Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-merge9.t @ 39561:d06834e0f48e
wireprotov2peer: stream decoded responses
Previously, wire protocol version 2 would buffer all response data.
Only once all data was received did we CBOR decode it and resolve
the future associated with the command. This was obviously not
desirable. In future commits that introduce large response payloads,
this caused significant memory bloat and slowed down client
operations due to waiting on the server.
This commit refactors the response handling code so that response
data can be streamed.
Command response objects now contain a buffered CBOR decoder. As
new data arrives, it is fed into the decoder. Decoded objects are
made available to the generator as they are decoded.
Because there is a separate thread processing incoming frames and
feeding data into the response object, there is the potential for
race conditions when mutating response objects. So a lock has been
added to guard access to critical state variables.
Because the generator emitting decoded objects needs to wait on
those objects to become available, we've added an Event for the
generator to wait on so it doesn't busy loop. This does mean
there is the potential for deadlocks. And I'm pretty sure they can
occur in some scenarios. We already have a handful of TODOs around
this. But I've added some more. Fixing this will likely require
moving the background thread receiving frames into clienthandler.
We likely would have done this anyway when implementing the client
bits for the SSH transport.
Test output changes because the initial CBOR map holding the overall
response state is now always handled internally by the response
object.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D4474
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 29 Aug 2018 15:17:11 -0700 |
parents | 41ef02ba329b |
children | 8d72e29ad1e0 |
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test that we don't interrupt the merge session if a file-level merge failed $ hg init repo $ cd repo $ echo foo > foo $ echo a > bar $ hg ci -Am 'add foo' adding bar adding foo $ hg mv foo baz $ echo b >> bar $ echo quux > quux1 $ hg ci -Am 'mv foo baz' adding quux1 $ hg up -qC 0 $ echo >> foo $ echo c >> bar $ echo quux > quux2 $ hg ci -Am 'change foo' adding quux2 created new head test with the rename on the remote side $ HGMERGE=false hg merge merging bar merging foo and baz to baz merging bar failed! 1 files updated, 1 files merged, 0 files removed, 1 files unresolved use 'hg resolve' to retry unresolved file merges or 'hg merge --abort' to abandon [1] $ hg resolve -l U bar R baz test with the rename on the local side $ hg up -C 1 3 files updated, 0 files merged, 1 files removed, 0 files unresolved $ HGMERGE=false hg merge merging bar merging baz and foo to baz merging bar failed! 1 files updated, 1 files merged, 0 files removed, 1 files unresolved use 'hg resolve' to retry unresolved file merges or 'hg merge --abort' to abandon [1] show unresolved $ hg resolve -l U bar R baz unmark baz $ hg resolve -u baz show $ hg resolve -l U bar U baz $ hg st M bar M baz M quux2 ? bar.orig re-resolve baz $ hg resolve baz merging baz and foo to baz after resolve $ hg resolve -l U bar R baz resolve all warning $ hg resolve abort: no files or directories specified (use --all to re-merge all unresolved files) [255] resolve all $ hg resolve -a merging bar warning: conflicts while merging bar! (edit, then use 'hg resolve --mark') [1] after $ hg resolve -l U bar R baz $ cd ..