view mercurial/progress.py @ 37716:dfc51a482031

registrar: replace "cmdtype" with an intent-based mechanism (API) Commands perform varied actions and repositories vary in their capabilities. Historically, the .hg/requires file has been used to lock out clients lacking a requirement. But this is a very heavy-handed approach and is typically reserved for cases where the on-disk storage format changes and we want to prevent incompatible clients from operating on a repo. Outside of the .hg/requires file, we tend to deal with things like optional, extension-provided features via checking at call sites. We'll either have checks in core or extensions will monkeypatch functions in core disabling incompatible features, enabling new features, etc. Things are somewhat tolerable today. But once we introduce alternate storage backends with varying support for repository features and vastly different modes of behavior, the current model will quickly grow unwieldy. For example, the implementation of the "simple store" required a lot of hacks to deal with stripping and verify because various parts of core assume things are implemented a certain way. Partial clone will require new ways of modeling file data retrieval, because we can no longer assume that all file data is already local. In this new world, some commands might not make any sense for certain types of repositories. What we need is a mechanism to affect the construction of repository (and eventually peer) instances so the requirements/capabilities needed for the current operation can be taken into account. "Current operation" can almost certainly be defined by a command. So it makes sense for commands to declare their intended actions. This commit introduces the "intents" concept on the command registrar. "intents" captures a set of strings that declare actions that are anticipated to be taken, requirements the repository must possess, etc. These intents will be passed into hg.repo(), which will pass them into localrepository, where they can be used to influence the object being created. Some use cases for this include: * For read-only intents, constructing a repository object that doesn't expose methods that can mutate the repository. Its VFS instances don't even allow opening a file with write access. * For read-only intents, constructing a repository object without cache invalidation logic. If the repo never changes during its lifetime, nothing ever needs to be invalidated and we don't need to do expensive things like verify the changelog's hidden revisions state is accurate every time we access repo.changelog. * We can automatically hide commands from `hg help` when the current repository doesn't provide that command. For example, an alternate storage backend may not support `hg commit`, so we can hide that command or anything else that would perform local commits. We already kind of had an "intents" mechanism on the registrar in the form of "cmdtype." However, it was never used. And it was limited to a single value. We really need something that supports multiple intents. And because intents may be defined by extensions and at this point are advisory, I think it is best to define them in a set rather than as separate arguments/attributes on the command. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D3376
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Sat, 14 Apr 2018 09:23:48 -0700
parents 2831d918e1b4
children 6bd9f18d31a8
line wrap: on
line source

# progress.py progress bars related code
#
# Copyright (C) 2010 Augie Fackler <durin42@gmail.com>
#
# 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

import errno
import threading
import time

from .i18n import _
from . import encoding

def spacejoin(*args):
    return ' '.join(s for s in args if s)

def shouldprint(ui):
    return not (ui.quiet or ui.plain('progress')) and (
        ui._isatty(ui.ferr) or ui.configbool('progress', 'assume-tty'))

def fmtremaining(seconds):
    """format a number of remaining seconds in human readable way

    This will properly display seconds, minutes, hours, days if needed"""
    if seconds < 60:
        # i18n: format XX seconds as "XXs"
        return _("%02ds") % (seconds)
    minutes = seconds // 60
    if minutes < 60:
        seconds -= minutes * 60
        # i18n: format X minutes and YY seconds as "XmYYs"
        return _("%dm%02ds") % (minutes, seconds)
    # we're going to ignore seconds in this case
    minutes += 1
    hours = minutes // 60
    minutes -= hours * 60
    if hours < 30:
        # i18n: format X hours and YY minutes as "XhYYm"
        return _("%dh%02dm") % (hours, minutes)
    # we're going to ignore minutes in this case
    hours += 1
    days = hours // 24
    hours -= days * 24
    if days < 15:
        # i18n: format X days and YY hours as "XdYYh"
        return _("%dd%02dh") % (days, hours)
    # we're going to ignore hours in this case
    days += 1
    weeks = days // 7
    days -= weeks * 7
    if weeks < 55:
        # i18n: format X weeks and YY days as "XwYYd"
        return _("%dw%02dd") % (weeks, days)
    # we're going to ignore days and treat a year as 52 weeks
    weeks += 1
    years = weeks // 52
    weeks -= years * 52
    # i18n: format X years and YY weeks as "XyYYw"
    return _("%dy%02dw") % (years, weeks)

