view tests/sshprotoext.py @ 42406:f385ba70e4af

changelog: optionally store added and removed files in changeset extras As mentioned in an earlier patch, copies._chain() is used a lot in the changeset-centric version of pathcopies(). It is expensive because it needs to look at the manifest in order to filter out copies whose target file has since been removed. I want to store the sets of added and removed files in the changeset in order to speed that up. This patch does the writing part of that. It could easily be a separate config, but it's currently tied to experimental.copies.write-to since that's the only real use case (it will also make the {file_*} template keywords faster, but I doubt that anyone cares enough about those to write extra metadata for them). The new information is stored in the changeset extras. Since they're always subsets of the changeset's "files" list, they're stored as indexes into that list. I've stored the indexes as stringified ints separated by NUL bytes. The size of 00changelog.d for the hg repo increased in size by 0.28% percent (compared to the size with only copy information in the changesets, which in turn is 0.17% larger than without copy information). We could store only the delta between the indexes and we could store them in binary, but the chosen format is more readable. We could also have implemented this as a cache outside the changelog. One advantage of doing it that way is that we would get the speedups from the {file_*} template keywords also on old repos. Another advantage is that it we can rewrite the cache if we find a bug in how we calculate the set of files. A disadvantage is that it would be more complex. Another is that it would surely use more space. We already write the copy information to the changeset extras, so it seems like a small step to also write these file sets. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6416
author Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com>
date Tue, 14 May 2019 22:19:51 -0700
parents b4d85bc122bd
children 2372284d9457
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# sshprotoext.py - Extension to test behavior of SSH protocol
#
# Copyright 2018 Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@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.

# This extension replaces the SSH server started via `hg serve --stdio`.
# The server behaves differently depending on environment variables.

from __future__ import absolute_import

from mercurial import (
    error,
    extensions,
    registrar,
    sshpeer,
    wireprotoserver,
    wireprotov1server,
)

configtable = {}
configitem = registrar.configitem(configtable)

configitem(b'sshpeer', b'mode', default=None)
configitem(b'sshpeer', b'handshake-mode', default=None)

class bannerserver(wireprotoserver.sshserver):
    """Server that sends a banner to stdout."""
    def serve_forever(self):
        for i in range(10):
            self._fout.write(b'banner: line %d\n' % i)

        super(bannerserver, self).serve_forever()

class prehelloserver(wireprotoserver.sshserver):
    """Tests behavior when connecting to <0.9.1 servers.

    The ``hello`` wire protocol command was introduced in Mercurial
    0.9.1. Modern clients send the ``hello`` command when connecting
    to SSH servers. This mock server tests behavior of the handshake
    when ``hello`` is not supported.
    """
    def serve_forever(self):
        l = self._fin.readline()
        assert l == b'hello\n'
        # Respond to unknown commands with an empty reply.
        wireprotoserver._sshv1respondbytes(self._fout, b'')
        l = self._fin.readline()
        assert l == b'between\n'
        proto = wireprotoserver.sshv1protocolhandler(self._ui, self._fin,
                                                     self._fout)
        rsp = wireprotov1server.dispatch(self._repo, proto, b'between')
        wireprotoserver._sshv1respondbytes(self._fout, rsp.data)

        super(prehelloserver, self).serve_forever()

def performhandshake(orig, ui, stdin, stdout, stderr):
    """Wrapped version of sshpeer._performhandshake to send extra commands."""
    mode = ui.config(b'sshpeer', b'handshake-mode')
    if mode == b'pre-no-args':
        ui.debug(b'sending no-args command\n')
        stdin.write(b'no-args\n')
        stdin.flush()
        return orig(ui, stdin, stdout, stderr)
    elif mode == b'pre-multiple-no-args':
        ui.debug(b'sending unknown1 command\n')
        stdin.write(b'unknown1\n')
        ui.debug(b'sending unknown2 command\n')
        stdin.write(b'unknown2\n')
        ui.debug(b'sending unknown3 command\n')
        stdin.write(b'unknown3\n')
        stdin.flush()
        return orig(ui, stdin, stdout, stderr)
    else:
        raise error.ProgrammingError(b'unknown HANDSHAKECOMMANDMODE: %s' %
                                     mode)

def extsetup(ui):
    # It's easier for tests to define the server behavior via environment
    # variables than config options. This is because `hg serve --stdio`
    # has to be invoked with a certain form for security reasons and
    # `dummyssh` can't just add `--config` flags to the command line.
    servermode = ui.environ.get(b'SSHSERVERMODE')

    if servermode == b'banner':
        wireprotoserver.sshserver = bannerserver
    elif servermode == b'no-hello':
        wireprotoserver.sshserver = prehelloserver
    elif servermode:
        raise error.ProgrammingError(b'unknown server mode: %s' % servermode)

    peermode = ui.config(b'sshpeer', b'mode')

    if peermode == b'extra-handshake-commands':
        extensions.wrapfunction(sshpeer, '_performhandshake', performhandshake)
    elif peermode:
        raise error.ProgrammingError(b'unknown peer mode: %s' % peermode)