Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/pure/osutil.py @ 42093:edbcf5b239f9
config: read configs from directories in lexicographical order
Mercurial currently reads the .rc files specified in HGRCPATH (and the
system-default paths) in directory order, which is unspecified. My
team at work maintains a set of .rc files. So far there has been no
overlap between them, so we had not noticed this behavior. However, we
would now like to release some common .rc files and then have another
one per plaform with platform-specific overrides. It would be nice if
we can determine the load order by choosing names carefully. This
patch enables that by loading the .rc files in lexicographical order.
Before this patch, the added test case would consistently say "30" on
my file system (whatever I have -- some Linux FS).
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6193
author | Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 03 Apr 2019 16:03:41 -0700 |
parents | 120ecb17242b |
children | f3fa10a5877d |
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# osutil.py - pure Python version of osutil.c # # Copyright 2009 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> and others # # 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 ctypes import ctypes.util import os import socket import stat as statmod from .. import ( encoding, pycompat, ) def _mode_to_kind(mode): if statmod.S_ISREG(mode): return statmod.S_IFREG if statmod.S_ISDIR(mode): return statmod.S_IFDIR if statmod.S_ISLNK(mode): return statmod.S_IFLNK if statmod.S_ISBLK(mode): return statmod.S_IFBLK if statmod.S_ISCHR(mode): return statmod.S_IFCHR if statmod.S_ISFIFO(mode): return statmod.S_IFIFO if statmod.S_ISSOCK(mode): return statmod.S_IFSOCK return mode def listdir(path, stat=False, skip=None): '''listdir(path, stat=False) -> list_of_tuples Return a sorted list containing information about the entries in the directory. If stat is True, each element is a 3-tuple: (name, type, stat object) Otherwise, each element is a 2-tuple: (name, type) ''' result = [] prefix = path if not prefix.endswith(pycompat.ossep): prefix += pycompat.ossep names = os.listdir(path) names.sort() for fn in names: st = os.lstat(prefix + fn) if fn == skip and statmod.S_ISDIR(st.st_mode): return [] if stat: result.append((fn, _mode_to_kind(st.st_mode), st)) else: result.append((fn, _mode_to_kind(st.st_mode))) return result if not pycompat.iswindows: posixfile = open _SCM_RIGHTS = 0x01 _socklen_t = ctypes.c_uint if pycompat.sysplatform.startswith('linux'): # socket.h says "the type should be socklen_t but the definition of # the kernel is incompatible with this." _cmsg_len_t = ctypes.c_size_t _msg_controllen_t = ctypes.c_size_t _msg_iovlen_t = ctypes.c_size_t else: _cmsg_len_t = _socklen_t _msg_controllen_t = _socklen_t _msg_iovlen_t = ctypes.c_int class _iovec(ctypes.Structure): _fields_ = [ (u'iov_base', ctypes.c_void_p), (u'iov_len', ctypes.c_size_t), ] class _msghdr(ctypes.Structure): _fields_ = [ (u'msg_name', ctypes.c_void_p), (u'msg_namelen', _socklen_t), (u'msg_iov', ctypes.POINTER(_iovec)), (u'msg_iovlen', _msg_iovlen_t), (u'msg_control', ctypes.c_void_p), (u'msg_controllen', _msg_controllen_t), (u'msg_flags', ctypes.c_int), ] class _cmsghdr(ctypes.Structure): _fields_ = [ (u'cmsg_len', _cmsg_len_t), (u'cmsg_level', ctypes.c_int), (u'cmsg_type', ctypes.c_int), (u'cmsg_data', ctypes.c_ubyte * 0), ] _libc = ctypes.CDLL(ctypes.util.find_library(u'c'), use_errno=True) _recvmsg = getattr(_libc, 'recvmsg', None) if _recvmsg: _recvmsg.restype = getattr(ctypes, 'c_ssize_t', ctypes.c_long) _recvmsg.argtypes = (ctypes.c_int, ctypes.POINTER(_msghdr), ctypes.c_int) else: # recvmsg isn't always provided by libc; such systems are unsupported def _recvmsg(sockfd, msg, flags): raise NotImplementedError('unsupported platform') def _CMSG_FIRSTHDR(msgh): if msgh.msg_controllen < ctypes.sizeof(_cmsghdr): return cmsgptr = ctypes.cast(msgh.msg_control, ctypes.POINTER(_cmsghdr)) return cmsgptr.contents # The pure version is less portable than the native version because the # handling of socket ancillary data heavily depends on C preprocessor. # Also, some length fields are wrongly typed