Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-dirstate-race.t @ 51871:cfd30df0f8e4
bundlerepo: fix mismatches with repository and revlog classes
Both pytype and PyCharm complained that `write()` and `_write()` in the
bundlephasecache class aren't proper overrides- indeed they seem to be missing
an argument that the base class has.
PyCharm and pytype also complained that the `revlog.revlog` class doesn't have a
`_chunk()` method. That looks like it was moved from revlog to `_InnerRevlog`
back in e8ad6d8de8b8, and wasn't caught because this module wasn't type checked.
However, I couldn't figure out a syntax with `revlog.revlog._inner._chunk(self, rev)`,
as it complained about passing too many args. `bundlerevlog._rawtext()` uses
this `super(...)` style to call the super class, so hopefully that works, even
with the wonky dynamic subclassing. The revlog class needed the `_InnerRevlog`
field typed because it isn't set in the constructor.
Finally, the vfs type hints look broken. This initially failed with:
File "/mnt/c/Users/Matt/hg/mercurial/bundlerepo.py", line 65, in __init__: Function readonlyvfs.__init__ was called with the wrong arguments [wrong-arg-types]
Expected: (self, vfs: mercurial.vfs.vfs)
Actually passed: (self, vfs: Callable)
Called from (traceback):
line 232, in dirlog
line 214, in __init__
I don't see a raw Callable, but I tried changing some of the vfs args to be typed
as `vfsmod.abstractvfs`, but that class doesn't have `options`, so it failed
elsewhere. `readonlyvfs` isn't a subclass of `vfs` (it's a subclass of
`abstractvfs`), so I'm not sure how to handle that. It would be a shame to have
to make a union of vfs subclasses (but not all of them have `options` either).
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 03 Aug 2024 01:33:13 -0400 |
parents | e845537f6adb |
children |
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#testcases dirstate-v1 dirstate-v2 #if dirstate-v2 $ cat >> $HGRCPATH << EOF > [format] > use-dirstate-v2=1 > [storage] > dirstate-v2.slow-path=allow > EOF #endif $ hg init repo $ cd repo $ echo a > a $ hg add a $ hg commit -m test Do we ever miss a sub-second change?: $ for i in 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20; do > hg update -qC 0 > echo b > a > hg st > done M a M a M a M a M a M a M a M a M a M a M a M a M a M a M a M a M a M a M a M a $ echo test > b $ mkdir dir1 $ echo test > dir1/c $ echo test > d $ echo test > e #if execbit A directory will typically have the execute bit -- make sure it doesn't get confused with a file with the exec bit set $ chmod +x e #endif $ hg add b dir1 d e adding dir1/c $ hg commit -m test2 $ cat >> $TESTTMP/dirstaterace.py << EOF > from mercurial import ( > context, > extensions, > ) > def extsetup(ui): > extensions.wrapfunction(context.workingctx, '_checklookup', overridechecklookup) > def overridechecklookup(orig, self, *args, **kwargs): > # make an update that changes the dirstate from underneath > self._repo.ui.system(br"sh '$TESTTMP/dirstaterace.sh'", > cwd=self._repo.root) > return orig(self, *args, **kwargs) > EOF $ hg debugrebuilddirstate $ hg debugdirstate n 0 -1 unset a n 0 -1 unset b n 0 -1 unset d n 0 -1 unset dir1/c n 0 -1 unset e XXX Note that this returns M for files that got replaced by directories. This is definitely a bug, but the fix for that is hard and the next status run is fine anyway. $ cat > $TESTTMP/dirstaterace.sh <<EOF > rm b && rm -r dir1 && rm d && mkdir d && rm e && mkdir e > EOF $ sleep 1 # ensure non-ambiguous mtime $ hg status --config extensions.dirstaterace=$TESTTMP/dirstaterace.py M d M e ! b ! dir1/c $ hg debugdirstate n 644 2 * a (glob) n 0 -1 unset b n 0 -1 unset d n 0 -1 unset dir1/c n 0 -1 unset e $ hg status ! b ! d ! dir1/c ! e $ rmdir d e $ hg update -C -q . Test that dirstate changes aren't written out at the end of "hg status", if .hg/dirstate is already changed simultaneously before acquisition of wlock in workingctx._poststatusfixup(). This avoidance is important to keep consistency of dirstate in race condition (see issue5584 for detail). $ hg parents -q 1:* (glob) $ hg debugrebuilddirstate $ hg debugdirstate n 0 -1 unset a n 0 -1 unset b n 0 -1 unset d n 0 -1 unset dir1/c n 0 -1 unset e $ cat > $TESTTMP/dirstaterace.sh <<EOF > # This script assumes timetable of typical issue5584 case below: > # > # 1. "hg status" loads .hg/dirstate > # 2. "hg status" confirms clean-ness of FILE > # 3. "hg update -C 0" updates the working directory simultaneously > # (FILE is removed, and FILE is dropped from .hg/dirstate) > # 4. "hg status" acquires wlock > # (.hg/dirstate is re-loaded = no FILE entry in dirstate) > # 5. "hg status" marks FILE in dirstate as clean > # (FILE entry is added to in-memory dirstate) > # 6. "hg status" writes dirstate changes into .hg/dirstate > # (FILE entry is written into .hg/dirstate) > # > # To reproduce similar situation easily and certainly, #2 and #3 > # are swapped. "hg cat" below ensures #2 on "hg status" side. > > hg update -q -C 0 > hg cat -r 1 b > b > # make sure the timestamps is not ambiguous and a write will be issued > touch -t 198606251012 b > EOF "hg status" below should excludes "e", of which exec flag is set, for portability of test scenario, because unsure but missing "e" is treated differently in _checklookup() according to runtime platform. - "missing(!)" on POSIX, "pctx[f].cmp(self[f])" raises ENOENT - "modified(M)" on Windows, "self.flags(f) != pctx.flags(f)" is True $ hg status --config extensions.dirstaterace=$TESTTMP/dirstaterace.py --debug -X path:e skip updating dirstate: identity mismatch M a ! d ! dir1/c $ hg parents -q 0:* (glob) $ hg files a $ hg debugdirstate n * * * a (glob) $ rm b #if fsmonitor Create fsmonitor state. $ hg status $ f --type .hg/fsmonitor.state .hg/fsmonitor.state: file Test that invalidating fsmonitor state in the middle (which doesn't require the wlock) causes the fsmonitor update to be skipped. hg debugrebuilddirstate ensures that the dirstaterace hook will be called, but it also invalidates the fsmonitor state. So back it up and restore it. $ mv .hg/fsmonitor.state .hg/fsmonitor.state.tmp $ hg debugrebuilddirstate $ mv .hg/fsmonitor.state.tmp .hg/fsmonitor.state $ cat > $TESTTMP/dirstaterace.sh <<EOF > rm .hg/fsmonitor.state > EOF $ hg status --config extensions.dirstaterace=$TESTTMP/dirstaterace.py --debug skip updating fsmonitor.state: identity mismatch $ f .hg/fsmonitor.state .hg/fsmonitor.state: file not found #endif Set up a rebase situation for issue5581. $ echo c2 > a $ echo c2 > b $ hg add b $ hg commit -m c2 created new head $ echo c3 >> a $ hg commit -m c3 $ hg update 2 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved $ echo c4 >> a $ echo c4 >> b $ hg commit -m c4 created new head Configure a merge tool that runs status in the middle of the rebase. The goal of the status call is to trigger a potential bug if fsmonitor's state is written even though the wlock is held by another process. The output of 'hg status' in the merge tool goes to /dev/null because we're more interested in the results of 'hg status' run after the rebase. $ cat >> $TESTTMP/mergetool-race.sh << EOF > echo "custom merge tool" > printf "c2\nc3\nc4\n" > \$1 > hg --cwd "$TESTTMP/repo" status > /dev/null > echo "custom merge tool end" > EOF $ cat >> $HGRCPATH << EOF > [extensions] > rebase = > [merge-tools] > test.executable=sh > test.args=$TESTTMP/mergetool-race.sh \$output > EOF $ hg rebase -s . -d 3 --tool test rebasing 4:b08445fd6b2a tip "c4" merging a custom merge tool custom merge tool end saved backup bundle to $TESTTMP/repo/.hg/strip-backup/* (glob) This hg status should be empty, whether or not fsmonitor is enabled (issue5581). $ hg status