view tests/test-wireproto-command-heads.t @ 42712:cdf0e9523de1

branchmap: explicitly warm+write all subsets of the branchmap caches 'full' claims it will warm all of the caches that are known about, but this was not the case - it did not actually warm the branchmap caches for subsets that we haven't requested, or for subsets that are still considered "valid". By explicitly writing them to disk, we can force the subsets for ex: "served" to be written ("immutable" and "base"), making it cheaper to calculate "served" the next time it needs to be updated. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6710
author Kyle Lippincott <spectral@google.com>
date Mon, 05 Aug 2019 13:31:12 -0700
parents a732d70253b0
children
line wrap: on
line source

  $ . $TESTDIR/wireprotohelpers.sh

  $ hg init server
  $ enablehttpv2 server
  $ cd server
  $ hg debugdrawdag << EOF
  > H I J
  > | | |
  > E F G
  > | |/
  > C D
  > |/
  > B
  > |
  > A
  > EOF

  $ hg phase --force --secret J
  $ hg phase --public E

  $ hg log -r 'E + H + I + G + J' -T '{rev}:{node} {desc} {phase}\n'
  4:78d2dca436b2f5b188ac267e29b81e07266d38fc E public
  7:ae492e36b0c8339ffaf328d00b85b4525de1165e H draft
  8:1d6f6b91d44aaba6d5e580bc30a9948530dbe00b I draft
  6:29446d2dc5419c5f97447a8bc062e4cc328bf241 G draft
  9:dec04b246d7cbb670c6689806c05ad17c835284e J secret

  $ hg serve -p $HGPORT -d --pid-file hg.pid -E error.log
  $ cat hg.pid > $DAEMON_PIDS

All non-secret heads returned by default

  $ sendhttpv2peer << EOF
  > command heads
  > EOF
  creating http peer for wire protocol version 2
  sending heads command
  response: [
    b'\x1dok\x91\xd4J\xab\xa6\xd5\xe5\x80\xbc0\xa9\x94\x850\xdb\xe0\x0b',
    b'\xaeI.6\xb0\xc83\x9f\xfa\xf3(\xd0\x0b\x85\xb4R]\xe1\x16^',
    b')Dm-\xc5A\x9c_\x97Dz\x8b\xc0b\xe4\xcc2\x8b\xf2A'
  ]

Requesting just the public heads works

  $ sendhttpv2peer << EOF
  > command heads
  >     publiconly 1
  > EOF
  creating http peer for wire protocol version 2
  sending heads command
  response: [
    b'x\xd2\xdc\xa46\xb2\xf5\xb1\x88\xac&~)\xb8\x1e\x07&m8\xfc'
  ]

  $ cat error.log