# file_write() and file_flush() of Python 2 do not restart on EINTR if
# the file is attached to a "slow" device (e.g. a terminal) and raise
# IOError. We cannot know how many bytes would be written by file_write(),
# but a progress text is known to be short enough to be written by a
# single write() syscall, so we can just retry file_write() with the whole
# text. (issue5532)
#
# This should be a short-term workaround. We'll need to fix every occurrence
# of write() to a terminal or pipe.
def _eintrretry(func, *args):
    while True:
        try:
            return func(*args)
        except IOError as err:
            if err.errno == errno.EINTR:
                continue
            raise

class progbar(object):
    def __init__(self, ui):
        self.ui = ui
        self._refreshlock = threading.Lock()
        self.resetstate()

    def resetstate(self):
        self.topics = []
        self.topicstates = {}
        self.starttimes = {}
        self.startvals = {}
        self.printed = False
        self.lastprint = time.time() + float(self.ui.config(
            'progress', 'delay'))
        self.curtopic = None
        self.lasttopic = None
        self.indetcount = 0
        self.refresh = float(self.ui.config(
            'progress', 'refresh'))
        self.changedelay = max(3 * self.refresh,
                               float(self.ui.config(
                                   'progress', 'changedelay')))
        self.order = self.ui.configlist('progress', 'format')
        self.estimateinterval = self.ui.configwith(
            float, 'progress', 'estimateinterval')

    def show(self, now, topic, pos, item, unit, total):
        if not shouldprint(self.ui):
            return
        termwidth = self.width()
        self.printed = True
        head = ''
        needprogress = False
        tail = ''
        for indicator in self.order:
            add = ''
            if indicator == 'topic':
                add = topic
            elif indicator == 'number':
                if total:
                    add = b'%*d/%d' % (len(str(total)), pos, total)
                else:
                    add = b'%d' % pos
            elif indicator.startswith('item') and item:
                slice = 'end'
                if '-' in indicator:
                    wid = int(indicator.split('-')[1])
                elif '+' in indicator:
                    slice = 'beginning'
                    wid = int(indicator.split('+')[1])
                else:
                    wid = 20
                if slice == 'end':
                    add = encoding.trim(item, wid, leftside=True)
                else:
                    add = encoding.trim(item, wid)
                add += (wid - encoding.colwidth(add)) * ' '
            elif indicator == 'bar':
                add = ''
                needprogress = True
            elif indicator == 'unit' and unit:
                add = unit
            elif indicator == 'estimate':
                add = self.estimate(topic, pos, total, now)
            elif indicator == 'speed':
                add = self.speed(topic, pos, unit, now)
            if not needprogress:
                head = spacejoin(head, add)
            else:
                tail = spacejoin(tail, add)
        if needprogress:
            used = 0
            if head:
                used += encoding.colwidth(head) + 1
            if tail:
                used += encoding.colwidth(tail) + 1
            progwidth = termwidth - used - 3
            if total and pos <= total:
                amt = pos * progwidth // total
                bar = '=' * (amt - 1)
                if amt > 0:
                    bar += '>'
                bar += ' ' * (progwidth - amt)
            else:
                progwidth -= 3
                self.indetcount += 1
                # mod the count by twice the width so we can make the
                # cursor bounce between the right and left sides
                amt = self.indetcount % (2 * progwidth)
                amt -= progwidth
                bar = (' ' * int(progwidth - abs(amt)) + '<=>' +
                       ' ' * int(abs(amt)))
            prog = ''.join(('[', bar, ']'))
            out = spacejoin(head, prog, tail)
        else:
            out = spacejoin(head, tail)
        self._writeerr('\r' + encoding.trim(out, termwidth))
        self.lasttopic = topic
        self._flusherr()

