Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-sparse-fsmonitor.t @ 35565:bdae51a83dfb
clonebundle: make it possible to retrieve the initial bundle through largefile
By setting the default path early enough, we make it possible to retrieve a
clone bundle as a largefile from the repository we are cloning.
But... why?
Clone bundle is a great feature to speeds up clone of large repository. However
one of the main obstacle for clone bundle deployment is the authentication
scheme. For non public project, just putting a static file on some random CDN is
not an option as we have to make sure people have the proper permission to
retrieves the bundle. On the other hand, 'largefiles' already have all the
necessary logic to serve arbitrary binary files -after- an authentication
checks. So reusing an existing large file infrastructure can be a significant
shortcut to clone bundle in this kind of closed environment.
The idea might seems strange, but the necessary update to the large file
extensions are quite small while the benefits are huge. In addition, since all
the extra logic live in the 'largefiles' extensions, core does not have to know
anything about it.
author | Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net> |
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date | Thu, 21 Dec 2017 13:58:11 +0100 |
parents | abd7dedbaa36 |
children |
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This test doesn't yet work due to the way fsmonitor is integrated with test runner $ exit 80 test sparse interaction with other extensions $ hg init myrepo $ cd myrepo $ cat > .hg/hgrc <<EOF > [extensions] > sparse= > strip= > EOF Test fsmonitor integration (if available) TODO: make fully isolated integration test a'la https://github.com/facebook/watchman/blob/master/tests/integration/WatchmanInstance.py (this one is using the systemwide watchman instance) $ touch .watchmanconfig $ echo "ignoredir1/" >> .hgignore $ hg commit -Am ignoredir1 adding .hgignore $ echo "ignoredir2/" >> .hgignore $ hg commit -m ignoredir2 $ hg sparse --reset $ hg sparse -I ignoredir1 -I ignoredir2 -I dir1 $ mkdir ignoredir1 ignoredir2 dir1 $ touch ignoredir1/file ignoredir2/file dir1/file Run status twice to compensate for a condition in fsmonitor where it will check ignored files the second time it runs, regardless of previous state (ask @sid0) $ hg status --config extensions.fsmonitor= ? dir1/file $ hg status --config extensions.fsmonitor= ? dir1/file Test that fsmonitor ignore hash check updates when .hgignore changes $ hg up -q ".^" $ hg status --config extensions.fsmonitor= ? dir1/file ? ignoredir2/file