in Linux kernel. def recvfds(sockfd): """receive list of file descriptors via socket""" dummy = (ctypes.c_ubyte * 1)() iov = _iovec(ctypes.cast(dummy, ctypes.c_void_p), ctypes.sizeof(dummy)) cbuf = ctypes.create_string_buffer(256) msgh = _msghdr(None, 0, ctypes.pointer(iov), 1, ctypes.cast(cbuf, ctypes.c_void_p), ctypes.sizeof(cbuf), 0) r = _recvmsg(sockfd, ctypes.byref(msgh), 0) if r < 0: e = ctypes.get_errno() raise OSError(e, os.strerror(e)) # assumes that the first cmsg has fds because it isn't easy to write # portable CMSG_NXTHDR() with ctypes. cmsg = _CMSG_FIRSTHDR(msgh) if not cmsg: return [] if (cmsg.cmsg_level != socket.SOL_SOCKET or cmsg.cmsg_type != _SCM_RIGHTS): return [] rfds = ctypes.cast(cmsg.cmsg_data, ctypes.POINTER(ctypes.c_int)) rfdscount = ((cmsg.cmsg_len - _cmsghdr.cmsg_data.offset) / ctypes.sizeof(ctypes.c_int)) return [rfds[i] for i in pycompat.xrange(rfdscount)] else: import msvcrt _kernel32 = ctypes.windll.kernel32 _DWORD = ctypes.c_ulong _LPCSTR = _LPSTR = ctypes.c_char_p _HANDLE = ctypes.c_void_p _INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE = _HANDLE(-1).value # CreateFile _FILE_SHARE_READ = 0x00000001 _FILE_SHARE_WRITE = 0x00000002 _FILE_SHARE_DELETE = 0x00000004 _CREATE_ALWAYS = 2 _OPEN_EXISTING = 3 _OPEN_ALWAYS = 4 _GENERIC_READ = 0x80000000 _GENERIC_WRITE = 0x40000000 _FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL = 0x80 # open_osfhandle flags _O_RDONLY = 0x0000 _O_RDWR = 0x0002 _O_APPEND = 0x0008 _O_TEXT = 0x4000 _O_BINARY = 0x8000 # types of parameters of C functions used (required by pypy) _kernel32.CreateFileA.argtypes = [_LPCSTR, _DWORD, _DWORD, ctypes.c_void_p, _DWORD, _DWORD, _HANDLE] _kernel32.CreateFileA.restype = _HANDLE def _raiseioerror(name): err = ctypes.WinError() raise IOError(err.errno, r'%s: %s' % (encoding.strfromlocal(name), err.strerror)) class posixfile(object): '''a file object aiming for POSIX-like semantics CPython's open() returns a file that was opened *without* setting the _FILE_SHARE_DELETE flag, which causes rename and unlink to abort. This even happens if any hardlinked copy of the file is in open state. We set _FILE_SHARE_DELETE here, so files opened with posixfile can be renamed and deleted while they are held open. Note that if a file opened with posixfile is unlinked, the file remains but cannot be opened again or be recreated under the same name, until all reading processes have closed the file.''' def __init__(self, name, mode=b'r', bufsize=-1): if b'b' in mode: flags = _O_BINARY else: flags = _O_TEXT m0 = mode[0:1] if m0 == b'r' and b'+' not in mode: flags |= _O_RDONLY access = _GENERIC_READ else: # work around http://support.microsoft.com/kb/899149 and # set _O_RDWR for 'w' and 'a', even if mode has no '+' flags |= _O_RDWR access = _GENERIC_READ | _GENERIC_WRITE if m0 == b'r': creation = _OPEN_EXISTING elif m0 == b'w': creation = _CREATE_ALWAYS elif m0 == b'a': creation = _OPEN_ALWAYS flags |= _O_APPEND else: raise ValueError(r"invalid mode: %s" % pycompat.sysstr(mode)) fh = _kernel32.CreateFileA(name, access, _FILE_SHARE_READ | _FILE_SHARE_WRITE | _FILE_SHARE_DELETE, None, creation, _FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL, None) if fh == _INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE: _raiseioerror(name) fd = msvcrt.open_osfhandle(fh, flags) if fd == -1: _kernel32.CloseHandle(fh) _raiseioerror(name) f = os.fdopen(fd, pycompat.sysstr(mode), bufsize) # unfortunately, f.name is '<fdopen>' at this point -- so we store # the name on this wrapper. We cannot just assign to f.name, # because that attribute is read-only. object.__setattr__(self, r'name', name) object.__setattr__(self, r'_file', f) def __iter__(self): return self._file def __getattr__(self, name): return getattr(self._file, name) def __setattr__(self, name, value): '''mimics the read-only attributes of Python file objects by raising 'TypeError: readonly attribute' if someone tries: f = posixfile('foo.txt') f.name = 'bla' ''' return self._file.__setattr__(name, value) def __enter__(self): self._file.__enter__() return self def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, exc_tb): return self._file.__exit__(exc_type, exc_value, exc_tb)