packaging: stage installed files for Inno
Previously, the Inno installer maintained its own mapping of
source files to install location. (We have to maintain a
similar mapping in the WiX installer.)
Managing the explicit file layout for Windows packages is
cumbersome and redundant. Every time you want to change the
layout you need to change N locations. We frequently forget
to do this and we only find out when people install Mercurial
from our packages at release time.
This commit starts the process of consolidating and simplifying
the logic for managing the install layout on Windows.
We introduce a list of install layout rules. These are simply
source filenames (which can contain wildcards) and destination
paths.
The Inno packaging code has been updated to assemble all
files into a staging directory that mirrors the final install
layout. The list of files to add to the installer is derived
by walking this staging directory and dynamically emitting
the proper entries for the Inno Setup script.
I diffed the file layout before and after this commit and
there is no difference.
Another benefit of this change is that it facilitates easier
testing of the Windows install layout. Before, in order to
test the final install layout, you needed to build an installer
and run it. Now, you can stage files into the final layout
and test from there, without running the installer. This
should cut down on overhead when changing Windows code.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D7159
$ 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 co -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 >> $TESTTMP/dirstaterace.py << EOF
> from mercurial import (
> context,
> extensions,
> )
> def extsetup(ui):
> extensions.wrapfunction(context.workingctx, '_checklookup', overridechecklookup)
> def overridechecklookup(orig, self, files):
> # make an update that changes the dirstate from underneath
> self._repo.ui.system(br"sh '$TESTTMP/dirstaterace.sh'",
> cwd=self._repo.root)
> return orig(self, files)
> 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
$ 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
> 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 "c4" (tip)
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