    def clear(self):
        if not self.printed or not self.lastprint or not shouldprint(self.ui):
            return
        self._writeerr('\r%s\r' % (' ' * self.width()))
        if self.printed:
            # force immediate re-paint of progress bar
            self.lastprint = 0

    def complete(self):
        if not shouldprint(self.ui):
            return
        if self.ui.configbool('progress', 'clear-complete'):
            self.clear()
        else:
            self._writeerr('\n')
        self._flusherr()

    def _flusherr(self):
        _eintrretry(self.ui.ferr.flush)

    def _writeerr(self, msg):
        _eintrretry(self.ui.ferr.write, msg)

    def width(self):
        tw = self.ui.termwidth()
        return min(int(self.ui.config('progress', 'width', default=tw)), tw)

    def estimate(self, topic, pos, total, now):
        if total is None:
            return ''
        initialpos = self.startvals[topic]
        target = total - initialpos
        delta = pos - initialpos
        if delta > 0:
            elapsed = now - self.starttimes[topic]
            seconds = (elapsed * (target - delta)) // delta + 1
            return fmtremaining(seconds)
        return ''

    def speed(self, topic, pos, unit, now):
        initialpos = self.startvals[topic]
        delta = pos - initialpos
        elapsed = now - self.starttimes[topic]
        if elapsed > 0:
            return _('%d %s/sec') % (delta / elapsed, unit)
        return ''

    def _oktoprint(self, now):
        '''Check if conditions are met to print - e.g. changedelay elapsed'''
        if (self.lasttopic is None # first time we printed
            # not a topic change
            or self.curtopic == self.lasttopic
            # it's been long enough we should print anyway
            or now - self.lastprint >= self.changedelay):
            return True
        else:
            return False

    def _calibrateestimate(self, topic, now, pos):
        '''Adjust starttimes and startvals for topic so ETA works better

        If progress is non-linear (ex. get much slower in the last minute),
        it's more friendly to only use a recent time span for ETA and speed
        calculation.

            [======================================>       ]
                                             ^^^^^^^
                           estimateinterval, only use this for estimation
        '''
        interval = self.estimateinterval
        if interval <= 0:
            return
        elapsed = now - self.starttimes[topic]
        if elapsed > interval:
            delta = pos - self.startvals[topic]
            newdelta = delta * interval / elapsed
            # If a stall happens temporarily, ETA could change dramatically
            # frequently. This is to avoid such dramatical change and make ETA
            # smoother.
            if newdelta < 0.1:
                return
            self.startvals[topic] = pos - newdelta
            self.starttimes[topic] = now - interval

    def progress(self, topic, pos, item='', unit='', total=None):
        now = time.time()
        self._refreshlock.acquire()
        try:
            if pos is None:
                self.starttimes.pop(topic, None)
                self.startvals.pop(topic, None)
                self.topicstates.pop(topic, None)
                # reset the progress bar if this is the outermost topic
                if self.topics and self.topics[0] == topic and self.printed:
                    self.complete()
                    self.resetstate()
                # truncate the list of topics assuming all topics within
                # this one are also closed
                if topic in self.topics:
                    self.topics = self.topics[:self.topics.index(topic)]
                    # reset the last topic to the one we just unwound to,
                    # so that higher-level topics will be stickier than
                    # lower-level topics
                    if self.topics:
                        self.lasttopic = self.topics[-1]
                    else:
                        self.lasttopic = None
            else:
                if topic not in self.topics:
                    self.starttimes[topic] = now
                    self.startvals[topic] = pos
                    self.topics.append(topic)
                self.topicstates[topic] = pos, item, unit, total
                self.curtopic = topic
                self._calibrateestimate(topic, now, pos)
                if now - self.lastprint >= self.refresh and self.topics:
                    if self._oktoprint(now):
                        self.lastprint = now
                        self.show(now, topic, *self.topicstates[topic])
        finally:
            self._refreshlock.release()