interfaces: convert the zope `Attribute` attrs to regular fields
At this point, we should have a useful protocol class.
The file syntax requires the type to be supplied for any fields that are
declared, but we'll leave the complex ones partially unspecified for now, for
simplicity. (Also, the things documented as `Callable` are really as future
type annotating worked showed- roll with it for now, but they're marked as TODO
for fixing later.) All of the fields and all of the attrs will need type
annotations, or the type rules say they are considered to be `Any`. That can be
done in a separate pass, possibly applying the `dirstate.pyi` file generated
from the concrete class.
The first cut of this turned the `interfaceutil.Attribute` fields into plain
fields, and thus the types on them. PyCharm flagged a few things as having
incompatible signatures when the concrete dirstate class subclassed this, when
the concrete class has them declared as `@property`. So they've been changed to
`@property` here in those cases. The remaining fields that are decorated in the
concrete class have comments noting the differences. We'll see if they need to
be changed going forward, but leave them for now. We'll be in trouble if the
`@util.propertycache` is needed, because we can't import that module here at
runtime, due to circular imports.
#require execbit unix-permissions no-chg
Checking that experimental.atomic-file works.
$ cat > $TESTTMP/show_mode.py <<EOF
> import os
> import stat
> import sys
> ST_MODE = stat.ST_MODE
>
> for file_path in sys.argv[1:]:
> file_stat = os.stat(file_path)
> octal_mode = oct(file_stat[ST_MODE] & 0o777).replace('o', '')
> print("%s:%s" % (file_path, octal_mode))
>
> EOF
$ hg init repo
$ cd repo
$ cat > .hg/showwrites.py <<EOF
> from mercurial import pycompat
> from mercurial.utils import stringutil
> def uisetup(ui):
> from mercurial import vfs
> class newvfs(vfs.vfs):
> def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs):
> print(pycompat.sysstr(stringutil.pprint(
> ('vfs open', args, sorted(list(kwargs.items()))))))
> return super(newvfs, self).__call__(*args, **kwargs)
> vfs.vfs = newvfs
> EOF
$ for v in a1 a2 b1 b2 c ro; do echo $v > $v; done
$ chmod +x b*
$ hg commit -Aqm _
# We check that
# - the changes are actually atomic
# - that permissions are correct (all 4 cases of (executable before) * (executable after))
# - that renames work, though they should be atomic anyway
# - that it works when source files are read-only (but directories are read-write still)
$ for v in a1 a2 b1 b2 ro; do echo changed-$v > $v; done
$ chmod -x *1; chmod +x *2
$ hg rename c d
$ hg commit -qm _
Check behavior without update.atomic-file
$ hg update -r 0 -q
$ hg update -r 1 --config extensions.showwrites=.hg/showwrites.py 2>&1 | grep "a1'.*wb"
('vfs open', ('a1', 'wb'), [('atomictemp', False), ('backgroundclose', True)])
$ "$PYTHON" $TESTTMP/show_mode.py *
a1:0644
a2:0755
b1:0644
b2:0755
d:0644
ro:0644
Add a second revision for the ro file so we can test update when the file is
present or not
$ echo "ro" > ro
$ hg commit -qm _
Check behavior without update.atomic-file first
$ hg update -C -r 0 -q
$ hg update -r 1
6 files updated, 0 files merged, 1 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ "$PYTHON" $TESTTMP/show_mode.py *
a1:0644
a2:0755
b1:0644
b2:0755
d:0644
ro:0644
Manually reset the mode of the read-only file
$ chmod a-w ro
$ "$PYTHON" $TESTTMP/show_mode.py ro
ro:0444
Now the file is present, try to update and check the permissions of the file
$ hg up -r 2
1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ "$PYTHON" $TESTTMP/show_mode.py ro
ro:0644
# The file which was read-only is now writable in the default behavior
Check behavior with update.atomic-files
$ cat >> .hg/hgrc <<EOF
> [experimental]
> update.atomic-file = true
> EOF
$ hg update -C -r 0 -q
$ hg update -r 1 --config extensions.showwrites=.hg/showwrites.py 2>&1 | grep "a1'.*wb"
('vfs open', ('a1', 'wb'), [('atomictemp', True), ('backgroundclose', True)])
$ hg st -A --rev 1
C a1
C a2
C b1
C b2
C d
C ro
Check the file permission after update
$ "$PYTHON" $TESTTMP/show_mode.py *
a1:0644
a2:0755
b1:0644
b2:0755
d:0644
ro:0644
Manually reset the mode of the read-only file
$ chmod a-w ro
$ "$PYTHON" $TESTTMP/show_mode.py ro
ro:0444
Now the file is present, try to update and check the permissions of the file
$ hg update -r 2 --traceback
1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ "$PYTHON" $TESTTMP/show_mode.py ro
ro:0644
# The behavior is the same as without atomic update