view tests/fsmonitor-run-tests.py @ 35923:efbd04238029

cmdutil: convert _revertprefetch() to a generic stored file hook (API) This will be used by LFS to fetch required files in a group for multiple commands, prior to being accessed. That avoids the one-at-a-time fetch when the filelog wrapper goes to access it, and it is missing locally (which costs two round trips to the server.) The core command list that needs this is probably at least: - annotate - archive (which is also used by extdiff) - cat - diff - export - grep - verify (sadly) - anything that has the '{data}' template There are no core users of the revert prefetch hook, and never have been since it was introduced in 45e02cfad4bd for remotefilelog. Thanks to Yuya for figuring out a way to reliably trigger the deprecated warning. Unfortunately, it wanted to blame the caller of revert. Passing along an adjusted stack level seemed the least bad choice (although it still blames a core function). One thing to note is that the store lock isn't being held when this is called. I'm not at all familiar with remotefilelog or its locking requirements, so this may not be a big deal. Currently, LFS doesn't hold a lock when downloading files. Even though largefiles doesn't either, I'm starting to think it should, and maybe the .hg/store/lock isn't good enough to cover the globally shared cache. .. api:: The cmdutil._revertprefetch() hook point for prefetching stored files has been replaced by the command agnostic cmdutil._prefetchfiles(). The new function takes a list of files, instead of a list of lists of files.
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
date Sun, 04 Feb 2018 14:14:28 -0500
parents efd6e941e933
children b7ba1cfba174
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#!/usr/bin/env python

# fsmonitor-run-tests.py - Run Mercurial tests with fsmonitor enabled
#
# 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.
#
# This is a wrapper around run-tests.py that spins up an isolated instance of
# Watchman and runs the Mercurial tests against it. This ensures that the global
# version of Watchman isn't affected by anything this test does.

from __future__ import absolute_import
from __future__ import print_function

import argparse
import contextlib
import json
import os
import shutil
import subprocess
import sys
import tempfile
import uuid

osenvironb = getattr(os, 'environb', os.environ)

if sys.version_info > (3, 5, 0):
    PYTHON3 = True
    xrange = range # we use xrange in one place, and we'd rather not use range
    def _bytespath(p):
        return p.encode('utf-8')

elif sys.version_info >= (3, 0, 0):
    print('%s is only supported on Python 3.5+ and 2.7, not %s' %
          (sys.argv[0], '.'.join(str(v) for v in sys.version_info[:3])))
    sys.exit(70) # EX_SOFTWARE from `man 3 sysexit`
else:
    PYTHON3 = False

    # In python 2.x, path operations are generally done using
    # bytestrings by default, so we don't have to do any extra
    # fiddling there. We define the wrapper functions anyway just to
    # help keep code consistent between platforms.
    def _bytespath(p):
        return p

def getparser():
    """Obtain the argument parser used by the CLI."""
    parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(
        description='Run tests with fsmonitor enabled.',
        epilog='Unrecognized options are passed to run-tests.py.')
    # - keep these sorted
    # - none of these options should conflict with any in run-tests.py
    parser.add_argument('--keep-fsmonitor-tmpdir', action='store_true',
        help='keep temporary directory with fsmonitor state')
    parser.add_argument('--watchman',
        help='location of watchman binary (default: watchman in PATH)',
        default='watchman')

    return parser

@contextlib.contextmanager
def watchman(args):
    basedir = tempfile.mkdtemp(prefix='hg-fsmonitor')
    try:
        # Much of this configuration is borrowed from Watchman's test harness.
        cfgfile = os.path.join(basedir, 'config.json')
        # TODO: allow setting a config
        with open(cfgfile, 'w') as f:
            f.write(json.dumps({}))

        logfile = os.path.join(basedir, 'log')
        clilogfile = os.path.join(basedir, 'cli-log')
        if os.name == 'nt':
            sockfile = '\\\\.\\pipe\\watchman-test-%s' % uuid.uuid4().hex
        else:
            sockfile = os.path.join(basedir, 'sock')
        pidfile = os.path.join(basedir, 'pid')
        statefile = os.path.join(basedir, 'state')

        argv = [
            args.watchman,
            '--sockname', sockfile,
            '--logfile', logfile,
            '--pidfile', pidfile,
            '--statefile', statefile,
            '--foreground',
            '--log-level=2', # debug logging for watchman
        ]

        envb = osenvironb.copy()
        envb[b'WATCHMAN_CONFIG_FILE'] = _bytespath(cfgfile)
        with open(clilogfile, 'wb') as f:
            proc = subprocess.Popen(
                argv, env=envb, stdin=None, stdout=f, stderr=f)
            try:
                yield sockfile
            finally:
                proc.terminate()
                proc.kill()
    finally:
        if args.keep_fsmonitor_tmpdir:
            print('fsmonitor dir available at %s' % basedir)
        else:
            shutil.rmtree(basedir, ignore_errors=True)

def run():
    parser = getparser()
    args, runtestsargv = parser.parse_known_args()

    with watchman(args) as sockfile:
        osenvironb[b'WATCHMAN_SOCK'] = _bytespath(sockfile)
        # Indicate to hghave that we're running with fsmonitor enabled.
        osenvironb[b'HGFSMONITOR_TESTS'] = b'1'

        runtestdir = os.path.dirname(__file__)
        runtests = os.path.join(runtestdir, 'run-tests.py')
        blacklist = os.path.join(runtestdir, 'blacklists', 'fsmonitor')

        runtestsargv.insert(0, runtests)
        runtestsargv.extend([
            '--extra-config',
            'extensions.fsmonitor=',
            '--blacklist',
            blacklist,
        ])

        return subprocess.call(runtestsargv)

if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.exit(run())