Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/minifileset.py @ 47123:d8ac62374943
dirstate-tree: Make `DirstateMap` borrow from a bytes buffer
… that has the contents of the `.hg/dirstate` file.
This only applies to the tree-based flavor of `DirstateMap`.
For now only the entire `&[u8]` slice is stored, so this is not useful yet.
Adding a lifetime parameter to the `DirstateMap` struct (in hg-core) makes
Python bindings non-trivial because we keep that struct in a Python object
that has a dynamic lifetime tied to Python’s reference-counting and GC.
As long as we keep the `PyBytes` that owns the borrowed bytes buffer next to
the borrowing struct, the buffer will live long enough for the borrows to stay
valid. However this relationship cannot be expressed in safe Rust code in a
way that would statisfy they borrow-checker. We use `unsafe` code to erase
that lifetime parameter, and encapsulate it in a safe abstraction similar to
the owning-ref crate: https://docs.rs/owning_ref/
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D10557
author | Simon Sapin <simon.sapin@octobus.net> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 30 Apr 2021 18:24:54 +0200 |
parents | 687b865b95ad |
children | 6000f5b25c9b |
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# minifileset.py - a simple language to select files # # Copyright 2017 Facebook, Inc. # # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. from __future__ import absolute_import from .i18n import _ from . import ( error, fileset, filesetlang, pycompat, ) def _sizep(x): # i18n: "size" is a keyword expr = filesetlang.getstring(x, _(b"size requires an expression")) return fileset.sizematcher(expr) def _compile(tree): if not tree: raise error.ParseError(_(b"missing argument")) op = tree[0] if op == b'withstatus': return _compile(tree[1]) elif op in {b'symbol', b'string', b'kindpat'}: name = filesetlang.getpattern( tree, {b'path'}, _(b'invalid file pattern') ) if name.startswith(b'**'): # file extension test, ex. "**.tar.gz" ext = name[2:] for c in pycompat.bytestr(ext): if c in b'*{}[]?/\\': raise error.ParseError(_(b'reserved character: %s') % c) return lambda n, s: n.endswith(ext) elif name.startswith(b'path:'): # directory or full path test p = name[5:] # prefix pl = len(p) f = lambda n, s: n.startswith(p) and ( len(n) == pl or n[pl : pl + 1] == b'/' ) return f raise error.ParseError( _(b"unsupported file pattern: %s") % name, hint=_(b'paths must be prefixed with "path:"'), ) elif op in {b'or', b'patterns'}: funcs = [_compile(x) for x in tree[1:]] return lambda n, s: any(f(n, s) for f in funcs) elif op == b'and': func1 = _compile(tree[1]) func2 = _compile(tree[2]) return lambda n, s: func1(n, s) and func2(n, s) elif op == b'not': return lambda n, s: not _compile(tree[1])(n, s) elif op == b'func': symbols = { b'all': lambda n, s: True, b'none': lambda n, s: False, b'size': lambda n, s: _sizep(tree[2])(s), } name = filesetlang.getsymbol(tree[1]) if name in symbols: return symbols[name] raise error.UnknownIdentifier(name, symbols.keys()) elif op == b'minus': # equivalent to 'x and not y' func1 = _compile(tree[1]) func2 = _compile(tree[2]) return lambda n, s: func1(n, s) and not func2(n, s) elif op == b'list': raise error.ParseError( _(b"can't use a list in this context"), hint=_(b'see \'hg help "filesets.x or y"\''), ) raise error.ProgrammingError(b'illegal tree: %r' % (tree,)) def compile(text): """generate a function (path, size) -> bool from filter specification. "text" could contain the operators defined by the fileset language for common logic operations, and parenthesis for grouping. The supported path tests are '**.extname' for file extension test, and '"path:dir/subdir"' for prefix test. The ``size()`` predicate is borrowed from filesets to test file size. The predicates ``all()`` and ``none()`` are also supported. '(**.php & size(">10MB")) | **.zip | (path:bin & !path:bin/README)' for example, will catch all php files whose size is greater than 10 MB, all files whose name ends with ".zip", and all files under "bin" in the repo root except for "bin/README". """ tree = filesetlang.parse(text) tree = filesetlang.analyze(tree) tree = filesetlang.optimize(tree) return _compile(tree)