _readtagcache(ui, repo): '''Read the tag cache. Returns a tuple (heads, fnodes, cachetags, shouldwrite). If the cache is completely up-to-date, "cachetags" is a dict of the form returned by _readtags() and "heads" and "fnodes" are None and "shouldwrite" is False. If the cache is not up to date, "cachetags" is None. "heads" is a list of all heads currently in the repository, ordered from tip to oldest. "fnodes" is a mapping from head to .hgtags filenode. "shouldwrite" is True. If the cache is not up to date, the caller is responsible for reading tag info from each returned head. (See findglobaltags().) ''' try: cachefile = repo.vfs('cache/tags', 'r') # force reading the file for static-http cachelines = iter(cachefile) except IOError: cachefile = None cacherevs = [] # list of headrev cacheheads = [] # list of headnode cachefnode = {} # map headnode to filenode if cachefile: try: for line in cachelines: if line == "\n": break line = line.split() cacherevs.append(int(line[0])) headnode = bin(line[1]) cacheheads.append(headnode) if len(line) == 3: fnode = bin(line[2]) cachefnode[headnode] = fnode except Exception: # corruption of the tags cache, just recompute it cacheheads = [] cacherevs = [] cachefnode = {} tipnode = repo.changelog.tip() tiprev = len(repo.changelog) - 1 # Case 1 (common): tip is the same, so nothing has changed. # (Unchanged tip trivially means no changesets have been added. # But, thanks to localrepository.destroyed(), it also means none # have been destroyed by strip or rollback.) if cacheheads and cacheheads[0] == tipnode and cacherevs[0] == tiprev: tags = _readtags(ui, repo, cachelines, cachefile.name) cachefile.close() return (None, None, tags, False) if cachefile: cachefile.close() # ignore rest of file repoheads = repo.heads() # Case 2 (uncommon): empty repo; get out quickly and don't bother # writing an empty cache. if repoheads == [nullid]: return ([], {}, {}, False) # Case 3 (uncommon): cache file missing or empty. # Case 4 (uncommon): tip rev decreased. This should only happen # when we're called from localrepository.destroyed(). Refresh the # cache so future invocations will not see disappeared heads in the # cache. # Case 5 (common): tip has changed, so we've added/replaced heads. # As it happens, the code to handle cases 3, 4, 5 is the same. # N.B. in case 4 (nodes destroyed), "new head" really means "newly # exposed". if not len(repo.file('.hgtags')): # No tags have ever been committed, so we can avoid a # potentially expensive search. return (repoheads, cachefnode, None, True) starttime = time.time() newheads = [head for head in repoheads if head not in set(cacheheads)] # Now we have to lookup the .hgtags filenode for every new head. # This is the most expensive part of finding tags, so performance # depends primarily on the size of newheads. Worst case: no cache # file, so newheads == repoheads. for head in reversed(newheads): cctx = repo[head] try: fnode = cctx.filenode('.hgtags') cachefnode[head] = fnode except error.LookupError: # no .hgtags file on this head pass duration = time.time() - starttime ui.log('tagscache', 'resolved %d tags cache entries from %d manifests in %0.4f ' 'seconds\n', len(cachefnode), len(newheads), duration) # Caller has to iterate over all heads, but can use the filenodes in # cachefnode to get to each .hgtags revision quickly. return (repoheads, cachefnode, None, True) def _writetagcache(ui, repo, heads, tagfnode, cachetags): try: cachefile = repo.vfs('cache/tags', 'w', atomictemp=True) except (OSError, IOError): return ui.log('tagscache', 'writing tags cache file with %d heads and %d tags\n', len(heads), len(cachetags)) realheads = repo.heads() # for sanity checks below for head in heads: # temporary sanity checks; these can probably be removed # once this code has been in crew for a few weeks assert head in repo.changelog.nodemap, \ 'trying to write non-existent node %s to tag cache' % short(head) assert head in realheads, \ 'trying to write non-head %s to tag cache' % short(head) assert head != nullid, \ 'trying to write nullid to tag cache' # This can't fail because of the first assert above. When/if we # remove that assert, we might want to catch LookupError here # and downgrade it to a warning. rev = repo.changelog.rev(head) fnode = tagfnode.get(head) if fnode: cachefile.write('%d %s %s\n' % (rev, hex(head), hex(fnode))) else: cachefile.write('%d %s\n' % (rev, hex(head))) # Tag names in the cache are in UTF-8 -- which is the whole reason # we keep them in UTF-8 throughout this module. If we converted # them local encoding on input, we would lose info writing them to # the cache. cachefile.write('\n') for (name, (node, hist)) in sorted(cachetags.iteritems()): for n in hist: cachefile.write("%s %s\n" % (hex(n), name)) cachefile.write("%s %s\n" % (hex(node), name)) try: cachefile.close() except (OSError, IOError): pass