contrib/debugcmdserver.py
author Durham Goode <durham@fb.com>
Fri, 11 Oct 2013 17:19:40 -0700
changeset 19887 dd7c294365f0
parent 16687 e34106fa0dc3
child 28353 cd03fbd5ab57
permissions -rwxr-xr-x
shelve: fix dirstate corruption during unshelve (issue4055) If you shelved on top of commit A, then rebased A to @ and unshelved, any file changed in A would appear as modified in hg status despite the contents not having changed. The fix is to use dirstate.setparents() instead of doing it manually. This will be a little slower since it has to iterate through everything in the dirstate instead of only what's in the mergestate, but this will be more correct since the mergestate did not include files which were merged but had no conflict. The tests also had several bad dirstate's hardcoded in them. This change updates the tests appropriately and adds a new test to cover this specific rebase case.

#!/usr/bin/env python
#
# Dumps output generated by Mercurial's command server in a formatted style to a
# given file or stderr if '-' is specified. Output is also written in its raw
# format to stdout.
#
# $ ./hg serve --cmds pipe | ./contrib/debugcmdserver.py -
# o, 52   -> 'capabilities: getencoding runcommand\nencoding: UTF-8'

import sys, struct

if len(sys.argv) != 2:
    print 'usage: debugcmdserver.py FILE'
    sys.exit(1)

outputfmt = '>cI'
outputfmtsize = struct.calcsize(outputfmt)

if sys.argv[1] == '-':
    log = sys.stderr
else:
    log = open(sys.argv[1], 'a')

def read(size):
    data = sys.stdin.read(size)
    if not data:
        raise EOFError
    sys.stdout.write(data)
    sys.stdout.flush()
    return data

try:
    while True:
        header = read(outputfmtsize)
        channel, length = struct.unpack(outputfmt, header)
        log.write('%s, %-4d' % (channel, length))
        if channel in 'IL':
            log.write(' -> waiting for input\n')
        else:
            data = read(length)
            log.write(' -> %r\n' % data)
        log.flush()
except EOFError:
    pass
finally:
    if log != sys.stderr:
        log.close()