wireproto: support for receiving multiple requests
Now that we have request IDs on each frame and a specification
that allows multiple requests to be issued simultaneously,
possibly interleaved, let's teach the server to deal with that.
Instead of tracking the state for *the* active command request,
we instead track the state of each receiving command by its
request ID. The multiple states in our state machine for processing
each command's state has been collapsed into a single state for
"receiving commands."
Tests have been added so our branch coverage covers all meaningful
branches.
However, we did lose some logical coverage. The implementation
of this new feature opens up the door to a server having partial
command requests when end of input is reached. We will probably
want a mechanism to deal with partial requests. For now, I've
tracked that as a known issue in the class docstring. I've
also noted an abuse vector that becomes a little bit easier to
exploit with this feature.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D2870
$ hg init rep
$ cd rep
$ mkdir dir
$ touch foo dir/bar
$ hg -v addremove
adding dir/bar
adding foo
$ hg -v commit -m "add 1"
committing files:
dir/bar
foo
committing manifest
committing changelog
committed changeset 0:6f7f953567a2
$ cd dir/
$ touch ../foo_2 bar_2
$ hg -v addremove
adding dir/bar_2
adding foo_2
$ hg -v commit -m "add 2"
committing files:
dir/bar_2
foo_2
committing manifest
committing changelog
committed changeset 1:e65414bf35c5
$ cd ..
$ hg forget foo
$ hg -v addremove
adding foo
$ hg forget foo
$ hg -v addremove nonexistent
nonexistent: $ENOENT$
[1]
$ cd ..
$ hg init subdir
$ cd subdir
$ mkdir dir
$ cd dir
$ touch a.py
$ hg addremove 'glob:*.py'
adding a.py
$ hg forget a.py
$ hg addremove -I 'glob:*.py'
adding a.py
$ hg forget a.py
$ hg addremove
adding dir/a.py
$ cd ..
$ hg init sim
$ cd sim
$ echo a > a
$ echo a >> a
$ echo a >> a
$ echo c > c
$ hg commit -Ama
adding a
adding c
$ mv a b
$ rm c
$ echo d > d
$ hg addremove -n -s 50 # issue 1696
removing a
adding b
removing c
adding d
recording removal of a as rename to b (100% similar)
$ hg addremove -s 50
removing a
adding b
removing c
adding d
recording removal of a as rename to b (100% similar)
$ hg commit -mb
$ cp b c
$ hg forget b
$ hg addremove -s 50
adding b
adding c
$ rm c
$ hg ci -A -m "c" nonexistent
nonexistent: $ENOENT$
abort: failed to mark all new/missing files as added/removed
[255]
$ hg st
! c
$ cd ..