wireprotov2: allow multiple fields to follow revision maps
The *data wire protocol commands emit a series of CBOR values.
Because revision/delta data may be large, their data is emitted
outside the map as a top-level bytestring value.
Before this commit, we'd emit a single optional bytestring
value after the revision descriptor map. This got the job done.
But it was limiting in that we could only send a single field.
And, it required the consumer to know that the presence of a
key in the map implied the existence of a following bytestring
value.
This commit changes the encoding strategy so top-level bytestring
values in the stream are explicitly denoted in a "fieldsfollowing"
key. This key contains an array defining what fields that follow
and the expected size of each field.
By defining things this way, we can easily send N bytestring
values without any ambiguity about their order. In addition,
clients only need to know how to parse ``fieldsfollowing`` to
know if extra values are present.
Because this breaks backwards compatibility, we've bumped the version
number of the wire protocol version 2 API endpoint.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D4620
#require serve
Test raw style of hgweb
$ hg init test
$ cd test
$ mkdir sub
$ cat >'sub/some text%.txt' <<ENDSOME
> This is just some random text
> that will go inside the file and take a few lines.
> It is very boring to read, but computers don't
> care about things like that.
> ENDSOME
$ hg add 'sub/some text%.txt'
$ hg commit -d "1 0" -m "Just some text"
$ hg serve -p $HGPORT -A access.log -E error.log -d --pid-file=hg.pid
$ cat hg.pid >> $DAEMON_PIDS
$ (get-with-headers.py localhost:$HGPORT 'raw-file/bf0ff59095c9/sub/some%20text%25.txt' content-type content-length content-disposition) >getoutput.txt
$ killdaemons.py hg.pid
$ cat getoutput.txt
200 Script output follows
content-type: application/binary
content-length: 157
content-disposition: inline; filename="some text%.txt"
This is just some random text
that will go inside the file and take a few lines.
It is very boring to read, but computers don't
care about things like that.
$ cat access.log error.log
$LOCALIP - - [$LOGDATE$] "GET /raw-file/bf0ff59095c9/sub/some%20text%25.txt HTTP/1.1" 200 - (glob)
$ rm access.log error.log
$ hg serve -p $HGPORT -A access.log -E error.log -d --pid-file=hg.pid \
> --config web.guessmime=True
$ cat hg.pid >> $DAEMON_PIDS
$ (get-with-headers.py localhost:$HGPORT 'raw-file/bf0ff59095c9/sub/some%20text%25.txt' content-type content-length content-disposition) >getoutput.txt
$ killdaemons.py hg.pid
$ cat getoutput.txt
200 Script output follows
content-type: text/plain; charset="ascii"
content-length: 157
content-disposition: inline; filename="some text%.txt"
This is just some random text
that will go inside the file and take a few lines.
It is very boring to read, but computers don't
care about things like that.
$ cat access.log error.log
$LOCALIP - - [$LOGDATE$] "GET /raw-file/bf0ff59095c9/sub/some%20text%25.txt HTTP/1.1" 200 - (glob)
$ cd ..