Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-inherit-mode.t @ 25899:c35ee1bbbbdc
highlight: exit early on textual and unknown files (issue3005)
When highlight extension encountered files that pygments didn't recognize, it
used to fall back to text lexer. Also, pygments uses TextLexer for .txt files.
This lexer is noop by design.
On bigger files, however, doing the noop highlighting resulted in noticeable
extra CPU work and memory usage: to show a 1 MB text file, hgweb required about
0.7s more (on top of ~3.8s, Q8400) and consumed about 100 MB of RAM more (on
top of ~150 MB).
Let's just exit the function when it's clear that nothing will be highlighted.
Due to how this pygmentize function works (it modifies the template in-place),
we can just return from it and everything else will work as if highlight
extension wasn't enabled.
author | Anton Shestakov <av6@dwimlabs.net> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 02 Aug 2015 19:18:35 +0800 |
parents | d251da5e0e84 |
children | 4414d500604f |
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#require unix-permissions test that new files created in .hg inherit the permissions from .hg/store $ mkdir dir just in case somebody has a strange $TMPDIR $ chmod g-s dir $ cd dir $ cat >printmodes.py <<EOF > import os, sys > > allnames = [] > isdir = {} > for root, dirs, files in os.walk(sys.argv[1]): > for d in dirs: > name = os.path.join(root, d) > isdir[name] = 1 > allnames.append(name) > for f in files: > name = os.path.join(root, f) > allnames.append(name) > allnames.sort() > for name in allnames: > suffix = name in isdir and '/' or '' > print '%05o %s%s' % (os.lstat(name).st_mode & 07777, name, suffix) > EOF $ cat >mode.py <<EOF > import sys > import os > print '%05o' % os.lstat(sys.argv[1]).st_mode > EOF $ umask 077 $ hg init repo $ cd repo $ chmod 0770 .hg/store before commit store can be written by the group, other files cannot store is setgid $ python ../printmodes.py . 00700 ./.hg/ 00600 ./.hg/00changelog.i 00600 ./.hg/requires 00770 ./.hg/store/ $ mkdir dir $ touch foo dir/bar $ hg ci -qAm 'add files' after commit working dir files can only be written by the owner files created in .hg can be written by the group (in particular, store/**, dirstate, branch cache file, undo files) new directories are setgid $ python ../printmodes.py . 00700 ./.hg/ 00600 ./.hg/00changelog.i 00770 ./.hg/cache/ 00660 ./.hg/cache/branch2-served 00660 ./.hg/cache/rbc-names-v1 00660 ./.hg/cache/rbc-revs-v1 00660 ./.hg/dirstate 00660 ./.hg/last-message.txt 00600 ./.hg/requires 00770 ./.hg/store/ 00660 ./.hg/store/00changelog.i 00660 ./.hg/store/00manifest.i 00770 ./.hg/store/data/ 00770 ./.hg/store/data/dir/ 00660 ./.hg/store/data/dir/bar.i 00660 ./.hg/store/data/foo.i 00660 ./.hg/store/fncache 00660 ./.hg/store/phaseroots 00660 ./.hg/store/undo 00660 ./.hg/store/undo.backupfiles 00660 ./.hg/store/undo.phaseroots 00660 ./.hg/undo.bookmarks 00660 ./.hg/undo.branch 00660 ./.hg/undo.desc 00660 ./.hg/undo.dirstate 00700 ./dir/ 00600 ./dir/bar 00600 ./foo $ umask 007 $ hg init ../push before push group can write everything $ python ../printmodes.py ../push 00770 ../push/.hg/ 00660 ../push/.hg/00changelog.i 00660 ../push/.hg/requires 00770 ../push/.hg/store/ $ umask 077 $ hg -q push ../push after push group can still write everything $ python ../printmodes.py ../push 00770 ../push/.hg/ 00660 ../push/.hg/00changelog.i 00770 ../push/.hg/cache/ 00660 ../push/.hg/cache/branch2-base 00660 ../push/.hg/cache/rbc-names-v1 00660 ../push/.hg/cache/rbc-revs-v1 00660 ../push/.hg/requires 00770 ../push/.hg/store/ 00660 ../push/.hg/store/00changelog.i 00660 ../push/.hg/store/00manifest.i 00770 ../push/.hg/store/data/ 00770 ../push/.hg/store/data/dir/ 00660 ../push/.hg/store/data/dir/bar.i 00660 ../push/.hg/store/data/foo.i 00660 ../push/.hg/store/fncache 00660 ../push/.hg/store/undo 00660 ../push/.hg/store/undo.backupfiles 00660 ../push/.hg/store/undo.phaseroots 00660 ../push/.hg/undo.bookmarks 00660 ../push/.hg/undo.branch 00660 ../push/.hg/undo.desc 00660 ../push/.hg/undo.dirstate Test that we don't lose the setgid bit when we call chmod. Not all systems support setgid directories (e.g. HFS+), so just check that directories have the same mode. $ cd .. $ hg init setgid $ cd setgid $ chmod g+rwx .hg/store $ chmod g+s .hg/store 2> /dev/null || true $ mkdir dir $ touch dir/file $ hg ci -qAm 'add dir/file' $ storemode=`python ../mode.py .hg/store` $ dirmode=`python ../mode.py .hg/store/data/dir` $ if [ "$storemode" != "$dirmode" ]; then > echo "$storemode != $dirmode" > fi $ cd .. $ cd .. # g-s dir