view mercurial/filelog.py @ 14093:ce99d887585f

httprepo: long arguments support (issue2126) Send the command arguments in the HTTP headers. The command is still part of the URL. If the server does not have the 'httpheader' capability, the client will send the command arguments in the URL as it did previously. Web servers typically allow more data to be placed within the headers than in the URL, so this approach will: - Avoid HTTP errors due to using a URL that is too large. - Allow Mercurial to implement a more efficient wire protocol. An alternate approach is to send the arguments as part of the request body. This approach has been rejected because it requires the use of POST requests, so it would break any existing configuration that relies on the request type for authentication or caching. Extensibility: - The header size is provided by the server, which makes it possible to introduce an hgrc setting for it. - The client ignores the capability value after the first comma, which allows more information to be included in the future.
author Steven Brown <StevenGBrown@gmail.com>
date Sun, 01 May 2011 01:04:37 +0800
parents e8271159c8c2
children 7c231754a621
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# filelog.py - file history class for mercurial
#
# Copyright 2005-2007 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.

import revlog
import re

_mdre = re.compile('\1\n')
def _parsemeta(text):
    """return (metadatadict, keylist, metadatasize)"""
    # text can be buffer, so we can't use .startswith or .index
    if text[:2] != '\1\n':
        return None, None, None
    s = _mdre.search(text, 2).start()
    mtext = text[2:s]
    meta = {}
    keys = []
    for l in mtext.splitlines():
        k, v = l.split(": ", 1)
        meta[k] = v
        keys.append(k)
    return meta, keys, (s + 2)

def _packmeta(meta, keys=None):
    if not keys:
        keys = sorted(meta.iterkeys())
    return "".join("%s: %s\n" % (k, meta[k]) for k in keys)

class filelog(revlog.revlog):
    def __init__(self, opener, path):
        revlog.revlog.__init__(self, opener,
                        "/".join(("data", path + ".i")))

    def read(self, node):
        t = self.revision(node)
        if not t.startswith('\1\n'):
            return t
        s = t.index('\1\n', 2)
        return t[s + 2:]

    def add(self, text, meta, transaction, link, p1=None, p2=None):
        if meta or text.startswith('\1\n'):
            text = "\1\n%s\1\n%s" % (_packmeta(meta), text)
        return self.addrevision(text, transaction, link, p1, p2)

    def renamed(self, node):
        if self.parents(node)[0] != revlog.nullid:
            return False
        t = self.revision(node)
        m = _parsemeta(t)[0]
        if m and "copy" in m:
            return (m["copy"], revlog.bin(m["copyrev"]))
        return False

    def size(self, rev):
        """return the size of a given revision"""

        # for revisions with renames, we have to go the slow way
        node = self.node(rev)
        if self.renamed(node):
            return len(self.read(node))

        # XXX if self.read(node).startswith("\1\n"), this returns (size+4)
        return revlog.revlog.size(self, rev)

    def cmp(self, node, text):
        """compare text with a given file revision

        returns True if text is different than what is stored.
        """

        t = text
        if text.startswith('\1\n'):
            t = '\1\n\1\n' + text

        samehashes = not revlog.revlog.cmp(self, node, t)
        if samehashes:
            return False

        # renaming a file produces a different hash, even if the data
        # remains unchanged. Check if it's the case (slow):
        if self.renamed(node):
            t2 = self.read(node)
            return t2 != text

        return True